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HOOVER INSTITUTION 
on War, Revolution, and Peace 



FOUNDED BY HER8EKT HOOVER 19*9 




THE 

ENCYCLOPAEDIA BRITANNICA 

ELEVENTH EDITION 



FIRST 


edition, 


pobliibtd In three volume*, 


1768-1771. 


SECOND 


if 


•i 


ten „ 


1777—1784. 


THIRD 


•» 


M 


eighteen „ 


1788—1797. 


FOURTH 


•i 


l» 


twenty ,. 


1801— 1810. 


FIFTH 


•» 


n 


twenty „ 


1815— 1817. 


SIXTH 


•» 


M 


twenty „ 


1893—1834. 


SEVENTH 


N 


•• 


twenty-one », 


1830— 1843. 


EIGHTH 


W 


M 


twenty-two „ 


1853—1860. 


NINTH 


fl 


*tt 


twenty-five „ 


1875-1880. 


TENTH 


•1 


ninth edition and eleven 








•opplementary volume*, 


1003—1003. 


ELEVENTH 


•t 


pobliihod In twenty-nine volume*, 


1910— 191 1. 



THE 

ENCYCLOPAEDIA BRITANNICA 

A 

DICTIONARY 

OF 

ARTS, SCIENCES, LITERATURE AND GENERAL 

INFORMATION 

ELEVENTH EDITION 

VOLUME XXVIII 
VETCH to ZYMOTIC DISEASES 



NEW YORK 
THE ENCYCLOPEDIA BRITANNICA COMPANY 

1911 



Copyright, in the United States of America, 1911, 

by 

The Encyclopedia Britanmca Company. 



INITIALS USED IN VOLUME XXVIII. TO IDENTIFY INDIVIDUAL, 
CONTRIBUTORS,* WITH THE HEADINGS OF THE 
ARTICLES IN THIS VOLUME SO SIGNED. 



lrgo. 

ICLl 

LD.li. 

US. 

A.P.BL 
IF.** 

LF.ft 

A.F.L 

1F.F. 

LM.C 
LI 

1LCL 
if.* 



Aired Bradley Gouch, M.A.. TtLD. 

Sometime Casberd Scholar of St John's College, Oxford. English Lector in the 
University of Kid. 1896-1905. 

Alocenon Charles Swinburne. 

See the biographical article: Swinburne, Algernon Charles. 



Damzsx Mouk, M.A., LL.D. 
itm Professor of "*' 



WettohnJla, Treaty of. , 



r of History at Amherst College, Mam. Professor at Amherst « WMfFirtr. 

College, 1877-1908. I 

Arthur Everett Shipley, M.A., D. Sc., F.R.S. f Vlt . /• ^, mfk . 

TV** Wonts* urn 



Aubed Faibii Babes*, M.Sc. 

Professor of Textile Industries at Bradford Technical College. 

Archibald Frank Becks. f 

A. F. Hutchison, M.A. 

Somrtitnf Rector of the High School, Stirling. 

Arthur Fraxcxb Leach, M. A. 

Barrlster-at4av, Middle Temple. Charity Commissioner for England and Wales. 
Formerly Assistant-Secretary to the Board of Education. Fellow of All Souk) 
College, Oxford, 1874-1881. Author of English Schools at Ike Reformation', Ac. 

Albert Frederick Pollard, M.A., F.R.Hist.S 



{waHaot,! 



ofWykeham. 



Wahlngham, Sir Frands; 
WWmrt, Geosge; 



Acmes Masy Clerke. 

See the biographical article : Clerks, Acmes M. 



Aubed Newton, F.R.S. 

See the biographical article: Nbwtom. Alfred. 



AstcTos Philemon Coleman, M.A., Ph.D.. F.R.S. 

Professor of Geology in the University of Toronto. Geologist, Bureau of Mines, • 
Toronto, 1895-1910, Author of Reports of tki Bureau of Mtnss of Ontario. 

Abthuk Stmoms. 

See the biographical article : Stmoms, Arthur. 

Aian Summerly Cole, C.B. 

Formerly Assistant-Secretary, Board of Education. South Kensington, 
Ornament in European Silks; Calalopu of Tapestry, Embroidery, Lace 
tin Ike Victoria amd Albert Museum; Ac 



Wagtalli 
Waxwinf ; Weaver-bud; 



wigoon; Woenwock; 
Woodpecker; Wren; 
WfYDtek, Zostarops. 

Yukon Territory. 

del 



n. Author of J 
andBeyptiaul 



Weaving: Archaeology and Ark 



Lecturer in 
Author of ~ 



1 Princle-Pattisoh.M^., LX.D..D.CX. 
of Logic and' Metaphysics in the University of Edinl 
n the University of Aberdeen, ton. Fellow of the Bi 
Mam's Place in Ike Cosmos ; The Pkmesephkal Radicals ; 8 



.burgh. Gilford J Weber's Law; 
British Academy. J Wolff, i 



(in Pari). 



Aims vow Orelli. f 

Formerly Professor of Law in the University of Zurich. Author of Das Slaatsmkl I Yolo. 
eW sckmcintriscken Eidatnossensckaft. L 

1 A complete last, showing all individual contributors, appears in the final volume. 



VI 

A.W.H.* 

JLW.Ho. 

A.W.B. 
BR 8. 

B.H.4. 

C.BL 

C.F.A. 
C.F.K. 

C. H. Ha. 

CEV 
C.K.W. 

C.L.K. 

C.R.B. 

&W.B. 

D. B.M. 
D. F. T. 

D.O.B. 

D.B. 
D.H.I 

D.rl-M. 



INITIALS AND HEADINGS OF ARTICLES 

Arthur William Holland. 

Formeriy Scholar of St John's College, Oxford. Bacon Scholar of Gray's Inn. 1900. 
Rev. Arthur Wollaston Huttoh. 

Rector of Bow Church, Cheapside, London. Formerly Librarian of the National 

Liberal Club. Author of Lifo of Cardinal Manning. Editor of Newman's Zisestf/ 1**" 1 

English Saints; Saz. 



Alexander Wood Renton, M.A., LL.B. 

Puisne Judge of the Supreme Court of Ceylon. 
of England. 



Editor of Encyclopaedia of the Laws 



Benjamin Eu Smith, A.M. | 

Editor of the Century Dictionary. Formerly Instructor in Mathematics at Amherst J 
College, Mass., and in Psychology at the Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore. 1 
Editor of the Century Cydopaedia of Nanns, Century Atias,**. J 



Whitney. 



DwffhL 



B. 



Heckst all-Smith. 

Associate of the Institute of Naval Architects. Secretary 0/ the 
Yacht Racing Union; Secretary of the Yacht Racing Associatic 
Editor of The Field. 



jtfanal 1 
itfon. Yachting | 

Sift Charles Norton EoGdrkBE Eliot, K.fc.M.G., M.A., LL.D., D.CX. 

Vice-Chancellor of Sheffield University. Formerly Fellow of Trinity College. 
Oxford. H.M.'s Commissioner and Commander-in-Chief for the British bast Africa 
Protectorate; Agent and Consul-General at Zanzibar; Consul-General for German 
East Africa, 1900-1904. 

Charles Francis Atkinson. 

Formerly Scholar of Queen's College. Oxford. Captain, 1st City of London (Royal 
Fusifers). Author of The Wilderness and Cold Harbor. 

Charles Francis Keary, M.A. 

Trinity College, Cambridge. Author of The Vikings in Western 
Norway and the Norwegians; &c 

Carlton Huntley Hayes, A.M., Ph.D. f victor m. and IV. (Pokes)- 

Assistant Professor of History tn Columbia University, New York City. Member \ l^ilt jr-ZiM ' 

of the American Historical Association. 7 \ "•» (row**). 



Ywa-ckL 



WMt f e w i QranCs Campaigmt. 



Christendom*,] Vtttnf. 



Crawtord Howell Toy, A.M.. LL.D. 

Sot the biographical article: Toy, Crawford Howell. 

Charles Kinosley Webster, M.A. 

Fellow of King's College, Cambridge. WhewcTI Scholar. 1907. 



Charles Lethbridge Kincstord. M.A., FJI.Hist.Soc., F.S.A. 

AsssstanvSecretarytotheBoardiof Education. Author of Life of Henry V. Editor 
of CkromtUs of London and Stow s Surrey of Loudon. 



Charles Raymond Beazley, M.A., D.LrrT. t F.R.G.S., F.R.Hist.S. 

Professor of Modern History in the University of Birmingham. Formerly Fellow of 
Merton College, Oxford, and University Lecturer in the History of Geography. 
Lothian Prizeman. Oxford. 1889. Lowell Lecturer, Boston, 1908. Author of 
Henry tho Navigator ; The Dawn of Modern Geogmsphyi Jbc 

Charles Wauces Robinson. C.B., D.C.L. 

Major-General (retired). Assistant Military Secretary, Headquarters of the Army, 
1890-1892. Governor and Secretary, Royal Military Hospital. Chelsea, 1895- 
1898. Author of Strategy of the Peninsular War; due 

David Binning Monro, M.A., Lrrr.D. 

See the biographical article: Monro, David Binning. 

Donald Francs Tqvey. 

Author of Essays in M usual Analysis: comprising The Classical Concerto, The 
Goldberg Variations, and analyses of many other classical works. 

David George Hogarth, M.A. 

Keeper of the Ashmolcan Museum, Oxford, and Fellow of Magdalen College. Fellow 
of the British Academy. Fjccavated at Paphos, 1888; Naurratis, 1899 and 1903; 
Ejjhumis, 1904-1005; Assiut, 1906-1907. Director. British School at Athens, 
1897-1900. Director, Cretan Exploration Fund, 1899. 

David Hannay. 

Formerly British Vice-Consul at Barcelona. Author of Short History of the Royal 

Navy; Life of Emilio Castesar; ftc 
Dukinfield Henry Scott, M.A., Pn.D„ LL.B., F.R.S. 

Professor of Botany, Royal College of Science. London, 1885-1892. Formerly 

President of the Royal Microscopical Society and of the Linnean Society. Author 

of Structural Botany; Studios in Fossil Botany, Ac. 
David Randall-Macivek, M.A., D.Sc. 

"urator of Egyptian Department, University of Pennsylvania. Formerly Worcester 
•der in Egyptology, University of Oxford. Author of Medieval Rhodesia ; &c. 



•f;- 



Warwick, Richard ftat*- 

ehanp, Earl of; 
Warwick, Riebwd RetlDa, 

Earl of; 
Whittlngton, Richard; 
Woittsltr.JolinTtRfeft, 

Earl of; 
Yora,RkbanLDiil»oL 



VMoffH. 



Wolf, Frtodrich Aogost 

Vfcfftria, ToOBnaSM L. m%} 
Wagacrt Biography (in part) 
and Critical Appreciation; 
Wtbtn CriStal Appreciation* 



Ztttun. 



ZvmalacarngvL 



Ife* 

RCL* 

LC.1 

It 

HI 
LEW. 

Lit 
IF.W. 

LI 
FJLC 

r.ct 

f.o.h.1. 
r.j.i. 



B*ITIAL8' AND HEADINGS OF ARTICLES 

Bsr. Elkami Aemtage, M.A. r 

JrWtyCollete. Cambridge. Professor in Yorkshire Unit* Isrtyt^sftCoOttM ZwfngJL 



va 



Bradford. 



Ernest CuurjE. M.D., F.R.CS. 
Surgeon to the 

Surgeon to the __ _ 

Society. Author of Refraction of the Eye; euu 



Surgeon _. _ m 

Surgeon to the Miller General Hospital. 



Central London Ophthalmic Hospital, an<T Consulting Opl 

w ..._ -r- . .. ... Vice-President of the Ophthalmologics! 



-I 



VWon; 
Ac. 



Errors of Refraction^ 



Edmund Cwrtm, M.A. 

Kebfe College, Oxford. Lecturer on History in the University of Sheffield. 

Rm* R«v. Edward Cotwex Bjotur, O.S.B., M.A., DXitt. f 

Abbot of Downside Abbey. Bath. Author of " The Lausiac History of Palladium " 1 
in Combndp Texts and Studies. [ 

Edmund Clarence Stedman. 

See the biographical article : Stedman, Edmund Clamncs. 



{wmUmLaiMiaolSieuy. 



Wadding, Luks. 



{whlttiw.iahji 



EsUftmo Gome, LL.D. 

Sea U*« biographical article: Gosss. Edmund. 



VUtoMBe; Vlreaj; 
Vounaer, c«ral; 
Waller, Edmund; 
Walloons: Literature; 



Wefis, Charles 



Wlntba* Christian; 
Wordsworth, Dorothy. 



Eocaxd Meter, Ph.D., D.Lttt., LL.D. X Volossaaaa: Vouobm 

Professor of Ancient History in the University of Berlin. Author of Gtschuhte its \ v.^TvIVaJ-wi 
AUerthums; CestkUkle da ate* Aegypitns; Die Israelite* uwd tkre Nochborsiimme. I *•"•*» *■"••«■. 



MsU* 



Rev. Edward Mewbprn Walker, M.A. 

Fellow, Senior Tutor and Libramu of Queen's College, Oxford. 

Owen, F.R.C.S., LL D., D.Sc. 
Consulting Surgeon to St Mary's Hospital, London, and to the Children' 
Great Ormond Street. London. Chevalier of the Legioo of Honour. 
A Manual of Anatomy for Senior StmUnlt. 

Elizabeth O'Neill, M.A. (Mrs H. O. O'Neill). 

Formerly University Fellow And Jones Fellow of the- University of Manchester. 

Edgar Peestage. 



/xtaophon {in part). 



»'s Hospital. J 
. Author of 1 



Wart; 
Whtttow. 



Com* 
Royal 



International Law, American Bar I 
Author of Dantd Webster* Modern] 



finacuu Lecturer in nsrtugnsae Literature 10 the •Jnlversitjr of Manchester, 
mendador. Portuguese Order of S. Thiago. Conesfnndmf Member of f 
Academy of Sciences and Lisbon Geographical Society) Ac 
Everett Pepperreil Wheeler, AJrf. 

For m erly Chairma* of the Commission on 
Associatioa. and other smwter Qniwsslons. 
Law of Camers; Wa&s and the Tariff. 

Sis Edwin Rat Lanxester. K.C.B., F.R.S., D.Sc. f LL.D., D.C.L. 

Hon. Fellow of Exeter Cottems Oxford. President of the British Assocktios^npoV 
P rof e ss or of Zoology and Comparative Anatomy in University College. London, 
lB?4-lffa Linacre Professor of Comparative Anatomy at Oxford. 1891-1*08. 
Director of the Natural History Departments of the British Museum. 1898-1907. 
Vice-President of the Royal Society, 1896. Romanes Lecturer ar Oxford, 1905. 
Author of Defeneration ; The Advancement of Science ; The Kingdonfof Mats; Ac 

Euro Thomson. A.M., D.Sc., Ph.D. f 

Inventor of Electric Welding. Electrician to the Thomson-Houston and General T 
Electric Companies. Professor of Chemistry and Mechanics. Central High School, J. 
Philadelphia. 1870-1800. President of the International Elcctro-teclinlcal Com- ]' 
mission, tool. I 

Franelyn Ardew Crallaw. 



(Vicar. 

[vtaanisvCO; 
I VWrsV 



Wtbsu* DnnJal (in part). 



ZOAlogy. 



.-, 1 



Oectnc* 



"formerly Director of Wood-carving, Gloucester County CounciL Author of Gothic I WtosWSttTlBf. 



Fsnnjcs Cqrnwallb Contbeare, M.A.. D.Th. 

Fenow of the British Academy. Formerly Fellow of University College. Oxford. 
Editor of Tko Ancient Armenian Texts of ArwtotU. Author of Myth, Mope 
Mml*\&L. 

FREDERICK GEOE0tv lilESOst BETjt, if .A. 

Fellow and Lecturer of Clare College, Cambridg*. 

Francis John Havxetield. M.A., T.L.D,, F.S.A. 



a{*» 



/wetstx. 



Camden Professor of Ancient History in the University of Oxford. Fellow of Brate- f 
nose College. Formerly Censor. Student. Tutor and Librarian of Christ Church. J 
Ford's Lecturer. 1006*1907. Fellow of the British Academy. Author of Mono- ] 
graphs on Roman History, especially Roman Britain: Ac \ 



FjsU«fanTO.A.M. l BX v# M.E. Vi/ , „ „ ^ 

Manager of tb» United States Voting Machine Company. 
Examiner, United States Patent Office. 



Formerly Assistant H 



, ... : 



.a v: 



viii 


P.L.L. 


P.H.H. 


F.B.C. 


P.T.H. 


F.Wt. 


».*** 


F. T. P. 


a. 


G.A.& 



a.v.1. 



INITIALS AND HEADINGS OF ARTICLES 

Lady Lugard. f 

See the biographical article: Lugaro, Sib F. J. D. , \ *■"»• 

Colonel Frederic Natusch Maude, C.B, 

Lecturer in Military History, Manchcst , __ 

Wotift Policy; The Utpng Competent The Jena Campaign. 



Lecturer in Military History", Manchester University. Author of War and tat] Worth. 
....... „_.,__. -~_ - ^ t5ew**«sg«i The Jena Campaign. {. 



{ Victoria Faum; 
Victoria Hyatt (« ftorf); 
r " * -'- - - 



Author of South Africa from the Great Trek to the Union. 

Frank Thomas Marzials, K.CB. 

Formerly Accountant-General of the Army. Editor of the "Great Writers" Series. 



Frederick Wedmore. / Whistler 

See the biographical article. Wedmore, Frederick. \ 

Frederick William Rudler, I.S.O., F.G.S. f Vokatto- Welfraamtnv 

Curator and Librarian of the Museum of Practical Geology. London, 1879-1903. i 7,^. ' * 

President of the Geologists' Association, 1887-1889. [arooa. 

Frederick York Powell. D.C.L., LL.D. f ««-#*•■*» m 

See the biographical article: Powell, Frederick York. t »•*"■»■■» w 

Lord Grihthorpe. J«uk.w *. _-% 

See the biographical article: Grwthorfe, ist Baron*. \ watM (s* farfj. 

Rev'. George Albert Cooke, M.A., D.D. f 

Oriel Professor of the Interpretation of Holy Scripture in the University of Oxford. J 

and Fellow of Oriel College. Canon of Rochester. Hon. Canon of St Mary's ] 

Cathedral, Edinburgh. Author of Text-Book of North Semitic Inscriptions ; &c I 

G.C.L Georce Collins Levey, CMC. 

Member of the Board of Advice to the Agent-General for Victoria. Formerly Editor 
and Proprietor of the Melbourne Herald. Secretary, Colonial Committee of Royal 
Commission to the Paris Exhibition, 1900. Secretary, Adelaide Exhibition, 1887.' 
\ Secretary, Royal Commission, Hobart Exhibition, 1894-1895. Secretary to Com- 

missioners for Victoria at the Exhibitions in London, Paris, Vienna, Philadelphia 
and Melbourne. 

G. B. Rev. Georce Edmundson, M.A., F.R.Hist.S. 

Formerly Fellow and Tutor of Brasenose College, Oxford. Ford's Lecturer, 1900. . 
Hon. Member, Dutch Historical Society; and Foreign Member, Netherlands 
Association of Literature. 



Victoria {Australia): History. 



William IIL, King ot tht 
Mtthartonds; 
tntSUtat; 
IL, Prince of Orange. 




G. FL George Fleming, C.B., LL.D., F.R.C.V.S. 

Formerly Principal Veterinary Surgeon, War Office, London. Author of Animal A Veterinary Science (in Pari). 
• Plagues: their History, Nature am* Prevention. I * ^ 

G. F. D. George Frederick Deacon, LL.D., M.Inst.M.E., F.R.M.S. (1843-1909). f 

Formerly Engineer-in-Chief for the Liverpool water Supply (Vyrnwy Scheme), I • 1 " 

and Member of the Council of the Institution of Civil Engineers. Borough and Water < Water 8HSpiy. 
Engineer of Liverpool, 1871-1879. Consulting Civil Engineer, 1 879-1909. Author I 
of addresses and papers on Engineering, &c. 

G. F. B.H. George Francis Robert Henderson. Swmr 

See the biographical article : Henderson, George Francis Robert. 1 ww " 

G. G. P.* Geoes* GtEwviiLE Pbtlumore, M.A., B.C.L. . f Wreak fin tart) 

Christ Church, Oxford. Barrister-at-law. Middle Temple. \ w,w * im panj ' 

orge Herbert Carpenter. (m*** h- a~#\. 

Professor of Zoology in the Royal College of Science. Dublin. Author of Insects: \ *•** V" r"'\ - - 

their Structure anTUfe. \WatVfl (m **rf). 

G. I. George Jameson, C.M.G.. M.A. f 

Formerly Consul-General at Shanghai, and Consul and Judge of the Supreme Court, J TangtSlft-Klang. 
Shanghai. [ 

0. 1. T. George James Turner. r 

Barrister-at-law, Lincoln's Ins. Editor of SeUct Pleat of tht forests for the Selden { Wapenttka. 
Society. [ 

G.fla. George SainTsbury, D.CX., LLJ>. • • . ' fSPT'i^*^! 5 - \. 

See%n7^yhWa^ . \ ™^^**^**\ 

C viiion, Francois; Voltaire* 
0. W. F. George Walter Protkero, M.A., Lrrr.D., LL.D. 



G. H. C George Herbert Carpenter. 



Editor of the Quarterly Review. Honorary Fellow, formerly Fellow ot King/a 
College. Cambridge. Fellow of the British Academy. Professor of History in the 
University of Edinburgh, 1894-1899. Author of Life and Times of Simon a* MonU 



% 



fort; &c. Joint-editor of the Cambridge Modem History. 

Major George William Redway. /wiM«riw» tim *i*A 

Author of The War of Secession, 1861-1862; Fredericksburg', a Study in War. \ WUMniw » <«* rW. 

0. W. T. Rev. Gritotbes Wheeler Thatcher, M.A., B.D. . (SSSSfmSS^ 1 

•■' Wteden of Camden College. Sydney, N.S.W. Formeriy Tutor In Hebrew and Old J™* ** *H fll i 

Testament History at MaiuncW College, Oxford. I ZatBaEnanati; Zahalr. 



INITIALS AND HEADINGS OF ARTICLES 



IX 



EC.R. 

IDs. 
ELI.* 

&P.0. 
EH.C. 

1H.W. 
lift. 

H.I.CL 
8.U. 

H.LJ. 

LLC. 
H.EV. 

LLt 

ESt 
&S*. 

E.W.C.D. 

■.*.«.• 

LA. 

LJ.CL 



Hcch CmSHOLic, MA. 

Formerly Scholar of Corpus Cbristi College, Oxford. Editor of Che 1 1th edition of ' 
• the Encyclopaedia Brilannica. Co-editor of the 10th edition. 

JUv. Homcb Caster Hovey, A.M., D.D. 

Fellow of the American Association for the Advancement of Science, the Geological 
Society of America, the National Geographic' Society and the SocietedeSpOeologie. 
Author of Celebrated American Caverns ; Handbook of Mammoth Cam of Kentucky; 
Ac 

HfPPOLYTE DeLEHAYE, S J. 

Bollandtst. Joint Editor of the Acta Sanctorum; uod the Analecta BoUandiana 

Herbert Edward Ryle, M.A., D.D. 

Dean of Westminster. Bishop of Winchester. 1903-101 1. Bishop of Exeter, toot- 
lo °3* Formerly Hulsean Professor of Divinity in the University of Cambridge;' 
and Follow oC King's College. Author of On Holy Scripture and Criticism ; Ac Ac. 

Haas FftiEDtiCH Gaoow, M.A., Ph.D., F.R.S. 

Strickland Curator nod Lecturer 00 Zoology ia the University of Cambridge. 
Author of " Amphibia and Reptiles " in the Cambridge Natural History; Ac 

Sib Henry Hardince Cunynchame, K.C.B., M.A. 

Assistant Under-Secretary, Home Office, London. Vice- P resident, Institute of, 
Electrical Engineers. Author of various works on Enameflmg, Electric Lighting, 



Waiter, John; 

Ward, Mnl 

Wilde, Oeear. 

Wordsworth, WflUami!* part). 



WyfjBdotto Cm*. 



tt;Vttnf,SL 



Westeott, Brooks Pom. 



VIP*. 



Witch (in Part). 



Rev Henry Herbebt Williams, M.A. f 

Fellow. Tutor and Lecturer in Philosophy, Hertford College, Oxford. Examining i Will: Philosophy. 

Chaplain to the Bishop of Llandaff. I - r-v 

Henry Jackson, M.A., Lttt.D., LL.D., O.M. 



Rents* Professor of Greek In 'the University of Cambridge, and Fellow of Trinity 
College. Fellow of the British Academy. Author of Tents to iUustrate the History of 



Creeh Philosophy from tholes to A 



ademy. 
ristotle. 



f Xenoerttes; 
< Xenophanet of 
[ZmoofBta, 



Xeoophanat of Colophon; 
Zenoof T 



Henry James Chaney, I.S.O\ fi$4»~Teci6). - 

Formerly Superintendent of the Standards Department of the Board of Trade, 
and Secretary to the Royal Commission on Standards. Represented Great Britain 

at the International Conference on the "' ' ' - * " '"" 

Weights and Measures. 



i Metric System, loot. Author of Treatise on 



Horace Lamb, M.A., LL.D., D.Sc.» FJELS. 

Professor of Mathematics in the University of Manchester. Formerly Fellow and 
Assistant Tutor of Trinity College. Cambridge. Member of Council of the Royal 
Society, 1894- 1896. Royal Medallist. 190a. President of London Mathematical 
Society, 1902-1904. Author of Hydrodynamics', Ac 

Hejtby Lewis Jones, M.A., MJD., F.R.C.P., M.R.C.S. 

Medical officer in charge of the Electrical Department and Clinical Lecturer on , 
Medical Electricity at St Bartholomew's Hospital, London. Author of Medical 
Electricity, Ac. 

Hector Monro Chadwice, M.A. 

Fellow and Librarian of Clare College. Cambridge.- and University Lecturer In 
Scandinavian. Author of Studies on Anglo-Saxon Institutions. 

-Herbebt Murray Vaocham, M.A., F-S.A. 

Keble College. Oxford. Author of The Last of the Royal Stuarts', The Medici 
Popes; The Last Stuart Queen. 

Henry Richarb Teooeb, F&A. 

Secretary and Librarian of the Athenaeum Club. London* 
Henry Sturt, M.A. 

Author of Jdela Theatri; The Idea of a Free Church; Personal Idealism. 

Henry Sweet, M.A., Ph.D., LL.D. 



University Reader in Phonetics, Oxford University. Corresponding Member of the . 
Academies of Munich, Berlin, Copenhagen and Helsingbors. Author ox X History 
ofBmoUsh Sounds since the Earliest Period; A Primer of Phonetics ; Ac 



Henry Wiluam Carless Davis, M.A. 

Fellow aod Tutor of Balliol College. Oxford. Fellow of All Souls College. Oxford, 
1895-1009. Author of England under the Normans and A ngeoins \ Charlemagne. 

Rxv. Henry Wheeler Robinson, M.A. 

Pr o f essor- of Church History in Rawdon College. Leeds. Senior KtanjaXt Scholar, 
Oafordf iool. Author of ,; Hebrew Psychology ia Relation to Pauline Anthropo- 
logy " an Mansfield College Essays ; Ac 

Israel Abrahams, M.A. 

Sendee in TalmudSc and Rabbinic, literature in the University of Cambridge. 
Formerly President. Jewish Historical Society of England. Author of A Short 
History of Jewish Literature \ Jewish Life in the Middle Ages ; Judaism ; Ac 

Isaac Josun Cox, Ph.D. 

Asvjettht Piafcasoft of History In the University of Cincinnati. President of the 
Ohio Vajley Historical AssncMoev AniJkpf .eTXJ* Journeys, of £a SaOe and his 



Weights sad I 

Scientific End Commercial. 



X-Ray 



WnlBK Geography ami 
Statistics and History. 

Wood, Anthony ft. 

VIscnftf, Frledrteh Tnoodor, 



Wace, Robert; 
Walter of Coventry; 
WUlhun L,Ktaf of] 

IL, King of England; 

ofRewbsjrgh. ' 
ZechBdah (in pari}. 



Wise, bate 
2^BJ,LeoBohL 



/ajley I 
mtons;i 



X 
J.A.B. 

J.A.F, 

J. A.H. 
J.Bt. 

J.Bu. 
J.B.O. 

J. F.-K. 

J.F.nTL. 
J.G*. 
J.G.B. 
J. G. M. 

JO. It 

J.O.So. 

J.B.F. 
J.H.M. 

J. J. L.* 

I.L.W. 
J. Mm. 

Lit; 

i. n. g. 

J.M.J. . 
J.H.H. 



INITIALS AND HEADINGS OF ARTICLES 



lings Alfred Ewino. C.B., LL.D., F.R.S., M.Inst.C.E. 

Director of (British) Naval Education. Hon. Fellow of Kind's College. Cambridge. 
Professor of Mechanism and Applied Mechanics in the University of Cambridge, 
1890-1903. Author o(Tk*Striit£tk 4 Ma*ritd$; doc. 

John Ambrose Fleming, M.A.. D.Sc., F.R.S. 

Pender Professor of Electrical Engineering in the University of London. Fellow of 
University College. London. Formerly Fellow of St John's Coucge, Cambridge* 



Watt, 



>llege, London, 
and University Lecturer on Applied Ma ch a n i n 
Current*. 



John Allen Howe. 

Curator and Librarian of the Museum of Practical Geology, London. Author of 
The Geology of Building Stones. 

James Bartlett. 

Lecturer on Construction, Architecture, Sanitation, Quantities, Ac, at King's 

College, London. Member of the Society of Architects. Member of the Institute of 

Junior Engineers. 
John Burroughs. 

See the biographical article: BURROUGHS, John. 

Julius Emu. Olson, B.L. 

Professor of Scandinavian Languages and Literature at the University of Wisconsin. 
Author of Norwegian Grammar and Reader. 

James Fitzmaurice-Keuy, LmJTX, F.R.Hist.S. 

Gilmour Professor of Spanish Language and Literature, Liverpool University. 
Norman McColl Lecturer. Cambridge University. Fellow of the British Academy. 
Member of the Royal Spanish Academy. Knight Commander of the Order of 
Alphonso XI I. Author of A History of Spanish Literature ; Ac 



John Fergusson M'Lennan. 
See the biographical article: 



M'Lennan, John Kebcusson. 



James Gairdner, C.B., ULD. 

See the biographical article:' Gairpner, James. 

JosEPn G. Horner, A.M.I.Mech.E. 

Author of Plating and Boiler Making ; Practical Metal Turning; Ac ■ 

John Gray McKendrick, M.D.. LL.D., F.R.S H F.R.S. (Edinj. 

Emeritus Professor of Physiology in the University of Glasgow. Professor of 
Physiology, 1876-1906. Author of Life in Motion', Life ofHdmkoUt; Ac 

John Geoxce Robertson, M.A., Ph.D. 

Professor of German Language and Literature, University of London. Editor of the 
Medem Language Journal. Author of History of German Literature; SchUUr after 
Century; Ac 

Sir Tames George Scott, K.C.I. E. 

Superintendent and Political Officer, Southern Shan States. Author of Burma-, 
The Upper Burma Gawetteer. 

John Henry Freese. M.A. 

Formerly Fellow of St John's College, Cambridge. 

John Henry Middlston, M.A., LrrrD., F.S.A., D.CX. (1846-1806). 

Slade Professor of Fine Art in the University of Cambridge, 1886-189$. Director 
of the Fiuwilliam Museum, Cambridge. 1889-1802. Art Director of the South 
Kensington Museum.. 1892-1896. Author of The Engraved Gems of Classical 
Times 1 lUuminaled Manuscripts in Classical and Medieteal Times. 

Rev. John James Lias, M.A. 

Chancellor of Uandaff Cathedral. Formerly Hulsean Lecturer in Divinity and Lady 

Margaret Preacher, University of Cambridge. Author of Miracles, science and 

Prayer \ Ac 
Jessie Laidlay Weston. 

Author of Arthurian Romances smrepresented in Malory. 

j MacQueen, F.R.C.V.S. 

>rofessor of Surgery at the Royal Veterinary College, London. Editor of Fleming's 
Operative Veterinary Surgery (2nd edition); Dun's Veterinary Medicines (10th 
edition); and Neumann's Parasites and Parasitic Diseases of the Domesticated 
Animals (2nd edition). 

John Mute, A.M, LL.D. 

Member of the American Academy of Arts and Letters. President of the Sierra 
Club and the American Alpine Club. Visited the Arctic regions on the United 
States steamer " Corwin " in search of the De Long expedition. Author of The 
Mountains of California; Our National Parks; Ac 

. John Miller Gray (1850-1894). 

Art Critic. Curator of the Scottish National Portrait Gallery, 1884-1894. Author 

of David Scott. RSJI.; James and William Tassie. 
. John Moerjs Jones. M.A. 

Professor of Welsh at the University College of North Wales, Banger. Formerly 

Research Fellow of Jesus College. Oxford. Author of The Blncumwium a* Welsh; 

Ac 

John Malcolm Mitchell. 
, Sometime Scholar of Queer, s College, Oxford. Lecturer In Classics, East London 
College (University ofLondon). Joint-editor of Gratis History of Crease. 



WeaJdea; Wtnbek Oraap. 

WaU-Mtwfags. 
■Whitman. Walt 
VtalamJ. 

Vulamtdlaha. Coot de; 
VTOena, Eukjm dt; 
ZorrilUyatoraWoU. 

< Werwolf (in part). 

J York, How oL 

{welding (m pan). 
'VTskm; 



JA -?J 



Wlelaa^Oirlsiophllartitt. 

Wa. 

Xtnofthon (In part). 

VttnrrfQs; 

Wim, Sir Christophar; 

Zueearo L-O. 

Ward. WnDam Gtorg*. 
• Wolfram yob 1 



import) 



Yostmitfc 



Wind* Sir Dual 

Wales: Litcratura and 
language. 



(m pan). 



INITIALS AND HEADINGS OF ARTICLES 



xi 



1ft. 
J.1& 

JLT.lt 

1.T.C 

JLf.E 
&W. 

IWs. 

Iff.Q. 



to. 

to. J. 

L 

i LDi* 
LT.ML 

Lift. 

LLP. 

IV 



Sine, M.A. (1843-1895). 

Asrthor Of A History of Germ a ny ; Ac L 

Joseph Shield Nicholson, M.A., ScD. 

Protestor of Political Economy at Edinburgh University. Fellow of the British 

Academy. Author of Principles of Political Economy; Money end Monetary 

Problems; Ac. 
James Smith Rtm, M.A.. LL.M. t Litt.D., LL.D. 

Piufes so i of Ancient History in the University of Cambridge and Fellow and Tutor. 

of Gonvifte and Caius College. Hon. Fellow, formerly Fellow and Lecturer, of 

Christ'* College. Editor of Cicero's Academica; De Amuitia; Ac. 

Rev. John Telfoed. 

Weafeyan Methodist Connexions! Editor. Editor of the Wesleyan Methodist. 
Magazine and the London Quarterly Review. Author of Life of John Wesley; 
Lift of Charles Wesley; Ac 



John Thomas Bealby. 

loint^author of Stanford's Europe. Formerly Editor of the ScoUisk Geographical 
Magasine. Translator of Svea Hedin's Through Asia, Central Asia and Tibet; &c. 



import). 



Wafts; 
Wealth. 



WSrttsnbteb, Dtakl Albert 



(Family); 
Wed*, John; 



Joseph Thomas Cunniw 



th- Western Polytechnic, London. Formerly Fellow 

Oxford, and Assistant Professor of Natural History in the 



(import); 
Vosja (s« port); 
Vologda: Government (in pari); 
Vialkm: Government (in part); 
Warsaw: Poland (in part); 
Yakutsk (j* pari); 
Yeniseisk (in pari). 



Lecturer on Zoology at the 

of University College. 

University of Edinburgh. Naturalist to the Marine Biological Association. 



P i u f es s oi of Geology and, 
Author of The Dead Heart 



James Vebnon Babtlet. M.A., D.D. 

Professor of Church History, Mansfield College, Oxford. Author of The Apostolic 
Age; ax. 

Jambs Whliams, M.A., D.C.L., LL.D. 

AH Souls Reader in Roman Law in the University of Oxford, and Fellow of Lincoln 
College. Barrister-at-Law of Lincoln's Ian. Author of Low of the Universities ; &c. 

Julius Weuhausen, D.D. 

See the biographical article: Wellhausbn, Julius. 

John Walteh Gbegoey, D.Sc., F.R.S. 

Pwfes s ui of Geology in the University of Glasgow. 
Mineralogy in the University of Melbourne, 1900-1904, 

James Wycupte Headlam, M.A. 

Staff Inspector of Secondary Schools under the Board of Education. Formerly 
Fellow of King's College, Cambridge, and Ih ofes sor of Greek and Ancient History at 
Queen's College, London. Author of Bismarck and the Foundation of the German 
Empire; doc 

Kael Feiedeich Geldneb, Ph.D. 

Professor of Sanskrit and Comparative Philology in the University of Marburg, 
Author of Vedisehe Studien; Ac. 

KlNCSLEY GaELAND JAYNE, 

Sometime Scholar of Wadham College. Oxford. Matthew Arnold Prizeman, 1903. 
Author of Vasco do Gama and his Successors. 

Kathleen Schlesingee. 

Editor of The Portfolio of Musical Archaeology. Author of The Instruments of the 
Orchestra. 

Count Lutzow, Lnr.D., D.Ph., F.R.G.S. 

Chamberkun of H.M. the Emperor of Austria, King of Bohemia. Hon. Member of 
the Royal Society of Literature. Member of the Bohemian Academy, &c. Author 
of Bohemia: Historical Sketch; The Historians of Bohemia (Ilchester Lecture, 
, 1904) ; The Life and Times of John Hus ; Ac 



VTnet, Atoiandra R. 

Warranty; Water Righto; 

Will (Law); 

Women (Early Low); Writ 

{zsctaiiall (in pari). 

1 Victoria: Geology; 
Western Australia: Geology. 



Louis Duchesne. 

See the biographical article: Duchesne, Louis M. 0. 

Leveson Fbanoe Vhenon-Haecoust, M.A., M.Inst. C.E. (1830-1907). 

riuftssor of Civil Engineering at University College. London. iSto-toos. Aatbor of 
Stums and Canals; Harbours and Docks', Chm Engineering as apphed in Con* 
structum;&c 

Leonaed James Spenceh, M.A. 

AeaWrast In the Department of Mineralogy. British Museum. Formerly Scholar of . 
Sidney Sussex College, Cambridge, and Harkness Scholar. Editor of the Minera- 
logicdMotemne. 

Lewis Richaed Faeneix, M.A., Litt.D. 

FeUow and Senior Tutor of Exeter College. Oxford. University Lecturer in Classical 
Archaeology: and Wilde Lecturer la Comparative Religion. Author of Cults of 
GroehSkJes;Boe*mtionofBMigion, 



WtodttOTSt, Lodwlf. 

ZMd-A rot»; ZofOtstaj . 

Xaffor, FrtJMlseo tfe. 

VtoDs; Viol; Vbflnal; 
Wted Instnnwals; 
Xylophone. 

iUkaWoan. 
{ Victor L-H. (Popes). m 



Lma Vhiau. 

Italian Foreign Omce (Emigration Department). r _ r „ 

sponde nt in the East of Europe. Italian Vice-Consul in New Orleans, 1906; Phila* 
delphnv 1007; and Boston, 



Formerly Newspaper Corre- 
in New Orleans, 1906: Phila* 
1907-1910, Author of Italian Life in Town and Country ; 



WeysOMs; Winsmlto; 
Wltherite; } 
ZtoBtss; Zofcite. 

Zens. 



Victor 



xH INITIALS AND HEADINGS OF ARTICLES 

L. W. Lucicn Woit. ( 

Vice-President, formerly President, of the Jewish Historical Society of EngUnd. i 
Joint-editor of the Bibitotheca AngUhjudaica. I 

H. A. B. Lady Broome (Mary Anne Broome). J u,^*^— *«^«««. ojw-. 

Author of Station Life in Hew Zealand; Stones About; Colonial Memories; Sec. \ weil *» Australia. Ut story. 

M. Bo. Malcolm Bell. J mmMm «^.^ sjwju^ir 

Author oi Pewter Plate; Sir R. Bume- Jones: a Record and Review. \ Walfc, Gtoigi ftatekfc. 

H. Br. Margaret Bryant. { Virgil: The Virgil Legend. 

M.C. Rt. Rev. Mandell Creighton.D.CL., LL.D. 

See the biographical article: Crsighton, Mandell. 

M. CaV Morttz Cantor, Ph.D. 

Honorary Professor of Mathematics in the University of Heidelberg. Hofrat of 
the German Empire. Author of VorUsungen uber die Ccsckickte der Mathematth ; Ac. 

H. H. 8. Marion H. Spielkann. F.S.A. 

Formerly Editor of the Magazine of Art. Member of Fine Art Committee of Inter- 
national Exhibitions of Brussels. Paris, Buenos Aires. Rome, and the Franco-British . 
Exhibition, London. Author of History of " Punch "; British Portrait Pointing 
to the opening of the iQth Century; Works of C. F. Watts, R.A.; British Sculpture 
and Sculptors of To-Day; HenrieUe Ronner; &c 

H. W. T. Northcote Whttridce Thomas, M.A. 

Government Anthropologist to Southern Nigeria. Corresponding Member of the . 
Socict6 d 'Anthropologic de Paris. Author ol Thought Transference; Kinship and 
Marriage in Australia; &c 



P. A. K. Prince Peter Alexetvitch Rropotkin. 

See the biographical article: Krofotkin, Prince P. A. 



Vlota, Franco*. 



Wanton, Emlle; 
Wood-engraving (in part\. 



Week* 

Werwolf {in part); 

WitehonfL 

Vladimir: Government {in fori) ; 
Volga (in part); 
Vologda: Government (in part) ; 
Vyatka: Government (in part); 
Warsaw: Poland (in part); 
Yakutsk (in part); 
Yenisaisk (m part). 



P. C M. Peter Chalmers Mitchell. M.A., D.Sc, LL.D., F.Z.S., F.R.S. . 

Secretary of the Zoological Society oPLondon. University Demonstrator in Com- J Zoological Gardens; 
parative Anatomy and Assistant to Linacre Professor at Oxford, 188&-1891. 1 TAAiartoMl llnmaiieJafiira 
Author of Outlines of Biology; &c* [ * OBW|Wii, ««"■«»"«*• 

P. GL Peter Giles, M.A., LL.D., Lrrr.D. f W- 

Fellow and Classical Lecturer of Emmanuel College, Cambridge, and University J *• 
Reader in Comparative Philology. Formerly Secretary of the Cambridge Pluto- | Y. 
logical Society. Author of Manual of Comparative Philology. [ 2. 



P. G. B Philip Gilbert Hamerton. J mmt * mmkm - m * htm tim ^a 

See the biographical article: Hamerton. Philip Gilbert. \ Wood-engraving (in pari). 

ist.f\ 



P. G. K. Paul George Konody. 

Art Critic of The Observer and The Daily Mail. Formerly Editor of The Artist, i Watteau. Antolne. 
Author of The Art of Walter Crane; Velasquez, Life and Work; &c 1 

P. S. Philip Schidrowttz, Ph.D., F.C.S. e 

Member of the Council. Institute of Brewing; Member of the Committee of the J Whisky; 
Society of Chemical Industry. Author of numerous articles on the Chemistry and 1 Win*. 
Technology of Brewing. Distilling; &c { 

P VL Paul Vtnocradoff, D.C.L., LL.D. / VlUagt Communities; 

See the biographical article: Vxnogradoff, Paul. \ Vlllonafo. 

R. A. W. Colonel Robert Alexander Wahab, C.B., C.M.G., CLE. 

Formerly H.M. Commissioner, Aden Boundary Delimitation. Served with Tirah J vnman 
Expeditionary Force, 1897-1898, and on the Anglo-Russian Boundary Commission, * ****** 
Pamirs, 1895. 

R. C. D. Romesh Chunder Dutt, CLE. (184&-1900). 

Fellow of the Royal Society of Literature; Member of the Royal Asiatic Socit.,. 

Barrister-at-Law, Middle Temple. Formerly Revenue Minister of Baroda State, -J VMyRSagar, If WAT Chandim. 

and Prime Minister of Baroda Sute. Author of Economic History of India in T 

Victorian Age, 1837-1900; &c 

See the biograpkical'artide; Garnbtt. Richard. \ WakoOoM, Edward Gibbon. 

R.G.H. Reginald Godfrey Marsden. fur^w t> a., a 

Barrister-at-Law, Inner Temple. | WWCk (in part). 

R. He. Sir Reginald Hennell, D.S.O., C.V.O. I 

Colonel in the Indian Army (retired). Lieutenant of the King's Body-Guard of the I 

Yeomen of the Guard. Served in the Abyssinian Expedition, 1867-6$; Afghan 4 Yeomen of the Guard. 
War. 1879-60; Burmah Campaign, 1886-87. Author of History of the Yeomen t r ' 
the Guard, 148$-! 004; &c. 

R. J. M. Ronald John McNeill, M.A, 

Christ Church. Oxford. Rf 
St Jama's Gazette (London). 



iciety. 
State. «h 
in the 



iald John McNeill, M.A. f 

Christ Church. Oxford. Barrister-at-Law, Lincoln's Inn. Formerly Edhbr of the < WentWOrth (Family). 

St James' 's Gazette (London). I v J 



INITIALS AND HEADINGS OF ARTICLES 



xm 



LLD. 



*.!*• 



LLP. 



B.B.B. 



a.p.t. 

B.I.C. 

B.W.F.H. 
1A.CL 

IK. 
IP. 

T.aVa. 

T.A.A. 
T.A.CL 

T.tta. 



Sot Robert Ksnnaway Douglas. 

Formerly Professor of Chinese, King's College, London. Keeper of Oriental Printed 
Books and MSS. at the BritsmMuseum. 1892-1907. Member of the Chinese- 
Consoler Service. 1858-186$. Author of The Language and Literature of China; 
Europe and the Far East; 4c 



Richard Lydekke*, F.R£., F.G.S,, F.Z.S. 
Member of the Staff of the Geological Sun 
Catalogue of Fossil Mammals, Reptiles and B\ 
of all Lands; The Came Animals of Africa; i 



&c. 



of India. 1874-1882. Author of 
in the British Museum; The Deer 



Reginald Lank Pools, M.A., Ph.D., LL.D. 
Keeper of the Archives of the Unr 
Fellow of the British Academ; 
of Wycliffe and movements ft 



., Ph.D., LL.D. r 

he University of Oxford and Fellow of Magdalen College, 
lemy. Editor of the English Historical Review. Author i 
for Reform 1 Ac [ 



Wade, Sir 

Vbeaeha; Volt; 
Wains (in fart); 
Water-Deer; Weanl; 
Whale (in pari); 
WbaJe-nataftiy; Wolf (in part); 
Wombat; Zebra (in part); 
Zwtogkal Distribution. 

WyeBffe (in part). 



Rev. Robert Munro.B.D., F.S.A. (Soot.) 
Barclay Manse, Old Kilpa trick, N. B. 



Robert NisbeT Bain (d. 1009). 
Assistant librarian. British Mi 



V 



, 1883-1900. Author of Scandinavia: the 

Political History of Denmark, Norway and Sweden, 1513-1900; The First Romanovs, 
1613-1725; Slavonic Europe: the Political History of Poland and Russia from 
1469101796; Ac 



Vitrified Forts. 



R. Phene Srama, F.S.A.. F.RXB.A. ........ . \ 

Formerly Master of the Architectural School, Royal Academy, London. Past 
President of the Architectural Association. Associate and Fellow of King's College, \ 
London. Corresponding Member of the Institute of France. Editor of Fergusson's 
History of Architecture. Author of Architecture: East and West; &c I 

Robert Seymour Conway, M.A., D.Lttt. f 

Professor of Latin and Indo-European Philology in the University of Manchester. J ifohaL 
Formerly Professor of Latin in University College, Cardiff; and Fellow of GonviHe | * wvw * 
and Caius College, Cambridge. Author of The Italic Dialects. K 

Robert William Frederick Harrison. 

Barrister-et-Law, I nner Temple. Assistant Secretary of the Royal Society, 

Stanley Arthur Cook. r _ . _ 

Lecturer h Hebrew and Syriac. and formerly Fellow, Gonvflle and Caius College. ZeDumn; 
• Cambridge. Editor for the Palestine Exploration Fund. Author of Glossary af\ 7~*~"- > " 
Aramaic Inscriptions; The Lams of Moses and the Code of Hammurabi; Critical 1 3 
Notes on Old Testament History ; Religion of Ancient Palestine; &c l 

Smon Newcomb, D.Sc., LL.D. 

SeeLbebiog^poicalartsde: Nnvcostt, Simon. 

Stzpbin Paget. F.R.C.S. 



Vladimir, St; 

Volttlnsky, Artemy Pttroytoh; 

Votontoo* (Family); 

Vorotmartj, Mihaly; 

Wanqvbt, Qlal ; 

Wesselenyl, Baron; 

WielopolskL Aktoander; 

Witowt; 

Wladlslans L-IV. of Poland. 

ZamoyskI, Jan; 

ZoIk1ewskl,Stanlilaoj; 

Zrinyl, Count (1508-1566); 

Zrinji, Coun$ (1620-1604). 

Vffla; 



,.{ 



VfolUL 



{ 

epbzn Paget. F.R.C.S. f 

Surgeon to the Throat and Ear Department. Middlesex Hospital. Hon. Secretary, 1 
fcrsfitrrh Defence Society. Author of Memoirs and Letters of Sir James Paget; Sk. I 



at Rome. Formerly Scholar of Christ 
f ^ Prise man, 1906. Member of 
of The Classical Topography 



{ 



TnovAS Asrby, M.A., D.Lrrr. 

Director of the British School of Arcl .__ 

Church, Oxford. Craven- Fellow, 1807. < 

the Imperial German Archaeological institute. 

of the Roman Campagna. 
Thomas Andrew Archer, M.A. 

Author of The Crusade of Richard I.; Ac. 

Tavozsnr Augustine Coghlan, I.S.O. 

Agent-Genera) for New South Wales. Government Statistician, New South Wales, 
1886-1905. Honorary Fellow of the Royal Statistical Society. Anthor of Wealth 
and Progress of New South Wales; Statistical Account *f Australia and New Zealand; 
Ac 

8x1 Thomas Barclay. 

Member of the Institute of International Law. Officer of the Lacion of Honour. 
Author of Problems of International Practice and Diplomacy; Ac M.P. for Black- 
burn, 1910. 

Thomas Hudson Bears, M.Inst.C.E., M.Inst.M.E. 

RegjiisJYofessor of Engineering in theJUniversitg of Edinburgh. Author of papers •{ WaJaY 



Yltarho; YeM; 
VoMnli; VoKerra; 
IVoiturno. 



Victoria: Geography and 

Statistics; 
Western Australia: Geography 

and Statistics, 



Wan Laws of; 
Waters, TerrltorJaL 



eSocictusof Ortiand M e ch a n ical Engineers, 1894-1903. 






T.B.O. 

T. W/-D. 
T. W. F. 

U.S. 
W.Ay. 

W.A.B.C. 

W.A.J.F* 

W.A.P. 

W.ti.* 

W.C.U. 

W.B.O. 

W.F.C. 

W.Hj. 

W.H.F. 

W.LO. 



INITIALS AND HEADINGS OF ARTICLES 



W. M. F. P. 

W.M.R. 

W.O.8. 

w.F.a 

W,P.* 



Tebbot Reaveley Glover, M.A.. 

Fellow and Classical Lecturer at St John's College, Cambridge. 
a t Canada, 1896-1901. Author of £ 



Queen'* University, Kingston, 

Walter Theodore Watts-Dunton. 

See the biographical article: Watts-Dunton, Walter Theodore. 



Professor of Latin, 
Virgil; Ac 



Vlrgfl (s* pari). 



Thomas William Fox: 

Professor of Textile* in the University of Manchester. 
Wearing. 



Author of Mechanics ef\ 



Count Uoo Baltani, Lm.D. 

Member of the Real* Accademia del Lincei. Sometime President of the Reale 
Societa Roman* di Storia Patria. Corre s ponding Member of the British Academy; 
Author of The Popes and the HohensUtuftn; Ac 

Wilfrid AntY, M.InstXJE. , 

Sometime SdMlarof Trinity College. Cambridge. Technical Adviser to the Standards^ 
Department of the Board of Trade. Author rd LeeeUeng and Geodesy; Ac 



Rxv. William Augustus Beevoort Cooudge, M.A., F.R.G.S.. Ph.D. 

Fellow of Magdalen College, Oxford. Professor of English History, St David's 
College, Lampeter, 1 880-1 881. Author of Guide du Haut Daupkini; The Rang* 
of the Tedi; Guide to Grindehnld; Guide to Switzerland; The Alps m Nature and 
m History; Ac Editor of the Alpine Journal, 1880-1881 ; Ac 

Walter Armttage Justice Ford. 

Sometime Scholar of King's CoHega, Cambridge. Teacher of Singing at the Royal 
College of Music, London. 

Walter Alison Phillips, M.A. 

Formerly Exhibitioner of Merton College and Senior Scholar of St John's College, 
Oxford. Author of Modern Europe; Ac. 



Tarn. 



VminL oioiainl. 



Weirhlag 



Verty; Vknse: Town; 
Vonriberg; Walensee; 
Wtokeirfed, Arnold too; 
Wlnterthv; Zug: Canton; 
Zog: Town; Zug, Lake of; 
Zttrfeh: Canton; 
Zftrieh: Town; 
Zorleh,I*ktot 



WoJLHogo. 



■{ 

an of the Joint Committee of Pottery Manufacturers of Great Britain. \ 
of English Stoneware and Earthe nwar e ; Ac I 

William Cawthorne TJnwin, F.R.S., IX.D.» aC.Inst.CE., MJnst.M.E. f 

Emeritus Professor, Central Technical College. City and Guilds of London Institute, i 
Author of Wrought Iron Bridges and Roofs; Treatise on Hydraulics-, Ac I 



William Burton, M.A., F.C.S. 

Chairman * - - - - 
Author 



Wyelifle (m pari). 
Wtd^woooVJetmk. 



Sir William Edmund Garstin, G.C.M.G. 

British Government Director, Sues Canal Co. Formerly Inspector-General of 
Irrigation, Egypt. Adviser to the Ministry of Public Works in Egypt. 1904-1908. 

William Feilden Craies, M.A. 

Barrister*t-Law, Inner Temple. Lecturer on Criminal Law, King's College,' 
London. Editor of Archbold's Criminal Pleading (33rd edition). 

William Henry. 

Founder and Chief Secretary of the Royal Life Saving Societ; 
Order of St John of Jerusalem. Joint Author of Swimming (r 
Ac 



Associate of the 
inton Library) 



Sir William Henry Flower, F.R.S. 

Sea the biographical article: Flower, Sir W. H. 

William Lawson Grant, M.A. 
Professor of C " 
Beit Lecturer 



Victoria Ryauss (in pari). 

Wager; Warrant; 

Witness, 



Wafer Polo. 

Wilms (in pari); 
Whale (in part); 
Wolf (in pari); 
Zebra (in pari). 



lwson Grant. M.A. f 

r of Colonial History, Queen's University. Kingston, Canada. Formerly J wn,.. «j. rwnui 
rturer on Colonial History, Oxford UriverrityTEditor of Acts #/ the Priey | wuson » *** ™ utl ' 
(Canadian Series). I 

•f Wordsworth, WnDam (in pari). 



Wiluam Minto, M.A. 

See the biographical article: Minto, William. 

Wiluam MacDonald, LL.D., Ph.D. 

Professor of American History in Brown University, Providence, R.I. Formerly 
P ro f essor of History and Political Science. Bowdoin. Member of the American 
Historical Association, Ac. Author of History and Government of Maine; Ac. 
Editor of Select Charters and other documents iUuttratioe of American History. 

Wiluam Matthew Flinders Petrir, F.R.S., D.C.L., LmJ). 
See the biographical article: Petrie, W. M. Flinders. 

William Michael Rossetti. 

See the biographical article: Rossetti, Dante Gabriel. 

Wiluam Oscar Scroggs. Ph.D. 

Assistant Professor of History and Economics at Louisiana State University 
Formerly Goodwin and Austin Fellow, Harvard University. 

Wiluam Prideaux Courtney. 

See the biographical article: Courtney, L. H. Baron. 



Ancient Historical. 



\ 



LZwbann, 



Wtlpola, Horatio; 
a Wilkes, Join. 



Wiluam Price James. 

Barrister-at*Law, Inner Temple. 
Romantic Professions; Ac 



High Bailiff. Cardiff County Court. Author o( 



Watson, 



(**«). 



INITIALS AND HEADINGS OF ARTICLES 



xv 



W.P.B. 

W.BL 

I.1B. 

W.T.C*. 

W.Wr. 
W.W.F* 

W.W.B* 
W.T.I. 



Hon. William Pembzk Rkevzs. i 

Director of the London School of Economics. Agent-General and High Com- 
missioner for New Zealand, 1896-1909. Minister of Education, Labour and Justice, 4 
New Zealand, 1891-1896.. Author of The Long White Chad: a History of Norn 
- --■ —' 1 fie I 



V0f* 



William Ridceway, M.A., D.Sc., Lrrr.D. i 

Disney Professor of Archaeology, and Brereton Reader in Classics, in the University 
of Cambridge. Fellow of Gonville and Caius College.- Fellow of the British 1 
Academy. President of the Royal Anthropological Institute, 1908. Author of The 
Eariy Age of Greece; Ac 

William Smyth Rockstro. 



tox^oijlGreo* History of Musicjromtk* Infancy of r -H Mf: *T«W (•» Port), 



Period; Ac. 



I Webar. 



I Water-flea; 
I Wood-louse. 



William Thomas Caiman, D.Sc., F.Z.S. I 

Assistant in charge of Crustacea, Natural History Museum, South Kensington. <j 
Author of " Crustacea," in a Treatise on Zoology, edited by Sir E. Ray 1 ankester. I 

Wiluston Walker, Ph.D., D.D. [_„,. • «.#-..,«% 

Professor of Church History. Yale University. Author of History of the Conpego- i Wlnthrop, John (1588-1649). 
m^mal Ouches in the UnitedSUsUs t J%eRefonnation^ I 

William Wabob Fowlex, M.A. 

Fellow of Lincoln College, Oxford. Sub-rector, 1881-1904. Gifford 
Edinburgh University, 1908. Author of The City-Slate of the Greeks 
The Roman Festioals of Uu RtpubHcan Period; Ac. 

William Walks* Rockwell, Lic.Theol. 

Assistant Professor of Church History, Union Theological Seminary, New York. 

William Young Sella*, LL.D. 

See the biographical article: Sella a, William Youmo. 



>rd Lecturer, J 
end Romans;] 



«[ Westinmster, Synods oL 
J Vlrgfl (» farti. 



PRINCIPAL UNSIGNED ARTICLES 




Whj. 



Watertown. 


Wlgan. 


Wyoming. 


Wax Figures. 


Wight, Isle oL 


Wyoming Valley. 


Weimar. 


Wigtownshire. 


Yale University. 


Wefl. 


Wflkes-Barr*. 


Yarmouth, 


Welb. 


Williamsburg (Va.). 


Yaws. 


Weft battel. 


WlDow. 


Yellow Fever. 


Westmeata. 


Wilmington (Dei). 


Yellowstone National 


Westminster. 


Wilton. 


Park. 


Westmorland. 


Wiltshire. 


Yew. 


Westphalia. 


Winchester. 


Yeso. 


West Point (H.Y.). 


Windsor. 


York. 


Watt Virginia. 


Winnipeg. 


Yorkshire. 


Weiford. 


Wire. 


Yorktown. 


Weymouth. 


Wisconsin. 


Ypellantt. 


Wheat. 


Wisconsin, University 


Yucatan. 


Wheeling. 


oL 


Yukon. 


Whig and Tory. 


Woolwich, 


Zante. 


Whist. 


Worcester. 


Zansibar. 


Whttey. 


Worcestershire. 


W-fffrnfl, 


Willi nana. 


Worms. 


Zeoxis. 


Wkooplng-Coiign. 


Wrestling. 


Zinc 


Wiektow. 


Writing. 
Wtottemberg. 


Eireonlom. 
ZulderZee. 



Wftnburg. 



ENCYCLOPEDIA BRITANNICA 

ELEVENTH EDITION 

VOLUME XXVIII 



, in botany, the English name for Vicia sotiva, also 
known as tare, a leguminous annual herb with trailing or climb- 
ing stems, compound leaves with five or six pairs of leaflets, 
reddish-purple flowers borne singly or in pairs in the leaf-axis, 
sad a silky pod containing four to ten smooth seeds. The 
• 3d form, sometimes regarded as a distinct species, V. anputi- 
fcXa, is common in dry soils, There are two races of the 
cultivated vetch, winter and spring vetches: the former, a 
hardy form, capable of enduring frost, has smoother, more 
cylindrical pods with smaller seeds than the summer variety, 
and gives less bulk of stem and leaves. The spring vetch is a 
■or ******** plant and grows more rapidly and luxuriantly 
than the winter variety. 

The name vetch is applied to other species of the genus 
Via*. Vide mohu, bitter vetch, and V. sybatka, wood 
Another British plant, Hippocnpis, 
i vetch from the fact of its pod breaking 
Joints. AwtkyBis 



a kidney-vetch, a herb with heads of usually yellow flowers, 
found on dry banks. Astrqalus is another genua of Legumi- 
imsir. and is known as milk-vetch. 

Vetches are a very valuable forage crop. Being indigenous 
to Britain, and not fast id ious in regard to soil, they can be 
csitrrmaed s ucce s sf ully under a great diversity of circumstances, 
sad ate well adapted for poor soils. By combining the winter 
aed spring varieties, and making several sowings of each in its 
season at intervals of two or three weeks, it is practicable to 
save them fit for use from May till October, and thus to cany 
««t a system of soiling by means of vetches alone. But it is 
ssnaOy more expedient to use them in combination with grass 
aad dovcr, beginning with the first cutting of the latter In May, 
taking the winter vetches in June, recurring to the Italian 
ryegrass or clover as the second cutting is ready, and afterwards 
biu a giug the spring vetches into use. Each crop can thus be 
ased when in its best state for cattle food, and so as gratefully 
to vary their dietary. 

Wimtm ?«*£*«.— There is no botanical difference between 
waster and spring vetches, and the seeds being identical in 
appearance, caution is required in purchasing seed to get it of 



the right sort. Seed grown hi England is found the moat 
suitable for sowing in Scotland, as it vegetates more quickly, 
and produces a more vigorous plant than that which is home- 
grown. As the great inducement to cultivate this crop is the 
obtaining of a supply of nutritious green food which shall be 
ready for use about the ist of May, so as to fill up the gap which 
is apt to occur betwixt the root crops of the previous autumn and 
the ordinary summer food, whether for grazing or soiling, it is 
of the utmost importance to treat it in such a way that it may be 
ready for use by the time mentioned. To secure this, winter 
tares should be sown in August if possible, but always as soon 
as the land can be cleared of the preceding crop. They may 
yield a good crop though sown in October, but in this case will 
probably be very little in advance of early-sown spring vetches, 
and possess little, if any, advantage over them in any respect. 
The land on which they are sown should be dry and well sheltered, 
clean and in good heart, and be further enriched by farmyard 
manure. Not less than 3} bushels of seed per acre should be 
sown, to which some think it beneScial to add half a bushel of 
wheat. Rye is frequently used for this purpose, but it gets 
reedy in the stems, and is rejected by the stock. Winter beans 
are better than either. The land having been ploughed rather 
deeply, and well harrowed, it is found advantageous to deposit 
the seed in rows, either by a drilling-machine or by ribbing. 
The latter is the best practice, and the ribs should be at least 
a foot apart and rather deep, that the roots may be well 
developed before top-growth takes place. As soon in spring as 
the state of the land and weather admits of it, the crop should 
be hoed betwixt the drills, a top-dressing at the rate of 40 bushels 
of soot or a cwt. of guano per acre applied by sowing broadcast, 
and the roller then used for the double purpose of smoothing 
the surface so as to admit of the free use of the scythe and of 
pressing down the plants which may have been loosened by 
frost. It Is thus by early sowing, thick seeding and liberal 
manuring that this crop is to be forced to an early and abundant 
maturity. May and June are the months In which winter 
vetches are used to advantage. A second growth will be 
produced from the roots if the crop is allowed to stand; but it 
Is much better practice to plough up the land as the crop is 



VETERAN— VETERINARY SCIENCE 



cleared, end to sow turnips upon it After a tun crop of vetches, 
land is usually in a good state for a succeeding crop. When the 
whole process has been well managed, the gross amount of cattle 
food yielded by a crop of winter vetches, and the turnip crop 
by which it is followed in the same summer, will be found 
considerably to exceed what could be obtained from the fullest 
crop of turnips alone, grown on similar soil, and with the same 
quantity of manure. It is useless to sow this crop where game 
abounds. 

Spring vetches, if sown about the tst of March, will be ready for 
use by the ist of July, when the winter vetches are just cleared 
off. To obtain the full benefit of this crop, the land on which it 
is sown must be clean, and to keep it so a much fuller allowance 
of seed is required than is usually given in Scotland. When the 
crop is as thick set as it should be, the tendrils intertwine, and 
the ground is covered by a solid mass of herbage, under which 
no weed can live. To secure this, not less than 4 bushels of 
seed per acre should be used If sown broadcast, or 3 bushels if in 
drills. The latter plan, if followed by hoeing, is certainly the 
best; for if the weeds are kept in check until the crop is fairly 
established, they have no chance of getting up afterwards. 
With a thin crop of vetches, on the other hand, the land Ss so 
certain to get foul, that they should at once be ploughed down, 
and something else put in their place. As vetches are in the 
best state for use when the seeds begin to form in the pods, 
repeated sowings are made at intervals of three weeks, beginning 
by the end of February, or as early in March as the season admits, 
and continuing till May. The usual practice in Scotland has 
been to sow vetches on part of the oat break, once ploughed 
from lea. Sometimes this does very well, but a far better 
plan is to omit sowing clover and grass seeds on part of the 
land occupied by wheat or barley after a crop of turnips, and 
having ploughed that portion in the autumn to occupy it with 
vetches, putting them instead of " seeds " for one revolution of 
the course. 

When vetches are grown on poor soils, the most profitable 
way of using them is by folding sheep upon them, a practice 
very suitable also for clays, upon which a root crop cannot 
safely be consumed in this way. A different course must, 
however, be adopted from that followed when turnips are so 
disposed of. When sheep are turned in upon a piece of tares, 
a large portion of the food is trodden down and wasted. Cutting 
the vetches and putting them into racks does not much mend 
the matter, as much is still pulled out and wasted, and the 
manure unequally distributed over the land. To avoid those 
evils, hurdles with vertical spars, betwixt which the sheep can 
reach with head and neck, are now used. These are set close 
up to the growing crop along a considerable stretch, and shifted 
forward as the sheep eat up what is within their reach. This 
requires the constant attention of the shepherd, but the labour 
is repaid by the saving of the food, which being always fresh and 
clean, docs the sheep more good. A modification of this plan 
is to use the same kind of hurdles, but instead of shifting them 
as just described, to mow a swathe parallel to them, and fork 
this forward within reach of the sheep as required, repeating 
this as often during the day as is found necessary, and at night 
moving the sheep close up to the growing crop, so that they may 
lie for the next twenty-four hours on the space which has yielded 
food for the past day. During the night they have such pickings 
as have been left on the recently mown space and so much of the 
growing crop as they can get at through the spars. There is 
less labour by this last mode than the other, and having practised 
it for many years, we know that it answers well. This folding 
upon vetches is suitable either for finishing off for market sheep 
that are in forward condition, or for recently weaned lambs, 
which, after five or six weeks' folding on this clean, nutritious 
herbage, are found to take on more readily to eat turnips, and to 
thrive better upon them, than if they had been kept upon 
the pastures ail the autumn. Sheep folded upon vetches 
must have water always at command, otherwise they wOI not 
prosper. 

As spring-sown vetches are in perfection at the season when 



pastures usually get dry and scanty, a common practice is to 
cart them on to grass land and spread them out in wisps, to be 
eaten by the sheep or cattle. It is, however, much better either 
to have them eaten by sheep where they grow, or to cart them to 
the homestead. 

VETERAN, old, tried, experienced, particularly used of a 
soldier who has seen much service. The Latin veteran** (veins, 
old), as applied to a soldier, had, beside its general application 
in opposition to tiro, recruit, a specific technical meaning in the 
Roman army. Under the republic the full term of service 
with the legion was twenty years; those who served this period 
and gained their discharge (missio) were termed emeriti. If they 
chose to remain in service with the legion, they were then called 
velerani. Sometimes a special invitation was issued to the 
emeriti to rejoin; they were then styled evocati. 

The base of La* vttus meant a year, as seen in the Cr. fr« (for 
Ftret) and Sanskrit vaisa ; from the same base comes vilulut, a calf, 
property a yearling, vitetlus, a young calf, whence O. Fr. veet, modern, 
won, English " veal," the flesh of the calf. The Teutonic cognate of 
vitulus is probably seen in Goth, withnts, lamb, English "wether," 
a castrated ram. 

' VETERINARY SCIENCE (Lat. velerinarius, an adjective 
meaning "connected with beasts of burden and draught,'* 
from veterinus, " pertaining to yearlings," and vittdus, " a calf "), 1 
t)ie science, generally, that deals with the conformation and 
structure of the domesticated animals, especially the horse; 
their physiology and special racial characteristics; their breed- 
ing, feeding and general hygienic management; their pathology, 
and the preventive and curative, medical and surgical, treat- 
ment of the diseases and injuries to which they are exposed; 
their amelioration and improvement; their relations to the 
human family with regard to communicable maladies; and 
the supply of food and other products derived from them for 
the use of mankind. In this article it is only necessary to 
deal mainly with veterinary science in its relation with medicine, 
as other aspects are treated under the headings for the par- 
ticular animals, Sx. In the present edition of the Encyclopaedia 
Britannica the various anatomical articles (see Anatomy for a 
list of these) are based on the comparative method, and the 
anatomy of the lower animals is dealt with there and in the 
separate articles on the animals. 

/■ffrfory. 

There is evidence that the Egyptians practised veterinary 
medicine and surgery in very remote times; but it is not until 
we turn to the Greeks that we obtain any very definite informa- 
tion with regard to the state of veterinary as well as human 
medicine in antiquity. The writings of Hippocrates (460-377 
B.c) afford evidence of excellent investigations in comparative 
pathology. Diodes of Carystus, who was nearly a contem- 
porary, was one of the first to occupy himself with anatomy, 
which he studied in animals. Aristotle, too, wrote on physiology 
and comparative anatomy, and on Use maladies of animals, 
while many other Greek writers on veterinary methane are 
cited or copied from by Varro, Columella and Galen. And we 
must not overlook Mago of Carthage (aoo n.c), whose work in 
twenty-eight books was translated into Greek and was largely 
used by Varro and Columella. 

1 Regarding the origin nr ilie wmd ■ veterinary," the following 
occurs in DVArbovaia DirinntwAim dt m/tUdne et &e ckirurgte 
vMrina$r$s, edited by Zundei (1H77), in. 814: " Le» mots 
veterinaria et vrUnnortm £taient employes par les Roroains pour 
designer: le pranfee, la m£dccine dw b&te* de somme; le second, 
pour indiquer orlui qui U ; -r.it iqij ah : le rrn.it ifterinae indiquait lea 
bfites de somme, et Hzit la contraction de veketerinae, du verba 
stfcre, nortec tircr, train™-, Lftymologie reclle du mot itHrinair*. 
ou plutat du mat vtitrmanux <k* Remain*, Kiait d 'apres Lenglet 
encore plus anctenrc; *l]e viendrait du ceftique, d'ou je mot strait 
p a ss e " ches les Ronuins; tct auieur fait venir le mot de vet, betafl 
(d'o* tfafamaati Vieh). H*t*n t t\n malade (d + ou t'allemand Zihta 
consomptioo), sit ou fffti, aniii?, nttkkcia (d'ou laJlemand 
4rstQ. 



VETERINARY SCIENCE 



tht3 titer the conquest of Greece the Romans do not appear 
to have knows much of veterinary medicine. Varro (116-48 ax.) 
>t _ M _ — may be considered the first Roman writer who dealt with 
JT^^ animal medicine In a scientific spirit in his Z)» RtRustko, 
m amm . in three books, which is largely derived from Greek writers. 
CeJsus is supposed to have written on animal medicine, 
and Columella (1st century) is credited with having utilized those 
ichtMcto veterinary science in the sixth and seventh parts of his 
De R* Rustic*, one of the best works of its class of ancient times; 
it craats not only of medicine and surgery, but also of sanitary 

lass for the suppression of contagious diseases. From the 

3rd centmry onwards veterinary science had a literature of its own 
and regular practitioners, especially in the service of the Roman 
armies {ntmomedici, osteriuarii). Perhaps the most renowned 
v e t erina ria n of the Roman empire was Apsyrtus of Bithynia, who 
ia 333 accompanied the expedition of Constantine against the Sar- 
sBarians in his professional capacity, and seems to have enjoyed a 
high and well-deserved reputation in his time. He was a keen 
observer; he distinguished and described a number of diseases 
which were badly denned by his predecessors, recognized the 
eosttagjous nature of glanders, farcy and anthrax, and prescribed 
ssnhtsoa for their suppression ; he also made interesting: observations 
on acciden ts and diseases of horses' limbs, and waged war against 
certain absurd empirical practices then prevailing in the treatment 
of itiiiasf. indicating rational methods, some of which are still 
■11 ns if ally employed in veterinary therapeutics, such as splints 
far fractures, sutures for wounds, cold water for the reduction of 
pjcJapaed vagina, hot baths for tetanus, Ac Not less eminent was 
fr ir , Cr4#. s the successor of Apsyrtus, whose writings he largely 
copied, but with improvements and valuable additions, especially 
as the hjgkne and training of horses. Felagonius, again, was a 
writer of empirical tendency, and his treatment of disease in general 
was moat irrational Publius Vegetius (not to be confounded with 
Flavins} Vegetius Renatus, who wrote on the military art) was a 
' r author of the end of the «h century, though less dlstln- 
I than Apsyrtus, to whom and to Felagonius he was toa great 
indebted in the preparation of his Mulomedkina sue Art 
Veusrimmria, He appears to have been more of a horse-dealer than 
a veterinary practitioner, and knew next to nothing of anatomy, 
which seems to have been but little cultivated at that period. He 
was very s upestiti ous and a believer in the influence of demons and 
sorcerer*; nevertheless, he gives some interesting observations de- 
rived from fab travels. He had also a good idea of aerial infection, 
seeogxdaed the utility of disinfectants, and describes some operations 
as* l e fen e d to by previous writers, such as removal of calculi from 
die bladder through the rectum, couching for cataract, the extirpa- 
tion of certain glands, and several serious operations on the horse's 
foot. Though inferior to several works written by his predece ss ors, 
the mTmitmuttifina of Vegetins maintained its popularity through 
may centuries. Of most of the ancient veterinary writers we know 
Turle beyoud what can be gathered from the citations and extracts 
a the two great collections of ftippiotrico and Geofonica compiled 
bv order of Constantine Porphyrogenitus in, the loth century. 



of 

practitioners 
extant. Ger- 



It ss uunojtasa ry to dwell here on the progress of the veterinary 
an daring the middle ages. Towards the dose of the medieval 
period the subject was much cultivated in the cavalry 
Italy; and Spam also had an organised system of good pi 
as the 15th century, who have left many books still ext 
easy was far behind, and literature on the subject did not exist 
■b* d the end of the 15th century, when in 149a there was published 
asoBywJously at Augsburg a Pferdearsneibnchtein. In the following 
century the influence of the Italian writers was becoming manifest, 
and the works of Fugger and Fayser mark the commencement 
of a new era. FayserV treatises. Von der GesUUerei and Von der 
Zmdkt der Kriegs- and BUrger-Pferde (IS20-97), are remarkable for 
is ■ iisslir j and good sense. In Great Britain animal medicine was 
perbapsi sn a more advanced condition than in Germany, if we 
acrepc the e v idence of the Ancient Lams and Institutes of Wales 
Loocksa, 1841); yet it was largely made up of the grossest super- 
" Among the Celts the healer of horse diseases and the 
i held in high esteem, as among the more civilized nations 
, and the court farrier enjoyed special privileges. * The 
town works in English appeared anonymously towards 
lencement of the 16th century, vis. Propertees and 
tjor a Horse and Mascal of Oxen, Horses, Skeehes, Hogges, 
Ds+grn. The word " mascal " shows that the latter work was in its 
o~5?si Italian. There is no doubt that in the 15th century the 
uxr-rasrag taste for horses and horsemanship brought Italian nding- 
rasters and farriers into England; and it is recorded that Henry 
\ III. brought over two of these men who had been trained by 
Grimae ia the famous Neapolitan school. The knowledge so intro- 
discod became popularised, and assumed a concrete form in Blunde- 
+-He'% Pomre Ckiefest Offices belonging to Horsemanship (is66), which 
*rm many references to horse diseases, and, though mainly a 
pJ Sf^Sw, fa yet enriched with original observations. In the 




1. Woriamning and Starcrafl of Early England (3 vols. 

• Sea FsBssssg, Horseshoes and Horse-Shoeing (London. 1869). 



century the anatomy of the domesticated animals, 
it entirely neglected, began to receive attention. A wore on 
comparative anatomy by Volcher Koyter was issued at Nuremberg 
in 1573* about the same time a writer in Germany named Copho 
or Cophoo published a book on the anatomy of the pig, in which 
were many original remarks on the lymphatic vessels; and Jehan 
Hervard in France produced in 1504 his rather incomplete Bippo- 
OsUolork. But by tar the most notable work, and one which main- 
tained its popularity for a century and a half, was that of Carlo 
Rulni, a senator of Bologna, published in 1598 in that city, and 
entitled DeW Anatomia a delt Infirmita del Cavollo, e sued Remediu 
Passing through many editions, and translated into French and 
German, this book was for the most part original, and a remarkable 
one for the time in which it was composed, the anatomical portion 
being especially praiseworthy. English books of the 17th century 
exhibit a strong tendency towards the improvement of veterinary 
medicine and surgery, especially as regards the horse. This is even 
more notable in the writings of the 18th century, among which may 
be particularized Gibson's Farrier* s New Guide (1719), Method of 
Dieting Hones (17*1) and (best of all) his New Treatise en the 
Diseases of Horses, besides Braken's, Burdon's, Bridge's and Bartlet's 
treatises. Veterinary anatomy was greatly advanced by the Anatomy 
of an Horse (1663) of Snape, farrier to Charles II., illustrated with 
copperplates, and by the still more complete and original work of 
Stubbs, the Anatomy of the Horse (1706;, which decidedly marked 
a new era ia this line of study. Of foreign works it may suffice to 
mention that of Soueysel, Veritable parfatt marischal (1664), which 
passed through many editions, was translated into several languages, 
and was borrowed from for more than a century by different writers. 
Sir W. Hope's Compteat Ho rseman (1696) is a translation from 
Soueysel by a pupiL 

Modern Schools and Colleges.— The most important era in the 
history of modern veterinary science commenced with the Institution 
of veterinary schools. France was the first to take the 
great initiative step in this direction. Buffon had recom- 
mended the formation of veterinary schools, but his 
recommendations were not attended to. Claude Bourgelat 



Umemiml 



(17x2-1 799) , an advocate at Lyons and a talented hippolo- mmwm9 • 
gist, through his influence with Bertin, prime minister under Louis 
XV., was the first to induce the government to establish a veterinary 
school and school of equitation at Lyons, in 1761. This school' 
he himself directed for only a few years, during which the great 
benefits that had resulted from it justified an extension of its teaching 
to other parts of France. Bourgelat, therefore, founded (1766) at 
Alfort, near Paris, a second veterinary school, which soon became, 
and has remained to this day. one of the finest and most advanced 
veterinary schools in the world. At Lyons he was replaced by the 
Abbe Rozier, a learned agriculturist, who was killed at the siege 
of Lyons after a very successful period of school management, 
during which he had added largely to agricultural and physical 
knowledge by the publication of his. Journal de Physique and Court 
d" Agriculture, Twenty years later the Alfort school added to its 
teaching staff several distinguished professors whose names still 
adorn the annals of science, such as Daubcrton, who taught rural 
economy; Vfc'd'Azyr, who lectured on comparative anatomy; 
Fourtroy, who undertook instruction in chemistry; and Gilbert, 
one of its most brilliant pupfls, who had veterinary medicine and 
surgery for his department. The last-named was also a distinguished 
agriculturist and published many important treatises on agricultural 
as well as veterinary subjects. The position he had acquired, added 
to hl» profound and varied knowledge, made him most useful to 
France during the period of the Revolution. It Is chiefly to him 
that it is indebted for the celebrated Rambouillet flock of Merino 
sheep, for the conservation of the TuUerics and Versailles parks, 
and for the creation of the fine experimental agricultural estab- 
lishment organized in the ancient domain of Sceaux. The Alfort 
school speedily became the nursery of veterinary science, and the 
source whence all similar institutions obtained their first teachers 
and their guidance. A third government school was founded in 
1825 at Toulouse; and these three schools have produced thousands 
of thoroughly educated veterinary surgeons and many professors 
of high scientific repute, among whom may be named Boufey, 
Chauveau, Colin, Toussaint, St Cyr, Goubaux, Arloing, Galtier, 
Nocard, Trasbot, Neumann. Cadiot and Leclaincbe. The opening 
of the Alfort school was followed by the establishment tA national 
schools in Italy (Turin, 1769), Denmark (Copenhagen, 1773), Austria 
(Vienna, 1775)* Saxony (Dresden. 1770), Prussia (Hanover, 1778; 
Berlin, 1790), Bavaria (Munich, T790), Hungary (Budapest, 1787) 
and Spain (Madrid, 1793); and soon government veterinary schools 
were founded in nearly every European country, except Great 
Britain and Greece, mostly on a munificent scale. Probably all, 
but especially those of France and Germany, were established as 
much with a view to training veterinary surgeons for the army as 

* — *■" * ' " "" In 1907 France possessed thrc - 

TourfKhai 



for the requirements of civil life. In 1007 1 
national veterinary schools, Germany had six, 



Russia four (Kharkov. 



Dorpat. Kazan and Warsaw), Italy six. Spain five, Austria-Hungary 
three (Vienna, Budapest ami Lembcrg), Switzerland two (Zurich 
aod Bern), Sweden two (Skara and Stockholm). Denmark, Holland, 
Belgium and Portugal one each. In 1849 a government veterinary 



VETERINARY SCIENCE 



school mi established at Constantinople, and in 1861 the goyero- 
ment of Rumania founded a school at Bucharest* The veterinary 
schools of Berlin, Hanover and Vienna have been raised to the 
position of universities. 
In 1790 St Bel (whose real name was Vial, St Bel bans; a village 
' ' > paternal estate), after studying at the 



near Lyons, where was his | 



Lyons school and teaching both at Alfort and Lyons, came 
to England and published proposals for founding a school 
in which to instruct pupus in veterinary medicine and 
surgery. The Agricultural Society of Odiham, which had been 
meditating sending two young men td the Alfort school, elected 
him an honorary member, and delegated a committee to consult 
with him respecting his scheme. Some time afterwards this 
committee detached themselves from the Odiham Society and formed 
an institution styled the Veterinary College of London, of which 
St Bel was appointed professor. The school was to be commenced 
and maintained by private subscription. In March 1792 



ments were made for building temporary stabling for fifty horses 
and a forge for shoeing at St Pancras. The college made rapid 
progress in public estimation, notwithstanding considerable pecuniary 
embarrassments. As soon as the building was ready for the recep- 
tion of animal patients, pupils began to be enrolled; and among the 
earliest were some who afterwards gained celebrity as veterinarians, 
as Bloxam, Blaine, R. Lawrence, Field and Bracy* Clark. On the 
death of St Bel in August 1793 there appears to have been some 
difficulty in procuring a suitable successor; but at length, on the 
recommendation of John Hunter and Cline, two medical men were 
appointed, Coleman and Moorcroft, the latter then practising as a 
veterinary surgeon in London. The first taught anatomy and 
physiology, and Moorcroft, after visiting the French schools, directed 
the practical portion of the teaching. Unfortunately, neither of 
these teachers had much experience among animals, nor were they 
well acquainted with their diseases; but Coleman (1765^1839) had 
as a student, in conjunction with a fellow-student (afterwards Sir 
Astlejr Cooper), performed many experiments on animals under the 
direction of Cline. Moorcroft, who remained only a short time at 
the college, afterwards went to India, and during a journey in 1819 
was murdered in Tibet. Coleman, by his scientific researches and 
energetic management, in a few years raised the college to a high 
standard .of usefulness; under his care the progress qf the veterinary 
art was such as to qualify its practitioners to hold commissions in 
the army; and he himself was appointed veterinary surgeon- 
general to the British cavalry. In 1831 he was elected a fellow of 
the Royal Society. Owing to the lack of funds, the teaching at 
the college must have been very meagre, and had it not been for 
the liberality of several medical men in throwing open the doors 
of their theatres to its pupils for instruction without fee or reward, 
their professional knowledge would have been sadly deficient. 
The board of examiners was for many years chiefly composed of 
eminent members of the medical profession. Coleman died in 
1839, and with him disappeared much of the interest the medical 
profession of London took in the progress of veterinary medicine. 
Vet the Royal Veterinary College (first styled " Royal during the 
presidentship of the duke of Kent) continued to do good work in 
a purely veterinary direction, and received such public financial 
support that it was soon able to dispense with the small annual 
grant given to it by the government. In the early years of the 
institution the horse was the only animal to which much attention 
was given. But at the instigation of the Royal Agricultural Society 
of England, which gave j£zoo per annum for the purpose, an addi- 
tional professor was appointed to investigate and teach the treatment 
of the diseases of cattle, sheep and other animals; outbreaks of 
disease among these were also to be inquired into by the officers 
of the college. This help to the institution was withdrawn in 1875. 
but renewed and augmented in 1886. For fifteen years the Royal 
Agricultural Society annually voted a sum of £500 towards the 
expenses of the department of comparative pathology, but in 190a 
this grant was reduced to £200. 

As the result of representations made to the senate of the uni- 
versity of London by the governors of the Royal Veterinary College, 
the university in 1906 instituted a degree in veterinary science 
(B.Sc.). The possession of this degree does not of itself entitle 
the holder to practise as a veterinary surgeon, but it was hoped that 
an increasing number of students would, while studying for the 
diploma of the Royal College of Veterinary Surgeons, also adopt the 
curriculum which is necessary to qualify for the university examina- 
tions and obtain the degree of bachelor of science. To provide 
equipment for the higher studies required for the university degree, 
the Board of Agriculture and Fisheries in 1906 made a grant to 
the college of £800 per annum. At this school post-graduate instruc- 
tion isgivenon the principles of bacteriological research, vaccination 
and protective inoculation, the preparation of toxins and vaccines 
and the bacteriology of the specific diseases of animals. 

The London Veterinary School has been the parent of other schools 
in Great Britain, one of which, the first in Scotland, was founded by 
Professor Dick, a student under Coleman, and a man of great per- 
severance and ability. Beginning at Edinburgh in 1819-20 with 
only one student, in three years he gained the patronage of the 
Highland and Agricultural Society of Scotland, which placed a small 
sum of money at the disposal of a committee appointed by itself 



to take charge of a department of veterinary surgery it had fonnebV 
This patronage, and very much in the way of material assistance 
and eacooragesnent, were continued to the lime of Dick's death in 
1866. During the long period in which he presided over the school 
considerable p rog r e ss was made in diffusing a sound knowledge of 
veterinary medicine in Scotland and beyond it For many years 
his examining board, which gave certificates of proficiency under the 



his examining board, which gave certificates of proficiency under the 
auspices of the Highland and Agricultural Society, was composed of 
the most distinguished medical men in Scotland, such as Goodsis; 
Syme, Lizars, Sallingall, Simpson and Knox. By his will Dick 
vested the college in the lord provost and town council of Edinburgh 
as trustees, ana left a large portion of the fortune he had made to 
maintain it for the purposes for which it was founded. In 1859 
another veterinary school was established in Edinburgh by John 
Gamgee, and the Veterinary College, Glasgow, was founded in J 863 
by James McCalL Gamgee's school was discontinued in 1865; 
and William Williams established in 1873 the " New Veterinary. 
College/' Edinburgh. This school was transferred in 15)04 to the 
university, Liverpool. In 1900 a veterinary school was founded in 
Dublin. 

In 1844 the Royal College of Veterinary Surgeons (to be carefully 
distinguished from the Royal Veterinary College) obtained its 
charter of incorporation. The functions of this body were until 
1881 limited almost entirely to examining students taught in the 
veterinary schools, and bestowing diplomas of membership on those 
who successfully passed the examinations conducted by the boards 
which sat in London and Edinburgh. Soon after the Royal College 
of Veterinary Surgeons obtainedits chatter of incorporation, a 
difference arose be t ween the college and Dick, which resulted in the 
latter seceding altogether from the union that had been established, 
and forming an independent examining board, the Highland and 
Agricultural Society of Scotland granting certificates ofpjroficiency 
to those students who were deemed competent. This schism 
operated very injuriously on the progress of veterinary education 
and on professional advancement, as the competition engendered 



was of a rather deteriorating nature. After the death < 



ick in 



1866, the dualism in veterinary licensing was suppressed and the 
Highland Society ceased to grant certificates. Now there is only 
one portal of entry into the profession,and the veterinary students 
of England, Ireland and Scotland must satisfy the examiners 
appointed by the Royal College of Veterinary Surgeons before they 
can practise thetr'profession. 

Before beginning their professional studies students of veterinary 
medicine must pass an examination in general education equivalent 
in every respect to that required of students of human medicine.. 
The minimum length of the professional training is four years of 
three terms each, and during that course four searching examinations 
must be passed before the student obtains his diploma or licence to 
practise as a veterinary surgeon. The subjects taught in the schools 
Jiave been increased in numbers conformably with the requirements 
of ever extending science, and the teaching is more thorough and 
practical. During the four years' curriculum, besides the pre- 
liminary technical training essential to every scientist, the student 
must study the anatomy and physiology of the domesticated animals, 
the pathology and bacteriology of the diseases to which these animals 
are exposed, medicine, surgery, hygiene, dietetics and meat inspec- 
tion, and learn to know the results of disease as men post mortem or 
in the slaughter-house. 

In 1881 an act of parliament was obtained protecting the title of 
the graduates of the Royal College of Veterinary Surgeons and 
conferring other advantages, not the least of which is the power 
granted to the college to remove the names of unworthy members 
from its register. In some respects the Veterinary Surgeons Act is 
superior to the Medical Act, while it places the profession on the 
same level as other learned bodies, and prevents the public being 
misled by empirics and impostem. 

In 1876 the college instituted a higher degree than membership— 
that of fellow (F.K.C.V.S.), which can only be obtained after the 
graduate has been five years in practice, and by furnishing a thesis 
and passing a severe written and oral examination on pathology and 
bacteriology, hygiene and sanitary science, and veterinary medicine 
and surgery. Only fellows can be elected members of the examining; 
boards for the membership and fellowship diplomas. The graduates 
of the Royal College of Veterinary Surgeons registered from its 
foundation in 1844 until 1907 numbered about 6000. 

In the British army a veterinary service was first instituted at the 
beginning of the 19th century, when veterinary surgeons with the 
relative rank of lieutenant were appointed to regiments of cavalry, 
the royal artillery and the royal wagon train. After the Crimean 
War, and consequent on the abolition of the East India Company 
(which then possessed its own veterinary service), the number of 
veterinary surgeons employed was increased, and in 1878 they were 
constituted a department, " with distinctive uniform, instead of 
being regimental officers as was previously the case. At the same 
time they were all brought on to a general roster for foreign service, 
so that every one in turn has to serve abroad. In 1903 the officers 
of the department were given substantive rank, and in 1904 were 
constituted a " corps, " with a small number of non-commissfonedl 
officers and men under their command and specially trained by them. 
In 1907 the Army Veterinary Corps consisted of 167 officers and «ao> 



VETERINARY SCIENCE 



I oaken and men. The men are stationed at the 

, sis. Woolwich depot, Aldershot, Bulford and the 

Cunagh, bat when trained are available for duty under veterinary 
ofieers at aay station, and a proportion of them are employed at 
the various hospitals in South Africa. Owing to their liability to 
service abroad in rotation, it follows that every officer spends a 
comkkzable portion of his service in India, Burma, Egypt or South 
Africa. Each tour abroad is five yean, and the average length of 
srrvicr abroad is about one-half the total. This offer* a wide and 
varied field for the professional activities of the corps, but naturally 
ratals a corresponding strain on the individuals. Commissions 
— * r — ' ■ s obtained by examination, the candidates having 



pre v iously qualified as members of the Royal College of Veterinary 
Surgeon*. Promotion to captain and major is granted at five and 



fifteen years' service respectively, and subsequently, by 
to Ixvtenaat-colooel and colonel, as vacancies occur. The 
general has the honorary rank of major-general. 

The Indian civil veterinary department was at first recruited 
from the A. V. Corps, but candidates who qualified as members of 

. the R.C.V.&. were subsequently granted direct appoint- 

"■' meats by the India (Mice, by selection. The service is 
paid and prr*"-"'* on the lines of the other Indian civil services, 
tad offers an excellent professional career to those whose constitu- 
te permits them to live in the tropics. The work comprises the 
investigation of disease in animals and the management of studs 
ird (arms, in addition to the clinical practice which falls to the share 
of aQ veterinary surgeons. 

In India there are schools for the training of natives as veterinary 
ifwjus in Bombay, Lahore, Ajmere and Bengal. The courses 
extend over two and three yean, and the instruction is very thorough. 
The \pvttMon are officers of the Indian civil veterinary depart- 
ment, and graduates are given subordinate appointments in that 
■ernes* «r had ready employment in the native cavalry or in civil 
be. 

la the United States of America, veterinary science made very 
slow ptmuu s until 1884, when the Bureau of Animal Industry 
. . _ . was- established in oonnmrion with the Department of 
U"** Agriculture at Washington. The immediate cause of the 
~ rtt formation of the bureau was the urgent need by the 
Federal government of official information concerning the nature 
and prevalence of animal diseases, and of the means required to 
oaatrol and eradicate them, and also the necessity of having an 
esntive agency to carry out the measures necessary to Stop the 
saread 01 ftirrrr* and to prevent the importation of contagion into 
Se country, as well as to conduct investigations through which 
father knowledge might be obtained. In 1007 the bureau consisted 
«f «■ drvwions, employing the services of 615 veterinary surgeons. 
It deals with the investi ga tion , control and eradication of contagious 
oneasea of animals, the inspection and quarantine of live stock, 
l sa^Uucdi ng, experiments m feeding, diseases of poultry; and the 
issnecriua of meat and dairy produce. It makes original investiga- 
ones a* to the nature, cause and prevention of communicable 
jnssri of five stock, and takes measures for their repression, 
linissinli in conjunction with state and territorial authorities. It 
prepmrea tuberculin and mallein, and supplies these substances free 
el charge to public health officers, conducts experiments with 

1 =- £ — j agents, and prepares vaccines, sera and antitoxins for 

— , Jon of animals against disease It prepares and publishes 

of srieotinc investigations and treatises on various subjects 

" e stock. The diseases which claim most attention are 

sheep scab, cattle mange, venereal disease of horses, 




t rt^ ss V u is of cattle and pig*, hog cholera, glanders, anthrax, 
rter, and parasitic diseases of cattle, sheep ami horses, 
r of the work of the bureau on the health and value of 
„ ■*** and their products is well known, and the people of 
fx tinned SUtes,now realize the immense importance of veterinary 

*V^Jw»rr schools were established in New York Gty in 1846, 
fionaa m iSafl. Chicago in 1883, and subsequently in Kansas 
Cry and elsewhere, but these, like those of Great Britain, were 
The American Veterinary College, N.Y., 



I m 1875. ia connected with New York University, and the 
NY. State Veterinary College forms a department of Cornell 
Lwverwtr at Ithaca. Other veterinary .schools attached to sate 
csrmvfcawj or agricultural colleges are those in Philadelphia. Pa.; 
GJwawbwjL Ohio; Ames. Iowa; Pullman, Washington; Auburn, 
" nhattan, Kansas; and Fort Collins, Colorado. Other 



k Manhattan, -___ , „ 

teterutary colleges are in San Francisco; Washington, D.C. (two) ; 

Grand Rapids, Michigan; St Joseph, Missouri ; aodCinonnati, Ohio. 

In Canada a veterinary school was founded at Toronto in 1862. 

aed four years later another school was established at Montreal. 

_ _ For some yean the Montreal school formed a department 

°"" ■* of McGffl University, but in 1902 the veterinary branch 
was dacasttaaued. Veterinary instruction in French is given by 
the faculty of comparative medicine at Laval University. The 
f laufssn Department of Agriculture possesses a fully equipped 
* — r service employing about 400 qualified 
\ as inspectors of live stock, meat and dairy 



In the Australian commonwealth there is only one veterinary 
school, which was established in ^Melbourne, Victoria, in 1888. 
The Public Health Departments of New South Wales, . . _ 
Western Australia, Tasmania and the other states employ *•■»■**» 
qualified veterinary surgeons as inspectors of live stock, cowsheds, 
meat and dairy produce. 

There is no veterinary school in New Zealand, but the Depart- 
ment of Agriculture has arranged to establish one at Wellington 
in connexion with the investigation laboratory and farm 
of the di vision of veterinary science at Wallaceville. The 
government employs about forty qualified veterinarians 
as inspectors of live stock, abattoirs, meat-works and dairies. 

In Egypt a veterinary school with French teachers was founded 
in 1830 at Abu-Zabel, near Cairo, by Clot-Bey. a doctor of menicine. 
This school was discontinued in 184a. The Public Health - , 
Department in 1001 established at Cairo a new veterinary ** 7 ^* 
school for the instruction of natives. Ten qualified \ 



surgeons are employed in the sanitary sci 

Each of the colonies Natal, Cape Colony, Transvaal, Orange River 
Colony, Swaziland, Bechuanaland and Rhodesia has a veterinary 
sanitary police service engaged in dealing with the - aut + 
contagious diseases of animals. Laboratories for the juhou 
investigation of disease and the preparation of antitoxins 
and pr otectiv e sera have been established at Grahamstown, Pretoria 
and Pie lei inaritzburg. 

Characteristics of Veterinary Medicine. 

Veterinary medicine has been far less exposed to the vagaries 
of theoretical doctrines and systems than human medicine. 
The explanation may perhaps be that the successful practice 
of this branch of medicine more clearly than m any other 
depends upon the careful observation of facts and the rational 
deductions to be made therefrom. No special doctrines seem, 
in later times at least, to have been adopted, and the dominating 
sentiment in regard to disease and its treatment has been a 
medical eclecticism, based on practical experience and anatomico- 
pathological investigation, rarely indeed on philosophical or 
abstract theories. In this way veterinary science has become 
pre-eminently a science of observation. At times indeed it has 
to some extent been influenced by the doctrines which have 
controlled the practice of human medicine— such as those of 
Broussais, Hahnemann, Brown, Rasori, Rademacher and others 
— yet this has not been for long: experience of them when 
tested upon dumb unimaginative animals soon exposed their 
fallacies and compelled their discontinuance. 

Of more moment than the cure of disease is its prevention, 
and this is now considered the most important object in con- 
nexion with veterinary science. More especially is this the case 
with those contagious disorders that depend for their existence 
and extension upon the presence of an infecting agent, and 
whose ravages for so many centuries arc written largely in the 
history of civilization. Every advance made in human medicine 
affects the progress of veterinary science, and the invaluable 
investigations of Davaine, Pasteur, Chauveau, Lister and 
Koch have created as* great a revolution in veterinary prac- 
tice as in the medicine of man. In "preventive medicine'* 
the benefits derived from the application of the germ theory 
are now realized to be immense; and the sanitary police 
measures based on this knowledge, if carried rigorously into 
operation, must eventually lead to the extinction of animal 
plagues. Bacteriology has thrown much light on the nature, 
diagnosis and, cure of disease both in man and animals, mid it 
has developed the beneficent practice of aseptic and antiseptic 
surgery, enabling the practitioner to prevent exhausting 
suppuration and wound infection with its attendant septic 
fever, to ensure the rapid healing of wounds, and to undertake 
the more serious operations with greater confidence of a success- 
ful result 

The medicine of the lower animals differs from that of man 
in no particular so much, perhaps, as In the application it makes 
of utilitarian principles. The fife of man is sacred; but in the 
case of animals, when there arc doubts as to complete restora- 
tion to health or usefulness, pecuniary considerations gener- 
ally decide against the adoption of remedial measures. This 
feature in the medicine of domesticated animals brings very 
prominently before us the value of the old adage that " pre- 
vention is better than cure." In Great Britain the value of 



VETERINARY SCIENCE 



veterinary pathology in the relations it bears to human medicine, 
to the public health and wealth, as well as to agriculture, has not 
been sufficiently appreciated; and in consequence but little 
allowance has been made lor the difficulties with which the 
practitioner of animal medicine has to contend. The rare 
instances in which animals can be seen by the veterinary surgeon 
in the earliest stages of disease, and when this would prove 
most amenable to medical treatment; delay, generally due to 
the inability of those who have the care of animals to perceive 
these early stages; the fact that animals cannot, except in a 
negative manner, tell their woes, describe their sensations or 
indicate what and where they suffer; the absence of those 
comforts and conveniences of the sick-room which cannot be 
called in to ameliorate their condition; the violence or stupor, 
as well as the attitude and structural peculiarities of the sick 
creatures, which only too frequently render favourable positions 
for recovery impossible; the slender means generally afforded 
for carrying out recommendations, together with the oftentimes 
intractable nature of their diseases; and the utilitarian in- 
fluences alluded to above— all these considerations, in the great 
majority of instances, militate against the adoption of curative 
treatment, or at least greatly increase its difficulties. But 
notwithstanding these difficulties, veterinary science has made 
greater strides since 1877 than at any previous period m its 
history. Every branch of veterinary knowledge has shared in 
this advance, but in none has the progress been so marked as 
in the domain of pathology, led by Nocard in France, Schutz 
and Kitt in Germany, Bang in Denmark, and McFadyean 
in England. Bacteriological research has discovered new dis- 
eases, has revolutionized the views formerly held regarding 
many others, and has pointed the way to new methods of 
prevention and cure. Tuberculosis, anthrax, black-quarter, 
glanders, strangles and tetanus furnish ready examples of the 
progress of knowledge concerning the nature and causation of 
disease. These diseases, formerly attributed to the most varied 
causes— including climatic changes, dietetic errors, peculiar 
condition of the tissues, heredity, exposure, dose breeding, 
overcrowding and even spontaneous origin— have been proved 
beyond the possibility of doubt to be due to infection 'by 
specific bacteria or germs. 

In the United Kingdom veterinary science has gained distinc- 
tion by the eradication of contagious animal diseases. For 
many years prior to 1865, when a government veterinary 
department was formed, destructive plagues of animals had 
prevailed almost continuously in the British islands, and 
scarcely any attempt had been made to check or extirpate them. 
Two exotic bovine diseases alone (contagious pleuro-pneumonia 
or lung plague and foot-and-mouth disease) are estimated to 
have caused the death, during the first thirty years of their 
prevalence in the United Kingdom, of 5,549,780 cattle, roughly 
valued at £83,616,854; while the invasion of cattle plague 
(rinderpest) in 1865-66 was calculated to have caused a money 
loss of from £5,000,000 to £8,000,000. The depredations made 
jn South Africa and Australia by the lung plague alone are quite, 
appalling; and in India the loss brought about by contagious 
diseases among animals has been stated at not less than 
£6,000,000 annually. The damage done by tuberculosis— a 
contagious disease of cattle, transmissible to other animals 
and to man by means of the milk and flesh of diseased beasts — 
cannot be even guessed at; but it must be enormous considering 
how widely this malady is diffused. But that terrible pest of 
all ages, cattle plague, has been promptly suppressed in England 
with comparatively trifling loss. Foot-and-mouth disease, 
which frequently proved a heavy infliction to agriculture, has 
been completely extirpated. Rabies may now be included, 
with rinderpest, lung plague and sheep-pox, in the category 
of extinct diseases; and new measures have been adopted for 
the suppression of glanders and swine fever. To combat such 
diseases as depend for their continuance on germs derived from 
the soil or herbage, which cannot be directly controlled by 
veterinary sanitary measures, recourse has been had to pro- 
tective inoculation with attenuated virus or antitoxic sera. 



The Board of Agriculture and Fisheries has an efficient staff 
of trained veterinary inspectors, who devote their whole time 
to the work in connexion with the scheduled diseases of animals, 
and are frequently employed to inquire into other diseases of 
an apparently contagious nature, where the circumstances are 
of general importance to agriculturists. 

Veterinary science can offer much assistance in the study 
and prevention of the diseases to which mankind are liable. 
Some grave maladies of the human species are certainly derived 
from animals, and others may yet be added to the list. In 
the training of the physician great benefit would be derived 
from the study of disease in animals— a fact which has been 
strangely overlooked in England, as those can testify who 
understand how closely the health of man may depend upon 
the health of the creatures he has domesticated and derives* 
subsistence from, and how much more advantageously morbid 
processes can be studied in animals than in our own species. 

Although as yet few chairs of comparative pathology have 
been established in British universities, on the European 
continent such chairs are now looked upon as almost indis- 
pensable to every university. Bourgelat, towards the middle 
of the x8th century, in speaking of the veterinary schools he 
had been instrumental in forming, urged that "leurs portes 
soient sans cesse ouvertes a ceux qui, charges par l'etat de la 
conservation des homines, auront acquis par le nom qu'Us 
se seront fait le droit d'interroger la nature, chercher des 
analogies, et verifier des idees dont la conformation ne peut ttre 
qu'utile a l'espece huraaine." And the benefits to be mutually 
derived from this association of the two branches of medicine 
inspired Vicq d'Azyr to elaborate his Nouteau plan de la 
constitution de la mtdecinc en France, which he presented to 
the National Assembly in 1700. His fundamental idea was to 
make veterinary teaching a preliminary (le premier degri) and, 
as it were, the principle of instruction in human medicine. His 
proposal went so far as to insist upon a veterinary school being 
annexed to every medical college established in France. This 
idea was reproduced in the Rapport sur I'instruciion puUiqut 
which Talleyrand read before the National Assembly in 1700. 
In this project veterinary teaching was to form part of the 
National Institution at Paris. The idea was to initiate students 
of medicine into a knowledge of diseases by observing those of 
animals. The suffering animal always appears exactly as it 
is and feels, without the intervention of mind obscuring the 
symptomatology, the symptoms being really and truly the 
rigorous expression of its diseased condition. From this point 
of view, the dumb animal, when it is ill, offers the samv diffi- 
culties in diagnosis as does the ailing infant or the comatose 
adult. 

Of the other objects of veterinary science there is only one 
to which allusion need here be made: that is the perfectioning 
of the domestic animals in everything that is likely to make 
them more valuable to man. This is in an especial manner 
the province of this science, the knowledge of the anatomy, 
physiology and other matters connected with these animafa 
by its students being essential for such improvement. 

Diseases of Domestic Animals. 

Considerations of space forbid a complete or detailed descrip- 
tion of all the diseases, medical and surgical, to which the 
domesticated animals are liable. Separate articles are devoted 
to the principal plagues, or murrains, which affect animals — 
Rinderpest, Foot-and-Mouth Disease, Pleuropneumonia, 
Anthrax, &c. Reference will be made here only to the more 
important other disorders of animals which axe of a communic- 
able nature. 

Diseases of the Horse, 

Every horseman should know something of the injuries, lame- 
nesses and diseases to which the horse is liable. Unfortunately 
not very much can be done in this direction by book instruction: 
indeed, there is generally too much doctoring and too little mining 
of sick animals. Even in slight and favourable cases of illness 
recovery is often retarded by too zealous and injudicious medication : 
the object to be always kept in view in the treatment of animal 
patient* is to place them in those conditions which allow nature to 



VETERINARY SCIENCE 



•paste smst freely ia restoring health. This can beat I 
in the tan of n using, which sick am mala greatly appreci 
.. . ever indifferent a hone may be to caressing or 
Ana * tioa durhur health, whea ill ha certaudyanorei 



be rendered 
late. How- 

^^ . ^ _. kmdatten- 

Imm * tioa during health, whea ill ha certainly appreciate* both, 
asd warn ia pain will often apparently endeavour to attract notice 
tad as* relief from thoae with whom heie familiar. Fresh air and 
Hfsnlinrm, quiet and comfort, should always be secured, if p ossi b le. 
The stable or loose- b ox should be warm, without being dose, and 
In* from draughts. If the weather is cold, and especially if the 
hone is ■offering from inflammation of the air-passages, it may be 
■eemvr to keep up the temperature by artificial means; but great 
en* ahosJd be taken that this does not render the air too dry to 
keathe. The surface of the body can be kept warm by ruga, and 
on legs by woollen ba nd ages, Yet a akk horse ia easily fatigued 
aod aaaoyed by too much clothing, and therefore it ia better to 
mart to artificial heating of the stable than to overload the body 
w iauwk movement by heavy wrappings. If blankets are used, at 
a sea to place a cotton or linen sheet under them, should the horse 
bre an irritable skin- For bedding, long straw should be com ' 
ai Cole as possible, since it hampers movement. Clean old 
smdast or peat-moss litter is the best. If the hoofs are s 
tad the horse, likely to be confined for some weeks, it affords 
to take off the shoes. Tying up should be avoided, if p oeai b k , 
takss it ia urgently required, the horse being allowed to move 
About or lie d aw n aa he may prefer. 

Whea a akk horse has lost his appetite, he should be tempted to 
mbyoefcrisgham suchfoodas will bewticiiig tohim. It should 
.„ begr^nfienjoentlyandmanmllqiaurtities,bmshcmkinot 
^ZT be forced on him; food will of ten be taken if offend from 
!** the hand, when it will not be eaten out of the manger. 
^* Whether the animal be fed from a bucket or from a 
ameer, any food that ia left should be thrown away, and the 
meptack* well cleaned out after each meal. Aa a rule, during 
horse r e quir e s laxative food, m order to allay fever 
torn*, while supporting the strength. The 
i the usual laxative foods employed: green 
its and barley, lucerne, carrots, parsnips, 
pwJ, bran mash, unseed and bran maah, boiled barley, " 



br tea and tmseed od. Green grass, hiceroe, and aunilar articles 
a* tsod if cat when in a wet stale, should be dried before being given. 



Based grain ahoukt be cooked with very little water, so thatTit may 
knarry and comparativel y dry when needy; a tittle ash should be 
d with it. One gallon of good gruel may be made with a pound 
ml and cold water, which should be stirred till it boils, and 
ejri uitted to simmer over a gentle fire till the fluid ia 
To make a bran maah, scald a stable bucket, throw 
put in 3 m of bran and I or- of salt, add ag 
of hotting water, stir up well, cover over and allow 
*e anna to stand for fifteen or twenty minutes until it is well 
(»htd. For a bran and linseed maah, boil slowly for two or three 
haas i h of kneeed, so aa to have about a couple of quarts of 
ark laid, to which » lb of bran and I oa» of salt may be 
attaL The whose should be stored up, covered over and allowed 
aaemiaabelosedeacribed. The thidwtlm maah the laorereadaty 
ei the horse eat it. Laaaeed tea ia made by boning I •> of Kn* 
ass ia a couple of gallons of water until the grains are quite soft, 
v . »— . ar— . . ... t . Ttthelin 



« an y be eeoan amralry made by 
ml aunwaids making up the 
adaaalf. Hay tea may be 



made by using asm water to cook 

' quantaty of water to about a gallon 
prepared by filling a bucket, after 
hay, pouring m aa much boiling water 
• ** backet wftT held, covering at over, and allowing it to stand 
aaJcoU, when the fluid may be strained off and given to the horse. 
ias forms a refreshing drink. Linseed eilj in quantities of from 



i ox. to 6 os. dairy, may be mixed with the food; it keeps the 
« condition, has a good effect on the skin and 



*maa fa a lax < 



* cmsBeted, asm sow lever or 
■I asd other eaefly digested 
•m d the foods already met 
to purpose to a certain eatc 



» epaamted, as in low fever or other weakening dis eas es , stre n gth e n - 

- " sted food must be administered, though 

r mentio ned, such aa boiled grain, answer 

_,, _ j p atent . Milk, eggs, bread and biecuits, 

ask, com, ftc^ are often prescribed with thai object. Milk amy be 
fn arsnsml or unskimmed: a little sugar may be mixed with it; 
«d me or two gallons may be given daily, according to drcum- 
•mce* One or two eggs may be given beaten up with a little sugar 
«d nucd with milk, three or four times a day, or more frequently; 
*they amy be boned hard and p owdere d , and mixed in the milk. 
A taut of stoat, am or porter may be given two or three times a day, 
» a haff to one bottle of port wine dally. Scalded oats, wkh a little 
■* added, are very useful when oonvakneence la nearly completed. 
J» * rate, a sick hone should have aa much water aa he hkea to drink, 
*°eeh k amy be neccamry ha certain cases to restrict the quantity, 
*d to have the chul taken off ; but it should never be warmer than 
YmtV. 



A* fittfe grooming aa possible should be allowed whea a hone ia 
*H eeai;. j| nVmld be Bmited to sponging the mouth, nostrils, 
■■» sad forehend with dean water, to which a little eucalyptus 



Rub the lege and can with the hand, 
ana shako or change it once a day, and it 
bodywitbaeoncloth. EasecisaJsot 



luring sicknem or injury, and the period at which it ia< 
epend upon cifcumstancea. Care must be taken that 



early , or carried too far at first. 

luired in administering medicines in the form of 



not rent 
allowed will 
it is not 

Much care ia reqi 
ball or bolus; and practice, as well aa courage and tact, 
in order to give it without danger to the administrator or 
tlmanimaL The ball should be held between the fingers ^ . 

of the first and fourth being ***»" 
second and third, which are amercers, 
the ball ; the right hand is thus made 



of the right hand, the tips t 
brought together below the 
placed on the upper aide of the ball; the ri y 

poaatble, ao aa to admit of ready maertion iato the mouth. 



The left band graapa the horae'a tongue, gently nulla it out and 
places it on that part of the right side of the lower jaw which ia 
bare of teeth. With the right band the ball is placed at the root 
of the tongue. The moment the right hand is withdrawn, the tongue 
' * be released. Thk causes the ball to be carried still farther 



back. The operator then doses the amoth and Watches the left 
side of the neck, to note the passage of the ball down the gullet. 



Many horses keep a ball in the mouth a considerable time Before 
they will allow it to go down. A mouthful of water or a handful 
of food will generally make diem swallow it readily. It ia moat 
essential to have the ball m oder at ely soft; nothing can be more 
dangerous than a hard one. 

c administer a drink or drench requires aa much care aa g 



a ball, in order to avoid choiring the horse, though it ia t 
with risk to the administrator. An ordinary glass or atone bottle 
may be used, providing there are no aharp pomte around the month; 
but either the usual arenching-honi or a tin vessel with a narrow 
mouth or spout is safer. It is necessary to raise the horae'a head, 
ao that the nose may be a little higher than the horirontal line. 
The drink must be given by a person standing on the right side 
(the attendant being in front or on the left aide of the horse), the 
cheek being pulled out a little, to form a sack or funnel, into which 
the medicine ia poured, a little at a time, allowing an interval now 
and again for the hone to swallow. If any of the fluid gets into the 
windpipe (which k ia liable to do if the head ia held too high), H 
will cauae coughing; whe re up o n the head should be instantly lowered. 
Neither the tongue nor the nostras should be i nte r f ered with. 
Powders may be given in a little maah or gruel, well stirred up, or 
in the drinking water. 

If a wide surface ia to be fomented (aa the cheat, abdomen or 
loins), a blanket or other large woollen doth should be dipped in 
water aa hot aa the hand can comfortably bear it, moderately wrung 
out and applied to the part, the heat and moisture being retained 
by covering it with a w ate rproo f sheet or dry rug. When it haa 
lost some of its beat, it should be removed, dipped in warm water 
and again applied. In cases of acute inflammation, it may be 
nm*«*-Tv to hrir-e thr -ater a little hotter; and, to avoid the 
inrouvenience- of rcmov ing the blanket, or the danger of chill whea 
it » removed, tt may be secured round the body by skewers or twine, 
the hot water being poured on the outside of the top part of the 
bfaftfcetbv*nyo>nucm«TTtveaael. To fo m ent the feet, they should be 
pWjed in a bucket <w tub (the latter with the bottom resting wholly 
on the goiund) ccriUming warm water; a quantity of mom litter put 
in The tab or bucket pn vente splashing and retains the beat longer. 

Poultices are used tor allaying pain, softening horn or other 
tsw/i v and. when antiseptic, cleansing and promoting healthy 
action in wounds, Tn be beneficial they should be large ^ ... 
ea<Jalway»kef*moUt. For applying poultices to the feet, 'naaaini 
a pircc of tacking or tetter a poultice-boot, supplied by aaddlera, 
ma> _ «-~- w*Ui advantage. Poultices are usually made with 
bran, though this haa the disadvantage of drying quickly, to prevent 
which it may be mixed wkh linseed meal or a little linseed oil. 
Antiseptk poultices containing lyaol, fatal, carbolic add or creolin, 
are very useful in the early tre a tm en t of foul and punctured wounds. 
A charcoal peuhiceu sometimes employed when there is an offensive 
smell to be got rid of . It is made by mixing linseed meal with 
boiling water and stirring until a soft mam ia produced; with this 
some wood charcoal in powder b mixed, and when ready to be 
applied some more charcoal ia sprinkled on the surface. It may bo 
noted that, in heu of them materials for poult Ices, spongiopiline 
can be usefully employed. A piece of sufficient site is steeped 
la hot water, applied to the part, covered with oiled silk or water- 
proof pheetlng, and secured by tapes. Even an ordinary sponge, 
steeped in hot water and covered with waterproof material, makes 
a good poulticing medium; it is well adapted for the throat, the 
apace between the branches of the lower jaw, as well aa for the lower 
joints of the limbs. 

Enemata or dystere are given in fevers, cons tt pstion, colic, ftc. 
to empty the poeterior part of the bowels. They can be administered 

by a large syringe capable of containing a quart or more ,, __ 

of water, with a nozzle about 13 in. long, or by a large Bm * mMt * 
funnel with a long noxxle at a right angle. Water, soap and *T 
water, or oil may be e mp l oy ed. To administer an enema r ''Uann. 
one of the horse's fore feat should be held up, while the operator 
introduces the nozzle, smeared with oil or lard, very gently and 
steadily Into the rectum, then injects the water. The quantity 
injected will depend on the nature of the malady and the sue or 
the home; from a or 4 quarts to aavaral eajleae may be used. • 



8 



VETERINARY SCIENCE 



• The epizootic diseases affecting the hone are not numerous, and 
may generally be considered as specific and infectious or contagious 
in their nature, circumstances of a favourable land leading 
to their extension by propagation of the agent upon which 
their existence depends. This agent, m most of the 



maladies, has been proved to be a 

there can be little doubt that it is so for all 

Glanders (*.*.)# or cguimta, one of the most serious maladw* of 
the horse, ass and mule, prevails in nearly every part of the world. 
It is a contagious, inoculable disease, caused by the tmciUus 
wtalUi, and specially affects the lungs, respiratory mucous 
membrane and the lymphatic system. The virulent 
agent of glanders appears to establish itself most easily among 
horses kept in foul, crowded, badly ventilated stables, or among 
such as are over-worked, badly fed or debilitated. Ganders, 
however, is always due to contagion, and in natural infection it 
may be contracted by inhalation of the bacilli, by ingestion of the 
virus with food or water, or by inoculation of a wound of the skin 
or a mucous membrane. Carnivorous animals-Hions, tigers, dogs 
and cats— have become infected through eating the flesh of gUndered 
horses; and men attending diseased horses are liable to be infected, 
especially if they have sores on the exposed parts of their bodies. 
Though in man infection through wounds is the readiest way of. 
receiving the disease, the bacillus may also obtain access through 
the digestive organs, the lungs and mucous membranes of the eyes, 
aose and lips. 

In descriptions of the equine disease sometimes a distinction is 
made between glanders with nasal ulcers and other symptoms of 
respiratory disease, and glanders of the skin, or farcy, out there is 
no essential difference between them. Glanders and farcy are doe 
to the same causal organism, and both may be acute or chronic 
Acute glanders is always rapidly fatal, and chronic glanders may 
become acute or it may terminate by apparent;recovery. 

The symptoms of acute glanders are initial fever with its accom* 
paniments, thirst, toss of appetite, hurried pulse and respiration, 
emaciation, languor and disinclination to move. Sometimes the legs 
or joints are swollen and the horse is stiff; but the characteristic 
symptoms are a greyish-yellow viscid discharge from one or both 
nostrils, a peculiar enlarged and nodulated condition of one or both 
submaxillary lymphatic glands, which though they may be painful 
very rarely suppurate, and on the nasal membrane small yellow 
pimples or pustules, running into deep, ragged-edged ulcers, and 
sometimes on the septum large patches of <ieep ulceration. The 
discharge from the nose adheres to the nostrils and upper lip, and 
the infiltrated nasal lining, impeding breathing, causes snuffling 
and frequent snorting. The lymphatic vessels of the face are often 
involved and appear as painful subcutaneous "cords" passing 
across the cheek. These vessels sometimes present nodules which 
break and discharge a glutinous pus. Aa the disease progresses, 
the ulcers on the nose increase in number, enlarge or become con- 
fluent, extend in depth and sometimes completely perforate the 
septum. The nasal discharge, now more abundant and tenacious, 
is streaked with blood and offensive, the respiration is noisy or 
roaring, and there may be coughing with bleeding from the nose. 
Painful oedematous swellings appear on the muzzle, throat, betwe en 
the fore legs; at the flank or on the limbs, and " farcy buds " may 
form on some of the swollen parts. Symp t om s of congestion of 
the lungs, or pneumonia and pleurisy, with extreme prostration, 
diarrhoea and gasping respiration, precede death, which is due to 
asphyxia or to exhaustion. 

Chronic or latent glanders generally presents few definite symptoms. 
The suspected animal may have a discharge from the dose, or an 
enlarged submaxillary gland, or both, and small unbroken nodules 
.may exist on the septum, but usually there is no visible ulceration 
of the nasal membrane. In some horses suspicion of glanders may 



be excited by lameness and sudden swelling of a joint, by proft 
staling, sluggishness, loss of condition and general untnnftine . 
of by refusal of food, rise of temperature, swollen fetlocks, with 



dry hacking cough, nasal catarrh and other symptoms of a common 
cold. With rest in the stable the horse improves, but a one-sided 
nasal discharge continues, the submaxillary gland enlarges, and, 
after an interval, ulcers appear in the nose or " farcy buds form 
on a swollen leg. In occult glanders the horse may appear to be 
in good health and be able to perform ordinary work. In these 
cases the existence of glanders can only be discovered by resorting 
to inoculation or the maUein test 

In cutaneous glanders, or farcy, jynptoms occur on the skin of 
a limb, usually a hind one, or on the body, where the lymphatics 
become raflamed-and ulcerated. The limb is much swollen, and 
the animal moves with* pain and difficulty. The lymphatic vessels 
appear as prominent tines or "cords, " hard and painful on manipula- 
tion, and along their course arise nodular swellings— the so-called 
"farcy bads." These small absoesses break and discharge a yellow, 
glutinous, blood-stained pus, leaving sores which beal very slowly. 
There is a rise of temperature with other symptoms of con* Mutiooai 



Medical treatment of glanders or farcy should not be attempted. 
The disease is dealt with under the Contagious Diseases (Animals) 
Acta. Horses which present sus p i ci o u s symptoms., or those which 



have been in contact, or have stood in the same stable whit glandered 
horses, should be isolated and tested with maUein. Animals which 
are found affected should immediately be destroyed, and thur 
harness, clothing and the utensils employed with them thoroughly 
rlransftd, while the stalls, horse-boxes and places which the horses 
have frequented should be disinfected. Forage left by glandered 
horses should be burned or fed to cattle. 

MaUein, which i* almost indispensable in the diagnosis of latent 
glanders, was discovered in x888 by Hdman, a Russian military 
veterinary surgeon, and the first complete demonstration of hs 
diagnostic value was given in 1801 by Kalning, also of Russia, 
.MaUein, prepared for the diagnosis of glanders in animals, is the 
sterilized and filtered liquid-culture of glanders bacilli. It there* 
fore does not contain even dead bacilli, but it has in solution c 



su bstan ces which are added to the liquid by the bacilli during their 
growth (McFadyean). Employed under proper precautions and 
aubcutaneously injected in a glandered horse, rnaUeia causes a 
marked rise of temperature and an extensive painful swelling at 
the seat of injection. 

Epizootic lymphangitis b a contagious eruptive disease of the 
horse caused by the cryptouccus farrimtnosus, and characterized 
by nodular swellings and suppuration of the superficial 
lymphatics. Infection can be transmitted by mediate 
or immediate contagion. The eruption usually appears ZZjT 
on the limbs, but it may occur on the body oron the head *^ 
and neck. The symptoms closely resemble those of cutaneous 
glanders or farcy,' from which this disease may readily be distin- 
guished by niicroscopic examination of the pus discharged from the 
sores, or by testing the horse with mallein. Glanders and epizootic 
lymohangftis may coexist in the same animal. It is a scheduled 
disease, and treatment should not be attempted. 

Strangles is a specific contagious eruptive fever peculiar to 
and is more especially incidental to young animals. It is 
larly characterised by the formation of abscesses in the 
lymphatic glands, chiefly those betw e en the branches of 
the lower jaw (aubmaxdlary). Various causes have been ascribed 
#__ t. j — l mM ^aagg of young horses from field to 



feeding, from 



and change of locality and climate. Bi 
by the strangles streptococcus. Languc 
on of appetite, cough, redness of the 



to hard work. 
But the 
tor and 



sole cause is infection . r 

appetite, cough, 
membrane, with discharge from the eyes and nose, and thirst are 
the earliest symptoms. ThentherekdinKulcym swallowing. 



it with the development of swelling bet we en the branches 
of the lower jaw, which Often causes the water in drinking to be 
returned through the nose and the masticated food to be dropped 
from the mout£ The swelling is hot and tender, diffused, and uni- 
formly founded and smooth; at first it is hard, with soft, doughy 
margins; but later it becomes soft in the centre* where an abscess 
is forming, and soon "points " and bursts, giving exit to a quantity 
' " * ' ' i by the t ' ' * 



is now exp erienced by the animal; the symptom* 



subside, and recovery takes place. In some cases 



l; tae symptom* 

, r _ the swelling is so 

great or occurs so dose to the larynx that the breathing ia in t erf er ed 
with, and even rendered so difficult that suffocation is threatened. 
In other cases the disease assumes an irregular form, and the swelling, 
instead of softening in the centre, remains hard for an indefinite 
time, or it may subside and abscesses form in various parts of the 
body, sometimes in vital organs, as the brain, lungs, liver, kidney*. 
&c, or in the bronchial or mesenteric glands, where they generally 
peoauceseriousconsequencea. Not unfrt^uendy a rMistular eruption 
accompanies the other symptoms. The malady may terminate- 
in ten days or be protracted for months, sometimes terminattna* 
fatally from complications, even when the animal is well nursed and 
kept m a healthy stable. 

Good nursing is the chief part of the treatment. The strength; 
should be maintained by soft nutritious food, and the body kept 
warm and comfortable: the stable or loose-box must have plenty of 
fresh air and be kept dean. The swelling may be fomented with 
warm water or poulticed. The poultice may be a little bag- con- 
taining bran and linseed meal mixed with not water and applied 
warm to the tumefaction, being retained there by a square piece 
of calico, with holes for the ears and eyes, tied down the middle of 
the face and behind the ears. If the breathing is disturbed and 
noisy, the animal may be made to inhale steam from hot water ia 
a bucket or from bran mash. If the breathing becomes very difficult, 
the windpipe must be opened and ft tube inserted. Instead of the 
swelling being poulticed, a little blistering ointment is sometime* 
rubbed over it, which hastens pointing of the abscess. When the 
abscess points, it may be lanced, though sometimes it is better to 
allow it to break spontaneously. 

It is important to distinguish strangles from glanders, and the 
distinction can, with certainty, be ascertained by retorting to the 
mallein test for glanders, or by microscopical examination of the 
pus from the strangles abscess. 

Under inuueaca several diseases are sometimes included, and ia 
different invasions it may (and doubtless does) assume vary- 
ing forms. It is a specific fever of a low or asthenic tkn^amm 
type, associated with inflammation of the.mucoua mem- ■■"■■■■■-, 
bran© going the air-passage* and aJao. sometimes with that el 



VETERINARY SCIBNCE 



9 



At various time* it has prevailed extensively over 
different parts of the world, more especially during the 18th and 
loth centuries. Perhaps one of the most widespread outbreaks 
recorded was that of 1872, on the American continent. It usually 
radiates from the district in which it first appears. The symptoms 
aire been enumerated aa follows: sudden attack, marked by ex- 
treme debility «nd stupor, with increased body-temperature, quick 
weak pome, rifors and cold extremities. The head as pendent, the 
ryetids swollen and half closed, eyes lustreless, and tears often 
■owing down the face. There is great disinclination to move; the 
body sways on the animal attempting to walk: and the limb- joints 
crack. The appetite is lost and the mouth is hot and dry; the 
bowels ate con s tipa te d and the urine scanty and high-coloured; 
there is nearly always a deep^ painful and harassing cough; on 
uncnUation of the chest* crepitation or harsh blowing sounds are 



. _ ine lining the eyelids and nose assumes 

other a bright pink colour or a dull leaden hue. A white, yellowish 
or tiuiiiih coloured discharge flows from the nostrils. In a few 
days the fever and other symptoms subside, and convalescence 
opidly sets in. la unfavourable cases the fever increases, as well 
si the prostration, the breathing becomes laboured, the cough more 
painful and deep, and auscultation and percussion indicate that the 
fangs are seriously involved, who perhaps the pleura or the heart. 
Clots sometintts form in the latter organ, and quickly bring about a 
laud termination. When the lungs do not suffer, the bowels may. 
sad with dsis complication there are, in addition to the stupor and 
tson and tenderness of the abdominal walls when pressed 



. . of colic, great thirst, a coated tongue, yellow- 

saw of the membranes of nose and eyes, high-coloured urine, con- 
stipation, and dry faeces covered with 1 
auric swelling and tenderness takes pk 
of the limbs, which may persist for a li 



Sometimes rheu- 
ejafic swelling and tenderness takes place in the muscles and joints 
' " * time, often shitting from 



a Use bsnba, wluca may persist for a long tune, often Hutting from 
kg to leg. and involving the sheaths of tendons. At other times, 
acute inflammation of the eyes supervenes, or even paralysis. 

In this diseaw good nursing is the chief factor in the treatment. 
Comfortable, dean and airy stables or loose-boxes should be pro- 
vided, and the warmth of the body and- limbs maintained. Cold 
and damp, foul air and nacleaalioess, are as inimical to health and 
«s antagonistic to recovery as in the case of mankind. In influenza 
it has been generally found that the less medicine the sick animal 
ncctves the more likely it is to recover. Nevertheless, it may be 
necessary to adopt such medical measures as the following. For 
enrstjpatioa administer enemata of warm water or give a dose of 
Siweed oil or salines. For fever give quinine or mild febrifuge 
diuretics (as liquor of acetate of ammonia or spirit of nitrous ether), 
tad, if there ss cough or nervous excitement, anodynes (such as 
extract of belladonna}. When the fever subsides and the prostration 
» great, it may be necessary to give stimulants (carbonate of 
anraoata, nitrous ether, aromatic ammonia) and tonics, both vege- 
table (gentian, quassia, calumba) and mineral (iron,copper,arsenjc). 
Some vete rina ry surgeons administer large and frequent doses of 
quinine from the onset of the disease, and* it is asserted* with 
fleet. If the abdominal organs are chiefly involved, 
may supplement the above (linseed boiled to a jelly. 
to which salt may be added, is the most convenient and best), and 
drop to allay pain (as opium and chloral hydrate). Olive ou is a 
aie fausathre in such cases. When nervous symptoms are mani- 
fested, it may be necessary to apply wet cloths and vinegar to the 
bead and neck; even blisters to the neck have been recommended. 
Bromide of potassium has been beneficially employed. • To combat 
•saammatioa of the throat, chest or abdomen, counter-irritants 
soy he resorted to, such as mustard, soap liniment or the ordinary 
vJute Kzusacnt composed of oil of turpentine, solution of ammonur 
sad ouve oft. The food should be soft mashes and gruel of oatmeal, 
•us carrots and green food, and small and frequent quantities 01 
scsJded oats in addition when convalescence has been established. 
Ooarine, maladie du coil, or covering disease of horses, is a 
* ts malady caused by the Trypanosoma equiperdum, and 
characterized by specific lesions of the male and female 
genital organs, the lymphatic and central nervous sys- 
tems. It occurs in Arabia and continental Europe, and 
baa recently been carried from France to the United States 
of America (Montana, Nebraska, the Dakota*, Iowa and 
njinots) and to Canada. In some of its features it resembles human 
vtpfcths, and it is propagated in the same manner. From one to 
*» days after coitus, or in the stallion not unfrequendy after some 
*erks. there is irritation, swelling and a livid redness of the external 
Q'Zafts of generation (in stallions the penis may shrink), followed 
b? suhealthy ulcers, which appear in successive crops, often at 
considerable intervals. In mares these are near the clitoris, which 
« frequently erected, and the animals rub and switch the tail 
About, betraying uneasiness. In horses the eruption is on the 
P*ri* and sheath. la the milder forms there is little constitutional 
disturbance, and the patients may recover in a period varying from 
!*o weeks to two months. In the severe forms the local swell- 
•R? increases by intermittent steps. In the marc the vulva is the 
•est of a deep violet congestion and extensive ulceration : pustules 
tpptar on the perinacum, tail and between the thighs; the lips of 
(he vulva are parted, exposing the irregular, nodular, puckered. 



ulcerated and lordaceous-looking mucous membrane. If the mare 
happen to be pregnant, abortion occurs. In all cases emaciation 
sets in; lameness of one or more limbs occurs; great debility is 
manifested, and this runs on to paralysis, when death ensues after 
a miserable existence of from four or five months to two years. 
In horses swelling of the sheath may be the only symptom for a 
long time, even for a year. Then there may follow dark patches 
of cxtravasated blood on or swellings of the penis; the testicles 
may become tumefied; a dropsical engorgement extends forward 
beneath the abdomen and chest; the lymphatic glands in different 
parts of the body may be enlarged; pustules and ulcers appear 
on the skin; there is a discharge from the eyes and nose; emacia- 
tion becomes extreme; a weak and vacillating movement of the 
posterior limbs gradually increases, as in the mare, to paralysis; 
and after from three months to three years death puts an end to 
loathsomeness and great suffering. This malady appears to be 
spread only by the act of coition. The indications for its suppres- 
sion and extinction are therefore obvious. They are f 1) to prevent 
diseased animals coming into actual contact, especially per coitum, 
with healthy ones; (2) to destroy the infected; and (3; as an addi- 
tional precautionary measure, to thoroughly cleanse and disinfect 
the stables, clothing, utensils and implements used for the sick 
horse. Various medicines have been tried in the treatment of 
slowly developing cases of dourine, and the most successful remedy 
is atoxyl— a preparation of arsenic. 

Horse-pox, which is somewhat rare, is almost, if not quite, identical 
wkh cow-pox, being undistinguishable when inoculated on men 
and cattle. It moat frequently attacks the limbs, though --^ 
it may appear on the face and other parts of the body. ZZl~~ 
There is usually slight fever; then swelling, heat and *^" 
tenderness are manifest in the part which is to be the seat of erup- 
tion, usually the heels; firm nodules form, increasing to one- third 
or one-half an inch in diameter; the hair becomes erect; and the 
skin, if light-coloured, changes to an intense red. On the ninth to 
the twelfth day a limpid fluid owes from the surface and mats 
the hairs together in yellowish scabs; when one of these is removed, 
there is seen a red, raw depression, whereon the scab was fixed. In 
three or four days the crusts fall off. and the sores heal spontaneously. 
No medical treatment is needed, cleanliness being requisite to 
prevent the pocks becoming sloughs. If the inflammation runs 
high, a weak solution of carbolic acid may be employed. 

Diseases of GtilU. 

The diseases of the bovine species are not so numerous as those 
of the horse, and the more acute contagious maladies are dealt 
with under Rinderpest and other articles already mentioned. 

Tuberculosis is a most formidable and widespread disease of 
cattle, and it is assuming greater proportions every year, in con- 
sequence of the absence of legislative measures for its rsftan 
suppression. It is a specific disease, contracted throrgh »#>!■■_ 
cohabitation, and caused by the Bacillus, tuberculosis, dis- 
covered by Koch in 1882. Infection takes place by inhalation of 
the bacilb or their spores, derived from the dried expectorate or 
other discharges of tuberculous animals; by Ingestion of the 
bacilli carried in food, milk or water, or by inoculation of a wound 
of the skin or of a mucous or serous membrane. Occasionally 
the disease is transmitted by an infected female to the foetus 
tn ulero. Its infective properties and communicabiHty to other 
species render it a serious danger to mankind through the con- 
sumption of the milk or flesh of tuberculous cows.^ The organs 
chiefly involved are the lymphatic glands, lungs, liver, intestine 
and the serous membranes — the characteristic tubercles or " grapes " 
varying in size from a millet seed to immense masses weighing 
several pounds. The large diffused nodular growths are found 

Erincipally in the chest and abdomen attached to the membranes 
ning these cavities. 

The symptoms somewhat resemble those of contagious pleuro- 
pneumonia (o.v.) in its chronic form, though tubercles, sometimes 
in large numbers, are often found after death in the bodies of 
cattle which exhibited no sign of illness during life and which when 
kilted were in excellent condition. When the lungs are extensively 
involved there are signs of constitutional disturbance, irregular 
appetite, fever, difficult breathing, dry cough, diarrhoea, wasting 
and debility, with enlarged throat glands, and, in milch cows, 
variation in the quantity of milk. Auscultation of the chest dis- 
covers dullness or absence of respiratory sounds over the affected 
parts of the lungs. If the animal is not killed it becomes more 
and more emaciated from anaemia, respiratory difficulty., defective 
nutrition and profuse diarrhoea. Tuberculosis of the mammary 
glands usually begins as a slowly developing, painless, nodular 
induration of one quarter of the udder. The mflk at first may be 
normal in quantity and quality, but later it becomes thin or watery 
and assumes a blue tint Cattle with tubercular lesions unaltered 
by retrogressive changes may appear to be in an ordinary state 
of health, and in such animals the existence of the disease can 
only be discovered by resorting to die tuberculin test. Tuber- 
culin, as prepared for the purpose of diagnosis, is a sterilised culture 
of tubercle bacilli, and when employed with proper precautions. 
it causes a marked rise of temperature in affected cattle, but in 



io 

non-tuberculous animals !t has no appreciable action. Medical 
treatment is of little if any avail. Preventive - measures are of the 
utmost importance. Animals proved free of tuberculous taint 
should alone be bred from, and those found diseased should be 
at once completely segregated or slaughtered. Before being used 
as food the flesh should be well cooked, and the milk from tuber- 
culous cows should be boiled or heated to a temperature of 15s* F. 

Black-quarter, or black-leg, is a specific, inoculable disease which 
occurs in young stock from a- few months to two years old, in 
nwi . various parts of the country, and generally in low-lying 
Z^ritr dam P situations. It was classed with anthrax until 
*"""■"* 1879. when Its nature was investigated by Arloing, Cor- 
nevin and Thomas, who termed it symptomatic anthrax (Ckarbon 
srmf>tomatiqiu}—e. misleading name for a disease which is perfectly 
distinct from anthrax. This disease is caused by the Bcciitus 
Ckamaei, and natural infection takes place through small wounds 
of the legs and feet or other parts. At first it is a local disease 
affecting usually a hind quarter, though sometimes the character- 
istic swelling forms on the shoulder, neck, breast, loins or flank. 
The chief symptoms are sudden loss of appetite, accelerated put 
and respiration, high temperature, debility, lameness or stiflne . 
followed by the formation of a small, painful swelling which rapidly 
increases in extent, becomes emphysematous, and in the centre 
cold and painless. Incision of the tumour gives escape to a red, 
frothy, sour-smelling fluid. This disease runs Its course very 
rapidly and, nearly always terminates fatally, even when medical 
treatment is promptly applied. Infection can be prevented by 
.resorting to protective inoculation by one of the methods intro- 
duced by Arloing, Kitt and others. The natural virus-muscle 
from the lesion, dried, reduced to powder and attenuated by heat 
at a high temperature, and apure culture of the causal organism, 
arc employed as vaccines. The vaccine is introduced subcutane- 
ously at the tip of the tail or behind, the shoulder. Immunity lasts 
for about twelve months. 

Abortion, or the expulsion of the foetus before viability, is a 
contagious disease in cows. In a herd a case of abortion or pre- 
ilftrtftmi nut* 1 ** !**■ from accident or Injury sometimes occurs, 
but when a number of pregnant females abort the cause 
Is due to specific Infection of the womb. The microbe of abortion 
inducescatarrhof the uterus and the discharge contains the infective 
agent. The virus may be transmitted by the bull, by litter.attendants, 
utensils, or anything which has been contaminated by the discharge 
from an infected cow. Whenever abortion occurs in a shed the 
cow should be at once isolated from the others, if they are pregnant, 
and cleansing and disinfection immediately resorted to, or preferably 
the pregnant cows should be quickly removed out of the shed and 
every care should be taken to keep them away from the affected cow 
and its discharges; the litter and the aborted foetus being burned 
or otherwise completely destroyed, and the cowshed thoroughly 
disinfected with quicklime. To prevent further infection, the hinder 
parts of the in-calf cows should be washed and disinfected from time 
to time. 

Contagious mammitfs a a common disease in milch cows. It 
has been investigated by Nocard and Mollereau, and proved 

~ to be caused by a streptococcus which b transmitted 

from one cow to another by the hands of the milkers. 
( The microbe gains access to the quarter by the teat and 
induces catarrhal inflammation of the milk ducts and 
sinuses, with induration of the gland tissue. This disease develops 
slowly, and except in cases complicated by suppuration, there is 
little or no constitutional disturbance, though sometimes the affected 
cows lose condition. The milk at first preserves its normal appear- 
ance, but Is less in quantity; it curdles quickly, is acid, and when 
mixed with good milk produces clotting; then it becomes thin and 
watery, and finally viscous, yellowish and foetid. At the base of 
the teat of the affected quarter induration begins and gradually 
extends upwards, and if not checked the disease passes from one 
quarter to another until the whole udder is attacked. Prevention 
can be secured by washing and disinfecting the udder and teats 
and the milkers* hands before and after milking. Diseased cows 
should be isolated, their milk destroyed or boiled and fed to pigs, 
and after each milking the teats should be injected with a warm 
solution of boracic acid or sodium fluoride. Infected cowsheds 
should be thoroughly cleansed and disinfected. 

Parturient paralysis, or mammary toxaemia, also known as milk 
fever, though neither a febrile nor a contagious malady, was until 
M „. quite recently a very fatal affection of dairy cows. It is 

y~__ caused by a nerve poison which is formed in the udder 
■"'— »oon after parturition: and, according to Schmidt, the 
toxin enters the circulation and affects especially, the central nervous 
system and the muscles, and in a less degree all the organs of the 
body. This disease usually attacks good milking cows within a 
few days of an easy labour and seldom before. the third or fourth 
parturition. In twenty-four to forty-eight hours after calving the 
cow becomes excited and restless, strikes at the abdomen with the 
hind feet, whisks the tail, lows, grinds the teeth, staggers, falls, 
makes ineffectual attempts to rise, and eventually lies comatose, 
stretched on her side with the head extended or inclined towards 
the shoulder. The eyes ate dull, injected and insensitive: general 



VETERINARY SCIENCE 



sensation, voluntary motion and the power of swallowing are tan. 
Secretion of milk fails, digestion is suspended, fermentation of the 
contents of the paunch sets in, with tympany, constipation and 
retention of urine. The pulse becomes feeble or imperceptible. 
Respiration is slow, sometimes stertorous or groaning; and the 
temperature is low or subnormal. If not treated the animal dies 
in two or three days from prolonged coma or heart failure. 

The curative treatment of this disease continued very unsatis- 
factory until 1897, when Schmidt, a veterinarian of Kolding, 
Denmark, introduced the method of injecting the teats with a 
solution of potassium iodide in conjunction with insufflation of 
atmospheric air. The immediate results of this line of treatment 
were astonishing. Rapid recovery became the rule, and in most 
cases the comatose condition disappeared in less than six hours, 
and the average mortality (40 to 60%) was reduced to 6%. 
Afterwards chinosol and other antiseptics were substituted for the 
potassium salt, and later pure oxygen or at m ospheric air alone waa 
injected into the udder, with the result of increasing the recoveries 
to 99%. 

Cowpox Is a contagious disease of much less frequent oc cu rrence 
now than formerly, probably owing to improved hygienic manage- 
ment. In many localities the disease appears In all cowmar 
heifers which have recently calved on certain farms. *^' 

There is usually a slight premonitory fever, which is generally 
overlooked; this is succeeded by some diminution in the quantity 
of the milk, with some increased coagulability, and by the appear- 
ance of the eruption or " pox " on the udder and teats. In well- 
observed cases the udder is hot and tender on manipulation for a 
day or two previous to the development of smalt pale-red nodules 
about the site of peas; these increase m dimensions to from three- 
fourths to one inch in diameter by the eighth or tenth day, when 
their contents have become fluid .and they present a depressed 
centre. This fluid, at first clear and limpid, becomes yellowish 
white as it changes to pns, and soon dries up, leaving a hard, button- 
shaped black crust, which gradually becomes detached. On the 
teats, owing to the handling of the milker or to the cow lying on 
the hard ground or on straw, the vesicles are carry ruptured and 
sores are formed, which often prove troublesome and may cause 
inflammation of the udder. 

Actinomycosis, though affecting man, horses, pigs and other 
creatures, is far more common in the bovine species. The fungua 
{Actinomyces) may be found in characteristic nodules in 
various parts of the body, but it usually invades the bones 
of the jaws, upper and lower, or the soft parts in the 
neighbourhood of these, as the tongue, cheeks, face, throat and 
glands in its vicinity. About the head the disease appears to com- 
mence with slight sores on the gums or mucous membrane of the 
mouth or with ulcers alongside decaying teeth, and these extend 
slowly into the tissues. If the jaw is affected, a large rounded 
tumour grows from it, the dense outer bone becoming absorbed 
before the increasing soft growth within. Soon the whole ^becomes 
ulcerated and purulent 'discharges take place, in which are found 
the minute, hard, yellow granules which contain the fungus. When 
the tongue is affected, it becomes enlarged and rigid; hence the 
designation of " wooden tongue " given to it by the Germans. In 
the course of time the surface of the organ becomes ulcerated, and 
yellowish masses or nodules may be seen on the surface. Sometime* 
the entire face is involved, the lips and nostrils becoming swollen, 
hard and immovable, often rendering respiration difficult. Around 
the throat there are rounded dense swellings, implicating the glands. 
When the disease is well-defined and of slight extent, the parte 
involved may be removed by the knife, wholly or partially. If the 
latter only, then the remaining affected tissues should be dressed 
with tincture of iodine or iodized carbolic acid. Chromic add haa 
also been found useful. A course of potassium iodide internally 
is sometimes curative and always beneficial. 

Diseases of Skeep. 

The contagious diseases of the sheep (other than those of foot* 
and-mouth disease, anthrax, rinderpest, black-quarter) are com- 
paratively few. 

The formidable disorder of sheep-pox is confined chieflyto the con- 
tinent of Europe. It is extremely contagious and fatal, and in these 
and some other characteristics resembles human smallpox. „,____ 
From three to twelve days after being exposed to infec- *■■** 
tion the sheep appears dull and listless, and eats tittle, if ***" 
anything: the temperature rises* there are frequent tremblings: 
tears flow from the eyes; and there is a nasal discharge. Red 
patches appear inside the limbs and under the abdomen; and on 
them, as well as on other parts where the skin is thin, dark red 
spots show 'themselves, which soon become papules, with a deep 
hard base. These are generally conical, and the apex quickly 
becomes white from the formation of pus. This eruption Is char- 
acteristic and unmistakable: and the vesicles or pustules may 
remain isolated (discrete pox) or coalesce into large patches (con- 
fluent pox). The latter form of the disease is serious. In bad 
cases the eruption may develop on the eyes and in the respiratory 
and digestive passages. The course of the disease lasts about 
three weeks or a month, and the eruption passes through the same 



VETERINARY SCIENCE 



ateaeius that of cowpou. 
in maU outbreaks to 



_ The mortality may extend from 10% 

or 95% in very virulent one*. Diseased 

1, and fed on nourishing (bod, especially 

_ x linseed; acidulated water may *»* 

If there it sloughing of the skin or extensive sores, o 

of emc ointment should be applied. But treatment should 

be adopted unless there «is general infection over a wide extent of 
country. All d iseased animals st 
thorn which have been an contact 



aould be destroyed, as well as 
with them, and thorough diain- 



Foot-roc is a disease of the daws of sheep. It „ _ 

frequently in badly drained, low-lying, marshy land, and is caused 
-.- ... by the Bacillus necnpkenu. Infection appears to be 
".— transmitted by cohabitation, litter, manure and in- 
fected p a s tur e s . The disease begins at the sole or between the 
datrs and gradually extends, causing changes in the bones and 
tendooe, with suppuration, d egener ation of horn and sloughing. 
The symptoms are la men ess, foot or feet hot, tender and swollen 
at the coronet; the horn soft and rotten. Affected sheep when 
leading may seat on the knees, or, if fore and hind feet are involved, 
they fie down constantl y. The daws must be cleansed, loose 
and ttoderraa horn removed, abscesses opened, and the foot thor- 
oughly disinfected and protected from further infection by an 
appropriate bandage. Some cases requite daily dressing, and all 
aflecsed feet should receive frequent attention. When large 
i of sheep are attacked they should be slowly driven through 



s foot-bath containing an antiseptic solution. Pastures on which 
foot-cut has been contracted should be avoided, the feet examined 
every month or oftcber, and where necessary pared and dressed 
wkh pine tar. 

Diseases ef I he «g. 
The pig may become affected with anthrax, foot-and-mouth 
eneane and tuberculosis, and it also has its own particular variola. 
But the contagious diseases which cause enormous destruction of 
orgs are swine fever and swine erysipelas in Great Britain, hog 
cholera and swine plague in the United States, and swine erysipelas 
»*d swine plague in France, Germany and other countries of the 
European continent. 
Swine fever is an exceedingly infectious disease, caused by a 
'* — and associated with ulceration of the intestine, enlarge- 
ment of the lymphatic glands, and limited disease of 
other organs. It is spread with great facility by mediate 
as well as immediate contagion; the virus can be carried 
by apparently healthy pigs from an infected piggery, by litter, 
■■iwir food, attendants, dogs, cats, vermin, crates, troughs or 
Anything which has been soiled by the discharges from a diseased 
pig. It is generally very rapid in its course, death ensuing in a 
very few days, and when the animal survives, recovery is pro- 
tracted. After exposure to infection the- animal exhibits signs of 
tRne«4 by dullness, weakness, shivering*, burying itsdf in the litter, 
(^inclination to move, staggering gait, great thirst, hot dry snout, 
k»s of appetite, and increased pulse, respiration and temperature 
(:ck* F.). Red and violet patches appear on the skin; there is a 
kicking coogh; nausea is followed by vomiting; diarrhoea ensues: 
tie hind legs become paralysed; stupor sets in, and the animal 
perishes. Treatment should not be attempted. Notification of 
tto existence of swine fever is compulsory, and outbreaks are 
dealt with by the Board of Agriculture and Fisheries. To suppress 
the disease lull all affected pigs and those which have been in 
"■■ -• * ... .. - ( And Kttef . t 

may have 



contact with them: burn or deeply bury the carcasses and litter, 
aad cover with quicklime. Disinfect everything that 



with the 

Diseases of tke Dog, . 



The contagions diseases of the dog are likewise very few, but 
the one which attracts most attention is common ana generally 



This is what is popularly known as distemper. 

It is peculiar to the canine species, for there is no evidence 

*"**"* chat k can be conveyed to other animals, though the 
Afferent families of Carnivore appear each to be liable to a similar 
disease. Distemper is a specific, fever which most frequently 
attacks young dogs, its effects being primarily developed in the 
inspiratory passages, though the brain, spinal chord and abdominal 
organs may subsequently be involved. Highly bred and pet dogs 
wafer more severely than the commoner and hardier kinds. It is 
a me infectious disease, and there is much evidence to prove that 
« owes its e xistence and prevalence solely to its virulence. One 
attack confers immunity from another. The symptoms are rigors, 
ssmsxmg, dullness, leas of appetite, desire for warmth, and increased 
UBaun a a nsre. respiration and pulse. The eyes are red, and the 
nam. at irst dry and harsh, becomes smeared with the discharge 
whsrh noons begins to flow from the nostrils. Suppuration also 
l the eyes: vision is more or less impaired by the mucus 



• vomiting. Debility rapidly ensues, and emaciation is soon 
aamssent: diarrhoea in the majority of cases sets in; the body 
am in an nnpaeasa at odour; ulceration of the mouth Is noticed; 
the aoatrim become obstructed by the discharge from them; con- 



» known as hydrophobia (o*.) or rabies ie 



II 

Tuition* generally come on; signs of bronchitis, p neu mo ni a, 
jaundice or other complication:* manifest themselves; and In 
some instance* there is a pustular of vesicular eruption on the «Mn . 
In fatal ea*es the animal dies in a state of marasmus. Many which 
recover are affarted with chores far a long rime afterwards. Here, 
again, good nursing it alt important. Comfort and flcinlincst, 
wtth plenty of fre^h air. must be enmrad. Debility being the most 
serious feature ol the disease, the strength should be maintained 
or restored until the fever hai run ha course. Light broth, beef 
tea. or bread and milk, or these alternately, may be allowed as 
diet* Preparation* of quinine, given from the commencement of 
the attack in a little wine, such as merry, have proved very bene- 
ficial. Often a mild Uutivt ** req aired. Complications should be 
treated a* they arise. The di4-.iw being extremely infectious, pre- 
cautions should be adopted with regard to other dogs. Protective 
vaccines and ant [distemper sera have been introduced by Lignieres, 
Cupoain. fhuaU* suid oibeta, Uit their action b uneertaia. 

The f ormSdabie affliction 1 
treated el under that i 

Principal Parasites of Domestic Animals. 
Perhaps the commonest worm infesting the horse is Ascaris 
equorum, or common lumbricoid. The males are from 6 to 8 in- 
long; females 7 to 17 in. They are found in almost .- ^ 

every part of the intestine. When present in considerable tmmm ~' 
numbers they produce slight intermittent colicky pains, an 
unthrifty condition of the skin, with staring coat. Although the 
horse feeds well, it does not improve in condition, but is " tucked 
up " and anaemic Among the principal remedies is a mixture of 
tartar emetic, turpentine and linseed oil. Santonin, ferrous sulphate, 
common salt and ejaujuc are also employed. Sderettemtum equinum 
or palisade worm ij a modcralc-siicd nematode, having a fttraiRht 
body with a somenjiai gbbukr head — male* { to t\ ul. females 
I in. to 3 in. long. This wurm, in found in tbe intestines, especially 
the double colon and caecum. The navyoa are developed in the 
eggs after their expulsion from the lnj*t h and arc lodged in moist 
mud, where, according to CobboTd, they change th?k first skin in 
about three, to cvU. alter which they probably enter the body of 
an intermediate bearvti whence they are convened in food or water 
to the digestive caej,J of the horse, the ultimate host. They then 
penetrate the mucous membrane and enter the blood vessel*, where 
they are sexually differentiated and give rise to aneurism. After 
a time they resume thdr wanderings and reach the large intestine, 
where they form small submucous cysts and rapidly acquire sexual 
maturity. They are most dangerous when migrating from one 
organ to another. They are found in the anterior mesenteric artery, 
but they also ; produce aneurism of the coeliac axis and other 
abdominal blood vessels, including the aorta. These parasitic 
aneurisms are a frequent cause of fatal colic in young horses. 

Sderostomum tetracanikum, or four-spined sclerostome, is about tbe 
same sine as tbe palisade worm, and like it is found in the colon, 
caecum and small intestine. It finds its way to tbe bowel in water or 
green fodder swallowed by the horse. It is a true blood-sucker, 
and its development is very similar to that of the S. equinum, except 
that it directly encysts itself in the mucous membrane and does not 
enter the blood vessels. The symptoms of its presence are emacia- 
tion, colicky pains, harsh unthrifty coat, flabby muscles, flatu- 
lence, foetid diarrhoea, anaemia, great weakness and, sometimes, 
baemorrhaeic enteritis. Treatment of equine sclerostomiasis fre- 
quently fails, as the remedies cannot reach the encysted parasites. 
As vermicides, thymol, areca, ferrous sulphate, tartar emetic, 
arsenic, sodium chloride, oil of turpentine, lysol, creolin and carbolic 
acid have been found useful. 

Oxyuris cunmla; or pin worm, is a common parasite of the large 
intestine. The anterior part of the body is curved and the tail 
sharply pointed. The male is seldom seen. The female measures 
I to 1) in. in length. It is found in the caecum, colon and rectum, 
and it causes pruritus of the anus, from which it may be found pro- 
ting. This parasite is best treated by means of a cathartic, followed 
s course of mineral tonics, and repeated rectal injections of sodium 



jecting. This parasite is best treated by means of a cathartic, followed 
by a course of mineral tonics, and repeated rectal injectio 
chloride solution, infusion of quassia or diluted creolin. 

Tbe cestodes or taeniae of the horse are insignificant in sue and 
they produce no special symptoms. Three species— Auoploctphala 
perjoltcia (26*28 mm. long;, A. Uicata (il-& cm.) and A. mamiUana 
(1-3 cm.>— have been described. The first is found in the small 
intestine and caecum, rarely in the colon; the second occurs in the 
small intestine and stomach; the third in the small intestine. 
Generally a horse may be proved to be infested with rape-worm by 
finding some of the ripe segments or proglottides in the faeces. The 
best remedy is male fern extract with turpentine and linseed oQ. 

Gasiropmlms eons, or the common bot-fly, is classed with the 
parasites on account of its larval form living as a parasite. The 
bot-fly deposits its eggs on the fore-arm, knee and shank of the horse 
at pasture. In twenty-four hours the ova are batched and the 
embryo, crawling on the skin, causes itching, which induces the horse 
to nibble or lick the part, and in this way the embryo is carried by the 
tongue to the mouth and swallowed. In the sto m a ch the embryo 
attaches itself to the mucous membrane, moults three times, in- 
creases in aim and changes from a blood-red to a yellowish-frown 



18 



VETERINARY SCIENCE 



colour. The bot remains in the stomach till the following spring, 
when it detaches itself, pane* into the food and is discharged with 
the faeces. When very numerous, beta may cause symptoms of 
indigestion, though frequently their presence in the stomach is not 
indicated by any sign of ill-health. They are difficult to dislodge 
or kill. Green food, iodine, naphthalin, hydrochloric acid and 
vegetable bitters have been recommended; but the most effective 
remedy is a dose of carbon bisulphide given in a gelatin capsule, 
repeated in twelve hours, and followed twelve hours later by an 
aloeticbalL 

Of the parasites which infest cattle and sheep mention will only 
be made of Distemum ktpaUcum, or common fluke, which causes 
. ~ liver-rot or diatomiasis, a very fatal disease of lambs and 
" ?TT._ sheep under two years old. It occurs most frequently 
mam iimp. ^ tK a ^ ^^j^ on low-lying, marshy or undraincdland, 
but it may be carried to other pastures by sheep which have been 
driven through a fluke-infested country, and sheep allowed to graze 
along ditches by the roadside jnay contract the parasite. For a 
full description of its anatomy and development see Trematodrs. 
Preventive treatment comprises the destruction of flukes and 
•nails; avoidance of low-lying, wet pastures draining infested land, 
and top-dressing with salt, gas-lime, lime water or soot ; supplying 
sheep with pure drinking water; placing rock-salt in the fields, and 
providing extra food and a tonic lick consisting of salt, aniseed, 
ferrous sulphate, linseed and peas-meat 

Husk, hoose or verminous bronchitis of calves is caused by 
Strongytus micrurus, or pointed-tailed strongyle, a thread-worm 
1 to 3 in. long, and S. pulmonaris, a similar but smaller nematode; 
and the corresponding disease of sheep is due to S. filaria and 5. 
rufrscens. The male S.fJatia is 1 to a in., and the female 2 to 4 in. 
long. They are white in colour and of the thickness of ordinary 
sewing cotton. The S. rufescens is thinner and shorter than S. filaria 
and its colour is brownish red. The development of these strongyles 
b not accurately known. When expelled and deposited in water or 
moist earth, the embryos may live for many months. Hoose occurs 
In spring and continues until autumn, when it may be most severe. 
In sheep the symptoms are coughing, at first strong, with long 
intervals, then weak and frequent, leaving the sheep distressed and 
wheezing; discharge from the nose, salivation, occasional retching 
with expulsion of parasites in frothy mucus, advancing emaciation, 
anaemia and weakness. In calves the symptoms are similar but 
less acute. Various methods of cure have been tried. Remedies 
given by the mouth are seldom satisfactory. Good results have 
follower! fumigations with chlorine, burning sulphur, tar, &c, and 
intra-tracheal injections of chloroform, iodine and ether, oil of 
turpentine, carbolic acid, and opium tincture, or chloroform, 
ether, creosote and olive oil. The system should be supported with 
as much good nourishing food as possible. 

The principal parasites which infest the alimentary canal of cattle 
or sheep are strongyles and taeniae. The strongyles of the fourth 
stomacn arc 5. contortus, or twisted wire-worm (male 10 to 20 mm., 
female 20 to 30 mm. long), 5. convolutus (female 10 to 13 mm.), 
S. cerricornis (female to to la mm.), S. gracilis (female 3 to 4 mm.), 
and an unnamed species (female 9 mm. long) discovered by 
McFadycan in 1896. In the contents of the stomach the contortus 
may easily be recognized, but the other parasites, owing to their 
small size or situation in the mucous membrane, may be overlooked 
in an ordinary post-mortem examination. The contortus, which 
is best known, may serve as the type. It lives on the blood which 
it abstracts from the mucous membrane, and, according to the state 
of repletion, its body may be red or white. The ova of this worm 
are discharged in the faeces and spread over the pastures by infected 
sheep. The ova hatch in a few days, and, according to Ransom, 
within a fortnight embryos one-thirtieth of an inch long may be 
found encased in a chitinoid investment, which protects them 
from the effects of excessive cold, heat or moisture. When the 
ground is damp and the temperature not too low, the embryos 
creep up the leaves of grasses and other plants, but when the 
temperature is below 40* F. they are inactive (Ransom). Sheep 
feeding on infected pasture gather the young worms and convey 
them to the fourth stomach, where they ( attain maturity in two or 
three weeks. In wet weather the embryos may be washed into 
ponds and ditches, and cattle and sheep may swallow them when 
drinking. Strongyles cause loss of appetite, irritation and inflam- 
mation of the stomach and bowel, diarrhoea, anaemia, progressive 
emaciation, and, if not destroyed or expelled, a lingering death from 
exhaustion. The success or failure of medicinal treatment depends 
on the degree of infestation. A change of pasture is always de- 
sirable, and as remedies a few doses of oil of turpentine in linseed 
Oil, or a solution of lysol or cyllin, and a powder consisting of arsenic, 
ferrous sulphate, areca, mix vomica and common salt may be tried. 
The ox may be the bearer of three and the sheep of twelve species 
of taeniae, and of these the commonest is Monietta (taenia) expanse, 
which is more frequently found in sheep than in cattle. It is the 
longest tapewor m , being from 6 to 30 ft. in sheep and from 40 to 
too ft. in cattle. Its maximum breadth is | in.*, it is found in the 
small intestine, and sometimes in sufficient numbers in lambs to 
obstruct the bowel. Infested animals are constantly spreading 
the ripe segments over the pastures, from which the ova or embryos 



are gathered by sheep. The s y mptoms are inappe ten ce, dry harsh 
woof, weakness, anaemia and diarrhoea with segments of the worms 
in the faeces. Various drugs have been prescribed for the expulsion 
of tapeworms, but the most useful are male fern extract, turpentine. 
kamala, kousso, aloes and linseed oiL Very Voung animals should 
be supported by dry nourishing food and tonics, including salt and 
ferrous sulphate. § 

The principal round-worms of the intestine of ruminant* are 
Ascaris vitulontm, or calf ascarid, Strongyttu fiiicoiUs* S. ventricoms, 
Sclerostomum kypostomum, Anckytostomum cemuum and Tricko- 
uphalm* afinis, or common whip-worm, which somet' 
severe symptoms in sheep. For a full account of the < 



of Cyslicercus boots, or beef measle, the larval form of Taenia saginala 
of the human subject, see Tapeworms. Another bladder-worm, 
found in the peritoneum of sheep and cattle, is On 

coiiis, or slender-necked hydatid, the larval form of Tol . 

of the dog. It seldom produces serious lessons. An important 
hydatid of ruminants in Coemtrus certbralis, which produces in sheep, 
cattle, goats and deer gid or sturdy, a peculiar affection of the 
central nervous system characterized by congestion, compression of 
the brain, vertigo, inoo-ordination, and other symp t om s of cerebro- 
spinal paralysis. This bladder-worm is the cystic form of Taenia, 
cotnurus of the dog. It b found in the cranial cavity, resting on the 
brain, within its substance or at its base, and sometimes in the* 
spinal canaL The symptoms vary with the position and number of 
the vesicles. In an ordinary case the animal feeds intermhtentty 
or not at all; appears unaccountably nervous or very dull, more or 
less blind and deaf, with glazed eye, dilated pupil, the head twisted 
or inclined always to one auk— that occupied by the cyst—and when 
moving the sheep constantly tends to turn in the same d ir e cti on. 
When the vesicle is deep-seated or within the cerebral lobe, the 
sheep carries the head low, brings the feet together and turns round 
and round like a dog preparing to lie down. When the developing 
cyst exerts pressure at the base of the cerebellum, the sheep re- 
peatedly falls and rolls over. ' In other cases the chief symptoms 
may be frequent falling, always on the same side, high trotting 
action with varying length of step, advancing by rearing and leaping, 
complete motor paralysis, and in spinal cases posterior paralysis 
with dragging of the hind limbs. Medicinal treatment is of no avail, 
but in some cases the hydatid can be removed by trephining the 
skull. Gid may be prevented by attending to the treatment of dogs 
infested with the tapeworm. 

The hclminthcs of the pig, although not very detrimental to the 
animal itself, are nevertheless of great importance as regards the 
cntozoa of man. Allusion must be made to Trickinetta 
spiralis, which causes trichinosis. The male is Ath, 2?* 
the female ith in. long, and the embryos Ath to i\th in. **" 
The ova measure rrWh in. in their long diameter; they are hatched 
within the body of the female worm. When scraps of trichinous 
flesh or infested rats have been ingested by the pig, the cysts en- 
closing the larval trichinae arc dissolved by the gastric juice in 
about eighteen hours, and the worms are found free in the intestine. 
In twenty-four to forty-eight hours later these larvae, having under- 
gone certain transformations, become sexually mature; then they 
copulate, and after an interval the embryos leave the body of the 
female worm and immediately begin to penetrate the intestinal 
wall in order to pass into various voluntary muscles, where they 
become encysted. About twelve days elapse from the time they 
begin their wandering. Usually each larva is enveloped in a capsule, 
but two or even three larvae have been found in one investment. 
They have been known to live in their capsules for eighteen months 
to two years. 

Cysticercus cettulosae is the larval form of Taenia solium of man 
(see Tapeworms). " Measly pork " is caused by the presence 
in the flesh of the pig of this entozoon, which is bladder-like in 
form. It has also been discovered in the dog. Other important 
parasites of the pig are Slepkanurus dentatus, or crown-tailed 
strongyle, Eckinorhynchus gigas, or thorn-headed worm, Ascaru 
suis, or pig ascarid, and Slrongyhidts suis. For these the most 
useful remedies are castor oil seeds, given with the food, and oil of 
turpentine in milk, followed by a dose of Epsom salts. 

Of all the domesticated animals the dog is by for the most fre- 
quently infested with worms. A very common round-worm is 
A scaris marginal* (3 to 8 in. long), a variety of the ascarid 
(A. mystax) of the cat. It occurs in the intestine or *?_*** 
stomach of young dogs. The symptoms are emaciation, *** 
drooping belly, irritable skin, irregular appetite, vomiting the 
worms in mucus, colic and diarrhoea. The treatment comprises 
the administration of areca or santonin in milk, followed by a dose 
of purgative medicine. A nematode, Filaria immitis, inhabits the 
heart of the dog, and its larvae may be found in the blood, causing 
endocarditis, obstruction of the vessels, and fits, which often end 
in death. Spiroptera sanguinoleuta may be found in the dog 
encysted in the wall of the stomach. Other nematodes of the dog 
are Anckytostomum trigenoeepkalum, which causes frequent bleeding 
from the nose and pernicious anaemia, and Trickocepkalus deprtsiims- 
cuius, at whip-worm, which is found in the caecum. The dog 
harbours eight species of taeniae and five species of Bclkriottpkalus. 
Taenia serrata, about 3 ft. io length, is found in about 10% of 



avium, owing to their eating the viscera of rabbits, &c, in which 
the larval form (Cystuercus pisiformis) of this tapeworm dwells, 
r. msrtmata is the largest ccstodc of the dog It varies m length 
km s to 8 ft, and is found in the small intestine of 30% of dogs in 
Cost Batata; its cystic form (C tenuicoUis) occurs in the peritoneum 
of tsetp. T coemmrns causes g»d in sheep as previously stated. It 
*kJotn exceeds 3 ft- in length Dogs contract this parasite by eating 
the beads of sheep infested with the bladder-worm (Coenurus 
armrehs) Dipyltdium eamnum, T, cucumerina, or melon seed 
tspeswm, is a very common parasite of dogs. It varies in length 
mm j to 15 in.; its larval form {Cryptocyslis truhodeetis el pultcis) 
a loond in the abdomen of the dog -flea (Pmlcx serraticeps), the dog- 
hsse [TnckedecUs lotus) and in the flea (P tmians) of the human 
•abject. The dog contracts this worm by swallowing fleas or lice 
wsfainmg the cryptocysts. T echtnococcus may be distinguished 
faws the other tapeworms by its small size. It seldom exceeds 
lis. ia length, and consists of four segments including the head 
The (earth or terminal proglottis when ripe is larger than all the 
Its cystic form is Echinococcus vetertnorum, which causes 
Bad djssaie of the liver, lungs, and other organs of cattle, pigs, 
ibeep, horses, and even man This affection may not be dvscovervd 
dtnng life. In weJl>marfced cases the liver is much deformed. 
Pttdy enlarged, and increased in weight, in the ox the hydatid 
■m any weigh from 50 to too lb or more Another tapewor m 
(T. sennits) sometimes occurs in the small intestine. Its cystic 
form is found in rodents. Bothrtocephalus lotus, or broad tapeworm, 
about 25 ft- long and 1 in. broad, is found in the intestine of the dog 
aad sometimes in man. Its occurrence appears to be confined to 
emata parts of the European continent. Its larval form is met 
sits ia pike, turbot, tench, perch, and other fishes. The heart- 
tfaped Dochriocephalus {B. contains) infests the dog and man in 
Craeaknd. For the expulsion of tapeworm male fern extract has 
bees found the moat effectual agent; arcca powder in linseed oil, 
sad s cMnbination of areca, colocynth and jalap, the dose varying 
amrdjag to the age, size and condition of the dog, have also proved 

The parasites which cause numerous skin affections in the 
J ' ited animals may be arranged in two groups, viz. 
animal parasites or Dermatosoa, and vegetable parasites 
i^T or Dermatophytes. The dcrmatozoa, or those which 
produce pruritus, mange, scab, Ac-, are lice, fleas, ticks, 
jcari or mange mites, and the larvae ot certain flies. The lice of the 
■one are Haematoptnus macrocebhalus, Truhodectes pilosus and 
£ fmi n e t rnt; those of cattle, H. eurystemus, or large ox-louse, 
S-ritsfc, or calf-loose, and T. sxolaris, or small ox-louse; and sheep 
■ay be attacked by T. symaeratephahu, or sheep-louse, and by the 
tae-&ke ked or tag (Metophagus annus) which belongs to the 
ppiparous diptera. Dogs may be infested with two species of 
m. H. pilifena and T. lotus, and the pig with one, H. nrius. 

Teas belong to the family Ixodidae of the order Acarina. A few 
macks have been proved responsible for the transmission of diseases 
caned by blood parasites, and this knowledge has greatly increased 
tie importance of ticks in veterinary practice. The best known 
(Senate Ixodes ricinus, or castor-bean txk, and /. hexagonus, which 
■* loaad all over Europe, and which attack dogs, cattle, sheep, 
deer and hones. Rhtpicephalta annulatus, or Texan fever-tick of 
tie faked States, Rh. decoloratus* or blue-tick of South Africa, and 
A- eastralis, or scrub-tick of Australia, transmit the parasite of 
ltd ww or bovine p irop las mo si s. Ph. appendteulatus carries the 
mnss of East Coast fever, Rh. bursa is the bearer of the parasite 
* srise p ir o piasmo aii, and Sh. everts* distributes the germs of 

re biliary fever. Amblyomma hebraeum conveys the parasite 
_ he art-water " of cattle and sheep, and Haemaphysalis leachi 
^■iiiutheparaatteof canine piroplasmosis. Hyalomma aegyplium, 
vEgypnan tick, JUs. sismu and Jab. capettsis, are common in most 
puto of Africa. 

t The acari of itch, scab or mange are species of Sareofrtes, which 
■nw ia the skin; Psoroptes, which puncture the skin and live 
« the surface sheltered by hairs and scurf; and Chorioptes, which 
J» ■ 'colonies and simply pierce the epidermis. Representatives 
***** three genera have been found on the horse, ox and sheep: 
^rietks of the first genus (Sarcoptes) cause mange in the dog and 
K: aad Chorioptes cynotis sometimes invades die cars of the dog 
**4 cat. These parasites live on 'the exudation prod need by the 
■titshoa which they excite* AsueJbn aaaua (Demodex fotliculorum) 
■ndes the dog's ason and so m etimes occurs in other animals. It 
mnbks the hair follicles and sebaceous glands, and causes a very 
*toctable acariasis — the follicular or oemodecic mange of the 
ft? '** Mrrs). A useful remedy for mange in the horse is d mixture 
« wkAor, oil of tar and whale oil, applied daily for three days, 
am vasked off and applied again. For the dog, sulphur, olive oil 
yd.pntaniuiH carbonate, or ou of tar and fish oil. may be tried. 
Vtnoas approved patent dips are employed for scab in sheep. A 
pod remedy for destroying uce may be compounded from St a vesacxe 
2***. tan soap and hot water, applied warm to the skin. Follic. 
jmr ■ange b nearly incurable, but recent cases should be treated 
y i *^rahoing with an ointment of 5 parts cyllin and 100 parts. 

xxvin I* 



VETERINARY SCIENCE 

dogs and those employed 
1 of n 



'3 

The vegetable parasites, or Dermatophytes, which cause tinea 
or ringworm in horses, cattle and dogs, belong to five distinct 
genera. Trichophyton, Murosporum, Etdamella, Achorton ^^ 
and Oospore. Ringworm of the horse is either a Tricho- ~V*2*Z*° 
phytosis produced by one of four species of fungi ( Trtcko- *•*■•*■ 
phyion mentagrophytes, T.flavum, T equinum and 7". verrucosum), 
or a Microsporosis caused by Murosporum oudoutm. ~ 



of cattle is always a Trichophytosis, and due to T. mentagrophytes. 
Four different dermatophytes (T cantnum, M audoutnt van 
eamnum, Evtametla sftnosa and Oosporo cantna) affect the dog, 
producing Trtchophytic, Microsporoua and Eidamellian ringworm 
and favus. Little is known of ringworm in sheep and swine. 
The fungi attack the roots of the hairs, which after a time lose 
their elasticity and break off, leaving a greyish-yellow, bran-like 
crust of epidermic products, dried blood and sometimes pus. In 
favus the crusts are yellow, cupped, almost entirely composed of 
fungi, and have an odour like that of mouldy cheese. Ringworm 
may affect any part of the skin, but occurs principally on the head, 
face, neck, back and hind quarters. It is very contagious, and 
it may be communicated from one species to another, and from 
animals to man. The affected parts should be carefully scraped 
and the crusts destroyed by burning; then the patches should be 
dressed with iodine tincture, solution of copper sulphate or carbolic 
acid, or with oil of tar. 

Bibliography.— Modern veterinary literature affords striking 
evidence of the piugitas made by the science: excellent text-books, 
manuals and treatises on every subject belonging to it are numeroust 
and arc published in every European language, while the abundant 
periodical press, with marked ability and discrimination, records 
and distributes the ever-increasing knowledge. The substantial 
advances in v eteri n ar y pathology, bacteriology, hygiene, surgery 
and preventive medicine point to a still greater rate of progress. 
The schools in every way are better equipped, the education and 
training— general and technical— of students of veterinary medicine 
are more comprehensive and thorough, and the appliances for 
observation and investigation of disease have been greatly improved. 
Among the numerous modern works in English on the various 
branches of veterinary science, the following may be mentioned; 
McFadycan, Anatomy of the Horse: a Dissection Guide (London, 
1002) ; Chauvcau, Comparative Anatomy of the Domesticated Ammals 
(London, 1891); Cuyer, Artistic Anatomy of Animals (London* 
1905I; Sharer Jones. Surgical Anatomy of the Horse (London, 
$?°7) : Jowett, Blood-Serum Therapy and Prreentive Inoculation 
(London, 1006); Swithinbank and Newman, The Bacteriology of 
Milk (London, 1905); Fleming, Animal Plagues (London, i88a); 
Mcrillat, Animal Dentistry (London, 1905;; Liautard, Animal 
Castration foth ed., London, 190a); Moussu and Dollar, Diseases 
of Cattle, Sheep. Coats and Swine (London, 1905); Reeks, Common 
Colics of the Horse (London, 190$); Sessions, Cattle Tuberculosis 
(London, 1905); SeweTl, Dogs: their Management (London, 1897); 



Diseases of the Dog and Cat (London, 1906); 
HiU, Management and Diseases of the Dog (London, 190$); Sewett, 
The Dog's Medical Dictionary (London, 1907); Goubaux and 
Barrier, Exterior of the Horse (London, 1904); Reeks, Diseases of 
the Foot of the Horse (London, 1906); Robcrge, The Foot of the 
Hone (London, 1894); Jensen, Milk Hygiene: a Treatise on 
Dairy and Milk Inspection, &e. (London, 1907); Smith, Manual 
of Veterinary Hygiene (London, 190$); Fleming, Human and 
Animal Variolae (London, 1881); Hunting, The Art of Horse- 
shoeing (London, 1899); Fleming, Horse-shoeing (London, 1900); 
Dollar and Wheatlcy, Handbook of Horseshoeing (London, 1898); 
Lufigwitz, Text-Booh of Horse-shoeing (London, 1904); Axe, The 
Horse: Us Treatment in Health and Disease (9 vols., London, 1905) ; 
Hayes, The Points of the Horse (London, 1904) ; Robertson, Equine 
Medicine (London, 1883); Hayes, Horses on Board Ship (London, 
190a); FitzWygram, Horses and Stables (London, 1901); Liautard, 
Lameness of Horses (London, 1888); Wattcy, Meat Inspection 
(2nd ed., London, 1901); Ostertag, Handbook of Meat Inspection 
(London, 1907); Courtcnay, Practice of Veterinary Medicine and 
Surgery (London, 1902); Williams, Principles and Practice of 
Veterinary Medicine (8th ccL, London, 1807); J. Law, Text-booh of 



mary Gland (London, 1904); De Bruin, Bovine Obstetrics (London, 
1901); Fleming, Veterinary Obstetrics (London, 1896); Dairympte. 
Veterinary Obstetrics (London, 1898); Neumann, Parasites and 
Parasitic Diseases of the Domesticated Animals (London, 1905)1 
F. Smith, Veterinary Physiology (3rd ed., London, 1907); Meade 
Smith, Physiology of the Domestic Animals (London, 1889); Kitt. 
Comparative General Pathology (London, 1907); Friedberger and 
Frohner, Veterinary Pathology (London, 1905); Brown, Atlas of 
the Pig (London, 1900); Rushworth, Sheep and their Diseases 
(Lond— •— N - «— --— ^ — '— «--'—' «•- /r ___•__ 

"ft 



(London, 1903); Fleming, Operative Veterinary Surgery (London, 
1903); Williams, Principles and Practice of Veterinary Surgery 
(10th ed., London, 1903); Moller and Dollar, Practice of Veterinary 



(New^t 



(New York, v, . 
Surgical Pathology 



don, 1904): Frohner. General Veterinary Surgery 
906); Menllat, Principles of Veterinary Surgery and 
ology (London, 1907); Cadiot and Almy, Surgical 



«4 



VETO 



Therapeutics of Domestic Animals (London, 1906); Hayes, Stable 
Management (London. 1903); Dun, Veterinary Medicines: thevr 
Actions and Uses (nth ed., Edinburgh. 1906); Tusoa, A Pharma- 



copoeia (London, 1904) 
Pharmacology (London* 
copoeta ana Manual of 



Hoare, Veterinary Therapeutics and 

' " ell. The Veterinary Pharma- 

(London, 1903); Window, 



Pharmacoioty (London," 1907), Gresswell. The Veterinary Pharma- 
copoeia and Manual of TherabeuUcs (London, 1903); Window 
Veterinary Materia Medtca and Therapeutics (New York, 1901) 



a, Veiertnary Toxicology (London, 1907); Laveraa and Mesnd, 
nnosomala and the Trypanosomiases (London. 1907): Journal 
nnparatvoe Pathology and Therapeutics (quarterly, Edinburgh) ; 



Nunn, Veterinary Toxicology (London, u 
Trypan ' " ~ ' 

Of CoiHfKircMivs rv H Hnuzj vim* iflcra|«ww» vH ua>lnl Ti buiuumnu/ i 

The Veterinary JournalimoiAhXy. London); The Veterinary Retard 
(weekly, London) ; The Veterinary News (weekly. London). 

(G. Fu;J. Mac.) 

VETO (Lat. for " I forbid "), generally the right of preventing 
any act, or its actual prohibition, in public law, the constitu- 
tional right of the competent authority, or in republics of the 
whole people in their primary assembly, to protest against a 
legislative or administrative act, and to prevent wholly, or for 
the time being, the validation or execution of the same. 

It is generally stated that this right was called into existence 
in the Roman republic by the Iribunicia potestas t because by 
this authority decisions of the senate, and of the consuls and 
other magistrates, could be declared inoperative, Such a state- 
ment must, however, be qualified by reference to the facts that 
interdico, inUrdkimus were the expressions used, and, in general, 
that in ancient Rome every bolder of a magistracy would check a 
negotiation set on foot by a colleague, bis equal in rank, by his 
opposition and intervention. This was a consequence of the 
position that each of the colleagues possessed the whole power of 
the magistracy, and this right of intervention must have come 
into existence with the introduction of colleagued authorities, 
i.e. with the commencement of the republic In the Roman 
magistracy a twofold power must be distinguished: the positive 
management of the affairs of the state entrusted to each indi- 
vidual, and the power of restraining the acts of magistrates of 
equal or inferior rank by his protest. As the tribuni pkbis 
possessed this latter negative competence to a great extent, it 
is customary to attribute to them the origin of the veto. 

In the former kingdom of Poland the precedent first set in 
1652 was established by law as a constant right, that in the 
imperial diet a single deputy by his protest " Nie pozwalam," 
t,c "I do not permit it," could invalidate the decision 
sanctioned by the other members. The king of France received 
the right of a suspensory veto at the commencement of the 
French Revolution, from the National Assembly sitting at Ver- 
sailles in 1789, with regard to the decrees of the latter, which 
was only to be valid for the time being against the decisions 
come to and during the following National Assembly, but during 
the period of the third session it was to lose its power if the 
Assembly persisted in its resolution. By this means it was 
endeavoured to diminish the odium of the measure; but, as is 
well known, the monarchy was soon afterwards entirely abol- 
ished. Similarly the Spanish Constitution of 1812 prescribed 
that the king might twice refuse bis sanction to bills laid twice 
before him by two sessions of the cortes, but if the third session 
repeated the same he could no longer exercise the power of 
veto. The same was the case in the Norwegian Constitution of 
1814. 

In the French republic the president has no veto strictly so. 
called, but he has a power somewhat resembling it. He can, 
when a bDI has passed both Chambers, by a message to them, 
refer it back for further deliberation. Tlie king or queen of 
England has the right to withhold sanction from a bill passed 
by both houses of parliament. This royal prerogative has not 
been exercised since 169a and may now be considered obsolete. 
The governor of an English colony with a representative legis- 
lature has the power of veto against a bill passed by the legis- 
lative body of a colony. In this case the bill is finally lost, just 
as a bill would be which had been rejected by the colonial council, 
or as a bill passed by the English houses of parliament would 
be if the crown were to exert the prerogative of refusing the 
royal assent. The governor may, however, without refusing his 
assent, reserve the bill for the consideration of the crown. In 
that case the bill dots not come into force until it has either 



actually or constructively received the royal assent, which is in 
effect the assent of the English ministry, and therefore indirectly 
of the imperial parliament. Thus the colonial liberty of legisla- 
tion is made legally reconcilable with imperial sovereignty, and 
conflicts between colonial and imperial laws are prevented. 1 

The constitution of the United States' of America contains in 
art. i., sect. 7, par a, the following order: — 

" Every bill which shall have passed the House of Representatives 
and the Senate shall, before it become a law, be presented to the 
president of the United State*, if he approve, he shall sign it* If 
not. be shall return it with his objections to that boose in which 
it shall have originated, who shall enter the objections at large on 
their journal and proceed to reconsider it. If, after such neon* 
sideration, two-thirds of that house shall agree to pass the bill, it 
shall be sent, together with the objections, to the other boon, by 
which it shall likewise be reconsidered, and, if approved by two- 
thirds of that house, it shall become a law. Every order, resolution 
or vote to which the concurrence of the Senate and House of Repre- 
sentatives may be necessary (except on a question of adjournment) 
shall be presented to the president of the United State*, and { before 
the same shall take effect, shall be approved by him, or, being dis- 
approved by him, shall be repassed by two-thirds of the Senate and 
House of Representatives, according to the rules and limitations 
prescribed in the case of a trilL" 

In all states of the Union except one the governors, In the 
same manner or to a modified extent, possess the right of 
vetoing bills passed by the legislature. Here, therefore, ire 
have again a suspensory veto which is frequently exercised. 

According to the constitution of the German empire of 1871, 
the imperial legislation is executed by the federal council and 
imperial diet; the emperor is not mentioned. In the federal 
council the simple majority of votes decides. But in the case 
of bills concerning the army, the navy and certain specially 
noted taxes, as well as in the case of decisions concerning the 
alteration of orders for the administration, and arrangements 
for the execution of the laws of customs and taxes, the proposal 
of the federal council is only accepted if the Prussian votes axe 
on the side of the majority in favour of the same (art. viL, sect 3). 
Prussia presides in the federal counciL The state of things is 
therefore, in fact, as follows: it is not the German emperor, but 
the same monarch as king of Prussia, who has the right of veto 
against bills and decisions of the federal council, and therefore 
can prevent the passing of an imperial law. The superior power 
of the presidential vote obtains, it is true, its due influence only 
in one legislative body, but in reality it has the same effect as 
the veto of the head of the empire. 

The Swiss federal constitution grants the president of the 
Confederation no superior position at all; neither be nor the 
federal council possesses the power of veto against laws or 
decisions of the federal assembly. But in some cantons, vix, 
St Gall (1831), Basel (1832) and Lucerne ft 841), the veto was 
introduced as a right of the people. The citizens had the power to 
submit to a plebiscite laws which had been debated and accepted 
by the cantonal council (the legislative authority), and to reject 
the same. If this plebiscite was not demanded within a certain 
short specified time, the law came into force. But, if the voting 
took place, and if the number of persons voting against the law 
exceeded by one vote half the number of persons entitled to vote 
in the canton, the law was rejected. The absent voters were 
considered as having voted in favour of the law. An attempt 
to introduce the veto in Zurich in 1847 failed. Thurgau and 
Schaffhausen accepted it later. Meanwhile another arrangement 
has quite driven it out of the field. This is the so-called " refer- 
endum "—properly speaking, direct legislation by the people— 
which has been introduced into most of the Swiss cantons. 
Formerly in all cantons— with the exception of the small moon* 
tainous districts of Uri, Schwyz, Unterwalden, Zug, Glarus and 
Appenrefl— it was not a pure democracy, but a representatrve 
constitution that prevailed: the great councillors or cantonal 
councillors periodically chosen by the people were the possesso r s 
of the sovereign power, and after deliberating twice passed the 
bills definitely. Now they have only to discuss the bills, which 

* A. V. Dicey. Introduction to Ike Study of the Law of the Constisutum, 
pp. 111 seq. (6th ed., London, looa); Sir H. Jenkyns, British Rmla 
and Jurisdiction beyond the Seas, pp. 1 13 seq. (London, 1902). 



VETTER—VEVEY 



«5 



■c priced «nd tent to all yotcn with < 
mm tk people oo a certain day vote far the acceptance or re- 
jtsusaef the law by writing " yea w 01 •• no " on a printed Toeing 
paper, which ■ placed in an urn under official control In 



aste enxnses are alao submitted to the derision of the people. 
Is tk revised federal constitution of 1874, tmder certain sup- 
assures which have no further interest foe us at present, a 
bemauve nfcrendnm or Iniiiniim (s\*. the possibility of de- 
a plebiscite wader exceptional circumstances) waa 
id for federal law*. Since that period it has of ten bees 
I and has operated like a veto. It is evident that by 
lae anpulsory referendum in the cantons the merejveto-is 



I the question as to what mrition the veto occupies 



v.w* must separate quite d 



t conceptions which 



t. The veto may be a mere ritkt of intervention on the part of a 
satknte against the order of another official, or against that of an 
isttsmy of equal or inferior rank. This was the case in andent 
lane, To tab class belong also those cases in which, as in the French 
Rvalue the president makes his " no " valid against decisions of 
ac leaoal councillors, and the prelect does the same against 
ftriaoes of the communal councillors. The use of the expres- 
ses ken is quite Justifiable, and this veto is not confined to bins, 
bst nam psrtscuiariy to administrative measures. It affords a 
punster against the abuse of an official position* 

2. Tk veto may be a safety-valve against precipitate d ec isio ns , 
ad «o s fmentme Measure. This task is fulfilled by the suspensory 
mo of the pres i d en t of the United States. Similarly, to this class 



sdssg the above snesttJoned 
constitutions, and 



prescriptions of tu< 
also the veto of the 



the Spanish and 
r of an 



Norueosa cosstitutions, and also the veto ol the governor of an 
Es^ssT colony against decisions of the legislature; for this protest 
a osly attended to prevent a certain want of harmony between the 
sacral sad the colonial legislation, by calling forth a renewed 
MiisiBHiiua, This veto is neither an interference with the com- 
setesot of an authority, nor a division of the legislative power 
most different factors, out simply a guarantee against precipitancy 
a tk case of a purely legislative measure. The wisdom of estab- 
hfcaw this veto power by the constitution is thus manifest. 

s. ft bwiossj to apply the tera veto to what »inerdytkii*f*'« 
sst */ aV sswrakotag of las Joaw, in other words, an act of sove- 
ssganr It would not be in accordance with the nature of a con- 

""^ \ Monarchy to declare the monarch's consent to a law 

r y, or ma ke it a compulsory duty; the legi slative power 
.'between faun and the chambers. The sovereign must 
t be perfectly at liberty to say " yes " or " no " in each 

^_ -jse according to his opinion. If he says the latter, weepeak 
da as his veto, but this— if be possesses an absolute and not merely 
» sMtMu s ay veto— is not an intervention and not a preventive 
etsswe, bat the negative side of the exercise of the legislative power, 
isd declare an act of sovereignty. That this right belongs fully 
•so entirely to the holder of sovereign power— however be may be 
fiBwi a self-evident. One chamber can also by protest prevent a 
hi of tk ether from coming in to force. The M placet of the temporal 
•wwforc kifcbs j ff sns w hen it occurs— also In volvesm this manner 
■ ibetf the veto or non placet.'' Where in pure demo cr ac ie s the 
ssiak k their assembly have the right of veto or referendum, the 
owoss of it is also a result of the sovereign rights of legislature. 
ffor tk question of the conflict between the two nouses of England, 
* tLMmmmTA-nom.) 

,1k nsoBfisw power of veto neiseasf il by the (Prnssian) president 
« tk kdecal council of Germany lies on the boundary between 
fc»ao(l>. (A.v.0.) 

fsTm [VdOer or WdUr, often written, with the addition 
sj tk definite artide, VtUtm], a lake of southern Sweden, 
fast, lsng, and 18 m. in extreme breadth. It has an area of 
7U to, au, and * drainage area of ss*8 sq. m.; its nrenmnni 
*pu m 390 ft., and its elevation above sea-level 289 ft It 
•ana eastward by the Motak river to the Baltic Its waters 
«*ef resuarkabk transparency and hlneneas, its shores pictur- 
■am and steep on the east side, where the Chnbetg (863 ft.) 
'•** ebrupf^r, with farrowed flanks pstrocri by. caves* The 
*** a subject to sudden storms. Its northern part is crossed 
has Xadabocf to M otak (W. to E.) by the G6ta canal route. 
A* Ik southern end is the Important arejwfacturing town of 
fakupiag. and 15 m. N. of it the pictiireaquo island of Vising, 
"*h a ruined palace of the 17th century and a fine church, 
^djteaa, 8 m. S. of Motela, with a staple industry in lace, 
■» t omvent (now a hospital) of St Bridget or BiegiUa (1*83), 
skautifal saonsstic church (1305-14*4) and a. castk of htiaw, 



Gustavo* Vass. At Alvastrn, 16 m. S. again, are rains of a 
Cistercian monastery of the nth century. Close to Motels 
are someof the largest mechsadcal workshops iu Sweden, bcJklmg 
war ships , machinery, bridges, &e. 

VErOLOBHUM, or Vxtvumia (Etruscan Vetatm), an andent 
town of Etraria, Italy, the site of which Is probably occupied 
by the modern village of Vetulomia, wbkh up to 1887 bore the 
name of Colonna. It lies 1130 ft. above sea-level, about 10 m. 
direct N.W. of Grosseto, on the N.E. side of the hills wbkh 
project from the flat Maremma and form the promontory of 
Castiglione. The place is little mentioned in ancient literature, 
though SOius Italicus tells us that it was hence thai the Romans 
took their magisterial insignia (fasces, curule chair, purple toga 
and brazen trumpets), and it was undoubtedly oneof the twelve 
cities of Etniria. Its site was not identified before x88i f and 
the identification has been denied in various works by C Dotto 
dei Dauli, who places it on the Poggio Castiglione near Massa 
Msrfttuna, where scanty remains of buildings (possibly of dty 
walls) have also been found. This site seems to agree better 
with the indications of medieval documents. But certainly 
an Etruscan city was situated on the hili of Colonna, where there 
are remains of dty walls of massive lin s es t one, in almost uori- 
sontal courses. The objects discovered in its extensive necro- 
polis, where over 1000 tombs have been excavated, ass now 
mthe museums of Gresseto ai»d Florence. The most important 
were surrounded by tumuli, which still form n prominent 
ffstwr fr fa th e i*«*<««**pf 

See G. Dennis, Cities and Cemeteries et JZ*av*s (London, 1883), 
ii. 2631 fletmo degfr &•**, passim; I. Fakhi, Ricercke in VetuhwU 
(Prato, 1881), and other works, especially Vetuionia e la saw 
necropoti antiehissima (Florence, 1891); G. Sordini, Vettdonia 
(Spoieto, 1894) and references. (T. As.) 

VEUILLOT, LOUIS (1813-1883), French journalist and man 
of letters, was born of humble parents at Boynes (Loiret) on 
the nth of October 1813. When Louis Veuillot was five 
years old his parents removed to Paris. After a very slight 
education he entered a lawyer's office, and was sent In 1830 to 
serve on a Rouen paper, and afterwards to Perigueuz. He 
returned to Paris In 1837, and a year later visited Rome during 
Holy Week. There he embraced extravagant ultramontane 
sentiments, and was from that time an ardent champion of 
Catholicism. The results of his conversion appeared in Peter- 
inagc en Suisse (1839), Rome et LoreUe (1841) and other works. 
In 1843 he entered the staff of the Unions retigieux. His 
violent methods of journalism had already provoked more than 
one duel, and for his polemics against the university of Paris 
in the Univers he was imprisoned for a short time. In 1848 
he became editor of the paper, which was suppressed in 1860, 
but revived in 1867, when VeuiDot recommenced bis ultra- 
montane propaganda, which brought about a second suppression 
Of his journal in 1874. When his paper was suppressed Veuillot 
occupied himself in writing violent pamphlets directed against 
the moderate Catholics, the Second Empire and the Italian 
government. His services to the papal see were fully recog- 
nized by Pius IX., on whom he wrote (1878) a monograph. He 
died on the 7th of March 1883. 

Some of his scattered papers were collected in MBcnges rdigimx. 



kistoriques et litUraires (11 vols., 1857-75), and his Correspondence 
(6vcJs..i8*3^s)ba*gr«atpoutkani*ei«st. '" 
EugeiieYe«n^t.pibla*«d foot-*) ac 



His younger brother, 



(6 vols., 1883-45) has great pefftkal h 
Eug*»Ve«ulot,Bvi''' * rrr " 
Ule, Louis VeuiUeL 

VBVBY [German Vais], n small town in the Swiss canton of 
Vaud and near the eastern extremity of the Lake of Geneva. 
It is by rafl 10 m. SJS. of Lausanne or s\ m. N.W. of the Veroex- 
Montreux railway station, white it is well served by steamers 
plying over the Lake of Geneva. In 1900 it had a population 
of rij8i, of whom 8878 were French-speaking, whik there 
were &s?7 Protestants to 3434 Romanists and 56 Jews. It is 
the second town in point of population in the canton, coming 
neat after Lansanne, though inferior to the ° agglomeration " 
known as Montreux; It stands at the month of the Vaveyse 
and commands fine views of the snowy mountahss seen over 
the glassy anxuen of the laksv The whole of the 1 



i6 



VEXILLUM— VIANDEN 



country is covered with, vineyards, which (with the entertain- 
ment of foreign visitors) occupy the inhabitants. Every twenty 
years or so (last in 1889 and 1905) the FHedes Vigneronsa held 
here by an ancient gild of vinedressers, and attracts much 
attention. Besides a railway line that joins the Montreux- 
Bernese Oberland line at Chamby (5 m. from Vevey and xj m. 
below Les Avants) there is a funicular railway from Vevey up 
the Mont Pelerin (3557 ft.) to the north-west. 

Vevey was a Roman settlement [Vmiou] and later formed part 
of the barony of Vaud, that was held by the counts and dukes of 
Savoy till 1536, when it was conquered by Bern. In 1798 it was 
freed from Bernese rule and became part of the canton du Lemon 
(renamed canton de Vaud in 1803) of the Helvetic Republic. 

VW. A. Dm C) 

VEXILLUM (Lat. dim. Of velum, piece of cloth, sail, awning, 
or from vekere, vcdtw, to carry), the name for a small ensign 
consisting of a square cloth suspended from a cross-piece fixed 
to a spear. The vtxUium was strictly the ensign of the maniple, 
as siptum was of the cohort, but the term came to be used for 
aU standards or ensigns other than the eagle (aqvda) of the 
legion (see Flag). Caesar ( B£. iL 20) uses the phrase wexillmm 
fropomr* of the red flag hoisted over the general's tent as a 
signal for the march or battle. The standard-bearer of the 
maniple was styled vexUloriut, but by the time of the Empire 
vexitttm and vexiltarius had gained a new significance. Tacitus 
uses these terms frequently both of a body of soldiers serving 
apart, from the legion under a separate standard, and also with 
the addition of -some word implying connexion with a legion 
of those soldiers who, after serving sixteen years with the 
legion, continued their service, under their own vexiUum, with 
the legion. The term is also used for the scarf wrapped round 
a bishop's pastoral staff (q.v.). Modern science has adopted 
the word for the web or vein of a feather of a bird and of the 
large upper petal of flowers, such as the pea, whose corolla is 
shaped like a butterfly. 

VEXld, or Wexi5, a town and bishop's see of Sweden, 
capital of the district (/An) of Kronobcrg, 124 m. N.E. of MalmS 
by rail. Pop. (1900) 7365. It is pleasantly situated among 
low wooded hills at the north end of Lake Vexid, and near the 
south end of Lake Helga. Its appearance is modem, for it 
was burnt in 1843. The cathedral of St Siegfrid dates from 
about 1300, but has been restored, the last time in 1898. The 
SmAland Museum has antiquarian and numismatic collections, 
a library and a bust of Linnaeus. There are iron foundries, 
a match factory, &c. At Ostrabo, the episcopal residence 
without the town, the poet Esaias Tegn6r died in 1846, and he 
is buried in the town cemetery. On the shore of Lake Helga 
is the royal estate of Kronoberg, and on an island in the lake 
the ruins of a former castle of the same name. 

VEZELAY, a village of France, in the department of Yonne, 
xo m. W.S.W. of Avallon by road. Its population, which was 
over 10,000 in the middle ages, was 524 in 1906. It is situated 
on the summit and slopes of a hill on the left bank of the Cure, 
and owes its renown to the Madeleine, one of the largest and 
most beautiful basilicas in France. The Madeleine dates from 
the 12th century and was skilfully restored by Ylollet-le-Duc 
It consists of a narthex, with nave and aisles; a triple nave, 
without triforium, entered from the narthex by three door- 
ways; transepts; and a choir with triforium. The oldest 
portion of the church is the nave, constructed about 1x25. 
Its groined vaulting is supported on wide, low, semicircular 
arches, and on piers and columns, the capitals of which are 
embellished with sculptures full of animation. The narthex 
was probably built about 1x40. The central entrance, leading 
from it to the nave, is one of the most remarkable features of 
the church; it consists of two doorways, divided by a central 
pier supporting sculptured figures, and is surmounted by a 
tympanum carved with a representation of Christ bestowing 
the Holy Spirit upon His apostles. The choir and transepts 
are later in data than the rest of the church, which they surpass 
in height and grace of proportion. They resemble the eastern 
portion of the church of St Denis, and were doubtless built in 
place of a. Romanesque xhoix damaged in a fire in 110,5. A 



crypt beneath the choir is. perhaps the letic of 
Romanesque church whkk was destroyed by fire in rise. 
The west facade of the Madeleine has three portals; that in the 
centre is divided by a pier and surmounted by a tympanum 
sculptured with a bas-relief of the Last Judgment. The upper 
portion of this front belongs to the 13th century. Only the 
lower portion of the northernmost of the two flanking towers 
is left, and of the two towers which formerly rose above the 
transept that to the north has disappeared. Of the other 
buildings of the abbey, there remains a chapter-house (13th 
century) adjoining the south transept. Most of the ramparts of 
the town, which have a circuit of over a mile, are still in 
existence. In particular the Porte Neuve, consisting of two 
massive towers flanking a gateway, is in good preservation. 
There are several interesting old houses, among them one in 
which Theodore of Besa was born. Of the old parish church, 
built in the 17th century, the clock-tower alone is left. A mile 
and a half from Vezelay, in the village of St Pere-sous-Vczelay, 
there is a remarkable Burguhdian Qothic church, built by the 
monks of Vezelay in the 13th century. The west- facade, 
flanked on the north by a fine tower, is richly decorated; its 
lower portion is formed of a projecting porch surmounted by 
pinnacles and adorned with elaborate sculpture. 

The history of Vezelay is bound up with its Benedictine abbey. 
which was founded in the oth century under the influence of 
the abbey of Cluny. This dependence was soon shaken off 
by the younger monastery, and the acquisition of the relics 
of St Magdalen, soon after its foundation, began to attract 
crowds of pOgrims, whose presence enriched both the monks 
and the town which had grown up round the abbey and ac- 
knowledged its supremacy. At the beginning of the 12th 
century the exactions of the abbot Artaud, who required 
money to defray the expense of the reconstruction of the 
church, and the refusal of the monks to grant political independ- 
ence to the citizens, resulted in an insurrection in which the 
abbey was burnt and the abbot murdered. During the next 
fifty years three similar revolts occurred, fanned by the counts 
of Nevers, who wished to acquire the suzerainty over Vezelay 
for themselves. The monks were, however, aided by the 
influence both of the Pope and of Louis VIL, and the towns- 
men were unsuccessful on each occasion. During the nth 
century Vezelay was the scene of the preaching of the second 
crusade in 1x46, and of the assumption of the cross in 1190 by 
Richard Coeur de Lion and Philip Augustus. The influence 
of the abbey began to diminish in 1280 when the Benedictines 
of St Maximin in Provence affirmed that the true body of 
St, Magdalen had been discovered in their church; its decline 
was precipitated during the wars of religion of the soth century, 
when Vezelay suffered great hardships. 

VIANDEN, an ancient town in the grand duchy of Luxem- 
burg, on the banks of the Our, dose to the Prussian frontier. 
Pop. (i9°5) 2 35°* It possesses one of the oldest charters in 
Europe, -granted early in the 14th century by Philip, count of 
Vianden, from whom the family of Nassau-Vianden sprang, 
and who was consequently the ancestor of William of Orange 
and Queen vVuheunina of Holland. The semi-mythical 
foundress of this family was Bertha, " the White Lady " who 
figures in many German legends. The original name of Vianden 
was Vienxtensis or Vienna, and its- probable derivation is from 
the Celtic Vun (rock). The extensive rains of the ancient 
castle stand on an eminence of the little town, but the chapel 
which forms part of it was restored in 1840 by Prince Henry 
of the Netherlands. The size and importance of this castle 
in its prime may be gauged from the fact that the Knights* 
Hall could acrtwnrnoriate five hundred men-at-arms. A re- 
markable feature of the chapel is an hexagonal hole in the 
centre of the floor, opening upon a bare subterranean dungeon. 
This has been regarded as an instance of the " double chapel," 
but if seems to have been constructed by order of the crusader 
Count Frederick II. on the model of the Church of the Holy 
Sepulchre. In the neighbourhood of Vianden are ether mined 
castles, notably those of .Stokexaburg and Felkfasttin, The 



VIANNA DO CASTELLO— VICAIRE 



«7 



Etta-town and its pleasant surrounding* have been praised 
by many, among others by Victor Hugo, who resided here on 
xeveral occasions. During his last visit he wrote his fine work 
L'Annk tortile. In the time of the Romans the Vianden 
valley was coveted with vineyards, but at the present day 
its chief source of wealth is derived from the rearing of pigs. 

VlaMxU DO CASTELLO, a seaport and the capital of the 
district el Vianna do Castello f Portugal; at the mouth of the 
rim Lima, which is here crossed by the iron bridge of the Oporto- 
Yakfica do Minho railway. Pop. (looo) 10,000. Vianna do 
Ctsuflo has manufactures of lace and dairy produce. Its 
fchenes sre important. Salmon and lampreys are expo rt ed, 
both fresh and preserved. The administrative district of Vianna 
do Castello coincides with the northern part of the ancient 
province of Entre Minho e Douro (j.v.). Pop. (1900) 115,267; 
ins, 857 so,, m. 

VIARSGGIO, a maritime town and sea-bathing resort of Tus- 
cany, Italy, in the province of Lucca, on the Mediterranean! 
13 m. N.W. of Pisa by rail, 7 ft. above sea-leveL Pop. (1906) 
14J0J (town); a 1 ^57 (commune). Being sheltered by dense 
pine-woods on the north, and its malaria having been banished 
by drainage, it as frequented as a winter resort, and in summer 
by some thousands for its sea-bathing. In 1740 the population 
vas only joo, and in 1841, 6549. The body of Shelley was 
banted on the shore near Viareggio after his death by drowning 
in 1822. The town possesses a school of navigation and a 
technical school, and carries on some shipbuilding. 

VIATICUM (a Latin word meaning " provision* for a journey "; 
Cr. rsftofco), is often used by early Christian writers to denote 
tbe sacrament of the Eucharist, and is sometimes also applied 
to baptism. Ultimately it came to be employed in a restricted 
tease to denote the last communion given to the dying. The 
13th canon of the council of Nicaea is to the effect that " none, 
even of the lapsed, shall be deprived of the last and most neces- 
sary viaticum (tyoKov)," and that the bishop, on examination, 
ii to give the obUl ion to all who desire to partake of the Eucharist 
oa the point of death. The same principle still rules the canon 
bv, it being of course understood that penitential discipline, 
vhich in ordinary circumstances would have been due for their 
ofcnce, is to be undergone by lapsed persons who have thus 
received the viaticum, in the event of recovery. In extreme 
cases h a lawful to administer the viaticum to persons not 
bMiag. and the same person may receive it frequently if his 
£ms§ be prolonged. The ritual to be observed in its adminis- 
tration does not differ from that laid down in the office for the 
coxmunion of the sick, except in the words of the formula, 
vfeich is " accipe, carissime frater (carissima soror), viaticum 
corporis nostri Jcsu Christi, quod te custodiat ab hoste maligno, 
protrgot te, et perducat te ad vitam aeternam. Amen." After- 
*vds the priest rinses his fingers in a little water, which the 
corcnumicaat drinks. The viaticum is given before extreme 
■action, a reversal of the medieval practice due to the impor- 
taocc of receiving the Eucharist while the mind is still clear. In 
lie ciriy centuries the sick, like those in health, generally re- 
enved both kinds, though there are instances of the viaticum 
being given under one form only, sometimes the bread and 
wnetimes, where swallowing was difficult, the wine. In times 
•f persecution laymen occasionally carried the viaticum to the 
sick, a practice that persisted into the 9th century, and deacons 
caatinued to do so even after the Council of Ansa (near Lyons) 
» qqo restricted the function to priests. 

VIBORG, a town of Denmark, capital of the ami (county) 
4 its name, lying in the bleak midland district of Jutland, 
faugh the immediate situation, on the small Viborg lake, is 
t^aoresque. Pop. (ioox) £623. It has a station on the railway 
taming east and west between Langaa and Vemb. The most 
nobble building is the cathedral (1130-1169, restored 1864- 
J -;6J. The Black Friars' church is of the 13th century, and 
1 the museum possesses specimens of the Stone, Bronze and Iron 
Vv also medieval antiquities. The Borgevold Park borders 
tbe lake on the site of a former castle. The industries embrace 
taiHeries, iron foundries and manufactures of cloth. The 



country to the south attains to a certain degree of beaaty near 
Lake Held, where the ground ■ slightly elevated. 

VIBORG (Finnish Viifiuri), capital of a province of the same 
name in Finland, is situated at the head of the Bay of Viborg 
in the Gulf of Finland*, at the mouth of the Saima Canal and 
on the railway which connects St Petersburg with Helsingfors. 
Population of the town (1004) 34i*>a, <* tbe province 458,269. 
The Saima Canal (37 m. long), a fine engineering wotk, connects 
with the sea Lake Saima— the principal lake of Finland, 249 ft. 
above sea4evel— and a series of others, including Puruvesi, 
Orivesi, Hoytilnen and Kauavesi, all of which axe navigated 
by steamers, as far north as Iisalmi ino3° 30/ N. lat, Viborg is 
thus the seaport of Karelia and eastern Savolaks, with the towns 
of VUmaastrand (2303 inhabitant* in 1904), St Michel (3933), 
Myslott (S0B7), KJuopio (13,5x9) and lisahni, with thek numerous 
saw-mills and iron-works. Viborg stands most pictustsquely 
on the glaciated and donie-flhaped granite hiUs surrounding the 
bay, which is protected at Us entrance by the naval station of 
Bj6rk5 and at its head by several forts. The castle of Viborg, 
built in 1293 by Marshal Torkel Knutson, was the first centre 
tor the spread of Christianity in Karelia, and for establishing 
the power of Sweden; it is now used as a prison. Its lofty and 
elegant tower has fallen into decay. . The court-house (1839), 
the town-house, the gymnasium (1641; with an excellent 
library), and the museum are among the principal buildings of 
the city. There are abo a lyceuia and two higher schools for 
girls, a school of navigation and several primary schools, both 
public aad private, a literary and an agricultural society, and 
several benevolent institutions. There are foundries, machine 
works and saw-mills, and a considerable export of timber and 
wood products. The coasting trade is also considers Met 

The environs are most picturesque and are visited by many 
tourists in the summer. The park of Monrepos (Old Viborg), in 
a bay dotted with dome-shaped islands, is specially attractive. 
The scenery of tbe Saima Canal and of the Finnish lakes with 
the grand As of Pungaharju; the Imatxa rapids, by which the 
Vuoksen discharges the water of Lake Saima into Lake Ladoga, 
with the castle of Kcxfaolm at its mouth; Scrdobol and Vaiamo 
monastery on Lake Ladoga— all visited from Viborg— attract 
many tourists from St Petersburg as well as from other parte of 
Finland. 

VIBURNUM, in. medicine, the dried bark of the black haw 
or Viburnum prunifolium, grown in India and North America. 
The black haw contains vibumin and valerianic, tannic, gallic, 
citric and malic adds. The British Pharmacopoeia! prepara- 
tion is the Extroctum Vibumi PrunifoUi Uquidum; the United 
States preparation is the fluid extract prepared from the 
Viburnum opnlns. The physiological action of viburnum is 
to lower the blood pressure. In overdose it depresses the motor 
functions of the spinal cord aad so produces loss of reflex 
and rjaxalysis. Therapeutically the drug is used as an anti- 
spasmodic in dysmenorrhea aad in meuorrhagia. 

VICAIRE, LOUIS GABRIEL CHARLES (1848-1000), French 
poet, was born at Bclfort on the asth of January 184ft. He 
served in the campaign of 1870, and then settled in Paris to 
practise at the bar, which, however, he soon abandoned for 
literature. His work was twice " crowned " by the Academy, 
and in 1892 he received the cros&of the Legion of Honour. Born 
in the Vosges, and a Parisian by adoption, Vkaire remained all 
his life an enthusiastic lover of the country to which bis family 
belonged — La Bresse— spending much of his time at Ambericu. 
His freshest and best work is his Awaux brtssans ( 1 884), a volume 
of poems full of the gaiety and spirit of the old French chansons. 
Other volumes followed: be Livre de la palrie, L'Heure en- 
chanUe (x8oo), X la bonne frauquctU (1892), Au boisjoli (1894) 
and U Clos its fits (1897). Vicairc wrote In collaboration with 
Jules Trainer two short pieces for the stage, Fleurs d'avril (1890) 
and La Farce in marirefondu (189s); also the UiracU do Saint 
Nicolas (1888). With his friend Henri Beauckir he produced a 
parody of the Decadents entitled Let DUiquaunuc* and signed 
Adore Floupette. His fame rests on his stmanx bressatu and on 
his Rabelaisian drinking songs; the religious and fairy noems 



i8 



VICAR— VICE-CHANCELLOR 



charming as they often are, carry simplicity to the verge of 
affectation. The poet died in Paris, after a long and painful 
illness, on the 23rd of September 1900. 

See Henri Corbel, Un Poite, Gabriel Vicairc (190a). 

VICAR (Lat. vicarius, substitute)^ title.more especially ecclesi- 
astical, describing various officials acting in some special way 
for a superior. Cicero uses the name vicarius to describe ah 
under-slave kept by another as part of his private property. The 
vicarius was an important official in the reorganised empire of 
Diocletian. It remained as a title of secular officials in the 
middle ages, being applied to persons appointed by the Roman 
emperor to judge cases in distant parts of the empire, or to 
wield power in certain districts, or, in the absence of the emperor, 
over the whole empire. The prefects of the city at Rome were 
called Vicani Romae. In the early middle ages the term was 
applied to representatives of a count administering justice for 
him in the country or small towns and dealing with unimportant 
cases, levying taxes, &c Monasteries and religious houses often 
employed a vicar to answer to their feudal lords for those of their 
lands which did not pass into mortmain. 

The title of " vicar of Jesus Christ," borne by the popes, was 
introduced as their special designation during the 8th century, in 
place of the older style of " vicar of St Peter " (or vicarius prin- 
<ipis aposidorum). In the early Church other bishops commonly 
described themselves as vicars of Christ (Du Cange gives an 
example as late as the oth century from the capitularies of 
Charles the Bald); but there is no proof in their case, or indeed 
in that of " vicar of St Peter " given to the popes, that it was part 
of their formal style. The assumption of the style " vicar of 
Christ " by the popes coincided with a tendency on the part of 
the Roman chancery to insist on placing the pontiff's name 
before that of emperors and kings and to refuse to other bishops 
the right to address him as" brother "(MasLatrie, s." Sabinicn," 
p. 1047). It was not till the 13th century that the alternative 
style " vicar of St Peter " was definitively forbidden, this pro- 
hibition thus coinciding with the extreme claims of the pope to 
rule the world as the immediate " vicar of God " (see Innocent 
HI.). 

All bishops were looked upon as in some sort vicars of the pope, 
but the title vicarius salts apostclicae came especially to be ap- 
plied as an alternative to legatus scdis apostclicae to describe papal 
legates to whom in certain places the pope delegated a portion 
of his authority. Pope Benedict XIV. tells us in his treatise 
De synodo dioecesana that the pope often names vicars-apostolic 
for the government of a particular diocese because the episcopal 
see is vacant or, being filled, the titular bishop cannot fulfil 
his functions. The Roman Catholic Church in England was 
governed by vicars-apostolic from 16S5 until 1850, when Pope 
Pius IX. re-established the hierarchy. Vicars-apostolic at the 
present day are nearly always titular bishops taking their titles 
from places not acknowledging allegiance to the Roman Catholic 
Church. The title is generally given by the pope to bishops sent 
on Eastern missions. 

A neighbouring bishop was sometimes appointed by the pope 
vicar of a church which happened to be without a pastor. A 
special vkar was appointed by the pope to superintend the 
spiritual affairs of Rome and its suburbs, to visit its churches, 
monasteries, &c, and to correct abuses. It became early a 
custom for the prebendaries and canons of a cathedral to employ 
" priest-vicars " or '* vicars-choral " as their substitutes when It 
was their turn as hebdotnedary to sing High Mass and conduct 
divine Office. In the English Church these priest-vicars remain 
in the cathedrals of the old foundations as beneficed clergy on the 
foundation; in the cathedrals of the new foundation they are 
paid by the chapters. " Lay vicars " also were and are employed 
to sing those parts of the office which can be sung by laymen. 

In the early Church the assistant bishops (ckorepiseopi) were 
sometimes described as vicani tpiscoporum. The employment 
of soch vicars was by no means general in the early Church, but 
towards the 13th century it became very general for a bishop to 
employ a vicar -general, often to curb the growing authority of 
the archdeacons. I& the middle ages there was not a very clear 



distinction drawn between the vicar and the official of the bishop. 
When the voluntary and contentious jurisdiction came to be dis- 
tinguished, the former fell generally to the vicars, the latter to 
the officials. In the style of the Roman chancery, official docu- 
ments are addressed to the bishops or their vicars for dioceses 
beyond the Alps, but for French dioceses to the bishops or their 
officials. The institution of vicars-general to help the bishops is 
now general in the Catholic Church, but k is not certain that a 
bishop is obliged to have such an official. He may have two. 
Such a vicar possesses an ordinary and not a delegated juris- 
diction, which he exercises Hke the bishop. He cannot, however, 
exercise functions which concern the episcopal order, or confer 
benefices without express and particular commission. In the 
Anglican Church a vicar-general is employed by the archbishop 
of Canterbury and some other bishops to assist in such matters 
as ecclesiastical visitations. In the Roman Catholic Church 
bishops sometimes appoint lesser vicars to exercise a more 
limited authority over a limited district. They are called 
" vicars-forane " or rural deans. They are entrusted especially 
with the surveillance of the parish priests and other priests of 
their districts, and with matters of ecclesiastical discipline. They 
are charged especially with the care of sick priests and in case of 
death with the celebration of their funerals and the charge of 
their vacant parishes. In canon law priests doing work in 
place of the parish priest are called vicars. Thus in France the 
curt or head priest in a parish church is assisted by several 
vicaircs. 

Formerly, and especially in England, many churches were 
appropriated to monasteries or colleges of canons, whose custom 
it was to appoint one of their own body to perform divine service 
In such churches, but in the 13th century such corporations were 
obliged to appoint permanent paid vicars who were called 
perpetual vicars. Hence in England the distinction between 
rectors, who draw both the greater and lesser tithes, and vicars, 
who are attached to parishes of which the great tithes, formerly 
held by monasteries, are now drawn by lay rectors. (See Appro- 
priation.) 

See Du Cange, Glossarium mediae el infiniae tatinitatis, ed. L. 
Favre (Niort, 1883, &c); Mignc, Encyclopedic iklologiquc, series i. 
vol. 10 (Droit Canon); Comte dc Mas Latrie, Trisor de chronotogie 
(Paris, 1889); and Sir R. J. Phillimore, Ecclesiastical law of the 
Church of England (2nd ed. 1895). (E. ON.) 

VICE. (1) (Through Fr. from Lat. vitium), a fault, blemish, 
more specifically a moral fault, hence depravity, sin, or a par- 
ticular form of depravity. In the medieval morality plays a 
special character who acted as an attendant on the devil was 
styled "the Vice," but sometimes took the name of specific 
vices such as Envy, Fraud, Iniquity and the like. He was 
usually dressed in the garb that is identified with that of the 
domestic fool or jester, and was armed with a wooden sword or 
dagger. (2) (M.E. vyce, vise or vyst\ Fr. tis; Lat. litis, a 
vine, or bryony, i.e. something that twists or winds), a portable 
or fixed tool or appliance which holds or grips an object while 
it is being worked; a special form of clamp. The tool consists 
essentially of movable jaws, either jointed by a hinge or moving 
on slides, and the closing motion is applied by a screw, whence 
the name, as of something which turns or winds, ot by a lever, 
ratchet, &c. (see Tools). (3) (Lat. vice, in place of, abl. sing. 
of a noun not found in the nom.). a word chiefly used as a prefix 
in combination with names of office-holders, indicating a position 
subordinate or alternative to the chief office-holder, especially 
one who takes second rank or acts in default of bis superior, 
e.g. vice-chairman, vice-admiral, &c. 

VICE-CHANCELLOR, the deputy of a chancellor (<j.v). In 
the English legal system vice-chancellors in equity were 
formerly important officials. The first vice-chancellor was 
appointed In 181 3 in order to lighten the work of the lord 
chancellor and the master of the rolls, who were at that time 
the sole judges in equity. Two additional vice-chancellors were 
appointed in 1841. The vice-chancellors sat separately from 
the lord chancellor and the lords justices, to whom there was 
an appeal from their decisions. By the Judicature Act 1873 



VICENTE 



«9 



they became Judges of the High Court of Justice, retaining their 
tides, but it was enacted that on the death or retirement of any 
one hi* successor was to be styled " judge." Vice-chancellor 
Sir J. Bacon (179&-1895) was the last to hold the office, resigning 



r is also the title given to the judge of the duchy 
court of Lancaster. For the vice-chancellor of a university, 
see CsmiCEL Lon- 

VlCOrTE, OIL (1470-1540), the father of the Portuguese 
drama, was born at Guimaraes, but came to Lisbon in boyhood 
and studied jurisprudence at the university without taking a 
degree. In 1493 we find him acting as master of rhetoric to the 
dnke of Beja, afterwards King Manoel, a post which gave him 
admission to the court; and the Cancioneuro Geral contains tame 
early lyrics of his which show that he took part in the famous 
server do paco. The birth of King John III. furnished .the 
occasion for his first dramatic essay— The Neatherd 1 t M analogue, 
which he recited on the night of the 7th-8th June 1502 in the 
queen's chamber in the presence of King Manoel and his court. 
It was written m Spanish out of compliment to the queen, a 
daughter of Ferdinand and Isabella, and because that language 
was then the fashionable medium with the higher classes. This 
auuagcr-bymn, which was a novelty in Portugal, so pleased the 
king's mother, the infanta D. Beatrix, that she desired Gil 
Vicente to repeat it the following Christmas, but be composed 
instead the Castilian Pastoral Auto, a more developed piece in 
which he introduced six characters. The infanta, pleased 
again, required a further diversion for Twelfth Day, whereupon 
he pr o d u ced the Auto of Ike Wise Kings. He had now estab- 
lished his reputation as a playwright, and for the next thirty 
years he entertained the courts of Kings Manoel and John III., 
accompanying them as they moved from place to place, and 
providing by his autos a distraction in times of calamity, and 
in times of rcjoidng giving expression to the feelings of the 
people. Though himself both actor and author, Gil Vicente 
had no regular company of players, but it is probable that he 
easily found students and court servants willing to get up a 
part for a small fee, especially as the plays would not ordinarily 
run for more than one night The Auto of the Sybil Cassandra 
(produced at the monastery of Euxobregas at Christmas 1503), 
the Auto of St Martin (played in the church at Caldas on the 
feast of Corpus Christ! 1504), and a mystery play, the Auto of 
the Four Seasons, all belong, like their predecessors, to the 
religious drama, but in 1505 Gil Vicente wrote a comedy of real 
tie, Who has Bran to sell? a title given it by the public It to a 
carver force depicting an amorous poor squire and his ill-paid 
servants, and opens a rich portrait-gallery in which the dramatist 
mdudes every type of Portuguese society, depicting the fail- 
ings of each with the freedom of a Rabelais. The next three 
years saw no new play, but in 1506 Gil Vicente delivered before 
the court at Almeirim a sermon in verse on the theme Non-volo, 
tola, * defcior, in which he protested against the intolerance 
shown to the Jews, just as in 1531 be interfered to prevent a 
aeas sa cee of the "New Christians" at Santarem. The Auto 
of the Soul, a Catholic prototype of Goethe's Faust, containing 
some beautiful lyrics, appeared in 1508, and in 1509 the Auto 
da India, a farce which has the eastern enterprise of his country* 
DM9 for background, while the Auto da Fanta (15x6) and the 
Exhortation to War (1513) are- inspired by the achievements 
that made Portugal a world-power. If the farce of TheOU Mian 
of the Garden (15x4) breathes the influence and spirit of the 
CdesHma, the popular trilogy of the Boats of Hell, Purgatory 
and Gary (1517, 1518, 15x9) is at once a dance of death, full 
of splendid pageantry and caustic irony, and a kind of Portuguese 
Dmma Conmedia. The Auto of the Fairies (1516), the Pane 
of the Doctors (1519) and the Comedy of Rubena (1521) ridicule 
m^-i— clerics and ignorant physicians with considerable 
freedom and a medieval coarseness of wit, and the Farce of the 
Gipsies m interesting as the first piece of the European theatre 
deafing professedly with that race. Igna Pereira, usually held 
to he Gfl Vicente's masterpiece, was produced in 1533 before 
King John UL at the convent of Christ at Thomar, and owed 



its origin to certain men of horn saber, perhaps envious partisans 
of the classical school. They pretended to doubt his author- 
ship of the autos, and accordingly gave him as a theme for a 
fresh piece the proverb: " I prefer an ass that carries me to a 
horse that throws me." Gil Vicente accepted the challenge, 
and furnished a triumphant reply to his detractors in this 
comedy of ready wit and lively dialogue,. The Beira Judge 
(1526), the Forge of Love (1525) and The Beira Priest (1526) 
satirise the maladministration of justice by ignorant magistrates 
and the lax morals of the regular clergy, and the Farce of the 
Muleteers (1526) dramatizes the type of poor nobleman described 
in Cleynart's Letters. The Comedy of the Arms of the City of 
Coimbra (1537) has a considerable antiquarian interest, and the 
facetious Ship of Love is full of quaint imagery, while the lengthy 
Auto of the Fair (1527), with its twenty-two characters, may 
be described as at once an indictment of the society of the time 
from the standpoint of a practical Christian and a telling appeal 
for the reform of the church. In an oft-quoted passage, Rome 
personified comes to the booth of Mercury and Time, and offers 
her indulgences, saying, " Sell me the peace of heaven, since I 
have power here below "; but Mercury refuses, declaring that 
Rome absolves the whole world and never thinks of her own 
sins. The play concludes with a dance and hymn to the Blessed 
Virgin. The Triumph of Winter (1529) exposes the unskilful 
pilots and ignorant seamen who cause the loss of ships and lives 
on the route to India, and the Auto da Lusiiania (1533) portrays 
the household of a poor Jewish tailor, ending with a curious 
dialogue between "All the World" and "Nobody." The 
Pilgrimage of the Aggrieved (1533) is an attack on discontent and 
ambition, lay and clerical. After representing the Auto da 
fata for the Conde de Vimioso (1535), and dramatizing the 
romances of chivalry in D. Duardos and Amadis de Caula, Gil 
Vicente ended his dramatic career in 1536 with a mirthful 
comedy, The Garden of Deceptions. He spent the evening of 
life in preparing his works for the press at the instance of King 
John HI., and died in 1540, his wife Branca Bezerra having 
predeceased him. Four children were born of their union, and 
among them Paula Vicente attained distinction as a member 
of the group of cultured women who formed a sort of female 
academy presided over by the infanta D. Maria. 

The forty-four pieces comprising the theatre of GQ Vicente fall 
from the point of view of language into three groups: (1) those in 
Portuguese only, numbering fourteen; (a) those in Spanish only,' 
numbering eleven; and (3I the bilingual, being the remainder, 
nineteen in all. They are also from their nature divisible as follows: 
a. Works of a religious character or of devotion. Most of these 
are a development of the mystery or miracle play of the middle 
ages; and they may be subdivided into (1) Biblical pieces; (2) pieces 
founded on incidents in the life of a saint ; and (3) religious allegories. 
In this department Gil Vicente reaches his highest poetical flights, 
and the Aula of the Soul is a triumph of elevation of idea and feeling 
allied to beauty of expression, b. Aristocratic works, or tragi- 
comedies, the composition of which was the result of his contact 
with the court; these, though often more spectacular than strictly 
dramatic, are remarkable for opulence of invention and sweetness 
of versification, c. The popular theatre, or comedies and farces. 
Gil Vicente's plays contain some evidence of his knowledge and 
r~ . -^ » .,__ ..j general 

j Testa- 

Wj/ r work of 

Francois Villon. Most of the plays are written in the national 
redondilha verse, and are preceded by initial rubrics stating the 
date when, the place where, in whose presence, and on what occasion 
each was first performed, and these make up the annals of the first 
thirty-four years of the Portuguese drama. Most of them were put 
on the rtage at the different royal palaces: some, however, were 
played in hospitals, and, It is said, even in churches, though this is 
doubtful; those of which the subjects are liturgical at the great 
festivals of Christmas. Epiphany and Maundy Thursday, others on 
the happening of some event of importance to the royal family or 
the nation. Many of the plays contain songs, either written and 
set to music by the author, or collected by him from popular sources, 
while at the close the characters leave the stage singing and dancing, 
as was the custom in the medieval comedies. ... 

Though so large a proportion of his pieces are in Spanish, they 
are all eminently national in idea, texture and subject. No other 
Portuguese writer reflects so faithfully the language, types, customs 
and colour of his age as Gil Vicente, and the rudest of his dramas 
are full of genuine comic feeling. If they never attain to perfect 



20 



VICENZA 



art, they possess the supreme gift of life. None of them are, strictly 
speaking, historical, and he never attempted to write a /tragedy. 
Himself a man of the people, he would not imitate the products of 
the classical theatre as did Sa de Miranda and Fcrreira, but though 
he remained faithful to the Old or Spanish school in form, yet he 
had imbibed the critical spirit and mental ferment of the Renaissance 
without its culture or erudition. Endowed by nature with acute 
observation and considerable powers of analysis, Gil Vicente possessed 
a felicity of phrase and an unmatched knowledge of popular super- 
stitions, language and lore. Above all, he was a moralist, with satire 
and ridicule as his main weapons; but if his invective is often stinging 
it is rarely bitter, while more than one incident in his career shows 
that he possessed a kindly heart as well as an impartial judgment, 
arid a well-balanced outlook on life. If he owed his early inspiration 
to Juan de Encina, he repaid the debt by showing a better way 
to the dramatists of the neighbouring country, so that he may 
truly be called the father of the rich Spanish drama, of Lope de 
Vega and Calderon. Much of his fame abroad is due to his position 
as an innovator, and, as Dr Garnet t truly remarked, " One little 
corner of Europe alone possessed in the early t6th century a drama 
at once living, indigenous and admirable as literature." 

Gil Vicente perhaps lacks psychological depth, but he possesses 
a breadth of mental vision and a critical acumen unknown in any 
medieval dramatist. In his attitude to religion he acts as the 
spokesman of the better men of his age and country. A convinced 
but liberal-minded Catholic he has no sympathy with attacks on 
the unity of the Church, but he cries out for a reform of morals, 
pillories the corruption and ignorance of the clergy and laity, and 
pens the most bitter things of the popes and their court. He 
strove to take a middle course at a time when moderation was still 
possible, though, had he lived a few years longer, in the reign of 
religious fanaticism inaugurated by the Inquisition, his bold stand 
for religious toleration would have meant his imprisonment or exile, 
if not a worse fate. He is a great dramatist In embryo, who, if 
he had been born fifty years later and preserved his liberty of thought 
and expression, might with added culture haw surpassed Calderon 
and taken his place as the Latin and Catholic rival of Shakespeare. 

Some of the plays were printed in Gil Vicente's lifetime, but the 
first collected edition, which included his lyrics, was published after 
his death by his son Luiz (Lisbon, 1562), with a dedication to King 
Sebastian. A second edition appeared in 1586, with various omissions 
and alterations made at the instance of the Inquisition, A critical 
edition of the text in 3 vols, came out at Hamburg (1834), with a 
glossary and introductory essay on Vicente's life and writings, and 
a poor reprint of this edition is dated Lisbon 1853. He has never 
found a translator, doubtless because of the difficulty of rendering 
his form and explaining his wealth of topical allusions. 

Authorities. — Dr Theophilo Braga, Gil Vicente e as origens do 
Ihealro national (Oporto, 1898): J- '-de Brito Rebello, Gil Vicente 
(Lisbon, 1902); "The Portuguese Drama in the 16th Century — 
Gil Vicente," in the Manchester Quarterly (July and October 1807); 
introduction by the Conde de Sabugosa to his edition of the Auto 
defesta (Lisbon, 1906). (E. Pa.) 

VICENZA, a town and episcopal see of Venetia, Italy, capital 
of the province of Viccnza, 42 m. W. of Venice by rail, 131 ft. 
above sea-level. Pop. (1001) 32,200 (town); 47,558 (com- 
mune). It lies at the northern base of the Monti Berici, on 
both sides of the Bacchiglionc, at its confluence with the Retrone. 
It was surrounded by 13th-century walls, once about 3 m. in 
circumference, but these are now in great part demolished. 
Though many of the streets are narrow and irregular, the town 
has a number of fine buildings, many of them the work of Andrea 
Palladio. The best of these is the town hall, otherwise known 
as the basilica, one of the finest works of the Renaissance period, 
of which Palladio himself said that it might stand comparison 
with any similar work of antiquity. It is especially noteworthy 
owing to the difficulty of the task the architect had to accom- 
plish — that of transforming the exterior of the Palazzo della 
Ragione, a Gothic building of the latter half of the 15th century, 
which the colonnades of the basilica entirely enclose. It was 
begun in. 1549, but not finished till 1614, long after his death. 
He also designed many of the fine palaces which give Vicenza 
its individuality; only two of them, the Barbarano and Chieri- 
cati palaces (the latter containing the picture gallery), have two 
orders of architecture, the rest having a heavy rustica basis 
with only one order above it. Many palaces, however, have 
been wrongly attributed to him which aie really the work of 
Scamozzi and others of his successors. The famous Teatro 
Olrmpico was begun by him, but only finished after his death; 
it is a remarkable attempt to construct a theatre in the ancient 
style, and the stage, with the representation of streets ascending 
at the back, is curious. The cathedral, which is Italian Gothic, 



dating mainly from the 13th century, consists of a nave with 
eight chapels on each side, and a very high Renaissance domed 
choir; it contains examples of the Montagnas and of Lorenzo 
da Venezia. The churches of S. Lorenzo (1 280-1344) and 
S. Corona (1260-1300), both of brick, are better examples of 
Gothic than the cathedral; both contain interesting works of 
art— the latter a very fine "Baptism of Christ," by Giovanni 
Bellini. In S. Stefano is an imposing altar-piece by Palma 
Vecchio. The church of SS. Felice e Fortunato was restored 
in a.d. 975, but has been much altered, and was transformed 
in 1613. The portal is of 11 54, and the Lombardesque square 
brick tower of n 60. Under it a mosaic pavement with the 
names of the donors, belonging to the original church of the 
Lombard period (?), was discovered in 1895 (see F. Berchet, 
///. Relatione ddl* Ufficio Regional* per la conservaxionc dd 
monument* del Veneto, Venice, 1895, p. m). None of toe 
churches of Vicenza is the work of Palladio. Of the Palladian 
villas in the neighbourhood, La Rotonda, or Villa Palladiana, 
1} m. S.E., deserves special mention.. It is a square building 
with Ionic colonnades and a central dome, like an ancient 
temple, but curiously unlike a Roman villa. Vicenza also 
contains some interesting remains of the Gothic period besides 
the churches mentioned— the lofty tower of the town ball 
(1174-1311*1446; the Piazza contains two columns of the 
Venetian period, with S. Theodore and the Lion of S. Mark 
on them) and several palaces in the Venetian style. Among 
these may be especially noted the small Casa Pigafetta dating 
from 1481, but still half Gothic, prettily decorated. Some of 
these earlier houses had painted facades. The fine picture 
of " Christ bearing the Cross " (wrongly ascribed to Giorgione), 
according to Burckhardt once in the Palazzo Loschi, is now 
in the Gardner collection at Boston, U.S.A. The most im- 
portant manufacture is that of silk, which employs a large 
proportion of the inhabitants. Great numbers of mulberry 
trees are grown in the neighbourhood. Woollen and linen 
cloth, leather, earthenware, paper, and articles in gold and 
silver are also made in Vicenza, and a considerable trade in 
these articles, as well as in corn and wine, is carried on. 

Vicenza is the ancient Vicetia, an ancient town of Venetia, 
It was of less importance than its neighbours Venetia and 
Patavium, and we hear little of it in history. It no doubt 
acquired Roman citizenship in 49 B.C., and became a ntuni- 
cipitim; and is mentioned two years later apropos of a dispute 
between the citizens and their slaves. Remains of a theatre 
and of a late mosaic pavement with hunting scenes have been 
found, three of the bridges across the Bacchiglione and Retrone 
are of Roman origin, and arches of the aqueduct exist outside 
Porta S. Croce. A road diverged here to Opitergium (mod. 
Oderro) from the main road between Verona and Patavium 
(Padua) : see T. Mommsen in Corp. Inscr. Latin, v. (Berlin, 1883), 
p. 304. It suffered severely in the invasion of Attfla,by whom 
it was laid waste, and in subsequent incursions. It was for 
some time during the middle ages an independent republic, 
but was subdued by the Venetians in 1405. Towards the end 
of the 15th century it became the seat of a school of painting 
strongly influenced by Mantegna, of which the principal repre- 
sentatives were, besides Bartolomeo Montagna, its founder, 
his son Benedetto Montagna, Giovanni Speranza and Gio- 
vanni Buonconsiglio. Good altar-pieces by the former exist 
in S. Bartolommeo, S. Corona, and the cathedral, and several 
pictures also in the picture gallery; while his son Benedetto 
had greater merits as an engraver than a painter. Some works 
by both of the last two exist at Vicenza— the best is a Pieta 
in tempera in the gallery by Buonconsiglio, by whom is also a 
good Madonna at S. Rocco. Andrea Palladio (1518-1580) was 
a native of Vicenza, as was also a contemporary, Vincenso 
Scamozzi (1552-1616), who was largely dependent on him, 
but is better known for his work on architecture {ArckUeilwa 
universale, 161 5). Palladio inaugurated a school of followers 
who continued to erect similar buildings in Vicenza even down 
to the French Revolution. (X. As.) 

See G. Pettina, Vicente, (Bergamo, 1905)* 



VICEROY— VICKSBURG 



21 



VICEROY (bom O. Fr. viceroy, mod. stccres, i*. Lat vice, in 
puce of , and rey or rot, king) , the coventor of a kingdom or colony 
to whom is delegated by his sovereign the power to 'exercise 
iejal authority in bis name. The lord-lieutenant of Ireland 
ud tat governor-general of India are frequently referred to as 
iksoys, bat the title has no official recognition in British 



VICH, a city of north-eastern Spain, in the province of 
laiteJooa, on the river Cum, a small right-hand tributary 
of the Ter, and on the GranoUe'rs-Ripoll railway Pop (xooo) 
u. 6 'S Vich is an ancient episcopal city, with narrow, ill- 
pawed streets and many curious old houses irregularly built on 
the slope of a hill, which rises above one of the side valleys of 
tk Ter basin. The cathedral, founded about 1040 and built 
chefly m the 14th century, was to some extent modernised in 
rtoj Its Gothic cloisters (1340) *re remarkable for the beauti- 
ful tiacery in their windows, and there is a fine altar of sculp- 
tured marble, Some valuable manuscripts are preserved in 
the library of the chapter-bouse, and the museum contains 
ie interesting archaeological collection, besides statuary, pic- 
tures, &c The city is locally celebrated for the manufacture 
of sausages, other industries include tanning and the weaving 
of l.nea and woollen fabrics. 

Vich, the Ausa of the ancient geographers, was the chief 
tc*v of the Ausetani, in the middle ages it was called Ausona 
md Vicus Ausonensis, hence Vic de Osona, and simply Vich. 

VICHY, a town of central France in the department of Allier, 
an the right bank of the Allier, 33 m. S. by E. of Moulins by 
niL Pop. (1906) 14*5301. Vichy owes its Importance to its 
aiaeral waters, which were well known in the time of the 
leouns. They afterwards lost their celebrity and did not regain 

* UD the 17th century, in the latter half of which they were 
visited and written of by Madame de Sevignt. Within the 
town or m its immediate vicinity there are between thirty and 
tecty springs, twelve of which are state property, four of these 
having been tapped by boring. The waters of those which are 
oatade the town are brought in by means of aqueducts. The 
■on celebrated and frequented are the Grande Grille, L'Hopital, 
tk Celcstins, and Lardy The most copious of all, the Puits 
Carri, is reserved for the baths. All these, whether cold or hot 
.'aaxunum temperature, 113* F.), are largely charged with 
bicarbonate of soda, some also are chalybeate and tonic. The 
vaten, which are limpid, have an alkaline taste and emit a 
£gtt odour of sulphuretted hydrogen. They are recom- 
acoded in cases of stomachir and liver complaint, also for 
tiabetes, gravel and gout. Large quantities arc bottled and 
aported. A luxurious bathing establishment, the property 
of the state, was opened in 1003. In addition to this, Vichy 
an the hydropathic establishments of Lardy, Larbaud and 
L'Hopital, and a large military hospital, founded in 1843. A 
fee casino and two public parks add to its attraction. The 
Brcoaenade commands a splendid view of the mountains of 
Aomgne. Onset, about 1 m. distant, has similar mineral 
•Her* and a bathing establishment. 

V1CXEBUB0, a city and the county-seat of Warren county, 
ifissssippi, U.S.A., on the Mississippi and Yazoo rivers, 1 44 m. 
by tai W. of Jackson, and a 3 6 m. N. by W. of New Orleans, 
&p. (1800) 13.373; (xooo) 14^34. of whom 8147 were 
■apoat; (1910 census) 10,814, being the second largest city 
» HiaiaWippI It is served by the Alabama & Vkksburg, 
tat Vkksburg, Sfareveport fr Pacific, and the Yasoo & 
atuaiuippi Valley railways, and by steamboat lines. It is built 
asxag the Walnut Hills, which rise about aoo ft. above the 
am. Among the principal buildings and institutions are 
u* court-house, standing on one of the highest hills, a fine 
Federal building, the city hall, a state charity hospital, an 

•The channel of the Mismsippi has changed greatly: until 1876 
He cabie city was on the Miauauppi which made a bead foaming 

* tost** of land opposite the city; in 1876 the river cut across 
ti* tongue and formed an island, making the northern part of the 
ciry {root on the shallow " Lake Centennial." The Federal govern- 
m. by turning the Yasoo through a canal across the upper end 
d tibe em channel, gave the city a river front once wore. 



infirmary, a sanatorium, a public library, the medical college 
of the university of Mississippi, All Saints' Episcopal College 
(Protestant Episcopal, 1009) for girls, Saint Francis Xavier's 
Academy, and Saint Aloysius College (Roman Catholic). The 
Civil Wat battle-ground has been converted into a beautiful 
National. Military Park, embracing 1283 acres and containing 
numerous markers, memorials and monuments, including one 
(1910) to Lieut.-General Stephen Dill Lee, who was super* 
intendent of the Military Park from 1800 until his death in 1008. 
On the bluffs just beyond the northern limits of the city and ad- 
joining the Military Park is the Vkksburg National Cemetery, in 
which are the graves of 16,892 Federal soldiers (1 2,700 unknown). 
The principal industry of Vkksburg is the construction and 
repair of rolling stock for steam railways. It has also a dry 
dock and cotton compresses; and among its manufactures are 
cottonseed oil and cake, hardwood lumber, furniture, boxes 
and baskets. In 1005 the factory products were valued at 
$1,887,924 The city has a large trade in long-staple cotton 
grown in the surrounding country. It is a port of entry but 
has practically no foreign trade. 

The French built fort St Peter near the site of Vkksburg 
early in the 18th century, and on the 2nd of January 1730 its 
garrison was murdered by the Yazoo Indians. As early as 
1783 the Spanish erected Fort Negates, and in 1708 this was 
taken by some United States troops and renamed Fort McHenry. 
The first permanent settlement in the vicinity was made about 
181 x by Rev. Newell (or Newit) Vick (d. 1819), a Methodist 
preacher. In accordance with his will a town was laid out in 
1824; and Vkksburg was incorporated as a town in 1825, 
and was chartered as a city in 1836. The campaigns of which 
it was the centre in 1862 and 1863 are described below. Vkks- 
burg was the home of Seargent Smith Prentiss from 1832 to 
1845- 

See H. F.,Simrau\ "Vkksburg: the City on the Walout Hills," 
in L. P. Powell's Historic Toms of tko Southern Statu (New York, 
1900). 

Campaign of 1862-63.— Vkksburg is historically famous as 
being the centre of interest of one of the most important cam* 
paigns of the Civil War. The command of the Mississippi 
which would imply the severance of the Confederacy into two 
halves, and also the reopening of free commercial navigation 
from St Louis to the sea, was one of the principal objects of 
the Western Union armies from the time that they began 
their southward advance from Illinois, Missouri and Kentucky 
in February 1862. A series of victories in the spring and 
summer carried them as far as the line Memphis-Corinth, 
but in the autumn they came to a standstill and were called 
upon to repulse the counter-advance of the Southern armies, 
these armies were accompanied by a flotilla of thinly armoured 
but powerful gunboats which had been built on the upper 
Mississippi in the autumn of i86x, and had co-operated with 
the army at Fort Donebon, Shnoh and Island No. xo, besides 
winning a victory on the water at Memphis. 

At the same time a squadron of sea-going vessels under 
Flag-oxhcer Farragut had forced the defences of New Orleans 
(0.9.) and, accompanied by a very small military force, had 
steamed up the great river. On reaching Vkksburg the heavy 
vessels again forced their way past the batteries, but both at 
Vkksburg and at Port Hudson they had to deal, no longer 
with low-sited fortifications, but with inconspicuous earth- 
works on bluffs far above the river-level, and they failed to 
make any impression. Farragut then returned to New Orleans. 
From Helena to Port Hudson the Confederates maintained 
complete control of the Mississippi, the improvised fortresses 
of Vkksburg, Port Hudson and Arkansas Post (near the mouth 
of Arkansas river) being the framework of the defence. It 
was to be the task of Grant's army around Corinth and the 
flotilla at Memphis to break up this system of defences, and, 
by joining hands with Farragut and clearing the whole course 
of the Mississippi, to cut the Confederacy in half. 

The long and painful operations by which this was achieved 
group themselves into four episodes: (a) the Grenada expedition 



22 



VICKSBURG 



of Grant's force, (b) the river column under McClernand and 
Sherman, U) the operations in the bayoux, and (d) the final 
" overland " campaign from Grand Gulf. The country in 
which these operations took place divides itself sharply into 
two zones, the upland east of the nver, upon which it looks 
down from high bluffs, and the levels west of it, which are a 
maze of bayoux, backwaters and side channels, the intervening 
land being kept dry near the river itself by artificial banks 
(levees) but elsewhere swampy. At Vicksburg, it is important 
to observe, the bluffs trend away from the Mississippi to follow 
the course of the Yazoo, rejoining the great river at Memphis. 
Thus there arc two obvious lines of advance for the Northern 
army, on the upland (Memphis and Grand Junction on Grenada- 
Jackson), and downstream through the bayou country 
(Memphis-Helena- Vicksburg). The main army of the defenders, 
who were commanded by Lieut.-General J C. Pcmberton, between 
Vicksburg and Jackson and Grenada, could front either north 
against an advance by Grenada or west along the bluffs above 
and below Vicksburg. 



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The first advance was made at the end of November 1862 
by two columns from Grand Junction and Memphis on Grenada. 
The Confederates in the field, greatly outnumbered, fell back 
without fighting. But Grant's line of supply was one long 
single-line, ill-equipped railway through Grand Junction to 
Columbus, and the opposing cavalry under Van Dorn swept 
round his flank and, by destroying one of his principal ma ga zin es 
(at Holly Springs), without further effort compelled the abandon- 
ment of the advance. Meantime one of Grant's subordinates, 
McClernand, was intriguing to be appointed to command an 
expedition by the river-line, and Grant meeting half-way an 
evil which he felt himself unable to prevent, had sent Sherman 
with the flotilla and some 30,000 men to attack Vicksburg 
from the water-side, while he himself should deal with the 
Confederate field army on the high ground. But the scheme 
broke down completely when Van Dorn cut Grant's line of 
supply, and the Confederate army was free to turn on Sherman. 
The latter, ignorant of Grant's retreat, attacked the Yazoo 
bluffs above Vicksburg (battle of Chickasaw Bayou) on Decem- 
ber 29th; but a large portion of Pemberton's field army had 
arrived to help the Vicksburg garrison, and the Federals were 



easily repulsed with a loss of 2000 men. McClernand now 
appeared and took the command out of Sherman's hands, 
informing him at the same time of Grant's retreat Sherman 
thereupon proposed, before attempting fresh operations against 
Vicksburg, to clear the country behind them by destroying 
the Confederate garrison at Arkansas Post. This expedition 
was completely successful, at a cost of about 1000 men the 
fort and its 5000 defenders were captured on the nth of 
January 1863 McClernand, elated at his victory, would 
have continued to ascend the Arkansas, but such an eccentric 
operation would have been profitless if not dangerous, and 
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Retreating from the upland, Grant sailed down the river 
and joined McClernand and Sherman at Milliken's Bend at 
the beginning of February, and, superseding the resentful 
McClernand, assumed command of the three corps (XIII., 
McClernand; XV , Sherman, XVII., McPherson) available. He 
had already imagined the daring solution of his most difficult 
problem which he afterwards put into execution, but for the 
present he tried a series of less risky expedients to reach the 
high ground beyond Pemberton's flanks, without indeed much 
confidence in their success, yet desirous in these unhealthy 
flats of keeping up the spirits of his army by active work, and 
of avoiding, at a crisis in the fortunes of the war, any appearance 
of discouragement. Three such attempts were made in all, 
with the co-operation of the flotilla under Captain David D. 
Porter. First, Grant endeavoured to cut a canal across the 
bend of the Mississippi at Vicksburg, hoping thus to isolate 
the fortress, to gain a water connection with the lower river, 
and to land an army on the bluffs beyond Pemberton's left 
flank. This was unsuccessful. Next he tried to make a 
practicable channel from the Mississippi to the upper Yazoo-, 
and so to turn Pemberton's right, but the Confederates, warned 
in time, constructed a fort at the point where Grant's advance 
emerged from the bayoux. Lastly, an advance through a 
maze of creeks (Steele's Bayou expedition), towards the middle 
Yazoo and Haines's Bluff, encountered the enemy, not on the 
bluffs, but in the low-lying woods and islands, and these so 
harassed and delayed the progress of the expedition that 
Grant recalled it Shortly afterwards Grant determined on 
the manoeuvre in rear of Vicksburg which established his repu- 
tation. The troops marched overland from Milliken's Bend 
to New Carthage, and on the 16th of April Porter's gunboat 
flotilla and the transports ran past the Vicksburg batteries. 
All this, which involved careful arrangement and hard work, 
was done by the 24th of ApriL General Banks, with a Union 
army from New Orleans, was now advancing up the river to 
invest Port Hudson, and by way of diverting attention from 
the Mississippi, a cavalry brigade under Benjamin Grierson 
rode from La Grange to Baton Rouge (600 m. in 16 days), 
destroying railways and magazines and cutting the telegraph 



VICO 



23 



; em panes. Sherman's XV. corps, too, made rigorous 
at Haines's Bluff, and in the confusion and 
uncertainty Pemberton was at a loss. 

Ofe the joth of April McClernand and the XIII. corps crossed 
the Mississippi 6 m. below Grand Gulf, followed by McPherson. 
The nearest Confederate brigades, attempting to oppose the 
advance at Port Gibson, were driven back. Grant had now 
deliberately placed himself in the middle of the enemy, and 
although his engineers had opened up a water-line for the 
barges carrying his supplies from MuTiken's Bend to New 
Carthage, his long line of supply curving round the enemy's 
flask was very exposed. But his resolute purpose outweighed 
all text-book strategy. Having crossed the Mississippi, he 
collected wheeled transport for five days' rations, and on 
Sherman's arrival cut loose from his base altogether (May 7th). 
Free to move, he aimed north from the Big Black river, so as 
to interpose between the Confederate forces at Vicksburg and 
those at Jackson. A fight took place at Raymond on the 12th 
of May, and Jackson was captured just in time to forestall the 
arrival of reinforcements for Pemberton under General Joseph 
E. Johnston. The latter, being in supreme command of the 
Confederates, ordered Pemberton to come out of Vicksburg 
aad attack Grant. But Pemberton did not do so until it was 
las late. On May 16th Grant, with all his forces well in hand, 
defeated him in the battle of Champion Hill with a loss of 
nearly 4000 men, and sharply pursuing him drove him into 
Vkksbnrg. By the xoth of May Vicksburg and Pemberton's 
army m it was invested by land and water. Grant promptly 
■wi s hed his works, but was repulsed with loss (May roth); 
the assault was repeated on the 32nd of May with the same 
resaJl, and Grant found himself compelled to resort to a blockade, 
acutforcements were hurried up from all quarters, Johnston's 
farce (east of Jackson), was held off by a covering corps under 
Rah* (afterwards under Sherman), and though another tin- 
fKceasfuI assault was made on the 25th of June, resistance was 
almost at an end. On the 4th of July, the day after, far away in 
reaasylvania, the great battle of Gettysburg had closed with Lee's 
defeat, the garrison of Vicksburg, 37,000 strong, surrendered. 

VICO. GIOVAJTin BATTOTA (r668-i744). Italia* jurist and 
panosopher, was born at Naples on the 93rd of June 1668. 
At the university he made rapid progress, especially in juris- 
prudence, though preferring the study of history, literature, 
iaridkal science and philosophy. Being appointed tutor to 
tat ae&hews of the bishop of Ischia, G. B. Rooca, be accom- 
pamed them to the castle of VatoOa, near Cuento, in the prov in ce 
sf Salerno. There be passed nine studious years, chiefly de- 
wed to classical reading, Plato and Tacitus being his favourite 
Makers, because M the former described the ideal man, and the 
utter man as he really is." On his return to Naples be round 
moself out of touch with the prevailing Cartesianism, and lived 
eaietiy until in 1607 he gained the professorship of rhetoric at 
tat UHvenfty, with s scanty stipend of 100 acudi. On this 
he supported a growing family and gave himself to untiring 
Andy. Two authors exercised a weighty influence on his 
■and— Francis Bacon and Grotius. He was no follower of 
(saw ideas, indeed often opposed to them; but be derived 
ham Bacon an increasing stimulus towards the investigation 
sf certain great problems of history and philosophy, while 
Gmtius proved valuable in his study of philosophic jurispru- 
dence. In 1708 he published his De ration* jfcrfiorawa, in 1710 
Of enficuissima Italorum sopienlio, in 1720 De unhersi juris 
tat frincipio d fine una, and in 1721 De constant** jurispru- 
fafe. On the strength of these works he offered himself as 
a raariirrafe lor the university chair of jurisprudence, but 
* he had no personal or family influence was not elected. 
Wkh calm courage be returned to his poverty and his favourite 
■ndies. and in 172$ published the first edition of the work 
tut forms the basis of his renown, Princtpii e? una ssiema 
■awe. In 1730 be produced a second edition of the Scienta 
■**», so much altered in style and with so many substantial 
t&fiuous that it was practically a new work. In 173$ Charles 
*H- of Naples marked his recognition of Vice's merits by 



appointing him WstortographeT-royal, with' a yearly stipend of 
100 ducats. Soon after his mind began to give way, but during 
frequent intervals of lucidity he made new corrections in his 
great work, of which a third edition appeard in 1744, prefaced 
by a letter of dedication to Cardinal Trojano Acquaviva. He 
died on the 20th of January of the same year. Fate seemed 
bent on persecuting him to the last. A fierce quarrel arose 
over his burial between the brotherhood of St Stephen, to 
which he had belonged, and the university professors, who 
desired to escort his corpse to the grave. Finally the canons 
of the cathedral, together with the professors, buried the body 
in the church of the GeroliminL 

Vico baa been generally described as a solitary soul, out of harmony 
with the spirit of his time and often directly opposed to it. Yet a 
closer inquiry into the social conditions of Vico • time, and of the 
studies then flourishing, shows him to have been thoroughly in 
touch with them. 

Owing to the historical past of Naples, and its social and economic 
condition at the end of the 17th century, the only study that really 
flourished there was that of law; and this soon penetrated from 
the courts to the university, and was raised to the level of a science. 
A great school of jurisprudence was thus formed, including many 
men of vast learning and great ability, although little known outside 
""*--- jjj^ however, obtained a 
the political history of the 

, and institutions and of the 

legal conflicts between the state and the court of Rome, Pietro 
Gmnnone was the initiator of what has been since known as civi 
history Giovsn Vincenao Gravina wrote a history of Roman law, 
specially distinguished for its accuracy and elegance. Vico raissd 
the problem to a higher plane, by tracing the origin of law in the 
human mind and explaining the historical changes of the one by 
those of the other. Thus he made the original discovery of certain 
Ideas which constitute the modern rjsychotogico-historSc method. 
This problem he proceeded to develop in various works, until in his 
Scutnaa moss be arrived at a more complete solution, which may be 
formulated as follows: If the principle of justice and law be one, 

et * nnd immutable, why fhoujd there be 50 many different 

code* of legislation? These di/Terences are not caused ky diUcreUrr 
of nationality only, but are to be note* J in the hiitory of the mm* 
people, even in thai of the Roman*. This problem is tuurhed upon 
in his Or&tumt er Inavzurai Addrejsti {OrcMumi Prduiiatti) and 
in his M*m>f Works {Scritli mirtori}. Finally he applied himself 
to ic> solution in his Utinxrjal Low (Diriiui itttirtrmh), which a 
divided into two book*, The first of the*:, D* un& t4 unnvrii 
juris prwiipio a fine *mo> was subdivided tntcj two farts; 10 Like 
wiie was the tetond. with the respective liUt* ol Ik t&mt&niui 
phtloUfias and De utxitaniia juris prutUnfti* 

The following i^ the general idea defi*^ed from these researches, 
Vivv htlJ (ju'J tv U. Lin rukr u) liiv utvild U nations, but ruling 
not as the providence' of the middle ages by means of continued 
miracles, but as He rules nature, by means of natural laws. If, 
therefore, the physicist seeks to discover the laws of nature by 
study of natural phenomena, so the philosopher must seek the laws 
of historical change by the investigation of human events and of the 
human mind. % Arxoroiag to Vico, law emanates from the conscience 
of mankind, in whom God has infused a sentiment of justice 
and is there f ore in dose and continual relation with the human 
mind, and participates in its changes. This sentiment of justice 
is at 6rst confused, uncertain aad almost instinctive — is, as it were, 
a divine and religious inspiration instilled by Heaven into the primi- 
tive tribes of the earth. It is an unconsciousj universal sentiment, 
not the personal, conscioua and rational sentiment of the superior 
few. Hence the saw to which it gives birth is enwrapped in religious 
forms which are likewise visible and palpable, inasmuch as primitive 
man is incapable of abstract, philosophical ideas. This law is not 
the individual work of any philosophical legislator, for no man 
was, or could be, a pJ»3osopher at that time. It is first displayed 
m the shape of natural and necess a r y usages consecrated by religion. 
The names of leading legislators, which we so often una recorded 
in the history of primitive peoples, are symbols and myths, merely 
serving to mark aa historic period or epoch by some definite end 
personal denomination. For nations, or rather tribes, were then 
distinguished by personal names only. The first obscure and con- 
fused conception of law gradually becomes clearer and better defined. 
Its visible and religious forms then give way to abstract formulae, 
which in their turn ase slowly replaced by the rational manifestation 
of the philosophic principles of law that gains the victory in the 
final stage of de v el op ment, designated by Vico as that of ovd and 
human law. This n the period of individual and philosophic 
legislators. Thus Roman law has passed through three great 
periods— the divine, the heroic and the human— which are like- 
wise the three chief periods of the history of Rome, with which 
hmmtiinatelyandintriiuMallyconfsfcted. Nevertheless, on careful 
examination of these three successive stages, it will easily be seen 
that, in spite of the apparent difference between them, all have a 
moo foundation, source and purpose. The human and civil 



24 



VICO 



. _ j law of the third period » assuredly very different in 
form from the primitive law; but in substance it is merely the 
abstract, scientific and philosophic manifestation of the same senti- 
ment of justice and the same principles which were vaguely felt in 
primitive times. Hence one development of law may tie easily 
translated into another. Thus in the varied manifestationa oi law 
Vico was able to discover a single and enduring principle (fie unwcrsi 
juris uno prinatoo etfine uno). On these grounds it has been sought 
to establish a close relation between Vico and Grotius. The latter 
clearly distinguished between a positive law differing in different 
nations and a natural law based on a general and unchanging prin- 
ciple of human nature, and therefore obligatory upon all. But Vico 
was opposed to Grotius, especially as regards his conception of the 
origin of society, and therefore of law. Grotius holds that its origin 
was not divine, but human, and neither collective, spontaneous 
nor unconscious, but personal, rational and conscious. He believed, 
moreover, that natural law and positive law moved on almost constant 
and immutable parallel lines. But Vico maintained that the one 
was continually progressing towards the other, positive law showing 
an increasing tendency to draw nearer to natural and rational law. 
Hence the conception that law is of necessity a spontaneous birth, 
not the creation of any individual legislator; and hence the idea 
that it necessarily proceeds by a natural and logical process of evolu- 
tion constituting its history- Vico may have derived from Grotius 
the idea of natural law, but his discovery of the historic evolution 
of law was first suggested to him by his study of Roman law. He 
saw that the history of Roman jurisprudence was a continuous 
progress of the narrow, rigorous, primitive and almost iron law of 
the XI I. Tables towards the wider, more general and more humane 
ius gentium. Having once derived this conception from Roman 
history, he was easily and indeed necessarily carried on to the next— 
that the positive law of all nations, throughout history, is a continual 
advance, keeping pace with the progress of civilisation, towards the 
philosophic and natural law founded on the principles of human 
nature and human reason. 

As already stated, the Seietua nuova appeared in three different 
editions. The third may be disregarded; but the first and second 
editions are almost distinct works. In the former the author sets 
forth the analytical process by which the laws he discovered were 
deduced from facts. In the second he not only enlarges his matter 
and gives multiplied applications of his ideas, but also follows 
the synthetic method, first expounding the laws he had dis- 
covered and then proving them by the facts to which they are 
applied. In this edition the fragmentary and jerky arrangement, 
the intricate style, and a peculiar and often purely conventional 
terminology seriously checked the diffusion of the work, which 
accordingly was little studied in Italy and remained almost un- 
known to the rest of Europe. Its fundamental idea consists in 
that which Vico, in his peculiar terminology, styles *' poetical 
wisdom " {sapitnsa poetica) and " occult wisdom (sapunxa rtfoxis), 
and in the historical process by which the one is merged in the 
other. He frequently declares that this discovery was the result 
of the literary labours of his whole life. 

Vico was the first thinker who asked, Why have we a science of 
nature, but no science of history? Because our glance can easily 
be turned outwards and survey the exterior world : but it is far 
harder to turn the mind's eye inwards and contemplate the world 
of the spirit. All our errors in explaining the origin of human 
society arise from our obstinacy in believing that primitive man 
was entirely similar to ourselves, who are civilised, xa. developed 
by the results of a lengthy process of anterior historic evolution. 
We must learn to issue from ourselves, transport ourselves back 
to other times, and become children again in order to comprehend 
the infancy of the human race. As in children, imagination and 
the senses prevailed in those men of the past. They had no abstract 
ideas; in their minds all was concrete, visible and tangible. All 
the phenomena, forces and laws of nature, together with mental 
conceptions, were alike personified. To suppose that all mythical 
stories are fables invented by the philosophers b to write history 
backwards and confound the instinctive, impersonal, poetic wisdom 
of the earliest times with the civilised, rational and abstract occult 
wisdom of our own day. But how can we explain the formation 
of this poetic wisdom, which, albeit the work of ignorant men, has 
so deep and intrinsic a philosophic value? The only possible 
reply is that already given when treating of the origin of law. 
Providence has instilled into the heart of man a sentiment of justice 
and goodness, of beauty and of truth, that is manifested differently 
at different times. The ideal truth within us, constituting the inner 
life that is studied by philosophers, becomes transmuted by the 
facts of history into assured reality. For Vico psychology and 
history were the two poles of the new world he dis cov ered. After 
having extolled the work of God and proclaimed Him the source of 
all knowledge, he adds that a great truth is continually flashed on us 
and proved to us by history, namely, " that this world of nations is 
the work of man, and its explanation therefore only to be found in 
the mind of man." Thus poetical wisdom, appearing as a spon- 
taneous emanation of the human conscience, is almost the product 
of divine inspiration. From this, by the aid of civilization, reason 
and philosophy* there is gradually developed the civil, occult 



The continual, slow and laborious progress from the one 
to the other is that which really constitutes history, and man be- 
comes civilized by rendering himself the conscious and independent 
possessor of all that in poetical wisdom remained impersonal, 
unconscious, that came, as it were, from without by divine aJLUus. 

Vico tfvw nuny applications of tail fundamental idea. The 
religion of primitive people* is no less mythical than their history, 
since they could only conceive of it t v m Wis of myths. On these 
lines he interprets the whole hirtory of primitive Rome. One book 
of the second cditkm of the 5fir»M avmv is devoted to "The 
Di*cov*ry oi the T rue 1 1 omcr f Wh y all the cities of Greece dispute 
the honour of being hi* birthplace is because the Iliad and the 
Odysiry are not the work d one, but of many popular poets, and a 
true fixation of the Groett people which is in every city of Greece. 
And because tlit primitive peoples are unconscious and self-ignorant 
Homer is repmcnied a* being blind. In all parts of history in 
which be wa* best versed Vico pursues a tiricter and more scientific 
method, and arrives at safer conclusions. This is the case in Roman 
history ^ especially in such portions at related to the history of law. 
Here be sometimes Ptuins, even in details, to divinations of the 
trutii *lier»ard* continued Ly new documents and later res e a rch . 
The aristocratic origin of Rome, the struggle between the patricians 
and the plebeians, the laws of the XII. Tables, not, as tradition 
would have it, imported from Greece, but the natural and spon- 
taneous product of ancient Roman customs, and many other similar 
theories were discovered by Vico, and expounded with his usual 
originality, though not always without blunders and exaggerations. 
Vico may be said to base his considerations on the history of two 

The i .... .... 



greater part of his ideas on poetical wisdom were 

derived from Greece. Nearly all the rest, more especially the transi- 
tion from poetical to occult wisdom, was derived from Rome. 
Having once formulated his idea, be made it more general in order 
to apply it to the history of all nations. From the savage state, 
through the terror that gives birth to religions, through the creation 
of families by marriage, through burial rites and piety toward* 
the dead, men approach civilisation with the aid of poetic wisdom, 
and pass through three periods — the divine, heroic and human— 
in which they have three forms of government, language, litera- 
ture, jurisprudence and civilization. The primary government is 
aristocratic. Patrician tyranny rouses the populace to revolt, 
and then democratic equality is established under a republic. 
Democratic excesses cause the rise of an empire, which, becoming 
corrupt, declines into barbarism, and, again emerging from it, re- 
traces the same course. This is the law of cycles, constituting that 
which is designated by Vico as the " eternal ideal history, or rather 
course of humanity, invariably followed by all nations/' It must 
not be held to imply that one nation imitates the course pursued by 
another, nor that the points of resemblance between them are 
transmitted by tradition from one to the other, but merely that 
all are subject to one law, inasmuch as this is based on the human 
nature common to all alike. Thus, while on the one hand the 
various cycles traced and retraced by all nations are similar and 
yet independent, on the other hand, being actually derived from 
Roman history, they become converted in the Scienm nutma 
into a bed ot Procrustes, to which the history of all nations 
has to be fitted by force. And wherever Vico's historical know- 
ledge failed he was led into increased error by this artificial and 
arbitrary effort. 

It has been justly observed by many that this continuous cyclical 
movement entirely excludes the progr e ss of humanity towards a 
better future. It has been replied that these cycles are similar 
without being identical, and that, if one might differ from another, 
the idea of progre ss was not necessarily excluded by the law of 
cycles. Vico undoubtedly considered the poetic wisdom of the 
Middle Ages to be different from that of the Greeks and Roman*. 
and Christianity to be very superior to the pagan religion. But be 
never investigated the question whether, since there is a law of 
progressive evolution in the history of different nations, separately 
examined, there may not likewise be another law ruling the general 
history of these nations, every one of which must have represented 
a new period, as it were, in the history of humanity at large. There- 
fore, although the Scienza nuova cannot be said absolutely to deny 
the law of progress, it must be allowed that Vico not only failed to 
solve the problem but even shrank from attacking it. 

Vico founded no school, and though during his lifetime and for 
a while after his death he had many admirers both in Naples and 
the northern dues, his fame and name were soon obscured, especially 
as the Kantian system dominated the world of thought. At the 
beginning of the 19th century, however, some Neapolitan exiles at 
Milan called attention to the merits of their great countryman, and 
his reinstatement was completed by Michclet. who in 1827 translated 
the Seietua nuova and other works with a laudatory introduction 
Vico's writings suffer through their author's not having followed si 
regular course of studies, and his style is very involved; He was a 
deeply religious man, but his exemption of Jewish origins from the 
canons of historical inquiry which he elsewhere applied waa probably 
due to the conditions of his age, which preceded the dawn of Semitic 
investigation and regarded the Old Testament and the Hebrew 
religion as rat generis. 



VICTOR— VICTOR, SEXTUS AURELIUS 



25 



For Vios-'s personal history tee hit autobiography, wnttM at 
tat ssqaest of the Conte di Portia, and his let tew; also Cantoni, 
C. B. Vtco, Stmdii Critici e Comparator* (Turin, 1867); R. Flint, 
Via (Edinburgh and London, 1884). For editions of Vico's own 
corks, sec Open, ed. Giuseppe Ferrari, with introductory essay, 
"U lieate de Vico" (6 vols.. Milan, 1834-3$). and Michekt, 
(Emm Cheemes de Vico (a vols., Paris, 1835). A full list is given 
■ B. Croce, Bibliografia Vickiana (Naples, 1904). See also 0. 
Kiemm, G. B. Vico als CesckicktspkUoioph und Vdlkerpsjckotot 
lUipcif. 1906); M. H. Rafferty in Journal of the Society of Com- 
fentue UyiUtiou, Now Series, xvn n xx. 

TICTOA, the name takea by three popes and two antipopes. 

V'KToa I. was bishop of Rome from about 100 to jo&, He 
ssboutted to the opinion of the episcopate in the various parts 
of Christendom the divergence between the Easter usage of 
Root sod that of the 4rishops of Asia. The bishops, parttcu- 
uriy St Irenaeus of Lyons, declared themselves in favour 
of the usage of Rome, but refused to associate themselves 
rjo tbe excommunication pronounced by Victor against 
tstir Asiatic colleagues. At Rome Victor excommunicated 
Tacodotas of Byzantium on account of his doctrine as to the 
penoe of Christ. St Jerome attributes to Victor some opuscule 
u Latin, which are believed to be recognised in certain apo- 
cryphal treatises of Sc Cyprian. 

Vjcrot IL, the successor of Leo DC, was consecrated in 
St Peter's, Rome, on the 13th of April 1055. His father was 
a Svabian baron. Count Hartwig von Calw, and bis own 
kptismal name was Gebhard. At the instance of Gebhard, 
bishop of Regensburg, unde of the emperor Henry III., he had 
beta appointed while still a young man to the see oi Eichstidt; 
n tms position his great talents soon enabled him to render 
oponant services to Henry, vhose chief adviser he ultimately 
tsome. His nomination to tbe papacy by Henry, at Mains, 
is September 1054* was made at the instance of a Roman 
deputation beaded by Hildebrand, whose policy doubtless was 
to detach from the imperial interest one of its ablest supporters, 
k June 1055 Victor met the emperor at Florence, and held a 
ceeadl, which anew condemned clerical marriages, simony 
sad the alienation of tbe estates of the church. In the follow- 
ng year be was summoned to Germany to the side of the 
enperor, and was with him when he died at Botield in the 
Han on the 5th of October 1056. As guardian of Henry's 
ishat son, and adviser of the empress Agnes, Victor now wielded 
eaonneus power, which he began to use with much tact for 
1st maintenance of peace throughout the empire and for 
meagthrnirtg the papacy against the aggressions of the barons. 
Be died shortly after his return to Italy, at Arezso, on tbe 
alts of Jury 1057. His successor was Stephen IX. (Frederick 
of Lorraine). (L. D.») 

V'jctoe ILL (Dauferius Epifani), pope from the 94th of May 
mss to the 1 6th of September 1087, was the successor of 
Gregory VII. He was a son of Landolfo V., prince of Bene- 
nsto, and was born in 1027. After studying in various 
snaastcrica he became provost of St Benedict at Capua, 
•ad in 1055 obtained permission from Victor II. to enter the 
ekwter at Monte Cassino, changing his name to Desiderius. 
He s ac c eod ed Stephen IX. as abbot in 1057, and his rule 
narks the golden age of that celebrated monastery; he 
snooted literary activity, and established an important 
Kbsol of mosaic. Desiderius was created cardinal priest of 
Sta CeriHa by Nicholas II. in 1050, and as papal vicar in 
ft*th Italy conducted frequent negotiations between the 
Romans and the pope. Among the four men suggested by 
Gfffory VaX on his death-bed as most worthy to succeed 
ma was Desiderius, who was favoured by the cardinals because 
°I bis great learning, his connexion with tbe Normans and 
ah d^eocnatfc ability. The abbot, however, declined the 
papal crown, and the year 1065 passed without an election. 
TVe cardinals at length proclaimed him pope against his will 
•a the 14th of May 1086, but he was driven from Rome by 
■tpmsaita before his consecration was complete, and, laying 
aide the papal insignia at Terracma, he retired to his beloved 
aonastcry. As vicar of the Holy See he convened a synod 
at Capua on the 7th of March 1067, resumed tbe papal insignia 



on the etst of March, and received tardy consecration at Same 
#n the 9th of May. Owing to the presence of tbe antipope, 
Clement III. (Gufbert of Ravenna), who had powerful partisans, 
his stay at Rome was brief. He sent an army to Tunis, which 
defeated the Saracens and compelled the sultan to pay tribute 
to the papal see. In August 1087 be held a synod at Bene- 
vento, which renewed the excommunication of Guibert; 
banned Archbishop Hugo of Lyons and Abbot Richard ef 
Marseilles as schismatics; and confirmed the prohibition of 
lay investiture. Falling ill at the synod. Vicar returned to 
Monte Cassino, where he died on the 16th of September 1087. 
He was buried at the monastery and is accounted a saint by 
the Benedictine order. His successor was Urban II. 

Victor III,, while abbot of Monlr Cawinc contributed perso na lly 
to th* Literary activity of the momtterv. He wrote Diologi de 
Mtractdtj S. Bfiuduii. which, along with his Epistotae, are in J. P. 
M ikjnc. Patrol. Lai. vol. 149, and an account of the miracles of Leo IX. 
(in Acta 5arnJ4rnm. 19th of April), The chief sources for his lite 
are the " Chronica monacteni Ciftincnw?.," in the Won. Germ* kist 
Script, vii , and the Vitae in J. P. Miunt. PatroL LaL vol 149, 
and in J. M, Wautrich, P&niif r Roman, Vilae. 

Sec J, LanHcn. Gtschlchte der romi*(hcn A" treat stft Cretor VII. 
bis Innveeiu III. (Bonn, 1693); F. Greeorovius, Rome f» Ike Middle 
Ag/i-. vol, 4. trarw. by Mr* G, W, Hamilton (London, 1000-3); 
IC J. von Hefcte. Cv»r.ilie*&ukitht* (and ed., 1873-00), vol. y. 
Hirwzh, ,J Drvtlcriut von Monte Carina ab Papst Victor III.,** in 
Ffn-ftunp-ri j M r djvlaktfi Ctuhvtrt*> vol, 7 (Gdttingen, 1867); 
H. H. Milman, Hiftory ?/ L&ttn Christianity, vol. 3 (repub. London, 
1899)- 

VrcTOt IV. was a title taken by two antipopes. (1) Gregorib 
Conti, cardinal priest of Santi Dodid Apostoli, was chosen by a 
party opposed to Innocent II. in succession to the antipope 
Anadetus II., on the 15th of March 1138, but through the in- 
fluence of Bernard of Clairvaux be was induced to make his 
submission on the 29th of May. (2) Octavian, count of Tuscuhim 
and cardinal deacon of St Nicola in carcere TuUiano, the Ghi* 
belline antipope, was elected at Rome on the 7th of September 
xi 59, in opposition to Alexander III., and supported by the 
emperor Frederick Barbarossa. Consecrated at Farfa on the 
4th of October, Victor was the first of the series of antipopes 
supported by Frederick against Alexander III. Though tbe 
excommunication of Frederick by Alexander in March xxoo 
made only a slight impression in Germany, this pope was never* 
theless able to gain the support of the rest of western Europe, 
because since the days of Hildebrand the power of the pope 
over the church in the various countries had increased so greatly 
that the kings of France and of England could not view with 
indifference a revival of such imperial control of the papacy as 
had been exercised by the emperor Henry 111. He died at 
Lucca on the 20th of April 1x64 and was succeeded by the anti- 
pope Fascbal III. (1164-1168). 

See M. Meyer. Die Wakl Alexanders III. und Victors IV. j/co 
(Gdttingen, 1871); and A. Hauck, KirckenfuckickU Deutscklands, 
Band iv. (C. H. Ha.) 

VICTOR, OAITJS JULIUS (4th cent. A.D.), Roman writer 
on rhetoric, possibly of Gallic origin. His extant manual (in 
C. Halm's Rhetorcs Latini Minor cs. 1863) is of some importance 
as facilitating the textual criticism of Quintilian, whom be 
closely follows in many places. 

VICTOR, SEXTUS AURELIUS, prefect of Pannonia about 
360 (Amro. Marc xxi. 10), possibly the same as the consul 
(jointly with Valentinian) in 373 and as the prefect of the city 
who is mentioned in an inscription of the time of Theodosius. 
Four small historical works have been ascribed to him on more or 
less doubtful grounds — (1) Origo Gcntis Romanac, (2) De Virions 
Illustribus Romoe t (3) De Catsaribus, (4) De Vita et Mori bus 
Imprraiorum Romanorum excerpta ex Libris Sex. Aw. Victoris. 
The four have generally been published together under the name 
Hisioria Romana, but the fourth piece is a rtchaujfi of the thfrd. 
The second was first printed at Naples about 1472, in 410, under 
the name of Pliny (the younger), and the fourth at Strassburg 
in 150$. 

The first edition of all four was that of A. Schottus (Svo, Ant- 
werp, 1579). The most recent edition of the De Caesoribus b by 
F. Kchlmayr (Munich, 1893). 



26 



VICTOR AMEDEUS IL— VICTOR EMMANUEL II. 



VICTOR AMEDBUS n. (1666-1732), duke of Savoy and first 
king of Sardinia, was the son of Duke Charles Emmanuel II. 
and Jeanne de Savoie-Nemours. Born at Turin, he lost his 
father in 1675, and spent his youth under the regency of his 
mother, known as " Madama Reale " (madame royale), an able 
but ambitious and overbearing woman- He assumed the reins 
of government at the age of sixteen, and married Princess Anne, 
daughter of Philip of Orleans and Henrietta of England, and niece 
of Louis XIV., king of France. That sovereign was determined 
to dominate the young duke of Savoy, who from the first resented 
the monarch's insolent bearing. In 1685 Victor was forced by 
Louis to persecute his Waldensian subjects, because they had 
given shelter to the French Huguenot refugees after the revoca- 
tion of the edict of Nantes. With the unwelcome help of a 
French array under Marshal Catinat, he invaded the Waldensian 
valleys, and after a difficult campaign, characterized by great 
cruelty, he subjugated them. Nevertheless, he became more 
anxious than ever to emancipate himself from French thraldom, 
and his first sign of independence was his visit to Venice in 
1687, where he conferred on political affairs with Prince Eugene 
of Savoy and other personages, without consulting Louis. About 
this time the duke plunged into a whirl of dissipation, and chose 
the beautiful but unscrupulous Contessa di Verrua as his mistress, 
neglecting his faithful and devoted wife. Louis having dis- 
covered Victor's intrigues with the emperor, tried to precipitate 
hostilities by demanding his participation in a second expedi- 
tion against the Waldensians. The duke unwillingly complied, 
but when the French entered Piedmont and demanded the 
cession of the fortresses of Turin and Verrua, he refused, and 
while still professing to negotiate with Louis, joined the league 
of Austria, Spain and Venice. War was declared in 1690, but at 
the battle of Staffarda (18th of August 1691), Victor, in spile 
of his great courage and skill, was defeated by the French under 
Catinat. Other reverses followed, but the attack on Cuneo was 
heroically repulsed by the citizens. The war dragged on with 
varying success, until the severe defeat of the allies at Marsiglia 
and their selfish neglect of Victor's interests induced him to 
open negotiations with France once more. Louis agreed to 
restore most of the fortresses he had captured and to make 
other concessions; a treaty was signed in 1696, and Victor 
appointed generalissimo of the Franco-Piedmontese forces in 
Italy operating against the imperialists. By the treaty of 
Ryswick (1607) .* general peace was concluded. On the out- 
break of the war of the Spanish Succession in 1700 the duke was 
again on the French side, but the insolence of Louis and of 
Philip V. of Spain towards him induced him, at the end of the 
two years for which he had bound himself to them, to go over 
to the imperialists (1704). At first the French were successful 
and captured several Piedmontese fortresses, but after besieging 
Turin, which was skilfully defended by the duke, for several 
months, they were completely defeated by Victor and Prince 
Eugene of Savoy (1706), and eventually driven out of the other 
towns they had captured. By the peace of Utrecht (17 13) the 
Powers conferred the kingdom of Sicily on Victor Amcdeus, whose 
government proved efficient and at first popular. But after a 
brief stay in the island he returned to Piedmont and left his 
new possessions to a viceroy, which caused much discontent 
among the Sicilians; and when the Quadruple Alliance decreed 
in 1 7 18 that Sicily should be restored to Spain, Victor was unable 
to offer any opposition, and had to content himself with receiving 
Sardinia in exchange. 

The last years of Victor Amedcus's life were saddened by 
domestic troubles. In 1715 his eldest son died, and in 1728 he 
lost bis queen. After her death, much against the advice of his 
remaining son and heir, Carlino (afterwards Charles Emmanuel 
III.), he married the Contessa di San Sebastiano, whom he 
created Marchesa di Spigno, abdicated the crown and retired to 
Chambery to end his days (1730). But his second wife, an 
ambitious intrigante, soon tired of her quiet life, and induced 
him to return to Turin and attempt to revoke his abdication. 
this led to a quarrel with his son, who with quite unnecessary 
harshness, partly due to his minister the Marquis d'Ormea, 



arrested his father and confined him at Rivoti cad later at Mon- 
calieri; there Victor, overwhelmed with sorrow, died on the 
31st of October 1732. 

Victor Amedeus, although accused not without reason of bad 
faith in his diplomatic dealings and of cruelty, was undoubtedly 
a great soldier and a still greater administrator. He not only 
won for his country a high place in the council of nations, but he 
doubled its revenues and increased its prosperity and industries, 
and he also emphasised its character as an Italian state. His 
infidelity to his wife and his harshness towards his son Carlino 
are blemishes on a splendid career, but he more than expiated 
these faults by his tragic end. 

See D. Carutti, Storia id Regno di Vittorio Amedeo IT. (Turin, 



1856); and E. Parri, Villorio A media fi. ed Euuuio di , 
(Milan, 1888). The Marchesa Vitelfeachi's work. Tk$ Romance tf 
Savoy (2 volt., London, 1905), is bated on original authorities, ana 
is the most complete monograph on the subject. 

VICTOR EMMANUEL II. (1820-1878), king of Sardinia and 
first king of Italy, was born at Turin on the 14th of March 
1820, and was the son of Charles Albert, prince of Savoy- 
Carignano, who became king of Sardinia in 1831. Brought up 
in the bigoted and chilling atmosphere of the Piedmontese court, 
he received a rigid military and religious training, but tittle 
intellectual education. In 184a ho was married to Adelaide, 
daughter of the Austrian Archduke Rainer, as the king desired 
at that time to improve his relations with Austria. The young 
couple led a somewhat dreary life, hidebound by court etiquette, 
which Victor Emmanuel hated. He played no part in politics 
during his father's lifetime, but took an active interest in military 
matters. When the war with Austria broke out in 1848, he was 
delighted at the prospect of distinguishing himself, and was 
given the command of a division. At Goito he was slightly 
wounded and displayed great bravery, and after Custom 
defended the rearguard to the last (25th of July 1848). In 
the campaign of March 1849 he commanded the same division. 
After the disastrous defeat at Novara on the 23rd of March, 
Charles Albert, having rejected the peace terms offered by the 
Austrian field-marshal Radetzky, abdicated in favour of his 
son, and withdrew to a monastery in Portugal, where he died 
a few months later. Victor Emmanuel repaired to Radetzky's 
camp, where he was received with every sign of respect, and 
the field-marshal offered not only to waive the claim that 
Austria should occupy a part of Piedmont, but to give him 
an extension of territory, provided he revoked the constitution 
and substituted the old blue Piedmontese flag for the Italian 
tricolour, which savoured too much of revolution. But although 
the young king had not yet sworn to observe the charter, and 
in any case the other Italian princes had aB violated their 
constitutional promises, he rejected the offer. Consequently 
he had to agree to the temporary Austrian occupation of the 
territory comprised within the Po, the Sesia and the Ticino, 
and of half the citadel of Alessandria, to disband his Lombard, 
Polish and Hungarian volunteers, and to withdraw his fleet 
from the Adriatic; but he secured an amnesty for all the Lom- 
bards compromised in the recent revolution, having even 
threatened to go to war again if it were not granted. It was 
the maintenance of the constitution m the face of the over- 
whelming tide of reaction that established bis position as the 
champion of Italian freedom and earned him the sobriquet of 
Ri Gdanlumo (the honest king). But the task entrusted to 
him was a most difficult one: the army disorganised, the 
treasury empty, the people despondent if not actively disloyal, 
and he himself reviled, misunderstood, and, like his father, 
accused of treachery. Parliament having rejected the peace 
treaty; the king dissolved the assembly; in the famous pro- 
clamation from Moncalieri he appealed to the people's loyalty, 
and the new Chamber ratified the treaty (9th of January 1850). 
This same year, Cavour (?.*,) was appointed minister of agri- 
culture in D'Ateglio's cabinet, and in 1851, after the fall of the 
latter, he became prime minister, a post which with brief in- 
terruptions he held until his death. 

In having Cavour sa has chief adviser Victor Emmanuel was 



VICTOR EMMANUEL II. 



27 



■oil fortunate, and bat for that statesman's astounding 
dptafttic genius the liberation of Italy would nave been 
ssponftlr. The years from 1850 to 1859 were devoted to restor- 
Bf the shattered finances of Sardinia, reorganising the army 
tad aodemising the antiquated institutions of the kingdom. 
Anesf other reforms the abolition of the faro eulesiaUuo 
(priidqstd ecclesiastical courts) brought down a storm of 
korifity from the Church both on the king and on Cavour, 
bat both remained firm in sustaining the prerogatives of the 
cmlpoeer. When the Crimean War broke out, the king strongly 
■posted Cavour in the proposal that Piedmont should join 
Fiance and England against Russia so as to secure a place in 
tat consols of the great Powers and establish a claim on them 
Iv eventual assistance in Italian affairs (1854). The following 
far Victor Emmanuel was stricken with a threefold family 
anMrtoae; for his mother, the Queen Dowager Maria Teresa, 
as wife, Queen Adelaide, and his brother Ferdinand, duke of 
Com, died within a few weeks of each other. The clerical 
party were not slow to point to this drcumstance as a judgment 
at tst king for what they deemed his sacrilegious policy. At 
ike end of 1855, while the allied troops were still in the East, 
Victor Enunsnuel visited Paris and London, where he was 
tarnuy adeemed by the emperor Napoleon III. and Queen 
Victoria, as well as by the peoples of the two countries. 

Victor Emmanuel's object now was the expulsion of the 
Austrians from Italy and the expansion of Piedmont into a 
hortb Itahan kingdom, but he did not regard the idea of Italian 
amy is coming within the sphere of practical politics for the 
Unc bring, although a movement to that end was already 
betinnjng to gain ground. He was in communication with some 
d the conspirators, especially with La Farina, the leader of 
tst 5«ciatt National*, an association the object of which was 
to naite Italy under the king of Sardinia, and he even com" 
aspirated with Marrini and the republicans, both in Italy and 
■hand, whenever he thought that they <could help in the 
e^osMn of the Austrians from Italy. In 1859 Cavour's 
aplossicy succeeded in drawing Napoleon III. into an alliance 
leuaat Austria, although the king had to agree to the cession 
dSnoy and possibly of Nice and to the marriage of his daughter 
Qotailde to Prince Napoleon. These conditions were very 
taartl to him, for Savoy was the hereditary home of Us family, 
sri he was greatly attached to Princess Cfcthilde and disliked 
the idea of marrying her to a man who gave little promise of 
mwhaj a good husband. But he was always ready to sacrifice 
ss eon personal feelings for the good of his country. He had an 
htarrirw with Garibaldi and appointed him commander of 
ue sewty raised volunteer corps, the Cacciatcri ddie AlpL 
fee then Napoleon would not decide on immediate hostilities, 
•adit required nil Cavour's genius to bring him to the point and 
had Austria into a declaration of war (April 1859). Although 
the Fisnco-SardinJan forces were successful in the field, Napoleon, 
fcmag an attack by Prussia and disliking the idea of a too 
powerful Italian kingdom on the frontiers of France, insisted on 
naknuj peace with Austria, while Veneris still remained to be 
bat Victor Emmanuel, realizing that he could not continue 
tat ^-ptifFi alone, agreed most unwillingly to the armistice of 
VTuhaoca. When Cavour heard the news be hurried to the 
•fs headquarters at Monzambano, and in violent, almost 
•nespectful inngnrg* implored him to continue the campaign 
at ifl hazards, relying on bis own army and the revolutionary 
•M Hanut in the rest of Italy. But the king on this occasion 
•sued more political insight than his great minister and saw 
** by adopting the heroic course proposed by the latter he 
*> the risk of finding Napoleon on the side of the enemy, 
■knees by waiting all might be gained. Cavour resigned 
«fice, sad by the peace 9! Zurich (10th of November 2859) 
Aaflns ceded Lombardy to Piedmont but retained Venetia; 
fe ceatral Italian princes who had been deposed by the revolu- 
fea vtre to be reinstated, and Italy formed into a confederation 
** independent states. But this solution was most unacceptable 
to Italian public opinion, and both the king and Cavour deter- 
■■ed to assist the people in preventing its realization, and 



consequently entered into secret relations with the revolutionary 
governments of Tuscany, the duchies and of Romagna. As 
a result of the events of 1859-60, those provinces were all 
annexed to Piedmont, and when Garibaldi decided on the 
Sicilian expedition Victor Emmanuel assisted him in various 
ways. He had considerable influence with Garibaldi, who, 
although in theory a republican, was greatly attached to the 
bluff soldier-king, and on several occasions restrained him 
from too foolhardy courses. When Garibaldi having conquered 
Sicily was determined to invade the mainland possessions of 
Francis II. of Naples, Victor Emmanuel foreseeing international 
difficulties wrote to the chief of the red shirts asking him not to 
cross the Straits; but Garibaldi, although acting throughout 
in the name of His Majesty, refused to obey and continued 
bis victorious march, for he knew that the king's letter was 
dictated by diplomatic considerations rather than by bis own 
personal desire. Then, on Cavour's advice, King Victor decided 
to participate himself in the occupation of Neapolitan territory, 
lest Garibaldi's entourage should proclaim the republic or 
create anarchy. When he accepted the annexation of Romagna 
offered by the inhabitants themselves the pope excommunicated 
him, but, although a devout Catholic, he continued in his 
course undeterred by ecclesiastical thunders, and led his army 
In person through the Papal States, occupying the Marches 
and Umbria, to Naples. On the 29th of October he met 
Garibaldi, who handed over bis conquests to the king. The 
whole peninsula, except Rome and Venice, was now annexed 
to Piedmont, and on the 1 8th of February 1861 the parliament 
proclaimed Victor Emmanuel king of united Italy. 

The next few yean were occupied with preparations for the 
liberation of Venice, and the king corresponded with Maszini, 
Khpka, Turr and other conspirators against Austria in Venetia 
itself, Hungary, Poland and elsewhere, keeping his activity 
secret even from bis own ministers/ The alhance with Prussia 
and the war with Austria of 1866, although fortune did not 
favour Italian arms, added Venetia to bis dominions. 

The Roman question yet remained unsolved, for Napoleon, 
although he had assisted Piedmont in 1859 and had reluctantly 
consented to the annexation of the central and southern 
provinces, and of part of the Papal States, would not permit 
Rome to be occupied, and maintained a French garrison there 
to protect the pope. When war with Prussia appeared imminent 
he tried to obtain Italian assistance, and Victor Emmanuel 
was very anxious to fly to the assistance of the man who had 
helped him to expel the Austrians from Italy, but he could not 
do so unless Napoleon gave him a free hand in Rome. This 
the emperor would not do until it was too late. Even after 
the first French defeats the chivalrous king, in spite of the 
advice of his more prudent councillors, wished to go to the 
rescue, and asked Thiers, the French representative who was 
imploring him for help, if with 100,000 Italian troops France 
could be saved, but Thiers could give no such undertaking 
and Italy remained neutral On the aoth of September 1870, 
the French troops having been withdrawn, the Italian army 
entered Rome, and on the and of July 1871 Victor E mm anuel 
made his solemn entry into the Eternal City, which then be- 
came the capital of Italy. 

The pope refused to recognize the new kingdom even before 
the occupation of Rome, and the latter event rendered relations 
between church and state for many years extremely delicate. 
The king himself was anxious to be reconciled with the Vatican, 
but the pope, or rather his entourage, rejected all overtures, 
and the two sovereigns dwelt side by side in Rome until death 
without ever meeting. Victor Emmanuel devoted himself 
to his duties as a constitutional king with great conscientious- 
ness, but he took more interest in foreign than in d om esti c 
politics and contributed not a little to improving Italy's inter- 
national position. In 1873 he visited the emperor Francis 
Joseph at Vienna and the emperor William at Berlin. He 
received an enthusiastic welcome in both capitals, but the 
visit to Vienna was never returned in Rome, for Francis Joseph 
as a Catholic sovereign feared to offend the pope, a circumstance 



28 



VICTOR EMMANUEL III.— VICTORIA, QUEEN 



t 



which served to embitter Austro-ItaKan relations. On the 
9th of January 1878, Victor Emmanuel died of fever in Rome, 
and was buried in the Pantheon. He was succeeded by his 
son Humbert. 

Bluff, hearty, good-natured and simple in his habits, yet 
he always had a high idea of his own kingly dignity, and his 
really statesmanlike qualities often surprised foreign diplomats, 
who were deceived by his homely exterior. As a soldier he 
was very brave, but he did not show great qualities as a military 
leader in the campaign of 1866. He was a keen sportsman 
and would spend many days at a time pursuing chamois or 
tteinbock in the Alpine fastnesses of Piedmont with nothing 
but bread and cheese to eat. He always used the dialect of 
Piedmont when conversing with natives of that country, and 
he had a vast fund of humorous anecdotes and proverbs with 
which to illustrate his arguments. He had a great weakness 
for female society, and kept several mistresses; one of them, 
the beautiful Rosa VerceUone, he created Countess Mirafiori e 
Fontanafredda and married morganatically in 1869; she bore 
him one son. 

Bibliography.— Besides the general works on Italy and Savoy 
see V. Benerio, It Regno di Vittorio Emanuel* II. (8 vols., Turin, 
1869); G. Massari, La Vita td V Regno di Vittorio Emanuele II. 
'2 vols., Milan, 1878) ; N. Bianchi, Storia delta Diphmazia Europe* 
n Italia (8 vols.. Turin, 1865). (L. V) 

VICTOR EMMANUEL IH. (1869- ), king of Italy, son 
of King Humbert I. and Queen Morgherita of Savoy, was born 
at Naples on the nth of November 1869. Carefully educated 
by his mother and under the direction of Colonel Osio, he 
outgrew the weakness of his childhood and became expert in 
horsemanship and military exercises. Entering the army 
at an early age he passed through the various grades and, 
soon after attaining his majority, was appointed to the command 
of the* Florence Army Corps. During frequent journeys to 
Germany he enlarged his military experience, and upon his 
appointment to the command of the Naples Army Corps in 
1896 displayed sound military and administrative capacity. 
A keen huntsman, and passionately fond of the sea, he extended 
his yachting and hunting excursions as far east as Syria .and 
as far north as Spitsbergen. As representative of King 
Humbert he attended the coronation of Tsar Nicholas H. in 
1896, the Victorian Jubilee celebrations of 1897, and the 
festivities connected with the coming of age of the German 
crown prince in 1900. The prince's intellectual and artistic 
leanings were well known; in particular, he has made a magnifi- 
cent collection of historic Italian coins, on which subject he 
became a recognized authority. At the time of the assassina- 
tion of his father, King Humbert (the 29th of July 1900), he was 
returning from a yachting cruise in the eastern Mediterranean. 
Landing at Reggio di Calabria he hastened to Monza, where he 
conducted with firmness and tact the preparations for the 
burial of King Humbert and for his own formal amission, 
which took place on the 9th and nth of August 1900. On the 
24th of October 1896 he married Princess Elena of Montenegro, 
who, on the xst of June toox, bore him a daughter named 
Yolanda Morgherita, on the 19th of November 1902 a second 
daughter named Mafalda, and on the 15th of September 1904 
a son, Prince Humbert. 

VICTORIA [ALEXANDRIA VICTORIA], Queen of the 
United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland, Empress of 
India (1810-1901), only child of Edward, duke of Kent, fourth 
son of King George III., and of Princess Victoria Mary Louisa 
of Saxe-Geburg-Gotha (widow of Prince Enrich Karl of Leh> 
ingen, by whom she already had two children), was born at 
Kensington Palace on the 24th of May 1819. The duke and 
duchess of Kent had been living at Axnorbach, in Franconia, 
owing to their straitened circumstances, but they returned to 
London on purpose that their child should be born in England. 
In 181 7 the death of Princess Charlotte (only child of the prince 
regent, afterwards George TV., and wife of Prince Leopold of 
Saxe-Coburg-Gotha, afterwards king of the Belgians), had left 
the ultimate sucresrion to the throne of England, in the younger 



generation, so uncertain that the three unmarried tons of 
George III., the dukes of Clarence (afterwards William IV.), 
Kent and Cambridge, all married in the following year, the 
two elder on the same day. All three had children, but the 
duke of Clarence's two baby daughters died in infancy, in 1819 
and 182 x; and the duke of Cambridge's son George, bom on 
the 26th of March x8xo, was only two months old when the 
birth of the duke of Kent's daughter put her before him in the 
succession. The question as to what name the child should 
bear was not settled without bickerings. The duke of Kent 
wished her to be christened Elisabeth, and the prince regent 
wanted Georgiana, while the tsar Alexander I., who had 
promised to stand sponsor, stipulated for Alexandrina, The 
baptism was performed in a drawing-room of Kensington 
Palace on the 24th of June by Dr Manners Sutton, archbishop 
of Canterbury. The prince regent, who was present, named 
the child Alexandrina; then, being requested by the duke of 
Kent to give a second name, he said, rather abruptly, " Let 
her be called Victoria, after her mother, but this name must 
come after the other." l Six weeks after her christening the 
princess was vaccinated, this being the first occasion on which 
a member of the royal family underwent the operation. 

In January 1820 the duke of Kent died, five days before his 
brother succeeded to the throne as George IV. The widowed 
duchess of Kent was now a woman of thirty-four, handsome, 
homely, a German at heart, and with little liking for English 
ways. But she was a woman of experience, and shrewd; and 
fortunately ahe had a safe and affectionate adviser in her brother. 
Prince Leopold of Coburg, afterwards ( 1 83 1) king of the Belgians, 
who as the husband of the late Princess Charlotte had once been 
a prospective prince consort of England. His former doctor and 
private secretary, Baron Stockmar (9.9.), a man of encyclopaedic 
information and remarkable judgment, who had given special 
attention to the problems of a sovereign's position in England, was 
afterwards to play an important role in Queen Victoria's life; 
and Leopold himself took a fatherly interest in the young 
princess's education, and contributed some thousands of pounds 
annually to the duchess of Kent's income. Prince Leopold 
still lived at this time at Claremont, where Princess Charlotte 
had died, and this became the duchess of Kent's occasional 
English home; but she was much addicted to travelling, and 
spent several months every year in visits to watering-places. 
It was said at court that she liked the demonstrative homage 
of crowds; but she had good reason to fear lest her child should 
be taken away from her to be educated according to the views 
of George IV. Between the king and his sister-in-law there was 
little love, and when the death of the duke of Clarence's second 
infant daughter Elisabeth in 182 1 made it pretty certain that 
Princess Victoria would eventually become queen, the duchess 
felt that the king might possibly obtain the support of his 
ministers if he insisted that the future sovereign should be 
brought up under masters and mistresses designated by himself. 
The little princess could not have received a better education 
than that which was given her under Prince Leopold's direction. 
Her uncle considered that she ought to be kept as long as 
possible from the knowledge of her position, which might raise 
a large growth of pride or vanity in her and make her un- 
manageable; so Victoria was twelve years old before she 
knew that she was to wear a crown. Until she became queen 
she never slept a night away from her mother's room, and she 
was not allowed to converse with any grown-up person, friend, 
tutor or servant without the duchess of Kent or the Baroness 
Lehzen, her private governess, being present. Louise Lehxen, 
a native of Coburg, had come to England as governess to the 
Princess Feodore of Ldningen, the duchess of Kent's daughter 

1 The question of her name, as that of one who was to be queen, 
remained even up to her accession to the throne a much-debated 
one. In August 183X, in a discussion in parliament upon a grant 
to the duchess of Kent, Sir M. W. Ridley suggested changing it to 
Elizabeth as "more accordant to the feelings of the people"; 
and the idea of a change seems to have been powerfully supported. 
In 1836 William IV. approved of a proposal to change it to 
Charlotte; but, to the process's own denght. k was given up. 



VICTORIA, QUEEN 



39 



by her fait husband, and she became teacher to the Princess 
Victoria when the latter was five yeais old. George IV. in 1827 
aide her a baroness of Hanover, and she continued as lady-in- 
aueadsace alter the duchess of Northumberland was appointed 
official go v e r n ess in 1830, but actually performed the functions 
tat of governess and then of private secretary till 184a, when 
sW left the court and returned to Germany, where she died in 
1I70. The Rev. George Davys, afterwards bishop of Peter- 
bonogb, taught the princess Latin; Mr J. B. Sale, music; 
Mr Watatt, history; and Mr Thomas Steward, the writing 
■after of Westminster School, instructed her in penmanship. 

la iftjo George IV. died, and the duke of York (George III.'s 
stand son) having died childless in 1827, the duke of Clarence 
tame king as William IV. Princess Victoria now became the 
direct heir to the throne. William IV. cherished affectionate 
feelings towards his niece; unfortunately he took offence at 
the duchess of Kent for declining to let her child come and live 
at his court for several months in each year, and through the 
ttoe of his reign there was strife between the two; and 
fciaee Leopold was no longer in England to act as peacemaker. 

In the early hours of the aoth of June 1837, William IV. died. 
Hs thoughts had dwelt often on his niece, and he repeatedly 
a«l that he was sure she would be "a good woman and a good 
pea. It will touch every sailor's heart to have a girt queen 
to fight for. They'll be tattooing her face on their arms, and 
I* be bound they'D all think she was christened after Nelson's 
asp." Dr Howley, archbishop of Canterbury, and the marquis 
of Cooyngham, bearing the news of the king's death, started in 
1 Sudan with four horses for Kensington, which they reached 
u five o'clock. Their servants rang, knocked and thumped; 
«d when at last admittance was gained, the primate and the 
tannus weie shown into a lower room and there left to wait, 
hseatly a maid appeared and said that the Princess Victoria 
•u M in a sweet sleep and could not be disturbed." Dr Howley, 
**> was nothing if not pompous, answered that he had come 

* state business, to which everything, even sleep, must give 
pace. The princess was accordingly roused, and quickly came 
iovikftairs in a dressing-gown, her fair hair flowing loose over 
is shoulders. Her own account of this interview, written the 
** day in her journal (Letters, I p. 97), shows her to have 
*w quite prepared. 

Use privy council assembled at Kensington in the morning; 
tad the usual oaths were administered to the queen by Lord 
Caxeflor Cottenham, after which all present did homage. 
IVtvua touching incident when the queen's uncles, the 
4ms of Cumberland and Sussex, two old men, came forward 

* perform their obeisance. The queen blushed, and descending 
•**a her throne, kissed them both, without allowing them to 
tad By the death of William IV., the duke of Cumberland 
ad become King Ernest of Hanover, and immediately after 

> ceremony he made haste to reach his kingdom. Had 
*>«ea Victoria died without issue, this prince, who was arro- 
rw, B-t tjupc rcd and rash, would have become king of Great 
BYaia; and, as nothing but mischief could have resulted from 
*a, the young Cfueen's life became very precious in the sight 

* ber people. She, of course, retained the late king's ministers 
t their offices, and It was under Lord Melbourne's direction 
Vt the privy council drew up their declaration to the kingdom. 
^Vs document described the queen as Alexandrina Victoria, 
•d iB the peers who subscribed the roll in the House of Lords 
« 'he xoth of June swore allegiance to her under those names. 
fc »» not txD the following day that the sovereign's style was 
fend to Victoria simply, and this necessitated the issuing of a 
** (federation and a re-signing of the peers' roll. The public 
rrhmatioo of the queen took place on the aist at St James's 
Hacr with great pomp. 

The queen opened her first parliament in person, and in a 
*tvritten speech, which she read with much feeling, adverted 

> her youth and to the necessity which existed for her being 
t-ried by enlightened advisers. When both houses had voted 
*rd ad d * e ss e s , the question of the Civil List was considered, 
** a week or Mo later a message was brought to parliament 



requesting an increase of the grant formerly made to the duchess 
of Kent Government recommended an addition of £30,000 a 
year, which was voted, and before the dose of the year a Civil 
List Bill was passed, settling £385,000 a yearpn the queen. 

The duchess of Kent and her brothers, King Leopold and the 
duke of Saxe-Coburg-Gotha, had always hoped to arrange that 
the queen should marry her cousin, Albert (q.v.) of Saxe-Coburg- 
Gotha, and the prince himself had been made acquainted with 
this plan from his earliest years. In 1836 Prince Albeit, who 
was born in the same year as his future wife, had come on a visit 
to England with his father and with his brother, Prince Ernest, 
and his handsome face, gentle disposition and playful humour 
had produced a favourable impression on the princess. The 
duchess of Kent had communicated her projects to Lord Mel- 
bourne, and they were known to many other statesmen, and to 
persons in society; but the gossip of drawing-rooms during the 
years 1837-38 continually represented that the young queen 
had fallen in love with Prince This or Lord That, and the more 
imaginative babblers hinted at post-chaises waiting outside Ken- 
sington Gardens in the night, private marriages and so forth. 

The coronation took place on the 28th of June 1838. Jfo more 
touching ceremony of the kind had ever been performed in 
Westminster Abbey. Anne was a middle-aged married ^^ 
woman at the time of her coronation; she waddled jS^ 1 ** 
and wheezed, and made no majestic appearance upon 
her throne. Mary was odious to her Protestant subjects, Eliza- 
beth to those of the unreformed religion, and both these queens 
succeeded to the crown In times of general sadness; but the 
youthful Queen Victoria had no enemies except a few Chartists, 
and the land was peaceful and prosperous when she began to 
reign over it. The cost of George IV.'s coronation amounted 
to £240,000; that of William IV. had amounted to £50,000 only; 
and in asking £70,000 the government had judged that things 
could be done with suitable luxury, but without waste. The 
traditional banquet in Westminster Hall, with the throwing 
down of the glove by the king's champion in armour, had been 
dispensed with at the coronation of William IV:, and it was 
resolved not to revive it. But it was arranged that the sove- 
reign's procession to the abbey through the streets should be 
made a finer show than on previous occasions; and it drew to 
London 400,000 country visitors. Three ambassadors for different 
reasons became objects of great interest on the occasion. Marshal 
Soult, Wellington's old foe, received a hearty popular welcome 
as a military hero; Prince Esterhazy, who represented Austria, 
dazzled society by his Magyar uniform, which was encrusted 
all over, even to the boots, with pearls and diamonds; while 
the Turkish ambassador, Sarim Effendi, caused much diversion 
by his bewilderment. He was so wonder-struck that he could 
not walk to his place, but stood as if he had lost his senses, 
and kept muttering, " All this for a woman! " 

Within a year the court was brought into sudden disfavour 
with the country by two events of unequal importance, but both 
exciting. The first was the case of Lady Flora Hastings. r*# 
In February 1839 this young lady, a daughter of the J, aw- 
marquis of Hastings, and a maid of honour to the 2»l"" P 
duchess of Kent, was accused by certain ladies of 
the bedchamber of immoral conduct. The charge having been 
laid before Lord Melbourne, he communicated it to Sir James 
Clark, the queen's physician, and the result was that Lady Flora 
was subjected to the indignity of a medical examination, which, 
while it cleared her character, seriously affected her health. 
In fact, she died in the following Jury, and it was then discovered 
that the physical appearances which first provoked suspicion 
against her had been due to enlargement of the liver. The 
queen's conduct towards Lady Flora was kind and sisterly 
from the beginning to the end of this painful business; but the 
scandal was made- public through some indignant letters which 
the marchioness of Hastings addressed to Lord Melbourne pray- 
ing for the punishment of her daughter's traducers, and the 
general opinion was that Lady Flora had been grossly treated 
at the instigation of some private court enemies. While the 
agitation about the affair was yet unapprised, the political 



3<> 



VICTORIA, QUEEN 



crisis known as the " Bedchamber Plot " occurred. The Whig 
ministry had introduced a bill suspending the Constitution of 
Jamaica because the Assembly in that colony had refused to 
adopt the Prisons Act passed by the Imperial Legislature. Sir 
Robert Peel moved an amendment, which, on a division (6th 
May), was defeated by a majority of five only in a house of 
583, and ministers thereupon resigned. The duke of Wellington 
was first sent for, but he advised that the task of forming an 
administration should be entrusted to Sir Robert Peel. Sir 
Robert was ready to form a cabinet in which the duke of Welling- 
ton, Lords Lyndhurst, Aberdeen and Stanley, and Sir James 
Graham would have served; but he stipulated that the mistress 
of the robes and. the ladles of the bedchamber appointed by the 
Whig administration should be removed, and to this the queen 
would not consent. On the 10th of May she wrote curtly that 
the course proposed by Sir Robert Peel was contrary to usage 
and repugnant to her feelings; the Tory leader then had to 
inform the House of Commons that, having failed to obtain the 
proof which he desired of her majesty's confidence, it was im- 
possible for him to accept office. The ladies of the bedchamber 
were so unpopular in consequence of their behaviour to Lady 
Flora Hastings that the public took alarm at the notion that the 
queen had fallen into the hands of an intriguing coterie; and 
Lord Melbourne, who was accused of wishing to rule on the 
strength of court favour, resumed office with diminished prestige. 
The Tories thus felt aggrieved; and the Chartists were so prompt 
to make political capital out of the affair that large numbers 
were added to their ranks. On the 14th of June Mr Attwood, 
M.P. for Birmingham, presented to the House of Commons a 
Chartist petition alleged to have been signed by 1,280,000 people. 
It was a cylinder of parchment of about the diameter of a coach- 
wheel, and was literally rolled up on the floor of the house. On 
the day after this curious document had furnished both amuse- 
ment and uneasiness to the Commons, a woman, describing 
herself as Sophia Elizabeth Guelph Sims, made application at 
the Mansion House for advice and assistance to prove herself 
the lawful child of George IV. and Mrs Fitzherbert; and this 
incident, trumpery as it was, added fuel to the disloyal flame 
then raging. Going in state to Ascot the queen was hissed by 
some ladies as her carriage drove on to the course, and two 
peeresses, one of them a Tory duchess, were openly accused of 
this unseemly act. Meanwhile some monster Chartist demon- 
strations were being organised, and they commenced on the 4th 
of July with riots at Birmingham. It was an untoward coinci- 
dence that Lady Flora Hastings died on the 5th of July, for though 
she repeated on her deathbed, and wished it to be published, that 
the queen had taken no part whatever in the proceedings which 
had shortened her life, it was remarked that the ladies who were 
believed to have persecuted her still retained the sovereign's 
favour. The riots at Birmingham lasted ten days, and had to 
be put down by armed force. They were followed by others at 
Newcastle, Manchester, Bolton, Chester and Macclesfield. 

These troublous events had the effect of hastening the queen's 
marriage. Lord Melbourne ascertained that the queen's dis- 
Tlt positions towards her cousin, Prince Albert, were un- 

«■*••* changed, and be advised King Leopold, through M. 
maniag*, y^ ^ uy cycr| ^ Belgian minister, that the prince 
should come to England and press his suit. The prince 
arrived with his brother on a visit to Windsor on the 10th of 
October 1839. On the 12th the queen wrote to King Leopold: 
" Albert's beauty is most striking, and he is so amiable and 
unaffected— in short, very fascinating." On the 15th all was 
settled; and the queen wrote to her uncle, " I love him more 
than I can say." The queen's public announcement of her 
betrothal was enthusiastically received. But the royal lovers 
still had some parliamentary mortifications to undergo. The 
government proposed that Prince Albert should receive an 
annuity of £50,000, but an amendment of Colonel Sibthorp— 
a politician of no great repute—for making the annuity £30,000 
was carried against ministers by 262 votes to 158, the Tories and 
Radicals going into the same lobby, and many ministerialists 
taking no part in the division* Prince Albert had not been 



described, in the queen's declaration to the privy council, as a 
Protestant prince; and Lord Palmerston was obliged to ask 
Baron Stockmar for assurance that Prince Albert did not belong 
to any sect of Protestants whose rules might prevent him from 
taking the Sacrament according to the ritual of the English 
Church. He got an answer couched in somewhat ironical terms 
to the effect that Protestantism owed its existence in a measure to 
the house of Saxony, from which the prince descended, seeing that 
this bouse and that of the landgrave of Hesse had stood quite 
alone against Europe in upholding Luther and his cause. Even 
after this certain High Churchmen held that a Lutheran was a 
" dissenter," and that the prince should be asked to subscribe 
to the Thirty-Nine Articles. 

The queen was particularly concerned by .the question of 
the prince's future status as an Englishman. It was impractic- 
able for him to receive the title of king consort; but the queen 
naturally desired that her husband «hould be placed by act of 
parliament in a position which would secure to him precedence, 
not only in England, but in foreign courts. Lord Melbourne 
sought to effect this by a clause introduced in a naturalization 
bill; but he found himself obliged to drop the clause, and to 
leave the queen to confer what precedence she pleased by 
letters-patent. This was a lame way out of the difficulty, for 
the queen could only confer precedence within her own realms, 
whereas an act of parliament bestowing the title of prince 
consort would have made the prince's right to rank above ail 
royal imperial highnesses quite clear, and would have left no 
room for such disputes as afterwards occurred when foreign 
princes chose to treat Prince Albert as having mere courtesy 
rank in his wife's kingdom. The result of these political diffi- 
culties was to make the queen more than ever disgusted with 
the Tories. But there was no other flaw in the happiness of 
the marriage, which was solemnized on the 10th of February 
1840 in the Chapel Royal, St James's. It is interesting to note 
that the queen was dressed entirely in articles of British manu- 
facture. Her dress was of Spitalfields silk; her veil of Honiton 
lace; ber ribbons came from Coventry; even her gloves had 
been made in London of English kid — a novel thing in days 
when the French had a monopoly in the finer kinds of gloves. 

From the time of the queen's marriage the crown played an 
increasingly active part in the affairs of state. Previously, 
ministers had tried to spare the queen all disagree- a tahntt 
able and fatiguing details. Lord Melbourne saw her 222^, 
every day, whether she was in London or at Windsor, 
and he used to explain all current business in a benevolent, 
chatty manner, which offered a pleasant contrast to the style 
of his two principal colleagues, Lord John Russell and Lord 
Palmerston. A statesman of firmer mould than Lord Melbourne 
would hardly have succeeded so well as he did in making rough 
places smooth for Prince Albert. Lord John Russell and Lord 
Palmerston were naturally jealous of the prince's interference 
—and of King Leopold's and Baron Stockmar's— in state 
affairs; but Lord Melbourne took the common-sense view that 
a husband will control his wife whether people wish it or not. 
Ably advised by his private secretary, George Anson, and by 
Stockmar, the prince thus soon took the dt facto place of the 
sovereign's private secretary, though he had no official status 
as such; and his system of classifying and annotating the 
queen's papers and letters resulted in the preservation of what 
the editors of the Letters of Queen Victoria (1907) describe as 
" probably the most extraordinary collection of state documents 
in the world "—those op to 1861 being contained in between 
500 and 600 bound volumes at Windsor. To confer on Prince 
Albert every honour that the crown could bestow, and to let bias 
make his way gradually into public favour by his own tact, 
was the advice which Lord Melbourne gave; and the prince 
acted upon it so well, avoiding every appearance of intrusion, 
and treating men of all parties and degrees with urbanity, that 
within five months of his marriage he obtained a signal mark 
of the public confidence. In expectation of the queen becoming 
a mother, a bill was passed through parliament providing for 
the appointment of Prince Albert as sole regent is esse the) 



L 



VICTORIA, QUEEN 



3» 



tsss, after giving birth to a child, died beta* her son or 
fcsfbter cum of age. 

T»e Regency Bfll had been hurried on m consequence of the 
attempt of a craxy pot-boy, Edward Oxford, to take the queen's 
4^^ hfe. On xoth June 1840, the queen and Prince Albert 
■At were driving up Constitution Hill in an open carriage, 
*"»* when Oxford fired two pistols, the bullets from which 
** flew, it is said, close by the prince's head. He was 
■nested 00 the spot, and when his lodgings were searched a 
stion'ty of powder and shot was found, with the rules 
af 1 secret society, called M Young England/' whose members 
*ere pledged to meet, " carrying swords and pistols and wearing 
mpe masks." These discoveries raised the surmise that 
Oxford vis the tool of a widespread Chartist conspiracy — 
«, as the Irish pretended, of & conspiracy of Orangemen to 
let tas duke of Cumberland on the throne; and while these 
defaakss were fresh, they threw well-disposed persons into a 
paroxysm of loyalty. ' £ven the London street dogs, as Sydney 
Seib said, joined with O'Connell in barking " God save the 
QBeea." Oxford seems to have been craving for notoriety; 
bat it may be doubted whether the jury who tried him did 
njbt to pronounce his acquittal on the ground of insanity. 
Be feigned madness at his trial, but during the forty years of 
ks subsequent confinement at Bedlam he talked and acted 
lie a rational being, and when he was at length released and 
Tti to Australia he earned his living there as a house painter, 
ui osed to declare that he had never been mad at all. His 
initial was to be deprecated as establishing a dangerous 
prartdent ra regard to outrages on the sovereign. It was always 
him Albert's opinion that if Oxford had been flogged the 
rrcpt of Francis on the queen in 1842 and of Bean in 
x same year would never have been perpetrated. After 
*e xttempt of Bean— who was a hunchback, really insane— 
artiamcut passed a bfll empowering judges to order whipping 
b 1 punishment for those who molested the queen; but some- 
lew this salutary act was never enforced. In 1850 a half-pay 
£or, named Pate, assaulted the queen by Striking her with 
1 stick, and crushing her bonnet. He was sentenced to seven 
rax? transportation; but the judge, Baron Alderson, excused 
r-3 the flogging. In 1869 an Irish kd» O'Connor, was sentenced 
kogvieen months* imprisonment and a whipping for presenting 
ijctol at the queen, with a petition, in St James's Park; but 
t*» line it was the queen herself who privately remitted the 
r*pooi punishment, and she even pushed clemency to the 
rtife of sending her aggressor to Australia at her own expense. 
S series of attempts on the queen was dosed in 1882 by 
MoJofl, who fired a pistol at her majesty as she was leaving 

* Great Western Railway station at Windsor. He, like Bean, 
vast genuine madman, and was relegated to Broadmoor. 

Tit birth of the princess royal, on the 21st of November 
2«3, removing the unpopular King Ernest of Hanover from 
mm the position of heir-presumptive to the British crown, 
rftte was a subject of loud congratulations to the people. 
w ^ m A carious scare was occasioned at Buckingham Palace, 
** when the little princess was a fortnight old, by the 
^rcrcry of a boy named Jones concealed under a bed in the 
r ^ auracry. Jones had a mania for palace-breaking. Three 
-so he effected a clandestine entry into the queen's residence* 
-- tTxe he managed to spend several days there. By day he 
-scaled himself in cupboards or under furniture, and by night 

* craped his way into the royal kitchen to eat whatever he could 
^i After his third capture, in March 1841, he coolly boasted 
"■*: be had Iain under a sofa, and listened to a private con- 
*r+ioa between the queen and Prince Albert. This third 
-=e he was not punished, but sent to sea, and turned out 
^7 vtfl. The incident strengthened Prince Albert's hands in 
*r-4 to carry out sundry domestic reforms which were being 
***Iy resisted by vested interests. The royal residences and 
rw ai li used to be under the control of four different officials—* 
w* Jonf csaanberlani, the lord steward, the master of the horse 
ȣ the uwmufssi oners of woods and forests. Baron Stockmar, 

r the cosifusioa fostered by this state of things, said— 



"The lord steward finds the fad and lays the fire: the lord 
chambsrlain light* it. The lord chamberlain provides the lamps; 
the lord steward must clean, trim and light them. The inside 
cleaning of windows belongs to the lord chamberlain'* depart* 
ment, out the outer parts must be attended to by the office of 
woods and forests, so that windows remain dirty unless the two 
departments can come to an understanding." 
It took Prince Albert four years of firmness and diplomacy 
before in 1845 nc wa * * bIe t° onn 8 the queen's home under 
the efficient control of a master of the household. 

At the general election of 1841 the Whigs returned In « 
minority of seventy-six, and Lord Melbourne was defeated on 
the Address and resigned. The queen was affected s*» J 
to tears at parting with him; but the crisis had been *•*»"• 
fully expected and prepared for by confidential com- ****** 
munications between Mr Anson and Sir Robert Peel, who 
now became prime minister (see Letters of Queen Victoria, 
i. 341 et acq.). The old difficulty as to the appointments to 
the royal household was tactfully removed, and Tory appoint- 
ments were made, which were agreeable both to the queen 
and to Peel. The only temporary embarrassment was the 
queen's continued private correspondence with Lord Melbourne, 
which led Stockmar to remonstrate with him; but Melbourne 
used his influence sensibly; moreover, he gradually dropped 
out of politics, and the queen got used to his not being indis- 
pensable. On Prince Albert's position the change had a 
marked effect, for in the absence of Melbourne the queen relied 
more particularly on his advice, and Peel himself at once dis- 
covered and recognized the prince's unusual charm and capacity. 
One of the Tory premier's first acts was to propose that a royal 
commission should be appointed to consider the best means for 
promoting art and science in the kingdom, and he nominated 
Prince Albert as president- The International Exhibition 
of 1851, the creation of the Museum and Science and Art 
Department at South Kensington, the founding of art schools 
and picture galleries all over the country, the spread of musical 
taste and the fostering of technical education may be attri- 
buted, more or less directly, to the commission of distinguished 
men which began its labours under Prince Albert's auspices. 

The queen's second child, the prince of Wales (see 
Edward VII.), was born on the 9th of November 1841; and 
this event " filled the measure of the queen's domestic Birth •# 
happiness," as she said in her speech from the throne i*»*f*K* 
at the opening of the session of 1 842. It is unnecessary *?**** 
from this point onwards to jtt seriatim through the domestic 
history of the reign, which is given in the article English 
History. At this time there was much political unrest at 
home, and serious difficulties abroad. As regards internal 
politics, it may be remarked that the queen and Prince Albeit 
were much relieved when Peel, who had come in as the leader 
of the Protectionist party, adopted Free Trade and re- 
pealed the Corn Laws, for it closed a dangerous agitation which 
gave them much anxiety. When the country was in distress, 
the queen felt a womanly repugnance for festivities; and yet 
it was undesirable that the court should incur the ravcsw« 
reproach of living meanly to save money. There aodtb* 
was a conversation between the queen and Sir Robert •""■** 
Peel on this subject in the early days of the Tory adminis- 
tration, and the queen talked of reducing her establishment 
in order that she might give away larger sums in charities. 
"I am afraid the people would only say that your majesty 
was returning them change for their pounds in halfpence," 
answered Peel. " Your majesty is not perhaps aware that the 
most unpopular person In the parish is the relieving officer, and 
if the queen were to constitute herself a relieving officer for all 
the parishes In the kingdom she would find her money go a very 
little way, and she would provoke more grumbling than thanks." 
Pod added that a sovereign must do all things in order, not 
seeking praise for doing one particular thing well, but striving 
to be an example in all respects, even in dinner-giving. 

Meanwhile the year 184s was ushered in by splendid fetes hi 
honour of the king of Prussia, who held the prince of Wales at 
the font. In the spring there was a faucyslres* ball at Bucking- 
ham Palace, which remained memorable owing to the offence 



3* 



VICTORIA, QUEEN 



which it gave in France. Prince Albert was costumed as 
Edward III., the queen as Queen PhQippa, and all the gentle- 
men of the court as knights of Poitiers. The French chose to 
▼iew this as an unfriendly demonstration, and there was some 
talk of getting up a counter-ball in Paris, the duke of Orleans 
to figure as William the Conqueror. In June the queen took 
her first railway journey, travelling from Windsor to Paddington 
j^ on the Great Western line. The master of the horse, 

plum-, whose business it was to provide for the queen's 
tintnih ordinary journeys by road, was much put out by this 
w innovation. He marched into the station several 

* mfttVt hours before the start to inspect the engine, as he would 
have examined a steed; but greater merriment was occasioned by 
the queen's coachman, who insisted that, as a matter of form, 
he ought to make-believe to drive the engine. After some 
dispute, he was told that he might climb on to the pilot engine 
which was to precede the royal train; but his scarlet livery, 
white gloves and wig suffered so much from soot and sparks 
that he made no more fuss about his rights in after trips. The 
motion of the train was found to be so pleasant that the queen 
readily trusted herself to the railway for a longer journey a 
few weeks later, when she paid her first visit to Scotland. 
A report by Sir James Clark led to the queen's visiting 
. Balmoral in 1848, and to the purchase of the Balmoral estate in 
1852, and the queen's diary of her journeys in Scotland shows 
what constant enjoyment she derived from her Highland home. 
Seven years before this the estate of Osborne had been pur- 
chased in the Isle of Wight, in order that the queen might have 
a home of her own. Windsor she considered too stately, and 
the Pavilion at Brighton too uncomfortable. The first stone 
of Oshorne House was laid in 1845, and the royal family entered 
into possession in September 1846. 

In August 1843 the queen and Prince Albert paid a, visit to 
King Louis Philippe at the chateau d'Eu. They sailed from 
8*iaUoa$ Southampton for Trcport in a yacht, and, as it hap- 
witb pened to be raining* hard when they embarked, the 

loyal members of the Southampton Corporation remem- 
bered Raleigh, and spread their robes on the ground 
for the queen to walk over. In 1844 Louis Philippe 
returned the visit by coming to Windsor. It was the first 
visit ever paid by a king of France to a sovereign of England, 
and Louis Philippe was much pleased at receiving the Order 
of the Garter. He said that he did not feel that he belonged 
to the " Club " of European sovereigns until he received this, 
decoration. As the father of King Leopold of Belgium's con- 
sort, the queen was much interested in his visit, which went 
off with great success and goodwill. The tsar Nicholas had 
visited Windsor earlier that year, in which also Prince Alfred, 
who was to marry the tsar's grand-daughter, was born. 

In 1846 the affair of the " Spanish marriages " seriously 
troubled the relations between the United Kingdom and 
France. Louis Philippe and Guteot had planned the marriage 
of the duke of Montpensier with the infanta Louisa of Spam, 
younger sister of Queen Isabella, who, it was thought at the 
time, was not likely ever to have children. The intrigue was 
therefore one for placing a son of the French king on the 
Spanish throne. (See Spain, History.) As to Queen Victoria's 
intervention on this question and on others, these words, 
written by W. E. Gladstone in 1875, may be quoted: — 

"Although the admirable arrangements of the Constitution have 
now shielded the sovereign from personal responsibility, they have 
left ample scope for the exercise of direct and personal influence 
in the whole work of government. . . . The sovereign as.«ompared 
with her ministers has, because she is the sovereign, the advantage 
of long experience, wide survey, elevated position and entire dis- 
connexion from the bias of party. Further, personal and domestic 
relations with the ruling families abroad give openings in delicate 
cases lor saying more, and saying it at once more gentry and more 
efficaciously, than could be ventured in the formal correspondence 
and rude contacts of government. We know with how much 
truth, fulness and decision, and with how much tact and delicacy, 
Che queen, aided by Prince Albert, took a principal part on behalf 
Of the nation in the painful question of the Spanish marriages." 



Tbe: 



shook so many continental thrones, 



left that of the United Kingdom unhurt. Revolutions brake 

out in Paris, Vienna, Berlin, Madrid, Rome, .Naples, Venice. 
Munich, Dresden and Budapest. The queen and Prince 
Albert were affected in many private ways by the events abroad. 
Panic-stricken princes wrote to them for political assistance 
or pecuniary aid. Louis Philippe abdicated and Bed to Eng- 
land almost destitute, being smuggled over the Channel by 
the cleverness of the British consul at Havre, and the queen 
employed Sir Robert Peel as her intermediary lor providing him 
with money to meet his immediate wants. Subsequently Clare* 
mont was assigned to the exiled royal family of France as & 
residence. During a few weeks of 1848 Prince William of Prussia 
(afterwards German emperor) found an asylum in England. 

In August 1849 the queen and Prince Albert, accompanied 
by the little princess royal and the prince of Wales, paid a visit 
to Ireland, landing at the Cove, of Cork, which from ^^ 
that day was renamed Queenstown. The recep- ma, 
tion was enthusiastic, and so was that at Dublin. 
"Such a day of jubilee," wrote The Times, "such a night 
of rejoicing, has never been beheld in the ancient capital of 
Ireland since first it arose on the banks of the Liffey." The 
queen was greatly pleased and touched. The project of estab- 
lishing a royal residence in Ireland was often mooted at this 
time, but the queen's advisers never urged it with sufficient 
warmth. There was no repugnance to the idea on the queen's 
part, but Sir Robert Peel thought unfavourably of it as an 
" empirical " plan, and the question of expense was always 
mooted as a serious consideration. There is no doubt that tha 
absence of a royal residence in Ireland was felt as a slur upon 
the Irish people in certain circles. 

During these years the queen's family was rapidly becoming 
larger. Princess Alice (afterwards grand duchess of Hesse) 
was born on the 25th of April 1843; Prince Alfred (afterwards 
duke of Edinburgh and duke of Saxe-Coburg-Gotha) on the 
6th of August 1844; Princess Helena (Princess Christian) 
on the 25th of May 1846; Princess Louise (duchess of Argyll) 
on the x8th of March 1848; and Prince Arthur (duke of Con- 
naught) on the 1st of May 1850. 

At the end of 18 si an important event took place, which ended 
a long-standing grievance on the part of the queen, in Lord 
Palracrston's dismissal from the office of foreign sccre- xa* 
tary on account of his expressing approval of Louis qmcemu^a 
Napoleon's coup d'etat in Paris. The circumstances l ^ d Pmtm 
are of extreme interest for the light they throw on m9ntom * 
the queen's estimate of her constitutional position and authority. 
Lord Palroerston had never been persona grata at court. His 
Anglo-Irish nature was not sympathetic with the somewhat 
formal character and German training of Prince Albert; and 
his views of ministerial independence were not at all in accord 
with those of the queen and her husband. The queen had 
more than once to remind her foreign secretary that his des- 
patches must be seen by her before they were sent out, and 
though Palmerston assented, the queen's complaint had to bi 
continually repeated. She also protested to the prime ministei 
(Lord John Russell) In 1848, 1849 and 1850, against varioui 
instances in which Palmerston had expressed his own persona 
opinions in matters of foreign affairs, without his despatched 
being properly approved either by herself or by the cabinet 
Lord John Russell, who did not want to offend his popula 
and headstrong colleague, did his best to smooth things over 
but the queen remained exceedingly sore, and tried hard to sye 
Palmerston removed, without success. On the 12th of Augus 
1850 the queen wrote to Lord John Russell the Xollowinj 
important memorandum, which followed in its terms a privat 
memorandum drawn up for her by Stockmar a few month 
earlier (Letters, ii. 282):—; 

"With reference to the conversation about Lord Palmersto: 
which the queen had with Lord John Russell the other day. am 
Lord Pahnerston's disavowal that he ever intended any disrespee 
to her by the various nestecb of which she has had so long and a 
often to complain, she thinks it rijht, in order to avoid any mil 
takes for the future* to explain what it utuc **$*«•** Train ti 
foreign secretary. 



VICTORIA, QUEBN 



33 



-i That he wffl 
cue. n older that I 
btpvcaher royal sai 

"zHaviaf gh* 
vtitnrih/ skemJ 
vm maid as failing 
*dd by the eaeir* 
ta swatter. She 
heroes kin and the 



distinctly state what he proposes in a given 
' queen nay know as distinctly to what she 



her sanction to a measure, that it be not 

modified by the minuter. Such an act she 

in sincerity to the crown, and justly to be 

of her constitutional right of d' 



it ipmsu in food ti 
est her is sufficient 
rousts before they 
am Lord John RusseU 



**»r» 



expects to be kept informed of what passes 
foreign ministers, before important decisions 
in that intercourse; to receive the foreign 
me. and to have the drafts for her approval 
time to make herself acquainted with their 
must be sent off. The queen thinks it best 
should show this letter to Lord Palincr»too." 



Lord Pahnerstou took a copy of this letter, and promised to 
I'tod to its direction. Bat the queen thoroughly distrusted 
as. and in October 1851 his proposed reception of Kossuth 
early fed to a crisis. Then finally she discovered (December i j) 
c (be time of the coup f Hat, that he had. of his own initiative, 
pvn tssarances of approval to Count Walcwski, which wore 
rat in accord with the views of the cabinet and with the 
' ptciratity wfakh bad been en joined " by the queen. This was too 
r*b even for Lord John Russell, and after a short and derisive 
'srsspondence Lord Palmerston resigned the seals of office. 
Tat death of the doJce of Wellington in 1S52 deeply affected 
'.* queen. The duke bad acquired a position above parties, 
ami * and was the trusted adviser of all statesmen and of the 
***** court in emergencies. The queen sadly needed such 
JJJ' a counsellor, for Prince Albert's position was one fall 
t+m of ctifftculty, and party malignity was continually 
putting wrong constructions upon the advice which he 
gave, and imputing to him advice which he did not 
r*. During the Corn Law agitation offence was taken at 
*s string attended a debate in the House of Commons, the 
*ia *^<«»i"f that he had gone down to overawe the 
toe m favour of Peel's measures. After Palmcrston's en- 
"aud resignation, there was a new and more absurd hubbub. 
1 efenax. was reached when the difficulties with Russia arose 
**& bd to the Crimean War; the prince was accused by the 
too; party of wanting war, and by the war party of plotting 
trnxder; and it came to be publicly rumoured that the queen's 
iiiti>d had been found conspiring against the state, and had 
•« committed to the Tower. Some said that the queen had 
*Q imsted too, and the prince wrote to Stockmar: " Thou- 
4a& of people surrounded the Tower to see the queen and me 
"«*t to it." This gave infinite pain to the queen, and at 
*pi she wrote to Lord Aberdeen on the subject. Eventually, 
* 2tt January 1854, Lord John Russell took occasion to deny 
** emphatically that Prince Albert interfered enduly with 
■cm affairs, and in both houses the statesmen of the two 
*-*« cen t er ed feeling panegyrics of the prince, asserting at 

* sunt time his entire constitutional right to give private 
<•■*« to the sovereign on matters of state. From this time 
' *»y be said that Prince Albert's position was established on 
••one footing. He had declined (1850) to accept the post 
4 tasaaanderHnvchief at the duke of Wellington's suggestion, 
ac* he always refused to let himself be placed in any situation 
**ri would have modified ever so slightly his proper relations 
rs the queen. The queen was very anxious that he should 
*av« the title of M King Consort," and that the crown should 

* path/ borne as it was by William IIL and Mary; but he 
-^*3 never spoke a word for this arrangement. It was only to 
*•* the queen that be consented to take the title of Prince Con- 
'"* *wjr letters patent of June as, 1857), and he only did this when 
< «u nastiest that statesmen of all parties approved the change. 

** the queen and royal family the Crimean War time was 
1 **7 bury and exciting one. Her majesty personally super- 
*fe intended the committees of ladies who organized 
J*"* rctief for the w oun de d, she helped Florence Nightin- 
* gale in falsing bands of trained nurses; she visited 
-• crippled soldiers In the hospitals, and it was through 

* nsokftc complaints of the utter insufficiency of the 
acKjt accossnaodatioa that Nethry Hospital was built. The 



distribution of medals to the soldiers and the institution of 
the Victoria Cross (February 1857) as a reward for individual 
instances of merit and valour must also be noted among the 
incidents which occupied the queen's time and thoughts. In 
1855 the emperor and empress of the French visited the queen 
at Windsor Castle, and the same year her majesty and the prince 
consort paid a visit to Paris. 

The queen's family life was most happy. At Balmoral and 
Windsor the court lived in virtual privacy, and the queen and 
the prince consort saw much of their children. Count- ra» 
less entries in the queen's diaries testify to the anxious fsvs* 
affection with which the progress of each little member J» rf ** r 
of the household was watched. Two more children "**?' 
had been born to the royal pair, Prince Leopold (duke of Albany) 
on the 7th of April 1853, and on the 14th of April 1857 their Last 
child, the princess Beatrice (Princess Henry of Battenbetg), 
bringing the royal family up to nine — four sons and five 
daughters. Less than a year after Princess Beatrice's birth 
the princess royal was married to Prince Frederick William of 
Prussia, afterwards the emperor Frederick. The next marriage 
after the princess royal's was that of the princess Alice to 
Prince Louis (afterwards grand duke) of Hesse-Darmstadt in 
1862. In 1863 the prince of Wales married the princess Alex- 
andra of Denmark. In 1866 the princess Helena became the 
wife of Prince Christian of Schlcswig-Holstcin. In 1871 the 
princess Louise was wedded to the marquis of Lome, eldest son 
of the duke of Argyll. In /87a Prince Alfred, duke of Edin* 
burgh, married Princess Marie Alexandrovna, only daughter of 
the tsar Alexander II. The duke of Connaught married in 
1879 the princess Louise of Prussia, daughter of the soldier- 
prince Frederick Charles. In 1882 Prince Leopold, duke of 
Albany, wedded the princess Helen of WaMeck-Pyrmont. 
Finally came the marriage of Princess Beatrice in 1885 with 
Prince Henry of Bat ten berg. 

On the occasion of the coming of age of the queen's sons and 
the marriages of her daughters parliament made provision. 
The prince of Wales, to addition to the revenues of the duchy 
of Cornwall, had £40,000 a year, the princess £10,000, and an 
addition of £36,000 a year for their children was granted by 
parliament in 1889. The princess royal received a dowry of 
£40,000 and £8000 a year for life, the younger daughters £30,000 
and £6000 a year each. The dukes of Edinburgh, Connaught 
and Albany were each voted an income of £15,000, and £10,009 
on marry ingi 

The dispute with the United States concerning the " Trent" 
affair of i86r will always be memorable for the part played in 
its settlement by the queen and the prince consort. r*» 
In i86t the accession of Abraham Lincoln to the presi- Ammtem 
dency of the United States of America caused the CMtWar * 
Southern States of the Union to revolt, and the war began. 
During November the British West India steamer " Trent " was 
boarded by a vessel of the Federal Navy, the " San Jacinto," and 
Messrs Slidell and Mason, commissioners for the Confederate 
States, who were on their way to England, were seised. The 
British government were on the point of demanding reparation 
for this act in a peremptory manner which could hardly have 
meant anything but war, but Prince Albert insisted on revising 
Lord Russell's despatch in a way which gave the American 
government an opportunity to concede the surrender of the 
prisoners without humiliation. The memorandum from the 
queen on this point was the prince consort's last political draft. 

The year 1861 was the saddest in the queen's life. On 16th 
March, her mother, the duchess of Kent, died, and on 14th 
December, while the dispute with America about the nsstse# 
" Treat " affair was yet unsettled, the prince consort «*» #**■» 
breathed his last at Windsor. His death left a void 0MMrt * 
in the queen's life which nothing could ever fill She built at 
Frogmore a magnificent mausoleum where she might be buried 
with him. 

Never again during her reign did the queen live in London, 
and Buckingham Palace was only used for occasional visits of -a 
few days. . 



34- 



VICTORIA, QUEEN 



At the time of the prince consort's death the prince of Wales 
was in his twenty-first year. He had spent several terms at 
each of the two universities of Oxford and Cambridge, 
and he had already travelled much, having visited 
most of Europe, Egypt and the United States. 
whm. fjjg marr | & g e was solemnized at Windsor on the toth of 
March 1863. The queen witnessed the wedding from the private 
pew or box of St George's Chapel, Windsor, but she wore the deep 
mourning which she was never wholly to put off to the end of 
her life, and she took no part in the festivities of the wedding. 

In foreign imperial affairs, and in the adjustment of serious 
parliamentary difficulties, the queen's dynastic influence abroad 
and her position as above party at home, together with the 
respect due to her character, good sense and experience, still 
remained a powerful element in the British polity, as was shown 
Attn- on more than one occasion. In 1866 the Austro- 
PrwsAtam Prussian War broke out, and many short-sighted people 
Wm> were tempted to side with France when, in 1867, 
Napoleon III. sought to obtain a " moral compensation " by 
laying a claim to the duchy of Luxemburg. A conference met 
In London, and the difficulty was settled by neutralizing the 
duchy and ordering the evacuation of the Prussian troops 
who kept garrison there. But this solution, which averted an 
imminent war, was only arrived at through Queen Victoria's 
personal intercession. In the words of a French writer — 

""The queen wrote both to the, king of Prussia and to the 
emperor Napoleon. Her letter to the emperor, pervaded with 
the religious and almost mystic sentiments which predominate in 
the queen's mind, particularly since the death of Prince Albert, 
teems to have made a deep impression on the sovereign who, 
amid the struggles of politics, had never completely repudiated the 
philanthropic theories of his youth, and who, on the battlefield of 
Sotterino, covered with the dead and wounded, was seized with an 
unspeakable honor of war." 

Moreover, Disraeli's two premierships (1868, 1874-80) did 
a good deal to give new encouragement to a right idea of the 
constitutional function of the crown. Disraeli thought 
that the queen ought to be a power in the state. His 
notion of duty — at once a loyal and chivalrous one- 
was that he was obliged to give the queen the best 
of his advice, but that the final decision in any course 'lay 
with her, and that once she had decided, he was bound, what- 
ever might be his own opinion, to stand up for her decision in 
public. The queen, not unnaturally, came to trust Disraeli 
implicitly, and she frequently showed her friendship for him. 
At his death she paid an exceptional tribute to bis "dear 
and honoured memory" from his " grateful and affectionate 
sovereign and friend." To something like this position lord 
Salisbury after 1886 succeeded. A somewhat different con- 
ception of the sove r ei g n's functions was that of Disraeli's 
great rival, Gladstone, who, though his respect for the person 
and office of the sovereign was unbounded, not only expected 
all people, the queen included, to agree with him when he 
changed his mind, but to become suddenly enthusiastic about 
his new ideas. The queen consequently never felt safe with him. 
Nor did she like his manner— he spoke to her (she is believed to 
have said) as if she were a public meeting. The queen was 
opposed to the Disestablishment of the Irish Church (i860)— 
the question winch brought Gladstone to bo premkr— and 
though she yielded with good grace, Gladstone was fretful 
and astonished because she would not pretend to give a 
hearty assent to the measure. Through her secretary, General 
Grey, the queen pointed out that aha had not conreakd bom 
Gladstone "how deeply she deplored' 1 his having felt himself 
under the necessity of raising the question, and how appre- 
hensive she was of the possible consequences of the measure;, 
but, when a general election had pronounced on the principle, 
when the mil had been carried through the House of Commons 
by unvarying majorities, she did not see what good conid be 
gained by rejecting it in the Lords. Later, when through the 
skilful diplomacy of the primate the Lords had passed the second 
reading by a small but sufficient majority (170 to 146), and after 
amendments had been adopted, the queen herself wrote—' 



" The queen ... is very sensible of the prudence and. at the 
same time, the anxiety (or the welfare of the Irish Establishment 
which the archbishop has manifested during the course of the 
debates, and she will be very glad if the amendments which have 
been adopted at his suggestion lead to a settlement of the qoe^ 
tion ,- but to effect thb, concessions, the queen believes, wilt have 
to be made on both sides. The queen must say that she cannot 
view without alarm possible consequences of another year of agita* 
tion on the Irish Church, and she would ask the archbishop seriously 
to consider, in case the concessions to which the government may 
agree should not go so far as be may himself wish, whether the 
postponement of the settlement for another year may not be likely 
to result in worse rather than in better terms for the Church. The 
queen trusts, therefore, that the archbishop will himself consider, 
and, as far as he can, endeavour to induce the others to consider, 
any concessions that may be offered by the House of Commons in 
the most conciliatory spirit." 

The correspondence of which this letter forms a part is one of 
the few published witnesses to the queen's careful and active 
interest in home politics during the latter half of her reign; 
but it is enough to prove how wise, bow moderate and how 
steeped in the spirit of the Constitution she was. Another 
instance is that of the County Franchise and Redistribution 
Bills of 1884-45. There, again, a conflict between the two 
houses was imminent, and the queen's wish for a settlement had 
considerable weight in bringing about the curious but effective 
conference of the two parties, of which the first suggestion, it 
is believed, was due to Lord Randolph Churchill. 

In 1876 a bill was introduced into parliament for conferring on 
the queen the title of " Empress of India." It met with much 
opposition, and Disraeli was accused of ministering „ nm ' u 
simply to a whim of the sovereign, whereas, in fact, J/SSt? 
the title was intended to impress the idea of British 
suzerainty forcibly upon the minds of the native princes, and 
upon the population of Hindustan. The prince of Wales's voyage 
to India in the winter of 1875-76 had brought the heir to the 1 
throne into personal relationship with the great Indian vasssis 
of the British crown, and it was felt that a further demonstra- i 
tion of the queen's interest in her magnificent dependency 
would confirm their loyalty. 

The queen's private life during the decade 1870-80 was one of 
quiet, broken only by one great sorrow when the Princess Alice 
died in 1878. In 1867 her majesty had started in author- -^^ 
ship by publishing The Early Days of HU Prince *£"* 
Consort, compiled by General Grey; in i860 she gave 
to the world her interesting and simply written diary entitled 1 
Leaser from Jfe Journal of am lift in the Highlands, and in 
1874 appeared the first volume of Tkt Lift and Letiers of Iks , 
Prince Consort (and voL in 1880), edited by Sir Theodore Martin. 
A second instalment of the Highland journal appeared in 1 
1885. These literary occupations solaced the hours of a life 
wmch was nx»Uy spent in privacy. A few trips to the Continent, 
in which the queen was always accompanied by her youngest 
daughter, the Princess Beatrice, brought a Httie variety into 
the home-life, and aided much in keening up the good health 1 
which the queen enjoyed almost uninterruptedly. So far as 
public ceremonies were concerned, the prince and princess of 
Wales were now coming forward more and more to represent 
the royal family. People noticed meanwhile that the queen 
had taken a great affection for her Scottish man-servant, John 
Brown, who had been in her service since 1849; she made him 
her constant pmonal attendant, and looked on him snore as 
a friend than as servant. When he died in 1683 the queen's 
grid was intense. 

From 1880 onwards Ireland almost inanonoliaed the field 
of domestic politics. The queen was privately opposed to 
Gladstone's Home Rule policy; but she observed in public 
a constitutional reticence on the subject. In the year, however, 
of the Crimes Act 1887, an event took place which was of more 
miiaiafr personal concern to the queen, and of more attractive 
import to the country and the ensptre at large. June _ 
soth was the fiftieth ann i v er sa ry of her a ccessi on to 
the throne, and en the following day, for the second 
time in English history, a great Jubilee restoration "was held 
to commemnntr so happy aa event,' The country threw 



VICTORIA, QUEEN 



35 



krsT into the celebration with unchecked enthusiasm; large 
sana of money were everywhere subscribed; in every city, 
town and village something was done both in the way of 
rrjoiriag and in the way of establishing some permanent 
nemoriil of the event. In London the day itself was kept by 
a solemn service in Westminster Abbey, to which the queen 
vent in state, surrounded by the most brilliant, royal, and 
princely escort thai had ever accompanied a British sovereign, 
ud catered on her way by the applause of hundreds of thousands 
of her subject*. The queen had already paid a memorable visit 
to the East End, when she opened the People's Palace on the 
uti of May. On the and of July she reviewed at Buckingham 
Palace some 28,000 volunteers of London and the home counties. 
Ob death of July she laid the foundation stone of the Imperial 
Iasthute, the building at Kensington to which, at the instance 
of the prince of Wales, it had been determined to devote the 
brje sum of money collected as a Jubilee offering, and which 
■as opened by the queen in 1893. On the oth of July the 
qwm reviewed 60,000 men at JUdershot; and, last and chief 
of ifl, 00 the ajrd of July, one of the most brilliant days of 
1 brilliant summer, she reviewed the fleet at Spithead. 

The year 1888 witnessed two events which greatly affected 
European history; and in a minor, though still marked, degree 
rkpw the life of the English court. On the Qlh of March 
the emperor William I. died at Berlin He was 
succeeded by bis son, the emperor Frederick III., 
irprded with special affection in England as the husband 
of ihe princess royal. But at the time he was suffering 
from a malignant disease of the throat, and he died on the 
ifih of June, being succeeded by his eldest son, the emperor 
William U-, the grandson of the queen. Meanwhile Queen 
Victoria spent some weeks at Florence at the Villa Pahnieri, 
tad returned borne by Darmstadt and Berlin. In spite of the 
£ac» of the emperor Frederick a certain number of court 
fc&iviiies were held in her honour, and she had long con- 
versations with Prince Bismarck, who was deeply impressed 
iy her majesty's personality. Just before, the prince, who 
•as still chancellor, had taken a very strong line with regard to 
* royal marriage Id which the queen was keenly interested— 
(be proposal that Prince Alexander of Battenberg, lately ruler 
«J Bulgaria, and brother of the queen's son -in-law, Prince Henry, 
■wdd marry Princess Victoria, the eldest daughter of the 
eaperor Frederick. Prince Bismarck, who had been anti- 
fiatteaberg from the. beginning, vehemently opposed this mar- 
taft, on the ground that for reasons of state policy it would 
over do for * daughter of the German emperor to marry 
» prince who was personally disliked by the tsar This affair 
ooed no little agitation in royal circles, but in the end state 
Rasoas were allowed to prevail and the chancellor had his 

The queen had home so well the fatigue of the Jubilee that 
•ring Che succeeding years she was encouraged to make some- 
M what more frequent appearances among her subjects. 
^^' In May 1888 she attended a performance of Sir Arthur 
Win's GdUes legend at the Albert Hall, and in August she 
»«ed Glasgow to open the magnificent new municipal buildings, 
**aaiag for a- couple of nights at Blytbswood, the seat of 
fc Archibald Campbell. Early in 1880 she received at Windsor 
» specal embassy, which was the beginning of a memorable 
chapter of English history: two Matabele chiefs were sent 
*y King Lobengula to present his respects to the " great White 
fcea," as to whose very existence, it was said, he had up 
fcl that time been sceptical. Soon afterwards her majesty 
«es to Biarritz, and the occasion was made memorable by a 
«w winch she paid to the queen- r eg e nt of Spain at San Sebas- 
(us, the only visit that an English reigning sovereign had ever 
Na to the Peninsula. 

Tie relations between the court and the country formed 
*ana ia 1880 for a somewhat sharp discussion in parliament 
>ai a ihe press. A royal message was brought by Mr W. H. 
Soils on the 2nd of July, expressing, on the one hand, the 
•Jfexa's desire to provide for Prince Albert Victor of Wales, and, 



on the other, informing the house of the intended marriage of 
the prince of Wales's daughter, the Princess Louise, to the 
earl (afterwards duke) of Fife. On the proposal of 
Mr Smith, seconded by Gladstone, a select committee meatMry 
was appointed to consider these messages and to gnat to 
report to the house as to the existing practice and as if prim* 
to the principles to be adopted for the future. The Jjajjjjjf - 
evidence laid before the committee explained to the 
country for the 7 first time the actual state of the royal income, 
and on the proposal of Gladstone, amending the proposal of 
the government, it was proposed to grant a fixed addition of 
£36,000 per annum to the prince of Wales, out of which he 
should be expected to provide for his children without further 
application to the country. Effect was given to this proposal 
in a bill called " The Prince of Wales's Children's Bill," which 
was carried in spite of the persistent opposition of a small group 
of Radicals. 

In the spring of 1800 the queen visited Aix-les- Bains in the 
hope that the waters of that health resort might alleviate 
the rheumatism from which she was now frequently .. 

suffering. She returned as usual by way of Darmstadt, 
and shortly after her arrival at Windsor paid a visit to Baron 
Ferdinand Rothschild at Waddesdon Manor. In February 
she launched the battleship " Royal Sovereign " at Portsmouth; 
a week later she visited the Horse Show at Islington. Her 
annual spring visit to the South was this year paid to the little 
town of Grasse. 

At the beginning of 1892 a heavy blow fell upon the queen 
in the death of the prince of Wales's eldest son Albert Victor, 
duke of Clarence and Avondale. He had never been DtMiM 
of a robust constitution, and after a little more than •/<*• 
a week's illness from pneumonia following influenza, ^*»o/ 
he died at Sandringham. The pathos of his death Clanmm - 
was increased by the fact that only a short time before it had 
been announced that the prince was about to marry his second 
cousin, Princess May, daughter of the duke and duchess of 
Teck. 

The death of the young prince threw a gloom over the 
country, and caused the royal family to spend the year in 
such retirement as was possible. The queen this year paid a 
visit to Costcbelle, and stayed there for some quiet weeks. 
In 1893 the country, on the expiration of the royal mourning, 
began to take a more than usual interest in the affairs of the 
royal family. On the 19th of February the queen 
left home for a visit to Florence, and spent tt 
in the Villa Pahnieri. She was able to display remarkable 
energy in visiting the sights of the city, and even went as 
far afield as San GImignano; and her visit had a notable 
effect in strengthening the bonds of friendship between the 
United Kingdom and the Italian people. On 28th April 
she arrived home, and a few days later the prince of Wales's, 
second son, George, duke of York (see Geobce V.), who by his 
brother's death had been left in the direct line of succession to 
the throne, was betrothed to the Princess May, the marriage 
being celebrated on 6th July in the Chapel Royal of St James's 
Palace. 

In 1894 the queen stayed for some weeks at Florence, and 
on her return she stopped at Coburg to witness the marriage 
between two of her grandchildren, the grand duke 1M ^ 

of Hesse and the Princess Victoria Melita of Coburg. *"*■ 

On the next day the emperor William officially announced 
the betrothal of the Ccsarcvitch (afterwards the tsar Nicholas If.) 
to the princess Alix of Hesse, a granddaughter whom 
the queen had always regarded with special affection. After 
a few weeks in London the queen went northwards and stopped 
at Manchester, where she opened the Ship Canal. Two days 
afterwards she celebrated her seventy-fifth birthday in quiet 
at Balmoral. A month later (June 23) took place the birth 
of a son to the duke and duchess of York, the child receiving 
the thoroughly English name of Edward. 

In 1895 the queen lost her faithful and most efficient private 
secretary, General Sir Henry Ponsonby, who for many years 



36 



VICTORIA, QUEEN 



bad helped her ia the management of her most private affairs 
and had acted as an intermediary between her and her ministers 
D€athof with singular ability and success. His successor was 
Prtac* Sir Arthur Bigge. The following year, 1806, was 
Hmaryot marked by a loss which touched the queen even more 
Bsa*a-> nearly and more personally. At his own urgent 
* request Prince Henry of Battcnberg, the queen's 

son-in-law, was permitted to join the Ashanli expedition, and 
early in January the prince was struck down with fever. He 
was brought to the coast and put on board her majesty's ship 
" Blonde," where, on the 20th, he died. 

In September 1806 the queen's reign had reached a point 
at which it exceeded in length that of any other English 
Tm sovereign; but by her special request all public 

Di*moB4 celebrations of the fact were deferred until the follow- 
jttbOe*. j^ j unCt which marked the completion of sixty 
years from her accession. As the time drew on it was 
obvious that the celebrations of this Diamond Jubilee, as 
it was popularly called, would exceed in magnificence those 
of the Jubilee of 1887. Mr Chamberlain, the secretary for the 
colonies, induced his colleagues to seize tho opportunity of 
making the jubilee a festival of the British empire. Accordingly, 
the prime ministers of all the self-governing colonies, with 
their families, were invited to come to London as the guests 
of the country to take part in the Jubilee procession; and 
drafts of the troops from every British colony and dependency 
were brought home for the same purpose. The procession 
was, in the strictest sense of the term, unique. Here was a 
display, not only of Englishmen, Scotsmen, Irishmen, Welsh- 
men, but of Mounted Rifles from Victoria and New South 
Wales, from the Cape and from Natal, and from the Dominion 
of Canada. Here were Hausas from the Niger and the Gold 
Coast, coloured men from the West India regiments, zapliehs 
from Cyprus, Chinamen from Hong Kong, and Dyaks — now 
civilised into military police— from British North Borneo. 
Here, most brilliant sight of all, were the Imperial Service troops 
sent by the native princes of India; while the detachments 
of Sikhs who marched earlier in the procession received their 
full meed of admiration and applause. Altogether the queen 
was in ber carriage for more than four hours, in itself an 
extraordinary physical feat for a woman of seventy-eight. 
Her own feelings were shown by the simple but significant 
message she sent to her people throughout the world: " From 
my heart 1 thank my beloved people. May God bless them." 
The illuminations in London and the great provincial towns 
were magnificent, and all the hills from Ben Nevis to the South 
Downs were crowned with bonfires. The queen herself held 
a great review at Aldershot; but a much more significant 
display was the review by the prince of Wales of the fleet 
at Spithead on Saturday, the 36th of June. No less than 165 
vessels of all classes were drawn up in four lines, extending 
altogether to a length of 30 m. 

The two years that followed the Diamond Jubilee were, as 
regards the queen, comparatively uneventful. Her health 
remained good, and her visit to Ciroiez in the spring of 1808 
was as enjoyable and as beneficial as before. In May 1800, 
after another visit to the Riviera, the queen performed what 
proved to be her last ceremonial function in London: she 
proceeded in " semi-slate " to South Kensington, and laid the 
foundation stone of the new buildings completing the Museum 
—henceforth to be called the Victoria and Albert Museum— 
which had been planned more than forty years before by the 
prince consort. 

Griefs and anxieties encompassed the queen during the last 
year of her life.* But if the South African War proved more 
7), serious than had been anticipated, it did more to 

«v*M ( weld the empire together than years of peaceful 
itttr**r. progress might have accomplished. The queen's 
frequent messages of thanks and greeting to ber colonics 
and to the troops sent by them, and her reception of 
the latter at Windsor, gave evidence of the heartfelt joy 
with which she saw the sons of the empire giving their lives 



for the defence of its integrity; and the satisfaction which 
she showed in the Federation of the Australian colonies was 
no less keen. The reverses of the first part of the Boer cam- 
paign, together with the loss of so many of her officers and 
soldiers, caused no small part of that " great strain " of which 
the Court Circular spoke in the ominous words which first 
told the country that she was seriously ill. But the queen 
faced the new situation with her usual courage, devotion and 
strength of will. She reviewed the departing regiments; she 
entertained the wives and children of the Windsor soldiers who 
had gone to the war; sho showed by frequent messages her 
watchful interest in the course of the campaign and in the 
efforts which were being made throughout the whole empire; 
and her Christmas gift of a box of chocolate to every soldier in 
South Africa was a touching proof of her sympathy and interest. 
She relinquished her annual holiday on the Riviera, feeling 
that at such a time she ought not to leave her country. Entirely 
on her own initiative, and moved by admiration for the fine 
achievements of " her brave Irish '* during the war, the queen 
announced her intention of paying a long visit to Publin; and 
there, accordingly, she went for the month of April 1000, 
staying in the Viceregal Lodge, receiving many of the leaders 
of Irish society, inspecting some 50,000 school children from 
all parts of Ireland, and taking many a drive amid the charming 
scenery of the neighbourhood of Dublin. She went even further 
than this attempt to conciliate Irish feeling, and to show her 
recognition of the gallantry of the Irish soldiers she Issued an 
order for them to wear the shamrock on St Patrick's Day, and 
for a new regiment of Irish Guards to be constituted. 

In the previous November the queen had had the pleasure 
of receiving, on a private visit, her grandson, the German Em- 
peror, who came accompanied by the empress and by two of 
their sons. This visit cheered the queen, and the successes of 
the army which followed the arrival of Lord Roberts in Africa 
occasioned great joy to her, as she testified by many published 
messages. But independently of the public anxieties of the 
war, and of those aroused by the violent and unexpected out- 
break of fanaticism in China, the year brought deep private 
griefs to the queen. In 1809 her grandson, the hereditary prince 
of Coburg, had succumbed to phthisis, and in 1900 his father, 
the duke of Coburg, the queen's second son, previously known 
as the duke of Edinburgh, also died (July 30). Then Prince 
Christian Victor, the queen's grandson, fell a victim to enteric 
fever at Pretoria; and during the autumn it came to be known 
that the empress Frederick, the queen's eldest daughter, was 
very seriously ill. Moreover, just at the end of the year a loss 
which greatly shocked and grieved the queen was experienced 
in the sudden death, at Windsor Castle, of the Dowager Lady 
Churchill, one of her oldest and most intimate friends. These 
losses told upon the queen at her advanced age. Throughout 
her life she had enjoyed excellent health, and even in the last 
few years the only marks of age were rheumatic stiffness of the 
joints, which prevented walking, and a diminished power of 
eyesight. In the autumn of 1900, however, her health began 
definitely to fail, and though arrangements were made d**b 
for another holiday in the South, it was plain that ber 9tUt9 _ 
strength was seriously affected. Still she continued •■*» 
the ordinary routine of her duties and occupations. Before 
Christmas she made her usual journey to Osborne, and there 
on the 2nd of January she received Lord Roberts on his return 
from South Africa and handed to him the insignia of the Garter. 
A fortnight later she commanded a second visit from the field- 
marshal; she continued to transact business, and until a week 
before her death she still took her daily drive. A sudden loss 
of power then supervened, and on Friday evening, the 18th of 
January, the Court Circular published an authoritative announce- 
ment of her illness. On Tuesday, the 22nd of January 1001, 
she died. 

Queen Victoria was a ruler of a new type. When she ascended 
the throne the popular faith in kings and queens was on the 
decline. She revived that faith; she consolidated her throne; 
she not only captivated the affections of the multitude, but 



VICTORIA, T. L. DA— VICTORIA (AUSTRALIA) 



Mb Cm Ttspoct of thonpitfui tnt and aD tins she achieved 
•7 arctaods which to her predecessors would have seemed im- 
pnctkahk— methods which it required no less shrewdness toj 
♦fewer than force of character and honesty of heart to adopt 
seadfisuy Whilst all who approached the queen bore witness 
to sec candour and reasonableness in relation to her ministers, 
aU likewise proclaimed how anxiously she considered advice 
tkt vis submitted to her before letting herself be persuaded 
tku ihe must accept it for the good of herpeople. 

Though richly endowed with saving common sense, the 
cws was not specially remarkable for high development of 
•ay fp*^*««H intellectual force. Her whole life, public and 
prime, wis an abiding lesson in the paramount importance 
«* dancler. John Bright said of her that what specially 
trick him was her absolute truthfulness. The extent of 
kr family connexions, and the correspondence she maintained 
with foreign sovereigns, together with the confidence inspired 
by her pcaonal character, often enabled her to smooth the 
nmtd paces of international relations; and she gradually 
stone in later years the link between all parts of a demo- 
cratic empire, the citizens of which felt a passionate loyalty for 
thar venerable queen. 

ijr her long reign and unblemished record her name had 
koime associated inseparably with British institutions and 
npentl solidarity. Her own life was by choice, and as far 
is her position would admit, one of almost austere simplicity 
tsd aooetbess; and her subjects were proud of a royalty 
*akh involved none of the mischiefs of caprice or ostentation, 
fo set in »— wp 1 * alike of motherly sympathy and of queenly 
ipdty. She was mourned at her death not by her own country 
adr, nor even by all English-speaking people, but by the 
thole world. The funeral in London on the xst and and of 
Unary, CTrl—img first the passage of the coffin from the Isle 
•* Wight to Gosport between lines of warships, and secondly a 
afitary procession from London to Windsor, was a memorable 
■okmsity: the greatest of English sovereigns, whose name 
wjbU in history mark an age, had gone to her rest. 

Tbercfca good bftlkgraphkal note at the end of Mr Sidney Lee's 
*tde a the National Dictionary of Biography. See also the Letters 
* *mm Victoria (1007), and the obituary published by The Times, 
an wbxa tone passages have been borrowed above. (H.Ch.) 



TTCT0H1A (or Vhtohia), TOMhUSSO LUDOVIOO DA 

'(■ 1540-c 1613), Spanish musical composer, was born at Avila 
ukss, as Haberl conjectures, his title of Presbyter Abulensis 
afei sot to Ins birthplace but to his parish as priest; so that his 
sane would indicate that he was born at Vittoria). In 1573 be 
** appointed as Maestro di CappeJla to the Collegium Germani- 
cs at Rome, where be had probably been trained. Victoria 
kf: Rome in 1580, being then appointed vice-master of the Royal 
Gapd si Madrid, a post which he held until 1602. In 1003 
fe composed for the funeral of the empress Maria the greatest 
ftqoian of the Golden Age, which is his last known work, 
kaujh in 1613 a contemporary speaks of him as still living, 
fc was not ostensibly Palestrina's pupil; but Palestrina had 
tie asia influence upon his art, and the personal relations 
fcvetn the two were as intimate as were the artistic. The 
**x began by Morales and perfected by Palestrina left no 
cnafiag-bJocks in Victoria's path and he was able from the 
•net to express the purity of his. ideals of religious music 
*ttmrt laving to sift the good from the bad in that Flemish 
taditko which had entangled Palestrina's path while it enlarged 
»» style, From Victoria's first publication in 1572 to his last 
«q«m (the Qffidmm Defunctorum of 1605) there is practically 
» change of style, all being pure church musk of unswerving 
toe* and showing no inequality except in concentration 
■* thwilJH Lite his countryman and prede ce ssor Morales, he 
*w*sosecular mask; 1 yet he differs from Morales, perhaps 
°o* than can be accounted for by his later date, in that his 
<Wiooal spirit b impulsive rather than ascetic. His work 

'One French aowg is mentioned by Hawkins, but no secular 
*•* appears ro the prospectus of the modern complete edition 
«a»»ortapwbBrf^byBm^aDdHartd. 



37 

is tne' crown of Spanish musk? musk which has been regarded"* 
as not constituting a special school, since it absorbed itself so 
thoroughly in the Rome of Palestrina. Yet, as has been aptly 
pointed out in the admirable article " Vittoria " in Grove's 
Dictionary of Music and Musicians ', Roman music owes so much 
to that Spanish school which produced Guerrero, Morales and 
Victoria, that it might fairly be called the Hispano-Roman 
school. la spite of the comparative smallness of Victoria's 
output as compared with that of many of his contemporaries, 
there is no mistaking his claim to rank with Palestrina and 
Orlando di Lasso in the triad of supreme 16th-century masters. 
In any extensive anthology of liturgical polyphony such as the 
Musica Divina of Proske, his work stands out as impressively 
as Palestrina's and Lasso's; and the style, in spite of a resem- 
blance to Palestrina which amounts to imitation, is as individual 
as only a successful imitator of Palestrina can be. That is to 
say, Victoria's individuality is strong enough to assert itself 
by the very act of following Palestrina's path. When he is 
below bis best his style does not become crabbed or harsh, but 
over-facile and thin, though never failing in euphony. If he 
seldom displays an elaborate technique it is not because he 
conceals it, or lacks it His mastery is unfailing, but bis 
methods are those of direct emotional effect; and the intellectual 
qualities that strengthen and deepen this emotion are themselves 
innate and not sought out. The emotion is reasonable and 
lofty, not because he has trained himself to think correctly, 
but because he does not know that any one can think otherwise. 
His works fill eight volumes in the complete edition of Messrs 
Breitkopf and HarteL ( D. F. T.) 

VICTORIA, a British colonial state, occupying the south- 
eastern corner of Australia. Its western boundary is in 140° 
58' E.; on the east it runs out to a point at Cape Howe, in 150° 
£. long., being thus rudely triangular in shape; the river Murray 
constitutes nearly the whole of the northern boundary, its 
most northerly point being in 34° S. lat.; the southern boundary 
is the coast-line of the Southern Ocean and of Bass Strait, the 
most southerly point is Wilson's Promontory in 30 S. lat. 
The greatest length east and west is about 480 m.; the greatest 
width, in the west, is about 250 m. The area is officially 
stated to be 87,80*4 sq. m. 

The coast-line may be estimated at about 800 m. It 
begins about the 141st meridian with bold but not lofty sand- 
stone cliffs, worn into deep caves and capped by grassy undu- 
lations, which extend inland to pleasant park-like lands. Capes 
Bridgewater and Nelson form a peninsula of forest lands, 
broken by patches of meadow. To the east of Cape Nelson 
lies the moderately sheltered inlet of Portland Bay, consisting 
of a sweep of sandy beach flanked by bold granite rocks. Then 
comes a long unbroken stretch of high cliffs, which, owing to 
insetting currents, have been the scene of many calamitous 
wrecks. Cape Otway is the termination of a wild mountain 
range that here abuts on the coast. Its brown cliffs rise verti- 
cally from the water; and the steep slopes above are covered 
with dense forests of exceedingly tall timber and tree-ferns. 
Eastwards from this cape the line of cliffs gradually diminishes 
in height to about 20 to 40 ft. at the entrance to Port 
Phillip. Next comes Port Phillip Bay, at the head of whkh 
stands the city of Melbourne. When the tide recedes from this 
bay through the narrow entrance it often encounters* a strong 
current just outside; the broken and somewhat dangerous sea 
thus caused is called " the Rip." East of Port Phillip Bay 
the shores consist for 15 m. of a line of sandbanks; but 
at Cape Schanck they suddenly become high and bold. East 
of this comes Western Port, a deep inlet more than half occupied 
by French Island and Phillip Island. Its shores are flat and 
uninteresting, in some parts swampy. The bay is shallow and 
of little use for navigation. The coast continues rocky round 
Cape Ltptrap. Wilson's ^Promontory is a great rounded mass 
of granite hffls, with wfld and striking scenery, tree-fern gullies 
and gigantic gum-trees, connected with the mainland by a 
narrow sandy isthmus. At its extremity lie a multitude of 
rocky islets, with steep granite edges. North of this cape, and 



38 



VICTORIA (AUSTRALIA) 




£j J-eopikMr E**l 144* *t CfWH 






%*- — 

5 ft i * _S t r a 1 r" D 



** *p t* 



opening to the east, lies Corner Inlet, which is dry at low water. 
The coast now continues low to the extremity of the colony. 
The slight bend northward forms a sort of bight called the 
Ninety Mile Beach, but it really exceeds that length. It is an 
unbroken line of sandy shore, backed by low sandhills, on 
which grows a sparse dwarf vegetation. Behind these hSls 
comes a succession of lakes, surrounded by excellent land, and 
beyond these rise the soft blue outlines of the mountain masses 
of the interior. The shores on the extreme east are somewhat 
higher, and occasionally rise in bold points. They terminate 
in Cape Howe, off which lies Gabo Island, of small extent but 
containing an important lighthouse and signalling station. 

The western half of Victoria it level or slightly undulating, and 
as a rale tame in its scenery, exhibiting only thinly timbered grassy 
lands, with all the appearance of open parka, The north-west 
corner of the colony, equally flat, is dry and sometimes sandy, 
and frequently bare of vegetation, though in one part tome seven 
or eight millions of acres arc covered with the dense brushwood 
known as " malice scrub." This wide western plain is slightly 
broken in two places. In the south the wild ranges of Cape 
Otway are covered over a considerable area with richly luxurious 
but almost impassable forests. This district has been reserved 
as a state forest and its coast forms a favourite holiday resort, 
the scenery being very attractive. The middle of the plain is 
crossed, by a thm line of mountains, known as the Australian 
Pyrenees, at the western extremity of which there are several 
irregularly placed transverse ranges, the chief being the Grampians, 
the Victoria Range and the Sierra Range. Their highest point 
is Mount William (3600 feet). The eastern half of the colony b 
wholly different. Though there is plenty of level land, it occurs 
m small patches, and chiefly in the south, in Gippsland, which 
extends from Corner Inlet to Cape Howe. But a great part of this 
eastern half is occupied with the complicated mass of ranges- known 
collectively as the Australian Alps. The whole forms a plateau 
averaging §ror» «<*» to 2000 ft. high, with many smaller table- 



lands ranging from jjooo to 5000 ft. in height. The highest peak. 
Bogong, is 6508 ft. in altitude. The ranges are so densely covered 
with vegetation that it is extremely difficult to penetrate them. 
About fifteen peaks over 5000 ft. in height have been measured. 
Along the ranges grow the giant trees for which Victoria is famous. 
The narrow valleys and gullies contain exquisite scenery, the rocky 
streams being overshadowed by groves of graceful tree-ferns, from 
amid whose waving fronds rise the tall smooth stems of the white 
gums. Over ten millions of acres are thus covered with forest -clad 
mountains which in due time will become a very valuable asset of 
the state. The Australian Alps are connected with the Pyrenees 
by a long ridge called the Dividing Range (1500 to jooo ft. high). 

Victoria is fairly well watered, but its streams are generally too 
small to admit of navigation. Thisjiowever, is not the case with 
Uvm9m the Murray river («.».). The Murray for a distance of 
^ "• 670 m. (or 1 «o m. if its various windings be followed) forms 
the boundary between New South Wales and Victoria, it receives 
a number of tributaries from the Victorian side. The Mitta Mitta, 
which rises in the heart of the Australian Alps, is 150 m. long. 
The Ovens, rising among the same mountains, is slightly shorter. 
The Goulburn (340 m.) Hows almost entirely through well-settled 
agricultural country, and is deep enough to be used in it* lower 
part for navigation. The valley of this river is a fertile grain- 
producing district. The Campaspe (150 m.) has too little volume 
of water to be of use for navigation ; its valley is also agricultural, 
and along its banks there lie a close succession of thriving town* 
ships. The Loddon (over 200 ra.) rises in the Pyrenees. The upper 

Grt flows through a plain, to the right agricultural and to the 
t auriferous, containing nearly forty thnving towns, including 
Bendigo (formerly named Sandhurst) and Castlemaine. In the 
lower part of the valley the soil is also fertile, but the rainfall is 
small. To the west of the Loddon is the Avoca river with a length 
of 140 ra.; it is of slight volume, and though it flows towards the 
Murray it loses itself in marshes and salt lagoon* before reaching 
that river. 

The rivers which flow southwards into the ocean are numerous. 
The Snowy river rises in New South Wales, and in Victoria flows 
entirely through wild and almost wholly unoccupied territory. 



VICTORIA (AUSTRALIA) 



39 



1feT« 



Tasebo (ijool lone), which rises ia the heart of the Australian 
. uinn the GippeUnd plafiae and fella into Lake King, one 
ef the Cajaneatnjl lahea; into tie tmine lake falls the Mitchell river, 
mug aha im the Australian Alpa. The Mitchell ia navigated for a 
short distsni i . The Latrobe empties itself into Lake WeUinston 
•ha a course of 135 m.; it rises at Mount Baw Basic. The 



1 in the' 



t Spur " of the Australian Alpa. 



r plains called the " Y< 



valley from the ranges, it follows a. sinuous course through 
Flats." which are whofly 
b of the best vineyards of 

Ja he way out of the Flats between high and pie- 

, bat weU-woodcd banks, and finally reaches Port Phillip 
Bay below Melbourne. Owing to its numerous windings its a 
ranmgh that city and its suburbs is at least thirty ntuea. Ni 
is the asm it* waterway, formerly available for vessels drawing 1 6 ft., 
tat aw been de ep e n ed so as to be available for vessels drawing 
an ft- The Barwon, farther west, is a river of considerable length 
fast hole volume, flowing chiefly through .pastoral lands. The 
Hopkins and Gaenebj (2B0 m.) both water the splendid pastoral 
bads of the west, the lower course of the former passing through 
the ferofedaatrict of Waxraaiubooi well known throughout Australia 
as a pocsco-crwwing region. 

(a the went there are Lake* Corangamite and Colac, due north 
of Cape Otway. The former ia intensely salt; the latter is fresh, 
having an outlet for its waters. Lakes Tyrrell and Hindmarab 
Le in the pernios of the north-west. In summer they are dried up, 
and m winter are again formed, by the waters of rivers that have 
ae outlet. In the east are the Gippsland lakes, formed by tbe waters 
ef the Latrobe, Mitchell and Tambo, being dammed back by the 
•sadhuce ef the Ninety Mile Beach, They are connected with Bam 
Soak by a ■arrow and shifting channel through a shallow bar; 
of Victoria has done a great deal of late years to 
— ce and make it safer. The upper lake is called 
: a narrow rjaaeage leads into Lake Victoria, 
co a wider expanse called Lake King. These are all 




ftakre and are visited by tourists, being readily accessible 

(ktUfj- — 'Victoria includes a more varied and complete geo* 
brcal a tuu e j a ce than any other area of equal site ia Australia. Its 
e» JoaHcal foundation consists of a band of Archean and Lower 
raweoeoic recks, which forms the backbone of the state. .The 
alimentary rocks in this foundation have been thrown into folds, 
cl which the axes trend approximately north and south. The 
Lover Palaeozoic and Archean rocks build up the Highlands of 
VrtDtam, which occupy the whole width of the state at tts eastern 
tad. extending from the New South Wales border on the north 
to the whore of the Southern Ocean on the south. These Highlands 
tvwtrrute the whole of the mountainous country of Gippsland 
tad the north-eastern districts. They become narrower to the 
%*«. and finally, beyond the old plateau of Dundaa, disappear 
beneath the recent loams of the plains along the South Australian 
bnriw. The Lower Palaeocoic and Archean rocks bear upon their 
aviate aome Upper Palaeozoic rocks, which occur in belts running 
scrth and south, and have been preserved by infolding or faulting: 
•xh ase the Grampian Sandstones in the west; the Cathedral 
ItffisBtaia Sandstones to the north-east of Melbourne; the belt 
of Devonian and Lower Carboniferous rocks that extends across 
estrm Victoria, through Mount Wellington to Mansfield; and 
eaaly. far to the east, is the belt of the Snowy river porphyries, 
ranted by -a chain of Lower Devonian volcanoes. Further Upper 
f WUeoaoac rock* and the Upper Carboniferous glacial beds occur 
* baacne on both northern and southern flanks of the Highlands. 
T-r Meaoaok rocks are confined to southern Victoria; they build 
c? the bill* of southern Gippsland and the Otway Ranges; and 
LtW wot. hidden by later rocks, they occur under the coast of 
r» wmtin district- Between the southern mountain chain and 
tar Victorian HighUnda occurs the Great Valley of Victoria, occupied 
*» aedarnentary and volcanic rocks of Kainosoic age. The North- 
**«*tern Plains, occurring between the northern foot of the Highlands 
sad the Murray, are occupied by Kainosoic sediments. 

Victoria has a fairly complete geological sequence, though It is 
saorer than New South Wales in tbe Upper Carboniferous and Lower 
XfsoatMc. The Archean rocks form two blocks of gneisses and 
r-sta, which bmld up the Hkddands of Dundaa in the west, and 
«f the sMJilinawjiii part of victoria. They were originally de- 
creed an saetarnorphosed Silurian rocks, but must be of Archean 
ajt Another aeries of Archean rocks b more widely developed, 
raj Cora tbe oM framework upon which the geology of Victoria 
eae fr— - boSt up. They are knowo as the Heathcotian aeries, 
t of phyllites, schists and amphibotitcs; white their most 
tic feature is the constant association of foliated diabase 
and bed* of iaaperoids. Volcanic agglomerate* occur In the series 
at the typical locality of Heathcote. The Heathcotian rocks form 
dar Gaabtnafcbbi Range, which runs for 40 m. northward and 
aaatawauaa, cast of fiendteo. They are also exposed on the surface 
at taweaatera foot of the Grampian Range, and at Dookie. and on the 
eatthem coast in Waratah Bay; they have been proved by bores 
aader Rothworth. and they apparently underlie parts of the Gippa- 
~ 1 Cambrian rotka have to far only bean de- 



finitely proved near Mansfield. MrA.M. Howitt baa there coOeoted 
aome fragmentary remains of OktuUns and worm tubes of the 
Cambrian genua SalunUa. These beds at Maaafield contain phos- 
phatic limestones and wavellite. 

The Ordovician system is wdl developed. It consists of slates 
and quaruites; and aome schists around the granites of the western 
district, and in the Pyrenees, are regarded as xoetarnorphic Ordovician, 
The Ordovician baa a rich graptolitic fauna, and they have been 
classified into the following diviaiona.*— 

Upper Ordovician DarriwOl Series 

( Castlemaine Series 

Lower Ordovician . ] Bendigo Series 

( Lancefield Series 

The Ordovician beds are beat developed in a band running north- 
north-west and south-south-east across Victoria, of which the 
eastern boundary passea through Melbourne. This* Ordovician 
band begins on the sooth with the block forming the plateau of 
Arthur's Seat and Morningtoa Peninsula, as proved by Ferguson. 
Thai outlier is bounded to the north by tbe depression of Port Philiip 
and the basalt plains west of Melbourne. It reappeare north of 
them at Lancefield, whence it extends along the Highlands, past 
ballarat. with southern outliers as far as Steiglitx. It forms the 
whole of the Ballarat Plateau, and is continued northward through 
the goldfields of Caatlemaine, Bendigo and the Pyrenees, till it 
dips under the Nbrth-Weatern Plains. Certain evidence as to the 
age of the rocks in the Pyrenees has not yet been collected, and they 
may be pte-Ordovkian. Some Upper Ordovician racks occur in 
the mountains of eastern Gippsland. as near Woods Point, and in 
north-eastern Victoria, in Wombat Creek. 

The Saurian system consists of two divisions: the lower or Mel- 
bournian, and the upper or Yeemgian. Both consist in the main 
of sandstones, quart titea and shales; but the upper series Includes 
lenticular masses of limestone, at Lillydale, Loyola and along 
the Thomson river. The limestones are rich in typical Silurian 
corah and bryoaoa, and the shales and sandstones contain brathio- 
poda and trilobftee. The Silurian rocks are well exposed in sections 
near Melbourne; they occur in a belt running from the southern' coast 
at Waratah Bay, west of Wilson's Prorantory, north-north-west* 
ward across Victoria, and parallel to the Ordovician belt, which 
underlies them on the west. The Silurian rocks include the gold- 
fields of the Upper Yam, Woods Point, Wathalla and Rushwortb, 
while the limestones are worked for lime at Lillydale and Waratah 



Bay. The Devonian system includes representatives of the lower, 
middle and upper * — ■ ~ 

porphyries and tb 



The Lower Devonian series include* the 
xiated igneous rocka, along the valley of 
the Snowy river. They r ep r e sent the remains of an old chain of 
volcanoes which once extended north and south across Victoria. The 
Middle Devonian is mainly formed of marine sandstones, and lime- 
stones in eastern Grppabnd. It is best developed in the valleys 
of the Mitchell, the Tambo and the Snowy rivers. The Upper 
Devonian rocks include sandstones, shales and coarse conglomer at es. 
At the close of Middle Devonian times there were intense crustal 
disturbances, and the granitic massifs, which formed the primitive 
mountain axis of Victoria, were then intruded. 

Tbe Carboniferous system begins with the Avon river sandstones, 
containing- Lepidodtndron, and the red sandstones, with Lower 
Carboniferous fish, collected by Mr Geo. Sweet near Mansfield. 
Probably the Grampian Sandstone, the Cathedral Mountain Sand- 
stone, and some in the Mount Wellington district belong to the same 
period. The Upper Carboniferous includes the famous glacial 
deposits and boulder clays, by which the occurrence of a Carboni- 
ferous glariation in the Southern Hemisphere was first demonstrated. 
These beds occur at Heathcote, Bendigo, the Loddoo Valley, 
southern Gippsland and the North-Eastern district. The beds 
comprise boulder clay, containing fee-scratched boulders, and 
sometimes rest upon fee- s cr a tched, moutonne surfaces, and some 
lake deposits, similar to those bid down m glacial lakes. The 
glacial beds are overlain by sandstones containing GanfomopUru, 
and Kltson's work in Northern Tasmania leaves no doubt that they 
are on the horizon of the Greta or Lower Coal Measures of New South 
Wales. 

The Meaoaok group is represented only by Juraatk rocks, which 
form the mountains of southern Gippsland and include its coal* 
fields. The rocks contain fossil land plants, occasional fish remains 
and the claw of a dinosaur, Ac. The coal is of excellent quality. 
The mudstonca, which form the main bulk of thia aeries, are large jy 
composed of volcanic debris, which decomposes to a fertile soil. 
These rocks tread south-westward along the Baas Ranee, which 
reaches Western Port. They skirt the Momington Peninsula, 
underlie part of Port Phillip and the Bellarine Peninsula, and are 
exposed in the Bamboo! Hills to the south-west of Geekmg; thence 
they extend into the Otway Ranges, which are wholly built of these 
rocks and contain aome coal seams. Farther west they disappear 
below tbe recent sediments and volcanic rocks of the Warrnamhooi 
district. They are exposed again in the Portland Peninsula, aad 
rise again to form the Wanoon Hills, to the south of Dundaa. 

Hie Kaawaioic beds include three main aerie*: lacustrine, marine 
The saain lacustrine aeriea it probably of ONaajoaa* 



+0 

age, and b important from it* thick beds of brown coal, which are 
thickest in the Great Valley of Victoria in southern Gippsland. A 
cliff face on the banks of the Latrobe, near Morwell, shows 90 ft. of 
it, and a bore near Morwcll is recorded as having passed through 
•50 ft. of brown coal. Its thickn e ss, at least in patches, is very 
great. The brown coals occur to the south-east of Melbourne, 
under the basalts between it and Geelong. Brown coal is also 
abundant under the Murray plains in north-western Victoria. The 
Kainoaoic marine rocks occur at intervals along the southern coast 
and in the valleys opening from it. The most important horizon 
b apparently of Miocene age. The rocks occur at intervals in eastern 
Victoria, along the coast and up the river valleys, from the Snowy 
river westward to Alberton. At the time of the deposition of these 
beds Wilson's Promontory probably extended south-eastward and 
joined Tasmania; for the mid-Kainoxoic marine deposits do not 
occur be tw ee n Alberton and Flinders, to the west of Western Port. 
They extend up the old valley of Port Phillip as far as Keilor to the 
north of Melbourne, and are widely distributed under the volcanic 
locks of the Western Plains. They are exposed on the floors of the 
volcanic cauldrons, and have been found by mining operations 
under the volcanic rocks, of the Ballarat plateau near Pitfield. The 
Miocene sea extended up the Glenelg valley, round the western 
border of the Dundas Highlands, and spread over the Lower Murray 
Basin into New South Wales; its farthest south-eastern limit was 
in a valley at Stawell. Some later marine deposit* occur at the 
Lakes Entrance in eastern Gippsland, and in the valley of the 
Glenelg. 

The volcanic series begins with a line of great dadte domes 
including the geburite-dacite of Macedon, which is associated with 
sdlvsbergites and trachy-doleritea. The eruption of these domes 
was followed by that of sheets of basalt of several different ages, 
and the intrusion of some trachyte dykes. The oldest basalts are 
associated with the OUgocene lake deposits; and fragments of the 
large lava sheets of this period form some of the table-topped moun- 
tains in the Highlands of eastern Victoria. The river gravels below 
the lavas have been worked for gold, and land plants discovered in 
the workings. At Flinders the basalts are associated with Miocene 
tones. The largest development of the volcanic rocks are a 
( of confluent sheets of basalt, forming the Western Plains, 
a occupy over 10,000 sq. m. of south-western Victoria. 
They are crossed almost continuously by the South- Western 
railway for 166 m. from Melbourne to Warrnambool. The volcanic 
craters built up by later eruptions are well preserved: such are 
"*" ; Mount Noorat, with 



VICTORIA (AUSTRALIA) 



Mount Elephant, a simple breached cone 
a large primary crater and four second 

Mount Warrenbeip, near Ballarat, a «l_ _ . 

breached to the north-west. Mount Franklin, standing on the 
Ordbvidan rocks north of Daylesford, is a weathered cone breached 
to the south-east. In addition to the volcanic craters, there are 
numerous volcanic cauldrons formed by subsidence, such as Bullen- 
merri and Gnotuk near Camperdown, Kdlembets near Terang, and 
Tower Hill near Port Fairy. Tower Hill consists of a large volcanic 
cauldron, and rising from an island in a lake on its floor is a later 



craters on its flanks; 
cone with the crater 



The Pleistocene, or perhaps Upper Pliocene, deposits of most 
interest are those containing the bones of giant marsupials, such as the 
Diproioion and PalortktsUs, which have been found near Geelong, 
Casdemaine, Lake Kolungulak. &c; at the last locality Diftotodon 
and various extinct kangaroos have been found in association with 
the dingo. There is no trace in these deposits of the existence of 
man, and 1. W. Gregory has reasserted the striking absence of 
evidence <n man's residence in Victoria, except for a very limited 
period. There b no convincing evidence of Pleistocene glacial 
deposits in Victoria. Of the many records, the only one that can 
still be regarded as at all probable b that regarding Mount Bogong. 

The chief literature on the geology of Victoria as to be found in 
the maps and publications of the Geological Survey— a branch of 
the Mines Department. A map of the State, on the scale of eight 
inches to the mile, was issued in 1902. The Survey has published 
numerous quarter-sheet maps, ana maps of the gold fields and 
parishes. The geology b described in the Reports, Bulletins and 
Memoirs of the Survey, and in the Quarterly Reports of the Mining 
Registrars. Statistics of the mining industry are stated in the 
Annual Report of the Secretary for Mines. See also the general 
summary of the geology of Victoria, by R. Murray, issued Dy the 
Mines Department in 1887 and 1895. Numerous papers on the 
geology of the State are contained in the Trans. R. Sot. T 
and on its mining g 
Enginotrs. The ph, 
Gregory ia the Gtarrat _ _ # 

Awre.— The native trees belong chiefly to the 
largely composed of Eucalypti or gum trees. There are several 
hundred species, the most notable bring Eucalyptus amytdaHna, a 
tree with tall white stem, smooth as a marble column, and without 
branches for 60 or 70 ft. from the ground. It b singularly beautiful 
when seen in groves, for these have all the appearance of lofty 
pillared cathedrals. These trees are among the tallest in the world, 
averaging in some districts about 300 ft. The longest ever 
measure ' * -rostrate 00 the Black Spur: it measured 



.Victoria, 



geology in the Trans, of Ik* Austral. JnsL Mi*. 
Byskal geography has been described by J. W. 
rapky of Victoria (1003). (J- W. G.) # 



it was 81 ft. in girth near the root. Racaljptns 



470 ft. In 1 „ _ 

thbulus or blue gum has broad green leaves, which . 
eucalyptus oil of the pharmacopoeia. Eucalyptus rostrmU b ex- 
tensively used in the colony as a timber, being popularly known aa 
red gum or hard wood. It b quite unaffected by weather, and 
almost indestructible when used as piles for, piers or wharves. 
Smaller species of eucalyptus form the common " bush." Mela- 



leucas, also of Myrtecea kind, are prominent objects along all the 
coasts, where they grow densely on the sand-hills, forming " ti-tree " 
scrub. Eucalyptus dumosa b a species which grows only 6 to 12 ft. 
high, but with a straight stem; the trees grow so dose t 

that it b difficult to penetrate the scrub formed by them. 

and a half million acres of the Whnmera district are covered with 
this " mallee scrub," aa it b called. Recent legislation has made 
this land easy of acquisition, and the whole of it has been taken 
op on pastoral leases. Five hundred thousand acres have recently 
been taken up aa an irrigation colony on Californian principles and 
laid out in 40-acre farms and orchards. The Leguminosne are 
chiefly r epresen ted by acacias, of which the wattle u the commonest. 
The black wattle b 0? considerable value, its gum being marketable 
and its bark worth from & to £10 a ton tor tanning purposes. The 
golden wattle b a beautiful tree, whose rich yellow blossoms fill the 
river-valleys in early spring with delicious scent. The Caauarinae 
or she-oaks are gloomy trees, of little use, but of frequent occurrence. 
Heaths, grass-trees and magnificent ferns and fern-trees are also 
notable features in Victorianrforests. But European and subtropical 
vegetation has been introduced into the colony to such an extern 
as to have largely altered the characters of the flora in many districts. 
Fauna.— The indigenous animals belong almost wholly to the 
Marsupblia. Kangaroos are tolerably abundant on the grassy 

Sains, but the process of settlement b causing their extermination, 
smaller species of almost identical appearance called the wallaby 
b still numerous in the forest lands. Kangaroo rats, opossums, 
wombats, native bears, bandicoots and native cats all belong: to 
the same das*. The wombat forms extensive burrows in some 
districts. The native bear b a frugivorous little animal, and very 
harmless. Bats are numerous, the largest species being the flying 



fox. very abundant in some districts. Eagles, hawks, tnrkeys, 
pigeons, ducks, quail, snipe and plover are common; but the 
characteristic denizens of the forest are vast flocks of parrots, 
parakeets and cockatoos, with sulphur-coloured or crimson crests. 
The laughing jackass (giant kingfisher) U heard in all the country 

Earts, and magpies are numerous everywhere. Snakes are numerous, 
ut less than one-fourth of the species are venomous, and they are 
all very shy. The deaths from snake-bite do not average two per 
annum. A great change b rapidly taking place in the fauna of the 
country, owing to cultivation and acclimatisation. Dingoes have 
nearly disappeared, and rabbits, which were inti 



a. Dingoes have 
traduced only 



CtirnaU. — Victoria enjoys an exceptionally fine dtmate. Roughly 
caking, about one-half of the days in the year present a bright, 
Midless sky, with a bracing and dry atmosphere, pleasantly warm 



speaking, 
cloudless 
but not relaxing. 



, pleasantly \ 
the autumn 



These days are mainly ._ . _„, 

spring. During forty-eight years, ending with 1905, there have 
been on an average 133 days annually on which rain has fallen more 
or less (chiefly in winter, but rainy days do not exceed thirty 
in the year. The average yearly rainfall was 25-61 in. The 
disagreeable feature of the Victoran climate b the occurrence of 
north winds, which blow on an average about sixty days in the 
year. In winter they are cold and dry, and have a slightly depressing 
effect; but in summer they are hot and dry, and generally brine 
with them disagreeable clouds of dust. The winds themselves blow 
for periods of two or three days at a time, and if the summer *- t« 
six or eight such periods it becomes relaxing and produces languor 
These winds cease with extraordinary suddenness, being replaced 
in a minute or two by a cool and bracing breeze from the south. 
The temperature often falls 40* or *fir F. in an hour. The 



temperature at Melbourne in 1905 was io8-s* 

and the minimum 32', giving a mean of 56- 1 °. the temperature 
never falls below freezing-point, except for an hour or two before 
sunnse in the coldest month. Snow has been known to fall in 
Melbourne for a few minutes two or three times during a loam 
period of years. It b common enough, however, on the pbteani* 
Ballarat, wluch u 1 over 1000 ft. high, always has a few snowstorms! 
and the roads to Qmeo among the Australian Alps lie under several 
feet of snow in the winter. The general healthiness of the climate* 
u shown by the fact that the average death-rate for the last fiv« 
years has been only 1271 of the population. 

Population.— A* regards population, Victoria maintained trie 
leading position among the Australasian colonies until the end 
of 1891, when New South Wales overtook it. The population 
in 1905 was 1,218,571, the proportion of the sexes being nearly 
equal. In i860 the population numbered 537.847; in x&7<f 



VICTORIA (AW!** 



«JfacIhe emct« of immigration over onW**""*?'? j"« 
~Zrf feoartons daring the period 1871 to 1880 mod tram 

"i?"iSL fa. iom ■omfceKd 30.107 »«d the deed- l**7«. 
** ^df^'?^^ngd in quWnnu? periods shows:- 



itti-65 
1866-70 
••7t-7S 
f»76-*> 



Births per looo 
of Population. 



43-3° 
39*7 

31*43 



Period. 



1881-85 
1886-90 
1891-95 
1896-1900 
1901-1905 



Births per 1000 
of Population. 



3076 
32-7J 
31-08 
26-20 
24*97 



wbstsialtvsw.., 
mhabstasx. Jt» . 
wu: lit*. fa/T^ 

»895. £6.7115,, .•;• , 

revenue m i«t$ «**» * ' 
other taxation. Ur^,^" 
lands, ^..j*;*^*^ 
expenditure wet*; u*m m " 
public instruction, \u* -,' 
£1.884.208; other iSZJCb 
the public debt of the stair •',* * 
per inhabitant. Thegreat t*tv -7 • ' 
to the construction of w MtL _** " 



43 

' w?is made by a 

' ' in the 

The 

-ises 
<ns. 
r.d 

10 



^ratHsan^ in ^i™"* 1 



1 861-65 



Deaths per looo 
of Population. 



1736 
14-93 



Period. 



1881-85 
1886-90 

1891-95 
1806-1900 

I001-IQ05 



Deaths per 1000 
o(. Population. 



1465 
16-07 
14-10 
1367 
1271 



to trie construction 01 »»>i„ ' • 
millions sterling being <*bmm£« ' " ' 

Up to 1 905 the estate had aW^ „ 
domain, and .had 17/m^M mam +Jl"" ' 
alienated nor leased amounted to 11^- * ' 

The capital value ol properties as *>„ Cj 
in 1905 was £210,920,174, and the •*•*«. .2 ' ' 
1884 the values were 104 millions a** #>„* 
203 millions and £i3.7.34.o©o: the year \Ji \SZ 
highest point of Inflation in land vaW a*4 +jy 
years there was a vast reduct wo, both » uto"^ - 
values, the lowest point touched being i* i**£^ ~/ - 
improvement has taken place, and there is every +,£' - » . 

•--- -nent will continue. The revenues of m ^r w " - * 

rhiefly from rates, but the rate* art W»«i ¥ t** , *'#- 
uvd licences, and contnbutioos for strvietV i22£^ 



improvement 
derived cf- 8 -* 



by fees and licences, and contributions for •ervS l Jj£*-~ . * 

" government endowments and special wnmi *? >■*. 

*z.,~+*a u% /oo.«72. the revenues of th* ~Zz~' **** - 



■re ^s^sr^stJA^^^iaR 

Ivation Army, 



rib; the Presbyterians n-« **?*'*' . "1 



and Metbodttts. t 

*• **■*■■—■ u> - -»— in iom the number of persons brought 

£*-*£ tSSSfes was $345/ Drunkenness accounted lor 

before tH* J*E2££tiT?i3S ^£ 1000 of the population^!!} 

!£^Sra^n*p*°p««y 4Wfc 

.1 - %#r*ifcm — As one of the six states of the Common- 

^r^o^rturnl^x senators and twenty-three repre- 

.eUth, ^•7J el /V" a i^ parliament. The local legislative 

**^Z2££t CouScU, composed of thirty-five members, 
,^J1S& a£»V combed of sixty^t member^ 
S. ifftf^Se membets of the Council retire every three years, 
^ ^l^r7ofTbe A«emblyare elected by universal suffrage 

?5si4adtMrst«s 
nsfw^;«a*rt-=£ 



BtfaA^'S^SBSSJUsS 

Board of Works. ^390^41; Tire Boards, £53^79- , The BostK 
vSSi U thrwthoriTy administering the metropotitaa waS\i 
riwerage works. Excluding, revenue tromservices rendered, tti 
SSSfof taxation levied in Victoria reached ^W^i^ 
this the federal government levied £2488.843, the state government 
S 79 !o2V.^mumcipaUtie. £986.009, and the Melbourne HarSS 

l££!%*u'«i* Industry: Jf.ncraJi.-About 3,400 persons find 
emrfov^Sntin TUie goldnelds, and the quantity ofgold won ui 1905 
was8J?So ot. valued at £3.»73.744' a decrease of 10.967 ox. as 
^i^Twlth 1004. Tne^vidends paid by gold-mimng com. 
compamj wun iJJH-' « £4x1,431, which, although about the 
P™" ^^TvSS^wa^decu^ of f.168,366 as compared 
ft ^i?S^^^Sii5Sted t ^W. Up to the 3ose of 1005 the total 

No^thefmeSScnwieraU are systematically worked, although 
No otner ^j^)r^^r7 known to exist. Brown coal, or lignite, 

^F""^! i^J^Tmiv fuelDurDOses, but w thout much success. 
8SJPS ^i^ ? now Sing ^raiS increasingly large quantities 

valued at £79jOW, M^ wo« ^^ minerals produced was 
air-SSr?'* tofal^nteral pr^Sion (exclusive of gold) of 
£i87,7«- 






rS5«? - S2»£ i» "»' y*« r "* they conp {SJJSWi'Sb* a^-^- ,, =2J2S ^d » u« ti*. 

sanHK* .a L»«ii*lit ami ia6 shires. I 



Bl municipalities m "••* 7*— "- 

*i towm, 38 boroughs and 146 shim- 



1 1 {SjEra^a^wajs^^ *• -^ 



42 

per fleece, ana 1 ' there dee beee e further improvement since the year 
turned. The following were the number of iheep depastured at the 
dates named: 1861, 6,240,000; 1871, 10.002,000; 1881. 10,267,000; 
1891, 12,928,000; 1901, 10,841,790, The hones number 385,513, 
the swioe 273,682, and the horned cattle i.737»6oo; of these fast. 
649,100 were dairy cows. Butter-making has greatly increased 
since 1890, and a fairly large export trade has arisen. In 1905, 
57,606,821 lb of butter were made, 4*397*35° & of cheese and 
16433,665 lb of bacon and bams, 

Manufactures.— There has been a good deal of fluctuation in the 
amount of employment afforded by the factories, as the following 
figures show: hands employed. 1885. 49.297: 1890, 56,639; 1893, 

£>473. 1895, 46.095; 1900, 64,207; 1905. 80^35. Of the hands 
st named, 52.925 were males and 27,310 females. The total 
number of establishments was 4264, and the horse-power of machinery 
actually used, 43,492. The value of machinery was returned at 
£6,187,919, and of land and buildings £7,771.238. The majority 
of the establishments were small; those employing from 50 to 100 
hands in 1905 were 161, and upwards of 100 hands. 124. 

Commerce. — Excluding the coastal trade, the tonnage of vessels 
entering Victorianports in 1905 was 3.989,903, or about 3} tons 
per inhabitant. The imports in the same year were valued at 
422,337386, and the exports at £22,758,828. These figures repre- 
sent £18, 8s. sd. and £18, 15s. 6d. per inhabitant respectively. The 
domestic produce exported was valued at £14,276,961 ; in 1891 the 
value was £13,026,426; and in 1881. £12480,567. The compara- 
tively small increase over the period named is due mainly to the large 
fall in prices of the tuple articles of local production. There has, 
however, been some loss of trade due to the action of the New Sooth 
Wales government m extending its railways Into districts formerly 
•applied from Melbourne. The principal articles of local production 
exported during 1905 with their values were as follows: butter and 



VICTORIA (AUSTRALIA) 



. £1 1576,189; gold (coined and bullion), £1,078,560; wheat, 
£1,835.204; frozen mutton, £275*195; frozen ana preserved rabbits 
and sares, £220,940; skins and hides, £535,086; wool, £2,501,990; 
horses, £278,033: cattle, £293,241; sheep. £326,526; oats. 
£165,585; flour. £590.297; hay end chaff, f 97.47.1 : bacon and 
ham, £89,943; jams and jellies, £73.233; fruit (dried and fresh), 
£1.25.330; The bulk of the trade passes through Melbourne, the 
imports in 1905 at that port being £18,112.528. 

Defence. — The Commonwealth defence forces in Victoria number 
about 5700 men, 4360 being partially paid militia and 1000 unpaid 
volunteers. There are also 18400 nflemen belonging to rifle clubs. 
Besides these there are 200 naval artillerymen, capable of being 
employed either as a light artillery land force, or on board war 
vessels. The total expenditure in 1905 for purposes of defence in 
the state was £29 1 ,577. 

Railways. — The railways have a total length of 3394 m., and the 
cost of their construction and equipment up to the 30th of June 
1905 was £41.259,387; this sum was obtained by raising loans, 
mostly in London, on the security of the general revenues of the 
state. In 1905 the gross railway earnings were £3,582,266, and the 
working expenses £2,222,279; so that the net earnings were 
£i.359.987. which sura represents 3*30% on the capital cost. 

Posts and Telegraphs.— Victoria had a length of 6338 m. of tele- 
graph line in operation in 1905; there were 969 stations, and the 
business done was represented by 2,256482 telegrams. The post- 
offices, properly so-called, numbered 1673; during that year 
119,689,000 letters and postcards and 59,024,000 newspapers and 
packets passed through them. The postal service is carried on at 
a profit; the revenue in 1905 was £708,369, and the expenditure 
£627,735. Telephones are widely used; in 1905 the length of 
telephone wire in use was 28,638 m., and the number of telephones 
14,134; the revenue from this source for the year was £102496. 

Banking.— At the end of 1905 the banks of issue in Victoria, 
eleven in number, had liabilities to the extent of £36422,844, and 
assets of £40,511,335. The principal items among the liabilities 
were: notes in circulation, £835499; deposits bearing interest, 
£23,055,743; and deposits not bearing interest, £12,068,153. The 
chief assets were: coin and bullion, £8,056,666; debts due, 
£29,918,226; property, £1.919,230; other assets, £617,213. The 
money in deposit in the savings banks amounted to £10,806,741, 
the number of depositors being 447,382. The total sum on deposit 
therefore 



in the state in 1905 was, 

£37, 15s. ad. per head of population. 



ore, £46,020,637, which represents 
..._.. . . ion. 

Authorities. — J. Bonwick, Discovery and Settlement of Port 
l-.„... „«_.._ _._*» „__»_. „ * ""-mil (Melbourne, 

Rev. J. D. Lang, 



Phillip (Melbourne, 1856), Early Days of Melbourne (Melbourne, 
1857), and Port Phillip Settlement (London. 1883); Rev. J. D. Lang. 
Historical Account of the Separation of Victoria from New South 



Wales (Sydney. 1870); 1 
1905. Melbourne); F. P. L 
Victoria (London, 1878); 



Victorian Year-Booh (annually, 1873- 

, Labilticre. Early History of the Colony of 

(London, 1878); G. W. Rusden, Discovery, Survey and 

Settlement of Port Phillip (Melbourne, 1878); R. B. Smyth. The 
Aborigines of Victoria (2 vols., Melbourne, 187*); I. I. Shillinglaw, 
Historical Records of Port Phillip (Melbourne. 1879) ; David Blair. 
Cyclopaedia of Australasia (Melbourne. 1881); E. Jenks, The 
Government of Victoria (London. 1881); E. M. Curr, The Australian 
Race: Us Origin, Language, Customs, fire. (Melbourne, 1886-87); 
Edmund Finn, ChromcUs of Early Melbourne (Melbourne, 1889); 



Philip Mennell. The Dictionary of Australasian Biography (Meinour** 
1892} ; T. A. Coghlan, Australia and Nev Zealand (1903-4). 

(T. A. C.) 

History.— The first discoverer of Victoria was Captain Cook, 
in command of H.M.S. " Endeavour," who sighted Cape Everard, 
about half-way between Cape Howe and the mouth of the Snowy 
river, on the 19th of April 1 770, a few days prior to his arrival at 
Botany Bay. The first persons to land in Victoria were the 
supercargo and a portion of the crew of the merchant ship 
" Sydney Cove," which was wrecked at the Furneaux Islands in 
Bass Strait on the 9th of February 1797. In the same year, 
Mr Bass, a surgeon in the navy, discovered the strait which 
bears his name and separates Victoria from Tasmania. Lieut. 
Grant in the "Lady Nelson "surveyed the south coast in 1800, 
and in 1801 Port Phillip was for the first time entered by Lieut. 
Murray. In 1802 that harbour was surveyed by Captain 
Flinders, and in the same year Mr Grimes, the surveyor-general 
of New South Wales, explored the country in the neighbour- 
hood of the present site of Melbourne. In 1804 Licut.-Colonel 
Collins, who bad been sent from England, formed a penal 
settlement on the snores of Port Phillip, but after remaining 
a little more than three months near Indented Head, he removed 
his party to Van Diemen Land. Victoria was visited in 1824 
by two sheep farmers named Hume and Hovell, who rode 
overland from Lake George, New South Wales, to the shores 
of Corio Bay. In 1826 a convict establishment was _ . 
attempted by the government of New South Wales at Jjjj 
Settlement Point, near French Island, Western Port 
Bay, but it was abandoned shortly afterwards. In 1834 
Messrs Edward and Francis Hcnty, who had taken part in 
the original expedition to Swan river, West Australia, and 
afterwards migrated to Van Diemen Land, crossed Bass Strait, 
established a shore whaling station st Portland Bay, and formed 
sheep and cattle stations on the river Wannon and Wando 
rivulet, near the site of the present towns of Merino, Casterton 
and Coleraine. In 1835 a number of flock owners m Van 
Diemen Land purchased through Batman from the aborigines 
a tract of 700,000 acres on the shores of Port Phillip. The sale 
was repudiated by the British government, which regarded 
all unoccupied land in any part of Australia as the property of 
the crown, and did not recognize the title of the aborigines. 
Batman, however, remained at Port Phillip, and commenced 
farming within the boundaries of the present city of Melbourne. 
He was followed by John Pascoe Fawkner and other settlers 
from Van Diemen Land, who occupied the fertile plains of the new 
territory. In 1836 Captain Lonsdale was sent to Melbourne by 
the government of New South Wales to act as resident magis- 
trate in Port Phillip. The first census taken in 1838 showed that 
the population was 351 1, of whom 3080 were males and 431 
females. In 1839 Mr Latrobe was appointed superintendent of 
Port Phillip, and a resident judge was nominated for Melbourne, 
with jurisdiction over the territory which now forms the state 
of Victoria. The years 1840 and 1841 were periods of depression 
owing to the decline in the value of all descriptions of live stock, 
for which the first settlers had paid high prices; but there was 
a steady immigration from Great Britain of men with means, 
attracted by the profits of sheep-farming, and of labourers 
and artisans who obtained free passages under the provisions 
of the Wakefield system, under which half the proceeds from the 
sale and occupation of crown lands were expended upon the 
introduction of workers. The whole district was occupied by 
sheep and cattle graziers, and in 1841 the population had 
increased to 11,738. Melbourne was incorporated as a town in 
1843, and was raised to the dignity of a city in 1847. In that 
same year the first Anglican was ordained, and 'in 1848 the first 
Roman Catholic bishop. The third census (taken in 1846) 
showed a population of 32,870. 

The elective element was introduced into the Legislative 
Council of New South Wales in 1842, in the proportion of 
twenty-four members to twelve nominated by the crown, and 
the district of Port Phillip, including Melbourne, returned six 
members. But the colonists were not satisfied with government 



VICTORIA (AUSTRALIA) 



from and by Sydney; an agitata in favour of separation 
eooraienced, and in 1851 Victoria was formed into a separate 
cokey with an Executive Council appointed by the crown, and 
a Legislative Council, partly elective and partly nominated, on 
the same lines as that of New South Wales. The population at 
thai date was 77,435* Gold was discovered a few weeks after 
the colony had entered upon its separate existence, and a large 
aomber of persons were attracted to the mines, first from the 
ne ighb o uri ng co l on i cs some of which, such as South Australia, 
Van Diemen's Land and West Australia, were almost denuded of 
aht>bodied men and women— and subsequently from Europe 
sad America. Notwithstanding the difficulties with which the 
local gover n ment had to contend, the task of maintaining law 
aed order was fairly grappled with; the foundations of a liberal 
system of primary, secondary and university education were 
bnd; roads, bridges and telegraphs were constructed, and 
Melbourne was provided with an excellent supply of water. 

Local self-government was introduced m 1853, and the 
Legislature found time to discuss a new Constitution, which not 
fuTiir only eliminated the nominee element from the Legis- 
f—» w lature, but made the executive government responsible 
*■*■ to the people. The administration of the gold-fields 
was not popular, and the miners were dissatisfied at the amount 
charged for permission to mine for gold, and at there being 
so representation for the gold-fields in the local Legislature. 
The discontent culminated, at Bauarat in December 1854, in 
nots in which there was a considerable loss of life both amongst 
the snmers and the troops. Eventually, an export duty on gold 
was snbstitotcd for the licence fee, but every miner bad to take 
oat a right whkh enabled him to occupy a limited area of land 
far muring, and also for residence. The census taken in 1854 
liiiwed a population of 236,778. The new Constitution was 
proclaimed in 1855, and the old Executive Council was gazetted 
is list first responsible ministry. It held office for about 
sateen months, and was succeeded by an administration 
famed from the popular party. Several changes were made 
a the direction of democratizing the government, and vote by 
btBot. snaahood suffrage and the abolition of the property 
qvaBfkation followed each other in rapid succession. To several 
of these changrt there was strenuous opposition, not sb much in 
ike Assembly which represented the manhood, as in the Council 
b vfc*ca the property of the colony was supreme. The crown 
bads were occupied by graziers, termed locally " squatters," 
vho held them under a licence renewable annually at a low 
ratal. These licences were very valuable, and the goodwill 
of * grazing farm or "run** commanded a high price. Persons 
•to desired to acquire freeholds for the purpose of tillage could 
oety do so by purchasing the land at auction, and the local 
smsattexsv unwilling to be deprived of any portion of a valuable 
property, were generally willing to pay a price per acre with which 
so person of small means desirous of embarking upon agricultnral 
pmrsmas could compete. The result was that although the 
population had increased in 1861 to 540,32a, the area of land 
cadet crop had not grown proportionately, and Victoria was 
dependent upon the neighbouring colonies and even more distant 
rsKTstzies for a considerable portion of its food. A series of Land 
Acta was passed, the first in i860, with the view of encouraging 
& csass of small freeholders. The principle underlying all these 
srvs was that residence by landowners on their farms, and their 
cAivatkm, were more important to the state than the sum 
ss&aed by the sale of the land. The policy was only partially 
saccessfult and by a number of ingenious evasions a large 
ptoportiost of the best land in the colony passed Into the posses- 
siaa of the original squatters. But a sufficient proportion was 
porchaeed by small farmers to convert Victoria into a great 
sgricnliaral country, and to enable it to export large quantities 
ef farm and dairy produce. 

The greater portion of the revenue was raised by the taxation 
tkroogh the customs of a small number of products, such as 
snints, tobacco, wine, tea, coffee, &c. But an agitation arose 
at favour of such an adjustment of the import duties as would 
protect the manufactures which at that time were being com- 



43 

menced. A determined opposition to this policy was made by a 
large minority in the Assembly, and by a large majority in the 
Council, but by degrees the democratic party triumphed. The 
victory was not gained without a number of political crises 
which shook the whole fabric of society to its foundations. 
The Assembly tacked the tariff to the Appropriation Bill, and 
the Council threw out both. The result was that there was no 
legal means of paying either the civil servants or the contractors, 
and the government had recourse to an ingenious though 
questionable system by which advances were made by a bank 
which was recouped through the crown " confessing " that it 
owed the money, whereupon the governor issued his warrant 
for its payment without any recourse to parliament. Similar 
opposition was made by the Council to payment of members, 
and to a grant made to Lady Darling, the wife of Governor Sir 
Charles Darling, who had been recalled by the secretary of 
state on the charge of having shown partiality to the democratic 
party. Indeed on one occasion the dispute between the 
government and the Council was so violent that the former 
dismissed all the police, magistrates, county court judges and 
other high officials, on the ground that no provision had been 
made by the Council, which had thrown out the Appropriation 
Bill, for the payment of salaries. 

Notwithstanding these political struggles, the population of 
the colony steadily increased, and the Legislature found time 
to pass some measures which affected the social life and the 
commercial position of the colonies. State aid to religion 
was abolished, and divorce was made comparatively easy. A 
system of free, compulsory and secular primary education was 
introduced. The import duties were increased and the transfer 
of land was simplified. In 1880 a fortnightly mail service via 
Sues between England and Melbourne was introduced, and in 
1880 the first International Exhibition ever held in Victoria 
was opened. In the following year the census showed a popu- 
lation of 862,346, of whom 452,083 were males and 4x0,263 
females. During the same year the lengthy dispute between 
the two houses of parliament, which bad caused so much incon- 
venience, so many heartburnings and so many political crises, 
was brought to an end by the passage of an act which reduced 
the qualifications for members and the election of the Legis- 
lative Council, shortened the tenure of their seats, increased 
the number of provinces to fourteen and the number of 
members to forty-two. In 1883 a coalition government, in 
which the Liberal or protectionist and the Conservative or 
free-trade party were represented, took office, and with some 
changes remained in power for seven years. During this political 
truce several important changes were made in the Constitution. 
An act for giving greater facilities for divorce was passed, and 
with some difficulty obtained the royal assent. The Victorian 
railways were handed over to the control of three commissioners, 
who to a considerable extent were made independent of the govern- 
ment, and the civil service was placed under the supervision of an 
independent board. In 2887 the representatives of Victoria met 
those of the other British colonies and of the United Kingdom 
in London, under the presidency of Lord Knutsford, in order to 
discuss the questions of defence, postal and telegraphic com- 
munication, and the contribution of Australia to the Imperial 
navy. In 1888 a weekly mafl service was established via Suez 
by the steamers of the P. & O. and the Orient Companies, and 
the second Victorian International Exhibition was opened. 
In 1800 all the Australian colonies, including New South Wales 
and New Zealand, sent representatives to a conference at 
Melbourne, at which resolutions were passed in favour of the 
establishment of a National Australian Convention empowered 
to consider and report upon an adequate scheme for the Federal 
Constitution. This Convention met in Sydney in 1891 and 
took the first step towards federation (see Australia). 

In 1801 the coalition government resigned and a liberal 
administration was formed. An act' passed in that year 
placed the railways again under the control of the government. 
Measures of a democratic and collect ivist tendency have since 
obtained the assent of the Legislature. The franchise of 



VICTORIA— VICTORIA FALLS 



Crhia 
•/WW. 



property-holders not resident in an electorate was abolished 
and the principle of "one man one vote" was established. 
Acts have been passed sanctioning Old Age Pensions; pro- 
hibiting shops, except those selling perishable goods, from 
keeping open more than eight hours; compelling the pro- 
prietors to give their assistants one half-holiday every six 
days; preventing persons from working more than forty-eight 
hours a week; and appointing for each trade a tribunal com- 
posed of an equal number of employers and employed to fix 
a minimum wage. (See Australia.) 

Victoria enjoyed a large measure of prosperity during the 
later 'eighties and earlier 'nineties, and its financial prosperity 
enabled the government to expend large sums in extending 
railway communication to almost every locality and to com- 
mence a system of irrigation. The soQ of Victoria is on the 
whole more fertile than in any other colony on the mainland 
of Australia, and in no portion of the continent is there any 
locality equal in fertility to the western district and some parts 
of Gippsland. The rainfall is more equable than in any portion 
of Australia, but the northern and north-western districts, 
which are the most remote from the sea and the Dividing Range, 
are subject to droughts, which, although not so severe or so 
frequent as in the interior of the continent, are sufficiently 
disastrous in their effects. The results of the expenditure upon 
irrigation have not been so successful as was hoped. Victoria 
has no mountains covered with snow, which in Italy and South 
America supply with water the rivers at the season of the year 
when the land needs irrigation, and it was necessary to construct 
large and expensive reservoirs. The cost of water is therefore 
greater than the ordinary agriculturist who grows grain or 
breeds and fattens stock can afford to pay, although the price 
may not be too high for orchardists and vine-growers. In 
1892 the prosperity of the colony was checked by a 
great strike which for some months affected produc- 
tion, but speculation in land continued for some time 
longer, especially in Melbourne, which at that time contained 
nearly half the population, 500,000 out of a total of 1,140,105. 
There does not seem to have been any other reasons for this 
increase in land values, for there was no immigration, and the 
value of every description of produce had fallen— except that 
the working classes were prosperous and well paid, and that 
the purchase of small allotments in the suburbs was a popular 
mode of investment. In 1893 there was a collapse. The 
value of land declined enormously, hundreds of persons believed 
to be wealthy were ruined, and there was a financial panic which 
caused the suspension of all the banks, with the exception of 
the Australasia, the Union of Australia, and the New South 
Wales. Most of them resumed payment, but three went into 
liquidation. It was some years before the normal condition 
of prosperity was restored, but the great resources of the colony 
and the energy of its people discovered new markets, and new 
products for them, and enabled them materially to increase the 
export trade. (G. C. L.) 

VICTORIA, a city and port of Brazil, capital of the state 
of Espirito Santo, on the W. side of an island at the head of 
the Bay of Espirito Santo, 270 m. N.IJ. of Rio de Janeiro, in 
lat. 20° 18' S. r long. 40 20' W. Pop. (1002, estimated) 9000. 
The city occupies the beach and talus at the base of a high, 
wooded mountain. The principal streets follow the water-line, 
rising in terraces from the shore, and are crossed by narrow, 
steep, roughly paved streets. The buildings are old and of 
the colonial type. The governor's residence is an old convent, 
with its church at one side. The entrance to the bay is rather 
tortuous and difficult, but is sufficiently deep for the largest 
vessels. It is defended by five small forts. The harbour is 
not large, but is safe and deep, being completely shut in by 
hills. A large quay, pier, warehouses, &c, facilitate the hand- 
ling of cargoes, which were previously transported to and from 
the anchorage by lighters. Victoria is a port of call for coasting 
steamers and a shipping port in the coffee trade. The other 
exports arc sugar, rice and mandioca (manioc) to home ports. 
Victoria was founded in 1535 by Yasco Fernando Coutinho. 



on the S. side and nearer the entrance to the bay, and received 
the name of Espirito Santo* The old site is still occupied, and 
is known as Villa Vtlha (Old Town). The name of Victoria 
was adopted in 1558 in commemoration of a crushing defeat 
inflicted by Fernando da Sa on toe allied tribes of the Aimores, 
Tapininguins and Goitacazcs in that year, It was attacked 
(1593) by the freebooter Cavendish, who was repelled by one 
of the forts at the entrance to the bay* 

VICTORIA* the capital of British Columbia and the principal 
city of Vancouver Island, in the S.R, comer of which it U 
finely situated 0*8° 25* ao* N,, 123* 12* 34* W.), on a small 
arm of tbc sca f its harbour, however, only ad mining vessels 
drawing 18 ft. Pop* (looo) about 35,000. Il is the oldcat 
city in the province. It has fine streets, handsome villas and 
public building?, government offices and churches. The high 
school is a Hi liatcd w i l h «M eGill University, in Mod UeaL Victoria 
is connected with the mainland by cable, and is a favourite 
tourist resort for the whole west coast of North America, Till 
1858 Victoria was a post of the Hudson's Bay Company. The 
city was incorporated in iSqj, and according to the census of 
18B6 the population was 14,000, including Chinese and Indians, 
spread over an area of 4 sq. m. Until the redistribution of the 
fleet in 1005, the headquarters of the British Pacific squadron 
was at EsquimaU, a fine harbour about 3 m, W, of Victoria. 
This harbour, though spacious, is not much used by merchant 
vessels. It is provided with a large dry -dock and is defended 
by fortifications of a modern type* 

VICTORIA FALLS, the Greatest waterfall [a the world, 
forming the most remarkable feature of the river Zambezi, 
Central Africa. The falls are about midway in the course of 
the Zambezi in 17 51' 5., 1$* 4i'*E. For a considerable dis- 
tance above the falls the river flows over a level sheet of basalt, 
its valley bounded by low and distant sandstone hills. Its 



VICTORIA FALLS 




clear blue waters are dotted with numerous tree-clad islands. 
These islands increase in number as the river, without quicken- 
ing its current, approaches ihc falls, whose nearness Is indicated 
only by a veil of spray* At the spot where ihc Zambezi ts at 
ils widest — over i£6o yds. — it falls abruptly over the edge of 
an almost vertical tha&ni with a roar as of continuous thunder. 



L. - 



VICTORIA NYANZA 



+5 



i of vapour. Hence the native name 
Uusi-oa-tnnya, " Smoke docs sound there" The chasm ex- 
lends the whole breadth of the river and is more than twice 
tat depth of Niagara, varying from 156 ft. at the right bank 
to 54j fL in the centre. Unlike Niagara the water does not 
fill into an open basin but is arrested at a distance of from 
So to 240 ft. by the opposite wall of the chasm. Both walls 
are of the same height, so that the falls appear to be formed 
by a huge crack in the bed of the river The only outlet is a 
aanow channel cut in the barrier wall at a point about three* 
alias from the western end of the chasm, and through this 
large, not more than too ft- wide, the whole volume of the 
nver poors for 130 yds. before emerging into an enormous 
zigzag trough (the Grand Canon) which conducts the nver 
past the basalt plateau. The tremendous pressure to which 
the water is subjected in the confinement of the chasm causes 
the perpetual columns of mist which rise over tbe precipice. 

The fall is broken by islands on the lip of the precipice into 
bur pasta. Close to the right bank i* a sloping cataract 36 yds. 
vide, called the Leaping Water, then beyond Boaruka Island, 
about 100 yds. wide, is the Main Fall, 473 yds. broad, and 
dinded by Livingstone Island from the Rainbow FaU 535 yds. 
vide. At both these falls the rock is sharp cut and the river 
aawuarir* its level to the edge of the precipice. At the left 
bank of the river is the Eastern Cataract, a miilrace resembling 
the Leaping Water. From opposite the western end of the 
f jOs to Danger Point, which overlooks the entrance of the 
large, the escarpment of the chasm is covered with great trees 
kaowa as the Rain Forest, looking across the gorge the eastern 
part of the wall (the Knife Edge) is less densely wooded. 

At the end of the gorge the river has hollowed out a deep 
pool, named the Boiling Pot. It is some 500 ft. across, its 
notice, smooth at low water, b at flood-time troubled by 
slow, enormous swirls and heavy boilings. Thence the channel 
runs sharply westward, beginning the great zigzag mentioned. 
This grand and gloomy canon is over 40 m. long. Its almost 
perpendicular walls are over 400 ft. high, tbe level of the escarp- 
ssent being that of the lip of the falls. A little below the 
Beting Pot, and almost at right angles to the falls, the canon 
a spanned by a bridge (completed in April 1005) which forms 
a fink in the Cape to Cairo railway scheme. This bridge, 
650 ft. long, with a main arch of 500 ft. span, is slightly below 
tk~ top of the gorge. The height from low-water level to the 
nils is 420 ft. 

The volume of water borne over the falls varies greatly, the 
krei of tbe river in the canon sinking as much as 60 ft. between 
tte full flood of April and the end of the dry season in October. 
When, the river is high the water rotb over the main falls in 
one great unbroken expanse; at low water (when alone it is 
passible to look into the grey depths of the great chasm) the 
fails are broken by crevices in the rock into numerous cascades. 

The falls are in the territory of Rhodesia. They were dis- 
covered by David Livingstone on the 17th of November 1855, 
and by him named after Queen Victoria of England. Living- 
stone approached them from above and gained his first view 
of (he falls from the bland on its lip now named after him. 
la j 860 Livingstone, with Dt (afterwards Sir John) Kirk, made 
a careful investigation of the falls, but until the opening of the 
rallvay from Bulawayo (1005) they were rarely visited. The 
land in the vicinity of the falls is preserved by the Rhodesian 
government as a public park. 

Se* Livingstone's Missionary Travels and Researcher in South 
Afrua (London. 1857) for the story of the discovery of the falls, 
and the Pfmlat Account of Dr lAvtnestone's Expedttion to the 
lamias and it* Tributaries 1858-1864 (London. 1894) for a fuller 
deacripttoo of the falls and a theory as to their origin. Horn I 
crossed Africa, by Major Serpa Pinto (English trans., London. 
1 *8 1 ). contains a graphic account of the visit paid to the falls by the 
Port u gu es e explorer. In the Geographical Journal for January 1905 
h aa ankle by A J. C. Molyneuk on " The Physical History of 
the Victoria Falls." The article is illustrated by excellent photo- 
graphs aad give* a bibliography. Consult also" The Gorge and Basin 
of the Zambesi below trie Victoria Falls," by G. W. Umplugh in 
the G**t -few <«9<*). vol. nod. (F. R. C.) 

XX VIM 2 



VICTORIA OTTAHZA, the largest lake in Africa and chief 
reservoir of the Nile, lying between o° se/ N to 3 S and 
jx° 40' to 34° $2' £. Among the fresh-water lakes of the world 
it is exceeded tn size by Lake Superior only and has an area of 
over 26,000 sq. m., being nearly the sue of Scotland. In shape 
it is an irregular quadrilateral, but tts shores, save on the west, 
are deeply indented. Its greatest length, taking into account 
the principal gulfs, N. to S. is 250 m., its greatest breadth 200 m. 
Its coast-line exceeds 2000 m. It fills a depression in the 
central part of tbe great plateau which stretches between the 
western ( Albert ine) and eastern rift -valleys (see Ajkica, % 1), 
and has an elevation of about 5720 ft. above the sea l Its 
greatest ascertained depth is some 270 ft , which compares with 
soundings of aooo ft on Tanganyika and 2500 ft. on Nyaan. 
Victona Nyanza Is remarkable for the severe and sudden storms 
which sweep across it, rendering navigation dangerous. It 
contains many groups of islands, the majority being near the 
coast-line. The lake is full of reefs, many just below the 
surface of the water, which is clear and very fresh. It is 
abundantly stocked with fish. Geological research shows 
that the land surrounding the lake consists of gneiss, quartz 
and schistose rocks, covered, in the higher regions, with marl 
and red clay, and hi the valleys with a rich black loam. 

Shores and Islands.— -The shores of the lake present varied aspects. 
The western coast, which contains no large indentations, is, in its 
southern part, backed by precipices of 300 or more ft. high, behind 
which rise downs to thrice the height of the cliffs. Going north* 
the hills give way to papyrus and ambach swamps, which mark the 
delta of the Kagera. Beyond the mouth of tnat river the hills 
reappear, and increase in height, till on reaching the N W. corner 
of the nyanza they rise some 500 ft. above the water. This western 
shore is marked by a continuous fault line which runs parallel to the 
lake at a short distance inland. The northern coast of the lake is 
very deeply indented and is marked throughout its length by rocky 
headlands jutting into the waters This high land is very narrow, 
and tbe streams which nsc on its northern face within a mile or two 
of the nyanza drain north away from the lake. On a promontory 
about 30 m east of the Katonga (see below) is Entebbe, the port ot 
Uganda and seat of the British administration. The chief indenta- 
tions on the north side are Murchison Bay and Napoleon Gulf, 
the entrance to the last named being partly filled by the triangular- 
shaped island of Buvuma or Uvuma (area 160 sq m.). Napoleon 
Guff itself is deeply indented, one bay, that of linja, running N.W. 
and being the outlet of the Nile, the water here forcing its way 
through the rock-bound shore of the lake. The north-east corner 
of the lake is flat and bare. A narrow channel, partly masked by 
islands, leads into Kavtrondo Gulf, which, with an average width 
of 6 m., extends 45 m. E. of the normal coast-line— a fact taken 
advantage of in building the railway from Mombasa to the lake. 
A promontory, 174 ft. above lake-level, jutting into the small bay 
of Ugowe, at the north-east end of Kavirondo Gulf, is the point 
where the railway terminates. The station is known as Port 
Florence. On the south side of the gulf tall hills approach, and in 
some cases reach, the water's edge, and behind them towers the 
rugged range of Kasagunga with its saw-tike edge. Proceeding 
south the shore trends generally south-west and is marked with 
many deep inlets, the coast presenting a succession of bold blufls, 
while inland the whole district is distinctly mountainous. At the 
S.E. corner of the lake Speke Gulf projects eastward, and at the 
S.W. corner Emin Pasha Gulf pushes southward. Here the coast 
is barren and hilly, while long ridges of rock run into the lake. 

The largest island in the lake, Ukerewe, on the S.E. coast, imme- 
diately north of Speke Gulf, is almost a peninsula, but the strip of 
land connecting it with the shore is pierced by two narrow channels 
about I of a mile long. Ukerewe Is 25 m. long, and 12 broad at 
its greatest width. It is uninhabited, wooded and hilly, rising 650 ft. 
above the lake. At the N.W. corner of the nyanza is the Seas* 
archipelago, consisting of sixty-two islands. The largest island 
in this group, namely, Bugata, is narrow, resembling the letter S 
in shape, and is almost cut in two in the middle. Most of these 
islands arc densely forested, and some of them attain considerable 
elevation. Their scenery is of striking beauty. Forty-two were 
inhabited. 1 Buvuma Island, at the entrance of Napoleon Gulf, 
has already been mentioned. Between it and as far as the mouth 
of Kavirondo Gulf are numerous other islands, of which tbe chief 
are Bugaia. Lolui, Rusunga and Mfwanganu. In general char- 
acteristics and the beauty of their scenery these islands resemble 
those of the Sesse* archipelago. The islands are of ironstone forma- 
tion overlying quartzite and crystalline schists. 

Rivers ~-The Kagera, the largest and most important of the lake 



1 For the altitude see Ceoe. Jour., March 1907 and July 1906. 
* To prevent the spread of sleeping sickness the inhabitants were 
removed to the mainland (1909). 

2a 



4 6 



VICTORINUS— VICTOR-PERRIN 



affluents, which has its rise in the hill country east of Lake Kivu, 
and enters the west side of the nyanza just north of i ° S, is described 
In the article Nile, of which it is the most remote head-stream. 
The other rivers entering Victoria Nyansa from the west are the 
Katonga and Ruizi, both north of the Kagcra. The Katonga rises in 
the plateau east of the Dweru branch of Albert Edward Nyanza, and 
after a sluggish course of 155 m. enters Victoria Nyanza in a wide 
swamp at its N.W. corner. The Ruizi (180 m.) is a deep, wide and 
swift stream with sinuous course flowing in part through great 
gorges and in part through large swamps. It rises in the Ankole 
district and reaches the nyanza a little north of the Kagcra. Be- 
tween the Katonga and the Nile outlet, the rivers which rise close 
to the lake drain away northward, the watershed being the lake 
shore. On the N.E. side of the nyanza, however, several con- 
siderable streams reach the lake — notably the Sio, Nzoia and 
Lukos (or Yala). The Nzoia (150 m), the largest of the three, 
rises in tfw foothills of the Elgeyo escarpment and flows swiftly 
over a rocky bed in a southwesterly direction, emptying into the 
lake south of Berkeley Bay. On the cast side the Mara Dabagh 
enters the lake between 1° and a° S. It is, next to the Kagcra, the 
largest of the lake tributaries. All the rivers mentioned are per- 
ennial, and most of them bring down a considerable volume of 
water, even in the dry season. On the S., S.E. and S.W. shores a 
number of short rivers drain into the lake. They traverse a tree- 
less and arid region, have but an intermittent flow, and are of 
little importance in the hydrography of the district. The only 
outlet of the lake is the Nile (qv.). 

Drainage Area, Rainfall and Lake Lewi. — The very important part 
played by the Victoria Nyanza in the Nile system has led to careful 
study of its drainage basin and rainfall and the perplexing variations 
in the level of the lake. The area drained by the lake covers, with 
the lake itself, 92,240 sq. m. In part it is densely forested, part 
consists of lofty mountains, and a considerable portion is somewhat 
arid tableland. According to the calculations of Sir William Garstin 
the rainfall over the whole area averages 50 in. a year. Allowing 
that as much as 25% of this amount enters the lake, this is 
equivalent to a total of 138,750,000,000 cub. metres in a year. 
Nicasurcmcnts at the Ripon Falls show that 18.000,000,000, or some 
13% of this amount, is taken off by the Nile, and when allow- 
ance has been made for the annual rise and fall of the lake-level it 
is apparent that by far the greater part of the water which enters 
the nyanza is lost by evaporation; in fact, that the amount drawn 
off by the river plays a comparatively small part in the annual 
oscillation of the water surface. Rain falls nore or less in every 
month, but is heaviest during March, April, May and again in 
September, October and November. The level of the lake is 
chiefly affected by the autumn rains and generally reaches its 
maximum in July. The annual rise and fall is on an average from 
t to 3 ft., but between November 1900 and June 1901 a difference 
of 42 in. was recorded. Considerable speculation was caused by 
the fact that whereas in 1878-70 the lake-level was high, from 
1880 to 1890 the level was falling, and that after a few 
years (1892-95) of higher level there was, from 1896 to ioo2 ; again 
a steady fall* amounting in seven years to 30 in. in the 
average levels of the lake. In 1903, however, the level rose and 
everywhere the land gained from the lake in the previous years 
was flooded. These variations are attributed by Sir William 
Garstin to deficiency or excess of rainfall. Any secular shrinking 
of the lake in common with the lakes of Central Africa geoerally 
must be so gradual as to have no practical importance. It must 
also be remembered that in such a vast sheet of water as is the 
nyanza the wind exercises an influence on the level, tending to 
pile up the water at different parts of the lake. The winds may 
also be the cause of the daily variation of level, which on Spcke 
Gulf has been found to reach 20 in.; but this may also partake 
of the character of a " seiche." Currents setting towards the north 
or north-west have been observed in various parts of the lake. 

Discovery and Exploration.— -The quest for the Nile sources led 
to the discovery of (he lake by J. H. Spcke in 1858, and it was 
by him named Victoria in honour of the queen of England. 
In 1862 Spcke and his companion, J. A. Grant, partially explored 
the N.W. shore, leaving the lake at the Nile outlet. Great 
differences of opinion existed as to its size until its circum- 
navigation in 1874 by H. M. Stanley, which proved it to be of 
vast extent. The invitation sent by King Mtesa of Uganda 
through Stanley to the Christian missionaries led to the despatch 
from England in 1876 of the Rev. C. T. Wilson, to whom We 
owe our first detailed knowledge of the nyanza. Mr Wilson 
and Lieut. Shcrgold Smith, R.N., made, in 1877, the first voyage 
across the nyanza. Lieut. Smith and a Mr O'Neill, both 
members of the Church Missionary Society, were in the same 
year murdered on Ukercwe Island. In 1889 Stanley further 
explored the lake, discovering Emin Pasha Gulf, the entrance 
to wh;-' ' ' * ' -' several islands. In 1890 the ownership 

of i> y Great Britain and Germany, the first 



degree of south latitude being taken as. the boundary una. 
The southern portion, which fell to Germany, was visited and 
described by scientists of that nation, whose objects, however, 
were not primarily geographic. At the instance of the British 
Foreign Office a survey of the northern shores of the lake was 
carried out in 1890-1900 by Commander B. Whitehouse, R.N. 
The same officer, in 1903, undertook, in agreement with the 
German government, a survey of the southern shores. Com- 
mander Whitchouse's work led to considerable modification of 
the previously accepted maps. He discovered numerous islands 
and bays whose existence had previously been unknown. 

Previously to 1806 navigation was confined to Arab dhows, 
which trade between the south end of the lake and Uganda, 
and to canoes. In the year named a small steamer (the" Ruwen- 
zori ") was launched on the lake by a Zanzibar firm, while in 
1900 a somewhat larger steamer (the " William Mackinnon" ), 
built in Glasgow at the instance of Sir W. Mackinnon, and 
afterwards taken over by the British government, made her 
first trip on the lake. In 1903, the year in which the railway 
from Mombasa to the lake was completed, a steamer of 600 tons 
burden was launched at Port Florence. Since that date trade 
has considerably increased. 

See Nils and Uganda and the British Blue-book Egypt No. 2 
(1904), which is a Report by Sir Wm. Garstin upon the Basin of the 
Uhper Nth. This report, besides giving (pp. 4-24) much original 
information upon the Victoria Nyanza, summarizes the informa- 
tion of previous travellers, whose works are quoted. In 1908 the 
British Admiralty published a chart of the lake (scale 4 in. to the 
mile) from the surveys of Commander Whitehouse. Non-official 
books which deal with the lake include: C. T. Wilson, Uganda 
and the Soudan (London, 1882); (Sir) F. D. Lugard, The Rise of ow 
East African Empire, vol ii. (London, 1803); Franz Stuhlmann, 
Mil Emm Pasha, &c. (Berlin, 1894); Paul Kollmann, The Victoria 
Nyansa (English translation; London, 1890); E. G. Ravenstem, 
"The Lake-level of the Victoria Nyanza, Geographical Journal. 
October 1901; Sir H. H. Johnston, The Uganda Protectorate 
(London, 1902). In most of these publications the descriptions 
of the lake occupy but a small part. (W. E. G. ; F. R. C.) 

VICTORINUS, GAIUS HARIUS (4th century A.D.), Roman 
grammarian, rhetorician and nco-Platonic philosopher, an 
African by birth (whence his surname Afcr), lived during the 
reign of Constant i us II. He taught rhetoric at Rome (one of 
his pupils being Jerome), and in his old age became a convert 
to Christianity. His conversion is said to have greatly influenced 
that of Augustine. When Julian published an edict forbidding 
Christians to lecture on polite literature, Victorious closed 
his scbooL A statue was erected in his honour as a teacher 
in the Forum Trajanum. 

His translations of platontc writers are lost, but the treatise De 
Defimtionibus (cd. T. Stangl in Tulliana at Mario-Victoriniona, 
Munich, 1888) is probably by him and not by Boftius, to whom it 
was formerly attnbuted. His manual of prosody, in four books, 
taken almost literally from the work of Aphthonius, is extant 
(H. Kcil, Grammatici Latini, vi.). It is doubtful whether he is the 
author of certain other extant treatises attributed to him on metrical 
and grammatical subjects, which will be found in Kcil. His com- 
mentary on Cicero's De Invent tone (in Halm's Rhetores Latini 
Minores, 1863) is very diffuse, and is itself in need of commentary. 
His extant theological writings, which will be found in J. P. 
Migne, Cursus P'atrologiae Latinae, via., include commentaries 
on Galatians, Epkesians and Philippians; De TrinitaU contra 
Arium; Ad Justinum Manickaeum de Vera Came Chrisli; and a 
little tract on " The Evening and the Morning were one day *' (the 
genuineness of the last two is doubtful). Some Christian poems 
under the name of Victorious arc probably not his. 

See G. Gciger, C. Marius Victorinus Afer, ein neuplatoniscker 
Phihsoph (Mctten, 1888); G. Koffmann. De Mario Victor ino 
phUosopko Christiano (Brcslau, 1880); R. Schmid. Marius I'ic- 
tcrinus Rhetor und seine Besiekungen aa Augustin (Kiel, 1895) ; Gore 
in Dictionary of Christian Biography, iv.; M. Schanz, Geschtchte 
dew rdmisckeu Litteratur, iv. x (1904); Teuffel, Hist, of Roman 
Literature (Eng. tr., 1900), 408. 

VICTOR-PERRIN, CLAUDE, Duke or Beixuno (1764- 
1841), marshal of France, was born at La Marche (Vosges) on 
the 7th of December 1764. In 1781 he entered the army as a 
private soldier, and after ten years' service he received his 
discharge and settled at Valence. Soon afterwards he joined 
the local volunteers, and distinguishing himself in the wax on 
the Alpine frontier, in less than a year he had risen to the 



VICTUAL— VIDAME 



47 



command of a battalion. For his bravery at the siege of Toulon 
m 1703 he was raised to the rank of general of brigade. He 
afterwards served for some time with the army of the Eastern 
Pyrenees, and in the Italian campaign of 1706-07 he so 
acquitted himself at Mondovi, Roveredo and Mantua that he 
was promoted to be general of division. After commanding 
for some time the forces in the department of La Vendee, be 
was again employed in Italy, where he did good service against 
the papal troops, and he took a very important part in the 
battle of Marengo. In 1802 he was governor of the colony of 
Louisiana for * short time, in 1803 he commanded the Batavian 
army, and afterwards he acted for eighteen months (1805-6) 
as French plenipotentiary at Copenhagen. On the outbreak 
of hostilities with Prussia he joined the V. army corps (Marshal 
Laanes) as chief of the general staff. He distinguished himself 
at Saaifcld and Jena, and at Friedland he commanded the 
L corps in such a manner that Napoleon gave him the marshal- 
ate. After the peace of Tilsit he became governor of Berlin, 
and in 1808 he was created duke of Belluno. In the same year 
he was sent to Spain, where be took a prominent part in the 
Peninsular War (especially at Espinosa, Talavera, Barrosa and 
Cadiz), until his appointment in 18 12 to a corps command in 
the invasion of Russia. Here bis most important service was 
a protecting the retreating army at the crossing of the 
Beresina, He took an active part in the wars of 1813-14, till 
in February of the latter year he had the misfortune to arrive 
too late at Momereau-sur-Yoone The result was a scene of 
violent recrimination and his supersession by the emperor, who 
transferred his command to Gerard. Thus wounded in his 
aasoor-propre, Victor now transferred his allegiance to the 
Bourbon dynasty, and in December 18x4 received from 
Louis XVII L the command of the second military division, 
la 1815 he accompanied the king to Ghent, and on the second 
mtoratioii he was made a peer of France. He was also 
president of a commission which inquired into the conduct 
cf the officers during the Hundred Days, and dismissed 
Xapoleon's sympathizers. In 1811 he was appointed war 
sinister and held this office for two years. In 1830 he was 
s»)or-general of the royal guard, and after the revolution of 
that year he retired altogether into private life. His death 
lock place at Paris on the xst of March 1841. 

His papers for the period 1793-1800 have been published (Paris, 
1I4O). 

91CT0AI* food, provisions, most commonly in the plural, 
" victuals-"" The word and its pronunciation came into English 
from the O. Fr. vilaiile. The modern French and English 
iprfiing are due to a pedantic approximation to the Latin 
crrginal, victuxiUa,** neuter plural substantive formed from 
n.'iMi/tf, virtus, nourishment, provisions {vioere, to live). The 
post familiar use of the term is in " licensed victualler," to which 
the Licensing Act 1872 (J 27) has applied the wide significance 
cf any person selling any intoxicating liquor under a licence 

from a justice of the 
peace. Properly a 
" victualling house " 
is one where persons 
arc provided with food 
and drink but not 
lodgings, and is thus 
distinct from an inn, 
which also provides 
the last. 
VICUGflA, one of 
., the two wild living 
. l^ South American re- 
i$v^ presentatives of the 
Vvi^ camel-tribe, a Canu- 
v * lidat (see Tyiopoda). 
From its relative the 
guanaco the vicugna 
(Lama earawta) differs by its inferior stature, more slender build 
and shorter bead, as well as by the absence of bare patches or 




Head of Vicugna. 



callosities on the hind limbs. The general colour of the woolly 
coat is orange-red. Vicugnas live in herds on the bleak and 
elevated parts of the mountain range bordering the region of 
perpetual snow, amidst rocks and precipices, occurring in 
various parts of Peru, in the southern part of Ecuador, and as 
far south as the middle of Bolivia. The wool is extremely 
delicate and soft, and highly valued for the purposes of weaving, 
but the quantity which each animal produces is not great. 

VTDA, MARCO OIROLAMO (c. 1480-1566), Italian scholar 
and Latin poet, was born at Cremona sho/tly before the year 
140a He received the name of Marcantonio in baptism, but 
changed this to Marco Girolamo when he entered the order of 
the Canonlci Regotari Lateranensi. During his early manhood 
he acquired considerable fame by the composition of two 
didactic poems in the Latin tongue, on the Came of Chess 
(Scaeekiat Ludus) and on the Sitkvorm (Bombyx). This reputa- 
tion induced him to seek the papal court in Rome, which was 
rapidly becoming the headquarters of polite learning, the place 
where students might expect advancement through their 
literary talents. Vida reached Rome in the last years of the 
pontificate of Julius II- Leo X , on succeeding to the papal 
chair (1513). treated him with marked favour, bestowed on him 
the priory of St Sylvester at Frascati, and bade him compose 
a heroic Latin poem on the life of Christ Such was the origin 
of the Ckristiad, Yida's most celebrated, if not his best, per* 
formance. It did not, however, see the light in Leo's lifetime. 
Between the years 1520 and 15x7 Vida produced the second of 
his masterpieces in Latin hexameters, a didactic poem on the 
Art of Poetry (see Baldi's edition, Wttrzburg, 1881). Clement 
VII. raised him to the rank of apostolic protonotary, and in 
1531 conferred on him the bishopric of Alba. It is probable 
that he took up his residence in this town soon after the death 
of Clement; and here he spent the greater portion of his remain- 
ing years. Vida attended the council of Trent, where he 
enjoyed the society of Cardinals Cervini, Pole and Del Monte, 
together with his friend the poet Flaminio. A record of their 
conversations may be studied in Vida's Latin dialogue Dt 
Republic*. Among his other writings should be mentioned 
three eloquent orations in defence of Cremona against Pavia, 
composed upon the occasion of some dispute as to precedency 
between those two cities. Vida died at Alba on the 27th of 
September 1566. 

See the Ltfe by Lancet ti (Milan. 1840). 

VIDAME (Lat. vice-dominus), a French feudal title. The 
vidame was originally, like the avooe (advocatus), an official 
chosen by the bishop of the diocese, with the consent of the 
count (see Advocate). Unlike the advocate, however, the 
vice-dominus was at toe outset an ecclesiastic, who acted as 
the bishop s lieutenant {locum tewens) or vicar. But the causes 
that changed the character of the advocatus operated also in 
the case of the vidame. During the Carolingian epoch, indeed, 
advocatus and vice-dominus were interchangeable terms, and 
it was only in the nth century that they became generally 
differentiated: the title of avout being commonly reserved for 
nobles charged with the protection of an abbey, that of vidame 
for those guarding an episcopal see. With the crystallization 
of the feudal system in the 12th century the office of vidame. 
like that of avoue, had become an hereditary fief. As a title, 
however, it was much less common and also less dignified than 
that of avou6. The advocatt were often great barons who added 
their function of protector of an abbey to their own temporal 
sovereignty, whereas the vidames were usually petty nobles, 
who exercised their office in strict subordination to the bishop. 
Their chief functions were: to protect the temporalities of the 
see, to represent the bishop at the count's court of justice, to 
exercise the bishop's temporal jurisdiction in his name (placttum 
or curia vice-domint) and to lead the episcopal levies to war. 
In return they usually had a house near the episcopal palace, 
a domain within and without the city, and sometimes the right 
to levy certain dues on the city. The vidames usually took 
their title from the see they represented, but not infrequently 
they styled themselves, not after their official fief, but after 



48 



VIDIN— VIDYA8AGAR 



their private seigneur ics. Thus the vidame de Picquigny was 
the representative of the bishop of Amiens, the vidame de 
Gerberoy of the bishop of Beauvais. In many sees there were 
no vidames, their function being exercised by viscounts or 
chatelains. With the growth of the central power and of that 
of the municipalities the vidames gradually lost all importance, 
and the title became merely honorary 

Sec A. Luchaire, Manuel ics institutions franqaises (Paris, 1892) ; 
Du CangCjCtowarium (ed. Niort, 1887), s. " Vice-dominus "; A. 
Mallet, " Etude hist, sur les avoucs et leu vidames," in Position des 
Iheses de FEcoU des diaries (an. 1870-72). 

VIDIN (formerly written Widin or Wjddxn), a fortified 
river-port and the capital of a department in the extreme 
N.E. of Bulgaria; on the right bank of the rivor Danube, near 
the Servian frontier and 151 m. VV.N.W. of Sofia. Pop. (1006) 
16,168, including about 3000 Turks and 1500 Spanish Jews — 
descendants of the refugees who fled hither from the Inquisition 
in the 16th century. Vidin is an episcopal see and the head- 
quarters of a brigade; it was formerly a stronghold of some 
importance, and was rendered difficult to besiege by the sur- 
rounding marshes, formed where the Topolovitza and other 
streams join the Danube. A steam ferry connects it with 
Calafat, on the Rumanian bank of the Danube, and there is a 
branch railway to Mezdra, on the main line Sofia-Plevna. The 
city consists of three divisions — the modern suburbs extending 
beside the Danube, the citadel and the old town, still sur- 
rounded by walls, though only four of its nine towers remain 
standing. The old town, containing several mosques and 
synagogues and a bazaar, preserves its oriental appearance; 
the citadel is used as a military magazine. There are a modern 
cathedral, a school of viticulture and a high school, besides an 
ancient clock-tower and the palace (Konak) formerly occupied 
by the Turkish pashas. Vidin exports cereals and fruit, and 
is locally celebrated for its gold and silver filigree. It has 
important fisheries and manufactures of spirits, beer and 
tobacco. 

Vidin stands on the site of the Roman town of Bononia in 
Moesia Superior, not to be confounded with the Pannonian 
Bononia, which stood higher up the Danube to the north of 
Sirmium. Its name figures conspicuously in the military annals 
of medieval and recent times; and it is specially memorable 
for the overthrow of the Turks by the imperial forces in 1689 
and for the crushing defeat of the hospodar Michael Sustos 
by Pasvan Oglu in 1801. It was again the scene of stirring 
events during the Russo-Turkish Wars of 1854-55 and 1877-78, 
and successfully resisted the assaults of the Servians in the 
Servo-Bulgarian War of 1886-87. 

VIDOCQ, FRANCOIS EUG&NE (1775-1857), French detective, 
was born at Arras in 1775 (or possibly 1773). After an adven- 
turous youth he joined the French army, where he rose to be 
lieutenant. At Lille he was imprisoned as the result of a quarrel 
with a brother officer, and while in gaol became involved, 
possibly innocently, in the forgery of an order for the release of 
another prisoner. He was sentenced to eight years' hard labour, 
and sent to the galleys at Brest, whence he escaped twice but 
was recaptured. For the third time he succeeded in getting 
free, and lived for some time in the company of thieves and 
other criminals in Paris and elsewhere, making a careful study 
of their methods. He then offered his services as a spy to the 
Paris police (1809). The offer was accepted, on condition that 
he should extend his knowledge of the criminal classes by 
himself serving a further term in prison in Paris, and subse- 
quently Vidocq was made chief of the reorganized detective 
department of the Paris police, with a body of ex-convicts under 
his immediate command. In this capacity Vidocq was ex- 
tremely successful, for he possessed unbounded energy and a 
real genius for hunting down criminals. In 1827, having saved 
a considerable sum of money, he retired from his post and 
started a paper-mill, the work-people in which were drawn 
entirely from ex-convicts. The venture, however, was a failure, 
and in 1833 Vidocq re-entered the police service and was em- 
ployed mainly in political work, though given no special office. 



Anxious to get back to his old detective post he himself foolishly 
organized a daring theft. The authorities were unable to trace 
the thieves, who at the proper moment were " discovered " 
by Vidocq. His real pert in the matter became known, however, 
and he was dismissed from service. He subsequently started 
a private inquiry agency, which was indifferently successful, 
and was finally suppressed. Vidocq died in great poverty in 
1857. Several volumes have been published under his name, 
the best known of which is Mtmoires de Vidocq (1828). It 
is, however, extremely doubtful whether he wrote any of them. 

See Charles Ledru, La Vie, la. mert et les demiers moments de 
Vidocq (Paris, 1857). 

VIDYASAGAR, ISWAR CHANDRA (1820-1891), writer and 
social reformer of Bengal, was born at Birswha in the Midnapur 
district in 1820, of a Kulin Brahman family. He was removed 
to Calcutta at the age of nine, was admitted into the Sanskrit 
College, and carried on his studies in the midst of privations and 
extreme poverty. In 1839 he obtained the title of VUyasa^ar 
( = " Ocean of learning ") after passing a brilliant examination, 
and in 1850 was appointed head pandit of Fort William College. 
In 1846 appeared his first work in Bengali prose, The Twenty- 
Five Tales of a Betal. This was succeeded by his Sokuniala in 
1855, and by his greatest work, The Exile of Sito, in 1862. These 
are marked by a grace and beauty which Bengali prose had never 
known before. The literature of Bengal, previous to the 19th 
century, was entirely in verse. Ram Mohan Roy, the religious 
reformer of Bengal, created the literary prose of Bengal early 
in the 19th century by his numerous translations and religious 
tracts; and Iswar Chandra Vidyasagar and his fellow-worker, 
Akhay Kumar Datta, added to its power and beauty about the 
middle of that century. These three writers are generally re- 
cognized as the fathers of Bengali prose literature. As a social 
reformer and educationist, too, Iswar Chandra made his mark. 
He associated himself with Drinkwatcr Bcthune in the cause of 
female education; and the management of the girls' school, 
called after Bethune, was entrusted to him in 1851. And when 
Rosomoy Datta resigned the post of secretary to the Sanskrit 
College of Calcutta, a new post of principal was created, and 
Iswar Chandra was appointed to it. Iswar Chandra's influence 
in the education department was now unbounded. He simpli- 
fied the method of learning Sanskrit, and thus spread a know- 
ledge of that ancient tongue among his countrymen. He was 
consulted in all educational matters by Sir Frederick Halliday, 
the first lieutenant-governor of Bengal. And when the great 
scheme of education under Sir Charles Wood's despatch of 1854 
was inaugurated in India, Iswar Chandra established numerous 
aided schools under that scheme in the most advanced district s 
of Bengal. In 1858 he resigned his appointment under govern- 
ment, and shortly afterwards became manager of the Metro- 
politan Institution, a private college at Calcutta. But a greater 
task than literar> work or educational reforms claimed his 
attention. He had discovered that the ancient Hindu scriptures 
did not enjoin perpetual widowhood, and in 1855 he startled 
the Hindu world by his work on the Remarriage of Hindu Widows. 
Such a work, from a learned and presumably orthodox Brahman, 
caused the greatest excitement, but Iswar Chandra remained 
unmoved amidst a storm of indignation. Associating himself 
with the most influential men of the day, like Prosonno Kumar 
Tagore and Ram Gopal Ghosh, he appealed to the British 
government to declare that the sons of remarried Hindu widows 
should be considered legitimate heirs. The British govern- 
ment responded; the act was passed in 1856, and some years 
after Iswar Chandra's own son was married to a widow. In 
the last years of his life Iswar Chandra wrote works against 
Hindu polygamy. He was as well known for his charity and 
wide philanthropy as for his educational and social reforms. 
His large income, derived from the sale of school-books, was 
devoted almost entirely to the succour of the needy; hundreds 
of young men owed their education to him; hundreds of widows 
depended on him for their daily bread. The Indian government 
made him a Companion of the Indian Empire in 1880. He died 
on the 29th of July 1891. (R. C. D.) 



VIEIRA 



+9 



YIKnU, A1T0NIO (i6oft-i6^7), Portuguese Jesuit and 
writer, the " prince of Catholic pulpit-orators of his tune," was 
bora in Lisbon on the 6th of February 1608. Accompanying 
his parents to Brazil in 1615 he received his education at the 
Jesuit college at Bahia. He entered the Jesuit novitiate in 
1625, and two years later pronounced his first vows. At the 
age of eighteen he was teaching rhetoric, and a little later 
dogmatic theology, at the college of Olinda, besides writing 
the " annual letters " of the province. In 1635 he received the 
priesthood. He soon began to distinguish himself as an orator, 
and the three patriotic sermons he delivered at Bahia (163&-40) 
are remarkable for their imaginative power and dignity of 
language. The sermon for the success of the arms of Portugal 
against Holland was considered by the Abbe Raynal to be 
** perhaps the most extraordinary discourse ever heard from 
a Christian pulpit." When the revolution of 1640 placed 
John IV. on the throne of Portugal, Brazil gave him its allegi- 
ance, and Vieira was chosen to accompany the viceroy's son to 
Lisbon to congratulate the new king. His talents and aptitude 
lor affairs impressed John IV. so favourably that he appointed 
htm royal preacher, gave him free access to the palace and 
constantly consulted him on the business of the state. Pos- 
sessed of great political sagacity and knowledge of the lessons of 
history, Vieira used the pulpit as a tribune from which he 
propounded measures for improving the general and particularly 
the economic condition of Portugal. His pen was as busy as 
his voice, and in four notable pamphlets he advocated the crea- 
tion of companies of commerce, the abolition of the distinction 
utt o imi Old and New Christians, the reform of the procedure 
of the Inquisition and the admission of Jewish and foreign 
traders, with guarantees for their security from religious per- 
secution. Moreover, he did not spare his own estate, for in his 
Scsagesima sermon he boldly attacked the current style of 
preaching, its subtleties, affectation, obscurity and abuse of 
metaphor, and declared the ideal of a sermon to be one which 
sent men away " not contented with the preacher, but discon- 
tented with themselves." In 1647 Vieira began his career as a 
diplomat, in the course of which he visited England, France, 
Holland and Italy. In his Papd Porte be urged the cession of 
Pernambuco to the Dutch as the price of peace, while his mission 
to Rome in 1650 was undertaken in the hope of arranging a 
marriage betw e en the heir to the throne of Portugal and the 
only daughter of King Philip IV. of Spain. His success, freedom 
of speech and reforming seal had made him enemies on all 
skies, and only the intervention of the' king prevented his 
rrpolskm from the Company of Jesus, so that prudence coun- 
selled his return to BrariL 

In his youth he had vowed to consecrate his life to the con- 
version of the negro slaves and native Indians of his adopted 
country, and arriving in Maranhao early in 1633 he recom- 
menced his apostolic labours, which had been interrupted 
daring his stay of fourteen years in the Old World. Suiting 
from Pari, he penetrated to the banks of the Tocantins, making 
sssmmi s converts to Christianity and civilization among the 
most savage tribes; but after two years of unceasing labour, 
dorms; which every difficulty was placed in his way by (he 
colonial authorities, he saw that the Indians must be with- 
drawn from the jurisdiction of the governors, to prevent their 
e^raottatlon, and placed under the control of the members of a 
single religious society. Accordingly in June 1654 he set sail 
sot Lisbon to plead the cause of the Indians, and In April 1655 
he itttt a hy* from the king a series of decrees which placed 
the minim" nnrtrr the Company of Jesus, with himself as their 
s up e r ior, and prohibited the enslavement of- tbe natives, except 
fas certain specified cases. Returning with this charter of 
freedom, he organised the missions over a territory having 
a coast-line of 400 leagues, and a population of 200,000 souls, 
and in the next six years (1655-61) the indefatigable mis- 
sionary set the crown on his work. After a thne, however, 
the fitlcm*f«, attributing the shortage of staves and the con- 
sequent diminution m their profits to the Jesuits, begun actively 
so oppose Vieira, and cbsy wens joined by members of the 



secular clergy and the other Orders who were Jealous of the 
monopoly enjoyed by the Company in the government of the 
Indians. Vieira was accused of want of patriotism and usurpa- 
tion of jurisdiction, and in 166 1, after a popular revolt, tbe 
authorities sent him with thirty-one other Jesuit missionaries 
back to Portugal. He found his friend King John IV. dead and 
the court a prey to faction, but, dauntless as ever in the pursuit 
of his ambition, he resorted to his favourite arm of preaching, 
and on Epiphany Day, 1667, in the royal chapel, he replied 
to his persecutors in a famous rhetorical effort, and called for 
the execution of the royal decrees in favour of the Indians. 
Circumstances were against him, however, and the count of 
Castelmclhor, fearing his influence at court, had him exiled 
first to Oporto and then to Coimbra; but in both these .places 
he continued his work of preaching, and the reform of the 
Inquisition also occupied his attention. To silence him his 
enemies then denounced him to that tribunal, and he was 
cited to appear before the Holy Office at Coimbra to answer 
points smacking of heresy in his sermons, conversations and 
writings. He had believed in the prophecies of a roth-century 
shoemaker poet, Bandarra, dealing with the coming of a ruler 
who would inaugurate an epoch of unparalleled prosperity 
for the church and for Portugal, and in the Quinto Impcrio 
or Claris Propketarum be had endeavoured Co prove the truth 
of his dreams from passages of Scripture. As he refused to 
submit, the Inquisitors kept him m prison from October 1005 
to December 1667, and finally imposed a sentence which pro- 
hibited him from teaching, writing or preaching. It was a 
heavy blow for the Company, and though Vieira recovered his 
freedom and much of his prestige shortly afterwards on the 
accession of King Pedro II., it was determined that he should 
go to Rome to procure the revision of the sentence, which still 
hung over him though tbe penalties had been removed. During 
a six years' residence in the Eternal City Vieira won his greatest 
triumphs. Pope Clement X. invited him to preach before the 
College of Cardinals, and he became confessor to Queen 
Christina of Sweden and a member of her literary academy. 
At the request of the pope he drew up a report of two hundred 
pages on the Inquisition in Portugal, with the result that 
after a judicial inquiry Pope Innocent XI. suspended it for 
five years (1676-81). Ultimately Vieira returned to Portugal 
with a papal bull exempting him from the jurisdiction of the 
grand inquisitor, and in January 1681 he embarked for Brazil. 
He resided in Bahia and occupied himself in revising his sermons 
for publication, and in 1687 he became superior of the province. 
A false accusation of complicity in an assassination, and the 
intrigues of members of his- own Company, clouded his hat 
months, and on the 18th of July 1697 be passed away. 

His works form perhaps the greatest monument of Portuguese 
prose. Two hundred discourses exist to prove his fecundity, 
while his versatility is shown by the fact that he could treat 
the same subject differently on half a dozen occasions. His 
letters, simple and conversational in style, have a deep his- 
torical and political interest, and form documents of the first 
value for the history of the period. As a man, Vieira would 
have made a nobler figure ft he had not been so great an egotist 
and so clever a courtier, and the readiness with which he sus- 
tained directly opposite opinions at short intervals with equal 
warmth argues a certain lack of sincerity. His name, how- 
ever, is identified with great causes, justice to the Jews and 
humanity to the Indians, and the fact that he was in advance 
of his age led to many of his troubles, while his disinterested- 
ness in money matters is deserving of all praise. 

Principal works: Sertnoes (Sermons) (15 vol*. Lisbon, 1670- 
1748), there arc many subsequent editions, but none com- 
plete; translations exist in Spanish, Italian, German and French, 
which have gone through several editions. Iltstoria do Fufuro 
(Lisbon, 1718; 2nd cd., ibid-, 1755); this and the Qutnto Imterio 
and the Claris Prophetarkm t seem to be in essence ono and the 
same book in different redactions. Cartas (Letters) (3 vols., Lisbon, 
1735-46) Nottnas rrcondttas do modo de procedtr a Inquisu&o 
dr Port* »at com ot sens pram (Lisbon, 1871). The Arte ie Furtor 
under VieJra's name in many editions is now known sot 



dr Porttttat 
published w 



5o 



VIELE-GRIFFIN— VIENNA 



to be his. A badly edited edition of the works of Vicira in 
27 volumes appeared in Lisbon, 1854-58. There arc unpub- 
lished MSS. of his* in the British Museum in London, and in the 
Bibliotheque Nationale in Paris. A bibliography of Vieira will 
be found in SommervogeL Bibliolkcave de la tcmpagme de Jisus, 
viii. 653-85. 
Authorities. — Andre 1 de Barms, Vida (Lisbon, 1746} — a panc- 

Kric by a member of the same society; L>. Francisco Alexandre 
bo, bishop of Vueu, " Historical and Critical Discourse," Obras 



(Lisbon, 1849), vol. ii.— a valuable study; Joio Francisco Lisboa, 
Vida (5th ed., Rio, 1891) — be is unjust to Vieira. but may be con- 
sulted to check the next writer * L Abbe E. Carel, Vieira, sa vie el 



ares (Paris, 1879); Luix Cabral, Vieira, bi'og., caraciere, Ho- 
p (Pans, 1900); idem, ~ 



ses auvres 

fuence (Paris, 1900);' idem, Vieira pregadcr (2 vols.", Oporto, 1901). 
Sotero dos Reia, Curso de klteratura Porfugueta e Braaleira, hi. 
121-344. (E» P*-) 

VlnLB-GRIFFIN, FRANCIS (1864- ), French poet, was 
born at Norfolk, Virginia, U.S.A., on the 26th of May 1864. 
He was educated in France, dividing his time between Paris 
and Touraine. His volumes include Cueille d'avrii (1885); 
Les Cygnes (1887; new series, 1892); La Ckevauckee d'Yeldis 
(1893); Swortkilde, a dramatic poem (1804); Laus Veneris 
(1895), a volume of translations from Swinburne; Poitnes et 
Poisies (1895), a collection containing much of his earlier work; 
Phocas lejardinier (1808); and La Ltgendc ailie de WieJand le 
Forgcron (1899), a dramatic poem. M. Vicle-Griffin is one of 
the most successful writers of the vers libre, the theory of which 
he expounded, in conjunction with MM. Paul Adam and 
Bernard Lazare, in the pages of a periodical entitled Entretiens 
politique* et lilUraires (1890-92). He is at his best in the 
adaptation of the symbolism of old legend to modern uses, 

VIELLE, vide, vielc, a French term, derived from Lat. fidi- 
cida, embracing two distinct types of instruments: (1) from 
the 12th to the beginning of the 15th century bowed instru- 
ments having a box-soundchest with ribs, (2) from the middle 
or end of the 15th century, the hurdy-gurdy (q.v.). The 
medieval word rieUe or viUe has often been incorrectly applied 
to the latter instrument by modern writers when dealing with 
the 13th and 14th centuries. The instruments included under 
the name of vidle, whatever form their outline assumed, always 
had the box-soundchest consisting of back and belly joined by 
ribs, which experience has pronounced the most perfect con- 
struction for bowed instruments. The most common shape 
given to the earliest vielles in France was an oval, which with 
its modifications remained in favour until the guitar-fiddle, 
the Italian lyra, asserted itself as the finest type, from which 
also the violin was directly evolved. (K. S.) 

VIBNi JOSEPH MARIE (1716-1809), French painter, was born 
at MontpeUier on the x8th of June 1716. Protected by Comte 
de Caylus, he entered at an early age the studio of Natoire, 
and obtained the grand prix in 1745. He used his time at Rome 
in applying to the study of nature and the development of his 
own powers all that he gleaned from the masterpieces around 
him; but his tendencies were so foreign to the reigning taste 
that on his return to Paris he owed his admission to the academy 
for his picture " Daedalus and Icarus " (Louvre) solely to the 
indignant protests of Boucher. When in 1776, at the height 
of his established reputation, he became director of the school 
of France at Rome, he took David with him amongst his pupils. 
After his return, five years later, his fortunes were wrecked 
by the Revolution; but he undauntedly set to work, and at 
the'age of eighty (1796) carried off the prize in an open govern- 
ment competition. Bonaparte acknowledged his merit by 
making him a senator. He died at Paris on the 27th of March 
1809, leaving behind him several brilliant pupils, amongst whom 
were Vincent, Regnault, Suvee, Mcnageot, Taillasson and 
others of high merit; nor should the name of his wife, Marie 
Thirds© Reboul (1728-1805), herself a member of the academy, 
be omitted from this list. Their son, Marie Joseph, born in 
1761, also distinguished himself as a painter. 

VIENNA (Ger. Wieu; Lat. Vindobona), the capital of the 
Austrian empire, the largest city in the Austro-Hungarian 
monarchy, and the fourth city in Europe as regards popula- 
tion. It is situated on the right bank of the Danube, at the 
b»»- -* ^ ""~»er Wald, and at. the beginning of the great 



plain which separates the Alps from the Carpathians. This 
plain is continued on the opposite bank of the Danube by the 
valley of the March, which constitutes the easiest access to the 
north. Thus Vienna forms a junction of natural ways from 
south to north, and from west to east. It also lies on the 
frontier which separates from one another three races, the 
German, the Slavonic and the Hungarian. 

Curiously enough, Vienna has for a long time turned its 
back, so to speak, on the magnificent waterway of the Danube, 
the city being built about ij m. away from the main stream. 
Only an arm of the river, the Danube Canal, so called because 
it was regulated and widened in 1598, passes through the city, 
dividing it into two unequal parts. It is true that the river 
forms at this point several arms, and the adjoining districts 
were subjected to periodical inundations, while navigation 
was by no means easy here. But in 1870 works for the 
regulation of the river were started with the object of making 
it quite safe for navigation, and of avoiding the dangers of 
inundation. By these magnificent works of regulation the 
new bed was brought nearer to the town, and the new river 
channel has an average width of 915 ft. and a depth of 10 ft. 
On its left bank stretches the so-called inundation region, 
1525 ft. wide, while on the right bank quays have been con- 
structed with numerous wharfs and warehouses. By these 
works of regulation over 2400 acres of ground were gained for 
building purposes. This new bed of the Danube was com- 
pleted in 1876. In conjunction with this work the entire 
Danube Canal has been transformed into a harbour by the 
construction of a lock at its entrance, while increased accom- 
modation for shipping has also been provided at the other end 
of the canal known as the winter harbour. Into the Danube 
Canal flows the small stream, called VVicn, now arched over 
almost in its entirety. Vienna extends along the right bank 
of the Danube from the historic and legendary Kahlcnbcrg 
to the point where the Danube Canal rejoins the main stream, 
being surrounded on the other side by a considerable stretch 
of land which is rather rural than suburban in character. 

Vienna is officially divided into twenty-one districts or 
Bctirke. Until 1892 it contained only ten of the present 
districts; in that year nine outlying districts were incorporated 
with the town; in 1900 Brigittenau was created out of part 
of the old district of Leopoldstadt, and in 1905 the Floridsdorf 
district was made up by the incorporation of the following 
former suburbs: Aspem-an-der-Donau, Dona uf eld, Floridsdorf, 
Gross Jedlersdorf, Hirschstctten, Jcdlcsce, K a gran, Lcopoldau, 
Lobau-Insel and Stadia u. By the incorporation of the suburbs 
in 1892, the area of Vienna was more than trebled, namely, 
from 21} sq. m. to 69 sq. m.; while a new increase of about 
one-fifth of its total area was added by the incorporation of 
1002. A feature of the new city is the unusually large propor- 
tion of woods and arable land within its bounds. These form 
nearly 60% of its total area, private gardens, parks and 
open spaces occupying a further 13%. While from the 
standpoint of population it takes the fourth place among 
European capitals, Vienna covers about three times as much 
ground as Berlin, which occupies the third place. But the 
bulk of its inhabitants being packed into a comparatively 
small portion of this area, the working classes suffer greatly 
from overcrowding, and all sections of the community from 
high rents. 

The inner city, or Vienna proper, was formerly separated 
from the other districts by a circle of fortifications, consisting 
of a rampart, fosse and glacis. These, however, were removed 
in 1858-00, and the place of the glacis has been taken by 
a magnificent boulevard, the Ring-Strasse, a m. in length 9 
and about 150 ft. in average width. Another scries of works, 
consisting of a rampart and fosse, were constructed in 1704 
to surround the whole city at that time, i.e. the first ten districts 
of modern Vienna. This second girdle of fortifications was 
known as the Lines (Linkn), and a second wide boulevard 
(Gilrtcl-Strasse) follows their course round the dty. This 
second or outer girdle of fortifications formed the boundary 



VIENNA 



5i 



the city and the outlying suburbs, but was removed 
is 1892, when the incorporation of the suburbs took place. 

The inner town, which lies almost exactly in the centre of the 
ethers, is still, unlike the older parts of most European towns, 
the most aristocratic quarter, containing the palaces of the 
emperor sod of many of the nobility, the government offices, 
many of the embassies and legations, the opera house and the 
principal hotels. Lcopoldstadt which together with Brigit- 
Ceruu are the only districts on the left bank of the Danube 
Canal, is the chief commercial quarter, and is inhabited to a 
great extent by Jews. Mariahilf, Neubau and Margarcthen are 
the chief seats of manufacturing industry. Landstrasse may 
be described as the district of officialism; here too arc the 
British and German embassies, Akcrgrund, with the enormous 
general hospital, the military hospital and the municipal 
asylum for the insane, is the medical quarter. 

Near the centre of the inner city, most of the streets in which 
are narrow and irregular, is the cathedral of St Stephen, the 
most xmDortant medieval building in Vienna, dating in Us present 
form mainly from the 14th and 1 5th centuries, but incorporating 
a few fragments of the original iath-ccnlury edifice. Among its 
most striking features are the fine and lofty tower (450 ft.), 
rebuilt in f 860-64; the extensive catacombs, in which the 
emperors were formerly interred; the sarcophagus (151 3) of 
Frederick III.; the tombs of Prince Eugene of Savoy; thirty- 
eight marble altars; and the fine groined ceiling. A little to the 
•oath-west of the cathedral is the liofburg, or imperial palace, 
a huge complex of buildings of various epochs and in various 
styles, enclosing several courtyards. The oldest part of the 
present edifice dates from the 13th century, and extensive 
additions have been made since 1887. In addition to privato 
moms and state apartments, the Hofburg contains a library 
of about 800,000 volumes, 7000 incunabula and 24,000 MSS., 
including the celebrated " Papyrus Rainer "; the imperial 
treasury, containing the family treasures of the house of 
Hsbsbtirg*- Lorraine, and other important collections. 

In the old town are the two largest of the Hofc, extensive 
blorks of buildings belonging to the great abbeys of Austria, 
vfckh are common throughout Vienna. These are the Schotten- 
hof fence belonging to the " Scoti," or Irish Benedictines) 
and the Molkerhof, adjoining the open space called the Freiung, 
rath forming a lit tie. town of itself. As in most continental 
towns, the custom of living in fiats is prevalent in Vienna, where 
Irw except the richer nobles occupy an entire house. Of late 
the so-called " ZinspalSste " (" tenement palaces ") have been 
built on a magnificent scale, often profusely adorned without 
and within with painting and sculpture. Other notable buildings 
wkhm the fine of the old fortifications are the Gothic Augustine 
church, built in the 14th century, and containing a fine monu- 
ment of Canova; the Capuchin church, with the burial vault of 
the Habsborgs; the church of Maria-Sticgcn, an interesting 
Gothic building of the 14th century, restored in 1820; the 
handsome Greek church, by T. Hansen (1813-1801), finished in 
1858; the Minorite church, a Gothic edifice of the 14th century, 
containing an admirable mosaic of Leonardo da Vinci's " Last 
Sapper " by RaffaeM, executed in 1806-14 by order of Napoleon 
and placed here ia 1846. Other churches worth mentioning are 
the Schottenkhxhe, baut in the 13th century, reconstructed 
ia the 17th and restored by H. von Ferstel (1828-1883), con- 
taining the tombs of the count of Starhemberg, the defender 
•f Vienna against the Turks in 1083, and of Duke Heinrich 
Jasoaawaott (d. 1177); the church of St Peter, reconstructed 
by Fischer von Edach in 1702-13, and the University church, 
erected by the Jesuits in 1625-31, both in the baroque style 
wkh rich frescoes; lastly, the small church of St Ruprecht, the 
eldest church in Vienna, first built in 740, and several times 
luiiHimhil; and the old Ratkous. At the comer of the 
Grabesa, one of the busiest thoroughfares, containing the most 
fiahjinaihlf shops in Vienna, is the Stock im Euem, the stump 
of a tree, said to be the last survivor of a holy grove round 
winch Che original settlement of Vindomina sprang up. It is 
full of naus driven into It by travelling journeymen. 



The Ring-Strasse ranks as one of the most imposing 
achievements of modern street architecture. Opposite the 
Hofburg, the main body of which is separated from 
the Ring-Strasse by the Hofgartcn and Volksgarten, rise 
the handsome monument of the empress Maria Theresa 
-(erected 1888) and the imperial museums of art and natural 
history, two extensive Renaissance edifices with domes 
(erected 1870-89), matching each other in every particular 
and grouping finely with the new part of the palace, 
Hans Makart's painted dome in the natural history museum 
is the largest pictorial canvas in the world. Adjoining the 
museums to the west is the palace of justice (1881), and this is 
closely followed by the houses of parliament (1883), in which 
the Grecian style has been successfully adapted to modem 
requirements. Beyond the houses of parliament stands the 
new Raihuus, an immense and lavishly decorated Gothic 
building, erected in 1873-83. It was designed by Friedrich 
Schmidt (1825-1891), who may be described as the chief 
exponent of the modern Gothic tendency as T. Hansen and 
G Semper, the creators respectively of the parliament house and 
the museums, are the leaders of the Classical and Renaissance 
styles which are so strongly represented in Viennese architecture. 
Opposite the Rat ha us, on the inner side of the Ring, is the new 
court theatre, another specimen of Scmpcr's Renaissance work, 
finished in 1889. To the north stands the new building of the 
university, a Renaissance structure by H. von Ferstel, erected 
in 1873-84 and rivalling the Ralhaus in extent. Near the uni* 
vcrsity, and separated from the Ring by a garden, stands the 
votive church in Alscrgrund, completed in 1879, and erected 
to commemorate the emperor's escape from assassination in 1853, 
one of the most elaborate and successful of modem Gothic 
churches (Ferstel). The other important buildings of the 
Ring-Strasse include the magnificent opera house, built 
1861-69, by E. Van dcr Null (181 2-1868) and A. von 
Siccardsburg (1813-1S68), the sumptuous interior of which 
vies with that of Paris; the academy of art, built in 1872- 
76; the exchange, built in 2872-77, both by Hansen; and 
the Austrian museum of art and industry, an Italian Renais- 
sance building erected by Ferstel in 1868-71. On the north 
side the Ring-Strasse gives place to the spacious Franz Josefs 
quay, flanking the Danube Canal The municipal districts out- 
side the Ring also contain numerous handsome modem buildings. 
Vienna possesses both in the inner city and the outlying dis- 
tricts numerous squares adorned with artistic monuments. 
One of the finest squares in the world for the beauty of the 
buildings which encircle it is the Ratbausplatz, adjoining the 
Ring-Strasse. 

Vienna is the intellectual as weQ as the material capital 
of Austria— emphatically so in regard to the German part 
of the empire. Its university, established in 1365, is now 
attended by nearly 6000 students, and the medical faculty en* 
joys a world-wide reputation. Its scientific institutions are 
headed by the academy of science. The academy of art was 
founded in 1707. 

Museums. — In the imperial art-history museum are stored the 
extensive art -col lections of the Austrian imperial family, which were 
formerly in the Hofburg, in the Belvedere, and in other places. It 
contains a rich collection of Egyptian, Greek, Roman ana Etruscan 
antiquities; of coins and medals, and of industrial art. The last 
contains valuable specimens of the industrial art of the middle 
ages and of the Renaissance period in gold, silver, bronze, glass, 
enamel, ivory, iron and wood. The famous salt-cellar (saliera) til 
Benvenuto Cellini, executed m 1530-43 for Francis I. of France, is 
here. Then cornea the collection of weapons and armour, including 
the famous Ambras collection, so called after the castle of Ambras 
near Innsbruck, where it was for a long time stored. The picture 
gallery, which contains the collection formerly preserved in the Bel- 
vedere palace, contains masterpieces of almost every school in the 
world, but it is unsurpassed for its specimens of Rubens, Durer and 
the Venetian masters. Next come toe imperial treasury at the Hof- 
burg, already mentioned; the famous collection of drawings and 
engravings known as the Albert ina in the palace of the archduke 
Frederick, which contains over 700,000 engravings and 16,000 draw- 
ings: the picture gallery of the academy of art; the collection of 
the Austrian museum of art and industry; the historical museum 
of the city of Vienna; and the military museum at the arsenal. 



52 



VIENNA 



Besides, there are in Vienna a number of private picture galleries 
of great importance. The largest is that belonging to Prince 
Liechtenstein, containing about 800 paintings, and specially rich 
in important works by Rubens and Van Dyck; the picture gallery 
of Count Harrach, with over 400 paintings, possessing numerous 
examples of the later Italian and French schools; that of Count 
Czemin, with over 340 paintings; and that of Count SchOnborn, with 
110 pictures. The imperial natural history museum contains a 
mincralogkal, geological and zoological section, as weU as a pre- 
historic and ethnographical collection. Its botanic collection 
contains the famous Vienna herbarium, while to the university is 
attached a fine botanical garden. Besides the Hofburg library, 
there are important libraries belonging to the university and other 
societies, the corporation and the various monastic orders. 

Parks, &c. — The Prater, a vast expanse (2000 acres) of wood and 
park on the cast side of the city, between the Danube and the 
Danube Canal, is greatly frequented by all classes. The exhi- 
bition of 1873 was held in this park, and several of its buildings, 
including the large rotunda, have been left standing. Other parks 
are the Hofgartcn, the Volksgartcn and the Town Park, all adjoin- 
ing the Ring-Strassc; the Augnrtcit in the Lcopoldstadt, the Belve- 
dere Park in the Landstrasse, the Esterhazy Park in Maruhilf, and 
the TUrkcnschanz Park in DobKng. Among the most popular 
resorts are the parks and gardens belonging to the imperial 
chateaux of Schonbrunn and Laxcnburg. 

Government and Administration. — Vienna is the residence of 
the emperor of Austria, the scat of the Austrian ministers, of 
the Reichsrat and of the Diet of Lower Austria. It is also 
the scat of the common ministries for the Austro-Hungarian 
monarchy, of the foreign ambassadors and general consuls and 
the meeting-place, alternately with Budapest, of the Austro- 
Hungarian delegations. It contains also the highest judicial, 
financial, military and administrative official authorities of 
Austria, and is the see of a Roman Catholic archbishop. Vienna 
enjoys autonomy for communal affairs, but is under the control 
of the governor and the Diet of Lower Austria, while the election 
of the chief burgomaster requires the sanction of the sovereign, 
advised by the prime minister. The municipal council is 
composed of 158 members elected for a period of six years. 
The long struggle between the municipality and the Austrian 
ministry arising out of the refusal to sanction the election 
(1895) of Dr Lueger, the anti-Semitic leader and champion, 
recalls in some respects the Wilkes incident in London. In this 
instance the ultimate success of the corporation greatly strength- 
ened the Obscurantist and reactionary element . throughout 
Austria. 

The cost of the transformation of Vienna, which has been in 
progress since 1858, cannot be said to have fallen heavily on the 

Copulation. Great part of the burden has been borne throughout 
y the " City Extension Fund," realized from the utilization of the 
ground formerly occupied by the fortifications and glacis. The 
subsequent regulation of the former suburbs has to a large extent 
covered its own expenses through the acquisition by the town of 
the improved area. The municipal finance has on the whole been 
sound, and notwithstanding the extra burdens assumed on the 
incorporation of the suburbs, the equilibrium of the communal 
budget was maintained up to the fall of the Liberal administration. 
In spite of shortsighted parsimony in the matter of schools, &c., 
and increased resources through the allocation to the municipality 
of a certain percentage of new state and provincial taxation, their 
anti-Semitic successors have been unable to avoid a deficit, and have 
been obliged to increase the rates. But the direct damage done 
in this and other ways would seem to be less than that produced 
by the mistrust they inspired for a time among the propertied 
Classes, and the consequent paralysing of enterprise. Their violent 
anti-Magyar attitude has driven away a certain amount of Hungarian 
custom, and helped to increase the political difficulties of the 
cis-Leithan government. 

Vienna is situated at an altitude of 550 ft. above the level of 
the sea, and possesses a healthy climate. The mean annual 
temperature is 48*6° F., and the range between January and July 
is about 40° F. The climate is rather changeable, and rapid 
falls of temperature are not uncommon. Violent storms occur 
in spring and autumn, and the rainfall, including snow, amounts 
to 35 in. a year. Vienna has one of the best supplies of 
drinking water of any European capital. The water is brought 
by an aqueduct direct from the Alps, viz. from the Schnec- 
berg, a distance of nearly 60 ra. to the south-west. These 
gsagnincent waterworks were opened in 1873, *&<* their sanitary 



influence was soon felt, in the almost complete, disappearance 
of typhoid fever, which had numerous victims before. 

Great enlargements, by tapping new sources of supply, were 
made in 1691-93, while since 1902 works have been in progress 
for bringing a new supply of pure water from the region 01 the 
Salza, a distance of nearly 150 m. Another sanitary work of prcat 
importance was the improvement carried out in the drainage 
system, and the regulation of the river Wien. This river, which, 
at ordinary times, was little more than an ill-smelling brook at one 
side of an immense bed, was occasionally converted into a formid- 
able and destructive torrent. Now halt the bed of the river has 
been walled over for the metropolitan railway, while the other half 
has been deepened, and the portion of it within the town has been 
arched over. A beginning was thus made for a new and magnificent 
avenue in the neighbourhood of the Ring-Strasse. 

Population. — In 1800 the population of the old districts was 
131,050; in 1840, 356,870; in 1857, 476,82a (or with suburbs, 
587,235); m z86q, 607,514 (with suburbs, 842,951); in 1880, 
704,756 (with suburbs, 1,090,119); in 1800, town and suburbs, 
1,364,548; and in 1900, 1,662,269, including the garrison of 
26,629 men. Owing to the peculiarities of its situation, tho 
population of Vienna is of a very cosmopolitan and hetero- 
geneous character. Its permanent population (some 45-5% 
are born in the city) is recruited from all parts of Austria, 
and indeed of the entire monarchy. The- German element 
is, of course, the most numerous, but there are also a great 
number of Hungarians, Czechs and other Slavs. 

Previous to the loss of the Italian provinces, a considerable pro- 
portion came from Italy (30,000 in 1859), including artists, members 
of the learned professions and artisans who lot their mark oa 
Viennese art and taste. The Italian colony now numbers about 
2500 (chiefly navvies and masons), in addition to some 1400 Austrian 
subjects of that nationality. At present the largest and most 
regular contributions to the population of Vienna come from the 
Czech provinces of Bohemia and Moravia, next in importance being 
those from Lower Austria and Sty ria. This steady and increasing 
influx of Czechs is gradually infusing a large proportion of Slav 
blood in what Bismarck (in 1 864) described as the German capital 
of a Slav empire. Formerly the Czech labourers, artisans and 
domestic servants who came to Vienna were somewhat ashamed 
of their mother-tongue, and anxious to conceal that evidence ot 
their origin as speedily as possible. The revival of the nationality 
agitation has produced a marked change in this respect. The 
Czech immigrants, attracted to Vienna as to other German towns by 



pnva . 

and places of resort. The consequence is that they take a pride in 
accentuating their national characteristics, a circumstance which 
threatens to develop into a new source of discord. In 1900 the 
population included 1,386,115 persons of German nationality, 
102,974 Czechs and Slovaks, 4346 Poles, 805 Ruthenians, 1329 
Slovenes, 271 Serbo-Croatians, and 1368 Italians, all Austrian 
subjects.' To these should be added 133,144 Hungarians, 21,733 
natives of Germany (3782 less than in lofo), 2506 natives of Italy, 
1703 Russians, 11 76 French, 1643 Swiss, &c. Of this heterogeneous 
population 1,461,891 were Roman Catholics, the Jews coming next 
in order with 146,926* Protestants of the Augsburg and Helvetic 
Confessions numbered 54*364; members of the Church of England, 
490; Old Catholics, 975; members of the Greek Orthodox Church, 
3674; Greek Catholics, 2521 ; and Mahommedans, 889. 

As a general rule, the Viennese are gay, pleasure-loving and 
genial The Viennese women are justly celebrated for their 
beauty and elegance; and dressing as a fine art is cultivated 
here with almost as great success as in Paris. As a rule, the 
Viennese are passionately fond of dancing; and the city of 
Strauss, J. F.K.Lanncr (1801-1843) a&d J. Gungl (18x0-1889) 
gives name to a "school" of waits and other dance music. 
Opera, especially in its lighter form, flourishes, and the actors 
of Vienna maintain with success a traditional reputation 
of no mean .order. Its chief place in the history of art 
Vienna owes to its musicians, among whom are counted 
Haydn, Mozart, Beethoven and Schubert. The Viennese 
school of painting is of modern origin; but some of its members, 
for instance, Hans Makart ( 1840-2884), have acquired a European 
reputation. 

Trade.— Vienna is the most important commercial and Industrial 
centre of Austria. For a long time the Austrian government, by 
failing to keep the Danube m a proper state for navigation, let 
slip the opportunity of making the city the great jDanubian 



VIENNA, CONGRESS OP 



53 



its geographical position entitles it to be. 
daring the bat quarter of the 19th century active steps were taken 



But 

m _ w .taken 

to loiter the economic interests of the city, 1*he regulation 
el the Danube, mentioned above, the conversion of the entire 
Daaabe Canal into a harbour, {he construction of the navigable 
canal Oanobe-Merch-Oder— all gave a new impetus to the trade of 
Vienna. The fast-growing activity of the port of Trieste and the 
sew and shorter railway line constructed between it and Vienna 
also cootribttte to the same effect. Vienna carries on an extensive 
trade in corn, flour, cattle, wine, sugar and a large variety of manu 1 
Uc ta ned articles. Besides the Danube it is served by an extensive 
set of railways, which radiate from here to every part of the empire. 
The staple productions are machinery, railway engines and car- 
riages, steel, tin and bronze wares, pottery, bent and carved wood 
farmtase, textfles and chemicals. In the number and variety of 
its l umber and other fancy goods Vienna rivals Paris, and a also 
leoowned for ha manufacture of jewelry and articles of precious 
metals, •kjets d'art, musical instruments, physical chemicals and 
optical instruments, and artistic products generally. Its articles 
of clothing, silk goods and millinery also enjoy a great reputation 
far the taste with which they are manufactured. Books, artistic 
publications, paper and beer are amongst the other principal 
products. The building trade and its allied trades are also active. 

History. — For several centuries Vienna filled an important 
role as the most advanced bulwark, of Western civilization and 
Christianity against the Turks, for during the whole of the 
anodic ages Hungary practically retained its Asiatic character. 
The story of Vienna begins in the earliest years of the Christian 
era, with the seizure of the Celtic settlement of Vindomina by 
the Romans, who changed its name to Vindobona, and estab- 
lished a fortified camp here to command the Danube and protect 
the northern frontier of the empire. The fortress grew in 
anportaoce, and was afterwards made a munidpium; and here 
Marcos Anrelins died in 180. On the decline of the Roman 

Vindobona became the prey of successive barbarian 
Att3a and his Huns wen among the temporary 
I the place <sth century), and in the following century 
it came into the possess i on of the Avars, after which its name 
sKsappeais from history until towards the dose of the 8th century, 
when Charkmagne expelled the Avars and made the district 
between the Enns and the Wiener Wald the boundary of his 
empire. In the time of Otho IL (976) this " East Mark " 
{Os*ss«rk, Oestenekh, Austria) was granted in fief to the Baben- 
fcexaera, and in fte reign of Frederick Barbarossa (1x56) it was 
advanced to the rank of a duchy. There is no certain record 
that the site of Vindobona was occupied at the time of the 
lorntation of the Ostmark, though many considerations make 
e\ probable. It is not likely that the Avars, living in their 
"ring 9 encaunpments, destroyed the Roman munidpium; 
sad Bees, the Hungarian name for Vienna to this day, is sus- 
ceptible of a, Slavonic interpretation only, and would seem to 
"»^if> that the site had been occupied in Slavonic times. The 
hvnssamt mention of " Wiene " in the oldest extant version of 
the dfiktimmimtini points in the same direction. Passing over 
a ckMbtxni mention of " Vwienni " in the annals of 1030, we 
had the M crritas'* of Vienna mentioned in a document of 
11 jo, and in 1156 it became the capital and residence of Duke 
P*j- fr*» J aa oai irg o tt . In 1237 Vienna received a charter of 
freed om from Frederick II., confirmed in 1247. In the time 
of the 1 1 midi ■ Vienna increased so rapidly, in consequence of 
the txamc that flowed through it, that in the days of Ottacar II. 
of llnlst mil (MSi-76), the successor of the Babenbergers, it had 
attained the dimrnsiops of the present inner town. A new era 
of power and splendour begins in 1*76, when it became the 
<apatal of the Hahsborg dynasty, after the defeat of Ottacar 
by wwAJpii of Habsburg. From this time on it has shared the 

1 of the house of Austria. In 1477 Vienna was besieged 
r by the Hungarians, and in 1485 it was taken by 
Matthew Corviaoa. Of mom importance were the two sieges 
by the Turks (15*0 and 1683), when the city was saved on the 
ant imsisinH by the gaHant defence of Count Nidas von Salm 
fLtm-ssio), and on the second by Rudiger von Starhemberg 
(iosS-xtox), who held out until the arrival of the Poles and 
Gerawmo under John Sobieski of Poland. The suburbs, however, 
were dLslw i cd on both occasions. In 1805* end again in 1800, 
Vienna was for a short time occupied by the French. In 18 14-1 $ 



ft was the meeting-place of the congress which settled the political 
affairs of Europe after the overthrow of Napoleon. In 1848 the 
city was for a time in the hands of the revolutionary party; but it 
was bombarded by the imperial forces and compelled to surrender 
on 30th October of the same year. Vienna was not occupied by 
the Prussians in the war of 1866, but the Invaders marched to 
within sight of its towers. In 1873 a great international exhibi- 
tion took place here. 

While Berlin and Budapest have made the most rapid progr e s s 
of all European dries, having multiplied their population by 
nine in the period 1800-90, Vienna— even including the extensive 
annexations of 1892— only increased sevenfold. Many causes 
conspired to this end, but most of them date from the years 1850, 
1866 and 1867. The combined effect of these successive blows, 
aggravated by the long period of decentralizing policy from 
Taaffe to Badeni, is still felt in the Kaiserstadt. The gaiety 
of Vienna had for centuries depended on the brilliancy of its) 
court, recruited from all parts of Europe, induding the nobility 
of the whole empire, and on its musical, light-hearted and con- 
tented population. Even before it fell from its high estate as the 
social centre of the Germari-speakmg world, it had suffered 
severdy by the crushing defeats of 1850 and the consequent exodus 
of the Austrian nobles. These were held responsible for the 
misfortunes of the army, and to escape the atmosphere of 
popular odium retired to their country seats and the provincial 
capitals. They have never since made Vienna their home to 
the same extent as before. The change thus begun was con* 
firmed by the exrhision of Austria from the German Cooiedcra. 
tion and the restoration of her Constitution to Hungary, events 
which gave an immense impetus to the two rival capitals. 
Thus within eight years the range of territory from which 
Vienna drew its former throngs of wealthy pleasure-seeking 
visitors and more or less permanent inhabit&nts— Italian, 
German and Hungarian-«was enormously restricted. Since then 
Vienna has benefited largely by the enlightened efforts of its 
dtizens and the exceptional opportunities afforded by the 
removal of the fortifications. But a decline of its importance, 
similar to that within the larger sphere which it influenced 
prior to 1850, has continued uninterruptedly within the Hahs* 
burg dominions up to the present day. Its commercial classes 
constantly complain of the increasing competition of the 
provinces, and of the progressive industrial emancipation of 
Hungary. The efforts of the Hungarians to complete their 
social and economic, no less than their political, emandpation 
from Austria and Vienna have been unremittingly pursued. 
The formal recognition of Budapest as a royal residence and 
capital in 1892, and the appointment of independent Hungarian 
court functionaries in November 1893, mark new stages in its 
progress. It would no longer be correct to speak of Vienna 
as the capital of the dual monarchy. It merely shares that 
distinction with Budapest. 

Btbxioosapht.— K. von Lfltsow and L. Tischter, Wiener 
Neubauten (6 vols., Wien, 1889-97); M. Bermann, AU-nnd 
Nenwien (and ed., Wien, 1903), edited by Schimmer; E. Guglia, 
Gtschukle der Sladt Wien (Wien, 1892) ; H. Zimmcrmann, Geschuhte 
der Stadl Wien fe vols., Wien, 1897-1900); Hickmann, Wien im 
Ip Jahrhundert (Wien, 1003): Wien, 1848-88, published by the 
Vienna corporation ; Staitshsckes Jakrbuch der Siadi Wien, annually 
since 1883; Gtschidde der Stadl Wien, published by the Vienna 
Altertkumnerein since 1897. 

VIENNA, CONGRESS OP (18x4-1815). The fall of Napoleon 
was only achieved by the creation of a special alliance between 
Great Britain, Austria, Russia and Prussia. By the Treaty of 
Cheumont of March xo, 18x4, these four powers bound them- 
selves together in a bond which was not to be dissolved when 
peace was conduded. When Napoleon had been beaten, 
France conceded to these allies by a secret article of the first 
Treaty of Paris of May 30, 1814, the disposition of all countries 
which Napoleon's fall had freed from French suzerainty. This 
stupendous task was reserved for a general congress, and it 
was agreed to meet at Vienna. The visit of the allied sovereigns 
to England and the pressing engagements of the emperor 
Alexander and Lord CasUereagh delayed the congress until the 



54 



VIENNA, CONGRESS OF 



Autumn, when all Europe sent its representatives to accept the 
hospitality of the impoverished but magnificent Austrian court. 

Metternich, though he had not yet completely established 
his position, acted as chief Austrian representative, and he was 
naturally in his capacity as host the president of the congress. 
Friedrich v. Genta acted as secretary both to him and the congress 
and did much of the routine work. Alexander of Russia 
directed his own diplomacy, and round him he had gathered a 
brilliant body of men who could express but not control their 
master's desires. Of these the chief were foreigners, according 
to the traditions of Russian diplomacy. Capo d'Istria, Nessel- 
rode, Stein, Poxso di Borgo were perhaps the best men in 
Europe to manage the Russian policy, while Czartoriski repre- 
sented at the imperial court the hope of Polish nationality. 
Frederick William III. of Prussia was a weaker character and, 
as will be seen, his policy was largely determined by his ally. 
Prince von Hardenberg, who by no means shared all the views 
of his master but was incapacitated by his growing infirmities, 
was first Prussian plenipotentiary, and assisting him was Baron 
von Humboldt. Great Britain was represented by Lord Castle* 
leagh, and under him were the British diplomats who had been 
attached to the foreign armies since 18x3, Clancarty, Stewart 
and Cathcart. Castlereagh brought with him decided views, 
which however were not altogether those of his cabinet, and 
his position was weakened by the fact that Great Britain was 
still at war with the United States, and that public opinion at 
home cared for little but the abolition of the slave trade. When 
parliamentary duties called Castlereagh home in February 1815, 
the duke of Wellington filled his place with adequate dignity 
and statesmanship until the war broke out. 
' France sent Prince Talleyrand to conduct her difficult affairs. 
No other man was so well fitted for the task of maintaining 
the interests of a defeated country. His rare diplomatic skill 
- and supreme intellectual endowments were to enable him to 
play a deciding part in the coming congress. All the minor 
powers of Europe were represented, for all felt that their in- 
terests were at stake in the coming settlement. Gathered there 
also were a host of publicists, secretaries and courtiers, and 
never before had Europe witnessed such a collection of rank 
and talent. From the first the social side of the congress im- 
pressed observers with its wealth and variety, nor did the 
statesmen disdain to use the dining-table or the ballroom as 
the instruments of their diplomacy. 

All Europe awaited with eager expectation the results of so 
great an assembly. The fate of Poland and Saxony hung in 
the balance; Germany awaited an entirely new reorganization; 
Italy was again ready for dismemberment; rumours went that 
even the pope and the sultan might be largely affected. Some 
there were who hoped that so great an opportunity would not 
J>e lost, but that the statesmen would initiate such measures 
of international disarmament as would perpetuate the blessings 
of that peace which Europe was again enjoying after twenty 
years of warfare. 

It was not long, however, before the allies displayed their 
intention of keeping the management of affairs entirely in their 
own hands. At an informal meeting on the 2 and of September 
the four great powers agreed that all subjects of general interest 
were to be settled by a committee consisting of Austria, Russia, 
Prussia and Great Britain together with France and Spain. 
At the same time, however, it was decided by a secret protocol 
that the four powers should first settle among themselves the 
distribution of the conquered territories, and that France and 
Spain should only be consulted when their final decision was 
announced. 

This was the situation which TaDeyrand had to face when 
he arrived on the 24th of September. His first step when he 
was admitted to the European committee, which was in the 
plans of the allies to act so colourless a part, was to ignore the 
position of the Four and to assert that only the congress as a 
whole could give the committee full powers. This would have 
meant an almost indefinite delay, for how was it possible 
' -net right* of all the different states to a 



voice in affairs? After some heated discussion a compromise 
was arrived at. The opening of the congress was postponed, 
and Sweden and Portugal were added to the European com* 
mittee, but the Four still persisted in the informal meetings which 
were to decide the important questions. Meanwhile separate 
committees were formed for the discussion of special problems. 
Thus a special committee was appointed consisting of the five 
German powers to discuss the constitution which was to replace 
the Holy Roman Empire, another to settle that of Switzerland, 
and others for other minor questions. Talleyrand had, how- 
ever, already shaken the position of the allies. He had posed 
as the defender of the public rights of Europe and won to his 
side the smaller powers and much of the public opinion of Europe, 
while the allies were beginning to be regarded more in the light 
of rapacious conquerors than as disinterested defenders of the 
liberties of Europe. 

Had the Four remained united in their views they would 
still have been irresistible. But they were gradually dividing 
into two unreconcilable parties upon the Saxon-Polish question. 
Alexander, exaggerating the part he had played in the final 
struggle, and with some vague idea of nationality in his brain, 
demanded that the whole of Poland should be added to the 
Russian dominions. Austria was to be compensated in Italy, 
while Prussia was to receive the whole of Saxony, whose unfor- 
tunate monarch had been the most faithful of Napoleon's vassals. 

It was Castlereagh that led the opposition to these almost 
peremptory demands of Alexander. A true disciple of Pitt, 
he came to the congress with an overwhelming distrust of the 
growing power of Russia, which was only second to his hatred 
of revolutionary France. He considered that the equilibrium 
of Europe would be irretrievably upset were the Russian 
boundaries to be pushed into the heart of Germany. Thus 
while willing, even anxious that Prussia should receive Saxony, 
in order that she might be strong to meet the.danger from the 
East, he was prepared to go to any lengths to resist the claims 
of Russia. For Austria Saxony was really of more vital interest 
than Poland, but Castlereagh, despite a vigorous resistance 
from a section of the Austrian court, was able to win Metternich 
over to his views. He hoped to gain Prussia also to bis side, 
and by uniting the German powers to force Alexander to retire 
from the position he had so uncompromisingly laid down. 
With the Prussian statesmen he had some success, but he could 
make no impression on Frederick William. Alexander used to 
the utmost that influence over the mind of the Prussian monarch 
which he had been preparing since the beginning of 1613. 
Against Castlereagh he entered the lists personally, and memor- 
andum after memorandum was exchanged. Despite the warning 
letters of the British cabinet which, dismayed at the long con* 
tinuance of the American War, counselled caution on a question 
in which England had no immediate interest, Castlereagh 
yielded no inch of his ground. But Metternich wavered on the 
question of Saxony, and December saw the allies hopelessly 
at difference. It seemed by no means unlikely that the armies 
which had conquered Napoleon would soon be engaged in 
conflict with one another. 

It was Talleyrand's opportunity. As Castlereagh and Metter- 
nich began to regard the position as hopeless they began to 
look upon him as a possible ally. Talleyrand had constantly 
defended the rights of France's old ally Saxony in the name 
of the principle which his master Louis XVIII. represented. 
His passionate appeal on behalf of "legitimacy" was par- 
ticularly adapted to the necessities of the situation. Alex* 
ander was driven into transports of rage by this championship 
of the ancien rSfim* by one who had been a servant of its 
bitterest foe. But Castlereagh saw that war could only be 
avoided if one party was made stronger than the other. The 
reluctant consent of the British cabinet was obtained and 
Talleyrand was approached as an equal. He came boldly to 
the front in the middle of December as the champion of Saxony: 
and, as Russia and Prussia were still obstinate, Metternich 
and Castlereagh demanded the admission of France to the 
secret council This was refused, and on the 3rd of January 



VIENNE 



55 



if IS a secret treaty of defensive alliance was signed between 
France, Austria and Great Britain. For some time affairs 
bang m toe balance, but Alexander could not mistake the lone 
of ais opponents. Gradually a compromise was arranged, and 
by tbe end of the. month all danger was past. Eventually 
Austria and Prussia retained most of their Polish dominions, 
and the latter power only received about two-fifths of Saxony. 
Tbe rest of Poland was incorporated as a separate kingdom in 
the Russian dominions with a promise of a constitution of its 
own. Talleyrand had rescued France from its humiliating 
position, and set it as an equal by the side of the allies. Hence- 
forward he made no effort for the rights of the whole congress. 

Meanwhile other affairs had been progressing more bar- 
— » ■*— *y under the direction of special committees, which 
nH— V representatives of the powers specially interested. 
SvitserJand was given a constitution which led it in the direc- 
tion of its later federalism. In Italy Austria retained her hold 
on Lombexdy and Venetia, Genoa was assigned to the kingdom 
of Sardinia, while Parma went to Marie Louise, the legitimate 
hear, Carlo Lndivico, having to be content with the reversion 
after her death, the congress meanwhile assigning Lucca to 
ban as & duchy; the claims of the young Napoleon to succeed 
his mot h er in Parma were only destroyed by the efforts of 
France aad England- The other petty monarchs were restored, 
and Marat's rash attempt* after Napoleon's return from Elba, 
to sake himself king of united Italy, gave back Naples to the 
Bourbons, an event which would have been brought about 
in any case in the course of the next few years (see Mokat, 
Jaacmi). Holland was confirmed in the possession of 
Belgians and Luxemburg, Limburg and Liege were added to her 

<* t.^w Sweden, who had sacrificed Finland to Russia, 

obtained Norway. 

German affairs, however, proved too complicated f of complete 
somtion. It was difficult enough to deride the claims of the 
states in the scramble for territory. Eventually, however, by 
methods of compromise, this was adjusted fairly satisfactorily. 
The greater states gained largely, especially Prussia, who was 
given large accessions of territory on the Rhine, partly as a 
compensat ion for her disappointment in the matter of Saxony, 
partly that she might act as a bulwark against France. Some 
«KT*— bet we en Baden and Bavaria remained unsettled, and 
many questions arising out of the new federal constitution of 
Germany, which had been hurriedly patched together under 
the mfloence of the news of Napoleon's return,' had to be post- 
poned for farther discussion, and were not settled until the 
Final Act agreed upon by the conference of German statesmen 
at Vienna in 1&21. 

Other more general objects, such as the free navigation of 
1 rivers and the regulation of the rights of precedence 
I dipl om atists (see Diplomacy), were managed with much 
Gastlereagh's great efforts were rewarded by a dc- 
t that tbe slave trade was to be abolished, though each 
r was left free to fix such a date as was most convenient 
to itseK. Tbe Final Act, embodying all the separate treaties, 
was signed on the oth of June 1815, a few days before tbe battle 
of Waterloo*. 

Before tbe work of the congress was completed Napoleon 
was again at? Paris, and the closing stages were hurried and ill- 
^,. ;.»»■■ d One negotiation of supreme importance was cut 
short for this reason. Castkreagn had left Vienna with the 
lope that the powers would solemnly guarantee their territorial 
settlement and promise to make collective war on whoever 
dared U» disturb it. This guarantee was to include the Otto- 
saan doenmions, in whose interests, indeed, it had been brought 
forward- Alexander made no objection provided that the 
Porte would submit all outstanding claims to arbitration. The 
distance of Constantinople from Vienna and the obstinacy of 
the sultan would probably have prevented a settlement, but the 
retarn of Napoleon rendered all such proposals almost absurd, 
and the scheme was dropped. 

Twos the congress of Vienna failed to institute any new 
tystem for securing the stability of the European polity, nor did 




it recognise those new forces of liberty and nationality which 
had really caused Napoleon's downfall Following the tradi- 
tion of all preceding congresses, it was mainly a scramble for 
territory and power. Territories were distributed among the 
powers with no consideration for the feelings of their in- 
habitants, and in general the right of the strongest prevailed. 
For this reason it has often met with a condemnation that has 
perhaps been unmerited. It is true that the map of Europe 
shows to-day but little trace of its influence; but much of its 
work was determined by conditions over which statesmen had 
little control. Europe was not ready for the recognition of 
nationality and liberalism. What it wanted most of all was 
peace, and by establishing something like a territorial equili- 
brium the congress did much to win that breathing space which 
was the cardinal need of alL 

BiBLiocRArHY.— Tbe treaties and acts of the congress may be 
consulted in J. L. Kluber, Aden des Wiener Congresses (9 vols.)* 
Comte d'Angeherg, Le Conpjts it Vienne (4 vols.). British and 
Foreirn Stale Papers, vol. ii., gives some of the documents in English, 
and trie Final Act is found in many collections. For the diplomacy. 
Wellington's Supplementary Despatches, vols. ix. and x.. Castle- 
reagh's Letters ana Despatches, vol. x., Talleyrand's Memoirs, vols, 
ii. and iii.. the works of Gentz (see Gsntz, F. Von) and the Memoirs 
of Hardcnberg and Crartoryski are very useful. Other records 
left by contempor a ries are those of MQnster, D. D. de Pradt, J. do 
Maistre and Gagern. The comte A. de La Garde-Chambonas, 
Souvenirs du contrts de Vienne (cd. with introduction and note by 
Comte Fleury, Paris, 1901 ), gives an interesting picture of the 
congress from its personal and social side. Ol later works a great 
many historians both of the Napoleonic era and of the 19th century 
include chapters on the congress; Sorei, L' Europe et la Rtodu- 
tion trancaise, voL viiL. and the various volumes of the Staaten- 
Gesckichte der Neuesten Zeit give much information. In English the 
best account is that by Dr A. W. Ward in chs. xix. and xxi. 
of vol. ix. of the Cambridp Modem History (1906), which gives 
also a fairly complete bibliography, pp. 867-475. There is also a 
list of authorities in Lavisse and Kambaud's ffistmre GtniraU, 
vol. r. (CK. W.) 

V1EHNE, a river of central France, a left-hand' tributary 
of the Loire, watering the departments of Correse, Haute- 
Vienne, Charente, Vienne and Indre-et-Loire. Length, 2x9 m.; 
area of basin, 8286 sq. m. Rising on the plateau of Milkvaches* 
14 m. N.W. of Ussd (department of Corrgse) at a height of 
3789 ft., the Vienne flows westward, between the highlands 
of Limousin on the south and the plateau of Gentioux and the 
Blond mountains on the north. Tbe first large town on its 
banks is Limoges (Haute-Vienne), below its confluence with 
tbe Taurion: in this part of its course tbe river supplies motive 
power to paper-mills and other factories. The river next 
reaches St Junien, below which it turns abruptly northwards 
to Confolens (Charente). Flowing through a picturesque and 
now wider valley, and passing in its course the churches and 
chateaux of Chauvigny, the river proceeds to the confluence 
of the Clain just above Chatdlerault. Below that town it 
receives the Creuse (rising on the plateau of Mfltevaches and 
reaching the Vienne after a course of 159 m.), and turns north- 
west, uniting with the Loire below the historic town of Cbinon. 
There is little river-traffic on the Vienne, and that only below 
its confluence with the Creuse (30 m.). 

VHMNB, a department of west-central France, formed in 
1700 out of Poitou (four-fifths of its present area), Touraine 
(one-seventh) and Berry, and bounded by Deux-Sevres on the 
W., Charente on the S., Haute-Vienne on the S.E., Indre on 
the E., Indre-et-Loire on the N.E. and N., and Malne-et-Loire 
on the N.W. Pop. (1906) 333,621. Area, 27x9 sq. m. The 
river Vienne, which gives its name to the department, with 
its tributaries the Creuse (subtributary the Gartempe) 6n the 
east and the Clain on the west, flows from south to north. The 
general slope of the department is In the same direction, the 
highest point (764 ft.) being in the south-east and the lowest 
(115 ft.) at the junction of the Vienne and the Creuse. In 
the south the Charente, on the north-west the Dive, and in 
tbe west some streams belonging to the basin of the Scvre- 
Niortaise drain small portions of the department. The average 
temperature is 54° F. The prevailing winds are from the 
south-west and west. The annual rainfall is 24 in. 



56 



VIENNE— VIENNE, COUNCIL OF 



Wheat, oats and barley are the principal cereals cultivated, 
other important crops being lucerne, sainfoin, clover, mangel- 
wurzel* and potatoes. Colza and hemp are grown to a limited 
extent. The district of Poitiers grows good red wine, and the white 
wine of Trois-Moutiers near Loudun is well known. The breeding 
of live stock in all its branches is fairly active. Poitou is famous for 
its mules, and the geese and turkeys of the department are highly 
esteemed. Oak, ash, alder and birch are the principal forest trees, 
and among the fruit trees are the chestnut, walnut and almond. 
Freestone is quarried. The most important industrial establish* 
ments are the national arms manufactory at Chatellerault and the 
cutlery works near that town. In other parts of the department are 
wool'Spuuung mills, hemp-spinning mills, manufactories of serges 
aod coarse cloth, vinegar, candles, goose and goat skins, leather, 
tiles and pottery, paper-works, breweries, distilleries, lime-kilns 
and numerous Sour-nulls. Corn, wine, brandy, vegetables, fruit, 
chestnuts, fodder, cattle, stone, cutlenr, arms and dressed hides are 
exported; butcher's beasts, colonial produce and coals are im- 
ported. The department is served by the Ouest-Etat and Orleans 
railways. Vienne forms part of the diocese of Poitiers, has its 
court of appeal and educational centre at Poitiers, and belongs 
to the region of the IX. army corps. The capital is Poitiers, and 
the department is divided tor purposes of administration into 
5 arrondissements (Poitiers, Chatellerault, Civray, Loudun, Mont- 
morillon), 31 cantons and 300 communes. The more noteworthy 
towns are Poitiers, Chatellerault, Loudun, Montmorillon and Chau- 
vigny, these being separately treated. Other places of interest 
are St Maurice, Civray and St Savin, which have Romanesque 
churches, the abbey church of St Savin being remarkable for its 
mural paintings; Ltgug6, with an abbey church of the 15th and 16th 
centuries; Charroux, which has a Romanesque octagonal tower and 
other remains of a famous abbey : and Sanxay, near which there are 
ruins of a theatre and other Gallo-Roman remains. Vienne is rich 
in megalithic monuments. 

VIENNE, the chief town of an arrondissement of the depart- 
ment of the Isere, France. Historically the first, it is by 
population (74,6x9 in igoi) the second city of the department 
of the Isere, after Grenoble; and the third, after Valence, of 
the Dauphine, It is situated on the left bank of the Rhone 
just below the junction of the Gere with the Rhone, and about 
20 m. by rail S. of Lyons. On the N., E. and S. the town 
is sheltered by low hills, the Rhone flowing along- its western 
side. Its site is an immense mass of ancient dSbris, which is 
constantly yielding interesting antiquities. On the bank of 
the Gere are traces of the ramparts of the old Roman city, 
and on the Mont Pipet (E. of the town) are the remains of an 
amphitheatre, while the ruined castle there was built in the 
13th century on Roman substructures. Several of the ancient 
aqueducts (one only is now actually in use) are stOl to be seen, 
while in the neighbourhood of the dty some bits of the old 
Roman roads may still be found. 

The streets of the town are narrow and tortuous, but it possesses 
two Roman monuments of the first class. One is the temple of 
Augusta and Livia, a rectangular building of the Corinthian order, 
erected by the emperor Claudius, and inferior only to the Maison 
Carroe at Nfmes. From the 5th century to 1793 ' lt wa * a church 
(Notre Dame de Vie), and the " festival of reason " was celebrated 
in it at the time of the Revolution. The other, in the more modern 
part of the town, is the Plan de PAintiUe, a truncated quadrangular 
pyramid about 52 ft. in height and resting on a portico with four 
arches. Many theories have been advanced as to what this singular 
structure really was (some imagine that it was the tomb of Pontius 
Pilatus. who, according to the legend, died at Vienne), but it is now 
generally believed to have been part of the spina of a large circus, 
the outlines of which have been traced. The church of St Peter 
belonged to an ancient Benedictine abbey and was rebuilt in the 
9th century. It is in the earliest Romanesque style, and forms 
a basilica, with tall square piers, reminding one of Lucca, while 
the two ranges of windows in the aisles, with their coupled marble 
columns, recall Ravenna from within and the Basse (Euvre of 
Beauvais from without. The porch is in the earliest Romanesque 
style. This church has of late years been completely restored, and 
since 1895 shelters the magnificent Must* Lopidaire (formerly housed 
in the temple of Augusta and Livia). The former cathedral church 



(primatial as well as metropolitan) of St Maurice contains some of 
t forms of the true N. Gothic, and was constructed at 



the best f 



periods between 105a and 1533. It is a basilica, with three aisles, 
• "U^fJ"^ transepts. UW315 ft. in length. 118 ft. wide and 80 
in height .The 'most striking portion is the W. front (1533). which 
rises majestically from a terrace overhanging the Rhone. But the 
IPS*!* JE*!" 1 ^ 11 ln J ur «J oy the Protestants in 1562. The church 
of St Andr* W Bas was the church of a second Benedictine monas- 
toy *-5r.il a * er thc chftpel °l the car! ' er *"»** of Provence. It 
was rebuilt in 1132, In the later Romanesque style. The town 
horary and art museum are now in the corn hall, which baa been 



reconstructed for that purpose. A suspension bridge leads from Use 
city to the right bank of the Rhone, where the industrial quarter 
of Ste Colombo now occupies part of the ancient city. Here is a 
tower, built in 1349 by Philip of Valois to defend the French bank 
of the Rhone, as distinguished from the left bank, which, as part of 
the kingdom of Provence, was dependent on the Holy Roman 
Empire. This state of things is also recalled by the name of the 
village, St Remain en Gal, to the N.W. of Ste Colombe. 

The Gere supplies the motive power to numerous factories. 
The most important are those which produce cloth (about 30 
factories, turning out daily about 15,000 yds. of cloth). There are 
numerous other industrial establishments (paper mills, iron foundries, 
brick works, refining furnaces, &c.). 

Vienne was originally the capital of the Allobroges, and 
became a Roman colony about 47 B.C. under Caesar, who 
embellished and fortified it- A litUe later these colonists were 
expelled by the Allobroges; the exiles then founded the colony 
of Lyons (Lugdunum). It was not till the days of Augustus 
and Tiberius that Vienne regained all its former privileges as' a 
Roman colony. Later it became thc capital of the Provincia 
Viennensis. In 257 Postumus was proclaimed emperor here* 
and for a few years from that day onwards Vienne was the 
capital of a short-lived provincial empire. It is said to have 
been converted to Christianity by Crescens, the disciple of 
St Paul. Certainly there were Christians here in 177, as in the 
Greek letter (preserved to us by Eusebius) addressed at that 
date by the churches of Vienne and Lyons to those of Asia 
and Phrygia mention is made of "the" deacon of Vienne. 
The first bishop certainly known is Verus, who was present at 
the Council of Aries in 314. About 450 Vienne became an 
archbishopric and continued one till 1790, when the see was 
suppressed. The archbishops disputed with those of Lyons 
the title of " Primate of All the Gauls." Vienne was con- 
quered by the Burgundians in 438, and in 534 was taken by the 
Franks. Sacked* in 558 by the Lombards and in 737 by the 
Saracens, the government of the district was given by Charles 
the Bald in 869 to a certain Count Boso, who in 879 was pre* 
claimed king of Provence, and was buried on his death in 887 
in the cathedral church of St Maurice. Vienne then continued 
to form part of the kingdom of Provence or Aries till in xoja it 
reverted to the Holy Roman Empire. The sovereigns of that 
kingdom, as well as the emperors in the 12th century (in 
particular Frederick Barbarossa in 1153), recognized the rights 
of the archbishops as the rulers (in the name of the emperor) 
of Vienne. But the growing power of the counts of Alboo. 
later Dauphins of the neighbouring county of the Viennois, 
was the cause of many disputes between them and the arch- 
bishops. In 1349 the reigning Dauphin sold his Dauphinl 
to France, but the town of Vienne was not included in this 
sale, and the archbishops did not give up their rights over it to 
France till X449, when it first became French. In 1 311-12 
the fifteenth General Council was held at Vienne. when Qetnent 
V. abolished the order of the Knights Templar. Vienne was 
sacked in 1362 by the Protestants under the baron des Adrets, 
and was held for the Ligue 1590-95, when it was taken in the 
name of Henri IV. by Montmorency. The fortifications were 
demolished between 1589 and 1636. In 1790 the archbishopric 
was abolished, the title " Primate of All the Gauls " being 
attributed to the archbishops of Lyons. Among famous natives 
of Vienne may be mentioned St Julian (jrd century) and 
Nicholas Chorier (1612-1692), the historian of the Deupnint, 
while Gui de Bourgogne, who was archbishop 1090-1 119, became 
pope in 11x9 as CahxtusII. (<L 1124). 

See A. Aflmer et A. de Terrebasse, Inscriptions antiques ef dn 
moyen 6ft de Vienne *w Dauphin* (6 vols., Vienne, 1875-76); CL 
Charvet, Fasies de lavillede Vienne (Vienne. 1869); U. Chevalier, 
Collection des Carttdaires Dauphinois, in vol. i. (Vienne, 1869). 
is that of St Andre* le Bas, and in vol. ii. (1891) a description of that 
of St Maurice; N. Chorier, Recherches sur les antianiUs de la villa 
de Vienne (Vienne, 1658) ; E. A. Freeman. Article in the Saturday 
Review lor Feb. 6, 1875; F. Raymond, Le Guide Vienna** (Troyes, 
1897). (W.A.B.C.) 

VIEftHE, COUNCIL OF. an ecclesiastical council, which in 
the Roman Catholic Church ranks as the fifteenth ecumenical 
synod. .It met from October 16, rjit, to May 6, 1312, under 



VIERGE— VIETA 



57 



the p r es i d ency of Pope Clement V. The transference of the 
Ci.ru. from Rome to Avignon (1309) had brought the papacy 
u.ier the influence of the French crown; and this position 
(*biip the Fair of France now endeavoured to utilise by de» 
Rindnis from the pope the dissolution of the powerful and 
v-ahhy order of the Temple, together with the introduction 
of a trial for heresy against the late Pope Boniface VOL To 
evade the second claim, Clement gave way on the first. Legal 
tvds and acts of violence against the Templars had begun as 
early as the year 1307 (see Teicplais); and the principal 
otrct of trie council was to secure a definite decision on the 
oration of their continuance or abolition. In the committee 
ir-DTjiated for preliminary consultation, one section was for the 
i-sacdiate condemnation of the order, and declined to allow 
•t say opportunity of defence, on the ground that it was now 
<~pcrflaona and simply a source of strife. The majority of 
-j* members, however, regarded the case as non-proven, and 
"•r-ianded that the order should be heard on its own behalf; 
»t Ue at the same time they held that its dissolution was unjustifi- 
isie. Under pressure from the king, who was himself present 
.- Yieane, the pope determined that, as the order gave occasion 
i * -— -**i bat could not be condemned as heretical by a judicial 
r-on'eace (da Jure), it should be abolished per modum provisionie 
."* ordinaJionis apostolicae; in other words, by an administra- 
tive ruling based on considerations of the general welfare. 
T '■ this procedure the council agreed, and on the sand of March 
\-x order of the Temple was suppressed by the bull Vox 
^^tsntir; while further decisions as to the treatment of the 
ccrr and Its possessions followed later. 

In addition to this the discussions announced in the opening 
screen, regarding measures for the reformation of the Church 
iii the protection of her liberties, took place; and a part of 
v Constitutions found in the Clementinum, published in 1317 
' •'- John XXIX, were probably enacted by the council. Still 
.- a impossible to say with certainty what decrees were actually 
P*.«*d at Vienne. Additional decisions were necessitated by 
1* violent disputes which raged within the Franciscan order 
is to the observance of the rules of St Francis of Assist, and 
bf the multitude of subordinate questions arising from this. 
Eesomtiosjt were also adopted on the Beguines and their mode 
< . lie toe Bbgothzs), the control of the hospitals, the institu- 
>« of inscructors In Hebrew, Arabic and Chaldaic at the 
czrarsities, and on numerous details of ecclesiastical discipline 
up! law. 

5r* siaasi. Cotttdio ConeHiarum, vol. xxv.; Hefele, CondKen- 
f-xiacaw, woi. vs. pp. 53*M- 

DAMIEL (1851-1904), Spanish painter and 

as born in Madrid in 1851. He went to Paris 

1*67 to seek his fortune, fired by the vivid energy of his 

*dttal te mpe r a ment. He became attached to the Monde 

s~ut*# in 1870, just before the Franco-Prussian War broke out, 

i--£. like other artists in the paper, came under the powerful 

-_r ^nce of Edmond Morin, the first newspaper draughtsman 

= France who sought to impart to drawings for journals the 

— iracter of a work of art. Yierge's earlier drawings, therefore, 

■_-aae greatly of Morin's style; such are, " The Shooting in 

o Rafdeb Pair," "The Place d'Armes at Versailles," 

7>k Loan," "The Great School-Fete of Lyons," "Anni- 

-*rsary of the Fight of Aydes" and " Souvenir of Coulmiers.'* 

•r^e lost no time in proving the extraordinary vigour and 

.-^seaqaedess of his art. Apart from the contribution of his 

#u original work, he was required by his paper to redraw upon 

•_* wood, for the engraver, the sketches sent in by artist-corre- 

Tmcdenta, such as Luc OUivier Merson in Rome and Samuel 

-nabsrta (Yierge's brother) in Spain. From 1871 to 1878 

£« ^drndaahty became more and more pron ou nced, and he 

7rAxxa\ among Us best-known drawings, "Christmas in 

^n.V -The Republican Meeting m Trafalgar Square/' 

\:tack on a Train m Andalusia," " Feast of St Rosalia in 

?afem>," " In the Jardin d'Acclimatation," " The Burning of 

•sr library of the Escuriai, 1871," " Grasshopper! in Algiers/** 

in Sicfly/' " Night Fete in Constantinople, *" 



"Episode of the Civil War in Spain/' "Marriage of the 
King of Spain" and "The Bull Fight." About this time 
he illustrated with remarkable dash and skill Victor Hugo's 
Annie terrible (Michel Levy, 1874, and Hugues, 1879), " 1813 " 
(Hugues, 1877) and Los Miserable* (1882). His masterpiece 
of illustration is Micheiet's History of France (1876), consist- 
ing of 26 volumes containing 1000 drawings. In 1879 he was 
drawing for La Vie mederne, and then proceeded to illustrate 
Pablo de Segovia* While engaged upon this work he was 
attacked by paralysis in the right arm, but with characteristic 
energy and courage he set himself to acquire the necessary skill 
in drawing with the left, and calmly proceeded with the illus- 
trations to the book. In 1891 he illustrated UEspaguAe, 
by Bergerat, and in 1895 Le Cabaret des trois verhu. In 1808 
he held, at the Penetan Gallery in Paris, an exhibition of his 
drawings for Chateaubriand's be Dernier Abeneerage (" The 
Last of the Abencerrages "), and in the following year a com- 
prehensive exhibition of his work (including the illustrations 
to Don Quixote) at the Art Nouveau Gallery, also in Paris. In 
z8o8 Vierge contributed to V Image, a magazine devoted to the 
encouragement of engraving upon wood; and two years later, 
at the International Exhibition at Paris, he was awarded a 
grand prix. In 190a he exhibited at the New Salon a scene 
from the Franco-Prussian War. He died at Boulogne-sur- 
Seine in May 1004. 
See Roger Marx, Vintage (1898): Blraldi, La Cravure an zo» 

V1KBSEX, a town of Germany, in the Prussian Rhine pro- 
vince, xi m. by rail S.W. from Crefeld, and at the junction of 
lines to MfLnchen-Gladbach, Venlo, &c. Pop. (1905) 27,577. It 
has an evangelical and four Roman Catholic churches, among 
the latter the handsome parish church dating from the 15th 
century, and various educational establishments. Viersen is 
one of the chief seats in the lower Rhine country for the manu- 
facture of velvets, silks (especially umbrella covers) and plush. 

VIERZON, a town of central France, in the department of 
Cher, so m. N.W. of Bourges by rail The Cher and the Yevre 
unite at the foot of the lull on which 'lie Vierzon-VQle (pop. 
(1906) town. 11,812) and Vicrxon- Village (pop. town, 2026; 
commune, 97x0); Vierxon-Bourgncuf (pop. town, 1482) is on 
the left bank of the Cher. The town has a port on the canal of 
Berry and is an important junction on the Orleans railway; 
there are several large manufactories for the production of 
agricultural ma c hines, also foundries, porcelain, brick and tile 
works and glass works. A technical school of mechanics and a 
branch of the Bank of France are among the institutions of the 
town. 

VIETA (or ViAtz), FRANCOIS, Seigneu* ob la Bxconifis 
(1540-1603), more generally known as Fianoscus Vieta, 
French mathematician, was born in 1540 at Fontenay-le-Comte, 
in Poitou. According to F. Rittcr, 1 Victa was brought up as 
a Catholic, and died in the same creed; but there can be no 
doubt that he belonged to the Huguenots for several years. 
On the completion of his studies in taw at Poitiers Vieta began 
his career as an advocate in his native town. This he left 
about 1567, and somewhat later we find him at Rennes as a 
councillor of the parlement of Brittany. The religious troubles 
drove him thence, and Rohan, the well-known chief of the 
Huguenots, took him under his special protection. He recom- 
mended him in 1580 as a "mat tie des requites" (master of 
requests); and Henry of Navarre, at the instance of Rohan, 
addressed two letters to Henry HI. of France on the 3rd of 
March and the 26th of April 1585, to obtain Victa's restoration 
to his former office, but without result. After the accession of 
Henry of Navarre to the throne of France, Vieta filled in 1589 
the position of councillor of the parlement at Tours. He 
afterwards became a royal privy councillor, and remained so 
till his death, which took place suddenly at Paris in February 
1603, but in what manner we do not know; Anderson, the 
editor of his scientific writings, speaks only of a " praeceps et 
ixnmaturum autoris fatum." 

\BatteHno Boncempagni (Rome, 1868). vol. I. p. tsj. a. I. 



58 



VIEUXTEMPS— VIGEE-LEBRUN 



We know of one important service rendered by Vieta as 
a royal officer. While at Tours he discovered the key to & 
Spanish cipher, consisting of more than 500 characters, and 
thenceforward all the despatches in that language which fell 
into the hands of the French could be easily read. His fame 
now rests, however, entirely upon his achievements in mathe- 
matics. Being a man of wealth, he printed at his own expense 
the numerous papers which he wrote on various branches of 
this science, and communicated them to scholars in almost every 
country of Europe. An evidence of the good use he made of 
his means, as well as of the kindliness of his character, is fur- 
nished by the fact that he entertained as a guest for a whole 
month a scientific adversary, Adriaan van Roomen, and then 
paid the expenses of his journey home. Vieta's writings thus 
became very quickly known; but, when Franciscus van 
Schooten issued a general edition of his works in 1646, he failed 
to make a complete collection, although probably nothing of 
very great value has perished. 

The form of Vieta's writings is their weak side. He indulged 
freely in flourishes; and in devising technical terms derived from 
the Greek he seems to have aimed at making them as unintelligible 
as possible. None of them, in point of fact, has held its ground, 
and even his proposal to denote unknown quantities by the vowels 
A, b, t, o, U, Y— the consonants b, C, &c, being reserved for general 
known quantities — has not been taken up. In this denotation 
he followed, perhaps, some older contemporaries, as Ramus, who 
designated the points in geometrical figures by vowels, making use 
of consonants, a, s, t, &c, only when these were exhausted. Vieta 
is wont to be called the father of modern algebra. This does not 
mean, what is often alleged, that nobody before him had ever 
thought of choosing symbols different from numerals, such as the 
letters of the alphabet, to denote the quantities of arithmetic, 
but that he made a general custom of what until his time had been 
only an exceptional attempt. All that is wanting in his writings, 
especially in his Isagoz* in aria* analyticam (1591), in order to 
make them look like a modern school algebra, is merely the sign 
of equality — a want which is the more striking because Robert 
Recorde had made use of our present symbol for this purpose since 
■557. and Xylander had employed vertical parallel lines since 1575. 
On the other hand. Vleta was well skilled in most modern artifices, 
aiming at a simplification of equations by the substitution of new 
quantities havmg a certain connexion with the primitive unknown 
quantities. Another of his works, Recatsio ccnonica effectumttm 
tr*mttric9na* t bears a stamp not less modern, being what we now 
call an algebraic geometry^— in other words, a collection of precepts 
how to construct algebraic expressions with the use of rule and 
compass only. While these writings were generally intelligible, 
and therefore of the greatest didactic importance, the principle 
of fcNK*ce»riry, first enunciated by Vleta, was so far in advance of 
his times that most readers seem to have passed it over without 
adverting to its value. That principle had been made use of by 
the Greek authors of the classic age; but of later mathematicians 
only Hero, Diophantus, &c.. ventured to regard lines and surfaces 
as mere numbers that could be joined to give a new number, their 
sum. It may be that the study of such sums, which he found 
in the works of Diophantus. prompted him to lay it down as a prin- 
ciple that quantities occurring in an equation ought to be homo- 
geneous, all of them lines, or surfaces, or solids, or supersclids — 
an equation between mere numbers being inadmissible. During 
the three centuries that have elapsed between Vieta's day and our 
own several changes of opinion have taken place on this subject, 
till the principle has at list proved so far victorious that modern 
mathematicians like to make homogeneous such equations as are 
not so from the begin ning, in order to get values of a symmetrical 
shape* Vieta himself, of course, did not see so far as that; never- 
theless the merit cannot be denied him of having indirectly suggested 
the thought. Nor are his writings lacking in actual inver. tiers. 
He conceived methods for the general resolution of equations of the 
second, third and fourth degrees different from those of Ferro and 
Ferrari, with which, however, it b difficult to believe him to have 
Y*en unacquainted. He devised an approximate numerical solution 
of equations of the second and third degrees, wherein Leonardo of 
Pisa must have preceded him, but by a method every vestige of 
which fe completely lost. He knew the connexion existing between 
the positive roots of an equation (which, by the way. were alone 



. _ . j reriodkity 

1 to Yirta in ijxn. In that year Adriian van Roomen 
gave out as a problem to all mathematician* an equation of the 
45th degree, which, bang recognised by Wta as deper.JWs on 
the equation between sin # and sin ♦ 45. was resolved bv htm at 
once, alt the rwe*ty-tkr«* positive fonts of which the said oquauaa 



was capable being given at the same time (see Tatcowoiirrnv). 
Such was the first encounter of the two scholars. A second took 
place when Vieta pointed to Apollonius's problem of taction as not 
yet being mastered, and Adriaan van Roomen gave a solution by 
the hyperbola. Vieta, however, did not accept it, as there existed 
a solution by means of the rule and the compass only, which he 
published himself in his Apollontus Callus (1600). In this paper 
Vieta made use of the centre of similitude of two circles. Lastly he 
gave an infinite product for the number*- (see Circle, Squaring of). 

Vieta's collected works were issued under the title of Opera 
Mathcmatica by F van Schooten at Leiden in 1646. (M. Ca.) 

VIEUXTEMPS, HENRI (1820-1881), Belgian violinist and 
composer, was born at Verviers, on the 20th of February 1820. 
Until his seventh year he was a pupil of Lecloux, but when Be 
Beriot heard him he adopted him as his pupil, taking him to 
appear in Paris in 1828. From 1833 onwards be spent the 
greater part of his life in concert tours, visiting all parts of the 
world with uniform success. Ho first appeared in London at 
a Philharmonic concert on the 2nd of June 1834, and in the 
following year studied composition with Reicha in Paris, and 
began to produce a. long series of works, full' of formidably 
difficult passages, though also of pleasing themes and fine 
musical ideas, which are consequently highly appreciated by 
violinists. From 1846 to 1852 he was solo violinist to the tsar, 
and professor in the conservatorium in St Petersburg. From 
1871 to 1873 he was teacher of the violin class in the Brussels 
Conservatoire, but was disabled by an attack of paralysis in the 
latter year, and from that time could only superintend the 
studies of favourite pupils. He died at Mustapha, in Algiers, 
on the 6th of June 1S81. He had a perfect command of 
technique, faultless intonation and a marvellous command of 
the bow. His staccato was famous all over the world, and bis 
tone was exceptionally rich and fulL 

VIGAN, a town and the capital of the province of Bocos Sur, 
Luzon, Philippine Islands, at the mouth of the Abra river, 
about 200 m. N. by W. of Manila. Pop. of the municipality 
(1003) 14,045; after the census of 1003 was taken there were 
united to Vigan the municipalities of Bantay (pop. 7020), 
San Vicente (pop. 5060), Santa. Catalina (pop. 5625) and Coayaa 
(pop. 6201), making the total population of the municipality 
38,851. Vigan is the residence of the bishop of Nueva Segovia 
and has a fine cathedral, a substantial court-house, other 
durable public buildings and a monument to Juan de Salccdo, 
its founder. It is engaged in farming, fishing* the manufacture 
of brick, tile, cotton fabrics and furniture, and the building 
of boats. The language is Hocano. 

V1GBB-LEBRUN. MARIE-ANKB ELISABETH (17SS-1&42), 
French painter, was born in Paris, the daughter of a painter, 
from whom she received her first instruction, though she bene- 
fited more by the advice of Doyen, Greuse, Joseph Vernet and 
other masters of the period. When only about twenty years 
of age she had already risen to fame with her portraits of Count 
Orloff and the duchess of Orleans, her personal charm mftlf; ng 
her at the same time a favourite in society. In 1776 she 
married the painter and art-critic J. B. P. Lebrun, and in 
1783 her picture of " Peace bringing back Abundance " (now 
at the Louvre) gained her the membership of the Academy. 
When the Revolution broke out in 1789 she escaped first to 
Italy, where she worked at Rome and Naples. At Rome she 
painted the portraits of Princesses Adelaide and Victoria, and 
at Naples the " Lady Hamilton as a Bacchante " now in the 
collection of Mr Tankerville Chaniberlayne; and then jour- 
neyed to Vienna, Berlin and St Petersburg. She returned to 
Paris in 17S1, but went in the folio wing year to London, where 
she painted the portraits of Lord Byron and the prince of 
Wales, and in iSoS to Switzerland. Her numerous journeys, 
and the vogue she enjoyed wherever she went, account for the 
numerous portraits from hex brush that are to be found in 
the great collections of many countries. Having returned to 
France from Switzerland, she lived nrst at her country house 
near Marry and then in Paris, where she died at the age of 
eighty-seven, in tS*». having been widowed for twenty-niz*e 
yean. She published her own memoirs under the title of 
trans* iSii-jr). Amo^ her many sitters was, 



VIGEVANO— VIGILANCE COMMITTEE 



59 



Marie Antoinette, of whom she painted over twenty portraits 
between 1779 and 1789. A portrait of the artist is m the hall 
of the painters at the Umxi,and another at the National Gallery. 
The Louvre owns two portraits of Mrae Lcbrun and her 
daughter, besides five other portraits and an allegorical com- 



A foil account of her eventful life is given ia the artist's Souvenirs^ 
and ia C Fillet's Mme VigU-Le Brun (Paris, 1890). The artist's 
autobiography has been translated by Lionel Strachey, Memoirs 
4 Mm* Vttjb-Ubnm (New York, 1903), fully illustrated. 

YIGEVAMO, a town and episcopal see of Lombardy, Italy, 
m the province of Pavia, on the right bank of the Tidno, 24 m. 
by rail S.W. from Milan on the line to Mortara, 381 ft. above 
sea-leveL Pop. (1001) 18,043 (town); 33,560 (commune). 
It is a medieval walled town, with an areaded market-place, 
a cathedral, the Gothic church of S. Francesco, and a castle 
of the Sforza family, dating from the 14th century and adorned 
with a loggia by Bramante and a tower imitating that of 
Fiarete in the Casleflo Sforzesco at Milan. It is a place of 
some importance in the silk trade and also produces excellent 
macaroni. There is a steam tramway to Novara. 

VfertiSSO*, GtiDBRANDR (183&-1880), the foremost 
Scandinavian scholar of the 19th century, was born of a good 
and old Icelandic family in BreiOaf jord in 1828. He was brought 
op, Lai he went to a tutor's, by his kinswoman, Kristin Vfgfuss- 
dottir, to whom, he records, he " owed not only that he became 
a man of letters, but almost everything." He was sent to the 
old and fiamous school at Bessastad and (when it removed thither) 
at Reykjavik; and in 1849, already a fair scholar, he came to 
Copenhagen University as a bursarius in the Rcgense College. 
He wan, after his student course, appointed slipendiarius by 
the Azna-Magnaean trustees, and worked for fourteen years in 
the ArnarMagnaean Library till, as he said, he knew every 
scrap of old vellum and of Icelandic written paper in that whole 
cJkction. During his Danish life he twice revisited Iceland 
(fast in 1853). and made short tours in Norway and South 
Germany with friends. In 1866, after some months in London, 
he settled down in Oxford, "which he made his home for the 
rest of Iris life, only quitting it for visits to the great Scandi- 
navian libraries or to London (to work during two or three long 
notions with his fellow-labourer, F Y Powell), or for short 
trips to places such as the Isle of Man, the Orkneys and Shetland*, 
the old oootstead of the West Saxons at Downton, the Roman 
station nt Fevensey, the burial-place of Bishop Brynjulfs 
2-fated son at Yarmouth, and the like He held- the office 
«f Reader in Scandinavian at the university of Oxford (a post 
ctested for him) from 1884 till his death. He was a Jubilee 
Doctor of Upsala, 1877, and received the Danish order of the 
Daaoebrog in 1885. Vlgfusson died of cancer on the 31st of 
Jisoary x88 °* 1um1 was btirted in St Sepulchre's Cemetery, 
Oxford, on the 3rd of February He was an excellent judge 
«f Bteraiure, reading most European languages well and being 
acquainted with their classics. His memory was remarkable, 
sad if the whole of the Eddie poems had been lost, he could 
have written them down from memory. He spoke English 
weB and idiomatically, but with a strong Icelandic accent. He 
wrote a beautiful, distinctive and clear hand, in spite of the 
lacssaauls of lines of MS. copying he had done in his early life. 

Br his TmnaidI (written between October 1854 and April 1855) 
me feud the founda t ions for the chronology of Icelandic history, in a 
«»>-•» «jf conclusions that have not been displaced (*ave by his own 
ai'.rioas and corrections), and that justly earned the praise of 
'. % Grimm- His editions of Icelandic classics (1858-68), Biskopa 
Border Saga, Form Sdgur (with Mobius), Eyrbyggia Saga 



»-.i Fla*eyar-b6k (with Unger) opened a new era of Icelandic scholar 
*i^p, and can only fitly be compared to the Rolls Series editions of 
c-wrW by Dc Stnbbs for the interest and value of their prefaces 
a- 1 texts. Seven years of constant and severe toil (1866-73) were 
- -! to the Oxford Icelandic- English Dictionary, incomparably 
•v» best guide to classic Icelandic, and a monumental example of 
* ^fe-Jkaaded work. His later series of editions (1874*85) included 
-*tnejtM£a and H&conar Sega, the great and complex mass of 
' >'«x£c historical sagas, known as Siurlunra, and the Corpus 
.*mt£3CMm BoreaU, in which he edited the whole body of classic 
Bosriian poetry. As an introduction to the Slurfnnga. he 
r a. consplete though coocisa. history of the classic Northern 



btsflannw and its sources. In the introduction to the Corpus* he 
laid the foundations of a critical history of the Eddie poetry and 
Court poetry of the North in a series of brilliant, original and well- 
supported theories that are gradually being accepted even by those 
who wens at first inclined to refect them. His little Icelandic 
Prose Header (with F. York Powell) (1879) furnishes the English 
student with a pleasant and trustworthy path to a sound knowledge 
of Icelandic The Grimm Centenary Papers (1886) give good 
examples of the range of his historic work, while his Appendix 
on Icelandic curntney to Sir G. W. Dasent's Burnt Njal is a model 
of methodical investigation into an intricate and somewhat import- 
ant subject. As a wnter in his own tongue he at once gained a high 
position by his excellent and delightful Relations of Travel in Norway 
and South Germany. In English, as his M Visit to Grimm ° and his 

Riwerf ul letters to Tho Times show, he had attained no mean skill, 
is life ia mainly a record of well-directed and efficient labour in 
Denmark and Oxford. (F. Y. P.) 

VIGIL (Lai. tigilio, "watch"), in the Christian Church, 
the eve of a festival. The use of the word is, however, late, the 
•igiUoe (pernoc t at to n es, snmrxifa ) having-origiaaUy been the 
services, consisting of prayers, hymns, processions and some- 
times the eucha ri st, celebrated on the preceding night in pre- 
paration for the feast. The oldest of the vigils is that of Easter 
Eve, thoseof Pentecost and Christmas being instituted somewhat 
later. With the Easter vigil the eucharist .was specially asso- 
ciated, and baptism with that of Pentecost (see Whitsunday). 
The abuses connected with nocturnal vigils 1 led to their being 
attacked, especially by Vigilentius of Barcelona (e. 400), against 
whom Jerome fulminated In this as in other matters. The 
custom, however, increased, vigils being instituted sor the 
other festivals, including those of saints. 

In the middle ages the nocturnal vigUia were, except in the 
monasteries, gradually discontinued, matins and vespers on 
the peeending day, with fasting, taking their place. In the 
Roman Catholic Church the vigil is now usually celebrated 
on the morning of the day preceding the festival, except at 
Christmas, when a midnight mass is celebrated, and on Easter 
Eve. These vigils are further distinguished as privileged and 
unprivileged. The former (except that of the Epiphany) have 
special offices; in the latter the vigil is merely commemorated. 

The Church of England has. reverted to early custom in so 
far as only " Easter Even " is distinguished by a special collect, 
gospel and epistle-. .The other vigils are recognized in the 
calendar (including those of the saints) and the rubric directs 
that "the collect appointed for any Holy-day that hath a 
Vigil or Eve, shall be said at the Evening Service next before." 

VIGILANCE COMMITTEE, in the United States, a self- 
constituted judicial body, occasionally organized in the western 
frontier districts for the protection of life and property. The 
first committee of prominence bearing the name was organized 
in San Francisco in June 1851, when the crimes of desperadoes 
who had immigrated to the gold-fields were rapidly increasing 
in numbers and it was said that there were venal judges, packed 
juries and false witnesses. At first this committee was com- 
posed of about 200 members, afterwards it was much larger. 
The general committee was governed by an executive committee 
and the city was policed by sub-committees. Within about 
thirty days four desperadoes were arrested, tried by the execu- 
tive committee and hanged, and about thirty others were 
banished. Satisfied with the results, the committee then 
quietly adjourned, but it was revived five years later Similar 
committees were common in other parts of California and in 
the mining districts of Idaho and Montana. That in Montana 
exterminated in 1863-64 a band of outlaws organized under 
Henry Tlummer, the sheriff of Montana City; twenty-four of 
the outlaws were hanged within a few months. Committees 
or societies of somewhat the same nature were formed in the 
Southern states during the Reconstruction period (1865-72) 
to protect white families from negroes and " carpet-baggers/' 
and besides these there were the Ku-Klux-Klan \q.v.) and its 
branches, the Knights of the White Cameha, the Pale Faces, and 
the Invisible Empire of the South, the principal object of which 
was to control the negroes by striking them with terror. 

1 The 35th canon of the council of Elvira (305) forbids women to 
attend them. 



6o 



VIGILANTIUS— VIGLIUS 



SetH.H. Bancroft, Papular Tribunals (a vols., San Francisco, 
1887); and T. J. Dimsdale, The Vigilantes of Montana (Virginia 
City, 1866). 

YIQ&aimUS (fl. c. 400), the presbyter, celebrated as the 
author of a work, no longer extant, against superstitious prac- 
tices, which called forth one of the most violent and scurrilous 
of Jerome's polemical treatises, was born about 370 at Cala- 
gurris in Aquitania (the modem Cazeres or perhaps Saint 
Bertrand de Comminges in the department of Haute-Garonne), 
where his father kept a " statio " or inn on the great Roman 
road from Aquitania to Spain. While still a youth his talent 
became known to Sulpidus Severus, who had estates in that 
neighbourhood, and in 395 Sulpidus, who probably baptized 
him, sent him with letters to Paulinus of Nola, where he met 
with a friendly reception. On his return to Severus m Gaul 
he was ordained; and, having soon afterwards inherited means 
through the death of his father, he set out for Palestine, where 
he was received with great respect by Jerome at Bethlehem. 
The stay of Vigilantius lasted for some time; but, as was almost 
inevitable, he was dragged into the dispute then raging about 
Origen, in which he did not see fit wholly to adopt Jerome's 
attitude. On his return to the West he was the bearer of a 
letter from Jerome to Paulinus, and at various places where 
he stopped on the way he appears to have expressed himself 
about Jerome in a manner that when reported gave great 
offence to that father, and provoked him to write a reply 
(Ep. 61). Vigilantius now settled for some time in Gaul, and 
is said by one authority (Gennadius) to have afterwards held 
a charge in the diocese of Barcelona. About 403, some years 
after his return from the East, Vigilantius wrote his celebrated 
work against superstitious practices, in which he argued against 
relic worship, as also against the vigils in the basilicas of the 
martyrs, then so common, the sending of alms to Jerusalem, 
the rejection of earthly goods and the attribution of special 
virtue to the unmarried state, especially in the case of the clergy. 
He thus covers a wider range than Jovinian, whom he surpasses 
also in intensity. He was especially indignant at the way in 
which spiritual worship was being ousted by the adoration 
of saints and their relics. All that is known of his work is 
through Jerome's treatise Contra VigUanUum, or, as that contro- 
versialist would seem to prefer saying, " Contra Dormitantium." 
Notwithstanding Jerome's exceedingly unfavourable opinion, 
there is no reason to believe that the tract of Vigilantius was 
exceptionally illiterate, or that the views it advocated were 
exceedingly "heretical." Soon, however, the great influence 
of Jerome in the Western Church caused its leaders to espouse 
all his quarrels, and Vigilantius gradually came to be ranked 
in popular opinion among heretics, though his influence long 
remained potent both in France and Spain, as is proved by the 
polemical tract of Faustus of Rhegium (d. c. 400). 

VIGIUUS, pope from 537 to 555, succeeded Silverius and 
was followed by Pelagius I. He was ordained by order of 
Belisarius while Silverius was still alive; his elevation was 
due to Theodora, who, by an appeal at once to his ambition 
and, it is said, to his covetousness, had induced him to promise 
to disallow the council of Chalcedon, in connexion with the 
" three chapters " controversy. When, however, the time 
came for the fulfilment of his bargain, Vigilius declined to 
give his assent to the condemnation of that council involved 
in the imperial edict against the three chapters, and for this 
act of disobedience he was peremptorily summoned to Con- 
stantinople, which he reached in 547. Shortly after his arrival 
there he issued a document known to history as his Judicalum 
(548), in which he condemned indeed the three chapters, but 
expressly disavowed any intentions thereby to disparage the 
council of Chalcedon. After a good deal of trimming (for he 
desired to stand well with his own clergy, who were strongly 
orthodox, as well as with the court), he prepared another docu- 
ment, the Constitutum ad Imperatorem, which was laid before 
the so-called fi'th " oecumenical " council in 553. and led to 
his condemnation by the majority of that body, some say 
even f 



. 1 •_! 



-at. Ultimately, however, he was induced 



to assent to and confirm the decrees of the council, and was 
allowed after an enforced absence of seven years to set out for 
Rome. He died, however, at Syracuse, before he reached 
his destination, on the 7th of June 555. 

V1GINTISEXV1RI, in Roman history, the collective name 
given in republican times to " twenty-six " magistrates of in- 
ferior rank. They were divided into six boards, two of which 
were abolished by Augustus. Their number was thereby 
reduced to twenty and their name altered to Vigintiviri 
("the twenty"). They were originally nominated by the 
higher magistrates, but subsequently elected in a body at a 
single sitting of the comitia tributa; under the empire they were 
chosen by the senate. The following are the names of the 
six boards:' (x) Trcsviri capitales (see Teesvuu); (2) Trcsviri 
numetales; (3) Quatuorviri tits in urbe purgandis, who had the 
care of the streets and. roads inside the city; (4) Duotiri His 
extra urban purgandis (see Duovuu), abolished by Augustus; 
(5) Decemviri stlilibus judicandis (see Decemviri), (6) Quatuor 
praejeeii Capuam Cumas, abolished by Augustus. The members 
of the last-named board were appointed by the praetor urbanus 
of Rome to administer justice in ten Campanian towns (list 
in Mommsen), and received their name from the two most 
important of these. They were subsequently elected by the 
people under the title of quatuorviri jure dicundo, but the date 
is not known. 

See Mommsen, Rdmisches Staatsrecht, ii, (1887), p. 592. 

VIGLIUS, the name taken by Wicle van Aytta van Zuichem 
(1507-1577), Butch statesman and jurist, a Frisian by birth, 
who was bom on the 19th of October 1507. He studied at 
various universities— Louvain, Dole and Bourgesanlong others — 
devoting himself mainly to the study of jurisprudence, and after- 
wards visited many of the principal seats of learning in Europe. 
His great abilities attracted the notice of Erasmus and other 
celebrated men, and his renown was soon wide and general. 
Having lectured on law at the universities of Bourges and 
Padua, he accepted a judicial position under the bishop of 
Miinster which he resigned in 1535 to become assessor of the 
imperial court of justice (Reichskammcrgerichl). He would 
not, however, undertake the post of tutor to Philip, son of the 
emperor Charles V.; nor would he accept any of the many 
lucrative and honourable positions offered him by various 
European princes, preferring instead to remain at the uni- 
versity of Ingolstadt, where for five years he occupied a pro- 
fessorial chair. In 1543 the official connexion of Viglius with 
the Netherlands began. At the emperor's invitation he became 
a member of the council of Mechlin, and some years later 
president of that body. Other responsible positions were 
entrusted to him, and he was soon one of the most trusted of the 
ministers of Charles V., whom he accompanied during the war 
of the league of Schmalkalden in 1546. His rapid rise in the 
emperor's favour was probably due to his immense store of 
learning, which was useful in asserting the imperial rights where 
disputes arose between the empire and the estates. He was 
generally regarded as the author of the edict against toleration 
issued in 1550; a charge which he demed, maintaining, on 
the contrary, that he had vainly tried to induce Charles to 
modify its rigour. When the emperor abdicated in 1555 
Viglius was anxious to retire also, but at the instance of King 
Philip H. he remained at his post and was rewarded by being 
made coadjutor abbot of St Bavon, and in other ways In 
r559. when Margaret, duchess of Parma, became regent of the 
Netherlands, Viglius was an important member of the small 
circle who assisted her in the work of government. lie was 
president of the privy council, member, and subsequently 
president, of the state council, and a member of the committee 
of the state council called the consul ta. But his desire to resign 
soon returned. In 1565 he was aJowed to give up the presi- 
dency of the state council, but was persuaded to retain his 
Other posts. However, he had lost favour with Margaret, who 
accused him to Philip of dishonesty and simony, while his ortho- 
doxy was suspected. When the duke of Alva arrived in the 
Netherlands Viglius at first assisted him, but he subsequently 



VTGNE— VIGNY 



61 



[ the duke's scheme of extortion, sad sought to Induce 
ramp himself to visit the Low Countries. His health was 
bow impaired and his work was nearly over. Having suffered 
a short imprisonment with the other members of the state 
anno! ia 1576, be died at Brussels on the 5th of May 15771 
and was buried in the abbey of St Bavoa. 

Vsglitis was an advocate of peace and moderation, and as 
such could not expect support or sympathy .from men engaged 
in a aue-and-death struggle for liberty, or from their relentless 
fftfinicv He was undoubtedly avaricious, and accumulated 
great wealth, part of which he left to round a hospital at 
his native place, Zwichem, and a college at the university of 
Louvain. He married a rich lady, Jacqueline Damant, but 
sad no children. 

Be wrote a Tntebuck des~ Sckmalkaldischen Donaukriegs, edited 
fcy A. von Druffef (Munich, 1877). and some of his lectures were 
piihli Im i1 under die title Commentarii in decern InstUuttonum 
tnuiot (Lyons. 1564). His Vita et opera historic* are given in the 
AnaUcta Betgica of C. P. Hoy nek van Papendrecht (the Hague. i743)< 
See L. P- Oachard. Correspondence de Philippe II. sur les affaires 
da Pey^Bas (Brussels, 1848-79) ;and Correspondance de Marguerite 
t Amine**, dmehesse de Parme, cam Philippe II. (Brussels, 1867-81); 
sad E. Poullet. Correspondance de cardinal de Cratmtte (Brussels, 
1*77-80. 

?16nX PAUL DB (1843-1901), Belgian sculptor, was born 
at Ghent. He was trained by his father, a statuary, and 
began by exhibiting his " Fra Angelica da Fiesoks " at the 
Ghent Salon in 1868. In 1872 he exhibited at the Brussels 
Salon a marble statue, " Heliotrope " (Ghent Gallery), and in 
1875, at Brussels, "Beatrix" and "Domenica." He was 
emp l oy e d by the government to execute caryatides for the 
awservatoire at Brussels. In 1876 at the Antwerp Salon he 
had boats of E. Hid and W. Wilson, which were afterwards 
placed in the communal museum at Brussels. Until 1882 he 
ived in Paris, where be produced the marble statue " Immor* 
ta&ty " (Brussels Gallery), and " The Crowning of Art," a 
bronze group on the facade of the Palais des Beaux-Arts at 
Brussels- Hisv monument to the popular heroes, Jean Breydel 
and Fferra de Coufnck, was unveiled at Bruges in 1887. At his 
death he left unfinished his principal work, the Anspach monu- 
ment, which was erected at Brussels under the direction of the 
architect Janlet with the co-operation of various sculptors, 
i swing other notable works by De Vigne may be mentioned 
"Voiunutia" (1875); "Poverella" (1S78); a bronse bust of 
* Fayche " (Brussels Gallery), of which there is an ivory replica; 
the maifaie statue of Mamix de Ste Aldegonde in the Square da 
Sanson, Brussels; the Metdepennmgen monument in the cemetery 
at Ghent; and the monument to Canon de Haerne at Courtrai 

&e E. 1*. Detage. Les Artistes Beiges eontemporains (Brussels), 
and Ol G- Destree, The Renaissance ef Sculpture tn Belgium (London, 

\ (Ft. for " little vine")i in architecture, a running 
representing, as its name imports, a little vine, 
1 %rar* ,h *", leaves and grapes. It is common in the Tudor 
j asad runs or reus in a huge hollow or casement. It is 
also caBad trayle. From the transference of the term to book- 
sTIs—s isistiii resulted the sense of a small picture, vanishing 
gandanfiy at the edge. 

w/anjnr, ALFRED DB (1797-1863), French poet, was bom at 
Laches (Indrc-et-Loire) oa the 27th of March 1707. Satnte- 
Bcanre, fa the rather in-natured essay which he devoted to 
Vigmy after his death, expresses a doubt whether the title of 
onusat which the poet bore was well authenticated, and hints 
that no very ancient proofs of the nobility of the family were 
lorthcosmng; hut it is certain that in the xBth century persons 
at the name occupied positions which were not open to any 
hast amen of noble birth. For generations the ancestors of 
Alfred de Vigny had been soldiers, and he himself Joined the 
anavy, with a commission in the Household Troops, at the 
sane of sixteen. But the Revolutionary and Napoleonic wars 
x, and after twelve years of life m barracks he retired, 
never, a very high estimate of the duties and 
the soldier. While stal serving he had made his 



mark, if as yet unrecognized, by the publication ia 18?* of a 
volume of poems, and in 1826 by another, together with the 
famous prose romance of Cinq-Mats. Sainte-Beuve asserts 
that the poet antedated some of his most remarks Me work. 
This may or may not be the case; he certainly could not ante* 
date the publication. And it; so happens that some of his most 
celebrated pieces— £ta, Dohrida, JfJsm— appeared (1822^43) 
before the work of younger members of the Romantic school 
whose productions strongly resemble these poems. Not is this 
originality limited to the point which he himself daimed in 
the Preface to his collected Poems m 1837— that they were 
M the first of their kind in France, in which philosophic thought 
is clothed ia epic or dramatic form." Indeed this daim is 
disputable in itself, and has misled not a few of Vigny's recent 
critics. It is in poetic, not philosophic quality, that his idiosyn- 
crasy and precursorship are most remarkable. It is quite 
certain that the other Alfred— Alfred de Musset— felt the 
influence of his elder namesake, and an impartial critic might 
discern no insignificant macks of the same effect in the work 
of Hugo himself. Even Lamartine, considerably Vigny's elder 
and his predecessor in poetry, seems rather to have been 
guided by Vigny than Vigny by him. No one can read Dole* 
rida w Le Cor without seeing that the author had little to 
learn from any of his French contemporaries and much 
to teach them. At the same time Vigny, from whatever cause, 
hardly made any further public appearance in poetry proper 
during the more than thirty years of his life, and his entire 
poems, including posthumous fragments, form but one very 
small pocket volume. Cinq*Mars, which at least equalled the 
poems in popularity, will hardly stand the judgment of posterity 
so well. It had in its favour the support of the Royalist party* 
the immense vogue of the novels of Walter Scott, on which 
It was evidently modelled, the advantages of an exquisite style. 
and the taste of the day for the romance as opposed to the novel 
of analysis. It therefore gained a great name both in France 
and abroad. But any one who has read it critically must 
acknowledge it to be disappointing. The action is said to be 
dramatic; if it be so, it can only be said that this proves very 
conclusively that the action of drama and the action of the 
novel are two quite different things. To the reader who knows 
Scott or Dumas the story is singularly uninteresting (far less 
interesting than as told in history); the characters want life; 
and the book generally stagnates. 

Its author, though always as a kind of outsider (the phrase 
constantly applied to him in French literary essays and histories 
being that he shut himself up in a tour d'ivoire), attached 
himself more or less to the Romantic movement of 2830 and 
the years immediately preceding and following it, and was 
stimulated by this movement both to drama and to novel-, 
writing. In the year before the revolution of July he pro- 
duced at the Iheatre Francais a translation, or rather 
paraphrase, of Othello, and an original piece. La Martchale 
d'Ancre. In 1832 he published the curious book S telle, contain- 
ing studies of unlucky youthful poets— Gilbert, Chatterton, 
Chenler— and in 1835 he brought out his drama of Chatter ton, 
which, by the hero's suicide, shocked French taste even after 
five years of Romantic education, but had a considerable success. 
The same year saw the publication of Servitude a grandeur 
militairee, a singular collection of sketches rather than a con- 
nected work in which Vigny's military experience, his idea of 
the soldier's duties, and his rather poetical views of history 
were all worked in. The subjects of Chatterton and OtheUo 
naturally suggest a certain familiarity with English, and in 
fact Alfred de Vigny knew English well, h'ved in England for 
some time and married in 1828 an Englishwoman, Lydia 
Banbury. His father-in-law was, according to French gossip, 
so conspicuous an example of insular eccentricity that he never 
could remember his son-in-law's name or anything about him, 
except that he was a poet. By this fact, and the kindness 
of casual Frenchmen who went through the list of the chief 
living poets of their country, he was sometimes able to dis- 
cover his daughter's husband's designation. Ia 184$ Alfred de 



6a 



VIGO— VIKING 



Vigny was elected to the Academy, but made no compromise 
io his "discourse of reception," which was unflinchingly 
Romantic. Still, he produced nothing save a few scraps; 
and, beyond the work already enumerated, little has to be 
added except his Journal d'un poite and the poems called Us 
Destinies, edited, with a few fragments, by Louis Ratisbonne 
after his death. Among his dramatic work, however, should 
be mentioned Quiite pour la penr and an adaptation of the 
Merchant of Venice called Skytoek. Us Destinies excited no 
great admiration in France, but they contain some exceedingly 
beautiful poetry of an austere kind, such as the magnificent 
speech- of Nature in " La Maison du berger " and the remarkable 
poem entitled " La Colere de Samson." Vigny died at Paris 
on the 17th of September 1863. 

His later life was almost wholly uneventful, and for the most part, 
as has been said, spent in retirement. His reputation, however, is 
perfectly secure, ft may, and probably will, rest only on his small 
volume of poems, though it will not be lessened, as far as qualified 
literary criticism is concerned, should the reader proceed to the rest 
of the work. The whole of his non-dramatic verse does not amount 
to 5000 lines; it may be a good deal less. But the range of subject 
is comparatively wide, ana extraordinary felicity of execution, not 
merely in language, but in thought, is evident throughout. Vigny, 
as may be seen in the speech of Nature referred to above, had the 
secret — very uncommon with French poets— of attaining solemnity 
without grandiosity, by means of an almost classical precision and 
gravity 01 form. The defect of volubility, of never leaving off, which 
mars to some extent his great contemporary Hugo, is never present 
In htm, and he is equally free from the looseness and disorders of 
form which are sometimes blemishes in Musset, and from the 
effeminacy of Lamartine, while once more his nobility of thought and 
plentifttlness of matter save him from the reproach which has been 
thought to rest on the technically perfect work of Theophile Gautier. 
The dramatic work is, perhaps, less likely to interest English than 
French readers, the local colour of Ckotierton being entirely false, 
the sentiment conventional in the extreme, and the real pathos of 
the story exchanged for a commonplace devotion on the poet's part 
to his host's wife. In the same way, the finest passages of Otkcllo 
simply disappear in Vigny's version. In his remaining works the 
defect of skill in managing the plot and characters of prose fiction, 
which has been noticed in Gnq-Mars. reappears, together (in the 
case of the Journal d'un poite and elsewhere) with signs of the 
fastidious and slightly affected temper which was Vigny's chief fault 
as a man. In his poem* proper none of these faults appears, and 
be is seen wholly at his best. It should be said that of his posthu- 
mous work not a little had previously appeared piecemeal in the 
Ran* dot dens mend**, to which he was an occasional contributor. 
The prettiest of the complete editions of his works (of which there are 
several) is to be found in what is called the PetiU bibtiotkiqueCkarpentier. 
For many years the critical attention paid to him was not great. 
Recently there has been a revival of interest as shown by mono- 
graphs: M. Paleokwue's " Alfred de Vigny " in the Grands icrnmins 
fraucais (1891); C Dorison's Alfred de Vigny t pabte-pkilasopke 
(1802) and t/n symbol* social (1894); G. Asse T s Alfred de Vigny el 
Us editions originates de sa potsie (1895); ^ Dupuy's Io Jeunesse 
eks Remaniiquee (1905); and E. Lauvnere's Alfred de Vigny (Paris, 
1910). But in most of these rather excessive attention has been 
paid to the " philosophy " of a pessimistic kind which succeeded 
Vigny's early Christian Romanticism. This, though not unnote- 
wortny, a separable from his real poetical quality, and concentra- 
tion on it rather obscures the latter, which is of the rarest kind. 
It should be added that an interesting sidelight has been thrown on 
Vigny by the publication (1905) of his Fragments inidits surP.etT* 
CorneiO*. (G. Sa.) 

VIGO, a seaport and naval station of north-western Spain, in 
the province of Fontevedra; on Vigo Bay (Ria de Vigo) and 
on a branch of the railway from Tuy to Corunna. Pop. (1000) 
93,159. Vigo Bay, one of the finest of the Gabcian fjords, 
extends inland for 19 m., and is sheltered by low mountains and 
by the islands (Islas de Cies, ancient Insmlae Skeae) at its 
mouth. The town fa built on the south-eastern shore, and 
occupies a hilly site dominated by two obsolete forts. The 
older streets are steep, narrow and tortuous, but there is also 
a large modern quarter. Vigo owes its importance to its 
deep and spacious harbour, and to its fisheries. It is a pott 
of call for many lines trading between Western Europe and 
South America. Shipbuilding b carried on, and large quanti- 
ties of sardines are canned for export In 1909, soar ships 
of 1,710,691 tons (1,153.564 being British) entered at Vigo; 
the imports in that year, including tin and tinplate, coal, 
at. sulphate of copper and ftr'fr*"*^ were 



valued at £481,752; the exports, including sardines, mineral 
waters and eggs, were valued at £554.824- The town contains 
flour, paper and sawmills, sugar and petroleum refineries, 
tanneries, distilleries and soap works; it has also a large agri- 
cultural trade and is visited in summer for sea-bathing. 

Vigo was attacked by Sir Francis Drake in 1585 and 1589. 
In 1702 a combined British and Dutch fleet under Sir George 
Rooke and the duke of Ormonde destroyed a Franco-Spanish 
fleet io the bay, and captured treasure to the value of about 
£1,000,000; numerous attempts have been made to recover 
the larger quantity of treasure which was supposed, on doubtful 
evidence, to have been sunk during the battle. In 17x9 Vigo 
was captured by the British under Viscount Cobham. 

VIJAYANAGAR, or Bijanagar ("the city of victory"), 
an ancient Hindu kingdom and ruined city of southern India. 
The kingdom lasted from about 1336 to 1565, forming during 
all that period a bulwark against Mahommedan invasion from 
the north. Its foundation, and even great part of its history, 
is obscure; but its power and wealth are attested by more 
than one European traveller, and also by the character of 
the existing ruins. At the beginning of the 14th century 
Mahommedan raiders had effectually destroyed every Hindu 
principality throughout southern India, but did not attempt 
to occupy the country permanently. In this stale of desolation 
Hindu nationality rose again under two brothers, named 
Harihara and Bukka, of whom little more can be said than 
that they were Kanarese by race. Hence their kingdom was 
afterwards known as the Carnatic At its widest extent, it 
stretched across the peninsula from sea to sea, from Masuiipatam 
to Goa; and every Hindu prince in the south acknowledged 
its supremacy. The site of the capital was chosen, with 
strategic skill, on the right bank of the river Tungabhadra, 
which here runs through a rocky gorge. Within thirty years 
the Hindu Rayas of Vijayanagar were able to hold their own 
against the Bahmani sultans, who had now established their 
independence of Delhi in the Deccan proper. Warfare with 
the Mahommedans across the border in the Raichur doab was 
carried on almost unceasingly, and with varying result. Two, 
or possibly three, different dynasties are believed to have 
occupied the throne of Vijayanagar as time went on; and 
its final downfall may be ascribed to the domestic dissensions 
thus produced. This occurred in 1565, when the confederate 
sultans of Bijapur, Ahmednagar and Gokonda, who had 
divided amongst themselves the Bahmani dominions, over- 
whelmed the Vijayanagar army in the plain of Talikota, and 
sacked the defenceless city. The Raya fled south to Penukonda, 
and later to Chandragiri, where one of his descendants granted 
to the English the site of Fort St George or Madras. The city 
has ever since remained a wilderness of immense ruins, which 
are now conserved by the British government. 

See R. SeweH, A Forgotten Empire (1900); and B. S. Row, History 
of Vijayanagar (Madras, 1906). 

VIKIMQ. The word " Viking," in the sense in which it is 
used to-day, is derived from the Icelandic (Old Norse) Vikings 
(m.), signifying simply a sea-rover or pirate. There is also in 
Icelandic the allied word ttking (f.) ( a predatory voyage. As a 
loan-word viking occurs in A.S. poetry (vicing or sWcsag), «-g. 
in Widsiik, Byrnatk, Exodus. During the Saga Ago (900-1050) , 
in the beginning of Norse literature, sttmgr is not as a rule 
used to designate any class of men. Almost every young 
Icelander of sufficient means and position, and a very large 
number of young Norsemen, made one or more viking expedi- 
tions. We read of such a one that he went "a-viking " {/am i 
wtt*»f, vera i mking, or very often fan, &c., testes 4 wsibsitg). 
The procedure was almost a rwogniaed part of education, and 
was analogous to the grand tour made by our great-grandfathers 
in the 18th century. But the aae of nikingr in a move g e netic 
sense is still to be found in the Saga Age. U the designation 
of this or that personage as suaatf tftwapr or raaoa nUkimgr (red 
viking) be not reckoned an instance of such use, we have it at 
all events in the same of a small quast-natioaality, the J6snsvf- 
kmgar, settled at Jomsborg on the Baltic (mawdernPo>iaexaAia> 



VIKING 



«3 



to whom a sags is dedicated: who po ss e s sed rather peculiar 
isstitutsons evidently the relic of what is now called the Viking 
Agej that preceded the Saga Age by a century. Another 
instance of such more generic use occurs in the following 
typical passage from the Landndmcb6k (Sturlabok), where 
it is recorded how Harald Fatrhair harried the vikings of the 
Scottish isles — that famous harrying which led to most of the 
t of Iceland and the birth of Icelandic literature:— 



** Haraldr en harfari hcrjatfi vestr am haf . . . Hann lagfi 
- nadir sg allar Sudreyjar. ... En er hann for vestann- stogust 
"t eyjeraar vikiogar ok Skotar ok Irar ok herjuffa ok nentu 
" vita " jfamdu, ed. Joasson, 1906, p. 135). 

ft is in this more generic sense that the word M viking " is 
sow generally employed. Historians of the north have dis- 
tinguished as the " Viking Age " {Vikingertiden) the lime when 
the Scandinavian folk first by their widespread piracies brought 
tluasU i m forcibly into the notice of all the Christian peoples 
of western Europe. We cannot to-day determine the exact 
homes or provenance of these freebooters, who were a terror 
alike to the Frankish empire, to England and to Ireland and 
vest Scotland, who only came into view when their ships 
anchored in some Christian harbour, and who were called now 
Norman**, now Docii, now Danes, now Locklannoch, which 
hot, the Irish name for them, though etymologically "men 
of the lakes or bays," might as well be translated " Norsemen," 
seeing that Loddamn was the Irish for Norway. The exact 
etymology of vfktngr itself is not certain: for we do not know 
whether via is used in a general sense (bay, harbour) in this 
connexkm, or in a particular sense as the VOc, the Skagerrack 
sad Chmtiania Fjord. The reason for using " viking " in a 
aore generic sense than is warranted by the actual employ- 
ment of the word in Old Norse literature rests on the fact that 
ve have no other word by which to designate the early Scandi- 
navian pirates of the otb and the beginning of the xoth century. 
We cannot tell for the most part whether they came from 
Denmark or Norway, so that we cannot give them a national 
same. M Mortnanner " is used by some Scandinavian writers 
(as by Steenstrup in his classical work Normonnerne). But 
"Normans'* has for us quite different associations. And 
even those who have preferred not generally to use the word 
* ridings ** to designate the pirates and invaders, have adhered 
to the term M Viking Age " for the period in which they were 
most active (cf. Munch, Dei Norske Folks Historic, Deel I. 
Bd. L p. 356; Steenstrup and others, Danmarks Riges Historic, 
bk. fi. &c.). At the same time, the significance which the 
ward ** viking " has had in our language is due in part to a false 
e ty molog y , connecting the word with " king "; the effect of 
watch stOl remains in the customary pronunciation vi-king 
-stead of vik-ing, now so much embedded in the language 
Aat it is a pedantry to try and change it. 

We may fairly reckon the " Viking Age " to lie between the 
date of the first recorded appearance of a northern pirate 
meet (ljk 789) and the settlement of the Normans in Normandy 
by the treaty of St Clair-sur-Epte, a.d. on or 012 * For a 
few years previous to that date our chief authority for the 
history of the piracies and raids in the Frankish empire fails 
as * we know that the Norsemen had a few years before that 
date been driven in great numbers out of Ireland; and England 
bed been in a sense pacified through the concession of a great 
port of the island to the invaders by the peace of Wedmore, 
« y SjS. Although, outside the information we get from 
Q:ristian chroniclers, this age is for the people of the north 
*mc of complete obscurity, it is evident that the Viking Age 

1 1 np "p«*« with some universal disturbance or unrest among 
tie Scandinavian nations, strictly analogous to the unrest 
-swag more southern Teutonic nations which many centuries 
»/eu>f* had heralded the break-up of the Roman empire, an 
epoch known as that of the Folk-wanderings (V dlkerwondcr- 
mKrrm). We judge this because we can dimly see that the 

* W. Voget gives the former date; 912 is that more commonly 

*T^AnmUs VtdastimL 



impulse which was driving part of the Norse and Danish peoples 
to piracies in the west was also driving the Swedes and perhaps 
a portion of the Danes to eastward invasion, which resulted 
in the establishment of a Scandinavian kingdom (Garoarfki) 
in what is now Russia, with its capital first at Novgorod, after- 
wards at Kiev.' This was, in fact, the germ of the Russian 
empire. If we could know the Viking Age from the other, 
the Scandinavian side, it would doubtless present far more 
interest than in the form in which the Christian chroniclers 
present it But from knowledge of this sort we are almost 
wholly cut off. We have to content ourselves with what is 
for the greater part of this age a mere catalogue of embarka- 
tions and plunderings along all the coasts of western Europe 
without distinctive characteristics. 

The Viking. Raids.— The detail of these raids is quite beyond 
the compass of the present article, and a summary or synopsis 
must suffice. For all record which we have, the Viking Age 
was inaugurated in a.d. 789 by the appearance In England 
on our Dorset coast of three pirate ships " from Haerethaland " 
(Hardeland or HardysscI in Denmark or H6rdeland in Norway), 
which are said in the Anglo-Saxon Chronicle to be M the first 
ships of the Danish. men" who sought the land of England. 
They killed the port-reeve, took some booty and sailed away. 
Other, pirates appeared in 793 on a (liferent coast, Northumbria, 
attacked a monastery on Lindisfarne (Holy Island), slaying 
and capturing the monks; the following year they attacked 
and burnt Jarrow; after that they were caught in a storm, 
and all perished by shipwreck or at the hands of the country- 
men. In 795 a fleet appeared off Glamorganshire. They 
attacked Man in 798 and Iona in 802. But after this date for 
the lifetime of a generation the chief scene of viking exploits 
was Ireland, and probably the western coasts and islands of 
Scotland. 

The usual course of procedure among the northern adven- 
turers remains the same to whatever land they may direct 
their attacks, or during whatever years of the 9th century these 
attacks may fall. They begin by more or less desultory raids, 
in the course of which they seize upon some island, which they 
generally use as an arsenal or point d'appui for attacks on the 
mainland. At first the raids are made in the summer: the 
first wintering in any new scene of plunder forms an epoch so 
far as that country or region is concerned. Almost always 
for a period all power of resistance on the part' of the inhabitants 
seems after a while and for a limited time to break down, and 
the plunderers to have free course wherever they go. Then 
they show an ambition to settle in the country, and some sort 
of division of territory takes place. After that the northerners 
assimilate themselves more or less to the other inhabitants of 
the country, and their history merges to a less or greater extent 
in that of the country at large. This course is followed in the 
history of the viking attacks on Ireland, the earliest of their 
continuous series of attacks. Thus they begin by seizing the 
island of Rechru (now Lambay) in Dublin Bay (a.d. 795); in 
the course of about twenty years we have notice of them on 
the northern, western and southern coasts; by a.d. 825 they 
have already ventured raids to a considerable distance inland. 
And in a.d. 832 comes a large fleet (** a great royal fleet," say 
the Irish annals) of which the admiral's name is given, Turgesius 
(Thorgds or Thorgisl?). The new invader, though with a 
somewhat chequered course, extended his conquests till in 
ad. 842 one-half of Ireland (called Lethcuinn, or Con's Half) 
seems to have submitted to him; and we have the curious 
picture of Turgesius establishing his wife Ota as a sort of tdlva, 
or priestess, in what had been one of Ireland's most famous 
and most literary monasteries, Clonmacnoise. Turgesius was, 
however, killed very soon after this (in 845); and though in 
a.d. 8$3 Olaf the White was over-king of Ireland, the vikings' 
power on the whole diminished. In the end, territory was— 
if by no formal treaty— ceded to their influence, and the 
(Irish) kingdoms of Dublin and Waterford were established on 
the island. 
* The word forftr (fort) is preserved in the "gorod " of Novgorod. 



64 



VIKING 



This brief sketch may be taken as the prototype of viking 
invasion of any region of western Christendom which was the 
object of their continuous attacks. Of such regions we may 
distinguish five. Almost simultaneously with the attacks on 
Ireland came others, probably also from Norway, on the western 
regions (coasts and islands) of Scotland. Plundering* of Iona 
are mentioned in ajd. 802, 806. In the course of a genera- 
tion almost all the monastic communities in western Scotland 
had been destroyed. But details of these viking plundering* 
are wanting. Chi the continent there were three distinct 
regions of attack. First the mouth of the Scheldt. There 
the Danes very early settled on the island of Wakheren, which 
had in fact been given by the emperor Louis the Pious in fief 
to a Danish fugitive king, Harald by name, who sought the 
help of Louis, and adopted Christianity. After the partition 
of the territory of Charlemagne's empire among the sons of 
Louis the Pious, Wakheren and the Scheldt-mouth fell within 
the possessions of the emperor Lothair, and in the region sub- 
sequently distinguished as Lotharingia. From this centre, 
the Scheldt, the viking raids extended on either side; some- 
times eastward as far as the Rhine, and so into Germany 
proper, the territory assigned to Louis the German; at other 
times westward to the Somme, and thus into the territory 
of Charles the Bald, the future kingdom of France. In the event, 
toward the end of the 9th century all Frisia between Wakheren 
and the German Ocean seems to have become the permanent 
possession of the invaders. In like fashion was it with the 
next district, that of the Seine, only that here no important 
island served the pirates for their first arsenal and winter 
quarters. The serious attacks of the pirates in any part of the 
empire distant from their own lands begin about the time of 
the battle of Fontenoy between Louis' sons (aj>. 841). The 
first wintering of the vikings in the Seine territory (*J>. 850) 
was in " Givoldi fossa," the tomb of one Givoldus, not far from 
the mouth of the river, but no longer exactly detenninable. 
Their first attack on Paris was in ajx 845: a much more 
important but unsuccessful one took place in aj>. 885-87, un- 
successful that is so far as the city itself was concerned; but 
the invaders received an indemnity for raising the siege and 
leave to pass beyond Paris into Burgundy. The settlement of 
Danes under Rouo or Rolf on the lower Seine, i.e. in Normandy, 
dates from the treaty of St Clair-sur-Epte, jld. 912 (or 911). 

The third region is the mouth of the Loire. Here the island 
feint <f a **w» was Noirmoutier, an island with an abbey at the 
Loire mouth. The northmen wintered there in aj>. 843. No 
region was more often ravaged than that of the lower Loire, 
so rich in abbeys— St Martin of Tours, Marmoutiers, St Bene- 
dict, &c But the country ceded to the vikings under Hasting 
at the Loire mouth was insignificant and not in permanent 
occupation. 

Near the end of the 9th century, however, the plundering 
expeditions which emanated from these three sources became 
so incessant and so widespread that we can signalixr no part 
of west France as free from them, at the same time that the 
vikings wrought immense mischief in the Rhine country and 
in Burgundy. The defences of west France seem quite to 
have broken down, as did the Irish when Turgesius took " Con's 
half," or when in jld. 853 Olaf the White became over-king of 
Ireland. Unfortunately at this point our best authority 
ceases-, and we cannot well explain the changes which brought 
about the Christ ianirat ion of the Normans and their settlement 
in Normandy as vassals, though recalcitrant ones, ol the West 
Prankish kings. 

For the viking attacks in the 5th (or 6th) territory, oar own 
country, the course of events is much clearer. As a part ol 
English history it is, however, sufficiently known, and the 
briefest summary thereof must suffice. TVat will show how 
in its general features it follows the normal course. The first 
appearance of the vikings in England we saw was in ajx 789. 
The first serious attacks do not begin tiD 838. The island of 
Sbeppey, however, was attacked in 835, and in the following year 
{fee vikings entrenched themselves there. The first wintering 



of the pirates in England was on the contiguous island ol 
Thanet in AJ>. 850. The breakdown of the English defences 
in all parts of the country save Wessex dates from 868: in 
Wessex that occurs in 877-88. But the position is suddenly 
recovered by Alfred in 878, by the battle of Aethandune, as 
suddenly though not so unaccountably as it was later in West 
Francia. As Rollo was to do in 91 a, the Danish leader Guthorm 
received baptism, taking the name of Aethelstan, and settled 
in his assigned territory, East Anglia, according to the terms 
of the peace of Wedmore. But the forces which Alfred de- 
feated at Aethandune represented but half of the viking army 
in England at the time. The other half under Half dan (Ragnar 
Lodbrog's son?) had never troubled itself about Wessex, but 
had taken firm possession in Northumbria. 

The six territories which we have signalized— Ireland, Western 
Scotland, England, the three in West Francia which merge into 
each other by the end of the 9th century — do not comprise the 
whole field of viking raids or attempted invasion. For farther 
still to the east they twice sailed up the Elbe (a.0. 851, 880) 
and burnt Hamburg. Southwards they plundered far up the 
Garonne, and in the north of Spain; and one fleet of them 
sailed all round Spain, plundering, but attempting in vain 
to establish themselves in this Arab caliphate. Tney plundered 
on the opposite African coast, and at last got as far as the 
mouth of the Rhone, and thence to Luna in Italy. 

What we found in the case of the Irish raids, that at first 
they are quite anonymous, but that presently the names of the 
captains of the expeditions emerge, is likewise the case in all 
other lands. In Ireland, besides the important and successful 
Turgesius, we read of a Saxulf who early met his death, as well 
as of Ivar (Ingvar), famous also in England and called the son 
of Ragnar Lodbrog, and of Oisla, Ivar's comrade; finally (the 
vikings in Ireland being mostly of Norse descent) of the well- 
known Olaf the White, who became king of all the Scandinavian 
settlements in Ireland. In France, Oscar is one of the earliest 
and most successful of the invaders. Later the name of Ragnar 
(probably Ragnar Lodbrog) appears, along with Weland, Hast- 
ing and one of the dons of Ragnar, Bjorn. Farther to the east 
we meet the names of Rurik, Godfred and Siegfried. In the 
eastern region the viking leaders seem to have been closely 
connected with one of the Danish royal families, the kings of 
Jutland. The practical though short-lived conquest of England 
begins under Ivar, Ubbe and Halfdan, reputed sons of Ragnar, 
and is completed by the last of the three in conjunction with 
the Guthorm above mentioned. This is, of course, what we 
should expect, that larger acquaintance gives to the Christian 
chroniclers more knowledge of their enemy. Precisely the same 
process in a converse sense develops the casual raids of early 
times into a scheme of conquest. For at the outset the Christian 
world was wholly strange to these northmen. We have, it has 
been said, hardly any means of viewing these raids from the 
other side. But one small point of light is so suggestive that 
it may be cited, here. The mythical saga of Ragnar Lodbrog is 
undoubtedly concerned with the Viking Age, though it is im- 
possible now to identify most of the expeditions Attributed 
to this northern hero, stories of conquest in Sweden, in Finland, 
in Russia and in England, which belong to quite a different 
age from this one. In the Christian chronicles the name of 
Ragnar is associated with an attack on Paris in aj>. 845, when 
the adventurers were (through the interposition of St Germain, 
say the Christians) suddenly enveloped in darkness— in a thick 
fog?— and fell before the arms of the defenders. In Saxo 
Grammaticus's account of Ragnar Lodbrog, this event seems to 
be reflected in the story of an expedition of Ragnar *s to Bjarma- 
land or Perm in Russia. For Bjarmaland, though it gained 
a local habitation, is also in Norse tradition a wholly mythical 
and mythological place, more or less identical with the under- 
world (NiflheU mist-hell). So it appears in the history given by 
Saxo Grammaticus of the voyage to Bjarraxland of one •• Gorrn 
the okL M It " looks like a vaporous cloud '* and is full of 
tricks and illusions of sense. We see then that in virtue 
of some quite historical misfortune to the viking invader* 



VIKING 



65 



connected with a mist «nd with a great sickness which invaded 
the army, Lhc place they have cone to (in reality Pans) is in 
Scandinavian tradition identified with the mythic fijarmaland; 
and later, in the history of Saxo Grammalicus, it is identified 
with the geographical Bjarraaland or Perm. (Saxo Grammat., 
Hist. Dan. p. 45*. Gylfagtoning (£dda Snorra); Acta SS. 18th 
May and nth Oct.; Steenstrup, tformanneme, L p. ojseq.; 
Scary, The Vikings in Waicm Christendom, pp. 163, ate.) 

No example could better than this bring home to us the 
strangeness of the Christian world to the first adventurers 
from the north, nor better explain the process of familiarity 
which gradually extended the sphere of their ambition. The 
expedition which we have made mention of took place almost in 
the middle of the 9th century, and exactly fifty years after the 
effective opening of the Viking Age. But after this date events 
developed rapidly. It was fourteen years later (in a.d. 850J that 
JUgnar's son Bjorn Ironside and Hasting made their great 
expedition round Spain to the Mediterranean. In 865 or 866 
came to England what we know as the Army, or the Great 
Army, whose first attacks were in the north of England. Five 
kings arc mentioned in connexion with this veritable invasion 
of England, and many earls. Their course was not unchequered ; 
bat it was only in Wessex that they met with any effective 
resistance, and the victory of Ashdown (871) put no end to their 
advance; for, as we know, Alfred himself had at last to wander 
a fugitive in the fastnesses of Selwood Forest. Much was 
retrieved by the victory of Aethandune; yet even after the 
peace of Wedmore as large a part of the land lay under the 
pover of the Danes as of the English. 

It b from this time that we discern two distinct tendencies 
ia the viking people. While one section is ready to settle 
down and receive territory at the hands of the Christian rulers, 
with or without homage, another section stiU adheres to a life 
of mere adventure and of plunder. A large portion of the Great 
Army refused to be bound by the peace of Wedmore, made some 
further attempts on England which were frustrated by Alfred's 
powerful new-built fleet, and then sailed to the continent 
and spread devastation far and wide. We see them under 
command of two Danish " kings," Godfred and Siegfried, first 
ia. the country of the Rhine-mouth or the Lower Scheldt; after- 
ward* dividing their forces and, while some devastate far into 
Germany, others extend their ravages on every side in northern 
France down to the Loire. The whole of these vast countries, 
Northern Francia, with part of Burgundy, and the Rhineland, 
sees to lie as much at their mercy as England had done before 
Aethandane, or Ireland before the death of Turgesius. But In 
every country alike the wave of viking conquest now begins to 
secede. The settlement of Normandy was the only permanent 
— ♦*s»— of the Viking Age in France. In England under 
Edward the Elder and Aethelnaed, Mercta recovered a great 
portion of what had been ceded to the Danes. In Ireland a 
g ppmj expulsion of the invaders took place in the beginning of 
Lac 10th century. Eventually the Norsemen in Ireland con- 
tested themselves with a small number of colonics, strictly 
f^fa^ in territory around certain seaports which they them- 
selves had created: Dublin, Waterford and Wexford; though 
m the whole of Ireland was divided into petty kingdoms, it 
B^bt easily happen that the Norse king in Ireland rose to the 
iniE.iHT — not much more than nominal— of over-king (Ard-Ri) 
lor the whole land. 

Character of Ike Vikings.— Severe, therefore, as were the 
r-iing raids in Europe, and great as was the suffering they 
evicted— on account of which a special prayer, A furore 
TwnmirMw libera not, was inserted in some of the litanies 
«{ Use West — if they had been pirates and nothing more their 
piice m history would be an insignificant one. If they had 
i— ~ no snore than what the Illyrian pirates had been in the 
earJy history of Rome, or than the Arabic corsairs were at this 
Tf ^ southern Europe, the disappearance of the evil would 
1 «?c been quickly followed by its oblivion. But even at the out- 
ire the vikings were more than isolated bands of freebooters. 
An we hnvt seen, the viking outbreak was probably part of a 



national 'movement. We know that at the same time that 
some Scandinavian folk were harrying all the western lands, 
others were founding Garoarfki (Russia) in the east; others were 
pressing still farther south till they came in contact with the 
eastern empire in Constantinople, which the northern folk knew 
as Mikillgaror (Mikkkgard); so that when Hasting and Bjom 
had sailed to Luna in the gulf of Genoa the northern folk 
had almost put a girdle round the Christian world. There is 
every evidence thai the vikings were not a mere lawless folk- 
thai is, in their internal relations— -but that a system of laws 
existed among them which was generally respected. The nearest 
approach to it now preserved is probably the code of laws 
attributed to the mythic king FroSi (the Wise) and preserved in 
the pages of Saxo Grammaticus. It contains provisions for the 
partition of booty, punishments for theft, desertion and treachery. 
But some of the clauses securing a comparative liberty for 
women appear less characteristic of the Viking Age (ct Alexander 
fiugge, Vikingerne, vol i. p. 40). Women, indeed, did not 
take part in their first expeditions. In the constitution of 
the Jomborg state and again in that of the eastern Veerings 
(a Scandinavian body in the service of the East Roman Empire) 
we see a constitution which looks like the foretaste of that of 
the Templars or the Teutonic Knights. Steenstrup thinks the 
code dted by Saxo may be identical with the laws which R0U0 
promulgated for his Norman subjects. In any case, they fall 
more near the viking period than any other northern table of 
laws. A certain republicanism was professed by these ad- 
venturers. " We have no king," one body answered to some 
Freakish delegates. We do read frequently of kings in the 
accounts of their hosts; but their power may not have extended 
beyond the leadership of the expedition; they may have been 
kingsflrf hoc. On the other hand, the whole character of northern 
tradition (Teutonic and Scandinavian tradition alike) forbids 
us to suppose that any would be elected to that office who was 
not of noble or princely blood. They were not entirely un- 
lettered; for the use of runes dates back considerably earlier 
than the Viking Age. But these were used almost exclusively 
for lapidary inscriptions. What we can alone, describe as a 
literature, first the early Eddie verse, next the habit of narrat- 
ing sagas: these things the Norsemen learned probably from 
their Celtic subjects, partly in Ireland, partly in the western 
islands of Scotland; and they first developed the new literature 
on the soil of Iceland. Nevertheless, some of the Eddie songs 
do seem to give the very form and pressure of the viking period. 1 
. In certain material possessions—those, in fact, belonging to 
their trade, which was war and naval adventure — these viking 
folk were ahead of the Christian nations: in shipbuilding, 
for example. There is certainly a historical connexion between 
the ships which the tribes on the Baltic possessed in the days 
of Tacitus and the viking ships (Kcary, The Vikings in Western 
Europe, pp. 108-0): a fact which would lead us to believe that 
the art of shipbuilding had been better preserved there than 
elsewhere in northern Europe. Merchant vessels must of course 
have plied between England and France or Frisia. But it b 
certain that even Charlemagne possessed no adequate navy, 
though a late chronicler tells us how he thought of building one. 
His descendants never carried out his designs. Nor was any 
English king before Alfred stirred up to undertake the same 
task. And yet the Romans, when threatened by the Carthaginian 
power, built in one year a fleet capable of holding its own against 
the, till then, greatest maritime nation in the world. The 
viking ships had a character apart. They may have owed their 
origin to the Roman galleys: they did without doubt owe 
their sails to them.* Equally certain it is that this special 
type of shipbuilding was developed in the Baltic, if not before 

1 More especially the beautiful scries contained in book Hi. of 
the Corpus Pocticum BoreaU, and ascribed by the editors of that 
collection to one poet— " the Hdgi Poet. Here vikings are 
mentioned by name— «.f.s— 

,r Var8 ara yrar.ok iarna glymr; 
Biast rond vie r6nd : rero vflcingar." 
•"Sail" in every Teutonic language is practically the same 
word, and derived from the Latin togulmm. 



66 



VIKRAMADITYA— VILAS 



the time of Tkritus, long before the dawn of the Viking Age. 
Their structure is adapted to short voyages in a sea well studded 
with harbours, not exposed to the most violent storms or most 
dangerous tides. To the last, judging by the specimens of 
Scandinavian boats which have come down to us, they must 
have been not very seaworthy; they were shallow, narrow in 
the beam, pointed at both ends, and so eminently suitable 
for manoeuvring (with oars) in creeks and bays. The viking 
ship had but one large and heavy square sail. When a naval 
battle was in progress, it would depend for its manoeuvring on 
the rowers. The accounts of naval battles in the sagas show 
us, too, that tins was the case. The rowers in each vessel, 
though among the northern folk these were free men and 
warriors, not slaves as in the Roman and Carthaginian galleys, 
would yet need to be supplemented by a contingent of fighting 
men, marines, in addition to their crew. Naturally the ship- 
building developed: so that vessels in the viking time would 
be much smaller than in the Saga Age. In saga literature 
we read of craft (of " long ships ") with so to 50 benches 
of rowers, which would mean 40 to 60 oars. There exist at 
the museum in Christians the remains of two boats which 
were found in the neighbourhood: one, the Goastad ship, is in 
veiy tolerable preservation. It belongs probably to the nth 
century. On this boat there are places for 16 oars a side, 
It is not probable that the largest viking ships had more than 
10 oars a side. As these ships must often, against a contrary 
wind, have had to row both day and night, it seems reasonable 
to imagine the crew divided into three shifts (as they caH them 
in mining districts!, which would give double the number of 
men available to fight on any occasion as to row. 1 Thus a 
to-oared vessel would carry 60 men. But some 40 men 
per ship seems, for this period, nearer the average. In 806, 
toward the end of our age, it is incidentally mentioned in one 
place that five vessels carried aoo vikings, an average of 40 per 
ship. Elsewhere about the same time we read of 12,000 men 
carried in 250 ships, an avenge of aS. 

The round and painted shields of the warriors hung outside 
aVwig the bulwarks: the vessel was steered by an oar at the 
right side (as whaling boats are to~day\ the steerboard or star- 
board side. Prow and stern rose high: and the former was carved 
most often into the likeness of a snake's or dragon's head: so 
generally that ~ dragon " or " worm " (snake) became synony- 
nvxss with a war-ship. The warriors were well armed. The 
eVwir or mail-shirt is often mentioned in Eddie songs: so are 
the axe, the spear, the javchn. the bow and arrows and the 
swrd. The Danes were specially r tuon uc d for their axes; 
bet aboet the sword the most of northern poetry and mytbdogr 
ev-gs. An i m me nse jot in battle breathes through the earliest 
Norse literature, which has scarce its tike in any other Hterature; 
and we know that the language recognised a peculiar battle 
K.ry % a veritable snadsess by which certain were seised and 
whxa went by the name of * berserk's way m tk^wrfcrj**^.* 
The courage of the vikings was proof against aaythir^ even as 
a rule against seperstitious terrors. * We cannot easily realise 
hew aXesVraci^g that courage was. A trained soldier is 
often afraid at sen, a trained safer lost v! he has not the pro- 
tectisg sense of his own ship beneath hisa. The Wki=g ventured 
*-ve nsknowa waters m steps very £3-£tted for their work. 
He had a! the spirit of aduniait of a Drake or a Hawkins, al 



Europe. It is also true, however, that they showed a great 
capacity for government, and in times of peace for peaceful 
organization. Normandy was the best-governed part of Fiance 
in the nth century; and the Danes in East Angfaa and the 
Five Burgs were in many regards a model to their Saxon neigh- 
bours (Steenstrup, «*. cii. iv. ch. a). Of all European lands 
England is without doubt that on which the Viking Age has 
left most impression: in the number of original settlers after 
878; in the way which these prepared for Canute's conquest: 
and finally in that which she absorbed from the conquering 
Normans. England's gam was France's loss: had the Normans 
turned their attention in the other direction, they might likely 
enough have gained the kingdom in France and saved that 
country from the intermittent anarchy from which it suffered 
from the nth till the middle of the 15th century. 

Sources of Viking History. — These are. as has been said, almost 
exclusively the chronicles of the lands visited by the vikings. For 
Ireland we have, as on the whole our best authority, the Annates 
L'Uaniemses (C- O'Conor, Scr. Re*. Hik, iv.). supplemented by the 
Annals of ike Four Masters (ed. O' Donovan) and the Chroniam 
Scoitomm (ed. Hencssy). Finally. The War of tke CaidkiB milk the 
GaiU (ed. Todd): Three Frarrvnts of Irisk History (O* Donovan); 
cf. VY. F. Skene. Cdtie SceLand. tor England the Amtfa-Saxam 
Ckromuk, Annates Lindisfarmenses (in Peru, llomnmntia. vol. six.); 
Simeon of Durham. Histaria Dnnflmi EuU'siae. Far the Franktsh 
empire the chief sources of our information are Tke A nnales Rerni 
Francantm, Annates Bertie*i (Pertz, vol. i.) in three parts (the first 
anonymous, the second bv Prudentius, the third by Hraanar, 
A..O. Sy&Si). Tke A auaUs Xamlemses U-o. 876. &73 : Pertz, voL ii.) 
are the authorities for the northern and eastern reports, and the 
AamaUs Fuldenses (» hich begin with Pipin of Herestcl and go down 
to A.D. 900; Pertz, vol. i.) for Germany. Toward the end of the' 
oth century the Annates I nta&ku (Pertz, vols. i. and ii.) are almost 
the exclusive authority for the western raids. In the historians of 
Normandy, especially in Dudo of Si Quenun, mach incidental matter 



iv be found. 

References to the Viking Age in a general way are to be foun-i 
in a vast nwmber of books. especia!!y histories of the Scandinavian 



countries, of which Munch'* bet Sake Fcxks Bistarie (1652, &c.) 
is the mast distinguished : J. J. A. Worsaa* lias written Minder cm 
de D&iske c* Xfi-JlimuUru i E*£an£. Sia&zai a*Ir!and (l8$l). 
an antiquarian rather than an historical srudv; G. B. Dcpping, 
L'Hisi.tre des exfedm.-xs ma.~.:.mes ces .Varment'* (1843). a not very 
critical work, and E. Mabi.'e. " Les Invasions Normawks dans 
la Loire ** v £-ta> des copies tsL t. 50. iSoo*. A completer work 
than cither of tVse is \V. YogcTs D.e Xs-wcKxr* and das Frcn- 
kisshe Rf-:k v iooe V It docs not. however, break any fresh ground. 
J. C, H. Stecnsmp's .\>"»cj«nr»*f ,,i$t6-&?\ in foor'votuxacs. is not 



the trained vahwr of refaance wpon his 



that mark a 



sna£erys^r£dasasn3ria~iIVrk%z*Trs«a^^ ; 

p. %4$\. He was en&wtwnaxerjr hardSr has marked fc<r creepy | 

and faithlessness. LrrT>s words, * nwrnnnanm craeVftas, per* 

ndtt^ptas owaa* r>nnkn«*mig&» it is to be feared, have been 

► nsssrje to the tnlat.t as tn axgr peopm of western 

MDvwr'wr. i rv 3^s\ to get the mm* 11 of mew 

veswoV adds bwt some an mom. T*i*«rc» 

a*. Th ii MWT an w ^ o waft ie mwcont <t wvwk 

shy? t wg fr t weak srrye *^ a 

rw — as wish ssvar tt^^l vikse* 

■^nhTssr^ 



■^weewsmp i.tmur 
onUaV a JO anr t dwen 

•nwn the cwew. ami lew 
ShflhMn he 



■ anm. 



a coaticocss h'.story. but a scries of studies of (reat learoing i 

value: C F. Kc.-iy, Tie Yl£**& in ilr,>arrn £*rcpr U&91) i 

h!>:or>- cf the vV..-^ raid* o« a?, the we«crr lind«s but ends A.D. SSS. 
A- Bu^jtc's Y-* r ^^e v ?>^|-6 is a stocJ> c« the moral and social 
sk> ol :Se vikings, or, one should rather say, of the earnest Scandi- 
nav^anioU^ <C-F. K_) 

▼nCllhTnmTYJL a lceeadarr FBnin king of Uxjain, who 
is supposed to ha\e pats h-s usae to the V&ram Samvnt, 
the era w*»Jch is nsed a2 oxer aenbera Irriia. except in Bengal, 
and at w*»e<se court the ** iure pfrs ** 01 Sacsirit literature are 
abo scTposed to have fiscrl^ed. Tbe \Tkrara era is reckoned 
from the venai eqv:=>«t ot tie vear 5- nx., but there is no 
evidence thai that *la:e cor7ea?er.is wi:>« xry event in the life 
of an actual king. As a ra:ter of fact, aS dates in this crai 
down to t>* icch ces^ry never use tie wcrd \~&ram, but that 
of Malava i^iead. :Kat br>4! the tribe that pres its name to 
>Ia^va, Tie narse \Ti.rirr^c-;>-i s:^?^- rrcars * sun of power." 
and was aiopzed by sevesa! Hladrs k~r>. of whom Cr^and* 
rar.*^<a IL vCKaadrap^ca \"ira=kai:- r >-A x . who astended tbe 
thzvoe of the Gv^xas aiwet jld. 3:5, xrf^aacbes most nearly 
10 the legend. 

See AVxa-Ar Crt-»rc*anL Baj>* *f TjJmsm Eras (1883); and 
Yineewt. S«t:V Srt'v Eu^r? of Jwcm v iOA|\ 

YlLni. VIUIJJI FftlBUS ,:?Lt^tco5\ American poKticnl 
tesier and Iiwjtt. was Sxz i^ C^cisra, Vcrsacct. on the oth of 
J-V »^K^ Hts :V.Ver, Le\i B. V2i$. a h"»ycr and Demo ct ntic 
jvO.:k-u=- e*-;£T*:r<i ia t5j: •» Miiisc«.Mscersm. William 
jrainatoi at the ^^ers^r *£ Wsc.^s.^ in 1S5S, and at tlse 
-\So>Tv ,Xew Ycrk x Law $&n! ia i&kx and be^an to practise 
hw in Madaan w^i v^ / j:Str j, :5f , ^ ^-r^tej ^^ be . 
came cap&aa of Cw r^ v aajr A of the Twea*^Tbird W ls c oaasi ia 



VILL—VILLACH 



67 



Vemntecrs, of which lie wn made lieutenant-colonel in 1663, 
tad which he commanded in tbe siege of Vkksburg. la 
August 1863 he resigned his commission and resumed his law 
practice. He was professor of law in the university of Wisconsin 
m 1808-05, and again in 1880-99, and In 1875-78 was a 
ssember of the commission which revised the statutes of 
Wisconsin. From 1876 to 1886 he was a member of the 
National Democratic Committee, and virtually the leader of 
ms patty in his state; he was a delegate to the National 
Democratic Conventions of 1876, 1880 and 1884, and was 
permanent chairman of the last. In 1885 he was a member 
of the state Assembly. He was postmaster-general in President 
Grower Cleveland's cabinet from March 1885 until January 1888, 
and was then secretary of the interior until March 1889. From 
1 Sot until 1897 be was a member of the United States Senate, 
hi which, during President Cleveland's second term, he was 
m w gi ii srd as the chief defender of the Administration, and 
he was espedaUy active in securing the repeal of the silver- 
purchase clause of the Sherman Act. He was a delegate to the 
Democratic National Convention of 1806, but withdrew after 
the adoption of the free-silver plank. He then became one of 
the chief organizers of the National (or Cold) Democratic 
party, attended the convention at Indianapolis, and was 
chairman of its committee on resolutions. In 1881-85 and 
in 1808-1005 he was a regent of the university of Wisconsin') 
and he was a member (1897-1003) of the commission which 
had charge of the erection of the State Historical Library at 
Madison, and in 1906*8 of the commission for the con- 
structioa of the new state capitol. He died at Madison on 
the 27th of August 190S. 

With E. E. Bryant be edited vols. i. to xx., except vol. v., of the 
Repfts ef the Wisconsin Supreme Court. 

Vim the Anglicised form of the word villa, used" in Latin 
aoenments to translate the Anglo-Saxon /mm, township, " the 
ant of the constitutional machinery, the simplest form of 
axial organization " (Stubbs, Const. Hist. J 39). Tbe word 
did not always and at all times have this meaning in Latin* 
EagEsfci documents, but H vifl" and " township " were 
efennatdy, in English law, treated as convertible terms for 
ozsrribing a village community, and they remained in use in 
leal nomenclature until the ecclesiastical parishes were con* 
verted into areas for dvfl administration under the Poor 
Law Acts. This technical sense is derived from the late Latin 
me of vSU for wVnr, a village. Thus Fleta (vi. c. $0, writing 
at the time of Edward I., distinguishes the villa, as a collection 
ef habitations and their appurtenances, from the mansio, a 
segle house, nutti vicina, and the manor, which may embrace 
one or more villa* . In classical Latin viRa had meant " country- 
house/* " farm," " villa " (see Villa); but the word was pro- 
aaaiy an abbreviation of vicula, diminutive of vicus, and in 
the sense of vicus H is used by Apuleius in the 2nd century. 
Later it even displaced chitas, for city; thus Rutilius Numa- 
tiaras m his Uinerarium speaks of villae in^enUs, oppida 
asras; whence the French ville (see Du Cange, Glossarium lot. 
%jv. Yaha). In the Prankish empire villa was also used of the 
royal and imperial palaces or seats with their appurtenances. 
la the sense of a small collection of habitations the word came 
zrto general use in England in the French form "village." 
From mtta. too, are derived viflcm and vilknage {q.v.) (see also 
YrLL*cz Coxou/wities). 

VILLA, the Latin word (diminutive of vicus, a village) for 
a country-house. This term, which fai England is usually 
ajren to a small country-house detached or semi-detached 
a the vicinity of a large lown, is being gradually superseded 
by such expressions as "country" or "suburban house," 
" bungalow,'* ftc, but in Italy h is still retained as in Roman 
ixsnes and means a summer residence, sometimes being of great 
extern. References to the villa are constantly made by Roman 
writers. Cicero is said to have possessed no less than seven 
riBas, the oldest of which was near Arpinum, which he inherited. 
Puny the younger had three or four, of which the example 
near Laurentrum is the best known from his descriptions. 



There Is too wide a divergence In the .various c o njort um l 
restorations to make them of much value, but the remains 
of the villa of Hadrian at Tivoii, which covered an ansa over 
seven miles long and in which reproductions were made of aU 
the most celebrated buildings he had seen during bis travels, 
those in Greece seeming to have had the most attraction 1st 
hfan, and the villas of the- idth century on similar sites, such 
as the Villa d'Este near Tivoii, enable one to form some idea 
ef the exceptional beauty of the positions selected and of the 
splendour of the structures which enriched them. According 
to Phny, there were two kinds of villas, the villa urbatuh wbfca 
was a country seat, and the villa rustka, the farm-house, 
occupied by tbe servants who had charge generally of the 
estate. The Villa Bosforcafo near Pompeii, which was excavated 
In 1893-04, was an example of the villa rustica, in which the 
principal room was the kitchen, with the bakery and stables 
beyond and room for the wine presses, oil presses, hand mihV 
ftc. The villas near Rome were all built on huiy sites, so that 
the laying out of the ground in terraces formed a very important 
element in their design, and this forms the chief attraction of 
the Italian villas of the 16th century, among which the following 
are the best known: the Villa Madams, the design of which, 
attributed to Raphael, was carried out by Giuho Romano in 
I5x>; the Villa Medici (1540); the VuU Albani, near the 
Porta Solaria; the Borghese; the Doria Pamphili (1690); 
the Villa di Papa Giuho (1550), designed by Vignola; the 
Aldobmndini (159a); the Fakonieri and the Montdragon 
Villas at Frascati, and the ViHa d'Este near Tivoii, in which 
the terraces and staircases are of great importance. In the 
proximity of other towns in Italy there are numerous villas, 
of which the example best known is that of the Villa Rotunda 
or Capra near Vkenza, which was copied by Lord Burhngton 
in his house at Chiswiclc 

The Italian villas of the 16th and 17th century, like those of 
Roman times, included not only the country residence, but the 
whole of the other buildings on the estate, such as bridges, 
casinos, pavilions, small temples, rectangular or circular, which 
were utilized as summer-houses, and these seem to have had 
a certain influence in England, which may account for the 
numerous examples in the large parks in England of similar 
erections, as also the laying out of terraces, grottos and formal 
gardens. In France the same influence was felt, and at 
FontaineUeau, Versailles, Meudon and other royal palaces, tbe 
celebrated Le N6tre transformed the parks surrounding them 
and introduced the cascades, which in Italy are so important 
a feature, as at St Cloud near Paris. (R. F. S.) 

VILLACH, a town in Carinthia, Austria, 94 m. W.of Klagen* 
fort by rail. Pop. (1900) 9690. It is situated on the Drave, 
near its confluence with the Gail, in a broad fertile basin at the 
foot of the Dobratsch or Villacher Alp (7107 ft.). The parish 
church is an interesting Gothic cdi6ce of the' 1 5th century. The 
principal industry of Villach consists in the fabrication of various 
lead wares, and is mostly dependent on the lead mines of 
Bleiberg, which is situated about 9 m. to the west. This village 
(pop. 3435) is one of the richest lead-mining centres in Europe. 
The ores found here comprise silver-free galena, sulphate of zinc 
and calamine. The mines were already worked during the 
middle ages. Warmbad Villach, a watering-place with hot 
sulphur baths, and Mittewald, a favourite summer resort, whence 
the ascent of the Dobratsch can he made, are in tbe neighbour- 
hood of Villach. Some of the prettiest Carinthian lakes are 
to be found near Villach, as the Ossiacher-see, on whose southern 
shore stands the ruined castle of Landskron, dating from the 
middle of the 16th century, the Wdrther-see and the small but 
lovely Faaker-see. 

Villach is an old town, which was given by Heinrich II. to 
the bishopric of Bamberg in 1007. During the middle ages it 
was an Important centre of commerce between Germany and 
Italy. With the advent of new trade routes at the beginning 
of modern times the town lost its importance, and in 1745 
the citizens nearly decided to emigrate en masse. Its trade 
revived during the French occupation of 1809-13, and it 



66 



VILLA DEL PILAR— VILLAGB COMMUNITIES 



continued to improve during the 19th century. The Turks were 
defeated here in 149a by Maximilian L, and an engagement 
between the Auttrians and the French took place here on the 
aist of August 1813. 

VILLA DEL PILAR, a city of Paraguay, 104 m. & by E. of 
Asuncion, on the left bank of the navigable river Paraguay, 
which receives the Bermejo from the right immediately opposite. 
Pop. (1910) about 10,000. Villa del Pilar is a thriving modern 
city, containing barracks, law courts, a national college, several 
schools and a branch of the Agricultural Bank. It has a fine 
harbour, and is one of the principal centres in the republic for 
the exportation of oranges. 

VILLAFRANCA DI VKHONA, a town of Venetia, Italy, in 
the province of Verona, xi m. S.S.W. of Verona, on the railway 
to Mantua, 174 ft. above sea-levcL Pop. (1001) 5037 (town); 
0635 (commune). It has considerable silk industries. Here 
preliminaries of peace were signed between Napoleon III. and 
the Austrians in 1859 after the battle of Solfcrino. Five miles 
to the N. is Custoaaa, where the Italians were defeated by the 
Austrians in 1848 and 1866, YiUafranca is a' common place 
name in Italy. 

VILLAQB COMMUNITIES. The study of village communities 
has become one of the fundamental methods of discussing the 
ancient history of institutions. It would be out of the question 
here to range over the whole field of human society in search for 
communal arrangements of rural life. It will be sufficient to 
confine the present inquiry to the varieties presented by nations 
of Aryan race, not because greater importance is to be attached 
10 these nations than to other branches of humankind, although 
this view might also be reasonably urged, but principally because 
the Aryan race in its history has 'gone through all sorts of 
experiences, and the data gathered from its historical life can 
be tolerably well ascertained. Should the road be sufficiently 
cleared in this particular direction, it will not be difficult to 
connect the results with similar researches in other racial 
surroundings. 

The best way seems to be to select some typical examples, 
chiefly from the domain of Celtic, Slavonic and Germanic 
social history, and to try to interpret them in regard to the 
general conditions in which communal institutions originate, 
grow and decay. As the principal problem will consist in 
ascertaining how far land was held in common instead of being 
held, as is usual at present, by individuals, it is advisable to 
look out for instances in which this element of holding in common 
is very dearly expressed. We ought to get, as it were, acclima- 
tised to the mental atmosphere of such social arrangements in 
order to counteract a very natural but most pernicious bent 
prompting one to apply to the conditions of the past the key 
of our modem views arid habitual notions, A certain acquaint- 
ance with the structure of Celtic society, more especially the 
society of ancient Wales, b likely to make it dear from the out- 
set to what extent the husbandry and law of an Aryan- race 
may depend on institutions in which the individual factor is 
greatly reduced, while the union first of kinsmen and then of 
neighbours plays a most decisive part. 

F. Seebohm has caked our attention to the interesting surveys 
of Welsh tracts of country made in the 14th century, soon after 
these regions passed into the hands of English lords. The frag- 
ments of these surveys published by him and his commentary 
on them are very illuminating, but further study of the docu- 
ments themselves discloses many important details and helps 
to correct some theories propounded on the subject. Let us 
take up a concrete and simple case. *g- the description of 
Astret Canon, a trev or township [nZiUl of the honour of 
Denbigh, surveyed in 1334. In the time of the native Welsh 
princes it was occupied entirely by a kindred (Jrvfras) of tree 
U A t» m in des c ended from a certain Canon, the son of Lawaurgh. 
The IJntfrifl was subdivided into four gaveUs or bodies of joint- 
I mini i On the half-eavell of Monryk ap Canon. *j. there are 
no less than sixteen coparceners* of whom eight possess bouses. 
The pacufiartty of this system of land tenure consists in the ' 
fact that aft the tenant**©! these gavchV derive their position j 



on the land from the occupation of the township by their 
kindred, and have to trace their rights to shares in the original 
unit. Although the village of Astret Canon was occupied under 
the Survey by something like fifty-four male tenants, the majority 
of whom were settled in houses of their own, it continued 
to form a unit as well in regard to the payment of tungpound, 
that is, of the direct land tax and other services and pay- 
ments, but also in respect of the possession and usage of the toil. 
On the other hand, movable property is owned in severalty. 
Services have to be apportioned among the members of the 
kindreds according to the number of heads of cattle owned by 
them. From the description of another township— Pireyon— 
we may gather another important feature of this tribal tenure. 
The population of this village also dust e red in ga veils, and wc 
hear that these gavells ought to be considered as equal shares 
in respect of the arable, the wood and the waste of the town* 
ship. If the shares were reduced into acres there would have 
fallen to each of the eight gavells of Pireyon ninety-one acres, 
one rood and a half and six perches of arable and woodland, 
and fifty-three and one-third of an acre and half a rood of waste 
land. But as a matter of fact the land was not divided in such 
a way, and the rights of the tenants of the gavdl were realised 
not through the appropriation of definite acres, but as propor- 
tionate opportunities in regard to tillage and as to usages in 
pasture, wood and waste. Pastoral habits must have greatly 
contributed to give the system of landbolding its peculiar 
character. It was not necessary, it would have been even 
harmful, to subdivide sharply the area on which the herds of 
cows and the flocks of sheep and goats were grazing. Still 
Welsh rural life in the 14th century had already a definite 
though subordinate agricultural aspect, and it is important to 
notice that individual appropriation had as yet made very 
slight progress in it. 

We do not notice any systematic equalisation between 
members of the tribal communities of the trev*. In fact, 
both differences in the ownership of cattle and differences of 
tribal standing, established by complex reckonings of pedigree 
and of social rank, led to marked inequalities. But there 
was also the notion of birthright, and we find in the laws that 
every free tribesman considered himself entitled to claim from 
his kindred grazing facilities and five erws for tillage. Such 
a daim could be made unconditionally only at a time when 
there was a superabundance of land to dispose of. In the 
14th century, to which our typical descriptions refer, this state 
of things had ceased to be universal. Although great tracts of 
Welsh land were undoubtedly still in a state of wilderness, the 
soil an more conveniently situated regions was beginning to be 
scarce, and considerable pressure of population was already 
fell, with a consequent transition from pastoral pursuits to 
agriculture. The tract appropriated to the township of Asiret 
Canon, for instance, contained only 574 acres of land of all 
kinds. In this case there was hardly room for the customary 
five erws per head of grown-up males besides commons. And 
yet although the population lived on a small pittance, the system 
of tribal tenure was not abandoned. 

Although there are no rearrangements or rediviskm within 
the tribe as a whole, inside every gaveU, representing more 
narrow circles of kinsmen, usually the descendants of one great- 
grandfather, Kt second cousins, the shares arc shifted and 
readjusted according to one of two systems. In one case, 
that of the trevcYvriv or joint-account village, every man 
receives ** as much as another yet not of equal value ' — nhich 
means, of course, that the members of such communities were 
provided with equal allotments, but left to make the best of 
them, each according to chance and ability. This practice of 
reallotment was, however, restricted in the 14th century to 
taeog trevs. to villages occupied by half-free settlers. The 
free tribesmen, the prijd^ii of Walts, held by J^JJcnkvJ, 
and realiotted shares within the trev on the cording of each 
new generation or. conversely, on the going out, the d\ing out, 
of each older general »x la oiher weeds: at the demise of 
the last of the grandfathers in a gaveU, all The fathers took 



VILLAGE COMMUNITIES 



69 



equal rank and chimed equal than* efthough formerly some 
of the portions had been distributed equally only between the 
grandfathers or their offspring (stirps). The right to claim 
redmsioa held good only within the circle of second cousin*. 
Members of the kindled who stood farther than that from 
each other, that is, third cousins, were not entitled to reallot- 
■est on the strength of deddenkud. 

Another fact which is brought out with complete evidence 
by the Welsh Surreys is that the tenure is ascribed to com- 
SMimtics of kinwnrn and not to chiefs or headmen The latter 
certainly existed and had exerted a powerful Influence on the 
disposal of common land as well as on government and justice. 
Bat in the view of 14th-century surveys each township is 
owned not by this or the other elder, but by numerous bodies 
of coparceners. The gavell of Owen Gogh, for instance, 
*— »-£^ twenty-six coparceners. In this way there is a 
dear attribution of rights of communal ownership, if we like 
to use the term, and not merely of rights of marntmanrr Nor 
is there any warrant for a construction of these Arrangements 




Let na now compare this description of Celtic tribal tenure 
wah Slavonic institutions. The most striking modem ex- 
amples of tribal communities settled on a territorial basis are 
sswrsrted by the history of the Southern Slavs in the Balkan 
Atamans* and in Austria, of Slovenes, Croats, Serbs and Bul- 
garians, bat it is easy to trace customs of the same kind in the 
ssenmesae of Western Slavs conquered by Germans, of the 
Boles and of the different subdivisions of the Russians. A good 
rise to the subject is provided by a Serb proverb which says 
that a seen by Idmadf is bound to be a martyr. One might 
i that these popular customs illustrate the Aristo- 
* 1 of the single man seeking the " autarkcia," 
a Tnr 1 — ^ and self-sufficient exigence in the society of his 
, and arriving at the stage of the tribal village, the 
that, which, is also a *£;st, as described in the famous intro- 
eactnry chapter of the Greek philosopher's Politics. The 
Skvs of the mountainous regions of the Balkans and of the 
Alps m their stubborn struggle with nature and with human 
; have clustered and still cluster to some extent (*.*. in 
_ o) in closely united and widely spreading brother* 
, (niurims) and tribes (pkmem). Some of these brother- 
, derive their names from a real or supposed common 
r, and are composed of relatives as well as of affiliated 
They number sometimes hundreds of members, 1 of 
, as the fighting males are characteristically called. Such 
► Vukotici, Kovacevici, as one might say in Old English 
t Vokotings or Kovachevings, of Montenegro. The dwell- 
sags, fields, and pasturages of these brotherhoods or kindreds 
are scattered over the country, and it is not always possible to 
trace them in compact divisions on the map. But there was 
the closest- union in war, revenge, funeral rites, marriage ar- 
xsaepmenta, provision for the poor and for those who stand 
as need of special help, as, for instance, in case of fires, inunda- 
tion* and the like. And corresponding to this union there 
existed a strong feeling of unity in regard to property, especially 
psuy c ity in land. Although ownership was divided among 
the 'gee— ■* families, a kind of superior or eminent domain 
stretched over the whole of the brotsho, and was expressed in 
the iwrtr 4 r* tWi in common in pasture and wood, in the right 
tc control alienations of land and to exercise pre-emption. If 
say of Use me m bers of the brotherhood wanted to get rid of his 
tease he had to apply first to his next of kin within the family 
aii T** T*y to the further h*Dtfty>n of the bralstvo. 

As the Welsh kindred Iprogomes) were subdivided Into 
geaefls formed of extended family communities, even so the 
Jsontenegrin, Servian, Slovene tribes fell into house 
Kmtos, Zadrqyu, which were built up on the 
of keeping blood-relatives and their property to- 
gether aa long as possible. They consisted generally of some 
1: to jo grown-up persons, tome 6 or 7 first and second cousins 
wtsk their wives and children, living in a hamlet around the 
* They range from 80 or 90 to 700. 



cental house of the (feswtfa, the house leader. In some in- 
stances the number of coparceners increased to 50 or even to 
7a The members of the united house community; which hi 
fact is a small village or hamlet, joined in meals and work. 
Their rights in the undivided household of the hamlet were 
apportioned according to the pedigree, is. this apportion- 
ment took account first of the stirpes or extant descendants of 
former scions of the family, so that, say, the offspring of each 
of twjo grandfathers who had been brothers were considered 
as equal sharers although the stwps, the stock, of one was 
fipa ts tiilc d only by one person, while the stop* of the other 
had grown to consist of two uncles and of three nephews sU 
alive. There was no resettlement of shares, as in the case of 
Wales, but the fife of the house community whfle it existed 
unbroken led to work in common, the contributions to which 
are regulated by common consent and supervised by the leader. 
Grounds, houses, implements of agriculture (ploughs, oxen, 
carts) and of viniailture--casks, cauldrons for the making 
of brandy, &&, are considered to be common capital and ought 
not to be sold unless by common consent. Divisions were not 
prohibited. Naturally a family had to divide sooner or later, 
and the shares have to be made real, to be converted into fields 
and vineyards. But this wss an event which marks, as it were, 
the dose of the regular existence of one union and the birth of 
similar unions derived from it. As a rule, the huCa kept together 
as long as it could, because co-operation was needed and isola- 
tion d an g e ro us f or economic considerations as weir as for the 
sake of dfffcncft. 

Attention, however, should be called more particularly to 
the parallel phenomena in the social history of the Russians, 
where the conditions seem to stand out in specially strong 
contrast with those prevailing among the mountain Slavs of 
the Balkans and of the Alps. In the enormous extent of 
Russia we have to reckon with widely different geographical 
and racial areas, among other, with the Steppe settlements of 
the so-called Little Russians in the Ukraina and the forest 
settlements of the Great Russians in the north. In spite of 
great divergencies the economic history of all these branches of 
Slavonic stock gravitates towards one main type, vis. towards 
rural unions of kinsmen, on the basis of enlarged households. 
In the south the typical village settlement is thvdvoriUt, the 
big court or hamlet consisting of some four to eight related 
families holding together; in the north it is the pdiUs, the big 
oven, a hamlet of somewhat smaller rise in which three to five 
families are closely united for purposes of common husbandry. 

It is mteresting to notice that even the break-up of the joint 
household does not lead to an entire severance of the ties 
between ha members. They mostly continue in another form, 
vis. in the shape of an open-field system with intermixture 
of strips, compulsory rotation of crops, common* of pasture, 
of wood, sometimes shifting allotments as regards meadows. 
There is, «.*% an act of division between six brothers from the 
north of Russia of the year 1640. They agree to divide bread 
and salt, house and liberties, money, doth and stores of all 
kinds and to settle apart. As to arable, Shumila is to take 
the upper strip in the field by the settlement, and next to him 
Tretjak, then Maxim, then Zaviala, then Shestoy, then Luke. 
In the big harvest furlong likewise, and in the small likewise, 
and by the meadow likewise and so on through sU the furlongs. 
So that in this case and in innumerable other cases of the same 
kind the open-field system with its inconvenient mtermixture 
of plots and limited power of every husbandman to manage 
his land appears as a direct continuation of the joint tribal 
households. 

Another fact to be noticed is the tendency to form artificial 
associations on the pattern of the prevailing unions of kinsmen. 
People who have no blood-relations to appeal to for clearing 
the waste, for providing the necessary capital in the way of 
cattle and plough implements, for raising and fitting out 
buildings, join in order to carry on these economic under- 
takings, and also to help each other against enemies and 
aggressors. The members of these voluntary associations, 



70 



VILLAGB COMMUNITIES 



which at once ciB to mind German, None and English gilds, are 

gmllirf «« AKii" «« «H^mfci » «n/j »h» gfr U tt^m^lw •« Spolkie/' 

b south Russia. Hi a district of the Ukraine called the 
"Ratensky Sharoatvo" there were no fewer than 378 such 
gilds interchanging with natural kin dred s. The organization 
of all these unions conk} in no way be oiled patziarchal 
Even in cases when there is a definite elder or headman (aaf- 
skoy), he was only the first among equals and eierrited only a 
limited authority over his fellows, all the important decagons 
had to be taken by the council of the community. 

In Great Russia, in the districts gathered under the sway 
of the Moscow tsars, the basis of the household community and 
of the rural settlements which sprang from it was modified 
fat another direction. The entire agricultural population was 
subjected to strict supervision, and coerc iv e measures for 
purposes of military organisation and taxation. Society was 
drilled into uniformity and service on the principle that every 
man has to serve the tsar, the upper class in war and civil 
administration, the lower class by agricultural labour. A 
consequence of the heavy burden laid on the land and of the 
growth of a landed aristocracy somewhat resembling the gentry 
and the nobUsst of the West was a change in the management 
of land allotments. They became as much a badge of service 
and a basis for fiscal requirements as a means of livelihood. 
The result was the practice of reaDotments according to the 
strength and the needs of different families. The shifting of 
arable (ptadd) was not in this case a reapportionment of 
rights, but a consequence of the correspondence between rights 
and ohfigariom, But although this admeasurement of claims 
appears as a comparatively recent growth of the system, the 
fundamental solidarity between kintmm or neighbourly asso- 
ciates grouped into villages was in no way an invention of 
the tsars or of their officials: it was rooted in traditional 
customs and naturally suggested by the practices of joint 
households. When these households become cro w d ed in cer- 
tain areas, open-field systems arise; when they are burdened 
with public and private service their dose co-operation pro- 
duces occasional or periodical redrviskais of the soil between 
the shareholders. 

Let us now pass to village conmiunfties in Teutonic countries, 
including England. A convenient startmg-pomt is afforded 
by the social and e con o mic conditions of the southern part of 
Jutland. 

Now the Saxon or Dtcmarschen portion of this region gives 
us an opportunity of observing the effects of an extended 
and highly systematised tribal organisation on Germanic sofl. 
The ^dependence of this northern peasant republic, which 
reminds one of the Swiss cantons, lasted until the time of the 
Reformation. We find the IMtmarschen organised in the 15th, 
as they had been in the 10th century, in a number of large 
kindreds, partly composed of relatives by blood and partly of 
44 cousins " who had joined them. The membership of these 
k\;dreds is based on agnatic ties— that is, on relationship 
through males— or on affiliation as a substitute for such agnatic 
kinship*. The families or households are grouped into brother- 
hoods, and these again into dans or M Schlachten n (Gfcscefeefcr), 
corresponding to Roman gasies. Some of them could put 
as many as 500 warriors in the field. They took their names 
from ancestors and chieftains: the WcJlersnannen, Henne- 
manncn, Jerremannen, Ac— that is, the men of WoD, the men 
of Heune, the men of Jerxe. In spite of these personal names 
the iMiiiiinlMi of the dans was by no means a monarchical 
one: it was based on the participation of the full-frown fight- 
ing men in the government of each dan and on a council of 
co-opted elders at the head of the entire federation. We need 
not repeat here what has already been stated about the mutual 
support which such dans afforded to their mrsnbtn in wax 
and hi peace, m jwffdal and in economic matters. 

Let us notice the influence of this tribal organisation on 
.wty. The regular econruaic arrangement 
I one based on a three-field and sinular systems. 
TlwfUfSBUga were divided into iaterawscd strips with com- 



pulsory relation on tJie usual pattern. And ft is interesting 
to notice that in these economic surroundings indivisible 
holdings con rsponriin g to the organic unities required for 
efficient agriculture arose of themselves. In spite of the equal 
right of an coheirs 10 an estate, this estate does not get divided 
according to their numbers, but either remains undivided or 
else falls into such fractions, halves or fourths, which will enable 
the farming to be carried on soccessfuuy. without rmsdnevous 
interruption and disruption Gradually the people settled 
down into the custom of united lurrrsrinn for agrarian units. 
The Hufe or Hof , the virgate, an might have been said in 
England, goes mostly to the eldest son, but also sometimes 
to the youngest, while the brothers bf the heir ether remain 
m the same household with farm, generally unmarried, or leave 
the house after having settled with the heir, who takes charge 
of the holding; as to an mdemnity for their relinquished chums. 
Tins mdemnity is not equivalent to the market price, but is 
fixed, in case of dispute or doubt, by an award of impartial 
and expert neighbours, who have to consider not only the 
claims of interested persons but also the economic quality and 
strength of the holding. In other words, the heir has to pay 
so much as the estate can conveniently provide without being 
wrecked by the outlay. 

This evidence b of decisive importance in regard to the 
formation of unified holdings; we are on entirely free soil, with 
no vestige whatever of inanorial organization or of coercion 
of tenants by the lord, and yet the Hufe, the normal holding, 
comes to the fore as a result of the eu a muk situation, on the 
strength of considerations drawn from the efficiency of the) 
fanning. This M Anerben " system is widely spread all through 
Germany. The question whether the eldest or the youngest 
succeeds is a subordinate one. Anyhow, manorial authority 
is not ntceinry to produce the limitation of the rights of success 
son to land and the creation of the system of holdings, although 
this has been often asserted, and one of the arguments for a 
servile origin of village communities turns on a imawyid incom- 
patibility between unified wirreiaon and the equal rights of 
free coheirs. 

We need not speak at any length about other parts of Germany, 
as space does not permit of a description of the i i nmmriab lo 
combinations of communal and individual elements in Gennan 
law, the various shapes of manorial and political institutions 
with which the influence of blood rdarinmhip, gild and neigh- 
hourly union had to struggle. 

But we must point out some facts from the range of Scandi- 
navian customs. In the mountainous districts of Norway wo 
notice the same tendency towards the unification of holdings 
as in the plains and hills of Schleswig and Bohtrm. Tha 
bonder of Gudbrandsdalen and Tefemarken, the free peasantry 
tilling the seal and pasturing herds on the slopes of the hills 
since the days of Harold Harfagr to our own times, sit in Odei- 
ga*rds t or freehold estates, from which supernumerary heirs 
are removed on receiving some «**— w pfry t and which are pro- 
tected from alienation into strange hands by the privilege o€ 
pre-emption exercised by relatives of the seller. Equally 
suggestive are some facts on the Danish side of the Straits, 
vis. the arrangements of the Mis which correspond to the 
hides and virgates of England and to the Huf en of Germany. 
Here again we have to do with normal holdings fr* 1 * !*— ^frrit 
of the number of coheirs, but dependent on the re quirem ents) 
of agriculture— on the plough and oxen, on certain —— »tTit 
relations between the arable of an estate and its outlying comw 
moos, meadows and woods. The bol does not stand by itself 
like the Norwegian gaard, but is fitted into a very dose uniosa 
with neighbouring boh of the same kind. Pf»<tir« ^ ntf tmi^^ n^ 
of open-field intermixture, of compulsory rotation of lot- t n ea d ows , 
of stinting the commons, arise of themselves in the villages of 
Denmark and Sweden. Laws compiled in tike 13th century 
but based on even more aadent customs give us most inter-. 
esting and definite information as to Scandinavian r»r^ttrts of 



We catch a rjSmpas, to begin with, of a aaethod of dividing: 



VILLAGE COMMUNITIES 



adds which wis considered archaic even in those early times. 
The Swedish laws use the expression " foroiskif t," which 
boos ancient mode of allotment, and another term corre- 
sponding to it is " bunarskift," which may possibly be con- 
nected with throwing the hammer in order to mark the boundary 
of land occupied by a man's strength. The two principal features 
of form or hamar skif t ate the irregularity of the resulting 
shapes of plots and the temporary character of their occupation. 
The first observation may be substantiated by a description 
like that of Laasby in Jutland: *' These lands are to that 
extent scattered and intermixed by the joint owners that it 
eannot be said for certain what (or how much)' they are. 1 ' 
Swedish documents, on the other hand, speak expressly of 
practices of shifting arable and meadows periodically,' some- 
tisMS year by year. 

Now the uncertainty of these practices based on occupa- 
tion became in process of time a most inc onv e nie nt feature 
of the situation and evidently led to constant wrangling as 
to rights and boundaries. The description of Laasby which 
I have just quoted ends with the significant remark: " They 
should be compelled to make allotment by the cord." This 
making of allotments by the cord is the process of rebning, 
hum re*, the surveyor's cord, and the juridical procedure 
accessary for it was called." solskift "--because it was a division 
i r fr i r-iag the course of the sun. 

The two fundamental positions from which this form of 
■»««-»—» proceeds are: (i) that the whole area of the village 
s "—»——» land (jadltsjord), which has to be lotted out to the 
■ugle householders; (2) that the partition should result in the 
creation of equal holdings of normal sise (boh). In some 
cases we can actually recognize the effect of these allotments 
by ******** solskift in the 18th century, at a time when the 
Danish ■ ■lUmiin acts produced a second general revolution in 
lsnfl tenatxe. 

The oldest twelve inhabitants, elected as sworn arbitrators 
for effecting the allotment, begin their work by throwing to- 
gether into one mass all the grounds owned by the members 
of the community, including dwellings and farm-buildings, 
with the exception of some privileged plots. There is a close 
correspondence between the sites of houses and the shares in 
the neld. The first operation of the surveyors consists in 
«— **-g oat a village green for the night-rest and pasture of 
the cattle employed in the tillage (forli) t and to assign sites 
to the nooses of the coparceners with orchards appendant to 
then (tofts); every householder getting exactly as much 
as has neighbour. From the tofts they proceed to the fields 
m the customary notion that the toft is the mother of the 
fiekL The fields are disposed into furlongs and shots, as they 
went called in England, and divided among the members of 
the village with the strictest possible equality. This is effected 
by »Hg""»c to every householder a strip in every one of the 
constituting the arable of the village. Meadows 
> often treated as lot-meadows in the same way as in Eng- 
hmd. According to the account of a solrebning executed in 
25x3 (Oester Hoejsted), every otHng, the eighth part of a bol 
tojeYe&ponding to the English oxgang or bovate), got a toft 
of *o roods in length and 6 in breadth. One of the coparceners 
received, however, 8 roods because his land was worse than that 
sf has nrgM"* 1 " * Of the arable there were allotted to each 
roods' breadth for the plough in each furlong and 
' in damp and in dry "—in meadow and 
After such a " solskift" the peasants held their 
■■"■■i"»»« in undisturbed ownership, but the eminent demesne 
a the vxHsge was recognized and a revision of the allotment 
was imeiiMr Many such revisions did actually take place, 
tad m snem cases all rights and claims were apportioned aecord- 
^ to Use standard of the original shares. Needless to say 
that these shares were subjected to all the usual limitations of 
■■■naun f arm i n g. 

After having said so much about different types of village 
t which occur in Europe it will be easier to analyse 
» of Eagbsh land tenure which disclose the work- 



71 

ing of s i mi la r "conceptions and arrangements. Features which 
have been very prominent in the case of the Welsh, Slavs, 
Germans or Scandinavians recur in the English instances some- 
times with equal force and at other times in a mitigated shape. 

There are some vestiges of the purely tribal form of com- 
munity on English soiL Many of the place-names of early 
Saxon and Anglican settlements are derived from personal 
names with the suffix ing, as designations like OsJtington, the 
town of the Hockings. 

True, it is just possible to explain some of these place-names 
as pointing to settlements belonging to some great man and 
therefore taking their designation from him with the adjunct 
of an ing indicating Dossesskm. But the group of words in 
question falls in exactly with the common patronymics of 
Saxon and German families and kindreds, and therefore it is 
most probable, as Kemble supposed, that we have to do in 
most of these msranees with tribal and family settlements, 
although the mere fact of belonging to a great landowner or 
a monastery may have been at the root of some cases. 

A very noticeable consequence of tribal habits in regard 
to landownership is presented by the difficulties which stood 
in the way of alienation of land by the occupiers of it. The 
Old English legal system did not originally admit of any aliena- 
tion of folkland, land held by folkright, or, in other words, of 
the estates owned under the ordinary customary law of the 
people. Such land could not be bequeathed out of the kindred 
and could not be sold without the consent of the kinsmen. 
Such complete disabilities could not be upheld indefinitely, 
however, in a growing and progressive community, and we 
find the ancient folkright assailed from different points of view. 
The Church insists on the right of individual possessors to give 
away land for the sake of their souls; the kings grant exemption 
from folkright and constitute privileged estates held by book 
and following in the main the rules of individualized Roman 
law; the wish of private persons to make provision for daughters 
and to deal with land as with other commodities produces con- 
stent collisions with the customary tribal views. Already, 
by the end of the Saxon period .transfer and alienation of land 
make their way everywhere, and the Norman conquest brings 
these features to a head by substituting the notion of tenure 
—that is, of an estate burdened with service to a superior— for 
the ancient notion of tribal folkland. 

But although the tribal basis of communal arrangements 
was shaken and removed in England in comparatively early 
times, it had influenced the practices of rural husbandry and 
landholding, and in*he modified form of the village com- 
munity it survived right through the feudal period, leaving 
characteristic and material traces of its existence down to the 
present day. 

To begin with, the open-field system with intermixture of 
strips and common rights in pasture and wood has been the 
prevailing system in England for more than a thousand years. 
Under the name of champion farming it existed everywhere in 
the country unto the Indosure Acts of the 1 8th and xoth centuries 
put an end to it; it may be found in operation even now m 
some of its features in backward districts. It would have 
been absurd to build up these practices of compulsory rotation 
of crops, of a temporary relapse of plots into common pasture 
between harvest and ploughing time, of the interdependence 
of thrifty and negligent husbandmen in respect of weeds and 
limes of cultivation, &c, from the point of view of individual 
appropriation. On the other hand, it was the natural system 
for the apportionment of claims to the shareholders of an 
organic and perpetual joint-stock company. 

Practices of shifting arable are seldom reported in English 
evidence. There are some traces of periodical redivisions of 
arable land hi Northumberland: under the name of runrig 
system such practices seem to have been not uncommon in the 
outer fields, the non-manured portions of townships m Scotland, 
both among the Saxon inhabitants of the lowlands and the 
Celtic population of the highlands. The joining of small tenants 
for the purpose of coaration, for the formation of the big, 



72 

heavy ploughs, drawn by eight ana,' aba produced 
the shifting in the possession of strips between the coparceners 
of the undertaking. But, as a rule, the arable was held in 
severalty by the different members of the township. 

On the other hand, meadows were constantly owned by entire 
townships and distributed between the tenements entitled to 
shares from year to year either by lot or according to a definite 
order. These practices are in full vigour in some places even 
at the present day Any person living in Oxford may witness 
the distribution by lot on Lammas day (ist of August) of the 
Lammas meadow*, that is, the meadows inclosed for the sake 
of raising hay-grass in the village of Yamton, some three miles 
to the north of Oxford. 

Let us, however, return for a moment to* the arable. Although 
held in severalty by different owners it was subjected to all 
sorts of interference on the part of the village union as repre- 
sented in later ages by the manorial court framing by-laws 
and settling the course of cultivation. It*might also happen 
that in consequence of encroachments, disputes and general 
uncertainty as to possession and boundaries, the whole distri- 
bution of the strips of arable in the various fields had to be gone 
over and regulated anew. In an interesting case reported from 
a Cartulary of Dunstable in Bedfordshire, all the possessions 
of the villagers in a place called Segcnhoe were thrown together 
in the 12th century and redivided according to an award of 
experts chosen by a meeting of the villagers from among the 
oldest and wisest inhabitants. 

Exactly as in the Danish examples quoted before, the strips 
were apportioned, not to the single owners, but to the normal 
holdings, the hides, and the actual owners had to take them 
in proportion to their several rights in the hides. This point 
is very important. It gives the English village community its 
peculiar stamp. It is a community not between single members 
or casual households, but between determined holdings con- 
structed on a proportional scale. Although there was no 
provision for the admeasurement and equalization of the claims 
of Smith and of Brown, each hide or ploughland of a township 
took as much as every other hide, each virgate or yardland as 
every other yardland, each bovate or oxgang as every other 
oxgang. Now the proportions themselves, although varying 
in respect of the number of acres included in each of these 
units in different places, were constant jn their relation to each 
other. The yardland was almost everywhere one-fourth of the 
hide or ploughland, and corresponded to the share of two 
oxen in an eight-oxen plough; the oxgang was reckoned at 
one-half bf the yardland, and correspond^ to the share of one 
ox in the same unit of work. The constant repetition of these 
fractions and units proves that we have to do in this case with 
phenomena arising not from artificial devices but from the very 
nature of the case. Nor can there be a. doubt that both the 
unit and the fractions were produced by the application to land 
of the chief factor of working strength in agrarian husbandry, 
the power of the ploughteam for tillage. 

The natural composition of the holdings has its counterpart, 
as in Schleswig-HoLstcin and as in the rest of Germany, in the 
customs of united succession.' The English peasantry worked 
out customary rules of primogeniture or of so-called Borough 
English or claim of the youngest to the land held by his father. 
The German examples adduced in the beginning of this article 
teach us that the device is not suggested primarily by the inte- 
rest of the landlord. Unified succession takes the place of the 
equal rights of sons, because it is the better method for preserving 
the economic efficiency of the household and of the tenement 
corresponding to it. There are exceptions, the most notorious 
being that of Kentish gavelkind, but in agricultural districts the 
holding remains undivided as long as possible, and if it gets 
divided, the division follows the lines not of the casual number 
of coheirs, but of the organic elements of the plotighlands. 
Fourths and eighths arise in connexion with natural fractions of 
the ploughteam of eight oxen. 

One more feature of the situation remains to.be noticed, 
and it is the one which i» still before our eyes in all parts of 



VILLAGE COMMUNITIES 



the country, that is, the commons which have survived the 
wholesale process of indosure. They were an integral part 
of the ancient village community from the first, not only because 
the whole ground of a township could not be taken up by arable 
and meadows, at a time when population was scanty, but 
because there existed the most intimate connexion between 
the agricultural and pastoral part of husbandry in the time of 
the open-field system. Pasture was not treated as a commodity 
by itself but was mostly considered as an adjunct, as appendant 
to the arable, and so was the use of woods and of turf. Thin 
fact was duly emphasised, e.g. in an Elizabethan case reported 
by Coke— Tyrringham's case. The problem of admeasurement 
of pasture was regulated m the same way as that of the. appor- 
tionment of arable strips, by a reference to the proportional 
holdings, the hides, yardlands and oxgangs of the township, 
and the only question to be decided was how many heads of 
cattle and how many sheep each hide and yardland had the 
right to send to the common pasturage grounds. 

When in course of time the open-field system and the tenure 
of arable according to holdings were given up, the right of free- 
holders and copyholders of the old manors in whkh the ancient 
townships were, as it were, encased, still held good, but it became 
much more difficult to estimate and to apportion such rights. 

In connexion with the individualistic policy of tacloeua* 
the old writ of admeasurement of commons was abolished 
in 1837 (3 & 4 Will. IV.) The ordinary expedient is to make 
out how much commonable cattle could be kept by. the tene- 
ments claiming commons through the winter. It is very 
characteristic and important that in the leading modern case 
on sufficiency of commons—in Robertson v. Hartopp— it wan 
admitted by the Court of Appeal that the sufficiency has to 
be construed as a right of turning out a certain number of 
beasts on the common, quite apart from the number whkh 
had been actually turned out at any given time. Now a vested 
right has to be construed from the point of view of the time 
when it came into existence. The standards used to estimate 
such rights ought not to be drawn from modern practice, which 
might help to dispense altogether with commons of pasture by 
stable feeding, substitutes for grass, &c., but ought to correspond 
to the ordinary usages established at a time when the open-field 
system was in full vigour. The legal view stands thus at 
present, but we cannot conceal from ourselves that after all the 
inroads achieved, by individual appropriation it is by no means 
certain that the reference to the rights and rules of a previous 
period will continue to be recognized. However this may be, 
in the present commons we have certainly a system which 
draws its roots from customs, as to the origin of which legal 
memory does not run. 

We may, in conclusion, summarize very briefly the principal 
results of our inquiry as to the history of European village 
communities. It seems that they may be stated under the 
following heads: (1) Primitive stages of civilization disclose 
in human society a 'strong tendency towards mutual support 
in economic matters as well as for the sake of defence, (a) The 
most natural form assumed by such unions for defence and 
co-operation is that of kinship. (3) In epochs of pastoral 
husbandry and of the beginnings of agriculture land is mainly 
owned by tribes, kindreds and enlarged households, while 
individuals enjoy only rights of usage and possession. (4) In 
course of time unions of neighbours are substituted for unions 
of kinsmen. (5) In Germanic societies the community of the 
township rests on the foundation of efficient holcKngs~-bols, 
hides, hufen— kept together as far as possible by rules of united 
or single succession. (6) The open-field system, which prevailed 
in the whole of Northern Europe for nearly a thousand years, 
was closely dependent on the customs of tribal and neighbourly 
unions. (7) Even now the treatment of commons represents 
the last manifestations of ancient communal arrangements, and 
it can only be reasonably and justly interpreted by reference 
to the law and practice of former times. 

AuTHoarnss.— Sir H. S. Maine, ViUat* CtmmmnUUt fa A* 
Exst and W*U (1873) ; E. de Uvelcye. Du Urtinmiimm. then, voa 



VILLALBA— VILLANELLE 



73 



(Paris. 



a; TV Mommsw, Ronnsche Forschungen (Berlin, 1864). P. 
aad. La PropruHi fonctere en Greco jusqu' did conqutte Remain* 
is, 1891); R- Pohfmano, Geschtchte des antihen Kommunirmus 



K Bicker (Leipzig, 1879) ; A. Meitsen, Siedetung und Agrorwesen der 
W t t t u i m a mu uudOstgarmanen,dcr Ketteu. Rdmer, FtnnenvndSlaven, 
W on der u uge u , Aubou und Agrorrecht der W biker %uropas ndrdltck der 
Alpem (4 vols., Berlin, 1895); F. de Coutanges, Les Ongines de la 
*refrim (Paris, 1893) J M. Kovalewsky, Die ohonomtsche Entwtchlung 
w»r *%s mat Betinn der hatHalischen Wtrtschaftsform (Berlin, 
tool); B. H. Baden-Powell, The Indian Village Community (London, 
1I96); T*s Land 5y*irifu 0/ British India (Oxford, 1892); J. 
lofty. Tagore Lectures an the Law of Inheritance and Succession tn 
India; TV 1 

r*. 1893): » 
_ SwMlumtu (MUnchen, 1893). F de Coulanges. La Ctfl an/t^iM 
(Pins. r8rx) ; F Seebohm, Ffc« frtfto/ System tn Wales (London. 1904) ; 
H. S. Maine. Lectures on the Early History of Institutions (London. 
187S); H d'Arbois de Jubainvule, La Fomitte celHque (Paris, 1905); 
Cents de Htterature ceUique (Paris, 1902); R. Anderson, History of 
Scotland (Edinburgh. 1874) . C. Innes. Lectures on Scotch Legal Anil- 
emsttes (E<finburgh. 1872). W. F Skene, Celtic Scotland (Edinburgh, 
1880): A. Domed, the dltere Sottal- und WtrUchaftsoerfassung der 
Alpensiantm (Weimar. 1909); J Peisxer, Dte Olieren Beaiehungen der 
Sawen s» Turhotataren und Cermanen und ihre saauUgeschtchtltche 
Bedeutunc (Stuttgart. 1905), G Cohn, (hmesndnschafl und 
Hausgenassenschaft (Zdtachrift fur vergleichende Rechtswissen- 
•cbaft, XI 1 1.. 1899) . Bogiiic, Zborntken (Servian Collection of modern 
legal c—tornt of the Southern Slavs (Agram, 1874) , De la forme dile 
Iaekaana de lafamille ruraU chct Us Serbes et les Creates (Paris, 1884) ; 
T. T. Smirnoff, Sketch of Culture History of the Southern Slaws (Kazan, 



1900) (Russian); F Krauss, SitU und Branch der SUdslaaen (Wien, 
1885V: A. Tschnproff, Die Fcldgemeinschafl (Stras ' 
A> Efiroenkov Southern Russia (Russian), voL I (1 



einschafl (Strassburg, 1902); 

Jian), voL L (loot), Feasant 

tin the Extreme North, I.TRuasian) (1884)) B. CiCerin, 
Essays an Ike History of Russian Law (Russian), V- SergieviC, 
Awtvptties of Russian Law, III. (Russian) (St Petersburg, 1003); 
Koearovsky, The Russian Village Community (Russian) (1906) , 
A. Kaufmann, The Russian Village Community ; I. (Russian) (Moscow, 
1908) ; G. L. von Maurer. Einlettung wur Geschtchte der Mark-, Hof-, 
Dmrf- und Stadteerfassung und der dffentlichen Cewalt (MOnchen, 
1854): Ceschichte der Morhenverfassunt in Deutschlaud (Erlangen, 
1856); Ceschichte der Frouhefe, dee Bauemhofe und der Hojvcr- 
fessung in Deutschlaud (4 vols., Erlangen, 1862); Ceschichte 
der Darfuerfassung in Deutschland (2 vols.. Erlangen, 1865); 
F. de Coolanges, Histoire des institutions politique* de Vancienne 



(Paris, 1875-9O; A* Flach, Les Origines de Fancienna 
Franca (Paris, 1893); E. Glasaon, Les Communaux et le domains 
ramie i Fipoque franque: riponse i M. Fustet de Coutanges (Paris, 
1890); K- Lamprecht. Deulrchn Wirtuhcftjlcbtn iii $JiV'-lter 
<A vols., Leipzig, 1885), F. Knapp. Grundnemchaft und RiUtrgut 
"7): W. Witti.h, Dk GmndkerrKkafi in . Nvrdwe* 

.Leipzig, 1896): Khamm, Die Grouhafm der AWcrr- 

» (1903); G. Maussen, A p arkhtortick* AbhvndlMngtn fj vols., 
ig, 1880); H. Brunn 
r. Deut 

in A*tla-SaxM Law (London, \<wi); 

„ — Agtatvetfaimng in SchUsvig-f nn 

fBerfin, 1908); F. W. Malt land and Sir F, Holloed The U\ 



Avarkhtortick* Abkondluug<* {2 vol 
Leipzig, 1880); H. Bruiuv-f. Deuttcht ftKktietitkichte (Loipdg, 
rf87); R- Schroder. Deutstm Jfateittxhtikit (sad cd. T 1*94); 
Fr. Seebohm, Tribal Custom in A*th-$Gx<i* Law (Londc 
U. Sering. Erbrecht und Atfarvetfoimnr in M/lfJa SaU^i* 
_^fio, 1908); F. W. Malt land and Sir F, Hollocft, Tk* tliston 
of Enffish Law before the Time ofFAwrd /JGimbrid£c, 1*95) . F. W. 

Ufii 
t English Vdlage Co-mmunity (London, 



THret EsiSyt in /V Early 
T&'jmihip and Etftmt^k (Ota- 



Maitund. Domesday Booh and Beyond 

History of England (Cambridge, 1597) " 

bridge. 1898); Fr. Seebohm, The Englii 

1884): P. Vinogradoff, V&nimtge in England [Oufcrd, 

Growth of the Manor (London, 1905); £1 



1S9J); The 

_ __ _ , h Sofi/ly r'n thi lllh 

Century (Oxford, 1907); G, L, Ciomine, Th-- Village Community 
'London, 1890) ; C. I. Elton, A Treatise on Commons and Waste Lands 
(London. 1868); Th. E. Scrutton, Commons and Commonfialds 
'Cambridge, 1887): J. Williams. Rights of Commons (London); 
J. Steeastrup, Studier over Kong Valdemars Jerdebog (Copenhagen) ; 
Lacridaen, Aarboger for Nordish Oldhyndighed, II Raekke, vol. u. 
'C^pcmhagen. 1896) ;bteman, DanshRetshistorie (Copenhagen, 1871) ; 



Norsk Retshistorie (Christiania, 1899). 



(P.Vi.) 



TTLLALMA, a town of north-western Spain, in the province 
el Logo; on the left bank of the river Ladra, one of the head- 
creams of the Mifio, and at the junction of the main roads 
irccn Ferrol and Mondonedo to the city of Lugo Pop. (1900) 
13.57a VUlalba is the chief town of the district watered by 
*J% Ladra, Tamboga and other small streams — a fertile 
piateaa 1500 ft. above sea-kveL Cloth and pottery are 
ruAtdactored, and there is some trade in grain and live stock. 
The nearest railway station is Otero, is m. S. by E, on the 
Lugo-Conuma line. 

YILUsMEDlAJiA* COUVT DB (1582-1629), Spanish poet, 
was born at Lisbon towards the end of 1582. His father, a 
distiognished diplomatist, upon whom the dignity of count 
was conferred m 1603, entrusted the education of the brilliant 
hoy (Joasi de Taasb y Peralta) to Luis Tribaldos de Toledo, 



the future editor of Mendoza's Cuerras de Granada, and to 
Bartolom6 Jimenez Pat6n, who subsequently dedicated 
Mercurius Trismegtstus to his pupiL On leaving Salamanca the 
youth married in 1601, and succeeded to the title on the death 
of his father in 1607, he was prominent in the dissipated life 
of the capital, acquired a bad reputation as a gambler, was 
forbidden to attend court, and resided in Italy from 10 ti to 
161 7. On his return to Spain, he soon proved himself a fearless, 
pungent satirist. Such public men as Lenaa, Rodrigo 
Caldcron and Jorge de Tobar writhed beneath his murderous 
invective i the foibles of humbler private persons were exposed 
to public ridicule in verses furtively passed from hand to hand. 
So great was the resentment caused by these envenomed 
attacks that Villamediana was once more ordered to withdraw 
from court in 16 18 He returned on the death of Philip HI, 
and was appointed gentleman in waiting to Philip IV *s young 
wife, Isabel de Bourbon, daughter of Henri IV. Secure m 
his position, he scattered his scathing epigrams in profusion; 
but his ostentatious attentions to the queen supplied bis 
countless foes with a weapon which was destined to destroy 
him. A fire broke out while his masque, La Gloria de Niguea, 
was being acted before the court on the 15th of May 162& and 
Villamediana carried the queen to a place of safety. Suspicion 
deepened; Villamediana neglected a significant warning that 
his life was in peril, and on the axst of August 1622 he was 
murdered as he stepped out of his coach. The responsibility 
for his death was divided between Philip IV. and Olivares, the 
actual assassin was either Alonso Mateo or Ignacio Mendes; 
and naturally the crime remained unpunished. 

Villamediana? works, first published at Saragossa in 1629! 
contain not only the nervous, blighting verses which made 
him widely feared and hated, but a number of more serious 
poems embodying the most exaggerated conceits of gongorism. 
But, even when adopting the perverse conventions of the hour, 
he remains a poet of high distinction, and his satirical verses, 
more perfect in form, are instinct with a cold, concentrated 
scorn which has never been surpassed. (J. F.-K.) 

VILLANELLB, a form of verse, originally loose in construc- 
tion, but since the 16th century bound in exact limits of an arbi- 
trary kind. The word is ultimately derived from the Latin villa, 
a country house or farm, through the Italian viQano, a peasant 
or farm hand, and a villancllc was primarily a round song 
taken up by men on a farm. The Spaniards called such a song 
a vUlancejo or vUlancete or a vUlancico, and a man who impro- 
vised viuanelles was a vUlanciquero. The vQlanelle was s 
pastoral poem made to accompany a rustic dance, and from the 
first it was necessary that it should contain a regular system 
of repeated lines. The old French viSanelles, however, were 
irregular in form. One of the most celebrated, the " Rosette, 
pour un peu d'absence " of Philippe Desportes (1545-1600), is 
a sort of ballade, and those contained in the Astree of d'Urfe*, 
1610, are scarcely less unlike the villaneHes of modern times. It 
appears, indeed, to have been by an accident that the special 
and rigorously defined form of the viDanelle was invented. In 
the posthumous poems of Jean Passerat (1534-1602), which 
were printed in 1606, several villaneUes were discovered, in 
different forma One of these became, and has remained, so 
deservedly popular, that it has given its exact character to 
the subsequent history of the villaneUe. This famous poem 
runs as follows?— 

M J'ai perdu ma tourterelle: 
Est-ce point celle que j'oi? 
Je veux alter aprea die. 

Tu regrettes ta femelle? 
HtlasTauss! fais-je moi: 
J'ai perdu ma tourterelle. 

Si ton amour est fidele, 
Aussi est ferine ma foi : 
Je veox auer aprea die. 

Ta plainte se renouvelle? 
Tou jours plaindre je me dots: 
J'ai perdu ma tovrtereHe. 



74 



VILLANI 



En ne voyaat plus la bcBe 
Plus rien de beau je ne vois: 
Je veux alter apres elle. 

Mort, que tant de fois j'appelle, 
Prends ce qui se donne a toi : 
J'ai perdu ma tourtereUe, 
Je veux alter apres elle." 

This exquisite lyric has continued to be the type of its class, 
and the villanelle, therefore, for the last three hundred years 
has been a poem, written in tercets, on two rhymes, the first 
and the third line being repeated alternatively in each tercet 
It is usual to confine the villanelle to five tercets, but that is 
not essential, it must, however, close with a quatrain, the 
last two lines of whkh are the first and third line of the original 
tercet. The villanelle was extremely admired by the French 
poets of the Parnasse, and one of them,' Theodore de Banville, 
compared it to a ribband of silver and gold traversed by a 
thread of rose-colour. Boulmicr, who was the first to point 
out that Passerat was the inventor of the definite villanelle, 
published collections of these poems in 1878 and 1870, and 
was preparing another when he died in 1881. When, in 1877, 
so many of the early French forms of verse were introduced, or 
reintroduced, into English literature, the villanelle attracted 
a great deal of attention, it was simultaneously cultivated by 
W. E. Henley, Austin Dobson, Lang and Gosse. Henley wrote 
a large number, and he described the form itself in a specimen 
beginning *— 

" A dainty thing's the Vfflanelle, 

Sly, musical, a jewel in rhyme, 

It serves its purpose passing well." 

It has since then been very frequently used by English and 
American poets. There are several excellent examples in 
English of humorous villanelles, especially those by Austin 
Dobson and by Henley. 

See Joseph Boulmicr, Les VillanelUs (Paris, 1878; 2nd enlarged 
edition, 1879). . (E. G.) 

VILLANI, GIOVANNI (c. 1275-1348), Italian chronicler, was 
the son of Villano di Stoldo, and was born at Florence in the 
second half of the 13th century; the precise year is unknown. 
He was of good burgher extraction, and, following the traditions 
of his family, applied himself to commerce. During the early 
years of the 14th century he travelled in Italy, France and 
the Netherlands, seeing men and things with the sagacity 
alike of the man of business and of the historian. Before 
leaving Florence, or rather in the interval between one journey 
and another, he had at least taken some part in that troubled 
period of civil contentions which Dino Compagni has described 
and which swept Dante Alighieri into banishment. In 1301 
Villani saw Charles, count of Valois, ruining his country under 
the false name of peacemaker, and was witness of all the misery 
which immediately followed. Somewhat later he left Italy, 
and in September 1304 he visited Flanders. It is not well 
ascertained when he returned to his native city. He was 
certainly living there shortly after the emperor Henry VII. 
visited Italy in 131a, and probably he had been there for some 
time before. While still continuing to occupy himself with 
commerce, he now began to take a prominent part in public 
affairs. In 13x6 and 1317 he was one of the priors, and shared 
in the crafty tactics whereby Pisa and Lucca were induced to 
conclude a peace with Florence, to which they were previously 
averse. In 13x7 he also had charge of the mint, and during 
his administration of this office he collected its earlier records 
and had a register made of all the coins struck in Florence. 
In 1331 he was again chosen prior; and, the Florentines having 
just then undertaken the rebuilding of the dty walls, he and 
some other citizens were deputed to look after the work. They 
were afterwards accused of having diverted the public money 
to private ends, but Villani clearly established his innocence. 
He was next sent with the army against Castrucdo Castracani, 
lord of Lucca, and was present at its defeat at Altopascio In 
1328 a terrible famine visited many provinces of Italy, including 
Tuscany, and Villani was appointed to guard Florence from 



the worst effects of that distressing period. He has left a record 

of what was done in a chapter of bis Chromcle, which shows 
the economic wisdom in which the medieval Florentines were 
often so greatly in advance of their age. In 1339, some time 
after the death of Castruccio, some nch Florentine merchants, 
and among them Villani, treated for the acquisition of Lucca 
by Florence for 80,000 florins, offering to supply the larger 
part of that sum out of their own private means, but the 
negotiations fell through, owing to the discords and jealousies 
then existing in the government {Chron x. 143) The following 
year Villani superintended the making of Andrea Pisano's 
bronze doors for the baptistery In the same year he watched 
over the raising of the campanile of the Badia, erected by 
Cardinal Giovanni Orsini {Chron x 177) In 1341 the acquisi- 
tion of Lucca was again under treaty, this time with Martino 
della Scala, for 250,000 florins. Villani was sent with others 
as a hostage to Ferrara, where he remained for some 'months. 
He was present in Florence during the unhappy period that 
elapsed between the entry of Walter of Brienne, duke of Athens, 
and his expulsion by the Florentines (1342-43) Involved 
through no fault of his own in the failure of the commercial 
company of the Bonaccorsi, which in its turn had been drawn 
into the failure of the company of the Bardi, Villani, towards 
the end of his life, suffered much privation and for some time 
was kept in prison. In 1348 he fell a victim to the plague 
described by Boccaccio. 

The idea of writing the Chronicle was suggested to Villani under 
the following circumstances. " In the year of Christ 1300 Pope 
Boniface VIII. made in honour of Christ's nativity a special and 
great indulgence. And I, finding myself in that blessed pilgrim- 
age in the holy city of Rome, seeing her great and ancient remains, 
and reading the histories and great deeds of the Romans as written 
by Virgil, ball Ut, Lican, Livy, Valerius, Paulus Orosius and other 
master* of history * ho wrote the exploits and deeds, both great and 
small, otitic Romans and also of strangers, in the whole world . . . 
considering that our city of Florence, the daughter and offspring 
of Rome, 19 on ibe increase and destined to do great things, as 
Rome is it) her decline, it appeared to me fitting to set down ia 
tin* whime and ikw chronicle all the facts and beginnings of the 
city of Florence, in as far as it has been possible to me to collect 
and disco wr iheUI, and to follow the doings of the Florentines at 
ten^ih „„ , an 1 the year 1300, on my return from Rome. 

I began to con [lis book, in honour of Cod and of the blessed 

John, and i n praise of our city of Florence." Villa ni's work, written 
in Italian, makes its appearance, so to speak, unexpectedly in the 
historical literature of Italy, just as the history of Florence, the 
moment it emerges from the humble and uncertain origin assigned 
to it by legend, rises suddenly into a rich and powerful life of 
thought and action. Nothing but scanty and partly legendary 
records had preceded Villani's work, which rests in part on them. 
The Cesta Florentinorum of Sanzanomc, starting from these vague 
origins, begins to be more definite about 1125, at the time of the 
union of Fiesole with Florence. The Chronica de Origin* Ctvitatis 
seems to be a compilation, made by various hands and at various 
times, in which the different legends regarding the city's origin 
have been gradually collected. The Annates Florentini Prtmi 
(1110-1173) and the Annates Florentini Seatndi (1107-1247), to- 
gether with a list of the consuls and podestas from 1197 to 1267, 
and another chronicle, formerly attributed, but apparently with- 
out good reason, to Brunetto Latini, complete the series of ancient 
Florentine records. To these must, however, be added a certain 
quantity of facts which were to be found in various manuscripts, 
being used and quoted by the older Florentine and Tuscan writers 
under the general name of Cesta Florentinorvm. Another work, 
formerly reckoned among the sources of Villani, is the Chronicle 
of the iialesptnt. but grave doubts are now entertained as to its 
authenticity, and many hold that at beat it is merely a remodel- 
ling, posterior to Villani's tune, of old records from which several 
chroniclers may have drawn, either without citing them at all or 
only doing so in a vague manner. 

The Htstorte Florentine, or Cronica universale, of Villani begins 
with Biblical times and comes down to 1348. The universality of 
the narrative, especially in the times near Villani's own, while it 
bears witness to the author's extensive travels and to the compre- 
hensiveness of his mind, makes one also feel that the book was 
inspired within the walls of the universal city. Whereas Dino 
Compagni's Chronicle is confined within definite limits of time and 
place, this of Villani is a general chronicle extending over the 



whole of Europe. Dino Compagni feels and lives in the facts of 
his history, Villani looks at them and relates them calmly and 
fairly, with a serenity which makes him seem an outsider, even 
when he is mixed up in them. While very important for Italian 
history in the 14th century, this work is the cornerstone of the 



VILLANOVA— V1LLARD 



75 



_ . dt Florence Of r 

Vaiam has a very exact knowledge. Having been a sharer in the 
public affairs and in the intellectual and economic life of his native 
city at a time when in both it had no rival in Europe, he depicts 
— *— t he saw with the vividness natural to a clear mind accustomed 
i and to the observation of mankind. He was Guclph, 

it passion; and his book is much more taken up with an 

inquiry into what is useful and true than with party considerations. 
He is really a chronicler, not an historian, and has but little method 



■a bis narrative, often reporting the things which occ u rred long 
ago just as he heard them and without criticism. Every now and 
then be falls into some inaccuracy; but such defects as he has are 



largely compensated for by his valuable qualities. He was for half 
a century eyewitness of his history, and he provides abundant 
information on the constitution of Florence, its customs, industries, 
commerce and arts; and among the chroniclers throughout Europe 
he is perhaps unequalled for the value of the statistical data he has 
preserved. As a writer Villa ni is clear and acute; and, though 
fats prose has not the force and colouring of Compagni's, It has the 
advaotage of greater simplicity, so that, taking his work as a whole, 
he may be regarded as the greatest chronicler who has written in 
Italian. The many difficulties connected with the publication of 
this important text have hitherto prevented the preparation of a 
perfect edition. However, the Chronicle has beenprinted by L. A. 
Muratori in tome xiii. of the Rerum Itaticarum Scriptores (Milan, 
1728). and has been edited by f. Moutter and F. G. Dragomanni 
(Florence. 1844)- Among other editions is one published at Trieste 
in 1857 and another at Turin in 1879. Selections have been trans* 
iated into English by R. E. Selfe (1896). 

VtOani's Chronicle was continued by two other members of his 
family. (1) Mattco Villani, his brother, of whom nothing w 
known save that he was twice married and that he died of the 
plague ia 1363. continued it down to the year of his death. Mat tea's 
work, though inferior to Giovanni's, is nevertheless very valuable. 
A more prolix writer than his brother and a less acute observer. 
Matteo is well informed in his facts, and for the years of which he 
writes is one of the most important sources of Italian history. 
(2) Fiurro Villani. the son of Matteo. flourished in the end of the 
lath and the beginning of the 15th century. In his continuation 
which goes down to 1364. though showing greater literary ability, 
he is very inferior as an historian to his predecessors. His most 
valuable work was a collection of lives of illustrious Florentines. 
Twice, in 1401 and 1404. he was chosen to explain in public the 
Dntna •Commcdia. The year of his death is unknown. 

See P. ( Scheffer-Boichorst. Florentiner Sludieu (Leipzig, 1874) ; 
G. Gervinos, " Geschichte tier Florentincn Hisioriographie " in his 
Histanstk* SckrifUn (1833); U. Balzani. U crouacke Italian* 
net medio evo (Milan, 1884); A. Gaspary, Geschichte drr italienischen 
Ltleratnr (Berlin. 1885); O. Knoll. Beit rage zur italienischen Hiilorio- 
rrapkie im 14. Jahrkundert (Gdttingen 1876). and O. Hartwig, " G. 
villani uud die Leggenda di Messer Gianni di Procida " in Band 
xxv. of H. von SybcPs Uistoristke Zeitschri/k (U. B.) 

VimUfOVA, the name given to an ancient cemetery in 
the neighbourhood of Bologna, Italy, and generally applied by 
archaeologists to all the remains of that period, and to the 
period itself, owing to the discovery therein of a large 
number of the characteristic remains of the earliest Iron Age of 
Italy. The antiquities of this culture are widely spread over 
upper Italy and differ essentially from those of the previous 
epoch known as Terramara, and they have been described 
by some as following at a considerable interval, for tbey show 
a great advance in metal work. The chief cemeteries of the 
VUlanova period are at Bologna, E&le, Villanova, Golascrca, 
Tnsszo, Rivoli and Oppiano. As there can be no doubt that 
the Terramara culture was that of the aboriginal Ligurians 
(see, however, Teuumara), so the Villanova is that of the 
TJmbrians, who, according to the historians, were masters of 
aO northern Italy, as far as the Alps at the time of the 
Etruscan conquest (c. 1000 a.c ). They contain cist-graves, 
the bottoms, sides and tops being formed of Bat unhewn 
stones, though sometimes there are only bottom and top 
slabs: the dead were burnt, and the remains are usually 
ia urns, each grave containing as a rule bet one ossuary; 
fpfttMiM^ the vessel is covered with a flat stone or a dish 
inverted, sometimes the urns are deposited in the ground 
without any protection. The vases are often hand-made 
and adorned with incised linear ornament, though in later 
times the bones were often placed in bronze urns or buckets. 
Though iron is steadily making its way into use, flat, flanged, 
aad socketed and looped celts of bronze are found in con- 
siderable numbers. Brooches of many kinds, ranging from 
the most primitive safety-pin fashioned out of a common 



bronze pin (such as those found in the Bronze Age settlement 
at Peschicra on Lake Maggiore) through many varieties, are 
in universal use. Representations of the human figure are 
practically unknown, bat models of animals of a rude and 
primitive kind are very common, probably being votive 
offerings. These are closely parallel to the bronze figures 
found at Olympia, where human figures were likewise rare. 
All these objects are decorated in repousse" with geometric 
designs. The culture of the Villanova period is part of the 
HaUstatt civilization, though tbe contents of the HaUstatt 
(o.».) graves differ in several marked features from the anti- 
quities of the ordinary VUlanova period, there is no breach 
of continuity between HaUstatt and Villanova, for the types 
of Vadena, Este, Golasecca and VUlanova are found in the 
HaUstatt culture. The connexion between the north and the 
south of the Alps is never interrupted. The chief difference 
lies in the fact that the Celts of the Danubian region made 
greater advances in the development of weapons and defensive 
armour than their kindred in northern Italy. The Po and 
Danube regions alike are characterized by bronze buckets, 
cists, girdles and the like, wrought in repousst with animal and 
geometric designs; but the introduction of iron into Italy is 
considerably posterior to its development in the HaUstatt 
area. 

See Montelius, La Civilisation primitive en Italic; Ridgeway, 
Early Age of Greece, vol. i.; Brizio, in C. R. Acad. Inter. (1906), 
315 sqq.; Grenicr, in Melanges de rtcole fnncaise (1907), 325 soq.; 
Pigorim and Vaglieri have contributed articles to the Renduonti 
dei Lincei and the Notixie degli scavi from 1907 onwards. (W. Ri.) 

VILLANUEVA DB LA SERENA, a town of western Spain, 
in the province of Badajoz, near the left bank of the river 
Guadiana, and on tbe Madrid-Badajoz railway. Pop. (1900) 
i.3.4Sv- Villanueva is a clean and thriving place, with good 
modern public buildings— town hall, churches, convents and 
schools. It is the chief town of an undulating plain, La Serena, 
locally celebrated for red wine and melons. Grain and hemp 
arc also cultivated, and live stock extensively reared in the 
neighbourhood. 

VILLANUEVA T GELTRU, a seaport of north-eastern Spain, 
in the province of Barcelona; on the Barcelona-Tarragona 
section of the coast railway. Pop. (iqoo) 11,850. Villanucva 
is a busy modern town, with manufactures of cotton, woollen 
and linen goods, and of paper. It has also iron foundries and 
an important agricultural trade. The harbour affords safe 
and deep anchorage; it is a lifeboat station and the head- 
quarters of a large fishing fleet. The coasting trade is also 
considerable. Villanucva has a museum, founded by the 
Catalan poet, historian and diplomat, Vittorio Balaguer (1824- 
1001), which contains collections of Roman, Egyptian and 
prehistoric antiquities, besides paintings, engravings, sculptures, 
coins and a large library, including many valuable MSS. 

VILLARD, HENRY (1835-1900), American journalist and 
financier, was born in Speyer, Rhenish Bavaria, on the loth of 
April 1835. His baptismal name was Ferdinand Hcinrich 
Gustav HUgard. His parents removed to Zweibrlicken in 
1839, and in 1856 his father, Gustav Lconhard Hilgard (d.1867), 
became a justice of the Supreme Court of Bavaria, at Munich. 
Henry was educated at the gymnasium of Zweibrlicken, at 
the French semi-military academy in rhalsbourg in 1840-50, 
at the gymnasium of Speyer in 1850-52, and at the universities 
of Munich and Wurzburg in 1852-53; and in 1853, having had 
a disagreement with his father, emigrated— without his parents' 
knowledge — to the United States. It was at this time that 
he adopted the name Villard. Making his way westward in 
1854, he lived in turn at Cincinnati, Belleville (Illinois), Peoria 
(Illinois) and Chicago, engaged in various employments, and 
in 1856 formed a project, which came to nothing, for establish- 
ing a colony of " free soil " Germans in Kansas. In 1856*57 
he was editor, and for part of the time was proprietor, of the 
Racine (Wis.) VolksbloU, in which he advocated tbe election 
of John C. Fremont (Republican). Thereafter he was associ- 
ated (in 1857) with the Staats-Zeilunx, Frank Leslie's and the 
Tribune, of New York, and with the Cincinnati Commercial 



7 6 



VILLA REAL—VILLAR3 



la i8|9-toi wu correspondent of the New York Herald In 
ittfti and of tbo New York Tf^mim (with the Army of the 
Potomac) In 1861-63, and la 1864 wm at too front as the 
representative of a nawi agency established by him in that 
year at Washington. la 186s bo became Washington corre- 
spondent of the Chicago Tribune, and la 1866 was the corre- 
•pomlont of that paper la the Pnisso-AustrUn War. He began 
to Uko an interest In railway financiering In 1871, was elected 
president of the Oregon & California railroad and of the Oregon 
Steamship Company in 1876, was receiver of the Kansas Pacific 
railway in 187ft 78, organised the Oregon Railway & Naviga- 
tion Company In 1870, the Oregon Improvement Company in 
1880, ana the Oregon & Transcontinental Company in 1881, 
becoming li* that year president of the Northern Pacific rail- 
way, which was completed under his management, and of 
which he remained president until 1883. In 1887 he again 
became connected with the Northern Pacific, and in 1889 was 
chosen chairman of its finance committee. He was actively 
Identified with tho financing of other Western railway projects 
until 1803. In 1881 he acquired the New York Epening Past 
and the Nati*** In 1883 he paid the debt of the state uni- 
versity of Oregon, and gave to the Institution $50,000, and 
ho also gave to the town of Zwelbruckcn, the home of his 
boyhood, an orphan asylum (1801). He died on the rath of 
November 1900. 
See Mmoin */ Henry Vitiard, Journalist and Fmamder, ttsf- 

1009 (J Vol*., UOAtOA* 1904). 

VILLA RBAU the capital of the district Of VOU Real, 
ISxtugal; 10 m. N, of the river Dour© and 47 m. by road 
K.N.K, of Oporto, Pop, (1000) 6716. The town has a large 
transit trade in wine, mineral waters and live stock, especially 
pigs. The administrative district of Villa Real corresponds 
with the western part of the ancient province of Traa os llontes 
(<»0. !V»v (i 000) S4»,io6; area, 1650 aq, m. There are 
alt aim* waters and baths at Ytdago (near Chaves) and at 
lYdra* Salgadas (near Villa Pouca d'Agular). Tho district 
adjacent to the Douro b known as tho Pak da nam\ or •* wine 
wintry "; here are the vineyard* from which '* port M wine is 
manufactured. 

VtUAHET OS J0T1US1, LOUIS THOMAS (17 50-1 St:), 

French admiral was bom at Auch, of a noble family of Lan~ 

guedvV. He was originally destined for the church, but served 

for some ttae i* the royal guard, which he had to leave at 

the age of auteen after killing one of his comrades in a duel. 

He then entered the navy, and in 1TT3 «** lieutenant on the 

* Atalant* * in Indian water*. In i;:S he fhst in gufr he d him- 

sen st the «<$* of IVfe&chenr, and was proesoted captain. He 

fttt<*w*rd» served wader Suflttn. took part in the battle of 

C\*KUk*e» and in tr$t was taken prisoner after a fierce 

eiKvuntee with an Encash vessel He was reknsed In 17$$. 

*4*vl ur.titt the tsajurity of naval eeVtrs* did not emirate 

dv.ru* the RevorutNw* In i^t he was Da command of the 

w l\v5smte * in the waters of $au Do#*infOs, and in ir*s was 

a>Hxv\tcvl ienr>ad»ira) and as&ted the CWveatk<eal. Si 

A fc >»ce„ in the ttvx$aai*a;*>a of the rVet, YCtaret was ta ceen- 

•u>A v* t he French *t*t at the HattW of the First «t Jcoe, He 

was apev^ted a ssmbee of the Cvtavfl ol the Acoeetts in t*<a6\ 

and w%* jenteaced t* dcevcu:*** in the MSewiag year on *c- 

\vuat of S** w*&* *v«*«!k**> He escaped arrest, however. 

n*i wax) the Ornatee kved at *ce<mcfcv at Osteon, la i*n 

he s»n>awasiM the *on*fcv*a which trassfveted the Free** 

*:n» v x e» San TVwi^upv and the fcfikwvag year wa* **Ae careaia- 

general el llitttS»g«w wasca he saneeJcevd t* t V En$fea in 

*$xv alter a he*** defeat In t$tt, a^cr swnc W5.Mii» on 

the not* of XantitoMv VtfSbret was tewaeded ve its services w*h 

the *aaw»aad of % nwltiiy oNnan and the past of fevexaor* 

amianleJYwafc* BtdfiedatYtssVtv 
||ji ^^ ^ ltafc(fc ^^^ lfcl 

t wnn km at K^4» «n Ae jsd el tXsuftee i^r* 

! fc ny h Ut wtts l««a\ ^ \feca eadtte FrxKVSve <v 

two esif Ifcaiil sxhirnlstsei' taw t^ vc >ty i^#» 

1 1>* h V e attstt syrerasnent^ ass* heU v take 



■uu may be mei 
• Filesofia (Florence, 



refuge in Florence. There he devoted himself to teaching 
and historical research in the public libraries, and in 1859 he 
published the first volume of his Siorta di Girolcmo Savona* 
rda e de* suoi tempi, in consequence of which he was appointed 
professor of history at Pisa. A second volume appeared in 
1 86 1, and the work, which soon came to be recognised as an 
Italian Classic, was translated into various foreign language*. 
It was followed by a work of even greater critical value, 
Niecold Mackiavetti e i suoi tempi (1877-82). In the mean* 
while Villari had left Pisa and was transferred to the chaii 
of philosophy of history at the Institute of Studii Superiori in 
Florence, and he was also appointed a member of the council 
of education (186a). He served as a juror at the international 
exhibition of that year in London, and contributed an important 
monograph on education in England and Scotland. In 1865 
he was appointed under-secretary of state for education, and 
shortly afterwards was elected member of parliament, a position 
which he held for several years. In 1884 he was nominated 
senator, and in i8qx-os he was minister of education in the 
Marchese di Rudinl's first cabinet. In 1803-04 he collected a 
number of essays on Florentine history, originally published in 
the Nu9$a Antohgia, under the title of J primi dm seceii deila 
stcria di Ft/erne, and in 1001 he produced Le Itnasimi bar* 
barieke in Italia, a popular account in one volume of the eventi 
following the dissolution of the Roman empire. All these 
works have been translated into English by the historian's 
wife, Linda White Villari. Another side of VSHari's activity 
was his interest in the political and social problems of the 
day; and although never identified with any political party fc 
his speeches and writings have always commanded considerable 
public attention. 
Among hb other literary vorks may be mentioned; Sam 

_jlf£ /|A*a\. j_^. «*■ •- «. ev«-.>.x_ w*« .»o.\. r^Mf 

i ' ""* " 
18 
lOOj). 

Society. His most important political i 
lotted in hb LtUtrt Mendiemaii td altri j> 
m Italia (Turin, 1885V and Scrim smBa amstiam* sadate m Julia 
(Florence, 1002). The LtOrrr Mu idi two K (oogiaaDy published in the 
nempaper L'Optn i t mt in 1875) produced a deep hnpreadoo, as they 
were the first exposure of the real c o od hi ooa of southern Italy. A 
wkctk>nof\mtnse»a)^traashUedbyhBwire^hasbecBpub£d^ 
in EnsUod (1907). 
See abo Francesco Bahhmroni, Pta|oe*f V&ari (Florence. 1007;. 

TOLA BICaV, the largest city m the interior of Paraguay, 
on the railway from Asuncion (70 an. N.W.) to Encaniacion. 
Pops (1010) about *5.ooo. Situated in n rich agricutairal 
region watered by the upper Tepscnary, with mnciy timbered 
mountains extending to the E. and W.. Yin* Rata has an im- 
portant trade in tobacco and yrrlo steal It m to n great 
extent saodern. and contains scene fine hniVhngv isxinding a 
national c\>t«cee. a ctacK oasny scnocK and n hfsaacli of Use 
Agrkultnral Rink. 

TIULaJtRIAU a town of csstcm Spain, m the provmce of 
CnsteiV5a de Is Plana: 4 av treat the Mec.:eR«nean Sen, near 
the ri$ht bank ot the river M.;-nr*» and on the Barceloon- 
Vak^cin rafiwar. PVrx vtocoi te^cedL \TlarreaI has a 
starxwt eo. the %ht ra^r-ar cecweee Ce>a and the s e ap o its 
of Caate&fe de la fiina a»d frurima. Tader hfoorish rale, 
vtd w? to the et^«^»n « the htareKves in 1000, it was the 
ke*A;-4*rt*rs of a rvureai^r traoe. sad in saedera tears its 
v*i.strRcs have tevived, Fa^s-grvTCs* chszcacs with brae- 
:vv>i <«*>****> and hcuaes wi:h at: reces 
vwspiatiriff^ to seawe eatent se ejcme the 
•f the of^k There are eattrsfcrr era us>fKics» 
Vt the £?T*ftai»»a caaal of C*KtCvtv w&acs> » n gead < 
«4 Svettewh 4»^J a «chc skat IV 
assftttnav-tuees «t pu^re. wee Jkii ew^ and spcrfes* 

nUJJKaV CXAC9B IMS BKTQt ML Fte«cx aw liamv 

TKXBSw M^e«9r«$ w\j> IX^ .yV^jb a>» Wvwzrw ca Maxcx 

v :.-vf-*^-*^ SMr^tl M F^&avf. «ne wt :he yge ac <at g a 1 *t 

<je" F*v*v > **.vnr. u^* Wrt *: VKOt* *a r*f Jth «af Max 165^ 

V am>i «;<ttvt tW a«t% thoMocl ;btv>iqf«*i aegKnie rc;i. lie 




VILLAVICIOSA— VILLEGAS 



77 



served in the light cavalry lathe Dutch wets, and distinguished 
himself by his daring and resourcefulness. But in spite of a 
loaf record of excellent service under Turenne, Conde and 
Luxembourg, and of his aristocratic birth, his promotion was 
bat slow for be ludincurt^ the enmhy of the powerful Louvois, 
and although he had been proprietary colonel (mesire de camp) 
of a cavalry regiment smce 1674, thirteen yean elapsed 
before be was made a marickal d* tamp In the interval be- 
tween the Dutch wars and the formation of the League of Augs- 
burg, Villaxs, who combined with his military gifts the tact 
and subtlety of the diplomatist, was employed In an unofficial 
mission to the court of Bavaria, and there became the constant 
companion of the elector, with whom he took the field against 
the Turks and fought at Mohacs. He returned to France in 
1690 and was given a command in the cavalry of the army in 
Flanders, but towards the end of the Grand Alliance War he 
went to Vienna as ambassador His part in the nest war 
(see Spanish Succession War), beginning with Friedlingen 
(1702) and Hdchstett (1703) and ending with Denain (171a), 
has made him immortal. For Friedlingen he received the 
-»— i»«fr»»», and for the pacification of the insurgent Cevennes 
the Saint-Esprit order and the title of duke Friedlingen and 
Hochstett were barren victories, and the campaigns of which 
they formed part records of lost opportunities. Villars's glory 
thus begins with the year 1709 when France, apparently help- 
less, was roused to a great effort of self-defence by the exorbi- 
tant demands of the Coalition. In that year he was called to 
^■m^w^rwt the main army opposing Eugene and Marlborough 
on the northern frontier During the famine of the winter he 
shared the soldiers' miserable rations. When the campaign 
opened the old Marshal Boufilers volunteered to serve under 
km, and after the terrible battle of Malplaquetfa.s ), in which 
he was gravely wounded, he was able to tell the king. " If 
it please God to give your majesty's enemies another such 
victory, they arc ruined " Two more campaigns passed without a 
battle and with scarcely any advance on the part of the invaders, 
but at last Marlborough manoeuvred Villain out of the famous 
Wt plus ultra lines, and the power of the defence seemed to be 
broken. But Louis made a last effort, the English contingent 
and its great leader were withdrawn from the enemy's camp, 
and Villan, though still suffering from his Malplaquet wounds, 
outmanoeuvred and decisively defeated Eugene in the battle 
of Denain. This victory saved France, though the war dragged 
on far ap** t>u -' year on the Rhine, where Villars took Landau, 
led the stonnexs at Freiburg and negotiated the peace of Rastatt 
wfch Prince Eugene. 

He played a conspicuous part in the politics of the Regency 
period as the principal opponent of Cardinal Dubois, and only 
the memories of Montmorency's rebellion prevented his being 
made constable of France. He took the field for the last time 
is the War of the Polish Succession (1734), with the title 
** marshal-general of the king's armies," that Turenne alone 
had held before him. But he was now over eighty years of 
age, and the war was more diplomatic than earnest, and after 
opening the rampaTgn with all the fire and restless energy of 
his youth he died at Turin on the 17th of June 1754. 

Villars's memoirs show us a "fanfaron plein d'honneur," 
as Voltaire cans him. He was indeed boastful, with the gas- 
conading habit of his native province, and also covetous of 
honours and wealth. But he was an honourable man of high 
courage, moral and physical, and a soldier who stands above 
al his con t empo ra ries and successors in the x8th century, on 
the same height as Marlborough and Frederick. 

The memoirs, part of which was published in 1734 and afterwards 
several times republished to untrustworthy versions, were for the 
first time completely edited by the Marquis de Vogue in 1884-92. 

VILLA VICI08A, a seaport of northern Spain, in the province 
of Orfedo; on the Ria de VuTavidosa, an estuary formed by the 
small river Vulavidoaa which here enters the Bay of Biscay 
Pop. (1000) 20,005. The town is the headquarters of a large 
fishery, and has some coasting trade. Its exports are chiefly 
agricultural produce. VHUvidosa suffers from the competition 
xxv m a* 



of the neighbouring porta of Gtjon and AvOes, and from the Itch 
of railway communication. It U connected by good roads with 
Siero (13 m ) and Infiesto (9 m.) on the Oviedo-Infiesto railway 

VILLEFRANCHB-DE-ROUKRQUE, a town of France, capital 
of an errondisaement in the department of Aveyron, 30 m. W 
of Redes by road. Pop (1006) town, 6297, commune, 3352. 
Villefranche, which has a station on the Orleans railway, Uss 
amongst the hills on the right bank of the Aveyron at its junction 
with the Alaou One of the three bridges that cross the nver 
belongs to the 13th century, and the straight, narrow streets are 
full of gabled houses of the 13th and 14th centuries One of the 
principal thoroughfares passes beneath the porch of Notre-Dame, 
the principal church of Villefranche. Notre-Dame was built 
from 1260 to 1581, the massive tower which surmounts its 
porch bong of late Gothic architecture The remarkable wood- 
work in the choir dates from the 15th century A Carthusian 
monastery overlooking the town from the left bank of the 
Aveyron derives much interest from the completeness and 
fine preservation of its buildings, which date from the 15th 
century They include a fine refectory and two cloisters, the 
smaller of which is a masterpiece of the late Gothic style. The 
manufacture of leather, animal-traps, hosiery, bell-foundinfo 
hemp-spinning, &c, are carried on. Quarries of phosphates 
and mines of argentiferous lead are worked near Villefranche 

Villefranche, founded about 1252, owes its name to the 
numerous immunities granted by Us founder AJphonse, count 
of Toulouse (d 1271), and in 1348 it was so flourishing that 
sumptuary laws were passed. Soon afterwards the town fell 
into the hands of Edward, the Black Prince, but was the first 
place in Guienne to rise against the English. New privileges 
were granted to the town by King Charles V , but these were 
taken away by Louis XI In x 588 the inhabitants repulsed the 
forces of the League, and afterwards murdered a governor sent by 
Henry IV. The town was ravaged by plague in X463, 1558 and 
1628, and in 1643 a revolt, excited by the exactions of the 
tntendanis, was cruelly repressed. 

VILLEFRANCHB-SUR-SAOnE. a manufacturing town of east- 
central France, capital of an arrondissement in the department 
of Rh6ne, on the Morgon near its junction with the Saonc, 21 m. 
N by W of Lyons by rail Pop (1006) 14,794. Among its 
industries the chief arc the manufacture of working clothes, the 
manufacture, dyeing and finishing of cotton fabrics, the spinning 
of cotton thread, copper founding and the manufacture of 
machinery and agricultural implements. The wines of Beau* 
jolais, hemp, cloth, linen, cottons, drapery goods and cattle 
are the principal articles of trade. An old Renaissance house is 
used as the town hall. The church of Notre-Dame des Marais, 
begun at the end of the 14th and finished in the x6th century, 
has a tower and spire (rebuilt in 1862), standing to the right of 
the facade (15th century), in which are carved wooden doors. 
Villefranche is the seat of a sub-prefect and has tribunals of first 
instance and of commerce, a chamber of commerce and a com- 
munal college among its public institutions. 

Founded in 1212 by Guichard IV count of Beaujeu, Ville- 
franche became in the 14th century capital of the BeaujolaJs. 
As a punishment for an act of violence towards the mayor's 
daughter, Edward II. was forced to surrender the Beaujohus to 
the duke of Bourbon. 

VILLEGAS, ESTEBAN MANUEL DB (1 580-1669), Spanish 
poet, was born at Matute (Logrofio) on the 5th of February 1589, 
matriculated at Salamanca, on the 20th of November 1610, and 
challenged attention by the mingled arrogance and accomplish- 
ment of Las Erdticas (16x7), a collection of clever translations 
from Horace and Anacreon, and of original poems, the charm of 
which is marred by the writer's petulant vanity Marrying 
in 1636 or earlier, Villegas practised law at Najcra till 1659, when 
he was charged with expressing unorthodox views on the 
subject of free will; he was exiled for four years to Santa Maria 
de Ribaredonda, but was allowed to return for three months 
to N&jera in March 1660. It seems probable that the rest of the 
sentence was remitted, for the report of the local inquisition lays 
stress on Villegas's simple piety, on the extravagance of his attire, 



7* 



VILLEHARDOUIN 



ridiculous in a nun of hit age, and on the eccentricity of his 
general conduct and conversation, so marked as to suggest " a 
kind of mania or lesion of the imagination." In his version of 
Boetius (1665), Viiiegas showed that he had profited by his 
experience, for he made no attempt to translate the last book 
(In which the problem of free will is discussed), and reprinted 
the Latin text without comment. He died at N&jera on the 3rd 
of September 1069. His tragedy El Hipdlito, imitated from 
Euripides, and a series of critical dissertations entitled Vanae 
Phthtogiatt finished in 1650, are unpublished, and " a book of 
satires," found among his papers by the inquisitors, was con- 
fiscated. 

VILLEHARDOUIN, OEOFFROY DB (c. 1160-*. taij), the 
first vernacular historian of France, and perhaps of modern 
Europe, who possesses literary merit, is rather supposed than 
known to have been born at the chateau from which he took 
his name, near Troyes, in Champagne, about the year 11 60. 
Not merely his literary and historical importance, but almost all 
that is known about him, comes from his chronicle of the fourth 
crusade, or Conqutto de Constantinople. Nothing is positively 
known of his ancestry, for the supposition (originating with Du 
Gangs) that a certain William, marshal of Champagne between 
1 163 and 1 1 79, was his father appears to be erroneous. VUle- 
hardouin himself, however, undoubtedly held this dignity, and 
certain minute and perhaps not very trustworthy indications, 
chiefly of an heraldic character, have led his most recent bio- 
graphers to lay It down that he was not born earlier than 1150 
or later than 1164. He introduces himself to us with a certain 
Abruptness, merely specifying his own name as one of a list of 
knights of Champagne who with their count, Thibault, took 
the cross at a tournament held at Escry<-sur»Abne in Advent 
1109, the crusade in contemplation having been started by the 
preaching of FulR de Neuilly, who was commissioned thereto by 
Pope Innocent III The next year six deputies, two appointed 
by each of the three allied counts of Flanders, Champagne and 
Blob, were despatched to Venice to negotiate for ships. Of 
these deputies Villchardouin was one and Quesnes de Be'thune, 
the poet, another. They concluded a bargain with the seigniory 
lor transport and provisions at a fixed price. Villchardouin 
had hardly returned when Thibault fell sick and died, but this 
did not prevent, though it somewhat delayed, the enterprise of 
the crusaders. The management of that enterprise, however, 
was a difficult one, and cost VUlehardouin another embassy into 
Italy to prevent if possible some of his feUow-pflgrims from 
breaking the treaty with the Venetians by embarking at other 
ports and employing other convoy. He was only in part suc- 
cessful, and there was great difficulty in raising the charter- 
money among those who had actually assembled (in isoi) at 
Venice, the sum collected falling far short of the stipulated 
amount. It b necessary to remember this when the somewhat 
erratic and irregular character of the operations which followed 
b judged. The defence that the crusaders were bound to pay 
their passage-money to the Holy Land, in one form or other, to 
the Venetians, b perhaps a weak one in any case for the attack 
on two Christian cities, Zara and Constantinople; it becomes 
weaker still when it b found that the expedition never went or 
attempted to go to the Holy Land at alL But the desire to 
discharge obligations incurred b no doubt respectable in itself. 
and Vutenardouia, as one of the actual negotiators of the 
bargain, must have felt it with peculiar strength. 

The crusader* set sail at last. an>i Zara, whkh the Venetians 
coveted, was taken without riuch tremble. The question then 
arose whither the host should go next. Vt&hir&Mitn does not 
tell us of any direct port taken by himsetf in the debates on the 
questton of interfering or not in the disputed succession to the 
empire of the East-Debates in which the chief eccle&assics 
present strongly protested against the diversion of the enterprise 
Rosa its proper goal It b quite dear, however, that the mar- 
shal of Champagne-* who was one of the traders and ini^rr 
conastiocs of tin expedition throughout. syrrpa;hjed wi:h the 
nujorirr, and it b bar to powt ont that the umpcatica of 
chhnkons adventure was peohnh^r as groat as that of gain* 



Re narrates spiritedly enough the dissensions and discussions 
in the winter camp 01 Zara and at Corfu, but is evidently much 
more at ease when the voyage was again resumed, and, after a 
fair passage round Greece, the crusaders at last saw before 
them the great dty of Constantinople which they had it in 
mind to attack. When the assault was decided upon, Vilfe- 
hardouin himself was in the fifth " battle/' the leader of which 
was Mathieu de Montmorency. But, though hb account of the 
siege is full of personal touches, and contains one reference to 
the number of witnesses whose testimony he took for a certain 
wonderful fact, he does not tell us anything of bis own prowess. 
After the flight of the usurper Alexius, and when the blind 
Isaac, whose claims the crusaders were defending, had been 
taken by the Greeks from prison and placed on the throne, 
VUlehardouin, with Montmorency and two Venetians, formed 
the embassy sent to arrange terms. He was again similarly 
distinguished when it became necessary to remonstrate with 
Alexius, the blind man's son and virtual successor, on the non- 
keeping of the terms. Indeed ViUchardouin's talents as a 
diplomatist seem to have been held in very high esteem, for 
later, when the Latin empire had become a fact, he was charged 
with the delicate business of mediating between the emperor 
Baldwin and Boniface, marquis of Montferrat, in which task 
he had at least partial success. He was abo appointed marshal 
of "Romanie"— a term very vaguely used, but apparently 
signifying the mainland of the Balkan Peninsula, while his 
nephew and namesake, afterwards prince of Achaia, took a 
great part in the Latin conquest of Peloponnesus. Vfllehardouin 
himself before long received an important command against 
the Bulgarians. He was left to maintain the siege of Adrianople 
when Baldwin advanced to attack the relieving force, and 
with Dandofo had much to do in saving the defeated crusaders 
from utter destruction, and conducting the retreat, in which 
he commanded the rearguard, and brought hb troops in safety 
to the sea of Rodosto, and thence to the capital As he occupied 
the post of honour in this disaster, so he had that (the command 
of the vanguard) in the expedition which the regent Henry 
made shortly afterwards to revenge his brother Baldwin's 
defeat and capture And, when Henry had succeeded to the 
crown on the announcement of Baldwin's death, it was VUle- 
hardouin who fetched home hb bride Agnes of Montferrat, 
and shortly afterwards commanded under him in a naval 
battle with the ships of Theodore Lascarb at the fortress of 
Gbotus. In the settlement of the Latin empire after the truce 
with Lascarb, VUlehardouin received the fief of Messinople 
(supposed to be Mosynopolb, a little inland from the modern 
Gulf of Lagos, and not far from the ancient Abdera) from 
Boniface of Montferrat, with the record of whose death the 
chronicle abruptly doses. 

In the foregoing account only those particulars which bear 
directly 00 \ulebardouin himself lave been detailed; but the 
chronicle b as far as possible from being an autobiography, and 
the displays of the writer's personality, nomerons as they are, am 
quite involuntary, and consist merely in hb wajr of h^^ft'fg the 
subject, not in the re f ere n ce s (as brie/ as hb functions as chronicler 
mill admit) to hb own proceedings. The chronicle of Vulenardoutn 
b justly held to be the very best presentation we po ssess of the 
scant of chivalry— not the designedly exalted and p» »* i* ril cnxvatry 
of the romances, not the seU-conscious a-d deliberate chivalry of 
the 14th century, but the unsophisticated mode of tt»«>fc4«a> and 
acting which brought about the crusades, s tim u lat ed the vast 
literary develcpraent of the isth and itxh t e muii e s. and sent 
knichrs-erreat. principally tSocfh not wholly of French blood, to 
establish principalities and kwjdcas thRK«bout Europe and the 
nearer East. On the whole, no doebc. k at the more masculine 
and practical side of tab enthusiastic state of and which. VUle- 
turdouin shows. No wctran cukes any but the b r i e f e st appear- 
ance in hb pages, thcc$h in Tv<>reoce to thb it rrcst of course be 
tv-retnbered that be was cemi.-!y a nun past saAJIe fife -when the 
events occurred, and perhaps a sui aporoncS;"»j ©M age when he 
set them down. CV>rit«> tNe strw^ aad jrapiuc touches here and 
tVrre\ exVtetin^ the ircrre-^saon w*»vh the bearty of sea and land, 
tW wArrvVor c* Corses* t»«cffe. the ma£*isade~of the effete but 
set*! i-nposti«; Greek power, trait on Kan. there b not only an entire 
' .*N«r«KY of xMatfcM cm such **Vx*ts as a modern vocSd have 
I J *:«d o« y-.Sat wa* ?*> Ne e\revt«d\ Nrt an absence Skrwise of the 
- eiaborase and nam: ul descries* of detaa in whkh < 



VILLELE 



n 



■■■■li ff would have indulged. It is Curious, for instance, to 
compare the scanty references to the material marvels of Constan- 
tinople which Villehardouin saw in their glory, which perished by 
nek and fire under his very eyes, and which live chiefly in the 
ssetaachofy pages of his Greek contemporary Nicetas, with the 
jUt^— — » descriptions of the scarcely greater wonders of fabulous 
courts at Constantinople itself, at Babylon, and elsewhere, to be 
foaad in his other contemporaries, the later chanson de geste writers 
and the earlier embroiderers of the Arthurian romances and remans 
fattmtmrex. And this later contrast is all the more striking that 
VlUeaardoum agrees with, and not impossibly borrows from, these 
very writers in many points of style and phraseology. The brief 
chapters of bis work have been justly compared to the hisses or 
erode* of a chanson in what may be called the vignetting of the 
■object of each, in the absence of any attempt to run on the narra- 
tive, m the stock forms, and in the poetical rather than prosaic 
word-order of the sentences. Undoubtedly this half-poetic style 
(animated as it is and redeemed from any charge of bastardy by the 
freshness and vigour which pervade it) adds not a little to the 
charm of the book. Its succession of word pictures, conventional 
and vet vigorous as the illuminations of a medieval manuscript, 
and m their very conventionality free from all thought of literary 
presentation, must charm all readers. The sober lists of names 
with which it opens; the account of the embassy, so business-like 
is its estimates of costs and terms, and suddenly breaking into 
a fervent de s cr i pti on of how the six deputies, " prostrating them- 
selves on the earth and weeping warm tears, begged the doge and 
people of Venice to have pity on Jerusalem " ; the story immediately 
following, bow the young count Thibault of Champagne, raising 
kimsetftrom a sickbed in his joy at the successful return of his 



overture. _ — „ -„ 

of the debates which took place as to the best means of carrying 
out the vow after the count's decease, the rendezvous, too ill kept 
at Venice, the plausible suggestion of the Venetians that the balance 
dec to them should be made up by a joint attack on their enemy, 
the Hffg of Hungary. Villehardouin does not in the least conceal 
the fact that the pope (" I'apostoilles de Rome," as he calls him. 
hi the very phrase of the chansons) was very angry with this; 
far his own part be seems to think of little or nothing but the 
separation due to the republic, which had loyally kept its bargain 
and been defrauded of the price, of the infamy of breaking company 
en the part of members of a joint association, and perhaps of the 
eaknightHness of not taking up an adventure whenever it presents 
fasetf. For here again the restoration of the disinherited prince of 
Coostaataaopie supplied an excuse quite as plausible as the liquids* 
tian of the debt to Venice. A famous passage, and one short enough 
Id quote, is that describing the old blind doge Dandolo. who had 
" Grant o ch otso n de remanotr (reason for staying at home), car vieb 
boa ere, et si avoit les yaubt en la teste biaus et n'en veoit gote 
feoutte)." and yet was the foremost in fight. 

it would be out of place to attempt any further analysis of the 
Conqu&e here. But it is not impertinent, and is at the same time 
an excuse for what has been already said, to repeat that Villehar* 
tana's book, brief as it is, is ia reality one of the capital books of 
fa ct autr e , act merely for its merit, but because it is the most 
authentic and the most striking embodiment in contemporary 
aterature of the sentiments which determined the action of a great 
and important period of history. There are but very few books 
which hold this position, and Villehardooin's is one of them. If 
every other contemporary record of the crusades perished, we should 
snfi be able by aid of this to understand and realize what the 
sxnitaJ attitude of crusaders, of Teutonic knights, and the rest was, 
asd without this we should lack the earliest, the most undoubtedly 
•rumk. and the most characteristic of all such records. The very 
lainssssliiirj with which Villehardouin is chargeable, the absence 
of eosapsnsctioa with which he relates the changing of a sacred 
reSgious pilgrimage into something by no means unlike a mere 
fiEbostering raid on the great scale, add a charm to the book. For, 
religious as it is, it is entirely free from the very slightest touch of 
h y po c risy or indeed of self-consciousness of any kind. The famous 
eascripuoa of the crusades, gesta Dei per Francos, was evidently to 
Yulehaxdouin a plain matter-of-fact description, and it no more 
occurred to him to doubt the divine favour being extended to the 
espediriom against Alexius or Theodore than to doubt that it was 
shown to expeditions against Saracens and Turks* 

Tbe person of Vilkbardoufn reappears for us once, but once 
eafy. is the chronide of his continuator, Henri de Valenciennes. 
There Is a great gap in style, though none in subject, between 
the really poetical prose of the first historian of the fifth crusade 
cad the Latin empire sid the awkward mannerism (so awkward 
that it has been taken to represent a "disrhymed" verse 
chronicle) of his foflower But the much greater length at 
which VTBerjardouin appears on this one occasion shows us tbe 
restraint which he must have exercised in the passages which 
deal with himself fin his own work. He again led the vanguard 



in the emperor Henry's expedition against Burnas Uie Bulgarian* 
and he is represented by the Valenciennes scribe as encouraging 
bis sovereign to the attack in a long speech. Then he disappears 
altogether, with the exception of some brief and chiefly diplo- 
matic mentions. Du Cange discovered and quoted a deed of 
donation by him dated 1807, by which certain properties were 
devised to the churches of Notre Dame de Foissy and Notre 
Dame de Txoyes, with the reservation of life interests to hit 
daughters Alia and Damerones, and bis sisters Emmeline and 
Haye, all of whom appear to have embraced a monastic life, 
A letter addressed from the East to Blanche of Champagne a 
died, and a papal record of 1212 styles him still " marshal of 
Romania. " The neat year this title passed to bis son Erard; 
and 13X3 is acormHngly given as the date of his death, which, 
as there is no record or hint of his having returned to France, 
may be supposed to have happened at Mesainople, where also 
he-must have written the Conquest, 

The book appears to have been known in the ages immediately 
succeeding his own; and, though there is no contemporary menu* 
script in existence, there are some half-dozen which appear to date 
from the end of the 13th or the course of the 14th century, while 
one at least appears to be a copy made from his own work in that 
spirit of unintelligent faithfulness which is much more valuable 
to posterity than more pragmatical editing. The first printed 
edition of the book, by a certain Blaise de vigenere. dates from 
1585, is dedicated to the seigniory of Venice (Villehardouin, it should 
be said, has been accused of a rather unfair predilection for the 
Venetians), and speaks of either a part or the whole of tbe memoirs 
as having been printed twelve years earlier. Of this earlier copy 
nothing seems to be known. A better edition, founded on a Nether- 
landish MS., appeared at Lyrns in if^i. But both these were 
completely antiquated b) mi of Du Cange in 1657, 

wherein that learned wiiri-r employed all his knowledge, never 
since equalled, of the sul k< t, Li- 1U1-I a translation, or rather 
paraphrase, into modern scarcely worthy either of 

himself or his author. D< mew edition from different 

MS. sources in 1823, and the t*^k tigufei with different degrees of 
dependence on Du Cange and Brut in the collections of Petitot, 
Buchon, and Michsud anJ Pgujoi lat. All these, however, have 
been superseded for the modern student by the editions of Natalis de 
Waifly (1872 and 1874), »n which lU ukt is critically edited from 
all the available MSS. and a new translation added, while there Is a 
still later and rather handier one by E. Bouchet (2 vols., Paris, 1891), 
which, however, rests mainly on N. de Wailly for text. The charm 
of Villehardouin can escape no reader; but few readers will fail to 
derive some additional pleasure from the two essays which Sainte- 
Beuve devoted to him,reprinted in the ninth volume of the Causeries 
dulundi. SeealsoA.Debidour,£*s Chroniqmeurs (iB8S). There are 
English translations by T. Smith (1829), and (more literally) Sir 
F. T. Marzials (Everyman's Library, 1908). (G. 5a.) 

VILLELE, JEAN BAPTISTS GUIUAUIIB MARIE ANNS 
E&RAPHIN, Comtb de (1773*1854), French statesman, was 
born at Toulouse on the 14th of April 1773 and educated for 
the navy. He joined the "Bayonnaise" at Brest in July 
1788 and served in the West and East Indies. Arrested in 
the Isle of Bourbon under the Terror, he was set free by 
the revolution of Thermidor (July 1704). He acquired some 
property in the island, and married in 1709 the daughter 
of a great proprietor, M. Desbassyns de Richemont, whose 
estates he bad managed. His apprenticeship to politics was 
served in the Colonial Assembly of Bourbon, where he fought 
successfully to preserve the colony from the consequences of 
perpetual interference from the authorities in Paris, and on 
the other hand to prevent local discontent from appealing to 
the English for protection. The arrival of General Decaen, 

St out by Bonaparte in 1802, restored security to the island, 
I five years later Villele, who had now realized a large fortune, 
returned to France. He was mayor of his commune, and a 
member of the council of the Haute-Garonne under the Empire 
At the restoration of 1814 he at once declared for royalist 
principles. He was mayor of Toulouse in 18 14-15 and deputy 
for the Haute-Garonne in the " Chambrc Introuvable " of 18x5 
Villele, who before the promulgation of the charter had written 
some Observations sur It projet de constitution opposing it, as 
too democratic in character, naturally took his place on the 
extreme right with the ultra-royalists. In the new Chamber 
of 1816 Villele found bis party in s minority, but bis persona] 
authority nevertheless in cr eased. He was looked on by the 



8o 



VILLEMAIN— VILLENA, E. DE 



ministerialists as the least unreasonable of his party, and by 
the "ultras" as the safest of their leaders. Under the 
electoral law of 1817 the Abb* Gregoire, who was popularly 
supposed to have voted for the death of Louis XVI. in the 
Convention, was admitted to the Chamber of Deputies. The 
Conservative party gained strength from the alarm raised by 
this incident and still more from the shock caused by the 
assassination of the due de Bent The due de Richelieu was 
compelled to admit to the cabinet two of the chiefs of the Left, 
Villele and Corbiere. Villele resigned within a year, but on 
the fall of Richelieu at the end of i8ax be became the real chief 
of the new cabinet, in which be was minister of finance. 
Although not himself a courtier, he was backed at court by 
Sosthenes de la Rochefoucauld and Madame du Cayla, and in 
182s Louis XVIII. gave him the title of count and made him 
formally prime minister. He immediately proceeded to muscle 
opposition by stringent press laws, and the discovery of minor 
liberal conspiracies afforded an excuse for further repression. 
Forced against his will into interference in Spain by Mathieu 
de Montmorency and Chateaubriand, he contrived to reap 
some credit for the monarchy from the successful campaign 
of 1813. Meanwhile he had consolidated the royal power by 
persuading Louis XVHI. to swamp the liberal majority in 
the upper house by the nomination of twenty-seven new peers; 
he availed himself of the temporary popularity of the monarchy 
after the Spanish campaign to summon a new Chamber of 
Deputies. This new and obedient legislature, to which only 
nineteen liberals were returned, made itself into a septennial 
parliament, thus providing time, it was thought, to restore 
some part of the ancien rigime, Villele's plans were assisted 
by the death of Louis XVIII. and the accession of bis bigoted 
brother. Prudent financial administration since 181 5 had made 
possible the conversion of the state bonds from 5 to 4%. It 
was proposed to utilise the money set free by this operation 
to indemnify by a milliard francs the emigris for the loss of their 
lands at the Revolution; it was also proposed to restore their 
former privileges to the religious congregations. Both these 
propositions were, with some restrictions, secured. Sacrilege 
was made a crime punishable by death, and the ministry were 
preparing a fatw to alter the law of equal inheritance, and thus 
create anew the great estates. These measures roused violent 
opposition in the country, which a new and stringent press 
law, nicknamed the " law of justice and love," failed to put 
down. The peers rejected the law of inheritance and the press 
law; it was found necessary to disband the National Guard; 
and in November 1827 seventy-six new peers were created, and 
recourse was had to a general election, lie new Chamber proved 
hostile to Villele, who resigned to make way for the short-lived 
moderate ministry of Martignac 

The new ministry made Villele's removal to the upper house 
a condition of taking office, and be took no further part in 
public affairs. At the time of his death, on the 13th of March 
1854, he had advanced as far as x 81 6 with his memoirs, which 
were completed from his correspondence by his family as 
Mhuoires H corresfendance dm comie da Villele (Paris, 5 vols., 
1887-00). 

See also C. de Masade, VOpposiHan royalist* (Paris, 1894); J. G. 
Hyde de NettvnW. Notice sur U ami* de ViUHe (Paris, 1899); and 
M. Chotard. " LCEuvre financiere deM.de Villele." in Atmaks des 
sciences petttiques (voL v., 1890). 

wiUBMAIH, ABSL FHAtffOIS (1790-1867), French politician 
and man of letters, was born us Paris on the 9th of June 1790. 
He was educated at the lycec Louis-le-Grand, and became 
assistant master at the lycee Charlemagne, and subsequently 
at the Seek Normale. In 181s he gained a prise from the 
Academy with an tfegv on Montaigne. Under the restoration 
be was appointed, first, assistant professor of modern history, 
and then professor of French eloquence at the Sorbonne. Here 
be delivered a series of literary lectures which had an extra- 
ordinary effect 00 his younger contemporaries. Vfllemain had 
the great advantage of coming just before the Romantic move- 
ment* of bavmf a wide and catholic love of literature without 



being an extremist. AH, or almost all, the clever young men 
of the brilliant generation of 1830 passed under his influence; 
and, while be pleased the Romanticists by his frank apprecia- 
tion of the beauties of English, German, Italian and Spanish 
poetry, he had not the least inclination to decry the classics— 
either the classics proper of Greece and Rome or the so-called 
classics of France. In 1819 he published a book on CromweH, 
and two years later he was elected to the Academy. Ville- 
main was appointed by the restoration government " chef de 
rimprimerie et de la librairie," a post involving a kind of 
irregular censorship of the press, and afterwards to the office 
of master of requests. Before the revolution of July he had 
been deprived of his office for his liberal tendencies, and had 
been elected deputy for £vreux. Under Louis Philippe he re- 
ceived a peerage in 1832. He was a member of the council of 
public instruction, and was twice minister of that department, 
and he also became secretary of the Academy. During the 
whole of the July monarchy he was thus one of the chief dis- 
pensers of literary patronage in France, but in his later years 
his reputation declined. He died in Paris on the 8th of May 
1867. 

VUIemaln's chief work is Ms Cours de la KUiralurefrancaise (5 vols.. 
1838-29). Among his other works are: Tableau de la literature du 
moyeu age (2 vols., 1846); Tableau de la litUrature au XVIII 9 
siecle (4 vols., 1864); Souvenirs contemporains (a vols., 1856); 
Histoire de Grigoire VII. (2 vols., 1873; Ens. trans., 1874). 

Among notices on Villemain may be cited that of Louis de Lomeme 
(1841), E. Mirecourt (1858), T. L. Dubut (1875). See also Sainte- 
Beuve, Portraits (1841, vol. 11L), and Causenes du lundi (vol. ri. 
" Notes et pensies "). 

VILLENA, ENRIQUE DE (1384-1434), Spanish author, was 
born in 1384. Through his grandfather, Alphonso de Aragon, 
count de Denia y Ribagorsa, he traced his descent from Jaime II. 
of Aragon and Blanche of Naples. He is commonly known 
as the marquess de Villena; but, although a marquessate was 
at one time in the family, the title was revoked and annulled 
by Henry ILL VSlena's father, Don Pedro de Villena, was 
killed at Aljubarrota; the boy was educated by his grand- 
father, showed great capacity for learning and was reputed 
to be a wizard. About 1402 he married Maria de Albornoc, 
seflom del Infantado, who apcedfly became the recognised 
mistress of Henry HI.; the complaisant husband was rewarded 
by being appointed master of the military order of Calatrava 
in 1404, but on the death of Henry at the end of 1406 the knights 
of the order refused to accept the nomination, which, allcr a 
long contest, was rescinded in 14x5. He was present at the 
coronation of Ferdinand of Aragon at Saragossa in 1414, retired 
to Valencia till 1417, when he moved to Castile to claim com- 
pensation for the loss of his mastership. He obtained in return 
the lordship (senorio) of Miesta, and, conscious of his unsuita- 
bility for warfare or political life, dedicated himself to literature. 
He died of fever at Madrid on the 15th of December 1434. 
He is represented by a fragment of his Arte de Irobar (1414), 
an indigestible treatise composed for the Barcelona Consistory 
of Gay Science; by Los Trabajos de H trades (1417)1 * pedantic 
and unreadable allegory; by his Tralado de Is ConsdaciSn 
and his handbook to the pleasures and fashions of the table, 
the Arte cisorid, both written in 1423; by a commentary on 
Psalm vifi. ver. 4, which dates from 1424; by the Libro da 
Aojamienlo (1425), a ponderous dissertation on the evil eye and 
its effects; and by a translation of the Aeneid, the first ever 
made, which was finished on the 10th of October X428. His 
treatise on leprosy exists but has not been published. VUlena's, 
writings do not justify his extraordinary tame; his subjects 
are devoid of charm, and his style is so uncouth as to be almost 
unintelligible. Yet he has an assured place in the history of 
Spanish literature; he was a generous patron of letters, bis 
translation of Virgil marks him out as a pioneer of the Re* 
naissance, and he set a splendid example of intellectual curiosity. 
Moreover, there is an abiding dramatic interest in the baffling 
personality of the solitary high-bora student whom Lope de 
Vega introduces in Forfar kasla morir, whom Ruis de Alarcon 
presents in La Cnet* da Salttmawra, and who reappears in the 



VILLENA—VILLENAGE 



81 



tgth century in Larra's Afacws and in HarUettbttsch's play 
La Reioma cucatitada. (J. F-K.) 

VllUOf A, a town of eastern Spain, in the province of Alicante; 
oa the light bank of the river Yinalapo, and at the junction 
of railways from Valencia, Alicante, Aibacete and Yecla. Pop. 
(tooo) 14,099. Villena is a labyrinth of winding alleys, which 
contain some interesting examples of Moorish domestic archi- 
tecture. It b dominated by a large and picturesque Moorish 
castle. The surrounding hills are covered with vines, and to 
the east there is an extensive salt lagoon. Silk, Hnen, flour, 
vine, brandy, oil, salt and soap are the chief industrial products. 

VTLLEMAGB (Villainage, Villanage. Villeinage), a 
svdieval term (from villa, villattns), pointing to serfdom, a 
coodhkjn of men intermediate between freedom and slavery. 
It occurs in France as well as in England, and was certainly im- 
ported into English speech through the medium of Norman 
Frrneh. The earliest instances of its use are to be found In the 
Latin and French versions of English documents in the nth 
and 1 3th centuries (cf. Domesday Book; Liebermann, Clossary 
te the Cesetze dtr Angchachsen, s.v. villanus, vilairi). The 
history of the word and of the condition is especially instructive 
in English usage. 

The materials for the formation of the villein class were 
already in existence in the Anglo-Saxon period. On the one 
kind, the Saxon ceorb (hciftyndemen), although considered as 
ncfading the typical freemen in the earlier laws (iEthelbcrht, 
Hlcthbere and Edric, Ine), gradually became differentiated 
through the action of political and economic causes, and many 
of them had to recognize the patronage of magnates or to seek 
Evenhood as tenants on the estates of the latter. These ceorb, 
siring on gafol-Iand, were, though personally free, considered 
as a lower order of men, and lapsed gradually into more or less 
oppressive subjection in respect of the great landowners. It b 
characteristic in this connexion that the West Saxon laws do 
not make any distinction between ceorb and tacts or half- 
freemen as the Kentish laws had done: this means that the 
aaif-free people were, if not Welshmen, reckoned as members 
•f the ceorl class. Another remarkable indication of the decay 
of the ceori's estate b afforded by the fact that in the treaties 
with the Danes the twibynde ceorb are equated with the Danish 
Irysings or freedmen. It does not mean, of course, that their 
condition was practically the same, but in any case the fact 
testifies to the gulf which had come to separate the two principal 
subdivisions of the free class— t^c ceorl and the thane. The 
Latin version of the Rccliludinn Singular urn Pcrsonarum, a 
-feenment compiled probably m the tith century, not long 
before the Conquest, renders gencat (a peasant tenant of a 
superior kind performing lighter services than the gcbur, as he 
was hardened with heavy week-work) by villa nut, but the gcbur 
came to be also considered as a vtUantts according to Anglo- 
Norman terminology. The group designated as feburs in 
Anglo-Saxon charters, though distinguished from mere slaves 
itiuwm baerdt-burbaerdc, Kemble, Cod Dipt. 1079), undoubtedly 
jtdoded many freedmen who in point of services and economic 
subjection were not very much above the slaves. Both ceorb 
and geb*rs disappear as separate classes, and it b clear that the 
greater part of them must have passed into the rank of villeins. 

In the terminology of the Domesday Inquest we find the 
TuVins as the most numerous element of the English popula- 
tion. Out of about 240.000 households enumerated in Domes- 
cay 100,000 are marked as belonging to villeins. They arc 
rcstics performing, as a rule, work services for their lords. Bat 
roc all the inhabitants of the villages were designated by that 
time. VtDeins are opposed to socmen and freemen on one 
Kind, to bovdarii, cottagers and slaves on the other. The 
i *;inclion in regard to the first two of these groups was evi- 
dently derived from their greater freedom, although the differ- 
ence is only one in degree and not in kind. In fact, the villein 
is assumed to be a person free by birth, but holding land of 
•Inch be cannot dispose freely. The distinction as against 
^rdarii and cottagers is based on the size of the holding: the 
*il>ms are holders of regular shares in the village— that is, of the 



virgates, bovatcs or half-hides which constitute the principal 
subdivisions in the fields and contribute to form the plough- 
teams— whereas the bordarii hold smaller plots of some 5 acres, 
more or less, and toUarii are connected with mere cottages and 
crofts. Thus the terminology of Domesday takes note of two 
kinds of differences in the status of rustics: a legal one In con- 
nexion with the right to dispose of property in Jaud, and an 
economic one reflecting the opposition between fne holders of 
shares in the fields and the holders of auxiliary tenements. The 
feature of personal serfdom b abo noticeable, but it provides a 
basis only for the comparatively small group of servi, of whom 
only about 25,000 are enumerated in Domesday Book. The 
contrast between this exceptionally situated class and the rest 
of the population shows that personal slavery was rapidly dis- 
appearing in England about the time of the Conquest. It b also 
to be noticed that the Domesday Survey constantly mentions 
the terra tiltanorum as opposed to the demesne in the estates or 
manors of the time, and that the land of the rustics b taxed 
separately for the geld, so that the distinction between the 
property of the lord and that of the peasant dependent on him b 
clearly marked and by no means devoid of practical importance. 
The Domesday Survey puts before us the state of things in 
England as it was at the very beginning of the Norman and 
at the close of the Saxon period. The development of feudal 
society, of centralizing kingship and ultimately of a system of 
common law, brought about great changes which all hinge on 
the fundamental fact that the kings, while increasing the power 
of the state in other respects, surrendered ft completely as 
regards the relations between the peasants and their lords. 
The protection of the assizes was tendered in civil matters to 
free tenants and refused to villeins. The royal courts refused 
to entertain suits of villeins against their lords, although there 
was a good deal of vacillation before this position was definitely 
taken up. Bracton still speaks in hb treatise of the possibility 
for the courts to interfere against intobrable cruelty on the part 
of the lord involving the destruction of the villein's waynage, 
that b, of his plough team, and In the Notebook of Bracton there 
arc a couple of cases which prove that 13th-century judges 
occasionally allowed themselves to entertain actions by persons 
holding in villenage against their lords. Gradually, however, 
the exception of villenage became firmly settled. As the 
historical and practical position was developing on these lines 
the lawyers who fashioned English common law in the 12th and 
13th centuries did not hesitate to apply to it the teaching of 
Roman law on slavery. Bracton fits hb definition of villenage 
into the Romanesque scheme of Aze's Summa of the Institutes, 
and the judges of the royal courts made sweeping inferences 
from thb general position. To begin with, the' relation between 
the villein and hb lord was regarded as a personal and not a 
praedbl one. Everyone bora of villein stock belonged to his 
master and was bound to undertake any service which might be 
imposed on him by the master's or the steward's command. 
The distinction between villeins in gross and villeins regardant, 
of which much is made by modern writers, was suggested by 
modes of pleading and does sot make its appearance in the 
Year- Books before the i$lh century. Secondly, all independent 
proprietary rights were denied to the villein as against hb lord, 
and -the legal rule " quicquid servo acqulritur domino acquiri* 
tur " was extended to villeins. The fact that a great number 
of these serfs had been enjoying protection as free ceorb in 
former ages made itself felt, however, in three directions. (1) In 
criminal matters the villein was treated by the King's Court 
irrespectively of any consideration as to his debased condition. 
More especially the police association, organized for the keeping 
of the peace and the presentation of criminals — the frankpledge 
groups were formed of all " worthy of were and wite," villeins 
as well as freemen, (a) Politically the villeins were not elimin- 
ated from the body of citizens: they had to pay taxes, to serve 
in great emergencies in the militia, to serve on inquests, &&, 
and although there was a tendency to place them on a lower 
footing in all these respects yet the fact of their being lesser 
members of the commonwealth did not remove the funda ment al 



8a 



VILLENAGE 



qualification of dtisenship. (j) Even in civil matters villeins 
were deemed free as regards third persons. They could sue 
and be sued in their own name, and although they were able 
to call in their lords as defendants when proceeded against, 
there was nothing in law to prevent them from appearing in 
their own right. The slate even afforded them protection 
against extreme cruelty on the part of their masters in respect 
of life and limb, but in laying down this rule English lawyers 
were able to follow the precedents set by late Roman juris- 
prudence, especially by measures of Hadrian, Antonine and 
Constantine the Great. 

There was one exception to this harsh treatment of villeins, 
namely, the rustic tenantry in manors of ancient demesne, 
that is, in estates which had belonged to the crown before the 
Conquest, had a standing-ground even against their lords as 
regards the tenure of their plots and the fixity of their services. 
Technically this right was limited to the inhabitants of manors 
entered in the Domesday Survey as terra regis of Edward the 
Confessor. On the other hand the doctrine became effective 
if the manors in question had been granted by later kings to 
subjects, because if they remained in the hand of the king the 
only remedy against ejectment and exaction lay in petitioning 
for redress without any definite right to the latter. If, however, 
the two conditions mentioned were forthcoming, villeins, or, as 
they were technically called, villein socmen of ancient demesne 
manors, could resist any attempt of their lords to encroach 
on their rights by depriving them of their holdings or increasing 
the amount of their customary services. Their remedy was to 
apply for a little writ of right in the first case and for a writ 
of mwmstnvermmt in the second. These writs entitled them 
to appear as plaintiffs against the lord in his own manorial 
court and, eventually, to have the question at issue examined 
by way of appeal, on a writ of error, or by reservation on some 
legal points in the upper courts of the king. A number of cases 
arising from these privileges of the men of ancient demesne 
are published in the Ndcbook of Bracton and in the Abbrnieti* 
pUcitcnm* This exceptional procedure does not simply go 
back to the rule that persons who had been tenants of the king 
ought not to have their condition altered for the worse in con- 
sequence of a royal grant. If this were the only doctrine 
applicable in the case there would be no reason why similar 
protection should be denied to all those who held under grantees 
of manors escheated after the Conquest. A material point 
for the application of the privilege consists in the fact that 
ancient demesne has to be proved from the time before the 
Conquest, and this shows dearly that the theory was partly 
derived from- the recognition of tenant right in villeins of the 
Anglo-Saxon period who, as we hut said above, were mostly 
ceorls, that is, freebom men. 

in view of the great difference in the legal position of the free 
man and of the villein in feudal common law, it became very 
important to define the exact nature of the conditions on which 
the status of a villein depended. The legal theory as to these 
conditions was somewhat complex, because it had to take 
account of certain practical consociations and of a. rather 
abrupt transition from a previous state of things based on 
Ancient premises. Of course, persons born from villein 
parents in lawful wedlock were villeins, but as to the condition 
of illegitunatc children there was a good deal of hesitation. 
There was a tendency to apply the rule that a bastard follows 
the mother, especially in the case of a servile mother. In 
the case of mixed marriages, the condition of the cMd b 
duu n unui by the free or villein condition of the tenemen t in 
which It was born. This notion of the induence of the tene- 
ment is we* adapted to feudal notions and makes itself iek 
nmun in the cane of the pursuit of a fugitive vwVnv He can 
he seised without further fetsnahth* if he is caught ha his 
"nest^ that is. in his native pboe. If not, the hard can fbwow 
t<n\ on flush fussuit for four days; once these days past, the 
teiblut is nuuu l si mJ n wuna nahy ht runmta i o iii of his liberty, 
■PtihtJuTw' has to bring an actum St uuue* nolcnau and has to 
^^Ihehuiuuuufauuot 



So much as to the proof of villenage by birth or previous 
condition. But there were numbers of cases when the dis- 
cussion as to servile status turned not on these formal points 
but on an examination of the services performed by the person 
claimed as a villein or challenged as holding in villenage. In 
both cases the courts had often recourse to proof derived not 
from direct testimony but from indirect indications as to the 
kind of services that had been performed by the supposed 
villein. Certain services, especially the payment of merdtel — 
the fins for marrying a daughter— were considered to be the 
badge of serfdom. Another service, the performance of which 
established a presumption" as to villenage, was compulsory 
service as a reeve. The courts also tried to draw a distinction 
from the amount and regularity of agricultural services to 
which a tenant was subjected. Bracton speaks of the contrast 
between the irregular services of a serf, " who could not know 
in the evening what he would have to do in the morning," 
and services agreed upon and definite in their amount. The 
customary arrangements of the work of villeins, however, 
render this contrast rather fictitious. The obligations of down- 
right villeins became to that degree settled and regular that 
one of the ordinary designations of the class was custumarii. 
Therefore in most cases there were no arbitrary exactions 
to go by, except perhaps one or the other tallage imposed at 
the will of the lord. The original distinction seems to have 
been made not between arbitrary and agreed but between 
occasional services and regular agricultural week-work. While 
the occasional services, even when agricultural, in no way 
established a presumption of villenage, and many socmen, 
freemen and holders by serjeanty submitted to them, agri- 
cultural week-work was primarily considered as a trait of 
villenage and must have played an important part in the 
process of classification of early Norman society. The villein 
was in this sense emphatically the man holding " by the fork 
andtheflaiL" 

This point brings us to consider the matter-of-fact conditions 
of the villeins during the feudal period, especially in the 12th, 
tjth and 14th centuries. As is shown by the Hundred Rolls, 
the Domesday of St Paul, the Surveys of St Peter, Glouc, 
Glastonbury Abbey, Ramsey Abbey and countless other records 
of the same kind, the customary conditions of villenage did not 
tally by any means with the identification between villenage 
and slavery suggested by the jurists. It is true that in nomen- 
clature the word M suri " b not infrequently used («g. in the 
Hundred Rolls) where tULxni might have been mentioned, and 
the feminine nitf (nafrro) appears as the regular parallel of 
TuUnms, but in the descriptions of usages and services we find 
that the power of the lord loses its discretionary character and 
is in every respect moderated by custom. As personal depend- 
ents of the lord native \ilksns were hanfe to be sold, and we find 
actual sales recorded: Glastonbury Abbey #4. sens a certain 
Philipp Hardyog for so shillings. But such transfers of human 
chattels occur seldom, and there b nodung during the English 
feudal period corresponding to the brisk trade in men character- 
istic of the ancient world. Uaxket was regarded, as has been 
stated already, as a badge of seridom in so far as it was said 
to imply a " buying of one s own bfeod " (scrums it samgmm* 
sm awwaitf). The explanation b even more characteristic 
than the custom kseti, because fines on ■wrriagr may be 
levied and were actually lewd from people of different cms* 
diuon, from the free as wdl as from the sen. SUB the tendency 
to treat ownefcrf as a dbiinciive feature of serfdom has to be 
noted, and we find that the custom spread for thb very reason 
in consequence of the encroachments of powerful lords: in 
the Hundred Rolb it b applied iixSucriminaiely to the whole 
rustic population of certain hundreds m a way which can 
hardry be explained unless by urtincial extension. Heriot> 
the surrender of the best horse or nx, b ahv> considered as the 
conuncn incident of \Snein tenure, although, of course, its very 
name proves its intbnate eonncTmn with the outfit of soldiers 
(nm^uniK 

Fcnnsfiictlly the institution of viBcnage una bound «p 



VILLENAGB 



«3 



with the manorial organization— that is, with the fact that the 
oc.-tt.itry was divided into a number of districts in which central 
borne farms were cultivated by the help of work supplied by 
rlcin households. 

The most important of villein services is the week-writ per- 
formed by the peasantry. Every virgaler or holder of a novate 
to to send a labourer to do work on the lord's farm for some days 
in the week. Three days is indeed the most common standard 
fcf service of this kind, though four or even five occur sometimes, 
a well as two. It must be borne in mind in the case of heavy 
charges, such as four or five days' -week -work, that only one 
labourer from the whole holding is meant, while generally there 
•ere several men living on every holding — otherwise the service 
•f five days would be impossible to perform. In the course of 
thne three days, or whatever the number was, many require- 
ecnis cf the demesne had to be met. The principal of these 
was ptcugkiug Ike fields belonging to the lord, and for such 
ptaghing the peasant had not only to appear personally as a 
-liMircr, but to bring his oxen and plough, or rather to join with 
ha oxen and plough in the work imposed on the village: the 
bavy, costly plough with a team of eight oxen had to be made up 
b) several peasants contributing their beasts and implements 
towds its composition. In the same way the villagers had to 
p> through the work of harrowing with their harrows, and of 
raving the harvest in their vans and carts. Carriage duties 
a urts and on horseback were also apportioned according to 
the time they look as a part of the week-work. Then came 
icrjirerable varieties of manual work for the erection and 
krtping up of hedges, the preservation of dykes, canals and 
aches, the threshing and garnering of corn, the tending and 
&arieg of sheep and so forth. All this hand-work was reckoned 
wording to customary standards as day-work and week-work. 
B:: besides all these services Into which the Tegular week-work 
d '.V peasantry was differentiated, stood some additional duties. 
T« ploughing for the lord, for instance, was n^t only imposed 
is the shape of a certain number of days in the week, but took 
icnetiraes the shape of a certain number of acres which the 
v^lagc had to plough and to sow for the lord irrespectively 
o< the time employed on it. This was sometimes termed 
i:' tor/a. Exceedingly burdensome services were required 
•a/'ie seasons when farming processes are, as it were, at their 
kv>t— in the seasons of mowing and reaping, when every day 
b tf special value and the working power of the farm hands is 
Srujed to the utmost. At that time it was the custom to call 
«? «he whole able-bodied population of the manor, with the 
aeption of the housewives for two, three or more days of 
rc»iog and reaping on the lord's fields; to these boon-works 
fte peasantry was asked or invited by special summons, and 
&'r value was so far appreciated that the villagers were 
s^By treated to meals In cases where they were again and 
iCiia called off from their own fields to the demesne. The 
totality of the lord actually went so far, in exceptionally hard 
tots, that some ale was served to the labourers to keep them in 
pod humour. 

la the 14th century this social arrangement, based primarily 
• "Jtural economy and on the feudal disrupt ion of society, began 
l ' pve way. The gradual, spread of intercourse rendered un- 
arxsary the natural husbandry of former times which sought 
j> produce a complete se« of goods in every separate locality. 
i-'Jtcad of acting as a little world by itself for the raising of corn, 
jk breeding of cattle, the gathering of wool, the weaving of 
t*a and common cloths, the fabrication of necessary imple- 
fc'ts of all kinds, the local group began to buy some of these 
r^iiaod to sell some others, renouncing isolation and making 
r -» iestiny dependent on commercial intercourse. Tnstcad of 
r 'V.nng from its population all kinds of work and reducing 
fc crdinary .occupations to a hard-and-fast routine meeting 
° * slow And unskilled manner all possible contingencies, the 
*^ poup began to move, to call in workmen from abroad for 
j-Ai of a special nature, and to send its own workmen to 
** wit for profitable employment in other places. Instead 
« naaagiag the land by the constant repetition of the same 



processes, by a customary immobility of tenure and service, by 
communalistic restrictions on private enterprise and will, local 
society began to try improvements, to escape from the bound* 
of champion farming. Instead of producing and collecting 
goods for immediate consumption, local society came more and 
more into the habit of exchanging corn, cattle, doth, for money, 
and of laying money by as a means of getting ail sorts of 
exchangeable goods, when required. In a word, the time of 
commercial, contractual, cask intercourse was coining fast. What 
was exceptional and subsidiary in feudal times came to obtain 
general recognition in the course of the 14th and 15th centuries, 
and, for this very reason, assumed a very different aspect* 
A similar transformation took place in regard to government* 
The local monarchy of the manorial lords was fast giving way to 
a central power which maintained its laws, the circuits of iu 
judges, the fiscal claims of its exchequer, the police interference 
of its civil officers all through the country, and, by prevailing 
over the franchises of manorial lords, gave shape to a vast 
dominion of legal equality and legal protection, in which the 
forces of commercial exchange, of contract, of social intercourse, 
found a ready and welcome sphere of action. In truth both 
processes, the economic and the political one, worked so much 
together that it is hardly possible to say which influenced 
the other more, which was the cause and which the effect. 
Government grew strong because it could draw on a society 
which was going ahead in enterprise and well -being; social 
Intercourse progressed because it could depend on a strong 
government to safeguard it. 

If we now turn to the actual stages by which this momentous 
passage from the manorial lo the commercial arrangement was 
achieved, we have to notice first of all a rapid development of 
contractual relations. We know that in feudal law there ran a 
standing contrast between tenure by custom—* villein tenure*— and 
tenure by (ontract—ircc tenure. While the manorial system was 
in full force this contrast led to a classification of holdings and 
affected the whole position of people on the land. Still, even at 
that time it rnighl happen that a freeholder owned some land 
in villcnage by the side of his free tenement, and that a villein 
held some land freely by agreement with his lord or with a 
third person. But these cases, though by no means infrequent, 
were still exceptional. As a rule people used land as holdings, 
and t hose were rigidly classified as villein or free tenements. The 
interesting point to be noticed is that, without any formal break, 
teasing land for life and for term of years is seen to be rapidly 
spreading from the end of the 13th century, and numberless small 
tenancies are created in the 14th century which break up the 
disposition of the holdings. From the close of the 13th century 
downwards countless transactions on the basis of leases for terms 
of years occur between the peasants themselves, any suit- 
ably kept set of 14th -century court rolls containing entries in 
which such and such a villein is said lo appear in the halimoU 
and to surrender for the use of another person named a piece of 
land belonging to the holding. The number of years and the 
conditions of payment are specified. Thus, behind the screen of 
the normal shares a number of small tenancies arise which run 
their economic concerns independently from the cumbersome 
arrangements of tenur* and service, and, needless to add, all these 
tenancies are burdened with money rents. 

Another series of momentous changes took place in the 
arrangement of services. Even the manorial system admitted 
the buying off for money of particular dues in kind and of 
specific performance of work. A villein might he allowed 
to bring a penny instead of bringing a chicken or to pay a rent 
instead of appearing with his oxen three times a week on the 
lord's fields. Such rents were called mat or mail in contrast 
with the gafol, ancient rents which had been imposed inde- 
pendently, apart from any buying off of customary services. 
There were even whole bodies of peasants called Molmen, because 
they had bought off work from the lord by settling with him 
on the basis of money rents. As time went on these practices 
of commutation became more and more frequent. There were, 
for both sides, many advantages in arranging thek mutual 



8 4 



VILLENEUVE 



relations on this bub. The lord, instead of clumsy work, got 
clear money, a much-coveted means of satisfying needs and 
wishes of any kind— instead of cumbrous performances which 
did not come always at the proper moment, were carried out 
in a half-hearted manner, yielded no immediate results, and 
did not admit of convenient rearrangement. The peasant got 
rid of a hateful drudgery which not only took up his time and 
means in an unprofitable manner, but placed him under the 
rough control and the arbitrary discipline of stewards or reeves 
and gave occasion to all sorts of fines and extortions. 

With the growth of intercourse and security money became 
more frequent and the number of such transactions increased 
in proportion. But it must be kept in mind that the con- 
version of services into rents went on very gradually, as a 
series of private agreements, and that it would be very wrong 
to suppose, as some scholars have done, that it had led to a 
general commutation by the middle or even the cod of the 
1 4th century. The 14th century was marked by violent fluctua- 
tions in the demand and supply of labour, and particularly 
the tremendous loss in population occasioned in the middle of 
this century by the Black Death called forth a most serious 
crisis. No wonder that many lords dung very tenaciously 
to customary services, and ecclesiastical institutions seem to 
Ipvo been especially backward in going over to the system of 
money rents. There is evidence to show, for instance, that 
the manors of the abbey of Ramsey were managed on the 
system of enforced labour right down to the middle of the 
15th century, and, of course, survivals of these customs in the 
shape of scattered services livctf on much longer. A second 
drawback from the point of view of the landlords was called 
forth by the fact that commutation for fixed rents gradually 
lessened the value of the exactions to which they were entitled. 
Money not only became less scarce but it became cheaper, 
so thai the couple of pence for which a day of manual work 
was bought oil in the beginning of the 13th century did not 
fetch more than half of their former value at its end. As quit 
rents were customary and not rack rents, the successors of 
those who had redeemed their services were gaining the whole 
surplus in the value of goods and labour as against money, 
while the successors of those who had commuted their right 
to claim services for certain sums in money lost all the 
«\^rcsponding difference. These inevitable consequences came 
to be perceived in course of time and occasioned a backward 
tendency to«ards services in kind which could not prevail 
ajrunst the general movement from natural economy to money 
ticjtlitur*. but was strong enough to produce social friction and 
grave disturbance*. 

Vhe economic crisis of the 14th century has its complement 
in the k$al crisis of the tjth. At that time the courts of 
few begin to do away with the denial of protection to villeins 
* *»* b. as we haw seen, commuted the k*al basis of viUccuge- 
TSw is effected by the recv^tul**. of copyhold tenure 'lace 
iVrvuourA. 

It is a tact of first-rate taagniuaoV that in the 15th century 
cuvirvAnr rclv.kvats on one hind, the power of gowraaaent 
wn ;Sc c* K-«\ nr*rocd. as u were, to ihat citcat tint the judges 
mi the ting bt£an to take cvg^uaac* oi the relit uns ot the 
peasants to tK\r kvds. The urst cases wh*h occur in this 
sew* are still trcatcvi not as a maucr of eccaxw law. hut as a 
eaar;*rs.rat»on «i e^v;i\. As oovbttul oa*cmky» oi oust, ot 
wiiiliMji, «f tcHmwctam **cc**9*^ they were taken cx> art 
In the strict course ot jte<K*. tsst as nutters » wtarh reams 
neeuVI ami had so he height tv the exceptional 
oi the court of chancery, fcu ihcs Ktcnrrenor ot 
pawed the way t+«ards one oi the 
t ha taw hr, wwhowt lorau^v ccs:ra>> <,'ag 
xumunt ami uSam tenure they created a InmJ h*$a* ** * a 
•to he oi the ratam: an the formula of <ur>>fe*c-*r»wr* 
emVaf aWw*«/SfcMWHaWcm*u«« .» ram- ;W 
ajmjt smut mat its ■nwiTfiiir. 1 1 ami the nenmi perva3e<i in J***- 
aesw oa the contrxrt, the 
1 4*4 Or ac* ea^nssseU toe %kw 



of the courts. One may almost be tempted to say that these 
obscure decisions rendered unnecessary in England the work 
achieved with such a flourish of trumpets in France by the 
emancipating decree of the 4th of August 1789. 

The personal condition of villcnage did not, however, dis- 
appear at once with the rise of copyhold. It lingered through 
the 1 6th century and appears exceptionally even in the 17th. 
Deeds of emancipation and payments for personal enfranchise- 
ment are often noticed at that very time. But these are 
only survivals of an arrangement which has been destroyed in 
its essence by a complete change of economic and political 
conditions* 

BiBLiOGEArav.— P. VlnogradofF. VMammmr in England (Oxford. 
189a) ; Pollock and Maitland, History of English Low (1*95). book ii. 
c. 1. H 5. ". 13; F. W. Maitland, Domesday and Beyond (1897). 
E«ay 1. II >. 3. 4; F. Seebohm, The English Village Community 
(1883); W. S. Holdsworth, History of English Law, iii. (1009); 
P. Vinogradov Growth of the Manor (190s) ; P. Vinogradoff, Eighth 
Society tn the Xlth Century (1908) ; A. Savine in the English Historical 
Renew, xvii. (1902); A. Savine in the Economic Quarterly Review 
(1004); A. Savine. " Bondmen under the Tudors/' in the Trans- 
actions of the Royal Historical Society, xvn. (1903). (P. Vi.) 

VILL ENEUVE, PIERRE CHARLES JEA* BAPTISTS SIL- 
VESTRE (1763-1806), French admiral, was born at Valensolcs in 
Provence on the 31st of December 1765. He entered the French 
royal navy as a " galde du Pavilion." Although he belonged to 
the corps of " noble " officers, who were the object of peculiar 
animosity to the Jacobins, he escaped the fate of the majority 
of his comrades, which was to be massacred, or driven into exile. 
He sympathized sincerely with the general aims of the Revolu- 
tion, and had a full share of the Provencal fluency which enabled 
him to make a timely and impressive display of "civic" 
sentiments. In the dearth of trained officers he rose with what 
for the French navy was exceptional rapidity, though it would ! 
have caused no surprise in Fjujfand in the case of an officer who 
had good interest. He was named post-captain in 1793, and 
rear-admiral in 1796. At the dose of the year he was appointed 
to take part in the unsuccessful expedition to Ireland which .' 
reached Bantry Bay, but the ships which were to have come to 
Brest from Toulon with him arrived too late, and were forced 
to take refuge at LXMenL. He accompanied the expedition to 
Egypt, with his flag in the *' GuiUaume TcE " (86). She was 
the third ship from the rear of the French line at the battle of 
the Nile, and escaped from the general destruction in company 
with the M Genereux w (;S). Yilfcneuve reached Malta on tho 
13rd of August. His conduct was severely blamed, and he ' 
defended himself by a specious letter to his colleague Blanquct- 
Duchayla on the i*th of November 1S00. when he had returned 
to Paris. At the time. Napoleon approved of his action. In a : 

letter written to him on the 21st of August 170S, three weeks ' 
after the battle. Napoleon says that the only reproach Vflleneuve ' 
had to make against himscil was that he had not retreated » 
sooner, since the pctsauon taken by the French CKmunander-in- 
chief had been forced and st^rrcu^devL When, however, the ' 

cir.pcror alter hb tail ovtaicd hb account of the expedition to ] 

Egypt to General Bcnnr*! at St Helena, he attributed the 
defeat at the Nile larxv'iv to the * bad cocuiuct of Admiral ' 

\ Uieneu\Y. % * In the ir.;crval Y*L*9cwe had tailed m the exe- 
cutam of the cvxsr-i^-atcd scKetr* tor the invasion of England 
in i&>> Napokvxi must stui have believed m the admiral's 
capacity and *vod fort tux. a «yL.t'-vaix« for which he had a 
great regard, when he sekcted kr-t to succeed Latcocbe Trevflle 
upon ht> death at Tis-xa ii Ac^?«t 1*04. The duty of the 
IVux* s^wivi^>n was Jo v'mw N^soa to iHr West Indies, return 
rx#<viiy. and 11 (wr-N.-jtva * ih ciher Frrcvh and Spar.bh 
s> ^s. to enter ;Ve v>4--<i »■'> ar «nxrw>< , -jrg :crce. It is 
<»»;e ot^xs-s thit \.caw-\e kaJ fr. 7t ihe trst no corSdeocc 
in the «Kvf» c< ia v^v^iiV^o rv\;» -i-£ \t its exeevrion an 
Avtasirg eve^^-atkv c< ^>a,* >-v"k ar-d e^iercy on the part of 
tSe s^i*Ni-.r< xv *k\- v*. H< W» t>at tb^ French were net 
<X-acz:. * J .Sit ; v ." ' $ v *^\ i. xh w«rr ia a f ar worse state 
:\in thew<\*"». Ii *o;.. v" s ^v-> :.::* cr^-r frcra Na>\ 1 
U- >i.«\« ha »X4 s<f *'-t -> ♦* vXtvixc Jic^* He l^k tbc 



VILL£NBUVfc-L£8-AVIGN0N--- VILLEROI 



*S 



command in November. On the 171% of January 1805 he left 
Toulon for the first time, but was dnven back by a squall which 
dismasted some of his awkwardly handled ships. On the 3rd of 
March he was out again, and this time he headed Nelson by 
some weeks on a cruise to the West Indies. But VUleneuve's 
success so far had not removed his fears. Though on taking 
op his command he had issued an order of the day in which he 
spoke boldly enough of the purpose of his cruise, and his de- 
termination to adhere to it, he was racked by fears of what 
sight happen to the force entrusted to his care. For the 
details of the campaign see Trafalgar In so far as the 
biography of ViUeneuve is concerned, his behaviour during 
these trying months cannot escape condemnation. He had 
eadertaken to carry out a plan of which he did not approve. 
Since he had not declined the task altogether, it was clearly his 
doty to execute his orders at all hazards. If he was defeated, 
as he almost certainly would have been, he could have left the 
mponsibaity for the disaster to rest on the shoulders of Napoleon 
who assigned him the task. But Villeneuve could not free him- 
self from the conviction that it was his business to save his fleet 
etca if he ruined the emperor's plan of invasion. Thus after 
be returned to Europe and fought his confused action with 
Sir R. Calder off Ferrol on the a 2nd of July 1805, he first hesi- 
tated, and then, in spite of vehement orders to come on, turned 
south to Cadiz. 'Napoleon's habit of suggesting alternative 
onuses to bis lieutenants gave him a vague appearance of excuse 
for making for that port. But it was one which only a very 
weak man would have availed himself of, for all hisjinstructions 
ought to have been read subject to the standing injunction to 
come on to the Channel— And in turning south to Cadis, he was 
going in the opposite direction. His decision to leave Cadis 
and give battle in October 1805, which led directly to the battle 
«f Trafalgar, cannot be justified even on his own principles. He 
foresaw defeat to be inevitable, and yet he went out solely 
because he learnt from the Minister of Marine that another 
ameer had been sent to supersede him. In fact he ran to meet 
the very destruction He had tried to avoid. No worse fate 
would have befallen him in the Channel than came upon him at 
Trafalgar, but it might hare been incurred in a manly attempt 
to obey his orders. It was provoked in a spasm of wounded 
vanity. At Trafalgar he showed personal courage, but the 
bdpiess incapacity of the allies to manoeuvre gave him no 
opportunity to influence the course of the battle. He was taken 
as a prisoner to England, but was soon released. Shortly after 
landing in France he committed suidde in an inn at Rennes, on 
the sznd of April 1806. Among the other improbable crimes 
attributed to Napoleon by the fear and hatred of Europe, was 
the murder of Villeneuve, but there is not the faintest reason to 
doubt that the admiral died by his own hand. 

The correspondence of Napoleon contains many references to 
V3neuve. Accounts of the naval operations in which he was 
- w i r eed will be found in James's Nmal History. Troude, in his 
/fsawffi'F mamlnjela Promt*, voL iil., publishes several of his letters 
—d orders of the day. (D. H.) 

roiJmriJVB-l£&-aVIGlfON, a town of south -eastern 
France, in the department of Gard on the right bank of the 
Rhone opposite Avignon, with which it is connected by a 
«-r— ?«*"■ bridge. Pop. (xoeo) 9583. Villeneuve preserves 
•nay remains of its medieval importance. The church of 
Xotre Dame, dating from the 14th century, contains a rich marble 
altar and remarkable pictures. The hospice, once a Franciscan 
cBovent. P*rt of which is occupied by a museum of pictures and 
tctiquxties, has a chapel in which is the fine tomb of Innocent 
VL (d. 156s). The church and other remains of the Carthusian 
tssnestery of Val-de-Beneaiction, founded in 1356 by Innocent 
VL, are now used for habitation and other secular purposes. A 
gateway and a rotunda, built as shelter for a fountain, both 
oatmg from about 1670, are of architectural note. On the Mont 
Aadsom, a hill to the north-east of the town, stands the Fort of 
St Andre* (14th century), which is entered by an imposing 
fortified gateway and contains a Romanesque chapel and 
ssssaias of the abbey of St Andre. The other buildings of 



interest mdode several old mansions once belonging to cardinals 
and nobles, and a tower, the Tour do Philippe le Bel, built in the 
14th century, which guarded the western extremity of the Pont 
St Beneset (see Avignon). 

In the 6th century the Benedictine abbey of St Andre was 
founded on Mount Andaon, and the village which grew up round 
It took its name. In the 13th century the monks, acting in 
concert with the crown, established a AajneV, or " new town,' 1 
which came to be called Vifloneuve. The town was the resort 
of the French cardinals during the sojourn of the popes at 
Avignon, and Its importance, due largely to its numerous rc- 
figious es tablis hments, did not decline till the Revolution. 

VILLBKBUVK'-fiUR-LOT, a town of south-western France, 
capital of an arrondissement in the department of Lot-et-Garonnc, 
22 m. N. by E. of Agen on a branch line of the Orleans railway. 
Pop. (1006) town, 6078; commune, 13,540. Villeneuve is 
divided into two unequal portions by the river Lot, which here 
runs between high banks. The chief quarter stands on the 
right bank and is united to the quarter on the left bank by a 
bridge of the 13th century, the principal arch of which, con* 
structed in the reign of Louis XIII. in place of two older arches, 
has a span of 118 ft. and a height of 50 ft. On the left bank 

rions of the 13th century ramparts, altered and surmounted 
machicolations in the 15th century, remain, and high 
square towers rise above the gates to the north-east and south* 
west, known respectively as the Porte de Paris and Porte de 
Pujols. On the right bank boulevards have for the most part 
taken the place of the ramparts. Arcades of the 13th century 
surround the Place La Fayette, and old houses of the 13th, 
14th and 15th centuries are to be seen in various parts of the 
town. The church of St £tienne is in late Gothic style. Oa 
the left bank of the Lot, 2 m. S.S.W of Villeneuve, are (he 
13th-century walls of Pujols. The buildings of the ancient 
abbey of Eyases, about a mile to the N.E., which are mainly of 
the 17th century, serve as a departmental prison and peni- 
tentiary settlement. The principal hospital, the hospice St 
Cyr, is a handsome building standing in beautiful gardens. 
Villeneuve has a sub-prefecture, tribunals of first instance and 
of commerce and communal colleges for both sexes. It is an 
important agricultural centre and has a very large trade in 
plums (prunes tfente) and in the produce of the market gardens 
which surround it, aa well as in cattle, horses and wine. The 
preparation of preserved plums and the tinning of peas and 
beans occupy many hands; there are also manufactures of 
boots and shoes and tin boxes. The important mill of Gajac 
stands on the bank of the Lot a little above the town. 

Villeneuve was founded in 1254 by Alphonse, count of 
Poitiers, brother of Louis IX., on the' site of the town of 
Gajac, which had been deserted during the Aibigensian crusade. 
VILLBROI, FRANCOIS Itt MEUFVTLLB, Due de (1644-1730), 
French soldier, came of a noble family which had risen into 
prominence in the reign of Charles DC His father Nicolas 
de Neufville, Marquis de VOleroi, marshal of France (1508-1685), 
created a duke by Louis XIV., was the young king's governor, 
and the boy was thus brought up in dose relations with Louis. 
An intimate of the king, a finished courtier and leader of society 
and a man of great personal gallantry, Villeroi was marked 
out for advancement in the army, which he loved, but which 
had always a jester appreciation of his incapacity than Louis* 
In t6oj, without having exercised any really important and 
responsible command, he was made a marshal In zoos, when 
Luxembourg died, he obtained the command of the army in 
Flanders, and William IIL found htm a far more complaisant 
opponent than the " little hunchback." In 1701 he was sent 
to Italy to supersede Catinat and was soon beaten by the inferior 
army of Eugene at Chiari (see Spanish Succession Was). In 
the winter of 1701 he was made prisoner at the surprise of 
Cremona, and the wits of the army made at his expense the 
famous rhyme: 

" Par la faveur de Beltone, et par an bonhear sans tgal, 
Nous avons cou s tr ve Cremone — et perdu notre general." 
In the following years he was pitted against Marlborough in 



86 



VILLERS LA VILLE— VILLOISQN 



Che Low Countries. Marlborough's own difficulties with the 
Dutch and other allied commissioners, rather than Villeroi's 
own skill, put off the inevitable disaster for some years, but 
in 1706 the duke attacked him and thoroughly defeated him 
at Ramillies («.».). Louis consoled his old friend with the 
remark, " At our age, one is no longer lucky," but superseded 
him in the command, and henceforward Villeroi lived the life 
of a courtier, much busied with intrigues but retaining to the 
end tho friendship of his master. He died on the 18th of 
July 1730 at Paris. 

VILLBRS LA VILLB, a town of Belgium in the province of 
Brabant, a m. E. of Quatre Bras, with a station on the direct 
line from Louvain to Charleroi. Pop. (1004) 1160. It is 
chiefly interesting on account of the fine ruins of the Cistercian 
abbey of Villers founded in 1 147 and destroyed by the French 
republicans in 1795. In the ruined church attached to the 
abbey are still to be seen the tombstones of several dukes of 
Braba nt of the 13th and 14th centuries. 
VILLETTB. CHARLES, Marquis db (1736-1703), French 
writer and politician, was born in Paris on the 4th of December 
1736, the son of a financier who left him a large fortune and 
the title of marquis. After taking part in the Seven Years' 
War, young Villette returned in 1763 to Paris, where he made 
many enemies by his insufferable manners. But he succeeded 
in gaining the intimacy of Voltaire, who had known his mother 
and who wished to make a poet of him. The old philosopher 
even went so far as to call his ptvUgi the French Tibullus. In 
1777, on Voltaire's advice, Villette married Mademoiselle de 
Varicourt, but the marriage was unhappy, and his wife was 
subsequently adopted by Voltaire's niece, Madame Denis. 
During the Revolution Villette publicly burned his letters of 
nobility, wrote revolutionary articles in the Ckrouiqua de 
Paris, and was elected deputy to the Convention by the 
department of Seinc-et-Oise He had the courage to censure 
the September massacres and to vote for the imprisonment 
only, and not for the death, of Louis XVI. He died in Puis 
on the 7th of July 1703. 

In it*4 h* published h» (Etnrts, which are el little value, and to 
170* hi* article* in the Ckrwmtqm eV Pans appeared w hook form 
under the title Lattrw dmm* sur Iss pnmapamx aUuemu mt s de la 

YlUinS. CHARUES PBLHAM (t8o*-i8oS), English states- 
man, son of George YilUers, grandson of the 1st earl of Clarendon 
of the second (Villiers) creation, and brother of the 4th eari 
(*v» ), was born in London on the 3rd of January 1802, and 
educated at St John's College. Cambridge. He read for the 
bar at Uacoln 1 * Inn, and became an associate of the Bentha 
mites and M philosophical radicals M of the day. He was an 
assistant commissioner to the Poor Law Commission (1S31), 
and ia 1^33 was made by the master of the Rolls, whose secretary 
he had been* a chancery examiner of witnesses, holding this 
othce till t$5*. In iSjt 5 he was ekctcd MJ\ for Wolverhampton, 
and retained his seat till his death. He was the pioneer of the 
free-trade movement, and became prominent with Cobden and 
Bright as one of it* duel supporters, being indefatigable in 
pressing the need for free trade on the House of Conusant* by 
leaohition and by petition* After free trade triumphed in 1646 
has importance in pontics became rather historical than actwal 
especially as he advanced to a reneeaht* oM age; bat he was 
niei'iiwiat of the FW Law Board, with a sent in the CantoeC. 
Ires* its* to i&*\ and he dad other useful work in the Liberal 
leftatasofthfttfcao, Lake Bright, he parted from Mr Gladstone 
on Heene Rate for Ireland. He attended per&aaacnt for the 
fast taweea tSa^ and died on the 10th of January *$*& 

rauott si rauuiaUL ■nnirw ~ 

hUThThht, Conns as (i^tS&tK French poet, wan horn 
at SI ftnwnc ea Brittany and heftfiaed on the*&hefXe*en«ber 
ntjat 8i snay ha snea to haw hnwagnrosni the %mhofat 
wnwnwjnmt hi French titacatus*. and As** the ntay on which 
ha we»enangnd dnawag ss> awash of his Be* thing! it was only 
r wis nwatay a the typical Syeaa ifat droanv He 
whwnnof JYnwnwws . Min i t tAj s> j tfc This was 



followed by a wild romance of the supernatural, Isit (x86s), 
and by two plays in prose, Elln (1866) and M or gone (1866). 
La RevoUe, a play in which Ibsen's Doll's House seems to be 
anticipated, was represented at the Vaudeville in 1870; Omtes 
cruets, his finest volume of short stories, in 1883, and a new 
sencs in 1889, Le Nouveau Monde, a drama in five acts, in 1880, 
L'£ve future, an amazing piece of buffoonery satirizing .the 
pretensions of science, in 1886, Trtbutat Bonkonct in 1887, 
Lt Secret de Vtckajaud in 1S88, Axil in 1800. He died in Paris, 
under the care of the Freres Saint-Jean-de-Dieu, on the 19th 
of August 1880. Villiers has left behind him a legend probably 
not more fantastic than the truth. Sharing many of the 
opinions of Don Quixote, he shared also Don Quixote's life. 
He was the descendant of a Grand Master of the Knights of 
Malta, famous in history, and his pnde as an aristocrat and 
as an idealist were equal He hated mediocrity, science, prog 
ress, the present age, money and "serious" people. In one 
division of his work he attacked all the things which he hated 
with a savage irony; in another division of his work he dis- 
covered at least some glimpses of the ideal world He remains 
a remarkable poet and a remarkable satirist, imperfect as both. 
He improvised out of an abundant genius, but the greater part 
of his work was no more than improvisation. He was ac- 
customed to talk his stories before be wrote them. Sometimes 
he talked them instead of writing them*. But he has left, at 
all events, the Conies cruets, in which may be found every 
classic quality of the French conic, together with many of the 
qualities of Edgar Allan Poe and Ernst Hoffman, and the 
drama of AxH, in which the stage takes a new splendour and a 
new subtlety of meaning Villiers's influence on the younger 
French writers was considerable It was always an exaltation. 
No one in his tune followed a literary ideal more romantically 

(A. Sy.) 

Sec also R du Pootavice de Heusaey, YtDtersieTTsU-Adam (1893), 
a biography , English trans (1904) by Lady Mary Loyd. S. 
Mallanne. Lrs Mtens Vtiitm de risk Adam (1802). R Martineau, 
Un wwml et deux marts (1901). tubbography A sekctxm from his 
atones, Htslaues j o ancre i afi , was made hy his fnends (Brussels, 
1899) 

YILUYGEN, a town of Germany in the grand duchy of 
Baden, pleasantly situated amid well-wooded hills, 52 m. by 
rail N of Schaffhauscn Pop (1905) 958a It is in part still 
surrounded by walls, with ancient gate towers. It a the chief 
scat of the watch-making industry of the Black Forest It 
also produces musical-boxes, glass and silk* and has a Gothic 
church of the 13th century and another of the nth, a isth- 
century town hah\ with a museum of antiquities, and musk, 
technical and agricultural schools. 

V1U0BGH. JEAN BAPTISTS GASPABD VMMSSK (or 
Danxss) OB (1750-1805), French daseacnl scholar, was born 
at CorbeU-sur-Seine on the 5th of March 1750 (or 1753, authori- 
ties differ). He belonged to a noble family (De Ansso) of Spanish 
origin, and took his surname from a village in the neighbour- 
hood. In 1773 he published the Homeric Lexicon of ApoUonius 
from a MS. in the abbey of Saint Germain des Pre*. In 1778 
appeared his edition of Langwss Popgun and CMw In 1781 he 
went to Venice, where he spent these years an cia,nrining the 
library, his eapeiwr* being: paid by the French government 
His chief discovery was a 10th-century- MS. of the Jliaa\ with 
ancient achoha and margin ■! notes, j^^tw^ supposititious, 
corrupt or transposed verses. Alter leaving Venice, he accepted 
the invitation of the duke of Saxe-Weiaaax to has court. Some 
of the fruits ei his rtiaarrfm in the hbraiy of the palace were 
collected into a volume yEpisHim Yimritumt, 17^3), dedicated 
to his royal hosts. Hoping tea find a limsnnr shxolar to the 
Venetian Uumnut in Greece* he returned to Paris to prepare 
for a joocney to the East. He stated Constantinople, Smyraa, 
the Gicek tOandK and Mount Athos, hot the results did not 
coame up to hi* eapectatMav Ia i;So he returned, and in 17S8 
broug ht out the Codex Yeoesw* oi Homer, whkh created a 
wnwaiioa ia the kaaraed wv«id. When the arvohttaon broke 
out being haaished froaa Paris, he ived in nr in aunt at Oateana, 
occupying hiauwJf <ha«dy wish the txanecniprion of the notes 



VILLON 



87 



h lie fibrary of the brothers Valois (Valerius). On the restora- 
tion of order, having returned to Paris, he accepted the pro- 
fonohip of modem Greek established by the government, 
tad add it until it was transferred to the College de France 
is the professorship of the ancient and modern Greek languages. 
He died soon after his appointment, on the 25th of April 1805. 
Aaother work of tome importance. Anecdote Craeca (1781), 
from the Fans and Venice libraries, contain* the lama (violet 
garden) of the empress Eudoda, and several fragments of 
Iifflblidras, Porphyry, Procopius of Gaza, Choridus and the 
fact grammarian* Materials for an exhaustive work con- 
templated by him on ancient and modern Greece are preserved 
a the royal library of Paris. 

See J. Darier, Notice historians snr la tie et Us outrages de 
filmsm (1806): Chardon de la Rochette, Melanges de critique et 
k pUd tr ie , m. (181a) ; and especially the article by his friend, and 
pupa E. (Aiatiemerc in NouveUe biographu generate, xiii., baaed upon 
novate information. 

miQl, FRANCOIS (1431-*- 1463)1 French poet (whose real 
■nane is a matter of much dispute, so that he is also called 
De Montcorbier and Des Loges and by other names, though 
it literature Villon is the sole term used), was born in 143 1, and, 
at it seems, certainly at Paris. The singular poems called 
Tatements, which form his chief if not bis only certain work, 
ue largely autobiographical, though of course not fully trust- 
earthy. But his frequent collisions with the law have left 
awe certain records, which have of late been ransacked with 
mnordiaary care by students, especially by M. Longnon. 
It appears that he was born of poor folk, that his father died 
a Us youth, bat that bis mother, for whom be wrote one of 
as most famous ballades, was alive when her son was thirty 
pus old. The very name Villon was stated, and that by no 
aoa authority, the president Claude Fauchet, to be merely 
1 common and not a proper noun, signifying "cheat" or 
"rural"; but this seems to be a mistake. It is, however, 
certain tbat Villon was a person of loose life, and that he 
antianed, long after there was any excuse for it in his years, 
<ae nckkss way of living common among the wilder youth 
«f the university of Paris. He appears to have derived his 
annate from a friend and benefactor named Guillaume de 
Vffion, chaplain in the collegiate church of Saint-BenoU-le- 
Beaoorae, and a professor of canon law, who took Villon into 
*i house. The poet became a student in arts, no doubt 
orfy, perhaps at about twelve years of age, and took the 
dejree of bachelor in 1449 and that of master in 1452. Between 
to year and 1455 nothing positive is known of him, except 
oat nothing was known against him. Attempts have been 
Bade, in the usual fashion of conjectural "biography, to fill up 
At pp with what a young graduate of Bohemian tendencies 
■■old, could, or might have done; but they are mainly futile. 

(hike 5th of June 145$ the first important incident of 
ki Be that is known occurred. Being In the company of a 
pica named Giles and a girl named Isabeau, he met, in the 
ne Saiat-Jacques, a certain Breton, Jean le Hardi, a master 
«f ma, who was with a priest, Philippe Chermoye or Sermoise 
« Sermaise. A scuffle ensued; daggers were drawn, and 
Sennaiie, who is accused of having threatened and attacked 
V2k>o and drawn the first blood, not only received a dagger- 
'hmst in return, but a blow from a stone which struck him 
6"n. Sermaise died of his wounds. Villon fled, and was 
talented to banishment — a sentence which was remitted in 
January 1456, the formal pardon being extant, strangely 
ttoogh, in two different documents, in one of which the culprit 
j» described as " Francois des Loges, autrement dit Villon," 
a the other as M Francois de Montcorbier M That he is also 
aid to have described himself to the barber-surgeon who 
Jftsed his wounds as Michel Mouton is less surprising, and 
£% needs an addition to the list of his aliases. It should, 
wwever, be said that the documents relative to this affair 
tofirm the date of his birth, by representing him as twenty- 
** years old or thereabouts. By the end of 1456 he was again 
a trouble. In his first broil "la fcmme Isabeau" is only 



generally named, and ft Is Impossible to say whether she had 
anything to do with the quarrel In the second, Catherine 
de VauceUes, of whom we hear not a little in the poems, is the 
declared cause of a scuffle in which Villon was so severely 
beaten that, to escape ridicule, he fled to Angers, where he 
had an uncle who was a monk. It was before leaving Paris 
that he composed what is now known as the Petit testament, 
of which we shall speak presently with the rest of his poems, 
and which, it should be said, shows little or no such mark of 
profound bitterness and regret for wasted Ufc as does its in 
every sense greater successor the Grand testament. Indeed, 
Villon's serious troubles were only beginning, for hitherto he 
had been rather injured than guilty. About Christmas-time 
the chapel of the college of Navarre was broken open, and 
five hundred gold crowns stolen. The robbery was not dis- 
covered till March 1457, and it was not till May that the police 
came on the track of a gang of student-robbers owing to the 
indiscretion of one of them. Gay Tabarie. A year more passed, 
when Tabarie, being arrested, turned king's evidence and 
accused Villon, who was then absent, of being the ring-leader, 
and of having gone to Angers, partly at least, to arrange for 
similar burglaries there. Villon, for this or some other crime, 
was sentenced to banishment: and he did not attempt to return 
to Paris. In fact for four years he was a wanderer; and he 
may have been, as each of his friends Regnier de Monligny 
and Colin des Cayeux certainly was, a member of a wandering 
thieves' gang. It is certain that at one time (in 1457), and 
probable that at more times than one, he was in correspondence 
with Charles d'Orleans, and it is likely that he resided, at any 
rate for some period, at that prince's court at Blois. He Jiad 
also something to do with another prince of the blood, Jean 
of Bourbon, and traces are found of him in Poitou, in Daupbine, 
&c. But at his next certain appearance he is again in trouble. 
He tells us that be had spent the summer of 1461 in the bishop's 
prison (bishops were fatal to Villon) of Mcung. His crime is 
not known, but Is supposed to have been church-robbing; 
and his enemy, or at least judge, was Thibault d'Aussigny, 
who held the see of Orleans. Villon owed his release to a 
general gaol-delivery at the accession of Louis XI., and became 
a free man again on the and of October. 

It was now that he wrote the Grand testament, the work 
which has immortalized him. Although he was only thirty 
at the date (1461) of this composition (which is unmistakable, 
because given in the book itself), there seems to be no kind 
of aspiration towards a new life, nor even any hankering after 
the old. Nothing appears to be left him but regret, his very 
spirit has been worn out by excesses or sufferings or both. 
Even his good intentions must have been feeble, for in the 
autumn of 1462 we find him once more living in the cloisters 
of Saint-BenoU, and in November he was in the Cbatelet for 
theft. In default of evidence the old charge of the college 
of Navarre was revived, and even a royal pardon did not bar 
the demand for restitution. Bail was, however, accepted, 
but Villon fell promptly into a street quarrel, was arrested, 
tortured and condemned to be hanged, but the sentence was 
commoted to banishment by the parlement on the 5th of January 
1463. The actual event is unknown: but from this time he 
disappea r s from history. Rabelais indeed tells two stories 
about him which have almost necessarily been dated later. 
One is a countryside anecdote of a trick supposed to have 
been played by the poet in his old age at Saint Maixent in 
Poitou, whither he had retired. The other, a coarse but 
pointed Jest at the expense of England, is told as having been 
addressed by Villon to King Edward V during an exile in that 
country. Now, even if King Edward V were not evidently out 
of the question, a passage of the story refers to the well-known 
scholar and man of science, Thomas Linacre, as court physician 
to the king, and makes Villon mention him, whereas Linacre 
was only a young scholar, not merely at the time of Edward V *s 
supposed murder, but at the extreme date (1489) which can be 
assigned to Villon's life. For in the year the first edition of 
the poet's work appeared, obviously not published by himself, 



88 



VILNA 



awl with no sign in it of his having lived later than the date 
(1461) of the Grand testament. It would be easy to dismiss 
these Rabelaisian mentions of Villon as mere humorous inven- 
tions, if it were not that the author of Pantagrud was born 
almost soon enough to have actually seen Villon if he had 
lived to anything, that could be called old age, that he almost 
certainly must have known men who had known Villon, and 
that the poet undoubtedly spent much time In Rabelais's own 
country on the banks of the lower Loire. 

The obscurity, the unhsppineat and the evil repute of Villon's 
life would not be in themselves s reason for the minute investiga- 
tion to which the events of that life have been subjected, and the 
result of which ha* been summed up here. But his poetical work, 
■canty as the certainly genuine part of it is, is of such extraordinary 
quality, and marks such an epoch in the history of European litera- 
ture, that he has been at all times an interesting figure, and, like all 
very interesting figures, has been often praised for dualities quite 
other than those which he really possessed. Boileau s famous verses, 
in which Villon is extolled for having first known how to smooth 
out the confused ait of the old romancers, are indeed a prodigy of 
blundering or ignorance or both. As far as art or the technical 
part of poetry goes, Villon made not the slightest advance on his 
predecessors, nor stood in any way in front of such contemporaries 
as his patron Charles d'Orleans. His two Testaments (so called by 
the application to them of a regular class-name of medieval poetry 
and consisting of burlesque legacies to his acquaintances) are made 
up of eight-line stanzas of eight -syllabled verses, varied in the case 
of the Grand testament by the insertion of ballades and rondeaux 
of very great beauty and interest, but not formally different in 
any way from poems of the same kind for more than a century 
past. What really distinguishes Villon is the intenser quality of 
his poetical feeling and expression, and what is perhaps arrogantly 
called the modern character of his subjects and thought. Medieval 
poetry, with rare exceptions, and, with exceptions not quite so 
rare, classical poetry, are distinguished by their lack of what is 
now called the personal note. In Villon this note sounds, struck 
with singular force and skill. Again, the simple joy of living which 
distinguishes both periods — the medieval, despite a common opinion, 
scarcely less than the ancient — has disappeared. Even the riot 
and rollicking of his earlier days are mentioned with far less relish 
of remembrance than sense of their vanity. This sense of vanity, 
indeed, not of the merely religious, but of the purely mundane and 
even half-pagan kind, is Villon's most prominent characteristic It 
tinges his narrative, despite its burlesque bequests, all through; 
it is the very keynote of his most famous and beautiful piece, the 
Ballade des dames dm temasjedis. with its refrain, " Mais ou soot les 
neiges d'anun ? " as well as of his most daring piece of realism, 
the other ballade of La Crosse ifa/Mf, with its burden of hopeless 
entanglement in shameless vice. It b nowhere more clearly 
sounded than in the piece which ranks with these two at the head 
of his work, the Revets de ia B*Ue flaasUm&v, in which a woman, 
once young and beautiful, now old and withered, laments her 
l«*t charms. So it is almost throughout his poems, including the 
(trim Ballade des pendns* and hardly excluding the very beautiful 
BeMede fame as mere, with its description of sincere and humble 
piety. It is in the profound melancholy which the dominance of 
this note has thrown over Villon's work, and in the suitableness 
of that melancholy to the temper of all generations since, that his 
charm and power nave consisted, though it is difficult to conceive 
any time at which his poetical merit could be ignored. 

His certainly genuine poems consist of the two Tt 



their codicil (the latter containing the Ballade des pexdus, or. more 
property Fftat** em teem* de toUosV, and some other pieces of a 
stmuartv mm humour), a few miscellaneous poems, chiefly ballades, 
and an extraordinary collection (called U Jerfm mm jeiehm) of 
poem* in orgs*, the greaterpart of which is now totally u amirH igible, 
fi\ whsch may perhaps be doubted, it ever was otherwise. Besides 
these, severs! poems of no inconsiderable interest are usually 
printed with Vulon's works, though tbev are certainly, or almost 
certainty, not tns. The chief are Les Arfmes Frmmtnes* n curiae* 
series of verse stories of cheating tavern-keepers, Jbc_ having some 
resemblance to those told of George rVck, but of a broader and 
coarser humour. These, though in many cases ~ common form 
of the broader tsMrfad. are not much brer than has time, and evi- 
s itaumisia I not to fact. Another of these spurious 1 * 
s UJtn ssr j smeiwu. snon o s ogwe of the ftusw Anmmw eh 



.. .. , . . .-isttttie. . ... . _ 

trained and pan] snMsery. who were citusw l y unpopular in France, 
« mode to mmese his own pohnxuwrr TV third most mwrtaat 
prere of tftnVkmd t» th» KmV gus eV JtasVM.w et eh MMewemL 
a smmustJe oasreweatiun b a u um two pi nssl im spendthrift*, which 
* sot with am sneria> Tsrtmposm*^ sowc^ra* wtreorTOJUr&uted 
a* Mmsm or seineed warn am works twl tar into the ifth century. 
*t»Vst«fxm1fJs*ts»sV« 




•ad 1$** there 



of Clement Marot. one of whose most honourable distinctions is 
the care be took of his poetical predecessors. The Pleiade movement 
and the classicizing of the grand siede put Villon rather out of 
favour, and he was not again reprinted till early in the 18th. century, 
when he attracted the attention of students of old French like he 
Duchat, Bernard de la Monnoye and Prosper Marchand. The 
first critical edition in the modern sense— that is to my, an edition 
founded on MSS. (of which there are in Villon's case several, chiefly 
at Paris and Stockholm)— was that of the Abbe J. H. R. Promp- 
sault in 1812. The next was that of the " Bibliophile 'Jacob * 
(P. Lacroix) in the BibUotkique Elehiriemne (Paris, 1854). The 
standard edition is CEuvres computes de Francois Villon, by M. 
Auguste Longnon (1892). This contains copies of the documents 
on which the story of Villon's life is based, and a bibliography. 
The late M. Marcel Schwob discovered new documents relating to 
the poet, but died before he could complete his work, which was 
posthumously published in 1905. See also A. Campaux, F. Villon, 
saneet ses etmtres (1859); A. Longnon, Etude biotrapkiqne (1877); 
and especially G. Paris, Francois Villon (tool), a book of the first 
merit. A complete translation of Villon was written by Mr John 
Payne (1878) for the Villon Society. There are also translations 
of individual poems in Mr Andrew Lang's Ballads and Lyrics 
of Old France (1872) and in the works of U. G. Rossetti and Mr 
Swinburne. Among critical studies of Villon may be mentioned 
those by Samte-Beuve in the Camseries dm lundi, vol. xhr., by Theo- 
phile Gautier in Grotesques, and by R. L. Stevenson in his Familiar 
Stndies of lien and Books (1883). An unedited ballad by Villon, 
with another by an unknown poet of the same date, was published 
by W. G. C. Bijvanck (1891) as UnJoHe inconmn. M. Pierre 
d Alhcim published (1892) an edition of Le Jargon with a translation 
into ordinary French. (G. Sa.) 

VILNA, or WrxNO, a Lithuanian government of West Russia, 
haviiig the Polish government of Suwalki on the W. t K.ovno and 
Vitebsk on the N., and Minsk and Grodno cm the E. and S. 
Area, 16,176 sq. m.; pop. (1906 estimate) 2,806,300. Vilna 
hes on the broad marshy swelling, dotted with lakes, which 
separates Poland from the province of East Prussia and stretches 
ELNJE. towards the Valdai Plateau. 



Its highest parts are a Bttle more than 1000 ft. above 1 

On its western and eastern boundaries it ia deeply trenched by 
the valleys of the Niemen and the & Dvina. It is chiefly built up 
of Lower Tertiary deposits, but in the north Devonian sandstones 
appear on the surface. The Tertiary deposits consist of Eocene 
day, slates, sandstones, limes to nes and chalk, with gypsum, and 
are partly of manne and partly of terrene origin. The whole is 



slates, sandstones, limes to nes and chalk, with gypsui 
srtly of manne and partly of terrene origin. The w 
overlain with thick layers of Glacial boulder day and 




. nd post -Glacial 

v of the mammoth and other ex- 

Interesting discoveries of Neolithic implements, 

of polished stone, and of implements belonging to the 
Bronse Age and the early years of the Christian epoch, have been 
e. Numerous lakes and marshes, partly covered with forests, 
scarcely passable except when froaen, as wdl as wet meadow- 
land, occupy a large area in the centre of the government. The 
Niemen, which flows along the south e rn and western borders for 
more than scorn-, is the chief artery of trade, and its importance 
in this respect is enhanced by its tributary the Yiliya, which flows 
west for more than son m. through the central parts of Vilna, 
: vinc many affluents on Jfcs course. Among the tributaries 



of the 



is the 



— — _ --_ . acquired renown during 

Napoleon s retreat m x8js: A flows ia a marshy valley in the 
south-east. The & Dvina tor Sf> m. of ha course separates Vilna 
from Vitebsk. The climate of the government is only slightly 
tempered by its proximity to the Baltic Sea (Jnnuary, 2i*-8; 
July, 64* 5); the average temperature at the town of Vilna is only 
4V 5. But m winter ts*thermomerd«e»ds very low, a minimum 
•jo* F kavmg been observed. The flora and fauna are inter- 
Hate between those of Poland and middle Ru 



The government is divided into seven districts, the chief towns 
of wmrn are Vans. Vueiai. Disna, Lida, Gahmyany, Zventsyany 
and Truss. 

YIUUL or Wfcuio, a town of Russia, capital of the govern- 
ment of the same name. 436 m. &S.W. of St Petersburg, at the 
intersection of the railway* from St Petersburg to Warsaw and 
from Iibau to the mouth of the Don. Pop. (1883) 93,760; 
(1000) 164,633. With its suburbs AutokoL IjAma^ PoguV- 
yanka and Sandhye, it stands on and around a knot of Kill* 
V 5450 flO at the confluence oi the Y2«ka with the Ylhya. Its 
streets are in part narrow and not very dean; but Yibaa is an 
old town, rich in historical associations. Its imperial palace, 
and the cathedral of St Stanislaus (13S7. restored 1S01), con- 
taining the silver sarcophagus of St Csmmir and the tomb of 
Prince Mtoft. are flne hnfldmgt Tm^ebasecocd cathedral, that 
of St Xsmtosna* baft in 1406-1604; also several chsuU ie s dating 



VILVORDB— VINCENT, ST 



89 



boss the 14th to the 16th centuries. The Ostra Bnmt chapel 
contains an image of the Virgin greatly venerated by Orthodox 
Greeks and Roman Catholics alike. The museum of antiquities 
has valuable historical collections. The ancient castle of the 
Jigrilnnrs is now a mass of ruins. The old university, founded 
is 157S, was re st ored (1803) by Alexander I., but has been closed 
since 1833 for political reasons; the only departments which 
stmain in activity are the astronomical observatory and a 
sstdkal academy. Vilna is an archiepiscopal see of the Ortho- 
dox Greek Church and an episcopal see of the Roman Catholic 
Church, and the headquarters of the governor-general of the 
Lithuanian provinces and of the III. army corps. The city 
pa mrmrs a botanical garden and a public library, and is adorned 
with statues to Catherine II. (1003), the poet Pushkin and 
Count M. Muraviev (1898). It is an important centre for trade 
& Umber and grain, which are exported; and has theological 
aenuaaries, both Orthodox Greek and Roman Catholic, a 
solitary school, a normal school for teachers and professional 
schools. It is the scat of many scientific societies (geographical, 
ssedkal and archaeological), and has a good antiquarian 
museum and a public library. 

History. — The territory of Vilna has been occupied by the 
Lithuanians since the iolh century, and probably much earlier; 
their chief fortified town, Vilna, is first mentioned in n 28. A 
temple to tbe god Perkunaa stood on one of its hills till 1387, 
•hen it was destroyed by Prince Jagiello, after his baptism. 
After 1323, when Gedymin, prince of Lithuania, abandoned 
Troki, Vilna became the capital of Lithuania. The formerly 
independent principalities of Minsk and Lidy, as well as the 
territory of Dtena, which belonged to the Polotsk principality, 
were annexed by the Lithuanian princes, and from that time 
VTna, which was fortified by a stone wall, became the chief city 
of the Lithnanian state. It was united with Poland when its 
prince, Casinrir IV., was elected (1447) to the Polish throne. 
The plague of 1588, a fire in x6io and still more the wars between 
Russia and Poland, which began in the 17th century, checked 
as further growth. The Russians took Vilna in 1655, and in 
the following year it was ceded to Russia. The Swedes captured 
it in x 70s and in 1 706. The Russians again took possession of 
it in 1788; and it was finally annexed to Russia in 1795, after 
the partition of Poland. Its Polish inhabitants took an active 
part in the risings of 1831 and 1863, for which they were 
severely punished by the Russian government. 

TILVORDB, a town of Belgium in the province of Brabant, 
m. N. of Brussels and on tbe Senne. Pop. (1 004) 144 1 8. The 
■Id castle of VUvorde, which often gave shelter to the dukes of 
Brabant in their days of trouble, is now used as a prison. Tbe 
younger Teniera lived and died at a farm outside Vilvorde, and 
abcri edm the parish church of Dry Torcn. 

VDtCEMslES, a town of northern France, in the department 
of Seine, ok a wooded plateau i\ m. E. of tbe fortifications of 
Pars, with which it is connected by rail and tram. Pop. (1006) 
town, 10,701; commune, 34» l8 S. Its celebrated castle, situated 
to the sooth of the town and on the northern border of the Bois 
de Vlncetmes, was formerly a royal residence, begun by Louis 
VTL in 1164, and more than once rebuilt. It was frequently 
visjted by Louis DC., who held informal tribunals in the neigh- 
bouring wood, a pyramid marking the spot where tbe oak under 
•hich he administered justice is said to have stood. The chapel, 
aa imitation of the Sainte Chapelle at Paris, was begun by 
Charks V. in 1379, continued by Charles VI. and Francis I., 
consecrated in 1553 and restored in modern times. In the 
sacristy is the monument erected in 1816 to the memory of the 
duke of Enghien, who was shot in the castle moat in 1804. 
Louis XI. made the castle a state prison in which Henry of 
Navarre, the great Grade*, Mirabeau and other distinguished 
persons were afterwards confined. Under Napoleon L the 
castle became a magazine of war-material. Louis XVIII. 
added an armoury, and under Louis Philippe numerous case- 
states and a new fort to the east of the donjon were constructed. 
The place now serves as a fort, arsenal and Darracks. It forms 
a rectangle 417 yds. long by 245 yds. vide. The enclosing wall 



was originally flanked by nine towers, which were cut down to 
its level between 1808 and x8ri, and now serve as bastions. 
The donjon is a square tower, 170 ft. high, with turrets at the 
corners. The Bois de Vincennes, which coven about 2300 
acres and stretches to the right bank of the Marne, contains 
a race-course, a military training-ground, a school of military 
explosives (pyrotechnic), several artipcial lakes, an artillery 
polygon and other military establishments, an experimental 
farm, the redoubts of Graveile and La Faisanderie and the 
normal school of military gymnastics. The wood, which now 
belongs to Paris, was laid out during the second empire on the 
same lines as tbe Bois de Boulogne. On its south border is the 
asylum of Vincennes, founded in 1855 for the benefit of con* 
valescents from the hospitals. In the town there is a statue of 
General Daumesnil, celebrated for his defense of the castle 
against the allies in 1814 and 181 5. Vincennes has a school of 
military administration and carries on horticulture and the 
manufacture of Ironware of various kinds, rubber goods, 
chemicals, perfumery, mineral waters, Arc. 

VINCENNES, a city and the county-seat of Knox county, 
Indiana, U.S.A., in the S.W. part of the state, on the £. bank of 
the Wabash river, about 117 m. S.W. of Indianapolis. Pop. 
(1800) 8853; (xooo) 10,240, of whom 736 were foreign-born; 
(1910 census) 14,895. It Is served by the Baltimore & Ohio 
South-Western, the Cleveland, Cincinnati , Chicago & St Louis, 
the Evansville & Terra Haute, and the Vandalia railways. 
Extensive levees, 15 m. in length, prevent the overflow of the 
Wabash -river, which for nine months in the year is navigable 
from this point to the Ohio. The city is level and well drained, 
and has a good water-supply system. In Vincennes are a Roman 
Catholic cathedra], erected in 1835, one of the oldest in the West, 
occupying the site of a church built early in the x8th century; 
Vincennes University (1806), the oldest educational institution 
in the state, which in xoio had 14 instructors and 236 students; 
St Rose Female Academy, and a public library. Coal, natural 
gas and oil are found near Vincennes. The city is a manufactur- 
ing and railway centre, and ships grain, pork and neat cattle. 
The total value of the factory products in 1905 was $3,172,270. 
Vincennes was the first permanent settlement in Indiana. On 
its site Francois Margane, Sieur de Vincennes, established a 
French military post about 1731, and a permanent settlement 
was made about the fort in 1735. After the fall of Quebec the 
place remained under French sovereignty until 1777, when it was 
occupied by a British garrison. In 1778 an agent of George 
Rogers Clark took possession of the fort on behalf of Virginia, 
but it was soon afterwards again occupied by the British, who 
called it Fort Sackville and held it until February X770, when it 
was besieged and was captured (on the 25th of February) by 
George Rogers Clark, and passed finally under American juris- 
diction. The site of the fort is marked by a granite shaft erected 
in 1005 by the Daughters of the Revolution. Vincennes was the 
capital of Indiana Territory from 1800 to 1813, and was the 
meeting-place in 1805 of the first General Assembly of Indiana 
Territory. In 1839 it was incorporated as a borough, and it 
a city in 1856. 



See J. Law, Tlu Colonial History of Vincennes (Vincennes, 1858); 
W. H. Smith, " Vincennes, the Key to the North-West," in L. P. 
Powell's Historic Towns of the Western States (New York, 1901) ; *' The 
Capture of Vincennes by George Rogers Clark," Old South Leaflet*, 
No. 43 (Boston, nd.) ; also chap. ii. of J. P. Dunns Indiana (Boston, 

VINCENT (or VxNCEimus), ST, deacon and martyr, whose 
festival is celebrated on the 22nd of January. In several 
of his discourses St Augustine pronounces the eulogy of this 
martyr, and refers to Ads which were read in the church. It is 
doubtful whether tbe Acts that have come down to us {Ada 
Sanctorum, January, ii. 304-307) are those referred to by St 
Augustine,. since it is not certain that they are a contemporary 
document. According to this account, Vincent was bom of 
noble parents in Spain, and was educated by Valerius, bishop 
of Saragossa, who ordained him to the diaconate. Under the 
persecution of Diocletian, Vincent was arrested and taken to 
Valencia. Having stood firm in his profession before Dacianus, 



90 



VINCENT OF BEAUVAIS 



the governor, he was subjected to excruciating tortures and 
thrown into prison, where angels visited him, lighting his 
dungeon with celestial light and relieving his sufferings. His 
warders, having seen these wonders through the chinks of the 
wail, forthwith became Christiana, He was afterwards brought 
out and laid upon a soft mattress in order that he might regain 
sufficient strength for new torments; but, while Dacianus was 
meditating punishment, the saint gently breathed his- last. 
The tyrant exposed his body to wild beasts, but a raven 
miraculously descended and protected it. It was then thrown 
into the sea, but was cast up on the shore, recovered by a pious 
woman and buried outside Valencia. Prudentius devoted one 
of his hymns (Perislepk. v.) to St Vincent, and St Augustine 
attests that in his lifetime the festival of the saint was celebrated 
throughout the Christian world (5am. 176, n. 4). 

See T. Ruinart, Acta marlyrvm sincere (Amsterdam, 1713). pp. 
364-66; Le Nain de TiUemont, Mtmoirts pour strvir a I'kistoin 
ouUsiaUigm (Paris, 1 701 , acq.), v. 215-225, 673-675. (H. Da.) 

VINCENT OF BEAUVAIS, or Vincentius Bellovacensis 
(c. noo-c. 1264), the encyclopaedist of the middle ages, was 
probably a native of Bcauvais. 1 The exact dates of his birth 
and death are unknown. A tolerably old tradition, preserved 
by Louis a Valleolcti (c. 1413), gives the latter as 1264;* but 
Tholomaeua de Luca, Vincent's younger contemporary (d. 1321), 
seems to reckon him as living during the pontificate of Gregory X. 
(1271-76). If we assume 1264 as the year of his death, the 
immense volume of his works forbids us to think he could have 
been born much Utter than 1190. Very little is known of his 
career. A plausible conjecture makes him enter the house of the 
Dominicans at Paris between 1215 and 1120, from which place a 
second conjecture carries him to the Dominican monastery 
founded at Bcauvais in 1 228-29. There is no evidence to show 
that the Vincent who was sub-prior of this foundation in 1246 
b the encyclopaedist; nor indeed is it likely that a man of such 
abnormally studious habits could have found time to attend to 
the daily business routine of a monastic establishment. It is 
certain, however, that he at one time held the post of " reader " 
at the monastery of Royaumont (Mens Rcgalis), not far from 
Paris, on the Oisc, founded by St Louis between 1228 and 1235. 
St Louis read the books that he compiled, and supplied the funds 
for procuring copies of such authors as he required for his com- 
Dilations. Queen Margaret, her son Philip and her son-in-law, 
Theobald V. of Champagne and Navarre, are also named among 
those who urged him to the composition of his " little works," 
especially the De Institutive Pri*cipum\ Though Vincent may 
weD have been summoned to Royaumont even before 1240, there 
b no actual proof that he lived there before the return of Louis IX. 
and his wife from the Holy Land, early in the summer of 1254. 
But it b evident that he must have written his work De 
Erudition* Filimm Repslium (where he styles himself as 
M Vincentius Bdvacerais, de ordine praedkatorum, qualiscumque 
lector in monasterio de Regali Monte ") after this date and yet 
before January 1260, the approximate date of his Tnctahu 
ComseUtthms. When he wrote the latter work he must have 
left Royaumont, as he speaks of returning from the funeral of 
Prince Louts (15th January tsoo) w ad nostram domum," a 
phrase whkh can hardly be explained othcru ise than as referring 
to hb own Dominican hi use, whether at Bcauvais or elsewhere. 

The Speculum JttV**. the great compendium of aH the kno w l e d ge 
of the middle ages* a* it Wt the pen of \ incent, seems to have con- 
sisted of three cam ourv. vis. the SSrrnfuui SotmnU. Ikxtrimlt 
and JrM?arWi. Such, at Wst. is Echanl's coochisao*. derived from 
an i inmiinauua of the rattiest extant MSS. All the printed editions* 
however, consul of four parts, the additional one being entitVvl 
Satrahm limit* This ha* been cwnrh-shown to be the production 
m a htter hand, and fe ascribed bv Echard to the period between 
tywfdiyfr la afffsmgement and st>%* k » quile dtflereat from 




the other three parts, and indeed k is mainly a compilation from 
Thomas Aquinas, Stephen de Bourbon, and two or three other 
contemporary writers. 

The Speculum Natural* fills a bulky folio volume of 848 closely 
printed double-columned pages. It is divided into thirty-two 
books and 3718 chapters. It is a vast summary of all the natural 
history known to western Europe towards the middle of the 13th 
century. It is, as it were, the great temple of medieval science, 
whose floor and walls are inlaid with an enormous mosaic of skilfully 
arranged passages from Latin, Greek, Arabic, and even Hebrew 
authors. To each quotation, as he borrows it, Vincent prefixes 
the name of the book and author from whom it is taken, distinguish- 
ing, however, his own remarks by the word " actor." The Speculum 
Natural* is so constructed that the various subjects are dealt with 
according to the order of their creation; it is in fact a gigantic 
commentary on Genesis i. Thus book L opens with an account 
of the Trinity and its relation to creation; then follows a similar 
series of chapters about angels, their attributes, powers, orders, &c, 
down to such minute points as their methods of communicating 
thought, on which matter the author decides, in his own person, 
that they have a kind of intelligible speech, and that with angels to 
think and to speak are not the same process. The whole book, in 
fact, deals with such things as were with God " in the beginning." 
Book ii. treats of our own world, of light, colour, the four elements, 
Lucifer and his fallen angels, thus corresponding in the main with 
the sensible world and the work of the first day. Books iii. and iv. 
deal with the phenomena of the heavens and of time, which b 
measured by the motions of the heavenly bodies, with the sky and 
all its wonders, fire, rain, thunder, dew, winds, &c Books v.-xiv. 
treat of the sea and the dry land: they discourse of the seas, the 
ocean and the neat rivers, agricultural operations, metals, precious 
stones, plants, herbs, with their seeds, grains and juices, trees wild 
and cultivated, their fruits and their saps. Under each species, 
where possible, Vincent gives a chapter on its use in medicine, and he 
adopts for the most part an alphabetical arrangement. In book vi 
c 7 he incidentally discusses what would become of a stone if it 
were dropped down a hole, pierced right through the earth, and, 
curiously enough, decides that it would stay in the centre. Book xv. 
deals with astronomy — the moon, stars, and the zodiac, the sun, 
the planets, the seasons and the calendar. Books xvL and xvii. 
treat of fowls and fishes, mainly in alphabetical order and with 
reference to their medical qualities. Books xvuL-xxxi. deal in a 
similar way with domesticated and wild animals, including the dog, 
serpents, bees and insects; they also include a general treatise on 
animal physiology spread over books xxL-xxii. .Books xxm.-xxviii. 
discuss the psychology, physiology and anatomy of man, the five 
senses and their organs, sleep, dreams, ecstasy, m emor y, reason, ftc. 
The remaining four books seem more or less su p pl em entary; the last 
(xxxii.) U a summary of geography and history down to the year 
1 350* when the book seems to have been given to the world, perhaps 
along with the Speculum HistoriaU and possibly aa earner form of 
the Speculum Doctrinal*. 

The Speculum Doctrinal*, in s eve nt ee n books and 2374 chapters, 
b a summary of all the scholastic knowledge of the age and does not 
confine itself to natural history. It b intended to be a practical 
manual for the student and the official alike: and. to fulfil this object, 
it treats of the mechanic arts of life as well as the subtleties of the 
scholar, the duties of the prince and the tactics of the general. 
The first book, after defining philosophy, &c gives a long Latin 
vocabulary of some 6000 or 7000 words. Grammar, logic, rhetoric 
and poetrv are discussed in books ii. and iii.. the hitter including 
several web-known fables, such as the Bon and the mouse. Book i v. 
treats of the virtues, each of which has two chapters of quotations 
allotted to it, one in prose and the other in verse. Book v. 
is of a somewhat similar nature. With book vi we enter on the 
practical part of the work; it deals with the art oe tmw m in , and 
gives directions for buiktim?. gardening:, sowing, reaping, rearing 
cattle and tending vineyards; it includes also a kind of agricul- 
tural almanac for each ctonth in the year. Books viL-ix. have 
reference to the on pdtiic*-. they contain rules for the education 
of a prince and a summary of the forms, terms and statutes of 
canonical, civil and criminal law. Book xL is devoted to the artes 
mecksmicmt* via. those of weavers, smiths armourers, merchants, 
hunters, and even the ceoeral and the sailor. Books xii.-riv. deal 
with medicine both in practice ar** in theory: they contain practical 
rules for the preservation of heahh according to the four seasons of 
the ve*r. and treat of various diseases from lever to gout. Book xv. 
deals with physics and may be reg a rded as a summary of the 
.nNv-Wmi .Na.'otbV. Book xvi. b given up to mathematics, under 
mVich head are included music. geometry* astronomy, astrology, 
weight* and measures and reetaphvsic*. It b noteworthy that in 
* "~ * *-*■- '~ v numerals. 



this Kwk Vincent show* a knowW^se of the Arabic ■ . _ 

he dvvs not call them by tnis name. With him the unit b termed 
** digitus "; when civUipocd bv ten it becomes the " artkulus '* J 
»^V the cwK.tvcr.kvt of the articuhw and the digitus b the 
" nu-wry? <v*-rv*-tw^* In this chapter (rvi o>, wtacb is super- 
srriVrd ** actor. " be cfcerhr e\r4aias Vow the value of m number 
increases tenfold w*a evens place it b moved to the left. He is 
teen acquainted «rii* the Uict invention of the " rifra " or cipher. 



VINCBNT, G.— VINCENT DE PAUL, ST 



9* 



Jerome and Gregory the Great, and even of later writers from Isidore 
sad Bade, through Alcuin, Lanfranc and Ansdm, down to Bernard 
af animus and the brethren of St Victor. 

A* the fifteenth book of the Speculum DoctrinoU is a summary of 
the Speculum Saturate, so the Speculum Historiole may be regarded 
as the expansion of the last book of the same work. It consists of 
thirty-one books divided into 3793 chapters. The first book opens 
est* the mysteries of God and the angels, and then passes on to the 
works of the six days and the creation of man. It includes disserta- 
tions on the various vices and virtues, the different arts and sciences, 
and carries down the history of the world to the sojourn in Egypt. 
The next eleven books (ii.-xh.) conduct us through sacred and secular 
■ntiMj down CO the triumph of Christianity under Constantine. 
The maty of Barlaam and Josaphat occupies a great part of book 
xv.; and book xvi. gives an account of Daniels nine kingdoms, 
fa which account Vincent differs from his professed authority. 
Suebert of Gemblonx, by reckoning England as the fourth instead 
of the fifth* In the chapters devoted to the engines of Britain 
he refiea on the Brutus legend, but cannot carry his catalogue of 
British or English kings further than 735, where he honestly con- 
fesses that his authorities fail him. Seven more books bring us to the 
riae of Mahomet (xxiii.) and the days of Charlemagne (xxiv.). 
Vomit's Charlemagne is a curious medley of the great emperor of 
history and the champion of romance. He is at once the gigantic 
cater of Turpin. the huge warrior eight feet high, who could lilt the 
armed knight standing on his open hand to a level with his head, the 
crusading conqueror of Jerusalem in days before the crusades, and 
yet with all this the temperate drinker and admirer of St Augustine, 
as ass character had filtered down through various channels from the 
■■Tnriril pages of Einhard. Book xxv. includes the first crusade, 
and in the course of book xxix., which contains an account of the 
Tatars, the author enters on what is almost contemporary history. 
wiadtar op in book xxxi. with a short narrative of the crusade of 
St Lows in 1 250. One remarkable feature of the Speculum HisUniak 
is Vincent's constant habit of devoting several chapters to selections 
from the writings of each great author, whether secular or profane, 
as he mentions him in the course of his work. The extracts from 
Cicero and Ovid. Origen and St John, Chrysostom, Augustine and 
Jerome are but specimens of a useful custom which reaches its 
ealawnatiac point in book xxviii., which is devoted entirely to the 
w r i tings 01 St Bernard. One main fault of the Speculum Hisloriale 
■ the unduly large space devoted to miracles. Four of the medieval 
hhtorinas from whom be quotes most frequently are Sigebert of 
Gmitnmnr, Hugh of Fleury, HeJinand of Froidmont. and William 
of H iliac srmry whom be uses for Continental as well as for English 
history. 

Vincent has thus hardly any claim to be reckoned as an original 
writer. But it is difficult to speak too highly of his immense in- 
dustry in collecting, classifying and arranging these three huge 
1 1 Jam 1 1 of to books and 0885 chapters. The undertaking to com* 
hme aB human knowledge into a single whole was in itself a colossal 
one and could only have been born in a mind of no mean order. 
Indeed more than six centuries passed before the idea was again 
sesnscitared; and even then it required a group of brilliant French* 
mm to do what the old Dominican bad carried out unaided. The 
anmher of writers quoted by Vincent is almost incredible: in the 
Speculum Natural* alone no less than 350 distinct works are cited, 
and to these must be added at least 100 more for the other 
two Specula. His reading ranges from Arabian philosophers and 
naturalist* to Aristotle. Eusebius, Cicero, Seneca. Julius Caesar (whom 
he cans Johns Celsusj, and even the Jew, Peter Alphonso. But 
Hebrew, Arabic and Creek he seems to nave known solely through 
one or other of the popular Latin versions. He admits that his 
quotations an not always exact, but asserts that this was the fault 
of careless copyistsv 

A fist of Vincent's works, both MS. and printed, will be found in 
the Histokr* litthaire de Prance, voL xviii., and in Jacques Echard's 
Scnplaresardiuispraedicalorum (1719-2 1 ). The Tractatusconselatorius 
pt9 marie amid and the Liber de eruditione filiorum refoltum (dedi- 
cated to Queen Margaret) were printed at Basel in December 
1410. The Liber de Institution* Prtncipnm, a treatise on the duties 
sittings and their functionaries, has never yet been printed, and 
die only MS. copy the writer of this article has been able to consult 
does not contain in its prologue alt the information which Echard 
seems to imply is to be found there. The so-called first edition of 
the Speculum Majus, including the Speculum Morale, ascribed to 
Jobann MeateUn and long celebrated as the earliest work printed 
at Strassburgj has lately been challenged as being only an earlier 
edition of Vincent's three genuine Specula ic. 1469-70), with which 
la* been bound up the Speculum Morale first printed by Mentelin 
U. 1473-76). The edition most frequently quoted is that by the 
Jt suits (4 vohv, Douai, 1624). 

See J. B. Bourgeat. £tudes sur Vincent de Beautais. thfologieu. 
pmlo Mp k a , cucydopHisU (Paris. 1856): E. Boutaric. Examen des 
source* dm Speculum kistonale de Vincent de Beautais (Paris. 1863), 
and in tome xvii of the Rerue des questions histonauos (Paris, 1875); 



W. Wattenbach, VeulscUamU CeschkhttoueUen. vol. ii. (1894. 
B. Haureau, Notices . . . deMSS. latins de la Bibtiotkique Nalionaii, 
tome v. (1892) ; and E. Male, L'artrdigieuxdu Xlll 9 Steele en France. 

(T.A.A.) 

VINCENT, GEORGE (1796-1831?), English landscape and 
marine painter, was born at Norwich In June 1706. He studied 
art under " Old" Crome, and at the age of fifteen began to 
contribute to the Norwich exhibition. From 1814 till i8aj he 
exhibited occasionally at the Royal Academy, and also in the 
Water-Colour Exhibition and the British Institution. In 1819 
he removed from Norwich to London, and he was a contributor 
to the Suffolk Street gallery from its foundation in 1824 till 183a 
He possessed great artistic abilities; but he fell into dissipation, 
and his works became slight and hastily executed. Finally he 
dropped out of sight, and he is believed to have died about 1831. 
His most important work, a " View of Greenwich Hospital," 
was shown in the International Exhibition of 1862. His " London 
from the Surrey Side of Waterloo Bridge " is also a fine work. 

VINCENT, MARY ANN (1818-1887), American actress, was 
born in Portsmouth, England, on the 18th of September 1818, 
the daughter of aa Irishman named Farlin. Left an orphan at an 
early age, she turned to the stage, making her first appearance in 
1834 as Lucy in The Review, at Cowes, Isle of Wight. The next 
year she married J. R. Vincent (d. 1850), an attor, with whom 
she toured England and Ireland for several years. In 1846 
Mrs J. R. Vincent went to America to join the stock company of 
the old National theatre in Boston. Here she became a great 
favourite. No actress in America, except Mrs Gilbert, has ever 
been such " a dear old lady " to so wide a circle of constant 
admirers. She died in Boston on the 4th of September 1887. 
Her memory is honoured by the Vincent Memorial Hospital, 
founded in that city in 1890 by popular subscription, and 
formally opened on the 6th of April 1891, by Bishop Phillips 
Brooks, as a hospital for wage-earning women and girls. 

VINCENT DE PAUL, ST (1576-1660), French divine, founder 
of the " Congregation of Priests of the Mission," usually known 
as La writes (q.v.), was born on the 24th of April 1576 at Fouy, 
near Dax, in Gascogne, and was educated by the Franciscans 
at Dax and at Toulouse. He was ordained priest in 1600. 
Voyaging from Toulouse to Narbonnc, he was captured by 
Barbary pirates, who took him to Tunis and sold him as a slave. 
He converted his third master, a renegade Italian, and escaped 
with him to Aigues-Mortes near Marseilles in June 1607. After 
short stays at Avignon and Rome, Vincent found his way to 
Paris, where he became favourably known to Monsieur (after- 
wards Cardinal) de Berulle, who was then founding the con- 
gregation of the French Oratory. At Berulle's instance be 
became curate of Clichy near Paris (16x1); but this charge he 
soon exchanged for the post Of tutor to the count of Joigny 
at FoUeville, in the diocese of Amiens, where his success in 
dealing with the spiritual needs of the peasants led to the 
"missions" with which his name is associated. In 1617 he 
accepted the curacy of ChaliUon-les-Dombcs (or sur-Chabv 
ronne), and here he received from the countess of Joigny the 
means by which he was enabled to found his first " confrenc 
de charite," an association of Vomen who ministered to the 
poor and the sick. In 1619 Louis XIII. made him royal 
almoner of the galleys. Among the works of benevolence 
with which his name is associated are the establishment of a 
hospital for galley slaves at Marseilles, the institution of two 
establishments for foundlings at Paris, and the organization 
of the " Filles de la Charite," to supplement the work of the 
con/riries, whose members were mainly married women with 
domestic duties. He died at Paris on the 27 th of September 
1660, and was buried in the church of St Laxare. He was 
beatified by Benedict XIII. in 1729, and canonized by Clement 
XII. in 1737, his festival (duplex) being observed on the 29th 
of July. The Society of St Vincent de Paul was founded by 
Frederic Oxanam and others in 1833, in reply to a charge 
brought by some free-thinking contemporaries that the church 
no longer had the strength to inaugurate a practical enterprise. 
In a variety of ways it doesa great deal of social service similar 



92 



VINCENT OF LERINS, ST— VINE 



to that of gilds of help. Its administration has always been in 
the hands of laymen, and it works through local "conferences" 
or branches, the general council having been suspended because 
it declined to accept a cardinal as its official head. 

Lives by Maynard (4 vols., Paris, i860); Bougaud (2 vols., Paris, 
1891); E. de Broglie (5th edition, Paris, 1809); Letters (2 vols., 
Paris, 1882); A. Loth (Paris, 1880); H. Simard (Lyons, 1894). 

VINCENT OF LERINS, ST, or Vincentb Lemnensis (d. c. 
a.d. 450), an ecclesiastical writer of the Western Church of 
whose personal history hardly anything is known, except that 
he was a native of Gaul, possibly brother of St Loup, bishop 
of Troyes, that he became a monk and priest at Lerinum, and 
that he died in or about 450. Lerinum (Lerins, off Cannes) 
had been made by Honoratus, afterwards bishop of Aries, the 
seat of a monastic community which produced a number of 
eminent churchmen, among them Hilary of Aries. The school 
did not produce an extensive literature, but it played an 
important part in resisting an exaggerated Augustinianism 
by reasserting the freedom of the will and the continued exist- 
ence of the divine image in human nature after the falL As 
regards Vincent he himself tells us that only after long and sad 
experience of worldly turmoil did he betake himself to the 
haven of a religious life. In 434, three years after the council 
of Ephesus, he wrote the Commonitorium odversus pro/anas 
omnium haereticorum novitatcs, in which he ultimately aims 
at Augustine's doctrine of grace and predestination. In it he 
discusses the " notes " which distinguish Catholic truth from 
heresy, and (cap. 2) lays down and applies the famous threefold 
test of orthodoxy — quod ubique, quod semper, quod ah omnibus 
creditum est. It is very striking that in his appeal to tradition 
Vincent assigns no part to the bishops as such— apart from 
the council; he appeals to the ancient "teachers," not to 
any apostolic succession. His " semi-Pelagian " opposition to 
Augustine is dealt with by Prosper of Aquitania in his Pro 
Augustini doctrina responsiones ad capiiula objectionum. Vin- 
centiamarium* It explains why the Commonitorium has reached 
us only in a mutilated form. 

The Commonitorium has been edited by Baluxe (Paris, 1663, 1669 
and 1684) and by KlOpfel (Vienna, 1809). It also occurs in vol. L 



of Migne's Patrol. Ser. Lot. (1846). 



...„ „--,-„- A full summary is given in 

A. Harnack's History of Dogma, hi. 230 ff. See also F. H. Stanton, 
Place of Authority i* Religion, pp. 167 ff.; A. Cooper-Marsdin, The 
School of Lerins (Rochester, 1905). 

VINCENT FERRER, ST (1355-1419)9 Spanish Dominican 
preacher, was born of respectable parentage at Valencia on the 
23rd of January 1355. In February 1374 he took the Domini- 
can habit, and after spending some years in teaching, and in 
completing his theological studies, he was licensed to preach. 
He graduated as doctor of theology at Lends in 1374, and his 
sermons in the cathedral of Valencia from 1385 onwards soon 
became famous. Cardinal Peter de Luna took him with him 
to Paris in 1391; and on his own election to the pontificate as 
antipope Benedict XIII. made Ferrer his confessor and master 
of the sacred palace. Finding, however, the ecclesiastical 
atmosphere of Avignon an uncongenial one, he in 1397 resumed 
his work as a preacher, and Spain, France, Italy, Germany 
and Great Britain and Ireland were successively visited by him; 
and in every case numerous conversions were the result of his 
eloquence, which is described as having been singularly power- 
ful and moving. In 1412 he was delegated by his native city 
to take part in the election of a successor to the vacant crown 
of Aragon; and in 14x6 he received a special invitation to 
attend the council of Constance, where he supported the cause 
of the Flagellants (?.?.). He died at Vannes on the 5th of April 
1419, and was canonized by Calixtus III. in 1455, his festival 
(duplex) being observed on the 5th of April. 

See A. Sorbeffi. // traUato di 5. Vinctuwo Ferrer intomo ol Grande 
I (Bologna, 1906). 

(1690-1730), Italian musical composer, 

1 in Calabria in 1690 and educated at 

k-Qrtco la the Conservatorio del Poveri di 

> known first by his comic operas in 




Neapolitan dialect In 17x9; he also composed many serious 
operas. He was received into the Congregation of the Rosary 
at Formiello in 1728 and died by poisoning in 1730, not 1732, 
as is generally stated. His comic operas, of which Le ZiU '« 
Gakro (1722) is the best, are full of life and spirit; in his serious 
operas, of which Didone Abbandonata (Rome, 17 28) and Ar laser se 
(Rome, 1730) are the most notable, have an incisive vigour 
and directness of dramatic expression deservedly praised by 
Burney. The well-known air " Vo solcando," from Ar laser se, 
is a good example of his style. 

VINDELIC1A, in ancient geography, a country bounded on 
the S. by Raetia, on the N. by the Danube and the Vallum 
Hadriani, on the E. by the Oenus (Inn), on the W. by the 
territory of the Helvetii. It thus corresponded to the N.E. 
portion of Switzerland, the S.E. of Baden, and the S. of WUrt- 
temberg and Bavaria. Together with the neighbouring tribes 
it was subjugated by Tiberius in 15 bx., and towards the end 
of the xst century aj>. was made part of Raetia («;.?.). Its 
chief town was Augusta Vindelicorum (Augsburg). Its in- 
habitants were probably of Celtic origin (cf. the recurrence of 
Vind- in other Celtic names— Vindobona, Vindonissa); some 
authorities, however, regard them as German. According to 
Dio Cassius (liv. 2 a) they were an agricultural people, and later 
writers (e.g. Isidorus, Origina, i. 4), describe the country as very 
fertile. 

VTNDHYA, a range of mountains in Central India. It forms 
a well-marked, though not quite continuous, chain across 
India, separating the Ganges basin from the Deccan. Starting 
on the west in Gujarat, the Vindhyas cross Malwa and the 
central portions of India, until their easternmost spurs abut 
on the valley of the Ganges at RajmahaL They thus roughly 
form the northern side of the triangle, of which the other two 
sides are the Eastern and Western Ghats. They have an 
elevation of 1500 to 4500 ft., nowhere exceeding 5000 ft. Geo- 
logically they give their name to the w Vindhyan formation," 
one of the recognized rock systems of India. In legendary 
tradition they formed the demarcating line between the Madya- 
desha or middle land of the Sanskrit invaders and the non- 
Aryan Deccan, and they are still largely inhabited by aboriginal 
races such as the Bhils. 

VINE. The grape-vine, botanically Vitis, is a genus .of 
about thirty species, widespread in the north temperate zone, 
but richest in species in North America, The best known 
and longest cultivated species is the old-world grape-vine, Vitis 
viniferai a variety of this, sSveslris, occurs wild in the Medi- 
terranean region, spreading eastwards towards the Caucasus 
and northwards into southern Germany, and may be regarded 
as the parent of the cultivated vine. It is of interest to note 
that grape-stones have been found with mummies in Egyptian 
tombs of not later age than 3000 years. The seeds have the 
characteristics of those of V. vinifera, but show some very 
slight variations from the type of seed now prevalent. Among 
the Greeks in the time of Homer wine was in general use. The 
cultivation of the vine must also nave been introduced into 
Italy at a very early period. In Virgil's time the varieties 
in cultivation seem to have been exceedingly numerous; and 
the varied methods of training and culture now in use in Italy 
are in many cases identical with those described by Columella 
and other Roman writers. Grape-stones have been found 
among the remains of Swiss and Italian lake dwellings of the 
Bronze period, and others in tufaceous volcanic deposits near 
Montpellier, not long before the historic era. 

The old-world species is also extensively cultivated in 
California, but the grape industry of the eastern United States 
has been developed from native species, chiefly V. Labrusta 
and V. aestivalis and their hybrids with V. vinifera Some 
of the American varieties have been introduced into France 
and other countries infested with Phylloxera, to serve as slocks 
on which to graft the better kinds of European vines, because 
their roots, though perhaps equally subject to the attacks of 
the insects, do not suffer so much injury from them as the 
European 1 



VINE 



93 



The Tine requires a high summer temperature and a pro- 
fonged period in which to ripen its fruit. Where these are 
forthcoming, it can be profitably cultivated, even though the 
winter temperature be very low. Tchihatchef mentions that 
at Erhran in Russian Armenia the mean winter temperature 
is 7*- 1 C and falls in January to -30° G, and at Bokhara the 
mean temperature of January is 4* C. and the minimum -aa° C, 
and yet at both places the vine is grown with success. In the 
Alps it is profitably cultivated up to an altitude of 1870 ft., 
and in the north of Piedmont as high as 3180 ft. At the present 
time the limit of profitable cultivation in Europe passes 
from Brittany, laL 47° 30', to beyond the Rhine by Liege and 
through Thuringia to: Silesia in lat. 51 55*. In former 
oratories vines were cultivated to the north of this region, as, 
for instance, in Holland, in Belgium largely, and in England, 
where they might still be grown. Indeed, experiments have 
been made in this direction near Cardiff in South Wales. The 
yield is satisfactory, and the wine made, the variety known as 
Camay noir, is described as being like still champagne. In 
the middle ages, owing to various causes, the better wines 
of France and Germany could not be obtained in England 
except at prohibitive prices; but when this state of things 
ceased, and foreign wine could be imported, the English con- 
sumers would no longer tolerate the inferior productions of 
their own vineyards. It is also probable that the English 
raised sugar or honey with the wine and thus supplied artificially 
that sweetness which the English sun denied. It is a curious 
fact that at the present day much or even most of the wine 
of finest quality is made at or near to the northern limits of 
posfiihlr cultivation with profit. This circumstance is probably 
explained by the greater care and attention bestowed both 

00 the cultivation of the vine and on the manufacture of the 
vine in northern countries than in those where the climate 
is move propitious. The relative inferiority of the wines made 
at the Cape of Good Hope and in Australia is partly due to 
\ariatioos of climate, the vine not yet having adapted itself 
10 the new conditions, and partly to the deficient skill of the 

1 iooiacturers. That such inferiority may be expected to 
disappear is — ggr— «** by the success of vine-culture in Madeira 
and the Canary Islands. 

The development of other spedes of VUis, such as the curious 
succulent species of the Soudan and other parts of equatorial 
Africa, or the numerous lands in India and Cochin China, is 
of course possible under suitable conditions; but it is obvious 
that an extremely long period must elapse before they can 
successfully compete with the product of many centuries. 

(See also generally the article Won. For currants and 
raisins, both produced by varieties of the grape-vine, see the 
respective articles.] 

Apart from their economic value, vines are often cultivated 
for purely ornamental purposes, owing to the elegance of their 
foliage, the rich coloration they assume, the shade they afford, 
and their hardihood. 

Viae* have woody climbing stems, with alternate, entire or 
palmateiy lobed leaves, provided at the bate with small stipules. 
Opposite some of these leaves springs a tendril, by aid of which the 
pUnt cUmbs. There are numerous transitional states between the 
orriunry form of tendril and the inflorescence. The flowers are 
«maO. green and fragrant, and are arranged in dense dusters. Each 
has a small calyx in the form of a shallow rim, sometimes five-lobed 
or toothed; five petals, which cohere by their tips and form a cap 
ur hood, which is pushed off when the stamens are ripe; and 
toe free stamens, placed opposite the petals and springing from 
a fleshy ring or disk surrounding the ovary: each bears a two- 
relied anther. The anomalous position of the stamens in front 
U the petals is explained by the abortion or non-development 
*4 an outer row of stamens, indications of which are sometimes 
«ecn on the hypogynous disk encircling the ovary. The ovary 
bean a sessile stigma and is more or less completely two-celled, 
vxtk two erect ovules in each celL This ripens into the 
berry and seed. The cultivated vine has usually hermaphrodite 
Severs; but as it occurs in a wild state, or as an escape from 
c*hjvatiou, the flowers manifest a tendency towards unisexualhy : 
that m, one punt bears flowers with stamens only, or only the 
isnliii his of the pistil, while on another plant the flowers are 
hsMiuil Exclusively female flowers without stamen* do not appear 



to have been observed. Seedling plants from the cultivated vines 
often produce unisexual flowers, thus reverting to the feral type. 
Perhaps the explanation of the fact that some of the cultivated 
varieties are, as gardeners say, " bad setters," — i*. do not ripen their 
fruit owing to imperfect fertilisation,— is to be sought in this natural 
tendency to dioecism. 




Fio. I.— Vine. 

1. Foliage, tendril and inflorescence, reduced. 

2. Flower after fall of petals, magnified. 

3. Fruit, reduced. 

The conformation of the vine stem has elicited a vast amount of 
explanatory comment. The most generally accepted explanation 
is the " sympodial " one. According to this, the shoot of the vine is 
a " sympodium," consisting of a number of " podia " placed one over 
the other in longitudinal series. Each podium consists of a portion 
of the stem bearing one or more leaves, each with an axillary bud or 
buds, and terminating in a tendril or an inflorescence. In V, Lab- 
rusca there is a tendril opposite to each leaf, so that the podium 
bears only a single leaf. In other species there is a definite arrange* 
ment of the leaves, some with and others without tendrils opposite 
to them, the numerical order remaining constant or nearly so. 



These arrangements have doubtless some reference to 
phenomena, continuity of growth being arrested by cold and pro* 
moted by warmth. In any case, it is obvious that these facts might 
be turned to practical end* in cultivation. A vine, for instance, 
that produce* bunches of grapes at each joint is preferable to one in 
which there are several barren joints, a* a larger quantity can be 
grown within a smaller area. Thepracticeof pruning or "stopping " 
n, consciously or unconsciously, regulated by the mode of growth* 
The tendril or inflorescence, according to the views above explained, 
though in reality terminal, is bent to one aide; hence it appears to 
be lateral and opposite to the leaf. While the tendril is thus 
diverted from it* original direct course, the axillary bud of the leaf 
opposite the tendril begins a new podium, by lengthening into a 
shoot which assumes the direction the tendril had prior to it* 



deflexion. This new podium, now in a direct line with its 

produce* leaves and ends in its turn in a tendril or ii_ 

A third podium succeeds the second, and so on. Other authorities 
explain the formation of the tendril and its anomalous position 
opposite to a leaf by supposing that the end of the stem bifurcates 
during growth, one division forming the shoot, the other the tendril 
or inflorescence. It is not possible within the limits at our command 



to specify the facts and argument* by which these theories are 
respectively supported. Practically the tendril* assist the plant 
in it* native state to scramble over rock* or trees. As in the 
case of similar formations generally, they are endowed with a 
sensitiveness to touch which enables them to grasp and coil 
themselves round any suitable object which comes in their way, 
and thus to support the plant. The seeds or grape-stones are 
somewhat dub-shaped, with a narrow neck-like portion beneath, 
which expands into a rounded and thickened portion above. On 
the inner or central side of the seed is a ridge bounded on either side 
by a shallow groove. This ridge indicates the point of union of the 
" raphe " or seed-stalk with the seed: it serves to distinguish the 
varieties of V. vinijtra from those of other spedes. In endeavouring 
to trace the filiation and affinities o( the vine, the characters afforded 
by the seed are specially valuable, because they have not been 
wittingly interfered with by human agency. Characters derived 
from the sise. colour or flavour of the berry are of less value for 



94 



VINE 



L 



historical or genealogical purposes than thoae which are the outcome 
of purely natural condition*. 

The vine is hardy in Britain so far as regards its vegetation, but 
not hardy enough to bnng its fruit to satisfactory maturity, so 
that for all practical purposes the vine must be regarded as a tender 
fruit. Planted against a wall or a building having a south aspect, 
or trained over a sunny roof, such sorts as the Black Cluster, Black 
Prince, Pit mast on White Cluster, Royal Muscadine, Sweetwater, Ac, 
will ripen in the warmest English summers so as to be very pleasant 
eating; but In cold summers the fruit b not eatable in the raw 
state, and can only be converted into wine or vinegar. For outdoor 
culture the Ions-rod system is generally preferred. 

When the plant is grown under glass, the vine border should 
occupy the interior of the house ana also extend outwards in the 
front, but it is best made by instalments of 5 or 6 ft. as fast as the 

Erevious portions become well filled with roots, which may readily 
e done by packing up a turf wall at the extremity of the portion 
to be newly made; an exterior width of 15 ft. will be sufficient. 
If the soil beyond this is very unfavourable, the roots should be 
prevented from entering it by building a wall at the extreme edge 
of the border. Inside borders require frequent and thorough 
waterings. In well-drained localities the border may be partially 
below the ground level, but in damp situations it should be made on 
the surface; in either case the firm solid bottom should slope 
outwards towards an efficient drain. A good bottom may be 
formed by chalk rammed down close. On this should be laid at 
least a foot thick of coarse, hard, rubbly material, a layer of rough 
turf, grass side downwards, being spread over it to prevent the 
compost from working down. The soil itself, which should be af or 
x ft. deep, never loss than a ft., should consist of five parts nch turfy 
loam, one part old lime rubbish or broken bricks, including a little 
wood ashes or burnt earth (ballast), one part broken charcoal, and 
about one part of half-inch bones, the whole beine thoroughly mixed, 
and kept dryish till used. It is well after the borders are completed 
to remove the top soil, in which no roots are to be found, every two 
or three years, and to replace it with a mixture of Rood loam, rotten 
manure, lime rubbish and bone meal, to the depth of 6 or 7 in. 
A mulch of half-decayed stable Utter is useful to prevent loss of 
moisture in summer. 

Young vines raided from eyes, «>. bud* having about } in. wood 
above and 1 in below, are generally preferred for planting. The 
eyes being selected from well -ripened shoots of the previous year 
are planted about the end of January, singly, in <mall pots of fight 
loamv compost, and after standing in a warm place for a few days 
should be plunged in a propagating oed, having a bottom heat of 75*, 
which should be increased to 85* when they nave produced several 
leaves, the atmosphere being kept at about the same temperature or 
higher by sun heat during the day, and at about 7§* at night. As 
soon at roots are freely formed the plant* must be shifted into 6-inch 
pots, aad later on into 12-inch ones. The shoots are trained up 
aear the glass, and, with plenty of heat (top and bottom) and of 
water, with air and light, and manure water occasionally, will form 
inn. strong, weU^ripened canes in the course of the season. To pre- 
pare the vine for planting, it should be cut back to within a ft. of 
the pot early in the season, and only three or four of the eyes 
at the base should be allowed to grow on. The best time for 



1 spring, when the young shoots have just started. 
Mild be planted imide the bouse, from 1 to a ft. 



pUating is in 
The vine* show 

from the front wall, and from 6 ft. to 8 ft. apart, the roots being 
placed an inch deeper in the soil than before, carefully disentangled 
and spread outwards from the stem, and covered carefully and 
irmly with friable loam, without manure. When the shoots are 
fairlv developed, the two strongest are to be selected and trained 
la. When forcing is commeaced, the vinery is shut up for two or 
three weeks without ire heat, the mean temperature ranging about 
$0*. Fire heat must be at irst applied very gently, and may range 
about $jt* at night, and from e** to yo* by day, but a lew degrees 
mate may be five* them a* the buds break and the new shorts 
appear. When thev are in Hover, and onwards during the sweSli.wr 
el the bu i w a, t$* mav be taken as a marines*, running up to go* 
with ewa heat aad the temperature may be lowered Axnewhat 
whea the fruit is ripe. The temperature must, however, be regu- 
ttted arcordiac to the variety. Muscats requiring a hither tempera- 
rare from the tune their bunches show than Htmeairgh*. As much 
esatwatmn as the state of the weather win permit should be given. 



iiu wa M atavasphere h eeeeamry ooth for the sweiHag 
•raw ae*s far amfataWag the health of the foliage. A due amount 
af awettnre may he km* ej» br the ase of evaporating troughs and 
hw m im g m s thewalm aad pathway* two or three rime* a dar. bat 
the leave* eVeuM aot he SYrmged. When the viae* are m tower, 
aa d whe a the trait n cwjoaring. t he rrep wratiag tr oughs shooM 
he heavens* hue, the armaty meat eat he eaceaaracv test the red 
aeimY nhn> ejtner Beets aheaU aetata the waves, la the coarse 
aff eh* aamam the- eeeder* fmwjO wil im L**"* 1 ******* 

oa the he n w » shut u$v 




m en* emea mm made j unaajhoots a few 
ehaxeaas are w^nVpener. aad stal agaia whea 
ironing, tmtstde 
tfcerontv. 



long-rod, the short-rod and the spur systems, and good crap have 
been obtained by each of them. It is admitted that larger bunches 
are generally obtained by the long-rod than by the spur system. 
The principle of this mode of pruning is to train in at considerable 
length, according to their strength, shoots of the last year's growth 
for producing shoots to bear fruit in the present, these rods are 
afterwards cut away and replaced by young shoots trained up 
during the preceding summer; and these are in their turn cut out in 
the following autumn after bearing, and replaced by shoots of 
that summers growth. By the short-rod system, short instead of 
long rods are retained, they are dealt with in a similar manner. 
The spur system has, however, become the most general. In this 
case the vines are usually planted so that one can be trained up 
under each rafter, or up the middle of the sash, the latter method 
being preferable. The shoots arc cut back to buds close to the 
stem, which should be encouraged to form alternately at equal 



distances right and left, by removing those buds from the original 
shoot which are not conveniently placed. The young shoots I roi 
these buds are to be gently brought to a horizontal p 



shoots from 
„ position, by 

bending them a little at a time, and tied in, and usually opposite 
about the fourth leaf the rudiments of a bunch will be developed. 
The leaf directly opposite the bunch must in all cases be preserved, 
and the young shoot is to be topped at one or two joints beyond 
the incipient fruit, the latter distance being preferable if there is 
plenty of room for the foliage to expand ; the lateral shoots, which 
will push out after the topping, must be again topped above their 
first or second joints. If the bunches are too numerous they must 
be thinned before the flowers expand, and the berries also must be 
properly thinned out and regulated as soon as they are well set, 
care being taken, in avoiding overcrowding, that the bunches be 
not made too thin and loose. 

The cultivation of vines in pots is very commonly p ract i sed with 
good results, and pot-vines arc very useful to force tor the earliest 
crop. The plants should be raised from eyes, and grown as strong 
as possible in the way already noted, in nch turfy loam mixed with 
about one-third of horse dung-and a little bone dust. The tempera- 
ture should be gradually increased from 60* to 80°, or 90° by sun 
heat, and a bottom heat a few degrees higher must be maintained 
during their growth As the roots require more room, the plants 
should be shifted from 3-inch pots into those of 6, 12 or 15 in. 
in diameter, in any of which larger sixes they may be fruited in the 
following season, but* to be successful in this, the young rod pro- 
duced must be thoroughly matured after it has reached its limit 
of growth The periodical thorough cleansing of the vine stems 
and every part of the houses is of the utmost importance. 

The number of varieties of grapes possessing some merit is con- 
siderable, but a very few of them will be found sufficient to supply 
all the wants of the cultivator. For general purposes nothing 
approaches the Black Hamburgh (including Frankentbal) in merit. 

Fumgotd Diseases — The most destructive form of fungoid disease 




t. Vine Var enacted bv nr.Mew, r«vxeah aemmr (Ermsphr Tech. 

m\ afcv-h loon* «>..:? patches oa the ipper face, reduced. 
*. Grapes tux'w&rS *::*. fced. 
> Port km of the rt\vrfc«.m of the fungus bearing spores (conidia), 

*. on erect braix be*. 

4. rertthevium or *" frok * of the fences with its curled append- 

apr*. 

5. A.W* from perithecium containing s 



which attach* the viae is cawed bv a as&srw. r*rf*e£s sMtnmr (£ry» 
v«* *N The &ac**e was irst aotked ia Fnghnri in 



VINE 




i**5. 'm t«4» k appeared at Versailles; by 1851 it bed spread 

through all the wine-producing countries of Europe, being specially 
virulent in the lands bordering on the Mediterranean; and in the 
(allowing year it made its appearance in Madeira. Like the PkyUo- 
ana (*.». ; also Wine), the mildew is in iu origin probably American. 
The nSsm e r a* ch ar act eri sed by the appearance of a mycelium forming 
wake or greyish-white patches on the young leaves; this spreads 
quickly and attacks the older leaves and branches, and ultimately 
reaches the crapes. At first these are marked only by small brown 
spots; bat the spots spread and fust together, the slon of the grape 
h xfc greyed, and the flesh decays, the seed only r emaining apparently 
■ ato n e bed . The disease spreads by the mycelium growing over 
the ep i dermis of the plant. The hyphae composing the mycelium 
are provided with haustoria which project into the cells of the 
affected part (fig. 3). Some of 
a» the hyphae which protect from 
** the leaf bear spores (conidia), 
which are constricted off one 
at a time, and by their means 
the fungus is distributed 
(fig- 2. 3). The perithelia are 
only produced excep ti onally 
in Europe, but this stage of 
the life-history is common in 
the United States and causes 
a widely spread disease among 
the American vines. The 
mildew is in its turn attacked 
by a fungus of the same tribe, 
Cicinnobotus Cesatii, which 
lives peranticaUv within the 
hyphae of its host, and at 
times even succeeds in de- 
stroying it. The means which 
have proved most efficacious, 
both as a remedy and a pre- 
ventive of this disease, is to 
scatter flowers of sulphur over 
the vines, before the morning 
dew has evaporated. An- 
other method is to boil one 
Fie. 3.— tTnrwrnla necator {Erysiphe P«* f *** *j** ***** parts 
Tm&rf). A and B, mycelium (Si). * wl P* ur - •* g «?™J de 
withbauatoria (A). (Afterde Bary.) the mixture over the affected 
la A several cell* of the epidermis P*/**;. , . . . 4 

are indicated. Another fungus which at- 

tacks vines, especially those of 
, mPtasmopmmvitictia, which has also been introduced from 
s to Europe, The mycelium spreads through the green ports of 
the plant, attacking the leaves, twigs and unripe grapes. On the upper 
side of the leaf, where it is first visible, it forms pale green irregular 
which b ecom e darker in colour. On the under side of the leaf 
enmtch«sarewfaiteandarocomposedof the spore-bearing hyphae. 
The leaf ultimately becomes dried up and brittle. The grapes 
which are attacked cease to grow, turn brown or white, and ulti- 
mately dry up and fall off. This disease has been successfully 
treated with a spray of copper sulphate and lime, or sulphate of 
iron; solutions of these salts prevent the conidia from germinating. 
Aathxacnose is the name usually given to a disease which was 
formerly known m» " charbon," '* pech " or " brenner." This 
disease is caused by the parasitism of Spkatdoma ampdmum, 
one of the Pyrenomycetous fungi (fig. 4). The fungus assails all 
the green parts of the vine, and injures the leaves and young 
shoots as much as it does the grape itself. The first sign of its 
p r esence is the appearance of a minute spot, which is greyish in the 
centre, with a brown border. This spot increases in size; in the 
stalks it assumes an oval shape, with its long axis parallel to 
the stalk, whilst in the leaves and grapes it is more or less circular 
in outline. The centre of the spots on the grapes becomes darker 
as the disease advances, and a red line appears dividing the dark 
brown border into an outer and an inner rim and giving a very 
characteristic appearance to the diseased plant. The surrounding 
taxae enlarges, so that the spots appear as if sunk in depressions, 
and bear a considerable resemblance to hailstone wounds. Later the 
•pots on the leaves often drop out. The berries do not shrivel up as 
those do that are affected by the black rot. The mycelium of Sphact- 
Imm grows jnst beneath the cuticle of the vine, through which it soon 
bursts, giving rise to a number of minute hyphae, which bear conidia. 
These are minute, oval, colourless spores, which serve to spread 
the disease over the vineyard and from place to place. The com- 
plete lite-history of this form is at present unknown ; and inferma- 
tioa us to where the fungus passes the winter, and in what form, 
would probably afford some useful indications as to the method that 
thooid be adopted to combat the disease. Anthracnose has been 
known in Europe for many years, but has only been observed in 
'---* 1881, whither it was probably imported from the old 



9S 

too lew, the di s ta n t seldom aprjearing in dry. weD^rposed vine, 
yards. A greaft deal of confusion still exists with regard to th is 
disease. A similar disease which of late has frequently been found 
in England, and which is ascribed to the fungus GU*oip*rium 
omfxiopkapm, is very similar to it. In their mode of attack, 
in the symptoms they produce, and in the result upon the grapes 
and the vine the two fungi are so much alike that for practical 
purposes they may be regarded as identical. Massee recom- 
mends that the shoots shook! be dredged with flowers of 
sulphur at intervals of ten days, while the disease continues to 
spread, a small quantity of quicklime in a finely powdered coo- 





?io. 4,— Charbon or 
Anthracnose of Vine, 
caused by Spkau- 
lomoampatH 



An a preventive to its attacks the copper sulphate sprays 

and a solution ($0%) of iron sulphate have been found very useful, 
as sreQ as care m planting on wefl-drained soil that docs not lie 



1. Portion of twig with 
discoloured patches, 
caused by the fun- 
gun. 

2. Fruit attacked by 
the f ungus(reduced ). 

dttion being added and 
every application, not no 




Fie. 5.— Black Rot of Grapes, 
Gmpuvdia BidmtUU. 

1. Grapes attacked by the fun- 
gus; the fruit becomes black, 
hard and shrivelled. 

2. Fructification of the fungus, 
entire and in section ; the latter 
shows the asci containing as- 
cospores, much enlarged. 

3. Single ascus, more enlarged, 
showing the eight contained 
spores. 

the quantity of lime being Increased at 
as to exceed the sulphur, however. The 
iron sulphate solution should be 
used while the vines are in a dormant 
condition, and diseased parts should 
be cleared away and burned. 

The black rot, like the Unchnda 
and Plasmotmnx, is also American in 
iuoriejin. It has been known and ob- 
served there since 1848, but appeared 
for the first time in France in 1885. 
The disease is caused by a fungus, 
Guicnardia BidmeUii (fig. 5) (»*oma 
sflrfcsfe), one of the PyrtnomyctUs, 
and by some authorities it has been 
considered to be a further stage in the 
life-history of Spkacttomo ampetinum. ' 
The fungus is most conspicuous on 
the grapes, but the leaves and stems 




FnnHarUf^tcSrfacftAr £Am 

Fig. 6. — Roscllinia (Dematophora) necatrix. 

A. Mycelium of the fungus attacking root of vine (reduced). 

B. Portion of vine root, showing masses of fructification (perUhtcia) of 

the fungus (reduced). 

are also affected. The grapes are not assailed until nearly 
full-grown, when a brownish spot appears, which spreads over the 



9 6 



VINEGAR— VINELAND 



whole grape. The Utter for a time retains Its plumpness, but on the 
appearance of little black pustules, which first occur on the part 
primarily affected, the grape begins to shrivel. This continues until 
the grape is reduced to a black hard mass, with the folds of skin 
pressed closely against the seed. The disease spreads from grape 
to grape, so that as a rule many of the grapes in a bunch are 
destroyed. The hyphao of the mycelium of this fungus are 
septate, with numerous short branches. The pustules on the sur- 
face are due to fructifications, pyenidia and spcrrnagonia. The 
fungus passes the winter in the withered grapes which fall to the 
ground, and on these the mature form of the fungus (fig. 5, a and 3) 
» produced; hence every care should be taken to collect these and 
burn them. The use of the copper solutions mentioned above may 
also be recommended as a preventive. 

Among the other fungi which infest the vine may be mentioned 
Pkythsttcta viticola and Pk, Lahrusau, which, when theattackissevere, 
cause the destruction of the leaves, the only part they assail These, 
like the foregoing, are members of the Pyrenomycdes, while many 
other allied fungi nave been described as causing spots on the leaves. 
Cercospora Vitu (Cladosporium viticolum), which has club-ahaped 
spores of a green-brown colour, also attacks the leaves; but, unless 
the season is extremely unfavourable, it does little harm. 

A very disastrous root-disease of the vine is due to the rav- 
ages of another pyrenomycetous fungus, RoscUtrria (Dematopkera) 
mecatrix (fig. 6), which forms subterranean strings of mycelium — 
so-called rhisomorphs. The diseased roots have been confounded 
with those attacked by Phylloxera. The only mode of combating 
the malady seems to be to uproot the plants and burn them. Isola- 
tion of the diseased areas by means of trenches has also been prac- 
tised. 

VINEGAR, a dilute solution of impure acetic add, prepared 
by the acetous fermentation of alcohol or of substances which 
yield alcohol when suitably decomposed (ordinary vinegar), or 
obtained from the products resulting on the dry distillation 
6T wood (wood vinegar). Ordinary or table vinegars, which 
contain, in addition to acetic acid, small quantities of alcohol, 
higher adds such as tartaric and succinic, various esters, albu- 
minous substances, &c, are produced solely by acetous fer- 
mentation, wood vinegar being only employed in certain arts. 
Ordinary vinegar has been known from the earliest times, and 
its power of combining with or dissolving mineral substances 
caused the alchemists to investigate its preparation and pro- 
perties. They failed, however, to obtain pure acetic add, 
although by distillation they prepared more concentrated solu- 
tions (spiriims Veneris). In 1607 Stahl showed that vinegar 
could be concentrated by freezing out part of the water, and, 
better, in 170s, by neutralising the add with an alkali and dis- 
tilling the salt with oil of vitriol. A notable improvement was 
made in 1789 by Lowitx, who snowed that the dilute add could 
be concentrated by repeatedly passing it over charcoal powder, 
and by cooling he obtained a crystalline substance named in 
>77? by Durande, " gladal acetic add." The presence of an 
acid substance in the products of the dry distillation of wood 
was mentioned by Glauber in 1648 and received the name of 
pyroligneoua add. Its identity with acetic add was demon- 
strated by Vauquelm in 1800. 

The mechanism of acetous fermentation is described under 
Fermentation; here we only treat of the actual processes. 
There are two methods in use: the " quick " process, proposed 
in 1 7 jo by Boerhaave and introduced by Sch&txenbach in 1823 
(analogous processes were proposed at about the same time by 
YYjgmann in Germany and by Ham in England), and the older or 
** slow " process. 

In the " quick " process advantage is takes of the bet that the 
fermentation proceeds more quickly when a large surface of the 
liquid is rcposwvt to air. Any alcoholic liquid can be treated. ""— 
apparatus cousins essentially of a vat divided into three 

the lowest, which is separated from the one above by a gri 

tattoo, servos for the collection of the vinegar; the central portion, 
which b by far the largest, b the chamber wherein the fermentation 
» effected: and it b separated from the topmost section by a disk 
perforate d with hoses about the siae of q<nHs through which thin 
slrusga lead into the apper part of the central section. The purpose 
of tSA disk a to subdivide the liquid pU>edupoa it into drops so as 
to increase the surface of the faqukt The sxfcs of the vat enclosing 
the lowest portion are p ww id e d with a ring of holes to admit air to 
the tut* and the vat b enclosed with a rkvriv finis* tid perforated 
hum th rough which the hquor to befersiewed* admitted ami 
s%tfras9»j*jnmfr«tfttt base escape* Tk* central chamber 
of huge surface The cns&snonest are 
e, ssust be careJuBy Irrrd 



The 




from all extractives by washing and steaming, then dried, and 
finally soured by immersion in hot vinegar for twenty-four hours. 
The fermented wort, prepared in various ways and of varying com- 
position, or wine, is warmed to about $8° C and then fed into the 
upper chamber. Falling on to the shavings, the surface b largely in- 
creased, and the fermentation which ensues maintains the tempera- 
ture at about 37*. and draws a current of air upwards through the 
shavings, which after a time become covered with the so-called 
mother of vinegar. If the liquid contains only 4% of alcohol, it 
b completely converted into acetic acid, but s tr o n ger liquors require 
" '* * "* vat three or four times. Some of the 
some acetic acid) is carried away by the 

.pes to the top of the vat; thb b avoided in some 

factories by leading the air over or into water, whereby the alcohol 
and aldehyde are recovered. The same b effected in Singer a 
generators, which are coupled together in tiers. 

For making wine-vinegar by the slow process, full-bodied wines 
about one year old and containing 10% of alcohol (this amount 
being obtained, when necessary, by blending) are preferred; and 
they are clarified by standing with beech shavings upon which the 
lees deposit. The fermentation is carried out in casks holding from 



u completely convercca into 
to be passed through the 1 
alcohol (and consequently m 
air which escapes to the tc 



50 to 100 gallons; these casks are repeatedly extracted with water in 
prevent any impurity finding its way into the vin< 
found that the casks foul after about six years' use, < 



order to prevent any impurity finding its way into the vinegar 
also it b found that the casks foul after about six years' use, whci 
it b necessary to remove the deposits of argol, yeast sediments. &c» 
and rc*cxtract with water, after which they are again fit for use. 
In conducting the fermentation the cask is one-third filled with 
boiling strong vinegar and allowed to stand for eight days. Nine 
pints of the wine are now added every day until the cask is two- 
thirds full, and the mixture b allowed to stand for fourteen days. 
After thb interval from 10 gallons to half the contents of the cask 
are drawn off, and more wine added. The working temperature b 
about 25*. The progress of the operation b shown by the white 
froth which appears on a spatula after immersion in the liquid: 
if it be reddish, more wine must be added. In certain parts of 
France, Holland and of the Rhine district a different procedure is 
adopted. Two casks, fitted with false bottoms on which arc placed 
vine cuttings, are taken : one cask b completely filled with the wine, 
whilst the other b only half filled. The acetification proceeds 
more rapidly in the second cask, and after twenty-four hours half 
the contents of the first cask are transferred to it, and the pr oce ss 
repeated. The product b settled in casks containing birch wood, 
and after fourteen days it b put upon the market. 

In preparing malt vinegar, an infusion of malt b prepared by 
extracting it with water at 72*, then at a higher temperature and 
finally at the boiling-point. After cooling the extract* are fer- 
mented with yeast, and the product kept for some months before 
acetification. Thb step can be effected by the quick process as 
described above, or by the slow process. In the latter the liquid at 
35* b transferred to barrels lying on their sides and the f e r m e nta tion 
allowed to proceed. When the process b complete the product b 
filtered through rapes in a fining tun. Thb b a cask fitted with a 
false bottom in which are placed spent tanner's wood, shavings, 
or, better, the pressed stalks and skins of grapes and ratsine from 
wine manufacture. Household vinegar b made in upright casks; 
after twenty-four hours it b transferred to a similar cask, and the 
process repeated in a thud and fourth cask. Malt vinegar b sold in 
four strengths designated li, 20, 22, 24, the last being " proof " 
vinegar, containing 6% of acetic add and having a specific gravity 
of 1019. These numbers represent the grains of dry pure sodium 
carbonate, whxh are neutralised by one fluid ounce of the vinegar. 

Several other vinegars are made. Crystal vinegar b ordinary 
vinegar decolorised by treatment with animal charcoal. Ale 
vinegar b prepared from strong sour pale ale; it has a tendency 
to putrefy. Glucose or sugar vinegar b made by first fexmenting 
amylaceous substances to alcohol, and then acetifying the alcohol. 
Compound table vinegars are made by digesting ordinary vinegar 
with condiments such as pepper, garlic, capers, Ac; whilst 
aromatic vinegars popularly used in vinaigrettes on account of their 
refreshing, stimulating pungency are obtained by distilling ordinary 
vinegar with plants, perfumes and aromatic suosrances. Medicinal 
vinegars are prepared either bv digestion or distillation of vinegar 
with various drugs. Vinegar, bowever. b not now much used in 
though occasionally taken, under a false impression, in 
to reduce obesity. 

Wood vinegar b not used m cooking, as it lacks those substances 
which render ordinary vinegar palatable. It b largely manu~ 
factored for conversion into pure areiir acid and acetom; and alsoj 
for use as an antiseptic and wood preservative. (See Acetic Acid.) 

VIstSLAVD, a borough of Cumberland county. New Jersey, 
U.JvA.. in the southern part of the state, about 54 m. S of 
Philadelphia and ab.vit 115 m. S.W. of New York. Pop. 
(tSoo)iSjr, (1000) ajro/iLcIudiruj $qo foreign-born; (igos state 
census) 4593*. Uo»o> 5«^- Area, rsQ.ru. It is served by the 
Ccniral of New Jersey and the West Jersey & Seashore railways, 
and by elect rk railway to Milrville and Bridgeton. Vincland 
b situated at an altitude of 90-118 ft. above the sea. on a 



VINER— VINGT-ET-UN 



97 



senerany Irret or slightly undulating plain, and has unusually 
braad, straight and well-shaded streets. The borough main* 
tain a public library, a public park of 40 acres, artesian water- 
works, a sewerage system and an electric lighting plant. It 
is the seat of the New Jersey Training School for Feeble- 
aficded Girls and Boys (1888), the State Home for the Care 
sad Training of Feeble-Minded Women (1888), and the State 
Home for Disabled Soldiers, Sailors, Marines and their Wives. 
The Ymdand Historical and Antiquarian Society (organized 
is 1864) has a library (8000 volumes in iooq) housed in the 
Society's building, and it maintains a free lecture course. 
Saloons for the sale of intoxicating liquors have never been 
aJbved in Vineland. The surrounding country is largely de- 
toted to the growing of small fruits, grapes, peaches, pears 
sod apples, and the raising of sweet potatoes; and within 
the borough are manufactured unfermenled grape juice wine, 
boots and shoes, clothing, carpets, rugs, chenille curtains, pearl 
bartons, flint-glass tubes and bottles, and iron castings. 

Vineland was founded in 186 1 by Charles K. Landis (1835- 
iqoo), who conceived' the idea of creating a settlement in the 
almost uninhabited "Pines" of Southern New Jersey; and 
after purchasing a large tract he laid out a village with small 
farms adjoining. The settlers, largely from New England 
and the Middle States, received the land at moderate prices 
oa agreeing to make certain stipulated improvements. The 
township of Landis (pop. in 19x0, 0435), named in honour 
of the founder of the settlement, was incorporated in 1864, 
saving formerly been a part of Millville; from it Vineland was 
frp»ri *f«* and was incorporated as a borough in 1880. 

See The Founder's Own Story of Ike Founding of Vineland 
YiaeUad, 1903), a pamphlet published by the Vineland Historical 
*ai Antiquarian Society. 

THER, SIR ROBERT (1631-1688), lord .mayor of London, 
was bora*in Warwick, but migrated in early life to London, 
where be was apprenticed to his uncle, Sir Thomas Viner (155&- 
1665), a goldsmith, who was lord mayor of London in 1653-54, 
and who was created a baronet in 1661. Soon Robert became 
a partner in his kinsman's business, and in 1666 an alderman 
of the city of London; in 1665 he was made a knight, and in 
tie following year a baronet. He was sheriff during the year 
of the great fire in London, and was chosen lord mayor in 1674. 
Combining like his uncle the business of a banker with that 
of a goldsmith, Viner was brought much into contact with 
C juries EL and with the court. The king attended bis mayoral 
banquet, and the lord mayor erected an equestrian statue in his 
buLoat on a spot now covered by the Mansion House. Having 
been appointed the king's goldsmith in x66x, Sir Robert was 
one of those who lent large sums of money for the expenses 
of the state and the extravagances of the court; over £400,000 
was owing to him when the national exchequer suspended 
payment in 1672, and he was reduced to the necessity of com- 
pounding with his creditors. He obtained from the state an 
annuity of £25,000. Viner died at Windsor on the 2nd of 
September 1688. 

See Viner: a Family History, published anonymously (1885). 

VIHET. ALEXANDRE RODOLPHB (1 797-1847), French 
critic sad theologian, of Swiss birth, was born near I ansa arte 
<m the 17th of June 1797. He was educated for the Protestant 
oristrj, being ordained in 1819, when already teacher of the 
French language and literature in the gymnasium at Basel; 
and doring the whole of his life he was as much a critic as a 
r»— -rlogfrn- His literary criticism brought him into contact 
s-ith Ssunte-Benve, for whom he procured an invitation to 
lectore at Lausanne, which led to his famous work on Port- 
RoynL Vinet's CkrcstcmathU franchise (1829), his Eludes sur 
is h&tratnre froucoise ov XIX™ Steele (1840-51), and his 
HiZoin de la UUerature francaise an X VII I™ siecle, together 
v^a his £tmdes sur Pascal, Andes sur Us moralities aux X Vl m * 
et X VII— s&des f Histoire de la predication parmi les Re" forme* 
ic France and other kindred works, gave evidence of a wide 
i^owfeoge of literature, a sober and acute literary judgment 
and a tlhiingnisfrr 4 faculty of appreciation. He adjusted bis 



theories to the work under review, and cnndwnnfid nothing so 
long as it was good work according to the writer's own standard. 
His criticism had the singular advantage of being in some 
sort foreign, without the disadvantage which attaches in French 
eyes to all criticism of things French written in a foreign language. 
As theologian he gave a fresh impulse to Protestant theology, 
especially in French-speaking lands, but also in England and 
elsewhere. Lord Acton classed him with Rothe. He built 
all on conscience, as that wherein man stands in direct per- 
sonal relation with God as moral sovereign, and the seat of 
a meral individuality which nothing can rightly infringe. 
Hence he advocated complete freedom of religious belief, and 
to this end the formal separation of church and state (If emeire 
en favcur de la liberU des adles (x8s6), Essai sur la conscience 
(1&29), Essai sur la manifestation des convictions reHgieuses (184s). 
Accordingly, when in 1845 the civil power in the canton of 
Vaud interfered with the church's autonomy, he led a secession 
which took the name of L'J&ise litre. But- already from 
1831, when he published his Discerns sur qudques sujets reHgieu* 
(Neuteaux discours, 1841), he had begun to exert a liberalising 
and deepening influence on religious thought far beyond his 
own canton, by bringing traditional doctrine to the test of a 
living personal experience (see also Fbokmel, Gaston). In 
this he resembled F. W. Robertson, as also in the change which 
he introduced into pulpit style and in the permanence of his 
influence. Vinet died on the 4th of May 1847 at Garens 
(Vaud). A considerable part of his works was not printed till 
after his death. 

His life was written in 1875 by Eugene Rambert, who re-edited 
the ChrestomatkU in 1876. bee also L. M. Lane, Life and Writings 
of A. Vinet (1890); L. Molines, Etude sur Alexandre Vinet (Pans, 
1890) ; V. Rossel, Hist, de la litt. fran^aise hors de France (Lausanne, 
1895); V. Rivet, Etudes sur Us oritines de la pensfe religieuse de 
Vinet (Paris, 1896); A. Schumann, Alex. Vinet (1907). A uniform 
edition of his works was begun in 1908, see Revue de tkieUgu et 
phticsophie (Lausanne, 1908, 234 sqq.). (J. V. B.) 

VINGT-ET-UN (colloquially, "Van John"), a round gams 
of cards, at which any number of persons may play, though' 
five or six arc enough. The right to deal having been decided, 
the dealer gives one card face downwards to each person, in- 
cluding himself. The others thereupon look at their cards 
and declare their stakes— one, two, three or more counters or 
chips— according to the value of their cards. When all have 
staked, the dealer looks at his own card and can double all 
stakes if he chooses. The amount of the original stake should 
be set by each player opposite his card. Another card is then 
dealt, face downwards, all round; each player looking at his 
own. The object of the game is to make 21, by the pips on 
the cards, an ace counting as 1 or ix, and the court cards as 
xo each. Hence a player who receives an ace and a teo-card 
scores ax at once. This is called a "natural"; the holder 
receives twice—sometimes thrice— the stake or the doubled 
stake. If the dealer has a natural too, the usual rule is 
that the other natural pays nothing, in spite of the rule of 
" ties pay the dealer." The deal passes to the player who 
turns up the natural, unless it occurs in the first round of a 
deal or the dealer has a natural too. If the dealer has not a 
natural, he asks each player in turn, beginning with the player 
on his left, if he wishes for another card or cards, the object 
still being to get to 21, or as near up to it as possible. The 
additional cards are given him one by one, face upwards, though 
the original cards are not exposed. If he requires no additional 
card, or when he has drawn sufficient, he sa>s, " Content,", 
or " I stand." If a player overdraws, i.e, if his cards count 
more than at, he pays the dealer at once. When all 
ore either overdrawn or content, the dealer may "stand" 
on his own hand, or draw cards, till he is overdrawn or stands. 
All the hands are then shown, the dealer paying those players 
whose cards are nearer to 21 than his own, and receiving from 
all the others, as " ties pay the dealer." If the dealer's cards, 
with the additions, make exactly 21, he receives double the 
stake, or doubled stake; if a player holds ai, he receives double - 
likewise, but ties still pay the dealer. If a player receives two 



9 8 



VINITA— VINLAND 



similar cards' he may put his stake on each and draw on them 
separately, receiving or paying according as he stands success* 
fully or overdraws, but the two cards must be similar, i.e. he 
cannot draw on both a knave and a queen, or a king and a 
ten, though their values are equal for the purpose of counting. 
A natural drawn in this way, however, only counts as 21, and 
does not turn out the dealer. Similarly a player may draw on 
three cards, or even four, should they be dealt him. A player 
who overdraws on one of such cards must declare and pay 
immediately, even though he stands on another. After a hand 
is played, the " pone " (Latin for " behind ")— Ihe player on 
the dealer's right— collects and shuffles the cards played, the 
dealer dealing from the remainder of the pack, till it is exhausted, 
when he takes the cards the pone holds, after the pone has cut 
them. It is a great advantage to deal, as the dealer receives 
from all who have already withdrawn, even if he overdraws 
himself. 

French Vingt-et-un, or vingt-et-un with variations, is played by 
any number of persons. The first deal is clayed as in the ordinary 
game. In the second (" Imaginary Tens ") each player is supposed 
to hold a ten-card and receives one card from the dealer, face down- 
wards; he is then considered to hold a ten -card plus the one dealt, 
and stands or draws, receives or pays, as in the ordinary game. It 
he receives an ace he holds a natural. In the third deaT(" Blind 
Vingt-et-un ") each player receives two cards, and draws or stands 
without looking at either. The fourth deal is " Sympathy and 
Antipathy," each player staking, and declaring which of the two 
he backs: two cards are then dealt to htm : if they are of the same 
colour, it is "sympathy"; if of different colours, "antipathy." 
At the fourth deal (Rouge-et-noir), each player, having received three 
cards, bets that the majority will be either black or red, as he chooses. 
In " Self and Company " every one stakes but the dealer, who then 
sets out two cards, face upwards, one for himself aud one for the 
players. If the two cards are pairs, the dealer wins; if not, he deals 
till one of the cards exposed is paired, paying or receiving according 
as that card belongs to himself or the company." The seventh 
deal is " Paying the difference." Each player receives two cards, 
face upwards. The dealer pays or receives a stake for the difference 
in number between the pips on his own cards and those of each 
player. The ace counts as one. The eighth deal Is " Clock." The 
stakes are pooled. The dealer deals the cards out, face upwards, 
calling " one " for the first, " two " for the second, and so on, the 
knave being 11, queen 12, and king 13. If any of the cards dealt 
correspond to the number catted, the dealer takes the pool ; if none 
correspond, he forfeits that amount. At the end of this (the eighth) 
deal, the next player deals. 

VINITA, a city and the county-seat of Craig county, Okla- 
homa, U.S.A., in the N.E. part of the state, about 135 m. E.N.E. 
of Guthrie. Pop. (1900) 2339; (1007) 3157, including 624 
Indians and 479 negroes; (1910) 4082. Vinita is served by the 
Missouri, Kansas & Texas and the St Louis & San Francisco 
railways. In the city are the Sacred Heart Institute (Roman 
Catholic), and a hospital for masons. Vinita is situated in an 
agricultural and stock-raising region, and lead, zinc, oil and 
natural gas arc found in the vicinity; the city's water supply is 
obtained from artesian wells. Bricks are manufactured. The 
first settlement was made here in 1870 and Vinita was chartered 
as a city in 1808. 

VINLAND (Old Norse, V inland, i.e. Vineland or Wincland), 
some region on the eastern coast of North America, visited and 
named by the Norsemen in the beginning of the nth century. 
The word first appeared in print in Adam of Bremen's Dc- 
scriptio Insufarum Aquilonis, an appendix to his Cesla Hamma- 
burgensis Ecelcsuu PontiJUum, published by Lindcnbrog in 
1595. In pursuit of historical study, Adam visited the Danish 
court during the reign of the well-informed monarch Svend 
Estridsson (1047-1076), and writes that the king " spoke of an 
island (or country) in that ocean discovered by many, which is 
called Vinland, because of the wild grapes [vita] that grow 
there, out of which a very good wine can be made. Moreover, 
that grain unsown grows there abundantly [fruges ibi non 
seminatas abundare] is not a fabulous fancy, but is based on 
trustworthy accounts of the Danes." This passage offers im- 
portant corroboration of the Icelandic accounts of the Vinland 
voyages, and is, furthermore, interesting "as the only un- 
doubted reference to Vinland in a medieval book written be- 
yond the limits of the Scandinavian world " (Fiske). Adam's 



information concerning Vinland did not, however, impress his 
medieval readers, as he placed the new land somewhere in the 
Arctic regions: " All those regions which are beyond are filled 
with insupportable ice and boundless gloom." These words 
show the futility of ascribing to Adam's account Columbus's 
knowledge of lands in the West, as many overzeaknis advocates 
of the Norse discoveries have done. The importance of the 
information, meagre as it is, lies in the fact that Adam received 
from the lips of kinsmen of the explorers (as the Danes in a 
sense were) certain characteristic facts (the finding of grapes 
and unsown grain) that support the general reliability of the 
Icelandic sagas which tell of the Vinland voyages (in which 
these same facts are prominent), but which were not put into 
writing by the Norsemen until later— just how much later it is 
not possible to determine. The fact that the Icelandic sagas 
concerning Vinland are not contemporaneous written records 
has caused them to be viewed by many with suspicion; hence 
such a significant allusion as that by Adam of Bremen is not 
to be overlooked. To the student of the Norse sources, Adam's 
reference is not so important, as the internal evidence of the 
sagas is such as to give easy credence to them as records of 
exploration in regions previously unknown to civilization. The 
contact with savages would alone prove that. 

During the middle ages the Scandinavians were the first to 
revive geographical science and to practise pelagic navigation. 
For six centuries previous to about 800, European interest in 
practical geographical expansion was at a standstill. During 
the 6th and 71b centuries, Irish anchorites, in their "passion 
for solitude," found their way to the Hebrides, Orkneys, Shet- 
land's, Faroes and Iceland, but they were not interested in 
colonization or geographical knowledge. The discovery of new 
lands in the West by the Norsemen came in the course of the 
great Scandinavian exodus of the 9th, 10th and tith centuries — 
the Viking Age — when Norsemen, Swedes and Danes 'swarmed 
over all Europe, conquering kingdoms and founding colonies. 
The main stream of Norsemen took a westerly course, striking 
Great Britain, Ireland and the Western Isles, and ultimately 
reached Iceland (in 874), Greenland (in 985) and Vinland (in 
1000). This western migration was due mainly to political 
dissatisfaction in Norway, doubtless augmented by a restless 
spirit of adventure. The chiefs and their followers that settled 
Iceland were " picked men," the flower of the land, and sought 
a new home from other motives than want or gain. They sought 
political freedom. In Iceland they lived active, not to say 
tumultuous, lives, and left fine literary records of their doings 
and achievements. The Icelandic colony was an interesting 
forerunner of the American republic, having a prosperous 
population living under a republican government, and main* 
taining an independent national spirit for nearly four centuries; 

Geographically Iceland belongs to America, and its coloniza- 
tion meant, sooner or later, the finding of other* lands to the 
West. A century later Greenland was peopled from Iceland, 
and a colony existed for over four hundred years, when it was 
snuffed out, doubtless by hostile Eskimos. Icelandic records, 
among them the Vinland sagas, also a Norwegian work of the 
13th century, called Speculum regale (The King's Mirror), and 
some papal letters, give interesting glimpses of the life of this 
colony. It was from the young Greenland colony thai an 
attempt was made to establish a new outpost in Vinland, but 
plans for permanent settlement were given up on account of 
the hostility of the natives, with whom the settlers felt powerless 
to grapple. Gunpowder had not yet been invented. 

Icelandic literature consists mainly of the so-called " sagas," 
or prose narratives, and is rich in historical lore. In the case 
of the Vinland sagas, however, there are two independent narra- 
tives of the same events, which dash in the record of details. 
Modern investigators have been interested in establishing the 
superiority of one over the other of the two narratives. One of 
them is the " Saga of Eric the Red " as found in the collection 
known as H auk's Book, so called because the manuscript was 
made by Hauk Erlendsson, an Icelander who spent much of his 
life in Norway. It was copied, in part by Hauk himself, bet* 



VINLAND 



99 



the years 1305 and 13341 the date of his death, and probably 
during the period 1310-20 It is No. 544 of the Arne- 
yagnran collection in Copenhagen. Another manuscript 
thai tells the same story, with only verbal variations, is found 
b No. S57 «■* the same collection. This manuscript was made 
later than Hauk's, probably in the early part of the 15th century, 
bat it is not a copy of Hauk's. Both were made independently 
bom earlier manuscripts. The story as found in these two 
xcanuscripts has been pronounced by competent critics, especi- 
ally Professor Gustav Storm of the university of Christian!*, 
a* the best and the most trustworthy record. 

The other saga, which by chance came to be looked upon as 
the chief repository of facts concerning the Vinland voyages, is 
found in a Urge Icelandic work known as the Flaky Book, as 
it was once owned by a man who lived on Flat Island (Flaley), 
en the north-western coast of Iceland. This collection of sagas, 
completed in about 1380, is "the most extensive and most 
perfect of Icelandic manuscripts/' and was sent to Denmark in 
1062 as a gift to the king. It was evidently the general ex- 
cellence of this collection that gave the version of the Vinland 
story that it contained precedence, in the works of early investi- 
gators, over the Vinland story of Hauk's Book. (Reeves's 
Fuding of Wimdand contains fine photographs of all the vellum 
pages that give the various Vinland narratives.) 

According to Flaley Book saga, Biarni Hcriulfsson, on a 
voyage from Iceland to Greenland in the early days of the 
Greenland colony, was driven out of his course and sighted new 
lands to the south-west. He did not go ashore (which seems 
strange), but sailed northward to Greenland. Fifteen years 
later, according to this account, Leif Ericsson set out from 
Greenland in search of the lands that Biarni had seen, found 
them and named them— HeUuland (Flat-stone-land), Markland 
(Torestland) and Vinland. After his return to Greenland, 
several successive expeditions visited the new lands, none of 
which (strangely enough) experienced any difficulty in finding 
Leifs hut in the distant Vinland. 

According to the Vinland saga in Hauk's Book, Leif Ericsson, 
whose father, Eric the Red, had discovered and colonised Green* 
iand, set out on a voyage, in 009, to visit Norway, the native land 
of bis father. He visited the famous King Olaf Tryggvason, who 
reigned from 095 to 1000, and was bending his energies toward 
Christianising Norway and Iceland. He immediately saw in Leif 
a likely aid in the conversion of the Greenlanders. Leif was 
converted and consented to become the king's emissary to 
Greenland, and the next year (1000) started on his return voyage. 
The saga says that he was " tossed about M on this long voyage, 
sad came upon an unknown country, where he found " self- 
sown wbeatfields, and vines," and also some trees called " mosur," 
of which he took specimens. Upon his arrival in Greenland, 
Leif pfftTirufr^ the message of King Olaf, and seems to have 
attempted no further expeditions. But his visits to the* new 
ksnds aroused much interest, and his brother Thorstein made an 
msuccessful attempt to find them. Later, in 1003, an Icelander, 
Thorfinn Kazisefni, who was visiting the Greenland colony, and 
who had married Gudrid, the widow of Leif 's brother Thorstein, 
set out with four vessels and too followers to found a colony in 
the new lands. Here they remained three years, during which 
time a sua, Snorri, was born to Thorfinn and Gudrid. This 
expedition, too, found " grapes and self-sown wheat," though 
seemingly not in any great abundance. Concerning the southern- 
BHtt region of Vinland, the saga says: "They found self-sown 
wheatswJds in the lowlands, but vines everywhere on higher 
oboes. . . - There were great numbers of wUd animals in the 
woods." Then the saga relates that one morning a large 
mother of men in skin canoes came paddling toward them and 
landed, staring curiously at them: " They were swarthy men 
and ill-looking, and the hair of their heads was ugly; they had 
large eyes and broad cheeks." Later the saga says: " No snow 
came there, and all of their live stock lived by grazing, and 
thrived.** The natives appeared again the next spring, and a 
dash occurred. Fearing continued trouble with them, Karlsefni 
tnwtvcd to return to Greenland. This he did a year later, and 



spent the winter of 1006-7 there, whereupon he settled in 
Iceland. From him and Gudrid a number of prominent 
ecclesiastics claimed descent, and also Hauk Erlendsson. The 
Vinland story was doubtless a cherished family possession, 
and was put into writing, when writing sagas, instead of Idling 
them, came into fashion. And here it is important to remember 
that before the age of writing in Iceland there was a saga-telling 
age, a most remarkable period of intellectual activity, by the aid 
of which the deeds and events of the seething life of the heroic 
age was carried over into the age of writing. " Among the 
medieval literatures of Europe, that of Iceland is unrivalled in 
the profusion of detail with which the facts of ordinary life are 
recorded, and the clearness with which the individual character* 
of numberless real persons stand out from the historic back* 
ground " (Origints IslondUat), Icelandic literary history says 
that Ari the Learned (born in 1067) was " the first man in this 
land who wrote in the Norse tongue history relating to. times 
ancient and modem." Among his works is the Book of 
StUkmeuts, "a work of thorough and painstaking research 
unequalled in medieval literature " (Flake). His work Tka 
Book of Icelanders is unfortunately lost, but an abridgment 
of it, Libdlus Islondormm, made by Ari himself, contains a 
significant reference to Vinland. It tells that the colonists in 
Greenland found "both broken cayaks (canoes) and stone 
Implements, whereby it may be seen that the same kind of 
folk had been there as they which inhabited Vinland, and 
whom the men of Greenland (i.e. the explorers) called the 
'skradings' (i.e. inferior people)." From this allusion one 
cannot but think that so keen and alert a writer as Ari had given 
some attention to Vinland in the lost work. But of this there 
is no other proof. We are left to affirm, on account of definite 
references in various sagas and annals to Leif Ericsson and the 
discovery of Vinland, that the saga as preserved in Hauk's Book 
(and also in No. 557) rested on a strong viva voce tradition that 
was early put into writing by a competent hand. Dr Flnnur 
Jonsson of Copenhagen says; " The classic form of the saga and 
its vivid and excellent tradition surely carry it back to about 
i2oo<" This conservative opinion does not preclude the possi- 
bility, or even probability, that written accounts of the Vinland 
voyages existed before this date. Vigfusson, in sneaking of the 
sagas in general, says: " We believe that when once the first saga 
was written down, the others were in quick succession committed 
to parchment, some still keeping their form through a succession 
of copies, other changed. . . . That which was not written down 
quickly, in due time, was lost and forgotten for ever." 

The fact that there are discrepancies between the two ver* 
sions as they appear in the Hauk's Book and in the Flaley Booh 
does not justify the overthrow of both as historical evidence. 
The general truth of the tradition is strengthened by the fact 
that it has come down from two independent sources. One of 
them must be the better, however, and this it is the province of 
competent scholars to determine. The best modern scholarship 
gives theprecedence to the Hauk's Book narrative, as it harmonises 
better with well-established facts of Scandinavian history, snd 
is besides a more plausible account. In accordance with this 
decision, Blami HeriuUson's adventure should be eliminated, 
the priority of discovery given to I«eif Ericsson, and the honour 
of being the first European colonists on the American continent 
awarded to Thorfinn Karlsefni and his followers. This was 
evidently the only real attempt at colonization, despite the 
numerous contentions to the contrary. Under date of 11 21 the 
Icelandic annals say: " Bishop Eric of Greenland went in search 
of Vinland." Nothing further is recorded. The fact that his 
successor as bishop was appointed in 1 1 23 would seem to indicate 
that the Greenlanders had information that Eric had perished. 

The only important phase of the Vinland voyages that has not 
been definitely settled is the identifications of the regions visited 
by Leif and Thorfinn. The Danish antiquarian Rafn, in bis 
monumental Antiquitatts Americanae, published in 1837, and 
much discussed in America at that time, held for Rhode Island 
as Leifs landfall and the locality of Tborfinn's colony. Pro* 
feasor E. N. Horsford, in a number of monographs (unfortunately 



IOO 



VINOGRADOFF— VINT 



of no historical or scientific value), fixed upon the vicinity of 
Boston, where now stand a Leif Ericsson statue and Horsford's 
&orumbega Tower as testimonials to the Norse explorers. But 
in 1887 Professor Storm announced his conviction that the 
lands visited by the Norsemen in the early part of the nth 
century were Labrador, Newfoundland and Nova Scotia. And 
a careful reading of the Hauk's Booh narrative seems to show 
that the numerous details of the saga fit Nova Scotia remarkably 
well, and much better than any other part of the continent. 
This view has in recent years been quite generally accepted by 
American scholars. But in 1910 Professor M. L. Fernald, a 
. botanist of Harvard University, published a paper in RModora, 
vol. 1 a, No. 134, in which he contends that it is most probable 
that the " vinber " of the sagas were not " grapes," but " wine- 
berries," also known as the mountain or rock cranberries. The 
" self-sown wheat " of the sagas he identifies as strand wheat, 
instead of Indian corn, or wild rice, and the mdsur trees as the 
canoe birch. He thinks the natives were Eskimos, instead of 
American Indians, as stoutly maintained by John Fiske. Pro- 
fessor Fernald concludes his paper by saying that: " The mass 
of evidence which the writer has in hand, and which will soon be 
ready for publication, makes it clear that, if we read the sagas 
in the light of what we know of the abundant occurrence north of 
the St Lawrence of the 'vinber' {Vauinium Viiis-Idaea or 
possibly Ribes triste, R. prostratum, or R. lacustre), 'hveiti* 
(Elymus arenarius), and ' mdsur ' (Belula alba, i.e. B. papyri/era 
at many botanists), the discrepancies in geography, ethnology 
and zoology, which have been so troublesome in the past, will 
disappear; other features, usually considered obscure, will 
become luminous; and the older and less distorted sagas, at 
least in their main incidents, will become vivid records of actual 
geographic exploration." 

It is possible that Professor Fernald may show conclusively 
that Lett's landfall was north of the St Lawrence. That the 
" vinber " were mountain cranberries would explain the fact, 
mentioned in the Flaley Book saga, that Leif filled his after- 
boat with " vinber " in the spring, which is possible with the 
cranberries, as they arc most palatable after having lain under 
the snow for the winter. But Thorfinn Karlsefni found no 
abundance of " vinber," in fact one of his followers composed 
some verses to express bis disappointment on this score. 
" Vines " were found only in the southernmost regions visited 
by Karlsefni. It is to be noted that the word "vines" is 
more prominent in the Hauk's Book narrative than the word 
" vinber." At present it does not seem likely that Professor 
Fernald's argument will seriously affect Professor Storm's 
contention that Thorfinn's colony was in Nova Scotia. At 
any rate, the incontrovertible facts of the Vinland voyages 
are that Leif and Thorfinn were historical characters, that 
they visited, in the early part of the nth century, some part 
of the American continent south-west of Greenland, that they 
found natives whose hostility prevented the founding of. a 
permanent settlement, and that the sagas telling of these 
things are, on the whole, trustworthy descriptions of actual 
experience. 

Bibliooeapht.— The bibliography of this subject is large, but 
adequate documents, accounts and discussions may be found in 
the following modern works: Gustav Storm, Studies on the Vine- 
land Voyages (Copenhagen, 1889); Arthur M. Reeves, The Finding 
of Winehnd, the Good (London, 1890 and 1895); John Fiskc, The 
Discovery of America, vol. i. (Boston, 1892); Juul Dieserud, " Norse 
Discoveries in America," in Bulletin of the American Geographical 
Society, vol. xxxiii. (New York, 1901 ;: Gudbrandr Vigffason and 
F. Yorke Powell, Origines Islandicae (Oxford, IQ05); and Julius 
E. Olson and others, The Northmen, Columbus and Cabot, tf}~JS°3 
(New York, 1906), the first volume of Original Narratives of Early 
American History. (J- E. O.) 

VMOQRADOPF, PAUL (1854- )* Anglo-Russian jurist, 
was born at Kostroma in Russia. He became professor of 
history in the university of Moscow, but his zeal for the spread 
of education brought him into conflict with the authorities, 
and consequently he was obliged to leave Russia. Having 
settled in England, Vinogradoff brought a powerful and original 
mind to bear upon the social and economic conditions of early 



England, a subject which he had already begun to study In 
Moscow. His Villainage in England (1892) is perhaps the 
most important book written on the peasantry of the feudal 
age and the village community in England; it can only be 
compared for value with F. W. Maitland's Domesday Book and 
Beyond. In masterly fashion Vinogradoff here shows that 
the villein of Norman times was the direct descendant of tbe 
Anglo-Saxon freeman, and that the typical Anglo-Saxon 
settlement was a free community, not a manor, the position 
of the freeman having steadily deteriorated in the centuries 
just around the Norman Conquest. The status of the villein 
and the conditions of the manor in the 12th and 13th centuries 
are set forth with a legal precision and a wealth of detail which 
shows its author, not only as a very capable historian, but 
also as a brilliant and learned jurist. Almost equally valuable 
was Vinogradoff's essay on "Folkland" in vol. vtii. of the 
English Historical Review (1893), which proved for the first time 
the real nature of this kind of land. Vinogradoff followed up 
his Villainage in England with The Growth of the Manor (1005) 
and English Society in the nth Century (1908), works on the lines 
of his earlier book. In 1903 he was appointed Corpus professor 
of jurisprudence in the university of Oxford, and subsequently 
became a fellow of the British Academy. He received honorary 
degrees from tbe principal universities, was made a member 
of several foreign academies and was appointed honorary 
professor of history at Moscow. 

VTlfOY. JOSEPH (1803-1880), French soldier, was originally 
intended for the Church, but, after some years at a semhjary, 
he decided upon a military career, and entered the army in 
1823. When he was a sergeant in the 14th line infantry, he took 
part in the Algerian expedition of 1830. He won his com- 
mission at the capture of Algiers, and during the subsequent 
campaigns he rose by good service to the rank of colonel. He 
returned to France* in 1850, and in the Crimean War served 
under Canrobert as general of brigade. For his brilliant con- 
duct at the Malakoff he was promoted general of division, and 
he led a division of Niels corps in the campaign of Solfermo. 
Retired on account of age in 1865, he was recalled to active 
service on the outbreak of the war of 1870, and after the early 
reverses was put at the head of the XIII. army corps, which, 
fortunately for France, did not arrive at the front in time to 
be involved in the catastrophe of Sedan. By a skilful retreat 
he brought bis corps intact to Paris on September 7th. Vinoy 
during the siege commanded the III. army operating on the 
south side of the capital and took part in all the actions in 
that quarter. On Trochu's resignation he was appointed to 
the supreme command, in which capacity he had to negotiate 
the surrender. During the commune be held important 
commands in the army of Versailles, and occupied the burning 
Tuileries.and the Louvre on May 93rd. He was in the same 
year made grand chancellor of the Legion of Honour. 

Vinoy wrote several memoirs on the war of 1870-71: Operations 
de I'armte pendant le siege de Paris (187a), L* Armistice ei la com' 
mune (187a), L Armie frangaise (1873). 

VINT, a Russian card-game. It is generally considered as 
the immediate ancestor of Bridge (9.*.). Vint means in 
Russian " screw," and is given to the game because the four 
players, each in turn, propose, bid and overbid each other 
until one, having bid higher than the others care to follow, 
makes the trump, his tis-d-vis becoming his partner. It has 
many points of resemblance to Bridge. The cards have the 
same rank; the score of tricks is entered under the line, and 
points for slam, penalties and honours above the line; while 
the value of the different suits is the same as in Bridge: spades, 
clubs, diamonds, hearts and " no trumps." In a " no trump " 
declaration aces only count as honours; in a suit declaration 
both the aces and the five next highest cards. During the 
progress of the bidding and declaring, opportunity is taken by 
the players to indicate by their calls their strength in the 
various suits and the high cards they hold, so that, when the 
playing begins, the position of the best cards and the strength 
of the different hands can often be fairly accurately estimated. 



VINTON— VIOLET 



Tke leads an subject to much the ssme rules «s those 1a 
Bridge. 

See TTuLnws and Principle* of Vint, edited by Frank W. Haddaa 
(London. 1 900). 

VUTKMf, FREDERIC PORTER (1846- ), American 
portrait painter, was bora at Bangor, Maine, on the 29th of 
January 1846. He was a pupil of Duveneck, of William M. 
Hunt in Boston, of Leon Bonnat and Jean Paul Laurens In 
Puis, and of the Royal Academy of Munich. In 2891 he was 
elected a full member of the National Academy of Design, 
Krw York. 

VIOL, a generic term for the bowed precursors of the violin 
(q-i), but in England more specially applied to those immediate 
predecessors of the violin which are distinguished in Italy and 
Germany as the Gamba family. The chief characteristics of 
the viola were a flat back, sloping shoulders, "c "-shaped 
wood-holes, and a short finger-board with frets. All these 
features were changed or modified in. the violin, the back 
bwrmrins; delicately arched, the shoulders reverting to the 
rounded outline of the guitar or troubadour fiddle, the shape 
of the sound-holes changing from " c " to " f," and the finger- 
board being carried considerably nearer the bridge. The viols, 
of which the origin may be traced to the 13th and 14th cen- 
tury German Minnesinger fiddle, characterized also by sloping 
shoulders, can hardly be said to have evolved into the violin. 
The latter was derived from the guitar-fiddle through the 
Italian lyre or viol-Iyra family, distinguished as da braccio and 
d.i gamba, and having early in the 17th century the outline 
sad M f " sound-holes of the violin- The viol family consisted 
of treble, alto, tenor and bass instruments, being further 
cfcf erestiated as da braccio or da gamba according to the position 
ia which they were held against the arm or between the knees. 
The favourite viol da gamba, or division viol, frequently had 
s man or a woman's head instead of the scroll finish to the peg- 
box, and sometimes a few fine wire sympathetic strings tuned 
sa octave higher than the strings in the bridge. 

Michael Praetorius mentions no less than five sizes of the 
viol da gamba, the largest corresponding to the double bass, 
sod in a table he notes the various accordances in use for each. 
He carefully distinguishes these instruments as viden and the 
viole da braccio (our violin family) as gcigen. Of the latter he 
pves sir sixes, the highest being the pochette with vaulted back, 
a rebec in fact, and the lowest corresponding to the violoncello, 
which he calls bass viol or geige da braccio. 

The viols were very popular In England in the tfith and 17th 
canaries, holding their own for a long time after the introduction 
«rf the loader-toned violin; they are fully described and figured in 
the mxmnem works of the period, and more especially in Christopher 
SmpaoB'a Dwiaims Viol (1667), Thomas MaoTs Mustek's Month 
mmt (1676) and John Ptayford's Introduction to Ik* SHU of Music 

(K.S.) 

VIOLA [Fr. viole t Ger. Brolschc, Its! viola, aUo\ the tenor 
member of the violin family. The construction of the viola is 
the same, but on a larger scale, as that of the violin (q.v.). 
The instrument is pitched a perfect fifth below the violin. 

vlOIJT. The violets comprise a large botanical genus 
(Viola) — in which more than 300 species have been described 
—found principally in temperate or mountain regions of the 
northern hemisphere; they also occur in mountainous districts 
of South America and South and Tropical Africa, while a few 
are found in Australasia. The species are mostly low-growing 
herbs with alternate leaves provided with large leafy stipules 
«5g x). The flowers, which are solitary, or rarely in pairs, at 
the end of slender axillary flower-stalks, are very irregular in 
farm, with five sepals prolonged at the base, and five petals, 
the lowest one larger than the others and with a spur, in which 
collects tbejxmey secreted by the spurs of the two adjoining 
The five anthers are remarkable for the coloured 
1 which extend beyond the anther cells and form a sort 
of cone around the style (fig. a). The ovary is superior and 
cne-celled, with three parietal placentas and numerous ovules; 
it bears a single style, which ends in a dilated or hood-like 
(fig. 3). The fruit is a capsule bursting kxulieidally, 



IOI 

U. through the centre of each of the three valves. By the 
contraction of the valves the small smooth seeds, whkh form 





Fig. i.— Leaf or Violatrkolor 
(Pansy) showing the large 
leafy stipules («;. 



Fie. 2.— Two Stamens 
of Viol* tricolor 
(Pansy), with their 
two anther lobes and 
the process* extend- 
ing beyond them. 
One of the stamens 
has been deprived of 
its spur; the other 
i its spur, c. 



a row down the centre, are shot out to some little distance from 
the parent plant. The irregular construction of the flower is 
connected with fertilisation by insect agency. To reach the 
honey in the spur of the flower, the insect must thrust its 
proboscis into the flower close under the globular head of the 
stigma. This lies in the anterior part of a groove fringed with 
hairs on the inferior petal The anthers shed their pollen into 
this groove, either of themselves or when the pistil is shaken 
by the insertion of the bee's proboscis. The proboscis, passing 
down this groove to the spur, becomes dusted with pollen; 
as it is drawn back, it presses up the lip-like valve of the 
stigma so that no pollen can enter the stigmatic chamber; 
but as it enters the next flower it leaves some pollen on the 
upper surface of the valve, and thus cross-fertilization is effected. 
In the sweet violet, V. odorata and other species, inconspicuous 
permanently closed or "dcistogamic" flowers (fig. 4) occur of a 





Fio. 4.— CleistogamicFlower 
of Viola sylvaiica, 
1. Flower. 2. Flower 

more highly magnified 



Fio. ^.—Pistil of Viola tricolor 
(Pansy). 1. Vertical section to 
show the ovules o, attached to 
theparietes. Two rows of ovules 
are seen, one in front and the 
other in profile. p, a thickened 
line on the walls forming the 
placenta; c, calyx; d, ovary; 
s, hooded stigma terminating the 
short style. 2. Horizontal section 

of the same, p, placenta; o, and cut open, o, anther 

ovules; s, suture, or median line s, pistil; st, style; t, stig 
of carpel. matic surface. 

greenish colour, so that they offer no attractions to insect visitors 
and their form is correspondingly regular. The anthers are so 
situated that the pollen on escaping comes into contact with 
the stigma; in such flowers self-fertilization is compulsory and 
very effectual, as seeds in profusion are produced. 

Several species of Viola are native to Great Britain. Viola 
cantna (fig. 5) is the dog violet, many forms or subspecies of which 
are recognized; v ~*<~~ '- ~ — > .--»-* :- u:-ui.. — : — ■ / — j._ 
fragrance, i 
TheT 

very sweet-scented, double, pale lavender flowers;' var. sulpkurt* 
has shining deep green leaves and lemon-yellow flowers, deeper 
yellow in the centre, and with a pale-violet spur. Sweet violets like 
a rich, fairly heavy soil, with a north or north-west aspect if ftrstiMtrr 



io2 VIOLIN 

they are readily increased by dividing the crowns after flowering. 
Other •pedes known in gardens are: V. altaica, flowers yellow or 




Fig. 5.— Dog Violet (Viola canind). 

X. Floral diagram of Viola, showing arrangement of parts in hori- 
zontal plan, b, pair of bracteotes below the flower; 1, sepals; 
P> petals; ft, stamens; 0, ovary. 

a. Fruit, split open. 

violet with yellow eye; V. biflora, a pretty little species 3-4 in. high 
with small yellow flowers, the large petal being streaked with black; 
V. calcarata, flowers light blue or white, or yellow in var. /lava; 
V. corntda, flowers pale blue — there are a few good varieties of 
this, including one with white flowers; V. cucuUala, a free-flowering 
American species with violet-blue or purple flowers; V. Munbyana, 
a native of Algeria, with large violet or yellow flowers; V. pedcta, 
the bird's-foot violet, with pedately divided leaves and usually 
bright blue flowers; V. rothomagensts, a native of western Europe, 
with flowers bright blue striped with black, and sometimes called 
the Rouen violet ; and V. stums, a native of Asia Minor, the. Russian 
violet, with pale-blue sweet-scented flowers. The garden pansies 
or heartseases are derivatives from V. tricolor, a cornfieldT weed, 
or V. altaica, a native of the Altai mountains. (See Pansy.) 
" Bedding violas," which differ from pansies in some slight technical 
details, have been raised from V. corntda and V. ltdea by crossing 
with the show pansies. The application of an infusion of violet 
leaves was at one time believed to have the power of reducing 
the size of cancerous growths, but its use is now discredited. 

VIOLIN, a musical instrument consisting essentially of a 
resonant box of peculiar form, over which four strings of 
different thicknesses are stretched across a bridge standing 
on the box, in such a way that the tension of the strings can 
be adjusted by means of revolving pegs to which they are 
severally attached at one end. The strings are tuned, by 
means of the pegs, in fifths, from the second or A string, which 
is tuned to a fundamental note of about 435 vibrations per 

• Jt ZJ-Z Z 

second at the modern normal pitch: thus giving vy — %. — 

as the four open notes. To produce other notes of the scale 
the length of the strings is varied by stopping them with the 
fingers on a finger-board, attached to a " neck " at the end of 
which is the " head " in which the pegs are inserted The 
strings are set in vibration by drawing across them a bow 
strung with horse-hair, which is rosined to increase adhesion. 
' The characteristic features which, in combination, distinguish 
the violin (including in that family name its larger brethren 
the viola and the violoncello) from other stringed instruments 
are: the restriction of the strings to four, and their tuning 
In fifths; the peculiar form of the body, or resonating 
chamber, especially the fully moulded back as well as front, 
or belly; the shallow sides or " ribs " bent into, characteristic 
curves; the acute angles of the corners where the curves of 
the ends and middle "bouts" or waist ribs meet; and the 
position and shape of the sound-holes, cut in the belly. By 



a gradual process of development in all these particulars the 
modern violin was evolved from earlier bowed, instruments, 
and attained its highest perfection at the hands of the great 
Italian makers in the 16th, 17th and early 18th centuries, since 
which time, although many experiments have been made, no 
material improvement has been effected upon the form and 
mode of construction then adopted. 

The body, or sounding-box, of the violin is built up of two arched 
plates of thin wood, the belly and the back, united by side pieces 
or ribs to form a shallow box. The belly is cut from soft elastic 
wood, pine being universally used for this purpose, while the back is 
made of a close-grained wood, generally sycamore or maple. Both 
back and belly are carved to their model from the solid, but for 
utilitarian reasons are generally, though not always, buHt up of two 
longitudinal sections; while the sides or ribs, of very thin sycamore 
or maple, usually in six sections, are bent on a mould, by the aid of 
heat, to the required form. Into the corners are glued corner-blocks 
of soft wood, which help to retain the ribs in their sharply recurved 
form, and materially strengthen the whole structure. Into the 
angle of the joints between the sides and the back and belly are glued 
thin lining strips, bent to the mould, giving a bearing surface for 
the glued joint along the whole outline of the instrument ; while, 
in addition, end blocks are inserted at the head and bottom of the 
body, the former to receive the base of the neck, and the latter the 
" tail pin " to which is attached the tail-piece, carrying the lower 
(fixed) ends of the strings. The belly is pierced with two sound- 
holes in the form of tt near, and approximately parallel to, the 

" bouts." The size, shape and position of these holes have an 
important influence on the character of the tone of the instrument, 
and present distinctive variations in the instruments of the different 
great makers. 

The neck, made of maple, is glued and now always mortised into 
the block at the upper end of the body, 1 bearing against a small 
semicircular projection of the back, and is inclined at such an angle 
that the finger-board, when glued on to its upper surface, may lie 
clear of the belly, over which it projects, but in such relation to the 
height of the bridge as to allow the strings to be stretched nearly 
parallel to, and at a convenient distance above, its own surface. 

The bridge, cut out of maple, in the peculiar form devised by 
Stradivari in the 17th century, and not since materially departed 
from, is in the violin about i\ in. high by 1} in. wide, and tapers in 
thickness from about i in. at the base to ft at the crown; but the 
dimensions of this very important member vary for different instru- 
ments according to the arch of the belly, the strength of the wood 
and other considerations. It is placed on the belly exactly midway 
between the sound-holes and in such a position as to stand on a 
transverse line dividing the surface into two approximately equal 
areas, that is, about if in. below the middle, the lower end of the 
body being wider than the upper part or shoulders; whereby a 
greater length is rendered available for the vibrating portion of the 
strings. 

A short distance behind the right foot of the bridge, the sound- 
post, a rod of toft pine about \ In. thick, is fixed inside the body in 
contact with the belly and the back, and serves directly, not only to 
sustain the belly against the pressure of the bridge under the tension 
of the strings, but to convey vibrations to the back. It also exer- 
cises a Very important influence on the nodal arrangement of these 
vibrating plates. The pressure of the other foot of the bridge, 
where the tension of the fourth string is far less than that of the 
first string, is partly sustained by the bass-bar— a strip of wood 
tapering from the middle to both ends, which is glued underneath 
the belly and extends to within rather less than a in. of the ends of 
the instrument. This fitting not only serves to strengthen the belly 
mechanically, but exerts a profound effect upon the vibrations of 
that plate. 

The fixed structure is completed by the head, which surmounts 
the neck and consists primarily of a narrow box into the aides of 
which are inserted the peas round which the free ends of the strings 
are wound. The head is finished by an ornamentation which in the 
hands of the Italian makers followed the traditional pattern of a 
scroll, or volute, offering the skilled craftsmen infinite scope for 
boldness and freedom in its execution; but sometimes, especially 
in the Tirolean irutnunents, k was carved in the form of an animal's 
head, usually a lion's. 

The strings, fastened at one end to an ebony taH-puce or tongue, 
which is itself attached by a gut loop to the pin at the base of the 
instrument, pass over the bridge, along the finger board and over the 
nut (a dwarf bridge forming the termination of the finger-board) to 
the pegs. The effective vibrating portion of the strings is accord- 
ingly the length between the nut and the bridge, and measures now 



1 Up to about the year 1800 the old Italian makers, including 
Stradivari (in his earlier instruments), usually strengthened the 
attachment of the neck by driving nails, frequently three and some- 
times four, through the top block into the base of the neck, which 
was not mortised mto the block. 



VIOLIN 



103 



m aa ordinary fttll-«ued violin about 13 in. The portion of the 
striags to winch the bow is applied lie* over the •pace, measuring 
about aim., between the bridge and the free end of the finger- 
board. The strings are manufactured from so-called catgut, made 
{ran the intestines of lambs, and range in thickness from the first 
to the third or D string from -026 to '046 in. more or less. The 
cccessaxy weight is given to the string of lowest pitch, G, without 
ordoly sacrificing its elasticity, by winding a thin gut string with 
axe save*- wire to about the same thickness as the A string. 

Aa ornamental feature characteristic of nearly all violins is the 
pvitne. a very thin slip of wood with margins of ebony or (rarely) 
*^kbooe, inlaid in thin strips close to the edge of both plates, 
*-xl following the entire outline of the instrument. In some in- 
s romeata, especially of the Brescia* school, a double lino of purfling 
%js inserted. 

The total number of pieces of wood of which the violin is composed 
aeneous to about 70, varying, as the plates arc made in one piece 
or built together, and with the number of sections in which the 
nbs are pat together. Of this number <7 pieces are built into 
tat peruaaoent structure, while 13 may be described as fittings. 
The «hole of the permanent structure is cemented together with 
fijt alone, and it is a striking testimony to the mechanical condir 
i.jcs satisfied by the design, that the instrument built of such 
aaaterial withstands without deformation the considerable 
applied to it. It is worthy of remark that after the lapse 
many years, since it attained perfect musical efficiency, no 
atial adjunct has entered into the construction of this in- 
KTuncat. No play of fancy has grafted anything beyond quite 
ciaor ornamentation on a work of art distinguished By its simplicity 
d pure outline and proportion. 

The following are the exact principal dimensions of a very fine 
reeds>en of Stradivari's work, which has been preserved in perfect 
t the latter end of the 17th century .•— 

Length of body -14 in. full. 

Width across top *-6>l in. bare. 

8^; 



Width across bottom -8{ 

Height of sides (top) -lA „ 

Height of sides (bottom) .... -x/t „ 
TV back is in one piece, supplemented a little in width at the lower 
7 .ft, after a common practice of the great makers, and is cut from 
\ , ry handsome wood; the ribs are of the same wood wliik '* ' lly 
a formed of two pieces of soft pine of rather fin ■ ■ ' ■ lly 

r.ea grain. The sound-holes, cut with perfect r.r -1-1 ■■<.', exhibit 
noch grace and freedom of design. The scroll, win. h i* very char- 
acteristic of the maker's style and beautifully mod'-lliA harmonises 
admirably with the general modelling of the instrument- The 
s&dd is natter than in violins of the earlier perkxl. and the driign 
brvH. while displaying all Stradivari's microscopic perfect ion of 
vt^rkmanshfp. The whole is coated with a very fine orongc-red- 
brt?«n varnish, untouched since it left the maker , hand in 1690, 
itjA the only l e sp ec ts in which the instrument has txxn allured since 
tiat date are in the fitting of the longer neck and stronger bass-bar 
seressitated by the increased compass and raised pitch of modern 
iwjln music. 

The measurements given above are the same as those of a weil- 
fcaown Stradivari of later date (1714)- 

The acoustics of the violin are extremely complex, and not- 
withstanding many investigations by men of science, and the 
enunciation of some plausible hypotheses with regard 
'"■ to details of its operation as a musical instrument, 
remain as a whole obscure. So far as the elementary principles 
■h*.n govern its action are concerned, the violin follows 
famifiar laws (see Sound). The different notes of the scale 
are produced by vibrating strings differing in weight and 
trasson, and varying in length under the hand of the player. 
Tae vibrations of the strings are conveyed through the bridge 
to t he body of the instrument, which fulfils the common function 
of a resonator in reinforcing the notes initiated by the strings. 
So far first principles carry us at once. But when we endeavour 
to elucidate in detail the causes of the peculiar character of 
use of the violin family, the great range and variety in that 
character obtained in different instruments, the extent to 
siuch those qualities can be controlled by the bow of the 
player, and the mode in which they are influenced by minute 
variation* in almost every component part of the instrument, 
we find ourselves faced by a series of problems which have so 
fir defied any but very partial solution. 

The distinctive quality of the musical tones of the violin is 
generally admitted to be due largely to its richness in the upper 
sarmoavc or partial tones superimposed on the fundamental notes 
prorfoced by the simple vibrations of the strings. 

The characteristic tone and its control by the player are un- 
doubtedly conditioned in the first place by the peculiar path of the 



vibrating string under the action of' the rosined bow. This takes 
the form not of a symmetrical oscillation but of a succession of 
alternating bound and free movements, as the string adheres to the 
bow according to the pressure applied and, releasing itself by its 
elasticity, rebounds. 

The lightness of the material of which the strings are made 
conduces to the production of very high upper partial tones which 
give brilliancy of sound, while the low elasticity of the gut causes 
these high constituents to be quickly damped, thus softening the 
ultimate quality of the note. 

In order that the resonating body of the instrument may fulfil 
its highest purpose in reinforcing the complex vibrations set up by 
the strings vibrating in the manner above described, not only as a 
whole, but in the number of related segments whose oscillations 
determine the upper partial tones, it is essential that the plates, 
and consequently the body of air contained between them, should 
respond sensitively to the selective impulses communicated to them. 
It is the attainment of this perfect selective responsiveness which 
marks the construction of the best instruments. Many factors 
contribute to this result. The thickness of the plates in different 
parts of thtsir areas, the sine and form of the interior of the body, 
thv *in: .ir m| shape of the sound-holes through which the vibrations 
of the I'pntained air are communicated to the external air, and 
wl influence the nodal points in the belly, according to the 

m fibres of the wood cut across, varying with the angle at 

wl ound-holes cross the grain of the wood. Their position 

in 1 li i- p 1 >«t also affects the width of the central vibrating portion 
of t he bell y under the bridge. 

All the<c important factors are influenced by the quality and 
elasticity of the wood employed. 

Much has been written and many speculations have been ad- 
vanced with regard to the superiority in tone of the old Italian 
inbuuiucui-i over those of modem construction. This superiority 
has sometimes been disputed, and, judging from the many examples 
of second-rate instruments which have survived from the 17th 
and iSth centuries, it is certain that antiquity alone does not confer 
upon violins the merits which have frequently been claimed for it. 
When, however, we compare the comparatively few really fine 
specimens of the Italian school which have survived in good condition, 
with the best examples of modern construction in which the propor- 
tions of the older masterpieces have been faithfully followed, and 
in which the most careful workmanship of skilled hands has been 
embodied, it cannot be denied that the former possess a superiority 
in the quality of their tone which the musical car immediately 
recognizes. After taking into account the practical identity in 
dimensions and construction between the classical and many 01 the 
best modern models, the conclusion suggests itself that the difference 
must be attributed to the nature of the materials used, or to the 
method of their employment, as influenced by local conditions 
and practice. The argument, not infrequently advanced, that the 
great makers of Italy nad special local sources of supply, jealously 
guarded, for wood with exceptional acoustical properties, can hardly 
be sustained. Undoubtedly they exercised great care in the selec- 
tion of sound and handsome wood ; but there is evidence that some 
of the finest wood they used was imported from across the Adriatic 
in the ordinary course of trade; and the matter was for them, in 
all probability, largely one of expense. There is good reason to 
suppose that a far larger choice of equally good material is accessible 
to modern makers. 

There remains the varnish with which the completed Instrument 
is coated. This was an item in the manufacture which received moot 
careful attention at the hands of the great makers, and much im- 
portance has been attached to the superiority of their varnish over 
that used in more recent times — so much so that its composition 
has been attributed to secret processes known only to themselves. 
The probability is that they were able to exercise more personal 
selection of the materials used than has been generally practised 
by makers dependent upon commercial products undtx modern 
conditions, and the general result has been analogous to that seen 
in the pigments employed by modern painters as compared with 
those made up for themselves by the old masters who could ensure 
perfect purity in their ingredients. But that the Italian makers 
individually or collectively attempted, or were able, to preserve 
as a secret the composition of the varnish they used is unlikely. 
Instruments exhibiting similar excellence in this respect were too 
widespread in their range, both of period and locality, to justify 
the assumption that the general composition of the nncst varnish 
of the early makers was not a matter of common knowledge in an 
industry so flourishing as that of violin-making in the 17th and early 
18th centuries. The excellence of an instrument in respect of its 
varnish depended on the quality of the constituent materials, on 
the proportions in which they were combined, and, perhaps mainly, 
on tne method of its application. The most enduring and perfect 
varnish used for violins is an oU varnish, and the best results there- 
with can only be obtained under the most advantageous conditions 
for the drying process. In this respect there can be no doubt that 
the southern climate placed the makers whose work lies in higher 
latitudes at a disadvantage. In a letter to Galileo in 1638 concern- 
ing a violin he had ordered from Cremona, the writer states that 



IO-f 



VIOLIN 



It r^nnot be brought to perfection without the strong heat of the 
•un "; and all recorded experience indicates the great importance 
of »low drying of the varnish under suitable conditions. Stradivari 
himself wroto to account for delay in the delivery of an instrument 
be< ause of the time required for the drying of the varnish. 

That a perfect varnish conduces to the preservation of a fine tone 
In the instrument is generally admitted; and its operation in this 
respect is due, not merely to the external protection of the wood 
from deterioration, but especially to its action, when supplied under 
favourable conditions to wood at a ripe stage of seasoning (when 
that process has proceeded far enough, but not so far as to allow the 
fibres to become brittle), in soaking into the pores of the wood and 
preserving its elasticity. This being so, successful varnishing will 
be seen to be an operation of great delicacy, and one in which toe old 
masters found full scope for their skill and large experience. The 
effects, upon the vibrational qualities of the wood, of thickness of 
coat, texture and gradual absorption into the pores of the wood under 
favourable conditions of drying, are great and far-reaching, as is 
proved in the survival through two centuries of the great qualities 
of the specimens most fittingly treated in this respect. 

After the early part of the 18th century the use of the fine oil 
varnish employed by the great makers was gradually abandoned, con- 
currently with the decline of the instrument maker's art in Italy. 
Except In the hands of the fast-diminishing band of craftsmen trained 
in the old traditions, its place was taken by the newer spirit varnishes 
which, with their quick-drying qualities and ease of application, 
satisfied the requirements of the more cheaply manufactured 
instruments of the period following the death of Stradivari; and 
before tho end of the century these inferior varnishes had quite 
supplanted the old recipes. 

Having regard to all these considerations it a not unreasonable 
to conclude that the varnish of the old instruments contributed 
probably the most important single element of their superiority 
fn tone to their more modern copies. It must, however, be borne 
in mind that the instrument makers of the 16th and 17th centuries 
carried on a great and flourishing and a highly developed craft; and 
that their best creations owe their distinction largely to causes 
similar to those which produced the great art works of the name 
period. The violin makers had a lifelong training in their craft. 
The productions of the famous among them were eagerly sought 
after. Throughout western Europe the highest in the land were 
true amateurs of music and vied with one another to secure the 
masterpieces of Brescia and Cremona. In such circumstances 
the trained judgment and wide experience of the craftsman were 
naturally concentrated upon securing the preliminary conditions of 
high excellence in his work : the choice of sound and handsome wood ; 
perfection of design and workmanship; the composition of his' 
varnish, and the utmost care and skill in applying it under the best 
conditions; and, not least important, time tor deliberate and 
thoughtful production. The masterpieces of that period were not 
constructed upon any exact or scientific system, but were the pro- 
ducts of development of a traditional craft working on empirical 
lines. Such theories of their construction as have been propounded 
arc based on analysis of an already perfected organism; and careful 
historical research has revealed no record or trace of laws or rules 
by which the great makers worked. 

Elaborate attempts haw been made, notably by Savart early in 
the 19th century, to educe from experiments on the elasticities and 
vibration periods of various specimens of wood used in some of the 
older instruments an exact system for the adjustment of these 
factors to the production of the best results; but data obtained 
by experiments with test specimens of regular shape do not carry 
us \ery far when applied to so complex and irregular a structure 
as the violin. The vibrating plates of the violin are neither sym- 
metrical nor uniform in dimensions. They are not free plates. "hut 
are fixed round the mhole ed$e of a very irregular outline: and these 
conditions, taken together with their unsymmetricaHv arched form, 
held under pressure by the tension of the strings, establish a state of 
complex stresses under vibration which have so far escaped analysis. 
Their vibratory movements are moreover influenced py so many 
accessory features of the instrument, such as the bass-bar, already 
described, the reaction of the sound-oust, and the difTen nt pres- 
sures by the two feet of the bridge, that it b impossible to fipire 
cfovlv the vibrations of any given area of the instrument. It is 
certainly verv remarkable that so precise a pattern of irregular form 
should have been arrived at empirically, and should have survive*! 
as the standard, apparently for all time. Not only b the arch of the 
plates unsyametrical in its longitudinal section, but. as b less 
commonly noticed, the upper bouts, especially in violins of the 
Cremoxu school, are slightly saa!k>w*r than the lower; so that 
the ed*e* of the betty are not strictly oaralVrl to those of the 
back, but the two plates coaverge in the direction of the beat* 
Probabiy the mort successful attempts at anaK^^< the vibrator* 
of the. viotta have been those made bv Stir \VUliitn It c^gia*. b\ meir < 
t tactile observation with the fiVger holdirjr a small rod ol 
4 W*a vackxn «poe* «• the surface of the %*brati"g plates. 



the belly is close to the foot of the bridge, under the fourth string, 
while that of least vibration is exactly over the top of the sound-post. 
The back, which Is strongly agitated, also has its point of least 
vibration where the sound-pott rests upon it. With the sound-post 
removed the belly vibrated almost equally on both sides of ha area, 
while the vibration of the back was very feeble, and the tone became 
very poor; supporting the view that in the complete instrument 
the vibrations of the back are derived from the belly mainly through 
the sound-post. Pressure on that point in the belly normally in 
contact with the top of the sound-poet partially restored the proper 



character though not the power of the tone; indicating the im- 
portant function of the sound-post in establishing a nodal point which 
largely determines the normal vibration of the belly. Modifications 



of the material of which the tomnd-post was made produced a pro- 
found effect upon the quality, but comparatively small effect upon 
the power of the tone. Of the part played by the sides in trans- 
mitting vibrations from belly to back, the most important share 
Is borne by the middle bouts, or incurved sides at the waist of the 
instrument. 

Experiments made lately afford some interesting evidence as 
to the nature of the vibrations set up in a sounding-box in response 
to those of a string at various pitches and under various conditions 
of bowing. These observations were made on a monochord and 
restricted to one portion of a sounding-board of regular shape. 
Experiments on similar lines made with an actual violin body might 
throw further light upon the behaviour of that instrument as a 
resonator; but such researches entail prolonged investigation. 

Two phenomena, familiar to violin players, are suggestive of 
further fines of research that may help to elucidate the problems of 
the localization of the principal responses in the body of the 
violin, and of the action of the wood under vibration. Many 
violins, especially old and inferior ones, fail to resonate clearly 
and fully to particular notes, the sounds produced being commonly 
known as " Wolf " notes; and these notes are, certainly sometimes 
and possibly always, associated with particular spots in the body of 
the instrument; tor, if pressure be applied at these spots, the 
resonance of the respective "Wolf" notes b improved. Thb 
observation suggests that the region concerned has been cut. or 
has become disproportionately thin in relation to the normal tuck* 
ness of the plate* and, when stimulated by the appropriate note, 
sets up a local system of vibrations, which interfere with, instead of 
sharing, the proper vibrations of the plate as a whole; thb inter- 
fering vibration being damped by local pressure. These defects 
are said to develop with age and constant use, and to be minimized 
by the use of thin strings but aggravated by thick ones; a circum- 
stance which tends to support the hypothesis of thin regions in the 
plate, which might be e x pec t e d to respond more truly to the vibra- 
tions of lighter, than to those of heavier strings. Detailed investi- 
gation of these phenomena on the lines of the experiments already 
referred to may have valuable results. Another well-known char- 
acteristic of the violin b that a new instrument, or one that has 
been long in disuse, b found to be " sleepy," that b, it falls to speak 
readily in response to the bow, a defect which gradually disappears 
with use. Experiments made to test the effect of prolonged trans- 
verse vibrations upon strips of suitable wood have shown that such 
treatment increases the flexibility of the wood, which returns to its 
normal degree of rigidity after a period of rest. No conclusive 
interpretation of these experiments has yet been offered; but they 
indicate the probability of modifications of the internal viscosity 
of the wood, by nsotecular changes under the jafluenrr of continued 
vibratory movement. 

The function of the bridge, as above mentioned, b to communicate 
the vibrations of the strings to the resonating body of the violin. 
Thb communication b made mamry, though not entirely, through 
the left foot of the bridge, which under the comparatively low 
tension of the G string rests with light pressure upon the belly, 
which at that point has accordingly greater freedom of movement 
than under the other foot, in proximity to which the sound-post, 
extending from back to belly, maintains that region of the plates 
m a state of relative rigidity, under the high tension of the E string. 
The view, however, maintained by some writers that the right toot 
of the bridge communicates no vibrations directly to the ocUy b 
inaccurate. The main object of placing the sound -post some dis- 
tance behind, instead of immediatetv under, the bridge foot is 
to allow the betty under that foot to vibrate with sosne freedom. 
Thb has been proved by the destructive effect produced upon 
the tone by fixing the sound-post immediately under the foot of 
the btk*se. 

The form into which the bridge fe fretted after the pattern devised 
bv Stradivari has given rise to some speculation; but the justifica- 
tion ot this tonn t- probaNy to be toued in the e&ph.natu>a pro- 
pouvled b> Str \V."..ara H^siins. narx*!y, that the strings, when 
atttatcd by t** bow. vlbcate in a plane ot!'.~ue to the vertical 
a\l< of the br>^e: the xibratvns may be acrorcinghr resolved into 
1 two cvMrroov-t*. ore horizontal along the length of the bridge, the 
otVr vertk-al — tKat ts i> • direction favourable for setting the 



VIOLIN 



105 



the transverse vibrations before they reach the belly. This is 
Accomplished by a certain lateral elasticity of the bridge itself, 
attained by under-cutting the sides so as to allow the upper half of 
the bridge to oscillate or rock from side to side upon its central 
trunk; the work done in setting up this oscillation absorbing the 
ua in w ers e vibrations above mentioned. 

The function of the sound-post is on the one hand mechanical, 
and on the other acoustical. It serves the purpose of sustaining 
tfre greater share of the pressure of the strings, not so much to 
M\e the belly from yielding under that pressure, as to enable it to 
vibrate more freely in its several parts than it could do. if unsup- 
ported, under the stresses which would be set up in its substance by 
that pressure. The chosen position of the post, allowing some 
freedom of vibration under the bridge, ensures the belly's proper 
vibration* being directly set up before the impulses are transmitted 
lo the back through the sound-post: this transmission being, as 
already shown, its principal function. The post also by its contact 
with both vibrating plates is, as already shown, a governing factor 
ia determining the nodal division of their surfaces, and its position 
therefore influences fundamentally the related states of vibration 
of the two plates of the instrument, and the compound oscillations 
xt up in the contained body of air. This is an important element in 
determining the tone character of the instrument. 

The immediate ancestors of the violins were the viols, which 
wtre the principal bowed instruments in use from the end of the 
15th to the end of the 17th century, during the latter 
mm ^ r ' part of which period they were gradually supplanted 
by Use violins; but the bass viol did not go out of use finally 
until towards the later part of the x8th century, when the general 
adoption of the larger pattern of violoncello drove the viol 
from the field it had occupied so long. The sole survivor of the 
viol type or instrument, although not itself an original member 
of Use family, is the double bass of the modem orchestra, which 
retains many of the characteristic features of the viol, notably 
the flat back, with an oblique slope at the shoulders, the high 
bridge and deep ribs. Excepting the marine trumpet or bowed 
cbonochord, we find in Europe no trace of any large bowed in- 
struments before the appearance of the viols; the bowed 
instruments of the middle age* being all small enough to be 
rested on or against the shoulder during performance. The 
rob probably owe their origin directly to the minnesinger 
fiddles, which possessed several of the typical features of the 
viofin, as distinct from the guitar family, and were sounded by 
a bow. These in their turn may be traced to the "guitar 
fiddle " (?.».), a bowed instrument of the 13th century, with five 
strings, the lowest of which was longer than the rest, and was 
attached to a peg outside the head so as to clear the nut and 
eager-board, thus providing a fixed bass, or bourdon. This 
instrument had incurved sides, forming a waist to facilitate the 
ase of the bow, and was larger than its descendants the fiddles 
asd violins. None of these earlier instruments can have had a 
deeper compass than a boy's voice. The use of the fidel m the 
Lands of the troubadours, to accompany the adult male voice, 
any explain the attempts which we trace in the 13th century to 
lengthen the oval form of the instrument. The parentage of the 
lidle family may safely be ascribed to the rebec, a bowed 
trstrament of the early middle ages, with two or three strings 
stretched over a low bridge, and a pear-shaped body pierced 
vi'h sound-holes, having no separate neck, but narrowed at the 
tj*>er end to provide a finger-board, and (nidging by pictorial 
representations, for no actual example is known) surmounted 
by a carved head holding the peg}, in a manner similar to 
that of the violin. The bow, which was short and clumsy, bad 
a considerable curvature. So far it is justifiable to trace back 
the descent of the violin in a direct line; but the earlier ancestry 
•rf this family is largely a matter of speculation. The best 
zriborities are agreed that stringed instruments in general 
are mainly of Asiatic origin, and there is evidence of the mention 
•f bowed instruments in Sanskrit documents of great antiquity. 
Too much genealogical importance has been attached by some 
writers to similarities in form and construction between the 
bowed and plucked instruments of ancient times. They prob- 
tifly developed to a great extent independently; and the bow 
H of too great and undoubted antiquity to be regarded as a 
•imtiopment of the plectrum or other devices for agitating the 
Blocked string. The two daises of instrument no doubt were 



ms^= 



under mutual obligations from time to time in their develop- 
ment. Thus the stringing of the viols was partly adapted from 
that of the lute; and the form of the modern Spanish guitar 
was probably derived from that of the fidd. 

The Italian and Spanish forms (ribeba, rabe) of the French 
name rebec suggest etymologically a relationship, which seems 
to find confirmation in the striking similarity of general appear- 
ance between that instrument and the Persian rebab, mentioned 
in the 12th century, and used by the Arabs in a primitive form 
to this day. The British crwth, which has been claimed by some 
writers as a progenitor of the violin, was primarily a plucked 
instrument, and cannot be accepted as in the direct line of 
ancestry of the viols. 

The viol was made In three main kmds— discant, tenor and 
bass—answering to the cantus, medius and bassus of vocal 
music. Each of these three kinds admitted of some variation 
in dimensions, especially the bass, of which three distinct sizes 
ultimately came to be made— (1) the largest, called the concert 
bass viol; (a) the division or solo bass viol, usually known by 
its Italian name of viola da gamba; and (3) the lyra or tabla- 
ture bass viol. The normal tuning of the viols, as laid down In 
the earliest books, was adapted from the lute to the bass viol, 
and repeated in higher fa- Dbcwt m • m VWdsGgU. 

tervab in the rest. The ~ (BmsVwi.) 

fundamental idea, as in the ftlZg ^ 
lute, was that the outermost ** *■"" 
strings should be two octaves 
apart— bence the intervals f8^ 

of fourths with a third in the •— 

middle. The highest, or discant viol, b not a treble but an alto 
instrument, the three viob answering to the three male 

voices. As a treble instrument, not only for street 

and dance musk, but in orchestras, the rebec or geige 

did duty until the invention of the violin, and long after- 

wards. The discant viol first became a real treble mstrument 

in the hands of the French makers, who converted it into the 

quinton. 

The earnest use of the viols was to double the pans of vocal 
concerted music; they were next employed in special composi- 
tions for the viol trio written m the same compass. o—thf 
Many such works m the form of "fantasies" or a**«f«r 
" fancies," and prehtdes with suites in dance form, by <*"**• 
the masters of the end of the 16th and 17th centuries, 
exist in manuscript; a set by Orlando Gibbons, which are 
good specimens, has been published by the English Musical' 
Antiquarian Society. Later, the viols, especially the bass, were 
employed as solo instruments,, the methods of composition and 
execution being based on those of the lute. Most lute music Ss 
in fact equally adapted for the bass viol, and vice versa. In the 
17th century, when the violin was coming into general use, con- 
structive innovations began which resulted in the abandonment 
of the trio of pure six-stringed viols. Instruments whkh show 
these innovations are the quinton and the viola d'amore. The 
first-mentioned is of a type intermediate between the viol and 
the violin. In the case of the discant and tenor viol the lowest 
string, which was probably found to be of little use, was aban- 
doned, and the pressure on the bass side of the belly thus con- 
siderably lightened. The five strings were then spread out, as 
it were, to the compass of the six, so as to retain the fundamental 
principle of the outer strings being two octaves apart. This was 
effected by tuning the lower half of the instrument in fifths, as 
in the violin, and the tipper half in „_. Outauor 

fourths. This Innovation altered the Tk * b ( * 5atau ' -~— 
tuning of the treble and tenor viojs, Jf g 
thus— One half of the mstrument ffi ■ ^ a,: 
was therefore tuned like a viol, the w 

other half as in a violin, the middle 
string forming the division. The 
tenor viol thus improved was called In France the quintet and the 
treble corresponding to it the quinton. From the numerous 
specimens which survive it must have been a popular instru- 
ment, as it is undoubtedly a substantially excellent one. The 




io6 



VIOLIN 



relief in the bass, and the additional pressure caused by the 
higher tuning in the treble, gave it greater brilliancy, without 
destroying the pure, ready and sympathetic tone which charac- 
terises the viol While the tendency in the case of the discant 
and tenor was to lighten and brighten them, the reverse process 
took place in that of the bass. The richer and more sonorous 
tones of the viola da gamba were extended downwards by 
the addition of a string tuned to double bass A. Marais, a 
French virtuoso, is usually credited with this improvement; 
and this extended compass is recognized in the classical viola 
da gamba writings of Sebastian Bach and De Caix d'Hervelois. 
The result, however, was not universally satisfactory, for Abel 
used the six-stringed instrument; and the seven strings never 
came into general use in England, where the viola da gamba was 
more generally employed and survived longer than elsewhere. 

The chief defect of the viols was their weakness of tone; 
this the makers thought to remedy in two ways: first by 
additional strings in unisons, fifths and octaves; and secondly 
by sympathetic strings of fine steel wire, laid under the finger- 
board as close as possible to the belly, and sounding in sympathy 
with the notes produced on the bowed strings. The sympathetic 
strings were attached to ivory pegs driven into the bottom 
block, and, passing through the lower part of the bridge, or over 
a very low bridge of their own, were stretched to pitch either by 
means of additional pegs or by wrest pins driven into the sides 
of the head, and tuned with a key. Originally six, seven or 
eight wire strings were used, tuned to the diatonic scale of the 
piece to be performed. Later on a chromatic set of twelve was 
employed, and occasionally viols were made with twenty-four 
wire strings, two for each semitone in the scale. This system 
of reinforcement was applied to all the various sizes of viols in 
use during that period. 

The improvements which resulted in the production of the 
violin proceeded on different lines. They consisted in increas- 
ing the resonance of the body of the instrument, by making 
it lighter and more symmetrical, and by stringing it more 
lightly. These changes transformed the body of the viol into 
that of the violin; and the transformation was completed by 
rejecting the lute tuning with its many strings, and tuning the 
instrument by fifths, as the fiddle had been tuned. The tenor 
viol appears to have been the first instrument in which the 
change was made, and thus the viola or tenor may probably be 
claimed as the father of the modern violin family. Violas 
were used in church music before the modern violin period, and 
violins as we know them were at first called " Piccoli Violini " 
to distinguish them from the earlier and larger instruments. 
A tenor viol of date 1500 is still extant, bearing in general out- 
line the typical features of the violin, as distinct from the 
viol family. This instrument was exhibited in 187 a in the 
Loan Exhibition of Musical Instruments at South Kensington 
with the label " Pietro Zanure, Brescia, 1509." From existing 
specimens we know that a bass violin, precursor of the violon- 
cello, with a tuning an octave below the tenor, appeared 
shortly after that instrument. A double bass violin, tuned 
ri ^. -.. a fourth below the violon- 
IfctttVioib. VMaooOo. "mm cello and usually known as 
- g j— - fej— S^= Q » the " basso da camera,'* corn- 
e d — — >= 4g= pleted the set of instruments 

j ^ a* in violin shape; but from 

B =^— the difficulty attending its 

manipulation it 



into general use. The celebrated double bass player, Dragooetti, 
occasionally used the basso da camera, and an English player 
named Hancock, who dispensed with the highest or E string, is 
•till remembered for his performances on this unusual instrument. 
The tenor and violoncello are made on the same general 
model and principles as the violin, but with modifications. 



m Both are, relatively to their pitch, made in smaller pro- 

«Mmm« portions than the violin, because, if they were con- 
***** stfwcUd to dimeiwiom having the same relation to 
*■* pitch and tension of strings as the violin, they would 
sj0e*^ fa* a& overpowering ton* but would be 



from their sin. These relatively diminished dimensions, both in 
the size of the instrument and in the thickness of the wood and 
strings, give to the tenor and violoncello a graver and more 
sympathetic tone. To some extent the reduced size is com- 
pensated by giving them a greater proportional height in the 
ribs and bridge; an increase hardly perceptible in the tenor, 
but very noticeable in the violoncello. To lighten the tension 
and thus allow greater freedom of vibration to the belly on the 
bass side, as with the lowest string of the violin, the two lowest 
of the tenor and violoncello are made of thin gut, covered 
with fine metal wire; thus providing the necessary weight 
without inconvenient •thickness. If the tension of the lowest 
string, or the two lowest strings, be increased, not only 
will they be elevated in pitch, but the violin will £J^*" 
produce a more powerful tone; if the bass string be 
lowered, the contrary will take place. By adapting the music 
to this altered tuning (scordatura) some novel effects are pro- 
duced. The following are the principal scordature which have 
been occasionally employed by various players: — 





P* 



NtidfoL B11 



BirbcOa. 



$^= Pjji 




LoIlL DeBfcfat. 

Prune, 
Kuu,k 

The violoncello is less amenable to the scordatura than 
the violin; the only classical instance is the 
tuning employed by Bach in his fifth sonata, 
which consists in lowering the first string by a 

tone. Bach. 

The early Italian school is chiefly represented by the Brescian 
makers, Caspar da Said, Giovanni Paolo Maggini, Giovita 
Rodiani and Zanetto Peregrino. It is, however, 
somewhat misleading to denominate it the Brescian 
school, for its characteristics are shared by the earliest 
makers of Cremona and Venice. To eyes familiar with the 
geometrical curves of the later Cremona school, most of the 
violins of these makers have a rude and uncouth appearance. 
The height of the model varies; the pattern is attenuated; 
the /-holes share the general rudeness of design, and are set 
high in the pattern. Andreas Amati of Cremona, the eldest 
maker of that name, effected some improvements on this 
primitive model; but the violin owes most to his sons, Antonio 
and Geronimo, who were partners. They introduced the 
substantial improvements which developed the Bresdan violin 
into the modern instrument. These improvements were in 
their inception probably of an artistic rather than a — fo^tifr* 
nature. Painting and inlaying had long been employed in the 
decoration of stringed instruments; but the brothers Amati 
were the first who applied to the violin the fundamental law 
of decorative art, that the decorative and constructive ^ <ttm<> ntn 
should be blended in their conception: in other words, the 
construction should be itself decorative and the decoration 
itself constructive. Nicholas Amati (1506-1684), son of Gero- 
nimo, made some slight improvements in the model, and his 
pupil Antonio Stradivari (1644- 1737) finally settled the typical 
Cremona pattern, which has been generally followed; for the 
majority of .violins since made, whether by good or bad makers, 
are copies of Stradivari. Besides the last-named, the following 
makers worked generally on the Amati model — Cappa, Gobetti, 
the Grancino family, Andreas Guarnieri and his son Giuseppe, 
the Ruggkri family and Scrafin of Venice. The Bergona 
family, Akssandro Gaghano, the earlier ■"r™b-r* el the Gua- 
dagnmi family, and Fanormo were either pupils or followers 
of Stradivari. But enrrpting Carlo Bergona and Stradivari's 
two soma* Qmo b o n o asd Francesco* there is no evidence of 



VIOLLET— VIOLLET-LE-DUC 



107 




any hiving actually worked with or .for bin. Landolfi, 
StoriooJ, and Carlo Giuseppe Testore, a pupil of Giovanni 
Graorino, leaned to the model of Giuseppe Guarnieri del Gesu. 
Some resemblances, especially in tbe matter; of the varnish, 
are traceable between tbe works of makers who lived con- 
temporaneously in tbe same town, e.g. in Naples, Milan and 
Venice. 

A high model was adopted by Jacob Stainer of Absara, near 
Ball in Tirol, whose well-known pattern was chiefly followed by 
the makers of England, Tirol and Germany, down to 
the middle of tbe 18th century. It thenceforward fell 
into disuse, owing to the superior musical qualities of the 
Cremona violin. TheschooIofStainerisrepresentedby 
Albani, Hornsteincr, the Klotz family (who made large 
s of instruments excellent in their kind), Schorn of Sals- 
burg and Withalm of Nuremberg, and others. The English 
oaken may be divided into three successive groups: (1) an 
antique English school, having a character of its own 
(Rayman, Urquhart, Pamphiloh, Barak Norman, Duke, of 
(Moid, ftc.); (2) imitators of Stainer, at the head of whom 
stands Peter Wamsley (Smith, Barrett, Cross, Hill, Aireton, 
Karris, frc); (3) a later school who leaned to the Cremona 
sudd (Banks, Duke, of Holborn, Belts, the Forstcrs, Gilkes, 
Carter, Fendt, Parker, Harris, Matthew Hardie of Edinburgh, 
ftc). The early French makers have little merit or interest 
(Bocquay, Gavinies, Pierray, Guersan, &c), but the later 
copyists of the Cremona models (Lupot, Aldric, Chanot the 
eider, Nicholas, Pique, Silvestre, Vuillaume, &c.) produced ad- 
stirable instruments, some of which rank next in merit to 
the first-rate makers of Cremona. 

The general form of the violin, as finally developed under the 
fc»«rf» of the leading makers, resolved itself into two main types, 
tac nigh and the flat models, of which the latter, on the lines 
Bfrimatdy adopted by Stradivari, has survived as the most efficient 
pattern for all modern instruments. The distinction is one of 
degree only, the maximum difference of actual measurement in 
i n r~~ * cases amounting to little more than a quarter of an inch 
m the convexity of the belly above the top line of the ribs; but 
the difference in character of tone of the two types is, in the main, 
well marked. Speaking generally, the tone of the high-built instru- 
neat is less powerful and sweeter, and it speaks more readily, but 
Kspoeds less completely to gradations of tone under the action 
of the bow than the natter type, which yields a tone of greater 
curving power and flexibility, susceptible to more subtle variation 
by the player, and with a peculiar penetrating quality lacking in the 
highly arched model. These differences in tone probably depend 
ess upon any direct effect of variations in depth of the sounding- 
box than on tbe incidental effects of cutting the wood to the higher 
or kmer arch; for it would seem that the best results in tone have 
bf^n attained in instruments with a fairly constant volume of 
ff^ E faMM*! air, the depth of the sides being roughly in inverse pro- 
portiosi to the height of arch in the best examples of the different 
■odehv la the high-cut arch the fibres of the wood on the upper 
•efface arc necessarily cut shorter, with the result that tbe plate 
a a whole does not vibrate so perfectly as in the flatter model, 
and this has a weakening effect on the tone. Again, tbe higher 
arch, with steeper curves towards the sides, necessitates the incRna- 
txm at the sound-holes at a considerable angle to the main horizontal 
plane of the instrument; and it is conceivable that, under such con- 
ditions, the vibrations of the upper layer of air within the body are 
i*biiiBHrrt too readily, before the composite vibrations of the whole 
ssass of air inside the instrument have attained their full harmonic 
value. Apart from these acoustical considerations, the question 
B probably one of material, the flatter construction demanding 
the use of a very strong and elastic wood in relation to the most 
notable thickness, in order to withstand the pressure of the bridge, 
a Hsistinrr which the higher arch renders possible with a stiffer and 
snre brittle material; and the effect of these qualities upon tone 
mast be taken into account in estimating the tone characters of the 
two types of instrument. 

Broadly speaking, the Uglier-arched type found favour with tbe 
earlier makers op to the end of the Amatt period. Stainer in Urol 
arJ&oed particularly in the direction of this model, which he appears 
10 have de v el o p e d on independent lines, the tradition that he 
karat bis craft from the Amati feeing no longer tenable. The 
fetter model was gradually evolved by Stradivari as he outgrew 
the hnmedtate influence 01 the Amati and developed on his own 
BDHnpaxabte lines a somewhat larger and more powerful instni- 
sktac. nf" p— * to the requirements of the increasing class of solo 



The violins as a distinctive family of instruments cannot, 



be fully discussed without reference to the bow (q.v.) as an 
essentia] adjunct, on account of the very important ■ n9kaw 
part taken by the bow in determining, as already w ' 

mentioned, the peculiar form of the vibrations of the string, 
and in controlling, in the hand of a skilled player, the subtle 
gradations of tone produced from the instrument. The evolu- 
tion of the modern bow has taken place almost entirely since 
tbe violin attained its final form, and has followed, more 
completely perhaps than the instrument itself, tbe develop- 
ment of violin music and the requirements of the player. It 
reached its highest perfection at tbe hands of the celebrated 
Francois Tourte of Paris, about 1780, whose bows have served 
as a model for all succeeding makers, even more exclusively 
than the violins of Stradivari controlled the pattern of later 
instruments; and at the present time Tourte bows art valued 
beyond any others. 

For more than 350 years the violin and its larger brethren 
have held the leading position among musical instruments. 
For them have been written some of the most inspired works 
of the great musicians. Famous composers, such as Tartinl, 
Corelli, Spohr and Viotti have been great violinists, and by 
their compositions, as much as by their talents as virtuosi, 
have largely developed the capacity of the violin as a vehicle 
of profound musical expression. To the listener tbe violin 
speaks with an intensity, a sympathy, and evokes a thrill of 
the senses such as no other instrument can produce. For 
tbe player it seems to respond to every pulse of bis emotions. 

References.— A. VTdal, La Lutherie et Its luthiers (Paris, 1S89); 
G. Hart, The Violin (London, 1875); Hill. Antonio StradtooH 
(London, 1902): Sir W. Huggins, " On the Function of the So*nd» 
Post, &c„ of the Violin, Proc. Royal Society, vol. xxxv. p. 241; 
H Helmhohz, On the Sensations of Tone, &c. (trans, by A. J. Ellis): 
E. H. Barton and G. A. B. Garrett, "Vibration Curves obtained 
from a Monochord Sound Box and String," Philosophical Afar. 
(July 1005); Carl Engel, Musical Instruments (London, 1875); 
A. J. Hipkins Musical Instruments, Historic, Rare and Unique 
(Edinburgh, 1887). (R. W. F. Hi) 

VIOLLET, PAUL MARIE (1840- ), French historian, was 
born at Tours on the 24th of October. 1840* After serving 
his native city as secretary and archivist, be became archivist 
to the national archives in Paris in 1866, and later ubrariftA 
to the faculty of law. In 1800 be was appointed professor of 
civil and canon law at the ecole des chartes. His work mainly 
concerns tbe history of law and institutions, nod on this subject 
he published, two valuable and scholarly book*— Droit public: 
Histoire its institutions politique* et administrative* de Us Franc* 
(1800-08), and Pricto de l' histoire du droit francais <i886). 

V10LLET-LB-DUC. EUG&NE EMMANUEL (1814-1879), 
French architect and writer on archaeology, was bom in Paris 
on tbe sist of January 1814. He was a pupil of AchiUe Leclere, 
and in 1830-37 spent a year studying Greek and Roman 
architecture in Sicily and Rome. His chief interest was, 
however, in the art of the Gothic period, and,' like Sir Gilbert 
Scott in England, he was employed to " restore " some of the 
chief medieval buildings of France, his earliest works being the 
abbey church of VezeJay, various churches at Poissy, St Michel 
at Carcassonne, the church of Semur in Cote-d'Or, and the 
fine Gothic town halls of Saint-Antonm and Narbonne, all 
carried out between 1840 and 185a From 1845 to 1856 be 
was occupied on the restoration of Notre Dame in Paris in 
conjunction with Lassus, 1 and also with that of tbe abbey of 
St Denis. In 1849 he began the restoration of the fortifications 
of Carcassonne and of Amiens cathedral; and in later yean 
be restored Laon cathedral, the chateau of Pierrefonds, and 
many other important buildings. He was an intimate friend of 
Napoleon UL, and during the siege of Paris (1871) gave valuable 
help as an engineer to the beleaguered army. He held many 
important offices, both artistic and political, and was for many 
years inspector-general of the ancient buildings throughout a 
large- part of France, His last work was the general scheme 

1 He published In 1867-60 a fine work showing Ms not very 
successful coloured decoration applied to the chapels of Notre 



io8 



VIOLONCELLO— VIPER 



for the Paris exhibition buildings in 1878. He died on the 
17th of September 1879 *t Lausanne. 

As a designer Viollet-le-Duc occupied only a secondary 
place; but as a writer on medieval architecture and the kindred 
arts he takes the highest rank. His two great dictionaries are 
the standard works in their class, and are most beautifully 
illustrated with very skilful drawings by his own hand. Viollet- 
le-Duc was a man of the most varied and brilliant abilities, 
endowed with a power of work which has seldom been equalled. 
He was at once an artist, a man of science, a learned archaeologist 
and a scholar. The map in his £* Massif du Mont Blanc, showing 
the rock contours and the glaciers of Mont Blanc, is a model of 
its kind, which combines great artistic beauty wi\h the accuracy 
of the most skilful engineer. His strong poetical fancy enabled 
him to reconstruct the life and buildings of the middle ages in 
the most vivid way. 

His principal literary works were the Dictionnaire de r architecture 
frangaue du XI. an XVI. sticl* (1854-68) ; Dictionnaire du mobilier 
francais (1858-75); L' Architecture tmlitaire au moyen dge (1894); 
Entretiens sur I' architecture (1863-72) ; Otis et rutnes americatnes 
(1863); Mhnoire sur la difense de Paris (1871); Habitations 
medernes (1874-77): Histoire d'une maison (1873); Histoire 
efmne farteresse (1874); Histoire de V habitation humaine (1875); 
Le Massif du Mont Blanc (1876); L'Art russe (1877); Histoire dun 
hdtd-de-vtlie et d'une caihUrale (1878); La Decoration appliquie 
aux idifices (1879) ; at well as many minor works dealing with 
separate buildings. 

VIOLONCELLO (Fr. nolencelk, Ger. ViolonceU, ItaL molon- 
cello), the bass member of the violin family. Although the 
word violoncello is a diminutive, signifying "small violone," 
or double bass, the instrument is really a bass violin, formed 
on a different model from the violone, which has the sloping 
shoulders and flat back of the viol family, whereas those of 
the violoncello are rounded as in the violin. The construction 
of the violoncello is therefore the same as that of the violin 
(q.v.) but on a much larger scale. It is either held, on account 
of its size, between the performer's knees, or rests on the floor 
supported on a foot or spike. 

VIOMVILLB, a village of Lorraine, between Metz and the 
French frontier, celebrated as the scene of the battle of Vion- 
ville (Rezonville or Mars-la-Tour), fought on the 16th of August 
1870 between the French and the Germans (see Metz and 
Fbanod-Gekiian Was). 

V10TTI, GIOVANNI BATTUTA (1753*1824). Italian violinist 
and musical composer, was born at Fontanetto in the province 
of Turin on the 23rd of May 1753. He learned the rudiments 
of music from his father, a blacksmith who played the horn; 
and in 1764 Giovannini taught him the violin for a year. 
Two years later be was placed at the cost of the prince de la 
Cut erne under the violinist G. Pugnani at Turin, where he 
became violinist in the court chapel. In 1780 Viotti, having 
already made himself a name, travelled through Germany and 
Poland to Russia, where the empress Catherine honoured him 
with marks of extraordinary favour. • He next appeared in 
London, in company with Pugnani, and at once achieved 
a brilliant and lasting reputation. In 1782 he was equally 
successful in Paris. Two years later he was appointed leader 
of the prince de Soubise's private orchestra; and in 1788 he 
undertook the direction of the opera, raising the perfor- 
mances, with Cherubini's assistance, to a very high level. He 
had also started an Italian opera in co-operation with the 
barber Leonard, which was opened in 1789 in the Tuileries, 
being subsequently amalgamated with the Theatre de la Foire 
St Germain in 1790 and finally merged in the new Theatre 
Feydeau in 1791. In 1791 the Revolution compelled Viotti 
to fly to London, where he took part in the Hanover Square 
concerts; but being suspected to be an agent of the Revolu- 
tionary Committee in" Paris he was compelled to retire for a 
time to the neighbourhood of Hamburg, which he subsequently 
quitted, although the date of his departure, often given as 1795, 
does not stem probable. It is possible that he was already 
in 1794 in London, where he took shares in a wine business, 
and he resided almost uninterruptedly there until 1819, when 



he once more settlep! in Paris, resumed the direction of the 
opera, and retired in 182s with a pension. He died in London 
on the 10th (or 3rd) of March 1824. 

Viotti's playing was distinguished by an extreme purity of style, 
a magnificent tone, and an inexhaustible variety of poetical and 
imaginative expression. Among his works are 29 violin concertos, 
a series of symphonies concertantes for two violins, 45 duos, 18 
trios and 21 quartets, and a great number of sonatas, notturnos 
and other instrumental works. His school was worthily perpetu- 
ated by his pupil Rode. 

VIPER. The vipers constitute a family of Old-World 
poisonous snakes, with a pair of poisonous fangs in the 
maxillary bones, which are short and movable. The main 
anatomical features are described in the article Snakes. In 
the present article only the Viptrinae % namely those without 
an external pit between the eye and the nose, are described. 
Pit vipers, or Crotalinae t are treated under Snakes, and those 
which are possessed of a rattle under Rattlesnake. The 
true vipers comprise about nine genera with some forty species, 
which can be distinguished as follows: — 

Causus in Africa, and Atemiophis feae in Burma, are the only 
vipers which have the head covered with large symmetrical shields, 
while in the other genera the head shields are broken up into small 
shields, or into still more numerous scales. C. rhombeatus, common 
from the Gambia to the Cape. 

Atractaspts, small burrowing snakes in Africa, without post- 
frontal bones. 

Echis and Athens have only one row of subcaudal shields. E. 
carinata, scarcely exceeding 20 in. in length, is very poisonous 
and easily overlooked on account of its fight brown coloration, 
with pale spots and delicate markings on the keels of the scales of 
the back. It is a desert type, having the lateral scales strongly 
keeled and directed downwards, by means of which it shuffle* 
itself into the sand; by folding itself and rubbing the scales together 



~ \ 




Fie. 1.— Echis carinata. The " Krait " of India, 
it produces a rustling sound. It ranges from India, where it is known 
as the " Krait," called " Kuppur ,r in Sind, through North Africa. 
This desert type is replaced farther south in Africa, where vegeta- 
tion flourishes, by the closely allied genus, Athens, which, however. 
possesses a prehensile tail and vivid coloration and has assumed 
truly arboreal habits. 

Cerastes is another desert form, but is restricted to Africa ; the 
arrangement of the scales of the sides of the body is similar to that of 



VIRBIUS 



*©9 



BtMs, but k has two rows of subcaudala. C. cerwiUa, the " horned 
viper " of North Africa, from Algeria to Palestine, has a large homy 
spike above each eye. This, the " Efa " of the Arabs, bones itseff 
in the sand, with only the eyes, nostrils and the horns appearing 
above the surface. It attains a length of i |ft, C. viper* is hornless. 
Bids a. Echidna s. Chtho has two rows of shields on the underside 
of the very short tail; the thick head is much depressed, like the 
body. The nasal shields are separated from the rostral by small 
scales, otherwise much resembling the genus Vipera. B. arietaw, 
the " puff-adder " of nearly the whole of Africa, an ugly, very 
dangerous brute growing to a length of 4 or 5 ft. B. naskornis, 
the west African nose-horned viper, has a pair of erectile scales 
00 the nose. Scarcely smaller and less bulky than the puff-adder 
and just as poisonous, it is yet very handsomely marked with a 
series of large pale, dark-edged spots and oblique crosses on a purplish 
or reddish brown ground. Especially handsome are the young, 
which at birth are as much as t ft. m length. On one occasion 
ooe of these snakes, after giving birth to twenty-one young (which 
bit and tailed mice within five minutes of being born), became very 
ill-tempered, and when two adult males were placed in her cage 
■he bit one with such violence as to break off one of her fangs, 
which she left, about three-quarters of an inch in length, sticking 




Fig. 2.— Athens burloni, (Length, 12 in.) 



in his back. He, however, appeared not to suffer the slightest 
inconvenience, and was never the worse for it (see Proc. Zoot. Soc. 
1871, p. 638). 

Kiseru, — The head Is covered with small scales and a few larger 
■hsilflB The eye is separated from the labials by small scales; 
the nasals are in contact with the rostral shield or separated by one 
Ba^orostraL The scales of the body are strongly keeled ; two rows 
of sabcaudals on the short tail. This genus of about ten species 
«ita smsnerous local varieties ranges over Europe, Asia and the 
e neater part of Africa. 

V. fccnu. the common European viper, ranging from Wales to 
Sachalien Island and from Caithness to the north of Spain, from 
the n o r th ern boundary of Persia to beyond the Arctic circle in 
Scandinavia. It inhabits all sorts of situations, but prefers heaths. 
swors and mixed woods with sunny slopes. It ascends the Alps 
np to 6000 or 7000 ft. The coloration is very variable, grey, brown, 
reddish or entirely black specimens occurring in the same country. 
The much-spoke n-of black zigzag line along the back is so often 
*, that it ' «.--... - - — 



I cannot be relied upon as a safe character. The 
faiVgrown males are smaller than the females, and have usually 
darker markings and a lighter ground colour. A specimen which is 
3 ft. long is rare, and is invariably a female. The chief food is mice, 

xxvrn 3 



which are banted after sunset. They cannot climb and they avoid 
going into water. The pairing takes place from March to May 



^**^S 




Fig. 3. — Bilis nasicornis. 

and the young arc born about four months later. During the 
pairing, and for hibernation, they often collect in considerable 
numbers. Whilst most snakes readily take proper food in cap- 
tivity, these vipers prefer starving themselves to death, a feat which 
they accomplish within six to nine months according to conditions. 
As a rule their bite is not fatal to man, but the consequences are 
often serious and protracted. For treatment see Snakes. 

V. aspis is the more southern and western continental European 
viper; it is slightly snub-nosed, and this feature is still more pro- 
nounced in v. laiaslei of Spain and Portugal. In V. ammodyUs 
of south-eastern Europe the raised portion is produced into a soft, 
scaly appendage. 

V. russelli, the " Daboia," is one of the most poisonous snakes of 
India, Ceylon, Java, Burma and Siaro. It is pale brown with three 
longitudinal series of black, light-edged rings which sometimes 
encircle reddish spots. It grows to a length of about 5 ft. 

(H.F.G.) 

VIRBIUS, an old Italian divinity, associated with the worship 
of Diana at Aricia (see Diana). Under Greek influence, he was 
identified witb Hippolytus (q.v.), who after be had been trampled 
to death by the horses of Poseidon was restored to life by 
Asclepius and removed by Artemis to the grove at Aricia, which 
horses were not allowed to enter. Virbius was the oldest priest 
of Diana, the first " king of the grove " {Rex Ncmorensis). .He 
is said to have established the rule that any candidate for the 
office should meet and slay in single combat its bolder at the 
time, who always went about armed with a drawn sword in 
anticipation of the struggle. Candidates had further to be 
fugitives (probably slaves), and as a preliminary bad to break off 
a bough from a specified tree. By the eponymous nymph 
Aricia, Virbius had a son of the same name, who fought on the 
side of the Rutulian Turnus against Aeneas. J. G. Frazer 
formerly held Virbius to be a wood and tree spirit, to whom 
horses, in which form tree spirits were often represented, were 
offered in sacrifice. His identification with Hippolytus and the 
manner of the lattcr's death would explain the exclusion of horses 
from his grove. This spirit might easily be confounded with the 
sun, whose power was supposed to be stored up in the warmth- 
giving tree. Sauer (in Roschcr's Lexikon) also identifies 

2a 



112 



VIRGIL 



driven from his farm. By the influence of his po w e rfu l friends, 
end by personal application to the young Octavian, Virgil 
obtained the restitution of his land. In the meantime he had 
taken his father and family with him to the small country house 
of his old teacher Siron {CatakpUm x.). 

Soon afterwards we hear of him living in Rome, enjoying, 
in addition to the patronage of PolKo, the favour of Maecenas, 
intimate with Varius, who was at first regarded as the rising 
poet of the new era, and later on with Horace. His friendship 
with Gallus, for whom he indicates a warmer affection and more 
enthusiastic admiration than for any one else, was formed 
before his second residence in Rome, in the Cisalpine province, 
with which Gallus also was connected both by birth and office. 
The pastoral poems, or * eclogues," commenced in his native 
district, were finished and published in Rome, probably in 
37 B.C. Soon afterwards he withdrew from habitual residence 
in Rome, and lived chiefly in Campania, either at Naples or in 
the neighbourhood of Nola. He was one of the companions of 
Horace in the famous journey to Brundisium; and it seems 
not unlikely that, some time before 33 B.C., he made the voyage 
to Athens which forms the subject of the third ode of the first 
book of the Odes of Horace. 

The seven years from 37 to 30 B.C. were devoted to the com- 
position of the Georgia. In the following year he read the 
poem to Augustus, on his return from Asia. The remaining 
years of his life were spent on the composition of the Aeneid. In 
10 B.C., after the Aeneid was finished but not finally corrected, 
he set out for Athens, intending to pass three years in Greece 
and Asia and to devote that time to perfecting the poem. At 
Athens he met Augustus, and was persuaded by him to return 
with him to Italy. While visiting Megara under a burning sun, 
he was seized with illness, and, as he continued his voyage 
without interruption, be grew rapidly worse, and died on the 
31st of September, in his fifty-first year, a few days after landing 
at Brundisium. In his last illness he called for the cases con- 
taining his manuscripts, with the intention of burning the 
Aeneid. He had previously left directions in his will that his 
literary executors, Varius and Tucca, should publish nothing of 
his which had not already been given to the world by himself. 
This pathetic desire that the work to which he had given so 
much care, and of which such great expectations were formed, 
should not survive him has been used as an argument to prove 
his own dissatisfaction with the poem. A passage from a letter 
of his to Augustus is also quoted, in which he speaks as if he felt 
that the undertaking of the work had been a mistake. This 
dissatisfaction with his work may be ascribed to his passion for 
perfection of workmanship, which death prevented him from 
attaining. The command of Augustus overrode the poet's wish 
and rescued the poem. 

Virgil was buried at Naples, where his tomb was long regarded 
with religious veneration. Horace is our most direct witness of 
the affection which he inspired among his contemporaries. The 
qualities by which he gained their love were, according to his 
testimony, candor— sincerity of nature and goodness of heart 
— and pittas— the union of deep affection for kindred, friends 
and country with a spirit of reverence. The statement of bis 
biographer, that he was known in Naples by the name " Par- 
thenias," is a testimony to the exceptional purity of his life in 
an age of licence. The seclusion of his life and his devotion to 
his art touched the imagination of his countrymen as the finer 
qualities of his nature touched the heart of his friends. It had 
been, from the time of Cicero, 1 the ambition of the men of finest 
culture and most original genius in Rome to produce a national 
literature which might rival that of Greece; and the feeling 
that at last a poem was about to appear which would equal 

1 Cf. Tusc Disp. ii. a: " Quatnobrem hortor omnes qui facere id 
ut brim quoque generis laudem jam langucnti Graedae 
* Ac. These words apply specially to philosophical litera- 
~*"~T passages m the same and in other works imply that 
k that the Romans had equal aptitude* for other de- 
S^aratnre; and the practice of the Augustan poets 
; to himself a special province of Greek literary 
the same ambition. 




or surpass the greatest among all the works of Greek genius) 
found a voice in the lines of Propertius — 

" Cedite Roman! scriptores, cedile Graii; 
Neacio quid majus nascitur lliade." 

The feeling of his countrymen and contemporaries seems 
justified by the personal impression which he produces on 
modern readers— an impression of sanctity, as of one who 
habitually lived in a higher and serener sphere than that of this 
world. The veneration in which his name was held during the 
long interval between the overthrow of Western civilization 
and the revival of letters affords testimony of the depth of the 
impression which he made on the heart and imagination of 
the ancient world. The traditional belief in his pre-eminence 
has been on the whole sustained, though not with absolute una- 
nimity, in modern times. By the scholars and men of letters 
of the 16th, 17th and 18th centuries it was never seriously 
questioned. During the first half of the 19th century his right 
to be ranked among the great poets of the world was disputed 
by some German and English critics. 

The* effect of this was a juster estimate of Virgil's relative 
position among the poets of the world. It may still be a matter 
of individual opinion whether Lucretius himself was not a more 
powerful and original poetical force, whether he does not speak 
more directly to the heart and imagination of our own time. 
But it can hardly be questioned, on a survey of Roman litera- 
ture, as a continuous expression of the national mini), from the 
age of Naevius to the age of Claudian, that the position of Virgil 
is central and commanding, while that of Lucretius is in a great 
measure isolated. If we could imagine the place of Virgil in 
Roman literature vacant, it would be much the same as if 
we imagined the place of Dante. vacant in modern Italian, and 
that of Goethe in German literature. The serious efforts of the 
early Roman literature— the efforts of the older epic and tragic 
poetry— found their fulfilment in him. The revelation of the 
power and life of Nature, first made to Lucretius, was able to 
charm the Roman mind, only after it had passed into the mind 
of Virgil. 

Virgil is the only complete representative of the deepest senti- 
ment and highest mood of his countrymen and of his time. In 
his pastoral and didactic poems he gives a living voice to the 
whole charm of Italy, in the Aeneid to the whole glory of Rome. 
He was in the maturity of his powers at the most critical epoch 
of the national life, one of the most critical epochs in the history 
of the world. Keeping aloof from the trivial daily life of his con- 
temporaries, he was moved more profoundly than any of them 
by the deeper currents of emotion in the sphere of government, 
religion, morals and human feeling which were then changing the 
world; and in uttering the enthusiasm of the hour, and alt the 
new sensibilities that were stirring in his own heart and Imagina- 
tion, he had, in the words of Sainte-Beuve, " divined at a decisive 
hour of the world what the future would love." He was also by 
universal acknowledgment the greatest literary artist whom 
Rome produced. Virgil bad a more catholic sympathy with 
the whole range of Greek poetry, from Homer and Hesiod to 
Theocritus and the Alexandrians, than any one else at any 
period of Roman literature. The effort of the preceding genera- 
tion to.attain to beauty of form and finish of artistic execution 
found in him, at the most susceptible period of his life, a ready 
recipient of its influence. The rude diakct of Latium had been 
moulded into a powerful and harmonious organ of literary 
expression by a long series of orators; the Latin hexameter, 
first shaped by Ennius to meet the wants of bis own spirit and 
of his high argument, bad been smoothed and polished by 
Lucretius, and still more perfected by the finer ear and more 
careful industry of Catullus and his circle; but neither had 
yet attained their final development. It was left for Virgil to 
bring both diction and rhythm to as high a pitch of artistic 
perfection as has been attained in any literature. This great 
work was accomplished by the steady devotion of his genius to 
his appointed task. For the first half of bis life he prepared 
himself to be the poet of bis time and country with a high 
ambition and unresting industry. Tht second half of his career 



VIRGIL 



"3 



was a religious consecration of all his powers of heart, mind 
and spin! to his high office. 

Virgil's fame as a poet rests on the three acknowledged works of 
his early and mature manhood — the pastoral poems or Eclogues, the 
Georgics and the Aeneid— all written in that hexameter verse which 
Tennyson has called 

" The stateliest measure ever moulded by the fips of man." 

The pastoral poems or Eclogue*—* word denoting short selected 
(ere com p osed between the years 42 and vj B.C., when 
Virgil was between the age of twenty-eight and thirty- 
three. By his invocation to the " Sicelides Musac " and 
** Arethusa," and by many other indications, he avows the purpose 
of efaoting from the strong Latin language the melody which the 
" ^-jk*" shepherd " drew out of the " Doric reed," and of expressing 
that tender feeling for the beauty of Italian scenes which Theocritus 
had express ed for the beauty of Sicily. 

The earliest poems in the series were the second, third and fifth; 
and these, alongwith the seventh, are the most purely Theocritean 
in character. The first and ninth, which probably were next in 
order, are much more Italian in sentiment, are much more an 
e xp re ss ion of the poet's own feelings, and have a much more direct 
ni t icncc both to his own circumstances and the circumstances of 
the time. The first is a true poetical reflex of the distress and 
coafinsoa which arose out of the new distribution of lands, and 
blends the poet's own deep love of his home, and of the sights 
and sounds familiar to him from childhood, with his Italian suscepti- 
bility to the beauty of nature. The ninth is immediately connected 
ss subject with the first. It contains the lines which seem accurately 
to describe the site of Virgil's farm, at the point where the range of 
kflb which accompany the river for some distance from the foot of 
the Lago di Garda sinks into the plain about 14 or 15 m. above 
Mantua. The sixth b addressed to Varus, who succeeded Folho as 
governor of the Cisalpine district. Its theme is the creation of the 
world (according to the Epicurean cosmogony), and the oldest talcs 
of mythology. 1 The fourth and eighth are both closely associated 
with the name of Virgil's earliest protector, Poltio. The fourth 
celebrates the consulship of his patron in 40 B.C., and also the 
pro sp e cti ve birth of a child, though it was disputed in antiquity, 
and still in disputed, who was meant by this child whose birth was 
10 be coincident with the advent of the new era, and who. after 
filfiag the other great offices of state, was to " rule with his lather's 
virtues the world at peace."* The main purpose of the poem, 
however, is to express the longing of the world for a new era of peace 
and happiness, of which the treaty of Brundisium seemed to hold out 
souk definite hopes. There is no trace in this poem of Theocritean 
bttoence. The ideas are derived partly from Creek representations 
of the Golden Age. end partly, it is supposed, from the later 
Sibythae prophecies, circulated after the burning in the time of Sulla 
of the old Sibylline books, and possibly tinged with Jewish ideas. 
Some of the phraseology of the poem led to a belief in the early 
Christian church that Virgil had been an unconscious instrument of 
inspired prophecy. The date of the eighth is fixed by a reference to 
the campaign of Pollio against the Dalmatians in 39 B.C. It is 
(minded on the +appax«vrpl« of Theocritus, but brings before us, 
with Italian associations, two love talcs of homely Italian life. The 
tenth reproduces the Daphnis of Theocritus, and is a dirge over 
the unhappy love of Gallus and Lycoris. As in the other poems, the 
second ana eighth, of which love is the burden, it is to the romantic 
and f antastic melancholy which the passion assumes in certain 
natures that Virgil gives a voice. 

There is no important work in Latin literature, with the exception 
of the comedy of Terence, so imitative as the Eclogues. But they 
are not, like the comedies of Terence, purely exotic as well as 
imitative. They are rather composite, partly Greek and partly 
Italian, and, as a vehicle for the expression of feeling, hold an 
mdenned place between the objectivity of the Greek idyll and the 
subjectivity of the Latin elegy. For the most part, they express 
the sentiment inspired by the beauty of the world, and the kindred 
Ktttknent inspired by the charm of human relationships. Virgil's 
susceptibility to the beauty of nature appears in the truth with which 
his work suggests the charm of Italy— the fresh life of an Italian 
spring, the dentate hues of the wild flowers and the quiet beauty of 
the pastures and orchards of his native district. The representative 
character of the poems is enhanced by the fidelity and grace with 
which he has expressed the Italian peasant's love of his home and of 
aD things associated with it. The supreme charm of the diction and 
rhythm is universally recognized. The power of varied harmony is 
ss conspicuous in Virgil's earliestpoems as in the maturer and more 
elaborate workmanship of the Georiics and Aeneid. The Italian 
language, without sacrifice of the fulness, strength and majesty of 
h.» tones, acquired a more tender grace and more liquid flow from 



_ ._ — , acquired a more tender grace 

the gift— the raoUe atque facetum — which the Muses of country 



toe 



on VirgU. 



1 la the Georgics also Virgil attempts to combine science with the 
poetic fancies which filled its place in older times. 

•See VirgiTs Messianic Eclogue: Its Meaning, Occasion and 
Sources, three studies by J B. Mayor, W. Warde Fowler and 
R. S. Conway (1907)* 



But these Muses had a more serious and dignified function to 
fulfil than that of glorifying the picturesque pastime, the '* otia dia," 
of rural life. The Italian imagination formed an ideal of aoonks. 
the happiness of a country life nobler than that of passive % ™ MV *— 
susceptibility to the sights and sounds of the outward world. It is 
stated that Maecenas, acting on the principle of employing the poets 
of the time in favour of the conservative and restorative policy of 
the new government, directed the genius of Virgil to the subject of 
the Georgics. No object could be of more consequence in the eyes 
of a statesman whose master inherited the policy of the popular 
leaders than the revival of the great national industry, associated 
with happier memories of Rome, which had fallen into abeyance 
owing to the long unsettleraent of the revolutionary era as well as 
to other causes. Virgil's previous life and associations made it 
natural for him to identify himself with this object, while his genius 
fitted him to enlist the imagination of his countrymen in its favour. 
It would be a roost inadequate view of his purpose to suppose that, 
like the Alexandrian poets or the didactic poets of modern times, 
he desired merely to make useful information more attractive by the 
aid of verse. His aim was rather to describe with realistic fidelity, 
and to surround with an atmosphere of poetry, the annual round of 
labour in which the Italian yeoman's life was passed; to bring out 
the intimate relation with nature into which man was brought in the 
course of that life, and to suggest the delight to heart and imagination 
which he drew from it; to contrast the simplicity, security and 
sanctity of such a life with the luxury and lawless passions of the 
great world; and to associate the ideal of a life of rustic labour 
with the beauties of Italy and the glories of Rome. This larger 
conception of the dignity of his subject separates the didactic poem 
of Virgil from all other didactic, as distinct from philosophic, poems. 
He has produced in the Georgics a new type of didactic, as in the 
Aeneid he has produced a new type of epic, poetry. 

The subject is treated in four books, varying in length from 514 to 
566 lines. The first treats of the tillage of the fields, of the constella- 
tions, the rise and setting of which form the farmer's calendar, and 
of the signs of the weather, on which the success of his labours 
largely depends. The second treats of trees, and especially of the 
vine and olive, two great staples of the national wealth and industry 
of Italy; the third of the rearing of herds and flocks and the breeding 
of horses; the fourth of bees. 

As he had found in Theocritus a model for the form in which 
his idler fancies were expre ss ed, he turned to an older page in 
Greek literature for the outline of the form in which his graver 
interest in rural affairs was to find its outlet. The Works and 
Days of Hesiod could not supply an adequate mould for the 
systematic treatment of all the processes of rural industry, and still 
less for the treatment of the larger ideas to which this was sub- 
sidiary, yet that Virgil considered him as his prototype is shown by 
the line which concludes one of the cardinal episodes of the poem — 

" Ascraeumquc cano Romana per oppkla carmen." 
Virgil accepts also the guidance of the Alexandrian poets who 
treated the science of their day— astronomy, natural history 
and geography — in the metre and diction of epic poetry. But, in 
availing himself of the work of the Alexandrians, Virgil is like a 
great master making use of mechanical assistants. A more power- 
ful influence on the form, ideas, sentiment and diction of the 
Georgics was exercised by the great philosophical poem of Lucretius, 
of which Virgil had probably been a diligent student since the 
time of its first appearance, and with which his mind was saturated 
when he was engaged in the composition of the Georgics. Virgil is 
at once attracted and repelled by the genius and attitude of the 
philosophic poet. He is possessed by his imaginative conception 
f n *».. m — a Hving, all-pervading power; he shares his Italian love 
of the beauty 1 f the world, and his sympathy with animal as well 
as human life. He recognizes with enthusiasm his contemplative 
elevation above the petty interests and passions of life. But he 
is repelled by his apparent separation from the ordinary beliefs, 
ho of his fellow-men Virgil is in thorough sympathy 

wfch EfkS bfcsJ restorative tendencies— reUgknis, social and national 
—of tm time; Lucretius was driven into isolation by the anarchic 
and dissolving forces of his. 

So i tr as any speculative idea underlying the details of the 
Georgia curt tkf detected, it is one of which the source can be. traced 
to Lurn-t"j4,— >be idea of the struggle of human force with the 
forr~» of nature. In Virgil this idea is modified by Italian piety 

atul bv the J ian delight in the results of labour. In the general 

plan of the poem Virgil follows the guidance of Lucretius rather than 
that of any Greek model. The distinction between a poem addressed 
to national and one addressed to philosophical sympathies is marked 
by the prominence assigned in the one poem to Caesar as the 
supreme personality of the age, in the other to Epicurus as the 
supreme master in the realms of mind. The invocation to the 
•' Di agrestes," to the old gods of mythology and art, to the frying 
Caesar as the latest power added to the pagan Pantheon, is both 
a parallel and a contrast to the invocation to the all-pervading 
fxinciple of life, personified as " Alma Venus." In the systematic 
treatment of his materials, and the tnterspersioo of episodes dealing 
with the deeper poetical and human interest of the subject. Virgil 
adheres to the practice of the older poet. He uses his connecting 



I 



«♦ 



VIRGIL 



finks and formula* auca aa "prindpJo/* M none age." Ac* but 
uses them more sparingly, so as to make the logical mechanism 
of the poem less rigid, while he still keeps op the liveliness of 
a personal address. Ml his topics admit of being vitalized by 
attributing to natural proce s ses the vivacity of human relationships 
and sensibility, and by association with the joy which the ideal 
fanner. feels in the results of his energy. Much of the argument of 
Lucretius, on the other hand, is aa remote from the genial presc 
of nature as from human associations. Virgil makes a mi 
use than Lucretius of ornament borrowed I rom older 

science and mythology. There b uniformity of chaster* 

in the diction and versification of the Georgia, contrasting with the 
imaginative force of isolated expressions and the majesty of isolated 
lines and passages in Lucretius. The " vivida vis ' of imagination 
is more apparent in the older poet; the artistic perfection of Virgil 
is even more conspicuous in the Georgia than in the Eclogues or the 



The principal episodes of the poem, in which the true dignity 
and human interest of the subject are brought out, occur in the 
first and second books. Other shorter episodes add variety to the 
different books. These episodes are mot detached or isolated 
ornaments, but give a higher unity to the poem, and are the main 
ground of its permanent hold upon the world. There is indeed one 
marked exception to this rule. The long episode with which the 
whole poem ends— the tale of the shepherd Aristacus. with which 
is connected the more poetical fable of Orpheus and Eurydice — 
has only the slightest connexion with the general ideas ana senti- 
ment of the poem. It is altogether at variance with the truthful 
realism and the Italian feeling which pervade it. But we are 
distinctly told that the original conclusion had contained the 
praises of Gallus, the friend of Virgil's youth, who, about the time 
when Virgil was finishing the poem, had gained distinction in the 
war against Cleopatra, and had m consequence been made the 
first governor of the new province of Egypt. Such a conclusion 
might well have been in keeping with the mam purpose of the poem. 

After the fall of Gallus, owing to his. ambitious failure in his 
Egyptian administration, and his death in 26 B.C., the poet, accord- 
ing to the story, in obedience to the command of the emperor, 
substituted for this encomium the beautiful but irrelevant fable of 



Orpheus and Eurydice, in which he first displayed the narrative 
skill, the pathos and the magical power of making the mystery of 
the unseen world present to the imagination which characterize the 



The cardinal episodes of the poem, as it now stands, are the 
passages in bk. i. from line 464 to the end, and in bk. ii. from 136 
to 170 and from 475 to 512. The first, introduced in connexion 
with the signs of the weather, recounts the omens which accom- 

Gnied the death of Julius Caesar, and shows how the misery of 
ily and the neglected state of the fields are the punishment for 
the great sin of the previous generation. In the second of these 
passages the true keynote of the poem is struck in the invocation 
to Italy— 

M Salve, magna parens frugum, Satunua teflus. 
Magna vuum." 
The thought of the beauties of the land, of the abundance and 
variety oiks products, of its ancient cities and mighty works of 
man, its brave and hardy races, the great men who had fought 
for her in old times, and of him, the greatest among her sons, who 
was then defending Rome against her enemies in the farthest East, 
inspires the poet, and gives dignity to the trivial details of farm 
life But a still higher and more catholic interest b given to the 
subject in the greatest of the episodes— the moat perfect passage in 
all Latin poetry — that from line 458, " O fortunatos nimium. to 
the end. The subject b there gunned by its connexion not only 
with the national well-being but with the highest life and purest 
happiness of man. The old delight in the labours of the field 
blends with the new delight in the beauty of nature, and b associated 
with that purity and happiness of family life which was aa Italian 
ideal, and with the poetry of those religious beliefs and observances 
which imparted a sense of security, a constantly recurring charm, 
and a bond of social sympathy to the old rustic fife. 

The G er t ies is not only the most perfect; but the most native 
of all the works of the ancient Italian genius. Even where he borrows 
from Creek originals, Virgil makes the Greek mind tributary to hia 
national design. The G ei r g i cs , the poem of the land, b aa easeu- 
tbJly Italian as the Odyssey, the poem of the sea, b essentially Greek. 
Nature as presented to us as she b revealed in the soft hrnirianrw 
of Italian landscape, not in the clearly denned forma of Greek 
scenery. The poem shown the Italian susceptibility to the beauty 
of the outward world, the dignity and sobriety of the Italian 
imsgjaatirsn, the firm and enduring structure of all Roman work- 
■nunahipt while it is essentially Itafiaa in its religious and ethical 

the 

the 

when it first 



work which yet remained for Virgil to aotompfish 
Roman epic to literature. Tab had 1 



Tka work which \ 
ads&nofacreat 

^tsssfe ffTlf t 



effort of the national 



the mere imitative reproduction of Greek 
rich had given the truest express 



ca wnica naa given toe truest e apwanwm 
before the time of Virgil had beenthe Amm 



of Enaius. This had been s u pp l e men ted by various historical 
poems but had never been superseded. It satisfied the national 
imagination as an e xpr e ssi on of the national life in its vigorous 
prime, but it could not satisfy the newly developed sense of art; and 
the expansion of the national life since the days of Ennios, and the 
changed conditions into which it passed after the battle of Aetium, 
demanded a newer and ampler expression. It bad been Virgil's 
earliest ambition to write aa heroic poem on the traditions of 
Alba Longa; and he had been repeatedly urged by Augustus to 
celebrate his exploits. The problem before bun was to co m pose a 
work of art on a large scale, which should represent a great action 
of tbe heroic age, and should at the same time embody the most 
vital ideas and sentiment of the hour— whkh in substance should 
glorify Rome and the present ruler of Rome, while in form it should 
follow closely the great modeb of epic poetry and reproduce all 
their sources of interest. It was hb ambition to be the Homer, aa 
be had been the Theocritus and Hesiod, of hb country. 

Various objects had thus to be combined in a work of art on the 
model of the Greek epic: the revival of interest in the heroic fore- 
time; the satisfaction of national sentiment; the expression of the 
deeper currents of emotion of tbe age; tbe personal celebration 
of Augustus. A new type of epic poetry had to be created. It 
was desirable to select a single heroic action which should belong 
to the cycle of legendary events celebrated in the Homeric poems, 
and which could be associated with Rome. The only subject which 
in aay way satisfied these conditions was that of tbe wanderings 
of Aeneas and of hb final settlement in Latium. The story, though 
not of Roman origin but of a composite growth, had long I 



senate and people. The subject enabled Virgil to tell again of the 
fall of Troy, and to weave a tale of sea-adventure similar to that 
of the wanderings of Odysseus. It was also recommended by the 
claim which the Julii, a patrician family of Alban origin, made to 
descent from lulus, the supposed son of Aeneas and founder of 
Alba Longa. 

The Aeneid b thus at once the epic of the national life under ita 
new conditions and an epic of human character. Tbe true keynote 
of the poem b struck in the line with which the proem clos es ■ 

" Tantae mobs erat Romanam oondere gentem." 
The idea which underlies the whole action of the poem b that of 
the great part played by Rome in the history of tbe world, that 
part being from of old determined by divine decree, and carried out 
through the virtue of her sons. The idea of universal empire in 
thus the dominant idea of the poem. With thb idea that of the 
unbroken continuity of the national life b intimately associated. 
The reverence for old customs and for the traditions of the past 
was a large element in the national sentiment, and has a prominent 
place in the Aeneid. So too has the feeling of local attachment 
and of the power of local association over the imagination. The 
poem b also characteristically Roman in the religious belief and 
observances which it embodies. Behind all the conventional 
machinery of the old Olympic gods there b the Roman apprehension 
of a great inscrutable power, manifesting itself by arbitrary signs, 
exacting jealously certain observances, working out ita own secret 
purposes through the agency of Roman arms and Roman counsels. 

The poem b thus a religious as well as a national epic, and this 
explains the large part played in the development of the action 
by special revelation, omens, prophecies, ceremonial usages and 
prayer. But, while the predominant rengious idea of the poem 
is that of a divine p u rpose carried out regardlessly of human feeling, 
in other parts of tbe poem, and especially in that passage of the 
sixth book in wf "*"""**" * 
on individual c 
spiritual <[ "... ... 

their actions. 

Tbe idealization of Augustus b no ex p re ssion of servile adulation. 
It b through the prominence assigned to him that the poem b truly 
representative of the critical epoch in human affairs at which it waa 
written. The cardinal fact of that epoch was the substitution of 
r *W» "s J rule for the rule of the old commonwealth over the Roman 
world. Virgil shows the imaginative signific a nce of that fact by 
revealing the em p eror as chosen from ofoU m the counscb of the 
supreme ruler of the world to fulfil tbe national destiny, as the 
descendant of gods and of heroes of old poetic renown; as one, 
moreover, who, in the actual work done by him, as victor in a great 
decisive battle bet wee n the forces of the Western and the Eastern 
world, as the organiser of empire and restorer of peace, order and 
religion, had rendered better service to mankind than any one of 
the heroes who in an older time had been raised for their great 
deeds to the company of the Kod*. 

Virgil's true and yet ktanzing interpretation of the imperial 
idea of Rome b the basis of the greatness of the Aeneid as a repre- 
sentative poem. It b on thb representative character and on the 
excellence of lei artistic execution that the claim of the Aeneid to 
rank aa one of the great poema_of the world mainly rests. The 



inferiority of the poem to the Iliad and the Odyssey as a direct 
representation of human life b so unquestionable that we are in 
danger of underrating the real though secondary interest which the 
poem posMisti as aa imitative epic of human action, manner* 



VIRGIL 



"5 



and character. In the wit place, it should be remarked that the 
actioa is chosen not only as suited to embody the idea of Rome, 
bat as having a peculiar nobleness and dignity of its own. It 
brings before us the spectacle of the destruction of the city of greatest 
name in poetry or legend, of the foundation of the imperiaTcity of 
the western seas, in which Rome had encountered her most powerful 
antagonist in her long struggle for supremacy, and that of the first 
rode se tt leme n t on the hills of Rome itsdf. The scenes through 
wfcicb the action is carried are familiar, yet full of great memories 
and associations— Troy and its neighbourhood, the seas and islands 
of Greece, the coasts of Epirus, familiar to all travellers between 
Italy and the East, Sicily, the site of Carthage, Campania, Latium, 
the Tiber, and all the country within sight of Rome. The personages 
of the action are prominent in poetry and legend, or by their 
ethnical names stir the sen ti men t of national enthusiasm— Aeneas 
and Anchises, Dido, Acestes, Evander, Turnus. The spheres of 
activity in which they are engaged are war and sea-adventure. The 
on of love is a powerful addition to the older sources of Interest. 
Aeneid revives, by a conventional compromise between the 
and the remote past, some image of the old romance of 

it creates the romance of "that Italy for which Camilla 

the virgin, Euryalus, and Turnus and Nisus died of wounds." 
It might be said of the manner of life represented in the Aeneid, 
that ft is no more true to any actual condition of human society 
than that represented in the Eclogues. But may not the same be 
■aid of all idealizing restoration of a remote past in an age of advanced 
civilization? The life represented in the Oedipus Tyrannus or in 
King Lear is not the life of the Periclean nor of the Elizabethan 
age. nor is it conceivable as the real life of a prehistoric age. The 
truth of such a representation is to be judged, not by its relation 
to any actual state of things ever realized in the world, but by its 
rdatton to an ideal of the imagination — the idea! conception of 
how man, endowed with the gifts and graces of a civilized time, 
bat yet not without the buoyancy of a more primitive age, might 
play his part under circumstances which would afford scope for 
the passions and activities of a vigorous personality, and for the 
rrtined emotions and subtle reflection of an era of high intellectual 
and moral cultivation. The verdict of most readers of the Aeneid 
will be that Virgil does not satisfy this condition as it is satisfied 
by Sophocles and Shakespeare. Yet there is a courtesy, dignity 
sad consideration for the feelings of others in the manners of his 
chief personages, such as might be exhibited by the noblest in an age 
cf chivalry and in an age of culture. The charm of primitive 
aunplkiry is present in some passages of the Aeneid, the spell of 
luxurious pomp in others. The delight of voyaging past beautiful 
ssaads is enhanced by the suggestion of the adventurous spirit which 
seat the first explorers abroad. Where Virgil is least real, and most 
purely imitative, is in the battle-scenes of the later books. They 
tfiord scope, however, to his patriotic desire to do justice to the 
martial energy of the Italian races; and some of them have a 
peculiar beauty from the pathos with which the deaths of some 
of the heroes are de scr i bed. 

But the adverse criticisms of the Aeneid are chiefly based on 
VsnpTs supposed failure in the crucial test of the creation of char- 
acter. Ana his chief failure is pronounced to be the "pious 
Aeneas." Is Aeneas a worthy and interesting hero of a great poem 
of action? Not. certainly, according to the ideals realized in Achilles 
and Odysseus, nor according to the modern ideal of heroism. Virgil 
vishes to bold up in Aeneas an ideal of pious obedience and per- 
sistent p ur p ose a religious ideal belonging to the ages of faith 
combined with the humane and self-sacrificing qualities belonging 
to an era of moral enlightenment. His own sympathy is with his 
sefigious idea] rather than with that of chivalrous romance. Yet 
*±~, there was in his own imagination a chord responsive to the 
chrralroas emotion of a later time* is seen in the love and pathos 
vhicn be has thrown into Ins delineations of Pallas, Lausus and 
dlaw But he feh that the deepest need of his time was not 
ary glory, but peace, reconciliation, the restoration of law, 
■*■** ana piety. ..... M . « 

la Dido Roman poetry has added to the great gallery of men and 
women, created by the imaginative art of different times and peoples, 
the ideal of a true queen and a true woman. On the episode of 
wfckh she ia the heroine the most passionate human interest is 
It has been objected that Virgil doss not really 



t*Tnnatbsse with his own creation, that he gives his approval to 
t>e cold desertion of her by Aeneas. But if Tie does not condemn 
*t s hero, he sees in the desertion and death of Dido a great tragic 
wsat in which a noHe and generous nature is sacrificed to the larger 
purpose of the gods. But that Virgil really sympathized with the 
niMiH of ms imagination appears, not only in the sympathy which 
ibe sxifil inspires, but in the part which he assigns to her in that 
shadowy realm— 

" Conjunx obi pristmut AH 
Respondet curls, aequatque Sycheeus airmen*." 
Eve* those who have been insensible to the i spu seii utiva and 
tt» tan hssnan interest of the Aeneid have generally recognized the 
artistic inillusi of the poem. This is conspicuous both in the 
conception of the action and the arrangement of its successive 
sinii il ia the workmanship of details. Each of the first eight 



large and distinct sphere of interest, and they each 
the impression of the work as a whole. In the first 
\ the storm, the prophecy of love and the building of 



books has a large and distinct i 
contribute to the impression of 1 

book we have the storm, the prophecy of love and the building c_ 
Carthage; in the second the destruction of Troy: in the third the 
voyage among the islands and coasts of the Mediterranean; in the 
fourth the tragedy of Dido: in the fifth the rest in the Sicilian bay, 
at the foot of Mount Eryx ; in the sixth the revelation of the spiritual 
world of Virgil's imagination, and of the souls of those who built 
up the greatness of Rome in their pre-existent state; in the seventh 
the arrival of the Trojans at the mouth of the Tiber and the gathering 
of the Italian clans; in the eighth the first sight of the hills of Rome, 
and the prophetic representation of the great crises in Roman history, 
leading up to the greatest of them all, the crowning victory of 
Actium. Among these books we may infer that Virgil assigned 
the palm to the second, the fourth and the sixth, as he selected 
them to read to Augustus and the imperial family. The interest 
is generally thought to flag in the last four books: nor is it passible 
to feel that culminating sympathy with the final combat between 
Turnus and Aeneas that we feel with the combat b etw e en Hector 
and Achilles. Yet a personal interest is awakened in the ad- 
ventures and fate of Pallas. Lausus and Camilla. Virgil may himself 
have become weary of the succession of battle-scenes—" eadem 
horrida bella "—which the requirements of epic poetry called upon 
him to portray. There is not only a less varied interest, there is 
greater inequality of workmanship in the later books, owing to 
the fact that they had not received their author's final revisal. 
Ycf in them there are many lines and passages of great power, 
pathos and beauty. Virgil brought the two great instruments 
of varied and continuous harmony and of a rich, chastened and 
noble style to the highest perfection of which the Latin tongue was 
capable. The rhythm and style of the Aeneid is more unequal 
than the rhythm and style of the Georgics, but is a larger and more 
varied instrument. The note of his supremacy among all the poetic 



artists of his country is that subtle fusion of the music and the 
meaning of language which touches the deepest and most secret 
springs of emotion, tie touches especially the emotions of reverence 
and of yearning for a higher spiritual life, and the sense of noble- 
ness in human affairs, in great institutions, and great natures; the 
sense of the sanctity of human affections, of the imaginative spell 
exercised by the past, of the mystery of the unseen world. This is 
the secret of the power which his words have had over some of the 
deepest and greatest natures in all ages. (W.Y.S.; T.R.C.) 

Bibliography 

Appendix Vergiliona.— Under this collective name there are 
current several poems of some little length and some groups of 
shorter pieces, all attributed to Virgil in antiquity. Virgil wrote a 
Culex, but not the Culex now extant, though it passed lor his half 
a century after his death. The Aetna, the Oris and the Copa are 
clearly not Virgil's. The Moretum b said to have been translated 
by him from a Greek poem by his teacher Parthenius; it is an 
exquisite piece of work, familiar perhaps to English readers in 
Cowper's translation. The case of the Catalepton (c«ra X**r«>) 
is peculiar. Two of these little poems (Ite nine indnes and VUlula 
quae Sironis) are generally accepted as Virgil's; opinion varies as 
to the rest, with very little to go upon, but generally rejecting them. 
The whole are printed in the larger editions of Virgil. For English 
readers the most obvious edition is that of Robinson Ellis (1907), 
who has also edited the Aetna separately. 

Manuscripts.— Gellius {Nodes AOicae, ix. 14. 7) teds us of people 
who had inspected idiograpkum librum Vergilii, but this has of course 
in all probability lone since perished. There are, however, seven 
very ancient MSS. of Virgil. (1) The Medkeus at Florence, with a 
note purporting to be by a man, who was consul in 494, to say he 
had read it. (2) ThePalatinusVaticanus of the 4th or 5th century. 
(3) The Vaticanus of the same period. (4) The " Schedae Vatkanae. '' 
(5) The " Schedae Berolinensrs," perhaps of the 4th century. (6) The 
<r SchedaeSangaIIenses. M (j) The " Schedae rescriptae Veronenses " 
— the last three of insignificant extent. For a full account of the 
MSS., see Henry, Aenetdea, i., and Ribbeck, Prolegomena ad Verg. 

Ancient Commentators.— Commentates on Virgil began to be 
written at a very early date. Suetonius, V. Verg. 44, mentions an 
Aeneidomostix of Carvilius Pktor and other works on Virgil's 
" thefts " and " faults," besides eight " volumina " of Q. Octavius 
Avitus, setting out in parallel passages the " li kenes s es (opMSrara 
was the name of the work) between Virgil and more ancient authors. 
M. Valerius Probus (latter part of 1st century a.d.) wrote a com* 
mentary, but it is doubtful for how much of what passes under his 
name he is responsible, if for any of it- At the end of the 4th 
century come the commentaries of Tiberius Claudius Donatus and of 
Servius, the former writing as a teacher of rhetoric, the latter of style 
and grammar. The work of Servius was afterwards expanded by 
another scholar, whose additions greatly added to it* worth, as they 
are drawn from older commentators and give us very valuable 
information on the old Roman religion and constitution. Creek 
and Latin legend* old Latin and linguistic usages. In this enlarged 
form the commentary of Servius and the Saturnalia of Macrobtus 
(also of the end of the 4th century) are both of great interest to 
the student of Virgil. There are. further, arts of Scholia m MSS. 
at Verona and Bern, which draw their ' ' * " 



n6 



VIRGIL, POLYDORE 



commentaries. See H. Nettleship, Essays in Latin Literature, xL, 
and Comparettl, Vergil in the Middle Ages, ch. 5. 

Editions, — The edition* of Virgil are innumerable; Heyne 
(1 767-1800), Forbiger (1872- 75) and Ribbcck (1859-66) in Germany, 
Benoist (1876) in France, and Conington (completed by Nettleship, 
and edited by Haverneld) in England, are perhaps the most im- 
portant. Good school editions in English have been produced by 
Page, Sidgwick and Papillon. Conington's work, however, is with- 
out question the best in English. 

Translations.— Famous English translations have been made by 
Dryden and by a host of others since his day. Since the middle of 
the loth century the most important are Conington (Aeneid in verse, 
whole works in prose) ; I. W. Mackail (Aeneid and Ceorgics in prose) ; 
William Morris (Aeneid in verse); Lord Justice Bowen (Eclogues 
and Aenetd,i.-vv in verse); Canon Thornhill (verse); C J. BuTson 



ana /tenma, 1.— vs. in verse/; i^uiaa iwniuui v v « ,ac 7i *~ j- »uw« 
(verse, 1906); J. Rhoades (verse, new ed., 1007). For essays on 
translating Virgil, see Conington, Miscellaneous Works, voL L; 
R. Y. Tyrrell, Latin Poetry (appendix). 

Authorities. — For full bibliographies of Virgil consult Schans, 
Cesch. der Rdmisehen Litteratur (1899) (in Iwan von Mailer's series, 
Handbuch der Klassischen AUertums-Wissenschaft), and Teuffel. 
History of Roman Literature, edited by L. Srhwabc and tr. by G. 
C. W. Warr (1900). On the life of Virgil: Nettkship's Ancient 
Lives of Vergil (1879) discusses the authorities, printing one of the 
lives, which be shows to be by Suetonius. On the Eclogues : Glaser, 
V. als Naturdichter u. Tketsi (1880) ; Cattault, Etude sur Us Bucoliques 
do V. (1897). On the Georgia: Morsch, De Craecis in Georgicis a V. 
axpressis (1878); Norden, T * V.-studien" (in Hermes, voL 28, 1893) 
(Norden has little patience with " aesthetic criticism ")• On the 
Aeneid: Schweglcr, Rom. Cesch. voL L (1853); Cauer, De fa: " 
Craecis ad Romam conditam pertinentibus; Hud, La Ltgende d\ 



V. (1883), Forstemann, Zur Cesch. des Aeneasmytkus; H. de 
la Ville de Mumont, Apollonios de Rhodes el Virgile (1894) (rather 
too long) ; Plass, V. u. dte cpische Kunsi (1884) ; Gcorgii, Dte politische 
Tendena der Aen. (1880); Boissier. NoutelUs promenades archio- 
ts (1886) (trans, under title The Country of Horace and Virgil, 
, Havelock Fisher, 1895); Gibbon, Critical Observations on the 



logioues( 
by D. H 



Book of the Aeneid (1770); Boissier, La Religion romaine 
d "Augusta aux Antonms (1884) (with section on sixth Aeneid): 
Ettig. Acheruniica (Leipxiger Studien, 1891); Norden, " V.-studien " 
(in Hermes, vol. 28, 1893), on sixth Aeneid. and papers in Neue 
Jahrbucher fur U. Altertum (toot); Dieterich, Nekysa (1891) (on 
Apocalypse of Peter and ancient teaching on the other fife — a 
valuable book); Henry, Aeneidea (1873-79) (* book of very great 
learning, wit, sense and literary judgment; the author, an Irish 
physician, gave twenty years to it, examining MSS., exploring 
Virgil's country, and reading every author whom Virgil could have 
used snd nearly every ancient writer who used Virgil). 

Virgil-literature: Sainte-Beuve, Etude sur Virgile (one of the 
great books on Virgil); Comparetti, Virgilio nd medio Ewe (1872) — 
Eng. tr., Vergil in the Middle Ages, by E. F. M. Benecke (1805) (a book 
of very great and varied interest) ; Heinxe, VirgiTs epische Teckntk 
(1902); W. Y. Sdlar, Roman Poets of the Augustan Age: Virgil 
(2nd ed. 1883); Glover, Studies in Virgil (1904). Essays in the 
following: F. W. H. Myers, Essays [aasrica/|(i880,themost famous 
English essay on Virgil: J. R. Green, Stray Studies (1876) (an 
excellent study of Aeneas); W. Warde Fowler, A Year with the 
Birds (on Virgil's bird-lore); Nettleship, Essays in Latin Literature 
(1884); Tyrrell, Latin Poetry (1808); Pat in, Essais sur la poisie 
Latin* (4th ed. 1900) (one of the finest critics of Latin literature) ; 
Goumy, Les Latins (1892) (a volume of very bright essays); J W. 
Mackail, Latin Literature (3rd ed. 1899). (T. R. G-) 

The VirgU Legend. 
Virgil's great popularity in the middle ages is to be partly 
explained by the fact that be was to a certain extent 
recognized by the Church. He was supposed to have 
prophesied the coming of Christ in the fourth Eclogue, and 
by some divines the Aeneid was held to be an allegory of 
•acred things. This position was sufficiently emphasized by 
Dante when he chose him from among all the sages of antiquity 
to be his guide in the Dtvina Comntedia. Ancient poets and 
philosophers were commonly transformed by medieval writers 
into necromancers; and Virgil and Aristotle became popularly 
famous, not for poetry and science, but for their supposed 
knowledge of the black art. Naples appears to have been 
the home of the popular legend of Virgil, which represented 
him as the special protector of the city, but was probably 
never quite independent of learned tradition. 

One of the earliest references to the magical anH of Virgil 1 occurs 
ra a letter of the imperial c han cel l or Conrad of Querfurt (1194), 



1 Th» Irish apostle to Carinthia, Sc Virgilio*, bishop of Salzburg 
d. yfttX who held original views on the subject of antipodes, may 
■sit beam the real epooym of the legend. 



reproduced by Arnold of Lfibeck in the continuation of the Chronica 
Slavorum of Hdmold. John of Salisbury alludes to the brazen fly 
fabricated by VirgU; Helinand (d. 1227) speaks of similar marvels 
in a work from which Vincent of Bcauvais has borrowed; and 
Gervaae of Tilbury, in his Otia Impertalta (1212), and Alexander of 
Neckam (d. 1217), in De Natuns Rerum. have reproduced these 
traditions, with additions. German and French poets did not 
overlook this accessory to their repertory. The Roman de Cteo- 
modes of Adenes li rois (12th century) and the Image du Monde 
of Gauthier de Metx (1245) contain numerous references to the 
prodigies of the enchanter. Reynard the Fox informs King Lion 
that be had from the wise Virgil a quantity of valuable receipts. He 
air — f — 5 a conwdeniMe part in The popular folk-tale The Seven 
War ki alters, ami appears in the Cttta Romanorum and that curious 
guidebook for pilgrims, the Mtr*it<lta Romae. He is to be found 
m John Gowtrs Cvnfasw A*"snlis and in John Lydgate's 
Btxhai. A Spanish romifrx, lergiltos, b included by E\-de 
Othem in his Tewro (Fan&. ifl-jAi, and fuan Ruiz, archpriest of 
Hit a {d. c 1360), also wrote a ^m on tne subject. Many of the 
talcs of magic throughout EttflajE were referred to VirgU, and 
graou.illy developed into a tomfpkicly new life, strangely different 
mini That of the real hero. They were collected in French under 
the; tit It of Lts Fait* Mcrrilfrkz de VtrgUle (c. 1409). a quarto 
chqpUjok of ten page*, which U-oime extremely popular, and was 
less addi Lie n matter, in other languages. The 



printed, wiui mote or Less additional I 
English ^TrrtKHi. beginning w THs 
mcrvclufr dede* done by Virgilius.,'' 



is resonable to wryght the 
was printed about 1520. We 
are told ho* Virgil beguiled the dwil at a very early age, in the 
same faihioo. as the fchernian per-iaded the jinnee in the Arabian 
Niehis to re-enter Solomon'* casket. Another reproduction of a 
widely tpfead tale was that *4 ihe L-dy who kept Virgil suspended in 
a t<a>krt. To rtvengc the affront the magician extinguished all the 
fires in the city, snd no one etmU rekindle them without subject- 
ing the lady to an cnkal highly ■ lensive to her modesty. Virgil 
maiic lor the tmperur a rastfs m « r:ich he could see and hear every- 
thing done or said in Rome, an ever-blooming orchard, statues of the 
tributary princes which gave warning of treason or rebellion, and a 
lamplosur •-■••»----«--•-- efi • * -*- ---**- • » • 
and built i 

eggs. At L... .._ ... „ - -- „ .-_.._. -_ 

knew that his time was come. In order to escape the common lot 
he placed all his treasures in a castle defended by images unceasingly 
wielding iron flails, and directed his confidential servant to hew him 
in pieces, which he was to salt and place in a barrel in the cellar, 
under which a lamp was to be kept burning. The servant waa 
assured that after seven days his master would revive, a young man. 
The directions were carried out; but the emperor, missing his 
medicine-man, forced the servant to divulge the secret and to quiet 
the whirling flails. The emperor and his retinue entered the castle 
and at last found the mangled corpse. In his wrath he slew the 
servant, whereupon a little naked child ran thrice round the barrel, 
crying, " Cursed be the hour that ye ever came here," and vanished. 

For the legends connected with Virgil see especially D. Com- 
paretti, Virgdio net medio evo (2nd ed., Florence, 1896; English 
trans., E. F. M. Benecke, 1895). The chief original source for the 
Neapolitan legends is the 14th-century Cronica di Partenope. See 
further W. J. Thorns, Early Eng. Prose Romances (1858); G. Brunet, 
Les Faite merveiUeux de Virgile (Geneva, 1867); E. Dumeril, 
" Virgile enchanteur " (M&anges archiotogiques. 1850) ; Gervase 
of Tilbury, Otia Imper. (ed. Liebrecht, 1856); P. Schwubbc, 
Virgilius per mediam aetatem (Paderborn, i8u); Siebenhaar, 
Dejabutis quae media aetata de Virgilio circumj. (Berlin, 1837); 



iv. 1859); F. Liebrecht, " Der Zaubcrer Virgilius " (ibid. x. 1865) ; 
K. L. Roth. "Cber d. Zaub. Virgilius ^ (ibid. iv. 1859); W. 
Victor, M Der Ursprung der Virgflsage* (ZeiLf. rom. Phil. v. 1877) ; 
A. Graf. Roma ncUa memoria e neile imaginaxioni del medio evo 
(Turin. 1882); F. W. Genthe. Leben und Fortleben des PuNiut 
VirgdiusMaroalsDichterundZauberer (2nd ed., Magdeburg, 1857). 

(M. Ba.) 

VIRGIL POLYDORE (a 1470-1555)1 English historian, of 
Italian extraction, otherwise known as P. V. Castellensis, 
was a kinsman of Cardinal Hadrian Castellensis, a native of 
Castro in Etruria. His fathers name is said to have been 
George Virgil; his great-grandfather, Anthony VirgU, " a man 
well skilled in medicine and astrology," had professed philo- 
sophy at Paris, as did Porydorc's own brother and proteg6 
John Matthew Virgil, at Pa via, in 151 7. A third brother was 
a London merchant in 151 1. Polydore was born at U rhino, 
is said to have been educated at Bologna, and was probably in 
the service of Guido UbaMo, duke of Urbino, before 1498, as 
in the dedication of his first work, Liber Proverbiorunt (April 
140S), he styles himself this prince's client. Polydore's second 
book, De Inttntoribus Rerum. is dedicated to Guidons tutor. 



VIRGINAL— VIRGINIA 



117 



Ludovicos Odaxius, from Urbino, in August 1409. After 
being chamberlain to Alexander VI. he came to England in 
1 sot as deputy collector of Peter's pence for the cardinal As 
Hadrian's proxy, he was enthroned bishop of Bath and Wells 
in October 1504. It was at Henry VII. 's instance that he com- 
menced his HUteria Anglica—9, work which, though seemingly 
begun as early as 1505, was not completed till August 1533, 
the date of its dedication to Henry VIII., nor published till 
1534- In May 1514 he and his patron the cardinal are found 
supporting Wolsey's claims to the cardinalship, but he had 
lost the great minister's favour before the year was out. A 
rash letter, reflecting severely on Henry VIII. and Wolsey, 
was intercepted early in 15x5, after which Polydore was cast 
into prison and supplanted in his collectorship (March and 
April). He was not without some powerful supporters, as 
both Catherine oV Medici and Leo X. wrote to the king on his 
behalf. From his prison he sent an abject and almost blas- 
phemous letter to the offended minister, begging that the fast 
■reproaching Christmas — a time which witnessed the restitution 
of a world — might see his pardon also. He was set at liberty 
before Christmas 15x5, though he never regained his collector- 
ship. In 1525 he published the first edition of Giidas, dedicating 
the work to Tunstall, bishop of London. Next year appeared 
his Liber de Prodigiis, dedicated from London (July) to Francesco 
Maria, duke of Urbino. Somewhere about 1538 he left England, 
and remained in Italy for some time. Hi-health, he tells us, 
forbade him on his return to continue his custom of making 
daily notes on contemporary events. About the end of 1551 
he went home to Urbino, where he appears to have died in 
1555. He had been naturalized an Englishman in October 
1 s 10, and had held several clerical appointments in England. 
In 1508 he was appointed archdeacon of Wells, and in 1513 
prebendary of Oxgate in St Paul's cathedral, both of which 
offices he held after his return to Urbino. 

The first edition of the Hisloria Anglica (twenty-sis books) was 
printed at Basel to 1534: the twenty-seventh book, dealing with 
the reign of Henry VIII. down to the birth of Edward VI. (October 
1536). was added to the third edition of I5$& Polydore claims to 
have been very careful in collecting materials for this work, and 
takes credit for using foreign historians as well as Er^U-k For 
which reason, be remarks, the English, Scotch and Frenx ii » ill find 
several things reported in his pages far differently from r he way in 
mrhich they are told in current national story. In his search jiter 
information he applied to James IV. of Scotland for a IL*t *.A the 
Scottish kings ana their annals; but not even his frien.l--.1iip [or 
Gavin Douglas could induce him to give credit to the i__*iuiical 
rations of this accomplished bishop, who traced the pedigree of the 
Scots down from the oanished son of an Athenian king and Scotta 
the daughter of the Egyptian tyrant of the Israelites. A similar 
sm akism made him doubt the veracity of Geoffrey of Monmouth, 
and thus called forth Leland's Defensio CaUofrxdi and Assertio 
lucomparabHis Arturii. This doubting instinct led to his being 
a rn ifwl of many offences against learning, such as that of burning 
cartloads of MSS. lest his errors should be discovered, of purloining 
books from libraries and shipping them off by the vesselful to Rome. 
As a matter of fact, it is ot course mainly from the time of Henry 
VI., where our contemporary records begin to fail so sadly, that 
Potydore's work is useful He must have been personally acquainted 
vita many men whose memories could carry them back to the 
beginning of the Wars of the Roses. Dr Brewer speaks somewhat 
harshly of him as an authority for the reign of Henry VIII., and 
indeed his spite against Wolsey is evident; but it is impossible to 
read bis social and geographical accounts of England and Scotland 



w.tboat gratitude for a writer who has preserved so many interest' 
a* detail*. Polydore 's Adagia (Venice, April 1498) was the 6rst 
couectioa of Latin proverbs ever printed; it preceded Erasmus's 
by two years, and the slight misunderstanding that arose for the 
moment out of rival claims gave place to a sincere friendship. A 
second series of Biblical proverbs (553 in number) was dedicated to 
Wolsey's follower. Richard Pace, and is preceded by an interesting 
!tt:tr (June JSioJt which gives the names of many of Polydore s 
Eozfeh friends, from More and Archbishop Warham to Linacre 
i»l TunstaU. The De Inventoribus, treating of the origin of all 
things whether ecclesiastical or lay (Paris, 1499). originally consisted 
of only seven books, bat was increased to eight in 1521. It was 
exceedingly popular, and was early translated Into French (1521) 
'537). Enf* 9 -*- '—' % J *—*-•- '-— * *" -^— 



aho achieved a great popularity, and was soon translated into 
kaSan (1543), English (1546) and Spanish (1550). This treatise 



takes the form of a Latin dialogue between Polydore and his 
Cambridge friend Robert Ridley. It takes place in the open air. 
at Polydore's country house near London. Polydore s duty is to 
state the problems and supply the historical illustrations; his 
friend's to explain, rationalize and depreciate as best he can. 
Here, as in the Hisloria Anglica, it is plain that the writer plumes 
himself specially on the excellence of his Latin, which in Sir Henry 
Ellis's opinion is purer than that of any of bis contemporaries. 

VIRGINAL, or Pad* op Vikginals, a name applied in 
England, and also recognized on the continent of Europe, 
to the spinet, and more especially to the small pentagonal 
and to the rectangular models. The word virginal, bestowed 
because it was pre-eminently the instrument for girls, denotes 
before all a keyboard instrument, having for each note one 
string only, plucked by means of a quill attached to a jack. 1 
The fine instrument in the Victoria and Albert Museum, known 
as Queen Elizabeth's virginal, is an Italian pentagonal spinet * 
elaborately emblazoned with the coat of arms of the queen, 
and having a compass of just over four octaves. King Henry 
VIIL and his daughters, Queen Mary and Queen Elizabeth, 
were all accomplished performers on the virginaL (K. S.) 

VIRGINIA, or Verglnia, in Roman legendary history, 
daughter of L. Virginius, a plebeian centurion. Her beauty 
attracted the notice of the decemvir Appius Claudiu*, who 
instructed Marcus Claudius, one of his clients, to claim her 
as his slave. Marcus accordingly brought her before Appius, 
and asserted that she was the daughter of one of his female 
slaves, who had been stolen and passed off by the wife of 
Virginius as her own child. Virginius presented him- 
self with his daughter before the tribunal of Appius, who, 
refusing to listen to any argument, declared Virginia to be 
a slave and the property of Marcus. Virginius thereupon 
stabbed her to the heart in the presence of Appius and the 
people. A storm of popular indignation arose and the decem- 
virs were forced to resign. The people for the second time 
"seceded" to the Sacred Mount, and refused to return to 
Rome unto the old form of government was re-established. 

See Livy hi. 44-58; Dion. Halic. xi. 38-45, "»«** account 
differs in some respects from Livy's; Cicero, De finibus, ii. 20; 
Val. Max. vi. 1, 2; for a critical examination of the story and its 
connexion with the downfall of the decemvirs, see Sir G. Cornewatl 
Lewis, Credibility of Early Raman History, ii.; Schwegler, Rdmische 
GesckukU, bk. xxx. 4, 5; also E. Pais, Ancient Legends of Roman 
History (Eng. trans. 1906), p. 185, according to whom the legends of 
Virginia and Lucretia (two different versions of one and the same 
story, connecting the history of Roman liberty with the martyrdom 
of a woman) are nothing but late elaborations of legends connected 
with the cults of Ardea. 

VIRGINIA, one of the more N. of the S.E. Atlantic states 
of the United States of America, lying between latitudes 36 30' 
and 39 3c/ N., and longitude 75* 15' and 83 40' W. It is 
bounded on the N.W. by Kentucky and West Virginia, the 
irregular boundary fine following mountain ridges for a part 
of its course; on the N.E. by Maryland, from which it is 
separated by the Potomac river; on the S. by North Carolina 
and Tennessee, the boundary line being nominally a parallel 
of latitude, but actually a more irregular line. Virginia has 
an area of 42,627 sq. m., of which 2365 sq. m. are water surface, 
including land-locked bays and harbours, rivers and Lake 
Drummond. The state has a length of about 440 m. E. and 
W., measured along its S. boundary; and an extreme breadth 
N and S. of about 200 m. 

Physical Features.— Virginia is crossed from N to S. or N.E. to 
S.W by four distinct physiographic provinces. The easternmost 
is the Coastal Plain Province, and forms a part of the great Coastal 
Plain bordering the S.E. United States from New York Harbour 
to the Rio Grande. This province occupies about 11,000 sq. m, 
of the state, and is known as " Tidewater Virginia." After the 
plain had been raised above sea-level to a higher elevation than it 
now occupies, it was much dissected by streams and then depressed, 
allowing the sea to invade the stream valleys. Such is the origin 
of the branching bays or " drowned river valleys," among which 
may be noted the lower Potomac, Rappahannock, York and James 
rivers. Chesapeake Bay itself b the drowned lower course of the 
Susquehanna river, to which the other streams mentioned were 



1 The mechanism is described under PiAKororra and Spinet. 



ti8 



VIRGINIA 



tributary previous to the depression which transformed them into 
bays. The land between the drowned valleys is relatively flat, 
and varies in height from sea-level on the E. to 150-300 ft. on the 
"* the "fall-line," the next 



W. border. Passing westward 

province b the Piedmont, a part of the extensive Piedmont Belt 
reaching from Pennsylvania to Alabama. This is the most ex- 
tensive of the subdivisions of Virginia, comprising 18,000 sq. m. 
of its area, and varying in elevation from 150-300 ft. on the E. to 
700-1200 ft. along the loot of the Blue Ridge at the W. The slop- 
ing surface is gently rolling, and has resulted from the uplift and 
dissection of a nearly level plain of erosion developed on folded, 



crystalline rocks. Occasional hard rock ridges rise to a moderate 
elevation above the general level, while areas of unusually weak 
Triassic sandstones have been worn down to form lowlands. W. of 
the Piedmont, and like it consisting of crystalline rocks, is the 
Blue Ridge, a mountain belt from 3 to 20 m. in breadth, narrowing 
toward the N., where it passes into Maryland, and broadening 
southward toward its great expansion in W. North Carolina and 
E. Tennessee, where it is transformed into massive mountain groups. 
In elevation the Blue Ridge of Virginia varies from 1460 ft. at 
Harper's Ferry, where the Potomac river breaks through it in a 
splendid water-gap, to 5719 ft. in Mt. Rogers. Grayson county. 
About 2500 sq. m. of the state are comprised in this province. 
W. of the Blue Ridge is the Newer Appalachian or Great Valley 
Province, characterised by parallel ridges and valleys developed 
by erosion on folded beds 01 sandstone, limestone and shales, and 
comprising; an area of about 10400 sq. m. in Virginia. The belts 
of non-resistant rock have been worn away, leaving longitudinal 
valleys separated by hard rock ridges. A portion oithis province 
in which weak rocks predominate gives an unusually broad valley 
region, known as the Valley of Virginia, drained by the Shenandoah 
river, and the headwaters of the James, Roanoke, New, and Holston 
rivers, which dissect the broad valley floor into gently rolling low 
hula. At the N., near the mouth of the Shenandoah, the valley is 
about 250 ft. above sea-level, but rises south-westward to an eleva- 
tion c^ inore than 1600 ft. at the S. boundary of the state 

The rivers of the state flow in* general from N.W. to S\E., across 
the Blue Ridge, the Piedmont and the Coastal Plain, following 
courses which were established before erosion had produced much 
of the present topography. But in the Newer Appalachians the 
streams more often follow the trend of the structure until they 
empty into one of the larger, transverse streams. Thus the Shen- 
andoah flows N.E. to the Potomac, the Holston S.W. toward the 
Tennessee. A part of this same province, in the S.W. part of 
the state, is drained by the New river, which flows N.W. across the 
ridges to the Kanawha and Ohio rivers in the Appalachian Plateau. 
la the limestone regions caverns and natural bridges occur, among 
which Luray Cavern and the Natural Bridge are well known. The 
d r owned fewer courses of the S.E. flowing streams are navigable, 
and afford many excellent harbours. Chesapeake Bay covers much 
fend that might otherwise be agriculturally valuable, but repays 
this fees, in part at least, by its excellent fisheries, including those 
for oysters. In the S.E., where the low, flat Coastal Plain is poorly 
drained, is the Great Dismal Swamp^ a fresh-water marsh covering 
midst of which is Lake Drwmmond. 2 m. or 



and the 



700 sq* m., in the 

more in diameter. Along the shores of Chesapeake 

Atlantic Ocean are few, sandy beaches, often 

Fssma.— Tul about the middle of the 18th century the 
and the elk roamed the W. part of the state- The Virginia deer 
is common in the bottomlands; a few beaver still frequent the 
remoter streams; in the higher portions are still a few black bears 
and pumas, besides the lynx, the Virginia varying hare, the wood- 
chuck, the red and the fox squirrel and flying squirrels. The grey 
amnrrel is plentiful m wooded districts. On the Coastal Plain 
are the musk-rat, the 



Many species of water and shore birds migrate along the 
where also others breed, as the royal, common and feast 
and black skimmer; practically all the ducks are migrant aj 



though the wood-duck breeds. Swan, geese and brant winter on the 
coast. The yellow-crowned atght-beroa and the little blue heron 
The tarkey-biuaard and die barn-owl are r e sident , 
and red-bellied woodpeckers, orchard orioles, yeDow- 
_ _ . lows, the cardinal, tie blue grosbeak, the Carolina 
wteaandtaenwcfc i aa^aTdarecharactertttko^ 
TWrafled grouse and wild turkey are found in the wooded momv 
tainous districts, while the quail (here caBed" partridge") is a game 
bad cf the open stwbbk setts. ■— -• # •— 

Of it ptflw, the rattles nake and ccjuTc r h fw d are the only poisonous 

^1 In the aaouattsVaawasas. and l>ssck bass in the^ere 
TV* cnt-ewa grows to a large sise in the 





r wshtrhi in Chesapeake Bay. 
injuria is covered with pine forests 



which merge westward with the hard woods of the Piedmont Bet 
where oaks formerly prevailed, but where a second growth of plr 
now constitutes part of the forest. Even on the Coastal FM 
the Jersey and okineW pines of to-day replace more valuable spec* 
of the original growth. The Blue Ridge and Newer Appalachii 
regions are covered with pine, hemlock, white oak, cherry ar 
yellow poplar; while that portion of these provinces lying in tl 
5.W. part of the state still contains valuable forests of hickory ar 
walnut, besides oak and cherry. On the Coastal Plain the cyprt 
grows m the Dismal Swamp, river birch alone the streams, m 
sweet gum and black gum in -swampy woods. Other charactcrist 
plants of the Coastal Plain are the cranberry, wild rice, wild yax 
wax myrtle, wistaria, trumpet flower, passion Bower, holly and vM 
alder. Many of these species spread into the Piedmont Bd 
Rhododendron, mountain laurel and azaleas are common in til 
mountains. The blackberry, black raspberry, huckleberry, blsj 



wild ginger and ginseng are widely distributed. 

.--The climate of Virginia is generally free from extremi 



berry, 

CUt w . 

of heat and cold. In the Coastal Plain region the temperature 
quite stable from day to day, as a result of the equalizing effect I 
the numerous bays which indent this province. The mean win* 
temperature is 39*8°, the mean summer temperature 77*2", with* 
mean annual of 58*6* Killing frosts do not occur before d 
middle of October, nor later than the last part of April. In fl 
Piedmont Province temperature conditions are naturally less Stan 
owing to the distance from the sea and to the greater inequafll 
of surface topography. In autumn and winter sudden temperata 
changes are experienced, though not frequently. The mean winli 
t e mp e r ature 01 this province is 35*8*; mean summer temperatuf 
75*; mean annual, 55*9*. Killing frosts mav occur as early 1 
the first of October and as late as the last of May. The great* 
variability in t emperature conditions in the state occurs in the Bh 
Ridge, Newer Appalachian Provinces, where the most rugged ai 
variable topography is likewise found. The mean winter temperata 
for this section b 33*8*; mean summer temperature, 71-3*; mcj 
annual, 53*2*. 

Sot/.— Marshy sous arc found along the lowest portions of l) 
Coastal Plain, and are exceedingly productive wherever reclaim) 
by draining, as in portions of the Dismal Swamp. Other portio) 
of the Coastal Plain afford more valuable soils, sandy loams ovtf 
lying sandy days. On the higher elevations the sou is light at 
sandy, ana such areas remain relatively unproductive. Tl 
crystalline rocks of the Piedmont area are covered with residil 
sods of variable composition and moderate fertility. Passing tl 
high and rugged Blue Ridge, which b infertile except in the Tmfj 
vening valleys of its S.W. expansion, we reach the Newer AppJ 
achians, where fertile limestone soils cover the valley floors. Tl 
Valley of Virginia is the most productive part of the state. 

F-wtjU.— The woodland area of Virginia was estimated in IO* 
at 23400 sq. m., or 58% of the area ofthe state. The timber art 
originally comprised three divisions: the mountain regions growtt 
pine and hard woods and hemlock; the Piedmont region product* 
chiefly oaks with some pine; and the fends below the " Fall Line} 
which were forested with yellow pine. Most of the pine of tj 
mountain region has been cut, and the yettow pine and hard wool 
have also largely disappeared. The productio n of timber hH 
however, steadily increased. In 1900 the vafee of the product wi 
$12,137,177. representing chiefly yellow pine. ■ 

J ? ufem».--Oysters are by far the most valuable of the fisher! 
products, but, of the 400,000 acres of waters within the stal 
suitable for oyster culture, in 1909 only about one-third was uai 
for that purpose. Next in importance were the catches of met 
haden, shad, dams, squeteague and akwives; while minor catcM 
were made of crabs , croaker, btuefish, butterfish, catfish, perch «4 
spotted and striped bass. 

Agrks&are.--Tobacco was an important crop in the earS 
history of the colony, and Virginia continued to be the feadfi 
tobacco-producing state of the Union (reporting in 1850 28-4% t 
the total crop) until after the Civil War, which, with the drvuat 
of the state, caused it to fall into second place. Kentucky takjf 
the lead: and in 1900 the crop of North Carolina also was lame 
The state's production of tobacco in 1909 was 120,125.000 I 
valued at $10*210,625. 

The production of Indian corn in 1909 was 47.328,000 but 
valued at $35*023.000; of wheat, 8,848.000 bus., valued I 
$10,175,000; of oats, 3.800,000 bisk, valued at $2.052.000 • 4 
rye, 184/500 bus, valued at $155,000; of buckwheat, 37$.ooobui 
valued at $287,000; the hay crop was valued at $8.06000 
(606,000 tons). The amount of the cotton crop in 1000 wl 
10,000 500-m bales. ^^ 

, T1lc /? Iue . U ■ oma , m ,01 ? **■ **W*»*oo (323.000 head] 
of mules, $7,020,000 (54.000 head); of neat cattJeTjfco^nZS 
£875,000 head); of swine; $5,041,00© (774.000 hm^Tu^tSi 
$2,036,000 (522.000 head). ^^ 

Jfrntrai*.— The value of all mineral products in xoofi w* 
fe3.U7.395; J* J? the moat valuable srnefc product wtTbito 
m H | o«* oMAtoWS**; 4^59*42 tons). The existence of thl 
mineral in the vicinity of Richmond was known as carry as 1770 
and the mining of it there began in 1775, but it waa practkaJh, 



1 about the middle of the 19th century. The most 

Important coalfields of the state tie in th« Appalachian regions la 
the S.W. part of the state, though there are also rich deposits in the 
counties of Henrico, Chesterfield and Goochland, and in parts of 
Powhatan and Amelia counties, i n the S.E. portion of the Kanawha 
, including Tasewell, Russell, Scott. Buchanan, Wise and Lee 

ies, occur rich deposits of coal, which are of great value because 

of their proximity to vast deposits of iron ores. In Tasewell county 
u the famous Pocahontas bed, which produces one of the most 
valuable grades of coking and steam coal to be found in the United 
States. There are remarkably rich deposits of iron ore in the 
Ahghanfcs, and the W. foothills of the Blue Ridge, from which most 
of the iron ore of the state is procured, are lined with brown hematite. 
Iroo-mining— perhaps the first in the New World— was begun in 
Virginia in 1606, when the Virginia Company shipped a quantity of 
ore to England ; and in 1619 the Company established on Falling 
Greek, a tributary of the James river, a colony of about ISO iron- 
Warwickshire, Staffordshire and Sussex, who had 



VIRGINIA 119 

number of wage ■earn ers from 40,184 to 99,709, the total wages from 
$7.4*5.a6l tof42,44S,7*o, and the value of products from $51,770, qoj 
to $132,172,910. The number of factories 1 increased from 3180 m 



established there several ore-reducing plants under the general 
mtnagrment of John Berkeley of Gloucester, England, when on the 
and of March 1622 the entire colony, excepting a girl and a boy, 
The first bust-furnace in the 



by the Indians. The first bust-furnace in .... 

colony seems to have been owned by Governor Spots wood, and was 
boik and operated at the head of the Rappahannock river about 
1715 by a colony of German Protestants. Immediately after the 
War ot Independence Virginia became an important iron-producing 
state. The industry waned rapidly toward the middle of the 19th 
century, but was renewed upon the discovery of the high-grade ores 
ia the S.W. part of the state and the development of railway 
facilkiea. The product of iron ore in 1908 was 693.233 long tons, 
rained at $1,465,691. The product of pig-iron in 1908 was 330,458 
long tons, valued at S4478J000 

Manganese ore-mining began in Virginia fat 1 857 in the Shenandoah 
Valley, and the product increased from about 100 tons in that year 
to about 5000 tons (mined near Warminster. Nelson county) in 
1868 aad 1869. Thereafter Virginia and Georgia supplied most of 
this mineral produced in the United States, and the greater part of 
k has been shipped to England. Between 1883 and 1891 the average 
annual production was about ISAM tons, the greatest output— 
20.567 t o w s bei ng mined in 1886% After itoi the product declined 
rapidly, amounting in 1907 to 800 tons valued at $48001 

In the production of pyrite. which is found in Louisa county aad 
a used for the manufacture of sulphuric add employed in the treat- 
ment of wood pulp for paper-making and In the manufacture of 
saperpkosphatcs from phosphate rock, Virginia took first rank in 
1903 with an output valued at $501,643, or 64-7 % of the total yield 
of this mineral in the United States: and this rank was maintained 
ia 1908. wfae* the product was 1 16440 long tons, valued at $435,522. 
L ime s tone is found in the region west of the Blue Ridge, and has 
been quarried extensively, the product, used chiefly for flux, being 
rained in 1908 at $645485. 

Virginia was by fair the most Imp o rtan t state In 1908 in the pro- 
doctJoa of soapstooe, nearly the whole product being taken from 
a long narrow belt running n ' * 

Albemarle county; more than , 
slabs for laundry and laboratory 
aad so apat o n e in 1908 was 19,616 short tons, valued at $458,252. 

Tacvahseof mineral waters produced in 1908 was $207.1 15. The 



the whole product being taken from 

north-east from Nelson county into 

in 90% of the output was sawed into 

ttory appliances. The product of talc 



r „ irring m connexion with faults 

the Appalachian chain of mountains; in 1008, 46 were reported, 

the state third among the states of the United States in 

of springs, and of these several have been in high medical 

_ At 18 of these resorts are situated, some of which have at 

. had considerable social vogue. White Sulphur Springs, in 

Greenbrier county, impregnated with sulphur, with therapeutic 

- -» • - ... . -Springs, in 

ntivc and 



application in jaundice, dyspepsia, Ac.; Alleghany Springs, in 
Montgomery county, calcareous and earthy, purgative and 
dmretx; Rawley Springs in Rockingham county. Sweet Chalybeate 



ia Alleghany county, and Rockbridge Alum Springs ia 
' * county, classed as iron springs and reputed of value as 

the thermal springs. Healing Springs (88 # F.) and Hot 

Springs (i 10 F.). both in Bath county are noted medirfnalsprings. 



tonics, ami the thermal springs, 

Springs (1 10 F.). both in Bath county are not* _ 

The value 01 metals produced in 1008 was as follows: gold 



(which is found in a belt that extends from the Potomac river to 
Halifax county and varies from 15 to 25 in. in width), $3600 (174 
fine on. troy); copper, $3313 $35,087 R>>; and lead, $1093 (13 short 
tons). Minerals produced in small quantities include gypsum, 
ssfltstones, salt and sandstone, and among those found but not 
p rod u ced (in 1903) in commercial quantities may be mentioocd 
w%ff?f>, alum, arsenic, bismuth, carbonite, felspar, kaolin, marble, 
plumbago, quartz, serpentine and tin. Asbestos was formerly 
mined in the western and south-western parts of the state. Barytas 
is mined near Lynchburg; the value of the output in 1907 was 
$33,833, since which date the output has decre a sed. 

Jtfnas/iiiTsrrr— Virginia's manufacturing establishments increased 
very rapkDy in number and in the value of their products during; 
the mac two decades of the 19th century. The number of ail 
ncreased from 5710 in 1880 to 8348 in 1900; the 
from $26,968,990 to $103/70488. the average 



the capital invested from $92,299,589 to 
•147,909,103, toe average number of wage-earners from 66.233 to 
80^385, the total wages from $20,269,026 to $27,043,058, 



the 



value of products from $108,644,150 to $148,856,535. The manu- 
facture of all forms of tobacco is the most important industry; the 
value of its products in 1905 was $16,768,304. Since 1880 there 
has been a rapid development in textile manufacture, for which the 
water power of the Piedmont region is used. A peculiar industry 
as the grading, roasting, cleaning and shelling of peanuts. 

Transportation and Commcrc*. — Four large railway systems prac- 
tically originate in the state and radiate to the S\ and W.: the 
Southern railway, with its main line traversing the state in the 
direction of its greatest length leaving Washington to run south-west 
through Alexandria, Charlottesville, Lynchborg aad Danville to 
the North Carolina line, with connexions to Richmond and a line 
to Norfolk on the east; the Atlantic Coast line with its main lines 
running & from Richmond and Norfolk; the Seaboard Air line, 
having its main lines also running to the S. from Richmond and 



laving its 

Norfolk; the Norfolk ft Western crossing the state from east 
to west in the southern part whh % Norfolk Ha eastern terminus, 
passing through Lynchburg and leaving the state at the south-western 
corner at Bristol, and the Chesapeake ft Ohio crossing the state 
from east to west farther north than the Norfolk ft Western 
from Newport News on the coast through Richmond to the West 
Virginia line. Of more recent construction is the Virginian railway, 
a project of H. H. Rogers, opened for traffic in 1909. which connects 
the coal region of West Virginia with Norfolk, crossing the southern 
part of the state from E. to W., aad is designed chiefly for heavy 
freight traffic The N.W. part of the state is entered by tbt Baltimore 
ft Ohio, which has a line down the Shenandoah Valley to Lexington. 
Connexion between Richmond and Washington is by a union line 
(Richmond, Fredericksburg ft Potomac ana Washington Southern 
railways) operated jointly by the Southern, Atlantic Coast line. 
Seaboard Air line, Chesapeake ft Ohio, Pennsylvania, and 
Baltimore ft Ohio railways. In 1850 there were 384m. of 
railway in Virginia; in 1880, 1839 m., and in 1890 it had nearly 
doubled, having increased to 345954 m., a gain coincident with 
the newly awakened Industrial activity of the Southern States and 
an era of railway building throughout this section. The railway 
mileage in 1900 was 3>7*9'58* and in January 1909 it was 4*348*53- 

Hampton Roads at the mouth of the James river, which forms 
the harbour for the leading ports of the state, Norfolk and Newport 
News, affords one of the beat anchorages of the Atlantic coast. It 



gives shelter not only to vessels plying to Ha adjoining porta but 
' ' ' ' shipping bound up or down the 
nbliag of naval 



serves as a harbour of refuge lor shipping bou 

Atlantic coast, and is frequently used for the t 

fleets. There is a large foreign trade and a regular steamship service 
to Boston, Providence, New York. Philadelphia and Savannah from 
Norfolk, and there is a considerable traffic on Chesapeake Bay. the 
Rappahannock, York, James and Elisabeth rivers. Fredericksburg 
at the head of navigation on the Rappahannock and West Point 
00 the York have traffic of commercial Importance in lumber and 
timber, oysters and farm produce, cotton and tobacco especially 
being shipped in coastwise vessels from West Point. Petersburg 
and Richmond on the James are connected with regular steamship 
lines with Norfolk, Richmond's water trade being chiefly in coal 
oil, logs and fertilizer. Steamboats plying on Chesapeake Bay 
connect Alexandria with Norfolk. From the Elisabeth river on 
which Norfolk b situated lead the Albemarle ft Chesapeake Canal 
and the Dismal Swamp Canal, which connect with the waters of 
Albemarle Sound. Traffic through these canals consists chiefly 
of forest products, logs, lumber and shingles. 

Population.— The population of Virginia In 1890 *a* 
1,655,980; in 1000, 1,854,184; and in 19x0, 2,061,612.* Of the 
total population in looo, 1,173.787 wen native whites, 19.461 
were foreign-born, 660,733 (or 35*7% of the total population) 
were negroes, 354 were Indians, 243 WCT « Chinese and 10 were 
Japanese, The state was fifth among the states and Territories 
in the number of negro inhabitants, but showed a marked 
decrease in the ratio of negroes to the total population in the 
decade from 1890 to 1000, the percentage of the total popula- 
tion in 1890 having been 38-4. 

Of the inhabitants bom m the United States 53*35 were natives 
of North Carolina, 12,504 were natives of Maryland, and 10,273 
were natives of Pennsylvania. Of the foreign-born 4504 were 



1 Statistics for 1890 represent the value of all manufactures; those 
for 1900 (from this point) and 1905 show values' under the factory 
system, excluding neighbourhood industries and hand trades. 



* According to previous censuses the population was as follows: 
(1790). 747,610; (1800), 880.200; (i8io), 074*600; (»**>>» 
1,065,366; (1830), 1.211.403: (1840). 1.230,797; (1850). I-Pl*66l8 
(i860), 1496418; (1870), I.325.163; (1880), 1412465. 



120 VIRGINIA 

Gonanb 3S34 «« native* of Ireland and 341s of England. Of 

the total population 53^64 were el foreign parentage fie. eitber 

one or both patents were foreign-bora) and 9769 were of German. 

S235 of Irish and 4793 of English parentage, both on the father's 

and on the mother s side. Out of the total of 79^546 members of 

religious denominations in 1906. more than half, 415*987* were 
~ ^ *. ^ *. . l ^ .j. ^j t j^ en wrn 

38.487 Protestant 



Baptists; the Methodists uw^^ 

39,628 Presbyterian*. 28,700 Roman ... 

Episcopalians, 20,248 Disciples of Christ, and l&oio Lutherans. 
Virginia in 1900 had 46-2 inhabitants to the square mile. The prin- 
cipal cities of the state are: Richmond (the capital), Norfolk- 
Petersburg, Roanoke, Newport News, Lynchburg, Portsmouth and 
Danville. 

G<ncrnwunL—Vii&wM. has had six state cons tituti ons: 
the first was adopted in 1776, the second in 1830, the third 
in 1851, the fourth in 1864, the fifth in 1869, end the sixth, 
the present, in 1902. Amendments to the present constitu- 
tion may be proposed in either house of the General Assembly, 
and if they pass both houses of that and the succeeding General 
Assembly by a majority of the members elected to each boose 
and are subsequently approved by a majority of the people 
who vote on the question at the next general election they 
become a part of the constitution. A majority of the members 
in each house of the General Assembly may at any time propose 
a convention to revise the constitution and, if at the next 
succeeding election a majority of the people voting on the 
question approve, the General Assembly must provide fox the 
election of delegates. To be entitled to vote one must be a 
male citizen of the United States and twenty-one years of age; 
have been a resident of the state for two years, of the county, 
city, or town for one year, and of the election precinct for 
thirty days next preceding the election; have paid, at least 
six months before the election, all state poll taxes assessed 
against him for three years next preceding the election, unless 
he is a veteran of the Civil War; and have registered after 
the adoption of the constitution (1002). For registration prior 
to 1004 one of four additional qualifications was required: 
service in the army or navy of the United States, of the Con- 
federate States, or of some state of the United States or of the 
Confederate States; direct descent from one who so served; 
ownership of property upon which state taxes amounting to 
at least one dollar were paid in the preceding year; or ability 
to read the constitution or at least to show an understanding 
of it. And to qualify for registration after 1904 one 
must have paid all state poll taxes assessed against him for 
the three years immediately preceding his application, unless 
he is a veteran of the Civil War; and unless physically unable 
he must " make application in his own handwriting, without 
aid, suggestion or memorandum, in the presence of the regis- 
tration officers, stating therein his name, age, date and place 
of birth, residence and occupation at the time and for two 
years next preceding, whether he has previously voted, and, 
if so, the state, county and precinct in which he voted last "; 
and must answer questions relating to has qualifications. 

gTrfs/wr .— The g o v er n or , lieutenant-governor, attorney-general, 
secretary of the commonwealth, treasurer, superintendent of public 
instruction and commissioner or agriculture are elected for a term 
of four years, every fourthyear from iop5» and each new administra- 
tion begins oa the 1st of February. The governor must be at least 
thirty years of age, a resident of the state for five years next pre- 
ceding his election; and, if of foreign birth, a citizen of the United 
States for ten years. He appoints numerous officers with the con- 
currence of the Senate, has the usual power of vetoing legislative 
bills, and has authority to inspect the records of officers, or to 
employ accountants to do so, and to suspend, during a recess of the 
General Assembly, any executive officer at the seat of government 
except the lieutenant-governor; he must, however, report to the 
General Assembly at its next session the cause of any suspensmn 

1 that body de t er mi ne s whether the suspended officer shall be 

Assembly consists of a Senate and a 

ostitation provides that the number of 

than forty nor less than thirty-three. 

■tsssnaB not be more than one hundred 

and delegates are elected by single 

.apportioned once every ten yearn, 

for a term of four years. 

The only qualifications Cor 




gates are those fequwed of an elector and f 
; there are, however, a few disqoailficatio 
in office* in the state or a salaried Feden 



in their districts; . . 

as holding certain offices in the state or a salaried Federal office. 
The General Assembly meets regularly at Richmond on the second 
Wednesday in January of each even-numbered year, and the governor 
must call an extra s ession on the application of two-thirds of the 
members of both houses, and may call one whenever he thinks 
the interests of the state require it. The length of a regular session 
is limited to sixty days unless three-fifths of the members of each 
house concur in extruding it, and no extension may exceed thirty 
days. Senators and delegates am paid $500 each for each regular 
session and 8250 for each extra s es sion. Any mil may originate 
in either house, but a bill of special, private or local interest must 
be referred to a standing committee of five members appointed 
by the Senate and seven m embers appointed by the House of Dele- 
gates, before it is referred to the committee of the house in which 
it originated. The governor s veto power extends to items in appro- 
priatxra bilk, and to overcome his veto, whethei of a whole bill or an 
item of an appropriation bul, a two-thirds vote in each house of the 



present is required, and such two-thirds must i 
each house a majority of the members elected to that house. When- 
ever the governor approves of the general purpose of a bill, but 
disapproves of 1 ■" ' 

with his r 

to him, he may, w h e th er I 

or not, treat it as if it were before him for the first time. 

Jad tcwy.— The administration of justice b vested principally 
in a supreme c " * *~ 

of a justice 1 ' 
of five j * 



! portion or portions, he may return {he bill 
tboas for amendment, and when it comes back 
ether his recommendations have been adopted 




andWythevitte, The coscuxrence of at feast three judges is m 

to the decision of a case in vo lv ing the constitutionality of a law. 
Whenever the docket of tins court is crowded, or there b a use upon 
it in which it is improper for a majority of the j uuges to ait .the General 
Assembly inayprovifc for aspect court of appeals, to be composed 
of not more than five nor leas than three judges of the circuit courts 
and city courts, w cities having a population of iojooo or more. The 
state is divided into thirty judicial circuits and in each of these a 
circuit judge is chosen for a term of eight years by a joint vote of 
the Senate and t he House of Del egates. The jurisdiction of the 
cnxmt courts was extended by the present Constitution to include 
that which, under the preceding Constitution, was vested m county 
courts, and the principal restriction as that they shall not have 
original jurisdiction in civil cases for the recovery of personal 
prop e rty amounting to less than fao. Similar to the circuit court 
is the con 



in each city having a population of 10,000 
. the judge of each of these corporation courts is chosen for 
a term of eight years by a Joint vote of the Senate and the House of 
Delegates, and he may hold a circuit as well as a corporation court. 
Circuit courts and tu rp uiation courts appoint the coitunissioaers in 
chancery. Three justices of the peace are elected in each magis- 
terial district for a term of four years. There are also justices of 
the peace (elected) and police justices (appointed) in cities, and in 
various minor cases a justice's court has original jurisdiction, either 
exclusive or concurrent with the circuit and corporation courts. 
In each city having a population of 70/mo or more a special justice 
of the peace, known as a civil justice, is elected by a joint vote of 
the Senate and the House of Delegates for a term off o ur ye ars . 

LKai Gos«r*m«a.— Each county is divided into magisterial 
districts, varying in number from three to eleven. Each district elects 
a supervisor for a term of four years, and the district supervisors 
constitute a county board of supervisors, which represents the 
county as a corporation, manages the county property and county 
business, levies the county taxes, audits the accounts of the county, 
and recommends for appointment by the circuit court a county sur- 
veyor and a county* superintendent of the poor. Each county also 
elects a treasurer, a sheriff, an attorney and one or more com- 
misshmers of the revenue, each for a term of four years, and a clerk, 
who is clerk of the circuit court, for a term of eight years. The 
coroner is appointed by the circuit court for a term of two years. 
Each magisterial district elects, besides a supervisor and justices 
of the peace, a constable and an ov er seer of the poor, each for a term 
of four years. The Constitution provides that all " communities M 
with a population less than 5000, incorporated after its adoption, 
shall be known as towns, and that those with a population of 5000 
or more shall be known as dries. In each dty incorporated after 
its adoption, the Constitution requires the election in each of a mayor, 
a treasurer and a sergeant, each for a term of four years, and the 
election or appointment of a commissioner of the revenue for an 
equal term; that in cities having a population of 10.000 or more 
the council shall be co m posed of two branches; that the mayor 
shall have a veto on all acts of the council and on herns of appro- 
priation, ordinances or resolutions, which can be overridden only by 
an affirmative vote of two-thirds of the m em ber s elected to each 
branch; and that no cky shall incur a bonded indebtedness ex* 
needing 18% of the assessed value of its real estate. 

•*-*---" •— " '--■ may manage her separate 



m potency 
i the pcni- 



property as if she were single, except that she caonot by her sole 
act d ep riv e her husband of his courtesy in her real estate. A widow 
is entitled to a dower in one-third of the real estate of which her 
husband was seised at any time during coverture If the husband 
dies intestate?, leaving no descendants and no paternal or maternal 
kindicd. the whole of his estate goes to his widow absolutely. If 
the husband dies intestate, leaving a widow and issue, cither by her 
or by a former marriage, the widow is entitled to at least one- third 
of his personal estate; if he leaves no issue by her, she is entitled 
to so much of his personal estate as was acquired by him by virtue 
of has marriage with her prior to the ath of April 1877; if be leaves 
ao issue whatever, she is entitled to one-half of his personal estate. 
A widower is entitled by courtesy to a life interest in all his wife's 
real estate: if she dies intestate, he is entitled to all her personal 
estate; if she dies intestate, leaving no descendants and no paternal 
or maternal kindred, he is entitled to her whole estate absolutely. 
The causes for ao absolute divorce arc adultery; ii 
drwrtion for three years; a sentence to confinement in 
tentiary; a conviction of an infamous offence before marriage 
unknown to the other; or, if one of the parries is charged with an 
offence punishable with death or confinement in the penitentiary, 
and has been a fugitive from justice for two years; pregnancy of 
the wife before marriage unknown to the husband, or the wife's 
bang a prostitute before marriage unknown to the husband. One 
party must be a resident of the state for one year preceding the 
com m en c ement of a suit for a divorce. When a divorce b obtained 
because of adultery, permission of the guilty party to marry again 
is in the discretion of the court. Marriages hctwecn whites and 
negroe s and bigamous marriages are void. The homestead of a 
householder or bead of a family to the value of S2000 and property 
rec o rded is exempt from levy, seizure, garnishment or forced sale, 
except for purchase money, for services of a labouring person or 
otechanic. for liabilities incurred by a public officer, fiduciary or 
attorney for money collected, for taxes, for rent or for legal fees 
of a public officer. If the owner b a married man hb homestead 
cannot be sold except by the joint deed of himself and hb wife; 
anther can it be mortgaged without his wife's consent except for 
purchase money or for the erection or repair of buildings upon it. 
The exemption continues after his death so long as there « an 
snssarried widow or an unmarried minor child. The family library, 
Uaniy pictures, school books, a seat or pew in a house of worship, 
a lot in a burial ground, necessary wearing apparel, a limited amount 
of furniture and household utensils, some of a farmer's domestic 
animals and agricultural implements, and the wages of a labouring 
man who is a householder are exempt from levy or distress. A law 
enacted in 1908 forbids the employment of children under fourteen 
rears of age in any factory, workshop, mercantile establishment, 
or mine within the state, except that orphans or other children 
depe nden t upon their own labour for support or upon whom invalid 
parents are dependent may be so employed after they are twelve 
years of age, and that a parent may work hb or her own children in 
nb or her own factory, workshop, mercantile establishment or mine. 
Charitable and Pinal Institutions. — Virginia has four hospitals 
for the insane: the Eastern State Hospital (1773), at Williams- 
burg: the South- Western State Hospital (1887). at Marion; the 
Western State Hospital (1828), with an epileptic colony, at Staun- 
ton, and the Central State Hospital (1870; for negroes), at Peters* 
burg. For the care of the deaf and blind there is the Virginia 
School for Deaf and Blind (1839), at Staunton, and the Virginia 
School for Coloured Deaf and Blind Children (1908). at Newport 



VIRGINIA 121 

Association of Virginia and the Virginia Home and Industrial School 
for girls are each under a board of trustees appointed by the General 
Assembly, and each b authorized to establish houses of correction, 
reformatories and industrial schools. A general supervision of aH 
state, county, municipal and private charities and corrections b 
vested by a law enacted in 1008 in a board of charities and correc- 
tions consisting of five members appointed by the governor with 
the concurrence of the Senate. 

Education.— The public free school system b administered by a 
state board of education, a superintendent of public instruction, 
division superintendents, and district and county school boards. 
The state board of education consists of the governor; the attorney- 
general; the superintendent of public instruction, who b ex officio 
its president; three experi e nced educators chosen quadrennially 
by the Senate from members of the faculties of the University of 
Virginia, the Virginia Miliary Institute, the Virginia Polytechnic 
Institute, the State Female Normal School at Farmville, the School 
for the Deaf and Blind, and the College of William and Mary; 
and two division superintendents, one from a county and one from 
a city, chosen biennially by the other members of the board. Thb 
board prescribes the duties of the superintendent of public instruc- 
tion and decides appeals from bis decisions; keeps the state divided 
into school divisions, comprising not less than one county or city 
each; appoints quadrennially, with the concurrence of the Senate, 
one superintendent for each school division and p r e s tiib e s his 
powers and duties; selects textbooks; provides for examination 
of teachers; and appoints school inspectors. In each county an 
electoral board, consisting of the attorney for the Commonwealth, 
the division superintendent and one member appointed by the 
judge of the circuit court, appoints a board of three school trustees 
lor each district, one each year. The division superintendent' 
and the school trustees of the several districts constitute a county 
school board. The elementary schools are maintained from the 
proceeds of the state school funds, consisting of interest on the 
literary fund, a portion of the state poll tax. a proper t y tax not less 
than one mill nor more than five nulls on the dollar, and special 
appropriations; county funds, consisting principally of a property 
tax; and district funds, consisting principally of a property tax 
and a dog tax. A law enacted in 1008 encourages the establish- 
domestic 



News. The State Penitentiary is at Richmond. The Prison 
Association of Virginia with an Industrial School (1890) at Laurel 
Station, the Negro Reformatory Association of Virgima with a 
Manual Labour School (1897) at Broadneck Farm, Hanover, and 
the Virginia Home and Industrial School for white girls (191a) at 
Bon Asr take care of juvenile offenders; these are all owned and 
controlled by arff-perpetuatine boards of trustees, but are supported 
by the state, receiving an allowance per capita. For each state 
hospital for the insane there is a special hoard of directors consisting 
of three members appointed by the governor with the concurrence 
of the Senate, one every two years, and over them all is the com- 
miitrinrr of state hospitals for the insane, who b appointed by the 
governor with the concurrence of the Senate for a term of four 
years. The me m b e r s of the special boards under the chairmanship 
of the comrabsjoner constitute a general board for all the hospitals, 
and Use superintendent of each hospital b appointed by the general 
board. Each school for the deaf and blind b managed by a board 
of visitors appointed by the governor with the concurrence of the 
Senate. About five-sixths of the convicts are negroes. Some of 
dm are employed on a state farm at Lassiter, Goochland county, 
on which there ts a tuberculosis hospital, and some of them on the 
poWic roads; in 1909 there were 350 men at the state farm, 14 
nad camps with about 630 men, and 1273 men and 96 women in 
the penitentiary at Richmond. When a prisoner has served one- 
half of his term and his conduct has been good for two years 
{i he has been confined for that period) the board of directors may 
ntrcJe him for the remainder of his term, provided there is 
sttafactory assurance that he will not be dependent on public 
charity. The Prison Association of Virginia, the Negro Reformatory 



nts of agriculture. < 



v e c onomy and manual 

training in at least one high school in each congressional district. 
A law enacted in 1910 provides a fund for special aid from the 
state to rural graded schools with at least two rooms. With state 
aid normal training departments are maintained in several of the 
high schools in counties which adopt the provisions of the statute. 
All children between the ages of eight and twelve years are required 
to attend a public school at least twelve weeks in a year {six weeks 
consecutively) unless excused on account of weakness of mind or 
body, unless the child can read and write and b attending a private 
school, or unless the child lives more than two miles from the 
nearest school and more than one mile from an established public 
school wagon route. The State Female Normal School, at Farm- 
ville, is governed by a board consisting of the state superintendent 
and thirteen trustees appointed by the governor with the con- 
currence of the Senate for a term of four years. The Virginia 
Normal and Industrial Institute, at Petersburg, b governed by a 
board of visitors consisting of the superintendent of public instruc- 
tion and four other members appointed by the governor with the 
concurrence of the Senate for four years. In 1908 the General 
Assembly made an appropriation for establishing two state normal 
and industrial schools for women, one at Harrisonburg and the 
other at Fredericksburg, both under a board of trustees consisting 
of the superintendent of public instruction and ten other members 
appointed by the go ver n or with the concurrence of the Senate. 
The Virginia Agricultural and Mechanical College and Polytechnic 
Institute, at Bucksburg. b governed by a board consisting of the 
state superintendent and eight visitors appointed by the governor 
with the concurrence of the Senate. The Virginia Military Institute. 
at Lexington, is governed by a board of visitors consisting of the 
adjutant general, the superintendent of public instruction and nine 
other members appointed by the governor with the concurrence of 
the Senate. The University of Virginia fav.), at Charlottesville, 
was founded In 1817 and opened in 1825. The College of William 
and Mary (1693), at Williamsburg, became a state institution in 
1906 and b likewise governed under a board appointed by the 
governor. Other institutions of higher learning which are not 
under state control are: Washington and Lee University (non- 
sectarian. 1749), at Lexington; Hampden-Sidney College (Presby- 
terian. 1776). at Hampden-Sidney; Richmond College (Baptist, 
S), at Richmond; Randolph- Macon College (Methodist Episco- 
1832), at Ashland; Emory and Henry College (Methodic 
copal, 1838), at Emory; Roanoke College (Lutheran, 1853), 
at Salem; Bridgewater College (German Baptist, 1879), at Bridge- 
water; Fredericksburg College (Presbyterian, 1891), at Fredericks- 
burg; Virginia Union University (Baptbt, 1899). at Richmond; 
and Virginia Christian College (Christian. 1903), at Lynchburg. , 
FituiiKr.—- Revenue for state, county and municipal purposes is 
derived principally from taxes on real estate, tangible personal 
property, incomes in excess of 81000, wills and administrations. 



debt amounting to nearly s>39,ooo,oo>\ [)nin- L pj|iy in oju ot 
improvements. She Was unable to pay Use inicmt tin thi* 
the Civil War, and in March 1871 the principal tegclhiT * 
overdue interest amounted to about £4-7*000,000. The 



123 VIRGINIA 

deeds, seals, lawsuits, banks, trust and security companies, insurance 
companies, express companies, railway and canal co r po r at i ons, 
sleeping<ar, parlour <ar and dining<ar companies, telegraph and 
telephone companies, franchise taxes, poll taxes, an inheritance tax 
and taxes on various business and professional licences. The tax 
laws require that p roper t y shall be assessed at its full value by 
commissioners of the revenue elected by counties and cities. The 
revenue is collected by county and city treasurers, clerks of courts, 
and the state corporation commission, consisting of three members 
appointed by the governor with the concurrence of the General 
Assembly in joint session. The total receipts in the fiscal year 
1908-1909 amounted to $5,536,510 and the toul disbursements to 
$5,796,980. By the 1st of January i&»i Virgmia had incurred a 
debt amounting to nearly $39,000,000, pri.11eki.vJIy in aid ol munul 
nabte to pay the inivTwt on thi* during 
wifti the 
\ . , ■ . ral 
Assembly passed an act at that time for refunding, two- third* ol it, 
claiming that the other third should he pin by Wtsf Virginia. 
But the advocates of a " forcible reaci j*k-tmcnt " el the ttebi <^rried 
the election in l879withtheaidof the negro vote, and after prolonged 
negotiations in 1892 a settlement wa- tfiLxtoi unJir * lm.fi .: tot 
amounting to about $28,000,000 was again refunded. In 1008 this 
had been reduced to about $24,000,000. The sinking fund consists 
of damages recovered against defaulting revenue collectors, railway 
stock and appropriations from time to time by the legislature. 

History.— Virginia was the first permanent English settle- 
ment in North America. From 1583 to 15S8 attempts had been 
made by Sir Walter Raleigh and others to establish colonies on 
the coast of what is now North Carolina. The only result was 
the naming of the country Virginia in honour of Queen Eliza- 
beth. But glowing accounts were brought back by the early 
adventurers, and in 1606 an expedition was sent out by the 
London Company, which was chartered with rights of trade 
and settlement between 34° and 4«° N. lat. It landed, 
at a place which was called Jamestown, on the 13th of May 
1607, and resulted in the establishment of many plantations 
along the James river. The purpose of the company was 
to build up a profitable commercial and agricultural com- 
munity; but the hostility of the natives, unfavourable climatic 
conditions and the character of the colonists delayed the growth 
of the new community. John Smith became the head of the 
government in September 1608, compelled the colonists to submit 
to law and order, built a church and prepared for more 
extensive agricultural and fishing operations. In 1609 the 
London Company was reorganised, other colonists were sent out 
and the boundaries of the new country were fixed, according to 
which Virginia was to extend from a point 200 m. south of Old 
Point Comfort, at the mouth of Chesapeake Bay, to another 
point too m. north, " west and northwest to the South Sea.'* 

The government of the country was in the hands of the 
London Company, which in turn committed administrative and 
local affairs to a governor and council who were to reside in the 
colony. Before the arrival of the " government " and their 
shiploads of settlers the original colony was reduced to the 
direst straits. Captain Christopher Newport (<L 161S), Sir 
Thomas Gates and Sir George Somas, the new authorities, 
leached Jamestown at last with 150 men, but finding things 
la such a deplorable state all agreed (June 10, 1610) to give up 
the effort to found a colony on the James and set sail for New- 
foundland. At the mouth of the river they met Lord Delaware, 
however, who brought other colonists and plentiful supplies; 
and they returned, set up a trading post at what is now Hampton 
and undertook to bring the hostile natives to subjection. In 
r6n, 650 additional colonists landed, the James and Appo- 
mattox rivers were explored and M plantations M were estab- 
Sshcd at Henrico and New Bermuda, In 161 7 Virginia fell 
into the hands of a rigid Puritan, Captain Samuel ArgaH. The 
colonists were compelled on pain of death to accept the doctrine 
of the trinity, respect the authority of the Bible and attend 
church. This rigid regime was superseded in 1619 by a miMer 
system under Sir George Yeardsev (d. 1617)- Twelve hundred 
new enmnhts arrived in t4io> At the same time negro slaves 
and maaj" uul r nt uTed "servants were iatported as labourers. 

At the beginning Virginia colonists had held their land and 
in common. But in t6t6 the land was par* 
Ignft and the settlers were scattered along the shores of the 



James and Appomattox riven many miles inland. Twenty 
thousand pounds of tobacco were exported in 1619. The com- 
munity had now become self-supporting, and the year that 
witnessed these changes witnessed also the first representative 
assembly in North America, the Virginia House of Burgesses, 
a meeting of planters sent from the plantations to assist the 
governor in reforming and remaking the laws of the colony. In 
162 1 a constitution was granted whereby the London Company 
appointed the governor and a council, and the people were to 
choose annually from their counties, towns, hundreds and 
plantations delegates to the House of Burgesses. The popular 
assembly, like the English House of Commons, granted supplies 
and originated laws, and the governor and Council enjoyed 
the right of revision and veto as did the king and the House of 
Lords at home. The Council sat also as a supreme court to 
review the county courts. This system remained unchanged 
until the revolution of 1776. But in 1624 the king took the 
place and exercised the authority of the London Company. 

Before 1622 there was a population of more than 4000 in 
Virginia, and the many tribes of Indians who were still the pro- 
prietors of the soil over a greater portion of the country naturally 
became jealous, and on the 22nd of March of that year fell upon 
the whiles and slew 350 persons. Sickness and famine once 
again visited the colony, and the population was reduced 
by nearly one-half. These losses were repaired, however; the 
tobacco industry grew in importance, and the settlers built their 
cabins far in the interior of lowland Virginia- This rapid 
growth was scarcely retarded by a second Indian attack, in 
April 1641, which resulted in the death of about 350 settlers. 
By 1648 the population had increased to 15,000. 

Virginia was neither cavalier nor roundhead, but both. 
Sir William Berkeley had been the governor since 1641, and 
though be was loyal enough to the crown, it was without 
difficulty that his authority was overthrown in March 1652 and 
that of Cromwell proclaimed in its stead. Richard Bennett, a 
Puritan from Maryland, now ruled the province. Bennett and 
his Puritan successors, Edward Digges and Samuel Mathews, 
made no serious change in the administration of the colony 
except to extend greatly the elective franchise. But this policy 
was reversed in 1660, when Berkeley was restored to power. 
The return of Berkeley was the beginning of a reaction which 
concentrated authority, both in the House of Burgesses and in 
the Council, in the hands of the older families, and thus created 
a privileged class. The governor, supported by the great 
families, retained the same House of Burgesses for sixteen years 
lest a new one might not be submissive. The increasing mass 
of the population dwelt along the western border or on the less 
fertile ridges which make up the major part of the land even in 
tide-water Virginia. These poorer people— who were not, 
however, '•poor whites "—developed an abiding hostility 
towards the oligarchy. They desired a freer land-grant system, 
protection against the inroads of the Indians along the border, 
and frequent sessions of an assembly to be chosen by all the 
freeholders. But a new code of laws outlawed many of these 
people as dissenters, and in 1676 a burdensome tax was laid by 
the unrepresentative assembly. The Indians had again attacked 
the border farmers, and the governor had refused assistance, 
being willing, it was generally believed, that the border pop- 
ulation should sutler while he and his adherents enjoyed n 
lucrative fur trade with the Indians. Under these circum- 
stances, Nathaniel Bacon (1647-1676), whose grandfather was 
a cousin of Francis Bacon, took up the cause of the borderers 
and severely punished the Indians at the battle of Bloody 
Run. But Berkeley meanwhile had outlawed Bacon, whose 
forces now marched on the capital demanding recognition as the 
authorised army of defence. This was refused, and civil war 
began, in which the governor was defeated and Jamestown was 
burned. But Bacon fell a victim to malaria and died in 
October in Gloucester county. Berkeley dosed the conflict 
with wholesale executions and confiscations. Censured by 
the king, he sailed to England to make his defence, but died 
in London in 1677 without having seen Charles. Virginia 



VIRGINIA 



123 



seawrined m the hands of the reactionary party and wa governed 
by men whose primary purpose was to " make their fortunes " 
at the expense of the colonial*. Even the accession of William 
and Mary scarcely affected the fortunes of the " fifth kingdom," 
though Middle Plantation, a hamlet not far from Jamestown, 
became Williamsburg and the capital of the province in 1691, 
and the clergy received a head, though not a bishop, in the 
person of James Blair (1656-1743), an able Scottish churchman, 
who as commisary of the bishop of London became a counter- 
poise to the arbitrary governors, and who as founder and head 
of the College of William and Mary (established at Williams- 
burg in 1693) did valiant service for Virginia. Under the 
stimulus of Blair's activity religion and education prospered 
as never before. The powers and duties of the vestry were 
defined, the position of the parish priest was fixed and his salary 
was regularly provided for at the public expense, and peda- 
gogues were brought over from Scotland. 

By 1700 the population of Virginia had reached 70*000, of 
whom 30,000 were negro slaves. The great majority of whites 
were small farmers whose condition was anything but desirable 
and who constantly encroached upon the Indian lands in the 
Rappahannock region or penetrated the forests south of the 
James, several thousand having reached North Carolina. Be- 
tween 1707 and 1740 many Scottish immigrants, traders, teachers 
and tobacco-growers settled along the upper Rappahannock, 
and, uniting: with the borderers in general, they offered strong 
rrrhfinrr to the older planters on the James and the York. 

Tobacco-growing was the one vocation of Virginia, and many 
of the planters were able to spend their winters in London or 
Glasgow and to send their sons and daughters to the finishing 
schools of the mother country. Negro slavery grew so rapidly 
dcring the first half of the eighteenth century that the blacks 
etrtnoanbered the whites in 1740. The master of slaves set 
the *■*"—■ Handsome houses were built along the banks of 
the «'-sjpf h rivers, and numerous slaves were employed. There 
was as great a social distance between the planters and their 
friaw on the one side and the masses of people in Virginia 
on the other as that which separated the nobles from the yeo- 
snanry in Europe; and there was still another chasm between 
the small farmers and the negroes. 

la 1716 an expedition of Governor Alexander Spotswood 
over the mountains advertised to the world the rich back- 
osuatry, now known as the Valley of Virginia; a migration 
thither from Pennsylvania and from Europe followed which 
revolutionized the province. The majority of blacks over 
whites soon gave way before the influx of white immigrants, 
and in 17S6 there was a population of 292,000* of whom only 
170,009 were negroes, and the small farmer class' had grown 
ss rapidly that the old tide-water aristocracy was in danger 
of being overwhelmed. The " West " had now appeared in 
American history. This first West, made up of the older 
smatt farmers, of the Scottish settlers, of the Germans from 
the Palatinate and the Scottish-Irish, far outnumbering the 
people of the old counties, demanded the creation of new 
counties and proportionate representation in the Burgesses. 
They dad not at first succeed, but when the Seven Years' War 
came on they proved their worth by fighting the battles of 
the community against the Indians and the French. When 
the wax was over the prestige of the up-country had been 
greatly enhanced, and its people soon found eastern leaders 
m the persons of Richard Henry Lee and Patrick Henry. In 
1763-1765 an investigation of the finances of the colony, 
forced by the up-country party, showed widespread corruption, 
and resulted in the collapse of the tide-water oligarchy, which 
had been in power since 1660. In the meantime the Presby- 
terians, who had been officially recognized in Virginia under 
the Toleration Act in 1609, and bad been guaranteed religious 
autonomy in the Valley by Governor Gooch in 1738, had sent 
■liiinmrin into the border counties of eastern Virginia. 
The Baptists about the same lime entered the colony both 
from the north and the south and established scores of churches. 
The new dcaonnnations vigorously attacked the methods and 



immunities of the established church, whose clergy had grown 
lukewarm in zeal and lax in morals. When the clergy, 
refusing to acknowledge the authority of the Burgesses in 
reducing their stipends, and, appealing to the king against the 
Assembly, entered the courts to recover damages from the 
vestries, Patrick Henry at Hanover court in 1763 easily con- 
vinced the jury and the people that the old church was well- 
nigh worthless. From this time the old order was doomed, 
for the up-country, the dissenters and the reformers had 
combined against it But the passage of the Stamp Act 
hastened the catastrophe and gave the leaders of the new 
combination, notably Henry, an opportunity to humiliate the 
British ministry, whom not even the tide-water party could 
defend. The repeal of the Stamp Act, followed as it was by 
the Townshend scheme of indirect taxation, displeased Virginia 
quite as much as had the former more direct system of taxation. 
When the Burgesses undertook in May 1769 to declare in 
vigorous resolutions that the right and power of taxation, 
direct and indirect, rested with the local assembly, the governor 
hastily dissolved them, but only to find the same men asscm* 
biing in the Raleigh tavern In Williamsburg and issuing forth 
their resolutions in defiance of executive authority. Patrick 
Henry and Richard Henry Lee, with Thomas Jefferson, a new 
up-country leader of great ability, were the leaders. 

In 1774 Lord Dunmore, the governor, led an army to the 
Ohio river to break an Indian coalition which had been formed 
to check the rapid expansion of Virginia over what is now 
Kentucky and West Virginia. The up-country again furnished 
the troops and did the fighting at Point Pleasant (q.v.) t where 
on the 10th of October the power of the Indians was completely 
broken. But the struggle with England had reached a crisis, 
and Virginia supported with seal the revolutionary movement 
and took the lead in the Continental Congresses which directed 
the su cc e ed i n g war. (see Umtrd States). In 1775 Patrick 
Henry organized a regiment of militia and compelled the 
governor to seek safety on board an English man-of-war in 
Chesapeake Bay. The war now assumed continental proportions, 
and the Virginia leaders decided in May 1776 that a declaration 
of independence was necessary to secure foreign assistance. 
When the Continental Congress issued the famous Declaration 
Virginia had already assembled in convention to draft a new 
Constitution. Although Henry, Lee and Jefferson exercised 
great power, they were unable to secure a Constitution which 
embodied the demands of their party: universal suffrage, 
proportional representation and religious freedom. A draft 
for such a Constitution was submitted by Jefferson, but the 
Conservatives rejected it. The system which was adopted 
allowed the older counties, which must be conciliated, a large 
majority of the representatives in the new Assembly, on the 
theory that the preponderance of property (slavery) in that 
section required this as security against .the rising democracy. 
In place of the former governor, there was to be an executive 
chosen annually by the Assembly; the old Council was to be 
followed by a similar body elected by the Assembly; and the 
judges were likewise to be the creatures of Jhe legislature. 
The Assembly was divided into two bodies, a Senate and a 
House of Delegates. The legislature would be all-powerful, 
and yet representation was so distributed that about one-third 
of the voters living in the tide-water region would return nearly 
two-thirds of the members of the legislature. The franchise, 
though not universal, was generously bestowed; it was a very 
liberal freehold system. 

The recruiting ground for the American army in Virginia was 
the up-country among the Scottish-Irish and the Germans who 
had long fought the older section of the colony. In 1779 
Norfolk was again attacked, and great damage was also done 
to the neighbouring towns. In January 1781 Benedict Arnold 
captured Richmond and compelled governor and legislature 
to flee beyond the Blue Ridge mountains, where one session of 
the Assembly was held. The last campaign of the war closed 
at Yorktown on the igth of October 1781. 

Virginia leaders, including Henry, were the first to urge the 



I2 4 



VIRGINIA 



formation of a national government with adequate powers 
to supersede the lame confederacy. In 1787, under the pre- 
sidency of Washington, the National Convention sat in Phila- 
delphia, with the result that the present Federal Constitution 
was submitted to the states for ratification during 1787-1789. 
In Virginia the tide-water leaders urged adoption, while the up- 
country men, following Henry, opposed; but after a long and 
a bitter struggle, in the summer of 1788 the new instrument was 
accepted, the low-country winning by a majority of ten voles, 
partly through the influence of James Madison. Thus the 
eastern men, who had reluctantly supported the War of Inde- 
pendence, now became the sponsors for the national government, 
and Washington was compelled to rely on the party of 
slavery, not only in Virginia but in the whole South, in order to 
administer the affairs of the nation. 

In 1784, Virginia, after some hesitation, ceded to the Federal 
government the north-west territory, which it held under the 
charter of 1600; in 1792 another large strip of the territory 
of Virginia became an independent state under the name 
of Kentucky. But the people ot these cessions, especially of 
Kentucky, were closely allied CO the great up-country party of 
Virginia, and altogether they formed the basis of the Jcffersonian 
democracy, which from 1794 opposed the chief measures of the 
Washington administration, and which on the passage of the 
Alien and Sedition laws in 1798 precipitated the first great 
constitutional crisis in Federal politics by the adoption in the 
Kentucky and Virginia legislatures of the resolutions, known 
by the names of those states, strongly asserting the right and 
duty of the states to arrest the course of the national 
government whenever in their opinions that course had become 
unconstitutional. Jefferson was the author of the Kentucky 
resolutions, and his friend Madison prepared those passed by 
the Virginia Assembly. But these leaders restrained their 
followers sharply whenever the suggestion of secession was 
made, and the question of what was meant by arresting the 
course of Federal legislation was left in doubt. The election 
of 1800 rendered unnecessary all further agitation by putting 
Jefferson in the President's chair. The up-country party in 
Virginia, with their allies along the frontiers of the other states, 
was now in power, and the radical of 1776 shaped the policy 
of the nation during the next twenty-five years- Virginia held 
the position of leadership in Congress, controlled the cabinet 
and supplied many justices of the Supreme Court. 

Virginia played a leading role in the War of 1812, and up to 
1835 her influence in the new Western and North- Western states 
was overwhelming. But the steady growth of slavery in the East 
and of a virile democracy in the West neutralized this influence 
and compelled the assembling of the constitutional convention 
of 1829, whose purpose was to revise the fundamental law in such 
a way as to give the more populous counties of the West their 
legitimate weight in the legislature. The result was failure, for 
the democracy of small farmers which would have taxed slavery 
out of existence was denied proportionate repre s entation. The 
slave insurrection under Nat Turner (f.».) in 1831 led to 
a second abortive effort, this time by the legislature, to 
do away with the fateful institution. The failure of these 
popular movements led to a sharp reaction in Virginia, as in 
the whole Sooth, in favoor of slavery. From i8js to 1861 
many leading Virginians defended slavery as a blessing and as 
part of a divinely established order. 

la 1850 a third Convention undertook to amend the Constitu- 
tion, and now that the West yielded its bitter hostility to slavery, 
representation was so arranged that the more populous section 
was enabled to control the House while the East still held the 
Senate; the ele ctio n of judges was confided to the people; and 
the smfcagewas broadened. Although the West was not pleased, 
the madmof the stave-holding counties threatened secession. 

IftlfcptttiBVl elections of i860 Virginia returned a majority 
l the secession candidates, Brechin- 
r of the large planters voting for the 
, and many of the smaller slave-owners 
The governor caUcd an extra 




session of the legislature soon after the Federal election, and tins 
in turn called a Convention to meet on the 13th of February 1861. 
The majority of this body consisted of Unionists, but the Con- 
vention passed the ordinance of secession when the Federal 
government (April 17) called upon the state to supply its quota 
of armed men to suppress " insurrection " in the lower Southern 
states. An alliance was made with the provisional government 
of the Confederate States, on April 2$, without waiting for the 
vote of the people on the ordinance. The Convention called 
out 10,000 troops and appointed Colonel Robert E. Lee of the 
United States army as commander-in-chief. On the 23rd of 
May the people of the eastern counties almost unanimously 
voted approval of the acts of the Convention, and the western 
counties took steps to form the state of West Virginia (q.v.). 
Richmond soon became the capital of the Confederacy. 

The Civil War was already begun, and Virginia was of neces- 
sity the battle-ground. Of the six great impacts made upon 
the Confederacy, four were upon Virginian soil: the first Man- 
assas campaign (1861), the Peninsular battles (1862), second 
Manassas (1862), Fredericksburg, Cliancellorsville (1862-65) 
and the great Wikkrness-Petcrsburg series of attacks 
(1864-65). About 50,000 men were killed in Virginia, and 
probably 100,000 died of wounds and disease. The principal 
battles were: the first Manassas, or Bull Run (July «. 1861); 
those around Richmond (June 26-July 2, 1862); second 
Manassas (August 29-30); Fredericksburg (December 12, 1862); 
Mechanicsville (May 2 and 3, 1863); the Wilderness (May 5 
and 6); Spottsyivania (May 8); North Anna and Bethesda 
church (May 29-30); Cold Harbor (Jum 3); the battles around 
Petersburg Gone 15, July 30 and November 1, 1864); and 
Five Forks (April 1) and Appomattox (April 8-9, 1865). 

With the surrender of the Confederate army under General 
Lee to Grant at Appomattox the task of reconstruction began. 
President Lincoln offered a very liberal plan of re-establishing 
the civil authority over the counties east of the Alleghany 
mountains, and Governor Francis H. Pierpont set up in Rich- 
mond a government, based upon the Lincoln plan and supported 
by President Johnson, which continued till the and of March 
1867, when the famous reconstruction order converting the 
state into Military District No. 1 was issued. General John 
M. Schofield was put in charge, and under his authority a 
constitutional Convention was summoned which bestowed the 
suffrage upon the former slaves, who, led by a small group of 
whites, who bad come into the state with the invading armies, 
ratified the 14th and 15th amendments to the Federal Constitu- 
tion and governed the community until 1869. Then the 
secessionists and Union men of 1861 united and regained 
control. Virginia was readmitted to the Union on the 26th 
of January 1870. The Constitution of the reconstruction 
years was unchanged until 1002, when the present fundamental 
law was adopted. 

In national elections the state has supported the Democratic 
party, except in i860, when its vote was cast for John Bell, the 
candidate of the Constitutional Union party. 



GoVSaNORS OF VlEClMIA 
Under the Company 
Edward Maria WingfieM. President of the 

loan Ratdttte, President of the Council 
John Smith. „ .. .... 

George Percy, ., ,. .... 

Thomas West. Lord Delaware. " Governor and 

Captain General " 

George Percy, Deputy Governor 

Sir Thomas Dak. " High Marshal " and 

Deputy Governor 

Sir Thomas Gates, Acting Governor 

S«r Thomas Dale, .. „ . 

George Yeardley, Lieutenant or Deputy 

Governor. ... 

Samuel Argall.Ltcutenant or Deputy Governor 
Nathaniel Powell. Act inc. Governor 
Sir George Yeardley, Governor . 
Sir Franci* W) alt, « ... 



1607 (April to Sept.) 
1607-1608 
1608-1609 
1609-1610 

1610-1618 

161 1 (March to May) 

i6tt (May to Aug.) 

1611-1612 

161 2-1616 

1616-1617 

1617-1610 

16 1 q( April 9 to 10) 

1610-1621 

1621-1624 



Under the Cronm 
Sir Francis Wyatt. Governor. 
Sir George Yeardley, „ 
Frauds West (elected by Council). 
John Pott M . 

Sir John Harvey, Governor . 
loon Went (elected by Council) 
Sir John Harvey, Governor . 
S \x Francis Wyatt. „ . 

Sir WUIiam Berkeley, ., . 
Richard Kemp (elected by Council) 
Sir William Berkeley, Governor . 

Richard Bennef Selected by General Assembly) 
Edward Digfes (elected by House of Burgesses) 
Samuel Mathews (elected by House oil Bur- 



VIRGINIA, UNIVERSITY OF 

J oh ft Floyd, Democrat 
Lfttkrfc * 



125 



1624-1626 
1626-1627 
1627-1628 
1628-1629 
X629-16M 
1635-1636 
1636-1639 
1639-1641 
1641-1644 
1644-1645 
1645-1653 

1652-1655 
1655-1657 



1657-1660 

1660-1677 

I 661-1662 
1677-1670 
1676-1680 
1680-1683 



Under Ike Crown 
Sir WIBiam Berkeley, Governor . 
Francis Morrison (or Moryson), Deputy 
Governor ...... 

Herbert Jeffreys, Lieutenant Governor ■ • 
Sir Henry Crocheky, Deputy Governor 
Thomas* Lord Culpeper. Governor 
Nicholas Spencer, President of the Council . 
Francis, Lord Howard of Effingham, Lieu- 

Nathaniel Bacon, President of the* Council '. 
Francis Nicholson, Lieutenant Governor 
Sir Edmund Andros, Governor 
Francis Nicholson, Lieutenant Governor 
George Hamilton Douglas, Earl of Orkney, 
Govemoc-mrduef ...«•*. 
Edward Nott. Lieutenant Governor 
Edmand Jenings, President of the Council e 
Robert Hunter, Lieutenant Governor 1 . 
Aleaander Sem tewo od, Lieutenant Governor . 

RnbenoTcer; Fiesident of the Council 
WH&am Gooch, Lieutenant Governor . 
Wifiam Anne KeppeL Earl of Albemarle, 

Governor-uvChief f 

lames Blair, President of the Council . 
Sr Wiflsam Gooch, Governor 

\ Robinson, President of the Council <. 



Lewm Din welL 

Robert Dm widdie. Lie 

John Campbell, Earl of Loudon, Governor 



1683-1684 

1684-1687 
1687-1690 
1 690-1692 
1692-1698 
1698-1704 

1704-1737 

1705-1706 

1706-1710 

1707 

1 7 10-172* 

1722-1726 

1726-1727 

1727-1740 

"737-17S4 

1740-1741 

1741-749 

1749 (June to 

1740-1750 

«750-i75« 

I75t"l758 



Sept.) 



General of the American Colo n ies 1 
John Blair, President of the Council - 
Francis Fauquier, Lieutenant Governor ( 
Sir Jeffrey Amherst, Governor-in-Chief \ 
loan Bmar, Presiden t of the Council 
Norbome Berkeley 1 

Governor-in-Chief 
WaVam Nelson, President of the Council 
Joan Murray, Earl of Dunmore, Governor- 



Baron de Botetourt, 



State 



1 Jefferson 

__* Nelson, jun. 

Benjamin Harrison 
Patrick Henry 



HemiyLee 



lames Wood, Democrats- Republican . 
lames Monroe, 

Wmmns n. CsbeQ, N M . . 

passes suuuiuc, „ „ . . 

C««W-. S-itk <*feg). Dccntie Rf 

puoncan ...... 

Peyton Randolph (acting) 

^ Barbour, And- Democrat . 
Cary Nicholas, Republican 
James Fatton Preston, 



WSai 



1 Mann Randolph, 



Tyler, State Rights Democrat 

li nam Branch Giles, Democrat . 



1756-1763 

1758 (Jan. to June) 

I75*-I768 

1763-1768 

1768 (March to Oct.) 

1768-1770 
"770-177I 

1771-1775 

1776-1779 

1779-17*1 

1781 

1781-1784 

1784-1786 

1786-1788 

1788-1791 

1791-1794 

1794-1796 

1796-1799 

1799-1802 

1 802-1 805 

j 805-1808 

1808-181 I 

181 1 

1811 

181 1-1812 

1812-1814 

1814-1816 

1816-1819 

1 819-1823 

1822-1825 

I 825-1827 

1 827-1830 



ton Waller T new til, Democrat . 
Wyndha.ni Robcrtvn (acting), Democrat 
David Campbell, Whijr 
Thorns* W- Gilmer, Whig - 

oho M. Patton (acting), „ 

vba Rutherford Cacticr.)* „ 

nhn M ' n n For- J Gregory (acting), Whig . 
^ ame* McDowell, „ 

William Smith. Dem o cr at , 
John Uuchanan Floyd, Democrat . 
Joseph Johnson p „ * 

Henry Alexander Wist, 
John Letcher, 

\illam Smith, 



. 1550-1554 
.1534-1536 

. 1836-1837 

. 1837-1840 

. 1840-1841 

< 1841 

. 1841-1842 

. 1842-1845 

• 're 1 ! 4 * 

. 1846-1849 

. 1549-1552 

. 1852-1856 

. 1856-1860 

. 1860-1864 

1864-1865 



Fundi H. Piernont (provi-ioral), Republican 1865-1867 
Henry Horatio Well*, „ m 1868-1870 

GtiUn Carlton Walker, m 1870-1874 

!mim LawsQn Kemper, Conservative . . 1874-1878 
Frederick Wm. Mackcy Holliday, M Debt- 



* Never in Virginia. 



Paying " , 
William Ewao Cameron, Read] utter 
Fitrhngh Lee, Democrat 
Philip W. McKinmry. Democrat . 
Charie* Tripktl O'FermJI. Democrat 
Jame* Hoge Tykr, M 

And rev lackwo Montague, „ 
Claude August u« Swansea, „ 
William Hodge* Mann, 



1878-1882 
1882-1886 
1886-1890 

1894-1898 
1898-1902 
I 902-1906 
I 906-1910 
1910 

Bibliography.— For physical description see Henry Gannett, 
Gaeetteer of Virginia (Washington, 1904)* US. Geological Survey 
Bulletin 232; W. B. Rogers, Geology of the Ku-gmm7(New York, 




On fisheries see the Report of las Commission of Fisheries, jot 
(Richmond, 1909). For administration see J. G. Pollard (edj, 
Code of Virginia (2 vote., St Paul, 1904); and on finance, W. L. 
RoyaU, History of the Virginia Debt Controeersy (Richmond, 1897). 
Hwfcfry.— General histories are: Robert Beverley, History of 
Virginia in Font Farts f Richmond, 1S55): R. R Howison. History 
of Virginia (2 vela., ibid, f&re); S. Kercheval. History of iMe VeMey 
of Virginia (Woodstock, Vs., 1&50); and J. E* Cook, Virginia: 
a History of the Fe&pk (Boston, 1 900), On the earner period *ec W. 
A. Clayton Torrcnce, " A Trial Bibliography of Colonial Virginia '• 
(Richmond, 10lo), in ihe Report of the Virginia 5toic Librarian 1 
L. G. Tyler (edj. Narration of Eatty Virginia, l$ad-*S (New 
York. IQ07); W. Srith. History of tke Ftnt Dtscmrry and Stttlfmrnt 
of Vtrgtnia (ibkt. iS&S): Susan M. Kingsbury (edj, Rnordi of the 



Virginia Company of London {a voU, Washington, 1906) j Ateitander 
Brown, The Firti Ht public in Ammo* fBocton, J89S); idem (edj. 
Genesis of the Umhni Statri {* voli.. ibid,, tSoo); I. 5. Bauctt, The 
Writissgs of Colon ri JNmam Byd of Wtsuxtr (New York, ioojV, John 
Flake, Old Virginia and her Neighbors (3oid- h JSf?); P. *- Bruce. 




Virginia (New York. 1906) : and. for religioua and social con'lkiorw, 
Rt. Rev. W. Mearie, Old Churches, II tni iters and Families ef Virginia 
GbkL, 1857); and U. J. Eckenrode, "Separation oi Church and 
State in Virginia " (Richmond. 1909) in the $ih Rtpvrt of ike Virginia, 
State Librarian. For the more recent period see Chai* K. Ambler^ 
Sectionalism in Virginia i7jv-t&6i (Chicago, igio), a valuable btudy; 
P. L. Ford, Wrilmgs of Thomas Jt&nip* (to vol*,. New Vork t 



, C Fofd, Writings tf Gevrtt Washington (14 vol*,, 
;W.W. Henry. Lift, Cvrrtst* ' 



1892-99); 

ibioU, 1889-93); W. W. Henry. Lift, Cvrr*3pv*4enci and £pen.kts 
of Pairich Henry (3 v^Ib.. ibid,, iftoi ); J. Elliott. Debates in the 
Seoeral State Corwentiimj tm the Adaption of the Ftdrwl C&mtit na- 
tion (Philadelphia, ]66t); T. R. Dew. Renew of Uu Debate in the 
Virginia Legislature, iSit-J? (Richmond, 1851). important for a 
comprehension ol the slavery issue; J, C. Ballagn. A History of 
Slavery i$t Virginia (Baltimore^ ic/at); B. B. Munford. Virginia* 
AMtmde toward Slavery (New York, 1909): end the Dtbato of the 
Virginia Conees%tume } jjf\\ t iftro, i$*a. which are very fmportaot, 
""""* ** "1 Histemtat 

■nd W. G, 



Stanard L 

1); w. 



^im« ,th, tfjv, taty. io\u, WHH.U »it wry 11 

for 18a pa See alto R. A- Brock (ed.), Virginia 

: (11 vols- Rkhmoud, 1882-9J): P. A. Bruce ii 



Virginia ilarsmne af HisUny and B iogto thy (lbid. + 18 
sqq.); W. W. Htninp, The Statutes at Large (13 vof 
1819-23); and W. R Palmer, Calm' 



voU. ibid 
of Virtinia State Peters 
(11 Vola,ibkL v 1874). 

VneiflU, UailVlBSl T V OF, a state institution for higher 
education, sHoated at OiarioUesvffle among the foot-hills of 
the Blue Ridfe Mooataina. Its buildings, arranged around 



126 



VIRGIN ISLANDS— VIRGO 



a large rectangular lawn and erected from a plan prepared 
by Thomas Jefferson, are noted for their architectural effect. 
At the head of the lawn is the Rotunda, modelled after the 
Roman Pantheon and now containing the university library; 
and at the foot of the lawn are three modern recitation and 
laboratory buildings. On the sides are grouped buildings for 
each individual professor and dormitories for students. There 
are also a chapel, a gymnasium, a hospital, and on the summit 
of Mount Jefferson Hill, a mile south-west of the campus, is, the 
M'Connick Observatory. The university comprises twenty- 
six independent schools, but the courses of instruction given 
in these are so co-ordinated as to form six departments: two 
academic— the college and the department of graduate studies; 
and four professional — law, medicine, engineering and agri- 
culture. The institution owns 52a acres of land, has productive 
endowment funds amounting to $1,978,000, and receives from 
the state an annual appropriation of $80,000. It is governed 
by a rector, chosen by and from nine visitors, and a board of 
visitors appointed by the governor and two visitors ex officio, 
the state superintendent of public instruction and the president 
of the university; and the corporate name of the university 
is "The Rector and Visitors of the University of Virginia.'* 
In 1004 Edwin Anderson Alderman (b. 1861) was elected 
president. In 1010 the faculty and officers numbered no, 
the students (men only) 803, and the number of volumes in 
the libraries 88/xxx 

The university traces its beginning to an act of the legislature 
in January 1803 for incorporating the M Trustees of Albemarle 
Academy." In 18x4, before the site of this proposed institu- 
1 been chosen, Thomas Jefferson was elected a trustee, 
his innWiMT the legislature, in February 1816, 
authorised the establishment of Central College in lieu of 
Albemarle Academy- The corner-stone of Central College was 
laid in October 1817, and Jefferson, who was rector of its board 
of trustees, evolved a plan for its development into the univer- 
sity of Virginia. The legislature, thanks to the efforts of Joseph 
Carrington Cabell, a dose personal friend of Jefferson, adopted 
the plan in 1818 and 1819, and seven independent achoob — 
ancient languages, modern languages, mathematics, natural 
philosophy, moral philosophy, chemistry and medkine— were 
opened to students in March 1825; a school of law was opened 
in 1826. In 1837 the School of Medicine became a department 
of three individual schools; and in 1850 the School of Law 
became a department of two schools. After the gift of $500,000 
by Andrew Carnegie there were established in 1900 the Andrew 
Carnegie School of Engineering, the James Madison School 
of Law, the James Monroe School of International Law, the 
James Wilson School of Political Economy, the Edgar Allan 
Foe School of English and the Walter Reed School of Pathology. 

Under Jefferson's plan only two degrees were granted: " Grad- 
uate," to any student who had completed the coarse of anv 
one school; and " Doctor M to a graduate ia more than one school 
who had shown powers of research. Bat in 1831 for the Doctor's 
degree the faculty substituted, following British custom, the 
degree of Master of Arts. The college now grants the degrees of 
^Bachelor of Arts," " Cidtaral Bachelor of Science " and^ Voca- 
tional Bachelor of Science*'; the Department of Graduate Studies, 
the degrees of " Geaduate in a School, - Master of Arts," "Master 
of Scsenoe " and " Doctor of Philosophy "; the Department of 
Law, the degree of " Bachelor of Lavs'*; the Departascnt of 
Medicine, the degree of M Doctor of Medicine**; the Department 
of Eaajsfteriog. the degrees of M Civil Engineer/' " Mechanical 
Eanamr." *Qectricaf Engineer,** " Mining Engineer*' and 
"C Wsnica l Fnj pnrrr''; and the D epartme nt of Agriculture, 
the d iem of ** Bachelor of Scat ore hi Agriculture.** 

£j-t«2 S . « *-. cm ^arsr-* < »** 

vlsWU UUam> a group of small islands m the West 
Indies, about 100 in number, for the most part uninhabited. 
Tney extend E. bam Puerto Rico, lying between 17* and 
sr^H^andV*»'aad65*jc/W., their total area being about 
405 no. sn. The jwanih are snostly rocky, or sandy and barren, 
r CUsTlunisBn yseM 1 
grass grows 

the 




though few, include the' mahogany and other useful trees. 
The coasts abound with fish. The climate is more healthy 
than that of the other West Indian islands, and the heat is 
not so great. Some of the islands belong to the United 
States, some to Denmark and some to Great Britain. The 
United States' possessions (once dependencies of Puerto Rico, 
but ceded by Spain in 1898) have an area of about 150 sq. m. 
and include Culebra or Snake Island, and Vieques or Crab 
Island. The chief Danish islands are St Thomas (*.».), St Croix 
(q.v.) and St John (?.».), the total area being about 240 sq. m. 
Of the British portion of the group the principal are Tortola, 
Anegada, Virgin Gorda, Jost van Dyke, Peter's Island and 
Salt Island, in all numbering 32, with an area of 58 sq. m. 
With the exception of the island of Sombteio they form one 
of the five presidencies in the colony of the Leeward Islands. 
The inhabitants are peasant proprietors, mainly engaged in 
raising cattle and in burning charcoal, but some are fishermen 
and boatmen. The chief town is Roadtown (pop. 400) at the 
head of a splendid harbour on the S. of Tortola, and what trade 
there is is mostly with St Thomas. Sombrero b maintained 
as a lighthouse by the British government. Population of 
the presidency, mostly negroes (1801) 4639; (ioox) 4008. 

Tne Virgin Islands were discovered by Columbus in his second 
voyage, in 1404, and named Las Virgenes, in honour of St Ursula 
and her companions. In 1666 the British established them- 
selves on Tortola, which has ever since remained in their pos- 
session. In the 17th century the Virgin Islands were favourite 
resorts of the buccaneers. The Danish islands of St Thomas 
and St John were taken by the British in 1801, but restored 
in the following year. In 1807 they surrendered to the British, 
and continued in their hands till 1815, when they were again 
restored . . 

VntGUnUI BTJFTJS, LDCIUS (aj>. 15-07), Roman patriot 
and soldier, three times consul (aj>. 63, 69, 97), was born near 
Comoro, Use birthplace of the two Plinys. When governor of 
upper Germany under Nero (68), after he had put down the 
revolt of Julius Vindex in Gaul, he was more than once urged 
by his troops to assume the supreme power; but he firmly 
refused, and further declared that he would recognize no one 
as emperor who had not been chosen by the senate. Galba, 
on his accession, aware of the feelings of the German troops and 
uncertain as to the intentions of Virginias, induced him to accom- 
pany him to Rome. But \lxginrus, as always, remained loyal 
to the head of the state. After the death of Otao, the soldiers 
again offend the throne to Virginias, but he again refused it. 
Considering themselves slighted, they diew their swords upon him, 
and he only saved himself from their hands by making his escape 
through the back of the tent. But the soldiers never forgave 
the fancied insult. Under Mtellius, during a military disturb- 
ance at Tkinum, one of Yirginius's slaves was arrested and 
charged with the design of murdering the emperor. Virginias 
was accused of being implicated in the conspiracy, and his 
death was loudly demanded by the soldiers. To his credit 
ViteDius refused to sacrifice so valuable a servant, on whose 
loyalty he could depend, to the vengeance of a capricious army. 
Vlrginius subsequently lived in retirement, chiefly in his villa at 
Akium, on the coast of Etruria, till bis death in 97, in which year 
he held the consulship, together with the emperor Kerva. At 
the public burial with which he was honoured, the historian 
Tacitus (then consul) delivered the funeral oration. The 
younger Pfiny, his neighbour and ward, has recorded the fines 
which Virginius had ordered to be engraved upon his tomb: 
• Hie situs est Rafas. patso qui Vindke quondam 
laperium asseruit aon sibi sed patriae.** 

See Tacitus, SisL L a.; Dio Cassha hfi. 24-27, fcdv. 4. 
beviii. 2; PUny, ££*. u. I, vl 10; Juvenal vin. 321, with 
Mayor's note; L. Paul in Mfsnsxdsn Mustvm (1899), fiv. pp. 
602-30. 

VntOO ("the Virgin "), in astronomy, the sixth sign of the 
sodiac (f.r), denoted by the symbol Tgp. It is also a constella- 
tion mentioned by Eudoxu* Uth century ax.) and Aratus 
(3rd century nx.) ; noiesny catalogued ^9 stars, Tycbo Brahe 33. 



VHtUBS— VISCHER (FAMILY) 



50. The Greeks iffinniiwml this constellation as a 
virgin, bat different fables are current at to the identity el the 
maid. She » variously considered to be: JustUia, daughter of 
Astraeos and Ancora, who lived before man sinned, and taught 
aim his duty, and when the golden age ended she returned to 
heaven; according to Hesiod the virgin is the daughter of Jupiter 
tad Themis; other* make her to be Erigone, daughter of 
learns, or Farthene, daughter of Apollo, The most interesting 
stars of this constellation are: a Virgin**, or Spica, a star of the 
first ntagmtude with a very faint companion; and y Virpmis, 
a binary star, having components of the third magnitude. 

YIRUf&V CHRinftsUL DB (x$$o?-i6xs?), Spanish dramatist 
and poet, was born at Valencia about the middle of the xoth 
century, joined the army, fought at Lepanto, and retired to his 
native place with the rank of captain shortly before 1586. The 
first-fruit of his leisure was El Jdonurtaic (1587), a dull poem on 
a repulsive subject which had the honour of being praised by 
Cervantes, and of being reprinted in 1601. Shortly afterwards 
Vines retained to Italy and issued a recast of his poem entitled 
EX MonstrroU Uganda (1602). His Obras trdgkas y Uricai (1609) 
induce five tragedies: La Gran Semiramis, La Cruel Ouandra, 
Am* f arioso, La Infdke Morula and Elisa Dido, The date of 
his death is unknown, but he is conjectured to have been alive 
as hue a* 1614. Virues belongs to the school of dramatists 
displaced by Lope de Vega, and his methods were out of fashion 
before Iris plays were printed; yet be is an interesting figure, 
chiefly because of the very extravagances which destroy the 
effect of his best scenes. 

VUBY, or Wrswr, the capital of the Swedish island and 
administrative district (/**) of Gotland, in the Baltic Sea. 
Pop. (xooo) 6376. It is the seat of a? bishop, the port of the 
island, and a favourite watering-place. It is picturesquely 
situated on the west coast, 150 m. S. by £. of Stockholm by sea. 
The bouses duster beneath and above a cliff (klint) 100 ft. high, 
and the town is thoroughly medieval in appearance. The 
remains from its period of extraordinary prosperity from the 
nth to the 14th century are of the highest interest. Its walls 
date from the end of the 15th century, replacing earlier forti- 
icatkma, and enclose a space much larger than that now 
covered by the town. Massive towers rise at dose intervals 
along them, and nearly forty are in good preservation. Between 
them are traces of bartizans. The cathedral church of St 
Mary dates from 1100-1M5, but has been much altered in 
later times: it has a great square tower at the west end and 
two graceful octagonal towers at the east, and contains numerous 
memorials of the 17th century. There are ten other churches, 
ia part ruined, none of which is used for service. Among those 
of chief interest St Nicholas', of the early part of the 13th 
century, formerly belonged to a Dominican monastery. It 
retains two beautiful rose-windows in the west front. The 
church of the Holy Ghost (Helgeands-Kyrka) in a late Roman- 
esque style (c. 1250) is a remarkable structure with a nave of two 
storeys. The Romanesque St Cement's has an ornate south 
portal, and the churches of St Drotten and St Lars, of the 12th 
century, axe notable for their huge towers. St Catherine's, of 
the middle of the 13th century, is Gothic, with a pentagonal 
apse. It belonged to a Franciscan convent, of the buildings of 
whkh there are slight ruins. 'Among ancient remains in the 
vicinity may be mentioned Galgberget, the place of execution, 
with tall stone pillars still standing; and the remarkable stone 
labyrinth of Trojeborg. Modern buildings include the Gotland 
museum of antiquities, and the high school, with a museum and 
Ebraxy. The artificial harbour, somewhat exposed, lies south 
of the ancient Hanseatic harbour, now filled up and covered 
with gardens. The town is the terminus of railways to north 
and south. It is the headquarters of the army division of 
Gotland troops, and there are some modern forts. 

The name Visby is derived from the old Norse ve (sanctuary) 
and by (town): This was no* doubt a place of religious sacrifice 
ia heathen times. At any rate it was a notable tr&dhig-pUce 
and emporium as early as the Stone Age, and continued to enjoy 
ha inwF~** nr ~ *» **& through the Bronze and Iron Ages, as is 



127 

proved, mter alia, by the large number of Arabic, Anglo-Saxon 
and other coins which have been found on the island. See 
Gotland and Sea Laws. 

VISCACHA, or Biscacha, a large South American burrowing 
rodent mammal belonging to the family Chinchillidae and com- 
monly known as Lagoskmus Irichodactylus, although some writers 
prefer the name Viscacia. With the cheek-teeth formed of a 
number of parallel plates in the manner characteristic of the 
family, the viscacha is distinguished from the other members 
of that group by having only three hind toes; while it is also 
the heaviest-built and largest member of the group, with smaller 
ears than the rest. It has a long tail and shaggy fur; the 
general colour of the latter being dark grey, with conspicuous 
black and white markings on the face. Viscachas inhabit 
the South American pampas between the Uruguay river and 
the Rio Negro in Patagonia, where they dwell in warrens 
covering from too to 200 sq. ft. and forming mounds 
penetrated by numerous burrows. The ground around the 
" viscachera " is cleared from vegetation, the refuse of which 
is heaped upon the mound. Anything the rodents may meet 
with on their journeys, such as thistle-stalks or bones, are 
collected and deposited on the viscachera. Deep down in 
the burrows dwell the viscachas, from which in frequented 
districts they seldom emerge till evening, unless to drink after a 
shower. Their chief food is grass and seeds, but they also 
consume roots. When alarmed, they rush to their burrows, 
and if these are disturbed utter a growling sound. A pair of 
prairie burrowing owls (Sfcotyto) are almost in variably inhabit- 
ants of a viscachera (see* Rodemha). (R. L.*) 

VISCHER, the name of a family of Nuremberg sculptors, 
who contributed largely to the masterpieces of German art 
in the 15th and x6th centuries. 

x. Hermann, the elder, came to Nuremberg as a worker in 
brass In X453 and there became a " master " of his gild. There 
is only one work that can be ascribed to him with certainty, 
the baptismal font in the parish church of Wittenberg (1457)* 
This is decorated with figures of the Apostles. 

2. His son, Pktuk, the elder, was born about 1455 in Nurem- 
berg, where he died on the 7th of January 1599. He became 
" master " in 1489, and in 1404 was summoned by the Electoral 
Prince Philipp of the Palatinate to Heidelberg. He soon 
returned, however, to Nuremberg, where he worked with the 
help of his five sons, Hermann, Peter, Hans, Jakob and Paul. 
His works are: the tomb of Bishop Johannes IV., in the Breslau 
cathedral (1406); the tomb of Archbishop Ernest, in Magde- 
burg cathedral (1497); the shrine of Saint Sebald in the Sebal- 
duskirche at Nuremberg, between 1508 and 1519; a large grille 
ordered by the Fugger brothers in Augsburg (lost); a relief of 
the " Crowning of the Blessed Virgin " in the Erfurt cathedral 
(a second example in the Wittenberg Schlosskirche, 1521); 
the tombstones for Margareta Tucherin in the Regensburg 
cathedral (1521), and for the Eisen family in the Agidienkirche 
at Nuremberg (1522); the epitaph for the cardinal Albrecht 
of Brandenburg in the collegiate church at Aschaffenburg 
(1525); the tomb of the electoral prince Frederick the Wise in 
the Schlosskirche at Wittenberg (1521); the epitaph of the 
duchess Helene of Mecklenburg in the cathedral at Schwerin. 
Besides these works there are a number of others ascribed to 
Peter the elder with less certainty. In technique few bronxe 
sculptors have ever equalled him, but his designs are marred 
by an excess of mannered realism and a too exuberant fancy; 
His chief early work, the tomb of Archbishop Ernest in Magde- 
burg cathedral (1495), is surrounded with fine statuettes of the 
Apostles under semi-Gothic canopies; it is purer m style than 
the magnificent shrine of St Sebald, a tall canopied bronze 
structure, crowded with rehefs and statuettes in the most 
lavish way. The general form of the shrine is Gothic, 1 but the 
details are those of the 16th-century Italian Renaissance treated 

»This great work is really a canopied pedestal to support and 
enclose the »hrine, not the shrine itself, which is a work of the 14th 
century, having the gabled form commonly used in the middle ages 
for metal reliquaries. 



128 



VISCHER, F. T.— V1SC0NTI (FAMILY) 



with modi freedom tnd origmaBfy. Some of the statuettes 
of saints studied to the slender columns of the canopy are 
nwHtrt'fil with much grace and even dignity of form. A small 
portrait figure of Peter himself, introduced at one end of the 
base, is s marvel of clever realism: he has represented himself 
as a stoat, bearded man, wearing a largfc leathern apron and 
holding some of the tools of his craft. This gorgeous shrine is a 
remarkable example of the uncommercial spirit which animated 
the artists of that time, and of the evident delight which they 
took in their work. Dragons, grotesques and little figures of 
boys, mixed with graceful scroll foliage, crowd every possible 
part of the canopy and its shafts, designed in the most free and 
u n conventional way and executed with an utter disregard of 
the time and labour which were lavished on them. 

See R. Bauer. Peter Vischer uad das mil* Humbert (1886): 
C Headlam. Peter Vischer (1901). 



FRIEDRICH THBODOR (1807-1887), German 
writer on the philosophy of art, was born at Ludwigsburg on the 
30th of June 1807, and was the son of a clergyman. He was 
educated at Tubingen, snd began life in his father's profession. 
In 183s he became Pr n at d osent in aesthetics and German 
literature at his old university, was advanced in 1837 to extra- 
ordinary professor, and in 1844 to full professor. In conse- 
quence, however, of his outspoken inaugural address, be was 
suspended for two years by the Wurttemberg government, and 
in bis enforced leisure wrote the first two volumes of his Acstkdik, 
mder W issen s c h aj l des Schhuen (1846), the fourth and last volume 
of which did not appear till 1857. Vischer threw himself 
heartily into the great German political movement of 1848-49, 
and shared the disappointment of patriotic democrats at its 
failure. In 1855 he became professor at Zurich. In 1866, his 
fame being now established, he was invited back to Germany 
with a professorship at Tubingen combined with a post at the 
PoLytechnikum of Stuttgart. He died at Gmunden on the 
14th of September 1887. His writings include literacy essays 
collected under the titles KrUiscke G*n& and Alles und Notes, 
poems, an excellent critical study of Goethe's Faust (187s), 
and a successful novel, Autk Eimer (1878; 95th ed., 1904). 
Vischer was not an original thinker, and his monumental 
Atstketik, in spite of industry and learning, has not the higher 
qualities of success. He attempts the hopeless task of explain- 
ing art by the Hegelian dialectic Starting with the definition 
of beauty as u the idea in the form of limited appearance/' he 
goes oa to develop the various elements of art (the beautiful, 
sublime and comic), and the various forms of art (plastic art, 
music and poetry) by means of the Hegelian antitheses— form 
and content, objective and subjective, inner conflict and recon- 
ciliation. The shape of the work also is repdlently Hegelian, 
consisting of short highly technical paragraphs containing the 
main argument, followed by detailed explanations printed 
in different .type. Still, Vischer had a thorough knowledge of 
every branch of art except music, and much valuable material 
is buried in his volumes. In later life Vischer moved consider- 
ably away from Hegelianism, and adopted the conceptions 
of sensuous completeness and cosmic harmony as criteria of 
beauty; but he never found time to rewrite bis great book. His 
own work as a literary artist is of high quality; vigorous, im- 
aginative and thoughtful without academic technicality. 

See O. Kerodl. P. T. Vischer, ErirnnerwrntsbUtier (1888); J. E. 
von Gunthert. F. T, Vischer, ein CharmhlerbtU (1888); 1. Frapan. 
Vischer-ErtMMenmgm (1889): T. Zkgfer. f. T. Vischer (Vortrat) 
(1893) ; J- G. Oswald, /T?. Vischer ah Dichter (1896). (H. St.) 

VBCQNTL the name of a celebrated Italian family which 
long ruled Milan; they claimed descent from King Desiderius, 
and in the nth century possessed estates on Lakes Como and 
Maggiore. A certain Ottone, who distinguished himself in 
the First Crusade, is mentioned in 1078 as viscount of Milan. 
The real basis for the family's dominion was laid, however, 
by another Onottt, a canon of Desio, appointed archbishop 
«*• IHtei* J^W Urban IV. in 1262 through the influence of 
~ Hn> Defla Tone family, who then con- 




trolled the city, opposed the appointment, and not until Us 
victory at Desio in 1277 was Ottone able to take po'.wwon of 
bis see. He imprisoned Napoleone Delia Torre and five of his 
relatives in iron cages, and directed bis later efforts toward 
the advancement of his nephew Matteo. He died on the 
18th of August 1295, Aged eighty years. Matte©, born at 
Invorio on the 15th of August 1255, succeeded Iris unde as 
political leader of Milan, and although an uprising of the Delia 
Torre in 1302 compelled him to take refuge at Verona, his 
steadfast loyalty to the imperial cause In Italy earned him the 
gratitude of Henry VIL, who restored him to Milan in 1310 
and made him imperial vicar of Lombardy. He brought 
under his rule Piacenxa, Tortona, Pavia, Bergamo, Vercelli, 
Cremona and Alessandro. An able general, be yet relied for 
his conquests more on diplomacy and bribery, and was esteemed 
as a model of the prudent Italian despot. Persevering in 
his GhibelUne policy, and quarrelling with Pope John XXII. 
over an appointment to the archbishopric of Milan, he was 
^^wmHMiHM-*^ by the papal legate Bertrand du Puy in 
1322. He at once abdicated in favour of his son Galeaxxo, 
and died at Crescenzago on the 24th of June of the same year. 
He left besides Galeazio several sons: Marco, Lucchino, 
Giovanni and Stefano. Galeaxxo I. (1 277-1328), who ruled 
at Milan from 1322 to 1328, met the Holy Army which the 
pope had sent against the Visconti at Vaprio on the Adda 
(1324). snd defeated it with the aid of the cntp etoi Louis the 
Bavarian. In 1327 he was imprisoned by the emperor at 
Monza because be was thought guilty of snaking peace with 
the church, and was released only on the intercession of bis friend 
Castnwrio Castracanr. By bis wife Beatrice d'Este be had 
the son Azzo who succeeded him. His brother Marco com- 
manded a band of Germans, conquered Pisa and Lucca and 
died in 1320. Axxo (1302-1339), who succeeded his father 
in 1328, bought the title of imperial vicar for 25,000 florins 
from the same Louis who had imprisoned Galea ftp L He con- 
quered ten towns, murdered his unde Marco (1329), suppressed 
a revolt led by his cousin Lodrisio, reorgantaed the administra- 
tion of his estates, built the octagonal tower of S. Gottardo, 
and was succeeded in turn by his uncles Lucchino and Gio- 
vanni. Lucchino made peace with the church in 1341, bought 
Parma from Obizxo d'Este and made Pisa dependent on Milan. 
Although he showed ability as general and governor, be was 
jealous and cruel, and was poisoned in 1349 by has wife Isabella 
Fieschi. Giovanni, brother of the preceding, archbishop of 
Milan and lord of the dty from 1349 to 1354, was one of the 
most notable characters of his time. He befriended Petrarch, 
extended the Visconti sway over Bologna (1350), defied Pope 
Clement VL, annexed Genoa (1353), and died on the $th of 
October 1354 after having established the rule of his family 
over the whole of northern Italy except Piedmont, Verona, 
Mantua, Ferrara and Venice. The Visconti from the time 
of Archbishop Giovanni were no longer mere rivals of the 
Delia Torre or dependants on imperial caprice, but real sove- 
reigns with a recognized power over Milan and the surrounding 
territory. The state was partitioned on the death of Giovanni 
among his brother Stefano *s three sons, Matteo 1L, Galeaxxo II. 
and Bernabo. Matteo II., who succeeded to Bologna, Lodi, 
Piacenxa and Parma, abandoned himself to the most revolt- 
ing immorality, and was assassinated in 1355 by direction 
of his brothers, who thenceforth governed the state jointly 
and with considerable ability. Galeaxxo II., who held his 
court at Pavia, was handsome and distinguished, the patron 
of Petrarch, the founder of the university of Pavia and a 
gifted diplomat. He married his daughter Violante to the 
duke of Clarence, son of Edward 1IL of Engbnd, giving a 
dowry of 200,000 gold florins; and his son Gian Galeaxxo to 
Isabella, daughter of King John of France. He died in 1378. 
Bejlkabo, who held his court at Milan, was involved in constant 
warfare, to defray the expenses of which he instituted very 
oppressive taxes. He fought Popes Innocent VI. and Urban V., 
who proclaimed a crusade against him. He fought the em- 
peror Charles IV., who declared the forfeiture of his fief. He 



VISCONTI-VENOSTA 



129 



I to e ia nisr sole power In the state after the death 
of his brother, but bis young nephew dan Galeasso plotted 
against him and put him to death (158s)* Oiah Galiazzo, 
the most powerful of the Visconti, became joint rukr of the 
San.-— » territories on the death of his father in 1378 and 
sole rakr 00 the death of his trade seven years later. He 
founded the cathedral of Milan, built the Certosa and the 
bridge across the Ticino at Pavia, improved the university 
of Pavia and established the library there, and restored the 
anivenhy at Fiacenza. His bureaucratic government was 
estcnent; be was an able and economical administrator, 
and was reputed to be one of the wealthiest princes of his time. 
He was ambitious to reduce all Italy under the sway of the 
Visconti. He conquered Verona in 1387; and in the following 
year, with the aid of the Venetians, took Padua. He plotted 
successfully against the rulers of Mantua and Ferrara, and 
bow that the whole jot Lombardy lay prostrate before him he 
tamed his attention to Tuscany. In 1399 he bought Pisa 
and seised -Siena. The emperor Wenceslaus had already con- 
ferred on him the title of duke of Milan for 100,000 florins, 
nerving only Pisa, and refused to take arms against him. 
Gian Gilrarrn took Perugia, Xucca and Bologna (1400-1), 
and was besieging Florence when be died of the plague (3rd of 
September 140s) at the age of fifty-five years. His sons, 
Giovanni Maria and Fihppo Maria, were mere boys at the 
lime of his death, and were taken -under the protection of 
the celebrated condottiere Fadno Cane de Ccatlejout most of 
Gian Galea no's conquests were lost to his self-seeking generals. 
Gtovaxsn Makia was proclaimed duke of Milan in 140a, dis- 
played an insane cruelty, and was killed in 141* by Gtubelline 
!»**;-"«- Fiurro Maria, who became nominal ruler of 'Pavia 
in 1402, succeeded his brother as duke of Milan. Cruel and 
extremely sensitive about his personal ugliness, he nevertheless 
ms a great politician, and by employing such powerful con- 
sottieri as Carmagnole, Picdnino and Francesco Sforza he 
managed to recover the Lombard portion of his father's duchy. 
From his marriage with the unhappy widow of the above- 
mentktned Fadno Cane he received a dowry of nearly half a 
Bullion florins. He died in 1447, the last of the Visconti indirect 
male hne, and was succeeded in the duchy, after the shortlived 
Ambfusian republic, by Francesco Sforza, who had married 
his daughter Bianca in 1441 (see Sforza). Vaisntina (1306- 
1408), a daughter of Gian Galeazzo and a sister of the preceding, 
smrried. Louis of Orleans in 1387, and it was from her that 
Louis XII. of France derived his claims to the duchy of Milan. 
r r . tpr »~nr t an. illegitimate brother, gained possession of Pisa 
sad other towns, but was despoiled and beheaded (1407) by 
Charles Vl.'s governor of Genoa, under whose protection he 
aad placed himself. Among collateral branches of the Vis* 
oooti family were the counts of Saliceto, counts of Zagnano, 
faros of Brignano, marquis of San Giorgio di Bofgoratto, marquis 
of Invotio and Marquis Delia Motta. Other branches attained 
to some prominence in the local history of Ban and of Tarento. 
Tebahso Visconti of Piacensa became Pope Gregory X. in 
irrt. Among the Visconti lords of Fontaneto was Gaspare, 
who died in 1595 archbishop of Milan. An Ignatius Visconti 
was sixteenth general of the Jesuits (x7Si~55)- 
There is a contemporary history of the principal members of the 
only by Paolo Giovio, bishop of Nocera, which may be had in 



seven! editions. See J. Burckbardt, The Cmliaatum ef the R$- 
aoxuenc* m My, trans, by S. G. C. Middlemore (London, 1898); 

1 Viscemkedi •£'**• «* Castetto dt Pana (1883); A. Medin, I 
YueemU aefl* peesia cemtemperamea (Milan, 1891); F. Mugnier, 
- Leans dee Visconti de Milan " in Mtmeises et documents de to 
utxHt seweiaunme Mistake el ferehiohgie* vol. a. of the mcood 
««s(iSo6). (C.H.HA.) 

vnamrumntTK muo, maiqub osao- ), 

ItaEan statesman, was born at Milan on the a and of January 
iIjq. A disciple of Maaani, he took part in all the anti- 
Austrian tmMpinKfr* until the ineffectual rising at Milan on 
the 6th of February 1853, of which he had foretold the failure, 
>-a-~a fch. to iMfcouncehis Maariaian allegiance. Continuing, 



nevertheless, his anti-Austrian propaganda, he ren d ered good 
service to the national cause, but being molested by the Austrian 
police, was obliged in 1859 to escape to Turin, and during the 
war with Austria of that year was appointed by Cavour royal 
commissioner with the Garibaldian forces. Elected deputy in 
i860, he accompanied Farini on diplomatic missions to Modena 
and Naples, and was subsequently despatched to London and 
Paris to acquaint the British and French governments with 
the course of events in Italy. As a recompense for the tact 
displayed on this occasion, he was given by Cavour a permanent 
appointment in the Italian foreign office, and was subsequently 
appointed undersecretary of state by Count Pasolini. Upon 
the letter's death he became minister of foreign affairs (34th 
March 1863) in the Minghctti cabinet, in which capacity he 
negotiated the. September Convention for the evacuation of 
Rome by the French troops: Resigning office with Minghctti 
in the autumn of 1864, he was in March 1866 sent by La Marmora 
as minister to Constantinople, but was almost immediately 
recalled and reappointed foreign minister by Ricasoli. Assum- 
ing office on the morrow of the second battle of Custozaa, be 
succeeded in preventing Austria from burdening Italy with 
a proportion of the Austrian imperial debt, in addition to the 
Venetian debt proper. The fall of Ricasoli in February 1867 
deprived him for a time of his office, "but in December 1869 he 
entered the Lanaa-SeUa cabinet as foreign minister, and retained 
his portfolio in the succeeding Minghctti cabinet until the fall 
of the Right in 1876. During this long period he was called 
upon to conduct the delicate negotiations connected with the 
Franco-German War, theoccupation of Rome oy the Italians, and 
the consequent destruction of the temporal power of the pope, 
the Law of Guarantees, and the visits of Victor Emmanuel II. 
to Vienna and Berlin. Upon the occasion of his marriage 
with the daughter of the marquis Alfieri di Sostegno, grand- 
niece of Cavour, he was created marquis by the king. For a 
time he remained a member of the parliamentary opposition, 
and in 1886 was nominated senator. In 1804, after eighteen 
years' absence from active political life, he was chosen to be 
Italian arbitrator in the Bering Sea question, and in 1896 once 
more accepted the portfolio of foreign affairs in the Di Rudini 
cabinet at a juncture when the disasters in Abyssinia and the 
indiscreet publication of an Abyssinian Green Book had rendered 
the international position of Italy exceedingly difficult. His 
first care was to improve Franco-Italian relations by negotiating 
with France a treaty with regard to Tunis. During the nego- 
tiations relating to the Cretan question and the Graeco-Turkish 
War, he secured for Italy a worthy part in the European Concert 
and joined Lord Salisbury in saving Greece from the loss of 
Thessaly. Resigning office in May 1898, on a question of 
internal policy, he once more retired to private life, but in 
May 1800 again ■— »m~i the management of foreign affairs 
in the second Pellouz cabinet, and continued to hold office in 
the succeeding Saracco cabinet until its fall in February 1901. 
During this period his attention was devoted chiefly to the 
Chinese problem and to the maintenance of the equilibrium 
in the Mediterranean and the Adriatic. In regard to the 
Mediterranean he established an ItAlo-Frcnch agreement by 
which France tacitly undertook to leave Italy a free hand in 
Tripoli, and Italy not to interfere with French policy in the 
interior of Morocco; and, in regard to the Adriatic, he came 
to an understanding with Austria guaranteeing the status que 
in Albania. Prudence and sagacity, coupled with unequalled 
experience of foreign policy, enabled him to assure. to Italy her 
full portion of influence in international affairs, and secured 
for himself the unanimous esteem of European cabinets. In 
recognition of his services he was created Knight of the Annun- 
siata by Victor Emmanuel III. on the occasion of the birth 
of Princess Yolanda Margberita of Savoy (1st of June 1901). 
In February 1006 he was Italian delegate to the Morocco con- 
ference at Algedraa. - 

An account of Viscooti-Veoosta's early life (down to 1859} is 
given in an interesting volume by his brother Giovanni Visconu- 
Venosta, Rkofdi di Giowcm* (Milan. 1904). 



I3<> 



VISCOUNT— VISION 



VnCOUVT (through O. Fr. visumU, mod. vicomU, from Low 
Lat. vico-amcs, cf. Portug. viscottde, Ital. visconte), the title 
of the fourth rank of the European nobility. In the British 
peerage it intervenes between the dignities of earl and baron. 
The title is now purely one of honour, having long been 
dissociated from any special office or functions. 

In the Carolingian epoch the vice-amiics, or misri comilis, 
were the deputies or vicars of the counts, whose official powers 
they exercised by delegation, and from these the viscounts of 
the feudal period were undoubtedly derived. Soon after the 
counts became hereditary the same happened in the case 
of their lieutenants; e.g. in Narbonne, Nlmes and Alby the 
viscounts had, according to A. Molinier, acquired hereditary 
rights as early as the beginning of the ioth century. Viscount- 
cies thus developed into actual fiefs, with their own jurisdiction, 
domain and seigniorial rights, and could be divided or even 
transmitted to females. Viscounts, however, continued for 
some time to have no more, than the status of lieutenants, call- 
ing themselves either simply vice-comitts, or adding to this title 
the name of the countship from which they derived their 
powers. It was not till the 12th century that the universal 
tendency to territorialize the feudal dominions affected the 
viscountcies with the rest, and that the viscounts began to 
take the name of the most important of their patrimonial 
domains. Thus the viscounts of Poitiers called themselves 
viscounts of Thouars, and those of Toulouse viscounts of 
Braniquel and Montelar. From this time the significance of 
the title was extremely various. Some viscounts, notably in 
the duchy of Aquitaine and the county of Toulouse, of which 
the' size made an effective centralized government impossible, 
were great barons, whose authority extended over whole 
provinces, and who disputed for power on equal terms with 
counts and dukes. Elsewhere, on the other hand, e.g. in the tie 
de France, Champagne, and a great part of Burgundy, the 
vicomics continued to be half feudatories, half officials of the 
counts, with the same functions and rank in the feudal hierarchy 
as the chatelains; their powers were jealously limited and, 
with the organization of the system of prevdts and bailiis in the 
jath century, practically disappeared. In the royal domains 
especially, these petty feudatories could not maintain them- 
selves against the growing power of the crown, and they were 
early assimilated to the prevdls; thus there is no record of a 
vicomU at Paris after 1027. 

In Normandy, where from the first the central power had 
been strong, vicomUs appeared at a very early date as deputies 
of the counts (afterwards dukes) of the Normans: " They are 
both personal companions and hereditary nobles." When 
local Norman counts began in the nth century, some of them 
had vicomtes under them, but the normal vicomU was still a 
deputy of the duke, and Henry I. largely replaced the hereditary 
holders of the vicomUs by officials. " By the time of the 
Conqueror the judicial functions of the viscount were fully 
recognized, and extended over the greater part of Normandy." 
Eventually almost the whole of Normandy was divided into 
administrative viscountcies or bailiwicks by the end of 
.the 19th century. When the Normans conquered England, 
they applied the term viscounte or vuzcomes to the sheriffs 
of the English system (see Sbesot), whose office, how- 
ever, was quite distinct and was hardly affected by the 
Conquest. 

Nearly four centuries later " viscount " was introduced as a 
peerage style into England, when its king was once more lord 
of Normandy. John, Lord Beaumont, K.G., who had been 
created count of Boulogne in 1436, was made Viscount Beau- 
mont, February 12, 1440, and granted precedence over all 
barons, which was doubtless the reason for his creation. Within 
a year the feudal vicomU of Beaumont in Normandy was granted 
to him and the heirs male of has body on the ground that he 
traced his descent from that district. In 1446 Lord Bourchier, 
who held the Norman countship of Eu, was similarly made 
a viscount. The oldest viscountcy now on the roll is that of 
Hereford, created in 1550; but the Irish viscountcy of Gorman- 



ston is as old as 1478. The dignity was sparingly conferred In 

the peerage of England till recent times, when the number of 
viscounts was increased by bestowing the dignity on retiring 
speakers (e.g. Viscounts Canterbury, Hampden, Feel, Selby) 
and ministers who accepted peerages (e.g. Viscounts Melville, 
Halifax, Knutsford, Llandaff, Cross, Ridley, Goschen, St 
Aldwyn, Morley of Blackburn, Wolverhampton). 

A viscount is "Right Honourable," and is styled "My 
Lord." His wife, also " Right Honourable," is a " viscountess," 
and is styled " My Lady." All their sons and daughters are 
" Honourable." The coronet first granted by James I. has oil 
the golden circlet a row of fourteen small pearls set in contact, 
of which number in representations nine are shown. The scarlet 
parliamentary robe of a viscount has two and a half doublings 
of ermine. 

See A. Luchaire, Manuel des institutions franchises (Paris, 1892), 
bibliography on p. 282; Stapleton's Rotuit Scaccarii Norwanmae; 
Powicke's The Angevin Administration of Normandy ". (£"£• 
Hut. Rev. vols, xxi., xxii.) ; Lords' Reports on the Dignity of a Petri 
Courthope Nicolas's Historic Peerage. 

VISHNU (Sanskrit, " the worker," from root visk, "to work "), 
a solar deity, in later Hindu mythology a god of the first im- 
portance, one of the supreme trinity with Brahma and Siva, but 
in the Rig Veda only a minor deity. In the Vedic scriptures 
his only anthropomorphic characteristics are the frequently 
mentioned strides that he takes, and his being a youth vast in 
body. His essential feature is the three strides (si-Aram) with 
which he traverses the universe. Two of these steps are visible 
to men, but the third or highest is beyond mortal sight. These 
steps are symbolic of the rising, culminating and setting of the 
sun, or alternatively the course of the solar deity through the 
three divisions of the universe. To-day Vishnu is adored by the 
Vishnavite sects as the equal or even the superior of Brahma, 
and is styled the Preserver. He is represented with four arms, 
and black in colour; in one hand he holds a club and in the 
others a shell, a discus and a lotus respectively. He rides 
on the Garuda, half man and half bird, having the head, wings, 
beak and talons of an eagle, and human body and limbs, its 
face being white, its wings red and its body golden. In bis 
character as preserver of men Vishnu has from time to time 
become incarnate to rid the world of some great evil (see also 
BaAHMANiStf and Hinduism). 

See A. A. Macdonell. Vedic Mythology (Strassburg, 1807); 
Sir W. Muir, Original Sanskrit Texts, iv. 63-298; Sir M. Monier- 
Williams, Brahmanism and Hinduism, iii v. vi. 

VISION (from Lat. videre, to see), or Sight, the function, in 
physiology, of the organ known as the eye (qv.). The sense of 
vision is excited by the influence of light on the retina, the 
special terminal organ connected with the optic nerve. By 
excitation of theTetina, a change is induced in the optic nerve 
fibres, and is conveyed by these to the brain, the result being a 
luminous perception, or what we call a sensation of light or 
colour. If light were to act uniformly over the retina, there 
would be no image of the source of the light formed on that 
structure, and consequently there would be only a general 
consciousness of light, without reference to any particular 
object. One of the first conditions, therefore, of vision for useful 
purposes is the formation of an image on the retina. To effect 
this, just as in a photographic camera, refractive structures must 
be placed in front of the retina which will so bend luminous 
rays as to bring them to a focus on the retina, and thus produce 
an image. Throughout the animal kingdom various arrange- 
ments are found for this purpose; but they may be all referred 
to three types, namely— (1) eye-specks or eye-dots, met within 
Medusae, Annelida*, &c.; (2) the compound eye, as found in 
insects and crustaceans; and (3) the simple eye, common, to 
all vertebrates. The eye-specks may be regarded simply as 
expansions of optic nerve filaments, covered by a transparent 
membrane, but having no refractive media, so that the creature 
would have the consciousness of light only, or a simple luminous 
impression, by which it might distinguish light from darkness. 
The comfomd tyo consists essentially of a series of transparent 



PHTSICAL CAUSES) 



VISION 



*3« 



arranged In a radiate manner against the 
inner surface of the cornea, with which their bases are united, 
while their apices are connected with the ends of the optic 
filaments. As each cone is separated from its neighbours, it 
admits only a ray of light parallel with its axis, and its apex 
represents only a portion of the image, which must be made up, 
like a mosaic-work, of as many parts as there are cones in the 
eye. When the cones are of considerable length, it is evident, 
from their form and direction, their apices being directed in- 
wards, that the oblique rays emanating from a'luminous surface 
will be cut off, and that only those rays proceeding along the 
am of the cone will produce an effect. Thus distinctness or 
sharpness of definition will be secured. The size of the visual 
field will depend on the form of the .eye, the outermost cones 
marring its limits. Consequently the size of the visual field will 
depend oo the size of the segment of the sphere forming its 
surface. The eyes of many insects have a field of about half a 
sphere, so that the creature will see objects before and behind it 
as well as those at the side. On the other hand, in many the 
eyes have scarcely any convexity, so that they must have a 
narrow field of vision. For anatomical details, and diseases of 
the eye, ace En; the pathological aspects of vision itself are 
treated at the end of this article. 

i. Physical Causes or Vision 
A luminous sensation may be excited by various modes of 
irritation of the retina or of the optic nerve. Pressure, cutting 
or electrical shocks may act as stimuli, but the normal excitation 
is the influence of light on the retina. From a physical point of 
view, light is a mode of movement occurring in a medium, 
termed the aether, which pervades all space; but the physiologist 
studies the operation .of these movements on the sentient 
organism as resulting in consciousness of the particular kind 
which we term a luminous impression. Outside of the body, 
soda movements have been studied with great accuracy; but 
the physiological effects depend upon such complex conditions 
as to make it impossible to state them in the same precise 
way. Thus, when we look at the spectrum, we are conscious of 
the sensations of red and violet, referable to its two' extremities: 
the physicist states that red is produced by 39a billions of 
impulses on the retina per second, and that violet corresponds 
to 757 billions per second; but he has arrived at this informa- 
tion by inductive reasoning from facts which have not at present 
any physiological explanation. We cannot at present trace 
any connexion, as cause .and effect, between 39a billions of 
sttpulses on the retina per second and a sensation of red. Below 
the red and above the violet ends of the spectrum there are 
vibrations which do not excite luminous sensations. In the 
first case, below the red, the effect as a sensation Is heat; and 
above the violet the result is that of chemical activity. Thus 
the method of dispersion of light, as is followed in passing a 
ray through a prism, enables us to recognize these general 
facts: (1) rays below the red excite thermal impressions; 
(a) from the lower red up to the middle of the violet, the thermal 
rays become gradually weaker until they have no effect; 
(3) from the lower red to the extreme violet, they cause luminous 
imp ressi o ns , which reach their greatest intensity in the yellow; 
and (4) iTom shout the end of the yellow to far beyond the 
extreme violet, the rays have gradually a less- and less luminous 
effect, but they have the power of exciting such chemical 
changes as are produced in photography. In general terms, 
therefore, the lower end of the spectrum may be called thermal, 
the middle luminous, and the upper actinic or chemical; but 
the three merge into and overlap one another. It may be 
observed that the number of vibrations in the extreme violet 
is not double that of the low red, so that the sensibility of the 
eye to vibrations of light does not range through an octave. 
The ultra-violet rays may act on the retina in certain condi- 
tions, as when they are reflected by a solution o( sulphate of 
qnuune, constituting the phenomenon of fluorescence. Far 
above the violet are the Rontgen radiations and probably 



2. Optical AiaAKceimrrs. or the Etb 
1. General.— When light traverses any homogeneous trans- 
parent medium, such as the air, it passes on in a straight course 
with a certain velocity; but if it meet with any other trans- 
parent body of a different density, part of it is reflected or 
returned to the first medium; whilst the remainder is propagated 
through the second medium in a different direction and with a 
different velocity. Thus we may account for the phenomena of 
reflection of light (9.9.) and of refraction (?.».). Let 06, in fig. 1 , be 
a plane surface of some trans- 
parent substance, say a sheet < 
of glass; a ray, cd, perpendi- 
cular to the surface, will pass 
through without refraction; 
but an oblique ray, ef, will 
be sent in the direction eh. 
If the ray eh had passed 
from a dense into a rarer 
medium, then the direction 
would have been . eg. It 
might also be shown that the 



^ 



Fig. i.— Refraction of Light. 



sine of the angle of incidence always bears a certain ratio, to 
the .sine of the angle of refraction; this ratio is termed the 
index of refraction. Thus, if a ray pass from air into water, the 
sine of the angle of incidence will have to the sine of the angle 
of the refraction the ratio of 4:3, or f. 

Before a ray of light can reach the retina, it must pass through 
a number of transparent and refractive surfaces. The eye 
is a nearly spherical organ, formed of transparent parts situated 
behind each other, and surrounded by various membranous 
structures, the anterior part of which is also transparent The 
transparent parts are— (1) the cornea; (a) the aqueous humour, 
found in the anterior chamber of the eye; (3) the crystalline 
lens, formed by a transparent convex body, the anterior sur- 
face of which is less convex than the posterior; and (4) the 
vitreous humour, filling the posterior chamber of the eye. The 
ray must therefore traverse the cornea, aqueous humour, lens 
and vitreous humour. As the two surfaces of the cornea 
are parallel, the rays practically suffer no deviation in passing 
through that structure, but they are bent or refracted during 
their transmission through the other media. 

From the optical point of view, the eye may be regarded 
as a dioptric system consisting of various refractive media, In 
such a system, as shown by K. F. Gauss, there are six cardinal 
points, which have a certain relation to each other. These sre — 

(I) Two focal points: every ray passing through the first focal point 
becomes, after its refraction, parallel to the axis, and every ray 
which before refraction is parallel to the axis passes after its refraction 
to the second focal point ; (a) two principal points : every ray which 
passes through the first point, before refraction passes after refrac- 
tion through the second, and every ray which passes through any 
* " " " ' " a the f 



point of a plane elevated on a 
principal point (the first principc 
•ponding point of an analogous | 
principal *p ~ 



first 

) passes through the com- 

.___ r raised upon the axis at the 

second principal point (the second principal plane); and (3) two 
nodal points, which correspond to the optical centres of the two 
principal planes just alluded to. The distance of the first principal 
point from the first focal point is called the anterior focal length, 
and the term posterior focal length is applied to the distance of the 
posterior focal point from the second principal point. Listing has 
given the following measurements in millimetres from the centre 
of the cornea for the cardinal points in an ideal eye:- 



Anterior focal point .' 13*8326 I First nodal point . 7*94x0 
Posterior focal point . 33*6470 1 Second nodal point* . 7*639* 
First principal point . 2*1746 I Anterior focal length .' 15007a 
Second principal point. 2*5734 I Posterior focal length . 20-0746 

A view of such an ideal eye is shown In fig. 2. 

The remaining measurements of such an eye are as follows: — 

Radii of Curvature 
Of anterior face of cornea - 8 millimetres. 
Of a nterior f ace of leas -10 
Of posterior face of lens -6 

Indices of Refraction 

Aqueous humour .... W* 1*3379 

Crystalline lens .... H- 1*545 

Vitreous hnaow .... VV- 1*3379 



132 



VISION 



[OPTICAL ARRANGEMENTS 



The optical constants of the human eye may be still further 
simplified by assuming that the two principal points and the two 




Fig. 2.— Transverse Section of an Ideal or Scbematique Eye. 
A. summit of cornea: SC t sck*rolic; 5, Schlemm** canal; CH. 
choroid; f, iris; M, eituury muscle; R T retina; N, optic 
nerve; HAh aqueous humour; L, crystalline lens, (he anterior 
vt the double lines on its face showing it* form during accommoda- 
tion; HV„ vitreous humour; DN. internal rectus muscle; DE, 
external rectus; YY*. principal optical axis; $&> visual axis, 
mating ana ngle of 5* with the optical axi*; C f centre of the ocular 
globe, Tkr rardmat paint* of Listini: II Ah. principal points; 
KiKx. nodal points; F|F* T principal local points* The dioptric 
{otiiiattii acfffrdini la Gtfawd-Trahm: H, principal points 
united; ■frihh principal foci during the repose of accommodation; 
♦\* F i« principal foci during the maximum oi accommodation; 
O, fined nodal point*. 

nodal points respectively are identical. Thus we may construct 
a reduced eye, in which the principal point is 2-3448 mm. behind the 
cornea and the single nodal point is 1*4764 ram. in front of the 
posterior surface of the lens. The refracting surface, or lens, has a 
radius of 5 mm and is 3 mm. behind the cornea; and the index 
of refraction is that of the aqueous humour, or W. or 1*3379- 

2. The Formation of an Image on the Retina.— This may 
be well Illustrated with the aid of a photographic camera. 
If properly focused, an inverted image will be seen on the 
glass plate at the back of the camera. It may also be observed 
by bringing the eyeball of a rabbit near a candle flame. The 
action of a lens in forming an inverted image is illustrated by 
fig. 3, where the pencil of rays proceeding from a is brought 

to a focus at a', 
( and those from 
I*" b at V m t conse- 
quently the image 
of ob is inverted 
as at 6V. The 
three character- 
istic features of 
the retinal image are*: (1) it Is reversed; (2) it is sharp and 
well defined 'if it be accurately focused on the retina; and 
(3) its size depends on the visual angle. If we look at a distant 
object, say a star, the rays reaching the eye are parallel, and 
in passing through the refractive media they are focused 
at the posterior focal point— that is, on the retina. A line 
from the luminous point on the retina passing through the 
nodal point is called the line of direction. If the luminous 
object be not nearer than, say, 60 yds. the image is still 
brought to a focus on the retina without any effort on the 
part of the eye. Within this distance, supposing the condition 
of the eye to be the same as in looking at a star, the image 
would be formed somewhat behind the posterior focal point, 
and the effect would be an indistinct impression on the retina. 
To obviate this, for near distances, accommodation, so as to 
adapt the eye* is effected by a mechanism to be afterwards 
described. 

When rays, reflected from an object or coming from a lumin- 
ous point, are not brought to an accurate focus on the retina, 
the image is not distinct in consequence of the formation of 
circles of diffusion, the production of which* will be rendered 
evident by fig. 4. From the point A luminous rays enter 
?> "* of a cone, the kind of which will depend 




Fig. 3. — Inversion by Action of a Lens. 



on the pupil. Thus it may be circular, or oval, or even tri- 
angular. If the pencil is focused in front of the retina, as at 




Flo. 4.— Formation of Circles of Diffusion. 

4, or behind it as at /, or, in other words, if the retina, in place 
of being at F, be in the positions G or H, there will be a luminous 
circle or a luminous triangular space, and many elements of 
the retina will be affected. The size of these diffusion circles 
depends on the distance from the retina of the point where 
the rays are focused: the greater the distance, the more 
extended will be the diffusion circle. Its size will also be 
affected by the greater or less diameter of the pupil. Circles 
of diffusion may be studied by the following experiment, called 
the experiment of Scheiner:— 
T C r 




i place, in consequence 01 tne reversal 01 tne rettnai image. 
ft be placed at o. only one image will be seen ; but if it oe 
ither in the plane of F or D. then two images will be seen. 
n, or «n ; consequently, in either of these planes there will 



Fig. 3. — Diagram illustrating the Experiment of Scheiner. 

Let C be a lens, and DEF be screens placed behind it. Hold 
in front of the lens a card perforated by two holes A and B, and 
allow rays from a luminous point a to pass through these holes. The 
point 0- on the screen E will be the focus of the rays cmanatine 
from a; if a were removed farther from the lens, the focus would 
be on F. and if it were brought near to C, the focus would then 
be on D. The screens F and D show two images on the point a. 
If, then, we close the upper opening in AB. the upper image m 
on F and the lower image n on D disappear. Suppose now that 
the retina be substituted for the screens D and F. the contrary 
will take place, in consequence of the reversal of the rettnai image. 
If the eye be j' ------ • •» - -- -- » re- 

placed either 1 

as at mm, or «n; consequently. _ 

be circles of diffusion and indistinctness, and only in the plane E' 
will there be sharp definition of the image. 

To understand the formation of an image on the retina, 
suppose a line drawn from each of its two extremities to the 
nodal point and continued onwards to the retina, as in fig. 6, 
where the visual angle is s. It is evident that its size will 
depend on the size of the 
object and the distance of the 
object from the eye. Thus, 
also, objects of different sizes, 
c, d, e in fig. 6, may be in- 
cluded in the same visual 
angle, as they are at different 
distances from the eye. The 
size of the retinal image may 
be calculated if we know the 
size of the object, its dis- 
tance from the nodal point 0, 
and the distance of the nodal 
point from the posterior focus. 
Let A be the size of the object, B its distance from the 
nodal point, and C the distance of o from the retina, 
or 15 mm.; then the size of the retinal image x«(A-r is)/B. 
The smallest visual angle in which two distinct points 
may be observed is 60 seconds; below this, the two sen- 
sations fuse into one; and the size of the retinal image 




Fig. 6.— The Visual Angle. 



OPTICAL ARRANGEMENTS) 



VISION 




corresponding to this angle » -on* mm., nearly the diameter 
of a single retinal rod or cone. Two objects, therefore, included 
in a visual angle of less than 60 seconds, appear as one point. 
A small visual angle is in most eyes a condition of sharpness 
of definition. With a large angle, objects appear less sharply 
marked. Acuteness is determined by a few retinal elements, 
or even only one, being affected. A very minute image, if 
thrown on a single retinal element, is apparently sufficient 
to excite it. Thus it is possible to see a brilliant point in an 
angle even, so small as J of a second,' and a sharp eye can see 
a body the y§ th of a line in diameter— that is, about the tfath 
part of an inch. 

3. The Optical Defects 'of the Eye.— As an optical instrument, 
the eye is defective; but from habit, and want of attention, 
its defects are not appreciated, and consequently they have 
little or no influence on our sensations. These defects are 
chiefly of two kinds— (1) those due to the curvature of the 
refractive surfaces, and (a) those due to the dispersion of light 
by the refractive media. 

(a) Aberration of Sphericity.— Suppose, as in fig. 7. M A K 
M to be a refractive 

I- ^— v surface on which 

parallel rays from 
L to S impinge, it 
will be seen that 
l those rays passing 
near the circumfer- 
ence are brought to 
a focus at F 1 , and 
those passing near 
w t- i_* . *»- . the centre at P— 

Fw. J.-Sphcncal Aberration. intcrmc diate rays 

being focused at N. Thus on the portion of the axis 
between F 1 and P there will be a scries of focal points, 
and the effect will be a blurred and bent image. In the eye 
this defect is to a large extent corrected by the following 
arrangements: (1) the iris cuts off the outer and more 
strongly refracted rays; (2) the curvature of the cornea is 
more ellipsoidal than spherical, and consequently those 
farthest from the axis are least deviated; (3) the anterior 
and posterior curvatures of the lens are such that the 
one corrects, to a certain extent, the action of the other; 
and (4) the structure of the lens is such that its power of re- 
fraction diminishes from the centre to the circumference, and 
consequently the rays farthest from the axis are less refracted. 

(b) Astigmatism. — Another defect of the eye is due to different 
meridians having different degrees of curvature. This defect 
b known as astigmatism. It may be thus detected. Draw 
on a sheet of white paper a vertical and a horizontal line with 
ink, crossing at a right angle; at the point of distinct vision, 
it will be found impossible to see the lines with equal distinct- 
ness at the same time; to see the horizontal line distinctly 
the paper must be brought near the eye, and removed from it 
to see the vertical. In the cornea the vertical meridian has 
generally a shorter radius of curvature, and is consequently 
more refractive than the horizontal. The meridians of the 
lens may also vary; but, as a rule, the asymmetry of the 
cornea is greater than that of the lens. The optical explana- 
tion of the defect will be understood with the aid of fig. 8. 
Thorn, suppose the vertical meridian C A D to be more strongly 
curved than the horizontal F A E, the rays which fall on C A D 
will be brought to a focus G, and those falling on F A E at B. If 
we divide the pencil of rays at successive points, G, H, I, K, B, 
by a section perpendicular to A B, the various forms it would 
present at these points are seen in the figures underneath, so that 
if the eye were placed at G, it would see a horizontal line a 0'; if 
at H, an ellipse with the long axis a a* parallel to A B; if at I, a 
circle; if at K, an ellipse, with the long axis, b c, at right angles 
to A B; and if at B, a vertical line b c. The degree of 
astigmatism is ascertained by measuring the difference of re- 
fraction in the two chief meridians; and the defect is corrected 
by the use of cylindrical glasses, the curvature of which, added 



to that of the minimum 
to that of the m*»inmrn 

e 



»33 

meridian! makes its focal length equal 





Fie. 8. — Diagram Illustrating Astigmatism. 

(c) Aberration of Refrangibility. — When a ray of white light 
traverses on a lens, the different rays composing it, being 
unequally refrangible, are dispersed: the violet rays (see fig. 9), 
the most refran- 
gible, are brought ^ 
to a focus at e, 

and the red rays, 4 ■ { — | ^.nrf l^m^ sf 

less refrangible, c- ~" * 

at a*. If a screen 

were placed at e, ** 

a series of con- Fig. 9.— Diagram illustrating the Dispcrsionof 
centric coloured Light by a Lens, 

circles would be formed, the central being of a violet, and 
the circumference of a red colour. The reverse effect would 
be produced if the screen were placed at d. Imagine the 
retina in place of the screen in the two positions, the sensar 
tional effects would be those just mentioned. Under ordinary 
circumstances, the error of refrangibility due to the optical 
construction of the eye is not observed, as for vision at near 
distances the interval between the focal point of the red and 
violet rays is very small. If, however, we look at a candle flame 
through a bit of cobalt blue glass, which transmits only the red 
and blue rays, the flame may appear violet surrounded by blue, 
or blue surrounded by violet, according as we have accommodated 
the eye for different distances. Red surfaces always appear 
nearer than violet surfaces situated in the same plane, because 
the eye has to be accommodated more for the red than for the 
violet, and consequently we imagine them to be nearer. Again, 
if we contemplate red letters or designs on a violet ground the 
eye soon becomes fatigued, and the designs may appear to move. 

(d) Defects due to Opacities, brc, in the Transparent Media.— 
When small opaque particles exist in the transparent media, 
they may cast their shadow on the retina so as to give rise to 
images which are projected outwards by the mind into space, 
and thus appear to exist outside of the body. Such phenomena 
are termed entoptic They may be of two kinds: (1) extra- 
retinal, that is, due to opaque or semi-transparent bodies in any 
of the refractive structures anterior to the retina, and presenting 
tbe appearance of drops, striae, lines, twisted bodies, forms of 
grotesque shape, or minute black dots dancing before the eye; 
and (2) intra-retiftat, due to opacities, &c, in the layers of the 
retina, in front of Jacob's membrane. The intra-retinal may 
be produced in a normal eye in various ways. (1) Throw a 
strong beam of light on the edge of tbe sclerotic, and a curious 
branched figure will be seen, which is an image of the retinal 
vessels. Tbe construction of these images, usually called 
Purhinje's figures, will be understood from fig. 10. Thus, in the 
figure to the left, the rays passing through the sclerotic at b m , 
in the direction b* c, will throw a shadow of a vessel at con the 
retina at 6', and this will appear as a dark line at B. If the 
light move from b* to a", the retinal shadow will move from V 
to a', and the line in the field of vision will pass from B to A 



*34 



VISION 



(OPTICAL ARRANGEMENTS 




It may be ihown that the distance c b' corresponds to the 
distance of the retinal vessels from the layer of rods and cones. 

If the light enter 
the cornea, as in 
the figure to the 
right, and if the 
light be moved, 
the image will 
be displaced in 
the same direc- 
tion as the light, 
if the movement 
does not extend 
beyond the 
middle of the 
cornea, but in the 
Fie. 10.— Purkinje's Figures. opposite direction 

In the eye to the right the illumination is to the light 
through the sclerotic, and in the one to the when the latter 
left through the cornea. fc moved up and 

down. Thus, if a be moved to a', d will be moved to cf , the shadow 
on the retina from e to c*, and the image b to V. If, on the other 
hand y a be moved above the plane of the paper, d will move 
below, consequently c will move above, and V will appear to 
sink. (2) The retinal vessels may also be seen by looking at a 
strong light through a minute aperture, in front of which a rapid 
te-and-fro movement is made. Such experiments prove that the 
sensitive part of the retina is its deepest and most external layer 
(Jacob's membrane). 

• 4. Accommodation, or the Mechanism of Adjustment for 
Different Distances. — When a camera is placed in front of an 
object, it is necessary to focus accurately in order to obtain a 
dear and distinct image on the sensitive plate. This may be 
done by moving either the lens or the sensitive plate backwards 
or forwards so as to have the posterior focal point of the lens 
corresponding with the sensitive plate. For similar reasons, 
a mechanism of adjustment, or accommodation for different 
distances, is necessary in the human eye. In the normal eye, 
any number of parallel rays, coming from a great distance, are 
focused on the retina. Such an eye is termed emmetropic 
(fig. xi, A). Another form of eye (B) may be such that parallel 
rays are brought to a focus in 
front of the retina. This form 
of eye is myopic or short- 
' sighted, Inasmuch as, for dis- 
tinct vision, the object must be 
brought near the eye, so as to 
catch the divergent rays, which 
are then focused on the retina. 
i A third form is seen in C, where 
the focal point, for ordinary 
distances, is behind the retina, 
and consequently the object 
must be held far off, so as to 
allow only the less divergent or 
parallel rays to reach the eye. 
»jg-This kind of eye is called hyper- 
' metropic, or far-sighted. For 
ordinary distances, at which 
objects must be seen distinctly 
F«6« 11. in everyday life, the fault of 

A, Emmetropic or normal eye: the myopic eye may be corrected 
B, Myopic or short-dghted by the use of concave and of 
^-4ted y cSe? netroP,C * ^e hyper^tropic by convex 
glasses. In the first case, the 
concave glass will move the posterior focal point a little 
farther back, and in the second the convex glass will bring 
it farther forwards; in both cases, however, the glasses may 
be so adjusted, both as regards refractive index and radius 
of curvature, as to bring the rays to a focus on the retina, 
and consequently secure distinct vision. 
From any point 65 metres distant, rays may be regarded 




as almost parallel, and the point will be seen without any effort 
of accommodation. This point, either at this distance or in 
infinity, is called the punctum rtmotum, or the most distant 
point seen without accommodation. In the myopic eye it is 
much nearer, and for the hypermetropic there is really no such 
point, and accommodation is always necessary. If an object were 
brought too close to the eye for the refractive media to focus it on 
the retina, circles of diffusion would be formed, with the result 
of causing indistinctness of vision, unless the eye possessed some 
power ot adapting itself to different distances. That the eye 
has some such power of accommodation is proved by the fact 
that, if we attempt to look through the meshes of a net at a 
distant object, we cannot see both the meshes and the object 
with equal distinctness at the same time. Again, if we look 
continuously at very near objects, the eye speedily becomes 
fatigued. Beyond a distance of 65 metres, no accommodation 
is necessary; but within it, the condition of the eye must be 
adapted to the diminished distance until we reach a point near 
the eye which may be regarded as the limit of visibility for near 
objects. This point, called the punctum proximum, is usually 
12 centimetres (or 4*8 inches) from the eye. The range of 
accommodation is thus from the punctum remotum to the 
punctum proximum. 

The mechanism of accommodation has been much disputed, 
but there can be no doubt it is chiefly effected by a change in 
the curvature of the anterior surface of the crystalline lens. 
If we hold a lighted candle in front and a little to the side of an 
eye to be examined, three reflections may be seen in the eye, 
as represented in fig. 12. The first, a, is erect, large and bright, 
from the anterior surface of the .cornea; 
the second, b, also erect, but dim, from the 
anterior surface of the crystalline lens; and 
the third, c, inverted, and very dim, from 
the posterior surface of the lens, or perhaps 
the concave surface of the vitreous humour 
to which the convex surface of the lens is 
adapted. Suppose the three images to be 
in the position shown in the figure for Fig. 12. — Reflected 
distant vision, it will be found that the middle Images in the Eye. 
image b moves towards a, on looking at a near object. The change 
is due to an alteration of the curvature of the lens, as shown in 
fig. 13. The changes occurring during accommodation are: 





Fig. 13. — Mechanism of Accommodation. 
A, The lens during accommodation, showing its anterior surface 
advanced; B, The lens as for distant vision; C, Position of the 
ciliary muscle. 

(1) the curvature of the anterior surface of the crystalline lens 
increases, and may pass from 10 to 6 mm.; (a) the pupil con* 
tracts; and (3) the intraocular pressure increases in the posterior 
part of the eye. An explanation of the increased curvature of 
the anterior surface of the lens during accommodation has been 
thus given by H. von Helmholta, In the normal condition, 
that is, for the emmetropic eye, the crystalline lens is flattened 
anteriorly by the pressure of the anterior layer of the capsule; 
during accommodation, the radiating fibres of the ciliary muscle* 
pull the ciliary processes forward, thus relieving the tension 
of the anterior layer of the capsule, and the lens at once bulges 
forward by its elasticity. 
By this mechanism the radius of curvature of the anterior 



OPTICAL ARRANGEMENTS) 



VISION 



twrfaceof the lens, as tbe eye accommodates from the far to the 
near point, may shorten from to mm. to 6 mm. The ciliary 
mode, however, contain* two seta of fibres, the longitudinal or 
saeridtoaal, which run from before backwards, and the circular 
or equatorial (Mailer's muscle), which run, as their name 
indicates, around the band of longitudinal fibres forming the 
muscle. Direct observation on the eye of an animal immediately 
after death shows that stimulation of the ciliary nerves actually 
causes a forward movement of the ciliary processes, and there 
can be little doubt that the explanation above given applies to 
nun, probably most mammals, and to birds and most reptiles. 
In birds, which are remarkable for acutencss of vision, the 
mechanism is somewhat peculiar. In them the fibres of the 
dfiary muscle have a strong attachment posteriorly, and when 
these contract they pull back the inner posterior layers of the 
cornea, and thus relax that part of the ciliary zone called the 
hgamentum pectinatum. In a state of rest this structure in 
the bird's eye is tense, but in accommodation it becomes relaxed. 
Thus by a somewhat different mechanism in the bird, accom- 
modation consists in allowing the anterior surface of the lens 
to become more and more convex. In reptiles generally the 
mechanism resembles that of the bird; but it is said that 
in snakes and amphibia there is a movement forwards of the 
fcns as a whole, so as to catch rays at a less divergent angle. 
When tbe eye is directed to a distant object, such as a star, the 
■Mchanism of accommodation is at rest in mammals, birds, 
reptiles and amphibia, but in fishes and cephalopods the eye 
at rest is normally adjusted for near vision. Consequently 
accommodation in the latter is brought about by a mechanism 
that carries the lens as a whole backwards. There is still some 
difficulty in explaining the action of the equatorial (circular) 
fibres. Some have found that the increased convexity of the 
anterior surface of the lens takes place only in the centra] 
portions of the lens, and that the circumferential part of the 
lens is actually flattened, presumably by the contraction of 
the equatorial fibres. Seeing, however, that tbe central part 
of the lens is tbe portion used in vision, as the pupil contracts 
daring accommodation, a flattening of the margins of the lens 
can have no optical effect. Further, another explanation can 
be offered of the flattening. As just stated, during accommoda- 
tion the pupil contracts, and the pupillary edge of the iris, 
thinned out, spreads over the anterior surface of the capsule 
of the lens, which it actually touches, and this part of the iris, 
along with the more convex central part of the lens, bulges 
into the anterior chamber, and must thus displace some 
of the aqueous humour. To make room for this, however, 
the circumferential part of the iris, related to tbe Hgamentum 
pectinatum, moves backwards very slightly, while the flatten- 
ing of the circumferential part of the lens facilitates this 
movement* 

Hehnholts s u cceeded in measuring with accuracy the sizes of 
these reflected images by means of an instrument termed an ophiXal- 
, the construction of which is based on the following optical 



eiples: When a luminous ray traverses a plate of glass having 
parallel sides, if it fall perpendicular to the plane of tpe plate, it 
wsl pass through without deviation; but if it (all obliquely on the 
plate (as shown in tbe left-hand diagram in fig. 14) it undergoes a 
literal deviation, bat in a direction parallel to that of the incident 
ray. so that to an eye. placed behind the glass plate, at the lower A, 

*"- ■ — * 1 point, upper A, would be in the direction of the pro- 

asot ray, and thus there would be an apparent lateral 

of the point, the amount of which would increase 

. tbe obliquity of the incident ray. If, instead of one plate, 
we take two plates of equal thickness, one placed above the other, 
two l ina g es will be seen, and by turning the one plate with reference 
to the other, each image may be displaced a little to one side. The 
tastnament consists of a small telescope (fig. 14) T, the axis of which 
coincides with the plane separating the two glass plates C C and 
B B. When we look at an object X Y, and turn the plates till we 
see two objects ay, ay touching each other, the size of the image 
X Y wiH be equal to the distance the one object is displaced to the 
one side and the other object to the other side. Having thus 
sseaaured the size of the reflection, it is not difficult, if we know the 
size of the object reflecting the light and its distance from the eye, 
to calculate the radius of the curved surface (Appendix to M'Ken- 
tbichVs Outlines of Physiology. 1878). Tbe general result is that, 
at accoeawiodatioa for near objects, the middle reflected image 




F10. 14.— Diagrammatic 
View of theOphthalmo- 
mcter of Heunholtz. 



«35 

% and the means of curvature of the anterior surface 

of the lent becomes shorter. 

5. Absorption mid Reflection 0/ Luminous Rays from tat Eye. 
—When light enters the eye, St is 
partly absorbed by the black pigment 
of the choroid and partly reflected. 
The reflected rays are returned 
through the pupO, not only following 
the same direction as the rays enter- 
ing the eye, but uniting to form an 
image at the same point in space as 
the luminous object.- The pupil of an 
eye appears black to an observer, 
because the eye of the observer does 
not receive any of those reflected rays. 
If, however, we strongly flhiminate 
the retina, and hold a lens in front of 
the eye, so as to bring the reflected 
rays to a focus nearer the eye, then 
a virtual and erect, or a real and re* 
versed, image of the retina will be 
seen. Such is the principle of the 
ophthalmoscope, invented by Helm- 
holtz in 1851. Eyes deficient in pig- 
ment, as in albinos, appear luminous, 
reflecting light of a red or pink colour; 
but if we place In front of such an 
eye a card perforated by a round hole 
of the diameter of the pupil, the hole 
will appear quite dark, tike the pupil of an ordinary eye. In 
many animals a portion of the fundus of the eyeball has no 
pigment, and presents an iridescent appearance. This is called 
a tapdunu It probably renders the eye more sensitive to light 
of feeble intensity. 

6. Functions of Ike Iris. — The iris constitutes a diaphragm 
which regulates the amount of light entering the eyeball. The 
aperture in the centre, the Pupil, may be dilated by contraction 
of a system of radiating fibres of involuntary muscle, or con- 
tracted by the action of another system of fibres, forming a 
sphincter, at the margin of the pupil. The radiating fibres 
are controlled by the sympathetic, while those of the circular 
set are excited by the third cranial nerve. The variations 
in diameter of the pupil are determined by the greater or less 
intensity of the fight acting on the retina. A strong light 
causes contraction of the pupil; with light of less intensity, 
the pupil wfll dilate. In the human being, a strong light acting 
on one eye will often cause contraction of the pupil, not only 
in the eye affected, but in the other eye. These facts indicate 
that the phenomenon is of the nature of a reflex action, in 
which the fibres of the optic nerve act as sensory conductors 
to a centre in the encephalon, whence influences emanate which 
affect the pupil. It has been ascertained that if the fibres 
of the optic nerve be affected in any way, contraction of the 
pupil follows. The centre is in the anterior pair of the corpora 
quadrigemina, as destruction of these bodies causes immobility 
of the pupfl. On the other hand, the dilating fibres are derived 
from the sympathetic; and it has been shown that they come 
from the lower part of tbe cervical, and upper part of the dorsal, 
region of the cord. But the iris seems to be directly susceptible 
to the action of light. Thus the pupil of the eye of a dead 
animal will contract if exposed to light for several hours, whereas, 
if the eye on the opposite side be covered, its pupil will remain 
widely dilated, as at the moment of death. 

The pupil contracts under the influence— (1) of an increased 
intensity of light; (2) of the effort of accommodation for near 
objects; (3) of a strong convergence of the two eyes; and (4) of 
such active substances as nicotine, morphia and pfaysostig* 
mine; and it dilates under tbe influence— (1) of a diminished 
intensity of light; (2) of vision of distant objects; (3) of a 
strong excitation of any sensory nerve; (4) of dyspnoea; and 
(5) of such substances as atropine and fayoscyamine. The chief 
function of the iris is to so moderate the amount of light entering 



136 



VISION 



(INFLUENCE OF UOHT 



the eye as to secure sharpness of definition of the retinal 
image. This it accomplishes by (x) diminishing the amount of 
light reflected from near objects, by catting off the more 
divergent rays and admitting only those approaching a parallel 
direction, which, in a normal eye, are focused on the retina; 
and (a) preventing the error of spherical aberration by cutting 
off divergent rays which would otherwise impinge near the 
margins of the lens, and would thus be brought to a focus in 
front of the retina. 

3. Spscmc iKrursNCE or Light on the Retina 
The retina is the terminal organ of vision", and all the parts 
in front of it are optical arrangements for securing that an image 
will be accurately focused upon it. The natural stimulus of 
the retina is light. It is often said that it may be excited by 
mechanical and electrical stimuli; but such an observation 
really applies to the stimulation of the fibres of the optic nerve. 
It is well known that such stimuli applied to the optic nerve 
behind the eye produce always a luminous impression; but 
there is no proof that the retina, strictly speaking, is similarly 
affected. Pressure or electrical currents may act on the eyeball, 
but in doing so they not only affect the retina, ^consisting of its 
various layers and of Jacob's membrane, but also the fibres 
of the optic nerve. It is possible that the retina, by which 
is meant all the layers except those on its surface formed 
by the fibres of the optic nerve, is affected only by its 
speciJU kind of stimulus, light. This stimulus so affects the 
terminal apparatus as to set up actions which in turn stimulate 
the optic fibres. The next question naturally is— What is the 
spedfic action of light on the retina? A. F. Holmgren, and 
abo J. Dewar and J. G. M'Kendrick, have shown that when 
Eght falls on the retina it excites a variation of the electrical 
current obtained from the eye by placing it on the cushions of 
a sensitive galvanometer. One electrode touches the vertex 
of the cornea and the other the back of the eyeball The 
corneal vertex is positive to the back of the eye, or to the 
transverse section of the optic nerve. Consequ e ntly a current 
passes through the galvanometer from the cornea to the back. 
Then the impact of light causes an increase in the natural 
electrical current—during the continuance of light the current 
dinriushes slowly and falls in amount even below what it was 
before the impact— and the withdrawal of light is followed 
by a rebound, or second increase, after which the current falls 
in strength, as if the eye suffered from fatigue. 
. It was also observed in this research that the amount of 
electrical variation produced by light of various intensities 
couesp oiid eri pretty closely to the results expressed by G. T. 
Fecfaner's law, which regulates the relation between the stimulus 
and the sensational effect in sensory impressions. This law is, 
that the sensational effect does not increase proportionally to 
the stimulus, but as the logarithm of the stimulus. Thus, sup- 
posing the stimulus to be 10, 100 or 1000 times increased, the 
srmalkmal effect wul not be 10, 100 or 1000 times, but only 
1, a and 3 times greater. 

Such electrical phenomena probably result either from 
thermal or chemical changes in the retina. light produces 
chemical changes in the retina. If a frog be killed in the dark, 
and if its retina be exposed only to jdfe* rays, the retina has 
peculiar purple colour, which is at once destroyed by exposure 
to ordinary light. The purple matter apparently is decom- 
posed by light. An image may actually be fixed on the retina 
by rJ'"^g the eye into a solution of alum immediately after 
death. Thus it would appear that light affects the purple- 
matter of the retina, and the result of this chemical change is 
to stimulate the optic filaments; if the action be arrested, 
we okay have a picture on the retina, but if it be not arrested, 
the picture is evanescent; the purple-matter is used up, and 
atw maMti of a similar kind is formed to take its place. The 
j*M*JgUhU therefore, be compared to a sensitive photographic 
g^BHHMfttt* sensitive matter quickly 1 e moted and replaced; 
^^^Kjttfifc that the electrical expression of the chemical 
-M^^^HERl*** been above described 

IK 



Fie ts-— Diagram for the 
Study of the Blind SpoU 



(a) PlMgeau*.— Ltuninoas unprcnionw may abo be pro- 
duced by pressure on the eyeball. Such impression ii, termed 
phosgenes, usually appear. as a luminous centre surrounded 
by coloured or dark rings. Sometimes they seem to be small 
bright scintillations of various forms. Similar appearances 
may be observed at the moments of opening or of closing * 
strong electrical current transmitted through the eyebalL 

(*) The Retina's Proper Light.— Tht visual field, even when 
the eyelids are closed in a dark room, is not absolutely dark. 
There is a sensation of faint luminosity which may at one 
moment be brighter than at another. This is often termed 
the proper light of the retina, and it indicates a molecular change, 
even in darkness. 

(c) The Excitability of the Retina.— The retina is not equally 
excitable in all its parts. At the entrance of the optic nerve,' 
as was shown by E. M ariotte in 1668, there is no sensibility to 
light. Hence, this part of the retina b called the blind spot. 
If we shut the left eye, fix the right eye on the cross seen in 
fig. 15, and move the book towards and away from the eye, 
a position wfll be found when the 

round spot disappears, that is ga _^ 

when its image falb on the en- •* ~ 

trance of the optic nerve. There 
b also complete insensibility to 
colours at that spot. The diameter 
of the optic papilla b about x-8 mm., giving an angle of 6°; 
this angle determines the apparent size of the blind spot in 
the visual field, and it b sufficiently large to cause a human 
figure to disappear at a distance of two metres. 

The yeBow spot in the centre of the retina b the most sensitive 
to light, and it b chiefly employed in direct vision. Thus, if 
we fix the eye on a word in the centre of this line, it b distinctly 
and sharply seen, but the words towards each end of the line 
are vague. If we wish to see each word distinctly, we " run 
the eye" along the line— that b, we bring each successive 
word on the yellow spot- This spot has a horizontal diameter 
of a mm., and a vertical diameter of -3 mm.; and it corresponds 
in the visual field to an angle of from s to 4*. The fossa in 
the spot, where there are no retinal elements except Jacob's 
membrane, consisting here entirely of cones (2000 in number), 
b the area of most acute sensibility. This fossa has a diameter 
of only • a mm., which makes the angle ten times smaller. Thus 
the field of distinct vision b extremely limited, and at the same 
moment we see only a very small portion of the visual field. 
Images of external objects are brought successively on this 
minute sensitive area, and the different sensations seem to 
be fused together, so that we are conscious of the object as 
a whole. 

Towards the anterior margin of the retina sensitiveness to 
light becomes diminished; but the diminution b not uniform, 
and it varies in different persons. 

(<0 Duration and Persistence of Retinal Impressions.— To 
excite the retina, a feeble stimulus must act for a certain time; 
when the retina b excited, the impression lasts after the cessa- 
tion of the stimulus; hut if the stimulus be strong, it may be 
of very short duration. Thus the duration of an electrical 
spark b extremely short, but the impression on the retina is 
so powerful, and remains so long, as to make the spark visible. 
If we rotate a disk having white and black sectors we see con* 
tinuous dark bands. Even if we paint on the face of the disk 
a single large round red spot, and rotate rapidly, a continuous 
red hand may be observed. Here the impressions of red on 
the same area of retina succeed each other so rapidly that 
before one disappears another b superadded, the result being 
a fusion of the successive impressions into one continuous 
This phenomenon b called the persistence of retinal 
An impwaiion lasts on the retina front Jm to u}u 
of a second. The cinematograph owes its elects to persist* 
ence of retinal impressions. 

(e) rat Phenomena of Irradiation.— U we look at fig. 16, 
the white square in the black field appears to be larger than the 
in the white acid, although both are of precisely 



COLOUB SENSATtONI 



(he i 



VISION 



*37 



Fig. 16.— Illustrating the Effect of 
Irradiation. 



me are. Tib 2s due" to irradiation. The borders of 
dear surfaces advance in the visual field and encroach on 
§^ ^"""1 obscure surfaces. Prob- 
^^^^^^^^H I ably, even with the most 

^^HLsafl-^H asanas. I cxftct 

^^H ^^| ^^H I diffusion images form round 
^^H ^^H ^^H I the image of a white sur- 
^^^Lnjnj^^H wawaww I face on a black ground, 
^^^^^^^^^B I forming a kind of penum- 

wmawawMawawaWsL- I bra, thus causing it to appear 

•*• B larger than it really is. 

(/) Intensity of Light required 
to excite the Retina.— Light 
must have a certain intensity to produce a luminous impres- 
sion. It is impossible to fix the minimum intensity necessary, 
as the effect will depend, not only on the intensity of the stimulus, 
but on the degree of retinal excitability at the time. Thus, 
after the retina has been for some time in the dark, its excita- 
bility is increased; 00 the other hand, it is much diminished 
by fatigue. Aubert has stated that the minimum intensity 
a about 300 times less than that of the full moon. The sensi- 
bility of the eye to light is measured by the photometer. 

(g) Consecutive Retinal Images.— Images which persist on 
the retina are either positive or negative. They are termed 
potitim when the bright and obscure parts of the image are 
the same as the bright and obscure parts of the object; and 
stylise when the bright parts of the object are dark in the 
image, and vice versa. Positive images are strong and sharply 
marked when an intense light has acted for not less than i of 
a second. If the excitation be continued much longer, a nega- 
tive and not a positive image will be seen. If, when the positive 
image Is still visible, we look on a very brilliantly illuminated 
sarface, a negative image appears. Negative images are seen 
with greatest intensity after a strong light has acted for a 
time. These phenomena may be best studied 
the retina is very excitable, as in the morning after a 
sound sleep. On awakening, if we look steadily far an instant 
at the window and then close the eyes, a posittee image of the 
window/ will appear) if we then gaae fixedly 
at the window for one or two minutes, dose 
the eyes two or three times, and then look at 
a dark part of the room, a negative image will **«* 
be seen floating before us. The positive image Orange 
is due to excitation of the retina, and the q5 ^ 
negative to fatigue. If we fatigue a small Yellow 
area of the retina with white light, and then 
auow a less intense light to fall 00 tt,the Y ^ a sh 
fatigued area responds feebly, and conse- Green 
quentlj the object, such as the window-pane, 
appears to be dark. Greenish 

4. Sensations or Colouk Cyanic 

1. General Statement.— Colour (*.».) is a 
special sensation excited by the action on the retina of rays of 
light of a definite wave-length. On the most likely hypothesis as 
to the physical nature of light, colour depends 00 the rateof vibra- 
tion of the luminiferous aether, and white light is a compound of 
aD the colours in definite proportion. When a surface reflects 
solar light into the eye without affecting this proportion, it is 
white, but if it absorbs all the light so as to reflect nothing, it 
appears to be black. If a body held between the eye and the sun 
transmits light unchanged, and is transparent, it is colourless, 
but if translucent it is white. If the medium transmits or reflects 
some rays and absorbs others, it is coloured. Thus, if a body 
absorbs all the rays of the spectrum but those which cause 
the sensation of green, we say the body is green in colour; 
but this green can only be perceived if the rays of light falling 
on the body contain rays having the special rate of vibration 
required for this special colour. For if the surface be illumin- 
ated by any other pure ray of the spectrum, say red, these 
ted rays will be absorbed and the body will appear to be black. 
As a white surface reflects all the rays, in red light U will be 



seen to be red, and in a green lighf , green. Colour depends on 
the nature of the body and on the nature of the light falling on 
it, and a sensation of colour arises when the body reflects or 
transmits the special rays to the eye. If two rays of different 
rates of vibration, that is to say, of different colours, affect a 
surface of the retina at the same moment, the effects are fused 
together and we have the sensation of a third colour different 
from its cause. Thus, if red be removed from the solar spec- 
trum, all the other colours combined cause a sensation of green- 
ish yellow. Again red and violet give purple, and yellow 
and blue, white. Yellow and blue, however, only give white 
when pure spectral colours are mixed. It b well known that 
a mixture of yellow and blue pigments do not produce white, 
but green; but, as was explained by Helmholtx, this is because 
the blue pigment absorbs all the rays at the red end of the 
spectrum up to the green, while the yellow pigment absorbs 
all the rays at the violet end down to the green, and as the 
only rays reflected into the eye are the green rays, the sub- 
stance appears green. Finally, if colours are painted on a 
disk in due proportions and in a proper order, the disk will, 
when quickly routed, appear white, from the rapid fusion of 
colour effects. 

When we examine a spectrum, we see a series of colours 
merging by insensible gradations the one into the other, thus:— 
red, orange, yellow, green, blue and violet. These are termed 
simple colours. If two or more coloured rays of the spectrum 
act simultaneously on the same spot of the retina, they may 
give rise to sensations of mixed colours. These mixed colours 
are of two kinds: (1) those which do not correspond to any 
colour in the spectrum, such as purple and white, and (2) those 
which do exist in the spectrum. White may be produced 
by a mixture of two simple colours, which are then said to be 
complementary. Thus, red and greenish blue, orange and 
cyanic blue, yellow and indigo blue, and greenish yellow and 
violet all produce white. Purple is produced by a mixture of 
red and violet, or red and bluish violet. The following table 
by Helmholtx shows the compound colours produced by mixing 
other colours: — 



Violet 


Indigo 


Cyanic 
blue 


dreenish 


Green 


Yellowish Yellow. 




blue 


blue 




green 


Purple 


Deep 


White 


White 


Whitish 


Golden Orange 




rose 


rose 




yellow 
Yellow 


yellow 
Yellow 


Deep 


White 


White 


Whitish 


rose 
White 


rose 
White 


Whitish 


yellow 
Whitish 


Yellowish 




row 
White 


Green 


green 
Green 


green 
Green 


green' 




Blue 


Water 

blue 


Greenish 
blue 








Water 


Water 










blue 


blue 










Indigo 












blue 














This table shows that if we mix two simple colours not 
so far separated in the spectrum as the co mplement a r y colours, 
the mixed colour contains 
more white as the interval ^ . 

between the colours em- x 

ployed is greater, and that 
if we mix two colours 
farther distant in the 
spectrum than the com- 
plementary colours, the 

mixture is whiter as the . , . , 

interval is smaller. By mixing more than two simple* colours, 
no new colours are produced, but only different shades of colour. 

a. Modes of Mixing Colour Sensations— Various methods 
baye been adopted for studying the effect of mixing colours. 

(a) By Superposing Two Spectra.— This may be done in a simple 
way by having a slit in the form of the letter V (see fig. 17), 
of which the two portions ab and be form a right angle; behind 
this slit is placed a vertical prism, and two spectra are obtained* 



Fig. 17.— Form of Double Slit for thr 
Partial Superposition of Two Spectra. 



138 



VISION 





as Ken in fig. 18, in which bfea h the spectrum of the slit ob, 

and cefd that of the aht cd; the coloured spectra are contained 

. in the triangle gef % and, 

f S, , , * 4 by arrangement, the 

effects of mixture of any 

two simple colours may 

be observed. 

^AA/ (ft) By Method of Re- 

<f fUcHon. — Place a red 

Fig. 18.— Diagram of Double Spectrum wafer 00 6, in fig. 19, and 

partially superposed. a Wuc wafcr oa d$ and 

so angk a small glass plate a as to transmit to the eye a 
reflection of the blue wafer on <f in the same line as the rays 
transmitted from the red 
wafer on b. The sensation 
will be that of purple; and 
by using wafers of different 
colours, many experiments 
may thus be performed. 

(c) By Rotating Disks which 

quickly superpose on the same 

Area of Retina the Impres* 

. sions of Different Wave-lengths. 

— Such disks may be con- 

Fig. 10.— Diagram showing lam- structed of cardboard, on 

bert s Method of mixing Sensa- which coloured sectors are 

tions of Colour. . . . . - * 

painted, as shown in fig. 20, 

representing diagrammatically the arrangement of Sir Isaac 
Newton. The angles of the sectors were thus given by him: — 

Red . 6o»455' I Green . 6o , 45'5 # 

Orange . 34° 10*5' Blue . . 54* 41' 

Yellow . 54° 4>' I Indigo . 34° 10-5' 

Violet . 6o° 455' 

With sectors of such a size, while will be produced on routing 
the disk rapidly. This method has been carried out with great 
efficiency by the colour-top of J. Clerk-Maxwell. It is a flat top, 
on the surface of which disks 
of various colours may be 
placed. Dancer has added 
to it a method by which, even 
while the top is rotating 
rapidly and the sensation of 
a mixed colour is strongly 
perceived, the eye may be 
able to see the simple colours 
of which it is composed. 
This is done by placing on 
the handle of the top, a 
short distance above the 
■?.#. ^ »v -# .v r* t coloured surface, a thin black 

various size and pattern, and 
weighted a little on one side. This disk vibrates to and fro 
rapidly, and breaks the continuity of the colour impression; 
and thus the constituent colours are readily seen. 

3. The Geometric Representation of Colours.— Colours may 
be arranged in a linear series, as in the solar spectrum. Each 
point of the line corresponds to a determinate impression of 
colour; the line is not a straight line, as regards luminous effect, 
but is better represented by a curve, passing from the red to the 
violet. This curve might be represented as a circle in the 
circumference of which the various colours might be placed, 
m which case the complementary colours would be at the 
extremities of the same diameter. Sir Isaac Newton arranged 
che^rim fe the form of a triangle, as shown in fig. ar. If we 
"*" - -— ^ j co ^ oaa jj jjjy^ jjjgfc^ thus— green, 

i of the triangle include the inter- 
i, except purple. 

. . ivently, from the inter- 

the complementary colours, the 

» and VS represent the amount of 

w* torsi white; the same holds good 





(COLOUR SENSATION 

for example, for bine and red. the 
idthe line SR-tbe amount of fed 



for the 

line SB -the amount of blue, and 
required to form white. 
Again, any point, say M, 
on the surface of the 
triangle, will represent a 
mixed colour, the composi- 
tion of which may be ob- 
tained by mixing the three 
fundamental colours in the 
proportions represented by 
the length of the lines M to 

green, MV and MR. But mg— j^^fc 

the line VM passes on to eJom xsnjsjf 

the yellow Y^we may then FlG 2I ._Ceometriea1 Representation 
replace the red and green ^ lhe Rations ( Colours as shown 
by the yellow, in the pro- i^, u-mtan 
portion of the length olthe *" Newton- 
fine MY, and mix it with violet in the proportion of SV. The 
same colour would also be formed by mixing the amount MY of 
yellow with MS of white, or by the amount RM of red with the 
amount MD of greenish blue. 

The following list shows characteristic complementary colours, 
with their wave-lengths (X) in millionths of a millimetre*-- 




Red, X 656. 
Orange, X 608. 
Gold-yellow, X 574.' 
Yellow, X 567. 
Greenish yellow, X 564. 



Blue-green, X 49*. 
Blue, X400. 
BIue,X482. 
Indigo-blue, X 464. 
Violet, X 433- 



By combining colours at opposite ends of the spectrum, the 
effect of the intermediate colours may be produced; but the 
lowest and the highest, red and violet, cannot thus be formed. 
These are therefore fundamental or primary colours, colours 
that cannot be produced by the fusion of other colours. If now 
to red and violet we add green, which has a rate of vibration 
about midway between red and violet, we obtain a sensation of 
white. Red, green and violet are therefore the three funda- 
mental colours. 

4. Physiological Characters of Colours.— Colour physiologically 
is a sensation, and it therefore does not depend only on the 
physical stimulus of light, but also on the part of the retina 
affected. The power of distinguishing colours is greatest when 
they fall on, or immediately around, the yellow spot, where the 
number of cones is greatest. In these regions more than two 
hundred different tints of colour may be distinguished. Out- 
side of this area lies a middle zone, where fewer tints are per- 
ceived, mostly confined to shades of yellow and blue. If Intense 
coloured stimuli are employed, colours may be perceived even 
to the margin of the periphery of the retina, hut with weak 
stimuli coloured objects may seem to he black, or dark like 
shadows. In passing a colour from the periphery to the centre 
of the yellow spot, remarkable changes in hue may be observed. 
Orange is first grey, then yellow, and k only appears as orange 
when it enters the zone sensitive to red. Purple and bluish 
green are blue at the periphery, and only show the true tint 
in the central region. Four tints have been found which do not 
thus change: a red obtained by adding to the red of the spectrum 
a little blue (a purple), a yellow of 574*$ *» * green of 495 X and 
a blue of 471 X. 

The question now arises, How can we perceive differences 
in colour? We might suppose a molecular vibration to be set 
up in the nerve-endings synchronous with the undulations of the 
luminiierous aether, without any change in the chemical con- 
stitution of the sensory surface, and we might suppose that 
where various series of waves in the aether corresponding to 
different colours act together, these may be fused together, or to 
interfere so as to give rise to a vibration of modified form or rate 
that corresponded in some way to the sensation. Or, to adopt 
another line of thought, we might suppose that the effect of 
different rays (rays differing in frequency of vibration and in 
physiological effect) is to promote or retard chemical changes 
in the sensory surface, " which again so affect the sensory nerves 
as Jo give rise to differing stales in the nerves and the nerve 
centres, with differing concomitant sensations." The former 
of these thoughts is the foundation of the Young-Hdmholts 
theory, while the Utter is applicable to the theory of E. Hefing. 



COLOUR 8EKSATI0N) 



VISION 



139 



5. Tkemries 
by physicists 

9 O T 



of C«b*r-AriM#tiM.— A theory widely accepted 

was first proposed by Thomas Young and 

afterwards revived by 




It 

on the assumption that 
three kinds of sexvoos ele- 
ments exist in the retina, 
the excitation of which 
give respectively sensa- 
tions of red, green and 
violet. These may be 
regarded as fundamental 



oos light excites all 
three, but with different 
intensities according to 
the length of the wave. 
Thus long waves will 
excite most strongly 
fibres sensitive to red, 



Fic.M.-Diagram showing the irrita- ™°*™°J* JCJ? 
Mity of the Three Kinds of Retina! «<>* ***» tnoao sensi- 
Benefit*. tive to violet Fig. a* 

1. red; a. green; 3. violet. R. O. Y. shows graphically the 
G.B.V. initial fetters of colours. irritability of the three 
sits of fibres. Hehnbolftz thus applies the theory.— 
" 1. Red excites strongly the fibres sensitive to red and feebly the 
other two— sensation: Red. 
3, Yellow excites moderately the fibres sensitive to red and 
green, feebly the violet— sensation : Yellow. 

3. Green excites strongly the green, feebly the other two- 

sensation: Green. 

4. Blue excites moderately the fibres sensitive to green and 

violet, and feebly the red— sensation : Blue. 

5. Violet excites strongly the fibres sensitive to violet, and feebly 

the other two— sensation: Violet. 

6. When the excitation is nearly equal for the three mods of 

fibres, then the sensation b White." 

The Young-Helmholts theory explains the appearance of the 
consecutive coloured images. Suppose, for example, that we look 
at a red object for a considerable time : the retinal elements sensitive 
to red become fatigued. Then (1) if the eye be kept in darkness, 
the fibres affected by red being fatigued do not act so as to.gfv* a 
sensation of red; those of green and of violet have been less excited, 
aad this excitation is sufficient to give the sensation of pale greenish 
broe- (2) if the eye be fixed on a white surface, the red fibres, being 
fatigued, are not excited by the red rays contained in the white light: 
oauSe contrary, the green and violet fibres are strongly excited, and 
the conseq uence is that we have an intense complementary image; 
(3) if we look at a bluish green surface, the complementary of red, 
the effect will be to excite still more strongly the green and violet 
feres, aad consequently to have a still more intense complementary 
nuage- U) if we regard a red surface, the primitive colour, the red 
fibres are little affected in consequence of being fatigued, the green 
aad violet fibres will be only feebly excited, and therefore only a 
very feeble complementary image will be scon; and (5) if we look 
at a surface of a different colour altogether, this colour may combine 
with that of the consecutive image, and produce a mixed colour, 
thus, on a yellow surface, we will see an image of an orange colour. 

Every colour has three qualities: (1) toe, or tint, such as red, 
green, violet; (*) degree of saturation, or purity, according to 
the amount of white mixed with the tint, as when we recognize 
a red or green as pale or deep? and (3) intensity, or luminosity, 
or brightness as when we designate the tint of a red rose as dark 
or bright. Two colours are identical when they agree as to 
these three qualities. Observation shows, however, that out of 
one hundred men ninety-six agree in identifying or in discrimin- 
ating colours, while the remaining four show defective apprecia- 
tion. These latter are called colour-blind. This defect is about 
ten times less frequent in women. Colour-blindness is congen- 
ital and incurable, and it is due to an unknown condition of 
the retina or nerve centres, or both, and must be dist i nguished 
from transient colour-Windness, sometimes caused by the 
missi ve use of tobacco and by disease. When caused by 
tobacco, the sensation of blue is the last to disappear Absolute 
inability to distinguish colour is rare, if it really exists; in some 
awn cases there is only one colour sensation; and in n few 



cases the colour-bund falls to distinguish Mae from green, or 
there is insensibility to violet. Daltonism, or red-green blind- 
ness, of which there are two varieties, the red-blind and the 
green-blind, is the more common defect. Red appears to a red- 
ound person as a dark green or greenish yellow, yellow and 
orange as dirty green, and green is green and brighter than .the 
green of the yellow and orange. To a green-blind person red 
appears as dark yellow, yellow is yellow, except a little lighter 
in shade than the red he calls dark yellow, and green is pale 
yellow. 

According to the Young-Hetmholtz theory, there arc three funda- 
mental colour sensations, red, green and violet, by the combination 
of which all other colours may be formed, and it is assumed that 
there exist in the retina three kinds of nerve elements, each of 
which is specially responsive to the stimulus of waves of a certain 
frequency corresponding to one colour, and much less so to waves 
of other frequencies and other colours. If waves corresponding 
to pure red alone act on the retina, only the corresponding nerve 
element for red would be excited, and so with green and violet. 
But if waves of different frequencies are mixed (corresponding to a 
mixture of colours), then the nerve elements will be set in action ia 
proportion to the amount and intensity of the constituent excitant 
rays in the colour. Thus if all the nerve elements were simultane- 
ously set in action, the sensation is that of white light ; if that corre- 
sponding to red and green, the resultant sensation will be orange er 
yellow; if mainly the green and violet, the sensation will be blue and 
indigo. Then red-blindness may be explained by supposing that the 
elements corresponding to the sensation of red are absent; and 
green-blindness, to the absence of the elements sensitive to green. 
If to a red-Wind person the green and violet are equal, and wbeirto 
a green-blind person the red asri violet are equal, they may have 
sensations which to them constitute white, while to the normal 
eye the sensation is not white, but bluish green in the one case and 
green in the other. In each case, to the normal eye, the sensation 
of green has been added to the sensations of red and blue. It will 
be evident, also, that whiteness to the colour-blind eye cannot be 
the same as whiteness to the normal eye. No doubt this theory 
explains certain phenomena of colour-blindness, of after-coloured 
images, and of contrast of colour, but it is open to various objections. 
It has no anatomical basis, as it has been found to be impossible 
to demonstrate the existence, of three kinds of nerve elements, 
retinal elements, corresponding to the three fundamental 

sensations. Why should red to a colour-blind person give r. 

sensation of something; like green, or why should it give rise to a 
sensation at all ? Again, and as already stated, in cases of colour- 
blindness due to tobacco or to disease, only blue may be seen, while 
it is said that the rest of the spectrum seems to be white. It is 
difficult to understand how white can be the sensation if the sensa- 
tions of red and green arc lost. On the other hand, it may be 
argued that such colour-blind eyes do not really see white as seen 
by a normal person, and that they only have a sensation which 
they have been accustomed to call white. According to this theory, 
we never actually experience the primary sensations. Thus we 
never see primary red, as the sensation is more or less mixed with 
primary green, and even with primary blue (violet). So with regard 
to primary green and primary violet. Helmholtx, in his last work 
on the subject, adopted as the three primary colours a red bluer 
than spectral red, (0) a green lying between 540 X and 560 X (6, like 
the green of vegetation), and a blue at about 470 X (c, like ultra- 
marine), all, however, much more highly saturated than any colours 
existing in the spectrum. 

Is Handbneh dor Physiologiuhen 0$Uh (Hamburg and Leipzig, 
1896) Helmholtz pointed out that luminosity or brightness plays a 
more important part In colour perception than has oecn supposed. 
Each spectral colour is composed of certain proportions of these 
fundamental colours, or, to put it in another way, a combination of 
two of them added to a certain amount of white. 

Hering's theory proceeds on the assumption of chemical changes 
in the retina under the influence of light. It also assumes 
that certain fundamental sensations are excited by light or occur 
during the absence of light. These fundamental sensations are 
white. Mack, red, yellow, green and blue. They are arranged in 
pairs, the one colour in each pair being, in a sense, complementary to 
the other, as white to black, red to green, and yellow to blue. Hexing 
also supposes that when rays of a certain wave-length fall on visual 
substances assumed to exist in the retina, destructive or. as it is 
termed, katabolic changes occur, while rays having other wave- 
lengths cause constructive or anabolic changes. Suppose that in a 
red-green substance katabolic and anabolic changes occur in equal 
amount, there may be no sensation, but when waves of a certain 
wave-length or frequency cause katabolic changes in excess, there 
will be a sensation of red. while shorter waves and of greater fre- 
quency, by exciting anabolic changes, will cause a sensation of 
green. In like manner, katabok'sm of a yellow-blue visual sub* 
stance gives rise to a sensation we call yellow, while anabolism. 
by shorter waves acting on the same substance, causes the sensation 
of blue. Again, katabohsm of a white-black visual s u b s t a nc e 



1 40 



VISION 



(EYE MOVEMENTS 



gives white, while anabolism, in the dark, gives rise to the sensation 
of blackness. Thus blackness is a sensation as well as whiteness, 
and the members of each pair are antagonistic as well as comple- 
mentary. In the red end of the spectrum the rays cause katabolism 
of the red-green substance, while they have no effect on the yellow- 
blue substance- Here the sensation is red. The shorter waves 
of the spectral yellow cau « katabvli>m of the yellow-blue material, 
while katabolism and anabuljam ef ihe r-d-green substance are here 
equal. Here the sensation is ycMuw. Stfll shorter waves, corre- 
sponding to green, nnw c*li%c iaaboU^m of the red-green substance, 
while their influence cm \h<- yrjkiw Wlic substance, being equal in 
amount as regards kataboiism and anabolism, is neutral. Here 
the sensation is green. Short waves of the blue of the spectrum 
cause anabolism of the yellow-blue material, and as their action on 
♦"le red -green matter is nnrtral. the sensation is blue. The very 
short wave-, .it the blue end of the spectrum encite katabolism of the 
red- green ffflitliffM, and thu* give violet by adding red to blue. 
The xrnsatlon orange is experienced when, there is excels of kata- 
bolism h and greenish blue when there it encess of anabolism in both 
■Lihstances. Again* when all the rayi of ihc spectrum fall on the 
retina, kfttabohsm and anabolism in the red-green and y el low-blue 
matters ore equal and neutralise each other* but katabolism is great 
in the while-black substance, and wc call the sensation white. 
Lasily, when no light falls on the retina, anabolic changes ant going 
on and there is the sensation of black. 

Hering H s theory accounts satisfactorily for the formation of 
ctitourea afierdmates. Thus, if we suppose the retina to be stimu- 
lated by red light, katabolism takes place, and if the effect continues 
after Withdrawal of the red stimulus, we have a positive after-image. 
Then ana belie changes occur under the influence of n utri lion, and 
the effect is assisted by the anabolic effect of ihorter wave -lengths, 
with the result that the negative aficr- image, green, h perceived. 
Perhaps the distinctive feature of fieri ngs theory is that white is 
an independent sensation, and not the secondary result of a mixture 
of primary sensations, as held by the Voung-Helmholtz view. 
The greatest difficulty in the way of the acceptance of Hering's 
theory b with reference to the sensation of black lilac k is held to 
be due to anabolic change* occurring in the white- black substance. 
Suppose that anabolism and kaiabolUm of the white-black sub- 
stance arc in equilibrium, unaccompanied by stimulation of either 
the ird'green or the yellow-blue &uhsta nces, we find that we have a 
sensation of darkness, but not one of intense blackness. This 
" darkness " has still a certain amount of luminosity, and it has 
been termed the *' intrinsic light" of the retina- Sensations of 
black differing from this darkness may be readily ejtpcrienced, as 
when we cx|>ose the retina to bright sunshine for a few moments 
and then close the eye. We then nave a sensation of intense black- 
ness, which soon h however, is succeeded by the darkness of the 
* intrinsic light," The various decrees of blackness, if it is truly a 
sensation, arc small compared with the degrees in the intensity of 
whiteness. Tn the consideration of both theories changa in the 
cert. bra! centres have not been taken into account h and of these we 
know next to nothing.. 

6. The Contrast of Colours.— It we look at a small white, 
grey or black object on a coloured ground, the object appears 
to have the colour complementary to the ground. Thus a circle 
of grey paper on a red ground appears to be of a greenish-blue 
colour, whilst on a blue ground it will appear pink. This effect 
is heightened if we place over the paper a thin sheet of tissue 
paper; but it disappears at once if we place a black ring or 
border round the grey paper. Again, if we place two comple- 
mentary colours side by side, both appear to be increased in 
intensity. Various theories have been advanced to explain 
these facts. Helmholtz was of opinion that the phenomena 
consist rather in modifications of judgment than in different 
sensory impressions; J. A. F. Plateau, on the other hand, 
attempted to explain them by the theory of consecutive 
images. 

5. The Movements op the Eye 

1. General Statement.— -The globe of the eye has a centre 
of rotation, which is not exactly in the centre of the optic axis, 
but a little behind it. On this centre it may move round axes 
of rotation, of which there are three — an antero-postcrior, 
a vertical and a transverse. In normal vision, the two eyes are 
always placed in such a manner as to be fixed on one point, called 
the fixed point or the point of regard. A line passing from the 
centre of rotation to the point of regard is called the line of 
refara\ The two lines of regard form an angle at the point of 
regard, and the base is formed by a line passing from the one- 
centre of rotation to the other. A plane passing through 
both lines of regard is called the plane of retard. With these 




definitions, we can now describe the movements of the eyeball, 
which are of three kinds: (1) First position. The head is erect, 
and the line of regard is directed towards the distant horizon. 
(2) Second position. This indicates all the movements round 
the transverse and horizontal axes. When the eye rotates 
round the first, the line of regard is displaced above or below, 
and makes with a line indicating its former position an angle 
termed by Helmholtz the angle of vertical displacement, or the 
ascensional angle; and when it rotates round the vertical 
axis, the line of regard is displaced from side to side, forming 
with the median plane of the eye an angle called the angle of 
lateral displacement. (3) Third order of positions. This includes 
all those which the globe may assume in performing a rotatory 
movement along with lateral or vertical displacements. This 
movement of rotation is measured by the angle which the plane 
of regard makes with jg _ A 

the transverse plane, an ***& 

angle termed the angle of 
rotation or of torsion. 

The two eyes move 
together as a system, so 
that we direct the two 
lines of regard to the 
same point in space. 

The eyeball is moved 
by six muscles, which 
are described in the 
article Eye (Anatomy). 
The relative attach- 
ments and the axes of 
rotation are shown in 
fig. 23. 

The term visual field 
is given to the area in- 
tercepted by the ex- 
treme visual lines which Fig. at—Diagram of the Attachments 
M8I ♦k tr >„„i. tk- ,,„,„ of the Muscles of the Eye and of their 
pass through the centre AxC9 of fiatMtlim th * hlter ^ 

of the pupil, the amount shown by dotted lines. (Fick.) 
of dilatation of .which The axis of rotation of the rectus 
determines its size. It internus and rectus externus being 
fnllnw* th* mn V ,m,„i, vertical, that is. perpendicular to the 
follows the movements p u neo f the pap££nnot be shown, 
of the eye, and is dis- *^*^ 

placed with il. Each point in the visual field has a corre- 
sponding point on the retina, but the portion, as already ex- 
plained, which secures our attention is that falling on the 
yellow spot. 

2. Simple Vision trith Two Eyes.— When we look at an object 
with both eyes, having the optic axes parallel, its image falls 
upon the two yellow spots, and it is seen 
as one object. If, however, we displace 
one eyeball by pressing it with the finger, 
then the image in the displaced eye docs 
not fall on the yellow spot, and we see ./v sr y 
two objects, one of them being less dis- A^ Qf— :V 
tinct than the other. It is not necessary, « • 

however, in order to see a single object Fig. 24.— Diagram 
with two eyes that the two images fall to illustrate the 
on the two yellow spots; an • object is Physiological Re- 
always single if its image fall on cone- j&tiZl? tW ° 
s ponding points in the two eyes. 

The eye may route round three possible axes, a vertical, 
horizontal and antero-posterior. These movements are effected 
by four straight musdes and two oblique. The four straight 
muscles arise from the back of the orbit, and pass forward to be 
inserted into the front part of the eyeball, or its equator, if we 
regard the anterior and posterior ends of the globe as the poles. 
The two obliques (one originating at the back of the orbit) 
come, as it were, from the nasal side— the one goes above the 
eyeball, the other below, while both are inserted into the eye- 
ball on the temporal side, the superior oblique above and the 
inferior oblique below. The six .muscles work in pairs. The 
internal and external recti turn the eye round the vertical *^y 




VISUAL PERCEPTIONS! 



VISION 



141 



to that the line of vision is directed to the light or left. The 
superior and inferior recti rotate the eye round the horizontal 
■lis, and thus the line of vision is raised or lowered. The 
cbtkrue wwrhi turn the eye round an axis passing through the 
centre of the eye to the back of the head, so that the superior 
obfcque muscle lowers, while the inferior oblique raises, the 
visual line. It was also shown by Helmholtz that the oblique 
muscles sometimes cause a slight rotation of the eyeball round 
the visual axis itself. These movements are under the control 
of the will up to a certain point, but there are slighter move- 
ments that are altogether involuntary. Helmholtz studied 
these slighter movements by a method first suggested by F. C. 
Dodders. By this method the apparent position of after- 
images produced by exhausting the retina, say with a red or 
green object, was compared with that of a line or fixed point 
gazed at with a new position of the eyeball. The ocular spectra 
soon vanish, but a quick observer can determine the coincidence 
of lines with the spectra. After producing an afterimage 
with the head in the erect position, the head may be placed 
into any inclined position, and if the attention is then fixed on a 
diagram having vertical lines ruled upon it, it can easily be seen 
whether the after-image coincides with these lines. As the 
after-image must remain in the same position on the retina, 
it will be evident that if it coincides with the vertical lines there 
must have been a slight rotation of the eyeball. Such a coin- 
cidence always takes place, and thus it is proved that there is 
an involuntary rotation. This minute rotation enables us to 
judge more accurately of the position of external objects. 

3. The horopter is the locus of those points of space which 
are projected on retinal points. While geometrically it may 
be conceived as simple, as a matter of fact it is generally a line 
of double curvature produced by the intersection of two hyper- 
haloids, or, in other words, it is a twisted cubic curve formed 
by the intersection of two hyperboloids which have a common 
generator. The curves pass through the nodal point of both 
eyes. An infinite number of lines may be drawn from any point 
of the horopter, so that the point may be seen as a single point, 
and these lines lie on a cone of the second order, whose vertex 
b the point. When we gaze at the horizon, the horopter is 
reaDy a horizontal plane passing through our feeL The 
horopter in this instance is the ground on which we stand. 
E x pe rim ents show " that the forms and the distances of these 
objects which are situated in, or very nearly in, the horopter, 
are perceived with a greater degree of accuracy than the same 
forms and distances would be when not situated in the horopter " 
(M* Rendrick, Life ofHelmholU, 1 890, p. x 7 * ci seq.). 

An object which is not found in the horopter, or, in other 
words, does not form an image on corresponding points of the 
retinae, is seen double. When the eyeballs are so acted upon 
by their muscles as to secure images on non-corresponding 
points, and consequently double vision, the condition is termed 
strabismus, or squinting, of which there are several varieties 
treated of in works on ophthalmic surgery. It is important 
to observe that in the fusion of double images we must assume, 
not only the correctness of the theory of corresponding points 
cf the retina, but also that there are corresponding points in the 
brain, at the central ends of the optic fibres. Such fusion of 
images may occur without consciousness — at all events, it is 
possible to imagine that the cerebral effect (except as regards 
consciousness) would be the same when a single object was 
placed before the two eyes, in the proper position, whether the 
individual were conscious or not. On the other hand, as we 
are habitually conscious of a single Image, there is a psychical 
tendency to fuse double images when they are not too dissimilar. 

4. Binocular Perception of Colour.— This may be studied as 
follows. Take two No. 3 eye-pieces of a Hartnack's micro- 
scope, or two eye-pieces of the same optical value from any 
microscope, place one in front of each eye, direct them to a clear 
window in daylight, keep them parallel, and two luminous fields 
w&l be seen, one corresponding to each eye. Then converge 
the two eye-pieces, until the two luminous circles cross, and 
the central port, like a bi-convex lens, will appear clear and 

xxvm 3* 



bright, while the outer segments will be much less intense, and 
may appear even of a dim grey colour Here, evidently, the 
sensation is due to a fusion of impressions in the brain. With 
a similar arrangement, blue hght may be admitted by the one 
eye-piece and red by the other, and on the convergence of the 
two, a resultant colour, purple, will be observed. This may 
be termed the binocular vision of colours It is remarkable 
that by a mental effort this sensation of a compound colour 
may be decomposed into its constituents, so that one eye will 
again tee blue and the other red. 

6. The Psychical Relations of Visual Peiciptions 

x. General Characters of Visual Perceptions. — All visual 
perceptions, if they last for a sufficient length of time, appear 
to be external to ourselves, erect, localized in a position in space 
and more or less continuous. 

(a) Visual Sensations are referred to the Exterior. — This appears 
to be due, to a large extent, to habit. Those who have been 
born blind, on obtaining eyesight by an operation, have 
imagined objects to be in close proximity to the eye, and have 
not had the distinct sense of exteriority which most individuals 
possess. Slowly, and by a process of education, in which the 
sense of touch played an important part, they gained the 
knowledge of the external relations of objects. Again, phos- 
genes, when first produced, appear to be in the eye, but when 
conscious of them, by an effort of imagination, we may transport 
them into space, although they never appear very far off. 

(6) Visual Sensations are referred to Erect Objects. — Although 
the images of objects are inverted on the retina we see them 
erect. The explanation of the effect is that we are conscious 
not of the image on the retina, but of the luminous object from 
which the rays proceed, and we refer the sensation in the 
direction of these rays. Again, in running the eye over the 
object, say a tall pole, from base to apex, we are not conscious 
of the different images on the retina, but of the muscular move- 
ments necessary to bring the parts successively on the yellow 
spot. 

(c) Visual Sensations are referred to Position in Space.— 
The localization of a luminous point in space can only be 
determined by observing its relations to other luminous points 
with a given position of the head and of the eye. For example, 
in a perfectly dark room, if we look at a single luminous point, 
we cannot fix its exact position in space, but we may get some 
information of a vague character by moving the head or the 
eye. If, however, a second luminous point appears in the dark- 
ness, we Tan tell whether it is nearer or farther distant, above 
or below the first. So with regard to other luminous points 
we observe their reciprocal relations, and thus we localize a 
number of visual impressions. There are three principal 
directions in space: the transverse (breadth), the vertical 
(height) and the sagittal (depth). Luminous points may be 
localized either in the transverse or vertical directions. Here 
we have to do simply with localization on a surface. A number 
of points may be observed simultaneously (as when the eye is 
fixed) or successively (as when the eye moves). If the move- 
ment of the eye be made rapidly, the series of impressions from 
different points may be fused to- • g 

gether, and we are conscious of • f 

a line, the direction of which is • # 

indicated chiefly by the muscular • 4 

sensations felt in following it. <*••••••«••*• -J 

The case is different as regards 

points In the sagittal direction. g v 

We see only a single point ©f..... #1 ,.,,. 

this line at a time; it may be ...... a 

a transverse scries of retinal « 

elements, A B, and each of these ••••••#••••• 

formed by a number of smaller Fro. aS'-Diagram ilh»t nun* 
~i-.-- „♦. .... .:t,.-t~i t« thc Localization of Visual 

elements, 1, a, 3, 4, situated in Perceptions. 

the axis of each principal element ; 

it may be, on the other hand, the transverse line a b situated 

in space and formed by a series of points in juxtaposition. 



H* 



VISION 



[ERRORS OF REFRACTION 



Each of these points will hapten a retinal element, and the 
mult will be the perception of a transverse line; but this will 
not be the same for the points c, d, e, /, g, situated in space in 
a linear series, in the sagittal direction; only one of those 
points, c, will impress the corresponding retinal element, and we 
can see only one point at a time in the line eg. By accom- 
modating successively, however, for the various points at 
different and considerable distances along the line eg, we may 
excite retinal elements in rapid succession. Thus, partly by 
the fusion of the successive impressions on the retina, and partly 
from the muscular sensations caused by repeated iccommoda- 
tions and possibly of ocular movements, we obtain a notion of 
depth in space, even with the use of only one eye. It is, how- 
ever, one of the chief effects of binocular vision to give precision 
to the notion of space in the sagittal direction. 

(d) Visual Sensations are ContinuQus.—Svppose the image 
of a luminous line falls on the retina, it will appear as a line 
although it is placed on perhaps 200 cones or rods, each of 
which may be separately excited, so as to cause a distinct 
sensation. Again, on the same principle, the impression of a 
superficial surface may be regarded as a kind of mosaic, made 
up of individual portions corresponding to the rods or cones 
on which the image of the surface falls. But in both cases 
the sensation is continuous, so that we see a line or a surface. 
The individual images are fused together. 

a. Notions derived from Visual Perceptions.— When we look 
at any object, we judge of its size, the direction of its surfaces 
(unless it be a point), its distance from the eye, its apparent 
movement or fixedness and its appearance of solidity. 

(0) Apparent So*.— This, so far as regards a comparatively 
small object, depends on the site of the retinal image, as deter- 
mined by the visual angle 
*••••• • With a very large object, 

*> ** . ** there is an appreciation of 

Fig, te\— Diagram to illustrate sixe from the muscular 

Illusions of Sue and Distance. 3^^ 4^^ !rom ^ 

movements of the eyeball as we " range " the eye over it. 
It is difficult to appreciate the distance separating two points 
between which there are other points, as contrasted with an 
apparently similar distance without intermediate points. For 
example, the distance A to B appears to be greater than from 
B to C, in fig. to* 

(ft) Direction,— As the retina is a curved surface* a long 
straight line, especially when seen from a distance; appears 
curved* In fig. 17 a curious illusion of direction* first shown 

by J. K. F.JZoellner, 
is depicted. If these 
lines be looked at 
somewhat obliquely, 
say from one comer, 
they will appear to 
converge or diverge, 
and the oblique lines, 
on each side of the 
vertical .lines* w21 
appear not to be 
exactly opposite each 
other. But the ver- 
tical lines are parallel, 
and the oblique lines 
are continuous across 
them. The effect is 
evidently due to an 
error of judgment, 
as it may be con- 
trotted by an intense 
effect* when the fines wiB be seem as they realty are. 



Fto.*K 



rtfWu** 



(c) i lJMi n i ftmwre. -We jwfee of distance* 
Kg* ofcjscts at a great dbtaaoe Cross the eye— <t) from their 
~^ depends on the dimroTifun of the visual 
tine intceposium of other objtvtt between 
Thus* at sea* we cannot form* 




on 



Fig. 28. — Illustrating 
Stereoscopic Vision. 



without great experience, an accurate estimate of how many 
miles we are off the coast, and all know how difficult k is to 
estimate accurately the width of a river. But if objects be 
interposed between the eye and the distant object say a few 
vessels at different distances at sea, or a boat in the river, then 
we have certain materials on which to form a judgment, the 
accuracy of which, however, even with these aids, will depend 
on experience. When we look at a near object, we judge of 
its distance chiefly by the sense of effort put forth in bringing 
the two lines of regard to converge upon it. 

(d) The Movement of a Bcdy.—lt the eye be fixed, we judge 
of movement by successive portions 
of the retina being affected, and 
possibly also by a feeling of an 
absence of muscular contractions 
necessary to move the eyeballs. 
When the eye moves, so as to 
"follow 1 ' the object, there is a 
sense of muscular effort, which is 
increased when, in addition, we require to move the head. 

(<) The Apparent Solidity of an Object.— U we look at an 
object, say a cube, first with the right eye and then with the 
left, it will be found that the two images of the object are some- 
what different, as in fig. 28. If, then, by means of a stereoscope* 
or by holding a card between the two eyes, and causing a slight 
convergence of the eyes, the two images are brought upon 
corresponding points of the two retinae, the image will at once 
be seen in relief. 

See also article M Vision " by W. H. R. Rivers in Schifer's Text* 
Booh of Physwtoa* vol. u. p. 1026. (J* G. M.) 

7. Exaots or Refraction and Accommodation and 
THEia Curative Txxathent 

The following is a classification of the diseases of vision, from 
a medkal point of view (see also Eye: diseases)*. — 

a. Errors of refraction: hyperopia, myopia, astigmatism, aniso- 
metropia, aphakia, 
a. Errors of accommodation :— 

(1) Lota of accommodation (a) From advancing years (presby- 
opia), or from debility, 
(i) From paralysis (cydopfegii) 
due to— 

1. Drugs such as atropine. 

2. Systemic poisons: dip* 

theriajafi 




(2) Spasm of accommodation. 

tj) Meridional asymmetrical accommodation by 



of the 



1 of wines 



Hyperopia or Hypermetropia (H.) (Far-sight; German 
* Utkrskht).— This is a condition of the refraction of the eye 
in which, with the eye at rest, parallel rays of light focus beyond 
the retina, which means that the image of a distant object a 
not in focus when it meets the retina, because the eye is too 
short antcro-posterioily. Most eyes at birth are hyperopic, 
but as the child grows the eye also grows; when, however, 
this does not take place, or does not take place sufficiently, 
normal development t& thus arrested. There are other con- 
ditions that cause hyperopia, but this shortening of the antero- 
posterior axis is by far the commonest. 

Hyperopia is corrected by convex glasses (fig. so\ and the 
sneasurcment of the hyperopia is that convex glass which enables 
the hyfcropk eye, at rest, to sec distinctly objects at a distance. 
When the hyperopia is not too high it can also be corrected 
by the eye ttsclt by means of the c&uy muscle (muscle of 
accoanmodatata) m&ch causes the crystalfine lens to become 
more convex, and thus brings about the same result as pacing 
a convex glass, before the eye. 

In young people when the error is not too bag* this work 
b done uavXMucxx^v. vt&a»n appears to be perfect, and ft is 
on|y by pladag the eye u*kx the inmaence of atropine that 



autoes or REFRACTION) 



VISION 



'+3 



the defect fe revealed. In the normal eye diitant objects are 
focused on the retina without the use of the ciliary muscle, 




Fie. 29. — Showing Parallel Rays focused on the Retina of a 
HyperofMC Eye by means of a Convex Lens. 

which is only employed when looking at near objects; but 
the hyperope has to use this muscle all his waking hours for 
both near and distant vision, so that his eyes are never at rest. 
Fortunately he has some compensation for this extra work, 
(or in most hyperopes the ciliary muscle becomes more or less 
hypertrophied; but even so, if near work is at all excessive, 
or if tbe defect is associated with astigmatism or anisometropia, 
symptoms of eye-strain will sooner or later show themselves 
(see Eyestrain, beiow). 

Io older people a very common symptom is blurring of the 
tjpe while reading; the book has to be put down and the eyes 
it«ed for some minutes before reading can be resumed. This 
is due to the fatigued ciliary muscle giving way and becoming 
mabk to focus. 

As we advance in years we lose accommodation power (see 
ft'sbyopia, below), so that the time comes to every hyperope, 
if be live long enough, when he not only has to use glasses for 
leading (at an earlier period than the normal person), but he 
ibo finds that he is gradually losing his distant vision. This 
is very alarming to many, until it is explained that all that 
kas happened is the loss of power to correct the defect, which 
defect, of course, has always existed, and which in future will 
km to be corrected by suitable glasses. The higher the 
hyperopia the sooner will these symptoms manifest themselves. 

la quite young children, sometimes the earliest sign of the 
presence of hyperopia is a convergent strabismus (internal 
squint). As a rule, this squint is nothing more than an over- 
convergence brought about by over-accommodation in those 
*ho cannot dissociate their convergence and accommodation; 
if »e remove the necessity for over-accommodation by correcting 
tbe defect with suitable glasses, the over-convergence disappears 
lad the squint is cured. 

Tbe total hyperopia of the eye is divided into manifest 
hyperopia and latent hyperopia. Manifest hyperopia is ex- 
posed m amount by the strongest convex glass that allows 
clear distant vision when the eye is not under atropine. Latent 
b)peTopia is the additional hyperopia which is revealed under 
atropine. With advancing years the latent hyperopia becomes 
■aore and more manifest, and between the ages of 45 and 50 
(He total hyperopia is entirely manifest. 

In addition to the symptoms already described, a very 
common one among young hyperopes is spasm of the ciliary 
**sde. This cramp of the muscle causes distant objects 
to be very indistinct, improvement only taking place with a 
emem glass, and near work has to be approached very close 
to tbe eyes, thus giving a wrong idea that the child is suffering 
from myopia; by paralysing the ciliary muscle with atropine 
tbe spasm disappears and the true nature of the defect is revealed. 

Tbe treatment essentially consists in ascertaining the total 
hyperopia of the eye, and this can only be done satisfactorily, 
'[ben latent hyperopia is present, by paralysing the accommoda- 
tion, using atropine for those under 25, and homatropinc for 
those between the ages of 25 and 35 or 40. Over 40 (and 
wbea the hyperopia is high, even at an earlier age) no cydo- 



plegk it necessary fa fact it is In many cases dangerous, as 
an attack of glaucoma may be induced. (See Eye: diseases.) 

Having found the total hyperopia, we learn the amount 
of the latent hyperopia, and, roughly speaking, the convex 
glass required is equal to the whole of the manifest hyperopia 
added to, from one-third to a half, of the latent; but the treat- 
ment varies with tbe age of the individual and the amount 
of the hyperopia, and is too complicated to be detailed here. 

Myopia (M.) (Short-sight). — Typical myopia is due to an 
elongation of the antero-posterior diameter of the eye, so mat 
the retina is situated behind the principal focus, and only diver- 




Fic. 30. 

gent rays of light from a near point (fig. 39), or parallel rays 
made divergent by a concave glass (fig. 31), can come to a 




Fio. 31. 
focus on the retina. In other words, the far point of a myope 
is at a short distance in front of the eye, the distance being 
the measure of the myopia. 

A myope can see distinctly at a distance when tbe eye is 
at rest (U. when accommodation is not being used), with that 
concave glass whose focal length is equal to the distance of 
the far point from the eye, and the converse is true; the measure- 
ment of myopia is that concave glass with which the myopic 
eye sees distinctly objects at a distance, and its focal length 
is equal to the distance of the myope's far point from the eye. 

The Causes of Myopia. — Although myopia is hereditary, it is, 
with few exceptions, not congenital. We have seen that almost 
all eyes are hyperopic at birth. The savage is rarely myopic: 
it is civilization that is responsible for it; the necessity for 
constantly adapting the eye for near objects means undue con- 
vergence. We find that myopia generally first shows itself at 
the age of 8 to 10, when school work begins in earnest — that is, 
when convergence is first used in excess—and there is no doubt 
that it is excessive convergence that is mostly responsible for the 
development of myopia. The over-used internal recti constantly 
pulling at the sclerotic tend to lengthen the antero-posterior 
diameter of the eye, and as this lengthening of tbe antero- 
posterior axis necessitates greater convergence still, a vicious 
circle is produced, and the myopia gradually increases. The 
hereditary character of myopia is explained by the existence in 
such eyes of an " anatomical predisposition " to myopia. The 
sclera is unusually thin, and consequently less able to resist 
tbe pull of the internal recti, and the relative position of the 
recti and the position of tbe optic nerve, both of which may be 
hereditary, may be factors in the production of this defect. 
Anything which causes young subjects to approach their work 
too near the eyes may be the starting-point. Bad illumination, 
or the light coming from the wrong direction (for instance, 
in front), or defective vision produced by corneal nebulae, or 
lamellar cataract, &c, all necessitate over-convergence in order 
to obtain clearer images, and myopia may be produced. 



144 

It is interesting to note that when the work is approached 
very near the eye, but convergence is not used, as in the case of 
watchmakers, who habitually use a strong convex glass in one 
eye, there is no special tendency to myopia. 

Some of the more common symptoms of myopia are: — 
(i) Distant objects are seen indistinctly, (a) Near objects are 
seen distinctly, and the near point is much nearer than in the 
normal eye. (3) Acuteness of vision is often lowered, and 
especially is this the case in high myopia. (4) Eye-strain is 
often present, due to overuse of the musdes of convergence, 
and this may lead to (5) an external or divergent squint. 

(6) Floating black specks are often complained of, these are 
generally muscae volitantes, but often, especially in high 
myopia, may be actual opacities floating in the vitreous. 

(7) Myopes often stoop and become " round shouldered " from 
their habit of poring over their work. 

A small amount of myopia, if it is stationary, is in no sense 
a serious defect of the eye, the possessors of it are often quite 
unconscious of any deficiency in vision, and in fact brag that they 
have better vision than their fellows. The reason of this is 
that they learn in early life to recognize indistinct distant 
objects by the aid of other senses in a way that the ordinary 
individual can hardly understand, and in later life they can 
postpone the wearing of glasses for near work for many years, 
and sometimes until extreme old age. Unfortunately myopia 
is, as a rule, not stationary; it almost always tends to increase, 
and if this increase leads to very high myopia such serious 
changes may occur in the eyes as to lower the visual acuity 
enormously and sometimes lead to total loss of vision. 

The treatment of myopia is general and local. 

Central Treatment. — The most important part of this is the pre- 
ventive treatment (prophylaxis), especially in its application to 
children. All children who have one or both parents myopic are 
specially " marked down " for this defect, for they have probably 
inherited an anatomical predisposition. Bearing in mind that 
excessive convergence is the most potent cause or myopia, the most 
rigid attention should be paid to the ophthalmic hygiene of the 
schoolroom. This room should be large, lofty and well ventilated, 
and have good-sized high windows on one wall, preferably on the 
north side. Each scholar should have an adjustable seat and desk 
so arranged that his head is upright and the work hot too near his 
eyes. These desks should be arranged in rows so placed that the 
pupils sit with the light on their left. Schoolbooks must be clearly 
printed and the type should not be too small. The school work 
that needs close application of the eyes should be continued only for 
a short period at a time, the period alternating with other work 
which docs not require the use of the eyes, such as mental arithmetic, 
black-board demonstrations, recitation, or play. Schoolmasters 
should teach more — that is, they should explain and impart know- 
ledge by demonstrations and simple lectures, and reduce as much as 
possible the time spent in " home preparations, " which is usually 
work done by bad light and when the student is physically and 
mentaHy tired. Even in the nursery the greatest care should be 
taken. The little ones should be supplied with large toys, a large 
box of plain wooden bricks being the best form; picture books 
should be discouraged, and close work that entails undue con- 
vergence, such as sewing, threading beads. &c., ought to be forbidden. 
The nursery governess can teach the alphabet, small words and even 
simple arithmetic with the bricks. No child with a tendency to 
myopia, or with a myopic family history should be allowed to learn 
to write or dra-v until at least seven years old The child's bed 
should nm be allowed to face the window, preferably it should be 
back to the tight. Students, or tho« engaged i*i literary or other 
work which entail 5 clos? application lor many ht,ur^ a day. should be 
advised to regulau- their work, if they are free to do *o>by working 
for shorter period j and (a king longer interval* tA rest, they ahoukl 
be specialty careful not to approach their work too Jjcar to the eyes 
and 1 hey thouhj alv 

Local Trtaiment. — litis conaiiu i* cimtiflg the error with 
a concave gJau, The wrung r, n the eye is 

under aire ft m* m *u (Jio» unrfrf 95, *n»J v-.'vr fcom&tropinc 
between the «gr* of I) **>. 4 g ca eyclnpkgic is 

required. F-Wfpf wfoA^^H l<- 

wurn ft/way* Th# ianM » lor near *^rtr pr«i fll 

nat c-oiutdcraM- l0 e rMr 



VISION (ERRORS OF REFRACTION 

and it b only by doing this that we can prevent the increase of 

myopia. Adults who have never worn their correction (especially 
if the myopia is high) must have a weaker glass for near work. 
Each case must be treated on its own merits. So-called malignant 
myopia, which is high myopia with serious changes in the eye, 
must be treated in.a special manner and with the greatest care. 

Astigmatism. 1 — The principal seat of astigmatism is the 
cornea, the curvature of one meridian being greater than that 
of the other. In regular astigmatism, which is the only form 
that can as a rule be treated by glasses, the meridians of greatest 
and least curvature are at right angles to each other, and the 
intermediate meridians pass by regular gradations from one 
to the other. Rays of light passing through such an astigmatic 
surface do not focus at one point, but form many points, with 
the result that the image is more or less indistinct according 
to the amount of the error. In uncorrected astigmatism a 
clock-face viewed at a distance of 4 or 5 yds. will appear to 
have certain figures distinct, and others (at right angles) 
indistinct; for instance, figures XI and V may appear quite 
black, while figures II and VIII are grey and indistinct. If 
one of the principal meridians be emmetropic the astigmatism 
is simple; if both be hyperopic, or if both be myopic, it is 
compound; and if one meridian be hyperopic and the other 
myopic, it is styled mixed astigmatism. Generally the vertical 
meridian or one near it is the most convex, and this is called 
direct astigmatism (astigmatism " according to the rule "). 
When the horizontal meridian or one near it is the most 
convex, the term inverse astigmatism is used (astigmatism 
" against the rule "). When the meridians are oblique, that is, 
about 45°, it is called oblique astigmatism. Low degrees 
of astigmatism (of the cornea) are corrected by the ciliary 
muscle, producing an astigmatism of the crystalline lens, the 
opposite of that of the cornea, and so neutralizing the defect. 
This work is done unconsciously, vision is generally quite good 
and no suspicion is entertained of anything wrong until some 
symptom of eye-strain shows itself (see Eye-strain, below), 
and the detection of it is one of the most important duties 
of the oculist. The only certain method of detecting and 
consequently correcting a low error of astigmatism, in all 
below the age of 50, is by paralysing the ciliary muscle with 
atropine or homatropine and thus preventing it from correcting 
the defect, and revealing the true refraction of the eye. As- 
tigmatism is corrected by cylindrical glasses combined with 
spherical convex or concave glasses if hyperopia or myopia 
co-exist, and the correction must be worn always in the form 
of rigid pince-nez or spectacles. 

Presbyopia (Old Sight).— A normal-sighted child at the age 
of ten has his near point of accommodation 7 cms. from the eye, 
and as age advances this near point recedes gradually. At the 
age of 40 it has receded to 22 cms., in other words at this age 
fine print cannot be read nearer to the eye than a* cms. Between 
the ages of 45 and 50 the person who has apparently enjoyed 
good sight up till then, both for distance and near, finds that 
by artificial light he cannot read the newspaper unless he 
holds it some distance from the eyes, and he has to give up 
consulting " Bradshaw " because he cannot distinguish between 
j T $ and 8's. Another symptom often complained of is the 
41 Tunning together of letters," so that the book has to be closed 
and the eyes rested before work can be resumed. This loss of 
accommodation power is due to the gradual hardening of the 
crystalline lens from age, and convex glasses have to take 
its place, in order to make reading possible and comfortable. 
In hyperopia the presbyopic period is earlier, and in myopia 
it is later than normal (see above). 

It is unwise for the presbyope to select the glasses for himself, 
as astigmatism or anisometropia may be present and must, 
of course, be corrected; the eyes should be properly tested, and 
this testing should be repeated every two or three years, as, 
not only does the old sight increase, but changes in the static 
refraction of the eyes are probably taking place. When an 
error of refraction exists with the presbyopia, glasses for distance. 
as well as reading, have to be worn, and to avoid the trouble 
1 See also § A stigmatism, above. 



make 

4 



VISITATION— VISITING CARDS 



»45 



_ _, the two should be combined as bi-focal 
The upper portion of the bi-tocal corrects the distant, 
and the lower the near vision, and in the best form the division 
between the two is invisible. When properly fitted these 
hi fori Is prove the greatest boon to the presbyope. 

Anisometropia (Odd Sight) is a condition in which the re- 
fraction off the two eyes is different. There are three varieties, 
(x) Binocular vision exists. As a rule a very small difference 
is p ro s ent, and the difference b generally in the astigmatism; 
consequently eye-strain is very commonly manifested, and the 
correction by suitable glasses is imperative. (2) The eyes are 
used alternately. For instance, one eye may be hyperopic or 
emmetropic and the other myopic; in such a case the former 
wiD be used for distant and the latter for near vision, and 
although binocular or stereoscopic vision is lost, glasses may 
never be required and any attempt at a correction of the defect 
may be useless. However, if eye-strain is present, the attempt 
should be made. (3) One of the eyes is permanently excluded.. 
When the difference between the eyes is great the most defective' 
eye is little used and tends to become amblyopic (partially 
hand), if it is not so already. This condition is very common 
in squint, and the treatment in such cases consists in providing 
the defective eye with its correcting glass, completely covering 
up the good eye and practising for certain periods every day, 
and thus forcing the defective eye to work. This eye may 
never take its share In binocular vision, but it may become 
very nseful, especially if disease or damage should affect the good 
eye; and the improvement of the vision of the eye materially 
assists the treatment of the squint. When one eye is irre- 
mediably lost, the other should be very carefully tested, and 
if any error exists it ought to be corrected and the glass worn 
always. 

Aphakia is the absence of the crystalline lens through dis- 
location, or removal by operation, or injury. A strong convex 
gbss has to be worn in front of such an eye in order to obtain 
dear vision even for distance, and a still stronger one for near 
vision; after cataract operation astigmatism is generally 
present and the convex glass must be combined with a cylinder: 
these glasses are best worn in the form of bi-focals (see Prcs- 
tysftft, above). 

Eye-Strain. — Eye-strain is a symptom, or group of symptoms, 
p i uduced by the correction, or attempt at correction, by the 
dfiary muscle of an error of refraction, or a want of balance 
bet w een the external muscles of the eye (heterophoria). Where 
gross errors exist either in the refraction or in the muscular equili- 
brium, the correction cannot be made, and consequently no 
attempt is made to correct the defect, and eye-strain is not 
produced. The smaller the error the more likely is the eye- 
strain to be present, and also, unfortunately, the more likely is 
it to be overlooked. It is important to recognize what may be 
the different manifestations of eye-strain. They may be grouped 
under three headings : (x) manifestations on the eye and lids, 
such as conjunctivitis, blepharitis, iritis, cyditis, glaucoma 
and catarart. (a) Peripheral irritation: (a) with pain: head- 
aches and megrim; (0) without pain: epileptic attacks and 
cbtntifoiiu movements of the facial muscles: vertigo, nausea, 
romiting. (3) Nerve waste: nerve exhaustion, neurasthenia, 
brain-fag. This last form of eye-strain is as common as it is 
subtle. It is subtle because the sufferer never suspects the 
eyes to be at fault; all his waking hours be is unconsciously 
correcting a low degree of astigmatism, or anisometropia, or 
heterophoria, which means a constant nerve waste; and when 
he begins near work he starts with a big deficit, and further 
strain results. 

Insomnia is a prominent symptom of eye-strain; this leads 
to depression, which in its turn may lead to the alcoholic or 
morphia habit. There is no form of functional nerve disorder 
that may not be caused by, or aggravated by, eye-strain. 

The treatment of eye-strain consists in correcting all errors 
of refraction (and in the case of astigmatism and anisometropia, 
even the smallest) and in wearing the correction always. A 
small amount of heterophoria will generally, in a short time. 



disappear when the error h corrected; if not, it must be corrected 
by prisms or decentring. (E. C.*) 

VISITATION (Lat. from visiiare, frequentative form of visa*, 
to look at, go to see, visit, tidere, to see), an act of visiting, or 
going to see, a formal visit. The use of the word for an act of 
divine retributive justice, or generally of an occurrence of grave 
import, such as a plague or famine, is due mainly to Biblical 
phraseology, as in " the day of visitation " (Isa. x. 3). For the 
duty of bishops of the Roman Church to visit periodically the 
tombs of the apostles Peter and Paul at Rome, the Visit alio 
Lminium A pos lot or urn, see Bisnop. The specific application 
of the term is to a formal periodical visit paid by a superior 
authority to an institution or to a district for the purpose of 
investigation, examination or the like. There are three classes 
of such visitations: ecclesiastical, charitable and heraldic. 
Ecclesiastical visitations, originally the periodical journeys of 
personal inspection to ascertain the temporal and spiritual 
condition of each parish, form part of the functions of an arch- 
bishop, a bishop and an archdeacon. All charitable corpora- 
tions are at law subject to visitation; the functions of the 
"visitors" have been largely taken over by the Board of 
Chanty Commissioners. Colleges at a university are regarded in 
law as charitable institutions, and each college has a " visitor " 
whose duly it is to represent the founder and see that his wishes 
are carried out. Heraldic visitations were perambulations 
made by a king-at-arms or other high heraldic officer with a 
commission under the Great Seal to examine into pedigrees and 
claims to bear arms. The results of these visitations were 
entered in "Visitation Books," which are in the nature of 
official records; their admissibility as evidence, though claimed, 
is judicially questioned as containing merely experts' statements 
from the families to whom they refer (D'Arcy de Knayth 
Peerage Case, 1901). These heraldic visitations ceased about 
1686. 

In addition to these specific meanings may biTinetitioned the 
festival of the " Visitation of Mary," in commemoration of the visit 
of the Virgin to Elisabeth, mother of St John the Baptist, celebrated 
in the Roman, Greek and other churches on the and of July, and the 
office of the English Church, the " Visitation of the Sick," ordered 
for the spiritual comfort and benefit of sick persons. 

For the international law relating to the right of belligerent vessels 
to " visit and search " neutral vessels in time of war, see Search, 
Right or. 

VISitmO CARDS. The use of cards of personal identifica- 
tion for social purposes is generally supposed to have had its 
origin at the court of Louis XIV. of France, that centre of the 
etiquette of the 17th century. But there appears to be little 
doubt that, in a rougher and ruder form, this mark of intercourse 
dates from much earlier times, and that the Chinese, and possibly 
other Oriental nations also, had in bygone ages employed such 
mediums of communication on calling at the houses of absent 
friends. When and where visiting cards first came into vogue in 
Europe is a matter of some uncertainty. It is probable, how- 
ever, that they were first used in Germany—and as early as the 
16th century. A German visiting card recently discovered in 
Venice bears this inscription: Johannes W ester holi Wcstpkaliu 
scribcbal, Paiavii, 4 Mar tit is x 60. Concerning this, Professor 
Dr Kirmis (Dandm, September 30th, 1905) remarks that the 
German students in Padua were wont, on quitting the university, 
to pay farewell calls at the houses of the professors, and, in the 
event of not finding them within, to leave their names on paper 
billets; and be adds that the custom must, until that time, 
have been unknown in Italy, for this card of the student Wester- 
holt was sent by Professor Giacomo Contarinl on the 15th of 
January 157a to Venice as a curiosity. Under the reign of 
Louis XI V., however, the fashion appears to have become firmly 
established in France. Small strips of paper were at first em- 
ployed for the purpose of the communication; but gradually 
they attained a more elaborate finish and execution. Ladies 
especially seem to have been the pioneers in this direction, and 
to have embellished their cards with hand drawings, sometimes 
taking the form of "hearts" and other amorous tokens of 
affection. Under Louis XV., the reign of exquisite extravagance 



146 



VISOKO— VITEBSK 



and refined Uste, visiting cards were furnished with deli- 
cate engravings, frequently masterpieces of that art, showing 
some fanciful landscape, or a view of the town or place where 
the person resided. A further stage in the development of this 
custom was the autograph signature at the foot of the card 
beneath the engraved view. England followed the lead of 
France, and visiting cards became a universal fashion in Europe 
towards the close of the 18th century. But though in almost 
every European country there are variations in the size and 
shape of the card and the way of describing the quality of the 
person whom it represents, the modern tendency is everywhere 
in favour of simplicity and the avoidance of ostentation. 

A valuable collection of visiting cards is that of the Gabinetto 
della Sumpc in Rome and the Museo Civico in Venice. 

VISOKO (or VtsoKi), a town of Bosnia, on the river Bosna, 
15 m. N.W. of Serajevo by raiL Pop. (1895), about 5000. 
Visoko has a brisk trade in leather, carpets and tobacco. 

Between the 13th and 16th centuries Visoko was only second 
to Jajce as a stronghold of the Bosnian rulers. There were 
fortified palaces at Sutjetka, and Bobovac, among the mountains 
on the north. Bobovac,-which had withstood many previous 
assaults, was betrayed to the Turks in 1463; at Sutjetka there 
is a Franciscan monastery, founded in 130X, often rased by the 
Turks, and finally rebuilt in x8ai. Just below Visoko lay the 
town of Podvboko, called Sotto Vis$dn by the Ragusans, which 
was the chief mart of the country from 1348 to 143a 

VISOR (also spelled viser, visor, visard or visard), a term now 
used generally of the various forms of movable face-guards in 
the helmet of medieval and later times. It meant properly 
a mask for the lace, and is an adaptation of the O.Fr. 
lis***, mod. nsibt, as is seen by the MX. forms tiser, tisere. 
It is thus to be referred to the Fr. sis, face, LaL tutu, from 
si*™, to see. In this sense the word " visor " is modern, the 
movable guard for the upper part of the face being known as 
an '* aventaU " or M ventail," and that for the lower part a 
M beaver " (see Helmet) . 

VISTULA (Ger. Wtkksti, Polish Wide) , one of the chief rivers 
of Europe, rising in Austria and flowing first through Russian 
and then through Prussian territory. Its source is in Austrian 
Silesia on the northern slopes of the West Beskiden range of 
the Carpathian mountains. 

The stream runt through a mountain valley, m a N.N W. direction 
to Sehwarrwasser, where it leaves the mountains, turns EL and N E.. 
and forms part of the Austro-German frontier. Returning vnhm 
Austrian territory iGabcia). it pastes Cracow, and thereafter forms 
a tons stretch of the frontier with Russia ^Poland), bending graduaUy 
towards the north, until at Zawkbost it runs due X and enters 
Poland. Here it at first bisects the high-lying plateau of southern 
Poland, but Kmvcs this near Joiefow, and Bows as far as the junction 
with the Pilica in a broad valley between wooded bluff*. Ci 



the plain of central and northern Poland, k passes Warsaw, and at 
the junction of the Bus sweeps \V. and NAY. to pass Ptock and 
Wlortasrk v«* further Poland for hs course within this territory). 
It enters Prussia 10 m. above Thorn, turns N.E. on receiving the 
Brahe, passes Gcasdeaa and turns towards the aorta. From ih» 
point it throws off numerous branches and sw aps from aide to ssde 
of a broad valley, having steep banks on the side upon which it 
nr^npes. and on the other being bordered by extensive fiat lands, 
hearing the Baltic Sea k forms a delta, dividing into two mam 
arms, the left or westers of which bears the name of Vtstula, and 
fiows directly to Daaasg Bay, while the right stcsIfcdtheXogat. and 
Sows into the Frischss Half. The enckistd dehaic tract is very 
fertile. Pans of k are known as sTmsV v cf . the Eae&li - stands * 
or " holms ** in the Fens and other tow-hw g tracts of the eastX. In 
the fewer part of the delta taw Haff Casud losd* fan the asam river 
to the Ftiscnes Haf ; these ass also vssiosn mitsssl clMuinem si that 
d ir ec t fan, hot the main river passes on towards the X W -. havmga 

TawtrssT 



to ran ronsVI to the coast, and umhiig Dsaaw Bay with 
iwiseonrjr th ro u gh an attswaal cot i in sn i m le d m H it new 
mmm>as»^ca<sswJsstoth»bsy.MasomtlHtsunthtt 




channel was formed for it. tea* to restore the proper head of water 

to the Vistula. 

Shifting banks form a serious impediment to navigation, and 
these and floods (principally in Miring and midsummer) necessitate 
careful works of regulation. The river is ice-bound at Warsaw, 
on an average, from about the 20th of December to the 10th of 
March. The navigation of the Vistula is considerable up to Cracow, 
and the river forms a very important highway of commerce in 
Poland (?.*-.) and Prussia. For small craft it is navigable 'above 
Cracow up to the Austro-German frontier, where the Praemss 
enters it. This nvcr and the Pilica, Bsura. Brahe, Schwarawasser and 
Fcrse are the chief left-bank tributaries; on the right the Vistula 
receives the Slcawa, Raba, Dunajec, Wtsloka and San before reach- 
ing Poland, the Wieprz and Bug in Poland, and the Drewenz in 
Prussia. The Brahe and the Bromberg Canal give access from the 
Vistula to the Nctae and so to the Oder. The river is rich in fish. 
Its total length is about 650 m., and its drainage area approaches 
74.000 sq. m. 

See H. Keller. Jfrnu*-, Prefd- und Wetcksdstnm, Hire Stnmp- 
oacft, Ac, vols. sis. and iv. (Berlin, 1000). 

VTTaXIANUS, bishop of Rome from 657 to 67s, succeeded 
Eugenius I. and was followed by Adeodatus. In the mono- 
thcLtc controversy then raging he acted with cautious reserve, 
refraining at least from express condemnation of the Typux 
of Constans II. The chief episode in his uneventful pontificate 
was the visit of Constans to Rome; the pope received him 
" almost with religious honours," a deference which he requited 
by stripping all the brazen ornaments of the city— even to the 
tiles of the Pantheon— and sending them to Constantinople, 
A rchbis hop Theodore was sent to Canterbury by Vitalian. 

VITEBSK, a government of western Russia, with the govern- 
ment of Pskov on the N., Smolensk on the EL, Mogilev, Minsk 
and Vilna on the S., and Courland and Livonia on the W., 
having an area of 16,078 sq. m. Except on its south-eastern 
and northern borders, where there are low hills, deeply eroded 
by the rivers, its surface is mostly flat, or slightly undulating, 
and more than a million acres are occupied by immrn w m » , f* > rf , 
while there are as many as 2500 small lakes. It is mainly 
built up of Devonian red sandstones and red days, but the 
Carboniferous fonnations--both the Lower, characterized 
by layers of coal, and the Upper—crop out in the cast. The 
whole is covered with Glacial and post -Glacial formations, in 
which remains of extinct mammah and stone implements are 
found in large quantities. There are numerous bunal-mounds 
containing bones and iron implements and ornaments. The 
soil b for the most part unproductive. The W. Dvina rises 
not far from the north-eastern angle of the government, and 
flows through it, or along its southern boundary, for 530 m. 
From its confluence with the Kaspfya, iVe. for more than 450 nu, 
it is navigable, and, through a tributary, the Ulyanka, it is 
connected with the Dnieper by the asererina CanaL The 
Mesha and Kasplya, tributaries of the W. Dvina, are navigable 
in spring. The climate is relatively mild, the average yearly 
temperature at the city of Vitebsk being 40* F. (January 16**4; 
July 64**3). The population was estimated at 1,740,700 in 
1006. The government is divided into eleven districts, the 
chief towns of which are Vitebsk, Drisa, Dvinsk, formerly Dflna- 
burg. Corodok, Lepd, Lyutsyn, Xevet, Polotsk, Ryezbitsa, 
S eberh and Veuxh. 

VITEBSK, a town of Russia, capital "of the government of 
the same name. 00 both banks of the W. Dvina, and on the 
railway from Snx4ca$k to Riga, $5 m. N.W. front the former. 
Pop. (iSS$> $a *:*; (iSo,:^ 65.$:!. It Is an old town, with 
decaying mansk>ns of the nobSity, and dirty Jewish quarters, 
half of its inhabitants being Jews. There are two ^lK^r^t^ 
founded in 1664 and 17-7 rcsrvctftrly. The church of St 
Ellas, a fa* example of the Old Russian style of architecture, 
founded in 1641, was burned down in 1004. The manufactures 
are fcstfpincir.U and the pocrer classes support themselves by 
gaideniiu^faat^Utixxgand the tax trade, while the merchants 
carry on an active bc5iaess with Riga in corn^ nax,bemp» 
tobacco, sugar and timber. 

Vitebsk iPbcsk. Vr.brsk and Vftepestt & ssentauncd for 
the list tine m tosj. m*r» it bekes g e d to the Polotsk princi- 
pahty. Eaghtj years later it because the chief town of a separate 



VITELLI— VITERBO 



«+7 



f v and so continued until 13*0, when it came under 
the dnsw'ninn of the Lithuanian*. In the 16th century it lell 
to Poland. Under the privileges granted to the city by the 
Fobs* sov e rei gn s it nourished, but it soon began to suffer from 
the van be tw e en Russia and Poland, during which it was 
thrice taken by the Russians and burned. Russia annexed it 
a nally in 177*. 

OTILL1. VITBLLOZZO ( M502), Italian condoUkre, 
Together with has father, Nicosia, tyrant of Citti di CasteJlo, 
sad his brothers, who were all soldiers of fortune, he instituted 
a new type of infantry armed with sword and pike to resist the 
German men-at-arms, and abo a corpa of mounted infantry 
armed with arquebuses. Vkeflosso took service with Florence 
against Pisa, and later with the French in Apulia (1406) and 
wkh the Orsini faction against Pope Alexander VI. In 1500 
ViteOocao and the Orsini made peace with the pope, and the 
letter's son Cesare Borgia, being determined to crush the petty 
tyrants of Romagna and consolidate papal power in that 
province, took the condottieri into his service. ViteUooo 
distinguished himself in many engagements, and in' 1 501 he 
advanced against Florence, moved as much by a desire to avenge 
ha brother Paolo, who while in the service of the republic bad 
been suspected of treachery and put to death (1400), *» by 
Cesare's orders. In fact, while the latter was actually nego- 
tiating with the republic, VUelli seised Arexeo. Forced by 
Borgia and the French, much against has will, to give up the 
city, he began from that moment to nurture hostile feelings 
towards his master and to aspire to independent rule. He took 
part with the Orsini, Onverotto da Fermo and other captains 
in the conspiracy of La Magione against the Borgia; but 
anrtual distrust and the incapacity of the leaders before Cesare's 
energy and the promise of French help, brought the plot to 
ought, and Vitelli and other condottieri, hoping to ingratiate 
themselves with Cesare once more, seized Senigaltia in his name. 
There they were decoyed by him and arrested while their 
troops wwre out of reach, and Vitelli and Oliverotto were 
strangled that same night (31st of December 1502). 

Sec voL m. of E. RicottPs 5tona delta eombatnie di ventura (Turin, 
tUs). in which Domenichi't MS Vita di VtteUotzo Vitelli a quoted; 
CVriarto, Cesar Borgia (Paris, 1889); P. Villari, Life ami Timet 
et N. MackmmtUi (English ed., London, 189a); see abo under 
jLaxAXDCa VL and Casaaa Borgia. 

VrTOLUUS* ATJLU8, Roman emperor from the rod of 
January to the 22nd of Decem b er a.d. 69, was born on the 
14th of September aj>. x$. He was the son of Lucius Vitel- 
kus, who had been consul and governor of Syria under Tiberius. 
Adas was consul in 48, and (perhaps in 60-61) proconsul of 
Africa, in which capacity he is said to have acquitted himself 
with credit. Under Galba, to the general astonishment, at 
the end of 68 he was chosen to command the army of Lower 
Gemany, and here be made himself popular with his subalterns 
and with the soldiers by outrageous prodigality and excessive 
good nature, which soon proved fatal to order and discipline. 
Fat from being ambitious or scheming, he was lazy and self- 
bdulgent, fond of eating and drinking, and owed his elevation 
to the throne to Caccina and Valens, commanders of two legions 
en the Rhine. Through these two men a military revolution 
•as speedily accomplished, and early in 69 Vitellius was pro- 
chimed emperor at Colonia Agrippinensis (Cologne), or, more 
accurately, emperor of the armies of Upper and Lower Ger- 
aaay. In fact, he was never acknowledged as emperor by 
the entire Roman world, though at Rome the senate accepted 
bam and decreed to him the usual imperial honours. He 
advanced into Italy at the bead of a licentious and ruffianly 
soldiery, and Rome became the scene of riot and massacre, 
gladiatorial shows and extravagant feasting. As soon as it 
vat known that the armies of the East, Dalmatia and Illyricum 
had declared for Vespasian, Vitellius, deserted by many of his 
adherents, would have resigned the title of emperor. It was 
said that the terms of resignation had actually been agreed 
upon with Primus, one of Vespasian's chief supporters, but 
Che praetorians refused to allow him to carry out the agreement, . 



and forced him to return to the palace, when he was on his way 
to deposit the insignia of empire in the temple of Concord. 
On the entrance of Vespasian's troops into Rome be was dragged 
out of some miserable hiding-place, driven to the fatal Gemonian 
stairs, and there struck down. " Yet I was once your emperor," 
were the last and, as far as we know, the noblest words of 
Vitellius. During his brief administration Vitellius showed 
indications of a desire to govern wisely, but be was completely 
under the control of Valens and Caecina, who for their own 
ends encouraged him in a course of vicious excesses which threw 
his better qualities into the background. 

See Tacitus, Histories; Suetonius, ViUUins; Dio Catauis facv.; 
Merivafe, Hist, of ike Romans under the Empire, cos. 56, 57; 
H . Schiller, Ceschichte dor romiscken Kaiseneit, i. pt. 1 ; W. A. Spooncr'a 
ed. of the Histories of Tacitus (introduction) ; B. W. Henderson, 
Ci»U War and Rebellion in the Roman Empire, AJf. 69-70 (1908). 

VITERBO, a city and episcopal see of the province of Rome, 
Italy, 54 m. by rail N.N. W. of Rome, 1073 ft above sea-level. 
Pop. (1901) 17,344 (town), 21,258 (commune). It lies on the 
old high toad between Florence and Rome, and besides the 
railway to Rome it has a branch line (25 m.) going N.E. to 
Atligliano, on the railway from Rome to Florence. It is 
picturesquely surrounded by luxuriant gardens, and enclosed 
by walls and towers, which date partly from the Lombard 
period. The streets are paved with large lava blocks, of which 
the town is also built. It has many picturesque medieval 
towers and other edifices (the Palazzo degli AJessandri is perhaps 
the most interesting), for which indeed it is one of the best 
towns in central Italy, and some elegant fountains; among 
the latter may be mentioned the Gothic Fontana Grande (1279, 
restored in 1424) and Fontana deila Rocca by Vignola (1360). 
The citadel (Rocca) itself, erected by Cardinal Alhomox in 
1345. is now a barrack. The Palazzo Patriai is a building of 
the early Renaissance in the Florentine style. The cathedral, 
a fine basilica, of the 1 2th (?) century, with columns and fantastic 
capitals of the period, originally fiat-roofed and later vaulted, 
with 16th-century restorations, - contains the tomb of Pope 
John XXL, and has a Gothic campanile in black and white 
stone. It is more probable that it was S. SuVestio (now Chiesa 
del Gesu) and not the cathedral that, in 1271, was the scene 
of the murder, on the steps of the high altar, during public 
worship, of Henry, son of Richard of Cornwall, by Guy de 
Montfort (see Dante, Inf. xS. 118). In front of the cathedral 
Pope Adrian IV. (Nicholas Bieakspear) compelled the emperor 
Frederick I. to hold his stirrup. as his vassal The old epis- 
copal palace with a double loggia built on to it (recently 
restored to its original form) is a Gothic building of the 13th 
century, in which numerous conclaves have been held. The 
church of S. Rosa exhibits the embalmed body of that saint, 
a native of Viterbo, who died in her eighteenth year, after 
working various miracles and having distinguished herself by 
her invectives against Frederick II. (1251), some ruins of whose 
palace, destroyed after his death, exist. S. Francesco, a Gothic 
church (before 1256), contains the fine Gothic tombs of Popes 
Clement IV. and Adrian V., and has an external pulpit of 
the 15th century. The town also contains a few small Roman- 
esque churches (S. Maria Nuova, S. Andrea, S. Giovanni in 
Zoccoli, S. Sisto, &c.) and several other Gothic churches. 
S. Maria delta CeUa is noteworthy among the former as having 
one of the earliest campanili of any size in Italy (9th century). 
The town hall, with a medieval tower and a 15th-century 
portico, contains some Etruscan sarcophagi from sites in the 
neighbourhood, and a few good paintings. At one corner of 
the picturesque square in front of it is a Roman sarcophagus 
with a representation of the hunt of Mcleager, with an inscrip- 
tion in honour of the fair Galiana, to win whom, it is said, a 
Roman noble laid siege to Viterbo in 113 s- Close by is the 
elegant Gothic facade of S. Maria della Salute, in white and 
red marble with sculptures. The Gothic cloisters of S. Maria 
della Vcrita just outside the town are strikingly beautiful. 
The church contains frescoes by Lorenzo da Viterbo (1460) *nd 
a fine majolica pavement. A mile and a half to the north-east 



14.8 



VITET— VTTORIA 



is the handsome early Renaissance pilgrimage church of the 
Madonno della Querda; the facade is adorned with three 
lunettes by Andrea della Robbia. The fine wooden roof of 
the interior is by Antonio da Sangallo the younger (1510-25). 
The adjoining monastery has a pleasing cloistered court. A 
mile and a quarter farther is the town of Bagnaia, with the 
Villa Lante, still belonging to the family of that name, with 
fine fountains and beautiful trees, ascribed to Vignola. The 
inhabitants of Viterbo are chiefly dependent on agriculture; 
hemp is a specialty of the district, and tobacco and various 
grains are largely grown, as well as the olive and the vine. 
There are in the vicinity numerous mineral springs; the warm 
sulphur spring of BoUicame, about 2 m. off, is alluded to by 
Dante (Inf. xiv. 79). 

Viterbo is by some identified with Surrino nova, -which is 
only mentioned in inscriptions, while some place it at the 
sulphur springs, called the BoUicame, to the west of Viterbo 
on the line of the Via Cassia, where Roman remains exist. 
This might well be the site of the Roman town. Here the 
Via Cassia was Joined by the Via Ciminia, passing east of the 
Lacus Ciminius, while a road branched off to Ferentum. See 
E. Bormann in Carp. Inscr. Lot. xi. (Berlin, 1888), p. 454; 
H. Nissen, Ilaliscke Landcskunde (Berlin, 1902), ii. 543. The 
forgeries of the Dominican Annio da Viterbo (d. 1502) were 
directed to prove that Viterbo was the site of the Fanum 
Voltumnae (see, however, Montefiascone). There are no 
archaeological remains in Viterbo itself, except a few courses 
of masonry under the bridge which connects the cathedral 
with the city, near the cathedral, possibly the pier of an older 
bridge. But the site is not unreasonably considered to be 
ancient, and the name to be derived from Vetus nrbs; tombs, 
too, have been found in the neighbourhood, and it is not an 
unlikely assumption that here, as elsewhere, the medieval 
town occupies the Etruscan site. It was fortified by the Lom- 
bard king Desiderius (the decree ascribed to him, now in the 
municipal palace, has long been recognized as a forgery of 
Annio). It is the centre of the territory of the "patrimony 
of Peter," which the countess Matilda of Tuscany gave to 
the papal see in the 12th century; in the' 13th century it 
became a favourite papal residence. Popes Urban IV. (1261), 
Gregory X. (1271), John XXI. (1276), Nicholas III. (1277) 
and Martin IV. (1281) were elected here, and it was at Viterbo 
that Alexander IV. (1261), Clement IV. (1268), Adrian V. 
(1 276) and John XXI. (1277) died. (T. As.) 

VITET, LUDOVIC (1802-1873), French dramatist and poli- 
tician, was born in Paris on the 18th of October 1802. He was 
educated afe the £cole Normale. His politics were liberal, and 
he was a member of the society " Aide-toi, le del t'aidera." On 
the triumph of liberal prindples in 1830 Guizot created an office 
espedaUy for Vitet, who became inspector-general of historical 
monuments. In 1834 he entered the Chamber of Deputies, 
and two years later was made a member of the Council of State. 
He was consistent in his monarchist principles, and abstained 
from taking any part in politics during the second empire. The 
disasters of 1*70-71 reawakened Vitet 's interest in public 
a flairs, and he published in the Revue des deux mondes his 
optimistic " Lett res sur le siege dc Paris." He died in 1873. 

Vitet was the author of «jm.- viable work* on the history of 
art T and his Mq nvgrap k ie df i'E-Jut Noire Darnc Jr M*jwn U&4SJ 
especially did much to awaken fjouular intd" l tu architecture. 
In tlic early days of the RomantiL muvcmmi he wrrjtc tome viwf 
drama Eic ikrtchet of the time of ifor Lc 
f.i'irruadth. sdhats hiitoriques (iftiM, L* 
(i**7)p and U Mottdtilrnri lit 

-get her in 18^4 with tin- lit It -of la 

tuts dc.Blotii in which the B 
in the most ccmvirciug sn-mntr. 

VITORiA, an cpiactfpil 
of the pfiwiitcc ol 
section of the Siotf! 




of Alava. Its oldest part, the CampOlo or Villa-Suso, occupies 
the top of the hill; some of the walls and towers by which it 
was formerly defended still remain. Bdow it is Vitoria Antigua, 
with narrow tortuous lanes; on the still lower levd ground is 
the modern town, with wide streets, an arcaded market-place 
and shady promenades. The cathedral of Santa Maria in the 
Campillo dates from 1x81, but has been considerably spoiled 
by late additions: the church of San Miguel also dates from the 
1 2th century; it has an exceptionally beautiful altar, carved in 
wood by J. Velazquez and G. Hernandez, in the x6th century. 
The town hall and the palace of the provincial assembly contain 
some fine paintings and interesting relics connected with the 
history of Alava. Vitoria, from its favourable position on the 
main lines from Madrid to France and to the port of San Sebas- 
tian, is an important centre of trade in wine, wool, horses, mules 
and hardware; other industries are paper-making, carriage- 
building, cabinet-making, tanning and the manufacture of 
earthenware. There is a branch railway from Vitoria -to 
VillarreaL The dty is lighted by dectridty; its trade and 
population have largely increased since 2875. 

Vitoria was founded in 581 by Leovigild, king of the Visi- 
goths; but its importance dates from the 10th century. In 
1 181 Sancho the Wise of Navarre granted it a charter and forti- 
fied it. 

Battle of Vitoria.— Vox the operations which preceded the 
battle of Vitoria see Peninsular War. On June aist, 1813, 
the French army in Spain (about 65,000 men with 150 guns), 
under King Joseph Bonaparte, hdd an extended position in the 
basin of Vitoria, south (with the exception of the extreme right) 
of the river Zadorra. The left rested on the heights of Puebla, 
north of the Puebla Pass, and Puebla de Arganzon, through 
which ran the Miranda- Vitoria-Bayonne road, Joseph's line of 
communication with France. Thence the line stretched to the 
ridge of Margarita, the troops so far being under General Gazan, 
with a second supporting line under D'Erlon between Arines 
and Hermandad and a reserve behind Arinez. The right under 
Reille guarded the Bilbao-Vitoria road, occupying heights on 
the north bank of the Zadorra, and also the villages and bridges 
of Abechuco and Gamarra Mayor, as well as a ridge near Ariaga 
on the south bank. 

There were no troops between Hermandad and Ariaga, except 
a mass of cavalry near Ali. The Zadorra, fordable in certain 
spots only, was spanned by bridges at Puebla de Arganzon, 
Nanclares, Villodas, Tres Puentes, Mendoza, Abechuco and 
Gamarra Mayor, which French guns commanded; but, for some 
reason, none of these had been destroyed. The faults of the 
French position and their occupation of it were its extension; 
that it was in prolongation of and (on the right espedaUy) very 
close to their line of retreat, so that if the right were driven back 
this line could be at once seized; that the centre was not strongly 
held; and that all bridges were left intact. 

The Allies (nearly 80,000, with 90 guns), under Wellington, 
had moved from the river Bayas at daylight to attack Joseph, 
in four columns, the right being under Hill (20,000, including 
Morillos's Spaniards), the right centre and left centre under 
Wellington 60,000) and the left under Graham (20,000, includ- 
ing Longa's Spaniards). As the columns marched across the 
intersected country between the Bayas and Zadorra, extending 
from near Puebla de Arganzon to the Bilbao-Vitoria road, they 
kept touch with each other; and as they neared the Zadorra 
the battle opened all along the line soon after xoa.m. Welling- 
ton 1 ^ instructions to Graham were to undertake no manoeuvre 
which would separate his column from those on the right; but. 
1 1 his proviso, to seize the Vitoria-Bayonne road if the enemy 
'.'■: rr.-.i decidedly in retreat. Hill after a sharp contest gained 
tbla heights, too weakly hdd; and pushing through the 
:'••■? village of Subijana dc Alava. The right centre 
vjng reached Villodas, was wailing for HU1 to gain 
■ ihi i, when the bridge at Tres Puentes was observed 
izrdcd, probably because it was commanded from the 
' I and, the French attention being now turned towards 
it was surprised and rushed by Wdlington with the 



VITRfe— VITRIFIED FORTS 



149 



, supported quickly by cavalry and other troops, 
themselves on the south bank. Joseph's 



BalU«of 

VITORIA 

Jane iitt. 1S1 j 




Kcto»» baa JI*jof -General C W. Robinson's Wtttimffn't Campaign, 
by pcnaiuiea of Hugh Rect. Ltd. 

centre was partially forced, while his left was hard pressed by 
Hill; and, fearing thai Gaaan and D'Erlon might be cut off from 
RetlJe, he ordered them to withdraw to a ridge farther back, 
which thry did, holding Arincs in front. Here there was no 
avd fighting; but, as Wellington had now passed.three divisions, 
many fans and the cavalry (which, however, from the nature of 
the ground could be but little used) across the Zadorra, Mar- 
garita, Herrnandad and Arinez soon fell to the Allies. 

On the left, Graham, having turned the heights north of 
Zadorra with Longa's Spaniards, seized Gamarra Menor close 
to the Bayonae road. He also with heavy loss carried Gamarra 
Mayor and Abechuco, but the bridges south of these villages, 
though more than once taken, were always recaptured by Reille. 
At length, when a brigade from the Allied centre had been 
pushed op from Hermandad against Reille's flank, he withdrew 
horn the obstinately defended bridges, and before this Gazan 
sad D'Erlon had also fallen back, fighting, to a third position 
on a ridge between Armentia and Ali west of Vitoria. Here, at 
about 6 p-mu, they made a last stand, being compelled in the end 
to yield; and as Graham having now crossed the bridges was 
dose to the Bayoane road, the main body of Joseph's army fled 
by a bad cross road towards Pampeluna, abandoning artillery, 
vehicles and baggage (of which an enormous quantity was parked 
near Vitoria), Reille afterwards joining it through Bctonia. 
The Allies then occupied Vitoria and pursued the French until 
iwfll»tfan All Joseph's equipages, ammunition and stores, 
X43 guns, a million sterling in money, and various trophies fell 
into Wellington's hands, the French loss in men being nearly- 
7000. that of the Allies over 5000, of whom 1600 were Portuguese 
and Spaniards. This decisive victory practically freed Spain 
fr om Fr ench domination. (C. W. R.) 

VRll a town of north-western France, capital of an 
anomfisaement in the department of Hk-et-Vuaine, situated 
on a mil rising from the left bank of the Vilaine, 34 m. E. of 
Homes by raU. Pop. (1006) town, 7x06; commune, 10,092. 
The town largely retains its feudal aspect. The ramparts on 
the north side and on the west, consisting of a machicolated 
watt with towers at intervals, are still standing. Only one 
gateway remains of the original castle, founded towards the 
end of the nth tentuty; the rest was rebuilt in the 14th and 
15th centuries (the best period of Breton military architecture) 
and restored in recent times. It is now occupied by a prison, 
a snaeum of natural history and painting and the town library. 
The church of Notre-Dame, formerly a priory of the abbey 



of St Melaine of Rennes, dates from the 15th and x6th centurie*. 
An outside stone pulpit is a fine example of 16th-century 
sculpture The church possesses a fine enamelled triptych 
of the 16th century. A tower of the 16th century is all that 
remains of the church of St Martin. The chateau of Los 
Rochet* 3 m. from Vitr6 was the residence of Madame de 
Sevigne. 

Vkr6 was formerly a Breton barony, and belonged in the 
10th century to the younger branch of the counts of Rennes. 
In 1295 it passed to Guy IX., baron of Laval, on his marriage 
with the heiress, and afterwards successively belonged to the 
families of Rieux, Coligny and La Tremoillc. The town was 
seized by Charles VIII. in 1488. Protestantism spread under 
the rule of the houses of Rieux and Coligny; Vitrl became a 
Huguenot stronghold; and a Protestant church was estab- 
lished, which was not suppressed till the revocation of the edict 
of Nantes in 1685. Philip Emmanuel, duke of Mercorur, the 
head of the members of the League in Brittany, besieged the 
town in vain for five months in 1589. The estates of Brittany, 
over which the barons of Vitre and of Leon alternately presided, 
met here several times. 

VITRIFIED FORTS, the name given to certain rude stone 
enclosures whose walls have been subjected in a greater or 
less degree to the action of fire. They are generally situated 
on hills offering strong defensive positions. Their form seems 
to have been determined by the contour of the flat summits 
which they enclose. The walls vary in size, a few being up- 
wards of 19 ft. high, and are so broad that they present the 
appearance of embankments. Weak parts of the defence are 
strengthened by double or triple walls, and occasionally vast 
lines of ramparts, composed of large blocks of unhewn and 
unvitrified stones, envelop the vitrified centre at some distance 
from it. No lime or cement has been found in any of these 
structures, all of them presenting the peculiarity of being more 
or less consolidated by the fusion of the rocks of which they 
are built. This fusion, which has been caused by the applica- 
tion of intense heat, is not equally complete in the various forts, 
or even in the walls of the same fort. In some cases the stones 
are only partially melted and calcined ; in others their adjoining 
edges are fused so that they are firmly cemented together; 
in many instances pieces of rock are enveloped in a glassy 
enamcMikc coating which binds them into a uniform whole; 
and at limes, though rarely, the entire length of the wall presents 
one solid mass of vitreous substance. 

Since John Williams— one of the earliest of British geologists, 
and author of The Mineral Kingdom— first described these 
singular ruins in 1777, about fifty examples have been dis- 
covered in Scotland. The most remarkable are Dun Mac 
Uisneachain (Dun Macsnoichan), the ancient Bercgoniurn, 
about 9 m. N.N.E. of Oban; Tap o' Noth, in Aberdeenshire; 
Craig Phadraic, or Fhadrick, near Inverness; Dun Dhardhail 
(Dunjardil) in Glen Nevis; Knockfarrail, near Strathpeffer; 
Dun Crcich, in Sutherland; Finhaven, near Aberlemno; 
Barryhill, in Perthshire; Laws, near Dundee; Dun Gall and 
Burnt Island, in Buteshire; Anwoth, in Kirkcudbright; and 
Cowdenknowes, in Berwickshire. Dun Mac Uisneachain is the 
largest in area, being 250 yds- long by 50 yds. broad. In the 
Tap 0' Noth the walls are about 8 ft. high and between 20 
and 30 ft thick. In Dun Mac Uisneachain, Barryhill and Laws 
the remains of small rectangular dwellings have been found. 

For a long time it was supposed that these forts were peculiar 
to Scotland; but they are found also in. Londonderry and 
Cavan, in Ireland; in Upper Lusatia, Bohemia, Silesia, 
Saxony and Thuringia; in the provinces on the Rhine, especi- 
ally in the neighbourhood of the Nahe; in the Ucker Lake, 
in Brandenburg, where the walls are formed of burnt and 
smelted bricks; in Hungary; and in several places in France, 
such as Chatcauvieux, Peran, La Courbe, Sainte Suzanne, 
Puy de Gaudy and Thauron. They have not been found in 
England or Wales. 

In some continental forts the vitrified walls are supported 
by masses of unvitrified stone built up on each side. This, 



1 50 



VITRIOL— VITRUVIUS 



in all probability, constituted an essential feature in the Scottish 
forts. Except on the hypothesis of buttresses of a similar 
kind, it is impossible to explain the vast quantities of loose 
stones which are found both inside and outside many of the 
vitrified walls. 

The method by which the fusion of such extensive fortifications 
was. produced has excited much conjecture. Williams main- 
tained that the builders found out, either during the process 
of smelting bog-ore, or whilst offering sacrifices, the power of 
fire in vitrifying stone, and that they utilised this method to 
cement and strengthen their defences. This view has been 
keenly controverted, and it has been suggested that the vitrified 
summits were not forts but the craters of extinct volcanoes, 
an hypothesis long since abandoned; that they are not so 
much forts as vitrified sites, and that the vitrescence was 
produced by fires lighted during times of invasion, or in 
religious celebrations; and, lastly, that if they were forts they 
must originally have been built of wood and stone, and that 
their present appearance is due to their being set on fire by 
a besieging enemy. The theory of Williams has, with modi- 
fications, been accepted by the principal authorities. It is 
supported by the following facts: — 

(1) The idea of strengthening walls by means of fire is not sin* 

Klar, or confined to a distinct race or area, as is proved by the 
rnt-earth enclosure of Aztalan, in Wisconsin, and the vitrified 
stone monuments of the Mississippi valley. (2) Many of the 
Primary rocks, particularly the schists, gneisses and traps, which 
contain large quantities of potash and soda, can be readily fused in 
the open air by means of wood fires — the alkali of the wood serving 
in some measure as a flux. (3) The walls are chiefly vitrified at 
the weakest points, the naturally inaccessible parts being un- 
verified.' (4) When the forts have been placed on materials prac- 
tically infusible, as on the quart tose conglomerates of the Old 
Red Sandstone, as at Craig Phadraic, and on the limestones of 
Dun Mac Uisneachain, pieces of fusible rocks have been selected and 
carried to the top from a considerable distance. (5) The vitrified 
walls of the Scottish forts are invariably formed of small stones 
which could be easily acted upon by fire, whereas the outer ram- 
parts, which are not vitrified, are built of large blocks. (6) Many 
of the continental forts are so constructed that the fire must have 
been applied internally, and at the time when the structure was 
being erected. (7) Daubree, in an analysis which he made on 
vitrified materials taken from four French forts, and which he sub- 
mitted to the Academy of Paris in February 1881, found the pre- 
sence of natron in such great abundance that he inferred that 
sea-salt was used to facilitate fusion. (8) In Scandinavia, where 
there are hundreds of ordinary forts, and where for centuries a 
system of signal fires was enforced by law, no trace of vitrifaction 
has yet been detected. 

A great antiquity has been assigned to vitrified forts, without 
sufficient proof. Articles of bronze and iron have been found 
in the Scottish forts, while in Puy de Gaudy a Roman tile has 
been discovered soldered to a piece of vitrified rock. In a few of 
the German forts Professor Virchow found some of the logs used 
as fuel in vitrifying the walls, and he concluded from the even- 
ness of their cut surfaces that iron and not stone implements 
must have been used. These results indicate that these 
structures were possibly in use as late as the early centuries 
of the Christian era. It has been suggested that they were 
built as refuges against the Norsemen. Much in the situation 
and character of the forts favours this supposition. This is 
especially the case with reference to the Scottish forts. Here 
the vitrified summits are invariably so selected that they not only 
command what were the favourite landing-places of the vikings, 
but are the best natural defences against attacks made from 
the direction of the seatoa*t> In Saxony and Lusaiia the 
forts are known as Schtxdcnhurgcn. and in the Highlands of 
Scotland as the fortresses of the Frinnc — designations vhieh 
also seem to point to an origin dating back to the times of Lhe 
vikings. 

Authorities.— John Wiltiams, An Atctmnt nf seme Remarkahlt 
Ancient Ruins (1777); A. Frawr Tyiler, Eiin, Phil. Tn*t. vt. 
Sir George Mackenzie, Observation s tm Vitrified Fvrti, Hit 
Scot. vol. iv.; J. MacCulloeh, Highlands and 
(1824), vol. i.; Hugh Miller. Rambies of a Cf^ofTrf 
Sir Daniel Wilson, Arthaeola£y and Pnhitfatu 

il8si), vol. iL; J. H. Burton, History ' 
i. Angus Smith. Lech Ettve and the 



J. Anderson, Scotland in Patau Timas (1886); C. MacLagaa, Tka 

Htll Forts of Ant tent Scotland: Thomas Ait ken, Trans. Invert 



Scientific Soc. vol. i.; Charles Proctor, Chemical Analysis of Vitri- 
' ' ~" ~ Dunideer (Huntly Field Club); 



fied Stones from Tap o' Not* end ,_._„_.„ 

various papers in Proceedings of Soc. Antic. Scot, (since 1903 Tka 
Scottish Historical Review) and Proceedings of Royal Irish Academy; 
R. Munro, Prehistoric Scotland (1899); G. Chalmers, Caledonia 
(new ed.. 7 vols., Paisley, 1887-94); Murray's Handbook to Scotland 
(1903 ed.); Lconhard, Archtv fur Miner alogie, vol. i.; Virchow. 
Ztschr. JUr Ethnotogie, vols. iii. and iv.; SchaafFhauten, Verkand- 
lungen der deutsch. anihrop. CeseUschaft (1881); Kohl. Verhand. dL 



deulsch. anihrop. CeseUschaft (1883); Thuot, La Forteresse titrifiie 
du Puy de Candy, fife; De Nadaillac, Les Premiers Homines, vol. i.; 
Mhnoxres de la Soc. Antiq. de France, vol. xxxviil; Hildebrand. 
De fdrhistorisha folhen i Europa (Stockholm. 1 880); Behla, Die 
vorgeschichtlichen RundwaUe im dstlichen Deutschland (Berlin, 1 8 88); 
Oppermann and Schuchhardt. Atlas vorptschichtlicher BefesHgnngen 
in Niedersachen (Hanover, 1888-98); Zschiesche, Die vorgeschicht- 
lichen Burgen und Walle im Thu ringer Zentralbechen (Halle, 1889); 
Bug, Schlesische Heidenschanzen (Grot t lea u, 1890); Gohausen, Die 
Befestigungsweisen der Voneit und des Mittelalters (Wiesbaden, 1898). 

(R. Mu.*) 
VltRIOL, a name given to sulphuric acid and to certain 
sulphates. Oil of vitriol is concentrated sulphuric acid. Blue 
or Roman vitriol is copper sulphate; green vitriol, ferrous 
sulphate (copperas); white vitriol, zinc sulphate; and vitriol 
of Mars is a basic iron sulphate. 

VITRUVIUS (Marcus Vitruvids Poluo), Roman architect 
and engineer, author of a celebrated work on architecture. 
Nothing is known concerning him except what can be gathered 
from his own writings. Owing to the discovery of inscriptions 
relating to the Gens Vitruvia at Formiae in Campania (Mola di 
Gaeta), it has been suggested that he was a native of that city, 
and he has been less reasonably connected with Verona on the 
strength of an existing arch of the 3rd century, which is inscribed 
with the name of a later architect of the same family name — 
" Lucius Vitruvhis Cerdo, a freedman of Lucius." From 
Vitruvius himself we learn that he was appointed, in the reign 
of Augustus, together with three others, a superintendent of 
balistae and other military engines, a post which, he says, he 
owed to the friendly influence of the emperor's sister, probably 
Octavia (De Architecture, i. pref.). In another passage (v. 1) he 
describes a basilica and adjacent aedes Augusti, of which he was 
the architect. From viii. 3 it has been supposed that he had 
served in Africa in the time of Julius Caesar, probably as a 
military engineer, but the words hardly bear this interpretation. 
He speaks of himself as being low in suture, and at the time of 
his writing bowed down by age and ill-health (n. pref.). He 
appears to have enjoyed no great reputation as an architect, 
and, with philosophic contentment, records that he possessed 
but little fortune. Though a great student of Greek philosophy 
and science, he was unpractised in literature, and his style is very 
involved and obscure. To a great extent the theoretical and 
historical parts of his work are compiled from earlier Greek 
authors, of whom he gives a list at i. 1 and viii. 3. The practical 
portions, on the contrary, are evidently the result of his own 
professional experience, and are written with much sagacity, 
and in a far clearer style than the more pedantic chapters, in 
which he gives the somewhat fanciful theories of the Greeks. 
Some sections of the latter, especially those on the connexion 
between music and architecture, the scale of harmonic pro- 
portions, and the Greek use of bronze vases to reverberate and 
strengthen the actors' voices in the theatre, are now almost 
wholly unintelligible. WnvfaA name is mentioned by 
Front In us in hk work on thr aqueducts of Rome- and most of 
what riiny layi* {Mist XnJ xx*v and twirl.) « bout methods 
of wall -painting, \he preparation of thf ftftti CO surface, and other 
practical deuil* in I ..: .1 t. &!zne*t word for word from 

I 1. though without any acknow- 
tedgi 

cited to 
. the 
ctom 
com* 
been 
revival 




VITRY-LB-FRANgOIS— VTITORIA 



Vrtruvfue wua the chief authority studied by architects, and in 
every point Ins precepts were accepted as final. In some cases 
a failure to understand his meaning led to curious results; 
for example, the medieval custom, not uncommon in England, 
of placing rows of earthenware jars under the floor of the stalls 
k church choirs, appears to have been an attempt to follow out 
i raised by Vitruvius as to the advantages of placing 
round the auditorium of theatres. Bramante, 
} Pauadio, Vignola and earlier architects were 
careful students of the work of Vitruvius, which through them 
has largely influenced the architecture of almost all European 



Bk-Lopeoe with a dedication to Augustus* C I is on the science 
of architecture generally, and the branches of knowledge with which 
the trained architect ought to be acquainted, viz. grammar, 
nu»ic. painting, sculpture, medicine, geometry, mathematics and 
optics: c a is on the general principles of architectural design; 
c x on the considerations which determines design, such as strength, 
utility, beauty; c 4 on the nature of different sorts of ground for 
sites: c 5 on walls of fortification; c 6 on aspects towards the 
north, south and other points; c. 7 on the proper situations of 
temples dedicated to the various deities. 

Bk. n. relates to materials (preface about Dinecrates, architect to 
Alexander the Great). C. 1 is on the earliest dwellings of man; 
c 2 on systems of Thales, Heraclitus, Democritus, Ac.; c. $ on 
bricks, c 4 on sand; c 5 on lime; c 6 on pozzolana; c 7 on kinds 
of none for building; c 8 on methods of constructing walls in stone, 
brick, concret e and marble, and on the materials for stucco; c, 9 
oa timber, time for felling it, seasoning, &c; and c. 10 on the fr 
trees of the Apennines. m 

Bk- iiL. on styles, has a preface on ancient Creek writers. C. 1 is 
on symmetry and proportion; c a on various forms of Greek 
temple*, r.g in antis, prostyle, peripteral, dipteral, hypaethral; 1 
c 3 on intc*<olurj»niatK>fi--pycnostyle, systyle. custyle. &c; c 4 
oa foundations, steps and sty locates; c 5 on the Ionic 'order, it* 
form and details. 

Bk. iv., on styles and orders, has a preface to Augustus on the 
scope of the work. The subjects of its nine chapters are — (1) the 
Corinthian. Ionic and Doric orders; {2) the ornaments of capitals, 
Ac; (3$ the Doric order; (4) proportions of the cclla and pronaos; 

* * * * ; (6) dqorwr * * '— ~ J **- — — U! 

, jean 

(9) altars. 



(5) sites of temples; (6) doorways of temples and their archi- 
traves; (7) the Etruscan or Tuscan order of tt ° " % * * 



temples; 

BkTw, 



[temples; (8) circular 

Bk. n w., X on public buildings, has a preface oa the theories of 
Pythagoras. Sec. Its twelve chapters treat — (1 ) of fora and basilicae. 
»ith a description of his own basilica at Fanum: (2) of the adjuncts 
of a forum (acrarium, prison and curia); (3) of theatres, their site 
and construction; (4) of laws of harmonics; (5) of the arrangement 
of tuned bronae vases in theatres for acoustic purposes; (6) of 
Roman theatres; (7) of Greek theatres; (8) of the selection of sites 
of theatres according to acoustic principles; (9) of portkus and 
covered walks; (10) of baths, their floors, hypocausts, the construe- 
boo and use of various parts; (it) of palaestrae, xvsti and other 
Greek buildings for the exercise of athletes; (12) of harbours and 

BkTvi is on sites and planning, and the preface treats of various 
Greek authors. C. 1 is on selection of sites; c. 2 on the planning 
of buildings to suit different sites; c. 3 on private houses, their 
construction and styles, the names of the different apartments: 
c 4 on the aspects suited for the various rooms} c 5 on buildings 



feted for special positions; c. 6 on farms ana country houses; 
c 7 on Greek houses and the names of various parts; c. 8 on con- 
traction of houses in wood, stone, brick or concrete. 
Bk. viL. mostly on methods of decoration, has a preface (as usual) 
s of ancient Greek writers, with lists of Greek sculptors, 

I writers on architecture, and of Roman architects. 

C 1 fens for its subject pavements and roads, their construction, 
-» — j. ^ a B on white stucco for walls (opus albarium)\ 




building of hollow walls to keep out the damp, 

various processes; c $ on methods and styles of 

debased taste of his time; c. 6 on fine stucco 

_ sMililr tTiirr coats to receive wall painting*; 

■ucd f<w mural decoration; c, 8 on rr*j lead {rniiniam} 

r.«ndhuw Lou*, the lattrMovxmrt tbcgakl U^m "."iri- 

d tlufi ft ciT'L .TL'i'l' ry\ c 9 an iW pn^iani I iu(i u( red 

p method of encaustic painty with pv.t 1*1%., fin. Hed 

ee. io-14 on anifkisl colour*— lila^k, Mut, purple' 

, i*-, mum purple and imitations of 




Jt have «howri ihai VitruvTin *as 
tple ai Olympian Zem ai At hen* as 
y almost umvtTul opinion that ii 
neediest theory thai the pasugc con" 
ipt- 



*5* 

Bk. viiL is on hydraulic engineering, aad the preface on theories of 
the ancients, C. I treats of the finding of good water; c 2 of rain- 
water and rivers— rivers in various countries; c 3 of hot springs, 
mineral waters, with an account of the chief medicinal springs 
of the world : c 4 of selection of water by observation and expert* 
ment; c 5 of instruments for levelling used by aqueduct engineers; 
c. 6 of construction of aqueducts, pipes of lead, day, &c, and other 



; treats of Greek sciences, 
gravity by Archimedes, and 



matter on- the subject of water-supply. 

Bk. ix. is on astronomy. The 1 ' 

geometry, the > discovery of specif „ _ ._„ _„ , 

other discoveries of the Greeks, and of Romans of his time who 
have vied with the Greeks— Lucretius in his poem De Rcrvm Natura, 
Cicero in rhetoric, and Varro in philology, as shown by his D» 
Linrna Latino,* The subjects of the eight chapters are — (1) the signs 
of the xodiac and the seven planets; (a) the phases of the moon; 
(3) the passage of the sun through the zodiac^ (4) and (5) various 
constellations; (6) the relation of astrological influences to nature; 
(7) the mathematical divisions of the gnomon; (8) various kinds 
of sundials and their inventors. 

Bk.x. is on machinery, with a preface concerning a law at ancient 
Ephesus compelling an architect to complete any public building 
he had undertaken: this, he' says, would be useful among the 
Romans of his time.* The chapters are — (1) on various machines, 
such as scaling-ladders, windmills, Ac.; (a) on windlasses, axles, 
pulleys and cranes for moving heavy weights, such as those used 
by Chcrstphron in building the great temple of Diana at Ephesus. 
and on the discovery by a shepherd of a quarry of marble required 
to build the same temple; (3) on dynamics; (4) on machines for 
drawing water; (5) on wheels for irrigation worked by a river; 
(6) on raising water by a revolving spiral tube; (7) on the machine 
of Ctesibius tor raising water to a height ; (8) on a very complicated 
water engine, the description of which is not intelligible, though 
Vitruvius remarks that he has tried to make the matter clear; 
(9) on machines with wheels to register the distance- travelled, either 
by land or water; (10) on the construction of scmpi&nes for hurling 
stones, (11) and (12) on balistae and catapults; (13) on battering- 
rams and other machines for the attack of a fortress; (14) on shields 
(lestudines) to enable soldiers to fill up the enemy's ditches; (15) on 
other kinds of Ustudincs ; (16) on rnacames for defence, and examples 
of their use in ancient times. (J. H. M.) 

The best edition is by Rose (2nd ed«, Leipzig, 1899); see also 
Nohl, Index Vttruvianus (1876); jolles. Vitruvs Aestketik (1006); 
Sontheimer, Vitna und setnt Zeit (1908). There is a good transla- 
tion by Gwih (1826; reprinted, 1874). 

The name of Vitruvius has been given to several works on modern 
architecture, such as Campbell, Vitruvius Briiannkus (London, 
17 15-71), a series of illustrations of the chief buildings of the 18th 
century in England, including many works of the brothers Adam ; 
one of these brothers, William Adam, produced a similar work illus- 
trating the buildings which he had designed for Scotland, under the 
title of VUrtmus Scoticns (Edinburgh, 1700). Thurah, L* Vitruve 
danois (Copenhagen, 1746-49), is a similar collection of modern 
buildings in Denmark. 

YTTRY-LB-FRAHytHS, a town of north-eastern France, 
capital of the department of Mame, on the right bank of the 
Maine, 20 m. S.E. of Chalons, on the railway from Paris to 
Strassburg. Pop. (1006) 7985. The Mame-Rhine canal, the 
Haute-Marne canal, and the lateral canal of the Marne unite 
at Vitry. Its church of Notre-Dame is a 17th-century building 
with fine 18th-century monuments. A convent of the Recollets 
now contains the town hall, the court-house, a library and a 
small museum. There is a bronze statue of P. P. Roycr-Collard 
(1763-184$), the politician and philosopher, a native of the 
district. The industrial establishments include important cement 
works and the manufacture of faience is carried on. The 
present town was built in 1 $45 on a uniform plan by Francis I. 
to replace the older one of Vitry-en-Perlhois, 2} m. to the north- 
east, burned in the previous year by Charles V. 

VTTTEL, a watering-place of north-eastern France, fn the 
department of Vosges, 31 m. W. of Epinal by rail. Pop. (1906) 
1954. The waters resemble those of Contrexeville, but are 
lighter in character; they are bottled and exported in large 
quantities. They are prescribed in cases of gravel, gout, &c. 
Vittel has been considerably developed in recent years, and is 
well supplied with hotels, a line casino and park, &C. 

VTTTORfA, a town of Sicily in the province of Syracuse, 
95 m. W.S.W. of Syracuse by rail (4a m. direct), founded in 1605 
by Giovanni Alphonso Henrique*, who named it after his 
mother, the famous Viltoria Colonna. It is a prosperous town 

* Vitruvius names Cicero and Lucretius as post ucstram nuntoriam 
ntxsctnlti. 
9 The architect being at that time also the contractor. 



«5* 



VITTORIO— VIVES 



in the centre of a fertile district, with the largest wine trade in 
Sicily. Pop. (iooi) 30,832 (town), $2,119 (commune). 

VITTORIO, a town and episcopal residence of the province 
of Treviso, Venetia, Italy, 25 ra. by rail N. of Treviso, 466 ft. 
above sea-leveL Pop. (1901) 2977 (town), 19,133 (commune). 
It is a summer resort, with sulphur and saline springs (51*8° to 
59° F.), and was formed in 1879 by the union of Ceneda (the epis- 
copal see) and Serravalle. The cathedral contains paintings 
by Pomponio Amalteo (a pupil of Pordenone) and others. At 
Serravalle is a church with a fine altar-piece (1547) by Titian. 
It is a scat of the silkworm breeding and silk-throwing industries. 

VITUS, ST (German, Veit; French, Guy). According to the 
legend, where he is associated with Modestus and Crescent ia, 
by whom he had been brought up, St Vitus suffered martyrdom 
at a very early age under the emperor Diocletian. Son of a 
Sicilian nobleman who was a worshipper of idols, Vitus was 
converted to the Christian faith without the knowledge of his 
father, was denounced by him and scourged, but resisted all 
attacks on his profession. Admonished by an angel, he crossed 
the sea to Lucania and went to Rome, where he suffered martyr- 
dom. His festival is celebrated on the 15th of June. The 
Passion of St Vitus has no historical value, but his name occurs 
in the Marlyrologium kieronymianum. In 836 the abbey of 
Corvcy, in Saxony, received his relics, and became a very active 
centre Of his cult. In the second half of the 9th century the 
monks of Corvcy, according to Hclmold's Chronica Slavorutn, 
evangelized the island of Riigen, where they built a church in 
honour of St Vitus. The islanders soon relapsed, but they kept 
up the superstitious cult of the saint (whom they honoured as a 
god), returning to Christianity three centuries later. At Prague, 
too, there are some relics of the saint, who is the patron of 
Bohemia and also of Saxony, and one of the fourteen " pro- 
tectors" (Notkkdfcr) of the church in Germany. Among the 
diseases against which St Vitus is invoked is chorea, also known 
as St Vitus's Dance. 

See Acta sanctorum, June, Ki. 1013-42 and vi. 137-40; 
Bibliotkeca hogiogropkua Latino (Brussels, 1899), n. 8711-33; J. H. 
Kesscl, " St Veit, seine Geachichtc, Verehrung und bildliche Dar- 
stellungen," in Jahrbucher its Vereins von Alterthumsfreunden im 
Rheintando (1867), pp. 152-83. (H. Db.) 

V1VALO0, UGOLINO and SORLBONB DB (fl. 2291-1315). 
Genoese explorers, connected with the first known expedition 
in search of an ocean way from Europe to India. Ugolino, 
with his brother Guido or Vadino Vivaldo, was in command of 
this expedition of two galleys, which he had organized in con- 
junction with Tedisio Doria, and which left Genoa in May 1291 
with the purpose of going to India " by the Ocean Sea " and 
bringing back useful things for trade. Planned primarily for 
commerce, the enterprise also aimed at prosclytism. Two 
Franciscan friars accompanied Ugolino. The galleys were well 
armed and sailed down the Morocco coast to a place called 
Gozora (Cape Nun), in 28 47' N., after which nothing more 
was heard of them. Early in the next (14th) century, Sorlcone 
de Vivaldo, son of Ugolino, undertook a series of distant wander- 
ings in search of his father, and even penetrated, it is said, to 
Mag£.doxo on the Somali coast. In 1455 another Genoese 
seaman, Antoniotto Uso di Mare, sailing with Cadamosto in 
the service of Prince Henry the Navigator of Portugal, claimed 
to have met, near the mouth of the Gambia, with the last 
descendant of the survivors of the Vivaldo expedition. The 
two galleys, he was told, had sailed to the Sea of Guinea; in 
that sea one was stranded, but the other passed uit (■> a place 
on the coast of Ethiopia-Mena or Amenuan, near iJ:e Gihun 
(here probably meaning the Senegal)— where the Genoese were 
seized and held in close captivity. 

See jacopo Doria, " Annales " (under A.o. 1291) in Pert z. Menu* 
mtnla Germaniae kistortca. Scnptores, xviii. 335 U&6j)< ibe 
" Conocjmiento de todos los Rcinos," ed. Marco* limpnci ck la 
Espada in the BoUttn of the Geographical Society or Madrid, vol. n. p 
No. 2. pp. ill. «I3, 117-18 (Madrid, February, i«77>: Canale, 
Degli antuhi navtgotori e scof^tlori Genooest (Genoa, iM>), G. K. 
Pert*. Der dlUste Verstun zur Entdeckung des Seewgm nmn thlindicn 



(Berlin, 1859); Annoli di Geografia e di Statistics fompoiti , 
do Giacomo Craberg (Genoa. 1802); Bclgraoo, "... AnuK - . 



Caffaro." in Arckw. Star. Iiol^ 3rd series, ii. 124, Ac. and in AttiidU 
Soc. Lig. di Storio P atria, xv. 320 (1881); W. Heyd, Histaire du, 
commerce du Levant (the improved French edition of the Gesckichte 
des Letantthandels), ii. 140-43 (Paris, 1886) ; C. R. Beazley, Dawn of 
Modem Geography, iii. 413-19, 551 (Oxford, 1906). 

VIVARINI, the surname el a family of painters of Murano 
(Venice), who produced a great quantity of work in Venice and 
its neighbourhood in the 15th century, leading on to that phase 
of the school which is represented by Carpacdo and the Bellmis- 

Antonio Vivarini (Antonio of Murano) was probably the 
earliest of this family. He came from the school of Andrea 
da Murano, and his works show the influence of Gentile da 
Fabriano. The earliest known date of a picture of his, an 
altar-piece in the Venetian academy, is 1440; the latest, in the 
Latcran museum, 1464, but he appears to have been alive 
in 1470. He worked in company with a certain " Joannes de 
Alemania," who has been (with considerable doubt) regarded 
as a brother (Giovanni of Murano), but no trace of this painter 
exists of a date later than 1447. After 1447 Antonio painted 
either alone or in combination with his younger brother Barto- 
lommeo. The works of Antonio are well drawn for their epoch, 
with a certain noticeable degree of softness, and with good flesh 
and other tints. Three of his principal paintings are the 
" Virgin Enthroned with the Four Doctors of the Church," the 
" Coronation of the Virgin," and " Sts Peter and Jerome." 
The first two (in which Giovanni co-operated) are in the Venetian 
academy, the third in the National Gallery, London. This 
gallery contains also specimens of the two under-named painters. 

Bartolommeo Vivaeini is known to have worked from 
1450 to 1499. He learned oil-painting from Antonello da 
Messina, and is said to have produced, in 1473, the first oil 
picture done in Venice. This is in the church of S. Giovanni 
e Paolo— a large allar-piece in nine divisions, representing 
Augustine and other saints. Most of his works, however, 
including one in the National Gallery, are in tempera. His 
outline is always hard, and his colour good; the figures have 
much dignified and devout expression. As " vivarino " means 
in Italian a goldfinch, he sometimes drew a goldfinch as the 
signature of his pictures. 

Luici or Alvise Vivarini, born about 1446, painted in 
1475 and on to 1502, when he died. It has sometimes been 
supposed that, besides the Luigi who was the latest of this 
pictorial family, there had also been another Luigi who was the 
earliest, this supposition being founded on the fact that one 
picture is signed with the name, with the date 1414. There 
is good ground, however, for considering this date to be a forgery 
of a later time. .The works of Luigi show an advance on those 
of his predecessors, and some of them are productions of high 
attainment; one of the best was executed for the Scuola di 
S. Girolamo in Venice, representing the saint caressing his lion, 
and some monks decamping in terror. The architecture and 
perspective in this work are superior. Other works by Luigi 
are in Treviso and in Milan. He painted -some remarkable 
portraits. (W. M. R.) 

VIVERO, a town of north-western Spain, in the province 
of Lugo; on the Ria de Vivero, ah estuary formed by the 
river Landrove, which here enters the Bay of Biscay. Pop. 
(1900) 1 2,843. Vivero is an old-fashioned and picturesque town, 
connected with the opposite bank of the estuary by 1 
of twelve arches and a causeway. Its fishing fleet,/" 
trade and the agricultural products of the icrttG 
around are important. The only means of comnumkati 
the interior is by the mid to Cabreiro-. ' 

VIVES, JUAH LUIS (1403-1540). S P , 
at Valencia on the 6th cf March UudUd 1 

from 1509 to iji*, ami fa i^i« was a 
h u n t.i 11 i l its at Lo uvairt. Ai ■ • tneiul I 

he prepared :«f* 
Cirilirfe Dti+ whjch y 
IO Ueniy VIIL 
and » mud \ 
•hose 




VIVIAN, ist BARON— VIVISECTION 



(1523). Wink in England he resided at Corpus Christ! College, 
Oxford, where he was made doctor of laws and lectured 
on philosophy. Having declared himself against the king's 
divorce from Catherine of Aragon, he lost the royal favour and 
wu ron fined to his house for six weeks. On his release he 
withdrew to Bruges, where he devoted himself to the com- 
position of numerous works, chiefly directed against the schol- 
astic philosophy and the preponderant authority of Aristotle. 
The most important of bis treatises is the De Causes comptarum 
Artktm, which has been ranked with Bacon's Orgonon. • He 
died at Bruges on the 6th of May 154a 

A co mplet e edition of his works was published by Gregorio 
Mjyias y Swear (Valencia, 178a). Adolfo Bonilla y San Martin's 
l»u Vims y la/Uosofia del renacimienlo (Madrid, 1903) is a valuable 
aad interesting study which includes aa exhaustive bibliography 
of \ Ives's writings and a critical estimate of previous monographs. 
IV best of these are A. J. Nameche, " Memoire but la vie et lea ecrits 
<fc Jeaa Look Vive* " in Memoir es couronnis par VAoadimue Royal* 
in sctemces et beUes4etlwes de BruxeUes (Brussels, 1 841). vol. xv.; 
A Lance's article in the Encyklopddie des lesammten Ermekunts- 
wU UuUrricklswesens (Leipzig. 1887), vol. uc; Berthe Vadier, Un 
Umdiit* dm XVI ~ sietle: Jean-Louis Vises et son livre de I'iduca- 
tumit U femme ckr&ienne (Geneva, 1892) ; C. Hoppe, Die Psy~ 
(btiogie sws Juan Luis Vives (Berlin, 1901). 

TTVIAM, RICHARD HUSSEY VIVIAN, ist Baiow (1775- 
iSaa), British cavalry leader, came of a Cornish family. Edu- 
cated at Harrow and Exeter College, Oxford, Vivian entered 
the army in 1793, and less than a year later became a captain 
b the 28th foot. Under Lord Moira he served in the campaign 
of 1 ;o4 in Flanders and Holland. At the end of the expedition, 
the 28th bore a disti n guis h ed part in Lord Cathcart's action of 
Goekknnaleerj. In 1798 Vivian was transferred to the 7th 
Light Dragoons (now Hussars), and in Sir Ralph Abercromby'a 
elision was present at the battles of Bergen and Alkmaar (19th 
September to 6th October 1799). In 1800 be received his 
majority, and in 1804 he became lieut-colonel of the 7U1. In 
command of this regiment he sailed to join Baird at Corunna in 
i3o8, and took part in Lord Paget 's cavalry fights at Sahagun 
tod Beaavente. During the retreat of Moore's army the 7th 
were constantly employed with the rearguard. Vivian was 
present at Corunna, and returned with the remainder of the 
tnny to England. It was not until late in 1813 that the 7th 
neturaed to the Peninsula, and Vivian (now colonel and A.D.C 
to the prince regent) was soon taken away to command a cavalry 
brigade under Hill. With this corps he served throughout 
the fighting on the "Nive (9th- 13th December). At the beghv 
aiag of 1814 be was transferred to a cavalry brigade of Beres- 
ford's corps, and took a marked part in the action el Gave de 
Pan and the battle of Orthes. In the advance on Toulouse 
Vlrian fought a brilliant action at Crois d'Orade on the Ers 
(&b April), when be was very severely wounded. At the 
beBnasng of 1815 he was made K.C.B.; he had been a major- 
fceaeral for several months. In April Sir Hussey Vivian was 
appointed to command a brigade of Uxbridge's cavalry, and 
»t Waterloo his regiments, with those of Vanddeur's brigade, 
sade the final charge of the day between Hougoumont and La 
Haye Sesnte, sweeping everything before them. This service 
n* rewarded by the thanks of both houses of parliament, 
tte ILCJL aad the orders of Maria Theresa and St Vladimir 
bom that cwsperora of Austria and Russia. He sat in the 
Home of C a mmon s as member for Truro from 1821 to 1831; 
»t was «5c- m ".- >mmandcr of ;he force* in Ireland, and 
SJI &m CjCJL la LS-iS he became ro^r r-gentfil oi I he 
m <l 1 i*jj be rt*th*i the G.C3-. ami in tSu. being 
ir tan C*cnw*Jl m mtrl lu 1 Vivian in the 

Bate He 
IHk Oasceaded in the 




»S3 

symmetry and are usually bladed" in habitf they are soft 
(H- }), flexible and sectile. The specific gravity is s-6. 
When unaltered and containing no ferric oxide, the mineral 
is colourless, but on exposure to the light it very soon becomes 
of a characteristic indigo-blue colour. Crystals were first found 
in Cornwall (at Wheal Jane, near Truro, associated with 
pyrrhotlte) by J. G. Vivian, after whom the species was named 
by A. G. Werner in 18x7. The mineral had, however, been 
earlier known as a blue powdery substance, called " blue iron- 
earth," met with in peat-bogs, in bog iron-ore, or with fossil 
bones and shells. (L. J. S.) 

VIVISECTION, literally the cutting {sectio) of living (nvus) 
animals, a word which might be applied to all surgical operations 
whether practised upon the lower animals or on man. As 
conventionally used, however, it has exclusive reference to 
experiments upon the lower animals undertaken for the advance- 
ment of medical sciences. There are a number of people who, 
calling themselves anti-vivisectionists, strongly object to these 
experiments on the lower animals; and it must be conceded 
that the humane reasons which they advance against it 
can only be set aside as " sentimental " if considerations of 
a wider humanity can show that the arguments of the anti- 
vfvisectionists really run counter to human progress. The 
supporters of vivisection, properly considered, must not be 
confused with those who would make a barbarous use of this 
means of research. What is at stake here is the right to use it 
properly and at alL It would be possible for cruelty of aa 
unnecessary kind to result if the practice of vivisection were 
unrestricted; and the purpose of this article is to give some 
account of the method of experiments on animals as sanctioned 
by law m the United Kingdom, and to justify that method by 
setting forth the chief historical discoveries that have been 
made by the help of vivisection. Such experiments have for 
their object the advancement of the sciences of physiology 
and pathology. From the earliest periods experimental vivi- 
sections have occasionally been practised, but before the days 
of anaesthetics it was difficult to execute them, and not less 
difficult to draw conclusions. The invention of anaesthetics 
has greatly extended the scope of the experimental method, 
because an animal can be kept unconscious and quiet, without 
even a quiver of a muscle, during prolonged operations. Further, 
the introduction of the antiseptic method has made it possible 
to subject all tissues and regions of the body to surgical inter* 
ference, and this has abo had the effect of increasing the possi- 
bilities of experimental research. 

la 1906 a British Royal Commission was appointed to inquire into 
the whole subject under the chairmanship of Lord Selby, on whose 
death Mr A. J. Ram, K.C. took the chair. The Commission sat 
from October 1906 to March 1908, and heard no fewer than 21,761 
questions and answers. In view of attempts on the part of the 
aaii-vivisectionists to misrepresent the nature of the evidence given 
before the Commission, in January 1908 the supporters of experi- 
ments 00 animals. founded the Research Defence Society, under the 
presidency of Lord Cromer; by July 1910 this society had some 3500 
members. Its official address is 21 Ladbroke Square, London, W. 

L Methods Employed.— The present act relating to experi- 
ments on animals was passed in 1876. At that time the 
majority of these experiments were physiological. There was, 
it may be fairly said, no such thing as bacteriology, no general 
following up of Pasteur's work. A few experiments were made 
in pathology, for instance in tubercle; and a few in surgery, 
in pharmacology, and in the action of poisons, especially snake 
venom. But the chief use of experiments on animals was for 
the advancement of physiology. The evidence given before the 
Royal Commission (1875) was almost entirely on physiological 
mailers, on the discoveries of Harvey, Bell, Mageodic and 
CU ude Bernard, on the Handbook for the Physiological Laboratory, 
mad so forth. The act, therefore, was drafted with a view to 
physiology, without much concern for pathology, and without 
foreknowledge of bacteriology. At the time of writing (1910), 

j% of the experiments are inoculations. Every expert- 

A must be made in a registered place open to govern- 

Utspection. But inoculation experiments are somet i m es 



'56 



VIVISECTION 



fistula thus ertafrKshed it. not afterward painful, though there 
may be some discomfort now and again. 

The classical instance b the case of Alexis St Martin, who was 
shot in the stomach in 1822, and recovered, but with a fistula. 
He let Dr Beaumont make experiment* on him for nine years: 
" During the whole of these periods, from the spring of 1824 to the 
present time (1833)* he has enjoyed general good health . . . active, 
athletic and vigorous; exefdsing, eating and drinking, like other 
healthy and active people. For the last four months he has been 
unusually plethoric and robust, though constantly subjected to a 
continuous series of experiments on the interior of the stomach; 
allowing to be introduced or taken oat at the aperture different 
kinds of food* drinks, elastic catheters, thermometer tabes, gastric 
juice, chyme, Ac. almost daily, and sometimes hourly. Such have 
been this man's condition and circumstances for several years past: 
and he now enjoys the most perfect health and constitutional 
soundness, with every function of the system in full force and vigour " 
(Beaumont, Experiments and Obscnalums en tke Gastric Juice, 1838). 

We come now to the question, What anaesthetics are used in 
these experiments, and are they properly administered ? The 
anaesthetics used are— (x) chloroform, ether, or a mixture 
containing chloroform and ether; (s) morphia, chloral, me- 
thane. It is sometimes said that morphia is not an anaesthetic. 
That depends on the quantity given. Not a month passes in 
this country without somebody killing himself or herself with 
morphia or chloraL They die profoundly anaesthetised: they 
cannot be roused; even the pain of a strong electric shock is not 
enough to rouse them. So it is with animals. The doses given 
to them are enormous and produce complete insensibility. On 
this point the evidence given before the Royal Commission of 
1006-6 by Mr Thane, Professor Schlf er, Sir Lauder Bnmton, Sir 
Henry Morris, Professor Dixon, Dr Dudley Buxton and Professor 
Starling is absolutely conclusive. "As to the statements," 
says Sir Lauder Bnmton, " that chloral and opium or morphia 
are not narcotics, and do not remove pain, there is no other word 
for it, it is simply a lie; you may as well say that chloroform 
does not remove pain. If you give any animal a sufficiently 
large dose of chloral or opium, you so completely abolish sensi- 
bility that there is nothing you can do that will awaken its 
sensibility. The animal is as senseless as a piece of board." 

With regard to chloroform, ether and the A.C.E. mix- 
ture (alcohol, chloroform and ether) It is absolutely certain 
that animals can be kept, with these anaesthetics, profoundly 
unconscious lor three or four or more hours. Nothing on 
this point is more worthy of consideration than the evidence 
in veterinary surgery, given before the Royal Commission 
by Mr Hobday, one of the very foremost veterinary surgeons 
in this country {Reports of Evidence, vol. iv. Q. 16984-16523). 
The opponents of all experiments on animals are apt to believe 
that dogs and cats must be bound and fastened on boards, and 
then have the anaesthetic given to them. That is not the case. 
They can take the anaesthetic first, and then be put in position; 
just as we, for many of the operations of surgery, are bound in 
position. And, of course, dogs and cats cannot lie on their backs 
as we can. " The usual thing we do/' said Professor Starling, 
in his evidence before the Royal Commission, " is to give the 
animal, half an hour before the experiment, a hypodermic 
injection of morphia, of about a quarter of a grain— from a 
quarter to a third. The effect of that is, that the dog becomes 
sleepy and stupid, and then sometimes it will lie down quietly, 
and if it is very sleepy you can put a mask oyer its nose con- 
taining the chloroform, alcohol and ether mixture, which it 
takes quite quietly. If, at the time one wants to begin the 
operation, the animal is not fully under the influence of morphia 
—if it still seems restless— it is put in a box, and there it has 
some wool saturated with the A.C.E. mixture put in the box. 
The air gradually gets saturated, the dog gets more and more 
sleepy, and finally subsides at the bottom of the box/' 

A few words must be said here about curare. It was said, some 
years ago, by an opponent of experiments on animals, that " curare 
is used daily throughout England," whereas, it is seldom used at 
allj and is never used alone in any sort or kind of operation on any 
animal in this country : in every such case a recognized anaesthetic 
must be given, and is given. In large doses curare not only 
abolishes the movement of the voluntary muscles, but also acts 
as an anaesthetic; in small doses it acts only on the voluntary 



muscles, ue. on the endings of the motor nerves going to these 
muscles. For example, suppose that the abject of the experi- 
ment is to observe ana record the action of a nerve on the contraction 
of certain blood vessels. The nerve gives off some branches to 
muscles, and other branches to blood vessels. If the animal be 
anaesthetized, and the nerve stimulated, muscles and vessels will 
both contract; but, if curare be given, as well as an anaesthetic, 
the vessels alone will contract, without the muscles: for curare 
does not act on the endings of motor nerves going to blood vessels. 
But, as a practical matter, curare is very hard to obtain, and is often 
impure, and is very seldom used. One of the inspectors said to the 
Royal Commission that he had once seen it used, fifteen years ago. 
Professor Gotch said that he had not used it, in his own work. Tor 
twenty years. Professor Schafer said that he had not used it for 
years. And Sir Lauder Bnmton said that he did not think he had 
used it at all since the passing of the act of 1876. The fear that, in 
a case where curare was being used, the effect of the anaesthetic 
might " pass off," and the animal be left under curare alone, is not 
reasonable. The dosage and administration of anaesthetics is not 



left to chance. If, for example, an animal is receiving a definite 
percentage of chloroform vapour, it is of necessity under the influence 
of the chloroform : and the anaesthesia will gradually become not 



less but more profound. (See the evidence given before the Royal 
Commission by Professor Langley and Professor Waller.) 

It may be interesting to compare the pain, or death, or dis- 
comfort among 86,277 animals used for experiments in Great 
Britain in 1909, with the pain, or death, or discomfort of an 
equal number of the same kinds of animals, either in a state 
of nature, or kept for sport, or used for the service of human 
profit or amusement. But it would be outside the purpose of 
this article to describe the cruelties which are inseparable 
from sport, and from the killing of animals for food, and from 
fashion; neither is this the place to describe the millions of 
mutilations which are practised on domestic animals by farmers 
and breeders. As one of the Royal Commissioners recently said, 
the farmyards, at certain times of the year, simply " seethe 
with vivisection." The number of animals wounded in sport, 
or in traps, cannot be guessed. Against this vast amount of 
suffering we have to put an estimate of the condition of 86,177 
animals used for medical science. Ninety-five per cent, of them 
were used for inoculation. . In many of these inoculations the 
result was negative: the animal did not take any disease, 
and thus did not suffer any pain. In many more, e.g. cancer 
in mice, tubercle in guinea-pigs, the pain or discomfort, if .any, 
may fairly be called trivial or inconsiderable. It could hardly 
be said that these small animals suffer much more than an 
equal number of the same kind of. animals kept in little cages 
to amuse children. • There remain 3888 animals which were 
submitted to operation under an anaesthetic. In the greater 
number of these cases the animal wis killed then and there 
under the anaesthetic, without recovering consciousness. In 
the remaining cases the animal was allowed to recover, and 
to be kept for observation; but no further observation of any 
kind, which could cause pain, was allowed to be made on it, 
unless it were again placed under an anaesthetic. Many of 
these cases, thus allowed to recover after an operation, may 
fairly be compared to an equal number of domestic animals 
after one of the formal operations of veterinary surgery. These 
observations made under Certificate B form but a very small 
proportion of the total number of experiments on animals in 
the United Kingdom; and they have led, in recent years, to 
discoveries of the very utmost importance for human life and 
health. 

II. Scientific Results.— We come now to consider the" 
results of experiments on animals, but we must remember that 
not we alone, but animals also, owe a great debt to them. Great 
epizootic diseases like anthrax, swine-fever, chicken cholera, 
silkworm disease, pleuro-pneumonia, glanders, Texas cattle 
fever, blackleg, tuberculosis in cattle, have killed yearly millions 
of animals, and have been brought under better control by 
these experiments. The advantages that have been obtained 
for man may be arranged under two heads— (A) Physiology, 
(B) Pathology, Bacteriology and Therapeutics. 

A. Physiology 
1. The Blood.— Galen (a.d. 131) confuted the doctrine of Erash> 
tratus, that the arteries contained jrmjjia, the breath of life, proving 



VIVISECTION 



»57 



they contain blood. "OorteWes, having 
cquwwl arteries Above and below, opened them, and 
•bowed that they were indeed full of blood." Realdus Columbus 
('SS9)< though he did not discover the general or " systematic " 
rimtlarkm of the Wood, yet seems to nave discovered, by experi- 
ment, the pulmonary circulation. " The blood is carried through 
the pulmonary artery to the lung, and there is attenuated; thence, 
snaed with air, it is carried through the pulmonary vein to the 
left side of the heart. Which thing no man hitherto has noted or 
left ob record, though it is most worthy of the observance of all 
asso. . . . And this is as true as truth itself; for if ^ou will look 
not oaly in the dead body but also in the living animal, you will 
always find this pulmonary vein full of blood, which assuredly it 
weak! not be if it were designed only for air and vapours. . . . 
Verily I pray you, O candid reader, studious of authority, but more 
^iy«*iM ■ of truth, to make experiment on animals. You will find 
the pulmonary vein full of blood, not air orfuligo, as these men call 
at, God help them." Harvey's treatise De Motu Cordis et Sanguinis 
as Amtmohbms was published at Frankfort in 162 1. It begins thus: 
When by many dissections of living animals, as they came to 
"* wutttis vworum dissetttonibus, 



, uti ad manum dabaniuft 
— I first gave myself- to observing how I might discover, with my 
own eves, and not from books and the writings of other men, the 
sse and purpose of the movement of the heart in animals, forthwith 
I found the matter hard indeed and full of difficulty; so that I 
began to think, with Frascatorius, that the movement of the heart 
was known to God alone. ... At last, having daily used greater 
disquisition and diligence, by frequent examination of many and 
various living- animals— ma/to frequenter et varus animalia viva 
immm s a mckmd e I came to believe that I had succeeded, and had 
escaped and got out of this labyrinth, and therewith had dis- 
^^whatld * ' ....... 



I desired, the movement and use of the -heart and the 
And from that time, not only to my friends but also in 

ribuc in my anatomical lectures, after the manner of the Academy, 
did not fear to set forth my opinion in this matter." Here, and 



yia at the end of the Preface, and again in the eighth chapter 
the De Motu, he puts his experiments in the very foreground 
of the argument. Take the headings of his first four chapters: 



Causae, quibus ad scribendum auctor permotus fuerit. 2. Ex 
v imr t um dissectione, quoits fit cordis motus. 3. A r If riorum motus 
ysafir, ex vis or urn dissection*, a. Motus cordis et auricularum 
ftttft. ex v im)t am dissection*. He had, of course, help from other 
s ou rc es f rom anatomy and from physics; but it is certain, from 
his own words, that he attributed his discovery, in a very great 
measure, to experiments on animals. Malpighi (1661), professor of 
Medicine at Bologna, by examining with a microscope the lung and 
the mesentery of the live frog, made out the capillary vessels. He 
writes to Boretti, professor of mathematics at Pisa, that he has 
failed in every attempt to discover them by injecting fluids into 
the larger vessels, but has succeeded by examining the tissues with 
the microscope: " Such is the divarication of these little vessels 
coming ad from the vein and ihe artery, that the order in which a 
vessel ramifies is no longer preserved, but it looks like a network 
woven from the offshoots of both vessels" {De Pulmonibus. 1661). 
St eph en Hales (1733), rector of Farringdon and minister of Tedding- 
too, and a Fellow of the Royal Society, made the first exact esti- 
mates of the blood pressure, the real force of the blood, by inserting 
one end of a vertical glass tube into the crural artery of a mare. 
and noting the rise of the blood in the tube {Statical Essays, con- 
taining Haemastaiicks, fife, x/jj). John Hunter, born 1738. made 
many observations on the nature and processes of the blood; and, 
above all, he discovered the facts of collateral circulation. These 
facts were fresh in his mind when he first ventured, in December 
■7S5, to tie the femoral artery in '* Hunter's canal " for the cure 
of aneurism in the popliteal space. The experiment that gave 
him his knowledge of the collateral circulation was made on one of 
the deer in Richmond Park: he tied its external carotid artery, 
to see what effect would be produced on the shedding of the antler. 
Some days later he found that the circulation had returned in 
the antler. He had the buck killed, and found that the artery 
had been completely closed by the ligature, but the small branches 
coming from it, between the heart and the ligature, were enlarged 
sad were in communication with others of its branches beyond 
the ligature; and by this collateral circulation the flow of blood 
to the antler had been restored. Among later observations on 
the circulation must be mentioned the use of the mercurial mano- 
neter by Poiseuflle (1828) and Ludwig (1849). the study of the 
blood pressure within the heart by Henng (1849) and the per- 
manent tracing of the pressure curves by Chauveau and Marey 
(1863). Finally came the study of those more abstruse problems 
of the circulation that the older physiologists had left alone — the 
influences of the central nervous system, the relations between 
blood pressure and secretion, the automatism of the heart-beat, and 
the influence of gravitation. Professor Starling, in 1906, writes 
as follows of this part of physiology : " Among the researches of 
the last thirty years, those bearing on the circulation of the blood 
meat take an important place, both for their physiological interest 
and for the weighty influence they have exerted on our knowledge 
and treatment of disorders of the vascular system, such as heart 



disease. We have learned to measure accurately the work done 
by the great heart-pump; and by studying the manner in which 
this work is affected by different conditions, we are enabled to in* 
crease or diminish it, according to the needs of the organ. Ex 
periments in what is often reg a rded as the most transcendental 
department of physiology — U. that which treats of muscle and 
nerve— have thrown light on the wonderful process of * com- 
pensation ' by which a diseased heart is able to keep up a normal 
circulation " And Dr James Mackenzie, writing in 1910 of certain 
irregularities of the circulation during pregnancy (venous pulse in 
the neck and irregular beat of the heart), says, very emphatically, 
that these conditions in patients have been interpreted by ex- 

Kriments on animals. '* The outcome of these researches (Wenc ke- 
en's clinical studies], as well as those of a great number of other 
observers, has been to elucidate the nature and meaning of a great 
number of abnormal conditions of the heart. It might be said 
with truth that, whereas a few years ago irregular action of the 
heart was one of the most obscure symptoms in clinical medicine, 
it is now one of the best understood. It is needless to repeat that 
this advance would have been absolutely impossible without the 
knowledge gained by experiment " (Research Defence Society, May 
1910). 

2. The Lacteals.— Asellius (1622) by a single experiment demon- 
strated the flow of chyle along the lacteals. The existence ol 
these minute vessels had been known even to Galen and Erastis- 
tratus, but they had made nothing of their knowledge. Asellius 
says: "I observed that the nerves of the intestines were quite 
distinct from these white threads, and ran a different courre. 
Struck with this new fact, ! was silent for a time, thinking of the 
bitter warfare of words among anatomists as to the mesenteric 
veins and their purposes. When I came to myself, to satisfy my- 
self by an experiment, I pierced one of the largest cords with a 
scalpel. I hit the right point, and at once observed a white liquid 
like nulk flowing from the divided vessel." Jchan Pecquet (1647), 
in the course of an experiment on the heart, observed the now 
of chyle into the subclavian vein, and its identity with the chyle 
in the lacteals; and by further experiment found the thoracic 
duct, and the chyle flowing up it: "1 perceived a white sub- 
stance, like milk, flowing from the vena cava ascendens into the 

rricardium, at the place where the right auricle had been 
found these vessels (the thoracic duct} all along the dorsal ver- 
tebrae, lying on the spine, beneath the aorta. They swelled below 
a ligature; and when 1 relaxed it, 1 saw the milk carried to the 
orifices that I had observed in the subclavian vein." The existence 
of this duct, which is empty and collapsed after death, had been 
overlooked by Vesalius and all the great anatomists of his time. 

3. The Gastric Juice. — Our knowledge about digestion dates 
back to the end of the 17th century, when Valisnieri first ob- 
served that the stomach of a dead animal contained a fluid which 
acted on certain bodies immersed in it — " a kind of aqua fortis" 
In 1752 Reaumur began his observations on this fluid, making 
birds swallow fine fenestrated tubes containing grain or meat, or 
sponges with threads attached; and observed that digestion con- 
sists in the dissolution of food, not in any sort of mechanical action 
or trituration. His observations were extended and perfected by 
Spallanzani (1777). Then came a period of uncertainty, with- 
out further advance; until in 1823 the French Academy offered 
a prize for the best work on the subject, and Tiedemann and 
Gmelin submitted their observations to them: "The work of 
Tiedemann and Gmelin is of especial interest to us on account 
of the great number of their experiments, from which came not 
only the absolute proof of the existence of the gastric juice,but 
also the study of the transformation of starch into glucose. Thus 
the theory of digestion entered a new phase : it was finally recog- 
nized, at least for certain substances, that digestion is not simply 
dissolution, but a true chemical transformation " (Claude Bernard, 
Physiologic opjtraloire, 1879). Beaumont's experiments on Alexis 
St Martin {vide supra) were published in 1838. They were, of 
course, based on the work of the physiologists: " I make no claim 
to originality in my opinions as respects the existence and opera- 
tion of the gastric juice. My experiments confirm the doctrines 
(with some modifications) taught by Spallanzani and many of the 
most enlightened physiological writers " (Beaumont's preface to 
his book). Eberlt, in 1834, showed how this knowledge of the 
gastric juice might be turned to a practical use, by extracting it 
from the mucous membrane of the stomachs of animals after death: 
hence came the invention of the various preparations of pepsin. 
Later. Blondlot of Nancy, in 1842, studied the gastric juice by the 
method of a fistula, like that ot St Martin. More recent observa- 
tions have been made on the movements of the stomach during 
digestion, and on the influences of the nervous system on the process. 

The stomach is, of course not the only organ of digestion: the 
fiver, the pancreas and the intestinal glands, all arc concerned. 
The recent work of Pawlow and of Starling has greatly advanced 
our knowledge of the actions of the secretions from these organs. 
The whole chain of processes, nervous and chemical, psychical and 
physical, from the taking of food into the mouth to the expulsion 
of the waste residue, is now viewed in its entirety: and especial 
study has been given to the influences, nervous or chemical, which 



VIVISECTION 




or distress, made we of fistulae established at different paints of 
the digestive canal, and was able to study the digestive juices at 
different stages during digestion, without causing pain to the 
animals. The work of Pawlow has been further developed by 
Professor Starling's recent work on the chemical 
in the body, during the act of digestion, to promote w 

4- Glycate*, — Claude Bernards work on the assimilation and 
destruction of sugar in the body was begun in 1843. His d is cov er y 
of the glycogenic action of the liver was made by keeping two dogs 
on different diets, one with sugar, the other without it, then 



them during digestion, and testing the blood in the 
from the liver: What was my surprise when I found 
quantity of sugar in the hepatic veins of the dog that had been 
fed 00 meat only, and had been kept for eight days without sugar ! 
Finally, after many attempts— aires meamcomp tessats ei 
deretpptr par " '" 



plnsUurs iQoswns quejefms obitgi de rectifier par its 
I succeeded in showing, that in dogs fed on meat the blood passing 
through the portal veui (from the stomach) does not contain sugar 
before it reaches the liver; but when it leaves the liver and comes 
by the hepatic veins into the inferior vena cava, this same blood 
contains a considerable quantity of a sugary stihstanrr (glucose) " 
{Somodte fomOiom dufoie. Paris. 1853). 

5. The Pancreas. — The 17th century was a time of very fanci- 
ful theories about the pancreas (Lindanus. Wharton, Bartholin! ). 
which need not be recalled here. But Sylvius (Francois de Bob) 
had the wisdom to see that the pancreas must be estimated, not 



ting to its position, but according to its structure, as of the 
nature of the salivary glands. He urged his pupil, Regnier de 
Graaf. to study it by experiment, and <fc Craaf says: " I put my 
hand to the work: and though many times I despaired of success, 
yet at last, by the blessing of God on my work and prayers, in the 
year 1662 I discovered a way of collecting the pancreatic juice " 
By the method of a fistula he collected and studied the secretion 
of the pancreas: and by further experiment he refuted Bartholini's 
theory that the pancreas was a sort of appanage or " biliary vesicle " 
of the spleen. But he got no help from the chemistry of his time; 
he could no more discover the anxiolytic action of the pancreatic 
secretion than Galvani could discover wireless telegraphy. Still. 
be did good work; and Claude Bernard. 180 years later, went back 
to de GraaTs method of the fistula. His observations, begun in 
1846, received a prize from the French Academy in 1850. Sir 
Michael Foster says of them: '* Valentin, it is true, had in 1844 
not only inferred that the pancreatic juice had an action on starch, 
but confirmed his view by actual experiment with the juke expressed 
from the gland: and Eberle had suggested that the juice had some 
action on Cat; but Bernard at one stroke made dear its threefold 
action. He showed that it on the one hand emulsified, and on the 
other hand split up into fatty acids and glycerine, the neutral fats: 
he clearly proved that it had a powerful action on starch, converting 
it into sugar; and lastly, he laid bans its remarkable action on 
proteid matters." At a later date it was discovered that the 
pancreas, beside its work in digestion, has an " internal secretion ": 
that it. like the thyroid gland and the suprarenal capsules, helps 
to keep the balance of the general chemistry of the whole body. 
Professor Schafer, writing in 1894, savs on this subject: "It 
was di sco vered a few years ago by von Mering and Minkowski that 
if. instead of merely diverting its secretion, the pancreas is bodily 
removed, the metabolic processes of the organism, and especially 
the metabolism of carbo-hydrates, are entirely deranged, the result 
being the production of permanent diabetes. But if even a very 
small part of the gland is left within the body, the carbo-hydrate 
metabolism remains unaltered, and there b no diabetes. The 
small portion of the organ which has been allowed to remain (and 
which need not even be left in its proper place, but may be trans- 
planted under the skin or elsewhere) is sufficient, by the exchanges 
which go on between it and the blood generally, to prevent those 
to the composition of the blood, and the 



general constitution of the body, which result from the complete 
removal of this organ.** This fact, that complete removal of the 
pancreas, in a cat or a dog. may cause fatal diabetes, is of import- 
ance, because the pancreas in some cases of diabetes in man is 
sed: but, at present, experiments on animals have not led to 
t certain^ or specific cure of diabetes in man. 

; by du Hamet 



my certain or specihc cure of diabetes in man 

6. The Growth of Bone.—Tbt e xperim en ts 

1739-1843) on the growth of bone by deposii 



82 



r ,„. „__ __ r _Jt from the periosteum 

thin membrane ensheathing each bone) rose out of Belchier's 

) that the bones take up the stain of madder 

* Du Hamet studied the whole subject very 

*~* tins bone-producing power of the pen- 

**— it fact in all operations 00 the bones. 

of his own memoirs La at croissmt 

osseuses qui tirtut tear origin* 

its Arbrts angmente em erossrmr 

fw st formewt dans Ftcone. By 




0750: 

. Still, he brought 

growth of bones, in length as well as in' 



to study the 



layers alternately * 

d by Bnamn (1746) *nd 

lately. < 

wholes 



e subject of the 



physiology and in surgery. Later. I 
Syrae (1837) *»d Stanley (1840) 1 
of bone, and on the exfoliation ^ 



proof of the truth which Bell had divined rather t 
that the anterior and posterior roots of spinal nerves I 



of the bones, m adult life, by dene 
Bkhat. John Hunter, Troja and Cruveuhier took 1 

from the point of view of surgery . 
. . r .. made experiments on the giuwiti 
exfolia t ion of dead bone; and. after then*. 
Oilier, whose in fl u ence on this part of surgical practice has been of 
the very highest value. 

7. The Senoms System.— A. The Nerve-Roots.— Through all the 
centuries between Galea, who lived in the time of Commodus. and 
Sir Charles Beil. who lived in the time of George III., no great 
advance was made in our knowledge of the nervous system. The 
way of experiment, which had led Oakn far ahead of his age, 

neglected, and everything was o v er w helmed by 1 

London and Magendie in Paris took up the experimental study of 
the nervous system about where Galen had left k. The question 
of priority of discovery does not c o n cern us here: we may take Sir 
Michael Foster's judgment, that Magendie brought exact and full 

# # ... 1 _^.._m. «— m..j -.- • » -j>er than dcnsonstsated. 

sentialtv 

different functions — * a truth which is the very foundation of the 
physiology of the nervous system." The date of Bell's work is 181 1 # 
Am Idea of a Sew A matemy of tke Bratm, tummilted for tke Ohsermaiten 
of the Author's Friends, la k he says: " Considering that the spinal 
nerves have a double root, and being jof opinion that the properties 
of the nerves are derived from their connerirms with the parts of 
the brain. I thought that I had an opportunity of putting my opinion 
to the test of experiment, and of proving at the nunc time that 
nerves of different endowments were in me same cord (the same 
nerve-trunk) and held together by the same sheath, da laying 
bare the roots of the spinal nerves I found that I could cut across 
the posterior fasciculus of nerves, which took its origin from the 
spinal marrow, without convulsing the muscles of the back; but 
that on touching the anterior fasciculus with the point of the knife, 
the muscles of the back were immediately convulsed. Such were 
my reasons for concluding that the cerebrum and c er cheuum were 
parts distinct in function, and that every nerve possessing a double 
function obtained that by having a double root. I now saw the 
of the double connexion of the nerves with the spinal 
, and also the cause of that seeming mtricacy in the con- 
of nerves throughout their course, which were not double 
origins." His other work, on the cranial nerves, which are 
*' not double at then- origins," bore fruit at once m surgery. Sir 
John Erichsen says of it : " Up to the time that Sir Charles Bell 
made his experiments on the nerves of the face, k was the ^"ma 
custom of surgeons to divide the facial nerve for the relief of 
neuralgia, tic dewleureux; whereas h exercises, and was proved 
by Sir Charles Bell to exercise, no influence over sensation, and its 
division consequently for the relief of pain was a useless operation.*' 

B. Reflex Action.— The observations made by Sir Robert Boyle, 
Redi. Le Galkns and others on the reflex movements of decapitated 
vipers, frogs, eels and butterflies were of no great use from the 
point of view of physiology: but they led toward the discovery 
that nerve-power b stored in the spinal cord, and is liberated thence 
in action independent of the higher cerebral centres. Marshall Hall 
(1832- 1837) discovered, by his experiments, that reflex actions are 
the work of definite groups of cells, set at certain points or levels in 
the cord : be proved the segmental structure of the cord, the exist- 
ence of nerve-centres in it. and thus foreshadowed the discovery 
of the like centres in the brain. In his earlier writings (1832-33) 
be extended the principles of the doctrines of reflex action to the 
larynx, the pharynx and the sphincter muscles; later, in 1837. be 
demonstrated the course of iierve-impulses within the cord, from 
one level to another, and the effects of direct stimulation of the cord. 
Also he noted the effects of opium and of strychnine on reflex 
action; and the reflex character of the convulsions that occur in 
certain diseases. 

C. The Medulla Oblongata and the Cerebelluni.— Flourens, who 
was among the earliest students of the me of chloroform, b best 
known for hb experiments on the respiratory centre and the cere- 
bellum. He kxalued the cells in the medulla that govern the reflex 
movement of respiration. Afterward came the disco v ery of cardiac 
and other centres in the neighbourhood of the respiratory centre, 
He showed also that the cerebellum b concerned with the equilibra- 
tion and co-ordination of the muscles; that aa animal, a few days old, 
deprived of sensation and consciousness by removal of the cerebral 
hemispheres, was yet able to stand and to move forward, but when 
the cerebellum also was remo v ed, lost all power of co-ordination 
{Recherche* experimenlales. Paris, 1842). And from the observations 
made by him and by others, it was found that the semicircular canals 
of the internal ears are the terminal organs of the sense of equilibra- 
tion. 

D. The Vaso-Motor Nerves.— Ckiide Bernard, studying the sym- 
pathetic nervous system, discovered the \-aso-motor nerves that 



VIVISECTION 



»59 



exmtrel the cafibre of the arteries. The question of priority between 
kssn and Brown Sequard need not be considered here. His first 
tT r **" wy of his work was communicated to the Sociiti de Biologie in 
December 1851. The following account of it is from his Lemons de 
pkyrtcUgu ofiratoire (1879)0— 

" Let roe remind you how I was led to discover the vasomotor 
nerves. Starting from the clinical observation, made long ago, that 
in paralysed Umbs you find at one time an increase of cold and 
at another an increase of heat, I thought that this contradiction 
might be explained by supposing that, side by side with the general 
action of the nervous system, the sympathetic nerve might have the 
function of presiding over the production of heat; that is to say, that 
is the case where the paralysed limb was chilled, I supposed the 
sympathetic nerve to be paralysed, as well as the motor nerves; 
while in the paralysed limbs that were not chillH +*~.r -,-t — r L -*tic 
serve had retained its function, the systematic nrrtc* alone km ing 
been attacked. This was a theory, that is to «y, an idea, K-jding 
me to make experiments; and for these experiments I must find a 
sympathetic nerve-trunk of sufficient size, giiog to somr organ (hat 
was easy to observe; and must divide the trunk to g« *fba| toMld 
happen to the heat-supply of the organ. You knov ihji the rj Lib it's 
car. and the cervical sympathetic of this mimal. offered us the 
req uir ed conditions. So 1 divided this nerve; and, at upm., ihc 
experiment gave the lie direct to my theory -It istupai dane e< Jtfet 
d anssMt I' experience donna d mon hypothkst ft *i*j it latent <timenti. 
I had thought 'that the section of the ner ,• would suppms the 
function of nutrition, of calorification, over tic 

3 -stem had been supposed to preside, and wuuid cautc the hollow of 
te ear to become chilled; and here was just the opposite, a very 
■arm ear, with great dilatation of its vessels." The experiments of 
Bodge and Waller (185.)) and of Schiff (1856) threw light on the 
action of these vaso-motor nerves, and on the place of the vaso- 
motor centre in the cord; and in 1858 Claude Bernard, by his 
experiments on the chorda tympani and the submaxillary gland, 
demonstrated their twofold influence, either to dilate or to constrict 
the vessels: ** It is almost impossible to exaggerate the importance 
of these labours of Bernard on the vaso-motor nerves, since it is 
almost impossible to exaggerate the influence which our knowledge 
of the vaso-motor system, springing as it does from BernanPs 
researches as from its fount and ongin, has exerted, is exerting, and 
ia widening; measure will continue to exert, on all our physiological 
•ad pathological conceptions, on medical practice, and on the 
conduct of human life. There is hardly a physiological discussion 
of any width in which we do not sooner or later come on vaso-motor 
questman" (Foster, life of Claude Bernard). 

E. Cerebral Localization.— The study of the motor And «nsory 
centres of the cerebral hemispheres began in din km I nh^.rvation. 
Observation of cases, and examination of the hi\iin jIut i1<4th 
(BouflUrd, 1825, Dax, 1836, Broca, 1861), led men 10 believe 1 h.u a 
particular area of the left frontal lobe of the brain did indeed gen ern 
sod permit the use of speech. Physiological experiment lad 
- io with the discovery of the speech cemrc*. " fiouiJUrd 



nothing to do 1 — _. . . 

ia 1825 collected a series of cases to show that the faculty of speech 
resided in the frontal lobes. In 1861 his views *ere bruu^ht by 
Attbertin before the notice of the Anthropological Society of I' ■ ris. 
Broca. who was present at the meeting, had a patient under hi& care 
who had been aphasic for twenty-one years, anu _uv *— ... an 
almost moribund state. The autopsy proved of great interest, as 
it was found that the lesion was confined to the left side of the brain, 
and to what we now call the third frontal convolution. ... In a 
subsequent series of fifteen typical cases examined, it was found that 
the lesson bad destroyed, among other parts, the posterior part of 
the third frontal in fourteen " (Hamilton, Text-Book of Pathology). 
From this clinical fact, that the movements of speech depend on the 
integrity of a special area of the brain's surface, and from the facts 
of " JacKsonian epilepsy," and similar observations in medicine and 
surgery, began the experimental wor 1 of cerebral localization, by 
Hitxig. Gotta, Schiff, Ferrier, Yeo, Horslcy, Beevor and many more. 
It would be hard to find a more striking instance of the familiar 
troth that science and practice work hand: in band. 

Again, the experimental method has thrown a flood of light on 
the minute anatomy of the central nervous system. For example, 
we have what is called Marchi's method; it was described to the 
Royal Commission (1006-8) by Dr Head and Sir Victor Horsley. 
It was found, by Professor Waller, that nerve-fibres, separated from 
the nerve-cells which nourish them, degenerate in a definite way. 
The application of this law expe rim e n t a lly has been of great value. 
'Let roe." says Dr Head, just take a simile. Imagine a wall 
co v ered with creepers arising from several stems. If we wished to 
know from which of these stems any one branch takes its origin, we 
could cut one stem, and every leaf arising from it would die, marking 
out among the healthy foliage the offshoots of the divided stem. 
This is the principle that has been used in tracing the paths in the 
nervous system. Cowers, by applying this method, discovered 
the ascending tracts in the lateral columns of the spinal cord." If a 
ssk rosc o pic section of a spinal cord, containing some fibres thus 
A ^ f^r f f., be treated with osmic acid (Marchi's method), the 
degenerate fibres show dark: and in this way their course may be 
traced at all levels of the cord. 



Indeed, it may truly be said that, alike In anatomy and in physio- 
logy, the whole present knowledge of the brain, the spinal cord and 
the nerves, is in great measure due to the use of experiments on 
animals. And this knowledge is daily applied to the diagnosis and 
treatment of diseases and injuries of the central nervous system. 
" In the case of operations on the brain, you have to form your 
opinion as to what is going on entirely from your knowledge of the 
physiology of the brain, and that we owe. of course, in the greatest 
measure to the discoveries of Hiizigand Friisch and Ferrier. That 
has all happened since 1870; and we are now able to cure epilepsy, 
we are able to cure abscess of the brain, and we are able to cure 
tumours of the brain. Then, in operations on the spinal cord, the 
.same thing prevails. In fact, the first operation on the spinal cord 
I am responsible for, so that I know the history of the subject. The 
technique of that operation 1 owe entirely to experiments on animals. 
As regards operations on the peripheral nerves. Bell's operative 
treatment of neuralgia was guided entirely by his experiments on 
animals. Then we come to the great subject of nerve suture. The 
initial work bearing upon that subject was carried out by Flourcns, 
who was the first, to my knowledge, to make experiments on animals, 
to suture nerves together, to investigate their function " (Sir Victor 
Horsley, evidence before the Royal Commission, vol. iv. p. 124). 

(These notes cover a part only of the results that have been 
obtained in physiology by the help of experiments on animals. 
The work of Boyle, Hunter, Lavoisier, Dcspretz, Rcgnault and 
Haldane, on animal heat and on respiration; of Petit, Dupuy, 
Breschet and Reid, on the sympathetic system; of Calvani, Volta, 
Hatler, du Bois-Reymond and Pfluger, on muscular contraction — 
all these subjects have been left out, and many more. In his evidence 
before the Royal Commission (1875), Mr Darwin said: " I am fully 
convinced that physiology can progress only by the aid of experi- 
ments on living animals. I cannot think of any one step which has 
been made in physiology without that aid. "J 

B. Pathology. Bacteriology and Therapeutics 

I. Inflammation.— Pathology is so intimately associated with 

the work of the microscope that it is a new study, in comparison 

with physiology. In 1850 the microscope was not in general use 

as it is now; nor did men have the lenses, microtomes and stain- 

fy. Bacteriology, 
75 it had hardly 



ing fluids that are essential to modern histology. Bacteriology, 
again, is even younger than pathology. In 1875 it had hardly 
begun to exist. For example, in the evidence before the Royal 



Commission (187$) one of the witnesses said that they "believed 
they were beginning to get an idea of the nature of tubercle." 
Anthrax was the first disease studied by the methods of bacteriology; 
and in his evidence concerning this disease, Sir John Simon speaks 
of bacteriology as of a discovery wholly new and unexplored. Then, 
ia 1881. came Koch's discovery of the bacillus of tubercle. But a 
great advance was made, in days before 187s, by the more general 
use of the microscope. Every change in the tissues during inflam- 
mation — the slowing of the blood stream in the capillary vessels, 
the escape of the leucocytes through their walls into the surround- 
ing tissues, the stagnation of the blood in the affected part— all 
these were observed in such transparent structures as the web or the 
mesentery of the frog, the bat's wing, or the tadpole's tail, irritated 
by a drop of acid, or a crystal of salt, or a scratch with a needle. It 
was in the course of observations of this kind that Wharton Jones 
observed the rhythmical contraction of veins, and Waller and 
Cohnheim observed the escape of the leucocytes, diapedesis, through 
the walls of the capillaries. From these simple experiments under 
the microscope arose all our present knowledge of the minute pro- 
cesses of inflammation. Later came the work of Metschnikoff and 
others, showing the importance of diapedtiu ia relation to the 
presence of bacteria in the tissues. 

a. Suppuration and Wound-Infection.-— Yrnc\Ka\\y every case of sup- 
puration, wound-infection or " blood-poisoning," all abscesses, bous, 
carbuncles, and all cases of puerperal fever, septicaemia, or pys*nua» 
are due to infection, either from without or from within the body, by 
various forms of micro-organisms. The same is true of every case 
of erysipelas, or cellulitis, or acute gangrene— in short, of the whole 
multitude of " septic ' diseases. The work done on these micro- 
cocci, and on other pathogenic micro-organisms, involved the study 
of the phases, antagonisms and preferences of each kind, their range 
of variation and of virulence, their products, and the influences on 
them of air, light, heat and chemical agents. The beginning of 
Lister's work was in Pasteur's study of the souring of milk, about 
1856. Pasteur's discovery, that lactic fermentation was due to 
a special microorganism, opened the way for modern surgery. 
Lister had been long studying the chemical changes in decomposing 
blood and other animal fluids; now he brought these studies into 
line with Pasteur's work. Thus, in 1867, in his first published 
writing on the antiseptic treatment of compound fractures, he speaks 
as follows: " We find that a flood of light has been thrown upon 
this most important subject by the philosophic writing of M. Pas- 
teur, who has demonstrated, by thoroughly convincing evidence, 
that it is not to its oxygen, or to any of its gaseous constituents, 
that the air owes this property (of producing decomposition), but to 
minute partides suspended in it, which are the germs of various 
low forms of life long since revealed by the microscope, and regarded 



VIVISECTION 



1 60 

aa merely accidental concomitant* of putrescence; bat 
by Pasteur to be its essential cause." The present antiseptic 
method includes the aseptic method. That is to say, the instru- 
ments and other accessories of an operation are ' sterilized by 
heat; and, where heat cannot be applied, as to the patients skin 
and the surgeon's hands, antiseptics are used. Modern surgery is 
both antiseptic and aseptic. 

3. Antkrax. — Tht bacillus of anthrax (charbon, malignant 
pustule, wool-sorter's disease) was the first specific micro-organism 
discovered. Raver and Davaine (1850) observed the petits batonnets 
in the blood of sheep dead of the disease; and in 1863, when 
Pasteur's observations on lactic-acid fermentation were published, 
Davaine recognized that the bdtonnets were not blood crystals, 
but living organisms. Koch afterward succeeded in cultivating 
the bacillus, and in reproducing the disease in animals by inocula- 
tion from these cultures. Pasteur's discovery of preventive in- 
oculation of animals against the disease was communicated to the 
Acaddmie des Sciences in February 1881; and in May of that year 
he gave his public demonstration at Pouilly-Ie-Fort. Two months 
later, at the International Medical Congress in London, he spoke as 
follows of this discovery: "... La mtthode que je viens de vous 
exposer pour obtcnir des vaccina du charbon etait a peine connuc 
quelle passait dans la grande pratique pour prevenir Inflection 
charbonneuse. La France perd chaque annee pour une valeur de 
plus de vingt millions d'animaux Irappes du charbon, plus de 
30 millions, m'a dit une des personnel autorisees de notre Minister* 
de 1 Agriculture; mais des statistiques exactcs font encore defaut. 
On me demanda de mettre a l'6preuve les resultats qui precedent 
par une grande experience publique, a Pouilly-le-Fort, pre* de 
Melun. . . . Je la resume en quclques mots; 50 rooutons furcnt 
mis a ma disposition, nous en vaccinames 25, les 25 autrcs ne sub- 
irent aucun traitement. puinze jours aprea environ, les 50 moutons 
furent inocules par le microbe charbonneux le plus virulent. Les 
25 vaccines resisterent; les 25 non-vaccines moururent. tous char- 
bonneux, en ctnquantc heures. Depuis lors, dans mon laboratotre. 
on ne peut plus suffire a preparer assez de vaccin pour les demandes 
des fermiers. En quinze jours, nous avons vaccine dans les departe- 
ments voisins de Paris pres dc 20,000 moutons et un grand nombre de 
boeufs, de vaches et de chevaux." The extent of this preventive 
vaccination may be judged from the fact that a single institute, the 
Sero-Therapeutic Institute of Milan, in a single year (1697-98) sent 
out 165,000 tubes of anti-charbon vaccine, .enough to inoculate 
33.734 cattle and 98,792 sheep. In France, during the years 
1882-93, more than three million sheep and nearly half a million 
cattle were inoculated. In the Annates de Vlnstilut Pasteur, March 
1894, M. Chamberland published the results of these twelve years in 
a paper entitled " Resultats pratiques des vaccinations centre le 
charbon et le rouget en France." The mortality from charbon. 
before vaccination, was 10% among sheep and 5% among 
cattle, according to estimates made by veterinary surgeons all over 
the country. With vaccination, the whole loss of sheep was about 
1%; the average for the twelve years was 0*94. The loss of 
vaccinated cattle was still less; for the twelve years it was 0-34, 
or about one-third %. The annual reports sent to M. Chamber- 
land by the veterinary surgeons represent not more than half of 
the work. " A certain number of veterinary surgeons neglect to 
send their reports at the end of the year. The number of reports 
that come to us even tends to become less each year. The fact is, 
that many veterinary surgeons who per f or m vaccinations every year 
content themselves with writing, *Tne results are always very good: 
it is useless to send you reports that are always the same.' We 
have every reason to believe, as a matter of fact, that those who send 
no reports are satisfied ; for if anything goes wrong with the herds, 
they do not fail to let us know it at once by special letters." 

The following tables, from M. Chamberland's paper, give the 
results of Pasteur's treatment against charbon during 1882-93, 
and against rouget (swine-measles) during 1886-92. It is to be 
noted that the mortality from rouget among swine, in years before 
vaccination, was much higher than that from charbon among sheep 
and cattle: " It was about 20%; a certain number of reports 
speak of losses of 60 and even 80%; so that almost an the 
veterinary surgeons are loud in their praises of the new vaccination." 

It would be too much to say that every country, in every year, 
has obtained results with this anthrax-vaccine equal to those which 
have been obtained in France. Nor would it be reasonable to 
advocate the compulsory or wholesale use of the vaccine in the 
British Islands, where anthrax is rare. For the general value of the 
vaccine, however, we have this striking fact, that the use of it has 
steadily increased year by year. A note from the Pasteur Institute, 
dated November 20, 1909, says.: " Depuis 1882 jusqu'au i w Janvier 
1009. Ml a 6t€ expedit, pour la prance. 8.400,000 doses de vaccin 
antt-charbonneux pour moutons, 1.300,000 pour boeufs. Pour 
i'ctranger, 8,500,000 doses pour moutons, 6,200,000 pour boeufs. 
Le nombre de doses augmente d'annee en annee, de sorte que pour 
I'annee 1908 seule fl faut compter en tout t. 500,000 doses 
moutons ( France et Stranger) 1,100.000 pour bcVufs." (Two 
are used for each animal.) It remains to be added that a serum- 
treatment, introduced by Sclavo. has been found of considerable 
value in cases of anthrax (malignant pustule) occurring in man. 



Vaccination against Cramon (Psancs) 



Sheep. 



Years. 



1882 
1883 
1884 
1885 
1886 
1887 
1888 
1889 
1890 
1891 
1892 
1893 



Total: 



270.040 

268,505 

316.553 

342.0 

313.* 

293.572 

269.574 

239.974 

223,61 1 

218,629 

259.696 

281.333 



3,296,815 



£' 8 



243.199 

193.119 

231.693 

280,107 

202,064 

187,811 

101,834 

88,483 

09.865 

53.640 

63.125 

73.939 



Mortality. 



I. 

is 

< 



9901,788,879 



5668 



4406 



1* 



'3J 

1033 
990 
514 
968 
300 
501 
244 

,11 

224 



6798 



16,872 0-94 



a 



Cattle. 



1882 
1883 
1884 
1885 
1886 
1887 
1888 
1889 
1890 
1891 
1892 
1893 



Total: 



35.654 
26,453 
33.000 
34.000 
39.154 
48.484 
34.464 
32,251 
33.965 
40.736 
4».6o9 
38.154 



438.824 



1255 



22,916 
20,501 

42,616 

21.073 
22,113 
28,083 
10,920 
11,610 

11.057 
10,476 
9.757 
9.840 



200,962 



»77 



12 

I 

? 

.1 

4 
7 

4 
4 
3 

1 



82 



432 



82 

S 4 
•5 
107 

64 

109 

47 
52 
23 

18 



691 



o-35 
0*31 
o-37 
0-50 
0*29 
039 
043 
0-45 
0-21 
0*13 
0*26 
0*18 



0-34 



50/ 



Vaccination against Rouget (France) 



Yean. 


V 


i 

•0 

X 

s 

a 
Z 


ii 
fe 

•3f§ 

'if 


Mortality. 


I 


i 
J 

5 


h 
1 

r 


Eg 

3 


< 


*4 

9 O 

Q 


1886 
1887 

1888 
1889 
1890 
1891 
1892 


For these 

two years 

France 

and other 

countries 

are put 

together. 

15.958 

19.338 

17.6S8 

20.583 

37.900 


-49 
49 

3« 

41 
41 

2 


7.087 
7.467 

6.968 
11.257 
M.992 
17.556 
10,128 


91 

57 

31 
92 
118 
102 
43 


24 
lO 

25 
12 
64 
34 
19 


56 
23 

38 
40 
72 

*? 
46 


171 
90 

94 
«44 

206 
108 


241 

1*21 

1-35 

I '28 

1 70 
117 
107 


20% 


Total: 


HM37 


296 


75455 


534 


188 


345 


1067 


1*45 


« 



4. Tubercle.— Laennec, who in 1816 invented the stethoscope, 
recognized the fact that tubercle is a specific disease, not a simple 
degeneration of the affected tissues. VUIemin. in 1865. communi- 
cated to the Academic des Sciences the fact that he had produced 
the disease in rabbits by inoculating them with tuberculous matter; 
and he appealed to these inoculations — en voici les preuvu — to 
show that La tuberculose est une affectum spicifique: Sa cause riside 
dans un agent inoculahle: L'inocufation se fail trks-bien de fhomme 
au lapin: La tuberculose apparticnt done a la ciasse des maladies 
virulentes. In 1868 Chauveau produced the disease not by inocula- 
tion but by admixture of tuberculous matter with the animal*' 
food. In 1880, after a period of some uncertainty and confusion 



VIVISECTION 



161 



of doctrines* Cofanheim reaffirmed the infeetivity of the disease, 
and even made the proof of tubercle depend oo inoculation alone: 
- everything is tuberculous that can produce tuberculous disease by 
inoculation in animals that are susceptible to the disease; and 
nothing is tuberculous that cannot do this." In 1881 Koch dis- 
covered the tubercle bacillus, and, in spite of the tragic failure of his 
tuberculin in 1890-01, a vast amount of practical advantage has 
already issued out of Koch's discovery, both by way of cure and by 
ny of prevention. It has been proved, by experiment on animals, 
that the sputa of phthisical patients are infective; and this and the 
Eke facts have profoundly influenced the nursing and general care 
of such cases. Bacteriology has brought about (under the safe* 
fuard of modern methods of surgery) a thorough and early surgical 
treatment of ail primary tuberculous sores or deposits— -the excision 
of tuberculous ulcers, the removal of tuberculous glands and the 
Ifice. It has helped us to make an early diagnosis, in obscure cases, 
bv finding: tubercle bacilli in the sputa, or in the discharges, or in a 
(trade of the tissues. It has proved, past all reasonable doubt, 
that lobes mesenteric*, a disease that lulls every year in England 
alooe many thousands of children, may arise from infection 01 the 
bowels by the milk of tuberculous cows. And it has helped to 
bring about the present rigorous control of the milk trade and the 
meat trade. 

The " new tuberculin," now that the use of the opsonic index 
has guided physicians to a better understanding of the tuberculin 
treatment, has been found of great value, and is giving excellent 
looks in suitable cases. Moreover, tuberculin is used, because of 
the reaction that it causes in tuberculous animals, as a test for the 
detection of latent tuberculosis in cattle. An injection of one to 
t«o cubic centimetres under the skin of the neck is followed by a 
high temperature if the animal be tuberculous. If it be not, there 
n so rise of temperature, or only a very slight rise. For example, 
ia 1899 this test was applied to 370 cows on farms in Lancashire: 
ite reacted to the test, 85 did not, 5 were " doubtful." Tuberculous 
disease was actually found ia 175 out of the 180. Eber of Dresden 
used the test on 174 animals, of whom 136 reacted, 32 did not react 
and 6 were doubtful. Of the 136, 2* were slaughtered, and were all 
found to have tubercle; of the 3a, 3 were slaughtered, and were 
found free. The opinion of Professor M'Fadyean, one of the highest 
authorities on the subject, is as follows: I have most implicit 
lakh in tuberculin as a test for tuberculosis when it is used on animals 
standing in their own premises and undisturbed.. It is not reliable 
when used on animals in a market or slaughter-house. A con- 
siderable number of errors at first were found when I examined 
animals in slaughter-houses after they had been conveyed there by 
rail. &c- Since that, using it on animals in their own premises, 1 
it it is praci 



have found that it is practically infallible. I have notes of one 
particular case where 25 animals in one dairy were tested, and after- 
wards all were killed. There was only one animal which did not 
react, and it was the only animal not found to be tuberculous when 
kuled.'' This test has now been in regular use for many years 
is many countries, and it is accepted everywhere as of national 



5. 0s**lferta.--The Bacillus diphtherias (Ktebs-Lorner bacfllus) 
was tfr^" 4 ***** by Klebs in 187s, and obtained in pure culture by 
LofSer in 1884. Behring and Kitaaato, in 1890, succeeded in 
nsBunizins; animals against the disease. The first cases treated 
with diphtheria antitoxin were published in 1893 by Behring, 
Kmsrl and Hubner. In England the antitoxin treatment was 
began in the latter part of 1894. Besides its curative use, the 
^jt/v^n has also been used as a preventive, to stop an outbreak 
of diphtheria, ia a school or institute or hospital or village, and 
with admirable success. (See Diphthema.) 

6. Tetanus (lock-jaw).- 



ss the true nature of this disease, and have led to the discovery 
of an antitoxin which has given fairly good results. We po s se s s, 
preventive treatment against the disease; though, 
the time of latency, when the antitoxin is most 

, x be recognised. The old, mischievous doctrine 

that tetanus wan due to acute inflammation of a nerve, tracking 
an from a wound to the central nervous system, was abolished 
•see and for ever by Sternberg (1880), Carle and Rattone (1884) 
and Nkx4aier (1884), who proved that the disease is due to infection 
by a spedhc flageuate organism in superficial soiL M It is said to 
be present in almost ail nch garden soils, and that the presence of 
sorse-dung favours its occurrence. There seems to be no doubt 
as to the ubiquity of the tetanus germ " (Ppore, Milroy Lectures, 
1009). The work of discovering and isolating the bacillus was full 
of difficulty. NicoUier, starting from the familiar fact that the 
disease mostly conies from wounds or scratches contaminated with 
earth, studied the various microbes of the soil, and inoculated 
rabbits with garden mould. He produced the disease, and sue- 
the bacillus, but failed to obtain a 

,_ , w% obtained a pure culture. Others 

studied the chemical products of the bacillus, and were able to 
produce the symptoms of the disease by injection of these chemical 
products obtained from cultures, or from the tissues in cases of 
It has been proved that the infection tends to remain 
it the bacilli in and near the wound pour thence into the 



tudaed tne various microoes 01 
with garden mould. He produ 
n finding and cultivating the bac 
Iture, Kitasato, in 1899, obtain 



blood their chemical products, and that these haven selective action, 
like strychnine, on the cells of the central nervous system. There- 
fore the rule that the wounded tissues should be at once excised, 
in all cases where this can possibly be done, has received confirma- 
tion. Before Nicolaier, while men were still free to believe that 
tetanus was the result of an acute ascending neuritis, this rule was 
neither enforced nor explained. 

As a preventive against tetanus, in man or hi animals, the 
antitoxin has proved of the very utmost value. This has been 
shown in a striking way in America. " One of the wounds most 
commonly followed by lock-jaw is the blank-cartridge wound of the 
band common on the glorious Fourth of July. The death-rate from 
these wounds is appalling. An active campaign has been conducted 
throughout the medical profession to reduce this mortality. All 
over the country, surgeons and medical journals have advised the 
injection of tetanus antitoxin in every case of blank-cartridge wound. 
The American Medical Association has compiled statistics of Fourth 
of July fatalities for the past six years. In 1903, the Fourth of July 
tetanus cases numbered 416. Then physicians began a more general 
use of antitoxin in all cases of blank-cartridge and common cracker 
wounds. Asa result of this campaign of prophylaxis by antitoxin 
injections, from 416 cases of tetanus in 1903 the number dropped 
to 105 cases in 1904, 104 cases in 1905, 89 cases in 1906, 73 cases in 
1907 and 55 cases in 1908. This reduction in the number of tetanus 
cases took place while the number of accidents remained practically 
the same each year, and while the number of deaths from causes 
other than tetanus was steadily rising from 60 in 1903 to 108 in 1908. 
It is thus evident that the saving of at least 300 lives from tetanus 
has been accomplished each year through the prophylactic use of 
antitoxin in the cases of Fourth of July -wounds alone " (James P. 
Warbasse, M.D., The Conquest of Disease through A nim a l Experi- 
mentation, Appteton & Co., 1910). 

The preventive use of the serum in veterinary practice has 
yielded admirable results. In some parts of the world tetanus is 
terribly common among horses. Nocard of Lille -has reported as 
follows: " The use of anti-tetanus serum as a preventive has been 
in force for some years in veterinary practice in cases of wounds or 
surgkxl procedures. To this end the Pasteur Institute has supplied 
7000 doses of anti-tetanus serum, a dose being 10 cubic centimetres; 
a quantity which has sufficed to treat preventively 3100 horses ia 
those parts of the country where tetanus is endemic. Among these 
there has been no death from tetanus. In the case of one horse, 
injected five days after receiving a wound, tetanus developed, but 
the attack was slight. During the same time that these animals were 
injected, the same veterinary surgeon observed, among animals not 
treated by injection, 359 cases of tetanus " (Lancet, August 7, 1897). 

7. Raines (hydrophobia).— The date of the first case treated by 
Pasteur's preve n t i ve method— Joseph Meister, an Alsatian shepherd- 
boy— is July 1883. The existence of a specific micro-organism of 
rabies was a matter of inference. The incubation period of the 
disease is so variable that no preventive treatment was possible 
unless this incubation period could be regulated. Inoculations of 
the saliva of a rabid animal, introduced under the skin of animals, 
sometimes failed; and if they succeeded, the incubation period of 
the disease thus induced was hop el essly variable. Next, Pasteur 
used not saliva, but an emnhdon of the brain or the spinal cord; 



because the central nervous system is the chief seat of the poison, 
loced under " 
gave no fixed incubation period. Tneref ore, be argued, 
as the poison has a selective action on the nerve cells of the central 



But this 
in action, and 



ts proper environ- 
1 skin, but under 



. introduced under the skin, was also uncertain 
no fixed incubation period. Therefore, he argued, 

r i selective action on the nerve cells of the central 

nervous system, and a sort of natural affinity with them, it must be 
introduced directly into them, where it will have its j 
meet; the emulsion must be put not under the 1 
the dura mater (the membrane enveloping the brain). These sub- 
dural inoculations were the turning-point of his work. By trans- 
mitting the poison through a series of rabbits, by subdural inoculation 
of each rabbit with a minute quantity of nerve tissue from the 
rabbit that had died before it. be was able to intensify the poison, 
to shorten to period of incubation, and to fix this period at six days. 
Thus he obtained a poison of exact strength, a definite standard of 
virulence, tins fixe: the next rabbit inoculated would have the 
disease in six days, neither more nor less. By gradual drying, after 
death, of the cords of rabid animals, be was able to attenuate the 
poison contained in them. The spinal cord of a rabbit that has 
died of rabies slowly loses virulence by simple drying. A cord 
dried for four days is less virulent than a cord dried for three, and 
more virulent than a cord dried for five. A cord dried for a fortnight 
has lost all virulence: even a large dose of it will not produce the 
disease. By this method of drying. Pasteur was able to keep going 
one or more series of cords, of known and exactly graduated strengths, 
according to the length of time they had been dried, ranging from 
absolute non-virulence through every shade of virulence. 

As with fowl cholera and anthrax, so with rabies: the poison, 
attenuated till It is innocuous, can yet confer immunity against a 
stronger dose of the same poison. A man. bitten by a rabid animal, 
has at least some weeks of respite before the disease can break out; 
and during that time of respite he can be immunised against the 
disease, while it is still dormant. He begins with a dose of poison 
attenuated past all power of doing harm, and advances day by day 



i6a 



VIVISECTION 



to more active dome, guarded each day by the dose of the day 
before, till he has manufactured within himself enough antitoxin 
to make him proof against any outbreak of the disease. (See 
Hydkophobia.) 

8. Caebra.— The specific organism of Asiatic cholera, the 
" comma-bacillus,*' was discovered by Koch in 1883; but such a 
multitude of difficulties arose over it that it was not universally 
recognised as the real cause of the disease before 1892, the year of 
the epidemic at Hamburg. The discovery of preventive inoculation 
was the work of many men, but especially of Haffkine, one of 
Pasteur's pupils. Ferran's earlier inoculations in Spain (1885) 
were a failure. Haffkine's first inoculations were made in 1893. 
At Agra, in April 1893, he vaccinated over 000 persons; and from 
Agra went to many other cities of India. Altogether, in twenty- 
eight months (April 1893-July 1895) no less than 42,179 persons 
were vaccinated (many of them twice) in towns, cantonments, gaols, 
tea estates, villages, schools, &c, " without having to record a single 
instance of mishap or accident of any land produced by our vaccines." 
(See Cholera.) - 

o. Bubonic Plat**.— The Bacillus testis was d isco vered in 1894 
by Kitasato and Yersin, working independently. The preventive 
treatment was worked out by Haffkine in 1896: M Twenty healthy 
rabbits were put in cages. Ten of them were inoculated with 
Haffkine's plague vaccine. Then both the vaccinated rabbits and 
the other ten rabbits that had not been vaccinated were infected 
with plague. The unprotected rabbits all died of the disease, and 
in their bodies innumerable quantities of the microbes were found. 
But the vaccinated rabbits remained in good health. Professor 
Haffkine then vaccinated himself and his friends. This produced 
some fever, from which, after a day or two. they recovered. Plague 
broke out in Byculla Gaol, in Bombay, in January 1897. About 
half the prisoners volunteered to be inoculated. Of these, 3 
developed plague on the day of inoculation, and it is probable 
that they had already plague before the treatment was carried out. 
Of the remaining 148 who were inoculated, only a were afterwards 
attacked with plague, and both of them recovered. At the same 
time, of the 173 who bad not been vaccinated, ta were attacked, 
and out of these 6 died." (See Plague.) 

10. Typhoid Ftwtr.— The Bacillus typhosus was discovered by 
Klebs, Eberth and Koch in 1880-81. The first protective inocula- 
tions in England were made at Netkv Hospital in i9o6 by Sir 
Almroth Wright and Surgeon-Major Semple: 16 medical men 
and a others offered themselves as subjects. The first use of 
the vaccine during an actual outbreak of typhoid was in October 
1897 at the Kent County Asylum: " All the medical staff and a 
number of attendants accepted the offer. Not one of those vaccin- 
ated— 84 in aunaber— contracted typhoid fever; while of those 
unvaccinated, and living under similar conditions, 16 were attacked. 
This is a significant fact, though it should in fairness be stated that 
the water was boiled after a certain date, and other precautions 
were taken, so that the vaccination cannot be said to be altogether 
re s po ns ible for the immunity. Still, the figures are striking" 
(Low*. March 1898). In 1899 Wright vaccinated against typhoid 
more than 3000 of the Indian army, at Bangalore, Rawal Pindi and 
Lucknow. Government has now sa n c ti oned voluntary inoculation 
again* typhoid, at the public expen se, among the British troops. 
" All regiments leaving for the tropics are offered this inoculation, 
and eaon year a larger percentage of the soldiers are accepting it. 
Here are some of the statistics; In August and Se pt ember 1905. 
150 men of a single regiment were inocukted: of these, as refused 
to accept a second morulstioo- The regiment reached India, 
September ae. A month later, typhoid lever broke out; and 
during the following few months 63 cases were obau mm! in the 
regiment. With but two exceptions, the disease attacked only the 
men who had not been inoculated, and both of these exceptions 
were ssen who had refused a second inoculation. Careful experi- 
ments were made with the second battalion of Royal FosSers in 
India in 1905 and 1906, The average e uuiglh of this regiment was 
948 men. During the two years^ 284 were inoculated with Wright's 
anti-typhoid vaccine. The nguauK had a total of 46 cases of 
typhoid. Thirty-five of these were men who had not been 
Inoculated; 9 had been inoculated. Five of the untnoculated died: 
none of the inoculated died. Another Indian regiment, the 17th 
Laacers. in 190s. 1906 and 1907 inoculated about one-third of its 
men. During the three years * had aoj cases of typhoid fever. 
There were 44 deaths, with not a single death of an inoculated man. 
During the first half of 1908, in the largest seven Indian stations 
where careful records were kept, out of a total of 10.420 soldiers, 
aaoy volunteered for iaocamtion. Typhoid developed in 1% 
of the uninocuntted, and in kas than t • of the inoculated men. 
Forty-five deaths occurred. Five per cent of these deaths were 

ong the uninonttated and 1 X was among the inoculated 

. In the United States army, a medical board has str 

* 1 anti-typhoid uerrinaikias. and vaccination is now 

tee who desire k. Already aooo soldiers have voktn- 

inoculuiun The German army has adopted 

1 of pronaysjsis. and is pmuung it rigorously ** 



strongly 



" Wtdal's reaction " for the early diagnosis of the disease— a matter 
of the very highest practical importance. A drop of blood, from 
the finger of a patient suspected to be suffering from typhoid fever, 
is diluted fifty or more times, that the perfect delicacy of the test 
may be ensured ; a drop of this dilution is mixed with a nutrient 
fluid containing living bacilli of typhoid, and a drop of this mixture 
is observed under the microscope. The motility of the bacilli is 
instantaneously or very quickly arrested, and in a few minutes the 
bacilli begin to aggregate together into dumps. This " clumping ** 
is also made visible to the naked eve by the subsidence of the 
agglutinated bacilli to the bottom of the containing vessel. Trie 
amazing delicacy of *' Widal's test " is but a part of the wonder. 
Long after recovery, a fiftieth part of a drop 01 the blood will still 
cause clumping: it has even been obtained from an infant whose 
mother had typhoid shortly before the child was born. A drop of 
blood from a case suspected to be typhoid can now be sent by post 
to be tested a hundred miles away, and the answer telegraphed 
back. 

11. Malta Fooer (Mediterranean fever).— The Micrococcus Meli- 
kmsis was discovered in 1887 by Sir David Bruce. The work of dis- 
covering and preparing an immunising scrum was done at'Nettey 
Hospital. In this fever, as in typhoid and some others, Widal's 
test is of great value: " The diagnosis of Malta fever from typhoid 
is, of course, a highly important practical matter. It is exceedingly 
difficult in the early stages" (Manson). Even in a dilution of 1 in 
1000, the blood of Malta fever can give the typical reaction with the 
Micrococcus MdUensisi and this occurred in a case at Netlcy of acci- 
dental inoculation with Malta fever: one of three cases that have 
happened there. The case is reported in the British Medical 
Journal* October 16, 1897: "It appears that he had scratched hie 
hand with a hypodermic needle on September 17, when immunizing 
a horse for the preparation of serum-protective against Malta fever ; 
and his blood, when examined, had a typical reaction with the 
mkrococcus of Malta fever in 1000-fold dilution. The horse, which 
has been immunized for Malta fever for the last eight months, was 
immediately bled, and we are informed that the patient has now 
had two injections, each of 30 cub. cm. of the serum. He is doing 
well, and it is hoped that the attack has been cut short." About 
50 cases of the fever, by April 1899. had been treated at Netley. 
The Lsuccf, April 15, 1899, says that the treatment was "with 
marked benefit: whereas they found that all drug treatment failed, 
the antitoxin treatment had been generally successful.'' Happily, 
it has now been proved that the usual source of infection with Malta 
fever is the drinking of the milk of infected goats: thus, by the 
avoidance, or by the careful and thoro ugh boiling of the milk, the 
fever may be preve n ted: and preve ntio n is better than cure. In 
1904 a cranmh ajon was sent out to Malta by the Royal Society, at 
the request of our government, to discover how the fever is conveyed 
to man. They found that it is not conveyed by air, or by drinking- 
water, or by pollution of sewage, or by contact; nor are its genua 
carried, like those of malaria, yellow fever and sleeping sickness, 
by insects. They found that it might be conveyed in food. There- 
fore Bruce examined the milch-goats, since goats' milk is universally 
drunk in Malta, The goats looked heahhy enough, but it was found 
that the blood of 50% of them gave the Widal reaction, and that 
some 10% of them were actively poisonous: monkeys fed on milk 
from one of them, even for one day, almost uvuriabfy got the 
disease. On the 1st of Jury 1906, an official order was issued 
forb id d ing the supply of goats' milk to our garrison. The year 
before, there had been 643 cases among our aokfiers alone. In 1906, 
up to the 1st of July, there were 123 cases. During the rest of the 
vear. iactading the three worst months for the fever, there were 40 
la 1907 there were it cases: in 1908 there were 5 cases; 

innothere was 1 case; in 1910, by latest accounts, none. 

la. Epidi m ic Jf«sjnsgv£s.--The history of the serum tr ea tm e nt 



ThnTorm of meningitis is one ot the worst ways hi which a man can 
die! Or RobbVwho had charge of the Belfast fever hospitals 
during an epidemic in Belfast, calls it " the moat terrible in its 
nmnifestationa, and the saost dham i an in its death-rate, of all the 
eptdenuc diseases met with tn English -speaking countries. ** Very 
a which rt spread 



little is known as to the way i 



t spreads, and the public 



health authorities cannot prevent its sudden appearance in a town. 
" Many of those attacked, 1 * says Dr Robb, " died within a few 
hours of the onset, and that after terrible suffering; whOe many 
of those who survived the acute attack lingered on for weeks and 
months, going steaduV downhill in spite off every effort to save 
them. Again, many of those who did survive were left permanently 
maime d.'^ T hat is the usu al pictu re of the disease when k is left 
to the older methods of treatment. 

By sneansof inoculation experiments, Dr Fsexner and Dr Joblisg. 
of the Rockefeller Institute, proved that the disease is due to a 
particular kind of germ, dipkxoccvs intracellularis. They obtained 
these germs from the bodies of patients who bad dxd.of the disease; 
they cuhivated the germs all by themselves, in test tubes, apart 
from all other kinds of germ»: and they were able to reproduce 
the duvase in monkeys by ir.iecting coder the skin a minute 
quantity of this pure culture ot the germs. It 1 



VIVISECTION 



the* the disease la uwnheys k test violent and less paiuf ul then it is 
m man. By the help of these experiments, Flexner aad Jobting 
«« able to prepare a scrum for the treatment of the disease, in 
the same way at the serum is prepared which has been such a 
Messing to toe world in cases of diphtheria. This serum for the 
treatment of epidemic meningitis was first used in the spring of 

The contrast between cases without serum treatment and cases 
with serum treatment is very plain. We may first give the records 
before the use of the serum. Of 4000 eases in New York in 1904, 
75% died; Baker reports from Greater New York 21 13 cases with 
1636 deaths* giving 77*4% mortality; Chalmers reports from 
x - 1. *». j — u_ _.....__ *•-%„, 

eatr 
Mc 
. ... . UjW] 

Tumour reports from the Transvaal 200 



Glasgow (1907) 998 cases with 683 deaths, giving 68*4% mortality; 
Bailie reports in Belfast (1907) 623 cases with 493 deaths, giving 
79-1% mortality; Ker reports that in the Edinburgh er J — ! ~ * fc — 
tu 78% mortality; Robertson reports from Leith (1 



with" 74-4% mortality 
rith 



i 74% mortality. Amongst patients treated in hospitals 

the death-rate was no better. Of 202 cases in Ruchlll Hospital, 
Glasgow, 79-a% died; of 108 cases in Edinburgh Fever Hospital, 
80-5% died; of 275 cases in Belfast Fever Hospital, 73*3% died; 
aad Dunn reports that in the Boston Children's Hospital, during the 
esjht years 1 899-1907, the mortality varied from 69% to 80% 
Contrast with these the results in cases treated with Flexner's and 
Jobfing's Serum. — 



Gty Hospital. Cincinnati. 

Dr Dorse, Boston . 

Johns Hopkins Hospital, Baltimore 

Rhode Issand Hospital . 

Lakeside Hospital, Cleveland . 

" " " h Fever Hospital 

. n»i Hospital (Children) 

Mswcxpel Hospital, Philadelphia 
~ ~" Fever Hospital 






45 
40 

S3 

17 
39 

33 

■S 

21 
98 



Died. 



13 



Mortality 
percent. 



311 

22-5 

18-1 
33*3 
37-7 
43*3 
13-3 
43-7 
296 



These figures speak for themselves. Similar results have been 
obtained with similar treatment in France and Germany. " From 
these figures,** says Dr Robb, " it will be seen that the death-rate in 
esses not treated with serum averaged some 75%. This has been 
reduced in cases treated with the serum to less than half, and in 
aany instances much below that figure." " My own experience 
las been that of 275 cases under my care in hospital, before the use 



of the 1 



commenced, 72*3% died: while of the 98 cases 
treated with serum 39*6% died. No selection of esses was made: 
every cane sent into hospital since September 1907 has been treated 
a this way. No change in the seventy of the attack was observed : 
b the three months immediately before the scrum arrived with 
a 45 cases came under treatment, of whom 37, or 82%, died; and 
a the first four months after we began its use in hospital 30 cases 
%ere treated, of whom 8 died, a mortality of 26*6%; while of the 
j4 cases occurring in the citjr in a the same period, but not sent 
r.to 

Great - 

kg than the impr o v em ent in the course run by the cases; for 
whereas it was common to have cases running on into weeks 
ia i even months, such cases are no longer met with " (R. D. & 
pamphlet. 1909). 

13. IfaJflrio-— Laveran, In 1880, discovered the Plasmodium 
—faiiai, an amoeboid orga ni sm, in the blood of malarial patients. 
in 1894 Maneoo took, as a working theory of malaria, the old belief 
that the nwjsauito is the intermediate host of the parasite In 1895 
t MacCuDum's observations on an allied organism, HalUridium. 

S&^_ ^tm.^~ * — - ii^Hm* «M%^tV Dam r#%k«nj4 Vkiwl^ m%l*mmwmw**^A l!t»M 



cases occurring in the aty in tne same period, but not sent 
> hospital, and not treated with the serum, over 80% died. 
et as this change in the death-rate has been, it is not more strik- 



In 1897, after two years' work, Ross found bodies^ pigmented like 
U February 1898 he started work in Calcutta: " Arriving there 



„ in the outer coat of the stomach of the grey or 

ringed " mosquito, after it had been fed on nuuarialblood. 



at a son-fever season, he took up the study of what may be called 
' led malaria-' In birds, two parasites have become well known — 
'1; the HalUriiimm, (2) the ProUosoma of Labbe, Both have 
•We*ete forms, and both are closely allied to the Plasmodium 
rw ii iQi Using grey mosquitoes and proteosoma-infected birds, 
iUios showed by a urge number of observations that it was only 
from blood containing the protcosoma that pigmented cells in the 
> could be got; therefore that tnis cell is derived from 
.__ oa, and is an evolutionary stage of that parasite** 

. 1698). These pigmen t ed cells give issue to innumerable 

s of spindle-shaped bodies, " germinal rods "; and in infected 

ooitoea Ross found these rods in the glands of the proboscis. 
Fnahy, he completed the circle of development, by infecting healthy 
su s nv we by causing mosquitoes to bite them. It would be hard to 
suihsss Rose's work, and that done in Italy by Grassi and others, 
lor iiwnrsa and carefulness. He says, for instance, " out of 245 
grey mosquitoes fed on birds with protcosoma, 178, or 72%, con- 
tained pigmented cells; out of 349 fed on blood containing halter- 



163 

esosna, Ac, not one contained a single 
pigmented cell. . . Ten mosquitoes fed on the sparrow with 
numerous proteosoma contained 1009 pigmented cells, or an average 
of lot each. Ten mosquitoes fed on the sparrow with moderate 
proteosoma contained 392 pigmented cells, or an average of 29 each, 
Tea mosquitoes fed on the sparrow with no proteosoma contained 
no pigmented cells." 

By these and the like observations it was made practically certain 
that malaria is transmitted from man to man by a special land of 
mosquito. Then came the final experiments on man. In 1900 
Sambon, Low and Terxi made their famous experiment on thent- 
setves in the neighbourhood of Ostia. They put up a little mosquito* 
proof hut in a neighbourhood " saturated with malaria." In this 
little but they lived through the whole of the malaria season, 
without takinga grain of quinine, and not one of them bad a touch 
of the fever. Then another experiment was made. * 



containing blood from a case of malaria was sent from 
Rome to the London School of Tropical Medicine. Dr Manson and 
Dr Warren then submitted themselves to being bitten by these 
mosquitoes, and in due time suffered malarial fever. On these proven 
facts was founded the whole plan of campaign against malaria. 
The nature, habits and breeding-places of the mosquito of malaria 
(AnopUts maaUiponnis) have been studied with infinite care, aad 
are now thoroughly recognized. The task is to destroy its eggs and 
its larvae, to break the cycle of its life, and to do away with its 
favourite breeding-places. 

14. Ytttow Ftvtr. — A special mosquito (SUgomyia) conveys 
yellow fever from man to man. The germ, like the germ of rabies, 
has not yet been made visible under the microscope. It is probably 
a very minute spirochaete, which undergoes a slow evolution in the 
body of the mosquito told off for that purpose. The earlier experi- 



ments (1810-30) made on themselves by Chervin, Potter, Firth 
and others were truly heroic, but proved nothing. Finlay (1880* 
1900) experimented with mosquitoes on himself and other volunteers, 
and certainly proved the transmissibility of the fever through 
mosquitoes. SanardH (1898) prepared an unmuniztng serum which 
gave good results: but the germ which he took to be the specific 
cause of the fever, having found it in cases of the fever, is not now 
accepted by bacteriologists as specific But the great work, which 
proved to the world the way of infection of yellow fever, was done 
by the Army Commission of the United States (1900). This Com- 
mission was sent to Havana, and the experiments were carried out 
by Drs Walter Reed, Carrol, Lazear and Agramonte in the Army 
Camp in Havana. A hut was constructed with two compart- 
ments, divided from each other by a wire mosquito-proof screen. 
In one compartment they placed Infected mosquitoes, which had 



bitten a yellow fever patient within the first three days of the fever. 
More than twenty volunteers offered themselves for experiment. " 



la 



one set of experiments, clothing and other material, soiled by the 
vomit or blood or excretions from cases of the fever, were placed la 
one of the rooms, and some of the experimenters slept for 31 con- 
secutive nights in contact with these materials, and in some cases 
in the very sheets oa which yellow fever patients had died. Not one 
of these experimenters took the fever. In another set of experi- 
ments, 33 of the experimenters submitted themselves to be bitten by 
die infected mosquitoes, and in each instance they took the disease. 
It was thus proved, past all reasonable doubt, that yellow fever 
cannot be co n veyed by ordinary infection, but must be transmitted 
from man to man through the agency of the mosquito. It might 
be said, by the opponents of all experiments on animals, that the 
discovery of these facts has nothing to do with " vivisection." But, 
as Professor Osier said in his evidence before the Royal Commission 
(voL iv. p. 1 58), these experiments would never have been thought of 
if it had not been for previous experiments on animals. " The men 
who made these investigations spent their lives in laboratories, and 
their whole work has been based on experimentation on annuals. 
They could not otherwise, of course, have ventured to devise a series 
of experiments of this sort." Out of this work came the wiping out 
of yellow fever (?.».) from Cuba after the Spanish- American War, 
and from the area of the Panama Canal. 

15. Stecptnt-Sickness. — Experiments on animals have proved that 
sleeping-sickness is due to specific germs carried by tse-tse flies from 
man to man. By measures taken to prevent this way of infection, 
legions of human lives have been saved or safeguarded. 

16. Infantile Paralysis.— Flexner, of the Rockefeller Institute, has 
proved, "by experiments on animals, the infective nature of this 
disease, and its transmissibility by inoculation: a discovery of the 
very utmost value and significance. 

17. Myxocdtmo.— Our knowledge of myxoedema, like our know- 
ledge of cerebral localization, began not in experimental science 
but in clinical observation (Gull. 1873: Ord. 1877). In 1882- 
1883 Reverdin and Kocher published cases where removal of the 
thyroid gland for disease (goitre) had been followed by symptoms 
such as Cull and Ord had described. In 188a Horsley, by removal 
of the thyroid gland of monkeys, produced in them a chronic 
myxoedema, a cretinoid state, the exact image of the disease in 
man: the same symptoms, course, tissue-changes, mental and 
physical hebetude, the same alterations of the excretions, the 
temperature and the voice. In 1888 the Clinical Society of London 



164 



WZAGAPATAM 



published an exhaustive report, of 215 pages, on 119 cases of the 
disease, giving all historical, clinical, pathological, chemical and 
experimental facts; but out of 215 pages there is but half a page 
about treatment, of the useless old-fashioned sort. In 1890 Horsley 
published the suggestion that a graft of thyroid gland from a 
newly killed animal should be transplanted beneath the skin in 
cases of myxoedema : " The justification of this procedure rested on 
the remarkable experiments of SchifJ and von Eisselsberg. I only 
became aware in April 1890 that this proposal had been in fact 
forestalled in 1889 by Dr Bircher in Aarau. Kocher had tried to 
do the same thing in 1883, but the graft was soon absorbed; but 
early in 1889 he tried it again in five cases, and one greatly im- 
proved." In 1891 George Murray published his Note on the Trial* 
ment of Myxoedema by Hypodermic Injections of an Extract of the 
Thyroid Gland of a Sheep. Later, the gland was administered in food. 
At the present time tabloids of thyroid extract are given. We could 
not have a better example how experiments on animals are necessary 
for the advancement of medicine. Now, with little bottles of tabloids, 
men and women are restored to health who had become degenerate 
in body and mind, disfigured and debased. The same treatment 
has given back mental and bodily growth to countless cases of 
sporadic cretinism. Moreover, the action of the thyroid gland has 
been made known, and the facts of " internal secretion " have been 
in part elucidated. (Claude Bernard, speaking of the thyroid, 
the thymus and the suprarenal capsules, said '. We know abso- 
lutely nothing about the functions of these organs', we have not 
so much as an idea what use and importance they may possess, 
because experiments have told us nothing about them, and anatomy, 
left to itself, is absolutely silent on the subject.") 

18. The Action of Dru&.—Ewa in the 18th century medicine 
was still tainted with magic and with gross superstition: the 
1721 Pharmacopoeia contains substances that were the regular 
stock-in-trade of witchcraft. Long after 1721 neither clinical 
observation, nor anatomy, nor pathology brought about a reason- 
able understanding of the action of drugs: it was the physiologists, 
more than the physicians, who worked the thing out— Bichat, 
Magcndie, Claude Bernard. Magendie's study of upas and strych- 
nine, Bernard's study of curare and digitalis, revealed the selective 
action of drugs: the direct influence of strychnine on. the central 
nerve-cells, of curare on the terminal filaments of motor nerves. 

Two instances may be given how experiments on animals have 
elucidated the action of drugs. A long list might be made- 
aconite, belladonna, chloride of calcium, . cocain, chloral, ergot, 
morphia, salicylic acid, strophantus, the chief diuretics, the chief 
diaphoretics— all these and many more have been studied to good 
purpose by this method; but it must suffice to quote here (1) Sir 
Thomas Fraser's account of digitalis, and (2) Sir Thomas Lauder 
Brunton's account of nitrite of amyl:— ... 

" 1. Digitalis was introduced as a remedy for dropsy; and on 
the applications which were made of it for the treatment of that 
disease, a slowing action upon the cardiac movements was observed, 
which led to its acquiring the reputation of a cardiac sedative. . . . 
It was not until the experimental method was applied in its investiga- 
tion, in the first instance by Claude Bernard, and subsequently 
by Dybkowsky, Pelikan, Meyer, Bohm and Schmiedeberg, that 
the true action of digitalis upon the circulation was discovered. 
It was shown that the effects upon the circulation were not in any 
exact sense sedative, but, on the contrary, stimulant and tonic, 
rendering the action of the heart more powerful, and increasing 
the tension of the blood vessels. The indications for its use in 
disease were thereby revolutionized, and at the same time rendered 
more exact; and the striking benefits which are now afforded by 
the use of this substance in most (cardiac) diseases were made avail- 
able to humanity." 

"2. In the spring of 1867 I had opportunities of constantly 
observing a patient who suffered from angina pectoris, and of 
obtaining from him numerous sphygmographic tracings, both 
during the attack and during the interval. These showed that 
during the attack the pulse became quicker, the blood-pressure rose 
and the arterioles contracted. ... It occurred to me that if it was 
possible to diminish the tension by drugs instead of by bleeding, 
the pain would be removed. I knew from unpublished experiments 
on animals by Dr A. Gamgee that nitrite of amyl had this power, 
and therefore tried it on the oatient. My expectations were per- 
ftvtly annexed*" 

10. Snake Venom. — Sewsll (I&87) *u&w*<l that anmuls amid 
I* iraiDunimli by repeated injection cC||H|BK| Of lattlewttke's 
venom, against a mt '■'■'9*) immun- 

ised arumaLi apftMfci 
ru.inv others wvrkfd 

■ 1 ■'■■ 
amJ vJue, I- 
work 1 

Lhe e*pcriiii" 
in dorinv' 
body-v 
of v 

•TlSl 



r 




" The following table gives the relative toxicity, for 1 kdogramme 

of rabbit, of the different venoms that I have tested " :— 

1. Venom of Naja .... 0*25 milligramme per 

kilogramme of rabbit. One gramme of this venom 
kills 4000 kilogrammes of rabbit: activity -4,000,000. 

2. Venom of Hoplocebhalus .- 0*29 . 3450,000. 

3. Venom of Pseudechis . .1-25 . 800,000. 

4. Venom of Pelias herus . 4*00 250,000. 

By experiments in vitro Calmette studied the influence of heat 
and chemical agents on these venoms; and, working by various 
methods, was able to immunize animals: — 

" 1 have got to immunizing rabbits against doses of venom that 
are truly colossal. I have several, vaccinated more than a year 
ago, that take without the least discomfort so much as forty milli- 
grammes of venom of Naja tripudians at once. Five drops of 6erum 
from these rabbits wholly neutralize in vitro- the toxicity of one 
milligramme of Naja venom. ... It is not even necessary that 
the serum should come from an animal vaccinated against the 
same sort of venom as that in the mixture. The serum of a rabbit 
immunized against the venom of the cobra or the viper acts in- 
differently on all the venoms that I have tested." 

In 1895 he had prepared a curative serum: " If you first inocu- 
late a rabbit with such a dose of venom as kills the control-animals 
in three hours; and then, an hour after injecting the venom, inject 
under the skin of the abdomen four to five cubic centimetres of 
serum, recovery is the rule. When you interfere later than this, 
the results are uncertain; and out of all my experiments the 
delay of an hour and a half is the most that I have been able to 
reach." 

In 1896 four successful cases were reported in the British Medical 
Journal. In 1898 Calmette reports: — 

" It is now nearly two vears since the use of my antivenomous 
serum was introduced in India, in Algeria, in Egypt, on the West 
Coast of Africa, in America, in the West Indies, Antilles, &c. It 
has been very often used lor men and domestic animals (dogs, 
horses, oxen), and up to now none of those that have received 
an injection of serum have succumbed. A great number of obser- 
vations have been communicated to me, and not one of them refers 
to a case of failure " {Brit. Med. Journ., May 14, 1898; see also 
Boston Medical and Surgical Journal, April 7, 1808). 

It is of course impossible that " antivenene should be always 
at hand, or that it should bring about any great decrease in the 
number of deaths from snake-bite, which in India alone are 50,000 
annually; but at least something has been accomplished with it. 

The account given above of the chief discoveries that have 
been made by the help of experiments on animals, in physi- 
ology, pathology, bacteriology and therapeutics, might easily 
have been lengthened if we added to it other methods of treat- 
ment that owe less, but yet owe something, to these experi- 
ments. Nevertheless the facts quoted in this article are 
sufficient to indicate the great debt that medicine owes to the 
employment of vivisection. (S. P.) 

VIZAGAPATAM, a town and district of British India, in the 
Madras presidency. The town stretches 3 m. along the coast, 
and has a station on a short branch of the East Coast railway, 
484 m. N.E. of Madras. Pop. (1001) 40,892. It lies on a 
small bay, the south extremity of which is bounded by a 
promontory known as the Dolphin's Nose, and its northern 
extremity by the suburb of Waltair. The town or fort, as it 
is called, is separated from the Dolphin's Nose by a small river, 
which forms a bar where it enters the sea, but is passable for 
vessels of 300 tons during spring tides. An English factory 
was established here early in the 17th century, which was cap- 
tured by the French in 1757, but shortly afterwards recovered. 
The town owes much to the munificence of the neighbouring 
raja of Vizianagram. A water supply has been provided at 
a cost of £30,000. Waltair is the European quarter. There 
is a considerable Roman Catholic population and a branch of 
the London Mission. The exports by sea include manganese 
ore, rice and sugar. Some weaving is carried on, and there 
is a speciality of ornamental boxes, &c, carved out of sandal- 
wood, horn, ivory, porcupine quills and silver. 

The District op Vizagapatam has an area of 17,222 sq. m., 
being one of the largest districts in India. It is a picturesque 
and hilly country, but for the most part unhealthy. The 
surface is generally undulating, rising towards the interior, 
and crossed by streams, which are dry except during the rainy 
season. The main portion is occupied by the Eastern Ghats. 
The slopes of these mountains are clothed with luxuriant 



VIZETELLY— VLAARDINGEN 



165 



, amid which rise many tall fewest trees, while the 
bamboo grows profusely in the valleys. The drainage on the 
cast is carried by numerous streams direct to the sea, and that 
to the west flows into the Godavari through the Indravati or 
through the Sabari and Siller rivers. To the west of the range 
is situated tbe greater portion of the extensive zamindari of 
Jaipur, wtudt is for the most part very hilly and jungly In the 
extreme north a remarkable mass of hills, called the Nim- 
atris, rise to a> height of 5000 ft. The plain along tbe Bay of 
Bengal is a vast sheet of cultivation, green with rice fields and 
sutfens of sugar<ane and tobacco. There are great varieties 
of dimace m the district. Along tbe coast the air is soft and 
the prevailing winds being south-easterly The 
mnnal rainfall at Vizagapatam exceeds 40 m. Pop, 
toot) 2,035*650, showing an increase of 4 7% in the decade. 
The principal crops are rice, millets, pulses and oil-seeds, with 
some sugar-cane, cotton and tobacco The coast portion of 
tbe district is traversed throughout by the East Coast railway. 
opened from Madras to Calcutta in 1004, and a line through 
the bilk* from Visianagram to Rafpur in the Central Provinces 
tui been ^anrfionfd The chief seaports are Bimhpatom and 



On the dissolution of the Mogul empire Vizagapatam formed 
part of the territory known as the Northern Circars, which were 
ceded to the East India Company by treaties in 1765 and 1766 
It was long before British authority was established over the 
kirr trad inland, inhabited by aboriginal tribes, and still ad- 
saaisterod under a peculiar system, which vests in the collector 
the powers of a political agent. This tract, forming more than 
t«o-tkjrdsof the whole district, is known as the Agency 

Se e The V is a£apatam Dutna Casetteer (Madras, 1907) 

Y1ZETBLLY. HENRY (1 820-1804), English publisher, was 
bora in London on the 30th of July 1820, the son of a printer. 
He was carry apprenticed as a wood engraver, and one of his 
hot blocks was a portrait of " Old Parr." Encouraged by the 
success of the Illustrated London News, Vizetelly in {843, with 
ah brother James Thomas Vizetelly (1817-1897) and Andrew 
Spottiswoode (1787-1866), started the Pictorial Times, which was 
suhfahed successfully for several years. In 1855, in partnership 
•fab Boyne, he started a threepenny paper called the Illus- 
*eiei Times, which four years later was merged in the Penny 
Omstrated Paper. In 1865 Vizetelly became Paris corrc- 
. for the Illustrated London News. During the yean he 
in Paris he published several books—Paris in Peril 
(i&8j). The Story of tke Diamond Necklace (1867) and a free 
translation of Topin's Man in tke Iron Mask. In 1872 he was 
transferred to Berlin, where he wrote Berlin under tke New 
Empire (1&7?). In 1887 he established a publishing house in 
T ^n^-r. issuing numerous translations of French and Russian 
authors In 1888 he was prosecuted for publishing a transla- 
tion of Zola's La Terre, and was fined £i°°» *nd when he 
reissued Zola's works in 1889 he was again prosecuted, fined 
£joo and imprisoned for three months. In 1803 he wrote a 
volame of autobiographical reminiscence called Glances Back 
swwsf* Seventy Years, a graphic picture of literary Bohemia in 
Paris and London between 1840 and 1870. He died on the xst of 
January 1894. His younger brother, Frank Vizetelly (1830-1883), 
was a clever artist and journalist ; he went to Egypt as war 
correspoodent for the Illustrated London News and was never 
be ard of a fter the massacre of Hicks Pasha's army in Rordofan. 

VJZJRJ. or Vtssu, an episcopal city and the capital of tbe 
district of Vixen, Portugal, at the terminus of a branch of the 
Hgneira da foz-Guarda railway, and on tbe Ribeira d'Asnos, 
a sob-tributary of the Mondego. Pop. (1900) 8057. The 
cathedral, which was founded in the 12th century, contains 
pKtares by the native artist Grao Vasco (16th century). Tbe 
cay stands near the ruins of the ancient Vacca, or Cava de 
Twists, a Roman military colony founded by Dedus Brutus 
and captured by Viriathus (2nd century B.C.). The adminis- 
trative district of Vizeu coincides with the central and northern 
pans of the ancient province of Beira (?.».). Pop. (1000) 
409,359; «a, *937 «q "t 



VIZIAORDO, Vqayavoig o* Gnntia, a port on the W 
coast of India in Ratnagiri district, Bombay, 170 m. S. of Bom 
bay aty. Pop (1001) 2339. It is one of the best harbours on 
the west coast, being without any bar, and may be entered in 
all weathers, even to large ships it affords safe shelter din- 
ing the south-west monsoon. At the beginning of the 18th 
century the pirate chief Angria made Viziadrug the capital of 
a territory stretching for 150 m along the coast and from 30 
to 60 m. inland. The fort was taken by Admiral Watson and 
Colonel Ctive in 1756. 

VIZIANAvRAM, a town of British India, in the Vizagapatam 
district of Madras, 17 m. from tbe seaport of Btmlipatam, on 
the East Coast railway, 522 m N.E. of Madras. Pop. (1001) 
37,270. It has a small military cantonment. It contains the 
residence of a tamindar of the same name, who ranks as the 
first Hindu nobleman of Madras. His estate covers about 
3000 sq m., with a population of 000,000. The estimated 
income is £180,000, paying a permanent land revenue of 
£34*Qco The town possesses many fine buildings, entirely 
supported by the raja. It has a college and two high 



The ruling family, which claims descent from a high official 
at tbe court of Golconda, established itself in Vizagapatam in 
the 17th century. In 1754 Viziarama Ras made an alliance 
with the French, but his son, on succeeding, fell out with them, 
captured Vizagapatam from them and ceded it to the British 
m 1758 The next raja, another Viziarama, was entirely under 
the influence of his half-brother Sita Ram, whose power, how- 
ever, became so great a menace that he was forced to retire in 
1703 A period of decay now set in. The raja was incompetent, 
and, his estate having been sequestrated for debt, revolted and 
was defeated and killed in 1704. The next raja, Narsyana 
Babu, was no more successful, and his estate had been 
long under the management of the British government when 
he died in 1845. Viziarama Gajapati Raz, who succeeded 
him and took over full powers in 185a, was a man of ability, 
and received the titles of maharaja and KX.SJ.; as abo was 
his son, the maharaja Ananda Raz, G.CJ.E. He died in 1897, 
and was succeeded by Raja Pusapati Viziarama Gajapati Raz, 
during whose minority (till 1904) the estate was again under 
government administration. 

VIZIER, more correctly Vina (Arabic Waxir), literally 
" burden-bearer " or "helper," originally the chief minister 
or representative of the Abbasid caliphs. The office of vizier, 
which spread from the Arabs to the Persians, Turks, Mongols, 
and other Oriental peoples, arose under the first Abbasid caliphs 
(see Mahommedan Institutions, and Caliphate, C |i) and 
took shape during its tenure by the Barmecides (9.*.). The 
vizier stood between sovereign and subjects, representing the 
former in all matters touching the latter. This withdrawal 
of the head of the state from direct contact with his people 
was unknown to the Omayyads, and was certainly an imitation 
of Persian usage; it has even been plausibly conjectured that 
the name is but the Arabic adaptation of a Persian title. In 
modern usage the term is used in the East generally for any 
important official under tbe sovereign. 

VIZZOLa TICINO. a village of Lombardy, Italy, in the 
province of Milan, 6 m. W. of Gallarate and 31 m. N.W. of 
Milan, 725 ft. above sea-level Pop. (1001) 469. It is situated 
on the Ticino, and is remarkable as having one of the largest 
electric works in Europe, worked by water-power from the 
Ticino brought by a canal 4} m. long, constructed in 1880-91 
by the Sodeta Lombards per Distribuzione di Energia Elettrica. 
Gallarate, Sesto Calende, Saronno and other neighbouring 
places are supplied from here with electricity. 

VLAARDINGEN, a river port of Holland, in the province ol 
South Holland, on the Maas, 6 m. by rail W. of Rotterdam. 
Pop. 17,00a A very old town and the seat of a former mar- 
graviate belonging to the counts of Holland, Vlaardingea is 
now chiefly important as the centre of the great herring and 
cod fisheries of the North Sea. Its only ornaments are the old 
market-place and the gardens formed by the purchase in 1825 



1 66 



VLACHS 



of a seat called the Hof. The chief industries are those connected 
with the large fishing trade. 

VLACHS. The Vlach (Vlakh, Wallach) or Ruraan race 
constitutes a distinct division of the Latin family of peoples, 
DlttHbrn- widel y disseminated throughout south-eastern Europe, 
tiom»f both north and south of the Danube, and extending 
tb«viacb sporadically from the Russian river Bug to the 
rmc0% Adriatic The total numbers of the Vlachs may be 
estimated at r 0,000,000 or 11,000,000 North of the Danube, 
5,400,000 dwell in Rumania; 1,250,000 are settled in Transyl- 
vania, where they constitute a large majority of the population, 
and a still greater number are to be found in the Banat and 
other Hungarian districts west and north of Transylvania. 
Close upon 1,000,000 inhabit Bessarabia and the adjoining 
parts of South Russia, and about 230,000 are in the Austrian 
province of Bukovma. South of the Danube, about 500,000 
are scattered over northern Greece and European Turkey, 
under the name of Kutzo-Vlachs, Tzintzars or Aromani In 
Servia this element is preponderant in the Timok valley, while 
in Istria it is represented by the Cid, at present largely Slavon- 
ized, as are now entirely the kindred Morlachs of Dalmatia. 
Since, however, it is quite impossible to obtain exact statistics 
over so wide an area, and in countries where politics and racial 
feeling are so closely connected, the figures given above can 
only be regarded as approximately accurate; and some writers 
place the total of the Vlachs as low as 9,000,000. It is note- 
worthy that the Rumans north of the Danube continually gain 
ground at the expense of their neighbours; and even the long 
successful Greek propaganda among the Kutxo-Ylachs were 
checked after i860 by the labours of Apostolu Margaritis and 
other nationalists. 

A detailed account of the physical, mental and moral characteristics 
of the Vlachs, their modern civilization and their historical develop- 
ment, will be found under the headings Rumania and Macedonia. 

All divisions of the race prefer to style themselves Romqni, 
Romeni, Rumeni or Aromani; and it is from the native pro- 
nunciation of this name that we have the equivalent expres- 
sion Rumen, a word which must by no means be confined to 
that part of the Vlach race inhabiting the present kingdom of 
Rumania. 

The name " Vlachs," applied to the Rumans by their neigh- 
bours but never adopted by themselves, appears under many 
allied forms, the Slavs saying Volokh or Woloeh, the 
Greeks Vlachoi, the Magyars Oldh, and the Turks, 
at a later date, Iffltk. In its origin identical with the 
English Wealh or Welsh, it represents a Slavonic adaptation 
of a generic term applied by the Teutonic races to all Roman 
provincials during the* 4th and 5th centuries. The Slavs, at 
least in their principal extent, first knew the Roman empire 
through a Teutonic medium, and adopted their term Volokh 
from the Ostro-Gathic equivalent of the Anglo-Saxon Wealh. 
It thus finds its analogies in the German name for Italy — 
Wdschland (Walischland), in the Walloons of the Low Countries 
and the WaUgau of Tirol An early instance of its application 
to the Roman population of the Eastern empire is found (c. 550- 
600) in the Traveller's Song, where, in a passage which in all 
probability connects itself with the early trade-route b&Hfcn 
the Baltic staple of Wollin and Byzantium, the glee-man speak* 
of Caesar^ realm a* Walaric, " Wel*hry. J * h* verae 140 he 
speaks of the Rum-walas, and it is to fce observed that Rum is 
one of the words by which the Vlachs of uisiern Europe still 
know themselves. 

The Vlachs Claim to be 9 J 
the Spaniards of Provencals— tnu 

Jong pn 

Influeno 
which is nun* 
The long) 

rt«rt 




by the names " Vlach " and " Ruman " but also by populai 
and literary tradition. In their customs and folk-tore both 
Latin and Slavonic traditions assert themselves. Of theii 
Roman traditions the Trajan saga, the celebration of the Latin 
festivals of the Rosalia and Kalendae, the belief in the striga 
(witch), the names of the months and days of the week, may 
be taken as typical examples. Some Roman words connected 
with the Christian religion, like biserica {basilica)" a church, 
botez**baptixo, dumintca— Sunday, preot (presbyter) = priest, 
point to a continuous tradition of the Illynan church, 
though most of their ecclesiastical terms, like their liturgy 
and alphabet, were derived from the Slavonic In most that 
concerns political organization the Slavonic element is also 
preponderant, though there are words like tMp&rat—tmperator, 
and domn*>dotntnus, which point to the old stock. Many 
words relating to kinship are also Latin, some, like vitrig 
(nJricux)** father-in-law, being alone preserved by this branch 
of the Romance family. But if the Latin descent of the Vlachs 
may be regarded as proven, it is far less easy to determine 
then* place of origin and to trace their early migrations 

The centre of gravity of the Vlach or Ruman race is at present 
unquestionably north of the Danube in the almost circular 
territory between the Danube, Theiss and Dniester; tt* 
and corresponds roughly with the Roman province «r%tM# 
of Datia, formed by Trajan in aj>. 106. From this *»■«* 
circumstance the popular idea has arisen that the race itself 
represents the descendants of the Romanized population of 
Trajan's Dada, which was assumed to have maintained 
an unbroken existence in Walachia, Transylvania and the 
neighbour provinces, beneath the dominion of a succession of 
invaders The Vlachs of Pindus, and the southern region 
generally, were, on this hypothesis, to be regarded as later 
immigrants from the lands north of the Danube. In 1871, E. R. 
Roesler published at Leipzig, in a collective form, a series of 
essays entitled Romamsche Studien, in which he absolutely 
denied the claim of the Rumanian and Transylvanian Vlachs 
to be regarded as autochthonous Dadans. He laid stress on 
the statements of Vopiscus and others as implying the total 
withdrawal of the Roman provincials from Trajan's Dada by 
Aurelian, in a.d. 272, and on the non-mention by historians of a 
Latin population in the lands on the left bank of the lower 
Danube, during their successive occupation by Goths, Huns, 
Gepidae, Avars, Slavs, Bulgars and other barbarian races. He 
found the first trace of a Ruman settlement north of the Danube 
in a Transylvanian diploma of 1222. Roesler's thesis has been 
generally regarded as an entirely new departure in critical 
ethnography. As a matter of fact, his condusions had to a 
great extent been already antidpated by F. J. Sulzer in his 
Gesckichle des Transalpiniscken Daeiens, published at Vienna in 
1781, and at a still earlier date by the Dalmatian historian 
G. Ludo (Lucius of Trail) in his work De Regno Dalmatiae tt 
Croatiae, Amsterdam, 1666. 

The theory of the later immigration of the Rumans into 

their present abodes north of the Danube, as stated in its most 

extreme form by Roesler, commanded wide acceptance, and in 

Hungary it was politically utilized as a plea for refusing parity 

oi treatment to a race of comparatively recent intruders. In 

Rumania itself Roesler's views were resented as an attack on 

Ru m:i n nation alit y , Ou t side Rumania they found a determined 

opponent in Dr J. Jung, of Innsbruck, who uphdd the continuity 

of the Roman provincial stock in Trajan's Dada, disputing 

btorje analogies the total withdrawal of the provincials 

■ (he reaction against Roesler was carried still 

L Pif, Professor A. D. Xenopol of Jassy, B. P. 

hitiut and many otheV Rumanian writers, who 

I while ttielr own race north of the Danube repre- 
ul Daco* Roman population of this region, the 

tffkey and Greece are similarly descended from 
ami Olyro-Roman inhabitants of the pro- 
of the river. On this theory the entire 
almost precisely the same territories to-day 



VLACHS 



167 



Ob the whole it nay be said that the troth lies between 
the two extremes. Reader is no doubt so far right that after 
*7». and throughout the early middle ages, the bulk of the 
Raman people lay south of the Danube. Pit's view that the 
population of the Roman provinces of Moesis and Illyria were 
Hellenined rather than Romanized, and that it is to Trajan's 
Dada alone that we must look for the Roman source of the 
Ylach race, conflicts with what we know of the Latinizing 
cf the Balkan lands from inscriptions, martyrologies, Pro- 
ropt us's list of Justinian's Ulyrian fortresses and other sources. 
This Roman dement south of the Danube had further received 
a great hurray at the expense of Trajan's colonial foundation 
to the north when Aurehan established his New Dacia on the 
Uoesian side of the river. On the other hand, the analogy 
lopplied by the withdrawal of the Roman provincials from 
Riparian Noricum tells against the assumption that the official 
withdrawal of the Roman colonists of Trajan's Dacia by Aurehan 
entailed the entire evacuation of the Carpathian regions by 
their Latin-speaking inhabitants. As on the upper Danube the 
continuity of the Roman population is attested by the Vici 
R*mm*isci of early medieval diplomas and by other traces of a 
Romanic race still represented by the Ladiacs of the Tirol, so it 
■ reasonable to suppose a Latin-speaking population continued 
to exist in the formerly thickly colonized area embracing the 
present Transylvania and Little Walachia, with adjoining 
Carpathian regions. Even as late as Just inian's time (483-565) • 
the official connexion with the old Dacian province was not 
wholly lost, as is shown by the erection or restoration of certain 
fortified posts on the left bank of the lower Danube 

We may therefore assume that the Latin race of eastern 
Europe never wholly lost touch of its former trans-Danubian 
9mfr strongholds. It was, however, on any showing greatly 
«*jpa» diminished there The open country, the broad plains 
*■* of what is now the Rumanian kingdom, and the Banat 

af Hongnxy were in barbarian occupation The centre of 
gravity of the Roman or Romance dement of JJlyricum had 
now shifted south of the Danube By the 6th century a 
large part of Thrace, Macedonia and even of Epirus had 
become Latin-speaking 

What had occurred in Trajan's Dacia in the 3rd century was 
consummated in the 6th and 7th throughout the greater part 
c* the Soulb-Iiryrian provinces, and the Slavonic and Avar 
cuaqocsts severed the official connexion with eastern Rome. 
The Roman element was uprooted from its fixed seats, and swept 
frt^r sail thither by the barbarian flood. Nomadism became 
is essential of independent existence, while large masses of 
leadens provincials were dragged as captives in the train 
el iheir conquerors, to be distributed in servile colonies. They 
were thus in many cases transported by barbarian chiefs— 
Sxr, Aw and Bulgarian— to trans-Danubian and Pannoniau 
tenons* In the Ad* of St Demetrius of Tbessalonica (d. A.D. 
y*> we find an account of such a Roman colony, which, 
taring been carried away from South-IUyrian cities by the 
Asar tkagam (prince), and settled by bim in the Sirmian district 
kryond the Save, revolted after seventy years of captivity, 
made their way once more across the Balkan passes, and finally 
sfttfad an an independent community in the country inland from 
Mrm ir" Others, no doubt, thus transported northwards 
tL vtt returned The earliest Hungarian historians who describe 
the Magyar invasion of the 9th century speak of the old in* 
kahoaBts of the country as Romans, and of the country they 
ampied as Pascna Romanontm, and the Russian Nestor, 
vising about 1100. makes the same invaders fight against 
S»-y» and Vlachs in the Carpathian Mountains. So far from 
tte first mention of the VTachs north of the Danube occurring 

•Jf in 1 712. as Roesler asserts, it appears from a passage of 
V*»ias of Chonaa that they were to be found already in x 164 
as tax afield a* the borders of Galicia, and the date of a passage 
t The SMmm^mhed, which mentions the Vlachs, under their 
-*~.t Ramaac. in association with the Poles, cannot well be 
• i»»hanispo. 

* 1 TTihrlrtt throughout the early middle ages the bulk of 



the Ruman population lay south of the Danube. It was In the 
Balkan lands that the Ruman race and language took their 
characteristic mould. It is here that this new lllyrian Romance 
first rises into historic prominence. Already in the 6th century, 
as we learn from the place-names, such as Sceptecasas, Bur* 
gualtu, Clisura, &c, given by Procopius, the Ruman language 
was assuming, so far as its Latin elements were concerned, 
its typical form. In the somewhat later campaigns of Com- 
mentiolus (587) and Priscus, against the Avars and Slavs, we 
find the Latin-speaking soldiery of the Eastern emperor 
making use of such Romance expressions as torna fratel (turn, 
brother!), or sculca (out of bed) applied to a watch (cf. Ruman 
a st c«fca«Itilian cericarsi+ex-is-) privative). Next we find 
this warlike Ruman population largely incorporated in the 
Bulgarian kingdom, and, if we are to judge from the names 
Paganus and Sabinus,. already supplying it with rulers in 
the 8th century. The blending and close contact during this 
period of the surviving Latin population with the Slavonic 
settlers of the peninsula impregnated the language with its large 
Slavonic ingredient. The presence of an important Latin 
element in Albanian, the frequent occurrence of Albanian 
words in Rumanian, and the remarkable retention by both 
languages of a suffix article, may perhaps imply that both alike 
took their characteristic shapes in the same region. The fact 
that these peculiarities are common to the Rumans north of the 
Danube, whose language differs dialecticaUy from that of their 
southern brothers, shows that it was this southern braoch 
that throughout the early periods of Ruman history was exer- 
cising a dominating influence. Migrations, violent trans- 
plantation, the intercourse which was kept up between the most 
outlying members of the race, in its very origin nomadic, at a 
later period actual colonization and the political influence of 
the Bulgaro-Vlacbian empire, no doubt contributed to propa- 
gate these southern linguistic acquisitions throughout that 
northern area to which the Ruman race was destined almost 
imperceptibly to shift its centre of gravity. 

Byzantium, which had ceased to be Roman, and had become 
Romanic, renewed its acquaintance with the descendants of the 
Latin provincials of IHyricum through a Slavonic medium,- and 
applied to them the name of Vlach, which the Slav himself had 
borrowed from the Goth. The first mention of Vlachs in a 
Byzantine source is about the year 976, when Cedrenus (ii. 439) 
relates the murder of the Bulgarian tsar Samuel's brother 
" by certain Vlach wayfarers," at a spot called the Fair Oaks, 
between Castoria and Prespa. From this period onwards the 
Ruman inhabitants of the Balkan peninsula are constantly 
mentioned by this name, and we find a series of political organiza- 
tions and territorial divisions connected with the name of 
Vlachia. A short synopsis may be given of the most important 
of these, outside the limits of Rumania itself. 

1 Tk* Bulgaro- Vlach Empire.— Aittt the overthrow of the older 
Bulgarian tsardom by Baal Bulgaroktonos (976-1025), the Vlach 
population of Thrace, Haemus and the. Moestan lands 
passed once more under Byzantine dominion; and in 
1185 a heavy tax, levied m land on the cattle of these 
warlike mountain shepherds, stirred the Vlachs to revolt 
against the e m peror Isaac Angelus, and under the leader- 
ship of two brothers, Peter and Asen, to found a new Bulgaro* 
VUchian empire, which ended with Kaliman II tn 1257 The 
dominions ot these half-Slavonic half-Rumen emperors extended 
north of the Danube over a great deal of what is now Rumania, 
and it was during this period that the Vlach population north of 
the river teems to have been moot largely reinforced. The 13th- 
century French traveller Rubruquis speaks of all the country 
between Don and Danube as A sen s land or Blakia. 

a. Gnat Wclathia (MryAX* BX» X U).— It is from Anna Comnena, 
in the second half of the tith century, that we first hear of a Vlach 
settlement, the nucleus of which was the mountainous region of 
Thessaly Benjamin of Tudela, in the succeeding century, gives 
an interesting account of this Great Walachia, then completely 
independent. It embraced the southern and central ranges of 
Pindus, and extended over part of Macedonia, thus including the 
region in which the Roman settlers mentioned in the Acts of 
St Demetrius had fixed their abode. After the Latin conquest of 
Constantinople in 1204, Great Walachia was included in the enlarged 
despotate of Epirus. but it soon reappears as an independent 
principality under its old name, which, after passing under the yoke 



i68 



VLADIKAVKAZ— VLADIMIR 



of the Serb emperor Duahan, was finally conquered by the Turks 
in 1393. Many of their old privileges were accorded to the in- 
habitants, and their taxes were limited to an annual tribute. Since 
this period the Megalovlachites have been largely Hellenized, but 
they are still represented by the flourishing Tantzar settlements of 
Pindus and its neighbourhood (see Macedonia). 

3. Little Wahch*a{Uup6. BXo X ia)was a name applied by Byzantine 
writers to the Ruman settlemenu of Aetolia and Acarnania, and 
with it may be included " Upper Walachia," or A*60X«xa- Its inha- 
bitants are still represented by the Tantzars of the Aspropotamo 
and the Karaguni (Black Capes) of Acarna n ia. 

4. The Morlachs (MavroOachi) of the West.— These are already 
mentioned as Nigri Latini bv the presbyter of Diodea (c. ,1150) 
in the old Dalmatian littoral and the mountains of what is now 
Montenegro, Herzegovina and North Albania. Other colonies ex- 
tended through a great part of the old Servian interior, where is 
a region still called Stara VlaSka or " Old Walachia." The great 
commercial staple of the east Adriatic shores, the republic of Ragusa, 
seems in its origin to have been a Ruman settlement, and many 
Vlach traces survived in its later dialect. Philippus de Diversis, 
who described the city as it existed in 1440, says that " the various 
officers of the republic do not make use either of Slav or Italian, with 
which they converse with strangers, but a certain other dialect only 
partially intelligible to us Latins, and cites words with strong 
Ruman affinities. In the mountains above Ragusa a number 01 
Vlach tribes are mentioned in the archives of that city, and the 
original relationship of the Ragusans and the nomadic Alpine repre- 
sentatives of the Roman provincials, who preserved a traditional 
knowledge of the old lines of communication throughout the penin- 
sula, explains the extraordinary development of the Ragusan com- 
merce. In the 14th century the Mavrovlachi or Morlachs extended 
themselves towards the Croatian borders, and a large part of mari- 
time Croatia and northern Dalmatia began to be known as Morlacchxa. 
A Major Vlachia was formed about the triple frontier of Bosnia, 
Croatia and Dalmatia, and a " Little Walachia " as far north as 
Pozega The Morlachs have now become Slavonized (see Dalmatia). 

5. Oct oflstria. — The extreme Ruman offshoot to the north-west 
is still represented by the Cid of the Val d'Arsa and adjoining 
Istrian districts. They represent a 15th-century Morlach colony 
from the Isles of Veglia, and had formerly a wider extension to 
Trieste and the counties of Gradisca and Gors. The Cici have 
almost entirely abandoned their native tongue, which is the last 
remaining representative of the old Morlach, and forms a connecting 
link between the Daco-Roman (or Rumanian) and the lllyro- or 
Macedo-Roman dialects. 

6. Rumans of Transylvania and Hungary.— As already stated, 
a large part of the Hungarian plains were, at the coming of the 
Magyars in the 9th century, known as Pascua Romanorum. At a 
later period privileged Ruman communities existed at Fogaras, 
where was a SUva Vtachorum, at Marmaros, Deva, Hatzeg, Hunyad 
and Lugos, and in the Banat were seven Ruman districts. Two of 
the greatest figures in Hungarian history, the isth<cntury rulers 
John Corvinus of Hunyad and his son King Matthias, were due to 
this element. For its later history see Transylvania. 

See, in addition to the books already mentioned, J. L. Pic\ Uber die 
Abstammung der Rum&nen (Leipzig, 1880); A. D. Xenopol, Les 
Roumains au moyen dge (Jassy, 1886); B. P. Hasdeu, " Strata ii 
Substrata* Genealogia poporelorfl balcanice/' in AnnaUle Academul, 
ser. 11, vol. 14 (Bucharest, 1893); D. Onciul, " Romanil in Dacia 
Traiana," &c, in Encidopedia Rom&na, vol. iii. (Bucharest, 1903). 

VLADIKAVKAZ, a town and fortress of Russia in northern 
Caucasia, the capital of the province of Terek. Pop. (1900) 
49,924. It stands on a plateau, at an altitude of 2345 ft., on 
both banks of the Terek, where that river issues from the Darial 
gorge. It is 434 m. by rail S.E. from Rostov-on-the-Don, and 
has regular communication with Tiflis (133 m.) by coach through 
the Darial Pass (Georgian military road) of the Caucasus. 
Moreover, a line of railway, running eastwards to the Caspian 
ports of Petrovsk and Baku, connects Vladikavkaz, or rather 
the station Beslan, 14 m. N. of it, with the Transcaucasian 
railway, i.e. with Tiflis, Poti and Batum. Russians, Armenians 
and Jews constitute the bulk of the population, which also con- 
tains Ossetes, Chechens, Ingushes and others. There are dis- 
tilleries and a number of smaller factories. The fort, around 
which the town has grown up, was built in 1784. The town is an 
episcopal see of the Orthodox Greek Church. 

VLADIMIR, ST (c. 956-10x5), grand duke of Kiev and of all 
Russia, was the youngest son of Svyatoslav I. and his mistress 
Malushka. In 970 he received Great Novgorod as his apanage. 
On the death of Svyatoslav in 972, a long civil war took place 

K»tttr«w»n fc'« *nn« Vamrvtltt and OW in whirh Vlsdimir WAS 



to recover Novgorod, and on his return marched against Yaro- 
polk. On his way to Kiev he sent ambassadors to Ragvald, 
prince of Polotsk, to sue for the hand of his daughter Ragnflria. 
The haughty princess refused to affiance herself to " the son of 
a bondswoman," but Vladimir attacked Polotsk, slew Ragvald, 
and took Ragnilda by force. Subsequently (980) he captured 
Kiev also, slew Yaropolk by treachery, and was proclaimed 
prince of all Russia. In 981 he conquered the Chervensk cities, 
the modern Galida; in 983 be subdued the heathen Yatvyags, 
whose territories lay between Lithuania and Poland; in 085 
he led a fleet along the central rivers of Russia to conquer the 
Bulgarians of the Kama, planting numerous fortresses and 
colonies on his way. At this time Vladimir was a thoroughgoing 
pagan. He increased the number of the trebiskcha, or heathen 
temples; offered up Christians (Theodore and Ivan, the proto- 
martyrs of the Russian Church) on bis altars; had eight 
hundred concubines, besides numerous wives; and spent his 
whole leisure in feasting and hunting. He also formed a great 
council out of his boyars, and set his twelve sons over his subject 
principalities. In the year 987, as the result of a consultation 
with bis boyars, Vladimir sent envoys to study the religions of 
the various neighbouring nations whose representatives had 
been urging him to embrace their respective faiths. The result 
is amusingly described by the chronicler Nestor. Of the Mussul- 
man Bulgarians of the Volga the envoys reported " there is no 
gladness among them; only sorrow and a great stench; their 
religion is not a good one." In the temples of the Germans they 
saw " no beauty "; but at Constantinople, where the full 
festival ritual of the Orthodox Church was set in motion to 
impress them, they found their ideal. " We no longer knew 
whether we were in heaven or on earth, nor such beauty, and 
we know not how to tell of it." If Vladimir was impressed by 
this account of his envoys, he was yet more so by the offer of 
the emperor Basil II. to give him his sister Anna in marriage. 
In 988 he was baptized at Kherson in the Crimea, taking the 
Christian name of Basil out of compliment to his imperial 
brother-in-law; the sacrament was followed by his marriage 
with the Roman princess. Returning to Kiev in triumph, he 
converted his people to the new faith with no apparent diffi- 
culty. Crypto-Christians had been numerous in Kiev for some 
time before the public recognition of the Orthodox faith. The 
remainder of the reign of Vladimir was devoted to good works. 
He founded numerous churches, including the splendid Desya- 
Hnnuy Sobor or " Cathedral of the Tithes " (089), established 
schools, protected the poor and introduced ecclesiastical courts. 
With his neighbours he lived at peace, the incursions of the 
savage Pctchenegs alone disturbing his tranquillity. His nephew 
Svyatpolk, son of his brother and victim Yaropolk, he married 
to the daughter of Bolcslaus of Poland. He died at Berestova, 
near Kiev, while on his way to chastise the insolence of his son, 
Prince Yaroslav of Novgorod. The various parts of his dis- 
membered body were distributed among his numerous sacred 
foundations and were venerated as relics. The university of 
Kiev has rightly been named after the man who both civilized 
and Christianized ancient Russia. His memory was also kept 
alive by innumerable folk ballads and legends. With him the 
Varangian period of Russian history ceases and the Christian 
period begins. 

See Memorials (Rus.) published by the Commission for the ex- 
amination of ancient documents (Kiev. 1881, Ac«k fVJComamn 

and M, lEtomin, Celltction cf Ilsstorual Malcnali (rcflklijlw^ T*> * 

&c); O. Pam tsky, Smnattjavtantum in Amjtn 

(Lembcnr, 1&9?}, A* Lanj^i-Paitilevsk: 

(Rui,) (Petersburg, 1BS7); } Macquatt* 

ttichr Stmfaip (Lciptijr, ts&ojj', I " 

Hosier als Kfidiittzrntrum dii von 

1904) 

VLADIJim.agovemi 
govern m tali of Mi 
E, hy N; 







VLADIMIR— VLADIVOSTOK 



169 



1» It. to 450 ft. below the general level, so that the country has 

4 hilly appearance. 

The lacustrine depression of the middle Volga and Oka extends 
■» the ease of the government. The Upper Carboniferous lime- 
tfooes. of which it is mostly built up, arc overlain by Permian 
sandstones towards the east, and patches of Jurassic clays— denuded 
tnnants of formerly extensive deposits — arc scattered over its 
-urface. The whole is covered with a thick sheet of boulder clay, 
considered to be the bottom moraine of the North-European fce- 
^«t, and overlaid, in its turn, in the depressions, by extensive 
Murine clays and sands. The geology, especially of the western 
>:.ts, has been investigated by Professor Nikitin, who has ascer- 
ui3cd that under the Glacial and post-Glacial deposits — the lower 
*uu of which contain remains of the mammoth and rhinoceros 
■ d the upper fossils of extensive prehistoric forests — occur Lower 
( V-aceous deposits and deposits intermediate between the Cre- 
'^rjs and the Jurassic C Volga " deposits). Upper Jurassic 
\< Uway and Oxford) and Upper Carboniferous deposits are also 
^nd, and at Gorbatov Permian marls. 

The soil is for the most part unfertile, save in the district of 
Yunev, where are patches 01 black earth, which have occasioned a 
if A deal of discussion among Russian geologists. Iron ore is 
*>Wy diffused, and china clay and gypsum are met with in several 
pjces. Peat is of Common occurrence. Forests cover extensive 
tracts in the south-east. The climate resembles that of Moscow, 
; a.t a a little colder, and still more continental: the average yearly 
fenperature at the city of Vladimir is 38° F. (January, 16*; July, 

Toe Oka Bows through the government for 8s ra., and is navigable 
-hnMghout. Of its tributaries, the Klyaxma is navigable to Kovrov, 
*vi even to Vladimir in summer; and timber is floated on the Teza. 
~r»fl Ukes are numerous; that of PIcshchcycvo or Pcrcyaslavl 

5 n. in length) has historical associations, Peter the Great having 
irre acquired in his boyhood his first experiences in navigation. 

I Tse marshes extend to more than half a million acres. 
I The population was estimated in 1906 as 1,730,400. It is 
^irouehly Great Russian. The Finnish tribes, Muroma and Merya, 
*±kh formerly inhabited the region, have been absorbed by the 
^'ivs. as also have the Karelians, who are supposed to have formerly 
1 oJabited the territory. The descendants of the few hundred Kare- 
ioa families, which were settled by Peter the Great on the shores 
i Lake Pereyaslavl, still, however, preserve their own language. 
The government b divided into thirteen districts, the chief towns 
"i which are Vladimir, Alexandras, Gorokhovets, Kovrov, Melenki, 
U&rom. Fereyastavl Zalyeskiy, Pokrov, Shuya, Sudogda, Suzdal. 
Vyuaiki and Yuriev Polskiy. Ivanovo-Vozncsensk, Cusevsk and 
Khafcri are important industrial towns. The temstvos (district 
o>i«ciis) make considerable efforts to foster education and improve 
u* sanitary arrangements. 

The nil ts not very fertile, and the standard of agriculture is low, 
*k inhabitants being largely engaged in manufactures. In 1900 
t f&^QO acres (15.8% of the entire area) were under cereals. 
Cherries and apples are exported in considerable quantities. 

The cultivation of flax, both for local manufactures and for 
txport ■e s pecially about Melenki — is important; so also is that of 
i*-r- 4 p. Natural pastures are numerous, and support large herds 
i cattle. The principal crops are rye, oats, wheat, barley and 
potatoes. The peasants hold 5.591,000 acres m communal owner* 
* ?: of this 60% is arable land, 3,802300 acres belong to private 
fr^er*. 552.300 acres to the crown and 370,000 acres to the imperial 
iisaly. The only important mineral is alabaster. 

Vladimir ranks third among the governments of European Russia 

(or oanafactures. It has some 500 large factories, which employ 

o«er 100.000 persons (one-third women); the principal establish* 

•»«» are cotton, linen and silk mills, dye-works, and rope, paper, 

•irQ-aard, oD, chemical, machinery, glass and iron works, tanneries 

•ad distilleries- Wood, coal, petroleum and peat arc all used as fuel. 

.% dbtissctiye feature of Vladimir is the great variety of petty 

we» carried on by peasants who still continue to cultivate their 

! **^^Whilo m some villa rw almost all the male popuhrion 

¥ * ***** * anJ travel all over Ruwa a * i-.ir^nlcr-,, m;< -.ms, 

,or*i pciJbr-, .>r travelling merch.ini-, cither villages 

ccuttie* \n dome branch of manufactured produce, 

iTseniers leave Vladimir every year. Whole 

[ 1 he hundred* the aggregate 
Ufl » >-• ' limir (or raihtr 

^^Hp Balkan pcnirKula. 
^r ^^B ^^^ '"^sickles, 

' C& 

lolc ifl 

HP ml for 

Jes and 
M. The 



principal ports are Murom on the Volga and Kovrov and Vyazmkj 
00 the Kfyazma. Timber, wood for fuel and manufactured goods 
are the chief exports. 

Numbers of Palaeolithic stone implements, intermingled with 
bones of the mammoth and the rhinoceros, and stHl greater numbers 
of Neolithic stone implements, have been discovered. There are a 
great number of burial-mounds belonging to the Bronze* and Iron 
periods, and containing decorations in amber and gold; nearly 
2000 such burial-mounds arc scattered round Lake PTeshcheycvo, 
some of them belonging to the pagan period and some to the early 
Christian. Coins from Arabia, Bokhara, Germany and Anglo-Saxon 
lands are found in great quantities. (P. A. K.; J. T. Be.) 

VLADIMIR, a town of Russia, capital of the government of the 
same name known in history as Vladimir-on-thc-Klyazma, to 
distinguish it from Vladimir in Volhynia. It is picturesquely 
situated on the Klyaxma and Lybcd, 11S m. by rail E.N.E. 
of Moscow. Pop. (1884) 18,420; (1900) 32,029. The city is an 
archiepiscopal see of the Orthodox Greek church. The Lybcd 
divides it into two parts. Extensive cherry orchards occupy 
the surrounding slopes, and in each is a small watch-tower, with 
cords drawn in all directions to be shaken by tbe watcher when 
birds alight. The kreml stands on a hill and contains two very 
old cathedrals — the Uspenskiy (1150; restored in 189 1), where 
all the princes of Vladimir have been buried, and tbe Dmitri- 
evskiy (1 197 ; restored in 1834-1835). Several churches date from 
the 1 2th century, including one dedicated to the Birth of Christ, 
in which St Alexander Nevski was buried. Tbe " Golden 
Gate " — a triumphal gate surmounted by a church — was built 
by the grand duke Andrei Bogolyubskiy in 1x58. 

Vladimir was founded in the 12th century. It first comes 
Into notice in 1151, when Andrei Bogolyubskiy secretly left 
Vyshgorod — the domain of his father in the principality of Kiev 
— and migrated to the newly settled land of Suzdal, where he 
became (1157) grand prince of the principalities of Vladimir, 
Suzdal and Rostov. In 1242 the principality was overrun by 
the Mongols under Batu Khan, and he and his successors 
asserted their suzerainty over it until 1328. During this period 
Vladimir became the chief town of the Russian settlements 
in the basin of the Oka, and it disputed the superiority with the 
new principality of Moscow, to which it finally succumbed in 
1328. In the 14th century it began to decay. 

VLAD1MIR-V0LHYNSKIY, a town of Russia, in the govern- 
ment of Volhynia, 19 m. N.N.E. of the spot where the frontiers 
of Russia, Poland and Galicia meet and 300 m. W.N.W. of 
Kiev. Pop. (1885) 8752; (1857) 9695, three-fourths Jews. 
Though not mentioned in the annals before 988, Vladimir was 
probably in existence in the 9th century under the name of 
Ladomir. In the 10th century it was the capital of the princi- 
pality of Volhynia. The Tatars and the Lithuanians destroyed 
it several times, but it always recovered, and only fell into decay 
in the 17th century. It was finally annexed to Russia after the 
first division of Poland (1772). The ruins in and near the town 
include remains of a church supposed to have been built by 
Vladimir, grand duke of Kiev, in the ioth-nth centuries, and 
of another built in 1160 by his descendant Mstislav. This 
latter was apparently very well built, and its length exceeded 
that of the temple of St Sophia at Kiev. The town contains a 
good archaeological museum. 

VLADIVOSTOK, the chief Russian seaport and naval station 
on the Pacific Ocean, situated at the southern extremity 
(43° 7* N. and 13 1° 55' E.) of the Maritime Province, not far from 
the point where that government touches both Manchuria and 
Korea (Cho-sen). It is connected by rail with Khabarovsk 
(479 m. N.N.E.), the capital of the Amur region, and with Chita 
in Transbaikalia (1362 m.) via Ninguta, Kharbin, Tsilsikar and 
Khailar. Pop. (rooo) 38,000, The town stands en Peter the 
Great Gulf, occupying the northern shore of one of its hom-likc 
expansions, which tbe Russians have called the Golden Horn. 
The depth of the Eastern Bosporus ranges from 13 to so 
fathoms, and that of the Golden Horn from 5 to 13, the latter 
affording a spacious harbour. The hills are covered with forests 
of oak, lime, birch, maple, cork, walnut, acacia, ash, aspen, 
poplar, dm, apple, pear and wild cherry, with a rich undergrowth 
of the most varied shrubs. Excellent timber is supplied by 



170 

oak and cedar forests not far off. The climate, however, is 
severe, as compared with that of corresponding latitudes in 
Europe. Though standing in almost the same parallel as 
Marseilles, Vladivostok has an average annual temperature of 
only 40* F., and, although the gulf itself never freezes, a thin 
Ice-crust forms along the shores in December and remains until 
April. The town has several handsome buildings, a monument 
to Admiral Nevelskiy (1897), a cathedral, a museum, an observa- 
tory, an Oriental institute (opened in 1899), professional schools, 
a naval hospital, mechanical and naval "works, steam saw-mills 
and flour-mills. The drawback of Vladivostok is that it has 
not, and cannot have, a well-developed hinterland, despite the 
great efforts which have been made by the Russian government 
to supply the Usuri region (to the north of Vladivostok) with 
Russian settlers. The town of Vladivostok was founded in 
1 860-1 861, and from 1865 to 1900 was a free port. 

VODENA (Turk, and Bulg. Vodeit, anc Edessa, q.v.), a dty 
of European Turkey,' in the vilayet of Salonica, western 
Macedonia; at the source of the small river Bistritza, which 
flows east and south into Lake Yenije, and on. the railway 
from Salonica to Monastir. Pop. (1905) about 25,000, con- 
sisting of Turks, Slavs and Greeks. -The town stands on a 
rocky height commanding views of Pindus and Olympus; 
the approaching slopes are richly wooded, and traversed by 
picturesque waterfalls, from which the name of Vodena (Slav. 
toda, water) is probably derived. Vodena is the see of a Greek 
archbishop, and possesses numerous churches and mosques, 
besides unimportant remains of Roman and Byzantine build- 
ings. It has manufactures of cotton, tobacco and leather, and 
a large trade in wine, silk cocoons and red pepper. 

VODEYSHANKAR, GOWRISHANKAR (1805-1892), native 
minister of the state of Bhaunagar in Kathiawar, Bombay, 
was born on the 21st of August 1805, of a family of Nagar 
Brahmins. He rose from being a revenue officer to be state 
minister in 1847. His success in this capacity was such that 
on the death of the reigning chief, in 1870, he was appointed 
joint administrator in concert with a British official. The 
experiment was in every respect successful. Under the simple 
and economical forms used in native states, improvements 
suggested by British experience were introduced. The land 
revenue was based on a cash system, the fiscal and customs 
systems were remodelled and tree planting was encouraged. 
The town of Bhaunagar received the great boon of the Gowri- 
shankar Waterworks, on which six lakhs of rupees were spent. 
The Bhaunagar state also warmly pressed for railway com- 
munication with the continent of India, and thus began a 
movement which has spread a network of railway lines over 
the peninsula of Kathiawar. The British government re- 
warded these many services of Gowrishankar with the distinc- 
tion of C.S.I. in 1877. He helped to establish the Rajkumar 
College at Rajkot, for the education of native princes, and also 
the Rajasthanik Court, which, after settling innumerable dis- 
putes between the land-owning classes and the chiefs, has since 
been abolished. In 1879 Gowrishankar resigned office, and 
devoted himself to the study of the higher literature of that 
Vedanta philosophy which through his whole life had been to him 
a solace and a guide. In 1 884 he wrote a work called Svarupanu- 
sandkan, on the union of the soul with Deity, which led to 
a letter of warm congratulation from Max Muller, who also 
published a short biography of him. In 1887 he put on the robe 
of the Sonyasi or ascetic, the fourth stage, according to the 
Hindu Shastras, in the life of the twice-born man, and in this 
manner passed the remainder of his life, giving above ten hours 
each day to Vedantic studies and holy contemplation. He 
died, revered by all classes, in December 1892. 

See Javerital U. Yajaik, Gowrishankar Udayashomkar (Bombay, 
1889). 

VODKA. Voon or Wodxy, the Russian national spirituous 
beverage. Originally vodka was made almost entirely from 
rye, barley malt to the extent of 15 to 20% being used 
to effect ssccbarincatkm (see Shuts), but at the present day 
potatoes and maize are the staple raw materials from wfakflT 



VODENA—VOGBL, SIR J. 



this spirit is manufactured, and, as a rule, green rye malt fa 
now used instead of barley. The distillation is conducted 
by means of live steam in a double still of the " patent " type. 
Vodka as manufactured contains from 90 to 96% of 
alcohol, but it is diluted, previous to retailing, to a strength 
of 60 to 40% It is illegal to sell it with less than 40% of 
alcoh oL 

VOETIUS (Vow), GYSBERTUS (1 588-1676), Dutch theo- 
logian, was born at Heusden, Holland. He studied at 
Leiden, and in 161 x became pastor of Blymen, whence in 16x7 
he returned to Heusden. In 16x9 he played an influential 
part in the Synod of Doit, and in 1634 was made professor 
of .theology and Oriental science at Utrecht Three years 
later he became pastor of the Utrecht congregation. He was 
an advocate of the extremest form of Calvinism against the 
Arminians; but his personal influence was good, and the 
city of Utrecht perpetuated his memory by giving his name 
to the street in which he had lived. 

VOGEL, EDUARD (1820-1856), German traveller in Central 
Africa, was born at Krefeld on the 7th of March 1829. He 
studied mathematics and astronomy at Leipzig and Berlin, 
and in 1851 engaged in astronomical work in London. In 
1853 he was chosen by the British government to take supplies 
to Heinrich Barth, then in the western Sudan; and Vogd 
met Barth at Kuka in Bornu (1854). During 1854 and 1855 
he explored the countries round Lake Chad and the upper 
course of the Benue. On the xst of December 1855 he left 
Kuka for the Nile Valley, and nothing further was heard of 
him. Several search expeditions were organized to ascertain 
his fate and to recover his papers; it was not until 1873 that 
Gustav Nachtigal on reaching Wadai leamt that Vogel had 
been murdered in that country in February 1856. 

See Erinnerungen an einen VersckdUnen (Leipzig, 1863). by 
Vogel's sister, E. Polko, and Der Afrikaforscher Biuard Vogd 
(Hamburg, 1889). 

VOGEL, SIR JULIUS (1835-1809), British colonial statesman, 
son of Albert Leopold Vogel, was born. in London on the 24th 
of February 1835, was educated at University College school, 
London, and emigrated to Victoria during the exciting years 
which followed the discovery of goldfields there. He became 
editor of a newspaper at Maryborough, stood for the Legislative 
Assembly and was defeated, and in 1861 left Victoria, carried in 
the mining rush to Otago, New Zealand, where much gold had 
just been found. Settling in Dunedin, he bought a half-share 
in the Otago Daily Times, and was soon its editor and a member 
of the Otago Provincial Council. He made his paper the most 
influential in the colony, and was returned to the House of 
Representatives. In 1866 he was head of the Otago Provincial 
Executive; by 1869 he had made his mark in the New Zealand 
parliament, and was treasurer in the ministry of Sir William Fox. 
Without delay he brought forward a scheme for the construction 
of trunk railways and other public works, the purchase of land 
from the Maori tribes, and the introduction of immigrants, all 
to be done with money borrowed in London. At that time New 
Zealand hardly contained a quarter of a million of white settlers, 
was exhausted by the ten years' struggle with the Maori, not 
then ended, and was depressed by the low price of her staple 
product, wool, and the abatement of a gold-fever. Yet Vogel's 
sanguine, energetic appeals and remarkable gift of persuasion 
induced the House of Assembly to adopt a modified version of 
his scheme. For the next six years he was tiff yA jpowm fttl 
man in tbe colony. Millions were borroweo; rajwap V 
pushed on, immigrants — slate and voluntary— Streamed a. 
Lasting peace was made with the Maori, » t digraph! 
Australia, a sleam mail nervier secured actus* the I 
Fronds; a government life insurant 
trust office, were tsiabT ' 
were well -managed* Di 
financial buari"^ — " 
ioiDtion ol 



* 



VOGHERA— VOGLER 



171 



In 1874 Vogel, until that time a supporter of the Provincial 
mtem, decided to abolish it. In this, with the aid of SirE. W. 
Stafford and Sir H. A. Atkinson, he succeeded. In the struggle, 
tower, be broke with many of his old allies, and in 1&76 sud- 
denly quitted New Zealand to take the post of agent-general in 
London. This he held until 1880, and while holding it nego- 
tiated a loan for five millions. Having become connected with 
certain public companies, and the New Zealand government 
Ejecting thereto, he bad to resign his position. An attempt, 
too, which be made in 1880 to enter the House of Commons as 
Couenrauve member for Penryn was unsuccessful. In 1884 
k returned to New Zealand, was at once elected to parliament, 
ud formed a coalition ministry with the Radical leader, Sir 
X. Stoat They held office for three years, but though Vogel 
ibrod some of his old financial skill, they were not years of 
prosperity for the -colony, or triumph for the government. A 
deficit, a rejected scheme of taxation and a crashing defeat at 
k polls ended VogeTs career as a minister. After a few 
moths of failure as leader of an outnumbered Opposition he 
pvt up the contest, left New Zealand for the last time, and 
fattbe last eleven years of his life lived quietly near London. 
Throughout his life he had from time to time to struggle with 
Wnea, lameness and acute bodily pain, while an impul- 
in, speculative nature led him once and again into financial 
^tallies. The persistency with which he faced trouble and 
•barrassment, the hopefulness he showed under stress of ill 
hrttme, the sympathy and pleasantness of manner which won 
ka friends at all times, were elements in his curious and 
iftfesting character no less remarkable than the fertility and 
■njpntivepower of his busy brain. 

Vogtl was among the pioneers of Imperial Federation; he 
■nM have extended Great Britain's influence m the Pacific 
Own had he been allowed. He was the first minister to 
"cue the second reading of a -Women's Franchise Bill in New 
fatad. As long ago as 1874 he endeavoured to save the 
Xcv Zealand forests from the reckless destruction by axe and 
fee which has since gone on. In 1889 a novel from his pen, 
i«w Domini 2000, was published, and reached a second edition. 
Be died at East Molesey en the 13th of March 1800. His wife, 
^»ns the daughter of William Clayton, government architect, 
Xrt Zealand, two sons and a daughter survived him. Another 
«U been killed in the Matabele War in South Africa. Vogcl 
**» a Jew of the Ashkenazi rite. (W. P. R.) 

VOGHtHA (anc Jria), a town of Lombardy, Italy, in the 
Prince of Pavia, and 19 m. by rail S.S.W. of that city, 305 ft. 
**e sea-level, on the Staffora (a tributary of the Po). Pop. 
r *i) I44S3 (town); 20,442 (commune). The fortifications 
octed by the Vlsconti in the middle ages have given place to 
*adj promenades. The large church of San Lorenzo dates 
to* the nth century, but was remodelled in the baroque 
*M about the beginning of the 17th. The suppressed church 
J^Dano (Chiesa Rossa), so called from the red colour of the 
** of which it is built, dates from the 10th century. The 
*shboufaood produces much silk, in which, as well as in com 
& vine, an active trade is carried on, The ancient Iria took 
^ name from the river on which it was situated. It was on 
* road from Placentia to Dertona, and was made a colony 
^*vftstxa(coloma Forum Iulium Tricnsivtm). 

VMUa,GEDBG JOSEPH (1 740-1814), usually known as 
war Abi (Abbot) Vogler, German organist and composer, 
5jJ«* ** IWchach in Wttrsburg on the 15th of June 1740. 
""" ' ftle educajmg him in the Jesuit 

^marked 
, but 




the Golden Spur, and appointed protonotary and chamberlain 
to the pope. 

On his return to Mannheim in 175s Vogler was appointed 
court chaplain and second "maestro di cappella." He now 
established his first great music school. His pupils were 
devoted to him, but he made innumerable enemies, for the 
principles upon which he taught were opposed to those of all 
other teachers. He had invented a new system of fingering 
for the harpsichord, a new form of construction for the organ, 
and a new system of musical theory founded upon that of 
ValotU. Mozart condemned the fingering as "miserable," 
and many rumours to his discredit have survived to this day 
owing to Mozart's share in the prejudice felt against him. The 
proposed change in the construction of the organ consisted in 
simplifying the mechanism, introducing free-reeds in place of 
ordinary reed-stops, and substituting unisonous stops for the 
great "mixtures" then in vogue. The theoretical system, 
though professedly based upon Valotti's principles, was to a 
great extent empirical. Nevertheless, in virtue of a certain 
substratum of truth which seems to have underlain his new 
theories, Vogler undoubtedly exercised a powerful influence 
over the progress of musical science, and numbered among his 
disciples some of the greatest geniuses of the period. 

In 1778 the elector removed his court to Munich. Vogler 
followed him thither in 1780, but, dissatisfied with the reception 
accorded to his dramatic compositions, soon quitted his post. 
He went to Paris, where after much hostility his new system 
was recognised as a continuation of that started by Rameau. 
His organ concerts in the church of St Sulpice attracted con- 
siderable attention. At the request of the queen, he composed 
the open Lt Patriotisme, which was produced before the court 
at Versailles. His travels were wide, and extended over Spain, 
Greece, Armenia, remote districts of Asia and Africa, and even 
Greenland, in search of uncorruptcd forms of national melody. 
In 1786 he was appointed "kapellmeister" to the king of 
Sweden, founded his second music school at Stockholm, and 
attained extraordinary celebrity by his performances on an 
instrument called the " orchestrion *'— a species of organ in- 
vented by himself. 1 In 1790 he brought this instrument to 
London, and performed upon it with great effect at the Pantheon, 
for the concert-room of which he also constructed an organ upon 
his own principles. The abbe's pedal-playing excited great 
attention. His most popular pieces were a fugue on themes 
from the " Hallelujah Chorus," composed after a visit to the 
Handel festival at Westminster Abbey, and A Musical 
Picture for the Organ, by Knecht, containing the imitation 
of a storm. 

From London Vogler proceeded to Rotterdam and the chief 
towns on the Rhine. At Esslingen he was presented with the 
"wine of honour," reserved for the use of sovereigns. At 
Frankfort he attended the coronation of the emperor Leopold II. 
He then visited Stockholm, and after a long residence there, 
interrupted by endless wanderings, once more established 
himself in Germany, where his compositions, both sacred and 
dramatic, received at last full credit. We hear o? him at Berlin 
in 1800, at Vienna in 1804 and at Munich in 1806. While 
at Frankfort in 1807 he received an invitation from Louis I., 
grand duke of Hesse-Darmstadt, offering him the appointment 
of " kapellmeister," with the order of merit, the title of privy 
councillor, a salary of 3000 florins, a house, a table supplied 
from the duke's own kitchen, and other privileges,which deter- 
mined him to bring his wanderings at last to a close. 

At Darmstadt he opened his third and most famous music 
school, the chief ornaments of which were Gansbacher, Weber 
and Meyerbeer, whose affection for their old master was un- 
bounded. One of Vogler's latest exploits was a journey to 
Frankfort in 18 10, to witness the production of Weber's Sylvana. 
He continued to work hard to the last, and died suddenly of 

•nnnUw at Darmctartfr t\n tY>* ritfi nf Mav iRta He WAS A 



172 



VOGT— VOICE 



brilliant and accomplished perfotmer, and an excellent if an 
eccentric teacher; but his own compositions have not survived. 

VOGT, KARL CHRISTOPH (181 7-1895), German naturalist 
and geologist, was born at Giesscn on the 5th of July 1817. 
In 1847 he became professor of zoology at Giesscn, and in 1852 
professor of geology and afterwards also of zoology at Geneva, 
where he died on the 5th of May 1895. His earlier publications 
were on zoology; he dealt with the Amphibia (1839), Reptiles 
(1840), with Mollusca and Crustacea (1845) and more generally 
with the invertebrate fauna of the Mediterranean (1854) 

His separate works include Im Gebirg and auf den Gletsckern 
(1843); Physiologische Brief e (1845-46); Grundriss der Geologic 
(i860); and Lekrbuch der Geologie und Pelrefaclcnkunde (2 vols., 
1846-47; cd. 4, 1879). An English version of his Lectures on Man: 
his Place in Creation and in the History of the Earth was published 
by the Anthropological Society of London in 1864. 

VOGTLAND, or Voictland, a district of Germany, forming 
the S.W. corner of the kingdom of Saxony, and also embracing 
parts of the principality of Reuss and of the duchies of Saxe- 
Altenburg and Saxc-Weimar. It is bounded on the N. by 
the principalities of Reuss, in the S.E. by Bohemia, and on the 
S.W. and W. by Bavaria. Its character is generally mountain- 
ous, and geologically it belongs to the Erzgcbirgc range. It 
is extremely rich in mineral ores — silver, copper, lead and 
bismuth. The name denoted the country governed for the 
emperor by a Vogt (bailiff or steward), and was, in the middle 
ages, known as terra advocatomm. The Vogte are first met 
with in the country in the xoth century, and the office shortly 
afterwards appears to have become hereditary in the princely 
line of Reuss. But this bouse was not in undivided possession, 
rival claims being raised from time to time; and after being 
during the middle ages a bone of contention between Bohemia, 
the burgraves of Nuremberg and the Saxon house of Wettin, 
it passed gradually to the Wettins, falling by the division of 
1485 to the Ernestine branch of the family. The elector 
Augustus I. made it one of the circles of his dominions. 

See Limmcr, Gesckkhte des Vogtlandes (Cera, 1825-28, 4 vols.) ; 
Simon, Das Vogtland (Meissen. 1904) ; C. F. Collmann, Das Vogtland 
im Afittelalter (Grciz, 1892) ; and Mctzncr, Vogtland ische Wandcrungcn 
(Annabcrg, 1902). 

VOGOft, EUGfeNE MELCHIOR. Comtc de (1848- ), 
French author, was born at Nice on the 25th of February 1848. 
He served in the campaign of 1870, and on the. conclusion of 
the war entered the diplomatic service, being appointed suc- 
cessively attache to the legations at Constantinople and Cairo 
and secretary at St Petersburg. He resigned in 1882, and 
from 1893 to 1898 was deputy for Ardeche. His connexion 
with the Revue des deux mondes began in 1873 with his Voyage 
en Syrie et en Palestine, and subsequently he was a frequent 
contributor. He did much to awaken French interest in the 
intellectual life of other countries, especially of Russia, his 
sympathy with which was strengthened by his marriage in 
1878 with a Russian lady, the sister of General Annenkov. 
De Voglie was practically the first to draw French attention 
to Dostoievski and his successors. He became a member of 
the French Academy in 1888. 

His works include: Htstoires orientates (1879); Portraits du 
Steele (1883); Le Fits de Pitrre U Grand (1884); llislotres d'htver 
(1885); Le Roman russe (1886); Regards htstoriques et litter at res 
(1892); Caurs russes (1894); Devanl U sibde (1896); Jean d'Agreve 
(1898); Le Raptxl des ombres (1900); Le hialtre de la mer (1903); 
Maxtme Gorky (1905). 

VOICE (Fr. voix, from Lat. tox), the sound produced by the 
vibrations of the vocal cords, two ligaments or bands of fibrous 
elastic tissue situated in the larynx. It is to be distinguished 
from speech, which is the production of articulate sounds 
intended to express ideas. Many of the lower animals have 
voice, but none has the power of speech in the sense in which 
man possesses that faculty. There may be speech without 
voice, as in whispering, whilst in singing a scale of musical 
tones we have voice without speech. (See Sonc; and for 
speech see Phonetics; also the articles on the various letters 
of the alphabet.) 

1. Physiological Anatomy.— The organ of voice, the larynx, 



is situated in man in the upper and fore part of the neck, where 
it forms a well-known prominence in the middle line (sec 
details under Respiratory System). It opens below into the 
trachea or windpipe, and above into the cavity of the pharynx, 
and it consists of a framework of cartilages, connected by 
elastic membranes or ligaments, two of which constitute the 
true vocal cords. These cartilages are movable on each other 
by the action of various muscles, which thus regulate the posit ion 
and the tension of the vocal cords. The trachea conveys the 
blast of air from the lungs during expiration, and the whole 
apparatus may be compared to an acoustical contrivance in 
which the lungs represent the wind chest and the trachea the 
tube passing from the wind chest to the sounding body con- 
tained in the larynx. Suppose two tight bands of any ehu>iic 
membrane, such as thin sheet india-rubber, stretched over 
the end of a wide glass tube so that the margins of the hands 
touched each other, and that a powerful blast of air is driven 
through the tube by a bellows. The pressure would so distend 
the margins of the membrane as to open the aperture and 
allow the air to escape; this would cause a fall of pressure, 
and the edges of the membrane would spring back by their 
elasticity to their former position; again the pressure would 
increase, and again the edges of the membrane would be dis- 
tended, and those actions would be so quickly repeated as to 
cause the edges of the membrane to vibrate with sufficient 
rapidity to produce a musical tone, the pitch of which would 
depend on the number of vibrations executed in a second of 
time. In other words, there would be a rapid succession of 
pun's of air. The condensation and rarefaction of the air thus 
produced arc the chief cause of the tone, as H. von Hcimholts 
has pointed out, and in this way the larynx resembles the siren 
in its mode of producing tone. It is evident also that the 
intensity or loudness of the tone would be determined by the 
amplitude of the vibrations of the margins of the membrane, 
and that its pitch would be affected by any arrangements 
effecting an increase or decrease of the tension of the margins 
of the membrane. The pitch might also be raised by the 
strength of the current of air, because the great amplitude of 
the vibrations would increase the mean tension of the elastic 
membrane. With tones of medium pilch, the pressure of the 
air in the trachea is equal to that of a column of mercury of 

^ / / A* ? * 





Fig. 1. 



Fie. a. 



FtG. I. — Cartilages and Ligaments of the Larynx, seen from the 
front; abt. half nat.site 1. epiglottis; 2, hyoid bone; 3, small 
cornu of hyoid bone; 4, middle thyrohyoid ligament; 5. great 
cornu of hyoid bone; 6, small nodules of cartilage (carttfago 
trittcea); 7, the lateral thyro-hyoid ligament; 8, left lamina or 
wing of thyroid cartilage; 9. cricoid cartilage; 10, lowef Cornu o| 
thyroid cartilage; tl. part of cricoid United to thftthy 
the middle crico-thyroid ligament; 12, secoi 
(From Krause.) 

Fig. 2.— Cartilages and Ligament of Larynx* 
abi.taa.lfajit.itK. 1, cpigloitiv ?. tei*cr cat 
3. greater cornu of hyoid; 4, Mr m! iK\ n. I«>rj 
tilago trittcea ; 6, upper ftrflu of thyruul 7,1 
ment: 8. cartilages of Santorm ; \ 
1amil>J of In, *. itrf; IT, m. 

12, inferior cornu 1 J [ii\ tlihI 1 1. r, 

*<tU of 



(Fm 1 




VOICE 



173 



■ that represented by jo mm. of water. Suck it a geaeral 

conception of the mechanism of voice. 
The cvtumfu form the framework of the larynx. They consist 

of three tingle pieces (the thyroid, the cricoid and the cartilage of 
« the epiglottis) and of three pairs (two 

arytenoids, two cornicula laryngis or 
cartilages of Sentorioi, and two cunei- 
form cartilages or cartilages of Wris- 
berg), see figs. 1 and a. The epiglottis, 
,the cornicula laryngis, the cuneiform 
' cartilages and the apices of the aryten- 
oids are composed of yellow or elastic 
fibre-cartilage, whilst the cartilage of 
all the others is of the hyaline variety, 
resembling that of the costal or nb 
cartilages. These cartilages are bound 
together by ligaments, some of which are 
seen in figs. 1 and 2, whilst the re- 
mainder are represented in fig. 3. The 
ligaments specially concerned in the pro- 
duction of voice are the inferior Piyro- 
arytenoid ligaments, or true vocal cords. 
These are composed of fine elastic fibres 
attached behind to the anterior pro- 
jection of the base of the arytenoid 

Fig. J.-Ririrt Half of the ^^Kf 9 . processus vocalis, 1 in fig. *, 




i- am 1. epiglottis; 



, continuous with the lateral crico-thyroid 
2, arytenoid cartilage • U ^rST^it Jj & £„«. ; . MvMm m ;«♦ « 

SSSr' «*• ea^Sar «*rrowTperture of thecal* * chink 
«»)!n3yoid ligansent: be !j ee S, thc - ***?.£> ***, t "lf V ? C f 1 

fell' £££ ^•e^«de , *a T^^JmS 
1 iaf#rinr tki-u_ t ■ _. is on each side a recess or pouch 

* 1 £Sen^c!^S?e tcrm ? d the *«"** «* MorgagmVand 

ortibw 'io' «!,£ ,tiH smaller recess, the laryngeal pouch, 
ttw£^J2rf 8Up «£ r which passes for the space of half an inch 
nwt^rfalL JiSi betweenthe superior vocal cords in- 
«F u thvtJare "* and ** th y roid cartilage outside, 
nwrWtirU.\« \«™u" reaching as high as the upper border of 

P^^anUntrii ^ fre * ****» <* tbe true *ocal cords. 
WyofhvSSbooe* tV ^he "PP* 1 " aperture of the glottis is 

»Ar jrTu of hVoS {~|^>^r^J.°^ n ^^r°u!: 



*»*• (From Krause.) 



. and, when seen from above by 
. means of the laryngoscope, it presents 

r* 7** represented in fig. 4. The aperture is bounded in front 
°y u* epiglottis, e $ behind by the summits of thc arytenoid carti- 
lages, or, and on the sides by two 
folds of mucous membrane, the 
aryteno-epiglottic folds, ae. The 
rounded elevations corresponding to 
the cornicula laryngis and cunei- 
form cartilages, c, andalso the cushion 
0/ the epiglottis, e, are readily' seen 

rin the faryngoscopfc picture. The 
(* glottis, o, is seen in trie form of a 
long narrow fissure, bounded by the 
true vocal cords, /»*, whilst above 
them we have the false vocal cords. 
If, and be tw een the true and false 

Flo. i t . -„ cords the opening of the ventricle, s. 

* STgEhP*? 1 * View The rima frtMu, between thc true 
^ttalattk* 1 *. l, . ton i ue J vocal cords, in the adult male eiea- 
BSjf^i^pnaryngo- 8 ure» about at mnu, or nearly an 
rS SL! 1 ^} I» Pha-inch from before backwards, and 
•SSS Sm JF ?YS' ^ rom 6 to ia mm. across iu widest 
- — *-^ J unjnnttse fold; pa rt[ vrnrding to the degree of 
' WtwL? dilatation. In ferrule* and in males 
fore puberty the anteroposterior 
ut 17 mm. and its 





aJs 



-nale 



m 



vocal cords the epithelium Is squamous. Patches of squamous 
epithelium are also found in the ciliated timet above the glottis, 
on the under surface of tbe epiglottis, on the inner surface of the 
arytenoid cartilages, and on the free border of the upper or false 
cords. Numerous mucous glands exist in the lining membrane of 
the larynx, more especially in the epiglottis. In each laryngeal 
pouch them arc sixty to seventy Mich gland*, surrounded by fat. 

We are now in a position to understand the action of the tn* tries 
of the larynx by which the vocal cords, forming the rima ihutdu, 
can be tightened or relaxed, and by 
which they can be approximated or 
separated. Beside* certain extrinsic 
muscles — sternohyoid. omohyoid, 

sterna- thyroid and ihyro-hyoid^which 
move the larynx as a whole, there 
are intrinsic muscles which move the Jf 
cartilages on each other. Some of 
these are seen in fig. 5. These muscles 
are [a) thc crico-thyrqid, (5) the poi- IS / 
terior crico-arytenoid t (c) thc latent I 1 
crico-arytenuid. {d) the thyro-arytenoid,,, t 
(«) the arytenoid, and (/) the aryteno- **\ , 
epaglottidean. Their actions mill be'*-- -^ 
readily understood with the aid of thcj f .„ 
diagrams in fig. 6. (l) The cHat4&}roid 
is a bhort thick triangular muscle, itsli" 
fibm pas&Ing from the cricoid cartilace 
obliquely upwards and outwards to be 
inserted into the ic^ur border oi thc 
thyroid cartilage and to the outer _. ti«-#i— *f*w.ui» 

bonto of iu lo«tr horn. Wh« .he F t5^S|tSl?S2 




from within; abt. two- 
thirds nat. sise. 1 , hyo> 
epiglottic ligament, seen 
in profile; 2, epiglottis; 
3, aryteno - epiglottic 
muscle; 4, Santorioi's 
cartilage*. 5. oblique ary- 
tenoid muscle; 6, trans- 
verse arytenoid muscle. 
seen in profile; 7, pos- 
terior crico - arytenoid ; 

8, lateral crico-arvtcnoid: 

9, lower cornu of thyroid 
cartilage cut through; 

10, insertion of posterior 
portion of crico-thyroid 
muscle; 11, left lamina 
of thyroid cartilage cut 
through; 12, long thyro- 
epiglottic muscle (a var- 
iety); 13, inferior thyro- 
arytenoid; 14, thyro- 
epiglottic; 15, superior 
thyro - arytenoid ; 16, 
median thyro-hvoid liga- 
ment. (From Krause.) 



muscle contracts, the cricoid and thy- 
roid cartilages are approximated. In 
this action, however, it is not the thy- 
roid that is depressed on the cricoid. 
as is generally stated, but, the thyroid 
being fixed in position by the action 
of the extrinsic muscles, the anterior 
border of the cricoid is drawn upwards, 
whilst its posterior border, in conse- 
quence of a revolution around the axis 
uniting the articulations between the 
lower cornua of the cricoid and the 
thyroid, is depressed, carrying the ary- 
tenoid cartilages along with it. Thus 
the vocal cords are stretched, (a) The 
tkyro-arytenoid has been divided by 
anatomists into two parts— one, the 
internal, lying close to the true vocal 
cord, and the other, external, imme- 
diately within the ala of the thyroid 
cartilage- Many of the fibres of the 
anterior portion pass from thc thyroid 
cartilage with a slight curve (concavity 
inwards) to the processus vocalis at the 
base of tbe arytenoid cartilage. They 
are thus parallel with the true vocal 
cord, and when they contract the ary- 
tenoids are drawn forwards, carrying 
with them the posterior part of the cricoid and relaxing the vocal 
cords. Thus the thyroarytenoids are the antagonists of the crico- 
thyroids. K. F. W. Ludwig has pointed out that certain fibres (portio- 
ary-vocalis) arise from thc side 01 the cord itself a nd pass obliquely back 
to the processus vocalis. These will tighten thc parts of the cord in 
front and relax the parts behind their points of attachment. Some 
of the fibres of the outer portion run obliquely upwards from the side 
of tbe crico-thyroid membrane, pass through the anteroposterior 
fibres of the inner portion of the muscle, and finally end in the tissue 
of the false cord. These fibres have been supposed to render the 
edge of the cord more prominent. Other fibres inserted into the 
processus vocalis will rotate slightly the arytenoid outwards, whilst 
a few passing up into the aryteno-epigbttidean folds may assist 
in depressing the epiglottis (Quain). ty The posterior and lateral 
crico-arytenotd muscles have antagonistic actions, and may be con- 
sidered together. The posterior arise from thc posterior surface of 
the cricoid cartilage, and passing upwards and outwards are attached 
to the outer angle of the base of the arytenoid. On the other hand, 
the lateral arise from thc upper border 01 the cricoid as far back as the 
articular surface for the arytenoid, pass backwards and upwards, 
and are also inserted into the outer angle of the base of the arytenoid 
before the attachment of the posterior cricoarytenoid. Imagine 
the pyramidal form of tbe arytenoid cartilages. To the inner angle 
of the triangular base are attached, as already described, the true 
vocal cords; and to the outer angle the two muscles in question. 
The posterior crico-arytenoids draw the outer angles backwards and 
inwards, thus rotating the inner angles, or proces s us vocalis, out- 
wards, and. when the two muscles act, widening the rima glottidis. 
This action is opposed by the lateral crico-thyroids, which draw the 
outer angle forwards ana outwards, rotate the inner angles inwards, 

2a 



174 



VOICE 



And thus approximate the cords. (4) The arytenoids pass from the 
one arytenoid cartilage to the other, and in action these cartilages 
will be approximated and slightly depressed. (5) The aryttno-epi- 
tjoUidean muscles arise near the outer angles of the arytenoid ; their 
fibres pass obliquely upwards, decussate and are inserted partly into 




Fie. 6. — Diagrams explaining the action of the muscles of the larynx. 
The dotted lines show the positions taken by the cartilages and the 
true vocal cords by the action of the muscle, and the arrows show 
the general direction in which the muscular fibres act. A, Action 
of crico-thyroid ; 1, cricoid cartilage; a, arytenoid cartilage; 
3, thyroid cartilage; 4, true vocal cord; 5, thyroid cartilage, new 
position ; 6, true vocal cord, new position. B, Action of arytenoid : 
i, section of thyroid; 2, arytenoid; 3, posterior border of epi- 
glottis: 4, true vocal cord; 5, direction of muscular fibres; 
6, arytenoid, new position; 7, true vocal cord, new position. 
C, Action of lateral crico-arytenoid; same description as for A 
and B; 8, posterior border of epiglottis, new position ; 9, arytenoid 
in new position. D, Action of posterior crico-arytenoid ; same 
description. (From Beaunb and Bouchard.) 

the outer and upper border of the opposite cartilage, partly into 
the aryteno-epigtottic fold, and ••-•'■ 



arytenoids, 
whil 



nd upper border of the opposite cartilage, partly into 
•epiglottic fold, and partly join the fibres of the thyro- 
In action they assist in bringing the arytenoids together, 
hilst they also draw down the epiglottis, and constrict the upper 
aperture of the larynx. The vocal cords will be also relaxed by the 
elasticity of the parts. 

2. Physiology of Voice Production. — The vocal cords are 
tightened by the action of the crico-thyroid, or, as it might 
jfoswtor be more appropriately termed, the thyro-cricoid 
awcAatf- muscle. It stretches the thyro-arytcnoid ligaments, 
**"• the free edges of which, covered by mucous membrane, 
form the vocal cords. The adductors of the cords are the 
lateral crico-arytenoids, while the posterior crico-arytcnoids 
are the abductors. The arytenoid muscle brings the cords 
together. Many of the fibres of the thyroarytenoid arc inserted 
obliquely into the sides of the cord, end in contraction they 
tighten the cord by pulling on the edge and making it curved 
instead of straight. Some such action is indicated by the 
elliptical shape of the riraa glottidis in passing from the chest 
register to the middle register. Other fibres, however, running 
parallel with the cord may tend to relax it in certain circum- 
stances. All the muscles except the thyro-cricoid (which is 
innervated by the superior laryngeal) receive nerve filaments 
from the inferior laryngeal branch of the vagus, the fibres 
being derived from the accessory roots. Both the abductor 
and adductor nerves come therefore from the inferior laryngeal. 
When an animal is deeply anaesthetized stimulation of the 
inferior laryngeal nerve causes abduction of the cord, but if 
the anaesthesia is slight, then we have adduction. The tonic 
contraction of the abductors is stronger than that of the 
adductors, so in a state of rest the glottis is slightly open. The 
centre of innervation is in the medulla oblongata, and this is 
dominated by a centre in the Rolandic region of the cerebral 
cortex. 

The intensity or loudness of voice depends on the amplitude 



Ofemraf 
pby*A>. 



of the movement of the vocal cords. ~ Pitch depends on the 
number of vibrations per second; and the length, size and 
degree of tension of the cords will determine the number of 
vibrations. The more tense the cords the higher the pitch, 
and the greater the length of the cords the lower will be the 
pitch. The range of the human voice is about three octaves— 
that is, from fa, (87 vibrations per second) to sol* (768 vibra- 
tions) In men, by the development of the larynx, the 
cords become more elongated than in women, in the ratio of 
3 to 2, so that the male voice is of lower pitch and 
is usually stronger. At the age of puberty the larynx 
grows rapidly, and the voice of a boy "breaks" 
in consequence of the lengthening of the cords, 
generally falling an octave in pitch. A similar 
change, but very much less in amount, occurs at the same 
period in the female. At puberty in the female there is an 
increase of about one-third in the size of the glottis, but it is 
nearly doubled in the male, and the adult male larynx is 
about one-third greater than that of the female. In advanced 
life the upper notes of the register are gradually weakened 
and ultimately disappear, whilst the character of the voice 
also changes, owing to loss of elasticity caused by ossification, 
which first begins about middle life in the thyroid cartilage, 
then appears in the cricoid, and much later in the arytenoid. 
Eunuchs retain the voices of childhood; and by careful train* 
ing it is possible in normal persons to arrest the development 
of the larynx so that an adult male can still sing the soprano 
parts sometimes used in cathedral choirs. The ranges of the 
different varieties of voice are shown in the following diagram, 
where the dotted lines give the range of certain remarkable 
voices, and the figures represent vibrations per second, taking 
the middle C of the piano as 256 vibrations per second. 



do. 

* 

la, 



104 8. U pper noreoftucrcah Ajugtrf. 



fjSS. U pp er wottcf Numou In riFUuUt Uagfca. 



tU 
l» 
•ok 



•ob 



do. 
lia 



(ai 

nli 



•oh 
lai 



43 1- 
34 '• 



256. MidCb 



160. 



106. 
»7. 



Contralto. ( 



AjutarL 



"Fixia^ iT'octive 



•l-i —" 
la -1 
sol -1 

fa-, „4> r _ _ 

Mi- 1 Gupard Fonur. j octave*. 

i*-i 

do- 1 J 1. Resuming of a 



A basso named Gaspard Forster passed from fa_i to la*; the 
younger of the sisters Sessi had a contralto voice from do* to 
fa»; the voice of Catalani ranged three and a half octaves; a 
eunuch singer, Farinelli, passed from la, to re»; Nilsson, in It 
Plauto Magico, could take fat; and Mozart states that he heard 
in Parma in 1770 a singer, Lucrezia Ajugari, range from sol 3 to 
do«, which she gave purely, whilst she could execute trills on res. 
The latter is the most highly pitched voice referred to in 
musical literature, an octave and a half above the highest 
ordinary soprano. It will be observed that the lowest note 
of Gaspare} Forster's voice is not much above the pitch at which 



VOICE 



*75 



the perception of musical tone begins, sad that from this note 
to the upper note of Lucresia Ajugari there is a range of nearly 
six octaves, whilst the extreme range of ordinary voices, from 
the lowest bass to the highest soprano, is a little over three 
octaves. It is also interesting to observe that the range of 
the human ear for the perception of musical tone is from do_, 
to do** or from about 33 to 33,768 vibrations per second- 
eleven octaves. 

3. The Voice Registers,— -The voice has been divided by 
writers into three registers— the lower or chest, the middle 
and the small or head register. In singing, the voice changes 
m volume and in quality in passing from one register into 
smother. There is remarkable diversity of opinion as to 
what happens in the larynx in passing through the various 
registers. There has also been much discussion as to the 
production of falsetto tones, Lehfcldt and Johannes Afuller 
held that a weak blast of air caused onto a portion of the cords, 
as regards length, to vibrate; M. J. Ortel noticed that when 
a falsetto tone is produced nodal lines are formed in the cords 
parafld to their edges, an observation supporting the first 
contention; M. Garcia was of opinion that as the voice rose 
in pitch into falsetto only the ligamentous edges of the cords 
vibrated; and W. R. E. Hodgkinson showed, by dusting finely 
powdered indigo into the larynx and observing the blue specks 
with the laryngoscope, that " in the deeper note of the lower 
register the vibrating margin extended from the thyroid carti- 
lage in front to a point behind the junction of the ligamentous 
and cartilaginous portions of the cord." In singing falsetto 
tones these additional parts are not thrown into action. Some 
remarkable and instructive photographs obtained by French 
show that in proceeding from the lowest to the highest notes 
of the lower register the cords became lengthened by one-eighth 
of aa inch in a contralto singer's larynx; the same singer, in 
passing into the middle register, showed a shortening of the 
cords by one-sixteenth of an inch, and another increase in 
length when the upper part of the middle register was reached. 

4. Condition of the Larynx in the Various Registers.— In 
^ g m g , one can readily observe that the tone may appear to 
cone chiefly from the chest, from the throat or from the head, 
or it may show the peculiar quality of tone termed falsetto. 
Authorities differ much in the nomenclature applied to these 
varieties of the voice. Thus the old Italian music masters 
spoke of the voce di petto, voce di gola and voce di testa. 
V*A*m* SeOer describes five conditions, viz. the first series 
of tones of the chest register, the second series of tones of the 
chest register, the first series of tones of the falsetto register, the 
tnnnd series of tones of the falsetto register, and the head register. 
French writers usually refer to two registers only, the chest and 
the head; whilst Behnke gives three registers for male voices 
fewer thick, upper thick and upper thin) and five for the voices 
of women and children (lower thick, upper thick, lower thin, 
■ppcr thin and small)' These distinctions arc of more import- 
ance practically than as implying any marked physiological 
diJereoces in the mechanism of the larynx during the pro- 
duction of the tones in the different registers. By means 
e£ the laryngoscope it is possible to see the condition of the 
rcna glottidis and the cords in passing through all the range 
of the voice. 

fa 1807 Bozzini first showed that it was possible to see into the 
dark cavities of the body by illumining them with a mirror, and 
1&29 W. Babing^ton first saw the glottis in this way. In 1854 



investigated his own larynx and that of other singers, i 
— . . ....*. ~ , cr ^ te< j 



three years later Turck. and especially J. N. Czermak, perfected the 
.«« ruction of the laryngoscope. In 1 881 Lennox Browne and 
Lmd Behnke obtained photographs of the glottis in the living man. 
Tbe lar yng osc o pe is a small mirror, about the diameter of a shilling, 
£ved to the end of a long handle at an angle of 125* to 130°. This 
r.:rror is gently pushed towards the back of the throat, and if 
«.£cient light be thrown into the mouth from a lamp, and if the 
e*e of the observer be in the proper position, by angling the small 
razor it is not difficult to get a view of the glottis. The light 
f-^ra the lamp is reflected by the mirror down on the glottis; from 
•b s it u reflected back to the mirror, and then by the mirror it is 
^waSy reflected to the eye of the observer. Usually the observer 
fc» m front of bis eye a mirror by which a powerful beam of light 



can be thrown from a lamp into the mouth and throat. In the 
centre of the mirror there is a small hole through which the eye of 
the observer sees the image in the small mirror at the back of tbe 
throat. By placing a second plane mirror in front of the face, an 
observer can easily study the mechanism of his own larynx. 

Suppose the picture of the larynx to be examined in the small 
mirror at the back of the throat, an image will be seen as in fig. 4. 
During calm breathing, the glottis is lance-shaped, between the 
yellowish white cords. A deep inspiration causes the glottis to open 
widely, and in favourable circumstances one may look into the 
trachea. When a sound is to be made, the vocal cords are brought 
close together, either along their whole length, as in fig. 7, or only 
along the ligamentous portion, the space between the arytenoids 
being still open, as in fig. 8. Then when the sound begins the 




I J -r 

5p 



Fig. 8. 
Fig. 7. — Arrangement of Glottis previous to Emission of a Sound. 

b, epiglottis; rs, false cord; r», true vocal cord; or, arytenoid 

cartilages. (From Mandl.) 
Flo. 8.— Closure of the Ligamentous Portion of Glottis, b, epiglottis; 

rs, false cord; rs', true vocal cord; or, space between arytenoids; 

or, arytenoid cartilages; c, cuneiform cartilages; rap, ary-epiglottic 

fold; *r, inter-arytenoid fold. (From Mandl.) 

glottis opens (fig. a), the form of the opening influencing the kind of 
voice, whilst the degree of tension of the cords will determine the 
pitch. 

During inspiration the edges of the true vocal cords may occa- 
sionally be close together, as in sobbing, and during inspiration the 
false cords are easily separated, even when they touch, and during 
expiration, owing to dilatation of the ventricles, they come together 
and may readily close. Thus, from the plane of the cords, the 
true cords are most easily closed during inspiration and the false 
cords during expiration. J. Wvllie clearly showed in 1865 that the 
false vocal cords play the chief part in closure of the glottis during 
expiration. Lauder B run ton and Cash have confirmed J. Wyllie s 
results, and have shown further that the function of the false cords 
is to close the glottis and thus fix the thorax for muscular effort. 

During the production of the chest voice, the space between the 
arytenoid cartilages is open, and between the vocal cords there is an 
ellipsoidal opening which gradually closes as the pitch of the sound 
rises (sec figs. 9, 10, 11). During head voice, tbe opening between 




Fie. 9. Fig. 10. 

FlC Q. — Chest Voice, Deep Tone, b, epiglottis; or, gfottis; rs, false 

vocal cord; ri, true vocal cord; rap, ary-epiglotudeau fold; ar t 

arytenoid cartilages. (From Mandl.) 
Fig. 10.— Chest Voice, Medium Tone, orl, ligamentous portion of 

glottis; orc % portion of glottis between arytenoids; remaining 

description as in fig. 7. (From Mandl.) 

the arytenoids is completely closed ; the portion between the vocal 
cords is open, but in place of being almost a narrow straight slit 
as in chest voice, it is wide open so as to allow an escape of more air 
(see fig. 12). Paralysis of the motor fibres causes aphonia, or loss of 
voice. If one cord is paralysed the voice may be lost or become 
falsetto in tone. Sometimes the cords may move in breathing or 
during coughing, but be motionless during an attempt at the pro- 
duction of voice. Rarelyj incomplete unilateral paralysis of the 
recurrent nerve, or the existence of a tumour on each cord, thus 
making them unequal in length, may cause a double tone, or 
diphthongia. Hoarseness is caused by roughness or swelling of the 
cords. 

5. The quality of the human voice depends on the same 
laws that determine the quality, clang-tint or timbre of the 
tones produced by any musical instrument. Musical tones 
are formed by the vibrations of the true vocal cords. These 
tones may be either pure or mixed, and in both cases they are 



176 



VOICE 



strengthened by the resonance of the air in the air-passages 
and in the pharyngeal and oral cavities. If mixed— that is, 




Fig. 11. 



Fig. 12. 



Fig. 11. — Chest Voice, High Tone. Description same as for figs. 7 

and 8. (From Mandl.) 
Fig. 12. — Head Voice, Deep Tones. /, tongue: *, epiglottis; 

pe. pharyngo-epiglottidean folds; ae, ary-cpiglottic folds; rs, 

false cords; ri, true vocal cords; g, pharyngo-laryngeal groove; 

ar, arytenoid cartilages; c, cuneiform cartilages; o, glottis; 

r, inter-arytenoid folds. (From Mandl.) 

if the tone is compounded of a number of partials — one or 
more of these will be strengthened by the cavities above the 
cords acting as a resonator; and so strongly may these partials 
be thus reinforced that the fundamental one may be obscured, 
and a certain quality or timbre will be communicated to the 
ear. Further, Helmholtz has shown that special forms of 
the oral cavity reinforce in particular certain partials, and thus 
give a character to vowel tones, — indeed to such an extent 
that each vowel tone may be said to have a fixed pitch. This 
may be proved by putting the mouth in a certain form, keep- 
ing the lips open, and bringing various tuning forks sounding 
feebly in front of the opening. When a fork is found to which 
the resonant cavity of the mouth corresponds, then the tone 
of the fork is intensified, and by thus altering the form and 
capacity of the oral cavity its pitch in various conditions may 
be determined. Thus, according to Helmholtz, the pitch 
corresponding to the vowels may be expressed; — 

Vowels . . . OU O A AI E I EU U 
Tone . . . faa sibi sib« sols sib* re« dot soli 
or or or or or 
re« fas fa> taa fa> 
No. of vibrations . 170 470 940 1536 1920 2304 1024 1536 
or or or or or 
576 341 170 341 170 
R. Kocnig has fixed the pitch of the vowels differently, thus: 

Vowels . . OU O A E I 

Tone sibs sibi sibi sibt sibs 

No. of vibrations . 235 470 940 1880 3760 

F. C. Donders has given a third result, differing from each of 
the above; and there is little doubt that much will depend 
on the quality of tone peculiar to different nationalities. By 
means of Koenig's manometric flames with revolving mirror 
the varying quality of tone may be illustrated: with a pure 
tone, the teeth in the flame-picture are equal, like the serrations 
of a saw, whilst usually the tone is mixed with partials which 
show themselves by the unequal serrations. Thus quality of 
voice depends, not merely on the size, degree of elasticity and 
general mobility of the vocal cords, but also on the form of 
the resonating cavities above, and very slight differences in these 
may produce striking results. 

6. 1 Vowel Tones. — A vowel is a musical tone produced by the 
vibrations of the vocal cords. The tone produced by the 
vocal cords is a mixed one, composed of a fundamental and 
partials, and certain of the partials are strengthened by the 
resonance of the air in the air-passages and in the pharyngeal 
and oral cavities. In this respect the quality of the human 
voice depends on the same laws as those determining the 
quality or timbre of the tones produced by any musical instru- 
ment. The pitch of the note of a musical instrument, however, 
depends on the pitch of the first or fundamental tone, while 
the partials are adder 1 «""»>* «™>ter or less intensity so as to 



give a special character to the sound; and in the case of a 
vowel tone the pitch does not appear to depend on that of the 
fundamental tone but on the pitch of the resonance cavity, 
as adjusted for the sounding of any particular vowel. When 
we wish to pronounce or sing a vowel the oral cavity must 
be adjusted to a certain form, and it is only when it has 
that form that the vowel can be sounded. The nature of 
vowel tones has been investigated by means of the phono- 
graph by Fleeming Jenkin and Ewing, L. Hermann, Pipping, 
Boeke, Lloyd, McKendrick and others. E. W. Scripture 
has worked with the gramophone. These observers may be 
ranged in two divisions — those who uphold the theory of 
relative as opposed to those who contend for the theory of 
fixed pitch. Assuming that a vowel is always a compound 
tone, composed of a fundamental and partials, those who uphold 
the relative pitch theory state that if the pitch of the funda- 
mental is changed the pitch of the partials must undergo a 
relative change, while their opponents contend that whatever 
may be the pitch of the tone produced by the larynx, the pitch 
of the partials that gives quality or character to a vowel is 
always the same, or, in other words, vowel tones have a fixed 
pitch. Helmholtz held that all the partials in a vowel tone 
were harmonic to the fundamental tone, that is that their periods 
were simple multiples of the period of the fundamental tone. 
Hermann, however, has conclusively shown that many of the 
partials are inharmonic to the fundamental. This practically 
upsets the theory of Helmholtz. The methods by which this 
problem can be investigated are mainly two. The pitch of the 
oral cavity for a given vowel may be experimentally determined, 
or an analysis may be made of the curve-forms of vowels on 
the wax cylinder of the phonograph or the disk of the gramo- 
phone. By such an analysis, according to Fourier's theorem, 
the curve may be resolved into the partials that take part in 
its formation, and the intensity of those partials may be thus 
determined. The observations of Donders, Helmholtz, KOnig 
and others as to the pitch of the resonating cavities gave 
different results. Greater success has followed the attempts 
made by Hermann, Boeke, McKendrick, Lloyd and Marichelle 
to analyse the curves imprinted on the phonograph. (Examples 
of such phonograms are given by McKendrick in the article on 
"Vocal Sounds" in Schafer's Physiology, ii. 1228; see also 
Phonograph.) 

The following is an instructive analysis by Boeke of the 
curves representing the tones of a cornet, and it illustrates 
the laws that govern the production of quality in such an 
instrument.-— 

Note . . t S 3 4 $ 6 7 8 9 10 Paitiah. 

/ "irovibs. . 1 t-os !•*» lis 1 01 0-80 0-5J 018 ©•!« o-io ,. 

<*"»$6 „ . t 0-9* 081 o-yj 030 0-300-07 0-04 o-oo. 004 » 

f* ■•384 „ . 1 0-76 0-46 014 0-09 006 0-07 o-oa 0-01 o-ot „ 

«"•$!« „ . t »91 O-JO O-I4 OI5 O-09 O-07 0-06 0-43 O03 „ 

These figures represent the relative intensities of the partials enter- 
ing into the formation of the note, and it will be observed that the 
intensity gradually diminishes. This analysts may be contrasted 
with that of the vowel && sung "by Boeke (aet. 50) on the notes /and 
c', and the same vowel sung on the notes g' and e' by his son (aet. 12). 

Man, aet. 50, singing <M. 

Pitch . . 1 * 3 4 S 6 7 8 9 to Putiab, 

/ -170-6 vlbs. 1 086 0-46 174 100 1-55 o-si 0-54 0-43 0-44 .. 
<' m »s6 „ t 049 1-96 x-a$ 0-60 056 oaj 005 0-06 0-10 „ 

Boy, aet. 12, singing &&. 
Pitch ..it 3 4 5 6 Partial*. 

f'-384viba> .1 i-il a'67 o-4S 0-I7 0-06 w 
S-640 „ . I 8-«9 J 45 OS) .... 

It will be observed that in both these cases the intensity of the 
partials does not fade away gradually as we proceed from the 
lower to the higher partials, as with the cornet, but that certain 
partials are intensified more than others, namely, those printed 
in black. In other words, the form of the resonating cavity 
develops particular partials, and these modify the quality 
of the tone. If we multiply the vibrational number of the 
fundamental tone by the number of the partial we obtain the 
pitch of the resonance cavity; or if wc take the mean of the 



VOIRON— VOITURE 



177 



partials reinforced we obtain the pitch of the mean resonance. 
Lloyd applies this method to the foregoing figures as follows.-- 





Partial*. 
Reinforced. 


Mean 

Partial. 


Pitch in 
Complete 
Vibration. 


Man's ML 

/- 170-6 viba. , 

«<r«r : : : 


4-6 

a-4 
«-3 


496 
339 

282 
2-04 


868 

1084 
1307 



This analysis shows: (x) that the man's resonance rises slightly 
(half-scsnitone) in ascending seven semitones in the middle of 
his register; (2) that the bo/s resonance rises three semitones 
in ascending nine semitones in the upper half of bis register; 
and (3) in the mid-register the boy's resonance is to the man's 
as 5:4. Thus, as we sing a vowel in an ascending scale the pitch 
of the oral cavity slightly changes, or, in other words, the pitch 
of the resonating cavity for a given vowel may be slightly altered. 

It would appear that both theories are partially true; they 
are not mutually exclusive. The view of Donders that each 
vowd has an oral cavity of unchangeable and fixed pitch is too 
exclusive, and, on the other hand, it cannot be denied that 
each vowel has a predominant partial or predominant partials 
which give it a definite character, and which must be produced 
by the oral cavity ss a whole, or by the double resonance of 
portions of the cavity, as suggested by Lloyd. As we sing a 
vowel in an ascending scale the form of the resonance cavity 
cay slightly change, but not sufficiently to alter the quality 
of the voweL Thus we still detect the vowel tone. A singer 
almost Instinctively chaoses such vowels as best suit the re- 
sonating arrangements of his or her voice, and avoids vowels 
or words containing vowels that would lead to the production 
of notes of inferior quality. 

Acmotrrres.— Helmholtr, Sensations of Tone, trans, by Ellis 
<r*75)» P- ,6 5- Konig. OmpUs Rendu* (1870), t. but. p. 931; alco 
Q*elqw*M experiences d'acouslifue (1882), p. 47. Donders, De 
pkyztaUrie der spraakklanhen (1870), *. 9; alio " Ucbcr dc Vokell," 
Archie f. d. noUoud Beitr. 3. Nat. v. Heil. (Utrecht, 1857), Bd. L 
s. 354. Donkin, Fourier's theorem. Acoustics, p. 65; Fleemtng 
Jtikui and Ewing, Trans. Roy. Sec. Ed. vol. xxviii. p. 750; 
Uyyd. Proc. Roy. See. Ed. (1898); Phonetische Stud. (1890-92); 
JL of Auat, end Pkys. (London), vol. xxxL p. 23; ibid, vol xxxi. 
I*. 240. Hermann, Phenophotographische untersuch., Bd. L-v.; 
A~tJu»f. d. its. Physiol. (Bonn). Bd. xhr. s. 582; Bd. xlvii. s. 44; 
hi. xlvii. a. 347; Bd. liii. s. 1; Bd. Iviii. s. 255. Pipping, Zeitschr. 
/. Biol. (Munich), Bd. xxvii. s. 1: abo Acta Societatis Scientiarum 
Frnnkae, Bd. xx. part it Boelce, " Mikroskopische Phonogram- 
*r:_dien," Archie f. d. get. Physiol (Bonn), Bd. 1. a. 297; also Proc. 
Jtey. Soc. Ed. (1896). McKendnck, Trans. Roy. Soc. Ed. vol. 
rxxviiL part H.; Proc. Roy. Soc. Ed. (1896-97); Sound and Speech 
Wsees as revealed by the Phonograph (London, 1897); Sch&fer's 
Text-book of Physiology, vol. u. art. Vowel Sounds ; and Nature 
{ Dec 26. looi)._ (In the latter there is an account of the important 



researches of Dr Mi 
trzU 4m Phonographe (Pat 
***-mutfum des voveUes. E. W. 
also Salute (February 1907). 



Marichelle, La Parole d'oprh la 
1897). Marage, Thiorie de la 
ipture. Speech Curves (1906). Sec 

qTg. M.) 



VOIRON, a town of France in the department of the Isere. 
Pop. (ioox) 12,625. It stands at a height of 950 ft, on the 
M -rge (a tributary of the Isere). It is a manufacturing town, 
tr.d contains numerous factories which produce a sort of cloth 
earned after the town, and also silk-weaving factories (2000 
Iixxns, with an annual output of eight to nine million yards). 
There are also paper-making factories in the town. The fine 
church of St Bruno was built 1864-73 at ^ e expense of the 
raonks of the Grande Chartreuse. Voiron is the starting-point 
of the steam tramways to St Laurent du Font, 12 m. (for the 
Grande Chartreuse), and to Chara vines, io| m. (for the Lac 
de Paladru). Voiron long formed part of Savoy, but in 1355 
was exchanged (with the rest of the region between the Rhone 
and the Isere, watered by the Guiers Mort) by the count with 
Franc e for Fandgny and Gex. 

VOISENON, CLAUDE HENRI DE FUZtE, Abb£ oe (1708-75), 
French dramatist and man of letters, was born at the chateau 



of Voisenon near Melun, on the 8th of Jury 1708. At the age 
of ten he addressed an epistle in verse to Voltaire, who asked the 
boy to visit him. From this introduction dated a friendship 
that lasted- for fifty years. Voisenon made his demit as a 
dramatist with L'Henremse ressemUanca in 1728, followed in 
1739 °y * three-act comedy U&cole du monde at the Theatre 
francais. This was preceded by a verse prologue, UOmbre de 
Moliere, and a month later Voisenon produced a criticism on 
his own piece in Le Rekmr de Fombre de Metier*. A duel in 
which he was the aggressor inspired him with remorse, and he 
entered the priesthood, becoming vicar general to the bishop of 
Boulogne. He received the abbey of Jard, which, made no 
demands on him. He became closely attached to Madame du 
Chatelet, the mistress of Voltaire (q.v), and was intimate with 
the comte de Caylus and Mademoiselle Quinault Dufresne. He 
made witty but by no means edifying contributions to the 
BJrennes de Saint- Jean, the Bals da Bois, ftc In 1744 he pro- 
duced the Manages assortis and in 1746 his masterpiece, the 
Coquette fixte. He lived on terms of the closest intimacy with 
Charles Simon Favart and his wife. His pen was always at the 
service of any of his friends, and it was generally supposed, 
though on insufficient grounds, that he had a considerable share 
in Favart's most successful operas. Voisenon had, strange to 
say, scruples all his life about the incongruity between his way 
of living and his profession, but he continued to write indecent 
stories for private circulation, and wrote verses in honour of 
Madame du Barry, as he had done for Madame de Pompadour. 
He was elected to the Academy in 1762* On the disgrace of his 
patron, the due de Chofseul, he lost his pensions and honours, 
but soon recovered his position. He was intimate with the 
chancellor Maupeou, and was suspected of writing on his behalf 
in defence of the abolition of the parlement. This and some 
other incidents brought him into general disgrace. Early in 
1775 he retired to the chateau de Voisenon, where he died on 
the 22nd of November of the same year. 

His CEuvres computet were published by his executrix, Madame 
de Turpin, m 1781. 

VOITURE, VINCENT (1 598-1648), French poet, was the son of 
a rich merchant of Amiens. He was introduced by a school- 
fellow, the comte d'Avaux, to Gaston d'Orleans, and accom- 
panied him to Brussels and Lorraine on diplomatic missions. 
Although a follower of Gaston, he won the favour of Richelieu, 
and was one of the earliest academicians He also received 
appointments and pensions from Louis XIII. and Anne of 
Austria. He published nothing in book form, but his verses 
and his prose letters were the delight of the coteries, and were 
copied, handed about and admired more perhaps than the 
work of any contemporary. He had been early introduced to 
the Hotel de Rambouillet, where he was the especial friend of 
JuHe d'Angennes, who called him her "dwarf king." His 
ingenuity in providing amusement for the younger members of 
the circle ensured his popularity, which was never seriously 
threatened except by Antoine Godeau, and this rivalry ceased 
when Richelieu appointed Godeau bishop of Grasse. When at 
the desire of the due de Montausier nineteen poets contributed 
to the Guirlande da Julie, which was to decide the much-feted 
Julie in favour of his suit, Voiture refused to take part The 
quarrel between the Uranistes and the Jobelins arose over the 
respective merits of a sonnet of Voiture addressed to a certain 
Uranie, and of another composed by Isaac de Benserade, till 
then unknown, on the subject of Job. Another famous piece 
of his of the same kind, La Belle Matineuse, is less exquisite, 
but still very admirable, and Voiture stands in the highest rank 
of writers oi vers de sociiti. His prose letters are full of lively 
wit, and, in some cases, as in the letter on Richelieu's policy 
(Letter LXXIV.), show considerable political penetration. He 
ranks with Jean de Balsac as the chief director of the reform in 
French prose which accompanied that of Malherbe in French 
verse. Voiture died at the outbreak of the Fronde, which killed 
the society to which he was accustomed, on the 26th of May 1648. 

1 Sec A. Roux. CEuvres deM.de Voiture (Paris. 1856); and C. A. 
Sainte-Beuve, Causeries du lundi, vol xii. 



178 



VOIVODE— VOLCANO 



VOIVODB (also Kofefc Vayode, WayntU t Ac, Med. Gr. 
0K06fa), a title in use among certain Slavonic peoples, 
meaning literally " leader of an army " (SL w», host, army; 
voiditi, to lead), and so applied at various periods and in various 
eastern European countries to rulers, governors or officials of 
varying degree. It is best known as the title of the princes of 
Moldavia and Wallachia. In these states the title remained in 
use from the earliest times until 1658 in the case of the first 
state, and until 17 16 in that of the second, when it gave way to 
Hospodar (?.».)• During the period of Hungarian domination 
of Transylvania (1004-1526) it was governed by a voivode as an 
Hungarian province, the last voivode raising himself to the 
position of an independent prince. In Poland the title was 
used of certain administrative officials; Polish historians 
latinised it by paiatinus. At the present day voivode is used, 
in its original sense of a high military officer, in the Monte- 
negrin army, where it corresponds to the general officer in 
other European armies. 

YOKES, the name of a family of English actors. Fkedeuck 
MoRTiuxa Vokss (1846-1888), the son of a costumier, made 
has first appearance on the stage in 1854. In 1861 he, his sisters 
Jessie (1851-1884), Victoria (1853-1804) and Rosin* (1858- 
1894), and Walter Fawdon (Yokes), first as the M Vokes 
Children " and then as the " Vokes Family," began to perform 
at music halls and at the pantomimes, and by their agility and 
humour made the name well known to English and American 
theatre-goers. Fred Vokes was a man of real inventiveness as 
well as rare acrobatic skill 

VOLAPOK, the first artificial language (see Universal 
Languages) to attain any measure of practical success. First 
published in 1880, it was the work of J. M. Schleyer (b. 1830), 
a south-German priest. Volapuk is not, like the earliest 
attempts of the kind, an a priori language, but is based mainly 
on English, the rest of the vocabulary being made up from 
Latin and the Romance languages. The borrowed words are 
reduced to a monosyllabic form and are often altered in a very 
arbitrary manner. Thus the name Volapuk itself is made up 
of the two English words, world end ipee*, the first in the 
genitive, the three vowels, «,*,», being used to express the three 
cases, genitive, dative and accusative respectively; the nomina- 
tive is expressed by the bare root, and s is added to form the 
plural. The grammar of Volapuk is therefore partly borrowed, 
like the vocabulary, partly original Adjectives end in -c*. 
The persons of the verb are indicated by adding the pronouns 
•+ " I," W M thou." <m « he," &c, plural afe " we," &c.; the 
tenses and the passive are indicated by prefixes, the moods by 
suffixes following the persochendings, many other inflections 
being used as well, so that the Volapuk verb boasts of no less 
than 505*440 diiTcrent forms. 

Although founded on English, Yolapok is mainly German 
in structure. It gets rid of the German word-order and the 
irregularities of German grammar, but it b often impossible 
to understand a Vobpuk text without thinking in German. 
The following is a sp e c i men of the language:— 

I fffob kenwnis valik vote Wile, rotiko etw peJrolivtf. fceb fcon- 
iViom* Votapftfce. as tv*fc medas rktikun nctasfctaM. 

** 1 love all my leiJow-curatune* of the whole world, especially 
tkwe cultivated looeV who Micve in Volapuk as ibcin&O oot of the 
greatest Betas of oatktt-biadine/* 

Here ktmjd governs the dative just as its German equivalent 
««ses.a*d M aritiv«t*d" is used in the sense of the German 



The history of Vobpek has an interest greater than that of 
the language itself. It has proved (1) that people in general 



artificial language is 





^ ___^ it; yet, after a few 
. Gasnaay, it spread, fast to France , 
,s>lew years over the whole ch-Uutd 
"~ the third Yehpek «_«» — * 1 



at Paris, there were 283 Volapuk societies all over the world, 
and the total number of Volapuk students was estimated at 
over a million. At this congress every one— even the waiters- 
spoke Volapuk, and the permanent triumph of the language 
seemed certain. But the year of its zenith was the beginning 
of a decline even more rapid than its rise. It fell to pieces 
through dissensions in its own camp, the first cause of which 
was the opposition of the inventor to those of his disciples who 
aimed at making the language mainly an instrument of com- 
mercial correspondence, and advocated the greatest possible 
simplification of grammar and vocabulary. The divergence 
of views between the inventor and his colleagues became more 
and more marked; and after the third congress the breach 
between M. Schleyer and the Volapuk Academy (founded at 
the second congress in 1887) became a definite one: the 
director of the Academy proposed a totally new scheme of 
grammar, and other members proposed others, although one 
of the objects of the foundation of the Academy was the pre- 
servation of the integrity of the language. A new director, 
M. Rosenberger of St Petersburg, was elected in 1893; and 
from this moment the Academy dissociated itself from Volapuk 
and began to construct a new international language. Idiom 
Neutral (see Universal Languages). (H. Sw.) 

VOLCAB, a Celtic people in the province of Gallia Nar- 
bonensis, who occupied the distract between the Garumna, 
(Garonne), Cerbcnna mons (Cevennes), and the Rhodanus (or 
even farther to the east in earlier times), corresponding roughly 
to the old province of Languedoc. They were divided into 
two tribes, the Aiecomid on the east and the Tectosages 
(whose territory included that of the Tolosates) on the west, 
separated by the river Arauris (Herault) or a line be t w ee n the 
Arauris and Orbis (Orbe). The Vokae were free and indepen- 
dent, had their own laws, and possessed the jus Lain. The 
chief town of the Tectosages was Tolosa (Toulouse); of the 
Arecomid, Nemausus (Ntmes); the capital of the province 
and residence of the governor was Narbo Martius (Narbonne). 
It was said that there was an early settlement of Volcae 
Tectosages near the Hercynia Silva in Germany; Tectosages 
was also the name of one of the three great communities of 
Gauls who invaded and settled in Asia Minor in the country 
called after them Galatia. 

See A. Holder. AtiuUixher Spreekxhats, L & (1806. 1904). 
s.vt. " Ajecomici ** and "Tectosari"; T. R. Holmes, Castor* s 
Conamtst vf Cad (1809) p. 5US A. Desjardins, Giȣnxpku d* la 
Gaair rmatar, L (1S76). 

VOLCANO, an opening in the earths crest, through which 
heated matter is brought, permanently or temporarily, from 
the interior of the earth to the surface, where it usually forms 
n hill, more or less conical in shape, and generally with a hollow 
or crater at the top. This hill, though not an essential part 
of the volcanic mechanism, is what b commonly called the 
volcano. The name seems to have been applied originally 
to Etna and some of the Lipari Islands, which were regarded 
as the seats of Hephaestus, a Greek divinity identified with 
Vulcan, the god of fire in Roman mythology. AD the pheno- 
mena connected directly or indirectly with volcanic activity 
are comprised under the general designation of nUamum or 
r*»».WKtfr— words whkh are also written less familiarly as 
vokaaisai and volcankuy; vhUst the study of the phenomena 
terms a department of natural ksowlcdge known as mV«a*'*gy. 
Yukankily is the chief superficial expression of the earth's 
internal igneous activity. 

It may happen that a volcano win remain for a long period 
in a state of moderate though variible activity, as illustrated 
by the normal condition of Suvvnboli. one of the Lipari Islands; 
but in most volcanoes the activity is more decidedly inter- 
mittent, paroxysms of greater or less vkCeaec occurring after 
intervals of comparative, or even coaplcte. repose. If the 
period of quiescence has been very protracted, the r enew e d 
acti\?:y b apt to be excer<^oiaIy rx^ent. Thus, Krakatoa 
before the great er=f*wn of is>; kid been cVreaa* far some- 
thing U« two ctntuoc* Aii u is bc^eved that the Japanese 



VOLCANO 



179 



volcano Bandafsan previously to the gigantic outburst of 188$ 
had been silent for mora than a thousand yean. A volcano 
may indeed remain so long dormant as to be mistaken for one 
completely extinct. The volcanoes of central France are 
regarded as extinct, inasmuch as no authentic historical record 
of any eruption is known, but there are not wanting signs that in 
some pans of this volcanic region the subterranean forces may 
yet be slumbering rather than dead. 

Premonitory Symptoms.-^K volcanic eruption is usually 
preceded by certain symptoms, of wfakh the most common are 
local earthquakes. The mountain, or other eruptive centre, 
may be thrown by internal activity into a state of tremor; 
the tremors perhaps continuing intermittently for months or 
even years, and becoming more frequent and violent as the 
crisis approaches. At first they are usually confined to the 
volcano and its immediate neighbourhood, but may sub- 
sequently extend to a considerable distance, though probably 
never developing into earthquakes of the first magnitude. 
The sudden opening of a subterranean crack, by rupture of a 
rock under strain, or the rapid injection of lava into such a 
issxxt, wul tend to produce a jar at the surface. For at least 
sixteen years before the first recorded eruption of Vesuvius in 
4.D 79 earthquakes had been frequent in the Campania and 
fc*.d wrought havoc in the cities of Herculaneum and Pompeii. 
Azain, the formation of Monlc Nuovo, near Pozruoli, in 1538, 
was heralded by local earthquakes beginning several years in 
advance of the eruption. So too in recent years many volcanic 
outbursts have been preceded by a succession of earthquakes; 
tat as volcanoes are frequently situated in areas of marked 
seismic activity, the shocks antecedent to an eruption may 
not, unless exceptionally violent, receive much attention from 
local observers. 

It commonly happens that a volcanic outburst is announced 
bv subterranean roaring and rumbling, often compared to 
thunder or the discharge of artillery underground. Other 
precursory symptoms may be afforded by neighbouring springs, 
which not unusually flow with diminished volume, or even 
fail altogether. Possibly fissures open underground and 
drain off the water from the springs and wells in the im- 
mediate locality. Occasionally, however, an increased flow 
has been recorded. In some cases thermal springs make their 
appearance, whilst the temperature of any existing warm springs 
may be increased, and perhaps carbon dioxide be evolved. A 
turned state of the atmosphere is by no means a constant 
f CTerunncr of an eruption, some of the greatest outbursts 
having occurred in a period of atmospheric stability; indeed 
the air is often felt to be close and still. 
• Immediately before a renewed outburst In an old volcano, 
the floor of the crater is generally upheaved to a greater or 
less extent, whilst the discharge of vapour from any fumarolcs 
m increased. Where a crater has been occupied by water, 
forming a crater-lake, the water on the approach of an erup- 
tion becomes warm, evolves visible vapour, and may even boil. 
In the case of cones which are capped with snow, the internal 
heat of the rising lava usually causes a rapid melting of the 
saow-cap, resulting perhaps in a disastrous deluge. 

It seems probable that by attention to the premonitory 
lyxBpcoms a careful local observer might in many cases foretell 
as eruption. 

It generally happens that a great eruption fs preceded by 
a preliminary phase of feeble activity. Thus, the gigantic 
catastrophe at Krakatoa on the 37th of August 1883, so far 
from having been a sudden outburst, was the culmination of a 
sr^e of excitement, sometimes moderate and sometimes violent, 
*a;rh bad been in progress for several months. 

Emission of Vapour. — Of all volcanic phenomena the most 
constant is the emission of vapour. It is one of the earliest 
features of an eruption; it persists during the paroxysms, 
attaining often to prodigious volume; and it lingers as the 
I* ? relic of an outburst, so that long after the ejection of ashes 
■M Uva has ceased an occasional puff of vapour may be the 
only memento of the disturbance. 



By far the greatest proportion of the vapour Is steam, which 
sometimes occurs almost to the exclusion of other gaseous 
products. Such, at least, is the usual and probably correct 
view, though it is opposed by A. Brun, who regards the volcanic 
vapours as chiefly composed of chlorides with steam in only 
subordinate amount. In the case of a mild eruption, like 
that occurring normally at Stromboli, the vapours may be 
discharged an periodical puffs, marking the explosion of bubbles 
rising more or less rhythmically from the seething lava in 
the volcanic cauldron. S. Wise observed at the volcano of 
Sangay, in Ecuador, no fewer than 267 explosions in the course 
of an hour, the vapour here being associated, as is so often 
the case, with ashes. During a violent eruption the vapour 
may be suddenly shot upwards as a vertical column of enormous 
height, penetrating the passing clouds. For a short distance 
above the vent the superheated steam sometimes exists as a 
transparent vapour, but it soon suffers partial condensation, 
forming clouds, which, if not dispersed by winds, accumulate 
over the mountain. When the vapour is free from ash it forms 
rolling balls of fleecy cloud, but usually it carries in mechanical 
association more or less finely divided lava as volcanic dust 
and ashes, whereby it becomes yellow, brown, or even black, 
sometimes as foul as the densest smoke. In a calm atmo- 
sphere the dust-laden vapour may rise in immense rings with 
a rotatory movement, like that of vortex-rings. Frequently 
the vapours, emitted in a rapid succession of jets, form cumulus 
clouds, or are massed together in cauliflower-like forms. The 
well-known "pine-tree appendage " of Vesuvius {pino tul- 
conieo), noted by the younger Pliny in his first letter to Tacitus 
on the eruption in the year 70, is a vertical shaft of vapour 
terminating upwards in a canopy of cloud, and compared 
popularly v/iih the trunk and spreading branches of the stone* 
pine. Whilst m some cases the cloud resembles a gigantic 
expanded umbrella, in others it is more mushroom-shaped. 
In a great eruption, the height of the mountain itself may 
appear dwarfed by comparison with that of the column of 
vapour. During the eruption of Vesuvius in April 1006, the 
steam and dust rose to a height of between 6 and 8 m. 
At Krakatoa in 1883 the column of vapour and ashes reached 
an altitude of nearly 20 m.; whilst it was estimated by some 
authorities that during the most violent explosions the finely 
divided matter must have been carried to an elevation of more 
than 30 m. The emission of vast volumes of vapour at high 
tension naturally produces much atmospheric disturbance, often 
felt at great distances from the centre of eruption. 

Bteirieal Excitement. — It is probably to the uprushing current 
of vapour that much of the electrical excitement which invari- 
ably accompanies an eruption may be referred. The friction 
of the steam rushing in jets through the volcanic vent must 
produce electrical disturbance, and indeed an active volcano 
has been aptly compared to a hydroelectric machine of gigantic 
power. Another cause of excitement may be found in the 
mutual friction of the ejected cinders and ashes as they rise 
and fall in showers through the air. Much trituration of 
volcanic material may go on in the crater and elsewhere during 
the eruption, whereby the solid lava is reduced to a fine dust. 
Other means of generating electricity are found in the chemical 
reactions effected in the volcano and in the sudden condensa- 
tion of the emitted vapour. L. Palmieri, in the course of his 
investigations at the observatory on Vesuvius, found that the 
vapours free from cinders carried a positive charge, whilst the 
cinders were negative. 

The electrical phenomena attending an eruption are often 
of great intensity and splendour. The dark ash-laden clouds 
of vapour are shot through and through by volcanic lightning, 
sometimes in rapid horizontal flashes, then in oblique forked 
streaks, or again in tortuous lines compared to fiery serpents, 
whilst the borders of the cloud may be brilliant with electric 
scintillations, often forming balls and stars of fire. During 
the great eruption of Krakatoa remarkable phenomena were 
observed by ships in the Strait of Sunda, luminous balls 
like " St Elmo's fire " appearing at the mast-heads and the 



i8o 



VOLCANO 



[yard-arms, whilst the volcanic mud which fell upon rigging and 
deck was strongly phosphorescent. 

Quite distinct from any electrical phenomena is that inter- 
mittent reddish glare which, is often seen at night in clouds 
hanging over an active crater, and which is simply a glow due 
to reflection from the incandescent lava and stones in the 
volcanic cauldron below. 

Volcanic Rain and Mud.— The condensation of the vast 
volumes of steam exhaled during an eruption produces torrents 
of rain, which, mingling to a greater or less extent with the 
volcanic ashes, forms a hot muddy stream known in Italy as 
lava d'acqua and lava di fango, and in South America as moya. 
Deluges of such mud-lava may rush violently down the moun- 
tain-side and spread over the neighbouring country with terribly 
destructive effect, whence they are greatly dreaded by those 
who dwell at the base of a volcano. The solidified volcanic 
mud, often mingled with larger fragments of lava, is known as 
luff or tufa. Herculaneum was buried beneath a flood of mud 
swept down from Vesuvius during the Plinian eruption of 79, 
and the hard tufaceous crust which thus sealed up the ill- 
fated city came in turn to be covered by lava-flows from sub- 
sequent eruptions: hence the difficulty of excavating at 
Herculaneum compared with similar work at Pompeii, where 
there was probably much less mud, since the city, having been 
at a greater distance from the volcanic centre, was overwhelmed 
in great measure by loose ashes, capable of removal with com- 
parative ease. 

It sometimes happens that volcanic mud is formed by the 
mingling of hot ashes not directly with rain but with water 
from streams and lakes, or even, as in Iceland, with melted 
snow. A torrent of mud was one of the earliest symptoms of 
the violent eruption of Mont Pcl6 in Martinique in 1902. This 
mud had its source in the £tang Sec, a crater-basin high up 
on the S.W. side of the mountain. By the explosive discharge 
of ashes and vapours mingled with the water of the tarn 
there was produced a vast volume of hot muddy matter which 
on the 5th of May suddenly escaped from the basin, when a 
huge torrent of boiling black mud, charged with blocks of rock 
and moving with enormous rapidity, rolled like an avalanche 
down the gorge of the Riviere Blanche. If a stream of lava 
obstructs the drainage of a volcano, it may give rise to floods. 

Ejected Blocks.— When a volcano after a long period of re- 
pose starts into fresh activity, the materials which have accu- 
mulated in the crater, including probably large blocks from 
the disintegration of the crater-walls, have to be ejected. 
If the lava from the last eruption has consolidated as a plug 
in the throat of the volcano, the conduit may be practically 
closed, and hence the first effort of the renewed activity is 
to expel this obstruction. The hard mass becomes shattered 
by the explosions, and the angular fragments so formed are 
hurled forth by the outrushing stream of vapour. When the 
discharge is violent, the vapour, as it rushes impetuously up 
the volcanic duct, may tear fragments of rock from its walls and 
project them to a considerable distance from the vent. Such 
ejected blocks, by no means uncommon in the early stages of 
an eruption, are often of large size and naturally vary accord- 
ing to the character of the rocks through which the duct has 
been opened. They may be irregular masses of igneous rocks, 
possibly lavas of earlier eruptions, or they may be stratified, 
sedimentary and fossiliferous rocks representing the platform 
on which the volcano has been built, or the yet more deeply 
seated fundamental rocks. By Dr H. J. Johnston-Lavis, 
who specially studied the ejected blocks of Vesuvius, the 
volcanic materials broken from the cone are termed " accessory " 
ejecta, whilst other fragmentary materials he conveniently calls 
"accidental" products, leaving the term "essential" ejecta 
for plastic lava, ashes, crystals, &c. Masses of Cretaceous 
or Apcnnine limestone ejected from Somma are scattered 
through the tuffs on the slopes of Vesuvius; and objects carved 
in such altered limestone are sold to tourists as " lava " orna- 
ments, Under the influence of volcanic heat and vapours, the 
ejected blocks suffer more or less alteration, and may contain 



in their cavities many crystallized minerals. Certain blocks 
of sandstone ejected occasionally at Etna are composed of white 
granular quarts, permeated with vitreous matter and encased 
in a black scoriaceous crust of basic lava. 

A rock consisting of an irregular aggregation of coaase ejected 
materials, including many large blocks, is known as a " volcanic 
agglomerate." Any fragments! matter discharged from a 
volcano may form rocks which are described as " pyrodastic" 

Cinders, Ashes and /?*»/.— After the throat of a volcano has 
been cleared out and a free exit established, the copious dis- 
charge of vapour is generally accompanied by the ejection of 
fresh lava in a fragmentary condition. If the ejected masses 
bear obvious resemblance to the products of the hearth and the 
furnace, they are known as " cinders " or " scoriae," whilst the 
small cinders not larger than walnuts often pass under their 
Italian name of " lapilli " (?.•>.). When of globular or ellipsoidal 
form, the ejected masses are known as " bombs " (g.tr.) or 
"volcanic tears." Other names are given to the smaller 
fragments. If the lava has become granulated it is termed 
" volcanic sand "; when in a finer state of division it is called 
ash, or if yet more highly comminuted it is classed as dust; 
but the latter terms are sometimes used interchangeably. The 
pulverized material, consisting of lava* which has been broken 
up by the explosion, or triturated in the crater, is often dis- 
charged in prodigious quantity, so that after an eruption the 
country for miles around the volcano may be covered with & 
coating of fine ash or dust, sometimes nearly white, like a fall 
of snow, but often of greyish colour, looking rather like Portland 
cement, and in many cases becoming reddish by oxidation of 
the ferruginous constituents. Even when first ejected the ash 
is sometimes cocoa-coloured. This finely divided lava insinu- 
ates itself into every crack and cranny, reaching the interior of 
houses even when windows and doors are dosed. A heavy fall 
of ash or cinders may cause great structural damage, crushing 
the roofs of buildings by sheer weight, as was markedly the case 
at Ottajano and San Guiseppe during the eruption of Vesuvius 
in April 1906. On this occasion the dry ashes slipped down the 
sides of the volcanic cone like an avalanche, forming great ash- 
slides with ridges and furrows rather like barrancos, or ravines, 
caused by rain. The burial of Ottajano and San Giuseppe in 
z 906 by Vesuvian ejecta, mostly lapilli, has been compared with 
that of Pompeii in 79. 

, Deposits of volcanic sand and ashes retain their beat long after 
ejection, so that rain will cause them to evolve steam, and if the 
rain be heavy and sudden it may produce explosions with emis- 
sion of great clouds of vapour. The fall of ash is at first prejudicial 
to vegetation, and is often accompanied or followed by acid rain ; 
but ultimately the ash may prove beneficial to the soil, chiefly in 
consequence of the alkalis which it contains. The " May dust of 
Barbados was a rain of volcanic ash which fell in May 1812 from 
the eruption of the Soufriere in St Vincent. It is estimated that 
the amount of dust which during this eruption fell on the surface 
of Barbados, 100 m. distant from the eruptive centre, was about 
3,000,000 tons. The distance to which ash is earned depends 
greatly on the atmospheric conditions at the time of the eruption. 
Ashes from Vesuvius in an eruption in the year 472 were carried, 
it is said, as far as Constantinople. During an eruption of Cotopaxj, 
on the 3rd of July 1880, observed by E. Whymper, an enormous 
black column of dust-laden vapour was shot vertically upwards 
with such rapidity that in less than a minute it rose to a height 
estimated at 20,000 ft. above the crater-rim, or nearly 40,000 ft. 
above sea-level, when it was dispersed by the wind over a very 
wide area. It is believed that the amount of dust in this discharge 
must have been more than 2,000,000 tons. Enormous quantities 
of dust ejected from Krakatoa in 1883 were carried to prodigious 
distances, samples having been collected at more than a thousand 
miles from the volcano; whilst the very fine material in ultra- 
microscopic grains which remained suspended for months in the 
higher regions of the atmosphere seems to have enjoyed an almost 
world-wide distribution, and to have been responsible for the re* 
markable sunsets at that period. 

The ash falling in the immediate vicinity of a volcanic vent will 
generally be coarser than that carried to a distance, since the 
particles as they are wafted through the air undergo a kind of 
sifting. Professor J. W. Judd, who made an exhaustive examination 
of the products of the eruption of Krakatoa, found that the dust 
near the volcano was comparatively coaide, dense and rather dark- 
coloured, in consequence of the presence of numerous fragments of 



VOLCANO 



181 



darit, crystalline imnerals, whilst thedost at a distance was 

vdy fine and perfectly white. According to tab observer, the 

[tides tended to fall in the following order : magnetite, pyroxenes, 
IcUpar. glass. The finely comminuted material, carried to a great 



bv the mutual attrition of fragments of brittle pumice as they rose 
and fell rn the crater, which thus became a powerful "dust*making 
mOl." By this trituration of the pumiceous lava, carried on for a 
space of three months during which the eruption lasted, the quantity 
d finely pulverized material must have been enormous; yet the 
anvmnt off ejected matter was probably very much less than that 
extruded during some other historical eruptions, such as that of 
Tomboro in Suxabawa, in 1815. The explosions at Krakatoa 
sere, hu w i v ei . exceptionally violent, having been sufficient to 
project some of the finely pulverized lava to an altitude estimated 
to have been at least 30 m. It is usually impossible during a great 
eruption to determine the height of the column of smoke,** 
■see it hangs over the country as a pall of darkness. 

The great black cloud, which was so characteristic a feature fa 
the tembie eruptions in the West Indies in 1903, was formed of 
sstam with sulphur dioxide and other gases, very heavily charged 
with incandescent sand or dust, forming a dense mixture that in 
some respects behaved like a liquid. Unlike the Krakatoa dust, 
which was derived from a vitreous pumice, the solid matter of the 
bock cloud was largely com p os ed of fragments of crystalline 
nsnerats. According to Drs Anderson and Ffett it is not impossible 
that on the afternoon of the 17th of May 1902, the solid matter 
ejected from the Soufriere of St Vincent amounted to several 
biMiotts of tons, and that some of the dust fell at distances more 
than 2000 m. east of the centre of eruption. 

In Mexico and Central America, under the favourable influence 
of warmth and moisture, rich soils are rapidly formed by the decom- 
:— ^j* 1 * off finely divided volcanic ejects. Vast areas in North 
Asscrka. especially in Nebraska and Kansas, are covered with thick 
d e po s i ts of volcanic dust, partly from recent eruptions but princi- 
pally from volcanic activity in geologic time. The dust is used in 
the arts an an abrasive agent. 

Lsaa. — The volcanic cinders, sand, ashes and dust described 
above are but varied forms of solidified lava* Lava is indeed 
the most characteristic product of volcanic activity. It consists 
of mineral matter which is, or has been, in a molten state; 
U.t the liquidity is not due to simple dry fusion. The magma, 
or subterranean molten matter, may be regarded as composed 
essentially of various silicates, or their constituents, in a state 
cf nrataal solution, and heavily charged with certain vapours 
or gases, principally water-vapour, superheated and under 
pressure. In consequence of the peculiar constitution of the 
-*M f*k* the order in which minerals separate and solidify from 
it on cooling does not necessarily correspond with the inverse 
crier of their relative fusibility. The lava differs from the 
:r-agma before eruption, inasmuch as water and various volatile 
snbsxances may be expelled on extrusion. The rapid escape 
of vapour from the lava contributes to the explosive phenomena 
of an eruption, whilst the rate at which the vapour is disengaged 
cepends largely on the viscosity of the magma. 

The lawn en its immediate issue from the volcanic vent a probably 
it a white heat, bot the temperature b difficult of determination since 
the molten matter is usually not easy of approach, by reason of the 
■ ■'■■ iMwIius vapour. Determinations of temperature are generally 
etade at n short distance from the exit, when the lava has undergone 
-tore or lent cooling, or on a small stream from a subordinate vent. 
A. Bartoii, using a platinum electric resistance pyrometer, found that 
s stream of lava near a bocca, or orifice of emission, on Etna, in the 
eruption of 1892, had at a depth of one foot a temperature of 1060* 
C. In the lavas of Vesuvius and Etna thin wires of silver and of 
cooper have frequently been melted. Probably the lava at the 
suface of the stream has a temperature of something like 1100" C, 
lot this must not be assumed to be iu temperature at the volcanic 
1 sens. C- Doelter, in some experiments on the melting-point of lava 
by means of an electric furnace, found that a lava from Etna softened 
sc from 96a* to 970* C. and became fluid at 1010* to 1040*. whilst a 
Vesuvtan lava softened at 1030 to 1060* and acquired fluidity at 
i>J*o* to 1090*. These results were obtained at ordinary atmospheric 
pressure, but it has been assumed that the melting-point of lava at a 
mat depth would, through pressure atone, exceed that obtained in the 
£boratory. On the other hand the presence of water and pf certain 
r^LixSLt fluxes in the magma lowers the f using-point, and hence the 
e.irudcd lava from which these have largely escaped may be much 
k-.. fusible than the original magma. 

D-terminations of the melting-points of various glasses formed 
by the fusion of certain igneous rocks have been made by J.A. 
n.- ^. w Uh the meldometcr of Professor J. Joly. The results give 



temperatures. ranging from ts6o* C. for rhyofite to 1070* for dolcrite, 
from the Clee Hius in Shropshire. The melting-points of the rocks 
in a glassy condition as here given are, however, lower than those of 
the corresponding rocks in a crystalline state. 

It should be noted that all determinations of the melting-points of 
minerals and rocks involving ocular inspection of the physical 
state of the material are liable to considerable error, and the only 
accurate method seems to be that of determining the point at which 
absorption of heat abruptly occurs— the latent heat of fusion. This 
has been done in the refined investigations by Mr A. L. Day and his 
colleagues in the Geophysical Laboratory of the Carnegie Institution 
at Washington. 

It is believed that the temperature of lava In the volcanic conduit 
may be in some cases sufficiently high to fuse the neighbouring rocks, 
and so melt out a passage through them in its ascent. The wall* 
rock thus dissolved in the magma wilt not be without influence on the 
composition of the lava with which it becomes assimilated. 

Many interesting observations are on record with regard to the 
heating effect of lava on metals and other objects with which it may 
have come in contact. Thus, after the destruction of Torre del 
Greco by a current of lava from Vesuvius in 1794, it was found that 
brass in the houses under the lava had suffered decomposition, the 
copper having become crystallized ; whilst silver had been not only 
fused but sublimed. This indicates a temperature of upwards of 
1000* C. Panes of glass in the windows at Torre del Greco on the 
same occasion suffered devitrification. 

Notwithstanding the high temperature of lava on emission, it 
cools so rapidly, and the consolidated lava conducts heat so slowly, 
that vegetable structures may be involved in a lava-flow without 
being entirely destroyed. A stream of lava on entering a wood, aa 
in the sylvan region on Etna, may burn up the undergrowth but 
leave many of the larger trees, with their trunks merely carbonised. 
On Vesuvius a lava-flow has been observed to surround trees while 
the foliage has been apparently uninjured. A vertical trunk of a 
coniferous tree' partially enveloped in Tertiary basalt occurs at 
Gribon in the Isle of Mull, as described by Sir A. Geikie and others ; 
plant-remains in basalt from the Bo'ness coalfield in Linlithgow* 
shire have been noticed by H. M. Cadell; and attention has been 
called by 8. Hobson to a specimen of scoriaceous basalt, from Mexico, 
which shows the impression of ears of maize and even relics of the 
actual grains. In consequence of the slow transmission of heat by 
solid lava, the crust on the surface of a stream may be crossed with 
impunity whilst the matter is still glowing at a short distance below. 
Lichens may indeed grow on lava which remains highly heated in the 
interior. 

The solidified surface of a sheet of lava may be smooth and 
shining, sometimes quite satiny in sheen, though locally wrinkled 
and perhaps even ropy or hummocky, the irregularities being mainly 
due to superficial movement after partial solidification. The 
" corded lava " has a surface similar to that often seen on blast* 
furnace slag, and is suggestive of a tranquil flow. After a lava 
stream has become crusted over on cooling, the subjacent lava, still 
moving in a viscous condition, tends to tear the crust, forming 
irregular blocks, or clinkers, which are carried forward by the flow 
and ultimately left in the form of confused heaps, perhaps of con* 
riderable magnitude. The front of a stream may present a wall of 
scoriaceous fragments looking like a huge pile of coke. As the 
clinkers are carried along, on the surface of the lava, they produce 
by mutual friction a crunching noise; and the sluggish flow of the 
lava-stream laden with its burden has been compared with that of a 
glacier. Since the upper part of the stream moves more rapidly than 
the lower, which is retarded by cooling in contact with the bed-rock, 
the superficial clinkers are carried forward and, rolling over the end. 
may become embedded in the lava as it advances. Scoriae formed 
on the top of a stream may thus find their way to the base. Rock- 
fragments or other dctrital matter occurring in the path of the lava 



will be caught up by the flow and become involved in the lower part 
of the molten mass; Whilst the rocks over which the lava travels 
may suflcr more or less alteration by the beat of the stream. 

The rapidity of a lava flow is determined partly by the slope of 
the bed over which it moves and partly by the consistency of the lava, 
this being dependent on its chemical composition and on the condi- 
tions of cooling. In an eruption of Mauna Loa, in Hawaii, in 1855, 
the lava was estimated to flow at a rate of 40 m. an hour; and at an 
eruption of Vesuvius in 180$ a velocity of more than 50 m. an hour, at 
the moment of emission, was recorded. The rapidity of flow is, how- 
ever, rapidly checked as the stream advances, the retardation being 
very marked in small flows. Where lava travels down a steep incline 
there is naturally a great tendency to form a rugged surface,, whilst 
a quiet flow over a flat plane favours smoothness. If. the lava meet 
a precipice it may form a cascade of great beauty, the' clinkers 
rapidly rolling down with a clatter, as described by Sir W. Hamilton 
in the eruption of Vesuvius in 1771, when the fiery torrent had a 
perpendicular fall of 50 ft. 

In Hawaii the smooth shining lava, often superficially waved and 
lobed, is known as pahoehoe, whilst the rugged clinker beds are 
termed aa. These terms are now used in general terminology, 
having been introduced by American geologists. The fields of aa 
often contain lava-bails and bombs. It may be said that the 



i8a 



VOLCANO 



pahoeboe corresponds practically with the Fkuten lata of German 
vulcanologists, and the aa with their SchoUen Una. Rugged flows 
are known in Auvergne as cheires. The surface of a clinker-field 
has often a horribly jagged character, being covered with ragged 
blocks bristling with sharp points. la the case of an obsidian-flow 
a most dangerous surface is produced by the keen edges and points 
of the fragmentary volcanic glass. 

If, after a stream of lava has become crusted over, the underlying 
magma should flow away, a long cavern or tunnel may be formed. 
Should the flow be rapid the roof may collapse and the fragments, 
falling on to the stream, may be carried forward or become absorbed 
in the fused mass. The walls and roof of a lava-cave are occasionally 
adorned with stalactites, whilst the floor may be covered with 
stalagmitic deposits of lava. The volcanic stalactites are slender, 
tubular bodies, extremely fragile, often knotted and rippled. 
Beautiful examples of lava stalactites from Hawaii have ocen 
described by Professor E. S. Dana. Caverns may ako be formed in 
lava- flows by the presence of large bubbles, or by the union of several 
bubbles. It may happen, too, that certain monticules thrown up on 
the surface of the lava are hollow, of which a famous example is 
furnished by the Cavcrne de Rosemond, at the base of Pitou Barry, 
in the Isle of Reunion. 

It is of great interest to determine whether aoltcn lava contracts 
or expands on solidification, but the experimental evidence on this 
subject is rather conflicting. According to some observers a piece 
of solid lava thrown on to the surface of the same lava in a liquid 
state will sink, while according to others it floats. It has often been 
observed that cakes formed by the natural fracture of the crust pn 
the lava of Kilauca sink in the liquid mass, but it has been suggested 
that the fragments are drawn down by convection-currents. On 
the other hand a solid piece, though denser than the corresponding 
liquid, may be buoyed up for a time by the viscous condition of the 
molten lava. Moreover, the presence of minute vesicles may lighten 
the mass. Although the minerals of a rock-magma may separately 
contract on crystallisation it does net follow that the magma itself, 
in which they probably exist in a state of solution, will undergo on 
crystallization a similar change of volume. On the whole, however, 
there seems reason to believe that lav? on solidifying almost always 



diminishes in volume and consequently increases in density. 

^. . , tfiments of C. Doelter the specific gravity of 

molten lava is invariably less than that of the same lava when solid, 



Accordingto the experin- 



though in some cases the difference is bit slight. In a vitreous or 
isotropic condition the lava has a lower density than when crystalline. 
The differences are illustrated by the fallowing table, where the 
figures give the specific gravity :— 





Natural 
solid 
lava. 


Liquid. 


Rapidly 
cooled, 
glassy. 


Slowly 

cooled, 

crystalline. 


Lava of Etna 
„ Vesuvius 


283 


2.58-2-74 
2-68-2-74 


2.71-2-75 
2-69-2.75 


2*81-2-83 
2.77-2-81 



Experiments by Dr C. Barus "showed that a diabase of specific 
gravity 3*017 formed a glass of sp. gr. 2-717, and nHted to a liquid 



of sp. gr. 2-52. J. A. Douglas on examining various igneous rocks 
found that in all cases the rock in a vitreous state had a lower sp. gr. 
than in a crystalline condition, the difference being greatest in the 



add plutonic rocks. A. Harker, however, has called attention to 
the fact that the glassy selvage of certain basic dykes ii. Scotland is 
denser than the same rock in a crystalline condition in the interior 
of the dykes. 

Physical Structure of Lavas. — An amorphous vitreous mass may 
result from the rapid cooling of a lava on its extrusion from the 
volcanic vent. The common type of volcanic glass is known as 
obsidian (?.».)• Microscopic examination usually shows thai even 
in this glass some of the molecules of the magma have assumed 
definite orientation, forming the incipient crystalline bodies known 
as microlites, &c. By the increase of these minute enclosures, in 
number and magnitude, the lava may become devitrified and assume 
a lithoidal or stony structure. If the molten magma consolidate 
slowly, the various silicates in solution tend to separate by crystalliza- 
tion as their respective points of saturation are reached. Should 
the process be arrested before the entire mass has crystallized, the 
crystals that have been developed will be embedded in the residual 
magma, which may, on consolidation, form a vitreous base. It 
ia believed that in many cases the lava brings up, through its 
conduit, myriads of crystals that have been developed during slow 
solidification in the heart of the volcanic apparatus. Showers of 
crystals of leucite have occurred at Vesuvius, of labradorite at 
Etna, and of pyroxene at Vesuvius, Etna and Stromboli. These 
44 intrateUuric crystals" were probably floating in the molten 
magma, and had they remained in suspension, this magma might on 
consolidation have enveloped them as a ground-mass or base. A 
rock so formed ftl generally known as a "porphyry," and the 
structure as porphyritic In such a lava the large crystals, or 
phenoctysts, evidently represent an early phase of consolidation, 
and the minerals of tn* matrix a later stage. It is notable that the 
intrateUuric crysta' ess of outline, as though they 



had suffered corrosion by attack of the molten magma, whilst they 
may contain vitreous enclosures, suggesting that the surrounding 
mass was liquid during their consolidation. It is believed that the 
more slowly consolidation has occurred* the larger generally are 
the crystals; and the higher the temperature of the magma the 
greater the corrosion or resorption. Possibly under certain con- 
ditions the phenocrysts and the ground-mass may have solidified 
simultaneously. 

In some cases the entire igneous mass assumes a crystalline 
structure, or becomes " bolocrystalline." Such a structure is well 
displayed when the magma has consolidated at considerable depths, 
cooling slowly under great pressure, and forming rocks which are 
termed " plutonic " or " abyssal " to distinguish them from rocks 
truly volcanic, or those which, if not effusive, like lava-flows, have at 
least solidified very near to the surface as dykes and sills. Volcanic 
and plutonic rocks pass, however, into each other by gradual transi- 
tion. The dyke-rocks, or intrusive masses, form an intermediate 
group sometimes distinguished under the name of " hypabyssal " 
rocks, as suggested by YV. C. Brogger. Lavas extruded in sub- 
marine eruptions may have solidified under a great weight of sea- 
water, and therefore to that extent rather under plutonic conditions. 

Chemical Composition sjF Lavas. — Lavas are usually classified 
roughly, from a chemical point of view, in broad groups according to 
the proportion of silica which they contain. Those in which the 
proportion of silica reaches 66% or upwards are said to be acid or 
acidic, whilst those in which it falls to 35% or below are called basic 
lavas. The two scries arc connected by a group of intermediate com- 
position, whilst a small number of igneous rocks of exceptional type 
are recognized as ultrabasic. Professor F. W. Clarke has suggested 
a grouping of igneous rocks as per-silicic. medio-silicic and sub- 
silicic, in which the proportion of silica ia respectively more than 60, 
between 50 and 60, or less than 50%. 

By far the greater part of all lavas consists of various silicates, 
cither crystallized as definite minerals or unindividualized as volcanic 
glass. In addition, however, to the mineral silicates, a volcanic rock 
may contain a limited amount of free acid and basic oxides, repre- 
sented by such minerals as quartz and magnetite. Rhyolite may be 
cited as a typical example of an acid lava, andesiteas an intermediate 
and basalt as a basic lava. The various volcanic rocks are described 
under their respective headings, so that it is needless to refer here 
to their chemical or mineralogies! composition. It may, however, 
be useful to cite a few selected analyses of some recent lavas and 
ashes: — 





I. 


11. 


III. 


IV. 


V. 


VI. 


Silica . . . 


48-28 


49-73 


50-00 


6800 


61-88 


49- 20 


Alumina . 


1839 


1846 


13-99 


16-07 


18-30 


14-90 


Ferric oxide 


I-I2 


6-95 


513 


263 


1-97 


4*51 


Ferrous oxide . 


7-88 


559 


9-10 


110 


4'3> 


™-75 
0-28 


Manganous oxide 








0*28 




Magnesia . 


37* 


3*99 


406 


108 


a- 7 i 


390 


Lime 


0.20 


10-71 


to-8i 


316 


6-3* 


9-20 


Soda .... 


284 


3-50 


302 


4.04 


317 


196 


Potash 


III 


1 07 


2-87 


1-8} 


t-09 


0-95 


Titanium dioxide 






0-82 


0-31 


1-72 


Phosphorus pentoxide 


0-51 








0-09 


o- 4 a 


Loss oa ignition 


062 


" 


0-24 




Ol 9 


0-10 


100-96 


lOO-OO 


9922 


1 00 00 


JOO-35 


9989 



I. From Vesuvius, eruption of 1006; by M. Pisani. 
II. „ Etna. Mean of several analyses by Silvestri and Fuchs 
(Mcrcalli). 

III. „ Stromboli, 1 891; by Ricciardi. 

IV. „ Krakatoa eruption of 1883; by C. Winkler. 

V. „ Mont Pde, Martinique, eruption of 1902; by M. Pisani. 
VI. M Kilauca, Hawaii; by O. Silvestri. 

In the course of the life of a volcano, the lava which It emits may 
undergo changes, within moderate limits, being at one time more acid, 
at another more basic Such changes are sometimes connected with 
a shifting of the axis of eruption. Thus at Etna the lavas from the 
old axis of Trifoclictto in the Valle del Bove were andesites, with 
about 55% of silica, but those rising in the present conduit are 
dolcritic, with a silica-content of only about 50%. It seems 
probable that, to a limited extent, changes in the character of a Lava 
may sometimes be due to contact of the magma with different rocks 
underground: if these are rich in silica, the acidity of the lava will 
naturally increase; while if they arc rich in calcareous and ferro- 
magnesian constituents, the basicity will increase: the variation is 
consequently apt to be only local, and probably always slight 

By von Richthofcn and some others it has been held that during 
a long period of igneous activity a definite order in the succession 
of the erupted rocks is everywhere constant; but though some 
striking coincidences may be cited, it can hardly be said that this 
generalization has been satisfactorily established. It has, however, 
often been observed, as emphasized by Professor Iddings, that a 
volcanic centre will start with the emission of lavas of neutral or 
intermediate type, followed in the course of a geological period by 



VOLCANO 



?8 3 



ecu end omk lavas. And ending with those of extreme ccroposraon, 
indicating progressive chance in the magma. 

The old idea of a universal magma, or continuous pyrosphere, hat 
been generally abandoned. Whatever may have been the case in a 
primitive condition of the interior of the earth, it seems necessaryto 

crveirs. The 



admit that the i 



i must now exist in separate reservoirs. 



which has been the subject of much discus* 
broad study of the genetic 



iadenendent activity of neighbouring volcanoes strikingly illustrated 
■ iulauea and Mauaa Loa in Hawaii, only ao m. apart, suggests 
a want of communication be tw een the conduits; and though the 
hvas are very similar at these two centres, it would seem that they 
can hardly be drawn from a common source. Again, the volcanoes 
of s out h er n Italy and the neighbouring islands exhibit little or no 
sympathy in their action, and emit lavas of diverse type. The lavas 
of Volcano, one of the Lipari Isles, are rhyolitic, whilst those of 
Strorabott, another of the group, are basaltic 

It is believed that the magma in a subterranean reservoir, though 
originally homogeneous, may slowly undergo certain changes, 
whereby the more basic constituents migrate to one quarter whilst 
the aria segregate in another, so that the canal, at successive periods, 
amy brine ap material of different types. The cause of this " 
mirir differentiation,'* which has been tfc 
■on. is of fundamental importance in any 
rdatioos of igneous rocks. 

It has often been observed that all the rocks from a definite 
igneo us centre have a general similarity in chemical and mincra- 
logical characters. This relationship is called, after Professor 1 doings, 
- consanguinity," and appears to be due to the fact that the rocks 
are drawn from a common source Professor Judd pointed out the 
e xi s te nce- of distinct " petrographical provinces,** within which the 
eruptive rocks during a given geological period have a certain family 
luWness and have appeared in definite succession. Thus he recog- 
aiaed a Brito- Icelandic petrographical province of Tertiary and recent 
hvas. It has been shown by A. Marker that alkali igneous rocks 
are generally associated with the Atlantic type of coast-line and 
-rrr-rrr" rocks with the Pacific type. 

Although changes in the character of an erupted product from a 
erven centre are usually brought about very slowly, it has often been 
sjp p osed that even in the course of a single prolonged eruption, or 
acnes of eruptions, the character of the lava may vary to some 
<*——»- That this is not, however, usually the case has been re- 
peatedly proved. M. H. Arsandaux, for instance, analysed the 
tombs of angste-andesite thrown out from Santorin at the beginning 
ot theensptkmof 1866, others ejected in 1867, and others again at the 
dase of the eruption in 1868; and he found no important variation 
ta the c o mp o si tion of the manna during these successive stages. 
M ceeovefr. Professor A. Lacroix found that the material extruded from 

from 
presented 
analogy to that of 187a and even to that of 1631. 

All the vesuvian lavas are of the type of rock known as leuco- 
tephrite or leucitetephrite, or they pass, by the presence of a little 
ouvine. into leurite-basaniCe. Leuate b characteristic of the lavas 
<« Vesuvius, whilst it is excessively rare in those of Etna, where a 
normal doleritic type prevails. NepheUne. a felspathoid related to 
leudte. is characteristic of certain lavas, such as those of the Canary 
I«*ands. which comprise nepheline-tephritesandncplidinc-basanites. 
M.3*t of the lavas from the volcanoes of South America consist of 
hvpersthene-andesite, and it is notable that the fragmcntal ejecta- 
nesta from the eruptions of St Vincent and Martinique in 1903 and 
£rm Krakatoa in 1883 were evidently derived from a magma of 
•Ju* Pacific type. 

It coamomy happens that acid lavas are paler In colour, less dense 
and less fusible than basic lavas, and they are probably drawn in 
■oose cases from shallower depths. As a consequence of the ready 
f j*sbiuty of many basic lavas, they flow freely on emission, running 
to great dista n ces and forming far-spreading sheets, whilst the more 
sod lavas rapidly become viscid and tend to consolidate nearer to 
tarir origin, often in huramocky masses. The shape of a volcanic 
ssoentain is consequently determined to a large extent by the 
caemscal character of the lavas which it emits. In the Hawaiian 
I^jsda, for instance, where the lavas are highly basic and fluent. 
:*w> form mountains which, though lofty, are flat domes with very 
sides. Such is the floidity of the lava on emission that 
on a slope of less than one degree. In consequence. 



Vesuvius in 1906 remained practically of the same composition f 
th e be g i n ning to theendof the eruption, and further, that it preset 
great analogy to that of 187a and even to that of 1631. 



#nuly 

& *ows freely 

too. of this mobility, it is readily thrown into spray and even pro- 
r-^trd by the expansive force of vapour into jets, which may rise 
*» the height of hundreds of feet and fall back stul incandescent. 
I the appearance of "fire fountains." The emission is not 
inicd, however, by violent explosions, such as arc 
with the eruption of magmas of less basic and 
tture. The viscosity of the lava at Kitauca was 

J by G. F. Becker to be about fifty times as great »% that 

of water. It may be pointed out that the fusibility of a lava depend* 
ant 00 the mere fact that it is basic, but rather on the character of 
the bases. A lava from Etna or Vesuvius may be really as basic 
as one from Hawaii. 

CaSvBory Lata.— A filamentous form of lava well known at Kilauea. 
is Hawaii, is termed Pelt's hair, after Pd<\ the reputed goddess of the 
It resembles the capillary slag much used in 




the arts wider the name of " mineral woof*'— a material formed by 
injecting steam into molten slag from an iron blast-furnace. It is 
commonly supposed that Pele's hair has been formed from drops of 
lava splashed into the air and drawn out by the wind into fine 



threads According, however, to Major C. E. button, the filaments 
are formed on the eddying surface of the lava by the elongation of 
minute vesicles of water-vapour expelled from the magma. iZ. F. W. 



Krukenberg, who examined the hair microscopically, figured a Urge 
number of fibres, some of which showed the presence of minute 
vesicles and microscopic crystals, the former when drawn out 
rendering the thread tubular. In a spongy vitreous scoria from 
Hawaii, described as " thread-lace," a polygonal network of delicate 
fibres forms little skeleton cells. Capillary lava is not confined to 
the Hawaiian volcanoes: it is known, for example, in Reunion, and 
may be formed even at Vesuvius. 

Pumiceous Lava. — The copious disengagement of vapour in a 
glassy lava gives rise to the light cellular or spongy substance, 
full of microscopic pores, known as pumice foe.), it is usually, 
though not invariably, produced from an add lava, and may some* 
times be regarded as the solidified foam of an obsidian. During the 
eruption of Krakatoa in 1883 enormous quantities of pumice were 
ejected, and were carried by the sea to vast distances, until they 
ultimately became water-logged and sank. Professor Judd found the 
pumice to consist of a vitreous lava greatly Inflated by imprisoned 
vapours; the walls of the air-cells were formed of the lava drawn 
out into thin plates and threads, often with delicate fibres running 
across the cavities. Having been suddenly cooled, it was extremely 
brittle, and its ready pulverization gave rise to much of the ash 
ejected during this eruption. It has been shown by Dr Johnston* 
Lavis that a bed of pumiceous lava, especially if bask, is generally 
vitreous towards the base, becoming denser, darker and more crys- 
talline upwards, until it may pass superficially Into scoria. The 
change is explicable by reduction in the temperature of the magma 
consequent on the conversion of water into steam. 

Water in Lavas. — Whether an eruption is of an explosive or a 
tranquil character must depend largely, though not wholly, on the 
chemical composition of the magma, especially on the extent to 
which it is aquiferous. By relief of pressure on the rise of the 
column in the volcanic channel, or otherwise, more or less steam 
will be disengaged, and if in large quantity this must become, with 
other vapours, a projectile agency of enormous power. The precise 
physical condition in which water exists in the magma h a matter 
of speculation, and hence lohnston-Lavis proposed to designate it 
simply as HiO. Water above its critical point, which is about 
370* C. or 698* F., cannot exist as a liquid, whatever be the pressure, 
neither is it an ordinary vapour. It has been estimated that the 
critical point would probably be reached at a depth of about 7 m. 
At very high temperatures the elements of water may exist in a 
state of dissociation. 

Much discussion has arisen as to the origin of the volcanic water, 
but probably it is not all attributable to a single source. Some may 
be of superficial origin, derived from rain, river or sea; whilst the 
upward passage of lava through moist strata must generate large 
volumes of steam. It has often been remarked that wet weather 
increase* the activity of a volcano, and that in certain mountains 
the eruptions arc more frequent in winter. According, however, to 
Professor A. Ricco's prolonged study of Etna, rain has no apparent 
influence on the activity of this mountain, and indeed the number of 
eruptions in winter, when rains are abundant, seems rather less than 
in summer. 

The popular belief that explosive action Is due to the admission 
of water to the volcanic focus is founded mainly on the topographic 
relation of volcanoes to large natural bodies of water, many being 
situated near the shore of a continent or on islands or even on 
the sea-floor. Salt water gaining access to heated rocks, through 
fissures or by capillary absorption, would give rise not only to water- 
vapour but to the volatile chlorides so common in volcanic exhala- 
tions. Yet it is notable that comparatively little chlorine is found 
among the products exhaled by the volcanoes of Hawaii, though 
these arc typically insular. Ju ralmieri, however, described certain 
sublimates on lava at Vesuvius after the eruption of 1872 as deposits 
of " sea-salt." to show that they were not simply sodium chloride, 
but contained other constituents found in sea-water. Professor 
T. 1. J. See believes that sea-water gains access to the heated rocks 
of the earth's interior by leakage through the floor of the ocean, the 
bottom never being water-tight, and Arrhenius supposes that it 
reaches the magma by capillarity through this floor. 

It has been supposed that water on reaching the hot walls of a 
subterranean cavity would pass into the spheroidal state, and on 
subsequent reduction ol temperature might come into direct contact 
with the heated surface, when it would flash with explosive violence 
into steam. Such catastrophe probably occur in certain cases. 
When, for example, a volcano becomes dormant, water commonly 
accumulates in the crater, and on a renewal of activity this crater- 
lake may be absorbed through figures in the floor leading to the 
reopened duct, and thus become rapidly, even suddenly, converted 
into vapour But such incidents are accidental rather than normal, 
and seem incompetent to account for volcanic activity in general. 

The effect of the contact of lava with water is often misunderstood. 



( 



184 



VOLCANO 



When a stream of lava flows into the sea tt.no doubt immediately 
generates a prodigious volume of steam ; but this is only a temporary 
phenomenon, (or the lava rapidly becomes chilled by the cold water, 
with formation of a superficial solid layer, which by its low thermal 
conductivity allows the internal mass to cool slowly and quietly. 
In the great eruption of Krakatoa in 1883 the sea-water gained 
occasional access to the molten lava, and by its cooling effect checked 
the escape of vapour, thus temporarily diminishing the volcanic 
activity. But Judd compares this action to that of fastening down 
the safety-valve of a steam-boiler. The tension of the elastic fluids 
being increased by this repression would give rise subsequently to. 
an explosion of greater violence; and hence the short violent 
paroxysms characteristic of the Krakatoa eruption were due to 
what he calls a " check and rally " of the subterranean forces. . The 
action in the volcanic conduit has, indeed, been compared with that of 

The downward passage of water through fissures must be confined 
to the upper portion of the earth's crust known as the " xorie of 
fracture, for it is. there only that open channels can exist. Water 
might also percolate through the pores of the rocks, but even the 
pores are closed at great depths. It was shown many years ago by 
G. A. Daubree that water could pass to a limited extent through a 
heated rock against the pressure of steam in the opposite direction. 
According to S. Arrhenius, water may pass inwards through the 
sea-bottom by osmotic pressure. 

As the melting points of various silicates are lowered by admixture 
with water, it appears that the access of surface-waters to heated 
rocks must promote their fusibility. Judd has suggested that the 
proximity of large bodies of water may be favourable to volcanic 
manifestations, because the hydrated rocks become readily melted 
by internal heat and thus yield a supply of lava. 

Whilst some of the water-vapour exhaled from a volcano is 
undoubtedly derived from superficial sources, notably in such insular 
volcanoes as Stromboli, the opinion has of late years been gaining 
ground, through the teaching of Professor E. Suess and others, that 
the volcanic water must be largely referred to a deep-seated sub- 
terranean origin— that it is, In a word. " hypogene " or magmatic 
rather than meteoric. It is held that the magma as it rises through 
the volcanic conduit brings up much water-vapour and other gaseous 
matters derived from original sources, perhaps a relic of what was 
present in the earth in its molten condition, having possibly been 
absorbed from a dense primordial atmosphere, or, as suggested by 
Professor T. C. Chamberlin, entrapped by the globe during its 
formation by accretion of planetesimal matter. 

Water brought from magmatic depths to the surface, and appear- 
ing there for the first time, has been termed " juvenile," and it 
has been assumed that such water may be seen in hot springs like 
those at Carlsbad. Professor T. W. Gregory has suggested that 
certain springs in the interior of Australia may derive part of their 
supply from juvenile or phitonic waters. 

According to A. Gautier, the origin of. volcanic water may be 
found in the oxidation of hydrogen, developed from masses of 
crystalline rock, which by subsidence have been subjected to the. 
action of subterranean beat. 

Volcdnic Vapours. — It seems not unlikely that the vapours 
and gases exist in the volcanic magma in much the same way 
that they can exist in molten metal. It is a familiar fact 
that certain metals when melted can absorb large volumes of 
gases without entering into chemical combination with them. 
Molten silver, for example, is capable of absorbing from the 
atmosphere more than twenty times its volume of oxygen, 
which it expels on solidification, thus producing what is called 
the " spitting of silver / r Platinum again can absorb and retain 
when solid, or occlude, a large volume of hydrogen, that can be 
expelled by heating the metal in vacuo. In like manner molten 
rock under pressure can absorb much steam. It appears that 
many igneous rocks contain gases locked up in their pores, not 
set free by pulverization, yet capable of expulsion by strong 
heat. The gases in rocks have been the subject of elaborate 
study by R. T. Chamberlin, whose results appear in Publication 
No. 106 of the Carnegie Institution of Washington. 

Sir W. A. Tilden has found that granite, gabbro, basalt and 
certain other igneous rocks enclose many times their volume of 
gases, chiefly hydrogen and carbon dioxide, With carbon monoxide, 
methane and nitrogen. Thus, the basalt of Antrim in Ireland, 
which is a Tertiary lava, yielded eight times its volume of gas having 
the following percentage composition: hydrogen 36-15, carbon 
dioxide 3208, carbon monoxide 20-08, methane 10, nitrogen i-6i. 
No doubt some of the gases evolved on heating rocks may be gener- 
ated by reactions during the experiment, as shown by M . VV. Travcrs, 
and also by Armand Gautier. It has been pointed out by Gautier 
that the gas exhaled from Mont Pcl6 during the eruption of 1002 
had practically the same composition as that which he obtained 
on heating granite and cert*»»» "***«* mcks. According to this 



authority a cubic kilometre of granite heated to redness would yield 
not less than 26,000,000 tons of water-vapour, besides other gases. 
If then a mass of granite in the earth's crust were subject to a great 
local accession of heat it might evolve vast volumes of gaseous 
'matter, capable of producing an eruption of explosive type. Judd 
found that the little balls of Siberian obsidian called marekanite 
threw off, when strongly heated, clouds of finely divided particle* 
formed by rupture of the distended mass .through the escape of 
vapour. Pitchstone when ignked loses in' some cases as much as 
10% of its weight, due to expulsion of water. 

Much of the steam and other vapour brought up from below 
by the lava may be evolved on mere exposure to the air, and hence 
a stream freshly extruded is generally beclouded with more or less 
vapour. Gaseous bubbles in the body of the lava render it vesicular, 
especially in the upper part of a stream, where the pressure is relieved, 
and the vesicles by the onward flow of the lava tend to become 
elongated in the direction of movement. Vesiculation, being; 
naturally resisted by cohesion, is not common in very viscid lavas of 
add type, nor is it to be expected where the lava has been subject! 
to great pressure, but it is seen to perfection in surface-flows of 
liquid lavas of basaltic character. A vesicular structure may some* 
times be seen even in dykes, but the cavities are usually rounded 
rather than elongated, and are often arranged in bands parallel to 
the walls of the dyke. A very small propor t ion of water in a lava 
suffices to produce vesiculation. Secondary minerals developed in a 
cellular lava may be deposited in the steam-holes, thus producing an 
amygdaloidal rock. 

After the surface of a lava-stream has become crusted over, vapour 
may still be evolved in the interior of the mass, and in seeking release 
may rlrvste or — . — 1 pierce the crust. Small cooes may thus be 
thrown up on a la va-llow, and when vapour escapes from terminal or 
lateral or ificc* they are known as " spiracles." The steam may issue 
wi' h MiFik Sent projectile force to toss up the lava in little fountains. 
Whvn 1 be Lava is \< t f liquid, as in the Hawaiian volcanoes, it may 
after projection from the blow-hcle fall back in drops and plastic 
dot * , wh ich on contol idation form, by their union, small cones. 

Va pour- vent * on Lava are often known as fumaroles (g.v.). The 
chardctcr of the k.i^ous exhalations varies with the temperature, 
and the following classification was suggested by C. Sainte-Claire 
Devil lo: (1) Dry or white fumaroles having a temperature above 
500* C. and evolving compounds of chlorine, and perhaps fluorine. 
(2) Acid fit marolci , exhaling much steam, with hydrocholoric add and 
sulphur dxuudf. U) Alkaline fumaroles, at a temperature of about 
100 ", with rourh bt^.iim and ammonium chloride and some sulphuretted 
hyr|iv£i-ft. 14 H i.l.i fumaroles, below ioo°, with aqueous vapour. 
carbon dianide a nd *u Iphuretted hydrogen. (5) Mofettes, indicating 
the expiring pha<^ of vulcanism. A similar sequence of emanations, 
foU : „ pruiri^iv •• cooling of the lava, has been noted by other 
observers. During an eruption, the gaseous products may vary 
considerably. Johnston-La vis found at Vesuvius that the vapour 
which first escaped from the boiling lava contained much sul- 
phurous acid, and that hydrochloric acid and other chlorides 
appeared later. 

If the vapours exhaled from volcanoes were derived originally 
from superficial sources, the lava would, of course, merely return to 
the surface of the earth what it had directly or indirectly absorbed. 
But if, as is now rather generally believed, much if not most of the 
volcanic vapour is derived from original subterranean sources, it 
must form a direct contribution from the interior of the earth to the 
atmosphere and hydrosphere, and consequently becomes of extreme 
geological interest. 

Description a/ Special Casts and Vapatsr*.— Hydrochloric add, 
HC1, escapes abundantly from many vents, often accompanied with 
the vapours of certain metallic chlorides, and is responsible for much 
of the acrid effects of volcanic exhalations. To avoid dangerous 
vapours an active volcano should be ascended on the windward side. 
Free hydrofluoric acid, HF, has sometimes been detected with the 
hydrochloric acid among Vesuvian vapours, and silicon fluoride, 
S1F4, has also been reported. Sulphuretted hydrogen, H»S, is a 
frequent emanation, and bdng combustible may contribute to the 
lamoent flames seen in some eruptions. It readily suffers oxidation, 
giving rise to sulphur dioxide and water. By the interaction of 
hydrogen sulphide and carbon dioxide, water and carbon oxy- 
sulphide, COS, are formed ; whilst by reaction with sulphur dioxide, 
water and free sulphur are produced, such being no doubt the origin 
of many deposits of volcanic sulphur. Hydrogen sulphide may be 
formed by the decomposition of certain metallic sulphides, like that 
of calcium, in the presence of moisture, as suggested by Anderson 
and Flett with regard to certain muds at the Soufriere of St Vincent. 
Sulphur dioxide, SOs, is one of the commonest exhalations, especially 
at acid fumaroles. It may be detected by its characteristic smell, 
that of burning brimstone, even when present in very small pro- 
portion and in the presence of an excess of hydrochloric acid. By 
hydration it readily forms sulphurous' acid, which may be further 
oxidized to sulphuric add. J. B. Boussingault found free sulphuric 
acid (with hydrochloric acidTin the water of the Rio Vinagre which 
issues from the volcano of Purace in the Andes of Colombia; and 
it occurs also in certain other vokanic waters. Carbon dioxide, 
CO* is generally a product of the later stages of an eruption, and is 



VOLCANO 



185 



often evolved after all other put* have ceased to escape, /.though 
it may sometimes be due to the decomposition ut lime*tofie, it seems 
to be mostly of true magma tic origin. At the veil -known Grotta 
del Cane, at Lake Agnano. in the phlegmean Fields near Maples, 
there has been for ages 4 ropiou* discharge, and analyze* sj the air 
of the cave by T. Graham Voung shaweif the presence ct fT.*n 61-5 
to 71% of carbon dioxide. Uiutier. in 1907, found 96 to >7% of 
thb gas in the vapour* (excluding water-vapour) emitted from the 
Souatara near Pozzuoli in the Bay of Naples The ga* by its 
beauty tends to actmautate in dcpre*<ed areas, m$ 1 Death 

Gakh in the Yellowatooe Park and in the Upa* Valley of J.iwl In 
the Eifel, in the Auvergrie and in many other volcanic ret 1 ns it is 
6scharged at temper .Hurts not above that of the armo>phe j .. This 
satural carbonic acid gas is now utilUcd industrially id many 
localities. In the fcasei of the fumaroles of Mont Pell, carbon 
■noaride*. CO, was delected by H. Moissan. Probably certain 
hydrocarbons, notably met. tunc or marsh- gas, CH», often sust in 
wokasric gases. They miffh t be formed, by the action of a iter on 
natural carbides, such as that of magnesium, calcium. &c. loissan 
bond 5-46% of methane in vapour from a fumarolc on M- at Pele 
in 1903. Free hydrogen was detected by K, Hansen as far back as 
r&*6 in vapours from volcanoes in Iceland. In ifcoi Dt lie and 
Fooque found it, with hydrocarbons, at Torre del Greco near Naples; 
sad in 1866 Fouque discovered it at Santodn. when? bdbh ot the 
vapour at the immediate focui of eruption contained as much as 
30% of hydrogen. It is notable that at Santoria free oxygen was 
aio founcL The elements of water may possibly exist, at the high 
temperature of the magma, in a state of dissociation, and certain 
volcanic explosions have sometimes been attributed to the com- 
bination of these elements. Oxygen is not infrequently found among 
vulcanic emanations, but may perhaps be derived in most cases from 
superficial air and ground-water; and in like manner the nitrogen, 
often detected, may be sometimes of atmospheric origin, though in 
other cases derived from nitrides in the lava. In the vapours 
emitted by Mont Pele in 1902 argon was detected by H. Moissan, 
to the extent of 0*71 %; and in those from Vesuvius in 1906 argon 
sad neon were found by Gautier. The collection of volcanic vapours 
oilers difficulty, and it is not easy to avoid admixture with the atmo- 
sphere. F. A. Perret has successfully collected gases on Vesuvius. 

Volcanic FUumts. — Although the incandescence of the lava and 
scones projected during an eruption, and the reflection from incan- 
descent matter in the crater have often been mistaken for red flames, 
these can be no doubt that true combustion, though generally feeble, 
dues occur during volcanic outbursts. Among the gases cited above, 
hydrogen, hydrogen sulphide and the hydrocarbons are inflammable. 
The flames seen in volcanoes are generally pale and of bluish, 
greenish or yellowish tint. They were first examined spectro- 
sconscaMy by I. Janssen, who in 1867 detected the lines of burning 
hydrogen at Santorin. Subsequently he proved the presence of 
k.-isogea, sodium and hydrocarbons in the volcanic flames of 
iCilauea. During the eruption of Vukano, in the Lipari Isles, in 
1 5*3. names with a bluish or greenish tinge were seen by A. E. 
Karfian, aa experienced observer resident in the island. These, 
brrswer. were referred to the kindling of sulphur deposited around 
the fumaroles, the flames being coloured by the presence of boric 
sod and arsenic sulphide. 

When a stream of lava flows over vegetation the combustion of 
the leaves and wood may be mistaken for flames issuing from the 
brra. In like manner brushwood may grow in the crater of a 
> and be ignited by a fresh outburst of lava, thus 



1 which,,from their position in the crater, may readily 
deceive an observer. 

Volcanic SwbKmatcs.— Certain mineral substances occur as sub- 
fcaxates in and around the volcanic vents, forming incrustations on 
the lava. They are either deposited directly from the effluent 
vapours, which carry them in a volatile condition, or are produced 
by interaction of the vapours among themselves; whilst some of the 
aexustatjons, rather loosely called sublimates, are due to reaction 
of the v a po urs on the constituents of the lava. Possibly at the 
temperature of the magma-reservoirs even silica and various 
■J frr -f — . may be volatilized, and might thus yield sublimation 
products. Many of the volcanic sublimates occur at first as incan- 
descent crusts on the lava. Being generally unstable they are 
(hn s uilt of preservation, and are not usually well represented in 



Arsons; the commonest sublimates is halite, or sodium chloride, 
XaCI, occurring as a white crystalline incrustation, sometimes 
accompanied, as at Vesuvius, by sylvite, or potassium chloride, 
ICO. which forms a similar sublimate. The two chlorides may 
be intimately associated. Sal ammoniac, or ammonium chloride, 
NH4Q. is not uncommon, especially at Etna, as a white crystalline 
crast. probably formed in part by the reaction of hydrochloric acid 
*rth nitrogen and hydrogen in the vapours. Bunsen, on finding 
it in Iceland, regard e d it as a product of the distillation of organic 
sarter. At the Solfatara. near Pozzuoli, sal ammoniac was formerly 
cufketerf as a sublimate on tiles placed round a bocca or vapour- 
veat. Ferric chloride. FeCia, not infrequently occurs as a reddish 
or br o w nis h yellow deliquescent incrustation, and because it thus 
cabers the lava it has received the name of molysite (from Gr. 



jrfXwct, stain). The action of hydrochloric add on the iron com* 
pounds in the lava may readily yield this chloride, which from its 
yellowish colour has sometimes been mistaken for sulphur. A 
crystalline sublimate from the fumaroles on Vesuvius, containing 
ferric and alkaline chlorides, KCl-NH4Cl-2FeCla+6H,0, is known 
as kremersite, after P. Kremers. From a scoriaceous lava found on 
Vesuvius after the eruption of 1906, Jobnston-Lavis procured a 
yellow rhombohedral sublimate, which he proved to be a chloride of 
manganese and potassium, whence he proposed for it the name 
chlorrnanganokalite. It was studied by L. J. Spencer, and found 
to contain 4KCl-MnCh. Chkxocalcite, or native calcium chloride, 
CaCU, has been found in cubic crystals on Vesuviaa lava. Fluorite, 
or calcium fluoride, CaFs, is also known as a volcanic product Lead 
chloride, PbClt, a rare Vesuvian mineral, was named cotunnite, 
after Dr Cotugno of Naples. The action of hydrogen sulphide on this 
chloride may give rise to galena, PbS, found by A. Lacroix on Vesu- 
vius in 1906. Atacamite, or cupric oxychloride, CuCW-3Cu(0H)t, 
occurs as a green incrustation on certain Vesuvian lavas, notably 
those of 1631. Another green mineral from Vesuvius was found 
by A. Scacchi to be a sulphate containing copper, with potas- 
sium and sodium, which he named from its fine colour eudorin* 
—a word which has been written in English as euchloriaite. The 
copper in the sublimates on Vesuvius will sometimes plate the iron 
nails of a traveller's boots when crossing the newly erupted lava. 
Cupric oxide, CuO, occurs in delicate crystalline scales termed 
tenorite, after Professor G. Tenore of Naples; whilst cupric sulphide, 
CuS, forms a delicately reticulated incrustation known as covellite, 
after N. Covelli, its discoverer at Vesuvius. 

A sublimate not infrequently found in feathery crystalline 
deposits on lava at Vesuvius, and formerly called " Vesuvian salt," 
is a potassium and sodium sulphate, (K-Na)iSO«, known as aphthi- 
talite (from Gr. i^firsr, imperishable, and aXs, salt). A sulphate 
with the composition PbSOr(K-Na)*S04. found in the fumaroles at 
Vesuvius after the eruption of 1906, was named by A. Lacroix 
palmierite, after L. Palmieri, who was formerly director of the 
observatory on Vesuvius. Various sulphites are formed on lavas 
by the sulphurous acid of the vapours. Ferric oxide, FeaO», which 
occurs in beautiful metallic scales as specular iron-ore, or as an 
amorphous reddish incrustation on the lava, is probably formed in 
most cases by the interaction of vapour of ferric chloride and steam 
at a high temperature. Less frequently, magnetite, Fe/>i, and 
magnesioferrite, MgFerO* are found in octahedral crystals on lava. 
An iron nitride (FeiNj) was detected thinly incrusting a lava erupted 
at Etna in 1874, and was named by O. Suvestri, who examined it, 
siderazotc. 

Boric add, H l BOi, occurs in the crater of Vulcano so abundantly 
that it was at one time collected commercially. It has also led to 
the foundation of an industry in Tuscany, where it is obtained from 
the soffioni (o.v.) of the Maremma. From Sasso in Tuscany it 
has received the name of sassolin or sassolite. Realgar, or arsenic 
sulphide, AstSt. occurs in certain volcanic exhalations and is de- 
posited as an orange-red incrustation, often associated with sulphur, 
as at the Solfatara, where orpiment, As»S>, has also been found. 

Of all volcanic products, sulphur (q.v.) is in some respects the most 
important. It may occur in large quantity lining the walls of the 
crater, as at Popocatepetl in Mexico, where it was formerly worked 
by the Indian *' volcaneros," or on the other hand it may be a rare 
product, as at Vesuvius. Sulphur appears generally to owe its 
origin in volcanic areas to the interaction of sulphur dioxide and 
sulphuretted hydrogen, or to the action of water on the latter. A 
volcanic vent where sulphur is deposited is truly a solfatara (soifo 
terra) or a soufriere, but all volcanoes which have passed into that 
stage in which they emit merely heated vapours now pass under 
this name (see Solfatara). The famous Solfatara, an old crater 
in the Phlegraean Fields, exhales sulphurous vapours, especially at 
the Bocca Grande, from which sulphur is deposited. In the orange* 
coloured sulphur of the Solfatara, realgar may be present to the 
extent of as much as 18%. A brown seleniferous sulphur occurring 
at Vulcano, one of the Lipari Islands, was termed by W. Haidinger 
volcanite, but it should be noted that Professor W. H. Hobbs has 
applied this name to an anorthoclase-augite rock ejected as bombs 
at Vulcano. Sulphur containing selenium is known as a volcanic 
product in Hawaii, whilst in Japan not only selenium but tellurium 
occurs in certain lands of sulphur. 

At the Solfatara, near Pozzuoli, the hot sulphurous vapours attack 
the trachytic rocks from which they issue, giving rise to such pro- 
ducts as alum, kaolin and gypsum. To some of these products, 
" snenaositc '-- J - -•- — % '*■ " '-- 



including alunogen and 1 



ite (soda-alum), the name solfatarite 



was given by C. W. Sheppard in 1835. By prolonged action of the 
acid vapours on lava, the bases of the silicates may be removed, 
leaving the silica as a soft white chalk-like substance. The occur- 
rence of kaolin and other white earthy aheration-products led to 
the hills around the Solfatara being known to the Romans as the 
Colli Uucogei. 

The Hot Dust Cloud and Avalanche of PM.— The terrific erup- 
tions in the islands of Martinique and St Vincent in the West 
Indies m 1902, furnished examples of a type of activity not previ- 
ously recognized by vulcanologjsU, though, as Professor A. Lacroix 



i 



i86 



VOLCANO 



hat pointed out, similar phenomena have no doubt occurred 
elsewhere, especially in the Azores. By Drs Tempest Anderson 
and J S. Flett, who were commissioned by the Royal Society to 
report on the phenomena, this type of explosive eruption is 
distinguished as the " Pelean type." Its distinctive character 
is found In the sudden emission of a dense black cloud of super- 
heated and suffocating gases, heavily charged with Incandescent 
dust, moving with great velocity and accompanied by the dis- 
charge of immense volumes of volcanic sand, which are not 
rained down in the normal manner, but descend like a hot 
avalanche. The cloud, with the avalanche, is called by Lacroix 
a nuie PeUenne, or nuie ordente, the latter term having been 
applied to the fatal cloud in the eruptions at San Jorge In the 
Azores in 1818. In its typical form, the cloud seen at Pete 
appeared as a solid bank, opaque and impenetrable, but having 
the edge in places hanging like folds of a curtain, and apparently 
of brown or purplish colour. Rolling along like an inky torrent, 
it produced in its passage intense darkness, relieved by vivid 
lightning. So much solid matter was suspended in the cloud, 
that it became too dense to surmount obstacles and behaved 
rather like a liquid. It has, however, been suggested that its 
peculiar movement as it swept down the mountain was due not 
simply to its heavy charge of solids, but partly to the oblique 
direction of the initial explosion. After leaving the crater, 
it underwent enormous expansion, and Anderson and Flett were' 
led to suggest that possibly at the moment of emission it might 
have been partly In the form of liquid drops, which on solidify- 
ing evolved large volumes of gas held previously in occlusion. 
The deadly effect of the blast seems to have been mostly due 
to the irritation of the mucous membrane of the respiratory 
passages by the fine hot dust, but suffocating gases, like sulphur 
dioxide and sulphuretted hydrogen, were associated with the 
water-vapour. Possibly the incandescent dust was even hotter 
than the surrounding vapour, since the latter might be cooled 
by expansion. 

It is said that the black cloud as it swept along was accom- 
panied by an indraught of air, not however sufficiently powerful 
to check its rapid advance. The current of air was likened by 
Anderson and Flett to the inrush of air at a railway station as 
an express train passes. An attempt was made to determine 
the temperature of the fatal blast which destroyed St Pierre, 
but without very definite results. Thus it was assumed that 
as the telephone wires were not melted the temperature was below 
the fusing-point of copper: possibly, however, the blast may 
have passed too rapidly to produce the effects which might 
normally be due to its temperature. 

Shape of Volcanic CW*.— Those volcanic products which are solid 
when ejected, or which solidify after extrusion, tend to form by 
their accumulation around the eruptive vent a hill, which, though 

fenerally more or less conical, is subject to much variation in shape, 
t occasionally happens that the hill is composed wholly of elected 
blocks, not themselves of volcanic origin. In this case an explosion 
has rent the ground, and the effluent vapours have hurled forth 
f ragmenta of the shattered rock through which the vent was opened, 
but no ash or other fragmentary volcanic material has been ejected, 
nor has any lava been poured forth. This exceptional type is 
represented in the Eifel by certain raontkules which consist mainly 
of fragments of Devonian slate, more or less altered. In some cases 
the area within a ring of such rocky materials is occupied by a sheet 
of water, forming a crater-lake, known in the Eifel as a moot* Piles 
of fragmentary matter of this character, though containing neither 
cinders nor lava, may be fairly re ga rded as volcanic, inasmuch as 
they are due to the explosive action of hot su b terr an ean vapours. 

In the ordinary paroxysmal type of eruption, however, cinders and 
ashes are shot upwards by the explosion and then desc e nd in showers, 
forming around the orifice a mound, in shape rather like the diminu- 
tive cone of sand in the lower lobe of an hour-glass. Little cinder* 
cones of this character may be formed within the crater of a large 
volcano during a single eruption; whilst large cones are built up 
by many successive discharges, each sheet of fragmentary material 
mantling more or leas regularly round the preceding byer. The 
symmetry of the lull b not infrequently affected by disturbing 
.-- i*ogwtad. for example, blowing the loose matter 

l TV sides of a cinder cone have generally a steep 
, varying from 30* to 45*, depending on the angle of repose 
1 ejectamenta. Excellent examples of small scoria-cones are 
~ ( the puyt of Auvtrgne in central France, whilst a mag- 



nificent illustration of this type of hill is furnished by Fusryama, 
in Japan, which reaches an altitude of 12,000 ft. How such a cone 
may be rapidly buHt up was well shown by the formation of Monte 
Nuovo, near Pozzuoli — a hill 400 ft. high and a mile and a half in 
circumference, which is known from contemporary evidence to have 
been formed in the course of a few days in September 1538. The 
shape of a cinder cone may be retained for ages, since it is not liable 
to suffer greatly by denudation, as the rain soaks into the loose 
porous mass instead of running down the outside. If lava rises in 
the duct of a cinder cone, it may. on accumulation in the crater, 
break down the wall, and thus effect its escape as a stream. Cones 
breached in this way are not uncommon in Auvergne. 

It often happens that the tinders and ashes ejected from a volcano 
become mixed with water, and so form a paste, which sets readily 
as a hard tufaccous mass. Such natural tuff is indeed similar to 
the hydraulic cement known as porzolana, which is formed artificially 
from volcanic ashes, and is renowned for durability. Although 
streams of volcanic mud are commonly associated with the ashes of 
a cinder-cone they may also form independent structures or tuff- 
cones. These are generally broad-topped hills, having sides with aa 
angle of slope as low in some cases as 15*. 

Lava-cones are built up of streams of lava which have consolidated 
around the funnel of escape. Associated with the lava, however, 
there is usually more or less fragmentary matter, so that the cones 
are composite in structure and consequently more acute in shape 
than if they were composed wholly of lava. As the streams of lava 
in a volcano ran at different times in different directions, they radiate 
from the centre, or flow from lateral or eccentric orifices, as irregular 
tongues, and do not generally form continuous sheets covering the 
mountain. 

When lava is the sole or chief element in the cone, the shape of the 
hill is determined to a great extent by the chemical composition and 
viscosity of the lava, its copiousness and the rapidity of flow. If 
the lava be highly basic ana very mobile, it may spread to a great 
distance before solidifying, and thus form a hill covering a large area 
and rising perhaps to a great height, but remarkably flat in profile. 
Were the lava perfectly Rquid, it would indeed form a sheet without 
any perceptible slope of surface. As a matter of fact, some lavas 
are so fluent as to run down an incline of i°, and flat cones of basalt 
have in some cases a slope of only io* or even less. The coIok al 
mass of Mauna Loa, in Hawaii, forma a remarkably flat broad cone, 
spreading over a base of enormous area and rising to a height of 
I3»9oo ft. Major Dutton, writing in 1883, said that " a moderate 
eruption of Mauna Loa represents more material than Vesuvius 
has emitted since the days of Pompeii." Yet the lava is so mobile 
that it generally wells forth quietly, without explosive demonstra- 
tion, and therefore unaccompanied by fragmentary ejectamenta. 
Fluent lavas like those of Hawaii are also poured forth from the 
volcanoes and volcanic fissures of Iceland. 

If the lava be less basic and less fusible, the hul formed by ita 
accumulation instead of being a low dome will take the shape of a 
cone with sides of higher gradient: in the case of andesite cones, for 
instance, the slope may vary from «• to 35° Acid rocks, or those 
rich in silica, such as rhyolites and trachytes, may be emitted aa 
very viscous lavas tending to form dome-shaped or bulbous ma&ses. 
Experiment shows that such lavas may persist for a considerable 
time in a semi-solid condition. It is possible for a dome to increase 
in sixe not by the lava running over the crater and down the sides 
but by injection of the pasty magma within the expanding bulb 
while still soft; or if solidified, the crust yields by cracking. Such 
a mode of growth, in which the dome consists of successive sheetn 
that have been compared to the skins of an onion, has been illustrated 
by the e xp e rim e n ts of Dr A. Reyer. and the structure is typically 
re p r e sen ted by the mameJons or steep-sided domes of the Isle of 
Bourbon. The Puy-de-D6me in Auvergne is an example of a cone 
formed of the trachytic rock called from its locality domite, whilst 
the Grand Sarcoui in the same region illustrates the broad dome- 
shaped type of hill. Such domes may have no summit-crater, and 
it is then usually assumed that the top with the crater has been 
removed by denudation, but possibly in some cases such a feature 
never existed. The " dome volcano of von Seebach is a dome of 
add lava extruded as a homogeneous mass, without conspicuous 
chimney or crater. Although domes are usually composed of acid 
rocks, it seems possible that they may be formed also of bask lavas, 
if the magma be protruded slowly at a low temperature to as to be 
rapidly congealed. 

The Spine of Pdf. — A peculiar volcanic structure appeared at Mont 
Fete in the course of the eruption of 1902, and was the subject of 
careful study by Professor A. Lacroix. Dr E. A. Hoovey v A. Hcilprin 
and other ob se rver s . It appears that from fissures m the floor 
of the Etane Sec a viscous andesitk lava, partly quartziferous, was 
poured forth and rapidly solidified superficially, forming a dome- 
shaped mass invested bv a crust or carapace. According to Lacroix. 
the crust soon became fractured, partly by shrinkage on consolida- 
tion and partly by internal tension, and the dome grew rapidly by 
injection of molten matter. Then there gradually rose from the 
dome a huge monolith or needle, forming a terminal spine, which in 
the course of its existence varied in shape and height, having btcn 
at its maximum in July 1903, when its absolute height was about 



VOLCANO 



187 



3*76 ft. above sm-level. The walls of the spine. Inclined at from 
7S to no - 10 the horizon, were apparently ahrhraaHH "• ««M-fc-<i 
and scratched by friction: in mat ■ were oocaaionally 
vapours were coatinnally escaping. Several amallei 
also formed. Some o beciV c is reg a rded the great spine aa a 
phiz of lava from a previous outburst, expelled 00 a renewal of 
activity. Lacroix, however, believed that it waa formed by tba 
extrnaHMi of an enormous mass of highly viacid magma, perhaps 
partly solidified before emission, and he compared the formation of 
<bedoKcwmtiwcxatertothe6truct3neonSantorumi866,deacribed 
by Fouque aa a " cumulo-volcano." P ro f c— or H. F. Csdand has 
•v^geatad a comparison with the cone of aadeaite in the cater of the 
tokano of Toaaca in Mexico, and it ia said that similar formations 
have been observed in the volcanoes of the Andes. Dr Tempest 
Anderson, 00 visiting Pet6 in 1907. found a stump of the spue, 
m— irring of a kind of volcanic agglomerate, rising from a cone of 

Tkt Crater.— The eruptive orifice in normal volcano— the astro 
of Italian vulcanologists— is usually situated at the bottom of a 
*fr I'm swjin or cup. known as the crater. This hollow ia formed and 
krpt open by the explosive force of the elastic vapours, and when-the 
v<j*caao becoaies dormant or extinct it may be closed, partly by 
rock falling from its crumbling walla and partly by the solidification 
of the lava which it may contain. If a renewed outburst 



the floor of the old crater may reopen or a new outlet may be f< 

at some weak point on the aide of the mountain: hence a crater may, 
with regard to position, be either terminal or lateral. The position 
of the crater will evidently be also changed on any shifting of the 
general axia of eruption. In shape and size the crater vanes from 
tune to time, the walls being perhaps breached or even blown away 
during an outburst- Hence the height of a volcanic — -^« 
in activity, measured to the rim of the crater or the terminal peak, 
is not constant. Vesuvius, for example, suffered a reduction of 
seven] hundred feet during the great eruption of 1906, the east side 
of the cone having lost, according to V. R. Matteuoci, lao metres. 

Whilst ia many cases the crater is a comparatively small circular 
hoabw around the orifice of discharge, it forms in others a large bowl 
like cavity, such as is termed in some localities a " caldera." In 
the Sandwich Islands the craters are wide pits bounded by nearly 
vertical walla, showing stratified and terraced lavas and floored by a 
great plain of black basalt, sometimes with lakes of molten lava. 
Pr feasor W. H. Pickering compares the lava-pits of Hawaii to the 
mter-riogs in the moon. Some of the pit-craters in the Sandwich 
U'-nda are of great size, but none comparable with the greatest of 
the lunar craters. Dr G. K. Gilbert, however, has suggested that the 
ring-shaped pita on the moon are not of volcanic origin, but are 
1. iiBssnns loaned by the impact of meteorites. Stmaarty the 
' crater " of Coon Butte, near Canyon Diablo, in Arizona, which ia 
.x> ft- ia diameter and 500 ft. deep, has been regarded as a vast 
t t due to collision of a meteorite of prodigious size. Probably the 
urgcu terrestrial volcanic crater is that of Aso-san, in the isle of 
KMsnia (Japan X. which ia a huge oval de prc saio u e sti m at ed by some 
observer* to have aa area of at least 100 sq. m. Some of the 
targe pit-craters have probably been formed by subsidence, the 
cxk of a volcano having been eviscerated by extravasation of lava, 
and the roof of the cavity having then subsided by loss of support 
Tae term caldera haa so met i mes been limited to craters formed by 



On the floor of the crater, ejected matter may accumulate as a 
coeoidal pile: and if such action be repeated in the crater of the 
■ew cone, a succession of concentric cones will ultimately be formed. 
The walls of a perfect crater form a ring, giving the cone a truncated 
appearance, but the ring may suffer more or less destruction in the 
course of the history of the mountain. A familiar instance of such 
ch-age is afforded by Vesuvius. The mountain now so called, using 
t*» term in a re s tric t e d sense, is a huge composite cone built up 
■ old crateral hollow, the walls of which still rise aa an 
; rampart on the N. and N.E. aides, and are known as 
_____ ^jnuna; but the S. and S.W. aides of the ancient crater have 
disappeared, having been blown away during some former outburst. 
probably the Plinian eruption of 79. In like manner the relics of an 
«*J crater form an amphitheatre partially engirdlina the Soufriere 
sa St Vincent, and other examples of "Soroma rings "a_e known to 

Much of the f ragmental matter ejected from a volcano rolls down 
the ktnkfe of the crater, forming beds of tuff which incline towards 
rh» central axis, or have a centroclinal dip. On the contrary, the 
sheets of cinder and lava which form the bulk of the cone slope 
away from the axis, or have a dip that is sometimes described as pcri- 
ceatric or qua-qua-versal. According to the old " crater-of -elevation 
theory.'* held especially by A. von Humboldt. L. von Buch and Elie 
or Beaamont, this inclination of the beds was regarded as mainly due 
to upheaval. It was contended that the volcanic cone owed its 
shape, for the most part, to local distension of the ground, and was 
indeed comparable to a huge blister of the earth's crust, burst at 
tic n rff ' " S r to form the " elevation crater." Palma, in the Canary 
fj_r--i 1 was dted aa a typical example of such a formation. This 
*«-- waa op posed mainly by Poulett-Scrope. Sir Charles Lyell and 
: Prevent, who argued that the volcano, so far from being 



bUdder-Hke, was 



me practically a solid 4 
to be known as the " c 



___ of erupted matter: hence 

crater-of-eruption theory." Its 

soundness haa been demonstrated whenever an insight haa 
obtained into the internal structure of a volcano. Thus, after 
the eruption of Krakatoa in 1883 a magnificent natural section of the 
great cone of Rakata, at the S. end of (he island, was exposed— the 
northern half having been blown away— and it was then evident 
that this mountain waa practically a solid cone, built up of a great 
succession of irregular beds of tuff and lava, braced together by 
intersecting dykes. The internal architecture of a volcano is raiely 
so well displayed aa in this case, but dissections of cones, more or less 
distinct, are often obtained by denudation. It should be mentioned 
that, In connexion with the structures called laccoliths, there may 
have been an elevation, or folding, and even faulting, of the super- 
ficial rocks by subterranean intrusion of lava ; but this is different from 
the local expansion and rupture of the ground required by the old 
theory. It may be noted, however, that in recent years the view of 
elevation, in a modified form, has not been without supporters. 

Where the growth of a volcanic mound takes place from within, 
as in certain steep-sided trachvtic cones, there may be 00 perceptible 
crater or external outlet. Again, there are many volcanoes which have 
no crater at the summit, because the eruptions always take place 
from lateral outlets. Even when a terminal pit is present, the lava 
may issue from the body of the mountain, and in some cases it exudes 
from so many vents or cracks that the volcano haa been described aa 
" sweating fire," 

Parasilv Corns.— la the case of a lofty volcano the column of lava 
may not have sufficient ascensional force to reach the crater at the 
summit, or at any rate it finds easier means of egress at some weak 
spot, often along radial cracks, on the flanks of the mountain. 
Thus at Etna, which rises to a height of more than 10,800 ft., the 
eruptions usually proceed from lateral fissures, sometimes at Wast 
hall-way down the mountain-aide. When f ragmental materials are 
ejected from a lateral vent a cinder-cone is formed, and by frequent 
repetition of such ejections the flanks of Etna have become dotted 
over with hundreds of scoria-cooes much like the puys of Auvergne. 
the largest (Monte Minardo) rising to a height of as much aa 750 ft. 
Hills ol this character, seated on the parent mountain, are known aa 



parasitic cones, minor cones, lateral cones, &c. 

Such subordinate cones often show a tendency to a linear arrange- 
ment, rising from vents or foe** along the floor of a line of fissure. 
Thus in 189. a chain of five cones arose from a rift on the S. side of 
Etna, running in a N. and S. direction, and the hills became known aa 
the Monti Suvestri, after Professor Oraxio Silvestri of Catania. This 
rift, however.was but a continuation of afissure from which thcrearose 
in 1886 the series of cones called the Monti Gemmellaro, while this 
in turn was a prolon g ation of a rent opened in 1881. The eruption 
on Etna in the •pring of 1910 took place along the same general 
direction, but at a much higher elevation, The tendency for erup- 
tions to be rene w e d along old lines of weakness, which can be readily 
opened afresh and extended, is a feature well known to vulcanologists. 

The small cooes which are frequently thrown up on lava streams 
were admirably exemplified on Vesuvius in the eruption of 185s and 
figured by J. Schmidt. The name of " driblet cones " waa given 
by J. D. Dana to the little cooes and pillars formed by jets of lava 
projected from blowing holes at Kilauea, the drops of lava remaining 
plastic and cohering aa they feU. Such dots may form columns and 
pyramids, with almost vertical sides. Steep-sided cones mote or 
less of this character occur elsewhere, but are usually built up around 
spiracles. Small cones formed by mere dabs of lava are known 
trivially aa " spatter cones." 

Fissure Eruptions.— la certain parts of the world there are vast 
tracts of basaltic lava with little or no evidence-of cones or of 
pyroclastic accompaniment. To explain their formation. Baron F. 
von Rfchthofen suggested that they represent great floods of lava 
which were pouredlorth not from ordinary volcanic craters wkh 
more or less explosive violence, but from great fissures in the earth's 
crust, whence they may have quietly welled forth and spread as a 
deluge over the surface of the country. The eruptions were thus 
effusive rather than explosive. Such phenomena, constituting a 
distinct type of vulcanism, are distinguished as fissure eruptions or 
massive eruptions— terms which suggest the mode of extrusion and 
the character of the extruded matter. Aa the lava in such outflows 
must be very fusible, it is generally of basaltic type, like that of 
Hawaii: indeed, the Hawaiian volcanoes, with their quiet emission 
of highly fluent lavas, connect the fissure eruptions with the " central 
eruptions," which are usually regarded as representing the normal 
type of activity. At the present day true fissure eruptions seem 
to be of rather limited occurrence, but excellent examples are 
furnished by Iceland. Here there are vast fields of black basalt, 
formed of sheets of lava which have issued from long chasms, 
studded in most cases with rows of small cones, but these generally 
so insignificant that they make no scenic features and might be 
readily obliterated by denudation. Dr T. Thoroddsen enumerates 
87 great rifts and lines of cones in Iceland, and even the larger cones 
of Vcsuvian type are situated on fissures. 

It is believed that fissure eruptions must have played a far more 
important part in the history of the earth than eruptions of the 
familiar cone-and-crater type, the latter representing indeed only 



I 



i88 



VOLCANO 



a declining phase of vulcanism. Sir Archibald Geikie, who has 
specially studied the subject of fissure eruptions, regards the Tertiary 
basaltic plateaus of N E. Ireland and the Inner Hebrides as out- 
flows from fissures, which may be represented by the gigantic 
system of dykes that form so marked a feature in the geological 
structure of the northern part of Britain and Ireland. These dykes 
extend over an area of something like 40,000 sq. m., while the 
outflows form an aggregate of about $000 ft. in thickness. In parts 
of Nevada, Idaho, Oregon and Washington, sheets of late Tertiary 
basalt from fissure eruptions occupy an area of about 200,000 
sq.ro., and constitute a pile at least 2000 ft. thick. In India the 
"ueccan traps*' represent enormous masses of volcanic matter, 
probably of like origin but of Cretaceous date, whilst South Africa 
furnishes other exampiesof similar outflows. Professor J. W. Gregory 
recognized in the Kapte plains of East Africa evidence of a type of 
vulcanism, which he distinguished as that of " plateau eruptions. " 
According to him a number of vents opened at the points of inter- 
section of lines of weakness in a high plateau, giving rise to many 
small cones, and the simultaneous flows of lava from these cones 
united to form a far-spreading sheet. 

Extrusive and Intrusive Magmas. — When the molten magma in the 
interior of the earth makes its way upwards and flows forth super- 
ficially as a stream of lava, the product is described as extrusive, 
effusive, effluent or eruptive; but if, failing to reach the surface, 
the magma solidifies in a fissure or other subterranean cavity, it is 
said to be intrusive or irruptive. Rocks of the former group only 
are sometimes recognized as strictly " volcanic, " but the term is 
conveniently extended, at least in certain cases, to igneous rocks 
of the latter type, including therefore certain hypabyssal and even 
plutonic rocks. 

When the intrusive magma has been forced into narrow irregular 
crevices it forms " veins, ,T which may exhibit complex ramifications, 
especially marked in some acid rocks; but when injected into a 
regularly shaped fissure, more or less parallel-sided, and cutting 
across the planes of bedding, it forms a wall-like mass of rock termed 
a '* dyke. " Most dykes are approximately vertical, or at least 
highly inclined in position. The inclination of a dyke to a vertical 
plane b termed its " hade *' In a cinder-cone, the lava as it rises 
may force its way into cracks, formed by pressure of the magma 
and tension of the vapours, and will thus form a system of veins 
and dykes, often radiating from the volcanic axis and strengthening 
the structure by binding the loose materials together. Thus, in 
the Valle del Bove, a huge cavity on the east side-of Etna, the walls 
exhibit numerous vertical dykes, which by their hardness stand out 
as rocky ribs, forming a marked feature in the scenery of the valley. 
In a similar way dykes traverse the walls of the old crater of Monte 
Somma at Vesuvius. Exceptionally a dyke may be hollow, the 
lava having solidified as a crust at the margin of the fissure but 
having escaped from the interior while still liquid. 

When molten matter is thrust between beds of tuff or between 
successive lava-flows or even ordinary sedimentary strata, it forms 
an intrusive sheet of volcanic rock known as a " sill. " A sill may 
sometimes be traced to its connexion with a dyke, which represents 
the channel up which the lava rose, but instead of reaching the 
surface the fluid found an easier path between the strata or perhaps 
alone a horizontal rent. Although a dyke may represent a conduit 
for the ascent of lava which has flowed out superficially, yet if the 
lava has been removed at the surface by denudation the dyke 
terminates abruptly, so that its function as the former feeder of a 
lava-current is not evident. In other cases a dyke may end bluntly 
because the crack which it occupies never reached the surface. 

Lava which has insinuated itself between planes of stratification 
may, instead of spreading out as a sheet or sill, accumulate locally as 
a lenticular mass, known as a laccolith or laccolite (q.v.). Such a 
mass, In many cases rather mushroom-shaped, may force the super- 
incumbent rocks upwards as a dome, and though at first concealed 
may be ultimately exposed by removal of. the overlying burden by 
erosion. The term pkacoHu was introduced by A. Harker to denote 
a meniscus-shaped mass of lava intruded in folded strata, along 
a crest or a trough. The bysmalUh of Professor lddings is a laccolith 
of rather plug-like shape, with a faulted roof. An intrusive mass 
auite irregular in shape has been termed by R. A. Daly a c honolith 
(Or. xAnr, a mould), whilst an intrusion of very great size and ill- 
defined form is sometimes described as a bathylith or baihotite. 

Structural Peculiarities in Lava.— Many of the structures exhibited 
by lava are due to the conditions under which solidification has been 
effected. A dyke, for example, may be vitreous at the margin 
where it has been rapidly chilled by contact with the walls of the 
fissure into which it was injected, whilst the main body may be 
hthoidal or crystalline: hence a basalt dyke will sometimes have 
a selvage formed of the basaltic glass known as tachylyte. A 
similar glass may form a thin crust on certain lava-flows. In a 
homogeneous vitreous lava, contraction on solidification may 
develop curved fissures, well seen in the delicate " pcriitic " cracks 
of certain obsidians, indicating a tendency to assume a globular 
structure, This structure becomes very distinct by the develop- 
ment of " spheruttte* " *** »l/*H.ii«ir masses with a radiating fibrous 
structure, sometiir vitrified glass. Occasionally 

the sphenratic \r t, when they are known as 



lithophyses, of which excellent examples occur at Obsidian Cliff hi 
the Yellowstone National Park, as described by Professor lddings. 
Globular structure on a large scale is sometimes displayed by lavas, 
especially those of basic type, such as the basalt of Aci Castello in 
Sicily, which was probably formed, according to Professor Gaetano 
Platania, by flow of the lava into submarine silt, relics of which still 
occur between the spheroids. Ellipsoidal or pillow-shaped masses arc 
not infrequently developed in ancient lava-flows, and Sir A. Geikie 
has suggested the term " pillow-structure " for such formations. 
Dr T. Anderson has observed them in the recent lavas of Savaii. 

Joints, or cracks formed by shrinkage on solidification, may 
divide a sheet of lava into columns, as familiarly seen in basalt, 
where the rock often consists of a close mass of regular polygonal 
prisms, mostly hexagonal. Each prism b divided at intervals by 
transverse joints, more or less curved, so that the portions are 
united by a slight ball-and-socket articulation. As the long axes 
of the columns lie at right angles to the cooling surface they are 
vertical in a horizontal sheet of lava, horizontal in a vertical dyke, 
and inclined or curved in other cases. It sometimes happens that 
in a basaltic dyke the formation of the prisms, having started from 
the opposite walls as chilling surfaces, has not been completed; 
and hence the prisms fail to meet in the middle. A spheroidal 
structure b often developed in basalt columns by weathering, the 
rock exfoliating in spherical shells, rather like the skins of an onion : 
such a structure b characteristically shown at the Kiaekellar, 
known also as the Elfen Grotto, at Bertrich, near Alf on the Moscl. 
where the pillars of the lava are broken into short segments which 
suggest by their flattened globular shape a pile of Dutch cheeses. 
Although prismatic jointing, or columnar structure, b most common 
in basalt, it occurs also in other volcanic rocks. Fine columns of 
obsidian, for instance, are seen at Obsidian Cliff in the Yellowstone 
Park, where the pillars may be 50 ft. or more in height. Such aa 
occurrence, however, b exceptional 

Vitreous lavas often show fluxion structure in the form of streaks, 
bands or trains of incipient crystals, indicating the flow of the mass 
when viscous. The character of thb structure is related to the 
viscosity of the lava. Those structural peculiarities which depend 
mainly on the presence of vapour, such as veskulation, have been 
almidV noticed, and the porphyritic structure has likewise been 

Submarine Volcanoes, 
Considering how large a proportion of the face of the earth 
is covered by the sea, it seems likely that volcanic eruptions 
must frequently occur on the ocean-floor. When, as occasionally 
though not often happens, the effects of a submarine eruption 
are observed during the disturbance, it is seen that the surface 
of the sea is violently agitated, with copious discharge of 
steam; the water passes into a state of ebullition, perhaps 
throwing up huge fountains; shoals of dead fishes, with volcanic 
cinders, bombs and fragments of pumice, float around the centre 
of eruption, and ultimately a little island may appear above 
sca-lcvcL This new land is the peak of a volcanic cone which 
is based on the sea-floor, and if in deep water the submarine 
mountain must evidently be of great magnitude. Christmas 
Island in the Indian Ocean, described by Dr C. W. Andrews, 
appears to be a volcanic mountain, with Tertiary limestones, 
standing in water more than 14,000 ft. deep. Many volcanic 
islands, such as those abundantly scattered over the Pacific, 
must have started as submarine volcanoes which reached the 
surface either by continued upward growth or by upheaval of 
the sea-bottom. Etna began its long geological history by 
submarine eruptions in a bay of the Mediterranean, and Vesuvius 
in like manner represents what was originally a volcano on 
the sea-floor. As the ejectamenta from a submarine vent 
accumulate on the sea-bottom they become intermingled with 
relics of marine organisms, and thus form fossiUferous volcanic 
tuffs. By the distribution of the ashes over the sea-floor, 
through the agency of waves and currents, these tuffs may pass, 
insensibly into submarine deposits of normal sedimentary type. 

One of the best examples of a submarine eruption resulting in the 
formation of a temporary bland occurred in 1831 in the Mediter- 
ranean between Sicily and the coast of Africa, where the water waa 
known to have previously had a depth of 100 fathoms. After the 
usual manifestations of volcanic activity an accumulation of black 
cinders and ashes formed an island which reached at one point a 
height of 300 ft., so that the pile of erupted matter had a thickness- 
of about 800 ft. The new island, which was studied by Constant 
Prevost, became known in England as Graham's Island, in France a» 
lie Julie and in Italy by various names as Isola Fcrdinandea. Being; 
merely a loose pile of scoriae, it rapidly suffered erosion by the sea* 
and in about three months was reduced to a shoal called Graham'* 



VOLCANO 



189 



Reef. In rflQf a submarine eruption oc cur re d near the isle of 
Pantefiaria in the same waters, and the eruptive centre was termed 
by Piof caa o* H. & Washington and Foerstner volcano, but it gave rise 
to no bland. A well-known instance of a temporary volcanic bland 
was furnished by Sabrina — an islet of cinders thrown up by sub- 
marine eruptions in 1811, off the coast of St Michael's, one of the 
Azores. The island of Bogosloff, or Castle Island, in Bering Sea, 
•boot 40 m. W. of Unalasha Island, is a volcanic mass which was 
arst o b ser v e d in 1796 after an eruption. In 1883 another eruption 
in the neighbouring water threw up a new volcanic cone of black 
sand and aaaes, known as New Bogosloff or Fire Island, situated 
about half a mile to the N.W. of Old Bogosloff, with which it was 
c onn ec t ed by a low beach. Another island, called Perry Island, 
larger than either of the others, made its appearance in the neigh- 
bourhood about the time of the great earthquake in California in 
1906. It ss reported that some of these islands have since dis- 



Uud Volcanoes. 

Mud volcanoes are small conical hills of day which discharge, 
more or less persistently, streams of fine mud, sometimes as- 
sociated with naphtha or petroleum, and usually with bubbles 
of gas. As the mud is generally saline, the hills are known also 
as "salses." The gases are chiefly hydrocarbons, often with 
core or less sulphuretted hydrogen and carbon dioxide, and 
sometimes with nitrogen. Though generally less than a yard 
in height, the cones may in exceptional cases rise to an elevation 
of as much as 500 ft. The mud oozes from the top and 
spreads over the sides, or is spurted forth with the gases. 
Occasionally the discharge is vigorous, mud and stones being 
thrown up to a considerable height, sometimes accompanied 
by names dne to combustion of the hydrocarbons. 

Mud volcanoes occur in groups, and have a wide distribu- 
tion. They are known in Iceland; in Modena; at Taman and 
Kertch, in the Crimea; at Baku on the Caspian; in Java and in 
Trinidad: Humboldt described those near Turbaco, in Colombia. 
In Sicily they occur near Girgenti, and a group is known at 
Patemo on Etna. By the Sicilians they are termed, maccalub$ t 
a word of Arabic origin. The " paint-pots" of the Yellowstone 
National Park are small mud volcanoes. 

Many so-called mud volcanoes appear to be due to the de- 
rangement of subterranean water-flow or to landslips in con- 
nexion with earthquakes, whilst others may be referable to 
certain chemical reactions going on underground; but there are 
others again which seem to be truly of volcanic origin. Hot 
water and steam escaping through clays, or crumbling tuffs 
reduced to a clayey condition, may form conical mounds of 
pasty material, through which mud oozes and water escapes. 

Geysers are closely related to volcanoes, but in consequence of 
tlyar special interest they are treated separately (sec Geyser). For 
ra trail steam-holes and other phenomena connected with declining 
rskaaicigr, see SorriONi, SoLrATARA and Mofetta. 

Geographical Distribution of Volcanoes. 

It is matter of frequent observation that volcanoes are most 
abundant in regions marked by great seismic activity. Although 
the volcano and the earthquake are not usually connected 
hi the direct relation of cause and effect, yet in many cases 
they seem referable to a common origin. Both volcanic ex- 
trusion and crustal movement may be the means of relieving 
kxal strains in the earth's crust, and both are found to occur, 
as nrigbt reasonably be expected, in many parts of the earth 
ufcere folding and fracture of the rocks have frequently 
fr »P P— « d and where mountain-making appears to be still in 
progress. Thus, volcanoes may often be traced along zones 
of crustal deformation, or folded mountain-chains, especially 
viere they run near the borders of the oceanic basins. They 
ar* frequently associated with the Pacific type of coast-line. 

The most conspicuous example of linear distribution is furnished 
tr the great belt of volcanoes, coinciding for the most part with a 
b^ad ofiKaamc disturbance, which engirdles intermittently the huge 
Wma of the Pacific; though here, as elsewhere in studying volcanic 
tocography, regard must be paid to dormant and extinct centres 
« vcfl as to those that are active at the present time. As volcanoes 
er m. many cases ranged alone what are commonly regarded as 
hn of fracture, it is not surprising that the centres of most intense 
rjJeasuciry are m many cases situated at the intersection of two or 
more fmcttart>tincs. On the eastern side of the Pacific Ocean the 



great *volcanic ring may be traced, though with many and extensive 
interruptions, from Cape Horn to Alaska. In South America the 
chain of the Andes between Corcovado in the south and Tolima in 
the north is studded at irregular intervals with volcanoes, some recent 
and many more extinct, including the loftiest volcanic mountains 
in the world. The grandest group of South American volcanoes, 
though mostly quiescent, is in Ecuador. Cotopaxi, seen in activity 
by ETWhymper in 1880, has, according to him, a height of 19,613 ft., 
whilst Sangay is said to be one of the most active volcanoes in the 
world. The linear arrangement, often a marked feature in the 
distribution of volcanoes, is well exemplified in the general north-and- 
south trend of the Andean ranges, the volcanoes being situated along 
the orographic axis. These folded mountains with their volcanoes 
also illustrate the close relationship to the sea so frequently observed 
in volcanic topography, a relationship, however, not without many 
exceptions. The volcanic rock called andesite was so named by 
L. von Buch from its characteristic occurrence in the Andes. It is 
notable that the volcanic rocks throughout the great Pacific belt 
present much similarity in composition. The volcanoes of Ecuador 
have been described in detail by A. Stubd and others (see Andes). 

Central America contains a large number of active volcanoes 
and solfataras, many of which are located in the mountains parallel 
to the western coast. Conseguina, on the south side of the Gulf of 
Fonseca, is remarkable for its eruption in 1835, when an enormous 
volume of ash was ejected and the summit of the mountain blown 
away. Ixalco, in San Salvador, came into existence in 1770, and 
is habitually active. In the centre of Lake Ilopango in Salvador, 
which possibly occupies an ancient crater, a volcanic island arose in 
1880. and attained a height of 160 ft Guatemala is peculiarly 
rich in volcanoes, as described by Dr Tempest Anderson, who 
visited the country in 1907. The Cerro Quemado, or the Volcano 
of Quezaltenango, was the scene of a great eruption in 1785. At 
the Volcano of Santa Maria there was an outburst in 1902 more 
violent than the simultaneous eruptions in the Lesser Antilles. 
The cones of Guatemala include the Volcan de Fuego and the 
Volcan de Agua, the former often active in historic times, whilst 
the latter is notable for the flood which in 154 1 swept down from 
the mountain and destroyed Old Guatemala, but this flood was 
probably not of volcanic origin. 

The plateau of Mexico is the scat of severnl active volcanoes 
which occur in a kind sketching aero** the country from Colima 
in the weal to Tuxila near Vera Crui. 'i\ t of these volcanic 

mountain* is Orizabi, or Cithaltrpttl, rising to an altitude of 
18 , jog fast) and known to have been active in the 16th century. 
Popocatepetl (*' iht ftmokifiK mountain "> reach?* a height of about 
fj.HSf.t ft., and from it* crater sulphur wan at one time systematic 
caMy collected. The lamoui vqTcuio of JoruH'.h, near Tofuca, at a 
distance of about i?o m. from ihe f-:-i, hi- t ■■■. r 'he centre of much 
seienijhc dUcuWon since it »os regarded by Humboldt, who visited 
it In 1S03, a.« a striking proof of the elevation ti< ory. It came into 
exigence rapidly doting aft eruption, which began in September 
1759, when it was (aid by unscientific observers that the ground 
became juddenty inflated from below T The cue, though not of 
except ional magnitude, it rihiatcd in. an elevated district, and its 
summit rises to about 4330 ft. above sea-lev el. In the neighbour- 
hoc*! of JoruMo there are three subordinate cones of similar cha- 
racter known at tvtcancito^ with great numbers of small mounds 
of cinder and ash formed around firm -n.]' - nn the lava, and locally 
called kvntitvs, or J ' little ovens, M The streams of basaltic lava 
from Jorullo form rough barren surface, wttkh pass under the 
name of matfayr, or bad Eomle, 

In tV United States very few volcanoes are active at the present 
day, though many have become extinct only in times that are 
geologic a! I y recent. An eruption occurred In 1857 atTresVirgines, 
in the south of California, and ('< on Lassen's Peak 

(California) wai also active in the middle of the roth century. The 
M*no Valley craters and Mount Shasta brnia. are extinct. 

The Cascade Range contain* numerous volran«: peaks, but only 
few show nigm* of at ti vH y. Mount Hood , in Orq- m, exhales vapour, 
as al^i doc* Mount Rainier in With met™. Mount St Helens 
(Washing* t*ft> *m ia eruption in t&at fcn and Mount Baker 

(Washington), the moat northern of the votcanres connected with 
the Cascade Rnngr> ia said to have been active in 184*. Few 
volcanic peaJu occur in the Rocky Mounto' , but evidence of 
lingering activity is very marked M the g tyasij and hot springs of 
tht 1 dluwtfone National Park. The earths internal heat is also 
manifested at many points elsewhere, as at Steamboat Springs on 
the Virginia Range, an offshoot of the Sierra Nevada, and in the 
Comstock Lode. 

Volcanic activity is prominent in Alaska, along the Coast Range 
and in the neighbouring inlands. The crater of Mount Edgecumbe, 
in Lazarus Island, is said to have been active in 1796, but this is 
doubtful. Mount Fairweather has probably been in recent activity, 
and the lofty cone of Mount Wrangell, on Copper river, is reported 
to have been in eruption in 1819. In the neighbourhood of Cook's 
Inlet there are several volcanoes, including the island of St Augustine. 
Unimak Island has two volcanoes, which have supplied the natives 
with sulphur and obsidian; one of these volcanoes being Mount 
Shishaldin, a cone rivalling Fusryama in graceful contour. The 



190 



VOLCANO 



Aleutian volcanic belt is a narrow, curved chain of islands, extending 
from Cook's inlet westwards for nearly 1600 m. It is notable that 
the convexity of the curve faces the great ocean, as has been observed 
in other cases, the arcs following the direction of the rock-folds. 
According to Professor 1. C. Russell, an authority on the volcanoes 
of N. America, there are in the Aleutian Islands and in the peninsula 
no fewer than 57 craters, cither active or recently extinct. 

From the Aleutian Islands the volcanic band of the Pacific 
changes its direction, and passing to the peninsula of Kamschatka, 
where 14 volcanoes are said to be active, turns southwards and forms 
the festoon of the Kurile Islands. Here again the convexity of the 
Insular arc is directed towards the ocean. This volcanic archi- 
pelago leads on to the great islands of Japan, where the volcanoes 
nave been studied by Professor J. Milne, who also described those of 
the Kuriles. Of the 54 volcanoes recognised as now active or only 
recently extinct in Japan, the best known is the graceful cone of the 
sacred mountain Fusiyama, but others less pretentious are far more 
dangerous. The great eruption of Bandaisan, about 120 m. N. 
of Tokio, which occurred in 1888, blew off one side of the peak called 
Kobandai, removing, according to Professor Sekiya's estimate, about 
3982 million tons of material. Aso-san in Kiushui, the southern- 
most large island of Japan, is notable for the enormous size of its 
crater. In the Bonin group of islands volcanic activity is indicated 
by such names as Volcano Island and Sulphur Island. 

South of the Japanese archipelago the train of volcanoes passes 
through some small islands in or near the Loo Choo (Liu Kiu) group 
and thence onwards by Formosa to the Philippine Islands, where 
subterranean activity finds abundant expression in earthquakes 
and volcanoes. After leaving this region the linear arrangement of 
the eruptive centres becomes less distinctly marked, for almost 
every island in the Moluccas and the Sunda Archipelago teems 
with volcanoes, solfataras and hot springs. Possibly, however, a 
broken sone may be traced from the Moluccas through New Guinea 
and thence to New Zealand, perhaps through eastern Australia 
(for though no active volcanoes are known there, relics of com- 
paratively recent activity are abundant); or again by way of the 
Bismarck Archipelago, the Solomon Islands, the New Hebrides, 
the Fiji Islands and Kermodoc Island. 

The great volcanic district in New Zealand is situated in the northern 
part of North Island, memorable for the eruption of Tarawera in 
1886. This three- peaked mountain on the south side of Lake 
Tarawera, not previously known to have been active, suddenly burst 
into action; a huge rift opened, and Lake Rotomahana subsided, 
with destruction of the famous sinter terraces. The crater of 
Tongariro is in the solfatara stage, whilst Mount Ruapehu is regarded 
as extinct. On White Island in the Bay of Plenty the cone of 
Wharkari is feebly active. 

Far to the south, 00 Ross Island, off South Victoria Land, in 
Antarctica, are the volcanoes of Erebus and Terror, the former of 
which is active. These are often regarded as remotely related to 
the Pacific sone. but Dr C. T. Prior has shown that the Antarctic 
volcanic rocks which he examined belonged to the Atlantic and not 
the Pacific type. 

Within the great basin of the Pacific, imperfectly surrounded by 
its broken girdle of volcanoes, there is a vast number of scattered 
islands and groups of islands of volcanic origin, rising from deep 
water, and having in many cases active craters. The most im- 
portant group n the Hawaiian Archipelago, where there is a chain 
of at least fifteen large volcanic mountains — all extinct, however, 
with the exception of three in Hawaii, namely Mauna Loa, Kilauem 
ami HuaUlai; and of these Hualalai has been dormant since 181 1. 
It is notable that the two present gigantic centres of activity ^ though 
within 20 m. of each other, appear to be independent in their 
eruiuivity. Several of the Hawaiian Islands, as pointed out by 
J. L>. Dana, who was a very high authority 00 this group, consist of 
two volcanoes united at the base, forming vokaaic twins or doublets. 

The volcanic regions of the Pacific are connected with those of 
the Indian Ocean by a grand train of islands rich in volcano**, 
strvuhing from the west of New Guinea through the Moluccas and 
the Sunda Islands, where they form a band extending axialty through 
J as a and Sumatra. Here is situated the principal theatre ol terrestrial 
\uWuaioty, apparently representing an enormous fissure, or system 
of fissures, in the earth's crust, sweeping in a bold curve, with its 
convexity towards the Indian Ocean. 

Numerous volcanic peaks occur in the string of small islands to 
the east of Java — notably in Ftores, Sumbawa, Lom b ok and Bali; 
and one of the most temfic er u p t io ns on record in any part of the 
worMoccunedmtsfentovince of Tomboy m the i^^ 
in the year 1815. Java contains within its small area as meayas 
49 great volcamc mount sins active, dormant and extinct. The 
largest in Smerin, about 11.000 ft. high, but the most rcgukrry 
active is amid to be Gownoag Laroongang. which is in almost un- 
intcm s pud activity^ emitting usually only ashes and vapour, though 
in tt|| kva streamed facta. Many of the Javanese volcanoes 
* r of content, with the sides of the cones 
I by tropical nine and probably 
Taw radial farmers on volcanic cones are 

of Krafcatoa hi the Strait of Sunda 




appears to be situated at a volcanic node, or the intersection of two 
curved fissures, and it is believed that the island itself represents 
part of the basal wreck of what waa once a volcano of gigantic size. 
After two centuries of repose, a violent catastrophe occurred in 
1883, whereby the greater part of the island was blown away. This 
ervrtftnn am i its effects were made the subject of careful study by 
VerLeek. Hreonand 4udd- 

Th rough the great island of Sumatra, a chain of volcanoes runs 
longitudinally, and may possibly be continued northwards in the 
Bay of [Ltrsgal by Barren island and Norcondam— die former an 
active and the latter an extinct volcano. On the western side of 
the Indi.m Ocean a small volcanic band may be traced in the islands 
of the Mascarene group, several craters in Reunion (Bourbon) being 
still active. Far south in the Indian Ocean are the volcanic islands 
of New Amsterdam and St PauL, The Comoro Islands in the 
channel of Mozambique exhibit volcanic activity, whilst in East and 
Central Africa there are several centres, mostly extinct but some 
partially active, associated with the Rift Valleys. The enormous 
cones of Kenia and Kilimanjaroo are extinct, but on Kibo, one of the 
summits of the latter, a crater is still preserved. The Mfumbiro 
volcanoes, S. of Lake Edward, rise to a height of more than 
11.700 feet. Kirunga, N. of Lake Kivu, is still partially active. 
Elgon is an old volcanic peak, but Ruwensori is not of volcanic 
origin. On the west side of Africa, the Cameroon Peak ia a volcano 
which was active in 1909, and the island of Fernando Po is also vol- 
canic Along the Red Sea there are not wanting several examplea 
of volcanoes, such as Jebel Teir. Aden is situated in an old crater. 

Passing to the Atlantic, a broken band of volcanoes, recent and 
extinct, may be traced longitudinally through certain islands, some 
of which rise from the great submarine ridge that divides the ocean, 
in part of its length, into an eastern and a western trough. The 
northern extremity of the series is found in Jan Mayen. an island in 
the Arctic Ocean, where an eruption occurred in 1818. Iceland, 
however, with its wealth of volcanoes and geysers, is the moat 
important of all the Atlantic centres. According to Dr T. 
Thoroddsen there are in Iceland about 130 post-glacial volcanoes, 
and it is known that from 25 to 30 have been in eruption during the 
historic period. Many of the Icelandic lava-flows, such as the 
immense flood from Laid (Skapta Jdkull) in 1783, are referable to 
fissure eruptions, which are the characteristic though not the 
exclusive form of activity in this island. Probably this type waa 
also responsible for the sheets of old lava in the terraced hills of 
the Faroe Islands, to which may have been related the Tertiary 
volcanoes of the west of Scotland and the north of Ireland. 

An immense gap separates the old volcanic area of Britain from 
the volcanic archipelagoes of the Azores, the Canaries and the Cape 
Verd Islands. Palma — a little island in the Canary group, with a 
caldera or large crater at its summit, from which fissures or barrancos 
radiate — b famous in the history of vulcanology. in that it furnished 
L. von Buch with evidence on which be founded the " cxater-of- 
elevation " theory. The remaining volcanic islands of the Atlantic 
chain, all now cold and silent, include Ascension, St Helena and 
Tristan da Cunha, whilst in the western part of the South Atlantic 
are the small volcanic isles of Trinidad and Ferdinando do Norooha. 
St Paul's rocks appear also to be of vokaaic origin. 

One of the most important volcanic regions of the world is found 
in the West Indies, where the Lesser Antilles — the scene of the great 
catastrophes of 1903 — form a string of 'islands, stretching in a regular 
arc that sweeps in a N. and S. direction across the eastern end of 
the Caribbean Sea. Subject to frequent seismic disturbance, and 
rich in volcanoes, solfataras and hot springs, these islands seem to 
form the summit of s great earth-fold which, rising as a curved ridge 
from deep water, separates the Caribbean Sea from the Atlantic. 
The volcanoes are situated on the inner border of the curve. It ia 
notable that the Antilles and the Sunda Islands, two of the grandest 
theatres of vulcanicity on the face of the earth, are situated at the 
antipodes of each other — one being apparently an eastern and the 
other a western offshoot of the great Pacific girdle. 

The European volcanoes, recent and extinct, may be regarded 
as repr ese nting rather ill-denned branches thrown off eastwards from 
the Atlantic band. Vesuvius is the only active volcano on the main* 
land, but in the Mediterranean there are Etna 00 the coast of 
Sicily; the Lipari Islands, with Stromboti and Vulcano in chronic 
activity; and farther to the east the archipelago of Snntoria. where 
new islands have appeared in historic times. Submarine eruptions 
have occurred also between Sicily and the coast of Africa; one ia 
1831 having given rise temporarilv to Graham's Island, and another 
in 1891 appearing near Pantellarin, itself a volcanic isle. Of 
the extinct EUuopeea volcanoes, some of the best known are an 
Auvergne, in the Eifet, ia Bohemia and in Catalonia, whilst the vol- 
canic bad of Italy includes the Euranean hills, the Alban hills, the 
Phlegraean Fields, Ac The great lakes of Bolsena and Bracciano 
occupy old craters, and many smaller sheets of water are on similar 
sites. The volcanic islands no longer active include Ischia, with the 
great cone of Fpomeo which was in a state of eruption ia 1301 : 
the Poaae Inlands, Nisid*, Vrveru and others near Naples; and 
several ia the Greek archipelago, such aa fcluos, Kiaaolos and 
Pblinos. 

From the eastern cad of the aaediterraaean evidence of i 



VOLCANO 



191 



vcJeaafc activity may be traced into Ada Minor and thence to 
Araeaia and the Caucasus. East of Smyrna there it a great detoUte 

* and to 



tract which the ancients recognized as volcanic 1 



. termed the 



Catacecaumene (burnt country). The volcanic districts of Lydia were 
studied by Prof e s s or H. & Washington. la the plateau of Armenia 
there arc several extinct volcanic mountains, more or less destroyed, 
of which the best known is Ararat. Nimrud Oagh on the shore of 
Lake Van is said to have been in eruption in the year 1441. Dr F. 
Oswald has described the volcanoes of Armenia. Of the volcanoes 
ir Persian territory not now active, Demavend, south of the Caspian, 
» aa important example. EI bun is also described as an old volcano, 
it has been said that in Central Asia there are certain vents still 
active, and recent volcanic rocks are known from the Prxhevalsky 
chain and other localities. 

The number of volcanoes known to be actually active on the earth 
b generally estimated at between 300 and 400, but there is reason 
to believe that this estimate is far too low. if account be taken of 
those volcanic cones which have not been active in historic time, the 
tctal will probably rise to several thousands. The distribution of 
vJeanoesat various periods of the earth's history, as revealed by the 
local occurrence of volcanic rocks at different horizons in the crust 
of the earth, is discussed under Geology. Periods of great earth- 
sBoveatcat have ben marked by exceptional volcanic activity. 

Causa of VuUanicily. 

In discussing the cause of vulcanicity two problems demand 
attention: first the origin of the heat necessary for the mani- 
festation of volcanic phenomena, and secondly the nature of 
the force by which the heated matter is raised to the surface 
and ejected. According to the old view, which assumed that 
the earth was a spheroid of molten matter invested by a conv 
paxaiivdy thin crust of solid rock, the explanation of the 
phenomena appeared fairly simple. The molten interior 
seppiied the heated matter, while the shrinkage of the cooling 
crust produced fractures that formed the volcanic channels 
through which it was assumed the magma might be squeezed 
Oct in the process of contraction. When physicists urged the 
necessity of assuming that the globe was practically solid, 
vukanolcgists were constrained to modify their views. Follow- 
eg a suggestion of W. Hopkins of Cambridge, they supposed 
that the magma, instead of existing in a general central cavity, 
was located in comparatively small subterranean lakes. Some 
authorities again, like the Rev. O. Fisher, regarded the magma 
as constituting a liquid zone, intermediate between a solid core 
and a solid shelL 

If solidification of the primitive molten globe proceeded from 
the centre outwards, so as to form a sphere practically solid, it 
3 conceivable that portions of the original magma might never- 
i_*kss be retained in cavities, and thus form " residual lakes." 
Aiibough the mass might be for the most part solid, the outer 
paction, or "crust," could conceivably have a honeycombed 
vrjcture, and any magma retained in the cells might serve 
lz iirectly to feed the volcanoes. Neighbouring volcanoes seem 
•z some cases to draw their supply of lava from independent 
surer*, favouring the idea of local cisterns or " intercrustal 
reservoirs.'* It is probable, however, that subterranean re- 
smuirs of magma, if they exist, do not represent relics of an 
carnal fluid condition of the earth, but the molten material 
ray be merely rock which has become fused locally by a 
leTporaxy development of heat or more likely by a relief of 
pressure. It should be noted that the quantity of magma 
sotted to supply the most copious lava-flows is comparatively 
ssmII, the greatest recorded outflow (that of Tomboro in Sura- 
baya, in 18x5) not having exceeded, it is said, six cubic miles; 
a-ud even this estimate is probably too high. Whilst in many 
curs the magma-cisterns may be comparatively small and 
'.ecporaxy, it must be remembered that there arc regions where 
the volcanic rocks are so similar throughout as to suggest a 
cjnmoo origin, thus needing intercrustal reservoirs of great 
crcnt and capacity. It has been suggested that comparatively 
»-*ti basins, feeding individual volcanoes, may draw their 
SE?pIy from more extensive reservoirs at greater depths. 

Moch speculation has been rife as to the source of the heat 
se^oired for the local melting of rock. Chemical action has 
■atuxalry been suggested, especially that of superficial water, but 
hi adequacy may be doubted. After Sir Humphry Davy's dis- 



covery of the metals of the alkalis, he thought that their remark* 
able behaviour with water might explain the origin of subterranean 
heat; and in more recent years others have seen a local source of 
heat in the oxidation of large deposits of iron, such as that brought 
up in the basalt of Disco Island in Greenland. It has been 
assumed by Moissan and by Gautier that water might attack 
certain metallic carbides, if they occur as subterranean deposits, 
and give rise to some of the products characteristic of volcanoes. 
But it seems that all such action must be very limited, and 
utterly inadequate to the general explanation of volcanic 
phenomena. At the same time it must be remembered that 
access of water to a rock already heated may have an important 
physical effect by reducing its melting point, and may thus 
greatly assist in the production of a supply of molten matter. 
The admission of surface-waters to heated rocks is naturally 
regarded as an important source of motive power in consequence 
of the sudden generation of vapour, but it is doubtful to 
what extent it may contribute, if at all, to the origin of 
volcanic heat. 

According to Robert Mallet a competent source of sub- 
terranean heat for volcanic phenomena might be derived from 
the transformation of the mechanical work of compressing and 
crushing parts of the crust of the earth as a consequence of 
secular contraction. This view he worked out with much 
ingenuity, supporting it by mathematical reasoning and an 
appeal to experimental evidence. It was claimed for the theory 
that it explained the linear distribution of volcanoes, their 
relation to mountain chains, the shallow depth of the foci and 
the intermittence of eruptive activity. A grave objection, 
however, is the difficulty of conceiving that the heal, whether 
due to crushing or compression, could be concentrated locally 
so as to produce a sufficient elevation of temperature for 
melting the rocks. According to the calculations of Rev. O. 
Fisher, the crushing could not, under the most favourable cir- 
cumstances, evolve heat enough to account for volcanic 
phenomena. 

Since pressure raises the melting-point of any solid that 
expands on liquefaction, it has been conjectured that many 
deep-seated rocks, though actually solid, may be potentially 
liquid; that is, they are maintained in a solid state by pressure 
only. Any local relief of pressure, such as might occur in the 
folding and faulting of rocks, would tend, without further 
accession of heat, to induce fusion. But although moderate 
pressure raises the fusing-pomt of most solids, ir is believed, 
from modern researches, that very great pressures may have 
a contrary effect. 

It is held by Professor S. Arrhenius that at great depths ill 
the earth the molten rock, being above its critical point, can 
exist only in the gaseous condition; but a gas under enormous 
pressure may behave, so far as compressibility is concerned, 
like a rigid solid. He concludes, from the high density of the 
earth as a whole and from other considerations, that the central 
part of our planet consists of gaseous iron (about 80% of the 
earth's diameter) followed by a zone of rock magma in a 
gaseous condition (about 15%), which passes insensibly out- 
wards into liquid rock (4%), covered by a thin solid crust (less 
than x % of diameter). If water from the crust penetrates by 
osmosis through the sea-floor to the molten interior, it acts, at 
the high temperature, as an acid, and decomposes the silicates 
of the magma. The liquid rock, expanded and rendered more 
mobile by this water, rises in fissures, but in its ascent suffers 
cooling, so that the water then loses its power as an acid and is 
displaced by silicic acid, when the escaping steam gives rise to 
the explosive phenomena of the volcano. The mechanism of the 
volcano is therefore much like that of a geyser, a comparison 
long ago suggested by Rev. O. Fisher and other geologists. 

According to the " planetesimal theory" of Professor T. C. 
Chamberlin and Dr F. R. Moulton, which assumes that the 
earth was formed by the accretion of vast numbers of small 
cosmical bodies called planetesimaJs, the original heat of the 
earth's Interior was due chiefly to the compression of the grow- 
ing globe by its own gravity. The heat, proceeding from the 



< 



192 



VOLCANO ISLANDS— VOLE 



centre outwards, caused local fusion of the rocks, though 
without forming distinct reservoirs of molten magma, and the 
fused matter charged with gases rose in liquid threads or tongues, 
which worked their way upwards, some reaching the super- 
ficial part of the earth and escaping through fissures in the 
zone of fracture, thus giving rise to volcanic phenomena. It 
is held that the explosive activity of a volcano is due to the 
presence of gases which have been brought up from the interior 
of the earth, whilst only a small and perhaps insignificant part 
is played by water of superficial origin. 

Entirely new views of the origin of the earth's internal heat 
have resulted from the discovery of radioactivity. It has been 
shown by the Hon. R. J. Strutt, Professor J. Joly and others 
that radium is present in all igneous rocks, and it is estimated 
that the quantity in the crust of the earth is amply sufficient 
to maintain its temperature. An ingenious hypothesis was 
enunciated by Major C. E. Dutton, who found in the radio- 
activity of the rocks a sufficient source of heat for the ex- 
planation of all volcanic phenomena. He believes that the 
development of heat arising from radioactivity may gradually 
bring about the local melting of the rocks so as to form large 
subterranean pools of magma, from which the volcanoes may 
be supplied. The supply is usually drawn from shallow sources, 
probably, according to Dutton, from a depth of not more than 
three or rarely four miles, and in some cases at not more than 
a mile from the surface. If the water in the local magma should 
attain sufficient expansive power, it will rupture the overlying 
rocks and thus give rise to a volcanic eruption. When the 
reservoir becomes exhausted the eruption ceases, but if more 
heat be generated by continued radioactivity further fusion 
may ensue, and in time the eruption be repeated. According, 
however, to Professor Joly, it is improbable that sufficient 
heat for the manifestation of volcanic phenomena could be 
developed by the local radioactivity of the rocks in the upper 
part of the earth's crust. 

AuTHORiTiE5.^-On general vukanicity see G. Mercalli, / Vukani 
aitivi della Una (1907) ; Sir A Geikie, Text-Book of Geology (4th ed., 
1903) (with bibliography); The Ancient Volcanoes of Great Britain 
(2 vols., 1897) (with general sketch of vulcanology) ; T. C. Chamberlin 
and R. D. SahV ~ ' ~ ' ./.-... .. .... 



G. P. ? 



ilisbury, Geology, Processes < 

Vohanoei (2nd ed., 187?); 



Processes and their Results (1905) 



1 



1. Vt 



(2nd e L i£3j); T. i\. Bonney, Volcanoes fifcga); Tempest Ander- 
son, Vakmte Studies in. many Lands (1903) (eftcdkn{ views). 
On spr> 1.1I volcano?* sw J. Phillips, Vesuvius (jhfa); J- L. Lobley, 
Mount Vriutrtus [ 1 BS9) j H. J. jahiHton-L&vis, the South Italian 



Volcai a (with cop lulu bibliography) (i&Qj); "The Eruption of 
Vcsuvj j* in April 1906." Set. Trans. Ray. Dublin Sac. (Jan. 1909); 
W. SaroriLi* von Wu.lt ershjuscrt, Der Aetna (hcraijigFgeben von 
A vor I Aiiul^ 1&S0); F. Fouqiri, Sanloriu ft us fruptiems (1879); 
R. D. M. Vwbeelc, Krahaiau (10B6) (with Album Alias); The 
Erupti ml of Krakaiaa and Subsequent Phenomena, Report of the 
Kraka i Commit lee of the Rayal Society (" On the Volcanic 
Phenomena, &c," hy Professor J. W. Judd) (iHIJflJ; Royal Society 
Report an ike Eruption of the Satiftibre, in St Vincrnt, in IQ02, by 
Tempt h Anderson and ). S. Flett, two pirti. Phil. Trans., 1903, 
scr. A vol. 3O0. and iooB, vol. aofl^ A. Lac rein, Ln Montague 
Pelie £1904)1 La Aftmtagttt Pdi* aprts its eruptions, avec observa- 
tions i tt tes eruptions tt*i Visuve en i8?q tl en *pod (1908); A. 
Heilprin, Mont Pett* (ior»j): E. O. Huavey, The too^t Eruptions 
of Mo\? PtUt and the Saufriite. NiniJi Internst. Geclog. Congress 



(Vienr 
xtii. (|f|.:. 1 1. 



.SOOJh p 
Seismawgltm 



•90J); Am. Jour. At. xiv r { rgojj, p. 31c.? Nat. Geog. Mag. 
J. Milne, ,h The Volcanoes of Japan," " 



Trans. 



togfiut Spc, of Japan frSflG); A. StO.be! , Die Vulkanberge 
von E **d&i (}^77): „}- C, KuiselL Vokanoes jtf North America 

>«90J 



(1897) J. D. Dbna, Characteristics of Vo/canwjJ Hawaiian Islands) 

"" O); < 



G, Dutton. Hawaiian Volcanoes, jth Ren. U.S. Geological 
2-83}, 18*4; C. H Hitchcock, Hawaii and its Volcanoes 
. i^uy;. l : vi die chemistry oi von.m>ic uUanomcnz see 
F. W. Clarke, "The Data of Geochemistry, " Butt. U.S. Geolojf. 
Survey, No. 350 (1908). For the planetesimal theory consult T. C. 
Chamberlin and R. D. Salisbury, Geology: Earth History, vol. ii. 



burvq 
(Hono. 



" Zur Physik des Vulcanismus" in Geologiska Foreningens i Stock- 
holm Forkandlingar, Band xxii. (1900) (Abstract by R. H. Rastall 
in the Geological Magazine, April 1907); C. E. Dutton, " VolcP nAM > 
— ■ Radioactivity," Journal of Geology (Chicago, 1906), vol. 
59: G. D. Louderback, ''The Relation of Radioactivii 
* " ibid. p. --.--.- 



Vulcanism,' 



I Hii 

. vih , 

by H. B. C SoUas, vol. iv. cap. xvi. (1909), 



Volcanoes 
xiv. 

Radioactivity to 

Radioactivity and Geology 



(1909); A. Harker, The Natural History of Igneous Rocks (1909); 
ad E. Suess, 71s Fata of the Earth (Pas Audita der Erie), trans!. 
~ - " 8 " ... (p w ^ 



VOLCAMO ISLANDS, three small islands in the western 
Pacific Ocean, S. of the Bonin Islands, forming part of the 
Japanese empire (annexed in 1891). They are also known as 
the Magellan Archipelago, and in Japan as Kwazan-retto 
(series of volcanic islands). They are situated between 24* 
and 26 N. and 141 and 142° E. Their names are Kita-iwo- 
jiraa (Santo Alessandro), Iwo-jima (Sulphur) and Minami- 
iwo-jima (Santo Agostino). Kiu-iwo-jima — which, as its 
name (kita) implies, is the most northerly of the three — rises 
2520 ft. above the water, and Minami-iwo-jima, the most 
southerly, to a height of 3021 ft. The islands are not inhabited. 
With this group is sometimes included another island, Arzo- 
bispo, nearer the Bonin group. 

VOLCEI (mod. Buccino), an ancient town of Lucania, 2128 
ft. above sea-level, the chief town of the independent tribe 
of the Volceiani, Vulcientes or Volcentani, whose territory 
was bounded N. by that of the Hirpini, W. and S. by Lucania 
and E. by the territory of Venusia. Some pre-Roman ruins 
still exist (Not. Scat., 1884, 115). It became a municipium, 
and in ad. 323 had an extensive territory attached to it, includ- 
ing the town of Numistro, the large Cyclopean walls of which 
may still be seen, 2} m. below Muro Lucano. Below the town 
is a well-preserved Roman bridge over the Tanager (mod. 
Tanagro). 

See G. Patron! in Notisie degli scoot (1897), 183. 

VOLCI, or Vulo, an ancient town of Etruria. The circuit 
of the walls measures about 4 m., and scanty traces of them 
and of Roman buildings within them still exist. The Ponte 
della Badia over the Fiora, a bridge with a main arch of 66 ft. 
span, 98 ft. above the stream, is also Roman. An aqueduct 
passes over it. The former wealth of the town is mainly proved 
by the discoveries made in its extensive necropolis from 1828 
onwards — Greek vases, bronzes and other remains — many 
of which are now in the Vatican. By 1856 over 15,000 tombs 
had, it was calculated, been opened. These were entirely sub- 
terranean, and little is now to be seen on the site but a 
great tumulus, the Cucumella, and a few smaller ones. The 
frescoes from the Francois tomb, discovered in 1857, illustrating 
Greek and Etruscan myths, are now in the Museo Torlonia 
at Rome. Void was one of the twelve towns of Etruria. 
Coruncanius triumphed over the people of Vulsinii and Void 
in 280 B.C., and the colony of Cosa was founded in their territory. 
This seems to have led to the decline of the city, and it does 
not seem to have been of great importance in the Roman 
period, though it became an episcopal see. 

See G. Dennis, Cities and Cemeteries of Etruria (London, 1883), 
i. 437t ii- 503; S. Gsell, FouUles dans la necropoU de Vulci (Pans, 
1801), for the excavations of 1889 (with copious references to earlier 
publications). (T. As.) 

VOLE, a book-name (invented by Dr J. Fleming, author of 
a work on British animals) for the water-rat and those species 
of field-mice which have cheek-teeth of the same general type. 
Although the British representatives of this group should 
undoubtedly retain their vernacular designations of water-rat 
and short-tailed field-mouse, the term " vole" is one of great 
convenience in zoology as a general one for all the members 
of the group. Systematically voles are classed in the mammalian 
order Rodentia, in which they constitute the typical section 
of the subfamily Microtinae in the Muridae, or mouse-group. 
As a group, voles are characterized by being more heavily 
built than rats and mice, and by their less brisk movements. 
They have very small eyes, blunt snouts, inconspicuous ears 
and short limbs and tails, in all of which points they are 
markedly contrasted with true rats and mice. In common with 
lemmings and other representatives of the Microtinae, voles 
are, however, broadly distinguished from typical rats and mice 
by the structure of their three pairs of molar teeth. These, 
as shown in the figure, are composed of a variable number of 
vertical triangular prisms, in contact with one another by two 
(or one) of their angles. On the number and relations of these 
prisms the voles, which form an exceedingly large group, rang- 
ing all over Europe and Asia north of (and inclusive of) the 



VOLGA 



*93 




and North America, are divided into genet* and 
Examples of some of these are afforded by the 
English representatives 
of the group. 

The first of these is 

* the common short- 

' tailed field-mouse, or 

>" field-vole," Uicrolus 

t agresHx, which belongs 

, to the typical section 

of the type genus, and 

is about the size of a 

mouse, with a short. 

stumpy body, and a 

Upperand Lower Molarsof the WateMUt {^jf 01 ? .^^ ^ 
{ST Water-VoIe), Microtus ampktbivs. length of the head and 

body. The hind feet 
lave six pads on their inferior surfaces, and the colour is dull 
grizzled brown above and greyish white below. The molar teeth 
have respectively 5, 5 and 6 prisms above, and o, 5 and 3 below. 
This rodent is one of the commonest of British mammals, and fre- 
quents fields, woods and gardens in numbers, often doing consider- 
able damage owing to its fondness for garden produce. It is 
spread over the whole of Great Britain (exclusive of the Orkneys), 
while on the continent of Europe its range extends from Fin- 
land to North Italy and from France and Spain to Russia. 

The second and larger species is the water-rat, or "water- 
vole," which belongs to a second section of the genus, and is 
commonly known as Microtia (Arricolu) ampkibius, although 
some writers employ the inappropriate specific name terrains. 
It is about the size of a rat, and has long soft thick fur, of a 
oufonn grizzled brown, except when (as is not uncommon) 
ii is black. The tail is about half the length of the head and 
body, and the hind feet are long and powerful, although not 
webbed, and have five rounded pads on their lower surfaces. 
In the upper jaw the first molar has 5, the second 4 and the 
third 4 prisms, of which the last is irregular and sometimes 
cSvided into two, making 5. In the lower jaw the first molar 
has 7 prisms, of which the 3 anterior are generally not fully 
separated from one another, the second 5 and the third 3. 
The water-rat is perhaps the most often seen of all English 
mammals, owing to its diurnal habits. It frequents rivers 
and streams, burrowing in the banks, and often causing con- 
Bderable damage. Its food consists almost wholly of water- 
weeds, rashes and other vegetable substances, but it wul 
also eat animal food on occasion, in the shape of insects, mice 
or yoang birds. The female has during the summer three or 
four fitters, each of from two to seven young. The range of 
the water-rat extends over Europe and North Asia from 
v~fi*mA to China, but the species is not found in Ireland, 
where no member of the group is native. 

The red-backed field-mouse or M bank-vole " may be distinguished 
externally from the first species by its more or less rusty or rufous- 
c ufcjji ed back, its larger ears and its comparatively longer tail, 
which attains to about half the length of the bead and body. On 
armnnf of an important difference in the structure of its molars, 
it b now very generally referred to a distinct genus, under the name 
of fisstsssy* pmotmM; these teeth developing roots at a certain 
stage of csosteace. mstrad of gro win g permanently. Their prisma 
asanfaer ns|wrtivrly 5 and 4 and 5 above, and 7. 3 and 3 below. 
The habits of this species are in every way similar to those of the 
«ne first on the list. Its range in Great Britain extends northwards 
to Morayshire, bat it is represented in an island off the Pembroke 
coast by a distinct form: on the cuutiaent of Europe it 
- - • "ileitsVtep 



» and Italy to soothers Russia, while i 



ited 



t is tepreseai 

m northern Asia ana North America by closely allied rped 

Fossil woks from the Pliocene of England and Italy with molars 
which are rooted as soon as developed form the genus Mimemjs. 



(known to Che Tatars as £W, W or Aid; to the 
fsnnk tribes as Rm, and to the ancients as Rka and Oanu), 
the longest and most important river of European Russia. It 
us in the Valdai plateau of Tver and, after a winding course 
of 73*5 m. (1070 in a straight line), fans into the Caspian at 
It is by far the longest river of Europe, the 



Danube, which comes next to it, being only 177s m., while 
the Rhine (760 m.) is shorter even than two of the chief tri- 
butaries of the Volga— the Oka and the Kama. Its drainage 
area, which includes the whole of middle and eastern as well 
as part of south-eastern Russia, amounts to 563,300 sq. m., 
thus exceeding the aggregate superficies of Germany, France 
and the United Kingdom, and containing a population of fifty 
millions. Its tributaries are navigable for an aggregate length 
of nearly 20,000 m. The " basin " of the Volga is not limited 
to its actual catchment area. By a system of canals which 
connect the upper Volga with the Neva, the commercial mouth 
of the Volga has been transferred, so to speak, from the Caspian 
to the Baltic, thus making St Petersburg, the capital and 
chief seaport of Russia, the chief port of the Volga basin as 
well. Other less important canals connect it with the Western 
Dvina (Riga) and the White Sea (Archangel); while a railway 
only 45 m. in length joins the Volga with the Don and the Sea 
of Azov, and three great trunk lines bring its lower parts into 
connexion with the Baltic and western Europe. 

The Volga rises in extensive marshes on the Valdai plateau, where 
the W.Dvina also has itsorigin. 1 a keScljgerwas formerly considered 
tobetheprindpalsoujoe^tthatdisrinctianisnowgivento ^-^ 
a small spring issuing beneath a chapel (57° 15' N. -,32° 30' i^JT*^ 
E.) in the midst of a Urge marsh to the west of Seliger. '"*"' 
The honour has also been claimed, not without plausibility, for the 
Rana rivulet. Recent exact surveys have shown these originating 
marshes to be no more than 665 ft. above sea-level. The stream 
first traverses several small lakes, all having the same level, and, 
after its confluence with the Runa, enters Lake Volga. A dam 
erected a few miles below that lake, with a storage of nearly io/wo 
million cub. ft. of water, makes it possible to raise the level of the 
Volga as far down as the Sheksna, thus rendering it navigable, even 
at low water, from its 65th mile onwards. 

From its confluence Kith the Sheksna the Volga flows with a very 
gentle descent towards the southeast, past Yaroslavl and Kostroma, 
along a broad valley hollowed to a depth of 150-200 ft. in the 
Permian and Jurassic deposits. In met, its course lies through a 
string of depressions formerly filled with wide lakes, all linked 
together, when the Volga at length assumes a due south-east 
direction it is a large river (6250 cub. ft. per second, rising occasionally 
in high flood to as much as 1 78360 cub. ft.); of its numerous tribu- 
taries, the Unxha (365 m» 330 navigable), from the north, is the 
most important. 

The next great tributary is the Oka, which comes from the south- 
west after having tra versed, on its course of 950 m., all the Great 
Russian provinces of central Russia. It rises in the govern- ^^^ 
meat oK)rd. among hills which also send tributaries to the ^a^nm 
Dnieper and the Don, and receives on the left the Upa, the itT r*.. 
Zhizdra, the Ugra (300 m.}, the Moskva, on which steamers 
ply up to Moscow, the Kl] - '--- *- ..-— ■— 1_ 



raiddie-Rui 



1 prone.. 



lyazma (395 m.), on whose banks arose the 
ty of Suzdal, and on the right the navigable 
Tana (3SS «•) «nd Mokaha. Every one of these tributaries is con- 
nected with some important event in the history of Great Russia, 
The drainage area of the Oka is a territory of 97.000 sq. m. It has 
been maintained that, of the two rivers which unite at Nishniy- 
Novgorod, the Oka, not the Volga, is the chief ; the fact m that both 
in length (818 m.) and in drainage area above the confluence (89.500 
sq. mQ, as well as in the aggregate length of its tributaries, the Volga 
is the inferior stream. _ . 

At Its confluence with the Oka the Volga enters the broad lacustrine 
depression which must have communicated with the Caspian daring 
tbepost-Phocene period by means of at least a broad strait. , 
Its level at low water is only 190 ft. above that of the ocean. ^. m 
1 rnmedhtery below the confluence the breadth of the river -^ggjm^ 
ranges from 350 to 1 750 yds. There are many islands which * 
change their appearance and position after each inundation. On 
the right the Volga is joined by the Sura, which drains a large area 
and brings a volume of 3700 to 22,000 cub. ft. of water per second, 
the Vetluga Ci6$ m. long, of which 365 are navigable), from the 
forest-tracts of Yaroslavl, and many smaller tributaries. Then 
the stream turns south-east and descends into another lacustrine 
depression, where it receives the Kama, below Kazan. Remains 
of molluscs stul extant in the Caspian occur ex tensiv ely throughout 
this depression and up the lower Kama. 

The Kama, 1 which brings to the Volga a contribution ranging 
from 52,500 to 144400 cub. It. and occasionally reaching 5»5/»o cub. 
ft- per second, might again be considered as the more important 
of the two rivers. It rises in Vyatka, takes a wide sweep towards 
the north and east, and then flows south and south-west to join the 
Volga after a course of no less than 1 150 m. 



l To the Votyaks h is known as the Budrhim-Kam, to the 
Chuvashes as the Shoiga-adil and to the Tatars as the Chotfuan-idc! 
or Ak-idel, all words signifying " White river." 



«94 



VOLGA 



Tbe 



Alone the next 738 m. of its course the Volffa— now gflo to *6no yds. 
wide — flows south-south-west, with but on *: grv.it Lou J at Vm.ira. 
At this point, where it pierces I ran^e of UmetttKM hills, 
the course of the river is vcrv pictUissljite, fringed as 
it is by cliffs which rise 1000 it. alcove the ItveJ of the 
stream (which is only 54 ft.abovi the He at Samara ). Along 
the whole of the Samara bend the Volga is accompanied on its 
right bank by high cliffs, which it is constantly und^ mining, while 
broad lowland areas stretch along the left or extern bank* and are 
intersected by several old beds of the Volga. 

At Tsaritsyn the great river reaches its extreme south-western 
limit, and is there separated from the Don by an isthmus only 
45 m. in width. The isthmus is too high to be crossed by means 
of a canal, but a railway to Kalach brings the Volga into some sort 
of connexion with the Don and the Sea of Azov. At Tsaritsyn the 
river takes a sharp turn in a south-easterly direction towards the 
Caspian; it enters the Caspian btenpes, and a few miles above 
Tsaritsyn sends off a branch — the Akhtuba — which accompanies 
It for 330 m. before falling into the Caspian. Here the Volga 
t»,» iiiMf. «c«ves no tributaries; its right bank is skirted by lew 
r+nJmmd n '" 5 ' but on tne ^t lt anastomoses freely with the 
Tjl*^ Akhtuba when its waters are high, and floods the country for 
*■"* 15 to 35 m. The wid th of the main stream ranges from 520 
to 3500 yds. and the depth exceeds 80 ft. The delta proper begins 
40 m. above Astrakhan, and the branches subdivide «o as to reach 
the sea by as many as 200 separate mouths. Below Astrakhan 
navigation is difficult, and on the sand-bars at the mouth the 
maximum depth is only 12 ft. in calm weather. 

The figures given show how immensely the river varies in 
volume, and the greatness of the changes which are constantly 
going on in the channel and on its banks. Not only does its 
level occasionally rise in flood as much as 50 ft. and overflow 
its banks for a distance of $ to 15 m.; even the level of the 
Caspian is considerably affected by the sudden influx of water 
brought by the Volga. The amount of suspended matter 
brought down is correspondingly great. All along its course 
the Volga is eroding and destroying its banks with great 
rapidity; towns and loading ports have constantly to be 
shifted farther back. 

The question of the gradual desiccation of the Volga, and 
}ts causes, has often been discussed, and in 1838 a committee 
which included Karl Bacr among its members was appointed 
by the Russian academy of sciences to investigate the subject. 
No positive result was, however, arrived at, principally on 
account of the want of regular measurements' of the volume of 
the Volga and its tributaries— measurements which began 
to be made on scientific principles only in 1880. Still, if we 
go back two or three centuries, it is indisputable that rivers 
of the Volga basin which were easily navigable then are now 
hardly accessible to the smallest craft. The desiccation of the 
rivers of Russia has been often attributed to the steady destruc- 
tion of its forests. But it is obvious that there are other 
general causes at work, which are of a much more important 
character — causes of which the larger phenomena of the 
general desiccation of Eastern and Western Turkestan axe 
contemporaneous manifestations. The gradual elevation of 
the whole of northern Russia and Siberia, and the consequent 
draining of the marshes, is one of these deeper-seated, ampler 
causes; another is the desiccation of the lakes all over the 
northern hemisphere. 

Fisheries.— The network of shallow and still limans or '* cut-offs n 
in the delta of the Volga and the shallow waters of the northern 
Caspian, freshened as these arc by the water of the Volga, the Ural, 
the Kura and the Terek, is exceedingly favourable to the breeding 
of fish, and as a whole constitutes one of the most productive 
fishing grounds in the world. As soon as the ice breaks up in the 
delta innumerable shoals of roach (Leuciscus rutilus) and trout 
(LuciotruUa leucichlhys) rush up the river. They are followed by 
the great sturgeon (Acipenstr huso), the pike, tne bream and the 
•ike perch (Leucioperca sandra). Later on appears the Caspian 
tcrring {Clupca caspia), which formerly was neglected, but has now 
become more important than sturgeon; the sturgeon A. steUatus 
and " wels " (Silurus giants) follow, and finally the sturgeon 
Acipenstr etiJdcnstadtii, so much valued for its caviare. In search 
of a gravelly spawning-ground the sturgeon go up the river as far 
as Sarepta (250 m.). The lamprey, now extensively pickled, the 
sterlet (A. ndhenus) x the tench, the gudgeon and other fluvial 
species also appear in immense numbers. It is estimated that 
180,000 tons of fish of all kinds, of the value of considerably over 
£1,500,000, are taken annually in the four fishing districts of the 
Volga, Ural, Terek and Kura. Seal-hunting is carried on oh! the 



h< 



Volga mouth, and every year about 40,000 of Pkoca vitMlina are 
killed to the north of the Manghishlak peninsula on the east side of 
the Caspian. 

Ice Covering. — In winter the numberless tributaries and sub- 
tributaries of the Volga become highways for sledges. The ice 
lasts 90 to 160 days, and breaks up earlier in its upper course than in 
some parts lower down. The average date of the break-up is April 
nth at Tver, and 14 days later about Kostroma, from which point 
a regular acceleration is observed (April 16th at Kazafi, April 7U1 ac 
Tsaritsyn, and March 17th at Astrakhan). 

Traffic. — The greater part of the traffic b up river, the amount 
of merchandise which reaches Astrakhan being nearly fifteen times 
less than that reaching St Petersburg by the Volga canals. The 
goods transmitted in largest quantity are fish, metals, manufactured 
wares, hides, flax, timber, cereals, petroleum, oils and salt. The down- 
river traffic consists chiefly of manufactured goods and timber, the 
latter mostly for the treeless governments of Samara, Saratov and 
Astrakhan, as well as for the region adjacent to the lower course of 
the Don. Dredging machines are kept constantly at work, while 
steamers are stationed near the most dangerous sandbanks to assist 
vessels that run aground. The following table shows the principal 
river ports, with the movement of shipping in an average year: — 



Chid River 

Port* oaths 

Vol,*. 


Vessels. 


Ton*. 


Appro in- 
mate 

Vahie. 


Entered. 


Cleared 


Imported. 


Exported. 


Tool 


Astrakhan 
Tsaritsyn . 
Rybinsk . 
Nizhniy- 
Novgorod 
Saratov 


2.724 
6,412 
3.760 

12,960 
1.639 


3.228 
I.482 
6.295 

7.5*5 
1.738 


938.000 

1,152,000 

590,000 

4,O92;b0O 
923,000 


3,734.000 
462,000 
172,000 

&LO0O 
128,000 


4,672,000 
1,614,000 

762,000 

4,176.000 
1,051,000 


1 

7,8l2.OO0 
5,000,000 
3.573.O0O 

2,727.000 
1,882,000 



Formerly tens of thousands of burlaki, or porters, were employed 
in dragging boats up the Volga and its tributaries, but this method 
of traction has disappeared unless from a few of the tributaries. 
Horse-power is still extensively resorted to along the three canal 
systems. The first large steamers of the American type were built 
in 1872. Thousands of steamers are now employed in the traffic, 
to say nothing of smaller boats and rafts. Many of the steamers 
use as fuel masul or petroleum refuse. Large numbers of the boats 
and rafts are broken up after a single voyage. 

History.— -The Volga was not improbably known to the early 
Greeks, though it is not mentioned- by any writer previous to 
Ptolemy. According to him, the Rha is a tributary of an 
interior sea, formed from the confluence of two great rivers, 
the sources of which are separated by twenty degrees of longi- 
tude, but it is scarcely possible to judge from bis statements 
how far the Slavs had by that time succeeded in penetrating 
into the basin of the Volga. The Arab geographers throw 
little light on the condition of the Volga during the great 
migrations of the 3rd century, or subsequently under the 
invasion of the Huns, the growth of the Khazar empire in the 
southern steppes and of that of Bulgaria on the middle Volga. 
But we know that in the 9th century the Volga basin was 
occupied by Finnish tribes in the north and by Khazars and 
various Turkish races in the south. The Slavs, driven perhaps 
to the west, had only the Volkhov and the Dnieper, while the 
(Mahommedan) Bulgarian empire, at the confluence of the 
Volga with the Kama, was so powerful that for some time 
it was an open question whether Islam or Christianity would 
gain the upper hand among the Slav idolaters. But, while 
the Russians were driven from the Black Sea by the. Khazars, 
and later on by a tide of Ugrian migration from the north-east, 
a stream of Slavs moved slowly towards the north-east, down 
the upper Oka, into the borderland between the Finnish and 
Turkish regions. After two centuries of struggle the Russians 
succeeded in colonizing the fertile valleys of the Oka basin; 
in the 12th century they built a series of fortified towns on the 
Oka and Klyazma; and finally they reached the mouth of the 
Oka, there founding (in 1222) a new Novgorod— the Novgorod 
of the Lowlands, now Nizhniy-Novgcrod. The great lacustrine 
depression of the middle Volga was thus reached; and 
when the Mongol invasion of 1239-43 came, it encountered in 
the Oka basin a dense agricultural population with many 
fortified and wealthy towns— a population which the Mongols 
found they could conquer, indeed, but were unable to drive 
before them, as they bad done so many of the Turkish tribes. 



VOLHYNIA— VOLLMAR 



«95 



This invasion checked but did not stop the advance of 
the Russians down the Volga. Two centuries elapsed before 
the Russians covered the 300 m. which separate the mouths 
of the Oka and the Kama and took possession of Kazan. But 
in the meantime a flow of Novgorodian colonization had 
moved eastward, along the upper portions of the left-bank 
tributaries of the Volga, and had reached the Urals. 

With the capture of Kazan (155a) the Russians found the 
lower Volga open to their boats, and eight years afterwards 
they were masters of the mouth of the river at Astrakhan. 
Two centuries more elapsed before the Russians secured a free 
passage to the Black Sea and became masters of the Sea of 
Azov and the Crimea; the Volga, however, was their route. 
During these two centuries they fortified the lower river, 
settled it, and penetrated farther eastward into the steppes 
towards the upper Ural and thence to the upper parts of the 
Tobol and other great Siberian rivers. 

Bibuoceaphy.— P. P. Semenov's Geogmpkkal and Statistical 
Dictionary {5 vol*., St Petersburg, 1863-85) contains a full biblio- 
graphy of the Volga and tributaries. See also V. Ragozin's Vol fa 
7i vols., St Petersburg, 1880-81, with atlas; in Russian); N. 
Bogolyubov, The Volga from Tver to Astrakhan (Russian, 1876); 
H. Roskoschny, Die Wotga und ihre ZuflHsse (Leipzig, 1887, vol. L), 
history, ethnography, hydrography and biography, with rich 
bibliographical information; N. Bogusla vskiy , The Volga as a Means 
of Communication (Russian, 1887). with detailed profile and maps; 
Pereryatkovich, Volga Region in the 151k and 16th Centuries (1877); 
and Leader, Die Wolga (1889). (P. A. K. } j. T. Bb.) 

VOLHYNIA, a government of south-western Russia, bounded 
by the Polish governments of Lublin and Sicdlce on the W., 
Grodno and Minsk on the N., Kiev on the E. and Podolia and 
Galicia (Austria) on the S., with an area of 27,690 sq. m. A 
broad, flat spur of the Carpathians— the Avralynsk plateau — 
which enters from the west and stretches out eastward towards 
the Dnieper occupies its southern portion, reaching a maximum 
elevation of 1200 ft.; another branch of the Carpathians in 
the west of the government ranges between 700 and 900 ft. at 
its highest points. Both are deeply grooved In places, and 
the crags give a hilly aspect to the districts in which they occur. 
The remainder of the government, which is quite flat, with 
an imperceptible slope towards the marshes of Finsk, is known 
as the Polyesie (see Minsk). 

The population in 1906 was estimated at 3»547t5°°* Some 
three-fourths of the population are Little Russians; the 
other elements are White and Great Russians, Poles (5-2%), 
Jews (13-2%) and Germans (57 %). The government 
is divided into twelve districts, the chief towns of which 
are Zhitomir, the capital, Dubno, Kovel, Kremenets, Lutsk, 
Novograd Volhynskiy, Ostrog, Ovruch, Vladimir Volhynskiy, 
Rovno, Suro-Konstantinov and Zaslavl. The conditions of 
peasant ownership differ from those which prevail .in other 
pans of Russia, and of the total area the peasants hold ap- 
proximately one-half; 42% of the total is in the hands of 
private owners, a considerable number of Germans having settled 
and bought land in the government. 

Forests cover nearly 50% of the area in the north (that is, in the 
Polyene) and 15% elsewhere. Agriculture is well developed in 
the south, and in 1900 there were 4,222,400 acres (24%) under 
cereal crops alone, la the Polyene the principal occupations arc 



connected with the export of limber and firewood, the preparation 
of pitch, tar, potash and wooden^ wares, and boat-building. Lignite 
and coal, some graphite and kaolin, arc mined, as also amber, which 



of pitch, tar, potash and wooden^ wares, and boat-Building. Lignite 

&1, some graphite and kaolin, arc mined, as also amber. wh r 
is often found in big lumps. Manufacturing industries are not very 



. The factories are confined to sugar works* dis- 
mills, and candle, tobacco, glass, cloth and agri- 
cultural machinery works. Domestic industry in the villages is 
chiefly limited to the making of wooden goods, including parquetry. 
The export* of gram and timber, chiefly to Germany and Great 
Britain, and of wool and cattle, arc considerable 

Volhynia has been inhabited by Slavs from a remote antiquity. 
In Nestor's Annals its people are mentioned under the name of 
Dulcbs, and later in the 12th century they were known as 
Vdhynians and Buzhans (dwellers on the Bug). From the 
cth century the towns of Volhynia-VTadimir, Ovruch, Lutsk 
and Dubno were ruled by descendants of the Scandinavian 
or Varangian chief Rurik, and the land of Volhynia remained 



independent until the 14th century, when it fell under Lithuania. 
In 1569 it was annexed to Poland, and so remained until 1795, 
when it was taken possession of by Russia. 

VOLK. LEONARD WBLL8 (182&-1895), American sculptor, 
was born at WeQstown (now Wells), Hamilton county, New 
York, on the 7th of November 1828. He first followed the 
trade of a marble cutter with his father at Pittsfield, Massa- 
chusetts. In 1848 he opened a studio at St Louis, Missouri, 
and in 1855 was sent by his wife's cousin, Stephen A. Douglas, 
to Rome to study. Returning to America in 1857, he settled 
in Chicago, where he helped to establish an Academy of Design 
and was for eight years its head. Among his principal works 
are the Douglas monument at Chicago and the Soldiers' and 
Sailors' monument at Rochester, New York, and statues of 
President Lincoln and Stephen A. Douglas (in the Illinois State 
Capitol at Springfield, 111"), and of General James Shields (in 
Statuary Hall, Capitol, Washington), Elihu B. Washburn, 
Zachariah Chandler and David Davis. In i860 he made a life- 
mask (now in the National Museum, Washington) of Lincoln, 
of whom only one other, by Clark Mills in 1865, was ever made. 
His son, Douglas Volk (b. 1856), figure and portrait painter, 
who studied under J. L. Gerome in Paris, became a member 
of the Society of American Artists in 1880 and of the National 
Academy of Design in 1899. 

VOLKSRUST, a town of the Transvaal, 175 m. S.E. of 
Johannesburg and 30S m. N.N.W. of Durban. Pop. (1904) 
2382, of whom 1342 were whites. The town lies at an ele- 
vation of 5420 ft. just within the Transvaal frontier and 4 m. N. 
of the pass through the Drakensberg known as Laing's Nek. 
It is the centre of a rich agricultural district. It was founded 
by the Boer government in 1888. As a customs port of entry 
it was of some importance, and it maintains its position as 
a distributing depot. It was created a municipality in 1903. 
Sandstone is quarried in the district. 

VOLLEMDAM, a small fishing village of Holland hi the 
province of North Holland, adjoining Edam on the shores of 
the Zuider Zee. It is remarkable for the quaintness of the 
buildings and the picturesque costume of the villagers, who am 
of a singularly dark and robust type. Many artists have been 
attracted to settle here. VoUendam has its origin in the build- 
ing of the great sea-dam for the new waterway to Edam in the 
middle of the 14th century. On the seaward side of the dike 
are some houses built on piles in the style of lake dwellings. 

VOLLMAR, OEORO HBINRICH VON (1850- ), German 
Socialist, was born at Munich in 1850. He was educated in a 
school attached to a Benedictine monastery at Augsburg, and 
in 1865 entered the Bavarian army as a lieutenant in a cavalry 
regiment. He served in the campaign of 1866, and then 
entered the papal army as a volunteer. In 1869 he returned 
to Germany, and during the war with France served in the army 
railway department. He was severely wounded at Blois and 
pensioned. Permanently crippled by his wounds, he devoted 
himself to political and social studies. In 1872 he was con- 
verted to the principles of Social Democracy, and threw himself 
with gieat energy into political agitation. In 1877 he became 
editor of the party organ at Dresden, and under the Socialist 
law was repeatedly condemned to various terms of imprisonment, 
and was also expelled from that city. From 1879 to 1882 he 
lived at Zurich, then the headquarters of Social Democracy, 
when, besides attending the university, he took part in editing 
the Social Domokrat. In 1881 he was elected member of the 
Reichstag, and from 1883 to 1889 was a member of the Saxon 
diet. After 1885 he resided in Bavaria, and it was to him 
that was chiefly due the great success of the Socialists in the 
older Bavarian provinces. He identified himself with the more 
moderate and opportunist section of the Socialist party, decisively 
dissociating himself from the doctrine of a sudden and violent 
overthrow of society, and urging his associates to co-operate in 
bringing about a gradual development towards the Socialistic 
state. He refused to Identify Social Democracy with t he extreme 
views as to religion and the family advocated by Bcbd, and 
successfully resisted attempts made in 1891 to expel h«r- ' — " 



1 



196 



VOLNEY— VOLOGDA 



the party in consequence of his opinions. . He became a member 
of the Bavarian Diet in 1893. 

In addition to a couple of books on the preservation of forests, be 
published Der isolitrte SotiaU Staat (Zurich, 1880). 

VOLNEY, CONSTANTIN FRANCOIS CHASSEKBUF, Comte 
de (1757-1820), French samnt, was born at Craon (Maine-et- 
Loire) on the 3rd of February 1757, of good family; he was at 
first surnamed Boisgirais from his father's estate, but afterwards 
assumed the name of Volney. He spent some four years in 
Egypt and Syria, and published his Voyage en Egypte et en 
Syrie in 1787, and Considiralions sur fa guerre des Turcs etdela 
Russie in 1788. He was a member both of the States-General 
and of the Constituent Assembly. In 1791 appeared Les Ruines, 
on mtdUations sur les revolutions des empires, an essay on the 
philosophy of history, containing a vision which predicts the. 
final union of all religions by the recognition of the common 
truth underlying them all. Volney tried, to put his politico- 
economic theories into practice in Corsica, where, in 1793 he 
bought an estate and made an attempt to cultivate colonial 
produce. He was thrown into, prison during the Jacobin 
triumph, but escaped the guillotine. He was some time 
professor of history at the newly founded £cole Normak. In 
1795 he undertook a journey to the United States, where he 
was accused in 1797 of being a French spy sent to prepare for 
the inoccupation of Louisiana by France. He was obliged 
to return to France in 1798. The results of his travels took 
form in his Tableau du climal et du sol des £tals-Unis (1803). 
He was not a partisan of Napoleon, but, being a moderate 
man, a savant and a Liberal, was impressed into service by 
the emperor, who made him a count and put him into the senate. 
At the restoration he was made a peer of France. He became 
a member of the Institute in 1795. He died in Paris on the 
25th of April 1820. 

VOLO, a town and seaport of Greece, on the east coast of 
Thessaly, at the head, of the gulf to which it gives its name. 
Pop. (1007) 23,3x9. It is the chief seaport and second in- 
dustrial town of Thessaly, connected by rail with the town of 
Larissa. The anchorage is safe, vessels loading and discharging 
by means of lighters. The port has a depth of 23 to 35 ft. 

The Kastro, or citadel, of Volo stands on or close to the site of 
Pagasae, whence the gulf took the name of Sinus Pagasaeus or 
Pagasicus, and which was one of the oldest places of which mention 
occurs in the legendary history of Greece. From this port the 



Arronautic expedition was said to have sailed, and it was already 
a nourishing place under the tyrant Jason, who from the neighbour- 
ing Pherae ruled overall Thessaly. Two miles farther south stand 



the ruins of Demetnas, founded (200 b.c.J by Demetrius Poliorcetes, 
and for some time a favourite residence of the Macedonian kings. 
On the opposite side of the little inlet at the head of the gulf rises the 
hill of Episcopi, on which stood the ancient city of lolcus. At 
Dimini, about 3 m. W. of Volo, several tombs have been found which 
yielded remains of the later Myccnean Age. 

VOLOGAESES (Vologaesus, Vologases; on the coins 
Ologases; Armen. Valarsh; • Mod. Pers. Bafash), the name 
of five Parthian kings. 

(1) Vologaeses I., son. of Vonones II. by a Greek con- 
cubine (Tac. Ann. xii. 44), succeeded his father in a.d. $t 
(Tac. Ann. xii. 14; cf. Joseph. Ant. xx. 3, 4). He gave the 
kingdom of Media Atropatcnc to his brother Pacorus, and 
occupied Armenia for another brother, Tiridates (Tac. Ann. 
xii. 50, xv. 2; Joseph. Ant. xx. 3, 4). This led to a long 
war with Rome (54-63)1 which was ably conducted by the 
Roman general Corbulo. The power of Vologaeses was 
weakened by an attack of the Dahan and Sacan nomads, 
a rebellion of the Hyrcanians, and the usurpation of VardanesII. 
(Tac Ann. xiii. 7, 37; xiv. 25; xv. 1; cf. Joseph. Ant. 
xx. 4, a, where he is prevented from attacking the vassal 
king of Adiabene by an invasion of the eastern nomads). 
At last a peace was concluded, by which Tiridates was ac- 
knowledged as king of Armenia, but had to become a vassal 
of the Romans; he went to Rome, where Nero gave him 
back the diadem (Tac. Ann. xv. iff.; Dio Cass. Uii. 19 ff., 
Ixiii. 1 ft\); from that time an Arsacid dynasty ruled in Armenia 
under Roman supremacy. Vologaeses was satisfied with this 



result* and honoured the memory of Nero (Suet. Nero, 57), 
though he stood in good relations with Vespasian also, to whom 
be offered an army of 40,000 archers in the war against Viiellius 
(Tac. Hisk iv. 51; Suet, Vespas. 6; cf. Joseph. Ant. viL 
Si 2, 7, 3; Dio Cass. Ixvi. n). Soon afterwards the Alani, 
a great nomadic tribe beyond the .Caucasus, invaded Media 
and Armenia (Joseph. BeSL vii. 7, 4); Vologaeses applied in 
vain for help to Vespasian (Dio Cass. Ixvi. 11; Suet. Domiiian, 2). 
It appears that the Persian losses in the east also could not be 
repaired; Byrcania remained an independent kingdom (Joseph. 
Bell. vii. 7,4; Aurd. Vict- EpU. 15, 4). Vologaeses I. died 
about a.d. 77. His reign is marked by a decided reaction 
against Hellenism; he built Vologesocerta (Balashkert) in the 
neighbourhood of Ctesiphon with the intention of drawing to 
this new town the inhabitants of the Greek city Seleucia (Plio. 
vi, 12 a). Another town founded by him is Vologesias on a 
canal of the Euphrates, south of Babylon (near Hira; cf. 
Noldeke in Zeilscknft der deulsckcn-morgcnl. Gesellsckafi, xxviii. 
93 ff.). On some of his coins the Initials of his name appear in 
Aramaic letters. 

(2) Vologaeses II., probably the Son of Vologaeses I., 
appears on coins, which bear bis proper name, in 77-79, and 
again 121-47. During this time the Parthian kingdom was 
torn by civil wars between different pretenders, which reached 
their height during the war of Trajan, 1x4-17* Besides 
Vologaeses II. we find on coins and in the authors Pacorus 
(78-c. 105), Artabanus III. (80-81), Osroes (106-29), Mithradates 
V. (c. 129-47) and some others; thus the Parthian empire seems 
during this whole time to have been divided into two or three 
different kingdoms. By classic authors Vologaeses II. is men- 
tioned in the time of Hadrian (c. 131), when Cappadocia, Armenia 
and Media were invaded by the Alani (Dio Cass. lxix. 15). 

(3) Vologaeses III., 147-91. Under him, the unity of 
the empire was restored. But he was attacked by the Romans 
under Marcus Aurclius and Verus (162-65). I& this war 
Sclcuda was destroyed and the palace of Ctesiphon burnt down 
by Avidius Cassius (164); the Romans even advanced into 
Media. In the peace, western Mesopotamia was ceded to the 
Romans (Dio Cass. Ixxi. x ff.; Capitolin. Marc. Aur. 8 f.; Verus 
8, &c.). Vologaeses III. is probably the king Volgash of the 
Parsee tradition, preserved in the Dinkarl, who began the gather- 
ing of the writings of Zoroaster. 

(4) Vologaeses IV., 191-209. He was attacked by Septixnius 
Severus in 195, who advanced into Mesopotamia, occupied 
Nisibis and plundered Ctesiphon (199), but attempted in vain 
to conquer the Arabic fortress Atra; in 202 peace was restored. 

(5) Vologaeses V., 200-c. 222, son of Vologaeses IV: Soon 
after his accession his brother Artabanus IV., the last Arsacid 
king, rebelled against him, and became master of the greater 
part of the empire (Dio Cass, lxxvii. 12). But Vologaeses V. 
maintained himself in a part of Babylonia; .his dated coins 
reach down to a.d. 222. (En. M ) 

VOLOGDA, a government of north-eastern Russia, having the 
government of Archangel on the N.,* Tobolsk on the E., Perm, 
Vyatka, Kostroma and Yaroslavl on the S., Novgorod, Olonctz 
and Archangel on the W. This immense government, which 
comprises an area of 155,218 sq. m., stretches in a north- 
easterly direction for 800 m., from Novgorod to the Urals, and 
includes the broad depression drained by the Sukhona from 
the S.W., and the Vychegda from the N.E., both head-waters 
of the N. Dvina. From the basin of the Volga it is separated 
by a flat, swampy, wooded swelling, where the beads of tribu- 
taries belonging; to both Arctic and Caspian drainage-areas 
are. closely intermingled. The eastern boundary of Vologda 
follows the main water-parting of the Urals, which has but few 
points over 3000 ft.; wide parinas, or Kpody plateaus, fill up 
the space between the main chain of the Urals and the southern 
spurs of the Timan Mountains, in the upper basin of the Pechora, 
It is above the- farmo*— -especially over those which are 
nearest the Urals proper— that the highest summits of the 
Urals rise in the form of dome-shaped mountains (Toll-poz-u, 
5535 ft.; Eozhem-is, 4225 ft.; Shadmaha, 41 15 ft.). The Timan 



VOLOGDA— VOLSCI 



197 



bamu*^— are a swampy plateau, where the riven flowing to 
the N. Dvina or to the Pechora take their rise in common 
maxsbes; so that on the Mylva portage boats have to be 
dragged a distance of only 3 m. to be transported from one 
system to the other. 

Permian sandstones and cupriferous slams cover most of the 
territory; only a few patches of Jurassic clays overlie them; in 
the east, ia the Ural parmas, coal-beanng Carboniferous, Devonian 
and Silurian slates and limestones appear, wrapping the crystalline 
slates of the main ridge. Vast layers of boulder clay and Lacustrine 
the whole. Rockxalt aad salt springs, iron ore, 



l long and navigable for 570 m., though it passes through a 
• uninhabited region. The Luta, a tributary of the Yug, ia 
avigated for more than 250 m. The Pechora, which Sows 



waxalt aad salt springs, iron ore, 

_._ the chief mineral products; but 

mining is in its infancy. 

The river Sukhona, which rises in the south-west and flows 
north-east, is navigable for 375 m. After its confluence with the 
Vug (300 m. long), which Bows from the south, it becomes the 
N. Dvraa, which proceeds north-west, and receives the Vychegda, 
740m.' 
nearly 

also navigated for more than 250 

through eastern Vologda, is an artery for the export of corn and the 
import of fish. The Pinega, the Mexefl and the Vaga. all belonging 
to the Arctic basin, rise in northern Vologda. In the south-west the 
Sukhona is connected by means of Lake Kubina, and the canal of 
Alexander von WOrttemberg with the upper Volga. Numberless 
smaller lakes occur, and marshes cover a considerable part of the 
surface. 

The climate is severe, the average yearly temperature being 
**• F. at Vologda (Jan., io # 7 ; July, ©3°-5) and 3*°-5 *' Ust-Sysolsk 
Uan., 4 *: July, 61 ••7). 

The flora and the physical aspects vary greatly as the traveller 
moves north-east down the Sukhona and up the Vychegda, towards 
the parmas of the Pechora. In the south-west the forests are cteared, 
and the dry slopes of the hills have been converted into fields and 
meadows; the population is relatively dense, and nearly one-quarter 
of the area is under crops. There is a surplus of grain, which is 
used for distilleries, and apples are extensively cultivated. The 
flora is middle-Russian. Farther north-east the climate grows more 
severe; but still, until the Dvina is reached, corn succeeds well, 
and there is no lack of excellent meadows on the river-terraces. 
Flax is cultivated for export; but only 4% of the area is tilled, the 
remainder being covered with thick fir forests with occasional groups 
of deciduous trees (birch, aspen, elder). At about 46* E. the larch 
appears and soon supersedes the fir. Several plants unknown in 
western Russia make their appearance {Silent tartarica, Anlkyllis 
todscrario. Euphorbia palustns, FUago arvensis, Lycofodium com- 
planatum, Sanpusorba officinalis). The Veratrum is especially 
characteristic; it sometimes encroaches on the meadows to such an 
extent as to compel their abandonment. The region of the upper 
Meaefi (the Udora) again has a distinctive character. The winter 
is so protracted, and the snowfall so copious, that the Syryenians are 
sometimes compelled to clear away the snow from their barley-fields. 
Bat the summer is so hot (a mean of 54° for the three summer months) 
that barley ripens within forty days after being sown. The Timan 
plateaus are a marked boundary for the middle-Russian flora. 
Those to the east of them are uninhabitable; even 00 the banks 
of the rivers the climate b so severe, especially on account of the 
icy northern winds, that rye and barley are mostly grown only in 
orchards. The whole is covered with quite impenetrable forests, 
growing on a soil saturated with water. Mosquitoes swarm in the 
forests; birds are rare. The Siberian cedar begins and the lime 
tree disappears. Fir, cedar, pine and larch compose the forests, 
with birch aad aspen on their outskirts. Hunting is the chief 
occupation of the Syryenian inhabitants. 

The population was estimated in 1906 at 1,517,500, of whom 
57,407 lived ia towns; 00% were Great Russians and 8*4% 
Syiyerians (q.v.). The government is divided into ten districts, 
the chief towns of which are Vologda, Gryazovets, Kadnikov, 
rsikofak, Solvychegodsk, Totma or Totyma, Ustyug Velikiy, 
Ust-Sysolsk, VeUk and Yarensk. Agriculture thrives m the 
three south-western districts. live-stock breeding occupies 
considerable numbers of people. A little sak is raised, and 
there are a few ironworks, but manufacturing industries are in 
their infancy; the chief branch is the weaving of linen in the 
villages. (P.A. K.;J. T. Be.) 

VOLOGDA, a town of Russia, capital of the government of the 
same name, situated in its south-western corner on the river 
Vologda, above its confluence with the navigable Sukhona, 
127 m. by rail N. of Yaroslavl. Pop. (1881) 17,025; (1897) 
27,82 s. It is an old town, having many ancient churches, 
including one which dates from the 12th century, and the 
cathedral, founded in 1568. Vologda is a considerable com- 
mercial centre— flax, linseed, oats, hemp, butter and eggs 



being exported to both St Petersburg and Archangel. It bat 
distilleries, tanneries, and oil, soap, tobacco, candle and fur- 
dressing works. 

Vologda existed as a trading town as early as the 12th 
century. It was a colony of Novgorod, and was founded in 
1x47, and carried on a brisk trade m flax, tallow, furs, corn, 
leather and manufactured goods. In 1273 it was plundered 
by the prince of Tver in alliance with the Tatars, but soon 
recovered. Moscow disputed its possession with Novgorod 
until the 15th century; the Moscow princes intrigued to find 
support amidst the poorer inhabitants against the richer Nov- 
gorod merchants, and four successive times Vologda had to 
fight against its metropolis. It was definitely annexed to 
Moscow in 1447. When Archangel was founded, and opened 
for foreign trade an 1553, Vologda became the chief depot for 
goods exported through that channel Polish bands plundered 
it in 1613, and the plague of 1648 devastated it; but it main- 
tained its commercial importance until the foundation of 
St Petersburg, when Russian foreign trade took another channel. 

VOLSCI* an ancient Italian people, well known in the history 
of the first century of the Roman Republic. They then in- 
habited the partly hilly, partly marshy district of the S. of 
Latium, bounded by the Anrunci and Samnites on the S., 
the Hernid on the E. r and stretching roughly from Norba 
and Cora in the N. to Anthim in the S. They were 
among the most dangerous enemies of Rome, and frequently 
allied with the Aequi, whereas the Hernid from 486 B.C. 
onwards were the allies of Rome. In the Volscian territory by 
the little town of Velitrse(VeUetri),the birthplace of Augustus. 
From this town we have a very interesting though brief in- 
scription dating probably from early in the 3rd century B.C.; 
it is cut upon a small bronze piste (now in the Naples Museum), 
which must have once been fixed to some votive object, dedi- 
cated to the god Declunus (or the goddess Deduna). 

The language of this inscription is dear enough to show the 
very marked peculiarities which rank it close beside the Ian* 
guage of the Iguvine Tables (see Iguvium). It shows on the 
one hand the labialization of the original velar tf (Volscian pis* 
Latin quis), and on the other hand it palatalizes the guttural 
c before a following i (Volscian /j^w- Latin facial). Like 
Umbrian also, but unlike Latin and Oscan,it has degraded all 
the diphthongs into simple vowels (Volscian s« parallel to Oscan 
svai; Volscian dene, Old Latin and Oscan deiuai or deiuoi). 
This phenomenon of what might have been taken for a piece of 
Umbrian text appearing in a district remote from Umbria and 
hemmed in by Latins on the north and Oscan-speaking Sam- 
nites on the south is a most curious feature in the geographical 
distribution of the Italic dialects, and is dearly the result of 
some complex historical movements. 

In seeking for an explanation we may perhaps trust, at least 
in part, the evidence of the Ethnkon itsdf. The name Volsci 
belongs to what may be called the -CO- group of tribal names 
in the centre, and mainly on the west coast, of Italy, all of 
whom were subdued by the Romani before the end of the 4th 
century b. c; and many of whom were conquered by tbe 
Samnites about a century or more earlier. They are, from 
south to north, Osci, Aurunci, Hernici, Marruci, Fclisci; with 
these were no doubt associated the original inhabitants of Arkia 
and of Sidki-num, of Vescia among the Aurunci, and of Labici 
dose to Hernican territory. The same formative dement appears 
in the adjective Mens Massicus, and the names Clanica and 
Marica belonging to the Auruncan district, with Gratwcae in 
south Etruria, and a few other names in central Italy (see 
" I due strati Delia popolazfone Indo-Europea ddl' Italia Antica," 
in the AtH del Congreuo InUrnozionaU di Sciaae Storichc, Rome, 
1903. P- 17). With these names must clearly be judged the 
forms Tusci and Etrusci, although these forms must not be re* 
garded as anything but the names given 'to the Etruscans by 
the folk among whom they settled. Now the historical fortune 
of these tribes is reflected in several of their names (see Sabini). 
The Samnite and Roman conquerors tended to impose tbe 
form of their own Ethnicon, namdy the suffix -NO-, upon 



198 



VOLSINII— VOLTA 



the tribes they conquered; hence the Uarruci became the 
Harrucini, the *Arici became AricitU, and it seems at least 
probable that the forms Sidicim, Carecini, and others of this 
shape are the results of this same process. The conclusion sug- 
gested is that these -CO- tribes occupied the centre and west 
coast of Italy at the time of the Etruscan invasion (see Etruma: 
Language)', whereas the -NO- tribes only reached this part of 
Italy, or at least only became dominant there, long after the 
Etruscans had settled in the Peninsula. 

It remains, therefore, to ask whether any information can 
be had about the language of this primitive -CO- folk, and 
whether they can be identified as the authors of any of the 
various archaeological strata now recognized on Italian soil. 
If the conclusions suggested under Sabxnx may be accepted as 
sound we should expect to find the Volsa speaking a language 
similar to that of the Ligures, whose fondness for the suffix 
-sco- we have noticed (see Ligures), and identical with that 
spoken by the plebeians of Rome, and that this branch of 
Indo-European was among those which preserved the original 
Indo-European Velars from the labialization which befell them 
in the speech of the Samnites. The language of the inscription 
of Vclilxae offers at first sight a difficulty from this point of view, 
in the conversion which it shows of q to p\ but it is to be 
observed that the Ethnicon of Velitrae is VelUemus, and -that the 
people are called on the inscription itself Vctcstrom (genitive 
plural); so that there is nothing to prevent our assuming that 
we have here a settlement of Sabines among the Volscian hills, 
with their language to some extent (e.g. in the matter of the 
diphthongs and palatals) corrupted by that of the people round 
about them; just as we have reason to suppose was the case 
with the Safine language of the Iguvini, whose very name was 
later converted into Igwinates, the suffix -/*- being much 
more frequent among the -CO- tribes than among the Safines 
(see Sabini) 

The name Volsci itself is significant not merely in its suffix; 
the older form Volusci dearly contains the word meaning 
" marsh " identical with Gr. SXos, since the change of Veto- 
to *volus- is phonetically regular in Latin, The name Mar ice 
(" goddess of the salt-marshes ") among the Aurunci appears 
also both on the coast of Picenum and among the Liguriaas; 
and Stcphanus of Byzantium identified the Osci with the Sicult, 
whom there is reason to suspect were kinsmen of the Ligures. 
It is remarkable in how many marshy places this -co- or -co- 
suffix is used. Besides the Aurunci and the dea Marica and the 
inlcmpestaeque Graviscae (Virg. Am. x. 184). we have the Usiica 
enbens of Horace (Odes i. 17, 11), the Heruici in the Trerus 
valley, Sotricum and Glanica in the Pomptine marshes. 

For the text and fuller account of the Volscian inscription, and for 
other records of the dialect, see R. S. Conway, The Italic Dialects, 
pp. 267 sqq. (R. S. CO 

VOLSINII, an andent town of Etruria, Italy. The older 
Volsinii occupied in all probability the isolated tufa rock, so 
strongly defended by nature, upon which in Roman times stood 
the town which Procoptus (B.C. n. n seq.) calls O»p0u3crr6i 
(Urbs tetus, the modern Orvieto). This conjecture, first made 
by O. Muller, has been generally accepted by modern archae- 
ologists, and it is a strong point in its favour that the bishop 
of Orvieto in 59s signs himself epmpus cmtatis BmJsiniauu 
(Gregor. Magn. Regis*, v. 57a, cf . iL it, vi 17). It had, and 
needed, no outer walls, being surrounded on all sides except 
the S.W. by abrupt tufa cliffs; but a massive wall found by 
excavation on the S.W. side of the town may have bdonged 
to the acropolis. No remains of antiquity are to be seen 
within the city; but at the foot of the hill on the N. a large 
Etruscan necropolis was found in 1874, dating from the 5th 
century BX. The tombs, constructed of blocks of stone and 
arranged in rows divided by passages (like bouses in a town), 
often had the name of the deceased on the facade. Many 

: of the best are in the 
Tombs with paintings have also 
nan on the way to Bolsena. 

of the iwdve cities of 




Etruria. Wars between Vo&nu and Rome are mentioned in 
39*i 30& &nd 294 b.c, and in 365-64 B.C. the Romans assisted 
the inhabitants against their former slaves, who had successfully 
asserted themselves against their masters and took the town. 
Fulvius Flaccus gained a triumph for his victory, and it was 
probably then that the statue of Vertumnus which stood in 
the Vicus Tuscus at Rome was brought from Volsinii. Zonaras 
states that the dty was destroyed and removed elsewhere, 
though the old site continued apparently to be inhabited, to 
judge from the inscriptions found there. The new dty was 
certainly situated on the hills on the N.E. bank of the Lake 
of Bolsena (Locus Volsinicnsis), 12 m. W S.W of Orvieto, where 
many remains of antiquity have been found, on and above 
the site of the modem Bolsena (q.v.). These remains consist 
of Etruscan tombs, the sacred enclosure of the goddess Nortia, 
with votive objects and coins ranging from the beginning of 
the 3rd century b.c to the middle of the 3rd century ad., 
remains of Roman houses, &c , and an amphitheatre of the 
imperial period (E Gabnd in Monuments det Lined, rvi. t 1906, 
169 sqq., and in Notinc degit Scovi, 1906, 59 sqq.) 

The history of the new Volsinii is somewhat scanty Scjanus, 
the favourite of Tiberius, and Musonius Rufus the Stoic were 
natives of the place. The earliest dated inscription from the 
cemetery of S. Christina (discovered with its subterranean 
church in 1880-81) belongs to ad. 376 and the first known 
bishop of Volsinii to a.d. 409. In the next century, however, 
the see was transferred to Orvieto. Etruscan tombs have 
been found on the Isola Bisentina, in the lake; and on the 
west bank was the town of Visentium, Roman inscriptions 
belonging to which have been found. The site is marked by 
a medieval castle bearing the name Biscnzo. 

See E. Bormann in Corp. Inser. Latin, xi., 1888. pp. 423 sqq.; 
Notisu degit Scan, passim; G. Dennis, op. cit. (ii. 18 sqq.). 

(T.As.) 

VOLTA, ALESSANDRO (1745-1827), Italian physicist, was 
born at Como on the 18th of February 1745. He is celebrated 
as a pioneer of electrical science, after whom the " volt " is 
named. In 1774 he was appointed professor of physics in the 
gymnasium of Como, and in 1777 be travelled through Switzer- 
land, where he formed an intimate friendship with H. B. de 
Saussure. In 1779 a chair of physics was founded in Pavia, 
and Volta was chosen to occupy it. In 1782 he journeyed 
through France, Germany, Holland and England, and became 
acquainted with many scientific celebrities. In 1791 be re- 
ceived the Copley medal of the Royal Society. In 1801 
Napoleon called him to Paris, to show his experiments on contact 
electridty, and a medal was struck in his honour. He was 
made a senator of the kingdom of Lombardy. In 18 15 the 
emperor of Austria made him director of the philosophical 
faculty of Padua. In 18 19 he retired and settled in his native 
town, where he died on the 5th of March 1827. For Volta 's 
dcctrical work, and his place in the history of discovery (see 
Electricity; also Voltmftek). 

VOLTA, the largest river of the coast of Upper Guinea, 
between the Gambia and the Niger, with a length of about 
900 m. Its mouth and the greater part of its course are in 
British territory. Its lower course had been known since the 
discoveries of the Portuguese, from whom it received (15th 
century) its name on account of the winding nature of its 
stream. It was not, however, until the last fifteen years of 
the 10th century that the extent of its basin— extending far 
north within the bend of the Ni g er— w a s made known. 

There are two main upper branches, the Black and the White Votta. 
Their sources a* on the grassy plateaus north of the forest belt of the 
Guinea coast, the Black Volta rising (as the Baule) in about 1 1 " N. 
4* 50' W. Its course is at first R and N.E.. to 12* 25' N.. at which 
point, after receiving a tributary from nearly 14* N. — the most 
northerly point of the basin. — it turns sharply south. From the 
el ev e nth to the ninth parallel the river forms the boundary be t wee n 
the Northern Territories of the Gold Coast (British) and the French 
Ivory Coast colony. The southerly course of the stream ceases 
at 8 15' N, where it is deflected E.. and even N., by a mountain ranee 
co m posed of sandstone and granite, v.hioh it finally breaks through 
by a narrow pass, in which its width is only souk 60 yds. Elsewhere 



VOLTAIRE 



199 



k baia general wkhh of r 90 to 200 yds. In o* 50' W. it re- 
ceives the White Votta, which flows generally south from about 
13* N. and likewise breaks through a narrow gap in the plateau 
escarpment. Both rivers shrink greatly in the dry season, reaching 
their lowest level at the end of January. Below the junction the 
Volt* flows S.E. and S., turning, however, E. (or 40 m. just north 
of 6*. In 7 # '37 / N. it receives on the left bank a large tributary, 
the Oti. cooiing from 12° N. In its lower course, through the forest 
belt, the river has often a width of over half a mile, with a depth 
in places of 40 to 50 ft. in the rains, but in 6° 18' N. il traverses • 
pass in which its width is narrowed to 30 yds. Its use as a water- 
way is limited by a number of rapids, the lowest of which occur 
in 6 8 7* N., above the trading port of Akuse. Its mouth b 
also obstructed during the greater part of the year by a bar. 
The river is usually navigable by small vessels from its mouth for 
about 60 no. 

The lower Volta was explored by M. J. Bonnat in 1875, but 
the upper basin was first traversed by the German traveller 
G. A. Krause (1886-87) and the French captain L. G. Binger 
(1888). It has since been explored by a number of colonial 
officials — German, French and British. Between 6° 41' and 
8° 8* N. the Volta forms the boundary between the Gold Coast 
and Togoland. 

VOLTAIRE, FRAHyOIS MAHIE AROUET DE (1694-1778), 
French philosopher, historian, dramatist and man of letters, 
whose real name was Francois Marie Arouct simply, was born 
00 the 2 1 st of November 1694 at Paris, and was baptized the 
next day. His lather was Francois Arouet, a notary; his 
mother was Marie Marguerite Daumart or D'Aumard. Both 
father and mother were of Poitcvin extraction, but the Aroucts 
had been for two generations established in Paris, the grand- 
father being a prosperous tradesman. The family appear to 
have always belonged to the yeoman-tradesman class; their 
special home was the town of Saint-Loup. Voltaire was the 
fifth child of bis parents — twin boys (of whom one survived), 
a girl. Marguerite Catherine, and another boy who died young, 
having preceded him. Not very much is known of the mother, 
who died when Voltaire was but seven years old. She pretty 
certainly was the chief cause of his early introduction to good 
society, the abbe de Chatcauncuf (his sponsor in more ways 
than one) having been her friend. The father appears to have 
been somewhat peremptory in temper, but neither inhospitable 
nor tyrannical. Marguerite Arouct, of whom her younger 
brother was very fond, married early, her husband's name 
being Mignot; the elder brother, Armand, was a strong Jan- 
senisl, and there never was any kind of sympathy between him 
and Francois. 

The abbe de Chatcauncuf instructed him early in belles- 
lettres and deism, and he showed when a child the unsurpassed 
faculty for facile verse-making which always distinguished him. 
At the age of ten he was sent to the College Lou is-lc-G rand, 
which was under the management of the Jesuits, and remained 
there till 171 1. It was his whim, as part of his general liberal- 
ism, to depredate the education be received; but it seems 
10 have been a very sound and good education, which formed 
the basis of his extraordinarily wide, though never extra* 
ordinarily accurate, collection of knowledge subsequently, and 
(a more important thing) disciplined and exercised his literary 
faculty and judgment. Nor can there be much doubt that the 
great attention bestowed on acting—the Jesuits kept up the 
Renaissance practice of turning schools into theatres for the 
performance of plays both in Latin and in the vernacular— 
had mach to do with Voltaire's lifelong devotion to the stage. 
It must have been in his very earliest school years that the 
celebrated presentation of him by his godfather to Ninon de 
Lcnclos took place, for Ninon died in 1705. She left him two 
thousand francs "to buy books with." He worked fairly, 
played fairly, lived comfortably, made good and lasting friends. 
Some curious traits are recorded of this life — one being that 
in the terrible famine year of Malplaquct a hundred francs a 
year were added to the usual boarding expenses, and yet the 
boys had to cat paiit bis. 

In August 171 1. at the age of seventeen, he came home, 
and the usual battle followed between a son who desired no 
profession but literature and a father who refused to consider 



literature a profession at all. For a time Vohairc submitted, 
and read law at least nominally. The abbe de Chateauneuf 
died before bis godson left school, but he had already intro- 
duced him to the famous and dissipated coterie of the Temple, 
of which the grand prior Vcnd6me was the head, and the 
poets ChauUcu and La Fare the chief literary stars. It does 
not appear that Voltaire got into any great scrapes; but his 
father tried to break him off from such society by sending him 
first to Caen and then, in the suite of the marquis de Chateauneuf, 
the abbe's brother, to the Hague. Here he met a certain 
Olympe Dunoyer (" Pimpette "), a girl apparently of respect- 
able character and not bad connexions, but a Protestant, 
penniless, and daughter of a literary lady whose literary reputa- 
tion was not spotless. The mother discouraged the affair, and, 
though Voltaire tried to avail himself of the mania for prosely- 
tizing which then distinguished France, his father stopped any 
idea of a match by procuring a kltrc de cachet, which, however, 
he did not use. Voltaire, who had been sent borne, submitted, 
and for a time pretended to work in a Parisian lawyer's office; 
but he again manifested a faculty for getting into trouble— 
this time in the still more dangerous way of writing libellous 
poems— ■*> that his father was glad to send him to stay for 
nearly a year (17 14-15) with Louis de Caumartin, marquis 
de Saint-Ange, in the country. Here he was still supposed 
to study law, but devoted himself in part to literary essays, 
in part to storing up his immense treasure of gossiping history. 
Almost exactly at the time of the death of Louis XIV. he 
returned to Paris, to fall once more into literary and Templar 
society, and to make the tragedy of (Edipe, which he had 
already written, privately known. He was now introduced to 
a less questionable and even more distinguished coterie than 
Vend6mc's, to the famous "court of Sccaux," the circle of 
the beautiful and ambitious duchesse du Maine. It seems 
that Voltaire lent himself to the duchess's frantic hatred of 
the regent Orleans, and helped to compose lampoons on that 
prince. At any rate, in May 1716 be was exiled, first to Tulle, 
then to Sully. Allowed to return, he again fell under suspicion 
of having been concerned in the composition of two violent 
libels— one in Latin and one in French— called from their first 
words the Puero Remnant* and the J'ai vu, was inveigled by 
a spy named Beauregard into a real or burlesque confession, 
and on the 16th of May 171 7 was sent to the Bastille. He 
there recast (Edipe, began the Hcnriade and determined to 
alter his name. Ever after his exit from the Bastille in April 
1718 he was known as Arouct de Voltaire, or simply Voltaire, 
though legally he never abandoned his patronymic. The origin 
of the famous name has been much debated, and attempts 
have been made to show that it actually existed in the Daumart 
pedigree or in some territorial designation. Some are said to 
maintain that it was an abbreviation of a childish nickname, 
" le pdit voltnlairc." The balance of opinion has, however, 
always inclined to the hypothesis of an anagram on the name 
" Arouct le jcunc," or " Arouct L j.," u being changed to v 
and j to > according to the ordinary rules of the game. 

A further " exile " at Chatenay and elsewhere succeeded the 
imprisonment, and though Voltaire was admitted to an audience 
by the regent and treated graciously he was not trusted. 
(Edipe was acted at the Theatre Francois on the 18th of Novem- 
ber of the year of release, and was very well received, a rivalry 
between parties not dissimilar to that which not long before 
had helped Addison's Calo assisting its success. It had a run 
of forty-five nights, and brought the author not a little profit. 
With these gains Voltaire seems to have begun his long scries 
of successful financial speculations. But in the spring of next 
year the production of Lagrange-Chanccl's libels, entitled the 
Philip pi qiics, again brought suspicion on him. He was in- 
formally exiled, and spent much time with Marshal Villars, 
again increasing his store of "reminiscences." He returned 
to Paris in the winter, and his second play, Artimire, was pro- 
duced in February 1720. It was a failure, and though it was 
recast with some success Voltaire never published it as a whole, 
and used parts of it in other work. He again spent much of 



200 



VOLTAIRE 



his lime with Vfllare, listening to the marshal's stories and 
making harmless love to the duchess. In December 1721 his 
father died, leaving him property (rather more than four 
thousand h'vres a year), which was soon increased by a pension 
of half the amount from the regent. In return for this, or in 
hopes of more, he offered himself as a spy— or at any rate as 
a secret diplomatist — to Dubois. But meeting his old enemy 
Beauregard in one of the minister's rooms and making an 
offensive remark, he was waylaid by Beauregard some time 
after in a less privileged place and soundly beaten. 

His visiting espionage, as unkind critics put it— his secret 
diplomatic mission, as he would have liked to have it put 
himself — began in the summer of 1722, and he set out for it 
in company with a certain Madame de Rupelmonde, to whom 
he as usual made love, taught deism and served as an amusing 
travelling companion. He stayed at Cambrai for some time, 
where European diplomatists were still in full session, jour- 
neyed to Brussels, where he met and quarrelled with Jean 
Baptiste Rousseau, Went on to the Hague, and then returned. 
The Henriade had got on considerably during the journey, 
and, according to his lifelong habit, the poet, with the help 
of his friend Thifiriot and others, had been " working the 
oracle" of puffery. During the late autumn and winter of 
1722-23 he abode chiefly in Paris, taking a kind of lodging in 
the town house of M. de Bernieres, a'nobleman of Rouen, and 
endeavouring to procure a "privilege" for his poem. In this 
he was disappointed, but he had the work printed at Rouen 
nevertheless, and spent the summer of 1723 revising it. In 
November he caught smallpox and was very seriously 31, so 
that the book was not given to the world till the spring of 
1724 (and then of course, as it had no privilege, appeared 
privately). Almost at the same time, the 4th of March, his 
third tragedy, Mariamne appeared, was well received at first, 
but underwent complete damnation before the curtain fell. 
The regent had died shortly before, not to Voltaire's advantage; 
for he had been a generous patron. Voltaire had made, however, 
a useful friend in another grand seigneur, as profligate and 
nearly as intelligent, the duke of Richelieu, and with him he 
passed 1724 and the next year chiefly, recasting Mariamne 
(which was now successful), writing the comedy of VIndiscret, 
and courting the queen, the ministers, the favourites and 
everybody who seemed worth. The end of 1725 brought a 
disastrous close to this period of his life. He was' insulted by 
the chevalier de- Rohan, replied with his usual sharpness of 
tongue, and shortly afterwards, when dining with the duke of 
Sully, was called out and bastinadoed by the chavelier's hire- 
lings, Rohan himself looking on. Nobody would take his part, 
and at last, nearly three months after the outrage, he challenged 
Rohan, who accepted the challenge, but on the morning 
appointed for the duel Voltaire was arrested and sent for the 
second time to the Bastille. He was kept in confinement a 
fortnight, and was then packed off to England in accordance 
with his own request. Voltaire revenged himself on the duke 
of Sully for his conduct towards his guest by cutting Maxi- 
milien de Bcthune's name out of the Henriade. 

No competent judges have ever mistaken the importance 
of Voltaire's visit to England, and the influence it exercised 
on his future career. In the first place, the ridiculous and 
discreditable incident of the beating had time to blow over; 
in the second, England was a very favourable place for French- 
men of note to pick up guineas; in the third, and most im- 
portant of all, his contact with a people, then far more different 
in every conceivable way from their neighbours than any two 
peoples of Europe are different now, acted as a sovereign tonic 
and stimulant on his intellect and literary faculty. Before 
the English visit Voltaire had been an elegant trifler, an adept 
in the forms of literature popular in French society, a sort of 
superior Dorat or Boufflers of earlier growth. He returned 
from that visit one of the foremost literary men in Europe, 
with views, if not profound or accurate, yet wide and acute 
on all let grands sujets, and with a solid stock of money. The 
visit lasted about three years, from 1726 to 1729; and, as if 



to make the visitor's luck certain, George I. died and George If. 
succeeded soon after his arrival. The new king was not fond 
of "boetry," but Queen Caroline was, and international 
jealousy was pleased at the thought of welcoming a distin- 
guished exile from French illiberality. The Walpoles, Bubb 
Dodington, Bolingbroke, Congrcve, Sarah, duchess of Marl- 
borough, Pope, were among his English friends. He made 
acquaintance with, and at least tried to appreciate, Shake- 
speare. He was much struck by English manners, was deeply 
penetrated by English toleration for personal freethought and 
eccentricity, and gained some thousands of pounds from an 
authorized English edition of the Henriade, dedicated to the 
queen. But he visited Paris now and then without permis- 
sion, and his mind, like the mind of every exiled Frenchman, 
was always' set thereon. He gained full licence to return in 
the spring of 1729. 

He was full of literary projects, and immediately after his 
return he is said to have increased his fortune immensely by 
a lucky lottery speculation. The Henriade was at last licensed 
in France; Brutus, a play which he had printed in England, 
was accepted for performance, but kept back for a time by the 
author; and he began the celebrated poem of the Puerile, the 
amusement and the torment of great part of. his life. But be 
had great difficulties with two of his chief works which were 
ready to appear, Charles XII. and the Lettrts star les Anglais. 
With both he took all imaginable pains to avoid offending 
the censorship; for Voltaire had, more than any other 
man who ever rived, the ability and the willingness to 
stoop to conquer. At the end of 1730 Brutus did actually 
get acted. Then in the spring of the next year he went to 
Rouen to get Charles XII. surreptitiously printed, which he 
accomplished. In 1732 another tragedy, Eripkile, appeared, 
with the same kind of halting success which had distinguished 
the appearance of its elder sisters since (Edipe. But at last, 
on the 13th of August 1732, he produced Zaire, the best (with 
Mtrope) of all his plays, and one of the ten or twelve best plays 
of the whole French classical school. Its motive was borrowed 
to some extent frcm Othello, but that matters little. In the 
following winter the death of the comtesse de Fontaine-Martel, 
whose guest he had been, turned him out of a comfortable 
abode. He then took lodgings with an agent of his, one 
Demoulin, in an out-of-the-way part of Paris, and was, for 
some time at least, as much occupied with contracts, specu- 
lation and all sorts of means of gaining money as with literature. 

In the middle of this period, however, in 1733, two important 
books, the tettres phUosophiques sur les Anglais and the Temple 
du goUt appeared. Both were likely to make bad blood, for 
the latter was, under the mask of easy verse, a satire on con- 
temporary French literature, especially on J. B. Rousseau, 
and the former was, in the guise of a criticism or rather panegyric 
of English ways, an attack on everything established in the 
church and state of France. It was published with certain 
"remarks" on Pascal, more offensive to orthodoxy than itself, 
and no mercy was shown to it. The book was condemned 
(June 10th, 1734), the copies seized and burnt, a warrant, issued 
against the author and his dwelling searched. He himself 
was safe in the independent duchy of Lorraine with £milie 
de Breteuil, marquise du Chatelct, 1 with whom he began to be 
intimate in 1733; he had now taken up his abode with her 
at the chateau of Cirey. 

If the English visit may be regarded as having finished 

1 Gabrielle Emilie Le Tonnelier de Breteuil, marquise du Chatelet 
(1 706-1 749), was the daughter of the baron de Breteuil, and married 
the manquis du Chatelet-Lomont in 1725. She was an accom- 
plished linguist, musician and mathematician, and deeply interested 
in metaphysics. When she first became intimate with Voltaire she 
was practically separated from her husband, though he occasionally 
visited Grey. She is only important! from her connexion with 
Voltaire, though an attempt has been made to treat her as an 
original thinker; see F. Hamel, An Eighteenth Century Marquise 
(1910). She wrote Institutions de physique (1740). Dissertation 
sur la nature et la propagation du feu (1 744), Doxies sur les religions 
reculees (1792), and in 1756 publishea a translation of Newton's 
Principia. 



VOLTAIRE 



20I 



Volute's education, the Cirey residence may be justly said to 
be the first stage of bis literary manhood. He had written 
important' and characteristic work before; but he had always 
been in a kind of literary Wanderjahre. He now obtained a 
settled borne for many years and, taught by his numerous 
brashes with the authorities, he began and successfully carried 
oat that system of keeping out of personal harm's way, and of 
at once denying any awkard responsibility, which made him 
for nearly half a century at once the chief and the most pros- 
perous of European heretics in regard to all established ideas. 
It was not till the summer of 1734 that Cirey, a half-dismantled 
country house on the borders of Champagne and Lorraine, 
was fitted up with Voltaire's money and became the head- 
quarters of himself, of his hostess, and now and then of her 
accommodating husband. Many pictures of the life here, 
some of them not a little malicious, survive. It was not en- 
tirely a bed of roses, for the "respectable Emily's" temper 
was violent, and after a time she sought lovers who were not 
so much dee Uribraux as Voltaire. But it provided him with 
a safe and comfortable retreat, and with every opportunity 
for literary work. In March 1735 the ban was formally taken 
off bias, and he was at liberty to return to Paris, a liberty of 
which he availed himself sparingly. 

At drey he wrote indefatigably and did not neglect, business. 
The principal literary results of bis early years here were the 
Discerns en vers sur Phomme, the play of Aleve and V Enfant 
frodiene (1736), and a long treatise on the Newtonian system 
which he and Madame du Chatelet wrote together. But, as 
usual, Voltaire's estraordinary literary industry was shown 
rather in a vast amount of fugitive writings than in substantive 
works, though for the whole space of his Cirey residence he 
was engaged in writing, adding to, and altering the PuceUe. 
In the very first days of his sojourn he had written a pamphlet 
with, the imposing title of Treatise en Metaphysics. Of 
metaphysics proper Voltaire neither then nor at any other 
time understood anything, and the subject, like every other, 
merely served him as a pretext for laughing at religion with 
the usual reservation of' a tolerably affirmative deism. In 
March 1736 he received his first letter from Frederick of Prussia, 
then crown prince only. He was soon again in trouble, this 
time for. the poem of Le Mendain, and he at once crossed the 
frontier and then made for Brussels. He spent about three 
months in the Low Countries, and in March 1737 returned to 
Grey, and continued writing, making experiments in physics 
(he ted at this time a large laboratory), and busying himself 
with iron-founding, the chief industry of the district. The 
best-known accounts of Cirey life, those of Madame de Grafigny, 
date from the winter of 1738-30; they ire somewhat spiteful 
but very amusing, depicting the frequent quarrels between 
Madame du Chatelet and Voltaire, bis intense suffering under 
criticism, his constant dcead of the surreptitious publication, 
of the PuceUe (which nevertheless he could not keep his hands 
from writing or his tongue from reciting to his visitors), and 
so forth. The chief and most galling of his critics at this time 
was the Abb* Desfontaines, and the chief of Desfontaines's 
attacks was entitled La VoUairomanie, in reply to a libel of 
Voltaire's called U Prtservatif. Both combatants had, accord- 
ing to the absurd habit of the time, to disown their works, 
Desfontaines's disavowal being formal and procured by the 
exertion of all Voltaire's own influence both at home and 
abroad. For be had as little notion of tolerance towards others 
as of dignity in himself. In April 1730 a journey was made 
to Brussels, to Paris, and then again to Brussels, which was 
the headquarters for a considerable time, owing to some law 
affairs, of the Du Chatelet*. Frederick, now king of Prussia, 
made not a few efforts to get Voltaire away from Madame du 
Chatelet, but unsuccessfully, and the king earned the lady's 
cordial hatred by persistently refusing or omitting to invite 
her. At last, in September 1740, master and pupil met for the 
first time at Cleves, an interview followed three months later 
by a longer visit. Brussels was again the headquarters in 174 1. 
by whkh time Voltaire had finished the best and the second 



or third best of his plays, Mirope and Mahomet. Mahomet 
was played first at Lille in that year; it did not appear in 
Paris till August next year, and Mirope not till 1743. This 
last was, and deserved to be, the most successful of its author's 
whole theatre. It was in this same year that he received the 
singular diplomatic mission to Frederick which nobody seems 
to have taken seriously, and after his return the oscillation 
between Brussels, Cirey and Paris was resumed. During 
these years much of the Essai sur Us mows and the Sttde de 
Louis XIV. was composed. He also returned, not too well- 
advisedly, to the business of courtiership, which he had given 
up since the death of the regent. He was much employed, 
owing to Richelieu's influence, in the fetes of the dauphin's 
marriage, and was rewarded through the influence of Madame 
de Pompadour on New Year's Day 1745 by the appointment 
to the post of historiographer-royal, once jointly held by 
Racine and Boileau. The situation itself and its accompanying 
privileges were what Voltaire chiefly aimed at, but there was a 
salary of two thousand livres attached, and he had the year 
before come in for three times as much by the death of his 
brother. In the same year he wrote a poem on Fontenoy.be 
received medals from the pope and dedicated Mahomet to him, 
and he wrote court divertissements and other things to admira- 
tion. But he was not a thoroughly skilful courtier, and one of 
the best known of Voltairians is the contempt or at least silence 
with which Louis XV.— a sensualist but no fool— received the 
maladroit and almost insolent inquiry Trajan est-U content? 
addressed in his hearing to Richelieu at the close of a piece 
in which the emperor had appeared with a transparent reference 
to the king. All this assentation had at least one effect. He, 
who had been for years admittedly the first writer in France, 
had been repeatedly passed over in elections to, the Academy. 
He was at last elected in the spring of 1746, and received on 
the 9th of May. Then the tide began to turn. His favour 
at court had naturally exasperated his enemies; it had not 
secured him any real friends, and even a gentlemanship of the 
chamber was no solid benefit, except from the money point 
of view. He did not indeed hold it very long, but was per- 
mitted to sell it for a large sum, retaining the rank and privileges. 
He had various proofs of the instability of his hold on the king 
during 1747 and in 1748. He once lay in hiding for two months 
with the duchesse du Maine at Sceaux, where were produced, 
the comedietta of La Prude and the tragedy of Rome sauvie, 
and afterwards for a time lived chiefly at Luneville; here 
Madame du Chatelet had established herself at the court of 
King Stanislaus, and carried on a liaison with Saint-Lambert, 
an officer in the king's guard. In September 1749 she died 
after the birth of a child. 

The death of Madame du Chatelet is another turning-point 
in the history of Voltaire. He was fifty-five, but he had 
nearly thirty years more to live, and he had learnt much during 
what may be called his Cirey cohabitation. For some time, 
however, after Madame du Cbatelet's death he was in a state 
of pitiable unsettlement. At first, after removing his goods 
from Cirey, he hired the greater part of the Chatelet town house, 
and then the whole. He had some idea of settling down in 
Paris, and might perhaps have done so if mischief had not 
been the very breath of bis nostrils. He went on writing 
satiric tales like Zadig. He engaged in a foolish and undigni- 
fied struggle with Crebillon pere (not fits), a rival set up against 
him by Madame de Pompadour, but a dramatist who, in part 
of one play, Rhadamisle et Ztnobie, has struck -a note of tragedy 
in the grand Cornelian strain, which Voltaire could never 
hope to echo. Semirame (1748). Oreste (1750) and Rente sauvie 
itself were all products of this rivalry. He used the most 
extraordinary efforts to make himself more popular than he was, 
but he could not help being uncomfortable. 

All this time Frederick of Prussia had been continuing his 
invitations. Voltaire left Paris on the 15th of June 2751, *nd 
reached Berlin on the 10th of July. This Berlin visit is more 
or less familiar to English readers from the two great essays 
of Macaulay and Cariyle as well as from the Prederich of the 



202 



VOLTAIRE 



latter. But these two masters of English were not perhaps 
the best qualified to relate the story. Both were unjust to 
Voltaire, and Macaulay was unjust to Frederick as well. It 
is certain that at first the king behaved altogether like a king 
to his guest. He pressed him to remain; he gave him (the 
words are Voltaire's own) one of his orders, twenty thousand 
francs a year, and four thousand additional for his niece, 
Madame Denis, in case she would come and keep house for her 
uncle. But Voltaire's conduct was from the first Voltairian. 
He insisted on the consent of his own king, which was given 
without delay. But Frenchmen, always touchy on such a 
point, regarded Voltaire as something of a deserter; and it 
was not long before he bitterly repented his desertion, though 
bis residence in Prussia lasted nearly three years. It was 
quite impossible that Voltaire and Frederick should get on 
together for long. Voltaire was not humble enough to be a 
mere butt, as many of Frederick's led poets were; be was not 
enough of a gentleman to hold his own place with dignity and 
discretion; he was constantly jealous both of his equals in 
age and reputation, such as Maupertuis, and of his juniors 
and inferiors, such as Baculard D'Arnaud. He was greedy, 
restless, and in a way Bohemian. Frederick, though his love 
of teasing for teasing's sake has been exaggerated by Macaulay, 
was a martinet of the first water, had a sharp though one-sided 
idea of justice, and had not the slightest intention of allowing 
Voltaire to insult or to tyrannize over his other guests and 
servants. If he is to be blamed in this particular matter, the 
blame must be chiefly confined to his imprudence in inviting 
Voltaire at the beginning and to the brutality of his conduct 
at the end. Within Voltaire there was always a mischievous 
and ill-behaved child; and he was never more mischievous, 
more ill-behaved and more childish than in these years. He 
tried to get D'Arnaud exiled, and succeeded. He got into a 
quite unnecessary quarrel with Lessing. He had not been in 
the country six months before he engaged in a discreditable 
piece of financial gambling with Hirsch, the Dresden Jew. 
He was accused of something like downright forgery—that is 
to say, of altering a paper signed by Hirsch after he had signed 
it. The king's disgust at this affair (which came to an open 
scandal before the tribunals) was so great that he was on the 
point of ordering Voltaire out of Prussia, and Darget the 
secretary had no small trouble in arranging the matter (February 
1751). Then it was Voltaire's turn to be disgusted with an 
occupation he had undertaken himself — the occupation of 
" buck washing " the king's French verses. However, he suc- 
ceeded in finishing and printing the Silde de Louis XIV., 
while the Dictionnaire philcsophique is said to have been 
devised and begun at Potsdam. But Voltaire's restless temper 
was brewing up for another storm. In the early autumn of 
1751 La Mettrie, one of the king's parasites, and a man of 
much more talent than is generally allowed, horrified Voltaire 
by telling him that Frederick had in conversation applied to 
him (Voltaire) a proverb about " sucking the orange and flinging 
away its skin," and about the same time the dispute with 
Maupertuis, which had more than anything else to do with his 
exclusion from Prussia, came to a head. Maupertuis got into 
a dispute with one Konig. The king took his president's part; 
Voltaire took Konig's. But Maupertuis must needs write his 
Letters, and thereupon (1752) appeared one of Voltaire's most 
famous, though perhaps not one of his most read works, the 
Diatribe du Doctew Akakia. Even Voltaire did not venture to 
publish this lampoon on a great official of a prince so touchy 
as the king of Prussia without some permission, and if all tales 
are true he obtained this by another piece of something like 
forgery— getting the king to endorse a totally different pamphlet 
on its last leaf, and affixing that last leaf to Akakia. Of this 
Frederick was not aware; but he did get some wind of the 
Diatribe itself, sent for the author, heard it read to his own 
great amusement, and either actually burned the MS. or be- 
lieved that it was burnt. In a few days printed copies appeared. 
Frederick did not like disobedience, but >■- - :if ■— ,:, »>d being 
nude a fool of, and he put Voltaire 



the affair blew over, the king believing that the edition of 
Akakia confiscated in Prussia was the only one. Alas! Vol- 
taire had sent copies away; others had been printed abroad; 
and the thing was irrecoverable. It could not be proved that 
he had ordered the printing, and all Frederick could do was 
to have the pamphlet burnt by the hangman. Things were 
now drawing to a crisis. One day Voltaire sent his orders, 
&c, back; the next Frederick returned them, but Voltaire 
had quite made up his mind to fly. A kind of reconciliation 
occurred in March, and after some days of good-fellowship 
Voltaire at last obtained the long-sought leave of absence and 
left Potsdam on the rfth of the month (1753). It was nearly 
three months afterwards that the famous, ludicrous and brutal 
arrest was made at Frankfort, on the persons of himself and 
his niece, who had met him meanwhile. There was some 
faint excuse for Frederick's wrath. In the first place, the poet 
chose to linger at Leipzig. In the second place, in direct dis- 
regard of a promise given to Frederick, a supplement to Akakia 
appeared, more offensive than the main text. . From Leipzig, 
after a month's stay, Voltaire moved to Gotha. Once more, 
on the 35th of May, he moved on to Frankfort. Frankfort, 
nominally a free city, but with a Prussian resident who did 
very much what he pleased, was not like Gotha and Leipzig. 
An excuse was provided in the fact that the poet had a copy 
of some unpublished poems of Frederick's,, and as soon as 
Voltaire arrived hands were laid on him, at first with courtesy 
enough. The resident, Freytag, was not a very wise person 
(though he probably did not, as Voltaire would have it, spell 
"poesie" "poeshie"); constant references to Frederick were 
necessary; and the affair was prolonged so that Madame 
Denis had time to join her uncle. At last Voltaire tried to 
steal away. He was followed, arrested, his niece seized separ- 
ately, and sent to join him in custody; and the two, with the 
secretary Collini, were kept close prisoners at an inn called the 
Goat. This situation was at last put an end to by the city 
authorities, who probably felt that they were not playing a 
very creditable part. Voltaire left Frankfort on the 7th of 
July, travelled safely to Mainz, and thence to Mannheim, 
Strassburg and Colraar. The last-named place he reached 
(after a leisurely journey and many honours at the little courts 
just mentioned) at the beginning of October, and here he pro- 
posed to stay the winter, finish his Annals of the Empire and 
look about him. 

Voltaire's second stage was now over. Even now, however, 
in his sixtieth year, it required some more external pressure 
to induce him to make himself independent. He had been, 
in the first blush of his Frankfort disaster, refused, or at least 
not granted, permission even to enter France proper. At 
Colmar he was not safe, especially when in January 1754 a 
pirated edition of the Essai sur les tnaurs, written long before, 
appeared. Permission to establish himself in France was 
now absolutely refused. Nor did an extremely offensive per- 
formance of Voltaire's— the solemn partaking of the Eucharist 
at Colmar after due confession— at all mollify his enemies. 
His exclusion from France, however, was chiefly metaphorical, 
and really meant exclusion from Paris and its neighbourhood. 
In the summer he went to Plombieres, and after returning 
to Colmar for some time journeyed in the beginning of winter 
to Lyons, and thence in the middle of December to Geneva. 
Voltaire bad no purpose of remaining in the city, and almost 
immediately bought a country house just outside the gates, 
to which he gave the name of Les Deiices. He was here 
practically at the meeting-point of four distinct jurisdictions-* 
Geneva, the canton Vaud, Sardinia and France, while other 
cantons were within easy reach; and he bought other houses 
dotted about these territories, so as never to be without a refuge 
close at hand in case of sudden storms. At Les Devices he 
set up a considerable establishment, which his great wealth 
made him able easily to afford. He kept open house for 
visitors; he had printers close at hand in Geneva; he fitted 
up a private theatre in which he could enjoy what was perhaps 
the greatest pleasure el his whole life— acting in a play of hit 



VOLTAIRE 



*>3 



own, stage-managed by himself. His residence at Geneva 
brought him into correspondence (at first quite amicable) with 
the most famous of her citizens, J. J. Rousseau. His Orphdin 
it U Chine, performed at Paris in 1755, was wr y weU received; 
the notorious La Pucette appeared in the same year. The 
earthquake at Lisbon, which appalled other people, gave 
Voltaire an excellent opportunity for ridiculing the beliefs 
of the orthodox, first in verse (1756) and later in the (from a 
literary point of view) unsurpassable tale of Candide (1759). 
All was, however, not yet quite smooth with him. Geneva 
had a law expressly forbidding theatrical performances in 
any circumstances whatever. Voltaire had infringed this law 
already as far as private performances went, and he had 
thought of building a regular theatre, not indeed at Geneva 
but at Lausanne. In July 175s a very polite and, as far as 
Voltaire was concerned, indirect resolution of the Consistory 
declared that in consequence of these proceedings of the Sieur 
de Voltaire the pastors should notify their flocks to abstain, 
aad that the chief syndic should be informed of the Consistory's 
perfect confidence that the edicts would be carried out. 
Voltaire obeyed this hint as far as Les Deiices was concerned, 
and consoled himself by having the performances in his 
Lausanne bouse. But he never was the man to take opposi- 
tion to his wishes either quietly or without retaliation. He 
undoubtedly instigated D'Alembert to include a censure* of 
the prohibition in his Encycloptdic article on " Geneva," a 
proceeding which provoked Rousseau's celebrated Leltre a 
U Alembert sur Us spectacles. As for himself, he looked about 
for a place where he could combine the social liberty of France 
with the political Uberty of Geneva, and he found one. 

At the end of 1758 he bought the considerable property of 
Ferney, on the shore of the lake, about four miles from Geneva, 
aad on French soil. At Les Deiices (which he sold in 1765) 
be had become a householder on no small scale; at Ferney 
(which he increased by other purchases and leases) he became 
a complete country gentleman, and was henceforward known 
to all Europe as squire of Ferney. Many of the most celebrated 
men of Europe visited him there, and large parts of his usual 
biographies axe composed of extracts from their accounts of 
Ferney. His new occupations by no means quenched his 
literary activity. He did not make himself a slave to his 
visitors, but reserved much time for work and for his immense 
correspondence, which had for a long time once more included 
Frederick, the two getting on very well when they were not 
in contact." Above all, he now, being comparatively secure in 
position, engaged much more strongly in public controversies, 
and resorted less to his old labyrinthine tricks of disavowal, 
garbled publication and private libel. The suppression of 
the Encydopidie, to which he had been a considerable con- 
tributor, and whose conductors were his intimate friends, drew 
from him a shower of lampoons directed now at " J'infame " 
(see infra) generally, now at literary victims, such as Le Franc 
de Pompignan (who had written one piece of verse so much 
better than anything serious of Voltaire's that he could not 
be forgiven), or Palissot (who in his play Les Philosophes had 
boldly gibbeted most of the persons so termed, but had not 
included Voltaire), now at Freron, an excellent critic and a 
dangerous writer, who had attacked Voltaire from the con- 
servative side, and at whom the patriarch of Ferney, as be 
now began to be called, levelled in return the very inferior 
farce-lampoon of L'&ossaise, of the first night of which Freron 
himself did an admirably humorous criticism. 

How he built a church and got into trouble in so doing at 
Ferney, how he put " Deo-erexit Voltaire " on it (1760-61) and 
obtained a relic from the pope for his new building, how he 
entertained a grand-niece of CorneiUe, and for her benefit wrote 
his well-known " commentary " on that poet, are matters of 
interest, but to be passed over briefly. Here, too, he began 
that series of interferences on behalf of the oppressed and 
the ill-treated which, whatever mixture of motives may have 
prompted it, b an honour to his memory. Volumes and 
almost libraries have been written on the Calas affair, and 



we can but refer here to the only lew famous cases of Sirven 
(very similar to that of Calas, though no judicial murder was 
actually committed), Espinasse (who had been sentenced to 
the galleys for harbouring a Protestant minister), Lally (the 
son of the unjustly treated but not blameless Irish-French 
commander in India), D'£talonde (the companion of La Banc), 
MontbaUli and Others. In 1768 he entered into controversy 
with the bishop of the diocese; he had differences with the 
superior landlord of part of his estate, the president De Brasses; 
and he engaged in a long and tedious return match with the 
republic of Geneva, But the general events of this Ferney 
life are somewhat of that happy kind which are no events. 

In this way Voltaire, who had been an old man when he 
established himself at Ferney, became a very old one almost 
without noticing it. The death of Louis XV. and the accession' 
of Louis XVI. excited even in his aged breast the hope of 
re-entering Paris, but he did not at once receive any encourage- 
ment, despite the reforming ministry of Turgot. A much 
more solid gain to his happiness was the adoption, or practical 
adoption, in 1776 of Heine Philiberte de Voricourt, a young 
girl of noble bat poor family, whom Voltaire rescued from the 
convent, installed in his house as an adopted daughter, and 
married to the marquis de Villette. Her pet name was " Belle 
et Bonne," and nobody had more to do with the happiness 
of the last years of the " patriarch " than she had. It is 
doubtful whether his last and fatal visit to Paris was due to 
his own wish or to the instigation of his niece, Madame Denis; 
but this lady — a woman of disagreeable temper, especially to 
her inferiors— appears to have been rather hardly treated 
by Voltaire's earlier, and sometimes by bis later, biographers. 
The suggestion which has been made that the success of 
Beaumarchais piqued him has nothing impossible in it. At 
any rale he had, at the end of 1777 and the beginning of 1778; 
been carefully finishing a new tragedy— Irene— for production 
in the capital. He started on the 5th of February, and five 
days later arrived at the city which be had not seen for eight- 
and-twenty years. 

He was received with immense rejoicings, not indeed directly 
by the court, but by the Academy, by society and by all the 
more important foreign visitors. About a fortnight after his 
arrival, age and fatigue made him seriously in, and a confessor 
was sent for. But he recovered, scoffed at himself as usual, 
and prepared more eagerly than ever for the first performance 
of Irene, on the 16th of March. At the end of the month he 
was able to attend a performance of it, which was a kind of 
apotheosis. He was crowned with laurel m his box, amid 
the plaudits of the audience, and did not seem to be the worse 
for it. He even began or proceeded with another tragedy— 
Agalhocle — and attended several Academic meetings. But 
such proceedings in the case of a man of eighty-four were 
impossible. To keep himself up, he exceeded even his usual 
excess in coffee, and about the middle of May he became very 
ill. On the 30th of May the priests were once more sent for 
—to wit, his nephew, the abb€ Mignot, the abbe Gaultier, who 
had officiated on the former occasion, and the parish priest, 
the cure of St Sulpice. He was, however, in a state of batf- 
insensibility, and petulantly motioned them away, dying in 
the course of the night. The legends about his death fn a 
state of terror and despair are certainly false; but it must 
be regarded as singular and unfortunate that he, who had more 
than once gone out of his way to conform ostentatiously and 
with his tongue in his cheek, should have neglected or missed 
this last opportunity. The result was a difficulty as to burial, 
which was compromised by hurried interment at the abbey 
of SceUieres in Champagne, anticipating the interdict of the 
bishop of the diocese by an hour or two. On the 10th of July 
1791 the body was transferred to the Pantheon, but during 
the Hundred Days it was once more, it is said, disentombed, 
and stowed away in a piece of waste ground. His heart) taken 
from the body when it was embalmed, and given to Madame 
Denis and by her to Madame de Villette, wa3 preserved in a 
silver case, and when it was proposed (in 1S64) to restore it to 



204 



VOLTAIRE 



the other remains, the sarcophagus at Sainte Genevieve (the 
Pantheon) was opened and found to be empty. 

In person Voltaire was not engaging, even as- a young man. 
His extraordinary thinness is commemorated, among other 
things, by the very poor but well-known epigram attributed 
to Young, and identifying him at once with " Satan, Death 
and Sin." In old age he was a mere skeleton, with a long nose 
and eyes of preternatural brilliancy peering out of his wig. 
He never seems to have been addicted to any manly sport, and 
took little exercise. He was sober enough (for his day and 
society) in eating and drinking generally; but drank coffee, 
as his contemporary, counterpart and enemy, Johnson, drank 
tea, in a hardened and inveterate manner. It may be presumed 
with some certainty that his attentions to women were for the 
most part pla tonic; indeed, both on the good and the bad side 
of him, he was all brain. He appears to have had no great 
sense of natural beauty, in which point he resembled his 
generation (though one remarkable story is told of his being 
deeply affected by Alpine scenery); and, except in his passion 
for the stage, he does not seem to have cared much for any of 
the arts. Conversation and literature were, again as in Johnson's 
case, the sole gods of his idolatry. As for bis moral character, 
the wholly intellectual cast of mind just referred to makes it 
difficult to judge that. His beliefs or absence of beliefs eman- 
cipated him from conventional scruples; and be is not a good 
subject for those who maintain that a nice morality may exist 
independently of religion. He was good-natured when not 
crossed, generous to dependents who made themselves useful 
to him, and indefatigable in defending the cause of those who 
were oppressed by the systems with which he was at war. But 
he was inordinately vain*, and totally unscrupulous in gaining 
money, in attacking an enemy, or in protecting himself when 
he was threatened with danger. His peculiar fashion of attack- 
ing the popular beliefs of his time has also failed to secure the 
approval of some who had very little sympathy with those 
beliefs. The only excuse made for the alternate cringing and 
insult, the alternate abuse and lying, which marked his course 
in this matter, has been the very weak plea that a man cannot 
fight with a system — a plea which is sufficiently answered by 
the retort that a great many men have so fought and have won. 
Voltaire's works, and especially his private letters,* constantly 
contain the word "1'inJime" and the expression (in full or 
abbreviated) " ccrasea riniime." This has been misunderstood 
in many ways— the mistake going so far as in some cases 
to suppose that Voltaire meant Christ by this opprobrious 
expression. No careful and competent student of his works 
has ever failed to correct this gross misapprehension. " L'in- 
fime" is not God; it is not Christ; it is not Christianity; 
it is not even Catholicism. Its briefest equivalent may be 
given as M persecuting and privileged orthodoxy " in genera), 
and, more particularly! it is the particular system which 
Voltaire saw around him, of which he had felt the effects in his 
own exiles and the confiscations of his books, and of which he 
saw the still worse effects in the hideous sufferings of CaUs and 
LaBarre. 

Vast and various as the work of Voltaire is. tovastness and 
variety are of the essence of it* writer's peculiar quality. The 
divisions of it have long beea recognised, and may be treated 

The first of these divisions m order, not the least in bulk, and, 
though not the first m merit, inferior to none in the amount of 
congenial labour spent on it. is the Jhssow. Between fifty and sixty 
different pieces (including a few which exist only in fragments or 
sketches) are included an his writings, and they cover hts literary 
life. It k at first sight remarkable that \ohaire. whose come 
power was undoubtedly *ar an excess of his tragic, should have 
written many tingtdJM of no sum! excellence in their way, but 
only one fair second- cl ass comedy. JVssmss. His other efforts in 
this latter direction are either afight and almost msjpificant in 
scope, or. as in the case of the sotnewkat famous £r*t**t*\ deriving 
all their interest from being personal Kbete. His tragedies, on the 
t of utnmiliiisii saerit in their own way. 
Isaacson of Racine 
the latter certainly. 
oi | i ai a t judges, sn 




a 



r jying the difficult and artificial name of the French tragedy. 

'aire, among those where love is admitted as a principal motive, 
and Metope, among those where this motive is excluded and kept in 
subordination, yield to no plays of their classe in such interest as is 
possible on the model, in stage effect and in uniform literary merit. 
Voltaire knew that the public opinion of his time reserved its highest 
prizes for a capable and successful dramatist, and he was deter- 
mined to win those prizes. He therefore set all his wonderful 
cleverness to the task, going so far as to adopt a little even of that 
Romantic disobedience to the strict Classical theory which he con- 
demned, and no doubt sincerely, in Shakespeare. 

As regards his poems proper, of which there are two long ones, 
the Henriade and the PuceUe, besides smaller pieces, of which a 
bare catalogue fills fourteen royal octavo columns, their value 
is very unequal The Heuriade has by universal consent been 
relegated to the position of a school reading book. Constructed 
and written in almost slavish imitation of Virgil, employing for 
medium a very unsuitable vehicle— the Alexandrine couplet (as 
reformed and rendered monotonous for dramatic purposes)— and 
animated neither by enthusiasm for the subject nor by real under- 
standing thereof, it could not but be an unsatisfactory performance. 
The PnctUe, if morally inferior, is from a literary point of view of 
far more value. It is desultory to a degree; it is a base libel on 
religion and history; it differs from its model Ariosto in being, not, 
as Ariosto is, a mixture of romance and burlesque, but a sometimes 
tedious tissue of burlesque pure and simple; 'and it b exposed to 
the objection — often and justly urged — that much of its fun depends 
simply on the fact that there were and are many people who believe 
enough in Christianity to make its jokes give nam to them and to 
make their disgust at such jokes piquant to others. NevWthekss, 
with all the FuccUe's faults, it is amusing. The minor poems are 



using. Tt ._ 

as much above the Puceile as the Puceue is, above the Henriade. 
It is true that there is nothing, or hardly anything, that property 
deserves the name of poetry in them — no passion, no sense of the 
beauty of nature, only a narrow " criticism of life, " only n conven- 
tional and restricted choice of language, a cramped and monotonous 
prosody, and none of that indefinite suggestion which has been 
rightly said to be of the poetic essence. But there is immense wit. 
a wc xlerful command of such metre and language as the taste of 
the time allowed to the poet, occasionally a singular if somewhat 
artificial grace, and a curious felicity of diction and manner. 

The third division of Voltaire's works in a rational order consists 
of his prose romances or tales. These productions — incomparably 
the most remarkable and most absolutely good fruit of his genius— 
were usually composed as pamphlets, with a purpose of polemic 
in religion, politics, or what not. Thus Candide attacks religious 
and philosophical optimism, V Homme aux quaranle ecus certain 
social and political ways of the time, Za&ii and others the received 
forms of moral and metaphysical orthodoxy, while some are mere 
lampoons on the Bible, the unfailing source of Voltaire's wit. But 
(as always happens in the case of literary work where the form 
exactly suits the author's genius) the purpose in all the best of them 
disappears almost entirely. It is in these works more than in any 
others that the peculiar quality of Voltaire — ironic style without 
exaggerati on a pp ears. That he learned it partly from Saint 
Evremond, still more from Anthony Hamilton, partly even from 
his own enemy Le Sage, is perfectly true, but he gave it perfectioa 
and completion. If one especial peculiarity can be singled out, 
it h the extreme restraint and simplicity of the verbal treatment. 
Voltaire never dwells too long on this point, stays to laugh at what 
he has said, elucidates or comments on his own jokes, guffaws over 
them or exaggerates their form. The famous " pour cocourager 
les autres " (that the shooting of Byng did " encourage the others ** 
very much is not to the point) is a tvpical example, and indeed the 
whole of Candide shows the style at its perfection. 

The fourth division of Voltaire's work, the ■I'mwicaf, as the 
bulkiest of all except his correspondence, and some parts of H are 
or have been among the most read, but it is far from being even 
among the best. The small treatises on Charles XI I. and FVter the 
Great are indeed models of clear narrative and ingenious sf some- 
what superficial grasp and arrangement. The so-called SmcU da 
Louis XIV. and Stick dt Lmns X V. (the latter inferior to the former 
but still valuable) contain a gnrat miscellany of interesting matter, 
treated bv a man of great acuteness and unsurpassed power of 
writing, who had also had access to much important private informa- 
tion. HBut < •..-.- 
me 

lei _ 

works. These defects are an almost total absence of any compre- 
hension of what has since been called the philosophy of history, 
the constant laestnce of gross prejudice, frequent inaccuracy of 
detail, and, above alL a complete incapacity to look at anything 
except from the narrow standpoint of a half-pessimist and hall 
aetf-sarisfied fWosofhe of the 16th century. 

His work in physics concerns us less than any other here; it is, 
however, not sstnnsawrobie in bulk, and » said by experts in give 
proof of aptitude. 

To his own age Voltaire was pre-eminently a port and a philo- 
sopher; the unkind nra of succeeding ages has sometimes questioned 



t even in these books defects ate present, which appear 
much more strongly in the singular oils podrida entitled Esses sur 
the 4 avoirs de t empire and in the minor historical 



VOLTERRA 



205 



whether be had any title to either name, and especially to the latter. 
His largest philosophical work, at least to called, is the curious 
medley* entitled Dtctionnaire philosophique, which is compounded 
of the articles contributed by him to the great Encyclopedic and of 
sfwral minor pieces. No one of Voltaire's works shows his anti- 
religioas or at least anti-ecclesiastical animus more strongly. The 
various title- words of the several articles arc often the merest stalking- 
horses, under cover of which to shoot at the Bible or the church, the 
target being now and then shifted to the political institutions of the 
writer's country, his personal foes, &a, and the whole being largely 
seasoned with that acute, rather superficial, common-sense, but 
abo commonplace, ethical and social criticism which the 18th century 
called philosophy. The book ranks perhaps second only to the 
sovels as showing the character, literary and personal, of Voltaire; 
and despite its form it is nearly as readable. The minor philosophical 
works are of no very different character. In the brief Trait* de 
mtiapkyuqu* the author makes his grand effort, but scarcely succeeds 
in doing more than show that he bad no real conception of what 
rsetaphysic is. 

In general criticism and miscellaneous writing Voltaire is not 
iaierior to himself in any of his other functions. Almost all his 
more substantive works, whether in verse or prose, are preceded by 
prefaces of one sort or another, which are models of his own light 
pungent causerie; and in a vast variety of nondescript pamphlets 
and writings be shows himself a perfect journalist. In literary 
criticism pure and simple his principal work is the Commentaire 
sar Cometlle, though he wrote a good deal more of the same kind— 
sometimes (as in his Life and notices of Molicre) independently 
sometimes as part of his Siecles. Nowhere, perhaps, except when 
he » dealing with religion, are Voltaire's defects felt more than 
here. He was quite unacquainted with the history of his own 
language and literature, and more here than anywhere else he showed 
the extraordinarily limited and conventional spirit which accom- 
panied the revolt of the French 18th century against limits 
conventions in theological, ethical and political matters. 

There remains only the huge division of his correspondence, which 
b constantly being augmented by fresh discoveries, and which, 
according to Georges Sengcsco, has never been fully or correctly 
printed, even in some of the parts longest known. In this great 
mass Voltaire's personality is of course best shown, and perhaps his 
literary qualities not worst. His immense energy and versatility, 
his adroit and unhesitating flattery when he chose to flatter, his 
ruthless sarcasm when he chose to be sarcastic, his rather un- 



scrupulous business faculty, his more than rather unscrupulous 
resolve to double and twist m any fashion so as to escape his ener* : — 
—all these things appear throughout the whole mass of letters. 



Most judgments of Voltaire have been unduly coloured by sympathy 
with or dislike of what may be briefly called his polemical side. 
When sympathy and dislike are both discarded or allowed for, he 
remains one of the most astonishing, if not exactly one of the most 
admirable, figures of letters. That be never, as Carlyle complains, 
gave utterance to one great thought is strictly true. That his 
characteristic is for the most part an almost superhuman cleverness 
rather than positive genius is also true. But that he was merely 
a mocker, which Carlyle and others have also said, is not strictly 
true or fair. In politics proper he seems indeed to have had few or 
no constructive ideas, and to have been entirely ignorant or quite 
reckless of the fact that his attacks were destroying a state of things 
for which as a whole he neither had nor apparently wished to have 
any substitute. In religion he protested stoutly, and no doubt 
sincerely, that his own attitude was not purely negative; but here 
alto be seems to have failed altogether to distinguish between pruning 
and cutting down. Both here and elsewhere his great fault was an 
inveterate superficiality. But this superficiality was accompanied 
by such wonderful acuteoess within a certain range, by such an 
absolutely unsurpassed literary aptitude and sense of style in all 
the lighter and some of the graver modes of literature, by such 
untiring energy and versatility in enterprise, that he has no parallel 
among ready writers anywhere. Not the most elaborate work of 
Voltaire is of much value for matter; but not the \try slightest 
work of Voltaire is devoid of value in form. In literary craftsmanship, 
at once versatile and accomplished, he has no superior and scarcely 
a rival. 

BrauOGBAraY.— The bibliography of Voltaire is a very large 
subject, and it has been the special occupation of a Rumanian 
diplomatist of much erudition and judgment, Georges Bengesco, 
Bihltographie de Voltaire (4 vols., Paris, 1883-90). The best edi- 
tion of the works is that by Louts Moland m 52 volumes (Paris, 
Gamier) ; the handiest and most compact is that issued in 13 volumes 
roval octavo by Fume, and kept in print by the house of Didot. 
Of the earlier editions, though their bulk is an objection, several are 
mtcfcsting and valuable. Especially may be noticed the so-called 
edition of Kehl, in which Voltaire himself, and later Bcaumarchais, 
were c o ncerned (70 vols., 1785-80) ; those of Dalibon and Baudouin. 
each in 97 volumes (from which M the hundred volumes of Voltaire " 
have become a not infrequent figure of speech) ; and the excellent 
edition of Beochot fi 829) in 72 volumes. Editions of separate or 
selected works are innumerable, and so are books upon Voltaire. 
These- is no really good detailed life of him, with complete examina- 
AXVIH 4* 



tkrti of his work, in any language* though y containing 

materi.il* for such are numerous (the hnt ui importance being that 
of T. J. Dirvemet in 1797), aad wnieiime* (e4£«eLiliy in the case of 
M. D* uioiresterrcs* Voii&ir* e* la jottiii ftattuitie, ittb? and others) 
excclk it. In English the essays of Carlyle and Viscount Morley 
(1872) are both in their way favafciabss, ami u>j freji c.v tent correct 
one another. The principal detaiW life in, Efi^iuh u that of an 
America writer. James Partwi {18*0, which gives the facts with 
very c nsidcrabte detail and lair accuracy, but with la tic power of 
critic* mi. That «1 Mr S. G, TaHentyre {London, 1903, 2 vols.) is 
gossip 14 and popular, Franch* Cspvono'i Kotiaim (1M2), which 
contain a useful bibliography, J* Churl on Cci(lm*'b Voltaire in 
EngUxi I U&J6), and Jh R Lounahurya Shakespeare and Voltaire 
(1902) may alio be specified. (G. Sa.) 

VOLTERRA (anc. Volaltrrac), a town and episcopal see of 
Tuscany, Italy, in the province of Pisa, from which it is 51 m. 
by raU S.E., and 35 by road W.N.W. from Siena. Pop. (1001) 
552a (town); 14,207 (commune). It stands on a commanding 
olive-dad eminence 1785 ft. above sea-level, with a magnificent 
view over mountains and sea (the latter some 20 m. distant), 
and is surrounded by the massive remains of its ancient walls 
of large, roughly-rectangular blocks of stone, some 4} m. in 
circuit, enclosing an area which must have been larger than 
was actually needed for habitation. Tombs of the pre-Etruscan 
or Villanova period have been found within its circuit, but 
only at the north-west extremity near S. Giusto. Here the 
clay of which the hill is formed is gradually giving way, causing 
landslips and the collapse of buildings, notably of the abbey 
church of S. Salvatore (1030). The medieval town occupies 
only the southern portion of this area. The most important 
relic of its Etruscan period is the Porta dell' Arco, an archway 
of dark grcystone, about 20 ft. high, the corbels of which are 
adorned with almost obliterated heads, probably representing 
the guardian deities of the city. There are remains of baths 
and a cistern of Roman date. Voltcrra preserves its medi- 
eval character, having suffered little modification since the 
16th century. The town contains many picturesque medieval 
towers and houses. The Palazzo dei Priori (1208-54), now 
the municipal palace, h especially fine, and the piazza in which 
it stands most picturesque. The museum contains a very 
valuable collection of Etruscan antiquities, especially cinerary 
urns from the ancient tombs N. and E. of the town. The urns 
themselves are of alabaster, with the figure of the deceased on 
the lid, and reliefs from Greek myths on the front. They 
belong to the 3rd-2nd centuries B.C. A tomb outside the 
town of the 6th century B.C., discovered in 1898, consisted of 
a round underground chamber, roofed with gradually projecting 
slabs of stone. The roof was supported in the centre by a 
massive square pillar (E. Petersen in Rdmische Milleilungen, 
1898, 409; cf. id. ibid., 1904, 244 for a similar one near Florence). 
There are also in the museum Romanesque sculptures from the 
old church of S. Giusto, &c. The cathedral, consecrated *n 
xi 20 (?), but enlarged and adorned by Niccolo Pisano (?) in 
1254, has a fine pulpit of that period, and on the high altar are 
sculptures by Minoda Ficsole; it contains several good pictures — 
the best is an " Annunciation " by Luca Signorelli. The sacristy 
has fine carvings. The baptistery belongs to the 13th century; 
the font is by Andrea Sansovino, and the ciborium by Mino 
da Fiesole. Both these buildings are in black and white 
marble. S. Francesco has frescoes of 14 10, and S. Girolamo 
tcrra-cottas and pictures. The citadel, now a house of correc- 
tion, consists of two portions, the Rocca Vccchia, built in 
1J43 by Walter de Brienne, duke of Athens, and the Rocca 
Nuova, built by the Florentines (1472). The inhabitants are 
chiefly employed in the manufacture of vases and other orna- 
ments from alabaster, of good quality, found in the vicinity. 
There are also in the neighbourhood rock-salt works and mines, 
as well as boracic acid works. This add is exhaled in volcanic 
gas, which is passed through water tanks. The acid is deposited 
in the water and afterwards evaporated. It is sent to England, 
and used largely in the manufacture of pottery glaze. 

Volatcrrae (Etruscan Velathri) was one of the most powerful of 
the twelve confederate cities of Et.ru ria. During the war between 
Marius and Sulla it withstood the latter's troops for two years in 



2o6 



VOLTMETER 



82-80 B.C. As a result of its resistance Sulla carried a law for the 
confiscation of the land of those inhabitants of Volaterrae who had 
had the privileges of Roman citizenship. This, however, does not 
seem to have been carried out until Caesar as dictator divided some 
of the territory of Volaterrae among his veterans. Among Us noble 
families the chief was that of the Caecinae, who took their name 
from the river which runs dose to Volaterrae and still retains the 
name Cccina. Cicero defended one of its members in an extant 
speech. It is included by Pliny among the municipal towns of 
Etruria. In the 12th and 13th centuries it enjoyed free institutions; 
in 1361 h f ell under the power of Florence. It rebelled, but was 
retaken and pillaged in 1472. Pcrsius the satirist and the painter 
Daniele da Vohcrra were both natives of the town. Several works 
of the latter are preserved there. 

Sec C. Ricci, VolUrra (Bergamo, 1905); E. Bormann in Corp. 
Jmscr. Latin. xL (Berlin, 1888). p, 324; G. Dennis, Cities and 
Cemeteries of Etruna (London, 1883), ii. 136. (T. As.) 

VOLTMETER, an. instrument for measuring difference of 
electric potential (see Electrostatics) in terms of the unit 
called a volt. The volt (so called after A. Volt a) is defined to 
be difference of potential which acting between the terminals 
of a resistance of one ohm sends through it a continuous current 
of one ampere. A voltmeter is therefore one form of electro- 
meter {q.vX but the term is generally employed to describe 
the instrument which indicates on a scale, not merely in 
arbitrary units but directly in volts, the potential difference of 
its terminals. Voltmeters may be divided into two classes, 
(a) electrostatic, (b) electrokinetic 

Electrostatic voltmeters are based on the principle that when two 
conductors are at different potentials they attract one another 
with a force which varies as the square of the potential difference 
(P. D.) between them. This mechanical stress may be made the 
measure of the P. D. between them, if one of the conductors is fixed 
while the other is movable, this last being subject to a constraint 
due to a spring or to gravity, means being also provided for measur- 
ing either the displacement of the movable conductor against the 
constraint or the force required to hold it in a fixed position relatively 
to the fixed conductor. One large class of electrostatic voltmeters 
consists of a fixed metal plate or plates and a movable plate or plates, 
the two sets of plates forming a condenser (see Ley den Jar). The 
movable system is suspended or pivoted, and when a P. D. is created 
between the fixed and movable plates, the latter are drawn into a 
new position which is resisted by the torque of a wire or by the force 
due to a weight. Utilizing this principle many inventors have 
devised forms of electrostatic voltmeter. One of the best known 
of these is Lord Kelvin's multicellular voltmeter. In this instru- 
ment (fig. 1) there arc two sets of fixed metal plates, connected 




Fie l.— Lord Kelvin's Mnf tl cc Buhr Ekctrartatk Voltmeter. 



together and ha 
the shape * 
them is 




bane, that ts. approximately 

disk, la the space between 

'a fight aluminium 

"*"~ ~* aluminium 

stiver wire, 

blades 



to the other member of the circuit, and a difference of potential 
is created between them, then the movable needle is drawn in so 
that the aluminium blades are more included between the fixed 
plates. This movement is resisted by the torsional elasticity of 
the suspending wire, and hence a fixed indicating needle attached 
to the movable system can be made to indicate directly on a scale 
the difference of potential between the terminals of the instrument 
in volts. Instruments of this kind have been constructed not only 
by Lord Kelvin, but also by W. E. Ayrton and others, for measuring 
voltages from 10,000 volts down to 1 volt. In other types 
of electrostatic instruments the movable system rotates round a 
horizontal axis or rests upon knife edges like a scale beam ; in others 
again the movable system is suspended by a wire. In the former 
case the control is generally due to gravity, the plates being so 
balanced on the knife edge that they tend to take up a certain 
fixed position from which they are constrained when the electric 
forces come into play, their displacement relatively to the fixed 
plates being shown on a scale and thus indicating the P. D. between 
them. In the case of high tension voltmeters, the movable plate 
takes the form of a single plate of paddle shape, and for extra high 
tensions it may simply be suspended from the end of a balanced 
arm; or the movable system may take the form of a cylinder 
which is suspended within, but not touching, another fixed cylinder, 
the relative position being such that the electric forces draw the 
suspended cylinder more into the fixed one. Electrostatic volt- 
meters are now almost entirely used for the measurement of high 
voltages from 2000 to 50.000 volts employed in dcctrotechnics. 
For such purposes the whole of the working parts are contained in a 
metal case, the indicating needle moving over a divided scale which 
is calibrated to show directly the potential difference in volts of 
the terminals of the instrument. One much-used electrostatic 
voltmeter of this type is the Kelvin multicellular vertical pattern 
voltmeter (fig. 2). For use at the switch-boards of electric supply 
stations the instrument takes 
another form known as the 
" edge-wise " pattern. 

Another class of voltmeters 
comprises the eUttrokinetic volt- 
meters. In these instruments 
the potential difference between 
two points is measured by the j 
electric current produced in 
wire connecting to two points. ! 
In any case of potential differ- 
ence measurement it is essential 
not to disturb the potential 
difference being measured; 
hence k follows that in electro* 
kinetic voltmeters the wire con- 
necting the two points of which 

the potential difference is to be Fie. 2.— Round Dial Kelvin Multi- 
measured must be of very cellular Electrostatic Voltmeter, 
high resistance. The instrument 5-in. scale. For high pressure, 
then simply becomes an am- 
meter of nigh resistance, and may take any of the forms of prac- 
tically used ammeters (see Amperemeter). Electromagnetic 
voltmeters may therefore be thermal* electromagnetic or electro- 
djfnamic. 

As a rule, electromagnetic voltmeters arc only suitable for the 
measurement of relatively small potentials — o to 200 or 300 volts. 
Numerous forms of hot-wire or thermal voltmeter have been devised. 
In that known as the Cardew voltmeter, a fine platinum-silver wire, 
having a resistance of about 300 ohms, fa stretched in a tube or upon 
a frame contained in a tube. This frame or tube b so constructed of 
iron and brass (one-third iron and two-thirds brass) that its tempera- 
ture cocmcient of linear expansion is the same as that of the platinum- 
silver alloy. The fine wire is fixed to one end of the tube or frame 
by an insulated support and the other end b attached to a motion- 
multiplying gear. As the frame has the same linear expansion as 
the wire, external chances of the t e mpera tore will not affect their 
relative length, but if the fine wire is heated by the passage of an 
electric current, its expansion will move the indicating needle over 
the scale, the motion being multiplied by the gear. In the Hartmann 
and Braun form of hot-wire voltmeter, the fine wire b fixed between 
two supports, and the expansion produced when a current b passed 
through it causes the mire to sag down, the sag being multiplied 
by a gear and made to move an indicating needle over a scale. 
In this case, the actual working wire, being short, must be placed 
in series with an additional high resistance. Hot wire voltmeters, 
like electrostatic voltmeters, are suitable for use with alternating 
currents of any frequency as well as with continuous currents, since 
their indications depend upon the heating power of the current* 
which b proportional to the square of the current and therefore 
to the square of the difference of potential between the terminals. 

Electromagnetic voltmeters consist of a coil of fine wire connec te d 
to the terminals of the instrument, and the current produced in 
that wire by a difference of potential bet wren the terminals creates 
a magnetic fidd proportional at any point to the strength of the 
current. This magnetic field may be made to cause a displacement 




VOLTURNO— VOLUINSKY 



■207 



spending taxed position ot the needle 00 the scale, une ot tl 
utef ul forms of electromagnetic voltmeter U that generally 
as a numabk coil voltmeter (fig. 3). In this instrument th< 




in a email piece of toft iron, at In the case of the corresponding 
ammeters, and this in turn may be made to displace an indicating 
needle over a scale so that corresponding to every given potential 
difference betwee n the terminals 01 the instrument there is a corre- 
sponding fixed position of the needle on the scale. One of the moat 

known 
'ere is a 
fixed permanent magnet, produc- 
ing a constant magnetic field, and 
in the interspace b e t ween the poles 
is fixed a delicately, pivoted cofl 
of wire carried in jewelled bear- 
ings. The normal position of this 
coil is with its plane parallel to the 
lines of force of the field. The 
current is got in and out of the 
movable coil by means of fine 
flexible wires. The movable coil 
has attached to it an index needle 
moving over a scale, and* a fixed 
coil of high-resistance wire is 
included in series with the movable 
coil between the terminals of the 
instrument. When a difference 
Fig. 3. — Round Dial Voltmeter of potential is made between the 
of Kelvin Siphon Recorder, terminals, a current passes through 
dead beat moving coil type, the movable coil, which then tends 
with front removed. to place itself with its plane more 

at right angles to the lines of force 
of the field. This motion is resisted by the torsion of a spiral spring 
resembling the hair-spring of a watch having one end fixed to the 
coil axis, and there is therefore a definite position of the needle on 
the scale corresponding to each potential difference between the 
terminals, provided it is within the range of the control. These 
instruments are only adapted for the measurement of continuous 
potential difference, that is to say, unidirectional potential differ- 
ence, but not for alternating voltages. Like the corresponding 
ammeters, they have the great advantage that the scales are equi- 
divisiortal and that there is no dead part in the scale, whereas both 
the electrostatic and electrothermal voltmeters, above described, 
labour under the disadvantage that the scale divisions are not equal 
bat increase with rise of voltages, hence there is generally a portion 
of the scale near the aero point where the divisions arc so close as to 
be useless for reading purposes and are therefore omitted. For the 
measurement of voltages in continuous current generating stations, 
movable coil voltmeters are much 
employed, generally constructed 
then in the "edgewise" pattern 
(fig- 4). 

Ettctrodynomic Voltmeters. — A 
high-resistance electrodynamo- 
meter may be employed as a volt- 
meter. In this case both the fixed 
and movable circuits consist of 
fine wires, and the instrument is 
constructed and used in a manner 
simitar to the Siemens dynamo- 
meter employed for measuring con- 
Fio. 4. — Edgewise Voltmeter, tinuous alternating current (sec 
Stanley D' Arson val type. Amperemeter). Another much- 
used method of measuring con- 
tinuous current voltages or unidirectional potential difference 
employs the principle of potentiometer (gv.). In this case a high- 
n-sistance wire is connected between the points of which the potential 
difference is required, and from some known fraction of this resist- 
ance wires are brought to an electrostatic voltmeter, or to a mov- 
able coil electromagnetic voltmeter, according as the voltage to 
be measured is alternating or continuous. This measurement is 
applicable to the measurement of high potentials, either alternating 
or continuous, provided that in the case of alternating currents the 
high resistance employed is wound non-inductively and an electro- 
static volt meter is used. The high-resistance wire should, moreover, 
be one haying a negligible change of resistance with temperature. 
For this purpose it must be an alloy such as manga run or constantan. 
It is always an advantage, if possible, to employ an electrostatic 
voltmeter for measuring potential difference if it is n ecessa ry to 
keep the voltmeter permanently connected to the two points. Any 
form of elect rokinetic voltmeter which involves the passage of a 
current through the wire necessitates the expenditure of energy to 
maintain this current and therefore involves cost of production. 
This amount may not by any means be an insignificant quantity. 
Consider, for instance, a hot-wire instrument, such as -a Cardew's 
voltmeter. If the wire has a resistance of 300 ohms and is connected 
to two points differing in potential by 100 volts, the instrument 
passes a current of one-third of an ampere and takes up 33 watts in 
power. Since there arc 8760 hours in a year, if such an instrument 
were connected continuously to the circuit it would take up energy 
equal to 263^000 watt-hours, or 260 Board of Trade units per annum. 
II the cost of production of this energy was only one penny per unit, 




the working expenses of keeping such a voltmeter in connexion with 
a circuit would therefore be more than £1 per annum, representing 
a capitalized value of, say, £10. Electrostatic instruments, however, 
take up no power and hence cost nothing for maintenance other than 
wear and tear of the instrument. 

The qualities required in a good voltmeter .ire: — (i,) It should be 
quick in action, that is to say. tlie Medio hli'mUl come quickly to a 
position giving immediately the PD, of the terrnin.ils of ihr instru- 
ment. <u.) The instrument should cive the name reading for the 
same P.D. whether this has been arrived at by increasing [torn a lower 
value or decreasing from a larger value ; in other words, there should 
be no instrumental hysteresis, (iis.) The instrument should havn 
no temperature correction; tlii* i* ft ftoofl quality of efeCtfOVhVttc 
instruments, but in all voltniu.cr- «i iiu* Uw.u«wtu;uc typo wukh 
are wound with copper wire an increase of one degree centigrade 
in the average temperature of that wire alters the resistance by 
0-4%, and therefore to the same extent alters the correctness of 
the indications, (iv.) It should, if possible, be available both for 
alternating and continuous currents, (v.) It should be portable 
and work in any position. (vL) It should not be disturbed easily by 
external electric or magnetic fields. This last point b important in 
connexion with voltmeters used on the switchboards of electric 
generating stations, where relatively strong electric or magnetic 
fields may be present, due to strong currents passing through con- 
ductors near or on the board. It is therefore always necessary to 
check the readings of such an instrument in situ. Electrostatic 
voltmeters arc also liable to have their indications disturbed by 
electrification of the glass cover of the instrument: this can be 
avoided by varnishing the glass with a semi-conducting varnish so 
as to prevent the location of electrostatic charges on the glassy 

See J. A. Fleming, Handbook r or the Electrical Laboratory and 
Testing-Room (London, 1903); G. Aspinall Parr, Electrical Engineer- 
ing Measuring Instruments (London, 1903): K. Edgecumbe and 
F. Punga, " On Direct Reading Measuring instruments for Switch- 
board Use," Journ. Inst, EUc Eng. (London, 1904), 33, 620. 

(J. A. F.) 

VOLTURHO (anc Volturnus, from vobcre, to roll), a river 
of central Italy, which rises in the neighbourhood of Al fed era 
in the central Apennines of Samnium, runs S. as far as Venafro, 
and then S.E. After a coarse of some 75 m. it receives, about 
5 m. E. of Caiazzo, the Calore, only 3 m. less in length, which 
runs first N. and then W., and after 37 m. reaches Benevento, 
near which it receives several tributaries; then curves round 
the mountain mass to the N. of the Caudine Forks, and so 
beyond Telese joins the Volturno. The united stream now 
flows W.S.VV. past Capua (anc Casilinum), where the Via 
Appia and Latina joined just to the N. of the bridge over it, 
and so through the Campanian plain, with many windings, 
into the sea. The direct length of the lower course is about 
31 m., so that the whole is slightly longer than that of the 
Liri, and its basin far larger. The river has always had con- 
siderable military importance, and the colony of Volt urn um 
(no doubt preceded by an older port of Capua) was founded 
in 194 B.C. at its mouth on the S. bank by the Romans; it 
is now about one mile inland. A fort had already been placed 
there during the Roman siege of Capua, in order, with Puteoll, 
to serve for the provisioning of the army. Augustus placed a 
colony of veterans here. The Via Domitiana from Sinuessa to 
Puteoli crossed the river at this point, and some remains of 
the bridge are visible. The river was navigable as far as Capua. 

On the 1st of October i860 the Neapolitan forces were 
defeated on the S. bank of the Volturno, near S. Maria di Capua 
Vetere, by the Picdmontese and Garibaldi's troops, a defeat 
which led to the fall of Capua. (T. As.) 

VOLUINSKY. ARTEHY PETROVICH (1680-1740), Russian 
general and statesman, son of Peter Voluinsky, one of the 
dignitaries at the court of Theodore III., came of an ancient 
family. He entered a dragoon regiment in 1704 and rose to 
the rank of captain; then, exchanging the military service for 
diplomacy, he was attached to the suite of Vice- Chancellor 
Shafirov. He was present during the campaign of the Pruth, 
shared Shafirov's captivity in the Seven Towers and in 1715 
was sent by Peter the Great to Persia to promote Russian 
influence there, and if possible to find an outlet to India. In 
1 7 18 Peter made him one of his six adjutant-generals, and 
governor of Astrakhan. In this post Voluinsky displayed dis- 
tinguished administrative and financial talents. In 1723 he 
married Alexandra Naruishkina, Peter's cousin. The same 



208 



VOLUNTEERS 



.year he was accused of peculation and other offences to the 
emperor, who caned him severely and deprived him of his 
plenipotentiary powers, despite his undeniable services in 
Persia, but for which Peter could never have emerged so tri- 
umphantly from the difficult Persian war of 1722-23. Cath- 
erine I. made Voluinsky governor of Kazan for a short time, 
and he held the same post for two years (1728-30) under 
Peter II. But his incurable corruption and unbridled temper 
so discredited the government that he was deprived of the 
post shortly after the accession of Anne. From 1730 to 1736 
Voluinsky served in the army under Mtinnich. In 1737 ne 
was 'appointed the second Russian plenipotentiary at the 
abortive congress of Nemirov held for the conclusion of peace 
with the Porte. In 1738 he was introduced into the Russian 
cabinet by Biren as a counterpoise against Andrei Osterman. 
Voluinsky, however, now thought himself strong enough to 
attempt to supersede Biren himself, and openly opposed the 
favourite in the Council of State in the debates as to the in- 
demnity due to Poland for the violations of her territory during 
the war of the Polish Succession, Biren advising that a liberal 
indemnity should be given, whereas Voluinsky objected to any 
indemnity at all. Biren thereupon forced Anne to order an 
inquiry into Voluinsky's past career, with the result that he 
was tried before a tribunal of Biren's creatures and condemned 
to be broken on the wheel and then beheaded. On the scaffold, 
" by the clemency of the empress," his punishment was miti- 
gated to the severing of his right hand followed by decapitation. 
The whole business seems to have been purely a piece of 
vindictiveness on the part of Biren. 

See R. N. Bain, The Pupils of Peter the Great (London, 1807); 
D. A. Korsakov, From the Lives of Russian Statesmen of the XVlJIth 
Century (Rus.) (Kazan, 1891). (R. N. B.) 

VOLUNTEERS, a general term for soldiers who are not pro- 
fessionals nor permanently embodied under arms in peace. 
Although it would be difficult to say when the principle of 
volunteer organization for national defence was first adopted in 
England, it is certain that voluntary military societies existed 
in various parts of the country in the reign of Henry VIII., who 
in fact granted a charter in 1537 to the " Fraternity or Guyldc 
of Saint George: Maisters and Rulars of the said Science of 
Artillary as aforesaid rehearsed for long-bowcs Cros-bowes and 
Hand-Gonncs." This ancient corps is now the Honourable 
Artillery Company of London. Although the Honourable Artillery 
Company has always been a distinct association, it was at one 
time (notably during the Great Rebellion) a centre of instruction 
for the City-trained bands, and in later times the HAC, divided 
into artillery and infantry units, has been assimilated as regards 
training and obligations to the Volunteer or Territorial Forces. 
Charters of a similar kind were granted to a Colchester society 
in 161 9 and to one at Bury St Edmunds in 1628. In the 16th 
and 17th centuries also various temporary corps outside the 
militia or trained-band organization were called volunteers. 
At Boston, Massachusetts, there is established a corps* bearing 
the name of the " Antient and Honorable Artillery Company 
of Massachusetts." This company was formed in 1638 after its 
London prototype. 

The notion of a large organized Volunteer Force, however, 
seems to have originated in England at the time of the Militia 
Bill of 1757, which was amended in 1758 so as to allow the 
militia captains to accept volunteers instead of the ordinary 
militiamen who were compuborHy furnisii-.-4 pro rata by each 
parish. In 1778 the volunteers wcic ftliil voluntary substitutes 
for mil it hi men, though formed in 
m]lili;'L unit, but volunteer cotpa 
independently of the militia* 
force hod sprung up in 
with foreign lov; 
the gentry in the 
176a to 
strength til 
menl 01 ' ! 
aUempU 




the moderate men in parliament therefore hastened to disband 
it. But this military coup d'ilal was not forgotten in England. 
Ireland indeed supplied 70,000 volunteers during the Napoleonic 
wars, practically in place of her militia quota. But the rebellion 
of 1798 kept alive the memory of 17.8a, and about 1804 the 
government disarmed and disbanded them. 

The English and Scottish volunteers, disbanded in 1783, were 
promptly revived when the French Revolutionary Wars pro- 
duced a new and more formidable enemy. Volunteer corps, 
some dependent as companies upon the militia, others inde- 
pendent units, were raised in 1704, volunteer service counting 
as militia service for the purposes of raising the county, town or 
parish quota. This was followed in 1798 by the formation, for 
purely local defence, of the Armed Associations, the equivalent 
of the modem "rifle clubs." At the peace of Amiens the 
340,000 volunteers then serving were nearly all disbanded, but 
one or two crops passed into the regular army as entire regiments, 
and some others managed to avoid disbandment until the 
renewal of the war revived the whole force. The danger of 
invasion was then at its height, and in- a few months the force 
numbered 380,000 men, or 3}% of a population which already 
kept up a regular army and a militia. But the training of this 
mass was very unequal; the numbers fell off as the likelihood of 
invasion decreased, and in the reaction from the first enthusiasm 
it began to be questioned whether the volunteers could be of 
much value under the easy conditions of service prevailing. In 
1808, therefore, the Local Militia was formed, in which the terms 
of enlistment and training liabilities were both stricter and better 
defined. The greater part of the volunteers transferred them- 
selves to the Local Militia, which by 181 2 (aided by the ballot) 
had reached a strength of 215,000 as against the 70,000 of the 
remaining volunteers. With the general peace of 1814 all these 
forces except the H.A.C. and the Yeomanry (q.v.) disappeared. 

After an interval of nearly half a century the warlike attitude 
of France caused British citizens once more to arm for the 
protection of their country. The British army and navy had 
declined in strength and efficiency; France, on the other hand, 
by the energetic development of her military .and naval power 
and the early application of steam to ships of war, brought 
the possibilities of the invasion of England in 1846 within 
measurable distance. England at this time was awakened to 
the gravity of the situation by the publication of a letter 
from Wellington to Sir John Burgoyne, 1 followed by a well- 
timed pamphlet by Sir Charles Napier, entitled The Defence of 
England by Volunteer Corps and Militia. The French danger, 
in abeyance during the Crimean War, was revived in 1857, 
when the tone of the French press became more and more 
menacing. The war in China, the Indian Mutiny and diffi- 
culties with the United States taxed the regular army to the 
utmost; while at home, besides the actual garrisons, there were 
barely 36,000 militia. This threatening condition of affairs 
tended to aggravate, if not to produce, a serious commercial 
panic. It was then that the volunteer movement began, and the 
Orsini episode and the openly expressed threats of French officers 
were all that was necessary to free the pent-up enthusiasm. 

A few rifle clubs were already in existence, and two of these, 
working as military bodies from the outset (1852-53), became 
the two senior volunteer battalions— ist V.B. (now 4th Bn.) 
Devonshire Regt., and Victoria Rifles (now oth Bn. London 
Regt.). But it was not until the situation became acute that 
the War Office took the step of raising the " Volunteer Force." 
A circular letter, dated 12th May 1859, from the secretary for 
war to the lords-lieutenant of counties in Great Britain authorized 
the formation of volunteer corps. The general enrolment took 
place at first under the old statute (44 Geo. III.). The main 
provisions of that act, however, were found inapplicable to the 
altered conditions under which invasion was now possible, and 
they failed also to provide for the maintenance of the volunteer 
lorce on a permanent footing in peace. A new act (Volunteer 
Act 1S63) was therefore passed, the most important provision 

which was that apprehended invasion should constitute a 
■See life and Letters of Field -Marshal Sir John Burgoyne. 



VOLUSENUS 



209 



sumocnl reason for the sovereign to call out the volunteers, in lieu 
off the oM condition which required the actual appearance of the 
enemy. The volunteers were, when called out, bound to serve 
in Great Britain until released by a proclamation declaring the 
occasion to have passed. This was modified in 1900 during the 
South African War, a new enactment allowing the authorities 
to call them out at times of "imminent national danger and great 
emergency." In 1871 the volunteers were removed from the 
control of the lords-lieutenant and placed under the War Office. 
In 1 88 1 the infantry battalions were affiliated to the various 
fine reg i ments. 

The force thus brought into existence was composed of corps of 
light horse, mounted rifles, garrison and heavy artillery, engineers 
and rifle volunteers. 1 Later there existed also in connexion with 
the admiralty a corps of " Royal Naval Artillery Volunteers " for 
the coast defences. The terms of service and training liabilities 
underwent no alteration of principle during the forty-eight years 
of the force's existence. The property belonging to the corps 
was vested in the commanding officer and administered by a com- 
mittee of officers under the rules of the corps. These rules were 
in the first instance agreed on at a general meeting of officers and 
men, and, having received the queen's approval, became legal, 
and could be enforced. The commanding officer could dis- 
miss a man from the corps, and a volunteer not on actual service 
could terminate his engagement at fourteen days' notice. But, 
as it became the almost universal practice for the government 
or the regimental commander to issue clothing and equipment 
free, the volunteers contracted in return to serve for three, four or 
five years, and, if they exercised their statutory rights, were 
obliged to refund part of the cost. Further, when capitation 
grants were given for the maintenance of the corps, the volunteer 
had either to earn this by continued service or repay the sum lost 
to the corps by his resignation. These conditions materially 
modified the statute law in practice, and in fact the term of 
four years exacted from the Territorial to-day differs in little 
more than name from the requirements' of the former " corps 
rules." Military law was applicable to officers and men when 
training with regulars. 

The formation of volunteer corps was so rapid that in the 
coarse of a few months in 1859-60 a force of 1 19,000 was created. 
More, however, remained to be done to put an end to the ever- 
recurring commercial panics. The government, which in the 
beginning had tolerated rather than encouraged the movement, 
and had required the volunteer to serve and to equip himself 
entirety at his own expense, now followed the lead of public 
opinion, and decided on maintaining the volunteer force as a part 
cf the regular defensive system. The personnel of the volunteer 
co^ps (with a few exceptions) thereupon underwent a change. 
The wealthy and professional classes, who had at first joined the 
ranks in anticipation of war, cared no longer to bear arms, 
Their places were taken by the artisan class, which added 
materially to the number and permanence of the force. But, as 
contributions and subscriptions now flagged, it became evident 
that public grants would have to be voted for its maintenance, 
*cd a scale of capitation allowances, subject to regulation, was 
fixed, on the recommendation of a Royal Commission. This 
capitation allowance per efficient volunteer was thenceforward 
the basts of all regimental finance and administration. 

The turning-point in the history of the volunteers was the 
South African War. In January 1000, and on several subse- 
quent occasions, the volunteers were invited to supply service 
companies for South Africa, to be incorporated in the regular 
battalions to which the volunteer battalions were affiliated. 
About one-third of the whole force volunteered for service in 
South Africa, and some 30,000 served in the volunteer com- 
panies with the line and in the " City Imperial Volunteers," 
besides a great number of volunteers whom the higher pay, 

1 The light horse and mounted rifles disappeared in the end, or 
ehe were converted into yeomanry. The " nflcs " title waa main- 
tained even after the infantry had been assimilated in drill, uniform 
and other respects to the fine battalions. For this reason even 
vrarlet-elothed battalions had no colours, pouch-belts instead of 
sashes, Ac. 



easier conditions and better prospects of active employment 
in the mounted guerrilla warfare tempted into the ranks of the 
yeomanry. The return of these companies infused into the 
force a leaven of officers and men who had been through an 
experience of constant small skirmishes and prolonged marching 
and bivouacking. Meantime the force as a whole had been 
subjected to a more earnest and vigorous training than it had 
ever had before. The establishment was greatly increased, and 
24 battalions were selected for special training and included with 
the regular home army, in the field force. Various partial 
reorganizations followed in 1901-5, and at last, in 1907-8, the 
whole force was re-cast, re-enlisted upon somewhat different 
terms, and organized along with the yeomanry into the new 
Territorial Force (see United Kingdom: Army). 
Strength op the Volunteer Force 
(From the Territorial Year Book 1909). 



Year. 


Establishment. 


Strength. 


Classed as 
^Efficient. 


1861 . 


211,961 


161,239 


140,100 


1870 
1880 . 


244.966 


193.893 


170,671 


243.546 
250,967 
£60,3 10 


206,537 


196.938 


1885 . 


224,012 


218,207 


1890 


221,048 


212,293 


1895 . 


260,968 


231.704 
229.854 
277,628 
288.476 


224,962 


i«99 - 


263.416 


223.921 


1900 


339.5" 


270.369 
28l,o62 


1901 . 


342.003 


190a 


345.547 
340.171 


268,550 
253,281 


256.451 


1903 . 


242,104 


1904 • 


343.246 
341.283 


253.909 


244.537 


1905 - 


249,611 


241.549 


1906 


338452 
335.849 


255.854 


246,654 


1907 • 


252,791 


244.2" 



VOLUSENUS, FLORENTIUS [Florence Wolson, or Wolsey, 
in later writers Wilson, though in letters in the vernacular 
he writes himself Volusene] (t . 1504-c 1547), Scottish humanist, 
was born near Elgin about 1504. He studied philosophy at 
Aberdeen, and in the dialogue Do Animi TranquillUaU says 
that the description of the abode of tranquillity was based on 
a dream that came to him after a conversation with a fellow- 
student on the banks q( his native Lossie. He was then a 
student of philosophy of four years' standing. Proceeding to 
Paris, he became tutor to Thomas Wynter, reputed son of 
Cardinal Wolsey. He paid repeated visits to England, where 
he was well received by the king, and, after Wolsey's fall, he 
acted as one of Cromwell's agents in Paris. He was in England 
as late as 1534, and appears to have been rector of Speldhuret 
in Kent. In Paris he knew George Buchanan, and found 
patrons in the cardinal Jean de Lorraine and Jean du Bellay. 
He was to have gone with du Bellay on his mission to Italy 
in '535. out illness kept him in Paris. As soon as he recovered 
he set out on his journey, but at Avignon, by the advice of his 
friend Antonio Bonvisi (d. 1558), he sought the patronage of 
the bishop of the diocese, the learned and pious Paul Sadolet, 
who made him master in the school at Carpentras, with a 
salary of seventy crowns. Volusenus paid frequent visits to 
Lyons (where Conrad Gesner saw him, still a young man, in 
1540), probably also to Italy, where he had many friends, 
perhaps even to Spain. A letter addressed to him by Sadolet 
from Rome in 1546 shows that he had then resolved to return 
to Scotland, and had asked advice on the attitude he should 
adopt in the religious dissensions of the time. He died 00 the 
journey, however, at Vienne in Dauphine, in 1546, or early 
in the next year. 

Voluaenus's linguistic studies embraced Hebrew as well as Creek 
and Latin. His reputation, however, rests on the beautiful dia- 
logue, Do Animi TranauUlitaU, first printed by S. Gryphius at 
Lyons in 1543. From internal evidence it appears to have been 
composed about that time, but the subject had exercised the writer 
for many years. The dialogue shows us Christian humanism at 
its best. Volusenus is a great admirer of Erasmus, but he criticizes 
the purity of his Latin and also his philosophy. His own philo- 
sophy is Christian and Biblical rather than classical or scholastic. 
He takes a fresh and independent view of Christian ethics, and he 
ultimately reaches a doctrine as tp the witness of the Spirit and the 



2IO 

assurance of grace which breaks with the traditional Christianity 
of his time and is based on ethical motives akin to those of the 
German Reformers. The verses which occur in the dialogue, and the 
poem which concludes it, gpve Volusenus a place among Scottish Latin 
poets, but it is as a Christian philosopher that he attains distinction. 

The dialogue was reissued at Leiden in 1637 by the Scots writer 
David Echlin, whose poems, with a selection of three poems from 
the dialogue of Volusenus, appear, with others, in the famous 
Amsterdam collection DeJitiae Poetarum Scotorum hufus uevi, 
printed by Blaev in a vols, in 1637. Later editions of the dialogue 
appeared at Edinburgh in 1707 and 175* (the latter edited by 
G. Wishart). All the reissues contain a snort life of the author by 
Thomas Wilson, advocate, son-in-law and biographer of Arch- 
bishop Patrick Adamson. Supplementary facts are found in the 
letters and state papers of the period, and in Sadolet's Letters. 

VOLUTE (Lat. volutum, velvet e, to roll up), in architecture, 
the spiral scroll of the capital of the Ionic order. As in the 
earliest example known, that of the archaic temple of Diana 
at Ephesus, the width of the abacus is twice that of the depth, 
constituting therefore a bracket-capital; it is probable that at 
first it consisted of an oblong block of timber, which, raised 
on a vertical post or column, lessened the bearing of the 
architrave or beam, and the first volutes or scrolls were painted 
on. In votive columns carrying a sphinx, as at Delphi, or 
statues, the oblong form of capital with largely developed 
volutes was long retained, but in the porticoes of the Greek 
temples the abacus was made square and the volute diminished 
in projection on each side. In the side elevation the portion 
of the capital which joins the two volutes is known as the 
cushion, and when the Ionic column was used in porticoes in 
the capitals of the angle columns the volute was brought out 
on the diagonal, so as to present the same design on front and 
side; this, however, at the back led to a very awkward arrange- 
ment with two half volutes at right angles to one another, 
which was not of much importance under the portico, but 
when, m the open peristyle of the Pompeian house, it faced 
the open court, another design was necessary, and the angle 
volute was employed on all four sides. A similar arrangement 
was devised by Ictinus for the capitals in the interior of the 
temple at Bassae (430 B.C.), and was employed in the semi- 
detached columns of the raised stage at Epidaurus. The 
Romans adopted the angle volute in the temple of Fortuna 
Virilis at Rome, but, except in their porticoes and as semi- 
detached between arches, the Ionic order was rarely employed 
by them, and few Roman examples are known. 

The architects of the Revival in the 16th century entirely mis- 
understood the origin and meaning of the volutes (the upper fillet 
of which was always carried horizontally across under the abacus 
in Greek and Roman work), and mistook them for horns, which they 
turned down into the echinus moulding. 

VONDEL. JOOST VAN DEN (1587-1679), Dutch poet, was 
born at Cologne on the 17th of November 1587. His father, 
a hatter, was an exile from Antwerp on account of his Ana- 
baptist opinions; but he returned to Holland when Joost was 
about ten years old, and settled in Amsterdam, where he carried 
on a hosiery business. Joost was the eldest son, and was 
expected to succeed to his father's shop. He was early intro- 
duced to the chamber of the Eglantine, however, and devoted 
most of his time to poetry and study. When the elder Vondel 
died he married Maria de Wolff, and seems to have left the 
management of his affairs in her capable hands. He read the 
French contemporary poets, and was especially influenced by 
the Divine Sepmaine of Du Bartas; he made some translations 
from the German; he was soon introduced to the circle gathered 
in the house of Roemer Vascher, and with these friends began 
to make a close study otjipa tat wtftgPL Hk first play. Bet 
Pascka, was i*inft«dLfyHJM||^sjMM£tfrte the beginning 
of a long aadliHhfl^^^^^^^^HMftifRBKATURE), 

After the ".. 

IndfgnKion 
.Voodel had 



VOLUTE— VONNOH 




with Hugo Grotius, another sufferer for his liberal opinions. 
Vondel had long been attracted by the aesthetic side of the 
Roman Catholic Church, and this inclination was perhaps 
strengthened by his friendship with Marie Tessclschade Visscher, 
for the Visscher household had been Catholic and liberal 
Tessclschade's husband died in 1634; Vondcl's wife died in 
1635; and the lies between the two were strengthened by time. 
Vondel eventually showed his revolt against the Calvinist 
tyranny by formally embracing the Roman Catholic faith in 
1640. The step was ill-received by many of his friends, and 
Hooft forbade him the hospitality of his castle at Muiden. 
In 1657 his only surviving son, who was entrusted with the 
hosiery business, mismanaged affairs to such an extent that 
he had to take ship for the East Indies, leaving his father to face 
the creditors. Vondel had to sacrifice the whole of his small 
fortune, and became a government clerk. He was pensioned 
after ten years' service, and died on the 5th of February 1679. 

The more important of his thirty-two dramas are: Hterusalem 
Venooest ("Jerusalem laid desolate") (1620): Palamedes, of Ver- 
moorde onnooseiheyd (" Palamedes. or Murdered Innocence ") (1625) ; 
Cijsbreght van Aemstd (1637): De Cebroeders (1640). the subject 
of which is the ruin of the sons of Saul; Joseph in Egypten (1640); 
Maria Stuart, of lemartelde majesteit (1646); the pastoral of De 
Leeuwndalers (1648): Lucifer (1654): Satmoneus (Solomon) (1657); 
Jephtka (1659); Konine David in ballintschab ("King David in 
banishment '), Konint David kersteld {" King David restored ") and 
Samson (1660); Batavische Cebroeders, the subject of which is the 
story of Claudius Civilis (1663); Adam in ball mgsc hap (" Adam in 
exile ") (1664). after the Latin tragedy of Hugo Grotius. He also 
wrote translations from the tragedies of Seneca, Euripides and 
Sophocles; didactic poems, and much lyrical poetry beside what 
is to be found in the choruses of his dramas. 

His complete works were edited by van Lennep (12 vols., 1850- 
1869). A bibliography (1888) was published by J. H. W. Unger, 
who revised van Lennep 's edition in 1888-94. Lucifer was trans* 
lated into English verse by L. C. van Noppen (New York, 1898). See 
also E. Gosse. Studies in Northern Literature (1879); G. Ed round son, 
Milton and Vondel (1885). where Milton's supposed indebtedness 
to Vondel is discussed; and critical studies by A. Baumgartner, 
S. J. (Freiburg. 1882): C. Looten (Lille. 1889). by J. A. Alberdingk 
Thijm (Poriretlen van Joost van den Vondel, 1876): and especially 
the chapters on Vondel (pp. 133-325) in W. J. A. Jonckbloct's 
Ccschtedenis der nederlandsehe letter kunde (vol. iv. 1 890). 

VON HOLST. HERMANN EDUARD (1841-1904), German- 
American historian, was born at Fellin in the province of Livonia, 
on the 19th of June 1841. He was educated at the universities 
of Dorpat and Heidelberg, receiving bis doctor's degree from 
the latter in 1865. He emigrated to America in 1867, remaining 
there until 1872. He was professor of history in the newly 
reorganized university of Slrassburg from 1872 to 1874, and 
at Freiburg in Baden from 1874 to 1892, and for ten years he 
was a member of the Baden Herrenhaus, and vice-president for 
four. He revisited the United States in 187S-79 and in 18&4, 
and in 1892 he became head of the department of history at 
the university of Chicago. Retiring on account of ill-health 
in 1900, he returned to Germany and died at Freiburg on the 
20th of January 1904. Both through his books and through 
his lectures at the university of Chicago, Von Hoist exerted 
a powerful influence in encouraging American students to 
follow more closely the German methods of historical research. 
His principal work is his Constitutional and Political History of ike 
United Slates (German ed., 5 vols., 1873-91; English trans, 
by Lalor and Mason, 8 vols., 1877-92), which covers the period 
from 1783 to 1861, though more than half of it is devoted to the 
decade 1850-60, it is written from & strongly anti-slavery 
point of view. Among his other writings are The Consti- 
tutional Law of the United States of America (German ed., 18S5; 
English trans., 1887); JoknC. Calhoun (1882), in the American 
Statesmen Series; John Brown (1888), and The French Revolution 
Tested by Mirabeau's Career (1894). 

See the Poiititai Science Quarterly, v. 677-78; the Nation, 
Ixxviu, 65-67. 

VONNOH. ROBERT WILLIAM (1858- ), American 
portrait and landscape painter, was born in Hartford, Connec- 
ticut, on the 17th of September 1858. He was a pupil of 
Boulanger and Lcfebvrc in Paris; became an instructor at 
the Cowlts Art School, Boston (1884-85), at the Boston 



VONONES— VORONEZH 



211 



Museum of Fine Art Schools (18*5-47)* and in the schools 
of ihe Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts, Philadelphia 
(iSgi-06), and a member o( the National Academy of Design, 
New York (1006), and of the .Secessionists, Munich. His wife, 
Bessie Potter Vonnoh (b. 1872), a sculptor, was a pupil of the 
Art Institute, Chicago, and became a member of the National 
Sculpture Society. 

VONONES (on coins Onuses), the name of two Parthian kings. 

( 1 ) Vononcs I., eldest son oC Phraates IV. After the assassina- 
tion of Orodes II. (c. a.d. 7), the Parthians applied to Augustus 
for a new king from the house of Arsaces. Augustus sent them 
Vooones (Hon. Anc. 5, o; Tac. Ann. ii. 1 f.; Joseph. Ant. 
x.iii. 2, 4), who was living as a hostage in Rome. But Vononcs 
could not maintain himself; he had been educated as a Roman, 
aad was despised as a slave of the Romans. Another member 
of the Arsacid house, Artabanus IL, who was living among the 
Dahan nomads, was invited to the throne, and defeated and 
expelled Vonooes. The coins of Vonones (who always uses 
his proper name) dale from a.d. 8-12, those of Artabanus 11. 
begin in A.D. to. Vonones fled into Armenia and became 
king here. But Artabanus demanded his deposition, and as 
Augustus did not wish to begin a war with the Parthians he 
removed Vonones into Syria, where he was kept in custody 
(Tac. Ann. ii. 4). When he tried to escape, a.o. 19, be was 
Llled by his guards (Tac. Ann. ii 58, 68). 

(>) Vononcs II., governor of Media, was raised to the throne 
after the death of Cotarzes in a.d. 51 (perhaps he was his 
brother, cf. Joseph. Ant. xx 3, 4). But he died after a few 
months, and was succeeded by his son Yologacscs I. (Tac. 
Ann. lit 14). (ED. M.) 

VOODOO or Vaudoux (Creole Fr. vaudoux. a negro sorcerer, 
probably originally a dialectic form of Fr. Vaudois, a Waldcn- 
sian), the name given to certain magical practices, superstitions 
and secret rites prevalent among the negroes of the West Indies, 
and more particularly in the Republic of Haiti. 

VOORHEBS, DANIEL WOLSEY (1877-1*07), American 
lawyer and political leader, was born in Butler county, Ohio, 
on the 26th of September 1827, of Dutch and Irish descent. 
Daring bis infancy his parents removed to Fountain county, 
Indiana, near Veedcrsburg. He graduated at Indiana Asbury 
(now De Pauw) University, Greencastle, Indiana, in 1849; 
■as admitted to the bar in 1850, and began to practise in 
Covington, Indiana, whence in 1857 he removed to Terre 
Haute. In 1858-60 he was U.S. district-attorney for Indiana; 
in 1861-66 and in 1860-7 J he was a Democratic repre- 
sentative in Congress; and in 1877-97 he was a member 
of the V.S. Senate. During the Civil War he seems to have 
been affiliated with the Knights of the Golden Circle, but he 
was not so radical as Vallandigham and others. He was a 
member of the committee on finance throughout bis service in 
the Senate, and his first speech in that body was a defence of 
tke free coinage of silver and a plea for the preservation of the 
full legal tender value of greenback currency, though in 1893 
he voted to repeal the silver purchase clause of the Sherman 
Act. lie had an active part in bringing about the building 
of the new Congressional Library. He was widely known as 
an effective advocate, especially in jury trials. In allusion to 
ha unusual stature he was called " the Tall Sycamore of the 
Wabash." He died in Washington, D.C., on the 10th of April 
*»97. 

Some of his speeches were published under the title. Forty Years 
cf Oratory (2 vol*. Indianapolis. Indiana, 1808), edited by his three 
was and his daughter, Harriet C. Voorhees. and with a biographical 
•ketch by T. B. Long. 

VORARLBERG, the most westerly province of the Austrian 
empire, extending S. of the Lake of Constance along the right 
bank of the Rhine valley. It consists of three districts. Brcgenz, 
Blttdena and Feldkirch, which are under the administrative 
authority of the Slaltkalter (or prefect) at Innsbruck, but 
possess a governor and a diet of their own (twenty-one members), 
aad send four members to the imperial parliament. Vorarl- 
betg is composed of the hilly region of the Brcgcnzcrwald, 



and, to its south, of the mountain valley of Montafon or of the 
upper 111, through which an easy pass, the Zeinisjoch (6076 ft.), 
leads to the Tirolese valley of Paznaun, and so to Landeck. 
Near Bludenx the Kloster glen parts from the 111 valley; 
through the latter runs the Arlberg railway (1884)— beneath 
the pass of that name (591a ft.)— to Landeck and Innsbruck. 
The 111 valley is bounded south by the snowy chain of the 
Rh&tikon (highest point, the Scesaplana, 9741 ft., a famous 
view-point), and of the Silvretta (highest point, Gross Pia Buin,' 
10,880 fL), both dividing Vorarlberg from Switzerland; slightly 
to the north-east of Pia Buin is the Dreilanderspitze (10,530 
ft.), where the Vorarlberg, Tirolese and Swiss frontiers unite. 

The total area of Vorarlberg is 1004-3 *q- m. Of this 88} %, 
or about 886 sq. m., is reckoned " productive," 30% of this 
limited area being occupied by forests, while 118 sq. m. rank as 
" unproductive." In 1000 the total population was 129,237, 
all but wholly German-speaking and Romanist. The largest 
town is Dornbirn (pop. 13,052), but Brcgenz (pop. 7595) is the 
political capital; Feldkirch has about 4000 inhabitants, while 
Bludcnz has rather more (see the separate articles on the three 
former). In the hilly districts the inhabitants mainly follow 
pastoral pursuits, possessing much cattle of all kinds. In the 
towns the spinning and weaving of cotton (introduced towards 
the end of the 18th century) is very flourishing. Forests cover 
about one-sixth of the district, and form one of the principal 
sources of its riches. But the Vorarlberg is predominantly an 
Alpine region, though its mountains rarely surpass the snow* 
level. Ecclesiastically it is in the diocese of Brixcn, whose 
vicar-general (a suffragan bishop) resides at Feldkirch. 

The name of the district means the " land that is beyond 
the Arlberg Pass," that is, as it seems to one looking at il from 
the Tirol. This name is modern and is a collective appellation 
for the various counties or lordships in the region which the 
Habsburgs (after they secured Tirol in 1363) succeeded in pur- 
chasing or acquiring— Feldkirch (1375, but Hohcnems in 1765 
only), Bludcnz with the Montafon valley (1394), Brcgenz (in 
two parts, 1451 and 1523) and Sonnenberg (1455)- After 
the annexation of Hohcnems (its lords having become extinct 
in 1759), Maria Theresa united all these lordships into an 
administrative district of Hither Austria, under the name 
Vorarlberg, the governor residing at Brcgenz. In 1782 
Joseph IL transferred the region to the province of Tirol. The 
lordship of Blumenegg was added in 1804, but in 1805 all 
these lands were handed over, by virtue of the peace of Press* 
burg, to Bavaria, which in 1814 gave them all back, save 
Hobcneck. In 1815 the present administrative arrangements 
were made. 

Sec A. Achleitnerand E. Ubl, Tirol mid Vorarlberg (Leipzig, 1895); 

t. K. von Bcrgmann. Landeskunde v. Vorarlberg (Innsbruck, 1868); 
lax Haushofer, Tirol und Vorarlberg (Bielefeld and Leipzig, l&ra); 
i. C. Hccr. Vorarlberg und Liechtenstein— Land und Utile (Feld- 
irch, 1906); O. von Pfister, Das Montovan (Augsburg. 1884); 
J. Starrer. Tirol und Vorarlberg (5- vols., Innsbruck. 1839-46); 
A. Steinitzer, Geschichtlicke und KulturgtschickUicke Wanderungen 
durch Tirol und Vorarlberg (Innsbruck, 1905); A. Waltcnbcrgcr, 
AlgSu, Vorarlberg und Westtirol (10th edition. Innsbruck. 1906). 
Sec also the list of books at the end of Tirol, and especially vol. xiii. 
(" Tirol u. Vorarlberg ") (Vienna, 1S93) of the great official work 
entitled Die oeskrrcickisck-ungariscke Monarchic in Wort und Bild. 

(W. A. B. C.) 

VORONEZH, a government of southern Russia, bounded N. 
by the government of Tambov, E. by Saratov and the Don 
Cossacks, S. by Kharkov and W. by Kursk and Orel; area, 
3 5*435 sq. m. It occupies the southern slopes of the middle- 
Russian plateau, and its average elevation is from 450 to 
700 ft. The surface is hilly, and intersected by ravines in the 
west (where two ranges of chalk hills separated by a broad 
valley run north and south), but flat and low east of the Don. 
Devonian sandstones crop out in the north; further south 
these are covered with Cretaceous deposits. Glacial clays with 
northern erratic boulders extend as far south as Voronezh, 
and extensive areas are covered with Lacustrine clays and 
sands. The soil is very fertile, owing to the prevalence of 
biack earth; it becomes, however, sandy towards the east. 



212 



VORONEZH— VORONTSOV 



Voronezh lies on the border between the forest and meadow 
region of middle Russia and the southern steppes; the forests 
disappear rapidly towards the south, and those which in the 
time of Peter the Great stood on the upper tributaries of the 
Don, and were used for shipbuilding, have now been almost 
entirely destroyed. . Less than one-tenth of the entire area is 
under wood. 

t The Don traverses Voronezh from N. to S.E., draining it 
for more than 400 m.; it is an. important channel for the 
export of corn, tallow and other raw produce, as well as for 
the import of wood, floated down from the north. Its tributary 
the Voronezh is also navigated, and the Bityug and Khoper, 
both left-hand affluents of the Don, flow in part through the 
government. Many other small streams flowing into the Don 
intersect the territory, but the influence of the dry steppes 
begins to make itself felt; there are no lakes, and marshes 
persist only in the valleys. The climate is continental, and 
although the mean temperature at the town of Voronezh is 
42*7° F., that of January is as low as 8*3°, and that of July 
as high as 74*2°. 

' The estimated pop. in 1006 was 3,007,700. The inhabitants 
consist in nearly equal parts of Great Russians in the north 
and Little Russians in the south, but there are a few Poles, 
Germans and Jews, both Orthodox and Karaites. The govern- 
ment is divided into twelve districts, the chief towns of which 
are Voronezh, Biryuch, Bobrov, Boguchar, Korotoyak, Nizhne- 
Dyevitsk, Novo-Khopersk, Ostrogozhsk, Pavlovsk, Valuiki, 
Zadonsk and Zemlyansk. Agriculture is the chief occupation, 
and grain is exported to a considerable amount. The peasants 
own 67% of the land, the crown and the imperial domains 
3% and private owners 30%. 

The principal crops are rye, wheat, oats, barley and potatoes. 
Aniseed, sunflowers, tobacco and beetroot ate extensively culti- 
vated, and much attention is paid to the growth of the pineapple. 
There are large tracts of excellent pasture land, on which cattle are 
bred; good breeds of cart-horses and trotting-horses are obtained. 
There are nearly two hundred breeding establishments, those at 
Hrenovoye and Chesmenka being the most important. In many 
villages the inhabitants are engaged in the making of wooden 
wares. There are flour-mills, distilleries, oil, sugai and woollen 
mills, iron works and tobacco factories. 

VORONEZH, a town of Russia, capital of the government 
of the same name, on the river Voronezh, 5 m. above its 
confluence with the Don and 367 m. by rail S.S.E. of Moscow. 
Pop. (1001) 84,146. It is one of the best-built and most 
picturesque provincial towns of Russia, and is situated on 
the steep bank of the river, surrounded by three large suburbs 
— Troitskaya, Yamskaya and Chizhovka. It has a military 
school of cadets, two museums, a monument (i860) to Peter the 
Great, a railway college, a pilgrimage church, and a theatre 
which figures in the history of the Russian stage. It was the 
birthplace of two peasant poets, who wrote some of the finest 
examples of Russian poetry— A. V. Koltsov (1800- 184 2) and 
I. S. Nikitin (1824-1861). A memorial to the former was 
erected in 1868. There are factories for cleansing wool and 
for the preparation of linens, woollens, bells, tallow and oil, 
as well as some distilleries. Voronezh is an important entrepot 
for corn, flax, tallow, hides, sugar, wood and coal from the Don. 
The city was founded in 1586, as a fort against Tatar raids, 
on a site which had been occupied from the nth century by a 
Khazar town, but had been deserted during the 14th and 15th 
centuries. Four years afterwards it was burned by the Tatars, 
but again rebuilt, and soon became an important trading place. 
Peter the Great recognized its importance, and in 1695 built 
here a flotilla of boats lor the conquest of Azov. The town 
" t destroyed by fire in 1703, 1748 and 

i f, """"^ " 

" t name of a Russian family, 

1 in Russian history. 

(1714-1767), Russian 

toome prominent. At 

;• A Kramer junker at 

kJlBOovna, whom lie 




materially assisted during the famous coup ffitai of the 6th of 
December 1741, when she mounted the Russian throne on the 
shoulders of the Preobrazhensky Grenadiers. On the 3rd of 
January 1742 he married Anna Skavronskaya, the empress's 
cousin; and in 1744 was created a count and vice-chancellor. 
His jealousy of Alexis Bestuzhev induced him to participate 
in Lestocq's conspiracy against that statesman. The empress's 
affection for him (she owed much to his skilful pen and still 
more to the liberality of his rich kinsfolk) saved him from the 
fate of his accomplices, but be lived in a state of semi-eclipse 
during the domination of Bestuzhev (1744-1758); On the dis- 
grace of Bestuzhev, Vorontsov was made imperial chancellor 
in his stead. Though well-meaning and perfectly honest, 
Vorontsov as a politician was singularly timorous and irre- 
solute, and always took his cue from the court. Thus, under 
Elizabeth he was an avowed enemy of Prussia and a warm 
friend of Austria and France; yet he made no effort to prevent 
Peter IIL from reversing the policy of his predecessor. Yet 
he did not lack personal courage, and endured torture after 
the Revolution of the 9th of July 1762 rather than betray his 
late master. He greatly disliked Catherine II., and at first 
refused to serve under her, though she reinstated him in the 
dignity of chancellor. When he found that the real control 
of foreign affairs was in the hands of Nikita Panin, he resigned 
his office (1763). Vorontsov was a generous protector of the 
nascent Russian literature, and, to judge from his letters, was a 
highly cultivated man. 

Alexander Rouanovich Vorontsov (1741-1805), Russian 
imperial chancellor, nephew of the preceding and son of Count 
Roman Vorontsov, began his career at the age of fifteen in the 
Izmailovsky regiment of the Guards. In 1759, his kinsman, 
the grand chancellor Mikhail Ularionovkh, sent him to Strass- 
burg, Paris and Madrid to train him in diplomacy. Under 
Peter III. he represented Russia for a short time at the court 
of St James's. Catherine II. created him a senator and 
president of the Board of Trade; but she never liked him, and 
ultimately (1791) compelled him to retire from public life. 
In 1802 Alexander I. summoned him back to office and ap- 
pointed him imperial chancellor. This was the period of 
the triumph of the Vorontsovs, who had always insisted on 
the necessity of a close union with Austria and Great Britain, 
in opposition to Panin and his followers, who had leaned on 
France or Prussia till the outbreak of the Revolution made 
friendship with France impossible. Vorontsov was also an 
implacable opponent of Napoleon, whose '" topsy-turvyness " 
he was never weary of denouncing. The rupture with Napoleon 
in 1803 is mainly attributable to him. He also took a leading 
part in the internal administration and was in favour of a 
thorough reform of the senate and the ministries. He retired 
in 1804. He possessed an extraordinary memory and a firm 
and wide grasp of history. 

His " Memoirs of my Own times " (Rus.) is printed in vol. vii. of 
the Vorwdsov Archives. 

Semen Rouanovich Vorontsov (1744-1832), Russian 
diplomatist, brother of Alexander Romanovich, distinguished 
himself during the first Turkish War of Catherine II. at Larga 
and Kagula in 1770. In 1783 he was appointed Russian 
minister at Vienna, but in 1785 was transferred to London, 
where he lived for the rest of his life. Vorontsov enjoyed great 
influence and authority in Great Britain. Quickly acquainting 
himself with the genius of English institutions, their ways and 
methods, he was able to render important services to his 
country. Thus during Catherine's second Turkish War he 
contributed to bring about the disarmament of the auxiliary 
British fleet which had been fitted out to assist the Turks, and 
in 1793 obtained a- renewal of the commercial treaty between 
Great Britain and Russia. Subsequently, his extreme ad- 
vocacy of the exiled Bourbons, his sharp criticism of the 
Armed Neutrality of the North, which he considered dis- 
advantageous to Russia, and his denunciation of the partitions 
of Poland as contrary to the first principles of equity and a 
shock to the conscience of western Europe, profoundly irritated 



VOROSMARTY— VORTIGERN 



213 



the empress. On the accession of Paul he was raised to the 
rank of ambassador extraordinary and minister plenipotentiary, 
and received immense estates in Finland. Neither Vorontsov's 
detention of the Russian squadron under Makarov in British 
ports nor his refusal, after the death of Bezborodko, to accept 
the dignity of imperial chancellor could alienate the Savour of 
PauL It was only when the emperor himself began to draw 
nearer .to France that he began to consider Vorontsov as 
incompetent to serve Russia in England, and m February 1800 
all the count's estates were confiscated. Alexander I. on his 
accession at once reinstated him, but ill-health and family 
affairs induced him to resign his post in 1806. From that time 
tffl his death in 1832 he continued to live in London. 

Besides hb valuable Note on the Russian War (Rus.) and numerous 
letters, Vorontsov was the author of an autobiography (in Russky 
Arkkm. Petersburg, 1S61) and " Notes on the Internal Government 
of Roasia " (Rus.) Cm Russky Arkhw, 1881). 

Mtxhail Sehenovich Vorontsov (1782-1856), Russian 
prince and field-marshal, son of the preceding, spent his 
Childhood and youth with his father in London, where he 
received a brilliant education. During 1803-4 he served in 
the Caucasus under Tsitsianov and Gulyakov, and was nearly 
killed in the Zakatahko disaster (January i$ x 1804). From 
1805 to 1807 he served in the Napoleonic wars, and was present 
at the battles of Pultusk and Friedland. From 1800 to 181 1 
he participated in the Turkish War and distinguished himself 
in nearly every important action. He was attached to 
Bagration's army during the war of 1812, was seriously 
wounded at Borodino, sufficiently recovering, however, to re- 
join the army in 1813. In 1814, at Craonne, he brilliantly 
withstood Napoleon in person. He was the commander of 
the corps of occupation in France fror? 1815 to 18 18. On the 
7th of May 1823 he was appointed governor-general of New 
Russia, as the southern provinces of the empire were then 
called, which under his administration developed marvellously. 
He may be said to have been the creator of Odessa and the 
benefactor of the Crimea. He was the first to start steam- 
boats on the Black Sea (1828). The same year he succeeded 
the wounded Menshikov as commander of the forces besieging 
\arna, which he captured on the 28th of September. In the 
campaign of x 8 29 it was through his energetic efforts that the 
phgue, which bad broken out in Turkey, did not penetrate 
into Russia. In 1844 Vorontsov was appointed commander- 
in-chief and governor of the Caucasus with plenipotentiary 
powers. For his brilliant campaign against Shamyl, and 
especially for his difficult march through the dangerous forests 
of Ichkerinia, he was raised to the dignity of prince, with the 
title of Serene Highness. By 1848 he had captured two-thirds 
of Daghestan, and the situation of the Russians in the Caucasus, 
so long almost desperate, was steadily improving. In the be- 
ginning of 1853 Vorontsov was allowed to retire because of 
his increasing 'infirmities. He was made a field-marshal in 
1856, and died the same year at 'Odessa. Statues have been 
erected to him both there and at Tiflis. 

See V. V. Ogarkov, The Vorontsov* (Rus.) (Petersburg, 1802V; 
Vorontsov Archives (Rus.' and Fr) (Moscow, 1870, &c.J; M. P. 
SMverbinin, Biography of Prince M. S. Vorontsov (Rus.) (Peters- 
burg. 1858). * r ' J (R.N.B.) 

VfeOfMiRTY, WHAlY (1800-1855), Hungarian poet, was 
born at Pusrta-Nytk on the 1st of December x8oo, of a 
noble. Roman Catholic family. His father was a steward of 
the Nadasdys. MiMly was educated at Ssekesfejervir by 
the Cistercians and at Pest by the Piarists. The death of the 
elder Vorflsmarty in 181 1 left his widow and numerous family 
extremely poor. As tutor to the Perczet family, however, VdroV 
maxty contrived to pay his own way and go through his aca- 
demical course at Pest. The doings of the diet of 1825 first 
enkindled his patriotism and gave a new direction to his poetical 
grnfus (he had already begun a drama* entitled Salomon), and 
he flung himself the more recklessly into public life as he was 
consumed by a hopeless passion for Elelka Perczel, who socially 
was far above him. To his -unrequited love we owe a whole 



host of exquisite lyrics, while his patriotism found expression 
in the heroic epos Zaidn fntdsa (1824), gorgeous in colouring, 
exquisite in style, one of the gems of Magyar literature. This 
new epic marked a transition from the classical to the romantic 
school. Henceforth Ydrosmarty was hailed by Kisfaludy and 
the Hungarian romanticists as one of themselves. All this 
time he was living from hand to mouth. He had forsaken 
the law for literature, but his contributions to newspapers and 
reviews were iriiscrably paid. Between 1823 and 1831 he 
composed four dramas and eight smaller epics, partly historical, 
partly fanciful. Of these epics he always regarded Cserkalom 
(1825) as the best, but modem criticism, has given the pre- 
ference to KH stontstd vdr (183 1), a terrible story of hatred 
and revenge. When the Hungarian Academy was finally 
established (November 17, 1830) he was elected a member of 
the philological section, and ultimately succeeded Karoly Kis- 
faludy as director with an annual pension of 500 florins. He 
was one of the founders of the Kisfaludy Society, and in 1837 
started the Athenaeum and the Figyelmezd, the first the chief 
bellettristic, the second the best critical periodical of Hungary. 
From 1830 to 1843 he devoted himself mainly to the drama, 
the best of his plays, perhaps, being Vcrndsz (1833), which won 
the Academy's ioo-gulden prise. He also published several 
volumes of poetry, containing some of his best work. Sttoal 
(1836), which became a national hymn, Az elkagyott anya 
(1837) and AM tfrs hUgyhds (184 1) are all inspired by a burning 
patriotism. His marriage in 1843 to Laura Csaj&ghy inspired 
him to compose a new cycle of erotics. In 1848, in conjunction 
with Arany and Petdfi, he set on foot an excellent translation 
of Shakespeare's works. He- himself was responsible for 
Julius Caesar and King Lear, He represented Jaitkovics at 
the diet of 1848, and in 1849 was made one of the judges of 
the high court. The national catastrophe profoundly affected 
him. For a short time he was an exile, and when he returned 
to Hungary in 1850 he was already an old man. A profound 
melancholy crippled him for the rest of his life. In 1834 he 
wrote his last great poem, the touching A tin cigdny. He died 
at Pest in 1855 in the same house where Karoly Kisfaludy 
had died twenty-five years before. His funeral, on the 21st of 
November, was a day of national mourning. His penniless 
children were provided for by a national subscription collected 
by Ferencz De&k, who acted as their guardian. 

The best edition of Vorosmarty's collected works is bv P&l Gyulai 
(Budapest, 1884). Some of them have been translated into German, 
e.g. Gedichte (Pest, 1857) :&»» Marot, by Mthaly Ring (Pest. 1879); 
Austewdhlte DickU, by Paul Hoffmann (Leipzig, 1895). See Pal 
Gyulai, The Lift of Vor&smarty (Hung.) (3rd ed., Bi *apcst, 1890), 
one of the noblest biographies in the language; Brajjer, v&r&smarty, 
sein Leben und seine Werke (Nagy-Becskerek, 1882). (R. N. B) 

VORTICELLA, the Bell-Animalcule, a genus of Peritrichous 
Infusoria (q.v.) characterized by the bell-shaped body, with 
short oral disk and collar, attached by a hollow stalk, inside 
and around which passes, attached spirally a contractile 
bundle of myonemes. By their contraction the stalk is brought 
into the form of a corkscrew, the thread being now on the 
shorter, i.e. the inner, side of the turns; and the animal is 
jerked back near to the base of the stalk. As soon as the 
contraction of the thread ceases, the elasticity of the stalk ex- 
tends the animal to its previous position. On fission, one of the 
two animals swims off by the development of the temporary 
posterior girdle of membranelles, the disk being retracted 
and closed over by the collar, so that the cell is ovoid: on 
its attachment the posterior girdle of cilia, disappears and a 
stalk forms. The other cell remains attached to the old stalk. 
In the allied genera Carchesium and Zootkamnium the two 
produced by fission remain united, so that a branching colony 
b ultimately produced'. The genus is a large one, and many 
species are epizoic on various water animals. 

VORTIGERN (GuomncniNos, Wyrtgtokn), king of the 
Britons at the time of the arrival of the Saxons under Hengest 
and Horsa. The records do not agree as to the date of the 
arrival of these chieftains or the motives which led them to 
to Britain. It teems dear, however, that VorUgero 



214 



VOSGES— VOSMAER 



made use of them to protect his kingdom against the Picts and 
Scots, and rewarded them for their services with a grant of 
land. Later we find the Britons at war with the new-comers, 
now established in Kent, and four battles are fought, in the 
last of which, according to the Historic Brittonum, the king's 
ton Vortemir, their leading opponent, is shun. The Historic 
Brittonum is our only authority for the marriage of Vortigern 
with the daughter of Hengest before the war. It also records 
the massacre of the British nobles after the death of Vortcmit 
and the subsequent grant of Essex and Sussex to the invaders 
by Vortigern. 

See Historic Brillonmm, ed. Hi. Mommsen in Horn, Hist. Germ. 
nil; Anrlo-Saxcn Chronicle, ed. Earie and Plummer (Oxford, 1899) ; 
Bed*, Hist. £«*., ed. C. Plummer (Oxford, 1896). 

VOSGES, a frontier department of eastern France, formed 
in 1700 chiefly of territory previously belonging to Lorraine, 
together with portions of Franche-Comte and Champagne, 
and bounded N. by the department of Meurthe-euMoscUe, 
E. by Alsace, S.E.* by the territory of Belfort, S. by the 
department of Haute-Saone, W. by Haute-Marne and N.W. 
by Meuse. Pop. (1006) 429.81*; area-, 2279 sq. m. The 
Vosges mountains (see below) form a natural boundary on 
the east, their highest French eminence, the Hohneck, attaining 
448a fL The Monu Faucilles traverse the south of the depart- 
ment in a broad curve declining on the north into elevated 
plateaus, on the south encircling the upper basin of the Sa6ne. 
This chain, dividing the basins of the Rhone and the Rhine, 
forms part of the European watershed between the basins of 
the Mediterranean and Atlantic. The Moselle and the Meuse, 
tributaries of the Rhine, have the largest drainage areas in the 
department; a small district in the N.W. sends its waters to 
the Seine, the rest belongs to the basin of the Rhone. The 
Moselle rises in the Col de Bussang in the extreme south-east, 
and in a N.N.W. course of about 70 m. in the department 
receives the Moselotte and the Vologne on the right; the 
Mortagne and Meurthe on the right and the Madon on the 
left bank also belong to this department though they join 
the Moselle outside its borders. The source of the Saone is 
on the southern slope of the Faucilles. On the shore of Lake 
Gerardmer lies the beautifully situated town of Gerardmer, a 
well-known centre for mountain excursions. 

The elevation and the northward exposure of the valleys make 
the climate severe, and a constant dampness prevails, owing 
both to the abundance of the rainfall and to the imper- 
meability of the subsoiL The average temperature at Spinal 
(1070 ft.) is 49* F. The annual rainfall at £pinal is aS in., at 
St Die 33 in. and in the mountains more. Arable farming 
flourishes in the western districts where wheat, oats and potatoes 
are largely grown. The vine is cultivated on the river banks, 
to best advantage on those of the Moselle. Pasture is abundant 
in the mountainous region, where cheese-making is carried on 
to some extent, but the best grazing is in the central valleys. 
Forests, which occupy large tracts on the Banks of the Vosges, 
cover about one-third of the department, and are a principal 
source of its wealth. Sawmills are numerous in the Vosges 
and the manufacture of furniture, sabots, brushes and wood- 
working in general are prominent industries. The department 
has mines of lignite and stone quarries of various kinds. 
There are numerous mineral springs, of which those of Contrexe- 
vflle, Plombleres, Vittel, Bains-levBains, MartignHes-Bains 
and Bussang may be named. The manufacture of textiles b 
the chief industry, oompristng the sp i nnin g and weaving of 
cotton, wool, silk, hemp and fax. and the manufacture of 
hosiery ami of eurttoidety and lace, Mirecourt (pop, 5092) 
I centnt for the two Inst. Tfae department 
tfr ttuOwwrmte of Bcr i nco n ) , has its court 
■alKancy, —4 belongs to the 




side of the Rhine valley in a N.N.E. direction, from Basel to 
Mains, for a distance of 150 m. Since 1871 the southern 
portion, from the Ballon d' Alsace to Mont Donon, has been the 
frontier between France and Germany. There is a remarkable 
similarity between the Vosges and the corresponding range 
of the Black Forest on the other side of the Rhine: both lie 
within the same degrees of latitude and have the same geological 
formation; both are characterixed by fine forests on their 
lower slopes, above which are open pasturages and rounded 
summits of a uniform altitude; both have a steep fall to the 
Rhine and a gradual descent on the other side. The Vosges 
in their southern portion are mainly of granite, with some 
porphyritic masses, and of a kind of red sandstone (occasionally 
1640 fL in thickness) which on the western versant bears the 
name of " gres Vosgien/' 

Orographically the range is divided south to north into four 
sections: the Grande* Vosges (62 m.). extending from Belfort to 
the valley of the Bruche; the Central Vosges (31 m.), between the 
Bruche and the Col de Saverne; the Lower Vosges (30 m.), between 
the Col de Saverne and the source of the Lauter; and the Hardt 
(?».).. The rounded summits of the Grande* Vosges are called 
"baUons." The departments of Vosges and Haute Saone are 
divided from Alsace and the territory of Belfort by the Ballon d'Alsace 
or St Maurice (4100 ft.). Thence northwards the average height of 
the range is 3000 ft., the highest point, the Ballon de Guebwiller 
(Gebweuer), or Soults, rising to the east of the main chain to 4680 ft. 
The Col de Saales, between the Grandes Vosges and the central 
section, is nearly 1900 ft. high ; the Utter is both lower and narrower 
than the Grandes Vosges, the Mont Donon (3307 ft.) being the highest 
summit. The railway from Paris to Strassburg and the Rhine and 
Marne Canal traverse the Col de Saverne. No railway crosses the 
Vosges between Saverne and Belfort* but there are carriage roads 
over the passes of Bussang from Rcmiremont to Thann, the Schlucht 
(3766 ft.) from Gerardmer to Munster, the Bonhomme from St 
Die to Colmar, and the pass from St Did to Ste Marie aux- Mines. 
The Lower Vosges are a sandstone plateau ranging from 1000 to 
1850 ft. high, and are crossed by the railway from Hagenau to Sarre- 
guemines, defended by the fort of Bitche. 

Meteorologically the difference between the eastern and western 
versants of the range b very marked, the annual rainfall being much 
higher and the mean temperature being much lower in the latter 
than in the former. On the eastern slope the vine ripens to a height 
of 1300 ft.; on the other hand, its only rivers are the 111 and other 
shorter streams. The Moselle, Meurthe and Sarre all rise on the 
Lorraine side. Moraines, boulders and polished rocks testify the 
existence of the glaciers which formerly covered the Vosges. The 
lakes, surrounded by pines, beeches and maples, the green meadows 
which provide pasture for large herds of cows, and the fine views 
of the Rhine valley, Black Forest and snow-covered Swiss moun- 
tains combine to make the district picturesoue. On the lower 
heights and buttresses of the main chain on the Alsatian side are 
numerous castles, generally in ruins. At several points on the main 
rid^e. especially at St Odilc above Ribeauvitle (Rappoltsweifer). are 
the remains of a wall of unmortared stone with tenons of wood. 
6 to 7 ft. thick and 4 to 5 ft. high, called the pagan wall (Mur Payen). 
It was used for defence in the middle ages, and archaeologists are 
divided as to whether it was built for this purpose by the Romans, 
or before their arrival. 

VOSMAER, CA&EL (1S26-1SSS), Dutch poet and arthritic, 
was born at the Hague on the aoth of March iSrf. He was 
trained to the law, and held various judiciary posts, but in 
1873 withdrew entirely from legal practice. His first volume 
of poems, 1S60, did not contain much that was remarkable. 
His temperament was starved m the very thin air of the 
intellectual Holland of those days, and it was not until after 
the sensational appearance of Muhatuli (Edward Douwes- 
Dekker) that Vosmaer, at the age of forty, woke up to a con- 
of his own talent. In 1S60 he produced an exhaustive 
on Rembrandt, which was issued in French. 
Vosmaer became a contributor to, and then the leading spirit 
and editor of, a journal which played an immense part in the 
awakening of Dutch literature; this was the Xtdcrlsudsdkt 
5/mraalar, in which a great many of his own works, in prose 
and Terse, originally appeared. The remarkable miscellanies of 
Vosmaer, called Biris *j Dmrst /Vauufr, appeared in three 
volumes, in i$;i, 1&74 and 1S76. h* *£<°< °* srmcted from 
these all the pieces in verse, and added other poems to them. 
In iSSt he published an archaeological novel calkd ilssasofse, 
the scene cf which was U«i in NapJes and Rome, and which 
described the raptures of a Dutch antiquary in love. Vosmaer 



VOSS, J. H.— VOSSIUS 



undertook the gigantic task of translating Homer into Dutch 
hexameters, and he lived just long enough to see this completed 
and revised. In 1873 he came to London to visit his lifelong 
friend, Sir (then Mr) Lawrence Alma-Tadema, and on his 
return published Londinias, an exceedingly brilliant mock* 
heroic poem in hexameters. His last poem was Nanno, an 
idyll on the Greek model. Vosmaer died, while travelling in 
Switzerland, on the lath of June 1888. He was unique in bis 
fine sense of plastic expression; he was eminently tasteful, 
lettered, refined. Without being a genius, he possessed immense 
talent, just of the order to be useful in combating the worn* 
out rhetoric of Dutch poetry. His verse was modelled on 
Heine and still more on the Greeks; it is sober, without colour, 
stately and a little cold. He was a curious student in versifica- 
tion, and it is due to him that hexameters were introduced and 
the sonnet reintroduced into Holland. He was the first to 
repudiate the traditional, wooden alexandrine. In prose he 
was greatly influenced by Multatuli, in praise of whom he wrote 
an eloquent treatise, Een Zaaier (A Sewer). He was also some- 
what under the influence of English prose models. (E. G.) 

VOSS, JOHAMN HEWR1CH (1751-1826), German poet and 
translator, was born at Sommersdorf in Mecklenburg-Strelitz 
on the 20th of February 1751, the son of a farmer. After 
attending (1766-69) the gymnasium at Neubrandenburg, he 
was obliged to accept a private tutorship in order to earn money 
to enable him to study at a university. At the invitation of 
H. C. Boie, whose attention he had attracted by poems con- 
tributed to the Goitingen Musenalmanach, he went to Gottingen 
in 177a. Here he studied philology and became one of the 
leading spirits in the famous Hain or Diekterbund. In 1775 
Boie made over to him the editorship of the Muscnalmanaek, 
which he continued to issue for several years. He married 
Bote's sister Ernestine in 1777 and in 1778 was appointed rector 
of the school at Otterndorf in Hanover. In 178a he accepted 
the rectorship of the gymnasium at Eutin, where he remained 
until 180*. Retiring in this year with a pension of 600 thalers 
he settled at Jena, and in 1805, although Goethe used his utmost 
endeavours to persuade him to stay, accepted a call to a pro- 
fessorship at Heidelberg. Here, in the enjoyment of a consider- 
able salary, he devoted himself entirely to his literary labours, 
translations and antiquarian research until his death on the 
29th of March 1826. 

Voss was a man of a remarkably independent and vigorous 
character. In 1785-0$ he published in two volumes a collection of 
original poems, to which be afterwards made many additions. The 
bat of these works is his idyllic poem Luise (1795), in which he 
sought, with much success, to apply the style and methods of 
r\**? Y~A poetry to the expression 01 modern German thought and 
sentiment. In his MytkoUgische Brief* (a vols., 1794). in which he 
attacked the ideas of Christian Gottlob Heyne. in his Antisymboith 
(2 vota.. 1824-26), written in opposition to Georg Friedrich Creuzer 
(1771-1858), and in other writings he made important contributions 
to the study of mythology. He was also prominent as an advocate 
of the right of free judgment in religion, and at the time when some 
members of the Romantic school were being converted to the 
Roman Catholic church he produced a strong impression by a 
powerful article, in Sophronison, on his friend Friedrich von Stol- 
berg's repudiation of Protestantism (18 19). It is, however, as a 
translator that Voss chiefly owes his place in German literature. 
H» tctfislations indicate not only sound scholarship but a thorough 
mastery of the laws of German diction and rhythm. The most 
fasioua of his translations are those of Homer. Of these the best 
h the translation of the Odyssey, as originally issued in 1781. He 
also translated Hesiod, Theocritus, Bion and Moechus, Virgil, 
Horace, Tibullus, Propertius and other classical poets, and be 
prepared a critical edition of Tibullus. In 1818-39 was published, 
10 9 vols., a translation of Shakespeare's plays, which he com- 
pleted with the help of his sons Hdnrich and Abraham, both of 
whom were scholars and writers of considerable ability. 

J. H. Voss's Sdmlliehe poetische Werke were published by his son 
Abraham an 1855; new ed. 1850. A good selection is in A. Sauer, 
Dor Gtllmger Dtckterbund, vol. i. (KQrschner's Deutsche Notional* 
literaiur. voL 49, 1887). His Letters were also published by his son 
in 4 vols. (1829-33). Voss left a short autobiography, Abrus meines 
Liens (iii8)T See also W. Hcrbst. /. H. Vcss 6 vols., 1872-76); 
A. Hevasoer, /. H. Voss als Schulmann w Eutin (1882). 

RICHARD (1851- ), German dramatist and 
was bom at Neugrape, in P o m era n i a, on the and of 



1888); Eva (1889); 

mentioned San Sebastian (1883); Da 

Pie Sabinerin (1888); Der Mdnch von Berchtesgaden (1891 



(1885); Alexandra I 
Die neue Zeit (18 



«5 

September 1851, the son of a country squire. Though intended 
for the life of a country gentleman, he showed no inclination 
for outdoor life, and on his return from the war of 1870-71, in 
which he was wounded, he studied philosophy at Jena and 
Munich, and then settled at Berchtesgaden. In 1884 Voss was 
appointed by the grand duke of 'Weimar librarian of the 
Wartburg, but, in consequence of illness, he resigned the post. 

Chief among his dramas are Savonarola (1878); Magda (1879); 
Die Patricierin (1880); Der Mohr des Zaren (1883); Unekrliek Vein 

'" "" ~ """ Weke dent Besiegten (1889); 

Among his novels may be 
Sohnder Volsktrin (1885); 

, .. „ v Berchtesgaden (1891); Der 

neue GoU (1898); Die Rickerin (1899); AUeriet Rrkbtes (1902); 
and Die Leute von Valdari (190a). 

See M. Goldmann, Richard Voss, ei» literarisches Charakkrbild 
(1900). 

VOSSEVANGEN, or Voss, a village and favourite tourist- 
centre of Norway, in South Bergenhus amt (county), 67 m. N.W. 
of Bergen by rail. It was the terminus of the finely engineered 
Bergen & Vossevangen railway, which, however, forms part 
of the projected trunk line between Christiania and Bergen. 
Vossevangen is pleasantly situated on the Vangsvand, in 
fertile upland, and has a stone church of the 13th century, 
and nfinneloft or two-storeyed timber house of the 14th century, 
with an outside stair. Driving roads run N.E. and S.E. from 
Vossevangen. The former, passing Stalheim, descends into the 
sombre Naerodal, a precipitous valley terminating in the Nacrft 
Fjord, a head-branch of the Sogne Fjord. The latter route 
follows the deep but gentler valley of the Skjerve, whence from 
Ovre Vaseoden roads continue to Eide (18 m,) and to Ulvik 
(33 m.), both on branches of the Hardangcr Fjord. 

VOSSIUS [Voss], GERHARD JOHANN (1577-1649). German 
classical scholar and theologian, was the son of Johannes Voss, 
a Protestant of the Netherlands, who fled from persecution 
into the Palatinate and became pastor in the village near 
Heidelberg where Gerhard was born. Johannes was a Carvinist, 
however, and the strict Lutherans of the Palatinate caused 
him once more to become a wanderer; in 1578 he settled at 
Leiden as student of theology, and anally became pastor at 
Dort, where he died in 1585. Here the son received his educa- 
tion, until in 1595 he entered the university of Leiden, where 
he became the lifelong friend of Hugo Grotius, and studied 
classics, Hebrew, church history and theology. In 1600 he 
was made rector of the high school at Dort, and devoted 
himself to philology and historical theology. From 1614 to 
1 619 he was director of the theological college at Leiden: 
Meantime he was gaining a great reputation as a scholar, not 
only in the Netherlands, but also in France and England. 
But in spite of the moderation of his views and his abstention 
from controversy, he came under suspicion of heresy, and 
escaped expulsion from his office only by resignation (16x9). 
The year before he had published his valuable history ol 
Pelagian controversies, whkh his enemies considered favoured 
the views of the Armintans or Remonstrants. In 1622, however, 
he was appointed professor of rhetoric and chronology, and 
subsequently of Greek, in the university. He declined invita- 
tions from Cambridge, but accepted from Archbishop Laud a 
prebend in Canterbury cathedral without residence, and went 
to England to be installed in 1629, when he was made LL.D. at 
Oxford. In 1632 he left Leiden to take the post of professor 
of history in the newly founded Athenaeum at Amsterdam, 
which he held till his death on the xoth of March 1649. 

His son Isaak (1618-1689), after a brilliant career of scholar- 
ship in Sweden, became residentiary canon at Windsor in 1673. 
He was the author of De uptuaginla inter prdibus (166 1), De 
potmatum cantu et virions rkytkmi (1673), and Variorum 
observationum liber (1685). 

Vossius was amongst the first to treat theological dogmas and the 
heathen religions from the historical point of view. His principal 
works are Historia Pelagian* sue Historiae de tontronsrsiis quae 
Pdafius ejusqne reliquiae moverunt (1618); Aristarchus, sue de arte* 
grammatiea (1635 and 1695; new ed. in 2 vols., 1833-35); Elymo- 
logkum linguae Latinae (1662; new ed. in two vole* 1760-63); 



2l6 



VOTE 



Commentariorum Kketoricofum oratoriarum institutionum Libri VI. 
(1606 and often); De Historicis Craects Libri HI. (1624); De 
Historicis Latinis Libri III. (1627): De Theohpa Genttii (1642); 
DisserUUioneS Tres de Tribus Svmbciis, Atxrsioltco, Atkanastano el 
ConstantinopoUtamo (1642). Collected works published at Amster- 
dam (6 vols., 1 695-1 701). 

See P. Niceron, Memoires pour unit d Tkislflire des hommes 
illust res, vol. xiii. (Paris, 1730); Herzog's ReaUncykfopddie, art. 
" Vossius "; and the article in the All genuine Deutsche Btogropkie. 

VOTE and VOTING. The Latin wfififi, 'derived from vovcre, 
to vow, meant a solemn promise, hence a wish, desire or prayer, 
in which senses the doublet " vow," derived through French, 
is used now chiefly. " Vote " is specially employed in the sense 
of a registering of one's choice in elections or on matters of- 
debate, and the political meaning is the only one which requires 
comment. 

Ancient.— In ancient Greece and Italy the .institution of 
suffrage already existed in a rudimentary form at the outset 
of the historical period. In the primitive monarchies it was 
customary for the king to invite pronouncements of his folk 
on matters in which it was prudent to secure its assent, before- 
hand. In these assemblies the people recorded their opinion 
by clamouring (a method which survived in Sparta as late as 
the 4th century B.C.), or by the clashing of spears on shields. 
This latter practice may be inferred to have obtained originally 
in Rome, the word suffragium meaning literally a responsive 
crash. Owing to the lack of routine in the early monarchies 
and aristocracies of Greece- and Italy the vote as yet lacked 
importance as. an instrument of government.- But in the days 
of their full political development the communities of these 
countries had firmly established the principle of government 
according to the will of majorities, and their constitutions 
required almost every important act to be directed by a formal 
vote. This rule applied equally to the decisions of general 
assemblies, administrative councils and law courts, and obtained 
alike in states where suffrage was universal and where it was 
restricted. 

In every case the taking of votes was effected in the form of 
a poll. The practice of the Athenians, which is shown by 
inscriptions to have been' widely followed in the other states 
of Greece, was to hold a show .of hands (x&porovta), except 
on questions affecting the status of individuals J these latter, 
which included all lawsuits and proposals of ostracism (q.v.), 
were determined by secret ballot (Mjxxrua, so called from the 
l^tfoi or pebbles with which the votes were cast). At Rome 
the method which prevailed up to the 2nd century B.C. was 
that of division (disussio). But the economic and social depend- 
ence of many voters on the nobility caused the. system of open 
suffrage to be vitiated by intimidation and corruption. Hence 
a series of laws' enacted between 139 and 107 B.C. prescribed 
the use of the ballot (" tabella," a slip of wood coated with wax) 
iqr all business done in the assemblies of the people. 

For the purpose of carrying resolutions a simple majority of 
Votes was deemed sufficient. Regulations about a quorum 
seem to have been unusual, though a notable exception occurs 
in the case of motions for ostracism at' Athens. As a general 
rule equal value was made to attach to each vote; but in the 
popular assemblies at Rome a system of voting by groups was 
in force until the middle of the 3rd century B.C. by which the 
richer classes secured a decisive preponderance (see Count*). 

As compared wiih modem practice the fund Ion of vollnj w« 
restricted 111 nornc notable waya, U) In the dt-inocranc? 'A Greece 
the use of the tot brgdy *u pj 'lamed j polling lor the election of 
magitiratcs: at Allien* vming .*a» limited to ilut choice of officers 
*kh pff il f'.-i.Uni'al quiilkhcattoflfti (2) In Accordance' with ihe 
theory - at trur ^-*u of government a* a 

*r cuulfl as a rtMu only be cutertihed 
realised 
hpentnent under the emperor 
l 1 * opened at clct liuti- 
' vrmmtnl* the 

,,! 

- the federal* ,-n 

n luiTr 

' vafet to represent* - 

■ ** it/d Lbut 1 lit Junction 



mad 1 




of suffrage in Greece and Italy throws rto light upon contemporary 
problems, such as the use of single-area constituencies and pro- 
portional representation. 

Modern.— The modern method of obtaining a collective 
expression of opinion of any body of persons may be either 
" open " or secret. An open expression of opinion may be by 
some word of assent or negation, or by some visible sign, as the 
holding up of a hand. Indeed any method of voting which does 
not expressly make provision for concealing the identity of the 
person registering the vote is "open." Some methods of 
voting still employed (as in the case of parliamentary elections 
for some of the English universities, where votes may be sent 
by post) must necessarily reveal the manner in which the elector 
has recorded his vote. It is in connexion with the election 
of members of representative bodies— especially legislative 
bodies — that the qualifications for and methods of voting 
become especially important. Practically every civilized 
country has accepted and put in force some form of representa- 
tion, which may be denned as the theory and principles on 
which the obtaining of a vote is founded. These are dealt 
with in the article Representation, and it will be sufficient 
to give here the various qualifications which are considered by 
different countries as sufficient to give effect to the principle 
of representation and the methods of recording votes. In 
detail these are given for the United Kingdom and the United 
States in the articles Registration of Voters and Elections, 
and for other countries under their respective titles in the 
.sections dealing with the Constitution. 

The first consideration is the age at which a person should 
be qualified for a vote. This in a large number of countries 
is fixed at the age of manhood, namely, twenty-one years of age, 
but in Hungary the age is fixed at twenty years, in Austria 
twenty-four years, while in Belgium, Baden, Bavaria, Hesse, 
Prussia, Saxony, Japan, the Netherlands and Norway the age 
is twenty-five years, and in Denmark thirty years. Some 
countries (e.g. Austria, Germany, France) have adopted the 
principle of what is often termed " manhood or universal 
suffrage," i.e. every male adult, not a criminal or a lunatic, being 
entitled to a vote, but in all cases some further qualifications 
lhan mere manhood are required, as in Austria a years residence 
in the place of election, or in France a six months' residence. 
A common qualification is that the elector should be able -to 
read and write. This is required in Italy and Portugal and 
some of the smaller European states, in some states of the 
United States (see Elections) and in many of the South 
American republics. But the most universal qualification of 
all is some outward visible sign of a substantial interest in the 
state. The word " substantial" is used here in a comparative 
sense, as opposed to that form of suffrage which requires nothing 
more for its exercise than attainment of manhood and perhaps 
a certain qualifying period of residence. This tangible sign 
of interest in the state may take the form of possession of 
property, however small in amount, or the payment of some 
amount of direct taxation, indeed in some cases, as will . be 
seen, this is rewarded by the conferring of extra votes. 

In the United Kingdom possession of freehold or leasehold 
property of a certain value or occupation of premises of a certain 
annual value gives a vote. This qualification of property may 
be said to be included in what is termed the " lodger " vote, 
given to* the occupier of lodgings of the yearly value unfur- 
nished of not less than £16. In Hungary, the payment of a 
small direct tax on house properly or land or on an income 
varying with occupation is necessary. So in Prussia, Saxony, 
Bavaria, Hesse, Italy (unless a certain standard in elementary 
education has been reached), Japan, the Netherlands, Portugal 
(unless the elector is able to read and write) and Russia. Some 
of the states in the United States also require the payment of 
a poll tax. On the other hand, in Russia, students, soldiers, 
governors of provinces and police officers are disqualified from 
voting; in Portugal, bankrupts, beggars, domestic servants, 
workmen in government service and non-commissioned officers 
are not electors; it must be noted, however, that the government 



VOTING MACHINES 



217 



of the new Portuguese republic promised in 1910 a drastic 
revision of the existing franchise. Italy disfranchises non- 
oonunissioned officers and men in the army while under anna, 
a* do France and Brazil. The United Kingdom and Denmark 
disqualify those in actual receipt of parish relief, while in 
Norway, apparently, receipt of parish relief at any time is a 
disqualification, which, however, may be removed by the 
recipient paying back the sums so received. In some countries, 
eg. Brazil, the suffrage is refused to members of monastic 
orders, &c, under vows of obedien ce . Apart from those 
countries where a modicum of education is necessary as a test 
of right to the franchise, there are others where education is 
specially favoured in granting the franchise. In the United 
Kingdom the members of eight universities (Oxford, Cambridge, 
London, Dublin University, Glasgow, Edinburgh, Aberdeen 
and St Andrews) send nine members to parliament; in 
Hungary members of the professional, scientific, learned and 
other classes (over 80,000) are entitled to vote without any 
other qualification; in Brunswick the scientific classes elect 
three members to the legislative chamber; in Saxony, members 
of scientific or artistic professions have extra votes; in Italy, 
members of academies and professors are qualified to vote 
by their position; while in the Netherlands legal qualifications 
for any profession or employment give a vote. 

Many objections have been urged of late years to the prin- 
ciple of according a plurality of votes to one individual on 
account of superior qualifications over others which he may 
be considered to possess. In the United Kingdom, where, 
roughly speaking, the principle of representation is that of 
taxation, the possession of qualifying property in any number 
of elec t oral districts will give a vote in each of those districts. 
Whether those votes can be actually registered will of course 
depend on certain circumstances, such as the distance of the 
districts apart and whether the elections are held on the same 
day or not. The Radical party in the United Kingdom have 
of late years been hostile to any system of plurality of votes 
(whether fl*'"-** by educational, property or other qualifications), 
though it may be said that the tendency of some recent electoral 
systems has been to introduce a steadying principle of this 
nature. In 1006 a bill was introduced for reducing the system 
of plural voting in the United Kingdom; it passed through the 
House of Commons, but was rejected by the House of Lords. 
The most remarkable system of plural voting was that intro- 
duced in Belgium by the electoral law of 1804. Under it, every 
citizen over thirty-five years of age with legitimate issue, and 
paying at least 5 francs a year in house tax, has a supple- 
mental vote, as has every citizen over twenty-five owning 
immovable property to the value of 2000 francs, or having a 
corresponding income from such property, or who for two 
years has derived at least 100 francs a year from Belgian funds 
either directly or through the savings bank. Two supple- 
mentary votes are given to citizens over twenty-five who have 
received a diploma of higher instruction, or a certificate of 
higher secondary instruction, or who fill or have filled offices, 
or engaged in private professional instruction, implying at 
least average higher instruction. Three votes is the highest 
number allowed, while failure to vote is punishable as a mis- 
demeanour. In 1908-9 the number of electors in Belgium 
was 1,65 r, 647, of whom 98 r, 866 had one vote, 378,264 two 
rotes and 291,5x7 three votes. In some other countries weight 
b given to special qualifications. In the town of Bremen the 
government is in the hands of a senate of 16 members and a 
Convent of Burgesses (BUrgerschaft) of 150 members. These 
latter are elected by the votes of all the citizens divided into 
dasscs. University men return 14 members, merchants 
40 members, mechanics and manufacturers 20 members, 
and the other inhabitants the remainder. So in Brunswick 
and in Hamburg legislators are returned by voters representing 
various interests. In Prussia, representatives are chosen by 
direct electors who in their turn are elected by indirect electors. 
One direct elector is elected from every complete number of 
250 souls. The indirect electors are divided into three classes, 



the first class comprising those who pay the highest tarn to 
the amount of one-third of the whole; the second, of those who 
pay the next highest amount down to the limits of the second 
third; the third, of all the lowest taxed. In Italy electors 
must either have attained a certain standard of elementary 
education, or pay a certain amount of direct taxation, or if 
peasant farmers pay a certain amount of rent, or if occupants 
of lodgings, shops, &c, in towns, pay an annual rent according 
to the population of the commune. In Japan, voters must pay 
either land tax of a certain amount for not less than a year 
or direct taxes other than land tax for more than two years. 
In the Netherlands, householders, or those who have paid the 
rent of bouses or lodgings for a certain period, are qualified for 
the franchise, as are owners or tenants of boats of not less than 
24 tons capacity, as well as those who have been for a certain 
period in employment with an annual wage of not less than 
£22, 1 8s. 4d., have a certificate of state interest of not less than 
too florins or a savings bank deposit of not less than 50 florins. 

The method now adopted in most countries of recording 
votes is that of secret voting or ballot (o.v.). This is carried 
out sometimes by a machine (see Voting Machines). The 
method of determining the successful candidate varies greatly 
in different countries. In the United Kingdom the candidate 
who obtains a relative majority is elected, i.e. it is necessary 
only to obtain more votes than any other candidate (see 
Representation). 

VOTING MACHINES. The complications in the voting at 
American elections have resulted in the invention of various 
machines for registering and counting the ballots. These 
machines are in fact mechanical Australian ballots. The 
necessity for them has been emphasized by election practice 
in many parts of the United States, where in a single election 
there have been from five to ten parties on the ballot, with 
an aggregate of four hundred or five hundred candidates, making 
the paper ballots large and difficult to handle. The objections 
to the paper ballot are further emphasized in the results ob- 
tained. The number of void and blank ballots is seldom less 
than 5% of the number of voters voting, and is often as high 
as 40%. This lost vote is often greater than the majority of 
the successful candidate. In close elections there is>n endless 
dispute as to whether the disputed ballots do or do not comply 
with the law. The election contest and recount expenses 
frequently exceed the cost of holding the election, and the title 
of the candidates to the office is frequently held in abeyance 
by a protracted contest until after the term of office has expired. 
A number of ways have been devised for marking the Australian 
ballot for identification without destroying its legality. The 
X is a very simple and well-known mark, yet in the case of 
CoulcMcn v. White, before the Supreme Court of Maryland, 
twenty-seven different ways of making the mark "X" were 
shown in the ballots in controversy, and all of them were a 
subject for judicial consideration, on which the judges of even 
the highest court could find room for disagreement. Wigmore 
in his book on the Australian ballot system points out thirteen 
ways of wrongly placing the mark, and forty-four errors in 
the style of the mark, besides many other errors tending to 
invalidate the ballot, all of them having frequently occurred 
in actual practice. These errors are not confined to the illiter- 
ates, but are just as common among the best-educated people. 
The ballots can and have frequently been altered or miscounted 
by unscrupulous election officers, and the detection of the 
fraud is frequently difficult and always expensive. 

Voting machines were devised first by English, and later 
with more success by American inventors. The earlier machines 
of Vassie, Chamberlain, Sydserff (1869) and Davie (1870) were 
practically all directed toward voting for the candidates of 
a single office by a ball, the ball going into one compart- 
ment or the other according to the choice of the voter. The 
use of the ball is in accordance with the original idea of ballot, 
which means " a little ball "; and because of the requirement 
of many of the constitutions of the states of the United States, 
that " elections shall be by ballot," many American inventors 



2l8 



VOTING MACHINES 



follow thk idea of using balls to indicate their votes. Others, 
however, maintaining that secrecy was the essential idea of 
voting by ballot, and that the form of the ballot was immaterial, 
worked on the idea of using a key and a counter for each candi- 
date, the counter registering the successive impulses given to 
it by the key, the machine preventing the voter from giving 
the key more than one impulse, and preventing the voter from 
operating more keys than he is entitled to vote. The highest 
courts of four different American states have ruled that any 
form of voting machine that secured secrecy would be con-, 
stitutionai. 

The first voting machine used in an election was the Myers 
Ballot Machine used at Lockport, New York, in 1892. This machine 
had a vertical keyboard with columns of push keys thereon, each 
column representing a party, and each key belonging to a candidate 
of that party, the keys of each horizontal fine belonging to the candi- 
dates of the various parties for a particular office. The voter pushed 
one of the knobs in each office line, which knob operated its counter 
and locked all other possible votes for the same office until the voter 
left the booth. The operated keys were released by the operation 
of the second booth door as the voter left the machine, and they 
were then reset by springs. The doors were so arranged that the 
voter must first pass through one and lock it behind htm before he 
could open the second one to get out. This both preserved secrecy 
and prevented repeating. Some sixty-five or more of these machines 
were used in the election in the city of Rochester. N.Y., in November 
1696, and with marked success. 

The McTammany Machine, operated by keys which punched holes 
in a web of paper. On this web the votes of each candidate were 
all punched in a single column, each separate column representing 
a separate candidate. The voter does not see the web, which is 
removed from the machine by the election officers after the election 
is over, and the vote thereon is canvassed by passing the web through 
a pneumatic counting machine. The paper web makes a separate 
record of each man's ballot that can be identified by a person skilled 
in the use of the machine. The machine is also slow in giving 
returns, due to the fact that the vote has to be counted after the 
election. 

In other types of machines each candidate had a separate recep- 
tacle, into which the machine dropped a ball for each vote that 
was cast for the candidate. These machines have so far not been 
successful. The whole development of practical voting machines 
has been limited to those machines in which a separate counter 
is provided for each candidate, the counter being operated either 
directly or indirectly by the voter. Of this type is the Myers 
machine, as well as the other machines mentioned here. 

The Bardwell Votometer had a separate counter for each candi- 
date, with a single key for operating all the counters on the machine. 
A keyhole was provided in each counter, in which the key could 
be inserted, and by turning it 180° the counter was operated and 
the key could be removed for use in another counter. The voter 
could operate but one counter at a time, and could not operate the 
counters in very rapid succession. The limited use of this machine 
can be attributed principally to the slowness with which it can be 
worked. The voter enters this machine by raising a bar at one end, 
which unlocks the counters for voting operation. Raising a similar 
bar at the other end as the voter passes out resets the machine for 
the next voter and locks it. .... . . , 

The Abbott Machine has attained considerable use in the state of 
-Michigan. In this machine the counters for each office are carried 
on a separate slide, and the voter moves these slides for the various 
offices from left to right, until the counter carrying the name of the 
candidate of his choice in each office row is lined up with the operat- 
ing bar. The vertical movement of the operating bar counts the 
vote on each of these slides, rings a bell, which notifies the election 
officer that a vote has been cast, and locks the machine against 
further voting. The election officer then moves a slide which resets 
the machine for the neat voter. The machine b limited in its 
application because two or more candidates on the same Office line 
cannot be voted for hy the *am* voter, dihoufih the voter may be 
entitled to vote for more than one tan-! i-J-itr 

The U.S. Standard Voting Machine ha* ri.i<5 the moit extensive 
use of any. A ^pirate key is provided le* rvh candidate. *h<eh 
key* are arranged on the key U . "* horuofiul 

party rowi ana v ■ *j * 

small pointer, *vh<*. ' ' rt '' .!■**» 

ihmugh the Uy\yoi V'2j l ? n ' S?J 

pmifinn and pnimi tn the Mto* ; 

Itrv* an lettered M(wrutiv--iv .'■' 

ofAce rows, so 1 r y™ 

<m all fii*" "^^^^■r^^^^^VV* t£ 



which extends outwardly and has a loose connexion with a curtain. 
The operation of the lever by a convenient handle enables the voter 
to close the curtain and unlock the machine for voting, after which 
the voter cannot retire from the machine until he has voted on 
the machine to a certain extent. The operation of any one of the 
party levers rings a bell to show that he has voted, and permits the 
reverse movement of the curtain lever, mhich counts the vote, resets 
the machine for the next voter and opens the curtain. Before 
opening the curtain the vote is not counted, and the voter can take 
back or change his vote. Repeating n prevented by a knob on the 
end of the machine, which locks the curtain lever against a second 
movement until it is released by the election officer. At the top of 
the machine is a paper roll on which the voter can write the names of 
candidates whose names do not appear on the machine in con- 
nexion with keys. This roll is concealed by slides, one for each 
office line of keys, which shoes must be lifted to expose the paper. 
An interlocking mechanism controls all the voting devices so that 
the voter cannot vote more than he is entitled to vote. These 
machines have been built large enough to provide for seven parties 
of sixty candidates each, and for thirty questions and amendments, 
a machine of such size carrying 480 counters, besides the total vote 
and protective counters. 

The Dean Machine has its keyboard placed horizontally, the keys 
being push buttons, which are arranged in party columns and 
transverse office rows. Party levers are provided by which the 
keys of the party are moved to voted position. Considerable stress 
is laid on the small keyboard of this machine, the peculiar type of 
counter used on it, and the separate card ballot for voting for 
unnominated candidates. 

Each state that adopts voting machines first enacts a law 
specifying the requirements that must be met in the construc- 
tion of the machines. These requirements are substantially 
the same in all the states, the laws being copied largely from 
the New York Voting Machine Law. The laws require in 
general that the machine shall give the voter all the facilities 
for expressing his choice which the Australian ballot gives 
him, and further require that the machine shall prevent those 
mistakes or frauds, which if made on an Australian ballot would 
invalidate it. 

Many of the states have special requirements, to meet which 
many ingenious features have been provided onthe various machines. 
Among these is the group of 18 supervisors in San Francisco, for 
which office as many as 108 candidates have appeared upon one 
ballot, out of which the machine must permit the voter to vote any 
18 and no more, regardless of the sequence in which they are selected, 
or the position in which they occur. 

Another of these local features is the primary election feature 
required by Minnesota, in which state the various parties must bold 
their primary election at the same time and on the same machine. 
The voter announcing the party of his preference finds the voting 
devices on the machine of all other parties locked against him, but 
the voting devices of his own party are open to his use. 

Still another is the lockout, by which the voter of limited voting 
franchises is prevented from voting for the candidates of certain 
offices. Another is the endorsed candidate in a group. Here the 
same candidate's name is provided with two or more voting devices 
in a group wherein the voter is allowed to vote for two or more 
candidates. Special provision must then be made to keep voters 
from voting twice for the same candidate. 

As to the important benefits attending the use of machines, 
there can be mentioned accuracy both in the casting and the 
counting of the vote, speed in getting in returns, and economy 
in holding elections. The improvement in accuracy is shown 
by the fact that the vote for each office usually runs 00% or 
more of the highest possible vote that could be registered by 
the number of voters that have voted. Speed is shown by 
the fact that in the city of Buffalo, with 60,000 voters voting on 
election day, the complete returns, including the vote on over 
100 candidates for the whole city, have been collected, tabulated 
and announced within 75 minutes from the closing of the polls. 
Economy is shown by the fact that although these machines 
are used but one or two days in each year, election expenses 
are reduced to such an extent that the machines pay for them- 
selves, in five or six elections. This is partly due to the smaller 
numkr of precincts necessary and the smaller number of election 
officers in each precinct and the shorter hours that they must 
work. The city of Buffalo has a dozen or more precincts, in 
each of which 800 voters or more are voted in an election day 
1 j ol ten hours, and in that city as many as 1041 voters have 
, I voi ed in one election day on one machine ( F. Ke.) 



•f 4 I voieu 



VOTKINSK— VOW 



219 



VUM1JMK, a town arid iron.works, in the Russian govern- 
ment of Vyatka, 40 m. N. of Sarapul and 8 m. W. from the 
Kama, founded in 1751S. Pop. a 1,000. Votkiosk was formerly 
one of the chief government establishments for the construc- 
tion of steamers for the Caspian, as well as of locomotives 
for the Siberian railway, and it has long been renowned for 
hs excellent tarantasses (driving vehicles) and other smaller 
iron-wares, at well as for its knitted goods. Its agricultural 
machinery is known throughout Russia. 

VOUCHER (from " to vouch/' to warrant, answer for, O. Fr. 
tractor, to cite, call in aid, Lat. vocore, to call, summon), any 
document in writing which confirms the truth of accounts or estab- 
lishes other facts, more particularly a receipt or other evidence 
in w riting which establishes the fact of the payment of money. 

VOOFT. 8IM0W ( 1 590-1 649), French painter, was born at 
Paris on the 9th of January 159a He passed many yean in 
Italy, where he married, and established himself at Rome, 
enjoying there a high reputation as a portrait painter. Louis 
XIII. recalled him to France and lodged him in the Louvre 
with the title of First Painter to the Crown. All royal work 
for the palaces of the Louvre and the Luxembourg was placed 
in his hands; the king became his pupil; he formed a large 
school, and renewed the traditions of that of Fontaineblean. 
Among his scholars was the famous Le Bran. Vouet was an 
exceedingly skilful painter, especially in decoration, and executed 
important works of this class for r *^^\ Richelieu (Rueil 
and Palais Royal) and other great nobles. His better easel 
pictures bear a curious resemblance to those of Sassoferrato. 
Almost everything he did was engraved by his sons-in-law 
Tortebat and Dorigny. 

VOOSSOIR (Get. WdtbtsUin), the French term used by 
architects for the wedge-shaped stones or other material with 
which the arch (f.t.) is constructed; the lowest stone on each 
side b termed the springer (Fr. antsrittet sommier) and the 
upper one at the crown of the arch the keystone (Fr. elateau). 

VOW (Lat. sofas*, vow, promiu: cf. Vote), a transaction 
between a man and a god, whereby the former undertakes in 
the future to render some service or gift to the god or devotes 
something valuable now and here to his use. The god on his 
part is reckoned to be going to grant or to have granted already 
some special favour to his votary in return for the promise 
made or service declared. Different formalities and ceremonies 
may in different religions attend the taking of a vow, but 
in all the wrath of heaven or of hell is visited upon one who 
breaks it. A vow has to be distinguished, firstly, from other 
and lower ways of persuading or constraining supernatural 
powers to give what man desires and to help him in time of 
need; and secondly, from the ordered ritual and regularly 
recurring ceremonies of religion. These two distinctions must 
be examined a little more at length. 

It would be an abuse of language to apply the term vow 
to the oses of imitative magic, e.g. to the action of a barren 
woman among the Battas of Sumatra, who in order to become 
a mother makes a wooden image of a child and holds it in her 
lap. For in such rites no prominence is given to the idea — 
even if it exists— of a personal relation be tw een the petitioner 
and the supernatural power. The latter is, so to speak, 
merhanirally constrained to act by the spell or magical rite; 
the forces liberated in fulfilment, not of a petition, bat of a 
wish are not those of a conscious will, and therefore no thanks 
are due from the wisher in case be is successful. The deities, 
however, to whom vows are made or discharged are already 
personal beings, capable of entering into contracts or covenants 
with man, of understanding the claims which his vow rttabhshrt 
on their benevolence, and of valuing his gratitude; conversely, 
m the taking of a vow the petitioner's piety and spiritual 
attitude have begun to outweigh those merely ritual details of 
the ceremony which in magical rites are all-important. 

Sometimes the old magical usage survives side by side with the 
more developed idea of a personal power to be approached in 
prayer. For example, in the Maghrib (in North Africa), in time 
of drought the m ai dens of Mawwm carry every evening in pro- 



cession through the streets a doll called gfrqja, really a dressed- 
up wooden spoon, symbolizing a pre-Islamic rain-spirit. Often 
one of the girls carries on her shoulders a sheep, and her com- 
panions sing the following words:— 

" Rain, fall, and I will give you my kid. 
He has a black head; he neither bleats 
Nor complains; he says not, * I am cold.' 
Rain, who fittest the skins. 
Wet our raiment. 
Rain, who feedest the rivers. 
Overturn the doors of our houses." 

Here we have a sympathetic rain charm, combined with a 
prayer to the rain viewed as a personal goddess and with a 
promise or vow to give her the animal. The point of the promise 
Hes of course in the fact that water is in that country stored and 
carried in sheep-skins. 1 

Secondly, the vow is quite apart from established cults, and is 
not provided for in the religious calendar. The Roman vow 
(wotum), as W. W. Fowler observes in bis work The Roman 
Festivals (London, 1809), p. 346, " was the exception, not the 
rule; it was a promise made by an individual at some critical 
moment, not the ordered and recurring ritual of the family or the 
State," The vow, however, contained so large an element of 
ordinary prayer that in the Greek language one and the same 
word (cfe4) expressed both. The characteristic mark of the vow, 
as Suidas in his lexicon and the Greek Church fathers remark, 
was that it was a promise either of things to be offered to God 
in the future and at once consecrated to Him in view of their 
being so offered, or of austerities to be undergone. For offering 
and austerity, sacrifice and suffering, are equally calculated to 
appease an offended deity's wrath or win his goodwill. 

The Bible affords many examples of vows. Thus in Judges xi. 
Jephthah " vowed a vow unto the Lord, and said, If thou wilt 
indeed deliver the children of Ammon into my hand, then it shall 
be that whosoever cometh forth out of the doors of my bouse to 
meet me, when I return in peace from the children of Ammon, it 
shall be the Lord's, and I will offer it up for a burnt-offering." 
In the sequel it is his own daughter who so meets him, and he 
sacrifices her after a respite of two months granted her in order 
to " bewail her virginity upon the mountains." A thing or 
person thus vowed to the deity became holy or taboo; and for 
h, as the above story indicates, nothing could be substituted. 
It belonged to once to the sanctuary or to the priests who re- 
presented the god. In the Jewish religion, the Utter, under 
certain conditions, defined in Leviticus xxvii., could permit it to 
be redeemed. But to substitute an unclean for a clean beast 
which had been vowed, or an imperfect victim for a flawless one, 
was to court with certainty the divine displeasure. 

It is often difficult to distinguish a vow from an oath. Thus in 
Acts xxiii. si, over forty Jews, enemies of Paul, bound themselves, 
under a curse, neither to eat nor to drink till they had slain him. 
In the Christian Fathers we near of vows to abstain from flesh 
diet and wine. But of the abstentions observed by votaries, 
those which had relation to the barber's art were the commonest. 
Wherever individuals were concerned to create or confirm a 
tie connecting them with a god, a shrine or a particular religious 
circle, a hair-offering was in some form or other imperative. 
They began by polling their locks at the shrine and left them as a 
soul-token in charge of the god, and never polled them afresh until 
the vow was fulfilled. So Achilles consecrated his hair to the river 
Spercheus and vowed not to cut it till he should return safe from 
Troy; and the Hebrew Naxarile, whose strength resided in his 
flowing locks, only cut them off and burned them on the altar 
when the days of bis vow were ended, and he could return to 
ordinary life, having achieved his mission. So in Acts xviii. 18 
Paul " had shorn his head in Cenchreae, for be had a vow." In 
Acts xxt sj we hear of four Jews who, having a vow on them, 
had their heads shaved at Paul's expense. Among the ancient 
Chatti, as Tacitus relates {Germauio, 31), young men allowed their 
hair and beards to grow, and vowed to court danger in that guise 

< Professor A. Bel in paper Qudqmenlcs paw Utnir l* phut, m**r~ 
Congris da QrienUUUta (Alger, tOOj). 



220 



VOZNESENSK— VRIENDT 



until they each had slain ah enemy. Robertson Smith (Religion 
of the Semites, ed. 1901, p. 483) with much probability explains 
such usages from the widespread primitive belief that a man's 
life lurks in his hair, so that the devotee being consecrated or 
taboo to a god, his hair must be retained during the period of 
taboo or purification (as it is called in Acts xxi. 26) lest it be 
dissipated and profaned. The hair being part and parcel of the 
votary, its profanation would profane him and break the taboo. 
The same author remarks that this is why, when the hair of a 
Maori chief was cut, it was, being like the rest of his person 
sacred or taboo, collected and buried in a sacred place or hung 
on a tree. And we meet with the same scruple in the initiation 
rite, called oxfiit*, of Eastern monks. First, the novice is care- 
fully denuded of the clothes, shoes and headgear, which he wore 
in the world, and which, being profane or unclean, would violate 
the taboo about to be set on him. His hair is then polled cross- 
wise by way of consecrating it; and in some forms of the rite 
the presiding monk, called " the lather of the hair," collects the 
shorn locks and deposits them under the altar or in some other 
safe and sacred place. Greek nuns used to keep the hair thus 
shorn off, weave it into girdles, and wear it for the rest of their 
lives round their waists, where close to their holy persons there 
was no risk of its being denied by alien contact. The rest of this 
rite of oyyina, especially as it is preserved in the old Armenian 
versions, smacks no less of the most primitive taboo. For the 
novice, after being thus tonsured, advances to the altar holding 
a taper in either hand, just as tapers were tied to the horns of an 
animal victim; the new and sacred garb which is to demarcate 
him henceforth from the unclean world is put upon him, and the 
presiding father laying his right hand upon him devotes him 
with a prayer which begins thus:— 

" To thee, O Lord, as a rational whole burnt-offering, as mystic 
frankincense, as voluntary homage and worship, we offer up this 
thy servant N. or M." 

From the same point of view is to be explained the prohibition 
to one under a vow of flesh diet and fermented drinks; for it was 
believed that by partaking of these a man might introduce into 
Jus body the unclean spirits which inhabited them— the brute 
soul which infested meat, especially when the animal was 
strangled, and the cardiac demon, as the Rabbis called it, which 
harboured in wine. 

The same considerations help to explain the custom of 
votive offerings.' Any popular shrine in Latin countries is 
hung with wax models of limbs that have been healed, of ships 
saved from wreck, or with pictures representing the votary's 
escape from perils by land and sea* So Cicero (de Deorum 
Notura, iii. 37) relates how a friend remarked to Diagoras the 
Atheist when they reached Samothrace: " You who say that 
the gods neglect men's affairs, do you not perceive from the 
many pictures how many have escaped the force of the tempest 
and reached harbour safely." Diagoras's answer, that the 
many more who had suffered shipwreck and perished had no 
pictures to record their fate does not concern us here. It is 
only pertinent to remark that these votivae tabettae and offerings 
may have had originally another significance than that of 
merely recording the votary's salvation and of marking his 
gratitude. The model ship may be a substitute for the entire 
ship which is become sacred to the god, bur cannoi be deposited 
in the shrine; the miniature limbs of wax arc substitute* for 
the real limbs which now belong to the god. In other case 
the very objects which are taboo are given to the god as when 
a sailor deposits his salt-stained suil before the idoL 

The general idea, then, involved in. vows, whether ancient 
or modern, is that to express which the modern anihropotogjst 
borrows the Polynesian word taboo. The votary desirous to 
" antedate his future act of service and make its efficacy 1* 
at once," 1 formally dedicates through spoken formula srH 
act a lifeless object such as a ring, an animal, hi* 
entire person to the god. He so cither makcf 
blessings, or shows gratitude for those already 
of the ritual prescriptions that accomfn 
* Religion of the 



to guard inviolate the sanctity or taboo, the atmosphere of 
holiness or ritual purity, which envelops the persons or objects 
vowed or reserved to the god, and thereby separated from 
ordinary secular use. 

The consideration of the moral effect of vows upon those who 
take them belongs rather to the history of Christian asceticism. 
It may, however, be remarked here that monkish vows, while 
they may lend to a man's life a certain fixity of aim and moral 
intensity, nevertheless tend to narrow his interests, and 
paralyse his wider activities and sympathies. In particular 
a monk binds himself to a lifelong and often morbid struggle 
against the order of nature; and motives become for him not 
good or bad according to the place they occupy in the living 
context of social life, but according as they bear upon an 
abstract and useless ideal (F. C C.) 

VOZNESENSK, a town of Russia, in the government of 
Kherson, on the left bank of the river Bug, at the head of 
navigation, 55 m. N.W. from Nikolayev, to which steamers 
ply regularly. Pop. 14,178. It is a river port of some im- 
portance^ and holds four large fairs annually. It contains a 
cathedral, a public garden and distilleries and breweries. 

VRANCX, SEBASTIAN, born about 1572, was a painter of 
the Antwerp school, of vtry moderate ability. Most of his 
pictures represent scenes of war, such as the sack of towns, 
cavalry combats and the like. Though occasionally vigorous 
in drawing, his paintings are dull and heavy in tone. The 
date of his death is uncertain. 

VRANYA, or Vsany£, the most southerly town of the 
kingdom of Servia, 7$ m. from the Macedonian frontier, on a 
slope descending from Mount Placevitza to the plain of the 
Upper Morava, in a picturesque and fertile country. Pop. 
(1000) 11,921. In the Russo-Turkish War of 2877 it was 
captured by the Servian army from the Turks, and subsequently 
was incorporated in the kingdom. It is the capital of a depart- 
ment of the same name, and is an important station on the 
railway from Nish to Salonica, with a custom house, prin- 
cipally for merchandise imported into Servia via Salonica. 
Its inhabitants are employed chiefly in the cultivation of flax 
and hemp, and in the making of ropes. There is a much 
frequented summer resort 4J m. E., called Vranyska Banya, 
with baths of hot sulphurous mineral water. 

VRATZA, the capital of the department of Vratza, Bulgaria, 
on the northern slope of the Stara Planina and on a small 
subtributary of the Danube. Pop. (1006) 14,832. Vratza 
is an archiepiscopal see and the headquarters of a military 
division. Wine, leather and gold and silver filigree are manu- 
factured, and there is a school of sericulture. 

VRIENDT, JUUAEN JOSEPH DB (1842- ), and AL- 
BRECHT FRANCOIS UEVEN DB (1843-1000), Belgian painters, 
both born at Ghent, sons of a decorative painter. The two 
brothers were dose friends, and their works show marked signs of 
resemblance. Having received their early training from their 
father at Ghent, they removed to Antwerp, where they soon 
yielded to the influence of the painter Baron Henri Leys. 
Albrecht became director of the Academy of Fine Arts at Antwerp 
and was succeeded by his brother. Albrecht's principal works are 
" Jacqueline of Bavaria imploring Philip- tiw.£ood to pardon 
her Husband " (1B71, Liege Gallery), **Tht Bxtommiinkatiun 
of Bouchard d'Avesnes " {\Hj GalkryK "' J 

AngdtiR " OS 77, acquired by LrHieJd IT,, king of ihr 
Belgians), " Pope PduJ UL before huthcr'a I'ottvait " f j * 
Antwerp Gallery), "The Given* of Chen I paying hoci&g*.- 
to the chiTd Charfc* \ .0, " Philip tl. 

Hand 




VRYHEID— VULTURE 



221 



, a town of northern Natal, 291 m. by rail N. by 
W. of Durban. Pop. (1904) 2287, of whom 1344 were whites. 
It is the chief town of a district, of the same name, rich in 
mineral wealth, including copper, coal and gold. The coal- 
fields of Hlobane are S.E. of the town. Originally part of 
Ziilnland the district of Vryheid was ceded by Dinizulu to a 
party of Boers under Lucas Meyer, who aided him to crash his 
opponents, and was proclaimed an Independent state under 
the title of the New Republic in 1884. In 1888 it was incor- 
porated with the Transvaal and in 1903 annexed to Natal (see 
Transvaal, | History; and Zcluland, f History). 

V-SHAPED DEPRESSION, in meteorology, a narrow area 
of low pressure usually occurring between two adjacent anti- 
cyclones, and taking the form of a V or tongue, as do the 
isobars representing it on a weather-chart. Such a depression 
may be regarded as a projection from a cyclonic system lying 
to one side of the two anticyclones. A similar depression, 
however, is frequently formed within a larger area of depression, 
*.e. an ordinary cyclone, and sometimes develops so far as 
to feive a complete circulation of its own; it is then known 
«ls a. " secondary." The line of lowest depression following the 
suds of the V brings with it heavy squalls and a sudden change 
of wind from one direction almost to the opposite. It is pre- 
ceded by signs of break in the weather such as usually herald 
tibe approach of an ordinary cyclone, and is followed by the 
nsnal signs of clearance. The occurrence of a V-depression 
or secondary within an ordinary cyclonic system intensifies, 
often to a dangerous degree, the usual disturbances in the 
weather accompanying that system. Conditions exactly opposite 
to those accompanying a V-shaped depression are provided 
by» a wedge " (q.v.). 

WVhCMM ( Vokanus), the Roman god of fire, and more esped- 

of devouring name (Virg. Am. 5. 662). Whether he was 

like Hephaestus, the deity of smiths, is very doubtful; 

surname Mukiber may rather be referred to his power to 

ay conflagrations. In the Comitium was an " area Vokani," 

called " Volcanal "; and here on the 23rd of August 

(Voleanmlta) the Flamen Volcanalis sacrificed, and the heads 

of ftoman families threw into the fire small fish, which the 

Tiber fishermen sold on the spot. This flamen also sacrificed 

oaa the 1st of May to Maia, who in an old prayer formula (Gettius 

•3- 23) was coupled with Volcanus as Maia Volcani. It is not 

' to explain these survivals of an old cult. But in historical 

the association of this god with conflagrations becomes 

' apparent; when Augustus organised the city in regimes 

"to check the constant danger from fires, the magistri 

(officers of administrative districts) worshipped him as 

^5**** ****** <***««'«« (CJ.L. vi. 801 and 802) and on the 

j g^° °* A "S«st there was a sacrifice to him together with Ops 

ypven and the Nymphae, which suggests the need of water 

■n quenching the flames. At Ostia, where much of the corn 

J^rf £?™ w , hich f «d the Roman population, the cult of this 

jjMoecajae famous; and it is probable that the fixing of his 

totZr «fcf AttgU8t bv th« early Romans had some reference 

month ^^* cr *° the newly harvested corn from fire in that 

VOVBAT* (^ . (W.W.F*) 

teaoB o/ tA* i*? 11 L ******> the common people), a Latin 
and #0 called / P 1 **** 1 ^ in d* 4th century by St Jerome, 
Chmxth fr ee Br*** ' ts comm on use in the Roman Catholic 
matte* to tfce j£if : TcxU and v #**°**)' Pius x - » x °o8 cn- 
" -i>vt *rjth m 1 " "ctinc Order the task of revising the text, 
mrsreULA £;' f f Testament 
» ffiod,5^WSBH C"The 




'The Fox and Goose"), in astro- 



E 

steilation of the northern hemisphere, 

^vkua, wfco catalogued twenty-seven stars. 

w to JV&na Vulpecvloe, a "new" star dis- 

irx 1670; t Vulpeculae, a short period 

^on* *• I>urnb-bell " nebula. 

* N A?J'Qrjg T ( x 76^x827), German author, 
r 01a the 23rd of January 176a, and was 
, ' ; ***««- In 1 700 he returned to Weimar, 
tia «J entered into relaUons with Vulpius's 



sister Christine (1765-1816), whom he afterwards married, ob- 
tained employment for him. Here Vulpius began, in imita- 
tion of Christian Heinrich Spicss, to write a series of romantic 
narratives. Of these (about sixty in number) bis Rinaldo 
RimaUim (1797), the scene of which is laid in Italy during the 
middle ages, is the best. In 1797 Vulpius was given an appoint- 
ment on the Weimar library, of which he became chief librarian 
in 1806. He died at Weimar on the 25th of June 1827. 

VULTURE, the name of certain birds whose best-known 
characteristic is that of feeding upon carcases. The genus 
Vultur, as instituted by Linnaeus, is now restricted by ornith- 
ologists to a single species, V. monachus. The other species 
included therein by him, or thereto referred by succeeding 
systematise, being elsewhere relegated (see LXmmerceyeb). 
A most important taxonomic change was introduced by T. H. 
Huxley (Proe. Zod. Society, 1867, pp. 462-64), who pointed 
out the complete structural difference between the vultures 
of the New World and those of the Old, regarding the former 
as constituting a distinct family, Cathartiaae (which, however, 
would be more properly named Sarcorhamphidae), while he 
united the latter with the ordinary diurnal birds of prey as 
Gypaetidae. 

The American vulture may be said to include four genera: 
(1) Sarcorkomphus, the gigantic condor, the male distinguished 
by a large fleshy comb and wattle; (2) Gypcgus, the king- 
vulture, with its gaudily coloured head and nasal caruncle; 




King-Vulture (Cypagus papa). 

(3) Catkarista, containing the so-called turkey-buzzard with 
its allies; and (4) Psew&ogrypkus, the great Californian vulture 
—of very limited range on the western slopes of North America. 
Though all these birds are structurally different from the true 
vultures of the Old World, in habits the Vulturidae and Sarco- 
rhamphidae are much alike. 

The true vultures of the Old World, Vulturidae in the re- 
stricted sense, arc generally divided into five or six genera, 
of which Neophron has been separated as forming a distinct 
subfamily, Ncophroninae— its members, of comparatively 
small sixe, differing both in structure and habit considerably 
from the rest One of them is the so-called Egyptian vulture 
or Pharaoh's ben, N. percnopienu, a remarkably foul-feeding 
species, living much on ordure. It is a well-known species 
in some parts of India, 1 and thence westward to Africa, where 

1 In the eastern part of the Indian peninsula it is replaced by a 
smaller race or (according to some authorities) species, N. ginginianus, 
which has a yellow instead of a black bill. 



222 



VURJEEVANDAS— VYSHNIY-VOLOCHOK 



it has an extensive range. It also occurs on the northern 
shores of the Mediterranean, and has strayed to such a distance 
as to have suffered capture in England and even in Norway. 
Of the genera composing the other subfamily, Vulturinae, 
Gyps numbers seven or eight local species and races, on more 
than one of which the English name griffon has been fastened. 
The best known is G. Julvus, which by some authors is accounted 
" British " from an example having been taken in Ireland, 
though under circumstances which suggest its appearance so 
far from its nearest home in Spain to be due to man's inter- 
vention. The species, however, has a wider distribution on 
the European continent (especially towards the north-east) 
than the Egyptian vulture, and in Africa nearly reaches the 
Equator, extending also in Asia to the Himalaya; but both 
in the Ethiopian and Indian regions its range inosculates 
with that of several allied forms or species. Pseudogyps with 
two forms— one Indian, the other African — differs from Gyps 
by having ia instead of 14 rectrices. Of the genera O to gyps 
and Lophogyps nothing here need be said; and then we have 
Vultur, with, as mentioned before, its sole representative* 
V. monadtirt, commonly known as the cinereous vulture, a 
bird which is found from the Straits of Gibraltar to the sea- 
coast of China. Almost all these birds inhabit rocky cliffs, 
on the ledges of which they build their nests. 

The question whether vultures in their search for food are 
guided by sight of the object or by its scent has excited much 
interest. It seems to be now generally admitted that the 
sense of sight is in almost every case sufficient to account for 
the observed facts. (A. N.) 

VURJEEVANDAS HADHOWDAS (181 7-1896), Hindu mer- 
chant of Bombay, of the Kapolc Bania caste, was born on the 28th 
of January 18 17 at Gogla, in Kathiawar, whence his father came 
to Bombay with Shelh Manoredas for trading purposes. Vur- 
jecvandas was educated in Bombay, started a new firm under 
the name of Vurjeevandas & Sons, and soon became one of the 
wealthiest merchants in Bombay. He was appointed a justice of 
the peace and a member of the Bombay Port Trust. He took 
a keen interest in the Royal Asiatic Society and the Bombay 
university, where a prize has been established to commemorate 
his name. He constructed the Madhow Bang in memory of his 
father, and gave it to the use of poor Hindus, endowing it with 
nearly five lakhs of rupees. He built a rest-house in Bombay in 
memory of his brother Mooljibhoy, and another one at Nasik. 
The sanatorium which he built in memory of his youngest son 
Rumhorcdas at Sion Hill is a great boon to the poor people of his 
community. He also established a dispensary at Matoonga and 
a fund for the relief of indigent Hindus. He died on the 12th 
of January 1806. 

VYATKA, or Viatka, a government of N.E. Russia, with 
the government of Vologda on the N., Perm on the E., Ufa and 
Kazan on the S. and Nizhniy-Novgorod and Kostroma on the 
W., having an area of 59,100 sq. m. It has on its northern 
boundary the flat water-parting which separates the basins of 
the Northern Dvina and the Volga, and its surface is an undulat- 
ing plateau 800 to 1400 ft. above sea-level, deeply grooved by 
rivers and assuming a hilly aspect on their banks. The Kama 
rises in the N.E., and, after making a wide sweep through Perm, 
Bows along its S.E. boundary, while the rest of the government 
is drained by the Vyatka and its numerous tributaries. Both 
the Kama and the Vyatka are navigable, as also are several 
tributaries; the Izh and Votka, which flow into the Vyatka, 
have important ironworks on their banks, The only railway 
is one from Perm to Archangel, through the town of Vyatka; 
the government is traversed by the great highway to Siberia, 
and by two other roads by which goods from the south are 
transported to loading-places on the Vychegda and the Yug to 
be shipped to Archangel. Lakes are numerous, and vast marshes 
exist everywhere, especially in the north. The climate is very 
severe, the average yearly temperature being 36° F. at Vyatka 
(January, 8-a°; July, 67 o°) and 35 at Slobodsk (January, 35°; 
July, 65-3°). 

The estimated pop. in 1006 was 3,532,600, The bulk of 



the inhabitants (78 %) are Russians; Votyaks make ia-i %» 
Cheremisses 5 %, and Tatars 3} %, the remainder being Bashkirs, 
Teptyars and Pcrmyaks. The Votyaks (Otyaks), a Finnish 
tribe, call themselves Ot, Ut or Ud, and the Tatars call them 
Ar, so that they may possibly be akin to the Ars of the Yenisei. 
They are middle-sized, with fair hair and eyes, often red-haired; 
and the general structure of the face and skull is Finnish. By 
their dialect thev belong to the same branch as the Permyaks. 

The government is divided into eleven districts, the chief towns 
of which are Vyatka. Elabuga. Glatov, Kotelnich. Malmyzh, Nolinsk. 
Orlov, Sarapul, Slobodsk, Clrzhum and Yaransk. Izhevsk and 
Votkinsk, or Kamsko-Votkinsk. have important ironworks. Some 
55% of the surface is covered with forests, two-thirds of which 
belong to (he crown, and hunting (especially squirrcl-huniing) and 
fishing are of commercial importance. The peasants, who form 
89% of the population, own 44% of the whole government, the 
crown 53% and private persons 2%. The soil is fertile, especially 
in the valleys of the south. Vyatka is one of the chief grain- 
producing governments of Russia. The principal crops arc rye, 
wheat, oats, barley and potatoes. Flax and hemp are extensi\ely 
cultivated* and large numbers of cattle are kept, but they are 
mostly of inferior breed. The government has a race of good 

e>nies that are widely exoorted. Domestic industries occupy 
rge numbers of the inhabitants. The principal manufacturing 
establishments are canneries, distilleries, ironworks, chemical 
works, glass factories, cotton and steam flour-mills, and hardware, 
machinery, paper and fur-dressing works. (P. A. K.; J. T. Be.) 

VYATKA, a town of Russia, capital of the government of the 
same name, on the Vyatka river, 304 m. by rail W.N.W. of 
Perm. Pop. 24.782. It is built on the steep hills which rise 
above the river and at their base. Its old walls have been 
demolished, and its old churches built anew. It is an episcopal 
see and has a fine cathedral. Its manufactures include silver 
and copper wares, and ecclesiastical ornaments, and it has aa 
important trade in corn, leather, tallow, candles, soap, wax, 
paper and furs (exported), and in manufactured and grocery 
wares (imported). Vyatka was founded in ti8x by the 
Novgorodians, as Khlynov. In ijqi it was plundered by the 
Tatars, and again in 1477. Moscow annexed Khlynov in 
1480. It received the name of Vyatka in 178a 

VYAZMA, a town of Russia, in the government of Smolensk, 
100 m. by rail E.N.E. of the town of Smolensk. Pop. 15,676, 
It was a populous place as early as the z ith century, and carried 
on a lively trade with Narva on the Gulf of Finland. In the 15th 
century it fell under the dominion of Lithuania, but was retaken 
by the Russians. The Poles look it again in 161 1, and kept it 
till the peace of 1634. It is now an important centre for trade. 
It has a cathedral, dating from 1506. 

VYERHYI (formerly Aluaty), a town and fort of Asiatic 
Russia, capital of the province of Scmiryechensk, 50 m, N. of 
Lake Issyk-kul, at the northern foot of the Trans-Ui Ala-tau 
Mountains, at an altitude of 2440 ft. Pop. 24,708. Founded 
in 1854, it is well-built, provided with boulevards and sur- 
rounded by luxuriant gardens. It has a cathedral, being an 
archiepiscopal sec of the Orthodox Greek Church, a school of 
gardening and sericulture, a public library, and a few distilleries, 
tanneries and oil works. Situated at the intersection of 
two roads— from Kulja to Tashkent, and from Semipalaiinsk 
to Kashgar— Vycrnyi carries on an active trade in wheat, rice, 
corn, tea, oil and tobacco. It was the centre of a remarkable 
earthquake on ihcoih of June 1&87. 

VYRHWY {Fyrtaoy), an artificial lake or reservoir in the north- 
west oi Montgomeryshire, N. Wales, constructed for the Liver- 
pool water-supply. It was formed by damming lh« river 
Vyrnwy, which runs through Montgomeryshire and jfafrfltfht 
Severn above Shrewsbury (see Watem-Supp^y)^ 

VYSHNIY-VOLOCHOK, a town of Ru ' " 
of Tver, 74 m- by rail N.W. of the dy 
The place owes its importance tft I 
Vyshne-Volotsk navij 
Peter the Great in 14 
the Neva, 
Tvert*4,a.| 
thc.r 




Wthe twenty-third letter of the English alphabet, 
•hows its origin in its name; it is but VV, and, 
as the name shows, V had the vowel value of 
«, while the " doable « " was employed for the 
assonant value. In German the same symbol w is called Vey, 
became in that language it has the value of the English », 
while the German » ( Von, fow in pronunciation) is used with 
the same value as /. In the English of the 9th century the uu of 
the old texts (and the u of the Northern) was found not to repre- 
sent the English v satisfactorily, and a symbol/* was adopted 
from the Runic alphabet. This survived sporadically as. late as 
theendof the 13th century, but long before that had been generally 
igiin replaced by uu (w only in Early Middle English) and by w. 
For wthe earliest English printers had a type, but French printers 
b:d not; hence a book like the Roman Catholic version of the 
New Testament printed at Rheims in 1582 prints w with two v's 
*♦. side by side. Throughout the history of English the sound 
stt.Tts to have remained the same — the consonantal i#. For this 
fitue as well as for u Latin always used only V; in Greek, 
acept in a few dialects, the consonant value was early lost (see 
osier F). W is produced by leaving a very small opening 
between the slightly protruded lips while the back of the tongue 
b raised towards the soft palate and the nasal passage closed. 
The ordinary w is voiced, but according to some authorities the 
w in the combination wh (really hw) is not, in when, what, &c, 
rrea when the A is no longer audible. The combination WH 
(**) represents the Indo-European q* when changed according 
to Grimm's law from a stop to a spirant. Thus what corresponds 
paDofogicaliy to the Latin quod and the first syllable.of the Greek 
nt-orfe. In Southern English the k sound has now been 
fneraDy dropped. In Scotland, along the line of former contact 
with Gaelic, it changes. into /: Jtie**white, forl**whorl\ but 
before i («) it remains in wheel. In Early English w appeared 
** only before r as in write, ljut also before / in wlisp {lisp). 
fa trite, wring, &c, the w is now silent, though dialectically, e.g. 
in Aberdeenshire, it has changed to v and is still pronounced, 
*ttt, wing, frc In English and in other languages there is 
considerable difficulty in pronouncing v before long « sounds: 
taceit has disappeared in pronunciation in two (tQ), but survives 
» Scotch two, though otherwise the difficulty is more noticeable 
in Scottish dialects than in literary English, as in " 00 "*=wool 
ud in the Scottish pronunciation of English words like wood 
u W. (P. Gi.) 

Va, a wild tribe inhabiting the north-east frontier of Upper 
Burma. Their country lies to the east of the Northern Shan 
fetes, between the Salween river and the state of Keng-TQng, 
Wending for about 100 m. along the Salween and for consider- 
*% less than half that distance inland to the watershed between 
tat river and the Mekong. The boundaries may be roughly said 
to be the Salween on the W. t the ridge over the Namting valley 
* l k N., the hills E. of the Nam Hka on the eastern and southern 
•Wei, while the country ends in a point formed by the junction 
j* the Nam Hka with the Salween. The Was claim to have 
*&*biled the country where they now are since the beginning of 
Jj*;b*tit appears more probable that they were the aborigines 
tffttmtarnoxt of northern Siara at least, if not of Indo-China, 

McLeod in 1837) 

nts wiiti small 

^1 Chicrtgtnai; 

■Bnpn'T' has 




but their language proves them to belong to the M6n-Khmcr 
family. They are popularly divided into Wild Was and Tame 
Was. The Wild Was are remarkable as the best authenticated 
instance of head-hunters in the British Empire. They were 
formerly supposed to be also cannibals; but ft is now known 
that they are not habitual cannibals, though it is possible that 
human flesh may be eaten as a religious function at the annual 
harvest feast. Their head-hunting habits have an animistic 
basis. In the opinion of the Wa the ghost of a dead man goes 
with his skull and hangs about its neighbourhood, and so many 
skulls posted up outside his village gate mean so many watch- 
dog umbrae attached to the village, jealous of their own preserves 
and intolerant of interlopers from the invisible world. Thus 
every addition to the collection of skulls is an additional safe- 
guard against ill-affected demons, and a head-hunting expedition 
is not undertaken, as was once thought, from motives of cannibal- 
ism or revenge, but solely to secure the very latest thing in 
charms as a protection against the powers of darkness. Outside 
every village is an avenue of human skulls, amid groves con- 
spicuous from long distances. These consist of strips of the 
primeval jungle, huge forest trees left standing where all the 
remaining country is cleared for cultivation. The undergrowth 
is usually cut away, and these avenues are commonly but hot 
always in deep shade. Along one side (which side apparently 
does not matter) is a line of posts with skulls fitted into niches 
facing towards the path. The niche is cut sometimes in front, 
sometimes in the back of the post. In the latter case there is a 
round hole in front, through which sometimes only the teeth 
and empty eye-sockets, sometimes the whole skull, grins a 
ghastly smile. Most villages count their heads by tens or 
twenties, but some of them have hundreds, especially when the 
grove lies between several large villages, who combine or run 
their collections into one another. The largest known avenue is 
that between HsQng Raraang and Hsan Htung. Here there 
must be a couple of hundred or more skulls; but it is not certain 
that even this is the largest. It is thought necessary to add some 
skulls to this pathway every year if the crops arc to be good. 
The heads of distinguished and pious men and of strangers are 
the most efficacious. The head-hunting season lasts through 
March and April, and it is when the Wa hill fields are being got 
ready for planting that the roads in the vicinity become dangerous 
to the neighbouring Shans. The little that is known of the 
practice seems to hint at the fact that the victim selected was 
primarily a harvest victim. A Wild Wa village is a very formid- 
able place to attack, except for civilized weapons of offence. 
All the villages are perched high up on the slope of the hills, 
usually on a knoll or spine-like spur, or on a narrow ravine near 
the crest of the ridge. The only entrance is through a long tunneL 
There is sometimes only one, though usually there are two, at 
opposite sides of the village. This tunnelled way is a few inches 
over 5 ft. high and not quite so wide, so that two persons cannot 
pass freely in it, and it sometimes winds slightly, so that a gun 
cannot be fired up it; moreover, the path is frequently studded 
with pegs in a sort of dice arrangement, to prevent a rush. 
None of the tunnels is less than 30 yds. long, and some are as 
much as 100 yds. Round each village is carried an earthen 
rampart, 6 to 8 ft. high and as many thick, and this is overgrown 
with a dense covering of shrubs, thin bushes and cactuses, so as 
to be quite impenetrable. Outside this is a deep ditch which 
would effectually stop a rush. These preparations indicate the 
character of tbe inhabitants, which is so savage and suspicious 
that the Wa country is still unadministcrcd and naturally does 
not appear in the 1001 census returns. The total number of 
the Wa race is estimated at more than 50,000. 0- G. Sc.) 

WAAOEN. GDSTAV FRIEDRICH (1 794-1868). German art 
historian, was born in Hamburg, the son of a painter and nephew 
of the poet Ludwig Heck. Having passed through the college 



224 



WAAGEN, W. H.— WACHSMUTH 



of Hirschberg, he volunteered for service in the Napoleonic 
campaign of 1813-1814, and on his return attended the lectures 
at Breslau University. He devoted himself to the study of art, 
which he pursued in the great European galleries, first in Ger- 
many, then in Holland and Italy. A pamphlet on the brothers 
Van Eyck led to his appointment to the directorship of the newly 
founded Berlin Museum in 1832. The result of a journey to 
London and Paris Was an important publication in three volumes, 
Kunstwerke und KUnstUr in England und Paris (Berlin, 1837- 
1839), which' became the basis for his. more important The 
Treasures of Art in Great Britain (London, 1854 and 1857). In 
1844 he was appointed professor of art history at the Berlin 
University, and in 1861 he was called to St Petersburg as adviser 
in the arranging and naming of the pictures in the imperial 
collection. On his return he published a book on the Hermitage 
collection (Munich, 1864). Among his other publications are 
some essays on Rubens, Mantegna and Signorelli; Kunstwerke 
und Kilnstier in Deutschland and Die vornehmsten KunstdcukmiUer 
inWien* He died on a visit to Copenhagen in 1868. In the light 
of more recent research his writings are not of much value. 
as regards trustworthy criticism, though they are useful as 
catalogues of art treasures in private collections at the time 
when they were complied. His opinions were greatly respected 
in England, where he was invited to give evidence before the 
royal commission inquiring into the condition, and future of the 
National Gallery. 

WAAGEN, WILHELM HEINRICH (1841-1900), German 
palaeontologist, was born at Munich on the 23rd of June 1841. 
He was educated at Munich and Zurich, and through the influence 
of A. Oppel he commenced to study the rocks and fossils of the 
Jurassic system, and published an essay in 1865, Versuch einer 
AUgetneinen Classification der Schichten des oberen Jura. In 1870 
he joined the staff of the Geological Survey of India, and was 
appointed palaeontologist in 1874, but was obliged to retire 
through ill-health in 1875. He published important monographs 
in the Palaeontologia Indica on the palaeontology of Cutch (1873- 
1876) and the Salt Range (1870-1883), dealing in the last-named 
work with fossils from the Lower Cambrian to the Trias. In 
1879 he was appointed professor of mineralogy and geology 
in the German technical high school at Prague, and he 
became a contributor to the continuation of Barrande's great 
work on the Systeme Silurien de Boktme. In 1890 he became 
professor of palaeontology at the university of Vienna, and 
in 1898 the Lycll medal was awarded to him by the Geological 
Society of London. He died in Vienna on the 24th of March 
1906. 

WABASH, a city and the county-seat of Wabash county, 
Indiana, U.S.A., about 42 m. S.W. of Fort Wayne. Pop. (1890) 
5105, (1900) 8618, of whom 498 were foreign-born and 134 
negroes; (iqioU.S. census) 8687. It is served by the Cleveland, 
Cincinnati, Chicago & St. Louis railway (which has extensive 
shops here), by the Wabash railway, and by interurban electric 
lines. It has a public library, a Memorial Hall (1897), erected 
to the memory of Federal soldiers in the Civil War and occupied 
by the local " camp " of the Grand Army of the Republic, a 
Masonic temple, a county hospital and two parks. The city is 
in a fertile agricultural region, and has a considerable trade 
in grain and produce. Among its manufactures are furniture, 
agricultural implements and foundry and machine-shop products. 
In 1905 the factory products were valued at $2,202,932 (31-2 % 
more than in 1000). Wabash was settled about 1834, in- 
corporated as a village in 1854, and first chartered as a dty 
in 1866. It was one of the first, cities in the world to be 
b'ghted with electricity, a lighting plant being established in 
February 1880. 

WACB, HENRY (1836- ), English divine, was born in 
London on the 10th of December 1836, and educated at Marl- 
borough, Rugby, King's College, London, and Brasenose College, 
Oxford. He was ordained in the Church of England in i80x, 
and held various curacies in London, heinff rhanbdn at Lincoln's 



was professor of ecclesiastical history, and subsequently (1883) 
principal. Both as preacher and writer Dr Wace, who took his 
D.D. degree in 1883, became conspicuous in the theological 
world. He was Boyle lecturer in 1874 and 1875, and Bampton 
lecturer in 1879; and besides publishing several volumes of 
sermons, he was co-editor of the Dictionary of Christian Biography 
(1877-1887), .and editor of The Speaker's Commentary on Ike 
Apocrypha. He took a leading part as the champion of historic 
orthodoxy in the controversies with contemporary Rationalism 
in all its forms, and firmly upheld the importance of denomi- 
national education and of the religious test at King's College; 
and when the test was abolished in 1902 he resigned his seat on 
the council. In 1881 he was given a prebendal stall at St Paul's, 
and in 1889 was appointed. a chaplain-in-ordinary to Queen 
Victoria. When be resigned the principalship of King's College 
in 1896 he was made rector of St Michael's, Cornbill; 
and in 1903 he became dean of Canterbury, in succession to 
Dr Farrar. 

WACB, (?) ROBERT (noo?-xi7S?), Anglo-Norman chronicler, 
was born in Jersey. He studied at Caen; he became personally 
known to Henry I., Henry H., and the tatter's eldest son, Prince 
Henry; from Henry II. he received a prebend at Bayeux and 
Other gifts. Except for these facts he is known to us only as the 
author of two metrical chronicles in the Norman-French lan- 
guage. Of these the earlier in date is the Roman de Brut, com- 
pleted in 1 1 55, which is said to have been dedicated to Eleanor 
of Aquitaine (ed. A. J. V. Lc Roux de Lincy, 2 vols., Rouen, 
1836-1838). This is a free version of the Latin Historia Britonum 
by Geoffrey of .Monmouth, in rhyming octosyllables; it was 
rendered into English, shortly after 1200, by Layamon, a mass- 
priest of Worcestershire, and is also largely used in the rhymed 
F.ng1ish chronicle of Robert Mannyng. Wace's second work, the 
Roman de Rou, written between x 1 60 and x 1 74, has a less fabulous 
character than the Brut, being a chronicle of the Norman dukes 
from Rollo to Robert Curthose. It has been ably dissected by 
Gustav Korting (Ober die Quellen des Roman de Rou, Leipzig, 
1867), who shows that it is mainly based upon Dudo and William 
of Jumieges. There is also reason for thinking that Wace used 
the Gesla regum of William of Malmesbury. Where Wace follows 
no ascertainable source he must be used with caution. Un- 
doubtedly he used oral tradition; but he also seems to have 
given free play to his imagination. 

The Roman de Rou is written in rhyming octosyllables, varied by 
assonanced alexandrines. It has been edited by F. Pluquet (2 vol*, 
and supplement, Rouen, 1827-1829) and more completely by H. 
Andresen (2 vols., Heilbronn, 1877-1879). (H. W. C. D.) 

WACHSMUTH, CHARLES (1829- 1896), American palaeonto- 
logist, was born in Hanover, Germany, on the 13th of September 
1829. Educated as a lawyer in his native city, he abandoned 
the profession on account of ill-health, and in 1852 went to New 
York as agent for a Hamburg shipping house. Two years biter, 
for reasons of health, be removed to Burlington, Iowa, U.S.A.. 
where he settled. Here he was attracted by the fossils, and 
especially the crinoids, of the Burlington Limestone, and in a 
few years possessed a fine collection. In 1864 he made acquaint- 
ance with L. Agassis, and in the following year paid a visit to 
Europe, where he studied the crinoids in the British Museum 
and other famous collections. He now decided to devote all his 
energies to the elucidation of the crinoidea, and with signal success. 
He made further extensive collections, and supplied spcdroi •■ 
to the Agassia museum at Cambridge, U-S.A*, ,iud The I 
Museum. Becoming acquainted with Frank Springr; ( i&ffe- 
a lawyer at Burlington, he j 1 1 rred up hh en 
and together ihry continue! the study of ctifi 
a series of import d at pape% 
Ventral Structure of J 
quern Modifif * 
At*id.Nat 
tneCrrod 

A ■ . .■ - : 



tilt Br ' 

tfet- 



WACO— WADAI 



225 



review and analysis was published by F. A. Bather, of the British 
Museum, in the Ceoi. Mag. for 1898-1899. Wachsmuth died on 
the 7th of February 1896. 
Obituary (with portrait) by F. A. Bather, Gad. Mag. (April 1896). 
WACO, a city and the county-seat of McLennan county, 
Texas, nearly in the centre of the state, on both sides of the 
Brazos river, about xoo m. S. by W. of Dallas. Pop. (1890) 
14,445; (1900) 20,686, of whom 5826 were negroes; (1910 
census) 26,425. Waco is served by the Missouri, Kansas & 
Teias, and by other railways. Waco is the scat of Baylor 
University (co-educational) and of the Texas Christian University 
(Christian; co-educational). Baylor University was founded at 
Independence, Texas, by the Texas Union Baptist Association, 
in 1845, and was consolidated in 1886 with Waco University 
(Baptist, 186 1, founded by Dr Rufus C. Burleson, a former 
president of Baylor University>. It was named in honour of 
Robert E. B. Baylor (1793-1874), a representative in Congress 
from Alabama in 1830-1831, and one of its founders. In 1908- 
1909 it had 40 instructors and 1296 students (664 women), of 
whom 647 were in the college. The Texas Christian University 
was founded in 1873 at Thorp's Springs as a private school, 
chartered as Add Ran College, transferred to the Christian 
Churches of Texas in 1889, and removed to Waco in 1895. Its 
present name was adopted in 1902, the name Add Ran College 
being retained for the college of arts and sciences. In 1908-1909 
the university had 26 instructors and 379 students (279 in the 
college of arts and sciences). Waco is situated in a fertile 
firming region. In 1905 the factory products were valued 
st $2,970,800. The city was named after the Waco (or Hueco) 
Indians (Caddoan stock), who had a large village here until 1830, 
when they were nearly exterminated by the Chcrokees; in 1855 
they removed to a reservation, and after 1859 became incor- 
porated with the Wichita. The first while settlement was made 
in 1849. Waco was incorporated as a town in 1856; in 1909 the 
administration was entrusted to a mayor and four commissioners. 
WAD, a black, earthy mineral consisting mainly of hydrated 
Mnganptf dioxide; of importance as an ore. Being an amor- 
phous substance, it varies considerably in chemical composi- 
tion, and contains different impurities often in large amount. 
A variety containing much cobalt oxide is called " asbolite," 
while *' lampadite " is a cupriferous variety. It is very soft, 
readily soiling the fingers, and may be considered as an earthy 
form of psilomelane (q.v.). It results from the decomposition 
cf other manganese minerals, and is often deposited in marshes 
(" bog manganese ") or by springs. The name wad is of uncertain 
origin, and has been applied also to graphite. (L. J. S.) 

WADAI, a country of north central Africa, bounded N. by 
Borku and Enndi, S. by the Ubangi sultanates, W. and S.W. by 
Kin^m and Bagirmi, and E. by Darf ur. Formerly an independent 
Mahommedan sultanate, it was in 1909 annexed to French 
Equatorial Africa (French Congo). Wadai has an area estimated 
it 150/300 sq. m., and a population of 3,000,000 to 4,000,000. 

The general level of the country is about 1500 ft., North, north-east, 
south-west and in the centre arc ranges of hills rising another 1000 ft. 
West and north-west the fall to the Sahara is gradual. Here occur 
remarkable sand-ridges of fantastic shape— hollow mounds, pyra- 
mid*. 1 nil 11 Ac — which are characteristic of the Libyan desert. 
There are also sandstone rocks of varying colours— red, blue, white, 
. Ac — presenting the aspect of ruined castles, ramparts and 
ten. North-west b a wide district of dreary plain— part of 
7- ik? whkl< ' "hes from the middle Nip*r to the Nile— 
■♦ill ifiura t>mh and Jjm palms. The crnrrif and eaitero 
digit Wule, and conuin larye forcri ^rc.is. The 
\ drainage area, though it i^ X" 5i **l | '* 
1*4 sy&icm) miy affnrd a 
The nrrim* which rise In 
I (ever joq m. looc) is 
' doa, softvl- Jtfo m_ 
Wadi Rime, 
c '!>■■ i ion 
frivtrs are 
Itety dry. 
*ft deep, 
but, uve 
ter in ihe 
Mm ire nee 
be torests 




are Urge herds of elephants, and hippopotami abound along the 
river-beds. In the north are the camel and the ostrich. Among 
the trees is a species of wild coffee which reaches 50 to 60 ft. and 
yields berries of excellent quality. The cotton plant is indigenous. 

Inhabitants and Trade—The inhabitants consist of negroid 
and negro tribes, Arabs r Fula, Tibba and half -castes. The Maba,' 
the dominant race, are said to be of Nubian origin; they are 
believed not to number more than 750,000, and live chiefly in 
the north-eastern district. They are in political alliance with the. 
Arab tribes, known in Wadai as Zoruk (dark) and Homr (red). 
The Maba have a reputation for pride, valour, cruelty, drunken- 
ness and barbaric splendour. 

The capital, Abesfcr, is in the N.E., in about ax° E., 13 & N. 
Thence a caravan route crosses the Sahara via the Kufra oases 
to Benghazi in Barca. Another trade route goes east through 
Darf ur to Khartum. The people possess large numbers of horses, 
cattle, sheep and goats. Maize, durra, cotton and indigo are 
cultivated, and cloth is woven. Ivory and ostrich feathers, the 
chief articles of export, are taken to Tripoli by the desert route, 
together with small quantities of coffee and other produce. 
There is a trade in cattle, horses and coffee with the countries 
to the south. Until the French conquest Wadai was a great 
centre of the slave trade. Slaves were obtained by raiding and 
in the form of tribute from Bagirmi, Kanem and other countries 
once dependent on Wadai. The slaves were sent chiefly to 
Barca. Wadai was also notorious for its traffic in eunuchs. 

History. — Situated between the Sahara and the dense forest 
lands of equatorial Africa, Wadai early became a meeting ground 
of negro and Arab culture. Eastern influences and the Mahom- 
medan religion ultimately obtained predominance, though the 
sovereignty of the country reverted to the negro race. It was 
sometimes tributary to and sometimes the overlord of the neigh- 
bouring countries, such as Bagirmi and Kanem. It was made 
known to Europe by the writings of the Arab geographers, 
but it was not until Nachtigal's visit in 1873 that accurate 
knowledge of the land and people was obtained. About 1640 a 
Maba chieftain named Abd-el-Kerim conquered the country, 
driving out the Tunjur, a dynasty of Arabian origin. Thereafter 
Wadai, notorious as a great slave-raiding state, suffered from 
many civil and foreign wars. Mahommed Sherif, sultan from 
1838 to 1858, introduced Scnossusm into the country. 

In the last decade of the 19th century the French advancing 
from the Congo and from the Niger made their influence felt in 
Wadai, and by the Anglo-French declaration of the 21st of 
March 1899 Wadai was recognized as within the French sphere. 
That state was then torn by civil wars. The Sultan Ibrahim 
(see Senussi) was murdered in 1900, and Ahmed Ghazili became 
sultan. He was warned by the Sheikh Senussi el Mahdi of the 
danger arising from the approach of the Christians (i\e. the 
French), but he had to meet the opposition of the princes 
Doud Murra (a brother of Ibrahim) and Acyl. Ahmed Ghazili 
and Doud Murra, though of the royal family, had non-Maba 
mothers; Acyl, a grandson of the Sultan Mahommed Sherif, 
was of pure Maba descent. Acyl, ordered to be blinded by 
Ahmed Ghazili, fled to Kelkile, west of Lake Fittri, and entered 
into friendly relations with the French. A few months later 
(Dec. 1901) Ahmed was dethroned. With Doud Murra, who then 
became sultan, the French endeavoured to come to an under- 
standing, and in November 1903 the Wadaians agreed to recog- 
nize the possession of Bagirmi, Kanem, &c, by France. How- 
ever, in the spring of 1904, acting, it is believed, at the instigation 
of the Senussites, the Wadaians attacked French posts in the 
Shari region and carried off many slaves. At. Tomba (13th of 
May 1904) they suffered a severe defeat, but they renewed their 
raids, and there was continual fighting on the west and south- 
west borders of Wadai during 1905-1907. The fighting resulted 
in strengthening the position of the French and of their ally Acyl, 
and in 1908 Doud Murra, again, it is stated, at the instigation of 
the Senussites, proclaimed the jihad. His army was split up 
under aguids (feudal lords), and was beaten in detail by the 
French. At Joue in the Batha valley (June 16, 1908) Comman- 
dant Julien inflicted enormous losses on the enemy. In May 






226 



WADDING— WADE, B. F. 



1909 Captain Fiegenschufi, with a small force of tirailleurs, 
and Acyl's contingents, advanced up the Batha to a place 
within 15 m. of Abeshr, where, on the 1st of June, the enemy 
were defeated. The next day another fight took place close to 
Abeshr. The Wadaians were again put to flight and the town 
bombarded with cannon. Doud Murra with a small following 
fled north, and Abeshr was occupied by the French. The 
prince Acyl was subsequently placed on the throne, and, under 
French guidance, governed Wadai proper. Dar Sila, Dar Runga 
and other tributary states being directly governed by French 
residents. 

The war was not, however, ended by the occupation of 
Abeshr. Captain Fiegenschuh's column, operating south-east 
of Abeshr, was cut off by the Massalit Arabs near the Darfur 
frontier, but a punitive force retrieved this disaster in April 
following. While these operations were in progress, Lieut. Boyd 
Alexander (b. 1873), who had previously crossed from the Niger 
to the Nile, the first British explorer lo enter Wadai, passed 
through Abeshr on his way to Darfur. At the station of Nyeri, 
in Dar Tama, on the Darfur border, he was murdered on the 
and of April 1010. 

In November 1910 a French column, 300 strong, under 
Colonel Moll, while operating in the Massalit country was at- 
tacked by 5000 men under Doud Murra and the sultan of the 
Massalit. The enemy was beaten off, but the French had over 
100 casualties, including Colonel Moll killed. 

See G. Nachtigal, Sahara und Sudan (3 vols., Berlin, 18 70- 1889); 
Captain Julicn, Le Dar Ouadai," Renseign. colon, comiU de I'Afrique 
frangaise (1904); J. van Vollenhoven, " Le Voyage de Nachtigal au 
Ouadai," Renseign. colon. (1903); Captain Repoux, " Le Ouadai," 
B.S.G. Com. Bordeaux (1909): Commandant Bordeaux, "Deux 
Contre»re«ous dans I'Ouaddai," La Geog. B.S.G. Paris (1908); A. 
Ferrier, " La Prise d'Abechcr," L'Afrique frangaise (1909); A. H. 
Kcane, " Wadai," Travel and Exploration (July 1910); Sir H. H. 
Johnston, " Lieutenant Boyd Alexander," Geog. Jour. (July 1910); 
The Times, July 2 tst, 1910 (details of Boyd Alexanders murder). 
See also Senussi. 

WADDING, LUKE (1588-1657), Irish Franciscan friar and 
historian, was born in Waterford in 1588 and went to study at 
Lisbon. He became a Franciscan in 1607, and in 16x7 he was 
made president of the Irish College at Salamanca. The next year 
he went to Rome and stayed there till his death. He collected 
the funds for the establishment of the Irish College of St Isidore 
in Rome, for the education of Irish priests, opened 1625, and for 
fifteen years he was the rector. A voluminous writer, his chief 
work was the Annates Minor urn in 8 folio vols. (1625-1654), re- 
edited in the 18th century and continued up to the year 1622; 
it is the classical work on Franciscan history. He published also 
a BUUiolkcca of Franciscan writers, an edition of the works of 
Duns Scotus, and the first collection of the writings of St Francis 
ofAssisi. (E.C.B.) 

WADDINGTON, WILLIAM HENRY (1826-1894), French 
statesman, was born at St Rcmi-sur-rAvre (Eurc-ct-Loir) on 
the nth of December 1826. He was the son of a wealthy 
Englishman who had established a large spinning factory in 
France and had been naturalized as a French subject. After 
receiving his early education in Paris, he was sent to Rugby, 
and thence proceeded to Trinity College, Cambridge, where he 
was second classic and chancellor's medallist, and rowed for the 
university in the winning boat against Oxford. Returning to 
France, he devoted himself for some years to archaeological 
research. He undertook travels in Asia Minor, Greece and Syria, 
the fruits of which were published in two Mbnoires, crowned by 
the Institute, and in his M Manges de numismalique el de philolagu 
(1861). Except his essay on " The Protestant Church in France," 
published in 1856 in Cambridge Essays, his remaining works arc 
likewise archaeologicaL They include the Fastes *;■ t' empire 
remain, and editions of Diocletian's edict and of Philippe LeLos's 
Voyage archlologique (1868-1877). He was elected ui (865 a 
member of the Academie des Inscriptions el Belles-Lei ires. 

After standing unsuccessfully for the department of ihe Aiant 
in 1865 and 1869, Waddington was returned by that const iLuenty 
at the election of 1871. He was minister of public instruction 
in the short-lived cabinet of the 19th of May 1873, and in 1876, 



having been elected senator for the Aisne, he was again entrusted 
by Dufaure with the ministry of public instruction, with which, 
as a Protestant, he was not permitted to combine the ministiy 
of public worship. His most important project, a bill transferring 
the conferment of degrees to the stale, passed the Chamber, but 
was thrown out by the Senate. He continued to hold his office 
under Jules Simon, with whom he was overthrown on the famous 
seize mat 1877. The triumph of the republicans at the general 
election brought him back to power in the following December 
as minister of foreign affairs under Dufaure. He was one of the 
French plenipotentiaries at the Berlin Congress. The cession of 
Cyprus to Great Britain was at first denounced by the French 
newspapers as a great blow to his diplomacy, but he obtained, 
in a conversation with Lord Salisbury, a promise that Great 
Britain in return would allow France a free hand in Tunis- 
Early in 1879 Waddington' succeeded Dufaure as prime 
minister. Holding office by sufferance of Gambetta, he halted 
in an undetermined attitude between the radicals and the re- 
actionaries till the delay of urgent reforms lost him the support 
of all parties. He was forced on the 27th of December to retire 
from office. He refused the offer of the London embassy, and 
in 1880 was reporter of the committee on the adoption of 
the scrulin de lisle at elections, on which he delivered an 
adverse judgment. In 1883 he accepted the London embassy, 
which he continued to hold till 1893, showing an exceptional 
tenacity in defence of his country's interests. He died on 
the 13th of January 1804. His wife, an American lady, whose 
maiden name was Mary A. King, wrote some interesting recol- 
lections of their diplomatic experiences — Loiters of a Diplomatist's 
Wife, 188J-1900 (New York, 1003), and Italian Utters (London, 
1005). 

WADE, BENJAMIN FRANKLIN (1800-1878), American states- 
man, was born near Springfield, Massachusetts, on the 27th of 
October 1800, of Puritan ancestry. He was reared on a farm, 
receiving little systematic education, and in 1821 he removed 
with his family to Andover, in the Western Reserve of Ohio. 
Here he spent two more years on a farm, and then, securing 
employment as a drover, worked his way to Philadelphia and 
finally to Albany, New York, where for two years he taught 
school, studied medicine, and was a labourer on the Erie Canal. 
Returning to Ohio in 1825, he studied law at Can field, was ad- 
mitted to the bar in 1827, and began practice at Jefferson, 
Ashtabula county, where from i83r to 1837 he was a law partner 
of Joshua R. Giddings, the anti-slavery leader. During 1837- 
1839 and 1841-1843 he was a Whig member of the Ohio State 
Senate. From 1847 until 1851 he was a state district judge, and 
from 1851 until i860 was a member of the United States Senate, 
first as an anti-slavery Whig and later as a Republican. In the 
Senate Wade was from the first an uncompromising opponent 
of slavery, his bitter denunciations of that institution and of the 
slaveholders receiving added force from his rugged honesty and 
sincerity. His blunt, direct style of oratory and his somewhat 
rough manners were characteristic. After the outbreak of the 
Civil War he was one of the most vigorous critics of the 
Lincoln administration, whose Ohio member, Salmon P. Chase, 
had long been a political rivaL He advocated the immediate 
emancipation and arming of the slaves, the execution of 
prominent Southern leaders, and the wholesale confiscation of 
Confederate property. During 1861-1862 he was cfcajnnan of 
the important joint-committee on the conduct « " 
in 1862, as chairman of the Senate Committed 
wis instrumental in abolish Ing slavery i 
(n 1864, with U. W. Davis tg.t.}, he secured 1 
Wade- Davis Bill (for I he reconstruct {an of the $ 
1 he fundament a? prirn; 
lctfi^laiivt?, not ail BtCi 
but It huuscs of CjMJ__ 
President LjtKuln withheld 
htMtd a j > n .,: r i ms 1 bn exftfd 
position 
inl 
a 




WADB, G.— WADE, SIR T. F. 



227 




purpose and attacking his leadership. As long as President 
Joixxt&on promised severe treatment of the conquered South, 
W^dc supported him, but when the President definitively 
adopted the more lenient policy of his predecessor, Wade became 
one of bis most bitter and uncompromising opponents. In 1867 
be vas elected president pro tern, of the Senate, thus becoming 
avctixig vice-president. He voted for Johnson's conviction on his 
trial for impeachment, and for this was severely criticized, since, 
in tb* event of conviction, he would have become president; 
but Wade's whole course before and after the trial would seem 
to belie the charge that he was actuated by any such motive. 
Alter leaving the Senate he resumed his law practice, becoming 
attorney for the Northern Pacific railway, and in 1871 he was a 
member of President Grant's Santo Domingo Commission. He 
diked at Jefferson, Ohio, on the 2nd of March 1878. His son, 
James Franklin Wade (b. 1843), was colonel of the 6th United 
S*^*t* (coloured) cavalry during the Civil War, and attained the 
exalt of major-general in the regular army in 1903, commanding 
the army in the Philippines in 1903-1904. 

See A. G. Riddle. Life of Benjamin F. Wade (Cleveland, Ohio. 1886). 
WADE, GEORGE (1673-1748), British field marshal, was the 
son of Jerome Wade of Kilavaliy, Westmeath, and entered the 
British army in 1690. He was present at Stciiikirk in 1692, and 
in X095 he became captain. In 1702 he served in Marlborough's 
army, earning particular distinction at the assault on the citadel 
of L.ic*ge, and in 1703 he became successively major and lieutcnaut- 
colonel in his regiment (later the 10th Foot). In 1704, with the 
temporary rank of colonel, he served on Lord Calway's staff 
in Portugal. Wade distinguished himself at the siege of 
Alcantara in 1706, in a rearguard action at Villa Nova in the 
same autumn (in which, according to Galway, his two battalions 
xegMibed twenty-two allied squadrons), and at the disastrous 
brittle of Almanza on the 25th of April 1707. He had now risen 
to the command of a brigade, and on the following 1st of January 
<r 707/8) he was promoted brigadier-general in the British army. 
His next service was as second in command to James (xst earl) 
Stanhope in the expedition to Minorca in 1708. In 1710 he was 
atesain with the main Anglo-allied army in Spain, and took part 
in the great battle of Saragossa on the 20th of August, after 
which he was promoted major-general and given a command at 
borne. The Jacobite outbreak of 1 7 1 5 brought him into promin- 
ence in the new role of military governor. He twice detected 
important Jacobite conspiracies, and on the second occasion 
procured the arrest of the Swedish ambassador in London, 
Count Gyllenborg. In 17 19 he was second in command of the 
land forces in the successful " conjunct " military and naval 
expedition to Vigo. In 1724 he was sent to the Highlands to 
■sake a thorough investigation of the country and its people, 
**** J wo . vca « later, having meantime been appointed com- 
man der-in-chief to give effect to his own recommendations, he 
«*»« the system of metalled roads which is his chid Otic to 
*■«*% and is commemorated in the lines- 

vSl ^.1??.? lhe>e road* before they were made. 
°" wouW W* up your hands and bless General Wade." 

-— -SSi le <l ? r tbis en *»necrmg work Wade superintended the 
time, xkrmly an *j ^ iess Uian 40 stone bridges. At the same 
* •" . i ' *t,c € f, W, "'J '***■ ***t tnat came of long eapcrimcc, he 
II *A 1 7 4 1 he was made a privy cuUTiollnr and 
the ordnance, and in 174J fiddi marshal. 
«twi the British contingent in Maudeii, 
command wiih I he luke 
contingent- The cam- 
msof emp nation. 
i re , and Wade, 
iigni'd the 
k him 
ield 
lion of 
rapidity 
feoUhe 
n, Wade 



In the i 




WADE, TH0HA8 (1805-1875), English poet and dramttist, 
was born at Woodbridge, Suffolk, in 1805. He early went to 
London, where he began to publish verse of considerable merit 
under the inspiration of Byron* Keats and especially Shelley. 
He wrote some plays that were produced 00 the London stage 
with a certain measure of success, owing more perhaps to the 
acting of Charles and Fanny Kemble than to the merits of the 
dramatist. Wade frequently contributed verses to the maga- 
sines, and for some years he was editor as well as part-pro* 
prietor of BdPt Weekly Messenger. This venture proving 
financially unsuccessful, he retired to Jersey, where he edited 
the British Press, continuing to publish poetry from time to 
time until 187 1. He died in Jersey on the 19th of September 
1875. His wife was Lucy Eager, a musician of some repute. 

The most notable of Wade's publications were: Tasso and Iks 
Sisters (1825), a volume of poems, among which " The Nuptials of 
Juno " in particular showed rare gifts of imagination, though like 
all Wade's work deficient in sense of melody and focKng for artistic 
form; Woman's Love (1828). a play produced at Covent Garden; 
The Phrenologists, a farce produced at Covent Garden in 1830; The 
Jew of Arragon, a play that was " howled from the stage " at Covent 
Garden in 1830 owing to its exaltation of the Jew; Mundi et cordis 
tormina (1835), a volume of poems, many of which had previously 
appeared in the Monthly Repository; The Contention of ueaih and 
Love, Helena and The Shadow Seeker — these three being published 
in the form of pamphlets in 1837; Protkanasia and other Poems 
(1839). Wade also wrote a drama entitled King Henry II., and a 
translation of Dante's " Inferno" in the metre of the original, both 
of which remain in manuscript ; and a series of sonnets inspired by 
his wife, some of which have been published. 

See Alfred H. Mills, The Poets and Poetry of the Century, vol. its. 
(10 vols., London, 1891-1897); Literary Anecdotes of the loth 
Century, edited by Sir W. Robertson Nicoll and T. J. Wise (2 vols., 
London. 1895-1896), containing a number of Wade's sonnets, a 
specimen of - his Dante translation and a reprint of two of his versa 
pamphlets. 

WADE, SIR THOMAS FRANCIS (1818-1805), British diplo- 
matist, born in London on the 25th of August 1818, was the son 
of Major Wade of the Black Watch, by bis wife Anne, daughter 
of William Smythe of Barba villa, Westmeath. In 1838 his 
father purchased for him a commission in the 81st Regiment. 
Exchanging (1839) into the 42nd Highlanders, he served with 
his regiment in the Ionian Islands, devoting his leisure to the 
congenial study of Italian and modern Greek. On receiving his 
commission as lieutenant in 1841 he exchanged into the 08th 
Regiment, then under orders for China, and landed in Hong-Kong 
in June 1842. The scene of the war had at that time been trans- 
ferrcd to the Yangtie-kiang, and thither Wade was ordered with 
his regiment. There he took part in the attack on Chin-kiang-fu 
and in the advance on Nanking. In 1845 he was appointed 
interpreter in Cantonese to the Supreme Court of Hong-Kong, 
and in 1846 assistant Chinese secretary to the superintendent of 
trade. Sir John Davis. In 1852 he was appointed vice-consul 
at Shanghai. The Tai-ping rebellion had so disorganized the 
administration in the neighbourhood of Shanghai that it .was 
considered advisable to put the collection of the foreign customs 
duties into commission, a committee of three, of whom Wade 
was the chief, being entrusted with the administration of the 
customs. This formed the beginning of the imperial maritime 
customs service. In 1855 Wade was appointed Chinese secretary 
to Sir John Bowring, who had succeeded Sir J. Davis at Hong- 
Koog. On the declaration of the second Chinese War in 1857, 
he was attached to Lord Elgin's staff as Chinese secretary, 
and with the assistance of H. N. Ley he conducted the negotia- 
tions which led up to the treaty of Tientsin (1858). In the 
following year he accompanied Sir Frederick Bruce inJiis attempt 
to exchange the ratification of the treaty, and was present at 
Taku when the force attending the mission was treacherously 
attacked and driven back from the Pciho. On Lord Elgin's 
return to China in i860 he resumed his former post of Chirese 
secretary, and was mainly instrumental in arranging for the 
advance of the special envoys and the British and French forces 
to Tientsin, and subsequently towards Peking. For the purpose 
of, arranging for a camping ground in the neighbourhood of 
Tungchow he accompanied Mr (afterwards Sir) Harry Parkes on 
his first visit to that city, where on the next day Parkes with 



228 



WADE, SIR W.— WAFER 



Mr Loch and others was by an act pf shameless treachery made 
prisoner. In the succeeding negotiations Wade took a leading 
part, and on the establishment of the legation at Peking he took 
up the post of Chinese secretary of legation. In 1862 he was 
made a Companion of the Bath. On the return of Sir Frederick 
Bruce to England in 1864 he remained as c&argt d'affaires, and 
again from 1869 to 1871, when he was appointed minister, he 
filled the acting post. The Tientsin massacre in 1870 entailed 
long and difficult negotiations, which were admirably conducted 
by Wade. On the assumption of power by the emperor Tung- 
chih he, in common with his colleagues, requested an audience 
in accordance with the treaties, which was for the first time 
granted as a right. The murder of A. R. Margary near Man- 
wyne in Yunnan in 1875 threatened at one time to cause a rupture 
with the Chinese government, and as a matter of fact Wade did 
leave Peking. But the Chinese, finding that he was in earnest, 
despatched Li Hung-Chang after him to Chefoo, where the two 
diplomatists arranged the penalties which were to be paid for 
the crime, and concluded a convention which, after a considerable 
interval, was ratified by the governments. Wade was then made 
K.C.B., and in 1883 retired from the service. On his return to 
England the attractions of his old university induced him to 
take up his residence at Cambridge, where he was appointed the 
first professor of Chinese. He died there on the 3 1st of July 1 895. 
In 1889 he was made G.C.M.G. In 1868 he had married Amelia, 
daughter of Sir John Herschel. (R. K. D.) 

WADE (or Waad), SIR WILLIAM (1546-1693), English states- 
man and diplomatist, was the eldest son of Armagil Wade 
(d. 1568), the traveller, who sailed with a party of adventurers for 
North America in 1536, and later became (1547) one of the clerks 
of the privy council in London and a member of parliament. 
William Wade obtained his entrance into official life by serving 
William Cecil, Lord Burghley, sending information to this 
statesman from Paris and from Italy. He also passed some 
time in Slrassburg; then in 1581 he became secretary to Sir 
Francis Walsingham and in 1583 a clerk of the privy council. 
He visited Vienna, Copenhagen and Madrid on public business, 
and in 1585 he went to Paris, being waylaid and maltreated on 
his return near Amiens by influential personages who disliked 
the object of his mission. In 1586 he went to Chartley and took 
possession of Mary Stuart's papers, and in 1587 was again in 
France. During the remainder of Elizabeth's reign Wade was 
much occupied in searching for Jesuits and in discovering plots 
against the life of the queen. James I., who knighted him in 
1603, employed him in similar ways, and he was fully occupied in 
unravelling the plots which marked the early years of the new 
reign. For some time Wade was a member of parliament. He 
retired from public life in 1613, and died on the 21st of October 
1623. Sir William was a shareholder in the Virginia company, 
and the Wades of Virginia claim descent from his father. 

WADEBRIDGE, a market town and seaport in the St Austell 
parliamentary division of Cornwall, England, on the .Great 
Western and London & South-Western railways, 38 m. W.N.W. 
of Plymouth. Pop. of urban district (1901), 2186. It is pic- 
turesquely situated at the head of the estuary of the river 
Camel, 7 m. from its mouth in Padstow Bay on the north coast. 
A stone bridge, consisting of seventeen arches, was built in 1485 
over the river, and made a county bridge under James I. The 
parish church of Egloshayle, nearly 2 m. from the town, is in the 
main Perpendicular, with a beautiful tower; but part of the 
fabric is Early English. The neighbouring church of St Breock 
is Decorated and Perpendicular, with a fine font of the earlier 
period. An ancient round-beaded cross stands near the town. 
There is considerable agricultural trade, and iron founding is 
carried on; while in the neighbourhood some copper, lead, 
granite and slate are worked and exported in small vessels; 
coal, timber and general merchandise being imported. 

-"•*-* M, a station on the east bank of the Upper Nile in the 

»a, in 2° 50' N. f 31* 35' E., too m. 

be on Victoria Nyanza, and 72 m. 

•>ert Nyanza. The government 

200 ft. above the Nile at a spot 



where the river narrows to 482 ft. and attains a depth of 30 ft. 
At this place was a gauge for measuring the discharge of the river. 
Wadclai was first visited by a European, Lieut. H. Chippendall, 
in 1875, and was named after a chieftain who, when visited by 
Gessi Pasha (on the occasion of that officer's circumnavigation 
of Albert Nyanza), ruled the surrounding district as a vassal of 
Kabarega, king of Unyoro. The region was annexed to the 
Egyptian Sudan and Wadelai's village chosen as a government 
post. This post was on the western bank of the Nile, ii m. 
below the existing station. Here for some time Emin Pasha had 
his headquarters, evacuating the place in December 1888. 
Thereafter, for some years, the district was held by the Mahdists. 
In 1894 the British flag was hoisted at Wadclai, on both banks 
of the Nile, by Major E. R. Owen. Some twelve years later 
the government post was withdrawn. There is a native village 
at the foot of the hill. 

WADHWAN, a town of India, in Kathiawar, Bombay, the 
capital of a petty state of the same name, and the junction of 
the Kathiawar railway system with the Bombay and Baroda 
line, 389 m. N. of Bombay. Pop. (1901) 16,223. It has con- 
siderable trade and manufactures. There is a school for girasios 
or subordinate chiefs. The civil station, under British ad- 
ministration, had a population in root of 11,255. The state 
of Wadhwan has an area of 236 sq. m.; pop. (1001), 34,851; 
revenue, £25,000. Cotton trade and stone-quarrying are im- 
portant, and there are manufactures of soap and saddlery. 

WADI, also written wady, in some dialects wad; Arabic for a 
" valley," hence a stream or river flowing through a valley, as 
well as the valley itself. It is a common term in place names. 

WADI HALFA, or Halta, a town of the Anglo-Egyptian 
Sudan', in 21° 55* N., 31° 19' E., on the right bank of the Nile, 
5 m. S. of the northern frontier of the Sudan. It is the chief town 
of the Haifa mudiria, is 770 m. S. of Cairo by rail and steamer, 
and 575 m. N.N.W. of Khartum by rail. Some 6 m. above the 
town is the second cataract, and on the west bank of the Nile 
opposite Haifa are the ruins of the ancient Egyptian city of 
Buhen (Bohon). Haifa is the northern terminus of the Sudan 
railway and the southern terminus of a steamboat service on 
the Nile, which, running to Shellal (Assuan), connects there with 
the Egyptian railways. 

Wadi Haifa is a general designation including the native village 
of that name, the camp, founded by the British in 1884 as their 
base in the operations for the relief of General Gordon, and the 
civil cantonment established at the same time. This cantonment 
occupies the site of a Nubian village, and round it has grown a 
thriving town, at first named Taufikia, but now called Haifa. 
It has a population (1907) of about 3000. The camp is 1} m. S. 
of Haifa. Here are the barracks, officers' quarters, railway 
works, and an esplanade along the river front. The village of 
Wadi Haifa is 3 m. S. of the camp\ 

WAD MEDANI, a town of the Anglo-Egyptian Sudan, capita] 
of the Blue Nile mudiria, in 14° 24' N., 33° 31' E., on the left 
bank of the Blue Nile, no m. by rail and 147 m. by river, S.E. 
of Khartum. Pop. about 20,000. It is the chief depot for grain 
raised in the Gezira, has oil and soap works, and is a thriving 
commercial centre, being on the main trade route between 
Khartum and Abyssinia. The town, which is of considerable 
antiquity, contains some fine buildings, the chief mosque having 
a conspicuous tower. Wad Medani was almost destroyed during 
the Mak&ia, but its return to prosperity under Anglo-Egyptian 
rule was rapid. In 1009 it was connected by railway with 
Khartum, and thus the hindrance to trade through the Blue Nile 
being scarcely navigable between January and June was over- 
come. In 1 910 railway communication between the town and 
Kordofan was established. (See Sudan, § Angle-Egyptian.) 

WAFER, a thin flat cake or sheet of paste, usually circular In 
shape. The derivation of the word, which fe the same as 
" waffle," a batter-cake cooked in waffle-irons and served hot, 
is given under " Goffer/' which is adapted from the French form 
of the Teutonic original. As articles of stationery, wafers consist 
of thin brittle, adhesive disks, used for securing papers together, 
and for forming a basis for impressed official seals. They art 



WAGER—WAGES 



229 



nude of a thin paste of very fine flour, baked between " wafer 
irons " over a charcoal fire tiU the thin stratum of paste becomes 
dry and brittle and the flour starch is partly transformed into 
glutinous adhesive dextrin. The cake is cut into round disks 
milh suitable steel punches. Bright non-poisonous colouring 
matter is added to the paste for making coloured wafers. They 
are also made of gelatin. Wafers of dry paste are used in medical 
practice to enclose powders or other forms of drugs, thus rendering 
them easy to swallow. 

In ecclesiastical usage the term " wafer " is applied to the thin 
circular disk of unleavened bread, stamped with a cross, the 
letters I-H.S- or the Agnus Dei, which is the form of the conse- 
crated bread as used in the service of the Eucharist by the Roman 
C&thob'c Church. 

WAGER (derived, through Fr. wagicr, gagier, from Lat. 
vadium, a pledge), a bet or stake. Wagers in the ordinary sense 
of the term are dealt with under the headings Gaming and 
Betting; but 'he method of wagering — in principle the putting 
of a decision to the hazard — has had extended employment in 
various cases which may be noticed here. The determination of 
cases, civil and criminal, by means of wager or analogous forms 
of procedure, was a characteristic feature of ancient law. The 
legis actio sacramenti at Rome — at first a real, then a fictitious, 
wager— and the wagers " of battle " and " of law " in England, 
of the highest antiquity in their origin, survived up to a com- 
paratively late period in the history of both legal systems. The 
form of the wager survived long after its reason had been for- 
gotten. The general prevalence of the wager form of proceeding 
is perhaps to be attributed to the early conception of a judge as 
a mere referee who decided the dispute submitted to him, not as 
an executive officer of the state, but as an arbitrator casually 
called in (see Maine, Ancient Lam, c. x.). 

" Wager of battle " in England was* mode of trial allowed in 
certain cases, viz. on a civil writ of right for recovery of land 
(see Wbit), and on criminal appeals of treason and felony (see 
Appeal). Trial by battle, or single combat, was a common 
Teutonic custom in days when criminal " appeal " was really a 
prosecution by a private individual; and it remained in vogue 
on the continent of Europe (where hired champions were allowed) 
to a much greater extent than in England, where after the Con- 
quest it was to some extent substituted for trial by ordeal (q.v.). 
It was an institution suited to the days of chivalry, and may be 
regarded as the parent of the duel (q.v.). In England the " ap- 
pellant "* first formulated his charge, which was proclaimed at 
five successive county courts. If the " appellee " did not appear 
he was outlawed; if he did he could plead various exemptions; 
and unless the court upheld them he was obliged to offer battle 
by throwing down his glove as gage. When an ordinary court 
ordered the battle, it was fought on foot with staves and leather 
shields; but when a court of chivalry 1 ordered it, on horse with 
spear and sword. If defeated, the appellee was liable to sentence 
of death by hanging, and an undecided fight still left him liable, 
though acquitted on the appeal, to trial by indictment; if the 
appellant yielded, the appellee was free. The right of " wager of 
battle " was claimed as late as 1818 by a man named Thornton, 
who had been acquitted at assizes of a charge of murdering a girl 
aimed Asbiord; her brother brought an "appeal," and the 
judges upheld Thornton's claim, but the appellant then with- 
drew. Next year appeals for felony or treason were abolished by 
statute.* 

u Wager of law *' (vadiatio Ugis) was a right of a defendant in 
actions of simple contract, debt and detinue. It superseded the 
ordeal (itself called lex in the Assize of Clarendon and other 

1 The medieval court of chivalry had both civil and criminal 
* , andjrat held jointly by the lord high constable and the 
1 last sitting of a court of chivalry for criminal 

^ d was in 1631 ; and as a em! court (for cases of 

honour and questions of precedence) it gradually decayed through 
vast of power to enforce its decisions. There is an interesting 
a ccount of the rules of battle ordered by a court of chivalry in 
Aaandban MS& M of the Bodleian Library (transcribed in /Bus- 
umwms »j Ancient SteU and Chivalry, Roxburghe Club, 1840). 

•See C. NeOaon, Trial by Comsat (Glasgow, 1801). 



earlsannfcaL The I 



ancient constitutional records). The procedure in a wager of 
law is traced by Blackstooe to the Mosaic law, Ex. xxii. 10; 
but it seems historically to have been derived from the system 
of compurgation, introduced into England from Normandy, a 
system which is now thought to have had an appreciable effect 
on the development of the English jury {q.v ). It also has some 
points of resemblance, perhaps some historical connexion, with 
the sponsio and the decisory oath of Roman law, and the reference 
to oath of Scots law (see Oath). The use of the oath instead of 
the real or feigned combat—real in English law, feigned in Roman 
law— no doubt represents an advance in legal development. 
The technical term sacramenlum is the bond of union between 
the two stages of law. In the wager of law the defendant, with 
eleven compurgators, appeared in court, and the defendant 
swore that he did not owe the debt, or (in detinue) that he did 
not detain the plaintiff's chattel; while the compurgators swore 
that they believed that he spoke the truth. It was an eminently 
unsatisfactory way of arriving at the merits of a claim, and it is 
therefore not surprising to find that the policy of the Law was in 
favour of its restriction rather than of its extension. Thus it 
was not permitted where the defendant was not a person of good 
character, where the king sued, where the defendant was the 
executor or administrator of the person alleged to have owed 
the debt, or in any form of action other than those named, 
even though the cause of action were the same. No wager of 
law was allowed in assumpsit, even though the cause of action 
were a simple debt. This led to the general adoption of assumpsit 
— proceeding originally upon a fictitious averment of a promise 
by the defendant— as a means of recovering debts. Where a 
penalty was created by statute, it became a common form to 
insert a proviso that no wager of law was to be allowed in an 
action for the penalty. Wager of law was finally abolished in 
1833 (3 & 4 William IV. c. 42). 

Another form of judicial wager in use up to 1845 was the feigned 
issue, by which questions arising in the course of chancery pro- 
ceedings were sent for trial by jury in a common law court. The 
plaintiff averred the laying of a wager of £5 with the defendant 
that a certain event was as he alleged ; the defendant admitted 
the wager, but disputed the allegation; on this issue was 
joined. This procedure was abolished by s. 19 of the Gaming 
Act 1845- (W.F.C.) 

WAGES (the plural of '* wage," from Late Lat. wodium, a 
pledge, O. Fr. wagicr, gaper)* Wages, although one of the most 
common and familiar terms in. economic science, is at the same 
time one of the most difficult to define accurately. The natural 
definition is that wages is the " reward for labour," but then 
we are at once confronted with the difficulty so well stated by 
Adam Smith: " The greater part of people understand better 
what is meant by a quantity of a particular commodity than by 
a quantity©/ labour; the one is a plain palpable object, the other 
an abstract notion, which, though it can be made sufficiently 
intelligible, is not altogether so natural and obvious." If we 
regard wages as the reward for a quantity of labour, it is clear 
that to make the meaning precise we must give a precise meaning 
to this abstract notion of Adam Smith. From the point of view 
of the labourer the quantity of labour refers not so much to the 
work accomplished (e.g. raising so many foot-pounds) as to " all 
the feelings of a disagreeable kind, all the bodily inconvenience 
or mental annoyance, connected with the employment of one's 
thoughts or muscles or both in a particular occupation " (J. S. 
Mill). But this analysis seems only to make the task of definition 
more difficult, for the class of labourers, in this wide sense of 
the term labour, would include the capitalist who racks his 
brains in making plans just as much as the navvy who digs with 
the sweat of his brow. Thus " profits," in the ordinary sense of 
the term, instead of being contrasted, would to a large extent 
be classified with wages, and in fact the wages of superintendence 
or of management is one of the recognized elements in the classical 
analysis of profits. It is only when we refer to the list of " occu- 
pations " in any civilized country that we can really form an 
adequate idea of the variety of classes to which the term labour, 
as defined by Mill, may be extended. 



230 



WAGES 



It may be granted that in certain economic inquiries it is 
extremely useful to bring out the points of resemblance between 
" workers " at the various stages of the social scale, and it is 
especially serviceable in showing that the opposition between 
14 employer " and the " employed," and the " classes " and the 
" masses," is often exaggerated. At the same time the differ- 
ences, if not in kind at any rate in degree, are so great that it the 
analogy is carried very far it becomes misleading. Accordingly it 
seems natural to adopt as the preliminary definition of " wages " 
something equivalent to that of Francis Walker in his standard 
work on the Wages Question, via. " the reward of those who 
are employed in production with a view to the profit of their 
employers and are paid at stipulated rates." 

It may be observed that by extending the meaning of pro- 
duction, as is now done by most economists, to include all kinds 
of labour, and by substituting benefit for profit, this definition 
will include all grades of wages. 

Having thus limited the class of those who earn " wages," the 
next point is to consider the way in which the wages ought to be 
measured. The most obvious method is to take as the 
^J 1 '**? rate of lime-wages the amount of money earned in a 
I^X certain time, and as the rate of task-wages the amount of 
money obtained for a given amount of work of a given 
quality; and in many inquiries this rough mode of measurement 
is sufficient. But the introduction of money as the measure at 
once makes it necessary to assume that for purposes of comparison 
the value of the money to the wage-earners may be considered 
constant. This supposition does not hold good even between 
different places in the same country at the same time, and still 
less with variations in time as well as place. To the labourers, 
however, the amount of money they obtain is only a means to 
an end, and accordingly economists have drawn a sharp dis- 
tinction between nominal and real wages. " Labour, hkc com- 
modities," says Adam Smith, " may be said to have a real and 
a nominal price. lis real price may be said to consist in the 
quantity of the necessaries and conveniences of life which arc 
given for it; its nominal price in the quantity of money. The 
labourer is rich or poor, is well or ill rewarded, in proportion to 
the real not to the nominal price of his labour." 

Walker (of, cti. pp. ia sqq.) has given a full analysis of the 
principal elements which ought to be taken into account in 
estimating the real wages of labour. They may beclassi- 
Yarttiotu ne( j ag follows, (i) Variations in the purchasing power 
£££. of money may be due in the first place to causes 
affecting the general level of prices in a country. 
Such, for instance, is a debasement of the coinage, of which a 
good example is furnished in English history in the reigns of 
Henry VIII. and Edward VI Thorold Rogers has ascribed 
much of the degradation of labour which ensued to this fact , 
and Macaulay has given a graphic account of the evils suffered 
by the labouring classes prior to the recoinage of 1696. The 
Issues of inconvertible paper notes in excess have frequently 
caused a disturbance of real wages, and it is generally asserted 
that in this case wages as a rule do not rise so quickly as com- 
modities. A general rise in prices due to great discoveries of 
the precious metals would, if nominal wages remained the same, 
of course cause a fall in real wages. There are, however, good 
grounds for supposing that the stimulus given to trade in this case 
would raise wages at least in proportion; and certainly the great 
gold discoveries in Australia and California raised wages in 
England, as is shown in Tookc's History of Prices, vol. v. p. 284. 
Similarly it is possible that a general fail in prices, owing to a 
relative scarcity of the precious metals, may lower the prices of 
commodities before it lowers the price of labour, in which case 
there is a rise in real wages. In the controversy as to the possible 
advantages of bimetallism this was one of the points most fre- 
quently discussed. It ts Impossible to say a priori whether a rise 
or fall in general prices, or a change in the value of money, win 
raise or lower real wages, since the result is effected principally 
by indirect influences. But, apart from these general movements 
m prices, we must, in order to find the real value of nominal 
wages, consider variations ^d in making this 



estimate we must notice the principal items In the expenditure 
of the labourers. Much attention has been given recently by 
statistician* to this subject, with the view of finding a good 
" index number " for real wages. (2) Varieties in the form of 
payment require careful attention. Sometimes the payment is 
only partly in money, especially in agriculture in some places. 
In many parts of Scotland the labourers receive meal, peats, 
potatoes, &C (j) Opportunities for extra earnings are sometimes 
of much importance, especially if we take as the wage-earning 
unit the family and not the individual At the end of the 18th 
century Arthur Young, in his celebrated tours, often calls 
attention to this fact. In Northumberland and other counties a 
" hind " {i.e. agricultural labourer) is more valued if he has a large 
working family, and the family earnings are relatively large. 

(4) Regularity of employment is always, especially in modern 
times, one of the most important points to be considered. Apart 
from such obvious causes of fluctuation as the nature of the 
employment, e.g. in the case of fishermen, guides, &c, there are 
various social and industrial causes (for a particular and able 
investigation of which the reader may consult Professor FoxwclTs 
essay on the subject). Under the system of production on a large 
scale for foreign markets, with widely extended division of labour, 
it seems impossible to adjust accurately the supply to the 
demand, and there are in consequence constant fluctuations in 
the employment of labour. A striking example, happily rare, is 
furnished by the cotton famine during the American Civil War 

(5) In forming a scientific conception of real wages we ought to 
take into account the longer or the shorter duration of the power 
to labour: the man whose employment is healthy and who lives 
more comfortably and longer at the same nominal rate of wages 
may be held to obtain a higher real wage than his less fortunate 
competitor. It is worth noting, in this respect, that in nearly 
every special industry there is a liability to some special form of 
disease: e.g. lace-workers often suffer from diseases of the eyes, 
minors from diseases of the lungs, &c. Thus, in attempting to 
estimate real wages, we have to consider all the various dis- 
comforts involved in the " quantity of labour " as well as all the 
conveniences which the nominal wages will purchase and all the 
supplements in kind. 

In a systematic treatment of the wages question it would 
be natural to examine next the causes which determine the 
general rate or wages in any country at any time. 
This is a problem to which economists have given JJUJ^J 
much attention, and is one of great complexity. It wagtt 
is difficult, when we consider the immense variety i*»v 
of ** occupations " in any civilized country and the ^yttii m* 
constant changes which are taking place, even to form 
an adequate conception of the general rate of wages. There are 
thousands of occupations of various kinds, and at first sight it 
may seem impossible to determine, in a manner sufficiently 
accurate for any useful purpose, an average or general rate of 
wages, especially if we attempt to take real and not merely 
nominal wages. At the same time, in estimating the progress of 
the working-classes, or in comparing their relative positions in 
different countries, it is necessary to use this conception of a 
general rate of wages in a practical manner. The difficulties 
presented are of the same kind as those met with in the deter- 
mination of the value of money or the general level of prices, 
and may be overcome to some extent by the same methods. 
An " index number " may be formed by taking various kinds of 
labour as fair samples, and the nominal wages thus obtained may 
be corrected by a consideration of the elements in the real wages 
to which they correspond. Care must be taken, however, that 
the quantity and quality of labour taken at different tunes and 
places are the same, just as in the case of commodities similar 
precautions are necessary. Practically, for example, errors are 
constantly made by taking the rate of wages for a short time 
(say an hour), and then, without regard to regularity of employ- 
ment, constructing the annual rate on this basis; and again, 
insufficient attention is paid to Adam Smith's pithy caution that 
" there may be more labour in an hour's bard work than in two 
hours' easy business." But, however difficult it may be to obtain 



WAGES 



23 x 



i of the general rate of wages for practical 
purposes, there can be no doubt as to the value and necessity 
of the conception in economic theory. For, as toon as it is 
assumed that industrial competition is the principal economic 
force in the distribution of the wealth of a community — and this 
is in reality the fundamental assumption of modern economic 
science,— a distinction must be drawn between the most general 
ones which affect all wages and the particular causes which 
lead to differences of wages in different employments, in other 
wjcds, the actual ate of wages obtained in any particular occu- 
pation depends partly on causes affecting that group compared 
with others, and partly on the general conditions which determine 
lac relations between labour, capital and production over the 
•hole area in which the industrial competition is effective. 
(See A. L. fiowley's Wat/a in the United Kingdom in the Nineteenth 
Cmiwry (1000), i 3, for an account of the meaning and use of the 
average wage.) 

Thus the theory of the wages question consists of two parts, or 

gives the answers to two questions, (i) What are the 

JJ"*" causes which determine the general rate of wages? 

mmy. (a) Why are wages in some occupations and at some 

times and places above or below this general rale ? 

With regard to the first question, Adam Smith, as in almost 
every important economic theory, gives an answer which com* 
hines two views which were subsequently differentiated into 
latagoDJsm. " The produce of labour constitutes the natural 
recompense or wages of labour," is the opening sentence of his 
chapter on wages. But then he goes on to sa>» that " this original 
state of things, in which the labourer enjoyed the whole produce 
of his own labour, could not last beyond the first introduction 
of the appropriation of land and the accumulation of stock." 
Aod be thus arrives at the conclusion that " the demand for 
(hose who live by wages, it is evident, cannot increase but in 
proportion to the increase of the funds which are destined to the 
payment of wages." This is the germ of the celebrated wages- 
fund theory which was carried to an extreme by J. S. Mill and 
others; and, although Mill abandoned the theory some time 
before his death, he was unable to eradicate it from his systematic 
treatise and to reduce it to its proper dimensions. It is im- 
portant to observe that in the hands of Mill this theory was by no 
means, as was afterwards maintained by Elliot Cairnes, a mere 
statement of the problem to be solved. According to Cairnes 
[Lading Principles of Political Economy, bit. ii.), the wages-fund 
theory, as given in Mill's Principles (bk. ii. ch. ». § i), embraces 
(he following statements: (1) the wages-fund is a general term 
wed to express the aggregate of all wages at any given lime in 
Possession of the labouring population; (2) the average wage 
depends on the proportion of this fund to the number of people; 
(3) the amount of the fund is determined by the amount of 
general wealth applied to the direct purchase of labour. These 
propositions Cairnes easily reduces to mere verbal statements, 
*ri he then states that the real difficulty is to determine the 
causes which govern the demand and supply of labour. But the 
"*** superficial glance, as well as the most careful survey, will 
convince the reader of Mill's chapters on wages that he regarded 
the theory not as the statement but as the solution of the problem. 
For he applies it directly to the explanation of movements in 
**ges, to the criticism of popular remedies for low wages, and 
to the discovery of what he considers to be legitimate and possible 
remedies. In fact, it was principally on account of the applica- 
tion of the theory to concrete facts that it aroused so much 
opposition, which would have been impossible if it bad been a 
■*re statement of the problem. 

The wages-fund theory as a real attempt to solve the wages 
Amotion may be resolved into three propositions, which are very 
Afferent from the verbal truisms of Cairnes. ( 1 ) In any country 
41 aay time there is a determinate amount of capita) uncon- 
ditionally destined for the payment of labour This is the wages- 
fad. (2) There is also a determinate number of labourers who 
■rost work independently of the rale of wages — that is, whether 
*he rate is high or low. (3) The wages-fund is distributed 
"Kocst the labourers solely by means of competition, masters 



competing with one another for labour, and labourers with one 
another fox work, and thus the average rate of wages depends 
on the proportion between wage-capital and population. It 
follows then, according to this view, that wages can only rite 
cither owing to an increase of capital or a diminution of popu- 
lation, and this accounts for the exaggerated importance attached 
by Mill to the Idalthusian theory of population. It also follows 
from the theory that any restraint of competition in one direction 
can only cause a rise of wages by a corresponding fall in another 
quarter, and in this form it was the argument most frequently 
urged Against the action of trade unions. It is worth noting, as 
showing the vital connexion of the theory with Mill's principles, 
that it is practically the foundation of his propositions on capital 
in his first book, and is also the basis of the exposition in his fourth 
book of the effects of the progress of society on the condition of 
the working-classes. 

It has often been remarked that, in economics as in other 
sciences, what eventually assumes the form of the development 
of or supplement to an old theory at first appears as if in direct 
antagonism to it, and there is reason to think that the criticism 
of the wages-fund theory was carried to an extreme, and that the 
essential elements of truth which it contains were overlooked. 
In many respects the theory may be regarded as a good first 
approximation to the complete solution of the problem. The 
plan favoured by some modern economists of regarding wages 
simply as the price of labour determined as in the case of other 
prices simply by demand and supply, though of advantage from 
some points of view, is apt to lead to a maladjustment of emption 
in other directions. The supply of labour, for example, is in 
many ways on a different footing from the supply of commodities. 
The causes which the wages-fund theory emphasizes too ex- 
clusively arc after all vcrae causae, and must always be taken into 
account. There can be no doubt, for example, that under certain 
conditions a rapid increase in the labouring population may 
cause wages to fall, just as a rapid decline may make them rise. 
The most striking example of a great improvement in the con- 
dition of the labouring classes in English economic history is 
found immediately after the occurrence of the Black Death in 
the middle of the 14th century. The sudden and extensive 
thinning of the ranks of labour was manifestly the principal 
cause of the great improvement in the condition of the 
survivors. 

Again, as regards the amount of capital competing for labour, 
the reality of the cause admits of no dispute, at any rate in any 
modern society. The force of this clement is perhaps best seen 
by taking a particular case and assuming that the general wages- 
fund of the country is divided into a number of smaller wages- 
funds. Take, for example, the wages of domestic servants 
when the payment of wages is made simply for the service 
rendered. We may fairly assume that the richer classes of the 
community practically put aside so much of their revenue for 
the payment of the wages of their servants. The aggregate of 
these sums is the domestic wages-fund. Now, if owing to any 
cause the amount available for this purpose falls oft. whilst the 
number of those seeking that class of employment remains the 
sa me, t he nat ural result would be a fall in wages. 1 1 may of cou rse 
happen in this as in other cases that the result is not so much a 
direct fall in the rate of wages as a diminution of employment — 
but even in this case, if people employ fewer servants, they must 
do more work. Again, if we were to seek for the reason why the 
wages of governesses are so low, the essence of the answer would 
be found in the excessive supply of that kind of labour compared 
with the funds destined for its support And similarly through 
the whole range of employments in which the labour is employed 
in perishable services and not in matcnal products, the wages- 
fund theory brings into prominence the principal causes governing 
the rate of wages, namely, the number of people competing, the 
amount of the fund competed for, and the effectiveness of the 
competition. This view also is in harmony with the general 
principles of demand and supply. If we regard labour as a 
commodity and wages as the price paid for it, then we may say 
that the price will be so adjusted that the quantity demanded 



23 2 



WAGES 



will be made equal to the quantity offered at that price, — the 
agency by which the equation is reached being competition. 

But when we turn to other (acts for the verification of the 
theory we easily discover apparent if not real contradictions. 
The case of Ireland after the potato famine affords an instance 
of a rapidly declining population without any corresponding 
rise in wages, whilst in new countries we often find a very rapid 
increase of population accompanied by an increase in wages. 
In a similar manner we find that the capital of a country may 
increase rapidly without wages rising in proportion— as, for 
example, seems to have been the case in England after the great 
mechanical improvements at the end of the 18th century up to 
the repeal of the Corn Laws— whilst in new countries where 
wages are the highest there arc generally complaints of the scarcity 
of capital. But perhaps the most striking conflict of the theory 
with facts is found in the periodical inflations and depressions of 
trade. After a commercial crisis, when the shock is over and the 
necessary liquidation has taken place, we generally find that 
there is a period during which there is a glut of capital and yet 
wages are low. The abundance of capital is shown by the low 
rate of interest and the difficulty of obtaining remunerative 
investments. Accordingly this apparent failure of the theory, 
at least partially, makes it necessary to examine the propositions 
into which it was resolved more carefully, in order to discover, 
in the classical economic phraseology, the " disturbing causes." 
As regards the first of these propositions — that there is always a 
certain amount of capital destined for the employment of labour 
—it is plain that this destination is not really unconditional. 
In a modern society whether or not a capitalist will supply 
capital to labour depends on the rate of profit expected, and this 
again depends proximately on the course of prices. But the 
theory as stated can only consider profits and prices as acting 
in an indirect roundabout manner upon wages. If profits are 
high then more capital can be accumulated and there is a larger 
wages-fund, and if prices are high there may be some stimulus 
to trade, but the effect on real wages is considered to be very 
small In fact Mill writes it down as a popular delusion that 
high prices make high wages. And if the high prices are due 
purely to currency causes the criticism is in the main correct, 
and in some cases, as was shown above, high prices may mean 
real low wages. If, however, we turn to the great classes of 
employments in which the labour is embodied in a material 
product, we find on examination that wages vary with prices 
in a real and not merely in an illusory sense. Suppose, for 
example, that, owing to a great increase in the foreign demand 
for British produce, a rise in prices takes place, there will be a 
corresponding rise in nominal wages, and in all probability a rise' 
In real wages. Such was undoubtedly the case in Great Britain 
on the conclusion of the Franco-German War. 

On the other hand, if prices fall and profits are low, there will 
so far be a tendency to contract the employment of labour. 
At the same time, however, to some extent the capital is applied 
unconditionally— in other words, without obtaining what is 
considered adequate remuneration, or even at a positive loss. 
The existence 01 a certain amount of fixed capital practically 
implies the constant employment of a certain amount of 
labour. 

Nor is the second proposition perfectly true, namely, that there 
are always a certain number of labourers who must work inde- 
pendently of the rate of wages. For the returns of* pauperism 
and other statistics show that there is always a proportion of 
" floating " labour sometimes employed and sometimes not. 
Again, although, as Adam Smith says, man is of all luggage the 
most difficult to be transported, still labour as well as capital 
may be attracted to foreign fields. The constant succession of 
strikes resorted to in order to prevent a fall in wages shows that 
in practice the labourers do not at once accept the "natural" 
market rate. Still, on the whole, this second proposition is a 
much more adequate expression of the truth than the first; for 
labour cannot afford to lie idle or to emigrate so easily as capital. 

The third proposition, that the wages-fund is distributed solely 
by competition, is also found to conflict with facts. Competition 



may be held to imply in its positive meaning that every indi- 
vidual strives to attain his own economic interest* regardless 
of the interests of others. But in some cases this end may be 
attained most effectively by means of combination, as, for 
example, when a number of people combine to create a practical 
monopoly. Again, the end may be attained by leaving the 
control to government, or by obeying the unwritten rules of 
long-established custom. But these methods of satisfying 
economic interests are opposed to competition in the usual sense 
of the term, and certainly as used in reference to labour. Thus 
on the negative side competition implies that the economic 
interests of the persons concerned are attained neither by 
combination, nor by law, nor by custom. Again, it is also 
assumed, in making competition the principal distributing force 
of the national income, that every person knows what his real 
interests are, and that there is perfect mobility of labour both 
from employment to employment and from place to place. 
Without these assumptions the wages-fund would not be evenly 
distributed according to the quantity of labour. It is, however, 
obvious that, even in the present industrial system, competition 
is modified considerably by these disturbing agencies; and in 
fact the tendency seems to be more and more for combinations 
of masters on one side and of men on .the other to take the place 
of the competition of individuals. 

The attempted verification of the wages- fund theory leads 
to so many important modifications that it is not surprising 
to find that in recent times the tendency has been to ^ 
reject it altogether. And thus we arrive at the develop- p^ff 
mentof Adam Smith's introductory statement, namely, from tt» 
that the produce of labour constitutes the natural JJJJJ* 
recompense or wages of labour. The most important "^ 

omission of the wages-fund theory is that it fails to take account 
of the quantity produced and of the price obtained for the pro- 
duct. If we bring in these elements, we find that there are 
several other causes to be considered besides capital, population 
and competition. There are, for example, the various factors in 
the efficiency of labour and capital, in the organization of industry, 
and in the general condition of trade. To some extent these 
elements may be introduced into the old theory, but in reality 
the point of view is quite different. This is made abundantly 
clear by considering Mill's treatment of the remedies for low 
wages. His main contention is that population must be rigidly 
restrained in order that the average rate of wages may be kept 
up. But, as several American economists have pointed out, in 
new countries especially every increase in the number of labourers 
may be accompanied by a more than proportionate increase in 
the produce and thus in the wages of labour. Again, the older 
view was that capital must be first accumulated in order after- 
wards to be divided up into wages, as if apparently agriculture 
was the normal type of industry, and the workers must have a 
store to live on until the new crop was grown and secured. 
But the " produce " theory of wages considers that wages are 
paid continuously out of a continuous product, although in some 
cases they may be advanced out of capital or accumulated stores. 
According to this view wages are paid out of the annual pioduce 
of the land, capital and labour, and not out of the savings of 
previous years. There is a danger, however, of pushing this 
theory to an untenable extreme, and overlooking altogether the 
function of capital in determining wages; and the true solution 
seems to be found in a combination of the " produce " theory with 
the " fund M theory. 

An industrial society may be regarded, in the first place, as a 
great productive machine turning out a vast variety of products 
for the cpnsumption of the members of the society. The 
distribution of these products, so far as it is not modified by 
other social and moral conditions, depends upon the principle of 
" reciprocal demand." In a preliminary rough classification we 
may make three groups— the owners of land and natural agents, 
the owners of capital or reserved products and instruments, and 
the owners of labour. To obtain the produce requisite even 
for the necessary wants of the community a combination of these 
three groups must take place, and the relative reward obtained 



WAGES 



233 



by each wiD vary in general according to the demands of the 
ethers for its services. Thus, if capital, both fixed and circulating, 
is scanty, whilst labour and land are both abundant, the reward 
of capital will be high relatively to rent and wages. This is well 
W"«^ in the high rate of profits obtained in early societies. 
According to this view of the question the aggregate amount 
paid in wages depends partly on the general productiveness of 
aD the productive agents and partly on the relative power of 
the labourers as compared with the owners of land and capital 
(the amount taken by government and individuals for taxes, 
charity, &c , being omitted). Under a system of perfect industrial 
competition the general rate of wages would be so adjusted that 
the demand for labour would be just equal to the supply at 
that rate. (Compare Marshall's Principles of Economics, bk. vL 
ch. £.) 

If all labour and capital were perfectly uniform it would not 
be necessary to carry the analysis further, but as a matter of fact, 
instead of two great groups of labourers and capitalists, 
we have a multitude of subdivisions all under the in- 
fluence of reciprocal demand. Every subgroup tries to 
obtain as much as possible of the general product, which is 
practically always measured in money. The determination of 
relative wages depends on the constitution of these groups and 
their relations to one another. Under any given social conditions 
there most be differences of wages in different- employments, 
which may be regarded as permanent until some change occurs in 
the conditions; in other words, certain differences of wages are 
stable or normal, whilst others depend simply on temporary 
fluctuations in demand and supply. A celebrated chapter in the 
Wealth of Nations (bk. i. ch. x.) is still the best basis for the 
investigation of these normal differences— which, as stated above, 
b the second principal problem of the wages question. First of 
all, a broad distinction may be drawn between the natural and 
artificial causes of difference, or, in Adam Smith's phraseology, 
between those due to the nature of the employments and those 
_ ^ due to the policy of Europe. In the former division 

J**JJ* we have (x) the agreeablcness or disagreeableness of 
^SSnme*. lne employment, illustrated by two classical examples 
— " honour makes a great part of the reward of all 
honourable professions," and " the most detestable of all em- 
ployments — that of public executioner — is, in proportion to the 
work done, better paid than any common trade whatever." 
There is, however, much truth in Mill's criticism, that in many 
cases the worst paid of all employments are at the same time the 
most disagreeable, simply because those engaged in them have 
practically no other choice. (2) The easiness and cheapness or 
the reverse of learning the business. This factor operates in two 
ways. A difficult business implies to some extent peculiar natural 
qualifications, and it also involves the command of a certain 
awywmf of capital to subsist on during the process of learning, 
sad thus in both respects the natural supply of labour is limited. 
(3) The constancy or inconstancy in the employment— a point 
already noticed under real wages. (4) The great or small trust 
reposed in the workmen, an important consideration in all the 
Either grades of labour, e.g. bankers, lawyers, doctors, &c. 
(5) The chance of success or the reverse. Here it is to be observed 
that owing to the hopefulness of human nature and its influence 
on the gambling spirit, the chance of success is generally over- 
estimated, and therefore that the wages in employments where 
the chance of success is really small are lower than they ought to 
be. The most striking instance is furnished by the labour in gold 
mines, diamond fields, and the like, and the same cause also 
operates in many of the professions. 

AH these causes of differences of wages in different employ- 
ments may be explained by showing the way in which they 
operate on the demand and supply of labour in the particular 
group. If the " net advantages," to adopt Marshall's phrase* 
ology, of any group are relatively high, then labour will be 
directly attracted to that group, and the children born in it will 
be brought up to the same occupation, and thus in both ways the 
supply of labour will be increased. But the " net advantages " 
embrace the conditions just enumerated. Again, if the other 



members of the community require certain forms of labour to a 
greater extent, there is an increase in the demand and a rise in 
their price. 

In addition to these so-called natural causes of difference, 
there are those arising from law, custom, or other so-called 

artificial causes. They may be classified under four 

headings. (1) Certain causes artificially restrain in- JJJJUJL 
dustrial competition by limiting the number of any UuHl-^ 
particular group. Up to the close of the 18th century, 
and in many instances to a much later date, the regulations of 
gilds and corporations limited the numbers in each trade (cf. 
Brentano, Gilds and Trade Unions), This they did by making a 
long apprenticeship compulsory on those wishing to learn the 
craft, by restricting the number of apprentices to be taken by 
any master, by exacting certain qualifications as to birth or 
wealth, by imposing heavy entrance fees, either in money or in 
the shape of a useless but expensive masterpiece. Some of these 
regulations were originally passed in the interests of the general 
public and of those employed in the craft, but in the course of 
time their effect was, as is stated by Adam Smith, simply to 
unduly restrain competition. The history of the craft-gilds is 
full of instructive examples of the principles governing wages. 
No doubt the regulations tended to raise wages above the natural 
rate, but as a natural consequence industry migrated to places 
where the oppressive regulations did not exist. In the time of the 
Tudors the decay of many towns during a period of rapid national 
progress was largely due to those " fraternities in evil," as Bacon 
called the gilds. At present one of the best examples of the 
survival of this species of artificial restriction is the limitation of 
the number of teachers qualifying for degrees in certain univer- 
sities. (*) In some employments, however, law and custom tend 
unduly to increase the amount of competition. This was to a 
great extent the case in the church and the scholastic professions 
owing to the large amount of charitable education. Adam 
Smith points out that even in his day a curate was " passing rich 
on forty pounds a year," whilst many only obtained £20— below 
the wages earned by a journeyman shoemaker. In the same way 
state-aided education of a commercial and technical kind may 
result in lowering the rates (relatively) of the educated business 
classes. It is said that one reason why the Germans replace 
Englishmen in many branches is that, having obtained their 
education at a low rate, there are more of them qualified, and 
consequently they accept lower wages. The customary idea 
that the position of a clerk is more genteel than that of an artisan 
accounts largely for the excessive competition in the former class, 
especially now that education is practically universal. (3) In 
some cases law and custom may impede or promote the circula 
tion of labour. At the time Adam Smith wrote the laws of 
settlement were still in full operation. " There is not a man of 
forty who has not felt most cruelly oppressed by this ill-contiived 
law of settlement." . Differences in wages in different parts of 
the same country and in different occupations are still largely 
due to impediments in the way of the movement of labour, 
which might be removed or lessened by the government making 
provisions for migration or emigration. (4) On many occasions 
in the past the law often directly interfered to regulate wages. 
The Statute of Labourers, passed immediately after the Black 
Death, was an attempt in this direction, but it appears to have 
failed, according to the investigations of Thorold Rogers. The 
same writer, however, ascribes to the celebrated Statute of 
Apprentices (5th of Elisabeth) the degradation of the English 
labourer for nearly three centuries {Agriculture and Prices, 
vol. v.). This, he asserts, was due to the wages being fixed by 
the justices of the peace. It is, however, worth noting that 
Brentano, who is equally sympathetic with the claims of labour, 
asserts that so long as this statute was actually enforced, or the 
customs founded upon it were observed, the condition of the 
labourers was prosperous, and that the degradation only began 
when the statute fell into disuse (Origin of GUds and Trade 

I Unions. For a full account of the effect of the Statute of 
Apprentices see W. Cunningham's Growth of English Industry 
and Commerce^ voL ii). 



234 



WAGES 



Something must be said as to the power of the state to regulate 
wages. As far as any direct regulation is concerned, it seems to 
be only possible within narrow limits. The state might 
of course institute certain complex sliding-scales for 
different classes of labour and make them compulsory, 
but this would rather be an official declaration of the 
natural market rate than a direct regulation. Any rate which 
the state of trade and prices would not bear could not be en- 
forced: masters could not be compelled to work at a loss or to 
keep their capital employed when it might be more advantage- 
ously transferred to another place or occupation. Thus the legal 
rate could not exceed to any considerable extent the market rate. 
Nor, on the other hand, could a lower rate in general be enforced, 
especially when the labourers have the right of combination and 
possess powerful organizations. And even apart from this the 
competition of capitalists for Labour would tend to raise wages 
above the legal rate, and evasion would be extremely easy. 

The best illustration of the failure to raise the rate of wages 
directly by authority is found in the English poor law system 
between 1796 and 1834. " In the former year (1796) 
JjJJJJ^ the decisively fatal step of legalizing out-relief to the 
wsges. able-bodied, and in aid of wages, was taken," and " in 
February 1834 was published perhaps the most 
remarkable and startling document to be found in the whole 
range of English, perhaps indeed of all social history " (Fowle's 
Poor Law). The essence of the system was in the justices 
determining a natural rate of wages, regard being paid to the 
price of necessaries and the size of the labourer's family, and an 
amount was given from the rates sufficient to make up the wages 
received to this natural level. The method of administration 
was certainly bad, but the best administration possible could 
only have kept the system in existence a few years longer. In 
one parish the poor-rate had swallowed up the whole value of the 
land, which was going out of cultivation, a fact which has an 
obvious bearing on land nationalization as a remedy for low wages. 
The labourers became careless, inefficient and improvident. 
Those who were in regular receipt of relief were often better off 
(in money) than independent labourers. But the most important 
consequence was that the real wages obtained were, in spite of 
the relief, lower than otherwise they would have been, and a 
striking proof was given that wages are paid out of the produce 
of labour. The Report of tke Poor Law Commissioners (1834) 
states emphatically (p. 48) that " the severest sufferers are those 
for whose benefit the system is supposed to have been introduced 
and to be perpetuated, the labourers and their families." The 
independent labourers suffered directly through the unfair 
competition of the pauper labour, but, as one of the-sub-reporters 
stated, in every district the general condition of the independent 
labourer was strikingly distinguishable from that of the pauper 
and superior to it, though the independent labourers were 
commonly maintained upon less money. In New Zealand and 
Australia in recent years a great extension has been made of 
the principle of state intervention in the regulation of wages. 

But, although the direct intervention of the state, with the 
view of raising the nominal rates of wages, is, according to theory 
and experience, of doubtful advantage, still, when we 
consider real wages in the evident sense of the term, 
there seems to be an almost indefinite scope for stale 
interference. The effect of the Factory Acts and 
similar legislation has been undoubtedly to raise the real wages 
of the working-classes as a whole, although at first the same argu- 
ments were used in opposition to these proposals as in the case 
of direct relief from the poor-rates. But there is a vital difference 
in the two cases, because in the former the tendency is to increase 
whilst in the latter it is to diminish the energy and self-reliance 
of the workers. An excellent summary of the results of Uvs 
species of industrial legislation is given by John Morley (Lift of 
Cobden. vol. i. p. 303): — 

" We have to-day a complete, minute, and voluminous code for 
the protection of labour, buildings must be kept pure of effluvia; 
dangerous machinery must be fenced: children and young persons 
must not clean it while in motion; their hours arc not only limited 
but fixed; continuous employment must not exceed a given number 



of hours, varying with the trade but prescribed by the law in given 
cases; a statutable number of holidays is imposed; the children 
must go to school, and the employer must have every week a certi- 
ficate to that effect ; if an accident happens notice must be sent 
to the proper authorities; special provisions are made for bake- 
houses, for lace-making, for collieries, and for a whole schedule 
of other special callings; for the due enforcement and vigilant 
supervision of this immense host of minute prescriptions there is 
an immense host of inspectors, certifying surgeons, and other 
authorities whose business it is to ' speed and post o'er land and 
ocean ' on sullen guardianship of every kind ot labour, from that 
of the woman who plaits straw at her cottage door to the miner 
who descends into the bowels of the earth and the seaman who 
conveys the fruits and materials of universal industry to and fro 
between the remotest parts of the globe." 

The analysis previously given of real wages shows that logically 
all these improvements in the conditions of labour, by diminishing 
the " quantity of labour " involved in work, are equivalent to a 
real rise in wages. Experience has also shown that the state 
may advantageously interfere in regulating the methods of 
paying wages. A curious poem, written about the time of 
Edward IV., on England's commercial policy (Political Songs 
and Poems, Rolls Series, ii. 282), shows that even in the 
15th century the " truck " system was in full operation, to the 
disadvantage of the labourers. Tne cloth-makers, in particular, 
compelled the workers to take half of their wages in merchandise 
which they estimated at higher than its real value. The writer 
proposes that the " wyrk folk be paid in good mon6," and that a 
sufficient ordinance be passed for the purpose, and a law to this 
effect was enacted in the 4th year of Edward IV. The Truck 
Acts have since been much further extended. Again, the legis- 
lation directed against the adulteration of all kinds of goods, 
which also finds its prototypes in the middle ages, is in its effects 
equivalent to a rise in real wages. 1 

The power of trade unions in regulating wages is in most 
respects analogous in principle to that of legislation just noticed. 
Nominal wages can only be affected within compara- i m __ jm _ 
tively narrow limits, depending on the condition of jjjjj # 
trade and the state of prices, whilst in many cases a f 
rise in the rate in some trades or places can only be 
accomplished by a corresponding depression elsewhere. At the 
same time, however, it can hardly be questioned that through 
the unions nominal wages have on the whole risen at the expense 
of profits — that is to say, that combinations of labourers can 
make better bargains than individuals. But the debatable 
margin which may make cither extra profits or extra wages is 
itself small, and the principal direct effect of trade unions is to 
make wages fluctuate with prices, a rise at one time being com- 
pensated by a fall at another. The unions can, however, look 
after the interests of their members in many ways which improve 
their general condition or raise the real rate of wages, and when 
nominal wages have attained a natural maximum, and some 
method of arbitration or sliding-scale is in force, this indirect 
action seems the principal function of trade unions. The effects 
of industrial partnership (cf . Scdley Taylor's Profit Sharing) and 
of productive co-operation (cf . Holyoake's History of Co-operation) 
are small in amount (compared with the total industry of any 
country) though excellent in kind, and there seem to be no signs 
of the decay of the entrepreneur system. 

The industrial revolution which took place about the end of the 
1 8th century, involving radical changes in production, destroyed 
the old relations between capital and labour, and per- ^^_ 
haps the most interesting part of the history of wages is {JJJjJJJL 
that covered by the 19th century. For fifty years after MV4M( 
the introduction of production on a large scale, the 
condition of the working-classes was on the whole deplorable, but 
great progress has since been made. The principal results may 
be summed up under the effects of machinery on wages — taking 
both words in their widest sense. Machinery affects the condition 
of the working-classes in many ways. The most obvious mode is 
the direct substitution of machinery for labour. It is clear that 
any sudden and extensive adoption of labour-saving machinery 

1 On this subject compare Jcvons, Tke Slate in Relation to Labour, 
mem edition by F. A. Hirst. 



WAGGA-WAGGA— WAGNER, R. 



235 



may, by throwing the labourers out of employment, lower the 
rate ol wages, and it is easy to understand how riots arose 
repeatedly owing to this cause. But as a rule the effect of labour- 
saving machinery in diminishing employment has been greatly 
exaggerated, because two important practical considerations 
have been overlooked. In the first place, any radical change 
made in the methods of production will be only gradually and 
continuously adopted throughout the industrial world; and in 
the second place these radical changes, these discontinuous leaps, 
tend to give place to advances by small increments of intention. 
We have an instance of a great radical change in the steam-engine. 
Watt's patent for " a method of lessening " the consumption of 
steam and fuel in fire-engines was published on January 5, 1769, 
and the movement for utilizing steam-power still found room for 
extension for a century or more afterwards. The history of the 
power-loom again shows that the adoption of an invention is 
comparatively slow. In 1813 there were not more than 2400 
power-looms at work in England. In 1820 they increased to 
14,150. In 1853 there were 100,000, but the curious thing is 
that during this time the number of hand-looms had actually 
mcreased to some extent (Porter's Progress of the Nation, p. 186). 
The power-loom also illustrates the gradual continuous growth 
of improvements. This is clearly shown by Porter. A very 
good hand-weaver, twenty-five or thirty years of age, could 
weave two pieces of shirting per week. In 1823 a steam-loom 
weaver, about fifteen years of age, attending two looms, could 
weave nine similar pieces in a week. In 1826 a steam-loom 
weaver, about fifteen, attending to four looms, could weave 
twelve similar pieces a week. In 1833 a steam-loom weaver, 
horn fifteen to twenty, assisted by a girl of twelve, attending to 
four looms, could weave eighteen pieces. This is only one ex- 
ample, for, as Porter remarks, It would fill many large volumes 
to describe the numerous inventions which during the 19th 
century imparted facility to manufacturing processes, and in 
every case we find a continuity in the improvements. This two- 
fold progressive character of invention operates m favour of 
the Labourer — in the first place, because in most cases the 
increased cheapness of the commodity consequent on the use 
of machinery causes a corresponding extension of the market 
and the amount produced, and thus there may be no actual 
diminution of employment even temporarily; and secondly, if 
the improvement takes place slowly, there is time for the absorp- 
tion of the redundant labour in other employments. It is quite 
deir that on balance the great increase in population in the 19th 
century was largely caused, or rather rendered possible, by the 
jrrxm^A use of labour-saving machinery. The way in which 
the working-classes were at first injured by the adoption of 
machinery was not so much by a diminution in the number of 
kinds required as by a change in the nature of the employment. 
Skilled labour of a certain kind lost its peculiar value, and children 
and women were able to do work formerly only done by men. 
Bat the principal evils resulted from the wretched conditions 
rcider which, before the factory legislation, the work was per- 
lonned; and there is good reason to believe that a deterioration 
of the type of labourer, both moral and physical, was effected. 
It is, however, a mistake to suppose that on the whole the use of 
machinery tends to dispense with skill. On the contrary, 
everything goes to prove that under the present system of pro- 
^ M duction on a large scale theTe is on the whole far 
*tb» more skill required than formerly — a fact well brought 
••rttiBt* out by Sir Robert Giffen in his essay on the progress 
l-BI " 1, of the working-classes (Essays en Finance, vol. ii. 
P 365), and expressed by the official reports on wages in different 
countries. (J. S. N.) 

WAGGA-WAGGA, a town of Wynyard county, New South 
Wales, Australia, on the left bank of the river Murrumbidgce, 
309 m. by rail W.S.W. of Sydney and 267 m. N.E. of Melbourne. 
Pop. (1001) 51 14. The Murrumbidgee is here spanned by a steel 
viaduct, the approaches of which are formed by heavy embank- 
ments. Wagga-Wagga has a school of art with a library attached, 
a fine convent picturesquely situated on Mount Erin, a good 
tacccourse and agricultural show-grounds, There is a consider- 



able amount of gold-mining in the district, which, however, is 
chiefly pastoral, although cereals, tobacco and wine are produced 
in considerable quantities. 

WAGNER, ADOLP (1835- ), German economist, was born 
at Ertangen on the 25th of March 1835. Educated at Gettingcn 
and Heidelberg, he was professor of political science at Dorpat 
and Freiburg, and after 1870 at Berlin. A prolific writer on 
economic problems, he brought out in his study of the subject 
the close relation which necessarily exists between economics 
and jurisprudence. He ranks without doubt as one of the most 
eminent German economists and a distinguished leader of the 
historical school. His leanings towards Christian socialism 
made him one of those to whom the appellation of " Katheder- 
Socialisten" or " socialists of the (professional) chair" was 
applied, and he was one of the founders of the Vcrtin Jiir Social- 
potitik. In 187 1 he undertook, in conjunction with Professor 
E. Nasse (1829-1890), a new edition of Rau's Lchrbucn dct 
politischen Okonomie, and his own special contributions, the 
Crwuilegung and Finanzmsscnsckaft, afterwards published separ- 
ately, are probably his most important works. He approaches 
economic studies from the point of view that the doctrine of the 
jus naturae, on which the physiocrats reared their economic 
structure, has lost its hold on belief, and that the old a priori 
and absolute conceptions of personal freedom and property have 
given way with it. He lays down that the economic position 
of the individual, instead of depending merely on so-called 
natural rights or even on his natural powers, is conditioned by 
the contemporary juristic system, which is Itself an historical 
product. These conceptions, therefore, of freedom and property^ 
half economic, half juristic, require a fresh examination. 
Wagner accordingly investigates, before anything else, the 
conditions of the economic life of the community, and m sub* 
ordination to this, determines the sphere of the economic freedom 
of the individual. Among his works arc Bcitr&ge zur Lchre von 
den Bankcn (1857), System der deuiscken Zelldbankgcsetagebung 
(1870-1873) and Agrar- und Industriestaai (1902). 

His brother, Hermann Wagner (1840- ), a distinguished 
geographer, joined the Geographical Institute of Justus Perthes 
in 1868, and was editor of the statistical section of the Gotkaer 
Almanack up to 1876. In 1872 he founded Die BevSlkerung der 
Erde, a critical review of area and population, and in 1880 he 
was appointed professor of geography at Gottingen. He was 
editor of the Geographischcs Jakrbuch from 1880 to 190&. His 
publications include Lekrbvch der Geographic (7th ed., 1903) and 
Methodise her Sckidailas (12th ed., 1007). 

WAGNER, RUDOLPH (1805-1864), German anatomist and 
physiologist, was born on the 30th of June 1805 at Bayreuth, 
where his father was a professor in the gymnasium. He began 
the study of medicine at Erlangen in 1822, and finished his 
curriculum in 1826 at Wtirzburg, where he had attached himself 
mostly to J. L. Schonlein in medicine and to K. F. Heusinger in 
comparative anatomy. Aided by a public stipendium, he spent 
a year or more studying in the Jartfin des Plantes, under the 
friendly eye of Cuvier, and in making zoological discoveries at 
Cagliari and other places on the Mediterranean. On his return 
he set up in medical practice at Augsburg, whither his father had 
been transferred; but in a few months he found an opening for 
an academical career, on being appointed prosector at Erlangen. 
In 1832 he became full professor of zoology and comparative 
anatomy there, and held that office until 1840, when he was 
called to succeed J. F. Blumenbach at Gottingen. At the Hano- 
verian university he remained till his death, being much occupied 
with administrative work as pro-rector for a number of years, 
and for nearly the whole of his residence troubled by ill-health 
(phthisis). In i860 he gave over the physiological part of his 
teaching to a new chair, retaining the zoological, with which 
his career had begun. While at Frankfurt , on his way to examine 
the Neanderthal skull at Bonn, he was struck with paralysis, 
and died at Gottingen a few months later on the 13th of May 1864. 

Wagner's activity as a writer and worker was enormous, and his 
ranee extensive, most of his hard work having been doneat Erlangen 
while his health was good. His graduation thesis was on the 



236 



WAGNER 




ambitious subject of " the historical development of epidemic and 
contagious diseases all over the world, with the laws of their diffusion," 
which showed the influence of Schfinlein. His first treatise was 
Dut Naturgesckickle des Menschen (in 2 vols., Kempten, 1831). 
Frequent journeys to the Mediterranean, the Adriatic, and the 
North Sea gave him abundant materials for research on invertebrate 
anatomy and physiology, which he communicated first to the 
Munich academy of sciences, and republished in his Beitrdge but 
vergleickenden " * 

additions in 
the subject 

Leipzig), wl ._ „ _- — 

concise style. A new edition of it appeared in 1843 under the title 
of Lekrbuch der Zookmie, of which only the vertebrate section was 
corrected by himself. The precision of his earlier work is evidenced 
by his Micrometric Measurements of the Elementary Parts of Man 
and Animals (Leipzig, 1834). His zoological labours may be said 
to conclude with the atlas Jeones zootomicae (Leipzig, 1841). In 
1835 he communicated to the Munich academy of sciences his 
researches on the physiology of generation and development, in- 
cluding the famous discovery of the germinal vesicle of the human 
ovum. These were republished under the title Prodromus historiae 
generationis kominis atque animalium (Leipzig, 1836). As in 
zoology, his original researches in physiology were followed by a 
students' text-book, Lekrbuch der specieUen Physiologic (Leipzig, 
1838), which soon reached a third edition, and was translated into 
French and English. This was supplemented by an atlas, Icones 

Ciysiologicae (Leipzig, 1839). To the same period belongs a very 
teresting but now little known work on medicine proper, of a 
historical and synthetic scope, Grundriss der Encyklofddi* und 
Methodolope der medicintscken Wissenschaften nock geschicktlicher 
A nsicht (Erlangen, 1 838) , which was translated into Danish. About 
the same time he worked at a translation of J. C. Prichard's Natural 
History of Man, and edited various writings of S. T. Sdmmcrring, 
with a biography of that anatomist (1844), which he himself fancied 
most of all his writings. In 1843, after his removal to. Gottingen, he 
began his great Handwdrterbuck der Pkysiologie, mit Ruckstckt auf 
pkysiologiscke Pathologie, and brought out the fifth (supplementary) 
volume in 1852 ; the only contributions of his own in it were on the 
sympathetic nerve, nerve-ganglia and nerve-endings, and he 
modestly disclaimed all merit except as being the organizer. While 
resident in Italy for his health from 1845 to 1847, he occupied himself 
with researches on the electrical organof the torpedo ana on nervous 
organization generally; these he published in 1855-1854 (Neureia* 
giscke Untersuckungen, Gottingen), and therewith bis physiological 
period may be said to end. His next period was stormy and con- 
troversial. He entered the lists boldly against the materialism of 
*' Stoff und Kraft," and avowed himself a Christian believer, where- 
upon he lost the countenance of a number of his old friends and 
pupils, and was unfeelingly told that he was suffering from an 
'* atrophy of the brain." His quarrel with the materialists began 
with his oration at the Gottingen meeting of the Naturforscher- 
VersammlunginI8M.on''Menschensch6pfuttgundSeelcnsubstan^.' , 
This was followed by a series of "Physiological Letters" in the 
AUgemeine Zeitung, by an essay on " Glauben und Wissen," and by 
the most important piece of this series, " Der Kampf um die Seele T 
(Gottingen, 1857). Having come to the consideration of these 

Ehilosophical problems late in life, he was at some disadvantage; 
ut he endeavoured to join as he best could in the current of con- 
temporary German thought. He had an exact knowledge of classical 
German writings', more especially of Goethe's, and of the literature 
connected with him. In what may be called his fourth and last 
period, Wagner became anthropologist and archaeologist, occupied 
himself with the cabinet of skulls in the Gottingen museum collected 
by Blumenbach and with the excavation of prehistoric remains, 
corresponded actively with the anthropological societies of Paris and 
London, and organized, in co-operation with the veteran K. E. von 
Baer, a successful congress of anthropologists at Gottingen in 1861. 
His last writings were memoirs on the convolutions of the human 
brain, on the weight of brains, and on the brains of idiots (1860- 
1862). 

See memoir by his eldest son in the GdUinger gekhrte Anseigen, 
" Nachrichten " for 1864. 

WAGNER, WILHELM RICHARD (18x3-1883), German 
dramatic composer, poet and essay- writer, was born at Leipzig 
on the 32nd of May 18x3. In i8aa he wasscnttotheKreuzschule 
at Dresden, where he did so well that, four years later, he trans- 
lated the first twelve books of the Odyssey for amusement In 
1828 he was removed to the Nicolaischule at Leipzig, where he 
was less successfuL His first music master was Gottlieb Mttller, 
who thought him self-willed and eccentric; and his first pro- 
duction as a composer was an overture, performed at the Leipzig 
theatre in 1830. In that year he matriculated at the university, 
tod took lessons in composition from Thoodor Weinlig, cantor at 
fbft TTifltiMTflh rt* A symphony was produced at the Gewand- 
tJM£gtis^fe*ta»JUldfa thc * oUowiL S yev hc *** appointed 



conductor of the opera at Magdeburg. The post was unprorUable, 
and Wagner's life at this period was very unsettled. He bad 
composed an opera called Die Feen adapted by himself from 
Gozzi's La Donna Serpente, and another, Das Liebesverbot, 
founded on Shakespeare's Measure Jet Measure, but only Das 
Ldebesverbot obtained a single performance in 1836. 

In that year Wagner married Wilhelmina Planer, an actress 
at the theatre at Konigsberg. He had accepted an engagement 
there as conductor; but, the lessee becoming bankrupt, the 
scheme was abandoned in favour of a better appointment at 
Riga. Accepting this, he remained actively employed until 
1839, when he made his first visit to Paris, taking with him an 
unfinished opera based on Bulwer Lytton's Rienzi, and, like his 
earlier attempts, on his own libretto. The venture proved most 
unfortunate. Wagner failed to gain a footing, and Rienzi, 
destined for the Grand Opera, was rejected. He completed it, 
however, and in 1842 it was produced at Dresden, where, with 
Madame Schroeder Devrient and Herr Tichatschek in the principal 
parts, it achieved a success which went far to make him famous. 

But though in Rienzi Wagner had shown energy and ambition, 
that work was far from representing his preconceived idcaL 
This he now endeavoured to embody in Derfiiegende Hollander, 
for which he designed a libretto quite independent of any other 
treatment of the legend. The piece was warmly received at 
Dresden on the and of January 1843; but its success was by 
no means equal to that of Rienzi. Spohr, however, promptly 
discovered its merits, and produced it at Casscl some months 
later, with very favourable results. 

On the 2nd of February 1843 Wagner was formally installed 
as Hofkapellmeister at the Dresden theatre, and he soon set to 
work on a new opera. He chose the legend of Tannhauser, 
collecting his materials from the ancient Tannhtiuser-LJed, the 
Vqlksbuck, Tieck's poetical Ert&hlung, Hoffmann's story of Der 
Sdngerkrieg, and the medieval poem on Der Wartburgkrieg. 
This last-named legend introduces the incidental poem of 
" Loherangrin," and so led Wagner to the study of Wolfram 
von Eschcnbach's Parztval and Titurel, with great results later 
on. But for the present he confined himself to the subject in 
hand; and on the 19th of October 1845 he produced his Tann- 
h&user, with Schroeder Devrient, Johanna Wagner, 1 Tichatschek 
and Mitterwurzer in the principal parts. Notwithstanding this 
powerful cast, the success of the new work was not brilliant, for 
it carried still further the principles embodied in Der flicgende 
Hollander, and the time was not ripe for them. But Wagner 
boldly fought for them, and might have prevailed earlier had he 
not taken part in the political agitations of 1849, after which his 
position in Dresden became untenable. In fact, after the flight 
of the king and the subsequent suppression of the riots, a warrant 
was issued for his arrest; and he had barely time to escape to 
Weimar, where Liszt was at that moment engaged in preparing 
Tannhdu'ser for performance, before the storm burst upon him 
with alarming violence. In all haste Liszt procured a passport 
and escorted his guest as far as Eisenach. Wagner tied to Paris 
and thence to Zurich, where he lived in almost unbroken retire- 
ment until the autumn of 1850. During this period most of his 
prose works— including Oper und Drama, ttber das Dirigieren, 
Das Judentun in der Musik— were given to the world. 

The medieval studies which Wagner had begun for his work at 
the libretto of Tannhduser bore rich fruit in his next opera 
Lohengrin, in which he also developed his principles on a larger 
scale and with a riper technique than hitherto. He had com- 
pleted the work before he fled from Dresden, but could not get 
it produced But he took the score with him to Paris, and, as 
he himself teus us, " when ill, miserable and despairing, I sat 
brooding over my fate, my eye fell on the score of my Lohengrin, 
which I had totally forgotten. Suddenly I felt something like 
compassion that the music should never sound from oil the 
death-pale paper. Two words 1 wrote to Liszt; his answer 
was the news that preparations were being made for the perform- 
ance of the work, on the grandest scale that the limited means 
of Weimar would permit. Everything that care and accessories 
* The composer's niece. 




WAGNER 



237 



couM do tns done' Co make the design of the piece, understood. 
Liszt saw what was wanted at once, and did it. Success was his 
reward; and with this success be now approaches, me, saying 
" See, we have come thus far; now create us a new work, that 
we may go further.". 

Lohengrin was, in fact, produced at Weimar under Liszt's 
direction on the 28th of August 1850. It was a severe trial to 
Wagner not to hear his own work, but he knew that it was in 
good hands, and he responded to Liszt's appeal for a new creation 
by studying the Nibetungenlied and gradually shaping it into a 
gigantic tetralogy. At this time also he first began to lay out 
the plan of Tristan und Isolde, and to think over the possibilities 
& Parsifal. 

During his exile Wagner matured his* plans and perfected his 
musical style; but it was not until some considerable time after 
Us return that any of the works he then meditated were placed 
upon the stage. In 1855 he accepted an invitation to London, 
where he conducted the concerts of the Philharmonic Society 
with great success. In 1857 he completed the libretto of Tristan 
md Isolde at Venice, adopting the Celtic legend modified by 
Gottfried of Strasburg's medieval version. But the music was 
delayed until the strange incident of a message from the emperor 
of Brazil encouraged Wagner to complete it in 1859. In that 
year Wagner visited Paris for the third time; and after much 
negotiation, tn which he was nobly supported by the Prince 
md Princess Metternich, Tannh&user was accepted at the Grand 
Opera. Magnificent preparations were made; it was rehearsed 
164 times, 14 times with the full orchestra; and the scenery and 
dresses were placed entirely under the composer's direction. 
More than £8000 was expended upon the venture; and the work 
was performed for the first time in the French language and with 
the new Venusberg music on the 13th of March 1861. But, for 
political reasons, a powerful clique was determined to suppress 
Wagner. A scandalous riot was inaugurated by the members 
of the Parisian Jockey Cub, who interrupted the performance 
with howls and dog-whistles; and after the third representation 
the opera was withdrawn* ' Wagner was broken-hearted. But 
the Princess Metternich continued to befriend him, and by 1861 
she had obtained a pardon for his political offences, with permis- 
sion to settle in any part of Getmany except Saxony. Even this 
restriction was removed in 1862 

Wagner how settled for a time in Vienna, where Tristan und 
Isdie was accepted, but abandoned after fifty-seven rehearsals, 
through the incompetence of the tenor. Lohengrin was, however, 
produced on the 15th of May 1861, when Wagner heard it for 
the first time. His circumstances were now extremely straitened ; 
h was the darkness before dawn. In 1863 he published the 
libretto of Dcr Ring des Ntbdungen. Ring Ludwig of Bavaria 
was much struck with it, and in 1864 invited Wagner, who was 
then at Stuttgart, to come to Munich and finish his work there. 
Wagner accepted with rapture. The king gave him an annual 
grant of 1200 gulden (£t*o), considerably enlarging it before the 
end of the year, and placing a comfortable house in the outskirts 
of the dty at his disposal. The master expressed his gratitude 
ma" Huldigungsmarsch." • In the autumn he was formally 
commissioned to proceed with the tetralogy and to furnish 
proposals for the building of a theatre and the foundation of 
a Bavarian music school. All promised well, but no sooner did 
Ins position seem assured than a miserable court intrigue was 
formed against him. His political indiscretions at Dresden were 
tt.««i» the excuse for bitter persecutions: scandalmongers made 
bis friendship with the ill-fated king a danger to both; and 
Wagner was obliged to retire to Triebschen near Lucerne for the 
west six years. 

On the xoth of June 1865 at Munich, Tristan und Isolde was 
produced for the first time, with Herr and Frau Schnorr in the 
principal parts. Die if eisier singer von Niirnberg, first sketched 
m 1845, was completed in 1867 and first performed at Munich 
under the direction of Hans von Btilow on the 21st of June 1868. 
The story, though an original one, is founded on the character 
of W»i»« Sachs, the poet-shoemaker of Nuremberg. The success 
of the opera was very great; but the production of the Ntbelung- 

xxvu.s 



tetralogy as a whole still remained Impracticable, though Das 
Rhemgold and Die WalkUrt were performed, the one on the 
22nd of September 1869 and the other on the 20th of June 1870. 
The scheme for building a new theatre at Munich having been 
abandoned, there was no opera-house in Germany fit for so 
colossal a work. A project was therefore started for the erection 
of a suitable building at Bayreuth (q.v.). Wagner laid the first 
stone of this in 1872, and the edifice was completed, after almost 
insuperable difficulties, in 1876. ' 

After this Wagner resided permanently at Bayreuth, in a house 
named Wahnfried, in the garden of which he built his tomb. 
His first wife; from whom he had parted since 1861, died in 1865; 
and in 1870 he was united to Liszt's daughter Cosima, who had 
previously been the wife of von Bfllow. Meantime Dcr Ring des 
Nibetungen was rapidly approaching completion, and on the 13th 
of August 1876 the introductory portion, Das Rkeingdd, was 
performed at Bayreuth for the first time as part of the great 
whole, followed on the 14th by Die WalkUre, on the 16th by 
Siegfried and on the 1 7th by GOUerd&mmerung. The performance, 
directed by Hans Richtcr, excited extraordinary attention; but 
the expenses were enormous, and burdened the management witL 
a debt of £7500. A small portion of this was raised (at great 
risk) by performances at the Albert Hall in London, conducted 
by Wagner and Richter, in 1877. The remainder was met by 
the profits upon performances of the tetralogy at Munich. 

Wagner's next and last work was Parsifal, based upon the 
legend of the Holy Grail, as set forth, not in the legend of the 
Morte d* Arthur; but in the versions of Chrestien de Troyes and 
Wolfram von Eschenbach and other less-known works. The 
libretto was complete before his visit to London in 1877. The 
music was begun in the following year, and completed at Palermo 
on the 13th of January 1882. The first sixteen performances 
took place at Bayreuth, in July and August 1882, under Wagner's 
own directing, and fully realized all expectations. 

Unhappily the exertion of directing so many consecutive 
performances seems to have been too much for the veteran 
master's strength, for towards the dose of 1882 his health 
began to decline rapidly. He spent the autumn at Venice, and 
was well enough on Christmas Eve to conduct his early symphony 
(composed in 1833) at a private performance given at the Liceo 
Marcello. But late in the afternoon of the 13th of February 
1883 his friends were shocked by his sudden death from heart- 
failure. 

Wagner was buried at Wahnfried in the tomb he bad himself 
prepared, on the 18th of February; and a few days afterwards 
King Ludwig rode to Bayreuth alone, and at dead of night, to 
pay his last tribute to the master of his world of dreams. 

(W.S.R.;D.F.T.) 

In the articles on Music and Opera, Wagner's task in music- 
drama is described, and it remains here to discuss his progress 
in the operas themselves. This progress has perhaps no parallel 
in any art, and certainly none in music, for even Beethoven's 
progress was purely an increase in range and power. Beethoven, 
we know, lost sympathy with his early works as he grew older; 
but that was because his later works absorbed his interest, not 
because his early works misrepresented his ideals. Wagner's 
earlier works have too long been treated as if they represented 
the pure and healthy childhood of his later ideal; as if Lohengrin 
stood to Parsifal as Haydn, Mozart and early Beethoven stand 
to Beethoven's last quartets. But Wagner never thus represented 
the childhood of an ideal, though he attained the manhood of 
the most comprehensive ideal yet known in art. To change the 
metaphor— the ideal was. always in sight, and Wagner never 
swerved from his path towards it; but that path began in a 
blaze of garish false lights, and it had become very tortuous 
before the light of day prevailed. Beethoven was trained in the 
greatest and most advanced musical tradition of his time. . For 
all bis Wagnerian impatience, his progress was no struggle from 
out of a squalid environment; on the contrary, one of his latest 
discoveries was the greatness of his master Haydn. Now 
Wagner's excellent teacher Weinlig did certainly, as Wagner 
himself testifies, teach him more of good music than Beethoven, 

2a 



23« 



WAGNER 



Haydn and Mozart could have seen in their youth; for he 
showed him Beethoven. But this would not help Wagner to 
feel that contemporary music was really a great art; indeed it 
could only show him that he was growing up in a pseudo-classical 
time, in which the approval of persons of " good taste " was 
seldom directed to things of vital promise. Again, he began 
with far greater facility in literature than In music, if only 
because a play can be copied ten times faster than a full score. 
Wagner was always an omnivorous reader, and books were then, 
as now, both cheaper than music and easier to read. Moreover, 
the higher problems of rhythmic movement in the classical 
sonata forms are far beyond the scope of academic teaching, 
which is compelled to' be contented with a practical plausibility 
of musical design; and the instrumental music which was con- 
sidered the highest style of art in 1830 was as far beyond Wagner's 
early command of such plausibility as it was obviously already 
becoming a mere academic game. Lastly, the rules of that game 
were useless on the stage, and Wagner soon found in Meyerbeer 
a master of grand opera who was dazzling the world by means 
which merely disgusted the more serious academic musicians 
of the day. . 

In Rienri Wagner would already have been Meyerbeer's rival, 
trat that his sincerity, and his initial lack of that musical savoir 
faire which is prior to the individual handling of ideas, put 
him at a disadvantage. Though Meyerbeer wrote much that is 
intrinsically more dull and vulgar than the overture to Ricnzi, 
he never combined such serious efforts with a technique so like 
that of a military bandmaster. The step from Ricnzi to Der 
fliegende Hollander is without parallel in the history of music, 
and would be inexplicable if Ricnzi contained. nothing good and 
if Der fiiegende Hollander did not contain many reminiscences 
of the decline of Italian opera; but it is noticeable that in this 
case the lapses into vulgar music have a distinct dramatic value. 
Though Wagner cannot as yet be confidently credited with a 
satiric intention in his bathos, the fact remains that all the 
Rossinian passages are associated with the character of Daland, 
so as to express his vulgar delight at the prospect of finding a 
rich son-in-law in the mysterious Dutch seaman. Meanwhile the 
rest of the work (except in the prettily scored " Spinning Song," 
and other harmless and vigorous tunes) has more affinity with 
Wagner's mature style than the bulk of its much more ambitious 
successors, Tannk&user and Lohengrin. The wonderful overture 
is more highly organized and less unequal than that of Taun- 
hduser; and although Wagner uses less Leit-motif than Weber 
(see Opera, ad fin.) and divides the piece into " numbers " 
of classical size, the effect is so continuous that the divisions 
could hardly be guessed by car. Moreover, the work was 
intended to be in one act, and is now so performed at 
Bayreuth; and, although it is very long for a one-act opera, 
this is certainly the only form which does justice to Wagner's 
conception. 1 

Spohr'g appreciation of Derfiicgende Hollander is a remarkable 
point in musical history; and his criticism that Wagner's style 
(in Tannh&user) " lacked rounded periods " shows the best effect 
of that style on a well-disposed contemporary mind. Of course, 
from Wagner's mature point of view his early style is far too 
much cut up by periods and full closes; and its prophetic traits 
are so incomparably more striking than its resemblance to any 
earlier art that we often feel that only the full closes stand 
between it and the true Wagner. But Spohr would feel Wagner's 
works to be an advance upon contemporary romantic opera 
rather than a foreshadowing of an unknown future. When we 
listen to the free declamation of the singers at the outset of Der 
fliegende Hollander—* declamation which is accompanied by 

1 The subsequent division into three acts, as given in all the 
published editions, has been effected in the crudest way by inserting 
a full close in the orchestral interludes at the changes of scene, and 
then beginning the next scene by taking up the interludes again. 
The true version can be recovered from the published score as 
follows: In act I skip from the last bar but four to the 41st bar 
of the introduction to the 2nd act; and at the end of the 2nd act 
skip from the last bar but five*' - -be entr'acte to the 

£raact» 



an orchestral and thematic texture as far removed from that ot 
mere recitative as it is from the forms of the classical aria—the 
repetition of a whole sentence in order to form a firm musical 
close has almost as quaint a ring as a Shakespearean rhymed tag 
would have in a prose drama of Ibsen. To Spohr the frequency of 
these Incidents must have produced the impression that Wagner 
was perpetually beginning arias- and breaking them off at once. 
With all its defects, Derfiicgende Hollander is the most masterly 
and the least unequal of Wagner's early works. As drama it 
stood immeasurably above any opera since Cherubini's Medic. 
As a complete fusion between dramatic and musical movement, 
its very crudities point to its immense advance towards the 
solution of the problem, propounded chaotically at the beginning 
of the 17th century by Monteverde, and solved in a simple form 
by Gluck. And as the twofold musical and dramatic achieve- 
ment of one mind, it already places Wagner beyond parallel in 
the history of art. 

TannJtauser is on a grander scale, but its musical execution is 
disappointing. The weakest passages in Derfiicgende Hollander 
are not so helpless as the original recitatives of Venus in the first 
act ; or Tannhauser's song, which was too far involved in the whole 
scheme to be ousted by the mature " New Venusberg music " 
with which Wagner fifteen years later got rid both of the end 
of the overture and what he called his " Palais-Royal " Venus. 
It is really very difficult to understand Schumann's impression 
that the musical technique of Tannh&user shows a remarkable 
improvement. Not until the third act does the great Wagner 
arbitrate in the struggle between amateurishness and theatricality 
in the music, though at all points his epoch-making stagecraft 
asserts itself with a force that tempts us to treat the whole work 
as if it were on the Wagnerian plane of Tannhauser's account of 
his pilgrimage in the third act. But the history of mid- 19th- 
century music is unintelligible until we face the fact that, when 
the anti- Wagnerian storm was already at its height, Wagner was 
still fighting for the recognition of music which was most definite 
just where it realized with ultra-Mcycrbeerian brilliance all that 
Wagner had already begun to detest. No contemporary, un- 
aided by personal knowledge, could be expected to trust in 
Wagner's purity of ideal on the strength of Tannh&user, which 
actually achieved popularity by such coarse methods of climax 
as the revivalislic end of the overture, by such maudlin pathos 
as O du mein holder Abendstcrn, and by the amiably childish 
grand-opera skill with which half the action is achieved by 
processions and a considerable fraction of the music is repre- 
sented by fanfares. These features established the work in a 
position which it will always maintain by its unprecedented 
dramatic qualities and by the glory reflected from Wagner's 
later achievements; but we shall not appreciate the marvel of 
its nobler features if we continue at this time of day to regard 
the bulk of the music as worthy of a great composer. 

After even the finest things in Tannh&user, the Vorspiel to 
Lohengrin comes as a revelation, with its quiet solemnity and 
breadth of design, its ethereal purity of tone-colour, and its 
complete emancipation from earlier operatic forms. The sus- 
pense and climax in the first act is so intense, and the whole 
drama is so well designed, that we must have a very vivid idea 
of the later Wagner before we can see how far the quality of 
musical thought still falls short of his ideals. The elaborate 
choral writing sometimes rises to almost Hellenic regions of 
dramatic art;, and there is no crudeness in the passages that 
carry on the story quietly in reaction from the climaxes — a 
test far too severe for TannJtOuser and rather severe for even 
the mature works of Gluck and Weber. The orchestration is 
already almost classically Wagnerian; though there remains 
an excessive amount of tremolo, besides a few lapses into comic 
violence, as in the yelpings which accompany Ortrud's rage 
in the night-scene in the second act. But the mere tone-colours 
of that scene are enough to make a casual listener imagine that 
he is dealing with the true Wagner: the variety of tone never 
fails, and depends on no immoderate paraphernalia; for, far- 
reaching as are the results of the systematic increase of the 
classical pairs of wind-instruments to groups of three, this is 



WAGNER 



339 



a very eaodest reform compared to the banausic " extra attrac- 
tions " of every new production of Meyerbeer's. 

Bat there is another side* to the picture. With the growing 
certainty of touch a stiffness of movement appears which gradually 
disturbs the listener who can appreciate freedom, whether in 
ihe classical forms which Wagner has now abolished, or in the 
majestic flow of Wagner's later style. Full closes and repeated 
sentences no longer confuse the issue, but in their absence we 
begin to notice the incessant squareness of the ostensibly free 
rhythms. The immense amount of pageantry, though (as in 
Tanakduscr) flood in dramatic motive and executed with splendid 
stage-craft, goes far to stultify Wagner's already vigorous attitude 
of protest against grand-opera methods; by way of preparation 
for the ethereally poetic end he gives us a disinfected present 
tarn Meyerbeer at the beginning of the last scene, where mounted 
trumpeters career round the stage in full blast for three long 
minutes; and the prelude to the third act is an outburst of 
sheer gratuitous vulgarity. Again, the anti-Wagnerians were 
entirely justified in penetrating below the splendidly simple 
nd original orchestration of the night-scene between Ortrud 
and Tdranrand, and pointing out how feebly its music drifts 
among a dozen vague keys by means of the diminished 7U1; 
a device which teachers have tried to weed out of every high- 
fiown exercise since that otiose chord was first discovered in 
the 17th century. The mature Wagner would not have carried 
out twenty bars in his flattest scenes with so little musical in- 
vention. We must not forget that these boyish demerits belong 
to the work of a man of thirty-five whose claims and aspirations 
already purported to dwarf the whole record of the classics. 
Aad the defects are in all respects commonplace; they have no 
resemblance to that uncanny discomfort which often warns 
the wise critic that he is dealing with an immortal. 

The crowning complication in the effect of Der flkgende 
Hollander, TannkUuser and Lohengrin on the musical thought 
of the 10th century was that the unprecedented fusion of their 
musical with their dramatic contents revealed some of the meaning 
of serious musk to ears that had been deaf to the classics. 
Wagnerism was henceforth proclaimed out of the mouths of 
babes and sucklings; learned musicians felt that it had an 
unfair advantage; and by the time Wagner's popularity began 
to thrive as a persecuted heresy he had left it in the lurch. 

Wagner had hardly finished the score of Lohengrin before 
he was at work upon the poem of Dtr Ring des Nibeltingcn. 
And with this he suddenly became a mature artist. On a super- 
ficial view this is a paradox, for there are many more violations 
of probability and much graver faults of structure in the later 
vvrks than in the earlier. Every critic could recognize the 
structural merits of the earlier plays, for their operatic con- 
ventionalities and abruptness of motive are always intelligible 
as stage devices. Jealousy might prompt a doubt whether 
these plays were within the scope of "legitimate 4 ' music; 
bat they were obviously stories of exceptional musical and 
romantic beauty, presented with literary resources unprecedented 
in operatic libretti. Now the later dramas are often notoriously 
rckward and redundant; while the removal of those convenient 
operatic devices which symbolize situations instead of developing 
them, does not readily appear to be compensated for by any 
superior artistic resource* But there is a higher point of view 
than that of story-telling. In the development of characters and 
intellectual ideas Wagner's later works show a power before which 
fab earlier stagecraft shrinks into insignificance. It would not 
have sufficed even to indicate his later ideas. To handle these 
so successfully that we can discriminate defects from qualities 
it all, is proof of the technique of a master, even though the 
faults extend to whole categories of literature. The faults 
make analysts exceptionally difficult, . for they are no longer 
commonplace; indeed, the gravest dangers of modern Wagnerism 
arise from the fact that there is hardly any non-musical aspect 
ra which Wagner's later work is not important enough to produce 
a school of essentially non-musical critics who have no notion 
how far Wagner's mature music transcends t be rest of his thought, 
nor how often it rises where his philosophy falls. Thus the 



prominent school of criticism which appraised Wagner in the 
19th century by his approximation to Darwin and Herbert 
Spencer, appraises him in the aoth by his approximation to 
Bernard Shaw; with the absurd result that CdUerdUmmermg 
is ruled out as a reactionary failure. It is true that its only 
conceivable moral is flatly the opposite of that " redemption, 
by love V which Wagner strenuously preaches in a passage at 
the end which remained unset because he considered it already 
expressed by the music. Indeed, though Wagner's later treat- 
ment of love is perhaps the main source of his present popularity 
it seldom rises to his loftiest regions except where it is thwarted. 
The love that is disguised in the deadly feud between Isolde 
and Tristan) before the drinking of the fatal potion, rises even 
above the music; the love-duet in the second act depends* for 
its greatness on its introduction, before the lovers have met, 
and its wonderful slow movement (shortly before the catastrophe) 
where they are almost silent and leave everything to the music: 
the intervening twenty minutes is an exhausting storm in which 
the words are the sophisticated rhetoric of a 19th-century novel 
of passion, translated into terribly turgid verse and set to music 
that is more interesting as an intellectual ferment than effective 
as a representation of emotions which previous dramatists 
have wisely left to the imagination. But so long as we treat 
Wagner like a prose philosopher, a librettist, a poet, a mere 
musician, or anything short of the complex and many-sided 
artist he really is, we shall find insuperable obstacles to under- 
standing or enjoying bis works. A true work of art is incompar- 
ably greater than the sum of its ideas; apart from the fact that, 
if its ideas are innumerable and various, prose philosophers 
are apt to complain that it has* none. And every additional 
idea that does not merely derange an art enlarges it as it were 
by a new dimension in space. Wagner added all the arts to 
each other, and in one of them he attained so consummate 
a mastery that we can corifidently turn to it when his words 
and doctrines fail us. Even when we treat him merely as a 
dramatist our enjoyment of his later works gains enormously 
if we take them as organic wholes, and not as mere plots dressed 
up in verse and action. It matters b'ttle that Parsifal requires 
two nameless attendant characters in a long opening scene, 
for the sole purpose of telling the antecedents of the story, 
when a situation is thereby revealed which for subtlety and power 
has hardly a parallel since Greek tragedy. The vast myth of 
the Ring is related in full several times in each of the three main 
dramas, with ruthless disregard for the otherwise magnificent 
dramatic effect of the whole; hosts of original dramatic and 
ethical ideas, with which Wagner's brain was even more fertile 
than his voluminous prose works would indicate, assert them- 
selves at all points, only to be thwarted by repeated attempts 
to allegorize the philosophy of Schopenhauer; all efforts to read 
a consistent scheme, ethical or philosophical, into the result 
are doomed to failure; but all this matters little, so long as we 
have Wagner's unfailing later resources in those higher dramatic 
verities which present to us emotions and actions, human and 
divine, as things essentially complex and conflicting, inevitable 
as natural laws, incalculable as natural phenomena. 

Wagner's choice of subjects had from the outset shown an 
imagination far above that of any earlier librettist; yet he had 
begun with stories which could attract ordinary minds, as he 
dismally realized when the libretto of Dcr fiicgende Hollander 
so pleased the Parisian wirc-puUers that it was promptly set to 
music by one of their friends. But with Der Ring des Nibdungen 
Wagner devoted himself to a story which any ordinary dramatist 
would find as unwieldy as, for instance, most of Shakespeare's 
subjects; a story in which ordinary canons of taste and prob- 
ability were violated as they are in real life and in great art. 
Wagner's first inspiration was for an opera (Siegfried's Tod, 
projected in 1848) on the death of Germany's mythical hero; 
but he found that the story needed a preliminary drama to 
convey its antecedents. This preliminary drama soon proved 
to need another to explain it, which again finally needed a short 
introductory drama. Thus the plan of the Ring was sketched 
in reverse order; and it has been remarked that GbUerd&nmerung 



24° 



WAGNER 



f 



shows traces of the tact that Wagner had begun his scheme in the 
days when French grand opera, with its ballets and pageantry, 
Still influenced him. There is little doubt that some redundant 
narratives in the Ring were of earlier conception than the four 
complete dramas, and that their survival is due partly to Wagner's 
natural affection for work on which he had spent pains, and partly 
to a dim notion that (like Browning's method in The Ring and 
the Book) they might serve to reveal the story afresh in the light 
of each character. Be this as it may, we may confidently date 
the purification of Wagner's music at the moment when he set 
to work on a story which carried him finally away from that 
world of stereotyped operatic passions into which he had already 
breathed so much disturbing life. 

The disturbing life already appears in Derfliegende Hollander, 
at the point where Scnta's father enters with the Dutchman, 
and Senta (who is already in an advanced state of SckwUrmerei 
over the legend of the Flying Dutchman) stands rooted to the 
spot, comparing the living Dutchman with his portrait which 
hangs over the door. The conflict between her passionate fascina- 
tion and her disgust at her father's vulgarity is finely realized 
both in music and drama; but, if we are able to appreciate it, 
then the operatic convention by which Senta avows her passion 
becomes crude. Ethical and operatic points of view are similarly 
confused when it is asserted that the Flying Dutchman can be 
saved by a faithful woman, though it appears from the relations 
between Senta and Erik that so long as the woman is faithful 
to the Dutchman it docs not matter that she jilts some one else. 
Erik would not have been a sufficiently pathetic operatic tenor 
if his claim on Senta had been less complete. In TannhUuser 
and Lohengrin Wagner's intellectual power develops far more 
rapidly in the drama than in the music. The SUngcrkrieg, with 
its disastrous conflict between the sincere but unnatural asceticism 
of the orthodox Minnesingers and the irrepressible human passion 
of Tannhauser, is a conception the vitality of which would 
reduce Tannhauscr's repentance to the level of Robert It DioMe, 
were it not that the music of the Siingerkrieg has no structural 
power, and little distinction beyond a certain poetic value in the 
tones of violas which had long ago been fully exploited by 
Mozart and Mehul, while the music of Tannhauscr's pilgrimage 
ranks with the Vorspiel to LoJicngrin as a wonderful foreshadow- 
ing of Wagner's mature style. Again, the appeal to " God's 
judgment " in the trial by battle in Lohengrin is a subject of 
which no earlier librettist could have made more than a plausible 
mess — which is the best that can be said for the music as music 
But as dramatist Wagner compels our respect for the power that 
without gloss or apology brings before us the king, a model of 
royal fair-mindedness and good-nature, acquiescing in Tel- 
ramund's monstrous claim to accuse Elsa without evidence, 
simply because it is a hard and self-evident fact that the persons 
of the drama live in an age in which such claims seemed reason- 
able. Tclramund, again, is no ordinary operatic villain; there 
is genuine tragedy in his moral ruin; and even the melodramatic 
Ortrud is a much more life-like intrigante than might be inferred 
from Wagner's hyperbolical stage-directions, which almost 
always show his manner at its worst. 

In Lohengrin we take leave of the early music that obscured 
Yfagner's ideals, and in the Ring we come to the music which 
transcends all other aspects of Wagnerisra. Had Wagner been 
a man of more urbane literary intellect he might have been less 
ambitious of expressing a woTld-philoiOphy m musJc-dr^Tna; 
ami it is ju:.i [Jul the result might have bum alas 

jntrmritlcnl dramatic movcmrnl in hi* bier works, and a balance 
(it tiliical iddlJ^MBl >■■ ind more oithodux. But 

ivc found his 
arUstJ ideas descend to us 

rrtil 41 -iil. More than a 
lion to a man who 
ad it* conie- 
* cmly work, 
Ikfj u ." Jrv 
ulrurc 





sacerdotal type of tradition, which makes progress even in the 
study of his works impossible except through revolt. Such are 
the penalties exacted by the irony of fate, for the world's 
persecution of its prophets. 

Genuinely dramatic music, even if it seem as purely musical 
as Mozart's, must always be approached through its drama; and 
Wagner's masterpieces demand that we shall use this approach; 
but, as with Mozart, we must not stop on the threshold. With 
Mozart there is no temptation to do so. But with Wagner, just 
as there are people who have never tried to follow a sonata but 
who have been awakened by his music-dramas to a sense of the 
possibilities of serious musk, so there are lovers of music who 
avow that they owe to Wagner their appreciation of poetry. 
But people whose love of literature is more independent find it 
hard to take Wagner's poetry and prose seriously, unless they 
have already measured him by his music. He effected no reform 
in literature; his meticulous adherence to the archaic alliteration 
of the Nibelungenlied is not allied with any sense of beauty in 
verbal sound or verse-rhythm; and his. ways of expressing 
emotion in language consist chiefly in the piling-up of super- 
latives. Yet be was too full of dramatic inspiration to remain 
perpetually victimized by the conscientious affectations of the 
amateur author; and, where dramatic situations are not only 
poetical but (as in the first act of Die WalkUre and the Waidweben 
scene in Siegfried) too elemental for strained language, Wagner 
is often supremely eloquent simply because he has no occasion 
to try to write poetry. Sometimes, too, when a great dramatic 
climax has given place to a lyrical anticlimax, retrospective 
moods, subtleties of emotion and crowning musical -thoughts 
press in upon Wagner's mind with a closeness that determines 
every word; and thus not only is the whole third act of Tristan, 
as Wagner said when he was working at it; of " overwhelming 
tragic power," but Isolde's dying utterances (which occupy the 
last five minutes and are, of course, totally without action or 
dramatic tension) were not unlike fine poetry even before the 
music was written. But, as a rule, Wagner's poetic diction must 
simply be tolerated by the critic who would submit himself to 
Wagner's ideas. 

If we wish to know what Wagner means, we must fight our 
way through his drama to his music; and we must not expect 
to find that each phrase in the mouth of the actor corresponds 
word for note with the music. That sort of correspondence 
Wagner leaves to. his imitators; and his views on " Leit-motif- 
hunting," as expressed in his prose writings and conversation, 
are contemptuously tolerant. We shall indeed find that his 
orchestra interprets the dramatic situations which his poetry 
roughly outlines. But we shall also find that, even if we could 
conceive the poetry to be a perfect expression of all that can be 
given in words and actions, the orchestra will express something 
greater; it will not run parallel with the poetry; the Leitmotif 
system will not be a collection of labels; the musical expression 
of singer and orchestra will not be a mere heightened resource of 
dramatic declamation. All that kind of pre-established harmony 
Wagner left behind him the moment he deserted the heroes and 
villains of romantic opera for the visionary and true tragedy of 
gods and demi-gods, giants and gnomes, with beauty, nobility 
and love in the wrong, and the forces of destruction and hate 
set free by blind justice. 

Let us illustrate Wagner's mature use ot Leitmotif by the theme 
which happens to be associated withAlberich's ring. The fact 
that this theme is commonly called the " Ring-motif " is a glaring 
instance of what' Wagner has had to endure from his friends. 
Important as the ring is throughout the tetralogy, Wagner would 
no more think of associating a theme with it for its own sake 
than he would think of associating a theme with Wotan's hat. 
Why should a Ring-motif be transformed into the theme repre- 
senting Walhalla? Are we to guess that the connexion of ideas 
is that Wotan had eventually to pay for Walhalla by the ring? 
But if we attend to the circumstances under which this theme 
arises, its purport and development become deep and natural. 
The Rhine-daughters have been teasing the Nibelung Alberich, 
and are rejoicing in the light of the Rhine-gold, which shines at 



WAGNER 



241 



thetopof a tock as theson strikes it through the water. Alberich 
does not think much of the gold if its only use is for these water*, 
children's games. But one of the Rhine-daughters tells him that 
" be who could make the gold into a ring would become master 
of the world," and to these words the so-called Ring-motif is 
first sung (see Melody, Example x 1). The Rhine-daughter sings 
it in a childlike, indolently graceful way which well expresses 
the kind of toy the ring or the world itself would be to her. 
One of her sisters bids her be careful, but they reassure them- 
selves with the thought that the Rhine-gold is safe, since no one 
can win it who does not renounce love. Alberich broods over 
what he hears, and already the theme changes its character as 
be thinks of such mastery of the world as he might gain by it 
(Melody, Ex. is). He curses love and grasps the gold. The 
theme of world-mastery grows dark with the darkness of the 
Nibehing's mind. The waters of the Rhine change into black 
ousts which grow grey and thin, while the now sinister theme 
becomes softer and smoother. Then it breaks gently forth in a 
nook, swinging rhythm and massively soft brazen tones, as 
Wotan awakes on a mountain height and gazes upon Walhalla, 
his newly finished palace which he has bid the giants build, so 
that from it he may rule the world (Melody, Ex. 13)- The theme 
thus shows no trivial connexion with a stage-property, mechanic- 
ally important in the plot; but it represents the desire for 
power, and what that desire means to each different type of mind. 
The gods, as the giants plaintively admit, " rule by beauty"; 
hence the" Walhalla-motif." What it becomes in the mind of 
the Ktbeiung is grimly evident when Alberich uses his ring in 
Xibdhcim. The Rhine-daughters' exultant cry of " Rhine-gold " 
k there tortured in an extremely remote modulation at the end 
of a very sinister transformation of the theme; and the orchestra- 
tion, with its Kirid but smothered brass instruments, its penetrat- 
ing k>w reed tones and its weird dninwoll beaten on a suspended 
cymbal, is more awe-inspiring than anything dreamed of by the 
cleverest of those co m posers who do not create intellectual causes 
for their effects. 

A famous and typical instance of Wagner's use of Leitmotif in 
tragic irony is the passage where Hagen gives Siegfried friendly 
welcome, to the melody of the curse which Alberich pronounced 
on the ring and all who approached it. The more subtle examples 
are inexhaustible in variety and resource; and perhaps the 
duaax of subtlety is the almost entire absence of Leitmotif m the 
first scene of the third act of GSUerddrnnserung, when Siegfried 
throws away his last chance of averting his doom. The Rhine- 
daeghters appear to him, and ask him to give them the ring that 
is on his finger. Siegfried refuses. They laugh at his stinginess 
and disappear. Siegfried is piqued, and calls them back to offer 
them the ring. Unfortunately they tell him of its curse, and 
prophesy death to him if he keeps it- This arouses his spirit of 
contradiction; and be tells them that they might have won 
it from him by coaxing, but never by threats, and that he values 
kis life no more than the stone he tosses away as be speaks to 
them- In spite of the necessary allusions to the ominous theme 
of the curse, which would give any less great composer ample 
excuse for succumbing to the listener's sense of impending doom, 
Wagner's music speaks to us through the child-minds of the 
Rhhse-daoghters and terrifies us with the ruthless calm of Nature. 

Almost as subtle, and much more directly impressive, is the 
pathos of the death of Siegfried, which is heightened by an un- 
precedented appeal to a sense of musical form on the scale of 
the entire tetralogy. Siegfried's whole character and career is, 
indeed, annihilated in the clumsy progress towards this con- 
■Bmmaziott; bat Shakespeare might have condoned worse plots 
for the sake of so noble a result ; and indeed Wagner's awkward- 
ness arises mainly from fear of committing oversights. Hagen, 
the Nibehxasr's son, has managed to make Siegfried unwittingly 
drink a love-potion with Gutnme, which causes him to forget his 
own bride, Brunnhilde. Siegfried is then persuaded to transform 
himself by bis magic Tarnhelm into the likeness of his host, 
Gutrone% brother Gunther, in order to bring Brunnhilde (whose 
same is now quite new to him) from her fire-cncirclcd rock, so 
that Gontber may have her for Ins bride and Siegfried may wed 



Gutrune. This is achieved; and Brunnhflde's horror and be- 
wilderment at meeting Siegfried again as a stranger in his own 
shape creates a situation which Siegfried cannot understand, 
and which Hagen pretends to construe as damning evidence that 
Siegfried has betrayed Gunther's honour as well as Brunnhilde's. 
Hagen, Gunther and Brunnhilde therefore agree that Siegfried 
must die. In order to spare Gutrune's feelings it is arranged 
that his death shall appear as an accident in a hunting party. 
While the hunting party is resting Siegfried tells stories of bis 
boyhood, thus recalling the antecedents of this drama with a 
charming freshness and sense of dramatic and musical repose. 
When he comes to the point where his memory has been clouded 
by Hagen's spells, Hagen restores his memory with another 
magic potion. Siegfried calmly continues to tell how he found 
Brunnhilde asleep on the fiery mountain. Hagen affects to 
construe this as a confession of guilt, and slays him as if in 
righteous wrath. The dying Siegfried calls on Brunnhilde to 
awaken, and asks " Who hath locked thee again in sleep?" 
He believes that he is once more with Brunnhilde on the Val- 
kyries' mountain height; and the harmonies of her awakening 
move in untroubled splendour till the light of life fades with the 
light of day and the slain hero is carried to the Gibichung's hall 
through the moonlit mists, while the music of love and death 
tells in terrible triumph more of his story than he ever knew. 

The bare conception of such art as this shows bow perfect is 
the unity between the different elements in Wagner's later music- 
drama. If the music of Tristan is more polyphonic than that of 
Lohengrin, it is because it is hardly figurative to call its drama 
polyphonic also. Compare the mere fairy-tale mystery of 
Lohengrin's command that Elsa shall never ask to know his 
name, with the profound fatalism of Isolde's love-potion. Apart 
from the gain in tragic force resulting from Wagner's masterly 
development of the character of Brangacne, the raw material 
of the story was already suggestive of that astounding combina- 
tion of the contrasted themes of love and death, the musical 
execution of which involves a harmonic range almost as far 
beyond that of its own day as the ordinary harmonic range of 
the 19th century is beyond that of the 16th. In his next work, 
Die MeisUr singer, Wagner ingeniously made poetry and drama 
out of an explicit manifesto to musical critics, and proved the 
depth of bis music by developing its everyday resources and so 
showing that its vitality does not depend on that extreme 
emotional force that makes Tristan und Isolde almost unbearably 
poignant. Few things are finer in music or literature than the 
end of the second act of Die Meister singer, from the point where 
Sachs's apprentice begins the riot, to the moment when the 
watchman, frightened at the silence of the moonlit streets so 
soon after he has heard all that noise, announces eleven o'clock 
and bids the folk pray for protection against evil spirits, while 
the orchestra tells us of the dreams of Walther and Eva and ends 
by putting poetry even into the pedantic ineptitudes of the 
malicious Beckmesser. Die Meistersinger is perhaps Wagner's 
most nearly perfect work of art; and it is a striking proof of its 
purity and greatness that, while the whole work is in the happiest 
comic vein, no one ever thinks of it as in any way slighter than 
Wagner's tragic works. The overwhelming love-tragedy of 
Tristan und Isolde is hardly less perfect, though the simplicity 
of its action exposes its longueurs to greater notoriety than those 
which may be found in Die Meistersinger. 

These two works interrupted the execution of the Ring and 
formed the stepping-stones to Parsifal , a work which may 
perhaps be said to mark a further advance in that subtlety of 
poetic conception which, as we have seen, gave the determining 
impulse to Wagner's true musical style. But in music he had 
no more to learn, and Parsifal, while the most solemn and 
concentrated of all Wagner's dramas, is musically not always 
unsuggestrve of old age. Its harmonic style is, except in the 
Grail music, even more abstruse than in Tristan; and the 
intense quiet of the action is far removed from the forces which 
in that tumultuous tragedy carry the listener through every 
difficulty. Again, while the Eucharist ic features in Parsifal 
attract some listeners, the material effect of their presentation 



2+2 



WAGNER 



on the stage has been known to repel others who are beyond 
suspicion of prejudice. But the greatness of the art is, like its 
subject, worlds away from material impressions; and a wide 
consensus regards Wagner's last work as his loftiest, both in 
music and poetry. Certainly no poet would venture to despise 
Wagner's imaginative conception of Kundry. In his letters to 
his friend Mathilde Wesendonck, it appears that while he was 
composing Tristan he already had the inspiration of working 
out the identification of Kundry, the messenger of the Grail, 
with the temptress who, under the spell of Rlingsor, seduces the 
knights of the Grail; and he had, moreover, thought out the 
impressively obscure suggestion that she was Herodias, con- 
demned like the wandering Jew to live till the Saviour's second 
coming. The quiet expression of these startling ideas is more 
remarkable than their adoption; for smaller artists live on 
still more startling ideas; but most remarkable of all is the 
presentation of Parsifal, both in his foolishness and in the widsom 
which comes to him through pity. The chief excuse for doubting 
whether Wagner's last work is really his greatest is that most 
of its dramatic subtleties are beyond musical expression, since 
they do not lead to definite conflicts and blcndings of emotion. 
Where the orchestra shows that Parsifal is becoming half-con- 
scious of his quest while Kundry is beguiling him with memories 
of his mother, — and also during the two changes of scene to the 
Hall of the Grail, where the orchestra mingles the agony of 
Amfortas and the sorrow of the knights with the tolling of the 
great bells,— the polyphony is almost as dramatic as in Tristan; 
while the prelude and the Charfrcitagszaubcr are among the 
clearest examples of the sublime since Beethoven. But else- 
where there are few passages in which the extremely recondite 
harmonic style can be with certainty traced to anything but 
habit. This style originated, indeed, in a long experience of the 
profoundest dramatic impulses; but as a habit it does not seem, 
like the greatest things in art, the one inevitable treatment of 
the matter in hand. But, whatever our doubts, we may safely 
regard Parsifal as a work which, like Beethoven's last fugues, 
invites attack rather from those critics who demand what flatters 
.their own vanity than from those who wish to be inspired by 
what they could never have foreseen for themselves. 

In Wagner's harmonic style we encounter the entire problem 
of modern musical texture.. Wagner effected vast changes in 
almost every branch of his all-embracing art, from theatre- 
building and stage-lighting to the musical declamation of words. 
Most of his reforms have since been intelligently carried out as 
normal principles in more arts than one; but, shocking as the 
statement may seem to 20th<entury orthodoxy, Wagnerian 
harmony is a universe as yet unexplored, except by the few 
composers who are so independent of its bewildering effect on 
the generation that grew up with it, that they can use Wagner's 
resources as discreetly as he used them himself. The last two 
examples at the end of the article on Harmony show almost all 
that is new in Wagner's harmonic principles. The peculiar art 
therein is that while the discords owe their intelligibility and 
softness to the smooth melodic lines by which in " resolving " 
they prove themselves but transient rainbow-hues on or below 
the surface, they owe their strangeness to the intense vividness 
with which at the moment of impact they suggest a mysteriously 
remot e foreign key. Wagner's orthodox contemporaries regarded 
such mixtures of key as sheer nonsense; and it would seem that 
the rank and file of his imitators agree with that view, since they 
either plagiarize Wagner's actual progressions or else produce 
such mixtures with no vividness of key -colour a ad little attempt 
to follow those melodic trains of thought by which Wagner 
makes sense of them. There is for more of truly Wagnerian 
harmony to be found before his time than since. It was so early 
recognized as characteristic o( Chopin (.hat a magnificent cumple 
may be seen at the end of Schumann's little tontvponru.i 
him in the Carnovdi: & very advam > A Wagnerian 
another principle constitute* the bulk ol the d 
first movement of Beethoven's sonau L 
in the " Golden Age " of musiev 
diatonic concord, the un ■ upcrti 



chords is hardly less Wagnerian than the perfect smoothness of 
the melodic lines which combine to produce them. 

Wagnerian harmony is, then, neither a side-issue nor a progress 
per solium , but a leading current in the stream of musical evolu- 
tion. That stream is sure sooner or later to carry with it every 
reality that has been reached by side-issues and leaps; and of 
such things we have important cases in the works of Strauss and 
Debussy. Strauss makes a steadily increasing use of avowedly 
irrational discords, in order to produce an emotionally apt 
physical sensation. Debussy has this in common with Strauss, 
that he too regards harmonies as pure physical sensations; but 
he differs from Strauss firstly in systematically refusing to regard 
them as anything else, and secondly in his extreme sensibility 
to harshness. We have seen (in the articles on Harmony and 
Music) how harmonic music originated in just this habit of 
regarding combinations of sound as mere sensations, and how 
for centuries the habit opposed itself to the intellectual principles 
of contrapuntal harmony. These intellectual principles are, of 
course, not without their own ground in physical sensation; 
but it is evident that Debussy appeals beyond them to a more 
primitive instinct; and on it he bases an almost perfectly 
coherent system of which the laws are, like those of 12th-century 
music, precisely the opposite of these of classical harmony. 
The only illogical point in his system is that the beauty of his 
dreamlike chords depends not only on his artful choice of a timbre 
that minimizes their harshness, but also on the fact that they 
enter the ear with the meaning they have acquired through 
centuries of harmonic evolution on classical lines. There is a 
special pleasure in the subsidence of that meaning beneath a 
soothing sensation; but a system based thereon cannot be 
universal. Its phenomena are, however, perfectly real, and can 
be observed wherever artistic conditions make the tone of a 
mass of harmony more important than the interior threads of 
its texture. This is of constant occurrence in classical pianoforte 
music, in which thick chords are subjected to polyphonic laws 
only in their top and bottom notes, while the inner notes make a 
solid mass of sound in which numerous consecutive fifths and 
octaves are not only harmless but essential to the balance of tone. 
In Debussy's art the top and bottom are also involved in the 
antipolyphonic laws of such masses of sound, thus making these 
laws paramount. 

The irrational discords of Strauss are also real phenomena in 
musical aesthetics. They are an extension of the principle on 
which gongs and cymbals and all instruments without notes of 
determinate pitch are employed in otherwise polyphonic music 

But it is important to realize that both these types of modem 
harmony are radically non-Wagnerian. Haydn uses a true 
Straussian discord in Tht Seasons, in order to imitate the chirping 
of a cricket; but the harshest realism in GSUcrdUmnmung (the 
discord produced by the horns of Hagen and his churls in the 
mustering-scene in the second act) has a harmonic logic which 
would have convinced Corelli. And of Debussy's antipolyphonic 
art there is less in Wagner than in Beethoven. The present in- 
fluence of Wagnerian harmony is, then, somewhat indefinite, 
since the most important real phenomena of later music indicate 
a revolt both from it and from earlier classical methods. It has 
had, however, a marked effect on weaker musical individualities. 
Musical public opinion now puts an extraordinary pressure on 
the young composer, urging him at all costs to abandon " out- 
of-date "styles howeverstinmlatingtheynsay.be to his invention. 
It is no exaggeration to say ti-it n j>.ir.itlcl condition in literature 
would he produced by .a ti ran* public cnuoioji to the effect that 
any English style wan hopelessly cut of date unless it consisted 
cxi of phrase to be found in 

IKant success of 

technique 

humorous 

its a moral 

until the 

becomes 

of Wagner's 




WAGON— WAGRAM 



343 



The wry sense of dramatic fitness has temporarily vanished 
from public musical opinion, together with the sense of musical 
form, in consequence of another prevalent habit, that of present* 
tag shapeless extracts from Wagner's operas as orchestral pieces 
without voices or textbooks or any hint that such adjuncts are 
desirable. But this vandalism, which Wagner condoned with a 
my bed grace, now happily begins to give way to the practice 
of presenting long scenes or entire acts, with the singers, on 
the concert-platform. This has the merit of bringing the real 
Wagner to ears which may have no other meana of hearing 
him, and it fosters no delusion as to what is missing in such a 
presentation. The guidance of Hans Richter has given us a 
ore bulwark against the misrepresentation of Wagner; and so 
there is hope that Wagner may yet be saved from such an 
obBvion in fetish-worship as has lost Handel to os for so long. 
As with Shakespeare and Beethoven, the day will never come 
when we can measure the influence of so vast a mind upon the 
history of art. Smaller artists can make history; the greatest 
absorb it into that daylight which is its final cause. 
List op Wagner's Works 

The following are Wagner's operas and music-dramas, apart 
Iran the unpublished Die Hockuil (three number* only), Du teen, 
aad Des Uebesverbot (Das Liebesverbot was disinterred in 191 0). 

t.RiensL, der lettte der Tribunen: trout tragiscke Oper; 5 acts 
O&3S-1840). 

2. Der fiiegende IloUdnder: romantistke Oper; 1 act, afterwards 
cat into 3 (1841). 

3. Tonnkinser and der Sdngerkrieg auf Wartbutg: romaniische 
Oper; 3 acts (libretto, 1843; music, 1844-1845; new Vcnusbcrg 
nunc, 1860-1 861). 

4. Ukengrin: romantiscke Oper; 3 acts (libretto. 1845; musk, 
1546-1848). This is the last work Wagner calls by the title of Opera. 

5- Das Rkeingold, prologue in 4 scenes go Der Ring des Ntbelungen; 
em Btkuenfestspiet (poem written last of the series, which was begun 
in i&i* and finished in 1851-1852; music, 1853-1854). 

& Die Watkure: der King ies Nibelmngen, enter Tag; 3 acts 
(score finished, 1856). 

7- Tristan vmd Isolde; 3 acts (poem written in 1857; music, 



"57-1850). 

* Siegfried: der Ring des Nioelungcn, xweiler Tag; 3 a 
1*0 nearly hnished before Tristan, the rest between 1865 and 1869. 



; der Ring des Nibelungen, xweiler Tag; 3 acts, the first 



9- Die Meister singer von Nurnberg; 3 acts (sketch of play, 1845; 
poen. 1861-1862; music, 1862-1867). 

10. Gitierd&mmernng : der Rinr des Nibelungen, driller Tan 
letniduction and 3 -acts (Siegfrieds Tod already sketched dramati- 
cally in 1848: music, 1 870-1874). 

11. Parsifal: ein Bfumenwethfesispid (a solemn stage festival 
Phy). 3 acts (poem, 1876-1877; music, 1877-1882, Ckarfreiiags- 
***** already sketched in 1857). 

As regards other compositions, the early unpublished works in- 
cfade a symphony, a cantata, some incidental nunc to a pantomime, 
ttd several overtures, four of which have recently been discovered 
«d produced. The important small published works are Eine 
Fast Overture (1839-1840; rewritten, 1855); the Siegfried Idytte 
tan cnuisite serenade tor small orchestra on themes from the 
■ale of Siegfried, written as a surprise for Frau Wagner in 1870); 
t»« Kaisermarsck (1871), the Huldtgungsmarsck (1864) for military 
hwd (the scoring of the concert-version finished by Raff); Funf 
bfichte (1862), a set of songs containing two studies for Tristan- 
*»d the early quasi-oratorio scene for male-voice chorus and full 
vcfestn. Das Liebesmaki der Apostel (1843). Wagner's retouching 
« Cock's Jpkigenie en Aulide and his edition of Falestrina's Siabat 
Jufcr demand mention as important services to music, by no means 
10 be classified (as in some catalogues) with the hack-work with 
**** he kept off starvation in Paris. 

The collected literary works of Wagner in German fill ten volumes, 

fs include political speeches, sketches for dramas that did not 

wenme operas, autobiographical chapters, aesthetic musical 

6r, *oses ana polemics of vitriolic violence. Their importance will 

• * compArjMe 10 ihdt of hi* rr: ic ; hut. just as the reaction 

'a ascendancy as an trc-cmir fn* coincided with an 

aspect for hi* ethical and socblojcical thought, so the 




that are compelling Wj^ih n m to grant music a 
iricie with a growing ;nlrmrjhan of his general 
hi have bt-tn 1 r. instated into English 



I 8q*~ 1 s<>il . " l M« ■ t r . v •■- ' . n ion by F. Ji 

King ffiFit publtkfrrd in the pocket edition 

st wonderful tour Jc forte yet achieved in 

11/ English text reveals 

or low of rhtforiral point in the fitting of 

riwra noic or ti ill in the music; and 

**ihcd or ateurr) the original will be 

reo, while the spirit ^f Wagner's poetry 
*- work tkscrw* mof* recognition than 



tt is ever likely to gat. Rapidiy as the standard of musical transla- 
tions was i nt 1 1 wing before this work appeared, no one could have 
foremen what has now been abundantly verified, that the Ring can 
be [icilornKd in English without any appreciable loss to Wagners art. 
The same tram later has also published a close, purely literary version. 
Lite h at 1; »f,— The Wagner literature is too enormous to be dealt 
with here. The standard biography is that of Glasenapp (6 vols., 
of which five appeared between 1804 and 1909). Of readable 
Er we may cite Ernest Newman, A Study of Wagner 

itfcws; H, & Krehbiel, Studies in Ike Wagnerian. Drama (1891); 
et.ii.- L. \V. ion, Legends of tke Wagner Dramas (1906). The 
*erfeti C 1 '. 1 j -■ rrle, by G. Bernard Shaw, though concerned mainly 
with ih. >hilosophy of the Ring, gfves a luminous account of 

Wagner's ma^uiy of musical movement. The highest English 
auiuoriiy on Wagner is his friend Dannreuther, whose article ia 
Grove's Dictionary is classical. 

See also Aai a, Harmony, Instrumentation, Music, Opera, and 
Overture. (D.F.T.) 

WAGON, or Wagcon, a large four-wheeled vehicle for the 
carriage of heavy loads, and drawn by two or more horses. 
This is the general English use of the term, where it is more 
particularly confined to the large vehicles employed in the 
carrying of agricultural produce. It is also used of the uncovered 
heavy rolling stock for goods on railways. In America the term 
is applied also to lighter vehicles, such as are used for express 
delivery, police work, &c. f and to various forms of four-wheeled 
vehicles used for driving, to which the English term " cart " 
would be given. The word " wagon " appears to be a direct 
adaptation of Du. IV a gen (cf. Ger. Wagen, Swed. Vagn, &c). 
Skeat finds the earliest use of the word in Lord Bcrner's transla- 
tion of Froissart (1523-1525)1 so that it is by no means an early 
word. The O.E. Cognate word was atrgft, later van, by dropping 
of g (cf. regn, ren t rain), modern " wain." The root of all these 
cognate words, meaning to carry, is seen in Lat. vehere. The 
term " wagon " or " waggon " is applied technically in book- 
binding to a frame of cane used for trimming the edges of gold 
leaf. In architecture a " wagon-ceiling " is a boarded roof of 
the Tudor time, either of semicircular or polygonal section. 
It is boarded with thin panels of oak or other wood ornamented 
with mouldings and with loops at the intersections. 

WAGRAM (Deutsch-Wagram), a village of Austria situated 
in the plain of the Marchfeld, 11J m. N.E. of Vienna. It gives 
its name to the battle of the 5th and 6th of July 1809, in which 
the French army under Napoleon defeated the Austrians com- 
manded by the archduke Charles. On the failure of his previous 
attempt to pass his whole army across the Danube at Aspern 
(see Napoleonic Campaigns and Aspern), Napoleon set himself 
to accumulate, around Vienna and the island of Lobau, not only 
his own field forces, but also every man, horse and gun available 
from Italy and South Germany for a final effort. Every detach* 
ment was drawn in within forty-eight hours' call, his rearward 
communications being practically denuded of their covering 
troops. The island of Lobau itself was converted practically into 
a fortress, and 150 heavy guns were mounted on its banks to 
command the Austrian side of the stream. Giving up, in face 
of this artillery, the direct defence of the river-side, the Austrians 
drew up in a great arc of about 6 m. radius extending from the 
Bisamberg, overlooking the Danube, in the west, to Markgraf- 
neusiedl on the east. From this point to the Danube below Lobau 
a gap was left for the deployment of the archduke Johann's 
army from Pressburg. This army, however, arrived too late.- 
Their total front, therefore, was about 12 m. for 120,000 men, 
which by a forward march of a couple of hours could be reduced 
to about 6 m.— giving a density of occupation of about 20,000 
men to the mile. 

Meanwhile Napoleon reconstructed the bridge over the main 
stream (see Aspern) more solidly, protecting it by palisades of 
piles and floating booms, and organized an armed flotilla to 
command the waterway. On the island itself preparations were 
made to throw three bridges across the Lobau arm of the stream 
opposite Aspern and Essling, and seven more on the right, facing 
east between Gross Enzcrsdorf and the main river. 

For several days previous to the great battle the French had 
sent across small detachments, and hence when, on the afternoon 
of the 41b of Jury, an advanced guard was put over near Gross 



EnzersdOrf, the attention of the Austrian* was not particularly 
attracted and they did not interfere. The emperor, however, 
had now men available for the battle, and under cover of this 
detachment his pontoniers made the seven bridges. Long before 
daylight on the 6th the troops began to stream across, and about 
9 a.m, the three corps destined for the first line (Davout, Oudinot 
and Massena) had completed their deployment on a front of 




some 6000 yds. and were moving forward to make way for the 
second line (Eugene and Bernadotte) and the third line (Bessicrcs 
and the guard). About noon the general advance began, the 
French opening outwards like a fan to obtain space for manoeuvre, 
Davout direct on Markgrafncusiedl and the Austrian left, 
Massena (slightly refused to cover the French left) byBreitenlee 
on Sttssenbrunn. 

The Austrian* held a strong position along the line of the 
Russbach from Deutsch-Wagram to Markgrafncusiedl with their 
left, whilst their right was held ready for a counter-attack 
intended to roll up the French attack from left to right when the 
proper moment should come. The movements of the great 
French masses in the confined space were slow, and the attack on 
the line of the Russbach did not declare itself till 8 p.m.; the 
corps did not attack simultaneously, and failed altogether to 
make any serious impression on the Austrian position. Massena 
on the left was scarcely engaged. 

But. hearing of the success of hu left wing on the RutsbatS. 
the archduke determine*! to anticipate the French nc*l morning 
on I hat side, and lour corps were (line led upon Massom, who 
h,id bivouacked his trcoiis overnight on ihe line Lcopoldsau- 
5u*5cnbrunn*Aderkiaa t I he Jailer, a strongly built village! 
forming, as It were^ a bridge-head to the passages of the Russbach 
1 1 Dculsth - Wagram, Anot he r corps with a at ron r cavalry force 
was also directed* to pivot round Markgrafncusiedl and to at lack 
Davoul on his righi- on ihis flank also the arrival of the archduke 
Johann was expected hler in the day. 

The Austrian movements were somewhat Lll-QOttftpCUl^ 
nevertheless, by n \ u. Massena's left had betu driven back 



almost to Aapern, and his right, though aided by Bernadotte. 
had failed to recapture Aderkka, from which the Austrian* had 
driven his advanced posts early in the morning. The situation 
for the French looked very serious, for their troops were not 
fighting with the dash and spirit of former years. But Napoleon 
was a master in the psychology of the battlefield, and knew that 
on the other side things were much the same. He therefore sent 
orders along the whole line 
for a gigantic counter-stroke. 
Davout on the right was to 
attack Markgrafneusiedl 
again. Massena was to 
move against the troops 
immediately to bis front; 
Bernadotte and Marmont 
to advance respectively 
against Breitcnlee and 
Aderklaa, whilst in the gap 
which would thus open 
between them marched the 
5th corps (Macdonald) on 
Sussenbrunn, covered by a 
battery of 104 guns and 
followed by the guard and 
reserve cavalry. 

Macdonald formed his 
30,000 men in a gigantic 
hollow square— on a front 
of one battalion, fourteen 
battalioris deployed at six 
paces distance leading, whilst 
the remainder of the in- 
fantry marched in column 
of sections on either flank, 
and cavalry closed the rear. 
The idea was to compel even 
the weakest to go on, on pain 
of being trampled to death 
under the feet of the follow- 
ing men and horses, but the 
terror caused by the Aus- 
trian round-shot tearing 
»«- huge gaps through the 
mass proved enough to counteract even this clanger, and 
the men in the advance threw themselves down whole- 
sale. It is admitted by French authors (Ardant du Picq) 
that of the 30,000 only 3000 actually delivered the attack, about 
3000 were killed or wounded, but 24,000 evaded their duty 
somehow, and the trail of the column appeared one mass of dead 
and .dying, creating a terrible impression on all who saw it. 
Nevertheless, Macdonald reached his destination, for the guns 
had literally torn a gap in the opposing line, and the guards and 
cavalry then followed intact. At the same time Davout also had 
made progress, and, learning that the archduke Johann could 
not be counted on for that day, the archduke Charles issued 
orders for a retreat. The whole Austrian army was gradually 
withdrawn, unbeaten and still available for a renewed offensive 
if necessary the following day. 

The French, however, were in no condition to follow up their 
advantage. They had seen more of the slaughter tbajA.tbck 
adversaries, and except the emperor and Da 
have been completely shaken. Even tfl l'ii 
always the steadiest in danger, the limit of fin 
pa-sscd, for when about 5 p. V* the t^^^^l 
archduke Johann 's force ap 
hitherto unknown in the < 
wing t and Napoleon had I 
possible with these 1 

ftcr-m-it [Zoht im 
r Hi, 700 (iiNi 

whoja 




WAGTAIL— WAILLY 



245 



128,600 (including 14,600 cavalry) men and 4x0 guns engaged; 
Josses, 19110 killed and wounded, and 6740 missing (20%); 

9 guns and one colour were lost. The casualties in general officers 
were unusually severe, ax French and 15 Austrian* being killed 
*i*a wounded. 

WAGTAIL (Wagtterd and Wagstyrt, 15th century jtdt T. 
Wright* Vol. Vocabularies, ii. 321, 253; Umgtale, Turner, 
IS44, P- 53), the popular name for .birds of the subfamily 
Metat Minor, which, together with the Anikinat (see Pipit), 
form the passerine family MotaciUidae. 

The pied wagtail MoUtcillo. lugubris h a common and generally 
distributed species in the British Islands, and common through- 
out northern Europe, but migrating southwards over a relatively 
narrow range in winter. The white wagtail, M. alba of Linnaeus, 
has a wide range in Europe, Alia and Africa, visiting England 
almost yearly, and chiefly differing from the ordinary British 
in its lighter-coloured tints— the cock especially having a dear 
grey instead of a black back. Three other species occur in 
England, but the subfamily with several genera and very many 
species ranges over the Old World, except Australia and Poly- 
nesia, whilst the Astatic species reach North-West America. 

Wagtails are generally parti-coloured birds, frequenting 
streams and stagnant water, and feeding on seeds, insects, 
worms, small molluscs and crustaceans. The bill is thin and 
elongated, and the tail is very long. The nests are made of moss, 
grass and roots, with a lining of hair and feathers; four to six 
eggs are laid, bluish white or brown, or yellowish with spots and 
narking*, 

The genus Motacilla (an exact rendering of the English 
" wagtail," the Dutch KwUtstaart, the Italian Codatremola and 
other similar words), which, as originally founded by Linnaeus, 
contained nearly all the " soft-billed " birds of early English 
ornithologists, was restricted by various authors in succession, 
following the example set by Scopoli in 1769, until none but the 
wagtails remained in it. (A. N.) 

WAHHlBU, a Mahommedan sect, the followers of Ibn 'Abd 
at-Wahhab, who instituted a great reform in the religion of 
Islam in Arabia in the 18th century. Mahommed ibn 'Abd ul- 
Wahhab was bom in 1691 (or 1703) at al-Hauta of the Nejd in 
central Arabia, and was of the tribe of the Ban! Tamlm. He 
studied literature and jurisprudence of the Hanifite school. 
After making the pilgrimage with his father, he spent some 
farther time in the study of law at Medina, and resided for a 
while at Isfahan, whence he returned to the Nejd to undertake 
the work of a teacher. Aroused by his studies and his obser- 
vation of the luxury in dress and habits, the superstitious 
pilgrimages to shrines, the use of omens and the worship given 

10 Mahomet and Mahommedan saints rather than to God, he 
began a mission to proclaim the simplicity of the early religion 
founded on the Koran and Sunna (i.e. the manner of life of 
Maaosnet). His mission in his own district was not attended 
•y success, and for long he wandered with his family through 
Arabia, until at last he settled in Dara'fyya, or Dcmiya (in the 
Nejd), where he succeeded in converting the greatest notable, 
Mahommed ibn Sa'ud, who married his daugthcr, and so became 
the founder of an hereditary Wahhabite dynasty. This gave the 
miarinniry the opportunity of following the example of Mahomet 
himself in extending his religious leaching by force. His 
BBiroctions m this matter were strict. AU unbelievers (i.e. 
Ifaakrm who did not accept his teaching, as well as Christians, 
fe) were to be put to death. IjnjncrVtfir mi nnc* into Paradise 

t IO Mi soldiers who (ctJ in battle, ami il is said that 

1 a written order from Ibn 'Abd 

heaven to adrr.it him forthwith, 

1 m the greater part 

Ali (see 

dkd >n 

r ibn 

d it.n 
ptade 
cbte 




study of the writer. Ibn Taimlyya, although a Hanbalite by 
training* refused to be bound by any of the four schools, and 
claimed the power of a mujtakid, i.e. of one who can give inde- 
pendent decisions. These decisions were based on the Koran, 
which, like Ibn Hazm (q.v.), he accepted in a literal sense, on 
the Sunna and Qiyds (analogy). He protested strongly against 
all the innovations of later times, and denounced as idolatry the 
'visiting of the sacred shrines and the invocation of the saints 
or of Mahomet himself. He was also a bitter opponent of the 
Suftsof his day. The Wahhfibites also believe in the literal sense 
of the Koran and the necessity of deducing one's duty from 
it apart from the decisions of the four schools. They also pointed 
-to the abuses current in their times as a reason for rejecting the 
doctrines and practices founded on 7/ssd*, i.e. the universal 
consent of the believer or their teachers (see Mahommedan 
Reugion). They forbid the pilgrimage to tombs and the in- 
vocation of saints. The severe simplicity of the WahhabU has 
been remarked by travellers in central Arabia. They attack aB 
luxury, loose administration of justice, all laxity against infidels, 
addiction to wine, impurity and treachery. Under 'Abd ul- 
Aziz they instituted a form of Bedouin (Bedawi) commonwealth, 
insisting on the observance of law, the payment of tribute, 
military conscription for war against the infidel, internal peace 
and the rigid administration of justice in courts established for 
the purpose. 

It is dear that the claim of the Wahhtbis to have returned 
to the earliest .form of Islam is largely justified; Burckhardt 
(voL ii~p. 1x2) says, " The only difference between his (».*. ul- 
Wahhab's) sect and orthodox Turks, however improperly so 
termed, is that the Wahabys rigidly follow the same laws which 
the others neglect or have ceased altogether to observe/ 1 Even 
orthodox doctors of Islam have confessed that in Ibn 'Abd 
ul-Wabhab's writings there is nothing but what they themselves 
bold. At the same time the fact that so many of his followers 
were rough and unthinking Bedouins hasled to the over-emphasis 
of minor points of practice, so that they often appear to observers 
to be characterized chiefly by a strictness (real or feigned) in such 
matters as the prohibition of silk for dress, or the use of tobacco, 
or of the rosary in prayer. 

Bibliography.— J. L. Burckhardt, Notes on Uu Bedouins and 
Wahabys (2 vols., London, 1831); A. Chodzko, " Le D&smc des 
Wahhabis in the Journal asiatique, series iv. vol xi. pp. 168 ff; 
I. Goldziher in the Zeitschrijt der deutschen morgenl&ndischen 
Gestllschaft, vol. UL pp. 156-157 (1898); D. B. Macdonald. Muslim 
Theology (London, 1903). (G. W. T.) 

WAI, a town in Satara district, Bombay, on the Kistna river. 
Pop. (ioox) 13,080. It is a place of Hindu pilgrimage, with a 
large Brahman population, the river being lined with temples 
and bathing ghats. In the neighbourhood are Buddhist caves. 

WAIBLINGEN, a town of Germany, in the kingdom of Wurt- 
temberg, in the centre of a fruitful vine-growing district on the 
Rems, xo m. N.E. from Stuttgart by the main line of railway to 
Nuremberg via Ndrdlingen and at the junction of a branch to 
Hessenthal. Pop. (1005) 5997. It has two Evangelical churches, 
one of which is a fine Gothic structure of the 15th century, 
restored in 1866, a Roman Catholic church and a modern town 
hall. Its industries, which include the making of pottery and 
silk and the cultivation of fruit and vines, are considerable. 
Waiblingen is mentioned in the 9U1 century, when it had a 
palace of the Carolingian sovereigns. Subsequently it belonged 
to the dukes of Franconia, and gave a surname to the emperor 
Conrad II. It was in this way that the Hohenstaufen family, 
which was descended in the female line from Conrad, received 
the name of Waiblingen, corrupted by the Italians into Ghibelline. 

WAILLY, NOttL FRANCOIS OB (1724-1801), French gram- 
marian and lexicographer, was bom at Amiens on the 31st of 
July 1724. His life was spent in fans, where for many years he 
carried on a school which was extensively patronised by foreigners 
who wished to learn French. In 1754 he published Prituipes 
giniraux de la langue fron(aise, which revolutionized the teaching 
of grammar in France. The book was adopted as a textbook 
by the university of Paris and generally used throughout France, 
an abstract of it being prepared for primary educational purposes. 



246 



WAINEWRIG 



la 1771 de WaHry published Uoyens simples el raisonnis de I 
dminuer Us imperfections de noire orthographe, in which he advo- [ 
cated phonetic spelling. He was a member of the Institute from 
its foundation (1795), end took an active part in the preparation 
of the Dtclionnatre de I'Acadtmie, His works, in addition to thost 
cited, include L'Orthographe des dames (1782) and Lt Nouveat 
Vocabulatre frantais, ou abrigi du dtclionnatre de FAcademt 
(180O He died in Paris on the 7th of April 1801 

WAINBWRIGHT. THOMAS GRIFFITHS (1704-1852), Engli 
journalist and subject-painter, was born at Chiswick in Octo 
1704 He was educated by his distant relative Dr Cha 
Burney, and served as an orderly officer in the guards, *n< 
comet in a yeomanry regiment In 18 19 he entered on a lite 
life, and began to write for The Literary Pocket- Book, E 
wood's Magazine and The Foreign Quarterly Renew I 
however, most definitely identified with The London Mai 
to which, from 1620 to 1823, he contributed some sma 
flippant art and other criticisms, under the signatures of ' 
Weathercock," " Egomet fionmot " and " Herr Vinkl 
He was a friend of Charles Lamb— who thought weJ 
literary productions, and in a letter to Bernard Barto 
him the " kind, light-hearted Wainewright "—and of 
brilliant contributors to the journal He also practi 
artist, designing illustrations to Chamberlayne's poems 
1821 to 1825 exhibiting in the Royal Academy figui 
mchiding a " Romance from Undine," " Pars in the < 
Helen " and the " Milkmaid's Song." Owing to his < 
habits, Wainewright's affairs became deeply involvi 
be insured the life of his sister-in-law in various 
sum of £18,000, and when she died/ in theDecemb 
year, payment was refused by the companies on 
misrepresentation. Wainewright retired to Fran 
by the authorities as a suspected person, and imi 
months. He had in his possession a quantity of 
it was afterwards found that he had destroy* 
sister-in-law, but also his uncle, his mother-in-la 1 
shire friend, by this poison. He returned to L01 
was at once arrested on a charge of forging, thix 
a transfer of stock, and was sentenced to tran 
He died of poplezy in Hobart Town hospital i 
. The Essays and Criticisms of Wainewright wei 
With an account of his life, by W. Carew Ha* 
of his crimes suggested to Dickens his sto 
and to Bulwer Lytton his novel of Lucretia, 
artist and poisoner, has interested latter-day < 
Wilde in " Pen. Pencil and Poisan "(.Fortnight 
and A. G. Allen, in T. Seooombe's Twelve Ba 

WAIKGANGA, a river of India, flowing 
Provinces in a very winding course of 
joining the Wardha the united stream, 1 
ultimately falls into the GodavarL 

WAINSCOT, properly a superior quali 
panel work, hence such panel-work a 
covering of the interior walls of an apai 
to be Dutch and came into use in En 
and occurs in lists of imported timbei 
Schot, adapted in English as wayn 
Voyages, L 173, has " boords called u 
the best kind of oak, well-grained, 
from knots. The form shows that i 
formed from wage* (i.e. wain, was 
has a large number of meanings, st 
enclosure of boards, cf . " sheet," ai 
panelling used in coach-building 
and relations nave been suggested 
with O. Eng. wah t wall, or with 
wave, the reference being to it 
The term " wainscot " is sometii 
the lining, whether of paper, j 
lower portion of the walls of a i 
cube; Lat. datum, something 
O. Fr. del, mod. di, Eng. " die 
cube on the base of a pedesta 



WAITZ, G.— WAKE, W. 



247 



household. He had a Every given liim and during illness an 
extra allowance of food. Betides "piping the watch" and 
guarding the palace against thieves and fire, this wait had to 
attend at the installation of knights of the Bath. London and 
all the chief boroughs had their corporation waits certainly 
from the early 16th century, for in the privy purse accounts 
of Henry VIII. occurs (153a) the entry " Item, the XI daye 
(of October) paled to the waytea of Canterbery in rewarde . . . 
▼ijs. vjd." In 158a Dudley, earl of Leicester, writes to the 
corporation of London asking that a servant of his should be 
admitted to the city waits. These borough waits appear, how- 
ever, to have been more nearly akin to the medieval troubadours 
or minstrels who played to kings and nobles at and after the 
evening meal. The duties of the London waits, which included 
playing before the mayor during his annual progress through 
the streets and at city dinners, seem to have been typical of 
all i6tb» and 17th-century dty waits. The London waits had 
a special uniform of blue gowns with red sleeves and caps, and 
wore a silver collar or chain round the neck. In the x8th and 
carry rgth century the ordinary street watchmen appear to have 
arrogated to themselves the right to serenade householders 
at Christ mas time, calling round on Boxing Day to receive a 
gratuity for their tunefulness as well as their watchfulness. 
When in 1820 their place as guardians of the city's safety was 
taken by police, it was left for private individuals to keep up the 

WAITZ, 6B0RG (18x3-1886), German historian, was born 

at Flensburg, in the duchy of Schleswig, on the 9th of October 

181 3. He was educated at the Flensburg gymnasium and the 

universities of Kiel and Berlin. The influence of Ranke early 

diverted him from his original purpose of studying law, and while 

atnl a student he began that series of researches in German 

anedieval history which was to be his life's work. On graduating 

at Berlin in August 1836, Waits went to Hanover to assist Ferts 

in the great national work of publishing the Momtmenta Ger- 

mmuuae historic*; and the energy and learning be displayed 

in that position won him a summons to the chair of history 

srt Kiel in 184a. The young professor soon began to take an 

interest in politics, and in 1846 entered the provincial diet as 

representative of his university. His leanings were strongly 

German, so that he became somewhat obnoxious to the Danish 

government, a fact which made an invitation in 2847 to become 

garo i es n or of history at Goitingen peculiarly acceptable. The 

pci l itaral events of 1848-1840, however, delayed his appearance 

sat his new chair. When the German party in the northern 

d a n hies rose against the Danish government, Waits hastened 

to place himself at the service of the provisional government. 

Hewas sent to Berlin to represent the interests of the duchies 

tfaere, and during his absence he was elected by Kiel as a delegate 

to the national parliament at Frankfort. Waits was an adherent 

erf the party who were eager to bring about a union of the German 

•tales c oder a German emperor; and when the king of Prussia 

the ! imperial crown the professor withdrew from the 

jm disappointment, and ended his active share in public 

.-^f^ Mto ? n ^ 1 ^ W " ube « M ^ lccturt8atGottin « exL 

ifS f j „ _ •P eaking was dry and uninteresting; but the matter 

..was 10 practical and hb leaching so sound that 

^^acteej io crowds to his kauri: -room, and the 

ctri£ert historical school spread far and wide. 

*a pen was not idle, and his industry is 

1 and in the I 'pcecdings of 

wfekh he belonged. In 1875 

t Pert 1 as principal editor 

lite of advancing 

t* with all his 

artco and Italy 

Ek died at Berlin 

I— in 1842 to a 

daughter 




I as |.inr: 

emu- ■: 

E k 

■pan 
Bed 



Jpta of Ranke, 



he has more affinity with Perts or D ahlmann , His special 
domain was medieval German history, and he rarely travelled 
beyond it, 

WaiL££chtd works, apart from hta contributions to th* Ifohumettfa 
are:— Dttitscke Verfasiuntigaxfiuhle (3 vota T Kiel, 1 844-1 «;&« 
itt'l ctl.» 7 vols, only, 1 065-1070): $chkswifcnolxt*in$ Gtifkickte 
(fvut, dttttngen, 1851-1054; the yd vol* *oa never published); 
Za ' :mtcr JtifWM WulUnu&iXr urid die ruropijifchf Poltiik (\ vols,; 
Berlin, 1 055- 1 B56) .* a nd Crsindsu^c dtr Politik ( Kie I, 1 B62) , A m ng, 
his smaller *or£it which* however, indicate the line of hia rMtarohes* 
are the fhjtluwjng : — Jahrtrtehrr del dctttxhrn Sticks unirr Hdnrit h f. 
(Berlin, iSj7 H yd cd«, lSflj); Qber ifru LeUn wd die Ukr? des UiJUa 
(Hanover, 1040}; Das nJti Reck dtr jalixhnt Fnutivn (Kid, 1O40); 
and Deuiviu Kaiicr veu Kari dtm Grossen lis Maximilian (Lkilio, 
187 J). In conjunction with other scholars Waltz took a leading part 
In the publication of the Farvkinittit tut dtutuhtn Gtifhithtt 
(Murrrh, 1JW2 aed.), and in the Natdalfant<iuhe Studitn t published in 
the JVmaaSassj 01 the SchkAuig-Mot&icifi Historical Society (Kirf f 
Ift^-if^a A BibtiofrabhiKht Oberj&ht Zber Watts'* Wtfkt was 
published by E. Steindorfr at Guttlngtn in iflgfo 

Obituary nr.ftitrs of Wait/ nre to be found In the Hiiterhth* 
Ztiiickrifly near aeries, voL auu; in the publication! for ift£6 oj the 
Berlin Akiirk-mie dar WHwrtKha f ten, the Gottiogen Ccsdlsch.ift 
der VViiienschilteii, and the Han&bcher Gcschichiifettin: tn the, 
Eiifanxke* Juhrbw-k dtr Garrcj GcstUsthaft, voU viii- ; and in the 
tttvue +uiortqu*, vol. xxxL 

WAITZ, THEODOR (1821-1864), German psychologist and 
anthropologist, was born at Gotha on tbe 17th of March 1821. 
Educated at Leipzig and Jena, he made philosophy, philology 
and mathematics his chief studies, and in 2848 he was appointed 
professor of philosophy in the university of Marburg. He was 
a severe critic of the philosophy of Fichte, Schilling and Hegel, 
and considered psychology to be the basis of all philosophy. 
His researches brought him into touch with anthropology, and 
he will be best remembered by his monumental work in -six 
volumes, Die Anlkropohgie ier Nahmtlker. He died on the 2 1st 
of May 1864 at Marburg". 

In addition to his Anthropologic, the first four volumes of which 



and a critical edition of the Organon 0/ Aristotle (1844). 

WAKE, THOMAS (1297-1349), English baron, belonged to 
a Lincolnshire family which had lands also in Cumberland, 
being the son of John Wake (d. 1300), who was summoned to 
parliament as a baron in 1295, and the grandson of Baldwin 
Wake (d. 1282), both barons and warriors of repute. Among 
Thomas Wake's guardians were Piers Gaveston and Henry, earl 
of Lincoln, whose daughter Blanche (d. 1357) he married before 
131 7. This lady was the niece of Thomas, earl of Lancaster, 
and her husband was thus attached to the Lancastrian party, 
but he did not follow Earl Thomas in the proceedings which 
led to his death in 1322. Hating the favourites of Edward II. 
Wake joined Queen Isabella in 1326 and was a member of tbe 
small council which advised the young king, Edward III.; soon, 
however, he broke away from the queen and her ally, Roger 
Mortimer, and in conjunction with his father-in-law, now earl 
of Lancaster, he joined the malcontent barons. He was possibly 
implicated in the plot which cost his brother-in-law, Edmund, 
earl of Kent, his life in 1330, and he fled to France, returning 
to England after the overthrow of Isabella and Mortimer. 
Edward III. made him governor of the Channel Islands and he 
assisted Edward Bruce to invade Scotland, being afterwards 
sent on an errand to France. Jn 1341 he incurred the displeasure 
of the king and was imprisoned, but he had been restored and 
had been employed in Brittany and elsewhere when he died 
childless on the 31st of May 1340. His estates passed to his 
sister Margaret (d. 1349)1 widow of Edmund, earl of Kent, 
and her son John (d. X352), and later to the Holand family. 
Wake established a house fox the Austin canons at Newton near 
Hull; this was afterwards transferred to Haltemprice in the 
same neighbourhood. 

WAKE, WILLIAM (1657-1737), English archbishop, was bom 
at Blandford, Dorset, on the 26th of January 1657, and educated 
at Christ Church, Oxford, He took orders, and in 1682 went to 
Paris as chaplain to the ambassador Richard Graham, Viscount 
Preston (2648-169$). Here he became acquainted with many of 



^ 



\ 



248 



WAKE— WAKEFIELD, E. G. 



the savants of the capital, and was much interested in French 
clerical affairs. He also collated some Paris manuscripts of the 
Greek Testament for John Fell, bishop of Oxford. He returned 
to England in 1685; in 1688 he became preacher at Gray's Inn, 
and in 1689 he received a canonry of Christ Church, Oxford. 
In 1693 he was appointed rector of St James's, Westminster. 
Ten years later he became dean of Exeter, and in 1705 he was 
consecrated bishop of Lincoln. He was translated to the see 
of Canterbury in 1 7 16 on the death of Thomas Tenison. During 
1718 he negotiated with leading French, churchmen about a pro- 
jected union of the Gallican and English churches to resist the 
claims of Rome (see J. H. Lupton, Archbishop Wake and the 
Project of Union, 1896). In dealing with nonconformity he was 
tolerant, and even advocated a revision of the- Prayer Book if 
that would allay the scruples of dissenters. His writings are 
numerous, the chief being his State of the Church and Clergy of 
England . . . historically deduced (London, 1703). He died at 
Lambeth on the 24th of January 1736/7. 

Sir Isaac Wake (c. 1580-1632), the diplomatist, was a kinsman of 
the archbishop. He commenced bis diplomatic career in Venice, 
and then he represented his county for sixteen years at Turin: be 
was knighted in 1619, and after being sent on various special missions 
by James I. he was British ambassador in Paris from 1630 Until his 
death in June 1632. Among Sir Isaac's writings is Rex platonicus, 
a description of the entertainment of James I. at Oxford in 1605; 
this was published in 1607 and has of tea been reprinted. 

WAKB (A.S. wocon, to " wake " or " watch "), a term now 
restricted to the Irish custom of an all-night " waking " or 
watching round a corpse before burial, but anciently used in the 
wider sense of a vigil kept as an annual church celebration in 
commemoration of the completion or dedication of the parish 
church. This strictly religious wake consisted in an aU-night 
service of prayer and meditation in the church. These services, 
popularly known as " wakes," were officially termed Vigiliae 
by the church, and appear to have existed from the earliest days 
of Anglo-Saxon Christianity. Tents and booths were set up in 
the churchyard before the dawn which heralded in a day devoted 
to feasting, dancing and sports, each parish keeping the morrow 
of its vigil as a holiday. Wakes soon degenerated into fairs; 
people from neighbouring parishes journeyed over to join in 
the merry-making, and as early as Edgar's reign. (958-975) the 
revelry and drunkenness had become a scandal. The vigiliae 
usually fell on Sundays or saints' days, those being the days 
oftenest chosen for church dedications, and thus the abuse was 
the more scandalous. In 1445 Henry VI. attempted to suppress 
markets and fairs on Sundays and holy days. In 1536 an Act 
of Convocation ordered that the yearly " wake " should be held 
in every parish on the same day, viz. the first Sunday in October, 
but this regulation was disregarded. Wakes are specially men- 
tioned in the Book of Sports of James I. and Charles L among the 
feasts which should be observed. 

Side by side with these church wakes there existed from the 
earliest times the custom of " waking" a corpse. The custom, 
as far as England was concerned, seems to have been older than 
Christianity, And to have been at first essentially Celtic. Doubt* 
less it had a superstitious origin, the fear of evil spirits hurting 
or even removing the body, aided perhaps by the practical 
desire to keep away rats and other vermin. The Anglok&LXOirf 
called the custom lich-wake or like-wake (AS. Iic t a corpse}, 
With the introduction of Christianity ihc tiering of prayer was 
added to the mere vigil, which until t hen bad b 
by formal mourning chants and recital* at 
dead. As a rule the corpse, with a pbtr of 
placed under the table, on which was 
Thrsc private wakes soon Lc-mlnl to 
during the reign of Ed van J III, I fee 1 
London proclaimed " 
the offering ol 
none but ne» 
The penalty 
Reform* * 
the 
out. 




custom equivalent to "waking," which, however, mot be 
distinguished from the funeral feasts pure and simple. 

For detailed accounts of Irish wakes sea Brand's Antiquities of 
Great Britain (W. C Haslitt's edition, 1905) under " Irish Wakes." 

WAKEFIELD. EDWARD GIBBON <i7o6~x86s), British 
colonial statesman, was born in London on the soth of March 
1 706, of an originally Quaker family. His father, Edward Wake- 
field (1774-1854), author of Ireland, Statistical and Political 
(181 2). was a surveyor and land agent in extensive practice; his 
grandmother, Priscilla Wakefield (1751-2832), was a- popular 
author for the young, and one of the introducers of savings banks. 
Wakefield was for a short time at Westminster School, and was 
brought up to his father's profession, which he relinquished on 
occasion of his elopement at the age of twenty with Miss Pattie; 
the orphan daughter of an Indian civil servant. The young lady's 
relatives ultimately became reconciled to the match, and pro- 
cured him- an appointment as attache to the British legation at 
Turin. He resigned this post in x8ao, upon the death of his 
wife, to whom he was fondly attached, and, though making 
some efforts to connect himself with journalism, spent the years 
immediately succeeding in idleness, residing for the most part in 
Paris. In 1826 he appeared before the public as the hero of a 
most extraordinary adventure, the abduction of Miss Ellen 
Turner, daughter of William Turner, of Shrigley Bark, Cheshire. 
Miss Turner was decoyed from school by means of a forged letter, 
and made to believe that she could only save her father from 
ruin by marrying Wakefield, whom she accordingly accompanied 
to Gretna Green. This time the family refused to condone his 
proceedings; he was tried with his confederates at Lancaster 
assizes, March 2827, convicted, and sentenced to three years* 
imprisonment in Newgate. The marriage, which had not been 
consummated, was dissolved by a special act of parliament. 
A disgrace which would have blasted the career of most men 
made Wakefield a practical statesman and a benefactor to his 
country. Meditating, it is probable, emigration upon his release, 
he turned his attention while in prison to colonial subjects, 
and acutely detected the main causes of the slow progress of 
the Australian colonies in the enormous size of the landed 
estates, the reckless manner in which land was given away, the 
absence of all systematic effort at colonization, and the conse- 
quent discouragement of immigration and dearth of labour. He 
proposed to remedy this state of things by the sale of land in 
small quantities at a sufficient price, and the employment of the 
proceeds as a fund for promoting immigration. These views were 
expressed with extraordinary vigour and incisiveness in his Letter 
from Sydney (1829), published while he was still in prison, but 
composed with such graphic power that it has been continually 
quoted as if written on the spot. After his release Wakefield 
seemed disposed tor a while to turn his attention to social 
questions at home, and produced a tract on the Punishment of 
Death, with a terribly graphic picture of the condemned cermoa 
in Newgate, and another on incendiarism in the rural districts, 
with an equally powerful exhibition of the degraded condition 
oJ iht agTicufLuraJ labourer. He soon, however, became entirely 
engTMsed with colonial affairs, and, having impressed John 
Stuaxi ym\. Colonel Torrens and other leading economists with 
; vaJuc of liii ideas, became a leading though not a conspicuous 
of the South Australian Company, by which the colony 
h Autt rails was ultimately founded. In 1833 he published 
nymoifeFy England and America, a work primarily intended 
& cqjtemial theory, which is done in the appendix 
1 Colonization." The body of the work, 
seminal ideas, though some statements 
conclusions extravagant. It contains the 
hr transport of letters should be wholly 
of subsequent reform — and the 
'.■ii instances, "the Americans 
a has ever been raised." In 1836 
volume of an edition of Adam 
\rt<:. In 1837 the New Zealand 
1 he became its managing 
his gnat undertaking fairly 



WAKEFIELD, G.— WAKEFIELD 



249 



com m e n ced when he accepted the post of private secretary to 
Lord Durham on the latter *s appointment as special commissioner 
to Canada. The Durham Report, the charter of constitutional 
government in the colonies, though drawn up by Charles Bulkr, 
embodied the ideas of Wakefield, and the latter was the means 
of its being given prematurely to the public through The Times, 
to prevent its being tampered with by the government. He 
acted in the same spirit a few months later, when (about July . 
1S39), understanding that the authorities intended to prevent 
the despatch of emigrants to New Zealand, he hurried them 
oil on his own responsibility, thus compelling the government to 
annex the country just in time to anticipate a similar step on the 
part of France. For several years Wakefield continued to direct 
the New Zealand Company, fighting its battles with the colonial 
office and the missionary interest, and secretly inspiring and 
guiding many parliamentary committees on colonial subjects, 
especially on the abolition of transportation. The company was 
by no means a financial success, and many of its proceedings 
were wholly unscrupulous and indefensible; its great object, 
bovever, was attained, and New Zealand became the Britain of 
ibe south. In 1846 Wakefield, exhausted with labour, was 
struck down by apoplexy, and spent more than a year in com- 
plete retirement, writing during his gradual recovery his Art of 
Colonization. The management of the company had meanwhile 
passed into the hands of others, whose sole object was to settle 
accounts with the government, and wind up the undertaking. 
Wakefield seceded, and joined Lord Lyttelton and John Robert 
Godley in establishing the Canterbury settlement as a Church of 
England colony. A portion of his correspondence on this subject 
was published by his son as The Founders of Canterbury (Christ- 
church, 1868). As usual with him, however, he failed to retain 
the confidence of his coadjutors to the end. In 1853, after the 
grant of a constitution to New Zealand, he took up his residence 
in the colony, and immediately began to act a leading part in 
colonial politics. In 1854 he appeared in the first New Zealand 
parliament as extra-ofBdal adviser of the acting governor, a 
position which excited great jealousy, and as the mover of a 
resolution demanding the appointment of a responsible ministry. 
It was carried unanimously, but difficulties, which will be found 
detailed in W. Swainson's New Zealand and its Colonisation (ch. 
u), prevented its being made effective until after the mover's 
retirement from political life. In December 2854, after a 
fatiguing address to a public meeting, followed by prolonged ex- 
posure to a south-east gale, his constitution entirely broke down. 
Be spent the rest of his life in retirement, dying at Wellington 
on the 16th of May 1862. His only son, Edward Jemingbam 
Wakefield (1820-1879), was a New Zealand politician. Three 
of Wakefield's brothers were also interested in New Zealand. 
After serving in the Spanish army William Hayward Wakefield 
(1803-1848) emigrated to New Zealand in 1839. As an agent of 
the New Zealand Land Company he was engaged in purchasing 
enormous tracts of land from the natives, but the company's 
tide to the greater part of this was later declared invalid. He 
remained in New Zealand until his death on the 19th of September 
1848. Arthur Wakefield (1 790-1843), who was associated with 
his brother in these transactions about land, was killed during a 
. *£* ****» son* natives at Wairau on the 1 7th of June 1843. The 

w wT^? *** FeKx w * k e fi eld (1807-187$), an engineer. 
tJU»t W? *** a fflan of I*** 6 vicws and loftr aim *» **"* m 
P^te We displayed the warmth of heart which commonly 

"e^heWf UlCS * quaI, " tics * His inain defect was unscrupttlous- 
aod the cm'^ at DOth, * n 8 necessary to accomplish an object, 
hi* asaociaf VKtu>a of his untrustworthiness gradually alienated 
Pttfiaaeat h ' *? d k(t bim P^tkaUy powerless. Excluded from 
naort to indfrLi /atai eiror rf "» vouln » he "" compelled to 
Public mtoj? oeans of working out his plans by influencing 
P**eia ^ **jf for a tendency to paradox, his intellectual 
I i* 1 **^ bJJ.J we highest, order, and as a master of nervous 
I ^natoo h^r** is sec «nd to Cobbctt alone. After every 
5?? as «tt?y ***** **** no contemporary showed equal 
W * eTv **to^ / ^" fcsi »an, or in this department rendered 



For an impartial examination of the Wakefield system, see Leroy- 
Beaulieu, Dt la colonisation ches Us peuples modernes (3rd ed. pp. 
and 696-700). See also R. Garnett's Life of Wakefield 



Ot G.) 

WAKEFIELD, GILBERT (1756-1801), English classical scholar 
and politician, was born at Nottingham on the 22nd of February 
1756. He was educated at Jesus College, Cambridge (fellow, 
1776). In 1778 he took orders, but in the following year quitted 
the church and accepted the post of classical tutor at the Non- 
conformist academy at Warrington, which he held till the dis- 
solution of the establishment in 1783. After leaving Warrington, 
he took private pupils at Nottingham and other places, and 
also occupied himself with literary work. His most important 
production at this period was the first part of the Siha critica, 
the design of which was the " illustration of the Scriptures by 
light borrowed from the philology of Greece and Rome." In 
1790 he was appointed professor of classics at the newly-founded 
Unitarian college at Hackney, but his proposed reforms and his 
objection to religious observances led to unpleasantness and to 
his resignation in the following year. From this time he sup- 
ported himself by his pen. His edition of Lucretius, a work 
of high pretensions and little solid performance, appeared in 
1796-1709, and gained for the editor a very exaggerated reputa- 
tion (see Munro's Lucretius, 1. pp. 19, 20). His light-hearted 
criticism of Porson's edition of the Hecuba was avenged by the 
hitter's famous toast: u Gilbert Wakefield; what's Hecuba to 
him or he to Hecuba ? " About this time Wakefield, who hated 
Pitt and condemned war as utterly unchristian, abandoned 
literature for political and religious controversy. After assailing 
with equal bitterness writers so entirely opposed as William 
Wilberforce and Thomas Paine, in January 1798 he "employed 
a few hours " in drawing up a reply to Bishop Watson's Address 
to the People of Great Britain, written in defence of Pitt and the 
war and the new " tax upon income." He was charged with 
having published a seditious tibel, convicted in spite of an 
eloquent defence, and imprisoned for two years in Dorchester 
gaol. A considerable sum of money was subscribed by the 
public, sufficient to provide for his family upon his death, which 
took place on the 9th of September 1801. While in prison he 
corresponded on classical subjects with Charles James Fox, the 
letters being subsequently published. 

See the second edition of his Memoirs (1 804). The first volume is 
autobiographical; the second, compiled by J. T. Rutt and A 
Wainewright, includes several estimates of his character and per- 
formances from various sources, the most remarkable being one 
by Dr Parr; see also Gentleman* s Megaoine (September 1801^ 5 
Henry Crabb Robinson's Diary (3rd ed., 1872); John Aildn in 
AiloVs General Biography (1799-1815). 

WAKEFIELD, a city and municipal and parliamentary 
borough in the West Riding of Yorkshire, England, 175! m. 
N.N.W. from London. Pop. (1901) 4Mi3> It is served by the 
Great Northern, Midland and Great Central railways (Westgate 
station), and the Lancashire and Yorkshire and North-Eastern 
railways (Kirkgate station), the Great Northern Company using 
both stations. It lies on the river Calder, mainly on the north 
bank, in a pleasant undulating country, towards the eastern 
outskirts of the great industrial district of the West Riding. 
The river is crossed by a fine bridge of eight arches on which 
stands the chapel of St Mary, a beautiful structure 50 ft. long 
by 25 wide, of the richest Decorated character. Its endowment 
is attributed to Edward IV., in memory of his father Richard, 
duke of York, who fell at the battle of Wakefield (1460). It was 
completely restored in 1847. In 1888 the bishopric of Wakefield 
was formed, almost entirely from that of Ripon, having been 
sanctioned in 1878. The diocese includes about one-seventh of 
the parishes of Yorkshire, and also covers a very small portion of 
Lancashire. The cathedral church of All Saints occupies a very 
ancient site, but only slight traces of buildings previous to the 
14th century can be seen. In the early part of that century the 
church was almost rebuilt, and was consecrated by Archbishop 
William de Melton in 1329. Further great alterations took place 
in the 15th century, and the general effect of the building as it 
stands is Perpendicular. The church consists of a dercstoried 
nave and choir, with a western tower; the eastward extension 



250 



WAKEFIELD— WAKLEY 



of the choir, the construction of the retrochoir and other works 
were undertaken in 1000 and consecrated in 1905 as a memorial 
to Dr WaJsham How, the first bishop. During restoration of the 
spire (the height of which is 247 ft.) in 1905, records of previous 
work upon it were discovered in a sealed receptacle in the 
weather-vane. Among the principal public buildings are the 
town hall (1880), in the French Renaissance style; the county 
hall (1898), a handsome structure with octagonal tower and dome 
over the principal entrance; the large corn exchange (1837, 
enlarged 1862), including a concert-room; the market house, 
the sessions house, the county offices (1896) and the prison for 
the West Riding; the mechanics' institution with large library, 
church institute and library, and the fine art institution. A 
free library was founded in 1905, and a statue of Queen Victoria 
unveiled in the Bull Ring at the same time. Benevolent 
institutions include the Clayton hospital (1879), on the pavilion 
system, and the West Riding pauper lunatic asylum with 
its branches. The Elizabethan grammar school, founded in 
1592, is the principal educational establishment. Among 
several picturesque old houses remaining, that known as the 
Six Chimneys, an Elizabethan structure, is the most striking. 

Formerly Wakefield was the great emporium of the cloth manu- 
facture in Yorkshire, but in the 19th century it was superseded in 
this respect by Leeds. Foreign weavers of cloth were established 
at Wakefield by Henry VII.; and Leland, writing in the time of 
Henry VII I., states that, its " whole profit standeth by coarse 
drapery." During the 18th century it became noted for the 
manufacture of worsted yarn and woollen stuffs. Although its 
manufacturing importance is now small in comparison with that 
of several other Yorkshire towns, it possesses mills for spinning 
worsted and carpet yarns, coco-nut fibre and China grass. It 
has also rag-crushing mills, chemical works, soap-works and 
iron-works; and there are a number of collieries in the neigh- 
bourhood. Wakefield is the chief agricultural town in the West 
Riding, and has one of the largest corn markets in the north of 
England. It possesses agricultural implement and machine 
works, grain and flour mills, malt-works and breweries. A large 
trade in grain is carried on by means of the Calder, and the 
building of boats for inland navigation is a considerable industry. 
There are extensive market-gardens in the neighbourhood. In 
the vicinity of Wakefield is Walton Hall, the residence of the 
famous naturalist Charles Waterton (1782-1865). The parlia- 
mentary borough returns one member. The municipal borough 
is under a mayor, 9 aldermen and 27 councillors. Area, 4060 
acres. 

In the reign of Edward the Confessor, Wakefield (Wackefeld) 
was the chief place in a large district belonging to the king and 
was still a royal manor in 1086. Shortly afterwards it was granted 
to William, Earl Warenne, and his heirs, under whom it formed 
an extensive baronial liberty, extending to the confines of 
Lancashire and Cheshire. It remained with the Warenne family 
until the 14th century, when John Warenne, eajrl of Warenne and 
Surrey, having no legitimate heir, settled it on his mistress, 
Maud de Keirford and her two sons. They, however, pre- 
deceased him, and after Maud's death in 1360 the manor fell to 
the crown. Charles I. granted it to Henry, earl of Holland, and 
after passing through the hands of Sir Gervase Clifton and Sir 
Christopher Clapham, it was purchased about 1700 by the duke 
of Leeds, ancestor of the present duke, who is now lord of the 
manor. In 1 203-1 204 William Earl Warenne received a grant 
of a fair at Wakefield on the vigil, day and morrow of All Saints' 
day. As early as 1 231 the town seems to have had some form of 
burghal organization, since in that year a burgage there is 
mentioned in a fine. In 1331, at the request of John de Warenne, 
earl of Surrey, the king granted the " good men " of the town 
pavage there for three years, and in the same year the earl 
obtained a grant of another fair there on the vigil, day and 
morrow of St Oswald. There is no other indication of a borough. 
The battle of Wakefield was fought in 1460 on the banks of the 
river Calder just outside the town. 

Leland gives an interesting account of the town in the 16th 
century, and while showing that the manufacture of clothing 



was the chief industry, says aho that Wakefield is "a very qtuk 
market town and meatly large, well served of flesh and fish both 
from sea and by rivers ... so that all vitaile is very good and 
chepe there. A right honest man shall fare well for 2d. a meal. 
. . There be plcnti of se coal in the quarters about Wakefield." 
The corn market, held on Fridays, is of remote origin. A cattle 
market b also held on alternate Wednesdays under charter of 
1765. The town was enfranchised in 1832, and was incorporated 
in 1848 under the title of the mayor, aldermen and councillors 
of the borough of Wakefield. Before this date it was under the 
superintendence of a constable appointed by the steward of the 
lord of the manor. 

See Victoria County History, Yorkshire; W. S. BanU, History of 
Wakefield (1871); E. Parsons, History of Leeds, &c. (1834); T. 
Taylor, History of Wakefield (1886). 

WAKEFIELD, a township of Middlesex county, Massachusetts, 
U.S.A., about 10 m. N. of Boston. Pop. (1890) 69S2; (1000) 
9290, of whom 2347 were foreign-born; (19 10, census) 11,404. 
Wakefield is served by three branches of the Boston & Maine 
railway and by electric interurban railway to neighbouring towns 
and cities. It contains the outlying villages of Greenwood, 
Montrose and Boyntonville; and, larger than these, Wakefield, 
near the centre of the township. In this village is the town hall, 
the gift of Cyrus Wakefield (181X-1873), and the Beebe Town 
Library, founded in 1856 as the Pubb'c Library of South Reading, 
and later renamed in honour of Lucius Becbe, a generous patron. 
The town park (about 25 acres), shaded by some fine old elms, 
extends to the S. shore of Lake Quannapowitt and contains a 
soldiers' monument; and in the S. part of the township are 
Crystal Lake and Hart's Hill (30 acres), a public park. In the* 
township is the Wakefield Home for Aged Women, and a 
Y.M.C.A. building. Manufacturing is the principal industry; 
and among the manufactures are rattan goods, hosiery, stoves 
and furnaces, boots and shoes, and pianos. The value of the 
factory products increased from $2,647,130 in 1000 to $4,807,728 
in 1905, or 81 -6 %. The township owns and operates the electric 
lighting and gas plants and the water- works. 

Within the present limits of Wakefcld the first settlement 
was made, in 1639, in that part of the old township of Lynn 
which in 1644 was incorporated as Reading. In 181 2 the southern 
or " Old Parish " of Reading, which was strongly Democratic- 
Republican while the other two parishes were strongly Federalist, 
was set apart and incorporated as the town of South Reading. 
In 1868 the present name was adopted in honour of Cyrus 
Wakefield, who established the rattan works here. A portion 
of Stoneham was annexed to Wakefield in 1889. 

Sec C. W Eaton, " Wakefield," in S. A. Drake's History of Middle- 
sex County (Boston, 1880). * 

WAKKERSTROOM, & town and district of the TransvaaL 
The district occupies part of the S.E. of the Transvaal, being 
bounded S. by the Orange Free State and Natal. The frontier 
line Is in part the crest of the Drakensberg. The town of Wakker- 
stroom, pop. (1904) 1402, h'es 18 m. E. of Volksrust and 4 m. N. 
of the Natal frontier. It is built on the high veld, at an elevation 
of 5900 ft., and possesses a bracing climate. The neighbouring 
hills rise over 7000 ft. The plain on which the town stands is 
drained by the Slang and other tributaries of the Buffalo affluent 
of the Tugela. The district, a fertile agricultural region, was . 
organized as one of the divisions of the Transvaal in 1859 by 
President M. W. Pretorius, and after his Christian names the 
town was called Marthinus-Wesscl-Stroom, an unwieldy desig- 
nation dropped in favour of Wakkerstroom. During the war of 
1880-81 the town was unsuccessfully besieged by the Boers. 
In 1903 a small portion of the district was annexed to Natal. 

WAKLEY, THOMAS (1 795-1862), English medical and social 
reformer, was born in Devonshire, and was early apprenticed to 
a Taunton apothecary. He then went to London and qualified 
as a surgeon, setting up in practice in Regent Street, and marrying 
(1820) Miss Goodchild, whose father was a merchant and a 
governor of St Thomas's Hospital. All through his career Waklcy 
proved to be a man of aggressive personality, and his experiences 
In this respect had a sensational beginning. In August 1820 a 
gang of men who. had some grievance against him burnt down his 



WALACHIA— WALCH 



251 



house and severely wounded him in a murderous assault. The 
•hole Affair was obscure, and Wakley was even suspected, un- 
justly, of setting fire to his house himself; but he won his case 
Against the insurance company which contested his claim. 
He became a friend of William Cobbett, with whose radioalism 
he was in sympathy. In 1823 he started the well-known medical 
weekly paper, the Lancet, and began a series of attacks on the 
jobbery in vogue among the practitioners of the day, who were 
accustomed to treat the medical profession as a close borough. 
Id opposition to the hospital doctors he insisted on publishing 
reports of their lectures and exposing various malpractices, and 
be bad to fight a number of lawsuits, which, however, only 
increased his influence. He attacked the whole constitution of 
the Royal College of Surgeons, and obtained so much support 
from among the general body of the profession, now roused to a 
tease of the abuses he exposed, that in 1827 a petition to "parlia- 
ment resulted in a return being ordered of the public money 
granted to it. But reform in the college was slow, and Wakley 
saw set himself to rouse the House of Commons from within. 
He became a radical candidate for parliament, and in 1835 was 
returned for Finsbnry, retaining his seat till 1852. In this 
capacity, and also as coroner for West Middlesex'— an appoint- 
ment he secured in 1830— he was indefatigable in upholding the 
interests of the working classes and advocating humanitarian 
reforms, as well as in pursuing his campaign against medical 
restrictions and abuses; and he made the Lancet not only a 
professional organ but a powerful engine of social reform. He 
died on the 16th of May 1862, leaving three sons, the proprietor- 
ship of the Lancet remaining in the family. 

See Samuel Squire Sprigge, Life and Times of Thomas Wakley 
(1*97). 

VAlACHIA* or Wallachm, a former principality of south- 
eastern Europe, constituting, after its union with Moldavia on 
the olh of November 1859, a part of Rumania (q.v.). 

WALAFRID 1 8TRAB0 (or Strabus, i*. " squint-eyed ") 
(d. 849), German monk and theological writer, was bom about 
808 in Swabia. He was educated at the monastery of Reichenau, 
sear Constance, where he had for his teachers Tatto and Wettin, 
to whose visions he devotes one of his poems. Then he went on 
to Folda, where he studied for some time under Hrabanus Maurus 
before returning to Reichenau, of which monastery he was made 
abbot in 838. There is a story— based, however, on no good 
evidence— that Walafrid devoted himself so closely to letters as 
to neglect the duties of his office, owing to which he was expelled 
from his house; but, from his own verses, it seems that the real 
cause of his flight to Spires was that, notwithstanding the fact 
that he had been tutor to Charles the Bald, he espoused the side 
of.bis elder brother Lothair on the death of Louis the Pious in 
840. He was, however, restored to his monastery in 842, and 
died on the 18th of August 840, on an embassy to his former 
pnpiL His epitaph was written by Hrabanus Maurus, whose 
elegiacs praise him for being the faithful guardian of his 
■Mastery. 

Wahfrid Strabo's works are theological, historical and poetical. 
Of bis theological works the moat famous is the great exegctical 
compilation which, under the name of Ctosa ordinana or the Closa, 
remained for some 500 years the most widespread and important 
quarry of medieval biblical science, and even survived the Re- 
formation, passing into numerous editions as late as the 17th century 
(see Hist MtruireAe la France, t. v. p. 59 ft*.). The oldest known 
copy, in four folio volumes, of which the date and origin are un- 
hewn, but which is certainly almost entirely Walafrid's work, 
fivw us his method. In the middle of the pages is the Latin text 
of the Bible; in the margins are the " glosses," consisting of a very 
wfl collection of patristic excerpts in illustration and explanation 
•f the teat. There is also an exposition of the first twenty psalms 
(published by Pea in Anecdata nova, iv.) and an epitome of Hrabanus 
Maurus's commentary on Leviticus. An ExposUio quatuor Evange- 
***■» b also ascribed to Walafrid. Of singular interest also is his 
At exordiis et intrementis return ecclesiasticarum, written between 
Mo and 84a and dedicated to Regenbert the librarian. It deals in 
3> chapters with ecclesiastical usages, churches, altars, prayers, 
beDs, pictures, baptism and the Holy Communion. Incidentally 
be introduces into his explanations the current German expressions 
far the things he is treating of. with the apology that Solomon had 



1 In the oldest MSS. this is always spelt M Walahfrid." 



set him the example by keeping monkeys as well as peacocks at his 

court. Of special interest is the fact that Walafrid, in his exposition 
of the Mass, shows no trace of any belief in the doctrine of transub- 
stantiatbn as taught by his famous contemporary Radbertus (q.v.); 
according to him, Christ gave to his disciples the sacraments of his 
Body and Blood in the substance of bread and wine, and taught 
them to celebrate them as a memorial of his Passion. 

Walafrid's chief historical works are the rhymed Vita sancli 
GclH, which, though written nearly two centuries after this saint's 
death, is still the primary authority for his life, and a much shorter 
life of St Othmar, abbot of St Gall (d. 759).* A critical edition of 
them by E. Dummlcr is in the Monumenta Germaniae hist. Pottos 
Lalini, il (1884). p. 259 ff. Walafrid's poetical works also include 
a short life of St fiiaithmaic, a high-born monk of lona, murdered 
by the Danes in the first half of the 9th century ; a life of St Mammas; 
and a Liber de visionibus Wettini. This last poem, like the two 
preceding ones written in hexameters, was composed at the com- 
mand of " Father " Adalgisus, and based upon the prose narrative 
of Heto, abbot of Reichenau from 806 to 822. It is dedicated to 
Wettin's brother Grimaid. At the time he sent it to Grimald 
Walafrid had, as he himself tells us, hardly passed his eighteenth 
year, and be begs his correspondent to revise his verses, because, 
' as it is not lawful for a monk to hide anything from his abbot, 
he fears he may be beaten with deserved stripes. In this curious 
vision Wettin saw Charles the Great suffering purgatorial tortures 
because of his incontinence. The name of the ruler alluded to is not 
indeed introduced into the actual text, but " Carolus Imperator " 
form the initial letters of the passage dealing with this subject. 
Many of Walafrid's other poems are, or include, short addresses to 
kings and queens (Lothatr, Charles, Louis, Pippin, Judith, Ac.) 
and to friends (Einhard, Grimald, Hrabanus Maurus, Tatto, Ebbo, 
archbishop of Reims, Drogo, bishop of Metz, &c). His most famous 
poem is the Hortulus, dedicated to Grimald. It is an account of a 
little garden that he used to tend with his own hands, and is largely 
made up of descriptions of the various herbs he grows there and 
their medidnal and other uses. Sage holds the place of honour; 
then comes rue, the antidote of poisons; and so on through melons, 
fennel, lilies, poppies, and many other plants, to wind up with the 
rose, " which in virtue and scent surpasses all other herbs, and may 
rightly be called the flower of flowers." The curious poem De 
Imagine Tetrici takes the form of a dialogue; it was inspired by an 
equestrian statue of Theodoric the Great which stood ia front of 
Charlemagne's palace at Aix-Ia-ChapeUe. 

For a bibliography of Walafrid's historical works, and of writings 
dealing with them, see Pott hast, Bibliotheca hist. med. aevi (Berlin, 
1894), p. 1 102 ff. Walafrid's works are published in Migne's Patro- 
logia Latino, vols, cxiii. and cxiv. For further references see the 
article by Eduard Reuss and A. Hauck in Herzog-Hauck, Real* 
encyhlopddie (Leipzig, 1908), xx. 790. 

WALCH, JOHANN GEORO (1693-1775), German theologian, 
was born on the 17th of June 1693 at Meiningen, where bis 
father, Georg Walch, was general superintendent. He studied 
at Leipzig and Jena, amongst his teachers being J. F. Buddeus 
(1667-1729), whose only daughter he married. He published in 
17 16 a work, Uistoria critica Latinoe linguae, which soon came 
into wide use. Two years later he became professor extra- 
ordinarius of philosophy at Jena. In 17 19 he was appointed 
professor ordinarius of rhetoric, in 1721 of poetry, and in 1724 
professor extraordinarius of theology. In 1728 he became 
professor ordinarius of theology, and in 1750 professor primarius. 
His theological position was that of a very moderate orthodoxy, 
which had been influenced greatly by the philosophy and 
controversies of the Deistic period. His university lectures 
and published works ranged over the wide fields of church 
hittory in its various branches, particularly the literature and 
the controversies of the church, dogmatics, ethics and pastoral 
theology. He died on the 13th of January 1775. 

Of his works the most valuable were Bibliotheca theologica (1757- 
1765); Bibliotheca patristica (1770, new cd. 1834); his edition of 
Luther's works in 24 vols. (1740-1752); Historische und theologische 
EinUitung in die rchridsen Streitigkeiten, tptlche sonderlich ouster der 



amounted to 287, Leben und Charakter des Kirchenroths J. C. WalcK 
was published anonymously by his son C. W. F. Walch (Jena, 1777). 
Cf. Wilhehn Gass, Protestantise he Dogmatik, iii. p. 205 sq. 

His son, Jouann Ernst Immanuel (1725-1778), studied 
Semitic languages at Jena, and also natural science and mathe- 
matics. In 1749 he published Einleitung in die Harmonic der 

* Walafrid also edited Thetmar's Life of Louis the Pious, prefixing 
a preface and making a few addition*, and divided Einhaxd's Vita 
Caroli into chapters, adding an introduction. 



252 



WALCOTT— WALDECK-PYRMONT 



Evangdisten, and in 1750 was appointed professor extraordi- 
narily of theology. Five years later he became professor 
ordinarius of logic and metaphysics; in 1759 he exchanged this 
for a professorship of rhetoric and poetry. Amongst other 
theological works he published Dissertation** in Acta Apostotorum 
(1756-1761); Antiquitates symbolicae (1772); and after his death 
appeared Observationes in liattkaeum ex Graecis inscriptionibus 
(1779). He also published a periodical Der Naturforscker (1774- 
1778), and during the years 1749-1756 took an active part in 
editing the Zeitungen von geUkrten Sacken. 
See article in AUgemeine deutscke Biographic; also Lebens- 

Ssckickte J. E. J. WaJch (Jena, 1880), and J. G. Meusel's Lexikou 
r verstorbenen leutscken SckriftsleUer, vol. av. 

Another son, Chmstian Wilhelm Franz (1726-1784), was 
educated at Jena under his father's direction, and as early as 
1 745-1747 lectured in the university in branches of exegesis, 
philosophy and history. He then travelled with his brother, 
J. E. L Walch, for a year in Holland, France, Switzerland and 
Italy. On his return he was in 1750 made professor extra- 
ordinarius of philosophy in Jena, but in 17 S3 he accepted an 
invitation to become professor ordinarius at Gdttingen. Here in 
1754 he became professor extraordinarius of theology, and three 
years later received an ordinary professorship. He lectured on 
dogmatics, church history, ethics, polemics, natural theology, 
symbolics, the epistles of Paul, Christian antiquities, historical 
theological literature, ecclesiastical law and the fathers, and took 
an active interest in the work of the Gdttinger SocieUU der Wixsen- 
schaften. In 1766 he was appointed professor primarius. His 
permanent place amongst learned theologians rests on his works 
on church history. Sender was much his superior in originality 
and boldness, and Mosheim in clearness, method and elegance. 
But to his wide, deep and accurate learning, to his conscientious 
and impartial examination of the facts and the authorities at 
first hand, and to " his exact quotation of the sources and works 
illustrating them, and careful discussion of the most minute 
details," all succeeding historians are indebted. His method is 
critical and pragmatic, " pursuing everywhere the exact facts 
and the supposed causes of the outward changes of history," 
leaving wholly out of sight the deeper moving principles and 
ideas which influence its course. He died on the xoth of March 
1784. 

His principal work was his Entwurf einer voUslSndigen Bistort* 
der Keteereien, SpaUungeih und Rdigionsstreiiigkeiten, bit anf die 
Zeit der Reformation (11 vols., Leipzig, 1762-1785). Of his other 
valuable works may be mentioned Gesckickte der rvangdisck-lutkeri- 
tchen Religion, als tin Boons, doss tie die wakre sei (1753). Entwurf 
einer voUst&ndigen Historie der romiscken Pdpste (i7$&> 2nd ed. 
1758: Eng. trans. 1759), Entwurf einer volht&ndigen Historie der 
Ktrckenversommlungen ' % ~ - ~- .■- — • i...*- -t- 

(176 
,77«>). 
keitigen Sckrift unter den alien Christen (1779). occasioned by the 
controversy between G. E. Lesaing and J. M. Goeae, and to which 
Lessing began an elaborate reply just before his death. 

On C. W. F. Walch as historian see F. Baur, Epocken der eirek- 
lieken Geschicktsukreibung (1852), p. 145 sq... and Dognungesckickle, 

638 so. (1867, 3rd ed.); W. Gass, Gesckickte der protestautistken 
ogmatik, rii. p. 267 sq. ; J. G. Meusd, Lexicon verslorbentr teulscken 
SckriftsteUer, vol. xiv. For his life, see the article in the AUgemeine 
deutscke Biographic 

A third son, Kaxl Fbtedrxch (1734-1799), devoted himself to 
the study of law, and became professor of law at Jena in 1759. 
His most important works were Introductio in controversies juris 
emits retentions (Jena, 1771) and Gesckickte der in Deutsckland 
gdtenden Rechte (Jena, 1780). He died on the 20th of July 1 700, 
WALCOTT, CHARLES DOOUTTLE (1850* ), American 
geologist, was born at the village of New York Mills, New York,' 
SB the 31st of March 1850. He received a school education at 
In 1876 he was appointed assistant on the New York 
L *nd in 1879 assistant geologist on the United 
\ Survey; in 1888 he became. one of the palae- 
_ : of the invertebrata, in 1893 chief palae- 
1 1804 director of the Geological Survey. In 
1 Secretary of the Smithsonian Institution. 
Geological Society of Washington he 
1 important address on The United States 



(1759). Grunds&Ue der Kirckeugesckkkte des 
Neuen Testaments T1761, 2nd ed. 1773, 3rd ed. 1 792). Bibliatkeca 
symbolica vetus (1770), Kritiscke Vntertuckung vom Gebrauck der 




Geological Survey. He added largely to contemporary know- 
ledge of the fauna of the Older Palaeoaoic rocks of North 
America, especially with reference to the Crustacea and 
brachiopoda; be dealt also with questions of ancient physical 
geography and with mountain structure. 
His more important works include " Palaeontology of the Eureka 



(Man. US. GeoL Survey. 1898). 

WALDECK-PYRMONT. a principality of Germany and a 
constituent state of the German empire, consisting of two 
separate portions lying about 30 m. apart, viz. the county of 
Waldeck, embedded in Prussian territory between the provinces 
of Westphalia and Hesse-Nassau, and the principality uf Pyr- 
mont, farther to the north, between Lappe, Brunswick, 
Westphalia and Hanover. Waldeck comprises an area of 407 
sq. m., covered for the most part with hills, which culminate in 
the Hegekopf (2775 ft.). The centre is occupied by the plateau 
of Corbach. The chief rivers are the Eder and the Diemel, both 
of which eventually find their way into the Weser. Pyrmont, 
only 26 sq. m. in extent, is also mountainous. The Earner, 
also belonging to the Weser system, is its chief stream. The 
united area is thus 433 sq. m., or about half the size of Cambridge* 
shire in England, and the united population in 1905 was 59,127, 
showing a density of 138 to the square mile. The population is 
almost wholly Protestant. In consequence of the comparatively 
high elevation of the country— the lowest part being 540 ft* 
above the sea-level— the climate is on the whole inclement. 
Agriculture and cattle-rearing are the main resources of the in- 
habitants in both parts of the principality, but the soil is nowhere 
very fertile. Only 57% of the area is occupied by arable land 
and pasture; forests, one-tenth of which are coniferous, occupy 
38%. Oats is the principal crop, but rye, pota t oes and flax are 
also grown in considerable quantities. Fruit is also cultivated 
in the principality. Iron mines, slate and stone quarries are 
worked at various points, and, with live stock, poultry, wool and 
timber form the chief exports. A few insignificant manufactures 
are carried en in some of the little towns, but both trade and 
manufactures are much retarded by the comparative isolation 
of the country from railways. Wildungen, in the extreme south 
of Waldeck, is the terminus of a branch line from Wabern, and 
a light railway runs from Warburg to Marburg; Pyrmont is 
intersected by the trunk line running from Colognc > viaPaderborn, 
to Brunswick and Berlin. 

The capital and the residence of the prince is Arolsen (pop. 
181 1 in 1905) in Waldeck; twelve smaller townships and about 
one hundred villages are also situated in the county. The only 
town in Pyrmont is Bad Pyrmont, with about 1500 inhabitants, 
a highly fashionable watering-place with chalybeate and saline 
springs. The annual number of visitors is about 23,000. Wil- 
dungen is also a spa of repute. The inhabitants to the north of 
the Eder are of Saxon stock, to the south of Franconian, a 
difference which is distinctly marked in dialect, costumes and 



Waldeck-Pyrmont has one vote in the federal council 
(Bundesrat) and one in the Reichstag. The constitution, 
dating from 1852, is a reactionary modification of one carried 
in 1849, which had been a considerable advance upon one 
granted in 18x6. The Landtag of one chamber consists of 
fifteen members, three of whom represent Prymont, elected 
indirectly for three years. In the event of the male line of the 
present ruling family becoming extinct, the female line will 
succeed in Waldeck, but Pyrmont will fall to Prussia. In terms 
of a treaty concluded in 1867 for ten years, renewed in 1877 for • 
similar period, and continued in 1887 with the proviso that it 
should be terminable on two years' notice, the finances and 
the entire government of Waldeck-Pyrmont are managed by 
Prussia, the little country having found itself unable to support 
unassisted the military and other burdens involved by its share m 
the North German Confederation of 1867-1871 and subsequently 
as a constituent state of the German empire. The govern- 
ment is conducted in the name of the prince by a Prussian 



WALDECK-ROUSSEAU 



253 



" Ludcadirector/' while the state officials Uke the oath of 
*Ue*?a»ce to the Juiigoi Prussia. The prince of Waldeck reserves 
his whole rights as head of the church, and also the tight of 
granting pardons, and in certain circumstances may exercise a 
veto on proposab to alter or enact laws. Education and similar 
matters are thus all conducted on the Prussian model; a previous 
convention had already banded over military affairs to Prussia. 
The budget for 1910 showed a revenue of £57,000 and a like 
expenditure. The public debt was £70,7x0, paying interest at 
3!%. The prince is supported by the income derived from 
crown lands. As regards the administration of justice, Waldeck 
and Pynnant belong to the districts of Cased and Hanover 
res pe cti vely. 

The princes of Waldeck-Pyrmont are descendants of the 
counts of Scbwaienberg, the earliest of whom known to history 
vasoneWidukind(d.zi37). HbsonVolkwin(d. 1178) acquired 
by marriage the county of Waldeck, and his line was divided into 
two branches, Waldeck and Landau, in 1397. In 1438 the land- 
grave of Hesse obtained rights of suzerainty over Waldeck, and 
the claims arising from this action were not finally disposed of 
until 1847, when it was decided that the rights of Hesse over 
Waldeck had ceased with the dissolution of the Holy Roman 
Empire. The Landau branch of the family became extinct in 
1495, and in 163 1 Waldeck inherited the county of Pyrmont, 
which had originally belonged to a branch of the Schwalenberg 
family. For a few years Waldeck was divided into Wildungen 
and Etscnberg, but in 1692, when the Wildungen branch died 
oat with George Frederick, the imperial field-marshal, the whole 
principality was united under the rule of Christian Louis of 
Eisenberg. From 169s the land has been undivided with the 
exception of a brief period zoom 1805 to z8ia, when Waldeck 
and Pyrmoat were ruled by two brothers. Frederick Anthony 
Urich (d. 1738), who succeeded his father, Christian Louis, in 
1706, was made a prince of the empire in 1 71 a. In 1807 Waldeck 
joined the confederation of the Rhine, and In 2815 entered the 
German confederation. Its first constitution was granted in 
1816 by Prince George II. (d. 1845)- Prince Frederick (b. 1865) 
sstceeded his father, George Victor (1831-1893), as ruler on the 
xith of May 1893. The most important fact In the recent history 
of the principality is its connexion with Prussia, to which 
reference has already been made. 

See Cortse. Ceschkkle und Beukreibvng des Furstentumt Waldeck 



(Arotoen. 1850); Lowe. Heimalskunde mm Waldeck (Aroben, 1887); 
J. C C. Honmeister, Historisdhfeahtisckes Handbmck uber aue 
Crsfeu umd FirsUn von Waldeck sett 1228 (Cassel, 1883); Boucher, 



Honmeister, Histerisck-gt 

_ _, *d FursUn von Waldeck set ....... 

Da Staattrttkt des Purstenlums Waldeck (Freiburg, 1884); A. 
Wagner. Die GeschichU Waldecks und PyrmonU (Wildungen, 1888), 
and the GescmicktsUdUerfur Waldeck und Pyrmont (Mengennghausen, 
1901, folj. 

YaLDBCK-R0U8SlaU, PIERRE MARIE REM* BBWEST 

(1846-1904), French statesman, was born at Nantes on the and 
of December 1846. His father, Rene Vakkc-Rousseau (1809- 
1881), a barrister at Nantes and a leader of the local republican 
party, figured in the revolution of 1848 as one of the deputies 
teturned to the Constituent Assembly for Loire Inf erieure. With 
Jules Simon, Louis Blanc and others he sat on the commission 
sppoiated to inquire into the labour question, making many im- 
portant proposals, one of which, for the* establishment of national 
hanks, was partially realized m 1850. After the election of Louis 
Napoleon to the presidency he returned to has practice at the bar, 
and for some time after the coup d'ital was in hiding to escape 
arrest. He came back to political life in the crisis of 1870, when 
he became mayor of Nantes in August and proclaimed the third 
republic there on the 4th of September. He shortly afterwards 
resigned municipal office in consequence of differences with his 
fdVrfrgpwf on the education question. 

The son was * delicate child whose defective eyesight forbade 
aim the use of books,, and his early education was therefore 
entirely oraL He studied law at Poitiers and in Paris, where he 
took hb licentiate m January 1869. His father's record ensured 
las reception in high republican circles. Jules Grevy stood 
sponsor lor htm at the Parisian bar, and he was a regular visitor 
at the houses of Stanislas Dufaure and of Jules Simon. After 



six months of watting for briefs in Paris, he decided to return 
home and to join the bar of St Nasaire, where he inscribed his 
name early in 1870. In September he became, in spite of his 
youth, secretary to the municipal commission temporarily 
appointed to carry on the town business. He organised the 
National Defence at St Nasaire, and himself marched out with 
the contingent, though no part of the force saw active service 
owing to lack of ammunition, their private store having been 
commandeered by the state. In 1873 he removed to the bar of 
Rennes, and six years later was returned to the Chamber of 
Deputies. In bis electoral programme he had stated that he 
was prepared to respect all liberties except those of conspiracy 
against the institutions of the country and of educating the young 
in hatred of the modern social order. In the Chamber he sup- 
ported the policy of Gambetta. The Waldeck-Rousseau family 
was strictly Catholic in spite of Its republican principles; never- 
theless Waldeck-Rousseau supported the anti-clerical education 
law submitted by Jules Ferry as minister of education in the 
Waddington cabinet. He further voted for the abrogation of the 
law of 18x4 forbidding work on Sundays and fete days, for 
compulsory service of one year for seminarists and for the re- 
establishment of divorce. He made his reputation in the Chamber 
by a report which be drew up in 1880 on behalf of the committee 
appointed to inquire into the French judicial system. But then 
ss later he was chiefly occupied with the relations between capital 
and labour. He had a large share in 1884 in securing the recog- 
nition of trade unions. In 1881 he became minister of the 
interior in Gambetta'* grand mmisthe, and he held the same 
portfolio in the Jules Ferry cabinet of 1883-1885, when he gave 
proof of great administrative powers. He sought to put down 
the system by which civil posts were obtained through the local 
deputy, and he made it clear that the central authority could not 
be defied by local officials. He had begun to practise at the Paris 
bar in 1886, and m 1889 he did not seek re-election to the 
Chamber, but devoted himself to his legal work. The most 
famous of the many noteworthy cases in which his cold and 
penetrating intellect and his power of dear exposition were 
retained was the defence of M. de Lessens in 1893. In 1894 he 
returned to political life as senator for the department of the 
Loire, and next year stood for the presidency of the republic. 
against Felix Faure and Henri Brisson, being supported by the 
Conservatives, woo were soon to be his bitter enemies. He 
received 184 votes, but retired before the second ballot to allow 
Faure to receive an absolute majority. During the political 
anarchy of the next few years he was recognised by the moderate 
republicans as the successor of Jules Ferry and Gambetta, and 
at the crisis of 1899 on the fall of the Dupuy cabinet he was 
asked by President Loubet to form a government. After an initial 
failure he succeeded in forming a coalition cabinet which included 
such widely different politicians as M. MiOerand and General de 
Gailiffet. He himself returned to his former post at the ministry 
of the interior, and set to work to quell the discontent with 
winch the country was seething, to put an end to the various 
agitations which under specious pretences were directed against 
republican institutions, and to restore independence to the judicial 
authority. His appeal to all republicans to sink their differences 
before the common peril met with some degree of success, and 
enabled the government to leave the second court-martial of 
Captain Dreyfus at Rennes an absolutely free hand, and then 
to compromise the affair by granting a pardon to Dreyfus. 
Waldeck-Rousseau won a great personal success in October by 
his successful intervention in the strikes at Le Creusot. With 
the condemnation in January 1900 of Paul Dtroulede and his 
monarchist and nationalist followers by the High Court the worst 
of the danger was past, and Waldeck-Rousseau kept order in 
Paris without having recourse to irritating displays of force* 
The Senate was staunch in support of M. Waldeck-Rousseau, 
and hi the Chamber he displayed remarkable astuteness hi 
winning support from various groups. The Amnesty BOI, passed 
on 19th December, chiefly through his unwearied advocacy, 
went far to smooth down the acerbity of the preceding years. 
With the object of aiding the industry of wunvprodudng, and of 



*54 



WALDEGRAVE FAMILY— WALDENBURG 



discouraging the consumption of spirits and other deleterious 
liquors, the government passed a bill suppressing the octroi 
duties on the three " hygienic " drinks — wine, cider and beer. 
The act came into force at the beginning of 1901. But the most 
important measure of his later administration was the Associa- 
tions Bill of ioox. like many of his predecessors, he was con- 
vinced that the stability of the republic demanded some restraint 
on the intrigues of the wealthy religious bodies. All previous 
attempts in this direction had failed. In his speech in the 
Chamber M. Waldeck-Rousseau recalled the fact that he had 
endeavoured to pass an Associations Bill in 1882, and again in 
1883. He declared that the religious associations were now 
being subjected for the first time to the regulations common to 
all others, and that the object of the bill was to ensure the 
supremacy of the civil power The royalist bias gjven to the 
pupils in the religious seminaries was undoubtedly a principal 
cause of the passing of this bill; and the government further 
took strong measures to secure the presence of officers of un- 
doubted fidelity to the republic in the higher positions on the 
Staff. His speeches on the religious question were published in 
1901 under the title of Associations et congrigations t following a 
volume of speeches on Questions sociales (1900). As the general 
election of 1902 approached all sect ions of the Opposition united 
their efforts, and M. Waldeck-Kousseau's name served as a 
battle-cry far one side, and on the other as a target for the 
foulest abuse. The result was a decisive victory for republican 
stability. With the defeat of the machinations against the 
republic M. Waldeck-Rousseau considered his task ended, and 
on the 3rd of June 1002 he resigned office, having proved himself 
the " strongest personality in French politics since the death of 
Gambetta. " He emerged from his retirement to protest in the 
Senate against the construction put on his Associations Bill by 
M. Combes, who refused in mass the applications of the teaching 
and preaching congregations for official recognition. His health 
had long been failing when he died on the zoth of August X004. 

His speeches were published as Discours parletnentaires (1889); 
Pour la rtbubliquc, 1883-1003 (1004), edited by H. Leyret; L'Elat 
et la liberie (1906) ; and his Plaidovers (1906, &c.) were edited by 
H. Barboux. See also H. Leyret, Waldeck-Rousseau et la troisieme 
rtpublique (1908), and the article Francs: History, 

WALDEGRAVE, the name of an English family, taken from 
its early residence, Walgrave in Northamptonshire. Its founder 
was Sut Richard Waldegrave, or Walgrave, who was member 
of parliament for Lincolnshire in 1335; his son, Sir Richard 
Waldcgrave (d. 1402), was speaker of the House of Commons in 
1402. One of Sir Richard's descendants was Sir Edward Walde- 
grave (c. 15x7-1561) of Borley, Essex, who was imprisoned 
during the reign of Edward VI. for his loyalty to the princess, 
afterwards Queen Mary. By Mary he was knighted, and he 
received from her the manor of Chewton in Somerset, now the 
residence of Earl Waldcgrave. He was a member of parliament 
and chancellor of the duchy of Lancaster. After Mary's decease 
he suffered a reverse of fortune, and he was a prisoner in the 
Tower of London when he died on the i6t of September 1561. 
Sir Edward's descendant, another Sir Edward Waldegrave, was 
created a baronet in 1643 for his services to Charles I.; and his 
descendant, Sir Henry Waldegrave, Bart. (1660- 1689), was 
created Baron Waldegrave of Chewton in x686. Sir Henry 
married Henrietta (d. 1730), daughter of King James II. and 
Arabella Churchill, and their son was James, 1st Earl Waldegrave 
(1684-1741). 

Educated in France, James Waldegrave soon crossed over to 
England, and under George I. he declared himself a Protestant 
and took his scat as Baron Waldegrave in the House of Lords. 
Having become friendly with Sir Robert Walpole, he was sent 
to Paris as ambassador extraordinary in 1725, and from 1727 
to 1730 he was British ambassador at Vienna. In 1729 he was 
created Viscount Chewton and Earl Waldcgrave, and in 1730 
he succeeded Sir Horatio Walpole as ambassador in Paris, filling 
this post during ten very difficult years. He died on the xithof 
April 174*< Much of his diplomatic correspondence is in the 
British Museum. 

His son Jamxs, the and earl (1715-1763), was perhaps the most 



intimate friend of George ILv and was for a time governor of 
his grandson, the future king George 111. He was very much in 
evidence during the critical years 1755-1757, when the king 
employed bun to negotiate in turn with Newcastle, Devonshire, 
Pitt and Fox about the formation of a ministry. Eventually, in 
consequence of a deadlock, Waldegrave himself was first lord of 
the treasury for five days in June 1757. He died on the 28th of 
April 1763, leaving some valuable and interesting Memoirs, 
which were published in 1821. 

His brother John, the 3rd earl (1718-1784), was a soldier, who 
distinguished himself especially at the battle of Minden and 
became a general in X772. He was a member of parliament from 
1747 to 1763. His younger son, William Waldegrave (1753— 
1825), entered the British navy in 1766, and after many years of 
service was third in command at the battle of Cape St Vincent 
in 1797. In 1800 he was created an Irish peer as Baron Rad- 
stock, and in 1802 he became an admiral. His son, George 
Granville, 2nd Baron Radstock (1786-1857), followed in his 
father's footsteps, and was made a vice-admiral in 185 1. In 
1857 his son, Granville Augustus William (b. 1833), became 3rd 
Baron Radstock. 

George, 4th Earl Waldegrave (1751-1789),. the eldest son of 
the 3rd earl, was a soldier and a member of parliament. His 
sons, George (1784-1794) and John Jakes (1785*1835), were 
the 5th and 6th earls. In 1797 the 6th earl inherited from Horace 
Walpole his famous residence, Strawberry Hill, Twickenham, 
but his son, George Edward, the 7th earl (1816-1846), was 
obliged in 184 a to sell the valuable treasures collected there. 
His wife, Frances, Countess Waldegrave (1821-1879), a daughter 
of the singer John Braham, was a prominent figure in society. 
He was her second husband, and after his death she married 
George Granville Vernon Harcourt of Nuneham Park, Oxford- 
shire, and later Chichester Fortescue, Baron Carlingford. 

The 7th earl was succeeded by his uncle William (1788-1859), 
a son of the 4th carl, and in 1859 William's grandson, William 
Frederick (b. z 85 1 ) , became the 9th earl. 

WALDEN, ROGER (d. 1406), English prelate, was a man of 
obscure birth, little or nothing, moreover, being known of his 
early years. He had some connexion with the Channel Islands, 
and resided for some time in Jersey; and he held livings in 
Yorkshire and in Leicestershire before he became archdeacon of 
Winchester in 1387. His days, however, were by no means 
fully occupied with his ecclesiastical duties, and in 1387 also ho 
was appointed treasurer of Calais, holding about the same time 
other positions in this neighbourhood. In 1395, after having 
served Richard II. as secretary, Walden became treasurer of 
England, adding the deanery of York to his numerous other 
benefices. In 1397 he was chosen archbishop of Canterbury in 
succession to Thomas Arundel, who had just been banished from 
the realm, but he lost this position when the new king Henry IV. 
restored Arundel in 1399* *nd After a short imprisonment he 
passed into retirement, being, as he himself says, " in the dust 
and under feet of men. " In 1405, through Arundel's influence, 
he was elected bishop of London, and he died at Much Hadham 
in Hertfordshire on the 6th of January 1406. An Historia 
Mundi, the manuscript of which is in the British Museum, is 
sometimes regarded as the work of Waldcn; but this was 
doubtless written by an earlier writer. 

See J. H. Wylie. History of B*tta*d under Henry IV. vol. iii. 
(1896). 

WALDBNBURO, a town of Germany, in the Prussian province 
of Silesia, 39 m. S.W. of Breslau by the line to Hinchberg and 
Goriitx Pop. (1905) 16,435. It contains a handsome town hall, 
three Protestant and two Roman Catholic churches. Walden- 
burg lies in the centre of the productive coal district of the 
Waldenburger Gebirge, a branch of the Sudetic chain, and its 
inhabitants are largely occupied in the mining industry. Among 
other industrial establishments, are a large porcelain and earthen- 
ware factory, extensive fireclay works, glassworks and a china* 
painting establishment; there are also numerous flax-spinncrtcs 
and linen-factories in the neighbourhood. Adjoining the tows 
on the south is the village of Oberwaldenburg, pop. (1905) 



1 

L- 



WALDENSES 



255 



4758, with ft chateau and some coal nines. Waldenburg became 
a town in 1426. 

WALNXSES. The Waldensian valley* lie to the south-west 
of Turin, in the. direction of Monte Viso, but include no high 
or snowy mountains, while the glens themselves are (with one 
or two exceptions) fertile and well wooded. The principal town 
near the valleys is Pinerolo (Pignerol). Just to its south-west 
there opens the chief Waldenaian valley, the Va! Pellke, watered 
by the stream of that name, but sometimes called inaccurately 
the Luserna valley, Luserna being simply a village opposite 
the capital, Torre Feffice; near Torre PfcUice the side glens of 
Angrogna and Rora join the Peflice valley. To the north-west 
of Pinerolo, up the Chisone valley, there opens at Perosa Argen- 
tina the valley of St Martin, another important Waldensian 
valley, which is watered by the Germanasca torrent, and at 
Perrero splits into two branches, of which the Prali glen is far 
more fertile than that of Massello, the latter being the wildest 
and moat savage of all the Waldensian valleys. 

The name Waldenses was given to the members of an heretical 
Christian sect which arose in the south of France about 1170. 
The history of the sects of the middle ages is obscure, because 
the earliest accounts of them come from those who were con- 
cerned in their suppression, and were therefore eager to lay 
apon each of them the worst enormities which could be attri- 
buted to any. In later times the apologists of each sect reversed 
the process, and cleared that in which they were interested at 
the expense of others. In early times these sectaries produced 
little literature of their own; when they produced a literature 
at the beginning of the 15th century they attempted to claim 
for it a much earlier origin. Hence there is confusion on every 
side; it is difficult to distinguish between various sects and 
to determine their exact opinions or the circumstances under 
which they came into being. The polemical conception which has 
done much to perpetuate this confusion is that of the historical 
continuity of Protestantism from the earliest times. According 
to this view the church was pure and uncorrupt till the time 
of Constantine, when Pope Sylvester gained the first temporal 
possession for the papacy, and so began the system of a rich, 
powerful and worldly church, with Rome for its capital. Against 
this secularized church a body of witnesses silently protested; 
they were always persecuted but always survived, till in the 
i jth century a desperate attempt was made by Innocent III. 
to root them out from their stronghold in southern France. 
Persecution gave new vitality to their doctrines, which passed 
on to Wycfiffe and Huss, and through these leaders produced 
the Reformation in Germany and England. 

This view rests upon a series of suppositions, and is entirely 
cnhistoricaL So far as can be discovered the heretical sects 
of the middle ages rested upon a system of Manichaeism which 
was imported into Europe from the East (see Manichaeism). 
The Manichaean system of dualism, with its severe asceticism, 
and its individualism, which early passed into antinomianism, 
was attractive to many minds in the awakening of the nth 
century. Its presence in Europe can be traced in Bulgaria soon 
after its conversion in 862,* where the struggle between the 
Eastern and Western churches for the new converts opened a 
way for the more hardy speculations of a system which had 
never entirely disappeared, and found a home amongst the 
Paulidans (q.v.) in Armenia. The name of Cathari (sec Cathars), 
taken by the adherents of this new teaching, sufficiently shows 
the Oriental origin of their opinions, which spread from Bulgaria 
amongst the Slavs, and followed the routes of commerce into 
central Europe. The earliest record of their presence there is 
the condemnation of ten canons of Orleans as Manichees in 102a, 
and soon after this we find complaints of the prevalence of 
heresy in northern Italy and in Germany. The strongholds of 
these heretical opinions were the great towns, the centres of 
dvuiaation, because there the growing sentiment of municipal 
independence, and the rise of a burgher class through commerce, 
created a spirit of criticism which was dissatisfied with the 
worldly lives of the clergy and their undue influence in affairs. 
1 Schmidt, HisUnre des Calhares, i. 7. 



The system of Catharism recognized two classes of adherents, 
eredentes and perfecU. The perfect* only were admitted to its 
esoteric doctrines and to its superstitious practices. To the 
ordinary men it seemed to be a reforming agency, insisting on a 
high moral standard, and upholding the words of Scripture 
against the traditions of an overgrown and worldly church. Its 
popular aim and its rationalistic method made men overlook 
its real contents, which were not put clearly before them. It 
may be said generally that Catharism' formed the abiding 
"backgfotmd of medieval heresy. Its dualistic system" and its 
1 anti-social principles were known only to a few, but its anti- 
ecclesiastical organization formed a permanent nucleus round 
which gathered a great deal of political and ecclesiastical dis- 
content When this discontent took any independent form of 
expressios* zeal, which was not always accompanied by dis- 
cretion, brought the movement into collision with the ecclesi- 
astical authorities, by whom it was condemned as heretical. 
When once it was in conflict with authority it was driven to 
strengthen its basis by a more pronounced hostility against the 
system of the church, and generally ended by borrowing some- 
thing from Catharism. The result was that in the beginning 
of the 13th century there was a tendency to class all bodies of 
heretics together: partly their opinions had coalesced; partly 
they were assumed to be identical. 

Most of these sects were stamped out before the period of the 
middle ages came to a close. Tnc Waldenses, under their more 
modern name of the Vaudols, have survived to the present 
day in the valleys of Piedmont, and have been regarded as at 
once the most ancient and the most evangelical of the medieval 
sects. It is, however, by no means easy to determine their 
original tenets, as in the 13th and 14th centuries they were a 
body of obscure and unlettered peasants, hiding themselves 
In a. corner, while in the 16th century they were absorbed into 
the general movement of the Reformation. As regards their 
antiquity, the attempts to claim for them an earlier origin than 
the end of the 12th century can no longer be sustained. They 
rested upon the supposed antiquity of a body of Waldensian 
literature, which modern criticism has shown to have been 
tampered with. The most important of these documents, a 
poem in Provencal, " La Nobla Leyczon," contains two lines 
which claimed for it the date of 1100:— 

Ben ha mil c cent ancz compli cnticrament 
Que fo scripta V ora, car sen al derier temp. 

But it was pointed out* that in the oldest MS. existing in the 
Cambridge university library the figure 4 had been imperfectly 
erased before the word " cent," a discovery which harmonized 
with the results of a criticism of the contents of the poem itself. 
This discovery did away with the ingenious attempts to account 
for the name of Waldenses from some other source than from 
the historical founder of the sect, Peter Waldo or Valdez. To 
get rid of Waldo, whose date was known, the name Waldenses 
or Vallenses was derived from Vallis, because they dwelt in the 
valleys, or from a supposed Provencal word Vaudes, which 
meant a sorcerer. 

Putting these views aside as unsubstantial, we will consider 
the relation of the Waldenses as they appear in actual history 
with the sects which preceded them. Already in the 9th century 
there were several protests against the rigidity and want of 
spirituality of a purely sacerdotal church. Thus Berengar of 
Tours (009-1088) upheld the symbolic character of the Eucharist 
and the superiority of the Bible over tradition. The Paterines 
in Milan (1045) raised a protest against simony and other abuses 
of the clergy, and Pope Gregory VII. did not hesitate to enlist 
their Puritanism on the side of the papacy and make them his 
allies in imposing clerical celibacy. In 1 1 10 an apostate monk 
in Zccland, Tanchelm, carried their views still farther, and 
asserted that the sacraments were only valid through the merits 
and sanctity of the ministers. In France, at Embrun, Peter de 
Bruys founded a sect known as Petrobrusians, who denied infant 
baptism, the need of consecrated churches, Uansubstantiation, 

■ Bcadshaw, in Tr*m*du>n* ef. Cambridgt Antumarum S*ie*y 
(184a). The text edited by Montet, ato (^887). 



25$ 



WALDENSES 



and manes for the dead. A follower of his, a monk, Henry, 
gave the name -to another body known as Henridans, who 
centred in Tours. The teachers of these new opinions were men 
of high character and holy lives, who in spite of persecution 
wandered from place to place, and made many converts from 
those who were dissatisfied at the want of clerical discipline 
which followed upon the struggle for temporal supremacy into 
which the reforming projects, of Gregory VII. had carried the 
church. 

It was at this time (1170) that a rich merchant of Lyons, 
Peter Waldo, sold his goods and gave them to the poor; then 
he went forth as a preacher of voluntary poverty His followers, 
the Waldenses, or poor men of Lyons, were moved by a religious 
feeling which could find no satisfaction within the actual system 
of the church, as they saw it before them. Like ^ Francis, 
Waldo adopted a life of poverty that he might be free to preach, 
but with this difference that the Waldenses preached the doctrine 
of Christ while the Franciscans preached the person of Christ, 
Waldo reformed teaching while Francis kindled love; hence 
the one awakened antagonisms which the other escaped. For 
Waldo had a translation of the New Testament made into 
Provencal, and his preachers not only stirred up men to more 
holy lives but explained the Scriptures at their will. Such an 
interference with the ecclesiastical authorities led to difficulties. 
Pope Alexander HI., who had approved of the poverty of the 
Waldensians, prohibited them from preaching without the per- 
mission of the bishops (n 79). Waldo answered that he must 
obey God rather than man. The result of this disobedience was 
excommunication by Lucius III. in 1184. Thus a reforming 
movement became heresy through disobedience to authority, 
and after being condemned embarked on a course of polemical 
investigation how to justify its own position. Some were re- 
admitted into the Catholic Church, and one, Durandus de Osca 
(1210), attempted to found an order of Pauperes Catholici, 
which was the forerunner of the order of St Dominic. Many 
were swept away in the crusade against the Albigenses (qv.). 
Others made an appeal to Innocent III., protesting their ortho- 
doxy. Their appeal was not successful, for they were formally 
condemned by the Lateran council of 121 5. 

The earliest definite account given of the Waldensian opinion 
b that of the inquisitor Sacconi about 1250. 1 He divides them 
into two classes: those north of the Alps and those of Lombardy. 
The first class hold (1) that oaths are forbidden by the gospel, 

(2) that capital punishment is not allowed to the civil power, 

(3) that any layman may consecrate the sacrament of the altar, 
and (4) that the Roman Church is not the Church of Christ. 
The Lombard sect went farther in (3) and (4), holding that no 
one in mortal sin could consecrate the sacrament, and that the 
Roman Church was the scarlet woman of the Apocalypse, whose 
precepts ought not to be obeyed, especially those appointing 
fast-days. This account sufficiently shows the difference of the 
Waldenses from the Cathari; they were opposed to asceticism, 
and had no official priesthood; at the same time their 
objection to oaths and to capital punishment are closely 
related to the principles of the Cathari. Their other opinions 
were forced upon them by their conflict with the authority of 
the Church. When forbidden to preach without the permission 
of the bishop, they were driven to assert the right of all to preach, 
without distinction of age or sex. This led to the further Btep of 
setting up personal merit rather than ecclesiastical ordination 
as the ground of the priestly office. From this followed again 
the conclusion that obedience was not due to an unworthy priest, 
and that his ministrations were invalid. 

These opinions were subversive of the system of the medieval 
church, and were naturally viewed with great disfavour by its 
officials; but it cannot fairly be said that they have much in 
common with the opinions of the Reformers of the 16th century. 
The medieval church set forth Christ as present in the orderly 
community of the faithful; Protestantism aimed at setting the 
individual in immediate communion with Christ, without the 
mechanical intervention of the officers of the community; the 

'D'Argentri, CoBectio jvdicionm d$ mmis erroribut, I 50, Ac 



Waldenses merely set forward a new criterion of the orderly 
arrangement of the church, according to which each member 
was to sit in judgment on the works of the ministers, and conse- 
quently on the validity of their ministerial acts. It was a rude 
way of expressing a desire for a more spiritual community* The 
earliest known document proceeding from the Waldensians is an 
account of a conference held at Bergamo in x 218 between the 
Ultramontane and the Lombard divisions, in which the Lom- 
bards showed a greater opposition to the recognized priesthood 
than did their northern brethren.*. 

As these opinions became more pronounced persecution became 
more severe, and the breach between the Waldenses and the 
church widened The Waldenses withdrew altogether from the 
ministrations of the church, and chose ministers for themselves 
whose merits were recognized by the body of the faithful. 
Election took the place of ordination, but even here the Lom- 
bards showed their difference from the Ultramontane*, and 
recognized only two orders, like the Cathari, while the northern 
body kept the old three orders of bishops, priests and deacons. 
Gradually the separation from the church became more complete : 
the sacraments were regarded as merely symbolical; the priests 
became helpers of the faithful; ceremonies disappeared; and 
a new religious society arose equally unlike the medieval church 
and the Protestantism of the 16th century. 

The spread of these heretical sects led to resolute attempts at 
their suppression. The crusade against the Albigensians could 
destroy prosperous cities and hand over lands from a heedless 
lord to one who was obedient to the church; but it could not 
get rid of heresy. The revival of preaching, which was the w/>rk 
of the order of St Dominic, did more to combat heresy, especially 
where its persuasions were enforced by law. The work of in- 
quisition into cases of heresy proceeded slowly in the hands of 
the bishops, who were too busy with other matters to find much 
time for sitting in judgment on theological points about which 
they were imperfectly informed. The greatest blow struck 
against heresy was the transference of the duty of inquiry into 
heresy from the bishops to Dominican inquisitors. The secular 
power, which shared in the proceeds of the confiscation of those 
who were found guilty of heresy, was ready to help in carrying 
out the judgments of the spiritual courts. Everywhere, and 
especially in the district round Toulouse, heretics were keenly 
prosecuted, and before the continued zeal of persecution the 
Waldenses slowly disappeared from the chief centres of population 
and took refuge in the retired valleys of the Alps. There, in the 
recesses of Piedmont, where the streams of the Pclice, the An- 
grogne, the Gusone and others cleave the sides of the Alps into 
valleys which converge at Susa, a settlement of the Waldensians 
was made who gave their name to these valleys of the Vaudois. 
In the more accessible regions north and south heresy was 
exposed to a steady process of persecution, and tended to assume 
shifting forms. Among the valleys it was less easily reached, 
and retained its old organization and its old contents. Little 
settlements of heretics dispersed throughout Italy and Provence 
looked to the valleys as a place of refuge, and tacitly regarded 
them as the centre of their faith. At times attempts were made 
to suppress the sect of the Vaudois, but the nature of the country 
which they inhabited, their obscurity and their isolation made 
the difficulties of their suppression greater than the advantages 
to be gained from it. However, in 1487 Innocent VIII. issued a 
bull for their extermination, and Alberto de' Capitanei, arch- 
deacon of Cremona, put himself at the head of a crusade against 
them. Attacked in Dauphine" and Piedmont at the same time, 
the Vaudois were hard pressed; but luckily their enemies were 
encircled by a fog when marching upon their chief refuge in the 
valley cf the Angrogne, and were repulsed with great loss. 
After this Charles II., duke of Piedmont, interfered to save his 
territories from further confusion, and promised the Vaudois 
peace. They were, however, sorely reduced by the onslaught 
which had been made. upon them, and lost their ancient spirit of 
independence. When the Lutheran movement began they were 
ready to sympathize with it, and ultimately to adapt their old 
' Preger, Beilriie tur Cexkkhte dtr WaUe+ier. 



WALDENSES 



257 



helfcfs to thoce of the rising ftoestant fern Already $ere were 
scattered bodies of Waldeases in Germany who had influenced, 
and afterwards joined, the Hussites and the Bohemian Brethren. 

The last step in the development of the Waldensian body was 
taken in 1530, when two deputies of the Vandois in Dauphine 
and Provence, Georges Morel and Pierre Masson, were sent to 
confer with the German and Swiss Reformers. A letter addressed 
to Oecolompadias 1 gives an account of their practices and 
beliefs at that time, and shows us a simple and unlettered 
community, which was the survival of an attempt to form an 
esoteric religious society within the medieval church. It would 
appear that its members received the sacraments of baptism 
and the holy communion from the regular priesthood, at all 
events sometimes, but maintained a discipline of their own and 
held services for their own edification. Their ministers were 
called barba, a Provencal word meaning guide. They were 
chosen from among labouring men, who at the age of twenty- 
five might ask the body of ministers to be admitted as candidates. 
If their character was approved they were taught during the 
winter months, when work was slack, for a space of three or 
four years; after that they were sent for two years to serve as 
menial assistants at a nunnery for women, which curiously enough 
existed in a recess of the valleys. Then they were admitted to 
office, after receiving the communion, by the imposition of hands 
of all ministers present. They went out to preach two by two, 
and the junior was bound absolutely to obey the senior. Clerical 
celibacy was their rule, but they admit that it created grave 
disorders. The ministers received food and clothing from the 
contributions of the people, but also worked with their hands; 
the result of this was that they were very ignorant, and also 
were grasping after bequests from the dying. The affairs of the 
church were managed by a general synod held every year. 
The duties of the barbas were to visit all within their district 
once a year, hear their confessions, advise and admonish them; 
in all services the two ministers sat side by side, and one spoke 
after the other. In point of doctrine they acknowledged the 
seven sacraments, but gave them a symbolical meaning; they 
prayed to the Virgin and saints, and admitted auricular con- 
fesskn, but they denied purgatory and the sacrifice of the mass, 
and did not observe fasts or festivals. After giving this account 
of themselves they ask for information about several points in a 
way which shows the exigencies of a rude and isolated society, 
and finally they say that they have been much disturbed by the 
Lutheran teaching about freewill and predestination, for they 
had held that men did good works through natural virtue 
stimulated by God's grace, and they thought of predestination in 
no other way than as a part of God's foreknowledge. 

Oecolampadius gave them further instruction, especially 
emphasizing the wrongfulness of their outward submission to 
the ordinances of the church: " God," he said, " is a jealous 
God, and does not permit His elect to put themselves under the 
yoke of Antichrist." The result of this intercourse was an alliance 
between the Vaudois and the Swiss and German Reformers. 
A synod was held in 153s at Chanforans in the valley of the 
Angrogne, where a new confession of faith was adopted, which 
recognized the doctrine of election, assimilated the practices of 
the Vaudois to those of the Swiss congregations, renounced for 
the future all recognition of the Roman communion, and estab- 
hshed their own worship no longer as secret meetings of a 
faithful few but as public assemblies for the glory of God. 

Thus the Vaudois ceased to be relics of the past, and became 
absorbed in the general movement of Protestantism. This was 
not. however, a source of quiet or security. In France and Italy 
alike they were marked out as special objects of persecution, 
and the Vaudois church has many records of martyrdom. The 
most severe trial to which the Vaudois of Piedmont were sub- 
jected occurred in 1655. The Congregation de Propaganda Fidt 
established, in 1650, a local council in Turin, which exercised a 
powerful influence on Duke Charles Emmanuel IL, who ordered 
that the Vaudois should be reduced within the limits of their 
indent territory. Fanaticism took advantage of this order; 
1 Scultetus, AnnaUs t ii. 394, &c. 



and an army, composed partly of French troops of Louis XIV.; 
partly of Irish soldiers who had fled before Cromwell, entered the 
Vaudois valleys and spread destruction on every side. They 
treated the people with horrible barbarity, so that the conscience 
of Europe was aroused, and England under Cromwell called on 
the Protestant powers to join in remonstrance to the duke of 
Savoy and the French king. The pen of Milton was employed 
for 1 this purpose, and his famous sonnet is but the condensation 
of his state papers. Sir Samuel Moriand was sent on a special 
mission to Turin, and to him were confided by the Vaudois 
leaders copies of their religious books, which he brought, back 
to England, and ultimately gave to the university library at 
Cambridge, Large sums of money were contributed in England 
and elsewhere, and were sent to the suffering Vaudois. 

By this demonstration of opinion peace was made for a 
time between the Vaudois and their persecutors; but it was a 
treacherous peace, and left the Vaudois with a hostile garrison 
established among them. Their worship was prohibited, and 
their chief pastor, Leger, was obliged to flee, and in his exile at 
Leiden wrote his Histoirc gbUralc des iglists vaudoises (1684). 
The revocation of the edict of Nantes in 1685 began a new period 
of persecution, which aimed at entire extermination. This was 
found so difficult that the remnant of the Vaudois, to the number 
of 2600,. were at last allowed to withdraw to Geneva. But the 
love of their native valleys was strong among the exiles, and in 
1689 one of their pastors, Henri Arnaud, led a band of 800 men 
to the reconquest of their country. His first attempts against 
the French were successful; and the rupture between Victor 
Amadeus, duke of Savoy, and Louis XIV. brought a sudden 
change of fortune to the Vaudois. They were recognized once 
more as citizens of Savoy, and in the war against France which 
broke out in 1696 the Vaudois regiment did good service for its 
duke. The peace of Utrecht saw the greater part of the French 
territory occupied by the Vaudois annexed to Savoy, and, 
though there were frequent threatening* of persecution, the 
idea of toleration slowly prevailed in the policy of the house of 
Savoy. The Vaudois, who had undergone all these vicissitudes, 
were naturally reduced to poverty, and their ministers were 
partially maintained by a subsidy from England, which was 
granted by Queen Anne. The 18th century, however, was a time 
of religious decadence even among the Alpine valleys, and the 
outbreak of the French Revolution saw the Vaudois made sub- 
jects of France. This led to a loss of the English subsidy, and 
they applied to Napoleon for an equivalent. This was granted, 
and their church was organized by the state. On the restoration 
of the house of Savoy in 1816 English influence was used on 
behalf of the Vaudois, who received a limited toleration. From 
that time onwards the Vaudois became the objects of much 
interest in Protestant countries. Large sums of money were 
collected to build hospitals and churches among their valleys, 
and they were looked upon as the possible centre of a Protestant 
church in Italy. Especially from England did they receive 
sympathy and help. An English clergyman, Dr GUly, visited 
the valleys in 1823, and by Ins writings on the Vaudois church 
attracted considerable attention, so that he was enabled to build 
a college at La Torre. Moreover, Dr GUly's book (A Visit 
to the Valleys oj Piedmont), chancing to fall into the hands of an 
officer who had lost his leg at Waterloo, Colonel Bcckwith, 
suggested an object for the energies of one who was loth at the 
age of twenty-six to sink into enforced idleness. Beckwith 
visited the valleys, and was painfully struck by the squalor and 
ignorance of a people who had so glorious a past. He settled 
among them, and for thirty-five years devoted himself to pro- 
mote their welfare. During this period he established no fewer 
than 120 schools; moreover he brought back the Italian language 
which had been displaced by the French in the services of the 
Vaudois church, and in 1849 built a church for them in Turin. 
He lived in La Torre till his death in 1862, and the name of the 
English benefactor is still revered by the simple folk of the 
valleys. (M. C.) 

The- parent church in the valleys is ecclesiastically governed 
by a court for internal affairs called the " Table/ 7 after the old 



258 



WALDERSEE— WALES 



stone table round which the ancient barbas used to sit, and a 
mission board, with an annual synod to which both the home and 
mission boards are subject. The total population of the Wal- 
densian valleys (for they also contain Roman Catholics in no 
small number) amounts to about 20,000 all told. In 1900 there 
were 16 parishes, with 18 pasteurs and 22 temples, and also a 
Sunday schools (3017 children) and 104 day schools (with 4218 
children); the full members (U. communicants) of the Wal- 
densian faith amounted to z 2,695. There were, besides, branches 
at Turin (1 temple, a pasteurs and 750 members), in other parts 
of Italy, including Sicily (46 temples and as many pasteurs, while 
the number of members was 5613, of day scholars 2704, and of 
Sunday school scholars 3707). It is also reckoned that in 
Uruguay and the Argentine Republic there are about 6000 
Waldcnsians; of these 1253 were in xooo full members,' while 
the day scholars numbered 364 and the Sunday school children 
67a 

The literature on the subject of the Waldensian and other sects is 
copious. For their rise the most important authorities are to be 
found in Moncta, Adversus Catharos et Waldenses; D'Argcntrd, 
CoUectio judiciorum de novis erroribus; Alanus, Adversus haerelicos; 
D'Achery, Spicilegia, vol. i.; Grotscr, Opera, vol. x.; Limborch, 
Histofia Inquisitionis, at the end of which is the Liter sententiarum 
of the Inquisition of Toulouse from 1307-1322. Of modern books 
may be mentioned Schmidt, Histoire des Catkares; Hahn, Ceuhuhte 
der neumanichaischen Ketzer; Dieckhoff, Die Waldenser im Mitt fl- 
atter; Prefer, Beitrage tur Gesehichte der Waldesier; Cant A, Cli 
Ertlici in Italia; Comba, Storia delta Rifarma in Italia, and Histoire 
des Vaudois d' I tali*; Tocco, L'Eresia nel medio evo; Montet, 
Histoire liltiraire des Vaudois; Lea, History of the Inquisition of 
the Middle Ages. Amongst books dealing with the more modern 
history of the Vaudois specially arc Leger, Histoire des tgtises 
vaudoises; Arnaud, Histoire de la rentree des Vaudois; Perrin, 
Histoire des Vaudois; Monasticr, Histoire de I'ctlise vaudoise; 
Muston, L Israel des Alpes; Gilly, Excursion to the Valleys of Pied- 
mont, and Researches on the Waldcnsians; Todd, The Waldensian 
Manuscripts; Melia, Origin, Persecution and Doctrines of the 
Waldensians; Jules Chevalier, Mimoires sur Us hirisiesen Dauphini 
avant le X VI* siicle, accompagnis de documents inidils sur les sorciers 
et Its Vaudois (Valence, 1890) ; J. A. Chabrand, Vaudois et Protestants 
des Alpes: recherches hiitoriques (Grenoble, 188C); H. Haupt, 
article in Von Sybet's Historische Zeitschrift (1889), pp. 39-68; 
W. A B. Coolidge, articles in the Guardian for 1 8th August 1 886 and 
4th December 1889. 

WALDERSBE, ALFRED, Count (1832-1904), Prussian 
general field marshal, came of a soldier family. Entering the 
Guard Artillery of the Prussian army in 1850, he soon attracted 
the favourable notice of his official superiors, and he made his 
first campaign (that of 1866) as aide-de-camp to General of 
Artillery Prince Charles of Prussia, with whom he was present at 
Koniggrats. In the course of this campaign Count Waldersee 
was promoted major .and placed on the general staff, and after 
the conclusion of peace he served on the staff of the X. Army 
Corps (newly formed from the conquered kingdom of Hanover). 
In January 1870 he became military attache at Paris and aide- 
de-camp to King William. In the Franco-German War Lieut.- 
Coloncl Count Waldersee, on account of both his admitted 
military talents and his recent experience of the enemy's army, 
proved a most useful assistant to the " supreme War-Lord. " 
He was present at the great battles around Metz, in which he 
played more than an orderly officer's part, and in the war against 
the republic he was specially sent to the staff of the grand duke 
of Mecklenburg-Schwerin, who was operating against Chanzy's 
army on the Loir. The grand duke was a good soldier, but not 
a brilliant strategist, and the fortunate outcome of the western 
campaign was largely due to his adviser. At the end of the war 
Waldersee received the First Class of the Iron Cross, and was 
entrusted with the exceedingly delicate and difficult post of 
German representative at Paris, in which his tact and courtesy 
were very marked. At the end of 1871 Waldersee took over the 
command of the 13th Uhlans at Hanover, and two years later 
he became chief of the staff of the Hanoverian army corps, in 
which he had served before 1870. In 1881 he became Moltke's 
principal assistant on the great general staff at Berlin, and for 
seven years was intimately connected with the great field 
marshal's work, so that, when Moltke retired in 1888, Waldersee 's 
appointment to succeed him was a foregone conclusion. Three 



years later the chief of the general staff was tent to command 
the IX. Corps at Allona, an appointment which was interpreted 
as indicating that his dose and intimate friendship with Bis- 
marck had made him, at this time of the chancellor's dismissal, 
a persona turn grata to the young emperor. In 1896, however, 
he was appointed inspector-general of the III. "Army In- 
spection " at Hanover, the order being accompanied by the 
most eulogistic expressions of the kaiser's goodwill On the 
despatch of European troops to quell the Boxer insurrection in 
China in 1900, it was agreed that Count Waldersee should have 
the supreme command of the joint forces. The preparations for 
his departure from Germany caused a good deal of satirical 
comment on what was known as the " Waldersee Rummd " or 
" theatricals." He arrived at the front, however, too late to 
direct his troops in the fighting before Peking. At the end of the 
war he returned to Europe. He resumed at Hanover his duties 
of inspector-general, which he performed almost to his death, 
which took place on the 5th of March 1004. 

WALDO, SAMUEL LOVETT (1783*1861), American artist, 
was bom in Windham, Connecticut, on the 6th of April 1783. 
He had a studio in Charleston, South Carolina. In 1806 he went 
to London, where he painted portraits for some years with 
success. In 1809 he returned to New York, and was a con- 
spicuous figure in the city's art life until his death there on the 
16th of February 1861. He became an associate of the National 
Academy in 1847. Among his works are a series of portraits of 
the early mayors of New York, now in the New York City Hall, 
a portrait of Peter Rcmsen, in possession of the New York 
Historical Society, and two portraits of John Trumbull. 

WALENSBE, also called the Lake op Walenstadt, a Swiss 
lake between the basins of the Rhine and the Linth (Limmat), 
lying S.E. of the Lake of Zurich. It is formed by the Sees river 
(descending from the Wcisstanncn glen), which once certainly 
sent its waters to the Rhine, but now enters the lake at its 
eastern end. Near its western end the Linth has been diverted 
through the Escher canal (completed in 181 1) into the lake, 
from which it soon again issues in order, by means of the Linth 
canal (completed In 18 16), to flow into the Lake of Zurich. 
The Walensee has an area of 9 sq. m., is about 9 m. in length, 
1 J m. wide and 405 ft. deep, while its surface is 1388 ft. above 
sea-level. It forms part of the Canton of St Gall, save if sq. m. 
towards its west end, which are in that of Glarus. It lies in a 
deep trench between two comparatively lofty ranges of moun- 
tains, so that its scenery is more gloomy than is usual with 
Swiss lakes. On the north shore there is but a single village of 
any size (Quint en), while above it rise the cliffs of the seven- 
peaked range of the Kurfflrstcn (7576 ft.), at the west end of 
which the village of Amdcn nestles in a hollow high above the 
lake. On the south side the hills rise less steeply from the shore 
(on which are Mfihlehorn and Murg) towards the fine terrace of 
the Kerenzenbcrg, on which are the frequented summer resorts 
of Obstaldcn and Fi Izba eh, backed on the south by the singularly 
imposing crags of the Murtsehcnstock (8012 ft.). The small 
towns of Wecsen and Walenstadt are situated respectively at 
the "western and the eastern extremities of the lake, a railway 
along the south shore of which connects them with each other 
(n m.). Since the construction of this line no steamers ply on 
the lake. (W.A.B.C.) 

WALES (Cymnt, Owalia, Cambria), a Principality occupying 
the extreme middle-west of the southern part of the island of 
Great Britain, bounded E. by the English counties of Cheshire, 
Shropshire, Herefordshire and Monmouthshire; S. by the 
Bristol Channel; W. by St George's Channel; and N. by the 
Irish Sea. . (For map see England, V.) Its area is 7467 sq. m. 
Its greatest length from N. to S. (from the Point of Air m Flint 
to Barry Island on the Glamorgan coast) is 136 m., while its 
breadth varies from 9} m. (from St Davids Head to the English 
border beyond Crickhowell) to 37 m. (the distance between 
Aberystwyth and the Shropshire boundary at Clun Forest). 
Its total circuit is about 540 m., of which 300 consist of coast- 
line. The principal headlands are Great Ormes Head in 
Carnarvonshire; BraJch-y-PwU, the most westerly point of 



WALES 



259 



e; St Davids Head, the most wetted? point of 
South Wales; Worms Head, the western extremity of Gower; 
and Lavernock Point to the W. of Cardiff. The principal islands 
are Holy Island, off the W. coast -of Anglesea; Bardsey (Ynys 
Enlli), near Brsich-y-Pwll; and the islands of Ramsey, Grass- 
holm, Skomer, Skokholmand Caldy (Ynys Pyr) off the Pembroke- 
shire coast. The chief inlets are the mouth of the Dee, dividing 
Flint from Cheshire; the Menai Straits, separating Anglcsca 
from the mainland; Carnarvon Bay; Cardigan Bay, stretching 
from Braich-y-Pwll to St Davids Head; St Brides Bay; 
Idferd Haven; Carmarthen Bay; and Swansea Bay. 

In common parlance, as wdl as for judicial purposes of circuits, 
the Principality is divided into North Wales and South Wales, each 
«f which consists of six counties. 



North Wales, 




Anglcsca (Ynys Fon) . 
Carnarvon (Sir Arf on) . 
Denbigh (Sir Dinbych). . 
Flint (Sir Faint) .... 
Merioneth (Sir Fdrionydd). . 
Montgomery (Sir Drefaldwyn) . 


Acreage. 


Population 
(1901). 


176,630 
361,156 
433.499 
164,744 
427,810 
510,111 


50,606 
126.883 
I £9.942 
81,700 
49*149 
54.901 



South Wales. 



Brecon or Brecknock (Sir Fry- 

cbeintog) 

Cardigan (Sir Aberteifi) 
Carmarthen (So* Gaerfyrddin) . 
Glamorgan (Sir Forganwg) . 
Pembroke (Sir Benfro). 
Radnor (Sir Facsyfed) . . 


Acreage. 


Population 
(1901). 


475.2*4 

$% 

518,863 
395.15" 
301,164 


59.907 
60,240 
£35.328 
859,93« 
88,732 
23,281 



Mountains. — Almost the whole surface of Wales is mountainous 
or undulating. The most important hill system is that of the North 
Wales mountains, covering the county of Carnarvon and parts of 
Merioneth and Denbigh, wherein the Snowdonian range reaches the 
kefcht of 357 « ft. in Snowdon itself; of 3484 ft. in Carncdd Llywelyn; 
and of 3426 ft in Camedd Dafydd. South of this system, and 
separated from it by the upper valley of the Dec, the Bcrwyn range 
extends from N.E. to S.E., and is itself adjacent to Aran-fawddy 
(2970 ft.), the highest point in the Cader Idris group. The system of 
Mid-Wales or Powys stretches from Cardigan Bay to the English 
border, and contains Plinlimmon (2462 ft.) in north Cardigan; 
Drygarn Fawr (21 15 ft.) in north Brecon; and Radnor Forest 
{2163 ft.) in mid-Radnor. From Plinlimmon a range of hills runs in 
a KMith-westerly direction towards St Davids, terminating in the 
PreseOy range of north Pembroke (1760 ft) and dividing the broad 
▼alleys of the Teifi and Towy. The three combined ranges of the 
Black Mountains, the Brecknock Beacons and the Black Forest 
sweep across south Brecon from W. to E., the chief elevations being 
the Carmarthen Van (2632 ft), the Brecon Beacon (2862 ft) and 
Frn-y-gader fawr (2660 ft.) near the English border. 

Lakes and Rmrs.— Small lakes, such as Uyn Ogwen, Uyn Safaddao 
(Llangorse Lake), Talyllyn, the Tcifi Pools, Stc, are fairly numerous 
in the mountainous districts, but the only natural lake of Importance 
is Bala Lake, or Uyn Tcgid, in Merionethshire, 4 m. long and about 
1 m. wide But the great reservoir known as Lake Vyrnwy, which 
supplies Liverpool with water, is equal in size to Bala; and the 
chain of four artificial lakes constructed by the Birmingham cor- 
...... ..^ «. . ~ 1 a large area 



Deration in the valleys of the Elan and Claerwen covi 
» west Radnorshire. The longest river in Wales is the Severn 
(180 jb.), in Welsh Hafren; which rises in Plinlimmon, and takes a 
aortb-easterfy direction through Montgomeryshire before reaching 
the English border. The Wye (130 m.) also rises in Plinlimmon, 
and forms for some 30 m. the boundary between the counties of 
Radnor and Brecon before encountering English soil near Hay. 
The Uek (56 m.) flows through Breconsnire, and loins the Bristol 
Channel at Newport in Monmouthshire. The Dee (70 m.) traverses 
Bala Lake, and drains parts of the counties of Merioneth, Denbigh 
and Flint The Towy (68 m.) flows through Carmarthenshire, 
entering Carmarthen Bay at Llanstephan; the Teifi (50 m.) rises 
near Tregaron and faffs into Cardigan Bay below the town of Cardi* 
~" ~ ' Jf amongst the Brecon Beacons, enters 



fan. The Taff (40 m.), risii 
the Bristol Channel at " 



Other rivers are the Dovey (30 m.). 



fafiing into Cardigan Bay at Aberdovey; the Taf (25 m.), entering 
Carmarthen Bay at Laugharner and the broad navigable Conway 
(24 nv). dividing the counties of Carnarvon and Denbigh. 

Welsh Plocc-N antes. —Tht place-names throughout the 
Principality may be said to group themselves roughly Into four 



division* 0.) Pun and unaltered Celtic names; (ii.) Corrupted 
or abbreviated Celtic names; (iiL) English names; (iv.) Scan- 
dinavian and foreign names. To the first division belong the 
vast majority of place-names throughout the whole of Wales 
and Monmouthshire. Except in some districts of the Marches 
and in certain tracts lying along the South Wales coast, nearly all 
parishes, villages; hamlets, farms, houses, woods, fields, streams 
and valleys possess native appellations, which in most cases are 
descriptive of natural situation, e.g. Naniyfm, the boundary 
brook; Abcrporth, mouth of the harbour; Talybont, end of the 
bridge; Troedyrhm, foot of the hill; Dyfryn, a valley, &c. 
Other place-names imply a personal connexion in addition to 
natural features, e.g. NanlygoJ, the blacksmith's brook; Trefecca, 
the house of Rebecca; Uwyn Modoc, Madoc's grove; Pant- 
saeson, the Saxons' glen, &c An historical origin is frequently 
commemorated, notably in the many foundations of the Celtic 
missionaries of the 5th, 6th and 7th centuries, wherein the word 
Uan (church) precedes a proper name; thus every Llanddcwi 
recalls the early labours of Dewi Sant (St David); every Lion- 
deilo, those of St Teilo; and such names as Llandudno, LI am fan, 
Uanbadarn and the like commemorate SS. Tudno, Afan, 
Padarn, &C. To the second division— those place-names which 
have been corrupted by English usage — belong most of the older 
historic towns, in striking contrast with the rural villages and 
parishes, which in nearly all cases have retained unaltered their 
original Celtic names. Anglicized in spelling and even to some 
extent changed in sound are Carmarthen (Caerfyrddin); Pem- 
broke (Penfro); Kidwelly (Cydwcli); Cardiff (Caerdydd); 
lianArwry (Lianymddyfri); while Lampeter, in Welsh Llanbcdr- 
pont-Stephan, affords an example of a Celtic place-name both 
Anglicized and abbreviated. In not a few instances modern, 
English nomenclature has supplanted the old Welsh place- 
names in popular usage, although the town's original appellation 
is retained in Welsh literature and conversation, e.g. Holyhead 
is Caergybi (fort of Cybi, a Celtic missionary of the 6th century); 
Presteign is Uanandras (church of St Andrew, or Andras); 
St Asaph is Llanelwy; the English name commemorating the 
reputed founder of the see, and the Welsh name recalling the 
church's original foundation on t he banks of the El wy. Cardigan, 
in Welsh Aberteifi, from its situation near the mouth of the 
Teifi, and Brecon, in Welsh Abcrhonddu, from its site near the 
confluence of the Usk and Honddu, are examples of corrupted 
Welsh names in common use— Ceredigion, Brychan— which 
possess in addition pure Celtic forms. In the third division, 
English place-names are tolerably frequent everywhere and pre- 
dominate in the Marches and on the South Wales coast. Even in 
so thoroughly Welsh a county as Cardiganshire, English place- 
names are often to be encountered, e.g. New Quay, High Mead, 
Oakford, &c; but many of such names are of modern invention, 
dating chiefly from the x8th and 10th centuries. Of the many 
English names occurring in south Pembroke and south Glamor- 
gan, some are exact or fanciful translations of the original Welsh, 
e.g. Cowbridge (Pontyfon) and Ludckurch (Eglwys Llwyd), others 
are of direct external origin, as Bishopstonc, Flemingstone, 
Butter Hill, Briton Ferry, Manselfield, &c. Names derived 
straight from an Anglo-Norman source are rare; Beaupre, 
Beaumaris, Beaufort, Fleur-de-lis, Roche, may be cited as ex- 
amples of such. Scandinavian influence can easily be traced 
at various points of the coast-line, but particularly in south 
Pembrokeshire, wherein occur such place-names as Caldy, Tenby, 
Goodwick, Dale, Skokholm, Hakin and Milford Haven. Speci- 
mens of Latinized names in connexion with ecclesiastical founda- 
tions are preserved in Strata Florida and Valfe Cruris Abbeys. 
Hybrid place-names are occasionally to be met with in the 
colonized portions of Wales, as in Gclliswick (a combination 
of the Celtic gelli, a hazel grove, and the Norse wick, a haven), 
and in Fletherhill, where the English suffix hill is practically a 
translation of the Celtic prefix. A striking peculiarity of the 
Principality is the prevalence of Scriptural place-names; a 
circumstance due undoubtedly to the popular religious move- 
ments of the loth century. Not only are such names as Horeb, 
Zion, Penuel, Siloh, etc., bestowed on Nonconformist chapels, 



26o 



WALES 



but these Biblical terms have likewise been applied to their sur- 
rounding houses, and in not a few instances to growing towns 
and villages. A notable example of this curious nomenclature 
occurs in Bethesda, Carnarvonshire, where the name of the 
Congregational chapel erected early in the 10th century has 
altogether supplanted the original Celtic place-name of Cilfbden. 
But although English and foreign place-names are fairly numer- 
ous throughout Wales, yet the vast majority remain Celtic either 
in a pure or in a corrupted form, so that some knowledge of the 
Celtic language is essential to interpret their meaning. 

A small glossary of some of the more common component words is 
appended below. 

Abet, the mouth or estuary of a river— Aberystwyth, Abergwili 

Ack, water — Clydach, Clarach. 

Afon, a river— a word which retains its primitive meaning in 
Wale*, whilst it has become a proper name in England— GlanaTon, 
Manorafon. 

Bcltws, a corrupt form of the English " bead-house/ or possibly 
of the Latin " beatus " — Bcttws-y-cocd, Bettws Ifan. 

Blaen, the top — Blaendyffrvn. Blaencwm. 

Bod, house or abode — Bodluan, Hafod. 

Bron, the human breast, hence breast of bill— Brongcst, Cil- 
bronnau. 

Bryn, a hill— Brynmawr, Penbryn. 

Bwick, a gap — Bwlchbychan, Tanybwlch. 

Cat, a field — Cacglas, Tynycae, 

Caer, a fortress or fortified camp— Caerlleon, Caersws. 

Capd, a corrupt form of the Latin " capclla " applied to chapels, 
ancient and recent — Capd Dcwi, Capcl-issaf, Parc-y<apd. 

Cam, a cairn or heap of stones — Mod-trigarn. 

Carnedd, a tumulus— Camedd Llywelyn. 

Cefn, a ridge— Cefn-Mably. Cdn-y-bedd. 

Cu, a retreat, said to be akin to the Goiddic kil— Ciliau-Acron, 
Cilcennin. 

CJrwc, a knoU or mound— Cnwcglas (Anglicized into Knucklas, in 
Radnorshire). 

Coed, a wood — Coedmawr, Penycoed. 

Craig, a rock or crag — Pcn-y-graig. 

Crit , a heap or barrow — Crflg Mawr, Trichrflg. 

Cxem, a low valley, Anglicized into " coomb " — Cwra Gwendraeth, 
Blaencwm. 

Din, a fortified hill, hence Dinas, a fortified town — Dinefawr. Pen 
Dinas. 

Dot, a meadow — Dolwilym, Dolau. 

Dxer, Dwfr, water— Glyndwrdu. the patrimony of the celebrated 
Owen Glendowcr, of which his Anglicized name is a corruption. 

Eghrys, a corruption of the Latin ecclesia," a church— Eglwyswrw, 
Tanyreglwys. 

Colli, in North Wales a steep slope; in South Wales a hanging 
wood— Galltyfyrddin. Pcnytallt. 

Celii, a grove — Gdlideg. Pengclly Forest. 

Clan, a bank — Glanyro6r, Glandofan. 

Clyn, a glen or narrow valley— Glyncothi, Tyglyn. 

Ltam, a sacred enclosure, hence a church — a most interesting and 
important Celtic prefix— Uandcilo, Uansaint. 

Lieck, a stone — Llechryd. Trellcch. 

L/xyn, a grove — Pcnllwyn, Llwynybran. 

Uys, a court or palace — Henllys, Ll> sowen. 

Maes, open landYor battlefield— Maes> fed (the Welsh name for 
Radnorshire), Maesllwch. 

JW\W. bald, hence a bare hill-top— Modfre. 

Mor, the sea — Brynmor, Gtanymdr. 

Mrnydd, mountain — Llanfynydd, Mynydd Dft. 

Nant, a n\w, hence also a brook— Nantgwylk, Nannau, Nant- 
garrdig. 

Pant, a glen or hollow— Pantycdyn, BlaenpanL. 

Pare, an enclosed field— Parc-y-Marw, Penparc 

Pen, a summit — PonmacnmawT, Pcnmark. 

Pont, a bridge, a corruption of the Latin " poos"-- Pont- 
airwen. Talybout. 

Port k. a gate or harbour — perhaps a corrupt form of the Latin 



h. Pump Porth ("the Five Gates "). 



SMBstS$s^as«AH, 

: nan paved 

**f-T(k4n, Sdt«Au. Sam JisVw. 

r*t. *m nwk\ aho heU -Talttft T*fy%*~ 

l-He***f , Cantrcf y- 




Ty*r*r^l af »n«cfcty, 

ncr, t*t*rved in the 
wtH, Wye cr Cnry. 
^i^t-V^Esi (tb 



used of the guest-house of an abbey— Yspytty Ystwyth. Tafarn 

Spite. 

Ystrad, a meadow or rich lowland — Ystrad Mynach, T.lanfihangd 
Ystrad. 

Population.— The total population of the twelve counties 
of the Principality was: 1,360,513 (1881), 1,519,035 (1801), 
1,720,600 (1001). These figures prove a steady upward tendency, 
but the increase itself is confined entirely to the industrial 
districts of the Principality, and in a special degree to Glamorgan- 
shire; while the agricultural counties, such as Pembroke, 
Merioneth, Cardigan or Montgomery, present a continuous 
though slight decrease owing to local emigration to the centres 
of industry. The whole population of Wales in Tudor, Stuart 
and early Georgian times can scarcdy have exceeded 500,000 
souls, and was probably less. But with the systematic develop- 
ment of the vast mineral resources of the South Wales coalfield, 
the population of Glamorganshire has increased at a more rapid 
rate than that of any other county of the United Kingdom, so 
that at present this county contains about half the population 
of all Wales. . It will be noted, therefore, that the vast mass of the 
inhabitants of Wales are settled in the industrial area which 
covers the northern districts of Glamorganshire and the south- 
eastern corner of Carmarthenshire; whilst central Wales, com- 
prising the four counties of Cardigan, Radnor, Merioneth and 
Montgomery, forms the least populous portion of the Principality. 
The following towns had each in 1901 a population exceeding 
10,000: Cardiff, Ystradyfodwg, Swansea, Merthyr Tydfil, 
Aberdare, Pontypridd, Llanelly, Ogmore and Garw, Pembroke, 
Caerphilly, Macsteg, Wrexham, Penarth, Neath, Festiniog, 
Bangor, Holyhead, Carmarthen. Only four towns in North 
Wales are included in these eighteen, and the combined popula- 
tions of these four — Wrexham (14,066), Festiniog (11,435), 
Bangor (11,269) ™d Holyhead (10,070)— fall far below that of 
Merthyr Tydfil (69,228), the fourth largest town in Glamorgan- 
shire. 

Industries.— The chid mineral product of the Principality is coal, 
of which the output amounts to over 23,000,000 tons annually. 
The great South Wales coalfield, one of the largest in the kingdom, 
covers the greater part of Monmouthshire and Glamorganshire, the 
south-eastern corner of Carmarthenshire, and a small portion of 
south Pemb. akeshire, and the quality of its coal is especially suitable 
for smdting purposes and for use in steamships. The supply of 
limestone and ironstone in Glamorganshire is said to be practically 
unlimited. About 400,000 tons of p»g iron are produced yearly, and 
some of the largest iron-works in the world are situated at Merthyr 
Tydfil and Dowlais. Copper, tin and lead works are everywhere 
numerous in the busy valleys of north Glamorgan and in the neigh- 
bourhoods of Swansea, Neath. Cardiff and Llandly. In North 
Wales, Wrexham, Ruabon and Chirk are centres of coal-mining in- 
dustry. There are valuable copper mines in Anglesea, and lead 
mines in Flint and in north Cardiganshire, which also yield a certain 
deposit of silver ore. Gold has been discovered and worked, though 
only to a small extent, in Merionethshire and Carmarthenshire. 
Slate, quarries are ve.y numerous throughout the Principality, the 
finest quality of slate being obtained in the neighbourhood of Bangor 
and Carnarvon, where the Penrhyn and Bethesda quarries give 
employment to many thousands of workmen. 

By far the larger portion of Wales is purely agricultural in-char- 
actec. and much of the valley land is particularly fertile, notably 
the Vale of Glamorgan, the Vale of Clwyd and the valleys of the 
Towy. the Tdfi. the Usk and the W\e, Which have long been cele- 
brated for their rich pastures. The holdings throughout Wales are 
for the most part smaller in extent than the average farms of England. 
Stock-raising is generally preferred to the growing of cereals, and 
in western Wales the oat crops exceed in sue those of wheat and 
barley. The extensive tracts of unen cl osed and often unimprovable 
land, which still cover a large area in the Principality, especially in 
the five counties of Cardigan, Radnor. Brecon, Montgomery and 
Xlcrioncth. support numerous Bocks of the small mountain sheep. 
the flesh of which supplies the highly prised Wdsh mutton. The 
wool of the sheep n manufactured into flannd at numberle s s factories 
in the various country towns, and the supply meets an important 
local demand. The upland tracts aho afford good pasturage for a 
■umber of cobs and ponies, nhich obtain high prices at the local 
fairs, and Pembrokeshire and Cardiganshire have long been famous 
for their breed of horses and ponies* The cattle of Wales present all 



and porn 
varieties of race, the Hereford breed prevailing in the 
coun ties, and Shorthorns and the black Castlemartins in the south- 
western parts. The great herds of goats, »hkh in medieval times 
nsb sw icd on the Wefeh hilK have entirely disappeared since the 
general adoption of the ahcep-farmiag industry. 



WALES 



261 



The deep-tea fisheries on the south-western coasts are of tome 
importance; the Mumbles, Tenby and Milford Haven being the 
chief centres of this industry. Lobsters and crabs are caught in 
Cardigan Bay, and oysters are found at various points of the Pent' 
broscabire coast. The large riven produce salmon, which are 
usually sent to the great towns for sale. The Wye, the Usk, the Dee. 
the Dovcy, the TetfL the Towy and most of the Welsh rivers and. 
lakes are frequented by anglers for salmon and trout. 

C*mmttnic4tfums.--Thc two principal railways serving the Princi- 
pality are the London & North-Western, which paasea along the 
North Wales coast-line by way of Conway and Bangor, crosses the 
Menai Strait and has its terminus at Holyhead; and the Great 
Western, which traverses South. Wales by way of Cardiff, Landore, 
UaneUy and Carmarthen, and has its principal terminal station at 
Fishguard Harbour. The lines of the Cambrian railway serve North 
and Mid- Wales, and branches of the London & North-Western and 
the Midland penetrate into South Wales as far as Swansea. A net- 
work of lines connects the great industrial districts of Glamorganshire 
with the main tine of the Great Western railway. There are steam- 
ship s er v ices be tw ee n Holyhead and Dublin in connexion with the 
trains of the London & North-Western railway; and an important 
traffic for dairy produce, live-stock and passengers between Fish- 
guard and Rosslare on the Irish coast was opened in 1906 in con- 
nexion with the Great Western railway. There is also a boat service 
b e t weeu Holyhead and Greenore on the Ulster coast. Steamboats 
likewise ply between Milford, Tenby, Swansea and Cardiff and 
Bristol; also between Swansea and Cardiff and Dublin; and there 
b a regular service between Swansea and Ilfracombe. The principal 
canals are the Swansea, the Neath, the Aberdare A Glamorgan, 
and the Brecon & Abergavenny, all worked in connexion with the 
industrial districts of north GUmorganshire. 

Ga rni nmtn t.—ln all acts of parliament Wales is invariably 
included under the term of " England and Wales," and whenever 
an act, or any section of an act, is intended to apply to the 
Principality alone, then Wales is always coupled with Monmouth- 
shire. Trie extinction of the Welsh Court of Great Sessions in 
1830 served to remove the last relic of separate jurisdiction in 
Wales itself, but in 1881 special legislation was once more 
inaugurated by the Welsh Sunday Closing Act (46, Victoria)! 
forbidding the sale of spirituous liquors by all inn-keepers on 
Sundays to any bat bona fide travellers throughout Wales and 
Monmouthshire, A separate act on behalf of Welsh education 
was likewise passed in 1889, when the Welsh Intermediate Educa- 
tion Act made special provision for intermediate and technical 
education throughout the Principality and Monmouthshire. 
Except for the administration of these two special acts, the 
system of government in Wales is identical in every respect with 
that of England (see England and United Kingdom). Royal 
rotnmtsfltoos dealing with questions peculiar to Wales have 
been issued from time to time, notably of recent years, in the 
Welsh Land Tenure Commission of 1893, and the Welsh Church 
Commission of xooo (see History)* 

JWigt<m.— Ecclesiastically, the whole of Wales lies within 
the province of Canterbury. The four Welsh sees, however, 
extend beyond the borders of the twelve counties, for they 
include the whole of Monmouthshire and some portions of the 
English border shires; on the other hand, the sees of Hereford 
and Chester encroach upon the existing Welsh counties. The 
diocese of St Davids (Tyddewi), the largest, oldest and poorest 
of the four Cambrian sees, consists of the counties of Pembroke, 
Carmarthen and Cardigan, almost the whole of Brecon, the 
greater part of Radnor, and west Glamorgan with Swansea and 
Gower. The cathedral church of St Davids is situated near 
the remote headland of St Davids in Pembrokeshire, but the 
episcopal residence has been fixed ever since the Reformation 
at Abergwili near Carmarthen, the most central spot in this 
vast diocese. The see of Llandafl comprises Monmouthshire, 
all Glarnorganshire as far west as the Tawe, and some parishes 
in Brecon and Hereford. The diocese of Bangor consists of the 
counties of Anglesea, Carnarvon and large portions of Merioneth 
and Montgomery. The diocese of St Asaph (Llanelwy) consists 
of the county of Denbigh, nearly the whole of Flint, with 
portions of Montgomery, Merioneth and Shropshire. 

Since the beginning of the 19th century dissent has been 
strongly represented in the Principality, the combined numbers 
of the various Nonconformist bodies far outstripping the ad- 
herents of the Church. Universally accepted statistics as to 
the various religious bodies it has been found impossible to. 



obtain, but the Report (1910) of the Welsh Church Commission 
stated that, exclusive of Roman Catholics, there were 743,361 
communicants or fully admitted members of some denomination, 
of whom 193*081 were Churchmen and 550,280 Nonconformists. 
The gentry and landowners are all, broadly speaking, members 
of the established Church, but it is impossible to name any 
other class of society as belonging definitely either to " Church " 
or u Chapel" According to the above Report, the three most 
powerful dissenting bodies in Wales are the Congregationalists 
or Independents, whose members number 175,147 throughout 
Wales and Monmouthshire; the Catvinistic Methodists— a direct 
offshoot of the Church since the schism of 181 1— with a mem- 
bership of 170,6x7; and the Baptists, 143.835. Weskyan and 
Presbyterian chapels are likewise numerous, and the Unitarian 
or Sodnian body has long been powerful in the valley of the 
Teifi. Nearly every existing sect is represented in Wales, in- 
cluding Swedenborgiass and Moravians. The Roman Catholic 
Church has many followers amongst the labouring population of 
Irish descent in the industrial districts. The diocese of Newport 
(known till 1806 as Newport and Menevia) consists of the counties 
of Monmouth, Glamorgan and Hereford; whilst the remaining 
eleven counties were in 1895 formed into the Vicariate of Wales, 
which in 1898 was erected into a diocese under a bishop with 
the title of Menevia. Since the expulsion of the religious orders 
from France in 1903 several communities of French monks and 
nuns have taken up their abode in the Principality. 

History— Ai the time of the Roman invasion of Britain, 
55 B.C., four distinct dominant tribes, or families, are enumerated 
west of the Severn, vis. the Decangi, owning the island of 
Anglesea (Ynys Fdn) and the Snowdonian district; the Or- 
dovices, inhabiting the modern counties of Denbigh, Flint and 
Montgomery; the Dimetae, in the counties of Cardigan, Car- 
marthen and Pembroke; and the Silures, occupying the counties 
of Glamorgan, Brecknock, Radnor and Monmouth. It is 
interesting to note that the existing four Welsh sees of Bangor, 
St Asaph, St Davids and UandafT correspond in the main with 
the limits of these four tribal divisions. On the advance of 
Ostorius into western Britain, he met with considerable resist- 
ance from Caractacus (Caradog), king of the Silures, but after 
some encounters this prince was eventually captured and sent 
in chains to Rome. The partial conquest by Ostorius was 
completed under Julius Frontinus by the year 78, after which 
the Romans set to work in order to pacify and develop their 
newly annexed territory. At this period the copper mines of 
Mona or Anglesea, the silver mines near Plinlimmon and the gold 
mines in the valley of the Cothi in Carmarthenshire were ex- 
ploited and worked with some success by the conquerors. In 
spite of the mountainous and boggy character of the country, 
roads were now constructed in all directions. Of these the most 
important are the military road leading S. from Deva (Chester) 
by way of Uriconium (Wroxeter) and Gobannium (Abergavenny) 
to Isca Silurum (Caerleonron-Usk) and Vcnta Silurum (Caer- 
went); another from Deva to Conovium (Conway), whence a 
road, the Sara Helen, extended due S. to Carmarthen {Mari- 
dunum), by way of Loventium (Pont Llanio), which was also 
connected with Gobannium; from Maridunum a road led E. 
through the modern county of Glamorgan by way of Leucarum 
(Loughor) and Nidum (Neath) to Venta Silurum. With the 
accession of Constantine, Christianity was Introduced by the 
Romans into the parts of Wales already colonised, and the 
efforts of the Roman priests were later supplemented during 
the 5th, 6th and 7th centuries by the devoted labours of Celtic 
missionaries, of whom nearly five hundred names still remain 
on record. Foremost in the work of preaching and educating 
were SS. David, Tello, Illtyd and Cadoc in Dyfed, Morganwg, 
Gwent and Brycheiniog, comprising South Wales; Cyntto, Afan 
and Padarn in Ceredigion and Maesyfed, or Mid-Wales; and 
Deiniol, Dunawd, Beuno, Kentigern and Asaph in North Wales. 
To this period succeeding the fall of the Roman power is also 
ascribed the foundation of the many great Celtic monasteries, of 
which Bangor-Iscoed on the Dee, Bardscy Island, Llancarvan 
and Uantwit Major in the Vale of Glamorgan, Caerleon-on-Usk 



26a 



WALES 



and St Davids are amongst the most celebrated in early 
Welsh ecclesiastical annals. With the withdrawal of the Roman 
legions, the recognized powers of the Dux BrUatinumm, the 
Roman official who governed the upper province of Britain, 
were in the 5th century assumed by the Celtic prince Cunedda 
under the title of Gwledig (the Supreme), who fixed his court 
and residence at Deganwy, near the modern Llandudno. During 
the 6th century the battle of. Deorham gained by the West 
Saxons in 577 cut off communication with Cornwall, and in 
613 the great battle of Chester^ won by King Ethelfrith, pre- 
vented the descendants of Cunedda from ever again asserting 
their sovereignty Over Strathdyde; the joint effect, therefore, 
of these two important Saxon victories was to isolate Wales 
and at the same time to put an end to all pretensions of its 
rulers as the inheritors of the ancient political claims of the 
Roman governors of the northern province of Britain. The 8th 
century saw a further curtailment of the Welsh territories under 
Offa, king of Mercia, who annexed Shrewsbury (Amwythig) and 
Hereford (Henfordd) with their surrounding districts, and 
constructed the artificial boundary known as OfiVs Dyke running 
due N. and S. from the mouth of the Dee to that of the Wye. 
It was during these disastrous Mercian wars that there first 
appeared on the Welsh coasts the Norse and Danish pirates, 
who harried and burnt the small towns and flourishing 
monasteries on the shores of Cardigan Bay and the Bristol 
Channel. In the 9th century, however, the Welsh, attacked by 
land and sea, by Saxons and by Danes, at length obtained a 
prince capable of bringing the turbulent chieftains of hiscountry 
into obedience, and of opposing the two sets of invaders of his 
realm. This was Rhodri Mawr, or Roderick the Great, a name 
always cherished in Cymric annals. Like Alfred of Wessex, 
Rhodri also built a fleet in order to protect Anglesea, *' the 
mother of Wales," bo called on account of its extensive corn- 
fields which supplied barren Gwynedd with provisions. In 877 
Rhodri, after many vicissitudes, was slain in battle, and his 
dominions of Gwynedd (North Wales), Deheubarth (South 
Wales) and Powys (Mid Wales) were divided amongst his three 
sons, AnarawcV, Cadell and Mervyn. Consolidation of Cambro- 
British territory was found impossible; there was no settled 
capital; and the three princes fixed their courts respectively 
at Aberffraw in Anglesea, at Dynevor (Dinerawr) near Llandilo 
in Deheubarth, and at Mathrafal in Powys. Howel, son of 
Cadell, commonly known as Howel Dda the Good, is ever 
celebrated in Welsh history as the fraraer, or rather the codifier, 
of the ancient laws of his country, which were promulgated to 
the people at his hunting lodge, Ty Gwyn ar Taf, near the 
modern Whit land. In Howcl's code the prince of Gwynedd 
with his court at Aberffraw is recognized as the leading monarch 
in Wales; next to him ranks the prince of Deheubarth, and 
third in estimation is the prince of Powys. The laws of Howel 
Dda throw a flood of interesting light upon the ancient customs 
and ideas of early medieval Wales, but as their standard of 
justice is founded on a tribal and not a territorial system of 
society, it is easy to understand the antipathy with which the 
Normans subsequently came to regard this famous code. The 
dissensions of the turbulent princes of Gwynedd, Powys and 
Deheubarth, and of their no less quarrelsome chieftains, now 
rent the country, which was continually also a prey to Saxon 
incursions by land and to Scandinavian attacks by sea. Some 
degree of peace was, however, given to the distracted country 
during the reign of Llewelyn ap Seissyllt, the husband of Ang- 
harad, heiress of Gwynedd, who at length secured the over- 
lordship or sovereignty of all Wales, and reigned till toss. His 
son, Griffith ap Llewelyn, who, after having been driven into 
exile, recovered his father's realm in the battle of Pencader, 
Carmarthenshire, in 1041, for many years waged a war of 
Varying success against Harold, earl of Wessex, but in 106 a he 
was treacherously slain, and Harold placed Wales under the old 
king's half-brothers, Bleddyn and Rhiwallon. 

With the advent of the Normans, William the Conqueror, with 
the object of placing a firm feudal barrier between Wales and the 
earldom of Mercia, erected three palatine counties along the 



Cymric frontier. Thus Hugh the "Woff was placed in Chester, 
(Caer), .Roger de Montgomery at Shrewsbury and William Fitz- 
Osbern at Hereford. In 1081 William himself visited the Princi- 
pality, and even penetrated as far west as St Davids. But the 
most important result of this first Norman invasion was to be 
found in the marvellous and rapid success of Robert Fitz-Hamon, 
earl of Gloucester, who, accompanied by a number of knightly 
adventurers, quickly overran South Wales, and erected a chain of 
castles stretching from the Wye to Milford Haven. The rich 
low-lying lands of Morganwg and Gwcnt were thus firmly 
occupied, nor were they ever permanently recovered by the 
Welsh princes; and such natives as remained were kept in 
subjection by the almost impregnable fortresses of stone erected 
at Caerphilly, Cardiff, Cowbridge, Neath, Kidwelly and other 
places. The important castles of Carmarthen and Pembroke 
were likewise built at this period. At the accession of William 
Rufus the domain of Gwynedd had been reduced to Anglesea 
and the Snowdonian district,, and that of South Wales, or 
Deheubarth, to the lands contained in thebasinsof the rivers Towy 
and Teifi, known as Ystrad Tywi and Ceredigion. Griffith ap 
Cynan, of the royal house of Gwynedd, who had been first an 
exile in Ireland, and later a prisoner at Chester, once more 
returned to his native land, and defied the Norman barons with 
success, whilst Henry I. vainly endeavoured to make his liege 
and follower, Owen of Powys, ruling prince in Wales. Meanwhile 
the house of Dynevor once more rose to some degree of power 
under Griffith ap Rhys, whose father, Rhys ap Tudor, had been 
slain in 1093. The confused reign of Stephen was naturally 
favourable to the development of Cymric liberty, and with such 
strong princes as Owen, son of Griffith ap Cynan, heir to the 
throne of Gwynedd, and with Griffith ap Rhys ruling at Dynevor, 
the prospects of the Cymry grew brighter. In 1136 the army of 
Griffith ap Rhys met with a large English force near Cardigan, 
composed of the denizens of the South Wales castles and of the 
hated Flemish colonists, who had been lately planted by Henry I. 
in Dyfed. A fierce engagement took place wherein the Norman 
and Flemish troops were utterly routed, and the victorious 
Cymry slew thousands of their fugitives at the fords of the Teifi 
close to the town of Cardigan. The following year (1137) »w 
the deaths of the two powerful princes, Griffith ap Cynan, " the 
sovereign and protector and peacemaker of all Wales," and 
Griffith ap Rhys, " the light and the strength and the gentleness 
of the men of the south." "With the accession of Henry II. 
peace was made with Owen of Gwynedd, the successor of Griffith 
ap Cynan, and with Rhys ap Griffith of South Wales. In 1169 
Owen Gwynedd died and was buried in Bangor cathedral after 
a reign of 33 years, wherein he had successfully defended his own 
realm and had done much to bring about that union of all Wales 
which his grandson was destined to complete. On the other 
hand, " The Lord Rhys," as he is usually termed, did homage 
to Henry II. at Pembroke in n 71, and was appointed the royal 
justiciar of all South Wales. At the castle of Cardigan in .1176, 
Prince Rhys held a historic bardic entertainment, or eisteddfod, 
wherein the poets and harpists of Gwynedd and Deheubarth 
contended in amicable rivalry. This enlightened prince died in 
1196, and as at his death the house of Dynevor ceased to be of 
any further political importance, the overlordship of all Wales 
became vested indisputably in the house of Gwynedd, which 
from this point onwards may be considered as representing in 
itself alone the independent principality of Wales. The prince 
of Gwynedd henceforth considered himself as a sovereign, 
independent, but owing a personal allegiance to the king of 
England, and it was to obtain a recognition of his rights as such 
that Llewelyn ap Iorwerth, " the Great," consistently strove 
under three English kings, and though his resources were small, 
it seemed for a time as though he might be able by uniting his 
countrymen to place the recognized autonomy of Gwynedd on 
a firm and enduring basis. By first connecting himself with John 
through his marriage with the English king's daughter Joan, by 
straining every nerve to repress dissensions and enforce obedience 
amongst the Welsh chieftains, and later by allying himself with 
the English barons against his suzerain, this prince during a 



WALES 



263 



reign of 44 years was enabled to give a considerable amount of 
peace and prosperity to his country, which he persistently sought 
to rale as an independent sovereign, although acknowledging a 
personal vassalage to the king of England. 

The dose of the 12th century saw the final and complete 
subjection of the ancient Cambro-British Church to the supre- 
macy of Canterbury. As part of the Roman Upper Province of 
Britain, Wales would naturally have fallen under the primacy 
of York, but the Welsh sees had continued practically inde- 
pendent of outside control during Saxon times. The bishops 
of St Davids had from time to time claimed metropolitan rights 
over -the remaining sees, but in 11x5 St Anselme's appointment 
of the monk Bernard (d. 1147) to St Davids, in spite of the 
opposition of the native clergy, definitely marked the end of 
former Welsh ecclesiastical independence. In 1188 Archbishop 
Baldwin with a distinguished train, whilst preaching the Third 
Crusade, made an itinerary of the Welsh sees and visited the four 
cathedral churches, thereby formally asserting the supremacy 
of Canterbury throughout all Wales. But in x 199 the celebrated 
Gerald de Barri (Giraldus Cambrensis), archdeacon of Brecon and 
a member of the famous Norman baronial house of de Barri, and 
also through his grandmother Nesta a great-grandson of Prince 
Rhys ap Tudor of Deheubarth, was elected bishop by the chapter 
of St Davids. This enthusiastic priest at once began to re-assert 
the ancient metropolitan claims of the historic Welsh see, and 
between the years 1 109-1203 paid three visits to Rome in order 
to obtain the support of Pope Innocent III. against John and 
Archbishop Hubert, who firmly refused to recognize Gerald's 
hue election. Innocent was inclined to temporize, whilst the 
Welsh chieftains, and especially Gwenwynwyn of Powys, loudly 
applauded Gerald's action, but Llewelyn ap Iorwerth himself 
prudently held aloof from the' controversy. Finally, in xaoj, 
Gerald was compelled to make complete submission to the king 
and archbishop at Westminster, and henceforth Canterbury 
remained in undisputed possession of the Welsh sees, a circum- 
stance that undoubtedly tended towards the later union of the 
two countries. 

In 1238 Llewelyn, growing aged and infirm, summoned all his 
nasals to a conference at the famous Cistercian abbey of Strata 
Florida, whereat David, his son by the Princess Joan of England, 
was acknowledged his heir by all present. Two years later 
Llewelyn, the ablest and most successful of all the Welsh princes, 
expired and was buried in the monastery of his own foundation 
at Aberconway. He was succeeded by David II., at whose death 
without children in 1246 the sovereignty of Gwynedd, and con- 
sequently of Wales, reverted to his three nephews, sons of his 
half-brother Griffith, who had perished in 1244 whilst trying to 
escape from the Tower of London, where Henry III. was holding 
him as hostage for the good behaviour of Prince David. Of 
Griffith's three sons, Owen, Llewelyn and David, the most 
popular and influential was undoubtedly Llewelyn, whose deeds 
and qualities were celebrated in extravagant terms by the bards 
of his own day, and whose evil fate has ever been a favourite 
theme of Welsh poets. Though to this, the last prince of Wales, 
political sagacity and a firm desire for peace have often been 
ascribed, it must be admitted that be showed himself both 
turbulent and rash at a time when the most cautious diplomacy 
ob his part was essential for his country's existence. For 
Edward, Henry Ill's son and heir, who had been created earl of 
Chester by his father and put in possession of all the royal 
claims fn Wales, was generally credited with a strong determin- 
ation to crush forever Welsh indepertdcnce,should & fitting oppor- 
tunity to do so present itself. Nevertheless, the hostile policy 
of Llewelyn, who had closely associated himself with the cause 
•f Simon de Montfort and the barons, was at first successful 
For after the battle of Evesham a treaty was concluded between 
the English king and the Welsh prince at Montgomery, whereby 
the latter was confirmed in his principality of Gwynedd and was 
permitted to receive the homage of all the Welsh barons, save 
that of the head of the house of Dynevor, which l he king reserved 
to himself; whilst the four fertile eanlrtfs of Perfeddwlad, lying 
between Gwynedd and the earldom of Chester, were granted to 



the prince. Llewelyn waft, however, foolish enough to lose the 
results of this very favourable treaty by intriguing with. the de 
Montfort family, and in 1273 he became betrothed to Eleanor 
de Montfort, the old Earl's only daughter, a piece of political 
folly which may possibly in some degree account for Edward's 
harsh treatment of the Welsh prince. In 1374 Llewelyn refused 
to attend at Edward's coronation, although the Scottish king 
was present. In 1276 Edward entered Wales from Chester, and 
after a short campaign brought his obstinate vassal to submit 
to the ignominious treaty of Conway, whereby Llewelyn lost 
almost all the benefits conferred on him by the compact of 
Montgomery ten years before. Llewelyn, utterly humbled, now 
behaved with such prudence that Edward at last sanctioned his 
marriage with Eleanor de Montfort (although such an alliance 
must originally have been highly distasteful to the English king), 
and the ceremony was performed with much pomp in Worcester 
Cathedral in 1278. In 1281 discontent with the king and his 
system of justice had again become rife in Wales, and at this 
point the treacherous Prince David, who had hitherto supported 
the king against his own brother, was the first to proclaim a 
national revolt. On Palm Sunday 1282, in a time of peace, 
David suddenly attacked and burnt Hawarden Castle, whereupon 
all Wales was up in arms. Edward, greatly angered and now 
bent on putting an end for ever to the independence of the 
Principality, hastened into* Wales; but whilst the king was 
campaigning in Gwynedd, Prince Llewelyn himself was slain 
in an obscure skirmish on the nth of December 1282 at Cefn-y* 
bedd, near Builth on the Wye, whither he had gone to rouse the 
people of Brycheiniog. Llewelyn's head was brought to Edward 
at Conway Castle, who ordered it to be exhibited in the capital, 
surrounded by a wreath of ivy, in mocking allusion to an ancient 
Cymric prophecy concerning a Welsh prince being crowned in 
London. His body is said, on doubtful authority, to have been 
buried honourably by the monks of Abbey Cwm Hir, near 
Rhayader. Llewelyn's brother, now David III., designated by 
the English " the last survivor of that race of traitors," for a 
few months defied the English forces amongst the fastnesses of 
Snowdon, but ere long he was captured, tried as a disloyal English 
baron by a parliament at Shrewsbury, and finally executed under 
circumstances of great barbarity on the 3rd of October 1283. 
With David's capture practically all serious Welsh resistance to 
the English arms ceased, if we except the unsuccessful attempt 
made to rouse the crushed nation in 1293 by Llewelyn's natural 
son, Madoc, who ended his days as a prisoner in the Tower of 
London. 

Having suppressed the independence of Wales, Edward now 
took steps to keep Gwynedd itself in permanent subjection by 
building the castles of Conway, Carnarvon, Criccicth and 
Harlech within the ancient patrimony of the princes of North 
Wales, whose legitimate race was now extinct save for Llewelyn's 
daughter Gwenllian, who had entered the convent of Sempring- 
ham. In April 1284 Queen Eleanor, who had meanwhile joined 
her husband in Wales, gave birth to a son in the newly built 
castle of Carnarvon, and this infant the victorious king, half 
in earnest and half in jest, presented to the Welsh people for a 
prince who could speak no word of English. On the 7th of 
February 1301, Edward of Carnarvon was formally created 
" prince of Wales " by his father, and henceforward the title 
and honours of Prince of Wales became associated with the 
recognized heir of the English crown. 

By the Statute, or rather Ordinance of Rhuddlan, promulgated 
fn 1284, many important changes were effected in the civil 
administration of Wales. Glamorgan and the county palatine 
of Pembroke had hitherto been the only portions of the country 
subject to English shire law, but now Edward parcelled out the 
ancient territory of the princes of Gwynedd and of Deheubarth 
into six new counties, with sheriffs, coroners and bailiffs. Thus 
Anglcsea, Carnarvon, Merioneth and Flint were erected in North 
Wales; whilst out of the districts of Ystrad Tywi and Ceredigion 
in South Wales, the old dominions of the house of Dynevor, the 
counties of Carmarthen and Cardigan were formed. The old 
Welsh land tenure by gavelkind was, however, still permitted 



264 



WALES 



to remain in force amongst the natives el all Wales, whilst it was 
henceforth arranged to administer justice in the eight counties 
by special royal judges, and in the Marches by the officers 
appointed by the various lords-marchers according to the terms 
of their tenure. Another distinguishing mark of Edward's policy 
towards Wales is to be found in the commercial and administra- 
tive powers given to the fortified towns, inhabited solely by people 
of English birth and by Welshmen who acquiesced in. English 
rule. Municipal charters and market privileges were now granted 
to such towns as Cardiff, Carmarthen, Builth, Cardigan, Mont- 
gomery, Aberystwith, Newborough, &c, and this wise policy 
was continued under Edward II. and Edward ILL Many of the 
turbulent Welsh warriors having now become mercenaries on the 
continent or else enlisted under the English king, and the whole 
of the land west of Severn at last enjoying internal peace, the 
commercial resources of Wales were developed in a manner that 
had hitherto not been possible. Coal, copper, timber, iron, and 
especially wool, were exported from the Principality, and by the 
Statute Staple of 1353 Carmarthen was declared the soIe ( staple 
for the whole Welsh wool trade, every bale of wool having first 
to be sealed or " rocketed " at this important town, which during 
the 14th century may almost be accounted as the English 
capital of the Principality, so greatly was it favoured by the 
Plantagenet monarchs. A natural result of this partial treatment 
of the towns by the king and his vassals was that the English 
tongue and also English customs became prevalent if not universal 
in all the towns of Wales, whilst the rural districts remained 
strongly Cymric in character, language and sympathy. 

After more than a century of enforced repose in .the land and 
of prosperity in the towns, all Wales was suddenly convulsed by 
a wide-spread revolt against the English crown, which reads more, 
like a tale of romance than a piece of sane history. The deposi- 
tion of Richard II. and the usurpation of Henry IV., combined 
with the jealousy of the rural inhabitants of Wales against the 
privileged dwellers of the towns, seem to have rendered the 
country ripe for rebellion. Upon this troubled scene now 
appeared Owen Glendower (Owain Glyndwfrdwy : died ? 1415), a 
descendant of the former princes of Powys and a favourite courtier 
of the late King Richard, smarting under the effect of personal 
wrongs received from Henry of Lancaster. With a success and 
speed that contemporary writers deemed miraculous, Owen 
stirred up his countrymen against the king, and by their aid 
succeeded in destroying castle after castle, and burning town 
after town throughout the whole length and breadth of the land 
between the years 1401 and 1406. In 1402 he routed the forces 
of the Mortimers at Bryn Glas near Knighton in Maesyfed, where 
he captured Sir Edmund Mortimer, the uncle and guardian of the 
legitimate heir to the English throne, the young earl of March. 
The aims of Owen were described by himself in a letter addressed 
to Charles VI., king of France, who had hastened to acknowledge 
the upstart as Prince of Wales and had sent 12,000 troops on his 
behalf to Milford Haven. In this letter Owen, who was holding 
his court in Llanbadarn near Aberystwith, demands his own 
acknowledgment as sovereign of Wales; the calling of a free 
Welsh parliament on the English model; the independence of 
the Welsh Church from the control of Canterbury; and the 
founding of national colleges in Wales itself. An assembly of 
Welsh nobles was actually summoned to meet in 1406 at Machyn- 
lleth in an ancient building still standing and known to this day 
as " Owen Glen dower's Parliament House." In vain did Henry 
and his lords-marchers endeavour to suppress the rebellion, and 
to capture, by fair means or foul, the person of Glendower 
himself; the princely adventurer seemed to bear a charmed 
existence, and for a few years Owen was practically master of all 
Wales. Nevertheless, his rule and power gradually declined, and , 
by the year 1408 Owen himself bad disappeared as suddenly and 
mysteriously as he had arisen, and the land once more fell into 
undisputed possession of the king and his chosen vassals. For 
Owen's brilliant but brief career and ruthless treatment of 
English settlers and Anglophil Welshmen, his countrymen had 
not unnaturally to pay a heavy penalty in the severe statutes 
which the affrighted parliaments of Henry IV. framed for the 



protection of the /English dwellers In Wales and the border 
counties, and which were not repealed until the days of the 
Tudors. Of the part played by the Cymry during the wars of 
the Roses it is needless to speak, since the period for,msa,part of 
English rather than of Welsh, history. The Yorkist faction 
seems to have been strongest in the eastern portion of the 
Principality, where the Mortimers were all-powerful, but later 
the close connexion of the house of Lancaster with Owen Tudor, 
a gentleman of Anglesea (beheaded in 1461) who had married 
Catherine of France, widow of Henry. V., did much to invite 
Welsh sympathy on behalf of the claims of Henry Tudor, his 
grandson, who claimed the English throne by right of his grand- 
mother. Through the instrumentality of the celebrated Sir 
Rhys ap Thomas (1451-1527), the wealthiest and the most 
powerful personage in. South Wales, Henry Tudor, earl of Rich* 
mond, on his landing at Milford Haven in 1485 found the Welsh 
ready to rise in his behalf against the usurper Richard III. With 
an army largely composed of Sir Rhys's adherents, Henry was 
enabled to face Richard III. at Bosworth, and consequently to 
obtain the crown of England.* Thus did a Welshman revenge 
the ignominious deaths of Prince. Llewelyn and Prince David by 
becoming two centuries later king of .England and prince of 
Wales. 

With the Tudor dynasty firmly seated on the throne, a number 
of constitutional changes intended to place Welsh subjects on a 
complete social and political equality with Englishmen have to be 
recorded. The all-important Act of Union 1 536 (27 Henry VIH.)» 
converted the whole of the Marches of Wales into shire ground, 
and created five new counties: Denbigh, Montgomery, Radnor, 
Brecknock, or Brecon and -Monmouth. At the same time the 
remaining lordships were added to the English border counties 
of Gloucester, Shropshire and Hereford, and also to the existing 
Welsh shires of Cardigan, Carmarthen, Glamorgan and Pembroke, 
all of which found their boundaries considerably enlarged under 
this statute. Clause 26 of the same act likewise enacted that the 
12 Welsh counties should return 24 members to the English 
parliament: one for each. county, one for the boroughs in each 
county (except Merioneth), and one for the town and county of 
Haverfordwest. It is probable that Welsh members attended 
the parliaments of 1 536 and 1 539, and certain it is that Ihey were 
present at the parliament of 1541 and every parliament subse- 
quently held. This act of union was followed in 1542 by an 
" Act for certain Ordinances in the King's Majesty's Dominion 
and Principality of Wales " (34 & 35 Henry VIIL), which 
placed the court of the president and council of Wales and (he 
Marches on a legal footing. This court, with a jurisdiction some- 
what similar to that of the Star Chamber, had originally been 
called into being under Edward IV. with the object of suppressing 
private feuds and other illegalities amongst the lords-marchers 
and their retainers. This council of Wales, the headquarters of 
which had been fixed at Ludlow P undoubtedly did gcod service 
on behalf of law and order under such capable presidents as 
Bishop Rowland Lee and William Herbert, carl of Pembroke; 
but it had long ceased to be of any practical use, and had in 
fact become an engine of oppression by the time of the Common- 
wealth, although it was hot definitely abolished till the revolution 
of 1 683. The act of 1542 also enacted that courts of justice under 
the name of " The King's Great Sessions in Wales " should sit 
twice a year in every one of the counties of Wales, except Mon- 
mouth, which was thus formally declared an English shire. 
For this purpose four circuits, two for North and two for South 
Wales, each -circuit containing a convenient group of three 
counties, were created; whilst justices of the peace and custcdes 
rolulontm for each shire were likewise appointed. At the same 
time all ancient Welsh laws and customs, which were at variance 
with the recognised law of England, were now declared illegal, and 
Cymric land tenure by gavelkind, Which had been respected 
by Edward I., was expressly abolished and its place taken by 
the ordinary practice of primogeniture. It was also particularly 
stated that all legal procedure must henceforth be conducted in 
the English tongue, an arrangement which fell very heavily on 
poor monoglot Welshmen and appears an especially harsh and 



WALES 



265 



1 ensxfment when coming from a sovereign who was 
r a genuine Welshman by birth. Under the system of the 
Great Sessions justice was administered throughout the twelve 
counties of Wales for nearly three hundred years; and it was 
not until 1830 that this system of jurisdiction was abolished 
(not without some protest from Welsh members at Westminster), 
and the existing North and South Wales circuits were brought 
into being. 

With the peaceful absorption of the Principality into the 
realm of the Tudor sovereigns, the subsequent course of Welsh 
history atwimrs mainly a religious and educational character. 
The influence of the Renaissance seems to have been tardy in 
penetrating into Wales itself, nor did the numerous ecclesiastical 
changes during the period of the Reformation cause any marked 
signs either of resentment or approval amongst the mass of the 
Welsh people, although some of the ancient Catholic customs 
lingered on obstinately. As early as the reign of Henry VIII. 
there were, however, to be found at court and in the universities 
a number of ardent and talented young Welshmen, adherents 
mostly of the reforming party in Church and State, who were 
drained to bring about a brimant literary revival in their native 
land during the reigns of Elizabeth and James I. Of this dis- 
tinguished band the most memorable names are those of Bishop 
Richard Davies (c. x 501-1581) and of William Salesbury, the 
squire-scholar of Uanrwst (c. 1 520-c. 1600) In Denbighshire, who 
is commonly credited with the honour of having produced the 
first printed book in the Welsh language, a small volume of pro- 
verbs published in London about the year x 545. With the acces- 
skn of Elisabeth a novel and vigorous ecclesiastical policy on 
truly national lines was now inaugurated in Wales itself, chiefly 
through the instrumentality of Richard Davies, nominated 
bishop of St Asaph in 1559 and translated thence to St Davids in 
1 561, who was mainly responsible for the act of parliament of 
1563, commanding the bishops of St Davids, Iiandaff, Bangor, 
St Asaph and Hereford to prepare with all speed for public use 
Welsh translations of the Scriptures and the Book of Common 
Prayer. Of the five prelates thus named, Davies alone was 
competent to undertake the task, and for assistance in the 
work of translation he called upon his old friend and former neigh- 
bour, William Salesbury, who like the bishop was an escellent 
Greek and Hebrew scholar. The pair laboured with such 
diligence that before the close of the year 1567 the required 
translations of the Liturgy and the New Testament were pub- 
lished in London; the former being the exclusive work of the 
bishop, whilst the latter was principally the product of Salesbury's 
pen/ although some portions of it were contributed by Bishop 
Davies and by Thomas Huet, or Hewett, precentor of St Davids 
(d. 1501). Having accomplished so much in so small a space of 
time, the two friends were next engaged upon a translation of 
the Old Testament, but owing to a quarrel, the cause of which 
remains obscure, this interesting literary partnership was brought 
to an abrupt ending about 1570. The honour of presenting his 
countrymen with a complete Welsh version of the Bible was 
reserved for William Morgan (c. 1547-1604), vicar of Llanr- 
hayader, in Denbighshire, and afterwards bishop successively of 
TJandafF and of St Asaph. For eight years Morgan was busied 
with ms self-imposed task, being greatly encouraged thereto 
by Archbishop Whit gift, by Bishop William Hughes (d. 1600) of 
St Asaph, and by other leading dignitaries of the Church both in 
England and in Wales. In December 1588 the first complete 
Welsh Bible, commonly known as M Bishop Morgan's Bible," 
was issued from the royal press at Westminster under the patron- 
age of queen and primate, about 800 copies being supplied for 
distribution amongst the parish churches of Wales. This famous 
cditi* priuceps of the Welsh Bible, first and foremost of Welsh 
riassirs, was further supplemented under James I. by the 
Authorized Version, produced by Richard Parry (x 560-1623), 
bishop of St Asaph, with the help of Dt John Davies of Mallwyd 
(1570-1644), the first great Welsh lexicographer. At the ter- 
centenary of " Bishop Morgan's Bible " in x888 a national move- 
l of appreciation was set on foot amongst Welshmen of all 
1 both at home and abroad, with the result that 



a memorial cross was erected in the cathedral dose of St Asaph 
in' order to perpetuate the names and national services of the 
eight leading Welsh translators oiVthe Scriptures:— Bishops 
Davies, Morgan and Parry; William Salesbury; Thomas Huet; 
Dr Davies of Mallwyd; Archdeacon Edmund Prys (1 541-1624), 
author of a popular Welsh metrical version of the Psalter; and 
Gabriel Goodman, dean of Westminster (x 528-1601), a native 
of Ruthin, who greatly assisted Bishop Morgan in his task. Two 
circumstances attending the production of these Welsh transla- 
tions should be noted s--<i) That the leaders of this remarkable 
religious, literary and educational revival within the Principality 
were chiefly natives of North Wales, where for many years St 
Asaph was regarded as the chief centre of Cambro-Britiah 
intellectual life; and (2) that all these important works in the 
Welsh tongue were published of necessity in London, owing 
to the absence of an acknowledged capital, or any central 
city of importance in Wales itself. 

It would be well-nigh impossible to exaggerate the services 
rendered to the ancient British tongue, and consequently to 
the national spirit of Wales, by these Elizabethan and Jacobean 
translations, issued in 1567, 1588 and 1620, which were able 
definitely to fix the standard of classical Welsh, and to embody 
the contending dialects of Gwynedd, Dyfed and Gwent for all 
time in one literary storehouse. But for this sudden revival 
of Cymric literature under the patronage of Elizabeth (for the 
obtaining of which Wales must ever owe a deep debt of gratitude 
to Bishop Richard Davies, " her second St David"), there is 
every reason to believe that the ancient language of the Princi- 
pality must either.have drifted into a number of corrupt dialects,. 
as it then showed symptoms of doing, or else have tended to 
ultimate extinction, much as the Cornish tongue perished in 
the 17th century. 

The growth of Puritanism in Wales was neither strong nor 
speedy, although the year 1588, which witnessed the appear- 
ance of Bishop Morgan's Bible, also gave birth to two fierce 
appeals to the parliament, urging a drastic Puritanical poficy 
in Wales* from the pen of the celebrated John Penry, a native' 
of Brecknockshire (1550-1593). Far more influential than 
Penry amongst the Welsh were Rhys Prichard (? 1570-1644), 
the famous vicar of Llandovery, 1 Carmarthenshire, and William 
Wroth (d. 1642), rector of Uanfaches, Monmouthshire. Of 
these two Puritan divines, Vicar Prichard, who was essentially 
orthodox in his behaviour, forms an interesting connecting 
link between the learned Elizabethan translators of the Bible 
and the great revivalists of the x8th century, and his moral 
rhymes in the vernacular, collected and printed after his death 
under the title of The Welshman's Candle (Canwyll y Cymry), 
still retain some degree of popularity amongst his countrymen. 
Although a strong opponent of Laud's and Charles's ecclesi- 
astical policy, Prichard lived unmolested, and even rose to be 
chancellor of St Davids; but the indiscreet Wroth, " the founder 
and father of nonconformity In Wales," being suspended in 
1638 by Bishop Murray of LUndaff, founded a small community 
of Independents at Uanfaches, which is thus commonly ac- 
counted the first Nonconformist chapel in Wales. During the 
years prior to the Great Rebellion, however, in spite of the 
preaching and writings of Vicar Prichard, Wroth and others., 
the vast mass of Welshmen of all classes remained friendly to 
the High Church policy of Laud and staunch supporters of the 
king's prerogative. Nor were the effects of the great literary 
revival in Elizabeth's reign by any means exhausted, for at 
this time Wales undoubtedly possessed a large number of native 
divines that were at once active parish priests and excellent 
scholars, many of whom had been educated at Jesus College, 
Oxford, the Welsh college endowed by Dr Hugh Price (d. 1574) 
and founded under Elisabeth's patronage in 1573. So striking 
was the devotion shown throughout the Principality to the king, 
who fought his last disastrous campaign in the friendly counties 
of Wales and the Marches, that on the final victory of the 
parliament there was passed within a month of Charles's execution 

* Sometimes known as vicar of Uandingat, his church being in 
that 



266 



WALES 



In 1649 (perhaps as a special measure of punishment) an 
" Act for the better Propagation and Preaching of the Gospel 
in Wales," by the terms of which a packed body of seventy 
commissioners was presented with powers that were practically 
unlimited to deal with all matters ecclesiastical in Wales. To 
assist these commissioners in their task of inquiry and eject- 
ment, a body of twenty-five " Approvers " was likewise con- 
stituted, with the object of selecting itinerant preachers to 
replace the dismissed incumbents; and amongst the Approvers 
are conspicuous the names of Walter Cradock (d. 1659), a sus- 
pended curate of St Mary's, Cardiff, and a follower of Wroth's; 
and of Vavasor Powell (16x7-1670), an honest but injudicious 
zealot Some 350 out of a possible total of 520 incumbents 
were now ejected in South Wales and Monmouthshire, and 
there is every reason to suppose that the beneficed clergy of 
North Walea suffered equally under the new system.. The 
greed and tyranny of several of the commissioners, and the 
bigotry and mismanagement of well-meaning fanatics such as 
Cradock and Powell, soon wrought dire confusion throughout 
the whole Principality, so that a monster petition, signed alike 
by moderate Puritans and by High Churchmen, was prepared 
for presentation to parliament in 165a by Colonel Edward' 
Freeman, attorney-general for South Wales. Despite the fierce 
efforts of Vavasor Powell and his brother itinerant preachers to 
thwart the reception of this South Wales petition at Westminster, 
Colonel Freeman was able to urge the claims of the petitioners, 
or " Anti-Propagators " as they were termed, at the bar of the 
House of Commons, openly declaring that by the late policy 
of ejectment and destruction "the light of the Gospel was 
almost extinguished in Wales." A new commission was now 
appointed to inquire into alleged abuses in Wales, and the 
existing evidence clearly shows how harsh and unfair was the 
treatment meted out to the clergy under the act of 1649, and also 
how utterly subversive of all ancient custom and established 
order were the reforms suggested by the commissioners and 
approvers. At the Restoration all the ejected clergy who sur- 
vived were reinstated in their old benefices under the Act of 
Uniformity of 1661, whilst certain Puritan incumbents were in 
their turn dismissed for refusing to comply with various re- 
quirements of that act. Amongst these Stephen Hughes of 
Carmarthen (i6aj-i6SS), a devoted follower of Vicar Prichard 
and an editor of his works, was ejected from the living of Mydrim 
in Carmarthenshire, whereby the valuable services of this eminent 
divine were lost to the Church and gained by the Nonconformists, 
who had increased considerably in numbers since the Civil Wars. 
The old ecclesiastical policy of Elisabeth, which had hitherto 
borne such good fruit in Wales, was now gradually relaxed under 
the later Stuarts and definitely abandoned under Anne, during 
whose reign only Englishmen were appointed to the vacant 
Welsh sees. From 170a to 1870, a period of nearly 170 years, no 
Welsh-speaking native bishop was nominated (with the solitary 
exception of John Wynne, consecrated to St Asaph in i;ts>. 
and it is needless to point out that this selfish and unjust policy 
was largely responsible for the neglect and misrule which dis- 
tinguished the latter half of the iStfe and the early part of the 
10th centuries. The Church, which had so long played a 
prominent and valuable part in the moral and literary education 
of the Welsh people, was now gradually forced out of touch with 
the nation through the action of alien and unsympathetic Wh% 
prelates in Wales itself, which still remained mainly High 
Church and Jacobite in feeling. 

All writers agree in stating that the mass of the Welsh 
people at the close of the 17th century were illiterate, and many 
divines of Cymric nationality charge their countrymen also with 
immorality and religious apathy. English was tittle spoken or 
nedmlood amongst the peasant population, and there was a 
great dearth of Welsh educational works. Some efforts to remedy 
fcdtjfceaejita of thine? had already been ma* 

1 of Stephen Hugjbes, and abo by the 

_ r the Promotion of Christian Know- 

I Jones (ifrSj-i?oi), rector of Lland- 

it* who was destined to Decease 




the true pioneer of Welsh education, religious and secular. 
Early in the reign of George I. this excellent man, whose name 
and memory will ever be treasured so long as the Welsh tongue 
survives, began a system of catechizing in the vernacular amongst 
the children and adults of his own parish. With the cordial 
help of Sir John Fhilipps (d. 1736) of Picton Castle, the head 
of an ancient family in Dyfed, and of Mrs Bridget Bevan of 
Laugharne (d. 1779), who is still affectionately remembered in 
.Wales as the donor of " Madam Bevan's Charity," Griffith Jones 
was enabled to extend his scheme of educating the people 
throughout South Wales, where numerous " circulating charily 
schools," as they were called, were set up in many parishes with 
the approval of their incumbents. The results obtained by the 
growth of these schools were speedy and successful beyond the 
wildest hopes of their founder. This educational system, in- 
vented by Griffith Jones and supported by the purse of Mis 
Bevan, in 1760 numbered sis schools, with a total number of 
8687 contemporary scholars; and by the date of Jones's death 
in 1 761 it has been proved that over 150,000 Welsh persons of 
every age and of either sex/nearly a third of the whole population 
of Wales at that time, were taught to read the Scriptures in 
their own language by means of. these schools. With this newly 
acquired ability to read the Bible in their own tongue, the many 
persons so taught were not slow to express a general demand for 
Cymric literature, which was met by a supply from local presses 
in the small country towns; the marvellous success of the Welsh 
circulating charity schools caused in fact the birth of the Welsh 
vernacular press. In spite, however, of the marked improve- 
ment in the conditions and behaviour of the Welsh people, owing 
to this strictly orthodox revival within the pale of the Church, 
Griffith Jones and his system of education were regarded with 
indifference by the English prelates m Wales, who offered no 
preferment and gave little encouragement to the founder of 
the circulating schools. Meanwhile the writings and personal 
example of the pious rector of Uanddowror were stirring other 
Welshmen in the work of revival, chief amongst them being 
HoweH Harris of Trevecca (1711-1773), a layman of brilliant 
abilities but erratic temperament; and Daniel Rowland (1713- 
1700), curate of Iiangeitho in Mid-Cardiganshire, who became 
in time the most eloquent and popular preacher throughout aB 
Wales. Two other clergymen, who figure prominently in the 
Methodist movement, and whose influence has proved lasting, 
were Peter Williams of Carmarthen (1722-1796), the Welsh 
Bible commentator, and William Williams of Pantyceryn (1717- 
1701). the celebrated Welsh hymn-writer. Incidentally, it will 
be noticed that ths important Methodist revival had its origin 
and found its chief supporters and exponents in a restricted 
corner of South Wales, of which Carmarthen was the centre, in 
curious contrast with the literary movement in Elizabeth's 
reign, which was largely confined to the district round St 



During the lifetime of Griffith Jones the course of Welsh 
Methodism had run in orthodox channels and had been generally 
supported by the Welsh clergy and gentry; but after his death 
the tendency to exceed the bounds of conventional Church 
discipline grew so marked as to excite the alarm of the English 
bishops in Wales. Nevert h eless, the bulk of the Methodists 
continued to attend the services of the Church, and to receive 
the sacraments from regularly ordained parish priests, although 
a schism was becoming inevitable. Towards the dose of the 
iSth century the Methodist revival spread to North Wales 
under the influence of the celebrated Thomas Charles, commonly 
called Charles of Bala (17c5-1S1.il, formerly curate of IJany- 
m uw dd*> and the founder of Welsh Sunday schools. So strained 
had the relations between the English rulers of the Church and 
the Methodists themselves now grown, that in xSit the long- 
expected schism took place, much to the regret of Charles of 
Bala himself, who had ever been a derated disciple of Griffith 
Jones. The great bulk of the farming and labouring members 
of the CWcbnw definitely abandoned their ** Ancient Mother,** 
to whom, however, the Welsh gentry still adhered. The Great 
Schism of ion marks m fact.the lowest point to which the 



WALES 



267 



fortunes of the once powerful And popular Chunk in Wales liad 
sunk; — an 181 x there were only English-speaking prelates to be 
found, whilst the abuses of non-residence, pluralities and even 
nepotism were rampant everywhere. As instances of this clerical 
corruption then prevailing in Wales, mention may he made of 
the cases of Richard Watson (d. 18 16), the non-resident bishop 
of Uandaff, who rarely visited his diocese during an episcopate 
of thirty years; and of another English divine who held the 
deanery, the chancellorship and nine livings in a North Welsh 
see, his curates-in-charge being paid out of Queen Anne's Bounty, 
a fond expressly intended for the benefit of impoverished livings. 
An honourable exception to the indolent and rapacious divines 
of this stamp was Thomas Burgess (bishop of St Davids), to 
whose exertions is mainly due the foundation of St David's 
College at Lampeter in 1822, an Institution erected to provide 
a better and cheaper education for Intending Welsh clergymen. 
The foundation of Lampeter College was one of the earliest signs 
of a new era of revived vigour and better government within the 
Church, although it was not till 1870 that, by Mr Gladstone's 
appointment of Dr Joshua Hughes to the see of St Asaph, the 
special claims of the Welsh Church were officially recognized, 
and the old Elizabethan policy was one more reverted to after 
a hose of nearly two hundred years. After 1870 Welsh ecclesi- 
astical appointments were made in a more truly national spirit, 
and this official acknowledgment of the peculiar duties and claims 
of the Church in Wales largely helped to win back no small 
amount of the strength and popularity that had been lost during 
Georgian times. 

With the old national Church enthralled by English political 
prelates, and consequently hindered from ministering to the 
special needs of the people, the progress of dissent throughout the 
Principality was naturally rapid. Although primary education 
was largely supplied by the many Church schools in all parts 
of Wales, yet it was in the three most important denomina- 
tions — the Congregationalists, the Baptists and the Calvinistic 
Methodists (that new-born sect of which the Church herself 
was the unwilling parent)— that almost all Welsh spiritual 
development was to be found during the first half of the 19th 
century. Thus between the year 181 1 (the date of the Methodist 
secession) and 183J (the year of the £reat Reform Bill), the 
number of dissenting chapels had risen from 945 to 1428: a 
truly marvellous increase even allowing for the speedy growth 
of population, since every chapel so built had of necessity to be 
well attended in order to render it self-supporting. From this 
religious guidance of the people by the well-organized forces of 
dissent, it was but a step to political ascendancy, and as the 
various constitutional changes from the Reform Bill onward 
began to lower the elective franchise, and thus to throw more 
and more power into the hands of the working classes, that 
spirit of radicalism, which is peculiarly associated with political 
dissent, began to assert itself powerfully throughout the country. 
As early as the reign of William IV. there appeared the weekly 
Times of Waits (Amscrau Cymry), founded and edited by the 
able William Rees, who may be styled the father of the Welsh 
political press; and the success of Rees's venture was so marked 
that other journals, arranged to suit the special tenets of each 
sect, speedily sprang into existence. In the year 1870— a date 
that for many reasons marks the opening of an important era 
in modern Welsh history— the dissenting bodies of Wales were 
supporting two quarterly, sixteen monthly and ten weekly 
papers, all published in the vernacular and all read largely by 
peasants, colliers and artisans. With so powerful a press behind 
it, it is no wonder that Welsh political dissent was largely 
responsible for the changed attitude of the Imperial government 
in its treatment of the Principality — as evinced in the Sunday 
Closing Act of x88x, a measure which was very dear to the strong 
temperance party in Wales, and in the Welsh Intermediate 
Education Act, granted by Lord Salisbury's government in 
1&S0. It was certainly owing to the pressure of Welsh political 
dissent that Lord Roaebery's cabinet issued the Welsh Land 
Tenure Commission in 1893 — an inquiry which did much to 
exonerate the Welsh squirearchy from a number of vague 



charges of extortion and sectarian oppression; and that Sir 
H. Cajnpbe&Baiuierman's cabinet appointed the Welsh Church 
Commission (atst June xooo). This Commission was authorized 
to " inquire into the origin, nature, amount and application of 
the temporalities, endowments and other properties of the 
Church of England in Wales and Monmouthshire; and into the 
provision made and the work done by the Churches of all de- 
nominations in Wales and Monmouthshire for the spiritual 
welfare of the people, and the extent to which the people avail 
themselves of such provision." The Report and Memoranda 
of the Commission were published on the 2nd of December 
191a 

Mention must be made of the Rebecca riots in 1843-1844 in 
South Wales, wherein many toll gates were destroyed by mobs 
of countrymen dressed in female garb, " as the daughters of 
Rebecca about to possess the gates of their enemies "; and the 
Anti-Tithe agitation of 1885-1886— largely traceable to the 
inflammatory language used concerning clerical tithe by certain 
organs of the vernacular press—which led to some disorderly 
scenes between distraining parties of police and crowds of excited 
peasants in the more remote rural districts. There have been 
occasional strikes accompanied by acts of lawlessness in the 
industrial and mining districts of Glamorganshire, and also 
amongst the workmen employed in the quarries of Gwynedd. 

The University College of Wales was founded at Aberystwyth 
in 1872; that of South Wales at Cardiff in 1883; and of North 
Wales at Bangor in 1884. In 1889 the system of intermediate 
schools, arranged to form an educational link between the primary 
schools and the colleges, was inaugurated. In November 1803 
the University of Wales was incorporated by royal charter, with 
Lord Aberdare (d. 1895) as its first chancellor. All the religious 
bodies, including the Church, have been extremely active in 
educational and pastoral work; whilst the peculiar religious 
movement known as a revival (Diwygiad) has occurred from time 
to time throughout the Principality, notably in the years 1859 
and 1004. 

But the most remarkable phenomenon in modern Wale* has 
been the evident growth of. a strong national sentiment, the 
evolution of a new Welsh Renaissance, which demanded special 
recognition of the Principality's claims by the Imperial parlia- 
ment. This revived spirit of nationalism was by outsiders some- 
times associated, quite erroneously, with the aims and actions 
of the Welsh parliamentary party, the spokesmen of political 
dissent in Wales; yet In reality this sentiment was shared equally 
by the clergy of the Established Church, and by a large number 
of the laity within its fold. Nor is the question of the vernacular 
itself of necessity bound up with this new movement, for Wales 
is essentially a bi-Iingual country, wherein every educated 
Cymro speaks and writes English with ease, and where also large 
towns and whole districts— such as Cardiff, south Monmouth, 
the Vale of Glamorgan, Cower, south Glamorgan, south Pem- 
broke, east Flint, Radnorshire and Breeonshire — remain practi- 
cally monoglot English-speaking. Nor are the Welsh landowners 
and gentry devoid of this new spirit of nationalism, and although 
some generations ago they ceased as a body to speak the native 
tongue, they have shown a strong disposition to study once more 
the ancient language and literature of their country. It is true 
that a Young Wales party has arisen, which seeks to narrow this 
movement to the exclusion of English ideas, and Influences; and 
It is also true that there is a party which is abnormally suspicious 
of and hostile to this Welsh Renaissance; but in the main it h 
correct to say that the bulk of the Welsh nation remains content 
to assert its views and requirements In a reasonable manner. 
How wide-spread and enthusiastic is this true spirit of national- 
ism amongst all classes and sects of Welsh society to-day may 
be observed at the great meetings of the National Eisteddfod, 
which is held on alternate years in North and South Wales at 
some important centre, and at which the immense crowds col- 
lected and the interest displayed make a deep Impression on the 
Anglo-Saxon or foreign visitors. The sincere, if somewhat 
narrow-minded religious feelings; the devotion manifested by 
all classes towards the land of their fathers; the extraordinary 



268 



WALES 



vitality of the Camhro-British tongue— time etc the main char- 
acteristics of modem Wales, and they seem to verify the terms 
of Taliesin's ancient prophecy concerning the early dwellers of 
Gwalia.*— 

44 Their Lord they shall praise; 
Their Tongue they shall keep; 
Their Land they shall lose 

Except Wild Wales." (H. M. V.) 

Welsh Literature.— The Welsh language poss esses an ex- 
tensive literature, ranging from the oth century to the present 
day. A detailed account of it will he found in the article Celt: 
Celtic Literature, | iv. 

Welsh Language.— Welsh, the Celtic language spoken by the 
ancient Britons (see Celt: Language), is the domestic tongue 
of the majority of the inhabitants of the Principality. With 
the final destruction of Welsh independence under Edward I. 
the Cambro-British language, in spite of the disappearance of a 
court, continued to be spoken by Welshmen of all classes residing 
west of Severn, and the xath and 15th centuries are remarkable 
for producing some of the finest Welsh bards and historians. 
With the union of Wales with England by the Act of 27 Henry 
VIII. (1536) the subsequent administration of all law and justice 
in the English tongue throughout the Principality threatened for 
a time the ancient language of the people with practical cxtinct- 
tion. From such a fate it was largely preserved by the various 
translations of the Scriptures, undertaken at the command of 
Queen Elizabeth and performed by a number of native scholars 
and divines, amongst whom appear prominent the names of 
Bishops Davies, Morgan and Parry, and of William Salesbury 
of LlanrwsL Although the assertion of the celebrated Rhys 
Prichard of Llandovery that in bis time (c. 1630) only x % of the 
people of Wales could read the native language is probably an 
exaggeration, yet the number of persons who could read and 
write Welsh must have been extremely small outside the ranks 
of the clergy. During the earlier half of the 17th century the 
number of Welsh Bibles distributed throughout the Principality 
could hardly have exceeded 8000 in all, and except the Bible 
there was scarcely any Welsh work of importance in cir cu latio n , 
The system of the Welsh circulating charity schools, set up 
by Griffith Jones, rector of Uanddowror, in the 18th century, 
undoubtedly gave an immense impetus to the spread of popular 
education in Wales, for it has been stated on good authority that 
about one-third of the total population was taught to read and 
write Welsh by means of this system. As a result of Griffith 
Jones's efforts there quickly arose a vigorous demand for Welsh 
books of a pious and educational character, which was largely 
supplied by local Welsh printing-presses. The enthusiastic 
course of the Methodist movement under Howell Harris, Daniel 
Rowland and William Williams; the establishment of Welsh 
Sunday Schools; the founding of the Bible Society under 
Thomas Charles of Bala; and the revival early in the 10th 
century of the Eisteddfod** (the ancient bardic contests of music, 
poetry and learning), have all contributed to extend the use of 
the Welsh language and to strengthen its hold as a popular 
medium of education throughout the Principality. In 1841 
the Welsh-Leaking population was computed at 67% of the 
total, and in 1803 Welsh was understood or spoken by over 
60% of the inhabitants in the twelve Welsh counties with the 
exc e ption of the following districts, wherein English is the pre- 
vailing or tlte sole language empktyed^— viz. iMmrly the whole of 
Radnorshire; east Flint, inemdmg the neighbouring districts 
of Ruabon and Wrexham in Denbighshire; cast Brecknock; 
east Montgomery; south Pembroke, with the adjoining district 
of fe»gs»mmi hi Cirmirthf mhire; and the districts of Gowcr, 
I m south Glamorgan. In Moo- 
1 of the county is purely Enghsh- 
. districts Engbsh also prevails 
ffWaks). 

i, k wS he convenient 




Voiceless spfranU: I ex fit (•£■*> /); Ik (-En* Ik in 

thick) ; c*( -Scottish ch in lock). 

Voiced spirants: / (-Eng. •); dd (-Eng. th in this); the 
guttural voiced spirant (7) disappeared early in Welsh. 

Voiceless nasals: mh; mh; mgh. 

Voiced nasals: m; n; ng. 

Voiceless liquids: U (unilateral voiceless /); rh (voiceless r). 

Voiced liquids: I; r. 

Sibilant: $ (Welsh has no*). 

Aspirate: A. 

Semi-vowels: i (-Eng. y in yard); 9 (-Eng. w). 

The sounds of f and d are more dental than in English, though 
they vary; the voiced spirants are very soft; the voiceless 
nasals are aspirated, thus mh is similar to Eng. nh in. imhale; 
r is trilled as in Italian. 

Vowels: «, e, t, o have the same values as in Italian; 9 as a 
vowel-north Eng. 00 in book or Italian u; y has two sounds— 
(1) the dear sound resembling the Eng. t in hk\ but pronounced 
farther back; (a) the obscure sound— Eng. t in jEr; u in Med. 
Welsh had the sound of French «, hut now has the dear sound of 
y described above, which is similar to the ear, and has the same 
pitch. 

The Welsh language belongs to the Celtic branch of the Aryan 
or Indo-European family of language*. Primitive Celtic split up, as 
already shown, into two dialects, represented in modern times by 
two groups of languages — (1) the Goiddic group, comprising Irish, 
Scottish, Gadic and Manx. (2) The Brythonic or Brirtomc * group, 
comprising Wdsh, Breton and Cornish. In the Goidelic group eu 
appear* as c, thus Irish eclair, " four n ; in the Brythonic group it is 
changed into p, as in Wdsh pedmar, " four." (Gaulish, which was 
supplanted in France by Latin, had ft. as in fetor-ritmrn, " four- 
wheeled car," and is thus allied to the Brvthonsc group; but it is 
believed that remains of a continental Celtic ra- dialect appear 
in such names as Seqmmui, and in some recently discovered inscrip- 
tions. The sounds of parent Aryan appeared in Primitive Cehic 
" "nations:-- " --•--.. 



with the following modifications:-—* disappeared, thus Aryan • peter, 
which gave Latin pater, Eng. father, gave m Irish afssr; correspond* 
ing to Eng. Iloor, we have Irish Idr, Welsh Uamr. The velar tenuis a, 
when labialucd, became 4*, without labialixation b— -ain^ k; the 
vdar media 9 became » or f . The aspirated mediae M, da, gh t fh 



were treated as unaspirated h, at, g, g; probably al» the rare aspir- 
ated tenues fell together with the unaspirated. The other Aryan 
consonants seem generally to have remained. Aryan*. I, u remained. 
Aryan f became f, as in Irish fir, Wdsh gwfr. " true, cognate with 
Latin virus. Aryan * became d, as in Irish Idr, cognate with Anglo- 
Saxon fior, Eag. fioor. The short vowels remained, except that 
Aryan 9 became a, as in the other European branches. 

In Brvthonic, primitive Celtic qu became p, as above noted. 
Probably also Celtic « was advancing or had advanced toa forward 

* " * Wdshasf. - 

th Eng. torn 
« with its 
itosv-n 

„ , [flexion wai r . 

in Stokes's restoration of Cdtic declension (Trams. PI 



position, for it appears in Wdsh as l, as in din," stronghold." 
Cdtic *dmn-on, cognate with Eng. town, while Latin ar/borrow 
the Brvthonic period, gives « with its Wdsh sound above deaci 
as in mmr, " wall,'* from Latin sssbmes. 

The Aryan system of inflexion was preserved in Cdtic, as may 
be seen in Stokes's restoration of Cdtic declension (Trams. PhiioL 
Sac*. 1885-1886, pp. 97-201); and Brvthonic was probably as 
highly inflected as Latin. The development of Brvthonic into 
Welsh is analogous to that of Latin into French. Unfortunately, 
the extant remains of Brythonic are scanty; but in the Roman 
period it borrowed a large number of Latin words, which, as we 
snow their original forms, and as they u n derwent the same modi- 
fications as other words in the language, enable us to trace the 
phonetic changes by which Brythonic became Welsh. 

These changes are briefly as follows: — 

I. Lass of SytUkUs.—Tix last syllable of every word of more than 
one syllable was dropped; thus Latin trrmlm-us gives in Welsh 
srr/r*: the name SsirtVa* "Severn " became Hafren. The loss 
extends to the stem-ending of the lint element of a compound, thus 
the personal name Jfagis rtfnsi became Mndgmmi and generally 
to iinacrinttd syllables, thus episcopms became 'epscop, whence 
fsgol; trhnkU-em gives n i ss W . The accusative is often the case 
represented in Vtdsh; but we have also the nominative, and 
anmctumi both, as in cnani from evruhas, and dmntod from chnt&t-tm, 
now two words, not two cases of the same word. Aryan declension 
natoraRy disappeared with the loss of final syllables. 

a. O i m noo l Change*.— <t) Between two vowels, or a vowd 
and a liquid, the seven consonants p, t\ c. h, 4, g. m, became re- 
spectively S, d» g. /. dd, -, £ where •*-" represents the lost voiced 
T » Examples: Latm empidms gave cymydd: Tacilms gave 



'The Bretons caD their taw. 



Bremmek; the Welsh bards 



tnesr language Bn _._. 

caB Welsh Brymmtmeg: both forms imply an original 
> Brimmmic**. 
• The • was short: Saarhms would have given Ins/rtn m Welsh. 



WALES 



269 



Tegyi; labdrem gave Uafur: sagitta gave sadk; rimus gave 
rkvyf. This change is called the " soft mutation." (2) After nasals 
(, (, e, b, d, g became respectively mk, nk, ngk, m, n, ng; thus 
mperitor gave ymkemwdr, and ambactos (evidently a Brythonic as well 
as a Gaulish word) gave amaetk (m, though etymofogicaUy double, 
» written single). This change is called the " nasal mutation." 
(3) pp. it, cc became respectively ph or ff, tk, ck; thus ptcc&lum gave 
ftckavd, later pec hod; and Bnttones gave Brytkon. This change 
is called the M spirant mutation." The tenuis becomes a spirant 
also after r or /, as in corf from corpus, and Elfin from Albinus, 
but ft gives Uloxll. The combinations art, ccl, <*/, utf gave atik, atih, 
erth, tcytk, respectively: as in doelk, " wise,'* from Lat. doctus, 
fnsrytk from f rutins. (4) Original 5 between vowels (but not Latin 
>) became a, and disappeared; initially it generally appears as k, 
as in koten, " salt," sometimes as *, as in satlk, " seven." Initial 
/ and r became U and rk, as seen in examples in (1) above, but 
between vowels they remained. Similarly initial v became gw, as 
in potn, from Latin vfnum, remaining between vowels, though now 
written w, as in ctwed from cwttas. 

A co ns on a nt occurring medially is, generally speaking, invariable 
in the present language; thus the p and d of cuptdus are b and dd in 
cybydd, but with the initial consonant the case is different. In one 
combination the initial may remain , thus *otnos cujndus gave tin 
cybydd, '* one miser " , in another combination it may have originally 
stood between vowels, and so is mutated, as in *dud cuptdd, which 
gave dan gybydd, " two misers." Thus arose the system of " initial 
mutation . an initial consonant may retain its original form, or 
may undergo any of the changes to which it is subject The names 
given above to these changes are those by which they are known 
when they occur initially the unchanged form being called the 
" radical- The liquids /and r were brought into the system, the 
initial forms U ana rk being regarded as " radical." The initial 
mutations, then, are as follows: — 



Radical 


P 


1 


c 


b 


d 


e 


m 


V 


rk 


Soft 


b 


d 


t 


f 


dd 


- 


s 


I 


r 


Nasal 


mk 


nk 


*lk 


m 


n 


ng 


No change. 


Spirant 


M 


tk 


ck 


No change. 


No change. 



The initial mutation of any word depends upon its position in 
the sentence, and is determined by a grammatical rale which can 
ordinarily be traced to a generalization of the original phonetic 
conditions. Thus the second dement of a compound word, even 
though written and accented as a separate word, has a soft initial, 
because m Brythonic the first element of a compound generally 
ended in a vowel, as in the name Maglo-eunos. The more important 
rales for initial mutation are the following : the soft mutation occurs 
in a feminine singular noun after the article, thus y font, " the 
mother" (radical mam); in an adjective following a feminine 
singular noun, as in mam dda, " a good mother " (da, good ") ; in 
a noun following a positive adjective, as in kin ddyn, "old man," 
t this order represents what was originally a compound; in 
following dy, '' thy," and ft, " his," thus ay ben, " thy head," 

, " his head {pen, ** head ") ; in the object after a verb; in a 

noun after a simple preposition; .in a verb after the relative a. 
The nasal mutation occurs after fy, " my," and yn, " in "; thus 
hmken. " my head " (pen, u head f '), yn Nkalgartk, " at Talgarth." 
The spirant mutation occurs alter a. " and," " with," ei, <r her "; 



a noun 
a ben, 



thus d pkeu, " and a bead," ei phot, her head.' 

3. Vowel Changes. — (1) Long ff, whether from Aryan A or 6 or 
from Latin 0, becomes aw in monosyllables, as in browd, " brother " 
from *6r«fer; in the penult it is 0, aa in broder, " brothes," in the 
ultima aw, later o, as in peekawd, now peckod, from peccOtum. Long 
I, whether from Aryan I or i, or from Latin I, remains as i, see ex- 
amples above. Latin i was identified with a native diphthong ei, 
and be co mes wy, as m rkwyf from rimus. Latin d and a* appear as 
a; see examples above. A long vowel when unaccented counts 
short, thus peuaJorem treated as *peudi6rem, gave peckodur. (1) 
Short J. f. remain; short I became y; and $ became y (with its 
obscure sound) in the penult, remaining in the ultima, though now 
written w. But short vowel* have been affected by vowels m suc- 
ceeding syllabic*. These " affections " of vowels are as follows :- 
(a) I-afiectioa, caused by « in a lost termination: 4 becomes ai or 
«, and I, i, & became y, more rarely at or ei. Thus *bardos gave 
bardd. but pi. m bardt gave beirdd; episcofr gave esgyb. "bishops." 
Thb change is also caused by -9, as in tteidr, " thief/' from latrB. 
(?) A-affectioii, caused by omalost ending: I becomes e (instead of 
7): & becomes 0. Thus cniias gave timed; column* gave ceiofn. 
(7) Penultimate affection : • or v in the ultima causes several changes 
a the penult, as arck, " order, ercki, M to bid "; saer. u carpenter," 
pL seiri- eaer, " fort," pi. ceyrydd. (3) In the modern language other 
vowel changes occur by a change of position; thus at, an, aw in the 
ekuna become ei, eu. o respectively in the penult, as daU, " leaves," 
dalem, *• leaf "; mm, " sun." ktudog, " sunny "; brawd, " brother," 
pi. broder or brodyr. The last is an old interchange of sounds, and 
probably the others are older than their first appearance in writing 
(19a century) suggests. 
XXViu 5* 



Aatdence.-Wctih has a definite article yr, "the,'* which 
becomes V after a vowel, and y before a consonant unless already 
reduced to V. Thus yr oen, " the lamb," i'r ty, " into the bouse, 
yny ty, " in the house." 

The noun has two numbers, and two genders, masculine and 
feminine. A plural noun is formed from the singular by i-affcettone 
thus bardd, " bard," pi. beirdd, ffon, " stick," pljfyn; or by adding 
a termination as ffenestr, " window," pi. ffenestn, with any conse- 
quent vowel change, as bravd, "brother," pi. brodyr, gwlad, 

country," pi. gwledydd. The terminations chiefly used are -au, 
•ton, -on, -t, -ydi, -oedd. These are old stem endings left after the 
loss of the original -es, thus laird gives Uetdr, lalrones gives lladron; 
the forms having dd represent jj stems, % becoming dd in certain 
positions. 

In some cases the singular is formed from the plural by the ad- 
dition of 'yn or •**»-, thus sir, " stars," seren, " star." 

Feminine names of living things are formed from the masculine 
by the addition of -es, as brentn, "king," brenktnes, " queen "; Uem 
" lion," Uewes, " lioness." It is difficult to lay down rules for the 
determination of the gender of names of inanimate objects. 

Adjectives arc inflected for number and gender. Plural ad- 
jectives are formed from the singular by t-affection or by adding 
the termination -14m or -on, thus kardd, " beautiful," pi. kexrddx 
glas, " blue," pi. gletston. 

Adjectives having y or w are made feminine by o-affection, due 
to the lost feminine ending -a, thus gvy*> " white," fern, gweni 
trwm, " heavy," fern. trom. 

The adjective has /our degrees ot comparison— positive, equative. 
comparative, superlative , as gldn, " clean," glaned, " as clean (as)," 
glonack, "cleaner," glanaf, "cleanest." A few adjectives are 
compared irregularly 

The personal pronouns are: simple sing, 1. mi, 2. ti, 3. masc ef, 
fem. hi; dL 1. nt, 2 ckvn, 3. kwy, hwynt, reduplicated, myfi, tydi, 
&c; conjunctive, mtnnau, titkau, &c Prefixed genitive: sing. 
I fy, " my," 2. dy, 3. *, ei; pi. 1. yn, eta, 2. yck, etch, 3. eu. Infixed 
genitive and accusative: sine. 1. 'm, 2. 'Ik, 3. '•'; pi. 1. '», 2. 'ck* 
3. '«. Affixed: sing. 1. «', 2, dt, 3. ef, &c, like the simple forms. 

The demonstrative pronouns are Awn, " this," -kwnnw, " that," 
fem. kon. konno, pi. Jbya, kynny. 

The relative pronouns are nominative and accusative a, oblique 
cases ydd, yr, y. The expressions yr kwn, y neb, " the one," are 
mistaken for relatives by the old grammarians; the true relative 
follows yr kwn a «* " the one who. 

The interrogative pronouns arc substantival pwy 7—" who ?" 
adjectival pa 7 Substantival " what ? " is expressed by pa betk t 
" what thing ? " or shortly beth t 

The verb has four tenses in the indicative, one in the subjunctive, 
and one in the imperative. The old passive voice has become an 
impersonal active, each tense having one form only. The regular 
verb carafe " I love," is conjugated thus: — 

Indicative — Pres. (and fut.) sing. 1. caref, 2. cert, 3. cdr; pi. 1. 
canon, 2. cerwek, 3. caranl; impers, certr. Imperfect singi 1. 
canon, 2. cant, 3. carai; pt I. carem, 2. careck, 3. ccrynt, carenl\ 
impers. cerid. Aorist sing. I. cerais, 2. ceraisl, 3. car odd; pL 
i.earasom, 2. carasock, $.carosant; impers. carwyd. Pluperfect 
sing. x. caraswn, 2. caranl, 3. carasai; pi. 1. carasem, 2. carauck, 
3. caresynt, -aunt; impers. caresid. 

Subjunctive — Pres. sing. 1. carwyf, 2. ceryck, 3. caro; pi. 1. carom, 

2. carock, ^. caront; impers. carer. 

Imperative — Pres. sing. 2. cdr, 3. cared; pi. 1. canon, 2. cerwek, 

3. carent; impers. cower. 

Verbal noun, cam. " to love." Verbal adjectives, earedig, u loved," 
caradwy, " lovable.' 

As In other languages the verb " to be " and its compounds are 
irregular; the number of other irregular verbs is comparatively 

Prepositions also are " conjugated " in Welsh, their objects, if 
pronominal, being expressed by endings. Thus or, " on, arnaf. 
u on me," arnat, " on thee," onto, " on him," ami, " on her, 
arnom, n on us," amock, " on you," arnynt, " on them." The second 
conjugation has for endings -of, -ot, -ddo, -ddi; -om, -ock, -ddyni; the 
third -y/, -yt, -ddo. -ddi; -ym t -yck, -ddyni. 

The negative adverbs are m, nid, conjunctive no, nod. Inter- 
rogative particles: 0, at. Affirmative particles: yr,fe. 

The commoner conjunctions are a, ac, " and " ; and, eithr, " but " ; 
0, os, " if "; pan, " when "; tro, " while." 

Syntaxv—\ oualifying adjective follows its noon, and agrees 
with it in gender and generally in number. It may, however, 
precede its noun, and a compared adjective generally does so.^ 

In a simple sentence the usual order of words is the following:— 
verb, subject, object, adverb; as prynodd Dafydd lyfr yno, " David 
bought a book there." The verb may be preceded by aa affirmative, 
a negative, or an interrogative particle. 

When a noun comes first, it is followed by a relative pronoun, thus, 
Dafydd o brynodd lyfr yno. which really means " (it is) David who 
bought a book there," and is never used in any other sense in the 
spoken language, though in literary Welsh it is used rhetorically 
for the simple statement which is properly expressed by put- 
ting the verb first. In negative and interrogative sentences this 
rhetorical use does not occur. 



270 



WALEWSKI— WALKER, F. A. 



In a simple interrogative sentence the introductory particle before 
the verb » a, and the positive answer consists in a repetition of the 
verb, a ddaw Dafydd ? Daw. " Will David come ? Yea." If the 
verb is aorist the answer is do for all verbs. In negative answers 
na precedes the verb. In sentences in which a noun comes first, the 
interrogative particle is at, and the answer is always, positive f«, 
negative nage, as at Dafydd a ddawt U. " Is it David who will 
come? Yes." 

A relative pronoun immediately precedes its verb and can only 
be separated from it by an infixed pronoun, thus Dafydd at pryuodd, 
M (it is) David who bought it," yno fm pweJt, " (it is) there that 
thou wilt see me." If the relative b the object of a preposition, the 
latter is put at the end of the clause, and has a personal ending, thus 
ytyy bum ynddo, literally, " the house which I-was in-it." 

The verb does not agree with its subject unless the latter is a 
personal pronoun ; when the subject is a noun the verb is put in the 
third person singular; thus earanl, " they love," can take a pro- 
nominal subject— caranl kwy, " they love "; but " the men love " 
is edr y dynton (not caranl y dynion, which can only mean " they 
love the men "). In relative clauses the verb is sometimes made to 
agree, but in the oldest poetry we generally find the singular verb, 
as in the oft-repeated Gododin phrase Gurvr a attk Galraeih, " men 
who went (to) Catraeth " (not Gmy> a aetkant). 

Authorities.— J D. Rhys, Cambrobrytanrncao Cymraecaem 
hngea* instiMtones (159a); John Davies, Antique lingoae BrUan- 
sicss . . . rvdimenta (16a 1); Antigua* lingua* Bntanntcae 
. . . dictionarium duplex (1632); Edward Lhuyd, Arckaeo- 
logia Britanntca (1707); W. O. Pughe, Grammar and Dictionary* 
(1853), vitiated by absurd etymological theories; J. C Zeuss, 
Grammalica Ceitka (and ed. by H. Ebcl, 1871V— an index to the 
O. Welsh glosses cited in this work was compiled by V. Tourncur in 
Arcktofur cell. Lexikograpkie, iii. 100- 137; T. Rowland, Grammar of 



Ik* Welsh Language * (1876), containing a large collection of facts 
the modern lanj * ~ " " J ' " --«-•-----■- 

Rhys, Lectures 'on W< ^ 

traduction to Early Welsh, withTa Reader (Manchester, 1909) 



about the modern language, badly arranged and wholly undigested . 
i-M Welsk Philology* (187Q); J. Strachan, An In* 



Stokes, " Urkdtischer Sprachschata," in Fick's Vergleichendes 
Wdrterbuch dor idg. Spracken \ ii. (1894) ; E. Ariwyl, Welsh Grammar 
for Schools, L (1898), ii. (1899); J. Morris Jones, Historical Welsh 
Grammar, !. (191 1); W. Spurrek, Welsh-English and Engjisk-Welsk 
Dictionary (Carmarthen •, 1904) ; D. Silvan Evans, Welsh Dictionary, 
A-E (1888-1906). The last-named received a subsidy from the 
British government. Some corrections and additions to the early 
volumes, by J. Loth, will be found in A rch. f. cdL Lex. vol. i. See also 
H. Sweet, ''Spoken N. Welsh," in Trans, of Ike London Pkil. Sac., 
i8$j-i8&i; T. Darlington, " Some Dialectal Boundaries in Mid- 
Wales," in Trans, of Ik* Hon, Sac of Cyntmrodorion, 1900-1901 ; 
and M. Nettlau. Beitrdg* smr cymriscken Grammatik (Leipzig, 1887), 
also in Rev. celt, vol. he. 0* »*• JO 

WALEWSKI, ALEXANDRE FLORIAH JOSEPH COLONHA, 

Comte (1S10-1868), French politician and diplomatist, was bora 
at Walewice near Warsaw on the 4th of May 18 10, the son of 
Napoleon I. and bis mistress Marie, Countess Wakwska. At 
fourteen Wakwski refused to enter the Russian army, escaping 
to London and thence to Paris, where the French government 
refused his extradition to the Russian authorities, Louis Philippe 
sent him to Poland in 1830s and he was then entrusted by the 
leaders of the Polish revolution with a mission to London. After 
the fall of Warsaw he took out letters of naturalisation in France 
and entered the French army, seeing some service in Algeria. 
In 1S37 he resigned) his commission and began to write for the 
stage and for the press. He is said to have collaborated with 
the elder Dumas in Mademoiselle de Beile-IsU y and a comedy of 
his, L'£eole du monde, was produced at the Theatre Francois in 
1840. In that year his paper, Lt Mcssager da ckambrcs, was 
taken over by Thiers, who sent him 00 a jnission to Egypt, and 
under the Guiaot ministry he was sent to Buenos Aires to 
co-operate with the British minister Lord Howden (Sir J. 
Caradoc). Tbeaccessionof Louis Napoleon to the supreme power 
in France guaranteed his career. He was sent as envoy extra- 
ordinary to Florence, to Naples and then to London, where he 
announced the comp dfttat to Palmerston (?.».). In 1855 Wakwski 
s uc ce eded Drooyn de Lhuys as minister of foreign affairs, and 
acted as French plenipotentiary at the Congress of Paris next 
year. When he left the Foreign Office in iSob it was to become 
minister of state, an office which he held until iS6j. Senator 
from ift&li 1 iftfs, he entered the Corps Ugislatif in 1865, and 
r*s interest, as president of the 
1 atthoriry two years later sent 
j on the 17th oi 
\e in iS66» was a 




member of the Academy of Fine Arts and a grand cross of (he 
Legion of Honour 

WALFISH BAY, a harbour of South- West Africa with a 
coast-line of 20 m. terminated southward by Pelican Point in 
2a 54' S., 14° 27' E. It belongs to Great Britain, together with 
a strip of territory extending 15 m. along the coast south of 
Pelican Point and with a depth inland from 10 to 15 m. The 
total area is 430 sq. m. Except seaward Walfish Bay is sur- 
rounded by German South- West Africa. The northern boundary 
is the Swakop river, cast and south there arc no natural frontiers. 
The coast district, composed of sand dunes, is succeeded by a 
plateau covered in part with sparse vegetation. The river 
Kuisip, usually dry, has its mouth in the bay — which forms the 
finest harbour along a coast-Iinc of over 1000 m The harbour is 
provided with a pier 200 yds*, long and is safe in all weathers. 
It was formerly frequented by whaling vessels (hence its name). 
The town has a small trade with the Hcreros of the adjoining 
.German protectorate. A tramway, urn. long, runs inland to 
Rooikop on the German frontier Pop. (1004), 097, including 
144 whites. 

Walfish Bay forms a detached portion of the Cape province 
of the Union of South Africa. It was proclaimed British territory 
on the x 2th of March 1878, and was annexed to Cape Colony on 
the 7th of August 1884 (see Arnica, § 5) The delimitation oi 
the southern frontier was in 1909 referred to the king of Spain 
as arbitrator between Great Britain and Germany 

WALKER, FRANCIS AMASA (1840-1897), American soldier 
and economist, was born in Boston, Massachusetts, on the md of 
July X&40. His father, Amasa Walker (1790-1875),* was also 
a distinguished economist, who, retiring from conimerdal life 
in 1S40, lectured on political economy in Obedin College from 
1842 to 1848, was examiner in the same subject at Harvard from 
1853 to i860, and lecturer at Amherst from 1859 to 1869. He was 
a delegate to the first international peace congress in London 
1843* and in 1849 to the peace congress in Paris. He was 
secretary of state of Massachusetts from 1851 to 1853 and 
a representative in Congress 1862-1863. His principal work. 
The Science of Wealth* attained great popularity as a textbook. 
Francis Walker graduated at Amherst College in i860, studied 
law, and fought in the Northern army daring the whole of the 
Civil War of 1861-65, rising from the rank of sergeant-major to 
that of brevet brigadier-general of volunteers — awarded him at 
the request of General Winfield S. Hancock. As a soldier he 
excelled in analysis of the position and strength of the enemy. 
In 1864 he was captured and detained for a time in the famous 
Libby Prison, Richmond. After the war he became editorial 
writer on the Springfield ( Massachusetts) Re publican, and in 1869 
was made chief of the government bureau of statistics. He was 
superintendent of the ninth and tenth censuses (those of 187c and 
x88o), and ( 187 1-7 3) commissioner of Indian affairs. From 1873 
to his death his work was educational, first as professor (1873- 
1881) of political economy in the Sheffield Scientific School at 
Yale, and then as president of the Massachusetts Institute of 
Technology, Boston. While superintendent of the census he 
increased the scope and accuracy of the records; and at the 
Institute of Technology he enlarged the i c sumus and numbers 
of the institution, which had 302 students when he assumed the 
presidency and 110S at his death. In other fields he promoted 
common-school education (especially in manual training), the 
Boston park system, and the work of thepuhhc horary, and took 
an active part m the discussion of monetary, econon^ statistical 
and other public questions, holding many offices of honour and 
responsibility. As an author he wroteon governmental treatment 
of the Indians, Tar Wages Question (1876), Money (1878), Land 
andits Rent (1883) and general potrtkal economy (18S3 and 1884), 
besides producing monographs on the life of General Hancock 
(1SS4) and the history of his own Second Army Carps (1886). 
As an e co no m ist, from the time of the appearance of his book 
on the subject, he so effectively combated the old theory of the 
" wage-fund " as to lead to its abandonment or material modifica- 
tion by .Ajacrican students; while in his writings on finance, 
from 1S78 to the end of his life, he advocated 1 



WALKER, F.— WALKER, G, 



271 



ntmrfallmH, without, however, seeking to justify any one nation 
in the attempt to maintain parity between gold and silver. A 
collection of posthumously published Discussions in Education 
(1899) was made up of essays and addresses prepared after his 
taking the presidency of the Institute of Technology: their 
most noteworthy argument is that chemistry, physics and the 
other sciences promote a more exact and more serviceable mental 
training than metaphysics or rhetoric. Walker's general tendency 
was towards a rational conservatism. On the question of vent 
he called himself a " Ricardian of the Ricardians." To his 
Watts Question is due in great part the conception formed by 
English students of the place and functions of the employer in 
modern industrial economics. A remarkable feature of his 
writings is his treatment of economic tendencies not as mere 
abstractions, bat as facts making for the happiness or misery 
of living men. General Walker died in Boston on the 5th of 
January 1897. 

WALKER, FREDERICK (1840-1875), English subject painter, 
the son of a designer of jewelry, was born in Marylebone, London, 
en the 24th of May 1840. When very young he began to draw 
from the antique in the British Museum, and at the age of sixteen 
he was placed in the office of an architect named Baker, The 
occupation proved uncongenial; at the end of eighteen months 
he resumed his work from the Elgin marbles at the British 
Museum, and attended Leigh's life school in Newman Street. 
In March 1858 he was admitted a student of the Royal Academy. 
But his study in the academy schools was disconnected, and 
ceased before he reached the life class, as he was anxious to 
begin earning his own living. As a means to this end, he turned 
his attention to designing for the wood-engravers, and worked 
three days a week for about two years in the studio of J. W. 
Whymper, under whose tuition he quickly mastered the tech- 
nicalities of drawing on wood. His earliest book illustrations 
appeared in i860 m Once a Week, a periodical to which he was 
a prolific contributor, as also to the Cornhitt Magasine, where 
hb admirable designs appeared to the works of Thackeray and 
those of his daughter. These woodcuts, especially his illustra- 
tions to Thackeray's Adventures of Philip and Denis DutaJ, are 
among the most spirited and artistic works of their class, and 
entitle Walker to rank with MiDais at the very head of the 
draughtsmen who have dealt with scenes of contemporary fife. 
Indeed, by his contributions to Once a Week alone he made an 
immediate reputation as an artist of rare accomplishment, and 
although he was associated on that periodical with such men as 
MiDais, Holman Hunt, Leech, Sandys, Charles Keene, Tenniel, 
and Du Maurier, he more than held his own against all com- 
petitors. In the intervals of work as a book illustrator he 
practised painting in water-colours, his subjects being frequently 
more considered and refined repetitions in colour of his black- 
and-white designs. Among the more notable of his productions 
in water-colour are M Spring," " A Fishmonger's Shop," " The 
Ferry," and M Philip in Church," which gained a medal in tho 
Paris International Exhibition of 1867. He was elected an 
associate of the Society of Painters in Water Colours in 1864 
and a full member in 1866; and in 1871 he became an associate 
of the Royal Academy. In this same year he was made an 
honorary member of the Belgian Society of Painters in Water 
Colours. His first oil picture, " The Lost Path," was exhibited 
in the Royal Academy in 1863, where it was followed in 1867 
by " The Bathers," one of the artist's finest works, in. 1868 by 
" The Vagrants," now in the National Gallery of British Art, in 
1869 by " The Old Gate," and in 1870 by " The Plough," a 
powerful and impressive rendering of ruddy evening light, of 
which the landscape was studied in Somerset. In 1871 he ex- 
hibited his tragic Kfe-sized figure of " A Female Prisoner at the 
Bar," a subject which now exists only in a finished oil study, 
far the painter afterwards effaced the head, with which he was 
dissatisfied, but was prevented by death from again completing 
the picture. The last of his fully successful works was 
" A Harbour of Refuge," shown In 1872 (also in the National 
Gallery of British Art); for " The Right of Way," exhibited in 
1875. bears evident signs of the artist's failing strength. He 



had suffered indeed for some years from a consumptive tendency; 
in 1868 he made a sea voyage, for his health's sake, to Venice, 
where he stayed with Orchardson and Birket Foster, and at the 
end of 1873 he went for a while to Algiers with J. W. North, in 
the hope that he might derive benefit from a change of climate. 
But, returning in the bitter English spring, he was again pros- 
trated; and on the 5th of June 1875 he died of consumption at 
St Fillan's, Perthshire. 

The works of Frederick Walker are thoroughly original and 
individual, both in the quality of their colour and handling and 
in their view of nature and humanity. His colour, especially in 
his water-colours, is distinctive, powerful and full of <*HVnte 
gradations. He had an admirable sense of design, and the 
figures of his peasants at their daily toil show a grace and sweep- 
ing largeness of line in which can be plainly traced the effect 
produced upon his taste by his early study of the antique; at 
the same time the sentiment of his subjects is unfailingly 
refined and poetic. His vigour of design may be seen in bis 
poster for Willrie Collins's The Woman in White, now in the 
National Gallery of British Art. 

See Life and Letters of Frederick Walker, AJIA., by John George 
Marks (1896). a full biography of a personal rather than a critical 
kind. Frederick Walker and his Works, by Claude Phillips (1897). 
should be consulted as an excellent critical supplement to the larger 
volume. See also Essays an Art, by J. Comyna Carr, which includes 
a judicious essay on Walker. 

WALKER, GEORGE («. 1618-1600), hero of the siege of 
Londonderry, was the son of George Walker, rector of Kihnom 
and chancellor of Armagh (d. 1677), and of Ursula, daughter of 
Sir John Stanhope of Melwood, and is said to have been born 
in 1 618 in Tyrone. He was educated at Glasgow University, 
and appointed to the livings of Lessan and Desertlyn, in the 
diocese of Armagh, near Londonderry, in 1669. In 1674 he 
obtained that of Oonaghmore, which he held with Lessan. At 
the outbreak of the Civil War in Ireland towards the close of 
x688, Walker, though in Holy Orders and advanced in years, 
raised a regiment and endeavoured to concert measures with 
Robert Lundy, the acting governor of Londonderry, for the 
defence of Dungannon. But Lundy, after having sent some 
troops to his support, ordered their withdrawal and the abandon* 
ment of the place on the 14th of March 1680. On the 17th of 
March Walker marched with his men to Strabane, and subse- 
quently was ordered by Lundy to move to Rash and then to 
St Johnstown, 5 m. from Londonderry. On the approach of the 
enemy (April 13th) Walker rode hastily to Londonderry to 
inform Lundy, but was unable to convince him of his danger. 
He returned to his men at Lifford, where, on the xath, he took 
part in a brush with thevnemy, afterwards following the retreat 
of the army to Londonderry. The town was in great confusion, 
and Walker found the gates shut against him and his regiment. 
He was forced to pass the night outside, and only entered the 
next day " with much difficulty and some violence upon the 
Centry." Immediately on his arrival he urged Lundy to take 
the field and refused the demand to disband his own soldiers. 
On the 17th of April Lundy determined to give up the town to 
James, and called a council from which Walker and others were 
especially excluded; but the next day the king and his troops, 
who had advanced to receive the surrender, were fired upon 
from the walls contrary to Lundy's orders, and the arrival of 
Captain Adam Murray with a troop of horse saved the situation. 
Lundy was deprived of all power, and was allowed to escape in 
disguise from the town. On the 19th of April Walker and Baker 
were chosen joint-governors. Walker commanded fifteen com- 
panies, amounting to 900 men, and to him was also entrusted 
the supervision of the commissariat, He showed great energy, 
courage and resource throughout the siege, and led several 
successful sallies. Meanwhile his duties as a clergyman were 
not neglected. The Nonconformists were allowed the use of 
the cathedral on Sunday afternoons, but in the morning Walker 
preached. Those few of his sermons which remain, though simple 
in their language, arc eloquent and inspiring. Meanwhile he had 
to contend with jealousies and suspicions within the town; but 
he succeeded in dispelling all misgivings and in reaffirming his 



272 



WALKER, H. O.— WALKER, O. 



credit with the garrison. At the dose of the siege, which 
lasted 150 days, the town was at the last extremity; but 
at length, on the 30th of July, Walker preached the last of the 
sermons by which he had helped to inspire its defence. An 
hour afterwards the ships were seen approaching, and the town 
was relieved. 

As regards the general course of the war the importance of the 
successful resistance at Londonderry can hardly be exaggerated. 
It was the first open act of hostility in Ireland against James, 
and the disaster to his arms not only embarrassed his ^mpaign 
in Ireland but prevented the expeditions to Scotland and 
England, and Walkers share in it was abundantly recognized- 
He sailed for Scotland and England on the 9th of August, and 
was everywhere welcomed with immense public enthusiasm. 
On the 29th of August he was graciously received at Hampton 
Court by William and Mary, before whom he had with good sense 
refused to appear in his military costume, and delivered to them 
the petition from Londonderry. William presented him with 
£5000, part of which he appears to have given to the widow of 
Baker, his fellow-governor, who died during the siege. Shortly 
afterwards he was nominated bishop of Londonderry, but as 
Bishop Hopkins, whom it was determined to remove, only died 
three weeks before Walker, the latter was never consecrated. 
Walker succeeded in obtaining a grant of £1200 for Londonderry 
from the city companies, and on the 18th of November his 
petition to the House of Commons for relief for the widows, 
orphans, clergy and dissenting ministers was read, and the king 
was asked to distribute £10,000 among them (House of Commons 
Journals, vol. x. p. 288). On the following day Walker was called 
in, received the thanks of the House, and made a short and 
dignified reply. On the 8th of October he had been granted the 
degree of D.D. at Cambridge in his absence, and on his return 
journey to Ireland he received the same diploma at Oxford 
(Feb. 1690). Walker met William on his arrival in Ireland on 
the 14th of June 1600 at Belfast, and followed his army. He 
was present at the battle of the Boyne on the 1st of July, but in 
what capacity, whether as spectator, as combatant or as minister 
to tend the wounded, is uncertain. 1 He was shot through the 
body at the passage of the river, according to one account, while 
he was going to the aid of the wounded Schomberg (G. Story, 
A True . . . History of the A fairs in Ireland, p. 82), and died 
almost immediately. His remains, or what were supposed to be 
such, were afterwards transferred from the battlefield and buried 
in his own church at Ponaghmore, where a monument and 
inscription were placed to his memory. A more conspicuous 
memorial was erected in Londonderry itself. 

Walker married Isabella Maxwell of Finnebrogue, and left 
several sons, four of whom during his lifetime were in the king's 
service, and from one of whom at least there are descendants at 
the present day. 

While in London Walker had published A True Account of Ike 
Siege of Londonderry (1680), dedicated to the king, which went 
through several editions and was translated for perusal abroad. 
This pamphlet, and the ovations received by Walker in London, 
excited fierce jealousies, which had been subdued in the hour of peril, 
but which were now formulated in the Narrative (1698) of John 
Mnrkewie, a Ji-^enting minister who hid been present during the 
t *a* ih.u l [t'U with having tibn too much credit TO 
. aft*] of having paved aver the ■crvicc* and nam*-* of the 
(Uic insfauatitffi* were added and h was declared 
1 held Lhe post of governor. These 
t uf their own exaggeration. On the 
umtt tbaugb d^ubtles* incomplete* is 
■WV and is free from any touch of 
; and both this, tract and his tub«- 
■ J 
n hu opponents^ Hi» character *■* 
ich attend a Mirtdrn ri*» tn fame and 
prcbitly obmcil by fftrraL 





of his contemporaries. There exists also too much positive and 
independent evidence to permit any doubt whatever as to the 
greatness of Walker's services. Burnet, in a passage which was 
not included in his published history perhaps because of the con- 
troversy, says: " There was a minister in the place. Dr Walker, 
who acted a very noble part in the government and defence of the 
town; he was but a man of ordinary parts, but they were suited to 
his work, for he did wonders in this siege " (Harleian MSS., 6584 /, 

S» b, printed by H. C Foxcroft. Supplement to Burnet's Htst. of. 
u Own Times, 1902, p. 331). 

In the Siege if Deny (1 893) the Rev. Philip Dwyer has collected 
the most essential facts and materials relating to Walker and tha 
siege, and has reprinted in his volume Walkers True Account and 
Vindication, together with Walker's sermons, various other does- 
meats and valuable notes. 

WALKER, HENRY OLIVER (1845- ), American artist, 
was born at Boston, Massachusetts, on the 14th of May 1843. 
He was a pupil of Leon Bonnat, Paris, and painted the figure and 
occasional portraits, but later devoted himself almost exclusively 
to mural decoration. His paintings symbolizing lyric poetry, 
for the Congressional Library, Washington; and his decorations 
for the Appellate Court House, New York; Bowdoin College, 
Maine; the enlarged State House, Boston; the Court House, 
Newark, New Jersey, and the Capitol at Saint Paul, Minnesota, 
are among his most important works. He became a member of 
the National Academy of Design, New York, in 1902. 

WALKER, HORATIO (1858- ), American artist, was bom 
at Listowel, Ontario, Canada, on the lath of May 1858. When 
he was a chnd his family settled at Rochester, New York. 
Although entirely self-taught, he became a distinguished painter 
of animals, the figure and landscape. His pictures, principally 
of Ca n a d ia n peasant life and scenes, show the influence of 
Troyon and Millet, mainly in their feeling for largeness of com* 
position, in solidity of painting and in the choice of theme. 
He became a member of the National Academy of Design, New 
York, in 1801; of the American Water Color Society and of the 
Royal Institute of Painters in Water Colours, London. He 
received a medal and a diploma at Chicago, 1803; *ad medals at 
Buffalo, 1901; Charleston, 190a; and St Louis, 1904. In 1&8& 
he won the Evans prize of the American Water Color Society, 
New York. 

WALKER, JOHN (1732-1807), English actor, philologist 
and lexicographer, was born at Colney Hatch, Middlesex, on 
the 18th of March 1733. Early in life he became an actor, his 
theatrical engagements including one with Garrick at Drury Lane, 
and a long season in Dublin. In 1768 he left the stage. After 
some experience in conducting a school at Kensington he com- 
menced to teach elocution, and in this found his principal 
employment for the rest of his life. In 1775 he published his 
Rhyming Dictionary, which achieved a great success and has 
been repeatedly reprinted, and in 1791 his Critical Pronouncing 
Dictionary, which achieved an even greater reputation, and has 
fun into some forty editions. He was the friend of the leading 
literary men of his time, including Johnson and Burke. He died 
in Lon don o n the xst of August 1807. 

WALKER, OBADIAH (1616-1609)1 master of University 
College, Oxford, was born at Darncld near Barnsley, Yorkshire, 
and was educated at University College, Oxford, becoming a 
fellow and tutor of this society and a prominent figure in uni- 
versity circles. In July 1648 the action of parliament deprived 
him of his academic appointments, and he passed some years 
in teaching, studying and travelling, returning to Oxford at the 
restoration of 1660, and beginning a few years later to take a 
leading part in the work of University College. In June 1676 
he was elected to the headship of this foundation, and in this 
capacity he collected money for some rebuilding, and forwarded 
the preparation of a Latin edition of Sir John Spelman's Life of 
Alfred the Great, published by the college. This was the time 
of Titus Oatcs and the popish plots, and some of Walker's 
writings made him suspect; however, no serious steps were 
taken against him, although Oxford booksellers were forbidden 
to selUiis book, The benefUs of our Satiour Jesus Christ to man- 
kind, and he remained a Protestant, in name at least, until the 
accession of James IL Soon after this event W came forward as 



WALKER, R.— WALKER, T. 



273 



a Roman Catholic, and be advised the new king with regard to 
affairs in Oxford, being partly responsible for the tactless conduct 
of James in forcing a quarrel with the fellowsof Magdalen College. 
Mass was said in his residence, and later a chapel was opened 
in the college for the worship of the Roman Church; he and 
others received a royal licence to absent themselves from the 
strvices of the English Church, and he obtained another to super- 
vise the printing of Roman Catholic books. In spite of growing 
unpopularity he remained loyal to James, and when the king 
led from England Walker left Oxford, doubtless intending to 
join his master abroad. But in December 1688 he was arrested 
it Sittingbourne and was imprisoned; then, having lost his 
mastership, he was charged at the bar of the House of Commons 
with changing his religion and with other offences. Early in 1690 
be was released from his confinement, and after subsisting for 
some years largely on the charity of his friend and former pupil, 
Dr John RadcIirTe, he died on the 21st of January 1609. 

Walker's principal writings are: Of education, especially of young 
tntlcmen (Oxford, 1673, and six other editions); Ars rattonis ad 
menkm nominalium libri trts (Oxford, 1673) ; and Creek and Roman 
History illustrated by Cains and Medals (Condon, 1693). 

WALKER, ROBERT (d. c. 1658), British painter, was a 
contemporary and to a slight extent a follower of Van Dyck. 
The date of bis birth is uncertain, and no details are known of 
bis early life. Although influenced by Van Dyck's art, he bad 
still a considerable degree of individuality and developed a sound 
style of his own which was more severe and restrained than that 
of the greater master. His greatest vogue was at the time of the 
Commonwealth, for in addition to several portraits of Cromwell 
he painted other portraits of Lambert, Ireton, Fleetwood, and 
many more members of the Parliamentarian party. In 1652 he 
wis given rooms in Arundel House in the Strand, London, 
where he resided for the rest of his life. He died either in 1658 
or in 1660, the authority for the earlier date being an inscription 
on an engraved portrait by Lombart. His work had much 
merit; it was vigorous and showed sound study of character. 
Several of his paintings, among them the portrait of William 
Faiibome the elder, are in the National Portrait Gallery, and 
there are others of notable importance at Hampton Court and 
in the University Galleries at Oxford. One of his portraits of 
Cromwell is in the Pitti Palace, where it is ascribed to Lcly; 
it was bought in the artists lifetime, but after the Protector's 
death, by the grand duke Ferdinand II. of Tuscany. Another 
■ at Warwick Castle. 

Walker painted also Robert Cromwell and his wife Elizabeth 
Steward, parents of the Protector. The portrait of the latter, 
attended by a page who is fastening his sash at the waist (now in 
the National Portrait Gallery, transferred from the British Museum, 
to which it was bequeathed by Sir Robert Rich. Bart., descendant 
of Cromwell's friend, Nathaniel Rich) was called by Walpole " Crom- 
well and Lambert "; but it is now certain that the page represents 
Cromwell's son Richard Elizabeth Cromwell, afterwards Mrs 
Chypole. the Protector's daughter, also sat to him. As no complete 
account of Walker's work is in existence (that of Walpole being very 
incomplete, while Cunningham passes him over entirely), it may be 
added that the artist twice painted John Evelyn, in different sizes, 
a» well as Bradshaw, John Hampden, Colonel Thomas Sanders, 
Cornet Joyce, and Speaker Lenthall, as well as Sir William and 
Lady Waller, Mrs Thomas Knight, and General George Monk, 
duke of Albemarle, and Sir Thomas Fairfax (engraved by Fatthorne). 
A portrait of Secretary Thurlow, which was in the Lord Northwick 
Collection, was attributed to him. As Walker was in the camp of 
the Parliamentarians and Dobson was the court painter at Oxford, 
few aristocratic persona sat to the former. Exceptions are Mary 
CancL duchess of Beaufort (engraved by J. Nutting), Aubrey, last 
carl of Oxford, and James Graham, marquess of Montrose; even 
a portrait of Charles 1. in armour, with his hand on his helmet, is 
credited to Walker. Two versions, of a like size, of his own portrait 
exist, one at the National Portrait Gallery and the other at Oxford, 
c n ua red by Peter Lombart, and again, later, by T. Chambars. 
pie Cromwdl in the Scottish National Portrait Gallery is a copy. 
Walker s copy of Titian's famous " Venus at her Toilet," highly 
esteemed by Charles I., is considered a work of great merit. 

WALKER, ROBERT JAMES (180X-1869), American political 
leader and economist, was born in Northumberland, Pennsylvania, 
on the 23rd of July 1801. He graduated from the University of 
Pennsylvania in 1819 and practised law in Pittsburg from 1822 
to 1826, when he. removed to Mississippi. Though living in a 



slave state he was consistently opposed to slavery, bat he 
favoured gradual rather than immediate emancipation, and in 
1838 he freed his own slaves. He became prominent, politically, 
during the nullification excitement of 1832-1833, as a vigorous 
opponent of nullification, and from 1836 to 184$ he sat in the 
United States Senate as a Unionist Democrat. Being an ardent 
expansionist, he voted for the recognition of the independence 
of Texas in 1837 and for the joint annexation resolution of 1845, 
and advocated the nomination and election of James K. Polk in 
1844. He was secretary of the treasury throughout the Polk 
administration (184 5-1849) and was generally recognized as the 
most influential member of the cabinet. He financed the war 
with Mexico and drafted the bill (1849) for the establishment of 
the department of the interior, but his greatest work was the 
preparation of the famous treasury report of the 3rd of December 
184$. Although inferior in intellectual quality to Alexander 
Hamilton's Report on Manufactures, presenting the case against 
free trade, it is regarded as the most powerful attack upon the 
protection system which has ever been made in aa American 
state paper. The " Walker Tariff " of 1846 was based upon its 
principles and was in fact largely the secretary's own work. 
Walker at first opposed the Compromise of 1850, but was woa 
over later by the arguments of Stephen A. Douglas. He was 
appointed territorial governor of Kansas in the spring of 1857 
by President Buchanan, but in November of the same year 
resigned in disgust, owing to his opposition to the Lecompton 
Constitution. He did not, however, break with his party 
immediately, and favoured the so-called English Bill (see 
Kansas); in fact it was partly due to his influence that a sufficient 
number of anti-Lecomptoa Democrats were induced to vote for 
that measure to secure its passage. He adhered to the Union 
cause during the Civil War and in 1863-1864 as financial agent 
of the United States did much to create confidence in Europe in 
the financial resources of the United States, and was instrumental 
in securing a loan of $250,000,000 in Germany. He practised 
law in Washington, D.C., from 1864 until his death there on the 
nth of November 1869. Both during and after the Civil War 
he was a contributor to the Continental Monthly, which for a 
short time he also, with James R. Gilmore, conducted. 

For the tariff report see F. W. Taussig, State Papers and Speeches 
on the Tariff (Cambridge, Mass., 1892). 

WALKER, SEARS COOK (1805-1853), American astronomer, 
was born at Wilmington, Massachusetts, on the 28th of March 
1805. Graduating at Harvard in 1825, he was a teacher till 1835, 
was an actuary in 1835-1845, and then became assistant at the 
Washington observatory. In 1847 he took charge of the longi- 
tude department of the United States Coast Survey, where be 
was among the first to make use of the electric telegraph for the 
purpose of determining the difference of longitude between two 
stations, and be introduced the method of registering transit 
observations electrically by means of a chronograph. He also 
investigated the orbit of the newly discovered planet Neptune. 
He died near Cincinnati on the 30th of January 1853. His 
brother Timothy (1802-1856) was a leader of the Ohio bar. 

See Memoirs of the Roy. Ask. Soc. voL xxiii. 

WALKER, THOMAS (1784-1836), English police magistrate, 
best known as author of The Original, was born on the 10th of 
October 1784 at Charlton-cum-Hardy, near Manchester, where 
his father was a prosperous cotton merchant and an active Whig 
politician. He was educated at Cambridge and called to the bar, 
and after devoting some years mainly to the study of the Poor 
Law was made police magistrate in Lambeth in 1829. In 183$ 
he started his weekly publication The Original, containing his 
reflections on various social subjects and especially on eating and 
drinking; and it is in the history of gastronomy, and the art 
of dining, that this curious and amusing work is famous. The 
weekly numbers continued for six months, and subsequently 
were republished, after Walker's death on the 20th of January 
1836, in an American selection (1837), in editions by W. B. 
Jerrold (with memoir) (1874), W. A. Guy (1875), and Henry 
Morley (1887), and in another selection of Sir Henry Cole 
(" Felix Summerley "), called AHslohgy (1881). 



27+ 



WALKER, W.— WALL, R. 



WALKER, WILLIAM (1824-1860), American 
adventurer, was born in Nashville, Tennessee, on the 
8th of May 1824. After graduating from the univer- 
sity of Nashville in 1838, he studied law, was admitted 
to the bar, and subsequently spent a year in the study 
of medicine at Edinburgh and Heidelberg. He prac- 
tised medicine for a few months in Philadelphia and 
then removed to New Orleans, where he engaged in 
journalism. In 1850 he migrated to California and 
engaged in newspaper work at San Francisco and later 
at Marysville, where he also practised law. On the 
15th of October 1853 he sailed from San Francisco 
with a filibustering force for the conquest of 
Mexican territory. He landed in Lower California, 
and on the 18th of January 1854 he proclaimed 
this and the neighbouring State of Sonora an independent 
republic. Starvation and Mexican attacks led to the abandon- 
ment of this enterprise, and Walker resumed his journalistic 
work in California. On the 4th of May 1855, with fifty- 
six followers, Walker again sailed from Son Francisco, 
this time for Nicaragua, where he had been invited by 
one of the belligerent factions to come to its aid. In October 
Walker seized a steamer on Lake Nicaragua belonging to the 
Accessory Transit Company, a corporation of Americans engaged 
in transporting freight and passengers across the isthmus, 
and was thus enabled to surprise and capture Granada, the 
capital and the stronghold of hb opponents, and to make himself 
master of Nicaragua. Peace was then made; Patricio Rivas, 
who had been neutral, was made provisional president, and 
Walker secured the real power as commander of the troops. 
At this time two officials of the Transit Company determined to 
use Walker as their tool to get control of that corporation, then 
dominated by Cornelius Vandcrbilt, and they advanced him 
funds and transported his recruits from the United States free 
of charge. In return for these favours, Walker seized the 
property of the company, on the pretext of a violation of its 
charter, and turned over its equipment to the men who had 
befriended him. On the 20th of May 1856 the new government 
was formally recognized at Washington by President Pierce, 
and on the 3rd of June the Democratic national convention 
expressed its sympathy with the efforts being made to "re- 
generate" Nicaragua. In June Walker was chosen president 
of Nicaragua, and on the 22nd of September, from alleged 
economic necessity, and also to gain the sympathy and support 
of the slave states in America, he repealed the laws prohibiting 
slavery. 

Walker managed to maintain himself against a coalition of 
Central American states, led by Costa Rica, which was aided and 
abetted by agents of Cornelius Vanderbilt, until the 1st of May 
1857, when, to avoid capture by the natives, he surrendered to 
Commander Charles Henry Davis, of the United States navy, 
and returned to the United States. In November 1857 he sailed 
from Mobile with another expedition, but soon after landing at 
Punta Arenas he was arrested by Commodore Hiram Paulding 
of the American navy, and was compelled to return to the 
United States as a paroled prisoner. On his arrival he was 
released by order of President Buchanan. After several un- 
successful attempts to return to Central America, Walker finally 
sailed from Mobile in August i860 and landed in Honduras. 
Here he was taken prisoner by Capt*m Salmon, of the British 
fmvy, artil was iurruJidcmJ la thu fli>nr!ura.n authorities, by 
whom he wa> trial and canJt tr.tied to be shut- He was executed 
on lite i/Ul of Septcml«r 1 Wfc. 

uTJtc w to iHaiT- 



Distance. 


Name. 


Time. 


Date. 


Place. 






hr. roin. sec. 






1 mile 


A. T. Yeomans. . 


6 191 

12 531 


1906 


Bath 


2 miles 


A. T. Yeomans. . 


1906 


Swansea 


3 .. 


J. W. Raby (profes- 










sional) 


20 21} 


1885 


Lillie Bridge 


4 .. 


G. E. Larncr . . 


^7 14 


1905 


Brighton 


5 » 


. W. Raby . . 


35 10 


1883 


Lillie Bridge 


10 „ 


. W. Raby . . 


» »4 45 
1 55 50 


1883 


Lillie Bridge 


15 » 


.W. Raby . . 


1883 


Lillie Bridge 


20 „ 


W. Perkins . . 


2 39 57 


1877 


Lillie Bridge 


30 „ 


. . Butler . . . 


4 29 52 


1905 


Putney 


40 » 


. Butler . . . 


6 11 17 


1905 


Putney 


50 ,. 


. Butler . 


7 52 27 


1905 


Putney 


100 „ 


T. E. Hammond . 


17 25 22 


1907 


London to Brighton 
and back 




The record distance walked in l hour was 8 m. 339 yds. by the 
English amateur G. E. Larner in 1905 ; in 8 hours, 50 m. 1 190 yds. 
by another English amateur, 1. Butler, in 1905; in 24 hours, 131 m. 
580} yds. by T. E. Hammond in 1908. 

About the year 1875 there was a revival of interest in pro- 
fessional walking, which took the form of " go-as-you-please " 
competitions, extending over several days, usually six. These 
may be classed as walking contests, for, although running was 
allowed, it was seldom practised, excepting for a few moments 
at a time, for the purpose of relief from cramped muscles. The 
great difficulty in competitive walking is to keep within the 
rules. A " fair gait " is one in which one foot touches the ground 
before the other leaves it, only one leg being bent in stepping, 
namely, that which is being put forward. 

WALL, RICHARD (1694-1778), diplomatist and minister in 
the Spanish service, belonged to a family settled in Waterford. 
As he was a Roman Catholic be was debarred from public 
service at home, and like many of his countrymen he sought his 
fortune in Spain. He served, probably as a soldier in one of 
the Irish regiments of the Spanish army, during the expedition 
to Sicily in 17 18, and was present at the sea fight off Cape 
Passaro. During the following years he continued to be em- 
ployed as an officer, but in 1727 he was appointed secretary to 
the duke of Liria, son of the duke of Berwick, and Spanish 
ambassador at St Petersburg. Wall's knowledge of languages, 
his adaptability, his quick Irish wit and ready self-confidence 
made him a great favourite, not only with the duke of Liria, 
but with other Spanish authorities. Spain was at that time 
much dependent on the ability of foreigners, and for a man of 
Wall's parts and character there were ample openings for an 
important and interesting career. The climate of St Petersburg 
seems to have been too much for him, and he soon returned to 
military service in Italy. It is said that when he was presented 
to the duke of Montemar, the Spanish general, and was asked 
who he was, he replied, " The most important person in the 
army after your excellency, for you are the head of the serpent, 
and I am the tail." He became known to Don Jose" Pali no, 
the most capable minister of King Philip V., and was sent by 
him on a' mission to Spanish America — a very rare proof of 
confidence towards a man of foreign origin. He is also said to 
have laid a plan for retaking Jamaica from the English. In 
1747 he was employed in the negotiations for the peace of Aix- 
la-Chapelle, and in 1748 was named minister in London. In 
England he made himself very popular. Though an exile 
through the operation of the Penal Laws, and though be proved 
loyal to his adopted country, he was a constant partisan of an 
English alliance. His views recommended him to the favour 
of King Ferdinand VI. (1 746-1 759), whose policy was resolutely 
peaceful. In 1752 Wall was recalled from London to assist in 
completing a treaty of commerce with England, which was then 
being negotiated in Madrid. Wall now became the candidate 
of the English party in the Spanish court for the post of Minister 
of Foreign Affairs, in opposition to the leader of the French 
party, the marquis de la Enscnada. He obtained the place 
in 1752, and in 1754 he had a large share in driving Enscnada 
from office. He retained his position till 1764. The despatches 
of the English minister. Sir. Benjamin Keene, and of his 



WALL— WALLACE, A, R. 



*7S 



successor, Lord Bristol, content many references to Watt. They 
are creditable to him. Though a constant partisan of peace and 
good relations with England, Wall was firm in asserting the 
rights of the government be served. During the early stages of 
the Seven Years' War (1756-1763) he insisted on claiming 
compensation for the excesses of English privateers in Spanish 
waters. He frequently complained to the English ministers of 
the difficulties which the violence of these adventurers put in 
his way. As a foreigner he was suspected of undue favour to 
England, and was the object of incessant attacks by the French 
party. The new king, Charles III. (1750-1788), continued 
Wall in office. When war was declared by Spain in 1761 the 
minister carried out the policy of the king; but he confessed to 
the English ambassador, Lord Bristol, that he saw the failure 
of has efforts to preserve peace with grief. The dose relations 
of Charles III. with the French branch of the House of Bourbon 
nude Wall's position as foreign minister very trying. Yet the 
king, who detested changing his ministers, refused all his re- 
quests to be allowed to retire, ttN Wall extorted leave in 1764 
by elaborately affecting a disease of the eyes which was in fact 
imaginary. The king gave him handsome allowances, and a 
grant for life of the crown land known as the Soto de Roma, 
near Granada, which was afterwards conferred on Godoy, and 
anally given to the duke of Wellington. Wall lived almost 
wholly at or near Granada, exercising a plentiful hospitality to 
al visitors, and particularly to English travellers, till his death 
in 1778. He left the reputation of an able minister and a very 
witty talker. 

A foil account will be found in volume iv. of Coxe's Memoirs of 
the Ktmgs of Spain of the House of Bourbon (London, 1815). Further 
details of his early career can be gathered from the Diario del viajc 
a Mouovia, 1727-1710, of the duke of Liria (vol. xciii. of the Dotu* 
mentis intditot para la Mstoria dcEspaMo), (Madrid, 1842, et seq.). 

WALL (O. Eng. wee/, weall, Mid. Eng. wai, unite, adapted from 
Lai. vallum, rampart; the original O. Eng. word for a wall was 
wig or waa), a solid structure of stone, brick or other material, 
tned as a defensive, protecting, enclosing or dividing fence, 
or as the enclosing and supporting sides of a building, house or 
room. The Roman vallum was an earth rampart with stakes 
or palisades (sulfa*, stake; Gr. <Xot, nail) and the Old English 
word was particularly applied to such earth walls; for the 
remains of the Roman walls in Britain see Britain. The word, 
however, was also applied to stone defensive walls, for which 
the Latin word was murus. The history of the wall as a means 
of defence will be found in the article Fortification and 
SncecRAPT, the architectural and constructional side under 
the headings Architecture, Masonry and Brickwork. In 
anatomy and zoology the term "wall, and also the Latin 
term paries, is used for an investing or enclosing structure, as 
in " cell- walls," walls of the abdomen, 82c. In the days when 
footpaths were narrow and ill-paved or non-existent in the 
streets of towns and when the gutters were often overflowing 
with water and filth, the side nearest to the wall of the bordering 
bouses was safest and cleanest, and hence to walk on that side 
was a privilege, hence the expressions " to take " or " to give 
the wall." The term " wall-rib " is given in architecture to a 
half-rib bedded in the wall, to carry the web or shell of the vault. 
In Roman and in early Romanesque work the web was laid on 
the top of the stone courses of the wall, which had been cut to 
the arched form, but as this was often irregularly done, and 
as sometimes the courses had sunk owing to the drying of the 
mortar, it was found better to provide an independent rib to 
carry the web; half of this rib was sunk in the wall and the 
other half moulded like the transverse and diagonal ribs, so that 
if the wad sank, or if it had to be taken down from any cause, 
the vault would still retain its position. 

The word *' wall eye " or " wall-eyed " is applied to a con- 
dition of the eye, particularly of a horse, in which there is a 
large amount of white showing or there is absence of colour in 
the iris, or there is leucoma of the cornea. It is also applied to 
tbe white staring eyes of certain fishes. The word has no con* 
action with M wall " as above, but is from the Icelandic vagi* 
tygr, vagi, a beam, sty in the eye, and eygr, eyed. 



WALLABY, a native name, used in literature for any member 
of a section of the zoological genus Mocropus, with naked muffle, 
frequenting forests and dense scrubs. With respect to their siae 
they are distinguished as large wallabies and small wallabies, 
some of the latter being no bigger than a rabbit. From the 
localities in which they are found they are also called brush 
kangaroos. See Kangaroo. 

WALLACE, ALFRED RUSSBL (1823- ), British natural- 
ist, was born at Usk, in Monmouthshire, on the 8th of January 
1823. After leaving school he assisted an elder brother in his 
work as a land surveyor and architect, visiting various parts of 
England and Wales. Living in South Wales, about 1840 he began 
to take an interest in botany, and began the formation of a 
herbarium. In 1847 he took his first journey out of England, 
spending a week in Paris with his brother and sister. In 1844- 
184$, while an English master in the Collegiate School at Leicester, 
he made the acquaintance of H. W. Bates, through whose in* 
fluence be became a beetle collector, and with whom he started 
in 1848 on an expedition to the Amazon. In about a year the 
two naturalists separated, and each wrote an account of his 
travels and observations. Wallace's Travels on the Amazon and 
Rid Negro was published in 1853, a year in which he went for a 
fortnight's walking tour in Switzerland with an old school-fellow. 
On his voyage home from South America the ship was burnt and 
all his collections lost, except those which be had despatched 
beforehand. After spending a year and a half in England, 
during which time, besides his book on the Amazon, he published 
a small volume on the Palm Trees of the Amazon, he started for 
the Malay Archipelago, exploring, observing and collecting from 
1S54 to 1862. He visited Sumatra, Java, Borneo, Celebes, the 
Moluccas, Timor, New Guinea and the Aru and K6 Islands. His 
deeply interesting narrative, The Malay Archipelago, appeared 
in 1869, and he also published many important papers through 
the London scientific societies. The chief parts of his vast insect 
collections became the property of the late W. W. Saunders, 
but subsequently some of the most important groups passed into 
the Hope Collection of the university of Oxford and the British 
Museum. He discovered that tbe Malay Archipelago was divided 
into a western group of Islands, which in their zoological affinities 
are Oriental, and an eastern, which are Australian. The Oriental 
Borneo and Bali are respectively divided from Celebes and 
Lombok by a narrow belt of sek known as " Wallace's Line," 
on the opposite sides of which the indigenous mammalia are as 
widely divergent as in any two parts of the world. Wallace 
became convinced of the truth of evolution, and originated the 
theory of natural selection during these travels. In February 
1 85 s, staying at Sarawak, in Borneo, he wrote an essay " On the 
Law which has regulated the Introduction of New Species" 
{Ann. and Mag. Nat. Hist., 1855, p. 184). He states the law 
as follows: M Every species has come into existence coincident 
both in time and space with a pre-existing closely allied 
species." He justly claims that such a law connected and 
explained a vast number of independent facts. It was, in 
fact, a cautious statement of a belief in evolution, and for three 
years from the time that he wrote the essay he tells us that 
" the question of how changes of species could have been brought 
about was rarely out of my mind." Finally, in February 1858, 
when he was lying muffled in blankets in the cold fit of a severe 
attack of intermittent fever at Ternatc, in the Moluccas, he began 
to think of Malthus's Essay on Population, and, "to use his own 
words, " there suddenly flashed upon me the idea of the survival 
of the fittest." The theory was thought out during the rest of the 
ague fit, drafted the same evening, written out in full in the two 
succeeding evenings, and sent to Darwin by the next post. Dar- 
win in England at once recognized his own theory in the manu- 
script essay sent by the young and almost unknown naturalist 
In the tropics, then a stranger to him. " I never saw a more 
striking coincidence," he wrote to Lyell on the very day, on the 
1 8th of June, when he received the paper: " if Wallace had 
my MS. sketch written out in 1842, he could not have made a 
better short abstract I Even his terms now stand as heads 
of my chapters." Under the advice of Sir Charles Lyell 



27& 



WALLACE, L. 



And Sir Joseph Hooker, the essay was read, together with an 
abstract of Darwin's own views, as a joint paper at the Linnean 
Society on the xst of July 1858. The title of Wallace's section 
was " On the Tendency of Varieties to depart indefinitely from 
the Original Type." The " struggle for existence," the rate of 
multiplication of animals, and the dependence of their average 
numbers upon food supply are very clearly demonstrated, and 
the following conclusion was reached: " Those that prolong their 
existence can only be the most perfect in health and vigour; . . . 
the weakest and least perfectly organized must always succumb." 
The difference between Lamarck's theory and natural selection 
is very clearly pointed out. " The powerful retractile talons of 
the falcon and the cat tribes have not been produced or increased 
by the volition of those animals; but among the different varieties 
which occurred in the earlier and less highly organized forms of 
these groups, those always survived longest which had the greatest 
facilities for seizing their prey. Neither did the giraffe acquire its 
long neck by desiring to reach the foliage of more lofty shrubs, 
and constantly stretching its neck for the purpose, but because 
any varieties which occurred among its antitypes with a longer 
neck than usual al once secured a fresh range of pasture over the 
same ground as their shorter-necked companions, and on the first 
scarcity of food were thereby enabled to outlive them." With such 
clear statements as these in the paper of the 1st of July 1858, it 
is remarkable that even well-known naturalists should have 
failed to comprehend the difference between Lamarck's and the 
Darwin- Wallace theory. Wallace also alluded to the resemblance 
of animals, and more especially of insects, to their surroundings, 
and points out that " those races having colours best adapted to 
concealment from their enemies would inevitably survive the 
longest." In 187 1 Wallace's two essays, written at Sarawak 
and Tcrnate, were published with others as a volume, Contribu- 
tions to the Theory of Natural Selection. Probably, next to the 
Origin of Species, no single work has done so much to promote 
clear understanding of natural selection and confidence in its 
truth; for in addition to these two historic essays, there are 
others in which the new theory is applied to the interpretation 
of certain classes of facts. Thus one treats of " Mimicry " in 
animals, another on " Instinct," another on " Birds' Nests." 
Each of these served as an example of what might be achieved 
in the light of the new doctrine, which, taught in this way and in 
an admirably lucid style, was easily absorbed by many who found 
the more complete exposition in the Origin very hard to absorb. 
In this work, and in many of his subsequent publications, Wallace 
differs from Darwin on certain points. Thus the two concluding 
essays contend that man has not, like the other animals, been 
produced by the unaided operation of natural selection, but that 
other forces have also been in operation. We here see the in- 
fluence of his convictions on the subject of " spiritualism." 
More recently he expressed his dissatisfaction with the hypothesis 
of " sexual selection " by which Darwin sought to explain the 
conspicuous characters which are displayed during the courtship 
of animals. The expression of his opinion on both these points 
of divergence from Darwin will be found in Darwinism (1889), a 
most valuable and lucid exposition of natural selection, as suited 
to the later period at which it appeared as the Eisays were to the 
ea3i(T. Darwin died same years Ijeforc thr controversy upon the 
possibility of the hereditary tuns minion of acquired characters 
arose over the writ in gs of Wtismann, but Wallace lias I 
accepted the general results of the German zoologist's t« 
and in Darwinism has presented a complete tin 
evolution unmixed with any trace of L^ 
inheritance, or Button's hereditary effect 
of surroundings. Tropica 
18 7 S, since republished con 
it formed the natural oou 
puuh'eations was \ \m 
(1876), a monumrc 
tain fully jtutfc | 
relation to 
of SpecUsJH* 



as a valuable supplement to the last-named work, appeared in 
1880. 

Turning to his other writings, Wallace published Miracles 
and Modern Spiritualism in 1881. Here is given an account 
of the reasons which induced him to accept beliefs which are 
shared by so small a proportion of scientific men. These reasons 
are purely experimental, and in no way connected with Christi- 
anity, for he had long before given up all belief in revealed 
religion. In 1882 he published Land Nationalization, in which 
he argued the necessity of state ownership of land, a principle 
which he had originated long before the appearance of Henry 
George's work. In Forty-five Years of Registration Statistics 
(1885) he maintained that vaccination is useless and dangerous. 
Wallace also published an account of what he held to be the 
greatest discoveries as well as the failures of the 19th century. 
The Wonderful Century (1809). His later works include Studies, 
Scientific and Social (1000), Man's Place in the. Universe (1903) 
and his Autobiography (1005). Possessed of a bold and intensely 
original mind, his activities radiated in many directions, ap- 
parently rather attracted than repelled by the unpopularity of 
a subject. A non-theological Aihanasius contra mundum t he 
has the truest missionary spirit, an intense faith which would 
seek to move the mountains of apathy and active opposition. 
Whatever may be the future history of his other views, he will 
always be remembered as an originator of a principle more 
illuminating than any which has appeared since the days of 
Newton, as one of its two discoverers whose scientific rivalry 
was only the beginning of a warm and unbroken friendship. 

Wallace was married in 1866 to the eldest daughter of the 
botanist, Mr William Mitten, of Hurstpierpoint, Sussex. In 
187 1 he built a house at Grays, Essex, in an old chalk-pit, and 
after living there four years, moved successively to Dorking 
(two years) and Croydon (three years). In 1880 he built a 
cottage at Godalming near the Charterhouse school, and grew 
nearly 1000 species of plants in the garden which he made. In 
1889 he moved to Dorsetshire. After his return to England in 
1862 Wallace visited the continent, especially Switzerland, for 
rest and change (1866, 1896) and the study of botany ami 
glacial phenomena (August 1895). He also visited Spa, in 
Belgium, about 1870, and in October 1887 went for a lecturing 
tour in the United States. He delivered a course of six Lowell 
lectures in Boston, and visited New York, New Haven, Balti- 
more, &c, spending the winter at Washington. The following 
March he went to Canada and Niagara, and then made his 
way westwards. He saw the Yosemile Valley, the Big Trees, 
and botanized in the Sierra Nevada and at Gray's Peak. 
In July he returned to Liverpool by way of Chicago and the 
St Lawrence. 

The first Darwin medal of the Royal Society was awarded 
to A. R. Wallace in 4890, and he had received the Royal medal 
in 1868. A pension was awarded him by Mr Gladstone at the 
beginning of 1881. He received the degree of D.C.L. from 
Oxford in 1889, and of LL.D. from the university of Dublin in 
1882. He was president of the Entomological Society of London 
in 1870-1871. 

Apart from Wallace's own AtttvbiegFcphy, a good deal of useful 
inform* i™, ;, K iy, n in trie bk^niphicjl introduction to Wallace's 
tf> vh iht A mauffi vr.d Riv Negro by the editor. Mr 







LEWIS fLtw] (18*7-1905), American soldier and 
xtrn ht Brook villi:, Indiana, on the 10th of April 
) an acuk'tnic education. He abandoned 
n J^diaiaapolis to recruit a corn- 
was, made second lieutenant) 
1 1 in j 846-1847 in the First 
■ the law, but at the begin- 
■1 . 1 o\ the Eleventh Indiana 
riia campaign, and on the 3rd 
brigadier-general. After the 
in, 1862) he was promoted 
l&fix), v as engaged at Shiloh 
cam minded the Eighth Corps 



WALLACE, SIR R.— -WALLACE, SIR WILLIAM 



277 



with headquarters at Baltimore. By delaying the Confederate 
general J. A. Early at Monocacy (July 9, 1864) he saved Washing- 
ton from almost certain capture. General Wallace served as 
president of the court of inquiry (November 1862) which in* 
vestigatad the conduct of General D. C. Buell, and of the court 
whkh in 1865 tried and condemned Henry Win, commander 
of the Confederate prison at Andersonville, Ga. He was also a 
member of the court whkh tried the alleged conspirators against 
President Lincoln. He resigned from the army in 1865 to 
return to the bar. He served as governor of New Mexico Terri- 
tory (1878-1881) and as minister to Turkey (1881-1885). Though 
exceedingly popular as a lecturer, his literary reputation rests 
upon three historical romances: The Fair God (1873), a story 
of the conquest of Mexico; Ben Hur (1880), a tale of the coming 
of Christ, which was translated into several languages and 
dramatized; and The Prince of India (1893), dealing with the 
Wandering Jew and the Byzantine empire. 

WALLACE, SIR RICHARD, Bart. (1818-1890), English 
art collector and philanthropist, was born in London on the 
76th of July 181 8. According to Sir Walter Armstrong (see 
DUt. of National Biography, art. " Wallace "), he was a natural 
son of Maria, marchioness of Hertford (wifeof the third marquess), 
under whose auspices the boy was educated, mainly at Paris; 
but it was generally supposed in his lifetime that he was a son 
of the fourth marquess (bis elder by only eighteen years), and 
therefore her grandson. At Paris he was well known in society, 
sad became an assiduous collector of all sorts of valuable objets 
fart, but in 1857 these were sold and Wallace devoted himself 
to assisting the fourth marquess, who left London to reside 
entirely in Paris, to acquire a magnificent collection of the 
finest examples of painting, armour, furniture and hric-t-brac. 
In 1870 the marquess of Hertford died unmarried, bequeathing 
to Wallace an enormous property, including Hertford House 
and its contents, the house in Paris, and large Irish estates. 
Pending the reopening of Hertford House, which had been shut 
up since the marquess had gone to live in Paris, Wallace sent some 
of the finest of his pictures and other treasures to the Bethnal 
Green Museum for exhibition; they were then transferred to 
Hertford House, whkh had been largely transformed in order 
to receive them. In 1 87 1 he was created a baronet for his services 
daring the siege of Paris, when he equipped several ambulances, 
founded the Hertford British hospital, and spent money lavishly 
m relief. This munificence endeared Sir Richard Wallace to 
the French people. From 1873 to l88 S ne had a scat In parlia- 
ment for Lisburn, but he lived mostly in Paris, where, in the 
Roe Laffitte and in his villa in the Bob de Boulogne, he dwelt 
among art treasures not inferior to those at Hertford House. 
In 1878 he was made one of the British commissioners at the 
Paris Exhibition, and he was also a trustee of the National 
Gallery and a governor of the National Gallery of Ireland. He 
died in Paris on the 20th of July 1890. He had married in 187 1 
the daughter of a French officer, by whom he had a son, who, 
however, died in 1887; and Lady Wallace, who died in 1897, 
bequeathed his great art collection to the British nation. It is 
now housed in Hertford House, Manchester Square, which was 
acquired and adapted by the government for the purpose. 

WALLACE, SIR WILLIAM (c. 1 270-1305), the popular 
national hero of Scotland, is believed to have been the second son 
of Sir Malcolm Wallace of Elderslie and Auchinbothie, in Ren- 
frewshire. The date of his birth is not certainly ascertained, 
but is usually given as 1 270. The only authority for the events 
of his early Kf e b the metrical history of Bund Harry. That 
authority cannot be implicitly relied on, though we need not 
conclude that the minstrel invented the stories he relates. He 
lived about two centuries later than Wallace, during which a 
considerable body of legend had probably gathered round the 
toiae, and these popular " gestis " he incorporates in his narra- 
tive. At the same time he professes to follow as his " autour " 
*& account that had been written in Latin by John Blair, the 
rcrsonal friend and chaplain of Wallace himself. As Blair's 
ic count has perished, we cannot tell how far the minstrel has 
iatihf inly followed his authority, but some comparatively recent 



discoveries have confirmed the truth of portions of the narrative 
which had previously been doubted. At best, however, his 
authority must be regarded with suspicion, except when it is 
confirmed by other and more trustworthy evidence. 

Only for a period of less than two years in his life— from the 
beginning of the insurrection in 1297 to the battle of Falkirk— 
does Wallace come before us in the clearest historical light. 
With the exception of one or two glimpses of him that we obtain 
from authentic historical documents, the recorded events of his 
later as of his earlier life rest on no more certain authority than 
that of Blind Harry. 

In his boyhood, according to the usual accounts, he resided 
for some time at Dunipace, in Stirlingshire, with an uncle, who 
is styled " parson " of the place. By this uncle h6 was partially 
educated, and from him he imbibed an enthusiastic love of 
liberty. His education was continued at Dundee, where he made 
the acquaintance of John Blair. On account of an incident that 
happened at Dundee— his slaughter of a young Englishman 
named Selby, for an insult offered to him— he is said to have 
been outlawed, and so driven into rebellion against the English. 
Betaking himself to the wilds of the country, he gradually 
gathered round him a body of desperate men whom he led in 
various attacks upon the English. In consequence of the success 
of these early enterprises his following largely increased, several 
of the more patriotic nobles— including the steward of Scotland, 
Sir Andrew Moray, Sir John de Graham, Douglas the Hardy, 
Wishart, bishop of Glasgow, and others— having joined him. 
His insurrection now became more open and pronounced, and 
his enterprises of greater importance. An attack was made 
upon the English justiciar, Ormsby.-who was holding his court at 
Scone. The justiciar himself escaped, but many of his followers 
were captured or slain. The burning of the Barns of Ayr, the 
quarters of English soldiers, in revenge for the treacherous 
slaughter of his uncle, Sir Ronald Crawford, and other Scottish 
noblemen, followed. The success of these exploits induced the 
English king to take measures for staying the insurrection. A 
large army, under the command of Sir Henry Percy and Sir 
Robert Clifford, was sent against the insurgents, and came up 
with them at Irvine. Dissensions broke out among the Scottish 
leaders, and all Wallace's titled friends left him and made sub- 
mission to Edward, except the ever faithful Sir Andrew Moray. 
The treaty of Irvine, by which these Scottish nobles agreed to 
acknowledge Edward as their sovereign lord, is printed in 
Rymer's Foedera. It is dated the oth of July 1297, and is the 
first public document in which the name of Sir William Wallace 
occurs. Wallace retired to the north, and although deserted by 
the barons was soon at the head of a large army. The vigour 
and success of his operations was such that in a short time he 
succeeded in recovering almost all the fortresses held by the 
English to the north of the Forth. He had begun the siege of 
Dundee when he received information that an English army, led 
by the earl of Surrey and Cressingham the treasurer, was on its 
march northward. Leaving the citizens of Dundee to 1 continue 
the siege of the castle, he made a rapid march to Stirling. En- 
camping in the neighbourhood of the Abbey Craig — on which 
now stands the national monument to his memory— he watched 
the passage of the Forth. After an unsuccessful attempt to bring 
Wallace to terms, the English commander, on the morning of 
the nth of September 1297, began to cross the bridge. When 
about one half of his army had crossed, and while they were still 
in disorder, they were attacked with such fury by Wallace, that 
almost all — Cressingham among the number — were slain, or 
driven into the river and drowned. Those on the south side of 
the river were seized with panic and fled tumultuously, having 
first set fire to the bridge. The Scots, however, crossed by a ford, 
and continued the pursuit of the enemy as far as Berwick. Sir 
Andrew Moray fell in this battle. The results of it were im- 
portant. The English were everywhere driven from Scotland. 
To increase the alarm of the English, as well as to relieve the 
famine which then prevailed, Wallace organized a great raid into 
the north of England, in the course of which he devastated the 
country to the gates of Newcastle. On his return he was elected 



278 



WALLACE, W.— WALLACE, W. V. 



guardian of the kingdom. In this office he set himself to re- 
organize the army and to regulate the affairs of the country. 
His measures were marked by much wisdom and vigour, and for 
a short time succeeded in securing order, even in the face of the 
jealousy and opposition of the nobles. Edward was in Flanders 
when the news of this successful revolt reached him. He hastened 
home, and at the head of a great army entered Scotland in July 
1208. Wallace was obliged to adopt the only plan of campaign 
which could give any hope of success. He slowly retired before 
the English monarch, driving off all supplies and wasting the. 
country. The nobles as usual for the most part deserted his 
standard. Those that remained thwarted his councils by their 
jealousies. His plan, however, came very near being successful. 
Edward, compelled by famine, had already given orders for a 
retreat when he received information of Wallace's position and 
intentions. The army, then at Kirkliston, was immediately set 
in motion, and next morning (July a a, 1298) Wallace was 
brought to battle in the vicinity of Falkirk.. After an obstinate 
fight the Scots were overpowered and defeated with great loss. 
Among the slain was Sir John de Graham, the bosom friend of 
Wallace, whose death, as Blind Harry tells, threw the hero into 
a frenzy of rage and grief. The account of his distress is one of 
the finest and most touching passages in the poem. With the 
remains of his army Wallace found refuge for the night in the 
Torwood — known to him from his boyish life at Dunipace. He 
then retreated to the north, burning the town and castle of 
Stirling on his way. He resigned the office of guardian, and 
betook himself again to a wandering life and a desultory and 
predatory warfare against the English. At this point his history 
again becomes obscure. He is known to have paid a visit to 
France, with the purpose of obtaining aid for his country from 
the French king. This visit is narrated with many untrustworthy 
details by Blind Harry; but the fact is established by other 
and indisputable evidence. When in the winter of 1303-1304 
Edward received the submission of the Scottish nobles, Wallace 
was expressly excepted from all terms. And after the capture 
of Stirling Castle and Sir William Oliphant, and the submission 
of Sir Simon Fraser, he was left alone, but resolute as ever in 
refusing allegiance to the English king. A price was set upon 
his head, and the English governors and captains in Scotland had 
orders to use every means for his capture. On the 5th of August 
1305 he was taken— as is generally alleged, through treachery— 
at Robroyston, near Glasgow, by Sir John Menteith, carried to 
the castle of Dumbarton, and thence conveyed in fetters and 
strongly guarded to London. He reached London on the 22nd 
of August, and next day was taken to Westminster Hall, where 
he was impeached as a traitor by Sir Peter Mallorie, the king's 
justice. To the accusation Wallace made the simple reply that 
he could not be a traitor to the king of England, for he never 
was his subject, and never swore fealty to him. He wis found 
guilty and condemned to death* The sentence was executed the 
same day with dixujnstajiecs of unusual cruelty. 

The cause of national independence was not lost with the- life of 
Wallace. Notwithstanding the cruelty and indignity amid which 
It terminated, thai Jilt was not a failure. It has been an inspira- 
tion to h:s countrymen ever since, The popukr TJcsi r**g;jfii!ag 
his statu fc b strength, bodily prowm ijvj nmisunud rautage are 
confirmed by the writer* iwsjvsi du qw^ time — Wyatt". 
Fordo n And indeed »u maacooldi 
personal ascendancy 
qualities. The littk we " 
short period he 
His patriotism 
skilled in 




WALLACE, WILLIAM (1 768-1843), Scottish mathematician, 
was born on the 23rd of September 1768 at Dysart in Fifeshire, 
where be received his school education. In 1784 his family 
removed to Edinburgh, where he himself was set to learn the 
trade of a bookbinder; but his taste for mathematics had 
already developed itself, and he made such use of his leisure 
hours that before the completion of his apprenticeship he had 
made considerable acquirements in geometry, algebra and 
astronomy. He was further assisted in his studies by John 
Robison (1730-1805) and John Playfair, to whom his abilities 
had become known. After various changes of situation, dictated 
mainly by a desire to gain time for study, he became assistant 
teacher of mathematics in the academy of Perth in 1704, and 
this post he exchanged in 1803 for a mathematical mastership 
in the Royal Military College at Great Marlow (afterwards at 
Sandhurst). In 1819 he was chosen to succeed John Leslie in the 
chair of mathematics at Edinburgh, and in 1838, when compelled 
by ill-health to retire, he received a government pension for life. 
He died in Edinburgh on the 28th of April 1843. 

In his earlier years Wallace was an occasional contributor to 
Lcybournc's Mathematical Repository and the Gentleman's Mathe- 
matical Companion. Between 1801 and 1810 he contributed article* 
on M Algebra," " Conic Sections," " Trigonometry,"* and several 
others in mathematical and physical science to the fourth edition of 
the Encyclopaedia Britannica, and some of these were retained in 
subsequent editions from the fifth to the eighth inclusive. He was 
also the author of the principal mathematical articles in the Edin- 
burgh Encyclopaedia, edited by David Brewster (1808-1830). He 
also contributed many important papers to the TransaUums of the 
Royal Society of Edinburgh. 

See Transactions of the Roy. Ast. Soc., 1844. 

WALLACE. WILLIAM (1844-1897), Scottish philosopher, was 
born at Cupar-Fife on the 1 zth of May 1844, the son of a house- 
builder. Between the ages. of sixteen and twenty-two he was 
educated at St Andrews, whence he proceeded as an exhibitioner 
in 1864 to Balliol College, Oxford. He took a first class in 
Moderations, and in Lit. Hum. (1867), was Gaisford prizeman in 
1867 (Greek prose) and Craven Scholar in 1869. Three years 
later he was appointed fellow, and in 187 1 librarian, of Merton 
College. In 1882 he was elected Whyte's professor of moral 
philosophy in succession to T. H. Green, and retained the position 
until his death. He died on the 18th of February 1897 from the 
effects of a bicycle accident near Oxford. His manner was some- 
what brusque and sarcastic, and on this account, in his under- 
graduate days at Balliol, he was known as " The Dorian." But 
he was greatly respected both as a man and as a lecturer. His 
philosophical works are almost entirely devoted to .German, and 
especially to Hegelian, doctrines, which he expounded and 
criticized with great clearness and literary skilL In dealing with 
Hegel he was, unlike many other writers, successful in express- 
ing himself in a lucid literary manner, without artificial and 
incomprehensible terminology. 

. 1 w urk* vn. re •' lie of Hegel (1873), which contain* 

a rr of the .'■■» ■...-' with an introduction, a second 

edit Kin oJ wtrfcfc with .1 volume entitled Prolegomena, appeared in 

iSr,j ; Epicureanism frBtioj; Kant. (Blackwood's Philosophical 

Claw. , tS6?)i Lite rf Ai.-ir.o > hopemkauer (1890); HefTs Philo- 

api*y of Mind UiujisLicd U 0x11 ihe Encyklopddte, with five intro- 

duc >ry roaays); Ledum and Essays on Natural TTteology and 

Etf . i, beine; a selection from his papers edited with a biographical 

ttnxluction by Edward CaiixL He wrote several important 

t.n t» for iheqth edition of the Ency. Bril., which, with some re- 

tiKifl, have been repeated in the- present work. 

WALLACE, WILLIAM VINCENT (1814-1865), British corn- 
was born at YVatcrtord, Ireland, his father, of Scottish 
twog a regimen 1 aI bandmaster. Vincent Wallace learnt 
to play several instruments, and became a leading 
Dublin. But in 1835 he married and went off to 
■beep farming. A concert in Sydney revived his 
m; and having separated from his wife, he began 
; which had many romantic episodes, in Australia, 
lh Seas, India and South America. He returned to 
In 1845 imd made various appearances as a pianist; 
Nbvcitibcr of that year bis opera Marilana was per- 
Piury Lane with great success: This was followed 
PSBuntary (1847), Litrlim (i860), Tkt Amber WUck 



WALLACK— WALL-COVERINGS 



279 



(rS6i), Lex's Triumph (1862) and The Desert Flower (1863). 
He also published a number of competitions for the piano, &c. 
Vincent Wallace was a cultivated man and an accomplished 
musician, whose Montana still holds the stage, and whose work 
as an English operatic composer, at a period by no means 
encouraging to English music, has a distinct historical value. 
Like Balfe, he was born an Irishman, and his reputation as one 
of the few composers known beyond the British Isles at that 
time is naturally coupled with Balfe's. But he was a finer artist 
and a more original musician. In later years he became almost 
blind; and he died in poor circumstances on the 12 th of October 
1865, leaving a widow and two children. 

WALLACK. JAMES WILLIAM (c. 1794-1864), Anglo- 
American actor and manager, was born in London, his parents 
being actors. He made his first stage appearance atDrury 
Lane in 1807. After three years in Dublin he was again at 
Drury Lane until he went to America in 18 18. He settled in 
New York permanently in 1852, the first Wallack's theatre being 
an old one renamed at the corner of Broome Street and Broad- 
way. The second, at 13th Street and Broadway, he built him- 
self. Wallack was an actor of the old schooL Thackeray praises 
his Shylock, Joseph Jefferson his Don Caesar de Baaan. He 
married the daughter (d. 1851) of John Henry Johnstone (i749~ 
1828), a popular tenor and stage Irishman. Their son, John 
Lutes Wallack (1820-1888), was born in New York on the 
1st of January 182a At one time in the English army, then on 
the Dublin and London stage, he made his first stage appearance 
ia New York in 1847 under the name of John Lester as Sir Charles 
Coldstream, in Boucicault's adaptation of Used Up. He was 
manager, using the name Wallack, of the second Wallack's 
theatre from 1861, and in 1882 he opened the third at 30th 
Street and Broadway. His greatest successes were as Charles 
Surface, as Benedkk, and especially as Elliot Grey in his own 
play Rasedale, and similar light comedy and romantic parts, for 
which his fascinating manners and handsome person well fitted 
Urn. He niaxrkd a sister (d. 1009) of Sir John Millais, He wrote 
his own Memories ej Fifty Years, 

WALLAROO, a seaport of Daly county, South Australia, 
situated in Wallaroo Bay, on the Spencer Gulf, 123 m. by rail 
N. W. by N. of Adelaide. It is connected by rail with the cele- 
brated Wallaroo copper mines (near Kadina, at a. distance of 
6 m. from the port). At Wallaroo Bay are the largest smelting 
works in the stale, ranking among the largest in the world. 
Gold, silver and concentrated ores are received from other 
parts of the continent and from Tasmania for smelting at these 
works, which have ample facilities for shipment. Population of 
town (xooi) 2920; of town and mines, 4866. 

WALLASEY, an urban district in the Wirral parliamentary 
division of Cheshire, England, 2 m. N.W. of Birkenhead, of 
which it forms a suburb. Pop. (1901) 53.579- The former 
marshy estuary called Wallasey Pool is occupied by the Great 
Float, forming an immense dock (see Birkenhead). The church 
of St Hilary, to. which is assigned a foundation in the xoth 
century, was rebuilt in the 18th century, with the exception of 
the tower bearing the date 1536. It was gutted by fire in 1857, 
and the whole was again rebuilt in the Early English style. 
On the shore of the Irish Sea is Leasowe Castle, once known as 
Mock-Beggar Hall, and supposed to have been erected by the 
earls of Derby in the reign of Elizabeth, in order to witness the 
horse-races held here. Under Wallasey Pool are remains of a 
submerged forest, in which various animal skeletons have been 



At the Conquest Wallasey formed part of the possessions or 
Robert dc Rhuddlan, and on his decease became part of the fee of 
RUton. In the reign of Elisabeth it had a small port, to which 
thtre belonged three barques and fourteen men. In 1668 the 
manor was possessed by the earl of Derby, but various parts after- 
wards became alienated. For a considerable time the horse-races 
held on what was then a common had considerable reputation, 
but they were discontinued in 1760. At these races the duke of 
Monmouth, son of Charles II., once rode his own horse and won 
the plate, 



WALLA WALLA, a dty and the county-seat of Walla Walla 
county, Washington, U.S.A., in the S.E. part of the state, on 
Mill Creek, about 200 m. S. by W. of Spokane. Pop, (1880) 
3588; (1890) 4700; (1000) 10,049, of whom 152a were foreign- 
born; (1910 census) • 19*364. Walla Walla is served by the 
Northern Pacific and the Oregon Railroad & Navigation Co/s 
(Union Pacific) railways, and by an interurban electric line. 
In the city are a state penitentiary, Fort Walla Walla (a U.S. 
cavalry post), a Federal Land Office, a Young Men's Christian 
Association building, a Carnegie library, the State Odd Fellows' 
Home, and the Stubblefield Home for Widows and Orphans. 
Sessions of Federal District and Circuit courts are held here. 
Walla Walla is the seat of Whitman College (chartered, 1859; 
opened, 1866; ^chartered, 1883), originally Congregational, but 
now non-sectarian, which. was founded by the Rev. Cushing 
Eells and. was named in honour of Marcus Whitman, and includes 
a college, a conservatory of music and a preparatory academy, 
and occupies a campus of 30 acres; and of Walla Walla College 
(Adventist). Here are also St Paul's School (Protestant Episco- 
pal) for girls, and St Vincent's Academy for girls and De La Salle 
Academy for boys (both Roman Catholic). The city is situated 
in a farming (especially wheat-growing), stock-raising and fruit- 
growing region, is a distributing centre for the adjacent territory 
in Washington, Oregon and Idaho, and has a large wholesale 
business. Among its manufactures are flour and grist-mill 
products, agricultural implements, lumber, foundry and machine- 
shop products, leather and malted liquors. The value of the 
factory product in 1005 was $1,485*79 1» 54* 1% more than in 
1000. The municipality owns its waterworks. In 1836 the 
famous missionary, Marcus Whitman, established at Wanlatpu, 
about 5 m. W. of the present Walla Walla, a mission of the 
American Board (Congregational), which in 1847 was broken up 
by an Indian attack, Whitman, his wife and twelve others 
being massacred, and the other residents being carried off as 
prisoners. In 1857 Fort Walla Walla was built by the United 
Slates government on the site of the present city, and about it 
a settlement grew up in 1857-1858. Walla Walla was laid out 
and organized as a town, and became the county seat in 1859; 
in 1862 it was chartered as a city. The name " Walla Walla " 
is said to be a Nes Perce Indian term meaning " a rapid stream." 

See W. D. Lyman, An Illustrated History of Walla Walla County, 
State of Washington (1901). 

WALL-COVERINGS. The present article deals with this 
subject (see Mural Decoration for art and archaeology) from 
the practical point of view in connexion with house-furnishing. 
In selecting a wall-covering, the chief factors to be borne in mind 
are the conditions of the room, viz. the use to which it is-to be put, 
and its lighting, aspect and outlook. 

Marble is one of the most beautiful materials that can be chosen for 
covering a wall. The variety of its natural markings and colour 
gives a wide choice that enables it to be employed in practically 
any scheme of colouring aod for rooms of any aspect and 
or any description. The working up of the marble is done 2l 
mostly by machinery ; the saws used arc flat strips of steel Z£Z. 
set in the frame of a machine and worked to and fro, sand mma 9> 
and water being constantly supplied to assist in the work of cutting. 
Mouldings are worked to the desired profile by rapidly revolving 
carborundum wheels, and arc afterwards polished by hand. Marble 
wall-slabbing needs very careful fixing, and should be well supported 
by a sufficient number of cramps at a little distance from the wall, 
leaving a space of about half an inch at the back of the slab. Non- 
rusting cramps should be used, such as those made of copper or 
bronze. A cement made of plaster of Paris and marble dust mixed in. 
the proportion of two parts to one should be used for fixing, as pure 
plaster, especially if new, is liable to swell and cause the marble to 
crack. Martxto and Scagliola are imitation marbles and are described 
in Plastbrwork. 

Well-designed and properly executed mosaic is a very beautiful 
decorative medium, and ranks among the most permanent as weH 
as most pleasing wall-coverings. With glass mosaic great u ^ 
ranges both of colour and of texture of surface can be rTmn ' 

obtained, different methods of preparing the glass giving a brilliant 
granular or quite dull surface as desired to suit the particular 
position of the work. Marble mosaic is used more for floors and 
pavings than for vertical surfaces. Most mosaic is now put together 
in the studio and pasted upon sheets of tough paper to which the 
design has previously been transferred. The whole section can thus 
be bedded on the prepared wall-surface with the least amount of 



28o 



WALLENSTEIN, A. E. 



trouble and without any danger of its sagging* When the cement kis 
properly &rt, the paper is washed oft from the fare of the work- 
Much improvement has been effected in ihe design and many* 
fact ur e of wall -t ilet, kip™ 1 1 y has the desig n of tile* reached a very 
Ta ^ high level of excellence, and as a material which combine* 

**^ the qualities of being hard in wear, durable, danip-tesui- 

ing and easily washable, with beauty of design, colouring and surface , 
tihng may perhaps be placed next in order of merit as a wall-covering 
to mosaic. A thin, opaque glass material, ma nufari ured under 
various trade names, is now much used, especially for tiling existing 
walla. It has all the sanitary qualities of tiles, but is perhaps 
somewhat more fragile and liable to be damaged under hard wear. 
It Is made in opal and other colours and h usually fined with a 
special ceinent or mastic which allows for slight movements of- 
expansion and contraction- Th< thickness of the material varies 
with different makers from i to i tn + 

Metal sheeting, though somewhat inartistic in appearance, is useful 
where a durable t waterproof and sanitary wall protection is needed, 
M tttt a ** therefore often used for sculleries, wash -house* and 

tbcttinr lavatories. Thin sheet* of line with slightly embossed 
^^ patterns and enamelled in colours can be hung upon the 
Will with a composition or white lead (one part) and whiting (two 
parts) mixed to a thick paste with varnish of gold slxe. Sheets 
of iroal or steel can be more elaborately embossed and fixed to 
the wall with nails or screws; they are either previously enamelled 
or are pa tnt ed after bci n e fixed . They are used more for cei I ing s than 
for wall-coverings* but are adapted for use in either position. 

Tapestry of good design and workmanship is a really beautiful 
wall-covering. It is usually hung upon frames fitted to the wall, 

^^ and may either cover the entire wall surface or be fixed 
Tmptttry. j n t jj e f Qrm fl | paiuij, friezes, dados or fillings, ft is not 
ai all a sanitary covering, lor it harbours a very large quantity of 
dust and dirt. The same remark applies, but perhaps in a less degree, 
to bnxadtj of silk and oWnj*, These materials are of a delicate 
nature and become easily soiled by the fumes of gas or oil lamps* 
Substitutes for these materials on stout paper and on cotton are made 
with a prepared back to facilitate pasting and hanging, and are a very 
good imitation of the better material 

A coarse canvas, specially prepared with a smooth back for pasting, 
and stained in several plain colour s* can now be purchased, Having 
a rough surface it naturally holds the dust, but this can easily be 
brushed off without damaging the material. It is a pleasing wall- 
covering, which will stand hard wear, and it forms a good back- 
ground Tor pictures and furniture. 

The term Ji wall-paper " embraces a very large variety of materials 
of many kinds, designs and qua! it ids, ranging from the cheapest 
WmB* mac h i ne-pri n led pa per* of t he most lli msy descript Eon a sj I 

mntut often hideous design, to the Japanese and similar Jtat her 
^^ papers, skilfully modelled in relief and richly decorated in 

gold and colours. The design of the paper, of whatever description 
it may be, should preferably be of a conventional pattern, unob* 
truMvc and restful to the eye and presenting do strong contracts of 
colour. The wall must be trcau-d as a background, consisting of a 
plane surface, and no attempt made to introduce a pictorial element 
into the decoration. The wall surface, regarded from the paper' 
hanger a point ol view, is often divided into three sections, the oWtf 
or fro«, the firid or fitting, and the frieze at the top immediately 
beneath the cornice. This subdivision is not always adhered to, and 
a wall may be papered uniformly all over its surface, or may consist 
of dado and filling; without the friese, or friefc and filling without ihe 
dado. The division 1 jet ween the sections is usually fornwd, in tha 
case of the frieie and filling, with a wood picture mil, and between the 
filling and dado with a moulded dado or chair rail. 

Wall -papers may be printed either in diiiempet colours or oil 
colour*, arid the patterns upon them arc printed either by hand or 
by machine- There are also itlf-cotoured papers whkh have'diffcrent 
kinds of surface finish, and with some of these a pattern is formed 
by contrasting a smooth with a rough or granulated surface or vice 
versa. Typical of such paper* are the intrant pafvr.x, which have the 

rr. Iiiii r rn-nrtr.it Jna rkr.in.l. ., tM .; n Krll_ . ■ »__ 



colour penetrating through their substance, 
often used in conjunct ion with 
coloured frieze of considerable depth- The 
jrl.iin paper or of an unr>btru*ivejpati 
down to the skirting withou 
printed in oil colours can be sued a 
in this way can be washed nepes 
pleasant 

'■■ ' •: \ ■>■ ■■• •• i: t n .,, .,..,1 





papers arc 
strongly 

of -ih.il, iP 

! 

[ nUKfi 

d treated 

I 

ce to ilir wall, i 

, kitchen* ,itiJ in simiLir 




sometimes worked on the paper with stencil paUtrm cut out of aiflc 
sheets. These are laid upon the paper and thick colour applied 
through the perforations with a stiff brush. 

The cheaper wall-papers are printed by machinery. The paper ia 
made to travel round a large arum around whkh are grouped the 
printing cylinders, each with its separate inking roller to supply the 
special colour for its use. On each of the wooden printing rollers is 
set copper " type," representing as much of the pattern as is to be 
printed in one colour. It is a difficult and tedious matter to get all 
the rollers to work together to form one perfect pattern, and when 
printing in several colours it may take a skilled workman a week or 
more to " set " his machine, a very large quantity of paper being 
spoilt during the process. 

The colours used for hand-printed work, whether applied with 
blocks or stencil plates, are much thicker in consistency than those 
for machine work. ( One advantage of hand-worked paper is the 
comparative ease with which a paper can be matched even after it 
has gone out of stock. At a slight extra cost the manufacturer will 
print a few pieces for his customer from the blocks he has retained. 
With machine-printed paper this, from a practical point of view, 
is impossible, for it would necessitate the printer's going through the 
long and costly process of " setting " the machine. 

Wall-papers are sold in rolls called "pieces. 4 ' In England the 
standard sjzc for a piece of paper is ia yds. long and si in. wide. 
The printed surface is only 20 in. in width, as a margin of half an inch 
is left on each edge. One or both of these plain margins must be 
removed prior to hanging. French wall-papers arc 9 yds. long and 
18 in. wide and only contain 40} so,, ft. compared with 63 ft. in a 

fiiece of English paper. To ascertain the number of pieces required 
or a room take the superficies in feet of the surface to be covered 
(deduction being made for the doors, windows, &c.) and divide by 60. 
This gives the net amount required; an allowance of about one- 
seventh must be added to allow for waste in matching patterns and of 
odd lengths. If French papers are to be used the division should be 
38 instead of 60, these figures representing in feet the area of the 
primed surface in each roll. The surface of the wall should before 
papering be carefully prepared so as to be quite smooth and regular. 
If the wall has been previously papered it should be stripped! and 
any irregularities filled in with stopping. To remove varnished paper- 



use hot water to which borax has been added in the proportions of 
2 oz. to each pint of water. I n selecting a paper for a newly plastered 
wall the colour chosen should be capable ot withstanding the bleaching 
action of the lime in the plaster. Greens, blues and pinks especially 
are affected in this manner. For heavy papers glue paste should be 
used. Papering which has become dirty may be effectually cleaned 
with new bread or stiff dough; when gently rubbed over the surface 
in one direction this speedily removes the dirt. When the wall is 
damp, tinfoil, pitch-coated paper or Wtuesden waterproofed paper 
is used behind the paper to prevent the paper from becoming damaged 
by the wet. ^ (J. Br} 

WALLENSTEIN ' (properly Waldstein), ALBRECHT 
WENZEL EUSEBIUS VON, duke of Friedland, Sagan and' 
Mecklenburg (1 583-1634), German soldier and statesman, 
was born of a noble but by no means wealthy or influential 
family at Herrmanic, Bohemia, on the 15th of September 1583. 
His parents were Lutherans, and in early youth he attended the 
school of the Brothers of the Common Life at Koschumbeig. 
After the death of his parents he was sent by his uncle, Slawata, 
to the Jesuit college of nobles at Olmtitz, after which he pro- 
fessed, hut hardly accepted, the Roman Catholic faith. In 
1 599 he went to'the university of Altdorf, which he had to leave 
in consequence of some boyish follies. Afterwards he studied at 
Bologna and Padua, and visited many places in southern- and 
western Europe. While in Padua he gave much attention to 
astrology, and during the rest of his life he never wavered in 
the conviction that he might trust to the stars for indications as 
to his destiny. For some time Wallenstein served in the army 
of the emperor Rudolph II. in Hungary, which was commanded 
by a methodical professional soldier, Giorgio Basta. His personal 
gallantry at the siege of Gran won for him. a company without 
purchase. In 1606 he returned to Bohemia, and soon afterwards 
he married an elderly widow, Lucrctia Nikossie von Landeck, 
whose great estates in Moravia he inherited after her death in 
161 4. His new wealth enabled him to offer two hundred horse, 
splendidly equipped, to the archduke Ferdinand for his war with 
Venice in 161 7. Wallenstein commanded them in person, and 
from that time he enjoyed both favour at court and popularity 
in the army. His wealth and influence were further increased 
by his marriage with Isabella Katharina, daughter of Count 
Barrach, a confidential adviser of the emperor Matthias. 

In the disturbances which broke out in Bohemia in 1618 and 
proved to be the beginning of the Thirty Years' War, advances 



WALLENSTEIN, A. E. 



281 



were made to Wallenstein by the revolutionary party, but he 
preferred to associate himself with the imperial cause, and he 
carried off the treasure-chest of the Moravian estates to Vienna, 
part of its contents being given him for the equipment of a regi- 
ment of cuirassiers. At the bead of this regiment Wallenstein 
won great distinction under Buquoy in the war against Mansfeld. 
He was not present at the battle of the Weisser Berg, but he did 
brilliant service as second-in-command of the army which opposed 
Gabriel Bethien in Moravia, and recovered his estates which the 
nationalists had seised. The battle of the Weisser Berg placed 
Bohemia at the mercy of the em peror Ferdinand, and Wallenstein 
tamed the prevailing confusion to his own advantage. He 
secured the great estates belonging to his mother's family, and 
the emperor sold to him on easy terms vast tracts of confiscated 
lands. His possessions he was allowed to form into a territory 
Ailed Friedland, and he was raised in 1622 to the rank of an 
imperial count palatine, in 1623 to that of a prince. In 1625 
se was nude duke of Friedland Meantime he fought with 
skill and success against Gabriel Bethien, and so enhanced his 
reputation at the dark moment when Vienna was in peril and the 
emperor's general Buquoy dead on the field of battle* At this 
stage in his life the enigma of his personality is complicated by 
toe fact that he was not only the cold, detached visionary with 
vast ambitions and dreams, but also the model ruler of his 
principality In everyday matters of administration he displayed 
rigour and foresight He not only placed the administration of 
justice on a firm basis and founded schools, hut by many wise 
measures developed agriculture and mining and manufacturing 
industries. At the same time he enlisted in the service of his 
ambition and his authority a pomp and refinement in his court 
which contrasted forcibly with the way of life of the smaller 
established rulers. 

When the war against the Bohemians had become a wide- 
spread conflagration, Ferdinand found he had no forces to oppose 
to the Danes and the Northern Protestants other than the Army 
of the League, which was not his, but the powerful and inde- 
pendent Maximilian's, instrument. Wallenstein saw his oppor- 
tunity and early in 1626 he offered to raise not a regiment or two, 
but a whole army for the imperial service. After some negotia- 
tions the offer was accepted, the understanding being that the 
Hoops were to be maintained at the cost of the countries they 
aright occupy. Wallenstein's popularity soon brought great 
numbers of recruits to his standard. He soon found himself 
at the head of jotooo (not long afterwards of 50.000) men. The 
—■ l-ifff* of this army in 1625, 1626 and 1627, against Mansfeld, 
the Northern Protestants and Gabriel Bethien, are described 
under Tfcmxr Yea**' Wax. 

Having established peace in Hungary, Wallenstein proceeded, 
ia 1627, to' dear Silesia of some remnants of Mansf eld's army, 
and at this time he bought from the emperor the duchy of Sagan, 
his outlay in the conduct of the war being taken into account in 
the conclusion of the bargain. He then joined Tilly in the 
struggle with Christian IV., and afterwards took possession of the 
duchy of Mecklenburg, which was granted to him in reward for bis 
services, the hereditary dukes being displaced on the ground that 
they had helped the Danish king. He failed to capture Stralsund, 
winch he besieged for several months in 1628. This important 
reverse caused him bitter disappointment, for he had hoped 
that by *ir*«hM^c free access to the Baltic he might be able to 
stake the emperor as supreme at sea as he seemed to be on land 
It was a part of Wallenstein's scheme of German unity that he 
should obtain possession of the Hanseatic towns, and through 
them destroy or at least defy the naval power of the Scandinavian 
kingdom, the Netherlands and England. This plan was com- 
pletely frustrated by the resistance of Stralsund, and even 
more by the emperor's " Edict of Restitution " that not only 
rallied against him all the Protestants but brought in a great 
soldier and a model army, Gustavus and the Swedes. 

At the same time the victory of the principles of the League 
involved the fall of Wallenstein's influence. By his ambitions) his 
high dreams of unity and the incessant exactions of his army, he 
had made for himself a host of enemies. He was reported to have 



spoken of the arrogance of the princes, and it appeared probable 
that he would try to bring them, Catholics and Protestants 
alike, into rigid subjection to the crown. Again and again 
the emperor was advised to dismiss him. Ferdinand was very 
unwilling to part with one who had served him so well, but the 
demand was pressed so urgently in 1630. that he bad no alter- 
native, and in September of that year envoys were sent to 
Wallenstein to announce his removal. Had the emperor declined 
to take this course, the princes would probably have combined 
against him, and the result would have been a civil war even 
more serious than that which had already brought so many 
disasters upon the country. ]Vauenstein perfectly understood 
this, and he therefore accepted the emperor's decision calmly, 
gave over his army to Tilly, and retired to Gitschin, the capital 
of his duchy of Friedland. There, and at his palace in Prague, 
he lived in an atmosphere of mysterious magnificence, the rumours 
of which penetrated all Germany. The enigma of his projects 
was intensified, and the princes who had secured his disgrace 
became more suspicious than ever. But ere long the emperor was 
forced by events to call him into the field again. 

Shortly before the dismissal of Wallenstein, Gustavus Adolphus 
had landed in Germany, and it soon became obvious that he was 
far more formidable than the enemies with whom the emperor 
had yet had to contend. Tilly was defeated at Breitenfeld and on 
the Lech, where he received a mortal wound, and Gustavus 
advanced to Munich, while Bohemia was occupied by bis allies 
the Saxons. The emperor entreated Wallenstein to come once 
more to his aid. Wallenstein at first declined; he had, indeed* 
been secretly negotiating with Gustavus Adolphus, in the hope 
of destroying the League and its projects and of building his 
new Germany without French assistance. However, he accepted 
Ferdinand's offers, and In the spring of 1632 he raised a fresh 
army as strong as the first within a few weeks and took the field. 
This army was placed absolutely under his control, so that he 
assumed the position of an independent prince rather than of a 
subject. His first aim was to drive the Saxons from Bohemia— 
an object which he accomplished without serious difficulty. 
Then be advanced against Gustavus Adolphus, whom he opposed 
near Nuremberg and after the battle of the Alte Veste diskdged. 
In November came the great battle of Lutxen (*.v.), in which 
the imperialists were d efea t ed, but Gustavus Adolphus was 
hilled. 

To the dismay of Ferdinand, Wallenstein made no use of the 
opportunity provided for him by the death of the Swedish king, 
but withdrew to winter quarters in Bohemia. In the campaign 
of 1633 much astonishment was caused by his apparent unwilling- 
ness to attack the enemy. He was in fact preparing to desert the 
emperor. In the war against the Saxons he had offered them as 
terms of peace the revocation of the Edict. Religious toleration 
and the destruction of the separatist regime, as well as not 
inconsiderable aggrandisements for his own power, formed bis 
programme, so far as historians have been able to reconstruct it, 
and becoming convinced from Ferdinand's obstinacy that the 
Edict would never be rescinded, he began to prepare to " force 
a just peace on the emperor in the interests of united Germany." 
With this object he entered into- negotiations with Saxony, 
Brandenburg, Sweden and France. He had vast and vague 
schemes for the reorganization of the entire constitutional system 
of the empire, and he himself was to have supreme authority 
in determining the political destinies of his country. But as the 
mere commander of mercenaries he was trusted by no one, and 
could only play the part of Cassandra to the end. 

Irritated by the distrust excited by bis proposals, and anxious 
to make bis power felt, he at last assumed the offensive against 
the Swedes and Saxons, winning his last victory at Steinau on 
the Oder in October. He then resumed the negotiations. In 
December he retired with his army to Bohemia, fixing his head- 
quarters at Pilsea. It had soon been suspected in Vienna that 
Wallenstein was playing a double part, and the emperor, en* 
couraged by the Spaniards at his court, anxiously sought .for 
means of getting rid of him. Wallenstein was well aware of the 
designs formed against him, but displayed little energy in hit 



282 



WALLER, EDMUND 



attempts to thwart them. This was due in part, no doubt, to ill- 
health, in part to the (act that he trusted to the assurances of his 
astrologer, Battista Seni. He also felt confident that when the 
time came for his army to decide between him and the emperor 
the decision wduld be in his own favour 

His principal officers assembled around him at a banquet on 
the 12th January 1634, when he submitted to them a declaration 
to the effect that tbey would remain true to him. This declara- 
tion they signed. More than a month later a second paper was 
signed; but on this occasion the officers' expression of loyalty to 
their general was associated with an equally emphatic expression 
of loyalty to their emperor. By thjs time Wallenstein had learned 
that he must act warily. On the 24th of January the emperor 
had signed a secret patent removing him from his command, 
and imperial agents had been labouring to undermine Wallen- 
stein's influence. On the 7th two of his officers, Piccolomini and 
Aldringer, had intended to seize him at Pilsen, but finding the 
troops there loyal to their general, they had kept quiet But 
a patent charging Wallenstein and two of his officers with high 
treason, and naming the generals who were to assume the supreme 
command of the army, was signed on the 18th of February, and 
published in Prague. 

When Wallenstein heard of the publication of this patent 
and of the refusal of the garrison of Prague to take his orders, 
be realized the full extent of his danger, and on the 23rd of 
February, accompanied by his most intimate friends, and 
guarded by about 1000 men, he went from Pilsen to Egcr, hoping 
to meet the Swedes under Duke Bernhard, who, at last convinced 
of his sincerity, were marching to join him. After the arrival of 
the party at Eger, Colonel Gordon, the commandant, and 
Colonels Butler and Leslie agreed to rid the emperor of his 
enemy. On the evening of the 25th of February Wallenstein 's 
supporters Illo, Kinsky, Tetzky and Neumann were received at 
a banquet by the three colonels, and then murdered. Butler, 
Captain Devereux and a number of soldiers hurried to the 
house where Wallenstein was staying, and broke into his room. 
He was instantly lulled by a thrust of Devereux's partisan. 
Wallenstein was buried at Gitschin, but in 1732 the remains were 
removed to the castle chapel of Mttnchengratz. 

No direct orders for the murder had been issued, but it was well 
understood that tidings of his death would be welcome at court. 
The murderers were handsomely rewarded, and their deed was 
commended as an act of justice. 

Wallenstein was tall, thin and pale, with reddish hair, and eyes 
of remarkable brilliancy. He was of a proud and imperious temper, 
and was seldom seen to laugh. He worked hard and silently. In 
times of supreme difficulty ne listened carefully to the advice of 
his counsellors, but the final decision was always his own, and he 
rarely revealed his thoughts until the moment for action arrived. 
Few generals have surpassed him in the power of quickly organizing 
great masses of men and of inspiring them with confidence and 
enthusiasm. But it is as a statesman that Wallenstein is immortal. 
However much or little motives of personal aggrandisement in- 
fluenced his schemes and his conduct, " Germany turns ever to 
Wallenstein as she turns to no other amongst the leaders of the 
Thirty Years' War. . . . Such faithfulness is not without reason. . . . 
Wallenstein's wildest schemes, impossible of execution by military 
violence, were always built upon the foundation of German unity. 
In the way in whicn he walked that unity was doubtless unobtain- 
able. . . . But during the long dreary years of confusion which 
w*r* to follow it w** «r»nu»»h?ncr t" tkinV of th* !*«» (w«r»nN»wlv *W* 
m:ni Willie lift.- had bevu ^xnt in lulling agaimtt the g resit cviU 
of the Land, against the spirit of rvjigiou* latoU -mnccamJ ihe*pirit 
of divtiion." 

Sec Forster, Atbrcikt vm Wqlitrtrtrtx ( 1 
US4&): Hclbig, Wattauiein u*J Arhh 
Ktiistr Ferdinand wnJ uVr Tfrnttg ■ 
Hurler, ^w Gtftfa'fM* }Y<iff*mrtint < 
WallexHciHj tiSfia); t. vnn Ranto* G 
1 £79); Ctfidtlv. Gtickkkb 
'.Mitchell, Watirtnlnniv 

WALLER. Bt«r»L*N 
eldest soli of £^| 
Bud 




at Coleshill and migrated to Bcaconsfidd. Of Waller's early 
education all we know is m's own account that he " was bred 
under several ill, dull and ignorant schoolmasters, till he went to 
Mr Dobson at Wickham, who was a good schoolmaster and had 
been an Eton scholar " His father died in 1616, and the future 
poet's mother, a lady of rare force of character, sent him to Eton 
and to Cambridge. He was admitted a fellow-commoner of 
King's College on the 22nd of March 1620. He left without a 
degree, and it is believed that in 1621, at the age of only sixteen, 
he sat as member for Agmondesham (Aroersham) in the last 
parliament of James 1 Clarendon says that Waller was " nursed 
in parliaments." In that of 1624 he represented Ilchester, and 
in the first of Charles I. Chipping Wycombe. The first act by 
which Waller distinguished himself, however, was his surreptitious 
marriage with a wealthy ward of the .Court of Aldermen, in 1631. 
He was brought before the Star Chamber for this offence, and 
heavily fined But his own fortune was large, and ail his life 
Waller was a wealthy man. After bearing him a son and a 
daughter at Beaconsfield, Mrs Waller died in 1634. It was about 
this time that the poet was elected into Falkland's " Club." 

It is supposed that about 163s he met Lady Dorothy Sidney, 
eldest daughter of the earl of Leicester, who was then eighteen 
years of age He formed a romantic passion for this girl, whom 
he celebrated under the name of Sacharissa. She rejected 
him, and married Lord Spencer in 1639. Disappointment, it is 
said, rendered Waller for a time insane, but this may well be 
doubted He wrote, at all events, a long, graceful and eminently 
sober letter on the occasion of the wedding to the bride's sister. 
In 1640 Waller was once more M.P. for Amersham, and made 
certain speeches which attracted wide attention; later, in the 
Long Parliament, he represented St Ives. Waller had hitherto 
supported the parly of Pym, but he now left him for the group 
of Falkland and Hyde. His speeches were much admired, and 
were separately printed; they are academic exercises vtry 
carefully prepared. Clarendon says that Waller spoke " upon all 
occasions with great sharpness and freedom." An extraordinary 
and obscure conspiracy against Parliament, in favour of the king, 
which is known as " Waller's Plot," occupied the spring of 1643, 
but on the 30th of May he and his friends were arrested. In 
the terror of discovery, Waller was accused of displaying a very- 
mean poltroonery, and of confessing " whatever he had. said, 
heard, thought or seen, and all that he knew . . or suspected 
of others." He certainly cut a poor figure by the side of those of* 
his companions who died for their opinions. Waller was called 
before the bar of the House in July, and made an abject speech 
of recantation. His life was spared and he was committed to the 
Tower, whence, on paying a fine of £10,000, he was released and 
banished the realm in November 1643. He married a second wife, 
Mary Bracey of Thame, and went over to Calais, afterwards 
taking up his residence at Rouen. In 1645 the Poems of Waller 
were first published in London, in three different editions; there 
has been much discussion of the order and respective authority of 
these issues, but nothing is decidedly known. Many of the lyrics 
were already set to music by Henry Lawes, In 1646 Waller 
travelled with Evelyn in Switzerland and Italy. During the 
worst period of the exile Waller managed to " keep a table " 
for the Royalists in Para, although in order to do so he was 
obliged to sell his wife's jewels. At the close of 1651 the House 
oj Commons revoked Waller's sentence of banishment, and he 
wAi allowed 10 return to Beaconsfield, where he lived very 
<ir»iil i he Restoration. 

055 he published A Panegyric to my Lord Protector, and 
de a Commissioner for Trade a month or two later. He 
i this up, in 1660, by a poem To the King, upon his 
' ' : . . i: turn. Being challenged by Charles II. to 
latter piece was inferior to the eulogy of Crom- 
replied, "Sir, we poets never succeed 
in as in fiction." He entered the House of 
1661, as M.P. for Hastings, and Burnet has 
next quarter of a century " it was no House 
there." His sympathies were tolerant and 
consianlly defended the Nonconformists. One 



WALLER, LEWIS— WALLER, SIR WILLIAM 



2«3 



famous speech o! Walter's was: *' Let us look to out Govern* 
ment, flcel and trade, 'tis the best advice the oldest Parliament 
man among you can give you, and so God bless you." After 
the death of his second wife, in 1677, Waller retired to his house 
called HaQ Barn at Beaconsfield, and though he returned to 
London, he became more and more attached to the retirement of 
his woods, " where, " he said, " he found the trees as bare and 
withered as himself." In 1661 he had published his poem, 
51 James* Park; in 1664 he had collected bis poetical works; 
in 1666 appeared his Instructions to a Painter; and in 1685 his 
Divine Poems. The final collection of his works is dated 1686, 
but there were further posthumous additions made in 1600. 
Waller bought a cottage at Coleshill, where he was born, meaning 
to die there; " a stag," he said, " when he is hunted, and near 
spent, always returns home." He actually died, hdwever, at 
Hall Barn, with his children and his grandchildren about him, 
on the 2 est of October 16S7, and was buried in woollen (in spite 
of his expressed wish), in trie churchyard of Beaconsfield. 

Waller's lyrics were at one time admired to excess, but 
with the exception of *' Go, lovely Rose " and one or two 
others, they have greatly lost their charm. He was almost 
destitute of imaginative invention, and his fancy was plain and 
trite But he resolutely placed himself in the forefront of 
reaction against the violence and " conceit " into which the 
baser kind of English poetry was descending. A great deal of 
discussion, some of it absurdly violent in tone, has been expended 
on the question how far Waller was or was not the pioneer in 
introducing the classical couplet into English verse. It is, of 
course, obvious that Waller could not M introduce " what had 
been invented, and admirably exemplified, by Chaucer. But 
those who have pointed to smooth distichs employed by poets 
earlier than Waller have hot given sufficient attention to the fact 
(exaggerated, doubtless, by critics arguing in the opposite camp) 
that it was he who earliest made writing in the serried couplet 
the habit and the fashion. Waller was writing in the regular 
heroic measure, afterwards carried to so high a perfection 
by Dryden and Pope, as early as 1623 (if not, as has been 
supposed, even in 162 1). 

The only critical edition of Waller's PoelUal Works '» that edited, 
with a careful biography, by G. Thorn- Drury, in 1893. (&• G.) 

WALLER, LEWIS (i860- ), English actor, was born in 
Spain, his father being a civil engineer. He first appeared on 
the London stage in 1883, at Toole's, and for some years added 
to his reputation as a capable actor in London and the provinces. 
He came more particularly to the front by a fine performance as 
Buckingham in The Three Musketeers under Mr Becrbohm Tree's 
management at His Majesty's in 1895, and soon afterwards 
organized a company of his own, first at the Hay market and 
afterwards at the Shaftesbury, Imperial, Apollo and other 
theatres. His fine voice and vigorous acting were well suited 
in his memorable production of Henry V. f and he had a great 
success with Monsieur Beaucaire and similar plays. His wife, 
Mrs Lewis Waller (Florence West), also became well known as 
a powerful and accomplished actress. 

WALLER. SIR WILLIAM (c. 1597-1668), English soldier, 
was the son of Sir Thomas Waller, lieutenant of Dover, and was 
born about 1597 He was educated at Magdalen Hall, Oxford, 
and served in the Venetian army and in the Thirty Years' War. 
He was knighted in 1622 after taking part in Vere's expedition 
to the Palatinate Little is known of his life up to 1640, when 
he became member of parliament for Andover Being a strict 
Presbyterian by religion, and a member of the opposition in 
politics, he naturally threw himself with the greatest ardour into 
the cause of the parliament when the Civil War broke out in 1642 
He was at once made a colonel, and conducted to a speedy and 
succesaful issue the siege of Portsmouth in September; and 
later in the year captured Farnham, Winchester and other 
places in the south-west At the beginning of 1643 Waller was 
sude a major-general and placed in charge of operations in the 

regkm ? f -SfT Wler and Bri$l ° l (scc Creat Rebellion), and 
he concluded his first campaign with a victory at Highnarn and 
the capture of Hereford. He was then called upon to oppose the 



advance of Sir Ralph Hopton and the Royalist western army, 
and though more or less defeated in the hard-fought battle of 
Lansdown (near Bath) he shut up the enemy in Devizes. How- 
ever, Hopton and a relieving force from Oxford inflicted a crush- 
ing defeat upon Waller's army at Roundway Down. Hopton 
was Waller's intimate personal friend, and some correspondence 
passed between the opposing generals, a quotation from which 
(Gardiner, Civil War, I 168) is given as illustrative of " the 
temper in which the nobler spirits on either side had entered 
on the war." " That great God," wrote Waller, " who is the 
searcher of my heart knows with what a sad sense I go upon this 
service, and with what a perfect hatred I detest this war without 
an enemy; but I look upon it as sent from God . . . God. . . 
in his good time send us the blessing of peace and in the meantime 
assist us to receive itl We are both upon the stage and must 
act such parts as are assigned us in this tragedy, let us do it in 
a way of honour and without personal animosities." 

The destruction of his army at Roundway scarcely affected 
Waller's military reputation, many reproaching Essex, the 
commander-in-chief, for allowing the Oxford royalists to turn 
against Waller. The Londoners, who had called him " William 
thp Conqueror," recognized his skill and energy so far as willingly 
to raise a new army for him in London and the south-eastern 
counties. But from this point Waller's career is one of gradual 
disillusionment. His new forces were distinctively local, and, 
like other local troops on both sides, resented long marches and 
hard work far from their own counties. Only at moments of 
imminent danger could they be trusted to do their duty. At 
ordinary times, e.g. at the first siege of Basing House, they 
mutinied in face of the enemy, deserted and even marched home 
in formed bodies under their own officers, and their gallantry 
at critical moments, such as the surprise of Alton in December 
1643 and the recapture of Arundel in January 1644, but partially 
redeemed their general bad conduct. Waller himself, a general 
of the highest skill, — " the best shifter and chooser of ground " 
on either side,— was, like Turenne, at his best at the head of a 
small and highly-disciplined regular army. Only a Conde or a 
Cromwell could have enforced discipline and soldierly spirit in 
such men, ill-clad and unpaid as they were, and the only military 
quality lacking to Waller was precisely this supreme personal 
magnetism. In these circumstances affairs went from bad to 
worse. Though successful in stopping Hopton's second advance 
at Cheriton (March 1644), he was defeated by Charles I. in the war 
of manoeuvre which ended with the action of Cropredy Bridge 
(June), and in. the second battle of Newbury in October his 
tactical success at the village of Speen led to nothing. His last 
expeditions were made into the west for the relief of Taunton, 
and in these he had Cromwell as his lieutenant-general. By this 
time the confusion in all the armed forces of the parliament had 
reached such a height that reforms were at last taken in hand. 
The original suggestion of the celebrated " New Model " army 
came from Waller, who wrote to the Committee of Both King- 
doms (July 2 » 1644) to the effect that " an army compounded 
of these men will never go through with your service, and till 
you have an army merely your own that you may command, 
it is in a manner impossible to do anything of importance." 
Simultaneously with the New Model came the Self-Denying 
Ordinance, which required all members of parliament to lay down 
their military commands. Waller did so gladly — the more as he 
had already requested to be relieved — and his active military 
career came to an end. But the events of 1643- 1644 h&d done 
more than embitter him. They had combined with his Pres- 
byterianism to make him intolerant of all that he conceived 
to be licence in church, state or army, and after he ceased to 
exercise command himself he was constantly engaged, in and 
out of parliament, in opposing the Independents and the army 
politicians, and supporting the cause of his own religious system, 
and latex that of the Presbyterian-Royalist opposition to the 
Commonwealth and Protectorate regime. He was several times 
imprisoned between 1648 and 1659. In the latter year he was 
active in promoting the final negotiations for the restoration of 
Charles II and reappeared in the House of Commons: He sat 



284 



WALLINGFORD— WALLIS, J. 



in the Convention Parliament, bat soon retired from political 
life, and he died on the 19th of September 1668. 

Sec Wood's Athenae Oxonienses, ed. Bliss, Hi. 812; and two partial 
autobiographies, " Recollections by General Sir William Waller " 
(printed in The Poetry of Anna Matilda, 1788), and Vindication of 
ike Character, Ac. (1797)- 

Sir William Waller's cousin, Sir Harmless Waller (c. 1604- 
1666) was also a parliamentarian of note. Knighted by Charles 
I. in 1629, he gained military experience in serving against the 
rebels in Ireland; then from 1645 to the conclusion of the Civil 
War he was in England commanding a regiment in the new 
model army. He was Colonel Pride's chief assistant when the 
latter " purged " the House of Commons in 1648, and he was 
one of the king's judges and one of those who signed the death 
warrant. During the next few years Waller served in Ireland, 
finally returning to England in 1660. After the restoration he 
fled to France, but soon surrendered himself to the authorities 
as a regicide, his life being spared owing to the efforts of his 
friends. He was, however, kept in prison and was still a captive 
when he died. 

See M. Noble, Laes of the Regicides (1708). 

WALLINGFORD, a township of New Haven county, Con- 
necticut, U.S.A., S.W. of the centre of the state, in the valley of 
the Quinnipiac river. It contains the villages of East Wailing- 
ford, Tracy and Yalcsville, and the borough of Wallingford. 
Pop. of the township (1900) 9001, (1910) 11,155; of the borough 
(1900) 6737, of whom 1796 were foreign-born and 21 were negroes, 
(1910) 8690. Area of the township, about 38 sq. m. The 
borough is 12 m. N.E. of New Haven, on a hill about i\ m long, 
and is served by the New York, New Haven & Hartford railway 
(which has stations also at East Wallingford and Yalesville) and 
by an interurban electric line connecting with Mcriden and New 
Haven. The borough has a public library (1881), a Masonic 
Home, the Gaylord Farm Sanatorium of the New Haven County 
Anti-Tuberculosis Association, the Phelps School (for girls) and 
the Choate School (1896, for boys). Among the manufactures 
of the borough are sterling silver articles, plated and britannia 
ware, brass ware, rubber goods, cutlery and edge tools. The 
township of Wallingford was settled in 1670. At a meeting held 
in January 1766, in protest against the Stamp Act, it was 
declared, that " Whereas it appears from ancient Records and 
other Memorials of Incontestable Validity that our Ancestors 
with a great Sum Purchased said township, with great Peril 
possessed and Defended the Same, we are Born free (having 
never been in bondage to any), an inheritance of Inestimable 
Value," and a penalty of 20s. was imposed upon any one who 
should introduce or use stamped paper or parchment. During 
the War of Independence patriotic sentiment here was strong 
and Loyalists were sometimes exiled to Wallingford, where they 
could have no effective influence. The borough of WalMngford 
was incorporated in 1853 and re-incorporated in 1868. From 
1851 to 1880 there was a communistic settlement, a branch of 
the Oneida Community, here; its property was bought by the 
Masonic Order and made into the Masonic Home. 

See C. H. S. Davis's History of Wallintjord (Meriden, 1870). 

WALLINGFORD, a market town and municipal borough in the 
Abingdon parliamentary division of Berkshire, England, 51 m. 
W by N. of London by the Great Western railway. Pop. (1001) 
2808. It is pleasantly situated in the flat valley of the Thames, 
on the west (right) bank. The railway tUtkfi is the terminus 
cA a branch line (mm Cholscy, Of tT ' ctiwr^icYoriiy St Leonard 1 ^ 
retaining some Norman work an«t rti ■ ^ j ly on its 

original plan, with . - «*■* i In.- indent 

ca^lc his left only 1 works 

may be tractrj * u ■ - "1 «Mc. TTift 

town hall rais ttftmar 

s< hwl wis ftui q< 1*4 a tfio^^^H 
agricultural ind p 
a mayor, 4 alder 

Th.-sTteafV 



the Conquest, and, though burned by Sweyn in ipo6, was much 
the largest and most important borough in Berkshire at the time 
of the Domesday Survey. The new castle was so extensive that 
eight houses had been demolished to make room for it; the 
market was already in existence, and perhaps also the gild 
merchant, which in a charter of Henry II. is said to date back 
to the reign of the Confessor. In the reign of Henry I. the be- 
ginning of decay is marked by the inability of the town " through 
poverty " to pay its aid. It is said to have suffered greatly from 
the Black Death, and its decline was accelerated by the building, 
in the early 15th century, of two bridges near Abingdon, which 
diverted the main road between London and Gloucester from 
Wallingford. Periodical reductions in the fee farm show the 
gradual impoverishment of the town, and in 1636 its Assessment 
for ship-money was only £20, while that of Reading was £220, 
Wallingford was a royal borough held in the reign of Henry III. 
by Richard, king of the Romans. Edward III. granted the fee 
farm to the Black Prince and his successors in the duchy of 
Cornwall. The earliest charters were given by Henry I. and 
Henry II., the latter confirming the ancient privileges of the 
borough, which were to be held as the citizens of Winchester held 
theirs, and granting to the burgesses freedom from toll through- 
out his dominions. These charters were confirmed and enlarged 
by Henry III. in 1267 and by Philip and Mary in 1557-1558. 
In 1648 the corporation consisted of a mayor, three aldermen, 
a chamberlain and sixteen burgesses. This constitution was 
remodelled in 1650 by a charter from Cromwell, but the governing 
charter until the passing of the Municipal Corporations Act of 
1835 was that given by Charles II. in 1663, incorporating the 
town under the style of a mayor,* recorder, town clerk, six 
aldermen, two burgesses, a chamberlain and eighteen assistants 
of the better sort of the inhabitants. In 1571 Elizabeth issued 
letters patent empowering the burgesses of Wallingford to take 
toll of all carts passing over their bridge, in order to provide for 
its repair and maintenance. Wallingford sent two members to 
parliament from 1295 to 1832, and one from 1832 to 1885, when 
its representation was merged in that of the county: before 1832 
the franchise was vested in the inhabitants paying scot and lot. 
The empress Maud took refuge at Wallingford after her escape 
from Oxford Castle (1142), and here peace was made between her 
and Stephen ( 1 1 53) . .Wallingford Castle was one of the last fort- 
resses to hold out for Charles I., and during the Commonwealth 
it was demolished by order of the government. In 1 205 the king 
commanded the sheriff of Oxford to cause a fair to be held at 
Wallingford at Whitsun for four days, to he continued for three 
years. In 1 227 Swyncombe fair was transferred from the feast of 
St Botolph to the feast of St Mark in order not to interfere with 
Wallingford fair. Fairs on the days of St Nicholas and of St John 
the Baptist were granted by Henry VII. in 1500, and the charter 
of 1663 provided for two markets and four annual fairs. All the 
latter have fallen into disuse except the Michaelmas fair, which is 
principally for hiring servants. During the 1 8th century the town 
was fairly prosperous and had a good trade in grain and malt. 

See Victoria County History, Berks; T. K. Hedges, The History 
of Wallintford (London, 1881). 

WALLIS, JOHN (1616-1703), English mathematician, 
logician and grammarian, was born on the 23rd of November 
x 61 6 at Ashford, in Kent, of which parish his father, Rev. John 
Wallis (1567-1622), was incumbent. After being at school at 
Ashford, Tenterden and Felsted, and being instructed In Latin, 
Greek and Hebrew, he was in 1632 sent to Emmanuel College, 
Cambridge, and afterwards was chosen fellow of Queens' College. 
Having been admitted to holy orders, he left the university in 
1 64 1 1 act as chaplain to Sir WilHam Darley , and in the following 
year accepted a similar appointment from the widow of Sir 
Horatio Vere. It was about this period that he displayed 
surprising talents in deciphering the intercepted letters and 
rapers of the Royalists. His adherence to the parliamentary 
ny was in 1643 rewarded by the living of St Gabriel, Fen- 
lurch Street, London. In 1644 he was appointed one of the 
or secretaries of the Assembly of Divines at Westminster. 
the same year he married Susanna Glyde, and thus 



curing 



WALLIS ARCHIPELAGO— WALLON 



285 



vacated bis fellowship; fat the death of his mother had left 
him in possession of a handsome fortune. la 164s he attended 
those scientific meetings which led to the establishment of the 
Royal Society. When the Independents obtained the superiority 
Walls adhered to the Solemn League and Covenant. The 
living of St Gabriel he exchanged for that of St Martin, Iron- 
monger Lane; and, as rector of that parish, he in 1648 sub* 
scribed the- Remonstrance against potting Charles I. to death. 
Notwithstanding this act of opposition, he was in June 164$ 
appointed Savilian professor of geometry at Oxford. In 1654 
he 1 here took the degree of D.D., and four years later succeeded 
Gerard Langbaine (1600-1658) as keeper of the archives. After 
the restoration he was named one of the king's chaplains in 
ordinary. While complying with the terms of the Act of Uni- 
formity, Wallis seems always to have retained moderate and 
rational notions of ecclesiastical polity. ^He died at Oxford on 
the 28th of October 1703. 

The works of Wallis are numerous, and relate to a multiplicity 
of subjects. His Instiluiio logical, published in 1687, was very 
fx>puUr. and in his Crammatica linguae Anglicanae we find indica- 
tion* of an acute and philosophic intellect. The mathematical works 
are published, some of them in a small 4to volume (Oxford, 1657) 
and a complete collection in three thick folio volumes (Oxford* 
i6»)j-i6o9). The third volume includes, however, some theo- 
In^-ica! treatises, and the first part of it is occupied with editions of 
treatises on harmonics and other works of Creole geometers, some of 
them first editions from the MSS., and in general with Latin versions 
and notes (Ptolemy, Porphyrius, Briennius. Archimedes, Eutocius, 
Ahstarchus and Pappus). The second and third volumes include 
also his correspondence with his contemporaries; and there is a tract 
on trigonometry by Caswell. Excluding all these, the mathe- 
matical works contained in the first ana second volumes occupy 
about 1800 pages. The titles in the order adopted, but with date 
of publication, arc .as follows: " Oratio inauguralis," on his 
appointment (1649) as Savilian professor (1657); M Mathesis uni- 
versalis, seu opus arithmeticum philologre et mathematice tradi- 
tura, arithmeticam numerosam et spcciosam aliaquc continens " 
(1657); *• Ad versus Mcibomiura, de proportionibus dialogus ° 
(1657); *' De sectionibus conicis nova methodo expositis " (1655); 
" Arithmetica infinirorum, sive nova mcthodus inquirendi in 
curvilineorum quadraturam aliaque dtftkiUora matheseos pro- 
Mrraata " (»655): " Eclipsis Solaris observatio Oxonii habita 2° 
Aug. 165a" 0655): "Tractatus duo. prior de cycloide, posterior 
de cissotde et de curvarum turn linearum *UM/*9u turn super- 
ficierum wXmrvouA^ (1659); " Mcchanica, sive de motu tractatus 
geometricus" (three parts, 1669-1670-1671); u De algebra 
tractatus btstoricua et practicus, ejusdem onginem et progressua 
vanos ostendem " (English, 1685); " De combinaitonibos alterna- 
tiunibus et partibus juiquotis tractatus " (English, 1685) " De 
sectionibus angularibus tractatus" (English, 1685); " De angulo 
contact us et semicirculi tractatus'* (1656); "Ejusdem tractatus 
defensio " (168O I " De postulate quinto, et quinta definitions 
lib. VL Euclidkt, dJsceptatio geomctrica" 1663); "cuno- 
cuaeus, seu corpus partira conum partim cuneura representans 
geometrice constderatum " (English, 1685) ; " De gravitate et 
gravitatione disquisitio geometrica " (1662; English, 1674); " De 
aesru maris hypothesis nova " (1666-1669). 

The Arithmetic* infinitomm relates chiefly to the quadrature of 
curves by the so-called method of indivisibles established by Bona- 
ventura Cavalieri in 1629 (see Infinitesimal Calculus). He 
extended the " law of continuity " as stated by Johannes Kepler; 
regarded the denominators of fractions as powers with negative 
exponents; and deduced from the quadrature of the parabola y -x*. 



mr m is a positive integer, the area of the curves when m is negative 
or fractional. He attempted the quadrature of the circle by inter- 
potation, and arrived at the remarkable expression known as Wallis' s 
Thtmtwi (see CiacLE, Squaring op). In the same work Wallis 



r Jt for the length of the element of a curve, which 

reduced the problem of rectification to that of quadrature. 

The Mathesis universalis, a more elementary work, contains 
copious dissertations on fundamental points of algebra, arithmetic 
and geometry, and critical remarks. 

The D* algebra tractatus contains (chapters ixvi.-udx.) the idea 
of the interpretation of imaginary quantities in geometry. This 
at given somewhat as follows : the distance represented by the 
square root of a negative quantity cannot be measured in the line 
backward* or forwards, but can be measured in the same plane 
above tbe line, or (as appears elsewhere) at right angles to the line 
either in Che plane, or in the plane at right angles thereto. Con- 
todered a* a Issstory of algebra, this work is strongly objected to by 
jean Ecsenna Montucla on the ground of its unfairness as against the 
early Italian algebraists and also Franciscus Vieta and Rene Descartes 
aad in favour 0/ Harriot ; but Augustus De Morgan, while admitting 
this, atcr bore* to it considerable merit. The symbol for infinity, o», 
was invested b9Lbjm. 



The two treatises 00 the cycloid and on thecissoid, Ac., and the 
Mechanic*, contain many results which were then new aad valuable. 
The latter work contains elaborate investigations in regard to the 
centre of gravity, and it is remarkable also for the employment of 
the principle of virtual velocities. 

Among the letters in volume iii., we have oae to the editor of 
the Ada Leifisica, giving the decipherment of two letters in secret 
characters. The 'embers are different, but on the same principle: 



the characters in each are either single digits or combinations of 
two or three digits, standing some of them for letters, others for 
syllables or words,— tbe number of distinct characters which had 



to be deciphered being thus very considerable. 

For the prolonged conflict between Hobbes and Wallis, see Hobbes, 

Thomas. 

• WALLIS ARCHIPELAGO, Uvea,' or Uea, a group of islands 
In the Pacific Ocean, N.E. of Fiji, about 13 S., 176° W.,* with 
a land area of 40 sq. m., belonging to France. It was placed 
under the French protectorate on the 5th of April 1887, and 
connected for administrative purposes with New Caledonia 
by decree of the 27th of November 1888. There b a French 
Resident in the islands, which are connected by a regular service 
with Noumea, New Caledonia. The principal islands are Uvea, 
of volcanic formation and surrounded with coral, and Nukuatea. 
The islands were discovered by Samuel Wallis ia 1767, and it 
was a missionary, Father Bataillon, who in 1837 first brought 
the influence of France to bear on the natives. These, about 
4500 in number, are of Polynesian race, gentle and industrious. 
The trade of the islands is mainly with Samoa, whence cottons 
and iron goods are imported, and to which copra and roots are 
exported. The Home Islands (Fotuna and Alofa), S.W. of the 
Wallis Islands, were discovered by Jacob Lemaire and Willcm 
Cornells Schouten in 161 6, and placed under the French pro- 
tectorate by decree of the 16th of February 1888. They have 
1 500 inhabitants. ' "*" 

WALLON, HENRI ALEXANDRE (181 2-1004), French 
historian and statesman, was born at Valenciennes on the 23rd 
of December 18 12. Devoting himself to a literary career, he 
became In 1840 professor at the £co!e Norm ale Supcricure under 
the patronage of Guizot, whom he succeeded as professor at the 
Facult6 des Lettres in 1846. His works on slavery in the French 
colonies (1847) and on slavery in antiquity (1848; new edition 
in 3 vols., 1879) led to his being placed, after the Revolution 
of 1848, on a commission for the regulation of labour in the 
French colonial possessions, and in November 1849 he was 
elected to the Legislative Assembly by the department of the 
Nord. He resigned in 1850, disapproving of the measure for 
the restriction of the suffrage adopted by the majority In the 
same year he was elected a member of the Academie des In- 
scriptions, of which he became perpetual secretary in 1873. 
Under the empire he withdrew altogether from political life, 
and occupied himself entirely with his duties as a professor of 
history and with historical writings, the most original of which 
is a biography, Richard //, episode de la rivaliie de la France 
et de VAngieterre (2 vols., 1864). Although remaining a re- 
publican, he exhibited decided clerical leanings in his Jeanne 
d'Arc (2 vols., i860; 2nd ed., 1875); La Vie de Noire Seigneur 
Jisus (1865)— a reply to the Vie dejfsusot E. Renan; And Saint 
Louis et son temps (187 1; 4th ed., 1892), which still ranks among 
haglographical works. Returning to politics after the Franco- 
German War, Wallon was re-elected by the department of the 
Nord in 1871, took, an active part in the proceedings of the 
Assembly, and finally immortalized himself by carrying his 
proposition for the establishment of the Republic with a presi- 
dent elected for seven years, and then eligible for re-election, 
which, after violent debates, was adopted by the Assembly 
on the 30th of January 1875. " Ma proposition," he declared, 
" ne proclame pas la Repubtique, elle la fait." Upon the defini- 
tive establishment of the Republic, Wallon became Minister of 
Public Instruction, and effected many useful reforms, but his 
views were too conservative for the majority of the Assembly, 
and he retired in May 1876. He had been chosen a life senator 
In December 187 s. Returning to his historical studies, Wallon 
produced four works of great importance, though less from 
his part in them as author than from the documents which' 
accompanied them: La Terreur (1873); iftitotr* du tribunal 



I 



?86 



WALLOONS 



Graodgagnage, DeV origin* des Wallons (Liege, 1 852), Vocabulaire 

s noms wallons, fife. (2nd ed., 1857), and DicL My* *' &* ' a l^n«u 

-ittonne (t. i. and ii. t 1845-1851 ; t. ui., by Sender, 1880); I. Dciardin, 

Diet des "spots" ou proverbes wallons (1863); Van der Kinder*, 



rioolulionnaire de Paris avee le journal it us odes (6 vols., 
1880-1882); La Resolution du ji mai el le fidiralisme en 179 j 
(2 vols., 1886); Les Rtprtsenlants du peuple en mission el la 
justice rivolutionnaire dans les dipartements (5 vols., 1880-1890). 
Besides these he published a number of articles in the Journal 
des savants; for many years he wrote the history of the Aca- 
demic des Inscriptions in the collection of Memoirs of this 
Academy, and he composed obituary notices of his colleagues, 
which were inserted in the Bulletin. He died at Paris on the 
13th of November 1904. 

WALLOONS (Wallons, from a common Tcut. word meaning 
" foreign," cf. Gcr. welsch % Du. waalsch, Eng. Welsh) , a people 
akin to the French, but forming a separate branch of the Romance 
race, inhabiting the Belgian provinces of Hainaul, Namur, 
Liege, parts of Luxemburg and southern Brabant, parts of the 
French departments of Nord and Ardennes, and a few villages 
in the neighbourhood of Malmedy in Rhenish Prussia. The 
Walloons arc descended from the ancient Gallic Belgi, with an 
admixture of Roman elements. They are in general charac- 
terized by greater vivacity and adaptability than Ibcir Flemish 
neighbours, while they excel their French neighbours in en- 
durance and industry. Their numbers are reckoned in Belgium 
at between 2,000,000 and 3,000,000. The Walloon dialect is 
a distinct branch of the Romance languages, with some ad- 
mixture of Flemish and Low German. It was used as a literary 
language until the 15th century, when it began to be assimilated 
to French, by which it was ultimately superseded. . 

c 
des 
waltonne 

Diet des _,_„ __ , , . 

Recherche* sur C ethnologic de la Beigique (Brussels, l872);Demarteau, 
Le Flamand, le Wallon, &c. (Liege. 1880); M. Wilmottc, Le Walton, 
Histoire el literature (Brussels, 1893); Monseur, Le Folklore wallon 
(Brussels, 1802). [X.] 

Walloon Literature.— In medieval times various local 
documents in prose and verse were written by inhabitants of 
Liege and its diocese in a dialect of French which contained many 
Walloon words and phrases. It is supposed that as early as the 
1 2th century the idiom of the people may have been used in 
songs which arc now lost, unless echoes of them are preserved in 
the curious Noels, partly in French, partly in patois, which were 
orally collected by M. Doutrcpont and published in 1888. Several 
Flemish works in old French, containing Walloon expressions, 
and in particular the so-called Poente moral of the 13th century, 
have been claimed as precursors of a local literature* but they 
arc really to be considered as composed in French with a certain 
admixture of Licgcois phrases. The earliest existing specimen of 
pure Walloon literature is the Ode in praise of Liege, dated 1620, 
and attributed to Mathias Navaeus; this was first printed in 
1857 in the transactions o( the Societe* Liegeoise. Except a few 
very flat popular songs, there is nothing more until the end of 
the 1 7th century, when we find Lis A iwes di Tongue (The Waters 
of Tongres), an amusing lyrical satire on the pretensions of that 
town to be considered a Roman spa. Fifty years later the 
opening of a popular theatre at Liege led to the creation of a 
class of farces, written in Walloon; of these Li Voige di.Chaud- 
fontaine (The Journey to Chaudfontaine) (1757), by Jean Noel 
Kama), has considerable humour and vigour in lis rhymed 
dialogue. Other successful comedies were /-* /■ r.fw di u \ ; 

phi*. Li Ligc&u tgagi, and, above 
liveliest sfjtdtrjen of old W 
ThU diverting farce dirrrihf* 4 lie ad*^^^| 
Invalids, who pursue a 
dramatic literature ciu 
early songs and pUyi 
great tru.lity, 

unknown* 




background, and it was not until the middle of the 19th century 
that Walloon literature began seriously to be cultivated. Its only 
expression, for a long time, was in lyrical poetry in the form of 
satires and the humorous songs, called pasqulycs and crdmiguotis. 
The earliest of the modern Walloon writers was Charles Nicolas 
Simonon (1 774-1847), who celebrated in Li Cdpariy the ancient 
dock-tower of the cathedral of St Lambert, an object of reverence 
to the inhabitants of Liege. His poems were collected in 1845. 
Henri Joseph Forir (1784-1862) was the first president of the 
Societe* Liegeoise, and one of the protagonists of Walloon litera- 
ture. He published a valuable dictionary of the patois. The 
Cur* C. E. £. Du Vivier de St reel (1700-1863) was the author of 
Id Pantalon trawi (The Torn Trowsers), a pasquiye which still 
enjoys an enormous popularity among the J^alloon population. 
The first Walloon writer of high merit, however, was Nicolas 
Dcfrecheux (1825-1874), who is the roost distinguished poet 
whom the patois has hitherto produced. His Leyti-m' plorer 
(Let me cry), when it appeared in 1854, made a wide sensation, 
and was the earliest expression of what is serious and tender in 
the Walloon nature. His Chansons wallonnes appeared in i860. 
Defrecheux stands almost alone among the Walloon poets as 
an artist and not merely an improvisatore. His poetical works 
were posthumously collected in 1877. 

For many years, in spite of the efforts of such scholars as 
MM. Alphonse Le Roy and H. Gaidoz, a taste for Walloon 
literature remained strictly circumscribed, and was limited to a 
small circle of enthusiasts in Liege and Namur. In 1872 a literary 
club was formed, entitled the Caveau Liegeois, and this gave a 
very great stimulus to the cultivation of the Walloon letters. 
The national drama, which had been entirely neglected for more 
than a century, once more was called into existence through the 
exertions of the theatrical club, called Les Wallons. The 
comedies of A. M. J. Delchef (b. 1835) were acted with success, 
and led the way for the most important patois dramatist that 
Liege has produced, £douard Remouchamps (b. 1836), who is 
the author of Tdll VPerriqjtt (1884), perhaps the most enter- 
taining farce in Walloon , and certain ly the most popular. Remou- 
champs was for thirty years a prolific writer of short pieces for 
the stage, sentimental and farcical. After the success of this 
play, according to an enthusiastic chronicler, " the writers of 
Wallonia became legion." Their style, however, was not greatly 
varied, and they have mainly confined themselves to songs, 
satirical lampoons and farces. The founder of the Sotiit.6 
Liegeoise was J. F. E. Baillcux (181 7-1860), to whom the revival 
of an interest in. early Walloon literature is mainly due; in con- 
junction with J. V. F. J. Dehin (1809-1871) he published s 
translation of Lafontaine into patois. Among writers of the 
younger generation, special credit must be given to Henri Simon 
(b. 1856), for his humorist ic tales and sketches; to Julien Delaite 
(b. 1868), for his amusing lyrics; and to Zephir Henin (b. 1866)1 
for his prose, prose being much rarer than verse in Walloon. 
It would be postible to add very largely to this list, but the most 
notable names have been mentioned. A certain monotonous 
fluency is the fault of Walloon literature, which repeats its effects 
too constantly, and is confined within too narrow limits. A lew 
writers, among whom Isidore Dory (b. 1833) rs prominent, have 
endeavoured to enlarge' the scope of the patois writers, but their 
suggestions have met with little response. When the Walloon 
writer desires to impart serious information or deep feeling, he 
u *is to the use of French. The pasqutye, which is the char* 
rnnJc form of Walloon verse, is a kind of semi-comic and 
emery Jam i liar lyric, humorous and extravagant, a survival 
ice of Beranger on taste three-quarters of a century 
■i'ny with which these songs are composed is 
I y (he enormous number of them which exist in 
Namur. The difficulties of Walloon literature are 
the unfixed character of its phonetic and often 
orthography. 

-H. Gaidoz, La SocWfliigeoiudeliaenUurewattonne 



Iphonsc Le Roy, Literature wallonne (Brussels. 

i 'efrecheux, Joseph Defrecheux et Charles Gothier, 

)tes wallons (Liege, 1695); Maurice Wilmotte, U 

18*4), ' <E.C) 



WALLOP, SIR H^-WALMER 



287 



WALLOP, IIR HBHRY (c. 1540-1599), English statesman, was 
the eldest son of Sir Oliver Wallop (d. 1566), of Farleigh Wallop, 
Hampshire. Having inherited the estates of his father and of 
lis uncle, Sir John Wallop (q.v.) t he was knighted in 1569 and 
was chosen member of parliament for Southampton in 1572. 
His connexion with Ireland, where the quarter part of his public 
life was passed, began in 1579, when he was appointed vice- 
treasurer of that country; this position was a very thankless 
and difficult one, and Wallop appears to have undertaken it 
very unwillingly. However, he reached Dublin and was soon 
immersed in the troubles caused by the rebellion of Gerald 
Fitzgerald, earl of Desmond, finding, in his own words, it was 
" easier to talk at home of Irish wars than to be in them." In 
July 1582 he and Adam Loftus, archbishop of Dublin, were 
appointed lords justices, and they were responsible for the 
government of Ireland for just two years, after which they were 
succeeded by Sir John Perrot. Sir Henry continued to fill the 
•race of vice-treasurer, and at Enniscorthy, where he had secured 
a lease of lands, he set up a colony of Englishmen and opened up 
a trade with Madeira. As a member of the Irish council he 
quarrelled with Perrot, and then from 1589 to 1595 he was in 
England, entertaining the queen at Farleigh Wallop in 1591. 
Having returned to Ireland he was sent to Dundalk to attempt 
to make peace with Hugh O'Neill, carl of Tyrone, but this 
proved a vain errand. At length, after many entreaties, he was 
allowed to resign the treasurership, but before he could arrange 
to leave Ireland he died on the 14th of April 1509. 

Wallop's eldest son, Sir Henry Wallop (1568-1642), who acted 
as his father's deputy in Ireland, left an only son, Robert Wallop 
(1601-1667). A member of parliament fox nearly forty years, 
and a supporter of the parliamentary party, Robert was one of 
the judges of Charles I., although he did not sign the death 
warrant. He was active under the Commonwealth, being a 
m em b e r of nearly all the councils of state. At the restoration 
he was deprived of his estates and was imprisoned, and he died 
in the Tower of London on the 1 glh of November 1 667 . Robert's 
son Henry (d. 1673) was the grandfather of John Wallop, xst 
earl of Portsmouth. 

WALLOP, SIR JOHN (c. 1490-1551), English soldier and 
diplomatist, belonged to an old Hampshire family. Adopting 
the profession of arms, he commanded ships which took part in 
the war between England and France in 15 13 and 1514; later 
he served the king of Portugal against the Moors, and then he 
fought for his own sovereign in Ireland and in France. In 
1526 Wallop began his diplomatic career, being sent on an errand 
to Germany by Henry VIII., and from 1532 to 1541 he passed 
much of his time in Paris and elsewhere in France as the repre- 
sentative of the English king. He filled several other public 
positions, including that of lieutenant of Calais, before January 
r $41. when he was suddenly arrested on a charge of treason; his 
oflenct, however, was not serious and in the same year he was 
made captain of Culnes. In 1543 he led a small force to help the 
emperor Charles V. in his invasion of France, and he remained 
at his post at Gulnes until his death there on the 13th of July 

WALLQVIST, OLAF (1 755-1 800), Swedish statesman and 
ecclesiastic, was ordained in 1776, became doctor of philosophy in 
1779, court preacher to Queen Louisa Ulrica in 1780, and bishop 
of Vorio in 1787. He attracted the attention of Gustavus III. 
by his eloquent preaching at the fashionable St Clara church 
at Stockholm. Gustavus at once took the young priest by the 
kind, appointed him, at twenty-five, one of his chaplains; made 
km a canon before he was thirty and a bishop at thirty-two, 
and Anally placed him at the head of the newly appointed com- 
L |or reforming the ecclesiastical administration of the 
Thus at thirty-four Wallqvist had nothing more to 



ItfvfsrVut the primacy, which would infallibly have been Ms 
40 1*4 the archbishop died during the king's lifetime. Wall- 
r*w* was, however, much more of a politician than a churchman. 
Hi- knowledge of human nature, inexhaustible energy, dauntless 
AWifirfence and diplomatic finesse made him indispensable 
'Jistarus III. His seductive manners too often won over 



those whom his commanding eloquence failed to convince. His 
political career began during the mutinous riksdag of 1786, when 
ho came boldly forward as one of the royalist leaders. But it 
was at the stormy riksdag of 1789 that Wallqvist put forth all his 
powers. The retirement of the timid primate left him without an 
equal in the Estate of Clergy, and it was very largely due to his 
co-operation that the king was able to carry through the famous 
fc Act of Unity and Security " which converted Sweden from a 
constitutional into a semi-absolute monarchy. Nevertheless, 
even the combative Wallqvist was appalled when on the 16th of 
February 1789 the king privately informed him that he meant 
on the following day soundly to trounce the Estate of Nobles in 
the presence of the three other estates and bend them to his 
royal will. A friend of compromise, like most of the men of his 
doth, Wallqvist dissuaded all revolutionary expedients at the 
outset, though when the king proved immovable the bishop 
materially smoothed the way before him. At this memorable 
riksdag Wallqvist exhibited, moreover, financial ability of the 
highest order, and, as president of the ecclesiastical commission, 
assisted to equilibrate the budget and find the funds necessary 
for resuming the war with Russia. During the brief riksdag 
of 179a, as a member of the secret committee, Wallqvist was 
at the very centre of affairs and rendered the king essential 
services. Indeed it may be safely said that Gustavus III., 
during the last six years of his reign, mainly depended upon 
Wallqvist and his clerical colleague, Carl Gustaf Nordin (?.».), 
who were patriotic enough to subordinate even their private 
enmity to the royal service. During the Reuterholm (q.v.) 
administration, Wallqvist, like the rest of the Gustavians, 
was kept remote from court. In 1800 he was recalled to the 
political arena. But his old rivalry with Nordin was resumed at 
the same time, and when the latter defeated a motion of the 
bishop's in the Estate of Clergy, at the diet of Norrkdping, 
Wallqvist from sheer vexation had a stroke of apoplexy and 
died the same day (30th of April 1800). 

As bishop of Vexift, Wallqvist was remarkable for his extra* 
ordinary administrative ability. He did much for education and 
for the poorer clergy, and endowed the library of the gymnasium 
with 6000 volumes. As an author also he was more than dis- 
tinguished. His Ecclesiastua Samlingar testify to his skill and 
diligence as a collector of MSS., while bis Minnen ock Bref, ed: 
E. V. Montan (Stockholm, 1878), is one of the most trustworthy 
and circumstantial documents relating to the Gustavian era of 
Swedish history. 

See R. N. Bain, Gustavus HI. and kit Contemporaries (London, 
1895, vol. ii): 0. . WoJtqtrists Sjdl/iograftska anteckningar (Upsala, 
1850): and J. Rosengrcn, Om O. WaUmnst sAsom Bishop ock Eforus 
(Vexfe, 1901). (R.N.B.) 

WALLSEND, a municipal borough In the Tyneside parlia- 
mentary division of Northumberland, England, on the north bank 
of the Tyne, 3! m. E.N.E. of Newcastle by a branch of the 
NoTth-Eastern railway. Fop. (1891) 11,257; (toot) 20,918. 
The church of St Peter dates from 1 809. There are remains of the 
church of the Holy Cross in transitional Norman style. At an 
early period Wallsend was famous for its coal, but the name has 
now a general application to coal that does not go through a sieve 
with meshes five-eighths of an inch in size. The colliery, which 
was opened in 1807, has frequently been the scene of dreadful 
accidents, notably on the 23rd of October 1821, when 52 lives 
were lost. There are ship and boat building yards, engineering 
works, lead and copper smelting works, cement works and brick 
and tile works. In the river are two pontoon docks and an 
immense dry dock. Wallsend was incorporated in 1001, and the 
corporation consists of a mayor, 6 aldermen and x8 councillors. 
Area, no* acres. 

Wallsend derives its modern name from its position at the 
eastern extremity of the Roman Hadrian's Wall; and there was a 
Roman fort here. It had a quay, of which remains have been 
discovered, and possessed a magazine of corn and other pro- 
visions for the supply of the stations in the interior. 

WALBBR, a watering-place, and member of the Cinque Port 
of Sandwich, in the St Augustine's parliamentary division of 



I 



288 



WALMISLEY-— WALPOLE, H. 



Rent , England, 2 m. S. of Deal, on the South-Eastern & Chatham 
railway. Pop. of urban district (10O1) 5248. Lower Walmer, 
the portion most frequented by visitors, extends northward 
along the coast, so as to be contiguous with DeaL Upper Walmer 
is a short distance inland, and below it Walmer Castle lies dose 
to the sea. This was a blockhouse built for coast defence by 
Henry VIII., but became the official residence of the Lords 
Warden of the Cinque Ports, and was in consequence much altered 
from its original condition. It ceased to'be the official residence 
in 1905, when the prince of Wales (afterwards George V.) was 
appointed Lord Warden, and the public was given access to 
those rooms which possess historical associations with former 
holders of the office, such as the duke of Wellington, who died 
here in 1852, William Pitt and others. Kingsdown, 1 m. south, 
is a decayed member of the Cinque Port of Dover. 

WALMISLEY, THOMAS ATTWOOD (1814-1856), English 
musician, was born in London, his father Thomas Forbes Wal- 
misley (1 783-1866) being a well-known organist and composer of 
church music and glees. Thomas Attwood (q.v.) was his god* 
father, and the boy was educated in music under their tuition. 
He became organist at Trinity College, Cambridge, in 1833, and 
there he soon became prominent by his anthems and other 
compositions. He not only took the degrees of MusJJac. and 
Mus.Doc., but also graduated at Jesus College as B.A. and M.A. 
In 1836 he was made professor of music. His Cathedral Music 
was edited after his death by his father. 

WALNUT (J ugh ns) t a botanical genus of about ten species 
(nat. ord, Jugfondaccac), natives of the temperate regions of the 
northern hemisphere, extending into Mexico, the West Indies 
and tropical South America. They are all trees, usually of large 
size, with alternate stalked, unequally pinnate leaves, and 
abounding in an aromatic resinous juice. The scars left by the 
fallen leaves are unusually large and prominent. The buds 
arc not unlike those of the ash; and it frequently happens that 
in the axils of the leaves, instead of one, several buds may be 
formed. The utility of this is seen in seasons when the shoot 
produced from the first bud is killed by frost; then one of the 
supplementary buds starts into growth, and thus replaces the 
injured shoot. T^ie flowers are unisexual and monoecious, the 
numerous males borne in thick catkins proceeding from the side 
of last year's shoot. The female flowers are solitary or few in 
number, and borne on short terminal spikes of the present 
season's growth. In the male flower the receptacle is " con- 
crescent " or inscparatefrom the bract in whose axil it originates. 
The receptacle is, in consequence, extended more or less horizon- 
tally so that the flowers appear to be placed on the upper surface 
of horizontally spreading stalks. The perianth consists of five 
or six oblong greenish lobes, within which is found a tuft, con- 
sisting of a large number of stamens, each of which has a, very 
short filament and an oblong two-lobed anther bursting longi- 
tudinally, and surmounted by an oblong lobe, which is the pro- 
jecting end of the connective. There is usually no trace of ovary 
in the male flowers, though by exception one may occasionally 
be formed. _ 

The female flower consists of a cup-like receptacle, inscparate 
from the ovary, and bearing at its upper part a bract and two 
bracteoles. From the margin springs a perianth of four short 
lobes. The one-celled ovary is immersed within the reccp- 
tacular tube, and is- surmounted by a short style with two 
short ribbon-like stigraatic branches. The solitary ovule springs 
erect from the base of the ovarian cavity. The fruit is a kind of 
drupe, the fleshy husk of which is the dilated rcceptacular tube, 
while the two-valved stone represents the two carpels. The 
solitary seed has no perisperm or albumen, but has two large 
and curiously crumpled cotyledons concealing the plumule, 
the leaves of which, even at this early stage, show traces of 

species best known is J. regia, the common walnut, a 
-' the mountains of Greece, of Armenia, of Afghanistan 

.t "-'-nalayas. Traces of the former existence 

allied species arc found in the Post- 
e and elsewhere, proving the former 



much wider extension of the specter At the present day the 
tree is largely cultivated in most temperate countries for the sake 
of its timber or for its edible nuts. The timber is specially 
valued for furniture and cabinet work and for gunstocks, the 
beauty of its markings rendering it desirable for the first-named 
purpose, while its strength and elasticity fit it for the second. 
The leaves and husk of the fruit are resinous and astringent; 
and are sometimes used medicinally as well as for dyeing pur- 
poses. A Spiriius Nucis Juglandis is given as an antispasmodic. 
It doubtless owes its properties to the alcohol which it contains. 
Sugar is also prepared from the sap in a similar manner to that 
obtained from the maple. The young fruits are used for pick- 
ling. When ripe the seeds are much esteemed as a delicacy, 
while in France much oil of fine quality is extracted from them 
by pressure. There are several varieties in cultivation, varying 
in the degree of hardihood, time of ripening, thickness of shell, 
size and other particulars. In the climate of Great Britain a 
late variety is preferable, as securing the young shoots against 
injury from frost, to which otherwise they are very subject* 
The kernel of the large-fruited variety is of very indifferent 
quality, but its large shells are made use of by the French as 
trinket cases. . — . 

The walnut is mentioned in the earliest British botanical writings, 
and is supposed to have been introduced by the Romans. It grows 
well, and ripens its fruit in the southern and midland counties of 
England ; but large trees may be seen as far north as Ross-shire in 
sheltered places. The tree succeeds in deep, sandy or calcareous 
loams, ana in stiff loams resting on a gravelly bottom. It requires 
free exposure to air and light. It is propagated by seeds, and oc- 
casionally by budding, grafting or inarching for the perpetuation of 
special varieties. Seedlings should be protected from frost during the 
first winter. The trees form their heads naturally, and therefore 
little pruning is required, it being merely necessary to cut off strag- 
gling growths, and to prevent the branches from interlacing. The 
best time for performing this is in the autumn, just after the fall of 
the leaf. Plants raised from the seed seldom become productive tiH 
they arc twenty years old. The fruit is produced at tnc extremities 
of the shoots of the preceding year; and therefore, in gathering the 
crop, care should be taken not to injure the young wood. In some 
parts of England the trees are thrashed with rods or poles to obtain 
the nuts, but this is not a commendable mode of collecting them. 

Among the American species J. nigra, the black walnut, is especi- 
ally noteworthy as a very handsome tree, whose timber is of great 
value for furniture purposes, but which is now becoming scarce. In 
Britain it forms a magnificent tree. The white walnut or butternut, 
J. cinerea, is a smaller tree, though it sometimes reaches loo ft. in 
height; its inner bark yields an extractive, jugla rutin, given as an 
hepatic stimulant and cathartic in doses of 2-5 grains. 

Closely allied to the walnuts, and sometimes confounded with 
them, arc the hickories. 

WALPOLE, HORATIO *7^ Horace^ 1717-1 797). English 
politician and man of letters, 4th earl of Orford — a title to 
which he only succeeded at the end of his life, and by which 
he is little known— was bom in Arlington Street, London, on 
the 24th of September 1717. He was the youngest of the five 
children of the 1st earl of Orford (Sir Robert Walpole) by 
Catherine Shorter, but by some of the scandal -mongers of a 
later age, Carr, Lord Hervey, half-brother of John, Lord Hcrvey, 
afterwards second earl of Bristol, has been called his father. 
If this rumour be correct, no such suspicion ever entered into 
the mind of Horace Walpole. To his mother he erected a 
monument, with an inscription couched in terms of sincere 
affection, in the chapel of Henry VII. in Westminster Abbey> 
and from the beginning to the end of his public life his sarcasms 
never spared the Newcastlesand the Hardwickcs, who had shown, 
as he thought, Iukewarmncss in support of his father's ministry. 
On the 26th of April 1727 he was sent to Eton, where he formed 
what was known as the " Quadruple Alliance " with Thomas 
Gray, Richard West and Thomas Ashton, and became very 
intimate with Henry Seymour Conway, George Augustus 
Sclwyn and the two Montagus, and in 1735 matriculated at 
King's College, Cambridge. Two years ( 1730- 1741) were spent 
in Gray's company in the recognized grand tour of France and 
Italy. They stopped a few weeks in Paris, and lingered for 
three months at Rheims, on the pretence of learning the French 
language. Henry Seymour Conway, whose mother was a sister 
of Lady Walpole, shared their society, in the French city. - The 



WALPOLE, H. 



289 



other two members of this little cirde next proceeded to Florence, 
where Walpole rested for more than a year in the villa of Horace 
Mum, the British envoy-extraordinary for forty-six years to 
the court of Tuscany. Mann's family had long been on terms 
of the closest intimacy with his guests, and they continued 
correspondents until 1786. As they never met again, their 
friendship, unlike most of Walpole's attachments, remained 
unbroken. After a short visit to Rome (March- June 1740), 
and after a further sojourn at Florence, Walpole and Gray 
parted in resentment at Reggio. Walpole in after years took 
the blame of this quarrel on himself, and it is generally believed 
that it arose from his laying too much stress on his superiority 
in position. In 1744 the two friends were nominally reconciled, 
but the breach was not cemented. 

Walpole came back to England on the 12th of September 
1741. He had been returned' to parliament on the 14th of May 
1 741 for the Cornish borough of Callington, over which his 
elder brother, through his marriage with the heiress of the 
Rolles, exercised supreme influence. He represented three 
constituencies in succession, Callington 1741-17541 the family 
borough of Castle Rising from 1754 to 1757, and the more 
important constituency of King's Lynn, for which his father 
had long sat in parliament, from the latter date until 1768. In 
that year he retired, probably because his success in political 
life had not equalled his expectations, but he continued until 
the end of his days to follow and to chronicle the acts and the 
speeches of both houses of parliament. Through his father's 
influence he had obtained three lucrative sinecures in the ex- 
chequer, and for many years (1745-1784) he enjoyed a share, 
estimated at about £1500 a year, of a second family perquisite, 
the coUcctorship of customs. These resources, with a house in 
Arlington Street, which was left to him by his father, enabled 
aim, a bachelor all his days, to gratify his tastes. He acquired 
in 1747 the lease and in the next year purchased the reversion 
of the charmingly situated villa of Strawberry Hill, near Twicken- 
ham, on the banks of the Thames. Six years later he began a 
series of alterations in the Gothic style, not completed for nearly 
a quarter of a century later, under which the original cottage 
became transformed into a building without parallel in Europe. 
On the 25th of June 1757 he established a printing-press there, 
which he called " Omenta Arbuteana," and many of the first 
editions of his own works were struck off within its walls. 
Through Walpole's influence Dodsley published in 1753 the 
clever, if eccentric, designs of Richard Bentley (the youngest 
child of the great scholar, and for some times proUgi of Horace 
Walpole) for the poems of Gray. The first work printed at 
Strawberry Hill was two odes of Gray (8th of August 1757), 
and among the reprints were the Life of Lord Herbert of Cher bury, 
Mtmoiff of Grammont, Hentxner's Journey into England, and 
Lord Wldtworth's Account of Russia. The rooms of this whimsi- 
cal edifice were crowded with curiosities of every description, 
and the bouse and its contents were shown, by tickets to admit 
four persons, between is and 3 from May to October, but only 
one party was admitted on each day, and the owner, although 
eaamoured of notoriety, simulated discontent at this limited 
intrusion into his privacy. Walpole paid several visits to Paris, 
where he made the acquaintance of Madame du Deffand (q.i.) 
m 1765. and they corresponded until her death in 1780. His. 
nephew, the reckless 3rd earl, died on the 5th of December 1791, 
and Horace succeeded to the peerage, but he never took his 
place in the House of Lords, and sometimes signed his name as 
M the node of the late earl of. Orford." All his life long he was a 
victim of the gout, but he lived to extreme old age, and died 
anmaxried, in Berkeley Square, London,- to which he had re- 
moved in October 1779, on the and of March 1797. He was 
buried privately at Houghton. The family estate descended 
to the earl of Chohnondeley, whose ancestor had married Horace 
Walpole's younger sister. All Walpole's printed books and 
manuscripts were left to Robert Berry (d. 19th of May 18x7) 
and Ms two daughters, Mary (1763-1852) and Agnes (1704- 
185a). and Mary Berry edited the $ve volumes of Walpole's 
works which were published in 1798. Their friendship bad been 



very dear to the declining days of Walpole, who, ft has even 
been said, wished to marry Mary Berry. By his will each of the 
ladies obtained a pecuniary legacy of £4000, and for their lives 
the house and garden, formerly the abode of his friend Kitty 
Clive, which adjoined Strawberry HUL Strawberry Hill went 
to Mrs Anne Darner, daughter of his lifelong friend General 
Conway, for her life, but it was entailed on his niece the countess 
dowager of Waklegrave and her heirs. The collections of Straw- 
berry Hill, which he had spent nearly fifty years in amassing, 
were dispersed under the hammer of George Robins in 1842. 
They are described in a catalogue of that date, and in a series 
of articles in the Gentleman's Magazine for that year. 

The pen was ever in Horace Walpole's hands, and his entire 
compositions would fill many volumes. His two works of 
imagination, the romance of the Castle of Otranto (1764) and the 
tragedy of the Mysterious Mother (1768), are now all but for- 
gotten. The Castle of Otranto , purporting to be a story translated 
by William Marshal, gent., from the original Italian of Onuphrio 
Muralto, canon of the church of St Nicholas at Otranto, was 
often reprinted in England, and was translated into both French 
and Italian. By Sir Walter Scott it was lauded to the skies for 
its power in raising the passions of fear and pity, but from 
Hazlitt it met with intense condemnation; its real importance, 
however, lies in the fact that it started the romantic revival. 
The Mysterious Mother , a tragedy too horrible for representation 
on any stage, was never intended for performance in public, and 
only fifty copies of it were printed at Strawberry Hill. By 
Byron, who, like Horace Walpole, affected extreme liberalism, 
and like him never forgot that he was born within the purple, 
this tragedy was pronounced " of the highest order." Several of 
Walpole's antiquarian works merit high praise. The volume of 
Historic Doubts on the Life and Reign of King Richard the Third 
(1760), one of the earliest attempts to rehabilitate a character 
previously stamped with infamy, showed acuteness and research. 
These doubts provoked several answers, which are criticized in 
a supplement edited by Dr E. C. Hawtrey for the Philobiblon 
Society (1854). A work of more lasting reputation, which has 
retained its vitality for more than a century, is entitled Anecdotes 
of Painting in England, with some Account of the Principal 
Artists; collected by George Vertue, and now digested and published 
from his original manuscripts by Horace Walpole (4 vols., 176a- 
1771). Its value to art students and to admirers of biographical 
literature demanded its frequent reproduction, and it was re- 
edited with additions by the Rev. James Dallaway in five 
volumes (1826-1828), and then again was revised and edited by 
R. N. Wornum in 1849. A cognate volume, also based on the 
materials of Vertue, is entitled the Catalogue of Engravers Bam 
and Resident in England (1763), which, like its more famous 
predecessor, often passed through the press. On the Catalogue 
of Royal and Noble Authors of England (1758) Walpole spent 
many hours of toilsome research. The best edition is that 
which appeared in«five volumes, in 1806, under the competent 
editorship of Thomas Park, who carefully verified and diligently 
augmented the labours of the original author. As a senator 
himself, or as a private person following at a distance the combats 
of St Stephen's, Walpole recorded in a diary the chief incidents 
in English politics. For twenty-seven years he studied, a silent 
spectator for the most part, the characters of the chief personages 
who trod the stage of politics, and when he quitted the scene be 
retained the acquaintance of many of the chief actors. If he was 
sometimes prejudiced, he rarely distorted the acts of those whom 
be disliked; and his prejudices, which lie on the surface, were 
mainly against those whom he considered traitors to his father 
These diaries extend from 1750 to 1783, and cover a period of 
momentous importance in the annals of the national history. 
The Memoirs^ of the Last Ten Years of the Reign of George II. was 
edited by Lord Holland (1846); its successor, Memoirs of the 
Reign of King George ///., was published under the editorial 
care of Sir Denis Le Marchant (4 vols., 1845), and re-edited in 
1804 by Mr G. F. Russell Barker; the last volumes of the series, 
Journal if the Reign of George III. from 1771 to 1783, were 
edited and illustrated by John Doran (2 vols., 1859)* and were 



ago 



WALPOLE, SIR S.— WALPURGIS 



edited with an introduction by A. F. Steuart (London, iooq). 
To these works should be added the Reminiscences (2 vols., 
1829), which Waipole wrote in 1788 (or the gratification of the 
Misses Berry. These labours would in themselves have rendered 
the name of Horace Waipole famous for all time, but his de- 
lightful Letters are the crowning glory of his life. His corre- 
spondents were numerous and widespread, but the chief of them 
were William Cole (1714-1782), the clerical antiquary of Milton; 
Robert Jephson, the dramatist; William Mason, the poet; Lord 
Hertford during his embassy in Paris; the countess of Ossory; 
Lord Harcourt; George Montagu, his friend at Eton; Henry 
Seymour Conway (1721-1795) and Sir Horace Mann. With 
most of these friends he quarrelled, but the friendship of the 
last two, in the former case through genuine liking, and in the 
latter through his fortunate absence from England, was never 
interrupted. The Letters were published at different dates, but 
the standard collection is that by Mrs Paget Toynbee (1003- 
1005), and to it should be added the volumes of the letters 
addressed to Waipole by. his old friend Madame du Deffand 
(4 vols., 18x0). Dr Doran's publication, Mann and Manners at 
the Court of Florence (1876), is founded on the epistles sent in 
return to Waipole by the envoy-extraordinary. Other works 
relating to him are Horace Waipole and his World, by L. B 
Seeky (1884) ; Horace Waipole, a memoir by Austin Dobson 
(1S00 and 1893); Horace Waipole and the Strawberry Hill Press, 
by M. A. Havens (1901). Waipole has been called " the best 
letter-writer in the English language "; and few indeed are the 
names which can compare with his. In these compositions his 
very foibles arc penned for our amusement, and his love of trifles 
— for, in the words of another Horace, he was ever " nescio quid 
meditans nugarum et totus in Qlis " — ministers to our instruction. 
To these friends he communicated every fashionable scandal, 
every social event, and the details of every political struggle in 
English life. The politicians and the courtiers of his day were 
more akin to his character than were the chief authors of his age, 
and the weakness of his intellectual perceptions stands out most 
prominently in his estimates of such writers as Johnson and 
Goldsmith, Gibbon and Hume. On many occasions he displayed 
great liberality of disposition, and he bitterly deplored for the 
rest of his days his neglect of the unhappy Chatterton. Chatter- 
ton wrote to Waipole in 1769, sending some prose and verse 
fragments and offering to place information on English art in 
Walpole's hands. Encouraged by a kindly reply, Chatterton 
appealed for help. Waipole made inquiries and came to the 
conclusion that he was an imposter. He finally returned the 
manuscripts in his possession, and took no notice of subsequent 
letters from Chatterton. 

Abundant information about Horace Waipole will be found in the 
Memeirs. of him and of his contemporaries edited by Eliot Warburton 



mention of Macaulay's sketch of Walpole's life and character. 

(W. P. O 
WALPOLE, SIR SPENCER (1830-1907), English historian and 
civil servant, was bora on the 6th of February 1839. He came 
of the younger branch of the family of the famous Whig prime 
minister, being descended from his brother, the 1st lord Waipole 
of Wolterton. He was the son of the latter's great-grandson, 
the Right Hon. Spencer Horatio Waipole (1807-1898), thrice 
home secretary under Lord Derby, and through his mother was 
grandson of Spencer Perceval, the Tory prime minister who was 
murdered in the House of Commons. He was educated at Eton, 
and from 1858 to 1867 was a clerk in the War Office, then be- 
coming an inspector of fisheries. In 1882 he was made lieutenant- 
governor of the Isle of Man, and from 1893 to 1899 he was 
secretary to the Post Office. In 1808 he was created K.C.B. 
Although well known as a most efficient public servant, and in 
private Kfe as the most amiable of men, Sir Spencer Walpole's 
real title to remembrance is as an historian. His family con- 
nexions gave him a natural bent to the study of public affairs, 
and their mtnriing of Whig and Tory in politics contributed, no 
doubt, ' ' Hlkiouarjalance— mdining, however, 



to the Whig or moderate Liberal side—which, together with fail 
sanity and accuracy, is so characteristic of his writings. His 
principal work, the History of England from i8t$ (1878-1886), 
in six volumes, was carried down to 1858, and was continued 
In his History of Twenty-Five Years (1004). Among his other 
publications come his lives of Spencer Perceval (1894) and Lord 
John Russell (1889), and a volume of valuable Studies in Bio- 
graphy (1006); and he wrote the section of the article English 
History, dealing in detail with the reign of Queen Victoria, for 
the Encyclopaedia Britannica. He died on the 7 th of July 1907. 

WALPOLE OF WOLTERTON, HORATIO, ist Baron (1678- 
t757). English diplomatist, was a son of Robert Waipole of 
Houghton, Norfolk, and a younger brother of the great Sir 
Robert Waipole. The Walpoles owned land in Norfolk in the 
isth century and took their name from Waipole, a village in the 
county. An early member of the family was Ralph de Waipole, 
bishop of Norwich from 1288 to 1209, and bishop of Ely from 
1299 until his death on the 20th of March 1302. Among its later 
members were three brothers, Edward (1560-1637), Richard 
(1564-1607) and Michael (1570-c. 1624), all members of the 
Society of Jesus. Another Jesuit in the family was Henry 
Waipole (1558-1505). who wrote An Epitaph of the life and death 
of the most famous clcrh and virtuous priest Edmund Campion. 
After an adventurous and courageous career in the service of 
the order, he was arrested on landing in England, was tortured 
and then put to death on the 17th of April 1595. 1 

Born at Houghton on the 8th of December 1678 and educated 
at Eton and King's College, Cambridge, Horatio Waipole became 
a fellow of King's and entered parliament in 1702, remaining 
a member for fifty-four years. In 171 5, when his brother, Sir 
Robert, became first lord of the treasury, he was made secretary 
to the treasury, and in 1 7 16, having already had some experience 
of the kind, he went on a diplomatic mission to The Hague. He 
left office with his brother in 1717, but he was soon in harness 
again, becoming secretary to the lord-lieutenant of Ireland in 
1720 and secretary to the treasury a second time in 1721. In 
1722 he was again at The Hague, and in 1723 he went to Paris, 
where in the following year he was appointed envoy extraordinary 
and minister plenipotentiary. He got on intimate terms with 
Ffeury and seconded his brother in his efforts to maintain friendly 
relations with France; he represented Great Britain at the 
congress of Soissons and helped to conclude the treaty of Seville 
(November 1729). He left Paris in 1730 and in 1734 went to 
represent his country at The Hague, where he remained until 
1740, using all his influence in the cause of European peace. 
After the fall of Sir Robert Waipole in 1742 Horatio defended his 
conduct in the House of Commons and also in a pamphlet, The 
Interest of Great Britain steadUy pursued. Later he wrote an 
Apology, dealing with his own conduct from 1715 to 1739, and an 
A nswer to the latter part of Lord Bolingbrohe*s letters on the study of 
history (printed 1763). In 1756 he was created Baron Waipole of 
Wolterton, this being his Norfolk seat, and he died on the 5th of 
February 1757. His eldest son, Horatio, the 2nd baron (1723- 
1809), was created earl of Orford in 1806, and one of his sons 
was Major-General George Waipole (17 58-1835), under-secretaiy 
for foreign affairs in 1806. 

See W. Coze, Memoirs of Horatio, Lord Waipole (2nd cd., 1808); 
the same writer, Memoirs of Sir Robert Waipole (1816) ; and Charles, 
comte de Baillon, Lord Waipole & la cour de France (1867). 

WALPURGIS (Waipuica or Walbukga),* ST (d. c 780), 
English missionary to Germany, was bora in Sussex at the 
beginning of the 8th century. She was the sister of Willibald, 
the first bishop of Eichstitt in Bavaria, and Wunnibald, first 
abbot of Hcidenheim. Her father, Richard, is thought to have 
been a son of Hlothere, 9th king of Kent; her mother, Winna 
or Wuna, a sister of St Boniface. At the instance of Boniface 
and Willibald she went about 750 with some other nuns to found 

1 The Letters ef Henry WolpoU. S.I., from the original manuscripts 
at Stonyhurst CoUese, were edited by the Rev. Augustus Jenopp tor 
private circulation (1873)- See the Her. A. Jestopp, One Generation 
of a Norfolk House (1878). 

* French forms of the name are Gualhourg. Fafcourg, Vaubourg 
and Avougpurg. 



WALRA&—WALRUS 



291 



religious houses in Germany. Her first settlement was at 
Bischofsheun in the diocese of Mainz, and two years later (754) 
she became abbess of the Benedictine nunnery at Heidenheim in 
the diocese of Ekhstatt. On the death of Wunnibald in 760 she 
succeeded him in his charge also, retaining the superintendence 
of both houses until her death. Her relics were translated to 
Ekhstitt, where she was laid in a hollow rock, from which 
exuded a kind of bituminous oil afterwards known as Walpurgis 
oil, and regarded as of miraculous efficacy against disease. It 
is still said to exude from the saint's bones (especially from 
October to February) and was chosen by Cardinal Newman as 
an example of a credible miracle. The cave became a place of 
pilgrimage, and a fine church was built over the spot. Walpurgis 
is commemorated at various times, bat principally on the 1st of 
May, her day taking the place of an earlier heathen festival 
which was characterized by various rites marking the beginning 
of summer. She is regarded as the protectress against magic arts 
(cf. the Walpurgis-Nacht dance in Goethe's Faust). In art she 
is r epre se nted with a crazier, and bearing in her hand a flask of 



Her life was written by the presbyter Wolfhard and dedicated to 
Erkenbald. bishop of Eichstatt (8*4-016). See the BollandUt Acta 
unutorum. vol. ui. February «. On Walpurew, WilHbald and 
Wunnibald see G. F. Browne, Boniface of Creation and his Com- 
panions (London, 1910), viL 

WALRAS, MARIE ESPRIT LEON (1834-TOio), French 
economist, was born at £vreux in 1834. From i860 to 1868 
he edited a journal called Le Travail, to which he contributed 
■any valuable sociological articles. In 1870 he was appointed 
professor of political economy at Lausanne, a post which he 
retained until his retirement in 1893. He died on the 4th ol 
January 1910. Walras is best known for his mathematical 
treatment of economics, and the extreme care be has shown in 
Ms works in distinguishing theory and practice. Hts most 
important works are £UnunU d'tconomit politique pure (1874- 
1877) and Tkiorie nudkenuUique de la rickesst soeiale (1883). 

Of his many valuable papers contributed to various periodicals a 
rood bibliography will be found in the Did. Pol. Eton. iii. 654. 
See biographical notice in Economic Journal (March. 1910) by 
Vtlfredo Pareto, his successor in the chair of political economy at 



WALRUS, or Moise (Odobaenus rosmarus), a large marine 
nammal aUkd to the seals, representing a family by itself. 
The former word is a modification of the Scandinavian waitress 
or koalros (" whale-horse "), the latter an adaptation of the 
Russian name for the animal. A full-grown male walrus measures 
from xo to xi ft. from the nose to the end of the short tail, and is 
a heavy, bulky animal, especially thick about the shoulders. 
The bead is rounded, the eyes are rather small, and there are no 
external ears. The muzzle is short and broad, with, on each side, 
a group of stiff, bristly whiskers, which become stouter and 
shorter in old animals. The tail scarcely projects beyond the 
skin. The fore-Kmbs are free only from the elbow; the fore- 
tipper is broad, flat and webbed, the five digits being of nearly 
equal length, but the first slightly the longest. Each digit has 
a small flattened nail, situated on the inner surface at a con- 
siderable distance from the end. The hind-limbs are enclosed 
in the skin of the body, almost to the heel. The free portion 
when expanded is fan-shaped, the two outer toes (first and fifth) 
being the longest, especially the latter. Flaps of skin project 
considerably beyond the bones of the toes. The nails of the first 
and fifth toes are minute and flattened; those of the second, 
third and fourth elongated, sub-compressed and pointed. The 
soles of both fore and hind feet are bare, rough and warty. The 
surface of the skin generally is covered with short, adpressed hair 
of a fight yellowish-brown colour, which, on the under parts of 
the body and base of the flippers, passes into dark reddish-brown 
or chestnut. In old animals the hair becomes more scanty, 
sometimes almost disappearing, and the skin shows evidence of 
the rough life and pugnacious habits of the animal in the scars 
with which it is usually covered. It is everywhere more or less 
wrinkled, especially over the shoulders, where ft is thrown into 
deep and heavy folds. 

One of the most striking characteristics of the walras is the 



pair of tusks which descend almost directly downwards from the 
upper jaw, sometimes attaining a length of 20 in. or more. 
In the female they are as long or sometimes longer than in the 
male, but less massive. In the young of the first year they are 
not visible. These tusks correspond to the canine teeth of other 
mammals. All the other teeth, including the lower canines, are 
much alike — small, simple and one-rooted, and with crowns, 
rounded at first, but wearing to a flat or concave surface. Many 
of the teeth are lost early, or remain through life in a rudimentary 
state concealed beneath the gum. The tusks are formidable 
weapons of defence, but their principal use seems to be scraping 
and digging among sand and shingle for the molluscs and crus- 
taceans on which the walrus feeds. They are said also to aid in 
climbing up the slippery rocks and ledges of ice on which so much 
of the animal's life is passed. 

Walruses are more or less gregarious in their habits, being met 
with generally in companies or herds of various sizes. They are 
only found near the coast or on large masses of floating ice, and 
rarely far out in the open sea; and, though often moving from 
one part of their feeding-ground to another, have no regular 
migrations. Their young are born between April and June, 




The Atlantic Walrus (Odobaenus rosmarus), 

usually but one at a time, never more than two. Their strong 
affect km for their young, and their sympathy for each other in 
danger, have been noticed by all who have had the opportunity of 
observing them in their haunts. When one is wounded the 
whole herd usually join in defence. Although harmless and in- 
offensive when not molested, they exhibit considerable fierceness 
when attacked, using their tusks with tremendous effect either 
on human enemies who come Into too close quarters or on polar 
bears, the only other adversary they can meet with in their own 
natural territory. The voice, a loud roaring, which can be beard 
at a great distance, is described by Dr Kane as " something 
between the mooing of a cow and the deepest baying of a mastiff, 
very round and full, with hs bark or detached notes repeated 
rather quickly seven or nfne times in succession." 

The principal food of the walrus consists of bivalve molluscs, 
especially Mya truneato and Saxieata rugosa, two species very 
abundant in the Arctic regions, which it digs up from the mud 
and sand in which they lie buried at the bottom of the sea by 
means of its tusks. It crushes and removes the shells by the aid 
of its grinding teeth and tongue, and swallows only the soft parts 
of the animal. It also feeds on other molluscs, sand-worms, star- 
fishes and shrimps. Portions of various kinds of seaweed have 
been found in its stomach, but whether swallowed intentionally 
or not is doubtful. 

The commercial products of the walrus are its oil, hide (used 
to manufacture harness and sole-leather and twisted into tiller- 
ropes) and tusks. The fvory of the latter is, however, inferior 
in quality to that of the elephant. Its flesh forms an important 
article of food to the Eskimo and Chukchi. Of the coast tribes 
of the last-named people the walrus formed the chief means of 
support. 



292 



WALSALL— WALSH, PETER 



Walruses are confined to the northern circumpolar regions, 
extending apparently as far north as explorers, have penetrated. 
On the Atlantic coast of America the Atlantic species was 
met with in the 16th century as low as the southern coast of 
Nova Scotia, and in the last century was common in the Gulf 
of St Lawrence and on the shores of Labrador. It still inhabits 
the coast round Hudson's Bay, Davis Strait and Greenland, 
where, however, its numbers are decreasing. It is not found on 
the Arctic coast of America between the 97th and x 58th meridians. 
In Europe, occasional stragglers have reached the British Isles; 
and it was formerly abundant on the coasts of Finmark. It is 
rare in Iceland, but Spitsbergen, Novaia Zemblia and the western 
part of the north coast of Siberia are constant places of resort. 
The North Pacific, including both sides of Bering Strait, northern 
Kamchatka, Alaska and the Pribyloff Islands are also the 
haunts of numerous walruses, which are isolated from those 
of the North Atlantic by long stretches of coast in Siberia and 
North America where they do not occur, The Pacific walrus 
appears to be as large as, if not larger than, that of the Atlantic; 
its tusks are longer- and more slender, and curved inwards; and 
the whiskers arc smaller, and the muzzle relatively deeper and 
broader. These and certain other differences have led to its 
being considered specifically distinct, under the name of Odo- 
baenus obesus. Its habits appear to be similar to those of the 
Atlantic form. Though formerly found in immense herds, it is 
becoming scarce, as the methods of destruction used by American 
whalers are more certain than those of the Chukchi, to whom 
the walrus long afforded the principal means of subsistence. 

Fossil remains of walruses and closely allied animals have been 
found in the United States, and in England, Belgium and France, 
in deposits of late Tertiary age. (W. H. F.; R. L.*) 

WALSALL, a market town and municipal, county and parlia- 
mentary borough of Staffordshire, England, on the northern 
edge of the Black Country, and on a tributary stream of the Tame. 
Pop. (1891) 71,789; (1901) 86,430. It is 120$ m. N.W. from 
London by the London & North-Western railway, on which 
system it is a centre of several branches, and is served by the 
Birmingham-Wolverhampton branch of the Midland railway and 
by canals. The town, though of ancient foundation, is modern 
in appearance. The central part stands high on a ridge at 
the northward termination of which is the church of St 
Matthew, dating in part from the 15th century, but almost 
wholly rebuilt. The council house and town hall was completed 
in 1905; there are two theatres, a free library and museum, 
and an institute of science and art. Recreation grounds include 
a picturesque arboretum, Reed's Wood and Palpey Park. 
Queen Mary's Schools are a foundation of 1554; here arc be- 
lieved to have been educated John Hough (1651-1743), the presi- 
dent of Magdalen College, Oxford, whom James II. sought to eject 
from office, afterwards bishop of Oxford, Lichfield, and Worce- 
ster; and John, Lord Somers (1651-1716), Lord Keeper and 
Lord Chancellor of England. There are large charities, and 
Walsall was the scene of the charitable work of Sister Dora (Miss 
Pattison) whom a statue commemorates. Coal, limestone and 
ironstone are mined in the neighbourhood. The most important 
products are saddlery and leather-work, horses' bits and all 
metal harness fittings; there arc iron and brass foundries, and 
locks, keys, bolts and other hardware are made, both in Walsall 
and at Bloxwich, a large industrial suburb. Three annual fairs 
are held. The parliamentary borough returns one member. 
The town is governed by a mayor, 8 aldermen and 24 councillors. 
Area, 74S0 acres. 

Walsall (WaleshaUs, WalshaU, Walsaler) is included in the list 
of lands given in 906 to the church of Wolverhampton, which, 
however, did not retain it long. It was granted by Henry II. 
to Herbert Ruffus, and Henry HI. confirmed it to his grandson 
(1227). Later the manor passed to the Bassets and the Beau- 
champs, and Warwick the King-maker held it in right of his wife. 
Henry VIII. granted it (1538) to Dudley, afterwards duke of 
Northumberland. William Ruffus in the reign of John granted 
fofJie. hitrgntf : - ~*— ^-"ttion of a fine of 1 2 marks silver and 
ej^jjwit ft* "g*ge, all services, customs and 



secular demands belonging to him and his heirs, except tallage. 
Henry IV. confirmed to the burgesses a grant of freedom from 
toll on the ground that Walsall was ancient demesne of the 
Crown. A mayor and twenty-four brethren who formed the 
council of the borough are mentioned in 1440, but the earliest 
charter of incorporation is that of Charles I. (1627), confirmed 
in 1 66 1, incorporating it under the title of " the Mayor and 
Commonalty of the Borough and Foreign of Walsall": under 
the act of 1835 the town was governed by a mayor, six aldermen 
and eighteen town councillors. It was not represented in parlia- 
ment till 1832. Walsall had a merchant gild in 1390; in the 
17th century it was already known for its manufacture of iron 
goods and nail-making. In the 18th century the staple industry 
was the making of chapes and shec-bue\les, and the town suffered 
when the latter went out of fashion. Two fairs, on Michaelmas 
day and September 21, were granted in 1399. The Tuesday 
market, which is still held, and two fairs on October 28 and May 6. 
were granted in 14x7 to Richard Beauchamp, earl of Warwick. 

See Victoria County History, Stafford; E. L. Glew, History of the 
Borough and Foreign of Walsall (1856)'. 

WALSH, JOHN HENRY (1810-1888), English writer on sport 
under the pseudonym of " Stonehenge," was born at Hackney, 
London, on the 21st of October 18 10. He was educated at 
private schools, and became a fellow of the Royal College of 
Surgeons in 1844. For several years he followed his profession 
of surgeon, but gradually abandoned it on account of the success 
of his works on the subject of sport. He removed from the 
country to London in 1852, and the following year brought out 
his first important book, The Greyhound (3rd ed. 1875), a collec- 
tion of papers originally contributed to " Bell's Life." In 1856 
appeared his Manual of British Rural Sports, which enjoyed 
many editions. During the same year he joined the staff of The 
Field, and became its editor at the close of 1857. Among bis 
numerous books published under the name of " Stonehenge " are 
The Shot-Gun and Sporting RifU (1859), The Dog in Health and 
Disease (1859; 4th ed. 1887), The Horse in the Stable and in the 
Field (1861; 13th ed. 1890), Dogs of the British Isles (1867; 
3rd ed. 1885), The Modern Sportsman's Gun and Rifle (1882- 
1884). While editor of The Field Walsh instituted a series of 
trials of guns, rifles and sporting powders extending over a period 
of many years, which greatly tended to the development of 
sporting firearms; and his influence upon all branches of sport 
was stimulating and beneficial. He died at Putney on the 12th 
of February 1888. 

WALSH, PETER [Valesius] (c. 161 8-1688), Irish politician 
and controversialist, was born at Mooretown, co. Kildare, and 
studied at Louvain, where he joined the Franciscans and acquired 
Jansenist sympathies. In 1646 he went to Kilkenny, then in 
the hands of the rebel " confederate Catholics," and, in opposition 
to the papal nuncio Rinuccini, urged, and in 1649 helped to 
secure, peace with the viceroy Ormonde. Persecuted from this 
time by the irreconcilable supporters of the papal claims, and 
even in danger of death, after Cromwell's conquest of Ireland 
he lived obscurely in London and abroad. On the restoration 
be urged his patron Ormonde to support the Irish Roman 
Catholics as the natural friends of royalty against the sectaries, 
and endeavoured to mitigate their lot and efface the impression 
made by their successive rebellions by a loyal remonstrance to 
Charles II., boldly repudiating papal infallibility and interference 
in public affairs, and affirming undivided allegiance to the crown. 
For eight years he canvassed for signatures to this address, but 
in spite of considerable support the strenuous opposition of the 
Jesuits and Dominicans deterred the clergy and nearly wrecked 
the scheme. From 1609 until his death he lived in London, 
much respected for his honesty, loyalty and learning. Ex- 
communicated by the Franciscan chapter-general in 1670, he 
remained a devout adherent of his church, although he main- 
tained friendly relations with the Anglicans, accepting their 
orders and attending their churches. He made a full submission 
to Rome before his death, though the fact has been questioned. 
He wrote (1672-1684) a scries of controversial letters »gainrt 
Pope Gregory VII. 's doctrine of papal supremacy over princes; 



l 



WALSH, WILLIAM— .WALSINGHAM, SIR FRANCIS 393 



a voluminous History of Ike Remonstrant* (1674); Sibemiea 
(1682), a worthless history of Ireland; in 1686 a reply to the 
Popery of Thomas Barlow (1607-1691)! bishop of Lincoln; and 
other works. In these writings he consistently upheld the 
doctrine of civil liberty against the pretensions of the papacy. 

See S R. Gardiner, History of Ik* Croat CM War; G. Burnet, 
History of his own Times, i. 195; T, Carte, Life of Ormonde (new ed. 
185 1); Diet. Nat. Btog. Hx. 

WALSH, WILLIAM (1663-1708), English poet and critic, son 
of Joseph Walsh of Abberley, Worcestershire, was born in 1663. 
He entered Wadham College, Oxford, as a gentleman commoner 
m 1678. Leaving the university without a degree, he settled 
in his native county, and was returned M.P. for Worcester in 
1698, 1701 and 170a. In 1705 be sat for Richmond, Yorkshire. 
On the accession of Queen Anne he was made "gentleman of the 
horse, " a post which he held till his death, noted by Narcissus 
Luttrell on the 18th of March 1708. He wrote a Dialogue con- 
cerning Women, being a Defence of the Sex (1691), addressed to 
14 Eugenia "; and Letters and Poems, Amorous and Gallant 
(preface dated 1692, printed in Jonson's Miscellany, 17x6, and 
separately. 1736); love lyrics designed, says the author, to Impart 
to the world " the faithful image of an amorous heart." It is 
not as a poet, however, but as the friend and correspondent of 
Pbpe that Walsh is remembered. Pope's Pastorals were sub* 
mined for his criticism by Wycherley in 1705, and Walsh then 
entered on a direct correspondence with the young poet. The 
letters are printed in Pope's Works (ed. Elwin and* Courthope, 
vi. 40-00). Pope, who visited him at Abberley in 1707, set 
great value upon his opinion. " Mr Walsh used to tell me," be 
says, '* that there was one way left of excelling; for though we 
had several great poets, we never had any one great poet that 
was correct, and he desired me to make that my study and my 
aim/' The excessive eulogy accorded both by Dryden and 
Pope to Walsh must be accounted for partly on the ground of 
personal friendship. The life of Virgil prefixed to Dryden's 
translation, and a " Preface to the Pastorals with a short defence 
of Virgil, against some of the reflections of Monsieur Fontenella," 
both ascribed at one time to Walsh, were the work of Dr Knightly 
Chetwood (1650-1720). In 1704 Walsh collaborated with Sir 
John Vanbrugh and William Congreve in Monsieur de Pour- 
aournac, or Squire Trdooby; an adaptation of Molidre's farce. 

Wahh's Poems are included in Anderson's and other collections of 
the British poets. See The Lnes of tke Poets, vol. iii. pp. 151 ct seq., 
published 1753 as by Theophilus Cibber. 

WALSWGHAM, SIR FRANCIS (c 1 530-1 500), English 
statesman, was the only son of William Wslsingham, common 
sergeant of London (d. March 1534), by his wife Joyce, daughter 
of Sir Edmund Denny of Cheshunt. The family is assumed to 
have sprung from Walsingham in Norfolk, but the earliest 
authentic traces of it are found in London in the first half of the 
15th century; and it waa one of the numerous families which, 
having accumulated wealth in the dty, planted themselves 
out as landed gentry and provided the Tudor monarchy with 
its justices of Che peace and main support. To this connexion 
amy also be attributed much of the influence which London 
exerted over English policy in the 1 6th century Sir Francis's 
great-great-great-grandfather, Alan, was a oordwainer of Grace- 
dturch Street; Alan's son Thomas, a vintner, purchased Scad- 
bury in Chislehurst, and Thomas'* great-grandson William 
bought Foot's Cray, where Francis may have been bom. His 
node Sir Edmund was lieutenant of the Tower, and his mother 
was related to Sir Anthony Denny, a member of Henry VHI.'s 
privy council who attended him on his death-bed. 

Francis matriculated as a fellow-commoner of King's College, 
Cambridge, of which Sir John Cheke was provost, in November 
1548; and be continued studying there amid strongly Protest- 
ant influences until Michaelmas 1550, when he appears, after 
the fashion of the time, to have gone abroad to complete his 
education (Stahlin, p. 79). Returning in 155a he was admitted 
at Gray's Inn on January 28, 1553, but Edward VI. 's death six 
months later induced him to resume his foreign travels. In 
iSSS-iSS 6 he was at Padua, where he was admitted a "con- 
tihariu* " in the faculty of laws. Returning to England after 



Elizabeth's accession he was elected M.P. lot Banbury' to her 
first parliament, which sat from January to May 1559. He 
married in January 1562 Anne, daughter of George Barnes, 
Lord Mayor of London and widow of Alexander Carleill, whose 
son-in-law Christopher Hoddesdon was closely associated with 
maritime and commercial enterprise. He was elected to repre- 
sent Lyme Regis in Elizabeth's second parliament of 1563 as 
well as for Banbury, and preferred to sit for the former borough. 
He may have owed his election to Cecil's influence, for to Cecil 
he subsequently attributed his rise to power; but his brother- 
in-law Sir Walter Mildmay was well known at court and in 1566 
became chancellor of the exchequer. In that year Walsingham 
married a second time, his first wife having died in 1564; his 
second was also a widow, Ursula, daughter of Henry St Barbe 
and widow of Sir Richard Worsley of Appuldurcombe, captain 
of the Isle of Wight. Her sister Edith married Robert Beale, 
afterwards the chief of WaJaingaam's henchmen. By his second 
wife Walsingham had a daughter who married firstly Sir Philip 
Sidney, secondly Robert Devereux, second earl of Essex, and 
thirdly Richard de Burgh, earl of Clanricarde. 

Wakingham's earliest extant communications with the 
government date from 1567; and in that and the following two 
years he was supplying Cecil with information about the move- 
ments of foreign spies In London. The Spanish ambassador 
in Paris declared in 157© that he had been for two years engaged 
in collecting contributions from English churches for the assist- 
ance of the Huguenots in France; and he drew up a memorial 
depicting the dangers of Mary Stuart's presence in England and 
of the project for her marriage with Norfolk. Ridolfi, the 
conspirator, was committed to his custody in October 1569, 
and seems to have deluded Walsingham as to his intentions; 
but there is inadequate evidence for the statement (Did. Nat. 
Biog.) that Walsingham was already organizing the secret 
police of London. In the summer of 1570 he was, in spite of his 
protestations, designated to succeed Norris as ambassador at 
Paris, La Mothe Fendon, the French ambassador in -England, 
wrote that he was thought a very able man, devoted to the 
new religion, and very much in Cecil's secrets. Cecil had in 
1569 triumphed over the conservative and aristocratic party 
in the council ; and Walsingham was the ablest of the new men 
whom he brought to the front to give play to the new forces 
which were to carve out England's career. 

An essential element in the new policy was the substitution 
of an alliance with France for the old Burgundian friendship. 
The affair of San Juan de Ulua and the seizure of the Spanish 
treasure-ships in 1568 had been omens of the inevitable conflict 
with Spain; Ridolfi's plot and Philip II.'s approaches to Mary 
Stuart indicated the lines upon which the struggle would be 
fought; and it was Walaingham% business to reconcile the 
Huguenots with the French government, and upon this reconcilia- 
tion to base an Anglo-French alliance which might lead to a 
grand attack on Spain, to the liberation of the Netherlands, to 
the destruction of Spain's monopoly in the New World, and to 
making Protestantism the dominant force in Europe. Walsing- 
ham threw himself heart and soul into the movement. He was 
the anxious fanatic of Elizabeth's advisers; he lacked the 
patience of Burghley and the cynical coolness of Elizabeth. His 
devotion to Protestantism made him feverishly alive to the 
perils which threatened the Reformation; and he took an 
alarmist view of every situation. Ever dreading a blow, he was 
always eager to strike the first; and alive to the perils of peace, 
he was blind to the dangers of war. He supplied the momentum 
which was necessary to counteract the caution of Burghley and 
Elisabeth ; but it was probably fortunate that his headstrong 
counsels were generally overruled by the circumspection of his 
sovereign. He would have phinged England into war with 
Spain in 157*, when the risks would have been infinitely greater 
than in 1588, and when the Huguenot influence over the French 
government, on which he relied for support, would probably 
have broken in his hands. His dear-cut, strenuous poncy of 
open hostilities has always had its admirers; but it is difficult 
to see how England could have secured from it more than she 



2g+ 



WALSINGHAM, SIR FRANCIS 



actually did from Elizabeth's more Fabian tactics. War, 
declared before England had gained the naval experience and 
wealth of the next fifteen years, and before Spain had been 
weakened by the struggle in the Netherlands and the depreda- 
tions of the sea-rovers, would have been a desperate expedient; 
and the ideas that any action on Elizabeth's part could have 
made France Huguenot, or prevented the disruption of the 
Netherlands, may be dismissed as the idle dreams of Protestant 
enthusiasts. 

Walsingham, however, was an accomplished diplomatist, 
and he reserved these truculent opinions for the ears of his own 
government, incurring frequent rebukes from Elizabeth. In his 
professional capacity, his attitude was correct enough; and, 
indeed, his anxiety for the French alliance and for the marriage 
between Elizabeth and Anjou led him to suggest concessions to 
Anjou'a Catholic susceptibilities which came strangely from so 
staunch a Puritan. Elizabeth did not mean to marry, and 
although a defensive alliance was concluded between England 
and France in April 157a, the French government perceived 
that public opinion in France would not tolerate an open breach 
with Spain in Protestant interests. Coligny 's success in captivat- 
ing the mind of Charles IX. infuriated Catherine de Medici's, 
and the prospect of France being dragged at the heels of the 
Huguenots infuriated the Catholics. The result was Catherine's 
attempt on Coligny's life and then the massacre of St Bartholo- 
mew, which placed Walsingham's person in jeopardy and 
ruined for the time all hopes of the realization of his policy of 
active French and English co-operation. 

He was recalled in April 1573, but the queen recognized that 
the failure bad been due to no fault of his, and eight months 
later he was admitted to the privy council and made joint 
secretary of state with Sir Thomas Smith. He held this office 
jointly or solely until his death; in 1577 when Smith died, 
Dr Thomas Wilson was associated with Walsingham; after 
Wilson's death in 1581 Walsingham was sole secretary until 
July 1586, when Davison began his brief and ill-fated seven 
months' tenure of the office. After Davison's disgrace in February 
1587 Walsingham remained sole secretary, though Wolley as- 
sisted him as Latin secretary from 1588 to 1500. He was also 
returned to parliament at a by-election in 1576 as knight of the 
shire for Surrey in succession to Charles Howard, who had become 
Lord Howard of Effingham, and he was re-elected for Surrey 
in 1584, 1586 and 1588. He was knighted on December i, 1377, 
and made chancellor of the order of the Garter on April 22, 1578. 

As secretary, Walsingham could pursue no independent policy; 
he was rather in the position of permanent undcr-eecretary of the 
combined home and foreign departments, and he had to work 
under the direction of the council, and particularly of Burghky 
and the queen. He continued to urge the necessity of more 
vigorous intervention on behalf of the Protestants abroad, 
though now his clients were the Dutch rather than the Huguenots. 
In June 1578 he was sent with Lord Cobham to the Netherlands, 
mainly to glean reliable information on the complicated situation. 
He had interviews with the prince of Orange, with Casimir who 
was there in the interests of Protestant Germany, with Anjou 
who came in his own interests or in those of France, and with 
Don John, who nominally governed the country in Philip's name; 
the story that he instigated a plot to kidnap or murder Don John 
is without foundation. His letters betray discontent with Eliza- 
beth's reluctance to assist the States; he could not understand 
her antipathy to rebellious subjects, and he returned in October, 
having accomplished little. 

In August 2581 he was sent on a second and briefer mission to 
Paris. Its object was to secure a solid Anglo-French alliance 
against Spain without the condition upon which Henry III. 
insisted, namely a marriage between Elizabeth and Anjou. 
The French government would not yield, and Walsingham came 
back, to be followed by Anjou who sought in personal interviews 
to overcome Elizabeth's objections to matrimony. He, too, 
was unsuccessful; and a few months later he was dismissed with 
tome English money and ostensible assurances of support. 
But - ' "" '"th countermined his plans; unlike Walsing- 



ham, she would sooner have seen Philip remain master of the 
Netherlands than see them fall into the hands of France. His 
final embassy was to the court of James VI. in 1583, and here his 
vehement and suspicious Protestantism led him astray and 
provoked him into counterworking the designs of his own 
government. He was convinced that James was as hostile to 
Elizabeth as Mary herself, and failed to perceive that he was as 
inimical to popery as he was to presbyierianism. Elizabeth and 
Burghley were inclined to try an alliance with the Scottish king, 
and the event justified their policy, which Walsingham did his 
best to frustrate, although deserted on this occasion by his chief 
regular supporter, Leicester. 

For the rest of his life Walsingham. was mainly occupied in 
delecting and frustrating the various plots formed against 
Elizabeth's life; and herein he achieved a success denied him 
in his foreign policy. He raised the English system of secret 
intelligence to a high degree of efficiency At one time he is 
said to have had in his pay fifty-three agents at foreign courts, 
besides* eighteen persons whose functions were even more obscure. 
Some of them were double spies, sold to both parties, whose real 
sentiments are still conjectural; but Walsingham was more 
successful in seducing Catholic spies than his antagonists were 
in seducing Protestant spies, and most of his information came 
from Catholics who betrayed one another In his office in London 
men were trained in the arts of deciphering correspondence, 
feigning handwriting, and of breaking and repairing seals in such 
a way as to avoid detection. His spies were naturally doubtful 
characters, because the profession does not attract honest men; 
morality of methods can no more be expected from counter* 
plotters than from plotters; and the prevalence of political or 
religious assassination made counterplot a necessity in the 
interests of the stale. 

The most famous of the plots frustrated by Walsingham was 
Anthony Babington's, which he detected in 1586. Of the guilt 
of the main conspirators there is no doubt, but the complicity of 
Mary Stuart has been hotly disputed. Walsingham bad long 
been convinced, like parliament and the majority of Englishmen, 
of the necessity of removing Mary; but it was only the discovery 
of Babington's plot that enabled him to bring pressure enough 
to bear upon Elizabeth to ensure Mary's execution. This cir- 
cumstance has naturally led to the theory that he concocted, 
if not the plot, at least the proofs of Mary's connivance. Un- 
doubtedly he facilitated her self-incrimination, but of her active 
encouragement of the plot there can be little doubt after the 
publication of her letters to Mendosa, in which she excuses her 
complicity on the plea that no other means were left to secure her 
liberation. Considering the part he played in this transaction, 
Walsingham was fortunate to escape the fate which the queen 
with calculated indignation inflicted upon Davison. 

Walsingham died deeply in debt on April 6, 1590. Since 1579 
he bad lived mainly at Barn Elms, Barnes, maintaining an 
adequate establishment; but his salary did riot cover his 
expenses, he was burdened with his son-in-law Sir Philip Sidney's 
debts, and he obtained few of those perquisites which Elizabeth 
lavished on her favourites. He bad little of the courtier about 
him; his sombre temperament and directness of speech irritated 
the queen, and it says something for both of them that he 
retained her confidence and his office until the end of his life. • * 

Dr Karl Stfihlin's elaborate and scholarly Sir Francis Walsingham 
*nd seine Ztit (Heidelberg, voL L, 1908) supersedes all previous 
accounts of Walsingham so far as it goes (1573) ; Dr Stahlin has also 
dealt with the early history of the family in his Die Walsingham bis 
xur Mitie des 16. Jahrhunderts (Heidelberg, 1905). Vast masses of 
Walsingham's correspondence are preserved in the Record Office and 
the British Museum; some have been epitomised in the Foreign 
Calendar (as far as 1582) ; and his correspondence during his two 
embassies to France was published in cxienso by Sir Dudley Digges in 
1655 under the title The CompUat Ambassador, possibly, as has been 
suggested by Dr Stahlin, to give a fillip to the similar policy then 
being pursued by Oliver Cromwell. The ascription to Sir Francis of 
Arcana Aulica: or Walsingham's Manual of Prudential Maxims for 
the Statesman and the Courtier is erroneous; the book is really the 



h: 



translation of a French treatise by one Edward Walsingham who 
flourished c. 1643-1659. See also Webb, Miller and Beckwith's 
History of CMslekwst (1699} and DicL Nat. Biog. lis. 231.340. 



*.L 



WALSINGHAM, THOMAS— WALTER, JOHN 



Mr Coayers Rend, who edited the Boris* Papers {" G 
1909), relating to Mary'* trial, was ie 1910 engaged on an elaborate 
life erf WaJoscham, pah of which the present writer was able to ice 
b MS. (A. F. P.) 

WALSIHGHAM. THOMAS (d. c. 1422), English chronicler, 
was probably educated at the abbey of St Albans and at Oxford. 
Re became a monk at St Albans, where he appears to have 
passed the whole of his monastic life except the six years between 
U94 and 1400 during which he was prior of another Benedictine 
house at Wymondham, Norfolk. At St Albans he was in charge 
of the scriptorium, or writing room, and he died about 1422. 
Walsingham 's most important work is his Historio Anglicana, 
a valuable piece of work covering the period between 1272 and 
1432. . Some authorities bold that Walsingham himself only 
wrote the section between 1377 and 1392, but this view is con- 
troverted by James Gairdner in his Early chroniclers of Europe 
(1879). 

The Hisloria, which from the beginning to 1377 » largely a com- 
pilation from earlier chroniclers, was published by Matthew Parker in 
1574 as Histeria Angliae breris. For the " Rolls •* series it has been 
edited in two volumes by H. T. Riley (1863-1804). Covering some of 
the same ground Walsingham wrote a Chronicon Angliae; this deals 
with English history from 1128 to 1388 and has been edited by Sir 
E. M . Thompson for the " Rous " scries ( 1 874). H isother writings in- 
clude the Cesta abbaium monasterii S. Albani and the Yfodigma 
Neustriae. The Gesta is a history of the abbots of St Albans from the 
foundation of the abbey to 1381. The original work of Walsingham 



n the period between 1308 and 1381, the earlier part being merely a 
compilation ; it has been edited for the " Rolls " series by H T Riley 
(1667-1809). The Ypodigma purports to be a history of the dukes of 



Normandv, but it also contains some English history and its value 
is not great. Compiled about 1419. it was dedicated to Henry V. 
and was written to justify this king's invasion of France. It was first 
published by Matthew Parker in 1574, and has been edited for the 
u Rolls " series by H.T. Riley (1876). Another history of England by 
Walsingham dealing with the period between 1172 and 1393 is in 
aunuscript in the British Museum. This agrees in many particulars 
with the Chronicon A niliae, but it is much less hostile to John of 
Gaunt, duke of Lancaster. Walsingham is the main authority for the 
history of England during the reigns of Richard II., Henry IV. and 
Henry V., including the rising under Wat Tyler in 1 181. He shows 
considerable animus against John Wyclifle and the Lollards. 

WALTER, HUBERT (d. 120s). chief justiciar of England and 
archbishop of Canterbury, was a relative of Ranulf de Glauvill, 
the great justiciar of Henry II., and rose under the eye of his 
kinsman to an important position in the Curia Regis. In 1184 
and in 1185 he appears as a baron' of the exchequer He was 
employed, sometimes as a negotiator, sometimes as a justice, 
sometimes as a royal secretary. He received no clerical pro- 
motion from Henry II., but Richard I. appointed him bishop of 
Salisbury, and by Richard's command he went with the third 
crusade to the Holy Land. He gained the respect of all the 
crusaders, and acted as Richard's principal agent in all negotia- 
tions with Saladin, being given a place in the first band of pilgrims 
that entered Jerusalem. He led the English army back to 
England after Richard's departure from Palestine, but in 
Sicily he heard of the king's CAptivily, and hurried to join him in 
Germany. In itQ3 he returned to England to raise the king's 
ransom. Soon afterwards he was elected archbishop of Canter- 
bury and made justiciar. He was very successful in the govern- 
ment of the kingdom, and after Richard's last visit be was practic- 
ally the ruler of England. He had no light task to keep pace 
with the king's constant demand for money. He was compelled 
to work the administrative machinery to its utmost, and indeed 
to invent new methods of extortion. To pay for Richard's 
ransom, he had already been compelled to lax personal property, 
the first instance of such taxation for secular purposes. The 
main feature of all his measures was the novel and extended use 
of representation and election for oil the purposes of government. 
His chief measures are contained in his instruction to the itinerant 
justices of it 94 and 1108, in bis ordinance of 1105 for the con- 
servation of the peace, and in his scheme of x 108 for the assess* 
ment of the carucage. The justices of 1194 were to order the 
dection of four coroners by the suitors of each county court. 
These new officers were to " keep." i.e. to register, the pleas of 
the crown, an important duty hitherto left to the sheriff. The 
juries, both for answering the questions asked by the judges and 



*95 

for trying cases under the grand assise, were to be chosen by a 
committee of four knights, also elected by the suitors of each 
county court for that purpose. In 110$ Hubert issued* an 
ordinance by which four knights were to be appointed In every 
hundred to act as guardians of the peace, and torn this humble 
beginning eventually was -evolved the office of justice of the 
peace. His reliance upon the knights, or middle-class land- 
owners, who now for the first time appear in the political fore- 
ground, is all the more interesting because it is this class who, 
either as membets of parliament or justices of the peace, were to 
have the effective rule of England in their hands for so many 
centuries. In 1x08, to satisfy the king's demand for money, 
Hubert demanded a carucage or plough-tax of five shillings on 
every plough-land (carucate) under cultivation. This was the 
old tax, the Danegeld, in a new and heavier form and there 
was great difficulty in levying ft. To make it easier, the justiciar 
ordered the assessment to be made by a sworn jury in every 
hundred, and one may reasonably conjecture that these jurors 
were also elected. Besides these important constitutional changes 
Hubert negotiated a peace with Scotland in 1195, and in 1197 
another with the Welsh. But Richard had grown dissatisfied 
with him, for the carucage had not been a success, and Hubert 
had failed to overcome the resistance of the Great Council when 
its members refused to equip a force of knights to serve abroad. 
In X19S Hubert, who had inherited from his predecessors in the 
primacy a fierce quarrel with the Canterbury monks, gave these 
enemies an opportunity of complaining to the pope, for in 
arresting the London demagogue, William Fitz Osbert, be had 
committed an act of sacrilege in Bow Church, which belonged 
to the monks. The pope asked Richard to free Hubert from all 
secular duties, and he did so, thus making the demand an excuse 
for dismissing Hubert from the jusriciarship. On the 27th of 
May 1109 Hubert crowned John, making a speech in which the 
old theory of election by the people was enunciated for the last 
time. He also took the office of chancellor and cheerfully worked 
under Geoffrey Fits Peter, one of bis former subordinates. In 
i2oi he went on a diplomatic mission to Philip Augustus of 
France, and m 1202 be returned to England to keep the kingdom 
in peace while John was losing his continental possessions. In 
x >os he died. Hubert was an ingenious, original and industrious 
public servant, but he was grasping and perhaps dishonest. 

Sec W. Stubbs, Constitutional History, vol. i. (1897): Miss K. 
Norgate's England under tht Angevin Kings, vol. ii. (1887): W. 
Stubbs, preface to vol. iv. of Roger of Hoveden's Ckronide (" Rolls" 
series, 1868-1871). 

WALTER, JOHN (17)8/9-18x2), founder of The Times 
newspaper, London, was born in 1738/9, probably in London, 
and from the death of his father, Richard Walter (about 1755/6), 
until 1781 was engaged in a prosperous business as a cool 
merchant. He played a leading part in establishing a Coal 
Exchange in London; but shortly after 1781, when he began to 
occupy himself solely as an underwriter and became a member 
of Lloyd's, he over-speculated and failed. In 1782 be bought 
from one Henry Johnson a patent for a new method of printing 
from " logotypes " {i.e. founts of words or portions of words, 
instead of letters), and made some improvements in it. In 1784 
he acquired an old printing office in Blackfriars, which formed 
the nucleus of the Printing-house Square of a later date, and 
established there his " Logographic Office." At first he only 
undertook the printing of books, but on xst January 1785 
he started a small newspaper called The Daily Universal Register, 
which on reaching its 940th number on xst January 1788 was 
renamed The Times. The printing business developed and 
prospered, but the newspaper at first had a somewhat chequered 
career. In 1789 Mr Walter was tried for a libel in it on the 
duke of York, and was sentenced to a fine of £50, a year's 
imprisonment in Newgate, to stand in the pillory for an hour 
and to give surety for good behaviour for seven years; and for 
further libels the fine was increased by £100, and the imprison* 
ment by a second year. On 9th March 1791, however, he was 
liberated and pardoned. In 1799 he was again convicted for 
a technical hod, this time on Lord Cowper. He had then given 



298 



WALTHAMSTOW— WALTHARIUS 



erected in 1556 and restored in 1798. On the south side of the 
church is a lady chapel dating from the end of the reign of 
Edward II. or the beginning of that of Edward 1IL, containing 
some good Decorated work, with a crypt below. Of the monastic 
buildings there remain only a bridge and gateway and other 
slight fragments. Bishop Hall became curate of Waltham in 
161 a, and Thomas Fuller was curate from 1648 to 1658. At 
Waltham Cross, about 1 m. W. of Waltham in Hertfordshire, 
is the beautiful cross erected (1 291-1204) by Edward I. at one 
of the resting-places of the corpse of Queen Eleanor on its way 
to burial in Westminster Abbey. It is of Caen stone and is 
supposed to have been designed by Pietro Cavallini, a Roman 
sculptor. It is hexagonal in plan and consists of three stages, 
decreasing towards the top, which is finished by a crocheted 
spirelet and cross. The lower stage isdivided into compartments 
enclosing the arms of England, Castile and Leon, and Ponthieu. 
Its restoration has not been wholly satisfactory. The royal gun- 
powder factory is in the immediate vicinity; government works 
were built in 1800 at Qutnton Hill, i m. W. of the town, for 
the manufacture of cordite; and the town possesses gun-cotton 
and percussion-cap factories, flour-mitts, malt kilns and breweries. 
Watercresses are largely grown in the neighbourhood, and there 
are extensive market gardens and nurseries. 

The town probably grew up round the church, which was built 
early in the nth century to contain a portion of the true cross. 
The manor was held by the abbot and convent of the Holy Cross 
from the reign of Henry I. to that of Henry VIII. The town was 
never more than a market town until 1804. In 1845 a local 
board of twelve members was formed to .govern it; in 1894, 
under the Local Government Act, it was brought under an urban 
district coundL The market of Waltham was granted to the 
abbey by Richard I. and confirmed in 1227 by Henry III., who 
also conceded two fairs in 1251: one for ten days following the 
Invention of the Holy Cross, the other on the vigil of the Exalta- 
tion of the Cross and for seven days after. The charter from 
which the present market appears to be derived was granted by 
Queen Elizabeth in 1560, and gave a Tuesday market for miscel- 
laneous stock. The fairs have died out, although as late as 1 79a 
they were held on the 14th of May and the 25th and 26th of 
September. The fisheries in the river Lea appear in records 
from xo86 onwards. At the end of the 17th century a fulling 
mill is mentioned, and by the year 1731 three powder mills were 
in existence. 

WALTHAMSTOW, a suburb of London in the Walthamstow 
parliamentary division of Essex, England, a short distance E. 
of the river Lea, with several stations on a branch of the Great 
Eastern railway, 6 m. N. of Liverpool Street station. Pop. of 
urban district (1891) 46,346; (1001) 95,131. It is sheltered on 
the north and east by low hills formerly included in Epping 
Forest. The church of St Mary existed at a very early period, 
but the present building, chiefly of brick, was erected in 1535 
by Robert Thome, a merchant, and Sir George Monoux, lord 
mayor of London, and has undergone frequent alteration. 
Besides other old brasses it contains in the north aisle the 
effigies in brass of Sir George Monoux (d. x 543) and Anne his wife. 
There are a number of educational institutions, including a school 
of art; Forest School, founded in 1834 in connexion with 
King's College, now ranks as one of the well-known English 
public schools. Brewing is extensively carried on. 

In the reign of Edward the Confessor Walthamstow belonged 
to Waltheof, son of Siward, earl of Northumberland, who married 
Judith, niece of William the Conqueror, who betrayed him to his 
death in 1075. The estate subsequently passed in 1309 to Guy 
de Beanchamp, earl of Warwick, and on the attainder of Earl 
Thomas in 1396 reverted to the crown. Afterwards it came 
into the possession of Edmund Beaufort, duke of Somerset; from 
the Somersets it passed to Sir George Rodney, and m 1639 came 
to the Maynard family. It is supposed to have been the birthplace 
of George Ga*-* " - (d. 1577). Sir William Batten, 
7), the friend of Pepys, had his 
W ' frequently visited here by 



WAXTHARIVS, a Latin poem founded on German popular 
tradition, relates the exploits of the west Gothic hero Walter of 
Aquiuiae. Our knowledge of the author, Ekkehard, a monk 
of St Gall, is due to a later Ekkehard, known as Ekkehard IV. 
(d. 1060), who gives some account of him in the Casus Saudi 
Colli (cap. 80). The poem was written by Ekkehard, generally 
distinguished as Ekkehard I., for his master Gcraldus in his 
schooldays, probably therefore not later than 930, since he was 
probably no longer young when he became deacon (in charge of 
ten monks) in 957. He died in 973. Waltkarius was dedicated 
by Geraldus to JErchanbald, bishop of Strassburg (fl. 965-991), 
but MSS. of it were in circulation before that time. Ekkehard IV. 
stated that he corrected the Latin of the poem, the Germanisms 
of which offended his patron Aribo, archbishop of Mains. The 
poem was probably based on epic songs now lost, so that if the 
author was still in his teens when he wrote it he must have 
possessed considerable and precocious powers. 

Walter was the son of Alphere, ruler of Aquitaine, which in the 
5th century, when the legend developed, was a province of the west 
Gothic Spanish kingdom. When Attila invaded the west the 
western princes are represented as making no resistance. They 
purchased peace by offering tribute and hostages. King Gibich, 
here described as a Frankish king, gave Hagen as a hostage 
(of Trojan race, but not, as in the Nibdun gen lied, a kinsman of 
the royal house) in place of his infant son Gunther, the Bur* 
gundian king Heririh, his daughter Hiltegund; and Alphere, bis 
son Walter. Hagen and Walter became brotheis in arms, 
fighting at the head of Attila's armies, while Hiltegund was put 
in charge of the queen's treasure. Presently Gunther succeeded 
his father and refused to pay tribute to the Huns, whereupon 
Hagen fled from Attila's court. Walter and Hiltegund, who had 
been betrothed in childhood, also made good their escape during a 
drunken feast of the Huns, taking with them a great treasure. 
The story of their flight forms one of the most charming pictures 
of old German story. They were recognized at Worms, however, 
where the treasure excited the cupidity of Gunther.. Taking 
with him twelve knights, among them the reluctant Hagen, 
he pursued them, and overtook them at the Wasgenstein in the 
Vosges mountains. Walter engaged the Nibelungen knights 
one at a time, until all were slain but Hagen, who held aloof 
from the battle, and was only persuaded by Gunther to attack his 
comrade in arms on the second day. He lured Walter from the 
strong position of the day before, and both Gunther and Hagen 
attacked at once. All three were incapacitated, but their wounds 
were bound up by HUtegund and they separated friends 

The essential part of this story is the series of single combats. 
The occasional incoherences of the tale make it probajje that 
many changes have been introduced in the legend. The Thidreks 
Saga, (chaps. 941-244) makes the story more probable by repre- 
senting the pursuers as Huns. There is reason to believe that 
Hagen was originally the father of Hiltegund, and that the tale 
was a variant of the saga of Hild as told in the SbaMskapcrmdl. 
Hild, daughter of King Hdgni, was carried off by Hedinn, son of 
Hjarrandi (A.S. Heorrenda}. The fight between the forces of 
father and lover only ceased at sundown, to be renewed on the 
morrow, since each evening Hild raised the dead by her incanta- 
tions. This is obviously a form of the old myth of the daily 
recurring struggle between light and darkness. The songs sung 
by Hiltegund in Waltkarius during her night watches were 
probably incantations, a view strengthened by the fact that in a 
Polish version the glance of Helgunda is said to have inspired the 
combatants with new strength. Hiltegund has retained nothing 
of Hild's fierceness, but the fragment of the Anglo-Saxon W older t 
shows more of the original spirit. In Waltkarius Hiltegund 
advises Walter to fly; in Waldtre she urges him to the combat. 

Bibliography.— Waltkarius was first edited by Fischer (Leipzig, 
1780). Later and more critical editions are by Jacob Grimm (Lot 
Ceduktedes Milttlohtri (Gouingen, 1838); R. Peiper (Berlin, 1873); 
V. Scheftel and A. Holder (Stuttgart. 1874); there are German 
translations by F. Linnig (Paderborn, 1885), and H. Althof (Leipzig. 
1896). See also ScheffeT's novel of Eckehard (Stuttgart. 1887). The 
A.S. fragments of Waldere were first edited by G. Stephens (1860), 
afterwards by R. Worker in Bit*, dtr angel-sacks. Potsu (vol. L, 



WALTHEOF— WALTHER VON DER VOGELWEIDE 299 



CasseL 1I81); by F. Hbtthausen in GtUborgs Hdgsholas Arsskrtfl 
(vol. v., tftoo), with autotype reproductions of the two leaves which 
have been preserved. See also A. Ebert, Attg. Gesch. der Lit des 
MUtetaUcn em Absudksnde (Leipzig. 1874-1887); R. Koezel, Gesch, 
der dentsehen Lneratur bis sum A usgangs des MiUetalters (vol L, pt. ii., 
Strassburg, 1807); M. D. Lamed, The Saga of Walter ofAqtUtaine 
(Baltimore. 1802); B. Symons, Deutsche Hetdensage (Strassburg, 
1903). With WaUharins compare the Scottish ballads of "Earl 
Brand " and " Erlmtoo " (F. J. ChUd's English and Scottish Popular 
Ballads, i. 88 acq.). 

WALTHEOF (<L 1076), earl of Northumbria, was a ton of Earl 
Siward of Northumbria, and, although he was probably educated 
for a monastic life, became earl of Huntingdon and Northampton 
about 1065. After the battle of Hastings he submitted to William 
the Conqueror; but when the Danes invaded the north of 
England in 1069 he joined them and took part in the attack on 
York, only, however,. to make a fresh submission after their 
departure in 1070. Then, restored to his earldom, he married 
William's niece, Judith, and in 1074 was appointed earl of 
Northumbria. In X075 Waltheof joined the conspiracy against 
the king arranged by the earls of Norfolk and Hereford; but soon 
repenting of his action he confessed his guilt to Archbishop 
Lanfranc, and then to William, who was in Normandy. Re- 
turning to England with William he was arrested, and after being 
brought twice before the king's court was sentenced to death. 
On the jist of May 1076 he was beheaded on St Giles's Hill, 
near Winchester. Weak and unreliable in character, Waltheof, 
like his father, is said to have been a man of immense bodily 
strength. Devout and charitable, be was regarded by the English 
as a martyr, and miracles were said to have been worked at his 
tomb at Crowland. The earl left three daughters, the eldest 
of whom, Matilda, brought the earldom of Huntingdon to her 
second husband, David I., king of Scotland. One of Waltheof 's 
grandsons was Waltheof (d. 1159), abbot of Melrose* 

See E. A. Freeman, The Norma* Conquest, vols, ii., iii. and iv. 
(1670-1876). 

WALTHER, BBRNHARD (1430-1504), German astronomer, 
was born at Nuremberg in 143a He was a man of large means, 
which he devoted to scientific pursuits. When Regiomontanus 
(f.».) settled at Nuremberg in 1472, Walther built for their 
common use an observatory at which in 1484 clocks driven by 
weight* were first used in astronomical determinations. He 
farther brought into prominence the effects of refraction in alter- 
ing the apparent places of the heavenly bodies, and substituted 
Venus for the moon as a connecting-link between observations of 
the sun and stars. Walther established a printing-press, from 
winch some of the earliest editions of astronomical works were 
issued. His observations, begun in 1475 ftnd continued until his 
death in May 1504, were published by J. Scboner in 1544, and by 
W. Sneil in 1618, as an appendix to his Observations* Hassiauae. 

See J. G. Doppebnayr, Hist Nackriekt won den nUmbergischen 
UathemaHcis, p. *3 (1730); G. A. Will, Nurnhergisches Geiemrteu- 
lexihan, vu. 381 (1806); I. F. MontucJa,Irtri. des mathematiques, u 
546; J. S. BaUly, Hist, de I'astr. moderne, X. 310; E. F. ApcJt, Die 
Reformation der Stemhunde, p. 54; J. P. von Vvurzclbaur, Uranies 
Norieas basis astronomica (1719); J- F. Weidler, Hist.astronomiae, 
p. 3»; A. G. Kattner, GeschichU der Mathematik, ii. 324; Mit- 
teUungtn da VerexnsfUr Gesch. der Stadt Numbers, vu. 237 (1888) 
(H. Pcu) ; R. Wolf, Gesch. der Astr. p. 92, &c. 

WALTHER VON DER VOGELWEIDE (c. xi 7 o-c 1330), the 
most celebrated of medieval German lyric poets. For all his 
fame, Waltber's name is not found in contemporary records, 
with the exception of a solitary mention in the travelling ac- 
counts of Bishop Woifger of Passau— " Walthero cantori de 
Vogelweide pro pellicio V. solidos longos " — "To Walther the 
singer of the Vogelweide five shillings to buy a fur coat," and 
the main sources of information about him are his own poems 
and occasional references by contemporary Minnesingers. Jt is 
clear from the title htr (Herr, Sir) these give him, that he was 
of noble birth; but it is equally clear from his name Vogelweide 
(Lat. oviarium, a gathering place or preserve of birds) that he 
belonged not to the higher nobility, who took their titles from 
castles or villages, but to the nobility of service (DtensiadeJ) f 
humble retainers of the great lords, who in wealth and position 
were little removed from non-noble free cultivators. For a 



long time the place of his birth was a matter of dispute, until 
Professor Franz Ffeiffer established beyond reasonable -doubt 
that he was born in the Wipthal in Tirol, where, not far from 
the little town of Stersing on the Eisak, a wood—called the 
Vorder- und Hintervogelweide— preserves at least the name 
of his vanished home. This origin would account for what is 
known of Waltber's early life. Tirol was at this time the home 
of several noted Minnesingers; and the court of Vienna, under 
the enlightened duke Frederick L of the house of Babenberg, 
had become a centre of poetry and art. Here it was that the 
young poet learned his craft under the renowned master Reinmar 
the Old, whose death he afterwards lamented in two of his most 
beautiful lyrics; and in the open handed duke he found his 
first patron. This happy period of his life, during which he pro- 
duced the most charming and spontaneous of his love-lyrics, 
came to an end with the death of Duke Frederick in 1x98. 
Henceforward Walther was a wanderer from court to court, 
singing for his lodging and his bread, and ever hoping that some 
patron would arise to save him from this " juggler's life " (gougd* 
fuorc) and the shame of ever playing the guest. For material 
success in this profession he was hardly calculated. His criti- 
cism of men and manners was scathing; and even when this 
did not touch his princely patrons, their underlings often took 
measures to rid themselves of so uncomfortable a censor. Thus 
he was forced to leave the court of tbe generous duke Bernhard 
of Carinthia (1202-1256); after an experience of the tumultuous 
household of the landgrave of Thuringia he warns those who 
have weak ears to give it a wide berth; and after three years 
at the court of Dietrich L of Meissen (reigned x 195-1 221) he 
complains that he had received for his services neither money 
nor praise. Walther was, in fact, a man of strong views; and 
it is this which gives him his main significance in history, as 
distinguished from his place in literature. From the moment 
when the death of the emperor Henry VI. (1197) opened the 
fateful struggle between empire and papacy, Walther threw 
himself ardently into the fray on the side of German independ- 
ence and unity. Though his religious poems sufficiently prove 
the sincerity of his Catholicism, he remained to the end of his 
days opposed to the extreme claims of the popes, whom he 
attacks with a bitterness which can only be justified by the 
strength of his patriotic feelings. His political poems begin 
with an appeal to Germany, written in 1x98 at Vienna, against 
the disruptive ambitions of the princes: — 

" Crown Philip with the Kaiser's crown 
And bid them vex thy peace ho snort." 
He was present, on the 8th of September, at Philip's coronation 
at Mainz, and supported him till his victory was assured. After 
Philip's murder in 1209, he "said and sang" in support of 
Otto of Brunswick against the papal candidate Frederick of 
Staufen; and only when Otto's usefulness to Germany had 
been shattered by the battle of Bouvines (1212) did he turn 
to the rising star of Frederick II., now the sole representative 
of German majesty against pope and princes. From the new 
emperor his genius and his zeal for the empire at last received 
recognition; and a small fief in Franconia was bestowed upon 
him, which, though be complained that its value was little, gave 
him the home and the fixed position he had so long desired. 
That Frederick gave him an even more signal mark of his favour 
by making him the tutor of his son Henry VII., is more than 
doubtful Tbe fact, in itself highly improbable, rests only upon 
the evidence of a single poem, which is capable of another 
interpreUtion. Waltber's restless spirit did not suffer him to 
remain long on his new property. In 1217 we find him once 
more at Vienna, and again in iito after the return of Duke 
Leopold VL from the crusade. About 1224 he seems to have 
settled on his fief near Wttreburg. He was active in urging the 
German princes to take part in the crusade of ts»8, and may 
have accompanied the crusading army at least as far as his 
native Tirol In a beautiful and pathetic poem he paints the 
change that had come over the scenes of his childhood and made 
his life seem a thing dreamed. He died about 1230, and was 
buried at Wttraburg, after leaving directions, according to the 



3°o 



WALTON, B.— WALTON, IZAAK 



story, that the birds were to be fed at his tomb daily. The 
original gravestone with its Latin inscription has disappeared; 
but in 1843 a new monument was erected over the spot. There 
is also a fine statue of the poet at Boxen, unveiled in 1877. 

Historically interesting as Walther's political verses are, 
their merit has been not a little exaggerated by modern German 
critics, who saw their own imperial aspirations and anti-papal 
prejudices reflected in this patriotic poet of the middle ages. 
Of more lasting value are the beautiful lyrics, mainly dealing 
with love, which led his contemporaries to hail him as their 
master in song {unsers songes master). He is of course unequal. 
At his worst he does not rise above the tiresome conventionalities 
of his school. At his best he shows a spontaneity, a charm and 
a facility which his rivals sought in vain to emulate. His earlier 
lyrics are full of the joy of life, of feeling for nature and of the 
glory of love. Greatly daring, he even rescues love from the 
convention which had made it the prerogative of the nobly 
born, contrasts the titles " woman " (wtp) and " lady " (Jrotiwe) 
to the disadvantage of the latter, and puts the most beautiful 
of his lyrics— U titer der linden— into the mouth of a simple 
girl. A certain seriousness, which is apparent under the joyous- 
ness of his earlier work, grew on him with years. Religious and 
didactic poems become more frequent; and his verses in praise 
of love turn at times to a protest against the laxer standards 
of an age demoralized by political unrest. Throughout his 
attitude is healthy and sane. He preaches the crusade; but 
at the same time he suggests the virtue of toleration, pointing out 
that in the worship of God 

" Christians, Jews and heathen all agree." 
He fulminates against " false love "; but pours scorn on those 
who maintain that " love is sin/' In an age of monastic ideals 
and loose morality there was nothing commonplace in the simple 
lines in which he sums up the inspiring principle of chivalry at 
its best 1— 

" Swer guotes wfbes Hebe hat 
Der schamt sich. ieder missetat." • 
Altogether Walther's poems give us the picture not only of a 
great artistic genius, but of a strenuous, passionate, very human 
and very lovable character. 

The Gedkhte were edited by Karl Lachmann (1837). This edition 
of the great scholar was re-edited by M. Haupt (3rd ed., 1853). 
Walikcr v. d. Vogdwcide, edited by Franz Pfeiffer, with introduction 
and notes (4th edition, by Karl Bartsch, Leipzig, 1873). Glossarium 
Mti d. Gedichten Walther's, nebst e. Reimveneichnis, by C. A. Hornig 
(Quedlinburg, 1844). There are translations into modern German by 
B. Obermann (1886), and into English verse Selected poems of Walter 
von der Vogdweid* by W. Alison Phillips, with introduction and notes 
(London, 1896). The poem Untcr der Linden, not included in the 
latter, was freely translated by T. L. Bcddoes (Works. 1800), more 
closely by W. A. Phillips in the Nineteenth Century for July 1806 
(cexjodii. p. 70). Leben u, Dickie* Walther's von der Vogeltoeide, by 
Wilbeim Wilmanm (Bonn, 1882), is' a valuable critical study of 
the poet's life and works. (W. A. P.) 

WALTON, BRIAN (1600-1661), English divine and scholar, 
was born at Seymour, in the district of Cleveland, Yorkshire, in 
1600. He went to Cambridge as a sizar of Magdalene College in 
1616, migrated to Peterhouse in 1618, was bachelor in 16x9 
and master of arts in 1623. After holding a school mastership 
and two curacies, he was made rector of St Martin's Orgar 
in London in 2628, where he took a leading part in the 
contest between the London clergy and the citizens about the 
city tithes, and compiled a treatise on the subject, whkh is 
printed in Brewster's Collectanea (1752). His conduct in this 
matter displayed his ability, but his zeal for the exaction of 
ecclesiastical dues was remembered in 164s in the articles 
brought against him in parliament, which appear to have led 
to the sequestration of his very considerable preferments.* He 
was also charged with Popish practices, but on frivolous grounds, 
and with aspersing, the members of parliament for the city. 
1M He who has the love of a good woman 
Is ashamed of every misdeed. " 

'He- was from January 1635-1636 rector of Sandon, In Essex, 
sAnKs first *<>n, is buried. He appears to have 

iMBsfCf *. and for a very short time he had 



In 1642 he was ordered into custody as a delinquent; thereafter 
he took refuge in Oxford, and ultimately returned to London 
to the house of William Fuller (1580^-1659), dean of Ely, 
whose daughter Jane was his second wife. In this retirement 
he gave himself to Oriental studies and carried through his great 
work, a Polyglot Bible which should be completer, cheaper and 
provided with a better critical apparatus than any previous 
work of the kind (see Polyglot) . The proposals for the Polyglot 
appeared in 1652, and the book itself came out in six great 
folios in 1657, having been printing for five years. Nine lan- 
guages are used: Hebrew, Chaldee, Samaritan, Syriac, Arabic, 
Persian, Ethiopic, Greek and Latin. Among his collaborators 
were James Ussher, John Lightfoot and Edward Pococke, 
Edmund Castell, Abraham Wheelocke and Patrick Young. 
Thomas Hyde and Thomas Greaves. The great undertaking 
was supported by liberal subscriptions, and Walton's political 
opinions did not deprive him of the help of the Commonwealth; 
the paper used was freed from duty, and the interest of Crom 
well in the work was acknowledged in the original preface, part 
of which was afterwards cancelled to make way for more loyal 
expressions towards that restored monarchy under which 
Oriental studies in England immediately began to languish. 
To Walton himself, however, the Reformation brought no dis- 
appointment. He was consecrated bishop of Chester in December 
1660. In the following spring he was one of the commissioners 
at the Savoy Conference, but took little part in the business. In 
the autumn of 1661 he paid a short visit to his diocese, and 
returning to London he died on the 29th of November. 

However much Walton was indebted to his helpers, the Polyglot 
Bible is a ereat monument of industry and of capacity for directing 
a vast undertaking, and the JProlegptnena (separately reprinted by 
Dathe, 1777, and oy Francis Wranghan, 1825) show judgment as 
well as learning. The same qualities appear in Walton's Considerator 
Considered (1659), a reply to the Considerations of John Owen, who 
thought that the accumulation of material for the revision of the 
received text tended to atheism. Among Walton's works must also 
be mentioned an Inlroduclio ad lectionem lingttarum oricntalium 
(1654: 2nd ed., 1655), meant to prepare the way for the Polyglot. 

See Henry J. Todd, Memoirs of the Life and Writings of Walton 
(London, 1821), in 2 vols., of which the second contains a reprint 
of Walton's answer to Owen. 

WALTON, IZAAK (1593-1683), English writer, author of 
The Complect Angler ; was bom at Stafford on the oth of August 
1503; the register of his baptism gives his father's name as 
Jcrvis, and .nothing more is known of his parentage. He settled 
in London as an ironmonger, and at first had one of the small 
shops, i\ ft. by s ft., in the upper storey of Gresham's Royal 
Burse or Exchange in Cornhill. In 1614 he had a shop in Fleet 
Street, two doors west of Chancery Lane. Here, in the parish 
of St Dunstan's, he gained the friendship of Dr John Donne, 
then vicar of that church. His first wife, married in December 
1626, was Rachel Floud, a great-great-niece of Archbishop 
Cranmer. She died in 1640. He married again soon after, his 
second wife being Anne Ken— the pastoral " Kcnna w of The 
Angler* $ Wish — step-sister of Thomas Ken, afterwards bishop 
of Bath and Wells. After the Royalist defeat at Marston Moor, 
he retired from business. He had bought some land near his 
birthplace, Stafford, and he went to live there; but, according to 
Wood, spent most of his time " in the families Of the eminent 
clergymen of England, of whom he was much beloved "; and 
in 1650 he was again living in ClerkenweU. In 1653 came out 
the first edition of his famous book, The Complect Angler. His 
second wife died in 1662, and was buried in Worcester cathedral 
church, where there is a monument to her memory. One of his 
daughters married Dr Hawkins, a prebendary of Winchester. 
The last forty years of his long life seem to have been spent in 
ideal leisure and occupation, the old man travelling here and 
there, visiting his " eminent clergymen " and other brethren of 
the angle, compiling the biographies of congenial spirits, and 
collecting here a little and there a little for the enlargement of 
his famous treatise. After 1662 he found a home at Farnhara 
Castle with George Morley, bishop of Winchester, to whom be 
dedicated his Life of George Herbert and also that of Richard 
Hooker; and from time to time he visited Charles Cotton in 



WALTON-LE-DALR— WALTZING MOUSE 



301 



fas fishing boon on the Daw. He ditd in his daughter's home 
at Winchester on the 15th of December toBj, and was buried 
in the cathedraL It is characteristic of his kindly nature that 
he left his property at Shalf ord for the benefit of the poor of his 
native town. 

Walton hooked a much bigger fish than bo angled for when he 
offered his quaint treatise, The Complect Angler, to the public. 
There is hardly a name id English literature, even of the first 
rank, whose immortality is more secure, or whose personality is 
the subject of a more devoted cult. Not only is he the sour 
tales of a considerable sect in the religion of recreation, but 
multitudes who have never put a worm on a book—even on a 
fly-hook — have been caught and securely held by his picture 
of the delights of the gentle craft and his easy leisurely transcript 
of his own simple, peaceable, lovable and amnsfeg character. 
Tie GmfUat Angler was published in 1653, but Walton con- 
tinued to add to its completeness in his leisurely way for a 
quarter of a century. It was dedicated tb John Offley, his most 
honoured friend. There was a second edition in 1655, a third 
in 1661 (identical with thai of 1004), a fourth in 1668 and a fifth 
in 1676. In this last edition the thirteen chapters of the original 
have grown to twenty-one, and a second part was added by his 
loving friend and brother angler Charles Cotton, who took up 
"Venator" where Walton had left him and completed his 
instruction in fly-fishing and the making of flies. Walton did 
not profess to be an expert with the fly; the fly-fishing in his 
first edition was contributed by Thomas Barker, a retired cook 
and humorist, who produced a treatise of his own in 1659; but 
in the use of the live worm, the grasshopper and the frog " Pis- 
cator " himself could speak as a master. The famous passage 
about the frog— often misquoted about the worm — " use him as 
though you loved him, that is, harm him as little as you may 
possibly, that he may live the longer "--appears in the original 
edition. The additions made aa the work grew were not merely 
to the technical part; happy quotations, new turns of phrase, 
songs, poems and anecdotes were introduced as if the leisurely 
author, who wrote it as a recreation, had kept it constantly in 
his mind and talked it over point by point with his numerous 
bre th ren. There were originally only two interlocutors in the 
opening scene, " Piscator " and " Viator "; but in the second 
edition, as if in answer to an objection that " Piscator " had it 
too much in his own way in praise of angling, he introduced the 
falconer, " Auceps," changed " Viator " into " Venator " and 
made the new companions each dilate on the joys of his favourite 
sport. 

Although The CampUai Angler was not Walton's first literary 
work, his leisurely labours as a biographer seem to have grown 
out of his devotion to angling. It was probably as an angler that 
he made the acquaintance of Sir Henry Wotton, but it is dear 
that Walton had more than a love of fishing and a humorous 
temper to recommend him to the friendship of the accomplished 
aaibasaador. At any rate, Wotton, who had intended to write 
the Hie of John Donne, and had already corresponded with 
Walton on the subject, left the task to him. Walton had already 
contributed an Elegy to the 1633 edition of Donne's poems, 
and he completed and published the Kfe, much to the satis- 
faction of the most learned critics, in 164a Sir Henry Wotton 
dying in 1639, Walton undertook bis life also; it was finished in 
1642 and published in 1651. His life of Hooker was published 
in 1662, that of George Herbert in 1670 and that of Bishop 
Sanderson in 1678. All these subjects were endeared to the 
biographer by a certain gentleness of disposition and cheerful 
piety; three of them at least— Donne, Wotton and Herbert— 
were anglers. Their lives were evidently written with bvine 
pains, in the same leisurely fashion ss his Angler, and like it 
ate of value less as exact knowledge than as harmonious and 
complete pictures of character. Walton also rendered affection- 
ate service to the memory of his friends Sir John Sltefhngton 
ud John Chalkhill, editing with prefatory notices Skeflington's 
Hero of Loremo in i6$a and Chalkhill 's TheaJma and CkarcMus a 
few months before his own death In 1683- His poems and prose 
tn^nesto were coUecrt in 1878 vafe 
XXVUl 6 



The best-known old edition of the Angler'*). Major's (and ed. 
1824). The book was edited by Andrew Lang in 1896. and various 
modern editions have appeared. The standard biography is that by 
Sir Harris Nicolas, prefixed to an edition of the A ngfer ( 1 836). There 
are notices also, with additional scraps of fact, annexed to two 
American editions, Bethuae's (1847) sad Dowling's (1857). An 
edition of Walton's Lives, by C. Sampson, appeared in 1903, See also 
ltaak Walton and hu Friends, by S. Martin (1903). 

WALTON-LE-DALB, an urban district in the Darwen parlia- 
mentary division of Lancashire, England, on the S. bank of the 
Ribble, immediately above Preston. Pop. (1901) 11,371. The 
church of St Leonard, situated on an eminence to the east of the 
town, was originally erected in the nth century. The earliest 
portions of the present building are the Perpendicular chancel 
and tower, the nave having been rebuilt in 1708, while the 
transepts were erected in 1816. There are a number of interest- 
ing old brasses and monuments. Cotton-spinning is carried on, 
and there are market-gardens in the vicinity. Roman remains 
have been found here, and there was perhaps a roadside post 
on the site. The manor of Walton was granted by Henry de 
Lacy about 1 130 to Robert Banastre. It afterwards passed by 
marriage to the Langtons, and about 1592 to the Hoghtons of 
Hoghton. Walton was the principal scene of the great battle 
of Preston, fought on the 17th of August 1648 between Crom- 
well and the duke of Hamilton. In 1701 the duke of Norfolk, 
the earl of Derwentwater and other Jacobites incorporated the 
town by the style of the " mayor and corporation of the ancient 
borough of Walton." In 17x5 the passage of the Ribble was 
bravely defended against the Jacobites by Parson Woods and 
has parishioners of Atherton (g.v.). 

WALTON-ON-THAbIES, an urban district in the Epsom 
parliamentary division of Surrey, England, pleasantly situated 
on the right bank of the Thames, 17 m. W.S.W. from London 
by the London & South- Western railway. Pop. (1901) 10,320, 
The church of St Mary has late Norman portions, and contains 
numerous memorials, including examples of the work of Chantrcy 
and Roubiliac. A verse inscribed upon a pillar is reputed to 
be Queen Elizabeth's profession of faith as regards transubstantia- 
tion. The queen was a frequent resident at Henry VIU.'s palace 
of Oatlands Park, which was destroyed during the civil wars 
of the 17th century. The property subsequently passed through 
various hands, and the park is reduced in extent by the modern 
growth of villas surrounding it. It contains, however, a remark- 
able grotto built of mineral and stalactitic rock, shells and other 
similar materials, by one of the earls of Lincoln when owner. 
Ashley Park, a Tudor mansion (in the main modernized), 
attributed to Cardinal Wolsey, was at times the residence of 
Cromwell; while John Bradshaw, who, as lord president of the 
court, sentenced Charles L to death, occupied the old manor, 
house of Walton. Walton is a favourite resort of anglers and 
boating parties. 

WALTDM-OM«THE-NAZB (or Walton-le-Soxen), a watering- 
place in the Harwich parliamentary division of Essex, England, 
the terminus of a branch of the Great Eastern railway from 
Colchester, 71 } m. E.N.E. from London. Pop. of urban district 
(1901) soia. This portion of the coast has suffered from en* 
croaebment of the sea, and a part of the old village of Walton* 
with the church, was engulfed towards the end of the x8th 
century. A prebendary stall at St Paul's Cathedral, London, 
was endowed with the lands thus consumed (praebenda 
roHsumpia per mare). On the E. side of the town is the open 
North Sea, with a fine stretch of sand and shingle, affording good 
bathing. To the west is an irregular inlet studded with low 
islands, known as Hanford Water. The Naze is a promontory 
2 mi N. by E. of the town, and fax the vicinity of Walton are 
low cliffs exhibiting the fossUiferous red crag formation. The 
church of All Saints is a brick building dating mainly from 
1804. Walton has a public ball, several hotels and a small 
theatre; and iron foundries and brick works. Services of 
passenger steamers in connexion with Harwich, Clacton-on- 
Sea, and London are maintained in the summer. 

WALTZING MOUSE (or Japanese Walthno Mouse), a 
pied race of the house mouse (Afav muctdus), or one of its allies, 

2a 



3«a 



WALWORTH— WANAMAKER 



originally bred in China, and known in Japan as the Nankin 
mouse. The habit of these mice of spinning round and round 
after their tails is highly developed, and continually exercised. 
In Japan, where there were originally two breeds, a grey and 
a white, these mice are kept in cages on account of their dancing 
propensities. The dancing was at one time supposed to be due 
to a disease of the labyrinth of the ear; but Dr K. Kishi, in a 
paper in the Zeitschrift fur wisscnsckafUicht Zoobgu (vol. 
xxi. pt. 3), concludes that it is the effect of confinement for 
untold centuries in small cages. 

WALWORTH, SIR WILLIAM (d. 138s), lord mayor of London, 
belonged to a good Durham family. He was apprenticed to 
John Lovekyn, a member of the Fishmongers' Gild, and 
succeeded his master as alderman of Bridge ward in 1368, becom- 
ing sheriff in 1370 and lord mayor in 1374. He is said to have 
suppressed usury in the city during his term of office as mayor. 
His name frequently figures as advancing loans to the king, 
and he supported John of Gaunt, duke of Lancaster, in the 
city, where there was a strong opposition to the king's uncle. 
His most famous exploit was his encounter with Wat Tyler in 
138 x, during his second term of office as lord mayor. In June 
of that year, when Tyler and his followers entered south London, 
Walworth defended London Bridge against them; he was 
with Richard II. when he met the insurgents at SmUhfidd, 
and assisted in slaying their leader (see Tyler, Wat), after- 
wards raising the city bodyguard in the king's defence; for 
which service he was rewarded by knighthood and a pension. 
He subsequently served on two commissions to restore the 
peace in the county of Kent. He died in 1385, and was buried 
in the church of St Michael, Crooked Lane, of which he was a 
considerable benefactor. Sir William Walworth was the most 
distinguished member of the Fishmongers' Gild, and he invariably 
figured in the pageants prepared by them when one of their 
members attained the mayoralty. He became a favourite 
hero in popular tales, and appeared in Richard Johnson's 
Nino Worthies of London in 159a. 

See William Herbert, The History., .of St Uickod. Crooked 
Lane, London . . . (1831) ; W. and R. Woodcock. Lives of Illustrious 
Lord Mayors (1846) ; an account of Wat Tyler's rebellion in a frag- 
mentary chronicle printed by G. H. Trevelyan in the Enriish 
Historical Renew (July 1898). 

WAMPUM, or Wampum-Peace (Amer. Ind. wampam, 
"white"; font, "bead"), the shell-money of the North 
American Indians. It consisted of beads made from shells, and, 
unlike the cowry-money of India and Africa (which was the 
shell in its natural state), required a considerable measure of 
skill in its manufacture. Wampum was of two colours, dark 
purple and white, of cylindrical form, averaging a quarter of 
an inch in length, and about half that in diameter. Its colour 
determined its value. The term wampum or wampunvpeage 
was apparently applied to the beads only when strung or woven 
together. They were ground as smooth as glass and were 
strong together by a hole drilled through the centre. Dark 
wampum, which was made from a " hard shell " dam (Venus 
mcrcenorio), popularly called quahang or qoabog, a corruption 
of the Indian name, was the most valuable. White wampum 
was made from the shell of whelks, cither from the common 
whelk (Bu*txnmnnndatum) t cx from that of Pyrutocanaikulata 
and Pyrtda caries. Wampum was employed most in New 
England, but it was common elsewhere. By the Dutch settlers 
of New York it was called seams* or teew*no\ and r ce no ho in 
Virginia, and perhaps farther south, for shell-money was also 
1 in the Carolina*, but whether the roenekt of the Virginian 
1 was made from the same species of shell as wampum 
Is not dear. Cylindrical shell-beads similar to the wampum of 
the Atlantic const Indians were made to some extent by the 
Indians of the west coast. This was manufactured from the 
Ifwnmt mmfmntnm, a masd which abounds there. 

la the ftl ifinf between whites and Indians, wampum so com- 

f r mjm\ ttfefftaceof ordinary coin that its value was fixed 

ft to a penny and five shillings a fathom. 

ft for a count, and the number of shells 

I standard of exchange. Thus 




where six wampum went to the penny, the fathom consisted of 
360 beads; but where four made a penny, as under the Massa- 
chusetts standard of 1640, then the fathom counted 240. The 
beads were at first worth more than five shillings per fathom, the 
price at which they passed current in 1643. A few years before 
the fathom had been worth nine or ten shillings. Connecticut 
received wampum for taxes in 1637 at four a penny. In 1640 
Massachusetts adopted the Connecticut standard, "white to 
pass at four and bleuse at two a penny." There was no restric- 
tion on the manufacture of wampum, and it was made by the 
whites as well as the Indians. The market was soon flooded 
with carelessly made and inferior wampum, but it continued to 
be circulated in the remote districts of New England through the 
17th century, and even into the beginning of the 18th. It was 
current with silver in Connecticut in 1704. 

Wampum was also used for personal adornment, and belts 
were made by embroidering wampum upon strips of deerskin. 
These belts or scarves were symbols of authority and power 
and were surrendered on defeat in battle. Wampum also served 
a mnemonic use as a tribal history or record. " The belts that 
pass from one nation to another in all treaties, declarations and 
important transactions are very carefully preserved in the chiefs' 
cabins, and serve not only as a kind of record or history but 
as a public treasury. According to the Indian conception, these 
belts could tell by means of an interpreter the exact rule, pro- 
vision or transaction talked into them at the time and of which 
they were the exclusive record. A strand of wampum, consisting 
of purple and white shell-beads or a belt woven with figures formed 
by beads of different colours, operated on the principle of associat- 
ing a particular fact with a particular string or figure, thus giving 
a serial arrangement to the facts as well as fidelity to the memory. 
These strands and belts were the only visible records of the 
Iroquois, but they required the trained interpreters who could 
draw from their strings and figures the acts and intentions 
locked up in their remembrance" (Major Rogers, Account of 
North America, London, 1765). 

See Holmes, " Art In Shdl of the Ancient Americans " in Annmoi 
Report of Burton of Ethnology, Washington, for 1880-1881; W. B. 
Weeden, Indian Money as a factor iu New England Guiliaaliou 
(Baltimore, 1884); E. Inffersoll, "Wampum and its History," 
in American Naturalist, vol xvii. (1883); Horatio Hale, "On the 
Origin and Nature of Wampum,*' in American Naturalist, vol. xvfii. 
(1884); C L. Norton. " The Last Wampum Gxnage," ia American 
Magamno (or March 1888. 

WANA, a valley and frontier outpost of Wasiristan fn the 
North- West Frontier Province of India. It lies to the west of the 
Mafasud country, and to the north of the Gonial river, and is in- 
habited by the Wariri tribe. Lying on thebe<derof Afghanistan, 
it is conveniently placed for dominating Wasiristan on the north 
and the Gonial Pass on the south, and occupies very much the 
same strategic position as the Zhob valley holds in Bamchfctan. 
It forms the end of the chain of outposts extending from Qoetta 
to Wasiristan, and can be supported either from India by the 
Gomal Pass or from Qoetta by the Zhob valley. In 1804, when 
the Inde-Afghan boundary commissioo was dehmiti&g the 
Waxiri border, the leahsod Warfris, thtnkmg their mdependeoce 
to be threatened, made a night stuck on the camp of the com- 
mission at Wana, The result was the Vfcxtristan Expedition of 
the same year, and the occupation of Wana by British troops. 
On the formation of the Nortb-West Frontier Province in 1901 
it was decided to replace the troops by militia, and Wana was 
handed over to them in 1004. It is now the headquarters of the 
political agency of Southern Wasiristan. 

WAffAMAKBR. JORH (1838- ), American merchant, 
was born, of Palattee-Ihipktnot stock, in Philadelphia, Penn- 
sylvania, on the 11th of July 1838. He attested a patJk school 
in that dty until he was fourteen, then became an errand boy fora 
book store, and was a retail clothing — 1— »»»i from 1856 until 
1861, when he established with Nathan Brown (who afterward 
became his brother-in-law) the clothing house of Wanamaker 
ft Brown, in Philadelphia, the partnership contrnmng until 
the death of Brown in 1868. In i860 Wanamaker founded the 
bouse of John Wanenute* Gswipany; and in 1875 bongs* the 



WANDBRU— WANGARA 



303 



ftBD^hiak Railroad Company's freight depot *l Thirteenth 
and Market streets, sad in the following year opened it ss a 
dry goods and clothing store, subsequently much enlarged. In 
September 1806 he acquired from Hilton, Hughes & Company 
the former New York store of A. T. Stewart, and thereafter 
greatly enlarged it and added a new building; this, and the 
Philadelphia store, are among the largest department stores 
in the United States. Mr Wanamaker was postmaster-general in 
President Benjamin Harrison's cabinet in 1889-1893, and 
brought about the establishment of post -offices on ocean-going 
vessels. He early identified himself with religious work in Phila- 
delphia; was the first paid secretary, in 1857-1861, of that 
city's Young Men's Christian Association, of which he was 
president in 1870-1883, and in 1858 founded, and thereafter 
served as superintendent of, the Bethany (Presbyterian) Sunday 
School, one of the largest in the world. He took an active part 
in the movement which resulted in the formation of the United 
States Christian Commission in 1861. 

WAMDERU (WAsmmoo), the native name for the species 
of langur monkeys (Semnofithecux) inhabiting the island of 
Ceylon; but in India commonly misapplied to the lion-tailed 
macaque, Mocacus siltnus (see Pkimates). 

WAMDESFORD, CHRISTOPHER (1502-1640), lord deputy of 
Ireland, was the son of Sir George Wandesford (1573-1619) of 
Kirklington, Yorkshire, and was bom on the 94th of September 
1 59a. Educated at Clare College, Cambridge, he entered partia* 
meat in i6*r, and bis rise to importance was due primarily to 
his friendship with Sir Thomas Wentworth, afterwards earl of 
Strafford. Although at first hostile to Charles I., this being 
evidenced by the active part he took in the impeachment of 
Buckingham, Wandesford soon became a royalist partisan, and 
in 1633 he accompanied Wentworth to Ireland, where he was 
already master of the rolls. His services to his chief were fully 
recognized by the latter, whom in 1640 he succeeded as lord 
deputy, but he had only just begun to struggle with the diffi- 
culties of his new position when he died on the 3rd of December 
164a 

His son Christopher (1628-1687), created a baronet in 1663, 
was the father of Sir Christopher Wandesford (d. 1707), who was 
created an Irish peer as Viscount Castlecoroer in 1707, Castlccorner 
in Kilkenny having been acquired by his grandfather when in 
Ireland. Christopher, the 2nd viscount (A 1 7 19), was secretary- 
at-war in 17x7-1718. In 1758 John, 5th viscount, was created 
Earl Wandesford, but his titles became extinct when he died in 
January 1784. 

For Waadesford's life see Thomas Comber, Memoirs of the Life ami 
Death of the Lord Deputy Wandesford (Cambridge, 1778); T. D. 
..- . . „• f of Rickmondskire, vol. il. (1823); and the Auto- 



biotrapky of his daughter, Alice Thqrnton, edited by Chades Jackson 
* heSui — - 



Whttafccr, History 

biofraphj of his dabg»«xa, »» * «<• ■««•- 

for the Surtees Society (Durham, 1875). 

WAKDIWASH, a town in the North Arcbt district of Madras, 
India. Pop. (xoox) 5971. It is notable as the scene of the victory 
of Sir Eyre Coote in 1760, the most important ever won by the 
British over the French in India. 

WAHDSBEK, a town of Germany, in the Prussian province o! 
Schleswig-Holstein, practically forming a populous suburb of 
Hamburg, with which it is connected by a railway and an 
electric tramway. Pop. (1905) 31.563- It w best known as the 
place of residence of the poet Johann Heinrich Voss and of 
Matthias Claudius, who here issued (177 1-177 5) the Wandsbeckcr 
Bote*. There is a monument to Claudius in the town. Its leading 
manufactures are spirits, tobacco, beer, leather and confectionery; 
other industries are machine building and gardening. 

WAHDSWORTH, a south-western metropolitan borough of 
London, England, bounded N. by the river Thames and Batter* 
sea, and E. by Lambeth, and extending S. and W. to the boundary 
of the county of London. Pop. (1001) 231,034. The name, 
which occurs in Domesday, indicates the position of the village 
on the river Wandlc, a small tributary of the Thames. Wands- 
worth is the largest in area of the metropolitan boroughs, in- 
cluding the districts of Putney by the river, part of Clapham 
in the north-east, Streatbam in the south-east, BaJham and 
Upper and Lower Tooting in the centre and south. These are 



mainly residential districts, and the borough la not thickly 
populated. Towards the west, along the Upper Richmond and 
Kingston roads, there is considerable open country, undulating 
and well wooded. It is to a great extent preserved in the public 
grounds of Putney Heath, which adjoins Wimbledon Common, 
outside the borough, on the north; and Richmond Bark and 
Barnes Common, parts of which are in the borough. Other 
public grounds are parts of Wandsworth Common (193 acres) 
and Clapham Common, both extending into Battersea, Tooting 
Bee (147 acres) and Streatham Common (66 acres), and Wands- 
worth Park bordering the Thames. The borough is connected 
with Fulham across the Thames by Wandsworth and Putney 
bridges. The annual Oxford and Cambridge boat-race starts 
from above Putney Bridge, finishing at Mortlake; and the 
club-houses of the principal rowing dubs of London are situated 
on the Putney shore. Putney Heath was formerly notorious 
as a resort of highwaymen and duellists. Among the institu- 
tions of Wandsworth are the Royal Hospital for Incurables, 
Putney; the Fountain and the Grove fever hospitals, Lower 
Tooting; the Clapham School of Art, Wandsworth Technical 
Institute; the Roman Catholic Training College for Women, 
West Hill; and Wandsworth Prison, Heathfield Road. The 
parliamentary borough of Wandsworth returns one member, 
but the municipal borough also includes part of the Clapham 
division of the parliamentary borough of Battersea and Clap- 
ham, and part of the Wimbledon division of Surrey. The 
borough council consists of a mayor, 10 aldermen and 60 council- 
lors. Area, 9129-7 acres. 

WANGANUI, the principal port on the west coast of North 
Island, New Zealand, in the Waitotara county, at the mouth 
of the Wanganui river, 134 m. by rail N. of Wellington. Pop. 
(1906) 8x75. The town is laid out in rectangular blocks at the 
foot of low hills, from the summit of which (as in Queen's 
Gardens) a splendid panorama rs seen, including the snow-dad 
Mount Ruapehu to the north-east. The river bar obstructs 
navigation, the depth not exceeding 14 ft., so that large vessels 
must tie outside. The district is agricultural and pastoral, and 
wool and grain are exported, as well as meat and dairy produce, 
for which there are large refrigerating works. The Wanganui 
Collegiate School (Church of England) is one of the largest 
boarding schools in Australasia. The district was the scene of 
conflicts with the natives in 1847, 1664 and x868, and in the 
beautiful Moutoa gardens a monument commemorates the 
battle of that name (May 14th, 1864). The settlement was 
founded in 184s. 

WANGARA, the Hausa name for the Mandingo (?.*.), a people 
Of West Africa; used*Iso as the name of districts in the western 
and central Sudan. The Wangara are also known as Wan- 
garawa, Wongara, Ungara, Wankore and Wakore. According 
to Idrisi (writing in the 12th century), the Wangara country 
was renowned for the quantity and the quality of the gold 
which it produces. The country formed an island about 
300 m. long by 150 in breadth, which the Nile {i.e. Niger) sur- 
rounded on all sides and at all seasons. This description corre- 
sponds fairly accurately with the tract of country between the 
Niger and its tributary the Bani. IdrisPs account of the annual 
inundation of the land by the rising of the Niger agrees with 
the' facts. He states that on the fall of the waters natives from 
all parts of the Sudan assembled to gather the gold which the 
subsiding waters left behind. In the closing years of the 18th 
and the opening years of the 19th century the discoveries of 
Hornemann, Mungo Park and others revived the stories of 
Wangara and its richness in gold. Geographers of that period 
(e.g. Major Rcnnell) shifted the Wangara country far to the east 
and confused Idrisi's description with accounts which probably 
referred to Lake Chad. Gradually, however, as knowledge 
increased, the Wangara territory was again moved westward, 
and was located within the Niger bend. The name has now 
practically disappeared from the maps save that a town in the 
hinterland of Dahomey is named Wangara (French spelling 
Ouangara). Idrisi's account as to the richness in gold of the 
upper Niger regions has basis hi fact ; though the gold brought 



3°4 



WANGARATTA—~WAQIDf 



in. considerable quantities to the European trading stations 
on the Gambia and Senegal in the xoth, 17th and 18th centuries 
appears to have come largely from Bambuk. 

WANGARATTA, a town of Victoria, Australia, in the counties 
of Moira, Delatite and Bogong, at the junction of the Ovens 
and King rivers, 145} m. by rail N.E. of Melbourne. Pop. 
(xoox) 2621. It is a prosperous little town in an agricultural 
district and is the see of an Anglican bishop. It has numerous 
industries, including flour-milling, tanning, fellmongery, brewing, 
coach-building, bacon-curing, and bicycle and butter making. 
Important stock sales are held fortnightly, and there is an annual 
agricultural exhibition. 

WAKSTEAD, an urban district in the Romford parliamentary 
division of Essex, England, forming a residential suburb of 
London, on a branch of the Great Eastern, railway, 8 m. N.E. 
of Liverpool Street station. Pop. (ioox) 9179. Wanstead 
Park, 184 acres in extent, was opened in 1882. Northward 
extend the broken fragments of Epping Forest. Wanstead 
Flats* adjoining the Park, form another open ground. At 
Lake House Thomas Hood wrote the novel Tylney Hall. At 
Snaresbrook in the parish of Wanstead are the Infant Orphan 
Asylum, founded in 1827, and the Royal Merchant Seamen's 
Orphan Asylum, established in London in 18x7 and rciounded 
here in 1861. In Snaresbrook is Eagle Pond or Lake, xo| acres 
in extent. 

Wanstead is mentioned in Domesday, and the name is con* 
sidered by some to be derived from Woden's stead or place, 
indicating a spot dedicated to the worship of Woden. It be- 
longed before the time of Edward the Confessor to the monks 
of St Peter's, Westminster, and afterwards to the bishop of 
London, of whom it was held at the time of the Domesday 
Survey by Ralph Fitz Brien. In the reign of Henry VIII. 
h came into the possession of the crown, and in 1549 it was 
bestowed by Edward VI. on Lord Rich, whose son sold it in 
1577 to Robert Dudley, earl of Leicester. The original manor 
house was rebuilt by Lord Chancellor Rich, who was here visited 
by Queen Elizabeth in 1561, and for her entertainment Sir 
Philip Sidney wrote a dramatic interlude which was played 
before the queen at Wanstead garden, and is printed at the 
end of the Arcadia, Sir Richard Child, afterwards earl of 
Tylney, built the splendid mansion of Wanstead House in 
1715 (demolished in 1822), in which the prince of Condi and 
others of the Bourbon family resided during the reign of the 
first Napoleon. 

WANTAGE, a market town in the Abingdon parliamentary 
divistoa of Berkshire, England. Pop. of urban district (1001), 
5766. It lies in the richly wooded Vale of White Horse, in a 
hollow at the foot of the steep hills which border the Vale on 
the south, 2 m. S. of Wantage Road station on the Great Western 
railway, with which a steam tramway connects it. The church of 
St Peter and St Paul is cruciform, and as a whole Perpendicular 
in appearance, but retains a nave arcade and ornate tower-arches 
of the Early English period. The font is a fine specimen of the 
same style; and there is beautiful woodwork in the chancel. 
An altar-tomb in alabaster of 1361, and a fine brass of 1414, 
commemorate members of the family of Fitzwarren. There are 
other brasses of the 15th and 16th centuries. The neighbouring 
building of the grammar school preserves a Norman door from 
another church, which formerly stood in the same churchyard 
with St Peter's. In the broad market-place is a great statue 
of King Alfred, executed by Count Gleichen and unveiled in 
1877 ; for Wantage is famous as the birthplace of the king in 
849. The town has a large agricultural trade and ironworks. 

The title of Baron Wantage of Lockinge was taken in 1885 
by Sir Robert Loyd-Lindsay (b. 1832) on his elevation to the 
peerage- He was the son of General James Lindsay of Balcarres, 
but took the additional surname of Loyd in 1858 on marrying 
the heiress of Lord Overstone, the banker; he fought with 
his regiment the Scot« P«esi;»r r. Ma rds in the Crimea and won 
the V.C., retiring r \ He was M. P. for Berks 

from 1865 to 188 retary to the War Office 

in i*77~i88o. ct at his death in xooo. 



WAPBNSHAW (M.E. for "weapon-show"), a periodical 
muster or review of troops formerly held in every district in 
Scotland, the object having been to satisfy the military chiefs 
that the arms of their retainers were in good condition. Scott's 
Old Mortality gives a description of one. The name is still 
given to rifle meetings held annually at Aberdeen and other 
places in Scotland. 

WAPENTAKE, anciently the principal adrnimstrative division 
of the counties of York, Lincoln, Leicester, Nottingham, Derby 
and Rutland, corresponding to the hundred in the southern 
counties of England. In many cases, however, ancient wapen- 
takes are now called hundreds. North of the Tees, Sadberg in 
Durham is the only district which was called a wapentake, and 
the rest of the ancient administrative divisions of the three 
northern counties were called wards. The word wapentake 
seems to have been first applied to the periodical meetings of the 
magnates of a district; and, if we may believe the 12th century 
compilation known as the Leges Edwardi, it took its name from, 
the custom in accordance with which they touched the spear 
of their newly-appointed magistrate with their own spears and 
so confirmed his appointment. Probably it was also usual for 
them to signify their approval of a proposal by the clash of their 
arms, as was the practice among the Scandinavian peoples. 
Wapentakes are not found outside the parts of England which 
were settled by the Danes. They varied in size in different 
counties; those of Yorkshire, for instance, being very much 
larger than those of Lincolnshire. As a general rule each wapen- 
take bad its own court, which had the same jurisdiction as the 
hundred court s of the southern counties. In some cases, however, 
a group of wapentakes had a single court. It should be noticed 
thaf the court was atyled wopentogium simply, and not curia 
wafienlagii. 

See Sir Henry Ellis, Central Introduction to Domesday 'Book', 
W. W. Skcat. Etymological English Dictionary; W. Stubbs, Constitu- 
tional History, and H. M. Chadwick, Studies on, Anglo-Saxon 
Institutions (1905). (G. J. T.) 

WAPPERS. BGIDE CHARLES OUSTAVB, Baron (1803- 
1874), Belgian painter, was born at Antwerp on the 33rd of 
August X803. After studying at the Antwerp Academy he went 
to Paris in 1826. The Romantic movement was then astir in 
France, and in that vehement struggle towards a new ideal artists 
and political men were thrown together. Wappers was the 
first Belgian artist to take advantage of this state of affairs, and 
his first exhibited picture, '• The Devotion of the Burgomaster 
of Leiden," appearing at the appropriate moment, hid a mar- 
vellous success in the Brussels Salon of 1830. The picture, 
although political, was in fact a remarkable work, which revolu- 
tionized the taste of Flemish painters. Wappers was invited 
to the court of Brussels, and was favoured with commissions. 
In 1832 the city of Antwerp appointed him professor of painting, 
and his triumph was complete when he exhibited at the Antwerp 
Salon of 1834 his masterpiece, *• An Episode of the Belgian 
Revolution of X830" (Brussels Gallery). He was subsequently 
appointed painter to the* king of the Belgians, and at the death 
of Matthicu van Bree he was made director of the Antwerp 
Academy. Of his very numerous works we may name M Christ 
Entombed," " Charles I. taking leave of bis Children/' " Charles 
IX.," " Camoens," " Peter the Great at Saerdam," and " Boc- 
caccio at the Court of Joanna of Naples." Louis Philippe gave 
him a commission to paint a large picture for the gallery at 
Versailles, " The Defence of Rhodes by the Knights of St John of 
Jerusalem," a work finished in 1844, when he received from the 
king of the Belgians the title of baron. After retiring from the 
post of director of the Antwerp Academy, he settled in 1853 in 
Paris, where he died on the 6th of December 1874. 

See J. flu Jardin, L'Art flamand: Caroille Leraonnicr, Hishin des 
beaux arts en Beltiqw; E. Fetis, Notice our Gostave Wappers," 
Annuaire de Cacaaimie royale de Belgiane (1884). 

WAQIDl [Aba 'Abdallah Mabommed ibn 'Umar ul-WaqidlJ 
(747-823), Arabian historian, was born at Medina, where he 
became a corn-dealer but was compelled tc flee from his creditors 
(owing largely to his generosity) to Bagdad. Here the Barmecide 
vizier Yabya b. Khalid (see Babjoecdes) gave him means and 



WAR. 



3<>S 



aid* ifes cadi in the western district of the city. Iri 810 be 
was transferred to Rosafa (Russia) an the east side. His greatest 
work is the Kildb ut-Magkdsi, or history of Mahomet's campaigns. 

The first third of the KUob W-AftffMst (one leaf missing) was 
published by A. von Kreroer from a Damascus MS (Calcutta, 1856)* 
Sprenger in his Lebcn Muhammad's used a British Museum MS. 
containing the first half, all but one leaf J Wellhausen published 
an abridged German translation from another British Museum MS. 
vnder the title Muhammad tn Medina (Berlin. 188a) 

Ascribed to Waqidi, but probably written at the time of the 
Crusades to incite the Moslems against the Christians, are several 
works on the conquests of Islam One of the best known is the FutAi 
•Mk-SUm. edited by W Nassau Lees (Calcutta, 1854-1862. Cairo, 
186$). M. J. de Goeje, in his Mtmotrts tur la couqutU de la S*ne 
fLeden, 1900), holds that this work is founded on that of Abu 
Hudhaifa ulkBukhari, which in turn is an edition of the real WaqidL 

See Arabia. Literature, section " History." (C. W T.) 

WAR (O Eng. ware, Fr guerre, of Teutonic origin; cf. H C. 
•errosj, to confound), the aimed conflict of states, in which each 
seeks to impose its will upon the other by force. War is the 
opposite of Peace (q.9 )» and Is the subject of the military art. 
la separate sections below the general principles of the art of 
war arc discussed, and the laws which have gradually become 
accepted among civilized peoples for the regulation of its con- 
ditions. The details concerning the history of individual wars, 
and the various weapons and instruments of war, are given in 
separate articles. 

See Army. Navy. Conscription, Strategy, Tactics, Infantry, 
Cavalry, Artillery, Engineers, Fortification, Coast De- 
fence, Officer*. Staff, Guards, Suffly and Transport, Um> 
forms. Arms and Armour, Gun, Rifle, Pistol, Sword, Lance, 
Ordnance, Machine Guns, Submarine Mines, Torpedo, &c 
The important wars are dealt with under the names commonly given 
to them; e.t. American Civil War, American War of inde- 
pendence. American War of 1812, Crimean War, Dutch Wars, 
Franco-German War, French Revolutionary Wars, Great 
RBaaxuoN. Geese War or Independence, Italian Wars, 
Napolbohic Campaigns, Pbloponnesiam War. Peninsular War, 
Punic Wars, Russo Japanese War, Russo Turkish. Wars, 
Servo-Bulgarian War, Seven Weeks* War, Seven Years' 
War. Spanish-American War, Spanish Succession War, Thirty 
Years' War. Important campaigns and battles are also separately 
treated tef. Waterloo, Trafalgar, Shenandoah Valley, Wil- 
Maxxss, metz, Ac.). * 

I General Principles 

It is not easy to determine whether industrial progress, improved 
organization, the spread of education or mechanical Inventions 
have wrought the greater change in the military art 
y^S^— War is first and foremost a matter of movement; and 
as such it has been considerably affected by the multi- 
plication of good roads, the introduction of steam transport, and 
by the ease with which draught animals can be collected. In 
the second place, war is a matter of supply; and the large area 
of cultivation, the Increase of live-stock, the vast trade in pro- 
visions, pouring the food-stuffs of one continent into another, 
have done much to lighten the inevitable difficulties of a cam- 
paign. In the third place, war is a matter of destruction; and 
while the weapons of armies have become more perfect and more 
durable, the modern substitutes for gunpowder have added 
largely to their destructive capacity. Fourthly, war fa not 
merely a bund struggle between mobs of individuals, without 
fj^«** or coherence, but a conflict of well-organised masses, 
moving with a view to intelligent co-operation, acting under the 
impulse of a single will and directed against a definite objective. 
These masses, however, are seldom so closely concentrated that 
the impulse which sets them in motion can be promptly and easily 
communicated to each, nor can the right objective be selected 
without some knowledge of the enemy's strength and dispositions. 
Means of intercommunication, therefore, as well as methods of 
observation, are of great importance; and with the telegraph, 
the telephone, visual signalling, balloons, airships and improved 
field-glasses, the armies of to-day, so far as regards the mainten- 
ance of connexion between different bodies of troops, and the 
diffusion, if not the acquiring, of information, are at a great 
advantage compared with those of the middle of the igth century. 

War, then, in some respects has been made much simpler. 
Armies are easier to move, to feed and to manoeuvre. But in 



oLherxesr*mil&rr^fltmi4icity has nude the conduct of a 
campaign more difficult. Not only is the weapon wielded by 
the general less clumsy and more deadly than heretofore, less 
fragile and better balanced, but it acts with greater rapidity 
and has a far wider scope. In a strong and skilful hand it may 
be irresistible; in the grasp of a novice it is worse than useless. 
In former times, when war was a much slower process, and armies 
were less highly trained, mistakes at the outset were not neces- 
sarily fatal Under modern conditions, the inexperienced com- 
mander will not be granted time in which to correct his deficiencies 
and give himself and his troops the needful practice. The idea 
of forging generals and soldiers under the hammer of war dis- 
appeared with the advent of " the nation in arms." Military 
organisation has become a science, studied both by statesmen 
and soldiers. The lessons of history have not been neglected. 
Previous to 1870, in one kingdom only was it recognized that 
intellect and education play a more prominent part in war 
than stamina and courage. Taught by the disasters of 1806, 
Prussia set herself to discover the surest means of escaping 
humiliation for the future. The shrewdest of her sons undertook 
the task The nature of war was analysed until the secrets of 
success and failure were lsid bare; and on these investigations a 
system of organization and of training was built up which, not 
only from a military, but from a political, and even an economical 
point of view, is the most striking product of the 19th century. 
The keynote of this system is that the best brains in the state 
shall be at the service of the war lord None, therefore, but 
thoroughly competent soldiers are entrusted with the responsi- 
bility of command; and the education of the officer is as 
thorough, as systematic and as uniform as the education of the 
lawyer, the diplomatist and the doctor. In all ages the power 
of intellect has asserted itself in war. It was not courage and 
e xp erien c e only that made Hannibal, Alexander and Caesar 
the greatest names of antiquity. Napoleon, Wellington and the 
Archduke Charles were certainly the best -educated soldiers of 
their time; whde Lee, Jackson and Sherman probably knew 
more of war, before they made it, than any one else in the United 
States. But it was not until 1866 and 1870 that the preponderat- 
ing influence of the trained mind was made manifest, Other 
wars had shown the value of an educated general, these showed 
the value of an educated army. It is true that Moltke, in mental 
power and in knowledge, was in no wise inferior to the great 
captains who preceded him, but the remarkable point of his 
campaigns is that so many capable- generals had never before 
been gathered together under one flag. No campaigns have been 
submitted to such searching criticism. Never have mistakes 
been owe sedulously sought for or more frankly exposed. 
And yet, compared with the mistakes of other campaigns, even 
with that of 1815, Where hardly a superior officer on either side 
bad not seen more battles than Moltke and his comrades bad 
seen field-days, they were astonishingly few. It is not to be 
denied that the foes of Prussia were hardly worthy of her steel. 
Yet it may be doubted whether either Austria or France ever put 
two finer armies into the field than the army of Bohemia in 1866 
and the army of the Rhine in 1870. Even their generals of 
divisions and brigades had more actual experience than those 
who led the German army corps. Compared with the German 
rank and file, a great part of their non-commissioned officers 
and men were veterans, and veterans who had seen much service. 
Their chief officers were practically familiar with the methods 
of moving, supplying and manoeuvring large masses Of troops; 
their marshals were valiant and successful soldiers. And yet 
the history of modern warfare records no defeats so swift and 
so complete as those of Koniggrtttz and Sedan. The great host 
of Austria was shattered to fragment* in seven weeks; the French 
Imperial army was destroyed in seven weeks and three days; 
and to all intent and purpose the resistance they had offered 
was not much more effective than that of a respectable militia. 
But both the Austrian and the, French armies were organized 
and trained under the old system. Courage, experience and 
professional pride they possessed in abundance. Man for man, 
in all virile qualities, neither officers nor men were inferior to 



( 



306 



WAR 



[GENERAL PRINCIPLES 



their torn. But one thing their generals lacked, and that wis 
education for war. Strategy was almost a sealed book to them; 
organisation a matter of secondary importance. It was no part 
of their duty, they declared, to train the judgment of their 
subordinates; they were soldiers, and not pedagogues. Know- 
ledge of foreign armies and their methods they considered useless; 
and of war prepared and conducted on " business principles " 
they had never even dreamt. 

The popular idea that war it a mere matter of brute force, 
redeemed only by valour and discipline, is responsible for a 
greater evil than the complacency of the amateur. 
It blinds both the people and Its representatives to 
their bounden duties. War is something more than a 
mere outgrowth of politics. It is a political act, initiated and 
controlled by the government, and it is an act of which the issues 
are far more momentous than any other. No branch of political 
science requires more careful study. It is not pretended that if 
military history were thoroughly studied all statinmen would 
become Moltkes, or that every citizen would be competent to 
set squadrons in the field. War is above all a practical art, and 
the application of theory to practice a not to be taught at a 
university or to be learned by those who- have never rubbed 
shoulders with the men in the ranks. But if war were more 
generally and more thoroughly studied, the importance- of 
organization, of training, of education and of readiness would be 
more generally appreciated; abuses would no longer be regarded 
with lazy tolerance; efficiency would be something more than a 
political catchword, and soldiers would be given ample oppor- 
tunities of becoming masters of every detail of their profession. 
Nor is this all. A nation that understood something about war 
would hardly suffer the fantastic tricks which have been played 
so often by the best-meaning statesmen. And statesmen them- 
selves would realize that when war is afoot their interference 
is worse than useless; that preparation for defence, whether 
by the multiplication of roads, the construction of railways, 
of arsenals, dockyards, fortresses, is not the smallest of their 
duties; and lastly, that so far as possible diplomacy and strategy 
should keep step. Each one of these is of far greater importance 
than in the past. In the wars of the 18th century, English 
cabinets and Dutch deputies could direct strategical operations 
without bringing ruin on their respective countries. The armies 
of Austria in 1701-1705, controlled as they were by the Auhc 
Councils, were more formidable in the field than those of the 
French Republic. In the campaigns of 1854 and 1850 the plans 
of Newcastle and Napoleon III. worked out to a successful 
issue; and if Lincoln and Stanton, his Secretary of War, im- 
perilled the Union in 186), they saw the downfall of the Southern 
Confederacy in 1865. But in every case amateur was pitted 
against amateur. The Dutch deputies were hardly less incapable 
of planning or approving a sound plan of campaign than Louis 
XIV. The Aulic Council was not more of a marplot than the 
Committee of Public Safety. Newcastle was not a worse st rategist 
than the tsar Nicholas I. Napoleon III. and his advisers were 
quite a match for the courtier generals at Vienna; while Lincoln 
and Stanton were not much more ignorant than Jefferson Davis. 
The amateur, however, can no longer expect the good fortune 
to be pitted against foes of a capacity no higher than his own. 
The operations of Continental armies will be directed by soldiers 
of experience whose training for war has been incessant, and who 
will have at their command troops in the highest state of efficiency 
and preparation. It is not difficult to imagine, under such 
conditions, with what condign punishment mistakes will be 
visited. Napoleon III. in 1850 committed as many blunders 
as he did in 1S70, But the Austrians had no Mollke to direct 
them; their army corps were commanded by men who knew 
less of generalship than a Prussian major, and their armament 
was inferior. Had they been the Austrians of to-day, it is 
pnWb|sj|Jh»| the French and the allies would have been utterly 
* - - jt4»4.ftB>iC«R* to more recent campaigns, while 
1 tftvo not hesitated to declare that if the 
I been Germans or French, the invasion 
' 'aHurc, it is impossible to doubt 




that had the Boers of 1809 possessed a staff ol tminedatraceglsta, 
they would have shaken the British Empire to its foundations. 
The true test of direction of war is the number of mistakes. 
If they were numerous, although the enemy may not have 
been skilful enough to take advantage of them, the outlook 
for the future under the same direction, but against a more 
practised enemy, is anything but bright. 

As regards preparation for defence, history supplies us with 
numerous illustrations. The most conspicuous, perhaps, is 
the elaborate series of fortifications which were _ 
constructed by Vauban for the defence of France; j^g^" 
and there can be no question that Louis XIV., in 4%(*m\% 
erecting this mighty barrier against invasion, gave 
proof of statesmanlike foresight of no mean order. An instance 
less familiar, perhaps, but even more creditable to the brain 
which conceived it, was Wellington's preparation of Portugal in 
1 800-181 1. Not only did the impregnable stronghold of Torres 
Vcdras, covering Lisbon, and securing for the sea-power an open 
door to the continent of Europe, rise as if by magic from the 
earth, but the whole theatre of war was so dealt with that the 
defending army could operate wherever opportunity might 
offer. No less than twenty supply depots were established 
on different lines of the advance. Fortifications protected the 
principal magazines. Bridges were restored and roads improved. 
Waterways were opened up, and flotillas organized; and three 
auxiliary bases were formed on the shores of the Atlantic 
Again, the famous " quadrilaterals " of Lombardy and Rumelia 
have more than fulfilled the purpose for which they were con- 
structed; and both Austria and Turkey owe much to the 
fortresses which so long protected their vulnerable points. 
Nor has the neglect of preparation failed to exert a powerful 
effect. Moltke has told us that the railway system of Germany 
before 1870 had been developed without regard to strategical 
considerations. Yet the fact remains that it was far better 
adapted both for offence and defence than those of Austria and 
France; and, at the same time, it can hardly be denied that the 
unprovided state of the great French fortresses earwiwri an 
evil influence on French strategy. Both Metx and Stratsburg 
were so far from forming strong pivots of manoeuvres, and thus 
aiding the operations of the field armies,/ that they required 
those armies for their protection; and the retreat on Mets, 
which removed Bazaine's army from the direct road to Paris 
and placed it out of touch with its supports, was mainly due to 
the unfinished outworks and deficient armament of the virgin 
city. Since 1870 it has been recognized that preparation of the 
theatre of war is one of the first duties of a government. Every 
frontier of continental Europe is covered by a chain of entrenched 
camps. The great arsenals are amply fortified and strongly 
garrisoned. Strategy has as much to say to new railways as 
trade; and the lines of communication, whether by water or 
by land, are adequately protected from all hostile enterprises. 

We now come to the importance of close concert between 
strategy and diplomacy. On the continent of Europe they can 
easily keep pace, for the theatre of war is always ^^^ 
within easy reach. But when the ocean intervenes 
bet ween two hostile states it is undoubtedly difficult 
to time an ultimatum so that a sufficient armed force 
shall be at hand to enforce it, and it has been said 
in high places that it is practically imposs ib le. The expedition 
to Copenhagen in 1807, when the British ultimatum was pre- 
sented by an army of 27,000 men carried on 300 transports, 
would appear to traverse this statement. But at the beginning 
of the aoth century an army and a fleet of such magnitude could 
neither be assembled nor despatched without the whole world 
being cognizant- It is thus perfectly true that an appreciable 
period of time must elapse between the breaking off of negotia- 
tions and the appearance on the scene of an invading army. 
Events may march so fast that the statesman's hand may be 
forced before the army has embarked. But because a powerful 
blow cannot at once be si ruck, it by no means follows that the 
delivery or the receipt of an ultimatum should at once produce a 
dangerous situation. _ Dewey's brilliant victory 'at Manila lost 



GENERAL FRINOTLESt WAR 

the greater put of its effect because the United States Govern- 
ment was unable to follow up the blow by landing a sufficient 
force. Exactly the same thing occurred in Egypt in 1881. The 
only results of the bombardment of Alexandria were the destruc- 
tion of the city, the massacre of the Christian inhabitants, the 
encouragement of the rebels, who, when the ships drew off, 
came to the natural conclusion that Great Britain was powerless 
on land. Again, in 1899 the invading Boers found the frontiers 
unfortified and their march opposed by an inadequate force 
It is essential, then, that when hostilities across the sea are to 
be apprehended, the most careful precautions should be taken 
to ward off the chance of an initial disaster. And such pre- 
cautions are always possible. It is hardly conceivable, for 
instance, that a great maritime power, with Cyprus as a place 
formes, could not have placed enough transports behind the 
fleet to hold a sufficient garrison for Alexandria, and thus have 
saved the city from destruction. Nor in the case of a distant 
province being threatened is there the smallest reason that the 
garrison of the province should be exposed to the risk of a 
reverse-before it is reinforced. It may even be necessary to 
abandon territory. It will certainly be necessary to construct 
strong places, to secure the lines of communication, to establish 
ample magazines, to organize local forces, to assemble a fleet of 
transports, and to keep a large body of troops ready to embark 
at a moment's notice. But there is no reason, except expense, 
that all this should not be done directly it becomes dear that 
war is probable, and that it should not be done without attract- 
ing public attention. In this way strategy may easily keep pace 
with diplomacy; and all that is wanted is the exercise of ordinary 
foresight, a careful study of the theatre of war, a knowledge of 
the enemy's resources and a resolute determination, despite 
some temporary inconvenience and the outcry of a thoughtless 
public, to give the enemy no chance of claiming first blood. The 
Franco-German War supplies a striking example. Mottke's 
original intention was to assemble the German armies on the 
western frontier. The French, he thought, inferior in numbers 
and but half prepared, would probably assemble as far back as 
the Moselle. But, as so often happens in war, the enemy did 
what he was least expected to do. Hastily leaving their garri- 
sons, the French regiments rushed forward to the Saar. The 
excitement in Germany was great; and even soldiers of repute, 
although the mobilization of the army was still unfinished, 
demanded that such troops as were available should be hurried 
forward to protect the rich provinces which lie between the Saar 
and Rhine. But the chief of the staff became as deaf as he was 
silent. Not a single company was despatched to reinforce the 
slender garrisons of the frontier towns; and those garrisons 
were ordered to retire, destroying railways and removing rolling- 
stock, directly the enemy should cross the boundary. Moltke's 
foresight had embraced every possible contingency. The 
action of the French, improbable as it was deemed, had still 
been provided against; and, in accordance with time-tables 
drawn up long beforehand, the German army was disen trained 
on the Rhine instead of on the Saar. Ninety miles of German 
territory were thus laid open to the enemy; but the temporary 
surrender of the border provinces, in the opinion of the great 
strategist, was a very minor evil compared with the disasters, 
military and political, that would have resulted from an attempt 
to hold them. 

It is hardly necessary to observe that no civilian minister, 
however deeply be might have studied the art of war, could 
be expected to solve for himself the strategic problems 
■^•^ which come before him. In default of practical 
{f^fr^ knowledge, it would be as impossible for him to 
decide where garrisons should be stationed, what 
fortifications were necessary, what roads should be constructed, 
er how the lines of communication should be protected, as to 
frame a plan of campaign for the invasion of a hostile state. His 
foresight, his prevision of the accidents inevitable in war, would 
necessarily be far inferior to those of men who had spent their 
lives in applying strategical principles to concrete cases; and 
U is exceedingly unlikely that he would be as prolific of 



307 

strategical expedients as those familiar with their employment. 
Nevertheless, a minster of war cannot divest himself of his 
responsibility for the conduct of military operations. In the 
first place, he is directly responsible that plans of campaign to 
meet every possible contingency are worked out in time of peace. 
In the second place, he is directly responsible that the advice 
on which he acts should be the best procurable. It is essential, 
therefore, that he should be capable of forming an independent 
opinion on the merits of the military projects which may be 
submitted to him, and also 00 the merits of those who have to 
execute them. Pitt knew enough of war and men to select Wolfe 
for ihe-command in Canada. Canning and Castlereagh, in spits 
of the opposition of the king, sent Wellington, one of the youngest 
of the lieutenant -generals, to hold Portugal against the French. 
The French Directory had sufficient sense to accept Napoleon's 
project for the campaign of Italy in 1706. In the third place, 
strategy cannot move altogether untrammelled by politics and 
finance But political and financial considerations may not 
present themselves in quite the same light to the soldier as to the 
statesman, and the latter is bound to make certain that they have 
received d ue at tention. I f , however, modifications are necessary, 
they should be made before the plan of campaign is finally 
approved; and in any case the purely military considerations 
should be most carefully weighed. It should be remembered 
that an unfavourable political situation is best redeemed by a 
decisive victory, while a reverse will do more to shake confidence 
in the Government than even the temporary surrender of some 
portion of the national domains. " Be sure before striking " 
and Reader four mieux souler are both admirable maxims; 
but their practical application requires a thorough appreciation 
of the true principles of war, and a very large degree of moral 
courage, both in the soldier who suggests and in the statesman 
who approves. If, however, the soldier and the statesman are 
supported by an enlightened public, sufficiently acquainted with 
war to realize that patience is to be preferred to precipitation, 
that retreat, though inglorious, is not necessarily humiliating, 
their task is very considerably lightened. Nothing is more 
significant than a comparison between the Paris press in 1870 
and the American Confederate press in 1864. In the one case, 
even after the disastrous results of the first encounters bad 
proved the superior strength and readiness of the enemy, the 
French people, with all the heat of presumptuous ignorance, 
cried out for more battles, for an immediate offensive, for a 
desperate defence of the frontier provinces. So fierce was their 
clamour that both the generals and the government hesitated, 
until it was too late, to advise the retreat of Bazainc's army; 
and when that army had been cut off at Meta, the pressure 
of public opinion was so great that the last reserve of France was 
despatched to Sedan on one of the maddest enterprises ever 
undertaken by a civilized state. In 1864, on the ether band, 
while Lee In Virginia and Johnston in the west were retreating 
from position to position, and the huge hosts of the Union were 
gradually converging on the very heart of the Confederacy, the 
Southern press, aware that every backward step made the 
Federal task more difficult, had nothing but praise for the 
caution which controlled the movements of their armies. But 
the Southern press, in three crowded years of conflict, had learned 
something of war. In i860 and 1870 the German press was so 
carefully muzzled that even had there been occasion it could 
have done nothing to prejudice public opinion. Thus both the 
sovereign and the generals were backed by the popular support 
that they so richly merited; but it may be remarked that the 
relations between the army and the government were char* 
acterized by a harmony which has been seldom seen. The old 
king, in his dual capacity as head of the state and commander- 
in-chief, had the last word to say, not only in the selection of 
the superior officers, but in approving every important operation. 
With an adviser like Moitkc at his elbow, it might appear that 
these were mere matters of form. Moitkc, however, assures us 
that the king was by no means a figurehead. Although most 
careful not to assert his authority in a way that would embarrass 
his chief of staff, and always ready to yield his own judgment 



3o8 



WAR 



{GENERAL PRINCIPLES 



to sound reasons, he expressed, nevertheless, a perfectly inde- 
pendent opinion on every proposal placed before him, and on 
very many occasions made most useful suggestions. And at 
the same time, while systematically refraining from all inter- 
ference after military operations had once begun, he never 
permitted military considerations to override the demands of 
policy. In 1866, when it was manifestly of the first importance, 
from a military point of view, that the Prussian army should be 
concentrated in a position which would enable it to cross the 
border immediately war was declared, the political situation was 
so strained that it was even more important to prevent the 
enemy from setting foot at any single point on Prussian territory. 
The army, in consequence, was dispersed instead of being con- 
centrated, and the ultimate offensive became a difficult and 
hazardous operation. It is true that the lung was an able and 
experienced soldier. Nevertheless, the wise restraint he displayed 
in the course of two great campaigns, as well as the skill with 
which he adjusted conflicting factors, arc an admirable example 
of judicious statesmanship. 

The duration of a campaign is largely affected by the deadly 
properties of modern firearms. It is true that the losses in 
battle are relatively less that in the days of Brown 
Bess and the smooth-bore cannon, and almost in- 
significant when compared with the fearful carnage 
wrought by sword and spear. The reason is simple. 
A battlefield in the old days, except at close quarters, was a 
comparatively safe locality, and the greater part of the troops 
engaged were seldom exposed for a long lime together to a hot 
and continuous fire. To-day death has a far wider range, and 
the strain on the nerves is consequently far more severe. De- 
moralization, therefore, sets in at an earlier period, and it is 
more complete. When troops once realize their inferiority, they 
can no longer be depended on. It is not the losses they have 
actually suffered, but those that they expect to suffer, that affect 
them. Unless discipline and national spirit are of superior 
quality, unless the soldier is animated by something higher than 
the mere habit of mechanical obedience, panic, shirking and 
wholesale surrender will be the ordinary features of a campaign. 
These phenomena made themselves apparent, though in a less 
degree, as long ago as the American Civil War, when the weapon 
of the infantry was the muzzle-loading rifle, firing at most two 
rounds a minute, and when the projectiles of the artillery were 
hardly more destructive than the stone shot of Mods Meg. 
With the msgaiine rifle, machine guns, shrapnel and high 
explosives they have become more pronounced than even at 
VJonviUe or Plevna. "The retreat of the 3&B (Prussian) 
Brigade,'* writes Captain Hoenig, an eye-witness of the former 
battle, " forms the most awful drama of the great war. It had 
bat $3% of its strength, and the proportion of killed to wounded 
was as 3 to 4, Strong men nollapwd inanimate. ... I saw 
men cry like children, others fell prone without a sound; in 
most the need of water thrust forth all other instincts; the body 
demanded its rights. ' Water, water,' was the only intelligible 
cry that broke from those moving phantoms. The enemy's 
lead pound like hail upon the wretched remnant of the brigade, 
yet they moved only slowly to the rear, their heads bent in utter 
weariness; their features distorted under the thick dust that 
had gathered on faces dripping with sweat. The strain was 
beyond endurance. The soldier was no longer a receptive being, 
he was oblivious of everything, great or smalL His comrades 
or his superiors be no longer recognised; and yet he was the 
same man who but a short time before had marched across the 
battknodshonfing hit marching chorus. A few active squadrons, 
and net a man w mdJ h a re es ca ped! Only he who had seen men 
, and uhaami their bearing, knows the 
1 leave upon the memory. 
1 bodfly exhaustion 
. j» . I do not shrink," 
ft«jttar*4a-Tbur affected 




whole army might 
in the first 



month of the campaign, and it is thus perfectly dear that some 
small mistake in conduct, some trifling deficiency in preparation, 
an ill-conceived order or a few hours' delay in bringing up a 
reinforcement may have the most terrible consequences. 

The importance, nay the necessity, that the people, as a 
governing body, should keep as watchful an eye on its armed 
forces and the national defences as on diplomacy or legislation 
is fully realized naturally enough, only by those nations whose 
instincts of self-preservation, by reason of the configuration of 
their frontiers or their political situation, are strongly developed. 
Yet even to maritime empires, to Great Britain or indeed to the 
United States, an efficient army is of the first necessity. 
Their land frontiers are vulnerable. They may have JJJZw^ 
to deal with rebellion, and a navy is not all-powerful, **wk 
even for the defence of coasts and commerce. It 
can protect, but it cannot destroy. Without the help of 
an army, it can neither complete the ruin of the enemy's 
fleet nor prevent its resuscitation. Without the help of an, 
army it can hardly force a hostile power to ask for terms. 
Exhaustion is the object of its warfare; but exhaustion,, unless 
accelerated by crushing blows, is an exceedingly slow process. 
In the spring of x86i the blockade was established in American 
waters along the coasts of the Southern Confederacy, and 
maintained with increasing stringency from month to month. 
Yet it was not till the spring of 1865 that the colours of the 
Union floated from the capitol of Richmond, and it was the army 
which placed them there. A state, then, which should rely 
on naval strength alone, could look forward to no other than 
a protracted war, and a protracted war between two great 
powers is antagonistic to the interests of the civilized world. 
With the nations armed to the teeth, and dominated to a greater 
or smaller extent by a militant spirit; with commerce and 
finance dependent for health and security on universal peace, 
foreign intervention is a mere question of rime. Nor would 
public opinion, either in Great Britain or America, be content 
with a purely defensive policy, even if snch policy were practic- 
able. Putting aside the tedium and the dangers of an intermin- 
able campaign, the national pride would never be brought to 
confess that it was inca p a b l e of the same resolute effort as much 
smaller communities. " An army, and a strong army," would 
be the general cry. Nor would such an army be difficult to create. 
Enormous numbers would not be needed. An army supported 
by an invincible navy possesses a strength which is out of aU 
proportion to its size. Even to those who rely on the big bat- 
talions and huge fortresses, the amphibious power of a great 
maritime stale, if intelligently directed, may be a most formidable 
menace; while to the state itself it is an extraordinary security. 
The history of Great Britain is one long illustration. Op! sin 
llahan points out that there are always dominant positions, 
outside the frontiers of a maritime ttate, which, in the interests 
of commerce, as well as of supremacy at sea, should never be 
allowed to pass into the possesskA of a powerful neighbour. 
Great Britain, always dependent for her prosperity on narrow 
seas, has long been familiar with the importance of the positions 
that command these waterways. In one respect at least her 
policy has been consistent. She has spared no effort to secure 
such positions for herself, or, if that has been impracticable, 
at least to draw their teeth. Gibraltar, Malta, St Lnda, Aden, 
Egypt, Cyprus are conspi cuo us instances; but above all stands 
Antwerp* In perhaps the most original passage of Alison's 
monumental work the constant inflnmr** of Antwerp on the 
destinies of the United Kingdom is vividly portrayed. " Nature 
has framed the Scheldt to be the rival of the Thames. Flowing 
through a country excelling even the midland counties of England 
in wealth and resources, adjoining cities equal to any in Europe 
in arts and commerce; the artery at once of Flanders and 
Holland, of Brabant and Luxemburg, it is fitted to be the 
great organ of communication between the fertile fields and 
rich manufacturing towns of the Low Countries and other 
maritime states of the world.** Antwerp, moreover, the key 
of the great estuary, is eminently adapted for the establishment 
of a vast naval arsenal, such as it became under Philip H. of 



PRINCIPLES] 



WAR 



309 



Spain and agate under the fiat Napoleon. " It it the pofiot," 
continues the historian, " foam which in every age the independ- 
ence of these kingdoms has been seriously menaced. Sensible 
of bet danger, it had been the fixed policy of Groat Britain 
for centuries to prevent this formidable outwork from falling 
into the hands of her enemies, and the best days of her history 
srecrueflyc<cupiedwiihthestniggktowardoJsuchacUsaster." 
In ascribing, however, every great war in which Great Britain 
has been engaged to this cause alone he has gone too far. The 
security of India has been * motive of equal strength. Never- 
theless, it was to protect Antwerp from the French that Charles 
II. sided with the Dutch in 1070; that Anne declared war on 
Louis XIV. in 1704; that Chatham supported Prussia in 174a; 
that Pitt, fifty years later, took up anna against the Revolution. 
The trophies of the British army in the great war with France 
were characteristic of the amphibious power. The troops took 
tmttrm more battleships than colours, and almost us many 
■■aiBnf naval arsenals as land fortresses. Many were the 
mamatmmt blows they struck at the maritime strength of France 
mmiSms "^ ner ****** out **** *■* **P*dition whkh landed 
on the Isle of Wakheren in 1800 been as vigorously 
conducted as it was wisely conceived, it would have hitNapoleon 
far harder than even the seizure of the Danish fleet at Copen- 
hagen. The great dockyard that the emperor had constructed 
on the Scheldt held the nucleus of a powerful fleet. Eight une- 
of-battle ships and ten frigates lay in inicVcnannei- Twenty 
vessels of different classes were on the taps, and in the niagazines 
and storehouses had been accumulated sufficient material to 
equip all these and twenty more. The destruction of Antwerp— 
and for a full week it was at Lord Chatham's me rcy -- wou ld 
have freed scores of British frigates to protect British commerce; 
Wellington, in his great campaign of 181 3, could not have had 
to complain that, for the first time, the communication by sea 
of a British army was insecure; the Americans, in the war 
which broke out in x8ia, would have been more vigorously 
opposed; and Napoleon, who, while Antwerp was his, never 
altogether abandoned hope of overmastering Great Britain on 
her own element, might, on bis own confession, have relinquished 
the useless struggle with the great sea power. The expedition 
failed, and failed disastrously. But for all chat, fulfilling as 
it did the great maxim that the naval strength of the enemy 
should be the first objective of the forces of the maritime power, 
bock by land and sea, it was a strategical stroke of the highest 



The predominant part played by the army under Wellington 
la Spain and Belgium has tended to obscure the principle that 
governed its employment in the war of 1793-1815. The army, 
in the opinion of the country, was first and foremost the auxiliary 
of the flcH; and only when the naval strength of the enemy 
had been destroyed was it used in the ordinary manner, i.e. 
in the invasion of the hostile territory and in lending aid to the 
forces of confederate powers. Events proved that these principles 
were absolutely sound. It was not in the narrow seas alone that 
the army rendered good service to the navy. Depriving France 
of her colonies, occupying her ports in foreign waters, ousting 
her from commanding posts along the trade routes, it contributed 
net only to her exhaustion, but to the protection of British 
'"■V'ffT T and to the permanent establishment of maritime 
supremacy. Few of these operations are of sufficient magnitude 
to attract much notice from the ordinary historian, yet it is 
impossible to overrate their effect. To the possession of the 
dominant positions that were captured by the army, Great 
Britain, in no small degree, is indebted for the present security of 
her vast dominions. The keynote of the fierce struggle with the 
French Empire was the possession of India. Before he became 
First Consul, Napoleon had realized that India was the throne 
of Asia; that whoever should sit on that throne, master of the 
commerce of the East, of the richest and most natural market 
for the products of the West, and of the hardiest and most en- 
lightened nations of the golden hemisphere, would be master 
of more than half the globe. But his prescience was not surer 
than the instinct of the British people. Vague and shadowy 



indeed ware their dreams of empire, yet the presentiment of 
future greatness, based on the foothold they had already gained 
in H i n d ust a n , seems always to have controlled the national . 
poncy. They knew as wefl as Napoleon that Malta and Egypt, 
to use bis own phrase, were merely the outworks of their strong- 
hold in the East; and that if those outworks fell into the hands 
of France, a great army of warlike Mahommedans, led by French 
generals, stiffened by a French army corps, and gathering 
impetus from the accession of every tribe it passed through, 
might march unopposed across the Indus. So, from first to last, 
the least threat against Egypt and Malta sufficed to awaken 
their apprehensions; and in then knowledge that India was the 
ultimate objective of aH his schemes is to be found the explanation 
of the stubbornness with which they fought Napoleon. It b not 
to.be denied that in thwarting the ambition of their mighty 
rival, or perhaps in furthering their own, the navy was the chief 
instrument; but in thrusting the French from Egypt, in adding 
Ceylon, Mauritius and Cape Colony to the outworks, the army, 
small as it was then, compared with the great hosts of the 
Continent, did much both for the making and the security of the 
British Empire. 

But the scope of the military operations of a maritime state 
is by no means limited to the capture of colonies, naval arsenals 
and coaling-stations. Timely diversions, by attracting a large 
portion of the enemy's fighting strength on the mainland, may 
give valuable aid to the armies of an any. The Peninsular War 
is a conspicuous example. According to Napoleon, the necessity 
of maintaining his grip on Spain deprived him of 180,000 good 
soldiers during the disastrous campaign .of 1813; and those 
soldiers, who would have made Dresden a decisive instead of a 
barren victory, were held fast by Wellington. Again, it was the 
news of Vittoria that made it useless for the emperor to propose 
terms of peace, and so escape from the coils that strangled him 
at Leipzig. 

Nor is the reinforcement supplied by a small army based upon 
the sea to be despised. In 1703 a British contingent under the 
duke of York formed part of the allied forces whkh, had the 
British government forborne to interfere, would in all probability 
have captured Paris. Twenty-two years later, under wiser 
auspices, another contingent, although numbering no more than 
30,000 men, took a decisive part in the war of nations, and the 
blunders of the older generation were more than repaired at 
Waterloo. Nevertheless, (he strength of the amphibious power 
has been more effectively displayed than in the campaign of 
181 5. Intervention at the most critical period of a war has 
produced greater results than the provision of a contingent at 
the outset. In 1781 the disembarkation of a French army at 
Yorktown, Virginia, rendered certain the independence of the 
United States; and in 1878, when the Russian invaders were 
already in sight of Constantinople, the arrival of the British 
fleet in the Dardanelles, following the mobilisation of an ex- 
peditionary force, at once arrested their further progress. Had 
the British Cabinet of 1807 realised the preponderating strength 
which even a small army, if rightly used, draws from the com- 
mand of the sea, the campaign of Eylau would in all probability 
have been as disastrous to Napoleon as that of Leipzig. The 
presence of 20,000 men at the great battle would have surely 
turned the scale in favour of the allies. Yet, although the men 
were available, although a few months later *7iOoo were assembled 
in the Baltic for the coercion of Denmark, his Majesty's ministers, 
forgetful of Marlborough's glories, were so imbued with the idea 
that the British army was too insignificant to take part in a 
Continental war, that the opportunity was let slip. It is a 
sufficiently remarkable fact that the successive governments 
of that era, although they realized very clearly that the first 
duty of the army was to support the operations and complete 
the triumph of the navy, never seemed to have grasped the 
principles which should have controlled its use when the com- 
mand of the sea had been attained. The march of the Allies on 
Paris in 1703 was brought to a standstill because the British 
Cabinet considered that the contingent would be better em- 
ployed in besieging Dunkirk. After the failure of the expedition 



3io 



WAR 



(GENERAL PRINCIPLES 



under Sir John Moore to achieve the impossible, and in con- 
junction with the Spaniards drive the French from the Peninsula, 
the ministry abandoned all idea of intervention on the main 
theatre, although, as we have seen, had such intervention been 
well timed, it might easily have changed the current of events. 
It is true that when the main theatre is occupied by huge armies, 
as was the case during the whole of the Napoleonic conflict, the 
value of a comparatively small force, however sudden its appear- 
ance, is by no means easily realized. For instance, it would seem 
at first sight that a British contingent of 100,000 men would be 
almost lost amid the millions that would take part in the decisive 
conflicts of a European war. It is remembered, however, that 
with enormous masses of men the difficulties of supply are very 
great. Steam has done much to lighten them, and the numbers 
at the point of collision will be far greater than it was possible 
to assemble in the days of Napoleon. Nevertheless, the lines of 
communication, especially railways, will require more men to 
guard them than heretofore, for they are far more vulnerable. 
The longer, therefore, the lines of communication, the smaller 
the numbers on the field of battle. Moreover, the great hosts of 
the Continent, not only for convenience of supply, but for con- 
venience of manoeuvre, will deploy several armies on a broad 
front. At some one point, then, a reinforcement of even one or 
two army corps might turn the scale. 

The objections, however, to intervention of this character 
arc numerous. Between allied armies, especially if one is far 

larger than the other, there is certain to be friction, 
W">***m m was the case in the Crimea; -and the question of 
armhs. supply is not easily settled. If, however, the decisive 

point is near the coast, as in the campaign of Eylau, 
the army of the maritime power, possessing its own base* can 
render effective aid without embarrassment either to itself 
or its ally. But, under all other conditions, independent opera- 
tions of a secondary nature are distinctly to be preferred. Such 
was dearly the opinion of the British ministries during the 
war with France. They recognized that by giving vitality 
and backbone to popular risings even a small army might create 
useful diversions. But their idea of a diversion was a series 
of isolated efforts, made at far-distant points; and even so late 
as i8r3 they were oblivious of the self-evident facts that for a 
diversion to be really effective it must be made in such strength 
as to constitute a serious threat, and that it should be directed 
against sortie vital point. Fortunately for Europe, Wellington 
foresaw that the permanent occupation of Portugal, and the 
presence of a British army in dose proximity to the southern 
frontier of France, would be a menace which it would be im- 
possible for Napoleon to disregard. Yet with what difficulty 
he induced the government to adopt his views, and how luke- 
warm was their support, is exposed in the many volumes of his 
despatches. In all history there are few more glaring instances 
of incompetent statesmanship than the proposal of the cabinet 
of i8r3, at the moment Wellington was contemplating the 
campaign that was to expel the French from Spain, and was 
asking for more men, more money and more material, to detach 
a large force in the vague hope of exdting a revolution in southern 
Italy. Whether the improvement in communications, as well 
as the increase in the size of armies, have not greatly weakened 
the value of diversions on the mainland, k-is J$$ctdt to say. 
Railways may enable the defender to onbeeMlttc his iazca, 
so rapidly th.it even Lhe landlr. ipoaed, ami with the 

enormous numbers at hfe> command 1 II br able 1$ 

tp.irp a considctaLI pastible 

to conceive that a small arnnafl 
lion, might find U«ol| fjaj 
force little i 
made at a .-n " 
new army ti^jj 




upon some prosperous port or important arsenal, would compel 
him to maintain large garrisons along the whole seaboard. 
The strength of these garrisons, in all probability, would be 
much larger in the aggregate than the force which menaced 
them, and the latter would thus exercise a far greater disintegrat- 
ing effect on the enemy's armed strength than by adding a few 
thousand men to the hosts of its ally. On theatres of war which 
are only thinly populated or half civilized, a descent from the 
sea might easily produce a complete change in the situation. 
The occupation of Plevna, in close proximity to the Russian 
line of communications and to the single bridge across the Danube, 
brought the Russian advance through Bulgaria to a sudden stop, 
and relieved all pressure on Turkey proper. The deadlock 
which ensued is suggestive. Let us suppose that the invaders' 
line of communications had been a railway, and Plevna situated 
near the coast. Supplied from the sea, with unlimited facilities 
for reinforcement, Osman's ring of earthworks would have 
been absolutely impregnable; and had the ring been pushed 
so far inland as to secure scope for offensive action, the Russians, 
in all human probability, would never have crossed the Balkans. 
It is perfectly possible, then, that if on army lands within reach 
of a precarious tine of communications it may compel the enemy, 
although far superior in numbers, to renounce all enterprises 
against distant points. 

Railways in war are good servants, but bad masters. In 
some. respects they are far superior to a network of highroads. 
Two trains will supply the daily needs of 100,000 men 
several hundred miles distant from their base. But *""****■ 
the road-bed is easily destroyed; the convoy system is impractic- 
able, and the regular course of traffic is susceptible to the slightest 
threat. So, when railways become the principal factors, as 
when an army finds itself dependent on a long and exposed line, 
a powerful aggressive combination becomes a matter of the 
utmost difficulty. The whole attention of the commander will 
be given to the security of his supplies, and even if he Is not 
thrown on the defensive by the enemy's activity, his liberty 
of action will be exceedingly circumscribed. The relative values 
of the different kinds of communications have a most important 
bearing on the art of war. A great waterway, such as the Nile, 
the Mississippi, the Danube or the Ganges, is safer and surer 
than a railway. But railways are far more numerous than 
navigable rivers, and a scries of parallel lines is thus a better 
means of supplying a large army. But neither railways 
nor waterways as lines of supply or of operation are *%?***** 
to be compared with the sea. Before the war of 1870, ^4'frw. 
for instance, a study of the French railway system 
enabled Moltke to forecast, with absolute accuracy, the direction 
of Napoleon's advance, the distribution of bis forces, and the 
extent of front that they would occupy. In a war, therefore, 
between two Continental powers, the staff on either side would 
have no difficulty in determining the line of attack; the locality 
for concentration would be at once made clear; and as the 
carrying capacity of all railways is well known, the numbers 
that would be encountered at any one point along the front 
might be easily calculated. But if the enemy's army, supported 
by a powerful fleet, were to advance across blue water, the case 
would be very different Its movements would be veiled in the 
most complete secrecy. It would be impossible to do more than 
ruch at its objective. It might strike at any point along 
hundreds of miles of coast, or It might shift from one point to 
another, perhaps far distant, in absolute security; it could 
bewilder the enemy with fdnts, and cause him to disperse his 
forces over the whole seaboard. Surprise and freedom of 
, movement are pre-eminently the weapons of the power that 
I immands the sea. Witness the War of Secession. . McClellan, 
«t 1P67, by the adroit transfer of 120,000 men down the reaches 
of Chesapeake to the Virginia Peninsula, had Richmond at bis 
crcv. Grant in 1864, by continually changing his line of 
tommumcation from one river to another, made more progress 
i m a month than his predecessors had done in two years. Sher- 
, nan's great march across Georgia would have been impossible 
1 I ad DOtm Federal fleet been ready to receive him when he reached 




fMNCIPLES] 



WAR 



J" 



e; end, throughout' the -war, the ktwwiedgBtaatet 
t a vast fleet of transports might oppcir otf dny one 
of the ports en their enormous seaboard prevented the Con- 
fexlerates, notwithstanding that the -garrisons were reduced to 
a most dangerous extent, from massing their lull strength lor 
a deem ve effort. 

The power of strihing like "a belt from the blue " is of the 
very greatest value in war. Surprise was the foundation of 
■tmnrt «J1 the grand strategical combinations of the pest, as 
it aria 1 be of those to come. The first thought and the last of the 
great general is to outwit his adversary, and to strike 
J B %f-- wr where he is least expected. And the measures be adopts 
pit m ,, to accomplish* his purpose are not easily divined. 
What soldier in Europe anticipated Marlborough's 
emaven to the Danube and Blenheim field? What other brain 
besides Napoleon's dreamt of the passage of the Alps before 
Marengo? Was there a single general of Prussia before Jena 
who foresaw that the French would march north from the 
Bavarian frontier, uncovering the roads to the Rhine, and risking 
utter destruction in case of defeat? Who believed, in the early 
Jssxse of ifcrs, that an army 130,000 strong would dare to invade 
a> country defended by two armies that mustered together over 
200.000 unbeaten soldiers? To what Federal soldier did it 
occur, on the morning of thanceilorsvaie, that Lee, confronted 
by 00,000 Northerners, would detach the half of his own small 
force of 50,000 tie attack his enemy in flank and rear? The 
very coarse which • appeared to ordinary minds so beset* by 
difficulties and dangers as to be outside the pale of practical 
strategy has, over and over again, been that which led to decisive 
victory; and if there is one lesson more valuable than another 
an res>rds national defence, it is that preparation cannot be 
too careful or precautions overdone. Overwhelming, numbers, 
adequately trained, commanded and equipped, are the only 
nacane of ensuring absolute security. But a numerical preponder- 
ance, either by land or sea, over all possible hostile combina- 
tioos, is unattainable, and in default the only sound policy 
is to take timely and ample precautions against all enterprises 
wbscb ere even remotely possible. There is nothing more to be 
dreaded in war than the combined labours of a thoroughly 
wcsl-tralned general staff, except the intellect and audacity of a 
_^ great strategist. The ordinary mind, even if it does 
*rf"|^ not shrink from great danger, sees no any of surmount* 
ing great difficulties; and any operation which 
involves both vast dangers and vast difficulties it 
el as chimerical. The heaven-born strategist, on the 
hand, " takes no counsel of his fears." Knowing* that 
ts fs seldom to be won without incurring risks,, be is always 
greatly daring; and by the skill with which be overcomes all 
obstacles, and even uses them, as Hannibal and Napoleon did 
the Alps, and as some great captain of the future may use .the 
sea, to further bis purpose and surprise his adversary, he shows 
his superiority to the common herd. It is repeated ad nauseam 
that m consequence of the vastly improved means of transmitting 
information, surprise on a large scale is no longer to be feared. 
It s» to be remembered, however, that the means of concentrating 
troops and ships are far speedier than of old ; that false informs* 
tioo can be far more readily distributed; and also, that if there 
fav one thing more certain than another, it is that the great 
strategist, surprise being still the most deadly of all weapons, 
will devote the whole force of bis intellect to the problem of 
bringing U about. 

Nor b it to be disguised that amphibious power is a far more 
terrible weapon lhan even in the days when it crushed Napoleon 
Commerce has increased by lesps and bounds, and it is no longer 
eoaneed witbm territorial limits. The arteries vital to the 
existence of civilized communities stretch over every ocean. 
States which in 1800 rated their maritime traffic at a few hundred 
thousand pounds sterling, value it now at many millions. 
Cfthera, whose flags, fifty years ago, were almost unknown on 
the high sea*, possess to-day great fleets of merchantmen; 
sod those who fifty years ago were setf-dependent, rely in great 
part, for the m ai nten a nce of their prosperity, on their intercourse 




'with distant continents. TJfiat is no great power, and few small 
ones, to whom the loss of its sea-borne trade would be other than 
a most deadly blew; and there is no great power that is not far 
more vulnerable than when Great Britain, single-handed, held 
her own against a European coalition. Colonies, commercial 
ports, dockyards, coaling-stations am so many hostages to 
fortune. Year by year they become more numerous. Year by 
year, as commercial rivalry grows mere acute, they become 
more intimately bound up with the prosperity and prestige 
of their nwther-countriea. And to what end? To exist as 
pledges of peace, asuptda mdiaris am, or to fan an easy 
psey to the power that iseupreme at sea and can strike hard 
on land? 

Even the baldest end briefest discussion of the vast subject 
of war would be incomplete without some reference to the 
relative merits of professional and unprofessional u.w.*# 
sofdiecsv Voluntary service still holds its ground in the 
Anglo-Saxon states; and both the United Kingdom 
and America will have to a great extent to rely, in 
esse of conflicts which tax all their resources, on troops who 
have neither the practice nor the discipline of their standing 
armies. Whet will be the value of these amateurs when pitted 
against regulars? Putting the question of moral aside, as 
leading us too far afield, it is deer that the individual amateur 
must depend upon his training. If, like the majority of the 
Beers, he is a good shot, a good scout, a good skirmisher and, if 
mounted, a good horseman and horsemaster, he is undeniably 
a most useful soldier. But whether amateurs en masse, that is, 
when organized into battalions and brigades, are thoroughly 
trustworthy, depends on the quality of their officers. With good 
officers, end a certain amount of previous training, there is no 
reason why bodies of infantry, artillery or mounted infantry, 
composed entirely of unprofessional soldiers, should not do 
excellent service in the field. Where they ate likely to fail is in 
discipline; and it would appear that, at the beginning of a 
campaign they are more liable to -panic, less resolute in stuck, 
less enduring under heavy losses and great hardships, and much 
slower m manoeuvre than the professionals. To a certain extent 
this is inevitable; and it has a most important bearing on the 
value of the dtixen soldier, for the beginning of a campaign is 
a most critical phase. In short, troops who are only half-trained 
or have been hastily raised may be a positive danger to the army 
to which they belong; and the shelter of stout earthworks is 
the only place for them. Yet the presence of a certain number 
.of experienced fighting men in the ranks may make nil the 
difference; and, in any case, it is probable that battalions cent-. 
» posed of unprofessional soldiers, the free cnieens of a free and 
prosperous state, are little if at all inferior, as fighting units, to 
battalions composed of conscripts. Bet it is to he understood 
that the men possess the qualifications referred to above, that 
the officers are accustomed to command and have a good practical 
knowledge Of their duties in the field. A mob, however patriotic, 
carrying small-bore rifles is no more likely to hold its own to-day 
against well-led regulars than did the mob carrying pikes and 
flint-locks in the past. A small body of resolute riviuens, well-. 
armed and skilful marksmen, might easily on their own ground 
defeat the same number of trained soldiers, especially if the 
latter were badly lei. But in a war of masses, the power of 
combination, of rapid and orderly mov e ment, and of tactical 
1 rnanctuvring is bound to tell. (G.F.R.H.) 

Literature.— On the general principles of War, see C. v. Cause- 
win, Vom Kriete (Eng. trans. On War, new ed. 1906) ; C. v. B(inder). 
K(rieg1stein); Grist und Sloff tm KHege (1895 J; Ardant du Picq, 
Butdes sur la combat; W. Bagehot, Physics and Politics; G. le Bon, 
PryckoUgie das foules and Psychologic de I'Umcation; F. N. Maude, 
War ami the World's Life (1907) : Beradt. Zakl im Kriege (statistical 
tables); Biottot. Us Grands I nstdrte— Jeanne d'Are; C. W. C. 
Oman, Art of War; M. Tfthns, Gesch. der Kriegstrissenschaften; v. der 
Goltx, Votk in Waffen (Eng. trans.. Nation im Arms) : A. T. Mahan, 
Influence of $eo Power on History; C. E. Callwell, Military Opera* 
lions and Maritime Preponderance; P.H. Colomb, Naval Warfarei 
Stewart Murray, Future Peace of the Antlo-Saxons; H. Spenser 
Wilkinson, far Brain of an Army, War and Policy, Ac.; and works 
mentioned in the .humogsepby to the article Aany. 



3*4 



WAR 



[LAWS OF WAR 



The considerations which have led man- 
kind to systematise the practice of war in regard to private 
property on land do not arise in the same form in connexion 
with private property at sea. Here there is no question of 
seizing the live stock, or the bedding, or the food, or the utensils 
of the private citizen. If ship and cargo are captured, it may 
be hard upon the merchant, but such captures do not directly 
deprive him of the necessaries of life. Yet, as in the case of war 
on land, its hardships have been attenuated, and progress has 
been made by developing a more systematic procedure of capture 
of private property at sea. Thus exemption from capture is 
now allowed by belligerents to enemy merchant ships which, 
at the outbreak of war, are on the way to one of their ports, 
and they also allow enemy merchantmen in their ports at its 
outbreak a certain time to leave them. This is confirmed by 
the Hague Convention of 1907 on the status of enemy ships 
on the outbreak of hostilities. A somewhat, similar practice 
exists as regards pursuit of merchant ships which happen to be 
in a neutral port at the same time with an enemy cruiser. Under 
the Hague Convention of 1907 respecting the rights and duties 
of neutral powers in naval war (Art. 16), this, too, is confirmed. 
Lastly, there has grown up, on grounds similar to those which 
have led to the indulgence shown to private property on land, 
a now generally recognised immunity from capture of 'small 
vessels engaged in the coast fisheries, provided they are in no 
wise made to serve the purposes of war, which also has been 
duly confirmed in the Hague Conventions of 1907 by Art. 3 of 
the convention relative to certain restrictions on the exercise 
of the right of capture in maritime war. This has all been done 
with the object of making the operations of war systematic, and 
enabling the private citizen to estimate his risks and take the 
necessary precautions to avoid capture, and of restricting acts 
of war to the purpose of bringing it to a speedy conclusion. 

We have seen that the only immunity of private property yet 
known to the laws of war is a limited one at sea. War, by its 
very nature, seems to prevent the growth of any such immunity. 
The tendency in war on land has been to spread its effects over 
the whole community, to keep a faithful record on both sides of 
all confiscations, appropriations and services enforced against 
private citizens; beyond this, protection has not yet been 
extended. There is good reason for this. The object of each 
belligerent being to break the enemy's power and force him to sue 
for peace, it may not be enough to defeat him in the open field; 
it may be necessary to prevent him from repairing his loss both 
in men and in the munitions of war. This may imply crippling 
his material resources, trade and manufactures. It has been 
contended that " to capture at sea raw materials used in the 
manufacturing industry of a belligerent state, or products on the 
sale of which its prosperity, and therefore its taxable sources 
depend, is necessarily one of the objects, and one of the least 
cruel, which the belligerents pursue. To capture the merchant 
vessels which carry these goods, and even to keep the seamen 
navigating them prisoners, is to prevent the employment of the 
snips by tha enemy as transports or cruisers, and the repairing 
from among the seamen of the mercantile marine of losses of men 
in the official navy." * 

The question of reform of the existing practice would naturally 
be viewed in different countries according to their respective 
interests. The United States has obviously an interest in the 
exemption of its merchant vessels and cargoes from capture, a 
small official navy being sufficient for the assertion of its ascend- 
ancy on the American continent It may also be presumed to be 
in the interest of Italy, who, in a treaty with the United States 
in 1871, provided for mutual recognition of the exemption. 

In the Austro-Prussian war of 1 866 the principle of inviolability 
was adhered to by both parties. Germany proclaimed the same 
principle in 1870, but afterwards abandoned it. 

There is a strong movement in Great Britain in favour of the 
general adoption of immunity. Whether it may now be expedient 
for her to agree to such immunity is an open question. It is 

1 • Barclay, " Proposed Immunity of Private Property at Sea from 
Capture by Enemy/* Law Quorttriy Rmew (January 1900). 



quite conceivable, however, that different considerations would 
weigh with her in a war with the United States from those which 
would arise in a war with France or Germany. In the case of 
the United States it might be in the interest of both parties to 
localize the operations of war, and to interfere as Utile as possible, 
perhaps for the joint exclusion of neutral vessels, with the traffic 
across the Atlantic In the case of a war with France or Germany, 
Great Britain might consider that the closing of the high sea to 
all traffic by the merchantmen of the enemy would be very much 
in hex own interest. 

The converse subject of the treatment of subjects of the one 
belligerent who remain in the country of the other belligerent also 
was not dealt with at the Hague. British practice in 

this matter has always been indulgent, the protection # 

to the persons and property of non-combatant enemies <***• pro- 
on British soil dating back to Magna Carta (s. 48), and gfrf 
this is still the law of England. The practice on the ""* 
continent of Europe varies according to circumstances, 
to which no doubt, in the event of the invasion of Great Britain. 
British practice would abo have to adapt itself. 

The Hague War-Regulations deal fully with the treatment of 
prisoners, and though they add nothing to existing ^ ^ 
practice, such treatment is no longer in the discretion JJvJJ.^ 1 * 
of the signatory Powers, but is binding on them. They 
provide as follows: — 

Prisoners of war ate in the power of the hostile government, 
but not in that of the individuals or corps who captured them. 
They must be humanely treated. All their personal belongings, 
except arms, horses and military papers, remain their property 
(Article 4). Prisoners of war may be interned in a town, fortress, 
camp or any other locality, and bound not to go beyond certain 
fixed limits; but they can only be confined as an indispensable 
measure of safety, and only so long as circumstances necessitating this 
measure shall endure (Article 5). The state may utilize the labour of 
prisoners of war according to their rank and aptitude, with the ex* 
ception of officers. Their tasks shall not be excessive, and shall have 
nothing to do with the military operations. Prisoners may be 
authorized to work for the public service, for private persons, or on 
their own account. Work done for the state shall be paid for ac- 
cording to the tariffs in force for soldiers of the national army em- 
ployedon similar tasks, or if there axe none in force, then according 
to a tariff suitable to the work executed. When the work is for other 
branches of the public service or for private persons, the conditions 
shall be settled in agreement with the military authorities. The 
wages of the prisoners shall go towards improving their position, and 
the balance shall be paid them at the time of their release, after de- 
ducting the cost of their maintenance (Article 6). The government 
into whose hands prisoners of war have fallen is bound to maintain 
them. Failing a special agreement between the belligerents, prisoners 
of war shall be treated, as regards food, quarters ana clothing, on the 
same footing as the troops of the government which has captured 
them (Article 7). Prisoners of war shall be subject to the laws, regula- 
tions and orders in force in the army of the state into whose hands 
they have fallen. Any act of insubordination warrants the adoption. 
as regards them, of such measures of severity as may be necessary. 
Escaped prisoners, recaptured before they have succeeded in re- 
joining their army, or before quitting the territory occupied by the 
army that captured them, are liable to disciplinary punishment. 
Prisoners who, after succeeding in escaping, are again taken prisoners, 
are not liable to any punishment for the previous flight (Article 8). 
Every prisoner of war, if questioned, is bound to declare his true 
name and rank, and if be disregards this rule, he is liable to a curtail- 
ment of the advantages accorded to the prisoners of war of his class 
(Article 9). Prisoners of war may be set at liberty on parole if the 
laws of their country authorize it, and, in such a case, they are bound, 
on their personal honour, scrupulously to fulfil, both as regards their 
own government and the government by whom they were made 
prisoners, the engagements they have contracted. In such cases, 
their own government shall not require of nor accept from them any 
service incompatible with the parole given (Article 10). A prisoner 
of war cannot be forced to accept his liberty on parole ; amilarly the 
hostile government is not obliged to assent to the prisoner's request 
to be set at liberty on parole (Article 11). Any prisoner of war who is 
liberated on parole and recaptured, bearing arms against the govern- 
ment to whom he had pledged his honour or against the allies of that 
government, forfeits his right to be treated as a prisoner of war, and 
can be brought before the courts (Article is). 

An interesting provision in the Regulations assimilates 
individuals who, following an army without directly ^^ 
belonging to it, such as newspaper correspondents CT " 
and reporters, sutlers, contractors, fall into the enemy's 

to prisoners of war, provided they can produce a 



LAWS OF WAR) 



WAR 



5»5 



from the military authorities of the any they were 



A new departure is made by clauses providing for the 
nstrtution of a bureau for information relative to prisoners of 
ta ^ tmm w. Tins is to be created at the commencement of 
MMtWto h os finti es, m each of the belligerent states and; when 

ff/f necessary, in the neutral countries on whose territory 

******* belligerents have been received. It is intended to 
answer aU inquiries about prisoners of war, and is to be furnished 
by the various services concerned with aU the necessary informa- 
tion to enable it to keep an individual return for each prisoner 
of war. It is to be kept informed of internments and 



aberations on parole, evasions, admissions into hospital, deaths, 
tc Ith also the duty of the bureau to receive and collect 
all objects of personal use, valuables, letters, Ate., found on 
the battlefields or left by prisoners who have died m hospital or 
ambulance, sod to transmit them to those interested. Letters, 
money orders and valuables, as well as postal parcels destined 
for the prisoners of war or despatched by them, are to be free of 
aU postal duties both in the countries of origin and destination, 
as well as in those they pass through. Gifts and relief in kind 
for prisoners of war are to be admitted free of all duties of 
entry, as well as of payments for carriage by the government 
railways. 

Furthermore, renef societies for prisoners of war, regularly con- 
stituted with the object of charity, are to receive every facility, 
within the bounds of military requirements and 
administrative regulations, for the effective accom- 
plishment of their task. Delegates of these societies 
are to be admitted to the places of internment for the distribution 
of relief, as abo to the halting-places of repatriated prisoners, " if 
famished with a personal permit by the military authorities, and 
on giving an engagement in writing to comply with all their 
regulations for order and police." 

The obligations of belligerents with regard to tick and wounded 
in war on land are now governed by the Geneva Convention of 
July 6th, 1006. By this Convention ambulances and 
"jJY military hospitals, their medical and administrative 
staff and chaplains sre " respected and protected under 
aU circumstances," and the use of a uniform flag and arm-badge 
bearing a red cross are required as a distinguishing mark of their 
character. A Convention, accepted at the Peace Conferences, 
has now adapted the principles of the Geneva Convention to 
maritime warfare. This new Convention provides that— 

Military hcepttal-ships, that is to say, ships constructed or 
assigned by states specially and solely for the purpose of assist- 
Big the wounded, sick or shipwrecked, and the names of which 
save been communicated to the belligerent powers at the com- 
mencement or during the course of hostilities, and in any case before 
they are employed, are to be respected and cannot be captured while 
hostilities last. 

As regards hospital-ships equipped wholly or in part at the cost 
of private individual* or officially recognized relief societies, they 
afaewise are to be respected and exempt from capture, provided the 
belligerent or neutral power to which they belong shall have given 
tbem an official commission and notified their names to the hostile 
power at the commencement of or during hostilities, and in any case 
before they are employed. 

The belligerents have the right to control and visit them; they 
caa refuse to help tbem, order them off, make tbem take a certain 
course, and put a commissioner on board ; they can even detain 
them, if important circumstances require it. 

The religious, medical or hospital staff of any captured ship is 
inviolable, and its members cannot be made prisoners of war. 

Lastly, neutral merchantmen, yachts or vessels, having, or taking 
on board, sick, wounded or shipwrecked of the belligerents, cannot 
be captured for so doing. 

The following prohibitions are also placed by the Hague 
Regulations on the means of injuring the enemy:— 

To employ poison or poisoned arms. 
... . To kill or wound treacherously Individuals belonging to 

* * L^ *** hostile nation or army. 
^ m r l — To kill or wound an enemy who, having laid down arms 
T^rr^rTot having no longer means of defence, has surrendered at 
discretion. 

To declare that no quarter will be given. 



To employ areas, projectile* or material of a nature to < 
superfluous injury. 

To .make improper use of a flag of trace, the national flag or 
military ensigns and the enemy's uniform, as well as the distinctive 
badges of the Geneva Convention. 

To destroy or seise the enemy's property, unless such destruction 
or seizure be imperatively demanded by the necessities of 



to attack or bombard towns, villages, habitations or 
buildings which are not defended. ■'■■■ «• 

To pillage a town or place, even when taken by assault. WMr ' 
m Ruses of war ajid the employment of ntethoda necesssry to obtain 
information about the enemy and the country, on the contrary, am 
considered allowable. 

A spy is one who, acting clandestinely, or on false pretences, 
obtains, or seeks to obtain, information in the none of operations of 
a belligerent, with the intention of cosnmuuscaring it to 
the hostile party (the Hague War-Regulations, Art. 29). 
Thus, soldiers not in disguise who have ue u eliated into the sone of 
operations of a hostile army to obtain information are not considered 
spies. Similarly, the following are not considered spies: soldiers or 
civilians, carrying out their mission openly, charged with the delivery 
of despatches destined either for their own army or for that of the 
enemy. To this class belong likewise individuals sent in balloons to 
deliver despatches, and generally to maintain communication be- 
tween the various parts of an army or a territory (id.). A spy taken 
in the act cannot be punished without previous trial, and a spy who, 
after rejoining the army to which be belongs, is subsequently captured 
by the enemy, is a prisoner of war, and not punishable for his previous 
acts of espionage. 1 

In sieges and bombardments all necessary steps are to be taken to 
spare as far as possible buildings devoted to rehgion, art, science 
and charity, hospitals and places where the skk and wounded are 
collected, provided they are not used at the same time for military 

Curposes; but the besieged are to indicate these buildings or places 
y some particular and visible signs and notify them to the assailant*. 

A new Convention respecting bombardments by naval forces 
was adopted by the Hague Conference of 1907, forbidding the 
bombardment of undefended " ports, towns, villages, dwellings 
or buildings," unless after a formal summons the local authorities 
decline to comply with requisitions for provisions or supplies 
necessary for the immediate use of the naval force before the 
place in question. But they may not be bombarded on account 
of failure to pay money contributions. On the other hand, the 
prohibition does not apply to military works, depots of arms, 
&c., or ships of war in a harbour. 

Another new Convention adopted at the Hague in 1907 dealt 
with the laying of automatic submarine contact mines. Its main 
provisions are as follows: — 

It is forbidden: 

1. To lay unanchored automatic contact mines, except when they 
arc so constructed as to become harmless one hour at most after the 
person who laid them ceases to control them; 

a. To lay anchored automatic contact mines which do not become 
harmless as soon as they have broken loose from their moorings: 

$. To use torpedoes which do not become harmless when they have 
missed their mark (Art. l). 

It is forbidden to lay automatic contact mines off the coast and 
ports of the enemy, with the sole object of intercepting commercial 
.shipping (Art. a). 

When anchored automatic contact mines are employed, every 
possible precaution must be taken for the security of peaceful 

The belligerents undertake to do their utmost to render these 
mines harmless within a limited time. and. should they cease to be 
under surveillance, to notify the danger zones as soon as military 
exigencies permit, by a notice addressed to shipowners, which must 
also be communicated to the Governments through the diplomatic 
channel. (Art. 3.) 

Powers which lay automatic contact mines off their coasts 

rve the same rules and take the same precautions as are 

imposed on belligerents. 

The neutral Power must inform shipowners, by a notice issued in 
advance, where automatic contact mines have been krid. This 
notice must be communicated at once to the Governments through 
the diplomatic channel. (Art. 4.) 

At the close of the war the Contracting Powers undertake to do 
their utmost to remove the mines which they have laid, each Power 
removing its own mines. 

As regards anchored automatic contact mines laid by one of the 
belligerents off the coast of the other, their position must be notified 
to the other party by the Power which laid tbem. and each Power 
must proceed with the least possible delay to remove the mines in Its 
own waters. (Art. 3.) 



Neutral I 



1 See, as to Fl*s */ Tnic*. Art. 33 of the Hague Regulations. 



3»6 



WARANGAL— WARBECK, PERKIN 



The Contracting Powers watch do not at present own perfected 
mines of the pattern contemplated in the present Convention, and 
which, consequently, could not at present carry out the rules laid 
down in Articles t and x, undertake to convert the matiriel of their 
mines as soon as possible so as to bring it into conformity with the 
foregoing requirements. (Art. 6.) 

Territory is considered as occupied when it is actually under 
the authority of the hostile army. The authority having passed 
Occupy into the hands of the occupant, the latter takes all 
ttoaot possible steps to re-establish public order and safety. 
to*O0 Compulsion of the population of occupied territory to 
terHtM ^ r ' take part in military operations against their, own 
country, or even give information respecting the army of the other 
belligerent and pressure to take the oath to the hostile power are 
prohibited. Private property must be respected, save in case 
of military necessity (Arts. 46 and 52). The property of religious, 
charitable and educational institutions, and of art and science, 
even when state property, are assimilated to private property, 
and all seizure of, and destruction or intentional damage done 
to such institutions, to historical monuments, works of art 
or science is prohibited (Art. 56). 

Practice as regards declarations of war has hitherto varied. 
The Franco-Prussian War of 1870 was preceded by a deliberate 
declaration. In the war between Japan and China 
JjJ^T" there was no declaration. (See Ariga, La Guerre 
war. sinojaponoise, Paris, 1896). The delivery of an 
ultimatum specifying those terms, the compliance with 
which is demanded within a specified time, is practically a- 
conditional declaration of war which becomes absolute in case 
of non-compliance. Thus the note communicated by the 
United States to Spain on 20th April 1898 demanded 
^HSkL tne " ^mediate withdrawal of all the land and sea 
forces from Cuba," and gave Spain three days to 
accept these terms. On the evening of 22nd April the United 
States seized several Spanish vessels, and hostilities were thus 
opened. In the case of the Transvaal War, the declaration also 
took the form of an ultimatum. A special Hague convention 
adopted at the Conference of 1007 now provides that hostilities 
" must not commence without previous and explicit warning in 
the form of a reasoned declaration of war or of an ultimatum 
with conditional declaration of war." It also provides that the 
existence of a state of war must be notified to the neutral powers 
and shall not take effect in regard to them until after the receipt 
of the notification which may be given by telegraph. Most of 
the good effect of the provision, however, is negatived by the 
qualification that neutral powers cannot rely on the absence of 
notification if it is clearly established that they were in fact aware 
of the existence of a state of war. 

Too much confidence must not be placed in regulations con- 
cerning the conduct of war. Military necessity, the heat of 
action, the violence of the feelings which come into 
law 3 war. P lav wiU always at times defeat the most skilfully- 
'combined rules diplomacy can devise. Still, such 
rules are a sign of conditions of public opinion which serve as a 
restraint upon the commission of barbarities among civilized 
peoples. The European operations in China consequent on the 
" Boxer " rising showed how distance from European criticism 
tends to loosen that restraint. On the other hand, it was signifi- 
cant that both the United States and Spain, who were not parties 
to the Declaration of Paris, found themselves, in a war confined 
to them, under the necessity of observing provisions which the 
majority of civilized states have agreed to respect. (T. Ba.) 

WARANGAL, an ancient town of India, in the Nizam's 
Dominions or Hyderabad state, 86 m. N.E. of Hyderabad city. 
It was the capital of a Hindu kingdom in the 12th century, but 
little remains to denote its former grandeur except a fort and 
four gateways of a temple of Siva. Warangal has given its name 
to a district and a division of the state. 

WARASDIN (Hungarian, Vorosd; Croatian, Varaldin), a royal 
free town of Hungary, and capital of the county of Warasdin, 
in Croatia-Slavonis; on the right bank of the Drave, 62 m. by 
rail N.N.E. of Agrarr »jo. Warasdin is the 

teat of a district cot Id castle, a cathedral 



and several churches, monasteries and schools. It carries on a 

brisk trade in timber, wine, fruit, tobacco, spirits, stoneware 
and silk. Coal is also mined in the Warasdin Mountains. The 
celebrated sulphur baths of Constantins-Bad or Tdplitz, known 
to the Romans as Thermae Conslanliamaa, lie about zo m. S. 

WARBECK* PERKIN (c. 1474-3400), pretender to the throne 
of England, was the son of Jehan de Werbecque, a poor burgess 
of Tournay in Flanders and of his wife Katherine de Faro. 
The exact date of his birth is unknown, but as he represented 
himself as having been nine years old in 1483, it must have taken 
place in, or close on, 1474. His confession made at the end of 
his life was an account of his early years which is to some extent 
supported by other testimony. The names of his father and other 
relations whom he mentions have been found in the municipal 
records of Tournay, and the official description of them agrees 
with his statements. According to this version, which may be 
accepted as substantially true, he was brought up at Antwerp 
by a cousin Jehan Stienbecks, and served a succession of em- 
ployers as a boy servant. He was for a time with an Englishman 
John Strewe at Middleburg, and then accompanied Lady 
Brampton, the wife of an exiled partisan of the house of York, 
to Portugal He was for a year employed by a Portuguese 
knight whom he described as having only one eye, and whom 
he names Vacz de Cogna (Yaz da Cunha ?). In 1491 he was at 
Cork as the servant of a Breton silk merchant Pregent (Pierre 
Jean) Meno. Ireland was strongly attached to the house of York, 
and was full of intrigue against King Henry VII. Perkin says 
that the people seeing him dressed in the silks of his master 
took him for a person of distinction, and insisted that he must 
be either the son of George, duke of Clarence, or a bastard of 
Richard III. He was more or less encouraged by the earls of 
Desmond and Kildare. The facts are ill recorded, but it is safe 
to presume that intriguers who wished to disturb the government 
of Henry VII. took advantage of a popular delusion, and made 
use of the lad as a tool. At this time he spoke English badly. By 
1492 he had become sufficiently notorious to attract the attention 
of King Henry's government and of foreign sovereigns. He 
was in that year summoned to Flanders by Margaret, the widowed 
duchess of Burgundy, and sister of Edward IV., who was the 
main support of the Yorkist exiles, and who was the enemy of 
Henry VII. for family reasons and for personal reasons also, 
for she wished to extort from him the payment of the balance of 
her dowry. She found the impostor useful as a means of injuring 
the king of England. Several European sovereigns were moved 
to help him by the same kind of reason. The suppositions that 
he was the son of Clarence or of Richard III. were discarded in 
favour of the more useful hypothesis that he was Richard, duke 
of York, the younger of the two sons of Edward IV., murdered in 
the Tower. Charles VIII., king of France, the counsellors of the 
youthful duke of Burgundy, the duke's father Maximilian, king of 
the Romans, and James IV. of Scotland, none of whom can have 
been really deceived, took up his cause more or less actively. He 
was entertained in France, and was taken by Maximilian to 
attend the funeral of the emperor Frederick III. in 1493. At 
Vienna he was treated as the lawful king of England. He was 
naturally the cause of considerable anxiety to the English govern- 
ment, which was well acquainted with his real history, and made 
attempts to get him seized. His protectors entered into negotia- 
tions which in fact turned on the question whether more was to 
be gained by supporting him, or by giving him up. An appeal 
to Isabella, queen of Castile, met with no response. In July 
1495 he was provided with a few ships and men by Maximilian, 
now emperor, and he appeared on the coast of Kent. No move- 
ment in his favour took place. A few of his followers who landed 
were cut off, and he went on to Ireland to join the earl of Desmond 
in Munster. After an unsuccessful attack on Waterford in August, 
he fled to Scotland. Here King James IV. showed him favour, 
and arranged a marriage for him with Catherine Gordon, daughter 
of the earl of Huntly. He was helped to make a short inroad 
into Northumberland, but the intervention of the Spanish 
government brought about a peace between England and 
Scotland. In 1497 Perkin was sent on bis travels again with 



WARBLER— WAHBURTON, B. & G. 



two or three nuU vessels, and accompanied by hi* vile, who 
bad borne bun one or two children. After some obscure adven- 
tures in Ireland, he landed at Whitesand Bay, near the Land's 
End, on the 7th of September, and was joined by a crowd of the 
country people, who bad been recently in revolt against excessive 
taxation* He advanced to Exeter, but was unable to master 
the town. On the approach of the royal troops- he deserted his 
followers, and ran for refuge to the sanctuary of Beaulieu in 
Hampshire. He then surrendered. His wife was kindly treated 
and placed in the household of Henry's queen Elisabeth. Perkin 
was compelled to make two ignominious public ^p^tfrni at 
Westminster, and in Cheapside on the 15th and 19th of June 
1405. On the 13rd of November 1499 he was hanged on a charge 
of endeavouring to escape from the Tower with the imprisoned 
e-rlofWarwick. 

See James Gairdoer, Richard the Third, and the Story of Perkin 
Worbeck (Cambridge, 1898). 

WARBLER, in ornithology, the name bestowed in 1773 by 
T. Pennant {Genera of Birds, p. 35) on the birds removed, in 
1769. by J. A. Scopoli from the linnaean genus Motacilla (cf. 
Wagtail) to one founded and called by him Sylvia— the last 
being a word employed by several of the older writers in an 
indefinite way— that is to say, on all the species of Motacilla 
which ^were not wagtails. " Warbler " has long been used by 
English technical writers as the equivalent of Sylvia, and is now 
applied to all members of the sub-family Sylviinae of the thrushes 
(o-t.), and in the combination "American warblers" to the 
distinct passerine family Mniotiltidae. The true warblers 
(Sylviinae) are generally smaller than the true thrushes Turdinae 
(see Thrushes), with, for the most part, a weak and slender 
bill. They seldom fly far, except when migrating, but frequent 
undergrowth and herbage, living on insects, larvae and fruit 
The song is unusually dear and very sweet, with frequently 
a metallic sound, as in the grasshopper warbler. The nest is 
usually cup-shaped and well lined, and from three to six eggs 
(twelve in Regulus), usually spotted, are laid. 

The true warblers are chiefly Old world, visiting' the southern Old 
World in winter, but members of the tub-family occur in New 
Zealand. Polynesia and Panama. Amongst the eommoneet in 
England is the well-known sedge-bird or sedge-warbler, Acrocepkalus 
eeheenahaenm, whose chattering song resounds in summer-time from 
t every wet ditch in most parts of Britain. As is the case with 



> many of its allies, the skulking habits of the bird cause it to be far 
lone often beard than seen; but, with a Kttle patience, it may be 
generally observed flitting about the uppermost twigs of the bushes 
it frequents, and its mottled back and the yellowish-white streak 
over its eye serve to distinguish it from its ally the reed-wren orreed- 
warbler. A. strepems, which is clad in a wholly mouse-coloured suit. 
But this Inst can also be recognised by It* different song, and com- 
paratively seldom does it stray from the reed-beds which are its 
favourite haunts. In them generally it builds one of the most 
beautiful of nests, made of the seed-branches of the reed and long 
grass, wound horizontally round and round so as to include in its 
substance the living stems of three or four reeds, between which it is 
suspended at a convenient height above the water, and the structure 
is so deep that the eggs do not roll out when its props are shaken by 
the wind. Of very similar habits is the reed-thrush or great reed- 
warbler, A. anmdinacens, a loud-voiced species, abundant on the 
Continent hot very rarely straying to England. Much interest also 
attaches to the species known as Savi's warbler, Locusteka Inscini- 
•ides, which was only recognised as a constant inhabitant of the 
Fen district of England a few years before its haunts were destroyed 
by drainage. The last example known to have been obtained in this 
country was killed in 1856. The nest of this species is peculiar, 
placed 011 the ground and formed of the blades of a species ofGlyceria 
so skilfully entwined as to be a very permanent structure, and it is a 
curious fact that its nests were well known to the sedge-cutters of the 
district which it most frequented, as those of a bird with which they 
were unacquainted, long before the builder was recognized by 
saturafists. In coloration the bird somewhat resembles a nightingale 
(whence its specific name), and its song differs from that of any of 
b before me n t i oned, being a long smooth trill pitched higher but 
-ling more tone than that of the grasshopper-warbler Lecnstella 
which n a widely-distributed species throughout the British 
only limited to marshy sites, bnt affecting also dry 1 
I indifferently 1 «-*--»- -* -• -■- •----• - 



/ many kinds of places where there is __„_ 

sad tliick herbage, heather or brushwood. In those parts of England 
where it was formerly most abundant it was known as the reeler or 
reel-bird, from its song resembling the whirring noise of the reel at 
« time used by the spinners of wool. The precise determination of 
tins b i n! t tag isssh o p pu lark! as it was long called w books, though 




317 

its notes if once heard can never temh^kca for tnose el a grass* 
hopper or cricket, and it has no affinity to the larks— as an English 
species » due to the discernment of Gilbert White in 1768. In its 
habits it is one of the most retiring of birds, keeping In the closest 
shelter, so that it rnay be within a very short distance of an eager 
naturalist without his being able to see it— the olive-colour, streaked 
with dark brown, of** upper plumage helping to make it invisible. 
The nest is verv artfully concealedln thetKckest herbage. The 
raen^ned™* aquatlc warWer * * re *** too numerous to be here 
The members of the typical genus Syhia, which includes some 
of the sweetest singers, are treated of under Whiteth boat; and 
the willow- and wood-wrens under Wren. The Australian genus 
Matunu, to which belong the birds known as " superb warblers" 
r^ inapuyjso^risdned, since in beauty they surpass any others of 

the cocks 
and Is so 

- -„ — . - ,-...-,-— .-v or scarlet, 

as well as green and hlac, are also present in one species or another, 
was to heighten the effect; But, as already stated, there are system- 
atise who would raise this genus, which contains some 15 species, 
to the rank of a distinct family, though on what grounds it u hard 

Thebfrds known as "American warblers,*' forming what is now 
recognised as a distinct family, Mniotiltidae, remain for considera- 
tion. They possess but nine instead of ten primaries, and are 
peculiar to the New World. More than 130 species have been 
described, and then have been grouped in ao genera or more, of 
which members of all but three are at least summer-visitants to 
North America. As a whole they are much more brightly coloured 
than the Sylvunae, for, though the particular genus MniotUta (from 
which the family takes its name) is one of the most abnormal— its 
colours being plain black and white, and its habits rather resembling 
those of a Tree-creeper (fl.r.)— in other groups chestnut, bluish-grey 
and green appear, the last varying from an olive to a saffron tint, 
and in some groups the yellow predominates to an extent that has 
gained for its wearers, belonging to the genus Dendroeca, the name of 
" golden warblers. In the genus Setophaga, the members of which 
deserve to be called w fly<atching " warblers, the plumage of the 
males at least presents yellow, orange, scarlet or crimson. 

The Mmotdtidae contain forms exhibiting quite as many diverse 
modes of life as do the Sylviinae. Some are exclusively aquatic in 
their predilections, others affect dry soils, brushwood, forests and 
soon. Aln^ all the genera are essentially migratory , bnt a large 
proportion of the species of Dendroeca, Sele+kaea. and especially 
Bauleuterus. seem never to .leave their Neotropical homes while 
the genera Leucopeza, Teretrtstis and Microligia, comprising in alt 
but 5 species, are peculiar to the Antilles. The rest are for the 
most part natives of North America, where a few attain a vary high 
lautude,\penetrating in summer even beyond the Arctic Circle, and 
thence migrate southward at the end of summer or in the fall of the 
year, some reaching Peru and Braril, but a few, as, for instance. 
Ponds ptttaynmt and Geot/dypis srJole, seem to be resident in the 
country last named. (A. N.) • 

WABBUBTOH, BARTHOLOMEW ELLIOTT GEOBGE (1810- 
1851), usually known as Eliot Warburton, British traveller and 
novelist, was born in 1810 near Tullamore,. Ireland. He was 
educated at Trinity College, Cambridge, and was called to the 
Irish bar in 1837. He contracted lasting friendships with 
Monckton Mimes (Lord Houghton) and A. W. KingUke, and 
gave up his practice as a barrister for travel and literature. He 
made a hit with his first book, The Crescent and the Crass. It was 
an account of his travels in 1843 in Turkey, Syria, Palestine and 
Egypt, and fairly divided public attention with Kinghilce's 
Eothen, which appeared m the same year, 1844. Interest was 
centred in the East at the time, and Warburton had popular 
sympathy with him in his eloquent advocacy of the annexation 
of Egypt; but, apart from this consideration, the spirited 
narrative of his adventures and the picturesque sketches of 
Eastern life and character were more than sufficient to Justify 
the success of the book. His most substantial work was a 
Memoir of Prince Rupert and Ike Cavaliers (1849), enriched with 
original documents, and written with eloquent partiality for the 
subject. This was followed in 1850 by Reginald Hastings, a 
novel, the scenes of which were said in the same period of dvil 
war, and, in 1851, by another historical novel, Darien, or The 
Merchant Prince. He -was sent by the Atlantic and Pacific 
Junction Company to explore the isthmus of Darien and to 
negotiate a treaty wkh the Indian tribes. He sailed on this 

• Seven species have bee n r ecorded ss wandering to Greenland, and 
one, Dendroeca stress, is said to have occurred in Europe Uiath 
' 1858,0.425). 



3 i8 WARBURTON, COLONEL SIR R.— WARBURTON, W. 



mission In the * Amazon," which perished by fire with nearly 
all on board on the 4th of January 1852. 

Hi* brother, Major George Warburton (1816-1857), wrote 
Hockdaga, or England in Ike New World (1846), and The Conquest 
of Canada (1840). 

WARBURTON, COLONEL SIR ROBERT (1842-1809), Anglo- 
Indian soldier and administrator, was the son of an artillery 
officer who had been taken prisoner at Kabul in 1842, and 
escaped through the good offices of an Afghan princess. He 
married this lady, and she transmitted to their son that power of 
exercising influence over the tribes of the north-west frontier 
which stood him in good stead during his long service in India. 
Warburton entered the Royal Artillery in 1861, took part in the 
Abyssinian War of 1867-68, and then joined the Bengal Staff 
Corps. He served with distinction in the expedition against the 
Utraan Khcl in 1878 and in the Afghan War of 1878-80. Very 
soon after the British government had made permanent arrange- 
ments for keeping open the Khyber Pass, Warburton was 
appointed to take charge of it as political officer. This post he 
held, discharging its duties with conspicuous ability, between 
1870 and 1882 with intervals of other duty, and continuously 
from 1882 until 1890. He turned the rude levies which formed 
the Khyber Rifles into a fine corps, ready to serve the Indian 
government wherever they might be required. He made the 
road safe, kept the Af ridis friendly, and won the thanks of the 
Punjab government, expressed in a special order upon his retire- 
ment, for his good work. When the Afridis began to cause 
anxiety in 1897, Colonel Warburton was asked by the govern- 
ment of India if he would assist in quieting the excitement 
amongst them. He declared himself ready to do so, but in the 
meantime the trouble had come to a head. Colonel Warburton 
look part in the campaign which followed; at its dose his active 
career ended. He occupied his leisure in -retirement by writing 
his memoirs, Eighteen Years in the Khyber (1900). He died at 
Kensington on the 22nd of April 1899. 

WARBURTON. WILLIAM (1608-1779), English critic and 
divine, bishop of Gloucester, was born at Newark on the 24th of 
December 1698, His father belonged to an old Cheshire family 
and was town derk of Newark. William was educated at 
Oakham and Newark grammar schools, and in 1714 he was 
articled to Mr Kirke, attorney at East Markham, in Nottingham- 
shire. After serving his time be returned to Newark with the 
intention of practising as a solicitor; but, having given some 
time to the study of Latin and Greek, he left the law and was 
ocdained deacon by the archbishop of York in 1723, and in 1727 
motived priest's orders from the bishop of London. He had 
occupied the interval m various literary labours, the most 
important being the notes he contributed to Theobald's edition 
of Shakespeare, and an* anonymous share in a pamphlet on the 
jurisdiction of the Court of Chancery, The Legal Judicative as 
Chancery stated (1727). This was an answer to another anony- 
mous pamphlet, written by Philip Yorke, afterwards Lord Chan- 
cellor Hardwicke, who replied in an enlarged edition (1728) of 
his original Discourse af the Judicial Authority . . . of Master 
af the fails- Warburton now received bom Sir Robert Sutton 
the small living of G*enstey,in Nottinghamshire, exchanged neat 
year for that of Brant Bsoeghton, Lincolnshire. He held in 
addition, ffom 1730, the Irving of Fifehy in Unoolnshire. In 
17*8 he was made an honorary M-A. of Cambridge, At Brant 
Broughton for eighteen yearn he spent has time in study, the first 
insult of which was his treatise on the AlHonte between Chunk 
and State (1736). The book brought Warburton into favour at 
court, and he probably onry misse d immediate uttfument by 
the death of Queen Caroline. His next and best-known work, 
Dnim Legation of Mooes d e n »m su >* tid an the Priorities of a 
Reiigiaus Deist ( > vets* mr-*74»). pa estms ms name as the 
author of the most daring and ingenious of theological paradoxes. 
The deists had made the absence of any metrication of the 
neHimmrfililiiiiilif' ■linbjirlinntnihf iliiini nilhiiiilj iifiln 
aheMlyedmkied the fact and turned 
: ~faining that no merely human 
1 sanction el morality. The 




author's extraordinary power, learning and originality were 
acknowledged on all hands, though he exdted censure and 
suspicion by his tenderness to the alleged heresies of Conyers 
Middleton. The book aroused much controversy. In a pamphlet 
of u Remarks " (1742), he replied to John Tillard, and Remarks 
on Several Occasional Reflections (1744-1745) was an answer to 
Akenside, Conyers Middleton (who had up to this time been his 
friend), Richard Pocockc, Nicholas Mann, Richard Grey, Henry 
Stebbing and other of his critics. As he characterized his 
opponents in general as the " pestilent herd of Hbertme scribblers 
with which the island is overrun," it is no matter of surprise that 
the book made him many bitter enemies. 

Either in quest of paradox, or actually unable to recognize the 
real tendencies of Pope's Essay on Man, he entered upon its 
defence against the Examen of Jean Pierre de Crousaz, in a series 
of articles (1738*1739) contributed to The Works of the Learned, 
Whether Pope had really understood the tendency of his own 
work has always been doubtful, but there is no question that he 
was glad of an apologist, and that Warburton's feu d" esprit 
in the long run did more for his fortunes than all his erudition. 
It occasioned a sincere friendship between him and Pope, whom 
he persuaded to add a fourth book to the Dunciad, and en- 
couraged to substitute Cibber for Theobald as the hero of the 
poem in the edition of 1743 published under the editorship of 
Warburton. Pope bequeathed him the copyright and the 
editorship of his works, and contributed even more to his advance- 
ment by introducing him to Murray, afterwards Lord Mansfield, 
who obtained for him in 1746 the preachership of Lincoln's 
Inn, and to Ralph Allen, who, says Johnson, " gave him bis 
niece and his estate, and, hy consequence, a bishopric* The 
marriage took place in 1745, and from that time Warburton 
resided principally at his father-in-law's estate at Prior Park, in 
Gloucestershire, which he inherited on Allen's death in 1764. 
In 1747 appeared his edition of Shakespeare, into which, as he 
expressed it, Pope's earlier edition was melted down. He had 
previously entrusted notes and emendations on Shakespeare to 
Sir Thomas Hantner, whose unauthorized use of them led to a 
heated controversy. As early as 1727 Warburton had corre- 
sponded with Theobald on Shakespearean subjects. He new 
accused him of stealing his ideas and denied his critical ability. 
Theobald's superiority to Warburton as a Shakespearean critic 
has kmg since been acknowledged. Warburton was further 
kept busy by the attacks on his Dimne Legation from afl quarters, 
by a dispute with Bolingbroke respecting Pope's behaviour in 
the affair of Bolingbroke's Patriot King, by his edition of Pope's 
works (1751) and by a vindication in 1750 of the alleged miracu- 
lous interruption of the rebuilding of the temple of Jerusalem 
undertaken by Julian, in answer to Conyers Middleton. War- 
burton's manner of dealing with opponents was both insolent 
and rancorous, but it did hint no disservice. He became pre- 
bendary of Gloucester in 1753, chaplain to the king in 1754, 
prebendary of Durham in 1755, dean of Bristol in 1757, and in 
x 759 bishop of Gloucester. He continued to write so long as the 
infirmities of age allowed, collecting and publishing his sermons, 
and totting to complete the D i mne Legation, further fragments of 
which were published with his posthumous Works. He wrote a 
defence of revealed religion in his View of Lord Bolingbroke's 
Philosophy (1754). end Hume's Natural Bistory of Religion 
called forth some Rima i hi . . . M by a gentleman of Cambridge n 
from Warburton, in wthcfa Ins friend and biographer, Richard 
Herd, had a share (1757). He made in 1762 a vigorous attack 
on Methodism under the title of The Doctrine of Grace. He also 
engaged in a keen controversy with Robert Lowth, afterwards 
bishop of London, on the book of Job, in which Lowth brought 
home charges of lack of scholarship and of insolence that admitted 
of no denial. His last important act was to found in 1768 the 
Waxburtonian lecture at Lincoln's Ian, "to prove the truth of 
revealed religion . . . from the completion of the prophecies of 
the Old and New Testament which relate to the Christian Church, 
especially to the apostacy of Papal Rome." He died at Gloucester 
on the 7th of June mo. Warburton was undoubtedly a great 
*yi " 



WARD, A. TUT,— WARD, E. 8. P. 



319 



paradox, Affected no ressdt in eky^esTee-ajtequate to its power. 
He was a warm and constant friend, and gave .many proofs of 
gratitude to his benefactors. 

WarborWs work* were edited (7 vol*., 17*8) by Bishop Hind 
with a biographical preface, and the correspondence between the two 
friends— an important contribution to the literary history of the 
period — was edited by Dr Parr in 1808. Warburton's life was also 
written toy John Serby Watson in 1863, and Mark Pattiaon made hint 
the sobject of an eseay in 1889c See also I. D'Israeli, Quarrels of 
Authors (1S14); and especially John Nichols. Library Anecdotes 
(1812-181$), vol. v.. and Illustrations (1817-1858), voC "..for his 
correspondence with William Stukeley, Peter desMaixeaux, Thomas 
Birch, John JortJn and Lewis Theobald. 

WARD, ADOUHUS W1LUAM (1837- )> English historian 
and man of letters, was bora at Hempstead, London, on the 
2nd of December 1837, and was edncated in Germany and at 
the university of Cambridge. In 1866 he was appointed pro- 
fessor of history and English literature in Owens College, Man- 
chester, and was principal from 1890 to 1807, when he retired. 
He took an active part in the foundation of Victoria University, 
of which he was vice-chancellor from 1886 to 1800 and from 1804 
to 1896. In 1897 the freedom of the city of Manchester was 
conferred upon him, and in iooo he was elected master of Peter- 
bouse, Cambridge. His most important work is his standard 
History of English Dramatic Literature to the Ate of Queen Anne 
(187s), re-edited after a thorough revision in three volumes in 
1809. He also wrote The House of A ustria in the Thirty years' 
War (1869), Great Britain and Hanover (1809), The Eledress 
Sophia and the Hanoverian Succession (1903); he edited Crabbe's 
Poems (a vols., 1005-1906) and Pope's Poetical Works (1809); 
he wrote the volumes on Chaucer and Dickens in the " English 
Men of Letters " series, translated CUrtras's History of Greece 
(5 vols., 1866-1873); he was one of the editors of the Cambridge 
Modem History, and with A. R. Waller edited the Cambridge 
History of English Literature (1907, Ac.). For the 9th edition of 
the Ency. Brit, he wrote the article Dhaka, and biographies 
of Ben Jonson and other dramatists; and he became an important 
contributor to the present work. 

WARD, ARTEMUS* the pen-name of Charles Farrar Browne 
(1834-1867), American humorous writer, was born in Waterford, 
Maine. Re began life at a compositor and became an occasional 
contributor to the daily and weekly journal*. In 1858 he 
published in the Cleveland Plain Dealer the first of the "Artemus 
Ward " series, which attained great popularity both In America 
and England. His separate publications were: Artemus 
Ward: his Booh (New York, 186*); Artemus Ward: his 
Travels (New York, 186s); Artemus Ward among Ike Fenians 
(r86s); Betsey Jane Ward: hut Booh of Goaks (New York, 
i860), generally attributed to him; Artemus Ward to London, 
and other Papers (New York, 1867). Artemus Ward's Lecture 
at the Egyptian Hall . . . and other Relies of the Humourist 
(London, 1869), edited by T. W. Robertson and J. C. Hotten, 
was published posthumously (New York, 1869). His wit largely 
relied on the drollery of strange spelling. In i860 bo became 
editor of Vanity Pair, a humorous New York weekly, which proved 
a failure. About the same time he began to appear as a lecturer, 
snd his eccentric humour attracted large audiences. In i860 
he visited England, where he became exceedingly popular both 
as a lecturer and ts a contributor to Punch. In the spring of 
the following year his health gave way, and he died of consump- 
tion at Southampton on the 6th of March 1867. 

His Complete Works, with memoir by E. P. Hintfsttn. were published 
in Londow in the same year, oat Sa ndwiches at NewYork in 1870. 

WARD. EDWARD MATTHEW (1816-1870), English historical 
and genre pointer, was born at PSmhco, London, in 1*16. Among 
his early boyish efforts m art was a series of clever illustrations 
to the Rejected Addresses of his uncles Horace and James Smith, 
which was followed soon afterwards by designs to some of the 
papers of Washington Irving. In 1830 he gained the silver 
palette of the Society of Arts; and in 1835, aided by Wilkie 
and Cbantrey, he entered the schools of the Royal Academy, 
having fn the previous year contributed to its exhibition his 
portrait of Mr O. Smith, the comedian, in his character of Don 
Quixote. Is 1836 he went to Rome, where in 1838 he gained a 



silver medal from the Academy of St Luke for has M CEmabue and 
Giotto," which in the following year was exhibited at the Royal 
Academy. The young artist now turned his thoughts to fresco- 
painting, which he studied under Cornelius at Munich. In 
1843 he forwarded his w Boadicea Animating the Britons previous 
to the Last Battle against the Romans " to the competition for 
the decoration of the Houses of Parliament — a work upon which 
he was afterwards engaged, having in 1853 been directed by the 
fine art commissioners to execute eight subjects in the corridor 
of the House of Commons. The success of his " Dr Johnson 
in Lord Chesterfield's Ante-Room " — now in the National 
Gallery, along with the " Disgrace of Lord Clarendon " (the 
smaller picture) (1846), the " South Sea Bubble" (1847), and 
" James II. Receiving the News of the Landing of the Prince of 
Orange " (1850)— secured his election as an associate of the Royal 
Academy in 1847, and in 1855 he gained full academic honours. 
Among the more important of bis other works may be named 
" Charlotte Corday Led to Execution " (185*), the " Last Sleep 
of Argyll " (1854) » the " Emperor of the French Receiving the 
Order of the Garter " (1859), painted for the queen, the " Ante- 
Chamber at Whitehall during the Dying Moments of Charles 
II." (x86x), " Dr Johnson's First Interview with John Wilkes " 
(1865), and the " Royal Family of France in the Temple," 
painted in 1851, and usually considered the artist's masterpiece. 
He died at Windsor, on the 15th of January 1879. In 1848 he 
had married Henrietta Ward (b. 1832), who, herself an admirable 
artist, was a granddaughter of James Ward, R.A. (1760-1859), 
the distinguished animal painter. Their son, Leslie Ward (p. 
1851), became well known as " Spy ° of Vanity Fair (from 1873 
to 1909), and later of the World, with Ms character portraits of 
contemporary cele brities, 

WARD, ELIZABETH STUART PHELPS (1844-1911), American 
author and philanthropist, was born in Boston, Massachusetts, 
on the 51st of August 1S44. She was the granddaughter of the 
Rev. Moses Stuart, and the daughter of the Rev. Austin Phelps 
(1820-1800) who became a professor in the Andover Theological 
Seminary in 1848, and Elizabeth Stuart Phelps (1815-1857), 
who wrote Sunnyside (1851), a popular book In its day, and 
other works. In 1848 she removed with her parents to Andover, 
where she attended private schools. When she was in her leens 
she wrote short stories for the Youth's Companion, The Atlantic 
Monthly and Harper's Magazine. She wrote many juveniles, 
especially Sunday-School books, such as the Tiny and the Gypsy 
series. In 1868 appeared in The Atlantic Monthly her short 
story, The Tenth of January, a narrative of the falling and burning 
of a coUon-mill at Lawrence, Mass., in 1860. In the same year 
appeared The Gates Ajar (xS68), her first novel, a realistic study 
of life, after death, which was widely read and was translated 
into several European languages. Her Beyond the Gates (1883), 
The Gates Between (18&7) and Within the Gates (1001) are in the 
same vein. She was actively interested in charitable work, 
in the advancement of women and In temperance reform. 
In 1888 she married Herbert Dickinson Ward (b. 1861), son of 
the Rev. William Hayes Ward. ^ . m 

Amone Mrs Ward's books, in addition to those already mentioned, 
are: Men, Women and Ghosts (i860); The TroUy Booh (i860), 
" " • "~ i Suent Partner (187O*. Trou/s 



iu vwrile ; Hedged t in ( 1870); t The ; 
Sealed* Orders, and Other Stories (1879); 



„ 'adding Tour and Story Booh (1873), juvenile ; What to Wear (1873). 
essays; Poetic Studies % (1875).. P ?"*! I™' Stoy of Arts J1877), 



8 Z5).. I 
Stonei 



Doctor Zay (1882); Songs of the 

■ — ' Old Maids, and Burglars in Paradise (1889); 



•at World, and Other Poems 
(1884); Old Maids, and Burglars in Paradise (188*); The Madonna 
of the Tubs (1886), a short story; Jack the Fisherman (1887). a 
Gloucester tragedy; The Struggle for Immortality (1889), essays; 
Fourteen to One, and Other Stones (1891); Austin Phelps: a Memoir 
(1891); Donald Marcy (1893); A Singular Life (1894). oneof her 
best-known novels; the Supply « Saint Agatha's <i8o6); Chapters 
from a Ufe (1896); The Story of Jesus Christ: an Interpretation 
(1897); The Successors of Mary the First (190O; Avery (1902). first 
issued serially in Harper's Magazine as His Wife.Trtxy (1904): 
The Man in the Case (1906); Walled In (1907); and Though Life Do 
Us Part (1908). In collaboration with her husband, she wrote two 
novels founded 00 Biblical scenes and characters. The Master of the 
Magicians (1890), and Come Forth (1 890). Among Mr Ward s books 
are The New Senior at And^er (1800): The RcfmUtc stiff 
PrtsidemS.ond Other Short Stories (1891); The C a j ssi e ofib* rt 



3*0 

(1893); A Dash toihe PoU (1893); The Whits Cr*tm> and Other 
Stents (1894); The Burglar who moved Parodist (1897): and The 
Light of the World (1901). 

WARD, JAMES (1769-1859), English animal painter and 
engraver, was born in Thames Street, London, on the 23rd of 
October 1769. At the age of twelve he was bound apprentice 
with J. Raphael Smith, but he received little attention and 
learnt nothing from this engraver. He was afterwards in- 
structed for over seven years by his elder brother, William Ward, 
and he engraved many admirable plates, among which his 
" Mrs Billington," after Reynolds, occupies a very high place. 
He presented a complete set of his engravings, in their various 
states, numbering three hundred impressions, to the British 
Museum. While still a youth he made the acquaintance of 
George Morland, who afterwards married his sister; and the 
example of this artist's works induced him to attempt painting. 
His early productions were rustic subjects in the manner of 
Morland, which were frequently sold as the work of the more 
celebrated painter. His " Bull-Bait," an animated composition, 
introducing many figures, attracted much attention in the 
Royal Academy of 1797. A commission from Sir John Sinclair, 
president of the new agricultural society, to paint an Alderney 
cow, led to much similar work, and turned Ward's attention to 
animal-painting, a department in which he achieved his highest 
artistic successes. His " Landscape with Cattle," acquired for 
the National Gallery at a cost of £1500, was painted in 1820- 
1823 at the suggestion of West, in emulation of the " Bull of 
Paul Potter" at the Hague. His "Boa Serpent Seizing a 
Horse " was executed in 1822, and his admirable " Grey Horse," 
shown in the Old Masters' Exhibition of 1879, dates from 1828. 
Ward also produced portraits, and many landscapes like the 
" Gordale Scar " and the " Harlech Castle " in the National 
Gallery. Sometimes he turned aside into the less fruitful paths 
of allegory, as in his unsuccessful " Pool of Belhesda " (1818), 
and " Triumph of the Duke of Wellington " (1818). rte was a 
frequent contributor to the Royal Academy and the British 
Institution, and in 1841 he collected one hundred and forty 
examples of his art, and exhibited them in his house in Newman 
Street. He was elected an associate of the Royal Academy in 
1807, and a full member in 181 1, and died at Cheshunt on the 
23rd of November 1859. 

Ward compiled an autobiography, of which an abstract was 
published in the Art Journal in 1849. 

WARD, JAMES (1843- ), English psychologist and meta- 
physician, was born at Hull on the 27th of January 1843. He 
was educated at the Liverpool Institute, at Berlin and Gdttingen, 
and at Trinity College, Cambridge; he also worked in the physio- 
logical laboratory at Leipzig. He studied originally for the 
Congregational ministry, and for a year was minister of Emmanuel 
Church, Cambridge. Subsequently he devoted himself to 
psychological research, became fellow of his college in 187s and 
university professor of mental philosophy in 1897. He was 
Gifford lecturer at Aberdeen in 1895-1897, and at St Andrews 
in 1908-1 910. His work shows the influence of Leibnitz and 
Lotze, as well as of the biological theory of evolution. His 
psychology marks the definite break with the sensationalism of 
the English school; experience is interpreted as a continuum 
into which distinctions are gradually introduced by the action 
of selective attention; the implication of the subject in experience 
is emphasised; and the operation in development of subjective, 
as well as natural, selection is maintained. In his metaphysical 
work the analysis of scientific concepts leads to a criticism of 
naturalism and of dualism, and to a view of reality as a unity 
which implies both subjective and objective factors. This view 
is further worked out, through criticism of pluralism and as a 
theistic interpretation of the world, in his St Andrews Gilford 
Lectures (the Realm of Ends). 

Beside the article " Psychology " in the Eney. Brit, (oth, 10th and 
Uth ed.) he has published Naturalism and Agnosticism (1809. 3rd 
ed. 15)07), besides numerous articles in the Journal of Physiology, 
Mind, and the British Journal of Psychology. 

W— Mk " M QU1NCY ADAMS (1830-19*0), American 
f Urban*, Ohio, on the 29th of June 1830. 



WARD, J.— WARD, M. A. 



His education was received In the Tillage schools. He studied 
under Henry K. Brown, of New York, in 1850-1857, and by 
1 861, when he opened a studio in New York, he had executed 
busts of Joshua R. Giddings, Alexander H. Stephens, and Hannibal 
Hamlin, prepared the first sketch for the "Indian Hunter," 
and made studies among the Indiana themselves for the work. 
In 1863 he became a member of the National Academy of Design 
(New York), and he was its president in 1872-1873. Among his 
best-known statues are the " Indian Hunter," finished in 1864 
(Central Park, New York); Washington, heroic size (on the 
steps of the U.S. Sub-Treasury, Wall Street, New York); Henry 
Ward Beccher (Brooklyn); an equestrian statue of General 
George H. Thomas (Washington); Israel Putnam (Hartford); 
and the seated statue of Horace Greeley, the founder of the New 
York Tribune, in front of the office of that newspaper. In 1896 
he was elected president of the newly organized National Sculp- 
ture Society (New York). Unlike his fellow-countryman, W. W. 
Story, he acquired has training, his inspiration and his themes 
from his own country. He died in New York on the 1st of 
May 191a 

WARD, LESTER FRANK (1841- ), American geologist 
and sociologist, was born in JoUet, Illinois, on the x8th of June 
1841. He graduated at Columbian (now George Washington) 
University in 1869 and from the law school of the same university 
in 1871, his education having been delayed by his service in the 
Union army during the Civil War. In 1865-1873 he was 
employed in the United States Treasury Department, and 
became assistant geologist in 1881 and geologist in 1888 to the 
U.S. Geological Survey. In 1884- 1886 he was professor of 
botany in Columbian University. He wrote much on paleo- 
botany, including A Sketch of Paleobotany (1885), The Geographi- 
cal Distribution of Fossil Hants (1888) and The Status of the 
Uesasoic Flora* of the United States (1905). He is better known, 
however, for his work in sociology, in which, modifying Herbert 
Spencer and refuting the Spencerjan individualism, he paralleled 
social with psychological and physical phenomena. His more 
important works are: Dynamic Sociology (1883, and ed. 1897), 
Psychic Factors of Civilisation (1897), Outlines of Sociology (1898), 
Sociology and Economics (1899), Pure Sociology (1903), and, 
with J. Q. Dealy, Text-Booh of Sociology ( 1905). 

See an appreciation by L. Guroplowicx, in Die Zeit (Vienna, 20th 
Aug. 1904) ; reprinted in English in vol x. of The American Journal 
of Sociology. 

WARD. MARY AUGUSTA [Mrs Humphry Ward] (1851- 
), British novelist, was bom on the nth of June 1851 at 
Hobart, Tasmania, where her father, Thomas Arnold (i8aa- 
1900), was then an inspector of schools. Thomas Arnold was a 
son of Arnold of Rugby, and a brother of the poet Matthew 
Arnold. As a scholar of University College, Oxford, at the 
crisis of the Oxford Movement, 'he had begun life as a Liberal 
of the school of Joweti, Stanley and Clough; In 1856 he became 
a Roman Catholic, relinquished his inspectorship of schools in 
Tasmania, and was appointed professor of English literature 
at Dublin, thence following Newman to Birmingham, where 
he published his Manual of English Literature. After a brief 
period of unrest he reverted to the English Church, and went to 
Oxford, where he lived twenty years, editing The Select Works 
of WyctifwnA Beowulf for the Clarendon Press, Henry of Hunting- 
don and Symeon of Durham for the " Rolls " scries, and, with 
W. E. Addis, the Catholic Dictionary, In 1877 he reverted once 
more to the Roman Catholic Church, and was appointed fellow 
of the new Royal University of Ireland, dying in Dublin on the 
tatb of November 1000. His daughter was brought up mainly 
at Oxford, and her early associations with a life of scholarship 
and religious conflict are deeply marked in her own later literary 
career. She was brought into close connexion during this period 
with Edward Hartopp Cradock, who was principal of Brascnose 
College from 1853 till his death in 1886, and some of whose 
characteristics went to the portrait of the " Squire " in JRobcri 
Blsmere. In 187a she married Thomas Humphry Ward (b. 
1845), then fellow and tutor of Brasenose, and one of the authors 
of the Oxford Spectator. Mr Humphry Ward, a son of the 



WARD, &— WARD, W. G. 



33i 



Rev. Henry Ward, Vicar of St fiarnabas, King's Square, London, 
E.C, remained at Oxford till 1880, and then went to London 
to take up literary work; with the help of the chief critics of 
the day he brought out the important selections of English 
verse called The English Poets (4 vols., i88o-i88x). He joined 
the staff of The Times and wrote much for that paper, becoming- 
its principal art critic. He also published Humphry Sandwith, 
a Memoir (1884); and he edited Men of the Reign (1885), English 
Art in Ike Public Galleries of London (1886), Men of the Time 
(1887), and, with the help of Matthew Arnold, Huxley, Lord 
Wobdey, H. S. Maine and others, The Reign of Queen Victoria: 
m Survey of Fifty Years of Progress (1887). 

Mrs Humphry Ward at first devoted herself to Spanish litera- 
ture, and contributed articles on Spanish subjects to the Diction- 
ary of Christian Biography, edited by Dr William Smith and Dr 
Henry Wace. She wrote also for Macmillan's Magazine. In 
1881 she published her first book, MUly and Oily, a child's story 
illustrated by Lady (then Mrs) Alma-Tadema. This was followed 
in 1884 by a more ambitious, though slight, study of modern 
life. Miss Brctherton, the story of an actress. In 1885 Mrs Ward 
published an admirable translation of the Journal of the Swiss 
philosopher Amid, with a critical introduction, which showed 
her delicate appreciation of the subtleties of speculative thought. 
It was no bad preparation for her next book, which was to make 
her famous. In February 1888 appeared Robert Elsmere, a 
powerful novel, tracing the mental evolution of an English 
clergyman, of high character and conscience and of intellectual 
leanings, constrained to surrender his own orthodoxy to the 
influence of the " higher criticism." The character of Elsmere 
owed much to reminiscences both of T. H. Green, the philosopher, 
and of J. R. Green, the historian. Largely in consequence of 
a review by W. E. Gladstone in the Nineteenth Century (May 
i888 v " Robert Elsmere and the Battle of Belief "), the book 
became the talk of the civilized world. It ran in five months 
through seven editions in three-volume form, and the cheap 
American editions had an enormous sale. It was translated 
into several European languages, and was the subject of articles 
in learned foreign reviews. Robert Elsmere is in itself a fine 
story, notably in its picture of the emotional conflict between 
Elsmere and his wife, whose over-narrow orthodoxy brings 
her religious faith and their mutual love to a terrible impasse; 
but it was the detailed discussion of the " higher criticism " 
of the day, and its influence on Christian belief, rather than its 
power as a piece of dramatic fiction, that gave the book its 
exceptional vogue. It started, as no academic work could have 
done, a popular discussion on historic and essential Christianity. 
In 1800 Mrs Ward took a prominent part in founding Univer- 
sity HaB, an " Elsmerian " settlement for working and teaching 
among the poor. Her next novel, David Grieve, was published 
in 1802. In MarxeUa (1804), and its sequel Sir George Tressady 
(1896), she broke new ground in the novel of modern politics 
and socialism, the fruit of observation and reflection at Univer- 
sity HalL In 1895 had appeared the short tragedy, the Story 
of Bessie CottreU. Mrs Ward's next long novel, Helbech of 
BamniscUUe (1808), treated of the clash between the ascetic 
ideal of Roman Catholicism and modern life. The element of 
Catholic and humanistic ideals entered also into Eleanor (1000), 
in which, however, the author relied less on the interest of a 
thesis and mom on the ordinary arts of the novelist. Eleanor 
was dramatised and played at the Court Theatre, in 1002* In 
Lady Rose's Daughter (1003)— dramatized as Agatha in 1005 — 
and The Marriage of William Ashe (1005), modern tales founded 
on the stories respectively of MILe de Lespinasse and Lady 
Caroline Lamb, she relied entirely and with success upon 
social portraiture. Later novels were Fenwichfs Career (1906), 
Diama Mallary (1008), Daphne (1909) and Canadian Born 
koio), 

Mrs Ward's eminence among latter-day women-novelists 
arises from her high conception of the art of fiction and her 
strong grasp of intellectual and social problems, her descriptive 
power (finely shown in the first part of Robert Elsmere) and 
her command of a broad and vigorous prose style. But her 



activities were not confined to literature. She was the originator 
in England of the Vacation Schools, which have done much to 
educate the poorest children of the community upon rational 
lines. She also took a leading part in the movement for op- 
posing the grant of the parliamentary suffrage to women, whilst 
encouraging their active participation in the work of local 
government. She was one of the founders of the Women's 
National Anti-Suffrage League in 1908, and both spoke and 
wrote repeatedly in support of its tenets. 

See for bibliography up to Tune 1904, English Illustrated Jfarostne, 
vol. xxxi. ( N.S.) p p. 294 and 299. (H. Ch.) 

WARD, SBTH (1617-1689), English bishop, was born in Hert- 
fordshire, and educated at Sidney Sussex College, Cambridge, 
where he became feHow in 2640. In 1643 be was chosen univer- 
sity mathematical lecturer, but he was deprived of his fellowship 
next year for opposing the Solemn League and Covenant In 
1649 he became Savilian professor of astronomy at Oxford, and 
gained a high reputation by his theory of planetary motion, 
propounded in the works entitled In Ismaelis Bulttaldi astro* 
nomiae philolaicae fundanttnta inquisitio brevis (Oxford, 
1653), and Aslronomia geometrica (London, 1656). About this 
time he was engaged in a philosophical controversy with Thomas 
Hobbcs. He was one of the original members of the Royal 
Society. In 1659 he was appointed master of Trinity College, 
Oxford, but not having the statutory qualifications he resigned 
in 1660. Charles II. appointed him to the livings of St Lawrence 
Jewry in London, and Uplowman, Devonshire, in 1661. He 
also became dean of Exeter (1661) and rector of Breock, Corn- 
wall (1662). In the latter year he was consecrated bishop of 
Exeter, and in 1667 he was translated to the see of Salisbury. 
The office of chancellor of the Order of the Garter was conferred 
on him in 1671. In his diocese he showed great severity to 
nonconformists, and rigidly enforced the act prohibiting con- 
venticles. He spent a great deal of money on the restoration of 
the cathedrals of Worcester and Salisbury. He died at Knights- 
bridge on the 6th of January 1688/1689. ' 

WARD, WILLIAM (1766*1826), English mezzotint-engraver, 
an elder brother of James Ward (q.v.), was born in London in 
1766. He was the most distinguished pupil of J. Raphael Smith, 
and executed a great part of many of the plates which bear the 
name of that excellent engraver. In 1795 nc began to exhibit in 
the Royal Academy, of which in 1814 he was elected an associate 
engraver. He also held the appointment of mezzotint-engraver 
to the prince regent and the duke of York. He executed six 
plates after Reynolds, engraved many of the works of his brother- 
in-law, George Morland, and his mezzotints after Andrew Geddes, 
which include the full -lengths of Sir David WOkie and of Patrick 
Brydone, are of great merit* His engravings are full of artistic 
spirit, and show fine feeling for colour-, and they are excellently 
tender and expressive in their rendering of flesh. He died in 
London on the xst of December 1826. 

WARD. WILLIAM GEORGE (1812-1882), English Roman 
Catholic theologian, was born on the 21st of March 1812. His 
career is extremely interesting as illustrating the development of 
religious opinion at a remarkable crisis in the history of English 
religious thought. Ward is described by bis son and biographer as 
somewhat unequally gifted by nature. For pure mathematics 
he had a special gift— almost a passion. For history, applied 
mathematics—for anything, in fact, outside the exact sciences— 
he felt something approaching to contempt. He was endowed 
with a strong sense of humour and a love of paradox carried to 
an extreme. He went up to Christ Church, Oxford, in 1830, 
but his father's subsequent pecuniary embarrassments compelled - 
him in 1833 to try for a scholarship at Lincoln College, which 
he succeeded in obtaining. His examination for mathematical 
honours exhibited some of the peculiarities of his character and 
mental powers. Four out of his five papers on applied mathe- 
matics were sent up absolutely blank. Honours, however, were 
not refused him, and in 1834 he obtained an open fellowship at 
BaUioL In the previous year the Tractarian movement had 
commenced, and Ward's relations with that movement were as 
original as the rest of his life. He was attracted. Co it by his 



322 

hatred of moderation and what he called " respectability " in 
any shape— a characteristic of which some amusing instances have 
been handed down. He was repelled from it by the conception 
he had formed of the character of Newman, whom he regarded as 
a mere antiquary. When, however, he was at length persuaded 
by a friend to go and hear Newman preach, he at once became 
a disciple. But he had, as Newman afterwards said of him, 
" struck into the movement at an angle." He had no taste for 
historical investigations. He treated the question at issue as one 
of pure logic, and disliking the Reformers, the right of private 
judgment which Protestants claimed, and the somewhat prosaic 
uniformity of the English Church, he flung himself into a general 
campaign against Protestantism in general and the Anglican form 
of it in particular. He nevertheless took deacon's orders in 
1838 and priest's orders in 184a 

In 1839 Ward became the editor of the British Critic, the organ 
of the Tractariaa party, and he excited suspicion among the 
adherents of the Tractarians themselves by his violent denuncia- 
tions of the Church to which he still belonged. In 1841 he urged 
the publication of the celebrated " Tract XC," and wrote in 
defence of it. From that period Ward and his associates worked 
undisguisedly for union with the Church of Rome, and in 1844 
he published his Ideal of a Christian Church, in which he openly 
contended that the only hope for the Church of England by in 
submission to the Church of Rome. This publication brought 
to a height the storm which had long been gathering. The 
university of Oxford was invited, on the 13th of February 1845, 
to condemn " Tract XC," to censure the Ideal, and to degrade 
Ward from his degrees. The two latter propositions were carried 
and " Tract XC." only escaped censure by the uon placet of 
the proctors, Guillemard and Church. The condemnation 
precipitated an exodus to Rome. Ward left the Church of 
England in September 1845, and was followed by many others, 
including Newman himself. After his reception into the Church 
of Rome, Ward gave himself up to ethics, metaphysics and 
moral philosophy. He wrote articles on free will, the philosophy 
of theism, on science, prayer and miracle* for the Dublin Review. 
He also dealt with the condemnation of Pope Honorius, carried on 
a controversial correspondence with John Stuart Mill, and took 
a leading part in the dwnrokwtt of the Metaphysical Society, 
founded by Mr James Knowks, of which Tennyson, Huxley and 
Maxtineau were also prominent members. He was a vehement 
opponent of Liberal Catholicism. In 1851 he was made professor 
of moral philosophy at St Edmund's College, Ware, and was 
advanced to the chair of dogmatic theology in 1852. In 186S he 
became editor of the Dublin Renew. He gave a vigorous support 
to the promulgation of the dogma of Papal Infallibility in 1S70. 
After his admission into the Roman Catholic Church he had, 
rather to the dismay of his friends, entered the married stale, 
and for a time had to struggle with poverty. But his circum- 
stances afterwards improved. He died on the 6th of July 
x88x (J.J-L*) 

See WXiam Caorfr Ward ami the Onford ntaueuwut (1889V. and 
Wdham Gmrft Ward and the Catholic Rental (1893). by his son. 
Wilfrid Philip Ward (b. 1856). who has also written the Ltfe and 
Times of Cardinal Wiseman; and Ten Personal Studies (1908). 

WARD, that which guards or watches and that which is 
guarded or watched. Tne word is a doublet of " guard," which 
was adapted from the French comparatively late into English. 
Both are to he referred to the Teutonic root war-, to protect, 
defend; cf. ** wary,** " warn,'* " beware, <X Eag. wear*. Ger. 
writs, fct, and the English "guardian," "garrison,'* Itc, 
The ruinr i p a l appKcatJarg of the term are, in architecture, to 
the inner courts of a fortified place; at Windsor Castle they are 
1 tha upper and lower wards (see Badxy, Castle); toa 
t a feck blocking the passage of any key 
; alat into which the ridge fits, 
~ 1 "wnrd M (see Loots). 
[fca+ba lauad in the use of the word 
'divided for the purpose 
election of guardians. 



WARD— WARDLAW, LADY 




Northumberland and Cumberland. To this branch belongs the 
use for the various large or small separate rooms in a hospital, 
asylum, &c, where patients are received and treated. The 
most general meaning of the word is for a minor or person 
who is under a guardianship (see Iunurr, Makuace and Roman 
Law). 

WARDEN, a custodian, defender, guardian (see Guardian, 
a word with which it is etymologically identical). The word is 
frequently employed in the ordinary sense of a watchman 
or guardian, but more usually in England in the sense of a chief 
or head official. The lords wardens of the marches,, for r lamplr, 
were powerful nobles appointed to guard the borders of Scotland 
and of Wales; they held their lands per baramam, the king's 
writ not running against them, and they had extensive rights of 
administrating justice. The chief officer of the ancient stan- 
naries of Cornwall has the title of ford warden (see St«vnaues), 
as has also the governor of Dover Castle (see CInque Pouts). 
Warden was until 1870 the alternative title of the master of the 
mint, and " warden of the standards " the title of the head of 
the Standards office (see Standards). The principal or head of 
several of the colleges of Oxford University is also termed 
warden. 

WARDHA, a town and district of British India, in the Nagpur 
division of the Central Provinces, which take their name from 
the Wardha river. The town is situated 49 m. S.W. of Nagpur 
by rail. Pop. (xoox) 087a. It was laid out in 1866, shortly 
after the district was first constituted. It is an important 
centre of the cotton trade. 

The District or Wardha has an area of 2428 eq. m. It is 
hilly in the north, and intersected by spun from the Satpuca 
range. The central portion includes the three peaks of Malegaon 
(1726 ft.), Nandgaon (1874 ft.), and Jaitgarh (aoS6 ft.). From 
this duster of hUls numerous small streams lead to the Wardha 
river on the one side, while on the other the Dham, Bor, and 
Asoda flow down the length of the district in a south-easterly 
direction. The Wardha, and its affluent the Wanna, are the 
only rivers of any importance. To the south the country 
spreads out in an undulating plain, intersected by watercourses, 
and broken here and there by isolated hills rising abruptly from 
the surface. In general the lowlands are well wooded. Leopards, 
hyenas, wolves, jackals and wild hog abound in the district; 
other animals found are the spotted deer, nilgai and antelope. 
The district is subject to great variations of climate, and the 
rainfall at Wardha town averages 41 in. In 1901 the population 
was 385,103, showing a decrease of 4% in the decade. The 
principal crops are cotton, millet, wheat and oilseeds This 
region supplies the cotton known in the market as Hingangtutt 
There arc cotton-mills at Hinganghat and Palgaon, and many 
factories for ginning and pressing cotton. The district is traversed 
by the Nagpur line of the Great Indian Peninsula railway. 
A branch runs from Wardha town past Hinganghat to the 
Warora coal-field in the district of Chanda, The history of 
Wardha forms part of that of Xagpur district, from which it 
was separated in iS6a for administrative purposes. 

See Wanna District Cmrttw (AJkhabad. too*)* 

VARDLAW, ELIZABETH. Lady (1677-1717), reputed 
author of Hardjhrutr, second daughter of Sir Charles fiaftet, 
was born in April 1677. She married ia 1606 Sir Henry Wardlaw, 
Bart., of PStreavie. The ballad of Hardyknule, pubBshed in 
1719 as an eld poem, was supposed to have been discovered 
by her m a vault at DnnfernJine > bntuoMSLwaseverptud u ce d ; 
and in the 1 767 edition of Percy's RtNomts the poem was ascribed 
to her. The beautiful ballad of 5tr Patnek Sptns {F. J. Child, 
Ennjisk and Scottish Popular Ballads, S. 17) has been also 
asserted to be her work, one of the supporters of the theory 
being Robert Chambers (Remarks an Scottish Ballads, 1*50). 
The level of accomplishment in HerdyknuU^ however, gives no 
reason for futtposing that Lady Wardlaw was capable of producing 
Str Patrkk Spent. 

See Norval CTvne. TW Romantic Ss«irl Be*hds «*f t*t Lady 
W*rB*w fjOTrr (i*59)» and J. H. Waikias, Early SeaOmm BaRnds 
lUoaww, ttort. 



WARDLAW, H.:-WAREHAM 



3*J 



WARDLAW. KBKRY (d. 1440)* Scottish prelate, was a son 
of Sir Andrew Wardlaw tad a nephew of Walter Wardlaw 
(d. 1300), bishop of Glasgow, who is said to have been made 
a cardinal by the anti-pope dement VII. in 1581. Educated 
at the universities of Oxford and of Paris, Henry Wardlaw 
returned to Scotland about 1385, and owing to his influential 
connexions received many benefices in the Church. He. passed 
some time at Avignon, and it was whilst he was residing at the 
papal court that he was chosen bishop of St Andrews, being 
consecrated in 1403. Returning to Scotland he acted as tutor 
to the futore king, James I., and finished the work of restoring 
ms cathedral. Then having helped to bring about the release 
of James from his captivity in England, he crowned this king 
in May 1424, and afterwards acted as one of his principal ad- 
visers. He appears to have been an excellent bishop, although 
he tried to suppress the teaching of John Wycliffc by burning 
its advocates. He died on the 6th of April 1440. Wardlaw's 
chief title to fame is the fact that he was the founder of the 
university of St Andrews, the first Scottish university. He 
issued the charter of foundation in February 14*1, and the 
privileges of the new seat of learning were confirmed by a bull of 
Pope Benedict XUI., dated the »8th of August 1413. The 
university was to be " an impregnable rampart of doctors and 
masters to resist heresy." 

WARDROBE, a portable upright cupboard for storing clothes. 
The earliest wardrobe was a chest, and it was not until some 
degree of luxury was attained in regal palaces and the castles 
of powerful nobles that separate accommodation was provided 
for the sumptuous apparel of the great. The name of wardrobe 
was then given to a room in which the wall-space was filled with 
cupboards and lockers— the drawer is a comparatively modern 
invention. From these cupboards and lockers the modern 
wardrobe, with its hanging spaces, sliding shelves and drawers, 
was slowly evolved. In its movable form as an oak " hanging 
cupboard " it dates back to the early x 7th century. For probably 
a hund red years such pieces, massive and cumbrous m form, 
but often with well-carved fronts, were made in fait numbers; 
then the gradual diminution in the use of oak for cabinet-making 
produced a change of fashion. Walnut succeeded oak as the 
favourite material for furniture, but hanging wardrobes in walnut 
appear to have been made very rarely, although clothes presses, 
with drawers and sliding trays, were frequent. During a large 
portion of the 18th century the tallboy (q.v.) was much used 
for. storing clothes. Towards its end, however, the wardrobe 
began to develop into its modern form, with a hanging cup- 
board at each side, a press in the upper part of the central 
portion and drawers below. As a rule it was of mahogany, 
bat so soon as satinwood and other hitherto scarce finely 
grained foreign woods began to be obtainable in considerable 
quantities, many elaborately and even magnificently inlaid 
wardrobes were made. Where Chippendale and his school 
had carved, Sheraton and Hcpplewhite and their contemporaries 
obtained their effects by the artistic employment of deftly 
contrasted and highly polished woods. The first step in the 
evolution of the wardrobe was taken when the central doors, 
which had hitherto enclosed merely tbe upper part, were carried 
to the floor, covering the drawers as well as the sliding shelves, 
and were fitted with mirrors. 

WARD-ROOM (i.e. the room of the guard), the cabin occupied 
by tbe commissioned officers, except the captain, in a man-of- 
war. In tbe wooden line-of-battle ships it was above the gun- 



WARE; a market town in the Hertford parliamentary division 
of Hertfordshire, England, on the river Lea, 29 m. N. of London 
by a branch of the Great Eastern railway. Pop. of urban 
district (1901) 5573. The church of St Mary is a cruciform 
Decorated and Perpendicular building of flint and stone, con- 
sisting of chancel (built, it is supposed, by Lady Margaret 
Beaufort, countess of Richmond, and mother of Henry VII.). 
lady chapel to the south (c. 1380), nave of five bays of the time 
of Richard II., transepts, aisles, south porch and embattled 
Urwer of the time of Edward III. There is an elaborate 



Perpendicular font. The modem mansion of The Priory, to the 
west of the town, occupies the site of a priory of tbe order of 
St Francis, founded, according to Dugdafe, by Hugh de Grant- 
maisnil, lord of Ware. A portion of the original building is 
incorporated in the modern one. Among public buildings are 
the corn exchange and the town-hall, which includes a literary 
institute and library. The famous M Great Bed of Ware," 
referred to in Shakespeare's Twelfth Night, which formerly was 
at the Saracen's Head in Ware, has been removed to Rye House, 
2 m. distant, the scene of the Rye House plot of 1683 against 
Charles II. The town possesses breweries and brick-fields, 
and there is a large trade in malt, assisted by the navigation of 
the Lea to London. Near the village of Great Amwell (x m. 
S.E.) are the sources of the New River, formed in 1606-1612 to 
supply London with water; and on a small island in the stream 
stands a monument to Sir Hugh Myddletoo, through whose 
exert ions this work was carried cut. 

WARE, a township of Hampshire county, Massachusetts, 
U.S.A., traversed by the Ware river, and about 25 m. E.N.E. of 
Springfield. Pop. (1880) 4817, (1890) 7329, (1000) 8263, of 
whom 3263 were foreign-born, (1010 census) 8774. Area 
20-3 sq. m. The township is served by the Boston & Albany and 
Boston 81 Maine railways, and by: two interurban electric lines. 
Its average elevation is about 550 ft. above sea-level. There 
is a public library (14,225 volumes In 1010). In 1905 the value 
of the factory products was $3,783,696, 23*2% more than in 
1900. Among the manufactures are cotton and woollen goods, 
and boots and shoes. The township owns and operates its 
waterworks. Because of its hard and rough soil, Ware was not 
settled as early as the surrounding townships, the first per- 
manent settlement being made in 1730. It was incorporated 
in X742 as a precinct, in i76r as a district (formed from parts 
of Brookfield, Palmer and Western, now Warren, and certain 
common lands), and in 177s as a separate township. In 1823 
additions were made from Brookfield and Western. 
. WAREHAM, a market town and municipal borough in the 
eastern parliamentary division of Dorsetshire, England, 121} m. 
S.W. by W. from London by the London & South- Western 
railway. Pop. (1901) 2003. It lies between the rivers Frome 
and Piddle, i\ m. above their outflow into Poole harbour. The 
town is of high antiquity, and is partially surrounded by earth- 
works probably of British construction. The church of St Mary 
contains a chapel dedicated to St Edward, commemorating 
that Edward who was murdered at Corfe Castle in this neigh- 
bourhood, whose body lay here before its removal to Shaftes- 
bury. It also possesses a remarkable Norman font of lead. Two 
other ancient churches remain, but are not used for worship. 
There are ruins of a priory dedicated to SS. Mary, Peter and 
Etherwold, and the site of the old castle may be traced. The 
town and neighbourhood have been long noted for their lime 
and cement, and large quantities of potters', pipe, fire and other 
kinds of clay are sent to Staffordshire and to foreign countries. 
The borough is under a mayor, 4 aldermen, and 12 councillors, 
Area 251 acres. 

Owing to its situation as a key of Purbeck, the site of Ware- 
ham (Wcrham, Warham) has been occupied from early times. 
The earthworks, of British origin, were modified in almost every 
successive age. That Warcham was a prc-Saxon town is evident 
from Asser's statement that its British name was Durngueir. 
The early chroniclers declare that St Aldhclm founded a church 
near Warcham about 701, and perhaps the priory, which is 
mentioned as existing in 876, when the Danes retired from 
Cambridge to a strong position in this fort. Their occupation 
was not lengthy. Having made terms with Alfred, they broke 
the conditions and returned to Cambridge. In the following 
year they were again at Warcham, which they made their 
headquarters. Beorhtric, the immediate predecessor of Ecgbert, 
was buried here. Further incursions made by the Danes in 998 
and in rots under Canute probably resulted in the destruction 
of the priory, on the site of which a later house was founded 
in the 12th century as a cell of the Norman abbey of Lysa, and 
in the decayed condition of Warcham in 1086, when 203 houses 



3*4 



WARENNE, EARLS— WAR GAME 



were ruined or waste, the result of misfortune, poverty and fire. 
The early castle, which existed before 1086, was important 
during the civil wars of Stephen's reign; in 1x4a Robert, earl 
of Gloucester, on his departure for France, committed it to his 
son's charge. Stephen, however, surprised and took it, but it 
surrendered to the earl in the same year on the king's refusal 
to send it aid. John fortified it against Louis of France in 1 216, 
and during the civil wars it waa the scene of much fighting, 
being stormed by the parliamentary forces in 1644. Wareham 
was accounted a borough in Domesday Book, and the burgesses 
in x 1 76 paid 20 marks for a default. In 1 180-1 181 they rendered 
account of 5 marks for erecting a gild without licence. The 
fee-farm of the borough was obtained in 12 11, on a fine of 100 
marks. The constitution of Wareham underwent a change 
during the years 1326-1338, when the governing body of the 
bailiffs and commonalty were replaced by the mayor and bailiffs. 
In 1587 Elizabeth granted certain privileges to Wareham, but 
it was not incorporated until 1703, when the existing fairs for 
April 6 and August 23 were granted. The port was important 
throughout the middle ages, and was required to furnish four 
ships for the French war in 1334. Considerable trade was 
carried on with France and Spain, doth, Purbcck stone and, 
later, clay being largely exported. 

WARENNE. EARLS. The Warcnnes derived their surname 
from the river of Guarenne or Yarenne and the little town of the 
same name near Arques in Normandy. William de Warenne, 
who crossed with William I. in 1066, was a distant cousin of the 
Conqueror, his grandmother having been the sister of Gunnora, 
wife of Richard I. of Normandy. De Warenne received as his 
share of English spoil some 300 manors in Yorkshire, Norfolk, 
Surrey and Sussex, including Lewes Castled He was wounded 
at the siege of Pcvensey and died in 1089, a year after he had 
received the title of earl of Surrey. Both he and his successors 
were more commonly styled Earl Warenne than earl of Surrey. 
His wife Gundrada, described on her monument as slirps dueum, 1 
appears to have been a sister of Gharbod, earl of Chester. 

Their son William, 2nd earl (c. 1071-1 138), was a suitor for 
the hand of Matilda of Scotland, afterwards queen of Henry I. 
He was temporarily deprived of his earldom in 1x01 for his 
support of Robert, duke of Normandy, but he commanded at 
the battle of Tcnchebrai (1x06), and was governor of Rouen in 
1135* He carried off Elizabeth of Vermandois, granddaughter 
of Henry I. of France, and wife of Robert, count of Mculan, and 
married her in x 118 after her husband's death. 

William de Warenne, 3rd earl (d. 1148), was, with his half- 
brother, Robert de Beaumont, early of Leicester, present at the 
battle of Lincoln, where his flight early in the day contributed 
to Stephen's defeat. He remained faithful to the queen during 
Stephen's imprisonment, and in 1146 he took the cross, and was 
killed near Laodicea in January X148. 

1 His daughter and heiress, Isabel, married in 1153 William de 
Blois, second son of King Stephen and Matilda of Boulogne, and 
in X163 Hamclin Plantagenet, natural son of Geoffrey, count of 
Anjou. Both Isabel's husbands appear to have borne the title 
of Earl Warenne. Earl Hamelin was one of those who at the 
council of Northampton denounced Becket as a traitor; he 
remained faithful to his half-brother, Henry II., during the trouble 
with the king's sons, and in Richard I.'s absence on the crusade 
he supported the government against the intrigues of Prince John. 

William, de Warenne (d. x 240), son of Isabel and Hamelin, who 
Succeeded to trie earldom in 1 101 r enjoycrl the tpcdn.1 rn nfiff cn c c 
of King John. In i:u, when i\ genera! rcbcUi''' • >■ 
bended, Jo Pin com milled to him l be custody 
shires; ami he remained faithful to hi* master througho 
troubles which preceded the aignin? of the Chartec 
the king's situation became J> -■■[ 
loyally, and, shortly before 
Prince Louis. He returned, huw 
mediately upon the accc 
minority, a toyal iuJ&kjtk r 

»S«R.E " 




the royal favourites who came into power alter 1927, and used Ms 
influence to protect Hubert de Burgh when the latter had been, 
removed from office by their efforts (1232). Warenne's relations 
with the king became strained in course of time. In 1238 he 
was evidently regarded as a leader of the baronial opposition, 
for the great council appointed him as one of the treasurers who 
were to prevent the king from squandering the subsidy voted in 
that year. His son John de Warenne (c 1 231-1304) succeeded 
in 1240, and at a later date bore the style of earl of Surrey and 
Sussex. In the battle of Lewes (1264) he fought under Prince 
Edward, and on the defeat of the royal army fled with the queen 
to France. His estates were confiscated but were subsequently 
restored. He served in Edward I.'s Welsh campaigns, and took 
a still more prominent part in Scottish affairs, being the king's 
lieutenant in Scotland in 1296-1297. In September 1297 he 
advanced to Stirling, and, giving way to the clamour of his 
soldiers, was defeated by William Wallace on the nth. He 
invaded Scotland early the next year with a fresh army, and, 
joining Edward in the second expedition ot that year, commanded 
the rear at Falkirk 

By his first wife, Alice of Lusignan, half-sister of Henry III., 
Earl Warenne had three children — Alice, who married Henry 
Percy, father of the xst baron Percy; Isabella, who married 
John Baliol, afterwards king of Scots; and William, who pre- 
deceased bis father, leaving a son John. 

John de Warenne (1 286-1347) succeeded his grandfather in 
1304, and was knighted along with the prince of Wales in 1306, 
two days after his marriage with the prince's niece, Joanna, 
daughter of Eleanor of England, countess of Bar. From that 
lime onwards he was much engaged in the Scottish wars, in 
which he had a personal interest, since John Baliol was his cousin 
and at one time his ward. As there were no children of his 
marriage, his nephew, Richard Fitzalan II., earl of Arundel 
(c. 1307-1376), became heir to his estates and the earldom of 
Surrey. His northern estates reverted to the crown, and the 
southern estates held by Joanna of Bar during her lifetime 
passed to Fitzalan. The Warrens of Poynton, barons of Stock- 
port, descended from one of Earl Warenne's illegitimate sons by 
Isabella de Holland. Earl Warenne had received from Edward 
Baliol the Scottish earldom of Strathearn, but seems never to 
have established effective possession. 

See G. E. C(okayne), Comtek Peerage, vol. vii. (1806) ; and John 
Watson, Memoirs of the Anctenl Earls of Warren or Surrey (2 vols., 
Warrington, 1782). 

WAR GAM B, or (in its German form) Kubcsrel, a scientific 
game, played by representing the positions and movements 
of troops on a map. Kriegspiel is, as the name indicates, of 
German origin. A form of it, invented by Marshal Keith, and 
called Kriegs-schachsspiel (War Chess), was in vogue in the 
1 8th century. In its. present form it was invented by von 
Reisswitx (1704-1827),^ Prussian officer, in 1824. As a game 
it quickly became fashionable at the German courts, and as a 
means of instruction it was promptly introduced into the Prussian 
army, whence it has spread to all the armies of the world. The 
idea of it has been applied also to naval warfare in recent times, 
the most usual form of naval war game being that designed by 
F. T. Jane about 1808. 

In the military game the positions of troops axe marked on 
maps, movements are made under regulations and the whole 
" ins -of past campaigns can be reproduced in outline of 
or more usually hypothetical manoeuvres may 
for study ami instruction. The materials required 
kmo »pie* of the same map, drawn to such scale 
lc to the magnitude of the operations to be 
i lfcc scheme is one for small numbers of troops, 
c it., essential, as small features of the 
action of small bodies, and it is only 

teal influence of small features- can 
nversely, with huge bodies, inapt 
Odnenient. A great amount of detail 
. u for military purposes; heights, 
' fences and the nature of the 



WARGLA— WARHAM 



335 



grand, all enter Into the question of the feasibility or the reverse 
of asBitary operations; and where the map is the actual field 
of manoeuvre, the features of the natural field must be adequately 
supplied. Blocks, cut or moulded to scale, represent the different 
units of the combatants; and are coloured (generally red and 
blue) to distinguish the opposing forces. Some pairs of dividers 
and a few measures of the same scale as the maps employed 
complete the material outfit. Printed regulations for the conduct 
of kriegspiel are of small value; and although rules have been 
drafted at various times and in many languages, they have 
generally been allowed to lapse, practice having proved that the 
decision of a competent umpire is of more value, as to the sound- 
ness or unsoundness of a military manoeuvre, than a code of 
regulations which inevitably lack elasticity. 

The usual course of procedure varies but little in the different 
countries in which the system has been employed. The central 
nap sc reened from the view of the combatants is used by the 
umpire, who places on it the forces of both sides; copies are on 
either hand behind screens or in adjoining rooms, and on them 
representative blocks are placed in positions which agree with the 
information possessed by each respective commander. A scheme is 
formulated such as may occur in war, and a " General Idea " or 
•* Narrative " is the common property of both sides, This contains 
of common knowledge which would be in the possession 
nmander in the field. The General Idea is sup ' 



of either commander in the field. The General Idea is supplemented 
by " special ideas," issued one to each of the combatants, supplying 
the information which a commander might reasonably be expected 
to have of the details of his own force. A third series of instruc- 
tions is issued, entitled " Orders," which define to each commander 
the object to be attained: and on receipt of these he is required to 
draft specific orders, such as, in manoeuvre or in war, would be 
considered necessary for issue to field units in the assumed circum- 
stances. Then the game begins. The units of artillery, cavalry, 
infantry or train-wagons advance or retreat at a rate approxi- 
mately regulated to their normal pace. Information gained by 
advancing patrob is brought at realistic speed to its destination . and 
ao alteration in the ordered movements of a unit is allowed* till ex- 
piration of the calculated time for the transmission of the intelligence 
and for the issue of fresh orders. So the exercise progresses, each 
■movement b marked, and periodically the blocks on the three maps 
•re placed £p they would be at a simultaneous moment. Smaller 
units yield To larger ones of the enemy; equal forces, if unassisted 
by superiority of position," contain "one another, and are practically 
neutralized till reinforcements arrive and equilibrium is overthrown. 
The decisions of the umpire are all-important, and it is he who 
or mars the value of the instruction. Some axioms must be 



universally accepted for the guidance both of himself and of the 
players. A force arrayed within effective range on the flank of an 
equal and hostile force has the better position of the two. Artillery 
in positioo with an unimpeded glads is a terrible task for a frontal 
attack. Cavalry, as such, is ineffective in woodlands, marshes or 
• country broken up by cross hedges or wire fencing. Infantry in 
masses is an ideal target for efficient artillery, and in scattered 
bodies affords opportunities for attack by well-handled cavalry. 
The just appticatara of the ideas contained in these few sentences 
to the varying stages of a combat is no mean task for a cultured 



One of many difficulties encountered in war Is the lack of accurate 
information. Any one man's view of details spread over large areas 
of country is extremely limited, and even with the greatest pre- 
cautions against unreality, a commander's information is vastly more 
accurate over the extended units of his mimic force at kriegspiel than 
when the forces so represented are men, horses and machines. 
tr ap ped in dust or in smoke, and partially obscured by accidents of 
the ground too insignificant for reproduction on the map. Yet 
whOst accepting a certain unreality in kriegspiel, and to a less degree 
in field manoeuvres, both byone and the other military training and 
education are furthered. The framing of orders follows identical 
Sacs at kriegspiel, at manoeuvres or In war The movement of 

1 in mimic warfare should be brought to harmonise as far as 

' : with seafity. Up to a point this is relatively easy, and 

, i chiefly on the quality of the umpiring. But directly the 

t contact of important bodies of troops is represented on paper. 

imaaJfiitinn. not realism, governs the results. Even this, however. 
ess be tempered, as regards the larger problems of the tactical 
ansmpanj of forces, by the wisdom and e x perience of the umpire 



t is tru« that military history teems with tactical events that no 
reproduce and no seer could have prophesied But the 
• eljcerV familiarity with military history, the more likely 
. m t «^the margin of safety against such incidents in his 
--> v » .thus kriegspiel, even in the domain of general 
I g mva lysbie assistance as a means of applying sound 
, snafued in other ways, to concrete cases, 

* town in the Algerian Sahara, 175 m. SW of 
tstecajavaanmtetoUMNifercaimtx^ 




point for the exploration of the southern part of the Sahara. 
Pop. (1006) 5579, the majority of mixed Berber and negro blood. 
The town is walled and is entered by six gateways, which are 
fortified. The French fort, barracks, hospital and other buildings 
are south of the native town. Wargla lies in an oasis containing 
many palm trees. It claims to be the oldest town in the Sahara, 
and was for a long time self-governing, but eventually placed 
itself under the protection of the sultan of Morocco. The sultan, 
however, had ceased to have any power in the town some time 
previous to the French occupation. Wargla was first occupied 
for the French in 1853 by native allies, but it was not until 187s 
that the authority of France was definitely established. The 
importance of the town as a trans-Saharan trade centre has 
greatly declined since the suppression of slave-trading by the 
French. The oasis in which Wargla is situated contains two or 
three other small fortified ksurs or villages, the largest and most 
picturesque being Ruissat. The total population of the oasts 
is aboutx 2,000. 

WARHAM, WILLIAM (& 1450-1533), archbishop of Canter- 
bury, belonged to a Hampshire family, and was educated at 
Winchester and New College, Oxford, afterwards practising and 
teaching law both in London and Oxford. Later he took holy 
orders, held two livings, and became master of the rolls in 1404, 
while Henry VIL found him a useful and clever diplomatist. 
He helped to arrange the marriage between Henry's son, Arthur, 
and Catherine of Aragon; he went to Scotland with Richard 
Foxe, then bishop of Durham, in 1407; and he was partly 
responsible for several commercial and other treaties with 
Flanders. Borgundy and the German king, Maximilian L In 
1502 Warham was consecrated bishop of London and became 
keeper of the great seal, but his tenure of both these offices was 
short, as in 1504 he became lord chancellor and archbishop of 
Canterbury In 1509 the archbishop married and then crowned 
Henry VIIL and Catherine of Aragon, but gradually withdrawing 
into the background he resigned the office of lord chancellor in 
1515, and was succeeded by Wolaey, whom he had consecrated 
as bishop of Lincoln in the previous year. This resignation was 
pcttibly due to bis dislike of Henry's foreign policy. He was 
present at the Field of the Cloth of Gold in 1520, and assisted 
Wobey as assessor during the secret inquiry into the validity of 
Henry's marriage with Catherine in 1527. Throughout the 
divorce proceedings Warham's position was essentially that of 
an old and weary man. He was named as one of the counsellors 
to assist the queen, but, fearing to incur the king's displeasure 
and using bis favourite phrase ira principis mors est, he gave her 
very little help; and he signed the letter to Clement VII. which 
urged the pope to assent to Henry's wish. Afterwards it was 
proposed that the archbishop himself should try the case, btrt this 
suggestion came to nothing. He presided over the Convocation 
of 1531 when the dergy of the province of Canterbury voted 
£100,000 to the king in order to avoid the penalties of praemunire, 
and accepted Henry aa supreme head of the church with the 
saving clause M ao far as the law of Christ allows." In bis con- 
cluding years, however, the archbishop showed rather more 
independence. In February 1532 he protested against all acts 
concerning the church passed by the parliament which met in 
1520. but this did not prevent the important proceedings which 
secured the complete submission of the church to the slate later 
in the same year. Against this further compliance with Henry's 
wishes Warham drew up a protest , be likened the action of Henry 
VIII. to that of Henry II , and urged Magna Carta in defence 
of the liberties of the church. He died on the 22nd of August 
1 532 and was buried in Canterbury cathedral Warham, who was 
chancellor of Oxford University from 1506 until his death, was 
munificent in his public, and moderate in his private life As 
archbishop he seems to have been somewhat arbitrary, and his 
action led to a serious quarrel with Bishop Foxe of Winchester 
and others in 15x2. 

SeeW F Hook. Lms of the Archbishop* ef Canterbury (1*60-1*7*)} 
I Gairdner in Diet Nat. Btog . vol fix. (1899). a«d The English 
I Chunk tn Ike i6lh Century (1902). J S Brewer, Reign of Henry 
i VUI. <i*44),*pd A. F. Pollard, Honry VIJI. O905).. 



3*6 



WARKWORTH— WARNER, O. L. 



WARKWORTH, a small town in the Wansbeck parliamentary 
division of Northumberland, England, 32 m. N. of Newcastle- 
upon-Tyne by the North-Eastem railway. Pop. (1901) 712. 
It is beautifully situated in a hollow of the river Coquet, i\ m. 
above its mouth, where on the S. bank is Amble, an urban 
district (pop. 4428), with a harbour. An ancient bridge of two 
arches crosses the river, with a fortified gateway on the road 
mounting to the castle, the site of which is surrounded on three 
sides by the river. Of this Norman stronghold there are fine 
remains, including walls, & gateway and hall, while the re- 
mainder, including the Lion tower and the keep, is of the 13th 
and 14th centuries. Roger Fitz-Richard held the manor and 
probably built the earliest parts of the castle in the reign' of 
Henry IL The lordship came to the Peraes in Edward III 's 
reign and is still held by their descendants the dukes of North- 
umberland, though it passed from them temporarily after the 
capture of the castle by Henry IV. in 1405, and again on the 
fall of the house of Lancaster. The foundation of Warkworth 
church is attributed to Ceolwulf, king of Northumbria (c 736), 
who subsequently became a monk. It was the scene of a massacre 
by a Scottish force sent by William the Lion in z 1 74. The church 
is principally of Norman and Perpendicular work, but remains 
of the Saxon building have been discovered. In the vicinity 
are remains of a Benedictine priory of the 13th century. By the 
side of the Coquet above the castle is the Hermitage of Wark- 
worthi This remarkable relic consists of an outer portion built 
of stone, and an inner portion hewn from the steep rock above 
the river. This inner part comprises a chapel and a smaller 
chamber, both having altars. There is an altar-tomb with a 
female effigy in the chapel. From the window between the 
inner chamber and the chapel, and from other details, the date 
of the work may be placed in the latter part of the 14th century, 
the characteristics being late Decorated. The traditional Story 
of the origin of the hermitage, attributing it to one of the 
Bertrams of Bothal Castle in this county, is told in Bishop 
Percy's ballad The Hermit of Warkworth (1771). At Amble are 
ruins of a monastic toll-house, where a tax was levied on shipping ; 
and Coquet Island, 1 m. off the mouth of the river, was a 
monastic resort from the earliest times, like the Fame and Holy 
Islands farther north. The harbour at Amble has an export 
trade in coal and bricks, coal and fireclay being extensively 
worked in the neighbourhood, and an import trade in timber. 

WARLOCK, a wizard, sorcerer or magician (see Magic). The 
word in O. Eng. i&warloga, literally "a liar against the truth," 
from war, truth, cognate with Lat verum (cf. Ger. wahr), and 
toga, liar, from Uogan, to lie (cf. Ger. Ulgen). It was thus used 
with the meaning of a traitor, deceiver, a breaker of a truce. 
In M. Eng. it is found as a name for the devil (warlogke), the arch 
liar and deceiver. The use of the word for a sorcerer or wizard, 
one whose magic powers are gained by his league with the devil, 
seems to be a northern English or Scottish use. 

WARMINSTER, a market town in the Westbury parlia- 
mentary division of Wiltshire, England, 100J m. W. by S. of Lon- 
don by the Great Western railway. Pop. of urban district door) 
S547 Its white stone houses form a long curve between the 
uplands of Salisbury Plain,which sweep away towards the north 
and east, and the tract of park and meadow land lying south and 
west. The cruciform church of St Denys has a 14th-century 
south porch and tower St Lawrence** chapel, a chantry built 
under Edward I,, was bough 1 by the townsfolk at the Refor ■ra- 
tios. Warminster baa also a free school established in 170?, a 
missionary college, a training home for lady mis 
a reformatory for boys. Beside* a sill mfit, 
engineering gjid agricultural i nplcmeju wm4s> I 
trade in farm produce. 

Warminster appears In Dot 
whose tenant was bound to 1 
lodging for [he king ai 
by George III. when 
from Rath, From* 
a busy coatfui 
great Bri!« 



on the north, where its entrenchments are double; and Scratohr 
bury, a line of outworks encircling an area of some 40 acres, 
with three entrances and a citadel in the midst. Barrows are 
numerous. Longleat, a seat of the marquesses of Bath, lies 5 m. 
S.E., surrounded by its deer park, crossed from N. to S. by a long 
and narrow mere. The house is one of the largest and most 
beautiful examples in the county, dating from the close of the 
z6th century. Its name is derived from the " leat " or conduit 
which conveyed water from Horningsham, about z m. south, to 
supply the mill and Austin priory founded here late in the 
13th century The monastic estates passed at the Dissolution to 
the Thynne family, who built Longleat. Sir Christopher Wren 
added certain staircases and a doorway. In 1670 the owner 
was the celebrated Thomas Thynne satirized in Drydea's 
Absalom and Achiiophd, and Bishop Ken found a home at 
Longleat for twenty years after the loss of bis bishopric 

WARNER, CHARLES DUDLEY (1829- 1000), American 
essayist and novelist, was born of Puritan ancestry, in Plainfield, 
Massachusetts, on the 12th of September 1829. From his sixth 
to his fourteenth year he lived in Charlemont, Mass., the scene 
of the experiences pictured in his delightful study of childhood. 
Being a Boy (1877). He removed thence to Cazenovia, New 
York, and in 1851 graduated from Hamilton College, Clinton, 
NY. He worked with a surveying party in Missouri; studied 
law at the university of Pennsylvania; practised in Chicago 
(1856-1860); was assistant editor (i860) and editor (1861- 
1867) of The Hartford Press, and after The Press was merged 
into The Hartford Courant, was co-editor with Joseph R. Hawlcy; 
in 1884 he joined the editorial staff of Harper's Magazine, for 
which he conducted " The Editor's Drawer " until J892, when 
he took charge of " The Editor's Study." He died in Hartford 
on the 20th of October 1900. He travelled widely, lectured 
frequently, and was actively interested in prison reform, city 
park supervision and other movements for the public good. 
He was the first president of the National Institute of Arts and 
Letters, and, at the time of his death, was pres^cnt of the 
American Social Science Association. He first attracted atten- 
tion by the reflective sketches entitled My Summer in a Garden 
(1870, first published in The Hartford Courant), popular for 
their abounding and refined humour and mellow personal charm, 
their wholesome love of out-door things, their suggestive comment 
on life and affairs, and their delicately finished style, qualities 
that suggest the work of Washington Irving. Among his other 
works are Saunlerings (descriptions of travel in eastern Europe, 
1872) and Back-Log Studies (1872); Baddeck, and Thai-Sort of 
Thing (1874), travcb in Nova Scotia and elsewhere; My Winter 
on the Nile (1876); In the Levant (1876); In the Wilderness 
(1878), A Roundabout Journey, in Europe (1883); On Horseback, 
in the Southern States (1888); Studies in the South and West, 
with Comments on Canada (1889); Our Italy, southern California 
((891). The Relation of Literature to Life (1896); The People 
for Whom Shakespeare Wrote (1897); and Positions in Literature 
(1902). He also edited " The American Men of Letters " series, 
to which he contributed an excellent biography of Washington 
Irving (1881), and edited a large " Library of the World's Best 
Literature." His other works include his graceful essays, As 
We Were Saying (1891) and As We Co (1893); and his novels, 
rfc.{5#& 4f* $n collaboration with Mark Twain, 1873); 
ThtirT.ftf image (1SS6); A Littic Journey in the Ifforld (1889); 
■ ■ f 1 H) ; and Thai fortune (1889). 



WARNER. C 




ch by T. R. Lounsbury in the Complete 
t. 1904) of Warner. 

(r&44-iSo6), American sculptor, was 
r-iectkut, on the 9th of April 1844, 
■j.\\-}\ operator, by 1869 he had 
through a course of study 
.u.T. He was in France when 
70 and enlisted in the Foreign 
the termination of the siege. 
where, however, he met with 
i fcbetft (arm in Vermont, 
and plated wax* «» well 



WARNER, S.~ WARRANT 



327 



is makers erf mantel ornaments. He attracted the attention of 

Daniel Cottier, of the Cottier Art Galleries of New York, where 

Warner's work was exhibited, and some commissions gradually 

secured (or him recognition. They were followed by busts of 

Aldcn Weir, the artist, and of Mand Morgan, the musician; 

some decorations for the Long Island Historical Society; statnes 

of Governor Buckingham at the Stale Capitol. Hartford, Conn., 

ffiZuam Lloyd Garrison and General Charles Devens, at Boston; 

reliefs of several striking North American Indian types, a 

fountain for Portland, Oregon, and the designs for the bronze 

doors, "Tradition" and "Writing," of the Congressional 

Library at Washington, of which be lived to complete only the 

former, which contains the beautiful figures of " Imagination " 

ind M Memory." Warner died in New York City on the 14th 

of August 1896. He was one of the five charter members of the 

Society of American Artists (1877), and in 1889 became an 

academician, National Academy of Design, New York. One of 

his best -known works is a •• Diana." He designed the souvenir 

silver half -dollar piece for the Columbia Fair at Chicago, in 1803, 

auking also some colossal heads of great artists for the art palace, 

Mad busts of Governors Clinton and Flower, of New York Slate 

WARNER, 8ETH (1743-1784), American Revolutionary 

soldier, was born fn Roxbnry, Connectirat, on the 17th of May 

r;43- He removed with his father to the M New Hampshire 

Grants " in 1 763, and became prominent among the young men 

who forcibly resisted New York's daim to the territory (see 

VnuKmr). At the outbreak of the War of Independence, he 

led the detachment of " Green Mountain Boys " which captured 

Crown Point (0 v.) on the nth of May 1775. and took part in the 

unsuccessful expedition against Quebec later in t he year In July 

1776 Ike became colonel in the Continental Army, and served 

throughout the war. He retired in 1782, and returned to 

Rozbury, where he died in 2784. 

See Daniel Chipmao, Lift (Burlington, Vt., 1858}. 

WABMSR. WILLIAM (15587-1600), English poet, was 

born in London about 7558 He was educated at Magdalen 

Hall, Oxford, but left the university without taking a degree 

He practised in London as an attorney, and gained a great 

reputation among his contemporaries as a poet. His chief 

work is a long poem in fourteen-syllabled verse, entitled Album's 

England (1586), and dedicated to Henry Carey, 1st Baron 

Hmwdrm. His history of his country begins with Noah, and is 

brought down to Warner's own time The chronicle is by no 

means continuous, and is varied by fictitious episodes, the best 

known of which is the idyll fn the fourth book of the loves 

of Azgentille, the daughter of the king of Deira, and the Danish 

prince, Curan, Here Warner's simple art shows itself at its best. 

His book, perhaps on account of its patriotic subject, was very 

popular, but it is difficult to understand how Francis Meres came 

to rank him with Spenser as the chief hcroical poets of the day, 

and to institute a comparison between htm and Euripides. 

Warner died suddenly at AmwcU in Hertfordshire on the 9th 

of March 1600. 

H« other works are Pan his Syrinx, or Fife, Compact of Seven 



•** * P?•* ,, 2 ,mo V• «dttioa (161a) contains sixteen books. It was 
ttpnntmd (18 10) m Alexander Chalmers's Eatlxsk Poets. 

WABJfSOORP, a town of Bohemia, Austria, 124 m. N.E. of 
Prague ^y raiL Pop. ( xooo ) 21,150. Warnsdorf was formed 
a 1*70 ^y uniting seven separate village communities, and as 
fiowoiieoff utelargest townsin Bohemia. It is a great industrial 

tJc~*£Llh * ? 0Wtt of BriUsn India » k Chanda district of 
1> " M *^5 n>v ?aces, on a branch of the Great Indian Peninsula 

**y* (1901) 




ffillAi» Important industry. 

"* fcEf ^ «-«• ~™'*»; a Fr. . 

***MJ- root represented in modern German by 



gewOhren), in English law, an authority in writing empowering ' 
a person to do an act or to execute an office. The procedure 
known as quo warranto (q*) is used to determine the right 
to hold certain kinds of public office. The term " warrant " 
occurs very early in constitutional documents it is found in the 
Assize of Clarendon and the Assise of the Forest, both in the 
reign of Henry II., but in neither case in its modern meaning. 
The original meaning seems to have been more akin to guarantee 
(f.v), warranty or security; and to some extent the term 
implies something in the nature of a guarantee or representation 
by the person issuing the warrant that the person who acts on 
it can do so without incurring any legal penalty The term is 
applied to a great variety of documents of very different kinds, 
which may be classified as (1) executive or administrative, (2) 
judicial or quasi-judicial and ^3) financial or commercial. 

1 Executive and A dmtnxstratsve. — While the royal prerogative was 
insufficiently defined and limited, a great many executive acts were 
authorized by royal warrant {per spectale mandahtm reps), which 
now cither depend on statute or are dealt with by departments 
of state without the need of recourse to the personal authority of 
the sovereign. Under present constitutional practice royal warrants " 
are as a general rule countersigned by a member of the cabinet or 
other responsible officer of state. By an act of 1435 (18 Hen. VI. 
c. 1) letters patent under the great seal must bear the date of the 
royal warrant delivered to the chancellor for their issue This act 
still applies to all patents, except for inventions. The form and 
countersignature of warrants for affixing the great seal it regulated 
by the Great Seal Act 1884. Pardon, which was granted lor centuries 
only by letter* patent under the great seal, has since 1837 in England 
and 1828 in Ireland been granted in case of Felony by warrant under 
the royal sign manual countersigned by a secretary of state (7 St 8 
Geo IV c. 28, s. 13, o Geo. IV. e. 54. a 33) The prerogative of 
the crown with reference to the control of the navy and army is 
largely exercised by the issue of warrants. In 1871 the purchase of 
commissions io the army was abolished by royal warrant, said to 
have been authorized by statute (49 Geo. III. c 126). but afterwards 
confirmed by parliament (34 & 35 Vict, c 86). Under existing legis- 
lation for the government of the military fasces of the crown royal 
warrants are used to form array corps, to deal with certain details 
as to payand regimental debts, and with the milhia and reserve 
forces. The convocation of naval courts-martial and the appoint- 
of judec-advocate and provost-marshal at such court is by 
nt of the Admiralty or of the officer on foreign or detached 
service who by his commission is entitled to convene such a court 
(see Naval Discipline Act 1866, a 58; Army Act 1881, s. 179). 
A general court-martial for the army is constituted by royal warrant 
or convened by an officer authorised to convene such court, or his 
lawful delegate (Army Act 1881. a 48). Appointments to certain 
offices under the crown are made by warrant of the king or of the 
appropriate department of state. In the navy and army the 
officers called warrant officers are so styled because they are appointed 
by warrant and do not hold commissions. In 160a the censorship of 
the stage was committed to the poet Daniel by royal warrant (see 
Theatbs). and certain tradesmen to the court are described as 
" warrant holders," because of the mode of their appointment. 
Abuses of claims to this distinction are punishable (Merchandise 
Marks Act 1887, a 20; Patents Act 1883, s. 107). Warrants under 
the royal sign manual arc subject to a ten-shUling stamp duty 
(Sump Act 1891). The issue of warrants under the hand of a 
secretary of state, so far as they affect personal liberty, depends 
in every case on statute, e.g. as to the surrender of fugitive criminals 
(Extradition), or the deportation of undesirable aliens (see Alien). 
or the bringing up prisoners as witnesses in courts of justice. The 
right of a secretary of state or the lord-lieutenant in Ireland by 
express warrant in writing to detain or open letters in the post 
office was recognized by orders in council and proclamations in the 

Kth century and by various post office acts, and is retained in the 
«t Office Act 1836 (a 25). The right was challenged, but was 
finally established by the reports of committees of both Houses 
appointed in 1844 on a complaint by Mazzini and others that Sir 
James Graham, then home secretary, bad opened their letters. 
It was exercised as recently as 1881 over the letters of persons 
suspected of treasonable correspondence in Ireland. The warrant 
of a law officer of the crown for sealing letters patent for inventions 
(necessary under the old patent law) has been superseded by other 
procedure since the Patents Act 1883. 

a Judicial and Quasi- Judicial Warrants.— Unless a statute 
otherwise provides a judicial warrant must be m writing under the 
seal, if any. of the court, or under the hand and (or) seal of the 
functionary who grants it. Committal for breach of privilege of the 
House of Commons is by warrant of the Speaker. During the Tudor 
and Stuart reigns frequent attempts were made by the crown and 
great officers of state to interfere with personal liberty, especially 
as to offences of state. The legality of these proceedings was 
challenged by the judges in Elizabeth's reign. On the abolition of 
the Star Chamber ft was enacted (16 Car I.e. to) that if any person 



328 



WARRANT OF ATTORNEY 



be imprisoned by warrant of the king in person, of the council 
board, or any of the privy council, he is entitled to a writ of habeas 
corpus, and the courts may examine into the legality of the cause of 
detention. This enactment, and the Habeas Corpus Act 1679, out 
an end to the interference of the executive with matters belonging 
to the judicature; but until 1763 there survived • practice by 
which a secretary of state issued warrants to arrest . individuals for 
state offences, and to search or seize the books and papers of the 
accused. The latter practice was examined and declared illegal in 
the famous case of En tick v. Carrington (19 How. St. Tr. 1030). 
All privy councillors are included in the commission of the peace 
for every county. The council itself is said to have power to issue 
warrants of arrest for high treason, but the power, if it exists, 
is in abeyance in England. The special powers given to the lord- 
lieutenant of Ireland in 1881 (44 & 45 Vict. c. 5) expired in 1906. 
As a result of the gradual restriction of the royal prerogative, the 
term warrant has come in modern times oftenest to be used of 
documents issuing from courts of justice. Few documents issuing 
from the superior courts are called warrants. In these courts writs 
and orders are more generally used. In courts of record which try 
indictments a " bench warrant " is sometimes used for the arrest of 
an absent defendant, but the word warrant has for judicial purposes 
become most closely associated with the jurisdiction of justices ol 
the peace. As a general rule no one can be arrested without warrant. 
To this rule there are certain exceptions either at common law or 
by statute. At common law a justice of the peace, a sheriff, a 
coroner, a constable and even a private person, may arrest any one 
without warrant for a treason, felony or breach of the peace com- 
mitted, or attempted to be committed, in his presence. A constable 
(whether a constable at common law or a police constable appointed 
under the Police Acts) may arrest a person indicted for felony; a 
constable or a private person may arrest on reasonable suspicion 
that he who is arrested has committed a felony. But in the latter 
case he does so at his peril, for he most prove (what the constable 
need not) that there has been an actual commission of the crime 
by some one, as well as a reasonable ground for suspecting the 
particular person. What is a reasonable ground it is of course im- 



and the police may assist in the arrest. In neither case is a warrant 
necessary. Nor is it necessary for the apprehension of one against 
whom the hue and cry is raised. The king cannot arrest in person 
or by verbal command, as no action would He against him for wrong- 
ful arrest. Statutory powers of arrest without warrant are given to 
both constables and private persons by many statutes, e.g. the Night 
Poaching Act 1828, certain of the Criminal Law Consolidation Acts 
of 1861, the Prevention of Crime Act 1871 and Police Acta. In 
those eases in which arrest without warrant is illegal or is found 
inexpedient, information in writing or on oath is laid Wore a justice 
of the peace setting forth the nature of the offence charged and to 
some extent the nature of the evidence implicating the accused; 
and upon this information, if sufficient in the opinion of the justice 
applied to, he issues his warrant for the arrest of the person in- 
criminated. The warrant t if issued by a competent court as to a 
matter over which it has jurisdiction, becomes a judicial authority 
to the person who executes it, and resistance to such a warrant is a 
criminal offence. The possession of a legal warrant by a peace officer 
on arrest is of great importance in determining whether a person 
resisting apprehension is justified or not in his resistance Should 
the officer attempt to apprehend him on a warrant manifestly 
illegal on its face, or without a warrant in a case where a warrant n 
necessary, and be killed in the attempt, the killing would probably be 
held to be manslaughter and not murder. Before bringing an action 
against constables for alleged illegal arrest under a justice's warrant 
the complainant must apply for theperusaland a copy of the warrant 
(24 Geo. II. c. 44, s. 6; Pollock, Torts, 6th ed., 117). Entry upon 
the land or seizure of property cannot as a rule be justified except 
under judicial warrant. The only common law warrant of this kind 
is the search warrant, which may be granted for the purpose of 
search ing for stolen goods. Special powers for issuing such warrants 
are given by the Army, Merchant Snipping, Customs, Pawnbrokers 
and Stamp Acts, and for the discovery of explosives or appliances 
for coining and forgery. The Criminal Law Amendment Act 1885 
allows the issue of search warrants where it is suspected that a 
female is unlawfully detained for immoral purposes. Execution of 
the decisions of a court of summary jurisdiction is secured by warrants, 
part of the process of the court, such as warrants of distress or 
commitment. A warrant may also issue for the apprehension of a 
witness whose attendance cannot be otherwise assured. The forms 
of warrants used by justices in indictable cases are scheduled to the 
Indictable- Offences Act 1848. Those used for summary jurisdiction 
are contained in the Summary Jurisdiction Rules of 1880. 

. As a general rule, warrants must be executed within the local 

jurisdiction of the officer who issued them. Warrants, &c, issued 

h" - «-•«— -* the High Court run through England, in criminal as 

-9: and the same rule applies as to courts having 

tion. The warrants of justices of the peace can 

\ pursuit within 7 m. of the boundary of the 

xoperly backed by a local justice or officer in 



any other part of the British islands (tee Straw aav Jurisdiction). 
There is also a special provision as to executing warrants in the border 
counties of England and Scotland. Under the Extradition Acts 
and Fugitive Offenders Act 1881 provision is made for the issue ol 
warrants in aid of foreign and colonial justice; but the foreign and 
colonial warrants have no force in the united Kingdom. 

The word " warrant " is used as to a few judicial or quasi- judicial 
matters of civil concern, e.g. warrant to arrest a ship in an admiralty 
action tn rem ; and in the county courts warrants to the bailiffs of 
the court are used where in the High Court a writ to the sheriff 
would be issued, rr (or attachment, execution, possession and de- 
livery (see County Court Rules, 1903, scheduled forms). A warrant 
of distress for rent issued by a landlord to a bailiff is sometimes 
described as a private warrant, but it is in reality a peculiar quasi- 
judicial remedy derived from feudal relations between lord and 
vassal. Arrest in civil or quasi«civil proceedings is in certain cases 
effected under warrant, e.g. where a bankrupt fails to obey orders 
of the court for his attendance (Bankruptcy Act 1883, »• >5J» and In 
certain cases where justices have summary jurisdiction. 

Financial and Commercial.—- Payment out of the treasury is 
generally made upon warrant. Treasury warrants are regulated by 
many of the acts dealing with the national debt. 

Payment of dividends by trading corporations and companies is 
generally made by means of dividend warrants. Mercantile warrants 
are instruments giving a right to the delivery of goods, generally 
those deposited at a dock or warehouse, and by mercantile custom 
regarded as documents of title to the goods to which they relate. 
They have been recognized by the legislature, especially in the 
Factors Acts. Thus the interpretation clause of the Factors Act 
1889 includes under the head of documents of title, dock warrants 
and warrants for the delivery of goods, and a fuller definition is given 
by a. 1 11 of the Stamp Act 1891, which imposes on such documents 
a stamp duty of 3d. Warrants of attorney are instruments authoriz- 
ing an attorneyto appear for the principal in an action and to consent 
to judgment. They must now be attested by a solicitor and registered 
in the Bill of Sale Office under the Debtors Act 1869. They are now 
little used. The forgery of any warrant of this kind or ol any 
endorsement or assignment thereof is punishable under the Forgery 
Act 1861. 

Scotland. — By art. xxiv. of the Articles of Union, royal warrants 
were to continue to be kept as before the union. The Secretary 
for Scotland Act 1885 enabled the crown by royal warrant to appoint 
the secretary to be vice-president of the Scotch Education Depart- 
ment. The lord advocate's warrant runs throughout the whole 
of Scotland. Warrants issued by courts of summary jurisdiction 
agree in the main with those in use in England, though their names 
are not the same (see Summary Jurisdiction). There are numerous 
statutory provisions as to warrants of other kinds. By the Debtors 
(Scotland) Act 1838 (1 & a Vict. c. 1 14) warrants for diligence, and to 
charge the debtor under pain of imprisonment, may be inserted in 
an extract of decree; and in a summons concluding for payment of 
money a warrant to arrest the movables, debts and money of the 
defender may be included . By the Court of Session Act 1 868 (31 & 33 
Vict, c 100) a warrant of inhibition may be inserted in the will of 
a summons. A crown writ is a warrant for mfeftment (31 Sr 3a 
Vict. c. 101). The same act gives forms of warrants of registration. 
The procedure of the sheriff court in its civil jurisdiction as to 
warrants of citation is regulated by the Sheriff Courts (Scotland) Act 
1907 (7 Edw. VI I. c. m ). The practice as to warrants of citation and 
commitment in the High Court of Justiciary and the sheriff court 
in its criminal jurisdiction now depends chiefly on the Criminal 
Procedure Act 1887 (50 & 51 Vict. c. 35). The meditatio Jugee 
warrant is a judicial warrant on which imprisonment may follow 
until the debtor give tautio juiicio sistu It corresponds to some 
extent to the writ ne exeat regno of English practice, but It may be 
issued by a sheriff (t & a Vict. c. 119, a. 25). Another kind of 
judicial warrant is a border warrant for arresting a debtor on the 
English side of the border. The warrant of attorney is not known 
in Scotland, its place being taken by the clause of registration, 
which is not avoided by the death of the person giving it. 

Untied States.— By the constitutions of the United States and 
of almost all the states, warrants are not to issue but upon probable 
cause, supported by oath or affirmation, and particularly describing 
the place to be searched and the persons or thing to be seized. These 
provisions have been held not to mean that there shall be no arrest 
without warrant, but to confine the right of arrest to circumstances 
similar to those which justify kin English law. The constitutions 
of some states forbid general warrants. A warrant is generally 
necessary for the payment of money out of the United States or a 
state treasury. (W. F. C.) 

WARRANT OP ATTORNEY. A warrant of attorney to confess 
judgment is a security for money (now practically obsolete) in 
the form of an authority to a solicitor named by a creditor, 
empowering him to sign judgment in an action against the 
debtor for the turn due, with a defeasance, or clause that the 
warrant shall not be put into force in case of due payment of 
the money secured. It was often used as a, collateral security, 
either for the payment of an annuity or with mortgages, in 



WARRANT-OFFICER— WAJtREN, G. K. 



order that the mortgagee, by enuring up judgment, might obtain 
priority in the adinintst ration of the assets of the mortgagor. 
The Debtors Act 1869 contained various provisions for making 
known to the debtor the extent oC the liability incurred by him, 
among others that the warrant must be executed in the presence 
of a solicitor named by the debtor, and that it and the defeasance 
must be written on the same paper. A warrant of attorney 
must be duly stamped, generally as a mortgage (e.r.) f and must 
be registered as a judgment in the central office of the Supreme 
Court. 

WARRANT-OFFICER, in the British navy, the name given 
to officers who rank next to those who hold commissions, being 
appointed by warrant* They include the master, purser, surgeon, 
gunner, boatswain and carpenter, the first three being of " ward- 
room rank," ijt. messing with the lieutenants, In the jnttiury 
forces a warrant-officer is appointed by a secretary of state's 
warrant, and ranks below the commissioned, officers and- above 
the noncommissioned officers. A warrantromcer often holds 



WARRANTY, erymologically, another form of Cdajunteb 
fa .*.). It is used, however, in a rather different sense. The 
sense common to both words is that of a collateral contract, 
under which responsibility for an act » incurred, and for the 
breach of which an act ion for damages lies. Warranty generally 
expresses the responsibility of the person doing the act, guarantee 
the resoonsiot lit y of some other person on hia behalf. A warranty 
may be denned, in the words of Lord Abmger, as " an express 
or implied statement of something which the party undertakes 
shall he part of the contract, and, though part of the contract, 
collateral to the express object of it " {CkaiiUr v. Hopkins, 1838, 
4 M. A W. 404). It diners from a condition in that a condition 
forms the basis of the contract and a breach of it discharges 
from the contract, and from a representation in that the latter 
does not affect the contract unless made a part of it expressly, 
or by implication as in contracts of insurance and other contracts 
vberriwuu jEdes, or unless it be fraudulent. These distinctions 
are not always accurately maintained. Thus in the Real Property 
Act 1845, 1 4» condition seems to be used for warranty. 

Warranty at it affected the law of real property was, before the 
pissing of the Real Property Limitation Act 1833 and the Fines 
and Recoveries Act 1833, a matter of the highest importance. A 
warranty in a conveyance was a covenant rcaJannexed to an estate 
of freehold, and either expressed in a clause of warranty or implied 
in cases where a feudal relation might exist between feoffor and 
feoffee. Tbe warranty, as described by Littleton, \ 697. was an 
oatgrowth of feudalism, and something very like it is to be found 
in the Liber Feudcrvm. At the time oiGIanvill the heir was bound 
to warrant the reasonable donations of Ms ancestor. Warranty was 
one of the elements in Braeton's definition of homage, 786, *' juris 
vinculum quo qui* astringitur ad warrantizaodum defendenduro et 
aoquietaadum tenentem suum in seisina versus ©nines." For an 
express warranty the word warranlito or warrant was necessary. 
The word " give " implied a warranty, as did an exchange and 
certain lands of partition. In order to bind heirs a clause of warranty 
was reqored. This was either lineal, collateral or commeacmg by 
disseisin. The differences between the three kinds were very 
technical, and depended on abstruse and obsolete learning. They 
are treated at great length in old works on realproperty, especially 
Coke upon Littleton by Butler, 3*4*. The feoffor or his heirs were 
bound by voucher to warranty or judgment in a writ of worronHa 
duett* to yield other lands to the feoffee in case of the eviction of the 



Vouching to warranty was a part of the old fictitious pro- 
ceedings in a common recovery in use for the purpose of barring an 
ul before" - *" J " . -«-- — .... 



e the Fines and Recoveries Act. Warranty of this nature, 
as far as it relates to the conveyance of real estate, though not 
actually abolished in all possible casts, is now superseded by cove* 
aants for title. The more usual of these are now by the Conveyanc- 
ing Act 1881 deemed to be implied In conveyances. For the implied 
warranties of title and quality see Sals of Goods. Vouching to 
warranty was at one time Important in the law of personality as 
well as of reality. Tbe procedure is fully described in Ghmvill. 
Die right of calling on the holder of lost or stolen goods to vouch 
to warranty (inUrciare), iJ. to give up the name of the person 
from whom be l e u c h r ed them, under pain of forfeiture, was often 
granted under the name of Ikeam as a local franchise. Warranty, 
as it exists at present in the law of personality, is either express or 
implied. There is no general rule as to what constitutes a warranty. 
It ss not necessary that an express warranty should be in writing. 
the law being that every affirmation at the time of sale of personal 
* *i is a warranty, provided that it appears to haws buecv so 



329 

intended. The principal cases of implied warranty occur in the 
contracts of sale and insurance. There is also an implied warranty 
in other kinds of contract, e.g. of seaworthiness by the shipowner in 
a contract between him and a charterer for the hire of a ship. In 
ail cases of implied warranty the warranty may be excluded by the 
special terms of the contract. For breach of warranty an action 
may be brought directly, or the breach may be used as ground for 
a counter claim or for reduction of damages, but the breach will not 
in the case of a warranty proper entitle the person suffering by it to 
a rescission of the contract. Thus in a sale the property passes 
although the warranty be broken. In some cases warranties on sale 
are the subject of statutory enactments, as the Merchandise Marks 
Acts and the Sate of Food and Drugs Acts. In some other acts, 
such as the Bills of Exchange Act 1882, the term warranty does not 
occur, but the practical effect is the same. 

Scotland.— The term corresponding to warranty in the law of 
heritable property n " warrandice/' Warranty, strictly speaking, 
seems confined to movables. Warrandice appears early in Scots 
law, the heir by Rtgiam Majtstalem being bound to warrant the 
reasonable donations of his ancestor. Warrandice in the existing 
law » either real or personal. Real warrandice is that whereby 
warrandice lands arc made over, as indemnity for those conveyed, 
to assure the person to whom they were conveyed from loss by the 
appearance of a superior title. Real warrandice is implied in ex* 
cambion. Its effect is that the excambcr, in case of eviction, may 
recover possession of his original lands. This is not in accordance 
with the English law in exchange, , Personal warrandice is either 
express or implied. There is an implied warrandice in every onerous 
deed, and an absolute warrandice presumes an onerous consideration. 
Express warrandice is either simple, against the future acts of the 
vendor, from fact and deed, against acts whether past or future, or 
absolute, or against all deadly, that is, on any ground existing before 
the sale. A clause of warrandice is the Scottish equivalent of the 
English covenants for title. By the Titles to Land Consolidation 
(Scotland) Amendment Act 1809 a clause of warrandice in the form 
given in tnescheduie to tbe act imports absolute warnmdkeas regards 
the lands and the title-deeds thereof, and warrandice from fact and 
deed as regards the rents. 

Untied 5&xfej.— Warranty in conveyances of real estate is expressly 
abolished by statute in many states. In some states warranty 
is implied on the transfer and indorsement of negotiable instru* 
ments. (J- W.> 

WARREN, GOUVERMETJR KEMBLE (1830-1882), American 
soldier, was born at CoJdspring, New York, on theoth of January 
1830, and entered West Point in 1846, graduating in 185a He 
was assigned to the engineers, and for several years was employed 
in survey work in the West, where he took part in some expedi- 
tions against the Indians. In 1859 he was made assistant 
instructor in mathematics at West Point. But two years later, 
at the outbreak of Urn Civil War, the scientific subaltern was 
made lientenant-cokme* of volunteers and posted to the newly 
raised 5th New York Volunteer Infantry. He was fully equal 
to the task, for his regiment was very soon brought into a state 
of marked efficiency. In August he was promoted colonel. 
He commanded a brigade of the V. corps at Gaines's Mill, Second 
Bull Run and Antietam, and was shortly afterwards promoted 
brigadies-general of Volunteers. During the Fredericksburg 
campaign he was on the engineer staff of the Army of 
the Potomac but after ChanceUorsville he was appointed chief 
of engineers in that army, and in that capacity rendered brilliant 
services at Gettysburg («.*.), his reward being promotion to major* 
general U.S.V. and the brevet of colonel in the regular army* 
When the Army of the Potomac was reorganised in the spring 
of 1864 Warren returned to the V. corps as its commander. 

Hit services in the Wilderness <e.t.) and Petersburg (0/4.) 
campaigns proved his fitness for this large and responsible 
coaunand, but his naturally lively imagination and the 
engineer's Inbred habit of caution combined to make him a 
brilliant but somewhat unsafe subordinate. He would have 
become one of the great chiefs of staff of history, ot even a 
successful army commander, but he sometimes faikd where a 
less highly gifted man. would have succeeded. He was at his 
best when the military situation depended on his exercising 
his initiative, as on the first day in the Wilderness, in which his 
action saved the army, at his worst when, as on the 10th of May 
before Spottsylvanis, he was ordered to attempt the impossible. 
On the latter occasion both Grant and Meade threatened to 
relieve him of his command, and Humphreys, the chief, of staff 
of tbe army, was actually sent to control the roovementa of the 
, V. corps. Similar incidents took place in the later stages of 



"WARREN, SIR J.. B.—WARREM", Sf.'-V 



33© 

the campaign, and at last, at the critical moment preceding the 
battle of Five Forks, Sheridan, who was in charge of the opera- 
tions, was authorized by Grant to relieve Warren of his command 
if he thought fit. The thoughtful Warren and the eager, violent 
Sheridan were ill-matched. At the outset the V. corps, being 
no longer composed of the solid troops of 1862 and 1863, fell 
into confusion, which Warren exerted himself to remedy, and 
in the event the battle was an important Union victory. But 
after it had ended Sheridan sent for Warren and, with no attempt 
to soften the blow, relieved him of his command. A court of 
inquiry was subsequently held, which entirely exonerated 
Warren from the reckless charges of apathy, almost of cowardice, 
which Sheridan brought against him. Shortly after Five Forks 
Warren resigned his volunteer commission, and received the 
brevet of brigadier-general in the regular army. After the 
war he was employed, in the substantive rank of major (1879 
lieutenant-colonel) of engineers, in survey work and harbour 
improvements. General Warren died on the 8th of August 
1882 at Newport, R.I. A statue to his memory was erected at 
Round Top, on the field of Gettysburg, on the sixth anniversary 
of his death. 

WARREN, SIR JOHN BORLASE. Bart. (1753-18"), English 
admiral, was born at Stapleford, Nottinghamshire, on the and 
of September 1753, being the son and heir of John Borlase 
Warren (d. 1775) of Stapleford and Little Mario w. He was 
educated at Emmanuel College, Cambridge, and in 1771 entered 
the navy as an able seaman; in 1774 he became member of 
parliament for Marlow; and in 1775 he was created a baronet, 
the baronetcy held by his ancestors, the Borlases, having become 
extinct in 1689. His career as a seaman really began in 1777, 
and two years later he obtained command of a ship. In April 
1704, in charge of a squadron of frigates, Warren captured 
three French frigates, and in similar ways he did excellent 
service for some time in protecting British trade. In 1796 
he is said to have captured or destroyed 220 vessels. Perhaps 
his best deed in the service was the defeat in October 1798 of a 
French fleet, carrying 5000 men, which it was intended to land in 
Ireland, a plan which he completely frustrated. In 1802 he was 
sent to St Petersburg as ambassador extraordinary, but he did 
not forsake the sea, and in 1806 he captured a large French war- 
ship, the " Marengo." He became an admiral in 1810, and was 
commander-in-chief on the North American station in 1813- 
1814. He died on the 27th of February 1822. His two sons 
predeceased their father, and his daughter and heiress, Frances 
Maria (1784-1837), married George Charles Venables- Vernon, 
4th Lord Vernon (1770-1835). Their son was George John 
Warren Vernon, 5th Lord Vernon (1803-1866). 

WARREN, JOSEPH (1741-1775)1 American politician, was 
born at Roxbury, Massachusetts, on the nth of June 174 1. 
He graduated from Harvard College in 1759, taught in a school 
at Roxbury in 1760-1761,. studied medicine, and began to 
practise in Boston in 1764. The Stamp Act agitation aroused 
his interest in public .questions. He soon became associated 
with Samuel Adams, John Adams and Joslah Quincy, Jr., as a 
leader of the popular party, and contributed articles and letters 
to the Boston GauUe over the signature " True Patriot." The 
efforts of Samuel Adams to secure the appointment of commit tecs 
of correspondence met with his hearty support, and he and 
Adams were the two leading members of. the first Boston com- 
mittee of correspondence, chosen in 1772. As chairman of a 
committee appointed for the purpose, he drafted the famous 
"Suffolk Resolves," which were unanimously adopted by a 
convention at Milton (?.*.) on the 9th of September 1774- • These 
" resolves " urged forcible opposition to Great Britain if it should 
prove to be necessary, pledged submission to such measures 
as the Continental Congress might recommend, and favoured 
the calling of a provincial congress. Warren was a member 
of the first three, provincial congresses (1774-1775), president 
of the third, and an active member of the committee of public 
safety. He took an active part in the fighting on the 19th 
of April, was appointed major-general of the Massachusetts 
' 'ok to Artemos Ward, on the 14th of June 



1775; and three days later, before hi* commission was made out' - 
he look part as a volunteer, under the orders of Putnam and 
Prescott, in the battle of Bunker Hill (Breed's Hilt), where he 
was killed. Next to the Adamses, Warren was the most in- 
fluential leader of the extreme Whig faction in Massachusetts. 
His tragic death strengthened their zeal for the popular cause 
and helped to prepare the way for the acceptance of the Declara- 
tion of Independence. Warren's speeches are typical examples 
of the old style -of American political eloquence. His best- 
known orations were those delivered in Old South Church on 
the second and fifth anniversaries (1772 and 1775) of the' 4 Boston 
Massacre." 

The standard biography is Richard Frothingham'a life and Timet 
of Joseph Want* (Boston, 1865). 

WARREN, MERCY (1798-1814), American writer, sister of 
James Otis (q. ».), was bom at Barnstable, Mass., and m 1754 
married James Warren (1726-1808) of Plymouth Mass., a college 
friend of her brother. Her literary inclinations were fostered 
by both these men, and she began early to write poems and 
prose essays. As member of the Massachusetts House of Rep- 
resentatives (1766-1774) and its speaker (1776-1777 and 
1787-1788), member (1774 and 1775) and president (1775) 
of the Provincial Congress, and. paymaster-general' in 177s, 
James Warren took a leading part in the events of the American 
revolutionary period, and his wife followed its progress with 
keen interest. Her gifts of satire were utilized in her political 
dramas, The Adulator (1773) and The Croup (1775); and John 
Adams, whose wife Abigail was Mercy Warren's close friend, 
encouraged her to further efforts. Her tragedies, " The Sack of 
Rome M and " The Ladies of Castile," were included in her Poems, 
Dramatic and Misceilaneour{i7Qo), dedicated to General Washing- 
ton. Apart frcm their historical interest among the beginnings 
of American literature, Mercy Warren's poems have no permanent 
value. In 1805 she published a History of the American Revolu- 
tion, which was coloured by somewhat outspoken personal 
criticism and was bitterly resentod by John Adams (see his 
correspondence, published by the Massachusetts Historical 
Society, 1 878). James Warren died in 1808, and his wife followed 
him on the 19th of October 1814. 

Sec Elizabeth F. Eilet, Women of the Revolution (1856: new ed. f 
1900) ; an article by Annie Russell Marble in the New England Mag- 
oMnt (April 1903); Alice Brown, Mercy Warren (New York, iflo6)- 

WARREN, MINTON (1850-1907), American classical scholar, 
was born at Pawtucket, Rhode Island, on the 29th of January 
1850, a descendant of Richard Warren, who sailed in the " May- 
flower " in 1620. He was educated at Tufts College and sub- 
sequently at Yale. After three years as a schoolmaster, he wenjt 
to Germany to complete his studies in comparative philology 
and especially in Latin language and literature. Having taken 
the degree of doctor of philosophy at Strassburg in 1879, he 
returned to the United States as Latin professor at Johns 
Hopkins University. In 1899 he was appointed Latin professor 
at Harvard. His life-work was a new edition of Terence, which, 
however, he left unfinished at his death. He was director of 
the American School of Classical Studies In Rome (1897-1899), 
and president of the American Philological Association (1898). 
Among his publications are: " Enclitic Ne in Early Latin " 
(Strassburg dissert., reprinted in Amer. Journ. of Pkitol. % 188 1); 
On Latin Glossaries, with especial reference to the Codex Sangal-, 
lensis (St Gall Glossary) (Cambridge, U.S. A., 1885); TkcSteU 
Inscription in the Roman Forum (Amer. J own. of Philol., vol. 
xxviii. No. 3, and separately in 1908). He died on the 26th 
of November 1907. 

See Harvard Magazine (Jan. 1908) and W. M. Lindsay in Classical 
Review (Feb. 1908). 

WARREN, SAVUBL (1807-1877), English lawyer and author, 
son of Dr Samuel Warren, rector of All Souls', Ancoats, Man- 
chester, was born near Wrexham in Denbighshire on the ajrd 
of May 1807. The elder Samuel Warren (1 781-1861) became a 
Weslcyan minister, but was expelled by Conference in 1835 on 
account of his attitude towards proposals for the establishment, 
oi a theological tnunfrg college at, Manchester. Ha formed t> 



WARREN, W.— WARRENSBURG 



new association, the members of which were nicknamed Warren- 
ites, and this developed into the United Methodist Free Churches. 
Warren himself took orders in the Church of England. His son, 
the younger Samuel Warren, studied medicine at the University 
of Edinburgh, but abandoned this to study for the English bar. 
He entered the Inner Temple in 2828, and was successful in 
bit profession. He took silk in 1851, was made recorder of Hull 
m 1852, represented Midhurst m parliament for" three years 
(1856-1850) and was rewarded in 2859 with a mastership in 
lunacy. He had already written a good deal on the subject of 
insanity in its legal aspects, and he was always a determined 
opponent of the rising school of medical alienists who were 
more and more in favour of reducing certain forms of crime to a 
state of mental aberration which should not be punished outside 
of asylums. Meantime he had made much more brilliant success 
in fiction. Very early in his career he had began to'write for 
Blackwood. His Passages from the Diary of a Late Physician 
were published in that magazine between August 2830 and 
August 2837, and appeared in collected form in 1838. These 
realistic short stories, with a somewhat morbid interest shielded 
under a moral purpose, were extremely popular. Warren's 
brief experience as a medical student thus stood him in good 
stead. But his great success was Ten Thousand a Year, which 
ran in Blackwood from October 1834) to August i&fr, and was 
published separately immediately on its conclusion. Critics 
complained of the coarse workmanship, the banality of the 
moralizing, the crudeness of the pathos, the farcical extravagance 
of the humour; but meantime the work proved one of the most 
popular novels of the century. Of the higher qualities of imagina- 
tion and passion Warren was destitute, but his sketches of 
character, especially farcical character — Tittlebat Titmouse, 
Oily Gammon, Mr Quicksilver (an open caricature of Lord 
Brougham)— are bold and strong, forcibly imprinted on the 
memory, and the interest of the story is made to run with a 
powerful current. For several years Warren was known as the 
author of Ten Thousand a Year, and many tales were told of 
his open pride in the achievement. In 1847 he made another 
venture, but Now and Then was not a success. The Lily and the 
Btt, a squib on the Crystal Palace, published in i8sr, though it 
had the honour of translation into Italian, was a signal failure. 
A pessimistic dissertation on The Intellectual and Moral Develop- 
ment of the Age, published in 7853, also fell flat, and thenceforth 
Warren, after publishing his Works: Critical and Imaginative, 
in four volumes in 7854, retired on his laurels. He died in 
London on the 29th of July 1877. 

• Warren also wrote several legal works of repute — Introduction to 
Law Studies (1835), Extracts from Blackshne (1837), Manual of 
PariiamaUary Law (1 8p). 

- WARREN, WILLIAM (1812-1888), American actor, was born 
in Philadelphia on the 17th of November 1812, the son of an 
English actor (1767-1832) of the same name. His first stage 
appearance was made there as Young Norval in Home's Douglas 
in 1832. A dozen years of wandering theatrical life followed, 
giving him a wide experience in every kind of part, the last few 
in comedy in a company headed by his brother-in-law, J B Rice. 
In 1846 he made his first appearance in Boston as Sir Lucius 
OTrigger in The Rivals at the Howard Athenaeum, and in the 
next season he became a member of the Boston Museum, in 
which stock company he remained for thirty-five years. Here 
he held his " Golden Jubilee " on the 28th of October 1S82. 
He died on the 21st of September 1888. 

WARREN, a city and the county-scat of Trumbull county, 
Ohio, U.S.A., in the N.E. part of the state, on the Mahoning river, 
about 50 m. S.E. of Cleveland, and 14 m. N\V. of Youngslown. 
Pop. (1800)5973, (1900) 8520(1161 foreign-born); (1910) 11,081. 
Warren is served by the Erie, the Pennsylvania, and the Balti- 
more & Ohio railways. The city has a public library and a 
hospital. The surrounding country is devoted to farming, 
dairying and coal and iron mining. The total value of the 
factory products in 1005 was $2,474,379. The first permanent 
white settlement on the site of Warren (I hen owned by Connecti- 
cut) was made in 2799 ty settlers from Washington county, 



331 

Pennsylvania- Warren was named in honour of a surveyor- 
Moses Warren, of New Lyme, Connecticut— employed by the 
Connecticut Land Company, which sold the land to the first 
settlers. The county was named in honour of Governor Jonathan 
Trumbull of Connecticut Warren was chartered as a city in 
2834, For several years before September 2909 Warren was 
the national headquarters of the National American Woman's 
Suffrage Association. 

See History of Trumbull and Mahoning Counties (2 vols., Cleveland. 
Ohio, 1.88a), and a T. Upton, History of TrumbuU County (Chicago, 
1909). 

WARREN, a borough and the county-seat of Warren county, 
Pennsylvania, U.S.A., on the N. side of the Allegheny river at 
the mouth of the Conewango river, about 35 m. N.E. of Titus- 
ville. Pop. (1880) 2810; (1890) 4332; (1900) 8043, of whom 
1529 were foreign-bora; (1910 census) 11,080. The foreign 
element is largely Swedish, Danish and Slavish. Warren is 
served by the Pennsylvania and the Dunkirk, Allegheny Valley 
&■ Pittsburg railways, and by electric railway to Jamestown, 
New York. Among the public buildings and institutions are 
the county court house, a state hospital for the insane (established 
1873), a Y.M.C.A. building and a state armoury. Warren is 
situated at the southern foot of a high sheer ridge, m a region 
rich in oil and natural gas; the borough ships and refines oil, 
and has various manufactures. The total value of its factory 
product in 1905 was $5,976,005 (62 4% more than in 1900), 
of which 83,038,894 was the value of refined oil and $1,220, 165 
the value of foundry and machine-shop products. The borough 
owns and operates the water-works and the electric lighting plant. 
The town site of Warren was laid out by commissioners appointed 
by Governor Thomas Mifflin in 1795, and Warren was incorpor- 
ated as a borough in 1832; it was named in honour of Joseph 
Warren, the American patriot. In 2895 part of Glade township 
was annexed. 

See J. S. Schenck and W. S. Rann, History of Warren County, 
Peunsybania (Syracuse, N.Y., 1887). 

WARREN, properly an old term of the English forest law, 
derived from the O. Fr. warenne, varenne, garenne (med. Lat 
warenna, warir, to guard, cf. *' ward "), and applied to one of 
the three lesser franchises, together with '* chase " and M paris," 
Included under the highest franchise, the " forest," and ranking 
last in order of importance. The " beasts of warren " were the 
hare, the coney (i.e. rabbit), the pheasant and the partridge. 
The word thus became used of a piece of ground preserved for 
these beasts of warren. It is now applied loosely to any piece 
of ground, whether preserved or not, where rabbits breed (see 
Forest Laws). 

WARRErTPOIHT, a seaport and watering-place of county 
Down, Ireland, the terminus of a branch of the Great Northern 
railway, by which it is 50} m. S.S.W. of Belfast. Pop. (1901) 
1817. It lies on the northern shore of the beautiful Cariingford 
Lough; behind it rise the Mourae Mountains, while across the 
lough are the Cariingford Hills, with Slieve GuDion. These 
hills afford shelter from inclement winds, and give Warrenpoint 
and other neighbouring watering-places on the lough a climate 
which renders them as popular in winter as in summer. There 
Is a quay here where large vessels can discharge, and agricultural 
produce is exported. The shores of the lough are studded with 
country scats lying picturesquely on the well- wooded hill slopes; 
and nearly 3 m. E. of Warrenpoint (connected by tramway) 
is Rosstrevor, one of the most noted watering-places in Ireland, 
charmingly situated in a position open to the sea, but enclosed 
on the north and cast. 

WARRENSBURG, a dty and the county-scat of Johnson 
county, Missouri, U.S.A., on a hilly site near the Blackwater 
Fork of the La Mine river, in the west central part of the state, 
about 65 m. S.E. of Kansas City. Pop. (1890) 4706; (1900) 
4724, including 556 negroes and 127 foreign-born; (igto) 4689. 
It is served by the Missouri Pacific railway. The city is the seat 
of a state normal school (opened in 1872), and among the pro- 
minent buildings are the court house and the railway station, 
both built of local sandstone. Pertle Springs, about i|m. S., 



33* 



WARRINGTON— WARRISTON, LORD 



is a summer resort Warrensburg fa a shipping and supply 
point for a rich farming region. In the immediate vicinity 
there are extensive quarries of a blue sandstone, one of the best 
building stones of the state. Warrensburg was made the county- 
seat in 1836. Its settlement dates from a little earlier. The 
present city is not on the site of the original settlement, but 
is near it; the old town was abandoned in 1857, when the railway 
passed by it. During the Civil War Warrensburg was a Union 
post. 

WARRINGTON, a market town and municipal, county and 
parliamentary borough of Lancashire, England, on the river 
Mersey, midway between Manchester and Liverpool, and 182 
m. N.W. by N. from London by the London & North-Western 
railway. Pop. (2891) 53,288; (1901) 64,242. It has extensive 
local connexions by way of the Cheshire lines. The church of 
St Elphin is a fine cruciform building with lofty central tower 
and spire. The style is Decorated,* but restoration has been 
heavy. A much earlier church formerly occupied the site, and 
of this the crypt remains beneath the existing chancel. The town 
hall, a -classical building of the i8lh century, was formerly a 
residence, and was purchased by the corporation in 1872, while 
the park in which it stands was devoted to public use. The 
other chief buildings are the museum and free library, with 
technical institute and the market hall. The educational 
institutions include a free grammar school, founded by one of 
the Boteler family in 1526, and a blue-coat school (1665). A 
few half-timbered houses of the 27th century remain in the 
Streets. A wide system of electric tramways and district light 
railways is maintained by the borough. Warrington and the 
neighbourhood are an important centre of the tanning industry. 
There are also iron bar, hoop and wire works, tool, soap, glass 
and chemical works, foundries and cotton mills. Considerable 
agricultural markets and fairs are held. The parliamentary 
borough (1832), returning one member, extends into Cheshire. 
The town was incorporated in 1847, and the corporation consists 
of a mayor, 9 aldermen and 27 councillors. Area 3058 acres. 

Warrington (otherwise Walintune, Werinton, Werington) 
is supposed to be of British origin, and the great Roman road 
from Chester to the north passed through it. There was a 
Romano-British village— perhaps also a military post— at 
Wilderspool. It is mentioned in Domesday Book as the head 
of a hundred. After the Conquest it became one of the possessions 
of Roger de Poictou. In Henry L'a reign a barony was formed 
for Pain de Vilars, of .which Warrington was the head and to 
which it gave the name, and from that family both manor and 
barony passed to the Botelers or Butlers, who first established 
their residence on the mote hill and before 1280 built Bewsey 
in Burton wood. The Butlers held both barony and manor till 
1586, when the barony lapsed and the manor passed after some 
vicissitudes to the Ireland* of Bewsey, then to the Booths and 
in 1769 to the Blackburns. In 1255 William le Boteler obtained 
a charter from Henry III. for an annual fair to last three days 
from the eve of St Thomas the Martyr (18th July). In 1277 
Edward I. granted a charter for a weekly market on Friday 
and an annual fair of eight days beginning on the eve of St 
Andrew (30th Nov.), and in 1285 another charter changing the 
market day from Friday to Wednesday and extending the summer 
fair to eight days. The market and fairs had, however, existed 
before the granting of these charters. Blome in 1673 speaks 
of Warrington market as an important one " for linen cloth, 
corn, cattle, provisions and fish, being much resorted to by the 
Welshmen," and in 1730 Defoe says the market was especially 
famous for " a sort of table linen called Huk-a-back or Huk-a- 
bulc." The fairs are still held, as well as the Wednesday chartered 
market, besides a Saturday market which is probably customary. 
In the z8th and early 19th centuries the chief industries were 
huckabacks and coarse cloths, canvas, fustians, pins, glass, 
sugar-refining and copper. During the Civil War the inhabitants 
emhxa£t4te {jttfc ca^ and the carl of Derby occupied the 
tOwn^ JMyuidttBgMiiil' lTlBl?|[|lii mll|l|ilHi 1 1 in 111 ill 1 to secure 

the parliamentary 
} siege, as Lord Derby | 




began to set the town on fire. Lord-Derby left Colonel Edward 
Norris in command and in -May the parliamentarians again 
attacked the town, which was forced to surrender after a six 
days' siege owing to lack of provisions. In 1648, after the royalist 
defeat at Winwick by Cromwell, part of the royal forces under 
General Baillie rallied at Warrington, hoping to effect the passage 
of the bridge, but failed, and the general with 4O00 men capitu- 
lated. In August 1659 Sir George Booth, lord of the manor, 
was defeated at Winnington, and part of his forces surrendered 
at Warrington to the parliamentary garrison. During the 
Rebellion of 1745, on the approach of Prince Charles Edward 
from Manchester, the bridge was cut down and the lew stragglers 
who ventured that way seised. A borough was created by 
William le Boteler about 1230 by a charter which has not beta 
preserved; but its growing strength alarmed the lord who 
contrived to repress it before 1300, and for over 500 yean 
Warrington was governed by the lord's manor court A charter 
of incorporation was granted in 1847. By the Reform Act of 
1832 the town returns one member to parliament. The church 
dedicated to St Elphin is mentioned in Domesday Book, and 
was in early times head of the ancient deanery of Warrington. 
There was a friary of Augustine or Hermit Friars here founded 
apparently about 128a 

WARRISTON. ARCHIBALD JOHNSTON, Lord (1612-1663), 
Scottish judge and statesman, son of James Johnstone (d. 2617), 
a merchant burgess of Edinburgh, was baptised on the 28th of 
March 161 1, educated at Glasgow, and passed advocate at the 
Scottish bar in 1633. He first came into public notice in 2637, 
during the attempt of Charles I. to force the English liturgy 
upon Scotland, when as the chief adviser of the Covenanting 
leaders he drew up their remonstrances. On the 28th of February 
1638, in reply to a royal proclamation, he read to an enormous 
multitude assembled in Grcyfriars churchyard at Edinburgh 
and in presence of the heralds, a strong protestation, and together 
with Alexander Henderson was a principal author of the National 
Covenant of 1638, drawing up himself the second part, which 
consisted in a recapitulation of all the acts of parliament con- 
demning " popery " and asserting the liberties of the Scottish 
church. He was appointed clerk to the tables, and also clerk 
and afterwards procurator or counsel to the general assembly 
held at Glasgow the same year, when he was the means of restor- 
ing several missing volumes of records. In June 1639 he took 
part in the negotiations leading to the treaty of Berwick, when 
his firm attitude was extremely displeasing to the king. He 
urged Charles to refrain from annulling the acts of the assembly 
since this would restrict all future assemblies, to which Charles 
replied " that the devil himself could not make a more uncharit- 
able construction or give a more bitter expression," and on 
Johnston's continuing his speech ordered him to be silent and 
declared he would speak to more reasonable men. 1 In August he 
read a paper before the Scottish parliament, strongly condemning 
its prorogation. In the following year he was appointed to attend 
the general of the army and the committee, and on the 23rd of 
June, when the Scottish forces were preparing to invade England, 
he wrote to Lord Savile asking for definite support from the 
leading opposition peers in England and their acceptance of the 
National Covenant, which drew from the other side at first nothing 
but vague assurances and subsequently the engagement forged 
by Lord Savile with the signatures of the peers. In October 
he was a commissioner for negotiating the treaty of Ripon and 
went to London. He continued after the peace to urge the 
punishment of the incendiaries, and especially of Traquair, 
and in a private interview with the king strongly opposed the 
proposed act of general oblivion. On the king's arriyal in Scotland 
in 1641 he led the opposition on the important constitutional 
point of the control of state appointments, supporting the 
claims of the parliament by an appeal to the state records, which 
he had succeeded in recovering. 

In September Johnston received public thanks for his services 
from the Scottish parliament, and, in accordance with the policy 
of conciliation then pursued for a short time by the king, was 
1 Johnston's " Diary " in Scottish Hist. Soc. Publ. t xxvt. 84. 



WARRNAMBOOL 



333 



appointed on the 13th of November 1641 a lord of session, with 
the title of Lord Warriston (a name derived from an 'estate 
purchased by him near Edinburgh in 1636), was knighted, and 
was given a pension of £200 a year. The same month he was 
appointed a commissioner at Westminster by the parliament 
for settling the affairs of Scotland. He was a chief agent in 
concluding the treaty with the English parliament in the autumn 
of 1643, and was appointed a member of the committee of both 
kingdoms in London which directed the military operations, and 
in this capacity went on several missions to the parliamentary 
generals. He took his seat early in 1644 in the Assembly of 
Divines, to which he had been nominated, and vehemently 
opposed measures tolerating independency or giving powers to 
laymen in ecclesiastical affairs. The articles of the unsuccessful 
treaty of Uxbridge were, for the most part, drawn up by him 
the same year. Besides his public duties in England he sat in 
the Scottish parliament for the county of Edinburgh from 1643 
till 1647, was speaker of the barons, and served on various 
committees. After the final defeat of Charles, when he had 
surrendered himself to the Scots, Johnston was made in October 
1646 king's advocate, and the same year was voted £3000 by 
the estates for his services. He continued to oppose unwise 
concessions to Charles, and strongly disapproved of the " engage- 
ment " concluded in 1648 by the predominant party with Charles 
at Carisbrookc, which, while securing little Cor Presbyterianism, 
committed the Scots to hostilities with the followers of Cromwell. 
He now became the leader of the "remonstrants," the party 
opposed to the "engagement," and during the ascendancy of 
the engagers retired to Cantyre as the guest of Argyll. He 
returned again after the Whiggamore Raid, 1 met Cromwell at 
Edinburgh in October after the defeat of the engagers at Preston, 
and in conjunction with Argyll promoted the act of Classes, 
passed on the 23rd of January 1649, disqualifying the royalists. 
The good relations now formed with Cromwell, however, were 
soon broken off by the king's execution, and Johnston was 
present officially at the proclamation of Charles II. as king at 
Edinburgh, on the 5th of February 1649. On the 10th of March 
he was appointed lord clerk register. In May he pronounced 
the vindictive sentence on Montrose, and he is said to have 
witnessed with Argyll the victim being drawn to the place of 
execution. He was present at the battle of Dunbar (3rd of 
September 1650) as a member of the committee of estates, 
to which body is ascribed the responsibility for Leslie's fatal 
abandonment of his position on Doon Hill. After the defeat 
he urged the removal of David Leslie, afterwards Lord Newark, 
from the command, and on the 21st of September delivered a 
violent speech in Charles's presence, attributing all the late 
misfortunes to the Stuarts and to their opposition to the 
Reformation. 

His first object in life being the defence of Presbyterianism, 
Johnston could join neither of the two great parties, and now 
committed himself to the faction of the remonstrants who 
desired to exclude the king , in opposition to the rcsolutioners who 
accepted Charles. The latter for some time maintained their 
superiority in the kingdom, Johnston being reduced to poverty 
and neglect. In the autumn of 1656 Johnston went to London 
as representative of the remonstrants; and soon afterwards, 
on the oth of July 1657, be was restored by Cromwell to his 
office of lord clerk register, and on the 3rd of November was 
appointed a commissioner for the administration of justice 
in Scotland, henceforth remaining a member of the government 
till the Restoration. In January 1658 he was included by 
Cromwell in his new House of Lords, and sat also in the upper 
chamber in Richard Cromwell's parliament. On the lattcr's 
abdication and the restoration of the Rump, he was chosen a 
r of the council of state, and continued in the administra- 



1 This was the name given to a successful raid on Edinburgh by 
a band of Argyll's partisan* gathered mainly from the west of 
Scotland. It took place in September 1648. just afrer the defeat of 
Hamilton at Preston. The term Whiggamore is said to be derived 
from Wkiuam, a word used by the ploughmen in the west of Scotland 
to encourage their horses. See 5. R. Gardiner, Great Cmi War, 
vet m. (1891). 
XXVUl 6* 



tion aa a member of the committee of pubhc safety, mi'i»t«i'i»m g 
consistently his attitude against religious toleration. At the 
Restoration he was singled out for punishment. He avoided 
capture, escaping to Holland and thence to Germany, and was 
condemned to death in his absence on the 13th of May i66t. 
In 1663, having ventured into France, he was discovered at 
Rouen, and with the consent of Louis XIV. was haought over 
and imprisoned in the Tower of London. In June he was taken 
to Edinburgh and confined in the Tolbooth. He was hanged 
on the isnd of July at the Market Cross, Edinburgh, the scene 
of many of his triumphs, and a few yards from his own house 
in High Street, which stood on the east side of what is now known 
as Warriston's Close. His head was exposed on the Netherbow 
and afterwards buried with his body in Greyfriars churchyard. 

Johnston was a man of great energy, industry and ability, 
and the successful defence of their religion by the Scots was 
probably owing to him more than to any other man. He is 
described by his contemporary Robert Baillie as "one of the 
most faithful and diligent and able servants that our church 
and kingdom has had all the tymes of our troubles." 1 He was 
learned in the Scottish law, eloquent and deeply religious. His 
passionate devotion to the cause of the Scottish church amounted 
almost to fanaticism. According to the History by his nephew 
Bishop Burnet, " he looked on the Covenant as the setting 
Christ on his throne." He had by nature no republican leanings ; 
" all the Royalists in Scotland," writes Baittie as late as 1646, 
44 could not have pleaded so trjucb for the crown and the king's 
just power as the chancellor and Warriston did for many days 
together." When, however, Presbyterianism was attacked 
and menaced by the sovereign, he desired, like Pym, to restrict 
the royal prerogative by a parliamentary constitution, and 
endeavoured to found his arguments on law and ancient pre- 
cedents. His acceptance of office under Cromwell hardly 
deserves the severe censure it has received. He stood nearer 
both in politics and religion to Cromwell than to the royalists, 
and was able in office to serve usefully the state and the church, 
but his own scrupulous conscience caused him to condemn 
in his dying speech, as a betrayal of the cause of Presbyterianism, 
an act which he regarded as a moral fault committed in order 
to provide for his numerous family, and the remembrance of 
which disturbed his last hours. Johnston was wanting in iaet 
and in consideration for his opponents, confessing himself that 
his M natural temper (or rather distemper) bath been hasty 
and passionate." He was hated by Charles I., whose statecraft 
was vanquished by his inflexible purpose, and by Charles II., 
whom he rebuked for his dissolute conduct; but he was beloved 
by Baillie, associated in private friendship and public life with 
Argyll, and lamented by the nation whose cause he had 
championed. 

He had a large family, the most famous of his sons being James 
Johnston (1655-1737)1 called "secretary Johnston." Having 
taken refuge in Holland after his father's execution, Johnston 
crossed over to England in the interests of William of Orange 
just before the revolution of 1688. In 1692 he was appointed 
one of the secretaries for Scotland, but he was dismissed 
from office in 1696. Under Anne, however, he began again 
to take part in public affairs, and was made lord clerk register. 
Johnston's later years were passed mainly at his residence,' 
Orleans House, Twickenham, and he died at Bath in May 1737. 

See W. Morison. Johnston of Warriston (1901). 

WARRNAMBOOL, a seaport of Villiers county, Victoria, Aus- 
tralia, 166 m. by rail W.S.W. of Melbourne. Pop. (100O 6410. 
The town lies on an eminence, on the shores of Warrnambool Bay, 
in a rich pastoral and agricultural district. Race meetings are 
held here, and the steeplechase course is considered the finest in 
the colony. Warrnambool has a fine port with a viaduct and 
breakwater pier 2400 ft. in length, and a jetty 860 ft. in length, 
on to which the railway runs. Large quant Hies of dairy produce, 
wool and live stock are exported; and there are a number of 
flourishing industries in the town, including brewing, flour- 
muling, tanning and boot and biscuit manufacturing. Sandstone 
■* Baillie, LttUrs and Journals (Bannatyne Club, 1841). 



33+ WARSAW 

abounds in the district and is extensively quarried. The summer 
climate is the coolest in the Australian states. 

WARSAW, a government of Russian Poland, occupying a 
narrow strip of land west of the lower Bug and west of the Vistula 
from its confluence with the Bug to the Prussian frontier. It 
is bounded by the Polish governments of Plock and Ixxnza on 
the N., Siedlce on the E., and Radom, Piotrkow and Kalisz 
on the S. Area 560$ sq. m.; estimated pop. (1006) 2,269,000. It 
occupies the great plain of central Poland, and is low and flat, 
with only a few hills in the south, arid along the course of the 
Vistula in the north-west, where the terraces on the left bank 
descend by steep slopes to the river. Terrible inundations often 
devastate the region adjacent to the confluence of the Vistula 
with the Narew and Bug, and marshes gather in the low-lying 
grounds. The soil, which consists chiefly of boulder day, 
lacustrine clays, and sandy fluvialilc deposits, is not particularly 
fertile. The government is divided into thirteen districts, the 
chief towns of which are Warsaw, Blonic, Gostynin, Grojec, 
Kutno, Lowicz, Neszawa, Novo-Minsk, Plonsk, Radzymin, 
Skicrniewice, Sochaczew and Wloclawek. In spite of the un- 
fertile soil, agriculture is prosecuted with considerable success. 
Manufacturing industries have also greatly developed. 

WARSAW (Polish Warszam, Gcr. Warsckau, Fr. Varsorit), 
the capital of Poland and chief town of the government of 
Warsaw. It is beautifully situated on the left bank of the 
Vistula, 387 m. by rail £. of Berlin, and 695 m. S.W. of St 
Petersburg. It stands on a terrace 120 to 130 ft- above the river, 
to which it descends by steep slopes, leaving a broad bench at 
its base. The suburb of Praga on the right bank of the Vistula, 
here 450 to 660 yds. broad, is connected with Warsaw by two 
bridges— the railway bridge which passes close under the guns 
of the Alexander citadel to the north, and the Alexander bridge 
(1666 ft. long; built in 1865 at a cost of £634,000) in the centre 
of the town. With its large population, its beautiful river, its 
ample commuaic&lions and its commerce, its university and 
scientific societies, its palaces and numerous places of amuse- 
ment, Warsaw is one of the most pleasant as well as one of the 
most animated cities of eastern Europe. From a military point 
of view Warsaw is the chief stronghold for the defence of Poland; 
the Alexander citadel has been much improved, and the bridge 
across the Vistula is defended by a strong fort, Sliwicki. 

Situated in a fertile plain, on a great navigable river, below its 
confluence with the Pilica and Wieprz, which drain southern 
Poland, and above its confluence with the Narew and Bug, which 
tap a wide region in the east, Warsaw became in medieval times 
the chief entrepot for the trade of those fertile and populous 
valleys with western Europe. Owing to its position in the 
territory of Mazovia, which was neither Polish nor Lithuanian, 
and, so to say, remained neutral between the two rival powers 
which constituted the united kingdom, it became the capital of 
both, and secured advantages over the purely Polish Cracow 
and the Lithuanian Vilna. And now, connected as it is by six 
trunk lines with Vienna, Kiev andsouth-western Russia, Moscow, 
St Petersburg, Danzig and Berlin, it is one of the most important 
commercial cities of eastern Europe. The south-western railway 
connects it with Lodz, the Manchester of Poland, and with the 
productive mineral region of Piotrkow and Kielce, which supply 
its steadily growing manufactures with coal and iron, so that 
Warsaw and its neighbourhood have become a centre for, all kinds 
of manufactures. The iron and steel industry has greatly de- 
veloped, and produces large quantities of rails. The machinery 
works have suffered to some extent from competition with those 
of southern Russia, and find the high price of land a great 
obstacle in tfeo way of extension. But the manufactures of plated 
•ihvfij — rTfurt boots and shoes (annual turnover £8,457,000), 
, tobacco, sugar, and all sorts of small 
axe of considerable importance, 
l fif44tt workers. Trade is principally in 
IttVJr but (he city is also a centre for 
I jla two fairs (wool and hops) 
estem Russia, The 
partisans, after the Polish 




insurrections of 1704, 1831 And 1863 considerably checked, bub 
by no means stopped, the industrial progress of the town, The 
barrier of custom-houses all round Poland, and the Russian rule, 
which militates against the progress of Polish science, technology 
and art, are so many obstacles to the development of its natural 
resources. The population has .nevertheless grown rapidly, 
from 161,008 in i860, 276,000 in 1872 and 436,750 in 1887, to 
756,426 in 1001; of these more than 25,000 are Germans, and 
one-third are Jews. The Russian garrison numbers over 30,000 
men. Warsaw is an archiepiscopal see of the Greek Orthodox 
and Roman Catholic churches, and the headquarters of the V., 
VI. and XV. Army Corps. 

The streets of Warsaw are adorned with many fine buildings, 
partly palaces exhibiting the Polish nobility's love of display, partly 
churches and cathedrals, and partly public buildings erected by the 
municipality or by private bodies. Fine public gardens and several 
monuments further embellish the city. The university (with 1500 
students), founded in 1816 but closed in 1832, was again opened in 
1869 as a Russian institution, the teaching being tn Russian; it 
has a remarkable library of more than 500,000 volumes, rich natural 
history collections, a fine botanic garden and an astronomical 
observatory. The medical school enjoys high repute in the scientific 
world. The school of arts, the academy of agriculture and forestry, 
and the conservatory of music are all high-class institutions. The 
association of the friends of science and the historical and agricultural 
societies of Warsaw were once well known, but were suppressed after 
theinsurrections, though they were subsequently revived. 

rThe theatre for Polish drama and the ballet is a fine building, 
which includes two theatres under the same roof; but the pride of 
Warsaw is its theatre in the Lazicnki gardens, which were laid out 
(1767-1788) in an old bed of the Vistula by King Stanislaus Ponia- 
towski, and have beautiful shady alleys, artificial ponds, an elegant 



1683. 

an island makes an open-air theatre. Two other public gardens, 
with alleys of old chestnut trees, are situated in the centre of the 
city. One of these, the Saski Ogrod, or Saxon garden (17 acres), 
which has a summer theatre and fine old trees, is one of the most 
beautiful in Europe; it is the resort of the Warsaw aristocracy. 
The Krasinski garden is the favourite promenade of the Jews. 

The central point of the life of Warsaw is the former royal castle 
(Zamek Krolewski) on Sigismund Square. It was built by the dukes 
of Maaovia, enlarged by Sigismund 111. (whose memorial stands 
opposite) and LadisJaus f V., and embellished by John Sobicski and 
Stanislaus Poniatowski. At present it is inhabited by the " governor- 
general of the provinces on the # Vistula " (i.e. Poland), and by the 
military authorities. Most of its pictures and other art treasures 
have been removed to St Petersburg and Moscow. Four main 
thoroughfares radiate from it; one, the Krakowskic Przedmiescie, 
the best street in Warsaw, runs southward. It is continued by the 
Nowy Swiat and the Ujazdowska Alcja avenue, which leads to the 
Lazienki gardens. Many fine buildings are found in and near these 
two streets: the church of St Anne (1454), which belonged formerly 
to a Bemardine monastery; the agricultural and industrial museum, 
with an ethnographical collection; the monument (1898) to the 
national poet Adam Mickicwicz (1798-1855) ; the Alexander Nevski 
cathedral of the Orthodox Greek Church, built in 1804 and following 
years on the Saxon Square in the Byzantine style, with five gilded 
cupolas and a detached campanile. 238 ft. high; dose beside it the 
former Saxon palace, once the residence of the Polish kings but now 
used as military administrative offices; the Lutheran church, 
finished in 1709, one of the most conspicuous in Warsaw; a monu- 
ment (1841) to the Polish generals who held with Russia in 1830 
and were therefore shot by their compatriots, removed to the 
Zielony Square in 1898 ; the buildings of the An Association, 
erected in 1898-1900; the university (see above); the church of the 
Holy Ghost (1682-1696), with the heart and monument of the 
musician F. F. Chopin; a monument (1830) to the astronomer 
N. Kopernicus <I473~1543): the palaces of the families Zamoyski 



and Ordynacld (now the conservatory of music); the building of 
the Philharmonic Society (1899-1001); and the church of St Alex- 
ander, built in 1826 and splendidly restored in 1891. The Ujaz- 



dowska Alcja avenue, planted with lime-trees and bordered with 
cafes and places of amusement, is the Champs Elysees of Warsaw. 
It leads to the Lazienki park and to the Belvedere palace (1822), 
now the summer residence of the governor-general, and farther west 
to the Mokotowski parade ground, which is surrounded on the south 
and west by the manufacturing district. Another principal street, 
the Marszaikowska, runs parallel to the Ujazdowska from the Saxon 
garden to this parade ground, on the south-east of which are the 
Russian barracks. The above-mentioned streets are crossed by 
another scries running west and east, the chief of them being the 
Senators, which begins at Sigismund Square and contains the best 
shops. The palace of the archbishop of Warsaw, the Imperial 
(Russian) Bank, formerly the Bank of Poland; the town hall (1725), 



WAttSAW— WAltT 1 



335 



burned in iMg, b«l rebuilt in IS70; the small Pod Blacka palace; 
now occupied by a chancery ; the theatre (1833); the old mint; 
the beautiful Reformed church (i8tt?); the Orthodox Creek cathedral 
of the Trinity, rebuilt in 1837; the Krasinski palace (1692). burned 
in 1782 but rebuilt; the place of meeting of the Polish diets, now 
the Supreme Court; the church of the Transfiguration, a thank- 
offering by John Sobieski for his victory of 1683, and containing 
his heart and that of Stanislaus Poniatowski; and several palaces 
aregrouped in or near Senators' Street and Miodowa Street. 

To the west Senators' Street is continued by Electors' Street, 
where is the very elegant church (1849) of St Charles Borromeo, 
and the Chlodna Street leading to the suburb of Wola, with a large 
add where the kings of Poland used to be elected. I n Leshno Street, 
which branches off from Senators' Street, are the Zdazna Brama, 
or Iron Gate; in the market-place the bazaar, the arsenal and the 
Wielopolski barracks. 

To the north of Stgismund Square is the old town— Stare Mtasto 
—the Jewish quarter, and farther north still the Alexander citadel. 
The old town very much recalls old Germany by its narrow streets 
and antique buildings, the cathedral of St John, the molt ancient 



church in Warsaw, having been built in the 13th century and restored 
in the 17th. The citadel, erected in 1832-1835 as a punishment for 
the insurrection of 1831. is of the old type, with six forts too close to 



the walls of the fortress to be useful in modern warfare. 

The suburb of Praga, on the right bank of the Vistula, is poorly 
bnitt and often flooded; but the bloody assaults which led to it* 
capture Hi 1794 by the Rassians under Suvarev, and in 1831 by 
Paskevicb, give it a name in history. 

In the outskirts of Warsaw are various more or less noteworthy 
villas, palaces and battlefields. WiJIanow, the palace of John 
Sobieski, afterwards belonging to Count X. Bramcki, was partly 
built in 1673-1 69a by Turkish prisoners in a fine Italian style, and 
is now renowned tor its historical relics, portraits and pictures. It 
is situated to the south of Warsaw, together with the pretty pilgrim- 
age church of Czerniakow. built by Prince Stanislaus Lubomirski in 
1691. and many other fine villas (Morysinek, Natolin, Krotikamia, 



which also has a picture gallery, Wierzbno and Mokotow). Mary* 
mont. ao old coantry residence of the wife of John Sobieski. and the 
Kaskada. much visited by the inhabitants of Warsaw, in the north, 
the Saska Kempa on the right bank of the Vistula, and the castle 
of Jabtona down the Vistula are among others that deserve mention. 
The castle and forest of Bielany (af m. N.), oa the bank of the 
Vistula, are a popular holiday resort in the spring. 

Among the battlefields in the neighbourhood is that of Grocbow 
where the Polish troops were defeated in 1831. and Wawcr in the 
same quarter (E. of Praga), where Prince Joseph Poniatowski 
defeated the Aostrians in the war of 1809; at Mariejowke, 50 m. 
ap the Vistula, Koscniscko was wounded and ta^cn by the Russians 
in 1794; and 20 m. down the river stands the fortress of Modlin, 
now Novogeorgievsk. 

History.— The history of Warsaw from the 16th century 
onwards is intimately connected with that of Poland. The 
precise date of the foundation of the town Is not known; but 
it is supposed that Conrad, duke of Masovia, erected a castle 
on the present siteof Warsaw as early as the 9th century. Casimir 
the Just is supposed to have fortified It in the nth century, but 
Warsaw is not mentioned In annab before 1224. Until 1526 it 
was the residence of the dukes of Mazovia, but when their 
dynasty became extinct ft was annexed to Poland. When 
Poland and Lithuania were united, Warsaw was chosen as the 
royal. residence. Sigismund Augustus (Was*) made it {153*) 
the real capital of Poland, and from 1574 onwards the election 
off the kings of Poland took place on the field of Wola, on the W. 
outskirts of the city. From the 1 7th century possession of it was 
continually disputed between the Swedes, the Russians, the 
Braiitfenburgers and the Austrian*. Charles Gustavus of Sweden 
took it in 1655 and kept it for a year; the Poles retook 
it in July 1656, but lost it again almost immediately. Augustus 
IL and Augustus III. did moth lor its embellishment, but it 
had much to suffer during the war with -Charles XII of Sweden, 
who captured it in 170*; but in the following year peace was 
nude, and it became free again. The disorders which followed 
opoc the death of Augustus HI. in 1763 opened a field for 
Russiao intrigue, and in 1764 the Russians took nossessioTi of 
the town and secured the election of Stanislaus Poniatowski, 
which led in 1773 to the first partition of Poland. In November 
r 704 the Russians took it again, after the bloody assault on 
Praga, but nest year, m the third partition of Poland, Warsaw 
was given to Prussia. In November 1 806 the town was occupied 
by the troops of Napoleon, and after the peace of Tilsit (1807) 
the capital of the Independent duchy of Warsaw; 



but the Austrian* seised it on the tist of April 1809, and kept 
possession of it till the *nd of June, when it once more became 
independent. The Russians finally took it on the 8tbof February 
1813. On the soth of November 1830, Warsaw gave the signal 
for the unsuccessful insurrection which lasted nearly one year; 
the city was captured after great bloodshed by Paskevicb, on 
the 7th of September 183 1. Deportations on a large scale, 
executions^ and confiscation of the domains of the nobility 
followed, and until 1856 Warsaw remained under severe military 
rule. In 1861 a series of demonstrations began to be made in 
Warsaw in favour of the independence of Poland, and after 
a bloody repression a general insurrection followed in January 
1863, the Russians remaining, however, masters of the situation. 
Executions, banishment to the convict prisons of Siberia, and 
confiscation of estates followed. Deportation to Siberia and the 
interior of Russia was carried out on an unheard-of scale. 
Scientific societies and high schools were closed; monasteries 
and nunneries were emptied. Hundreds of Russian officials 
were called in to fill the administrative posts, and to teach fn the 
schools and the university; the Russian language was made 
obligatory in all official acts, in all legal proceedings, and even, 
to a great extent, in trade. The very name of Poland was 
expunged from official writings, and, while the old institu- 
tions were abolished, the Russian tribunals and administra- 
tive institutions were introduced. The serfs were liberated. 
Much rioting and lawless bloodshed took place in the city in 
1905-1906. (P. A.K.; J.T. Be.) 

WARSAW, a dty and the county-seat of Kosciusko county, 
Indiana, U.S.A., on the Tippecanoe river, about 1 to m. £. of Chi- 
cago. Pop. (1800)3547; (iooo> 3087, including 10? foreign-bcm; 
(1910) 4430. Warsaw is served by the Pittsburg, Fort Wayne 
* Chicago (Pennsylvania system) and the Cleveland, Cincinnati,- 
Chicago & St Louis railways, and by Interurban electric lines. 
It is picturesquely situated in the lake Country of Indiana on 
Center, Pike and Winona lakes. Immediately E. of the city, 
on Winona (formerly Eagle) Lake, which is about 2 by 3 m. and 
has an average depth of 30 ft., is Winona (formerly Spring 
Fountain) Park (incorporated 1S95 largely by Presbyterians), 
which primarily alms to combine the advantages of Northfield* 
Massachusetts, and Chautauqua; New York. There is excellent 
boating and bathing here, and these are mineral springs in the 
Park, where In the summer there are a Chautauqua course lasting 
for six weeks, a norma! school a Bible school, a Bible conference, 
a school of missions, an International Training; School for Sunday 
School Workers, a conference of temperance workers and nature 
study and other regular summer school courses; and in other 
months of the year courses arc given here by the Winona Normal 
School and Agricultural Institute, Winona Academy (for boys) 
and Winona Conservatory of Music, and the Winona Park School 
for Young Women. The control of the Park is inter-denomi- 
national — the Winona Federated Church was organized in 1905. 
Under practically the same control is the Winona Technical 
Institute in Indianapolis. The surrounding country is devoted 
to farming and stock raising. Warsaw was first platted in 1836, 
and became a dty in 1875. 

WART (Lat. verruca), a papillary excrescence of the skin, or 
mucous membrane. The ordinary flat warts of the skin occur 
mostly upon the hands of children and young persons; a long 
pendulous variety occurs about the chin or neck of delicate 
children, and on the scalp in adults. Warts arc apt to come out 
in numbers at a time; a crop of them suddenly appears, to 
disappear after a time with equal suddenness. Hence the sup- 
posed efficacy of charms. A single wart will sometimes remain 
when the general erupt ion has vanished. The liability of crops 
of warts runs io families. In after life a wart on the hands or 
fingers is usually brought on by some irritation, often repeated, 
even if it be slight . Warts often occur on the wrists and knuckles 
of slaughter-house men and of those much occupied with ana- 
tomical" dissect ion; they are often of tuberculous origin (butchers' 
warts). Chimney-sweeps and workers in coal-tar, petroleum, 
4c, are subject to warts, which often become cancerous. Warts 
occur singly in later life on the nose or lips or other parts of the 



33» 



WARWICK, SIR P. 



conspiracy of the Norman nobles in 1 1 ot . By his wife Margaret, 
daughter of Geoffrey II., count of Perche, he had five sons and 
two daughters. He died on the 20th of June 1123, and was 
buried in the Norman abbey of Preaux, near Pont-Audemer, 
a family foundation of which be and his brother were patrons. 
At Warwick he founded the priory of the Austin Canons, and 
endowed the church of St Mary. 

Of his sons Roger de Newburgh became and earl of Warwick 
and died in 1153; Rotrou (d. 1130) became archbishop of 
Rouen; and Robert, seneschal and justiciar of Normandy, 
died in 1 1 85 in the abbey of Bee, of which he was a benefactor. 
The and earl was followed by his two sons in succession, William 
(d. xi 84) and Waleran (d. 1304). Henry de Newburgh, 5th 
earl of Warwick (1192-1229), took the royal side in the civil 
wars of the reigns of John and Henry III. The 6th earl, Thomas 
de Newburgh (c. 12x3-1297), left no heirs, and was succeeded 
by his sister Margaret, countess of Warwick in her own right, 
who was twice married, but left no heirs. Her second husband, 
John du Plessis, assumed the title of earl of Warwick in 1245, 
and in 1250 received a grant of his wife's lands for life. He was 
succeeded in 1263 by Countess Margaret's cousin and heir, 
Sir William Mauduit (1220-1268), 8th earl of Warwick. 
Mauduit's sister and heiress, Isabel de Beauchamp, had apparently 
adopted the religious life at the time of her brother's death, and 
her son William de Beauchamp became 9th earl of Warwick. 

His son Guy de Beauchamp, xoth earl of Warwick (1278- 
13 1 5), received grants of land in Scotland for his services at 
Falkirk, and in 1301 was one of the signatories of the letter 
to the pope denying the papal right to interfere in Scottish 
affairs. He was with Edward I. at the time of his death, and 
Is said to have been warned by him against Piers Gaveston. 
He was one of the lords ordainers of 1310, and was concerned 
in the capture of Gaveston, though he declined to countenance 
his execution. He died on the 10th of August 1315. His son, 
Thomas de Beauchamp, xith earl (13x3-1360)1 was marshal of 
England in 1344, and of the English army in France in 1346. 
He fought at Crecy and Poitiers, and was one of the original 
knights of the Garter. 

Thomas de Beauchamp, 12th earl (it. 1345-1401), was about 
twenty-four years old when he succeeded his father. He served 
on the lords' committee of reform in the Good Parliament in 
1376, and again in 1377, and was a member of the commission of 
inquiry in 1379. Appointed governor to Richard II. in February 
1381, he joined the nobles who sought to impose their authority 
on the lung, and was one of the lords appellant in 1388. After the 
overthrow of his party in 1389 Warwick lived in retirement, 
but although he had for the moment escaped Richard's vengeance 
he was not forgiven. Being invited with Gloucester and 
Arundel to a banquet at court on the xoth of July 1397 he alone 
of the three was imprudent enough to obey the summons. He 
was immediately arrested and imprisoned in the Tower of London, 
in that part of the fortress since known as the Beauchamp Tower. 
Warwick made a full confession in parliament; his honours 
were forfeited and he himself banished. He was again in the 
Tower in X398, but was liberated and restored to his honours 
on the accession of Henry IV. His son Richard Beauchamp, 
13th earl of Warwick, is separately noticed. 

Henry, 14th earl of Warwick (1423-1445), Earl Richard's 
son, a descendant, through his mother Constance le Despenser, 
of Edmund, duke of York, fifth son of Edward III., received a 
patent making him premier earl in 1444. A year later he was 
created duke of Warwick with precedence next after the duke of 
Norfolk, a rank disputed by the duke of Buckingham. The 
assertion that he was crowned king of the Isle of Wight seems to 
have no foundation in fact. The 14th earl whose honours were pro- 
bably due to his father's services, died m bis twenty-second year, 
leaving a daughter Anne, who died in 1449* On her death the 
earldom lapeMlo-flM crowfe 91* estates passed to Sir Richard 
NevtUo^JMMsilE^iiBifitVIU^^rfoO.in right of 
hb wtlfrtfH^^H^^HHBsssW **« «* Warwick. 
Mb IJsM^H^^^^^^^^^Kwtotaof Warwick 

r and, these 




failing, to Margaret, countess of Shrewsboly, half-sister of the 
countess Anne. After the death of her husband, the Kingmaker, 
at Barnet in 1471, the rights of the countess, heiress of the 
Beauchamp estates, were set aside " as if the seid countes were 
nowe naturally dede •' (act of 13 Edward IV. 1473) » favour of 
her daughters, Isabel, wife of George, duke of Clarence, and 
Anne, who, after the murder of her first husband Edward 
prince of Wales in 147 1, married Richard, duke of Gloucester, 
afterwards Richard HI: Their mother was allowed to resume 
her estates in 1487. but only to settle them on the crown. She 
was succeeded in 1403 in the earldom by her grandson Edward 
Plantagenet, 18th earl of Warwick (1475-1499), son of the duke 
of Clarence, and therefore the Yorkist heir to the crown. He 
was imprisoned in 1484, bis sole offence being his birth, and 
was executed in 1499 on a charge of conspiracy with his fellow- 
prisoner, Perkin Warbeck. He was the last representative of 
the male line of the Plantagencts. His honours were forfeited, 
and his estates passed to his sister Margaret, countess of Salisbury 
in her own right, the unfortunate lady who was executed in 
1541. 

The next bearer of the title was John Dudley, Viscount 
Lisle, afterwards duke of Northumberland (?.•.), who was created 
earl of Warwick in 1 547, on account of his descent from Margaret, 
countess of Shrewsbury, daughter of Richard Beauchamp, 
earl of Warwick. The earldom became extinct with his son 
John Dudley, 20th earl of Warwick (c. 1528-1554), who was 
condemned to death for having signed the letters patent making 
his sister-in-law, Lady Jane Grey, heir apparent. He was 
released from prison in October 1 554, but died in the same month. 
His brother, Ambrose Dudley (*, x 528-1 590), who fought at 
St Quentin in 1557, secured the reversal of the attainder of 
himself and his brother consequent on the attempt to place 
Lady Jane Grey on the throne, and in 1561 was created Baron 
Lisle and earl of Warwick. He was in high favour with Elizabeth, 
as was his third wife Anne, daughter of Francis Russell, and 
earl of Bedford. His brother Robert, earl of Leicester, having 
predeceased him his honours became extinct on his death 
in 1590* 

The earldom was revived in 1618 in favour of Robert Rich, 
3rd Baron Rich (c. 1560-1619), grandson of Lord Chancellor Rich, 
who died shortly after his elevation. His wife Penelope, Lady 
Rich, is separately noticed. He was succeeded in 1619 by his 
eldest son Robert Rich, 2nd or 23rd earl of Warwick (?.».), whose 
two sons Robert (16x1-1659) «nd Charles (1619-1673) succeeded 
him in the earldom and died leaving no male issue. The 5th or 
26th earl of Warwick was their cousin Robert Rich (1620-1675), 
eldest son of Henry, xst earl of Holland. His grandson, the 7th 
or 38th earl, left no issue, and the title became extinct on the 
death, on the x 5th of September 1759, of his kinsman Edward 
Rich, 8th or soth earl. It was revived two months later, when 
Francis Greville, Baron Brooke of Beanchamps Court (i?io~ 
X773), who had in 1746 been created Earl Brooke ot Warwick 
Castle, became earl of Warwick. GreviUe was descended from 
Robert Greville, the and baron, who was killed at Lichfield 
during the civil war and he represented a cadet branch of the 
Beauchamp family. His son George (1746-1816) became the 
2nd earl of this line, and the earldom has remained with hat 
descendant*, Francis Richard (b. 1853) becoming the 5th earl 
in 1893. His wife, Frances Evelyn, countess of Warwick, 
daughter of Colonel the Hon. C. H. Maynard (d. 1865), inherited 
the estates of her grandfather, Henry .Maynard, 5th and hut 
Viscount Maynard (1 78^-1 865). She became well known in 
society, and later for her interest in sodal questions. 

WARWICK, SIR PH1UP (1609-1683), English writer and 
politician, was the son of Thomas Warwick, or Warrick, a 
musician, and was bom in Westminster on the 24th of December 
1609. Educated at Eton, be travelled abroad for some time and 
in 1636 became secretary tb the lord high treasurer, William 
Juaon; later be was a member of the Long Parliament, being 
one of those who voted against the attainder of Strafford ami who 
followed Charles I. to Oxford. He fought at EdgehOI and was 
one of the king's secretaries during the negotiations with the 



WARWICK, EARLS OF 



339 



partismcnt at Hampton Court, and also during those at Newport, 
Charles speaking very highly of his services just before his 
execution. Rrmamfng in England, Warwick was passively loyal 
to Charles IL during the Commonwealth and enjoyed the con- 
fidence of toe royalist leaden. In 1660 the king made him a 
knight, and in 1661 he became a member of parliament and 
secretary to another lord treasurer, Thomas Wriothesky, earl 
of Southampton, retaining this post until the treasury was put 
into commission on Southampton's death in May 1667. He 
died on the 15th of January 16S3. Warwick's only son, the 
younger Philip Warwick (d. 1683), was envoy to Sweden 
in 1680. 

Warwick is chiefly known for his Memoirs of the reigne of King 
Charles /., with a continuation to the happy restauratton of King 
Chariot //., written between 1675 *nd 1677 and published in London 
in 1701. 

WARWICK, RICHARD BRAUCHAMP, Eam. or (1382-1430), 
son of Thomas Beaucbamp, was born at Salwarp in Worcester- 
shire on the 18th of January 1382, and succeeded his father in 
1401. He had some service In the Welsh War, fought on the 
king's side at the battle of Shrewsbury on the sand of July 1403, 
and at the siege of Aberystwith in 1407. In 1408 he started on 
a pilgrimage to the Holy Land, visiting on his way Paris and 
Rome, and fighting victoriously in a tournament with Pandolfo 
Malatesta at Verona. From Venice be look ship to Jaffa, whence 
he went to Jerusalem, and set up his arms in the temple. On 
his return he travelled through Lithuania, Prussia and Germany, 
and reached England in 1410. Two years later he was fighting 
in command at Calais. Up to this time Warwick's career had 
been that of the typical knight errant. During the reign of 
Henry V. his chief employment was as a trusted counsellor and 
diplomatist. He was an ambassador to France in September 
1413, and the chief English envoy to the coronation of Sighunund 
at Aix-la-ChapeUe, and to the council of Constance in the autumn 
of 1414. During the campaign of Agincourt he was captain of 
Calais, where in April- 14x6 he received Sigisnrand with .such 
courtly magnificence as to earn from him the title of the " Father 
of Courtesy.'' In the campaigns of 1417-18 Warwick took a 
prominent part, reducing Domfront and Caudebec. Then he 
joined the king before Rouen, and in October 1418 had charge 
of the negotiations with the dauphin and with Burgundy. Next 
year he was again the chief English spokesman in the conference 
at Meulan, and afterwards was Henry's representative in arrange- 
ing the treaty of Troyes. At the sieges of Melun in 1420, and of 
Mantes in 1421-23 he held high command. Warwick's sage 
experience made it natural that Henry V. should on his death-bed 
appoint him to be bis son's governor. For some years to come 
he was engaged chiefly as a member of the council fn England. 
In 1428 he received formal charge of the little king's education. 
He took Henry to France in 1430, and whilst at Rouen had the 
superintendence of the trial of Joan of Arc. In 1431 he defeated 
Pothon de Xaintrailks at Sevignies. Next year he returned to 
England. The king's minority came nominally to an end in 
I437- Warwick was then not unnaturally chosen to succeed 
Richard of York fn the government of Normandy. He accepted 
loyally a service " full far from the ease of my years," and went 
down to Portsmouth in August, but was long detained by bad 
weather, "seven times shipped or ever he might pass the. sea," 
sad only reached Honficur on the 8th of November. In Nor- 
mandy he ruled with vigour for eighteen months, and died at his 
post on the 30th of April 1439- His body was brought home 
and buried at Warwick. His tomb in St Mary's church is one of 
the most splendid specimens of English art in the 15th century. 
Warwick married (1) Elisabeth Berkeley, (2) Isabella Despenser. 
By Us second wife he left an only son Henry, afterwards duke of 
Warwick, who died in 1445. and a daughter Anne, who as her 
toother's sister of the whole blood brought the title and chief 
share of the estates to her husband Richard Neville, the king- 
maker. By Ins first wife he had three daughters, of whom the 
eldest, Margaret, married John Talbot, earl of Shrewsbury. 

BrSLtoetAPHT.— John Rout (d. 1491) wrote a life of Warwick, 
gfatttatsd with over fifty drawing*, now ax the British Museum 
(Coos* M& Jelins B. Sv.)» They have been reproduced in Strvu's 



Manners and Customs-, new edition by Mr Emery Walker, with 
notes by Lord Dffloa and Mr W. St John Hope. More authoritative 
material must be sought in strictly contemporary chronicles, and 
especially in the Vita HeuriciQuintiaacribed to Elmham. Monstrelct ; 
Chronktes of London (ed. C. L. Kingsford) add J. Stevenson, Utters, 
fire, illustrative of the English Wars tn France (" Rolls " series). For 
modern accounts consult J. H. Wylie, Henry IV.; C. L. Kingsford, 
Henry V. ; and Sir James Ramsay, Lancaster and York. (C. lTR.) 

WARWICK, RICHARD NFYILL&V Earn, or (1428-1471), 
called " the king-maker," was eldest son of Richard Neville, 
earl of Salisbury, by Alice, only daughter and heiress of Thomas, 
the last Montacute earl of Salisbury. He was born on the a and 
of November 1438, and whilst still a boy betrothed to Anne, 
daughter of Richard Beauchamp, earl of Warwick. When her 
brother's daughter died in 1449, Anne, as only sister of the whole 
blood, brought her husband the title and chief share of the 
Warwick estates. Richard Neville thus became the premier 
earl, and both in power and position excelled his father. Richard, 
duke of York, was his uncle, so when York became protector 
in 1453, tnd Salisbury was made' chancellor, it was natural that 
Warwick should be one of the council After the king's recovery 
in 1455 Warwick and his father took up arms in York's support. 
Their victory at St Albans on the 22nd of May was due to the 
fierce energy with which Warwick assaulted and broke the 
Lancastrian centre. He was rewarded with the important office 
of captain of Calais; to his position there he owed bis strength 
during the next five years. Even when York was displaced at 
home, Warwick retained his post, and in 1457 was also made 
admiral. He was present in February 1458 at the professed 
reconciliation of the two parties in a loveday at St Paul's, London. 
During the previous year he had done some good fighting on the 
march of Calais by land, and kept the sea with vigour; now on 
his return he distinguished himself in a great fight with Spanish 
ships off Calais on the 28th of May, and in the autumn by capt ux- 
ing a German salt-fleet on its way to Ltibeck. These exploit* 
brought him a prestige and popularity that were distasteful to 
the home government. Moreover, England was at war neither 
with Castile nor with the Hanse. Warwick's action may possibly 
have* formed part of some Yorkist design for frustrating the 
foreign policy of their rivals. At all events there was pretext 
enough for recalling him to make his defence. Whilst he was 
at the court at Westminster a brawl occurred between his re- 
tainers and some of the royal household. Warwick himself 
escaped with difficulty, and went back to Calais, alleging that 
his life had been deliberately attempted. When in the following 
year a renewal of the wax was imminent, Warwick crossed over 
to England with his trained soldiers from Calais under Sir 
Andrew Trollope, But at Ludlow on the 12th of October 
TroUope and his men deserted, and left the Yorkists helpless. 
Warwick, with his father, his cousin the young Edward of York, 
and only three, followers, made his way to Barnstaple. There 
they hired a little fishing vessel. The master pleaded that he 
did not know the Channel, but Warwick resourcefully took 
command and himself steered a successful course to Calais. He 
arrived just in time to anticipate the duke of Somerset, whom 
the Lancastrians had sent to supersede him. During the winter 
Warwick held Calais against Somerset, and sent out a fleet which 
seised Sandwich and captured Lord Rivers. In the spring he 
went to Ireland to concert plans with Richard of York. On his 
return voyage he encountered a superior Lancastrian fleet in the 
Channel. But Exeter, the rival commander, could not trust his 
crews and dared not fight. 

From Calais Warwick, Salisbury and Edward of York crossed 
to Sandwich on the 26th of June. A few days later they entered 
London, whence Warwick at once marched north. On the tolh 
of July he routed the Lancastrians at Northampton, and took 
the king prisoner. For the order to spare the commons and slay 
the lords Warwick was responsible, as also for some later execu- 
tions at London. Yet when Richard of York was disposed to 
claim the crown, it was, according to Waurin, Warwick who 
decided the discussion in favour of a compromise, perhaps from 
loyalty to Henry, or perhaps from the wish not to change a weak 
sovereign for a strong. Warwick was in charge of London at the 



34© 



WARWICK, 2nd EARL OF— WARWICK 



time when Richard and Salisbury were defeated and slain at 
•Wakefield. The Lancastrians won a second victory at St Albans 
on the 17th of February 1461, possibly through lack of general- 
ship on Warwick's part. But in his plans to retrieve the disaster 
Warwick showed skill and decision. He met Edward of York 
in Oxfordshire, brought him in triumph to London, had him 
proclaimed king, and within a month of his defeat at St Albans 
was marching north in pursuit of the Lancastrians. The good 
generalship which won the victory of Towton may have been 
due to Edward rather than to Warwick, but the new king was 
of the creation of the powerful earl, who- now had his reward. 
For four years the government was centred undisputedly in 
the hands of Warwick and his friends. The energy of his brother 
John, Lord Montagu, frustrated the various attempts of the 
Lancastrians in the north. In another sphere Warwick himself 
was determining the lines of English policy on the basis of an 
alliance with France. The power of the Nevilles seemed to be 
completed by the promotion of George, the third brother, to be 
archbishop of York. The first check came with the announce- 
ment in September 1464 of the king's secret marriage to Elizabeth 
Woodville. This was particularly distasteful to Warwick, who 
had but just pledged Edward to a French match. For the time, 
however, there was no open breach. The trouble began in 1466, 
when Edward first made Rivers, the queen's father, treasurer, 
and afterwards threw obstacles in the way of an intended 
marriage between Warwick's daughter Isabel and George of 
Clarence, his own next brother. Still in May 1467 Warwick 
went again, with the king's assent to conclude a treaty with 
France. He returned to find that in his absence Edward, under 
Woodville's influence, had committed himself definitely to the 
Burgundian alliance. Warwick retired in dudgeon to his estates, 
and began to plot in secret for his revenge. In the summer of 
1469 he went over to Calais, where Isabel and Clarence were 
married without the king's knowledge. Meantime he had stirred 
up the rebellion of Robin of Redesdale in Yorkshire; and when 
Edward was drawn north Warwick invaded England in arms. 
The king, outmarched and outnumbered, had to yield himself 
prisoner, whilst Rivers and his son John were executed. Warwick 
was apparently content with the overthrow of the Woodvilles, 
and believed that he had secured Edward's submission. In 
March 1470 a rebellion in Lincolnshire gave Edward an oppor- 
tunity to gather an army of his own. When the king alleged 
that he had found proof of Warwick's complicity, the earl, taken 
by surprise, fled with Clarence to France. There, through the 
Instrumentality of Louis XI., he was with some difficulty 
reconciled to Margaret of Anjou, and agreed to marry his second 
daughter to her son. In September Warwick and Clarence, with 
the Lancastrian lords, landed at Dartmouth. Edward in his 
turn had to fly oversea, and for six months Warwick ruled 
England as lieutenant for Henry VI., who was restored from his 
prison in the Tower to a nominal throne. But the Lancastrian 
restoration was unwelcome to Clarence, who began to intrigue 
with his brother. When in March 1471 Edward landed at 
Ravenspur, Clarence found an opportunity to join him. Warwick 
was completely outgencralled, and at Barnet on the 14th of 
April was defeated and slain. 

Warwick has been made famous by Lytton as "The Last of 
the Barons." The title suits him as a great feudal lord, who was 
a good fighter but a poor general, who had more sympathy with 
the old order than with the new culture. But he was more than 
this. He had some of the qualities of a strong ruler, and the 
power to command popularity. He was a skilled diplomatist 
and an adroit politician. These qualities, with his position as 
the head of a great family, the chief representative of Bcauchamp, 
Despenser, Montacute and Neville, made him during ten years 
•' the king-maker. " 

Warwick's only children were his two daughters. Anne, the 
younger, was married after his death to Richard of Gloucester, 
the future Richard III. Their husbands shared his inheritance 
and qus» r ~ ' '""vision. 

BlP" of course fills a great place in con- 

a note on the chief of them «ee 



under Edward IV. For modern authorities sea especially C. W. 
Oman's brilliant but enthusiastic Warwick tho KtmtrMohtr t Sir 
James Ramsay's LancaiUr and York, and Stubbt's CousHtMtio—l 
History- (CL.KJ 

WARWICK, SIR ROBERT RICH. »nd Eau. OF (1587-1658), 
colonial administrator and admiral, was the eldest son of Robert 
Rich, earl of Warwick (see above) and his wife Penelope Rich 
(9.9.), and succeeded to the title in 16 10. Early interested in 
colonial ventures, he joined the Bermudas, Guinea, New England 
and Virginia companies. His enterprises involved him in 
disputes with the East India Company (1617) and with the 
Virginia Company, which in 1624 was suppressed through hit 
action. In 1627 he commanded an unsuccessful privateering 
expedition against the Spaniards. His Puritan connexions and 
sympathies, while gradually estranging him from the court, pro- 
moted his association with the New England colonies. In 1628 
he indirectly procured the patent for the Massachusetts colony, 
and in 163 1 he granted the " Saybrook " patent in Connecticut. 
Compelled the same year to resign the presidency of the New 
England Company, he continued to manage the Bermudas and 
Providence Companies, the latter of which, founded in 1630, 
administered Old Providence on the Mosquito coast. Mean- 
while in England Warwick opposed the forced loan of 1626, the 
payment of ship-money and Laud's church policy, and with his 
brother the first lord Holland (a.*.) came to be recognized at one 
of the heads of the Puritans. In March 1642 the Commons, in 
spite of the king's veto, appointed him admiral of the fleet, and 
in July he gained the whole navy for the parliament. He raised 
forces in Norfolk and Essex on the outbreak of the war, and as 
lord high admiral (1643-1645) he did good service in intercepting 
the king's ships and relieving threatened ports. In 1643 he was 
appointed head of a commission for the government of the 
colonies, which the next year incorporated Providence Planta- 
tions, afterwards Rhode Island, and in this capacity he exerted 
himself to secure rcUgious liberty. Reappointed lord high 
admiral in May 1648, in the vain hope that his influence with the 
sailors would win back the nine ships which had revolted to the 
king, he collected a new fleet and blockaded them at Helvoelsluys. 
Dismissed from office on the abolition of the House of Lords in 
X640* he retired from public life, but was intimately associated 
with Cromwell, whose daughter Frances married his grandson 
and heir Robert Rich in 1657. He died on the 19th of April 
1658. The suspicions cast by his enemies on his religious sincerity 
and political fidelity appear to be baseless. 

WARWICK, a town of Meri vale county, Queensland, Australia, 
169 m. by rail S.W. of Brisbane. Pop. (1001) 3836. It lies on the 
bank of the river Contadamine, in the heart of one of the best 
agricultural districts in Queensland, and is perhaps the most 
attractive inland town in the colony. It is well laid out with 
many substantial public and private buildings, and has two large 
parks, besides smaller recreation grounds. The district is famous 
for its vineyards, and quantities of excellent wine are made; 
wheat and maize are the principal crops, but tobacco, oaU and 
lucerne are largely grown. Coal is found near the town, as arc 
also marble, good building stone and brick clay. 

WARWICK, a municipal and parliamentary borough, and the 
county town of Warwickshire, England; finely situated on 
the river Avon, the Warwick & Napton and Birmingham 
canals, 98 m. N.W. from London. Pop. (1001) 11,880. It is 
served by the Great Western and the London & North- 
western railways. The parliamentary borough was united with 
that of Leamington in 1885, and returns one member. Leaming- 
ton lies 2 m. E., and the towns are united by the suburb of New 
Milverton. 

The magnificent castle of the earls of Warwick stands in 
a commanding and picturesque position on a rocky eminence 
above the river. Its wslls, enclosing a lovely lawn and 
gardens, are flanked by towers, of which Caesar's tower, 147 ft. 
high, the Gateway tower and Guy's tower are the chief, dating 
from the 14th century. The residential portion lies on the river 
side. Excepting a few traces of earlier work, its appearance 
is that of a princely mansion of the 17th centnry. Then Is 



WARWICK— WARWICKSHIRE 



341 



a fernotn eoQectkm of picture! The Great Hall and other 
apartments suffered from fire in 1871 , but were restored A vase 
of marble attributed to the 4th century 8 C. is preserved here, it 
was discovered near Hadrian's Villa at Tivoli in Italy. Below 
the castle the Avon, with thickly wooded banks, affords one of the 
most exquisite reaches of river scenery in England. The church 
of St Mary is principally, as it stands, a rebuilding o( the time 
of Queen Anne, after a fire in 1694. It appears from Domesday 
that a church existed before the Conquest. It was made collegiate 
by Roger de Newburgh, the second Norman earl, in 11 23. At 
the Dissolution Henry VIII. granted the foundation to the 
burgesses of the town. The fieauchamp Chapel survived the 
fire; it is a beautiful example of Perpendicular work, founded 
by the will of Earl Richard Beauchamp, and built between 
1443 *nd 1464* Th e nne tomb of the earl stands in the centre. 
There are only scanty traces of the old town walls, but the east 
and west gates remain, rendered picturesque by chapels built 
above them. The priory of St Sepulchre was founded by Henry 
de Newburgh and completed in the reign of Henry I., on the site 
of an ancient church, for a society of canons regular. It is now 
a private residence. Leicester Hospital, established by Robert 
Dudley, earl of Leicester, is a picturesque example of half -limber 
building. It was originally used as the hall of the united gilds 
of the Holy Trinity, the Blessed Virgin and St George the 
Martyr. The earl of Leicester, by an act of incorporation ob- 
tained in 1571, founded the hospital for the reception of twelve 
poor men possessing not more than £5 a year, and a master. 
The first master, appointed by the earl himself, was the famous 
Puritan, Thomas Cartwright. St John's Hospital, a foundation of 
the time of Henry II., is represented by a beautiful Jacobean 
mansion. There are numerous charities in the town, the principal 
being those of Henry VIII., Sir Thomas White and Thomas 
Oken. The first is devoted to ecclesiastical and municipal 
stipends and to the King's School. By the charity of Sir Thomas 
White, the sum of £100 is lent, without interest, to young trades- 
men for a period of nine years. The King's School, an important 
foundation for boys, dates from the reign of Edward the Con- 
fessor. It occupies modern buildings. Upon the same foundation 
are the high school for girls and the King's middle school. Among 
public buildings are a shin hall, free library and museum. 
Industries include gelatine- and brick-making, and there are 
ironworks. The parliamentary borough returns one member. 
Area, 5613 acres. 

A famous site in the vicinity of Warwick is Guy's Cliffe, where 
a modern mansion, embodying ancient remains, crowns the 
precipitous rocky bank of the Avon. Here was the hermitage 
of the first Guy, earl of Warwick. Blacklow Hill in the vicinity 
was the scene of the execution of Piers Gaveston, the favourite 
courtier of Edward II., in 13x2. 

Warwick {Wonric, Warremci, Warrewyh) is said to have 
been a Roman station, and was later fortified by iEthcliUed, 
the lady of Merda, against the Danes. At the time of the 
Domesday Survey, Warwick was a royal borough, containing 
261 bouses, of which 130 were in the king's hands, while 19 
, belonged to burgesses who enjoyed all the privileges they bad 
bad in the time of Edward the Confessor. The Conqueror granted 
the borough to Henry of Newburgh, who was created earl of 
Warwick, and in aU probability built the castle on the site 
of iElhel&ed's fortification. ITie Beauchamps, successors of 
Henry of Newburgh as earls of Warwick, held the borough 
of the king in chief. Although the borough owed its early 
importance to the castle of the earls of Warwick as well as to its 
position, and received a grant of a fair from John, earl of Warwick, 
in 1261, it seems to have developed independently of them, and 
received no charter until it was incorporated under the title of 
the burgesses of Warwick in 1546 after it had come into the 
king's hands by the attainder of Edward, earl of Warwick, 
in 1400. Other charters were granted in 1553, 1665, 1684 and 
X694, of which that of 1553 allowed the appointment of assistant 
burgesses, though this was discontinued in 1608 because through 
their means a candidate for the borough was elected who was not 
supported by the recorder and aldermen. The charter, of S694 



conferred the title of " Mayor, Aldermen and Burgesses " on 
the corporation, and appointed the offices of the borough. 
The mayor, aldermen and assistant burgesses were to assemble 
yearly at Michaelmas, and in the presence of all the burgesses 
nominate two aldermen, who should elect the new mayor and 
other officers. A mayor refusing office was to be fined £20, an 
alderman £10 and an assistant burgess £5. In 1882 the borough 
was divided into three wards, and the corporation consuls of a 
mayor, 6 aldermen and 18 town councillors. Warwick returned 
two members to parliament from 1295, but in 1885 the number 
was reduced to one. In addition to the fair granted by the earl 
to the burgesses in 1261, he himself held by prescriptive right a 
yearly fair in August and a market evtry Wednesday. Another 
fair was granted in 1 200, and in 14 13 the fair held at Michaelmas 
was changed to the feast of St Bartholomew. Fairs are now held 
on the 12th of October and on the Monday before St Thomas's 
day. A market is held every Saturday, the first charter for this 
being granted in 1545. A gaol a mentioned here as early as 
1200 in a pipe roll of that year. 

WARWICK, a township of Kent county, Rhode Island, U.S.A., 
about 5 m. S. of Providence, on the W. side of Narragansett Bay 
(here called Providence river) and crossed by the Pawtuxet river, 
which is in its lower course a part of the township's northern 
boundary. Pop. (1800) 17,761; (1900) 21,3x6, of whom 779a 
were foreign-born; (1910 census) 26,629. The township is 
crossed by the New York, New Haven & Hartford railway, 
and electric lines serve most of its twenty-seven rather scattered 
villages. The larger villages are: on the river, Pontiac, Natick, 
River Point (at the junction of the two upper branches of the 
Pawtuxet), Phoenix, CcntreviHc and Crompton; on Greenwich 
Bay, Apponaug and Warwick; and on Providence river, 
Shawomet, Warwick Neck, Oakland Beach, But ton woods, 
Conimicut and Long Meadow, which are summer resorts. Water 
power is provided by the Pawtuxet river, and much cotton and 
some woollen and print goods are manufactured. The value of 
the factory product in 1905 was $7,051,971 (171% more than 
in iooo)f of the total, nine-tenths was the value of textile 
products. Warwick, originally called Shawomet (Shawmut), 
its Indian name, was settled in 1643 by Samuel Gorton (q.v.) 
and a few followers. Gorton quarrelled with the Indians, was 
carried off to Boston, was tried there for heresy, was convicted, 
and was imprisoned; was released with orders to leave the 
colony in March 1644, went to England, and under the patronage 
of the earl of Warwick returned to bis settlement in 1648 and 
renamed it in honour of the earl. In 1647 the settlement entered 
into a union with Providence, Newport and Portsmouth under 
the Warwick (or Williams) charter of 1644, but during 1651- 
1654 Warwick and Providence were temporarily separated from 
the other two towns. Warwick was the birthplace of General 
Nathanael Greene. 

WARWICKSHIRE, a midland county of England, bounded N. 
■by Staffordshire, E. by Leicestershire and Northamptonshire, 
S. by Oxfordshire and Gloucestershire, and W. by Worcestershire. 
The area is 902*3 sq. m. The river Avon, watering a rich valley 
on a line from N.E. to S.W., divides the county into two unequal 
parts. The greater, lying to the N.W., drains principally to the 
Trent through the rivers Cole, Blythe, Rea, Anker and minor 
streams. Between these valleys, and dividing the system from 
that of the Avon, the land rises in gentle undulations, and is of 
plateau-like character, generally between 400 and 600 ft. in eleva- 
tion. There are considerable tracts of this nature on the western 
boundary, both north and south of Birmingham, on the eastern 
boundary north of Rugby, and in the centre between the Blythe. 
the Anker and the Avon. From this side the Avon receives the 
Swift, the Sowe and the Alne. The northern district was 
distinguished by Camden as the Woodland, as opposed to the 
southern or Feldon, " a plain champain." The northern wood-* 
land embraced the ancient forest of Ardeo (q.v.) and it is this 
district which gave to the county the common epithets of 
M woody " or " leafy." " The Feldon or south-eastern district 
is almost wholly in the Avon valley. From this side the 
Avon receives the Learn, the Itchcn and the Stour. Along the 



3+3 



WARWICKSHIRE 



south-eastern boundary runs the highest line of hills in the county, 
reaching some 800 ft., and including Edge Hill (which gives 
name to the battle of 1642), and the Brailes, Dasselt, Napton 
and Shuckburgh hills. The county boundary here extends 
across the highest line of hills, to include the headwaters of some 
of the feeders of the Cherwell, and thus a small part of the 
drainage area of the Thames. These hills rise abruptly, and 
command wide views over the champaign. The finest silvan 
scenery is found on the banks of the Avon; the position of Guy's 
Cliffe and of Warwick Castle are well-known examples. It is not 
difficult to trace the influence of the scenic characteristics of the 
county in the writings of its most famous son, William Shake- 
speare. 

Geology.— The Archean rocks are represented by some volcanic 
ashes and intrusive dykes (the Caldecote Scries), which are exposed 
north-west of Nuneaton. They dip south-westward under the 
Cambrian beds— Hartshill Quartzite and Stockingford Shales— 
which give rise to higher ground; the quartzitc, which is opened up 
in numerous large roadstone quarries, contains towards its summit 
a fauna suggesting that of the OUnellus zone, one of the oldest faunas 
known. The quartzite as welt as the overlying shales is seamed 
with intrusive dykes of diorite. A small inlier of the same shales 
occurs at Dosthill. south of Tamworth. The Coal Measures of the 
Warwickshire coalfield crop out in the north of the county between 
Nuneaton and Tamworth and contain valuable coal-seams; they 
pass conformably under the so-called Permian red sandstones and 
marls which are apparently the equivalents of the Keele Beds 
of Staffordshire, and like them should be grouped with the Coal 
Measures; they occupy a considerable area north and west of 
Coventry, and at Corlcy form high ground (62$ ft.) ; in several places 
•hafts have been sunk through them to the productive Coal Measures 
below. The rest of the county is occupied in the northern half by 
the Triassic red rocks, and in the south-east by the Lias. Of the 
Trias the Bunter (soft red sandstones with pebble-beds) is repre- 
sented only between Birmingham and Sutton Coldfield, where it is 
succeeded by the Keuper Sandstone, which is occasionally exposed 
also around the edge of the coalfield (Tamworth, Coventry, Warwick, 
Maxstoke) ; the Keuper Marls occupy a large area in the centre of 
the county, while some sandstones in them form picturesque scarps 
near Henlcy-in-Arden. The highly fossiliferous Rhactic beds which 
introduce the Lias are seldom exposed. The Lower Lias limestones 
are worked for cement (as near Rugby) and abound in ammonites. 
The Middle Lias sands and limestones follow, and form escarpments 

&> at Edge HQl, 710 ft.) ; but these and the lowest members of the 
lite series scarcely cross the county boundary from Oxfordshire. 
Glacial drifts— boulder-clay, sand and gravel— overspread large areas 
of the older rocks; their composition shows them to have been 
deposited from glaciers or ice-sheets which entered the district from 
the Irish Sea, from North Wales and from the North Sea. Later 
fluvio-glacial gravels of the Avon valley have yielded mammalian 
remains (hippopotamus, mammoth, &c), while palaeolithic imple- 
ments of quartzite have been found in the old gravels of the Rea 
near Birmingham. Coal, ironstone, lime and cement are the chief 
mineral products; manganese ore was formerly got from the 
Cambrian rocks. 

Climate and Agriculture.— The dimate is generally mad and 
healthy. The soil is on the whole good, and consists of various 
loams, mark, gravels and clays, well suited for most of the usual 
crops. It is rich in pasture-land, and dairy-farming is increasing. 
It has excellent orchards and market-gardens, and possesses some 
of the finest woodlands in England. About five-sixths of the total' 
area, a high proportion, is under cultivation, and of this about two- 
thirds is in permanent pasture, Oats and wheat occupy the greater 
part of the area under grain crops. In connexion with the cattle- 
rearing and dairy-farming, over half the acreage under green crops 
is occupied by turnips, swedes and mangolds. 

Industries.— The industrial part of the county is the northern. 
Warwickshire includes the greatest manufacturing centre of the 
Midlands— Birmingham, though the suburbs of that city extend 
into Staffordshire and Worcestershire. Metal-working in all branches 
is prosecuted here, besides other industries. Coventry is noted for 
cycle-making.and, with Bed worth and Nuneaton and the intervening 
villages, is a seat of the ribbon- and tape-makers. A small rich 
coalfield occurs in the north-east, extending outside the county 
northward from Coventry. Clay, limestone and other stone are 
quarried at various points, and an appreciable amount of iron ore 
is raised. 

C ommun ication*.— The main line of the London & North-Wcstera 
railway runs within the county near tho N.E. boundary, by Rugby, 
Nuneaton and Tamworth, with branches to Leamington and War- 
wick, Coventry and Birmingham, and cross-branches. The northern 
fine of the Great Western railway runs through Leamington and 
Warwick to Birmingham, with branches to Stratford-on-Avon and 
H#nl«*v-in-Atden. The Leicester and Birmingham branch of the 
-rosea the north of the county by Nuneaton, and 
resham line of this company serves Akester. 



The East and West Junction railway, from Blisworth in North* 
amptonbhire, serves Stratford-on-Avon and terminates at Broom 
Junction on the Evesham line of the Midland Water communica- 
tion through the ca>t of the county is afforded by the Oxford and 
Coventry canals. The Warwick & Napton canal 10ms the Oxford 
at Napton; the Warwick & Birmingham joins these towns, and 
the Stratford-on-Avon is a branch from it. The Faceley canal runs 
N.E. from Birmingham. None of the rivers is of commercial value 
for navigation. 

Population and Administration.— The area of the ancient 
county is 577.462 acres, with a population in 1891 of 805,071, 
and in 1001 of 897,835, the chief centres of increase lying natur- 
ally in the parts about Birmingham and Coventry. The area 
of the administrative county is 579,885 acres. The municipal 
boroughs are: Aston Manor (pop. 77,326), Birmingham (522,204), 
Coventry (69,978), Leamington, officially Royal Leamington 
Spa (26,888), Nuneaton (24,996), Stratford-on-Avon (8310), 
Sutton Coldfield (14.264) and Warwick (11,889), the county 
town. The urban districts are: Bulkington (1548), Erdington 
(16,368), Kenilworth (4544) and Rugby (16,830). Among the 
towns not appearing In these lists there should be mentioned: 
Akester (2303), Atherstone (5*48), Bedworth (7169), Colesbill 
<2593)> Foleshill (5514) and Solihull (7517). Warwickshire is 
in the midland circuit, and assizes are held at Warwick It 
has one court of quarter sessions, and is divided into 14 petty 
sessional divisions. The boroughs of. Birmingham, Coventry, 
Royal Leamington Spa, Stratford-on-Avon, Sutton Coldfield and 
Warwick have separate commissions of the peace, and the 
boroughs of Birmingham and Warwick have, in addition, 
separate courts of quarter sessions. The total number of civil 
parishes is 267. The county, which is mostly in the diocese of 
Worcester, but also extends into those of Lichfield, Gloucester, 
Peterborough and Oxford, contains 297 ecclesiastical parishes 
or districts, wholly or in part. Warwickshire has four parlia- 
mentary divisions— Northern or Tamworth, North-eastern or 
Nuneaton, South-eastern or Rugby, and South-western or Strat- 
ford-on-Avon, each returning one member. The parliamentary 
boroughs of Aston Manor, Coventry and Warwick return one 
member each, and that of Birmingham has seven divisions, each 
returning one member. 

Birmingham is the seat of a university, of the large grammar 
school of King Edward VI., and of other important educational 
institutions. At Rugby is one oi the most famous of English 
public schools. The King's School, Warwick, is a large boys' 
school, and the Leamington High School h for girls. There is 
a day training college for schoolmasters and schoolmistresses in 
connexion with Mason University College, Birmingham. Among 
other institutions there may be mentioned the Lady Warwick 
College for the instruction of women in the higher branches of 
agriculture, &c, founded by Frances, countess of Warwick, at 
Reading in 1898, and subsequently removed to Studley Castle 
in western Warwickshire, where there is accommodation for 
50 students. 

History.— -The earliest English settlers in the district now 
known as Warwickshire were a tribe of Hwiccas who, pushing 
up the Severn valley in the 6th century, made their way along 
the passages afforded by the Avon valley and the Roman Fosse 
Way, the extent of their settlement being indicated by the ancient 
limits of the diocese of Worcester. The vast forest of Ardcn, 
stretching from the Avon to the site of the modern Birmingham, 
barred any progress northwards, at the same time affording 
protection from the Anglian tribes who were already settled 
about Atherstone, and it was only after the battle of Cirencester 
in 628 that the whole of the Hwiccan territory was comprised 
in Mercia. In 675 Cosfbrd was included in the endowment of 
Peterborough, and in 757 iEthelbald was slam at Seckingtoo 
in a battle with the West Saxons. The shire of Warwick origin- 
ated in the 10th century about £thelfted's new burgh at 
Warwick, and is mentioned by name in the Saxon CkronicU in 
1016, when it was harried by Canute. The Danes made frequent 
incursions in the district in the 10th and nth centuries, but no 
traces of their settlements occur south of Rugby. 

The shire offered little resistance to the Conqueror, who was 



WASH, THE 



343 



at Warwick in jo68, and Thorkffl the sheriff was one of the few 
Fjigtistimen to retain large estates which he had held before the 
conquest, his family long continuing in the county under the 
name of Arden. The fortification which he bad raised at Warwick 
William entrusted to Heary, son of Roger de Beaumont, after- 
wards earl of Warwick, and Robert, count of Meulan, Henry's 
elder brother, had an important fief. Coventry Minster was 
richly endowed, and in 1185 the prior claimed among other 
privileges to have an independent coroner and to hold two 
courts a year. The earldom and castle of Warwick subsequently 
passed to the Beauchamps, and in the reign of Henry VI. to the 
Nevilles. The Clintons, founders of the castles and priories at 
MsTstoke and KenQwortb, enjoyed large estates in the county 
during the Norman period. 

Hie ten Domesday hundreds of Warwickshire are now reduced 
to four, all of which are mentioned in the 1 ath century. Hemling- 
ford represents the Domesday hundred of ColeshiB; Knightlow, 
the Domesday hundreds of Bomelau, Meretone and Stanlei; 
Kineton, the Domesday hundreds of Treraelau, Honesberie, 
Fexhole and Berricestone; Barlichway, the Domesday hundreds 
of Fernecumbe and Pntetau. Coleshill took its name from Coles- 
hul, a town near the junction of the Cole and the Blythe; 
Hemlingfonj from a ford over the Tame near Kingsbury; 
Knightlow from a hill on Dunsmore Heath; Meretone ana 
Stanlei from the villages of Mart on and Stoncleigh; Berrice- 
stone from Barcbeston on the Stour; Barlichway from a plot 
of ground on a hill between Haselor and Burton. BUeUa 
hundred, which derived its name from a tumulus between 
Wootton Wawen and Straiford-oa-Avon, was a liberty of the 
bishops of Worcester, and in the 17th century, though reckoned 
part of Barlichway hundred, possessed a court leet and court 
baron. The boundaries of Warwickshire have remained prac- 
tically unchanged since the Domesday Survey, but Spibbury, 
now in Oxfordshire, Romsley, Shipley, Quat and Rudge, now 
in Shropshire, and Chillington, now in Staffordshire, were assessed 
under this county, while Sawbridge, Berkswell, Whitacre, Over 
and Whichford. now in tins county, were assessed under 
Northamptonshire. Warwickshire was united with Leicester- 
shire under one sheriff until 1566, the shire court for the former 
being held at Warwick. 

In the 13th century Warwickshire included the deaneries of 
Warwick and Kineton within the archdeaconry and diocese of 
Worcester; the rest of the county constituting the archdeac on r y 
of Coventry within the Lichfield diocese, with the deaneries 
of Coventry, Stondey, Merton and Arden. In 1836 the arch- 
deaconry of Coventry was annexed to the diocese of Worcester, 
and m 1854 Its deaneries were entirely reconstituted and made 
thirteen in number. In 186 f the deanery of Akester was formed 
within the archdeaconry of Worcester, and Kineton was divided 
into North Kineton and South Kineton. In 1804 the deaneries 
of Aston, Birmingham, Coleshul, Northfield, Polesworth, 
Solihull and Sutton Coldfield were formed into tlhe archdeaconry 
of Birmingham, the archdeaconry of Coventry now including 
the deaneries of Atherstone, Baginton, Coventry, Dassett 
Magna, Dunchurch, Leamington, Monks KJrby, Rugby and 
Southam. 

In the wars of the reign of Henry III. Simon de Montfort 
placed KenOworth CasUe in charge of Sir John Gtffard, who in 
1264 attacked Warwick Castle and took prisoner the earl and 
countess of Warwick, who had supported the king. During the 
Wars of the Roses the Nevilles, represented by the earl of Warwick, 
supported the Yorkist cause, while Coventry was a Lancastrian 
stronghold. On the out break of the Civil War of the • 7th century 
Warwickshire and Staffordshire were associated for the parlia- 
ment under Lord Brooke. The battle of £dgehfll was fought 
in 1647. and in 1643 Birmingham, then a small town noted for 
its Puritanism, was sacked by Prince Rupert. Coventry endured 
a siege in 1647, and skirmishes took place at Southam and 
Warwick. 

At the time of the Domesday Survey the industries of Warwick- 
shire were almost exclusively agricultural, the extensive wood- 
lands north of Use Avon affording pasturage for sheep, while 



meadows and water-mills were numerous in the river valleys. The 
woollen industry flourished in Norman times, and Coventry was 
famed for its wool and broadcloths in the reign of Edward IIL 
Coal was probably dug at Griff in the 12th century, but the 
Warwickshire collieries only came into prominence in the 17th 
century, when John Briggs of Bedworth made an attempt to 
monopolise the coal trade. Birmingham was already famous for 
its smiths and cutlers in the x6th century. In the early 17th 
century the depopulation and distress caused by the enclosures 
of land for pasture led to frequent riots. The silk industry at 
Coventry and the needle industry about Akester both flourished 
in the x8th century. 

Warwickshire returned two members to the parliament of 
1200, and in 1295 Coventry and Warwick were each represented 
by two members. Tamworth returned two members in 1584. 
Under the Reform Act of 1832 the county returned four members 
in two divisions', Birmingham was represented by two members, 
and Tamworth was disfranchised. Under the act of 1868 
the representation of Birmingham waa increased, to three 



Antiquities. — Of pre-Norman architecture tome traces appear in 
the fine church of Wootton Wawen in the Arden (western) district. 
Otherwise the type is scarce, but Saxon remains, such as burial urns 
and jewelry, have been found in several places, as near Bensford 
Bridge on Watling Street, For ecclesiastical architecture Coventry 
with its three spires is famous, aad among village churches there ace 
many fine examples. Of those retaining Norman portions may be 
mentioned: Wofston and Berkswell in the Coventry district; 
Polesworth, formerly conventual, and Curd worth in the north; 
and in the south, in the neighbourhood of EdgehiQ, Burton Dassett, 
a very noteworthy building, and Warmington. where there is a 
remarkable specimen of domus imclusi or anchorite's chamber. 
There are also fine examples of Decorated work, such as Knowle, 
Solihull and Temple Balsall in Arden, and Brailes under the southern 
hills. Among the numerous religious houses in the county several 
have left remains. Such are the Cistercian foundations of Coombe 
Abbey near Coventry, of the 12th century, adjoining the mansion 
of that name in a beautiful park; of Merevale near Atherstone; and 
of Stoneleigh near Kcnflworth, also adjoining a famous mansion. 
This abbey was a lath-century foundation, but a majestic gatehouse 
of the 14th century also stands. Maxstoke Priory, in Arden, was a 
foundation for Augustinian canons of the 14th century. WroxaU 
Abbey was a Benedictine nunnery of the 12th century: but the 
name is given to a modern mansion. In view of the large share the 
county has had in war, it is not surprising to find many examples 
of great fortified houses or castles. Warwick Castle and Kenil worth 
Castle, the one still a splendid residence, the other a no less splendid 
ruin, are described under those towns. At Hartshill (the birthplace 
of Michael Drayton the poet) there is a fragment of a Norman castle. 
Among fortified mansions Maxstoke Castle is of the 1 4th century; 
Baddesley Clinton Hall is of the 15th as it stands, but is an earlier 
foundation : Astley Castle is another good specimen of the period. 
Comoton Wyniatcs. once fortified. Is a beautiful Elizabethan house 
of brick, so remarkably hidden in a hollow of the southern hills as 
to be visible only from the closest proximity on all sides; Charles L 
ky , -~ l here A'w- the Civil Wnr% Chartecote Park is a modernized 
El ' OtAn balk m an exquitite situjti <n on the Avon above Strat- 
ford Ol more modern nurr?iun> Anbury Hall, Astley Castle, 
Ncwnrum Paddost, Ragley R-iM »tid WalTon Hall may be mentioned. 

See Wvnrt,! Cotxty History, Wanetttikut; Sir William Dugdale, 
7V A*tv$»um t>f Wanrtitikife (London, 1656: and ed., a vols., 
London. i7.jo): W> Smith. A Huuwy i)f the County of Warwick 
(B r ;h.im. JSjo); J, T\ Bur£'2se, Historic Warvnckshtre (London, 
1870): luirty fcintrwrrTki in W&rantk:J;irt (Birmingham, 1884); 
S. Timmin* h Hutery i>f WarvLkfkire ( -H I opular County History rf 
strict* (London, 1&S9J: J. Kinnct, The Forest oj Ardm (London, 
1863). 

WASH, THB. a shallow hay of the North Sea, on the Lincoln- 
shire and Norfolk coast of England. It is roughly square in 
shape, penetrating the land for 12 m., and being so m. wide at 
the head and is at the mouth. Through the sandbanks which 
form its bed there are two main channels into deep water; one, 
Boston Deeps, is kept open by the waters of the Witham and 
Wetland; the other, Lynn Deeps, gives passage to those of the 
Nene and the Great Ouse. The Wash is the remnant of a much 
larger bay, which covered a large part of the Fens which now 
border it; it is gradually oiling with the deposits of the rivers, 
and from time to time small portions are reclaimed (see Fens), 
The flat bordering lands are protected by sea-walls. The 
formerly dangerous passage of the marsh-lands, which were 
to irruptions of the tide, is illustrated by the accident to 



WASHBURN, C. C— WASHINGTON, GEORGE 



34+ 

King John in 1216 shortly before his death. Passing over 
the Cross Keys Wash, near Sutton Bridge, his baggage and 
treasure wagons were engulfed and he himself barely escaped 
with life. 

WASHBURN, CADWALLADER GOLDEN (1818-1882), 
American soldier and politician, was born at Livermore, Maine, 
on the 22nd of April 1818. He was admitted to the bar in 1842, 
and removed to Mineral Point, Wisconsin, where he practised 
law, speculated in land and engaged in banking. He became 
prominent in the Republican party, and was a member (1855- 
1861) of the U.S. House of Representatives, of which his brother 
Israel (1811-1883) was a member from Maine in 1851-1861; his 
brother rJihu Benjamin (see below) changed the spelling 
of the family surname to Washburne. At the beginxiing of 
the Civil War he became colonel of the Second Wisconsin 
Cavalry, was promoted to brigadier-general on the 16th of 
July 1862 and to major-general on the 20th of November 1862, 
and assisted in the capture of Vicksburg (4th July 1863), after 
which he served in Texas and West Tennessee. Resigning from 
the army in 1865, he became extensively interested in flour-milling 
and lumbering in Wisconsin. From 1867 to 1871 he was again 
a member of the U.S. House of Representatives, and subsequently 
served one term (187 2-1874) as governor of Wisconsin. 

WASHBURN, a city and the county-seat of Bayfield county, 
Wisconsin, U.S.A., about 52 m. E. of Superior, Wis., and about 
6 m. N. of Ashland, on Chequamegon Bay, an arm of Lake 
Superior. Pop. (1910) 3830. Washburn is served by the 
Northern Pacific and the Chicago & North-Western railways, 
and by several lines of lake steamships. The city is finely 
situated on high land above the bay, and is a popular summer 
resort, being especially well known for its boating and fishing. 
It has a Carnegie library. Among its manufactures are staves, 
shingles, lumber, wooden ware and bricks. There is a powder 
and dynamite plant in the vicinity. In the city there are also 
grain elevators and large coal docks, and in the neighbourhood 
are valuable stone quarries. In 1650 Radisson and Groscilliers 
touched here on their trip along the south shore of Lake Superior. 
In 1665 Father Claude Alloucz, the Jesuit, established on the 
shore -of the bay, a short distance south of the present city, the 
first French mission in Wisconsin, which he named " La Pointe 
du Saint Esprit," and which in 1669 was placed in charge of 
Father Jacques Marquette. The place was visited by Du Luth 
in 1681-1682, and here in 1693 lie Sueur, a fur trader, built a 
stockaded post. In 1 7 18 a fort was erected and a French garrison 
placed in it. About 1820-18 21 a trading post of the American 
Fur Company was established in the neighbourhood. The 
present city, named in honour of Governor C. C. Washburn, 
dates from about 1879, but its growth was slow until after 1888. 
It was chartered as a city in 1004. 

WASHBURNE, ELIHU BENJAMIN (18x6-1887), American 
statesman, born in Livermore, Maine, on the 23rd of September 
1816. He was one of seven brothers, of whom four sat in Congress 
from as many different states. He received a common school 
education, graduated at the Harvard Law School in 1839, 
and was soon afterwards admitted to the bar. In 1840 he 
removed to Galena, Illinois. He was elected to Congress m 
1852, where, first as a Whig and afterwards as a Republican, 
he represented his district continuously until 1869, taking a 
prominent part in debate, and earning the name " watch-dog 
of the Treasury " by his consistent and vigorous opposition to 
extravagant and unwise appropriations. He contributed much 
to aid General Grant during the Civil War, and the latter on 
becoming President made Washburne secretary of state. On 
account of ill-health, however, he served only twelve days, 
and was then appointed minister to France, where during the 
Franco- Prussian War and the Commune he won much distinction 
as protector of German and other foreign citizens in Paris. He 
was the only foreign minister who remained at his post during 
trie Commune. In 1877 he retired from public life, and died in 
Chicago, III., on the 22nd of October 1887. He published 
ReriJUftuMi of 4 Minister to Prance (2 vols., 18S7), and edited 
>» (1884). 



WASHINGTON, BOOKER TALIAFERRO <c. i8*o~ ), 
American negro teacher and reformer, was bora on a plantation 
near Hale's Ford, Franklin county, Virginia. Soon after the 
Civil War he went to Maiden, West Virginia, where he worked 
in a salt furnace and then in a coal mine. He obtained an 
elementary education at night school, and worked aa a house 
servant in a family where his ambition for knowledge was 
encouraged. In 187a " by walking, begging rides both in wagons 
and in the cars " he travelled 500 m. to the Hampton (Virginia) 
Normal and Agricultural Institute, where be remained three 
years, working as janitor for his board and education, and 
graduated in 1875. For two years he taught at Maiden, West 
Virginia, and studied for eight months (1878-1879) at the Way- 
land Seminary in Washington, D.C In 1079 he became in- 
structor at the Hampton Institute, where he trained about 
seventy-five American Indians with whom. General & C 
Armstrong was carrying on an educational experiment, and 
he developed the night school, which became one of the most 
important features of the institution. In 1881 he was appointed 
organizer and principal of a negro normal school at Tuskegee, 
Alabama (?.».), for which the state legislature had made an annual 
appropriation of $2000. Opened in July 188 1 in a little shanty 
and church, the Tuskegee Normal and Industrial ' Institute 
became, under Washington's presidency, the foremost exponent 
of industrial education for the negro. To promote its interests 
and to establish better understanding between whites and 
blacks, Washington delivered many addresses throughout the 
United States, notably a speech in 189s at the opening of the 
Atlanta Cotton States and International Exposition. In 1900 
at Boston, Massachusetts, he organized the National Negro 
Business League. Harvard conferred upon him the honorary 
degree of A.M. in 1806, and Dartmouth that of LL.D. in 1901. 

Among his publications are a remarkable autobiography, Up 
from Slavery (1901). The Future of the American Negro 6809*. 
Sowing and Reaping (1900), Character Budding (1902), Working with 
the Hands (1904). Tuskegee and Us People (1905). Putting the most into 
Life (1906), Life of Frederick Douglass (1007), The Negro w Business 
(1907) and The Story of the Negro (1909). 

WASHINGTON, BUSHROD (1762-1879), American jurist, 
nephew of George Washington, was born in Westmoreland 
county, Virginia, on the 15th of June 1762. He graduated in 
x 778 at the College of William and Mary, where he was an original 
member of the Phi Beta Kappa Society; was a member of a 
volunteer cavalry troop in 1780; studied law in Philadelphia 
in 1781, and began practice in his native county. He served in 
the House of Delegates in 1787, and in the following year sat 
in the convention which ratified for Virginia the Federal Con- 
stitution. After living in Alexandria for a short time he removed 
to Richmond and in 1798 was appointed an associate justice 
of the United States Supreme Court by President John Adams, 
He* was George Washington's literary executor, and supervised 
the preparation of John Marshall's Lift of Washington (5 vols., 
1 804-1807); and on Mrs Washington's death in 1802 he inherited 
Mount Vernon and a part of the estate. He died in Philadelphia 
on the 26th of November 1829. 

WASHINGTON, GEORGE (1732-1700), the first president 
of the United States, was born at Bridges Creek, Westmoreland 
county, Virginia, on the a*nd (Old Style i»th) of February 
1732. The genealogical researches of Mr Henry E. Waters 
seem to have established the connexion of the family with the 
Washingtons of Sulgrave. Northamptonshire, England. The 
brothers John and Lawrence Washington appear in Virginia 
in 1658. John took up land at Bridges Creek, became a member 
of the House of Burgesses in 1666, and died in 1676 His eldest 
son, Lawrence, married Mildred Warner, by whom he had three 
children— John, Augustine ( 1604^1 743 ) and Mildred. Augustine 
Washington married twice. By the first marriage, with Jane 
Butler, there were four children, two of whom, Lawrence and 
Augustine, grew to manhood. By the second marriage, in 1730, 
with Mary Ball, descendant of a family which migrated to 
Virginia in 1657. there were six children — George, Betty, Samuel, 
John, Charles and Mildred. Upon the death of the father, 
Lawrence inherited the estate at Hunting Creak, on the Potosaac, 



WASHINGTON, GEORGE 



US 



liter known as Mount Vernon, and Georsje the estate on the 
Rappahannock, nearly opposite Fredericksburg, where his 
father anally lived. 

Of Washington's early life little is known, probably because 
there was little unusual to telL The story of the hatchet and 
the cherry-tree, and similar tales, are undoubtedly apocryphal, 
having been coined by Washington's most popular biographer, 
Mason Weems (d. 18*5).* There is nothing to show that the 
hoy's life was markedly different from that common to Virginia 
(amities in easy circumstances; plantation affairs, hunting, 
fishing, and a little reading making up its substance. From 1715 
to 1730 he lived at what Is now called Mount Vernon, and alter, 
waids at the estate on the Rappahannock. His education was 
only elementary- and very defective, except in mathematics, 
in which he was largely self-taught; and although at his death 
he left a considerable library, he was never an assiduous reader. 
Although he had throughout his life a good deal of official contact 
with the French, he never mastered their language. Some 
careful reading of good books there must have been, however, 
for in spite of pervading illiteracy, co m mon in that age, in matters 
of grammar and spelling, he acquired a dignified and effective 
English style. The text* of his writings, as published by Jarcd 
Sparks, have been so " edited " in these respects as to destroy 
their value as evidence; but the edition of Mr Worthington C. 
Ford restores the original texts, Washington left school in the 
autumn of 1747* and from this time we begin to know something 
of Ins afe. . He was then at Mount Vernon with his half-brother 
Lawrence, who was also his guardian. Lawrence was a son-in-law 
of William Fairfax, proprietor of the neighbouring plantation** 
Belvoir, and agent for the extensive Fairfax lands in the colony. 
Lawrence had served with Fairfax at Cartagena, and had mode 
the acquaintance of Admiral Edward Vernon, from whom Mount 
Vernon was named. The story that a commission as midshipman 
wis obtained for George through the good offices of the admiral, 
hut that the opposition of the boy's mother put an end to the 
scheme, teems to lack proof. la 1748, however, through the 
influence of Thomas, Lord Fairfax, the head of the family, who 
had come to America to live, Washington, then only sixteen years 
of age, was appointed surveyor of the Fairfax property; and an 
appointment as public surveyor soon followed. The next three 
years were spent in this service, most of the time on the frontier. 
He always retained a disposition to speculate in western lands, 
the ultimate value of winch he early appreciated; many of his 
later investments of this character are treated in C W. Butter- 
aekrs WasJdnflo+Crowford Utias (1877)* He seems, too, to 
have impressed others already with his force of mind and char- 
acter. In 1 751 he accompanied his half-brother Lawrence, who 
was stricken with consumption, to the West Indies, where he 
had an attack of small-pox which left him marked for hie. 
Lawrence died in the following year, making George executor 
ander the will and residuary heir of Mount Vernon; and the 
kuter estate became his in 1761. 

In October 1753, on the eve of the last French and Indian war, 
Washington was chosen by Governor Robert Dinwiddie as the 
agent to warn the French away from their new posts on the 
Ohio, in western Pennsylvania. He accomplished the winter 
journey safely, though with considerable danger and hardship; 
and shortly alter his return was appointed lieutenant-colonel of 
a Viajinia regiment, under Colonel Joshua Fry. In April 1754 
he set out with two companies for the Ohio, defeated (a8th May) 
a force of French and Indians at Great Meadows (in the present 
Fayette county, Pennsylvania), but at Fort Necessity in this 
vicinity was forced to canitulater<3rd July), though only after a 
vigorous defence. For his services he received the thanks of 
the House of Burgesses. When General Edward Braddock 
arrived in Virginia in February 1755, Washington wrote him a 
diplomatically worded letter; and was presently made a member 

1 Weems was a Protestant Episcopal clergyman, who first published 
a brief biography of Washington in 1800. and later (1806) consider- 
ably expanded tt and introduced various apocryphal anecdotes. 
The biography, though worthless, had an immense circulation, and 



of the staff, with the rank of cokmet Hkpersoiial relations with 
Braddock were friendly throughout, and in the calamitous defeat 
he showed for the first time that fiery energy which always lay 
hidden beneath his calm and unruffled exterior. He ranged the 
whole field on horseback, making himself the most conspicuous 
target for Indian bullets, and, in spite of what he called the 
" dastardly behaviour " of the regular troops, saved the expedi* 
tion from annihilation, and brought the remnant of his Virginians 
out of action in fair order* In spite of his reckless exposure, 
he was one of the few unwoundod officers. In August, after his 
return, he vmsccon missioned commander of the Virginia forces, 
being then twenly-threc years old. For about two years his task 
was that of M defending a frontier of more than 350 m. with 
700 men," a task rendered, the more difficult by the inaub> 
ordination and irregular service of his soldiers, and by irritating 
comrovctsks over official precedence. To settle the latter 
question he made a journey to Boston, in 1756, to confer with 
Governor Wittlam Shirley. In the winter of 1757 bis health 
broke down, but in the next year he had the pleasure of com* 
manding the advance guard of the expedition under General 
John Forbes which occ up ied Fort Duqncsne and renamed it 
Fort Pitt. (Sec PrrrsnuRo: History.) At the end of the year 
he resigned his commission, the war in Virginia being at an end, 
and in January 1750 married Martha Dandridge (173^-1 803), 
widow of Daniel Parke Custis. 

For the next fifteen years Washington's life at Mount Vernon,' 
where he made his home after his marriage, was that of a typical 
Virginia planter of the more prosperous sort, a consistent member 
and vestryman of the Estabhshcd (Episcopal) Church, a large 
slave-holder, a strict but considerate master, and a widely 
trusted man of affairs. His extraordinary escape in Braddock'* 
defeat had led a colonial preacher to declare in a sermon his 
belief that the young man had been preserved to be "the 
saviour of his country "; but if there was any sucji impressioa 
it soon died away, and Washington gave his associates no reason 
toconriderhimamanof uncoirtsoon endowments. Hissnarriage 
brought him an increase of about $100,000 in his property, mik- 
ing him one of the richest men in the colonies; and he was able 
to develop his plantation and enlarge its extent. His attitude 
towards slavery has been much discussed, but it does not seem 
to have been different from that of many other planters of that! 
day: he did not think highly of the system, but had no invincible, 
repugnance to it, and saw no way of getting rid of it. In bis 
treatment of slaves he was exacting, but not harsh, aad was 
averse to selling them save in case of necessity. His diaries show 
a minutely met nodical conduct of business, generous indulgence 
in hunting, comparatively little reading and a wide acquaintance 
with the lending men of the colonies, but no marked indications of 
wriat a lisually considered to be '* greatness.'' Asm the case of 
Lincoln, he was educated into greatness by the increasing weight 
of bis responsibihtSes aad the manner in which he met then*.' 
like others of the dominant planter class in Virginia, be was 
repeatedly elected to the House of Burgesses, but Che business 
which came before the colonial assembly was for some years of 
only local importance, and he is not known to have made any 
set speeches in the House, or to have said anything beyond a state- 
ment of his opinion and the reasons for it. He was present on 
the aoth of May 1765, when Patrick Henry introduced his famous 
resolutions against the Stamp Act. That he thought a great deal 
on public questions, and took, full advantage of his legislative 
experience as a means of political education, is shown by his 
letter of the $th of April 1769 to his neighbour, George Mason, 
communicating the Philadelphia non-importation resolutions,' 
which had just reached him. In this he considers briefly the 
best means of peaceable resistance to the policy of the ministry, 
but even at that early date faces frankly and fully the probable 
final necessity of resisting by force, and endorses it, though only 
as a last resort. In May following, when the House of Burgesses 
was dissolved, be was among the members who met at the 
Raleigh tavern and adopted a non-importation agreement; and 
he himself kept the agreement when others did not. Though 
on friendly terms with Governor Norbome Berkeley, Baron 



346 



WASHINGTON, GEORGE 



Botetourt and his successor, John Murray, e*rl-gf Dunmore, lie 
nevertheless took a prominent part, though without speech- 
making, in the struggles of the Assembly against Dunmore, 
and his position was always a radical one. As the breach 
widened, he even opposed petitions to the king and parliament, 
on the ground that the claims to taxation and control had been 
put forward by the ministry on the basis of right, not of ex- 
pediency, that the ministry could not abandon the claim of 
right and the colonies could not admit it, and that petitions 
must be, as they already had been, rejected. " Shall we," 
he writes in a letter, " after this whine and cry for relief? " 

On the 5th of August 1774 the Virginia convention appointed 
Washington as one of seven delegates to the first Continental 
Congress, which met at Philadelphia on the 5th of September, 
and with this appointment his national career, which was to 
continue with but two brief intervals until his death, begins. 
His letters during his service in Congress show that he had fully 
grasped the questions at issue, that he was under no delusions 
as to the outcome of the struggle over taxation, and that he 
expected war. " More blood will be spilled on this occasion/' he 
wrote, " if the ministry are determined to push matters to 
extremity, than history has ever yet furnished instances of in 
the annals of North America." His associates in' Congress at 
once recognized his military ability, and although he was not a 
member of any of the committees of the Congress, he seems to 
have aided materially in securing the endorsement by Congtcss 
of the Suffolk county, Massachusetts, resolves (see Milton, 
Mass.) looking towards organized resistance. On the adjourn- 
ment of the Congress he returned to Virginia, where he con- 
tinued to be active, as a member of the House of Burgesses, 
in urging on the organization, equipment and training of troops, 
and even undertook in person to drill volunteers. His attitude 
towards the mother country at this time, however, must not 
be misunderstood. Much as he expected war, he was not yet 
ready to declare in favour of independence, and he did not 
ally himself with the party of independence until the course 
of events made the adoption of any other course impossible. 
In March 1775 he was appointed a delegate from Virginia to 
the second Continental Congress, where he served on committees 
for fortifying New York, collecting ammunition, raising money 
and formulating army rules.' It seems to have been generally 
understood that, fa case of war, Virginia would expect him to 
act as her commander-in-chief, and it was noticed that, in the 
second Congress, be was the only member who habitually appeared 
in uniform. History, however, was to settle the matter on 
broader lines. The two most powerful colonies were Virginia 
and Massachusetts. The war began in Massachusetts, troops 
from New England flocking to the neighbourhood of Boston 
almost spontaneously; but the resistance, if it was to be effective, 
must have the. support of the colonies to the southward, and 
the Virginia colonel who was serving on all the military com- 
mittees of Congress, and whose experience in the Braddock 
campaign had made his name favourably known in England, 
was the obvious as well as the politic choice. When Congress, 
after the fights at Lexington and Concord, resolved that the 
colonies ought to be put in a position of defence, the first practical 
step was the unanimous selection (June 15), on motion of John 
Adams of Massachusetts, of Washington as commander-in-chief 
of the armed forces of the United Colonies. Refusing any salary 
and asking only the reimbursement of his expenses, he accepted 
the position, asking " every gentleman in the room," however, 
to remember his declaration that he did not believe himself to 
be equal to the command, and that he accepted it only as a duty 
made imperative by the unanimity of the call. He reiterated 
this belief m private letters even to his wife; and there seems 
to be no doubt that, to the day of his death, he was the most 
determined sceptic as to his fitness for the positions to which he 
was successively called. He was commissioned on the 17th of 
June 177s, set out at once for Cambridge, Mass., and on the 3rd 
of July took command of the levies there assembled for action 
against the British garrison m Boston. The battle of Bunker 
Hill had already taken plate,: new* of it reaching him on the way 



north. Until the following March, Washington's work was to 
bring about some semblance of military organization and 
discipline, to collect ammunition and military stores, to corre- 
spond with Congress and the colonial authorities, to guide 
military operations in widely separate parts of the country! 
to create a military system for a people entirely unaccustomed 
to such a thing and impatient and suspicious under it, and to 
bend the course of events steadily towards driving the British 
out of Boston. He planned the expeditions against Canada 
under Richard Montgomery and Benedict Arnold, and sent 
out privateers to harass British commerce. It is not easy to see 
how Washington survived the year 1775; the colonial poverty, 
the exasperating annoyances, the outspoken criticism of those 
who demanded active operations, the personal and party dis- 
sensions in Congress, the selfishness or stupidity which cropped 
out again and again among some of the most patriotic of his 
coadjutors were enough to have broken down most men. They 
completed his training. The change in this one winter is very 
evident. If he was not a great man when he went to Cambridge, 
he was both a general and a statesman in the fullest sense when he 
drove the British out of Boston in March 1776. From that time 
until his death he was admittedly the foremost man of the 
continent. 

The military operations of the remainder of the War of Inde- 
pendence are described elsewhere (see American Wax or 
Independence). Washington's retreat through New Jersey; 
the manner in which he turned and struck his pursuers at Trenton 
and Princeton, and then established himself at Morristown, so as 
to make the way to Philadelphia impassable; the vigour with 
which he handled his army at the Brandywine and Germantowit; 
the persistence with which he held the strategic position of Valley 
Forge through the dreadful winter of 1777-1778, in spite of the 
misery of his men, the clamours of the people and the impotence 
and meddling of the fugitive Congress — all went to show that the 
fibre of his public character had been hardened to its permanent 
quality. " These are the times that try men's souls," wrote 
Thomas Paine at the beginning of 1776, and the words had added 
meaning in each year that followed; but Washington had no 
need to fear the test. The spirit which culminated in the treason 
of Benedict Arnold was a serious addition to bis burdens; for 
what Arnold did others were almost ready to do. Many of the 
American officers, too, had taken offence at the dose personal 
friendship which had sprung up between the marquis de La 
Fayette and Washington, .and at the diplomatic deference which 
the commander-in-chief felt compelled to show to other foreign 
officers. Some of the foreign volunteers were eventually dis- 
missed politely by Congress, on the ground that suitable employ- 
ment could not be found for them. The name of one of them, 
Thomas Conway, an Irish soldier of fortune from the French 
service, is attached to what is called " Conway's Cabal" a scheme 
for superseding Washington by General Horatio Gates, who in 
October 1777 succeeded in forcing Burgoyne to capitulate at 
Saratoga, and who had been persistent in his depreciation of the 
commander-in-chief and in intrigues With members of Congress. 
A number of officers, as well as of men in civil life, were mixed up 
in the plot, while the methods employed wore the lowest forms 
of anonymous slander; but at the first breath of exposure 
every one concerned hurried to cover up his part in it, leaving 
Conway to shoulder both' the responsibility and the disgrace. 
The treaty of alliance of 1778 with France, following the sur- 
render of Burgoyne, put an end to all such plans. It was absurd 
to expect foreign nations to deal with a second-rate man as 
commander-in-chief while Wastungton was in the field, and he 
seems to have had no further trouble of this kind. The prompt 
and vigorous pursuit of Sir Henry Clinton across New Jersey 
towards New York, and the battle of Monmouth, hi which the 
plan of battle was thwarted by Charles Lee, another foreign 
recruit of popular reputation, closed the military record of 
Washington, so far as active campaigning was concerned, until 
the end of the war. The British confined their operations to 
other parts of the continent! and Washington, alive as ever to 
the importance of keeping up connexion with New England, 



WASHINGTON, GEORGE 



347 



devoted himself to watching the British In and about New York 
Oty. It was in every way fitting, however, that he who had been 
the mainspring of the war from the beginning, and had borne far 
more than his share of its burdens and discouragements, should 
end it with the campaign of Yorktown, conceived by himself, 
and the surrender of Cornwaflis (October 1781)- Although peace 
was not concluded until September 1783, there was no more 
important fighting. Washington retained his commission until 
the 13rd of December 1783, when, in a memorable scene, he 
returned it to Congress, then in session at Annapolis, Md., 
and retired to Mount Vernon. His expenses during the war, 
including secret service money, aggregated about $64,000; in 
addition he expended a considerable amount from his private 
fortune, for which he made no claim to reimbursement. 

By this time the popular canonization of Washington had 
fairly begun. He occupied a position in American public life 
and in the American political system which no man could 
possibly hold again. He may be said to have become a political 
element quite apart from the Union, or the states, or the people 
of either. In a country in which newspapers had at best only 
a local circulation, and where communication was still slow and 
difficult, the knowledge that Washington favoured anything 
superseded, with very many men, both argument and the necessity 
of information. His constant correspondence with the governors 
of the states gave him a quasi-paternal attitude towards govern- 
ment in general On relinquishing his command, for example, 
he was able to do what no other man could have done with 
either propriety or safety: he addressed a circular letter to the 
governors, pointing out changes in the existing form of govern- 
ment which he believed to be necessary, and urging " an in- 
dissoluble union of the states- under one federal head," " a 
regard to public justice/' the adoption of a suitable military 
establishment for a time of peace, and the making of "'those 
mutual concessions which are requisite to the general prosperity.*' 
His refusal to accept a salary, cither as commander-in-chief 
or as president, might have been taken as affectation or im- 
pertinence in any one else; it seemed natural and proper enough 
in the case of Washington,, but it was his peculiar privilege. 
It is even possible that be might have had a crown, had he 
been willing to accept it. The army, at the end of the war, 
was justly dissatisfied with its treatment. The officers were 
called to meet at Newburgh, and it was the avowed purpose 
of the leaders of the movement to march the army westward, 
appropriate vacant public lands'as part compensation for arrears 
of pay, leave Congress to negotiate for peace without an army, 
and " mock at their calamity and laugh when their fear cometh." 
Less publicly avowed was the purpose to make their commander- 
in-chief king, if he could be persuaded to aid in establishing a 
monarchy. Washington put a summary stop to the whole pro- 
ceeding. A letter written to him by Colonel Lewis Nicola, on be- 
half of this coterie, detailed the weakness of a republican form of 
government as they had experienced it, their desire for " mixed 
government," with him at its head, and their belief that " the 
title of king " would be objectionable to but few and of material 
advantage to the country. His reply was peremptory and 
indignant. In plain terms he stated his abhorrence of the 
proposal; he was at a loss to conceive what part of his conduct 
could have encouraged their address; they could not have 
found " a person to whom their schemes were more disagree- 
able "; and he charged them, " if you have any regard for your- 
self or posterity, or respect for me, to banish these thoughts 
from your mind, and never communicate, as from yourself 
or any one else, a sentiment of the like nature." His influence, 
and his alone, secured the quiet disbanding of the discontented 
army. That influence was as powerful after he had retired to 
Mount Vernon as before the resignation of his command. The 
Society of the Cincinnati, an organization composed of officers 
of the late war, chose him as its first president; but he insisted 
that the Society should abandon its plan of hereditary member- 
ship, and change other features of the organization against which 
there had been public clamour. When the legislature of Virginia 
gave him 150 shares of stock in companies formed for the 



improvement of the Potomac and James rivers, and* he was 
unable to refuse them lest his action should be misinterpreted, 
he extricated himself by giving them to educational institutions. 
His voluminous correspondence shows his continued concern 
for a standing army and the immediate possession of the western 
military posts, and his interest in the development of the 
western territory. From public men in all parts of the country 
he received such a store of suggestions as came to no other man, 
digested it, and was enabled by means of it to speak with what 
seemed infallible wisdom. In the midst of a burden of letter- 
writing, the minute details in his diaries of tree-planting and 
rotation of crops, and his increasing reading on the political 
side of history, he found time to entertain a stream of visitors 
from all parts of the United States and from abroad. Among 
these, in March 1785, were the commissioners from Virginia and 
Maryland, who met at Alexandria (q.t.) to form a commercial 
code for Chesapeake Bay and the Potomac, and made an oppor- 
tunity to visit Mount Vernon. From that moment the current 
of events, leading into the Annapolis Convention (see Anna* 
poiis, Md.) of 1786 and the Federal Convention of the follow- 
ing year, shows Washington's close supervision at every point. 

When the Federal Convention met at Philadelphia in May 
1787 to frame the present constitution, Washington was present 
as a delegate from Virginia, though much against his will; and 
a unanimous vote at once made him the presiding officer. Natur- 
ally, therefore, he did not participate in debate; and he seems 
to have spoaen but once, and then to favour an amendment 
reducing from 40,000 to 30,000 the minimum population required 
as a basis of representation in the House. The mere suggestion, 
coming from him, was sufficient, and the change was at once 
agreed to. He approved the constitution which was decided 
upon, believing, as he said, "that it was the best constitution 
which could be obtained at that epoch, and that this or a dissolu- 
tion awaits our choice, and is the only alternative." As president 
of the convention he signed the constitution, and kept the papers 
of the convention until the adoption of the new government, 
when they were deposited in the Department of State. All his 
vast influence was given to secure the ratification of the new 
instrument, and his influence was probably decisive. When 
enough states had ratified to assure the success of the new 
government, and the time came to elect a president, there was 
no hesitation. The office of president had been " cut to fit the 
measure of George Washington," and no one thought of any 
other person in connexion with it. . The unanimous vote of the 
electors made him the first president of the United States; 
their unanimous vote elected him for a second time in 1702- 
1793; and even after he had positively refused to- serve for a 
third term, two electors voted for him in 1 796-1 797. The public 
events of his presidency arc given elsewhere (see United States, 
5 History), While the success of the new government was the work 
of many men and many causes, one cannot resist the conviction 
that the factor of chief importance was the existence, at the head 
of the executive department, of such a character as Washington. 
It was he who gave to official intercourse formal dignity and 
distinction. It was be who secured for the president the power 
of removal from office without the intervention of the Senate. 
His support of Hamilton's financial plans not only insured a 
speedy restoration of public credit, but also, and even more 
important, gave the new government constitutional ground on 
which to stand; while his firmness in dealing with the " Whisky 
Insurrection " taught a much-needed and wholesome lesson of 
respect for the Federal power. His official visits to New England 
in 2789, to Rhode Island in 1790 and to the South in 1791 
enabled him to test public opinion at the same time that they 
increased popular interest in the national government. Himself 
not a political partisan, he held the two natural parties apart, 
and prevented party contest, until the government had become 
too firmly established to be shaken by them. Perhaps the final 
result would not in any case have failed, even had " blood and 
iron " been necessary to bring it about; but the quiet attainment 
of the result was due to the personality of Washington, as well 
as to the political sense of the American people. 



348 



WASHINGTON, GEORGE 



It would be a great mistake to suppose, however, that the 
influence of the president was fairly appreciated during his 
term of office, or that he himself was uniformly respected. 
Washington seems never to have unde rs tood fully either the 
nature, the significance, or the inevitable necessity of party 
government in a republic. Instead, he attempted to balance 
party against party, selected representatives of opposing political 
views to serve in his first cabinet, and sought in that way to 
neutralize the effects of parties. The consequence was that 
the two leading members of the cabinet, Alexander Hamilton 
and Thomas Jefferson, exponents for the most part of diametric- 
ally opposite political doctrines, soon occupied the position, to 
use the words of one of them, of " two game-cocks in a pit." 
The unconscious drift of Washington's mind was toward the 
Federalist party; his letters to La Fayette and to Patrick Henry, 
in December 1708 and January 1700, make that evident even 
without the record of his earlier career as president- It is in- 
conceivable that, to a man with his type of mind and his extra- 
ordinary experience, the practical sagacity, farsightedness and 
aggressive courage of the Federalists should not have seemed 
to embody the best political wisdom, however little he may have 
been disposed to ally himself wiih any party group or subscribe 
to any comprehensive creed. Accordingly, when the Democratic* 
Republican party came to be formed, about 1795, it was not to 
be expected that its leaders would long submit with patience to 
the continual interposition of Washington's name and influence 
between themselves and their opponents; but they maintained 
a calm exterior. Some of their followers were less discreet. 
The president's proclamation of neutrality, in the war between 
England and France, excited them to anger; his support of 
Jay's treaty with Great Britain roused them to fury. His 
firmness in thwarting the activities of Edmond Charles Edouard 
Genet, minister from France, alienated the partisan* of France; 
his suppression of the " Whisky Insurrection " aroused in some 
the fear of a military despotism. Forged letters, purporting 
to show his desire to abandon the revolutionary struggle; were 
published; he was accused of drawing more than his salary; 
bis manners were ridiculed as "aping monarchy"; hints of 
the propriety of a guillotine for his benefit began to appear; 
he was spoken of as the " stepfather of his country-" The brutal 
attacks, exceeding in virulence anything that would be tolerated 
to-day, embittered his presidency, especially during his second 
term; in 1793 he is reported to have declared, in a cabinet 
meeting, that " he would rather be in his grave than in his 
present situation/* and that " he had never repented but once 
the having slipped the moment of resigning his office, and that 
was every moment since." The most unpleasant portions of 
Jefferson's Anas arc those in which, with an air of psychological 
dissection, he details the storms of passion into which the president 
was driven by the newspaper attacks upon him. There is no 
reason to believe, however, that these attacks represented the 
feeling of any save a small minority of the politicians; the people 
never wavered in their devotion to the president, and his election 
would have been unanimous in 1796, as in 1792 and 1789, had 
he been willing lo serve. 

He retired from the presidency in 1797,* and returned to Mount 
Vernon, his journey thither being marked by popular demon- 
strations of affection and esteem. At Mount Vernon, which had 
suffered from neglect during his absence, he resumed the planta- 
tion life which he loved, the society of his family, and the care 
of bis slaves. He had resolved some time before never to obtain 
another slave, and " wished from his soul " that Virginia could 
be persuaded to abolish slavery; " it might prevent much future 
mischief **; but the unprecedented profitableness of the cotton 
industry, under the impetus of the recently invented cotton 
gin, had already begun to change public sentiment regarding 
slavery, and Washington was too old to attempt further innova- 
tions. Visitors continued to flock to htm, and his correspondence, 
as always, took a wide range. In 1 708 he was made commander- 
fa-ebjef of the provisional army raised in anticipation of war with 

_ , under date of the 17th of September 1796, 
Farewell Address " to the American people. 




France, and was fretted almost beyond endurance by the quarrels 

of Federalist politicians over the distribution of commissions. 
In the midst of these military preparations he was struck down 
by sudden illness, which lasted but for a day, and died at Mount 
Vernon on the 14th of December 1709. His disorder was an 
oedematous affection of the wind-pipe, contracted by exposure 
during a long ride in a snowstorm, and aggravated by neglect 
and by such contemporary remedies as bleeding, gargles of 
" molasses, vinegar and butter " and " vinegar and sage tea," 
which "almost suffocated him," and a blister of cantharides 
on the throat. He died as simply as he had lived; his last words 
were only business directions, affectionate remembrances to 
relatives, and repeated apologies to the physicians and attendants 
for the trouble he was giving them. Just before he died, says 
his secretary, Tobias Lear, he felt his own pulse; his countenance 
changed; the attending physician placed his hands over the 
eyes of the dying man, " and he expired without a struggle or 
a sigh." The third of the series of resolutions introduced in 
the House of Representatives five days after his death, by John 
Marshall of Virginia, later chief-justice of the Supreme Court, 
states exactly, if somewhat rhetorically, the position oi Washing* 
lion in American history: " first in war, first in peace, and first 
in the hearts of his countrymen."* His will contained a pro- 
vision freeing bis slaves, and a request that no oration be pro- 
nounced at his funeral His remains rest in the family vault 
at Mount Vernon (?.».), which since i860 has been hold by an 
association, practically as national property. 

AH contemporary accounts agree that Washington was of 
imposing presence. He measured just 6 ft. when prepared for 
burial; but his height in his prime, as given in bis orders for 
clothes from London, was 3 in. more. La Fayette says 
that his hands were " the largest he ever saw on a man." 
Custis says that his complexion was " fair, but considerably 
florid." His weight was about 220 lb. Evidently it was his 
extraordinary dignity and poise, forbidding even the suggestion 
of familiarity, quite as much asJus suture, that impressed those 
who knew him. The various and widdy-differing portraits of 
him find exhaustive treatment in the seventh volume of Justin 
Wiusor's Narrative and Critical History of Awurico. Winsor 
thinks that "the favourite profile has been unquestionably 
Houdon's, with Gilbert Stuart's canvas for the full face, and 
probably John Trumbull's for the figure." Stuart's face, however 
with its calm and benign expression, has fixed the popular 
notion of Washington. 

Washington was childless: the people of his lime said he 
was the father only of his country. Collateral branches of the 
family have given the Lees, the Custises, and other families a 
claim to an infusion of the blood. 

BrrajociAMrr.—A complete bibliography of books relating to 
Washington would be very voluminous. The best edition of his 
Writing U that of W. C Ford (14 vol*., New York, 1889-1893). 
Sparks s edition (12 vol*., Boston. 1837) has in the main been super- 
seded, though it contains some papers not included by Ford, and the 



Lift, which comprise s vol.- L. still has value. I. D. Rkhardson'i 
J/eutfts and Papert of the Presidents (vol. i., Washmtfot), 1896) 
collects the presidential messages and proclamations, with a few 



omissions. A descriptive list of biographies and biographical 
sketches is given in W. S. Baker's Bibliotheea W*shmgto*ian* 
(Philadelphia. 1889). The most important lives are those of John 
Marshall (Philadelphia. 1804-1807), David Ramsay (New York, 
1807). Washington Irvine (New York. 1855-1859). E, E. Hale (New 
York. 1888). H. C Lodge (Boston. 1889; rev. ed.. 1898), B. T. 
Thayer (New York, 1894) and Woodrow Wilson (New York, 1897). 
Valuable for their presentation of differing aspects of Washington's 
career are: W. S. Baker's Itinerary of Washington (Philadelphia. 
1892). 11. B. Carrineton's Washington the Soldier (New York. 1899), 
G. W. P. Custis's Recollections and Private Memoirs of Washington 
(New York, i860), P. L. Ford's Tme Cfrge Washington (Phila- 
delphia, 1896) and R. Rusk's WashintUm in Domestic lift (Phila- 
delphia 1857). The larger comprchcn«4\c histories of the United 
States by Bancroft, Hildrcth, Win«nr. McMaster, Von Hoist. Schouler 
and Avery, the biocraphtes in the M American Statesmen " series, 
and Hart's " American Nation " series, are indispensable. There 
ban interesting attempt to make a composite portrait of Washinctosj 
in Science (December 11.1 885). (W.M acD. •) 



•This characterization originated with Henry Lee. 



WASHINGTON 



349 



If, a dty and the capital of the United States 
of America, coterminous with the District of Columbia, on the 
north-east bank of the Potomac river at the head of tide and 
navigation, 40 m. S.W. of Baltimore, 135 m. S. W. of Philadelphia, 
and 225 m. S.W. of New York. Area, 60 sq. m. (exclusive of 
10 sq. m. of water surface). Pop. (1890) 230,302; (1000) 
278,718, of whom 20,119 were foreign-born and 87,186 were 
negroes; (1910) 331,060. The city proper covers only about 
10 sq. m. lying between the Anacostia river and Rock Creek, 
and rising from the low bank of the Potomac, which is here 
nearly 1 m. wide; above are encircling hills and a broken 
plateau, which rise to a maximum height of 420 ft. and contain 
the former city of Georgetown, the villages of Anacostia, 
Brightwood, Tennallytown, and other suburban districts. 

Streets and Parks.— The original plan of the city, which was 
prepared by Major Pierre Charles L'Enfant (1755-1825), under 
the supervision of President Washington and Thomas Jefferson, 1 
was a masterpiece in landscape architecture and in the main 
it has been preserved. Besides streets running east and west, 
which are named by the letters of the alphabet, and streets 
running north and south, which are numbered, there are avenues 
named for various states, which radiate from two foc i the 
Capitol and the White House— or traverse the city without any 
fixed plan. North and south of the Capitol they are numbered; 
east and west from it streets are lettered, but streets are dis- 
tinguished by annexing to the name or letter the name of the 
quarter: N.W., S.W., N.E. or S.E.— the city is divided into 
these four parts by North Capitol, East Capitol and South 
Capitol streets, which intersect at the Capitol The width of the 
avenues is from 120 to 160 ft. and the width of the streets from 
80 to 1 20 ft. More than one-half the area of the city is comprised 
in its streets, avenues and public parks. Among the principal 
residence streets are Massachusetts, especially between Dupont 
and Sheridan circles, New Hampshire, Connecticut and Vermont 
Avenues and 16th Street, all in the N W. quarter of the city. 
The principal business streets are Pennsylvania Avenue (especi- 
ally between the Capitol and the White House) and 7th, 9th, 14th 
and F streets. Streets and avenues for the most part are paved 
with a smooth asphalt pavement, and many of tbem have 
two and occasionally four rows of overarching shade trees and 
private lawns on either side. At nearly every intersection of t wo 
avenues is a circle or square in which is the statue of some notable 
American whose name the square bears. At the intersection 
of a street with an avenue there is usually the reservation of a 
small triangular grass plot at least. In L'Enfant's plan a park 
or mall was to extend from the Capitol to the White House 
Instead of this the mall extends from the Capitol to Washington 
Monument, which stands near the intersection of lines west from 
the Gapitol and south from the White House. In 1001 , however, 
a commission (Daniel Hudson Burnham, C. F. McKim, Augustus 
St Gaudens and F. L. Olmsted, Jr.) was appointed by authority 
of the United States Senate to prepare plans for the beaulifi- 
catioo of the city and this body, seeking in the main to return to 
L'Enfant's plan, has submitted a design for a park-like treatment 
of the entire district between Pennsylvania and Maryland 
avenues from the Capitol to the White House and between lower 
New York Avenue and the Potomac, with an elm-shaded mall 
300 ft. wide bisecting the park from the Capitol to the Monument, 
with a group of official and scientific buildings fronting the mall 
on either side, with a group of municipal buildings between the 
mall and Pennsylvania Avenue, and with a Lincoln memorial 
on the bank of the Potomac Potomac Park (740 acres), a 
portion of which is embraced fn this design, has already been 
reclaimed from the Potomac river. On Rock Creek, above 
Georgetown, is the National Zoological Park (under the control 
of the Smithsonian Institution), embracing 170 acres in a pictu- 
resque site. North of this and extending to the boundary of the 

1 The actual surveying and laying out of the city was done by 
Andrew Ellicott (1754-1820). acivi! engineer, who had been employed 
m many boundary disputes, who became surveyor-general of the 
United States in 1792. and from 1812 until his death was professor 
of mathematics at the United States Military Academy at West 
Point. 



District, and including both banks of Rock Creek, with Its wild 
and picturesque beauty, is a tract of 1600 acres, known as Rock 
Creek Park. 

Climate— The climate of Washington is characterized by great 
humidity, long-continued and somewhat oppressive heat in summer, 
and mild winters. During a period of thirty-three yean ending 
December 1903 the mean winter temperature (December, January 
and February) was 35* F. and the mean summer temperature (June. 
July and August) 75*; the mean of the winter minima was 27*, 
and the mean of the summer maxima 85 s Extremes ranged, bow* 
ever, from an absolute maximum of 104* to an absolute minimum 
of -15* There is an average annual precipitation of 43*1 in., 
which is quite evenly distributed throughout the year Although 
snowstorms arc infrequent and snow never lies long on the ground, 
the average fall of snow for the year amounts to 22-5 in. 

Building!.— In a dignified landscape netting on the brow of a hill 
that is itself nearly 100 ft. above the Potomac stands the Capitol ' 
(built 1793-1827. architect, William Thornton (d. 1827). super- 
intendent of the Patent Office, whose designs were modified by 
B H La t robe and Charles Bulnnch, wings and dome added 1851- 
1865) It consists of a centra) building of Virginia sandstone, 
painted white, and two wings of white Massachusetts maible Its 
length u 751 ft., and its breadth ranges in different parts from 121 
to 324 ft The main building is surmounted with an iron dome, 
designed by Thomas Ustic Walter, which rises to a height of 268! ft., 
and on the dome is a statue of Liberty (1863. 10} (t high) by 
Thomas Crawford The Capitol faces east, and on this side is a nchly 
sculptured 'portico with Corinthian columns leading to the rotunda 
under the dome, a sculptured Corinthian portico leading to the 
Senate Chamber in the north wing, and a plain Corinthian portico 
leading to the Hall of Representatives in the south wing, there is 
also a portico at each end and on the west side of each wing The 
rotunda, 06 ft. in diameter and 180 ft high, is decorated with eight 
historical paintings; "Landing of Columbus" (1402). by John 
Vandcrlyn; " De Soto discovering the Mississippi (1541), by 
William Henry Powell. " Baptism of Pocahontas (1613). byjohn 
** J ' ""* ....... . -. . mm ijpi 



Cadsby Chapman; "Embarkation of the Pilgrims from 



1ft 



Haven " (1620). by Robert Walter Weir. " Signing the Declaration 
of Independence (1776). by John Trumbull. "Surrender of 
Burgoync at Saratoga (1777). by Trumbull. " SurreooW of Corn- 
wants at Yorktown" (1781). by Trumbull, and "Washington 
resigning his Commission at Annapolis" (1783). by Trumbull 
Between the rotunda and the Hall of Representatives is the National 
Hall of Statuary (formerly the Hall of Representatives), in mhich 
each state in the union may erect statues of two " of her chosen 
sons", and between the rotunda and the Senate Chamber is the 
room of the Supreme Court, which until 1859 was the Senate 
Chamber * 

The Executive Mansion, more commonly called the White House 
the official residence of the president, is a two-storey budding of 
Virginia freestone, painted white since 1814 to hide the marks of 
fire — only the walls were left standing after the capture of the city 
by the British in that year It is 1 70 (t long and 86 ft deep It is 
simple but dignified, the principal exterior ornaments are an Ionic 
portico and a balustrade The White House was built m 1792-1709 
from designs by Jame* Hoban. who closely followed the plans of the 
seats of the dukes of Lei Aster, near Dublin, and in 1902- looj. when 
new executive offices and a cabinet room were built and mere con- 
nected with the White Horn* by an esplanade, many of the original 
features of Hoban * plan were restored East of the White House 
and obstructing the view from it to the Capitol stands the oldest of 
the departmental buildings, the Treasury Building (architect. 
Robert Mills (1781-185*). then U S architect), an imposing edifice 
mainly of granite, 510 ft. long and 280 ft wide, on the east front 
is a colonnade of trurty-eight Ionic columns, and on each of the 
other three sides is an Ionic portico On the opposite side of the 
White House is a massive granite building of the State, War and 
Navy Departments* 56? ft. long and 342 ft. wide The Library of 
Congress (1889*1807. cost, exclusive of site, over 86 .000.000). 
south-east of the Capitol, was designed by Smithmeyer & Pelt, 
and the designs were modified by Edward Pcarce Casey (b 1864), 
the architect . it is in the Italian Renaissance style, is 340 by 470 ft., 
and encloses four courts and a central rotunda surmounted by a flat 
black copper dome, with gilded panek and a lantern. The exterior 
walls are of white New Hampshire granite, and the walls of the 



• See Glenn Brown, The History of the Umted Slates Capital (2 vols,. 
1900-1903) 

■ The allegorical decorations here are by Pcrwco and Horatio 
Greenough-. those on the Senate portico ate by Thomas Crawford, 
who designed the bronae doors at the entrances to the Senate and 
House wings At the east door of the rotunda is the bromc door 
(1858. modelled by Randolph Rogers) At the west entrance are 
elaborate bronze doors ( loto) by Louis Amatcis (b 1855). 

4 Connected with the Capitol by subways, immediately SB. and 
N E of the Capitol rcsprctrvdv. are the marble office buildings 
(1908) of the House of Representatives and of the Senate The 
Capitol is connected by subways with the Library of Congress also,. 



350 



WASHINGTON 



interior courts are of Maryland granite and white enamelled bricks. 
There are numerous sculptural adornments without and there n 
elaborate interior decoration with paintings, sculpture, coloured 
marbles and gilding. 1 Two squares north of the Senate office- 
building is the Union Railway Station (1908, 343 by 760 ft., cost, 
$4,000,000), designed by Daniel Hudson Burnham, consisting ot a 
main building of white granite (from Bethel, Vermont) and two 
wings, and facing a beautiful plaza. On Pennsylvania Avenue, 
nearly midway between the Capitol and the White House, is the 
nine-storey Post Office (1899; with a tower 300 ft. high), housing 
the United States Post Office Department and the City Post Office. 
A few squares north-west of it arc the General Land Office, the 
headquarters of the Department of the Interior (commonly called 
the Patent Office), with Doric portico; the Pension Office, in which 
the Inauguration Ball is held on the evening of each president's 
taking office: the Government Printing Office (twelve storeys — one 
of the few tall office-buildings in the city) ; the City Hall, or District 
Court House; and the District Building (1908). another building of 
the local government. On the heights north of Georgetown is the 
United Slates Naval Observatory, one of the best -equipped institu- 
tions of the kind ; from it Washington time is telegraphed daily to 
all parts of the United States. Near Rock Creek, west of George- 
town, is the Signal Office and headquarters of the United States 
Weather Bureau. In the Mall are the building of the Department 
of Agriculture, the Smithsonian Institution iq.v.), the National 
Museum (1910), the Army Medical Museum and the Bureau of 
Fisheries, and here a building for the Department of Justice is to 
be erected. Facing the Mall on the south is the home of the Bureau 
of Engraving and Printing, in which the United States paper money 
and postage stamps are made. Not far from the White House is the 
Corcoran Gallery of Art (1894-1897; architect, Ernest Flagg), of 
white Georgia marble in a Nco-Grecian style, housing a collection 
of paintings (especially American portraits) and statuary; the 
gallery was founded and endowed in 1869 by William Wilson Cor* 
coran (1798-1888) " for the perpetual establishment and encourage- 
ment of the Fine Arts." The Public Library, a gift of Andrew 
Carnegie, is a white marble building in the Mount Vernon Square, 
at the intersection of Massachusetts and New York avenues. A 
prominent building, erected with money given mainly by Mr 
Carnegie, is that of the Pan-American Union (formerly Bureau of 
American Republics) The old Ford's Theatre, in which President 
Lincoln was assassinated, is on Tenth Street N W between E and 
F The house in which Lincoln died is on the opposite side of the 
street, and contains relics of Lincoln collected by O H. Oldroyd. 

Monuments, — Foremost among the city's many monuments Is 
that erected to the memory of George Washington. It is a plain 
obelisk of white Maryland marble, 55 ft. square at the base and 
555 ft. m height , it was begun in 1*48, but the work was abandoned 
in 1855-1877, but was completed in 1884 at a cost of $1,300,000* 
Among statues of Washington are the half-nude seated figure (1843) 
byGrecnough in the Smithsonian Institution, and an equestrian statue 
(i860) of Washington at the Battle of Princeton by Clark Mills in 
Washington Circle. Among the other prominent statues are: 
the equestrian statue (1008) of General Philip Sheridan in Sheridan 
Circle, by Gutxon Borglum ; an equestrian statue of General Sherman 
near the Treasury Building, by Carl Rohl-Smith: a statue of 
Frederick the Great (by T. Uphucs; presented to the United States 
by Emperor William II. of Germany) in front of the Army War 
College at the mouth of the Anacostia rrver; a statue of General 
Nathanacl Greene (by H K. Brown) in Stanton Square, statues 
of General Winficld Scott in Scott Square (by H K Brown) and in 
the grounds of the Soldiers' Home (by Launt Thompson), a statue 
of Rear-Admiral S F Du Pont in Dupom Circle (by Launt Thomp- 



son), of Rear-Admiral D G Farragut (by Vinnie Ream Hoxie); 
an equestrian statue of General George H Thomas (by J Q A 
Ward), erected by the Society of the Army of the Cumberland. 



1 A bronze fountain. " The Court of Neptune." in front of the 
Library, ta by Hinton Perry- Granite portrait busts of great authors 
occupy niches in windows near the entrance; these are by j S. 
Hartley, Herbert Adams and F. W. RuckstuhL The allegorical 
figures over the entrance are by Bela L, Pratt There are fine bronze 
doors by Olin Warner and Frederick Macmonmcs. Among the 
mural paintings are series by John W. Alexander, Kcnyon Cox, 
E. H. Blashneld. Henry Oliver Walker (b. 1843). Walter McEwcn. 
Elihu Vedder, Charles Spraguc Pearce (b. 1851), Edward Simmons 
(b. 1852). George Willoughby Maynard (b. 1843). Robert Rcid 
(b. 1862), George R. Barse, Jr. (b. 1861), W. A. Mackay, F W. 
Benson (b. 1862), Walter Shirfar- (b. 1838), Gari Mclchers (b. i860), 
W. Dc L. Dodge (b. 1867) and others. 

* The site is said to have been chosen by Washington himself— 
Congress had planned a marble monument in 1783. Jn 1833 the 
Washington National Monument Society was formed and a popular 
subscription was taken. The obelisk was designed by Robert Mills, 
whose original plan included a " Pantheon 100 ft. high with a 
colonnade and a colossal statue of Washington. After 1877 the work 
was carried on by an appropriation made by Congress. See Frederick 
L. H-irvpv- Htstor* of the Washin&on Monument and the National 
'Washington, 1903). 



one of General George B. McCleJIan, by Frederick Msuanonals* j and 
statues of Lincoln,* by Scott Flannery and (in Lincoln Park) by- 
Thomas Ball, of Joseph Henry (by W. W Story) in the grounds of 
the Smithsonian Institution, of John Marshall (by Story) on the 
west terrace of the Capitol, of General Andrew Jackson (by Clark 
Mills) and. in Lafayette Square, of the Marquis de Lafayette (by 
Falguiercand Mcrci£),of the Comtede Rocharabeau (by F. Hamar) 
and of Baron von Steuben (1910). In Pennsylvania Avenue, at the 
foot of Capitol Hill, is a Monument of Peace (by Franklin Simmons) 
in memory of officers, seamen and marines of the U.S. Navy killed 
in the Civil War. 

Cemeteries.— On the opposite aide of the Potomac, in Virginia, and 
adjoining Fort Myer, a military post (named in honour 01 General 
Albert James Myer (1827-1880), who introduced in 1870 a system 
of meteorological observations at army posts) with reservation of 
186 acres, is Arlington, a National Cemetery (of 4083a acres), in 
which lie buried 21,106 soldiers killed in the Civil War and in the war 
with Spain; among the distinguished officers buried here are 
General Philip Henry Sheridan, Admiral David Dixon Porter, 
General Joseph Wheeler and General Henry W. Lawton; there is a 
Spanish War Monument; the grounds are noted for their natural 
beauty, and on the brow of a hill commanding a magnificent view 
of the city is Arlington House (1802), the residence of George Wash- 
ington Parke Custis (1781-1857), grandson of Martha Washington, 
and afterwards of General Robert E. Lee, Custis's son-in-law; the 
estate was seized by Federal troops early in the Civil War, and was 
bought by the United States in 1864; there was a military hospital 
here throughout the Civil War. Adjoining the grounds 01 the 
Soldiers' Home (3m. N. of the Capitol) isa National Military Cemetery 
containing the graves of 7220 soldiers. On the bank of the Anacostia 
river, east of the Capitol, is the Congressional Cemetery containing 
the graves of many members of Congress. North of Georgetown w 
Oak Hill Cemetery, and in the vicinity of the Soldiers' Home are 
Rock Creek, Glcnwood, Harmony, Prospect Hill and St Mary's Ceme- 
teries. A crematorium was completed in 1909, and cremation 
instead of interment has since been urged by the District com- 
missioners. 

Chanties, fire.— The National Soldiers' Home (1851), founded by 
General Winficld Scott, comprises five buildings, with accommoda- 
tions for 800 retired or disabled soldiers, and 512 acres of beautiful 
grounds. The charitable and correctional institutions of the 
District of Columbia are the following government institutions, under 
the control of the United States or of the District of Columbia: 
Frccdmcn s Hospital (1862), United States Naval Hospital (1866), 
art Insane Asylum on the S. side of the Anacostia river, the District 
of Columbia Industrial Home School (1872), a Municipal Lodging 
House (1892), a Soldiers' and Sailors' Temporary Home (18B8). 
Workhouse, Reform School for Boys, Reform School for Girls and 
Industrial Home School (1872). Among many private institutions 
arc the Washington City Orphan Asylum (1815); Lutheran Eye, 
Ear and Throat Infirmary (1889); Episcopal Eye, Ear arid Throat 
Hospital (1897): Providence Hospital (1861; Sisters of Charity): 
George Washington University Hospital (1898); Georgetown 
University Hospital (1898); Columbia Hospital for Women (1866); 
Children's Hospital (1671); Washington Hospital for Foundlings 
(1887); Children's Temporary Home (1890; for negroes); a 
German Orphan Asylum (1879); Washington Home for incurables 

11889), Home for the Aged (1871); the National Lutheran Home 
1890), the Methodist Home (1890) and Baptist Home (1880). 
i ' non-support law," which went into effect in 1906, enacts that a 
man who refuses to provide for his family when able to do so shall 
be committed to the workhouse for hard labour, and that fifty cents 
a day shall be paid to his family. A Juvenile Court and a Board of 
Children's Guardians have extensive jurisdiction over dependent 
and delinquent children, and a general supervision of all charities 
and corrections is vested in a Board of Charities, consisting of five 
members appointed by the president of the United States. 

Education.— Washington is one of the leading educational centres 
of the United States. The public school system, under the control 
of a Board of Education of six men and three women appointed by 
the supreme court fudges of the District of Columbia, embraces 
kindergartens, primary schools, grammar schools, high schools, a 
business high school, manual training schools, normal schools and 
night schools. The schools arc open nine months in the year, and 
all children between eight and fourteen years of age are required to 
attend some public, private or parochial school during these month* 
unless excused because of some physical or mental disability. George 
Washington University, in the vicinity of the White House, isa non- 
sectanan institution (opened in 1821 under the auspices of the 
Baptist General Convention as " The Columbian College in the 
District of Columbia", endowed by W W. Corcoran in 1872, 
organiccd as the Columbian University in 1873, organized under its 
present name* an 1904). and compri&es Columbian College of Arts 



' A Lincoln memorial is to be erected on the Mall W of the 
Washington monument 

4 The name was changed when the offer of the George Washington 
Memorial Association to build a $500,000 memorial building wan 
accepted. 



WASHINGTON 



35* 



and Science* with a graduate department (1*93). • College of the 
Political Sciences (1907). Washington College of Engineering, 
division* of architecture and education (1907). a Department o( Law 
(first organised in 1826; closed in 1827. reorganized in 1865). a 
Department of Medicine (1821 ; since 1866 in a budding given by 
W W. Corcoran), with several affiliated hospital*, a Department 
of Dentistry (1887), the National College of Pharmacy tunned »ith 
the university in 1906). and a College of Veterinary Medicine (1908). 
In 1909 this University had 18$ instructors and 1520 students. 
Georgetown University te in Georgetown (f») The Catholic 
University of America (incorporated 1887. opened 1889). with 
buildings near the Soldiers' Home, stands at the head of Roman 
Catholic schools in America. Although designed especially for 
advanced theological studies, it comprises a School of the Sacred 
Sciences, a School of Philosophy, a School of Letter*, a School of 
Physical Sciences, a School of Biological Sciences, a School of Social 
Sciences, a School of Jurisprudence, a School of Law and a School of 
Technological Sciences, in 1909 its faculty numbered 42 and its 
students 225. A Franciscan convent. Dominican. Pauhst and 
Maris* houses, and Trinity College for gtrts are affiliated with the 
Catholic University. The American Ikuurcnty (chartered 1693), 
under Methodist Episcopal control, designed to bear a relation «o 
the Protestant churches similar to that of the Catholic University 
to the Catholic Church, with a campus of 94 acres at the north-uc*t 
end of the city, in 1910 had not been opened to students. Howard 
University (1867). lor the higher education of negroes, is situated 
sooth-west of die Soldiers' Home, it was named in honour of 
General Oliver Otis Howard, one of Us founders and (in 1809-1873) 
its president; it has a small endowment, and ts supported by 
Congressional appropriations which areadmimstered by t he Secretary 
of the Interior; k com p runs an academy, a college of arts and 
science*, a teachers' college, a school of theology a school olla» a 
school of medicine, a pharmaceutic cpllege. a dental college . a school 
of manual arts and applied sciences, and a commercial college, in 
1909 it had 121 instructors and 1253 students. 

The Columbia Institution for the Deaf and Dumb (tee Deaf and 
Dumb), 00 Kendall Green, in the nonh-eaurrn pan of the ciiv. 1* 
composed of Kendall school (a secondary school )iand of Gallaudct 
College (called in 1 864-1893 the National Deaf Mute College, the 
present name is in honour of Dr T H Gallaudet ) . it was the - ft rst 
institution to give collegiate courses to the deal, and it has received 
Congressional appropriations, though it as private foundation 
Washington has also several academics, seminaries and small 
colleges: among the latter are St John's College iRoman Catholic, 
1870) and Washington Christum College (non-sectarian. 1902) The 
Washington College of Law (1890) is an evening school cspeoatlv 
for women. A School of Art is maintained in the Corcoran Gallery 
of Art. 

The Carnegie Institution of Washington, founded by Andrew 
Carnegie in 1002 and endowed by him with f 22.000.000 1810.000.000 
in IO02; $12,000,000 later), ss designed "to encourage m the 
broadest and most liberal manner investigation, research and 
discovery, and the application of knowledge to the improvement of 
mankind: and in particular to conduct, endow and assist investiga- 
tion in any department of science, literature or an . and to thi* end 
to cooperate with governments, universities, colleges, technical 
schools, teamed societies and individuals, to appoint committees 
of experts to direct special lines of rcsearc h . 10 puhfoh and distribute 
documents; and to conduct lectures, hold meeting* and acquire 
and maintain a library. " It is under the control of a board of 
twenty-lour trustees, vacancies in which are filled uv the remaining- 
■embers. In 1008 ten department* bad been organrred Botanical 
Research, with a " desert laboratory " (1903) at Tucton. Arizona, 
Economics and Sociology (1004). Experimental Evolution «nha 
station (1904) at Cold Spring Harbor. New York t«* HuMTi»ctON. 
MY). Geophysical Research, with a laboratory (toob-ioo?) at 
Washington — investigation* have been cat nod on by the US 
Geological Survey and at McGiTl University Toronto. Him one al 
Research (1903). Marine Biology, with a laboratory (1904) at 
Tortogas. Florida. Meridian Astrometrv O906. wotk \s corned on 
especially at Dudley Observatory. Albany. New Yothl. Research 
in Nutrition with a laboratory (1900) at Bom on Massachusetts— 
investigations (since 1904) had oecn earned on at Yale and Wc-leyan 
universities: Solar Physics, with observatory (1905) on Mount 
Wilson. California, and workshops -at Pasadena. California, and 
Terrestrial Magnetism (1903, headquarters in Washington), the 
institution had assisted Luther Burba nk in hisliortiruliuraleipen- 
■ents since 1005. and had published the Index Medu.su sime 1903. 
and it makes occasional grams for minor research and tentative 
investigations 

The learned societies of Washington are to a large degree more 
national than local in their character; among them are the 
Washington Academy of Sciences (1898). a " federal head " of most 
of the societies mentioned below; the Anthropological Society 
(founded 1879: incorporated 1887). which ha* published Tranutittons 
U879 sqq . with the co-operation of rhe Smithsonian Institution) 
and The American Anthropologist (1888-1898; since 1898 pubh»hcd 
by the American Anthropological Association), the National 
Geographic Society 08881. which since 1003 has occupied the 
Hubbard Meiuo i ia l Building, which sent scientific expeditions to 



Alaska. Mont Poire and La Souflritre. and winch publishes the Na- 
tional Gtugraphit Mofftzuu (1888109.), Notional Gtoffapku Monograph 
(1895) And vanous special maps; the Philosophical Society ol 
Washington (1871. incorporated 1901). devoted especially tc 
mathematical and physical sewnees; the Biological Society (1880) 
which publishes Proceedings (1880 sqq ); the Botanical Society ol 
Washington Oooi); the Geological Society of Washington (1893) 
the Entomological Society of Washington (1884), which publishes 
Protttdtvii (1884 sqq); the Chemical Society (I884), the Record* 
of the Past Exploration Society (icjoi). which publishes Records o) 
Ike Peat (1902 sqq); the Southern History Association (1896) 
which issues Publications (1897 squ ). the Society for Philosophical 
Inquiry (1893). which publishes Memoirs (1893 sqq). the Society 
of American Foresters (1000). which publishes Proceedings (190* 
snq ) . and the Cosmos Club The libraries and scientific collections 
0/ the Federal government and its various bureaus and institution: 
afford exceptional opportunities for students and investigators (sc< 
Libraries g United Stairs) The Library of Congress contain: 
more than 1 .800000 volumes and 100.000 manuscripts, and large 
collect tom> of maps and pieces of music. In the library of th< 
State Department are 70.000 volumes ol documents. The library 
of the Surgeon-General's Office contains 200,000 volumes, and is th« 
largest mcdnal library in the world Besides these there is a vast 
amount of material in the collections of the Bureau of Education, 
the Bureau ol Ethnology, the Smithsonian Institution, the Nationa' 
Museum the House of Representatives, the Patent Office, tht 
Department of Agriculture, the Botanic Gardens, the Bureau ol 
Fi-bmw*. the Naval Observatory, the Geological Survey and th< 
Coa«4 and Geodetic Survey The Public Library, containing about 
1 10 000 volumes, is a circulating horary 

Communuauons — Seven railways enter the city • the Philadelphia 
Baltimore & Washington division of the Pennsylvania System. th< 
Baltimore A Ohio, the Southern, the Chesapeake A Ohio, the Wash- 
ington. Baltimore & Annapolis, the Washington Southern and th< 
Washington. Alexandria & Mt Vernon. Steamboats ply daily from 
the loot of Seventh Street to Alexandria. Mt Vernon. Old Point 
Comfort and Norfolk, and at Old Point Comfort there is connexion 
• ith boats lor New S'Ork There is also an hourly ferry service tc 
Alexandria, and at irregular intervals there are boats direct to Bahi- 
mote. Philadelphia. New York and Boston. The street railways 
underground trollry in the urban district and overhead trolley in 
the <unurb». connect at several points with intcrurban railways in 
Marx land and Virginia 

Industry* — The nty's manufactured and commerce are of ltttk 
importance in proportion to Us population. Only government 
manufactures and manufactures for local consumption are at all 
large In 1005 the government's printing and publishing cost 
$S 999 99b. it* ordnance and ordnance stores (in the Navy Yard 
on the bank of the Anacostia ry\er) t Ss 331.459. and ttsengravinf 
and plate printing S3 409 517 The total value of the products ol 
all the lactones in the District which were operated under private 
ownership amounted to S1S..359.15Q. and 80575 97 1. or 52% ol 
this uas the value of printing and publishing, bread and othei 
bakery products, gas and malt liquors. 

Ctr-numfnt —Washington is the seal of the Federal govern- 
ment of ihe United States and as such Is not self-ruled, but 
governed by the Federal Congress. The city was chartered in 
1802, with a mayor appointed annually by the president of th< 
United States and an elective council of two chambers. Th< 
mayor was elected by the counctl front 181 2 to 1820, and by tht 
people (biennially) from 1820 to 187 f. In 1871 the Federal 
Congress repealed the charters of Washington and Georgetown 
and established a new government for the entire District, con 
si sting of a governor, a secretary, a board of public works, c 
board of health and a counctl appointed by the president wit! 
the concurrence of the Senate, and a House of Delegates and a 
delegate to the National House of Representatives elected b) 
the people In 1874 Congress subst it u ted a government by lhre< 
commissioners appointed by the president whh the concurrent 
of the Senate, and in 1878 the government by commissioners wai 
made permanent. Two of the commissioners must be resident! 
of the District, and the third commissioner must be an officer o: 
(he Corps of Engineers of t he Untied 'StMcs A rmy> The peoplt 
of the District have no voice fn its government, have no repre 
serrtution in Congress and do not vote for the president of tht 
United States. The District commissioners are the chief efceco 
live ofheers. Congress and the eommfssioners legislate for Um 
District; the president, the commissioners and the suprcim 
court of the District appoint the administrative officers am 
boards, and the president appoints the judges of the Distrk 
courts, vlz a court of appeals, a supreme court, a mumcipa 
court, a police court, a probate court and a juvenile court 
One-half the expenses of the government of Waahoigton is pait 



35? 



WASHINGTON 



by the District of Columbia and one-half by the United States. 
The revenue of the District, which is denved from a property 
tax and from various licences, is paid into the United States 
Treasury; appropriations, always specific and based on estimates 
prepared by the commissioners, are made only by Congress; 
and all accounts arc audited by the Treasury Department. 
The government owns the waterworks, by which an abundant 
supply of water is taken from the Potomac at the Great Falls, 
conducted for is m through an aqueduct o ft. in diameter and 
filtered through a sand filtration plant. 

The government of the District has been uniformly excellent, 
and the laws therefor have been modem in their tendency The 
employment of children under fourteen years of age in any factory, 
workshop, mercantile establishment, store, business office, telegraph 
or telephone office, restaurant, hotel, apartment house, club, theatre, 
bootblack stand, or in the distribution or'transmtssion of merchandise 



or messages is forbidden, except that a child between twelve and 
fourteen years of age may with the permission of the judge of the 
juvenile court be employed at an occupation not dangerous or 



injurious to his health or morals if necessary for his support or for 
the assistance of a disabled, ill or invalid parent, a younger brother 
or sister, or a widowed mother No child under fourteen years of 
age may be employed in any work whatever before six o'clock in the 
morning, after seven o'clock in the evening, or during the hours 
when the public schools are in session. 

History —During the War of Independence Philadelphia was 
the principal seat of the Continental Congress, but it was driven 
thence in 1783 by mutinous soldiers, and for the succeeding 
seven years the discussion of a permanent site for the national 
capital was characterized by sectional jealousy, and there was 
a strong sentiment against choosing a state capital or a large 
City lest it should interfere with the Federal government. The 
Constitution, drafted in 1787, authorized Congress " to exercise 
exclusive legislation in all cases whatsoever, over such district 
(not exceeding xo sq. m.) as may, by cession of particular 
states, and the acceptance of Congress, become the seat of govern- 
ment of the United States." Virginia and Maryland promised 
such a cession; President Washington was known to be in favour 
of a site on the Potomac, and in July 1700 Alexander Hamilton, 
in return for Thomas Jefferson's assistance in passing the bill 
for the assumption of the slate war debts by the Federal govern- 
ment, helped Jefferson to pass a bill for establishing the capital 
on the Potomac, by which the president was authorized to select 
a site anywhere along the Potomac between the Eastern Branch 
(Anacostia) and the Conocochcague river, a distance of about 
80 m , and to appoint three commissioners who under his direc- 
tion should make the necessary surveys and provide accom- 
modations for the reception of Congress in 1800. The com- 
missioners—Thomas Johnson (1732-1819) and Daniel Carroll 
(1756- 1820) of Maryland and Dr David Stuart of Virginia— 
gave the city its name; Major L'Enfant drew its plan, and 
Andrew EUicott laid it out. When, in 1800, the government 
was removed to Washington it was " a backwoods settlement in 
the wilderness "; as a city it existed principally on paper, and 
the magnificence of the design only served to emphasize the 
poverty of the execution. One wing of the Capitol and the 
President's House were nearly completed, but much of the land 
surrounding the Capitol was a marsh; there were no streets 
worthy of the name, the roads were very bad, and the members 
of Congress were obliged to lodge in Georgetown. For many 
years such characterizations as " Wilderness City/' " Capital 
of Miserable Huts," " City of Streets without Houses," " City 
of Magnificent Distances " and '* A Mudhole almost Equal to 
the Great Serbonian Bog " were common* Resolutions were 
frequently offered by some disgusted member of Congress for 
the removal of the capital. In 1814, during the second war with 
Great Britain, the British, after defeating on the 34th of August 
an American force at Bladensburg, Prince George county, 
Maryland, about 6 m. N.E. of Washington, occupied the city 
and burned the Capitol, the President's House, some of the 
public offices, and the Navy Yard. In the following year when 
a mil appropriating $500,000 for rebuilding was before Congress 
It nv» — '' L * — iJ -blc opposition from the "capital movers." 
T*- al was again to the front when, in 1*46, 

♦ the District was retroceded to that slate 



in response to the appeal of Alexandria, which had suffered from 
the neglect of Congress. The lethargy of the nation toward 
its capital suddenly vanished al the outbreak of the Civil War. 
At the close of the first day's bombardment of Fort Sumter 
(April i?th, 186 1 ) Leroy P Walker (1817-1884), the Confederate 
Secretary of War, boasted that before the 1st of May the Con- 
federate flag would float over the Capitol. The North, alarmed 
at the threat, speedily transformed Washington into a great 
military post and protected it on all sides with strong earthworks. 
Throughout the war it was the centre of the military operations 
of the North here the armies were officered and marshalled, Trom 
here they marched on their campaigns against the South, here 
was the largest depot of military supplies, and here were great 
hospitals for the care of the wounded. Although several times 
threatened by the South, Washington was never really in danger 
except in July 1864 when General Jubal A. Early advanced 
against it with 12,000 veterans, defeated General Lew Wallace 
with about 3500 men at Monocacy Bridge on the 6th, and on 
the nLh appeared before the fortifications, which were at 
the tunc defended by only a few thousand raw troops; the 
city was saved by the timely arrival of some of Grant's veterans. 
In the city, on the 23rd and 24th of May 1865, President 
Andrew Johnson reviewed the returning soldiers of the Union 
Army. 

The population of Washington increased from 61,12a to 
109.109 or 78-6% in the decade from i860 to 1870, and the 
stirring effects of the Civil War were far-reaching. The city had 
been founded on too elaborate and extensive a plan to be left 
to the initiative and unaided resources of its citizens. But under 
the new form of government which was instituted in 1871 a 
wonderful transformation was begun under the direction of 
Alexander R. Shcpberd.(i835-ioo2), the governor of the District 
and president of the board of public works. Temporary financial 
embarrassment followed, but when the Federal government had 
taken upon itself half the burden and established the economic 
administration of the commissioners, the problem of beautifying 
the nations capital was solved. 

Bibliography.- -C. B.Todd, The Story oj Washington, the National 
Capital (New York. 1889); R. R. Wilson, Washington, the Capital 
Ctly (2 vols., Philadelphia, 1901) ; C. H. Forbe*>Lindsay. Washington, 
the City and the Seat of Government (Philadelphia. 190S); F A. 
Vanderlip, " The Nation's Capital," in L. P. Powell's historic Towns 
of the Southern States (New York, 1900); William V. Cox. 1S00- 
1000, Celebration of the tooth Anniversary of the Establishment of the 
Seat of Government in the District of Columbia (Washington, IQOI); 
J. A. Porter, The City of Washington, Us Origin and Administration, 
in Johns Hopkins University Studies, voL iti. (Baltimore. 1885) ; 
C. Howard. Washington as a Center of Learning (Washington, 1904) ; 
Tindall, Origin and Government of the District of Columbia (ibid.. 
1903); A. R. Spofford, The Founding of Washington City (Baltimore, 
1 881); and Glenn Brown, Papers on Improvement of Washington^ 
City (Washington, 1901). 

WASHINGTON, a city and county-seat of Daviess county, 
Indiana, U.S.A., about 50 m. N.E. of Evansville. Pop. (1890) 
6064, (1900) 8551, of whom 391 were foreign born and 255 
negroes, (1910 census) 11404* It is served by the Baltimore 
& Ohio South Western (which has repair shops here) and the 
Evansville & Indianapolis railways. The city has a public 
library and a city park of 45 seres. It is the shipping point of 
the surrounding farming, stock-raising and coal-mining region, 
and there are deposits of kaolin and fireclay in the vicinity. 
The total value of the factory product in J 90 5 was $1,166,749 
(486% more than in 1900). The municipality owns and 
operates the electric, lighting plant. Washington was settled in 
18 1 6 and chartered as a dty in 1870. 

WASHINGTON (or Washington Court House), a dty and 
the county-scat of Fayette county, Ohio, U.S.A., on Paint 
Creek, 35 m. S.E. of Springfield. Pop. (1880) 3708. (1890) 5742, 
(1900) 5751 (708 negroes); (1910) 7277. It is served by the 
Baltimore & Ohio, the Cincinnati & Muskingum Valley (Penn- 
sylvania Lines), the Detroit, Toledo & Irouton, and the Cincin- 
nati, Hamilton & Dayton railways. It is in a rich farming and 
stock and poultry-raising region, has a large poultry-packing 
house and various manufactures. Washington, or Washington 
Court House as it is often called to distinguish it from the 



WASHINGTON 



353 



▼mage of Washington in Guernsey county, Ohio, was laid out in 
iSro and was chartered as a city in 1888. 

WASHINGTON, a borough and the county-seat of Washington 
county, Pennsylvania, U.S.A., about 25 m. S.W. of Pittsburg 
and about 50 m. N.E. of Wheeling, West Virginia, on Chartiers 
Creek. Pop. (1900) 7670, of whom 46s were foreign born and 
084 were negroes; (1910) 18,778. Washington is served by the 
main line of the Baltimore k Ohio, the Chartiers Valley branch 
of the Pittsburg, Cincinnati, Chicago & St Louts (Pennsylvania 
system) and the Waynesburg & Washington railways and a 
connecting line for freight service, and by electric railway to 
Pittsburg. Among its public buildings and institutions are the 
county court-house (in which are the rooms of the Washington 
County Historical Society), the Federal building, two hospitals, 
a Y.M.C.A. building and a public library. It is the seat of 
Washington and Jefferson College, of Washington Seminary 
(1836) for girls and of a school of business. Washington and 
Jefferson College was incorporated, in 1865, by the consolidation 
of two rival institutions, Washington Academy and Jefferson 
College. Washington Academy (incorporated in 1787 and en- 
dowed by the legislature of Pennsylvania), which was opened 
in 1789, was incorporated as Washington College in 1806, and 
in 1852 became a synodical college of the Presbyterian Church, 
under the direction of the synod of Wheeling. Jefferson College, 
which was an outgrowth of Canonsburg Academy at Canonsburg, 
7 m. from Washington, was chartered in 1794, and incorporated 
as Jefferson College in 1802; from 1826 until 1838 the Jefferson 
Medical College of Philadelphia was its medical department. 
In 1869, by an act of the legislature, all departments were located 
at Washington. In 1872 a chair of engineering and applied 
mathematics and one of biology were established with an endow- 
ment of $40,000, the gift of Dr Francis J. LeMoyne, and the 
chairs of Greek and of Latin were endowed by the Rev. C. C. 
Bcatty with $60,000. In 1900-10 10 Washington and Jefferson 
College (including Washington and Jefferson Academy) bad 29 
instructors, 4x3 students, about 20,000 volumes in its library 
and an endow m ent of $630,000. Washington is in a bituminous 
coal and natural gas region, and there are manufactories of glass, 
iron tubing and pipe, tin plate, steel, &c The site was part of 
a tract bought in 1771 by David Hogc and was known at first 
as Catfish camp after an Indian chief, Tingooqua or Catfish, 
It was platted in October 1781 and called Basset town in honour 
of Richard Bassett (d, 181 5), a member of the Federal constitu- 
tional convention of 1787 and of the United States Senate in 
1789-1 793, and governor of Delaware in 1 798-1801 . The village 
was replatted m November 1784 and renamed in honour of 
General Washington, to whom a large part of the site bad 
belonged. The early settlers were chiefly Scotch-Irish. At 
first a part of Strabaae township, one of the original thirteen 
townships of Washington county, in February 1786 Washington 
was made a separate election district; it was incorporated 
as a town in x8xo; was chartered as a borough and enlarged 
in 185a, and its limits were extended in 1854 and 1855. Since 
1000 there have been added to the borough North and South 
Washington and the industrial suburb of Tylerdale, East and 
West Washington, although practically one with the borough, 
tenanting under separate administration. The location of 
Washington on the old " National Road u gave it importance 
before the advent of railways. At the LeMoyne crematory 
established here by Dr Francis Julius LeMoyne, 1 on the 6th 
of December 1876, took place the first public cremation in the 
United States; the body burned was that of Baron Joseph 
Henry Louis de Palm (1800-1876), a Bavarian nobleman who 
had emigrated to the United States in x86a and had been active 
in theTheosopoical Society in New York. 

» LeMoyne (1798-1879) was the son of a French refugee, and 
: abolitionist. " * - • -" ■ •» - 



was aa ardent 1 



In 1840 he ' 



. the Liberty party's 

candidate Cor the vice-presidency. He built a normal school lor 
negroes near Memphis, Tennessee, and gave money to Washing- 
ton College, at whack be had graduated in 1815. Largely through 
LeMoyne s influence Washington became an important point 
on the M underground railway " for assisting runaway slaves 
to 



See Boyd Crumrine (ed.), The History of Washington County. 
Pennsylvania (Philadelphia, 1882); and Alfred Creigh, The History 
of Washington County from its First Settlement to the PresrU Time 
(Harrisburg, 1S71). 

WASHINGTON, the most north-westerly state of the United 
States of America. It lies between latitudes 4s 32' and 40 N. 
and between longitudes 1 16 5 7' and 1 24 48' W. On the N. it is 
bounded by British Columbia, along the 49th parallel as far W. as 
the middle of the Strait of Georgia and then down the middle of 
this strait and Haro Strait, and along the middle of the channel 
the Strait of Juan de Fuca, which separate it from Vancouver 
Island, on the E. the south portion of its boundary is the Snake 
river, which separates it from Idaho, but from the confluence of 
the Snake and Clearwater rivers (a little W. of 117°) the E. 
boundary line between Washington and Idaho runs directly 
N., on the S. the Columbia river separates it from Oregon 
from the mouth of that river to the point of the, upper intersection 
with the 46th parallel of N. latitude, but from thence eastward 
the S. boundary line between Washington and Oregon is the 
46th parallel; on the W. the state is bounded by the Pacific 
Ocean. The stale has a maximum length, from E. to W., of 
360 m. and a maximum width of 240 nv; area, 69,127 sq. m. f of 
which 2291 sq m. are water surface. 

Physical Features.— The western half of Washington lies in the 
Pacific Mountains province, consisting of the Coast range and the 
Cascade range, separated by a broad basin known as the Sound 
Valley The eastern half of the state is occupied in the north by a 
westward extension of the Rocky Mountains, and in the centre and 
south by the northwestern portion of the Columbia Plateau province. 
The most prominent physical feature of the state is the Cascade 
mountain range, which with a N.N.E. and S.S.W. trend crosses 
the state 30 to 40 tn. W. of the middle. On the S. border this 
mountain range occupies a tract about 50 m. in width, and to the 
northward it widens to 100 m. or more. The general height of the 
ridges and peaks is about 8000 ft. above the sea, but there are five 
ancient snow-capped volcanoes which equal or exceed 10,000 ft. 
These are Mount Rainier or Tacoma (14*363 ft.). Mount Adams 
(12,470 ft.), Mount Baker (10.827 ft.), Glacier Peak (10,436 ft.) 
and Mount St Helens (10,000 ft.). Glaciers are common both in the 
N. and in the S. region, even on the higher elevations. Both slopes 
of the Cascades are cut deep by valleys. Along the Pacific Coast the 
ridges of the Coast range are only about 1500 ft. in height in the 
S. part of the state, but they rise northward in the Olympic Moun- 
tains and reach a maximum of elevation on Mount Olympus of 
8150 ft. The Olympics meet the ocean alone a rather straight line, 
but farther S. the coast line is broken by Gray s Harbour and Willapa 
Bay, the drowned lower portions of river valleys. The upheaval of 
the Cascade Mountains on the E. and the Olympic Mountains and 
Coast range on the W. left between them the Puget Sound Basin, 
the gently sloping sides of which descend in the central portion to 
less than 100 ft. from sca-leveL A still greater subsidence farther 
north produced Puget Sound. East of the Cascade Mountains the 
Columbia and Spokane rivers mark the boundary between the 
Okanogan Highlands to the northward and the Columbia plateau 
to the southward. The Okanogan Highlands, an outlier of the 
Rocky Mountains extending westward from the Cceur d'Alene 
Mountains in Idaho, reach heights of 5000 to 6000 ft above the sea. 
but are characterized by long gentle slopes, rounded divides ana 
wide stream basins. In some 01 the larger valleys there are glacial 
terraces. The Columbia plateau consists of horizontal beds of lava 
having a total thickness of several thousand feet, and its surface 
has a general elevation of 1000 to 2000 ft. above sca-leveL West of 
the Columbia river the plain is broken by several monoclinal ridges 
rising 2000 to 3000 ft. above it and extending eastward 50 to 75 m. 
from the foothills of the Cascades. In some parts, especially (in 
Douglas and Grant counties) within the Big Bend of the Columbia, 
the plain is frequently cut by coulees, or abandoned river channels, 
some of them 500 to 600 ft. deep and with very precipitous walls. 
The Grand Coulee represents the course of the Columbia river 
during the glacial period, when its regular channel was blocked with 
ice. There are also deep canyons which have been cut by the rivers 
in their present courses, especially by the Snake river and its tribu- 
taries. The S.W. corner of the state is occupied by the Blue Moun- 
tains, which rise about 7000 ft. above the sea and are cut deep by 
canyons. About 11,000 so. m. in Washington have a minimum 
elevation exceeding 3000 ft.; an approximately equal area has a 
maximum elevation less than 500 ft., and the mean elevation of the 
entire state is 1700 ft. 

The Okanogan Highlands, the Columbia plain, the E. slope of the 
Cascade Mountains and the S. portion of the Puget Sound Basin 
are drained by the Columbia and its tributaries. This large river 
enters the N.tJ. corner of the state from the N., traverses it in a 
winding course from N. to &., forms the greater portion of its S. 
boundary, and discharges into the Pacific Qoeen. The Snake (in 



35+ 



WASHINGTON 



the S.E., a little W. of the I roth parallel), the Spokane (in the east 
central part) and the Fend Oreille (on the N. boundary) are it* 
principal tributaries from the E.; the Yakima (a little above the 
mouth of the Snake) from the W.; and the Okanogan (in the north 
central part of the state), from the N. A portion of the Puget 
Sound Basin and a portion of the Coast range are drained by the 
Chehalis river, which has cut a channel through the Coast range and 
discharges into Gray's Harbour. The W. slope of the Cascades, 
most of the £. slope of the Olympics and the N. portion of the 
Puget Sound Basin are drained by a great number of small rivers 
into the Puget Sound; and the W. slope of the Olympics and Coast 
range is drained by several other small rivers into the Pacific On 
the Cascade Mountains, at the heads of streams, are a number of 
lakes of glacial origin, the largest of which is Lake Chelan on the E. 
slope in Chelan county. This is nearly 60 m. in length, and from 
I to 4 m. wide. At the upper end it is about 1400 ft. deep, but it is 
shallow at the bwer end where the water is held back by a morainal 
dam, and where only 3} m. from the Columbia river it is about 
400 ft. above the level of the river. There are also several alkali 
lakes or chains of alkali lakes in the coulees on the Columbia plateau. 

Fauna.-— Many species of wild animals still inhabit the state, but 
the number of each species has been much reduced. The caribou, 
moose, antelope, mountain sheep, beaver, otter and mink are scarce. 
Few elk are found except in the inaccessible districts on the Olympic 
Mountains. White- and black-tailed deer and black bear inhabit 
the densest forests. Mountain goats are quite numerous on the 
Cascades. The destruction of cougars, lynx (" wildcats "), coyotes 
ana wolves is encouraged by bounties. Coyotes and jack-rabbits 
are the most numerous denizens of the Columbia plain. 'Musk-rats 
and skunks are numerous west of the Cascades. The blue grouse 
and partridge are the principal game birds. The sage-hen is common 
on the Columbia plain. The Japanese pheasant and the California 
quail have increased in numbers under the protection of the state. 
Among other game birds are prairie-chickens, ducks, geese, swan, 
brant, sandhill crane and snipe. The speckled trout, which abounds 
in nearly all of the mountain streams and lakes, is the principal game 
fish. Other freshwater fish are the perch, black bass, pike, pickerel 
and white fish. There are large quantities of salmon in the 
lower Columbia river, in Gray's and Wiltapa harbours, and in 
Puget Sound; oyster fisheries in Gray's and Willapa harbours 
and in Puget Sound; cod. perch, flounders, smelt, herring and 
sardines in these and other salt waters. For all the more desirable 
game a close season has been established by the state. 

Flora.— The Puget Sound Basin and the neighbouring slopes of 
the Cascade and Olympic Mountains are noted for their forests, 
consisting mainly of giant Douglas fir or Oregon pine (Pseudotsuga 
Dougbsit), but containing also some cedar, spruce and hemlock, 
a smaller representation of a few other species and a dense under- 
growth. Near the Pacific Coast the forests consist principally of 
hemlock, cedar and Sitka spruce. At an elevation of about 3000 ft. 
on the W. slope of the Cascades the red fir ceases to be the dominant 
tree, and between this elevation and the region of perpetual snow, 
on a few of the highest peaks, rise a succession of forest zones con- 



taining principally: (1) yellow pine, red and yellow fir, white fir 
and cedar; (2) lodgcpole pine, white pine, Engelmarm spruce and 
yew; (3) subalpine fir, lovely fir, noble fir, Mertens hemlock, Alaska 



cedar and tamarack; (4) white-bark pine, Patton hemlock, alpine 
larch and creceptng jumper. Deciduous trees and shrubs are repre- 
sented in western Washington by comparatively email numbers of 
maple, alder, oak, Cottonwood, willow, ash, aspen, birch, dogwood, 
sumach, thornapple, wild cherry, chokecherry, elder, huckleberry, 
blueberry,! blackberry, raspberry, gooseberry and grape. The E. 
slope of the Cascades and roost of the Okanogan Highlands are 
Clothed with light forests consisting chiefly of yellow pine, but 
containing also Douglas fir, cedar, larch, tamarack and a very 
small amount of oak. In the eastern part of the Okanogan High- 
lands there is some western white pine, and here, too, larch is 
most abundant. The Columbia plain ts for the most part treeless 
and, except where irrigated, grows principally bunch-grass or, in its 
tower and more arid parts, sagebrush. In the forest regions of 
eastern Washington the underbrush is light, but grasses and a great 
variety of flowering plants abound. 

Climate.— 4n western Washington, where the ocean greatly 
influences the temperature and the mountains condense the moisture 
of vapour-bearing winds, the climate is equable and moist. Eastern 
Washington, too, usually has a mild temperature, but occasionally 
some regions in this part of the state are visited by a continental 
extreme, and as the winds from the ocean lose most of their moistare 
rn passing over the Cascades, the climate is- either dry or arid accord- 
in* to deration. Along the coast the temperature is rarely above 
#jr F. or below 10* F.; the mean temperature for Jury is about 
9* .far January 40*. and for the entire year 50*. In the Puget 
fennel Nafo an occasional cold east wind during a dry period in 
t temperature to fall below zero. At Centralia, in 
the temperature has risen as high as 102 °. 
ature for January is 34* in the NT portion of 
the S. portion; for July it is 6o* to the north 
and for the entire year it is 46* in the north 
*Wi*g April and October the temperatures 
inarly the same r~ - v — ' ■ — 




Washington, but during lulyth _ . 

are subject to a range from 40* to 1 10 . and during, January from 
65* to - 30°. However, the climate is so dry in eastern Washington 
that the " sensible " variations are much less than those recorded 
by the thermometer. In the south-eastern counties the winters 
are mild, with the exception of an orrawonal cold period, and the 
summers are hot. The rainfall on the W. slope 0/ the Olympic, 
Coast range and Cascade Mountains Is from 60 to 1 20 in. annually, 
and in the Puget Sound Basin it is from 25 to 60 in., it being 
least on the N7E. or leeward side of the Olympics. About three- 
fourths of the rain in western Washington (alb during the wet 
season from November to April inclusive. On the Okanogan High* 
lands, on the eastern foothills of the Cascade Mountains^ on the 
Blue Mountains and 011 the elevated portion of the Columbia Plain 
which comprises the E. border counties, the annual rainfall and melted 
snow amount to from 12 to 24 in., but in the southern half of eastern - 
Washington the Columbia river flows through a wide district of low 
elevation, where the rainfall and melted snow amount to only 6 to 
12 in. a year, and where there is scarcely any precipitation during the 
summer months. There is a heavy snowfall in winter on the moun- 
tains, and in a large portion of eastern Washington theavcrage annual 
snowfall is 40 in. or more. Along the coast the prevailing winds 
blow from the west or south; in the Puget Sound Basin from the 
south, and In eastern Washington from the south-west, except 
in the Yakima and Wenatchee valleys, where they are north-west. 
During summer the winds are very moderate in western Washington, 
but during winter they occasionally blow with great violence. In 
eastern Washington hot winds from the north or cast are occasionally 
injurious to the growing wheat in June or July. Light hailstorms 
are not uncommon, but tornadoes are unknown in the state*. 

Soils. — The soils of western Washington are chiefly glacial, those 
of eastern Washington chiefly volcanic. In the low tidewater 
district of the Puget Sound Basin an exceptionally productive soil 
has been made by the mixture of river silt and sea sand. In numerous 
depressions, some of which may have been the beds of lakes formed 
by beaver dams, the soil is deep and largely of vegetable formation. 
In the valleys of rivers which nave overflowed their banks and on 
level bench lands there is considerable silt and vegetable loam 
mixed with glacial clay; but on the hills and ridges of western 
Washington (he soil is almost wholly a glacial deposit consisting 

Srincipaliy' of day but usually containing some sand and gncveL 
>n the Columbia plateau the soil is principally volcanic ash and 
decomposed lava ; it is almost wholly volcanic ash in the more arid 
sections, but elsewhere more decomposed lava or other igneous rocks, 
and some vegetable loam is mixed with the ash. On the E. slope 



of the C 



and on the 



Okanogan Highlands glacial deposits of 
I as vegetable loam, are mixed with the 



clay, gravel or sand, as well as vegetal 
volcanic substances. 

Fisheries.— Washington's many waterways, both fresh and salt, 
and especially those which indent or are near the coast, make the 
fisheries resources of great value. The catch and canning of salmon 
are particularly important. In 1905 the value of canned salmon 
was $2431,605 (26,601,429 lb). 

Forests. — In 1907 the estimated area of standing timber in Wash- 
ington was ",720 sq. m. besides that included in national forest 
reserves. The forest re se rves are included in- tea national parka, 
named the Chelan, Columbia. Colville, Kaniksu, Olympic, Ranter, 
Snoqualmie, Washington. Wanaha and Wenatchee, the Chelan being 
the largest, with an area of 2492,500 acres. The aggregate area 01 
these parks (all of which were opened in 1907 and 1006) is 18,850*7 
sq. «U or about three-elevenths of the total area of the state. 

Irritation. — The principal Federal irrigation undertakings in 1910 
were known as the Okanogan project ' and the " Yakima project." 
The former (authorized in 1905) provided for the irrigation of about 
10,000 acres in Okanogan county by means of two reservoirs of an 
aggregate area -of 650 acres, main cunala and main hterals 20 m. 
long and small laterals 30 m. long, the water being taken from 
the Salmon river. In 1909 about 3000 acres in this project were 
watered and under cultivation. The Yakima project involved the 
irrigation of about 600,000 acres by means of five reservoirs of an 
aggregate area of 804/100 acre-feet, and vat undertaken by the 
United States government in 1905. 

Agriculture. — The development of the agricultural resources of 
Washington was exceedingly rapid after 1880. The wheat crop 
in 1909 was 35,780.000 bushels, valued at $ 33,275,000; oats, 
9,898,000 bushels, valued at $4,751,000; barley, 7.189.000 bushels, 
valued at $4,601,000; rye. 84,000 bushels, valued at $79,000; 
Indian corn. 417,000 bushels, valued at $359.,OQO. The principal 
wheat-producing region Is the south-eastern part of the state. 
Western Washington has large hay crops; In the E. part of the 
state much alfalfa is grown, -especially in Yakima county. In W. 
Washington peas are raised for forage. 

Vegetable crops are successfully grown in low alluvial lands of the 
W. part of the state, and on the irrigated volcanic ash lands E. of 
the mountains. Apple-growing and the raising of other fruits 
have increased rapidly- Small fruits are more successful in the 
W. part of the itare. Crapes are grown on the mountain sides, 
cranberries on the bog lands near the coast, and nuts in the S.E. 
parts. 

Live-stock and dairy products are important factors in the 



4 



4! 



WASHINGTON 



355 



a gika l una f wealth of Washington, bat the raiting of Overtook on 
ranges is Its* common than when huge herds grazed free on govern- 
ment lands. Dairying* •* distinct from grasing, has much increased 
in importance In reotnt years. 

Mim*r*ls.— The mineral wealth of Washington is large, but its 
resources have been only slightly developed, and had hardly begun 
before the first decade of the 20th century; m 1002 the total value 
of all mineral products was $ 5.393,659: in 1907 it was $11,617,706 
and in looB $11,610,224. 



1 are the only important ones in 
1 only, of the Pacific states, is 



The coal deposits of Wi 
the Pacific states, and in Wash 

there any coking coal. In the Cbwfitz Valley an inferior coal was 
found in 1848. The first important coalmining was near BdKngham 
Bay, in Whatcom county, where coal was discovered in 1853 and 
where 3374 tons were mined in i860. Between 1830 and i860 coal 
was found on the Stilaguarnish river (Snohomish county) and on the 
Black river (near Seattle) and in 1863 at Gil man (King county); 
but it was not until b e tw ee n 1880 and 1885, when the Green river 
field in King county and the Roslyn mines in Kittitas county were 
opened, that commercial production became important: the output 
was 3.024.943 tons (valued at £6,690,412) in 1908, when nearly one- 
half (1414,621 tons) of the total was from Kittitas county ana most 
of the remainder from the counties of King (931.643 tons) and 
Pierce (531,678 tons). There are large deposits of glacial and 
residual clays and clay shales throughout the state. 

Serpentine marble with seamed markings has been found in 
Adams and Stevens counties. Granite h found about Puget Sound 
and in the extreme eastern part of the state; it is largely used in 
riprap or rough foundations. Sandstone is found especially in the 
N.W. in Whatcom and San Juan counties; it is used for paving 
Mocks. Limestone also is found most plentifully in the north and 
north-western parts of the state- 
Gold, silver, copper, lead and a little iron (almost entirely brown 
ore) are the principal ores of commercial importance found in 
Washington. The total value of gold, silver, copper and lead in 
1908 was $378,816 (gold $242,234, silver $47,076. copper $41,188, 
lead $48,318). The largest output of each of these ores in 1008 
was in Stevens county; Perry. King and Okanogan counties ranked 
nest in the output of gold: Okanogan and Ferry counties in the 
output of silver: Okanogan in the output of copper) and King in 
the output of lead. About nine-tenths of the gold was got from 
dry or siliceous ores and about 8 % from placer mines; about two- 
thirds of the silver from dry or siliceous ores, about two-ninths from 
copper ores, and most of the other ninth from lead ores. The only 
lead on is galena. The copper is mostly a copper glance passing 
rato chateooyrite; it is found in fissure veins with granite. A small 
quantity of »nc (7 tons in 1906) is occasionally produced. Tungsten 
is found as wolframite in Stevens county near Deer Trail and Bissell. 
in Okanogan county near Loomis, in Whatcom county near the inter* 
national boundary, and (with some acheelite) at Silver Hill, near 
Spokane. Nickel has been found near Keller in Ferry county, and 
molybdenum near Davenport, Lincoln couflty. There is chromite 
in the black sands of the sea-coast and the banks of the larger rivers. 
Antimony deposits were first worked in 1906. Arsenic is found. 

Manufactures.— There was remarkable growth in the manufactur- 
ing industries of Washington between 1880 and 1905. due primarily 
to the extraordinary development of its lumber industry. In 1870 
the value of lumber products wasli .307.585. and the Territory ranked 
thirty-first among the states and territories in this industry, and in 
fSfto the value of the product was $1.7*4.742; by 1905 the value 
had increased to $49,572.51*, and Washington now ranked first. 
The manufacture of planing mill products, including sashes, doors 
sod blinds, was an important industry, the products being valued 
m 1905 at $5,173432. , 

Kent in commercial importance to lumber and timber products 
are flour and grist mill products, valued in 1905 at $14,663,61*. 
Other important manufactures art: slaughtering and meat packing 
(wholesale). $6,2*1.705 ■«■ »903. ***** liquors, $4471,777; and 
foundry and machine shop products, $3,862,279. 

Transportation and Commerce.— -Puget Sound has formed a 
natural terminus for several transcontinental railways, the cities of 
Seattle and Tacoma on its shores affording outlets to the commerce 
of the Pacific for the Northern Pacific, the Great Northern and the 
Chicago, Milwaukee & Puget Sound transcontinental lines, which 
enter these cities with their own tracks. The Union Pacific and the 
Canadian Pacific reach Seattle over the tracks of other roads. The 
Northern Pacific and the Great Northern enter the state near the 
middle of its eastern boundary at Spokane, which is a centre for 
practically all the railway lines in the eastern pan of the state. 
The Northern Pacific, the first of the transcontinental roads to touch 
the Pacific north of San Francisco, reaches Seattle with a wide 
sweep to the south, crossing the Columbia river about where it is 
entered by the Yakima and ascending the valley of the latter to 
the C?**-*^ Mountains. The Great Northern, running west from 
Spokane, crosses the sure in nearly a straight line, and between this 
road and the Northern Pacific, and paralleling the Great Northern, 
rms the recently constructed Chicago, Milwaukee & Puget Sound, 
the westward extension of the Chicago. Milwaukee ft St Paul. The 
Northern Pacific sends a branch line south from Tacoma parajlcl 



j with the coast to Portland on the Columbia river, where it meets: the 
Southern Pacific and the Oregon Railroad & Navigation Company's 
line (a subsidiary of the Union Pacific), thus affording coramuoica* 
tion southwards, and up the valley of the Columbia to the east. 
Entering the south-east corner of the state, the Oregon Railroad ft 
Navigation Company extends a line northwards to Spokane, and a 
branch of the Great Northern, leaving the main line at this city, 
runs north-westward into British Columbia. The Spokane. Portland 
& Seattle railway connects the three cities named by way of the 
Columbia Valley; and the Spokane A Inland Empire sends a line 
eastward into Idaho to the Cceur d'Alene country and another 
through the south-eastern part of the state into Nevada. In 1880 
the railway mileage was 289 m.; in 1890. 2012*05 m.; in 1900, 



2888-44 m.; and on the 1st of January 1906, 4180*32 in. 
Seattle and Tacoma are among the four leading \ 
United States on the Pacific. Other harbours on Puget Sound of 



commercial importance are Orympia, Everett and Belliaaham. 
Port Townsend is the port of entry for Puget Sound. Gray's 
Harbour, on the western coast, is of importance in lumber traffic. 

Population.— Tht population In i860 was 11,594; in 1870, 
2J»955; in *88o, 75. no; in 1890, 340*300, an increase within 
the decade of 365-1%; in 1900, 318,103, an increase of about 
45%* In 19-A according to the U.S. census returns, the total 
population of the state reached 1,141,99a Of the total popula- 
tion in 1000, 304,179 were native whites, 111,364 or 21*5% were 
foreign-born, 10,139 (of whom 2531 were not taxed) were Indians, 
5617 were Japanese, 3629 were Chinese, and 2514 were negroes. 
The Indians on reservations in 1909 were chiefly those on Colvflle 
Reservation (1,297*000 acres unallotted), in the N.E. part of the 
state, and the Yakima Reservation (837,753 acres unallotted), 
in the S. part; they belonged to many small tribes chiefly of 
the Salishan, Athapascan, Chinookan and Shahaptian stocks. 
Of the foreign-born, 18,385 were English-Canadians, 16,686 
Germans, 12,737 Swedes, 10,481 natives of England, 9801 
Norwegians and 7262 Irish. Of the total population 241,388 
were of foreign parentage (i.e. either one or both parents were 
foreiga*born), and of those having both parents of a given 
nationality 34400 were of German, 10,359 of Swedish, 17456 
of Irish, 16,959 of Norwegian and 16,835 of English parentage. 
The Roman Catholic Church in 1906 had more members than 
any other religious denomination, 74,981 out of the total of 
191,976 in all denominations; there were 31,700 Methodists, 
13464 Lutherans, 11,316 Baptists, 10,628 Disciples of Christ, 
10,025 Congregationalists and 6780 Protestant Episcopalians. 

Government. — Washington is governed under its original 
constitution, which was adopted on the 1st of October 1880. An 
amendment may be proposed by either branch of the legislature; 
if approved by two-thirds of the members elected to each branch 
and subsequently, at the next general election, by a majority 
of the people who vote on the question it becomes a part of the 
constitution. Five amendments have been adopted: one in 
1804, one in 1896, one in 1900, one m 1004, and one in 1910. 
Suffrage is conferred upon all adult citizens of the 
United States (including women, 1910) who have lived in the 
state one year, in the county ninety days, and in the city, 
town, ward or precinct thirty days immediately preceding the 
election, and are able to read and speak the English language; 
Indians who are not taxed, idiots, insane persons and convicts 
are debarred. General elections are held biennially, in even* 
numbered years, on the first Tuesday after the first Monday 
in November, and candidates, except those for the supreme 
court bench and a few local offices, are nominated at a direct 
primary election, held the second Tuesday in September. 

The governor, lieutenant-governor, secretary of state, treasurer, 
auditor, attorney-general, superintendent of public instruction and 
commissioner of public lands are elected for a term of four years; 
and each new administration begins on the second Monday in 
January. The governor's salary is foOOO a year, which is the 
maximum allowed by the constitution. 

The legislature consists of a Senate and a House of Representatives, 
and the constitution provides that the number of representatives 
shall not be less than sixty-three nor more than ninety-nine, and 
the number of senators not more than one-half nor less than one- 
third the number of representatives. Senators are elected by 
single districts for a term of four years, a porti6n retiring every two 
years; representatives are elected, one. two or three from a district, 
for a term of two years. Regular sessions of the legislature are held 
biennially, in odd-numbered years, and begin on the second Monday 



356 



WASHINGTON 



in January. Any bill or any item or items of any bill which has 
passed both houses may be vetoed by the governor, and to override 
a veto a two-thirds vote of the members present in each house b 
required. No law other than appropriation bills can go into effect 
until ninety days after the adjournment of the legislature, except in 
case of an emergency, by a vote in each house of two-thirds of all its 
members. The members of the legislature are paid $5 for each day's 
attendance during the session, besides an allowance for travelling 
expenses. 

Justice is administered principally by a supreme court, superior 
courts and justices of the peace. The supreme court consists of 
nine judges elected for a term of six years, one of those whose term 
next expires being chosen chief justice, and is divided into two 
departments. The presence of at least three judges in each 
department is required, and the concurrence of at least three judges 
is necessary to a decision. In case of a disagreement the case may 
be heard again in the same department, transferred to the other 
department, or to the court en banc* The chief justice or any four 
of his associates may at any time convene the court en banc, and 
if so convened at least five of the judges must be present, and the 
concurrence of at least five is necessary to a decision. The supreme 
court has original jurisdiction in habeas corpus, quo warranto and 
mandamus proceedings against all state officers; and it has appellate 
jurisdiction except in civil actions for the recovery of money or 
personal property, in which the original amount in controversy 
does not exceed 9200, and which at the same time do not involve 
the legality of a tax, impost, assessment, toll or municipal fine, or 
the validity of a statute. J udges of the superior courts (one or more 
for each county, or one for Two or more counties jointly) are elected 
for a term of four years. They have original jurisdiction in all 
cases in equity, in all cases at law which involve the title or possession 
of real property, or the legality of a tax, impost, assessment, toll or 
municipal fine, and in all other cases at law in which the amount 
in controversy is $100 or more, in nearly all criminalcases, in matters 
ol probate, in proceedings for divorce, and in various other cases; 
and they have appellate jurisdiction of cases originally tried before 
a justice of the peace or other inferior courts where the amount in 
controversy is more than $20. Justices of the peace, one or more 
in each election precinct, are elected for a term of two years. They 
have jurisdiction of various civil actions in which the amount in 
controversy is less than $100, and concurrent jurisdiction with the 
superior courts in all cases of misdemeanours, but punishment by a 
justice of the peace is limited in cities of the first class to a fine of 
£500, or imprisonment for six months, and elsewhere to a fine of 
$100 or imprisonment for thirty days. 

Local Coutrnmeut.—The government of each county is vested 
principally in a board of three commissioners elected by a county 
at large, some for two and some for four years. The other 
county officers are a derk. a treasurer, an auditor, an assessor, an 
attorney, an engineer, a sheriff, a coroner and a superintendent of 
public schools, each elected for a term of two years. Township 
organization is in force only when adopted by a particular county at 
a county election: in 1910 only one county (Spokane) had the town* 
ship organization. Each township is governed by the electors 
assembled annually (the first Tuesday in March) in town meeting 
and by three supervisors, a clerk, a treasurer, an assessor, a justice 
of the peace and a constable, and an overseer of highways for each 
road district, all elected at the town meeting, justice of the peace 
and a constable for a term of two years, the other officers for a term 
of one year; each overseer of highways is chosen by the electors of 
his district. Municipalities are incorporated under general laws, 
and cities are divided into three classes, the first class including 
those having a population of 20,000 or more, the second class those 
having a population between 10,000 and 30.000. the third class tbosr 
having a population between 1500 and 10.000. When a community 
has a population between 300 and 1500 within an area of l sq. m., 
it may be incorporated as a town. A city of the first class is per- 
mitted to frame its own charter, but its general powers are prescribed 
by statute. A city of the second class must elect a mayor and twelve 
councilman, and its mayor must appoint a police judge, an attorney, 
a street commissioner and a chief of police. A city ol the third class 
must elect a mayor, seven councilmen, a treasurer, a health officer, 
a clerk and an attorney, and its mayor must apoint a marshal, 
a police justice and as many policemen as the council provides 
lor. An incorporated town must elect a mayor, five councilmen 
and a treasurer, and its mayor must appoint a marshal and a clerk. 

Miscellaneous Laws. — Either husband or wife may hold, manage 
and dispose of his or her separate property independent of the other, 
but property which they hold in common is under the management 
and control of the husband except that be cannot devise riy will 
more than one-half of the community real or personal property, or 
convey, mortgage or encumber any of the community real estate 
unless his wife joins him. When either husband or wife dies intestate 
one-third of the separate real estate of the deceased goes to the sur- 
vivor if there are two or more children, one-half of it if there is only 
one child, the whole of it if there are no children, no issue of children, 
and 00 father, mother, brother or sister. One-half of the community 
Bpppmyflffft to the survivor in any case, and the whole of it if there 
frMMfJWPWH ■ liHit I In i f 1 Iiilili 1 ii Where there 



is no will one-half of the residue of the separate personal estate goes 
to the survivor if there are issue, and the whole of it if there are no 
issue. A law enacted in 1909 forbids a marriage in which either of 
the parties is a common drunkard, habitual criminal, epileptic 
imbecile', feeble-minded person, idiot or insane person, a person who 
has been afflicted with hereditary insanity , a person who is afflicted 
wkh pulmonary tuberculosis in its advanced stages, or a person who 
is afflicted with any contagious venereal disease, unless the woman 
is at least forty-five years of age. A plaintiff must reside 
in the state one year before filing an application for a divorce. 
Neither party is permitted to marry a third party until six months 
after the divorce has been obtained. Washington has a state board 
consisting of three members appointed by the governor to confer with 
commissioners from other states upon such matters as marriage 
and divorce, insolvency, descent and distribution of property, 
the execution and probate of wills, for the purpose of promoting 
uniformity of legislation respecting them. A homestead to the value 
of $1000 which is owned and occupied by the head of a family is 
exempt from attachment or forced sale except (or debts secured by 
mechanics', labourers*, materialmen's or vendors' liens upon the 
premises. If the owner is a married man the homestead may be 
selected from the community property but not the wife's separate 
property without her consent, ana when it has been selected, even if 
from the husband's separate property, it cannot be encumbered or 
conveyed without the wife s consent. Personal property is exempt 
from execution or attachment as follows: all wearing apparel of 
every person and family; private libraries to the value of $500; all 
family pictures; household goods to the value of $500; certain 
domestic animals or $350 worth of other property chosen instead; 
firearms kept for the use of a person or family; certain articles 
(within specified values) necessary to the occupations of farmers, 
physicians, and other professional men, teamsters, lightermen, &c_ 
and the proceeds of all life and accident insurance. By a law enacted 
in 1909 the licensing of the sale of intoxicating liquors, other than for 
medical purposes by druggists and pharmacists, is left to the option 
of counties and cities. 

Charities, cVc— The state charitable and penal institutions coasist 
of the Western Washington Hospital for the Insane at Fort Steua- 
coom, the Eastern Washington Hospital for the Insane at Medical 
Lake, the State School for the Deaf and the State School for the Blind 
at Vancouver, the State Institution for Feeble-minded near Medical 
Lake, the Washington Soldiers' Home and Soldiem' Colony at 
Orting, the Veterans' Home at Port Orchard, the State Penitentiary 
at Walla Walla, the State Reformatory at Monroe and the State 
Training School at Chehalis. All of these institutions are under the 
management of a bi-partisan State Board of Control which consists 
of three members appointed by the governor for a term of six years, 
one every two years, and also removable by the governor in his dis- 
cretion. Each member receives a salary of $3000 a year. The same 
board together with the superintendent of the penitentiary constitute 
a prison Doard. The State Training School is for the reformatory 
training of children between eight and eighteen years of age who have 
been found guilty of any crime other than murder, manslaughter or 
highway robbery, or who for some other cause have been committed 
to it by a court of competent jurisdiction. 

Education.— The public school system is administered by a state 
superintendent of public instruction, a state board of education, 
regents or trustees of higher institutions of learning, a superintendent 
of the common schools and a board of education in each county, 
and a board of directors in each school district. The state super- 
intendent is elected for a term of four years. The state board 
of education consists of the state superintendent, the president 
of the University of Washington, the president of the State 
College of Washington, the principal of one of the state normal 
schools chosen biennially by the principals of the state normal 
schools, and three other members appointed biennially by the 
governor, one of whom must be a superintendent of a district 
of the first class, one a county superintendent and one a principal 
of a high school. This body very largely determines the course of 
study in the elementary schools, high schools, normal school and the 
normal departments of the University and the State College, approves 
the requirements for entrance to the University and the State College, 
and prepares the Questions for the examination of teachers. Each 
county superintendent is elected for a term of two years. The 
county board of education consists of the county superintendent and 
four other members appointed by him for a term of two years; one 
of its principal duties is to adopt the text-books for schools in 
districts in which there is no four-year accredited high school. 
In a school district which maintains a four-year accredited 
high school there is a text -book commission consisting of the city 
superintendent or the principal of the high school, two members 
of the board of directors designated by the board, and two teachers 
appointed by the board. All children between eight and fifteen 
years of age. and all between fifteen and sixteen years of age 
who are not regularly employed in some useful or remunerative 
occupation, must attend the public 'School all the time it is m s e ssi on 
or a private school for the same time unless excused by the city or 
the county superintendent because of mental or physical disabRitv 
or because of proficiency in the branches taught in the first eight 



WASHINGTON 



557 



(fades, Washington has three state nofmsl schools: om at Cheney, 
one at Bellingham, and one at EUensburg, and each of them is under 
the management of a board of three trustees appointed by the 
governor with the concurrence of the Senate for a term of six years, 
one every two years. The State College of Washington (1890) at 
Pullman, for instruction in agriculture, mechanical arts and natural 
sciences, includes an agricultural college, an experiment station and 
a school of science. The University c4 Washington (1862) at Seattle 
embraces a college of liberal arts, a college of engineering and schools 
of law, pharmacy, mines and forestry. Whitman College (Congrega- 
tional, 1866) at Walla Walla, Gonzaga College (Roman Catholic. 
1887) at Spokane, Whitworth College ( Presbyterian, 1890) at Tacoma 
and the University of Puget Sound (Methodist Episcopal, 1903) at 
Tacoma are institutions of higher learning maintained and controlled 
by their respective denominations. 

Finance.— The revenue for state, county and municipal purposes 
is derived principally from a general property tax, a p rivilege tax 
levied on the gross receipts of express companies and private 
car companies, an inheritance tax and licence fees for the sale 
of intoxicating liquors. Real property is assessed biennially: 
personal property, annually. For the two years ending the 1st of 
October 1908 the total receipts into the state tifcaswy amounted. 
to $10,854^81*42 tad the total disbursements amounted to 
fu.0S3.375* 13. The net state debt on the 1st of October 1908 
amounted to fe67>576-3*. 

History.— The early exploration of the western coast of North 
America grew out of the search for a supposed passage, some- 
times called the " Strait of Anian " between the Pacific and the 
Atlantic In Purckas his Pilgrimmes (1625) was published the 
story of Juan de Fuca, a Creek mariner whose real name was 
Apostolos Valerianos, who claimed to have discovered the 
passage and to have sailed in it more than twenty days. Though 
lae story was a fabrication, the strait south of Vancouver Island 
was given his name. An account of the various Spanish and 
English explorers has already been given under Okxgon and need 
not be repeated at length here. 

In 1787 a company of Boston merchants sent two vessels, 
the " Columbia " and the " Washington " under John Kendrick 
and Robert Gray (1755-1806) to investigate the possibility 
of establishing trading posts. They reached Nootka Sound in 
September 1788, and in July 1789 Captain Gray in the 
" Columbia " began the homeward voyage by way of China. 
Captain Kendrick remained, erected a fort on Nootka Sound, 
demonstrated that Vancouver was an island and in x 791 purchased 
from the Indians large tracts of land between 47* and 51* N. 
tat. for his employers. On the homeward voyage he was 
accidentally killed and his vessel was lost. Meanwhile Captain 
Gray in September 1790 sailed from Boston on a second voyage. 
During the winter of x 791-1792 he built another fort on Nootka 
Sound and mounted four cannon from the ship. With the coming 
of spring: he sailed southward, determined to settle definitely 
the existence of the great river, which he bad vainly attempted 
to enter the previous summer. Captain George Vancouver 
(1759-1798), in charge of a British exploring expedition then 
engaged in mapping the coast (1792-1794), was sceptical of 
the existence of the river, but Captain Gray, undiscouraged, 
persisted in the search and on the nth of May 1792 anchored 
in the river which he named Columbia in honour of his ship. 
The later claim of the United States to all the territory drained 
by the river was based chiefly upon this discovery by Captain 
Gray, who had succeeded where Spanish and British had failed. 
The territory became known as Oregon (q.v.). 

The first white man certainly known to have approached 
the region from the east was Alexander Mackenzie of the North- 
west Fur Company, who reached the coast at about lat. 53* 
n> July 1793. With the purchase of Louisiana (30th April 1803) 
the United States gained a clear title to the land between the 
Mississippi and the Rocky Mountains as far north as 49* and, 
because of contiguity, a shadowy daim to the region west of 
the mountains. In 18x9 Spain specifically renounced any claim 
she might have to the coast north of 4*°* strengthening thereby 
the position of the United States. Just before the purchase 
of Louisiana, President Jefferson had recommended to Congress 
(t8th January 1803) the sending of an expedition to explore the 
headwaters of the Missouri, cross the Rockies and follow the 
streams to the Padfic In accordance with the recommendation 



Meriwether Lewis (9.9.) and William Clark, hoth officers of the 
United Stales Army, with a considerable party left St Louis 
on the 14th of May 1804, ascended the Missouri to' the head- 
waters, crossed the Rockies and, following the Colombia river, 
reached the ocean in November 1805. The return journey 
over nearly the same route was begun on the 33rd of March 
1806, and on the 23rd of September they reached St Louis. 

The story of the struggle of the rival British and American 
companies to control the fur trade, with the final dominance 
of the Hudson's Bay Company has been told under Oregon and 
need not be repeated. Since the country was considered to be 
of little value the question of boundaries was not pressed either 
by Great Britain or the United States after the War of 181 2, 
and by a treaty concluded on the soth of October 1818 it was 
agreed that " any country that may be claimed by either party 
on the north-west coast of North America, westward of the 
Stony (Rocky) Mountains shall be free and open for the term of 
ten years from the date of the signature of the present convention 
to the vessels, dtiiens and subjects of the two powers." On 
the 6th of August 1827 the convention was continued in force 
indefinitely with the proviso that either party might abrogate 
the agreement on twelve months' notice. Meanwhile Russia 
(17th April 1834) agreed to make no settlement south of 54° 40' 
and the United States agreed to make none north of that line. 
In February 1825 Great Britain and Russia made a simner 
agreement. This left only Great Britain and the United States 
as the contestants for that territory west of the Reeky Mountains 
between 42° and 54° 40', which by this time was commonly 
known as the Oregon country. American settlers in considerable 
numbers soon began to enter the region south of the Columbia 
river, and in 1841, and again in 1843, these settlers attempted 
to form a provisional government. A fundamental code was 
adopted m 1845 and a provisional government was established, 
to endure until " the United States of America extend their 
jurisdiction over us." North of the river, the Hudson's Bay. 
Company discouraged settlement, believing that the final deter* 
initiation of the boundary controversy would make that stream 
the dividing line. Though there were a few mission stations in 
the eastern part of the present state of Washington (see Whitman, 
Maicus), the first permanent American settlement north of 
the Columbia was made in 184$ on the Des Chutes river, at the 
head of Puget Sound at the present Tumwater. Others soon 
followed in spite of the efforts of the chief factor of the Hudson's 
Bay Company, Dr John M'taughtin, and these permanent 
settlers finally carried the day. 

Interest in the Oregon country developed with the increase 
of settlers and of knowledge and a demand tor the settlement 
of the boundary dispute arose. The report of Captain Charles 
Wilkes, who visited the coast in 1841-1842 in charge of the 
United States exploring expedition helped to excite this interest. 
In the presidential campaign of 1844 one of the Democratic 
demands was " Fifty-four forty or fight." By a treaty negotiated 
by James Buchanan, on the part of the United States, and 
Richard Fakenham, on the part of Great Britain, and ratified 
on the 17th of July 1846, the boundary was fixed at 49° to the 
middle of the channel separating the continent from Vancouver 
Island and thence " southerly through the middle of the said 
channel and of Fuca's Straits to the Pacific Ocean." A dispute 
later arose over this water-line. The act establishing a territorial 
government for Oregon was approved on the 14th of August 
1848, and the first governor, Joseph Lane (1801-1881), assumed 
the government on the 3rd of March 1849. Following the in- 
crease of population north of the Columbia, the territory was 
divided, and Washington Territory was established on the and 
of March 1853, with the river as the southern boundary to the 
point where it is intersected by the forty-sixth parallel, and 
thence along that parallel to the summit of the Rocky Mountains, 
thereby including portions of the present states of Idaho and 
Montana. The first governor. Major Isaac I. Stevens, of the 
United States Army, took charge on the 29th of September 
1853, and a census indicated a population of 3965, of whom 1682 
were voters. Otympia was chosen as the temporary seat of 



J5» 



WASHSTAND— WASP 



government, and Governor Stevens at once set to work to ex* 
tingulsh the Indian titles to land and to survey a route lor a 
railway, which was later to become the Northern Pacific. The 
Indians, alarmed by the rapid growth of the white population, 
attempted to destroy the scattered settlements and the wandering 
prospectors (or gold, which had been discovered in eastern 
Washington in 1855. Between 1855 and 1859, after many sharp 
contests, the Indians were partially subdued. 

Shortly after 1846, the British began to assert that the Rosario 
Strait and not Haro Strait (as the Americans held) was the 
channel separating the mainland and Vancouver Island, thus 
claiming the Haro Archipelago of which San Juan was the 
principal island. Conflict of authority arose, and in 1859 San 
Juan was occupied by U.S. troops commanded by Captain 
George £. Pickett (1825-1875), and for a time hostilities seemed 
imminent. By agreement joint occupation followed until, by 
the Treaty of Washington (May 8, 1871), the question was 
left to the German emperor, who decided (October 21, 1872) in 
favour of the United States. Meanwhile Oregon was admitted 
as a state (February 14, 1859) with the present boundaries, and 
the remnant of the territory, including portions of what are 
now Idaho and Wyoming, was added to Washington. The 
discovery of gold in this region, however, brought such a rush of 
population that the Territory of Idaho was set off (March j, 1863) 
and Washington was reduced to its present limits. Rapid growth 
in population and wealth led to agitation for statehood, and a 
constitution was adopted in 1878, but Congress declined to pass 
an enabling act. The development of Alaska and the completion 
of the Northern Pacific Railroad to the coast (1883) brought a 
great increase in population. A large number of Chinese coolies 
who had been introduced to construct the railway congregated 
in. the towns on the completion of the work, and in 1885 serious 
anti-Chinese riots led to the declaration of martial law by 
the governor and to the use of United States troops. Finally 
the long-desired admission to statehood was granted by Con- 
gress (February 22, 1889) and President Benjamin Harrison 
(November x x, 1889) formally announced the admission complete. 

Since admission the progress of the state has continued with 
increasing rapidity. The Alaska-Yukon Exposition, designed 
to exhibit the resources of western America, held at Seattle 
June-October 1009, was a complete success. In politics the 
state has been Republican in national elections, except in 1896, 
when it was carried by a fusion of Democrats and Populists. 
A Populist was elected governor and was re-elected in xooo. 



.- Governors of Washington 
Territorial. 

Tsaac T. Stevens 

C. H. Mason (acting) 

Fayette McMullcn 

C. H. Mason (acting) 

Richard D. Gholson 

Henry M. McGill (acting) 

Win. H. Wallace 

L. I. S. Turney (acting) 

Wm. Pickering » 

George E. Cole 

E. L. Smith (acting) 

Marshall F. Moore 

Alvin Flanders 

Edward S. Salmon 

ElishaP. Ferry 

W. A. Newell 

Watson C. Squire 

Eugene Sexnple 

MilesC. Moore 



EKsha P. Ferry 
John H. McGraw . 
J. R. Rogers . 
Henry CMcBride' 
Albert E. Mead 
Samuel G. Cosgrove » 
M. E. Hey' . . 



Slate. 
Republican 

Populist 

Republican (acting) 
Republican 

Republican (acting) 



1853-1857 

1857 

j 857-1 858 

1 858- 1 859 

1859-1860 

1 860-1861 

1861 

1861-186J 

1863-1 866 

1 866- 1 867 

1867 

I 867-1869 

I 869-1 870 

187O-1872 

1872-X880 

I880-1884 

1884-1887 

I 887-1 889 

1889 

1889-1893 

1893-1897 

1897-1901 

I 901-1905 

1905-1909 

1909 

1909- 



1 Absent from the Territory during the greater part of 1865, during 
vbJch time Elwood Evans acted as governor. 
•In place of L R. Roger*, deceased. 
^*Hs3^ March 1909. 



BiBMOCRArmr.— For general and physical description sea the 
Annual Reports (1902 aqq.) of the Washington Geological Survey— 
in vol. i. there is a " Bibliography of the Literature referring to the 
Geology of Washington " by R. Arnold—; O. L. Waller, Irrigation 
in the State of Washington (Washington, 1909). Bulletin 214 of the 
U.S. Department of Agriculture; and Water Supply and Irrigation 
Papers, $$ and 118 (1901 and 1905) of the U.S. Geological Survey. 
W. L. Davis and T. H. Bowles's Birds of Washington (2 vols., Seattle, 
1909) is an excellent work. For administration see R. A. Ballingcr 
and A. Remington, Codes and Statutes of Washington (ibid., 1910). 
For history see H. H. Bancroft, The Northwest Coast (2 vols., San 
Francisco, 1884)* and Oregon (2 vols., ibid., 1886-1888), Washington. 
Idaho and Montana (ibid., 1890); " " " 

Discovery to (he North Pacific Ocean C 
Evans, Washington (Tacoma, Washing!) 



Washington (New York, 1909), 

MABCUS. 



; George Vancouver, Voyage of 
1 (3 vols., London, 1797); Elwood 
hington, 1 893); and E. S. Meany, 



m . , . Sec also the bibliographies under 

Oregon and Whitman, * 

WASHSTAND, a table or stand containing conveniences fo* 

personal ablutions. In its 18th-century form it was called a 
" basin stand " or " basin frame/ 1 and is still sometimes described 
as a " washhand stand." Its direct, but remote, ancestor was 
the monastic lovobo, ranges of basins of stone, lead or marble 
fed from a cistern. They were usnally of primitive conception, 
and a trough common to all was probably more frequent than 
separate basins. Very occasionally they were of bronze adorned 
with enamels and blazoned with heraldry. Very similar usages 
obtained in castles and palaces, fixed lavatories being con- 
structed in the thickness of the walls for the use of their more 
important residents. These arrangements were obviously 
intended only for the summary ablutions which, until a very late 
date, sufficed to even the high-born. By degrees the latabo 
became portable, and a "basin frame "is mentioned as early 
as the middle of the 17th century.' Examples of earlier date than 
the third or fourth decade of the x8th century are, however, 
virtually unknown. Thenceforward, until about the end of that 
century, this piece of furniture was usually literally a " stand." 
It was supported upon a tripod; a circular orifice in the top 
received the basin, and smaller ones were provided for a soap 
dish and a water-bottle. Sometimes a stand for the water -jug 
when the basin was in use was provided below, and very com- 
monly there was a drawer, sometimes even two drawers, below 
the basin. Great numbers of these stands were made to fit into 
corners, and a " corner wash-stand " is still one of the commonest 
objects in an old furniture shop. Chippendale designed such 
stands in an elaborate rococo fashion, as well as in simpler form. 
As the 18th century drew to its close the custom of using the same 
apartment as reception room by day and sleeping room by night 
produced a demand for what was called " harlequin furniture. "— • 
pieces which were contrived a double or triple debt to pay. 
Thus a variety of complicated combination washstands and 
dressing tables were made, and fitted with mirrors and sometimes 
with writing conveniences and drawers for clothes. Sheraton 
developed astonishing ingenuity in devising a type of furniture 
which, if we may judge by the large number of examples still 
existing, must have become highly popular. With the beginning 
of the 19th century and the expansion of ideals of personal 
cleanliness, the washstand grew in size and importance. It 
acquired the form of an oblong wooden table provided, like 
its smaller predecessors, with orifices for basins and fitted with a 
broad shelf -like stretcher upon which the jugs were placed when 
they were removed from the basins. Ample space was provided 
for' soap-dishes and water-bottles. These tables were single or 
double, for the use of one or two persons. The washstand, as 
we know it in the 20th century, took its final form when the 
wooden top was replaced by marble, unpierced, the basins being 
placed upon the slab, which, in the beginning almost invariably 
white, is now often of red or other warm-tinted marble. 

WASP (Lat. vespa), the common name for a well-known 
sort of stinging insect. The order Hymenoptera is divided into 
two sub-orders, the Symphyta and the Apocrita. The latter 
is subdivided into several sections, one of which, the Vespoidca, 
includes all the true wasps; in addition to the ruby wasps and 
many of the " Fossores " or digging wasps. 

The true wasps (forming the old section Diploptera) are in 
their turn divided into three families— <i) the Vespidae, (a$ the 



WASP 



359 



Emnenidae, tnd (3) the Masarfdae, wftfeh together comprise 
some 1500 different species. They are characterized by their 
wiags, which arc present in both sexes and also in the modified 
females or workers, being longitudinally folded when at rest, 
except in the Masaridae. The antennae are usually elbowed, 
and contain twelve or thirteen joints; in some cases they are 
davate. A pair of notched faceted eyes are present, and three 
ocelli in the top of the head. The mouth-parts are arranged for 
socking, but have not reached that degree of perfection found 
amongst the bees. Hence wasps cannot obtain the sugary 
secretion from deeply-seated nectaries, and their visits to flowers 
are confined to such as are shallow or widely opened; they 
particularly frequent the UmbeUlferae. The maxillae are 
elongated, and compressed, the maxillary palp six- jointed. The 
labium is prolonged centrally into a " tongue," which is glandular 
at the tip; the paraglossae are linear. The labial palp has three 
or four joint*. The pro-thorax is oval, and its sides are prolonged 
backward to the base of the wings. The fore wing has two or 
three submarginal ccHa. The legs are not provided with any 
adaptations for collecting pollen. The abdomen is sometimes 
pedunculate, its second (apparently first) segment being drawn 
out Into a long stalk, which connects it with the alitrunk, made up 
of the thorax and the first abdominal segment. The queens and 
the workers are armed with a powerful sting. The usual colour 
of these insect* is black, relieved to a greater or less degree by 
spots and patches of yellow or buff. 

The Diploptera may be subdivided into two groups in accord- 
ance with the habits of life of the insects comprising the section. 
One of the groups includes the famHy Vespfdae, which is com- 
posed of social wasps, and includes the hornet (Vcspo crabro) and 
the common wasp ( V. vulgaris). The other group contains two 
smaller families, the Eumenidae and the Masaridae, the members 
of which are solitary in their mode of life. 

Family 1. Vtspidae.— In addition to their social habits the members 
of thii famHy are characterized by certain structural features. The 
anterior wings have three submarginal cells. The antennae have 
thirteen joints in the males and twelve in the females; the claws of 
the tarsi are simple; the anterior four tibiae have two spines at the 
tip; the abdomen is but rarely pedunculated, and the posterior 
ssgroents are often very contractile. 

The members of this family approximate very closely to bees ia 
their social manner of life. The communities are composed of males, 
fertile females and workers. The latter are females in which the 
ovary remains undeveloped; they resemble the perfect female in 
external appearance, but are slightly smaller. It has been shown by 
P. Marchal that a clear line of distinction between queen and worker 
cannot always be drawn. Unlike the hive bees', the wasps* com- 
munity is annual, existing for one summer only. Most of the 
members die at the approach of autumn, but a few females which 
have been fertilized hibernate through the winter, sheltered under 
Mooes or in hollow trees. In the spring and with the returning warm 
•other the female regains her activity and emerges from her hiding- 
place. She then sets about finding a convenient place for building 
* nest and establishing a new colony. The common wasp (V. 
wrfmn'i) usually selects some burrow or hole in the ground, which, if 
too small, she may enlarge into a chamber suitable Tor her purpose. 
She then begins to build the nest. This is constructed of small fibres 
of old wood, which the wasp gnaws, and kneads, when mixed with 
the secretion from the salivary glands, into a sort of papier-mache 
palp. Some of this m formed into a hanging pillar attached to the 
reef of the cavity, and in the lower free end of this three shallow 
csp-fike cells are hung. In each of these an egg Is laid. The foundress 
of the society then continues to add cells to the comb, and as soon 
as the grubs appear from the first-laid eggs she has in addition to 
teed and feed them. The development within the egg takes eight 
nays. 

The grubs are apodal* thicker in the middle than at either end: 
the mandibles bear three teeth: the maxillae and labium are repre- 
sented by fleshy tubercles. The body, eaduwrve of the head, consists 
pf thirteen segments, which bear lateral tobtrcks and spiracles. 
The larva has no anus. The larvae are suspended with the head 
downwards ia the cells, and require a good deal of attention, being 
fed by their mother upon insects which are well chewed before they 
ere grven to the larvae, or upon honey. At the same time the mother 



e enlarging and deepening the cells in which they live, building new 
xut,and laying on 
»ngle of each cell. 



ceQ*, and laving more eggs, which are usually suspended in the same 



After about a fortnight the grubs cease to feed, and, forming a silky 
mver to their cells, become pupae. This quiescent stage- lasts about 
ten days, at the end of which period they ernesgn as the imago or 
perfect insect. The silky covering, of the cell is round or convex 
■; and to leave the cell the insect ehber pushes it out, when 



It opens Hka-a bow Kd, or gnaws a round hole through it. As soon as 
the ceM is vacated it is cleaned out and another egg deposited. In 
this way two or three larvae occupy successively the same cell during 
the summer. The first wasps that appear in a nest are workers, and 
theseat once set to work to enlarge the comb, and feed- the larvae, &c. 

The material of the nest, as before stated, is usually dried 
wood, worked by the mandibles of the wasp, with the addition of its 
salivary secretion, into a pulp, which can easily be moulded whilst 
moist; it dries into a substance of a papery appearance, but 
possessing considerable tenacity. Sometimes paper itself, such as old 
cartridge cases, b used. The Combs are arranged horizontally ; each 
contains a single layer of cells opening downwards. The second 
comb is suspended from the first by a number of hanging pillars which 
are built from the point of union of three cells. The space between 
two combs is just sufficient to allow the wasps to cross each other. 
The combs are roughly circular in outline, and increase in size for the 
first four or five layers, after which they begin to decrease; the 
whole is covered by a roughly made coating consisting of several 
layers of the same papery substance which composes the combs. 
This is continued down until it forms a roughly spherical covering for 
the whole, but not giving any support to the combs, which are inde- 
pendent of It. As the nest increases in size, the covering needs to be 
repeatedly pulled to pieces and reconstructed, its inner layer being 
cut away as the combs are enlarged. The covering is pierced by 
apertures for the passage of the wasps. The cells are hexagonal at 
their mouths, but above become more rounded in their cross section. 

During the first half of the summer workers only are produced, but. 
as fruit ripens and food becomes more abundant, fully developed 
females and males appear, the latter often from parthcnogenetlcaUy 
developed eggs of the later broods of workers. The males and 
females are larger than the workers, and require larger cells for their 
development; these are usually kept apart from one another and 
from those of the workers. The males may be distinguished by their 
longer antennae, by the more elongated outline of their body, and by 
the absence of a sting. 

In a favourable season, when the weather is warm and food 
plentiful, a nest may contain many thousands of cells full of wasps in 
various stages of development; and, as each cell is occupied two 
or three times in the course of a summer, those authorities who put 
the number of the members of the community as high as 30,000 are 
probably not far wrong. 

At the approach of autumn the society begins to break up; the 
males fertilize the females whilst flying high in the air. They then 
die. often within a few hours. The workers leave the nest, carrying 
with them any grubs that remain in the cells, and both soon perish. 
The nest Is entirely deserted. The fertilized females, H has been seen, 
creep into crevices under stones or trees, or hide amongst moss, and 
hibernate until the warmth of the following spring induces them to 
leave their hiding-places and set about founding a new community. 

There are altogether seven species of Vespa met with in Britain. 
V. vulfaris, the common or ground wasp, V. rufa, the red wasp, 
distinguished by its reddish-yellow 
abdomen, and V. germanica, the 
German wasp, with three black 
spots upon its first abdominal seg- 
ment, are classed together aa ground 
wasps. They build their nests in 
burrows in the ground, but this is 
not an invariable rule; they may 
be distinguished from the tree wasps 
by their shorter cheeks and usually 



by the first joint in the antennae 




F10. 1.— Vesp* ri^fa. 



the female being black. Vespa 
austriaca {arborea) is a race of V. 
ntfa, in whose nest it sometimes 
lives as an inquiline. The tree wasps build stouter nests upon 
branches of trees; the first joint of the antennae of the females 
is yellow in front. The tree wasps are V. syivestris, noncgica and 
crabro. 

The hornet, V. crabro, is the largest species occurring in Great 
Britain. They have a more distinctly red colour than the common 
wasp, and a row of red spots upon each side of the abdomen. They 
occur much more rarely than the common wasp, and appear to be 
almost confined to the southern half of England. Their nests 
resemble those described above, but are larger; they are found in 
hollow trees or deserted out-houses. Their communities are smaller 
in number than those of the other wasps. 

The hornet, where it occurs in any number, does a considerable 
amount of damage to forest trees, by gnawing the .bark off the 

founger branches to obtain material for constructing its nest, 
t usually selects the ash or alder, but sometimes attacks the lime, 
birch and willow. Like the wasp, it does much damage to fruit, upon 
the juices of which it lives. On the other hand, the wasp 'is useful 
by keeping down the numbers of Aies and other insects. It catches 
these in large numbers, killing them with its jaws and not with its 
sting. It then tears off the legs and wings, and bears the body back 
to its nest as food for the larvae. Wasps also act to some extent as 
flower fertilizers, but in this respect they cannot compare with bees; 
they visit fewer flowers, and have no adaptations on their limbs for 
carrying off the pollen. 



360 



WASP 



The genu* Vespa is very widely spread; it contains ever forty 
•pedes, distributed all over the world. Some of the largest and 
handsomest come from eastern Asia. V. mandarin* of China and 
Japan, and V, magnifua of the East ladies and Nepal, measure 

9 in. across the wings; 
V. crientalis, found in 
Greece, Egypt and the 
East, builds its nest of 
day. 

The only other genus 
of Vespidae which is 
found in Europe is 
Pelistes, which occurs in 
the countries bordering 
the Mediterranean. The 
colonies of this genus 
are much smaller than 
those of Vcspa, Each 
nest consists of a single 
tier of cells in the form 
of a round plate, sup* 

Eorted in the middle 
y a single stalk. This 
comb is sometimes 
vertical, the cells then 
being horizontal or 
slightly oblique. Some 
of the members of this 
genus store up honey, 
which in the case of a 
South American species 
is poisonous, from the 
nature of the flowers 
from which it is gathered. 
The members of this 
genus have a slender body; the thorax is more oblong than in the 
genus Vcspa, the palps are stouter and the abdomen is more 
distinctly pedunculate. 

The genus Iuhnofoster, from the East Indies, has many structural 
features in common with the Eumenidae, but the character of its 
communities, and its nest, which is very small, justify its position 
amongst the social wasps. 

The genus Icarta, common in Australia and the East Indies, 
builds very small nests, of two or three rows of cells, hanging on 
one side from a stalk. 

Synaeca is a South American genus, which builds large nests, 
sometimes 3 ft. in length, closely applied to the branch of a tree; 
they never contain more than one layer of cells, which are hori- 
zontally placed. The whole nest is built of coarse material, chiefly 
small pieces of bark : and there is only one opening, at the lower end. 
Another South American genus, Ckarltrgus, makes a tough nest, 
pendent from boughs of trees, and opening to the exterior below 
by a median aperture. The combs are 
arranged, somewhat like funnels, inside 
one another, but with spaces between. 
The anex of each comb is pierced by a 
hole for the wasps to pass from one 
gallery to another. 
The nest of Tatua, which occurs in 




Fig. *.— Nest of Vcspa sybestris. 




Flo; 3.— Polities kpidus and nest 

Mexico and South America, is also pendent, but the combs 
Src horiwiiul; the opening, from the cfctcnnr li at the side* 
an-] ihr |M^n;t funn one ipllcry to amitbrr 1. :iUo Utter*!- 

The CMern.tl ..,,,, ir.ince ■ .':no, found in Brarfl 

ud other em <t » ..J 1 the curnmon 

ftitp, l«it n> nmghsr. IntrrruiMy ihc o gfrd toncefttri- 

rally, more or tea carnllc-1 <iu] covering mhkh afford* 

thfru njppr ft. 

Ihr ■mrhidjc J1IT.J 

(he M nf lifer 

only 

^^ 

iwf*-^ *- mM ^ mmmmm ^mw ^^m\\\\\\\\\m\m 

>v& bifid 




claws on their tarsi, and the two anterior tibiae have but one spine, 

at the tip. The mandibles are elongated, and form a land o( rostrum, 
in this respect approaching the Fossores. 

Eumenes coorcUUa is the only British species of this genus. The 
female is t in. long, the male somewhat shorter. The abdomen Is 
connected with the thorax by a long peduncle. The colour is black, 
relieved by spots of yellow. It constructs small 
spherical cells of mud, which are found attached 
to stems of plants, very generally to the heath. 
At 6rst the cell opens to the exterior by means 
of a round pore; one egg is deposited in each 
cell, and a store of honey as food for the larva 
when hatched; the cell is then closed with mud. 
The larvae of some species are carnivorous, and 
then the food-supply stored up in the cell con- 
sists of caterpillars and other insect larvae -. 
which have been paralysed by the parent wasp *"*• ^•. Ail 
stinging them through the cerebral ganglion; Eumenes smumn, 
when the larva of the Eumenes emerges from the egg it sets upon 
these and devours them. 

The genus Odynerus contains a very large number of spedee, 
found in all parts of the world. The members of this genus are 
about the size of a fly, and they differ from Eumenes in having a 
sessile abdomen. Some of the species construct their cells in sand- 
heaps, lining them with agglutinated grains of sand; others live in 
cavities of trees lined < with the some material, whilst others build 
their nests of mud. Like some of the species of Eumenes, they store 
up paralysed Lepldopterous and Chrysomclcous larvae as food for 
their carnivorous grubs. 

Family 3. Masaridae.— The members of the third family, the 
Masaridae, are sharply distinguished by the possession of only two 
submarginal cells in the fore wing, which folds imperfectly or not at 
all when at rest. Their antennae are frequently clavate, particularly 
so in the genus Cehnites; they are twelve-jointed, but as the terminal 
joints are almost fused they appear to be composed of only eight 
Joints. The wings are not so completely folded as in the other two 
families, and the abdomen is but slightly contractile. The maxillae 
are short and their palps very small, with but three or four joints. • 

The number of genera comprised in this family is small; none 
occur in Britain, but in southern Europe some species are found. 
They make their nest in cavities in the earth, generally in a bank* 
and construct an irregular gallery leading down to it. 

During hot fine summers wasps cause a good deal of loss to 
market gardeners and fruit growers. During this time of year 
they live almost exclusively upon the sweet juices of ripe fruit, 
occasionally carrying off small particles of the flesh. At the 
same time they have not entirely lost their carnivorous tastes, 
for they frequently attack the meat in butcher's shops, but 
render compensation by killing and carrying off to feed their 
grubs considerable numbers of blow-flies. Wasps also p et f onn 
an important service in keeping down the numbers of cater-' 
pillars. The larvae arc almost exclusively carnivorous, living 
upon insects captured by their parents anil 
reduced by them to a pulp before being given 
to the young. During the spring the first 
broods that appear live largely upon honey; 
and this forms the staple 
food of the genus PolisUs 
throughout their whole 
life. 

In attempting to rid a 
district of wasps, unless 
the nest can be taken, 
there is little good in 
lulling stray members of 
the community. On the 
other hand, the killing of 
queen-wasps in early 
spring probably means that the formation of a nest and the 
production of a society whose members are counted by 
thousands is in each case prevented. 

The number of wasps is kept down by numerous enemies. 
The most effective of these live in the nests and devour the 
larvae; among them are two species of beetle, Rhipipkorus 
paradoxus and LeMa linearis. Two species of /dbieanwesj, 
and a species of Antkdmyia, also infest the nests of wasps and 
prey upon the grubs. The larvae of the syrpbid flies Vduceila, 
found in the nests of both wasps and bees, are now believed to 
be scavengers rather than parasites. In the tropica some species 
fire attacked by fungi, the hyphae of which, protrude between 




FlO. 5.— Mfasaris tespifonuis. 




WASSAIL— WASTE 



361 



the segment* of the abdomen, and give the wasp a very extra- 
ordinary appearance. 

Bibliography.— In addition to various systematic memoir* 
enumerated at the end of the article on Hymenoptera, reference 
may be made to De Saussure (JionopaPkte des guHes societies, 
Geneve, 1853-1858), P. Marchal {Arch. Zoot. Exp. Gen. (3), tv., 
~ . t (jjfo^ Soc. Zoot. Franc*, viii., 1895) and O. HJLaf 



1896), C. Janet ( 



(Natural History of Common Animals, ch. v., Cambridge. 1904). 

(A.E.ST6.H/C.: 



WASSAIL (O. Eng. was kdl, " be whole/' " be well "), primarily 
the ancient form of " toasting,** the term being applied later to the 
Christmas feasting and revelries and particularly to the bowl of 
spiced ale or wine which was a feature of the medieval Christmas. 
One of the earliest references to the wassail-bowl in English 
history is in the description of the reception of King Vortigern 
by Hengist, when Rowena "came into the king's presence, 
with a cup of gold filled with wine in her hand, and making a 
low reverence unto the king said, ' Waes had hlaford Cyning,' 
which is * Be of health, Lord King. 1 " la a collection of ordinances 
for the regulations of the royal household in Henry VIL's 
reign, the steward on Twelfth Night was to cry "wassail" 
three timeson entering with the bowl, the royal chaplain respond- 
ing with a song. Wassailing was as much a custom in the 
monasteries as in laymen's houses, the bowl being known as 
poatiuu Caritalis. What was popularly known as wassailing 
was the custom of trimming with ribbons and sprigs of rosemary 
a bowl which was carried round the streets by young girls 
singing carols at Christmas and the New Year. This ancient 
custom still survives here and there, especially in Yorkshire, 
where the bowl is known as " the vessel cup," and is made 
of holly and evergreens, inside which are placed one or two dolls 
trimmed with ribbons. This cup is borne on a stick by children 
who go from house to house singing Christmas carols. In 
Devonshire and elsewhere it was the custom to wassail the 
orchards on Christmas and New Year's eve. Pitchers of ale or 
cider were poured over the roots of the trees to the accompani- 
ment of a rhyming toast to their healths. 

WASTE (O. Fr. wast, guast, gast, gaste; Lai. vastus, vast, 
desolate), a term used in English law in several senses, of which 
(our are the most important. (1) " Waste of a manor " is that 
part of a manor subject Co rights of common, as distinguished 
from the lord's demesne (see Commons, Manor). (2) " Year, 
day, and waste " was a part of the royal prerogative, acknowledged 
by a statute of Edward II., De Praerogativa Regis. The king 
had the profits of freehold lands of those attainted of felony and 
petit treason, and of fugitives for a year and a day with a right 
of committing waste in sense (3) thereon. After the expirrtion 
of a year and a day the lands returned to the lord of the fee. 
This species of waste was abolished by the Corruption of Blood 
Act 1814 (see Felony, Treason). (3) The most usual significa- 
tion of the word is " any unauthorized act of a tenant, for a 
freehold estate not of inheritance, or for any lesser interest, 
which substantially alters the permanent character of the thing 
demised (L) by diminishing its' value, (iL) by increasing the 
burden on it, (iii.) by impairing the evidence of title and thereby 
injuring the " inheritance " (West Ham Charity Board v. East 
hmdon W.W., 1900, 1 Ch. 6241 637; cf. Pollock, Law of Torts, 
7th ed., 345). 

Waste in tense (3) is either voluntary or permusw. Voluntary 
waste b by act of commission, as by pulling down a house, wrongfully 
removing fixtures (o jr.), cutting down timber trees, i.e. oak, ash, elm, 
twenty years old, and such other trees, e.g. beech, as by special 
custom are counted timber, In the district, opening new quarries or 
nunc* (but not continuing the working of existing ones), or doing 
anything which may — for this is the modern test— alter the nature 
of the thing demised, such as conversion of arable into meadow land. 
Although an act may technically be waste, it will not as a rule 
constitute actionable waste, or be restrained by injunction, in the 
absence of some prohibitive stipulation if it is ameliorating," i\*. 
if it miproves the value of the land demised (see Meux v. CobUy, 
tioj. 2 Ch. 253, 263). In the case of " timber estates ** upon which 
tren of various kinds are cultivated solely for their produce and the 
profit gamed from their periodical felling and cutting, the timber 
e not considered as part of the inheritance but as the annual fruits 
of the estate, and an exception arises in favour of the tenant for life 
(see Daskmved v. Hatnuu, 1891, 3 Ch. 306). Under the Settled 
Land Act J 882 a tenant for life may grant building, mining and other 



for the prescribed terms M for any purpose whatever, wher her 

Permissive waste is by act of onnaskiTi, 

to fall Out of rep air. A "Mermar M — * leriri 



involving waste or not^' Permissive waste is by set of omiaskin, 

1 allowing buildings to fall Out of repair. A '* termor " — m 1 erm 

allwbo held by lefi=c (or life or ti res, or for years 



such as allowing buildini 
which here includes M all 

by deed or without deed " by the statute at Marlborough ( U67 J — 
may not commit waste without licence in *m i n g from the reversioner. 
In case a tenant for life or for any smaller interest holds (si is often 
the case by the terms of awillorsettlenn.Tit) " without impeachment 
of waste ' (sauns impea c h m ent do wast, n. without liability to have 
his waste challenged or impeached), hi» rights are considerably 
greater, and he may use the profits josVt rerum iubftatuia (ru u~- 1 
language of Roman law, from which the EnglUh law of waste Is in 
great measure derived). For instance, he may cut timber in a 
husband-like manner and open mines; but he may not commit 
what is called equitable waste, that is, pull down or deface the 
mansion or destroy timber planted or left for ornament or shelter 
(Weld^BtundeU v. WolstUy, 1903, a Ch. 664). Acts of equitable waste 
were, before 1875, not cognizable in coons of common law, but by 
the Judicature Act 1873, a 25 (3). m theabsenceof special provisions 
to that effect an estate for fife without impeachment of waste does 
not confer upon the tenant for life any legal right to commit equitable 
waste. A copy-holder may not commit waste unless allowed to do 
so by the custom of the manor. The penalty for waste is forfeiture 
of the copyhold; Catbrmtk v. Poynien, 1905, 2 K.B, 258 (see Copy- 



bold). The Agricultural Holdings Acts 1000 and 1906, by reason 
of their provisions giving compensation for Improvement, as regards 
the holdings to which they apply, override some of the old common 



law doctrines as to waste. The act of 1900 provides (s. 2 [3D that 
where a tenant, who claims compensation for improvements, has 
wrongfully been guilty of waste, either voluntary or permissive, the 
landlord shall be entitled to set off the sums due to him in respect 
of such waste, and to have them assessed by arbitration in manner 
provided by the acts of 1900 and 1906. Under the act of 1906 the 
tenant is permitted to disregard the terms of his tenancy as to the 
mode of cropping; on arable land, but if he exercises Ms statutory 
freedom of cropping in such a manner as to injure or deteriorate his 
holding, the landlord is entitled to recover damages for such injury, 
ftc (a 3). 

Remedies for Wad*.— Various remedies for waste have been given 
to the reversioner at different periods in the history of English law. 
At common law only single damages seem to have been recoverable. 
This was altered by the legislature, and for some centuries waste 
was a criminal ot quasi Krimtnal offence. Magna Carta enacted that 
a guardian committing waste of the lands In his custody should 
make amends and lose his office. The statute of Marlborough (1267) 
made a " (eraser " (as above denned) committing waste liable to 
grievous amerceme n t as well as to damages, and followed Magna 
Carta in forbidding waste by a guardian. The statute of Gloucester 
(1278) enacted that a writ of waste might be granted against a 
tenant for life or years or in courtesy or dower, and on being attainted 
of waste the tenant was to forfeit the land wasted and to pay thrice 
the amount of the waste. This statute was repealed by tie Civil 
Procedure Acts Repeal Act 1879. In addition to the writ of waste 
the writ of estrtpement (said to he a corruption of exstirpamentttm, 
and to be connected with the French estnpier x to lame) lay to prevent 
injury to an estate to which the title was disputed. This writ has 
long been obsolete. Numerous other statutes dealt with remedies 
lor waste. The writ of waste was superseded at common law by 
the " mixed action " of waste (itself abolished by the Real Property 
Limitation Act 1833), and by the action of trespass on the case (see 
Tort, Trespass). The court of chancery also intervened by in- 
junction to restrain equitable waste. At present proceedings may 
be taken either by action for damages, or by application for an 
injunction, or by both combined, and either in the kings bench or 
in the chancery divisions. By the Judicature Act 1873, a 25 (8), 
the old jurisdiction to grant injunctions to prevent threatened waste 
is considerably enlarged. The Rules of the Supreme Court, Ord. 
xvi r. 37, enable a representative action to be brought for the 
prevention of waste. In order to obtain damages or an injunction, 
substantial injury or danger of it must be proved. In England only 
the high court (unless by agreement of the parties) has jurisdiction 
in questions of waste, but in Ireland, where the law of waste is similar 
to English law, county courts and courts of summary jurisdiction 
have co-ordinate authority to a limited extent (cf. Land Act i860, 
ss. 35-39). 

The law of waste as ft affects ecclesiastical benefices will be found 
under Dilapidations. 

(4) " Waste of assets " or " devastavit " is a squandering and mis- 
application of the estate and effects of a deceased person by his 
executors or administrators, for which they are answerable out of 
their own pockets as far as they have or might have had assets of 
the deceased (see Executors and Administrators). Executors 
and administrators may now be sued in the county court for waste 
of assets (County Courts Act 1888, s. 95). 

Scotland. — In Scots law " waste '* Is not used as a technical term, 
but the respective rights of fiar and life-renter are much the same as 
in England. As a general rule, a life-renter has no right to cut 
timber, even though planted by himself. An exception is admitted 
in the case of coppice wood, which is cut at regular intervals and 
allowed to grow again from the roots. Crown timber is also available 



tf>2 



WATCH 



to the life-renter for the purpose of keeping op the 

buildings. Before making use of mature timber for estate purposes, 
the life-renter should give notice to the Bar. He is also entitled 
to the benefit of ordinary windfalls. Extraordinary windfalls are 
treated as grown timber. Life-renters by " constitution " (ue. by 
grant from the proprietor) as opposed to life-renters by " reserva- 
tion " (where the proprietor has reserved the life-rent to himself in 
conveying the fee to another) have, as a rule, no right to coals or 
minerals underground if they are not expressed in the grant or 
appear to have been intended by a testator to pass by his settlement , 
for they are partes soli. Where coals or minerals are expressed in 
the grant, and also in cases of life-rent by " reservation, the life- 
renter may work any mine which had been opened before the be- 
ginning of his right, provided he does not employ a greater number 
of miners, or bnng up a greater quantity of minerals, than the un- 
burdened proprietor did. All life-renters are entitled to such 
minerals as are required for domestic use and estate purposes. 

British Possessions.— French law Is in force in Mauritius, and has 
been followed in substance in the civil codes of Quebec Cart. 455) 
and St Lucia (art. 406). In most of the other colonies the rules of 
English law are followed, and in many of them there has been legisla- 
tion on the lines of the English Settled Land Acts. In India tha law 
as to waste is included to some extent in the Transfer of Property 
Act (No. IV. of 1 Wa) and its amendments. Section 108 deals with 
the liabilities of lessees for waste, which may be varied by the terms 
of the lease or by local usage. The liabilities for waste of persons 
having under Hindu or Mahommedan law limited 'interests in 
reality depend in the main upon those laws and not on Indian, 
statute law. 

United States.—" In the United States, especially in the Western 
states, many acts are held to be only in a natural and reasonable 
way of using and improving the land— clearing wild woods, for 
example — which in England, or even in the Eastern states, would be 
manifest waste " (Pollock, Torts, 7th ed., 345). Thus Virginia. North 
Carolina, Vermont and Tennessee have deviated in favour of the 
tenant from English rules, while Massachusetts has adhered to them 
(Ruling Cases, tit. " Waste," xxv. 380, American notes). In certain 
states, e.g. Minnesota, Oregon and Washington (ibid., p. 381), the 
action of waste is regulated by statute. 

Europe.— The French Civil Code provides (art. 591) that the 
usufructuary may cut timber in plantations that are laid out for 
cutting, and are cut at regular intervals, although he is bound to 
follow the example of former proprietors as to quantity and times. 
This provision is in force in Belgium (Civil Code. art. 501). Analogous 

S revisions are to be found in the civil codes of Holland (art. 814), 
pain (art. 485), Italy (art. 486), and cf. the German Civil Code, 
art. 1036. 

Authorities.— English law: Bewes, Law of Waste; Fawcett, 
Law of Landlord and Tenant*, Foa, Law of Landlord and Tenant; 
Woodfall, Law of Landlord and Tenant. Scots law: Erekine, 
Principles (Edinburgh). Irish law: Nolan and Kane, Statutes 
relating to the Law of Landlord and Tenant in Ireland (Dublin) ; 
Wylie, Judicature Acts (Dublin). American law: Bouvier, Law 
Diet. (Boston and London). Indian law: Shepherd and Brown, 
Indian Transfer cf Property Act 1882. (A. VV. R.) 

WATCH (in 0. Eng. wctcce, a keeping guard or watching, 
from wacian, to guard, watch, wacan, to wake), a portable time- 
piece. This is the most common meaning of the word in its 
substantival form, and is the subject of the present article. The 
word, by derivation, means that which keeps watchful or wakeful 
observation or attention over anything, and hence is used of a 
person or number of persons whose duty it is to protect anything 
by vigilance, a guard or sentry; it is thus the term for the body 
of persons who patrolled the streets, called the hours, and 
performed the duties of the modern police. The application of 
the term to a period of time is due to the military division of 
the night by the Greeks and Romans into " watches " (4u\aical , 
vigiliac), marked by the change of sentries; similarly, on ship- 
board, time is also reckoned by " watches," and the crew is 
divided into two portions, the starboard and port watches, 
taking duty alternately. 1 The transference of the word to that 
which marks the changing hours is easy. 

1 In the British navy the twelve hour* of ihc night ire divided 
into three watches of four hour*— fro hi eight to twelve tht first 
watch, from twelve to four the middle watuh, and from fmir to *jgfc 
the morning watch. The twelve hours of the da 
four watches, two of four hours— eight to midda 
T.U. — and two of two hour*, from lour to mix and 
are the " dog watches," and their purpoar 11 
the watches every tv.-L-niy-Fuiu liour- 
from eight to midWln mm hhc nit; 
4 A Jr. on the next. rhc"w;itrh1 
to the watch, who arc mustered tov : ■ 
kept by an hour-gL ■■*, c\cry hajfji nr , 1 h 




Fro. 1. 



The invention of portable timepieces dates from the end of 
the 15th century, and the earliest manufacture of them was in 
Germany. They were originally small clocks with mainsprings 
enclosed in boxes; sometimes they were of a globular form 
and were often called " Nuremberg eggs." Being too large for 
the pocket they were frequently hung from the girdle. The 
difficulty with these early watches was the inequality of action 
of the mainspring. An attempt to remedy this was provided 
by a contrivance _ _ 

called the stack-freed, 
which was little more 
than a sort of rude 
auxiliary spring. The 
problem was solved 
about the years 1525- 
1540 by the invention 
of the fusee. By this 
contrivance the main- 
spring is made to turn 
a barrel on which is 
wound a piece of 
catgut, which in the 
latter part of the 16th 
century was replaced 
by a chain. The other encl of the catgut band is wound upon 
a spiral drum, so contrived that as the spring runs down and 
becomes weaker the leverage on the axis of the spiral increases, 
and thus gives a stronger impulse to the works (Jig. 1). 

In early watches the escapement was the same as in early 
clocks, namely, a crown wheel and pallets with a balance ending 
in small weights. Such an escapement was, of course, very 
imperfect, for since the angular force acting on the balance does 
not vary with the displacement, the time of oscillation varies 
with the arc, and this again varies with every variation of the 
driving force. An immense improvement was therefore effected 
when the hair-spring was added to the balance, which was 
replaced by a wheel. This was done about the end of the 17th 
century. During the 18th century a series of escapements were 
invented to replace the old crown wheel, ending in the chrono- 
meter escapement, and though great improvements in detail 
have since been made, yet the watch, even as it is to-day, may be 
called an 18th-century invention. 

The watches of the iGth century were usually enclosed in 
cases ornamented with the beautiful art of that period. Some- 
times the case was fashioned like a skull, and the watches were 
made in the form of octagonal jewels, crosses, purses, little books, 
dogs, sea-shells, &c, in almost every instance being finely en- 
graved. Queen Elizabeth was very fond of receiving presents, 
and, as she was also fond of clocks, a number of the gifts pre- 
sented to her took the form of jewelled watches. 

The man to whom watch-making owes perhaps most was 
Thomas Tompion (^30-1713), who invented the first dead-beat 
escapement for watches (fig. 2). It consisted of a balance-wheel 
mounted on an axis of semi-cylindrical form 
with a notch in it, and a projecting stud. 
When the teeth of the scape-wheel came 
against the cylindrical part of the axis they 
were held from going forward, but when the 
motion of the suds was reversed, the teeth 
slipped past the tiotch, and struck the projection, thus giving 
an rmpuke, "All tl^rrr^mcTit *fts afterwards developed by 
George Graham <<*:.', -17.S*) Id to Uj* horizontal cylindrical 
tliown dead-beat escapement for 
dokLi EC 1 ** 

nnla in the [5th century greatly 

5 ng on » beam ot the fore- 

— r i ine stroke is given 
ell in t hi middle watch, 
t- 1 Urate the course 
. tetk tSStd tha bell, a 
nch gun* were 6red 
1: A tho morning. 



$T%s 



Fie. a. 



WATCH 



363 



improved' watches. But * defect still 'remained, namely, 
the influence of temperature upon the hair-spring of the balance- 
wheel Many attempts were made to provide a remedy. John 
Harrison proposed a curb, so arranged that alterations of tempera* 
tore caused unequal expansion in two pieces of metal, and thus 
actuated an arm which moved and mechanically altered the length 
of the hair-spring, thus compensating the effect of its altered 
elasticity. But the best solution of the problem was ultimately 
proposed by Pierre fc Roy (1717-1785) and perfected by Thomas 
Earnsbaw (1740-1830). This was to diminish the inertia of the 
balance-wheel in proportion to the increase of temperature, by 
means of the unequal expansion of the metals composing the rim.* 
Invention in watches was greatly stimulated by the need of a 
good timepiece for finding longitudes at sea, and many successive 
rewards were offered by the government for watches which 
would keep accurate time and yet be able to bear the rocking 
motion of a ship. The difficulty ended by the invention of the 
chronometer, which was so perfected towards the early part of 
the 19th century as to have even now undergone but little change 
of form. In fact the only great triumph of later years has been 
the invention of watch-making machinery, whereby the price 
is so lowered that an excellent watch (in a brass case) can now 
be purchased for about £2 and a really accurate time-keeper fox 
about £18. 

A modern watch consists of a case and framework containing 
the four essential parts of every timepiece, namely, a mainspring 
and apparatus for winding it up, a train of wheels with hands and 
a face, an escapement and a balance-wheel and hair-spring* We 
shall describe these in order. 

The Mainspring. — As has been said, the mainspring of an old- 
fashioned watch was provided with a drum and fusee so as to equalize 
its action on the train. An arrangement was provided to prevent 
overwinding, consisting of a hook which when the chain was nearly 
wound up was pushed aside so as to engage a pin, and thus prevent 
further winding (see fig. l). Another arrangement for watches 
without a fusee, called a Geneva stop, consists of a wheel with one 
tooth affixed to the barrel arbour, working into another with only 
four or five teeth. This allows the barrel arbour only to be turned 
round four or five times. 

The " going-barrel, '* which is fitted to most modern watches, con- 
tains noTusee, but the spring is delicately made to diminish in size 
(<i>m one end to the other, and it is wound up for only a few turns, 
to that the force derived from it does not vary very substantially. 
The unevenness of drive is in modern watches sought to be counter- 
acted by the construction of the escapement and balance-wheel. 

Watches used formerly to be wound with a separate key. They 
are now wound by a key permanently fixed to the case. The de- 
pression of a small knob gears the winding key with the hands so as 
to enable them to be set. With this contrivance watches are well 
protected against ( the entry of dust and damp. 

Watch Escapements.— -The escapements that have come Into 
practical use are— (1) the old vertical escapement, now disused; (2) 
the lever, very much the most common in English watches; (3) the 
horizontal or cylinder, which is equally common in foreign watches, 
though it was of English invention; (4) the duplex, which used to be 
more in fashion for first-rate watches than it is now; and (5) the 
Attached or Chronometer escapement, so called because it is always 
used in marine chronometers. 

The vertical escapement is simply the original clock escapement 
adapted to the position of the wheels in a watch and the balance, 
in the manner exhibited in fig. 3- # As it 
requires considerable thickness in the 
watch, is inferior in going to all the others 
and is no cheaper than the level escape- 
ment can now be made, it has gone out ot 
use. 
I The leoer escapement, as it is now univer- 

ftgfcj* sally made, was Drought into use late in the 

18th century by Thomas Mudge. Fig. 4 
The position of the lever with reference to the pallets 
principle, and is only a question of convenience, in 
it; but it is generally such as we have given it. 
tame as in the dead-beat clock escapement, 
there is no friction on the dead faces of the 
pessary for locking. The reason why this 
with a pendulum is that its arc of vibration 
' * :e depth of intersection cannot be got 
ribed by the end S of the lever and any 
would work into it ; whereas, in a watch, 
cylinder on the verge of the balance, does 
the nick in the end of the lever until the 
its middle position. The pallets are under- 
-*, le. the dead faces are so sloped as to 





give a Iktfc recoil the wrong toy, ortfthtJy to re«M the unlocking, 
because otherwise there would be a risk that a shake of the watch 
would let a tooth escape while the pin is dis- 
engaged from the lever. There is also a further 
provision added for safety. In the cylinder 
which carries the impulse pin P them is a 
notch just in front of P, into which the other 
pin S on the lever fits as they pass; bat when 
the notch has got past the cylinder it would 
prevent the lever from returning, because the 
safety-pin S cannot pass except through the 
notch, which b only in the position for letting it 
pass at the same time that the impulse-pin is 
engaged in the lever. The pallets in a lever 
" and cheap 



escapement (except bad . 



s) are 





Flo. 5. 



r . r - ip 

always jewelled, and the scape-wheel is of brass. 

The staff of the lever also has jewelled pivot* 

holes in expensive, watches, and the scape-wheel has in all 1 

ones. The holes for the bssance-pivou are now always jewelled. 

The scape-wheel in this and most of the watch escapements generally 

beats five times in a second, in large chronometers four times; and 

the wheel next to the scape-wheel carries the seconds-hand. 

t F «- 2 ls tt P* an J o£ tn f J******** or cylinder escapement, cutting 
through the cylinder, which is on the verge of the balance, at the 
level of the tops of the teeth of the escape-wheel; for the triangular 
pieces A, B are not flat projections in the same plane as the teeth, 
but are raised on short stems above the plane of the wheel ; and still 
more- of the cylinder than the portion 
shown at ACD is cut away where the 
wheel itself has to pass. The author of 
this escapement was G. Graham, and it 
resembles his dead escapements in clocks 
in principle more than the lever escape- 
ment does, though much less in appear- 
ance, because m this escapement there is 
the dead friction of the teeth against the 
cylinder, first on the outside, as here repre- 
sented, and then on the inside, as shown 
by the dotted lines, during the whole 
vibration of the balance, except that portion which belongs to the 
impulse. The impulse is given by the oblique outsjde edges An, Bo 
of the teeth against the edges A, D of the cylinder alternately. The 
portion of the cylinder which is cut away at the point of action is 
about 30* less than the semicircle. The cylinder itself is made either 
of steel or ruby, and, from the small quantity of it' which is left at 
the level of the wheel, it is very delicate; and probably this has been 
the main reason why, although it is an English invention, it has been 
most entirely abandoned by the English watchmakers in favour of the 
lever, which was originally a French invention, though very much 
improved by Mudge, for before his invention the lever had a rack or 
portion of a toothed wheel on its end, working into a pinion on the 
balance verge, and consequently it was affected by the dead friction, 
and that of this wheel and pinion besides. This used to be called the 
rack lever, and Mudge's the detached lever; but, the rack lever being 
now quite obsolete, the word " detached " has become confined to 
the chronometer, to which it is more appropriate, as will be seen 
presently. The Swiss watches have almost universally the horizontal 
escapement. It is found that— for some reason which u apparently 
unknown, as the rule certainly does not hold in cases seemingly 
analogous— a steel scape-wheel acts better in this escapement than 
a brass one, although in some other cases steel upon steel, or even 
upon a ruby, very soon throws off a film of rust, unless they are kept 
well oiled, while brass and steel, or stone, will act with scarcely any 
oil at all, and In some cases with none. 

The duplex escapement (fig. 6) is probably so called because there 
is a double set of teeth in the scape-wheel — the long ones (like those 
of the lever escapement in shape) for 
locking only, and short ones (or rather , . 

upright pins on the rim of the wheel) for 
giving the impulse to the pallet P on the 
verge of the balance. It is a single-beat 
escapement: Le. the balance only receives 
the impulse one way, or at every alter- 
nate beat, as in the chronometer escape- 
ment. When the balance is turning in the 
direction marked by the arrow, ana arrives 
at the position in which the dotted tooth 
b has its point against the triangular notch 
V, the tooth end slips into the notch, and, 
as the verge turns farther round, the tooth 
goes on with it till at last it escapes 
when the tooth has got into the position 
A; and by that time the long tooth or 
pallet which projects from the verge has 

moved from f to P, and just come in front of the pin T, which stands 
on the rim of the scape-wheel, and which now begins to push against 
P. and so gives the impulse until it also escapes when it has arrived 
at i; and the wheel is then stopped by the next tooth B having got 
into the position b, with its point resting against the verge. and there 
is dead friction between them, and this friction is lessened by the 




Fig. 6. 



3*4 



WATCH 




distance of the point* of the long teeth f rem the centre of the scape* 
wheel. Ae the balance turns back, the nick V goes post the end of 
the tooth b. and in consequence of its smallness it passes without 
visibly affecting the motion of the scape-wheel, though of course it 
does produce a very slight shake in passing. It is evident that, if it 
did not pass, the tooth could not get into the nick for the next escape. 
The objection to this escapement is that it requires very great 
delicacy of adjustment, and the watch also requires to be worn care- 
fully; for, if by accident the balance is once stopped from swinging 
back far enough to carry the nick V past the tooth end, it will stop 
altogether, as it will lose still more of its vibration the next time from 
receiving no impulse. The performance of this escapement, when 
well made, and its independence of oil, are nearly equal to those of 
the detached escapement; but, as lever watches are now made 
sufficiently good for all but astronomical purposes, for which chrono- 
meters are used, and they are cheaper both to make and to mend 
than duplex ones, the manufacture of duplex watches has almost 
disappeared. 

The chronometer or detached escapement is shown at fig. 7 in the 
form to which it was brought by Earnshaw, and in which it has 
remained ever since, with the very slight difference that the pallet P, 
on which the impulse is given (corresponding exactly to the pallet P 
in the duplex escapement), is now generally set in a radial direction 
from the verge, whereas Earnshaw made it doped backward, or 
undercut, like the scape-wheel teeth. Thf early nistory of escape- 
ments on this principle does not seem to be very clear. They appear 
to have originated in France; but there is no doubt that they were 
considerably improved by the first Arnold (John), who died in 1799. 
Earnshaw's watches, however, generally beat his in trials. 

In fig. 7 the small tooth or cam V, on the verge of the balance, 
is just on the point of unlocking the detent DT from the tooth T 
of the scape-wheel; and the tooth A will immediately begin to give 
the impulse on the pallet P ; which, in good 
chronometers, is always a jewel set in the 
cylinder; the tooth V is also a jewel. This 
part of the action is so evident as to require 
no further notice. When the balance returns, 
the tooth V has to get past the end of the 
detent, without disturbing it; for, as won as 
it has been unlocked, it falls against the 
banking-pin E, and is ready to receive the 
next tooth B, and must stay there until it is 
again unlocked. It ends, or rather begins, in a 
etiffish spring, which is screwed to the block 
D on the watch frame, so that it moves without 
any friction of pivots, like a pendulum. The 
passing is done by means of another spring VT, 
called the passing spring, which can be pushed away from the body 
of the detent towards the left, but cannot be pushed the other way 
without carrying the detent with it. In the back vibration, there- 
fore, as in the duplex escapement, the balance receives no impulse, 
and it has to overcome the slight resistance of the passing spring 
besides; but it has no other friction, and is entirely detached from 
the scape-wheel the whole time, except when receiving the impulse. 
That is also the case in the lever escapement ; but the impulse in that 
escapement is given obliquely, and consequently with a good deal 
of friction; and, besides, the scape-wheel only acts on the balance 
through the intervention of the lever, which has the friction of its 
Own pivots and of the impulse pin. The locking-pallet T is undercut 
a little for safety, and is also a jewel in the best chronometers; and 
the passing spring is usually of gold. In the duplex and detached 
escapements, the timing of the action of the different parts requires 
great care, t\e. the adjusting them so that each may be ready to act 
exactly at the right time; and it is curious that the arrangement 
which would be geometrically correct, or suitable for a very slow 
motion of the balance, will not do for the real motion. If the pallet P 
were really set so as just to point to the tooth A in both escapements 
at the moment of unlocking (as it has been drawn, because otherwise 
it would look as if it could not act at all), it would run away some 
distance before the tooth could catch it, because in the duplex 
escapement the scape-wheel is then only moving slowly, and in the 
detached it is not moving at all, and has to start from rest. The 
pallet P is therefore, in Tact, set a little farther back, so that it 
may arrive at the tooth A just at the time when A is ready for it. 
without wasting time and force in running after it The detached 
escapement has also been made on the duplex plan of having long 
teeth for the locking and short ones or pins nearer the centre for the 
impulse; but the advantages do not appear to be Worth the addi- 
tional trouble, and the. force required for unlocking is not sensibly 
diminished by the arrangement, as the spring D roust in any case be 
fairly stiff, to provide against the watch being carried in the position 
in which the weight of the detent helps to unlock it. 

An escapement called the lever chronometer has tx-cn ^veral time* 
reinvented, which implies that it has never come into tencm! use, 
It is a combination of the lever as to the lockingaruhht > chronometer 
as to the impulse. It involves a little drop and therefore uasic 
of force as a tooth of the wheel just escapes at the ■* pasam}; " 
beat where no impulse is given. But it should" be understood 
that a single-beat escapement involves no more lev* of force and 
the escape of no more teeth than a double one, except the siigfc \ 



F10.7. 



drop in the duplex and this lever chronometer or others 00 the 

same principle. 

There have been several contrivances for remonUnre escapements; 
but there are defects in all of them; and there is not the same 
advantage to be obtained by giving the impulse to a watch-balance 
by means of some other spring instead of the mainspring as there is 
in turret-clocks, where the force of the train is liable to very much 
greater variations than in chronometers or small clocks. 



The balance-wheel and hair-spring consist of a small wheel, usually 



of brass, to which is affixed a spiral, or in chronometers a 

spring. This wheel swings through an angle of from 180 s to 270 
and its motions are approximately isochronous. The time of the 
watch cm be regulated by an arm to which is attached a pair of pins 
wli ich embrace the hair-spring at a point near its outer end, ana by 
the movement of which the spring can be lengthened or shortened. 
The first essential in a balance-wheel is that its centre of gravity 
shoul-J be exactly in the axis, and that the centre of gravity of the 
hair- sprint- should also be in the axis of the balance-wheel. True 
isoehrom*m is disturbed by variations in the driving force of the 
train or by variations in temperature, and also by variations in 
barometric pressure. Isochronism is produced in the first place 
by a proper shape of the spring and its ovcrcoil It is usual to time 
the watch's going when the mainspring is partly wound up, as well 
as when it is fully wound up, and then by removing parts of the 
hair-spring to get such an adjustment that the rate is not influenced 
by the lesser or greater extent to which the watch has been wound. 
The variations in length and still more in elasticity caused in a hair- 
spring by changes 01 temperature were for long not only a trouble 
to watchmakers but a bar to the .progress of the art. A pendulum 
requires scarcely, any compensation except for its own elongation 
by heat; but a balance requires compensation, not only for its 
own expansion, which increases its moment of inertia just like the 
pendulum, but far more on account of the decrease in the strength 
of the spring under increased heat. E. "G. Dent, in a pamphlet on 
compensation balances, gave the following results of some experi- 





have lost 7} and 8} seconds an hour, or more than three minutes a 
day, for each successive increase of 34°, which is about fifteen times 
as much as a common wire pendulum would lose under the same 
increase of heat; and if a metal balance had been used instead of a 
glass one thediffcrence would have been still greater. 

The necessity for this large amount of compensation having arisen 
from the variation of the elasticity of the spring, the first attempts 
at correcting it were by acting on the spnng itself in the manner 
of a common regulator. Harrison's compensation consisted of a 
compound bar of brass and steel soldered together, having one end 
fixed to the watch-frame and the other carrying two curb pins 
which embraced the spring. As the brass expands more than the 
steel, any increase of heat made the bar bend; and so, if it was set 
the right way, it carried the pins along the spring, so as to shorten 
it. This contrivance is called a compensation curb: and it has often 
been reinvented, or applied in a modified form. But there are two 
objections to it: the motion of the curb pins does not correspond 
accurately enough to the variations in the force of the spring, and 
it disturbs the isochronism, which only subsists at certain definite 
lengths of the spring. 

The compensation which was next invented left the spring un- 
touched, and provided for the variations of temperature by the 
construction of the balance itself. Fig. 8 shows the plan of the 
ordinary compensation balance. Each portion 
of. the rim 01 the balance is composed of an 
inner bar of steel with an outer one of brass 
soldered, or rather melted, upon it, and 
carrying the weights b, b, which are screwed to 
it. As the temperature increases, the brass 
expanding must bend the steel inwards, and 
so carries the weights farther in, and 
diminishes the moment of inertia of the 
balance, the decrease of rate being inversely 
as the diameter of the balance-wheel. The 
metals are generally soldered together by 
pouring melted brass round a solid steel disk, and the whole is 
afterwards turned and filed away till it leaves only the crossbar in 
the middle lying flat and the two portions of jpe rjm standing 
edgeways. The first person to practise tbjb /dtetteq:^ s*jhfog 
them appears to have oeen either TJjJgjnj jgjI^^gjj whei le 

The adjustment of a balance f nr compensation can only be done 
by tnil, <irid requires a yood cl: iJ of time ft must be done in- 
dependently of that (or tunc — the format hy lifting the weighty 
bcraijw the nearer they are 1 

will move over as the -" 
by screws with N*v 




Fig. 8. 




WATCH 



3&5 



6* knows results of previous experience with similar balances; 
and many watches are sold with compensation balances which have 
sever been tried or adjusted, and sometimes with a mere sham 
compensation balance, not even cut through. 

Secondary Gmpcnsotum.^-When chronometers had been brought 
to great perfection it was perceived that there was a residuary error, 
which was due to changes of temperature, but which no adjustment 
of the compensation would correct. The cause of the secondary 
error is that as the temperature rises the elasticity of the spring 
decreases, and therefore its accelerating force upon die balance- 
wheel diminishes. Hence the watch tends to go slower. 

In order to compensate this the split rim of the balance-wheel is 
made with the more expansible metal on the outside, and therefore 
tends to curl inwards with increase of temperature, thus diminishing 
the moment of inertia of the wheel. Now the rate of error caused 
by the increase of temperature of the spring varies approximately with 
tie temperature according to a certain law, but the rate of correction 
due to the diminution of the moment of inertia caused by the change 
of form of the rim of the wheel does not alter proportionally, but 
according to a more complex law of its own, varying more rapidly 
wits cold than with heat, so that if the rate of the chronometer » 
correct, say, at .y>° F. and also at 90* F., it will gain at all intermediate 
temperatures, the spring being thus under-corrected for high tempera- 
tures and over-corrected for low. Attempts have been made by 
alterations of shape of the balance-wheel to harmonize the pr ogress 
of the error with the progress of the correction, but not with very 
conspicuous success. 

We shall give a short description of the principal classes of in- 
ventions for this purpose. The first disclosed was that of J. S. 
Eate (sometimes attributed to Robert Motyneux), which was com- 
municated to the astronomer-royal in 1835. la one of several 
methods proposed by him a compensation curb was used; and 
though, for the reasons given before, this will not answer for the 
primary compensation, it may for the secondary, where the motion 
required is very much smaller. In another the primary compensation 
bar, or a screw in it, was made to reach a spring set within it with a 
■mall weight attached at some mean temperature, and, as it bent 
farther in, it carried this secondary compensation weight along with 
it The obvious objection to this is that it is discontinuous; but the 
whole morion is so small, not more than the thickness of a piece of 
paper, that this and other compensations on the same principle 
spacer to have been on some occasions quite successful. 

Another large class of balances, all more or less alike, may be 
represented by E. J. Dent's, which came next in order of time. 
He described several forms of his invention; the following descrip- 
tion apphes to the one he thought the best. In rig. 9 the flat cross- 
bar rr is itself a compensation bar which bends 
upwards under increased heat; so that, if 
the weights •*, v were merely set upon up- 
right stems rising from the ends of the cross- 
bar, they would approach the axis when that 
bar bends upwards. But, instead of the 
stems rising from the crossbar, they rise from 
the two secondary compensation pieces stu, in 
the form of staples, which are set on the 
crossbar; and, as these secondary pieces 
themselves also bend upwards, they make 
the weights approach the axis more rapidly 
as the heat increases: ' and by a proper 
adjustment of the height of the weights on 
the stems the moment of inertia of the balance can be made to 
vary ta the proper ratio to the variation of the intensity of the 
spring. The cylindrical spring stands above the crossbar and 
between the staples. 

Fir. 10 seprcscnts E. T. Loseby's mercurial compensation balance. 
Besides the weights D, D, set near the end of the primary compen- 
sation bars B, 8, there are small bent tubes FE, FE with mercury 
in them, like a thermometer, the bulbs being at F, F. As the heat 
it not only do the primary weights D, D and the bulbs F, F 
approach the centre of the balance, 
but some of the mercury is driven 
along the tube, thus carrying some 
more of the weight towards the 
centre, at a ratio increasing more 
rapidly than the temperature. The 
tubes are sealed at the thin end, 
' with a little air included. The 
action is here equally continuous 
with Dent's, and the adjustments 
for primary and secondary com- 
pensation are apparently more in- 
dependent of each other; and this 
. . ____ modification of Le Roy's use of 

^||M|nM^. mercury for compensated balances 

.^s^^^^^^^^H^^L (which docs not appear to have 
I^^^^^^^^^^^^Hfegfegant and ingenious. Nevertheless an 
^g^g^g^g^g^g^g^g^g^gS&t* for seven years of Loseby's trials 
^^^^^■^■Vm^m^m^nf this method over the others was more 
^s^r*' •Dent's compensation was the most sue- 

W^ Ifout of the seven, and Loseby's in only one. 




Fig. 0* 




Loseby s method has never been adopted by any other chronometer* 
maker, whereas the principles both of Eiffe s and of Dent's methods 
have been adopted by several other makers. 

A few chronometers have been made with glass balance-springs, 
which have the advantage of requiring very little primary and no 
secondary compensation, on account of the very small variation in 
their elasticity, compared with springs of steel or any other metal. 

One of the most important and interesting attempts to correct the 
temperature errors of a hair-spring by a aeries of corresponding 
temperature changes in the moment of inertia of the balance-wheel 
has been made by means of the use of the nickel-steel compound 
called invar, which, on account of its very small coefficient of ex- 
pansion, has been of great use for pendulum, rods. In a memoir 
published in 1904 at Geneva, Dr Charles Cuillaume, the inventor of 
invar, shows that in order to get a true secondary compensation 
what is wanted is a material having the property of causing the 
curve of the rim of the wheel to change at an increasing rate as 
compared with changes in the temperature. This is found in those 
specimens of invar m which the second coefficient of expansion is 
negative, i\«. which are less dilatable at higher temperatures than 
at lower ones. It in satisfactory to add that such balance-wheels 
have been tried successfully on chronometers, and notably in a deck 
watch by Paul Ditisheim of Neucbatd, who has made a chronometer 
with a eourbilbn escapement and an invar balance-wheel, which 
holds the highest record ever obtained by a watch of its class. 

It is obvious that in order that a watch may keep good time the 
centre of gravity of the balance-wheel and hair-spring must be 
exactly in the axis; for if this were not the case, then the wheel 
would act partly like a pendulum, so that the time would vary 
according as the watch was placed in different positions. It is 
exceedingly difficult to adjust a watch so that these " position 
errors" are eliminated. Accordingly it has been proposed to 
neutralize their effect by mounting the balance-wheel sad hair, 
spring upon a revolving carriage which shall slowly rotate, so that 
in succession every possible position of the balance-wheel and spring 
is aesuraedjand talis errors are averaged and mutually destroy one 
another. This is called the tourbilkxi escapement. There are 
sevecal forms of it, and watches fitted with it often keep excellent 
time. 

Stop watches or chronographs are of several kinds. In the usual 
and simplest form there is a centre seconds hand which normally 
remains at rest, but which, when the winding handle is pressed ia, 
is linked on to the train of the watch and begins to count seconds, 
usually by fifths* A second pressure arrests its path, enabling 
the time to be taken since the start. A third pressure almost 
instantaneously brings the seconds hand back to aero, this result 
being effected by means of a heart-shaped cam which, when a lever 
presses on it instantaneously, flies round to aero position. The 
number of complete revolutions of the seconds haad, t*. minutes, is 
recorded on a separate dial. 

Calendar work on watches is, of course, fatal to neat accuracy of 
time-keeping, and is very complicated. A watch is made to record 
days of the week and month, and to take account of leap years 
usually by the aid of star-wheels with suitable pauls and stops. 
The type of this mechanism is to be found in the calendar motion of 
an ordinary grandfather s dock. 

Watches have also been made containing small musical boxes and 
arranged with performing figures on the dials. Repeaters are striking 
watches which can be made at will to strike the hours and either the 
quarters or the minutes, by pressing a handle which winds up a 
striking mechanism. They were much in vogue as a means of dis- 
covering the time in the dark before the invention of luchcr matches, 
when to obtain a tight by means of flint and steel was a troublesome 
affair. 

From what has been said it win be seen that for many years the 
form of escapements and balance-wheels has not greatly altered. 
The great improvements which modern science has been able to 
effect in watches arc chiefly in the use of new metals and in the 
employment of machinery, which, though they have altered the 
form but little, have effected an enormous revolution in the price. 
The cases of modem watches are made sometimes of steel, artificially 
blackened, sometimes of compounds of aluminium and copper, 
known as aluminium gold. Silver is at present being less employed 
than formerly. The hair-springs are often of palladium in order to 
render the watch non-magnetizable. An ordinary watch, if the 
wearer goes near a dynamo, will probably become magnetized and 
quite useless for time-keeping. One of the simplest cures for this 
accident is to twirl it rapidly round while retreating from the dynamo 
and to continue the motion till at a considerable distance. The use 
of invar has been already noticed. 

It would be impossible to enumerate, stilt more to describe, the 
vast number of modern machines that have been invented for 
making watches. It may be said briefly that every part, including 
the toothed wheels, is stamped out of metal. The stamped pieces 
are then finished by cutters and with milling machinery. Each 
machine as a rule only does one operation, so that a factory will 
contain many hundreds of different sorts of machines. The modern 
watchmaker therefore is not so much of a craftsman as an engineer. 
The effect of making all the parts of a watch by machinery is that 
each is interchangeable, so that one part wul fit any watch. It is 



366 



WATER 



not an easy thing to secure this result, for as the machines are used 
die cutting edges wear down and require rcgrinding and resetting. 
Hence a tool is not allowed to make more than a given quantity of 
parts without being examined and readjusted, and from time to 
time the pieces being put out are tested with callipers. The parts 
thus made are put in groups and sorted into boxes, which are then 
given over to the watch-adjusters, who put the parts together and 
make the watch go. The work of adjustment for common watches 
is a simple matter. But expert adjusters select their pieces, measure 
them and correct errors with their tools. The finest watches are thus 
largely machine-made, but hand-finished. The prejudice against 
machine-made watches has been very strong in England, but is 
dying out— not, unfortunately, before much of the trade has been 
lost. A flourishing watch industry exists in Switzerland in the 
neighbourhood of Neuchatei. A watch in a stamped steel case can 
now be made for about five shillings. There is no reason why in 
such a neighbourhood as Birmingham the English watch industry 
should not revive. 

The use of jewelled bearings for watch pivots was introduced by 
Nicholas Facio about the beginning of the 18th century. Diamonds 
and sapphires are usually employed and pierced either by diamond 
drills or by drrib covered with diamond dust. Rubies are not a 
very favourite stone for jewels, but as they and sapphires can now 
be made artificially for about two shillings a carat the difficulty of 
obtaining material for watch jewelling has nearly disappeared. 

Watches have also been fitted with machinery whereby electric 
contacts are made by them at intervals, so that if wires are led to 
and away from them, they can be made to give electric signals and 
thus mark dots at regular intervals on a moving strip of paper. 

As in the case of clocks, the accuracy of going of a watch is esti- 
mated by observation of the variations of its mean daily rate. This 
is officially done at Kew Observatory, near Richmond, and also for 
admiralty purposes at Greenwich. At Richmond watches are divided 
into two classes, A and B. For an A certificate the trials last for 
forty-five days, and include tests in temperatures varying from 40* 
to oo° F , going in every position with dial vertical, face up and face 
down. The average daily departure from the mean daily rale, that 
is the average error due to irregular departures from the average 
going rate, must not exceed 2 seconds a day except where due to 
position, when it may amount to 5 seconds. The errors should not 
increase more than 0*3 seconds a day for each 1 * F. The trial for t he 
B certificate is somewhat similar but less severe. Chronometers 
are put through trials lasting 55 days, and their average error 
from mean rate is expected not to exceed 0-5 seconds per diem. 
The fees for these tests are various sums from two guineas down- 
wards. In estimating the time-keeping qualities of a watch or clock, 
the error of rate is of no consequence. It is simply due to the time- 
keeper going too fast or too slow, and this can easily be corrected. 
What is wanted for a good watch is that the rate, whatever it is, 
shall be constant. The daily error is of no account provided it is a 
uniform daily error and not an irregular one. Hence the object of 
the trials is to determine not merely the daily rate but the variations 
of the daily rate, and on the smallness of these the value of the watch 
as a time-keeper depends. (G. , H. H. C ) 

WATER. Strictly speaking, water is the oxide of hydrogen 
which is usually stated to have the formula HaO (see below), 
but in popular use the term is applied to a great variety of 
different substances, all of which agree, however, in being the 
water of the chemist modified differently in the several varieties 
by the nature or proportion of impurities. In all ordinary 
waters, such as are used for primary purposes, the impurities 
amount to very little by weight— as a rule to less than iVh of 1 %. 

Of all natural stores of water the ouan is by far the most 
abundant, and from it all other water may be said to be derived. 
From the surface of the ocean a continuous stream of vapour 
is rising up into the atmosphere to be rccondensed in colder 
regions and precipitated as rain, snow or sleet, &c. Some 1*1 ths 
of these precipitates of course return directly to the ocean; 
the rest, falling on land, collects into pools, lakes, rivers, &c 
or else penetrates into the earth, perhaps to reappear as springs 
or wells. As all the saline components of the ocean are non- 
volatile, rain water, in its natural state, can be contaminated 
only with the ordinary atmospheric gases— oxygen, nitrogen 
and carbon dioxide. Rain water also contains perceptible traces 
of ammonia, combined as a rule, at least partly, with the nitric 
add, which is produced wherever an electric discharge pervades 
the atmosphere. 

Lake waters, as a class, are relatively pure, especially if tfftft 
mountain slopes over which the rain collects into a lake are 
relatively free of soluble components. For example, the 
of Loch Katrine (Scotland) is almost chemically pure. 



taken up from the peat of the surrounding hills, and which 
impart to it a faint brownish hue, while really pure water is 
blue when viewed through a considerable thickness. 

River water varies very much in composition even in the 
same bed, as a river in the course of its journey towards the 
ocean passes from one kind of earth to others; while, compared 
with spring waters, relatively poor in dissolved salts, rivers 
are liable to be contaminated with more or less of suspended 
matter. 

Spring waters, having been filtered through - more or less 
considerable strata of earth, are, as a class, clear of suspended, 
but rich in dissolved, mineral and organic matter, and may also 
contain gases in solution. Of ordinarily occurring minerals 
only a few are perceptibly soluble in water, and of these calcium 
carbonate and sulphate and common salt are most widely 
diffused. Common salt, however, in its natural occurrence, 
is very much localized; and so it comes that spring and well 
waters are contaminated chiefly with calcium carbonate and 
sulphate. Of these two salts, however, the former is held in 
solution only by the carbonic acid of the water, as calcium 
bicarbonate. But a carbonate-of-lime water, if exposed to the 
atmosphere, even at ordinary temperatures, loses its carbonic 
acid, and the calcium carbonate is precipitated. The stalactites 
(q.v.) which adorn the roofs and sides of certain caverns are 
produced in this manner. Many waters are valuable medicinal 
agents owing to their contained gases and salts (see Mineral 
Waters). 

In addition to its natural components, water is liable to be con- 
taminated through accidental influxes of foreign matter Thus* 
for instance, all the Scottish Highland lochs are brown through 
the presence in them of dissolved peaty matter. Rivers flowing 
through, or wells sunk in. populous districts may be contaminated 
with excrcmentilious matter, discharges from industrial establish* 
ments, &c The presence of especially nitrogenous organic matter is 
a serious source of danger, inasmuch as such matter forms the 
natural food or soil for the development of micro-organisms, includ- 
ing those kinds of bacteria which are now supposed to propagate 
infectious diseases. Happily nature has provided a remedy. The 
nitrogenous organic matter dissolved in (say) a river speedily suffers 
disintegration by the action of certain kinds of bacteria, with forma- 
tion of ammonia and other (harmless) products; and the ammonia, 
again, is no sooner formed than, by the conjoint action of other 
bacteria and atmospheric oxygen, it passes first into (salts of) nitrous 
and then nitric acid A water which contains combined nitrogen in 
the form of nitrates only is, as a rule, safe organically; if nitrites are 
present it becomes liable to suspicion ; the presence of ammonia is a 
worse symptom, and if actual nitrogenous organic matter is found 
in more than microscopic traces the water is possibly (not necessarily) 
a dangerous water to drink. 

All waters, unless very impure, become safe by boiling, which 
process kills any bacteria or germs that may be present. 

Of the ordinary saline components of waters, soluble magnesium 
and calcium salts are the only ones which are objectionable sanitarily 
if present in relatively large proportion. Calcium carbonate m 
harmless; but, on the other hand, the notion that the presence of 
this component adds to the value of a water as a drinking water is a 
mistake. The farinaceous part of food alone is sufficient to supply 
all the lime the body needs, besides, it is questionable whether lime 
introduced in any other form than that of phosphate is available for 
the formation of, for instance, bone tissue. 

The fitness of a water for washing is determined by its degree 0/ 
softness. A water which contains lime or magnesia ssJts decom- 
poses soap with formation of insoluble lime or magnesia salts of the 
tatty acids of the soap used. So much of the soap is simply wasted ; 
only the surplus can effect any detergent action. Several methods 
for detcrmtninjf the hardness of a water have been devised, The 
most exact method it to determine the lime and nw^ncia j»ravi- 
mcirically or by alkalimetry; or by Clark's soap t«t, but (hi* 

E races* frequently jive* inaccurate results. In thit method, wfrklL 
owever, 11 largely used, a measured volume of the watti u plootd, 
in a stoppered bottle, and a standard solution fit war is then dra pr<.-j 
in from a graduaied vessel, until the ml* run:, by addition of \h* Inst 
drop of soap # has acquired the pfonerty of throwing up a peculiar 
kind o! creamy froth whw violently »UsJ ■ *■*» alt the* 

soa p-dest roying compflnfn Is have U ■ 

soap required measure^ ihe hard J 
is referri-d to a standard, far v* 
hard 1 its* prm— - " 
com-rrtihtf ■ 

£ ': 



ft 



WATER-BOATMAN—WATERBURY 



367 



Cm the Encash wale, a 1 



of 15* and over ia haid, between 5' 



and 15* moderately hard, and of less than 5° soft. 

That part of the hardness of a water which is actually owing to 
carbonate of Hme (or magnesia) can easily be removed in two ways, 
(1) By Dotting, the free carbonic add goes off with the steam, and 
the carbonate of lime, being bereft of its solvent, comes down as a 
precipitate which can be removed by filtration, or by allowing it 
to settle, and decanting off the clear supernatant liquor. (2Y A 
method of Clark's b to mix the water with just enough of milk of 
Bute to convert the free carbonic add into carbonate. Both this 
and the orkinal carbonate of lime are precipitated, and can be 
asm " * 



1 the first case. 

From any uncontaminated natural water pure water is easily 
prepared. The dissolved salts arc removed by distillation; if care 
be taken that the steam to be condensed is dry, and if its condensation 
be effected within a tube made of a suitable metal (platinum or 
silver are best, but copper or block tin work well enough for ordinary 
purposes), the distillate can contain no impurities except atmospheric 
gases, which latter, if necessary, must be removed by boiling the 
dwtiWfd water in a narrow-necked flask until h begins to " bump," 
and then allowing it to cool in the absence of air. This Utter opera- 
tion ought, strictly speaking, to be performed in a silver or platinum 
flask, as glass is appreciably attacked by hot water. For most 
purposes distilled water, taken as it comes from the condenser, is 
sufficiently pure. The preparation of absolutely pure water is a 
matter of great difficulty. Stas, in his stoichiometric researches, 
mixed water with potassium manganate, and distilled after twenty* 
four hours; the product being redistilled and condensed in a 
platinum tube just before it was required. 

Pure water, being so easily procured In any quantity, is used 
largely as a standard of reference in metrology and in the quantita- 
tive definition of physical properties. Thus a " gallon " is defined 
t 62 F. 01 a quai 



as the volume at < 



1 quantity of water whose uncorrected 



as determined by weighing in air of 30;in. pressure and 62* F 

of temperature, is equal to 10 lb avoirdupois. The kilogramme in 
Eke manner b defined as the mass of 1 cubic decimetre of water, 
measured at the temperature corresponding to its maximum density 
(4* C). The two fixed points of the thermometer correspond — the 
lower (o* C, or 32 s F.) to the temperature at which ice melts, the 
upper (100* Cm or 212* F.) to that at which the maximum tension 
ot steam, as it rises from boiling water, is equal to 760 mm. or 30-in. 
mercury pressure. 30 in. being a little more than 760 mm., 212* F. 
is, strictly speaking, a higher temperature than 100* C, but the 
difference is very trifling. Specific heats arc customarily measured 
by that of water, which is taken as « 1. All other specific heats of 
liquids or solids (with one exception, formed by a certain strength of 
aqueous methyl alcohol) are less than 1. The temperate character of 
insular climates is greatly owing to this property of water Another 
pbystographically important peculiarity of water is that it expands 
on freezing (into ice), while most other liquids do the reverse. II 
volumes ot ice fuse into only to volumes of water at o° C. ; and the 
ice-water produced, when brought up gradually to higher and higher 
temperatures, again exhibits the very exceptional property that it 
contracts between o* and 4* C. (by about rain of its volume) and 
then expands again by more and more per degree of increase of 
temperature, so that the volume at too* C. is 1 -013 times that at 4* C. 
In former times water was viewed as an * l clement," and the 
notion remained in force after this term (about the time of Boyle) 
had assumed its present meaning, although cases of decomposition 
of water were familiar to chemists. In Boyle's time it »as already 
well known that iron, tin and zinc dissolve in aqueous hydrochloric 
or sulphuric acid with evolution of a stinking inflammable gas. Even 
Boyle, however, took this gas to be ordinary air contaminated with 
wnamraabJe stinking oils. This view was held by all chemists 
until Cavendish, before 1784, showed that the gas referred to. if 
properly purified, is free of smell and constant in its properties, 
which are widely different from those of air— the most important 
point of difference being that the gas when kindled in air burns 
with evolution of much heat and formation of water. Cavendish. 
4 lid n-j' ulUfy himself *Uh 1 1 proving this Fact 

tatswely; he determined the rj nam ifa rive reljiioTf*. and found 
skce very nearly 1000 volume* ul air to burn 433 volumes 
lyvtftfcn " gas; but 1000 volume* ot air, a^n. according to 
.f««Jtf contain aio volumes of oay gen; hence, very nearly, 
rfa— tif hydrogen take up 1 volume of o^-gen to become 
rW tmportarvr riismvcry wat onry con finned by the sub* 
•rimer" ■ of Humboldt and Gay-Lussac, whirh were no 
1 Cavendish's to prove thai the hit pi u» of 1 
UudfOteo was an observational 
t and Scott, has shown 
trie composiiuin was 
iter by Pumas by 
|r naa also been 
» IseeHYUHOGf.H) 
acted much attention, 
5 poirti, refractive 
wiih ihe i.nnpJe 
r protaliir formula 
hUQ)*. The question 
1 suggest that the 




simple inolecule, HiO, which he calls hydrone. condenses in liquid 
water to form cyclic or chained compounds, containing tetravaient 
oxygen, resembling in structure the polymethytenes or paraffins 

WATER-BOATMAN, an aquatic hemipterous insect of the 
family NoUmectidae, of which the beat known species (Nolonecia 
glauco) is a prominent feature in the pond-life of Great Britain. 
The technical name, Notonecta, meaning "back-swimmer," 
alludes to the habit of the insect of swimming upside down, the 
body being propelled through the water by powerful strokes 
of the hind legs, which are fringed with hair and, when at rest, are 
extended laterally fike a pair of sculls in a boat. As is the case 
with other water-bugs, this insect is predaceous and feeds upon 
aquatic grubs or worms. The body is richly supplied with long 
hairs, which serve to entangle bubbles of air for purposes of 
respiration . The eggs are laid in the stems of water plants. 

WATERBTJCK (Wasserbok), the name of a large South African 
antelope (Cobus eUipsipryntnws) belonging to the subfamily 
Cerncoprinat, characterised by the white elliptical ring on the 
buttocks, and the 
general reddish 
grey colour of the 
long and coarse 
hair They have 
heavily fringed 
necks and tufted 
tails, the bucks 
carry long sub- 
lyrate and heavily 
ringed horns, but 
the does are horn- • 
less. They seek 
refuge from pur- 
suit in the water. 
The name is ex- 
tended to include 
the sing-sing or 
defassa watcrbuck 
(C. defassa), a 
wi des p rea d 
species, without 
the white ring on 
the buttocks, and 
represented by several local races, one of which is foxy red 
while a second is greyish. Both species equal in siae the red 
deer. The smaller members of the genus Cobus (which is 
exclusively African) are generally called kobs. (See Antelope.) 

WATERBURT, a city and one of the county-seats of New 
Haven county, Connecticut, U.S.A., since 1000 coextensive with 
the township of Waterbury, on the Naugatuck river, in the west 
central part of the state, about 32 m. S.W. of Hartford. Pop. 
(ioco) 51,130, of whom 15,368 were foreign-born (5866 being 
Irish, 2007 Italian, 1777 French Canadian, 1265 Russian, 1195 
French, and 938 English); (1910 census) 73,141- Area 29 sq. m. 
Waterbury is served by the New York, New Haven ft 
Hartford railway, and is connected by electric lines with New 
Haven, Bridgeport, Thomaston, Woodbury and Watertown. 
It has four public parks (the Green, Chase, Hamilton and 
Forest), with a total acreage of 80 acres, and a Soldiers 1 and 
Sailors' Monument . designed by George E. BisselL The most im- 
portant public buildings are the Federal building, the county 
court house, a state armoury, the Silas Bronson Public Library 
(1870, with an endowment of $200,000 and with 81,500 volumes 
in ioto),the Odd Fellows Temple, a Y.M.C.A. building and the 
Buckingham Music Hall (1007), and among the charitable in- 
stitutions are the Southmayd Home (1808) for aged women, the 
Waterbury hospital (1890) and the St Mary's hospital (1908)4 
In the city are the St Margaret's Diocesan School for Girl* 
(Protestant Episcopal, 1875). the Waterbury Industrial School 
and the Academy of Notre Dame (1868). There is good water 
power here from the Naugatuck river and its tributaries Mad 
river and Great Brook. In 1005 Waterbury ranked third among 
the ir»anufacturing cities of Connecticut (being surpassed only by 




368 



WATER-DEER— WATERFORD 



Bridgeport and New Haven)* with a factory product valued at 
•32,367,359 (6*7 % more than in xooo). The most important manu- 
factures are rolled brass and copper (value in 1005, $12,599,736, 
or 34-3 % of the total for the United States), brass-ware (value in 
1005, $7,387,228, or 422% of the total for the United States), 
clocks and watches — over a million watches are made here each 
year— and stamped ware (value in 1905, $1,037,666). The 
manufacture of brass- ware originated here in 1802 with the 
making of brass buttons; iron buttons covered with silver 
were first made here about 1760, block tin and pewter buttons 
about 1800, bone and ivory buttons about 1812, sheet brass in 
1830, and pins and plated metals for daguerreotypes in 1842. 
Old-fashioned tall wooden clocks were made in Waterbury in the 
latter part of the 18th century, and cheap watches were first made 
here in 1879, these were long distinctive of Waterbury, and were 
often called " Waterbury watches." The manufacture of cloth 
dates from 181 4, and broadcloth was first made here in 1833. 
The city has a large wholesale trade and is a shipping point for 
dairy products. The municipality owns and operates the water- 
works. 

The township of Waterbury was incorporated in 1686, having 
been since its settlement in 1677 a part of Farmington township 
known as Mattatuck. The city of Waterbury was first chartered 
in 1853. The city and the township were consolidated in 1901. 
City elections arc held biennially and the mayor, city clerk, 
treasurer, comptroller, city sheriff and aldermen hold office for 
two years. With the consent of the Board of Aldermen the 
mayor appoints five electors who with the mayor constitute a 
department of public works; appoints three electors who with 
the mayor, comptroller, and president of the Board of Aldermen 
constitute a department of finance; appoints five electors who 
with the mayor constitute a department of public safety; and 
appoints five electors who constitute a department of public 
health. In 1902 there was a destructive fire in the business 
district of the city, and during a strike of street railway employees 
in 1903 state troops were called out to maintain order. 

WATER-DEER, a small member of the deer- tribe from 
northern China differing from all other Ceroidae except the musk- 
deer (with which it has no affinity) by the absence of antlers 
in both sexes. To compensate for this deficiency, the bucks 
are armed with long sabre-like upper tusks (see Deer). The 
species typifies a genus, and is known as Hydrtlaphus (or Hydro- 
poles) incrmis; but a second form has been described from 
Hankow under the name of H. kreyenbergi, although further 
evidence as to its claim to distinction is required. Water-deer 
frequent the neighbourhood of the large Chinese rivers where 
they crouch amid the reeds and grass in such a manner as to be 
invisible, even when not completely concealed by the covert. 
When running, they arch their backs and scurry away in a series 
of short leaps. In captivity as many as three have been produced 
at a birth. 

This is one of the few deer in. which there are glands neither 
on the hock nor on the skin covering the cannon-bone. These 
glands probably enable deer to ascertain the whereabouts of 
their fellows by the scent they leave on the ground and herbage. 
The sub-aquatic habits of the present species probably render 
such a function impossible, hence the absence of the glands. 
The tail is represented by a mere stump. (R. L.*) 

WATERFALL, a point in the course of a stream or river where 
the water descends perpendicularly Or nearly so. Even a very 
small stream of water falling from any considerable height 
is a striking object in scenery. Such lolls, of small volume 
though often of immense depth, are common, for a small it ream 
has not the power to erode a steady slope, and ihus at any con- 
siderable irregularity of level in its course it forms a fall. In 
many mountainous districts a stream may descend into the valley 
of the larger river to which it is tributary by way of a fall, its 
own valley having been eroded more slowly and less deeply 
than the main valley. Mechanical consideration* .i|nrt, ifc 
usual cause of the occurrence of a waterfall is a sudclcr 
in geological structure. For example, if there be thru. I. 
strata, so laid down that a hard stratum occurs U 



soft ones, a river will be able to grade its course through the 
upper or lower soft strata, but not at the same rate through the 
intermediate bard stratum, over a ledge of which it will con- 
sequently fall. The same will occur if the course of the river has 
been interrupted by a hard barrier, such as an intrusive dyke of 
basalt, or by glacial or other deposits. Where a river fails over 
an escarpment of hard rock overlying softer strata, it powerfully 
erodes the soft rock at the base of the fall and may undermine 
the hard rock above so that this is broken away. In this way 
the river gradually cuts back the point of fall, and a gorge is 
left below the fall. The classic example of this process is provided 
by the most famous falls in the world — Niagara. 

WATER-FLEA, a name given by the earlier microscopists 
(Swammerdam, 1669) to certain minute aquatic Crustacea of 
the order Cladocera, but often applied also to other members 
of the division Entomostraca (q.v.). The Cladocera arc abundant 
everywhere in fresh water. One of the commonest species, 
Dcphnia pulex, found in ponds and ditches, is less than one- 
tenth of an inch in length and has the body enclosed in a trans- 
parent bivalved shell The 
bead, projecting in front of 
the shell, bears a pair of 
branched feathery antennae 
which are the chief swim- 
ming organs and propel the 
animal, in a succession of 
rapid bounds, through the 
water. There is a single 
large black eye. In the 
living animal five pairs of 
leaf-like b'mbs acting as 
gills can be observed in 
constant motion between 
the valves of the shell, and 
the pulsating heart may be 
seen near the dorsal surface, p«rkrr and Haswell't TextB«k «/ Z*J*a. 

a little Way behind the ** Permission of MacmOka & Oj. 

head. The body ends Daphnia (after Claus). 

behind in a kind of tail ««J. /. antennule. d*L Digestive 

with a double curved daw r^SSfr- /. SwSng. 
which can be protruded br.p. Brood- feet, 

from the shell. The female pouch, ht. Heart, 

carries the eggs in a brood- *• Evc - **** Shell-gland, 

chamber between the back 

of the body and the shell until hatching takes place. Through- 
out the greater part of the year only females occur and 
the eggs develop " parthenogcnctically," without fertilisa- 
tion. When the small males appear, generally in the 
autumn, fertilized " winter " or " resting eggs " are produced 
which arc cast adrift in a case of " cphippium " formed by a 
specially modified part of the shell. These resting eggs enable 
the race to survive the cold of winter or the drying up of the water. 
For a fuller account of the Cladocera and of other organisms 
which sometimes share with them the name of " water- fleas." see 
the article ENTOMosTaacA. (W. T. Ca.) 

WATERFORD, a county of Ireland in the province of Munster, 
bounded E. by Waterford Harbour, separating it from Wexford, 
N. by Kilkenny and by Tipperary, W. by Cork, and S. by the 
Atlantic. The area is 458,108 acres, or about 7*6 to, in. The 




coast line is in some parts bold and rggyft . j ^j%J^r^ - 
by numerous toys ami inlet s h tfre "pffh fTt^TT MHfflj ij" iTKwfrirr? 




Harbour \ Train ore Bay, with 
txten&ivc caves, and noted for 
roclty character of il* bed; 
quentctl f<u refuge 1 
pant acting county 

sarin 



picturc 



diffs and some 
on account of the 
if»iur r much frt- 
1 ughal Harbour, 




WATERFORD 



3*9 



Mountains, reaching a height of 1504 ft- To the south of Dun- 
famn there is a lower but very rugged range, called the Drum 
Hills. The south-eastern division of the county is for the most 
part level Though Waterford benefits in its communications 
by the important rivers in its vicinity, the only large river it 
can properly dalm as belonging to it is the Blackwater. This 
river is famous for salmon fishing, and, particularly in the stretch 
Between Cappoquin and Lismore, flows between high, well- 
wooded banks, contrasting beautifully with the background of 
mountains. It enters the county east of Fermoy, and flows 
eastward to Cappoquin, the bead of navigation, where it turns 
abruptly southward, to fall into the sea at Youghal Harbour. 
Waterford Harbour may be called the estuary of three important 
rivers, the 9uir, the Nore and the Barrow, but neither of the 
two last touches the county. The Suir reaches it about 8 m. 
from Clonmel, and thence forms its northern boundary with 
Tipperary and Kilkenny. It is navigable to Clonmel, but the 
traffic hes mainly on the left bank, outside the county. 

Gfoloty. — The Knoekmealdown Mountains are an anticline of 
Old Red Sandstone, cut away at the eastern end to expose Silurian 
strata, which are associated with an extensive serieaof volcanic and 
intrusive rocks, often crushed by earth-movement. The impressive 
scarp formed by the Old Red Sandstone conglomerate above this 
lower ground ia called the Comeragh Mountains. The moraine- 
dammed cirque of Lough Coumshingaun lies in these, with a precipice 
1000 ft. in height. The unconformity of the Old Red Sandstone on 
the greenish and yellowish Silurian .shales is excellently seen on the 
north bank of the Suir at Waterford. Carboniferous Limestone is 
found in the floor of the synclinals on either side of the great anticline, 
that is, in the Suir valley on the north, and in the green and richly- 
wooded hollow of the Blackwater on the south. Rapidly repeated 
anticlinal and synclinal folds continue this structure across the 
country between Dungarvan and Youghal. Rich copper-mines were 
worked, mainly in the 19th century, in the Silurian area near Bon- 
atahon, and the region remains full of mineral promise. 

Industries.— The land is generally better adapted for pasturage 
than for tillage, although there are considerable tracts of rich soil 
ia the south-eastern districts. The proportion of tillage to pasture 
is, however, roughly as t to 3}, though the acreage under the principal 
crops of oats, potatoes and turnips is on the whole fairly maintained. 
The numbers of cattle, sheep and poultry increase steadily, and pigs 
are extensively reared. The woollen manufacture, except for home 
use. is practically extinct, but the cotton manufacture is still of some 
importance, lucre are also breweries, distilleries and a large 
number of flour-mills. The valuable deep sea and coast fisheries 
have distinct headquarters at Waterford, and the noted salmon 
fisheries of the Suir and Backwater have theirs at Waterford and 
Lismore respectively. Railway communication is provided by the 
Waterford, Dungarvan, Lismore and Co. Cork branch of the Great 
Southern and Western railway, traversing the county from E. to W.; 
and by the Waterford and Tramore railway, while the city of Water- 
ford is approached by fines of the first-named company from the N, 
(from Dublin) and W. (from ■'---•-■-* 



PttuUlivn and Administration.— The population (05,70s in 

1891; 87,187 in 1 001) decreases at a rate about equal to the 

average of the Irish counties, and emigration is considerable. 

Nearly 95% of the total are Roman Catholics, and about 74% 

constitute the rural population. The chief towns are the city 

of Waterford (pop. 26,769), Dungarvan (4850), and Lismore 

(1583); Portia w and Tramore, and Cappoquin are lesser towns. 

The county is divided into eight baronies. Down to the Union 

ia 1S00 the county returned two members, and the boroughs 

of Dungarvan, Lismore and Tallow two each. Thereafter, and 

bete the Redistribution Act of 1885, the county returned two 

the borough of Wfl.U>ifitrd ivw, and Dungarvan one. 

' now returns two memlrfn, for the east and west 

while ifce county of (he city of Waterford 

tics arc hd'i at \\ 'it tr Ford .and quarter 

Iftofarvin, and Wetter ford. The county 

Ant diocese of Otwry, and the Roman 

<ja«Of 14 JMe 1 foxd and Li&niore 

mtury the Banes landed 

perm-tNenL settlement. 

bio which King John 

1 which he nominally 

I of t he convenience of 

1 trillions passed 

1 or rebellious 




tribes. In 1444 the greater part of it was granted to James, 
earl of Desmond, and in 1447 it was bestowed on John Talbot, 
earl of Shrewsbury, who was created earl of Waterford. The 
county suffered severely during the Desmond rebellion, in the 
reign of Elizabeth, as. well as in the rebellion of 164 1 and during 
the Cromwellian period. There are in the county a considerable 
number of barrows, duns, cromlechs and similar relics. of the 
andent inhabitants. At Ardmore, overlooking the sea from 
Ram Head, there is a round tower 95 ft. in height, and near it 
a huge rath and a large number of- circular entrenchments. 
Among the old castles special mention may be made of Lismore, 
originally erected in 1185, but now in great part comparatively 
modern. The chief ecclesiast ical remains are those of the chancel 
and nave of the cathedral of Ardmore, where a monastery and 
oratory were founded by St Declan in the 7th century. The see 
of Ardmore was abolished in the lath century. Here are also 
remains of a church and oratory, and a holy well. Mention should 
be made of the existing monastery of Mount Melleray, a convent 
of Trappists founded near Cappoquin in 1830, on the expulsion 
of the foreign members of this order from France. Schools, 
both free and boarding, are maintained; and there is a branch 
of the order at Roscrea (Co. Tipperary). 

WATERFORD, a city, county of a city, parliamentary 
borough, seaport, and the chief town of Co. Waterford, 
Ireland. Pop. (1901) 26,769. It is finely situated on the south 
bank of the Suir 4 m. above its junction with the Barrow, at 
the head of the tidal estuary called Waterford Harbour, mm. 
S.S. W. from Dublin by the Great Southern and Western railway. 
This is the principal railway serving the city, having lines from 
Dublin and from the north-west, besides the trunk line between 
Rosslare, Waterford and Cork. Waterford is also, however, 
the terminus of the Dublin and South-Eastern line from Dublin 
via New Ross, and for the Waterford and Tramore line, serving 
the seaside resort of Tramore, 7 m. S. The Suir is crossed by 
a wooden bridge of thirty-nine arches, and 832 ft. long, con- 
necting Waterford with the suburb of Ferrybank. The dty is 
built chiefly along the banks of the river, occupying for the most 
part low and level ground except at its western extremity, 
and excepting the quay and the Mall, which connects with the 
southern end of the quay, its internal appearance is hardly of a 
piece with the beauty of its environs. The modern Protestant 
cathedral of the Holy Trinity, generally called Christ Church, 
a plain structure with a lofty spire, occupies the site of the 
church built by the Danes in 1096, in the Mall. Near it are the 
episcopal palace and deanery. There is a handsome Roman 
Catholic cathedral, and the training seminary for priests called 
St John's College deserves notice. The principal secular buildings 
are the town-hall, the county and city courts and prisons, the 
custom-bouse and the barracks. At the extremity of the quay 
is a large circular tower, called Reginald's Tower, forming at 
one time a portion of the city walls, and occupying the site of 
the tower built by Reginald the Dane in 1003. Near the summit 
one of the balls shot from the cannon of Cromwell while besieging 
the city is still embedded in the wall. Other remains of the 
fortifications, consisting of towers and bastions, are to be seen 
as in the Tramore railway sidings and in Castle Street. There 
are a number of hospitals and similar benevolent institutions, 
including the leper house founded in the reign of King John, 
now used practically as an infirmary. The town possesses 
breweries, salt-houses, foundries and flour mills; and there rs 
a large export trade in cattle, sheep and pigs, and in agricultural 
produce. It is the headquarters of extensive salmon and sea 
fisheries. Waterford is second in importance to Cork among 
the ports of the south coast of Ireland. There is regular com- 
munication by steamer with Cork, with Dublin and Belfast, 
with Fishguard, Glasgow, Liverpool, Bristol, Plymouth, South- 
ampton, London and other ports. Local steamers ply to Dun- 
cannon, New Ross and other places on the neighbouring estuaries. 

Waterford Harbour is a winding and well-sheltered bay formed 
by the estuary of the river Suir, and afterwards by the joint 
estuary of the Nore and Barrow. lis length to the sea is about 
IS m. Its entrance is 3 m. wide, and is lighted by a fixed light 



WATERFORD— WATERHOUSE, J. W 



37© 

on the ancient donjon of Hook Tower (130 ft. in height) and 
others. The quay, at which there is a depth of 22 ft. of water 
at low tide, was enlarged in 1705 by the removal of the city walls, 
and is about ij m. in length. At Ferrybank, on the Kilkenny 
side of the river, there is a shipbuilding yard with patent slip 
and graving dock. By the Suir there is navigation for barges 
to Clonmcl, and for sailing vessels to Carrick-on-Suir; by the 
Barrow for sailing vessels to New-Ross and thence for barges 
to Athy, and so to Dublin by a branch of the Grand Canal; and 
by the Nore for barges to Inistioge. The shores of the harbour 
are picturesque and well-wooded, studded with country residences 
and waterside villages, of which Passage and Duncannon are 
popular resorts of the citizens of Waterford. 

Anciently Waterford was called Cuon-na-groitk, the haven of 
the sun. By early writers it was named Menapia. It is supposed 
to have existed in very early times, but first acquired importance 
under the Danes, of whom it remained one of the principal 
strongholds until its capture by Strongbow in x 171. On the 
x8th of October 1172 Henry II. landed near Waterford, and he 
here received the hostages of the people of Munster. It became 
a cathedral city in 1096. The Protestant dioceses of Cashel, 
Emly, Waterford and Lismore were united in 1833. Prince 
John, afterwards king of England, who had been declared lord 
of Ireland in 1177, landed at Waterford in 1185. After ascending 
the English throne he granted it a fair in 1204, and in 1206 a 
charter of incorporation. He landed at Waterford in 12 10, in 
order to establish within his nominal territories in Ireland a 
more distinct form of government. The city received a new 
charter from Henry III. in 1 23 2. Richard II. landed at Waterford 
in October 2304 and again in 1309. In 1447 it was granted by 
Henry VI. to John Talbot, earl of Shrewsbury, who was created 
earl of Waterford. In 1497 it successfully resisted an attempt 
of Perkin Warbeck to capture it, in recognition of which it 
received various privileges from Henry VII., who gave it the 
title of urbs iniocta. In 1603, after the accession of James I. 
to the English crown, the city, along with Cork, took a prominent 
part in opposition to the government and to the Protestant 
religion, but on the approach of Mount joy it formally submitted. 
From this time, however, the magistrates whom it elected refused 
to take the oath of supremacy, and, as by its charter it possessed 
the right to refuse admission to the king's judges, and therefore 
to dispense with the right of holding assizes, a rule was obtained 
in the Irish chancery for the seizure of its charter, which was 
carried into effect in 1618. In 1619 an attempt was made to 
induce Bristol merchants to settle in the city and undertake 
its government, but no one would respond to the invitation, 
and in 1626 the charter was restored. The city was unsuccessfully 
attacked by Cromwell in 1649, but surrendered to Ireton on the 
xoth of August 1650. After the battle of the Boyne James II. 
embarked at it for France {July 1690). Shortly afterwards it 
surrendered to William, who sailed from it to England. It 
sent two members to parliament from 1374 to l88 5» WDCD tne 
number was reduced to one. In 1898 it was constituted one of 
the si* county boroughs having separate county councils. 

WATERFORD, a village of Saratoga county, New York, 
U.S.A., on the W. bank of the Hudson river, near the mouth of 
the Mohawk river, and about to m. N. of Albany. Pop. (1900) 
3146, of whom 474 were foreign-born 1 (1905) 3134; (1910) 
3245. Waterford is served by the Delaware & Hudson uii* 
way, and is at the junction of the Erie and the Champlain 
divisions of the great barge canal connecting Lake Eric and Lake 
Cham plain. There was a set tic mem here probably as early as 
1630, and Waterford was laid out in 1784, and was incorporated 
as a village in 1704. 

WATERHOUSE, ALFRED (1830-1905), English architect, 
was born at Liverpool on the igth or July 1839, and pant' 1 
professional pupilage under Richard Lane in M 
earliest commissions were of a domestic nature, 
as a designer of public buildings was assured is 
success in the open competition for the Mai 
This work marked him not on \y as in 
complicated building on a Urge scale*, I 



the Gothic cause. Nine yean later, in 1868, another competition 
secured for Waterhouse the execution of the Manchester town* 
hall, where he was able to show a firmer and perhaps more original 
handling of the Gothic manner. Hie same year brought him the 
rebuilding of part of Caius College, Cambridge, not his first uni- 
versity work, for Bailiol, Oxford, had been put into his hands 
in 1867. At Caius, out of deference to the Renaissance treat- 
ment of the older parts of the college, the Gothic element was 
intentionally mingled with classic detail, while Bailiol and 
Pembroke, Cambridge, which followed in 1871, may be looked 
upon as typical specimens of the style of his mid career — Gothic 
tradition (European rather than British) tempered by individual 
taste and by adaptation to modern needs. Girton College, 
Cambridge, a building of simpler type, dates originally from the 
same period (1870), but has been periodically enlarged by further 
buildings. Two important domestic works were undertaken in 
1870 and 1871 respectively— Eaton Hall for the duke, then 
marquis, of Westminster, and Heythrop Hall, Oxfordshire, the 
latter, a restoration, being of a fairly strict classic type. Iweme 
Minster for Lord Wolverton was begun in 1877. In 1865 Water- 
house had removed his practice from Manchester to London, 
and he was one of the architects selected to compete for the Royal 
Courts of Justice. He received from the government, without 
competition, the commission to build the Natural History 
Museum, South Kensington, a design which marks an epoch in 
the modern use of terra-cotta. The new University Club— a 
Gothic design— was undertaken in 1866, to be followed nearly 
twenty years later by the National Liberal Gub, a study in 
Renaissance composition. Waterhouse's series of works for 
Victoria University, of which he was made LL.D. in 1895, date 
from X87O1 when he was first engaged on Owens College, Man- 
chester. Yorkshire College, Leeds, was begun in 1878; and 
Liverpool University College in 1885. St Paul's School, Hammer- 
smith, was begun in 1881, and in the same year the Central 
Technical College in Exhibition Road, London. Waterhouse's 
chief remaining works in London are the new Prudential Assur- 
ance Company's offices in Holborn; the new University College 
Hospital; the National Provincial Bank, Piccadilly, 1892; the 
Surveyors' Institution, Great George Street, 2896; and the 
Jenner Institute of Preventive Medicine, Chelsea, 1895. For 
the Prudential Company he designed many provincial branch 
offices, while for the National Provincial Bank he also designed 
premises at Manchester. The Liverpool InBrmary is Water- 
house's largest hospital; and St. Mary's Hospital, Manchester, 
the Alexandra Hospital, Rhyl, and extensive additions at the 
general hospital, Nottingham, also engaged him. Among works 
not already mentioned are the Salford gaol; St Margaret's 
School, Bushey; the Metropole Hold, Brighton; Hove town- 
hall; Alloa town-hall; St Elizabeth's church, Reddish; the 
Weigh House chapel, May fair; and Hutlon Hall, Yorks. He 
died on the 22nd of August, 1005. 

Waterhouse became a fellow of the Royal Institute of British 
Architects in 1861, and president from 1888 to 1891. He obtained 
a grand prix for architecture at the Paris Exposition of 1867, and 
a Rappet " in 1878. In the same year he received the Royal 
gold medal of the Royal Institute of British Architects, and was 
made an associate of the Royal Academy, of which body he became 
a full member in 188* and Li"*aauier in- 180ft. He hecune a member 
of the academic* of Vienna 1 1800), BruiscU f 1886 J. Antwerp (1887) 
Milan (iBJiB) and Berlin (fHbo), and a < < "ri -|«««idiftg m« HiMr Of 
the I Rttitut dc France (1B43). Mt^t 1K36 he w.»s otwtamly called 
upon to xi as aueuor fn archil \ r t hil«na 

member of the murn.11 ;,.■., licatc OH the 

deigns for the west I'm.'. In (890 he 

served a* airhiHcrLir.il fn . ! Commission on the 

nrafxacd «nL'>igt™7*u of f j&ft*** a* * P ! >■ ■ ■- ^ burial. 

• lotted in 
pai 




WATER-LILY— WATERLOO CAMPAIGN 



371 



dectcd an associate of the Royal Academy in 1885 and acade- 
mician in 180s. Four of his paintings, " Consulting the Oracle/ 1 
" St EuiaHa," " The Lady of ShaJott » and " The Magic Circle," 
are in the National Gallery of British Art. 

See " J. W. Waterhouse and his Work," by A. L. Bakfry, Shutur, 
VoL iv. 

WATER-ULV, a name somewhat vaguely given to almost 
any floating plant with conspicuous flowers, but applying more 
especially to the species of Nympkaca, Nupkar, and other members 
of the order Nymphaeaceae. These are aquatic plants with 
thick fleshy rootslocks or tubers embedded in the mud, and 
throwing up to the surface circular shield-like leaves, and leafless 
flower-stalks, each terminated by a single flower, often of 
great beauty, and consisting of four or five sepals, and numer- 
ous petals gradually passing into the very numerous stamens 
without any definite line of demarcation between them. The 
ovary consists of numerous carpels united together and free, 
or more or less embedded in the top of the flower-stalk. The 
ovary has many cavities with a large number of ovules attached 
to its walls, and is surmounted by a flat stigma of many radiating 
rows as in a poppy. The fruit is berry-like, and the seeds are 
remarkable for having their embryo surrounded by an endosperm 
as well as by a perisperm. The anatomical construction of these 
plants presents many peculiarities which have given rise to 
discussion as to the allocation of the order among the dicotyledons 
or among the monocotyledons, the general balance of opinion 
being in favour of the former view. The leaf-stalks and flower* 
stalks are traversed by longitudinal air-passages, whose dis- 
position varies in different species. The species of Nympkaca 
are found in every quarter of the globe. Their flowers range 
from white to rose-coloured; yellow and blue. Some expand in 
the evening only, others close soon after noon. Nympkaca alba 
(Casialia aha) is common in some parts of Britain, as is also the 
yellow Nupkar lutcum {Nympkaca tvtca). The seeds and the 
rhizomes contain an abundance of starch, which renders them 
serviceable in some places for food. 

Of recent years great strides have been made in the culture of 
new varieties of water-tiKes in the open air. Many beautiful 
Nympkaca hybrids have been raised between the tender and 
hardy varieties of different colours, and there are now in com- 
merce lovely forms having not only white, but also yellow, rose, 
pbk and carmine flowers. In many gardens open-air tanks 
have been fitted up with hot-water pipes running through them 
to keep the water sufficiently warm in severe weather. The 
open-air water-lily tank in the Royal gardens, Kew, is one of the 
latest and most up-to-date m construction. These coloured 
hybrids were originated by M. Latour Marliac, of Temple-sur-Lot, 
France, some of the most favoured varieties being com**, chroma- 

IcOa^ 

Amongst 

uituta, odorata, pypmaca , 

sweet-scented flowers ;/lava. yellow, and spkacrocarpa, rose-carmine. 
Amongst the tender or hothouse Njmpkacas the following are most 
noted: bhndo, white; devoniensa, scarlet (a hybrid between 
N. Lotus and N. rubra); cdidis, white; tUgons, yellowish white and 
purple: tigaaica, blue; kewmsis, rose-carmine (a hybrid between 
N. drmmtensis and N. Lotus) ; Lotus, red. white; pubescens, white: 
scuiifsiia, bright blue; stellata, blue, with several varieties; and 
S tui$tmnt i, a pale-rose hybrid. 

leral head of water-lily are included the lotus of 

Lotus, and the sacred lotus of India and China, 

1, formerly a native of the Nile, as shown by 

_ and other evidence, but no longer found in 

gigantic Victoria rcgia, with leaves 6 to 7 ft in 

8 to 16 in. across, also belongs to this group. 

era of the Amazon, often covering the surface 

under the name water matte. 

the county-seat of Black Hawk 

Cedar river, about 90 m. W. of 

t W. of Chicago. Pop. (1800) 6074; 

were foreign-born; (1010 census) 

Illinois Central (which has large 

here), the Chicago, Rock Island 

wt Western, and the Waterloo, Cedar 

sdar Falls to Sumner) railways. The 

rks, a public library 0&79) with two 



nee, some 01 mc must isvuurcu varieties uciog wtwb, w»f«»u- 
, Jlammea, ignea, rosea, Robinsoni, Aurora* blando, &c. 
mongst hardy species of Nympkaca now much grown are Candida, 
la, odorata, pygmaca and iubtrosa, all with white, more or less 




buildings, a Y.M.C.A. building, and a good public school System, 
including a manual training school. There is a Chautauqua 
park. The river here is 700 to 900 ft. wide; its clear water flows 
over a limestone bed through a rather evenly sloping valley 
fa the middle of the dty with enough fall to furnish valuable 
water power. The value of the factory product in 1005 was 
84,693,888. The city is situated in a rich agricultural, dairying 
and poultry-raising region, and is an important shipping point. 
Waterloo was first settled about 1846, was laid out in 1854, 
first chartered as a dty in 1868, and became a dty of the first 
class in 1005. 

WATERLOO CAMPAIGN, 1815. On February 27, 1815, 
Napoleon set sail from Elba with his force of 1000 men and 
4 guns, determined to reconquer the throne of France. On 
March t he landed near Cannes, and proceeded at once to march 
on Paris. He deliberately chose the difficult route over the 
French Alps because he recognized that his opponents would 
neither expect him by this route nor be able to concert combined 
operations in time to thwart him. Events proved the wisdom 
o( his choice. His advance to Paris was a series of triumphs, 
his power waxing with every league he covered, and when he 
reached Paris the Bourbons had fled. But be had soon to turn 
his attention to war His sudden return, far from widening 
the breaches between the allies, had fused them indissolubly 
together, and the four powers bound themselves to put 150,000 
men apiece under arms and to maintain them in the field until 
Napoleon had been utterly crushed. So, from the first, France 
was faced with another war against an affrighted and infuriated 
Europe, a war in which the big battalions would be on the side 
of the Seventh Coalition; and to oppose their vast armies 
Napoleon only had In March the 150,000 men he had taken over 
from Louis XVIII. when the Bourbon hurriedly quitted tin 
throne. Of this force the emperor could have drawn together 
some 50,000 men within ten days and struck straight at the 
small allied forces that were in Belgium at the moment. But 
he wisely refrained from taking the immediate offensive. Such 
an act would have proved that he desired, nay provoked a war; 
and further, the engagement of such small forces could lend to 
no decisive results. Napoleon therefore stayed his hand and 
proceeded to hasten forward the organization, almost the creation 
of an army, with which he could confront the coalition. Mean- 
while he sought to detach Great Britain and Austria from the 
alliance. But be did not permit his political enterprise to stay 
his military preparations; and, by constant attention __.___ j 
to the minutest details, by June 1 he had got together l ^S^* M 
an army of 360,000 for the defence of France, one half tteoa. 
of which was available for field service. In this army 
was comprised bis whole means of defence; for he had no allies. 
On his return from Elba it is true that Murat, the king of Naples, 
took his side; but recklessly opening an offensive campaign, 
Murat was beaten at Tolentino (May 2-3), and he found himself 
compelled to fly in disguise to France, where the emperor refused 
him an audience or employment. Herein Napoleon wronged 
France, for he deprived her of the most brilliant cavalry soldier 
of the period. Shorn thus of his single ally, the emperor realized 
that the whole eastern land-frontier of France was open to 
invasion, from the North Sea to the Mediterranean. By the 
end of May he had placed his forces as follows to protect his 
empire. 

D'Erlon's I. Corps cantoned between Lule and Valenciennes; 

Reille's II. Corps cantoned between Valenciennes and Avesnes. 

Vandamme's III. Corps cantoned around Rocroi. 

Gerard's IV. Corps cantoned at Metz. 

Lobau's VI. Corps cantoned at Laon. 

Grouchy'* Cavalry Reserve at Guise. 

Marshal Mortier with the Imperial Guard at Paris. 

Rapp with the V. Corps (20,000) near Stratsburg. 

18,500 more troops under Sucbet, Brune and Lecourbe 
guarded die S.E. frontier from Basel to Nice, and covered Lyons; 
8000 men under Clausel and Decaen guarded the Pyrenean 
frontier; whilst Laxnarque led 10^000 men into La Vendee to 
quell the insurrection in that quarter. In 1815 Napoleon was 
not supported by a united and unanimous France; the country 



372 



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was weakened by internal dissensions at the - very moment 
when it was needful to put every man in line to meet the rising 
tide of invasion surging against the long curving eastern frontier. 
Napoleon now pondered over his plan of campaign. In 
Belgium, across an almost open frontier, lay an ever-increasing 
force of Anglo-Dutch and Prussian troops under Wellington 
and BlUcher. The Rhine frontier was threatened by Schwarzen- 
berg's A us t nans (210,000); Barclay de Tolly's Russians (150,000) 
were slowly coming up; and another Austrian force menaced 
the S.E. frontier of France. The allies determined that they 
would wage a war without risks, and they were particularly 
anxious to avoid the risk of defeat in detail It was accordingly 
arranged that Wellington and Blucher should await in Belgium 
the arrival of the Austrian and Russian masses on the Rhine, 
about July 1, before the general invasion of France was begun. 
Thereafter, whatever befell, the allied armies would resolutely 
press forward towards Paris, affording each other mutual support* 
and with the tremendous weight of troops at their disposal 
thrust back Napoleon upon his capital, force him to fight in 
front of it, and drive him when defeated within its works. The 
end would then be in sight. Thus they had planned the campaign, 
but Napoleon forestalled them. In fact, the threatening danger 
forced his hand and compelled him to strike before he had 
collected a sufficient army for his defensive needs. Consequently 
he determined to advance swiftly and secretly against Wellington 
and Blucher, whose forces, as Napoleon knew, were dispersed 
over the country of their unenthusiastic ally. Thus he designed 
to crush a part of the coalition before the Russians and Austrians 
poured over the eastern frontier. Once Wellington and Blucher 
were destroyed he would move southwards and meet the other 
allies on the Rhine. He might thus compensate for his numerical 
inferiority by superior mobility and superior leadership. 



His information showed that Wellington held the western 
half of Belgium from the Brussels-Charlerot road to the Scheldt, 
that his base of operations was Ostend, and that his (m . , 
headquarters were at Brussels. Blucher, based onJJJJJJJ* - * 
the Rhine at Coblentz, held the eastern half from the 
Brusscls-Charleroi road to the Mcuse, and had his headquarters 
at Namur. The emperor was convinced that nothing could be 
gained by invading Belgium from the S.E. or W.; such a stroke 
would surely drive the allies together, and that was never 
Napoleon's custom. On the other hand, if he struck straight 
at Charleroi — the allied junction point — he would drive the 
" Armce du Nord " like an armoured wedge between the allies, 
if only he caught them unsuspicious and unready. Forced 
asunder at the outset, each would (in all probability) fall back 
along his own line of communication, and the gap thus made 
between the allies would enable the emperor to manoeuvre 
between them and defeat them in turn. To gain the best chance 
of success he would have to concentrate his whole army almost 
within gunshot of the centre of the enemies' outposts without 
attracting their attention; otherwise he would find the allies 
concentrated and waiting for him. 

Wellington and BlUcher were disposed as follows in the early 
days of June (Map 1.). The Anglo-Dutch army of 03,000 
with headquarters at Brussels were cantoned: I. Corps (Prince 
of Orange), 30,200, headquarters Braine-le-Comtc, disposed in 
the area Enghicn-Gcnappe-Mons; II. Corps (Lord Hill), 27,300, 
headquarters Ath, distributed in the area Ath-Oudenarde- 
Ghent ; reserve cavalry (Lord Uxbridge) 9900,' in the valley of 
the Dendre river, between Grammont and Ninove; the reserve 
(under Wellington himself) 25,500, lay around Brussels. The 
frontier in front of Leuze and Binche was watched by the Dutch- 
Belgian light cavalry. 




WATERLOO CAMPAIGN f t8i5 

Theatre of Operations in Belgium 

Skownr Dnpo* cba* df 0»porac F«a 

m afcki «f J«um<4-i*iS** 



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373 



Blather's Prussian army 01 tt6\ooo men, with headquarter* 
at Namur, was distributed as follows:— 

I. Corps (Zieten). 50,800, cantoned alongthe Sambre, headquarters 
Charleroi, and covering the area Fontaine fit veoue-FIeurus-Mousticr. 

//. Corps (Pirch I.), 31,000, headquarters at Namur, lay in the area 
Namur- Hannut-Huy. 

III. Corps (Thielemann), 23.900, in the bend of the river Meine* 
headquarters Ciney, and disposed in the area Dtnant-Huy-Cincy. 

IV. Corps (Bulow), 30400, with headquarters at Liege, around 
that place. 

The frontier In front of Binche, Charleroi and Dinant was 
watched by the Prussian outposts. 

Thus the allied front extended for nearly 90 m. across Belgium, 
tod the mean depth of their cantonments was 30 m. To con- 
centrate the whole army on either flank would take six days, 
and on the common centre, about Charleroi, three days. 

The allies had foreseen the very manoeuvre that Napoleon 
designed to put into execution, and had decided that if an 
attempt were made- to break their centre they would concentrate 
forwards and on their inner flanks, the Anglo-Dutch army 
forming up at Gosselies and the Prussians at Fleurus. Here 
they would be in contact, and ready to act united against 
Napoleon with a numerical superiority of two to one. The 
necessary three days' warning of the French concentration they 
felt certain they would obtain, for Napoleon's troops were at this 
juncture distributed over an area (Lille-Metz-Paris) of 175 m. 
by 100 m.; and to concentrate the French army unknown to, and 
unobserved by, the allies, within striking distance and before they 
bad moved a man to meet the onrush of the foe, was unthinkable. 
But, as in 1800, it was the unthinkable that happened. 

It will be seen that Blttcher covered Fleurus, his concentration 
point, by Zieten 's corps, in the hope of being able to collect his 
army round Fleurus in the time that Zieten would secure for him 
by a yielding fight. Wellington on the other hand was far less 
satisfactorily placed; for in advance of Gosselies he had placed 
only a cavalry screen, which would naturally be too weak to gain 
him the requisite time to mass there. Hence his ability to 
concentrate hung on the mere good luck of obtaining timely 
information of Napoleon's plans, which in fact he failed to obtain. 
But the two tracts of country covered by the allies differed 
vastly in configuration. Blucher's left was protected by the 
difficult country of the Ardennes. On the other hand, the duke's 
whole section lay dose to an Open frontier across which ran no 
fewer than four great roads, and the duke considered that his 
position " required, for its protection, a system of occupation 
quite different from that adopted by the Prussian army." He 
naturally relied on his secret service to warn him in such time 
as would enable him to mass and meet the foe. His reserve 
was well placed to move rapidly and promptly In any direction 
and give support wherever required. 

The emperor made his final preparations with the utmost 
secrecy. The Army of the North was to concentrate In three 
fractions— around Solre, Beaumont and PhOippeville— asdoseto 
Charleroi as was practicable; and he arranged to screen the 
initial movements of the troops as much as possible, so as to 
prevent the allies from discovering in time that their centre 
was aimed at. He directed that the movements of the troops 
when they drew near the allied outposts should be covered 
as far as possible by accidents of ground, for there was no great 
natural screen to cover his strategical concentration 

Gerard and the IV Corps from Me tz, having the longest distance 



ii-d first fan Jlidv 




), and soon the whr*lc army was 
dixit il point* of con rem ration, 
? to hnJc ihi :ti'/v .,.-!,. nts of the 
himself kfr Paris for 
hud achieved almost 
HajfBt artii Philippe- 
■grated under 
t. end ready 
( v.. fry things 
II resting 
ttant canton- 
:>] 1 hem, and 



The opposing armies were of very different quality. Welling- 
ton's was a collection of many nationalities, the kernel being 
composed of his trusty and tenacious British and King's German 
Legion troops, numbering only 42,000 men. Of the remainder 
many were far from enthusiastic in the cause for which they had 
perforce to take up arms, and might prove a source of weakness 
should victory incline to the French eagles. Blficher's army 
was undoubtedly more homogeneous, and though it is doubtful 
if he possessed any troops of the same quality as Wellington's 
best, on the other hand he had no specially weak elements. 
. Napoleon was at the head of a veteran 'army of Frenchmen, 
who worshipped their leader and were willing to die for France 
if necessity demanded. But there were lines of weakness, too, 
in his army. He had left Marshal Davout behind in Paris, and 
Murat in disgrace; Suchet was far off on the eastern frontier, 
and Clause! was In the south of France. The political reasons 
for these arrangements may have been cogent, but they injured 
France at the very outset. Marshal Soult was appointed chief 
of the staff, a post for which he possessed very few qualifications; 
and, when the campaign began, command of the left and right 
wings had perforce to be given to the only two marshals available, 
Ney and Grouchy, who did not possess the ability or strategic 
skiH necessary for such positions. Again, the army was morally 
weakened by a haunting dread of treason, anil some of the 
chiefs, Ney for example, took the field with disturbing visions 
of the consequences of their late betrayal of the Bourbon cause, 
in case of Napoleon's defeat.' Finally, the army was too small 
for its object. Herein Napoleon showed that he was no longer 
the Napoleon of Austerlitx; for he left locked up In far-distant 
secondary theatres no less than 56,500 men, of whom he could 
have collected some 30,000 to 36,000 for the decisive campaign 
in Belgium. Had he made in i8rs the wise distribution of his 
soldiers in the theatre of war which he made in his former 
immortal campaigns,- he would have, concentrated 155,000 to 
160,000 of his available force opposite to Charleroi on June 14, 
and the issue of the campaign would hardly have been in doubt. 
But he failed to do so, and by taking the field with such inferior 
numbers he left too much to Fortune. 

For his advance into Belgium in 18x5 Napoleon divided his 
army into two wings and a reserve. As the foe would lie away 
to his right and left front after he had passed the Sambre, one wing 
would be pushed up towards Wellington and another towards 
BlUcher; whilst the mass of the reserve would be centrally 
placed so as to strike on either side, as soon as a force of the 
enemy worth destroying was encountered and gripped To 
this end he had, on the 14th, massed bis left wing (Reule and 
D'Erlon) around Solre, and his right wing (Gerard) at Philippe- 
ville, whilst the central mass (Vandamme, Lobau, the Guard 
and the Cavalry Reserve) lay around Beaumont. 

The orders for the French advance next day, among the 
finest ever issued, directed that the army should march at dawn 
and move to the Sambre at Marchaenne and Charleroi. By 
evening it was expected that the whole would have crossed the 
Sambre, and would bivouac between the sundered allies. 

But at the very outset delays occurred. Owing to an accident 
that befell the single orderly despatched with orders for Van- 
damme, the III. Corps remained without other definite 7^ 
orders than those issued on June 13, warning them to p—iag* 
be ready to move at 3 aji! The corps therefore «"** 
stood fast on the morning of June x 5, awaiting further SMBbn * 
instructions. This was the. more unfortunate as Van* 
damme was destined to lead the advance on Charleroi by 
the centre road. But the emperor regarded it merely as " an 
unfortunate accident," nothing more, and the advance in two 
wings and a reserve continued, undisturbed by such occurrences. 

Gerard, too, was late in starting, for his corps had not been 
fully concentrated over-night. Zieten's outposts on the right 
bank of the Sambre gained still further time, for they fought 
stubbornly to retard the French advance on Marduenne and 
Charleroi. But Zieten declined, and very wisely, to fight on the 
right bank, and he made the most of the screen afforded by the 
little river. He had to delay 'the French advance for 34 hours 



k 



374 

and give time for Blucher's concentration, at the same time 
retaining his own freedom of manoeuvre, and this in spite of 
the great length of the summer day, the short distance that he 
lay in front of Fleurus, the tremendous numerical superiority 
of the French and Napoleon's personal presence at their head. 

When the French left wing and centre reached the Sambre 
bridges, at Marchienne and Charleroi, they found them held and 
strongly barricaded, and the cavalry were powerless to force the 
passage. It was nearing noon when the emperor reached the 
front with the Young Guard, whom he had personally hurried 
forward. He immediately took action, and under his direction 
the bridge at Charleroi was stormed shortly after noon. Almost 
at the same time Rcille forced the passage at Marchienne. 
Instead of drawing his corps together and retreating en masse 
up the Fleurus road, Zieten wisely withdrew on two roads, using 
those to Quatre Bras and Fleurus. The defenders of Marchienne 
used the former, while the brigade which had held Charleroi 
fell back by the latter. The emperor at once began the advance 
along both the roads. The left wing was directed to push up 
the Gosselies-Qualre Bras road, and Pajol's cavalry followed 
the Prussians who retired along the Gilly-Fleurus road. The 
emperor took post at Charleroi About 3 p.m. Marshal Ney joined 
the army, was given the command of the left wing, and ordered to 
drive the Prussians out of Gosselies, and clear the road northward 
of that place. Ney took over his command just when the attack 
on Gosselies was impending. The Prussians were driven from 
the town, but they managed to effect a roundabout retreat to 
Ligny, where they rallied. Ney pushed on his advance up the 
Brussels road. When he had left for the front, the emperor 
proceeded with Grouchy to reconnoitre the Prussian position at 
Gilly, and handing over the command of the right wing to the 
marshal, whom he ordered to capture Gilly, Napoleon returned 
to Charleroi, to hasten the passage of the French army across 
the Sambre and mass it in the gap between the allies. But the 
head of Vandamme's corps had by this time crossed the river, 
and the emperor ordered it to assist Grouchy. 

What meanwhile were the allies doing? There is no doubt 
that, surprised by the suddenness of the French advance, they 
were caught unprepared. But on the 15th the critical nature of 
the situation dawned on them, and naturally on Bliicher first, as 
his headquarters were nearer to the frontier than Wellington's, 
and Bliicher had had previous experience of Napoleon's powers. 
As soon as the Prussian marshal got the first real warning of 
imminent danger, he ordered (an accordance with the pre- 
arranged plan) an immediate concentration of his army on his 
inner flank at Sombreffe. Unfortunately for him the first orders 
sent to Billow by Gneisenau, chief of the sta0, at midnight 
June 14-15, were written in so stilted and hazy a style that Bulow 
did not consider any especial display of energy was required. 
Hence the IV Corps was neutralized until after the 16th. The 
other two corps commanders (Pirch I. and Thielemann) received 
clearer orders, and acted promptly enough. They concentrated 
their scattered men and hastened to march to the appointed 
rendezvous. By nightfall Pirch I. had bivouacked the II Corps 
at Mazy, only 4 m. short of Sombreffe, and Thielemann and 
the III. Corps had reached Namur, within easy distance of the 
Ligny battlefield. Bliicher wisely shifted his own headquarters 
to Sombreffe on the a'fternoon of the 15th. 

Wellington's position at nightfall was very different, and can 
hardly be termed safe or even satisfactory Definite news of 
the French advance only reached Brussels about 3 p.m. on the 
15th; and even then the duke was by no means certain of the 
direction of Napoleon's main stroke. Hence the first orders be 
issued were for his divisions to concentrate at their respective 
alarm-posts, intending later to send them further orders when 
the situation had somewhat cleared up. For whatever reasons, 
Wellington thought Napoleon would attempt to turn his right 
and cut his line of communications. Had Napoleon attempted 
this he would (if successful) have driven the Anglo-Dutch 

hftrk unon the PrtMHUjmn. in*t*nA M a*n*ratifi» tJwi *1Km 



WATERLOO CAMPAIGN 



concentration on his inner (left) flank ssltticher had done, and 
the danger of Blucher's position was thus enormously increased. 

Curiously enough, the allies do not appear to have decided 
upon the course to be taken in case they were surprised, as they 
virtually were, and their system of intercommunication— if 
system it can be called— was most imperfect. They ought to 
have arranged loyally and promptly to let each other know every 
move it was proposed to make and the reasons for moving, for 
thus only could concerted action be ensured when confronted 
with Napoleon, " in whose presence it was so little safe to make 
. a false movement." 

Wellington's subordinates at the critical point, however, acted 
with admirable boldness. Prince Bernard, in command of a 
brigade at Quatre Bras and Frasnes, recognizing the pressing 
danger that threatened on the Brussels road, retained bis position 
there to check the French advance, instead of drawing off 
westwards and massing with the rest of his division at Niveiles; 
and in this action he was firmly supported by his immediate 
superiors. It was due to their presence of mind that Wellington 
maintained his hold on the important strategical point of Quatre 
Bras on June 15 and 16. Consequently, as Ney's wing advanced 
northward from Gosselies along the Brussels road, it came upon an 
advanced detachment of this force at Frasnes. The detachment 
was quickly forced to retire on its supports at the cross-roads, 
but here Prince Bernard firmly held his position; and by 
his skilful use of cover and the high standing corn he prevented 
the French gauging the weakness of the small force that barred 
their way. The day was now drawing to a close, and Ney 
decided wisely not to push his advance any farther. He was in 
front of a force of unknown strength which appeared resolved 
to stand its ground, his men were tired, and the cannon-thunder 
to his right rear proclaimed clearly that Grouchy had not 
made much headway on the Fleurus road. To push on farther 
might isolate the left wing among a host of allies. He therefore 
halted his command, and, later, made a report to the emperor 

Meanwhile two long hours had been wasted on the right whilst 
Grouchy and Vandamme deliberated over their planel action in 
front of the Prussian brigade at Gilly, and it was not until the 
emperor himself again reached the front, about 5.30 p.m., that 
vigour replaced indecision. There was a brief bombardment, 
and then Vandamme's corps was sent forward with the bayonet 
to drive out the foe. The shock was too great , the Prussians 
gave way immediately and were chased back into the woods by 
cavalry Grouchy now pushed on towards Fleurus, which was 
still held by Blucher's troops, and there the advance came to a 
halt, as the light was failing and the troops exhausted 

Thus, thanks to Zieten 's fine delaying action, Bliicher by 
nightfall on June 15 had secured most of the ground requisite 
for his pre-arranged concentration, for one corps was in position, 
and two others were at hand. Btilow's corps was unavailable, 
for the reason already given, but of this fact Bliicher was still 
necessarily ignorant Wellington, owing to his original disposi- 
tions and the slowness of bis concentration, had only retained 
a grip on Quatre Bras thanks to the boldness of his subordinates 
on the spot His other troops were assembling. I Corps, 
Nivclles, Brainc-le-Comte and Enghien, II Corps, Ath, Gram- 
mont and Sotteghem, heavy cavalry at Ninove; Reserve at 
Brussels During the night of the 15th orders were sent for the 
divisions to move eastwards towards NiveUes, and si dawn the 
Reserve marched for Mt. S. Jean. Thus Wdhngtan. did cot 
even yet realize the full significance of the enptrWs opening 




But if the intelligence which the ds$e>« 
come to hand on the 15th* it 4 
have effected 1 
His trusted i 
Ibis time i 



WATERLOO CAMPAIGN 



375 



of selecting the reports which were worth forwanfiofc, tent ft 
back, saying that, so far from convincing him that the emperor 
was advancing to give battle, it assured him of the contrary 
Owing to this officer's presumptuous folly Grant's information 
only reached the duke on June 18, too late to be of use. 

The Army of the North on this night was disposed as follows: 
— The left wing stretched from Frasnes back to the Sambre at 
Marchicnne and Thuin. Reillc's corps was to the front and was 
covered by the light cavalry of the Guard and Pir6's lancers. 
Ney's headquarters were at Gosselies; one division (Girard's) 
was at Wangenies and acted as a link between the two wings. 
The right wing, under Grouchy, had come to a halt in front of 
Ffcurus. It was covered by Pajol's and Exelmans' cavalry corps. 
Vandamme's was the leading infantry corps, and it bivouacked 
with its head at Winage. Gerard's corps (with which was 
Kellermann's cuirassier corps) halted astride the Sambre at 
Chatelet. Gerard's advance bad been delayed owing to the 
commander of his leading division deserting with his staff to 
the Prussians. Consequently the IV. Corps had not assisted 
at all in the passage of the river; though had ft only been 
present, it would have been magnificently placed to co-operate 
with Grouchy in the action of Gilly. Thus each of these 
strategical covering forces was itself protected by an adequate 
tactical advanced guard, to perform the service of local pro- 
tection. The centre (or reserve) was meanwhile disposed as 
follows: The Guard was halted between Gilly and Charleroi; 
the emperor's headquarters being at the latter place. Milhaud's 
Cuirassier corps and Lobau's (VI.) corps were south of the Sambre, 
between Charleroi and Jaraioulx. In this particular the execu- 
tion on June 15 fell short of the original conception, for at night- 
fall about one-third of the French army was still on the right 
bank of the river. This, however, signified little, for the emperor 
stui occupied a dominant strategical position. 

Napoleon had now perfected his arrangements for the invasion 
of Belgium, and bis army was organized definitely in two wings 
and a reserve; the latter being so placed that it could be brought 
" into action on either wing as circumstances dictated." As 
circumstances dictated, either wing would fasten upon one of the 
silted armies and detain it unto the reserve had time to come 
up and complete its destruction; the other wing meantime de- 
taining the other allied army and preventing its commander 
from coming to his colleague's assistance. The emperor was not 
m possession of the Namur-Nivdlcs road. The allies were thus 
afforded an opportunity of committing the very blunder which 
Napoleon longed for, namely to attempt a risky forward con- 
centration. Ifis dispositions on the night of the i5tb-i6th were 
skilfully calculated to encourage the allies to mass at Quatre 
Bras and Sombreffe, and his covering force were pushed suffi- 
ciently forward — to Frasnes and Fleurus-rto grip whichever ally 
adventured his army first. At nightfall the Army of the North 
lay concentrated ° in a square whose sides measured ism. each; 
and it could with equal facility swing against the Prussians or 
the Anglo-Dutch, and was already placed between them." 

Early on the morning of June 16 Prince Bernard was reinforced 
at Quatre Bras by the rest of his division (Perponcher's), and 
Wellington's other troops were now all on the march eastward 
except the reserve, who were heading southwards and halted 
at the cross-road of Mt. S. Jean until the duke had resolved that 
their objective should be Quatre Bras. They then marched in 
that i J IfjrtfT _ Wcher meanwhile was making his arrangements 
t south of the Namur-Nivelles road and 
1 communication with Wellington at 
" I keep open the Namur road, 
r Billow's arrival. 

r up his army, and 

tant letter of the 

: " I have adopted as 

\ divide my army into 

fwHl form the reserve, 

* wing fust as drcum- 

trostances I shall weaken 

. " Here, in its simplest 




form, is the principle that underlies Napoleon's strategy in 18x5. 
Only on the wing on which the reserve is brought into action 
will a decisive result be aimed at The other is to be used ex- 
clusively to neutralize the other enemy, by holding him at bay. 

Napoleon's original plan for the 16th was based on the assump- 
tion that the allies, who had been caught napping, would 
not attempt a risky forward concentration; and he intended 
therefore to push an advanced guard as far as Gembloux, for the 
purpose of feeling for and warding off Blilcher. To assist this 
operation the reserve would move at first to Fleuras to reinforce 
Grouchy, should he need assistance in driving back Blocker's 
troops; but, once in possession of Sombreffe, the emperor would 
swing the reserve westwards and join Ney, who, it was supposed, 
would have in the meantime mastered Quatre Bras. In pursuance 
of this object Ney, to whom KeUermann was now attached, 
was to mass at Quatre Bras and push an advanced guard 6 m. 
northward of that place, with a connecting division at Marbais 
to link him with Grouchy. The centre and left wing together 
would then make a night-march to Brussels. The allies would 
thus be irremediably sundered, and all that remained would 
be to destroy them in detail. Napoleon now awaited further 
information from his wing commanders at Charleroi, where he 
massed the VI. Corps (Lobau), to save it, if possible, from a 
harassing countermarch, as it appeared likely that it would 
only be wanted for the march to Brussels. Ney spent the 
morning in massing his two corps, and in reconnoitring the 
enemy at Quatre Bras, who, as he was informed, had been rein* 
forced. But up till noon he took no serious step to capture the 
cross-roads, which then lay at his mercy. Grouchy m^ntim^ 
reported from Fleunis that Prussian masses wete coming up 
from Namar, but Napoleon does not appear to have attached 
much importance to this report. He was still at Charleroi 
when, between 9 and zo a.m., further news readied him from 
the left that considerable hostile forces were visible at Quatre 
Bras. He at once wrote to Ney saying that these could only be 
some of Wellington's troops, and that Ney was to concentrate 
his force and crush what was in front of him, adding that he 
was to send all reports to Fleunis. Then, keeping Lobau pro- 
visionally at Charleroi, Napoleon hastened to fleunis, arriving 
about xi. He found that Grouchy had made little progress 
beyond the town. As he surveyed the field from the windmill 
north, .of Fleunis it struck him as significant that BlOcher't 
troops were disposed parallel to the Namur road, as if to 
cover a forward concentration, and not at right angles to ft, 
as they would be had they been covering a retreat. Still, 
at the moment, only one corps was showing. Possibly, how- 
ever, the decisive day of the campaign had come. By the 
emperor's arrangements Vandammc, Gerard, Pajol and Exel- 
mans would be available after a p.m. to attack whatever force 
Br&cher might command, and the Guard and Milhaud would 
be at hand to act as reserve. The wonder is that he did 
not now order Lobau to move to some intermediate position, 
such as Wangenies, where he would be available for either 
wing as circumstances dictated. At a p.m. Napoleon ordered 
Ney to master Quatre Bras, and added that the emperor would 
attack the corps which he saw in front of him. Whichever wing 
succeeded first would then wheel inwards and help the other. 
Not yet had Napoleon grasped the full significance of the allied 
movements, for the decisive flank had not yet become dear. 

BrOcher had already determined to fight. Meanwhile, Welling, 
ton, having reached Quatre Bras in the morning, wrote to him 
to concert the day's operations; then, as aD was quiet In his 
front, he rode over to meet BrBeher at Brye. The two chiefs, 
surveying the French army in their front, considered that no 
serious force was in front of Quatre Bras, and Wellington termin- 
ated the interview with the conditional promise that he would 
bring his army to Broeher's assistance at Ligny, if he was not 
attacked himself. This promise, of course, was never fulfilled, 
for Ney employed the duke all day at Quatre Bras; and, further- 
more, the duke's tardy concentration made it quite impossible for 
him to help BfQcherdirectly on the Ligny battlefield. On his return 
to Quatre Bras he found that a crisis had already been reached. 



37^ 



WATERLOO CAMPAIGN 




LIGNY " 
and 
QUATREBRAS 



Ma? II. 



Ney had allowed the valuable, hours to slip away when he 
could have stormed Quatrc Bras, with case and ensured co* 
operation wit h bis master. Remcm luring the surprises 
£jJJ* that the battles in Spain had provided for the marshals 
Opposed lo the dulc. he masked nearly the whole 
of Reille's corps before he advanced. The prince of Orange, in 
command at Qua ire Bras, had only 7500 troops. But by 
boldly scattering hit force and by making use of the Bossu wood 
and the farms, he covered the cross roads and showed a firm 
front to the very superior force which Ney commanded. It 
was then 2 p.m. The Dutch- Belgian troops to the east of the 
Brussels highway were at once farced back by the mass of men 
moved against them, and it looked as if the whole defence 
would crumple up. But about 3 f.*l timely succour readied 
tbe field — Van MerIen T s cavalry from Nivdics, Picton and the 
5th division from Brussels — and Wellington returned and took 
over the command. Picton at once stopped the victorious French 
advance to the cast of the road, hut the remaining division 
(Jerome) of ReuVs corps now reached the front and Key Hung 
it into the Bossu wood to dear that place and keep his left Bank 
free. A fierce fight now broke out all along the line, in which 
Jerome steadily made ground in the Bossu wood, while Ficton 
showing a dauntlc^ front maintained his position, The Bruns- 
wick contingent now reached the field* but their duke wbUi 
leading a charge received a mortal wound and the attack fail 
It was nearly 4*15 P.u, when Ney received 
order, and in obedience to it he made another 
the Bossu wood was virtually cleared of it * 
about $ P4C. further reinforcements tmt 
(3rd) division com me, in from 
he could only capture Qual 

But shortly afterwards 
Corps, without his direct 1 
wards to assist in the batti 



(about 5.30) he received an order from Napoleon to seiae Quatre 
Bras and then turn eastwards to crush Blue her r who was caught 
at Ligny. Napoleon added t " The f a $c of France is in your 
hands," Ney*s duty was merely to hold Wellington for certain 
at Quatre Bias and allow D T Erlon to carry out the movement 
which must ensure a decisive result at Ligny, in accordance 
with Napoleon's plan of campaign. In any case D'Erlon could 
not come back in time to give him effectual help. But incap- 
able of grasping the situation, and beside himself with rage„ 
Ney sent imperative orders to D'ErloVi to return at once, and 
immediately afterwards be ordered Kellermanu lo lead his one 
available cuirassier brigade and break through Wellington's 
line. The charge was admirably executed; it overthrew one 
British regiment which it caught in Kne, but being unsup- 
ported it achieved nothing further of importance, and was 
beaten back. When this attempt to master the cross-roads 
had ended in failure, Ney received a verbal messap! ffom th« 
emperor, enjoining him lhat p whatever happened at Qualm 
Bras, D'Erjon must be allowed to carry out the movement ordered 
by the emperor, The bearer* Major Bamius, knowing the im- 
portance of the manoeuvre winch the I. C^swas^rryingout w 
strove to induce Key 19 ncansidcr D'Erlon 's recall; but tbe 

plunging into the 

rlUngton received, 
ish Guard*}, 

Key's 77,000 men.. 

the line, and 

French to> 




battle 

Riff Vy 

iterordcr 

.Marshal Ney 

Key to delacn 



WATERLOO CAMPAIGN 



377 



D v Efk>n, had on hh own initiative ordered the I. Corps to the 
eastward) the general considered be ought to return to the left 
wing, and leaving one division at Wagnelee he withdrew his force. 
The incident was immeasurably unfortunate for the French. 
Had the I. Corps been thrown into the doubtful struggle at 
Quatre Bras, it must have crushed Wellington; had it been used 
at Ligny it would have entailed Blucher's annihilation. But 
osallsting between the two fields, it took part in neither. When 
the fighting was over, at xo P.1C, Ney wrote a abort and some- 
what one-sided account of the action to Soul*. 

On the other flank there had meanwhile been waged the bitterly 
fought batik of Ligny. As Blucher's dispositions gradually 
UgmXt became clearer the emperor realized that the first 
decisive day of the campaign had actually come, and 
he promptly made arrangements for defeating the Prussian 
army in his front. BlUcher, to cover the Namur road, held with 
the L Corps the villages of Brye, St Amand and Ligny, whilst 
behind his centre was massed the II. Corps, and on his left was 
placed the III. Corps. Wellington and Bulow on arrival would 
act as general reserve; Blucher's army, as he finally disposed it, 
was quite visible to Napoleon on the bare open slopes which 
it occupied above St Amand and Ligny, the II. Corps being 
especially exposed. The emperor decided to bear-down Blficher's 
centre and right with the corps of Vandamme and Gerard and 
with Guard's division which he had drawn into his operations, 
containing the Prussian left meanwhile with the squadrons of 
Pajol and Exehnans, assisted by a few infantry. The Guard and 
Milhaud were in hand at Fleurus. Further, he could order up 
Lobau, and direct Ney to move his rearward corps across and 
form it np behind Blucher's right. When the battle was ripe, he 
would crush the Prussian centre and right between the Guard and 
D'Erlon's corps. It was a somewhat complicated manoeuvre; 
for he was attempting to outflank his enemy -with a corps that he 
had subordinated to Marshal Ney. Much depended on whether 
Ney would grasp the full purport of his orders; in a similar case 
at Bautzen he had failed to do so, and he failed as badly now. 
The usual Napoleonic simplicity was wanting at ligny, and he 
paid in full for the want. 

It was just after 1*30 p.m. when Napoleon, hearing the sound 
of Ney's cannon to the westward and realizing that Wellington 
was attacked and neutralized, commenced the battle at Ligny. 
Blucher's force was numerically very superior. The Prussians 
numbered a^out 83,000 men to Napoleon's 71,000* (including 
Lobau, who only came up at the end of the day). A fierce fight 
was soon raging for the villages. Vandamme and Girard attacked 
S. Amand, whilst Gerard attempted to storm Ligny; on the 
right Grouchy held Thielemann in play, and in the centre neat 
Fleams were the Guard and Milhand in reserve, close to the 
em p er or 's headquartemon the mill. At 3.1 5 P.m., when the battle 
was in full swing, Napoleon wrote in duplicate to Ney, saying, 
" The fate of France is in your hands," and ordering the marshal 
to master Quatre Bras and move eastwards to assist at Ligny. 
Immediately afterwards, hearing that Ney had 20,000 men in 
front of hfan^he seat the " pencil-note " by General La Bedoyere 
which directed Ney to detach D'Erkm's corps to Ligny. This, 
as we know, the A.LXC. in a fit of mistaken zeal took upon himself 
to do. Hence the corps appeared too soon, and in the wrong 
dwectkra*. But neither order made it sufficiently clear to Ney 
that do-operation at Ligny was the essential, provided that 
WriJinsJrin was held fast at Quatre Bras. In other words, Iky 
sad te e ters* to hold Wellington with part of the French left wing 
sMtfM*df4achtlx$renisJtto^ofhMora 
deatUsW «t ligny . This is clear when the first letter to Ney 
kmame&wtth the orders, as it was meant to be; but Ney in the 
"the later instructions. Meanwhile the 
1 to bring up his corps at once to Fleurus 
rbt of great service, whereas had he been 
nelee he might have co-operated in the 
efficiently. The fight for the villages 
. sly and incessantly, each side behaving as if 
; front. The villages were captured and re- 
f the French had the better of the fightin* 




for they compelled Blucher to use up more and more of bis 
reserves, and prevented the Prussians from breaking through .to 
the southward of S. Amand. Eventually the fighting became so 
furious that the troops engaged literally melted away, particu- 
larly at Ligny, and the emperor was finally compelled to call 
on his reserve to replenish the troops first engaged. But hardly 
had the Young and Middle Guard marched off to reinforce 
Vandamme and Gerard, when Vandamme sent word that a hostile 
column, over 30,000 strong, was threatening the French left (in 
reality this was D'Erlon's corps). Vandamme 's exhausted troops 
were unnerved at the sight of this fresh foe, and an incipient 
panic was only quelled by turning guns on the fugitives. It was 
now between 5.30 and 6. The emperor concluded that this 
could not be D'Erion, because he had arrived too soon and was 
marching in an evidently wrong direction. He at once sent an 
officer to reconnoitre. Meanwhile the reinforcements which he 
had despatched were most opportune. The Prussians had seised 
the opportunity offered by the slackening -of the French attacks 
to rally and deliver a counterstroke, which wis parried, after 
achieving a small measure of success, by the bayonets of the 
Young Guard. It was about 6.30 before Napoleon learned that 
the unknown force was actually D'Erlon's, and somewhat later 
he beard that it had counter-marched and withdrawn westwards. 
Repeated orders sent to the commander of the division left by 
D'Erion failed to induce him to engage his command decisively, 
and thus Napoleon obtained no direct co-operation from his 
left wing on this, the first decisive day of the campaign. Thus 
relieved about his left, but realizing that D'Erion had returned 
to Ney, the emperor had perforce to finish toe battle single- 
handed. Blucher now delivered a general counterstroke against 
Vandamme. Massing every available man he led the attack in 
person; but he vainly attempted to make ground to the south 
of S. Amand; the exhausted Prussians were overpowered by 
the chasseurs of the Guard and forced to retire in disorder. 
Napoleon's opportunity to finish the "battle had come at last. 
He could at least beat Blucher and render the Prussians unfit 
for any serious operation except retreat on June 17, although 
he could no longer expect to destroy the Prussian army. Lobaut 
corps, too, was now arriving and forming up on the heights east of 
Fleurus. The artillery of the Guard, therefore, came Into action 
above Ligny to prepare Blucher's centre for assault.. Some 
delay was occasioned by a thunderstorm; but, as this passed 
over, the guns opened and the Old Guard and Milhaud's cuiras- 
siers proceeded to form up opposite to Ligny. About 745 p.m. 
a crashing salvo of 60 guns gave the signal for a combined assault 
to be delivered by Gerard and the Guard, with Milhaud moving 
on their right flank. Blucher's worn-out soldiers could not 
withstand the tremendous impact of Napoleon's choicest troops, 
and the Prussian centre was pierced and broken. But the gallant 
old marshal still had some fresh squadrons in hand, and he 
promptly launched them to stem the French advance. While 
leading one of the charges in person his horse was shot and fell 
under him, but fie was rescued and borne in a semi-conscious 
condition from the field. Without doubt, the personal risk to 
which Blucher exposed himself at this crisis was far too great; 
for it was essential that the command of the Prussian army 
should remain vested in a chief who would loyally keep in touch 
and act entirely in concert with his colleague. In this way only 
could the allies nope to obtain a decisive success against Napoleon. 
By 9 PJf. the main battle was over, and everywhere the French 
pushed resistkssly forward. Napoleon was master of Blucher's 
battlefield, and the beaten Prussians had retired to the north of 
the Namur-Nivelles road. Under the circumstances, the late 
hour, the failing light and the lack of information as to events 
on the left wing, immediate pursuit was out of the question. 

The execution had again fallen short of the conception? 
Blacker though beaten was not destroyed, nor was his line with 
Wellington cot. If the Prussians now retired northwards, 
parallel to the direction which Wellington would follow perforce 
on the morrow, the chance of co-operating in a decisive battle 
would still remain to the allies; and Gneisenau's order issued 
by moonlight, directing the retreat on Tilly and Wavre, went 



37» 



WATERLOO CAMPAIGN 



ftrto ensuring the pooitbility of such combined action. However, 
Gneisenau was very remiss in net immediately reporting this 
vital move and the necessity for it to tae duke, as it left the 
Anglo-Dutch inner flank quite exposed. Gneisenau apparently 
selected Wavre, not with, the intention of assisting his ally, 
but rather to re-establish his own line of communication, and 
the presence of the Prussians on the field of battle of Waterloo 
must be put down, to the immortal credit of Blucher and 
Grolmann, his quartermaster-general. Gneisenau at this crisis 
in the affairs of the allies does not appear to have subordinated 
everything to co-operation at all cost with Wellington, and he 
allowed supply considerations and the re-establishment of his 
communications to overweigh the paramount necessity of ar- 
ranging concerted action with his ally. Probably Wellington's 
failure to co-operate at Ligny had heightened the Prussian 
chief-of-staff's unworthy suspicions of the good faith and 
soldierly qualifications of the British marshal; and it was well for 
the allies that Blucher was able to resume command before 
Napoleon had time to profit from the dissensions that would 
probably have arisen had Gneisenau remained in control. The 
casualties in the hard-fought battle of Ligny were very heavy. 
The Prussians lost about x 2,000 men and »x guns, and the French 
8500; in ligny more than 4000 dead lay on. an area of about 
400 sq. yds., and in one of the hamlets of S. Amand there lay, 
almost to a man, the gallant 82nd of the line (Girard's division). 
So close was the fighting that most of the 20,000 casualties lay 
on about 2 sq. m. of ground. It was a really Napoleonic battle. 

Despite D'Erlon's misadventure the emperor had the game 
still in his hands, for Ney's failure had actually placed the Anglo- 
Dutch army in a precarious position. So true is it that a tactical 
failure encountered in carrying out a sound strategical plan 
matters but little. Again Napoleon's plan of campaign had 
succeeded. The emperor having beaten Blucher, the latter 
must fall back to rally and re-form, and call in Billow, who had 
only reached the neighbourhood of Gembloux on June 16; 
whilst on the other flank Ney, reinforced by D'Erion's fresh 
corps, lay in front of Wellington, and the marshal could fasten 
upon the Anglo-Dutch army and hold it fast during the early 
morning of June 17, sufficiently long to allow the emperor to 
dose round his foe's open left flank and deal him a deathblow. 
But it was clearly essential to deal with Wellington on the 
morrow, ere Blucher could again appear on the scene. Welling- 
ton was by no means so well acquainted with the details of the 
Prussian defeat at Ligny as he ought to have been. It is true 
that, before leading the final charge, Blucher despatched an 
aide-de-camp to his colleague, to tell him that he was forced to 
retire; but this officer was shot and the message remained 
undelivered. To send a message of such vital importance by a 
single orderly was a piece of bad staff work. It should have 
been sent in triplicate at least, and it was Gneisenau's duty 
to repeat the message directly he assumed temporary command. 
Opposed as they were to Napoleon, Gneisenau's neglect involved 
them in an unnecessary and very grave risk. 

Napoleon was unwell, and consequently was not in the saddle 
on the 17th as early as he would otherwise have been. In his 
Jma9 J7 absence neither Ney nor Soult appears to have made 
any serious arrangements for an advance, although 
every minute was now golden. During the night more reinforce- 
ments arrived for Wellington, and on the morning of June 1 7 
the duke had most of his army about Quirt re Bras. But it was 
24 hours too late, for Blocker's defeat had rendered the Anglo- 
Dutch position untenable. Early In the morning Wellington 
(still ignorant of the exact position or bis nily) sent out an officer, 
with an adequate escort, to establish touch with the Prussians, 
This staff officer discovered and reported that the Prussians were 
drawing off northwards to rally at Wavre; and about o A.H. a 
Prussian orderly officer arrived from Gneisenau to explain the 
situation and learn Wellington's plans. The duke reptfc'i 1 
he should fall back on Mt S. Jean, and would accept batik* 
in a selected position to the south of the Forest • ' 
provided he was assured of the support of one s 
corps. Like the good soldier and loyal ally |J 1 




subordinated everything to the one essential of maiKcuvring 
so as to remain in communication with Blucher. It was a a.m. 
on June 18 before he received the answer to his suggestion. 

Early on the 17th the Prussians drew off northwards on three 
roads, Thielemann covering the withdrawal .and moving via 
Gembloux to join hands with BUlow. The French cavalry on 
the right, hearing troops in motion on the Namur road, dashed in 
pursuit down the turnpike road shortly after dawn, caught up the 
fugitives and captured them. They turned out to be stragglers; 
but their capture for a time helped to confirm the idea, prevalent 
in the French army, that Blucher was drawing off towards his 
base. Some delay too was necessary before Napokon could 
finally settle on his plan for this day. The situation was still 
obscure, details as to what had happened on the French left were 
wanting, and the direction of Bluchers retreat was by no means 
certain. Orders, however, were sent to Ney, about 8 a.m., to 
take up his position at Quatre Bras, and if that was impossible 
he was to report at once and the emperor would co-operate* 
Napoleon clearly meant that Ney should attack whatever 
happened to be in his front. If confronted by a rear-guard 
he would drive it off and occupy Quatre Bras; and if Wellington 
was still there the marshal would promptly engage and hold fast 
the Anglo-Dutch army, and report to the emperor. Napoleon 
would in this case hasten up with the reserve and crush Welling- 
ton- Wellington in fact was there; but Ney did nothing what-, 
ever to retain him, and the duke began his withdrawal to Mt. S. 
Jean about 10 aIm, The last chance of bringing about a decisive 
French success was thus allowed to slip away. 

Meanwhile Napoleon paid a personal visit about 10 ajc. to 
the Ligny battlefield, and about xz a.m. he came to a decision. 
He determined to send the two cavalry corps of Pajol ( 
and Exelmans, and the corps of Vandamme and ( 
Gerard, with Teste's division (VI. Corps), a force of 
33,000 men and zxo guns, to follow the Prussians, penetrate 
their intentions and discover if they meditated uniting with 
Wellington in front of Brussels. As Exelmans' dragoons had 
already gained touch of the III. Prussian corps at Gembloux, the 
emperor directed Marshal Grouchy, to whom he handed over the 
command of this force, to " proceed to Gembloux." This order 
the marshal only too literally obeyed. After an inconceivably slow 
and wearisome march, in one badly arranged column moving on 
one road, he only reached Gembloux on June 17, and halted there 
for the night. His cavalry gained contact before noon with 
Thielemann's corps, which was resting at Gembloux, but the 
enemy was allowed to slip away and contact was lost tor want 
of a serious effort to keep it. Grouchy did not proceed to the 
front, and entirely failed to appreciate the situation at this 
critical juncture. Pressing danger could only exist if Blocker 
had gone northwards,- and northwards, therefore, in the Dyie 
valley, he should have diligently sought for traces of the Prussian 
retreat. 1 Had Blucher gone eastwards, Grouchy, holding the 
Dyle, could easily have held back any future Prussian advance 
towards Wellington. Grouchy, however, went to Gembloux as 
ordered. By nightfall the situation was all in favour of the 
allies; for Grouchy was now actually outside the four Prussian 
corps, who were by this time concentrated astride the Dyle at 
Wavre. Their retreat having been unmolested, the Prussians 
were ready once more to take the field, quite twenty4our hours 
before Napoleon deemed ft possible for trie f defeated it T-igny, 

On the oih^rtlank, too, things had gqni ill !■; la voutol Welling- 
ton. Although the emperor wrote to Ney agtin at noon, from 
Ligny, that troops had now been placed Jii position at Marbai* 
to second the marshal's a 
quiescent, and Welling 
that, on N'apoU 

1 There i e/p 




WATERLOO CAMPAIGN 



379 



hetoimdoi]^th€di±e*civtlry»crettu^ 
still in position. Can we wonder that be gave vent to his anger 
p and declared that Ney had ruined France? This was 
t9t the fatal mistake of the campaign, and Fortune turned 
jy*r now against her former favourite. Although the 
*■* smouldering fires of his old energy flamed out once 

more and Napoleon began a rapid pursuit of the cavalry screen, 
which crumpled up and decamped as he advanced, yet all his 
efforts were powerless to entangle the Anglo-Dutch rearguard 
to such an extent that Wellington must turn back to its assist- 
ance. The pursuit, too, was carried out in the midst of a tropical 
thunderstorm which broke at the roar of the opening cannonade, 
and very considerably retarded the French pursuit. It was 
not until the light was failing that Napoleon reached the heights 
of Rossomme opposite to Wellington's position and, by a masterly 
reconnaissance in force, compelled the duke to disclose the pres- 
ence of practically the whole Anglo-Dutch army. The French 
halted, somewhat loosened by pursuit, between Rossomme and 
Gcnappe and spent a wretched night in the sodden fields. 

During the night Wellington received the reassuring news 
that BlQcher would bring two corps certainly, and possibly four, 
to Waterloo, and determined to accept battle. Napoleon's plan 
bang to penetrate between the allies and then defeat them 
successively, the left was really the threatened flank of the 
Anglo-Dutch army. Yet so far was Wellington from divining 
Napoleon's object that he stationed 17,000 men (including 
Colvule's British division) at Hal and Tubixe, 8 m. away 
to his right, to repel the turning movement that he ground- 
kssly anticipated and to form a rallying point for Ins right in 
ease his centre was broken. By deliberately depriving himself 
of this detachment, on June 18, the duke ran a very grave 
risk. With the 67,600 men whom he had in hand, however, 
he took up a truly admirable " WcUiugtonian " position astride 
the Niveucs-Brussels and Charleroi-Brussels roads which meet at 
ftr - j^ Mt S. Jean. He used a low ridge to screen his main 
defensive position, exposing compaaatively few troops 
in front of the crest. Of his 156 guns, 78 belonged to the British 
artillery; but of his 67,600 men only 39,800 were British or 
King's German -Legion troops, whereas all Napoleon's were 
Frenchmen and veterans. Wellington occupied Hougoumont 
in strength, chiefly with detachments of the British Guanas; 
and he also placed a garrison of the K.G.L. in La Haye Saints, 
the tactical key of the allied position. Both these farms were 
strengthened; but, still nervous about his right flank, the duke 
occupied Hougoumont in much greater force than La Haye 
Sainte, and massed the bulk of his troops on his right. The main 
position was very skilfully taken up, and care was taken to 
distribute the troops so that the indifferent and immature were 
closely supported by those who were " better disciplined and 
more accustomed to war." Owing to a misconception, one 
Dutch-Belgian brigade formed up in front of the ridge. Full 
arrangements were made for Blucher's co-operation through 
General Muffling, the Prussian attache* on the duke's staff. 
The duke was to stand fast to receive the attack, whilst the 
Prussians should close round Napoleon's exposed right and 
support Wellington's left. The Prussians were thus the real 
I it was Wellington's task to receive Napoleon's 
* him for the decisive counter-stroke. 

1 promise to his ally; but the execution 

He did not start his corps on their 

1 a considerable time after dawn, and then, 

s of all (Bulow) was selected 

delay was aggravated 

isvre and delayed the march. 

I was in the saddle. 

army for the attack on 

of the ground (largely 

^e scattered bivouacs of the 

:k* from being made at 6 A.M. 

as therefore put off first of all 

>. to permit the sodden ground 

i arms to manoeuvre freely and 




gtve time to the French inny to dose up. Dming the night the 
emperor had received a report from Marshal Grouchy, dated 
Gembloux, xo P.XC, 17th, which stated that the Prussians were 
retiring in two columns towards Wavre and Peiwes. Grouchy 
added that If be found that the bulk of the Prussians were 
moving on Wavre he would follow them and separate them from 
Wellington. But a glance at the map shows that this was 
impossible. By following the Prussians Grouchy, who had taken 
up a position outside the Prussian left flank, would inevitably 
drive the allies together. It was xo km. when the emperor 
answered this letter, and he directed the marshal to march for 
Wavre, thus approaching the French army and entering the aone 
of the main operations. The underlying idea of manoeuvring in 
two wings and a reserve should be kept in ndnd when considering 
this letter. Its meaning will then dearly be, that Grouchy was to 
endeavour to place his force on the inner Prussian flank and hold 
them back from Waterloo. But this is just what the despatch 
does not state verbally and precisely, and accordingly Grouchy, 
like Ney on the x6th and 17th, misread it. 

The French army proceeded to form up in an imposing array 
some 1300 yards from Wellington's position, and if some mis- 
givings as to the resuk filled the minds of men like Soult, Reille 
and Foy, who had had previous experience of Wellington in 
the field, none at any rate dwelt in Napoleon's mind. The 
lateness of the hour at which the attack was delivered, and the 
emperor's determination to break Wellington's centre instead 
of outflanking the Anglo-Dutch left and further separating the 
allies, deprived hhn of whatever chance he still possessed of 
beating Wellington before Blucbcr could intervene. Napoleon 
drew up his army of 74,000 men and 346 guns in three lines, 
fully in view of the allies. In the first line were the corps of 
Reille and D'Erlon, who were destined to attack the allied line 
and prepare it for the final assault. In the second line were 
KeUermaun'a cuirassiers, the incomplete corps of Lobau, the 
squadrons of Domon and Subervie, and MflhauoVs cuirassiers. 
In the third line was the Guard. It was an Imposing array of 
veteran troops, and when their emperor rode along the lines t)i«.*y 
received, him with extraordinary enthusiasm. 

The battle of Waterloo may be divided into five phases. 1 
About xx. 30 the first phase opened with an attack by one of) 
Regie's divisions on Hougnumonl ■ This was a. mere 
aide-issue, destined to draw Wellington's attention JJJJ" 
to his right, and in this it failed. About noon, how- jrm 
ever, a battery of 80 French guns unlimbered on the 
long spur to the S.E. of La Haye Sainte, to prepare the duke's 
centre for the main attack. Here the form of the ground so 
skilfully chosen sheltered the defence in some degree from the 
tempest of iron that now beat against the position. After 
t p.m., and just before he gave orders for Ney to lead the main 
attack, the emperor scanned the battlefield, and on his right 
front he saw a dense dark cloud emerging from the woods at 
Chapelle Saint Lambert. It was 1 soon discovered that this 
was Billow's corps marching to Wellington's assistance. A 
letter was now awaiting despatch to Grouchy, and to it was added 
a postscript that the battle was raging with Wellington, that 
Bulow's corps had been sighted by the emperor, and that the 
marshal was to hasten to the field and'erush BGlow. This order 
at least was precise and clear, but it was sent 12 hours too late, 
and when Grouchy received it he was unable to carry it out. 
To neutralize Bulow when necessity arose, the emperor now 
detached Lobau together with the squadrons of Domon and 
Subervie. The French general, however, hardly drew out 
far enough from the French right; otherwise the magnificent 
resolution he displayed and the admirable obstinacy with which 
his troops fought against ever-increasing odds are worthy of 
all praise. Thus as early as x.30 tm. the Prussian interven- 
tion deranged the symmetry of Napoleon's battle-array. 

It did not occur to the emperor that it would be wise to break 
off the fight now and seek a more favourable opportunity of 
beating the allies in detail. He was still determined to play 
the game out to the bitter end, and involve Wellington and 
Bulow's corps in a common ruin. 



WATERLOO CAMPAIGN 




Map III. 



Ney was therefore ordered to attack Wellington's centre with 
D'Erlon's corps. Owing to a misconception the columns used 
for advance were over-heavy and unwieldy, and the 
corps failed to achieve anything of importance. Aa 
D'Erlon's troops advanced the Dutch-Belgian brigade 
in front of the ridge, which had been subjected to an overwhelm- 
ing fire from the 80 French guns at close range, turned about 
and retired in disorder through the main position. This, however, 
was the solitary success secured by the I. corps; for the left 
division failed to storm La Haye Sainte, which was most gallantly 
defended, and Picton's division met the remainder of D'Erlon's 
corps face to face, engaging them in a murderous infantry 
duel in which Picton fell. It was during this struggle that Lord 
Uxbridge launched two of his cavalry brigades on the enemy; 
and the " Union brigade n catching the French infantry unawares 
rode over them, broke them up, and drove them to the bottom 
of the slope with the loss of two eagles. The charge, however, 
over-reached itself, and the British cavalry, crushed by fresh 
French horsemen hurled on them by the emperor, were driven 
back with great loss. So far no success against Wellington had 
been achieved, and Billow was still an onlooker. 

Ney was now ordered to attack La Haye Sainte again, but the 
attack failed. A furious cannonade raged, and the Anglo-Dutch 
line withdrew slightly to gain more cover from the 
ridge. Ney misinterpreted this manoeuvre and led 
out, about 4 p.m., Milhaud's and Lefebvre-DesnoueUtes' 
horsemen (43 squadrons) to charge the allied centre between the 
two farms. For several reasons, the cavalry could only advance 
at a ' rscmen closed they were received with 



m* 



volleys of case from the guns, and the infantry formed into 
squares. Against the squares the horsemen were powerless, 
and failing to break a single square, they were finally swept off 
the plateau by fresh allied horsemen. Kellermann's cuirassiers 
and the heavy horse of the Guard (37 fresh squadrons) now 
advanced to support the baffled cavalry, the latter falling in as 
supports. The whole 80 squadrons resumed the attack, but with 
no belter result. The cavalry gradually became hopelessly 
entangled among the squares they were unable to break, and 
at last they were driven down the face of the ridge and the most 
dramatic part of the battle came to an end. Had these great 
cavalry attacks been closely supported by infantry, there can 
be little doubt that they must have achieved their object. But 
they were not. In his handling of the three arms together. 
Napoleon on this day failed to do justice to his reputation. 

About 4.30 p.m. Biilow at last engaged. Lobau's men were 
gradually overpowered and forced back into Plancenoit, the 
village was stormed, and the Prussian round shot reached 
the main road. To set his right flank free the emperor called 
further on his reserve, and sent Duhesme with the Young Guard 
to Lobau's support. Together, these troops drove Biilow out 
of Plancenoit, and forced him back towards the Paris wood. 
But the Prussians had not yet changed the fate of the day. 

Napoleon now ordered Ney to carry La Haye Sainte at what- 
ever cost, and this the marshal accomplished with the wrecks 
of D'Erlon's corps soon after 6 p.m. The garrison 
(Ring's German Legion) had run out of rifle ammuni- 
tion and the French bursting in seized the post. This 
Was the first decided advantage that Napoleon had gained during 



WATERLOO-WITH-SEAFORTH— WATERLOW 



381 



the day. The key of the date's position mi now in Napoleon's 
hands, Wellington's centre was dangerously shaken, the troops 
were exhausted, and the reserves inadequate. But the Iron Duke 
faced the situation unmoved. Calmly he readjusted his line and 
strengthened the torn centre. Happily for him, Pirch I.'s and 
Zieten's corps were now at hand. Pirch I. moved to support 
Billow; together they regained possession of Plancenoit, and once 
more the Charleroi road was swept by Prussian round shot. 
Napoleon, therefore, had to free his right flank before he could 
make use of Ney's capture. To this end he sent two battalions 
of the Old Guard to storm Plancenoit. The veterans did the work 
magnificently with the bayonet, ousted the Prussians from the 
place, and drove them back 600 yards beyond it. But Napoleon 
could not turn now on Wellington. Zieten was iast coming 
up on the duke's left, and the crisis was past. Zieten's advent 
permitted the two fresh cavalry brigades of Vivian and Vandeleur 
on the duke's extreme left to be moved and posted behind the 
depleted centre. The value of this reinforcement at this particular 
moment can hardly be overestimated. 

The French army now fiercely attacked Wellington all along the 
line; and the culminating point of this phase was reached when 
Napoleon sent forward the Guard, less 5 battalions, 
-£, to attack Wellington's centre. Delivered in three 
echelons, these final attacks were repulsed, the first 
echelon by Colin Halkett's British Brigade, a Dutch-Belgian 
battery, and a brigade of Chasse's Dutch-Belgian division; 
the second and third echelons by the Guards, the sand, and the 
Royal Artillery. Thus ended the fifth phase. 

A* the Guard recoiled (about 8 p.n) Zieten pierced the north- 
east corner of the French front, and their whole line gave way 
Mm . mgtMm as the allies rushed forward on their now defenceless 
/!££ prey. Three battalions of the Guard indeed stood their 
ground for some time, but they were finally over- 
whelmed. Afterwards, amidst the ruins of their army, two 
battalions of the 1st Grenadiers of the Guard defied all efforts to 
break thenv But, with the exception of these two battalions, the 
French army was quickly transformed into a flying rabble. 
Bulow and Pirch L now finally overpowered Lobau, once more 
recaptured Plancenoit, and sealed the doom of the French army. 
But Lobau's heroic efforts had not been in vain; they had 
given his master time to make his last effort against Wellington; 
and when the Guard was beaten back the French troops 
holding Plancenoit kept free the Charleroi road, and prevented 
the Prussians from seizing Napoleon's line of retreat 

When Wellington and Blucher met about o.r$ P.M." at 
"La Belle Alliance," the victorious chiefs arranged that 
the Prussians should take up the pursuit, and they faithfully 
carried out the agreement Pushing on through the night, they 
drove the French out of seven successive bivouacs and at length 
drove them over the Sambre. The campaign was virtually 
at an end, and the price paid was great The French had lost 
over 40,000 men and almost all their artillery on June 18; the 
Prussians lost 7000, and Wellington over 15,000 men. So 
desperate was the fighting that some 45»ooo killed and wounded 
lay on an area of roughly 3 sq. m. At one point on the plateau 
u the »7th (InniskiDlngs) were lying literally dead in square "; 
and the position that the British infantry held was plainly marked 
by the red line of dead and wounded they left behind them. 

A few words may now be bestowed on Marshal Grouchy, 
commanding the right wing. The marshal wrongly determined 
ftgMt -, on the z8th to continue his march to Wavre in a single 
fnfiam column, and be determined, still more wrongly, to 
*• move by the right bank of the Dyie. Breaking up 

*"** from bivouac long after dawn, he marched forward, 
via Walhain. Here he stopped to report to the emperor some 
intelligence which turned out to be false, and he remained for 
breakfast. Hardly had he finished when the opening roar of 
the cannonade at Waterloo was heard. Grouchy was now urged 
by bis generals, especially by Gerard, to march to the sound of 
the firing, but he refused to take their advice, and pushed on to 
Wavre, where he found the Prussians (Thielemann's corps of 
16,000 men) holding the passages across the Dyle. A fierce fight 



(called the Action of Wavre) began about 4 *.*., in which the 
Prussians were for long victorious. Instead of concentrating 
his force upon one bridge over the swampy and unfordable 
Dyle, Grouchy scattered it in attacks upon several; and when 
the emperor's despatch arrived, saying Bulow was in sight, the 
marshal was powerless to move westward. Towards the end of 
the day Colonel Vallin's Hussars stormed the Limale bridge, and 
a large part of Grouchy's force then promptly gained the left 
bank. The action continued till about 11 p.m., when it died out, 
to recommence shortly after dawn. Thielemann was at length 
overborne by sheer weight of numbers, and towards 11 ajc 
he was forced to retire towards Louvain. The losses were con- 
siderable, about 2400 men on each side. 

Grouchy's victory was barren. In the far higher duty of co- 
operation be had failed miserably. His tactical achievement 
could avail the emperor nothing, and it exposed his own force 
to considerable danger. Whilst pondering on the course he should 
follow, the marshal received the news of the awful disaster that 
had overtaken the emperor at Waterloo. In a flash he realized 
his danger and made prompt arrangements to begin his retreat 
on Namur, the only tine to France that was then available. 
This retreat he carried out resolutely, skilfully and rapidly, 
.slipping past BlUcher and finally bringing his force to Paris. 
But the rapid advance of the allies gave France no time to rally. 
Napoleon was forced to abdicate, and finding escape was impos- 
sible, he surrendered (on July 14) to the British—" the most 
powerful, the most unwavering and the most generous of his foes." 

The causes of Napoleon's failure in the Waterloo campaign were 
as follows:— The French army was numerically too weak for the 
gigantic task it undertook. Napoleon himself was no longer the 
Napoleon of Marengo or Austerlrtx, and though he was not broken 
down* his physical strength was certainly impaired. Ney failed to 
grasp and now Wellington on the critical 17th June; and on the 
17th and 18th Grouchy's feeble and false manoeuvres enabled 
BKkcher to march and join Wellington at Waterloo. Napoleon's 
chance of success was dangerously diminished, if not utterly de- 
stroyed, by the incompetence of the two marshals whom in an evil 
hour he selected for high commands. Another dominant influence in 
shaping the course of event* was the loyalty of Blucher to his ally, 
and the consequent appearance of the Prussian army at Waterloo. 
Nor mast we overlook Wellington's unswerving determination to 
co-operate with Blucher at all costs, and his firmness on June 18; 
or the invincible steadiness shown by the British troops and those 
of the King'* German Legion. 

BiBLrocEA pit*.— Some of the principal books on the campaign are : 
Colonel Grouard, Critique de 181$ ; H. Houssaye, Waterloo; General 
Polko, Waterloo {1815); Shaw-Kennedy, Batik of Waterloo; 
Captain W. Siborne, oth Foot, History of Ike Waterloo Campaign; 
Clausewits, Campagne de i8iSi Colonel Charras, Histoire de la 
Campagne de 1815, Waterloo; L. Naves, Les Quatre Bras, Litny, 
Waterloo et Wavre; General H. T. Siborne, R.E., Waterloo Letters'. 
Colonel Cbetaey,- Waterloo Lactates'. Wellington, Despatches and 
Memorandum en the Battle of Waterloo; Correspondance and Com* 
mis flu in j of Napoleo n . 

la this arricfc the writer has been greatly assisted by the advice 
and suggestions of Lieut.-CoL H. W. L. Hime, RJV. (A. F. B.*) 

WATBBL0O-W1TH-SBAFORTH, an urban district in the 
Bootle and Ormskirk parliamentary, divisions of Lancashire, 
England, at the mouth of the Mersey, 4 m. N. by W. of Liverpool. 
Pop. (1891) 17,225; (xoor) 93,102. On account of its facilities 
for bathing, firm sands, pleasant scenery and nearness to Liver- 
pool, of which it is a suburb, it is much frequented both by 
visitors and by residents. 

WATERLOW, SIR ERNEST ALBERT (1850- ), English 
painter, was born in London, and received the main part of his 
art education in the Royal Academy schools, where, in 1873, 
he gained the Turner medal for landscape-painting. He was 
elected associate of the Royal Society of Painters in Water-Colours 
in 1880, member in 1804, and president in 1807; associate of 
the Royal Academy in 1890, and a c ade m i ci an in 1903; and he 
was knighted in 1902. He began to exhibit in 187s and has 
produced a considerable number of admirable landscapes, in 
oil and water-colour, handled with grace and distinction. One 
of his pictures, " Galway Gossips, J ' is in the National Gallery 
of British Art. 

See Sir E. A. Waterlov. RA. t J»Jc,rW., by C. Churns Baker {Art 
Journal Office, 1906). 



3«2 



WATER MOTORS 



WATER MOTOR!. The subject of hydraulic transmission 
of power is treated generally under Power Transmission 
(Hydraulic), and the present article is confined to water motors. 

Hydraulic Lifts,— The direct-acting lift is perhaps the simplest 
of all machines using pressure-water, but as the height of the 
lift increases, certain problems in construction become exceedingly 
difficult to cope with, notably those due to the great increase 
in the weight and displacement of the ram. In fact, with a 
simple ram it b not possible to lift beyond a certain height 
with a given pressure and load. It becomes, therefore, necessary 
to balance in some way the varying displacement of the ram 
if economy is to be secured in the working: this is often done by 
the use of counter-weights attached to chains travelling over 
head sheaves, but this largely destroys the simplicity and safety 
of the direct-acting lift, and hence some form. of hydraulic 
balancing is more satisfactory and more certain. 

la one form, shown in fig. I, the lift cylinder is in hydraulic 
connexion with a pair of short cylinders placed one above the other, 
the pistons working in them being 
r..nr-i i- J together by a common 
rixl- Hi-low the piston of the upper 
cylinder is an annular space E 
(surruunding the common piston 
r... ]:■ with a capacity equal to the 
nuiimum displacement of the lift— 
mm. while the corresponding 
annular area C of the piston of the 
lower cylinder it just large enough 
when subji-ctcd to the working 
water pressure to enable the wont 
oit lifting the net load to be done 
And any friction to be overcome. 
The area B of the top side of the 
upper piston ia proportioned in such 
a way that *hen under the full 
water pressure the dead weight of 
the mm and cage is just balanced 
whim the former is at the bottom 
of in stroke. With this arrange- 
merit the lift - lam and the two 
balance, pUtonj are always in equi- 
librium, or, in other words, the 
ever 'changing displacement of the 
lift- ram u automatically in balance. 
To work the lift, pressure-water is 
admitted to the annular space C 
> balance 



ftaft frfUli 




above the lower of the two 
piit orts ( i he space B above the upper 
.mp ia always in commu n ica ti o n 
frith the prraure-water), and the 
combined pressure on the two pis- 
ton* b lufficicnt to lift the cage, 
mm and load. As the ram ascends 
it apparently increases in weight! 
but this is balanced by the greater 
pressure on the two balance pistons 
a* thev descend, owing to the in- 
crc-aw: of the head of water acting 
on them. To -How the lift-ram to 
descend, the pressure-water in C 
above the lower balance piston is 
discharged through the exhaust into 
the drain, while that above the 
upper piston u simply pushed back 
Into the pressure mam. As an 
illustration of the economy of this 
aysiem, it may be mentio n ed that 

[it one Uft having a 64n. 

liii of 90 ft., the working load being 
t ton and the maximum working 
speed 180 ft. a minute, the quantity 
ol pleasure- water used per journey of 
90 ft- was reduced from 109 to 24* 

fattens by the use of this method of 
alantiu£. 

n of hydraulic balance (fig. 2) the ram A has an 

annul it urea to proportioned that when it i* connected with the 

cite* in un elevated unit (u hi ally placed somewhere in the roof of 

* buihluftf), the hydraulic pnrwun; upon it just balances the weight 

d cage. Here again , since the in ternary of the pressure 

iea greater *s it doscend* owing to the increased head, the 

of weight of the lift -ram at it riae* is automatically 

rater from the htgh-prr&HJTc system b admitted down 

iw rara H and doea the *wk of tifting the live load. 

the fr * -Q-toveJ electric railways in London 



Flo. t^— Hydraulic 



and elsewhere, hydraulic passenger lifts on a large scale have been 
brought into use for conveying passengers up and down from the 
street level to the underground stations. 

Dired-adint Water Motors.— Owing to the difficulty of securing 
a durable motor with a simple and trustworthy means of auto- 
matically regulating the quantity of water used 
to the power needed at various times from 
the motor, not much advance has been] 
recently made in the use of water motors' 
with reciprocating rams or pistons. Prob- 
ably the most successful one has been a 
rotary engine invented by Mr Arthur Rigg. 1 

In this engine the stroke, and therefore the 
amount of water used, can be varied either by . 
hand or by a governor while it is running; the j 
speed can also be varied, very high rates, as 
much as 600 revolutions a minute, being attain- 
able without the question of shock or vibration 
becoming troublesome. The cylinders are cast 
in one piece with a circular valve, and rotate 
about a main stud S (fig. 3), while their 
plungers are connected to a disk crank which 
rotates above the point O, which is the centre 
of the main crank; O S being the crank length 
or half stroke of the engine, any variation in 
its length will vary the power of the engine and 
at the same time the quantity of water used. 
The movement of S is obtained by means of 
a relay engine, in which there are two rams of 
different diameters; a constant pressure is 
always acting on the smaller of these when the 
motor is at work, while the governor (or hand- 
power if desired) admits or exhausts pressure- 
water from the face of the other, and the move- 
menu to and fro thus given to the two rams alter 
the position of the stud S, and thus change the 
stroke of the plungers of the main engine. Fig. 4 
gives an outside view of a 30-lI.P. engine capable 
of using water at a pressure of 700 lb per sq. 
in.; the governor b carried within the driving 
pulley shown at the right-hand end, while the 
working revolving cylinders are carried inside 
the boxed-in flywheel at the left-hand end, the 
relay cylinder and its attachments being fixed to 
the bed-plate in front of the flywheel. On a 
test one of these engines gave an efficiency or 
duty of 80%. 

Water Wheels.— The Pelton water wheel 
(fig. 5) has proved a most successful motor 
when very high heads are available, heads 
of 2000 feet having been used occasionally. 
Such machines have been extensively em- 
ployed in America, and have also lately^, 
been used in Great Britain, worked by the ¥w '^^^ 6n ^ c 
high-pressure water supplied in large towns. oaian ng. 

The wheel carries a series of cups placed at equal distances around 
the circumference. A jet or jets of water impinge on the cups, the 
interiors of which are shaped in such a way that the jet is discharged 
parallel to its original direction. If the linear velocity of the cupa 
in feet a second is V lf and the linear velocity of the jet is V», then 
the velocity of the jet relative to the cup is V t — V*i feet a second, 
and if the whole energy of 
the water ia to be given S^ 
up to the cups, the water V^ /d 
must leave the cup with -^* 
zero absolute velocity. 
But its velocity relative to 
the cup, as it passes back- 
»- '- ^-(VV-Vi), and 




since the forward velocity 
of the cup is V t , the abso- 
lute velocity of the water is 
-(Vs-V 1 )+V,or2V,-V^ 
This will become aero if 
Vi b iVt, that is, if the 
linear velocity of the cup- 
centres is one-half that of 
the jet of water impinging 
upon them. The theoretical 
efficiency of the wheel 
would then be 100%. The 
actual efficiency of these 

wheels when used with high falls Is from 80 to *6%; 
used in connexion with high-pressure water in London an efficiency 



Fie. 3. — Section of Rigg s Water* 
Engine. 



> This engine was fully described in Eaginssrwig, vol. xrm p. 61. 



WATER MOTORS 



and when a dynamo is driven directly 
lydraulic energy has been converted into 



3«3 



of 70% has be 

by them about 66 % of the 

electric energy. 

Pelton wbeeb are very sensitive to variation of load, and con- 
siderable trouble was experienced at first in securing adequate 




Fio. 4.— External View of Rigg's Water-Engine.* 

governing when they were used to generate electric energy; but 
this difficulty has been overcome, andthey have been rendered most 
efficient machines for use with high falls, where ordinary turbines 
would be difficult to manage owing to the excessive speed at which 
they would run. In a small installation in the United States water 
b brought in a 36-in. pipe a distance of 1800 ft., and supplies six 

Pelton wheels each 28 in. 
in diameter, running at 135 
revolutions a minute under 
a head of 130 ft. The total 
power developed is 600 H.P., 
and though the load factor 
varies very greatly in this 
case, the differential type of 
governor used secures perfect 
control of the running of the 
wheels. 

Turbines.— The turbine 
has now become one of 
the most efficient of the 
prime movers employed by 
man, and in the United States of America and on the continent 
of Europe 1 its use has enormously increased of recent years. 
Though no radical changes have been made in the design of tur- 
bines for some years, an immense amount of skill and ingenuity 
has been shown in perfecting and improving details, and such 
machines of great size and power are now constantly being 
made, and give every satisfaction when in use, 

In the " Hercules '* turbine, shown in fig. 6, the flow is what is 
called mixed, that is, it is partly a radial inward and partly an axial 
Bow machine. On entering, the water flows at first in a radial 
direction, and then gradually, as it passes through the wheel, it 
receives a downward component which becomes more and more 
important. Professor Thurston has published the results of a test 



rf one of these, wlu^ gave an effiaeac^ 
at about three-fifths full load. 

Another turbine of the mixed flow type is tne " Victor," which 
consists of three parts— the outer guide case, and, inside this, the 
gate, and the wbeeL The gate regulates the speed of the 
wheel by varying the quantity of water; when fully open it 
merely forms a continuation of the guide passages, and 
thus offers no obstruction to the flow of the water, but by 
giving it a movement through a part of a revolution the 
passages are partly blocked and the flow of the water is 
checked. Tins form of regulation is fairly efficient down 
to three-quarter opening. Turbines of this type may also 
be used on horizontal shafts, and are very useful in the case 
of low falls where there is a large amount of water and the 
head is fairly constant. At Massena, in New York State, 
75,000 H.P. is to be developed from fifteen sets of these 
turbines working under a head of 40 ft. Each generator 
can develop 5000 H.P. at a potential of 2200 volts, and is 
driven by three horizontal double turbines on the same 
shaft; when working under a minimum head of 3a ft. at 
150 revolutions, each turbine will have a nominal horse- 
power of 1000. 

Probably the most important application of turbines to 
the generation of power on a great scale is that at Niagara 
Falls. The water is tapped oflT from the river Niagara about 
1 m. above the falls and brought by a canal to the power- 
house. The wheel-pit is 180 ft. in depth, and is connected 
with the river below the falls by a mil-race, consisting of 
a tunnel 21 ft. high and 18 ft 10 in. wide at its largest 
section. The original turbines were of the " Fourneyron " 
type, and a pah* were mounted on each vertical shaft, tne two 
being capable of giving out 5000 H.P. with a fall of 136 ft. 
Each pair of wheels is built in three storeys, and the outflow 
of the water is controlled by a cylindrical gate or sluice, which is moved 
up and down by the action 01 the governor. As the pair of wheels 
and the big vertical shaft (which b of hollow steel 38 in. in diameter) 
with the revolving part of the dynamo mounted on the upper end 
of the shaft weigh about 152,000 lb, a special device, since adopted 
in other similar power plants, was designed to balance in part this 




Fig. 5.— Pelton Wheel 



■This and some of the other drawings have been taken from 
Blaine's Hydratdic Machinery. 

* The following statistics of turbine construction in Switzerland 
are taken from Sckweiteriscke Batueitunt (1001). p. 128, which, in 
the same volume at p. 53, contains a valuanle article on the most 



snportant im; 
in the Paris 



its in turbines and their regulation shown 
litkm of 1901 : — 



Period. 


Number 

of 
Turbines. 


Total H.P 


Average 


1844-1869 
1869-1879 
1 879-1 860 
1880-1899 

Totab 


5Z 
T006 

1840 

2231 


133.579 
400,474 


72} 
179* 


5844 


637.635 






Fie 6.—" Hercules " Turbine. 

dead weight. The water passes from the penstock through the guide 
blades ofthe upper wheel, and in doing so acts in an upward direction 
on a cover of the upper wheel, which thus becomes, as it were, 
a balance-piston. The total upward pressure on this piston is cal* 
culated to be equal to 150,000 lb; hence the shaft-bearings are 
practically relieved from pressure when the wheels are running. 
Another turbine which has come into extensive use b the " Francis/' 
an exceedingly efficient turbine on a low fall with large quantities 
of water. At SchafThauscn two of them with a fall 01 ial ft. de- 
veloped 430 H.P., when the older turbines only gave 260 H.P., the 



3 «4 



WATER-OPOSSUM— WATER POLO 



_ ... r of the Francis turbine being in this case 66% at full load 
and 77% at half load. 

A recent form of the Jonval turbine is shown in fig. 7. This 
turbine was designed to give 1250 H.P. with a fall of 25 ft. and an 
efficiency of 77%. It is fitted with a suction pipe and a circular 
balanced sluice for admitting and cutting off the water-supply. 
The wheel is 12 ft. 3! in. in diameter, and has a speed of fifty revolu- 
tions per minute, and the power generated is transmitted through 
bevel-gearing to a horizontal shaft from which the power is taken 




Fig. 7.— Jonval Turbine. 

off for various purposes. When complete the torbine weighed 
about 140 tons. There is a regulating arrangement, by which one- 
half of the guide-passages can be shut off in pairs from the water, 
and at the same time air is freely admitted into these unused passages 
by pipes which pass through the hinges of the controlling shutter. 
Tests of a turbine of this slow-moving type showed an efficiency of 
82% at full gate, and one of 75% when half of the passages in the 
guide-blades were closed by the shutters, as described above. 

As an illustration of the use of water-power, even at a considerable 
distance from a town, the case of Lausanne may be described. The 
town has secured the right of using a waterfall of 113 to 118 ft. 
high, by impounding the Rhone near Saint Maurice. In dry seasons 
this will supply 6000 H.P.. and for quite ten months in an ordinary 
year 14,000 H.P. The plant in 1902 consisted of five turbines, 
having horizontal axles, and each developing 1000 H.P. when 
running at 300 revolutions a minute. They drive electric generators, 
and the current so produced is taken at a pressure of 22,000 volts 
on overhead wires a distance of 35 m. to Lausanne, the loss being 
estimated not to exceed 10% in the long transmission. Near the 
town is a station for reducing the voltage, and current is distributed 
at 125 volts for lighting purposes and at 500 volts for use on the 
tramways and for other power purposes. 

Authorities. — For further information concerning the construc- 
tion and employment of water motors, the reader is referred to the 
followingpapcrs and textbooks.*— Proc. Inst. Meek. Eng. (1882), p.119 
(1889), p. — - '° " % ~ — " rH -~" — - — ■*- : - Ln ~— — 
of recent 
" Power 

ing of W 

"Mersey Railway Lifts"; vol. xciii. p. 596, " Experiments on 
Jonval and Girard Turbines at Alching ; vol. xcvi. p. 182, " Hy- 
draulic Canal Lifts"; vol. cii. p. 154, " Keswick Water-Power 
Electric Station " ; vol. cxii. p. 410, " Hydraulic Works at Niagara "; 
vol. cxviii. p. 537, " A 12-Mile Transmission of Power Generated by 
Pelton Wheels Y/ ; vol. exxiii. p. 530, " The Pelton Water Wheel ,r ; 
vol. exxiv. p. 223, "The Niagara Power Works"; vol. exxvi. 
p. 494, "The Rheinfelden Power Transmission Plant "; vol. cxIL 
p. 269. " Electric Transmission Plants in Transvaal," p. 307, " Tur- 
bines "; vol. cxlii. p. 451, " Electrical Installations at Lausanne "; 
vol. cxlv. p. 423, ,f Water Power at Massena "; vol. cxlvii. p. 467, 
"Some Large Turbine Installations."— Wood, Theory of Turbines; 
Bovey, Hydraulics; Bidding, Hydraulic Motors', Blaine, Hydraulic 
Machinery; Bodmer, Hydraulic Motors; Unwin, "Water Motors" 
(Lectures on Hydro-Mechanics, Inst. CitU Eng., 1885). (T. H. B.) 

WATER-OPOSSUM, or Yapock {Chironectcs minimus), the 
tingle representative of the genus. This animal is distinguished 
from other opossums by its webbed hind-feet, non-tubercuJated 
soles, and peculiar coloration. Its ground colour is light grey, 
with four or five sharply contrasted brown bands passing across 
its bead and back, giving it a very peculiar mottled appearance; 
the head - " are about 14 in. long, and the tail 

mcasur lmost wholly aquatic in its habits, 



living on small fish, crustaceans and other water animals; iff 
range extends from Guatemala to southern BraxiL 

WATER POLO* a game which has dona much to advance 
swimming in popular favour and to improve the stamina of 
swimmers. It is played either in a bath or open water, the teams 
consisting of seven a side. The field of play must not exceed 
30 yds. or be less than 19 yds. in length, and the width must not 
be more than 20 yds. The ball used must be round and fully 
inflated, and must not measure less than 26f , nor more than '28 in. 
in circumference. It must be waterproof, with no strapped 
seams outside, and no grease or other objectionable substance 
placed on it. The goals must be 10 ft. in width, with a cross-bar 
3 ft. above the surface when the water is 5 ft. or over in depth, 
and 8 ft. from the bottom when the water is less than 5 ft. in 
depth; in no case must the water in which a game is played 
be less than 3 ft. Goal nets are used in all important matches. 
The duration of a match is supposed to be 14 minutes, seven 
minutes each way. The officials consist of a referee, a time- 
keeper and two goal scorers, the first-named official starting 
the game by throwing the ball into the centre of the bath. 
A goal is scored by the entire ball passing between the goal 
posts and under the cross-bar. 

The players have to place themselves in a line with their re sp ec ti ve 
goals, and are not allowed to start swimming to the centre of the 
bath until the word " Go " is given. They are usually divided into 
3 forwards, 1 half-back, 2 backs and a goalkeeper. To the fastest 
swimmer is usually assigned the place of centre-forward, and it is 
his duty to make all headway possible so as to reach the ball before 
the opposing forward of the other side, then pass rapidly back to the 
half or one of the backs and swim on to within close proximity of 
the opponent's goal and wait for a pass. The other forwards should 
rapidly follow him up and each man carefully shadow one of the 
opposing side. In handling the ball only one hand may be used, 
for to touch the ball with both hands at the same time constitutes 
a foul, as also does the holding of the rail or the side, during any 
part of the game, the standing on or touching of the bottom of the 
bath except for the purpose of resting, interfering or impeding an 
opponent in any way, unless he be holding the ball, holding the hail 
under water when tackled, jumping from the bottom or pushing off 
from the side (except at starting or restarting) in order to play the 
ball or duck an opponent, holding, pulling back or pushing off from 
an opponent, turning on the back to lock at an opponent, assisting 
a player at the start or restart to get a good push off, throwing the 
ball at the goalkeeper from a free throw or retua' * * * ** 



ing to play the ball 
? ball has been out 



at the command of the referee after a foul or the 

of the field of play. Dribbling or striking the ball is held to be not 
holding, but lifting, carrying, pressing under water or placing the 
band under or over the ball when actually touching, is holding; 
dribbling up the bath and through the posts is permissible. There 
is a penalty area, 4 yds. from each goal-post, and the imaginary line 
across the bath is not allowed to be passed by the respective goal- 
keepers, otherwise they commit a fouL They may stand to defend 
their goal, touch the ball with both hands or jump from the bottom 
to play the ball, but in all other respects the same rules as to fouls 
apply to them as to other players. In any case they are not allowed 
to throw the ball beyond half-distance. If they do so the opposing 
side is awarded a free throw. For fouls which the referee considers 
to have been committed wilfully there are very severe penalties, and 
those guilty of them are ordered out of the water until a goal has been 
scored, thus for the time being crippling the side. Deliberately 
wasting time, starting before the word " Go," taking; up a position 
within 2 yds. of the opponent's goal, changing position after the 
whistle has blown for a free throw or other similar stoppage of play, 
or deliberately splashing an opponent in the face, are all held to be 
wilful fouls. Whenever the whistle blows for fouls the players have 
to remain in their respective places until the ball has left the hand 
of the player to whom the free throw was awarded. A player who 
has been wilfully fouled within 4 yds. of his opponent's goal Une is 
given a penalty throw, and the consequence is that a close match 
is often won by reason of a player deliberately breaking the rules 
when his goal is hotly assailed. In ordinary fouls the ball must 
touch another player before a goal can be scored, but in penalty 
throws it need not. Any player throwing the ball over his own 
goal line concedes a corner throw to the other side, but if an opposing 
player sends it over it is a free throw for the goalkeeper. After each 
goal is scored the players return to their respective ends, waiting 
lor the word " Go, and at half-time they are allowed a rest of three 
minutes, during which they leave the water. Fouls, half-time and 
time are declared by whistle, apd goals by bell. 

The game requires careful practice of smart and sdentific passing, 
side and back-handed throws, and accurate shooting. For this 
purpose " throwing the water-polo ball " contests are commonly 
held by the leading clubs, who also engineer competitions on points 
for shooting at goal. 



WATER RIGHTS 



385 



It was not until the formation of the London Water Polo 
League in 1889 that the game was specially catered for, but a 
form of it had previously been known and played in several 
parts of England and Scotland In 1870 the old London Swim- 
ming Association, the forerunner of the present Amateur 
Swimming Association, appointed a committee to draw up rules 
for a game of " Football in the water,"" but no report of that 
committee appears to have been presented. In 1876 aquatic 
handball matches were played in the sea off Bournemouth by 
members of the Bournemouth Premier Rowing Club, and in 1877 
there were similar matches at the annual competition for the 
Bon Accord Club in the river Dee, and a year prior to that 
some rules had been drawn up for the Aberdeen Club. The game 
at length found its way to the Midlands, and led to the foundation 
of the Midland Aquatic Football Association, whose rules were 
somewhat similar to those in vogue in America, where goals 
are scored by placing the ball in a marked-out space called 
"goal/* In 1883 Birmingham Leander played All England at 
Portsmouth; in 1885 the Amateur Swimming Association took 
official recognition of the game, and in 188S started the English 
championship, this being won the first year by Burton-on-Trent. 
Then came the foundation of the London Water Polo League, 
through whose agency- county associations came into being, 
inter-county matches were played, and international games 
arranged The first county matches were played in 1890, and 
the first international the same year, the game being between 
England and Scotland at Kensington Baths on 28th July. 
England was beaten by four goals to none, but the outcome of 
the match was the cementing of friendly relations between the 
English and Scottish associations, and the gradual spread of 
the game, until the English, Irish, Scottish and Welsh associa- 
tions joined together and formed an international board, without 
whose sanction none of the rules of the game can now be altered. 
Oxford and Cambridge met for the first time in 1891, and since 
then the Blues' committee of each university have given 
swimming and water polo a " half blue." The game has become 
popular in many European countries, and friendly matches 
between English and continental clubs are frequently played. 
It has also extended to Egypt, India and Australia, in which 
countries the British rules have been adopted. 

See the Amateur Swimming Association's Handbook for rules of 
the game and instructions to referees. (W. Hy.) 

WATER RIGHTS. By the law of England the property in 
the bed and water of a tidal river, as high as the tide ebbs and 
flows at a medium spring tide, is presumed to be in the crown 
or as a franchise in a grantee of the crown, such as the lord of 
a manor, or a district council, and to be extra-parochial. The 
bed and water of a non-tidal river are presumed to belong to 
the person through whose land it flows, or, if it divide two 
properties, to the riparian proprietors, the rights of each extend- 
ing to midstream (ad medium fi!um aquae). In order to give 
riparian rights, the river must flow in a defined channel, or at 
least above ground. The diminution of underground water 
collected by percolation, even though malicious, does not give 
a cause of action to the owner of the land in which it collects, 
it being merely damnum sine injuria, though he is entitled to 
have it unpolluted unless a right of pollution be gained against 
him by prescription. The right to draw water from another's 
well is an easement, not a profit & prendre, and is therefore 
Aimi Mn by custom. - As a general rule a riparian proprietor, 
whether 011 a tidal or a non-tidal river, has full rights of user 
of his property. Most of the statute law will be found in the 
Sea Fisheries Acts 1843 to 1891, and the Salmon and Freshwater 
Fisheries Acts 1861 to 1866. In certain cases the rights of the 
riparian proprietors are subject to the intervening rights of other 
persons. These rights vary according as the river is navigable 
or not, or tidal or not. For instance, all the riparian proprietors 
might combine to divert a non-navigable river, though one 
alone could not do so as against the others, but no combination 
of riparian proprietors could defeat the right of the public to 
have a navigable river maintained undiverted. We shall here 
shortly the rights enjoyed by. and the limitations 



imposed upon, riparian proprietors, In addition to those falling 
under the head of fishery or navigation. In these matters 
English law is in substantial accordance with the law of other 
countries, most of the rules being deduced from Roman law. 
Perhaps the main difference is that running water is in Roman 
law a res communis, like the air and the sea. In England, 
owing to the greater value of river water for manufacturing 
and other purposes, it cannot be said to be common property, 
even though it may be used for navigation. The effect of this 
difference is that certain rights, public in Roman law, such as 
mooring and unloading cargo, bathing, drying nets, fishing for 
oysters, digging for sand, towing, &c, are only acquirable by 
prescription or custom in England. By Roman law, a hut might 
lawfully be built on the shore of the sea or of a tidal river; in 
England such a building would be a mere trespass. Preaching 
on the foreshore is not legal unless by custom or prescription 
» (Llandudno Urban Council v. Woods, 1809, a Ch. 705). Nor 
J may a fisherman who dredges for oysters appropriate a part of 
i the foreshore for storing them (Truro Corporation v. Route, 1902, 
i 2 K.B. 709). 

The right of usc*of the water of a natural stream cannot be better 
described than in the words of Lord Kingsdown in 1858; " By the 
general, law applicable to running streams, every riparian proprietor 
has a right to what may be called the ordinary use of water flowing 
past his land— for instance, to the reasonable use of the water for 
domestic purposes and for his cattle, and this without regard to the 
effect which such use may have in case of a deficiency upon pro- 
•prietors lower down the stream. But, further, he has a right to the 
use of it for any purpose, or what may be deemed the extraordinary 
use of it, provided he does not thereby interfere with the rights of 
other proprietors, either above or below him. Subject to this con- 
dition, he may dam up a stream for the purposes of a mill, or divert 
the water for the Durpoae of irrigation. But he has no right to inter- 
cept the regular flow of the stream, if he thereby interferes with the 
lawful use of the water by other proprietors, and inflicts upon them 
a sensible injury " (Miner v. Ctlmour, 12 Moore VP.C. Cases. 156). 
The rights of riparian proprietors where the flow of water is artificial 
rest on a different principle. As the artificial stream is made by a 
person for his own benefit, any right of another person as a riparian 
proprietor does not arise at common law. as in the case of a natural 
stream, but must be established by grant or prescription. If its 
origin be unknown the inference appears to be that riparian pro- 
prietors have the same rights as if the stream had been a natural 
one {paily v. Clerk, 1902, 1 Ch. 640). The rights of a person not a 
riparian proprietor who uses land abutting on a river or stream by 
the licence or grant of the riparian proprietor are not as full as though 
he were a riparian proprietor, for he cannot be imposed as a riparian 
proprietor upon the other proprietors without their concent. The 
effect of this appears to be that he is not entitled to sensibly affect 
their rights, even by the Ordinary as distinguished from the extra- 
ordinary use of the water. Even a riparian proprietor cannot divert 
the stream to a place outside his tenement and there use it for pur- 
poses unconnected with the tenement (McCartney v. Londonderry 
of Louth Svilly Rly. Co.. 190a, A.C. 301). 

The limitations to which the right of the riparian proprietor is 
subject may be divided into those existing by common right, those 
imposed for public purposes, and those established against him by 
crown grant or by custom or prescription. Under the first head 
comes the public right of navigation, of anchorage and fishery from 
boats (in tidal waters), and ol taking shell-fish (and probably other 
fish except royal fish) on the shore of tidal waters as far as any 
right of several fishery does not intervene. Under the second head 
would fall the right of eminent domain by which the state takes 
riparian rights for public purposes, compensating the proprietor, 
the restrictions upon the sporting rights of the proprietor, as by 
acts forbidding the taking of fish in close time, and the Wild Birds 
Protection Acts, and the restrictions on the ground of public health, 
as by the Rivers Pollution Act 1876 and the regulations of port 
sanitary authorities. The jurisdiction of the state over rivers in 
England may be exercised by officers of the crown, as by commis- 
sioners of sewers or by the Board of Trade, under the Crown Lands 
Act 1866. A bridge is erected and maintained by the county 
authorities, and the riparian proprietor must bear any inconvenience 
resulting from it. An example of an adverse right by crown grant 
is a ferry or a port. The crown, moreover, as the guardian of the 
realm, has Jurisdiction to restrain the removal of the foreshore, the 
natural barrier of the sea. by its owner in case of apprehended danger 
to the coast. The rights established against a riparian proprietor by 
private persons must as a rule be based on prescription or custom. 
only on prescription where they are in the nature of profits d prendre. 
The public cannot claim' such rights by prescription, still less by 
custom. Among such rights are the right to land, to discharge cargo, 
to tow to dry nets, to beach boats, to take sand, shingle or water, to 
have a sea-wall maintained, to pollute the water (subject to the Rivers 



386 



WATER-SCORPION— WATERSPOUT 



Pollution Act), to water cattle, Ac. In some caaes the validity of 
local riparian customs has been recognized by the legislature. The 
right to enter on lands adjoining tidal waters for the purpose of watch- 
ing for and landing herrings, pilchards and other sea-fish was con- 
firmed to the fishermen of Somerset. Devon and Cornwall by I Jac. I. 
c 23. Digging sand on the shore of tidal waters for use as manure 
on the land was granted to the inhabitants of Devon and Cornwall by 
7 Jac. I. c. (8. The public right of taking or killing rabbits in the day- 
time on any sea bank or river bank in the county of Lincoln, so far 
as the tide extends, or within one furlong of such bank, was preserved 
by the Larceny Act 1881. It should be noticed that rights of the 
public may be subject to private rights. Where the river is navi- 
gable, although the right of navigation is common to the subjects of 
the realm, it may be connected with a right to exclusive access to 
riparian land, the invasion of which may form the ground for legal 
proceedings by the riparian proprietor (see Lyon v. The Fishmongers' 
Company. 1876, 1 A.C. 662). There is no common-law right of 
support by subterranean water. A grant of land passes all water- 
courses, unless reserved to the grantor. 

A freshwater lake appears to be governed by the same law as a 
aon-tidal river, surface water being pars soil. The preponderance of 
authority is in favour of the right of the riparian proprietors as against 
the crown. Most of the law will be found in BrisUm v Cormuan. 
1878. 3 A.C. 648. 

Unlawful and malicious injury to sea and river banks, towing paths, 
sluices, flood-gates, mill-dams, Ac or poisoning fish, is a crime 
under the Malicious Damage Act 1861. 

Ferry is a franchise created by grant or prescription. When 
created it is a highway of a special description, a monopoly to be 
used only for the public advantage, so that the toll levied must be 
reasonable. The grantee may have an action or an injunction for 



infringement of his rights by competition unless the infringement 

^e by act of parliament. In Hopkins v. C.N. Ry Co.. 1877. 2 

}.B.D. 224 (followed in Dibden v. Skirrow, 1907. 1 Ch. 437). it was 



I that the owner of a ferry cannot maintain an action lor loss of 
traffic caused by a new bridge or ferry made to provide for new traffic 
Many ferries are now regulated by local acts. 

Wetr. the gurges °f Domesday, the kidetlus of Magna Carta, as 
appurtenant to a fishery, is a nuisance at common law unless granted 
by the crown before 1272. From the etymology of ktdetlus the weir 
was probably at first of wicker, later of timber or stone The owner 
of a several fishery in tidal waters cannot maintain his claim to a weir 
unless he can show a title going back to Magna Carta. In private 
waters he must claim by grant or prescription. Numerous fishery 
acts from 25 Edw. 1 1 1, st. 4, c. 4 deal with weirs, especially with regard 
to salmon fishery. An interesting case is Hanbury v. Jenkins, 1901, 
2 Ch. 401. where it was held that a grant of " wears ** in the Usk by 
Henry VIII. in 1516 passed the bed of the river aa weQ as the right 
of fishing. 

Mill may be erected by any one. subject to local regulations and 
to his detaining the water no longer than is reasonably necessary for 
the working of the wheel. But if a dam be put across running water, 
the erection of it can only be justified by grant or prescription, or (in 
a manor) by manorial custom. On navigable rivers it must have 
existed before 1272. The owner of it cannot pen up the water 
permanently so as to make a pond of it. 

Balking— The reported cases affect only sea-bathing, but Hall 
(p. 160) is of opinion that a right to bathe in private waters may 
exist by prescription or custom. There is no common-law right to 
bathe in the sea or to place bathing-machines on the shore Pre- 
scription or custom is necessary to support a claim, whether the fore- 
shore is the property of the crown or of a private owner (Brtnckma* 
v. Motley, 1904. 2 Ch. 313). Bathing in the sea or in rivers is now 
often regulated by the by-laws of a local authority. 

Scotland.— The law of Scotland is in general accordance with that 
of England. One of the principal differences is that in Scotland. 
if a charter state that the sea is the boundary of a grant, the 
foreshore 'is included in the grant, subject to the burden of crown 

S" hts for public purposes. Persons engaged in the herring fishery 
the* const of Scotland have, by 11 Ceo. ill. c 31. the right to use 
the shore for 100 yds. from high-water mark for landing and drying 
nets, erecting huts and curing fish. By the Army Aa 1881. s. 143. 
soldiers on the march in Scotland pay only half toll at ferries. The 
right of ferry is one of the retalia minora acquirable by prescriptive 
possession on a charter of barony. Sea-greens are private property. 
The iijEht to take asm-red from another* foreshore may be prescribed 
rude. Inierfurentt «iih the free passage of salmon by 
f water to aniik-U! cN.ificn.-ls is restrainable by interdict 
m ^itorr k t9c*. AC. 4rfe). See the Salmon Fisheries 
Itftlft*. 

a Effwral accordance with that of England. 

6, the 1 riih court went perhaps beyond 

ie to carry away drift seaweed 

The Rivers Pollution Act 1876 

tWf act of 1893. 

common b* af England was originally 

Tmt 10 the ughi of the crown. This was 

11 original states, which are not 

» not generally followed 

-" ^-w cusditions. unknown in England. 




had arisen. Accordingly the soil of navigable rivets, fresh or salt; 
and of lakes, is vested in the state, which has power to regulate 
navigation and impose tolls. The admiralty jurisdiction of the 
United States extends to all public navigable nvers and lakes where 
commerce is carried 00 between different states or with foreign 
nations (Genesee Chief v. Fitxhugh. 12 Howard's Rep. 443). And 
in a case decided in 1893 it was held that the open waters of the 
great lakes are " high seas " within the meaning of § 3346 of the 
Revised Statutes (U.S. v. Rodger s. 150 U.S. Rep. 249): A state 
may establish ferries and authorize dams. But if water from a 
dam overflow a public highway, an indictable nuisance is caused. 
The right of eminent domain is exercised to a greater extent than 
in England in the compulsory acquisition of sites for mills and the 
construction of levees or embankments, especially on the Mississippi. 
In the drier country of the west and in the mining districts, the 
common law as to irrigation has had to be altered, and what was 
called the " Arid Region Doctrine " was gradually established. By 
it the first user of water has a right by priority of occupation if he 
give notice to the public of an intention to appropriate, provided 
that he be competent to hold land. 
Authorities —Hall's Essay on the Rights of the Crown on the Sea- 



Shore (1830) has been re-edited in 1875 and 1888. See also S. A. 
and H. S. Moore. History and Law of Fisheries (1003). Among 
American authorities are the works of Angcll. Gould and Pomcroy, 
on Waters and Watercourses, Washburn on Easements, Angcll on 
the Right of Property in Tide Waters, Kiroey on Irrigation and the 
Report to the Senate on Irrigation (1900). (J. W.) 

WATER-SCORPION, an aquatic hemipterous insect of the 
family Nepidae, so called from its superficial resemblance to a 
scorpion, which is due to the modification of the legs of the 
anterior pair for prehension, and to the presence of a long 
slender process, simulating a tail, at the posterior end of the 
abdomen. The common British species (Nepa cinerea) lives 
in ponds and stagnant water, and feeds upon aquatic animal 
organisms principally of the insect kind. Respiration in the 
adult is effected by means of the caudal process, which consists 
of a pah- of half-tubes capable of being locked together to form 
a siphon by means of which air is conducted to the tracheae 
at the apex of the abdomen when the tip of the tube is thrust 
above the surface of the water. In immature forms the siphon 
is undeveloped and breathing takes place through six pairs of 
abdominal spiracles. The eggs, laid in the stems of plants, 
are supplied with seven filamentous processes which float freely 
in the water. 

In Nepa the body is broad and flat; but in an allied water-bog. 
Ranatra, which contains a single British species (R. linearis), it Is 
bng and narrow, while the legs are very slender, and elongate. 
Certain exotic members of this group, sometimes erroneously 
referred to the Nepidae. but really forming a special family. Bek> 
stomidae. are of large size, a South American species, Betostoma 
grande, reaching a length of between 4 and 5 in. 

WATERSHED, in physical geography, the line separating the 
headstreams tributary to two different river-systems or basins. 
Alternative terms are " water-parting " and " divide." The 
crest of a mountain ridge forms the most dearly marked water- 
shed, in a plain country of gentle slope (e.g. the central plain of 
Ireland) the watershed is often difficult to trace, as the head- 
waters of two different river systems may merge in marshes or 
lakes at the highest levels. In a mountainous country, where 
two streams, flowing in opposite directions but having their 
sources adjacent, are both gradually eroding or cutting back 
the land at their heads, a pass is formed. In such cases, where 
one stream erodes faster than the other, the stronger may 
ultimately " behead " the weaker, and '* capture " some of its 
water s, wh ose flow is diverted from one basin to another. 

WATERSPOUT, a local vorticular storm occurring over a 
water-surface, and in origin and form similar to a tornado (o.«.) 
over the land. A whirling, funnel-shaped cloud, first observed 
as a pendant from the mass of storm-cloud above, seems to 
grow downwards, tapering, towards the water-surface, which is 
violently agitated, and finally (when the spout is fully developed) 
appears to be drawn up to meet the doud from above. This 
appearance is deceptive, as the bulk of the water carried along 
by the whirling spout is condensed from the atmosphere, and, 
even when the spout is formed over a salt-water surface, is 
found to be fresh. Waterspouts occur most frequently over 
the warm seas of the tropics, but they are not f"TfinH to the 
warmer tropical seasons, or even to low latitudes. 






COLLECTING AREAS) 



WATER SUPPLY 



387 



WATER SUPPLY. This article is confined to the collection 
and storage of water (or domestic and industrial uses and 
irrigation, and its purification on a large scale. The conveyance 
of water is dealt with in the article Aqueduct. 

Collecting Areas 

Surface Waters.— Any area, large or small, of the earth's 
surface from any part of which, if the ground were impermeable, 
water would flow by gravitation past any point in a natural 
watercourse is commonly known in Europe as the " hydro- 
graphic basin " above that point. In English it has been called 
indifferently the " catchment basin," the " gathering ground," 
the " drainage area " and the " watershed." The latter term, 
though originally equivalent to the German Wasscrscheide — 
" water-parting "—is perhaps least open to objection. The 
water-parting is the line bounding such an area and separating 
it from other watersheds. The banks of a watercourse or sides 
of a valley are distinguished as the right and left bank respectively, 
the spectator being understood to be looking down the valley 

The surface of the earth is rarely impermeable, and the 
structure of the rocks largely determines the direction of flow 
ef so much of the rainfall as sinks into the ground and is not 
evaporated. Thus the figure and area of a surface watershed 
may not be coincident with that of the corresponding under- 
ground watershed; and the flow in any watercourse, especially 
from a small watershed, may, by reason of underground flow 
from or into other watersheds, be dispropor- 
tionate to the area apparently drained by that 
watercourse. 

When no reservoir exists, the volume of 
continuous supply from any watershed area 
Dgy is evidently limited to the minimum, 

wtMikie or, so-called, extreme dry weather 
*w •/ jfa,, f ifc stream draining it. This 
Mn * mm cannot be determined from the rain- 
fall; it entirely depends upon the power of the 
soil and rock to store water in the particular 
area under consideration, and to yield it con- 
tinuously to the stream by means of conrcn- e=Z 
trated springs or diffused seepage. Mountain * r " 
areas of 10,000 acres and upwards, largely 
covered with moorland, upon nearly imper- 
meable rocks with few water-bearing fissures, yield in tem- 
perate climates, towards the end of the driest seasons, and 
therefore solely from underground, between a fifth and a 
quarter of a cubic foot per second per 1000 acres Through- 
out the course of the river Severn, the head- waters of which 
are chiefly supplied from such formations, this rate does not 
materially change, even down to the city of Worcester, past 
which the discharge flows from 1,256,000 acres. But in smaller 
areas, which on the average arc necessarily nearer to the water- 
parting, the limits are much wider, and the rate of minimum 
discharge is generally smaller. 

Thus, for example, on 1000 acres or leas, it commonly falls to one- 
tenth of a cubic foot, and upon an upland Silurian area of 040 acres, 
giving no visible sign of any peculiarity, the discharge fell, on the 
21st of September 1803, to one-thirty-fifth of a cubic foot per second 
per 1000 acres. In this case, however, some of the water probably 

SJ through the beds and joints of rocks to an adjoining valley 
at a lower level, and had both streams been gauged the average 
I probably have been considerably greater. The Thames at 
Tcddington. fed largely from cretaceous areas, fell during ten days in 
September 1898 (the artificial abstractions for the supply of London 
being added) to about one-sixth of a cubic foot, and since 1880 the 
uncharge has occasionally fallen, in each of six other cases, to about 
one-fifth of a cubic foot per second per tooo acres. Owing, however, 
to the very variable permeability of the strata, the tributaries of the 
Thames, when separately gauged in dry seasons, yield the most 
divergent results. It may be taken as an axiom that the variation 
of minimum discharges from their mean values increases as the 
separate areas diminish. In the eastern and south-eastern counties 
of England even greater variety of dry weather flow prevails than in 
the west, and upon the chain formations there are generally no 
surface streams, except such as burst out after wet weather and form 
the NxaMed" bournes." On the 01 her lund. some rocks in mountain 
* notably the granites, owing to the great quantity of water 



stored in their numerous fissures or joints, commonly yield a much 
higher proportion of so-called dry weather flow. 

When, however, a reservoir is employed to equalize the 
flow during and before the period of dry weather, the minimum 
flow continuously available may be increased to a 
much higher figure, depending upon the capacity of **"'** 
that reservoir in relation to the mean flow of the stream supplying 
it. In such a case the first essential in determining the yield 
is to ascertain the rainfall. For this purpose, if there arc no 
rain-gauges on the drainage area in question, an estimate may 
be formed from numerous gauging* throughout the country, 
most of which are published in British Rain/ail, initialed by the 
late Mr C. J. Symons, F.R.S., and now carried on by Dr H. R. 
Mill * But except in the hands of those who have spent years 
in such investigations, this method may lead to most incorrect 
conclusions. If any observations exist upon the drainage area 
itself they are commonly only from a single gauge, and this 
gauge, unless the area is very level, may give results widely 
different from the mean fall on the whole area. Unqualified 
reliance upon single gauges in the past has been the cause of 
serious errors in the estimated relation between rainfall and 
flow off the ground. 

The uncertainties are illustrated by the following actual example: 
A battery of fourteen rain-gauges, tn the same vertical plane, on 
ground having the natural profile shown by the section (fig. 1), 
gave during three consecutive years the respective falls shown by 



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the height of the dotted lines above the datum line. Thus on the 



average, gauge C recorded 20% more than gauge D only 70 ft. 
distant, white at C, in 1897, the rainfall was actually 30% greater 
than at J only 560 ft. away. The greatly varying distribution of 
rainfall over that length of 1600 ft. is shown by the dotted lines 



measured upwards from the datum to have bean remarkably con- 
sistent in the three years; and its cause — the path necessarily taken 
in a vertical plane by the prevailing winds blowing from A towards 
N — after passing the steep bank at C D — may be readily understood. 
Such examples snow the importance of placing any rain-gauge, so far 
as possible, upon a plane surface of the earth — horizontal, or so 
inclined that, if produced, especially in the direction of prevailing 
winds, it will cut the mean levels of the area whose moan rainfall is 
intended to be represented by that gauge. It has been commonly 
stated that rainfafl increases with the altitude. This is broadly true. 
A rain-cloud raised vertically upwards expands, cools and tends to 
precipitate; but in the actual passage of rain-clouds over the surface 
of the earth other influences are at work. In fig. 2 the thick line 



fc^OTT\? 




Fig. 2. 



represents the profile of a vertical section crossing two ranges of hills 
and one valley. The arrows indicate the directions of the prevailing 
winds. At the extreme left the rain-clouds are thrown up. and if this 
weie all. they would precipitate a larger proportion of the moisture 



Since the above was written, this work has been ta&cn over by 
the " British Rainfall Organization.*' 



( 



'388 



WATER SUPPLY 



(COLLECTING AREAS 



they contained as the altitude increased. But until the clouds rise 
above the hill there is an obvious countervailing tendency to com- 
pression, and in steep slopes this may reduce or entirely prevent pre- 
cipitation until the summit ia' reached, when a fall of pressure with 
commotion must occur. Very high mountain ranges usually consist 
of many ridges, among which rain-clouds arc entangled in their 
Ascent, and in such cases precipitation towards the windward side of 
the main range, though on the leeward sides of the minor ridges of 
which it is formed, may occur to so large an extent that before the 
summit is reached the clouds arc exhausted or nearly so, and in this 
case the total precipitation is less on the leeward than on the wind- 
ward side of the main range; but in the moderate heights of the 
United Kingdom it more commonly happens from the causes ex- 
plained that precipitation is prevented or greatly retarded until the 
summit of the ridge is reached. The following cause also contributes 
to the latter effect. Imagine eleven raindrops A to K to fall- simul- 
taneously and equi-distantly from the horizontal plane AM. A strong 
wind is urging the drops from left to right. The drops A and K may 
be readily conceived to be equally diverted by the wind, and to fall 
near the tops of the two hills respectively. Not so drop C, for directly 
the summit is passed the wind necessarily widens out vertically and, 
having a greater space to fill, loses forward velocity. It may even 
eddy backwards, as indicated by the 



; curved arrows, and it is no 



uncommon thing, in walking up a steep hill in the contrary direction 
to the flight of the clouds, to find that the rain is coming from 
behind. Much the same tendency exists with respect to all drops 
between B and E, but at F the wind has begun to accommodate itself 
to the new regime and to assume more regular forward motion, and 
as J is approached, where vertical contraction of the passage through 
which the wind must pass takes place, there is an increasing tendency 
to lift the raindrops beyond their proper limits. The general effect 
is that the rain falling from between G and K is spread over a greater 
area of the earth G'K' than that falling from the equal space between 
B and F, which reaches the ground within the smaller area B'F'. 
From this cause also, therefore, the leeward side of the valley re- 
ceives more rain than the windward side. In the United Kingdom 
the prevailing winds are from the south-west, and some misapprehen- 
sion has been caused by the bare, but perfectly correct, statement 
that the general slope towards the western coast is wetter than 
that towards the eastern. Over the whole width of the country from 
coast to coast, or of the Welsh mountain ranges only, this is so; 
but it is nevertheless true that the leeward side of an individual valley 
or range of hills generally receives more rain than the windward side. 
Successive abstraction of raindrops as the rain-clouds pass over 
ridge after ridge causes a gradually diminishing precipitation, but 
this is generally insufficient to reverse the local conditions, which 
tend to the contrary effect in individual ranges. The neglect of 
these facts has led to many errors in estimating the mean rainfall on 
watershed areas from the fall observed at gauges in particular parts 
of those areas. 

In the simplest case of a single mountain valley to be used for the 
supply of an impounding reservoir, the rainfall should be known at 
live points, three being in the axis of the valley, of which one is near 
the point of intersection of that axis with the boundary of the 
watershed. Then, in order to connect with these the effect of the 
right- and left-hand slopes, there should be at least one gauge on each 
side about the middle height, and approximately in a line perpendicu- 
lar to the axis of the valley passing through the central gauge: The 
relative depths recorded in the several gauges depend mainly upon 
the direction of the valley and steepness of the bounding hills. The 
gauge in the bottom of the valley farthest from the source will in a 
wide valley generally record the least rainfall, and one of those on 
the south-west side, the highest. M uch will depend upon the judicious 
placing of the gauges. Each gauge should have for 10 or 15 yds. 
around it an uninterrupted plane fairly representing the general 
level or inclination, as the case may be, of the ground for a much 
larger distance around it. The earliest records of such gauges 
should be carefully examined, and if any apparently anomalous 
result is obtained, the cause should be traced, and when not found 
in the gauge itself, or in its treatment, other gauges should be used to 
check it. The central gauge is useful for correcting and checking the 
others, but in such a perfectly simple case as the straight valley 
above assumed it may be omitted in calculating the results, and if 
the other four gauges are properly placed, the arithmetical mean of 
their results will probably not differ widely from the true mean for 
the valley. But such records carried on for a year or many years 
would afford no knowledge of the worst conditions that could arise 
in longer periods, were it not for the existence of much older gauges 
not far distant and subject to somewhat similar conditions. The 
nearer such long-period gauges are to the local gauges the more 
likely are their records to rise and fall in the same proportion. The 
work of the late Mr JamcsGlaisher.F.R.S., of the late Mr G.J. Symons, 
F.R.S., of the Meteorological Office and of the Royal Meteorological 
Society, has resulted in the establishment of a vast number of rain- 
gauges in different parts of the United Kingdom, and it is generally, 
though not always, found that the mean rainfall over a long period 
can be determined, for an area upon which the actual fall is known 
only for a short period, by assigning to the missing years of the short- 

period gauges, r* the same proportion to those of 

correspondinr 'od pauses, that the rainfalls df 



the known years in the short -period gauges bear to those 0/ < 

sponding years in the long-period gauges. In making such compari- 
sons, it is always desirable, if possible, to select as standards long* 
period gauges which are so situated that the short-period district lies 
between them. Where suitably placed long-period gauges exist* 
and where care has been exercised in ascertaining the authenticity 
of their records and in making the comparisons, the short records of 
the local gauges may be thus carried back into the long periods with 
nearly correct results. 
Rainfall is proverbially uncertain; but it would appear from the 



the records of any period of 25 years will generally be found to fall 
within. 3i % of the mean of 50 years. It is equally satisfactory to 
know that there is a nearly constant ratio on any given area (ex- 
ceeding perhaps 1000 acres) between the true mean annual rainfall, 
the rainfall of the driest year, the two driest consecutive years 
and any- other groups of driest consecutive years. Thus in any 
period of 50 years the driest year (not at an individual gauge but 
upon such an area) will be about 63% of the mean for the 50 
years. 

That in the two driest consecutive years will be about 7$% of the 
mean for the 50 years* 

That in the three driest consecutive years will be about 80 % of the 
mean for the 50 years. 

That in the four driest consecutive years will be about 83% of the 
mean for the 50 years. 

That in the five driest consecutive years will be about 85 % of the 
mean for the 50 years. 

That in (he six driest consecutive years will be about 86} % of the 
mean for the 50 years. 

Apart altogether from the variations of actual rainfall produced By 
irregular surface levels, the very small area of a single rain-gauge ta 
subject to much greater variations in short periods than can possibly 
occur over larger areas. If, therefore, instead of regarding only the 
mean rainfall of several gauges over a series of years, we compare the 
relative falls in short intervals of time among gauges yielding the 
same general averages, the discrepancies prove to be very great, and 
it follows that the maximum possible intensity of discharge from 
different areas rapidly increases as the size of the watershed decreases. 
Extreme cases of local discharge are due to the phenomena known 
in America as " cloud-bursts, which occasionally occur in Great 
Britain and result in discharges, the intensities of which have rarely 
been recorded by rain-gauges. The periods of such discharges are 
so short, their positions so isolated and the areas affected so small, 
that we have little or no exact knowledge concerning them, though 
their disastrous results are well known. They do not directlv affect 
the question of supply, but may very seriously affect the works from 
which that supply is given. 

Where in this article the term " evaporation " is used alone, 
it is to be understood to Include absorption by vegetation. 
Of the total quantity of rainfall a very variable pro* ^ 
portion is rapidly absorbed or re-evaporated. Thus aoamUt 
in the western mountain districts of Great Britain, sftiwa 
largely composed of nearly impermeable rocks more **■» 
or less covered with pasture and moorland, the water evaporated 
and absorbed by vegetation is from 13 to 1 5 in. out of a rainfall 
of 80 in., or from 16 to 10%, and is nearly constant down to 
about 60 in., where the proportion of loss is therefore from t» 
to 35%. The Severn down to Worcester, draining 1,956,000 acres 
of generally flatter land largely of the same litbolojrjcal character, 
gave in the dry season from the xst of July 1887 to the 30th 
of June 1888 a loss of 17-93 in. upon a rainfall of 27-34 in. ot 
about 66%; while in the wet season, tat of July 1882 to the 
30th of June 1883, the loss was 21*00 In. upon a rainfall of 
43-26 in., or only 49%. Upon the Thames basin down to 
Teddington, having an area of 2,353,000 acres, the loss in the 
dry season from the 1st of July 1890 to the 30th of June 1891 
was 17-22 in. out of a rainfall of 21-62 in., or 79%; while in 
the wet season, 1st of July 1888 to the 30th of June 1889, it was 
18-96 out of tg-72 in., or only 65%. In the eastern counties 
the rainfall is lower and the evaporation approximately the 
same as upon the Thames area, so that the percentage of loss 
is greater. But these are merely broad examples and averages 
of many still greater variations over smaller areas. They show 
generally that, as the rainfall increases on any given area evapora- 
tion increases, but not in the same proportion. Again, the loss 
from a given rainfall depends greatly upon the previous season. 
An inch falling in a single day on a saturated mountain area 
will nearly all reach the rivers, but if it falls during a drought 
s*ven-eighths may be lost so far as the period of the drought 



COLLECTING AREAS) 



WATER SUPPLY 



389 



is concerned. In such a case-most of the water is absorbed by 
the few upper inches of soil, only to be re-evaporated during the 
next few days, and. the small proportion which sink* into the 
ground probably issues in springs many months later.' Thus 
the actual yield of rainfall to the streams depends largely upon 
the mode of its time-distribution, and without a knowledge 
of this it is impossible to anticipate the yield of a particular 
rainfall. In estimating the evaporation to be deducted from 
the rainfall for the purpose of determining the (low into a 
reservoir, it is important to bear in mind that the loss from a 
constant water surface is nearly one and a half times as great as 
from the intermittently saturated land surface. Even neglecting 
the isolated and local discharges due to excessive and generally 
unrecorded rainfall, the variation in the discharge of all streams, 
and especially of mountain streams, is very 'great.. We have 
teen that the average how from mountain areas in Great Britain 
towards the end of a dry season does not exceed one-fifth of a 
cubic foot per second per 1000 acres. Adopting this general 
minimum as the unit, we find that the flow from such areas up 
to about 5000 acres, whose mean annual rainfall exceeds .50 in., 
may be expected occasionally to reach 300 cub. ft., or 1500 such 
units; while from similar areas of 20,000 or 30,000 acres with 
the same mean rainfall the discharge sometimes reaches 1200 or 
1300 such units. It is well to compare these results with those 
obtained from much larger areas but with lower mean rainfall. 
The Thames at Teddington has been continuously gauged by 
the Thames Conservators since 1883, and the Severn at Worcester 
by the writer, on behalf of the corporation of Liverpool, during 
the 10 years 1881 to 1800 inclusive. The highest flood, common 
to the two periods, was that which occurred in the middle of 
February 1883. On that occasion' the Thames records gave a 
discharge of 7*6 cub. ft. per second per 1000 acres, and the 
Severn records a discharge of 8-6 cub. ft. per second per 1000 
acres, or 38 and 43 respectively of the above units; while in 
February 1881,. before the Thames gauging* were commenced, 
the Severn had risen to 47 of such units, and subsequently in 
May 1886 rose to so such units, though the Thames about the 
same time only rose to 13. But in November 1804 the Thames 
rose to about 80 such units, and old records on the Severn 
bridges show that that river must on many occasions have risen 
to considerably over 100 units. In both these cases the natural 
maximum discharge is somewhat diminished by the storage 
produced by artificial canalization of the rivers. 

These illustrations of the enormous variability of discharge 
serve to explain what is popularly so little understood, namely, 

the advantage which riparian owners, or other persons 
SS." interested in a given stream, may derive from works 
w«s*r. constructed primarily for the purpose of diverting 

the water of that stream— it may be to a totally 
different watershed— for the purposes of a town supply. Under 
modern legislation no such abstraction of water is usually 
allowed, even if limited to times of flood, except on condition 
of an augmentation of the natural dry-weather flow, and this 
condition at once involves the construction of a reservoir. The 
water supplied to the stream from such a reservoir b known 
as " compensation water," and is generally a first charge upon 
the works. This water is usually given as a continuous and 
uniform flow, but in special cases, for the convenience of mill- 
owners, as an intermittent one. 1 In the manufacturing districts 
of Lancashire and Yorkshire it generally amounts to one-third 
of the whole so-called " available supply." In Wales it is usually 
about one-fourth, and elsewhere still less; but in any case it 
amounts to many times the above unit of one-fifth of a cubic 
foot per second per 1000 acres. Thus the benefit to the fisheries 
and to the riparian owners generally is beyond all question; but 
the cost to the water authority of conferring that benefit is 
also very .great— commonly (according to the proportion of the 
natural flow intended to be rendered uniform) 20 to 35% of 

*The volume of compensation water is usually fined as a given 
fraction of the so-called l4 available supply " (which by a convention 
that has served its purpose well, is understood to be the average flow 
Of the stream during the three consecutive driest years). 



the whole expenditure upon the reservoir works. Down to the 
middle of the 19th century, the proportioning of the size of a 
reservoir to its work was a very rough operation. Y kUmf 
There were few rainfall statistics, little was known ntre*m 
of the total loss by evaporation, and still less of its wkb 
distribution over the different periods of dry and rtt * r¥9lr '' 
wet weather. Certain general principles have since been laid 
down, and within the proper limits of their application have 
proved excellent guides. In conformity with the above-men- 
tioned convention (by which compensation water is determined 
as a certain fraction of the average flow during the three driest 
consecutive years) the available supply or flow from a given 
area is still understood to be the -average annual rainfall during 
those years, less the corresponding evaporation and absorption 
by vegetation. But this is evidently only the case when the 
reservoir impounding, the water from such an area is of just 
sufficient capacity to equalize that flow without possible exhaus- 
tion in any one of the three summers. If the reservoir were 
larger it might equalize the flow of the four or more driest 
consecutive years, which would be somewhat greater than that 
of the three; if smaller, we might only be able to count upon 
the average of the flow of. the two driest consecutive years, and 
there are many reservoirs which will not yield continuously 
the average 'flow of the stream even in the single driest year. 
.With further experience it has become obvious that very few 
reservoirs are capable of equalizing the full flow of the three 
consecutive driest years, and each engineer, in estimating the 
yield of such reservoirs, has deducted from the quantity ascer- 
tained -on the assumption that they do so, a certain quantity 
representing, according to his judgment, the overflow which in 
one or more of such years might be lost from the reservoir. 
The actual .size of the reservoir which would certainly yield 
the assumed supply throughout the driest periods has therefore 
been largely a matter of judgment. Empirical rules have grown 
up assigning to each district, according to its average rainfall, 
a particular number of days' supply, independently of any inflow, 
as the contents of the reservoir necessary to secure a given yield 
throughout the driest seasons. But any such generalizations 
are dangerous and have frequently led to disappointment and 
sometimes to needless expenditure. The exercise of sound 
judgment in such matters will always be necessary, but it is 
nevertheless important to formulate, so far as possible, the 
conditions upon which that judgment should be based. Thus 
in order to determine truly the continuously available discharge 
of any stream, it is necessary to know not only the mean flow 
of the stream, as represented by the rainfall less the evaporation, 
but also the least favourable distribution of that flow throughout 
any year. 

The most trying time-distribution of which the author has had 
experience in the United Kingdom, or which he has been able to 
discover from a comparison of rainfalls upon nearly impermeable 
areas exceeding 1000 acres, is graphically represented by the thick 
irregular line in the left-hand half of fig. 3, where the total flow for 
the driest year measures 100 on the vertical percentage scale; the 
horizontal time scale being divided into calendar months. 

The diagram applies to ordinary areas suitable for reservoir con- 
struction and in which the minimum flow of the stream reaches about 
one-fifth of a cubic foot per second per 1000 acres. Correspondingly, 
the straight line a a represents uniformly distributed supply, also 
cumulatively recorded, of the same quantity of water over the same 
period. But, apart from the diurnal fluctuations of consumption 
which may be equalised by local " service reservoirs." uniform 
distribution of supply throughout twelve months is rarely what we 
require; and to represent the demand in most towns correctly, we 
should increase the angle of this line to the horizontal during the 
summer and diminish it during the winter months, as indicated by 
the dotted lines b b. The most notable features of this particular 
diagram are as follows: Up to the end of 59 days (to the 28th Febru- 
ary) the rate, of flow is shown, by the greater steepness of the thick 
line, to be greater than the mean for the year, and the surplus 
water— about 11% of the flow during the year— must be stored; 
but during the 184 days between this and the end of the 243rd day 
(31st August) the rate of flow is generally below the mean, while from 
that day to the end of the year it is again for the most part above the 
mean. Now, m order that a reservoir may enable the varying flow, 
represented cumulatively by the irregular line, to be discharged in 
I a continuous and uniform flow to satisfy a demand represented 



39° 



WATER SUPPLY 



KXLLECTIWG AHfeAS 



cumulatively by the straight line a a, its capacity must be such that 
it wi!l hold not only the n % surplus of the same year, but that, on 
June 10th, when this surplus has been used to satisfy the demand, it 
will still contain the water e d — 19%— stored from a previous year; 
otherwise between June 10th and August 31st the reservoir will be 
empty and only the dry weather flow of the stream will be available 
for supply. In short, it the reservoir is to equalize the whole flow of 
this year, it must have a capacity equal to the greatest deficiency 
c d of the cumulative flow below the cumulative demand, plus the 
greatest excess c/of the cumulative flow over the cumulative demand. 
This capacity is represented by the height of the line a' a' (drawn 
parallel to a a from the point of maximum surplus f) vertically above 
the point of greatest deficiency c, and equal, on the vertical scale, to 
the difference between the height c-48% and g -78% or 30% of 
the stream-flow during the driest year. A reservoir so proportioned 
to the stream-flow with a proper addition to avoid drawing off the 
bottom water, would probably be safe in Great Britain in any, year 



in this 
cxaninatiop 



After the reservoir begins to fall— in this case at the end of February 
— no ordinary change in the variation of demand can affect $be 

ration, subject of course to the cumulative demand not exceeding 
reservoir yield for the assumed year of minimum rainfall. In 
assuming a demand at the beginning of the year below the mean, 
resulting in an overflow equal in this case to b 1 at the end of February 
and increasing our reservoir to meet it, we assume also that some 
additional supply to that reservoir beyond the 1 1 % of the stream- 
flow from the driest year can be obtained from the previous year. 
In relation to this supply from the previous year the most trying 
assumption is that the rainfall of that year, together with that 01 the 
driest year, will be the rainfall of the two dncst consecutive years. 
We have already seen that while the rainfall of the driest of 50 years 
is about 63% of the mean, that of the driest two consecutive 
years is about 75 % of the mean. It follows, therefore, that the year 
immediately preceding the driest cannot have a rainfall less than 
about 87 % of the mean* Aa the loss by evaporation is a deduction 
lying between a constant figure and a 
direct proportional to the rainfall, we 
should err on the safe side in assuming 
the flow in the second driest year to be 
increased proportionally to the rainfall, 
or by the difference between 63 and 87 
equal to 24% of the mean of 50 years. 
This 24% of the 50 years' mean flow is 
38% of the driest year's flow in fig. 3, 
and is therefore much mofc than 
sufficient to ensure the reservoir begin- 
ning the driest year with a stock equal 
to the greatest deficiency — 10%— of 
the cumulative flow of that year beyond 
the cumulative demand. 

But in determining the capacity of 
reservoirs intended to yield a supply 
of water equal to the mean flow of 
two, three or more years, the error, 
though on the safe side, caused by 
assuming the evaporation to be pro- 
portional to the rainfall, is too great 
to be neglected. The evaporation 
slightly increases as the rainfall in- 
creases, but at nothing like so high 
a rate. Having determined this 
evaporation for the second driest con- 
secutive year and deducted it from 
the rainfall — which, as above stated, 
cannot be less than 87 % of the mean 
of 50 years— we may, as shown on 
fig. 3, extend our cumulative diagram 
of demand and flow into the reservoir 
*\ from one to two years. 

The whole diagram shows, by the 
£ greater gradient of the unbroken 
straight lines, the greater demand 
which can be satisfied by the enlarge- 
ment of the reservoir to the extent necessary to equalize the flow 
of the two driest consecutive years. The new capacity is either 
chore' k\ whichever, in the particular case under investigation, 
is the greater. In the illustration the c' A' is a little greater, 
measuring 47 J % of the flow of the driest year. In the same way 
we may group in a single diagram any number of consecutive 
driest years, and either ascertain the reservoir capacity necessary 
for a given uniform yield (represented cumulatively by a straight 
line corresponding with aV, but drawn over all the years instead 
of one), or conversely, having set up a vertical from the most 
trying point in the line of cumulative flow (c or d in fig. 3 — 
representing, in percentage of the total annual flow of the driest 
year, the capacity of reservoir which it may be convenient to 
provide) we may draw a straight line a'" a!" of uniform yield 
from the head of that vertical to the previous point of maximum 
excess of cumulative flow. The line a* a m drawn from aero 
parallel to the first line, produced to the boundaries of the 
diagram, will cut the vertical at the end of the first year at the 
percentage of the driest year's flow which may be safely drawn 
continuously from the reservoir throughout the two years. It 
is to be observed that any irregularity in the rate of supply 
to be increased by the imall quantity »« determined by from thc «*rvoir may occur between the critical periods of 
- -' »k* variation of the actual from a constant demand. I maximum excess of cumulative flow and maximum deficiency 



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F10. 3. 

for a uniform demand equal to the cumulative stream-flow; or, if it 
failed, that failure would be of very short duration, and would 
probably only occur once in ffi years. 

It may be at first sight objected that a case is assumed In which 
there is no overflow before the reservoir begins to fall, and therefore 
no such loss as generally occurs from that cause. This is true, but it 
is only so because we have made our reservoir large enough to contain 
in addition to its stock of 19%, at the beginning of the year, all the 
surplus water that passes during the earlier months in this driest year 
with its least favourable time-distribution of flow. Experience 
shows, in fact, that if a different distribution of the assumed rainfall 
occurs, that distribution will not try the reservoir more severely while 
thc hitherto assumed uniform rate of demand is maintained. But, as 
above stated, thc time-distribution of demand is never quite uniform. 
The particular drought shown on the diagram is the result of an 
exceptionally early deficiency of rainfall which, in conjunction with 
the variation of demand shown by the dotted line b b t '» the most 
trying condition. The reservoir begins to fall at the end of February, 
and continues to do so with few and short exceptions until the end of 
August, and it so happens that about the end of August this dotted 
line, b b representing actual cumulative demand, crosses the straight 
line a a of uniform demand, so that the excess of demand, represented 
by the slope from June to September, is balanced by the deficiency of 
demand, represented by the flatter slope in the first five months, 
t aa regards the small quantity b t near the end of February, 
, not having- been drawn off dunnglanuary and February, must 



except as regards the small quantity b e near the end of February, 
which, not haviiur been drawn off dunnglanuary and February, must 
overflow before the end of February. To avoid this loss the 1 1 % is 



COLLECTING AREASj 



WATER SUPPLY 




Flo. 4- 



39° 



WATER SUPPLY 



K<=*K 



cumulatively by the straight line a a. Its capacity must be such that 
it wilt hold not only the n % surplus of the same year, but that, on 
June toth, when this surplus has been used to satisfy the demand, it 
will still contain the water e d — 19%— stored from a previous year; 
otherwise between June 10th and August 31st the reservoir will be 
empty and only the dry weather flow of the stream will be available 
for supply. In short, if the reservoir is to equalize the whole flow of 
this year, it must have a capacity equal to the greatest deficiency 
c d of the cumulative flow below the cumulative demand, plus the 
greatest excess r/of the cumulative flow over the cumulative demand. 
This capacity is represented by the height of the line a'a' (drawn 
parallel to a a from the point of maximum surplus/) vertically above 
the point of greatest deficiency c, and equal, on the vertical scale, to 
the difference between the height c-48% and g * 78% or 30% of 
the stream-flow during the driest year. A reservoir so proportioned 
to the stream-flow with a proper addition to avoid drawing off the 
bottom water, would probably be safe in Great Britain in any. year 



After the reservoir begins to fall — in *.!, 

— no ordinary change in the variation. *>* 

r ration, subject of course to the cism*-sf<a r ' 
reservoir yield for the assumed yea' 
assuming a demand at the beginning *~ 
resulting in an overflow equal in ttsia c=a.> i. . 
and increasing our reservoir to meet <^ft y 

additional supply to that reservoir * *^^ 1 

flow from the driest year can be « -^ \ 

In relation to this supply from » * - ^ 

assumption is that the rainfall of ■ 

driest year, will be the rainfall », 

We have already seen that wh ' - ^ 

is about 63% of the mear "*■_ _ * 

years is about 75% of then ■ — •*. 

immediately preceding tr»- — ~ ^ 

about 87 % of the mean- 



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for a uniform demand equal to the ctmv 
failed, that failure would, be of very 
probably only occur once in £0 years 
It may be at first sight objected t 
there is no overflow before the resc 
no such loss as generally occurs frt 
is only so because we have made c 
in addition to its stock of 19 %► 
surplus water that passes durim 
with its least favourable tv 
shows, in fact, that if a differ 
occurs, that distribution wi*' 
the hitherto assumed unifc 
above stated, the timc-di* 
The particular drought 
exceptionally early drf 
the variation of ocm 
trying condition. T 
and continues to d<- 
August, and it so 






line, b b represcr 
Uneaaoftjflfft 
by the slop* fr 
demand, J*r 
ptMn 




■ >n in 

..-inc for 

..ill, already 

.uncd in Great 

( remembered that 

• r than its net available 

. <>nb hsh life may be main- 

-..off. 

1 and some parts of Great Britain, 

utt her unduly on the safe side, as the 

of rainfall are less than in most parts of 

<Khout Europe the annual variations follow 

law as in Great Britain, but in some parts the 

,1 rainfall in a single year is often more trying. The 

longer, and the rain, when it falls, especially along the 



-'lord supplies bv L . Gr <*t 
• I.^ly and many Z*^»n\ 
> considerable volumes iss 
J, and are Unavailable, wiiholl? tet 
we supply of distant towns. Onis ' « 
wrings are fairly distributed over the Unitr^ • ****** 
:c arc no formations, except perhaps blown sa a ln « d <>m 
•■>t vary greatly in their resistance to the percohu £ ' ^r hich <**> 
and therefore tend to produce overflow from und wa «er, 

some points above the valley levels. But even the ° Unc * a *' 
lions have generally found surface springs insufficient* 1 P *^*- 
for their use and have adopted the obvious rem~? , on&l ant 
wells. Hence, throughout the world we find the K 11 sink »>R 
still very common in rural districts. The shallow wn we ^ 

rarely supplies enough water for more than a fewh ll0H ' eve ^. 
being commonly situated near to those houses the w t^ 8 * and 
seriously polluted. Deep wells owe their comparand • ls oflen 
from pollution to the circumstances that the la mum 'ty 

of water yielded renders it worth while to pump thff * qu * mil y 
convey it by pipes from comparatively unpolluted aT^ and 
that any impurities in the water must have passed th ' **** 



r 



jfltEcnircs areasi WATER. SUPPLY 

^dersble <ief>t.lx» and by far the larger part of them through 



length o€ 



is**. 1 • 



iUtering material, and must have taken so 

ch the well that their organic character has 

The principal water-bearing formations, Utilised 

s - - ..... Chalkajldthe 



Jg£t Britain t> y meant of deep weUs, are the Chi 

VatS 1 S^^^ne. The Upper and Middle Chalk __ , 

uTili* 1 .^C^ *** 1 * their mass. They hold water like a sponge, 

rTosr* ** tlx ** auacier pressure to fissures by which they are 

,£tfe a '^" 1 * 1 * "* t.Ke case of the Upper Chalk.toducUfoUowing 

u ol ^^^ A ^nell sunk in these formations without striking 

$!*!*• ^^ter-bearing flint bed, receives water only at 

y rr - sV>* ***e; but if, on the other hand, it strikes one or 

% ; e oV &* tutu *al water-ways, the quantity of water capable 

^fc^**" 1 f *^»a it will be greatly increased. 

. Ss «> twrtable peculiarity of the Upper and Kiddle Chalk 

-.aliens that, below their present valleys the underground 

r passes more freely than elsewhere. This is explained 

f act that tlae Chalk fissurea are almost invariably rounded 

Urged by the erosion of carbonic acid carried from the 

by the water passing through them. These fissures 

- .Uce of the streams in an impermeable area, and those 

'- valleys must obviously be called upon to discharge 

from the surface, and thus be brought in contact 

-Sonic acid, than similar fissures elsewhere. Hence 

'" for a well in the Chalk is generally that over 

rata were impermeable, the largest quantity of 

'ild flow. The Lower Chalk formation is for 

■crmeablc, though it contains many ruptures 

smashes, in the interstices of which large 

ived from the Upper and Middle Chalk, 

r ed, or which may merely form passages 

i the Upper Chalk. Thus despite the 

ss large springs are occasionally found 

Chalk. A striking example is that 

under Abbot's Cliff, near Dover. 

k. formations to imitate artificially 

id watercourses, by driving from 

.s " as they are called, below the 

jures and water-bearing beds, and 

vingarea. 

.iice to the Chalk formations as a source of 

-.ater supply comes the Trias or New Red Sand- 

jisting in Great Britain of two main divisions, the 

.r above and the Bunter below. With the exception 

. ii»e Red Maris forming the upper part of the Keuper, most 

of the New Red Sandstone is permeable, and some parts contain, 

when saturated, even more water than solid chalk; but, just 

as in the case of the chalk, a well or borehole in the sandstone 

yields very little water unless it strikes a fissure; hence, in New 

Red Sandstone, also, it is a common thing to form underground 

chambers or adits in search of additional fissures, and sometimes 

to sink many vertical boreholes with the same object in view. 

As the formation approaches the condition of pure sand, the 
water-bearing property of any given mass increases, but the 
' difficulty of drawing water from it without admixture 
J2** of sand also increases. In sand below water there arc, 
mm ^ of course, no open fissures, and even if adits could be 
usefully employed, the cost of constructing and lining them 
through the loose sand would be prohibitive. The well itself 
must be lined; and its yield is therefore confined to such water 
as can be drawn through the sides or the bottom of the lining 
without setting up a sufficient velocity to cause any sand to 
daw with the water. Hence it arises that, in sand formations, 
only shallow wells or small boreholes are commonly found. 
Imagine for a moment that the sand grains were by any means 
rendered immobile without change in the permeability of their 
interspaces; we could then dispense with the iron or brickwork 
lining of the well ; but as there would still be no cracks or fissures 
to extend the area of percolating water exposed to the open 
well, the yield would be very small. Obviously, it must be very 
much smaller when the lining necessary to hold up loose sand 
h used. Uncemented brickwork, or perforated ironwork,, are 



393 

the usual materials employed for lining the well and holding up 
the sand, and the quantity of water drawn is kept below the 
comparatively small quantity necessary to produce a velocity, 
through the joints or orifices, capable of disturbing the sand. 
The rate of increase of velocity towards any isolated aperture 
through which water passes into the side of a well sunk in a deep 
bed of sand is, in the neighbourhood of that aperture, inversely 
proportional to the square of the distance therefrom. Thus, the 
velocity across a little hemisphere of sand only \ in. radius 
covering a x-in. orifice in the Jining is more than iooo times the 
mean velocity of the same water approaching the orifice radially 
when x6 in. therefrom. This illustration gives some idea of the 
enormous increase of yield of such a well, H, by any 
means, we can get rid of the f fictional sand, even from J^JJSjf A# 
within the x6 in. radius. We cannot do this, but JET** 
happily the grains in a sand formation differ very 
widely in diameter, and if, from the interstices between the larger 
grains in the neighbourhood of an orifice, we can remove the 
finer grains, the resistance to flow of water is at once enormously 
reduced. This was for the first time successfully done in a well, 
constructed by the Biggleswade Water Board in 1002, and now 
supplying water over a large area of North Bedfordshire. This 
well, 10 ft. diameter, was sunk through about no ft. of surface 
soil, glacial drift and impermeable gault clay and thence passed 
for a further depth of 70 ft. into the Lower Green sand formation, 
the outcrop of which, emerging on the south-eastern shore of 
the Wash, passes south-westwards, and in Bedfordshire attains 
a thickness exceeding 250 ft- The formation is probably mole 
or less permeable throughout; it consists largely of loose sand 
and takes the general south-easterly dip of British strata. The 
Biggleswade well was sunk by processes better known in connexion 
with the sinking- of mine shafts and foundations of bridges 
across the deep sands or gravels of bays, estuaries and great 
rivers. Its full capacity has not been ascertained; it much 
exceeds the present pumping power, and is probably greater 
than that of any other single well unassisted by adits or boreholes. 
This result is mainly due to the reduction of frictional resistance 
to the passage of water through the sand in the immediate 
neighbourhood of the well, by washing out the finer particles 
of sand and leaving only the coarser particles. For this purpose 
the lower 45 ft of the cast-iron cylinders forming the well was 
provided with about 660 small orifices lined with gun-metal 
tubes or rings, each armed with numerous thicknesses of copper 
wire gauze, and temporarily closed with screwed plugs. On 
the removal of any plug, this wire gauze prevented the sand 
from flowing with the water into the well; but while the finer 
particles of sand remained in the neighbourhood of the orifice, 
the flow of water through the contracted area was very small. 
To remove this obstruction the water was pumped out while 
the plugs kept the orifices dosed. A flexible pipe, brought 
down from a steam boiler above, was then connected with any 
opened orifice. This pipe was provided, close to the orifice, 
with a three-way cock, by means of which the steam might be 
first discharged into the sand, and the current between the cock 
and the well then suddenly reversed and diverted into the well. 
The effect of thus alternately forcing high-pressure steam among 
the sand, and of discharging high-pressure water contained in 
the sand into the well, is to break up any cohesion of the sand, 
and to allow all the finer particles in the neighbourhood of the 
orifice to rush out with the water through the wire gauze into 
the weH This process, in effect, leaves each orifice surrounded 
by a hemisphere of coarse sand across which the water flows 
with comparative freedom from a larger hemisphere where the 
corresponding velocity is very slow, and where the presence 
of finer and more obstructive particles is therefore unimportant. 
Many orifices through which water at first only dribbled were thus 
caused to discharge water with great force, and entirely free from 
sand, against the opposite side of the well, while the general 
result was to increase the inflow of water many times, and to 
entirely prevent the intrusion of sand. Where, however, a 
firm rock of any kind is encountered, the yield of a well (under 
a given head of water) can only be increased by enlargement 



39+ 



WATER SUPPLY 



(COLLECTING AREAS 



of the main well in depth or diameter, or by boreholes or adits. 
No rule as to the adoption of any one of these courses can be 
laid down, nor is it possible, without examination of each 
particular case, to decide whether it is better to attempt to 
increase the yield of the well or to construct an additional well 
some distance away. By lowering the head of water in any 
well which draws its supply from porous rock, the yield is always 
temporarily increased. Every well has its own particular level 
of water while steady pumping at a given rate is going on, and 
if that level is lowered by harder pumping, it may take months, 
or even years, for the water in the interstices of the rock to 
accommodate itself to the new conditions; but the permanent 
yield after such lowering will always be less than the quantity 
capable of being pumped shortly after the change. We have 
hitherto supposed the pumps for drawing the water to have been 
placed in the well at such a level as to be accessible, while the 

suction pipe only is below water. Pumps, however, 
ittrc'afea. may *> e ("^ ^ AVt Deen ^ placed deep down in boreholes, 

so that water may be pumped from much greater 
depths. By this means the head of pressure in the boreholes 
tending to hold the water back in the rock is reduced, and the 
supply consequently increased; but when the cost of main- 
tenance is included, the increased supply from the adoption of 
this method rarely justifies expectations. When the water has 
been drawn down by pumping to a lower level its passage 
through the sandstone or chalk in the neighbourhood of the 
borehole is further resisted by the smaller length of borehole 
below the water; and there are many instances in which repeated 
lowering and increased pumping, both from wells and boreholes, 
have had the result of reducing the water available, after a few 
years, nearly to the original quantity. One other method— the 
Ak*m. }at °* *"* ^^^kd " "fr-Hf l " — *hould be mentioned. 

This ingenious device originated in America. The 
object attained by the air-lift is precisely the same as that 
attained by putting a pump some distance down a borehole; 
but instead of the head being reduced, by means of the pnmp, 
it is reduced by mixing the water with air. A pipe is passed 
down the borehole to the desired depth, and connected with 
a'r-compressors at the surface. The compressors being set to 
work, the air is caused to issue from the lower end of the pipe 
and to mix in fine bubbles with the rising column of water, 
sometimes several hundred feet in height. The weight of the 
column of water, or rather of water and air mixed, is thus greatly 
reduced. The method will therefore always increase the yield 
for the time, and it may do so permanently, though to a very 
much smaller extent than at first; but its economy must always 
be less than that of direct pumping. 

In considering' the principles of well supplies it is important 
to bear the following facts in mind. The crust of the earth, so 
far as it is permeable and above the sea-level, receives from 
rainfall its supply of fresh water. That supply, so far as it is 
not evaporated or absorbed by vegetation, passes away by the 
streams or rivers, or sinks into the ground. If the strata were 
uniformly porous the water would lie in the rock at different 
depths below the surface according to the previous quantity 
and distribution of the rainfall. It would slowly, but constantly, 
percolate downwards and towards the sea, and would ooze out 
at or below the sea-level, rarely regaining the earth's surface 
earlier except in deep valleys. Precisely the same thing happens 
in the actual crust of the earth, except that, in the formations 
usually met with, the strata are so irregularly permeable that 
no such uniform percolation occurs, and most of the water, 
instead of oozing out near the sea-level, meets with obstructions 
which cause it to issue, sometimes below the sea-level and 
sometimes above it, in the form of concentrated springs. 
After prolonged and heavy rainfall the upper boundary of the 
sub-soil water is, except in high ground, nearly coincident with 
the surface. After prolonged droughts it still retains more or 
less the same figure as the surface, but at lower depths and 
always with less pronounced differences of level 

Sedimentary rocks, formed below the sea or salt lagoons, 
must originally have contained salt water in their interstices. 



On the upheaval of such rocks above the sea-level, fresh water 
from rainfall began to flow over their exposed surfaces, and, 
so far as the strata were permeable, to lie in their swsm 
interstices upon the salt water. The weight of the wmttr 
original salt water above the sea-level, and of the fresh ****\ 
water so superimposed upon it, caused an overflow ***** 
towards the sea. A hill, as it were, of fresh water rested in the 
interstices of the rock upon the salt water, and continuing to 
press downwards, forced out the salt water even below the level 
of the sea. Subject to the rock being porous this process would 
be continued until the greater column of the lighter fresh water 
balanced the smaller head of sea water. It would conceivably 
take but a small fraction of the period that has in most cases 
elapsed since such upheavals occurred for the salt water to be 
thus displaced by fresh water, and for the condition to be 
attained as regards saturation with fresh water, in which with 
few exceptions we now find the porous portions of the earth's 
crust wherever the rainfall exceeds the evaporation. There 
are cases, however, as in the valley of the Jordan, where the 
ground is actually below the sea-kvel, and where, as the total 
evaporation is equal to or exceeds the rainfall, the lake surfaces 
also are below the sea-level. Thus, if there is any percolation 
between the Mediterranean and the Dead Sea, it must be towards 
the latter. There are cases also where sedimentary rocks, 
formed below the sea or salt lagoons, are almost impermeable: 
thus the salt deposited in parts of the Upper Keuper of the New 
Red Sandstone, is protected by the red maris of the formation, 
and has never been washed out. It is now worked as an im- 
portant industry in Cheshire. 

Perhaps the most instructive cases of nearly uniform percola- 
tion in nature are those which occur in some islands or peninsulas 
formed wholly of sea sand. Here water is maintained 
above the sea-level by the annual rainfall, and may nmi 
be drawn off by wells or borings. On such an island, 
in the centre of which a borehole is put down, brackish water 
may be reached far below the sea-level; the salt water forming 
a saucer, as it were, in which the fresh water lies. Such a salt* 
water saucer of fresh water is maintained full to overflowing 
by the rainfall, and owing to the (fictional resistance of the sand 
and to capillary action and the fact that a given column of 
fresh water is halinrfd by a shorter column of sea water, the 
fresh water never sinks to the mean sea-level unless artificially 
abstracted. 

Although such uniformly permeable sand is rarely met with in 
great manes, it is useful to consider in greater detail so simple a case. 
Let the irregular thick line in fig. 5 be the section of a circular bland 
a mile and a quarter in diameter, of uniformly permeable sand. 




Fig. 5. 

The mean sea-level U shown by the horizontal line da, dotted where 
it passes through the land, and the natural mean level of saturation 
bb, above the sea-level, by a curved dot and dash line. The water, 
contained in the interstices of the sand above the mean sea-level, 
would (except in so far as a film, coating the sand particles, is held up 
by capillary attraction) gradually sink to the sea-level if there wen 
no rainfall. The resistance to its passage through the sand is, how* 
ever, sufficiently great to prevent this from occurring while p erco la- 
tion of annual rainfall takes place. 

Hence we may suppose that a condition has been attained In which 
the denser salt water below and around the saucer CC (greatly 
exaggerated in vertical scale) balances the less dense, but deeper 



DAMS) 

fresh tracer within It. Nm suppose a well to be sunk in the middle 
of the island, and a certain quantity of water to be drawn therefrom 
daily. For small supplies such a well may be perfectly successful; 
but however small the quantity drawn, it must obviously have the 
effect of diminishing the volume of fresh water, which contributes 
to the maintenance of the level of saturation above the sea-level; 
and with further pumping the fresh water would be so far drawn 
upon that the mean level of saturation would sink, first to a curved 
figure—a cone of depression— «uch as that represented by the new 
level of saturation dd, and later to the figure represented by the lines 
er, in which the level of saturation has everywhere been drawn below 
the mean sea-leveL Before this stage the converse process begins, 
the reduced column of fresh water is no longer capable of balancing 
tbe sea water in the sand, inflow occurs at e and e, resulting finally in 
the well water becoming saline. The figure, in this case of uniform 
percolation, assumed by the water in the neighbourhood of a deep 
welt b a surface of revolution, and, however irregular the percolation 
and the consequent shape of the figure, it is commonly, but somewhat 
incorrectly, called the " cone of depression. " 1 1 cannot have straight, 
or approximately straight, sides in any vertical plane, but in nature 
is an exceedingly irregular figure drawn about curves— not unlike 
those in fig. 5. In this case, as in that of a level jplanc of uniformly 
porous sand, the vertical section of the figure is tangential to the 
vertical well and to the natural level of the subsoil water. 

The importance of this illustration is to be found elsewhere than in 
islands, or peninsulas, or in uniformly porous sand. Where the 
strata are not uniformly porous, they may resist the passage of water 
from the direction of the sea or they may assist it ; and round the 
whole coast of England, in the Magnesian limestone to the north- 
east, in the Chalk and Grecnsand to the east and south, and in the 
New Red Sandstone to the west, the number of wells which have 
been abandoned as sources of potable supply, owing to the percola- 
tion of sea water, is very groat. Perhaps the first important cases 
occurred in the earlier part of the 19th century on the Lancashire 
shore of the Mersey estuary, where, one after another, deep wells in 
the New Red Sandstone bad to be abandoned for most purposes. 
On tbe opposite side, in the Cheshire peninsula, the total quantity of 
water drawn has been much less, but even here serious warnings have 
been received. In 1895 the single well then supplying Eastbourne 
was almost suddenly rendered unfit for use, and few years pass 
without some similar occurrence of a more or less serious kind. The 
remarkable suddenness with which such changes are brought about 
is- not to be wondered at when the true cause is considered. The 
action of sandstone in filtering salt waters was investigated in 1878 
by Dr Isaac Roberts, F.R.S., who showed that when salt water was 
allowed to percolate blocks of sandstone, the effluent was at first 
nearly fresh, the salt being filtered out and crystallized for the most 
part near the surface of ingress to the sandstone. As the process 
continued the sah-saturated layer, incapable of further effective 
filtration, grew in 'thickness downwards, until in the process of time 
it filled the whole mass of sandstone. But before this was accom- 
plished the filtration of the effluent became defective, and brackish 
water was received, which rapidly increased nearly to the saltness 
of the inflow. Into such blocks, charged with salt crystals and 
thoroughly dried, fresh water was then passed, and precisely the 
converse process took place. A thickness of only 12 in. of Bunter 
sandstone proved at first to be capable of removing more than 80% 
of the chlorides from sea water; but, after the slow passage of only 
o>6 gallon through I cub. ft. of stone, the proportion removed fell 
to 8-51 %. The general lesson to be learned from these facts is, that 
if the purity of the water of any well not far removed from the sea is 
to be maintained, that water must not be pumped down much below 
the sea-level. In short, the quantity of water drawn must in no case 
be allowed to exceed the quantity capable of being supplied 
to the well through the medium of the surrounding soil 
and rock, by rain falling upon the surface of the land. If 
it exceeds this, the stock of fresh water held in the inter- 
stices of the rock, and capable of flowing towards the well, 7-^ 
must disappear; and the deficit between the supply and H 
demand can only be made up by water filtering from the sea --.^ i 
and reaching the well at first, quite free from salt, but sooner 
or later in a condition unfit for use. 

Dams 

Any well-made earthen embankment of moderate 
height, and of such thickness and uniformity of con- 

struction as to ensure freedom from excessive 

22r" percolation at any point, will in the course of time 
become almost impermeable to surface water standing 
against it; and when permeable rocks are covered with many 
feet of soil, the leakage through such soil from standing water 
newly placed above it generally diminishes rapidly, and in 
process of time often ceases entirely. Even the beds of 
sluggish rivers flowing over porous strata generally become 
so impermeable that excavations made in their neighbour- 
hood, though freely collecting the subsoil water, receive no 



WATER SUPPLY 



395 



river water whatever. Thus natural or artificial surfaces 
which are completely permeable to rainfall may become 
almost impermeable when protected by surface water from 
drought and frost, and from earth-worms, vegetation and 
artificial disturbance. The cause of this choking of the pores 
is precisely the same as that described below in the case of sand 
filters. But in order that the action may be complete the 
initial resistance to percolation of water at every part of the 
soil must be such that the motion of the water through it shall 
be insufficient to disturb the water-borne mineral and organic 
particles lodged on the surface or in the interstices of the soil 
If, therefore, a reservoir so formed survives the first few years 
without serious leakage, it is' not likely, ir» the absence of artificial 
disturbance, to succumb owing to leakage at a later period. 
Hence, as the survival of the fittest, there are many artificial 
waters, with low dams consisting exclusively of earth — and 
sometimes very sandy earth — satisfactorily performing their 
functions with no visible leakage. But it is never advisable to 
rely upon this action, where, as in the case of a reservoir for water 
supply, large portions of naturally permeable bottom are liable 
to be uncovered and exposed to the weather. 

The most important dams are those which dose the outlets 
of existing valleys, but a dam may be wholly below ground, and 
according to the commoner method of construction 
in Great Britain, wherever sufficiently impermeable 
rising ground is not met with at the intended boundary 
of a reservoir, a trench is cut along such portion, and carried 
down to rock or such other formation as, in the engineer's 
opinion, forms a sufficiently impermeable sheet beneath the 
whole surface to be covered with water. Into this trench so- 
called " puddled clay," that is, clay rendered plastic by kneading 
with water, is filled and thoroughly worked with special tools, 
and trodden in layers. In this manner an underground 
compartment is formed, the bottom of which is natural, and 
the sides partly natural and partly artificial, both offering 
high resistance to the passage of water. Above ground, if the 
water level is to be higher than the natural boundary, the same 
puddle walls or cores are carried up to the required level, and 
are supported as they rise by embankments of earth on 
either side. 

Fig. 6 is a typical section of a low dam of this class, impounding 
water upon gravel overlying impermeable clay. In such a structure 
the whole attention as regards water-tightness should be concen- 
trated upon tbe puddle wall or core. When, as may happen in dry 
seasons, the puddle wall remains long above the water level, it parts 
with moisture and contracts. It is essential that this contraction 
shall not proceed to such an extent as may possibly produce cracking. 
Drying is retarded, and the contraction due to a given degree of 
drying is greatly reduced, by the presence of sand and small stones 
among the clay. Nearly all clays, notably those from the Glacial 
deposits, naturally contain sand and stones, 40 to 50% by weight of 
which is not too much if uniformly distributed and if the day is 
otherwise good. But in tbe lower parts of tbe trench, where the 




6.— Section of Typical Low Earth Eml 



t in Flat Plain. 



clay can never become dry, plasticity and ductility are, for reasons 
to be explained below, the first consideration, and there the pro- 
portion of grit should be lower. The resistance of clay to percolation 
by water depends chiefly upon the density of the clay, while that 
density is rapidly reduced if the day is permitted to absorb water. 
Thus, if dry clay is prevented from expanding, and one side be sub- 
jected to water pressure while the other side is held up by a com- 
pletely porous medium, the percolation will be exceedingly small: 
out it the pressure preventing the expansion is reduced the clay will 
swell, and the percolation will increase. On the restoration of the 
pressure, the density will be again increased by the reduction of the 



396 



WATER SUPPLY 



M» 



water*fiUed interstices, and the percolation will be correspondingly 
checked. Hence the extreme importance in high dams with cay 
cores of loading the clay well for some time before water pressure is 
brought against it. If this is done, the largest possible quantity of 
clay will be slowly but surely forced into any space, and, being pre- 
vented from expanding, it will be unable subsequently to absorb 
more water. The percolation will then be very small, and the risk 
of disintegration will be reduced to a minimum. The embankments 
on either side of the puddle wall are merely to support the puddle and 
to keep it moist above the ground level when 
the reservoir is low. They may be quite per- 
meable, but to prevent undue settlement and 
distortion they must, like the puddle, be well 
consolidated. In order to prevent a tendency to 
slip, due to sudden and partial changes of satura- 
tion, the outer embankment should always be 
permeable, and well drained at the base except 
close to the puddle. The less permeable materials 
should be confined to the inner parts of the 
embankments; this is especially important in the 
case of the inner embankment in order that, 
when the water level falls, they may remain moist 
without becoming liable to slip. The inner slope 
should be protected from the action of waves by 
so-called " hand-pitching," consisting of roughly- 
squared stonework, bedded upon a layer of 
broken stone to prevent local disturbance of the 
embankment by action of the water between 
the joints of the larger stones. 

In mountain valleys, rock or shale, commonly 
the most impermeable materials met with in such 
positions, are sometimes not reached till con- 
siderable depths arc attained. There are several 
cases in Great Britain where it has been neces- 
sary to carry down .the puddle trench to about 
300 ft. below the surface of the ground vertically 
above those parts. The highest dams of this class 
in the British islands impound water to a level 
of about l to ft. above the bottom of the valley. 
Such great works have generally been well con- 
structed, and there arc many which after fifty 
years of use are perfectly Bound and water-tight, 
and afford no evidence of deterioration. On the 
other hand, the partial or total failure of smaller 
dams of this description, to retain the reservoir 
water, has been much more common in the past 
than is generally supposed. Throughout Great 
Britain there are still many reservoirs, with 
earthen dams, which cannot safely be filled; and 
others which, after remaining for years in this 
Condition, have been repaired! From such cases 
and their successful repair valuable experience of 
the causes of failure may be derived. 

Most of these causes are perfectly well under- 
stood by experienced engineers, but instances of 
-. - malconstruction of recent date are still met with. A 
23bMfc fcw 8ach aksen will now be mentioned. The base of 
wmMMgv. a pmjjig trench is .often found to have been placed 
upon rock, perfectly sound in itself, but having joints which 
are not impermeable. The loss of water by leakage through 
such joints or fissures below the puddle wall may or may not 
be a serious matter in itself; but if at any point there is sufficient 
movement of water across the base of the trench to produce the 
slightest erosion of the clay above it, that movement almost in- 
variably increases. The finer particles of clay in the line of the joint 
are washed away, while the sandy particles, which nearly all natural 
clays contain, remain behind and form a constantly deepening 
porous vein of sand crossing the base of the puddle. Percolation 



IPAMS 

the sand. Thus the permeable vein grows vertically rather than 
horizontally, and ultimately assumes the form of a thin vertical 
sheet traversing the puddle wall, often diagonally in plan, and having 
a thickness which has varied in different cases from a few inches to a 
couple of feet or more, of almost clean sand rising to an observed 
height of 30 or 40 ft., and only arrested in its upward growth by the 
necessary lowering of the reservoir water to avoid serious danger. 
The settlement of the plastic clay above the eroded portion soon 
produces a surface depression at the top of the embankment over or 



TOP flANK 1EVE_L_ 



?■ 




PUDDLED 

<:lay 



m 

.^,<maeTl and flOCK^OJVtHE; 0L D r_e Qi .';} SA^o STONE _ 




Flo. 7. — Earth Embankment, with stone toe and concrete trench, 
through this sand is thus added to the original leakage. Having cumbent 
passed through the puddle core the leaking water sometimes rises to 
the surface of the ground, producing a visibly turbid spring. As 
erosion proceeds, the contraction of the space from which the clay 
is washed continues, chiefly by the sinking down of the clay above 



Fie. 8.— Leakage due to improperly formed discharge culvert through 
puddle wall of reservoir. 

nearly over the leakage, and thus sometimes gives the first warning of 

impending danger. It is not always possible to prevent any leakage 

whatever through the strata below the bottom or beyond the ends 

of the trench, but it is always possible to render such leakage entirely 

harmless to the work above it, and to carry th« water by relief-pipes 

to visible points at the lower toe of the dam. Wherever the base of a 

puddle wall cannot be worked into a continuous bed of clay or shale, 

or tied into a groove cut in sound rock free from water-bearing 

fissures, the safest course is to base it on an artificial material at once 

impermeable and incapable of erosion, interposed between the rock 

and the puddled clay. Water-tight concrete is a suitable material 

for the purpose; it need not be made so thick as the puddle core, 

and is therefore sometimes used with considerable advantage in lieu 

of the puddle for the whole depth below ground. In 

fig. 7 a case is shown to be so treated. Obviously, the 

junction between the puddle and the concrete might 

nave been made at apy lower level. 

However well the work may be done, the lower part 
of a mass of puddled clay invariably settles into a 
denser mass when weighted with the clay , 
above. If, therefore, one part is held up, , 
by unyielding rock for example, while an 
adjoining part has no support but the clay beneath 
it, a fracture — not unlike a geological fault — must 
result. Fig. 8 is a part longitudinal section through 
- the puddle wall of an earthen embankment. The 
puddle wall is crossed by a pedestal of concrete carry- 
ing the brick discharge culvert. The puddle at a was 
originally held up by the flat head of this pedestal; 
not so the puddle at b, which under the superin- 
weight settled down and produced the fault be, 
accompanied with a shearing or tangential strain or, less probably, 
with actual fracture in the direction bd. Serious leakage at once 
began between c and b and washed out the clay, particle by particle, 
but did not wash out the sand associated with it, which remained 



WATER SUPPLY 



Plate 1. 




Plate II. 



WATER SUPPLY 




WATER SUPPLY 



397 



behind ia the crevice. 71m day roof, father than the \ 



i of Urn 



crevice of nod, gave way and pre— ed down to fill the vacancy, aad 
the leakage worked op along the weakened plane of tangential strain 
6s*. On the appearance of serious leakage the overflow level of the 
water originally at *f was lowered for safety to f * ; and for many 
years the reservoir was worked with its general level much below fit. 
The sand~filled vein, several inches in width, was found* on taking 
out the puddle, to have terminated near the highest level to which 
the water was allowed to rise, but not to have worked downwards. 
There can be fittle doubt that the puddle at the right-hand angle j 
was also strained, but not to the point of rupture, as owing to the 
rise of the sandstone base there was comparatively little room for 
settlement on that side. In repairing this work the perfectly safe 

form shown by the dotted 
lines Jw, kj was substituted 
for the flat surface aj, and 
this alone, if originally 
adopted, would have pre- 
vented dangerous shearing 
strains. As an additional 
precaution, however, deep 
tongues of concrete like 
those in fig. 7 were built 
in the rock throughout the 
length of the trench, and 
earned up the sides and 
over the top of the ped- 
estal. The puddle was 
then replaced, and remains 
sensibly watertight. The 




Fig. 



lesson taught by fig. 8 applies also to the ends of puddle walk 
where they abut against steep faces of rock. Unless such facet 
are so far below the surface of the puddle, and so related to 
the lower parts of the trench, that no tension, and consequent 
tendency to separation of the puddle from the rock, can possibly 
take puce, and unless abundant time is given, before the 
reservoir is charged, for the settlement aad compression of the 
puddle to be completed, leakage with disastrous results may occur. 
In other cases leakage and failure have arisen from allowing a pact 
of the rock bottom or end of a puddle trench to overhang, as tn fig. 9. 

U __._. - ■ * -« - __T -_.._ 1— ? * L-.I-. -..-■ auaJJU 1m I 1111*1111 .— I «_■ «■ 



Here the straining of the original horizontal puddle in settling down 
....... . i way by # the curved. Hnea. 



There is considerable distortion oTthe clay, resulting from combined 
shearing and tensile stress, above each of the steps of rock, and 
reaching its maximum at and above the highest rise ab, where it has 
proved sufficient to produce a dangerous line of weakness ae, the 
tension at •either causing actual rapture, or such increased porosity 
as to permit of percolation capable of keeping open the wound. In 
such cases as are shown in figs. 8 and 9 the growth of the sand vein is 
not vertical, but inclined towards, the plane of maximum shearing 
in. Fig. 9 also illustrates a weak place at b where the clay either 
er pressed hard against the overhanging rock or has actually 



unpleasant places below ground, and I 
surrounding area, if safety ia to be sect 
rock should always be cut away to a 1 



_____ _. ___ jing rot 

drawn away therefrom in the process of settling towards the lower 
part to the left. When it is considered that a parting of the clay, 
sufficient to allow the thinnest film of water to pass, may start the 
formation of a vein of porous sand in the manner above explained, 
it will be readily seen how great must be the attention to details, in 
■ ", and below the water level of the 
e secured. In cases like fig. 9 the 
l slope, such as that shown in 
fig. to. 

If no considerable difference of water-pressure had been allowed 
between the two sides of the puddle trench in figs. 8 or 9 until the day 

had ceased to settle down, 
it b probable that the 
interstices, at fi 



first formed 
between the puddle and 
the concrete or rock, 
would have been suffici- 
ently filled to prevent in- 
jurious percolation at any 
future time. Hence it ts 
always a safe precaution 
to afford plenty of time 
for such settlement before 
Fl_ rooftop- Rr_« for l^kSo^^^ % a ^^ 

such precautions should be added the use of concrete or brickwork 
tongues running longitudinally at the bottom of the trench, such as 
those shown at a higher level in fig. 7. 

In addition to defects arising out of the condition or figure of the 
rock or of artificial work upon which the puddle clay rests, the puddle 

_ . waB Itaelf is often defective. The original material may 

"J* have been perfectly satisfactory, but if, for example, in 
JJJJr* to* progress of the work a stream of water is allowed to 
^"* . flow across it, fine clay is sometimes washed away, and the 
gravel or sand associated with it left to a sufficient extent to permit 
of future percolation. Unless such places are carefully dug out or 
re-puddled before the work of filling u resumed, the percolation may 
increase along the vertical plane where it is greatest, by the erosion 
ftjtvm 7* 




and falling tn of the day roof, as In the other cases dted. Two 
instance- probably originating in some such cause are shown in fig. 1 1 
in the relative positions in which they were found, and carefully 
measured, aa the puddle was removed from a crippled reservoir dam. 
These fissures are in vertical planes stretching entirely across the 
puddle trench, and reaching in one case, as, nearly to the highest 
level at which the reservoir had been worked for seventeen years 
after the leakage had been discovered. The larger and older of these 
veins was 44. ft. high, of which 14 ft. was above the original ground 
level, and it is interesting to note that this portion, owing probably to 
easier access for the water from the reservoir and reduced com- 
p r essi on of the puddle, was much wider than below. The little vein 
to the left marked bb, about ji ft. deep, is curious. It looks like the 
beginning of success of an effort made by a slight percolation during 
the whole life of the reservoir to increase itaelf materially by erosion* 




F10. 11.— Vertical Vdn of Leakage. 

There b no reason to believe that the initial cause of such a leakage 
could be developed except during construction, and it is certain that 
once begun it must increase. Only a knowledge of the great loss 
of capital that has resulted from abortive reservoir construction 
justifies this notice of defects which can always be avoided, and are 



too often the direct result, not of design, but of parsimony in pro- 
viding during the execution of such works, and especially 
ground, a sufficiency of intelligent, ex p e ri enced and conscat 



n some cases, as, for example, when a high earthen embankment 
crosses a gorge, and there is plenty of stone to be had, it Is desirable 
to place the outer bank upon a toe or platform of rubble stonework, 
aa in fig. 7, by which means the height of the earthen portion if 
reduced and complete drainage secured. But here again great care 
must be exercised in the packing and consolidation of the stones, 
which will otherwise crack and settle. 
As with many other engineering works, the tendency to 1 



either of the sides of the valley or of the reservoir embankment hi 
baa often given trouble, and has sometimes led to serious disaster, 



39« 



WATER SUPPLY 



[DAMS 



mi wood, 
ttotUcoa- 



This, however, is a kind of failure not always attributable to want 
of proper supervision during construction, out rather to improper 
choice of the site, or treatment of the case, by those primarily 
responsible. 

In countries where good day or retentive earth cannot be 
obtained, numerous alternative expedients have been adopted 
with more or less success. In the mining districts 
of America, for example, where timber is cheap, rough 
stone embankments have been lined on the water face 
with timber to form the water-tight septum. In such 
a position, even if the timber can be made sufficiently 
water-tight to begin with, the alternate immersion 
and exposure to air and sunshine promotes expansion and con- 
traction, and induces rapid disintegration, leakage and decay. 
Such an expedient may be justified by the doubtful future of 
mining centres, but would be out of the question for permanent 
water supply. Riveted sheets of steel have been occasionally 
used, and, where bedded in a sufficient thickness of concrete, 
with success. At the East CaHon Creek dam, Utah, the height 
of which is about 61 ft. above the stream, the trench below 
ground was filled with concrete much in the usual way, while 
above ground the water-tight diaphragm consists of a riveted 
steel plate varying in thickness from ft in.' to ft in. This 
steel septum was protected on either side by a thin wall of 
asphaltic concrete supported by rubble stone embankments, 
and owing to irregular settling of the embankments became 
greatly distorted, apparently, however, without causing leakage. 
Asphalt, whether a natural product or artificially obtained, as, 
for example, in some chemical manufactures, is a most useful 
material if properly employed in connexion with reservoir dams. 
Under sudden impact it is brittle, and has a conchoidal fracture 
like glass; but under continued pressure it has the properties 
of a viscous fluid. The rate of flow is largely dependent upon the 
proportion of bitumen it contains, and is of course retarded by 
mixing it with sand and stone to form what is commonly called 
asphalt concrete. But given time, all such compounds, if they 
contain enough bitumen to render them water-tight, appear to 
settle down even at ordinary temperatures as heavy viscous 
fluids, retaining their fluidity permanently if not exposed to 
the air. Thus they not only penetrate all cavities in an exceed- 
ingly intrusive manner, but exert pressures in all. directions, 
which, owing to the density of the asphalt, are more than 40 % 
greater than would be produced by a corresponding depth of 
water. From the neglect of these considerations numerous 
failures have occurred. 

Elsewhere, a simple concrete or masonry wall or core has been 
used above as well as below ground, being carried up between 
embankments either of earth or rubble stone. This construction 
has received its highest development in America. On the 
Titicuv » tributary of the Croton river, an earthen dam was 
completed in 1895, with a concrete core wall 100 ft. high— almost 
wholly above the original ground level, which is said to be 
impermeable; but other dams of the same system, with core 
walls of less than zoo ft. in height, are apparently in their 
present condition not impermeable. Reservoir No. 4 of the 
Boston waterworks, completed in 1885, has a concrete core wall. 
The embankment is 1800 ft. long and 60 ft. high. The core wall 
is about 8 ft. thick at the bottom and 4 ft. thick at the top, and 
in the middle of the valley nearly 100 ft. in height. At irregular 
intervals of 150 ft. or more buttresses 3 ft. wide and x ft. thick 
break the continuity on the water side. That this work has been 
regarded as successful is shown by the fact that Reservoir No. 6 
of the same waterworks was subsequently constructed and 
completed in 1894 with a similar core waU. There is no serious 
difficulty in so constructing walls of this kind as to be practically 
water-tight while they remain unbroken; but owing to the 
settlement of the earthen embankments and the changing level 
of saturation they are undoubtedly subject to irregular stresses 
which cannot be calculated, and under which, speaking generally, 
plastic materials are much safer. In Great Britain masonry 
or concrete core walls have been generally confined to positions 
below ground. Thus placed, no serious strains are caused either 



by changes of temperature or of moisture or by movements of 
the lateral supports, and with proper ingredients and care 
a very thin wall wholly below ground may be made water- 
tight. 

The next class of dam to be considered is that in which the 
structure as a whole is so bound together that, with certain 
reservations, it may be considered as a monolith 
subject chiefly to the overturning tendency of water- 2JJ£ UT 
pressure resisted by the weight of the structure itself 
and the supporting pressure of the foundation. Masonry dams 
are, for the roost part, merely retaining walls of exceptional 
site, in which the overturning pressure is water. If such a dam 
is suffisiently strong, and is built upon sound and moderately 
rough rock, it will always be incapable of sliding. Assuming 
also that it is incapable of crushing under its own weight and the 
pressure of the water, it must, in order to fail entirely, turn over 
on its outer toe, or upon the outer face at some higher level. 
It may do this in virtue of horizontal water-pressure alone, or 
of such pressure combined with upward pressure from intrusive 
water at its base or in any higher horizontal plane. Assume 
first, however, that there is no uplift from intrusive water. As 
the pressure of water is nil at the surface and increases in direct 
proportion to the depth, the overturning moment is as the cube 
of the depth; and the only figure which has a moment ot 
resistance due to gravity, varying also as the cube of its depth* 
is a triangle. The form of stability having the least sectional 
area is therefore a triangle. It is obvious that the angles at the 
base of such a hypothetical dam must depend upon the relation 
between its density and that of the water. It can be shown, 
for example, that for masonry having a density of 3, water being 
x, the figure of minimum section is a right-angled triangle, with 
the water against its vertical face; while for a greater density 
the water face must lean towards the water, and for a less density 
away from the water, so that the water may lie upon it. For 
the sections of masonry dams actually used in practice, if designed 
on the condition that the centre of all vertical pressures when 
the reservoir is full shall be, as hereafter provided, at two-thirds 
the width of the base from the inner toe, the least sectional area 
for a density of 2 also has a vertical water face. As the density 
of the heaviest rocks is only 3, that of a masonry dam must 
be below 3, and in practice such works if well constructed vary 
from 22 to 26. For these densities, the deviation of the water 
face from the vertical in the figure of least sectional area is, 
however, so trifling that, so far as this consideration is concerned, 
it may be neglected. 

If the right-angled triangle dbc, fig. 12, be a profile 1 ft. thick of & 
monolithic dam, subject to the pressure of water against its vertical 
side to the full depth ab~ 

d in feet, the horizontal _lfmte2na& *> 

pressure of water against 
the section of the dam, in- 
creasing uniformly with the 
depth, is properly repre- 
sented by the isosceles s 
right-angled triangle abe, / 
in which be is the maximum S 
water-pressure due to the Oa&urwq* mm »- 
f uU depth d, while the area 
abe-* is the total hori* 

zontal pressure against the w „ w 

SwcSJ^wa^tinS Fio. , ? .-D^m ofRight-Angled 
at one-third its depth above Triangle Dam. 

the base. Then ~ is the resultant horizontal pressure with an ovesw 
turning moment of 

* w 

If x be the width of the base, and p the density of the masonry, the 
weight of the masonry in terms of a cubic foot of water will be -5- 
acting at its centre of gravity f , situated at I* from the outer toe, 
and the moment of resistance to overturning on the outer toe, 

e& « 



z 




DAMS) 

Equating Uh 
(i), we have 



WATER SUPPLY 



399 



(i) to the 



3 6 

d 



That is to eay, for such a monolith to be on the point of overturning 
under the horizontal preHure due to the full depth of water, its base 
must be equal to that depth divided by the square root of twice the 
density of the monolith. For a density of 2*5 the base would there- 
fore be 44*7 % of the height. 

We have now to consider what are the necessary factor* of safety, 
and the modes of their application. In the first place, it is out of 
j^^ w the question to allow the water to rise to the vertex a 
TT ' w of such a masonry triangle. A minimum thickness must 
mmm ^' be adopted to give substance to the upper part; and where 
the dam b not used as a weir it must necessarily rise several feet 
above the water, and may in either event have to carry a roadway. 
Moreover, considerable mass is required to reduce the internal 
strains caused by changes of temperature. In the next place, it is 
necessary to confine the pressure, at every point of the masonry, to 
an intensity which will give a sufficient factor of safety against 
crushing. The upper part of the dam having been designed in the 
fight otthese conditions, die whole process of completing the design 
is simple enough when certain hypotheses have been adopted, though 
somewhat laborious in its more obvious form. It is clear that the 
greatest crushing pressure must occur, either, with the reservoir 
empty, near the lower part of the water face a*, or with the reservoir 
full, near the lower part of the outer face or. The principles hitherto 
adopted in designing masonry dams, in which the moment of re- 
sistance depends upon the figure and weight of the masonry, involve 
certain assumptions, which, although not quite true, have proved 
useful and harmless, and are so convenient that they may be con- 
tinued with due regard to the modifications which recent investiga- 
tions have suggested. One such assumption is that, if the dam is 
well built, the intensity of vertical pressure will (neglecting local 
irregularities) vary nearly uniformly from face to face along any 
hor u o nta l plane. Thus, to take the simplest case, if abu (fig. 13) 
s a rectangular mass already designed for the superstructure 

& B 



JHtfcAogA 




Fto. 13.— Factor of Safety Diagram. 






of the dam. and g its centre of gravity, the centre of pressure upon 
the base will be vertically under g, that is. at the centre of the base, 
and the load will be properly represented by the rectangle bfgc, of 
which the area represents the total load and the uniform depth of its 

— '■* intensity. At this high part of the structure the intensity of 

will of course be much less than its permissible intensity. 



If now we assume the water to have a depth 4 above the base, the 
total water pressure represented by the triangle kbh will have its 
centre at dfy from the base, and by the parallelogram of forces, 
assuming the density of the masonry to be 3*5, we find that the 
centre of pressure upon the base be b shifted from the centre of the 
base to a point i nearer to the outer toe c, and adopting our assump- 
tion of uniformly varying intensity of stress, the rectangular diagram 
of pressures will thus be distorted from the figure bfte to the figure of 
1 bjlc, having its centre o vertically under tne point at which 



the resultant of all the forces cute the base 6c For any lower level 
the same treatment may, step by step, be adopted, until the maxi* 
mum intensity of pressure d exceeds the assumed permissible 
maximum, or the centre of pressure reaches an assigned distance 
from the outer toe c, when the base must be widened until the 
maximum intensity of pressure or the centre of pressure, as the 
case may be, is brought within the prescribed limit. The resultant 
profile is of the kind shown in fig. 14. 

Having thus determined the outer profile under the conditions 
hitherto assumed, it must be similarly ascertained that the water 

vertical pressure of the "^ 
masonry when the reser- 
voir is empty, and the 
base of each compart- 
ment must be widened 
if necessary in that 
direction also. Hence in 
dams above 100 ft* in 
height, further adjust- 
ment of the outer profile 
may be required by 
reason of the deviation 
of the inner profile from 
the vertical. The effect 
of this process is to give 
a series of points in the 
horuontal planes at 
which the resultants of 
all forces above those 
planes respectively cut 
the planes. Curved 
lines, as dotted in fig. 14, 




Fig. 14. — Diagram showing lines of 



p re ssu re in Masonry 1 

drawn through those points give the centre of pressure, for the 
r es erv oir full and empty respectively, at any horuontal plane. 
These general principles were recognised by Messrs Graeft and 
Delocre of the Fonts et C ha u ss nrs. and about the year 1866 were put 
into practice in the Furens dam near St Eticnne. In 1871 the late 
Professor Ranldne, F.&S., whose remarkable perception of the 
practical fitness or unfitness of purely theoretical deductions gives 
his writings exceptional value, received from Major Tulloch, K.E., 
on behalf of the municipality of Bombay, a request to consider the 
subject generally, and with special reference to very high dams, such 
as have since been constructed in India. Ranldne pointed out that 
before the vertical pressure reached the maximum pressure per* 
missible, the pressure tangential to the slope might do so. Thus 
conditions of stress are conceivable in which the maximum would be 
tangential to the slope or nearly so, and would therefore increase the 
vertical stress in p ropor ti on to the cosecant squared of the slope. 
It Is very doubtful whether this pressure is ever reached, but such a 
limit rather than that of the vertical stress must be considered when 
the height of a dam demands it. Next, Ranldne pointed out that, in 
a structure exposed to the overturning action of forces which fluctu- 
ate in amount and direction, there should be no appreciable tension 
at any point of the masonry. But there is a still more important 
reason why this condition should be strictly adhered to as regards 
the inner face. We have hitherto considered ooly the horuontal 
overturning pressur e of the water: but if from originally defective 
construction, or from the absence of vertical pressure due to weight of 
masonry towards the water edge of any horizontal bed, as at ab in 
fig. 14, water intrudes beneath that part of the masonry more readily 
than it can obtain egress along or, or in any other direction towards 
the outer face, we shall have the uplifting and overturning pressure 
due to the full depth of water m the reservoir over the width ab added 
to the horizontal pressure, In which case aO our previous calculations 
would be futile. The condition, therefore, that there shall be no 
tension b important as an dement of design; but when we come to 
construction, we must be careful also that no part of the wall shall 
be less permeable than the water face. In fig. 13 we have seen that 
the varying depth of the area bjlc approximately represents the 
varying distribution of the vertical stress. If, therefore, the centre 
of that became so far rem oved to the right as to make / coincident 
with b, the diagram of stresses would become the triangle /jV, and 
the vertical pressure at the inner face would be nil. This will 
evidently happen when the centre of pressure s*i§ two-thirds from the 
inner toe b' and one-third from the outer toe c*; and if we displace the 
centre of nressure still further to the right, the condition that the 
centre of figure of the diagram shall be vertically under that centre of 
pressure can only be fulfilled by allowing the point / to cross the 
base to j* thus giving a negative pressure or tension at the inner toe. 
Hence it follows that on the assumption of uniformly varying stress 
the line of pressures , when the reservoir is full, should not at any 
horisontal plane fall outside the middle third of the width of that 
plane. 

Ranldne in his report adopted the prudent course of taking as the 
safe limits certain pressures to which, at that time, such structures 
were known to be subject. Thus for the inner face he took, as the 
limiting vertical pressure, 320 ft. of water, or nearly 9 tons per sq. ft., 
and for the outer face 250 ft. of water, or about 7 tons per sq. ft. 



4-0O 



WATER SUPPLY 



For simplicity of calculation Rankinc chose logarithmic curves for 
both the inner and outer faces, and they fit very well with the con- 
ditions. With one exception, however— the Beetaloo dam in 
Australia 1 10 ft. high— there are no practical examples of dams with 
logarithmically curved faces. 

After Rankine, a French engineer, Bouvier, gave the ratio of the 
maximum stress in a dam to the maximum vertical stress as i to the 
cosine squared of the angle between the vertical and the resultant 
which, in dams of the usual form, is about as 13 is to 9. 

During the last few years attention has been directed to the 
stresses— including shearing stresses— on planes other than hori- 
zontal. M. Levy contributed various papers on the subject which 
will be found in the Comptes rendus de VAcademie des Sciences (1895 
and 1898) and in the Annates des Ponts et Chaussees (1897). He in- 
vestigated the problem by means of the general differential equations 
of static equilibrium for dams of triangular and rectangular form 
considered as isotropic elastic solids. In one of 
these papers Levy formulated the requirement 
now generally adopted in France that the vertical 
pressure at the upstream end of any joint, calcu- 
lated by the law of uniformly varying stress, 
should not be less than that of the water pressure 
at the level of that joint in order to prevent in- 
trusive water getting into the structure. 

These researches were followed by those of 
Messrs L. W. Atcherlcy and Karl Pearson, F.R.S., 1 
and by an approximate graphical treatment by 
Dr W. C. Unwin, F.R.S." Dr Unwin took two 
horizontal planes, one Close above the other, and 
calculated the vertical stresses on each by the law 
of uniformly varying stresses. Then the differ- 
ence between the normal pressure on a rectangular 
element In the lower plane and that on the upper 
plane is the weight of the element and the differ- 
ence between the shears on the vertical faces of 
that element. The weights being known, the 
principal stresses may be determined. These 
researches led to a wide discussion of the sufficiency 
of the law of uniformly varying stress when 
applied to horizontal joints as a test of the 
stability of dams. Professor Karl Pearson showed 
that the results are dependent upon the assump- 
tion that the distribution of the vertical stresses 
on the base of the structure also followed the 
law of uniformly varying stress. In view of the 
irregular forms and the uncertainties of the nature 
of the materials at the foundation, the law of uni- 
formly varying stress was not applicable to the 
base of the dam. He stated that it was practic- 
ally impossible to determine the stresses by purely 
mathematical means. The late Sir Benjamin 
Baker, F.R.S., suggested that the stresses might 
be measured by experiments with elastic models, 
and among others, experiments were carried out 
by Messrs Wilson and Gore* with indiarubber 
models of plane sections of dams (including the 
foundations] who applied forces to represent the 
gravity and water pressures in such a manner that 
the virtual density of the rubber was increased 
many times without interfering with the proper 
ratio between gravity and water pressure, and by this means the 
strains produced were of sufficient magnitude to be easily measured. 

The more important of their results are shown graphically in figs. 
15 and 16, and prove that the law of uniformly varying stress b 
generally applicable to the upper two-thirds of a dam, but that at 
parts in or near the foundations that law is departed from in a way 
which will be best understood from the diagrams. 

Fig. 1 5 shows a section of the model dam. The maximum principal 
•tresses are represented by the directions and thicknesses of the two 
systems of intersecting lines mutually at rijght angles. 

Tensile stresses (indicated by broken lines on the diagram) are 
shown at the upstream toe notwithstanding that the line of resist- 
ance k wdl withm the middle third of the section. It is important to 
notice that the maximum value of the tension at the toe lies in a 
direction approximately at 45* to the vertical, but at points lower 
down in the foundation this tension, while less in magnitude, becomes 
much more horizontal. This feature indicates that in the event of a 
crack cccurring at the upstream toe, its extension would tend to 
turn downwards and follow a direction nearly parallel with the 
maximum pressure lines, in which direction it would not materially 
affect the stability of the structure. 

As a matter of fact, the foundations of most dam* are carried down 
m vertical trenches, the lower part only being in sound materials so 
that actual separation almost corresponding with the hypothetical 



(DAMS 

crack is allowed In the first Instance with no harmful effects. Similar 
experiments upon models with rounded toes but otherwise of the 
same form showed a considerable reduction in the magnitude of the 
tensile stresses. 

On examining the diagram it will be observed that the maximum 
compressive stresses are parallel to and near to the down stream face 
of the section, which values are approximately equal to the maxi- 
mum value of the vertical stress determined by the law of uniformly 
varying stress divided by the cosine squared of the angle between the 
vertical and the resultant. 

The distributions of stress on the base line of the model for " reser- 
voir empty " and " reservoir full " are shown in fig. 16 by ellipses of 
stress and by diagrams of stress on vertical and horizontal sections. 

Arrow heads at the ends of an axis of an ellipse indicate tension 
as distinct from compression, and the semi-axes in magnitude and 
direction represent the principal stresses. 

FiH. is.— Di*v*mt Hlut*roHnj rttuFti *f 
P'iVmi* JkJ Gort'f Tfpftimtmlr AiiA a* jadi*- 
f*M** MrtJd rfjn , Rrairvnil full. 

Thr l«P lyur m.\ Q < Unrt raulualfr m.% right 
Hn&Jti *how lb* direclkwn o[ the wainsum nwl 
minimum tinwi icfknUve Ijr . Suih iLcnso 
*rc ternvnJ priadpil iTJr*w4. Temiufl ii in<Ji- 
ca tcj l>y UtutiEu lt«4 toll coaptation by JuQ 

Hk ihrttfcif ilrrsm in ten* ifonf ttr linn 
of princEpdl ilf Lis And reach a nuilmum. on 
fine* a! 44° tAfreiOi Tbf nrjfnhudt* ol ihe 
muJmum ih*arin«j itrcttc* AR todJcxittl by ibr 
iLgtfbrtk ihflrTttjtct of Lne itrL-l"—** ot tfcw 
lien nf IhfiwW UftK. 

Line 46 fa In *urh a portion thai the *lfn*r* 
ikmff and above it in not mituiilky ■.B<tIcJ 
by Luc man; JiTLfuLu iii»d below LLvit Im* 
producrf by tl\t iudi]tn dianfie in IcCHma it 

the bu* of IV d*<n, Thr wrtk*l dMts&c* 
above, the Utif di nf uiy poJtt bi ifcc daU^t 
line Jf b urai*rtiuittl la the venial con>- 
paoiuL of ific [oaipnijsJvi *$ie*f no. Hut line ab 
Bisumcd La vn.nr unifurmty item tuct tu ficc. 
And ikruiLrly the *ertfc*l dbtitac? nf ,t\y 

CultiI in thr j-dot^flnH-dub h°G ■« ^t^iVT 

Lhvlinc ai hk nroporlioDaJ foLhr vmn:*! 

tmnp^pimt of the sura determined ti- 

penmcDlalh/, ThiVLnkal cotn^mti.t 

ilupjrAtiti iM And •*■■ 

dr*wn to * U?f*l Atalc I 

the tact iAdkalibt Lie pcbtttyA] 




* On Soma Disregarded Points in ike Stability of Masonry Dams, 
* Company Research Memoir (London, 1904). 

CmZ Engineers, vol. 172, p. 



Drapers' Company Research Memoir 
* Bu t mm i* t (May isth, 1905). 
•Ptamdsngs of the Institution of 

107. 



It is obvious that experiments of the kind referred to cannot take 
into account all the conditions of the problem met with in actual 
practice, such as the effect of the rock at the sides of the valley, and 
variations of temperature, Ac, but deviations in practice from the 
conditions which mathematical analyses or experiments assume are 
nearly always present. Such analyses and experiments are not on 
that account the less important and useful. 

So far we have only considered water-pressure against the reser- 
voir side of the dam; out it sometimes happens that the water and 
earth pressure against the outer face is considerable enough to modify 
the lower part of the section. In dams of moderate height above 
ground and considerable depth below ground there is, moreover, 
no reason why advantage should not be taken of the earth resistance 
due either to the downstream face of the trench against which the 
foundations are built, or to the materials excavated and properly 
embanked against that face above the ground level or to both. 
We do not always know the least resistance which it is safe to give 
,to a retaining wall subject to the pressure of earth, or conversely, 
the maximum resistance to side-thrust which natural or embanked 
earth will afford, because we wisely neglect the important but very 
variable element of adhesion between the particles. It is notorious 
among engineers that retaining walls designed in accordance with 
the well-known theory of conjugate pressures in earth are un- 
necessarily strong, and this arises mainly from the assumption that 
the earth b merely a loose granular mass without any such ad- 
hesion. As a result of this theory, in the case of a retaining wall 
supporting a vertical face of earth beneath an extended horisontal 
plane level with the top of the wall, we get 

a l+sin* 



DMd WATER SUPPLY 4 bi 

RESERVOIR EMPTY RESERVOIR FULL 




CLLlPStfl or strcss 




vcitticai mcsstmts o* momzontaw joints. 



■pF" 



HORIZONTAL PffCSSOftCS ON VERTICAL JOIMTt. 



SHEARING imCIICI 




__x_ 



Fig. 16.— Showing Stresses at base of model dam determined experimentally. 



where P is the horizontal pressure of the earth against the wall 
exerted at one-third its height, w the weight of unit volume of 
the material, x the height ofthe wall, and + the angle of repose of 
the material. That the pressure so given exceeds the maximum 
possible pressure we do not doubt; and, .conversely, if we put 

2 I-SU1 + 

we may have equal confidence that P' will be less than the maximum 
pressure which, if exerted by the wall against the earth, will be borne 
without disturbance. But like every pure theory the principles of 
conjugate pressures in earth may lead to danger if not applied with 
due consideration for the angle of repose of the material, the modi- 
fications brought about by the limited width of artificial embank- 
ments, the possible contraction away from the masonry, of clayey 
materials during dry weather for some feet in depth and the tendency 
of surface waters to produce scour between the wall and the em- 
bankment. Both the Neuadd and the Fisher Tarn damsare largely 
dependent upon the support of earthen embankments with much 
economy and with perfectly satisfactory results. 

In the construction of the Vyrnwy masonry dun Portland 
, concrete was used in the joints. When more than six 
old, 9 in. cubes of this material never failed under 
compression below xn tons per sq. ft. with an average of 167 
tons; and the mean resistance of all the blocks tested between 
two and three years after moulding exceeded 2x5 tons per sq. ft., 
while blocks cut from the concrete of the dam gave from 181 
to 3»o tons per sq. ft. It has been shown that the best hydraulic 
lime, or volcanic puzzuolana and lime, if properly ground 
while slaking, and otherwise treated in the best-known manner, 
as well as some of the so-called natural (calcareous) cements, 
will yield results certainly not inferior to those obtained from 
Portland cement. The only objection that can in any case be 
urged against most of the natural products is that a longer time 
at required tor induration; but in the case of masonry dams 
sufficient time necessarily passes before any load, beyond that 
of the very gradually increasing masonry, b brought upon the 
structure. The result of using properly treated natural limes 
is not to be judged from the careless manner in which such 



limes have often been used in the past. Any stone of which 
it is desirable to build a masonry dam would certainly possess 
an average strength at least as great as the above figures for 
concrete; the clay slate of the Lower Silurian formation, used 
in the case of the Vyrnwy dam, had an ultimate crushing strength 
of from 700 to 1000 tons per sq. ft. If, therefore, with such 
materials the work is well done, and is not subsequently liable 
to be wasted or disintegrated by expansion or contraction or 
other actions which in the process of time affect all exposed 
surfaces, it is dear that 15 to so tons per sq. ft. must be a perfectly 
safe load. There are many structures at present in existence 
bearing considerably greater loads than this, and the granite 
ashlar masonry of at least one, the Bear Valley dam in California, 
is subject to compressive stresses, reaching, when the reservoir 
is full, at least 40 to 50 tons per sq. ft., while certain brickwork 
linings in mining shafts are subject to very high circumferential 
stresses, due to known water-pressures. In one case which 
has been investigated this circumferential pressure exceeds 
26 tons per sq. ft., and the brickwork, which is 18 in. thick and 
20 ft. internal diameter, is perfectly sound and water-tight. 
In portions of the structure liable to important changes of 
pressure from the rise and fall of the water and subject to the 
additional stresses which expansion and contraction by changes 
of temperature and of moisture induce, and in view of the great 
difficulty of securing that the average modulus of elasticity in 
all parts of -the structure shall be approximately the same, it is 
probably desirable to limit the calculated load upon any external 
work, even of the best kind, to 15 or 20 tons per sq. ft. It is 
clear that the material upon which any high masonry dam is 
founded must also have a large factor of safety against crushing 
under the greatest load that the dam can Impose upon it, and 
this consideration unfits any site for the construction of a 
masonry dam where sound Tock, or at least a material equal in 
strength to' the strongest shale, cannot be had; even in the case 
of such a material as shale the foundation must be well below 
the ground*' 



+02 



WATER SUPPLY 



The actual construction of successful masonry dams has 
varied from the roughest rubble masonry to ashlar work. It 
Mmi»Mmtm is probable, however, that,' all things considered, 
random rubble in which the flattest side of each 
block of stone is dressed to a fairly uniform surface, so that it 
may be bedded as it were in a tray of mortar, secures the nearest 
approach to uniform elasticity. Such stones may be of any 
size subject to each of them covering only a small proportion 
of the width of the structure (in the Vyrnwy dam they reached 
8 or 10 tons each), and the spaces between them, where large 
enough, must be similarly built in with smaller, but always the 
largest possible, stones; spaces too small for this treatment 
must be filled and rammed with concrete. All stones must be 
beaten down into their beds until the mortar squeezes up into 
the joints around them. The faces of the work may be of squared 
masonry, thoroughly tied into the hearting; but, in view of the 
expansion and contraction mentioned below, it is better that the 
face masonry should not be coursed. Generally speaking, in 
the excavations for the foundations springs are met with; these 
may be only sufficient to indicate a continuous dampness at 
certain beds or joints of the rock, but all such places should be 
connected by relief drains carried to visible points at the* back 
of the dam. It should be impossible, in short, for any part of the 
rock beneath the dam to become charged with water under 
pressure, either directly from the water in the reservoir or from 
higher places in the mountain sides. For similar reasons care 
must be taken to ensure that the structure of the water face 
of the dam shall be the least permeable of any part. In the 
best examples this has been secured by bedding the stones near 
to the water face in somewhat finer mortar than the rest, and 
sometimes also by placing pads to fill the joints for several 
inches from the water face, so that the mortar was kept away 
from the face and was well held up to its work. On the removal 
of the pads, or the cutting out of the face of the mortar where 
pads were not used, the vacant joint was gradually filled with 
almost dry mortar, a hammer and caulking tool being used to 
consolidate it By these means practical impermeability was 
obtained. If the pores of the water face are thus rendered 
extremely fine, the surface water, carrying more or less fine 
detritus and organic matter, will soon dose them entirely and 
assist in making that face the least permeable portion of the 
structure. 

But no care in construction can prevent the compression of 
the mass as the superincumbent weight comes upon it. Any 
given yard of height measured during construction, or at any 
time after construction, will be less than a yard when additional 
weight has been placed upon it; hence the ends of such dams 
placed against rock surfaces must move with respect to those 
surfaces when the superincumbent load comes upon them. 
This action is obviously much reduced where the rock sides 
of the valley rise slowly; but in cases where the rock is very 
steep, the safest course is to ace the facts, and not to depend for 
water-tightness upon the cementing of the masonry to the rock, 
but rather to provide a vertical key, or dowel joint, of some 
material like asphalt, which will always remain water-tight. 
So far as the writer has been able to observe or ascertain, there 
are very few masonry dams in Europe or America which have 
not been cracked transversely in their higher parts. They 
generally leak a little near the junction with the rock, and at 
some other joints in intermediate positions. In the case of the 
Neuadd dam this difficulty was met by deliberately omitting 
the mortar in transverse joints at regular intervals near the top 
of the dam, except just at their faces, where it of course cracks 
harmlessly, and by filling the rest with asphalt. Serious move- 
ment from expansion and contraction does not usually extend 
to levels which are kept moderately damp, or to the greater 
mass of the dam, many feet below high-water leveL 

The first masonry dam of importance con s tr u c te d m Great Britain 
was that upon the river Vyrnwy, a tributary o( the Severn, in con- 
nexion with the Liverpool water-supply (Plate I.). Its height, 
subject to water-pressure, is about 134 ft., and a carriage-way b 
carried on arches at an elevation of about 18 ft. higher. As this 
dam is about 1 180 ft. in length from rock to rock, it receives prectic- 



(DAMS 

ally no jupp. rri from th? sides of the valley. Its construction drew 
muj h aiicnik-n to the tuhjen of masonry dams in England — where 
til* crmhvu.rk dim. wjih a wall of purj-jled day, had hitherto been 
almost miiv*- naJ— and sine* its completion nine more masonry dams 
of smaller «i» have been completed. In connexion with the Elan 
and CLierwen work;, in Mid- Wales, for the supply of Birmingham, 
six mi:-:.?iry ilimi were projected, thrtrc of which are completed, in- 
ducing the CaUan Goch fijrn, yto ft. long at the water level, and 
subject to a wiiter-pcw^ne of 15* ft. above the rock foundations and 
of 112 ft, above itie river bed, and the Craig-yr-allt Goch dam, 
subjea to a hiead of m ft, The Utter dam b curved in plan, the 
radius being 740 ft, and the chord ol 1 he trc 515 ft. In the Derwent 
Valley sdmssv in connexion with the water supplies of Derby, 
Leicester. Nottingham and Sheffield, six more masonry dams have 
received parliamentary M ruction. Of these the highest is the Hag- 
glee, on the Aihop, a tributary of the Derwent, which will impound 
wtir or I., .ilviit 1 36 It, above the river b«d, the length from rock to 
rp k J rm,; uso 1 1 , T/s«q of these dams arc now in course of construc- 
tion, one of wiikh, the Huwdcn, will be 1080 ft. in length and will 
impound water to a depth of 1 14 ft. above the river bed. In 1892 
the excavation was begun for the foundations of a masonry dam 
across the Croton river, in connexion with the supply of New York. 
The length of this dam from rock to rock at the overflow level is 
about 1500 ft. The water face, over the maximum depth at which 
that face cuts the rock foundations, is subject to a water-pressure of 
about 260 ft., while the height of the dam above the river bed is 
163 ft* The section, shown in fig. 17. has been well considered. The 
hearting is of rubble masonry, and the faces are coursed ashlar. 




f»«<j|QM 



So-called " natural cement " has been used, except during frosty 
weather, when Portland cement was substituted on account of its 
more rapid setting. An important feature in connexion with this 
dam is the nature of the foundation upon which it stands. Part of 
the rock is schist, but the greater portion limestone, similar in 
physical qualities to the Carboniferous limestone of Great Britain. 
The lowest part of the surface of this rock was reached after excavat- 
ing through alluvial deposits to a depth of about 70 ft., but owing 
to its fissured and cavernous nature it became necessary to ex- 
cavate to much greater depths, reaching in places more than 120 ft. 
below the original botf *-*-•• - 
toa 



n of the valley. Great pains appear to have 
that the cavernous portions of the rock had 



been cut out and built up before the building was begun. 

The Furens dam, already referred to as the earliest type of a 
scientifically designed structure of the kind, is subject to a pressure 
of about 166 ft. of water; the valley it crosses is only about 100 ft. 
wide at the water leveU and the dam is curved in plan to a radius of 
828 ft. Much discussion has taken place as to the utility of such 
curvature. The recent investigations already referred to indicate 
the desirability of curving dams in plan in order to reduce the possi- 
bility of tension and infiltration of water at the upstrea-a face. In 
narrow rock gorges extremely interesting and complex problems re- 
lating to the combined action of horizontal and vertical stresses arise, 
and in some such cases it is evident that much may be done by means 
of horizontal curvature to reduce the quantity of masonry without 
reduction of strength. The Bear Valley dam, California, is the most 



RESERVOIRS) 



WATER SUPPLY 



4<>3 



dsriag example in eristmcr of the employment 
Us height from the rock bed is 64 ft., and it is 



of the arch principle. 

, subject during floods 

to a head of water not much less. The length of the chord oTthe arc 
across the valley U about 230 ft. and the radius 335 ft. The dam was 
begun ia 1883, with a base 20 ft- thick, narrowing to 13 ft. at a height 
of 16 ft- The cost of this thickness being regarded as too great, it 
was abruptly reduced to 8 ft. 6 in., and for the remaining 48 ft. it 
was tapered up to a anal width of about 3 ft- The masonry is de- 
scribed by Mr Schuyler as M a rough uncut granite ashlar, with a 
hearting of rough rubble all laid in cement mortar and gravel." 
This dam has been in satisfactory use since 1885, and the slight 
filtration through the masonry which occurred at first is said to have 
almost entirely ceased. 

In New South Wales thirteen tfun concrete dams, dependent upon 
horizontal curvature for their resistance to water pressure, have 
been constructed in narrow gorges at comparatively small cost to 
impound water for the use of villages. The depth of water varies 
from 18 ft. to 76 ft. and five of them have cracked vertically, owing 
apparently to the impossibility of the base of the dam partaking of 
the changes of curvature induced by changes of temperature and of 
moisture in the upper parts. It is stated, however, that these cracks 
dose up and become practically water-tight as the water rises. 

Something has been said of the failures of earthen dams. Many 
masonry dams have also failed, but, speaking generally, we know 

less of the causes which have led to such failures. The 

**■■■•■» examination of one case, however, namely, the bursting 
fa 1895 of the Bouzcy dam, near Epinal, in France, by which many 
lives were lost, has brought out several points of great interest, ft 
b probably the only instance in which a masonry dam has slipped 
upon its foundations, and also the only case in which a masonry 
dam has actually overturned, whDe curiously enough there is every 
probability that Jhe two circumstances had no connexion with each 
other. A short time after the occurrence of the catastrophe the dam 
was visited by Dr W. C. Unwin. F.R.S., and the writer, and a very 
carefol examination of thework wasmade by them. Someof the blocks 
of rabble masonry carried down the stream weighed several hundred 
tons. The original section of the dam is shown by the continuous 
thick line in fig. 18, from which it appears that the work was subject 
to a pressure of only about 65 ft. of water. In the year 1884 a length 



years after this, and about fifteen years after the dam was first 
brought into use. It overturned on its outer edge, at about the level 
indicated by the dotted line just above the counterfort : and there it 
no good reason to attribute to the movement of 1884, or to the 
vertical cracks it caused, any influence ia the overturning of 1895. 
Some of the worst 



cracks were, in- 
deed, entirely be- 
yond the portion 
overturned, 
which consisted 
of the mass 570 
ft. long by 37 
ft, ia depth, and 
weighing about 
20,000 tons, 
shown in eleva- 
tion in fig. 19. 
Thelineotpres- 



tkfVATtOSJ 



«sotf- 




Waitr Face. 
Fig. 19.— Elevation and Plan of Bouzcy Dam. 




Fig. 18.— Section of Bouzcy Dam. 

of 450 ft. of the dam, out of a total length of 1706 ft* slipped upon 
its foundation of soft sandstone, and became slightly curved in pun 
as shown at a, 6, fig. 19. the maximum movement from the original 
straight line being about t ft Further sliding 00 the base was pre- 
vented by the construction of the cross-lined portions in the section 
(fig. 18). These precautions were perfectly effective in securing the 
safety of the dam up to the height to which the counterfort waa 
carried. As a consequence of this horizontal bending of the dam the 
vertical cracks shown id fig. 19 appeared and were repaired. Eleven 



• See Proc. ItuL C£. voL cxxvL pp. 91-95. 



given tor this 
dam with the 
reservoir full, on 
the hypothesis 
that the density ' 
of the masonry ' 
was a little over 
2, is shown by 
long and short 
dots in fig. 18. 
Materials actu- 
ally collected from the dam indicate that the mean density 
did not exceed 1*85 when dry and 2-07 when saturated, which 
would bring the fine of pressures even closer to the outer 
face at the top of the counterfort. In any event it must have 
approached well within 3 J ft. of the outer face, and was more 
nearly five-sixths than two-thirds of the width of the dam 
distant from the water face; there must, therefore, have been 
considerable vertical tension at the water face, variously com- 
puted according to the density assumed at from if to l| 
ton per square loot. This, if the dam had been thoroughly 
well constructed, either with hydraulic lime or Portland 
cement mortar, would have been easily borne. The 
materials, however, were poor, and it is probable that 
rupture by tension in a roughly horizontal plane took place. 
Directly this occurred, the front part of the wall was sub- 
ject to an additional overturning pressure of about 35 ft. 
of water acting upwards, equivalent to about a ton per 
square foot, which would certainly, if it occurred through- 
out any considerable length of the dam, have immediately 
overturned it. But, as a matter of fact, the dam actually 
stood for about fifteen years. Of this circumstance there 
are two possible explanations. It is known that more or 
less leakage took place through the dam, and to moderate 
this the water face was from time to time coated and 
repaired with cement. Any cracks were thus, no doubt, 
temporarily closed ; and as the structure of the rest of the 
dam was porous, no opportunity was given for the per- 
colating water to accumulate in the horizontal fissures 
to anything like the head in the reservoir. But ia 
reservoir work such coatings are not to be trusted, and a 
single horizontal crack might admit sufficient water to 
cause an uplift. Then, again, it must be remembered that 
although the full consequences of the facts described might 
arise ia a section of the dam 1 ft. thick (if that section 
were entirely isolated}, they could not arise throughout the 
length unless the adjoining sections were subject to like 
conditions. Any horizontal fissure in a weak place would, 
in the nature of things, strike somewhere a stronger place, 
and the final failure would be deferred. Time would then 
become an element. By reason of the constantly changing 
temperatures and the frequent filling and emptying of the 
reservoir, expansion and contraction, which are always at 
work tending to produce relative movements wherever 
one portion of a structure is weaker than another, must 
have assisted the water-pressure in the extension of the 
horizontal cracks, which, growing slowly, during the 
fifteen years, provided at last the area required to enable 
the Intrusive water to overbalance the little remaining stability of 
the dam. 

Resekvors 
From very ancient times in India, Ceylon and elsewhere, 
reservoirs of great area, but generally of small depth, have been 
built and used for the purposes of irrigation; and in modem 
times, especially in India and America, comparatively shallow 
reservoirs have been constructed of much greater area, and in 
some cases of greater capacity, than any in the United Kingdom. 



4-04 



WATER SUPPLY 



[PURIFICATION 



Yet the hilly parts of the last-named country are rich In magni- 
ficent sites at sufficient altitudes for the supply of any parts by 
gravitation, and capable, if properly laid out, of affording a 
volume of water, throughout the driest seasons, far in excess 
of the probable demand for a long future. Many of the great 
towns had already secured such sites within moderate d is ta n ces, 
and had constructed reservoirs of considerable size, when, in 
1879, 1880 md 189a respectively, Manchester, Liverpool and 
Birmingham obtained statutory powers to draw water from 
relatively great distances, via. from Thirlmere in Cumberland, 
in the case of Manchester; from the river Vyrnwy, Montgomery- 
shire, a tributary of the Severn, in the case of Liverpool; and 
from the rivers Elan and Claerwen in Radnorshire, tributaries 
of the Wye, in the case of Birmingham. Lake Vyrnwy, com- 
pleted in 1889, includes a reservoir which is still by far the 
largest in Europe. 

This reservoir is situated in a true Glacial lake-basin, and having 
therefore all the appearance of a natural lake, is commonly known 

. as Lake Vyrnwy. It is 825 ft above the sea, has an 

f U» area of 1 lai acres, an available capacity exceeding 12,000 

Y rrmwjr. g^ifo,, gallons, and a length of nearly 5 m. Its position 
In North Wales is shown in black in fig. 20, and the two views on 
Plate I. show respectively the portion of the valley visible from the 
dam before impounding began, and the same portion as a lake on the 
completion of the work. Before the valves in the dam were closed, 
the village of Llanwddyn, the parish church, and many farmsteads 
were demolished. The church was rebuilt outside the watershed, and 
the remains from the old churchyard were removed to a new cemetery 
adjoining it. The fact that this valley is a port-Glacial lake-basin 
was attested by the borings and excavations made for the founda- 
tions of the dam. The trench in which the masonry was founded 
covered an area 120 ft wide at the bottom, and extending for 1 172 ft. 
across the valley. Its site had been determined by about 190 
borings, probings and shafts, which, following upon the indications 
afforded by the rocks above ground, proved that the rock bed crossing 
the valley was higher at this point than elsewhere. Here then, buried 
in alluvium at a depth of 50 to 60 ft. from the surface, was found the 
rock bar of the post-Glacial lake; at points farther up the valley, 
borings nearly 100 ft. deep had failed to reach the rock. The Glacial 
striae, and the dislocated rocks— moved a few inches or feet from 
their places, and others, at greater distances, turned over, and 
beginning to assume the sub-angular form of Glacial boulders— were 
found precisely as the glacier, receding from the bar, and giving place 
to the ancient lake, hadleft them, covered and preserved by sand and 
gravel washed from the terminal morain. Later came the alluvial 
wlring-up. Slowly, but surely, the deltas of the tributary streams 
advanced into the lake, floods deposited their burdens of detritus in 
the deeper places, the lake shallowed and shrank and in it* turn 
yielded to the winding river of an alluvial strath, covered with peat, 
reeds and alders, and still liable to floods. It is interesting to record 
that during the construction of the works the implements of Neolithic 
man were found, near the margin of the modern lake, below the peat, 
and above the alluvial clay on which it rested. Several of the reser- 
voir sites in Wales, shown by shaded lines in fig. 20, are in all prob- 
ability similar post-Glacial lake-basins, and in the course of time 
some of them may contain still greater reservoirs. They are pro- 
vided with well-proportioned watersheds and rainfall, and being 
nearly all more than 500 ft. above the sea, may be made available for 
the supply of pure water by gravitation to any part of England. 
In 1892 the Corporation of Birmingham obtained powers for the 
construction of six reservoirs on the rivers Elan and Claerwen, also 
shown in fig. 20, but the sites of these reservoirs are long narrow 
valleys, not lake-basins. The three reservoirs on the Elan were 
completed in 1904. Their joint capacity is 11,320 million gallons, 
and this will be increased to about 18,000 millions when the remain- 

% three are built. 
f natural lakes in Great Britain raised above their ordinary levels 
that the upper portions may be utilized as reservoirs, Loch Katrine 
supplying Glasgow is well known. Whitehaven is similarly supplied 
from Ennerdale, and in the year 1894 Thirlmere in Cumberland was 
brought into use, as already mentioned, for the supply of Manchester. 
The corporation have statutory power to raise the lake 50 ft., at 
which level it will have an available capacity of about 8000 million 
gallons; to secure this a masonry dam has been constructed, though 
the lake is at present worked at a lower level. 

It is obvious that the water of a reservoir must never be allowed 
to rise above a certain prescribed height at which the works will be 
^ - perfectly safe. In all reservoirs impounding the natural 

w * g ow of a 8trea m, this involves the use of an overflow. 

Where the dam is of masonry it may be used as a weir; but where 
earthwork is employed, the overflow, commonly known In such a 
case as the " bye-wash,' 1 should be an entirely independent work, 
consisting of a low weir of sufficient length to prevent an unsafe rise 
of the water level, and of a narrow channel capable of easily carrying 
away any water that passes over the weir. The absence of oneor both 
of these conditions has led to the failure of many dams. 



narrow reacnes or taxes it is relatively nigner. 
ceediog about 2 m., twice this height may be res 
2-mikv' fetch " about 3I ft., or i} ft. above the t 
this again, the height of the wave should be all 



Reservoirs unsafe from this came still exist in the United Kingdom. 
Where the contributory drainage area exceeds 5000 acres, the dis- 
charge, even allowing tor so-called " cloud-bursts," rarely or never 
exceeds the rate of about 300 cub. ft. per second per 1000 acres, or 
1500 times the minimum dry weather flow, taken as one-fifth of a 
cubic foot; and if we provide against such an occasional discharge, 
with a possible maximum of 400 cub. ft. at much more distant 
intervals, a proper factor of safety will be allowed. But when a 
reservoir b cuaced upon a smaller area the conditions are materially 
changed. The rainfall which produces, as the average of all the 
tributaries in the larger area, 300 cub. ft. per second per 1000 acres, 
is made up of groups of rainfall of very varying intensity, falling 
upon different portions of that area, so that upon any section of it the 
intensity of discharge may be much greater. 

The height to which the water is permitted to rise above the sill 
of the overflow depends upon the height of the embankment above 
that level (in the United Kingdom commonly 6 or 7 ft.), and this 
again should be governed by the height of possible waves. In open 
places that height is seldom more than about one and a half times the 
square root of the " fetch " or greatest distance in nautical miles 
from which the wave has travelled to the point in question ; but in 
narrow reaches or bices it is relatively higher. In lengths not ex- 

* reached, giving for a 

e mean level. Above 

,_... allowed for "wash," 

making the embankment in such a case not less than 5I ft. above the 
highest water-level. If. then, we determine that the depth of over- 
flow shall not e xc eed if ft., we arrive at 6| ft. as sufficient for the 
height of the embankment above the sill of the overflow. Obviously 
we may shorten the sill at the cost of extra height of embankment, but 
it ts rarely wise to do so. 

The overflow sill or weir should be a masonry structure of rounded 
vertical section raised a foot or more above the waste-water course, 
in which case for a depth of xi ft. it will discharge, over every foot 
of length, about 6 cub. ft. per second. Thus, if the drainage area 
exceeds 5000 acres, and we provide for the passage of 300 cub. ft. 
per second per 1000 acres, such a weir will be 50 It. long for every 
1000 acres. But, as smaller areas are approached, the excessive local 
rainfalls of short duration must be provided for, and beyond these 
there are extraordinarily heavy discharges generally over and gone 
before any exact records can be made; hence we know very little 
of them beyond the bare fact that from 1000 acres the discharge may 
rise to two or three times 300 cub. ft. per second per 1000 acres. In 
the writer's experience at least one case has occurred where, from a 
mountain area of 1300 acres, the rate per 1000 was for a short time 
certainly not less than 1000 cub. ft. per second. Nothing but long 
observation and experience can help the hydraulic engineer to judge 
of the configuration of the ground favourable to such phenomena. 
It is only necessary, however, to provide for these exceptional dis- 
charges during very short periods, so that the rise in the water-level 
of the reservoir may be taken into consideration ; but subject to this, 

E revision must be made at the bye-wash for preventing such a flood, 
owever rare, from filling the reservoir to a dangerous height. 
From the overflow siU the bye-wash channel may be gradually 
narrowed as the crest of the embankment is passed, the water 
being prevented from attaining undue velocity by steps of heavy 
masonry, or, where the gradient is not very steep, by irregularly set 
masonry. 

PUSmCATION 

When surface waters began to be used for potable purposes, 
some mode of arresting suspended matter, whether living 
or dead, became necessary. In many cases gauze 
strainers were at first employed, and, as an improve- ^K^, 
ment upon or addition to these, the water was caused 
to pass through a bed of gravel or sand, which, like the gauze, 
was regarded merely as a strainer. As such strainers were 
further improved, by sorting the sand and gravel, and using the 
fine sand only at the surface, better clarification of the water 
was obtained; but chemical analysis indicated, or was at the 
time thought to indicate, that that improvement was practically 
confined to clarification, as the dissolved impurities in the water 
were certainly very little changed. Hence such filter beds, as 
they were even then called, were regarded as a luxury rather 
than as a necessity, and it was never suspected that, notwith- 
standing the absence of chemical improvement in the water, 
changes did take place of a most important kind. Following 
upon Dr Koch's discovery of a method of isolating bacteria, and 
of making approximate determinations of their number m 
any volume of water, a most remarkable diminution in the 
number of microbes contained in sand-filtered water was 
observed; and it is now well known that when a properly 
constructed sand-filter bed is in its best condition, and is worked 
in the best-known manner, nearly the whole of the microbes 



PURIFICATION] 

existing in the crude water viD be Arrested. The tend, which 
b nominally the filter, has interstices about thirty times as wide 
as the largest dimensions of the larger microbes; and the reason 
why these, and, still more, why organisms which were individually 
invisible under any magnifying power, and could only be detected 
as colonies, were arrested, was not understood. In process 
of time it became dear, however, that the worse the condition 
of a filter bed, in the then general acceptation of the term, 
the better it was as a microbe filter; that is to say, it was not 
until a fine film of mud and microbes had formed upon the 
surface of the sand that the best results were obtained. 

Even yet medical science has not determined the effect upon 
the human system of water highly charged with bacteria which 
are not known to be individually pathogenic. In the case of 
the bacilli of typhoid and cholera, we know the direct effect; 
but apart altogether from the presence of such specific poisons, 
polluted water is undoubtedly injurious. Where, therefore, 
there is animal pollution of any kind, more especially where there 
is human pollution, generally indicated by the presence of 
bacillus cdi communis, purification is of supreme importance, 
and no process has yet been devised which, except at extravagant 
cost, supersedes for public supplies that of properly-conducted 
sand nitration. Yet it cannot be too constantly urged that such 
filtration depends for its comparative perfection upon the surface 
film; that this surface film is not present when the filter is new, 
or when its materials have been recently washed; that it may be, 
and very often is, punctured by the actual working of the 
filters, or for the purpose of increasing their discharge; and that 
at the best it must be regarded as an exceedingly thin line 
of defence, not to be depended upon as a safeguard against 
highly polluted waters, if a purer source of supply can 
possibly be found. Such filters are not, and in the nature of 
things cannot be, worked with the precision and continuity 
of a laboratory experiment. 

In fie. 2 1 a sectkm is shown of an efficient sand-filter bed. The thick* 
oeu of sand is 5 ft. 6 in. In the older filters it was usual to support 
this sand upon small gravel 
resting upon larger gravel, 
and so on until the material 
was sumcienciy open to pass 
the water laterally to under- 
drains. But a much shal- 
lower and certainly not less 
efficient filter can be con- 
structed by making the 
under-dratns cover the whole 
bottom. In fig. 21 the sand 
rests on small gravel of 
such degree of coarseness 
that the whole of the grains 
would be retained on a sieve 
of |-in. mesh and rejected 
by a sieve of i-in. mesh in 
the clear, supported upon a 
3-in. thickness of bricks laid 
town., close together, and consti- 
- BmCtt*. tuting the root of the u ndcr- 
B**^* 4 **" drains, which arc formed by 
-other bricks laid on thin 
asphalt, upon a concrete 
Fig. si.— Section of Sand-Filter Bed. floor. In this arrangement 
the whole of the materials 
nay be readily removed for cleansing. In the best niters an 
automatic arrangement for the measurement of the supply to 
each separate filter, and for the regulation of the quantity within 
* ' ' 1 the resistance at outflow : 



WATER SUPPLY 



405 



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certain , r 

arranged that not more than 'a certain head of pressure, about 
*i ft., can under any circumstances come upon the surface film, 
while a depth of several feet of water is maintained over the 
sand. It H essential that during the working of the filter the 
water should be so supplied that it will not disturb the surface of 
the sand. When a fitter has been emptied, and is being re-charged, 
the water should be introduced from a neighbouring filter, and should 
pass upwards in the filter to be charged, until the surface of the sand 
has been covered " ~* *" — " " ' - 



The unaltered water may then be allowed to flow 

sand to a depth of 2 or 3 ft. 

water that requires filtra- 



quietly mad to fill the space above the sand 
it would app ear to be i mpos s ible with any w 
tiba to straw that the first filtrate shall be satisfactory 
begins issmedistely after a filter is charged; and if the hignest 
results are to be obtained, either the unfiltered water roust .be per- 
mitted to pass extremely slowly over the surface of the sand without 



passing through it, or to stand upon the sand until the surface film 
has formed. With waters giving little or no sediment, which are 
often the most dangerous, some change, as by the first method, is 
necessary, it has been proposed, on the other hand, to allow the 
filter to act slowly until the surface film is formed, and to discard the 
first effluent. This course can scarcely fail to introduce into the sand 
many bacteria, which may be washed through when the full working 
of the niters is begun; and it should not, therefore, be adopted when 
the source of the supply is known to be subject to human pollution. 
The time for the formation of aneffident surface films varies, according 
to the quality of the raw water, from a few hours to a few days. Judg- 
ing from the best observations that have been made on a large scale, 
the highest rate of efficient nitration when the surface film is in good 
condition is about 4 in. downwards per hour of the water contained 
above the sand, equivalent to about 50 saltans per day from each 
square foot of sand. When the surface turn has once been formed, 
and the filter has begun' its work, it should continue without interrup- 
tion until the resistance of that film becomes too great to permit of the 
necessary quantity of water being passed. That period will vary, 
accordingto the condition of the water, from eight or ten days to four 
weeks. The surface film, together with half an inch to an inch of 
sand, is then carefully scraped off and stored for subsequent washing 
and use. This process may be repeated many times until the thick- 
ness of the fine sand is reduced to about 18 in., when the filter bed 
should be restored to its full thickness. 

A lately discovered effect of sand filtration is a matter of great 
importance in connexion with the subject of aqueducts. A brown 
slimy sediment, having the appearance of coffee grounds when 
placed in clear water, has been long observed in pipes conveying 
surface waters from mountain moorlands. The deposit grows on 
the sides of the pipes and accumulates at the bottom, and causes 
most serious obstruction to the flow of water. The chemists and 
bacteriologists do not appear to have finally determined the true 
nature and origin of this growth, but it Is found in the impounded 
waters, and passes into the pipes, where it rapidly increases. It is 
checked even by fine copper wire-cause strainers, and where the 
water passes through sand-filter beds in the course of an aqueduct, 
the growth, though very great between the reservoir and the filter 
beds, is almost absent between the filter beds and the town. Even 
the growth of the well-known nodular incrustations in iron pipes is 
much reduced by sand filtration. From these facts it is dear that, 
other things being the same, the best positbo for the strainers ana 
filter beds is ss dose as possible to the reservoir. 

Some surface waters dissolve lead when bright, but cease to do so 
when the lead becomes tarnished. More rarely the action b con* 
tinuous, and the water after being passed through lead cisterns and 
pipes produces lead poisoning— so called " plumbism." The lia- 
bility to this appears to be entirely removed by efficient sand 
filtration. 

Sand filtration, even when working an the best possible manner, 
falls short of the perfection necessary to prevent the passage of 
bacteria which may multiply after the filter is passed. Small, 
however, as the micro-organisms are, they are larger than the 
capillary passages In some materials through which water under 
pressure may be caused to percolate. It is therefore natural that 
attentats should have been made to construct niters which, while 
permitting the alow percolation of water, should preclude the 
passage of bacteria or their spores. In the laboratory of Pasteur 
probably the first filter which successfully accomplished this object 
was produced. In this apparatus, known as the Perteur-Chambcr* 
land filter, the filtering medium b biscuit porcelain. It was followed 
by the BerkefieW filter, constructed of baked infusorial earth. Both 
these filters arrest the organisms by purely mechanical action, and 
if the joints are water-tight and they receive proper attention and 
frequent sterilization, they both give satisfactory results on a small 
scale for domestic purposes. The cost, however— to say nothing of 
the uncertainty— where large volumes of water are concerned, much 



_ . . . . . pure 

supply; not necessarily pure in an apparent or even m a chemical 
sense, for water msv be visibly coloured, or may contain considerable 
proportions both of organic and inorganic impurity, and yet be taste: 
less and free from pathogenic pollution. 

There are several materials now in use possessing remarkable 
power to decolourise clarify, chemically purify and oxidise water; 
but they are too costly for use in connexion with public water supplies 
unless a rate of filtration b adopted quite inconsistent with the 
formation of a surface film capable of arresting micro-organisms. 
This fact does not render them less useful when applied to the arts 



in which they are successfully employed. 
Attempts have been made, by adding certain/ 



1 to the 



water to be filtered, to increase the power of sand and other granu- 
lar materiab to arrest bacteria when pw awing through them at much 
higher vdocities than are possible for successful filtration by means 
of the surface film upon sand. The effect b to prodoce between the 
sand or other grains a glutinous substance which does the work per- 
formed by the mud ana microbes upon the surface of the sand filter. 
Elsewhere centrifugal force, acting somewhat after its manner ia the 
cream separator, has been called in aid. 



406 



WATER SUPPLY 



(PUR&ICATtOrl 




The sedimentation tank forms a very important 
help to filtration. In the case of river waters liable 
to turbidity the water should always be passed 
througfe such tanks before being placed in the filters. 



They form, moreover, additional safeguards against organic 
impurity. Sedimentation tanks oa a sufficient scak may effect 
the purification of the water to almost any desired extent. 
This b shown to be the case by the purity of some lake 



PURIFICATION) 



WATER SUPPLY 



407 




waters; but the first cost of the works and the subsequent 
removal of the sediment are in some cases a serious matter, 
and any approach to the comparatively perfect action of lakes 
is out of the question. By the use of such tanks, however, when 



the condition of the water demands it, and by passing the 
effluent water through sand niters when in good condition, the 
number of microbes is found to be reduced by as much as 97 
or even 90%. This, when attained, is undoubtedly a moat 



4 o8 



WATER SUPPLY 



(DISTRIBUTION 



important reduction in the chance of pathogenic bacteria passing 
into the filtered water; but much more must be done than hat 
hitherto in most places been done to ensure the constancy of 
such a condition before it can be assumed to represent the 
degree of safety attained. No public supply should be open 
to any such doubt as ought to, or may, deter people from 
drinking the water without previous domestic nitration or 
boiling. 

DlSTMBtmON 

The earliest water supplies in Great Britain were generally 
distributed at low pressure by wooden pipes or stone or brick 
conduits. For special purposes the Romans introduced 
cast-lead pipes, but they were regarded as luxuries, 
not as necessaries, and gave way to cheaper, conduits 
made, as pump barrels had long been made, by boring 
out tree trunks, which are occasionally dug up in a good state of 
preservation. This use of tree-trunks as pipes is still common 
in the wooded mountain districts of Europe. Within the 19th 
century, however, cast iron became general in the case of large 
towns; but following the precedent inseparable from the use 
of weaker conduits, the water was still delivered under very 
low pressure, rarely more than sufficient to supply taps or tanks 
near the level of the ground, and generally for only a short 
period out of each twenty-four hours. On the introduction 
of the Waterworks Clauses Act 1847, an impetus was given 
to high-pressure supplies, and the same systems of distributing 
mains were frequently employed for the purpose; but with 
few exceptions the water continued to be supplied intermittently, 
and cisterns or tanks were necessary to store it for use during 
the periods of intermission. Thus it happened that pipes and 
joints intended for a low-pressure supply were subjected, not 
only to high pressure, but to the trying ordeal of suddenly 
varying pressures. As a rule such pipes were not renewed: 
the leakage was enormous, and the difficulty was met by the 
very inefficient method of reducing the period of supply still 
farther. But even in entirely new distributing systems the 
network is so extensive, and the number of joints so great, that 
the aggregate leakage is always considerable; the greatest 
loss being at the so-called " ferrules " connecting the mains with 
the house " communication " or " service " pipes, in the lead 
pipes, and in the household fittings. But a far greater evil 
than mere loss of water and inconvenience soon proved to be 
inseparable from intermittent supply. Imagine a hilly town 
with a high-pressure water supply, the water issuing at numerous 
points, sometimes only in exceedingly small veins, from the 
pipes into the sub-soil. In the ordinary course of intermittent 
supply or for the purpose of repairs, the water is cut off at some 
point in the main above the leakages; but this does not prevent 
the continuance of the discharge in the lower part of the town. 
In the upper part there is consequently a tendency to the 
formation of a vacuum, and some of the impure tub-soil water 
near the higher leakages is sucked into the mains, to be mixed 
with the supply when next turned on. We are indebted to the 
Local Government Board for having traced to such causes 
certain epidemics of typhoid, and there can be no manner of 
doubt that the evil has been very general. It is therefore of 
supreme importance that the pressure should be constantly 
maintained, and to that end, in the best-managed waterworks 
the supply is not now cut off even for the purpose of connecting 
house-service pipes, an apparatus being employed by which this 
is done under pressure. Constant pressure being granted, 
constant leakage is inevitable, and being constant it is not 
surprising that its total amount often exceeds the aggregate 
of the much greater, but shorter, draughts of water taken for 
various household purposes. There is therefore, even in the 
best cases, a wide field for the conservation and utilization of 
water hitherto entirely wasted. 

Following upon the passing of the Waterworks Clauses Act 
1847, a constant supply was attempted m many towns, with 
the result in some cases that, owing to the enormous loss 
arising from the prolongation of the period of leakage from 



a fraction of an hour to twenty-four hours, it was impossible to 
maintain the supply. Accordingly, in some •places large sections 
of the mains and service pipes were entirely renewed, 
and the water consumers were put to great expense in 
changing their fittings to new and no doubt better 
types, though the old fittings were only in a fraction of the < 
actually causing leakage. But whether or not such stringent 
methods were adopted, it was found necessary to organize a 
system of house-to-house visitation and constantly recurring 
inspection. In Manchester this was combined with a most 
careful examination, at a depot of the Corporation, of all fittings 
intended to be used. Searching tests were applied to these 
fittings, and only those which complied in every 
respect with the prescribed regulations were stamped JJJ 
and permitted to be fixed within the limits of the 
water supply. But this did not obviate the necessity for house- 
to-house inspection, and although the number of different points 
at which leakage occurred was still great, it was always small 
in relation to the number of houses which were necessarily 
entered by the inspector; moreover, when the best had been 
done that possibly could be done to suppress leakage due to 
domestic fittings, the leakage below ground in the mains, ferrules 
and service pipes still remained, and was often very great. 
It was clear, therefore, that in its very nature, house-to-house 
visitation was both wasteful and insufficient, and it remained 
for Liverpool to correct the difficulty by the application, in 
1873, of the " Differentiating waste water meter," which has 
since been extensively used for the same purpose in various 
countries. One such instrument was placed below the roadway 
upon each main supplying a population of generally between 
1000 and 2000 persons. 

Its action is based upon the following considerations: When 
water is passing through a main and supplying nothing but leakage 
the flow of that water is necessarily uniform, and any instrument 
which graphically represents that flow as a horizontal line conveys 
to the mind a full conception of the nature of the flow, and if by 
the position of that line between the bottom and the top of a diagram 
the quantity of water (in gallons per hour, for example) is recorded, 
we have a lull statement, not only of the rate of flow, but of its 
nature. We know, in short, that the water Is not being usefully 
employed. In the actual instrument, the paper diagram is mounted 
upon a drum caused by clockwork to revolve uniformly,- and is ruled 
with vertical hour lines, and horizontal quantity lines representing 
gallons per hour. Thus, while nothing but leakage occurs the uniform 
horizontal line is continued. If now a tap is opened in any house 
connected with the main, the change of flow in the main will be 
represented by a vertical change of position of the horizontal line, 
and when the tap is turned off the pencil will resume its original 
vertical position, but the paper will have moved like the hands of a 
clock over the interval during which the tap was left open. If, on 
the other hand, water is suddenly drawn off from a cistern supplied 
through a ball-cock, the flow through the ball-cock will be recorded, 
and will be represented by a sudden rise to a maximum, followed by a 
gradual decrease as the ball rises and the cistern fills; the result 
being a curve having its asymptote in the original horizontal line. 
Now, all the uses of water, of whatever kind they may be, produce 
some such irregular diagrams as these, which can never be confused 
with the uniform horizontal line of leakage, but arc always super- 
imposed upon it. It is this leakage line that the waterworks engineer 
uses to ascertain the truth as to the leakage and to assist him in its 
suppression. In well-equipped waterworks each house service pipe 
is controlled by a stop-cock accessible from the footpath to the 
officials of the water authority, and the process of waste detection by 
this method depends upon the manipulation of such stop-cocks in 
conjunction with. the differentiating meter. As an example of one 
mode of applying the system, suppose that a night inspector begins 
work at r 1.30 p.m. in a certain district of 2000 persons, the meter of 
which records at the time a uniform flow of 2000 gallons an hour, 
showing the not uncommon rate of leakage of 24 gallons per head per 
day. The inspector proceeds along the footpath from house to house, 
and outside each house he closes the stop-cock, recording opposite 
the number of each house the exact time of each such operation. 
Having arrived at the end of the district he retraces ms steps, 
reopens the whole of the stop-cocks, removes the meter diagram, 
takes it to the night complaint office, and enters in the " night 
inspection book " the records he has made. The next morning the 
diagram and the " night inspection book " are in the hands of the 
day inspector, who compares them. He finds, for example, from 
the diagram that the initial leakage of 2000 gallons an hour has 
in the course of a 4* hours' night inspection fallen to 400 gallons 
an hour, and that the 1600 gallons an hour is accounted Tor by 



WATERS, TERRITORIAL 



U Men distinct drops of different amounts and at different 
Each of these drops is located by the time and place records in the 
book and the time records on the diagram as belonging to a particular 
i that out of possibly 300 premises the bulk of the 



j pipe; so .. . w „- r 

leakage has been localized in or just outside fifteen. To each of 
these premises he goes with the knowledge that a portion of the total 
leakage of 2000 gallons an hour is almost certainly there, and that 
nust be found, which is a very different thing from visiting three 
.- four hundred houses, in not one of which he has any particular 
reason to expect to find leakage. Even when he enters a house with 
previous knowledge that there is leakage, its discovery may be 
difficult. It is often, hidden, sometimes underground, ana may only 
be brought to light by excavation. In these cases, without some 
such system of localization, the leakage might go on for years or 
for ever. These are many and obvious variations of the system. 
That described requires a diagram revolving once in a few hours, 
otherwise the time scale witl be too close; but the ordinary diagram 
revolving once in 24 hours is often used quite effectively in night 
inspections by only closing those stop-cocks which. are actually 
passing water. This method was also first introduced in Liverpool. 
The night inspector carries with him a stethoscope, often consisting 
merely of his steel turning-rod, with which he sounds the whole of 
the outside stop-cocks, but only closes those through which the 
sound of water is heard. An experienced man, or even a boy, if 
selected as possessing the necessary faculty (which is sometimes 
very strongly marked;, can detect the smallest dribble when the stop- 
cock is so far closed as to restrict the orifice. Similar examinations 
by means of the stop-valves on the mains are also made, and it often 
happens that the residual leakage (400 gallons an hour in the last 
case) recorded on the diagram, but not shut off by the house stop- 
cocks, is mentioned by the inspector as an " outside waste," and 
localized as having been heard at a stop-cock and traced by sounding 
the pavement to a particular position under a particular street. . All 
leakages found on private property are duly notified to the water 
tenant in the usual way, and subsequent examinations are made 
to ascertain if such notices have been attended to. If this work 
is properly organized, nearly the whole of the leakage so detected 
is suppressed within a month. A record of the constantly fluctuating 
so-called " night readings " in a large town is most interesting and 
instructive. If, for example, in the case of a hundred such districts 
we watch the result of leaving them alone, a gradual growth of 
leakage common to most of the districts, but not to all, is observed, 
while here and there a sudden increase occurs, often doubling or 
trebling the total supply to the district. Upon the original installa- 
tion of the system in any town, the rate of leakage and consequent 
total supply to the different districts is found to vary greatly, and 
in some districts it is usually many times as groat per head as in 
others. An obvious and fruitful extension of the method is to employ 
the inspectors only in those districts which, for the time being, 
promise the most useful results. 

la many European cities the supply of water, even for domestic 
purposes, is given through ordinary water meters, and 'paid for, 
. according to the meter record, much in the same manner 
v ua supply of gas or electricity. By the adoption of 
this method great reductions in the quantity of water 
used and wasted are in some cases effected, and the water tenant 

Kys for the leakage or waste he permits to take place, as well as 
r the water he uses. The system, however, docs not assist in 
the detection of the leakage which inevitably occurs between the 
reservoir and the consumer's m ete r ; thus the whole of the mains, 
joints and ferrules connecting the service pipes with the mains, 
and the greater parts of the service pipes, are still exposed to leakage 
without any compensating return to the water authority. But the 
worst evil of the system, and one which must always prevent its 
introduction into the United Kingdom, is the circumstance that it 
treats water as an article of commerce, to be paid for according to 
the quantity taken. In the organization of the best municipal 
water undertakings in the United Kingdom the free use of water 
is encouraged, and it Is only the leakage or occasional improper 
employment of the water that the water authority seeks, and that 
successfully, to suppress. The objection to the insanitary effect of 
the meter-payment system has, in some places, been sought to be 
removed by providing a fixed quantity of water, assumed to be 
sufficient, as the supply for a fixed minimum payment, and by using 
the meter records, simply for the purpose of determining what 
additional payment, if any, becomes doe from the water tenant. 
Ckarly, if the excesses are frequent, the limit must be too low; 
if infrequent, all the physical and administrative complication 
involved in the system is employed to very little purpose. 

The question of the distribution of water, rightly considered, 
resolves itself into a question of delivering water to the water 
tenant, without leakage on the way, and of securing that the 
fittings employed by the water tenant shall be such as to afford 
an ample and ready supply at all times of the day and night 
without leakage and without any unnecessary facilities for waste. 
If these conditions are complied with, it is probable that the 
total rate of supply will not exceed, even if it reaches, the rate 



409 

in any system, not being an oppressive and insanitary 
system, by which the water is paid for according to the quantity 
used. (G. F. D.) 

WATERS, TERRITORIAL, In international law "territorial 
waters" are the belt of sea adjacent to their shores which 
states respect as being under their immediate territorial jurisdic- 
tion, subject only to a right of " inoffensive " passage through 
them by vessels of all nations. As to the breadth of the belt 
and the exact nature of this inoffensive right of passage, however, 
there is still much controversy. The 3-miles' limit recognized 
and practised by Great Britain, France and the United States 
seems to have been derived from the cannon range of the period, 
when it was adopted as between Great Britain and the United 
States, »-«. towards the close of the 18th century. Bynkershoek, 
a famous Dutch jurist, whose authority at one time was almost 
as great in England as in his own country, in a dissertation on 
the Dominion of the Sea (1702), had devised a plausible juridical 
theory to support a homogeneous jurisdiction over environing 
waters in the place of the quite arbitrary claims made at that 
time, to any distance seawards, from whole seas to range of vision. 
Starting from the fact that fortresses can give effective protection 
within range of their cannon, and that in practice this effective 
protection was respected, he argued that the respect was not 
doe to the reality of the presence of cannon, but to the fact that 
the state was in a position to enforce respect. This it could do 
from any point along its shore. Hence bis well-known doctrine: 
tcrrae dominium fonilur, kbi jinilur armorum vis. The doctrine 
satisfied a requirement of the age and became a maxim of inter* 
national law throughout northern Europe, both for the protection 
of shore fisheries and for the assertion of the immunity of 
adjacent waters of neutral states from acts of war between 
belligerent states. Germany still holds in principle to this 
varying limit of cannon range. Norway has never agreed to 
the 3 m., maintaining that the special configuration of her 
coast necessitates the exercise of jurisdiction over a belt of 4 m. 
Spain lays claim to jurisdiction over 6 m. from her shores. The 
writers and specialists on the subject are quite as much divided. 
A British Fishery Commission in 1893 reported that " the present 
territorial limit of 3 m. is insufficient, and that, for fishery 
purposes alone, this limit should be extended, provided such 
extension can be effected upon an international basis and with 
due regard to the rights and interests of all nations." The 
committee recommended that "a proposition on these lines 
should be submitted to an international conference of the 
powers who border on the North Sea." There is already an 
International convention, dated 6th May 1882, between Great 
Britain, France, Belgium, Holland, Germany and Denmark, 
relating to the regulation of the fisheries in the North Sea, which 
has fixed the limit of territorial waters as between the contracting 
parties at 3 m. measured from low- water mark and from a straight 
line drawn from headland to headland at the points where they 
are xo m. across. In the British Act of 29th June 1803, giving 
effect to a subsequent convention (16th November 1887; between 
the same parties for the regulation of the liquor traffic in the 
North Sea, " territorial waters " are declared to be as defined 
in the Territorial Waters Jurisdiction Act 1878. In this Act the 
definition^ as follows:— ; 

The territorial waters Of Her Majesty's dominions in reference to 
the sea means such part of the sea adjacent to the coast of the 
United Kingdom, or the coast of some other part of Her Majesty's 
dominions, as is deemed by international law to be within the 
territorial sovereignty of Her Majesty; and for the purpose of any 
offence declared by this act to be within the jurisdiction of the 
admiral, any part of the open sea within one marine league of the 
coast measured from low-water mark shall be deemed to be open 
sea within the territorial waters of Her Majesty's dominions. 

This definition only restricts the operation of the 3 m. limit 
to offences dealt with in the act, and does, not deal with bays. 
The act of 1893 declares that the articles of the convention 
" shall be of the same force as if they were enacted in the body 
of the act," but this convention gives no definition of territorial 
waters. 

The jurisdiction exercised in British territorial waters under 



4-io 



WATER-THYME— WATERTON 



the Territorial Waters Jurisdiction Act of 1878 * is asserted 
without distinction between them and inland waters. " All 
offences " committed by any person, whether a British subject 
or not, and whether or not committed " on board or by means 
of a foreign ship," " within the territorial waters of Her Majesty's 
dominions," are made punishable under it. No exception is 
made for offences committed on merely passing' foreign vessels, 
except that there is this attenuation in their case, that no 
prosecution can take place without a special authorization given 
by certain high officers of state.* It is doubtful whether any 
Continental state would recognise so complete a jurisdiction. 
The subject has been exhaustively dealt with by both the 
Institute of International Law and the International Law 
Association, which, at the suggestion of the rapporteur of the 
two committees, decided that the subjects of fisheries and 
neutrality should be dealt with separately. The following 
considerations and rules were adopted in 1894 by the institute 
and afterwards by the association: — 

Whereas there is no reason to confound in a single zone the 
distance necessary for the exercise of sovereignty and protection 
of coast fisheries and the distance necessary to guarantee the 
neutrality of non-belligerents in time of war; And whereas the 
distance most commonly adopted of 3 m. from low-water mark 
has been recognized as insufficient for the protection of coast fisheries; 
And whereas, moreover, this distance docs not correspond to the 
real range of cannon placed on the coast ; The following dispositions 
are adopted : — 

. Art. I. The state has the right of sovereignty over a belt of sea 
along hs coast subject to the right of inoffensive passage reserved 
in article 5. This belt is called territorial waters (mer territorial) . 

Art. II. Territorial waters extend for 6 sea m. (60 to 1 degree of 
latitude) from low-water mark along the whole extent of its coasts. 

Art. III. For bays, territorial waters follow the trend of the 
coast except that it is measured from a straight line drawn across 
the bay from the two points nearest the sea where the opening of 
the bay is of 12 marine m. in width, unless a greater width shall have 
become recognized by an immemorial usage. 

Art. IV. In .case of war the adjacent neutral state shall have 
the right to extend by its declaration of neutrality or by special 
notification its neutral zone from 6 m. to cannon range from the 
coast. 

Art. V. AH ships, without distinction, have the right of inoffen- 
sive passage through territorial waters, subject to the belligerent 
right to regulate, and for purposes of defence to bar, the passage 
through the said waters for every ship, and subject to the right of 
neutrals to regulate the passage through the said waters for ships 
of war of all nationalities. 

Art. VI. Crimes and offences committed on board foreign ships 
passing through territorial waters by persons on board such ships, 
upon persons or things on board the same ships, are, as such, beyond 
the jurisdiction of the adjacent state, unless they involve a violation 
of the rights or interests of the adjacent state, or of its subjects or 
citizens not forming part of its crew or its passengers. 

Art. VII. Ships passing through territorial waters must conform 
to the special rules laid down by the adjacent state, in the interest 
and for the security of navigation and for the police of the sea. 

Art. VIII. Ships of all nationalities, by the simple fact of being 
in territorial waters, unless merely passing through them, are sub- 
ject to the jurisdiction of the adjacent state. 

The adjacent state has the right to continue upon the high seas 
the pursuit of a ship commenced within territorial waters, and to 
arrest and try it for an offence committed within the limits of its 
waters. In case of capture on the high seas the fact shall, however, 
be notified without delay to the state to which the ship belongs. 
The pursuit is interrupted from the moment the ship enters the 
territorial waters of its own state or of a third power. The right of 
pursuit ceases from the moment the ship enters a port either of its 
own country or of a third power. 



*Thi< act mm* ii.. -,t',,rr.,i >,' hat was thought to be a defect in 
British bwr, t J-i. .J>>. i-H.n in ih-.- *<N. known" Franconia "case having 
been that lerritmul water k *vrc " out of the realm," and that 
rrimiiul jurisdiction nriihki thi-in over a foreign ship could be exer- 
cised only in virtue of an art of parliament. 

1 Proceedings, »yi | 1 of the act, for the trial and punishment 
of a person who is not a finish *u Inject, and who is charged with any 
offence as is declared by thi* act to be within the jurisdiction of the 
anli-rural. shall not be instituted Irnny Court of the United Kingdom, 
except with the consent of one of the principal Secretaries of State, 
and on hi* certificate that the in* 1 i tut km of such proceedings is in his 
opinion ttLptcJitoc , and *hali not L* instituted in any British dominions 
outside oi the (Jailed Kingdom except with the leave of the governor 
of the po* of IBC drimimoni in which such proceedings are proposed 
to be [ ■— *» » — * *■"* -^n hi* cerELlkate that it is expedient tnat such 
proc united. 



Art. IX. The special position of stripe! warandoftliipaatlmi&sted 
to them is reserved 

Art. X. The provisions of the preceding articles arc applicable 
to straits not exceeding 12 m. in width, with the following modifica- 
tions and exceptions: — 

(1) Straits, the coast of which belong to different powers, 
form part of the territorial waters of the adjacent states, their 
jurisdiction respectively extending to the middle line of the 
straits; 

(2) Straits whose coasts belong to the same state, 'and which 
are indispensable for maritime communication b e twe en two or 
more states other than the state in question, form part of the 
territorial waters of the said stare whatever the proximity of 
the two coasts may be; 

(3) Straits serving as a passage between one open sea and 
another can never be closed. 

Art. XI. The position of straits already regulated by conventions 
or special usage is reserved. 

The Dutch government in 1896 brought these rules to the 
notice of the leading European governments, and suggested 
the desirability of concluding an international convention on 
the subject. The only government which was unfavourable 
to the proposal was that of Great Britain. (See as to the Moray 
Firth Fisheries controversy, North Sea Fisheries Convention.) 

In the Hague Convention of 1007 respecting the rights and 
duties of neutral powers in naval war, the existing practice 
in regard to territorial waters is confirmed (see arts. 2, 3, 9, 10, 
12, 13 and 18) , but no definition of what constitutes the distance 
of these waters seawards is given. This question is among 
those which the next Hague Conference may deal with, inasmuch 
as for purposes of neutrality the difficulties connected with 
fishery questions do not arise.' 

Authorities. — Sir Thomas Barclay, Question de la mer lerriloriala 
(published by the Association Internationale de la Marine, Paris, 
1002): Idem, as rapporteur on the subject in the Annuaires da 
finstitut de droit international for 1893 and 1894; ^ M < Special Re- 
port of the International Law Association (replies to Questionnaire, 
i893)» ar| d Report and Discussion (1895); Idem, Problems of Inter- 
national Practice and Diplomacy (London, 1907), pp. 109 et seq. See 
also Coulson and Forbes, Law. relating to Waters (London, 1910), 
3rd ed., pp. 5 et seq. (T. Ba.) 

WATER-THYME, known botanically as. Elodea canadensis, a 
small submerged water-weed, native of North America. It 
was introduced into Co. Down, Ireland, about 1836, and 
appeared in England in 1841, spreading through the country 
in ponds, ditches and streams, which were often choked with 
its rank growth. Elodea is a member of the monocotyledonoua 
natural order Hydrocharidcae (?.«.). 

WATERTON, CHARLES (1782-1865), English naturalist and 
traveller, was born at Walton Hall, near Pontefract, Yorkshire, 
on the 3rd of June 1782. After being educated at the Roman 
Catholic college of Stonyhurst, and travelling a short time in 
Spain, he went to Demerara to manage some estates belonging to 
his family. He continued in this occupation for about eight 
years, when he began those wanderings upon the results of which 
his fame as a naturalist principally rests. In his first journey, 
which began in 1812, and the principal object of which was to 
collect the poison known as curare, he travelled through British 
Guiana by the Demerara and Essequibo rivers to the frontiers 
of Brazil, making many natural history collections and observa- 
tions by the way. After spending some time in England he 
returned to South America in 1816, going by Pcrnambuco and 
Cayenne to British Guiana, where again he devoted his time 
to the most varied observations in natural history. For the third 
time, in 1820, he sailed from England for Demerara, and again 
he spent his time in similar pursuits. Another sojourn in England 
of about three years was followed by a visit to the United States 
m 1824; and, having touched at several of the West. India 
islands, be again went on to Demerara, returning to England 
at the end of the year. In 1828 he published the results of his 
four journeys, under the title of Wanderinrs in South America 
— consisting largely of a collection of observations on the 

» The question of revising the limits fixed for Territorial Waters 
in the Convention of 1882 (see above) was the subject of an animated 
discussion at the conference at Hull of the National Sea Fisheries 
Protection Association in 1906. when a resolution was adopted in 
favour of maintaining the present 3- miles limit on grounds of 
expediency, which deserve serious consideration* 



WATERTOWN— WATERVILLE 



4" 



appearance, character and habits of many of the animals Co be 
found in British Guiana. Waterton was a keen and accurate 
observer, and his descriptions are of a graphic and humorous 
character, rarely to be found in works on natural history. He 
married in 1820, and from that time lived mostly at Walton Hall, 
devoting himself to the improvement of his estate, to country 
pursuits, and to natural history observations. He also pub- 
fished three series of Essays in Natural History (1838, 1844, 1857). 
He died at Walton Hall on the 27th of May 1865, from the result 
of an accident. His only son, Edmund Waterton (1830-1887), 
was an antiquary, who paid special attention to rings; some of. 
those he c ollected are in the Victoria and Albert Museum. 

WATERTOWK, a township of Middlesex county, Massachu- 
setts, U.S.A., on the Charles river, about 6 m. W. of Boston. 
Pop. (1890) 7073; (xooo) 9706, of whom 2885 were foreign- 
bora and 53 were negroes; (1910 census) 12,875. Area, 
4-i sq. m. Watertown is served by the Fttchburg division of 
the Boston ft Maine railway, and is connected with Boston, 
Cambridge, Newton (immediately adjacent and served by the 
New York, New Haven & Hartford railway) and neighbouring 
towns by electric railways. It is a residential and manufacturing 
suburb of Boston. The township is at the head of navigation 
on the Charles, and occupies the fertile undulating plains along 
the river running back to a range of hills, the highest of which 
are Whitney Hill (200 ft.) and Meeting House Hill (250 ft.). 
Within the township are several noteworthy examples of colonial 
architecture. There are several small parks and squares, 
including Central Square, Beacon Square, about which the 
business portion of the township is centred, and Saltonstall 
Park, in which is a monument to the memory of Watertown's 
soldiers who died in the Civil War, and near which are the 
Town House and the Free Public Library, containing a valuable 
collection of 60,000 books and pamphlets and historical memorials. 
There are two interesting old burying-grounds: one on Grove 
Street, near the Cambridge line, first used in 1642, contains a 
monument to John Coolidge, killed during the British retreat 
from Concord and Lexington on the 19th of April 177$; the 
other is near the centre of the village about the former site of the 
First Parish Church. In Coolidge r s Tavern (still standing) 
Washington was entertained on his New England tour in 1789; 
and in a house recently moved from Mt Auburn Street to Marshall 
Street the Committee of Safety met in 1775. Within the town- 
ship are mounds and earthworks which Professor E. N. Horsford 
thought were the remains of a Norse settlement in the nth 
century, and which include a semicircular amphitheatre of six 
tiers or terraces which he thought was an assembly place, and 
1 portion of a stone wall or dam. The Federal government 
maintains at Watertown one of its principal arsenals, occupying 
grounds of about 100 acres along the river. Several of the 
original low brick buildings, built between 1816 and 1820, still 
stand. In 1005 the value of Watertown's factory products 
was $15,524,675. 

Watertown was one of the earliest of the Massachusetts Bay 
settlements, having been begun early in 1630 by a group of 
settlers led by Sir Richard Saltonstall and the Rev. Ceorge 
Phillips. The first buildings were upon land now included 
within the limits of Cambridge. For the first quarter century 
Watertown ranked next to Boston in population and area. 
Since then its limits have been greatly reduced. Thrice portions 
have been added to Cambridge, and it has contributed territory 
to form the new townships of Weston (1712), Waltham (1738), 
and Belmont (1859). In 1632 the residents of Watertown 
protested against being compelled to pay a tax for the erection 
of a stockade fort at Cambridge;. this was the first protest in 
America against taxation without representation and led to the 
establishment of representative government in the colony. 
As early as the close of the 17th century Watertown was the 
chief horse and cattle market in New England and was known 
for its fertile gardens and fine estates. Here about 1632 was 
erected the first grist mill in the colony, and in 1662 one of the 
first woollen mills in America was built here. In the First 
Pari* Church, the site of which is marked by a monument, 



Historical Sketch of WaUriovm (Boston", 1906): and " Watertowni 
by S. F. Whitney, in vol, hi. of D. Hamilton Hurd's 



the Provmda! Congress, after adjournment from Concord, met 
from April to July 1775; the Massachusetts General Court 
held its sessions here from 1775 to 1778, and the Boston town 
meetings were held here during the siege of Boston, when many 
of the well-known Boston families made their homes in the 
neighbourhood. For several months early in the War of Inde- 
pendence the Committees of Safety and Correspondence made 
Watertown their headquarters and it was from here that General 
Joseph Warren set out for Bunker Hill. In 1832-1834 Theodore 
Parker conducted a private school here and his name is still 
preserved in the Parker School. 

iddlcsex County (2 vols.. Bost . 

the 

History of 

Middlesex County (Philadelphia, 1890). The Watertown Records 
(4*voIs., Watertown and Boston, 1894-1906) have been published by 
the Historical Society of Watertown (orgaoiied in 1888 and Incor- 
porated in 1891). 

WATERTOWN, a city and the county-seat of Jefferson county. 
New York, U.S.A., 73 m. (by rail) N. of Syracuse, on the Black 
river. Pop. (1890) 14.7*5; (1900) 21,696, of whom 5x19 were 
foreign-born and 75 were negroes; (1910 census) 26,730. Water- 
town is served by the New York Central & Hudson River 
railway. The city has several squares and public parks, one of 
them, City Park, having an area of about 300 acres. Among 
the public buildings and institutions are the city hall, the Federal 
building, the county court house, a state armoury, the Flower 
Memorial Library (erected as a memorial to Roswell P. Flower, 
governor of New York in 1892-1895, by his daughter, Mrs J. B. 
Taylor) with 25,514 vols, in 1910, the Immaculate Heart 
Academy (Roman Catholic), the Jefferson County Orphan 
Asylum (1859), the St Patrick's Orphanage (1897; under the 
Sisters of St Joseph), the Henry Keep Home (1879), for aged 
men and women, St Joachim's Hospital (1896; under the 
Sisters of Mercy), and the House of the Good Samaritan (1882). 
Watertown is situated in a fertile agricultural and dairying 
region, of which it is a distributing centre, and it ships large 
quantities of farm produce and dairy products (especially cheese). 
The Black river furnishes water-power which is utilized by 
manufacturing establishments of diversified character. In 1905 
the city's factory product was valued at $8,371,618. Watertown 
was settled during the late years of the 18th century. It became 
the county-seat in 1805, was incorporated as a village in 1816 
and was first chartered as a city in 1869. 

WATERTOWN, a city of Dodge and Jefferson counties, 
Wisconsin, U.S.A., on both banks of the Rock river, about 45 m. 
W.N.W. of Milwaukee. Pop. (1890) 8755; (1900) 8437, including 
2447 foreign-born; (1905, state census) 8623; (1910) 8829. Water- 
town is served by the Chicago & North- Western and the Chicago, 
Milwaukee & St Paul railways, and by an interurban electric 
line, connecting with Milwaukee. It is the seat of North-western 
University (1865; Lutheran), which includes collegiate, pre- 
paratory and academic departments, and had in 1908-1909 
11 instructors and 283 students, and of the Sacred Heart College 
(Roman Catholic, opened in 1872 and chartered in 1874), under 
the Congregation of the Holy Cross. There are also a Carnegie 
library, a Lutheran Home for the Fecble-Minded, and a City 
Hospital. The Rock river furnishes water-power which is 
utilized for manufacturing. The value of the factory product 
in 1005 was $2,065,487. The city is situated in a dairying and 
farming region. The municipality owns and operates its water- 
works. Watertown was founded about 1836 by settlers who 
gave it the name of their former home, Watertown, New York. 
Afterwards there was a great influx of Germans, particularly 
after the Revolution of 1848, among them being Carl Schurz, 
who began the practice of law here. Germans by birth or descent 
still constitute a majority of the population. Watertown was 
incorporated as a village in 1849, and was chartered as a dty 
in 1853. 

WATERVnXE, a dty of Kennebec county, Maine, U.S.A., 
on the Kennebec river, 19 m. above Augusta. Pop. (1900) 



412 



WATERVLIET— WATSON, R. 



9477, of whom 2087 were foreign-born; (1910 census) 11,458. It 
is served by the Wiscasset, Waterville & Farmington railway, 
and two lines of the Maine Central railroad. The Ticonic Falls 
in the river afford excellent water-power, which is used in the 
manufacture of cotton and woollen goods, &c. In Winslow (pop. 
in 1 9 10, 2709), on the opposite side of the river And connected 
by bridges with Waterville, are large paper and pulp mills. 
Waterville has a Carnegie library and is the scat of Colby College 
(Baptist), which was incorporated as the Maine Literary and 
Theological Institution in 1813, was renamed Waterville College 
in 1821, was named Colby University in 1867, in honour of 
Gardner Colby (1 810-1879), a liberal benefactor, and received its 
present name in 1899. Since 187 1 women have been admitted 
on the same terms as men. In 1910 the college library contained 
51,000 volumes. Waterville was settled about the middle of 
the 18th century. It was a part of the township of Winslow 
from 1 77 1 to 1802, when it was incorporated as a separate town- 
ship. It was first chartered as a city in 1883. 

WATERVLIET, a city of Albany county, New York, U.S.A., 
on the W. bank of the Hudson river opposite Troy and about 
5 m. N. of Albany. Pop. (1890) 12,967; (1900) i4»3*i» of whom 
2754 were foreign-born and 59 were negroes; (1910 census) 
1 5»o74« Watervliet is served by the Delaware & Hudson railway 
and by steamboat lines on the Hudson. river, and is connected 
with Troy by bridges and ferries, and with Albany, Troy, Cohoes 
and Schenectady by electric lines. Trje Erie and Champlain 
canals have their terminals a short distance above the city. 
The city has a city hall and a public library. Watervliet is 
situated in a good farming country, but is chiefly a manufacturing 
place; in 1905 its factory products were .valued at $1,884,802 
(25% more than in 1900) , not including the product of the 
United States Arsenal (1807), on the river, an important manu- 
factory of heavy ordnance. The place was originally called 
West Troy* and was incorporated as a village in 1836; in 1897 
it was chartered as a city under its present name; at the same 
time the township of Watervliet in which it was situated was 
divided into the to'wnships of Colonie and Green Island. .In 
1776 the first settlement of Shakers (q.v.) in America was made 
in the township by M Mother Ann " Lee and her followers, who 
named it Niskayuna. Here " Mother Ann " died and is buried. 

WATFORD, a market town in the Watford parliamentary 
division of Hertfordshire, England, 17 J m. N.W. of London 
by the London & North-Wcstcrn railway. Pop. of urban 
district (1891) 17,063; (1901) 29,327. It lies on the small river 
Colne in a pleasant undulating and well wooded district. The 
church of St Mary, with embattled tower and spire, is of various 
dates, and contains good examples of monumental work of the 
early 17th century; and in the churchyard is buried Robert 
Clutlerbuck (d. 1831), author of the History and Antiquities 
of the County of Hertford. There are several modern churches 
and chapels. The chief building within the town is the Watford 
Public Library and School of Art. There are large breweries, 
also corn-mills, malt-kilns and an iron foundry. Bushcy, on the 
south side of the Colne, lying for the most part high above it, 
is a suburb, chiefly residential, with a station on the North- 
western line. The chuich of St James, extensively restored 
by Sir Gilbert Scott, is Early English in its oldest part, the 
chancel. Here a school of art was founded by Sir Hubert von 
Herkomer, R.A., but it was closed in 1904, and subsequently 
revived in other hands. Other institutions arc the Royal 
Caledonian Asylum and the London Orphan Asylum. At 
Aldenham, 2 m. N.E., the grammar school founded in 1599 now 
ranks as one of the minor English public schools. 

WATKIN. SIR EDWARD WILLIAM, 1st Bart. (1810-1901), 
English railway manager, was born in Manchester on the 26th 
of September 1819. He was the son of Absalom Watkin, a 
merchant in Manchester, and was employed in his father's 
counting-house, ultimately becoming a partner; but m 1845 
he was appointed secretary of the Trent Valley railway, which 
was soon afterwards absorbed by the London & North- Western 
Company. He next joined the Manchester & Sheffield Com- 
pany 1 of •" "-■* general manager and then chairman, 



subsequently combining with the duties thus entailed the 
chairmanship of the South-Eastern (1867) and of the Metropolitan 
(187 2). His connexion with these three railways was maintained 
to within a short time of his death, and they formed the material 
of one of his most ambitious schemes — the establishment of 
a through route under one management from Dover to Man* 
Chester and the north. This was the end he had in view in his 
successful fight for the extension of the Manchester, Sheffield 
& Lincolnshire railway (now the Great Central) to London; 
and his persistent advocacy of the Channel tunnel (?.».) between 
Dover and Calais was really a further development of the same 
idea, for its construction would have enabled through trains 
to be run from Paris to Lancashire and Scotland, vis the East 
London (of which also he was. for a time chairman) and the 
Metropolitan. The latter scheme, however, failed to obtain the 
necessary public and political support. Other projects had even 
less success. His plans for a tunnel between Scotland and 
Ireland under the North Channel, and for a ship canal across 
Ireland from Galway to Dublin, did not come to anything; 
while the great tower at Wembley Park (near Harrow), intended 
to surpass the Eiffel Tower at Paris, stopped at an early stage. 
It was in the realms of railway politics that Watkin showed to 
best advantage; for the routine work of administration pure 
and simple he had no aptitude. He entered parliament as a 
Liberal, and after representing Stockport from 1864 to 1868, sat 
as member for Hythc for twenty-one years from 1874, becoming 
a Liberal-Unionist at the time of the Home Rule split, and 
subsequently acting as a " free lance." In 1868 he received a 
knighthood, and in 1880 he was created a baronet. His death 
occurred at Northcndcn, Cheshire, on the 13th of April 1901. 

WATKINS, a village and the county-seat of Schuyler county, 
New York, U.S.A., at the head, (south end) of Seneca Lake, about 
22 m. N.N.W. of Elmira. Pop. (1800) 2604; (1900) 2943; 
(1905) 2957; (1910) 2817. Watkins is served by the New York 
Central & Hudson River, the Northern Central (Pennsylvania) 
and the Lehigh Valley railways, by an electric line to Elmira 
and by a steamer line on the lake. There are mineral springs, 
whose waters, notably those of ah iodo-bromated brine spring* 
are used in bath treatment for rheumatism, gout, heart, kidney 
and liver diseases, &c. Partly within the village limits is Watkins 
Glen, a narrow winding gorge about 2 m. long, with walls and 
precipices from 100 to .300 ft. high, through which flows a small 
stream, forming many falls, cascades and pools. The Glen 
property, about 103 acres, wa$ opened as an excursion resort 
in 1863, and in 1906 was made a free state reservation or park 
and was placed in the custody of the American Scenic and 
Historic Preservation Society. About 3 m. S.E. is Havana 
Glen, about ij m. long. The first settlement here was made 
in 1788, and Watkins was incorporated as a village* in 1842. 

WATLING STREET, the Early English name for the great 
roa4 made by the Romans from London past St Albans (Roman 
Verulamium) to Wroxeter (Roman Viroconium) near Shrewsbury 
and used by the Anglo-Saxons, just as a great part of it is used 
to-day. According to early documents the name was at first 
Waeclinga (or Waetlinga) straH; its derivation is unknown, 
but an English personal name may lie behind it. After the 
Conquest the road was included in the list of four Royal Roads 
which the Norman lawyers recorded or invented (see Ebhinb 
Street). Later still, in the Elizabethan period and after it, 
the name Watling Street seems to have been applied by anti- 
quaries to many Roman or reputed Roman roads in various 
parts of Britain, and English map-makers and inferior writers 
on Roman roads still perpetuate the fictions. In particular, 
the Roman "North Road" which ran from York through 
Corbridge and over Cheviot tottewstcad near Melrose, and thence 
to the Wall of Pius, and which has largely been in use ever since 
Roman times, is now not unfrequently called Watling Street, 
though there is no old authority for it and throughout the middle 
ages the section of the road between tfie Tyne and the Forth 
was called Dcre Street. (F. J. H.) 

WATSON, RICHARD (1737-1816), English divine, was born in 
August 1737 at Heversbam in Westmorland. His father, a 



WATSON, T. 



9, sent him to Trinity College, Cambridge, where 
he was elected a fellow in 1700. About the same time be had 
the offer of the post of chaplain to the factory at Bcncoolen, in 
the Straits Settlements. " You are too good/' said the master 
of Trinity, " to die of drinking punch in the torrid zone "; and 
Watson, instead of becoming, as he had flattered himself, a great 
orientalist, remained at home to be elected professor of chemistry, 
a science of which he did not at the time possess the simplest 
rudiments. " I buried myself," he says, " in my laboratory, and 
in fourteen months read a course of chemical lectures to a very 
full audience.". One of his discoveries led to the black-bulb 
theimometer. Not the least of his services was to procure an 
endowment for the chair, which served as a precedent in similar 
instances. In 1 771 he was appointed rcgius professor of divinity, 
but did not entirely renounce the study of chemistry. In 176S 
he had published Institution** metatturgicae, intended to give 
a scientific form to chemistry by digesting facts established 
by experiment into a connected scries of propositions. In 1781 
he followed this up with an introductory manual of Chemical 
Essays. In 1 776 he answered Gibbon's chapters on Christianity, 
and had the honour of being one of the only two opponents 
whom Gibbon treated with respect. The same year he offended 
the court by a Whig sermon, but in 1779 became archdeacon 
of Ely. He had always opposed the American War, and oh the 
accession of Lord Shelburne to power in 178a was made bishop 
of Llandaff, being permitted to retain his other preferments on 
account of the poverty of the sec. Shelburne expected great 
service from him as a pamphleteer, but Watson proved from 
the ministerial point of view a most impracticable prelate/ He 
immediately brought forward a scheme for improving the condi- 
tion of the poorer clergy by equalizing the incomes of the bishops, 
the reception of which at the time may be imagined, though it 
was substantially the same as that carried into effect by- Lord 
Melbourne's government fifty years later. Watson now found 
that he possessed no influence with the minister, and that he had 
destroyed his chance of the great object of his ambition, promo- 
tion to a better diocese. Neglecting both his see and his professor- 
ship, to which latter he appointed a deputy described as highly 
incompetent, he withdrew to Calgarth Park, in his native county, 
where he occupied himself in forming plantations and In the 
improvement of agriculture. He also frequently came forward 
as a preacher and as a speaker in the House of Lords. His 
advice to the government in 1787 is said to have saved the 
country £100,000 a year in gunpowder. In 1796 he published, 
in answer to Thomas Paine, an Apology for the Bible, perhaps 
the best known of his numerous writings. Watson continued to 
exert his pen with vigour, and in general to good purpose, 
denouncing the slave trade, advocating the union with Ireland, 
and offering financial suggestions to Pitt, who seems to have 
frequently consulted him. In 1798 his Address to the People 
of Great Britain, enforcing resistance to French arms and French 
principles, ran through fourteen editions, but estranged him 
from many old friends, who accused him, probably with injustice, 
of aiming to make his peace with the government. Though 
querulous because of his non-preferment, De Quinccy tells us 
that " his lordship was a joyous, jovial, and cordial host." He 
died on the 2nd of July 1816, having occupied his latter years 
in the composition and revision of an autobiography (published 
In 181 7), which, with all its egotism and partiality, is a valuable 
work, and the chief authority for his life. 

WATSON, THOMAS (<r. x 55*7-1 59*)i English lyrical poet, was 
born in London, probably in 1557. He proceeded to Oxford, 
and while quite a young man enjoyed a certain reputation, even 
abroad, as a Latin poet. His De remedio amor is, which was 
perhaps his earliest important composition, is lost, and so is 
his u piece of work written in the commendation of women-kind," 
which was also in Latin verse. He came back to London and 
became a law-student. The earliest publication by Watson 
which has survived is a Latin version of the A ntigone of Sophocles, 
issued in 1 581. It is dedicated to Philip Howard, carl of Arundel, 
who was perhaps the patron of the poet, who seems to have spent 
sonx part of this year in Paris. . Next year Watson appears for 



the first time as an English poet in some verses prei 
stone's Heptameron, and also in a far more imp 
as the author of the 'ExaropxaBia or Passionate Ce 
This is a collection or cycle of 100 pieces, in tl 
Petrarch, celebrating the sufferings of a lover 
farewell to love. The technical peculiarity of the 
poems is that, although they appear and profess t 
they are really written in triple sets of common si 
and therefore have eighteen lines each. It seem 
Watson, who courted comparison with Pclrar 
desired to recommend this form to future Sonne 
this he had no imitators. 1 Among those who wen 
the friends of Watson we note Matthew Roydei 
Pcele. In 1585 he published a Latin translatl 
pastoral play of Aminta, and his version was aftc 
latcd into English by Abraham Fraunce (1587). 
now, as the testimony pf Nashe and others provi 
the best Latin poet of England. In 1590 he 
English and Latin verse, his Meliboeus, an elegy 
of Sir Francis Walsingham, and a collection of I tali 
put into English by Watson and set to music by I 
remainder of Watson's career nothing is known, ssl\ 
26th of September 1592 he was buried in the 
Bartholomew the Less, and that in the following ) 
and best book, The Tears of Pancie, or Love Disc 
was posthumously published. This is a collect 
sonnets, regular in form, so far at least as to have 
each. Spenser is supposed to have alluded to the ui 
of Watson in Colin Clout's Come Home Again, wh 
" Amyntas quite is gone and lies full low 
Having his Amaryllis left to moan." 
He is mentioned by Meres in company with Shalu 
and Marlowe among " the best for tragedie," but 
work of his except the translations above mentic 
down to us. It is certain that this poet enjoyed a 
tion in his lifetime, and that he was not without a di 
upon the youth of Shakespeare. He was the fii 
original experiment made by Wyat and Surrey, 
the pure imitation of Petrarch into English poetry, 
read in Italian, French and Greek literature. Watso 
and he had not escaped from a certain languor a 
which prevent his graceful verses from producing tf 
This demerit is less obvious in bis later than in his < 
and with the development of the age, Watson, 
temporaries regarded him as a poet of true excellence 
ably have gained power and music As it is, he has 
being one of the direct forerunners of Shakespeare I 
Adonis and in the Sonnets), and of being the lead 
procession of Elizabethan sonnet-cycle writers. 

The English works of Watson, excepting the madn 
collected by Edward Arber in 1870. Thomas Wat 
Madrigals Englished'* (1500) were reprinted (ed. F 
from the Journal of Germanic Philology (vol. ii.. No. . 
the original Italian, in 1899. See also Mr Sidney Lee 
(pp. xxxti.-xli.) to Elizabethan Sonnets in the new ed 
An English Garner. 



* Speaking of the Becakmpamta, Mr Sidney Lee s 
deprecates all claim to originality. To each poem 
prose introduction in which he frankly indicates, 
ample quotations, the French, Italian or classical pc 
the source of his inspiration " {Elizabethan Sonnets, 1 
a footnote (p. xxxix.) he adds: *' Eight of Watson 
according to his own account, renderings from Pe 
are from Scranoo dell' Aquila (1466-1500); four ea 
Strozza, the Ferrarcsc poet, and from Ronsard; t 
Italian poet, Agnolo Firenzuola (1493-154,8): two » 
French poet, £ticnne Forcadel, known as Forcatulus 
the Italian Cirolamo Parabosco (fi. 1548). and A 
while many arc based on passages from such authors 
Creeks) Sophoclcs.Thcocritus, Apollonius of Rhodes 
epic Argonaulica); or (among the Latins), Virgil, 1 
Horace, Propertius, Seneca, Pliny, Luean, Martial 
Flaccus; or (among the modern Italians) Angelo P< 
1404) and Baptista Mantuanus (1448-1516); or 
modern Frenchmen) Gervasius Scpinus of Sauraur, wi 
after the manner 01 Virgil and Mantuanus.' 



4H 

WATSON, WILLIAM (c. 1559-1603), English conspirator, was 
a native of the north of England, and was born probably on the 
23rd of April 1559. In 1586 he became a Roman Catholic priest 
in France, and during the concluding years of Elizabeth's reign 
he paid several visits to England; he was imprisoned and 
tortured more than once. He became prominent as a champion 
of the secular priests in their dispute with the Jesuits, and in 
1601 some writings by him on this question appeared which were 
answered by Robert Parsons. When Elizabeth died, Watson 
hastened to Scotland to assure James I. of the loyalty of his 
party, and to forestall the Jesuits, who were suspected of intrigu- 
ing with Spain. The new king did not, however, as was hoped, 
cease to exact the necessary fines; and the general dissatisfaction 
felt by the Roman Catholics gave rise to the " Bye plot," or 
" Watson's plot," in which connexion this priest's name is best 
known, and to its sequel the Main or Cobham's, plot. Watson 
discussed the grievances of his co-religionists with another priest, 
William Clark, with Sir Griffin Markham and Anthony Copley, 
and with a disappointed Protestant courtier, George Brooke; 
they took another Protestant, Thomas, 15th Lord Grey de Wilton, 
into their confidence, and following many Scottish precedents 
it was arranged that James should be surprised and seized; while 
they talked loudly about capturing the Tower of London, con- 
verting the king to Romanism, and making Watson lord keeper. 
One or two of the conspirators drew back; but Watson and his 
remaining colleagues arranged to assemble at Greenwich on the 
34th of June 1603, and under the pretence of presenting a 
petition to carry out their object. The plot was a complete 
failure; Henry Garnet and other Jesuits betrayed it to the 
authorities, and its principal authors were seized, Watson being 
captured in August at Hay on the Welsh border. They were 
tried at Winchester and found guilty; Watson and Clark were 
executed on the 9th of December 1603, and Brooke suffered the 
same fate a week later. Grey and Markham were reprieved. 
Before the executions took place, however, the failure of the 
Bye plot had led to the discovery of the Main plot. Brooke's 
share in the earlier scheme caused suspicion to fall upon his 
brother Henry Brooke, Lord Cobham, the ally and brother-in-law 
of Sir Robert Cecil, afterwards carl of Salisbury. Cobham 
appears to have been in communication with Spain about the 
possibility of killing " the king and his cubs " and of placing 
Lady Arabella Stuart on the throne. He was seized, tried and 
condemned to death, but although led out to the scaffold he 
was not executed. It was on suspicion of being associated with 
Cobham in this matter that Sir Walter Raleigh was arrested and 
tried. 

See the documents printed by T. G. Law in The Arch priest contro- 
versy (1896-1808); the same writer's Jesuits and Seculars (1889), 
and S. R. Gardiner, History of England, vol. i. (1005)* 

WATSON, WILUAH (1858- ), English poet, was born on 
the 2nd of August 1858 at Burley-in-Wharfedalc, Yorkshire, 
and was brought up at Liverpool, whither his father moved for 
business. In 1880 he published his first book The Prince's Quest, 
a poem showing the influence of Keats and Tennyson, but giving 
little indication of the author's mature style. It attracted no 
attention until it was republished in 1893 after Mr Watson had 
made a name by other work. In 1884 appeared Epigrams of 
Art, Life and Nature, a remarkable little volume, which already 
showed the change to Mr Watson's characteristic restraint and 
concision of manner. But it passed unnoted. Recognition came 
with the publication of Wordsworth's Grave in x8oo; and fame 
with the publication of the second edition in 1891, and the 
appearance in the Fortnightly Review, August 1891, of an article 
by Grant Allen entitled " A New Poet." Wordsworth's Crave, 
which marked a reversion from the current Tennysonian and 
Swinburnian fashion to the meditative note of Matthew Arnold, 
exhibited in full maturity Mr Watson's poetical qualities; his 
stately diction, his fastidious taste, his epigrammatic turn, his 
restrained yet eloquent utterance, his remarkable gift of literary 
criticism in poetic form. Besides Wordsworth's Crave the 
volume contained Ver tenebrosum (originally published in the 
National Review for June 1885), a scries of political sonnets I 



WATSON, W,— WATT 



indicating a fervour of political conviction which was later to 
find still more impassioned expression; also a selection with 
additions from the Epigrams of 1 884, and among other miscellane- 
ous pieces bis tribute to Arnold, " In Laleham Churchyard." 
During the years 1890-1892 he contributed articles to the 
National Review, Spectator, Illustrated London News, Academy, 
Bookman and Atalanla, which were collected and republished in 
1893 as Excursions in Criticism. In 1893 he also published 
Lacrymae Musaram, the poem which gave the title to the volume 
being a fine elegy on the death of Tennyson; and it included the 
poem on " Shelley's Centenary " (both of these printed privately 
in 1892), and " The Dream of Man," the earliest of his philo- 
sophical poems. The same year, too, saw the publication of 
The Eloping Angels, a serio-comic trifle of small merit, dedicated 
to Grant Allen. During this year Mr Gladstone bestowed 
on him the Civil List pension of £200 available on the death of 
Tennyson. In 1894 followed Odes and Other Poems, and in 
1895 The Father of the Forest, which contained also the fine 
" Hymn to the Sea" in English elegiacs (originally contributed 
to the Yellow Book), " The Tomb of Burns," and " Apologia," 
a piece of candid and just self-criticism. The volume contained 
also a sonnet " To the Turk in Armenia," a prelude to the series 
of sonnets about Armenia contributed to the Westminster 
Gazette and republished in a brochure called The Purple East in 
1896. These sonnets were republished with revision and con- 
siderable additions, and a preface by the bishop of Hereford, 
in The Year of Shame in 1897. Whatever view was taken of the 
poet's incursion into politics, no one doubted his passionate 
sincerity, or the excellence of the poetical rhetoric it inspired, 
In 1898 were published his Collated Poems and a volume of new 
poetry The Hope of the World, which opened with his three chief 
philosophical poems, the title piece, " The Unknown God," and 
" Ode in May." In 1902 he printed privately 50 copies of New 
Poems, and published his " Ode on the Coronation of King 
Edward VII.," a favourable specimen of its class; and in 1903 
besides a volume of Selected Poems a collection of poems contri- 
buted to various periodicals and called For England: Poems 
Written During Estrangement, a poetical defence of his impugned 
patriotism during the Boer War. In 1909 appeared an important 
volume of New Poems. 

Mr Watson's poetry falls chiefly into the classes above in* 
dicated— critical, philosophical and political—to which may be 
added a further class of Horatian epistles to his friends. This 
classification indicates the high character and also the limitations 
of his poetry. It is contemplative, not dramatic, and only 
occasionally lyrical in impulse. In spite of the poet's plea in 
his " Apologia " that there is an ardour and a fire other than 
that of Eros or Aphrodite, ardour and fire are not conspicuous, 
qualities of his verse. Except in his political verse there is more 
thought than passion. Bearing trace enough of the influence of 
the romantic epoch, his poetry recalls the earlier classical period 
in its epigrammatic phrasing and Latinized diction. By the 
distinction and clarity of his style and the dignity of his move- 
ment William Watson stands in the true classical tradition of great 
English verse, in a generation rather given over to lawlessness 
and experiment. 

See also section on William Watson in Poets of Ike Younger Genera- 
tion, by William Archer (1902); and for bibliography up to Aug. 
19031 English Illustrated Magazim, vol. xxix. (N.S.), pp. 542 and 

548. cw.Ej.) 

WATT, JAMES (1736-1819), Scottish engineer, the inventor of 
the modern condensing steam-engine, was born at Greenock 
on the 19th of January 2736. His father was a small merchant 
there, who lost his trade and fortune by unsuccessful speculation, 
and James was early thrown on bis own resources. Having si 
taste for mechanics he made his way to London, at the age of 
nineteen, to learn the business of a philosophical-instrument 
maker, and became apprenticed to one John Morgan, in whose 
service he remained for twelve months. • From a child he had 
been extremely delicate, and the hard work and frugal living of 
his London pupilage taxed his strength so severely that he was 
forced at the end of a year to seek rest at home, not, however, 



WATT 



415 



until be bad gained a fair kno w ledge of the trade and become 
bandy in the use of took. Before going to London he had made 
the acquaintance of some of the professors in Glasgow college, 
and on his return to Scotland in 1756 he sought them out and 
obtained work in repairing astronomical instruments. He next 
tried to establish himself aa an instrument maker in Glasgow, 
but the city gilds would not recognize a craftsman who had not 
served the full term of common, apprenticeship, and Watt was 
forbidden to open shop in the burgh. The college, however, took 
bun under its protection, and in 1757 he was established in its 
precincts with the title of mathematical-instfument maker to the 
university. 

Before many months Joseph Black, the discoverer of latent 
beat, then lecturer on chemistry, and John Robison, then a 
student, afterwards professor of natural philosophy at Edinburgh, 
became his intimate friends, and with them he often discussed the 
possibility of improving the steam-engine, of which at that time 
Thomas Newcomen's was the most advanced type. The engine 
was then applied only to pumping water— chiefly in the drainage 
of mines; and it was so clumsy and wasteful of fuel as to be 
bat little used. Some early experiments of Watt in x 761 or 1 76a 
led to no positive result, but in 1764 his attention was seriously 
drawn to the matter by having a model of Newcomen's engine, 
which fanned part of the college collection of s cientific apparatus, 
given him to repair. Having put the model in order, he was at 
once struck with its enormous consumption of steam, and .set 
uim*m-u to examine the cause of this and to find a remedy. 

In Newcomen's engine the cylinder stood vertically under one 
end of the main lever or " beam " and was open at the top. 
Steam, at a pressure scarcely greater than that of the atmosphere, 
was admitted to the under side; this allowed the piston to be 
polled up by a counterpoise at the other end of the beam. 
Ownt mnric ation with the boiler was then shut off, and the steam 
in the cylinder was condensed by injecting a jet of cold water 
from a cistern above. The pressure of the air on the top of the 
peston then drove it down, raising the counterpoise and doing 
stork. The injection water and condensed steam which had 
gathered in the cylinder were drained out by a pipe leading 
down into a welli 

Watt at once noticed that the alternate heating and cooling 
of Use cylinder in New co men's engine made it work with tedious 
slowness and excessive consumption of steam. When steam 
was admitted at the beginning of each stroke, it found the metal 
of the cylinder and piston chilled by contact with the condensed 
steam and cold injection water of the previous stroke, and it 
was not untfl much steam had been condensed m heating the 
dulled surfaces that the cylinder was able to fill and the piston 
to rise.' His first attempt at a remedy was to use for the material 
of the cylinder a substance that would take in and give out heat 
atowtj. Wood was tried, but it made matters only a little 
better, and did not promise to be durable. Watt observed that 
the evil was intensified whenever, for the sake of making a good 
vacuum under the piston, a specially large quantity of injection 
water was supplied. 

He then entered on a scientific examination of the properties 
of steam, studying by experiment the relation of its density 
and pressure to the temperature, and concluded that two 
condition* were essential to the economic use* of steam in a 
condensing steam-engine. One was that the temperature of 
the condensed steam should be as low as possible, xoo* F. or 
lower, otherwise the vacuum would not be good; the other 
was, to quote his own words, " that the cylinder should be always 
as hot as the steam which entered it." In Newcomen's engine 
these two conditions were incompatible, and it was not for some 
months that Watt saw a means of reconciling them. Early in 
1765. while walking on a Sunday afternoon in Glasgow Green, 
the idea flashed upon him that, if the steam were condensed 
fat a vessel distinct from the cylinder, it would be practicable 
so make the temperature of condensation low, and still keep 
the cylinder hot. Let this separate vessel be kept cold, either 
by injecting cold water or by letting it stream over the outside, 
and let a vacuum be maintained in the vessel Then, whenever 



communication* was made between it and the cylinder,* steam 
would pass over from the cylinder and be condensed; the pressure 
in the cylinder would be as low as the pressure in the condenser, 
but the temperature of the metal of the cylinder would remain 
high, since no injection water need touch it. Without delay 
Watt put this idea to the test, and found that the separate eon- 
denser did act as he had anticipated. To maintain the vacuum 
in it he added another new oigan, namely, the air-pump, the 
function of which is to remove the condensed steam and water 
of injection along with any air that gathers in the condenser. 

To further his object of keeping the cylinder as hot as the 
steam that entered it, Watt supplemented his great invention 
of the separate condenser by several less notable but still import- 
ant improvements. In Newcomen's engine a layer of water 
over the piston had been used to keep it steam-tight; Watt 
substituted a tighter packing lubricated by oil. In Newcomen's 
engine the upper end of the cylinder was open to the air; Watt 
covered it in, leading the piston-rod through a steam-tight 
staffing box in the cover, and allowed steam instead of air to 
press on the top of the piston. In Newcomen's engine the 
cylinder had no dothing to reduce loss of heat by radiation and 
conduction from its outer surface; Watt not only cased it in 
non-conducting material, such as wood, but introduced a steam- 
jacket, or layer of steam, between the cylinder proper and an 



All these features were specified in his first patent (see SxEAat- 
Engine), which, however, was not obtained till January 1709, 
nearly four years after the inventions it covers had been made. 
In the interval Watt had been striving to demonstrate the merits 
of his engine by trial on a large scale. His earliest experiments 
left him in debt, and, finding that his own means were quite 
insufficient to allow him to continue them, he agreed that Dr 
John Roebuck, founder of the Canon ironworks, should take 
two-thirds of the profits of the invention in consideration of 
his bearing the cost. An engine was then erected at Kinneil, 
near Linlithgow, where Roebuck lived, and this gave Watt the 
opportunity of facing many difficulties in details of construction. 
But the experiments made slow progress, for Roebuck's affairs 
became embarrassed, and Watt's attention was engaged by other 
work. He had taken to surveying, and was fast gaining reputa- 
tion as a civil engineer. In 1767 he was employed to make a 
survey for a Forth and Clyde canal— a scheme which failed to 
secure parliamentary sanction. This was followed during the 
next six years by surveys for a canal at Monkland, for another 
through the valley of Strathmore from Perth to Forfar, and 
for others along the lines afterwards followed by the Crinan and 
Caledonian canals. He prepared plans for the harbours of Ayr, 
Port-Glasgow and Greenock, for deepening the Clyde, and for 
building a bridge over it at Hamilton. In the course of this 
work he invented a simple micrometer for measuring distances, 
consisting of a pair of horizontal hairs placed in the focus of a 
telescope, through which sights were taken to a fixed and 
movable target on a rod held upright at the place whose distance 
from the observer was to be determined. The micrometer was 
varied in a number of ways; and another fruit of his ingenuity 
about the same time was a machine to facilitate drawing in 
perspective. 

Meanwhile the engine had not been wholly neglected. Watt 
had secured his patent; the Kinneil trials had given him a 
store of valuable experience; Roebuck had failed, but another 
partner was ready to take his place. In 1768 Watt had made 
the acquaintance of Matthew Boulton, a man of energy and 
capital, who owned the Soho engineering works at Birmingham. 
Boulton agreed to take Roebuck's share in the invention, and 
to join Watt in applying to parliament for an act to prolong the 
term of the patent. The application was successful. In 177s 
an act was passed continuing the patent for twenty-five years. 
By this time the inventor had abandoned his civil engineering 
work and had settled in Birmingham, where the manufacture 
of steam-engines was begun by the firm of Boulton & Watt. 
The partnership was a singularly happy one. Boulton had the 
good sense, tojeavc. the work of inventing to Watt, in whose 



416 



WATT 



genius he had the fullest faith; on the other hand, his substantial 
means, his enterprise, resolution and business capacity supplied 
what was wanting to bring the invention to commercial success. 
During the next ten years we find Watt assiduously engaged 
in developing and introducing the engine. Its first and for a 
time its only application was in pumping; it was at once put 
to this use in the mines of Cornwall, where Watt was now 
frequently engaged in superintending the erection of engines. 
Further inventions were required to fit it for other uses, and 
these followed in quick succession. Watt's second steam-engine 
patent is dated 1781. It describes five different methods of 
converting the reciprocating motion of the piston into motion 
of rotation, so as to adapt the engine for driving ordinary 
machinery. The simplest way of doing this, and the means now 
universally followed, is by a crank and fly-wheel; this had 
occurred to Watt, but had meanwhile been patented by another, 
and hence he devised the " sun and planet wheels " and other 
equivalent contrivances. A third patent, in 178a, contained 
two new inventions of the first importance. Up to this time the 
engine had been single-acting; Watt now made it double-acting; 
that is to say, both ends of the cylinder, instead of only one, 
were alternately put in communication with the boiler and the 
condenser. Up to this time also the steam had been admitted 
from the boiler throughout the whole stroke of the piston; 
Watt now introduced the system of expansive working, in which 
the admission valve is closed after a portion only of the stroke 
is performed, and the steam enclosed in the cylinder is then 
allowed to expand during the remainder of the stroke, doing 
additional work upon the piston without making any further 
demand upon the boiler until the next stroke requires a fresh 
admission of steam. He calculated that, as the piston advanced 
after admission had ceased, the pressure of the steam in the 
cylinder would fall in the same proportion as its volume increased 
—a law which, although not strictly true, does accord very 
closely with the actual behaviour of steam expanding in the 
cylinder of an engine. Recognizing that this would cause a 
gradual reduction of the force with which the piston pulled or 
pushed against the beam, Watt devised a number of contrivances 
for equalizing the eifort throughout the stroke. He found, 
however, that the inertia of the pump-rods in his mine engines, 
and the fly-wheel in his rotative engines, served to compensate 
for the inequality of thrust sufficiently to make these con- 
trivances unnecessary. His fourth patent, taken out in 17841 
describes the well-known "parallel motion," an arrangement 
of links by which the top of the piston-rod is connected to the 
beam so that it may either pull or push, and is at the same time 
guided to move in a sensibly straight line. " I have started a 
new hare," he writes to Boulton in June of that year; " I have 
got a glimpse of a method of causing a piston-rod to move up 
and down perpendicularly by only fixing it to a piece of iron upon 
the beam, without chains or perpendicular guides or untowardly 
frictions, arch-heads, or other pieces of clumsiness. I think it 
a very probable thing to succeed, and one of the most ingenious 
simple pieces of mechanism I have contrived." 

A still later invention was the throttle-valve and centrifugal 
governor, by which the speed of rotative engines was automatic- 
ally controlled. One more item in the list of Watt's contributions 
to the development of the steam-engine is too important to be 
passed without mention: the indicator, which draws a diagram 
of the relation of the steam's pressure to its volume as the stroke 
proceeds, was first used by Boulton 8c Watt to measure the 
work done by their engines, and so to give a basis on which the 
charges levied from their customers were adjusted. It would 
be difficult to exaggerate the part which this simple little instru- 
ment has played in the evolution of the steam-engine. The 
eminently philosophic notion of an indicator diagram is funda- 
mental in the theory of thermodynamics; the instrument 
Itself is to the steam engineer what the stethoscope is to the 
1, and more, for with it he not only diagnoses the ail ments 

, whether in one or another of its organs, 

rtn, health, 
(swats* of the engine was not long in being 




established. By 1783 all but one of the Newcomen pumping- 
engines in Cornwall had been displaced by Wait's. The mines 
were then far from thriving; many were even on the point of 
being abandoned through the difficulty of dealing with large 
volumes of water; and Watt's invention, which allowed this 
to be done at a moderate cost, meant for many of them a new 
lease of life. His engine used no more than a fourth of the fuel 
that had formerly been needed to do the same work, and the 
Soho firm usually claimed by way of royalty a sum equivalent 
to one-third of the saving — a sum which must have been nearly 
equal to the cost of the fuel actually consumed. Rival manu- 
facturers came forward, amongst whom Edward Bull and 
Jonathan Carter Hornblower are the most conspicuous names. 
They varied the form of the engine, but they could not avoid 
infringing Watt's patent by the use of a separate condenser. 
When action was taken against them on that ground,* they 
retaliated by disputing the validity of the fundamental patent 
of 1769. In the case of Boulton & Watt v. Butt the court 
was divided on this point, but in an action against Hornblower 
the patent was definitely affirmed to be valid by a unanimous 
finding of the Court of King's Bench. This was in 1709, only a 
year before the monopoly expired, but the decision enabled 
the firm to claim a large sum as arrears of patent dues. In 
connexion with these trials Watt himself, as well as his early 
friends Black and Robison, drew up narratives of the invention 
of the steam-engine, which are of much interest to the student 
of its history. 1 

Before Watt's time the steam-engine was exclusively a steam- 

Eump, slow-working, cumbrous and excessively wasteful of fuel* 
[is first patent made it quick in working, powerful and efficient, 
but still only as a steam-pump. His later inventions adapted it 
to drive machinery of all kinds, and left it virtually what it is 
to-day, save in three respects. I n respect of mechanical arrangement 
the modern engine diners from Watt's chiefly in this, that the 
beam, an indispensable feature in the early pumpine-engjnes, and 
one which held its place long after the need for it had vanished, 
has gradually given way to more direct modes of connecting the 
piston with the crank. Another difference is in the modern use of 
nigh-pressure steam. It is remarkable that Watt, notwithstanding 
the fact that his own invention of expansive working must have 
opened his eyes to the advantage of high-pressure steam, declined 
to admit it into his practice. He persisted in the use of pressures 
that were little if at all above that of the atmosphere. His rivals 
in Cornwall were not so squeamish. Richard Trevithick ventured 
as far as 120 lb on the square inch, and a curious episode in the 
history of the steam-engine is an attempt which Boulton & Watt 
made to have an act of parliament passed forbidding the use of high 
pressure on the ground that the lives of the public were endangered. 
The third and only other respect in which a great improvement has 
been effected is in the introduction of compound expansion. Here, 
too, one cannot but regret to find the Soho firm hostile, though the 
necessity of defending their monopoly makes their action natural 
enough. Hornblower had in fact stumbled on the invention of the 
compound engine, but as his machine employed Watt's condenser 
it was suppressed, to be revived after some years by Arthur Woolf 
(1 766-1837). In one of his patents (1784) Watt describes a steam 
locomotive, but he never prosecuted this, and when William Mur- 
doch, his chief assistant (famous as the inventor of gas-lighting), 
made experiments on the same lines, Watt gave him little encourage- 
ment. The notion then was to use a steam carriage on ordinary 
roads; its use on railways had not yet been thought of. When that 
idea took form later in the last years of Watt's life, the old man 
refused to smile upon his offspring; it is even said that he put a 
clause in the lease of his house that no steam carriage should on any 
pretext be allowed to approach it. 

On the expiry in 1800 of the act by which the patent of 1760 
had been extended, Watt gave up his share in the business of 
engine-building to his sons, James, who carried it on along with 
a son of Boulton for many years, and Gregory, who died in 
1804. The remainder of his life was quietly spent at Heathficld 
Hall, his house near Birmingham, where he devoted bis time, 
with scarcely an interruption, to mechanical pursuits. His 
last work was the invention of machines for copying sculpture 

1 Another narrative of the utmost interest was written by Watt in 

1814 in the form of a footnote to Robison's article " Steam-Engine," 

from the fourth edition of the Encyclopaedia Britawfica, which Watt 

revised before it was reprinted in the collected edition of Robison*! 

I works. See Robison's MeckoMkal PkOosefky, voL B. 



WATTEAU 



417 



i for making reduced copies, another for taking facsimiles 
by means of a light stiff frame, which carried a pointer over the 
surface of the work while a revolving tool fixed to the frame 
alongside of the pointer cut a corresponding surface 00 a suit- 
able block. We find him in correspondence with Sir Francis 
Chantrey about this machine not many months before his death, 
and presenting copies of busts to his friends as the work " of 
a young artist just entering on his eighty-third year." His 
life drew to a tranquil close, and the end came at Heathfield 
on the 19th of August 1810. His remains were interred in the 
neighbouring parish church of Handsworth. 

Watt was twice married— first in 1763 to his cousin Margaret 
Miller, who died ten years later. Of four children born of the 
marriage, two died in infancy; another was James (1760-1848), 
who succeeded his father in business; the fourth was a daughter 
who Kved to maturity, but died early, leaving two children. 
His second wife, Anne Macgregor, whom he married before 
settling in Birmingham in 1775, survived him; but her two 
children, Gregory and a daughter, died young. 

Some of Watt's minor inventions have been already noticed. 
Another, which has proved of great practical value, was the letter- 
copying press, for Copying manuscript by using a glutinous ink and 
pressing the written page against a moistened sheet of thin paper. 
He patented this in 1780, describing both a roller press, the use 
of which he seems to have pre fe rre d in copying: his own conrespond- 
', and also the form of screw press now found in every merchant's 



Io the domain of pure science Watt claims recognition not only 
as having had ideas greatly in advance of his age regarding what 
h now called energy, but as a discoverer of the composition ©f water. 
Writing to Joseph Priestley in April 1781, with reference to some 
of Priestley s experiments, he suggests the theory that " water is 
composed of depnlogisticated air and phlogiston deprived of part of 
their latent or elementary heat." It is difficult to determine the 
exact meaning attached to these antiquated terms, and to say how 
far Watt's suggestion anticipated the fuller discovery of Cavendish. 
Watt's views were communicated to the Royal Society in 1783, 
Cavendish's experiments in 1784, and both arc printed in the same 
volume of the Philosophical Transactions. 

The early and middle part of Watt's life was a long straggle with 

Kar health: severe headache prostrated him for days at a time; 
t as he grew old his constitution seems to have become more 
robust. His disposition was despondent and shrinking; he speaks 
of himself, but evidently with unfair severity, as indolent to 
excess." ** I am not enterprising," he writes; " I would rather face 
a loaded cannon than settle an account or make a bargain; in short, 
1 find myself out of my sphere when I have anything to do with 
mankind." He was a man of warm friendships, and has left a 
personal memorial of the greatest interest in his numerous letters. 
They are full of sagacity and insight: his own achievements are 
cold with a shrewd but extremely modest estimate of their value, and 
in a style of remarkable terseness and lucidity, lightened here and 
there by a touch of dry humour. In his old age Watt is described 
by his contemporaries as a man richly stored with the most various 
knowledge, full of anecdote, familiar with most modern languages 
and thenr literature, a great talker. Scott speaks of M the alert, 
kind, ben evol e nt old man, hb talents and fancy overflowing on every 
subject, with his attention alive to every one's question, his informa- 
tion at every one's command." 
See J. P. Muirhead, Origin and Progress of the Mechanical In- 



soecincat 
Smiles, i 



of James Watt (3 vols., 1854; vols. i. and ii. contain 
and Watt's letters; voL iii. gives a reprint of fab pat 
tarns and other papers); Muirhead, Life of Walt (1$ 



Lives of Boulton and Watt; Williamson, Memorials of ll 
Lineage, &c., of James Watt, published by the Watt Club (Greenock, 
1856); Correspondence oftkelale James Watt on his Discovery of the 
Theory of the Competition of Water, edited by Muirhead (1846); 
Cowper, On the I nventions of James Watt and hb ModeU jmnerved 
at Handsworth and South Kensington." Proc. Inst. Meek. Eng. 
(1883) ; article " Watt " in the Encyclopaedia Brisannica (6th edition, 
1823), by James Watt, junior; Robbon, Methanual Philosophy, 
vol ii. (1 tea) (letters and notes by Watt on the History of the Steam* 
Engine). (J.A.E.) 

WATTEAU. AJiTOINB (1684-17"), French painter, was 
born in Valenciennes, of humble Flemish origin. Comte de 
Caytua, hb staunch friend of later yean, and hb first biographer, 
refers to Wattcau's father as a hard man, strongly drrinrlmed 
to accede to hb son's wbh to become a painter; but other 
arronnrs show him in a kinder light— as a poor, struggling 
man, a tiler by trade, who secured for hb son the best possible 
education. Certain it b that at the age of fourteen Watteau 
was placed with Germ, a mediocre Valenciennes painter, with 



whom he remained until 1702. It is to be assumed that he learnt 
far more from the study of Ostade's and Teniers's paintings in 
hb native town than from hb first master's teaching. Not 
only in subject-matter, but in their general tonality, hb earliest 
works, like " La Vraie Gaiett," which was in the collection of Sir 
Charles Tennant, suggest this influence. Gerin died in 170s, 
and Watteau, almost penniless, went to Paris, where he found 
employment with the scene-painter M6tayer. Tilings, however, 
went barlly with hb new master, and Watteau, broken down 
in health and on the verge of starvation, was forced to work in 
a kind of factory where devotional pictures were turned out in 
wholesale fashion. Three francs a week and meagre food were 
his reward, but hb talent soon enabled him to paint the St 
Nicolas, the copying of which was allotted to him, without hav- 
ing to refer to the original Meanwhile he spent his rare leisure 
hours and the evenings in serious study, sketching and drawing 
hb impressions of types and scenes. Hb drawings attracted 
the attention of Claude Gillot, an artist imbued with the spirit 
of the Renaissance, who after having successfully tried himself 
in the mythological and historical genre, was just at that time 
devoting himself to the characters and incidents of the Italian 
comedy. Gillot took Watteau as pupil and assistant, but the 
young man made such rapid progress that he soon equalled and 
excelled hb master, whose jealousy led to a quarrel, as a result of 
which Watteau, and with him hb fellow-student and later pupil, 
Lancret, severed hb connexion with Gillot and entered about 

1708 the studio of Claude Audran, a famous decorative painter 
who was at that time keeper of the collections at the Luxembourg 
Palace. From him Watteau acquired hb knowledge of decorative 
art and ornamental design, the garland-like composition which 
he applied to the designing of screens, fans and wall panels. 
At the same time he became deeply imbued with the spirit of 
Rubens and Paolo Veronese, whose works he had daily before 
him at the palace; and be continued to work from nature and 
to collect material for his formal garden backgrounds among 
the fountains and statues and stately avenues of the Luxembourg 
gardens. Hb chinoiseries and tmgeries date probably from the 
years during which he worked with Audran. 

Perhaps as a recreation from the routine of ornamental design, 
Watteau painted at thb time "The Departing Regiment," 
the first picture in hb second and more personal manner, in 
which the touch reveals the influence of Rubens's technique, 
and the first of a long series of camp pictures. He showed the 
painting to Audran, who, probably afraid of losing so talented 
and useful an assistant, made light of it, and advised him not 
to waste hb time and gifts on such subjects. Watteau, suspicious 
of hb master's motives, determined to leave him, advancing 
as excuse his desire to return to Valenciennes. He found a 
purchaser, at the modest price of 60 livres, in Sirois, the father* 
in-law of hb later friend and patron Gersalnt, and was thus 
enabled to return to the home of hb childhood. In Valenciennes 
he painted a number of the small camp-pieces, notably the 
M Camp-Fire," which was again bought by Sirois, the price thb 
time being raised to 200 livres; this b now in the collection of 
Mr W. A. Coats in Glasgow. Two small pictures of the same 
type are at the Hermitage in St Petersburg. 
. Returning to Paris after a comparatively short sojourn at 
Valenciennes, he took up his abode with Sirois, and competed in 

1709 for the Prix de Rome. He only obtained the second prize, 
and, determined to go to Rome, he applied for a crown pension 
and exhibited the two military pictures which he had sold to 
Sirois, in a place where they were bound to be seen by the 
academicians. There they attracted the attention of de la Fosse, 
who, struck by the rare gifts displayed in these works, sent for 
Watteau and dissuaded him from going to Italy, where he had 
nothing to learn. It was to a great extent due to de la Fosse 
and to Rigaud that Watteau was made an associate of the 
Academy in 17x2, and a full member in 17 17, on the completion 
of hb diploma picture, " The Embarkment for Cythera," now 
at the Louvre. A later, and even more perfect, version of the 
same subject b in the possession of the German emperor. It b 
quite possible that the superb portrait of Rigaud by Watteau 



4*8 



WATTENBACH— WATTERSON 



belonging to Mr Hodgkins, «u painted in acknowledgment of 
Rigaud's friendly action. 

Watteau now went to live with Crosat, the greatest private 
art collector of his time, for whom be painted ft set of four 
decorative panels of " The Seasons," one of which, " Summer/' 
is now in the collection of Mr Lionel Phillips. Crozat left at his 
death some 400 paintings and 19,000 drawings by the masters. 
It is easy to imagine how Watteau roamed among these treasures, 
and became more and more familiar with Rubens and the great 
Venetians. In 17x9 or 1720 the state of his health had become 
so alarming that he went to London to consult the famous doctor 
Richard Mead. But far from benefiting by the journey, he 
became worse, the London fog and smoke proving particularly 
pernicious to a sufferer from consumption. On his return to 
Paris he lived for six months with his friend Gersaint t for whom 
he painted in eight mornings the wonderful signboard depicting 
the interior .of an art dealer's shop, which is now — cut into two 
parts— in the collection of the German empcf or. His health made 
it imperative for him to live in the country, and in 172 1 he took 
up his abode with M. le Fevre at Nogent. During all this time, 
as though he knew the near approach of the end and wished to 
make the best of his time, he worked with feverish baste. Among 
his last paintings were a " Crucifixion " for the curl of Nogent, 
and a portrait of the famous Venetian pastellist Rosalba Camera, 
who at the same time painted ber portrait of Watteau. His 
restlessness increased with the progress of his disease; he wished 
to return to Valenciennes, but the long journey was too danger- 
ous; he sent for his pupil Pater, whom he had dismissed in a fit 
of ill-temper, and whom he now kept by his side for a month to 
give him the benefit of his experience; and on the xSth of July 
17 2 x he died in Gersaint's arms. 

Watteau's position in French art is one of unique importance, 
for, though Flemish by descent, he was more French in his art 
than any of his French contemporaries. He became the founder 
—and at the same time the culmination— of a new school which 
marked a revolt against the pompous decaying classicism of the 
Louis XIV. period. The vitality of bis art was due to the rare 
combination of a poet's imagination with a power of seizing 
reality. In his treatment of the landscape background and of 
the atmospheric surroundings of the figures can be found the 
germs of impressionism. All the later theories of light and its 
effect upon the objects in nature arc foreshadowed by Watteau's 
/Iter champilres, which give at the same time a characteristic, 
though highly idealized, picture of the artificiality of the life 
of his time. He is the initiator of the Louis XV. period, but, 
except in a few rare cases, his paintings are entirely free from the 
licentiousness of his followers Lancret and Pater, and even more 
of Boucher and Fragonard. During the last years of his life 
Watteau's art was highly esteemed by such fine judges as Sirois, 
Gersaint,.the comte de Caylus, and M. de Julienne, the last of 
whom had a whole collection of the master's paintings and 
sketches, and published in 1735 the Abrigfi delaviede Watteau, 
an introduction to the four volumes of engravings after Watteau 
by Cochin, Thdmaasin, Le Bas, Liotard and others. From the 
middle of the x8th century to about 1875, when Edmond de 
Goncourt published his Catalogue ratsonni of Watteau's works 
and Caylus's discourse on Watteau delivered at the Academy 
in 1748, the discovery of which is also due to the brothers de 
Goncourt, Watteau was held in such slight esteem that the 
prices realized by his paintings at public auction rarely exceeded 
£100. Then the reaction set in, and in 1801 the " Occupation 
according to Age" realized 5200 guineas at Christie's, and 
" Perfect Harmony " 3500 guineas. At the Bourgeois sale at 
Cologne in 1904 M The Village Bride " fetched £5000. 

The finest collection of Watteau's works is in the possession of 
the German emperor, who owns as many as thirteen, all of 
the best period, and mostly from M. de Julienne's collection. 
At the Kaiser Friedrich museum in Berlin are two scenes from 
tfcsrlulfsa and French comedy and a fUe ckampUrc. In the 
tiMsUrMfcttto *** **** of ms puttings, ftmong them " Rustic 
^Hg^ 1 «*fa* Return from the Chase," " GUles and his 
^^^Bjgts)"* ""ALady at her Toilet" and 



" Harlequin and Columbine." The Louvre owns, besides the 
diploma picture, the " Antiope," " The Assemblage in the Park," 
" Autumn," " Indifference," " La Finette," " Gilles," " A Re- 
union " and " The False Step," as weU as thirty-one original 
drawings. Other paintings of importance are at the Dresden, 
Glasgow, Edinburgh, St Petersburg and Vienna galleries; and 
a number of drawings are to be found at the British Museum 
and the Albertina in Vienna. Of the few portraits known to have 
been painted by Watteau, one is in the collection of the late M. 
Groult in Paris. 

Authorities.— Since the resuscitation of Watteau's fame by the 
de Goncourts. an extensive literature has grown around his life and 
work. The basis for all later research 7s furnished by Caylus's 
somewhat academic Life. Gersaint's Catalogue ratsonni (Paris, 
1744), and Julienne's Abrigf. For Watteau's childhood, the most 
trustworthy information will be found in CelUer's Watteau, son 
enfanee, ses comtemporains (Valenciennes, 1867). Of the greatest 
importance is the Catalogue raisonni de Veeuvre de Watteau, by E. de 
Goncourt (1875), and the essay on Watteau by the brothers de 
Goncourt in UArt dm X VHP Steele. See also Watteau by Paul 
Mantx (Paris, 1893); "Antoine Watteau," by G. Daraenty {Let 
Artistes cileores, Paris, 1891); Watteau, by Gabriel Staines (Paris. 
1892); AnUnne Watteau by Claude Phillips (London. 1895; reprinted 
without alterations or corrections by the author, 190$); and Camille 
MauckuYs brilliant monograph Antoine Watteau (London, 1005), 
which is of exceptional interest as a physiological study, since 
the author establishes the connexion between Watteau's art and 
character and the illness to which he succumbed in the prime of 
his life. (P.G.K.) 

WATTENBACH, WILHELH (18x0-1897), German historian, 
was born at Ranzau in Holstein on the a 2nd of September 1810. 
He studied philology at the universities of Bonn, Gottingen 
and Berlin, and in 1843 he began to work upon the Mommenta 
Gemaniae historica. In 1855 he was appointed archivist at 
Breslau; in x86a he became professor of history at Heidelberg, 
and ten years later professor at Berlin, where he was a member 
of the directing body of the Monumento and a member of the 
Academy. He died at Frankfort on the axst of September 1897 
Wattenbach was distinguished by bis thorough knowledge of the 
chronicles and: other original documents of the middle ages, 
and his most valuable work was done in this field. 

His principal book, Deutseklonds GesckickUqueUen in Mittelalter 
bis tur MtUe des 13. Jakrkunderts, is unrivalled as a guide to the 
sources of the history of Germany in the middle ages; this was first 
published in 1858. and has passed through several editions. Cognate 
1 l:- j_i_-. ,_.„•_..•„•.-,, PoMopupte {Uiprig, !86o. 

1 im MutetaHer (Leipzig, 1871, 



works are his Anleituug but lateiuischen PaULorrapkie (Leipzig, 1869, 
and again 1886); and Das ScknfUoesen im Mutilator (Leipxig, 1871, 
and again 1896). Wattenbach also wrote Beiirdge sur Gtsck ic kte 



der christlichen Kircke in Bokmen und U&krtn (Vienna, 1849); 
Geuhuhte des rbmischen PapsUunu (Berlin, 1876); and Anieitung 
our gruemischen Palaographie (Leipzig, 1867, and again 1895). 

WATTERSON, HENRY (1840- ), American journalist, 
was born in Washington, D.C., on the 16th of February 18401 
His father, Harvey McGee Watterson (181 1-1891), was a jour* 
nalist and lawyer, and was a Democratic representative in Con- 
gress in 1839-1843. The son was educated by private tutors, 
and between 1858 and 1861 was editor of the Washington States 
and of the Democratic Rcwiew. During the Civil War be served 
in the Confederate army as aide-de-camp to General Nathan B. 
Forrest and to General Leonidas Polk in 1861-1862; he was 
editor of the Chattanooga Rebel in 1862-1863, *nd was chief of 
scouts in General Joseph E. Johnston's army in 1864. In 
1865-1867 he was an editor of the Republican Banner, at Nash- 
ville, Tennessee, and in 1867-1868 was editor of the Journal 
at Louisville, Kentucky. In 1868, with W. N. Haldeman, be 
founded and became editor of the Louisville Courier- Journal, 
a consolidation of the Courier (1843), the Democrat (1844), 
and the Journal (1830;, and it toon became one of the most 
influential of Southern newspapers. He was a Democratic 
representative in Congress from August 1876 to March 1877, 
and was delegate at large to the National Democratic Conventions 
of 1876, 1880, 1884, 1 888 and 1892, serving as temporary chairman 
in 1876, and as chairman of the platform committee in 1880 
and 1888. He became widely known as a lecturer and orator. 
His publications include History of the Spanish- American War 
(1809) and The Comfrmiscs of Life (190a). 



WATTIGNIES— WATTMETER 



419 



WATTIGMIES, a village of France $J m. S.SX.of Maubeuge, 
the scene of a battle in the French Revolutionary Wan (?.*.), 
fought on the i5th-i6th October 1793. The Allied army, chiefly 
Austrian*, under Coburg, was besieging Maubeuge, and the 
Revolutionary army, preparing to relieve it, gathered behind 
Avesnes. Coburg disposed a covering force of ax ,000 astride the 
Avesnes-Maubeuge road, 5000 on the right with their flank on 
the Sambre, 9000 in the centre, on a ridge in an amphitheatre of 
woods, and 6000 on the left, chiefly on the plateau of Wattignies. 
A long line of woods enabled the Republican commander, Jourdan, 
to deploy unseen; 14*000 men were to attack the right, 16,000 
were sent towards Wattignies, and 13,000 were to demonstrate 
in the centre till the others had succeeded and then to attack. 
Meantime (though this part of the programme miscarried) the 
Maubeuge garrison, which was almost as strong as its besiegers, 
was to sally out. Even without the Maubeuge garrison. Jourdan 
had a two- to-one superiority. But the French were still the 
undisciplined enthusiasts of Hondschoote. Their left attack 
progressed so long as it could use " dead ground " in the valleys, 
but when the Republicans reached the gentler slopes above, 
the volleys of the Austrian regulars crushed their swarms; and 
the Austrian cavalry, striking them in flank, rode over them. 
The centre attack, ordered by Carnot on the assumption that all 
was well on the flanks, was premature; like the left, it pro- 
gressed while the slopes were sharp, but when the Republicans 
arrived on the crest they found a gentle reverse slope before them, 
at the foot of which were Coburg's best troops. Again the dis- 
ciplined volleys and a well-timed cavalry charge swept back 
the assailants. The French right reached, but could not hold, 
Wattignies But these reverses were, in the eyes of Carnot and 
Jourdan, mere mishaps. Jourdan wished to renew the left 
attack, but Carnot, the engineer, considered the Wattignies 
plateau the key of the position and his opinion prevailed. In 
the night the nearly equal partition of force, which was largely 
responsible for the failure, was modified, and the strength of 
the attack massed opposite Wattignies. Coburg meanwhile 
strengthened his wings. He heard that Jourdan had been re- 
inforced up to 100,000. But he called up few fresh battalions, 
and put into line only 23,000 men. In reality Jourdan had not 
received reinforcements, and the effects of the first failure almost 
neutralized the superiority of numbers and enthusiasm over 
discipline and confidence. But at last, after a long fight had 
eliminated the faint-hearted* enough brave men remained 
m the excited crowds held together by Carnot and Jourdan 
to win the plateau. Coburg then drew off. His losses were 
9500 out of 23,000, Jourdan's 3000 out of 43,000. 

WATTLB AND DAB, a term in architecture (Lat. cratilius) 
applied to a wall made with upright stakes with withes twisted 
between them and then plastered over. It is probably one of 
the oldest systems of construction; the Egyptians employed 
the stems of maize for the upright stakes; these were secured 
together with withes and covered over with mud, the upper 
portions of the maise stems being left uncut at the top, to in- 
crease the height of the enclosure; and these are thought by 
Professor Petrie to have given the origin for the cavetto cornice 
oi the temples, the torus moulding representing the heavier 
coil of withes at the top of the fence wall. Vitruvius (ii. 8) 
refers to it as being employed m Rome. In the middle ages in 
Engl and it was employed as a framework for day chimneys. 

WATTMETER, an instrument for the measurement of electric 
power, or the rate of supply of electric energy to any circuit. 
The term is generally applied to describe a particular form of 
electrodynamometer, consisting of a fixed coil of wire and an 
enxbracing or neighbouring coil of wire suspended so as to be 
mo vable . In general construction the instrument resembles 
a Siemens electrodynamometer (see Ahpkkemeteb). The fixed 
cofl is called the current coil, and the movable coil is called the 
potential coil* and each of these coils has its ends brought to 
separate terminals on the base of the instrument. The principle 
on which the instrument works is as follows: Suppose any 
circuit, such as an electric motor, lamp or transformer, is receiving 
electric current; then the power given to that circuit reckoned 



in waits is measured by the product of the current flowing through 
the circuit in amperes and the potential difference of the ends of 
that circuit in volts, multiplied by a certain factor called the 
power factor in those cases in which the circuit is inductive and 
the current alternating. 

Take first the simplest case of a non-inductive power-absorbing 
circuit If an electro-dynamometer, made as above described, has 
its fixed circuit connected in series with the power-absorbing circuit 
and its movable coil (wound with fine wire) connected acmes the 
terminals of the power-absorbing circuit, then a current will flow 
through the fixed coil which is the same or nearly the same as that 
through the power-absorbing circuit, and a current will Bow through 
the high resistance cofl of the wattmeter proportional to the potential 
difference at the terminals of the power-absorbing circuit. The 
movable coil of the wattmeter is normally suspended so that its 
axis is at right angles to that of the fixed coil and b constrained by 
the torsion of a spiral spring. When the currents flow through the 
two coils, forces are brought into action compelling the coils to set 
their axes in the same direction, and these forces can be opposed by 
another torque due to the control of a spiral spring regulated by 
moving a torsion head on the instrument. The torque required to 
hold the coils in their normal position is proportional to the mead 
value of the product of the currants flowing through two colls 
respectively, or to the mean value of the product of the current in 
the power-absorbing circuit and the potential difference at its ends, 
that is, to the power taken up by the circuit. Hence this power 
can be measured by the torsion which most be applied to the 
movable coil of the wattmeter to hold it in the normal position 
against the action of the forces tending to displace k. The 
wattmeter can therefore be calibrated so as to give direct 
readings of the power reckoned in watts, taken up in the circuit; 
hence its name, wattmeter. In those cases in which the power* 
absorbing circuit is inductive, the coil of the wattmeter connected 
across the terminals of the power-absorbing circuit must have 
an exceedingly small inductance, else a considerable correction 
may become necessary This correcting factor has the follow- 
ing value. If Ts stands for the time-constant of the movable 
circuit of the wattmeter, commonly called the potential coil, the 
time constant being defined as the ratio of the inductance to the 
resistance of that circuit, and if T* is the time-constant similarly 
defined of the power-absorbing circuit, and if F b the correcting 
factor, and p«*r times the frequency «, then, 1 

f "i+^»t»tV 

Hence an electrodynainic wattmeter, applied to measure the electrical 
power taken up in a circuit when employing alternating currents. 
gives absolutely correct readings only in two cases — (i.) when the 
potential circuit of the wattmeter and the power-absorbing circuit 
have negligible inductances, and (it.) when the same two circuits 
have equal time-constants. If these conditions are not fulfilled, 
the wattmeter readings, assuming the wattmeter to have been 
calibrated with continuous currents, may be either too high or too 
low when alternating currents are being used. 

In order that a wattmeter shall be suitable for the meaturemenc 
of power taken up in an inductive circuit certain conditions of 
construction must be fulfilled. The framework and case of the 
instrument must be completely non-metallic, else eddy currents 
induced in the supports will cause disturbing forces to act upon 
the movable coil. Again the shunt circuit must have practically 
zero inductance and the series or current coil must be wound or 
constructed with stranded copper wire, each strand being silk 
covered, to prevent the production of eddy current* in the mass 
of the conductor. Wattmeters of this kind have been devised by 
j. A. Fleming, Lord Kelvin and W. Duddell and Mather. W. E. 
Suropner, however, has devised forms of wattmeter of the dyna- 
mometer type in which iron cores are employed, and has denned 
the conditions under which these instruments are available for 
accurate measurements. See " New Alternate Current Instruments,** 
/ear. ImsL Eke £xg., 41, a*7 (1908). 

There are methods of measuring electrical power by means of 
electrostatic voltmeters, or of quadrant electrometers adapted for 
the purpose, which when so employed may be called electrostatic 
wattmeters. If the quadrants of an electrometer ($.*.) arc con- 
nected to the ends of a non-inductive circuit in series with the 
power-absorbtng circuit, and if the needle is connected to the end 
of thb last circuit opposite to that at which the iaductionless re- 
sistance b connected; then the deflexion of the electrometer will be 
proportional to the power taken up in the circuit, since it u pn> 
ptRtional to the mean value of (A-B) (C-4 (A+B)}, where A and 
B are the potentials of the Quadrants and C b t 



_, 1 that of the needle. 

Thb expression, however, measures the power taken up in the 
power-absorbing circuit. In the case of the voltmeter method of 
measuring power devised by W. E. Ayrton and W. E. Sumpner in 
■Sot, an electrostatic voltmeter b employed to measure the fall of 
potential Vi down any inductive circuit in which it b desired to 

1 For the proof of thb formula sec J. A. Fleming, The Alternate 
Current Transformer in Theory and Practice, i. 168. 



420 

morale the pew absorption, and alio the volt-drop V, down an 
inductkraleu resistance R in series with it, and alio the volt-drop V, 
down the two together. The power absorption U then given by the 
expression (W— Vi*— W)/2K. For methods of employing the 
heating power of a current to construct a wattmeter see a paper 
by J. T. Irwin on " Hot-wire Wattmeters," Jour. Inst. Elec. Eng. 

For 'die details of these and many other methods of employing 
wattmeters to measure the power absorption in single and polyphase 
circuits the reader is referred to the following works: J. A. Fleming, 
Handbook for the Electrical Laboratory and Testing Room (1003); 
Id., The Alternate Current Transformer in Tkeory and Practice 
(1905); G. Aspinall Parr, Electrical Engineering Measuring Instru- 
ments (1903); A. Gray, Absolute Measurements in Electricity and 
Magnetism (1900); E. Wilson, " The Kelvin Quadrant Electrometer 
as a Wattmeter," Proc Roy. Soc (1898), 62, 356; J. Swinburne, 
" The Electrometer as a Wattmeter," Phil. Mag. (June 1891): 
W. E. Ayrton and W. E. Sumpner, " The Measurement of the Power 
given by an Electric Current to any Circuit," Proc. Roy. Soc (1891), 
49, 424; Id., " Alternate Current and Potential Difference Analogies 
in the Method of Measuring Power," PkiL Mag. (August 1891); 



WATTS, A. A.— WATTS, G. F. 



W. E. Ayrton, " Electrometer Methods of Measuring Alternating 
Current Power," Journ. Inst. Elec. Eng. (1888), 17, 164; T. H. 
Dlakesley, " Further Contributions to Dynamometryorthe Measure- 
' ~ wer," Phil. Mag. (April 1891); G. L. Addenbrooke, 



ment of Power, . „__,.._ --,-.. 

"The Electrostatic Wattmeter and its Calibration and Adaptation 
(or Polyphase Measurements," Electrician (1903), 51. 81 1 ; W. E. 
Sumpner, " New Iron-cored Instruments for Alternate Current 
Working." Jour. Inst. Elec. Eng., 36, 431 (1906). (J. A, F.) 

WATTS, ALARIC ALEXANDER (1797-1864), English 
Journalist and poet, was the son of John Mosley Watts and 
grandson of William Watts, a Leicester physician oi repute. 
After leaving school he made his living for a short time by teach- 
ing, and in 1818 joined the staff, of the New Monthly Magazine 
In London, becoming about the same time a contributor to the 
Literary Gazette. In 1822 he was made editor of the Leeds 
Intelligencer, in the columns of which he was one of the first 
to advocate measures for protecting workers in factories against 
accidents from machinery. In 1823 he published his first volume 
of verse, Poetical Sketches, and irt 1824 he became the editor of 
the Literary Souvenir, oi which he also became the proprietor 
two years later, and in the conduct of which he secured the 
co-operation of some of the most famous men of letters of the 
period. In 1825 he went to Manchester as editor of the Man- 
chester Courier, a position which he resigned a year later; in 
1827 he assisted in founding the Standard, of which the first 
editor was Stanley Lees Giffard; and in 1833 he started the 
United Service Gazette, which he edited for several years. Watts 
was also interested in a number of provincial Conservative 
newspapers which were not financially successful, and he became 
bankrupt in 1850, but was awarded a civil service pension by 
Lord Aberdeen in 1854. In 1856 he edited the first edition of 
Men of the Time. Watts died in London on the 5th of April 
1864. In 1867 a collection of his poems was published in a 
volume entitled The Laurel and the Lyre. 

See A. A. Watts, Alaric Watts (2 vols., London, 1884). 

WATTS, GEORGE FREDERICK (181 7-1004), English painter 
and sculptor, was born in London on the 23rd of February 28x7. 
While hardly more than a boy he was permitted to enter the 
schools of the Royal Academy; but his attendance was short- 
lived, and his further art education was confined to personal 
experiment and endeavour, guided and corrected by a constant 
appeal to the standard of ancient Greek sculpture. There are 
portraits of himself, painted in 1834; of Mr James Weale, 
about J835; of his father, " Little Miss Hopkins/' and Mr 
Richard Jarvis, painted in 1836; and in 1837 he was already 
far enough advanced to be an exhibitor at the Academy with a 
picture of " The Wounded Heron " and two portraits. His 
first exhibited figure-subject, "Cavaliers, appeared on the 
Academy walls in 1839, and was followed in 1840 by " Isabella e 
Lorenzo," in 1841 by " How should I your true love know? u and 
in 1842 by tvscene from Cymbdine and a portrait of Mrs Ionides. 
1 for the decoration of the new 
prizes in 1842 to those artists 
L should be adjudged best adapted to 
1 in Westminster Hall next year 
^Jpr a design of " Caxactacus led 




in triumph through the streets of Rome.'* This enabled him to 
visit Italy in 1844, and he remained there during the greater 
portion of the three following years, for the most part in Florence, 
where he enjoyed the patronage and personal friendship of Lord 
Holland, the British ambassador. For him he painted a portrait 
of Lady Holland, exhibited in 1848, and in his Villa Careggi, 
near the city, a fresco, after making some experimental studies 
in that medium, fragments of which are now in the Victoria 
and Albert Museum. To Lord Holland's encouragement, also, 
it was chiefly due that in 1846 the artist took part in another 
competition, the third organized by the Royal Com mi ss i oners, 
who on this occasion announced a further Hst of prizes for works 
in oil. Watts sent in a cartoon depicting " Alfred inciting his 
subjects to prevent the landing of the Danes, or the first naval 
victory of the English," which, after obtaining a first-class prize 
of £500 at the exhibition in Westminster Hall, was purchased 
by the government, and hangs in one of the committee rooms of 
the House of Commons. It led, moreover, to a commission for 
the fresco of " St George overcomes the Dragon," which, begun 
in 1848 and finished in 1853, forms part of the decorations of 
the Hall of the Poets in the Houses of Parliament. He next 
proposed to adorn gratuitously the interior of the Great Hall 
of Euston railway station with a series of frescoes illustrating 
" The Progress of the Cosmos," but the offer was refused. A 
similar proposition made shortly afterwards to the Benchers off 
Lincoln's Inn was received in a less commercial spirit, and was 
followed by the execution of the fresco, " Justice: a Hemicycle 
of Lawgivers," on the north side of their haH 

While this large undertaking was still in progress, Watts was 
working steadily at pictures and portraits. In 1849 the first 
two of the great allegorical compositions which form the most 
characteristic of the artist's productions were exhibited— " Life's 
Illusions," an elaborate presentment of the vanity of human 
desires, and " The people that sat in darkness," turning eagerly 
towards the growing dawn. In 1850 he first gave public ex- 
pression to his intense longing to improve the condition of 
humanity in the picture of " The Good Samaritan " bending over 
the wounded traveller; this, as recorded in the catalogue of the 
Royal Academy, was " painted as an expression of the artist's 
admiration and respect for the noble philanthropy of Thomas, 
Wright, of Manchester," and to that dty he presented the work. 
In 1856 Watts paid a visit to Lord Holland at Paris, where he was 
then ambassador, and through him made the acquaintance and 
painted the portraits of Thiers, Prince Jerome Bonaparte and 
other famous Frenchmen; while other celebrities who tat to him 
during these years were Guizot (1848), Colonel Rawlinson, C.B., 
Sir Henry Taylor and Thomas Wright (1851), Lord John 
Russell (1852), Tennyson (1856, and again in 1850), John 
Lothrop Motley the historian (1859), the duke of Argyll (i860), 
Lord Lawrence and Lord Lyndhurst (1862), Lord Wenskydale 
(1864), Mr Gladstone (1858 and 1865), Sir William Bowman and 
Swinburne (1865), Panixri (1866) and Dean Stanley and Dr 
Joachim m 1867. Notable pictures of the same period are 
" Sir Galahad " (1862), " Ariadne in Naxos " (1863), " Time and 
Oblivion " (1864), originally designed for sculpture to be carried 
out " in divers materials after the manner of Pheidias," and 
"Thetis "(1866). 

In spite of these and many other evidences of his importance, 
it was not until 1867 that Watts was elected an Associate of 
the Royal Academy, but the council then conferred upon him 
the rare distinction of promoting him, in the course of the same 
year, to full Academidanship. Thencef o rward he continued to 
exhibit each year, with a few exceptions, at the Academy, even 
after his retirement in 1806, and be was also a frequent con* 
tributor to the Grosvenor Gallery, and subsequently to the New 
Gallery, at which last a. special exhibition of his works was held 
in the winter of 1806-1897. Though he travelled abroad to some 
extent, going to Asia Minor in 1857 with the expedition sent to 
investigate the ruins of Halicarnassus, and visiting in later years 
Italy, Greece and Egypt, the greater part of his life was passed in 
the laborious seclusion of his studio either at LittteHoUand House, 
Melbury. Road, Kensington, where he settled in 1819, or in the 



WATTS, G. F. 



421 



country at Limnersleasc, Compton, Surrey. Apart from his art, 
his tifc was happily uneventful, the sole {acts necessary to record 
being his marriage in 1886 with Miss Mary Fraser-Tytler, an 
early union with Miss Ellen Terry having been dissolved many 
years before; his twice receiving (1885 and 1894), but respectfully 
declining, the offer of a baronetcy; and his inclusion in June 
1002 m the newly founded Order of Merit. He died on the at 

The world is exceptionally well provided with opportunities of 
judging of the qualities of G. F. Watts's art. for with a noble gene- 
fosity ne presented to his country a representative selection of the 
best work of his long life. A prominent element in it. and one 
which must prove of the greatest value to posterity, is the inesti- 
mable series of portraits oOus distinguished contemporaries, a series 
ao leas remarkable for its artistic than for its historical interest. A 
glance through the list of bis subjects shows the breadth of his sym- 
pathise and ms superiority to creed or party, Among politicians are 
the duke of Devonshire (1883). Lords Salisbury (1884), Sherbrooke 
(1882), Campbell (1882). Cowper (1877), Ripon (1896), Dufferin 
(1897) and Shaftesbury (1682). Mr Gerald Balfour (1809) and Mr 
John Bums (1897); poets— Tennyson, Swinburne (1884), Browning 
(1875). Matthew Arnold (i88i). Rossetti (1865, and subsequent 
repfaca) and William Morns (1870); artists— hinudf (1864, i860, 
and eleven others), Lord Leighton (1871 and l88i).Calderon (1872), 
Prinsep (1872), Burne-Joncs (t87o), M ilia is (1871), Walter Crane 
(1891). and Alfred Gilbert (1896); literature is represented by John 
Stuart MiU (exhibited 1874). Cariyle (1869), George Meredith (1893), 
Max MOller (1895) and Mr Lecky (1878); music, by Sir Charles 
Halle; while among others who have won fame in diverse paths 
are Lords Napier (1886) and Roberts (1809), General Baden-Powell 



(1902), Garibaldi, Sir Richard Burton ft 882), Cardinal Manning 
(1882). Dr Martineau (1874), Sir Andrew Clark (1894), George Pea- 
body, Mr Passroore Edwards, Claude Montefiore (1894). Even more 
significant from an artistic point of view is the great collection of 
symbolical pictures in the Tate Gallery which forms the artist's 
message to mankind. Believing devoutly in the high mission of 
didactic art, he strove ever to carry out his part of it faithfully. 
To quote his own words: " My intention has not been so much to 
paint pictures that charm the eye, as to suggest great thoughts that 
will appeal to the imagination and the heart, and kindle all that is 
best and noblest in humanity ": and his tenet is that the main ob- 
ject of the painter should be '* demanding noble aspirations, con- 
detuning in the most trenchant roanaer prevalent vices, and warning 
in deep tones against lapses from morals and duties." 

There are not wanting critics who radically dissent from this view 
of the proper functions of art. It must be admitted that there is 
force in their objec ti on when the inner meaning of a picture is found 
10 be exceedingly obscure, if not incomprehensible* without a verbal 
explanation. In the female figure, for instance, bending blindfolded 
on the globe suspended in space and sounding the sole remaining 
string upon her lyre, while a single star shines in the blue heavens, 
it is not obvious to every one that the Idea of " Hope " (1885) is 
suggested. There can be few, never th e l e ss , who will maintain that 
has aim l» not a lofty one: and the strongest evidence of the artist's 
greatness, to those who accept his doctrine, is the fact that he has 
not only striven untiringly for his own ideals, but has very often 
gloriously attained them. Moreover, fn so doing he has not failed 
on Tfffra«TA«» to impart .to his work much of that very charm which is 
to him a secondary consideration, or to exhibit an assured and 
accomplished mastery of the technical achievement which is to some 
the primary object and essential triumph of painting. It was, in 
abort, the rare combination of supreme handicraft with a great 
imaginative intellect which secured to Watts his undisputed place 
in the public estimation of his day. The grandeur and dignity of his 
style, the ease and purposef ulness of his brushwork, the richness and 
harmoniousness of his colouring — qualities partly his own, partly 
derived from his study of Italian masters at an early and impression- 
able age — are acknowledged even by those to whom his elevated 
educational intentions arc a matter of indifference, if not of absolute 
disapprobation; while many, to whom his exceptional artistic 
attainment b a sealed book, have gathered courage or consolation 
from the grave moral purpose and deep human sympathy of his 
teaching. He expresses his ideas for the most part in terms of 
beauty, an idealised, classical beauty of form, a glowing, Venetian 
beauty of colour, though his conviction of the deadly danger of 
fceaped-up riches, which he vindicated in his life as well as in his 
work, has, in such cases as " The Minotaur " (exhibited in 1896). 
M Mammon " (l 885) and " Jonah " (1895), where the unveiled 
vUcaess of Cruelty and Greed is fearlessly depicted, driven him to 
the presentment of sheer ugliness or brutality. Far oftener a vast, 
all-embracing tenderness inspires his work; it is the sorrow, not 
the sin, that stirs him. When he would rebuke the thoughtless 
inhumanity which sacrifices its annual hecatombs of innocent 
birds to fashionable vanity and grasping co mme rce, it k not upon 
the blood and crueky that he dwells, but the pity of it that he 
typifies in "Dedication" or "The Shuddering Angel" (1892) 
weeping over the attar spread with Woman's spous. 

Yet rt is as a teacher that the artist is seen at his highest t he 



would sooner point oat the true way 
admonish those who have ' * 



_ those who seek it tfum 
He never wearies of em- 



phasizing the reality of the power of Love, the fallacy underlying 
the fear of Death. To the early masters Death was a bare and 
ghastly skeleton, above all things to be shunned; to Watts it 
is a grand, impressive figure, awful indeed but not horrible, irre- 
sistible but not ruthless, a bringer of rest and peace, not to be 
rashly sought but to be welcomed when the inevitable hour shall 
strike. "Sic transit" (1892) conveys most completely, perhaps, Watts's 
lesson on the theme of death. Stretched on a bier and reverently 
sheeted lies a corpse; strewn neglected on the ground lie the ermine 
robe of worldly rank, the weapons of the warrior, the lute of the 
musician, the hook of human learning, the palmer's robe of late 
repentance and the roses of fleeting pleasures; the laurel crown 
remains as the one thing worth the winning, and the inscription 
" What I spent 1 had; what I saved I lost; what J gave I have." 
points the moral. Such is the significance of the still more masterly 
'' Court of Death " (finally completed 1002 and now in the Tate 
Gallery). To the same early masters Love was usually a mere 
distributor of sensual pleasures, a tricksy spirit instinct with malice 
and bringing more harm than happiness to humanity, though 
neither was of much moment. Watt* has not altogether ignored 
this view, and in " Mischief " (1878) has portrayed Man, k>ve*led, 
entangled among the thorns of he work! j but, in the main. Love to 
him is the chief guide and helper of mankind along the barren, rock* 
strewn path of life, through whom alone he can attain the higher 
levels* and who triumphs in the end over Death itself. To these 
views on the all-importance of love a trilogy of pictures in the Tata 
Gallery gives full expression. In the first, " Love and Life," ex- 
hibited in 1885, a replica of an earlier picture in the Metro- 
politan Museum, New York, and of another version presented 
by him to the Luxembourg, Paris, Love, a figure in the prime of 
manhood, leads and supports the slender, dinging girl who symbolises 
Life up to the craggy mountain-top, while he partly shields her from 
the blast under a broad wing. Ox this he himself said, " Probably 
' Love and Life ' best portrays my message to the age. Life, re- 
presented, by the female figure, never could have reached such 
heights unless protected and guided by Love " c 1 and in theprefatory 
note to the exhibition of his works in 1896 he wrote, " The slight 
female figure is an emblem of the fragile quality in humanity, at 
once ha weakness and its strength; sensibility, aided by Love, 
sympathy, tenderness, self-sacrifice, and all that the range of the 
term implies, humanity ascends the ragged path from brutality to 
spirituality." The limitations of earthly love are shown in the 
second " Love and Death," one version of which was exhibited in 
1877 and others in 1896, &c. In this. Love, a beautiful boy, striving 
vainly to bar the door to the mighty figure of Death, is thrust back 
with crushed wings p o w e r l es s to stay the advance; but that the 
defeat is merely apparent and t em p orary is suggested rather than 
asserted by the third " Love Triumphant 1 ' (1898), where Time, with 
broken scythe, and Death lie prostrate, while the same youth, with 
widespread wings and face and arms upraised to heaven, stands 
betwe en them on tiptoe as if preparing to soar aloft. Though the 
purely symbolical is the most distinctive side of Watts's art, it is by 
no means the only one. He has drawn inspiration largely from both 
the Old and New Testaments, more rarely from the poets and 
classical myths; still more rarely he has treated subjects of modern 
life, though even in these he has not abandoned his moral purpose, 
but has sought out such incidents, whether fictitious or historical, 
as will serve him in conveying some lesson or monition. The three 
pictures of the story of Eve in the Tate Gallery, " She shall be 
called woman" (1892), " Eve Tempted" and "Eve Repentant " 
(both exhibited in 1806), and " The Curse of Cain " (1872) in the 
Diploma Gallery, may be cited as examples of the first; ''For he 
had great possessions" (1894) of the second; "Sir Galahad" 
(1862), " Orpheus and Eurydfce " and " Psyche " (1880), of the 
third; and "The Irish Famine " (about 1847) and " A Patient Life 
of Unrewarded Toil " (1890), of the last of these. Never has he treated 
religion from a sectarian point of view. 

Watts is before all things a painter with a grave and earnest 
purpose, painting because that form of expression was easier to him 
than writing, though he has published some few articles and pam- 
phlets, chiefly on art matters; but he, too, has his lighter side, and 
has daintily treated the humorously fanciful in " Good luck to your 
fishing " (1889); " The habit does not make the monk " (1889), in 
which Cupid, half-hidden under the frock, taps maliciously at a 
dosed door; and " Trifles Light as Air" (exhibited 1001), a swarm 
of little amorini drifting in the summer air like a cloud of gnats; 
while in " ExpcriaUia docet B.C." (1890). a primeval woman watching 
with admiration, not unmixed with anxiety, the man who has first 
swallowed an oyster, he condescends, not very successfully, to the 
frankly comic These must be regarded, however, as merely the 
relaxations of the serious mind that has left its impress even on the 
relatively few, but very admirable, landscapes ne produced, in 
which, as for instance " The Carrara Mountains from Pisa " (1881), 
a sober dignity of treatment is conspicuous. 

Watts's technique is as individual as his point of view, tt is 
chiefly remarkable for its straightforwardness and simplicity, and 



1 G. F. Watts, RA., by Charles T. Bateman. 



I 



422 



WATTS, I.— WATTS-DUNTON 



its lack of any straining after purely technical effects. The Idea 
to be expressed is of far higher importance tt> him than the manner 
of eipretstAg it- The statement of it should be a matter of good, 
sound workmanship, not or artistic agility m manual dexterity. 
To say whiit he nan to say as clearly and briefly as any be is fiti 
airti + and when he haa achieved the effect he desires, the method of 
hi* doing so ia ol no further moment, In the bM of paint a* paint, 
in the Intrinsic beau Lies of surface and handling, he would sctm in 
hi* later yean to take no di-light. Thus in pan* of the picture the 
rough, coarse can vast he prefers may be so thinly oovercff that every 
fibre of the material can be seen, while in others a richly modelled 
impasto loads the turf ace- lie employs, as far a* possible, pure 
colour* laid on in direct iuxtapoflltion or broken into and across 
each other* not blended and comm inglcd on the polettev H e esch tws 
all elaboration ol detail and, cxrept in |wrtraiiure, works rarely 
from the living models neglecting minor drticitie* of form or passages 
of local colour, conventional isiing to a standard uf his own rather 
than idealising— a prucess not always unproductive of faults of 
drawing and proportion, as in the figure of *" Faith " (1896), or of 
singularities of lint, as in the curious leaden face and mbmatTC 
background in " The Dweller in the Innermost " (1B80). He avoids, 
ad a rule, the use of ui;fmitc outline, leaving the limits of hi* forms 
to melt imperceptibly into the background; nor does^ texture 
interest him greatly, and a uniform fresco-like surface v* apt to 
represent ncsn and foliage, distance and foreground alike, tie 
intends deliberately thai the tliinp he depicts, be they what they 
may, shall be symbols,, useful for their meaning ahme. and he makes 
no alteram at conferring on them an accurate actuality,, whicjN might 
distract the attention from ihe paramount idea. That (hi* reticence 
is intentional may be Learned from an examination of his earliest 
work*, in which the accessories arc rendered with a precise* if some- 
times a dry, truthfulness of observation; that it is not doe to 
carelessness or indifference is shown by the inexhaustible patience 
with which each picture has been executed. His earlier pictures 
are unsurpassed in the art of England for fine technical qualities of 
ctuour and delicacy of ha nd! mg- Though work log u nceasingl y , Watts 
never hurried the completion of any canvas. CM two slightly differing 
vtr>LiHi* of " Fata Morgana," both begun in 1647, the first was not 
nnjs.hi.ii before i#7o, the second not unlit ten years later. l£ven 
after finishing a picture sufficiently for exhibition, he often subse- 
quently worked further upon it. The portrait of Lord Leighton T 
exhibited in 1S81, was repainted In lSSn; ihe version of *■ Love and 
Drcith," exhibited in 1*177, and to'. 1 *,}, ami all the pictures presented to 
the Tate Gallery in i&/7 T were more or Icm retouched when hung 
there. Furthermore, he painted more than one vt'piion of (several of 
his favourite subjects, a circumstance which, combined with the fact 
that lie rarely added the year to hi* signature and kept no record 
of his nnnujtk production, makes the task of precisely dating hi* 
pictures for the most pan impossible, white it renders any attempt to 
dispose his works in periods untrim worthy and artificial, since even 
the growth and inevitable decay of artistic power arc to a considerable 
extent obscured. 

Founded admittedly on the Grecian monuments, there is a sculp- 
turesque rather than pictorial quality in most of nil compositions, 
a regulated disposition which, though imparting often a certain air 
of unreality and detachment, inspires them nevertheless with that 
noble itnpFcssivcnc!>* which forms their most conspicuous character- 
istic. It is natural, therefore, that in sculpture itself he should also 
take a high, place, A taste for this he acquired as a boy 3 he was a 
constant victor to the studio of Bchnes, where He not infrequently 
made drawings from the cait?, though he was never in any sense 
his pupil Among his works in this branch of art are a bust of 
"Clyuc" (186&), monuments to the marquis of Lothian. Ui&hop 
Lonsdale and Lord Tennyson, a large bronae equestrian statue of 
" Hugo Lupus " at Eaton Hall (l&aj), and a coIosh! one of a man 
on horseback, emblematical of " I'hysicaJ Energy,'* original Ey in- 
tended for a ptate on ike Embankment, but destined to stand 
among the Matoppo Kills as an enduring evidence of the artist's 
n ion far Ceul Rhodes; a replica has been placed in Kensington 
t.jrdeni. It was titc practical idealism of Rhodes that oppeakd to 
him, and m this quality Watts Uirusctf was by no means lacking. 
Much of his time and ntletiLion wits e,iven to the promotion of the 
\n» ajid Indu tivry Am* union; he sniffed Mrs Watts with 
both money Slid ad* if* witbefouudifitfof an art pottery at Camp-ton, 
1 1 lift* at the iuu* pUit «f a highly decora ted mortuary 
entirely by k*wl Uooor ; and it was 
^^^■pnpnSosi la rosimen'i Park, 
" tablets to the unsung heroes 

M Tne WmU of Mr G. F, 

' Pali Afart Gorttle 

). "C, F Watts, 

ri Journal, Extra 

George Frederick 

an>* |fo)): Cosmo 

Charle^T Bate 

iMuh-rt (roxu); 

lM. Be.) 




WATTS, ISAAC (1674-1748), English theologian and hymn 
writer, son of a clothier, was born at Southampton on the 
17th of July 1674. The father, who afterwards had a boarding- 
school at Southampton, also wrote poetry, and a number of his 
pieces were included by mistake in vol. t. of the son** Posthumous 
Works, Isaac Watts is stated to have begun to leam Latin 
when only in his fifth year, and at the age of seven or eight to 
have composed some devotional pieces to please hit mother. 
ffi* pen conformity precluded him from enuring either of the 
universities, but in bis sixteenth year he went to study at the 
nonconformist academy at Stoke Newington, of which the Rev. 
Thomas Rowe, minister of the Independent meeting at Girdlers* 
Hall, was then president. On leaving the academy he spent 
more than two years at home, and began to write his hymns, 
but in 1 he autumn of 1696 he became tutor in the family of Sir 
John Hartopp at Stoke Newington, where he probably prepared 
the materials of his two educational works— Logick, or the Right 
Use of Reason in the Enquiry after Truth (1725), and The Kmno- 
lili-e of the Heavens and the Earth made easy, or the First Principles 
pJ Geography and Astronomy Explained (1726). In his twenty- 
fourth year Watts was chosen assistant to Dr Isaac Chauncy 
(1632-171 a), pastor of the Independent congregation in Mark 
Lane, London, and two years later he succeeded as sole pastor. 
The state of his health, which he had injured by overwork, led 
to (he appointment of an assistant in 1703. In 1704 the con- 
gregation removed to Pinner's Hall, and in 1 708 they built a new 
meeting-bouse in Bury Street. In 171 2 Watts was attacked by 
fever, which incapacitated him for four years from the per- 
formance of his duties. In 171 2 he went to live with Sir Thomas 
Abney of Abney Park, where he spent, the remainder of his life, 
the arrangement being continued by Lady Abney after her 
husband s death. Watts preached only occasionally, devoting 
his leisure chiefly to the writing of hymns (see Hymns), the 
preparation of his sermons for publication, and the composition of 
1 1 1 to] '.■ l* i cal work. In 1 706 appeared his Horae Lyrieae, of which 
an edition with memoir by Robert Southey forms vol. ix. of 
Satrtd Classics (1834); in 1707 a volume of Hymns; In 17 10 
The Fsalms of David; and in 1720 Divine and Moral Songs for 
Children. His Psalms are free paraphrases, rather than metrical 
version*, and some of them (" O God, our help in ages past," for 
instance) are amongst the most famous hymns in the language. 
His religious opinions were more liberal in tone than was at 
that time common in the community to which he belonged; his 
views regarding Sunday recreation and labour were scarcely of 
puritanical strictness; and his Calvinism was modified by hb 
rejection of the doctrine of reprobation. He did not hold the 
doctrine of the Trinity as necessary to salvation, and he wrote 
several works on the subject in which be developed views not far 
removed from Arianism. He died on the 25th of November 1 748, 
and was buried at Bunhill Fields, where a tombstone was erected 
10 his memory by Sir John Hartopp and Lady Abney. A 
memorial was also erected to him in Westminster Abbey, and a 
memorial hall, erected in his honour at Southampton, was opened 
in 1S75. 

Among the theological treatises of Watts, in addition to volumes 
of Krmnni, are Doctrine of the Trinity (1722); Discourses on the 
Low i>f tied and its Influence on all Ihe Passions (i7>9): Catechisms 
fvr Chiid'tn and Youth (1730); Essays towards a Proof of a Separate 
Stele far Souls (1732); Essay on the Freedom of the Will (1732); 
Essay on the Strength and Weakness of Human Mason (1737); Essay 
en tht Ruin and Recovery of Mankind (1740); Glory of Christ as 
God- M&n Unveiled (1740); and Useful and Important Questions 
cm eming Jesus, the Son of God (1746). He was also the author of 
a variety of miscellaneous treatises. His Posthumous Works appeared 
■ n 1 -7 «. and a further instalment of them in 1770. The Works of. . . 
/ jijf ft'uUi (6 vols.), edited by Dr Jennings and Dr Doddridge, with 
a memoir compiled by G. Burder, appeared in 1810-1811. His 
poetical works were included in Johnson's English Poets, where 
they mere accompanied by a Life, and they appear in subsequent 
similar collections. See also The Life, Times ana Correspondence of 
haar, Walts (1834) by Thomas Milner. 

WATn-DUNTON. WALTER THEODORE (183a- ), 
English man of fetters, was bom at St Ives, Huntingdon, on 
the nih of October 1832, his family surname being Watts, to 
which ht added in 1897 his mother's name of Dunton, He was 



WAUGH, B.— WAURIN 



4*3 



originally educated as a naturalist, and aaw much of the East 
Anglian gypsies, of whose superstitions and folk-lore he made 
careful study. Abandoning natural history for the law, he 
qualified as a solicitor and went to London, where he practised 
for some years, giving his spare time to his chosen pursuit of 
literature, He contributed regularly to the Examiner from 1874 
and to the Athenaeum from 1875 until 1898, being for more than 
twenty years the principal critic of poetry in the latter journal 
His article on " Poetry " in the ninth edition of the Bmcy. Brit. 
(voL xul, 188s) was the principal expression of his views on 
the first principles of the subject, and did much to increase his 
reputation, which was maintained by other articles he wrote for 
the Encyclopaedia Briiannica and for the chief periodicals and 
reviews. Mr Watts-Dunton had considerable influence as the 
friend of many of the leading men of letters of his time; he 
enjoyed the confidence of Tennyson, and contributed an appre- 
ciation of him to the authorized biography. He was in later 
years Rossetti's most intimate friend. He was the bosom 
friend of Swinburne (?.».)• who shared his borne for nearly thirty 
years before he died in 1909. The obituary notices and apprecia- 
tions of the poets of the time, which he contributed to the 
Athenaeum and other periodicals, bore testimony to his sympathy, 
insight and critical acumen. It was not, however, until 1897 
that he published a volume under his own name, this being his 
collection of poems called The Coming of Love, portions of which 
he had printed in periodicals from time to time. In the following 
year his prose romance Ayhoin attained immediate success, and 
ran through many editions in the course of a few months. 
Both The Coming of Love and Ayhrin set forth, the one in poetry, 
the other in prose, the romantic and passionate associations of 
Romany life, and maintain the traditions of Borrow, whom Mr 
Watts-Dunton bad known well in his own early days. Imagina- 
tive glamour and mysticism are their prominent characteristics, 
and the novel in particular has had its share in restoring the 
charms of pure romance to the favour of the general public. 
He edited George Borrow'* Lovengro (1893) and Romany Rye 
(1000); in X903 be published The Renascence of Wonder, a 
treatise on the romantic movement; and his Studies of Shah* 
ipeare appeared in 1910. But it was not only in his published 
work that Mr Watts-Dunton'a influence on the literary life of 
his time was potent. His long and intimate association with 
Roasetti and Swinburne made him, no doubt, a unique figure 
in the world of letters; but his own grasp of metrical principle 
and of the historic perspective of the glories of English poetry 
made him, among the younger generation, the emb od imen t of 
a great tradition of literary criticism which could never cease 
to command respect. In 1905 he married. His life has been 
essentially one of devotion to letters, faithfully and disinter- 
estedly followed. 

WAUGH, BENJAMIN (1839-1008), English social reformer, 
was born at Settle, Yorkshire, on the aoth of February 1839. 
He passed the early years of his life in business, but in 1865 
entered the congregational ministry. Settling at Greenwich 
be threw himself with ardour into the work of social reform, 
devoting himself especially to the cause of the children. He 
served on the London School Board from 1870 to 1876. In 1884 
he was responsible for the establishment of the London society for 
the prevention of cruelty to children, which four years later was 
established on a national basis. He was elected its honorary 
secretary, and it was largely owing to information obtained by 
him that the Criminal Law Amendment Act of 1885 was passed, 
while by his personal effort he secured the insertion of a chuise giving 
magistrates power to take the evidence of children too young to 
understand the nature of an oath. In 1889 he saw the work 
accomplished by his society (of which he had been made director 
the same year) recog n ize d by the passing of an act for the pre- 
vention of cruelty to children, the first stepping-stone to the act 
of 1908 (see Cmioaiw, Law Relating to). In 1895 a charter of 
incorporation was conferred on the society, but in 1897 it was the 
object of a serious attack on its administration. An inquiry was 
demanded by Waugh, and (he commission of inquiry, which 
included Lord Hcrschell and others, completely vindicated the 



eodety and Its director. Waugh had gfven up pastoral work 
io 1887 to devote his whole time to the society, and he retained 
his post as director until 1005, when the state of his health com- 
pelled his retirement. He remained consulting director until his 
death at Westdiff, near Southend, Essex, on the nth of 
March 1908. Waugh edited the Sunday Magas&ne from 1874 
to 1806, but he had otherwise little leisure for literary work. 
His The Gael Cradle, who rocks it? (1873) was a plea for the 
abolition of juvenile imprisonment. 

WAUGH, EDWIN (2817-1800), known as "The Lancashire 
Poet," was bom at Rochdale, on the 29th of January 1817, the 
son of a s h o em a ker . For several years he earned his living as 
a journeyman printer in various pans of the country. In 1855 
he published his first book, Sketches of Lancashire Life and 
Localities, following this up with reprinted Poems and Sengs 
(1859). His rendering of the Lancashire dialect was most happy, 
and his rude lyrics, full of humour and pathos, were great 
favourites with bis countrymen. He died on the 30th of April 
1690. 

See Miner's Memoir in an edition of Waugh's selected works 
(1893-1893). 

WAURBGAN, a dty and the county-seat of Lake county, 
Illinois, U.S.A., on the W. shore of Lake Michigan, about 36 m. 
N. of Chicago. Fop. (1800) 4913; (»ooo) 0426, of whom 2506 
were foreign-born; (1910 census) 16,069. It is served by the 
Elgin, Joliet 8c Eastern (of which it is a terminus) and the Chicago 
Be North Western railways, by an interurban electric line, and by 
lake steamers. In x88o the United States government under- 
took the formation of an artificial harbour with a channel 13 ft 
deep, and in 1902-1004 the depth was increased to ao ft. The 
main portion of the dty is situated about too ft. above the level 
of the lake. There are a number of parks and mineral springs, 
and along the lake front a fine driveway, Sheridan Road. The 
dty is a residential suburb of Chicago. The prindpal buildings 
are the Federal building, the Court House, a Carnegie library, 
the Masonic Temple and McAlister Hospital At the" village 
of North Chicago (pop. in 1910, 3306), about 3 m. S. of Waukegan, 
there is a United States Naval Training Station. Waukegan is 
the commercial centre of an agricultural and dairying region, 
and has various manufactures. The total vahie of the factory 
product in 1005 was $3,961,513. Waukegan was settled about 
183s, and until 1849 was known as Little Fort, which is supposed 
to be the English equivalent of the Indian name Waukegan. 
It became the county-seat of Lake county in 1841, was in* 
corporated as a town in 1849, and first chartered as a dty in 1850. 

WAUKESHA, a dty and the county-seat of Waukesha 
county, Wisconsin, U.S.A., about 29 m. W. of Milwaukee on the 
Little Fox river. Pop. (1800) 6321; (1900) 7419, including 1408 
fordgn-born; (190s state census) 6049; (*Qio) 8740. Waukesha 
Is served by the Minneapolis, St Paul & Sauk Ste Marie, the 
Chicago & Nortb-Western and the Chicago, Milwaukee & St 
Paul railways, and by interurban electric railways connecting 
U with Milwaukee, Oconomowoc and Madison. The medicinal 
mineral springs (Bethesda, White Rock, &c.) are widely known. 
Among the public buildings are the county court house and the 
public library. Waukesha is the seat of the State Industrial 
School for Boys (established as a house of refuge in i860) and of 
Carroll College (Presbyterian, co-educational, 1846). Waukesha 
was first settled in 1834, was named Prairieville in 1839, was 
incorporated as a village under its present name (said to be a 
Pottawatomi word meaning " fox ") in 1852, and chartered as 
a dty in 1896. In 1851 the first railway in the state was com* 
Dieted between Milwaukee and Waukesha, but the village re- 
mained only a farming community until the exploitation of the 
mineral springs was begun about 1868. About 15 m. S. of 
Waukesha, near Mukwonago (pop. in 19x0,615), Sn 1844-184$, 
there was an unsuccessful communistic agricultural settle- 
ment, the Utilitarian Association, composed largely of London 
mechanics led by Campbell Smith, a London bookbinder. 

WAURIN (or Wavmn), JEHAN (or Jean de) (d. c 147O. 
French chronicler, belonged to a noble family of Artois, and was 
present at the battle of AgincourL Afterwards he fought for 



I 



4^4 



WAUSAU— WAVE 



the Burgundians at VeroeuH and elsewhere, and then occupying 
a high position at the court of Philip the Good, duke of Burgundy, 
was sent as ambassador to Rome >n 1463. Jehan wrote, or rather 
compiled, the Ruuett des eroniques et anckiennes istories de h 
Grant Bretaignc, a collection of the sources of English history 
from the earliest times to 1471. For this work he borrowed from 
Froissart, Monstrelet and others;- but for the period between 
1444 and 147 x the ReeueU is original and valuable, although 
somewhat untrustworthy with regard to affairs in England itself. 

From the beginning to 688 and again from 1399 to 1471 the text 
has been edited for the Rolls Series (5 vols,, London, 1864-1891), 
by W. and E.L.CP. Hardy, who have also translated the greater 
part of it into English. The section from' 1335 to 1471 has been 
edited by L. M. E. Dupont (Paris, 1858-1863). 

WAUSAU, a city and the county-seat of Marathon county, 
Wisconsin, U.S.A., on both banks of the Wisconsin river, about 
185 m. N.W. of Milwaukee, Pop. (1890) 9253; (1900) 12,354, 
of whom 3747 were foreign-born; (1910 census) 16,500. 
There is a large German element in the population, and two 
German semi-weekly newspapers are published here. Wausau 
is served by the Chicago, Milwaukee & St Paul and the Chicago 
& North- Western railways. The city is built for the most pari 
on a level plateau above the river and extends to the top of high 
bluffs on either side. It has a fine city hall, a Carnegie library, 
the Marathon County Court House, a hospital, built by the Sisters 
of the Divine Saviour, and a Federal Building. In Wausau 
are a VJS. land office, the Marathon County Training School 
for Teachers, the Marathon County School of Agriculture and 
Domestic Science, and a County Asylum for the Chronic Insane. 
Valuable water-power furnished by the Big Bull Falls of the 
Wisconsin (in the city) is utilised for manufacturing,' and in 
1910 water-power sites were being developed on the Wisconsin 
river immediately above and below the city. In 1905 the factory 
products were valued at $4,644,457. Wausau had its origin in 
a logging-camp, established about 1838. In 1840 a saw-miU was 
built here, and in 1858 the village was incorporated under its 
present name. After i8$o, when Wausau was chartered as a 
city, its gro wth was rapid. 

WAUTERS, EMILE (1848- ), Belgian painter, was bom 
in Brussels, 1848. Successively the pupil of Portaels and 
Gerftme, he produced in 1868 " The Battle of Hastings: the 
Finding of the body of Harold by Edith," a work of striking, 
precocious talent. A journey was made to Italy, but that the 
study of the old masters in no wise affected his individuality 
was proved by " The Great Nave of St Mark's " (purchased by 
the king of the Belgians). As his youth disqualified him for the 
medal of the Brussels Salon, which otherwise would have been 
his, he was sent, by way of compensation, by the minister of fine 
arts, as artist-delegate to Suez for the opening of the canal— 
a visit that was fruitful later on. In 1870, when he was yet only 
twenty-two years of age, Wauters exhibited his great' historical 
picture of " Mary of Burgundy entreating the Sheriffs of Ghent 
to pardon the Councillors Hugonet and Humbercourt " (Liege 
Museum) which created a veritable furore, an impression which 
was confirmed the following year at the London International 
Exhibition. It was eclipsed by the celebrated " Madness of 
Hugo van der Goes " (1872, Brussels Museum), a picture which 
led to the commission for the two large works decorating the 
Lions' staircase of the H6tcl de Villc — " Mary of Burgundy 
swearing to respect the Communal Rights of Brussels, 147 7 " 
and " The Armed Citizens of Brussels demanding the Charta 
from Duke John IV. of Brabant." His other large compositions 
comprise " Sobieski and his Staff before Besieged Vienna " 
(Brussels Museum) and the harvest of a journey to Spain and 
Tangier*, u The Great Mosque," and " Serpent Charmers of 
Sokko," and a souvenir of hia Egyptian travel, " Cairo, from the 
toffcasr-eJ-Nil" (Antwerp Museum). His vast panorama 
I most artistic work of this class ever 
> Banks of the Nile " (1881), 380 ft. 
, was. exhibited with extra- 
jfanftch, and the Hague. Wauters 
Ijpat ws earliest period exhibiting, 
'1 subtle grip, but later on 




developing into the whole range of a brilliant, forceful palette, 
and then into brighter and more delicate colours, encouraged 
thereto, in his more recent work, by his adoption of pastel aa 
a medium even for life-size portraits, mainly of ladies. His 
portraits, numbering over two hundred, include many of the 
greatest names in Belgium, France, and America (Wauters having 
for some years made Paris his chief home). Among these may 
be' named the Baron Goninet, the Baroness Goflanet, Madame 
Somzee (standing at a piano), Master Somzee (on horseback by 
the sea-shore), the Princess Clementine of Belgium (Brussels 
Museum), Lady Edward Sassoon, Baron de Bleichroder, Princess 
de Ligne, Miss Lorillard, a likeness of the artist in the Dresden 
Museum,and M. Schollaert (president of the Chamber of Deputies) 
— the last named an amazing example of portraiture, instinct 
with character and vitality. The vigour of his male, and the 
grace and elegance of his female, portraits are unsurpassable, 
the resemblance perfect and the technical execution such as to 
place the artist in the front rank. Between 2889 and 1900 the 
painter contributed to the Royal Academy of London. Few 
artists have received such a succession of noteworthy distinctions 
and recognitions. His " Hugo van der Goes," the work of a yout h 
of twenty-four, secured the grand medal of the Salon. He has 
been awarded no fewer than six " medals of honour "—at Paris 
in 1878 and 1889; Munich, 1879; Antwerp, 1885; Vienna, 
1 858; and Berlin, 1883. He is a member of the academy of 
Belgium, and honorary member of the Vienna, Berlin, and 
Munich academies, and corresponding member of the Institut 
de France and of that of Madrid. He has received the order of 
merit of Prussia, an^ is Commander of the order of Leopold, 
and of that of St Michael of Bavaria, officer of the Legion of 
Honour, &c 

See M. H. Spielmann, Magazine of Art (1887); A. T. Wauters, 
Magazine of Art (1894); Joseph Anderson, Pall Mall Magazine 
(1896) ; G. Serae (" Wauters as a Painter of Architecture ") A rchi- 
teUural Record (1901). (M. H. S.) 

WAVE. 1 It is not altogether easy to frame a definition which 
shall be precise and at the same time cover the various physical 
phenomena to which the term " wave " is commonly applied. 
Speaking generally, we may say that it denotes a process in 
which a particular stale is continually handed on without change, 
or with only gradual change, from one part of a medium to 
another. The most familiar instance is that of the waves which 
are observed to travel over the surface of water in consequence 
of a local disturbance; but, although this has suggested the 
name * since applied to all analogous phenomena, it so happens 
that water-waves are far from affording the simplest instance 
of the process in question. In the present article the principal 
types of wave-motion which present themselves in physics are 
reviewed in the order of their complexity. Only the leading 
features are as a rule touched upon, the reader being referred 
to other articles for such developments as are of interest mainly 
from the point of view of special subjects. The theory of water- 
waves, on the other hand, will be treated in some detail. 
S 1. Wave-Propagalion in One Dimension. 

The simplest and most easily apprehended case of wave-motioa 
is that of the transverse vibrations of a uniform tense string. The 
axis of X being taken along the length of the string in its undisturbed 
position, we denote by y the transverse displacement at any point. 
This is assumed to be infinitely small; the resultant lateral force 
on any portion of the string is then equal to the tension (P, say) 
multiplied by the total curvature of that portion, and therefore in 
the case of an clement fix to Pytx, where the accents denote dif- 
ferentiations with respect to x. Equating this to (Ax.% where p is 
the line-density, we have 

j-*v.- (1) 

where «-V(P/p) (2) 



' The word M wave," aa a substantive, is late in English, not 
occurring till the Bibleof 1551 (Skeat, Etym. Diet., 1910). The proper 
O. Eng. word was w£f, which became vawe in M. Eng. ; h is cognate 
with Get. Woge. and is allied to ** wag," to move from side to side, 
and is to be referred to the root wegn, to carry, Lat. fdktrt, Erg. 
" weigh ." Ac The O. Eng. vafianM .Eng. wme»,to fluctuate, to waver 
in mind, cf* wo<fre. restless, is cognate with M.H.G. vabcUn, to 
move to and fro, cf. Eng. wabble " of which the ultimate root ia 
seen in " whip." and in quaver.'* 



WAVE 



ItefMftaltafctioiief (I) was gfvenby J. le R. d'Alcmbert in 1747; 

3F-/(d-«)+F(cl+x) (3) 

what the functions/, F are arbitrary. The first term is unaltered 
is value when * and cl are increased by equal amounts; hence this 
term, takes by itself, represents a wave-form which is propagated 
without change in the direction of x-poattive with the constant 
velocity c. The second term represents in like manner a wave-form 
travelling with the same velocity in the direction of x-negative; 
and the rno st general fr ee motion of the etnas; consists of two such 
wave-forms superposed* In the case of an initial disturbance con- 
fined to a finite portion of aft unlimited string, the motion finally 
resolves itself into two waves travelling unchanged in opposite 



4*5 



directions. 



la these separate waves we have 



. . (4) 
as appears from (3), or from simple geometrical considerations. It 
is to be noticed* in this as in all analogous cases, that the wave- 
velocity appears as the square root of the ratio of two quantities, 
one of which represents (in a generalized sense) the elasticity of the 
medium, and the other its inertia. 

The expressions for the kinetic and potential energies of any 
portion of the string are 

T-yjfdx, v-ip/y»dr. ... (5) 

where the integrations extend over the portion considered. The 
relation (4) shows that in a single progressive wave the total energy 
is half kinetic and half potential. 

When a point of the string (say the origin O) is fixed, the solution 
takes the form 

y/(«*»H(<*+*) (6) 

As applied (for instance) to the portion of the string to the left of O, 
this indicates the superposition of a reflected wave represented by 
the second term on the direct wave represented by the first The 
reflected wave has the same amplitudes at corresponding points as 
the incident wave, as k indeed required by the principle of energy. 



bat its sign is rr 
The reflection of a wave at the junction of two strings of unequal 



marries a, / k of interest on account of the optical analogy. If 
A, B be the ratios of the amplitudes in the reflected and transmitted 
waves, respectively, to the corresponding amplitudes in the incident 
wave, it is found that 

A— (r-D/(n+i),B-»W(»+i).. . . (7) 
where #, - VCpVp), k the ratio of the wave-velocities. This is on the 
hypothesis of an abrupt change of density; if the transition be 
gradual there may be little or no reflection. 

The theory of waves of longitudinal vibration in a uniform straight 
rod follows exactly the same lines. If { denote the displacement of 
a particle whose undisturbed position is x, the length of an clement 
of the central line k altered from to to **+*& and the elongation 
is therefore measured by ?. The tension across any section is 
accordingly E«f\ where » is the sectional area, and E denotes 
Young's modulus for the material of the rod (see Elasticity). The 
rate of change of momentum of the portion mduded betw e e n two 
ujnsuiHiyf cr o ss se cti o n s is sw*x.f, where «- now stands for the 

— . -. — ^ Equating this to the difference of the tensions on 

1 we obtain 

€-«** <«) 



c-VCE/p) (9) 

The solution and the interpretation are the same as in the case of 
(1). It may be noted that in an iron or steel rod the wave- velocity 
given by (9) amounts roughly to about five kilometres per second. 

The theory of plane elastic waves in an unlimited medium, whether 
fluid or solid, leads to differential equations of exactly the same type. 
Thus in the case of a fluid medium, if the displacement { normal to 
the wave-fronts be a function of 1 and x, only, the equation of 
motion of ft thin stratum initially bounded by the planes x and 
x-Hx k 



*5i*""d? 



. . . (10) 

where p is the pressure, and * the undisturbed density. If p de- 
pends only on the density, we may write, for small disturbances, 

p-ft+*». 4 («0 

where s, — (*-*)*• » the " condensation," and k is the coefficient 
of cubic elasticity. Since j— d£/dx, this leads to 

... (12) 



with 



e«V(»/A 



(13) 
a value 



of temperature, we have A— £• by Boyle's Law, and therefore 
c~V(*W>t). Thisresnlt, which a due substantially to Sir I. Newton, 
gives, however, a value considerably bdow the true velocity of 
sound. The discrepancy was explained by P. & Laplace (about 



1806?}. The tenmerature k net really coiistaJtt. bat rises end fans 
as the gas k alternately compressed and rarefied. When this k 
allowed for we have *-->*•. where «r k the ratio of the two specific 



heats of the gas, and therefore c-VCrM 

and the consequent value of c agrees well with the best direct 



fpj). For eir, -y-i-4*. 
„ snth the best direct de- 

» (ip metres per second at o° C). 

The potentkf energy of a system of sound waves k f fa" per unit 
volume. As in all cases of propagation in one dimension, the 
energy of a single progressive system is half kinetic and half potential 

In the case of an unlimited isotropic elastic solid medium two 
types of plane waves are possible, viz. the dkplacement may be 
normal or tangential to the wave-fronts. The axis of x being 
taken in the direction of propagation, then* in the case of a normal 
dkplacement € the traction normal to the wave-front k (X+a M Wdr, 
where X, m are the elastic constants of the medium, viz. M k the 
" rigidity." and X-A-f* where h k the cubic elasticity. Thk 
leads to the equation 



where 



1-ftV. .,...-.. (14) 

•-V!(x+*M)A»l-VI(*+iM)M. . • (15) 

The wave-velocity k greater than in the case of the longitudinal 
vibrations of a rod, owing to the lateral yielding which takes place 
in the latter case. In the case of a displacement 9/ parallel to the 
axk of y, and therefore tangential to the wave-fronts, we have a 
shearing strain da/dx, and a corresponding shearing stress pda/dx. 
Thk leads to 

v-H* . . . . , (16) 
with 

ft-VWp) (17) 

In the case of steel \k -1 -841 . 10", «- 8« 19. 10", p - 7-849 C.G.S.) 
the wave-velocities a, b come out to be 6- 1 and 3*2 kilometres per 
second, respectively. 

If the medium be crystalline the velocity of propagation of plane 
waves will depend also on the aspect of the wave-front For any 
given direction of the wave-normal there are in the most general 
case three distinct velocities of wave-propagation, each with its 
own direction of particle-vibration. These latter directions are 
perpendicular to each other, but in general oblique to the wave- 
front For certain types of crystalline structure the results simplify, 
but it k unnecessary to enter into further details, as the matter is 
chiefly of interest in relation to the now abandoned elastic-solid 
theories of double-refraction. For the modern electric theory of 
light see Light, and Electric Waves. 

Finally, it may be noticed that the conditions of wave-propagation 
without change of type may be investigated in "" '*■ 



If we impress on the whole medium a velocity equal and opposite 
to that of the wave we obtain a " steady " or " stationary " state in 
which the circumstances at any particular point of space are co ns t ant . 
Thus in the case of the vibrations of an inextemibie string we may, 
in the first instance, imagine the stringto run through a fixed smooth 
tube having the form of the wave. The velocity c being constant 
there k no tangential acceleration, and the tension P k accordingly 
uniform. The resultant of the tensions on the two ends of an 
element 8s is Pfe/R, in the direction of the normal, where R denotes 
the radius of curvature. Thk will be exactly sufficient to produce 
the normal acceleration c*/R in the mass pfc, provided «*—P/a. 
Under thk condition the tube, which now exerts no pressure on the 
string, may be abolished, and we have a free stationary wave on a 
moving string. Thk argument k due to P. G. Tait. 

The method was applied to the case of air-waves by W. J. M. 
Rankine in 1870. When a gas flows steadily through a straight 
tube of unit section, the mass m which crosses any section in unit 
time must be the same; hence if u be the velocity we have 



(18) 



Again, the mass which at time I occupies the space between two 
fixed sections (which we will distinguish by suffixes) has its momen- 
tum increased ia the time U by (mur-mei) *A whence 

Pi-fr-m(ut-*i) (19) 

Combined with (18) thk gives 

pi+m7pi-P.+mV*. .... (20) 
Hence for absolutely steady motion it is essential that the ex- 
pression p-h»*/p should have the same value throughout the wave. 
Thk condition U not accurately fulfilled by any known substance, 
whether subject to the " isothermal " or adiabatic " condition; 
but in the case of small variations of pressure and density the 
relation k equivalent to 

Pt-fdpld* («) 

and therefore by (18), if c denote the general velocity of the current, 

<•-*>/<**-«* .... (22) 
in agreement with (13). The fact that the condition (20) can only 
be satisfied approximately shows that some progressive change of 
type must inevitably take place in sound-waves of finite amplitude, 
thk question has been examined by & D. Fbkson (1807), Sir G. G. 
Stokes (1848), a Rfemana (1858), S. Earnahaw (1858), W. J. hi. 
Rankine (1870), Lord Rayleigh (1878) and others. It appears that 



I 



4^8 



WAVE 



and it i» therefore usual to fix attention in the tret place on die case 
of an infinitely extended wave-system of simple-harmonic profile, 
say 

*-/J sin *(x-d) (5) 

The corresponding value of ♦ is 

♦-H a s8ar a ~«"->- • • • « 

where * denotes the depth, it is in fact easily verified that this 
satisfies (1), and makes d+/dy-o, for y -A, and that it fulfils the 
pressure-condition (3) at the free surface. The kinematic condition 
(4) will also be satisfied, provided 

(7) 



2wk 



e«-f tanhiWi-gtanh^, 



X denoting the wave-length 3rfk. It appears, on calculating the 
component velocities from (6), that the motion of each particle is 
elliptic-harmonic, the semi-axes of the orbit, horizontal and vertical, 
peine 

jx»hk(y+K) Mnhkjj+h) tR . 

' sinhU » * suTOS ' •■ - - - W 
where y refers to the mean level of the particle. The dimensions of 
the orbits diminish from the surface downwards. The direction of 
motion of a surface-particle is forwards when it coincides with a 
crest, and backwards when it coincides with a trough, of the waves. 
When the wave-length is anything less than double the depth 
wc have tan h JWk-i, practically, andthe formula (6) reduces to 

♦ -j£**cos*(x-d) (9) 

with 

*-{-£ (10) 

the same as if the depth were infinite. The orbits of the particles 
arc now circles of radii (&*. When, on the other hand, X b moderately 
large compared with h, we have tan h kh»kh, and «-V(gto. in 
agreement with the preceding theory of "long" waves. These 
results date from G. Green (1839) and Sir G. B. Airy (1845)- 

The energy of our simple-harmonic wave-train is> as usual, half 
kinetic and half potential, the total amount per unit area of the free 
surface being kgpP. This is equal to the work which would be 
required to raise a stratum of fluid, of thickness equal to the surface- 
amplitude 0, through a height J6\ 

It has been assumed so far that the upper surface is free, the 
pressure there being uniform. We might also consider the case of 
waves on the common surface of two liquids of different densities. 
For wave-lengths which are less than double the depth of either 
liquid the formula (10) is replaced by 

(11) 

where p, p' are the densities of the lower and upper fluids respec- 
tively. The diminution in the wave-velocity c has, as the formula 
indicates, a twofold cause; the potential energy of a given deforma- 
tion of the common surface is diminished by the presence of the 
upper fluid in the ratio (p— p')/p. whilst the inertia is increased in 
the ratio (p+p')/p. When the two densities are very nearly equal 
the waves have little energy, and the oscillations of the common 
surface are very slow. This u easily observed in the case of paraffin 
oil over water. 

To examine the progress, over the surface of deep water, of a 
disturbance whose initial character b given quite arbitrarily it 
would be necessary to resolve it by Fourier's theorem into systems 
of simple-harmonic trains. Since each of these b propagated 
with the velocity proper to its own wave-length, as given by (10), 
the resulting wave-profile will continually alter its shape. The case 
of an initial local Impulse has been studied in detail by S. D. Pobson 
(1816), A. Cauchy (1815) and others. At any subsequent instant 
the surface b occupied on either side by a train of waves of varying 
height and length, the wave-length increasing, and the height 
diminbhing, with increasing distance (x) from the origin of the 
disturbance. The longer waves travel faster than the shorter, so 
that each wave b continually being drawn out in length, and its 
velocity of propagation therefore continually increases as it ad- 
vances. If we fix our attention on a particular point of the surface, 
the level there will rise and fall with increasing rapidity and in- 
creasing amplitude. These statements are all involved in Pobaoo* 
approximate formula 



^ 2x'pT?' 



which, however is only valid 
compared with }gf. This ?hi 
a particular wave-length X be 



The foregoing ifc'-triptW 
cue of ^i initial \$?f> 



>\um thmt • i Ur$e 



band of the surface. The corresponding results for the more practical 
case of a band of finite breadth are to be inferred by superposition. 
The initial stages of the disturbance at a distance as, which b large 
compared with the breadth b of the band, will have the same char- 
actcr as before, but when, owing to the continual diminution of the 
length of the waves emitted, X becomes comparable with or smaller 
than b, the parts of the dbturbance which are due to the various 
parts of the band will no longer be approximately in the same 
phase, and we have a case of interference " in the optical sense. 
The result b in general that in the final stages the surface will be 
marked by a series of groups of waves of diminishing amplitude 
separated oy bands of comparatively smooth water. 

The fact that the wave-velocity of a simple-harmonic train varies 
with the wave-length has an analogy in optics, in the propagation 
of light in a dispersive medium. In both cases we have a contrast 
with the simpler phenomena of waves on a tense string or of light- 
waves tn vacuo, and the notion of " group-velocity," as distinguished 
from wave-velocity, comes to be important. If in the above analysb 
of the disturbance due to a local impulse we denote by U the velocity 
with which the locus of any particular wave-lengths X travels, we 
see from (13) that U-Jc. The actual fact that when a limited 
group of waves of approximately equal wave-length traveb over 
relatively deep water the velocity of advance of the group as a 
whole is less than that of the individual waves composing it seems 
to have been first explicitly remarked by J. Scott Russell (1844). 
If attention b concentrated on a particular wave, this is seen to 
progress through the group, gradually dying out as it approaches 
the front, whilst its former place in the group b occupied in suc- 
cession by other waves which have come forward from the rear. 
General explanations, not restricted to the case of water-waves, 
have been given by Stokes, Rayleigh, and others. If the wave- 
length X bo regarded as a function of x and I, we have 



dX .LT1 dX . 



(14) 



since X does not vary in the neighbourhood of a geometrical point 
travelling with velocity U, this being in fact the definition of U. 
Again, if we imagine a second geometrical point to move with the 
waves, we have 



ax , ax dc x jc ax 
*7 +c 3x-ox x -*3xdx' 



(15) 



the second member expressing the rate at which two consecutive 
wave-crests are separating from one another. Comparing (14) and 
(»5)t we have 



U-c-X 



dc 



* 



(K* 




Fio. 2. 




If a curve be constructed with X as abscissa and c as ordinate, the 
group-velocity U will be represented by the intercept made by the 
tangent on the axb of c This is illustrated 
by the annexed figure, which refers to the 
case of deep-water waves; the curve b a 
parabola, and the intercept b half the 
ordinate, in accordance with the relation 
U~£c, already remarked. The physical 
importance of the motion of group-velocity 
was pointed out by O. Reynolds (1877}, who 
showed that the rate at which energy m pro- 
pagated b only half that which would be , 
required for the transport of the group as 
a whole with the veloctty^ c. 
- The preceding investigations enable us 
to infer the effect of a pressure-disturb- 
ance travelling over the surface of still water with, say, ft 
constant velocity r > in the direction of x-negative. The ab- 
normal pressure being supposed concentrated on an infinitely 
narrow band of the surface, the elevation v at any point P may 
be regarded as due to a succession of infinitely small impulses de- 
livered over bands of the surface at equal infinitely short intervals 
of time on equidistant lines parallel to the (horbontal) axb of a. 
Of the wave-systems thus successively generated, those only will 
combine to produce a sensible effect at P which had their origin 
in the neighbourhood of a line Q 
whose position b determined by the 
consideration that the phase at P is 
" stationary " for variations in the 
position of Q. Now if I be the time 
whkh the source of dbturbance has. 
fciken ta travel from Q to its actual 
pration 0, it appears from (12) that 
e phan. 1 of the waves at P, 
originated at Q, is jfl*/4x-f Jx, where 
QP. This condition for station- 
ary [ihiic U tW'tiore 

i*xcll' (17) Fio. 3. 

I 1 alion, O and P are 

1 <» fixed; hence x-c, and therefore OQ -tf-aPQ, 
•dtf seen that the wave-length at P b such that 
1 LJ is the corresponding group-velocity. Hence the 



WAVE 



+29 



wave-length X at points to the right of O U uniform, being that 
proper to a wave- velocity c, viz. X-2»c«/f. The disturbance is, 
there f or e followed by a train of waves of approximately simple- 
harmonic profile, of the length indicated. An approximate calcula- 
tion shows that, except in the immediate neighbourhood of the 
source of disturbance, the surface-elevation is given by 

«-sH* • • • • c») 

where x b now measured from 0, and P§(-/Aixi represents the 
integral of the disturbing surface pressure over the (infinitely small) 

breadth of the band 
on which it acts. The 
case of a diffused 

Rressure can be in- 
sired by integration. 
The annexed figure 
gives a representation 
of a particular case, 
obtained by a more 
_ exact process. The 

J" 10, 4- pressure is here sup- 

posed uniformly distributed over a band of breadth AB. 

A similar argument can be applied to the case of finite depth (a), 
but since the wave-velocity cannot exceed Vt2f*) the results are 
modified if the velocity c of the travelling pressure exceeds this 
limit. There is then no train of waves generated, the disturbance 
of level being purely local. It hardly needs stating that the in- 
vestigation applies also to the case of a stationary surface disturbance 
on a running stream, and that similar results follow when the 
disturbance consists in an equality of the bottom. In both cases we 
have a train of standing waves on the down-stream side, of length 
corresponding to a wave-velocity equal to that of the stream. 

The effect of a disturbance confined to the neighbourhood of a 
point of the surface (of deep water) was also included in the in- 
vestigations of Cauchy and Poisson already referred to. The 
formula analogous to (12), in the case of a local impulse, is 







(19) 




The lines of equal pres s ure , among which is included of course the 
surface-profile, are trochoid*! curves. The extreme form of wave- 
profile is the cycloid, with the cusps turned upwards. The methe- 



where r denotes distance from the source. The interpretation is 
similar to chat of the two-dimensional case, except that the amplitude 
of the annular waves diminishes outwards, as was to be expected, in 
a higher ratio. ... . . .. ., 

The effect of a pressure-point travelling in a straight line over 
the surface of deep water is interesting, as helping us to account 
in some degree for the peculiar system of waves which is seen to 
accompany a ship. The configuration of the wave-system is shown 
by means of the lines of equal phase in the annexed diagram, due to 
V. W. Ekman (1006), which 
differs from the drawing origin- 
ally given by Lord Kelvin (1887) 
in that it indicates the differ- 
ence of phase between the 
transverse and diverging waves 
^ Za •* tn * common boundary of the 

two series. The two systems of 
waves are due to the fact that 
at any given instant there are 
two previous positions of the 
moving pressure-point which 
have transmitted vibrations of 
After V. Wilfrid Eknun, On Stitumorj stationary phase to any given 
WmniMK—mmt Warn. ^ nt p w ; tn in the range of the 

Fig. 5. figure. When the depth is finite 

the configuration is modified, and if it be less than <*/t. where e is 
the velocity of the disturbance, the transversal waves disappear. 

The investigations referred to have a bearing on the wave- resistance 
of ships. This is accounted for by the energy of the new wave- 
groups which are continually being started and left behind. Some 
experiments on torpedo boats moving in shallow water have indi- 
cated a Calling off in resistance due to the absence of transversal 
vaves jost referred to. For the effect of surface-tension and the 
theory of " ripples " see Capillary Action. 

f 5. Surface- Waves of Finite Height, 
The foregoing results are based on the assumption that the 
amplitude may be treated as infinitely small. Various interesting 
investigations have been made in which this restriction is, more or 
less, abandoned, but we are far from possessing a complete theory. 
A system of exact equations giving a possible type of wave- 
motion on deep water was obtained by F. J. v. Cerstner in 1803. and 
rediscovered by W. J. M. Rankine in 1863. The orbits of the 
particles, in this type, are accurately circular, being denned by the 

^ MUO ?-e+*-V» sin *(o-«l), y-6-*-»c»cos*(a-at). . (1) 

where («. b) is the mean position of the particle, *-2*-/X; and the 
wave-velocity is 

x-y(g/*)-V(gX/2«). * . • «. (a) 

AAVTO 8 




Fie. 6. 

matical elegance and simplicity of the formulae (1) are unfortunately 
counterbalanced by the fact that the consequent motion of the 
fluid elements proves to be " rotational " (see Hydromechanics), 
and therefore not such as could be generated in a previously quiescent 
liquid by any system of forces applied to the surface. 

Sir G. Stokes, in a series of papers, applied himself to the deter- 
mination of the possible " irrotational " wave-forms of finite height 
which satisfy the conditions of uniform propagation without change 
of type. The equation of the profile, in the case of infinite depth, Is 
obtained in the form of a Fourier series, thus 

y-ecos«x+|«o«cos2*x+|JWo«cos3*x+...,. * (3) 
the corresponding wave- velocity being approximately 



-vm^i 



* * « * 



(4) 



where X "3*7*. The equation (3), so far as we have given the de- 
velopment, agrees with that of a trochoid (fig. 7). As in the case of 
Gerstner'e waves the 
outline is sharper near 
the crests and flatter ^i*^ 
m the troughs than in 
the case of the simple- Flo. 7. 

harmonic curve, and . 

these features become accentuated as the ratio of the amplitude to 
the wave-length increases. It has been shown by Stokes that the 
extreme form of irrotational waves differs from that of the rotational 
Gerstner waves in that the crests form a blunt angle of tao*. Ac- 
cording to the calculations of J. H. Michell (1893). the height is 
then about one-seventh of the wave-length, and the wave-velocity 
exceeds that of very low waves of the same length in the ratio 6:5. 
It is to be noticed further that in these waves of permanent type 
the motion of the water-particles is not purely oscillatory, there 
being on the whole a gradual drift at the surface in the direction of 
propagation. These various conclusions appear to agree in a general 
way with what is observed in the case of sea-waves. 

in the case of finite depth the calculations are more difficult, 
and we can only here notice the limiting type which is obtained when 
the wave-length is 
supposed very great 
compared with the 
depth (a). We have 
then practically the 
*' solitary wave *' to 
which attention was 
first directed by J. 

Scott Russell (1844) t ,_ . . . . _ _ 

from observation. The theory has been worked out by J. Boussmesq 
(1871) and Lord Rayletgh. The surface-elevation is given by 

,-«secnM(x/6) (5) 




Fie. 8. 



6»-A*(*+a)/3a, . , , . . (6) 
and the velocity of propagation is 

«-VlfC%+«)l (7) 

fn the extreme form o-A and the crest forms an angle of 120*. 
It appears that a solitary wave of depression, of permanent type, is 
impossible. 

Bibliography. — Experimental researches: E. H. u. W. Weber. 
WeUenlekn (Leipzig, 1823); J. Scott Russell, " Report on Waves," 
Brit. Assoc. Rep. (1844). Theoretical works : S. D. Poisson," Memoire 
sur la theorie du son," J. de Vteole pdyt. 7 (1807); " Mem. sur la 
theorie des ondes," Mem. de Faced, roy. des sc. 1 (1816): A. Cauchy. 
u Mem. sur la theorie des ondes," Mhn. de Cacod.roy. des u. 1 
(I8a7); Sir G. B. Airy. " Tides and Waves." Encyd.Metrop. (1845)- 
Misy classical investiiatsons are now most conveni e ntly a c«a si Nr 



2a 



+3© 



WAVELLITE— WAXWING 



in the fallowing collection* : G- Cnwi, Math. Papers {Cambridge, 
1871); H. v. Hdmholu, Csmmmrtie A bhandi i*» jcm (Leipzig, 1882- , 
1895): Lord Rayletgh. SfimtijU Pvptn ^Cambridge, l8< 
W. J. M. Rankine, Misc. Scitmifit Paper t (Lonrion, 1881); 



Stokes. Math, and Phys. Pa per 3 (Cambridge. 1 .KAo-igoj). 

' 1 jhc ml «■ by P. Fetch- 



Numerous 
references to other writers will I* found in ihe articles™ by P. Forch- 
heimer J" Hydraulik "), H, Lamb {" SchwEngun^en eJastischer 
Korper, insb. Akustik "), and A. E. H, Love f Hydrodynamik ") 
in various divisions of the fourth volume of the BncyU. d. math. 
Wis*. 1 and in H. Lamb's Hydrodynamics {jfd ed,, Cambndgc, 
1906). (H. Lb.) 

WAVBLLITB, a mineral consisting of hydrated aluminium 
phosphate, Al»(OH)»(P0 4 )t + 4iHsO. crystallizing in the ortho- 
rhombic system. Distinct crystals are of rare occurrence, the 
mineral usually taking the form of hemispherical or globular 
aggregates with an internal radiated structure. It is translucent 
and varies in colour from grey or white to greenish, yellowish, &c. 
The hardness is 3 J, and the specific gravity 2-32. It was first 
found, at the end of the 18th century, by Dr W. Wavell near 
Barnstaple in Devonshire, where it lines crevices in a black 
slaty rock. It has also been found in Ireland (Tipperary and 
Cork), Arkansas, &c. (L. J. S.) 

WAVERLY, a village of Tioga county, New York, U.S.A., 
about 18 m. S.E. of Elmira, on the Cayuta Creek, near the 
Chemung and the Susquehanna rivers, which unite several 
miles S. of the village. Pop. (1800) 41 23; (1000) 4465. of whom 
295 w «* foreign-born; (1905) 4915; (1910) 485s. It is served 
by the Delaware, Lackawanna & Western, the Erie and the 
Lehigh Valley railways. With South Waverly (pop. in iqio 
1084)— separated from Waverly only by the state line and really 
a part of the village— Sayre, and Athens, Pennsylvania, it is 
connected by electric railway and the three form practically 
an industrial unit. Waverly is also connected by electric line 
with Elmira. The village is a railway centre of some importance, 
distributes coal from the Wyoming Valley mines, and ships 
the dairy products of a large farming district and small fruits 
and garden products. Waverly was settled about 1804 by 
settlers from Connecticut and the Hudson River Valley, and was 
incorporated as a village in 1854. 

WAVRE, a town of Belgium, in the province of Brabant, 
14 m. S.E. of Brussels. Pop. (1004) 8517. It was on this 
place that Grouchy advanced on the day of Waterloo, gaining 
a useless success here over a Prussian corps while the fate of 
the campaign was being decided elsewhere. The Prussians 
erected here a fine monument by Van Oemberg in 1859. 

WAX, a solid fatty substance of animal and vegetable origin, 
allied to the fixed oib and fats. From these it is distinguished 
by the fact that while oils and fats are glycerides, a true wax 
contains no glycerin, but is a combination of fatty acids with 
certain solid monatomic alcohols (see Oils). 

WAX FIGURES. Beeswax is possessed of properties which 
render it a most convenient medium for preparing figures and 
models, either by modelling or by casting in moulds. At ordinary 
temperatures it can be cut and shaped with facility; it melts 
to a limpid fluid at a low heat; it mixes with any colouring 
matter, and takes surface tints well; and its texture and con- 
sistency may be modified by the addition of earthy matters and 
oib or fats. When molten, it takes the minutest impressions 
of a mould, and it sets and hardens at such a temperature that 
no ordinary climatic influences affect the form it assumes, even 
when it is cast in thin laminae. The facilities which wax offers 
for modelling have been taken advantage of from the remotest 
limes. Figures m wax of their dciiTi * *cre used In the fuoeml 
rites of the ancient Egyptian* and deposited among other 
offerings in their graven- many of linear an r -cd in 

muKuma, That the Egypiiiiu alto n ■■■« ''. ' totftl on be 
teamed from numerous utlustans Among 

the Greeks during the if I; 
used at dulU |.<r 
for votive offerings »r»a 
1o whih n, i 




patrician families, this/ia imagtnvm being one of the privileges 
of the nobles, and these masks were exposed to view on ceremonial 
occasions, and carried in their funeral processions. The closing 
days of the Saturnalia were known as Sigillaria, on account of 
the custom of making, towards the end of the festival, presents 
of wax models of fruits and waxen statuettes which were fashioned 
by the Sigillarti or manufacturers of small figures in wax and other 
media. The practice of wax modelling can be traced through 
the middle ages, when votive offerings of wax figures were made 
to churches, and the memory and lineaments of monarch* and 
great personages were preserved by means of wax masks as in 
the days of Roman patricians. In these ages malice and supersti- 
tion found expression in the formation of wax images of hated 
persons, into the bodies of which long pins were thrust, in the 
confident expectation that thereby deadly injury would be 
induced to the person represented; and this belief and practice 
continued till the 17th century. Indeed the superstition still 
survives in the Highlands of Scotland, where as recently as 1885 
a clay model of an enemy was found in a stream, having been 
placed there In the belief that, as the clay was washed away, so 
would the health of the hated one decline. With the renaissance 
of art in Italy, modelling in wax took a position of high im- 
portance, and it was practised by some of the greatest of the 
early masters. The bronze medallions of Pisano and the other 
famous medallists owe their value to the art qualities of wax 
models from which they were cast by the cire perdue process; 
and indeed all early bronzes and metal work were cast from 
wax models. The lite de cire in the Wicar collection at Lille 
is one of the most lovely examples of artistic work in this 
medium in existence. Wicar, one of Napoleon's commissaries, 
brought this figure from Italy. It represents the head and 
shoulders of a young girt It has been claimed as a work of 
Greek or Roman art, and has been assigned to Leonardo da Vinci 
and to Raphael, but all that can be said is that it probably 
dates from the Italian Renaissance. In 1909 for Bode, the 
director of the Kaiser Fried rich Museum at Berlin, purchased 
in England, for (it was stated) £8000, a life-sized half-length 
female figure in wax, which he attributed to Leonardo da Vinci 
or his school. The figure was shown to have once been in the 
possession of Richard Cockle Lucas (1800- 1883), a sculptor 
and worker in ivory, wax, &c. It was chimed that the figure 
was really Lucas's work and was a reproduction in wax of a 
picture of " Flora" attributed to Leonardo da Vinci, now in the 
possession of the Morrison family at Basildon Park, near Pang- 
bourne; this view was repudiated by Dr Bode, but was generally 
accepted in England (see The Times, Oct .-Dec. 1909; and 
particularly the Burlington Magazine, May, June, August, 1910). 
Till towards the close of the 18th century modelling of medallion 
portraits and of relief groups, the latter frequently polychromatic, 
was in considerable vogue throughout Europe. About the end 
of the iSth century Flaxman executed in wax many portraits 
and other relief figures which Josiah Wedgwood translated 
into pottery for his jasper ware. The modelling of the soft 
parts of dissections, &c, for teaching illustrations of anatomy 
was first practised at Florence, and is now very common. Such 
preparations formed part of a show at Hamburg in 1 7 2 1 , and from 
that time wax-works, on a plane lower than art, have been 
popular attractions. These exhibitions consist principally of 
images of historical or notorious personages, made up of waxen 
masks on lay figures in which sometimes mechanism is fitted 
to give motion to the figure. Such an exhibition of wix-works 
with mechanical motions was shown in Germany early fn the 
iSth century, and Is described by Steele in the Tatter. The 
most [irnom modern wax-work exhibition is that of Madame 
Tu«&.-iud (q.r.) in London. 

' -TREE. Wax Myrtle, Candleberry, popular names of 

ot Myrica, especially M. cerifera, a North American 

l, the fruits of which have a waxy covering and are used as 

m of vegetable wax, M. Gal* is the native British gale 
■ sweet -gale. 
AXWiNG, a bird first so called apparently by P. J. Selby an 

Itlmitr, MriL Ornithology, p. 87), having been before known 



WAYCROSS— WAYLAND THE SMITH 



43* 



as the "sOk-ufl " (Philes. Transactions, 1*85, p. 1x61)— a literal 
rendering of the German Seidenschwn*—oi "chatterer"— 
the prefix " German/' " Bohemian " or u waxen " being often 
also applied. Selb/s convenient name has now been generally 
adopted, since the bird b readily distinguished from almost all 
others by the curious expansion of the shaft of some of its wing- 
feathers at the tip into a flake that looks like scarlet sealing-wax, 
while its exceedingly silent habit makes the name " chatterer" 
wholly Inappropriate, and indeed this last arose from a mis- 
interpretation of the specinc term gamdus, meaning a Jay (from 
the general resemblance in colour of the two birds), and not 
referring to any garrulous quality. It is the Amfdis gamins 
of Linnaeus and of more recent ornithologists, and is the type of 
the Passerine family AmpeHdae. 

The waxwing b a bird that for many years excited vast 
interest. An irregular winter-visitant, sometimes in countless 
hordes, to the whole of the central and some parts of southern 
Europe, it was of old time looked upon as the harbinger of war, 
plague or death, and, while its harmonious coloration and the 
grace of its form were attractive, the curiosity with which its 
irregular appearances were regarded was enhanced by the 
mystery which enshrouded its birthplace, and until the summer 
of 1856 defied the searching of any explorer. In that year, 
however, all doubt was dispelled through the successful search 
in Lapland, organized by John Wolley, as briefly described by 
him to the Zoological Society (Proceedings, 1857, pp. 55, 56, 
pi. exxii.). 1 In 1858 H. E. Dresser found a small settlement of 
the species on an island in the Baltic near Uleaborg, and with his 
own hands took a nest. It is now pretty evident that the wax- 
wing, though doubtless breeding yearly in some parts of northern 
Europe, is as irregular in the choice of its summer-quarters as in 
that of its winter-retreats. Moreover, the species exhibits the 
same irregular habits in America. It has been found in Nebraska 
in " millions," as well as breeding on the Yukon and on the 
Anderson river. 

Beautiful as is the bird with its full erectile crest, its cinnamon- 
brown plumage passing in parts into grey or chestnut, and relieved 
by black, white and yellow— all of the purest tint — the external 
feature which has invited most attention is the "sealing-wax" 
(already mentioned) which tips some of the secondary or radial 
quills, and occasionally those of the tail. This is nearly as much 
exhibited by .the kindred species, A. cedrorum — the well-known 
cedar-bird of the English in North America — which is easily dis- 
tinguished by its smaller sire, less black chin-spot, the yellower 
tinge of the lower parts and the want of white on the wings. In 
the it. pkotnicopierus of southern-eastern Siberia and Japan, the 
i e» nig e » and rectrices are tipped with red in the ordinary way without 
dilatation of the shaft of the feathers. 

Both the waxwing and cedar-bird seem to live chiefly on insects 
in summer, but are marvellously addicted to berries during the 
rest of the year, and will gorge themselves if opportunity allow. 
They are pleasant cage-birds, quickly becoming tame. The erratic 
habits of the waxwing are probably due chiefly to the supplies of 
food it may require, prompted also by the number of mouths to be 
fed. for there is some reason to think that this varies greatly from 
oar year to another, according to season. The flocks which visit 
Britain and other countries outside the breeding range of the species 
naturally contain a very large proportion of young birds. (A. N .) 

WAYCROSS, a city and the county-seal of Ware county, 
Georgia, U.S.A., about 06 m. S.W. of Savannah and about 60 m. 
W. of Brunswick. Pop. (1880) 628; (1S00) 3364. (1000) 50x9 
(2899 negroes) , (1910) 14*485. Waycross is served by the Atlanta, 
Birmingham & Atlantic, and The Atlantic Coast Line railways, 
several branches of the latter intersecting here. In the city is 
the Bunn-BeQ Institute (Baptist, opened in tooq). There are 
large railway car construction and repair shops here, and Way- 
cross is a commercial centre for the forest products (naval stores 
and lumber) and the cotton, sugar cane, sweet potatoes, melons 
and pears of the surrounding country. The municipality owns 
the water-works, the water-supply being obtained from artesian 
wells. Before the passage of the state prohibition law Waycross 
secured virtual prohibition of the sale of intoxicating liquors by 
requiring a large liquor license fee ($20,000 in 1883, increased 
to $30,000 in 1892). Waycross was settled in 1870, was first in- 
corporated in 1874 and became a city in 1909. 

* A fuller account of his discovery, illustrated by Hewitson Is 
g)ven in Tie ibis (1861, pp. 93-106, pL iv). 



WAYLAJfD, FRANCIS (1706-1865), American educationist, 
was bom in New York City on the nth of March 1796. His 
father was an Englishman of the same name, who was a Baptist 
pastor. The son graduated at Union College in 1813 and studied 
medicine in Troy and in New York City, but in 18x6 entered 
Andover T heo l ogical Seminary, where he was greatly influenced 
by Moses StuarL He was too poor to conclude his course in 
theology, and in 1817-1821 was a tutor at Union College, to 
which after five years as pastor of the First Baptist Church of 
Boston he returned in 1826 as professor of natural philosophy. 
In 1827 he became president of Brown University. In the 
twenty-eight years of his administration he gradually built 
up the college, improving academic discipline, formed a library 
and gave scientific studies a more prominent place. He also 
worked for higher educational ideals outside the college, writing 
text-books on ethics and economics, and promoting the free 
school system of Rhode Island and especially (1828) of Pro- 
vidence. His Thoughts on the Present Collegiate System in th$ 
United States (1842) and bis Report to the Corporation of Brown 
University of 1850 pointed the way to educational reforms, 
particularly the introduction of industrial courses, which were 
only partially adopted in his lifetime. He resigned the presidency 
of Brown in 1855, and in 1857-1858 was pastor of the First 
Baptist Church of Providence. He died on the 301 h of September 
1865. He was an early advocate of the temperance and anti- 
slavery causes, for many years was " inspector of the state 
prison and Providence county jail," president of the Prison 
Discipline Society, and active in prison reform and local charities. 
He was one of the " law and order" leaders during the " Dorr 
Rebellion " of 1842, and was called " the first citizen of Rhode 
Island." His son Francis (1 826-1 004) graduated at Brown 
in 1846, and studied law at Harvard; he became probate judge 
in Connecticut in 1864, was lieutenant-governor in 1809-1870, 
and in 1872 became a professor in the Yale Law School, of which 
he was dean from 1873 to 1903. 

Besides several volumes of sermons and addresses and the volumes 
already mentioned, he published Elements of Moral Science (1835, 
repeatedly revised and translated into foreign languages) ; Elements 
of Political Economy (1837), in which he advocated free-trade; 
The Limitations of Human Responsibility (1838); Domestic Slavery 
Considered as a Scriptural Institution (1845): Memoirs of Harriet 
Ware (1850); Memoirs of Adontram Judson (1853); Elements of 
Intellectual Philosophy (1854); Notes on the Principles and Practices 
of Baptist Churches (1857}: Letters on the Ministry of the Gospel 
(1863); and a brief Memoir of Thomas Chalmers (1864). 



rofl ,..„.. 

See The Life and Labors of Francis Wayland (2 vols.. New York, 
1867) by his sons Francis and Heman Lincoln; the snorter sketch 
(Boston, 1891) by James O. Murray in the "American Religious 
Leaders " series, and an article by G. C Verplanck in vol xiv. of 
the American Journal of Education. 

WAYLAND THB SMITH (Scand. Volundr, Ger. Wichnd), hero 
of romance The legend of Wayland probably had its home 
in the north, where he and his brother Egill 1 were the types of 
the skilled workman, but there are abundant local traditions of 
the wonderful smith in Westphalia and in southern England. 
His story is told in one of the oldest songs of the Edda, the 
V Slundarhiba, and, with considerable variations, in the prose 
P Mr ckssaga CThidrtVs sage), while the Anglo-Saxon Beowulf and 
Dcor's Lament contain allusions to it. The tale of Wayland falls 
naturally into two parts, the former of which contains obviously 
mythical features. He was the son of the giant sailor Wale and 
of a mermaiden. His grandfather was that Vilkinus. king of 
Norway, who lent his name to the Vilkina- or pibrehssaga. 
Three brothers Volundr, Egill and Slagfihr seized the swan-maidens 
Hla)>guJ>r, Olrun and Hervor, who, divested of their feather 
dresses, stayed with them seven or eight years as their wives. 
The second part of the story concerns Volundr, lord of the elves, 
the cunning smith, who, after learning his art from Mime, then 
from the dwarfs, came to the court of King Nifafr", and there 
defeated in fight the smith Amilias. Volundr's sword, Mimung, 
with which he won this victory, was one of the famous weapons 
in German epic poetry. In the Dietrich cycle it descended to 

1 Egill was compelled to prove his skill as an archer by shooting 
an apple off the head of his three-year-old son; he is thus the 
prototype of William Tett. 



( 



43* 



WAYNE 



Wayland's ton Wittich, and was cunningly exchanged by Hade- 
brand for a commoner blade before Wittich's fight with Dietrich. 
Nl bohr, in order to secure VOlundVs services, lamed him by cutting 
the sinews of his knees, and then established him in a smithy on a 
neighbouring island. The smith avenged himself by the slaughter 
of NfyoJ'r's two sons and the rape of his daughter Bodvildr. 
He then soared away on wings he had prepared. The story in 
its main outlines bears a striking resemblance to the myth of 
Daedalus. For the vengeance of Vdlundr there is a very dose 
counterpart in the medieval versions of the vengeance of the 
Moorish slave on his master. The denouement of this tale, 
which made its first appearance in European literature in the 
De obediemtia (Opera, Venice, 3 vols., 1518-1510) of Jovianus 
Pontanus (d. 1 503), is different, for the Moorish slave casts himself 
down from a high tower. The Aaron of the Shakespearian play 
of Titus Andnmkus was eventually derived from this source. 

Swords fashioned by Wayland are regular properties of 
medieval romance. King Rhydderich gave one to Merlin, and 
Rimenhild made a similar gift to Child Horn. English local 
tradition placed Wayland Smith's forge in a cave close to the 
White Horse in Berkshire. If a horse to be shod, or any broken 
tool were left with a sixpenny piece at the entrance of the cave 
the repairs would presently be executed. 

The earliest extant record of the Wayland legend is the repre- 
sentation in carved ivory on a casket of Northumbrian workman- 
ship of a date not later than the beginning of the 8th century. 
The fragments of this casket, known as the Franks casket, came 




The Franks Casket. 

into the possession of a professor at Clermont in Auvergne about 
the middle of the last century, and was presented to the British 
Museum by Sir A. W. Franks, who had bought it in Paris for a 
dealer. One fragment is in Florence. The left-hand compartment 
of the front of the casket shows Vdlundr holding with a pair of 
tongs the skull of one of Nf^o^s children, which he is fashioning 
into a goblet. The boy's body lies at his feet. Bodvildr and her 
attendant also appear, and Egill, who in one version made 
Volundr's wings, is depicted in the act of catching birds. 

See also Vigftisson and Powell, Corpus poet. bor. (i. pp. 168-174, 
Oxford, 1883F; A. S. Napier, The Franks Casket (Oxford, iqoi); 
G. Sarraxin, Cermanische HeUUnsage in Skakespere's Titus Androni- 
cus (Herrig's Arckw, xcvii., Brunswick, 1806); P. Maurus, Die 
WieJandsage in der Literatur (Erlangen and Leipzig, 1902); C. B. 
Depping and F. Michel, Vitand le Forgeron (Paris. 1833). Sir Walter 
Scott handled the Wayland legend in Kentlworth ; there are dramas 
on the subject by Borsch (Bonn, 1895), English version by A. Comyn 
(London, 1898), August Demtnin (Leipzig, 1880), H. Drachmann 
(Copenhagen; 1898), and one founded on K. Simrock's heroic poem 
on Wietand is printed in Richard Wagner's Gesammelte Schrtften 
(vol. Hi. tnd ed., Leipzig, 1887). 

WAYNE, AHTHOMY (1745-1796), American soldier, was born 
in the township .of Easttown, Chester county, Pennsylvania, 
' X74S, of a Yorkshire family. As a boy 
_ . 1 toward a military life. He was 
, and was a surveyor in Pennsylvania 




and (1765) in Nova Scotia, where he was agent for a proposed 
colony. He married in 1766 and passed the next few years 
on the Chester county farm inherited from his father, holding 
some minor offices and after 1774 taking an active part upon 
various patriotic committees. Having recruited and organized 
the Fourth Pennsylvania battalion of Continental troops, he 
first saw active service at its head in Canada during the retreat 
of Benedict Arnold after the Quebec campaign. His excellent 
behaviour at the skirmish of Three Rivers led Philip Schuyler 
to place him for some months in command of Ticonderoga. 
While at this post, on the 21st of February 1777, he was com- 
missioned brigadier-general. In April Washington ordered him 
to take command of the " Pennsylvania Line " at Morristown, 
and he rendered distinguished service at Brandywine and 
Germantown, and by his coolness and courage at Monmouth, 
after the retreat of General Charles Lee, did much to save 
the day for the Americans. Later in 1778 political 
necessity led to his being superseded by St Clair, his ranking 
officer, in the command of the regular Pennsylvania troops, but 
upon Washington's recommendation he organized a new Light 
Infantry corps, with which he per f ormed the most daring 
exploit of the War of Independence — the recapture of Stony 
Point by a midnight attack (15-16 July 1779) at the point of 
the bayonet. This well-planned enterprise aroused the greatest 
enthusiasm throughout the country and won for Wayne the 
popular soubriquet " Mad Anthony." Upon the disbanding of 
the Light Infantry corps, Wayne, again in command of the 
Pennsylvania line, rendered effective service in counteracting 
the effect of Benedict Arnold's treason and of the mutiny of 
the Pennsylvania troops. In 1781 he was sent south to join 
General Nathanael Greene, but in Virginia was deflected to 
aid Lafayette against Lord Comwalhs. After the American 
success at Yorktown, Wayne served with such marked success 
in Georgia, that the state rewarded him with a large rice planta- 
tion (which proved a financial failure) and Congress breveted him 
major-general. In 1793 Washington offered him the command 
of the regular army with the rank of major-general to fight the 
hostile Indians north-west of the Ohio, who had been rendered 
insolent by their successes over General Josiah Harmar in 1790 
and General Arthur St Clair in 1791, and indirectly to compel 
the British to yield the posts they held on the American side of 
the lakes. Wayne spent the winter of 1792-1793 in recruiting 
his troops near Pittsburg and in drilling them for effective service 
in the reorganized army. The government continued its efforts 
to induce the Indians to allow white settlements beyond the 
Ohio, but a mission in 1793 ended in a failure. Meanwhile 
Wayne had transferred his troops toFort Washington(Cincinnati), 
and upon learning of the failure of the negotiations, advanced 
the greater part of his forces to Greenville, a post on a branch of 
the Great Miami, about 80 m. north of Cincinnati. During the 
winter he also established an outpost at the scene of St Clair's 
defeat. The Indians attacked this post, Fort Recovery, 
in June 1794, but were repulsed with considerable slaughter. 
Late in July Wayne's legion of regulars, numbering about aooo, 
was reinforced by about 1600 Kentucky militia under General 
Charles Scott, and the combined forces advanced to the junction 
of the Auglaize and Maumee rivers, where Fort Defiance was 
constructed. Here Wayne made a final effort to treat with the 
Indians, and upon being rebuffed, moved forward and encountered 
them on the 20th of August in the battle of Fallen Timbers, 
fought near the falls of the Maumee, and almost under the walls 
of the British post Fort Miami. This decisive defeat, supple- 
mented by the Treaty of Greenville, which he negotiated with 
the Indians on the 3rd of August 1795, resulted in opening the 
North-west to civilization. Wayne retained his position as com- 
mander of the army after its reorganization, and he rendered 
service in quelling the proposed filibustering expeditions from 
Kentucky against the Spanish dominions, and also took the lead 
in occupying the lake posts delivered up by the British. While 
engaged in this service he died at Erie, Pennsylvania, on the 15th 
of December 1796, and was interred there. In 1809 his remains 
were removed to St David's Churchyard, Radnor, Pennsylvania. 



See Charles I. SttM. Major-Ceueral Anthony Wayne and 
Pennsyhania Line (Philadelphia, 1893): J* Muwell. (ed.). Wa- 
Orderly Bock of the Northern Army at Fort Ticonderota and M 



WAYNESBORO— WAYNFLETE 

Payne's 
Mount 

1 Cam- 

Clark, A Journal of Major- 



Independence (Albany, 1859); Boyer,«j4 Journal of Wayne's Cam- 

paitn (Cincinnati 1866); William Clark. / * 

General Anthony Waynes Campaign against .... 

2ISS. owned by R. C Ballard Thrutton); H. P. Johnston, The 
ormingoj Stony Point (New York, 1900); J. R. Spears, Anthony 
Wayne (New York, 1903). 

WAYNESBORO, a borough of Franklin county, Pennsylvania, 
U.S.A., near Antietam Creek, about 14 m. S.E. of Chambers- 
burg, and about 65 m. S.W. of Harrisburg. Pop. (1S90) 381 1 ; 
(1900) 5396; (1910) 7199. Waynesboro is served by theCumbes- 
land Valley and the Western Maryland railways. It lies at the 
foot of the South Mountain, and under the borough are many 
caves and caverns. A settlement was made here about 1734; 
it was called Mount Vernon for twenty years, and then Wallace- 
town (in honour of an early settler) until the dote of the Wat of 
Independence, when it was named Waynesborough in honour of 
General Anthony Wayne; a village was platted in X797; its 
charter as a borough, granted in 1818, was repealed in 1824 but 
was revived in x 830, the spelling being changed to " Waynesboro," 

See Benjamin M. Nead, Waynesboro (Harrisburg, Pa., 1900).. 

WAYKPLBTB. WILLIAM (1395-14*6), English lord chancellor 
and bishop of Winchester, was the son of Richard Pattene or 
Patyn, alias Barbour, of Wainfleet, Lincolnshire (Magd. Coll. 
Oxon. Reg. f. 84b), whose monumental effigy, formerly in the 
church of Wainfleet, now in Magdalen College Chapel at Oxford, 
seems to be in the dress of a merchant. His mother was Margery, 
daughter of Sir William Brereton of that ilk in Cheshfre(Ormerod's 
Cheshire, iii. 81). Of Waynflete's education it is only possible 
to assert that he was at Oxford University. It has been alleged 
that he was a Wykehamist, a scholar at Winchester College and 
New College, Oxford. But unless he was, as is improbable, 
the M Wfllelmus Pattney, de eadem, Sar. Dioc.," admitted in 
1403, he was not a scholar of Winchester, and in any case was 
not a scholar of New College. Nor was he a commoner in college 
at Winchester or at New College, as his name does not appear 
in the Hall books, or lists of those dining in hall, at either college. 
That he was a day-boy commoner at Winchester is possible, 
but seems unlikely. He was never claimed in his lifetime by 
either college as one of its alumni. That he was at Oxford, and 
probably a scholar at one of the grammar schools there, 
before passing on to the higher faculties, is shown by a letter 
of the chancellor addressed to him when provost of Eton (Ep. 
Acad. Oxf. Hist. Soc i. 158) which speaks of the university 
as his " mother who brought him forth into the light of knowledge 
and nourished him with the alimony of all the sciences." He 
is probably the William Barbour who was ordained acolyte by 
Bishop Fleming of Lincoln on the 21st of April 1420 and sub- 
deacon on the 2 1 st of January 1421; and as " William Barbour," 
otherwise Waynfiete of Spalding, was ordained deacon on the 
18th of March 1421, and priest on the 21st of January 1426, 
with title from Spalding Priory. He may have been the William 
Waynfiete who was admitted a scholar of the King's Hall, 
Cambridge, on the 6th of March 1428 (Exch. Q. R. Bdlc. 346, 
do. 31), and was described as LL.B. when receiving letters of 
protection on the 15th of July 1429 {Proc. P.C. iii. 347) to enable 
him to accompany Robert FiUrlugh, D.D., warden of the hall, 
on an embassy to Rome. For the scholars of the King's Hall 
were what we should call fellows, as may be seen by the appoint- 
ment to the hall on the 3rd of April 1360 of Nicholas of Drayton, 
B.C.L.^nd John Kent, B. A., instead of two scholars who had gone 
off to the French wars without the warden's leave (Cal. Close 
Rolls). William Waynfiete, presented to the vicarage of 
Skendleby, Lines, by the Priory of Bardney (Lincoln, Ep. Reg. 
f. 34, Chandler, x6), on the 14th of June 1430, may also have been 
our Waynfiete. There was, however, another William Waynfiete, 
who was instituted rector of Wroxhall, Somerset, on the 17th of 
May 1433 (Wells, Ep. Reg. Stafford), and was dead when his 
successor was appointed on the 18th of November 1436 (Wells, 
Ep. Reg. StUlington). A successor to the William Waynfiete 
at the King's Hall was admitted on the 3rd of April 1434- 



433 

Meanwhile, our Waynfiete had become headmaster of Winchester ; 
Mr William Wanneflete being paid 50s. as Inf ormator scolarium, 
teacher of the scholars of the college, for the quarter beginning 
on the 24th of June 1430 (Win. CoD. Bursars' Roll 8-9 Hen. VI.) 
and so continuously, under many variants of spelling, at the rate 
of £10 a year until Michaelmas 1441 {V.C.H., Bucks, fi. 154). 
He was collated by Bishop Beaufort at some date unascertainable 
(through the loss of the 2nd volume of Beaufort's Episcopal 
Register) to the mastership of St Mary Magdalen's Hospital, 
a leper hospital on St Giles' HOI, just outside the city of Win- 
chester (Vet. Mon. iii. 5). The first recorded headmaster after 
the foundation of the college, John Melton, had been presented 
by Wykeham to the mastership of this hospital in 1393 shortly 
before his retirement. Its emoluments, amounting' to £9, 12s. 
a year, nearly doubled the headmaster's income. 

Under the influence of Archbishop Chicheley, who had himself 
founded two colleges in imitation of Wykeham, and Thomas 
Bekynton, king's secretary and privy seal, and other Wyke- 
hamists, Henry VI., on the nth of October 1440, founded, in 
imitation of Winchester College, " a college in the parish church 
of Eton by Windsor not far from our birthplace," called the 
King's College of the Blessed Mary of Eton by Windsor, as " a 
sort of first-fruits of his taking the government on himself." 
The college was to consist of a provost, xo priests, 6 choristers; 
35 poor and needy scholars, 25 almsmen and a magister infor- 
mator " to teach gratis the scholars and all others coming from 
any part of England to learn grammar." Only two fellows, 
4 choristers, 2 scholars and 2 almsmen were named in the charter 
and probably were only colourably members. Waynfiete was 
not, as alleged {Did. Nat, Bibg.) t named a fellow. On the 5th 
of March 1440-1441, the king endowed the college out of alien 
priories with some £500 a year, almost exactly the amount of 
the original endowment of Winchester. On the 31st of July 

1441 Henry VI. went for a week-end visit to Winchester College 
to see the school for himself. Here he seems to have been so 
much impressed with Waynfiete, that at Michaelmas, • 1441, 
Waynfiete ceased to be headmaster of Winchester. In October 
he appears dining in the hall there as a guest, and at Christmas 

1442 he received a royal livery, five yards of violet cloth, as 
provost of Eton. Though reckoned first headmaster of Eton, 
there is no definite evidence that he was. The school building 
was not begun till May 1442 {V.C.H., Bucks, ii. 154). William 
Westbury, who left New College, " transferring himself to the 
king's service," in May 1442, and appears in the first extant 
Eton Audit Roll 1444-1445 as headmaster, was probably such 
from May 1442. If Waynfiete was headmaster from October 
1 44 1 to May 1442, bis duties must have been little more than 
nominal. As provost, Waynfiete procured the exemption of 
the college from archidiaconal authority on the 2nd of May, 
and made the contract for completion of the carpenter's work 
of the eastern side of the quadrangle on the 30th of November 
1443. On the 2 1 st of December X443 he was sworn to the 
statutes by Bishop Bekynton and the carl of Suffolk, the king's 
commissioners, and himself administered the oath to the other 
members of the foundation, then only five fellows and eleven 
scholars over fifteen years of age. He is credited with having 
taken half the scholars and fellows of Winchester to Eton to 
start the school there. In tact, five scholars and perhaps one 
commoner left Winchester for Eton in 1443. probably in July, 
just before the election. For three of them were admitted 
scholars of King's College, Cambridge, on the 19th of July, that 
college, by its second charter of the 10th of July 1443 having been 
placed in the same relation to Eton that New College bore to 
Winchester; ije. it was to be recruited entirely from Eton. 
The chief part of Waynflete's duties as provost was the financing 
and completion of the buildings and establishment. The number 
of scholars was largely increased by an election of 25 new ones 
on the 26th of September X444, the income being then £046, 
of which the king contributed £120 and Waynfiete £18, or more 
than half his stipend of £30 a year. The full number of 70 scholars 
was not filled up till Waynflete's last year as provost, X446-1447 
(Eton Audit Roll). So greatly did Waynfiete ingratiate himself 



43 6 



WAZZAN— WEALD, THE 



Abed but slightly above the rivar levd. A " nghsa " differs from 
a " warn " in being on a higher levd and often beyond the reach of 
irrigation. Pasture is found abundantly in the hills, but cultivation 
only on the borders of the main streams. Passing up and down these 
main water-courses, there is an appearance of great fertility and 
wealth, which is entirely due to these thriving strips of verdure, 
their restricted and narrow limits being hardly visible from the river 
beds.- From above, when viewed from the flanking ridges, the vast 
extent of hill country, neither high, nor imposing, nor difficult of 
access, but invariably stony and rough, compares strongly with the 
narrow bands of enclosed cultivation winding about like green 
ribbons, and marking the course of the main streams from, the enow- 
covered peaks to the plains. The physiography of Wariristan is 
that of the Kurram to the north rather than that of the Soiiman 
hills to the south. 

The Waziris are the largest tribe on the frontier, but their 
state of civilisation is very low. They are a race of robber* and 
murderers, and the Waziri name is execrated even by the 
neighbouring Mabommedan tribes. Mahommedans from a 
settled district often regard Waziris as utter barbarians, and 
seem inclined to deny their title to belong to the faith. They 
have been described as being " free-born and murderous, hot- 
headed and light-hearted, self-respecting but vain." The poverty 
of their country and the effort required to gain a subsistence in 
it have made the Waziris a hardy and enduring race. Then- 
physique is uncommonly good, and thdugh on the average short 
of suture, some extremely tall and large men are to be found 
amongst them. They are generally deep-chested and compact 
of build, with a powerful muscular development common to 
the whole body, and not confined to the lower limbs as is the case 
•with some hill tribes of the Himalayas. As mountaineers the 
Waziris would probably hold their own with any other Pathan 
tribe of the frontier. 

Except in a few of the highest hills, which are well-wooded, 
the Waziri country is a mass of rock and stones, bearing a 
poor growth of grass and thinly sprinkled with dark evergreen 
bushes*, progress in every direction except on devious paths 
known to the natives is obstructed by precipices or by toilsome 
stony ascents; and knowledge- of the topography, a mere 
labyrinth of intricate ranges and valleys, comes only as the result 
of long acquaintance. Broken ground and tortuous ravines, 
by making crime easy and precaution against attack difficult, 
have fostered violence among the people and developed in them 
an extraordinary faculty of prudence and alertness. In con- 
sequence of his isolation the Waziri has become independent, 
self-reliant and democratic in sentiment. Through the in- 
accessibility of his own country to lowlanders, combined with 
the proximity of open and fertile tracts inhabited by races of 
Inferior stamina, he has developed into, a confirmed raider; 
and the passage through his country of mountain footpaths, 
connecting India with Afghanistan, has made him by frequent 
opportunity a hereditary highwayman as well. The women 
enjoy more freedom than amongst most Pathan tribes, and are 
frequently unfaithful. The ordinary punishment of adultery 
is to put the woman to death, and to cut off half the right foot 
of the man. Amongst Waziris also, as amongst other Pat-bans, 
the blood-feud is a national institution. 

The Waziris, who number some 40,000 fighting men altogether, 
are divided into two main sections, the Darwcsh Khel (30*000) 
and the Mahsuds (8000), with two smaller sections. The Darwesh 
Khel, the more settled and civilized of the two, inhabit the lower 
hills bordering on Kohat and Bannu districts, and the ground 
lying on both sides of the Kurram river, between Thai on the 
north and the Tochi Valley on the south. The Mahsuds, who 
inhabit the tract of country lying between the Tochi Valley on 
the north and the Gomal river on the south, have earned for 
themselves an evil name as the most confirmed raiders on the 
border; but they are a plucky race, as active over the hilb 
as the Afridis, and next to them the best-armed large tribe on 
the fyontieft The Mahsud country, especially that, part within 
v "" , Is more difficult even than'Tirah. To 

p girt by an intricate belt of uninhabited, 
1 ravines. To the north a zone of 
H ppt lest than 20 m. in width, hilly 




and difficult, separates the Mahsuds from the Tochi The) 
Tochi Valley is inhabited by a degraded Pathan tribe, known 
as Dauris, who have voluntarily placed themselves under 
British protection since 180& In dealing with the M aVn dt 
it must be remembered that from Wana to Tank, from Tank 
to Bannu, and from Bannu to Datta Khel, or for a di*tfnnrt» of 
over 200 m., British territory is open to Mahsud depredations. 
This length of frontier is equal to the whole Thal-Kohat-Pesha- 
war-Malakand line, covering the eight or ten tribes that took 
part in the frontier risings of 1897. So that the M»*"wk should 
really be compared with the whole of those ten tribes, and not 
with any single one. 

British expeditions were needed against various sections of 
the Waziris in i$$a, 1859, i860, s88o, i8$i, 1894, 1897 and 
190a. 

The success of Sir Robert s*mWf» in snfriiirfng the wild 
tribes of Baluchistan had led to a similar attempt to open up 
Wa riris ta n to British civilization; but the Pathan is much 
more democratic and much less subject to the influence of his 
maliks than is the Baluchi to the authority of his chiefs; and 
the policy finally broke down in 1894, when the Waziris made 
a night attack upon the camp of .the British Delimitation Com- 
mission at Wana. The Commission had been appointed to 
settle the boundary with the Afghans, and the Waziris regarded 
it as the final threat to their independence. The attack" was 
delivered with such determination that the tribesmen penetrated 
into the centre of the camp, and it was only with the greatest 
difficulty that friend could be distinguished from foe. A large 
force of 11,000 British troops subsequently traversed the tribal 
country, destroyed their towers and dictated terms, one of which 
was that the Tochi Valley should be occupied by British garrisons. 
But still there was trouble, which led to the Tochi expedition of 
1897; and, in spite of the further lessons taught the Waziris 
in two expeditions in 1902, the attempt to " Sandemanise " 
Wariristan was given up by Lord Curzon. The British garrisons 
in the Tochi and Gomal valleys were withdrawn, and two 
corps of tribal nulitia, from 1300 to 1500 strong, were gradually 
formed to replace the British troops. 

See Grammar and Vocabulary of Waziri Pasklo, "by I. G. Lorimer 
(Calcutta, 1902); Paget and Mason's Frontier Expeditions (1884); 
Mahsud Waziri Operations (1902), Blue-book. * 

WAZZlH. * small hillside town, 60 m. N.W. by N. of Fez, 
Morocco. It has a considerable trade with the country round, 
and manufactures a coarse white woollen cloth with rough 
surface from which the hooded cloaks (called jelldbt) are made. 
Its proudest name is Dar D'manah— House of Safety— as it is 
sanctuary for any who gain its limits, on account of the tomb 
of a sainted Idrisi Sharif, who lived there in x 727. It is the heaoV 
quartcrs of his descendants. 

WEALD, THE, a district in the south-east of England. It 
includes the portions of Sussex, Kent and Surrey which are 
enclosed between the North and South Downs— a district of 
Lower Cretaceous rocks encircled by 'Upper Cretaceous hills. 
It extends from Frensham and Petersneld on the Hampshire 
borders to the English Channel between Folkestone and East- 
bourne. With the exception of the easternmost part, it drains 
by rivers running northward and southward through gaps in the 
Downs, the origin of which is considered under that heading. 
The Weald was formerly covered by the forest of Andredesleah 
or Andrcdswcald ( u the wood or forest without habitations "), 
which was 120 m. in length and about 30 in greatest breadth. 
About 1660 the total area under forest was estimated at over 
200,000 acres. The chief remains of the ancient forests are 
Ashdown, St Leonards and Tilgale, and the nomenclature often 
indicates the former extent of woodland, as in the case of Hurst- 
pierpoint {hurst meaning wood), Midhurst, Fcmhurst, Billings- 
hurst, Ashurst and many others. The forests were interspersed 
with lagoons; and the rainfall being very great caused marshes, 
but it abated in consequence of the cutting down of the Wcalden 
forests for fuel in the extensive ironworks that formerly existed 
in the district. The locality best preserving the ancient char- 
acter of the Weald is the hUly district in the centre, forming a 



WEALDEN— WEALTH 



437 



pictumqne broken range running east and west under the name 
of the Forest Ridges. This forms the main water-parting el the 
Weald, dividing the Vale of Sussex from the Vale of Kent; and 
was also the seat of the iron industry which was prosecuted by 
the Romans and probably earlier, reached its highest importance 
in the z6th and 17th centuries, and was maintained even till the 
early years of the 10th century. The Andredeslcah had an early 
historical interest as forming a physical barrier which kept the 
South Saxons isolated from other Saxon kingdoms. Descending 
from over sea upon the coastal district of Sussex, to which they 
gave name, towards the close of the 5th century, they populated 
H thkUy, and maintained independence, in face of the accretions 
of the West Saxon kingdom, for upwards of a hundred years. 

UAJJDsV, in geology, a thick series of estuarine and fresh- 
water deposits of Lower Cretaceous age, which derives its name 
from its development in the Weald of Kent and Sussex. In the 
type area it is exposed by the denudation of a broad anticlinal 
sold from which the higher Cretaceous beds have been removed. 
The Wealden rocks lie in the central part of this anticline between 
the escarpments of the North and South Downs; they extend 
eastwards from the neighbourhood of Haslemere and EUand 
Chapel to the west between Pcvensey and Hythe. This forma- 
tion is divisible into two portions, the Weald Clay above and 
the Hastings Sands below. The Weald Clay which occupies the 
central, upland part of the area from Horsham to the sea coast 
consists of dark brown and brae days and shales, occasionally 
mottled in the neighbourhood of sandy lenticles, which together 
with calcareous sandstones, shelly limestones and nodular iron- 
stones take a subordinate place in the series. About Horsham 
the Weald Clay is 1000 ft. thick, but it decreases In an eastward 
direction; at Tonbridge it is only 600 ft. Certain subordinate 
beds within the- Weald Clay have received distinctive names. 
" Horsham stone " is a calcareous flaggy sandstone/ often ripple 
marked, usually less than 5 ft. thick, which occurs at about 120 ft. 
above the base of the Clay. "Sussex marble "is the name given 
to mote than one of the high limestone beds which are mainly 
composed of a large form of Paludina (P. flwiorum) ; some of the 
lower limestone layers contain a small species (P. sussexUnsis). 
The Suss ex marble (proper)* occurs about xoo ft. below the top 
of the days; it is the most important of the limestone binds, 
and its thickness varies from 6 ft. to a in.; it is known also as 
Bethendea marble, Petworth marble, Laughton stone, ftc 
It has been widely used in the Weald district in church architec- 
ture and for polished mantelpieces. The ironstones were 
formerly smelted in the western part of the area. 

The Hastings Sands are divisible Into three main subdivisions : 
the Tollbridge W«H* Sand, the Wadhurst Clay and the Asbdown 
Sand. Lik*tJieovcriyii« Weald Oay this aeries thickenaai a whole 
towards the west. In the west^ the Tunbridge Wells Sand is sepa- 
rated into an upper, and lower division by the thickening of a bed of 
clay— the Grinstead Clay— which in the east, about Rye, Ac, is quite 
thin: at CuckfieJd a second clay bed 15 ft. thick divides the upper 
division. The upper beds of the tower Tunbridge Wells Sand 



good landscapes around West Hoathly and near East Grinstead 
The Wadhurst Clay is very constant in character; near the base it 
fr e qu en tl y contains clay-ironstone, which in former times was the 
mam source of supply for the Wealden iron industry. Much of the 
fa>gber portiooof the Hastings Sand country is made ef the Asbdown 
Sands, consistin g of sand, soft sandstones and subordinate clay 
bends; in the east, however, clay is strongly developed at the base 
of this group, and at Fairiight is more than 360 ft. thick, while the 
sandy portion is only i« ft. These clays with sandy layers are 
known as the Fairiight Clays. Beds of Fgnite are found in these 
beds, and a calcareous sandstone, called Tlgate stone, occurs near 
the top of the Asbdown Sands and in the Wadhurst Clay. The old 
town of Hastings is built on Asbdown Sand, but St Leonards is 
mainly on Tanbridge Wells Sand. 

. Wealden beds occur on the southern side of the Isle of Wight and 
in the Isle of Purbeck in Dorsetshire. The Wealden anticline can 
be traced across the Channel into the Baa Boulonnais. A separate 
Wealden area exists in north Germany between Brunswick and 
Beatnehn, in the Ostervald and Teutoberger WakL where the 
Deister Sandstone (150 ft,) corresponds to the Hastings Sands and 
the W alde r thon (70-100 ft.) to the Weald Clay. The former contains 
valuable coal beds, worked in the neighbourhood of Obernldrcben, 
Ac, and a good building, stone. 

The fossab of the Wealden beds comprise freshwater shellfish, 
Cmta, Pnl m tma , JeVtosfsM, Cwvne: and estuarine and marine 



forms such as Ostna. Essgsreand MyUUu. An interesting 1 
of dinosaurs and pterodactyles has been obtained from the Wealden' 
of England and the continent of Europe, of which Ituanoion is the 
best known— a large number of almost entire skeletons of this genua 
were discovered in some buried Cretaceous valleys at Bernissart in 
Belgium; other forms are Hderatmkut, OmWuckeinu, Omiikopsii, 
Cmdtasaurus and Tiiancsaunu. Among the plant remains are 
Char*, Bemuttiies, Equisitites \ Fittmia, SagenopUru and Tkwites. 
The fishes, plants and reptiles of these formations possess a decidedly 
Jurassic aspect, and for this reason several authorities are in favour 
of retaining the Wealden rocks in that system, and the close re- 
lationship between this formation and the underlying Purbeckiasv 
both in England and in Germany; tends to support this view. 

See CasTAcaxws, Neocomiah, Pumkcxian; also W. Topley. 
- Geology of the Weald." Mem. GecL Survey (London, 1875). P ^ 

WEALTH, etymologically the condition of well-being, pros- 
perity in its widest sense. The word does not appear in Old 
English, but is a Middle English formation, weft**, on the O. Eng. 
ssrfo, wen-being, from we*, well, cognate with Dan. set, Ger. 
woMl. The original moaning survives in the Prayer for the King's 
Majesty of the English Book of Common Prayer, " Grant him in 
health and wealth long to live," and in "commonwealth," 
i.e. good of the body politic hence applied to the body pontic 
itself. 

In economics, wealth is most commonly denned as consisting 
of all useful and agreeable things which possess exchange value, 
and this again is generally regarded aa coextensive with all 
desirable things except those which do not involve labour or 
sacrifice for their acquisition in the quantity desired. On 
analysis it will be evident that this definition implies, directly, 
preliminary conceptions of utility and value, and, indirectly, of 
sacrifice and labour, and these terms, familiar though they may 
appear, are by no means simple and obvious in their ™T">g, 
Utility, for the purposes of economic reasoning, is usually held 
to mean the capacity to satisfy a desire or serve a purpose 
(J. S. Mill), and in this sense is clearly a much wider term than 
wealth. Sunshine and fresh air, good temper and pleasant 
manners, and all the infinite variety of means of gratification, 
material and immaterial, are covered by utility as thus denned. 
Wealth is thus a species of utility, and in order to separate it 
from other species some difcrextui must be found. This, 
according to the general definition, is exchange value, but a little 
reflection will show that in some cases it is necessary rather to 
contrast value with wealth. " Value," says Ricardo, expanding 
a thought of Adam Smith, " essentially differs from riches, for 
value depends not on abundance but on the difficulty or facility of 
production." According to the well-known tables ascribed to* 
Gregory King (164^-1712), a deficiency of a small amount in the 
annual supply of com will raise its value for more than in pro* 
portion; but it would be paradoxical to argue that this rise in 
value indicated an increase in an important item of national 
wealth. Again, as the mines of a country axe exhausted and ita 
natural resources otherwise impaired, a rise in the value of the 
remainder may take place, and as the free gifts of nature are 
appropriated they become valuable for exchange; but the 
country can hardly be said to be so much the wealthier in con* 
sequence. And these difficulties are rather increased than 
diminished if we substitute for value the more familiar concrete 
term •' money-price "—for the contrast between the quantity 
of wealth and its nominal value becomes more sharply marked 
Suppose, for example, that in the total money value of the 
national inventory a decline were observed to be in progress, 
whilst st the same time, as is quite possible, an increase was 
noticed in the quantity of all the important items and an 
improvement in their quality, it would be in accordance with 
common sense to. say that the wealth of the country was in* 
creasing and not decreasing. 

So great are these difficulties that some economists (eg. 
Ricardo) have proposed to take utility as the direct measure of 
wealth, and, as H. Sidgwick has pointed out, if double the 
quantity meant double the utility this would be an easy and 
natural procedure. Bat even to the same individual the increase 
in utility is by no means simply proportioned to the increase in 
quantity, and the utility of different commodities to different 



«8 



WEAPON— WEASEL 



Individuals* and a' fortiori of different amounts, is prjoverbial 
The very same things may to the same individual be productive of 
more utility simply owing to a change in his tastes or habits, and 
a different distribution of the very same things, which make 
up the wealth of a nation, might indefinitely change the quantity 
of utility; but it would be paradoxical to say that the wealth had 
increased because it was put to better uses. 

We thus seem thrown back on value as the essential 
characteristic* allowance being made for any change in the 
standard of value; but there are still difficulties to be overcome. 
Some things that undoubtedly possess value or that can command 
a price are immaterial, c.g. the advice of a lawyer or physician 
or the song of a prima donna, and, although perhaps the skill 
of a workman (in any grade of the social scale) might be considered 
as attached to the man, as a coal mine is attached to a place, 
it is more in accordance with popular usage to consider skill 
as immaterial, whilst at the same time it seems equally natural 
prima facie to confine the term wealth to material things in the 
common sense. Again, the credit system of a country is a product 
of great labour and sacrifice, it is most closely connected with the 
production of its material wealth in the narrowest sense, and it 
certainly commands a pecuniary value, and yet credit is more 
generally held to be a representative rather than a part of wealth, 
owing apparently to its insubstantial character. Apart from the 
question of materiality some writers have insisted on relative 
permanence and possibility of accumulation as essential attributes 
of wealthy and have thus still further narrowed the scope of the 



There can be no doubt that it Is on many grounds desirable 
in economics to use terms as tar as possible in their popular 
acceptations; but this rule must always be subordinate to the 
primary object in view. In nearly every department of know- 
ledge in which popular terms have been retained it has been found 
necessary either constantly to use qualifying adjectives where 
the contest is not a sufficient guide, and in some cases, when 
analysis discloses very different elements, to make a selection. 
Sometimes it has been found convenient to use a term with 
some variation in the definition according to the branch of the 
subject in hand. 1 Applying these rules to the definition of wealth, 
perhaps the best solution is that which is generally connected 
with German ffinnnntow (e.g. Adolf von Held). Wealth consists 
of utilities, and in the first great department of economics— 
the consumption of wealth— it is utility with which we are 
principally concerned— the idea of value, for example, being 
"overshadowed. The most general law of the consumption of 
wealth is that successive portions of any stock give a diminishing 
amount of utility when consumed. Then in the department 
of the production of wealth the most important characteristics 
are the labour and sacrifice necessary to put the utilities desired 
into the things and to place the things where they are wanted. 
The idea of value is again secondary and subordinate. We can 
readily see the part played by nature, labour and capital re- 
spectively in the production of any commodity without con- 
sidering the effects on its value of the various factors; we can 
understand the principles of division of labour and of the 
relative productiveness of large and small industries without 
entering into questions of value except in the most general 
manner. In the department of the distribution of wealth the 
fundamental conception is the right of appropriation; and 
accordingly J. & Mill very properly commences this part of 
his subject by an account of the relative advantages of the 
socialistic and individual systems of property. It is quite 
possible under the former to conceive of all the distribution being 
made without any exchange and with reference simply to the 
wants or the deserts of the members of the society. Thus it is 
not until we arrive at the department of the exchange of wealth 
that the characteristic of value becomes predominant, although 
sMme.it ckeesy connected with utility and labour and 




ilties of definitions in political economy 
- totitital Economy, bk. " ' 
ej Political Economy. 



Principles of Political Economy, bk. L ch. u", 
and Method '" " 



Usually, however, It will be found that in most cases anything 
which can fairly be classed as wealth in one department is also 
wealth in the others, and thus the definition is reached that 
wealth in general consists of all " consumable utilities which 
require labour for- their production and can be appropriated 
and exchanged." It only remains to add that " utilities " may 
be divided into " inner " and " outer " (to translate the German 
literally)— the "inner" being such as are simply sources of 
personal gratification. to their possessor, e.g. a good ear for 
music; the " outer " utilities again may be divided into " free " 
and " economic," the former, as a rule, e.g sunlight, not being 
the result of labour and not capable of appropriation or exchange, 
and the latter as a rule possessing each of these marks. It 
is these " economic utilities" which constitute wealth in the 
specific sense of the term, although its use may be extended 
by analogy to include almost all utilities. 

See A. Marshall, Principles of Economics (1907); J. B. Clark 
Philosophy of Wealth (1886) and Distribution of Wealth (1809); 
W. E. Wearn, Plunders (1864); F. A. Walker, Political Economy 
(1888); and J. & Nicholson, Principles of Political Economy 
(I9Q3). (J.S.N.) 

WBAPOff (0. Eng. «***», cf. Du. watee, Ger. Wappe, also 
Wappcn, a coat of arms, heraldic shield), any instrument of 
offence or defence, more usually a term confined to offensive 
or attacking instruments. The general sketch of the history 
and development of weapons of offence and defence is given 
under Asms and Armoux; particular weapons are treated 
under such heads as Halbesd, Lance, Spear, Swobo, Gum, 
Pistol, Rule, Osdnance and Machine-guns. 

WEAR, a river of Durham, England, rising in the Pennine 
chain near the Cumberland border, and traversing a valley 
about 60 m. in length to the North Sea, with a drainage area 
of 458 sq.m. A series of streams draining from the hills between 
Killhope Law and Burnhope Seat (2452 ft.) are collected at 
Wearbead, up to which point the valley is traversed by a branch 
of the North-Eastern railway. Hence eastward, past the small 
towns of St John's Chapel and Stanhope, and as far as that of 
Wokingham, Weardale is narrow and picturesque, sharply 
aligned by high-lying moorland. Below, it takes a south-easterly 
bend as far as Bishop Auckland, then turns northward and north- 
eastward, the course of the river becoming extremely sinuous. 
The scenery is particularly fine where the river sweeps round the 
bold peninsula which bears the cathedral and castle of the city 
of Durham. The valley line continues northerly until Chester* 
le-Street is passed, then it turns north-east; and soon the river 
becomes navigable, carrying a great traffic in coal, and having 
its banks lined with factories. At the mouth is the large seaport 
of Sunderland. 

WEASEL {Putorius nitalis), the smallest European species 
of the group of mammals of which the polecat and stoat axe 
well-known members (see Casntvora). The weasel is an elegant 
little animal, with elongated slender body, back much arched, 
head small and flattened, ears short and rounded, neck long and 
flexible, limbs short, five toes on each foot, all with sharp, com- 
pressed, curved claws, tail rather short, slender, cylindrical, and 
pointed at the tip, and fur short and dose. The upper-parts, out* 
side of limbs and tail, are uniform reddish brown, the under-parts 
white. In cold regions the weasel turns white in winter, but less 
regularly and only at a lower temperature than the stoat or 
ermine, from which it is distinguished by its smaller size and 
the absence of the black tail-tip. The length of the head and 
body of the male is usually about 8 in., that of the tail 2} in.; 
the female is smaller. The weasel is generally distributed through- 
out Europe and Northern and Central Asia; and is represented 
by a closely allied animal in North America. It possesses all 
the active, courageous and bloodthirsty disposition of the rest 
of the genus, but its diminntive size prevents it attacking and 
destroying any but the smaller mammals and birds. Mice, rats, 
water-rats and moles, as well as frogs, constitute its principal 
food. It is generally found on or near the surface of the ground, 
but it can not only pursue its prey through holes and crevices 
of rocks and under dense tangled herbage, but follow it up the 



WEATHER— WEAVER-BIRD 



+39 



items and branches of trees, or even Into the water, swimming 
with perfect ease. It constructs a nest of dried leaves and 
herbage, placed in a hole in the ground or a bank or hollow tree, 




The Weasel (PuUmus nivalis). 

in which it brings up its litter of four to six (usually five) voting 
ones. The mother will defend her young with the utmost despera- 
tion against any assailant, and has been known to sacrifice her 
own life rather than desert- them. (R. L.*) 

WEATHER (O. Eng. feeder; the word is common to Teutonic 
languages; cf. Da. wder, Dan. seir, Icel. veQr, and Ger. Wetter 
and GewiUer, storm; the root is wo- to blow, from which is 
derived " wind "), the condition of the atmosphere in regard to 
its temperature, presence or absence of wind or cloud, its dry- 
ness or humidity, and all the various meteorological phenomena 
(tee Meteorology). The term " weathering " is used in geology 
of the gradual action of the weather upon rocks, and is also 
applied, in architecture, to the inclination or slope outwards 
given to cornices, string courses and window sins, to throw off 
the rain. 

WEAVER* JAMES BAIRD (1833- \ American lawyer 
and political leader, was born at Dayton, Ohio, on the x 3th of 
Jane 1833. **e studied law at Cincinnati, Ohio, and served on 
the Federal side in the Civil War, becoming colonel in November 
1862; he was mustered out in May 1864, and in March 1865 
was breveted brigadier-general of volunteers. He was district- 
attorney for the second Judicial District of Iowa in 1866-1870 
and an assessor of internal revenue in Iowa in 1863-1873; and 
was a representative in Congress in 1870-1881 and in 1885-1889, 
being elected by a Greenback-Democratic fusion. In x88o he 
was the candidate of the Greenback party for president and 
received a popular vote of 309,578; and in 189s he was the 
candidate of the People's party, and received 22 electoral votes 
and a popular vote of 1,041,021. 

WEAVER-BIRO, the name 1 by which a group of between 
soo and 300 species are now usually called, from the elaborately 
interwoven nests that many of them build, some of the structures 
being of the most marvellous kind. By the older systematists 
men of these birds as were then known were distributed among 
the genera Oriolus, Loxia y Emberka and PringSta; and it was 
G. L. Cuvier who in 18x7 first brought together these dissevered 
forms, comprising them in a genus Pbceus. Since his time 
others have been referred to its neighbourhood, and ospecialy 



'First bestowed in this form apparently by I. F< 

^vwotots, i, p, 435) had called the " iroup 

of Button the weever oriole," from its habit of entwining 



(G. Shaw's Gen, Zoology, xiv. pt. 1. p. 34); but in 178a J 
m (Synopsis, i, p, 435) had called the TroupiaU du SitUgol 
JToo the weever oriole," from its habit of entwining the wiret 
of the cage ia which it was kept with such vegetable fibres as it could 

r. and hence in 1788 Cmclin named it Orudis lextor. In 1800 
. M. Daudin used the term " Tisserin " for several species of the 
unnaean genus Loxt'o, and this was adopted some years later by 
Cuvier as the equivalent of his Ploceus, as mentioned in the text. 



the genus Vidua with fts allies, so as to make of them a sub- 
family Ploeetnae, which in 1847 was raised by J. Cabanis to 
the rank of a family Ploceidae—n. step the propriety of which 
has since been generally admitted, though the grounds for taking 
it are such as could not be held valid in any other order than 
that of Passeres, The PloceUae are closely related to the 
FringWidae (see Finch), and are now divided into two sub- 
families, the Ploceinae and Viduinoe, the former chiefly found 
in Africa and its islands, the latter In the Ethiopian, Australian 
and Indian regions. 

Perhaps the most typical Hootine weaver-bird is ByphanU 
omit tucullala, an African species, and it is to the Ethiopian 
Region that by far the greatest number of these birds belong, 
and in it they seem to attain their maximum of development. 
Tneyare all small, with, generally speaking, a sparrow-like build; 
but mrklinem of colouring the males of some are very conspicuous 
—glowing in crimson, scarlet or golden-yellow, set off by jet- 
black, while the females are usually dull in hue. Some species 
build nests that are not very remarkable, except m being almost 
invariably domed— others (such as the most typical Indian 
weaver.bird, Ploceus baya) fabricate singular structures* of 
closely and uniformly interwoven tendrils or fine roots, that 
often hang from the bough of a tree over water, and, starting 
with a solidly wrought rope, open out into a globular chamber, 
and then contract into a tube several inches in length, through 
which the birds effect their exit 'and entrance. But the most 
wonderful nests of all, and indeed the most wonderful built by 
birds, are those of the so-called sociable grosbeak, PkUbetaerns 
sort**, of Africa. These are composed wholly of grass, and are 
joined together to the number of 100 or 200— indeed 320 are 
said to have been found in one of these aggregated masses, which 
usually take the form of a gigantic mushroom, 1 affording a home 
and nursery to many pairs of the birds which have been at the 
trouble of building it. These nests, however, have been so often 
described and figured by South African travellers that- there 
is no need here to dilate longer on their marvels. It may be 
added that this species of weaver-bird, known to French writers 
as the lUpuhikaitty is of exceptionally dull plumage. 

The group of widow-birds,* Viduinoe, b remarkable tor the 
extraordinary growth of the tail-feathers in the males at the 
breeding-season. In the largest spedes, Vidua (sometimes 
called Chen) progne, the cock-bird, which, with the exception 
of a scarlet and buff bar on the upper wing-coverts, is wholly 
black, there is simply a great elongation of the rectrices; but 
in V. paradisea the form of the tail is quite unique. The middle 
pair of feathers have the webs greatly widened, and through 
the twisting of the shafts their interior surfaces are vertically 
opposed. These feathers are comparatively short, and end in a 
hair-like filament. The next pair are produced to the length 
of about a foot— the bird not being so big as a sparrow— and 
droop gracefully in the form of a sickle. But this Is not ail: 
each has attached to fts base a hair-like filament of the same 
length as the feather, and this filament originally adhered to 
and ran along the margin of the outer, web, only becoming 
detached when the feather is full grown.* In another spedes, 
V, principalis, the middle two pairs of rectrices are equally 
elongated, but their webs are convex, and the outer pair contains 
the inner, so that when the margins of the two pairs are applied 

•These differ from those buOt by some of the Osjoles (q.v.) and 
other birds, whose nests may be compared to pensile pockets, while 
those of these weaver-birds can best be likened to a stocking hung up 
by the " toe," with the " heel " enlarged to receive the eggs, while 
access and exit are obtained through the " leg." 

* But at a distance they may often be mistaken for a native hut, 
with ha grass-roof. 

•It has been ingeniously suggested that this name should be 
more correctly written Whydah bird— from the place on the West 
Coast of Africa so named; but Edwards, who in 1745 figured one 
of the species, states that he was informed that " the Portuguese call 
this bird the widow, from its colour and long train" (AfaL Hist 
Birds, i. p. 86). 

1 This curious structure was long ago described by Brisson (Ora* 
tkologie, in. p. 1 23), and more recently by Strickland (Coulr. Omu 
Oology (1850), pp. 88 and 149. pi. 59)- 



4+o 



WEAVING 



a sort of cylinder is formed. 1 The females of all the widow-birds 
differ greatly in appearance from the males, and are generally 
clothed in a plumage of mottled brown. 

Usually classed with the weaver-birds is a vast group of small 
seed-eating forms, often called Spermeslinae, but for which Estrddinae 
would seem to be a more fitting name. These comprehend the 



bills, rytena mcwa ana pnocmcofvcra, cuiwiwu, abkhhwi j<*»v*<mu, 
the Java sparrow, Munia oryxtvora and many others. Many of 
these genera are common to Africa and India, and some also to 
Australia. (A. N.) 

WEAVING. The process of weaving consists in interlacing, 
at right angles, two or more series of flexible materials, of which 
the longitudinal are called warp and the transverse weft. 
Weaving, therefore, only embraces one section of the textile 
industry, for felted, plaited, netted, hosiery and lace fabrics lie 
outside this definition. Felting consists in bringing masses of 
loose fibres, such as wool and hair, under the combined influences 
of heat, moisture and friction, when they become firmly inter- 
locked in every direction. Plaited fabrics have only one series 
of threads interlaced, and those at other than right angles. 
In nets all threads are held in their appointed places by knots, 
which are tied wherever one thread intersects another. Hosiery 
fabrics, whether made from one or many threads, are held together 
by intersecting a series of loops; while lace fabrics are formed 
by passing one set of threads between and round small groups 
of a second set of threads, instead of moving them from side to 
side. Notwithstanding the foregoing limitations, woven fabrics 
are varied in texture and have an enormous range of application. 
The demands made by prehistoric man for fabrics designed for 
clothing and shelter were few and simple, and these were fashioned 
by interlacing strips of fibrous material and grasses, which in 
their natural condition were long enough for the purpose in 
hand. But , as he passed from a state of savagery into a civilized 
being, his needs developed with his culture, and those needs are 
still extending. It no longer suffices to minister to individual 
necessities; luxury, commerce and numerous industries must 
also be considered. 

The invention of spinning (q.v.) gave a great impetus to the 
introduction of varied effects; previously the use of multicoloured 
threads provided ornament for simple structures, but the demand 
for variety extended far beyond the limits of colour, and different 
materials were employed either separately or conjointly, together 
with different schemes of interlacing. Eventually the weaver was 
called upon to furnish articles possessing lustre, softness and 
delicacy; or those that combine strength and durability with 
diverse colourings, with a snowy whiteness, or with elaborate 
ornamentation. In cold countries a demand arose for warm 
clothing, and in hot ones for cooler materials; while commerce 
and industry have requisitioned fabrics that vary from normal 
characteristics to those that exceed an inch in thickness. In 
order to meet these and other requirements the world has been 
searched for suitable raw materials. From the animal kingdom, 
wool, hair, fur, feathers, silk and the pinna fibre have long been 
procured. From the vegetable kingdom, cotton, flax, hemp, 
jute, ramie and a host of other less known but almost equally 
valuable materials are derived. Amongst minerals there are 
gold, silver, copper, brass, iron, glass and asbestos. In addition, 
strips ol paper, or skin, in the plain, gilt, silvered and painted con- 
ditions are available as well as artificial fibres. All of the fore- 
going may be used alone or in combination. 

From such varied raw materials it is not surprising that woven 
fabrics should present an almost endless variety of effects; yet 
these differences are only in part due to the method of weaving. 
The processes of bleaching (q.v.) 3 merceruing (q.v.), dyeing (q.v.), 
printing (see TlXTO^PlljrriKC) and finishing (q.v.) contribute 

of the resultant 

Z of threads spun in 

ibrigin, with paper, 

ibed and figured 
pictures sent 




Industrial Technicology 
All weaving schemes are reducible to a few elementary 
principles, but no attempted classification has been quite 
successful, for fabrics are constantly met with that possess 
characteristics supposed to be peculiar to one class, but lack 
others which are deemed equally typical. Nevertheless, since 
some classification is essential, the following will be adopted, 
namely: Group i, to include all fabrics made from one warp 
and one weft, provided both sets of threads remain parallel in 
the finished article and are intersected to give the requisite fed 
and appearance. Group 2, to include (a) fabrics constructed 
from two warps and one weft, or two wefts and one warp, 
as in those that are backed, reversible and figured with extra 
material; (0) two or more distinct fabrics built simultaneously 
from two or more warps and wefts, as in two, three and other 
ply cloths; (c) fabrics built by so intersecting two or more 
warps and wefts that only one texture results, as in loom-made 
tapestries and figured repps. Group 3, to include fabrics in which 
a portion of the weft or warp rises vertically from the ground- 
work of a finished piece, as in velveteens, velvets, plushes and 
piled carpets. Groups 4, to embrace all fabrics in which one 
portion of the warp is twisted partially, or wholly, round another 
portion, as in gauzes and lappet cloths. Although some fabrics 
do not appear to fall into any of the above divisions, and in 
others the essential features of two or more groups are combined, 
yet the grouping enumerated above is sufficiently inclusive for 
most purposes. 

The fabrics included in Group I are affected by the nature and 
closeness of the yarns employed in their construction, by colour, or 
by the scheme of intersecting the threads. The most important 
section of this group is Plain Cloth, in which the warp and weft 
threads are approximately equal in thickness and closeness, and 
pass over and under each other alternately, as in fig. I, which shows 
a design, plan and two sections of plain cloth. Such a fabric would, 
therefore, appear to admit of but slight ornamentation, yet this is 
by no means the case, for if thick and thin threads of warp and weft 
alternate, the resultant fabric may be made to assume a corrugated 
appearance on the face, while beneath it remains flat, as in poplins, 
repps and cords. A plan and a longitudinal section of a repp cloth 
is shown at fig. a. Colour may also be employed to ornament plain 
fabrics, and its simplest application produces stripes and checks. 
But colour may convert these fabrics into the most artistic and 
costly productions of the loom, as is the case with tapestries, which 





'Fie. 1.— Plain Cloth. 



Fio. 2.— Repp Cloth. 



are at once the oldest and most widely diffused of ornamented 
textiles. Tapestries only differ from simple plain cloth in having 
each horizontal line of weft made up of numerous short lengths of 
parti-coloured thread. Many fine specimens of this art have been 
recovered from ancient Egyptian and Peruvian tombs, and many are 
still produced in the Gobelins and other celebrated manufactories 
of Europe. 

Twills are next in importance to plain cloth on account of their 
wide range of application and great variety of effects; in elabor- 
ately figured goods their use is as extensive as where they provide 
the only ornament. Twills invariably form diagonal ribs in fabrics, 
and these are due to the intervals at which the warp and weft are 
intersected ; thus two or more warp threads are passed over or under 
one or more than one weft thread in regular succession. Twills are 
said to be equal when similar quantities of warp and weft are opon 
the face of a fabric, unequal when one set of threads greatly pre- 
ponderates over the other set, as in figs. 3, 4, which require four 
warp and weft threads to complete the scheme of intersections. 
If the ribs form angles of 45 degrees, the warp and weft threads per 
inch are about equal in number, but for an unequal twill the material 
most in evidence should be closest and finest. The angle formed may 
be greater or less than 4$ degrees, as in figs. 5. 6 ; if greater, the warp 



preponderates, if less, the weft preponderates. Twills are simple 
and /amy, both terms refer to the schemes of intersecting. In the 



INDUSTRIAL TECHNICOL0GY1 WEAVING 

former the came number of warp thread* ale placed successively 
above or below each weft thread, and the ribs are of uniform width* 
as in fig*. 3, 4. in the latter more warp threads may be above one 



♦41 







Fig. 3.— Four-thread \ Twin. Fie. 4.— Four-thread i Twill. 

pick than another, the ribs may vary in width arid email ornament 
may be introduced between the ribs, as in figs. 5, 6 and 7, where the 
dark squares represent warp upon the surface. T wills maybe 
broken up into zigzags, lozenges, squares and other geometrical 
designs; all of which may be produced by revcrsings in the diagonal 
lines, or by reversing the weave of an unequal twill. Fig. 8 is a 
zigzag, namely, a twill reversed in one direction. Fig. 9 is a diamond, 







Fig. 5.— Upright TwilL 



Fxg. 6.— Reclining TwUL 



or a twill reversed in two directions, and fig. 10 is a diaper, or an 
unequal twill which gives a warp face in one place and a weft face 
in another. Satins and saUeens form another important section of 
Group 1. In a satin the bulk of the warp, and in a satteen the bulk 
of the weft, is on the face of a fabric If perfect in construction both 
present a smooth, pattcrnless appearance, which is due in part to 
the scheme of intersections, in part to using fine material tor the 







Fig. 7.— Fancy TwflL 



Fig. 8.— Zigzag. 



surface threads and placing it dose enough together to render the 
points of intersection invisible; the threads of the other set being 
coarser and lever in number. Satins differ from twills in having 
each warp thread lifted, or depressed, separately, but not successively 
From five to upwards of thirty threads of warp and weft are required 
to complete the various schemes of intersecting. If the intervals 
between the intersections are equal the weave ts said to be perfect. 





Fig. 9. — Diamond. 



Fig. 10.— Diaper. 



as m fig. 1 1, but if the intervals are Irregular it is said to be imperfect, 
as in fig. 12. In Damasks a satin is combined with a satteen weave, 



_ i any desired size and shape of either weave may be pro- 
duced, great facilities are offered for the development of all kinds 
of ornamentation. But in combination neither the satin nor the 
satteen can be perfect in construction, for one requires a preponder- 
ance of warp, the other a preponderance of weft; as a sequence 
every point of intersection is distinctly visible on both surfaces. 
Brocades are fabrics in which both sets of threads may be floated 
irregularly upon the surface to produce ornamental effects, and 
they may be taken as typical of all one warp and one weft fabrics 



that are figured by irregularly Boated materials, wnether the threads 
are uniformly or irregularly distributed, and whether one weave 
or several weaves be employed. 

Group a includes all backed and reversible fabrics, as well as 
those ornamented with extra material and compounded. Cloths 
intended for men's wear are often backed t the object of which is to 
give weight and bulk to a thin texture without interfering with the 




r Tf Mjr Tft ijT T : ll 



FXG. 11.— Five-thread 
Satteen. 



Fig. u.— Six-thread 
Satteen. 



face effects. Either warp or weft may be used as backing; if the 
former there are two series of warp to one series of weft threads, 
while in the latter there are two aeries of weft to one scries of warp 
threads, The face material is superposed upon that of the back, 
but the ratio of face threads may be one or two to one of back. In 
order to avoid disturbing the face weave, only those threads are 
used to bind the backing that are bidden on the face, as in fig. 13, 
which gives the design and a transverse section of a backed fabric: 
A is face weft; B back weft, and the circles are warp threads; of 
the latter C, D, are beneath both B and A. This diagram will serve 
equally as a longitudinal section of a warp-hacked fabric, if A 
represents a thread of face warp, B a thread of back warp and the 
circles are weft threads. Weft backing is capable of giving a more 
spongy feel to a fabric than warp, because softer materials may be 
usedibut in these fabrics the length output of loom is reduced by 
reason of the wefts being superposed. Warp-backed fabrics, whether 
uniformly coloured or striped, do not materially reduce the output 
of a loom, for every weft thread adds to the doth length. Reversible 
fabrics may have either two series of differently coloured wefts or 
warps to one of the other series, in which t^am 

event they may be similarly figured on mmm 

both sides by causing the threads of the RpQ 

double series to change places, as in the 159 

design and transverse section, fig. 14; or, BaB! 

by allowing one series to remain con- f BOB 

stantly above the other, as in backed 

cloths, both sides may be similar or dis- £ ^ggg g gS jg^CT gg> 
similar ia colour and pattern. Fabrics "~ — j ^ T^ — '" 
figured with extra material may have two -^ ..I^u^ 
aeries of warp or weft threads to one FIC - 13— Wt-backed 
aeries of the other set. and they may yield raxmc 

reversible or one-sided cloths. A ground texture may have extra 
material placed above or below it, as in fig. 15, where a design 
and transverse section of the cloth are given; the waved lines and 
circles represent a cross-section of plain doth and A is a thread of 
extra material; or ordinary and extra material may be used con- 
jointly for figuring. Compound doths must have at least two textures, 
and be as distinct in character as if woven in separate looms; they 
have many advantages over backed cloths, thus: the same design 
and colouring may be produced on both sides: where bulk and 
weight are required a fine surface texture may be formed over a 
ground of inferior material, and soft weft be passed between the 
upper and lower textures. The fabric is more perfect and admits 
of either simple or elaborate patterns being wrought upon the surface, 
with simple ones beneath, as in piques and matelasses. One texture 
may be constantly above the other and connected at the selvages 
only, as in hose pipes and pillow slips; or at intervals a thread may 
pass from one texture into the other, in which event both are united, 
as in many styles of bed-covers and vesting*. If differently coloured. 




Fig. 14.— Weft Reversible 
Fabric. 



FiG. IS. — Figuring with 
Extra Weft. 



the textures may change places at pleasure, as m Kidderminster 
carpets; or, from three to twelve textures may be woven simultane- 
ously, and united, as in belting doth. There may be from one to 
three threads of face warp to one of back, and the wefting may or 
may not corresp on d with the warping. Fig. 16 shows the face and 



44* 



WEAVING 



IINDUSTRIAL TECHNICOLOCT 




back weaves, the design, and a transverse section of a compound 
cloth with two threads of face warp and weft to one of back, and 
both are stitched together. The circles in the upper and lower 
lines represent face and back warps respectively, and A, B, C are 
weft threads placed in the upper and lower textures. Loom-made 
tapestries and figured repps form another 
section of Group 2. As compared with 
true tapestries, the loom-made articles 
have more limited colour schemes, and 
their figured effects may be obtained from 
warp as well as weft, whether interlaced 
to form a plain face, or left floating more 
or less loosely. Every weft thread, in 
passing from selvage to selvage, is taken 
to the surface where required, the other 
portions being bound at the back. Some 
specimens are reversible, others are one- 
sided, but, however numerous the warps 
and wefts, only one texture is produced. When an extra warp of 
fine material is used to bind the wefts firmly together a plain or twill 
weave shows on both sides. If a single warp is employed, two or 
more wefts form the figure, and the warp seldom floats upon the 
surface. Where warps do assist to form figure it rarefy happens 
that more than three can be used without overcrowding the reed. 
Fig. 17 gives the design, and a transverse 
section of a reversible tapestry in four 
colours, two of which are warps and two 
NtiM* ,**•*—+ wefts. If either warp or weft is on the 
r W)!6WU^^ surface, corresponding threads are be- 
t c *£=»=ig 3 fe5=g=g <t 1WW T neath. The bent lines represent weft and 
Fie. 1 7.— Tapestry with the circles warp. Figured repps differ 
'wo Warps and Two from plain ones in having threads of one, 



Fie. 16. — Compound 
Fabric 



Two 
Wefts. 



Fta. 18.— Velveteen. 



or more than one, thick warp floated over 
thick and thin weft alike; or, in having 
several differently coloured warps from which a fixed number of 
threads are lifted over each thick weft thread; the face of the 
texture is then uniform, and the figure is due to colour. 

Group 3. Piled Fabrics. — In all methods of weaving hitherto 
dealt with the warp and weft threads have been laid in longitudinal 
and transverse parallel lines. In piled fabrics, however, portions of 
the weft or warp assume a vertical position. If the former there are 
two series of weft threads, one being intersected with the warp to 
form a firm ground texture, the other oeing bound into the ground at 
regular intervals, as in the design and transverse section of a velveteen, 
fig. 18; the circles and waved lines form plain cloth, and the loose 
thread A is a pile pick. After leaving 
J W UH I the loom all threads A are cut by push- 

SoocB tng a knife lengthwise between the plain 

doth and the pile. As each pick is 
severed both pieces rise vertically and the 
fibres open out as at B. Since the pile 
threads are from two to six times as 
numerous as those of the ground, and rise 
from an immense number of places, a uni- 
form brush-like surface is formed. Raised 
the threads A beneath the ground 
\ so that the knife shall only cut 
remain on the surface. The effect 
upon the face varies with the distribution of the binding points, and 
the length of pile is determined by the distance separating one point 
from another. 

Chenille.—- When chenille is used in the construction of figured 
weft-pile fabrics, it is necessary to employ two weaving operations, 
namely, one to furnish the chenille, the other to place it in the final 
fabric Chenille is made from groups of warp threads that are 
separated from each other by considerable intervals; then, multi- 
coloured wefts are passed from side to side in accordance with a 
predetermined scheme. This fabric is next cut midway between the 
groups of warp into longitudinal strips, and, if reversible fabrics 
such as table-covers and curtains are required, each strip is twisted 
axially until the protruding ends of weft radiate from the core of 
warp, and form a cylinder of pile. In the second weaving this 
chenille is folded backward and forward in a second warp to lay the 
colours in their appointed places and pile projects on both sides of 
the fabric. If chenille is intended for carpets, the ends of pile weft 
ore bent in one direction, and then woven into the upper surface of a 
itp-mg ground texture. 

Warp-piled Fabrics have at least two series of warp Threads 10 one 
of wirft, aivj are more varied in structure than ittft-pibd fabrics 
because they may be either plain or figured* and have their surfaces 
cuU looped or both, 

Vcfaii ami Flmka are woven single and double. In the fomer 
case both ground and pile war;- ■■ ' *mh the weft, but 

at interval* o\ re tilted ovt-r a 

wire »vfvich. is sfibse<tiiei' r - »■ lunched 



I t! -: J|1 




looped over a wire. At B the circles are repeated to show how the 
ground warp intersects the weft. 

Double Plushes consist of two distinct ground textures which are 
kept far enough apart to ensure the requisite length of pile. As 
weaving proceeds the pile threads are interlaced with each series of 
weft threads, and passed from one to the other. The uniting pile 
material is next severed midway between the upper and lower 
textures, and two equal fabrics result. Fig. 20 gives three longi- 




Fig. 19.— Utrecht Velvet. 



Fig. 20.— Double Plush. 




tudinal sections of a double pile fabric. The circles A,.B are weft 
threads in the upper and lower fabrics respectively; the lines that 
interlace with these wefts are pile warp threads which pass vertically 
from one fabric to the other. At C, D the circles are repeated to 
show how the ground warps intersect the wefts, and at E the arrows 
indicate the cutting point. 

Figured Warp-pue Fabrics are made with regular and irregular 
cut and looped surfaces. If regular, the effect is due to colour, and 
this again may be accomplished in various ways, such as (a) by 
knotting tufts of coloured threads upon a warp, as in Eastern carpets; 
(b) by printing a fabric after it leaves the loom ; (c) by printing each 

f)ile thread before placing it in a loom, so thai a pattern shall be 
ormed simultaneously with a pile surface, as in tapestry carpets; 
(d) by providing several sets of pile threads, no two of which are 
similar in colour; then, if five sets are available, one-fifth of all the 
pile warp must be lifted over each wire, but any one of five colours 
may be selected at any place, as in Brussels and Wilton carpets. 
Fig. 21 is the design, and a longitudinal 
section of a Brussels carpet. The circles 
represent two tiers of weft, and the lines 
of pile threads, when not lifted over a 
wire to form loops, are laid between the 
wefts; the ground warp interlaces with 
the weft to bind the whole together. 
When the surface of a piled fabric is 
irregular, also when cut and looped pile 
are used in combination, design is no 
longer dependent upon colour, for in the Fig. 21. — Brussels Carpet, 
former case pile threads are only lifted 

over wires where required, at other places a flat texture is formed. 
In the latter case the entire surface of a fabric is covered with pile, 
but if the figure is cut and the ground looped the pattern will be 
distinct. 

Group 4. Crossed Weaving. — This group includes all fabrics in 
which the warp threads intertwist amongst themselves to give 
intermediate effects between ordinary weaving and lace, as in 
gauzes. Also those in which some warp threads are laid trans- 
versely in a piece to imitate embroidery, as in lappets. 

Plain Cause embodies the principles that underlie the construction 
of all crossed woven textiles. In these fabrics the twisting of two 
warp threads together leaves large 
interstices between both warp and 
weft. But although light ana open 
in texture, gauze fabrics are the 
firmest that can be made from a 
given quantity and quality of 
material. One warp thread from 
each pair is made to cross the other 
at every pick, to the right and to 
the left alternately, therefore the 
same threads are above every pick, 
but since in crossing from side to 
side they pass below the remaining threads, all are bound securely 
together, as in fig. 23, where A is a longitudinal section and B a plan 
of gauze. 

Lena is a muslin composed of an odd number of picks of a plain 
weave followed by one pick of gauze. In texture it is heavier than 
gauze, and the cracks are farther apart transversely. 

Forney Gaum may be made in many ways, such as (a) by using 
crossing threads that differ in colour or count from the remaining 
threads, provided they are subjected to slight tensile strain: (6) 
by causing some to twist to the right, others to the left simultane- 
ously; (c) by combining gauze with another weave, as plain, twill, 
satin, brocade or pile; (a) by varying the number of threads that 
cross, and by causing those threads to entwine several ordinary 
threads; (e) by passing two or more weft threads into each 
crossing, and operating any assortment of crossing threads at 
pleasure. 




Fig. 22.— Plain Gauze. 







Fig. 23.— Lappet Fabric 



MACHINERY) 

Upp* wtcrimr consists in diapering the surface of a plain or 
fause fabric with aimple figure*. Tbia U dooe by drawing certain 
warp thread* into a traneveree 
poeition and then lifting tbem 
over a thread of weft to fix them 
in the texture; after which they 
are moved in the opposite' direc- 
tion and lifted over the following 
pick. The material between one 
binding point and another must 
float loosely, and this limits the 
usefulness of lappet figuring. In 
fig. 23, the thick lines show a 
lappet spot upon a plain texture. 
Notwithstanding diverse struc- 
ture, intricate mechanisms are 
not essential to the production of 
either simple or complex textures *. 
the most elaborate and beautiful specimens of the weaver's art 
save been manufactured upon aimple machinery. 

Wearing Machinery. 

The longitudinal threads of a fabric are called warp, caine, 
twist and organzine, and the transverse threads are weft, shoot, 
woof, filling and tram. A loom for intersecting these several 
threads must provide for: (1) Shedding; namely, raising and 
lowering the warp threads in a predetermined sequence so as to 
form two lines between which the weft may be passed, (a) 
Picking, or placing lines of weft between the divided warp. 
(3) Beating-up, or striking each weft thread into its appointed 
position in the fabric. (4) Letting-off, or holding the warp tense 
and delivering it as weaving proceeds. (5) Taking-up, or drawing 
away the doth as manufacluied. (6) Temples, for stretching 
the fabric widthwisc in order to prevent the edge threads of a 
warp from injuring the reed, and from breaking. Power looms 
require the above-named contrivances to act automatically, 
and in addition: (7) A weft-fork, to stop a loom when the 
weft becomes exhausted or breaks. (8) Mechanism for stopping 
a loom when the shuttle fails to reach its appointed box. (9) 
For weaving cross stripes, multiple shuttle boxes are needed 
to bring different colours, or counts of weft, into use at the 
proper time. (10) In some looms a device for automatically 
ejecting a spent cop, pirn or shuttle, and inserting a full one, 
is requisite, (x x) If a weaver has to attend to a greater number 
of looms than usual,- a device for stopping a loom when a warp 
thread fails is essential. 

The Band Loom.— During the 17th and the first half of the 18th 
centuries it was observed that wherever any branch of the textile 
iadostry had been carried to a high state of excellence the looms 



WEAVING 




Fig. 24. — Diagram of Hand-Loom. 

used to manufacture a given fabric were similar in essentials, although 
in structural details they differed greatly. Prior to the invention of 
the fly shuttle by John Kay, in 1743, no far-reaching invention had 
for generations been applied to the hand-loom, and subsequently 
the Jacqtiard machine and multiple shuttle boxes represent the 
chief changes. A hand-loom as used in Europe at the present time 
(see fig. 24) has the warp coiled evenly upon a beam whose gudgeons 



443 

are laid in open steps formed in the loom framing. Two ropes are 
coiled round this beam, and weighted to prevent the warp from 
being given off too freely. From the beam the threads pass alter- 
nately over and under two lease rods, then separately through the 
eyes of the shedding harness, in pairs between the dents of a reed, and 
finally they axe attached to a cloth roller. For small patterns healds 
ase used to form sheds, but for large ones a jacquard machine is 
required. Healds may be made of twine, of wire or of twine loops 
into which metal eyes, called mails, are threaded. . But they usually 
consist of a number of strings which are secured' above and below 
upon wooden laths called shafts, and each string Is knotted near 
the middle to form a small eye. From two to twenty-four pairs of 
shafts may be employed, but the healds they carry must collectively 
equal the number of threads in the warp. These healds will be 
equally or unequally distributed upon the shafts according to the 
nature of the pattern to be woven, and the threads will be drawn 
through the eyes in a pred ete r m ined order. The upper shafts are 
suspended from pulleys or levers, and the lower ones are attached 
directly or indirectly to treadles placed near the floor. The weaver 
depresses these treadles with bis feet in a sequence suited to the 
pattern, and the scheme of drawing the warp through the healds. 
When a treadle la pressed down, at least one pair of shafts will be 
lifted above the others, and the warp threads will ascend or descend 
with the healds to form a abed for a shuttle, containing weft, to be 
passed through (see Shuttle). The reed (fig. 25) is the instrument 



Fig. 25.— Weaver's Reed. 

by which weft is beaten into position in the cloth ; it also determines 
the closeness of the warp threads, and guides a moving shuttle from 
side to side. It b made by placing strips of flattened wire between 
two half round ribs of wood, and binding the whole together by 
passing tarred twine between the wires and round the ribs. Such 
a reed is placed in the lower portion of a batten, which is suspended 
from the upper framework of the loom. In front of the reed, and 
immediately below the warp, the projecting batten forms a race for 
the shuttle to travel upon from side to side. Before Kay's invention 
a shuttle was thrown between the divided warp and caught at the 
opposite selvage, but Kay continued the projecting batten on both 
sides of the warp space, and constructed boxes at each end. Over 
each box he mounted a spindle, and upon it a driver, or picker. 
Bands connected both pickers to a stick which the weaver held in 
his right hand, while with the left hand he controlled the batten. 
Thus: a treadle is pressed down by one foot to form a shed; the 
batten Is pushed back till a sufficient portion of the shed is brought 
in front of the reed, and the depressed threads lie upon the shuttle 
race; a dear way is thus provided for the shuttle. A quick move- 
ment of the stick tightens the cord attached to a picker and projects 
the shuttle from one box to the other. The batten is now drawn 
forward, and the reed beau up the weft left by the shuttle. Aa the 
next treadle b depressed to form another division of the warp for 
the return movement of the shuttle, the last length of weft b en- 
wrapped between intersecting warp threads, and the remaining 
movements follow in regular succession (see fig. 26). 

In cases where the weft forms parti-coloured stripes across a fabric* 
also where different counts of weft are used, shuttles, equal in number 




Fio. 26.— Section of Plain Wen in Process of Weaving on the Loom. 



a. The warp beam. 

b. The lease rods by which the 

warp is divided and crossed. 

c. c. Two pairs of shafts containing 

healds. 



d, The reed in position for pick- 
ing, and also for beating-up. 
s, Woven cloth. 
/, The cloth beam. 



to the colours, counts or materials, must be provided. By Robert 
Kay's invention of multiple shuttle boxes, in 1760, much of the time 
lost through changing shuttles by hand was prevented. His drop 
boxes consist of trays formed in tiers and fitted into the ordinary 
shuttle boxes. Each tray is capable of holding a shuttle, and by 
operating a lever and plug with the forefinger and thumb of the 
left hand, the trays may be raised and lowered at pleasure to bring 
that shuttle containing the colour next needed into line with the 
picker. 



The Draw Loom.— Large figured effects were formerly pi 
in draw looms, where the warp threads were so controlled by separate 
strings that any assortment could be lifted when reouired. Thus: 
to the lower end of each string a dead weight, called * lingoe. was 
attached, and a few inches above the lingoe a mail was fixed for the 



WEAVING 



control of a warp thread. The strings passed through a drilled 
board which held the mails and warp threads facing the proper reed 
dents. Still higher up, groups of strings were connected to neck 
cords; each group consisted of all strings required to rise and fall 
together constantly. If, for example, in the breadth of a fabric 
there were twelve repeats of a design, twelve strings would be tied 
to the same neck cord, but taken to their respective places in the 



comber board. The 

clearly shown in fig. 27 : A are! 







Hf*H 



FlC. 27v — Diagram of Jacquard 
Machine and Harness. 



parts of a draw loom harness are 

T», and the dots represent mails, 
is the comber board; between 
B and C are mounting strings and 
neck cords, two strings being 
attached to each cord; and C w 
the bottom board. Each neck cord, 
after being led through a per- 
forated bottom board C, and over 
a grooved pulley, was threaded 
through a ring on the top of a 
vertical cord called the simple, and 
passed horizontally to, and tied 
upon a bar rigidly fixed near the 
ceiling of the weaving room. The 
simple cords were similarly at- 
tached to a bar placed near the 
floor. From one hundred to several 
thousands of neck and simple cords 
could be used in one harness. The 
design to be reproduced in cloth 
was read into the parallel lines of 
the simple by looping a piece of 
string round each cord that 

J;overned warp threads to be lifted 
or a given shed; after which all 
the loops were bunched together. 
By pulling at a bunch of loops the 
simple cords were deflected and 
they caused all warp threads con- 
trolled by them to be lifted above 
the level of those undisturbed. 
Similar bunches of loops were 
formed for every shed required for one repeat of a design, and 
they were pulled in succession by the draw-boy, while the weaver 
attended to the batten and picking. 

The Jacquard machine is the most important invention ever 
applied to the hand-loom, but it is not the work of one man; it 
represents the efforts of several inventors whose labours extended 
over three-quarters of a century. This apparatus has taken the 
places of the simple, the loops, the pulleys and the draw-boy of the 
older shedding motion, but other parts of the harness remain un- 
changed. In 172s Basile Bouchon substituted for the bunches of 
looped string an endless band of perforated paper by which the 
simples for any shed could be selected. In 1728 M. Falcon con- 
structed the machine since known as the Jacquard and operated it 
through the medium of perforated cards, but it was attached to the 
simple cords and required a draw-boy to manipulate it. In 1745 
Jacques de Vaucanson united in one machine Bouchon's band of 
paper and the mechanism of Falcon. He placed this machine where 
the pulley box previously stood, and invented mechanism for 
operating it from one centre. 

It is said that about the year 1801 J. M. Jacquard was called upon 
to correct the defects of a certain loom belonging to the state, in 
doing which he asserted that he could produce the desired effects 
by simpler means, and this he undoubtedly accomplished. In or 
about 1804 he discarded the simple and all but a few inches of the 
vertical neck cords; he placed Falcon's apparatus immediately 
over the centre of the loom and severally attached the upper portions 
of the neck cords to the hooks; all of which Vaucanson had previ- 
ously done. He then perforated each face of a quadrangular frame — 
used by Fatcon to guide the cards to the draw-boy, and since known 
as the cylinder — and invented mean* whereby the cylinder could ho 
made to slide horizontally to and fro, and at each outward journey 
make one-quarter of a revolution. Cards wen? so hcH ufMin i.his 
cylinder by pecs that at each rotatory movement one wa,* brought 
into action and another moved away. By means of two treadles 
placed beneath the warp one weaver could operate the cm ire loom. 
The cylinder wa* conl rolled with one foot, the sclrcting cwm with 
the other, and both hands were free to attend, be. picking and beating- 
up. 

In a Jacquard machine the warp thread* are 
upright wires called hooks. See D. ftjj. 37, 1 
extremities and arc normally supported 
which is perforated to permit * 
beneath to be attached to the " 
needles F, — one of which u 
foot of the draw-in 1 
former to permit 01 
hook. The atrajf 
of an inch thro 1 
feat upon bar 
of the nt-tdla 




{MACHINERY 

lateral movement, and small helical springs, a, enclosed in a box F. 
impinge upon the loops of the needles with sufficient force to press 
them and their hooks forward. A frame H, called a griff e, is made 
to rise and fall vertically by a treadle which the weaver actuates 
with one foot. This frame contains a blade for each line of hooks, 
and when the blades are in their lowest position the books are free 
and vertical with their heads immediately over the blades, hence, an 
upward movement given to the griff e would lift all the hooks and 
thereby all the warp threads. Only certain hooks, however, must 
be lifted with the griffe, and the selection is made by a quadrangular 
block of wood, 1, called a cylinder, and cards which are placed upon 
it. Thus, each face of the cylinder has a perforation opposite each 
needle, so that if the cylinder be pressed close to the needle board 



the needle points will enter the holes in the cylinder and remain 
undisturbed. But if a card, which is not perforated in every possible 
place, is interposed between the cylinder and the needles, the un- 
punctured para of the card dose up some of the holes in the 
cylinder, and prevent corresponding needles from entering them. 
Each needle so arrested is thrust back by the advancing card ; its 
spiral spring a is contracted and its hook D is tilted as shown in the 
figure. If at this instant the griffe H ascends, its blades will engage 
the heads of all vertical hooks and lift them, but those dislocated by 
being tilted will remain unlifted So soon as the pressing force of 
a card is removed from the needles the elasticity of the springe 
restores both needles and hooks to their normal positions. Cards are 
perforated by special machinery from a painted design, after which 
they are laced into a chain and passed over conical pegs upon the 
cylinder; the number required to weave any pattern equals the 
number of weft threads in that pattern. The cylinder is generally 
drawn out and turned by each upward movement of the griffe. 
and restored to the needles by each downward movement, so that 
each face in succession is presented to the needles, and each rotatory 
movement brings forward a fresh card. As the griffe rises with 
vertical hooks a shed is formed, and a thread of weft is passed across 
the warp. The griffe then descends and the operation is repeated 
but with a new combination of lifted threads for each card. A 
Jacquard may contain from .100 to 1200 hooks and needles, and 
two or more machines may be mounted upon the same loom. 

Since Jacquard's time attempts have been made to dispense with 
hooks, needles, springs, cards, the cylinder and several other parts; 
machines have also been specially designed for effecting economies 
in the manufacture of certain fabrics; but although some of these 
devices are used in different sections of the industry, the single lift 
Jacquard remains unchanged, except in its details, which have been 
modified to give greater certainty of action to the moving parts. 
The most far-reaching changes are directly due to efforts made to 
adapt the Jacquard to fast running power looms. Alfred Barlow, 
John and William Crossley, and others, devised means whereby two 
hooks could control the same warp thread, and they provided the 
machine with two griffes, each capable of actuating alternate rows 
of hooks. One griffe was caused to ascend as the other descended, 
therefore, if one of the two hooks that operate a warp thread is 
lifted for the first shed, the other hook can begin to rise for a second 
shed immediately the first begins to fall. About half the time 
originally needed for shedding is thus saved, and as a result Jacquards 
can now be run at 210 to 220picks per minute. 

Preparing Warp and Weft fop Weaving. — The power loom is only 
one 01 a scries of machines which revolutionized weaving. Although 
early inventors of the power loom did much to perfect its various 
movements, the commercial results were disappointing, chiefly 
because means had not been devised for preparing warp and weft 
in a suitable manner for such a machine. Wiluam Kadcliffe, of 
Stockport, perceived these shortcomings, and concluded that, by 
division of labour, weaving could be brought into line with, the then 
recently invented,, spinning machinery. He, therefore, set himself 
the task of solving the problems involved, and by inventing the 
beam warper, the dressing sizing machine, the shuttle tongue, and 
the pin cop, he enabled the power loom to become a factor in the 
textile industry. The term preparation embraces winding, warping, 
-ifTn., Yorkshire dressing, dra wing-in. twisting and occasionally 
other opt rations. 

Weft IVti«tet(.— Weft yarn? invariably receive simpler treatment 
than warp yams; in many cases none at nil. Cops and ring spools 
pa** direct to the loom unless their dimensions are unsuited to the 
thuUle*, in which case they, together with wefts bleached or dyed 
in batiks of used in a saturated condition, require winding upon 
it,- iiies. Pirn winders differ greatly in 
e furnished with conical shapcrs, 
cone rollers mounted upon studs. 
imidt' a shaper, is slipped over a 

ertically or horizontally, 

spindle being flattened to 
K whirl is driven from a central 
a rotating pirn, and a vibrating 
L per. Both spindle and pirn 
_i is full, when they become 
rvtr* and cops and ring spools 
used for coarse yarns, which 

us a greater length of weft 

lie used. 



Ij 



E consists 10 trausfertuig yarn h 
to wnrpers, bobbins or cheeses (m 
Machines for this p ur pose are 
actively as soindle and dram. 



MACHINERY) 

i from cops, ring spools 
__...... >(seeCOTioii-Sruninio 

Macjumbky). Macnines for this purpose are of two kinds, which 
are known respectively as spindle and dram. In the former each 
bobbin is placed upon a vertical spindle and rotated by frictions! 
contact; * yarn gutder meanwhile rises and fans far enough to lay 
the threads in even coils between the bobbin flanges. In the latter 
each bobbin, or tube, is laid upon a rotating drum and a thread 
guide moves laterally to and fro; slowly for a bobbin, but quickly 
for a tube. 

Warping. -The number of longitudinal threads in a web vary 
according to their closeness and its breadth, it b the function of a 
warper to provide a sufficient number of parallel threads for a web. 
all of equal length, and to retain their narallrtism. Warpers are of 
three types, viz. mill, beam and sectional. 

Mill warping is the oldest type now ia extensive use. A mill 
warper has a creel in which from 50 to upwards of 500 bobbins or 
cheeses, are supported horizontally upon pegs, and the mill has a 
vertical axis which carries three wheels, upon whose rims vertical 
stave* are. fixed about 1 ft. apart to form a reel, from 5 to upwards 
of so yds. in circumference. The threads from the creel are threaded 
ia succession through leasing needl es, then passed in groups of four 
to twenty threads between .*..*. . 

to the mill staves. Then 

frames which may be moved up inclined planes: one to elevate 
odd threads, the other even ones, and both separations thus formed 
are retained upon separate pegs; this is the lease which enables 
a w ea v er to readily fix the position of a broken thread. As the 
mill rotates the threads form a tape about I in. wide, and the leasing 
apparatus slides down a post to coil the threads spirally upon the 
reel. When the full length of warp has been made the milfis stopped, 
a half beer lease is picked by hand from the divisions formed by the 
runners, and also retained upon pegs. The mill next reverses its 
direction of rotation, and as the leasing, apparatus ascends the 
threads are folded back upon themselves. Hence, if a reel is ao yds. 
ia circumference, and 300 threads are in use to make a warp 600 yds. 
long, and containing moo threads, the reel will make 30 revolutions 
(600+20*30) also 10 reversals, for at each reversal 200 additional 
" will be added (2000 -i-aoo- to). When a warp is complete, 



WEAVING 



4+5 



. and, finally, fastened by 1 . w 
The needles are mounted alternately in two 



strings 1 
loosely I 



they are 

B€OM\ 



1 are passed through the leases, and it is coiled into a ball, 
___eiy linked into a chain, or dropped into a sheet. If a mill has 
its axis horizontal the leasing apparatus must slide horizontally. 

Winding on From*.— After a ball warp has been bleached, dyed 
or sized, the half beers are laid amongst toe teeth of a coarse comb 
to open out the threads to the necessary breadth, ia which condition 
* f are coiled upon a loom beam. 

- -» warping is* the system most extensively used in the cotton 

The creels for these machines have an average capacity of 

about 600 bobbins, and are often V-shaped in plan. In each leg of 
the V the bobbins are arranged in tiers of 16 to ao, and row behind 
sow. The threads are drawn separately between the dents of an 
adjustable reed, then under and over a series of rollers; from here 
they an dropped amongst the teeth of an adjustable comb and led 
down to a warpers beam, which rests upon the surface of a drum. 
As the drum rotates the threads are drawn from the bobbins and 
m app e d in even coils upon the beam. On most of these machines 
sarrninisrn is attached for arresting motion on the fracture of a. 
thread, and also for accurately measuring and recording the lengths 
of warp made. When full, a warpers beam holds threads of much 
greater length than are needed for any warp, but they are insufficient 
w number. Thus: If 500 threads are in use, and warps of the 
aboveHsamed particulars are required, four similar beams must be 
filed (2000 -1- 500 -4) and the threads from all are subsequently 
united. The chief parts of a beam warper may be used as a substitute 
for* mill warper, provided that mechanism be employed to contract 
the threads to the form of a loose rope and coQ them into a cylindrical 
ball, which wul be subsequently treated as a mill warp. Or, one of 
these warpers may be furnished with parts which, when the threads 
are roped. Units them loosely into a .chain. 

Stctionmt warping is chiefly employed for coloured threads and its 
outstanding features consist in contracting the threads to form a 
ribbon of from 3 in. to 12 in, wide. This ribbon is coiled upon a 
Hock placed between flanges, and when completed is set aside until- 
a sufficient number of similar sections have been made; after 
which they are slipped upon a shaft and by endlong pressure con- 
verted into a compact mass* All the threads are then collected and 
transferred in the form of a sheet to a loom beam; each section 
contributing its own width to that of the warp. Sectional warps 
are also made upon horizontal mills by superposing the coils of a 
ribboAof yarn upon a portion of the staves. When the first section 
is fisimil a second is wound against it, and the operation continued 
•Mat al the sections have been made; after which the yarn is run 



ep — ^ % loom Pf ET P- 

YtAkirt dressing is used to make striped warps from balled 
wane which have been dyed in different colours. The operation is 
as loflows: The requisite number of threads of any colour is split 
Cram a uniformly dyed ball and set aside until warps of the remaining 
odours have been similarly treated. The split sections from the 
OTvral balls collectively contain as many threads as are needed for 
i varp. but those threads have still to be placed in their proper 



c This is done by drawing them In groups of two or four 

1 the dents of a reed to a predetermined colour scheme, then 
...... ... .. The 



all are attached to a loom beam which is supported in a frame. 
*■ ' -—---■»■ * - «e» and gssvuis;. and winds the thkcwi» 

to hold the threads taut they are passed 



beam is rotated by stepped cones and gearing, aad winds the threads 
upon itself. But in order u L " " -»---* » 



be* 



leeu weighted rollers and d efl e ct e d by bars arranged ladder* 
; in passug from one part of the machine to another they are 



opened out to the width of the beam. 
—In cases where single yarns are made from short fibrous 
smooth surfaces are obtained by laying the outstanding 
of fibres upon the thread, and fastening the fibres together to 
impart sufficient strength to resist the strains of weaving. This is 
accomplished either by coating a thread or by saturating it with an 
adhesive paste, la hand-loom days the paste was applied by brushes 
to successive stretches of warp while in a loom. But with the advent 
of mech a n i c a l weaving it was found necessary to size a warp before 
plachur it ia a loom. Two systems were evolved, the one invented 
by William Radcltife sizes, dries and beams a warp in one operation . 
the yarn is made to pan in the form of a sheet between a pair of 
rollers, the lower one being partly immersed in warm size. Ia 
rotating, this roller carries upon its surface a film of size which 1c 
deposits upon the threads, while, by pressure, the upper roller 
dis tribu tes the size evenly. Brushes acting automatically smooth 
down the loose.fibres and complete the distribution of size. As the 
yarn advances it la separated by reeds and lease rods, so that in 
passing over steam chests and fans the moisture contained in the 
threads may be quickly evaporated. This machine Is a duplex one, 
for the w aru c ia beams era divided into two sets and placed at opposite 
ends of the machine. Both halves receive similar treat men t as they 



ove to the centre, where the loom beam is placed. 
71s Ball Warp5tHr.--While efforts 



RadcKne' 



were being made to perfect 



dl WarfSmr. 

's dressing machine a system of sizing ball warps was being 
' evolved and this system is still largely employed. 



The 



conaWtsof a long trough, inside which a series of rollers are 

fitted, either in one ho riz o nta l planeor alternately in two horizontal 
planes; but over the front end of the trough a pair of squeezing 
* The trough contains size, which is maintained 



m r , quantity to submerge the 

rollers. Two warps, in the form of loose tapes, may be simultaneously 
led over, under and between the rollers. As the warps advance the 



threads become saturated with size,, and the squeezing rollers press 



out all but a predetermined percentage, the latter being regulated by 
varying the pressure of the upper roller upon the lower one. " 



Ifn 



size be required than can be put into- the threads during one passage 
through the machine, they may be similarly treated a second time. 
This process does not lay all the loose fibres, but the threads remain 
elastic. After sizing* the warps are passed backward and forward, 
and over and under, a set of steam-heated cylinders by which the 
moisture contained in the threads is evaporated; they are next either 
rebelled, or wound upon a loom beam. 
" ' " .^-Fbr ' " 



Slash* Smngsr-fa 
edune has to a large 



some branches of the textile industry it 1 



_ Madeline's 

1 by the slasher, but in 

, 1 still retained under various 

In a slasher the threads from a number of warping 

beams are first combined into one sheet, then plunged into a trough 
filled with size which is kept at a boiling temperature by perforated 
steam pipes : and next squeezed b et w een two pain of rollers mounted 
ia the trough. The under surfaces of the siring rollers are in the size* 
but the upper squeezing rollers are covered with flannel, and rest by 
gravitation upon the lower ones, On leaving the size trough the 



J encircles two steam-heated cylinders whose 

diameters are respectively about 6 ft. and 4 ft.; these quickry expel 
moisture from the yarn, but so much heat is generated that fans 
have to be employed to throw cool air amongst the threads. The 
yarn is next measured, passed above and below rods which separate 
threads that have been fastened together by size, smeared with piece 
marks, and coiled upon a loom beam by means of a slipping friction 
gear. The last-named is employed so that the surface speed of 
winding shall not be affected by the increasing diameter of the loom 
beam. By means of mechanism which greatly reduces the velocities 
of the moving parts, much necessary labour may be performed 
without actually stopping the machine: this relieves the yarn of 
strain, and gives better sizing, yet slashed warps are less elastic than 
dressed, or balled sized ones, and they lack the smoothness of dressed 

Hank swing Is chiefly, but not exclusively, employed for bleached 
and coloured yarns. Machines for doing this work consist of a tank 
which contains size, flanged revolving rollers and two hooks. One 
hook is. made to rotate a definite number of times in one direction, 
then an equal number the reverse way; the other has a weight 
suspended from its outer end and can be made to slide in and out. 
Size in the tank is kept at the required temperature by steam pipes, 
and " doles " of hanks are suspended from the rollers with about 
one-third their length Immersed in size. As the hanks route all pans 
of the yarn enter the size, and when sufficiently treated they are 
removed from the rollers to the hooks where they are twisted to 
wring out excess, and force in required size. If' sufficient size has 
not been added by one treatment, when untwisted, the wrung-out 
banks are passed to a similar machine containing paste of greater 
density than the first there to be again treated ; if necessary this may 



4+6 



WEAVING 



{MACHINERY 



be followed by a third passage. On the completion of siring the 
hanks are removed either to a drying stove or a drying machine. If 
to the former, they are suspended from fixed, horizontal poles in a 
specially heated and ventilated chamber. If to the latter, loose 
poles containing hanks are dropped into recesses in endless chains, 
and slowly earned through a large, heated and ventilated box, being 
partially rotated the while. On reaching the front of the box they 
are removed, brushed and made up into bundles. After which the 
yarn is wound, warped and transferred to a loom beam. 

Drawing-in, or entering, is the operation of passing warp threads 
through the eyes of a shedding harness, in a sequence determined 
by the nature of the pattern to be produced, and the order of lifting 
the several parts. It is effected by passing a hook through each 
harness eye in succession, and each time a thread is placed in the 
hook by an attendant, it is drawn into an eye by the withdrawal of the 
book. 

Twisting or looming consists in twisting, between the finger and 
thumb, the ends of a new warp separately upon those of an old one, 
the remains of which are still in the eyes of the shedding harness. 
The twisted portions adhere sufficiently to permit of all being drawn 
through the eyes simultaneously. 

The Power Loom. — Little is known of the attempts made before the 
beginning of the 17th century to control all parts of a loom from one 
centre, but it is certain" the practical outcome was inconsiderable. 
In the year 1661, a loom was set up in Danzig, for which a claim was 
made that it could weave four or six webs at a time without human 
aid, and be worked night and day ; this was probably a ribbon loom. 
In order to prevent such a machine from injuring the poor people, 
the authorities in Poland suppressed it, and privately strangled or 
drowned the inventor. M. de Gennes, a French naval officer, in 
1678 invented a machine whose chief features consisted in controlling 
the healds by cams, the batten by cams and springs and the shuttle 
by a carrier. From 1678 to 1745 little of importance appears to 
have been done for the mechanical weaving of broadcloth. But in 
the last-named year M. Vaucanson constructed a very ingenious, self* 
acting loom, on which the forerunner of the Jacquard machine was 
mounted; he also adopted de Gennes's shuttle carrier. All early 
attempts to employ mechanical motive power for weaving failed, 
largely because inventors did not realize that success could only be 
reached through revolution. Mechanical preparing and spinning 
machinery had first to be invented, steam was needed for motive 
power, and the industry required reorganization, which included the 
abolition of home labour and the introduction of the factory system. 

During the last quarter of the 18th century it was generally 
believed that, on the expiry of Arkwright's patents, so many spinning 
mills would be erected as to render it impossible to consume at home 
the yarns thus produced, and to export them would destroy the 
weaving industry. Many manufacturers also maintained it to be 
impossible to devise machinery which would bring the production of 
cloth up to that of yarn. It was as a protest against the last-named 
assertions that Dr Edmund Cartwrignt, a clergyman of the church 
of England, turned his attention to mechanical weaving. More 
fortunate than his predecessors, he attacked the problem after much 
initial work had been done, especially that relating to mechanical 
spinning and the factory system, for without these no power loom , 
could succeed. In 1785 Dr Cartwrignt patented his first power loom, 
but it proved to be valueless. In the following year, however, he 
patented another loom which has served as the model for later in* 
ventors to work upon. He was conscious that for a mechanically 
driven loom to become a commercial success, either one person 
would have to attend several machines, or each machine must have 
a greater productive capacity than one manually controlled. The 
thought and ingenuity bestowed by Dr Cartwrignt upon the realiza- 
tion of his ideal were remarkable. He added parts which no loom, 
whether worked manually or mechanically, had previously been 
provided with, namely, a positive Ict-ofl motion, warp and weft stop 
motions, and sizing the warp while the loom was in action. With this 
machine he commenced, at Doncaster.to manufacture fabrics, and 
by so doing discovered many of its shortcomings, and these he 
attempted to remedy: by introducing a crank and eccentrical 
wheels to actuate the batten differentially; by improving the 
picking mechanism ; by n device for stopping inc loom when a 
shuttle failed to enter a shuttle box: by preventing a shuttle Irnrn 
rebounding when in a box; and by stretching the doih with ti . 1 lplei 
that acted automatically, in 1791 Dr Cartwriglu obtained h< l.n* 
patent for weaving machinery ; thia provided \hr loom kith multiple 
shuttle boxes for weaving checks and enj*a Hfipt- Put aft Mutluty 
were unavailing; it beca me apparent thai n$> mothanrani, 1 
perfect, could *ucc«d so long at warps com mutO t 
loom was stationary. His plans forsi<mg vt\cm »hitc a * 
operation, and al^o before being pi .>*"<,;■ 
Still, provided continuity of action could h 
of trie power loom was a-uuicd , aod mtmm I 
end were supplied in 1803, by Willi" 



to labour in their own homes refused employment in mills, owing to 
dislike of the factory system and the long tiaairs of toil which it 
entailed, that spinners and manufacturers were compelled to procure 
assistants from workhouses; this rendered mill life more distasteful 
than it otherwise would have been to hand spinners and weavers. 
Their resentment led them to destroy machinery, to burn down mills, 
to ill-use mill workers and to blame the power loom for the distress 
occasioned by war and political disturbances. Yet improvements in 
every branch of the textile industry followed each other in quick 
successions, and the loom slowly assumed its present shape. By 
using iron instead of wood in its construction, and centring the batten, 
or slay, below instead of above the warp line, the power loom became 
more compact than the hand-loom. 

Motion is communicated to all the working parts from a main 
shaft A (fig. 28), upon which two cranks are bent to cause the slay 
B to oscillate; by toothed wheels thb shaft, drives a second shaft, C, 
at half its own speed. For plain weaving four tappets are fixed upon 
the second shaft, two, D, for moving the shuttle to and fro, and two 
others, E, for moving the healds, L, up and down through the 
medium of treadles M, M. For other schemes of weaving shedding 
tappets are more numerous, and are either loosely mounted upon 
the second shaft, or fixed upon a separate one. In either event 




FlO. 28. — Vertical Section of a Power Loom. 

they are driven by additional gearing, for the revolutions of the 
tappets to those of the crank shaft must be as one is to the number 
of picks in the repeat of the pattern to be woven. Also, when two 
or more shuttles are driven successively from the same side of a 
loom, if the picking tappets rotate with the second shaft, those 
tappets must be free to slide axially in order to keep one out of 
action so long as the other is required to act. The warp beam F 
is often put under the control of chains instead of ropes, as used in 
hand looms, and the chains are attached to adjustably weighted 
levers, G, whereby the effectiveness of the weights may be varied 
at pleasure. In the manufacture of heavy fabnes, however, it may 



be necessary to deliver the warp by positive gearing, which is either 

3 nul 

mine t 
g M*$t 19 beaten home. This 



connected, or otherwise, to 

drawn forward rrryltfrty a* It h n 
the run, ' . roller, I, and 



ng. 

ml. 



Thomas Johnson, by their inv 
' essing sizinr machine* 
For upwards of thirty 



numerous difrkultie* 
organization, and *h 
unused to autcmar 




tking-up motion. The doth is 

lured by passing it over 

to the roller an inter- 



Hbiinp tlay, and is communicated 

inejoom is stopped when the weft 

notion, which depends for its action 

r* of a fcrk> N. These prongs come in 

«sen the selvage of the web and the 

iitttle i*. (hot to the side at which the 

mricT no thread they are not 

Ion informed with a vibrating 

■'•' . .d, and with it a second 

1 In the other hand, if the 

ction. If more than one 

each, instead of alternate 

Eaced beneath the centre 

shuttle* if in falling it 

>m continues in motion, 

s 1*11 far enough beneath the 



MACHINERY] 

•buttle race for a stop to act tipoo a lever and brine; die loom to a 
stand. To prevent a complete wreck of the warp it is essential to 
arrest the loom when a shuttle (ails to reach its appointed box. 
For this purpose there are two devices,which are known respectively 
as fast and loose reed stop motions. The first was invented in 1796 
by Robert Miller, and Us action depends upon the shuttle, as it 
eaters a box, raising two blades, K, which if left down would strike 
against stops, and so disengage the driving gear. The second was 
invented in 1834 by W. H. Hornby and William Ken worthy; it is 
an appliance for liberating the lower part of a reed when a shuttle 
remains in the warp, thus relieving it, for the time being, of its 
function of beating up the weft. On the release of a seed worn toe 
motion of the slay, a dagger stops the loom. Temples must keep a 
fabric distended to the breadth of the warp in the reed, and be self- 
adjusting. This is usually accomplished by small rollers whose 
surfaces are covered with fine, closely set points. The rollers are 
placed near the selvages of a web which is prevented from contracting 
width wise by being drawn tightly over tbepoints. 

Looms are varied in details to suit different kinds of work, but as 
a rule fabrics figured with small patterns are provided with healds 
for shedding as at L. while those with large patterns are provided 
with the Jacquard and its harness. Healds may be operated either 
by tappets or dobbies, but the range of usefulness in tappets is 
generally reached with twelve shafts of healds and with patterns 
Saving sixteen picks to a repeat; where they are unsuitable for 
beald shedding a dobby is used. A dobby may resemble, in con- 
struction and action, a small Jacquard; if so the selection of healds 
that rise and fall for any pick is made by cards. la other types of 



WEAVING 



447 



dobbies the selection is frequently made by lags, into which pegs 
are inserted to pattern in the same manner that cards are perforated. 
By actingupon levers the pegs bring corresponding hooks intocontact 



with osculating griffe bars, and these lift the required hecld shafts. 
Such machines are made single and double acting, and some have 
rollers in place of pegs to form a pattern. When multiple shuttles 
are required for power looms one of two types is selected, namely, 
drop or rotating boxes; the former are applicable to either light 
er heavy looms, but the latter are chiefly confined to light boms. 
As previously stated, Robert Kay invented drop boxes in 1760, 
but they were not successfully applied to the power loom until 
1845, when Squire Digglc patented a simple device for operating 
them automatically. Since his time many other methods have been 
introduced, the most successful of these being o perated indirectly 
from the shedding motion. Revolving boxes were patented in 1843 
by Luke Smith. They consist in mounting a series of shuttles in 
chambers formed in the periphery of a cylinder, and in moving the 
cylinder far enough, in each direction, to bring the required shuttle 
ia line with the picker. 

Automatic Wefi Supply.— Many devices have been added to power 
looms with a view to reduce stoppages, amongst which those for 
the automatic supply of weft are probably the roost important. 
These efforts originated with Charles Parker, who. in 1840, obtained 
the first patent, but no marked success was achieved until 1894, 
when J. H. Northrop patented a cop changer. By his plan a 
cylindrical hopper, placed over one shuttle box, is charged with 
oops or pirns. AC the instant fresh weft becomes necessary the 
lowest cop in the hopper is pressed into a shuttle from above, the 
spent one b pressed out from beneath, and the new weft is led into 
the shuttle eye, while the loom is moving at its normal speed. The 
' sniam is controlled by the weft fork, or by a feeler which acts 
only a predetermined quantity of weft remains inside a shuttle. 



Many inventions are designed to eject an empty shuttle and intro- 

" ~ "" 'tange a cop, but differ in construction and 

, yet, at the time of writing, they have not 



duce a full one; others change a 

action from the Northrop, yet, ai _. . 

been so successful as the last-named. By relieving a weaver of the 

labour of withdrawing, filling, threading and inserting shuttles it 

was seen that a large increase might be made in the number of 

looms allotted to one weaver, provided suitable mechanism could be 

*- '' ' for stopping a loom on the failure of a warp thread. 

Stopping Motions date from 1786, when Dr Cartwright 

d an independent detector from each warp thread until 

e occurred, at which time a detector fell into the path of a 

smd the loom was arrested. The demand for warp stop 

,w«a, however, small until automatic weft supply mechanisms 

~ * The majority of those devices now in use are con- 

r __ Dr Cartwright's lines, but some are so attached to 

that, at one position in every shed, an unbroken thread 

" " " and deu 



W*rp S 

■ttSMSMCd 




detector until a thread fails, when a de- 

„ by a vibrator, and the driving mechanism is dis- 

' In other warp atop motions pairs of threads are crossed 

* and a wire p a ss e d between them is held 

threads until one breaks; the wire then 

with a metal bar, and electro-mechanical 



r Tbs 

4 toupw; 



loom, which was for a long period o p erate d 
j mechanical power could be applied, was 
than a century before Dr Cartwright's in- 

as the Dutch engine loom, and was designed 

to upwards of forty tapes or ribbons simultane- 
> may be regarded as a series of looms mounted 
aving a complete set of parts, and as the first 



practical effort to connect and control alt the motion of weaving 
from one centre. The place and date of its invention are uncertain ; 
but it Is known that in some districts its use was entirely prohibited, 
in others it was strictly limited, and that it was worked in Holland 
about 1690. In England the first patent was obtained by John Kay 
and John Snell, in 1745, for additions which enabled it to be worked 
by hand, by water, or other force, and in 1760 John Snell appears 
to have added the drew harness lor weaving flowered ribbons. In 
1765 a factory ia Manchester was filled with ribbon looms which 
were either invented by M. Vaucanson, or Kay and Snell, but one 
weaver could only attend to one machine. When worked by hand 
it was known as the bar loom, because the weaver oscillated by hand 
a horizontal bar that set in motion all parte of the machine. The 
shuttles and reeds are actuated from the batten, the former originally 
by pegs, but later by a rack and pinion arrangement, which in action 
shoot the shuttles amuttaneously across a web, to the right and left 
alternately, each into the place vacated by its next neighbour. 
One small warp beam is required for each web, but tappets, dobbies, 
or Jacquards are available for dividing the threads. Where differ- 
ently coloured wefts are needed in one web the shuttles are mounted 
in ties* and all raised or lowered at once to bring the proper colour 
in line with the shed. 

In Striod Wearing similar shuttles are added to the battens of 
broad looms in order to diaper small figure effects, in different 
colours or materials, over the surface of broad webs. 

Pile Weaving.— LoomB for weaving piled fabrics differ in certain 
important respects from those employed for ordinary weaving: 
they are also made to differ from each other to suit the type of 
fabric to be manufactured, as, for example, double and single, plain 
and figured, textures. 

In Double Pit* Looms the special features are those that control the* 
pile threads, and those that sever the vertical tines of pile. Two 
ground warps are requisite, and unless they are kept a uniform 
distance apart the pued effects will be irregular. For plain goods 
the pile threads are wound upon two or more beams, and, as they 
move from web to web, cloth-covered rollers deliver them in fixed 
lengths. Meanwhile, a shuttle passes twice in succession through 
each ground warp, and the pile threads in moving above or beneath 
the wefts are bound securely. Both fabrics are furnished with 
taking-up rollers which draw the pieces apart and so stretch the 
uniting pile in front of a knife, which severs it, thus forming two 
pieces at once. A knife may consist of a short blade that merely 
moves to and fro across toe webs, or of a disk mounted upon a 
spindle, which, in moving from side to side, revolves; in either 
case it is automatically sharpened. But if a knife is longer than the 
breadth of a fabric it receives only a slight lateral movement, and 
must be periodically removed for sharpening. In plain and printed 
goods healds control all the warps; but in figured goods, other than 
those made from printed warps, a Jacquard is needed to lift, and a 
creel to bold, the pSe threads. 

Single Pile Looms. — The chief feature which renders most single 
pile looms dissimilar from others is the mechanism by which wires 
are woven upon, and withdrawn automatically from, a ground 
texture. Wires are of two kinds, namely, without *nd with knives; 
the former, being flattened and somewhat pointed, are woven above 
the weft of a ground texture, but beneath the pile, hence, by with- 
drawing tbem, looped pile is formed. A wire terminating in a knife 
with a sloping blade, on being withdrawn, cuts the pile and produces 
a brush-like suiface. The mechanism for operating the wires is 
placed at one end of a loom and consists of an arm which moves in 
and out; at each inward movement a wire is inserted, and at each 
outward movement one is withdrawn. In weaving tapestry carpets,- 
and certain other fabrics, a wire and a shuttle move simultaneously, 
but a shuttle passes through the ground warp, while 1 a wire passes 
beneath the pile. After several wires have been woven upon the 
ground texture the one first inserted b withdrawn by the vibrating 
arm, and at the next inward movement the same wire enters the 
warp near the reed, where it is beaten up with the weft, and. from 
this point, the operation is continuous. Tapestry carpets require 
three warps, one for the ground texture, a second, or stuffing warp, 
to give bulk and elasticity to the tread, and a third to form the 
pile. The last named is printed upon a large drum, thread by 
thread to the colour scheme of the design, then, when the colours 
have been fixed, and the threads accurately placed, they are wound 
upon a beam, and all the warps are operated by healds. For figured 
velvets, and Brussels and Wilton carpets, the pile warp beam is 
replaced by a creel, in order that each thread of pile may be wound 
upon a bobbin and separately tensioned. This is essential, because, 
in the weaving of a design, it is probable that no two threads of 
pile will be required in equal lengths. Creels are made in sections 
called frames, each of which usually carries as many bobbins as 
there are loops of pile across a web, and the number of sections 
equal the number of colours. In weaving these fabrics healds are 
used to govern the ground warp, but a Jacquard is needed for the 
pile. It must form two sheds, the lower one to receive a shuttle, 
the upper one to make a selection of threads beneath which the wire 
is to pass. 

Terry Loom*.— Looms for weaving bued textures, of the Turkish 
towel type, have the reed placed under the control of parts that 
prevent it from advancing its full distance for two pick* *» ' ' 



+4» 



WEAVING 



(ARCHAEOLOGY AND ART 



fieri** thai separate one line of loops from another, At such timet 
the weft is not beaten home* but a broad crack is formed. So soon 
as the reed again moves though its normal *jjace three picks of weft 
are simultaneuiisly driven borne, thus dosing the gap, and causing 
part of the pile to loop upward, the remainder downward. The 
system ji available for plain and figured effects* ^ 

Cause Teiium ate woven in looms having a modified shedding 
harness, which, at predetermined intervals, draws certain warp 
threads crosswise beneath others, and Lifts them while crossed. 
Also, a tensioning device to slacken the crossed threads and thus 
prevent breakages due to excessive strain- At other times the 
shedding h normal. 

Lappet Looms have a series of needles fixed upright in laths, and 
'placed in. a prove cut in the slay, in front of the reed* Each needle 
carries a thread which does not pass through the reed, hence, by 
giving the lathi an endlong movement of varying extent, and lifting 
the needles for each pick, their threads are laid crosswise in the web 
to pattern, fX W* F.) 

AlClIATOLOCV AND ART 

The archaeology of shuttle -weaving shows that for ages the 
use of a loom for weaving plain,, as distinct from ornamental 

or figured textiles, 
whether of fibres 
or of spun threads, 
has been practically 
universal, whilst 
the essential points 
of it* construction 
have been almost 
Uniform in charac- 
ter. An early stage 
in its development, 
anterior probably 
to that when the 
spinning of threads 
had been invented, 
is represented by 
the Loom or frame 
(sec fig. so) used by 
a native of Sarawak 
to make a textile 
with shreds of 
grass. As will be 
seen, the shreds of 




From Rnlh'i ttatiifi *f Jdiu*, 
TcWuve uid HtQMfl. 

FiC 29.— Loom from Sarawak, 



grass for the warp are divided into groups by a flat sword-shaped 
implement which serves as the batten (Latin Spalka). The 
shuttle is passed above it, leaving a weft of grass in between 
the warp; the batten is then moved upwards and compresses 
l he weft into the warp; this method of pressing the weft upwards 
was usually employed by Egyptian and Greek weavers for their 
linen tea tiles of beautiful quality. Fig, 30 gives us an Indian 




the reeds of it the warp threads are passed and fastened lo a 
roller or cylinder. After throwing his shuttle once or twice 
backwards and forwards, the weaver pulls the comb towards 
himself, thereby pressing his weft and warp together, thus making 
the textile which he 1 
gradually winds from 
time lo lime on to the 
roller. This advance in 
the construction of the 
loom is also virtually 
of undateable age; and 
except for more Sub- 
stantial const rue l ion , 
there is little difference 
in main principles be- 
tween it and the 
medieval loom of fig. 
31, With such looms, 
and by arranging 
coloured warp threads 
in a given order and 
then weaving into 
them coloured shuttle 
or weft threads, simple 
textiles with stripes 
and chequer patterns Fn; r jr. — Medieval Ijvuti, from a Cut 
could be and were, by J 01t Amman; middle of the loth 
produced;' but lexliks ""*** 

of complex patterns and textures necessitated the more 
complicated apparatus . that belongs to a later stage in 
the evolution of the loom. Fig. 32 is from a Chinese 
drawing, illustrating the description given in a Chinese book 
published in 1 2 to on the art of weaving intricate designs. 
The traditions and records of such figured weaving* are far 
older than the date of this book* As spun silken threads were 
brought into use, so the development of looms with increasing 
numbers of headles and other mechanical facilities for this 
sort of weaving seems to have started. But as far hack as 3600 
b.c> the Chinese were the only cultivators of silk, 1 the delicacy 
and fineness of which must have postulated possibilities in 









Fro. jo.— Indian |{iU Tril 

Hill tribesman weaving with spun 
the loom fitted with rudely 
weaver lifts and lower* all 
he may throw his shnti 
Besides the headles there 



vOom for Figured Weaving (Photo)* 

is in which grasses, wools 
ie is probably correct to credit 
ler inventor* of looms for weaving 
Brother nations (acquainted 
w with wonder. At the 
Chinese dexterity in 
i was apparently in 
" Cing woven by thtf 
t elaborate almost 



ARCHAEOLOGY AND ART) 



WEAVING 



449 



as those of the present day, with dragons, phoenixes, mystical 
bird forms, flowers and fruits. 1 At that time even Egypt, 
Assyria or Babylonia, Greece and Rome, seem to have been only 
learning of the (act that there was such a material as silk.* 
Their shuttle-weaving had been and was then concerned with 
spun wool and flax and possibly some cotton, whilst the orna- 
mentation of their textiles, although sparkling on occasion with 
golden threads, was done apparently not by shuttle-weaving but 
by either embroidery or a sort of compromise between darning 
and weaving from which tapestry weaving descended (see 
Tapestry). The range of their colours was limited, reds, purples 
and yellows being the chief; and their shuttle- weaving was 
principally concerned with plain stuffs, and in a much smaller 
degree with striped, spotted and chequered fabrics. Remains 
of these, whether made by Egyptians thousands of years B.C., 
by Scandinavians of the early Bronze Age, by lake dwellers, 
by Aztecs or Peruvians long before the Spanish Conquest, 
display little if any technical difference when compared with 
those woven by nomads in Asia, hill tribes in India and natives 
in Central Africa and islands of the Pacific Such ornamental 
effect as is seen in them depends upon the repetition of stripes 
or very simple crossing forms, still this principle of repetition 
is a prominent factor in more intricate designs which are shuttle- 
woven in broad looms and lengths of stuff. 

The world's apparent indebtedness to the Chinese for knowledge 
of figured shuttle-weaving leads to some consideration of their early 
overland commerce westwards. About 200 B.C. during the Han 
Dynasty Chinese trade had > extended beyond inner Asia to the 
confines of the Graeco-Parthian empire, then at its zenith, and the 
protection of the route by which the Seres (Chinese) sent their 
merchandise was fully recognized as a matter of importance. Seventy 
years later the emperor of China sent a certain Chang Kien on a 
mission to the Indo-Scythians; and according to his records the 
people as far west as Bactria (adjacent to the Graeco-Parthian 
territory) were knowing traders, and amongst other things under- 
stood the preparation of silk. Chinese weaving* had for some time 
been coming into Persia, and doubtless instigated the more skilled 
wearers there to adapt their shuttle looms in course of time to the 
weaving of stuffs with greater variety of effects than had been 
hitherto obtained by them; and into Persian designs were intro- 
duced details taken not only from Chinese textiles, but also from 
sculptured, embroidered and other ornament of Graeco-Parthbn and 
earlier Babylonian styles. In A.D. 97 Chinese enterprise in still 
furthering their trade relations with the Far West is at least sug- 
gested by the fact that envoys from the emperor of China to Rome 
actually reached the eastern shores of the Medi t erranean, but 
turned back frightened by the Parthian accounts of the terrors of 
the sea voyage. 

Early in the 3rd century a.dl Hefiogabalus is reputed to have been 
amongst the first of the Roman emperors to wear garments entirely 
of silk (holosericum), which, if figured (as » not unlikely), were 
probably of Syrian or Persian manufacture. Sklonius Apollinaris 
(5th century} writes of Persian patterned stuffs, — " Bring forth 
brilliant cushions and stuffs on which, produced by a miracle of art, 
we behold the fierce Parthian with his head turned back on a prancing 
steed; now escaping, now returning to hurl his spear, by turns 
fleeing from and putting to flight wild animals whom ne pursues " — 
a description quite appropriate to .such silk weaving as that in fig. 33. 
A number of kindred pieces have' been recovered of late years from 
Egyptian burial-places of the Roman period. The Persians of the 
Saasanian dynasty (3rd to 7th century) traded in silks with Romans 
and Byzantines; King Chosroes (about 570) encouraged the trade, 
and ornamental weaving seems to have been an industry of some 
standing at Bagdad and other towns north, east and south, e.e. 
Hamadan, Kaxvin Kashan, Yesd Persepolis, &c To the north- 
west of Persia and north of Syria lay the Byzantine region of Anatolia 
(now Asia Minor), some towns in which became noted for their fine 
weavings: the mass of the population there was well off in the 6th 
century, the country highly cultivated and prosperous, and justice 
fairly administered,' thus affording favourable conditions lor an 
industry like ornamental weaving, which had been and was prosper- 
ing in neighbouring Syrian districts. 



* See Ckmem Art. by Stephen W. Bushel], C.M.G., B.S&, M.D. 
(London, 1006), vol. n. p. 0$. 
' Aristotle describes the silk- worm and its cocoon. Virgil-Martial 
in writers (including Pliny) throw scarcely more light 
of silken stuffs than that they were of rarity and 
by opulent Romans. Propettnis (19 a.c) writes .of 
ats of varied tissue," and of Cynthia that perchance 
Arabian Sflk." 

, Studies in ike History and Art cf Ike Aston 
of Aberdeen, 1906). 




Between the 1st and 6th centuries A.D., then, knowledge of silk 
and us value in fine weaving was spreading itself, not only in the 
further western regions of Southern Asia, but also in Egypt, where 
Greek and Roman taste influenced the works of Copts or those 




Fig. 33.— Syrian or Persian Silk Weaving of the 5th Century, 
natives who maintained old Egyptian traditions in technical handi- 
crafts. Of peculiar interest in this connexion are fragments of flax 
(yellow and- brown) woven with a compatatively elaborate texture, 
as well as in patterns (see fig. 34) which suggest an ordinary type 
of Roman pavement designs (3rd centuty and earlier), the basis of 
which is roundels linked together. Stuffs in which the style of 




Fko. 34.— Syrian and Coptic Flax Weaving of the 5th or 6th 
Century, 
patterns, though comparatively simple, Is rather more Oriental, are 
of flax and wool, and the official robes of Roman consuls seem to 
have been of this character, and amongst other goods may have been 
made with small technical difference at Rome * or at Fostat (Cairo) 



4 In 360 by order of the emperors Valens and Valentinian the 
making of textiles in which 'gold and silken threads were introduced 
'to women's workrooms or gynecia (see Codex of Theo- 



dosius, lib. x. tit. 21, lex 1). In the 3th century the weaving of 
silken, tunics and mantles was prohibited (Codex Theodosius, fin. x. 
tit. 21, lex 3). 



+5° 



WEAVING 



[ARCHAEOLOGY AND ART 



or Alexandria or other towns in Lower Egy 
Contemporaneously the development of simi! 



>t aa well aa in Syria, 
ar weaving appears to 










Fig. ^.-^-Syriais ot Anatolian Silk Weaving of the $th Century 
with Samson and the Lion (repeated}. 

nave been proceeding In Byzantine provinces, though perhaps not in 
so marked a way a$ when Justinian systematized ssriculture 1 an J 
still further stimulated shuttle-weaving in the town of Byzantium 

(Coa&taminopie) ttacM 

in a,0, 553, 

For examples of the 
elaborate figure weav- 
ing! at that time 
we have to rely upon 
such as have been 
rescued in the service of 
archaeology from th^ 
oblivion of tomb* ami 
burial - places. The 
dates of some speci- 
mens can be fixed with 
almost certainty Ly 
means of nearly con- 
temporary records, r x 
those of Sidonius 
ApollinartB and birr 
Hia the LJUra- 
rian ; comparison and 
classification lead to 
almost conclusive in- 
ferences ai to the date* 
of other examples. 
Broadly sneaking,, the 
earlier of these remains 
(£«, from about the 
4th to the 7th century J 
seem to be either of 
Pert 




FiC. j&.— Byzantine Red Slifc and Gold 
Th read weaving of t he 1 1 th Century, 
of lions and pairs of small bird*. 



Byzantine styles, though one may do so in respect of certain Moslem 
(Moorish and Saracen jc) weaving, which have deductive features 




possi 
aad 



FiG. 57 — Part of Silk Wrapping of the Emperor Charlemagne, 
.il 'ly of Bagdad manufacture* oih Century , with Fanciful Elephant 
Sacred Tree device in a Roundel* 

of design, and were produced in the south of Spain and in. Sicily 
about a period from the roth century to the i^ih 

Fig. 35, from a piece of sarcenet with repeated parallel series of 
Samsons and lions for gladiators?)* u probably $th~<cemury Syrian or 




jecu were occasionally ._ 
•7th and the 13th c 
lore, and it is difficult if 
between tho*e of Romau<B; 




k, Mth Century, with Ogivad 
•bout pairs of Birds, ftt 

. are pieces with scenes of the Annuncla* 
with artistic birds and Lioai. in die 
mi of the Chapel of St Lawrence ia 



ARCHAEOLOGY AND ARTI 



WEAVING 



45i 



the old Lateran Palace, Rome, Scriptural subjects 1 teem to be 
typical of those which were coodemaed by Anatolian and Syrian 
fathers of the Christian church as early as in the late 4th century, 
and Asterius, bishop of Amasus, in denouncing the 1 jxury of the rich 
in flaunting themselves in such inappropriately decorated silks, has 



left a most useful description of the subjects decorating them. 

Of 



long maintained in Syrian and Byzantine patterns was that 
ited * * * " ** * "" "* * * ** " 



. . _ roundels, within which other than scriptural subjects 
wrought, «.f. hunters on horseback (as in fig. 33), fantastic 
lis and birds, singly or in pairs, confronting one another or back 



f rammg, composed of animals, birds and the like, formally treated 
and repeated vertically and horizontally, as in fig. 36. which is from a 
silk and gold thread shuttle-weaving classified as Byzantine of the 
nth century manufacture. But this style of composition also 
occurs in a Sassanian or Syrian silk of the 5th century at Le Mans,* 
and again in the Cope of St Maxim at Chinon, which is powdered with 
panthers. Conventional eagles (reminiscent perhaps of the Roman 
Eagle), with scale patterns on their breasts and wings, are woven in 
the wrappings r ep ute d to have been given by the Empress Placidia 
for the corpse of St Germain (448) preserved at the church of St 
Eusebius at Auxerre. Some likeness 
in style may be detected between 
these latter and a fragment of one of 
the wrappings of St Cuthbert (d. 688) 
at Durham, though in this case the 
elaborate ornamentation is set within 
a roundel Prior to the discovery of 
woven silks in the Akhmin cemeteries, 
the periods to which tradition and 
association had ascribed the Auxerre 
and Durham specimens were con- 
sidered too early; but there now 
seems to be far less reason to question 
that ascription. Fig. 37 is from part 
of a silken wrapping of Charlemagne 
(early oth century) now at Aix-la- 
Chapelle. It bears a Greek inscrip- 
tion of the names of Peter, governor of 
Negropont, and Michael, chamberlain 
of the Imperial Chambers, and this it 
taken by some authorities as evidence < 
that the weaving was made at Byzan- 
tium. On the other band, Eginnard, 
Charlemagne's secretary, has written 
of gifts, including rich textiles pre- 
sented in his day by Haroun al 
Rasthid to the emperor, 4 . and a fabric 
like that in question might have been 
math: quirt.' possibly even at Baghdad 
in the 9*h century or earlier. In the 
I uh century amongst the handicrafts- 
men in the city of Byzantium were 
many skilled native and foreign 
weavers; and their designs generally 
appear to reflect the style of earlier 
Persianesque and Syrian taste. 

About the 12th century the well- 
used pattern scheme of roundels 
became more or less superseded by 
one of continuous ovals, of ogivai 
framings (see fig. 38), contemporary 
with which are Saracenic patterns 
based on hexagonal and star-shape 
fro me*. Vmliin these new varieties 
of p,- • r r ! ; mings recur the Byzan- 
tine and Y\ r-oanesflue pairs of birds, 
animoK &c. But distinct from these 
is t he marc restricted style which has 
been mentioned. It had arisen under 
the iiftiiinrff for the most part of the 
Far i my KhuLifs, not only in Syrto and 
Alexandria hut also in Sicily and 

A. Part of a narrow band or orphrey woven in gold and sUk threads with a Latin inscription !£ ll l 1L ' rn S £ lin ' . p »«««« « «*» 

along the edges. German work of the 13th century. M j^j^racenic type are usually 

B. Part of a broad band or orphrey woven in gold and silk threads with fibres rf the Crucffixkm ^"P 01 " 1 °* a "^cession of parallel 

and the Aanunciation (?). It bears an mscriotkm. Odilia me fecit. It is orobablv German bandj— narrow and wide— containing 
work of the 13th century. 
C and D. Specimens of Cologne orphrey* woven in silk and gold threads; C bears 
tion, and the faces of the Virgin and Child are embroidered. 




Fig. 39. — Specimens of various Small Loom Weavings between the 7th and 15th centuries. 



probably German Danos-^oarrpw ana wwe— containing 

ikvuumjt ^ Ktia * u Kufic inscriptions, groups of small 

rs a Latin inscrio- """cate ..geometrical . devices, and 

occasionally — * — • -— * — ■ — f - 

Part of a narrow band woven in gold and silk threads with chevron spaces filled with delicate ana .i • iL t 

scroll ornament, among which are occasional animal and bird devices. Possibly English or °* "*** ***** m 

French work of the'Mth century. elsewhere (see 



French work of the'Mth century. 
Part of a narrow band or clavus from a Coptic tunic of the oth or 10th century. 

to back, frequently with a sacred tree device* between them. A 
piece of Sassanian suit, probably of the 6th century, shows a gryphon 
practically identical with that sculptured on the patterned saddle- 
doth of a king (Chosroes II.?) in the archway to the garden of the 
king's palace at Kermchah. 
Leas common perhaps are patterns) without roundel or other 



> The silken wrappings of St WOibald (700-786). a founder of the 
church at Eichstatt, where they are still preserved, are woven with 
repeated roundels, each enclosing a Daniel between two lions, and are 
perhaps Byzantine of the 8th century. 

* See Sir George Bird wood's chapter on Knop and Flower pat* 
ia his Industrial Arts of India, tn which this device of and 



i as well as its relation and that of the horn, 
r ia Greek, Roman and even 



occasionally conventional animals 
A 13th-century example 
pattern has been given 
. Brocade, fig. 1). 
Almeria, Malaga, Grenada and 
Seville were notable Moorish weav- 
ing places in Spain for such pstterned silks and stuffs as these; 
and even after the Christian conquest of Grenada at the end of the 
15th century this city retained its celebrity for silks woven " a la 
Moresque.'' 

In Sicily ao similar survival of Saracenic influence seems to have 
been as strongly maintained, notwithstanding the numerous Saracen 
weavers at work in the island (or years before the Royal factory for 
silk weaving came to be organised at Palermo under Norman 
supremacy. According to the usual story, Roger of Sicily, or Roger 
Guiscard, who in 1 147 made a successful raid on the shores of Attica, 
and took Athens, Thebes and Corinth, carried off as prisoners a 
number of Greek (Byzantine) weavers and settled them at Palermo in 
the factory known as the Hotel des Tiraz A mixture of Byzantine 



> See Abkidaire farckSohgie (June 1854). 
* JUchvdm, *c. by Francisque Michel, i. 40. 



+52 



WEAVING 



and Saracenic styles of textile patterns ensued; and this peculiarity I 
is demonstrated in many of the rich fabrics attributed to south and 
north Italian weavers from the 1 2th century onwards. From Palermo | 



(ARCHAEOLOGY AND ART 
GsrwMca 



portant part, and possibly was applicable to early brocades. 

or Carmuk (Arab Kamkla, from the Chinese Ktmko — also brocade) 

was another handsome stuff corresponding in a way with Indian 




Apparel of a Dalmatic woven in Venice late in the 15th century, 
with the Virgin in glory. 



B C 

Part of Orphrey with Part of Orphrey, with the 

the Virgin and Child (Siena Annunciation (Florentine weav- 

weaving, 1425-1450). tag, late 15th century) 



Fig. 40. 



the art of ornamental weaving in this style soon extended into the 
mainland, and from Apulia a bishop of St Evroul in Normandy is 
mentioned as having obtained a number of silken goods in the 12th 
century. From the 13th century onwards Lucra, Florrr.re. Milan. 
Genoa and! Venice became important centres, using not only im- 
ported silk, but also such as was being then cultivated in I oily, for 
prricukure had become an Italian industry early in the 13th century, 
Wandering Saracenic and Byzantine weavers even before that time 
had strayed or been taken to work at placet in Germany, France and 
Briuin, but the output of their productions in northern countries 
v;i- . l I r: 1 . 1 ■ t infinitesimal as compared wj j,, i 1l1.it nij" the far grtftttf 
lt.iti.tn output, nevertheless they were sowing the seeds of a harvest 
to be reaped centuries lata - by these more northerly European 
countries. 

To the influence of these early sporadic weavings we seem to trace 
a distinctive class of work, which was done by inmates of monasteries 
and convents as well as by devout ladies, in little looms, for use as 
stoics, maniples, omtireys and similar narrow bands. A rhyming 
chronicler of the 13th century paraphrases the older record by Egin- 
hafd of the sltil! nf Charlemagne' a daughters in slilfc weaving, " ouvrer 
en *oie en taulieles " or small looms, 1 The illustrations, in fig P 39 

{;ive varieties of this class of work between the 7c.lt and 1 5th cmuinc*, 
or which Cologne especially seems to have become famous in the- 
15th century. Venice also made work of corns ponding character: 
and the designs were evidently furnished by or directly adapted from 
the compositions of such artists as those who produced the notable 
German and Venetian woodcuts of the 15th century (fig, 40). 

Whilst the bulk of the Italian patterned stuffs issuing in great 
length* from large looms wen* of afk, a good many also were woven 
in wool*, or wools intermixed with «ilk*> The earlier of the silk 
In tile* — Persian. Syrian and Byzantine— were of the nature of 
sarcenet and taffetas; later in development are satins* damask 
satins, brocades, and still later (m. about the end of the 14th century} 
come Italian velvets and cloths of gold, which quite tra ascended 
the ancient and less substantial attsEc doths of the early Roman 
fieriod. Medieval inventories and records ronUin many names of 
lev riles, but the exact technical meaning of several of them is un- 
certain, Gemini. Sandal . SynJ^nvs seem to relate to such material* 
as sarcenet nt t.ilTt-1,1 : uta*i> from low Latin, U held by some writer* 
\o l*e ol ■ ■ * as Mfflif or **amitr t so culled betauw the we fi 



Kincobs. Velvet (Italian peUuia— shaggy) is vduiau in French docti- 
ments ol the 14th century, and is a finely piled material of silk, and on 
that account may have been called Samit, as the German word 





<jWf.V-AiFr, Slid ii n 

w w been general 
stpUve.1 






f North Julian Sisk Wejving of the 141 h tentury, 
ed on an ogival basis wdh fantastic bird . ome 
ich arr of s Chinese type, and Per*ianc*que cone forms containing 
ah.im Arabic inscriptions. 

\mei implies velvet, as does the Russian Ammiu. Diaper 

aspre, meaning patterned] was u«d not Only to denote a 

lar and geometrx patterning but in tome ea^e* * special sort 

nen or silk* Muslin from Mosul and gau« from Ciaa, are two 



ARCHAEOLOGY AND ART! 



WEAVING 



wetl-lcaown and kindred textiles. Frequently one metis with odd 
phrases such as " silk of Brydges " (Bruges), " silk domes " (from 
Dorneck), " sheets of raynes " (Rheims), and " fuschan in Appules " 
(Naples fustian). 



Many of the foregoing stuffs are identifiable by textures peculiar to 
them; this is, however, not so as regards their ornamental patterns, 
for these are frequently interchanged, the same class of patterns 
appearing in satin damasks, velvets and brocades. This is particu- 
larly the case with 13th* and 14th-century Italian stuffs. In the 
patterns of these, as previously suggested, are strong traces of Sara- 
cenic and Byzantine motives, intermingled with badges, heraldic 
devices, human figures^eagles, falcons, hounds, lions, harts, boards, 
leopards, rays of fight, Peratancsque pine cone and cloud forms, ana 
even Chinese mystical birds, symmetrically distributed, without 
framings, as a rule, though elaborations of the ogival frame or scheme 
are also met with, but less frequently (see fig. 41). Such fabrics, 
made in the main by Lucchese weavers, appear to have been traded 
in with other European countries. But besides trade records, there 
are others relating to Lucchese weavers who left their own town under 
stress of circumstances, civil wars and the like, to settle and work 
elsewhere, as in France and Flanders, during the ijtth century. 
Nevertheless the northern parts of Italy were the fertile places for 
producing fine types of patterned textiles used by Italian and other 




Fio. 42.- 



-Damask and Brocade Silk Fabric 
facture of the 15th century. 



Italian 



European courts and nobles: and if the art seriously dwindled in 
the town of Lucca, it flourished conspicuously, from the end of the 
14th century and up to the beginning of the 16th century, in Venice, 
Bologna, Genoa, Florence and Milan. There was nothing similar 
co compete with it in France, Germany or England. The identifica- 
tion of its splendid varieties is made possible upon referring to 
contemporary paintings by Orcagna, Cnvelli, Spinello Aretino and 
later Italian masters, as well as to those of the Flemish School, 
Gheraet David, Mabuse, &c. 

Of a specially distinct class, very dignified in effect, are patterns 
of the 15th century based upon the repetition of conventional 
pentagooally constructed leaf panels, clearly defined in outline, each 
encircling a pomegranate or cone form around which radiate small 
leaves or blossoms; though they were more richly developed in 
superb velvets and cloths of gold, for which Florence; Venice and 

"** 1 famed, this type of design is also woven in less costly 

A composite unusual and beautiful design of another 
kind is given in fig. 42. Repeated large leaf shapes can just be 
detected in it, but more remarkable are the bunches of radiating 
stalks of wheat-ears and cornflowers within them ; whilst about them, 
arranged in hexagonal trellising, are leafy bars, small birds, crowns, 
pomegranates and other daintily depicted plant forms. This piece 
of damask combined with brocade weaving is of late 15th century 
manufacture: and after the opening of the next century the 
freedom Jtowards realistic treatment, which we find here, enters 
into many of the Italian patterns. In some of them, however, an 
Ottoman or Anatolian feeling is apparent, as in fig. 43 from a figured 
silk which is considered to have been made in Venice. The chained 
dogs and birds in this design recall the rather more formal ones in 
Lucchese patterns of a hundred and fifty years earlier, whereas the 
Wngtby serrated leaves and elongated flower devices charged with 



materials. 



+53 

and hyacinths depicted on a smaller scale are unmis- 
takably Ottoman. Persian fabrics of rather thin silk material or 
taffetas like that of the original of this were also being woven with 
varieties of floral designs, as well as others portraying Persian 
stories. At this period there was considerable activity in weaving 
sumptuous stuffs at Broussa and Constantinople (fig. 44). Arabic 
and Turkish wea v e rs often came over to be employed in Venice, 
blending Italian and Oriental characteristics into their designs. 

In Spain during the early 16th century we have traces of Hispano- 
Moresque influence in the overlapping and interlocking nondescript 
forms; but Spanish weavings are hardly comparable in quality 
with the Italian of the same time. In the middle of this century 
cloths of gold or of silver, with the pattern details raised in velvet 
and brocateUes of similar 
formal design wer»» marV | 
in greater qus 
Italy for costume?! <■{ 
men and women. T In- 
frequent basis *i\ most nf I 
the designs is the ogival 
framework already re- 
ferred to, but it is miiili 
elaborated with detail 
and combined with the J 
cone device of a previous 
century. The omantt na- 
tion of this style is purely 1 
conventional tliT..ujK ■. 
the various device* h.1 
ing little of tr- 
ance of actui 
like fruit, leave;, ftt 

The time, however, 
was dose at hand when j 
a more general reaction I 
was to set in. in the j 
direction of designs re- 
presenting forms very 
nearly as they actually 
look, an example of i 
which occurs in h% 45. 
with its leaf forma anil | 
crowns. This from 
class of silk dama*k 
bmpas, which 11 kindml 
to brocatdle; re ■ 1 «? r. j 
in lampas is th,it 
ground is dilkuru 
colour from that of cite 
ornament on it* and a* 
In the case of portion* of 
brocateiles its texture it 
of taffeta or sarcenet 
quality. 1 At the end of 
the 16th century a pe- 
culiar type of pit 1 cm 
consists of repetition «• in 
different positions of tfM 
same, detail treated real- 
istically or pun Lv tifria- 
mentally, littk- ti any- 
thing 01 quite the time 
character having been 
previously destined vj j 
such fig. 46, with its 
repeated realistic leafy Fig. 43.— Piece of Venetian Silk Weav- 
logs variously placed, is ing showing Ottoman influence in the 
an example. The pnn- design (16th century), 
ciple in the composition 

of these patterns, but with a greater variety of conventional detail, 
is followed in French 17th century examples. However, as soon as 
figured weaving became well organized in France at this time, a 
school of designers arose in that country who adopted a realism that 
predominated in French patterns during the succeeding! 50 years, 
that is, from Louis XIV. to the end of the 18th century. Throughout 
this period French figured stuffs seem to surpass those of other 
countries. " If, " writes Monsieur Parisct, " any account is to be 
taken of the weavers during the 14th and 15th centuries who made 
cloths and velvets of silk at Paris, Rouen, Lyons.Nimes and Avignon, 
it must be remembered that they were almost solely Italian emigrants 
from Lucca and Florence, who had fled their towns during troublous 
times. " By a charter granted by Francis I. to Lyons, foreign and 
native workmen were encouraged to promote the city's interests in 
trade and manufacture; still, it is not until the 17th century that 
Lyons really asserts herself in producing fabrics possessing French 
taste and ornamentation. The more important designs were supplied 
by trained artists of whom Reval. a pupil of Le Brun, the M onndpal 
of the Academic des Beaux Arts founded by Colbert in Pans (1648), 
Pillement and Philippe de la Salle in the 18th century, may be 

'See Ornament in European Silks (London. 1899). p. *5* 




454 



WEAVING 



(ARCHAEOLOGY AND ART 



named. Their influence in the domain of fanciful, and at time* ; 
extravagant realistic, floral patterns was widespread. Soon after 
the revocation of the Edict of Nantes, in consequence of which 
thousands of Protestant weavers left France, factories for weaving 

silks and mixed materials 
with patterns imitating 
the successive French 
phases became organized 
at Spitalficlds, in 
Cheshire, Yorkshire, 
Norfolk and elsewhere 
in England, as well as 
in Germany at Crcfcld, 
Elbcrfcld, Barmen ana 
Weisscn. 

Entirely distinct from 
what has already been 
discussed is a branch of 
. artistic weaving con- 
if ccrned with the decora- 
tion of linens, that 
flourished notably in 
Italy towards the end 
of the 15th century and 
in the 16th century. 
From early times long 
and narrow Italian tabic- 
cloths were enriched 
with ornament of linen 
or cotton threads of a 
single- colour, and 
Signora Isabella Erera 
has written at some 
Fie. 44.— Ottoman (Anatolian) Sflk and I , ** 1 . * bo " t thcm '! 
Cold Thread Weaving of the 16th century, illustrating, the result of 
with ogival framed ornament. The original her investigations with 
is stated to have come from a sultana's fcveral examples cuUcd 
tomb at Droussa or Constantinople. J rom paintings by Pictro 

Lorenzetto of Siena 
(1140), by Chirlandaja (1447-1490), &c. In Leonardo da Vinci's 
painting of the Last Supper, now in the Louvre, the border of the 
tablecloth is very like many examples of this sort of textile in the 
Victoria and Albert Museum, South Kensington. Their char- 
acteristic ornament, in rather heavy blue thread, consists of quaint 
animals and birds in pairs, which arc evident derivations of those so 
often seen in Italo-Byzantine and Lucchcse silks and brocades. Be- 




larly with Perugia. In the 16th century, work of similar (style 1 
produced, but it was lighter and flatter in texture and often d 





Fie. 45. — Italian Silk Damask or Lampaa, with purple ground 1 
pattern of late 16th century. 



aides animals and birds, reversed names and 
introduced, e.g. " Amor " for " " " " *" 
and " Eroma^' for " Amore," 
patterns probably date ' 
fuller ones were ce ' 
century. An in 
cloths woven in 
.which is suggest 
LSeethti 




Flo. 46. — Italian Silk Damask or Lampaa of late 16th century, 
with pattern of repeated leafy logs. 

with red or yellow silk, and embroidery was sometimes added to the 
weaving. 

The most important and probably the best known class of later 
ornamental linen weaving is that of damask household napcry, which, 
as a reflection of satin damask, was developed in the flax-growing 
regions of Saxony, Flanders and North France, during the late 15th 
or early 16th century; it was then rare and acquired for use by 
wealthy persons only.* The style of design in the better of the old 
linen damasks has some kinship with that of bold 15th- and 16th- 
century woodcuts of the Flemish or German schools. To some 
extent these damask figure subjects recall those of the coloured 
Cologne and Venetian orphreys for copes and apparels for dal- 
matics. . The early history of linen damask is obscure, but a great 
many of its' results are preserved in England. A napkin with the 
royal shield of Henry VII., the supporters within the garter 
surmounted by the crown, is in the Victoria and Albert Museum 
where it is called Flemish. On the other hand it is possibly the 
work of Flemings in England, since from the time of Edward I. 
and for a hundredyears " a constant stream of emigrants passed 
from Flanders to England."* The Victoria and Albert Museum 
contains an early 16th-century tablecloth in damask linen of 
German or Flemish manufacture with various subjects, chiefly 
religious and moral : Gideon being shown as a kneeling knight, the 
fleece of wool on the ground being near him, while from above the 
I I dew falls on it; below Gideon is the Virgin Mary and the unicorn, 
Jm and lower down an angel with seven dogs heads typifying 
I different virtues as shown in the lettering—-^aei, spes, charitas, Ac. 
In another which was probably made in England (at Norwich?) 
by Flemings during the second half of the 16th century, we find 
St George and the Dragon, the royal arms of Queen Anne Boleyn, 
the badges of Queen Anne Boleyn and Queen Elizabeth, the 
crowned Tudor Rose, and repeated portraits of Queen Elizabeth, 
with the legend below, " God save tneQueene." This specimen is 
also in the victoria and Albeit Museum. A hundred years later 
in date is a tablecloth on which is a view of old St Paul's (burnt 
in 1666), while above and below occurs the wreathed shield of the 
City of London. A different class of linen, with the design done in 
blue, was evidently, from the inscriptions on it, the work of a 
German or Fleming, and probably woven in Germany about 
1730. Here we find the wreathed arms of the City of London, 
a view of " London," and " George der II. Kftnig in Engelland 
mounted on horseback. In this specimen the design is repeated, and 
• Tn* earl of Northumberland (1512) is said to have had but eight 
cloths for his personal use, while his large retinue of servants 
— " one, which was washed once a month. (See notes by Rev. 
"vcJyn White on damask linen. Proceeding* 0/ Society of 
ies, second series, vol. xx. p. 132.) 

ftev. C H. Evelyn White s paper on damask linen, Pro* 
oj Society 0/ Antiquaries, second scries, vol. xx. pp. 130-140, 



WBB— WEBBR, C. VOtf 



sot teversed, as it' the' caw with the earner pieces, A large 
collection of this German damask weaving with coloured thread 
was formed under the auspices of the Royal Kunstgcwerbe 
Museum at Dresden. 1 The north-eastern Irish industry of damask 
weaving owe* much to French Protestant refugees, who settled 
there towards the close of the 17th century, though linen manu- 
facture had been established in the district by a colony of Scots 
in 1634. Dunfermline in Scotland is said to produce as much 
damask as the rest of Europe, but there are important manufactories 
of it at Courtrai and Liege in Belgium, in Silesia, Austria and else- 



LiTSitATUBB.— The following are titles of a few works on weaving, 
from which much important information on the subject may be 
derived: — J. Bezon, Dictionnaire des Hssus (8 vols., Paris, 1850- 
1863), more or less technical only, Dictumnairt des sciences (Paris, 
1751-1780), technical ; Michel Frandsque, Redurches surle co m me r os, 
Ufahrieatum et Fusap des Hoffos de sou, for et oVargent (a vols., Paris, 
1852-1854), a well-known work full of erudition in respect of the 
archaeology of woven fabrics, their technical characteristics, Ac.; 
James Yates, Textrinum entiquorum : an Account of the Art of 
Weaving among the Ancients (London, 1843), a very valuable and 
learned work of reference; Very Rev. Daniel Rock, D.D., Textile 
Fabrics (London, 1870), with some few good illustrations: Pariset, 
Histoire do U. soio (Paris. 1862) ; Raymond Cax, L'Art de dfcorer Us 
Hssus, &c. (Paris, 1000) ; Alan Cole, Ornament in European Silks 
(London, 1899), well illustrated; J. Leasing, Berlin hbniglicke 
Museen, Die GemebfSammlung des k. Kunsttewrbe- Museums 



(Berlin. 1900), a very fine series of phototype facsimiles of all kinds 
of textiles; L Riegf, Die agypHsehen Textil-Funde (Wien, 1889); 
R. Forrer, Rbmiscke und bysanHnisihe Seiden-Textihen (Strassburg, 
1891); A. Dupont Aubervule, VOmamtni des Hssus (Paris, 1877), 
admirable illustrations; F. Fischbach, Die vicuHgstsn Webe-Omo- 
meum (3 vols., Wiesbaden, 1901). admirable illustrations s Raymond 
Cax, U UusU kistoriquo des ttssus . . . do Lyon (Lyon. 1902); 
Nuremberg: Germanlsches Museum. KataJog der Gcwebesammlung 
des germanuchen National-Museums (Nuremberg, 1896). 

(A.S.C.) 

WBB (a word common to Teutonic languages, ci Du. utebbe t 
Dan. wset, Ger. Gewebe, all from the Teutonic wabh— to weave), 
that which is woven (sec Weaving). The word is thus applied 
to anything resembling a web of doth, to the vexsllum of the 
feather of a bird, to the membrane which connects the toes 
of many aquatk birds and some aquatic mammals; it is partial- 
kriy used of the " cobweb/' the net span by the spider, the 
Old English name for which was dtar-coppc, Le. poison-head 
(ator, poison, and coppc, tuft or head). In architecture the term 
u web " is sometimes given, in preference to " panel," to the 
stone shell of a vault resting on the ribs and taking its winding 
surface from the s ame; see Vault. 

WBBB, MATTHEW (18*8-1883), English swimmer, generally 
known as " Captain Webb," was bom atDawley m Shropshire 
on the 18th of January 1848, the son of a doctor. While still 
a boy lie saved one of his brothers from drowning m the Severn, 
and, while serving on board the training ship in the Mersey, he 
again distinguished himself by saving a drowning comrade. 
He served his apprenticeship in the East India and China trade, 
shipped as second mate for several owners, and in 1874, was 
awarded the first Stanhope gold medal by the Royal Humane 
Society for an attempt to save a seaman who had fallen over- 
board from the Cunard steamship " Russia," In 1875 Captain 
Webb abandoned a sea-faring life and became a professional 
swimmer. On the 3rd of July he swam from Bbckwall Pier to 
Gravesend, a distance of 20 m., in 4* hoars, a record which 
remained unbeaten until 1899. In the same year, after one 
unsuccessful attempt, he swam the English Channel, on the 24th 
of August, from Dover to Calais in si) hours. For the next 
few years Webb gave performances of diving and swimming 
at the Royal Aquarium in London and elsewhere. Crossing 
to America, he attempted, on the 34th of July 1883, to swim 
the rapids and whirlpool below Niagara Falls. In this attempt 
he lost his life. 



, 8IDHBY (1859- ), English socialist and author, 
t born in London on the 13th of July 1 859. He was educated 
at private schools fn London and Switzerland, at the Birkbeck 
Institute antf the City of London College. From 1875 to 1878 
he was employed in a city office, but he entered the civil service 
by open competition as a clerk in the War Office in 1878. became 
»See Leinendamastmuster des XVII. und XVIII. Jakrkxnderts. 
Kail Kumach (Dresden. 1891). 



45J 

surveyor of taxes in "1879, and in 188 1 entered the colonial 
office, where he remained until 1891. In 1885 he was called to 
the bar at Cray's Inn. Mr Webb was one of the early members 
of the Fabian Society, contributing to Fabian Essays (188$); 
and he became well-known as a socialist, both by his speeches 
and his writings. He entered the London County Council in 
189* as member for Deptford, and was returned at the head 
of the poll in the successive elections of 1895; 1898, 1901 and 
1904. He resigned from the dvil service in 1891 to give his whole 
time to the work of the Council (where he was chairman of the 
Technical Education Board) and to the study of economics^ 
He served from 1903 to 1906 on the Royal Commission on Trade 
Union Law and on other important commissions. He married 
in 1891 Miss Beatrice Potter, herself a writer on economics and 
sociology, the author of The Co-operative Movement in Great 
Britain (1891) and a contributor to Charles Booth's Life and 
Labour of the People (1891-1003). His most important works 
are: a number of Fabian tracts; London Education (1904); 
The Eight Hours Day (1891), in conjunction with Harold Cox; 
and, with Mrs Sidney Webb, The History of Trade Unionism 
(1894, new ed. ioo*)» Industrial Democracy (1897, new ed. 1902), 
Problems of Modern Industry (1808), History of Liquor Licensing 
(1903), English Local Government (1906), &c. Mrs Webb was 
a member of the Royal Commission on the Poor Law, and she 
and her husband wei* responsible for the Minority Report 
(see Poor Law) and for starting the widespread movement in 
its favour. 

WEBB CITY, a dty of Jasper county, Missouri, U.S.A., 
in the S.W. part of the state, about 160 m. S. of Kansas City. 
Pop. (1890) 5043; (1900) 9201, of whom 248 were foreign-born; 
(19x0 U.S. census) 11,817. It is served by the Missouri Pacific 
and the St Louis & San Francisco railway systems, and is the 
headquarters of the electric mtcrurban railway connecting with 
Carthage and Joplin, Missouri, Galena, Kansas and other 
cities. With Cartrrville (pop. 1910, 4539), which adjoins it on 
the E., it forms practically one city; they are among the most 
famous and productive " camps " in the rich lead and sine 
region of south-western Missouri, and Webb City owes its 
industrial importance primarily to the mining and shipping of 
those metals. The value of the factory product increased from 
$353»566 m toco to $637,965 in 1905. Webb City was laid out 
and incorporated as a town in 1875, and first chartered as a 
dty in 1876. White lead was discovered here in 1873, on the 
farm of John C. Webb, in whose honour the city is named; 
a nd sys tematic mining began in 1877. 

WEBBB, WILLIAM (fl. 1586), English literary critic, was 
educated at St John's College, Cambridge, where he took his 
degree in 1 572-1573. He was tutor to the two sons of Edward 
Sulyard of Flcmyngs, Essex, and later to the children of Henry 
Grey of Plrgo in the same county. A letter from him is prefixed 
to the 1592 edition of Toncred and Gismunda, % written by his 
friend, Robert Wilmot. In 1586 he published A Discourse of 
English PoctrU, dedicated to his patron, Edward Sulyard. 
Wcbbe argued that the dearth of good English poetry since 
Chaucer's day was not due to lack of poetic ability, or to the 
poverty of the language, but to the want of a proper system of 
prosody. He abuses " this tinkerly verse which we call ryme, 1 * 
as of barbarous origin, and comments on the works of his con- 
temporaries, displaying enthusiasm for Spenser's Shepheardcs 
Calendar, and admiration for Phaer's translation of Virgil. 
He urged the adoption of hexameters and sapphics for English 
verse, and gives some lamentable examples of his own com- 
position. 

The Discourse was reprinted in J. Haslcwood's Ancient Critical 
Essays (1811-1815). by E. Arber in 1869. and in Gregory Smith's 
Elizabethan Critical Essays (1904). 

WEBER, CARL MARIA FRIEDRICH ERNEST VON (1786- 
1826), German composer, was born at Eutin, near Lilbeck, on 
the 1 8th of December 1 786, of a family that had long been devoted 
to art. His father, Baron Franz Anton von Weber, a military 
* The original play, Gismonde of Salernt, was by five authors, and 
was produced in the Queen's presence at the Inner Temple in 1568. 



+5* 



WEBER, C. VON 



officer in the service of the palgrave Karl Theodor, was an 
excellent violinist, and his mother once sang on the stage. His 
cousins, Joscpha, Aloysia, Constanze and Sophie, daughters 
of Franz Anton's brother Fridolin, attained a high reputation 
as vocalists. Tlje great composer, Mozart, after having been 
rejected by Aloysia, married Constanze, and thus became 
Franz Anton's nephew by marriage. Fridolin played the violin 
nearly as well as his brother; and the whole family displayed 
exceptional talent for music. Franz Anton von Weber was a 
man of thriftless habits and culpable eccentricity. Having been 
wounded at Rosbach, he quitted the army, and in 1758 he was 
appointed financial councillor to Clement August, elector of 
Cologne, who for nine years overlooked his incorrigible neglect 
of duty. But the elector's successor dismissed him in 1768; 
and for many years after this he lived in idleness at Hildesheim, 
squandering the property of his wife, Anna dc' Fumetti, and 
doing nothing for the support of his children until 1778, when he 
was appointed director of the opera at Ltibeck. In 1779 the 
prince bishop of Eutin made him his kapellmeister, and not 
long afterwards his wife died of a broken heart- Five years 
later he went to Vienna, placed two of his sons under Michael 
Haydn, and in 1785 married the young Viennese singer Genovefa 
von Brenner. In the following year Carl Maria von Weber was 
born— a delicate child, afflicted with congenital disease of the 
hip-joint. 

On his return from Vienna, Franz Anton, finding that a new 
kapellmeister had been chosen in his place, accepted the humbler 
position of " Stadt Musikant." This, however, he soon relin- 
quished; and for some years he wandered from town to town, 
giving dramatic performances, in conjunction with the children 
of his first wife, wherever he could collect an audience. The 
effect of this restless life upon the little Carl Maria's health and 
education was deplorable; but, as he accompanied bis father 
everywhere, he became familiarized with the stage from his 
earliest infancy, and thus gained an amount of dramatic experience 
that laid the foundation of his future greatness. Franz Anton 
hoped to sec him develop into an infant prodigy, like his cousin 
Mozart, whose marvellous career was then rapidly approaching 
its close. In furtherance of this scheme, the child was taught 
to sing and place his fingers upon the pianoforte almost as soon 
as he could speak, though he was unable to walk until he was 
four years old. Happily his power of observation and aptitude 
for general learning were so precocious that he seems, in spite 
of all these disadvantages, to have instinctively educated him- 
self as became a gentleman. In 1798 Michael Haydn taught 
him gratuitously at Salzburg. In the March of that year his 
mother died. In April the family visited Vienna, removing 
in the autumn to Munich. Here the child's first composition— 
a set of "Six Fughettas" — was published, with a pompous 
dedication to his half -brother Edmund; and here also he took 
lessons in singing and in composition. Soon afterwards he began 
to play successfully in public, and his father compelled him to 
write incessantly. Among the compositions of this period were 
a mass and an opera — Die Macht der Liebe und des Weins — now 
destroyed. A set of " Variations for the Pianoforte," composed 
a little later, was lithographed by Carl Maria himself, under the 
guidance of Alois Scnefclder, the inventor of the process, in 
which both the father and the child took great interest. 

In 1800 the family removed to Freiberg, where the Ritter von 
Steinsberg gave Carl Maria the libretto of an opera called Das 
Watdmddchen, which the boy, though not yet fourteen years 
old, at once set to music, and produced in November at the 
Freiburg theatre. The performance was by no means successful, 
and the composer himself was accustomed to speak of the 
work as " a very immature production " ; yet it was afterwards 
reproduced at Chemnitz, and even at Vienna. 

Carl Maria returned with his father to Salzburg in 1801, 
resuming his studies under Michael Haydn. Here he composed 
his second opera, Peter Sckmoii und seine Nackbarn, which was 
unsuccessfully produced at Nuremberg in 1803. In that year 
he again visited Vienna, where, though Joseph Haydn and 
* f Vechtsbergerwerc both receiving pupils, his father preferred 



placing him under Abt Vogler. Through Vogler's Instrument- 
ality Carl Maria was appointed conductor of the opera at Breslau, 
before he had completed his eighteenth year. In this capacity 
he greatly enlarged his experience of the stage, so that he rank* 
among the greatest masters of stage-craft in musical history; 
but he lived a sadly irregular life, contracted debts, and lost his 
beautiful voice through accidentally drinking an acid used in 
lithography— a mishap which nearly cost him his life. These 
hindrances, however, did not prevent him from beginning a new 
opera called R&bczahl, the libretto of which was "romantic" 
to the last degree, and Weber worked at it enthusiastically, 
but it was never completed, and little of it has been preserved 
beyond a quintet and the masterly overture, which, re-written 
in 181 1 under the title of Der Beherrscher derGeister,w)w ranks 
among its author's finest instrumental compositions. 

Quitting Breslau in 1806, Weber removed in the following 
year to Stuttgart, where he had been offered the post of private 
secretary to Duke Ludwig, brother of Frederick, king of 
WUrtemberg. The appointment was a disastrous one. The 
stipend attached to it was insufficient to meet the twofold 
demands of the young man's new social position and the thrift- 
lessness of his father, who was entirely dependent upon him for 
support. Court life at Stuttgart was uncongenial to him, though 
he yielded to its temptations. The king hated him and his 
practical jokes. He fell hopelessly into debt, and, worse than all, 
became involved in a fatal intimacy with Margarethe Lang, 
a singer at the opera. Notwithstanding these distractions he 
worked hard, and in 1809 re-modelled Das WaldmOdcken, under 
the title of Sylvana, 1 and prepared to produce it at the court 
theatre. But a dreadful calamity prevented its performance. 
Franz Anton had misappropriated a large sum of money placed 
in the young secretary's hands for the purpose of clearing a 
mortgage upon one of the duke's estates. 1 Both father and son 
were charged with embezzlement, and, on the 9th of February 
1810, they were arrested at the theatre, during a rehearsal of 
Sylvana, and thrown by the king's order into prison. No one 
doubted Weber's innocence, but after a summary trial he and his 
father were ordered to quit the country, and on the 37th of 
February they began a new life at Mannheim. 

Having provided a comfortable home for his father, and begun 
a new comic opera, in one act, called Abu Hassan, Weber re- 
moved to Darmstadt m order to be near his old master Abt 
Vogler, and his fellow-pupils Meyerbeer and Glnsbncher. 
On the 16th of September 1810, he reproduced Sylvana at 
Frankfort, but with very doubtful success. A bu Hassan was com- 
pleted at Darmstadt in January 181 x, after many interruptions, 
one of which (his attraction to the story of Der FrdsckUtz see 
below) exercised a memorable influence upon his later career. 

Weber started in February 181 1 on an extended artistic tour, 
during which he made many influential friends, and on the 4th 
of June brought out Abu Hassan with marked success at Munich. 
His lather died at Mannheim in 18x2, and after this he had no 
settled home, until in X813 his wanderings were brought to an 
end by the unexpected offer of an appointment as kapellmeister 
at Prague, coupled with the duty of entirely remodelling the 
performances at the opera-house. The terms were so liberal 
that he accepted at once, engaged a new company of performers, 
and directed them with uninterrupted success until the autumn 
of 1816. During this period he composed no new operas, but he 
had already written much of his best pianoforte music, and played 
it with never-failing success, while the disturbed state of Europe 
inspired him with some of the finest patriotic melodies in exist- 
ence. First among these stand ten songs from Kernel's Ltyer 
und Sckwerdt, including " Vater, ich rufe dich," and " Uitzow's 
wilde Jagd " ; and in no respect inferior to these are the splendid 
choruses in his cantata Kanpf und Sieg> which was first per- 
formed at Prague, on the a and of December 18x5. 

Weber resigned his office at Prague on the 30th of September 

* As the MS. of Das Wal&mMehen has been lost. ft a Impossible 
now to determine its exact relation to the later work. 

* Spitta gives a different account of the occurrence, and attributes 
the robbery to a servant. 



WEBER, C. VON 



457 



1816, and on the 21st of December, Frederick Augustus, king of 
Saxony, appointed him kapellmeister at the German opera at 
Dresden. The Italian operas performed at the court theatre 
were superintended by Morlacchi, whose jealous and intriguing 
disposition gave endless trouble, The king, however, placed the 
two kapellmeisters on an exact equality both of title and salary, 
and Weber found ample opportunity for the exercise of his 
remarkable power of organization and control, tie now gave 
his close attention to the story of Der FreischUtz, which he had 
previously meditated turning into an opera, and, with the assist- 
ance of Friedrich Kind, he produced an admirable libretto, under 
the title of Des J tigers Brant. No subject could have been better 
fitted than this to serve as a vehicle for the new art-form which, 
under Weber's skilful management, developed into the type 
of "romantic opera." He had dealt with the supernatural in 
Rubaakl, and in Syhana with the pomp and circumstance of 
chivalry; but the shadowy impersonations in Rubezahl are 
scarcely less human than the heroine who invokes them; and 
the music of Syhana might easily have been adapted to a story 
of the 19th century. But Weber now knew better than to let 
the fiend in Der FreischUtz sing; with three soft strokes of a 
drum below an unchanging dismal chord he brings him straight 
to us -from the nether world. Every note in Euryanthc breathes 
the spirit of medieval romance; and the fairies in Oberon have 
an actuality quite distinct from the tinsel of the stage. This un- 
compromising reality, even in face of the unreal, forms the 
strongest characteristic of the pure "romantic school," as 
Weber understood and created it. It treats its wildest subjects in 
earnest, and without a doubt as to the reality of the scenes 
it ventures to depict, or the truthfulness of their dramatic 
interpretation. 

Weber wrote the first note of the music of Der FreischUtz 
on the and of July— beginning with- the duet which opens the 
second act. Bat so numerous were the interruptions caused 
by Morlacchi's intrigues, the insolence of unfriendly courtiers, 
and the attacks of jealous critics that nearly three years elapsed 
before the piece was completed. In the meantime the per- 
formances at the opera-house were no less successfully remodelled 
at Dresden than they had already been at Prague, though 
the work of reformation was far more difficult; for the new 
kapellmeister was surrounded by enemies who openly subjected 
him to every possible annoyance, and even the king himself 
was at one time strongly prejudiced against him. Happily, 
he no longer stood alone in the world. Having, after much 
difficulty, broken off his liaisonwith MargaretheLand, he married 
the singer Carolina Brandt, a noble-minded woman and con-' 
summate artist, who was well able to repay him for the part he 
had long played in her mental development. The new opera 
was completed on the 13th of May 1820, on which day Weber 
wrote the last note of the overture— which it was his custom 
to postpone until the rest of the music was finished. There is 
abundant evidence to prove that he was well satisfied with the 
result of his labours; but he gave himself no rest. He had engaged 
to compose the music to Wolff's Gipsy drama, Precios*. Two 
months later this also was finished, and both pieces ready for 
the stage. 

In consequence of the unsatisfactory state of affairs at Dresden, 
it had been arranged that both Predosa and Der FreischUtz— 
no longer known by its original title, Des J&g/ers Braut— should 
be produced at Berlin. In February 1821 Sir Julius Benedict 
was accepted by Weber as a pupil; and to his pen we owe a 
delightful account of the rehearsals and first performance of his 
master's chef-fame. Preciosa was produced with great success 
at the old Berlin opera-house on the 14th of June 1821. On 
the 18th of June, the anniversary of the battle of Waterloo, the 
opening of the new " Schanspielhaus " was celebrated by the 
production of Der FreischUtz. Much anxiety was caused by 
unforeseen difficulties at the rehearsals; yet, so calm was Weber's 
mind that he devoted his leisure time to the composition of his 
C om certstUch in F minor— one of his finest pianoforte pieces. 
Until the last moment his friends were anxious; the author was 
not; and the result justified his confidence in his own powers. 



The success of the piece was triumphant. The work was received 
with equal enthusiasm at Vienna on the 3rd of October, and at 
Dresden on the 26th of January 1822. Yet Weber's position 
as kapellmeister was not much improved by his success, though, 
in order to remain faithful. to his engagements, he had refused 
tempting offers at Berlin and Cassel, and, at the last-named 
place, had installed Ludwig Spohr in a position much more 
advantageous than his own. 

For his next opera Weber accepted a libretto based, by Frau 
Wilhelmine von Chezy, on the story of Euryanthc, as originally 
told in the 13th century, in Gilbert de Montreuil's Raman de la 
VioUUe, and repeated with alterations in the Decamerone, in 
Shakespeare's Cymbeline, and in several later forms. In place 
of the ghostly horrors of Der FreischUtz, the romantic element 
was here supplied by the chivalric pomp of the middle ages. 
The libretto is in one respect superior to that of Der FreischUtz, 
inasmuch as it substitutes elaborate recitative for the spoken 
dialogue peculiar to the German " Schauspiel " and French 
14 optra comique. " It is, in fact, a " grand opera " in every 
sense of the words, — the prototype of the "music drama" 
perfected fifty years later by Wagner. The overture— as usual, 
written last— presents a feature that has never been imitated. 
During its performance the curtain temporarily rises, to exhibit, 
in a tableau vivant, the scene in the sepulchral vault upon which 
the whole story turns. This direction is now rarely carried out; 
but Weber himself well knew how much the interest of the piece 
depended on it. The work was produced at the Karntnerthor 
theatre in Vienna, on the. 25th of October 1823, and received with 
^nthus fai rn. 

Weber's third and last dramatic masterpiece was an English 
opera, written for Covent Garden theatre, upon a libretto 
adapted by Planch* from Wieland's Oberon, It was disfigured 
by the spoken dialogue abandoned in Euryanthc, but in musical 
beauty it is quite equal to it, while its fairies and mermaids 
are as vividly real as the spectres in Der FreischUtz. Though 
already far gone in consumption, Weber began to compose the 
music on the 23rd of January 1825. Charles Kemble had offered 
him £1000 for the work, and he could not afford to rest. He 
finished the overture- in London, at the house of Sir George 
Smart, soon after his arrival, in March 1826; and on the 12th 
of April the work was produced with triumphant success. But 
it cost the, composer his life. Wearied out with rehearsals and 
performances of the opera, and concerts at which be was received 
with rapturous applause, he grew daily perceptibly weaker; 
and, notwithstanding the care of his kind host, Sir George Smart, 
and his family, he was found dead in his bed on the morning of 
the 5th of June 1826. For eighteen years his remains rested in 
a temporary grave in Moorfields chapel; but in 1844 they were 
removed and placed in the family vault at Dresden, Wagner 
making an eloquent speech. 

Besides his three great dramatic masterpieces fend the other 
works already mentioned, Weber wrote two masses, two symphonies, 
eight cantatas, and a large number of songs, orchestral and pianoforte 
pieces, and music of other kinds, 1 mounting altogether to more than 
250 compositions. (W. S. R.) 

Weber's style rises, in his three greatest works, to heights 
which show his kinship with the great classics and the great 
moderns. His intellect was quick and clear; but yet finer was 
the force of character with which he overcame the disadvantages 
of his feeble health, desultory education and the mistakes of his 
youth. With such gifts of intellect and character, every moment 
of his short life was precious to the world; and it is Impossible 
not to regret the placing of his training in the hands of Abt 
Vogler. Weber's master was an amiable charlatan, whose 
weakness as a teacher was thoroughly exposed, in perfect 
innocence, by' his two illustrious pupils. Meyerbeer wished 
to be famous as the maker of a new epoch in opera. Weber 
could not help being so in reality. But he was sadly hampered 
by his master's inability to teach realities instead of appearances; 
and to this impediment alone must we assign the fact that his 
masterpieces do not begin earlier in his career. With extra- 
ordinary rapidity and thoroughness he learnt English a year 
before his death in order U> compose Oberon, with the resr* 



458 



WEBER, W. E.— WEBER'S LAW 



that there is only one obvious mistake in the whole work, and 
the general correctness of declamation is higher than in most 
of his German works. This is typical of Weber's general culture, 
mental energy and determination; points in which, as in many 
traits in his music, he strikingly resembles Wagner. But all 
his determination could not quite repair the defects of his purely 
musical training, and though his weaknesses arc not of glaring 
effect in opera, still there are moments when even the stage 
cannot explain them away. Thus the finale of Der Freischittz 
breaks down so obviously that no one thinks of it as anything 
but a perfunctory winding-up of the story, though it really 
might have made quite a fine subject for musical treatment. In 
Euryanihe Weber attained his full power, and his inspiration 
did not leave him in the lurch where this work needed large 
musical designs. B ut the libretto was f ullof absurdities ; especially 
in the last act, which not even nine remodellings under Weber's 
direction could redeem. Yet it is easy to see why it fascinated 
him, for, whatever may be said against it from the standpoints 
of probability and literary merit, its emotional contrasts are 
highly musical. Indeed it is through them that the defects invite 
criticism. 

Oberon is spoilt by the old local tradition of English opera 
according to which its libretto admitted of no music during 
the action of the drama. Thus Weber had in it no opportunity 
for his musical stage-craft; apart from the fact that the action 
itself is entirely without dramatic motive and passion, since 
the characters are simply shifted from Bordeaux to Bagdad 
whenever Oberon waves his wand. 

Many attempts have been made to improve the libretti of 
Euryanihe and Oberon, but none are quite successful, for Weber 
has taken a great artist's pains in making the best of bad material. 
All that can be said against Weber's achievements only reveals 
the more emphatically how noble and how complete in essentials 
was his success and his claim to immortality. His pianoforte 
works, while showing his helplessness in purely musical form, 
more than bear out his contemporary reputation as a very great 
pianoforte player. They have a pronounced theatrical tendency 
which, in the case of such pieces of gay romanticism as the 
Invitation a la danse and the Conctrlstiick, is amusing and by 
no means inartistic. In orchestration Weber is one of the 
greatest masters. His treatment of the voice Is bold and 
interesting, but very rash; and his declamation of words 
is often incorrect. His influence on the music of his own day 
is comparable to his influence on posterity; for he was not only 
a most efficient director but a very persuasive journalist; and 
(in spite of the inexperience that made him disapprove of 
Beethoven) for all good music other than his own he showed a 
gr owing enthusiasm that was infectious. (D. F. T.) 

WEBER, W1LHELH EDUARD (1804-1891), German physicist, 
was bom at Wittenberg on the 24th of October 1804, and was 
a younger brother of Ernst Heinrich Weber, the author of Weber's 
Law (see below). He studied at the university of Halle, where 
he took his doctor's degree in 1826 and became extraordinary 
professor of physics in 1828. Three years later he removed to 
Gdttingen as professor of physics, and remained there till 1837, 
when he was one of the seven professors who were expelled from 
their chairs for protesting against the action of the king of 
Hanover (duke of Cumberland) in suspending the constitution. 
A period of retirement foDowcd this episode, but in 1843 he 
accented the chair of physics at Leipzig, and six years later 
returned to Goltfngen, where he died on the 23rd of June i8or. 
Weber's name Is especially known for his work on electrical 
measurement. Until his time there was no established system 
either of stating or measuring electrical quantities; but he showed, 
as his colleague K. F. Gauss did for magnetic quantities, that 
it is both theoretically and practically possible to define them, 
not merely by reference to other arbitrary quantities of the same 
kind, but absolutely in terms in which the units of length, 
time, and mass are alone involved. He also carried on extensive 
researches in the theory of magnetism; and it is interesting that 
in connexion with his observations in terrestrial magnetism he 
Hot only employed an early form of mirror galvanometer, but 



also, about 1833, devised a system of electromagnetic telegraphy, 
by which a distance of some 9000 ft. was worked over. In 
conjunction with his elder brother he published in 182s a well- 
known treatise on waves, Die Wellenlehre auf Experiment 
gegrUndet; and in 1833 he collaborated with his younger brother, 
the physiologist Eduard Friedrich Weber (1806-1871), in an 
investigation into the mechanism of walking. 

WEBER'S LAW, in psychology, the name given to a principle 
first enunciated by the German scientist, Ernst Heinrich Weber 
( 1 795-1878), who became professor at Leipzig (of anatomy, 
1 818, of physiology, 1840). He was specially famous for his 
researches into aural and cutaneous sensations. His law, the 
purport of which is that the increase of stimulus necessary to 
produce an increase of sensation in any sense is not a fixed 
quantity but depends on the proportion which the increase 
bears to the immediately preceding stimulus, is the principal 
generalization of that branch of scientific investigation which 
has come to be known as psycho-physics (q.v.). 

According; to Gustav Fechner (q.v.), who has done most to prosecute 
these inquiries and to consolidate them under a separate name, 
" psycho-physics is an exact doctrine of the relation of function or 
dependence between body and soul." In other words, it is through- 
out an attempt to submit to definite measurement the relation of 
physical stimuli to the resulting psychical or mental facts, and forms 
an important department of experimental psychology. It deals with 
the quantitative aspects of mental facts— their intensity or quantity 
proper and their duration. Physical science enables us, at least in ibe 
case of some of the senses, to measure with accuracy the objective 
amount of the Stimulus, and introspection enables us to state the 
nature, of the subjective result. Thus we are able to say whether a 
stimulus produces any psychical result, and can fix in that way the 
minimum sensibile or " threshold of consciousness " for each of the 
senses. In like manner (though with less accuracy, owing to the dis- 
turbing nature of the conditions) we can fix the sensational maxi- 
mum, or upper limit of sensibility, in the different senses, that is to 
say, the point beyond which no increase of stimulus produces any • 
appreciable increase of sensation. We thus determine, as Wundt puts 
it, the limit-values between which changes of intensity in the stimulus 
are accompanied by changes in sensation. But the central inquiry of 
psycho-physics remains behind. Between the quantitative mini- 
mum ana the quantitative maximum thus fixed can we discover any 
definite relation between changes in the objective intensity of the . 
stimuli and changes in the intensity of the sensations as estimated by 
consciousness. The answer of psycho-physics to this Inquiry is 
given in the generalization variously known as " Weber s law," 

Fechncr's law," or the " psycho-physical law," which professes to 
formulate with exactitude the relations which exist between change 
of stimulus and change of sensation. 

As we have no means of subjectively measuring the absolute 
intensity of our sensations, it is necessary to depend upon the mental 
estimate or comparison of two or more sensations. Comparison 
enables us to say whether they are equal in intensity, or if unequal 
which is the greater and which is the less. But as they approach 
equality in this respect it becomes more and more difficult to delect 
the difference. By a scries of experiments, therefore, it will be 
possible, in the case of any particular individual, to determine the 
least observable difference in intensity between two sensations of any 
particular sense. This least observable difference is called by 
Fechner the Unterschiedsschwellc or " difference-threshold," that is 
to say, the limit of the discriminative sensibility of the sense in 
question. That such a "threshold," or least observable difference, 
exists is plain from very simple examples. Very small increases may 
be made in the objective amount of hght, sound or pressure— that is. 
in the physical stimuli applied to these senses — without the subject 
on whom the experiment is made detecting any change. It is further 
evident that, by means of thb UntersckMMsckwetk, it is possible to 
compare the discriminative sensibility of different individuals, or of 
different senses, or (as in the case of the skin) of different parts of the 
same sense organ: the smaller the difference observable the finer the 
discriminative sensibility. Thus the discrimination of the muscular 
sense is much more delicate than that of the sense of touch or pressure, 
and the discriminative sensibility of the skin and the retina varies 
very much according to the parts of the surface affected. Various 
methods have been adopted with a view to determine these minima 
of discriminative sensibility with an approach to scientific precision. 
The first is that employed by Weber himself, and has been named 
the method of just observable differences. It consists either in 
gradually adding to a given stimulus small amounts which at first 
cause no perceptible difference in sensation but at a certainpoint do 
cause a difference to emerge in consciousness, or, vice versa, ingradu* 
ally decreasing the amount of additional stimulus, till the difference 
originally perceived bec o mes imperceptible. By taking the average 
of a number of such results, the minimum may be determined with 
tolerable accuracy. The second method is called by Fechner the 
method of correct and incorrect instances. When two stimuli are 



WEBSTER, A.— WEBSTER, D. 



459 



•try nearly equal tha subject will often fail to recognise which b the 
greater, saying sometimes that A is greater, sometimes that B is 
greater. When in a large number of trials the right and wrong 
guesses exactly balance one another we may conclude that the 
difference between the two stimuli is not appreciable by the seme. 
On the other hand, as soon as the number of correct guesses definitely 
exceeds half of the total number of cases, it may be inferred that 
there is a certain subjective appreciation of difference. This 
method was first employed by Vierordt. The third method, that of 
average errors, is very similar to the one just explained. Here a 
certain weight (to take a concrete example) is laid upon the hand of 
the person experimented upon, and he is asked, by the aid of sub- 
jective impression alone, to fix upon a second weight. exactly equal 
to the first. It is found that the second weight sometimes slightly 
exceeds the first, sometimes slightly falls below it. Whether above 
or below is of no consequence to the method, which depends solely 
on the amount of the error. After a number of experiments, the 
different errors are added together, and the result beirig divided by 
the number of experiments gives us the average error which the 
subject may be calculated upon to make. This marks the amount 
of stimulus which is just below the difference-threshold for him. 
This method was first employed by Fechner and Volkmann. The 
different methods were first named, and the theory of their applica- 
tion developed by Fechner in his EUmente dcr Psyckophysik (i860). 

A number of experimental variations have since been devised 
by Wundt and others, but they are all reducible to the two 
types of the " gradation " and " error " methods. These methods 
have been chiefly applied to determine the relation of the 
difference-threshold to the absolute magnitude of the stimuli 
employed. For a very little reflection tells us that the smallest 
perceivable difference is not an amount whose absolute intensity is 
constant even within the same sense. It varies with the intensity 
of the stimuli employed. We are unable, for example, to recognise 
slight differences in weight when the weights compared are heavy, 
' gh we should be perfectly able to make the distinction if the 
hts compared were both light. Ordinary observation would 
I us, therefore, to the conclusion that the greater the intensity 
of the original stimulus at work the greater must be the increase of 
stimulus in order that there may be a perceptible difference in the 
resulting sensation. Weber was the first (after a prolonged series of 
experiments) to clothe this generality with scientific precision by 
formulating the law which has since gone by his name. He showed 
that the smallest perceptible difference is not absolutely the same, 
but remains relatively the same, that is, it remains the same fraction 
of the preceding stimulus. For example, if we can distinguish 16 or. 
and 17 oc, we shall be able to distinguish ** ox. and 44 ox., but not 
32 oz. and AS ox., the addition being in each case A of the preceding 
stimulus. This fraction (supposing it to be the difference-threshold 
of the muscular sense) remains a constant, however light or however 
Heavy the weights compared. The law may be formulated thus: — 
The. difference b e t we en any two stimuli is experienced as of equal 
magnitude, in case the mathematical relation of these stimuli 
remains unaltered. Or, otherwise expressed, in order that the 
intensify of a sensation may increase in arithmetical progression 
the stimulus must increase in geometrical progression. It is also 
expressed by Fechner in the form — The sensation increases as the 
logarithm of the stimulus. 

The law has been variously interpreted. Fechner himself designated 
it the psycho-physical law, and treated it as the fundamental formula 
of the relation between body and mind, thus assigning to it an 
ontological dignity and significance. But in this " psycho-physical " 
interpretation of his results he has not had a numerous following. 
Wundt interprets the law in a purely " psychological " sense, making 
it a special instance of the general law of relativity which governs 
our mental states. Introspection can give us no information as to 
the absolute intensity of the stimulus; for a stimulus is known in 
consciousness only through its sensational resultant. Hence, he 
argues, we can only compare one psychical state with another, and 
our standard of measurement is therefore necessarily a relative one ; 
it depends directly upon the preceding state with which we compare 
the present. Others (r.g. G. E. Mailer) have attempted to give the 
law a purely physical or " physiological " explanation. Instead of 
holding with Fechner that the law expresses a recondite relation 
between the material and the spiritual world, they prefer to regard 
the quantitative relation between the last physical antecedent in 
the brain and the resultant mental change as prima facie one of 
•imple proportion, and to treat Weber's law as holding b e t wee n the 
initial physical stimulus and the final action of the nerve-centres. 
According to this interpretation, the law would be altogether due 
to the nature of nervous action. As a nerve, says Sully, after a 
temporary degree of stimulation temporarily loses its sensibility, 
•o the greater the previous stimulation of a nerve the greater is the 
additional stimulus required to produce an appreciable amount of 
sensation. 

Weber's law, it must be added, holds only within certain limits. 
In the " chemical " senses of taste and smell experiments are almost 
impossible. It is not practicable to limit the amount of the stimulus 
with the necessary exactitude, and the results are further vitiated 
by the long continuance of the physiological effects. The same con- 
vocation* apply with still more force to the organic sensations, and 



trip r«uTti in the case of temperature senjattoni are completely 
uncurtain. The law is appro* LnuiieJy irue in the cue of light, hen ring 
pressure* and the mtixuUr sen?* — moat exactly in the case of sound. 
As this i* the &en*e which afford* the greatest facilities for measuring 
the precise amount of the stimiriui, it may pcrhap* be inferred that, 
if we could attain the same exactitude in the other senses, with the 
dimi run iuti til the mjmcrviut difiCuibing extra nee us. influence* At work, 
t!uj Liw w-julit vindicate itself with the ume exactitude and certainly. 
I ■ : 1 u rt her to be noted, however H that even in those sen^cA in, which 
if has r*ren approximately verified, the law holds with stringency 
only wit tun certain limits- The remits arc most exact in the middle 
regions of the *en*ory scale: when we approach the upper or lower 
limit of ienaibdity they become quite uncertain. 

LtTEftATUM- — Weber's invc^Uptions were published as " Dei 
Taat^ifin und das CemeJnceJQfal/ \n Wagner's HaftdwMtrrlmik dtr 
phyiiohtif. iiL (te^G}. Fechnet'i BUmt*kderPfyck#pkyirk (j*6o) 
contains an elaborate exposition of (he whole subject. He replied 
lo his critics in two later works, I* Sdihcv dtr Ptychophyiik (187?) 
and jfrniuw dtr Hvuftpunkt* drt Psyckophysik (i£Hj). Deibttuf'i 
Elvdt piyckohhystquf (1 675). Elaine* crUiqut oV la lot psychopkyitqui 
(10&3), and Elcmfutt dt piythophyiiqitf thibraU «f sptriale (tSBjJ, 
and G. E. M tillers gut Gtumfkjtitng dtr Psyckvpkystk (iSj-*) »r< 
also important documents; and the subject i* fully treated in 
\X until** Qraudzuft dtr physiologisfhtn Piychofotie (H. ivja-lqo^\, 
and_ " Uber die Moth ode d\ Mini mala ndemngen/' in Pitta. SjuJ* 
(Leipzig, iBfljh or, more popularly, in his Unman and Ankm4t 
Piychoiaty (and ed. iSgdh Lecture*- a. 3, 4. See j*ko Ludcl'i Phyiia- 
toguaJ Piythefoty 0&&7J. which is based upon W until; M^inonpi. in 
Zfitechr. fur Piyehflc&t. xi. CiJtyo); Ziehen, Ijttttttdm drr tkyttv 
tefitcktn F.iuAWflfif (7th ed. a Jena, tQc/Oi E- B. Tin better, Hx'p*ri* 
tnmitil Piyrhvfrzy (ii. + 19*15); Professor James Ward'* +< Ar tempi tn 
Interpret hcchiier's Law." in Aftnd. L 452 *T*1+; and generally text* 
t<M?kt of psychukrity. *,*.. G. F- Stout'* Mutum! 0/ Fsythniocy, bk, ii, 
ch. 7 (Wlofl Eng Meinour); James's Printiptci of Psychology, ch, tj; 
Kijlpe's Omtlixrs of PsyckoUty, part L chap, f and 3, |A, S. P.- P. J 

WEBSTEB. ALEKAKDEH (1707-1784), Scottish writer and 
minister, son of James Webster, a covenanting minister, was 
born in Edinburgh in 1707* Having become a minister ia the 
church of Scotland, he propounded a scheme in 1742 fur provid- 
ing pensions for the widows of ministers. The Liblcs which he 
drew up from information obtained from all the presbyteries 
©{ Scotland were based on a system of actuarial calculation that 
supplied a precedent followed by insurance companies in modem 
limes Tor reckoning averages of longevity. In 1755 Lhe govern- 
ment commissioned Webster to obtain data for the Gr*t census 
of Scot Und, which he carried out in lbe same year. In 1753 
he was ejected moderator of the Genera! Assembly; in 1771 
he was appointed a dean of the Chapel Royal and chaplain to 
George ill. in Scotland; and he died on the 35th of January 
1784- 

\\ tUier published in 174ft hw CakwlattQiu^ setting forth the 
principle* on which his Khcme for widows' pensions wai based; he 
also wrote a drfrnee of the Mcrhodi L mo^-ement in 1741, and Zeal 
forth* CM mm Relic**** Intrrtitiaf i£*nki*4 Cvmmtn&il i»7S^)^ 

WEBSTER, BENJAMIN MOTTINGHAW C*W-»W»}, Eugltsb 
actor, manager and dramatic writer, was born in Bath on the 
3rd of September 1707, tne son of a dancing mamer. First 
appearing as Harlequin, and then in small parts at Drury Lane, 
he went to the If ay market in 1820, And was given Leading 
comedy character business. He was the lessee of tlic Hayniatkct 
from 1B3;; he built tne rew Adelphi theatre (J050J; later the 
Olympic, Princess's and St James's caroe under his control; 
and he was the patron of all the contemporary playwrights and 
mjny of the best actors, *ho owed tbeir opportunity of succeis 
to hitm As a character actor lie *a* unequailed in bis day, 
especially in such pans as Triplet in J/sUj frf Farcj, Joey 
Ijdffi in Xo TJnrrr>v£hfarr, a;nd John Perry blngle in bta own 
dramatization ot The GnVlfl &n the Hearth. He wrote, trans* 
hted or adapted nearly a bund red plays* Webster took his 
formal farewell of the stage in 1874, and he died on the 3rd of 
July IBS?, tils daughter, Harrfclte Georgians (d. 1897), wis 
the first wile of Edward Lcvy-Lawson, itt barun Bumham; 
and his son, W. 5* WebftGr, had three c liilJ re n— Benjamin 
Wefrtfet (b, 1 $64; married to Miss May Whitby), Annie (Mrs 
A. E. George) and li«ic (Mrs Sydney E rough)— all well I40* rt 
on the London stage, and further connected with il in each Cgst 
by marriage, 

WEBSTER, DANIEL f 1783-1851)/ American statesman, 
was bora in Salisbury (now Franklin), New HampsI*-- — * L ' 



460 



WEBSTER, D. 



x8thof January 1783. He was a descendant of Thomas Webster, 
of Scottish ancestry, who settled in New Hampshire about 1636. 
His father, Ebenezer Webster (1730-1806), was a sturdy frontiers- 
man; when, in 1763, be built his log cabin in the town of Salis- 
bury there was no habitation between him and Canada. He 
was a member of Rogers' Rangers in the Seven Years' War, 
served in the War of Independence, was for several years a 
member of the New Hampshire legislature, was a delegate to 
the New Hampshire convention which ratified the Federal 
constitution, and was a justice of the court of common pleas for 
his county. Daniel was a frail but clever child, and his family 
made great sacrifices to give him and bis elder brother Ezekiel 
a good education. He attended Phillips Exeter Academy 
about nine months in 1794, was further prepared for college 
by Dr Samuel Wood, the minister at Boscawen, and graduated 
at Dartmouth College in 1 801. He was chosen Fourth of July 
orator in Hanover, the college town, in 1800, and in his speech 
appears the substance of the political principles for the develop- 
ment of which he is chiefly famous. After graduation he began 
the study of law in his native town. When in the following 
winter money had to be earned to enable Ezekiel to remain in 
college, Daniel accepted the principalship of .the academy at 
Fryeburg, Maine; but he resumed his law studies in the follow- 
ing year, and in 1804, with Ezekiel's assistance, he was enabled 
to go to Boston and conclude his studies under Christopher 
Gore (1758-1827), later governor of Massachusetts (1809-1810) 
and a U.S. senator (1813-18x6). Admitted to the bar in Boston 
in 1 80s, Webster began the practice of law at Boscawen, but his 
father died a year later, and Webster removed in the autumn 
of 1807 to Portsmouth, then one of the leading commercial 
dties of New England.. Here he rose rapidly to eminence both 
at the bar and in politics. 

t His political career began in earnest at the opening of the War 
of 18 12. He led the opposition in his state to the policy of 
Madison's administration, was elected by the Federalists a 
member of the National House of Representatives, and took 
his seat in May 1813. Henry Clay, the speaker, appointed him 
a member of the Committee on Foreign Relations, of which 
John C. Calhoun was chairman, and for some forty years these 
three constituted a great triumvirate in American politics. 
Webster had been in the House less than three weeks when he 
greatly embarrassed the administration by introducing a set 
of resolutions asking for information relating to the immediate 
cause of the war. In January 1814, when a bill to encourage 
enlistments was before the House, he attacked the conduct of 
the war in his first great speech. An even more forcible speech, 
delivered later in the same session, in support of a bill for repeal- 
ing the embargo and non-importation acts, marked him as one 
of the foremost men in Congress. He successfully opposed a 
bill providing for what would have been practically an irredeem- 
able currency, and he voted against the bill for chartering the 
second United States bank, although it provided for the redemp- 
tion of bank notes in specie, because he objected to permitting 
the government to have so large a share in its management. 
Webster removed to Boston in June 18x6. This cost him his 
seat in Congress after the 4th of March 181 7, and for the next six 
years he was engaged chiefly in the practice of law in the courts 
of Massachusetts and before the U.S. Supreme Court. 

His first leading case before the Supreme Court was the 
Dartmouth College Case. In 1815, when the Dartmouth board 
of trustees was rent by factions, the majority, who were Federal- 
ists and Congregationalists, removed the president, John 
Wheelock, who was a Presbyterian, and appointed Francis 
Brown in his place. Wheelock appealed to the legislature in 
the following year, when it was strongly Republican, and that 
body responded by passing acts which virtually repealed the 
charter received from George HI., created a state university, 
placed Wheelock at its bead, and transferred to it the property 
of the college. The case came before the Supreme Court of New 
Hampshire in May 1817. Jeremiah Mason (1 768-1848), a lawyer 
of the first rank, Jeremiah Smith and Webster appeared for 
tip cdlegft, *°A Argued that these acts were invalid because 



they were not within the general scope of the legislature's power, 
because they violated provisions of the state constitution and 
because they violated the clause of the Federal Constitution 
which prohibits a state from impairing the obligation of contracts 
but the court decided against them. On the last point, however, 
the case was carried to the Supreme Court of the United States, 
and there Webster, presenting principally arguments of his 
colleagues at the state trial and making a powerful appeal to 
the emotions of the court, won the case for the college and for 
himself the front rank at the American bar. The result, too, 
vindicating as it did the supremacy of the Constitution of the 
United States, was a substantial gain for that nationalism which 
Webster advocated in his first Fourth of July oration at Hanover, 
and the promotion of which was for the remainder of his career 
his principal service to his country. His next great case was that 
of M'CuUoch v. Maryland Maryland had imposed a tax upon 
the Baltimore branch of the Bank of the United States; The, 
Maryland Court of Appeals sustained the validity of this act. 
Webster, supported by William Pinkney and William Wirt, 
argued in February 18x9, (1) that the power to establish a bank 
was to be implied from the general power given to Congress to 
administer the financial affairs of the nation, and was a means 
of administering the finances which was appropriate and within 
the discretion of Congress; (2) that " the power to tax is the power 
to destroy," and that a state had not the constitutional power 
to impose a tax upon any instrumentality of the government 
of the United States. The Supreme Court sustained these argu- 
ments and the act of Maryland was held to be void. Four years 
later (1823) Webster argued the case of Gibbons v. Ogden. The 
state of New York, in order to reward the enterprise of Robert 
R. Livingston and the inventive genius of Robert Enlton in the 
application of the steam engine to traffic on the water, had given 
to them a monopoly of all transportation by steam within the 
waters of New York. The highest court of that state sustained 
the validity of the monopoly. Gibbons, who had begun to run 
a steamboat from New Jersey, appealed to the Supreme Court. 
Webster argued that the Federal Constitution gave to Congress 
control over interstate commerce, and that any interference 
by the legislature of a state with this commerce was unconstitu- 
tional and void. The Supreme Court so held; its opinion, 
written by Chief Justice Marshall, being little else than a recital 
of Webster's argument. In the case of Ogden v. Saunders, 
heard in 1824 and reheard in 1827, in which the question was the 
validity or invalidity of the insolvent laws of the several states, 
Webster argued that the clause prohibiting a state from impairing 
the obligation of contracts applied to future as well as to past 
contracts, but the court decided against him. 

Meanwhile Webster had come to be recognized as the first 
American orator. His oration at Plymouth, on the 22nd of 
December 1820, on the second centennial anniversary of the 
landing of the Pilgrims, placed him in this rank. No man 
mastered more thoroughly the fundamental principles of govern- 
ment and the currents of feeling which influence the destiny of 
nations. His oration in 1825 at the laying of the corner stone 
of the Bunker Bill monument contained perhaps the clearest 
statement to be found anywhere of the principles underlying 
the American War of Independence. In the following year 
Webster delivered his oration in commemoration of the second 
and third presidents of the United States— John Adams and 
Thomas Jefferson — who died on the 4th of July 1826; it is 
particularly remarkable for Adams's imaginary reply in the 
Continental Congress to the arguments against a Declaration 
of Independence, beginning with the familiar quotation: " Sink 
or swim, live or die, survive or perish, I gave my hand and 
my ' heart to this vote." Webster's physical endowment* as 
an orator were extraordinary. Thomas Carlyle thus describes 
him as he appeared in London in 1839. 

" Not many days ago I saw at breakfast the notabkst of your 
notabilities, Daniel Webster. He is a magnificent specimen. You 
might say to all the world, ' This is our Yankee Englishman; such 
limbs we make in Yankee land! ' As a logic fencer, or parliamentary 
Hercules, one would be inclined to back him at first sight against all 
the extant world. The tanned complexion, that amorphous crag-like 



WEBSTER, D. 



461 



face; the dull black eye* under the 
anthracite furnace*, needing only to' 
:losed; I * 



__, _j of brows, like dull 

„ j bUrwn; the mastiff mouth 

accurately closed; I have not traced ao much of siUnt Bcrserkir 
raj* <hat I remember in any man." 

In i8jo Webster took an important part in the convention 
called to revise the constitution of Massachusetts, his arguments 
in favour of removing the religious test, in favour of retaining 
property representation in the Senate, and in favour of 
increasing the independence of the Judiciary, being especially 
notable. He was a member of the National House of Repre- 
sentatives from 1&J3 to 1827 and of the Senate from 1837 to 
1841. Soon after returning to the House he supported in a 
notable speech a resolution to send a commissioner to Greece, 
then in insurrection. 

The tariff "was to him a distasteful subject, and he was governed 
in his attitude toward it largely by the wishes of the majority 
of his constituents. He opposed the tariff bill of 1816 and in 
1824, and he repudiated the name of " American system," 
claimed by Clay for his system of protection. When, however, 
the tariff bill of 1828, which was still more protective, came up 
for discussion, Webster had ceased to oppose protection; but 
he did not attempt to argue in favour of it. He stated that 
his people, after giving warning in 2824 that they would consider 
protection the policy of the Government, had gone into protected 
manufactures, and he now asked that that poucy be not reversed 
to the injury of his constituents. In later speeches, too, he 
defended protection rather as a policy under which industries 
had been called into being than as advisable if the stags had been 
dear for the adoption of a new policy. 

The tariff of 1838 aroused bitter opposition in South Carolina, 
and called from Vice-President Calhoun the statement of the 
doctrine of nullification which was adopted by the South Carolina 
legislature at the dose of the year and is known as the South 
Carolina Exposition, genator Robert Y. Hayne, from the same 
state, voiced this doctrine in the Senate, and Webster's reply 
was Us most powerful exposition of the national conception 
of the Union. The occasion of this famous Webster-Hayne 
debate was the introduction by Senator Samuel A. Foote (1780- 
1846) of Connecticut of a resolution of inquiry into the expediency 
of restricting the sales of the Western lands. This was on the 
39th of December 1839, and after Senator Benton 'of Missouri 
had denounced the resolution as one inspired by hatred of the 
East for the West, Hayne, on the. 19th of January 1830, made 
a vigorous attack on New England, and declared his opposition 
to a permanent revenue from the public lands or any other 
source on the ground that it would promote corruption and the 
consolidation of the government and " be fatal to the sovereignty 
and independence of the states." Webster's brief reply drew 
from Hayne a second speech, in which he entered into a full 
exposition of the doctrine of nullification, and the important 
part of Webster's second reply to Hayne on the aoth and 27th 
of January is a masterly exposition of the Constitution as in 
his opinion it had come to be after a development of more 
than forty years. He showed the revolutionary and unpractical 
character of any doctrine such as nullification (9.9.) based on the 
assumption that the general government was the agent of the 
state legislatures. It placed the general government, he said, 
in the absurd position of a " servant of four-and-twenty masters, 
of different wills and different purposes, and yet bound to obey 
ail." He then argued at length that the correct assumption was 
that both the general government and the state government 
were " all agents of the same supreme power, the people," that 
the people had established the Constitution of the United 
States and that in the Supreme Court, established under that 
Constitution, was vested the final decision on all constitutional 
questions. Whatever may be said of the original creation of 
the Constitution, whether by the states or- by the people, its 
development under the influences of a growing nationalism 
*as a strong support to Webster's argument, and no other 
speech so strengthened Union sentiment throughout the North; 
it* keynote was " liberty and Union, now and forever, one and 
inseparable." South Carolina, however, insisted that its doctrine 
xxvra 8* 



was sound, and in November 1833 passed an ordinance declaring 
the revenue laws of the United States nun and void. President 
Jackson respo nde d with a proclamation denying the right of 
nullification, and asked Congress for authority to collect the 
revenue in South Carolina by force if necessary. A bill, known 
as the Force Bill, was introduced m the Senate, and in the 
debate upon it Webster had an encounter with Calhoun. His 
reply to Calhoun, printed as " The Constitution not a compact 
between sovereign States," is one of his closest legal arguments, 
but somewhat overmatched by the keen logic of bis adversary. 

Webster's support of President Jackson in the South Carolina 
trouble helped to drive Calhoun into ao alliance with Clay-, and 
Clay, whose plan of preserving the Union was by compromise, 
came forward with a bill for greatly reducing the tariff. Webster, 
strongly opposed to yielding in this way, made a vigorous speech 
against the bill, but it passed and South Carolina claimed a 
victory. In the same year (1833) the Whig party began to take 
definite form under the leadership of Clay, in opposition, chiefly, 
to President Jackson's bank policy, and Webster joined the 
ranks behind Clay with an aspiration for the presidency. He 
was formally nominated for that office by the Massachusetts 
legislature in 1835, and received the electoral vote of that state, 
but of that state only. Four years later his party passed him 
by for William Henry Harrison, the hero of Tippecanoe, and 
Webster refused the proffered nomination for vice-president. 

President Harrison appointed Webster secretary of state but 
died one month after taking office. John Tyler, who succeeded 
to the presidency, was soon " read out of his party," and all 
his cabinet except Webster resigned. Webster hesitated, but 
after consultation with a delegation of Massachusetts Whigs 
decided to remain. Although he was severely criticized there 
were good reasons for his decision. When he entered office the 
relations between the United States and Great Britain were 
critical. The M'Leod case 1 in which the state of New York 
insisted on trying a British subject, with whose trial the Federal 
government had no power to interfere, while the British govern- 
ment had declared that it would consider conviction and execu- 
tion a cosm belli; the exercise of the hateful right of search by 
British vessels on the coast of Africa; the Maine boundary, 
as to which the action of a state might at any time bring the 
Federal government into armed collision with Great Britain-* 
all these at once met the new secretary, and he felt that he had 
no right to abandon his work for party reasons. With the special 
commissioner from Great Britain, Lord Ashburton, he concluded 
the treaty of 1842 known as the Webster-Ashburton Treaty. 
Differences arisingout of the M'Leod case were adjusted by extend- 
ing the principle of extradition. The question of the suppression 
of the African slave trade, with which was connected the right 
of search, was settled by an agreement that each nation should 
keep in service off the coast of Africa a squadron carrying not 
fewer than eighty guns, and that the two squadrons should act 
in concert when necessary. The North-east boundary dispute 
was settled by a compromise which allowed Maine abdut 5500 
sq. m. less than she had claimed, and allowed Great Britain 
about as much less on her claim, and by an agreement on the 
part of the government of the United States to pay to Maine 
and Massachusetts " in equal moieties " the sum of $300,000 
for their assent (see Maine). 

Immediately after the treaty had been concluded the Whigs 
insisted that Webster should leave the cabinet. He refused, 
for a time, to be driven, but because of their continued attacks, 
together with his ambition to becoooe president, and because 
Tyler favoured the annexation of Texas while he was opposed 
to it, he resigned in May 1843. He was forgiven by his party 
in the following year, but not until the opposition, provoked 
by the retention of his position under Tyler, had ruined whatever 

1 This case* grew out of the Canadian rebellion of 1837. Alexander 
M'Leod boasted in November 1840 that he was one of a Canadian 
party who, on the 39th of December 1837, had captured and burned 
a small American steamboat, the " Caroline," aiid in the course of 
the attack had shot Amos Durfee. The Canadian commander 
had regarded the " Caroline " as being in the service of the insurgents 
and had asked for volunteers to destroy her (ate Sawaap, W. H.). 



4-62 



WEBSTER, J. 



chance be might have had in that year of receiving the presidential 
nomination. In June 1843, on the occasion of the co m plet i on 
of the Bunker Hill monument, Webster delivered another classic 
oration. In February 1844 he argued the Girard Will Case 
before the United States Supreme Court. Stephen Girard (q.v.) 
had devised and bequeathed the residue of his estate for the 
establishment and maintenance of Girard 'College, in which no 
minister of the Gospel of any sect or denomination whatever 
should be admitted. The suit was brought to break the will, 
and Webster, for the plaintiffs, after stating that the devise 
could stand only on condition that it was a charity, argued 
that it was not a charity because no teaching was such except 
Christian teaching. He made an eloquent plea for Christianity, 
but his case was weak in law, and the court sustained the will. 

Webster was returned to the Senate in 1845. He opposed the 
annexation of Texas and the Mexican War, and was, as before, 
the recognized spokesman of his party. At the beginning of the 
quarrel of the North and the South over the organization of the 
territory acquired from Mexico, Calhoun contended that the 
Constitution of the United States extended over this territory 
and carried slavery with it, but Webster denied this on the 
ground that the territory was the property of, not part of, the 
United States, and Webster's view prevailed, The whole matter 
had, therefore, to be adjusted by Congress, and as the growing 
intensity of the quarrel revealed the depth of the chasm between 
the sections, Clay came forward with the famous compromise of 
1850, and Webster's last great speech-—" The Constitution and the 
Union," or as it is more commonly known " The Seventh of March 
Speech "—was in support of this Compromise. It was a noble 
effort to secure a lasting settlement of the slavery question, but 
he was bitterly denounced throughout the north as a renegade. In 
July 1850 Webster again became secretary of state, in the cabinet 
of President Fillmore. Perhaps the most important act of his 
second term was obtaining the release of Kossuth and other Hun- 
garian refugees who had fled to Turkey, and whose surrender bad 
been demanded by the Austrian government. He died at his 
home in Marshfield, Massachusetts, on the 24th of October 1852. 
Webster was twice married— first in 1808 to Grace, daughter 
of Rev. Elijah Fletcher, a New Hampshire clergyman. She died 
in 1828, leaving two sons, Daniel Fletcher, killed in the second 
battle of Bull Run, and Edward, a major in the United States 
army, who died while serving in the Mexican War, and a daughter 
Julia, who married Samuel Appleton. Webster's second wife was 
Caroline Le Roy, daughter of Jacob Le Roy, a New York 
merchant. He was married to her in 1829 and she survived him. 

The universal expression of respect and admiration at the time 
of Webster's death showed that he had retained the confidence 
of his people. Never, since the death of Washington, had there 
been in the United States such a universal expression of public 
sorrow and bereavement. It is not too much to say that the 
conviction of the justice of their cause that carried the northern 
states successfully through the Civil War was largely due to the 
arguments of Webster. He had convinced the majority of the 
people that the government created by the Constitution was not 
a league or confederacy, but a Union, and had all the powers 
necessary to it* maintenance and preservation. He had con- 
vinced the Supreme Court, and established the principle in 
American jurisprudence, that whenever a power is granted by a 
Constitution, everything that is fairly and reasonably involved 
in the exercise of that power is granted also. He established the 
freedom of the instrumentalities of the national government 
from adverse legislation by the states; freedom of commerce 
between the different states; the right of Congress to regulate 
the entire passenger traffic through and from the United States, 
and the sacredness of public franchises from legislative assault. 
The establishment of these principles was essential to the integrity 
and permanence of the American Union. 

BmuocxAPBY.— The Works of Daniel Webster (6 vols., Boston, 
185:) contain a biographical memoir by Edwatd Everett: G. T. 
Curtis, Life of Daniel Webster (s vols., New York, 1870) is the most 
complete biography, but it is written wholly from an admirers 
point of view. See also J. W. Mclntyre (ed.), Writints and Speeches 
of Daniel Webster (18 vols., Boston. 1903) l Fletcher Webster (cd.), 



Daniel Webster's Private Correspondents (2 vols., Boston, 1857) I H. C 
Lodge, Daniel Webster (Boston, 1899) ; J. B. McMaster, Dantei Webster 
(New York, 1902); E. P. Wheeler. Daniel Webster, the Expounder 
ojfthe Constitution (New York, 1905); S. W. McCall, Dantd Webster 
(Boston, 1902); and Norman Hapgood, Daniel Webster (Boston, 
1899). (E. P. W.: X.) 

WEBSTER, JOHH (fl. 1602-1624), English dramatist, was a 
-writer for the stage in the year 1602, when he had a share in three 
plays noted by Philip Henslow, and he published in 1624 the 
city pageant for that year, " invented and written by John 
Webster, merchant-tailor." In the same year a tragedy by 
Ford and Webster, A late Murther of lite Sonn upon Ike Mother, 
was licensed for the stage; it is one of the numberless treasures 
now lost to us through the carelessness of genius or the malignity 
of chance. Beyond the period included between these two dates 
there are no traces to be found of his existence; nor is anything 
known of it with any certainty during that period, except that 
seven plays appeared with his name on the title page, three of 
them only the work of his unassisted hand. He was the author 
of certain additions to Marston's tragicomedy of The Malcontent 
(1604); these probably do not extend beyond the induction, a 
curious and vivacious prelude to a powerful and irregular *ork 
of somewhat morbid and sardonic genius. Three years later, in 
1607, two comedies and a tragedy, " written by Thomas Dekker 
and John Webster," were given to the press. The comedies are 
lively and humorous, full of movement and incident; but the 
beautiful interlude of poetry which distinguishes the second 
scene of the fourth act of Westward Hoi is unmistakably and 
unquestionably the work of Dekker; while the companion 
comedy of Northward Ho! is composed throughout of homespun 
and coarse-grained prose. The Famous History of Sir Thomas 
Wyatl is apparently a most awkward and injurious abridgment 
of an historical play in two parts on a pathetic but undramatic 
subject, the fate of Lady Jane Grey. In this lost play of Lady 
Jane (noted by Henslow in 1602) Heywoqcl, Dekker, Chettie and 
Smith had also taken part; so that even in its original form it 
can hardly have been other than a rough piece of patchwork. 
There are some touches of simple eloquence and rude dramatic 
ability in the mangled and corrupt residue which is all that 
survives of it; but on the whole this " history " is crude, meagre, 
and unimpressive. In 16x2 John Webster stood revealed to the 
then somewhat narrow world of readers as a tragic poet and 
dramatist of the very foremost rank in the very highest class. 
The White Devil, also known as Vittoria Corotnbona, 1 is a tragedy 
based on events then comparatively recent — on a chronicle 
of crime and retribution in which the leading circumstances 
were altered and adapted with the most delicate art and the most 
consummate judgment from the incompleteness of ^composite 
reality to the requisites of the stage of Shakespeare. By hint 
alone among English poets have the finest scenes and passages of 
this tragedy been ever surpassed or equalled in the crowning 
qualities of tragic or dramatic poetry— in pathos and passion, 
in subtlety and strength, in harmonious variety of art and 
infallible fidelity to nature. Eleven years had elapsed when the 
twin masterpiece of its author— if not indeed a still greater or 
more absolute masterpiece— was published by the poet who bad 
given it to the stage seven years before. The Duchess of Malfy * 
(an Anglicized version of Amain, corresponding to such designa- 
tions as Florence, Venice and Naples) was probably brought on 
the stage about the time of the death of Shakespeare; it was 
first printed in the memorable year which witnessed the first 
publication of his collected plays. This tragedy stands out among 
its compeers as one of the imperishable and ineradicable land* 
marks of literature. All the great qualities apparent in The White 
Devil reappear in The Duchess of Malfy, combined with a yet more 
perfect execution, and utilised' with a yet more consummate 

1 The White Dhtl\ or, The Tragedy of Paulo Giordano Ursini, 
Duke of Brachiano, with the Life and Death of Vittoria Cerombona, 
the famous Venetian CurUtau (1612). Other editions, with varying 
title-pages, 1631, 1665, 1672. 

* The Dutchess of MaJfey, A Tratedy. As it was atfrovedly well 
acted at Black friers . . . (1 623). The plot is taken from a novd 
by Bandello, and is also the subject of a tragedy by Lope de Vega, 
El Mayor Dome de la tuques** evAmalfi. 



WEBSTER, N.— WEBSTER, T. 



463 



skm. No poet has ever so long and 90 successfully sustained 
at their utmost height and intensity the expressed emotions and 
Che united effects of terror and pity. The transcendent imagina- 
tion and the impassioned sympathy which inspire this most 
tragic of aB tragedies save King Lear are fused together in the 
fourth act into a creation which has hardly been excelled for 
unflagging energy of impression and of pathos in all the dramatic 
or poetic literature of the world. Its wild and fearful sublimity 
of invention is not more exceptional than the exquisite justice 
and tenderness and subtlety of its expression. Some of these 
executive merits may be found in an ill-constructed and ill-con- 
ditioned tragi-comedy which was printed in the same year; but 
few readers will care to remember much more of The DeviPs Law 
Case than the admirable scenes and passages which found favour 
in the unerring and untiring sight of Webster's first and final, 
interpreter or commentator, Charles Lamb. Thirty-one years later 
(1654) the noble tragedy of Appius and Virginia was given to the 
world— a work which would alone have sufficed to perpetuate 
the memory of its author among all competent lovers of English 
poetry at its best Seven years afterwards an unprincipled 
and ignorant bookseller published, under the title of Two New 
Playes: vis. A Cure for a Cuckold: a Comedy. The Thracian 
Wonder, A Comical History. As H hath been several times acted 
with peat Applause, two plays of which he assigned the authorship 
to John Webster and William Rowley. This attribution may 
or may not be accurate; the former play is a mixture of coarsely 
realistic farce and gracefully romantic comedy. An elegy on 
Henry, prince of "Wales, -and a few slight occasional verses, com- 
pose the rest of Webster's remaining extant works. 

(Edward Phillips, in his Theatrum poUarum, wrongly attri- 
buted to him a share in The Weakest goes to the WaU. The play 
of Guise, mentioned by Webster himself in the Introduction to 
The Devil's Law Case, is lost.] 

Webster's claims to a place among the chief writers of his 
country were ignored for upwards of two centuries. In 1830 
the Rev. Alexander Dyce first collected and edited the works 
of a poet who had found his first adequate recognition twenty- 
two years earlier at the pious and fortunate hands of Lamb. 
But we cannot imagine that a presentiment or even a fore- 
knowledge of this long delay in the payment of a debt so long 
due from his countrymen to the memory of so great a poet would 
seriously have disturbed or distressed the mind of the man who 
has given us the due to his nature in a single and an imperishable 
sentence—" I rest silent* in my own work." (A. C. S.) 

- See The Works of John Webster; with some Account of the Author 
and Notes, by Alexander Dyce (new ed., 1857); The Dramatic Works 
of John Webster, edited by William Haxlitt the younger (1857); 
the Best Plays of Webster. and Toumeur, edited by J. & Symonds 
for the " Mermaid " series (1888-1903) . Love's Graduate . . (Oxford, 
1885), in which Webster's supposed share in A Cure for a Cuckold is 
presented separately by S. Spring-Rice, with an introduction by 
Edmund Goose, bee also E. Gosse, Seventeenth-Century Studies 
(1883); and especially an exhaustive treatise by E. E. Stoll, John 
Webster, The Periods of his Work as determined by his Relations to the 
Drama of his Day (Boston, Massachusetts, 1905). Mr Stoll's account 
(see p. 43) shows that the additional biographical suggestions made by 
Mr Sidney Lee in his article in the Diet. Nat.Biog.are not supported. 

WEBSTER, HOAH (1758-1843), American lexicographer 
and' journalist, was born at West Hartford, Connecticut, on the 
16th of October 1758. He was descended from John Webster 
of Hartford, governor of Connecticut in 1656-1657, and on his 
mother's side from Governor William Bradford of Plymouth. 
He entered Yale in J 7 74, graduating in 1778. He studied law, 
and was admitted to the bar at Hartford in 1781. In 1782-1783 
he taught in a classical school at Goshen, New York, and became 
convinced of the need of better textbooks of English. In X783- 
1785 he published at Hartford A Grammatical Institute of the 
English Language, in three parts, a spelling-book, a grammar and 
a reader. This was the pioneer American work in its field, and it 
soon found a place in most of the schools of the United States. 
During the twenty years in which Webster was preparing his 
dictionary, his income from the spelling-book, though the royalty 
was less than a cent a copy, was enough to support his family; 
and before 1861 the sale reached more than a million copies a 



year. .The wide use of this book contributed greatly to uni- 
formity of pronunciation in the United States, and, with his 
dictionary, secured the general adoption in the United States of 
a simpler system of spelling than that current in England. In 
1 785 he published Sketches of American Policy, in which he argued 
for a constitutional government whose authority should be vested 
in Congress. This he regarded as the first distinct proposal 
for a United States Constitution, and when in 1787 the work of 
the commissioners was completed at Philadelphia, where Webster 
was then living as superintendent of an academy, he wrote in 
behalf of the constitution an Examination of the Leading Principles 
of the Federal Constitution. In 1 788 he started in New York the 
American Magazine, but it failed at the end of a year, and he 
resumed the practice of law at Hartford. In 1703, in order to 
support Washington's administration, he removed to New York 
and established a daily paper, the Minerva (afterwards the 
Commercial Advertiser), and later a semi-weekly paper, the Herald 
(afterwards the New York Spectator). In 1798 he removed to 
New Haven. He served in the Connecticut House of Represen- 
tatives in x 800 and 1802-07 »*nd as a county judge in 1 807-1 x . In 
1807 he published A Philosophical and Practical Grammar of the 
English Language. In 1806 he had brought out A Compendious 
Dictionary of the English Language, and in 1807 he began work 
on his dictionary. While engaged on it he removed in 1812 to 
Amherst, Massachusetts, where he was president of the Board of 
Trustees of the Academy and assisted in founding Amherst Col- 
lege. He was also a member of the General Court of Massa- 
chusetts. In 1822 he returned to New Haven, and the next 
year be received the degree of LL.D. from Yale. He spent a 
year (1824-1825) abroad, working on his dictionary, in Paris and 
at the university of Cambridge, where he finished his manuscript. 
The work came out in 1828 in two volumes. It contained 
12,000 words and from 30,000 to 40,000 definitions that had not 
appeared in any earlier dictionary. An English edition soon' 
followed. In 1840 the second edition, corrected and enlarged, 
came out, in two volumes. He completed the revision of an 
appendix a few days before his death, which occurred in New 
Haven on the 28th of May 1843. 

The dictionary was revised in 1847 under the editorship of Profess o r 
Chauncey A. Goodrich and published in one volume. In 1859 a 
pictorial edition was issued. In 1864 it was revised mainly under 
the direction of Professor Noah Porter, and again in 1890 under the 
same direction, the latter revision appearing with the title of the 
International Dictionary of the English Language. The tatter was 
again issued in 1900, with a supplement of 25,000 words and phrases, 
under the supervision of William Torrev Harris, who edited another 
revision, in 1909, under the title of the New International Dictionary 
of the English Language. It has frequently been abridged. 

Among Webster s other works are Dissertations on the English 
Language (1789), a course of lectures that he had given three years 
before in some of the chief American cities; Essays (1790); The 



Stat* of Banking Institutions and Insurance Offices (1802); and A 
Collectton of Papers on Political, Literary, and Moral Subjects (1843), 
which included " On the Supposed Change in the Temperature of 
Winter," a treatise showing long ana careful research. He 
also published Governor John Winthrop's Journal in 1790, and 
wrote a History of the United States, of which a revised edition ap- 
peared in 1839. 

See Memoir of Noah Webster by his son-in-law, Professor Chauncey 
A. Goodrich, in the quarto editions of the Dictionary, also Nock 
Webster (1882), by Horace E. Scudder, in "American Men of 
Letters." 

WEBSTER, THOMAS (1775-1844), British geologist, was born 
in the Orkney Isles in 1773, and was educated at Aberdeen. He 
subsequently went to London and studied architecture, the 
Royal Institution in Albemarle Street being built from his design. 
In 1826 lie was appointed house-secretary and curator to the 
Geological Society of London, and for many years he rendered 
important services in editing and illustrating the Transactions of 
the Society. In 1841-1842 he was professor of geology in Univer- 
sity College* London. He was distinguished for his researches 
on the Tertiary formations of the Isle of Wight, where he recog- 
nized the occurrence of both fresh-water and marine strata; he 
continued his observations on the mainland of Hampshire, and 



4 6 + 



WEBSTER, T.— WEDDERBURN 



subsequently in Dorsetshire, where he described the Purbeck and 
Portland rocks. To him Sir Henry C Englefield (1751-1832) 
was indebted for the geological descriptions and the effective 
geological views and sections of the Isle of Wight and Dorset 
that enriched his Description of the Principal Picturesque Beauties, 
Antiquities and Geological Phenomena of the Isle of Wight (18x6). 
The mineral Websterite was named after him. He died in. 
London on the 26th of December 1844. 

WEBSTER, THOMAS (1800-1886), English figure painter, was 
born at Ranelagh Street, Pimlico, London, on the aoth of March 
1800. His father was a member of the household of George III. ; 
and the son, having shown an aptitude for music, became a 
chorister in the Chapel Royal, St James's. He, however, 
developed a still stronger love for painting, and in 182 1 he was 
admitted student of the Royal Academy, to whose exhibition he 
contributed, in 1824, portraits of " Mrs Robinson and Family." 
In the following year he gained the first medal in the school of 
painting. Till 1 879 he continued to exhibit in the Royal Academy 
work of a genial and gently humorous character, dealing com' 
monly with subjects of familiar incident, and especially of child 
life. Many of these were exceedingly popular, particularly his 
" Punch " (1840), which procured in 1841 his election as A.R.A., 
followed five years later by, full membership. He became an 
honorary retired academician in 1877, and died at Cranbrook, 
Kent, on the 23rd of September 1886. His " Going into School, 
or the Truant " (1836), and his " Dame's School " (1845) are 
in the National Gallery, and five of his works are in the South 
Kensington Museum. 

WEBSTER, a township of Worcester county, Massachusetts, 
U.S.A., on the French river, about 16 m. S.S.W. of Worcester. 
Pop. (1890) 7031; (1900) 8804, of whom 3562 were foreign- 
born; (19x0 census), 11,509. Land area (1906), 12-19 sq. m. 
Webster is served by the New York, New Haven & Hartford, and 
the Boston & Albany railways, and by interurban electric lines. 
In the- township is Lake Chaubunagungamaug, a beautiful sheet 
of water about 2 sq. m. in area. The manufacture of textiles 
and of boots and shoes is the principal industry; the total 
value of the factory product in 1005 was $5,867,769. Webster 
was founded by Samuel Slater (1768-1835), who in 18x2 built 
cotton-mills and in 18x5-18x6 began the manufacture of woollen 
doth. The township, named in honour of Daniel Webster, was 
erected in 1832 from common lands and from parts of Dudley 
and Oxford townships, which before the cotton-mills were built 
here were almost uninhabited. 

Sec Holmes Ammidown, Historical Collections (New York, 1874), 
vol. i. pp. 461-524. 

WECKHERLIN, OEORG RUDOLF (1584-1653). German 
poet, was born at Stuttgart on the 15th of September 1584. 
After studying law he settled at Stuttgart, and, as secretary to 
the Duke Johann Friedrich of Wttrttemberg, was employed on 
diplomatic missions to France and England. Between 1620 
and 1624 he lived in England in the service of the Palatinate, 
and seems also to have been employed by the English govern' 
ment. In X644 he was appointed "Secretary for Foreign 
Tongues " in England, a position in which, on the establishment 
of the Commonwealth, he was followed byMilton. He died in 
London on the 13th of February 1653. Weckherlin was the 
most distinguished of the circle of South German poets who 
prepared the way for the Renaissance movement associated in 
Germany with Martin Opitx. Two volumes of his Oden und 
Ges&nge appeared in 16x8 and 1619; his collected Geistliche 
und weltliche Gedichte in 1641. His models were the poets 
of the French PlHade, and with his psalms, odes and sonnets 
he broke new ground for the German lyric. An epic poem on 
the death of Gustavus Adolphus, in alexandrines, seems to have 
won most favour with his contemporaries. 

Weckherlin's Gedichte have been edited by H. Fischer for the 
SluUgartcr Literarischer Verein(yoh. cxcix.-cc., 1 894-1895). Selections 
were published by W Muller (1823) and K. Goedekc (1873). See 
also C. P. Conz, Nachrichlen von demjjeben und den Schrifien Weckker* 
Hum (1803); E. Hopfncr, G. R. Wechherlins Oden und Cesdnp (1865) ; 
H. Fischer, Beitr&ge sur Literaturgeschichte Schwobens (1891), and the 
same author's article in the AUgemeine deutsche Biographie (1896). 



WEDDERBURN, JAMES (i495?-i533), JOHH (1500-1556) 
and ROBERT (i5io?-?i556), Scottish poets and religious re- 
formers, were natives of Dundee, where their father James 
Wedderburn was a prosperous merchant. All three brothers 
studied at St Andrews University. James Wedderburn, who 
had gone to St Andrews in 1514, was for a time in France prepar- 
ing for a mercantile career. On his return to Dundee in 15x4 
he received instruction. in the Reformed faith from Friar Hewat, 
a Dominican monk. He composed a play on the beheading 
of St John the Baptist, and another, a morality satirizing church 
abuses, in the setting of episodes from the story of Dionysius 
the Tyrant, both of which were performed in 1540 in the play- 
field of Dundee. Neither of these nor a third ascribed to him 
by Calderwood, the historian, are extant. A charge of heresy 
was broughtagainst him, but he escaped to France, and established 
himself as a merchant at Rouen or Dieppe, where he lived un- 
molested until his death in 1553, although attempts were made 
by the Scottish community there to bring further charges against 
him. 

John Wedderburn graduated M.A. at St Andrews in 1528. 
He took priests' orders and appears to have held the chaplaincy 
of St Matthews, Dundee, but in March 1539 he was accused of 
heresy, apparently for having, in conjunction with his brothers, 
written some anti-Catholic ballads. He escaped to Wittenberg, 
where with other of his compatriots he received the teaching of 
the German reformers. There he gained an acquaintance with 
the Lutheran hymns, which he turned to account on his return 
to Scotland. The death of James V. and the known leanings 
of the regent, the earl of Arran, to reform, encouraged many 
exiles, Wedderburn among them, to revisit Scotland. It is 
probable that he was the author of the greater portion of the 
Compendious Booh of Psalms and Spiritual Songs which contains 
a large number of hymns from the German. The enormous 
influence of the collection, with its added Gude and Godlie 
BaUalis, on Scottish reform, is attested by the penalties enacted 
against the authors and printers of these books. John Wedder- 
burn was in Dundee as late as X546, when he was obliged to flee 
to England. John Johnston in his Coronis martyrum says he 
died in exile in 1556. 

Robert Wedderburn, who graduated M.A. in 1530, was 
ordained priest, and succeeded his uncle John Barry as vicar of 
Dundee; but before he came into actual possession he also was 
suspected of heresy, and was compelled to flee to France and 
Germany. He returned to Scotland in 1546. He appears to 
have been actual vicar of Dundee in 1552. His sons were 
legitimized in January 1553. 

The earliest known edition of the Compendious Booh of Psalms and 
Spiritual Songs (of which an unique copy is extant) dates back to 
1567, though the contents were probably published in broad sheets 
dunng John Wedderburn's lifetime. It consists of a calendar and 
almanac, a catechism, hymns, many of them translations from the 
German, metrical versions of the Psalms, and a collection of ballads 
and satirical poems against the Catholic church and clergy. The 
separate shares of the brothers in this compilation cannot be settled, 
but Robert is said to have edited the whole and added the section of 
" gude and godlie baftatis." Many of these ballads are adapted from 
secular songs. Editions of the book appeared in 1578 (primed by 
John Ros), in lepo (by Robert Smith), in 1621 (by Andre Hart); 
selections were published by Lord Hailes (1765) and by Sfbbald 
(1802) ; a reprint of the 1 621 volume was edited by Sir J. G. Dalyell 
in Scotish Poems of the Sixteenth Century (1801); and of the 1578 
volume by David Laing in x86& In 1897 Professor A. F. Mitchell 
reprinted the 1567 volume (expurgated) for the Scottish Text Society. 

" Vedderbttrn's " Comblainte of Scotlande (1549) has been variously 
assigned to Robert Wedderburn, to Sir David Lyndsay and to Sir 
Tames Inglis, who was chaplain of the Abbey of Cambuskenneth 
from about 1 508 to 155a It is a prose treatise pleading for the 
maintenance of the Scottish alliance with France, written by a 
determined enemy of England and of the English party in Scotland. 
It is dedicated to Mary of Guise, and consists of the " Dreme " of 
Dame Scotia and her complaint against her three sons. These two 
sections are connected by a " Monologue Recrcatif," in which the 
author displays his general knowledge of popular songs, dances and 
tales, of astronomy, natural history and naval matters. Four copies 
of this work are extant, but in none is the title-page preserved. In 
the HarkUn catalogue the book is entered as Vedderpum's Comftainte 
of Scotlande. myth one Exorlatione to the thre Estaits to he vigilante 
in the Deffens of their Public Veil (1549) (Catalogus BiUiothecae 



WEDDING— WEDGWOOD 



465 



Haritia ■ n - vol, t no 8.571). Thi* title, which 15 rcpcaiod with varia- 
tions in -j-pcIliiiR in vol, iv, no. 12070, beare every mark of authenticity. 
The be-.' It ipf^jcs to have Ixxn printH in France, and the idea 
of Dam? 5cfctia , 5 exhortation* to hrr ^ms. the Three Estates, is 
borrowed from Alain Chattier 1 * Qn&inh&*e \mutif t vnut passages 
of which an? ippruoriated outright. Other nuiiif/i are borrowings 
from 0:uvien tic bairn G<rUU and Sir Dav**j Lynefoay. There are 
strong .irEurnvnt* 3 gainst Robert WedUerburn'* authorship, as 
maintained by Laing 4nd otherv It b not likely 1 hnc h* would write 
ia supf n vl Cardinal Beaton** policy, and The dialect is an ex- 
aggerated form of Utimted Mkio^ Scot^ diflvririg materially from 
the language of ihc C**ttH*diBiiS Book^ Some of the orthographical 
and tytHjf n*ph*T4l pe<olUrilka are due to the tart that the book 
was set up by Parisian primer*, Sir J A- H« Murray inclines to 
assign it to Sir James Ingli*. or_an unknown pric&t of the name of 

The text of the Comphyni was first edited by Leyden in 1801. 
Murray's edition for the E.E.T.S. appeared in 1872. The intro- 
duction to the latter requires revision in the light of later discoveries 
as to the plagiarisms ia the text. See the paper by W. A. Neilson in 
The Journal of Germanic Philology (iv.), the note by W. A. Craigie in 
The Modem Quarterly' of Language and Literature (i. 267), Gregory 
Smith's Specimens of Middle Scott (1902), p. 135 et seq., and the 
article by J. T. T. Brown in the Scottish Historical Review (January 
I9©4>- 

WEDDING, the common term for the marriage ceremony. 
The verb " to wed " is properly to engage by a pledge (O. Eng. 
wed, a pledge, wager; cf. Lat. tor, nadis; M. Dutch wtdde, pledge, 
pawn; bwed. tad, bet, &c). The term "wedlock" (O. Eng. 
vedldc; from Idc, a gift), used of the state of marriage, or the 
vows and sacrament of marriage, properly means a gift given 
as a pledge; cf. Cer. Morgcngabe, the gift to the bride on the 
morning after the marriage. 

Sec M arriage and Family. _ 

WEDGE (0. Eng. wecg, a mass of metal, cognate with Dutch 
wig, wiggt, Dan. vacgge, &c; in Lith. the cognate form outside 
Teut. is found in wagis, a peg, spigot; there is no connexion 
with a weign," " weight," which must be referred to the root 
wegh t to lift, carry, draw, cf. Lat. veherc, whence "vehicle," 
&c), a piece of wood or metal, broad and thick at one end, and 
inclined to a thin edge or point at the other, used as a means for 
splitting wood, rocks, ftc, of keeping two closely pressing surfaces 
apart, or generally for exerting pressure in a confined space. 
The " wedge " has sometimes been classed as one of the simple 
mechanical powers, butjtjs properly only an application of 
the inclined plane. f~ 

In meteorology, the term*" wedge " is used of a narrow area 
of high pressure between two adjacent cyclonic systems, which 
takes the form of a wedge or tongue, as do the isobars represent- 
ing it on a weather-chart. A wedge moves along between the 
rear of a retreating cyclone and the front of one advancing, and 
may be regarded as a projection from an anticydonic system 
lying to one side of the course of the cyclones. As the crest of 
the wedge (i.e. the line of highest pressure) passes over any point 
the wind there changes suddenly from one direction almost to 
the opposite, while the clearing weather of the retreating cyclone 
and the temporary fine weather after its passing are quickly 
succeeded by a break indicating the approach of the following 
cyclone. Conditions exactly opposite to those accompanying 
a wedge are provided by a " V-shaped depression." 

WEDGWOOD, JOSIAH (1 730-1 795) > the most distinguished 
of English manufacturers of pottery, came of a family many 
members of which had been established as potters in Stafford- 
shire throughout the 17th century and had played a notable 
part in the development of the infant industry. Dr Thomas 
Wedgwood of Burslem was one of the best of the early salt- 
glaze potters. Josiah, born in 1730, was the youngest child 
of another Thomas Wedgwood, who owned a small but thriving 
pottery in Burslem. At a very early age he distinguished 
himself by keen powers of observation and interest in ah that 
was curious and beautiful. Soon after the death of his father in 
1739, Josiah, then scarcely ten years of age, was taken away 
from school and set to learn the art of " throwing " day, ia 
shaping pottery vessels on the thrower's wheel, at which he soon 
became extraordinarily skilful. 

In 1744 he was apprenticed to his ddest brother, who had 
su c cee d ed to the management of his father's pottery; and in 



175a, shortly after the term of his apprenticeship had expired,' 
he became manager of a small pottery at Stoke-upon-Trent, 
known as Alder's pottery, at a very moderate salary. Within 
a year or two he became junior partner with Thomas Whieldon 
of Fenton, then the deverest master-potter in Staffordshire* 
Many of Whiddon's apprentices afterwards became noted 
potters, and there can be little doubt that Wedgwood gained 
greatly at this period of his life by his association with Whieldon* 
But he was too original to remain long content with a subordinate 
position, and the pottery business was -devdoping so rapidly 
that he had every inducement to commence work on his own 
account. N 

In 1759 he leased the Ivy House pottery in Burslem from 
some relatives, and like a sensible man he continued to make 
only such pottery as was being made at the period by his fdlow- 
manufacturers. Salt-glaze and green and yellow glare seem to 
have been his first staples. In 1762 he also leased the Brick- 
House, abas " Bell " works, at Burslem. The fine white English 
earthenware was just reaching perfection, and Wedgwood was 
soon one of its best-known makers. . He was most active and 
energetic in his efforts, not only for the improvement of Stafford* 
shire pottery, but almost equally so for the improvement of 
turnpike roads, the construction of a canal (the Trent & Mersey) 
and the founding of schools and chapels. Almost the first step 
in his public career outside his native district was the presents* 
Uon of a service of his improved cream-coloured earthenware 
to Queen Charlotte in 176 a. The new ware was greatly 
appreciated, and Wedgwood was appointed potter to the queen 
and afterwards to the king. He gave the name of Queen's 
Ware to his productions of this class, and this judicious royal 
patronage awarded to a most deserving manufacturer un- 
doubtedly helped Wedgwood greatly. Having laid the. founda- 
tions of a successful business in his admirable domestic pottery-— 
the best the world had ever seen up to that time — he turned 
his attention to artistic pottery, and the European renaissance of 
t basic art— fostered by the discovery of Pompeii and the recovery 
of Greek painted vases from the andent graves in Campania 
and other parts of Italy— bring at its height it was natural that 
Wedgwood should turn to such a source of inspiration. Although 
every European country was affected by this neo-classical • 
revival it may be claimed that England absorbed it more com- 
pletely than any other country, for. the brothers Adam (the 
architects) and Josiah Wedgwood brought it into absolute 
correspondence with modern tastes and ideas. Wedgwood was 
particularly successful in this direction, for his " dry " bodies- 
some of which, like the black and cane bodies, had long been 
known in the district, others, such as the famous Jasper bodies, 
which he invented after years of laborious effort— lent themsdves 
particularly well to the reproduction of designs based on the 
later phases of Greek art. If our increased appreciation and 
knowledge of Greek and Roman art makes us at times impatient 
with the mechanical perfection of the works of Wedgwood 
and his contemporaries, the fault is even more the fault of a 
nation and a period than that of any individual, however com- 
manding. It will always remain to Wedgwood's credit that he 
was the most successful and original potter the world has ever 
seen— the only one, through all the centuries, of whom it can 
be truthfully said that the whole subsequent course of pottery 
manufacture has been influenced by his skill. . 

Of the externals of his life a few facts will suffice,' He married 
his cousin, Sarah Wed gw ood, in 1764, and they had a numerous 
family of sons and daughters. One of these daughters was the 
mother of the famous naturalist Charks Darwin. Some time 
after his marriage (via. 1766) he entered into a partnership with 
Thomas Bentley of Liverpool, a man of considerable taste and 
culture. Bentley, who was a handsome, courtly man, attended 
largely to the London sales. In 1769 they opened splendid 
new works, near Hanky, that with their classic leanings they 
christened "Etruria." Thcycontinued a practiceof Wedgwood's in 
employing able artists to produce designs, and the most famous of 
these was John Flaxman, whose name will for ever be associated 
with the firm's productions. ^Bentkydied in 1780 and Wedgwood 



466 



WEDMORE— WEEKS 



remained sole owner of the Etruria works until 1700, when he 
took some of bb sons and a nephew, named Byerley, into partner- 
ship. He died on the 3rd of January 179s, rich in honours and 
in friends, for besides being a great potter he was a man of high 
moral worth, and was associated with many noted men of his 
time, amongst whom should be mentioned Sir Joseph Banks, 
Joseph Priestley and Erasmus Darwin. His descendants have 
carried on the business at Etruria to this day, and have lately 
established at the works a Wedgwood museum of great interest. 

SeeCsBAMCS. For detailed accounts of hb life toe Elba Metyeard, 
Life of Wedgwood (1865-1866); Jcwitt, Life of Wedgwood (1865); 
Rathbone, Old Wedgwood (1893); Church, Josiah Wedgwood: 
Master-Potter (1894; new ed., 1903): Burton, History and Descrip- 
tion of English Earthenware and Stoneware (1904); J. C. Wedgwood, 
A History of the Wedgwood homily (1909). (W. B.") 

WBDMORB. FREDERICK (1844- ), English art critic 
and man of letters, was born at Richmond Hill, Clifton, on the 
9th of July 1844* the eldest son of Thomas Wedmore of Druids 
Stoke, Stoke Bishop. Hb family were Quakers, and he was 
educated at a Quaker private school and then in Lausanne 
and Paris. After a short experience of journalism in Bristol 
be came to London in 1868, and began to write for the Spectator. 
Hb early works included two noveb, but the best examples of 
hb careful and artistic prose are perhaps to be found is hb 
vohuncsof short stories, Pastorals of France (1^7), Renunciations 
(1893), Orgeat and Miradou (1896), reprinted in 1005 as A 
Dream of Provence. In 1900 he published another novel, The 
Collapse of Ike Penitent. As early as 1878 he had begun a long 
connexion with the London Standard ss art critic He began 
hb studies on etching with a noteworthy paper in the Nineteenth 
Century (1877-1878) on the etchings of Charles Meryon. Thb 
was followed by The Pour Masters of Etching (1883), with 
original etchings by Sir F. S. Haden, Jules Ferdinand Jacque- 
mart, J. M. Whistler, and Alphonse Legros; Etching in England 
(1895); an English edition (1804) of E. Michel's Rembrandt; and 
a study and a catalogue of Whistler's Etchings (1899). Hb 
other works include Studies in English Art (zvob., 1876-1880), 
The Masters of Genre Painting (1880), English Water Colour 
(1902), Turner and Rushm ( 2 vols., 1900). 

WDffiSBURY, a market town and municipal and parlia- 
mentary borough of Staffordshire, England, in the Black Country, 
i»i m. N.W. from London by the London k North-Western 
railway, and on the northern line of the Great Western. Pop. 
(1001) 26,554. An overhead electric tramway connects with 
Walsall, 3} m. N. The town b ancient, but of modern growth 
and appearance as an industrial centre. The church of St 
Bartholomew, however, b a fine Perpendicular building, standing 
high. It b traditionally supposed to occupy the site of a place 
of the worship of Woden or Odin, and the name of the town to 
be derived from thb god through the form Wodensborough. 
A church was built, probably in the nth century t and from 
1 301 to 1535 the advowson, tithes, &c. t belonged to the abbot 
of Halesowen. The present church was several times restored 
in the 18th and 19th centuries. The chief public buildings are 
the town hall (1872), art gallery (1891), and free library (1878). 
Coal, limestone and ironstone are mined. A special kind of 
coal, giving an intense beat, b largely used in forges. There are 
great iron and steel works, producing every kind of heavy goods 
used by railway and engineering works, such as boiler plates, 
raib, axles, tubes, bolts and nuts. Stoneware potteries are 
also important. Similar industries, with brick-making, are 
practised at Daxlaston, an urban district (pop. 1549$), within 
the parliamentary borough. Wednesbury returns one member 
to parliament. The town b governed by a mayor, 4 aldermen, 
and is councillors. Area, sag? acres. 

Here Ethelfleda, widow of iEthctadof Merda, in 9x6 constructed 
a castle. TTawriiri is net mentioned in Domesday, but appears 
10 "*^§iJBl%Ae;UrOBy of Dudley. After the Conquest 
it bmWmwMWMWMwmwnwnwMm^vntn, S*sd H was bestowed by Henry 

f representation 
tin 1686. 

journalist and 
y. New York, on the 




15th of November 1797. He began to earn hb own living at 
the age of eight. From 181 1 to x8i8 he worked as an apprentice 
and journeyman printer in Onondaga Hollow, Utica, Auburn* 
Cooperstown, Albany and New York City. Hb first independent 
enterprises, the Republican Agriculturist, established at Norwich, 
N. Y., in 1 818, and the Onondaga County Republican, established at 
Manlius, N.Y., in 1821, proving unsuccessful, he became editor. 
of the Rochester Telegraph in 1822. Entering politics as an 
opponent of the Democratic machine, which he termed the Albany 
Regency, Weed was in 1824 elected to the Assembly on the 
John Quincy Adams ticket, serving for a single session (i8'5>« 
Two years later, during the excitement over the disappearance 
of William Morgan (see Anti-Masonic Pasty), he retired from 
the Telegraph and threw himself with enthusiasm into the 
attack on the Masonic order, editing for a time the Anti-Masonic 
Enquirer. In 1830 he established and became editor of the 
Albany Evening Journal, which he controlled for thirty-five 
years. Supporting the Whigs and later the Republicans, 
it was one of the most influential anti-slavery papers in the north- 
east; and Thuriow Weed himself became a considerable force 
in politics. In 1863 he retired from the Journal and settled 
in New York City. In 1867 ha assumed editorial control of the 
C omm er cial Advertiser, but was soon compelled to resum on 
account of ill-health. He died in New York City on the 22nd of 
November 188*. 

See The Life of Thuriow Weed (vol. i.. Autobiography, edited by 
hb daughter. Harriet A. Weed ; vol. ii.. Memoir, by his grandson, 
Thuriow Weed Barnes, Boston and New York. 1884). The Memoir b 
especially full for the period 1850-1867. 

WEEHAWKEV, a township of Hudson county, New Jersey, 
U.S.A., in the N.E. part of the state, on the Hudson river, 
adjoining Tioboken and opposite the city of New York. Pop. 
(1890) 1943; (1900) 5325; (1910 census), 11,228. It b served 
by the New York, Ontario & Western, and the West Shore 
railways (being a terminus of the latter), and by suburban 
electric lines, and b connected with New York City by steam 
ferries. The township consists of a narrow strip of land along 
the western bank of the Hudson, and at the southern extremity 
of the Palisades. The extensive water-front is lined with wharves, 
some of which can accommodate the largest ocean steamers. 
On a ledge below the crest of the Palisades b the famous duelling 
ground, where New York citizens and others once settled their 
quarrels. Originally a part of Hoboken and North Bergen, 
the township of Weehawken was separately incorporated in 1859. 
It s name b an Indian word said to mean " maize land." 

WEEK (from A.S. wicu, Germanic m wik6n, probably -change, 
turn), the name given to periods of time, varying in length in 
different parts of the world, but shorter than a " month." The 
month may be divided in two ways: a fractional part may be 
taken (decad or pentad), as in East Africa or Ancient Egypt 
(moon-week), or the week may be settled without regard to the 
length of the month (market- week, &c). The seven-day week 
(see Calendas) originated in West Asia, spread to Europe and 
later to North Africa (Mahommedan). In other parts of Africa 
three, four (especially in the Congo), five, six and eight (double 
four) day weeks are found, and always in association with the 
market; the same applies to the three-day week of the Muyscas 
(S. America), the four-day week of the Chibchas, the five-day 
week of Persia, Malaysia, Java, Celebes, New Guinea and Mexico; 
in andent Scandinavia a five-day period was in use, but markets 
were probably unknown. That the recurrence of the market 
determined the length of the week seems dear from the Wajagga 
custom of naming the days after the markets they visit, as well 
as from the fact that on the Congo the word for week b the same 
as the word for market. Among agricultural tribes in Africa 
one day of the week, which varies from place to place, b often 
a rest-day, visiting the market being the only work allowed. 

Laach tn Zts.firSociahoissenschaft. u. 619 seq.. and N.W. Thomas 
ia Jownu Comparative Legislation, xix. 90 seq., refer to the week m 
' with the market. (N. W. T.) 



WEEKS, EDWIN LORD (1840-1903), American artist, was 
bom at Boston, Massachusetts, in 1849. He was a pupil of 
Leon Boanat and of J. L. Gesome, at Paris. He made many 



WEENIX— WEEVIL 



467 



voyages to the East, tod was distinguished aa a pointer of 
oriental scenes. In 1895 be wrote and illustrated a book of 
travels, From the Black Sea through Persia and India, and two 
years later be published Episodes of Mountaineering. He died 
on the 17th of November 1903. He was a member of the Legion 
of Honour, France, an officer of the Order of St Michael, Germany, 
a nd a me mber of the Secession, Munich. 

WEENIX, JAJf BAPTIST (1621-1660), Dutch painter, the 
son of an architect, was born in Amsterdam, and studied first 
under Jan Micker, then at Utrecht under A. Bloemaert, and at 
Amsterdam under Moijaert, and finally, between 1643 ^d 10 47» 
in Rome. In that city he acquired a great name and worked 
for Pope Innocent and Cardinal Pamphili. He returned to his 
native country in 1649, fa which year he became master of 
the gild of St Luke at Utrecht, where he died in 1660. 
He was a very productive and versatile painter,' his favourite 
subjects being landscapes with ruins and large figures, seaports, 
and, later in life, large still-life pictures of dead game. Now 
and then he attempted religious genre, one of the rare pieces 
of Una kind being the H Jacob and Esau " at the Dresden 
Gallery. At the National Gallery, London, is a "Hunt- 
ing Scene " by the master, and the Glasgow Gallery has a char- 
acteristic painting of ruins. Weenix is represented at most of 
the important continental galleries, notably at Munich, Vienna, 
Berlin, Amsterdam, and St Petersburg. His chief pupils were 
his son Jan, Berchem, and Hondecoeter. 

His son, Jam Weenix (1640-1719), was born at Amsterdam 
and was a member of the Utrecht gild of painters in 1664 and 
1668. Like his father he devoted himself to a variety of sub- 
jects, but his fame is chiefly due to his paintings of dead game 
and of hunting scenes. Indeed, many of the pictures of this 
genre, which were formerly ascribed to the elder Weenix, are 
now generally considered to be the works of his son, who even at 
the early age of twenty rivalled, and subsequently surpassed, 
bis father in breadth of handling and richness of colour. At 
Amsterdam he was frequently employed to decorate private 
homes with wall-paintings on canvas; and between 170s and 
171s he was occupied with an important series of large hunting 
pictures for the Prince Palatine Johann Wilhelm's castle of 
Bensberg, near Cologne. Some of these* pictures are now at 
Munich Gallery. He died at Amsterdam in 17 19. Many of 
his best works are to be found in English private collections, 
though the National Gallery has but a single example, a painting 
of dead game and a dog. Jan Weenix is well represented at 
the galleries of Amsterdam, The Hague, Haadem, Rotterdam, 
B erlin, a nd Paris. 

WEEVER, JOHN (1576-1632), English poet and antiquary, a 
native of Lancashire, was born in 1576. He was educated at 
Queens' College, Cambridge, where he resided for about four 
yean from 1504, but be took no degree. In 1599 he published 
Epigrammts in the Oldest Cut and Newest Fashion, containing 
a sonnet on Shakespeare, and epigrams on Samuel Daniel, 
Michael Drayton, Ben Jonson, William Warner and Christopher 
Middleton, all of which are valuable to the literary historian. 
In xooi he published The Mirror of Martyrs or The Life and 
Death of . . . Sir John Oldcastle, which he calls in his preface the 
M first trew Oldcastle," perhaps on account of the fact that 
Shakespeare's Falsi a ff first appeared as Sir John Oldcaslle. 
In the fourth stanza of this long poem, in which Sir John is his 
own panegyrist, occurs a reminiscence of Shakespeare's Julius 
Caesar which serves to fix the date of the play. After travelling 
in France, the Low Countries and Italy, Weever settled in Clcrken- 
well, and made friends among the chief antiquaries of his times 
The result of extensive travels in his own country appeared in 
Ancient FuneraU Monuments (1631), now valuable on account of 
the later obliteration of the inscriptions. 

The Huth Library contains a unique copy of a thumb-book Agnus 
Dei (1606), containing a history of Christ. The Mirror of Martyrs has 
been reprinted for the Roxburghe Club (1872). 

WEEVBL The wcevers {Trachinus) are small marine fishes 
which are common on the coasts of Europe, and which have 
attained notoriety from the painful and somrtimes dangerous 



wounds they are able to inflict upon those who incautiously handle 
them. They belong to a family of spiny-rayed fishes (2>o- 
chinidae), and are distinguished by a long low body with two 
dorsal fins, the anterior of which is composed of six or seven spines 
only, the posterior being long and many-rayed; their anal 
resembles In form and composition the second dorsal fin. The 
ventral fins are placed in advance of the pectorals, and consist 
of a spine and five rays. The caudal fin has the hind margin not 
excised. The body is covered with very small scales, sunk in and 
firmly adherent to the skin, but the upper surface of the head is 
bony, without integument. The head, like the body, is com- 
pressed, with the eyes of moderate size and placed on the side 
of the head; the month la wide, oblique, and armed with bands 
of very small teeth. 

Several species of weavers are known, but two only occur on the 
British coasts, via., the Greater Weever (Trachinus draco) and the 
Lesser Weever (T. oipera); the former is frequently found of a 
length of 12 in., and p o r s esic i some thirty rays in the Second dorsal 
fin, whikt the latter grows only to about half that length, and has 
about ten rays less in the dorsal. The coloration of both is plans, 
but the short first dorsal fin is always of a deep black colour. The 
weevers are bottom fish, burying and hiding themselves in the sand 
or be t wee n shingle— the lesser species living dose inshore and the 
greater preferring deeper water, and being found sometimes floating 
on the surface at a distance of several miles from the shore. Al- 
though weevers, especially the lesser, are in the habit of burying 
themselves in the sand, and are abundant in some localities muck 
resorted to by bathers, accidents from stepping upon them are much 
more rare than from incautiously handling them alter capture. 
They probably make their escape on perceiving the approach of a 
person. The wounds are inflicted by the tarsal and opercular spines, 
are very painful, and sometimes cause violent local inflammation. 
The spines are deeply grooved, and the poisonous fluid which is 
lodged In the grooves is secreted by small glands at their base. The 
flesh is not bad eating, and great numbers of the larger species (T. 
draco) are brought to the Pans market. On the poisonous properties, 
cf . G. J. Allman. Ann. and Mag. N.H., vL (1841), p. 161 ; L Gressin, 
a Pttu&ede VappareU ovemudus Us poissous du genre 



Vioe (Paris, 1884); W. N.Parker, Proc. Zoot. Sot. (1888), pvjSQS 
C. Phtsalix, Bull. Mus. Paris < 1899), p. 256; A. Briot, C. R. Soc. Bu*\ 
Itv. (1902), pp. 1169 and 1197, and lv. (1903), p. 693. 



WEEVIL, Anglo-Saxon unfel, a term now commonly applied to 
the members of a group of Coleoptera termed the Rhyncophora. 
This group is characterised by the prolongation of the head into 
a rostrum or proboscis, at the end of which the mouth, with 
its appendages, is placed. The antennae are usually elbowed, 
and often end in a dub-shaped swelling. The basal portion 
of the antennae frequently lies in a depression at the side of the 
rostrum, and this gives the antennae the appearance of emerging 
half-way along the rostrum. The mouth appendages are small; 
the mandibles, however, are stout. The palps are very short and 
conical as a rule. The body is usually small; in shape it varies 
very much. The elytra are very hard, and in some cases fused 
with one another, rendering flight impossible. The larvae are 
white, fleshy, apodal grubs, with a series of tubercles along each 
side of the body; the head is round, and bears strong jaws,' 
and sometimes rudimentary ocelli. They are exclusively 
phytophagous. The Rhyncophora embrace four families — 
(1) the Curculionidae, or true weevils, (2) the Scolytidae,or bark- 
beetles, (3) theBrenthidae, (4) the Anthribidae. 

The Curculionidae form one of the largest families amongst the 
Coleoptera, the number of species described exceeding 20,000, 
arranged in 11 50 genera. The antennae are elbowed, and clavate, 
with the basal portion inserted in a groove. The third tarsal joint 
is generally bilobed. Over 400 species exist in Great Britain, few 
of which exceed half an inch in length. The genera Pkyllobius 
and Polydrosus include some of the most beautiful insects found in 
Britain — their brilliancy, like that of the Lepidoptera, being due to 
the presence of microscopic scales. The diamond beetle of South 
America, Entmns tmperialis, is another singularly beautiful weevil; 
ha colour is black, studded with spangles of golden green. The 
immense family of the Curculionidae includes members which 
differ greatly from one another in size, colour, and appearance; 
even the rostrum, the most striking common characteristic, varies 
greatly. The form of the body is very various: some are rounded 
or oval, others elongated, almost linear; some are covered with 
warty protuberances, whilst others are smooth and shining, often 
with a metallic lustre. , 

One of the commonest members of this family in Great Britain 
is the not weevil, Balamnus nueum. It is of a brownish colour,' 



4 68 



WEGSCHEIDER— WEIGHING MACHINES 



varied with yellow, the ten reddish. Its rostrum is unusually long, 
being five-sixths of the body length in the female, and slightly shorter 
in the male. The antennae are 7-jointed. The first three joints are 
much longer than thick; the four following are shorter, and the 
seventh not longer than thick. The larva is very common in hazel 
nuts and filberts. When the nuts are about hall-grown, the female 
bores, with its rostrum, a minute hole in the still comparatively soft 

nut-shell, and deposits an 
egg within the nut. The 
egg is said to be pushed in 
by means of the long ros- 
trum. As the nut grows the 
slight puncture becomes 
almost obliterated, so that 
it is unnoticed by all but 
the most observant eye. 
The larva is a thick white 
grub with a brownish head, 
bearing fleshy tubercles 
along its side. It feeds 
upon the substance of the 
nut. The nuts which are 
infested by this insect are 
usually the first to fall to 
the ground; the larva then 
bores a round hole through 
the nut shell, by means of 
its jaws, and creeps out. 
It hades itself in the ground 
during the winter, and in 
the spring it passes into the 
pupa stage, from which it 




emerges about August 
the full-grown insect. A 



1. Balaninus gtcndium, magnified. 

2. The same, natural sue. 

3. The larva, magnified. 

4. The same, natural size. . „„ -~~_- 

5. Head and snout of the female, nearly allied form, Balan- 

magnificd. > inuspandium, attacks both 

6. The same parts of the male, magni- hazelnuts and acorns. 

fied, to show . arrangement of In an unobtrusive way 
antennae. weevils do immense harm 

to vegetation. This is 
effected not so much by their numbers and their powers of con- 
sumption, as amongst caterpillars, but by their habits of attack- 
ing the essential pans of a plant, and causing by their injuries the 
death of the plant affected. They destroy the young buds, shoots and 
fruits, and attack the young plants in their most delicate organs. 
Many of them devour seed, as the corn weevils, Catandra granaria 
and C. crysae, and in this way vegetation is severely injured, and its 
spread seriously checked. Others cause much damage in forests, by 
boring under the bark and through the wood of trees, whilst some 
even burrow in the tissue of the leaves. 

The Brenthidae, Anthribidae and Scolytidae are described in the 
article Coleoptbra. 

The Bruchidae are often called " weevils," but they have no close 
affinity with the Rhynchophora, being nearly allied to the Cbryso- 
mclidae or leaf beetles. The antennae are straight, and inserted upon 
the head just in front of the eyes; they are n -jointed, and serrated 
or toothed in the inside. Brtuhus fiisi causes considerable damage 
to pease; during the spring the beetle lays its eggs in the young pea, 
which is devoured by the larva which hatches out in it. 

(A.E.S.;G.H.C.) 

WEGSCHEIDER, JULIUS AUGUST LUDWIG ( 1771-1849), 
German theologian, was born at Kubelingen, Brunswick, on the 
17th of September 1771, studied theology at Helmstadt, was 
tutor in a Hamburg family 1795-1805, Rcpctcni at Gottingen, 
professor of theology at Rinteln in Hesse (1 806-1 81 5), and at Halle 
from 181 5. In 1830 he (with his colleague Wilhelm Gescnius) 
was threatened with deposition for teaching rationalism, and 
though he retained Jus oflice he lost Ills influence, which passed Lo 
F- A. ThoLuck and Julius MuIJlt. He died on the 37th of January 
1840. 

HU thief works were Ober die van d*t ntmsten }'htftnt>p>kir gtfarderie 
Trexvu*t dtr Metal van det Rdigum (iSc^j; Efn+Wimf in das 
i . vMrritum Jfihanmi (1606); .in J Imt&iiinrvtt ikmiefu-a* fitf. 
m-luat (1815), tO which W. Str.t^V* Krift* dtl JtlttffufrllHllJ I* 
Wtguhcider'j DofmaJik {1B30) waj * reply, 

WEI OH IMG HAC HIKES. M<xK™icir<M<»» For determi 
weights or comparing the nuMd ol ! 
lied a* (ti) equal .irmnl u-iian 
[t) spring balance* and (J) 
balances cuy be dit " 
which the *eak-iwn» j 
and balarrcs 



by combinations of unequal-armed levers and steelyards, »uch 
as platform machines, weighbridges, &c. 

Equal-armed Balances. 

Scale-beams are the most accurate balances, and tjie most 
generally used. When constructed for purposes of extreme 
accuracy they will turn with the one-millionth part of the load 
weighed, though to ensure such a result the knife-edges and 
their bearings must be extremely hard (either hardened steel 
or agate) and worked up with great care. The beam must be 
provided with a small ball of metal which can be screwed up and 
down a stem on the top of the beam for the purpose of accurately 
adjusting the position of the centre of gravity, and there should 
be a small adjustable weight on a fine screw projecting horizon- 
tally from one end of the beam for the purpose of accurately 
balancing the arms. 

The theory of the scale-beam is stated by Wcisbach in his Mechanics 
of Machinery and Engineering, as follow*: — In fig. 1 D is the fulcrum 
of the balance, % t lie centre . 
of gravity of the beam 
alone without the scales, 
chains of weight*; A and 
B the pnlnti of 1 pension 
of 1 tic chains. If the 
length of the arms 

AC-BC-ACD-*,SD-r. * F ic. 1 

the angle of deviation of '**•* 
the balance from the horizontal -+, the weight of the beam alone 
—G, the Wright on one side - P, that on the other - P+Z, and lastly 
the weight 0/ each scale with its appurtenances -Q then 

From this it is inferred that the deviation, and therefore the sensitive- 
ness, of the balance increases with the length of the beam, and de- 
creases as the distances, a and *, increase; also, that a heavy balance 
is, ceteris paribus, less sensitive than a light one, and that the sensitive- 
ness decreases continually the greater the weight put upon the scales. 
In order to increase the sensitiveness of a balance, the line AB joining 
the points of suspension and the centre of gravity of the balance must 
be brought nearer to each other. Finally, if a is made extremely 
small, so that practically tan ♦ -Z//G*, the sensitiveness is inde- 
pendent of the amount weighed by the balance. Weisbach also 
shows that if Gv* is the moment of inertia of the beam, the time, /, 
of a vibration of the balance is 




- jmtttft 




This shows that the time of a vibration increases as P, Q and / 
increase, and as a and s diminish. Therefore with equal weights a 
balance vibrates more slowly the more sensitive it is, and therefore 
weighing by a sensitive balance is a slower process than with a less- 
sensitive one. 

The conditions which must be fulfilled by a scale-beam in proper 
adjustment are: — (1) The beam must take up a horizontal position 
when the weights in the two scale-pans are equal, from nothing to 
the full weighing capacity of the machine. (2) The beam must take 
Up a definite position of equilibrium for a given small difference of 
weight in the scale-pans. The sensitiveness, ue. the angle of devia- 
tion of the beam from the horizontal after it has come to rest, due to 
a given small difference of weight in the scale-pans, should be such as 
is suited to the purposes for which the balance is intended. Bearing 
in mind that with ordinary trade balances there is always a possi- 
bitiiv of the xale-pans and chains getting interchanged, these 
cofidiiKHLS require; (a) That the beam without the scale-pans and 
dujna j mi it be equally balanced and horizontal; (6) that the two 
kaIim^itlh with their chains must be of equal weight; (r) that the 
arm* of the beam must be exactly equal in length; i.e. the line 
joining the end knife edges must be exactly bisected by a line drawn 
perpend icubr fa it from the fulcrum knife-edge. By testing the 
£*m with the icale-pans attached and equal weights in the pans, 
At.ri noting can fully the position which it takes up; and then inter- 
Aging fbc stale-pans, Ac, and again noting-the position which 
beam taxes up, a correct inference can be drawn as to the causes 
rn.ir : and if after slightly altering or adjusting the knife-edges 
ir-pjiLv in the direction indicated by the experiment, the 
n f *nted, any required degree of accuracy may be oc- 
hre approximations. The chief reason for testing 
f 1 weights in the scale-pans rather than with the scale- 
, iv that the balance might be unstable with the weights 
<k bout them. This is not an infrequent occurrence, 
m the tendency on the part of manufacturers to make 
• ttremery sensitive that they are on the verge of in- 
ns;, a Jet AfiCO be the beam of a scale-beam, Z the 



EQUAL-AHMED) 



WEIGHING MACHINES 



469 




fblcrsmi knife-edge^ and X.Y the lcmTe-edgesM 

hong. In order to ensure a high degree of sensitive tnhi — ve 

sometimes constructed eo that Z is slightly below tvtine jumn^X 

and V. imJ is H.aly 

4 T -^ * *~"~~ W i - ~~** — ^J L^ centre *f gravity of the 

beam iliw the scale- 

pani .Mi-] chains 

attached. The ad Ja ion 

Fig. a. of weights in the scales 

will hive the effect of 

raising the point H till it gets above Z, and the bjLiiHie. becoming 

unstable, will turn till it is brought up by a stop ol some kind. 

Fig. 3 r epres en ts a precision balance constructed to weigh with 
great accuracy. The beam is of bronze in a single deep casting. 
cored out in the middle so as to allow the saddle at the top ol the 
stand to pass through the beam and afford a continuous bearing for 
the fulcrum knife-edge. The knife-edge and its bc^ri ng arc both of 
steel or agate, and the bearing surface is flat. Tin- end knife-edges 
also are of steel or agate, and have continuous bearing on (hi steel 
or agate surfaces at the upper part of the suspension link*. To 
relieve the knife-edges from wear when the balance is not being used 
a triangular frame is provided* which is lifted and lowered by a cam 
action at the bottom, and moves vertically in guides fixed on the 
stand. By its upward movement the tops of the screw studs near 
its ends are first received by the projecting studs on each side of the 
suspension links, and the suspension links are lifted off the end 
knife-edges; and next, as the sliding frame continues its upward 
motion, the horizontal studs at the two ends of the beam are received 
in the forks at the ends of the sliding frame, and by them the fulcrum 
of the beam is lifted off its bearing. To keep the beam truly in its 
place, which is very necessary, as all the bearings are flat, the re- 




Fraw. Airy. " Os.Wdfhinf Machines." Institution of Civil Engbms, 1S9*. 
Fig. 3. — Precision Balance. 

cesses for the ends of the studs are formed so as to draw the beam 
without strain into its true position every time that it is thrown out of 
gear by the sliding frame. The end knife-edges are adjusted and 
tightly jammed into exact position by means of wedge pieces and set 
screws, and the beam is furnished with delicate adjusting weights at 
its top. The position of the beam with respect to the horizontal is 
shown by a horizontal pointer (not shown) projecting from one end 
of it, which plays past a scale, each division of which corresponds 
to the r\tb or f$»th of a grain according to the size and delicacy 
of the machine. A first-class chemical balance would be made in 
this manner, but in all places where there are acids and gases 
the knife-edges and bearings must be made of agate, as the fumes 
attack and corrode steel. .....,_, 

For the weighing of very small quantitsss with balances of great 
delicacy, the following method is adopted: — If the balance be in 
perfect adjustment, and / be the length of each arm, and w a very 
minute difference of the weights in the two scale-pans, by which the 
beam is deflected from the horizontal by a very small angle +, it can 
easily be shown that tan f, or *\ varies as wXl. Therefore the angle 
of deflection which would be produced by grain weight hung at the 
distance 11 10 (for example) from the centre is the same as would be 
produced by rVh of a grain in the scale-pan at the distance /. 
Therefore by graduating the top of the beam and shifting a rider 
grain weight till the beam is horizontal, it is easy to ascertain the 
•matt difference of weight in the scale-pans which caused the de- 
flection to the T t»th or 1 fath part of a grain without using a weight 
smaller than a grain. 

The fitting of the knife-edges is of great importance. In ordinary 
trade balances a triangular piece of hard steel, with a finely-ground 

■ — , is driven through a triangular hole in the beam and jammed 
- This forms the knife-edge, and the scale-pans are hung from 
two projecting ends of the piece of steel Similarly the two 



angl 
deft 



projecting ends of the central piece of steel which forms the fulcrum 
take bearing on two cheeks of the stand, between which the beam 
sways. It is dear that errors will arise if the pieces of steel are 
not truly perpendicular to the plane of the beam, and the adjust- 
ment ot great accuracy would be very tedious. Therefore for 
balances of precision the end knife-edges are fixed on the top of 
the beam so as to present a continuous unbroken knife-edge, and 
the fulcrum knife-edge is also made continuous, the beam being 
cored out or cut away to admit of the introduction of the stand 
bearing. With this arrangement the knife-edges can be easily 
adjusted and examined, and the system is now rapidly extending 
to the better class of trade balances. 

The knife-edges of weighing niachines ate the parts that wear 
out soonest, but very little is known about them experimentally, 
and the knife-edges made by different makers vary extremely in their 
-lies. Those made by some of the best makers for the most 

Bcate machines are formed to an angle of about 80 ° between the 
sides, with the finished edge ground to an angle varying from no* 
to 120*. The following may be taken as the maximum bads per in. 
of acting or efficient knife-edge allowed by the best makers: — 

1. For scale-beams of the highest accuracy — From lib per in. 
for a machine of | lb capacity, to 25 lb per in. for a machine of 80 lb 
capacity. 

2. For ordinary trade scale-beams, counter machines, and dead- 
weight machines— From 30 lb per in. for a machine of 7 lb capacity, 
to 600 lb per in. for a machine of i ton capacity. 

3. For platform machines and weighbridges— From 120 lb per in. 
for a machine of 4 cwt. capacity, to 1 ton per in. for a machine of 
35 tons capacity. 

The sensitiveness of scale-beams depends entirely upon the skill 
and care used in their construction, with balances of the highest 
precision it may be as high as Tti^wsth of the load weighed, 
while with trade ba l an c es when new it would be about «V«th of 
the load. 

In Emery's testing machine there are no knife-edges, but their 
function is performed by thin steel plates, which are forced under a 
very heavy pressure into slots formed in the parts that are to be 
connected, so that the parts are united by the plate. In this case 
there is no friction and no sensible wear, so that very great perman- 
ency of condition and constancy of action might be expected. But 
the resistance to bending of the steel plates would render this arrange- 
ment unsuitable for scale-beams, in which the movement is large. 
In some respects it would appear to be very suitable for weighbridges, 
in which the movement 01 the lever is very small, but for general 
convenience of adjustment the knife-edges appear preferable. 

In the comparison of standard weights, or in any weighing opera- 
tions where great accuracy is required, it is necessary to use many 
precautions. The comparison 01 standard weights has to be con- 
ducted at the standard temperature, and the room must be brought 
to that temperature and maintained at it. The balance must be 
enclosed in a glass case to protect it from draughts of air or from the 
heat of the body of the operator. And the operations of placing 
add shifting the weights must be effected by mechanism which will 
enable this to be done without opening the case or exposing the 
machine. 

When the weights which are to be compared are of different metals 
further complications arise, for the volumes of equal weights of 
different metals will be different, and therefore the quantity of air 
displaced by them will be different, and the difference of the weights 
of air displaced by the two weights must be allowed for. And the 
weight 01 air displaced depends upon the density of the air at the 
time of weighing, and therefore the barometer reading must be 
taken. ( For this correction an exact knowledge of the specific 
gravities of the metals under comparison is required. In this way 
an exact comparison of the weights in vacuo can be computed, but 
of course the simplest way of arriving at the result would be by the 
construction of a strong air-tight case which can be completely 
exhausted of air by an air-pump, and in which the weighing can 
then be effected in vacuo. The difficulty about weighing in vacuo 
is that it b found almost impossible to exhaust the case entirely, or 
even to maintain a constant decree of exhaustion, by reason of the 
leakage connected with the weighing operations, and in consequence 
weighing in vacuo is not much in favour. Whatever method is 
adopted, very exact weighing is a difficult and troublesome work. 

Counter machines have an advantage over scale-beams in not 
being encumbered with suspension chains and the beam above. 
They are usually made with two beams, each with its three knife- 
edges, rigidly tied together or cast in one piece and some distance 
apart, so that the scale-pans being carried on two knife-edges, each is 
prevented from tipping over sideways. To prevent them from 
tipping over in the direction of the beams a vertical leg is rigidly 
fastened to the under side of each pan, the lower end of which is 
loosely secured by a horizontal stay to a pin in the middle of the 
frame. In using these machines there is seldom any question of 
determining the weight to any great nicety, and rapid action is 
generally of high importance. Hence they are very commonly made 
unstable, or accelerating," i.e. they are constructed with the 
fulcrum knife-edges lower than the line joining the end knife-edges, 
and they are arranged so that the beam is horizontal when the stop 
1 of the weights-pan is hard down on its bearings. This arrangement 



+70 



WEIGHING MACHINES 



[UNEQUAUARMED 



is well adapted for weighing out parcels of goods of a definite weight, 
though not for ascertaining the correct weight of a given article. 
For the latter purpose machines are used of which the beams are 
made stable, or " vibrating/' by constructing them with the fulcrum 
knife-edges above the line joining the end knife-edges. 

" Accelerating " machines can be uied to the advantage of the 
vendor in two ways. Firstly, in using them to determine the weight 



1-4 ■ * 




Fig. 4. 



of a given article. For with unstable balances, although the smallest 
excess of weight in the goods-pan will cause it to descend till it is 
brought up by its stop, yet being in this position, a very much greater 
weight than the difference which brought it there will be required 
in the weights-pan to enable it to mount again. If VV be the weight 
in each pan when the goods pan commenced to sink, / the length of 
each arm, m the distance of the fulcrum below the line joining the 
end knife-edges, and fi the aitglfe at the fulcrum which defines the 
range of sway of the beam, it cart easily be shown that w, the ad- 
ditional weight required in the weights-pan to enable the goods-pan 
to rise from its stop, u given by the equation w- W Jnrtan 0/L— 
m tan 0. So that if, for exnmotc, a fhh monger u*es such a machine 
to ascertain the weight of a piece of fish which he plates in the goods- 
pan, and thereby depresses it down upon it 9 slop, and then places 
weights in the weights-pan tLLL rh<r gooda-pan rise*, the customer Is 
charged for more than the real weight of the fish. Secondly, in u*itig 
them out of level, with the goods, cod of the maehinc lower than the 
weights end. If B be the angle of t tit of the machine, and the other 
Symbols be as before, it may be shown, that the additional weight w 




Fig. 5. 

which Is needed in the weights-pan to enable the good* -pan to tim 
off its stop, is given by the equation w- W 2rtt tan ip - frj/L— *■ tan 
05— t). When t is negative, as it is when the goods end of the 
machine is lower than the weights end, the value of w may be very 
appreciable. With " vibrating machines the value of m is in general 
so extremely small that w is of no practical importance in cither of 
the above cases. 

• If a counter machine be made with a large flat good"- pan, at j 
fig. 4, an error may be caused by placing the good* e«miri*j 



on the pan, at at D or E. 



Using the symbols of the diagram, ft 
can be shown that the effect of placing the weight W at E instead of 
F is to cause the end of the beam to descend, as if under the action 
of an additional weight, w, at F such that 

w-WaCiMJ-'+tan')/*. 
The condition that must exist in order that the balance may weigh 
correctly for all positions of the weight W is to- o, or tan #• — m/~*; 
that is, the stay KG must be adjusted parallel to the line joining 
the points A and C. From the equation for w, it is seen that 
the larger k is the smaller w will be. Therefore for the larger 
counter machines, where it is not convenient to have the scale-pans 
raised high above the counter, and for " dead-weight " machines on 
the same principle, where it is not convenient to have the scale-pans 
raised high above the floor, there is an advantage in adopting the 
" inverted counter machine " arrangement (fig. 5), because the 
vertical leg can be produced upwards as high as is required. This 
arrangement is very common. As will be readily understood from 
the construction of the machines, there is more friction in counter 
machines than in scale-beams. The "sensitiveness " error allowed 
by the Board of Trade for counter machines is five times as great as 
that allowed for scale-beams. 

The torsion balance made by tne United States Torsion Balance 
and Scale Company of New York is a counter machine made with- 
out knife-edges, and is very sensitive. It is constructed with two 
similar beams, one above the other, which arc coupled together 
at the ends to form a parallel motion for carrying the pans up- 
right. The coupling is effected by firmly clamping the ends of the 
beams upon the top and bottom respectively of a loop of watch- 
spring, which is tightly stretched round the casting carrying the pan, 
as is shown in the encf view in fig. 6. At their middles the beams are 
similarly clamped upon the top and 
bottom of a loop of watch-spring [ 
which is tightly stretched round a 
casting which is bolted upon the 
bed-plate. When the case which 
holds the machine is adjusted hori- 
zontally by means of its foot- 
screws, and the weights in the 
pans are equal, the beams remain 
perfectly horizontal; but with the 
slightest difference of weight in the 
pans the beams arc tilted, and the 
elastic resistance of the springs to 
torsion allows the beams to take 
up a definite position of equi- 
librium. The lower beam carries on 
a saddle a scale which is raised 
nearly to the top of the glass case 




Fig. 6. 



which the machine is enclosed, and as the beams sway this scale 
plays past a scratch on the glass, which is so placed that when 
the zero point on the scale coincides with the scratch the beams 
are horizontal. With proper care this machine should be very per- 
manent in its action. 

Umqual-orvud Balances. 
Steeiyaras are simple, trustworthy and durable, but unless 
special contrivances are introduced for ascertaining the position 
of the travelling poise with very great accuracy, there will be 
a little uncertainty as to the reading, and therefore steelyards are 
not in general so accurate as scale-beams. When carefully 
nicked they are well-adapted for weighing out definite quantities 
of goods, such as 1 tb, 2 lb, &c. f as in such cases there is no 
question of estimation. The ordinary way of using a steelyard is 
to bring it into a horizontal position by means of movable 
weights, and to infer the amount of the load from the positions of 
these. But it is sometimes convenient to use a fixed weight 
on the long arm, and to infer the amount of the load from the 
portion of ihe steelyard. The rule for graduation is. v<r> ■'.<.; . "<■ 
The simplest form is that which has a single travelling poise. 
The more elaborate ones are made either with a heavy travel liiie; 
poise to measure the bulk of the load with a light travelling pomp 
for the remainder, or else with a knife-edge at the end of the *i ct \ 
yard, on which loose weights arc hung to measure the bulk o{ 
the load, the remainder bong measured **^ * ^^t in • 
poise. The advantage of the first ajiangcmerit i* that the 
weights on. the steelyard are slw.i 1 1 1 id Iptomisi - 

of indication arc *vr parol thr 

Iooj* weights are ! 




UNEQUAL-ARMED) 

la fig. 7 let Z be the fulcrum knife-edge, X the knife-edge on which 
the load R is hung, and H the centre of gravity of the weights to the 
right of Z, viz. the weight, W, of the steelyard acting at its centre 
of gravity ; G, the travelling poise; P, acting at M ; and the weights, 
Q, bung on the knife-edge at Y. Then if Z be below the line joining 
X and H. the steelyard will be " accelerating " ; t.e. with the smallest 
excess of moment on the left-hand side of the fulcrum, the end C of 
the steelyard will rise with accelerating velocity till it is brought up 
by a stop of some sort; and with the smallest excess of moment 
on the right-hand side of the fulcrum, the end C of the steelyard will 
drop, and will descend with accelerating velocity till it is brought 
up by a similar stop. If Z be above the line XH, the steelyard is 
" vibrating"; • ** it will sway or vibrate up and down, ultimately 
coming to rest in its position of equilibrium. Steelyards, again, are 
frequently arranged as counter machines, having a scoop or pan 
resting on a pair of knife-edges at the short end, which is prevented 



WEIGHING MACHINES 



a 



m 



Fie. 7. 

from tipping over by a stay arrangement similar to that of other 
counter machines. 

Steelyards are largely used in machines for the automatic weighing 
oat of granular substances. The principle is as follows: The 
weighing is effected by a steelyard with a sliding poise which is set 
to weigh a definite weight of the material, say 1 lb. A pan b carried 
00 the knife-edges at the short end, and is kept from tipping over by 
stays. A packet is placed on the pan to receive the material from 
the shoot of a hopper. A rod, connected at its lower end with the 
steelyard, carries at its upper end a horizontal dividing knife, which 
cuts off the flow from the shoot when the steelyard kicks. When the 
filled packet is removed, the steelyard resumes its original position, 
and the filling goes on automatically. 

The automatic personal weighing machine found at most railway 
stations operates by means of a steelyard carrying a fixed weight on 
its long arm, the load on the platform being inferred from the position 
of the steelyard. In fig. 8 the weight on the platform is transferred 

by fevers to the vertical 
*nrr\ thirut. A, which is 
wrapper) mil ml an arbor 
on the a*lc u( the disk- 
wheel* B, to which is 
ri k 'jHly attached the 
toothed segmc-nt, C, The 
weight. T>. it rigidly 
BtUehtd to the axle of the 
wheel. U, and the counter- 
balance, £. U hung from 
the wheel. D, by means of 
a rard wrapped round it. 
When the pull o( the band, 
A, comes upon the wheel, 
ft. it revolves through a 

CrrT.in aflfile in tin.' dliec- 

tfcm ol the am>w until the 

three force*, \\i. the pull of 

A, the weight. D, and the 

Cf*jflEerbalance 4 E. are in 

equilibrium. The toothed 

segment. C, actuates the 

pinion* F, which carries 

the finger, G, and this 

finder remain* fixed in 

portitton » Jon^ as the 

person id Handing on the 

platlurtn. U now a small 

weight 4 as a penny, be 

pasted through the Jot, H, 

it raits into the imafl box, I, 

and causes the lever, J, to 

In Mellon wheels ni K h and a is 

1 L. which 

.■■■I ii Tree to 

rim a finger, 

■ ■ 1 moveo up 

I . volves, 

t'l'. ion which 

[ ^ properly 

- , 1 . hai a 

ta i lie box de- 

Tu-ii The weight 

L, ...jLises the 




47* 

finger, G, to run back to its «ero position, carrying with it the finger 
M, and causing the click finger of the box, I, to trip open the bottom 
of the box and let the penny faH out. The lever, J , regains its zero 
position, and all b ready for another weighing. Since so small a 
weight as a penny has to move the lever. J, together with the dial 
finger, &e„ it is evident that the workmanship must be good and die 
friction kept very low by means of friction wheels. 

Some of the largest and most accurate steelyards are those made 
for testing machines for tearing and crushing samples of metals and 
other materials. They are sometimes made with a sliding poise 
weighing I ton, which has a run of 200 in., and the steelyard can exert 
a pull of 100 tons. 

Balances are frequently used as counting; machines, when the 
articles to be counted are all of the same weight or nearly so, and 
this method is both quick and accurate. They are also used as trade 
computing machines, as in the case of the machine made by the 
Computing Scale Company. Dayton. Ohio, U.S.A. In this machine 
the goods to be priced are placed on the platform of a small platform 
machine whose steelyard is adjusted to balance exactly the weight 
of the platform, levers and connexions. The rod which transmits 
the pull of the long body lever of the platform machine to the knife- 
edge at the end of the short arm of the steelyard is continued up- 



body lever due to the weight of the goods on the platform comes upon 
the steelyard; C is the fulcrum of the steelyard, which with the 
steclyardTcan be slid to and fro on the frame of the machine; and Q 

""ffff" T 



=£=£= 



T 



■**■ 



Fie. 9. 



is a poise which can be slid along the upper bar of the steelyard. 
The steelyard is exactly in balance when there is no weight on the 
platform and Q is at the aero end of its run, at O. Suppose that 

the weight of the goods on the platform is (p) lb, and that £th 
of this weight is transmitted by the long body lever to the point 
A, so that J lb is the pull at A* Let the lower bar of the steel- 
yard be graduated in equal divisions of length, d, each of which 
represents one penny, so tha t the distance CA-gXd represents 
q pence. Then the number pXq represents the total value of 
the goods on the platform. If Q lb be the weight of the poise Q, 
the position of Q when the steelyard is exactly in balance is 

given by the equation Jxg^-QxOQ. or OQ-pXqXjfe H 

therefore the upper bar be graduated in divisions, each of which 

b £7y the indication of the poise Q, vu. fXq graduations, gives 

correctly the value of the goods. Thus to ascertain the value of 
goods on the platform of unknown weight at a given price per lb, 
it is only necessary to slide the steelyard tiU the weight acts at 
■the division which represents the price per lb, and then to move 
die poise Q till the steelyard b in balance; the number of the 
division which defines the position of the poise Q will indicate the 
sum to be paid for the goods. When the load on the platform is 
large, so that the value of the goods may be considerable, it b 
convenient to measure the larger part of the value by loose weights 
which, when hung at the end of the steelyard, represent each a 
certain money value, and the balance of the value b determined by 
the sliding poise Q. 

In the machines commonly used to weigh loads exceeding 2 cwt. 
the power b applied at the end of the long arm of the steelyard and 
multiplied by levers from 100 to 500 times, so that the weights used 
are small and handy. The load b received upon four knife-edges, so 
that on the average each knife-edge receives only one-fourth of the 
load, and, as will be seen, it b immaterial whether the load b received 
equally by the four knife-edges or not, which b essential to the useful 
application of these machines. 

In fig. 10 AB b the steelyard. The platform and the load npon it 
are carried on four knife-edges, two of which, x, and x», are shown, 
and the load b transferred to the steelyard by thetwolcversshown, 
the upper one CD being known as the " long body," and the lower 
one EF as the " short body." If t,*i -S|X», and ftf -*#», then the 
leverage of any portion of the load applied at *t will be the same as 
the leverage of any part of the load applied at *». and the pressure 
produced at y% will be the same for equal portions of the load, whether 
they were originally applied it x, or x,. Platform machines, like 
steelyards, may be arranged either on the " accelerating " principle 
or on the " vibrating " principle. If in fig. 10 ft be the centre of 



472 

gnr 
thn 



WEIGHING MACHINES 



jvity of the long body CD, and *i be the centre of gravity of the 
. ree vertical forces acting downwards at the points si, t and gi, 
considered as weights collected at those points; then if Ai be above 
the line Ziyi it can be shown that this arrangement of the knife-edges 
of CD favours the " acceleration " principle, and is suited to act with 
and assist an " accelerating " steelyard, and similarly if the point At 
be above the line ny% in the case ofthe short btviy EFV If the knife- 
edges be placed so that At and At arc below i\w lines *,y» and *ay* 
respectively, the arrangement will favour the '* v ihrjiion ' principle, 
ana is suited to act with and assist a " vibrating " steelyard. 

It is very important that platform machines should be truly level. 
With accelerating machines a small amount el tilt in any direction 
considerably affects the accuracy of the weighing, and when the 
amount of tilt is considerable the action may m rh.jr.tvi I, so that a 
machine which was intended to act as an act o I l-»i!a£ machine nets 
like a vibrating one. Vibrating machines are only <Ji£ht!y affected 
by being out of level in comparison with accelemiing machines, 
and in this matter they have a distinct ad van t . j ^ i>. \V hrn a plat f orm 
machine is in true adjustment, and the loose weight* mmk arc 
intended to be hung at the end of the steelyard arc correct and 
consistent among themselves, a good and new machine, whose 
capacity is 4 cwt., should not show a greater error than 4 oz. when 
fully loaded. Platform machines are slightly affected by changes of 
temperature. In some cases they arc made " self-recording ' by 
the following arrangement: The steelyard is provided with a large 
and a small travelling poise. Each of these poises carries a horizontal 
strip of metal, which is graduated and marked with raised figures 
corresponding to those on the steelyard itself. These strips pass 




Fie. 10. 



under a strong punching lever arranged on the frame of the machine. 
A card prepared for the purpose is introduced through a slit in the 
frame between the punch arid the strips. When the poises have been 
adjusted to weigh a load on the platform the punch is operated by a 
strong pull, and the impression of the raised figures is left on the card. 
Thus the weight is recorded without reading the positions of the 
poises. In another arrangement the self-recording parts are entirely 
enclosed in the travelling poise itself. 

Fig. 11 shows the ordinary arrangement of the parts of a plat- 
form machine, but there are many types which differ greatly in 
detail though not in principle* 

When the goods to be weighed are very heavy, portable weigh- 
bridges or platform machines are inapplicable and it is necessary 
to erect the weighbridge on a solid foundation. Some weigh- 
* * ' 1 are arranged in a manner similar to that of the* platform 



machines already described, but having the long body lever turned 
askew, so that the end of it projects considerably beyond the side 
of the weighbridge casing, and the pillar and steelyard which receive 
its pull are clear of the wagon on the platform. In another arranger 
ment two similar triangular levers take bearing on opposite sides of 
an intermediate lever which communicates their pressures to the 
steelyard; thjs is a very sound and simple arrangement for ordinary 
long weighbridges. Lastly, when the weighbridge is very long— and 
they are sometimes made 40 ft. long, and are arranged to weigh up 
to 100 tons or more— it is practically composed of two platform 
machines end to end, each having its four knife-edges to receive the 
load, and the two long bodies take bearing on the opposite sides of an 
intermediate horizontal lever, the end of which is connected with the 
steelyard. When skilfully made they are very accurate and durable. 

A useful application of weighbridges u to ascertain the exact 
weights on the separate wheels of locomotive engines, so that they 
may be properly adjusted. For this purpose a number of separate 
weighbridges of simple construction are erected, one for each wheel of 
the engine, with their running surfaces in exactly the same horizontal 
plane. The engine is moved on to them, and the pressures of all 
the wheels are taken simultaneously, each by its own weighbridge. 

There are many kinds of weighing machines depending for their 
action on combinations of levers, and arranged to meet special 
requirements. Such are coal platform machines for weighing out 



tUNEQtfAL- ARMED 

coal in sacks, the levers of which are arranged as in the ordinary 
platform machines, but for the sake of compactness the steelyard is 
returned back over the long body, and when loaded with the proper 
weight indicates the correct weight of the coal in the sack by its end 




Section on 
EF. 



Fig. 11. 

kicking up. Crane machines are used to weigh | 
hoisted by a crane; the lever arrangement Is 1' 

A crane machine of peculiar construction, 
ing heavy loads, and extremely si " 
properly come under any of the 
have been classified, is the hydi 
machine is constructed wf"*~ "~ 
being provided by whjcA\. 




SPRING BALANCES) 



WEIGHING MACHINES 



cylinder, which is filled with oil or other liquid, is fitted-wlth a piston 
having a piston-rod passing downwards and terminating in an 
attachment for the goods to be weighed. As the goods are lifted by 
the crane the whole of their weight is taken -by the liquid in the 



473 




FlC. 12. 

cylinder, and the pressure on the liquid, as indicated by a pressure 
gauge, gives the weight. The gauge has a plain dial, marked off to 
indications given by the application of standard tons and cwts. ; it 
could probably be read to about J % of the load weighed. 

Spring Balances. 
For many purposes spring balances are the most convenient 
of all weighing machines. They arc rapid in action, the indica- 
tion is in general clear, and there is no need of loose weights except 
for testing the machine occasionally. Their action depends upon 
the extension of one or more spiral springs, and as the extension 
is proportionate to the weight which causes it the graduation 
is very simple. The accuracy of spring machines depends upon 
the accuracy of the springs and the workmanship of the machines. 
The springs in general are very accurate and uniform in their 
extension, and are very permanent when fairly well used; but 
their indications are apt to vary from fatigue of the springs if 
they are kept extended by a weight for a long time. Their in- 
dications also vary with the temperature, so that for good work 
it is advisable that spring balances should be frequently checked 
with standard weights. For the sake of compactness and con- 
venience of reading the extension of the springs, and conse- 
quently the load, is frequently indicated on a dial, by means of 
a small rack and pinion, which give motion to a finger on the 
dial-plate, but the regularity and correctness of the indications 
of the finger will depend upon the condition of the rackwork 
and upon the friction, and these will vary with the wear of the 
machine. For the above reasons spring balances are not in 
general so accurate as knife-edge machines. It fs found >hat 
when a spiral spring is extended by a weight it has a tendency 
to turn a little round its axis. Therefore an index pointer attached 
to the bottom of the spring, and moving past a scale would rub 
slightly against the case. To correct this tendency the spring 
is usually made half with right-hand spiral and half with left- 
hand spiral. 

The extension of a spiral spring is given by the formula :— 
Extension -W4iiR»/fc>\ in which W- weight causing extension, 
in lbs ; n — number of coils; R - radius of spring, from centre of coil 
to centre of wire, in inches; r -radius of wire of which the spring is 
made, in inches ; E -coefficient of elasticity of wire, in lbs per square 
inch- Trie vninc oTE-li,. nds upon the tempering of the wire ami 
u:IJ vary accordingly- fh » ^TlTIl^ gj* " -r- * T ml! 

dually beab*. "^JO 

it it nfiCfr-^i 




Automatic Weighing Machines. 
During the last few years great efforts have been made to 
expedite the operation of weighing machines by the introduction 
of machinery, more or less complicated, which renders the 
machines to a great extent self-acting. The object aimed at 
varies very mucL with different machines. Sometimes the object 
is to weigh out parcels of goods in great numbers of the same 
definite weight. Sometimes the object is to weigh out parcels 
of goods, of unknown weight, as in ordinary retail dealing, 
and to give the exact value of each parcel at different rates 
per lb. Sometimes the object is to weigh many loads in succes- 
sion, the loads being of varying weight, and to present the total 
weight at the end of a day's work; this is the case with machines 
for weighing coal and other minerals. Of course the introduction 
of automatic mechanism introduces friction and other complica- 
tions, and it is difficult to construct automatic machines that 
shall be as accurate in their weighing as the simpler weighing 
machines, but in many weighing operations a moderate degree 
of accuracy will suffice, and speed is of great importance. It 
is to meet such cases that the greater number of automatic weigh- 
ing machines have been invented. _ Some examples of these 
machines will now be given. 

Automatic Computing Spring Weighing Machine for Retail Purposes 
(ng- 13).— A right and carefully balanced drum with its axis horizontal 
is cnclobi-d within a cylindrical casing, and rotates freely in bearings 
formed in the ends of the casing. The casing is fixed in supports on 
the top of a strong frame, which also carries a small platform machine 
, ° j "^ construction on which the goods to be weighed are 
placed. The pull of the toad is transmitted to a hook which hangs 
freely from the middle of a horizontal bar below the drum casing. 
At each end of the drum casing is attached a vertical spiral spring, 
and by the extension of these springs the weighing of the goods is 
effected. There are also two vertical racks, one at each end of the 
casing, in connexion with 
the two springs, and 
these actuate pinions on 
the axle of the drum and 
cause it to revolve as the 
springs extend. The 
horizontal bar which 
receives the pull of the 
load is connected at its 
ends with the two spiral 
springs and pulls verti- 
cally upon them. Above 
the horizontal bar, and 
parallel with it, is a rod 
which is connected at its 
ends with the lower enda 
of the vertical racks, and 
at its middle with the 
horizontal bar. The con- 
nexion with the hori- 
zontal bar is through the 
medium of an adjustable 
cam. This cam can be 
turned by hand in a 
vertical plane by means 
of a worm and wheel 
movement, and by turn- 
ing the worm the vertical 
distance between the bar 
which is attached to the 
springs and the rod which 
is attached to the racks 
can be increased or 
diminished, and thus the 
racks can be moved rela- 
tively to the springs. By 
this means the zero of the 
scale on the drum can be 

ad 'listed to the fixed I «»* u-. «."—.— —— - # U~ -i—- 
- A»Y™ »l«™;««r JX2! ******* B«rd ot Trade, by peroi 

.dex on the casing when Cco uoflg of HJI. Sutiooery Office: 
■*^£™ ""VE? if JiSl Fic - i3.-Price-computing Spring 

rSSuS^-Jiilr Weighing Machine. 

r compensation arrange* 

ment for effecting automatically the same adjustment for changes 

sf temperature. To deaden the vibration of the springs after a load 

has been placed on the platform, and thus to enable the weights and 

'he goods to be read rapidly, the piston of a glycerin 

cylinder h attached to the end of the lever which pulls upon the 

hoc is of the horizontal bar and is worked by it in the glycerin. 




Ddti 



the 



474 



WEIGHING MACHINES 



{AUTOMATIC 



On the outer surface of the drum are printed the weight of the 
goods in tb and 02., and the money value of the goods corresponding 
to the different rates per tb. The side of the casing which is next 
to the seller is pierced centrally by two slots, one a vertical slot 
through which the weight is read on the drum, and the other a 
horizontal slot, half of it on each side of the vertical slot, through 
which the money values of the goods, corresponding to the different 
rates per lb, are read. The weight of the goods is recorded by means 
of an index pointer fixed to the casing on one side of the vertical 
slot, and the money values arc opposite the figure* defining the rates 
per lb, which are marked on the edge of the casing below the hori- 



values are indicated on the chart by the toothed edge of the index 
arm. On the customer's side of the machine the weight of the 
goods is indicated on a pair of arcs by a separate index arm precisely 
tn the same manner as on the seller's side. 

In weighing, the goods are placed in the pan of an ordinary lever 
machine (sec fig. 14), and the end of the lever rests on the stirrup 
end of a short vertical rod. The upper end of this rod is formed into 
a loop, and this loop pulls upon a knife-edge which is fixed to a 
short lateral arm rigidly attached to a vertical disk, and this disk 
turns in bearings formed in the frame of the machine. The same 
disk carries the index arm, which is rigidly fixed to it and indicates 
the weight and value of the goods, and also carries the 
pendulum, which is rigidly attached to it, and reguiates the 
position of the index arm according to the position which 
it takes up and the leverage which it exerts when swayed 
out of the vertical position py the action of the lever of the 
lever machine. This lever is so counterbalanced that when 
there is no weight in the pan the pendulum is vertical, and 
the index arm should then stand at zero. The zero adjust*, 
ment is effected by means of levelling screws in the base of 
the frame. In order to deaden the vibrations of the index 
arm when weighing goods a vertical rod is attached to the 
lever from the lever machine near its left-hand end, and this 
rod carries on its lower end a plunger which works in a dosed 
cylindrical dash-pot containing oil or glycerin. 

Automatic Computing Weighing Machine (even balance and 




pendulum) for Retail Purposes (fig. 1$). — This is an equal-armed 
inverted counter machine (see ng. 5) arranged to weigh up to 
14 lb with great accuracy. Up to 2 lb the weight of the load is 
registered automatically on the chart in much the same 
manner as in the case of the automatic computing weighing 
machine already described. When the load exceeds 2 lb one 
or more 2- lb weights are placed in the weights-pan, and the 
value of the portion of the goods corresponding to these 
2-lb weights is computed, at the rate per lb, in the ordinary 
manner; and the value of the balance of the weight of the 
goods is read off the chart, and the two are added together. 
The advantage of this is that a very open scale is obtained 
for reading the value of the balance of the load. Thus, for 
weighing up to the full load of 14 lb, six 2-lb weights are 
required and no others. 



The manner in which the balance of the load is weighed 
is as follows: Near the bottom of the vertical leg from 
the goods-pan, a projecting piece is rigidly attached to 
It. and as the pan descends with the balance of the load 
this piece pulls by a hook on a thin band of steel, which 



From the Notic: iauod by the SUidard* Deptrtment of Um Board of Trade, by permiuioo of the Controller of H. M. Stationery Office. 

Fig. 14.— Price-computing Weighing Machine. 



sontal slot. On the *Jdc of the r.inW which i* nfirt (^ ih* !■■■.■ r | 
there is a verticil Jut tfim »gh *Hkh ine wvightof the g**»H ( 
read on the drum. 

Automatic Co*i$*li*l Hri 'lift* AfWAinf 
(fig. 14). — The net ion of the ,1 achme shuw 
the displace! iir in of a load' d pendulum 
arranged to weigh goods up to >•■ I 
the pendulum, and up to 16 II* with «n • 
be readily sEp^l on t/> th> 
values are arr-mged on a VC *^^^H 
towards the pivoting centre of an ii 
the weighing rmcctuLtium, 1 
occuptea by tW u-alr* for t| 
and the rest ot the c^ 
arcs which srmw (he 
The rates per lb *i 
•ponding to the 




round the surface of a disk to which 

disk rotates by rocking on a pair of 

rifciOLy nuchcd to the frame. 

kr rigidly attached to it. 

9 pcitktk-in by the steel band until 

! the disk also carries the index 

face of the chart, and indicates 

light. The disk also carries a 

hich indicates the weight oa 

Lt the bottom of the vertical 

1 • rejecting piece which is 

,-.,<!, the piston of which 

rays, and deadens the 

I 16).— This machine It 
m 1 tb each, which are done 
rge number of movements 



AUTOMATIC] 

have to be provided for, and the machinery U complicated, so that 
a general description of the action of the machine is all that will 
be here given. • 

The tea is fed into a hopper, which has a large opening at the 
bottom, and this opening is entirely closed by two cyUodrical 
brushes, which are mounted end to end 
on a horizontal shaft. As they revolve 
these brashes engage the tea in the 
hopper, draw it out by degrees, and 
drop it into a compartment of a 
circular dram which hangs on one end 
of a scale-beam. The brushes have 
the same diameter, but one is much 
longer than the other, and they move 
independently of one another. For the 
bulk of the filling both brushes are in 
operation, but when the load fa nearly 
complete the longer brush is stopped 
and the filling is completed by the 
shorter brush only. When the load is 
complete the shorter brush also is 
stopped while the compartment of the 
drum is emptied. And the action is 
then renewed. All these operations 
are effected automatically. 

The circular drum is divided into 
four equal compartments by radial 
diaphragms. And in a pan at the 
other end of the beam (which is counter- 
balanced for the weight of the 
drum) is a J- lb weight to weigh *he 
tea. As the uppermost compartment 
fills, the weights end of the beam rises, 
and by means of a vertical rod suc- 
cessively operates on detents connected 
with the rotation of the two brushes, 
and stops them in turn. And when 
the short brush is stopped a rod from 
the shaft frees a spring detent which 
keeps the drum in position and tips it 
over. The tea is shot out and falls into 
a receptacle below, and the drum 
makes a quarter of a revolution, and 
is again held in position by the detent 
with an empty compartment at top 
ready for the next filling. 

The power is applied by a belt round 
a pulley, which is mounted on the end 
of the horizontal shaft which carries 
the brushes. The brushes arc carried 
by sleeves which run loosely on the 
shaft, and to each sleeve is rigidly fixed 
a ratchet wheel. Next the ratchet 
wheel is a disk which is keyed on to 
the shaft. The ratchet wheel and the 
disk are automatically connected by 
dutch mechanism in order to effect 
the rotation of the brushes. The clutch 
mechanism is freed at the proper time 
by the action of the vertical rod at the 
end of the beam, and the brushes then 



WEIGHING MACHINES 



475 






is placed in the weights-pan of the balance, and is the only loose 
weight used with the machine. The pair of beams are hung centrally 
by rods and hooks from knife-edges in the forked end of a strong 
beam, which is carried at its fulcrum by the top plate of the frame 
of the machine. This beam is heavily counterbalanced at its further 
extremity. Underneath the top 
plate of the machine, and 
strongly framed to it, is a box. 
which contains the horiaontal 
rods to the ends of which are 
attached the slides which regu- 
late the flow of sugar from the 
bottom of the hopper. These 
rods pas*, through holes in the 
front and back plates of the box, 
and are furnished with spiral 
springs, which (when the rods 
are forced back by hand) are in 
compression between the back 
plate of the box and shoulders 
on the rods. The rods are held 
in this position by detents which 
take hold of the shoulders of the 
rods, and are acted upon from 
the front end of the upper beam 
and the weights-pan end of the 
U -wer beam respectively, in order 
to release the rods at the proper 
times and reduce orcut off the How 
of sugar from the hopper. The 
upper slide has the shape of a 
truncated cone, and it reduces the 
orifice of flow so as to render the 
flow of the sugar more manage- 
able. The lower slide is simply a 
cut-off slide. When it is desired 
to use the machine, a 4- lb bag is 
placed under the orifice -of the 
hopper upon the goods-pan of 
the balance, and the slide rods 
are thrust back by hand till they 
are held by their detente, and 
the sugar flows rapidly into the 
bag. When the bag is nearly 
charged to the weight of 4 lb, the 
weight of the bag of sugar over- 
comes the resistance of the 
counterbalance of the upper 
beam, and its front end drops a 
certain distance. In dropping it 
dislodges the detent of the 
reducing slide, and the slide 
springs forward and reduces the 
flow of the sugar. The dim- 
inished stream of sugar con- 
tinues to flow till the 4-Ib weight 
in the weights-pan is lifted (the 
end of the upper beam being 
for the time brought up against 
the frame and unable to descend 
further), and in lifting it dis- 





Ftsaias N*knmue& by it* Sundards Department of the Bowrf of Trstle. by 

Fig. 15.— Price-computing Weighing 

while the toad is discharged. The beam then recovers fts 

" tion and the action ofthe machine is renewed. 

S»gar Weighing Maehine (fig. 17).— This machine is 

weighing out granulated white sugar in parcels of i-lb. 

weight. The sugar is run into a conical hopper and is 

._ the open mouth of a bag which is placed on the goods- 

m _jnce. The balance consists of a pair 01 equaj-armed beams 

connected together and acting as a single beam. A 4-R> weight 



1 of the Coalrotter of H. U. Suiloaery Ofio*. 
Machine— even Balance and Pendulum. 




lodges the detent of the cut-off slide. The slide springs forward and 
cuts off the flow. The filled bag is then removed and replaced by an 
empty bag and the action is renewed. 

In order to ensure the correct weight of the bag it w necessary to 
consider that when the cut-off slide acts, a certain quantity of sugar 
is in transitu and has not at that moment taken its place in the bag. 
This is allowed for by means of a rider weight, which is arranged so as 
automatically to add its weight to that ofthe sugar in the bag while 



476 



WEIGHING MACHINES 



the 4- lb weight h bdng lifted. But at the same Instant that the cut- 
off takes place the rider weight is lifted off the end of the balance by a 





From the Notice famed by the Standards Department of the Board of Trade, by 
permission of the Controller of H.M. Stationery Gfbce, 

Fig. 16.— Automatic Tea Weighing Machine. 

self-acting arrangement, and the sugar in transitu takes its place in 
the bag. And, u the rider weight has been correctly adjusted, the 

bae of sugar will be 
shown tw weigh exactly 
4 lb lay the beam vibra- 
ting in equipoise. 

A uiom utt f Coat 
Weighing Machine (fig. 
i8) r — Thi* machine 
weighs the coal de- 
livered into factories, 
&.c. by charges up to 
70 cwt. at a lime, and 
records and sums up 
the weights of the 
charges so as to ex- 
hibit the total wright 
delivered. The whole 
of th>* work is effected 
automatically. 

The coal is dropped 

into a Hopper by a 

grab. The hopper i* 

carried on two knife- 

edges, one on each side, 

and is prevented from 

tipping over fore and 

aft by a pair of parallel 

motion bars on each 

aide. The knife-edyes 

rrn which the hopper 

rest* arc on two hori- 

' l vers, one on 

'. ol i he hop- 

v\r* arc 




FfMii lb* Notkr murd by 4 
q( the Uwl of Tradf, 9 
of II M SLiliojtfri 

Fig. ij.-— Aui 







by means of « 
jndicatot levef. 



[AUTOMATIC 

vertically upon the spring of an ordinary spring balance, which 
registers the load, and with the addition of suitable counting 
mechanism sums up the weights of any number of successive toads. 

The charges of coal fall into the hopper with a heavy shock, and in 
order to save the knife-edges there is a strong pin in each side of the 
hopper below the knife-edge, which, before the charge of coal is 
dropped into the hopper, is acted on by a strong horizontal JHtch- 

filate, which heaves the hopper off the knife-edges and relieves them 
rom the shock. The hcaving-up of the flitch-plate and hopper is 
effected by a cam on the end of a horizontal shaft which runs along 
the back of the machine behind the hopper. The flitch-plate rests at 
one end on the top of this cam, and at the other end is shackled to the 
horizontal arm of a bell-crank lever which is pivoted on the frame. 
When a charge of coal is dropped into the hopper, the bell-crank 
lever receives a violent jerk from the shackle of the flitch-plate, and 
this jerk by means of suitable mechanical arrangements throws a 
pinion on the cam shaft into gear with a wheel on a counter shaft 




From the Notice issued by the Standards Department of Ibe Boud of Trade, by 
I ■ n of the Controller of H.M. Stationery Office. 

Fig. 18.— Automatic Coal Weighing Machine, 
which is kept constantly running by means of a belt and pulley 
driven by an engine. The cam shaft and the cam then begin to 
revolve, and the flitch-plate is gradually lowered till the knife-edge 
bearings of the hopper arc received on the knife-edges of the main 
measuring levers, and the load is then weighed by the levers and the 
spring-balance. Shortly after this is done the mechanism at the 
back of the hopper automatically opens the doors at the bottom of 
the hopper, and the coal drops out. The rotation of the cam shaft 
continues till the cam has again heaved up the flitch-plate, when the 
pinion on the cam shaft is thrown out of gear with the wheel on the 
counter shaft, and the cam remains steady till another charge of coal 
is dropped into the hopper and the action is renewed. The coal when 
dropped out of the hopper runs down a shoot into a receptacle, from 
whence it is lifted by a Jacob's Ladder and distributed to the boilers, 
Ac. of the"fa«ory. ...... ... 

Automatic Coal Weishine Machine (fig. 19)— This machine is 
designed to weigh and total up the weight of materials named over 
ir during a considerable course of operations. The trucks or other 
receptacles containing the coal, &c, are drawn upon the platform of 
th' machine, and the pull of the load is transferred by a vertical rod 
at the left-hand end of the machine to the knife-edge on the short 
arm of the steelyard, whose fulcrum is carried on bearings in the 
frame. Behind the pulley at the top of the machine and on the same 
that I i* a spur wheel, which drives both of the spur wheels shown m 
he diagram. The small spur wheel is mounted on the steelyard, and 
Lhij wood and the one that drives it are so arranged that their line of 



WEIGHTS AND MEASURES 



477 



r j shall exactly coincide with the line of the fulcrum knife- 
edge; the object of thb is that the pressure may not influence the 
sway of the steelyard, which must depend entirely upon the poise. 
By means of a pair of mitre wheels the small spur wheel causes a 
screwed shaft, which runs along the middle of the steelyard, to 




«f u» Boud «f Trad* far 



Twom tb» Notkt lowed by tat Stasdudt Depart) 
fLM. SteUoooy Oficc ^^ 

Fia 19.— Automatic Coal Weighing Machine. 

revolvevand as it revolves it carries the huge pobe along the steel* 
yard. . Thus, if the poise be at the zero end of the steelyard at the 
left-hand side of the machine, when the load comes upon the platform 
the scr ewe d shaft carries the poise along the steelyard till equilibrium 
is established, and the end of the steelyard drops. By the first part 
of this drop the movement of the poise is suddenly stopped, as will be 
explained below, and the travel of the poise alone the steelyard, 
which measures the load on the platform, is recorded by the amount 
of rotation of the large spur wheel, and this is suitably shown on a 
dial in connexion with the wheel. By the second part of the drop the 
motion of the poise is 1 evened and the poise is .run back to the xero 



dutch with a shaft in the tame line, on which are keyed a sprocket 
wheel and a ratchet wheeL The sprocket wheel is connected by a 
chain with a similar sprocket wheel which is keyed on the same shaft 
as that of the left-hand pulley. The ratchet wheel is acted upon by 
a pawl which is shown on the diagram. When the poise is at the 
aero end, and there is no load on the 
platform, the end of the steelyard is 
down, and has locked the ratchet wheel 
by means of the pawl; the shaft being 
thus locked, the sprocket wheels are 
stopped, the drum-shaft runs free by the 
friction clutch, and the two pulleys 
which are connected by the crossed band 
are running idle. When the load to be 
weighed comes upon the platform, the 
end of the steelyard rises and unlocks 
the ratchet wheel through the pawl; 
the sprocket gearing is driven by the 
friction clutch, and drives the axle of 
the left-hand small pulley. The mitre 
wheels come into operation and the 
poise is carried along till the end of the 
steelyard drops, and locks the ratchet 
of tat OootraOcr of wheel. By means of a horizontal rod the 
same drop of the steelyard also locks 




Fsara Uw Notfc* lowed by the 

fin iili 1 ill IkrofH-M "•■•'- — r 



of ibt Batoi of Tradt, by 



Fic. 20. — Automatic Luggage" Weighing Machine. 

end in readiness for the next load. All of this is effected auto- 
matically as follows: — 
The machine is driven continuously by a belt from a motor which 



wraps round the large drum at the fight-hand side of the machine. 
On the same axle as the dram and behind it b a small pulley which b 
keyed upon the axle and b connected with the small pulley (which 
runs idle on its shaft) at the left-hand side of the machine by a 
mi— d bete Thus these two small pulleys ore afwayo running, but 
in opposite directions. The drum-shaft is connected by a friction 



together by dutch gearing the left-hand 
pulley and the adjacent sprocket whed, and the pulley drives the 
sprocket wheel in the opposite direction to that which it had before. 
Consequently the motion of the mitre wheels is reversed and the 
poise b run back to zero. When the poise arrives at zero it frees 
the dutch which connects the pulley and the sprocket wheel, and 
the machine b then ready for the next load. The poise having 
arrived at the end of its run and unable to go further, the mitre 
wheeb and the sprocket gearing are stopped, and the two pulleys and 
the cross bdt run idle till the next load comes upon the platform. 

Automatic Luggage Weighing Machine (fig. 20). — Thb machine b 
Intended for the weighing of personal luggage at railway stations. 
It consbts of a platform which b carried by levers arranged in the 
manner of an ordinary platform machine, which are connected with 
the registration mechanism by a vertical rod. Thb rod b continued 
upwards by a pair of thin nickel bands which are led right and left 
over two horizontal cylinders, round which they partly wrap, and 
to which they are firmly attached. The diameter of the middle 
part of the cylinders b greater than that of the ends, and the bands 
from the vertical rod are led over the middle part. To each cylinder 
a pair of similar nickel bands are led downwards from the top of a 
casting which b bolted to the frame. The lower ends of these bands 
pass round the under side of the end portions of the cylinders, 
wrapping dose round them, and are firmly attached to them. To 
the bottom of each cylinder b rigidly attached a heavy solid cylinder 
of lead, and these are the regulators of the position of equilibrium 
of the cylinders when they rotate under the action of the load. 
When the load comes upon the platform the pull of the vertical 
rod b transmitted by the nickel bands to the cylinders around 
which they are wrapped, and causes them to revolve. As they 
rotate they roll themselves up the pairs of bands which are attached 
to the top of the casting, and at the same time cause the leaden 
weights attached to the bottoms of the cylinders to take up a lateral 
position, where they exercise a leverage opposing the motion of 
the cylinders, and bringing them up in a definite position corre- 
sponding to the pull of the vertical rod. By the rolling of the 
cylinders up the vertical bands from the casting the cylinders are 
raised vertically through a space defined by the position of the 
leaden regulators. By means of suitable and simple mechanism 
thb vertical movement of the cylinders works plunger pistons in a 
pair of cylinders which contain glycerin, and these deaden the 
vibrations of the machinery while weighing b going on. The same 
vertical movement also actuates the index finger of a large -dial, 
on which the weight of thdr luggage can be easily read by passengers 
standing near while their luggage is being weighed. 

Authorities.— Julius Webbach, Mechamcs of Machinery and 
Engineering (London, 1848): Ernest Brauer, Die Konstruhtion der 
Waage (Weimar, 1887); H. J. Chancy, Our Weights and Measures 
(London, 1807); Airy on "Weighing Machines,* Proc. Inst. C.E. 
vol. cviii.; W. H. Brothers on "Weighing Machinery," Trans. Soc. 
Engineers, voL for 189a (W. Ay.) 

WEIGHTS AMD MEASURES. Thb subject may be moat 
conveniently considered under* three aspects— I. Scientific; 
IL Historical; and UL.Commercbi. 

L Sosntxiic 

1. Units.— In the United Kingdom two systems of weights 
and measures are now recognized— the imperial and the metric. 
The fundamental units of these systems are— of length, the 
yard and metre; and of mass, the pound and kilogram. 

The legal theory of the British system of weights and measures 
is— (a) the standard yard, with all lineal measures and their 



47« 



WEIGHTS AND MEASURES 



(SCIENTIFIC 



squares and cubes based upon that; (a) the standard pound 
of 7000 grains, with all weights based upon that, with the troy 
pound of 5760 grains for trade purposes; (c) the standard 
gallon (and multiples and fractions of it), declared to contain 
10 tt> of water at 6a° F., being in volume 277*274 cub. in., which 
contain each 252*724 grains of water in a vacuum at 62°, or 
252*458 grains of water weighed with brass weights in air of 
62° with the barometer at 30 in. Of the metric units international 
definitions have been stated as follows ■— 

(a) The unit of volume for determinations of a high degree of 
accuracy is the volume occupied by the mass of 1 kilogram of pure 
water at its maximum density and under the wxmai atmospheric 
pressure; this volume is called litre. 

(ft) In determinations of volume which do not admit of a high 
degree of accuracy the cubic decimetre can be taken as equivalent 
to the litre; and in these determinations expressions of volumes 
based on the cube of the unit of linear measure can be substituted 
for expressions based on the litre as denned above. 
• (c) The kilogram is the unit of mass; it is equal to the mass of 
the international prototype of the kilogram. 1 

(rf) The term "weight " denotes a magnitude of the same nature 
as a force; the weight of a body is the product of the mas* of the 
body by the acceleration of gravity; in particular, the normal 
weight of a body is the product of the mass of the body by the 
normal acceleration of gravity. The number adopted for the value 
of the normal acceleration of gravity is 980*965 cm/sec*. 

2. Standards.— The metre (mttre-4-traits) is represented by 
the distance marked by two fine lines on an iridio-platinum bar 
(/-o° C.) deposited with the Standards Department. This 
metre (m.) is the only unit of metric extension by which all other 
metric measures of extension— •whether linear, superficial or 
solid— are ascertained. 

The kilogram (kg.) is represented by an Iridio-platinum 
Standard weight, of cylindrical form, by which all other metric 
(weights, and all measures having reference to metric weight, 
ore ascertained in the United Kingdom. 

From the above four units are derived all other weights and 
measures (W. and M.) of the two systems. 
~ The gallon is the standard measure of capacity in the imperial 
System as well for liquids as for dry goods. 

In the United Kingdom the metric standard of capacity is the 
litre, represented (Order in Council, 19th May 1800) by the 
capacity of a hollow cylindrical brass measure whose internal 
diameter is equal to one-half its height, and which at o° G, 
when filled to the brim, contains one kg. of distilled water of 
the temperature of 4 C, under an atmospheric pressure equal 
to 760 millimetres at o° C. at sea-level and latitude 45°; the 
weighing being made in air, but reduced by calculation to a 
vacuum. In such definition an attempt has been made to avoid 
former confusion of expression as to capacity, cubic measure, 
and volume; the litre being recognized as a measure of capacity 
holding a given weight of water. 

For the equivalent of the litre in terms of the gallon, see below 
HI. Commercial. 

In the measurement of the cubic inch it has been found that* 
the specific mass of the cubic inch of distilled water freed from 
air, and weighed in air against brass weights (A-8-ij), at the 
temperature of 62° F., and under an atmospheric pressure 
equal to 30 in. (at 32° F.), is equal to 252-297 grains weight 
of water at its maximum density (4 C). Hence a cubic foot of 
water would weigh 62*281 lb avoir., and not 62*321 lb as at 
present legally taken. 

For the specific mass of the cubic decimetre of water at 4* C, 
under an atmospheric pressure equal to 760 mm., Guillaume 
and Chappuis of the Comit6 International des Poids et Mesmes 
at Paris (C.LP.M.) have obtained 00099707 kg.,' which hat been 
accepted by the committee. 

The two standards, the cubic inch and the cubic decimetre, 
may not be strictly comparable owipg to a difference in the 
normal temperature (Centigrade and Fahrenheit scales) of the 
two units of extension, the metre and the yard. 

t^ J^ 4 ifem* (Paris, toot). 



1 Troisitmt Conftrtnu 
Metric Units C*^ "*" 

•/»»•?. 7notu. 

*Proc. "*- 
Connies 




(300I. p. 84. 



For the weight of the cubic decimetre of water, as deduced from 
the experiments made in London in 1896 as to the weight of the 
cubic inch of water. D. Mendclcen* iProc. Hoy. Sot.. 1895) has obtained 
the following results, which have oeen adopted in legislative enact* 
ments in the United Kingdom :*— 



Temperature on 

the Hydrogen 

Thermometer 

Scale. 



o* 

i 



39-a 
590 

62*0 
68O 



Weight of Water in vacua. 



Of a Cubic 
Decimetre in 
Grammes. 



999*716 
999-847 
998979 
998-7J5 
998082 



Of a Cubic 
Inch in 
Grains. 



252*821 

*5****3S 
252-568 
252407 



Of a Cubic 

loch in 

Russian Dolis. 



368686 
368734 

368-316 
368083 



In this no account is taken of the compressibility of water — that 
is to say, it is supposed that the water is under a pressure of one 
atmosphere. The weight of a cubic decimetre of water reaches 
1000 grammes under a pressure of four atmospheres; but in vacuo, 
at all temperatures, the weight of water is less than a kilogram. 

3. National Standards.— National standards of length are not 
legally now referred to natural standards or to physical con- 

□ ca 



Section of bar. 



Section at a a'. 



c 



f» 



Fie. 1.-— Present Imperial Standard Yard, 1844. 

Total length of brorute bar. 38 in. ; distance a a', 36 in., or the 
imperial yard; a a', wells sunk to the mid-depth of the bar, at the 
bottom of each of which is inserted a gold stud, having the defining 
line of the yard engraved on it. 

stants, 4 but it has been shown by A. A. Michelson that a standard 
of length might be restored, if necessary, by reference to the 
measurement of wave-lengths of light. Preliminary experiments 
have given results correct to **o*5 micron, arid it appears 
probable that by further experi- 
ments, results correct to <*i-op 
may be obtained. That is to say, 
the metre might be redetermined 
or restored as to its length within 
one ten-millionth part, by reference 
to, e.g., 1553163*5 wave-lengths of 
the red ray of the spectrum of cad- 
mium, in air at 1 5* C. and 760 mm. 

In all countries the national 
standards of weights and measures | 
arc in the custody of the stale, or V 
of some authority administering the 
government of the country. The 
standards of the British Empire, 
so far as they relate to the imperial 
and metric systems, are in the 
custody of the Board of Trade. 
Scientific research is not, of course, 
bound by official standards. 

For the care of these national Fie. 2.-lmpcrial Standard 
standards the Standards Department • Pound 1844. 

was developed, under the direction of * ^^* 

a Royal Commission • (of which the Platinum pound avotrdu- 
late Henry Williams Chisholm was a pois, of cylindrical form, with 
leading member), to conduct all com- groove at a for lifting the 
parisons and other operations with weight, 
reference to weights and measures in 

aid of scientific research or otherwise, which it may be the duty of 
the Mate to undertake. Similar standardizing offices are established 




« VaUw d% Mktrt. A. A. Michelson (Paris, 1894); Vails. Everett. 
..lustrations of C.G.S. System; Unites et Eialons, Guillaume (Pari*, 
1890); L upton's Numerical Tables, 1892: Metric Equivalent Cards, 



1901; Dictionary of Metric Measures. L. Clark (1891); Glaatbrook 
and Shaw's Phytic s (1001). 
• Report Standards Commission. 1870. 



SCIENTIFIC] 

in other countries (see Standaids). Verified " Parliamentary 
Comet " of the imperial standard are placed at the Royal Mint, 
with the Royal Society, at the Royal Observatory, and in the 
Westminster Palace. 

The forms of the four primary standards representing the 
four units of extension and mass are shown in figs, i to 4. 

A secondary standard measure for dry goods is the bushel of 
1824* containing 8 imperial gallons, represented by a hollow 
bronze cylinder having a plane base, Us internal diameter being 
double its depth. 

The imperial, standard measure of capacity is a hollow cylinder 
(fig. 5) made of brass, with a plane base, of equal height and 
diameter; which when filled to the brim, as determined by a 
plane glass disk, contains zo lb weight of water at J»62° F.B. 
-30 in., weighed in air against brass weights. 

4. Atmospheric Pressure, and Materials.— \n the verification of a 

precise standard of length there may be taken into account the 

influence of the variation of 

n atmospheric pressure. Taking the 

range of the barometer in Great 
Britain from 28 to 31 in., giving a 
difference of 3 in. (76 millimetres), 
which denote* a variation of 103 
grammes per square centimetre 
in the pressure of the atmosphere, 
the chance caused thereby in the 
length of a standard of linear 
measurement would appear to be 
as follows :— 
For the yard measure of the 
form shown in fig. I a difference 
nof length equal to 0000002 in. is 
caused by the variation of atmo* 



WEIGHTS AND MEASURES 



479 



spheric pressure from 28 to 31 
For the metre of the form she 



X 



Fig. 3.— National Standard 
Metre, 1897. 

lridio-pbtinum bar of Tresca 



own 
in fig. 3 the difference in length 
for a variation of 76 mm. in the 
barometer would be 0*000048 mm. 
on the metre. 

With reference to the materials 
of which standards of length 
are made, it appears that the 
Matthey alloy iridio-platinum 
(90% platinum, 10% iridium) is 
probably of all substances the 
least affected -by rime or circum- 
stance, and of this costly alloy, 
therefore, a new copy of the im- 
perial yard has been made. There 
appears, however, to' be some 

..___ objection to the use of iridio- 

lection as shown at A. The two platinum for weights, as, owing 
microscopic lines are engraved to its great density (A -21-57), 
on the measuring axis of the bar the slightest abrasion, will make an 
at b, one near to each end of the appreciable difference in a weight; 
bar. The standard metre {metre' sometimes, therefore, quarts or 
tJresbj was supplemented by rock-crystal is used; but to this 
tat delivery to Great Britain, also there is some objection, as 
is 1898, of an end standard owing to its low density (A - 2-63) 
metre (metre-a^bouts) also made there is a large exposed surface 
of iridio-platinum. and also of the mass. For small standard 
verifiedbytbeC.I.P.M. Acorn- weights platinum (A -21-45) and 
parisoa of the yard with the aluminium (A -2*67) are used, and 
metre was made by the C.l. P.M. also an alloy of palladium (60%) 
in 1896, and of the round and and silver (40%) (A-ii-oo). 
kilogram in 1883*1885 (see III. For ordinary standards of 
Commercial). length Guillaume's alloy (invar) of 

mckel (357%) «"d steel (64-3%) 
is used, as it is a metal that can be highly polished, and is capable 
of receiving fine graduations. Its coefficient of linear expansion is 
only 0-0000008 for 1* C. 1 

5. Electrical Standard* —Authoritative standards and instru- 
ments for the measurement of electricity, based on the funda- 
mental units of the metric system, have been placed in the 
Electrical Laboratory of the Board of Trade ' These Include 
Current measuring } The standard ampere, and sub-standards 

instruments. f from t to 2500 amperes. 

Potential measuring ( The standard volt, and sub-standards 
for the measurement oi pseaanre from 
25 to 3000 volts. 
The standard ohm, sdb-standafds up 
to ico.eoo ohms, and below 1 ohm Co 
visz ohm. 



in s tru ments. 

Resistance measuring 
instruments. 



Rapfwtdu Yard. Dr Benoit (1896). 
• Orders in Council (1894). 





Fio. 4.— National Standard 
Kilogram, 1897. 



6. Temperature.— In the measurement of temperature the 
Fahrenheit scale is still followed for imperial standards, and the 
Centigrade scale for metric standards. At the time of the con- 
struction of the imperial standards 
m 1844, Sheepshanks'* Fahrenheit 
thermometers were used; but it 
is difficult to say now what the 
true temperature then, of 62° F., 
may have been as compared with 
62 F., or 16-607° C, of the 
present normal hydrogen scale. 
For metrologies! purposes the 
C.I.P.M. have adopted as a normal 
thermometric scale the Centigrade 
scale of the hydrogen thermometer, 
having for fixed points the tempera- 
ture of pure melting ice (o°) and 
that of the vapour of boiling dis- 
tilled water (ioo°), under a normal 
atmospheric pressure; hydrogen 
being taken under an initial raano- 
mctric pressure of 1 metre, that is 
to say, at VW-'S'SS times the 
norma) atmospheric pressure. This 
latter is represented by the weight 
of a column of mercury 760 mm. 
in height; the specific gravity of 
mercury being now taken as 
<3'595°« *ftex Volkmann and 
Marek, and at the normal in- 
tensity followed under this pres- 
sure. The value of this intensity is 
equal to that of the force of gravity 
at the Bureau International, Paris (at the level of the Bureau), 
divided by 1*000332; a co-efficient which allows for theoretical 
reduction to the latitude 45° and to the level of the sea. The 
length of the metre is independent of the thermometer so far 
that it has its length at a definite physical point, the temperature 
of melting ice (o° C), but there is the practical difficulty that for 
ordinary purposes measurements cannot be always carried out 
ato*C. 

The Internationa! Geodetic Committee have adopted the 
metre as their unit of measurement. In geodetic measurements 
the dimensions of the triangles vary with the temperature of 
the earth, but these variations in the same region of the earth 
are smaller than the variations of the temperature of the air, 
less than io° C Adopting as a co-efficient of dilatation of the 
earth's crust 0-000002, the variations of the distances are smaller 
than the errors of measurement (see Geodesy). 

7. Standardising Institutions.— Beside* the State departments 
dealing with weights and measures, there are other standardizing 
institutions of recent date. 
In Germany, e.g. there is 
at Charlottenburg ( Berlin) 

a technical uisUiuie 

(Physikalisch - tethnmbe- 

Reichsanstalt) established 

under Dr W. ForsU-r in 

1887, which undertakes 

researches with reference 

to physics and mtdiiiik*, 

particularly as applied to 

technical industries.' In 

England a National 

Physical Laboratory 

(N.PX.) has been established, based on the German institute, 

and has its principal laboratory at Bushey House, near 

Hampton. Middlesex. Here is carried out the work of 

m ^/jflTrKging measuring instruments of various sorts in use 




FlG. S —Present Imperial Standard 
Gallon. 1824 



„ der pkysikalischen Fekhson- 
slalt. Band ii/ (Berlin. 1900); Denksckrift betreffend die Tattgkeil 
der K. Norm.-Aickungs Kommn. (1869-1900). 



* Wissenschofiliche Abkandhtnmtn 
- - ~ ...... •• 100); Denk 



480 



WEIGHTS AND MEASURES 



[ANCIENT HISTORICAL 



by manufacturers, Ihe determination of physical constants 
and the testing of materials. The work of the Kcw Observa- 
tory, at the Old Deer Park, Richmond, has also been placed 
under the direction of the N.P.L. (see 111. Commercial). 1 
The CI. P.M. at Paris, the first metre-logical institution, also 
undertakes verifications for purely scientific purposes. A 
descriptive list of the verifying instruments of the Standards 
Department, London, has been published. 1 In the measurement 
of woollen and other textile fabrics, as to quality, strength, 
number of threads, &c, there exists at Bradford a voluntary 
standardizing institution known as the Conditioning House 
(Bradford Corporation Act 1887), the work of which has been 
extended to a chemical analysis of fabrics. 

8. Ancient Standards of England and Scotland. — A "troy 
pound" and a new standard yard, as well as secondary standards, 
were constructed by direction of parliament in 1758-1760, and 
were deposited with the Clerk of the House of Commons. When 
the Houses of Parliament were burned down in 1834, the pound 
was lost and the yard was injured. It may here be mentioned 
that the expression " imperial " first occurs in the Weights and 
Measures Act of 1824. 'The injured standard was then lost 
sight of, but it was in 1891 brought to light by the Clerk of the 
Journals, and has now been placed in the lobby of the residence 
of the Clerk of the House, together with a standard " stone " 
of 14 lb.* 

In the measurement of liquids the old " wine gallon " (331 
cub. in.) was in use in England until 1824, when the present 
imperial gallon (fig. 5) was legalized; and the wine gallon of 
1707 is still referred to as a standard in the United States. 
Together with the more ancient standard of Henry VII. and of 
Queen Elizabeth, this standard is deposited in the Jewel Tower 
at Westminster. They are probably of the Norman period, and 
were kept in the Pyx Chapel at Westminster, now in the custody 
of the Commissioners of Works. A sketch of these measures b 
given in fig. 6* 

Besides these ancient standards of England (1405, 1588, 
1601) there are at the council chambers of Edinburgh and 



chant's pound of 7200 grains, from France and Germany, also super- 
seded. (" AvoirdcpoU " occurs in 1336, and has been thence con* 
tinued: the Elizabethan standard was probably 7002 grains.) 
Ale gallon of 1601 -282 cub. in., and wine gallon 01 1707 ■ 231 cub. 
in.. Both abolished in 1824. Winchester corn bushel of 8X268.8 
cub. in. and gallon of 274 \ are the oldest examples known (Henry 



-_!^ 





Fie. 7.— The Scots Choppin 
or Half-Pint, 1555. 



Fig. 8.— Lanark Stone 
Troy Weight, 1618. 



VII.), gradually modified until fixed in 1826 at 277.274, or 10 pounds 
of water. 

French Weights and Measures Abolished.— Often needed in reading 
older works. 



"**% 


t*-pouct. 


M-pfed, 


<o&H)in. 


1-0638 


l»-7So* 


gn»m. 


ft •grot, 


Sconce, 


•SiWgr. 


SP-om 


47»'t7 



6-toise. 
. 7*-73$ 
o»mire. 



3000 "Unie tSeposte. 
S-4ZH9 miles, 
a ■ poidi de marc 
1-070* lb. 




Fie. 6.— A, Winchester Bushel of Henry VI I. s B. Standard Hundred' 
weight (112 lb) of Elizabeth; C, Ale Gallon of Henry VII. 

Linlithgow some of the interesting standards of Scotland, as 
the Stirling jag or Scots pint, 1618; the choppin or half-pint, 
IS55 (fig. 7); the Lanark troy and tron weights of the same 
periods (fig. 8).* k 

English Weights and Measures Abolished.— The yard and handful, 
or 40 in. ell. abolished in 1439. The yard and inch, or 37 in. ell (cloth 
measure), abolished after 1553; known later as the Scotch cll- 
37-o6. Cloth ell of 45 in., used till 1600. The yard of Henry VI 1. ■ 
33*963 in. Saxon monevcrs pound, or Tower pound, 5400 grains, 
abolished in 1527. Mark, I pound -3600 grains. Troy pound in 
use in 1415. established as monetary pound 1527. Troy weight was 
abolished, from the 1st of January 1879, by the Weights and Measurts 
Act 1878, with the exception only of the Troy ounce, its decimal parts 
and multiples, legalised fn 1853. 16 Vict. c. 29. to be used for the sale 
of gold and silver articles, platinum and precious stones. Merchant's 
pound, in 1270 established for all except gold, silver and medicines 
-6730 grains, generally superseded by avoirdupois in 1303. Mcr- 



• * Treasury Committee on National Physical Laboratory. Parlia- 
mentary Paper, 1898. 

* Descriptive List of Standards and Instruments, Parliamentary 
Paper. 18$*. 

• Report on Standards deposited in House of Commons, 1st 
November 1891. 

4 S. Fisher. The Art Journal, August 190a 
» Buchanan, Ancient &*uk Standards. 



3777SS 

Rhincland foot, much used in Germany, - 12*357 in. -the foot of the 
Scotch or English cloth ell of 37 06 in., or 3X 12-353. (H.J. C.) 

II. Ancient Historical 

Though no line can be drawn between ancient and modern 
metrology, yet, owing to neglect, and partly to the scarcity of 
materials, there is a gap of more than a thousand years over 
which the connexion of units* of measure is mostly guess-work. 
Hence, except in a few cases, we shall not here consider 
any units of the middle ages. A constant difficulty in 
studying works on metrology is the need of distin- 
guishing the absolute facts of the case from the web 
of theory into which each writer has woven them— often 
the names used, and sometimes the very existence of the 
units in question, being entirely an assumption of the 
writer. .Again, each writer has his own leaning: A. 
Bockh, to the study of watcr-vohimes and weights, 
even deriving linear measures therefrom; V. Qucipo, 

.,„ t0 *!•* connexion with Arabic and Spanish measures; 

D, the old Wine J. Brandis, to the basis of Assyrian standards; 
Mommsen, to coin weights; and P. Bortolotti to 
Egyptian units; but F. Hultsch is more general, and appears 
to give a more equal representation of all sides than do other 
authors. In this article the tendency will be to trust far more 
to actual measures and weights than to the statements of ancient 
writers; and this position seems to be justified by the great in- 
crease in materials, and their more accurate means of study. 
The usual arrangement by countries has been mainly abandoned 
in favour of following out each unit as a whole, without recurring 
to it separately for every locality. 

The materials for study are of three kinds, (t) Literary, both 
in direct statements in works on measures (e.g. Eliasof Nisibis), 
medicine (Galen) and cosmetics (Cleopatra), in ready -reckoners 
(Didymus), clerk's (katlb's) guides, and like handbooks, and in 
indirect explanations of the equivalents of measures mentioned 
by authors (e.g. Joscphus). But all such sources are liable to 
the most confounding errors, and some passages relied on have 
in any case to submit to conjectural emendation. These authors 
are of great value for connecting the monumental information, 

• In the absence of the actual standards of ancient times the units 
of measure and of weight have to be inferred from the other remains: 
hence unit in this division is used for any more or less closely defined 
amount of length or weight in terms of which matter was measured. 




ANCIENT HISTORICAL) 



WEIGHTS AND MEASURES 



481 



but must yield more and more to the increasing evidence of 
actual weights and measures. Besides this, all their evidence 
is but approximate, often only stating quantities to a half or 
quarter of the amount, and seldom nearer than 5 or 10%; 
hence they are entirely worthless for all the closer questions of 
the approximation or original identity of standards in different 
countries; and it is just in this line, that the imagination of 
writers has led them into the greatest speculations, unchecked 
by accurate evidence of the original standards, (a) Weights and 
measures actually remaining. These are the prime sources, and 
as they increase and are more fully studied, so the subject will 
be cleared and obtain a fixed basis. A difficulty has been in 
the paucity of examples, more due to the neglect of collectors 
than the rarity of specimens. The number of published weights 
did not exceed 600 of all standards in 1880; but the collections 
from Naucratis (28), f Defenneh (29) and Memphis (44) have 
supplied over six times this quantity, and of an earlier age than 
most other examples, while existing collections have been more 
thoroughly examined. It is above all desirable to make allow- 
ances for the changes which weights have undergone; and, as 
this has only been done for the above Egyptian collections and 
that of the British Museum, conclusions as to the accurate 
values of different standards will here be drawn from these 
rather than continental sources. (3) Objects which hose been 
made by measure or weight, and from which the unit of construc- 
tion can be deduced. Buildings will generally yield up their 
builder's foot or cubit when examined (Inductive Metrology, 
p. 9). Vases may also be found bearing such relations to one 
another as to show their unit of volume. And coins have long 
been recognized as one of the great sources of metrology— valu- 
able for their wide and detailed range of information, though 
most unsatisfactory on account of the constant temptation to 
djmmUh their weight, a weakness which seldom allows us to 
reckon them as of the full standard. Another defect in the 
evidence of coins is that, when one variety of the unit of weight 
was once fixed on for the coinage, there was (barring the deprecia- 
tion) no departure from it, because of the need of a fixed value, 
and hence coins do not show the range and character of the real 
variations of units as do buildings, or vases, or the actual 
commercial weights. 

Principle or Study. — 1. Limits of Variation in Different 
Copies, Places and Times.— Unfortunately, so very little is 
known of the ages of weights and measures that this datum- 
most essential in considering their history— has been scarcely 
considered. In measure, Egyptians of Dynasty IV. at Gizeh on 
an average varied x in 350 between different buildings (97). 
Buildings at Persepolis, all of nearly the same age, vary in unit 
x in 450 (25). Including a greater range of time and place, the 
Roman foot in Italy varied during two or three centuries on an 
average rirr fr°m th e mean. Covering a longer time, we find an 
average variation of tH in the Attic foot (25), yfo in the English 
foot (25), rfa in the English itinerary foot (25). Se we may say 
that an average variation of -jVf by toleration, extending to 
double that by change of place and time, is usual in ancient 
measures. In weights of the same place and age there is a far 
wider range; at Defenneh (29), within a century probably, the 
average variation of different units is fc *\ 9 and Vr> the range 
being just the same as in all times and places taken together. 
Even in a set of weights all found together, the average variation 
is only reduced to *V. in place of A (29). Taking a wider range 
of place and time, the Roman libra has an average variation of 
tS in the exampieaof better period (48), and in those of Byzantine 
age fV (44). Altogether, we see that weights have descended 
from original varieties with so little intercomparison that no 
rectification of their values has been made, and hence there is as 
much variety m any one place and time as in all together. 
Average variation may be said to range 'from -fa to vV hi different 
units, doubtless greatly due to defective balances. 

2. Rate of Variation— Though large differences may exist, the 
rate of general variation is but alow— excluding, of course, all 
monetary standards. In Egypt the cubit lengthened rfo in 

* These figures refer to the authorities at the end of this section. 



some thousands of years (85,44) Thclfalian mitoltM lengthened 
T^j since Roman times (2); -the English mile lengthened 
about fir in four centuries (81). The English foot has not 
appreciably varied in several centuries (25). Of weights there are 
scarce any dated, excepting coins, which nearly all decrease; 
the Attic tetadrachm, however, increased tV hi three centuries 
(28), owing probably to its being below the average trade 
weight to begin with. Roughly dividing the Roman weights, 
there appears a decrease of Vir from imperial to Byzantine times 
(48). 

3. Tendency of Variation.— This is, in the -above cases of 
lengths, to an increase in course of time. IThe Roman foot is 
also probably Hf larger than the earlier form of it, and the later, 
form in Britain and Africa perhaps another yfa larger (25). Prob- 
ably measures tend to increase and weights to decrease in trans* 
mission from time to time or place to place. 

4. Details of Variation,— Having noticed variation in the gross, 
we must next observe its details. The only way of examining these 
is by drawing curves (28, 29), representing the frequency of occur- 
rence of all the variations of a unit; for instance, in the Egyptian 
unit— the kat— counting in a large number how many occur 
between 140 and 141 grains, 141 and 14s, and so on? such 
numbers represented by curves show at once where any particular 
varieties of the unit lie (see Nauhratis, i. 83). This method is only 
applicable where there is a large number of examples; but there 
is no other way of studying the details. The results from such 
a study— of the Egyptian kat, for example— show that there are 
several distinct families or types of a unit, which originated in 
early times, have been perpetuated by copying, and reappear 
alike in each locality (see Tanis, ii. pi. 1.). Hence we see that if 
one unit is derived from another it may be possible, by the 
similarity or difference of the forms of the curves, to discern 
whether it was derived by general consent and recognition from 
a standard in the same condition of distribution as that in which 
we know it, or whether it was derived from it in earlier times 
before it became so varied, or by some one action forming it from 
an individual example of the other standard without any varia- 
tion being transmitted. As our knowledge of the age and 
locality of weights increases these criteria in curves will prove 
of greater value; but even now no consideration of the 
connexion of different units should be made without a graphic 
representation to compare. their relative extent. and nature 
of variation. » 

5. Transfer of Units.— The transfer of units from one people 
to another takes place almost always by trade. Hence the value 
of such evidence in pointing out the ancient course of trade and 
commercial connexions (17). The great spread of the Phoenician 
weight on the Mediterranean, of the Persian in Asia Minor and 
of the Assyrian in Egypt are evident cases; and that the decimal 
weights of the laws of Manu (48) are decidedly not Assyrian or, 
Persian, but on exactly the Phoenician standard, is a curious 
evidence of trade by water and not overland. If, as seems 
probable, units of length may be traced in prehistoric remains,' 
they are of great value; at Stonehcnge, for instance, the earlier 
parts are laid out by the Phoenician foot, and the later by the 
Pelasgo-Roman foot (26). The earlier foot is continually to be 
traced in other megalithic remains, whereas the later very 

(26). This bears strongly on the Phoenician 



origin of our prehistoric civilization. Again, the Belgic foot of 
the Tungri is the basis of the present English land measures, 
which we thus see are neither Roman nor British in origin, but 
Belgic Generally a unit is transferred from a higher to a less 
dvilized people; but the near resemblance of measures in different 
countries should always be corroborated by historical considera- 
tions of a probable connexion by commerce or origin (Head; 
Historia Numorum, xxxvnY). It should be borne in mind that 
in early times the larger values, such as minae, would be trans- 
mitted by commerce, while after the introduction of coinage the 
lesser values of shekels and drachmae would be the units; and 
this needs notice, because usuaHy a borrowed unit was multiplied 
or divided according to the ideas of the borrowers, and strange 
modifications thus arose 



482 



"WBIOHTS AND MEASURES 



6. Connexions of Lengths? Volumes and Weights.— Tbk is the 
most difficult branch of metrology, owing to Che variety of con- 
nexions which can be suggested, to the vague information we 
have, especially on volumes, and to the liability of writers to ration- 
alize connexions which were never intended. To illustrate how 
easy it is to go astray in this line, observe the continual reference 
in modern handbooks to the cubic foot as 1000 oa. of water; also 
the cubic inch is very nearly 950 grains, while the gallon has actu- 
ally been fixed at zo lb of water; the first two are certainly 
mere coincidences, as may very probably be the last also, and 
yet they offer quite as tempting a base for theorising as any 
connexions in ancient metrology. No such theories can be 
counted as more than coincidences which have been adopted, 
unless we find a Ytry exact connexion, or some positive state- 
ment of origination. The idea of connecting volume and weight 
has received an immense impetus through the metric system, 
but it is not very prominent in ancient times. The Egyptians 
report the weight of a measure of various articles, amongst others 
water (6), but lay no special Stress on it; and the fact that there 
Is no measure of water equal to a direct decimal multiple of the 
weight-unit, except very high in the scale, does not seem as if 
the volume was directly based upon weight. Again, there are 
many theories of the equivalence of different cubic cubits of water 
with various multiples of talents (2, 8, 18, 24, 88); but connexion 
by lesser units would be far more probable, as the primary use 
of weights is not to weigh large cubical vessels of liquid, but rather 
small portions of precious metals. The Roman amphora being 
equal to the cubic foot, and containing 80 librae of water, is 
one of the strongest cases of such relations, being often men- 
tioned by ancient writers. Yet it appears to be only an approxi- 
mate relation, and therefore probably accidental, as the volume 
by the examples is too large to agree to the cube of the length 
or to the weight, differing -fa, or sometimes even -jV- 1 

. Another idea which has haunted the older mctrologists, 
but is still less likely, is the connexion of various measures 
with degrees on the earth's surface. The lameness of the Greeks 
in angular measurement would alone show that they could not 
derive itinerary measures from long and accurately determined 
distances on the earth. 

7. Connexions with Coinage. — From* the" 7th century B.C. 
onward, the relations of units of weight have been complicated 
by the need of the interrelations of gold, silver and copper 
coinage; and various standards have, been derived theoretically 
from others through the weight of one metal equal in value 
to a unit of another. That this mode of originating standards 
was greatly promoted, if not started, by the use of coinage 
we may see by the rarity of the Persian silver weight (derived 

1 Relative to -the uncertain connexion of length, capacity and 
weight in the ancient metrological systems of the East, Sir Quite* 
Warren, R.E., has obtained by deductive analysis a new equivalent 
of the original cubit (Palestine Exploration Fund Quarterly, April, 
July, October 1809). He shows that the length of tho cubit arose 
through the weights; that is to say, the original cubit of Egypt was 
based on the cubic double— cubit of water— and from this the 
several nations branched off with their measures and weights. For 
the length of the building cubit Sir C. Warren has deduced a length 
equivalent to 30*6109 English inches, which compares with a mean 
Pyramid cubit of 206015 in. as hitherto found. By taking all the 
ancient cubits, them appears to be a remarkable coincidence through- 
out with ao-6100 in. 

Sir C Warren ha* derived a prirdit K-e u nit Irom a proportion cif the 
humaq body, by ascertaining the proUibk mean height of the ancient 
people in Egypt, and k> thereby ha* derived a suodanJ from the 
suture of man. The human bexfy Hjm Jurimhtd the earliest 
for many races (H, O. Arnold-Fur^u, Th 
169B}, as the foot, palm, h2nd r (Ji£ii< nail, 
seems probable, therefore , thai a royal cub 
from seme kifigly stature, and In 
building of bfypt, as the Groat 1 

So far thi * b 1 1 r march appear - 
that fun'hmt-Fjiat units of mca^.': 
vii-ighiaandCJpQcitSc*, lih".u" 
naiiuo of the £*#t, SO wsss^^^H 
talk) wed what by nn 
method, that of Obi, 
Wight* **w! rubfc 
throng 




[ANCIENT HISTORICAL 

from the Assyrian standard)/ soon after the introduction c( 
coinage, as shown in the weights of Defenneh (29). The relative 
value of gold and silver (17, 21) in Asia is agreed generally to 
have been 13} to 1 in the early ages of coinage; at Athens 
in 434 b.c. it was 14:1; in Macedon, 350 B.C., 12J.1; in 
Sicily, 400 b.c, 15:1, and 300 B.C., i3:r; in Italy 
in 1st century, it. was 12:1, in the later empire 13-9:1, and 
under Justinian 14*4:1. Silver stood to copper in Egypt as 
80:1 (Brugsch), or 120:1 (Revillout); in earfy Italy and 
Sicily as 250:1 (Mommsen), or 120:1 (SouUo), under the empire 
120:1, and under Justinian 100:1. The distinction of the use 
of standards for trade in general, or for silver or gold in particular, 
should be noted. The early observance of the relative values 
may be inferred from Num. vii. 13, 14, where silver offerings 
are 13 and 7 times the weight of the gold, or of equal value and 
one-half value. 

S. Legal Regulations of M easures.— Most states have preserved 
official standards, usually In temples under priestly custody. 
The Hebrew "shekel of the sanctuary" is familiar; the standard 
volume of the apet was secured in the dromus of Anubis at 
Memphis (85); in Athens, besides the standard weight, twelve 
copies for public comparison were kept in the dty; also standard 
volume measures in several places (2); at Pompeii the block with 
standard volumes cut in it was found in the portico of the 
forum (83); other such standards arc known in Qrcek cities 
(Gytbium, Pallidum and Trajanopolis) (11, 38); at Rome 
the standards were kept in the Capitol, and weights also in the 
temple of Hercules (2); the standard cubit of the Nilometcr 
was before Constantine in the Serapaeum, but was removed 
by him to the church (2). In England the Saxon standards 
were kept at Winchester before a.d. 950 and copies were legally 
compared and stamped; the Normans removed them to West- 
minster to the custody of the king's chamberlains at the ex- 
chequer; and they were preserved in the crypt of Edward 
the Confessor, while remaining royal property (9). The oldest 
English standards remaining are those of Henry VII. Many 
weights have been found in the temenos of Demeter at 
Cnidus, the temple of Artemis at Ephesus, and in a temple 
of Aphrodite at Byblus (44); and the making or sale of 
weights may have been a business of the custodians of the 
temple standards. 

9. Names of Units.— -It Is needful to observe that most names of 
measures are generic and not specific, and cover a great variety of 
units. Thus foot, digit, palm, cubit, stadium, mile, talent, mina, 
stater, drachm, obol, pound, ounce, grain, metretes, medimnus, 
modius, bin and many others mean nothing exact unless qualified 
by the name of their country or city. Also, it should be noted 
that some ethnic qualifications have been applied to different 
systems, and such names as Babylonian and Euboic are 
ambiguous; the normal value of a standard win therefore 
be used here rather than its name, in order to avoid confusion, 
unless specific names exist, such as hat and uten. 

All quantities stated in this article without distinguishing 
names are in British units of inch, cubic inch or grain. 

Standards of Length.— Most ancient measures have been derived 
from one of two great systems, that of the cubit of 20-63 hi., or the 
digit of .729 in.; and both these systems are found in the earliest 



20-43 in.— First known in .Dynasty IV. in Egypt, most accurately 
ao 670 1 n the Great Pyramid, varying 20-51 to 20-71 in Dyn. IV. to 
VI. (27). Divided decimally in tooths; but usually marked in 
Egypt into 7 palms of j8 dipts. approximately; a mere juxtaposition 
Liar convenience) of two incommensurate systems (25, 27). The 
average of sevual clUl rode remaining is 10-65, *£* « general 
u t s 000 fi,c . (J3 ) . A t PhilM, Ac, in Roman rimes 20-76 on tbo 
Rloraner* (44)- Thi* uu: is also recorded by cubit lengths scratched 
tomb at Ekni Hah a {M), and by dimensions of the tomb of 
tcssu LV. ind oi Edf n temple (5) In papyri. From this cubit, 
«k 1 , wa 1 Formed th c xykw or j cubits, the usual length of a walkm*- 
am, Bf«f ( of 4 cubit-., and the hhet of 40 cubits (18); also 
ilur.ooo cubi* s, act uaDy found marked on the Memphis- 

„ unit nearly as early as Egypt. Tht divided 
00 the drawmg boards of the statues of Godea 
art- of ) o-8<), or a span of 10-44, which is 
■ £ T , 1. a fraction of the cubit also found in Egypt. 



ANCIENT HISTORICAL] 

Buildings in Assyria and Babylonia show 20*5 to 20*6. The Baby- 
lonian system was sexagesimal, thus (18) — 

■bM. f-ojst, 6-uunftt. 6-qum. fe-sos, jo-fanna* »*>Iuspu. 
-to feck 3*44 so* 114 74JO aaj.000 446.000 

- Asia Minor had this unit in early times-— in the temples of Ephesus 
20-55, Samos 20*62 ; Hultsch also claims Priene 20*00. and the stadia 
of Aphrodisias 20-67 and Laodicea 2094. Ten buildings in all give 
20-63 mean (18, 25) ; but in Armenia it arose to 2076 in late Roman 
times, like the Late rise in Egypt .(25). It was specially divided into 
t th, the foot of |ths being as important as the cubit. 
12*45 in. This was especially the Creek derivative of the 20*63 
. y t cubit. It originated in Babylonia as the foot of that 
1x2075* system (24), in accordance with the sexary system 
applied to the early decimal division of the cubit. In Greece it is 
the most usual unit, occurring in the Propylaea at Athens 12*44, 
temple at Aegina 12*40, Miletus 12*51, the Olympic course 12*62, 
Ac (18); thirteen buildings giving an average of 12*45, ~ 
variation *o6 (25), -| of 20-75, m. var. *io. The digit- J 
• J foot of 12*4; then the system is— 

10»ptcthfoo, 6- > 



WEIGHTS. AND MEASURES 



483 



foot. 



ir4ia. 



J »l- 

lio... 



if? 



In Etruria it probably appears in tombs as 12*45 (25); perhaps 

in Roman Britain; and in medieval England as 12*47 (25). 

13*8 in T* 1 ** * r ° ot ** • c * rce -y known irnoaunientally. On three 

jY ' Egyptian cubits there is a prominent mark at the 19th 

SX20-7. <jig, t or |^ ' lUt w hich shows the existence of such a 

(53). It became prominent when adopted by Philetaerus 



about 280 B.C. as the standard of Pergamum {42). and probably it 
had been shortly before adopted by the Ptolemies for Egypt. From 
that time it is one of the principal units in the literature (Didymus, 
&c), and is said to occur in the temple of Augustus at Pergamum as 
138 (18). Fixed by the Romans at 16 digits (13 J -Roman foot), 
or its cubit at if Roman feet, it was legally -13-94 at 123 b.c. 
(42); and l\ Philetaerean stadia were --Roman mile (18). The 
multiples of the 2063 cubit are in late times generally reckoned in 
these feet of 1 cubit. The name " Babylonian foot " used by 
B6ckh (2) is only a theory of his, from which to derive volumes and 
weights; and no evidence for this name, or connexion with Babylon, 
is to .be found. Much has been written (2, 3, 33) on supposed cubits 
of about 17-18 in. derived from 20*63 — mainly in endeavouring to 
get a basis for the Greek and Roman feet ; but these are really con- 
nected with the digit system, and the monumental or literary 
evidence for such a division of 20*63 will not bear examination. 
17.34} There is, however, fair evidence for units of 17*30 and 
% 'J^L- 1*730 or rS of 20-76 in Persian buildings (25); and the 
f X20-70. 8ame j, r ound j n aJj* Min 0r ^ 17.25 or | of 20*70. On the 
Egyptian cubits a small cubit is marked as about 17 in., which may 
well be this unit, as | of 20*6 is 17*2 ; and, as these marks are placed 
before the 23rd digit or 1 7 0, they cannot refer to 6 palms, or 17-7. 
which is the 24th digit, though they are usually attributed to that 

We now turn to the second great family based on the digit. 
This has been so usually confounded with the 20*63 family, owing 
to the juxtaposition of 28 digits with that cubit in Egypt, that it 
should be observed how the difficulty of their incommensurability 
has been felt. For instance, Lepsius (3) supposed two primitive 
cubits of 13*2 and 20*63, to account for 28 digits being only 20-4 
when free from the cubit of 20*63— the & nt a 4 digits being in some 
cases made shorter on the cubits to agree with the true digit standard, 
while the remaining 4 are lengthened to fill up to 20*6. In the 
.•27 ;« Dynasties IV. and VTin Egypt the digit is found in tomb 
sculptures as '727 (27); while from a dozen examples 
in the later remains we find the mean -728 (25). A length of 10 digits 
is marked on all the inscribed Egyptian cubits as the lesser span " 
(33). In Assyria the same digit appears as -730, particularly at 
Nimrud (25): and in Persia buildings show the to-digit length of 
7-34 (25). In Syria it was about -728, but variable; in eastern 
Asia Minor more like the Persian, being '732 (25). In these cases 
the digit itself, or decimal multiples, seem to have been used. 
11-23 T*-* pre-Greek examples of this cubit in Egypt, men- 
•~V tioned by Bdckh (2). give 18-23 a* ■ mean, which is 
25 Xt**9- 2$ digits of -729. and has no relation to the 20-63 cubit. 
This cubit, or one nearly equal, was used in Judaea in the times of 
the kings, as the Siloam inscription names a distance of 1758^ ft. as 
roundly 1200 cubits, showing a cubit of about 17*6 is. This is also 
evidently the Olympic cubit; and, in pursuance of the decimal 
multiple of the digit found in Egypt and Persia, the cubit of 25 digits 
was I of the orgnsa of too digits, the series being — 



. Ttstoea 



■c£.. !:!«**. 



I***. 



Then, taking | of the cubit, or | of the orguia, as a foot, the Greeks 
arrived at their foot of 12*14; this, though very well known in 
literature, is but rarely found, and then generally in the form of 
the cubit, in monumental measures. The Parthenon step, cele- 
brated as too ft. wide, and apparently 225 ft. long, gives by Stuart 
17 *37. by Penrone 12*165, oy Paccard 12*148, differences due to 
scale and not to slips in measuring. Probably 12-16 is the nearest 



value. There are but few buildings wrought on this foot in Asia 
Minor, Greece or Roman remains. The Greek system, however, 
adopted this foot as a basis for decimal multiplication, forming 



in '6 1316 

which stand as fth of the other decimal aeries based on the digit. 
This is the agrarian system, in contrast to the orguia system, wmch 
was the itinerary series (33). 

Then a further modification took place, to avoid the inconveni- 
ence of dividing the foot in i6| digits, and a new digit was formed 
—longer than any value of the old digit— of A of the foot, or *76o, 
so that the series ran 

.«-•, (to-Udus 

"*"• < •*..., ^.■etfukv lo-strun*. 10-stadioa, 
Ttfbeh r« v-9 1*9 HC*. 

This rm;ni..in of the, Creek system (25) is only an inference from 
the f 1 yet known, for M lave not sufficient information to prove 
it, thatch it seems much th c simplest and most likely history. 

11-62 S™* the good reasons for this digit having been ex- 
ifi y . f* 3 ™ tc " r * rom Egypt— from the presence of the 

*u/s a* jMj23 Clihit - a Bgypt, and from the -729 digit being the 
decn " has? of the Greek lung measures — it is not surprising to find 
it in i n I f aly a » a dig] t , an T multiplied by 1 6 as a foot. Toe more 
so as he half of this foot , or $ digits, is marked off as a measure on 
the I ; Titian cubit rod* {SI}. Though Queipo has opposed this con- 
nexK 1. not noticing the Greek link of the digit), he agrees that it 
is su porred by ihe Egyptian square measure of the plethron, being 
equa u ihc- Roman actus (33). The foot of if*6 appears probably 
first in the prehistoric ami tarty Greek remains, and is certainly- 
found ib Ltrufian tomb diuiensions as 11-59 (25). Dorpfeld con- 
siders this as the Attic foot, and states the foot of the Greek metro- 
logical relief at Oxford as 11 -65 (or 11-61, Hultsch). Hence we see 
that it probably passed from the East through Greece to Etruria, 
and thence became the standard foot of Rome; there, though 
divided by the Italian duodecimal system into 1*2 unciae, It always 
maintained its original 16 digits, which are found marked on some 
of the foot-measures. The well-known ratio of 25:24 between the 
12-16 foot and this we see to have arisen through one being f of too 
and the other 16 digits— 16| : 16 being as 25 : 24, the legal ratio. 
The mean of a dozen foot -measures (1) gfves ii*6i6***ool, and of 
long lengths and buildings 11*6074*01. In Britain and Africa, 
however, the Romans used a rather longer form (25) of about 11 -68, 
or a digit of -730. Their series of measures 

dhtas. 4*BdaMS\ 4-P»». S-P***m, «*S' 
*7*6utch rap 11*6* sS'i 



also 



s-oBS-Apa, P-*»-P-» W'"S pslral 



. •-rofllWt; 

1*6* st.xoo 

Cubans ir42*-*6 palm!. 



Either from its Pektsgic or Etrurian use or from Romans, this foot 
appears to have come into prehistoric remains, as the circle of 
Stonehenge (26) is 100 ft. of 11*68 across, and the same is found 
in one or two other cases. 1 1*60 also appears as thefoot of some 
medieval English buildings (25). 

We now pass to units between which we cannot state any con*' 



25*1.— The earliest sign of this cubit b in a chamber at Abydos 
(44) about 1400 B.C.; there, below the sculptures, the plain wall is 
marked out by red designing lines In spaces of 25*13 -*k>3 in., which 
have no relation to the size of the chamber or to the sculpture. 
They must therefore have been marked by a workman using a cubit 
of 25*13. Aptrt irom medieval and other very uncertain data* 
such as the Sabbath day's journey being 2000 middling paces for 
2000 cubits, it appears that Josephus, using the Greek or Roman 
cubit, gives half as many more to each dimension of the temple 
than does the Talmud; this shows the cubit used in the Talmud 
for temple measures to be certainly not under 25 in. Evidence of 
the early period is given, moreover, by the statement in 1 Kings 
(vii. 26) that the brazen sea held 2000 baths; the bath being about 
2300 cub. in., this would show a cubic of 25 in. The corrupt text in 
Chronicles of 3000 baths would need a still longer cubit; and, if a 
lesser cnbit of 21-6 or 18 in. be taken, the result for the size of the 
bath would be impossibly small. For other Jewish cubits see 18-2 
and 21*6. Oppert (24) concludes from inscriptions that there was 
in Assyria a royal cubit of I the U cubit, or 25*20; and four monu- 
ments show (25) a cubit averaging 25*28. For Persia Queipo (33) 
relies on, and develops, an Arab statement that the Arab koshama 
cubit was the royal Persian, thus fixing it at about 25 in. ; and the 
Persian guerze at present is 25, the royal guerze being 1} times this, 
or 37) in. As a unit of 1*013, decimally multiplied, is most com- 
monly to be deduced from the ancient Persian buildings, we may 
take 25*34 as the nearest approach to the ancient Persian unit. 

21*6.— The circuit of the city wall of Khorsabad (24) is minutely 
stated on a tablet as 24,740 ft. (U), and from the actual size the 
is therefore 10806 in. Hence the recorded series of measures on the 
Senkerch unlet are valued (Oppert) as— 

^ 5w-(T*la). J-U 4-«st-w. s-ss. $-fn>, it-os, jo-kubo. 

^* (60 -U.6© -(«), 

'iSiach 46 10-te 64-* 1*9-6 64S 7776 a*j.*a» 

i Other units are the suklum or iU-54. and cnbit of 2 U- 2 1-9* 



484 



WEIGHTS AND MEASURES 



which are not named in this tablet. In Persia (24) the series on 
the same base was — 

vftasti. a-ansni, ado^sspatiss, 90«pumtbaflba, t*»|8v; 
xo-7 inches ai-4 77«* «SM>o 46j.*#© 

probably 

jnva, 6-samaU to—vitaatl; sad guns- isnsni; tbobSzu«tar%m. 
18 inch 1-07 l©7 ti-8 sx-4 4»* n-4 

The values here given are from some Persian buildings (25), which 
indicate ax -A, or slightly less; Oppert 's value, on less certain data, 
is 21-52. The Egyptian cubits have an arm at 15 digits or about 
io*q marked on them, which seems like this same unit (33). 

This cubit was also much used by the Jews (33), and is so often 
referred to that it has eclipsed the 25-1 cubit in most writers. The 
Gemara names 3 Jewish cubits (2) of 5, 6 and 7 palms; and, as 
Oppert (24) shows that 25*2 was reckoned 7 palms, 21 -6 being 6 
palms, we may reasonably apply this scale to the Gemara list, and 
read it as 18, 21 *6 and 25*2 in. There is also a great amount of 
medieval *and other data showing this cubit of 21 -6 to have been 
familiar to the Jews after their captivity; but there is no evidence 
for its earlier date, as there is for the 25-in. cubit (from the brazen 
sea) and for the 18-in. cubit from the SOoam inscription. 

From Assyria also it passed into Asia Minor, being found on the 
city standard of Ushak in Phrygia (33), engraved as 21*8, divided 
into the Assyrian foot of xo-8, and naif and quarter, 5*4 and 2*7. 
Apparently the same unit is found (18) at Heraclea in Lucania, 
2186: and, as the general foot of the South Italians, or Oscan foot 
(18), best denned by the 100 feet square being ^ of the jugerum, 
ana therefore = 10-80 or half of 2 1 -6o. A.cubit 012 1 *5 seems certainly 
.to be indicated in prehistoric remains in Britain, and also in early 
Christian buildings in Ireland (25). 

22 '2. — Another unit not far different, but yet distinct, is found 
apparently in Punic remains at Carthage (25), about 11*16 (22-32), 
and probably also in Sardinia as 11 -07 (22-14), where it would 
naturally beof # Punic^origin. % In the Hauran 22*16 is shown by_a 

. ._ „ some 
prehistoric English remains as 22-4. 

20-0. — This unit may be that 01 the prc-Semitic Mesopotamtans, 
as it is found at the early temple of Mupayyir fUr); and, with a few 
other cases (25), it averages 19*97. It is described by Oppert (24), 
from Utcrary sources, as the great U of 222 susi or 39*96, double of 
19*98; from which was formed a reed of 4 great U or 159-8. The 
same measure decimally divided is also indi c ated by buildings in 
Asia Minor and Syria (25). 

19*2. — In Persia some buildings at Persepolis and other places 
(25) are constructed on a foot of 9-6, or cubit of 19*2 ; while the 
modern Persian arista is 38*27 or 2X19*13. The same is found 
very clearly in Asia Minor (25), averaging 19*3; and it is known in 
literature as the Pythic foot (18, 33) of 9*75, or i of 19*5, if Cen- 
sorinus is rightly understood. It may be shown by a mark (33) on 
the 26th digit of Sharpe's Egyptian cubit » 19*2 in. 

13*3. — This measure does not seem to belong to very early times, 
and it may probably have originated In Asia Minor. It is found 
there aa 13*35 in buildings. Hultsch gives it rather less, at 13*1, 
as the " small Asiatic foot." Thence it passed to Greece, where it 



Udiuioujr lpc ui s uur. irugiu. iu iuc iwuiau «-iw is diivwu uy « 

basalt door (British Museum), and perhaps elsewhere in Syria (25) 
It is of some value to trace this measure, since it is indicated by sonu 



In Romano-African remains it is often 



found, rather higher, or 13*45 average (25). It lasted in Asia 
apparently till the building of the palace at Mashita (a.d. 620), 
where it is 13-22, according to the rough measures we have (25). 

a 1 *.. it u_ <l* __•_•_ ^ .l. jiLl* c^._l„i: ^t ~*. c . •_ 



And it may well be the origin of the dira' Stambuli of 26*6, twice 
13-3. Found in Asia Minor and northern Greece, it does not appear 
unreasonable to connect it, as Hultsch does, with the Belgic foot 
of the Tungri, which was legalised (or perhaps introduced) by 
Drusus when governor, as i longer than the Roman foot, or 13*07; 
this statement was evidently an approximation by an increase of 2 
digits, so that the small difference from 13/3 is not worth notice. 
Further, the pertka was 12 ft. of 18 digits, «.*. Drusian feet. 
< Turning now to England, we find (25) the commonest building 
foot up to the «5th century averaged 13-22. Here we see the Belgic 
foot passed over to England, and we can fill the gap to a considerable 
extent from the itinerary measures. It has been shown (31) that 
the old English mile, at least as far back as the 13th century, was 
of . 10 and not 8 furlongs. It was therefore equal to 79,200 in., and 
divided decimally into 10 furlongs 100 chains, or 1000 fathoms. 
For the existence of this fathom (half the Belgic pertica) we have 
the proof of its half, or yard, needing to be suppressed by statute (9) 
in 1439, as " the yard and full hand," or about 40 in., — evidently 
the yard of the most usual old English foot of 13-73, wtitrb would 
be 39*66. We can restore then the old English system o( long 
measure from the buildings, the statute-prohibit ion. the surviving 
chain and furlong, and the old English mile shown by maps and 
itineraries, thus: — 

foot, j-yird, s-btbon, IO-ch»», soafaitafc lO-sUfe. 

U-as «f»46 J9M* m t?-JJ* NJ* 

Such a regular and extensive system could not have pee n put into 
use throughout the whole country suddenly in 1350, especially as 
it must have had to resist the legal foot now in u* P which was 
enforced (9) as early as 950. We cannot suppose that tuch * lystatn 
would be invented and become general in face of the Laws eatorcuig 



IANCIENT HISTORICAL 

the 12-in. foot. Therefore it must be dated some time before the 
10th century, and this brings it as near as we can now hope to the 
Belgic foot, which lasted certainly to the 3rd or 4th century, and 
is exactly in the line of migration of the Belgic tribes into Britain. 
It is remarkable how near this early decimal system of Germany and 
Britain is the double of the modern decimal metric system. Had it 
not been unhappily driven out by the 12-in. foot, and repressed 
by statutes both against its yard and mile, we should need but a 
small change to place our measures in accord with the metre. 

The Gallic teuga, or league, is a different unit, being 1*59 British 
miles by the very concordant itinerary of the Bordeaux pilgrim. 
This appears to be the great Celtic measure, as opposed to the old 
English, or Germanic, mile. In the north-west of England and in 
Wales this mile lasted as 1-56 British miles till 1500; and the perch 
of those parts was correspondingly longer till this century (31). 
The " old London mile " was 5000 ft., and probably this was the 
mile which was modified to 5280 ft., or 8 furlongs, ana so became the 
British statute mite. 

Standards op Arba.— We cannot here describe these in detail. 
Usually theywere formed in each country on the squares of the long 
measures. The Greek system was — 
fool, s6*»»De*apodes 

M9" .scans, ts**sm*ns, 4**P**£liroo. 

IAS7SQ.IL 56-96 xo*46 1567 io,«61 

The Roman system was — 

pes, loo-dsoanptds, afi-dima, 4*»»ctas, s-jugerum. 
•0414. ft. ©4. __ S$S4 U.SJ6 , *7M» 

Jastran, s-bcraSam, lao—cmtarii, 4*»ttJtvs. 
-6 jos ten 1-141 124-1 496-4 

Standards op Volume. — There is great uncertainty as to the 
exact yalucs of all ancient standards of volume — the only precise 
data being those resulting from the theories of volumes derived 
from the cubes of feet and cubits. Such theories, as we have noticed, 
are extremely likely to be only approximations in ancient times, 
even if recognized then; and our data are quite inadequate for 
clearing the subject. If certain equivalences between volumes in 
different countries are stated here, it must be plainly understood 
that they are onfy known to be approximate results, and not to 
give a certain basis for any theories of derivation. All the actual 
monumental data that we have are alluded to here, with their 
amounts. The impossibility of safe correlation of units necessitates 
a division by countries. 

Egypt. — The -h on was the usual small standard; by 8 vases which 
have contents stated in hons (8, 12, 20, 22, 33, 40) the mean is 29-2 
cub. in. >** *6; by 9 unmarked pottery measures (30) 29*1 ***i6, and 
divided by 20; by 18 vases, supposed multiples of hon (1), 32*1 >• 



These last are probably only rough, and we may take 29*2 cub. in. 
* *5. This was reckoned (6) to hold 5 uteris of water (uten.*. 1470 
grains) j which agrees well to the weight; but this was probably an 



approximation, and not derivative, as there is (14) a weight called 
shet ofa*70 or 4-95 uten, and this was perhaps the actual weight of a 
hon. The variations of hon and uten, however, cover one another 
completely. From ratios stated before Greek times (35) the series of 
multiples was— 

10, 8-baa, 4-boaoa, lo-tpetf xo->(Thebu',io-t*. 

or bcus ( 4*- tarns 
3-65 cab. in. tort Ii6"8 116S 467s 11,680 116,800 

(Theban) is the " great Theban measure." 

In Ptolemaic times the artaba (2336*), modified from the Persian, 
was general in Egypt, a working equivalent to the Attic metretes— 
value 2 apet or \ tama ; medimnus —tama or 2 artabas, and fractions 
down to rh artaba (35). In Roman times the artaba remained 
(Didymus), but k was the usual unit (name unknown), and this 
was* divided down to A or -fa artaba (35) — thus producing by J* 
artaba a working equivalent to the xestes and sextarius (35). Also 
a new Roman artaba (Didymus) of 1540* was brought in. Beside 
the equivalence of the hon to 5 utens weight of water, the mathe- 
matical papyrus (35) gives* 5 besha—} cubic cubit (Revillout's 
interpretation of this as 1 cubit* is impossible geometrically; see 
Rev. Eg., 1 881, for data); this is very concordant, but it is very 
unlikely for 3 to be introduced in an Egyptian derivation, and 
probably therefore only a working equivalent. The other ratio of 
Rcvillout and Hultsch, 320 hons -cubit*, is certainly approximate. 

Syria* Palestine and Babylonia. — Here there are no monumental 
data known; and the literary information does not distinguish the 
closely connected, perhaps identical, units of these lands. More- 
over, none of the writers are before the Roman \ 
relied on are medieval rabbis. A large number c 
|n rouph {2, 18. 33), beinj; based on the woi LJ 
tbc bath or cptia with the Attfe metrctOR, irom * 
tir-dun fractional sur-cmcoU wbidtm-em more a- 
Thia, however, ihow^ tTio bjih to be about 
two bctier data (2) vl E-.iiphanhis and Theodore 
- 1 1 baths, and sauw ( t bath) - 1 1 
?jz6ocub.in TlAli-Mrs^liinktolisvi- 1 




***-"■• 




ANCIENT HISTORICAL] 

Punic variant of the } bath or saton of Phoenicia. One dose datum, 
if trustworthy, would be log of water « Assyrian mina .-. bath about 
2200 cub. in. The rabbinical statement of cub. cubit of 21*5 holding 
320 logs puts the bath at about 2250 cub. in.; their log-measure, 
holding six ben's eggs, shows it to be over rather than under this 
amount ; but their reckoning of bath - J cubit cubed is but approxi- 
mate: by 2i-5 it is 1240, by 25-1 it is 1990 cubic in. The earliest 
Hebrew system was — 

srabih. lit ajo t&j t sjoo Mijoao 

°tssar6n ('* tenth-deal ") is also called goraer. The log and kab are 
not found till the later writings; but the ratio of hin to *issar6n is 
practically fixed in early times by the proportions in Num. xv. 4-9. 
Eptphanius stating great hin — 18 xestes, and holy hin «9, must refer 
to Syrian xestes, equal to 24 and 12 Roman; this makes holy hin as 
above, and great hin a double hin, ue. seah or saton. His other 
statements of saton - 56 or 50 sextaria remain unexplained, unless 
this be an error for bath -56 or 50 Syr. sext. and .*. -2290 or 2560 
cub. in. The wholesale theory of Revillout (35) that all Hebrew and 
Syrian measures were doubled by the Ptolemaic revision, while 
retaining the same names, rests entirely on the resemblance of the 
names apet and cpha, and of log to the Coptic and late measure lok. 
But there are other reasons against accepting this, besides the im- 
probability of such a change. 
The Phoe n ician and old Carthaginian system was (18) — 

faf. 4 -tab, ©— atfoa. 30 -conn, 

31 cab. in. nj 740 aa.a» 

valuing them by 31 Sicilian -41 Attic modii (Josephus, above). 
The old Syrian system was (18) — 

cotrfc. «— Ssrr.sntas. lJ-*»bith»eratfaa, it-coOatboo. a-battWtetet 
n cob. a. 41 I40 1110 atao 

also 

Sjrr. aetfes, 45-a»rb, » ■awtwt<i or artabs. 
41 1*99 iToa 

The later or Sekuddan system was (18)— 
cot-rle, a—Syr. testa, 00—f 



WEIGHTS AND MEASURES 



485 



the Syrian being 1 J Roman sextarii. 
The Babylonian system was very similar (18) — 

u, 4-c.^ja:""*^ „_^ t . 

S5cab.fek ua tote site t&jko 14* .too 

The approximate value from capitha— 2 Attic choenices (Xenophon) 
warrants as m taking the acbane as fixed in the following system, 
winch places it closely in accord with the preceding. 
In Persia Hultsch states-* 

capcta 48 -tlUba. 4o) - _ fc -__ 

auris 7JJ wumm ^ 

U*4cab.h. 19&J «7o I4**» 

the absolute values being fixed by artaba-51 Attic choenices 
(Herod. L 192). The maris of the Pontic system is I of the above, 
and the Macedonian and Naxian maris ft of the Pontic (18). By 
the theory of maris-l of 20*6* it is 1755- ; by maris •Assyrian 
talent. 1850, in place of 1850 or 1980 stated above; hence the more 
likely theory of weight* rather than cubit, connexion is nearer to 
the facta. 

Aegimetau System."- This is so called from according with the 
Aesinetan weight The absolute data are all dependent on the Attic 
and Roman systems, as there are no monumental data. The series of 
names is the same as in the Attic system (18). The values are 
1 1 X the Attic (Athenaeus, Theophrastus, &c) (2, 18), or more closely 
1 1 to 12 times t of Attic. Hence, the Attic cotyle being 17-* cub. in., 
the Acginetan is about 25*7. The Boeotian system (18) included the 
achane ; if this ■ Persian, then cotyle - 247. Or, separately through 
the Roman system, the mnasis of Cyprus (18) -170 sextarii; then 
the cotyle -24-8. By the theory of the metretes being 1} talents 
Aegiaetan, the cotyle would be 2.V3 to 24-7 cub. in. by the actual 
weights, which have tended to decrease. Probably then 25-0 is the 
best approximation. By the theory (18) of 2 metretes -cube of the 
18-67 cubit from the 12-45 foot, the cotyle would be about 25-4. 
within -4; but then such a cubit is unknown among measures, and 
not likely to be formed, as 12-4 is | of 20-6. The Aegtnetaa system 

rh^n wa*—' 

~~7~^ . . jt-cb0B>... t* I - 

a*y§a, 4-eaaoaX. |g_ k?-i> 4mmmdMBw t| J-wsaaaas. 

ajcafwia- tea jo» to* saeo ste» 

1* wu the lyitetn of Sparta, ttf Bowtui {where the aporryma 
cms, the cDphinui-6 cboeuicn. jnd saites or saton or 
raise, while 30 niHinn.i '■acbane, evidently 
jfiJiotuK and of O, ; .n»s (where 2 chocs - 
bich 5 -meduanua of Salamis, of which 2 




The aWTutr value of this system 
"*' " -> ttone slabs, each with 
nd two named vases. 
b is-a (best, others 
Paniaum slab 17*1 
im the Ganus slab 
5 as a fair approxi- 



mation. It is supposed that the Paaathenak va s e s were intended as 
metretes; this would show a cotyle of 14*4-1 7*1. The theories of 
connexion give, for the value of the cotyle, metretes— Aeginetan 
talent, .*. 1^-4-1 6-6; metres | of 12-16 cubed, .-.16*6; metretes- |J 
of 1216 cubed, .*. 16-8; medimnus— a Attic talents, becteus-20 
minae, choenix— 2 J minae, .-. 16-75; metretes -3 cub. spitbami 
(i cubit -9- 1 2), .*. 17*5; 6 metretes -2 ft. of 12*45 cubed. .*. 178 
cub. in. for cotyle. But probably as good theories could be found for 
any other amount; and certainly the Tacts should not be set aside, as 
almost everyauthor has done, in favour of some one of half a doses 
theories. The system of multiples was for liquids— 

cyttbr*. ■f-osjrbspaoa, 4-eotyk. n-caoat, ts-atetrcta, 

rocub.fa. 44 U't a«o »}*> 

with the tetarton (8*8), a -cotyle, 2 -xestes (35-), introduced from 
the Roman system. For dry measure— 

cyalbaB, 4-cotyla, 4-chocais, S-aactaas, 4-inafiauBn, 
aleukia. 17'S »• Sfo Sjte 

with the xestes, and amphoreus (1680) -| medimnus, from the 
Roman system. The various late provincial systems of division 
are beyond our present scope (18). 

.System ef CytjUmmu—A system differing widely both In units and 
names from the preceding is found on the standard slab of Gythium 
in the southern Peloponnesus (Rev. Arch., 1872). Writers have 
unified it with the Attic, but it is decidedly larger in its unit, giving 
19*4 (var. 19* 1-19-8) for the supposed cotyle. Its system in— 



stcafcia. 



J-f«>. 



And with this agrees a pottery cylindrical vessel, with official stamp 
on it (AHM02I0N, Ac), and having a fine black line traced round 
the inside, near the top, to show its limit; this seems to be probably 
very accurate, and contains 58-5 cub. in., closely agreeing with the 
cotyle of Gythium. It has been described (Rev. Arch., 1872) as an 
Attic choenix. Gythium being the southern port of Greece, it seems 
not too far to connect this 58 cub. in. with the double of the Egyptian 
hon -58-4, as it is different from every other Greek system. 

Roman System. — The celebrated rarnesian standard congiua of 
bronze of Vespasian, " mensurae exactae in Capitolio P. X., con- 
tains 206-7 cub. in. (2), and hence the amphora 1654. By the 
sextarius of Dresden (2) the amphora is 1695; by the congius of 
Ste Genevieve (2) 1700 cub. in.; and by the ponderarium measures 
at Pompeii (33 J 1540 to 1840, or about 1620 for a mean. So the 
Famesian congius, or about 1650, may best be adopted. The 
system for liquid r — 



f-6cttb.av J44 m6 ta$ 1630 

for dry measure 16 sextarii -mod ius, 550 cub. in.; and to both 
systems were added from the Attic the cyathus (2-87), acetabulum 
(4*3) and hemina (17-2 cub. in.). The Roman theory of the amphora 
being the cubic foot makes it 1569 cub. in., or decidedly less than the 
actual measures; the other theory of its containing 80 librae of 
water would make it 1 575 by the commercial or 1 605 by the monetary 
libra— again too low for the measures. Both of these theories there- 
fore are rather working equivalents than original derivations; or at 
least the interrelation was allowed to become far from exact. 

Indian and Chinese Systems.— On the ancient Indian system set 
Numismata Orientalia, new ed., L 24 ; on the ancient Chinese, Nature, 
iPP f T 565, and xxxv. 318. 

Standards or Weight.— For these we have far more complete 
data than for volumes or even lengths, and can ascertain in many 
rases the nature of the variations, and their type in each place. 
The main ttsjaal on which we shall rely here are those — (1) from 
Assyria (38) aUjtjt 800 ax.; (2) from the eastern Delta of Egypt 
(3) from western Delta (28) (Naucratis); (4) from 
Memphis (44}— ill these about the 6th century B.C., and therefore 
before much interference from the decreasing coin standards; (5) 
from Cnidus; ki from Athens: (7) from Corfu; and (8) from Italy 
( Brit ifrh M uKum ) (44). As other collections are but a fraction of the 
whrpk of theatj and are much less completely examined^ little if any 
one by including them in the combined results, 
though for sptdal types or inscriptions they will be mentioned. 

1*0 grii . _ie Egyptian unit was the kat, which varied between 

138 and 155 grains (2M°). There were several families or varieties 
within this range, at least in the Delta, probably five or six in all (29). 
The original places and dates of these cannot yet be fixed, except for 
the lowest type of 158-140 grains; this belonged to Heliopoln (7), as 
two weights (35) inscribed of " the treasury of An " show 139*9 and 
140-4, while a plain one from there gives 138-8; the variety 147-149 
may belong to Hermopolis (35), according to an inscribed weight. 
The names of the kat and tema are fixed by being found on weights, 
the uten by inscriptions; the series was— 

fa). i©-kii. to-atas. so*taaaw 
14* sn> 14ft M*s 14.600. 

The tema Is the same name as the large wheat measure (35), which 
was worth 30,000 to 19,000 grains of copper, according to Ptolemaic 
receipts and accounts (Rev. Eg. t 1881, 150), and therefore very 
likely worth 10 utens of copper in earlier times when metals were 
scarcer. The kat was regularly divided into 10 ; but another division. 
for the sake of interrelation with another system, was in I andi- 



486 



WEIGHTS AND MEASURES 



scarcely found except in tne eastern Delta, where it is common 
(29) ; and it it known from a papyrus (38) to be a Syrian weight. 
The utcn is found +6-245, »n Upper Egypt (rare) (44). Another 
division On a papyrus) (38) is a silver weight of ft teat -about 88— 
perhaps the Babylonian siglus of 86. The uten was also binarily 
divided into I28peks of gold in Ethiopia ; this may refer to another 
standard (see 129) (33). The Ptolemaic copper coinage is on two 
bases— the uten, binarily divided, and the Ptolemaic five shekels 
(1050), also binarily divided. (This result is from a larger number 
than other students have used, and study by diagrams.) The theory 
(3) of the derivation of the uten from T iVj cubic cubit of water 



either in volumes or weights for taking 1500 utens. Another theory 
(3) derives the uten from T ^ro of the cubic cubit of 24 digits, or better 
I of 20-63: that, however, will only fit the very lowest variety of the 



uten, while there is no evidence of the existence of such a cubit. 
The kat is not unusual in Syria (44), and among the haematite 
weights of Troy (44) are nine examples, average 144, but not of ex- 
treme varieties. 
120 «■• • 2SRcrr* The a™* standard of Babylonia became the 
n£ri* 1 Zoo- P arent of «vcral other systems; and Itself 
7 ~I*- 000 ' an< * * ts d er * v *tf v *» became more widely spread 
405,000. t j ian any otner standard. It was known in two 
forms— one system (24) of— 

an, so-ifcMr, 6-sbefcd. ts-ttom, 6-mancft, to-ttknt; 
•10(0. US 1*9 *W» 77 jo 4»$jooo 

and the other system double of this in each stage except the talent. 
These two systems arc distinctly named on the weights, and are 
known now as the light and heavy Assyrian systems (19, 24). (It 
is better to avoid the name Babylonian, as It has other meanings 
also.) There are no weights dated before the Assyrian bronze lion 
weights (9. 17, 19. 38) of the nth to 8lh centuries B.C. Thirteen 
of tnts class average 127*2 for the shekel; 9 haematite barrel-shaped 
weights (38) give 128-2; 16 stone duck-weights (38), 126-5. A 
heavier value is shown by the precious metals^— the gohi plates 
from Khorsabad *""* 
of Persia 129- 2. 

is the system of . , 

Euboic. by Pollux -70 minae Attic, by Aelian - 72 minae Attic, and, 
therefore, about 470,000 grains. In Egypt this is found largely at 
Naucratis (28, 29), and less commonly at Defenneh (29). In both 
places the distribution, a high type of 129 and a lower of 127, is like 
the monetary and trade varieties above noticed; while a smaller 
number of examples are found, fewer and fewer, down to 1 18 grains. 
At Memphis (44) the shekel is scarcely known, and a I mina weight 
was there converted Into another standard (of 200). A few barrel 
weights are found at Karnak, and several egg-shaped shekel weights 
at Gebelen (44) ; also two cuboid weights from there (44) of 1 and to 
utens are marked as 6 and 60, which can hardly refer to any unit but 
the heavy shekel, giving 245. Hultsch refers to Egyptian gold rings 
of Dynasty XVI 1 1, of 1 25 grains. That this unit penetrated far to the 
south in early times is shown by the tribute of Kush (34) in Dynasty 
XVII 1.; this is of 801, 1443 and 23,741 kat*, or 15 and 27 manehs 
and 7} talents when reduced to this system. And the later Ethiopk 
gold unit of the pek (7),or T ti<>f the uten, was io*8 or more, and may 
therefore be the } sikhir or obolos of 21 -5. But the fraction rri, or a 
continued binary division repeated seven times, is such a likely mode 
of rude subdivision that little stress can be laid on this. In later 
times in Egypt a class of large glass scarabs for funerary purposes 
seem to be adjusted to the shekel (30). Whether this system or the 
Phoenician of 224 grains was that of the Hebrews is uncertain. 
There is no doubt but that in the Maceabean times and onward 218 
was the shekel; but the use of the word darkemdn by Ezra and 
Nehemiah, and the probabilities of their case, point to the darag* 
maneh, A maneh or shekel of Assyria; and the mention of ) shekel 
by Nehemiah as poll tax nearly proves that the 129 and not 218 
grains is intended, as 218 is not divisible by 3. But the Maceabean 
use of 2t 8 may have been a reversion to the older shekel; and this is 
strongly shown by the fraction J shekel (1 Sam.ix.8), the continual 
mention of large decimal numbers of shekels ia the earlier books, 
and the certain fact of 100 shekels being* mina. This would all be 
against the 129 or 258 shekel, and for the 218 or 224. There is, 
however, one good datum if it can be trusted*. 300 talents of silver 
(2 Kings xviil. 14) are 800 talents on Sennacherib's cylinder (34), 
while the 30 talents of gold is the same in both accounts. Eight 
hundred talents on the Assyrian silver standard would be 267— or 
roundly 300— talents on the heavy trade or gold system, which is 
therefore probably the Hebrew. Probably the 129 and 224 systems 
coexisted in the country; but on the whole it seems more likely that 
129 or rather 238 grains was the Hebrew shekel before the Ptolemaic 
fly as the too shekels to the mina is paralleled by the 



So* Uk-rt of tlsfls* 

465*0© 



times — especially 

following Persian system (Hultsch)— 

ISO 111. S4SOT7SO »»7.fOOO 

the Hebrew system being 

gosh, so-mMmL voo-im 

tresis. »ssr >s.*» 774.000 

and, considering that the two Hebrew cubits arc the Babylonian and 

Persian units, and the volumes are aUo Babylonian, it ia the more 



jo-utnt. 



lANCtENT HISTORICAL 

likely that the weights should have come with these. From the 
east this unit passed to Asia Minor; and six multiples of 2 to 20 
shekels (a v. 127) are found among the haematite weights of Troy 
(44). Including the oldest of them. On the Aegean coast it often 
occurs In early coinage (17) — at Lampsacus 131-129, Phocaea 256- 
*54/ Cyzicus *S**~247> Methymna 124-6, Ac. In later times it was a 
main unit of North Syria, and also on the Euxine, leaden weights 
of Antioch (3), Callatia and Tomb being known (38). The mean 
of these eastern weights is 7700 for the mina, or 1 28. But the leaden 
weights of the west (44) from Corfu, &c, average 7580, or 126-3; this 
standard was kept up at Cyzicus in trade long alter it was Tost in 
coinage. At Connth the unit was evidently the Assyrian and not the 
Attic, being 129-6 at the earliest (17) (though modified to double 
Attic, or 133, later) and being +3, and not into 2 drachms. And this 
agrees with the mina being repeatedly found at Corcyra, and with the 
same standard passing to the Italian coinage (17) similar in weight, and 
in division into f--thc heaviest coinages (17) down to 400 B.C. (Terina, 
Vena, Svbaris, Posidonia, Mctapontum, Tarentum, &c.) being none 
over 126, while later on many were adjusted to the Attic, and rose to 
134. Six disk weights from Carthage (44) show 126. It is usually the 
case that a unit lasts later in trade than in coinage; and the promin- 
ence of this standard in Italy may show how it is that this mina (t8 
unciae - 7400) was known as the " Italic " in the days of Galen and 
Dioscorides (2). 

126 m. A variation on the main system was made by forming a 
6100 mina of 30 shekels. This is one of the Persian series (gold). 



6«qq mina %n y* sncisns. 1 nn is one m uic rcrsian acnes \gvuii, 

3 ' and the { of the Hebrew series noted above. But it is 
most striking when it is found in the mina form which distinguishes 
it. Eleven weights from Syria and Cnidus (44) (of the curious 
type with two breasts on a rectangular block) show a mina of 6250 
(125-0); and it is singular that this class is exactly like weights 
of the 224 system found with it, but yet quite distinct in standard. 
The same passed into Italy and Corfu (44), averaging 6000— divided 
in Italy into unciae (rS). and scripulae (rrr). *nd called litra (in 
Corfu?). It is known in the coinage of Hatna (18) as 6320. And 
a strange division of the shekel in 10 (probably therefore connected 
with this decimal mina) is shown by a series of bronte weights (44) 
with four curved sides and marked with circles (British Museum, 
place unknown), which may be Romano-Gallic, averaging: 125-1- 10, 
This whole class seems to cling to sites of Phoenician trade, and to 
keep clear of Greece and the north— perhaps a Phoenician form of the 
129 system, avoiding the sexagesimal multiples. 

If this unit have any connexion with the kat, it is that a kat of 
gold is worth 15 shekels or | mina of silver; this agrees well with 
the range of both units, only it must be re m em b ered that 129 was 
used as gold unit', and another silver unit deduced from it. Afore 
likely then the 147 and 129 units originated independently in Egypt 
and Babylonia. 

86 on. From ,2 9 F^fts of gold was adopted aa equal value 
!!*£,. of silver* 1720, on the proportion of 1:13), nod this 

-S, was divided in 10-172— which was used either in 

S 16.000. th j s form of u$ fo [f $ ^ known ag the . Iug (1?) 

Such a proportion is indicated in Num. vii., where the gold spoon of 
10 shekels is equal in value to the bowl of 1 30 shekels, or double tt-at of 

Jo, i.e. the silver vessels were 200 and 100 sigli. The silver plates at 
khorsabad (18) we find to be 80 sigli of 846, The Persian silver 
coinage 6hows about 86-o; the danak was ft of this or 28-7, Xeno- 
phon and others state it at about 84. As a monetary weight it seems 
to have spread, perhaps entirely, in consequence of the Persian 
dominion; it varies from 174* downwards^ usually 167. in Aradus, 
Cilicia and on to the Aegean coast, in Lydia and in Macedonia (17). 
The silver bars found at Troy averaging 2744, or ) mina of 8232. have 
been attributed to this unit (17) ; but no division of the mina in f is 
to be expected, and the average is rather low. Two haematite weights 
from Troy (44) show 86 and 87-2. The mean from leaden weights 
of Chios, Tenedos (44), ftc, is 8430. A duck-weight of Camirus, 
probably early, gives 8480; the same passed on to Greece and Italy 
(17), averaging 8610; but in Italy it was divided, like all other units, 
into unciae and scripulae (44). ft is perhaps found in Etrurian coin- 
age as i 75- 1 72 (17). By tne Romans it was used on the Danube (18), 
two weights of the first legion there showing 8610; and this is the 
mina of 20 unciae (8400) named by Roman writers. The system 
was— 

obol. 6-BkVa. leo-mlm, So-tafest. 
U'3fn> s* •*•» friyeep 

A derivation from this was the I of 172, or 57*3. the so-called 
Phocacan drachma, equal in silver value to the ft of the gold 238 
grains. It was used at Phocaea as 58-5, and parsed to die colonies 
of Posidonia and Velia as 59 or 1 18. Tnec ' •»■--*- 
it "into Gaul as 5*-2-54-9. 

M4 That this unit (commonly called 1 

f"J5?7 from the 129 system can hardly be i 

1~T« «> intimately associated in Syria 1 

672.000. ration ig , 58 :2J9 ::0:8; — 

the descent took place is not 1 * * 
57 of silver or a drachm. \ of 2jr 
otherwise, deriving it from t**^ 
the drachm is } ofthe 1 
287. and the sacred u 
27; or thirdly, wmtt] 



e colony of Mi 




ANCIENT HISTORICAL) 

fold m equal to 1150 of silver, 5 shekel* or A mina. Other pro- 
posed derivations from the kat or pek are not satisfactory. In act ual 
uc this unit varied greatly: at Naucratis (29) there are groups of it 
at 231, 223 and others down to 308 ; this is the earliest form in which 
we can stady it, and the corresponding values to these are 130 and 
1 26, or the gold and trade varieties of the Babylonian, while the lower 
tail down to 208 corresponds to the shekel down to 1 18. which is just 
what is found. Hence the 224 unit seems to have been formed from 
the 129, after the main families or types of that had arisen. It is 
scarcer at Defenneh (29) and rare at Memphis (44). Under the 
Ptolemies, however, it became the great unit of Egypt, and is very 
prominent in the later literature in consequence (18, 35). The 
average of coins (21) of Ptolemy I. gives 210-6, and thence they 

Rfcdually diminish to 210, the average (33) ot the whole scries of 
olenites being 218. The "argentcus" (as Revillout transcribes a 
sign in the papyri) (35) was of 5 shekels, or 1090; it arose about 440 
B.C, and became after 160 B.C. a weight unit for copper. In Syria, as 
early as the 15th century B.C., the tribute of the Rutcnnu, of Naha- 
raina, Meciddo, Anaukasa. &c (34), is on a basis of 454-484 kats. or 
300 shekels (A talent) of 226 grains. The commonest weight at 
Troy (44) is the shekel, averaging 224. In coinage it is one of the 
commonest units in early times; from Phoenicia, round the coast 
to Macedonia, it is predominant (17) ; at a maximum of 230 (lalysus), 
k Is in Macedonia 224, but seldom exceeds 220 elsewhere, the earliest 
Lydian of the 7th century being 219, and the general average of coins 
218. The system 



WEIGHTS AND MEASURES 



From the Phoenician coinage it was adopted for the Maccabean. 
It is needless to give the continual evidences of this being the later 
Jewish shekel, both from coins (max. 223) and writers (2, 18, 33) ; 
the question of the early shekel we have noticed already under 129. 
In Phoenicia and Asia Minor the mina was specially made in the 
farm with two breasts (44), 19 such weights averaging 5600 ( -224) ; 
and thence it passed into Greece, more in a double value of 1 1 ,200 
(0224). From Phoenicia this naturally became the main Punic 
I a bronze weight from lol (18), marked too, gives a drachma 



197 to 234. In Spain it was 236 to 216 in different series (17). and 
h *• a question whether the Massfliote drachmae of 58-55 are not 
Phoenician rather than Phocaic. In Italy this mina became 
naturalized, and formed the " Italic mina " of Hero, Priscian, &c; 
also its double, the mina of 26 unciae or 10,800, - 50 shekels of 2 16: 
the average of 42 weights gives 5390 (•215*6), and it was divided 
both into 100 drachmae, and also in the Italic mode of 12 unciae and 
288 scripulae (44). The talent was of 120 minae of 5400, or 3000 
shekels, shown by the talent from Herculaneum, ta, 660,000 and by 
the weight inscribed PONDO exxv. (i.e. 125 librae) talentvm 
sicxoavn. iii., i.e. talent of 3000 shekels (2) (the M being omitted; 
just as Epiphanius describes this talent as 125 librae, or (-9) 
Domismata, for 9000). This gives the same approximate ratio 96; 
100 to the libra as the usual drachma reckoning. The Alexandrian 
talent of Fcstus, 12,000 denarii, is the same talent again. It is 
be li e ve d that this mina + 12 unciae by the Romans is the origin of 
the Arabic rati of 12 ukfyas, or 5500 grains (33), which is said to 
have been sent by Harun al-Rashid to Charlemagne, and so to have 
originated the French monetary pound of 5666 grains. But, as this 
is probably the same as the English monetary pound, or tower 
pound of 5400. which was in use earlier (sec Saxon coins), it seems 
more likely that this pound (which is common in Roman weights) 
was directly inherited from the Roman civilization. 
_Q Another unit, which has scarcely been recognized in 

WJjT metrology hitherto, is^ prominent^ in the weights from 

400,000. 



Egypt — some 50 weights from Naucratis and 15 from 

Defenneh plainly agreeing on this and on no other basis. 

Its value varies between 76*5 and 81-5 — mean 79 at Naucratis (29) 

or 81 at Defenneh (29). It has been connected theoretically with a 

binary division of the 10 shekels or " stone " of the Assyrian systems 

(28). 1290+16 being 80*6; this is suggested by the most usual 

maKipfm being 40 am! Po=*?*j and 50 shekels of 120: It \% thus akin 

run* of 50 fchckcU previously not iced. The tribute of the Ast, 

.\t*i. .£e.. to Thpthmr^ 111. (34 L though in un> 

iberi fA kat*, wmrt out in round ihoit^inds oi units when 

>'•* ttandanJ. That th« unit i» qtiitr dr*tinct from the 

grains it clear in the Egyptian weights, uhkh maintjm ■ 

i Ht w ct w the two tYTttnra. Neat, in Syria three in bribed 

vtus U*; *how a m. 11 3 ...f aUmt 16,400, 

i inojn Babylonia, 

^&«~»ijb ^i^^^™"™ origin., Ily 

I -*"-r pi wriiers, 







coinage in Ghcta, before the general Persian coinage (17) about 
380 B.C., is Tarsus, 164 grains; Soli, 169, 163, 158; Nagidus, 158, 
161-153 later; Issus, 166: M alius, 163-154— all of which can only by 
straining be classed as Persian; but they agree to this standard, 



487 

') aboi 
agidus, 158, 



which, as we have seen, was used in Syria in earlier times by the 
Khita, Sec. The Milesian or " native " system of Asia Minor (18) is 
fixed by Hultsch at 163 and 81 -6 grains—the coins of Miletus (17) 
showing 160, 80 and 39. Coming down to literary evidence, this is 
abundant. Bdckh decides that the "Alexandrian drachma'* was 
| of the Solonic 67, or «= 80*5, and shows that it was not Ptolemaic, 
or Rhodian. or Aeginetan, being distinguished from these in in- 
scription* (2). Then the " Alexandrian mina " of Dioscorides and 
Calcn (Z) is 20 unciae -8250; in the " AnalecU " (2) it is 150 or 
158 drachmae -»8 too. Then Attic: Euboic or Aeginetan;: 18:25 
in the metrologists (2), and the Euboic talent -7_ooo T ' Alexandrian 
drachmae; the drachma therefore is 80a The "Alexandrian" 
wood talent: Attic talent : : 6:5 (Hero, Didymus). and. -.480,000, 
which is 60 minae of 8000. Pliny states the Egyptian talent at 
80 librae =306,000; evidently m the Abydus lion talent, which 
is + 100, and the mina is.%3960, or 50X79*2. The largest weight is 
the "wood" talent of Syria (18) -6 Roman talents, or 1,860,000, 
evidently 120 Antioch minae of 15.500 or 2X7750. This evidence 
is too distinct to be set aside; and, exactly confirming as it does 
the Egyptian weights and coin weights, and agreeing with the early 
Asiatic tribute, it cannot be overlooked in future. The system was 



(SoaUkat. 



e system v 
60-Cwek takat. 



•209 m » a im Tfcb system, the Aeginetan, one of the most im- 
SEo- portant to the Greek world, has been thought to. 

•170.000 be a degradation of the Phoenician (17, 21), sup- 

0/Vt" "* posing 220 grains to have been reduced in primitive 
Greek usage to 194. But we are now able to prove that it was aa 
independent system — (t) by its not ranging usually over 200 grains 
in Egypt before it passed to Greece; (2) by its earliest example, 
perhaps before the 224 unit existed, not beins over 208; and (3) by 
there being no intermediate linking on of this to the Phoenician 
unit in the large number of Egyptian weights, nor in. the Ptolemaic 
coinage, in which both standards are used. The first example (30) 
b one with the name of Amcnhotep 1. (17th century B.C.) marked aa 
"gold 5," which is 5X207*6. Two other marked weights are from 
Memphis (44). showing 201 *8 and 196-4, and another Egyptian 191-4. 
The range of the (34) Naucratis weights is 186 to 199, divided in two 
groups averaging 190 and 196, equal to the Greek monetary and 
trade varieties. Ptolemy I. and II. also struck a series of coins (32) 



a Y^1?..?gd 



In Syria haematite weights are found (30) averaging 
198-57 divided into 99-2, 49-6 and 24*8; and the same division 
is shown by gold rings from Egypt (38) of 24-9. In the medical 
papyrus (38) a weight of | kat is used, which is thought to be Syrian; 
now 1 kat =0,2 to 101 grains, or just this weight which we have 
found in Syria; and the weights of ] and \ kat are very rare in 
Egypt except at Defenneh (29), on the Syrian road, where they 
abound. So we have thus a weight of 207-191 in Egypt on marked 
weights, joining therefore completely with the Aeginetan unit in 
Egypt of 199 to 186, and coinage of 199, and strongly connected 
with Syria, where a double mina of Sidon (18) is 10460 or 50 X 
209-2. Probably before any Greek coinage we find this among the 
haematite weights of Troy (44), ranging from 208 to 193-2 (or 104- 
96*6), i*. just covering the range from the earliest Egyptian down 
to-the early Aeginetan coinage. Turning now to the early coinage, 
we see the fuller weight kept up (17) at Samos (202), Miletus (201), 
Calymna (100. 50), Methymna and Scepsis (09, 49). 1 Ionia (197); 
while the coinage of Aegina, (17. 12), which by its wide diffusion 
made this unit best known, though a few of its earliest staters go up 
even to 207, yet is characteristically on the lower of the two groups 
which we recognise in Egypt, and thus started what has been 
considered the standard value of 194, or usually 190, decreasing 
afterwards to 184. In later times, in Asia, however, the fuller 
weight, or higher Egyptian group, which we have Just noticed in 
the coinage, was kept up (17) into the series of cistophori (196-191). 
as in the Ptolemaic series of 199. At Athens the old mina was fixed 
by Solon at 150 of his drachmae (18) or 9800 grains, according to the 
earliest drachmae, showing a stater of 196; and this continued to 
be the trade miaa in Athens, at least until 160 B.C., but in a reduced 
form, in which it equalled only 138 Attic drachmae, or 0200. The 



Greek mina weights show (44), on an average of 37.9650 v- stater of 
193). varying from 186 to 199. In the Hellenic coinage it varies 
(18) from a maximum of 200 at Pharae to 192, usual full weight: 



193). varying from 186 to 199. In the 1 

(18) from a maximum of 200 at Pharae u. .*-, «~— .%... »<;•«>.-.. 
this unit occupied (17) all central Greece, Peloponnesus and most of 
the islands. The system was-— 

s -Mater, 90-raaw, 60 -blot 
OS 19a 0600 srtfloo 



1 That this unit was used for gold in Egypt, one thousand years 
before becoming a silver coin weight in Asia Minor, 



, need not be 



dwelt on. when we see in the coinage of Lydia (17) gold pieces and 
silver on the same standard, which was expressly formed for silver 
alone, t.t. 84 grains. The Attic and Assyrian standards were used 
indifferently for either gold or silver. 



4 88 



WEIGHTS AND MEASURES 



[COHMERCIAL 



It also passed into Italy, but in a smaller multiple of 35 drachmae, 
or J of the Greek mina; 12 Italian weights (44) bearing value marks 
(which cannot therefore be differently attributed) show a libra of 
3400 or \ of 9600, which was divided in unciae and sextulae, and 
the full-sized mina is known as the 24 uncia mina, or talent of 120 
librae of Vitruvius and Isidore (18) -9900. Hultsch states this to 
be the old Etruscan pound. 

412 W* tn ^ c trade rama °* 9°5° m Greece, and recognized 
" in Italy, we can hardly doubt that the Roman libra is 

495o g"« t he half of this mina. At Athens it was 2X4900, and 
on the average of all the Greek weights it is 2X4825, so that 4950 
— the libra— is as close as we need expect. The division by 12 does 
not affect the question, as every standard that came into Italy was 
similarly divided- In the libra, as in most other st. ndards, the 
value which happened to be first at hand for the coinage was not 
the mean oC the whole of the weights in Lhe country; the Phoenician 
coin weight is beluw the trade average h the Assyrian U above, the 
Aeginetan is below, bul the Roman coinage is above ihcavcrage of 
trade weights, or the mean standard. Rejecting: all weights ofthe 
tower empire, the average (44) of about too is 495ft ; while 42 later 
Creek weights {norrusma, 6te.) average 4857, and 16 later Latin 
on« (solidus. &<:.} show 4810. The cmnagc standard, however, was 
always higher (18): the oldest gold shows 5056, (he Campanian 
Roman 5054, the consular gold $Q\7* the autri 5037, The Constantinc 
solid i 5053 and the Justinian gold 4996, Thus, though it fell in 
the later empire, like the trade weight, yet it Was always above that. 
Though it has no exact relation to the congius or amphora, yet it 
is closely ■ 4977 grains, the e*b ol the cubic toot of water. If, however, 
the weight in a degraded iorm, and the foot in an undegraded form, 
% corne from the Last, it is nccrtiess to look (or an exact relation be- 
tween them, but rather for n mere working equivalent, like the 
1000 ounces to a the cubit loot in England. Bockh has remarked 
the great divei^ty between wights ofthe same age — those marked 
*' Ad Augusti Temp " ranging 4971 to §535, those tested by the fussy 

Braefect Q. Junius Rusticus vary 4362 to 5625, and a set in the 
ritish Museum (44) belonging together vary 4700 to 5168. The 
series was — 

sfllqiia, 6-scripatan, 4—textaU, 6-ancfc, ia<*»lilm, 
•±jgn. i7» 6S-y 41s 4950 

the greater weight being the centumpondium of 495,00a Other 
weights "were added to these from the Greek system — 

obolw. 6— dnchnu, t*»skflicus, 4-uack; 

84 gis. SI'S iciS 41a 

and the sextola after Constantine had the name of solidus as a 
coin weight, or nomisma in Greek, marked N on the weights. A 
beautiful set of multiples of the scripulum was found near Lyons 

gl8), from I to 10X17*28 grains, showing a libra of 4976. In 
ryzantine times in Egypt glass was used for coin- weights (30), 
averaging 68*0 for the solidus "4896 for the libra. The Saxon and 
Norman ounce is said to average 416*5 (Num. Chron., 1871, 42), 
apparently the Roman uncia inherited. 
tn or- The ■y***" 1 which is perhaps the best known, through 
V •"* its adoption by Solon in Athens, and is thence called 
J*; *)* Attic or Solonic, is nevertheless far older than its intro- 
402,000. Auction into Greece, being found in full vigour in Egypt 
in the 6th century B.C. It has been usually reckoned as a rather 
heavier form of the 129 shekel, increased to 134 on its adoption 
by Solon. But the Egyptian weights render this view impossible. 
Among them (29) the two contiguous groups can be discriminated 
by the 129 being multiplied by 30 and 60, while the 67 or 134 n 
differently X25, 40, 50 and 100. Hence, although the twr* «»~»ips 
overlap owing to their nearness, it is impossible to i>-,i-nl them as 
all one unit. The 129 range is up to 131*8, while t ige 

is 130 to 138 (65-69). Hultsch reckons on a ratio of 24 jj between 
them, and this is very near the true values; the full Attic t^ing 

~- — * - • •• ■ ......... . fuil gol g 



1 pi 



67*3, the Assyrian should be 1292, and this is jusi >i 
coinage weight. We may perhaps see the sense of thi* ratiu 1 3m nigh 
another system. The 80-grain system, as wc have s 
ably formed by binarily dividing the 10 shekels, or ' 
it had a talent (Abydus lion) 01 5000 drachmae; thi 
identical with the talent of 6000 Attic drachmae. S 
the 80-grain system was sexagcsimally divided for tl 
was afterwards adopted by Solon. Such seems tl 
history of it, and this is in exact accord with the full original u^ht 
of each system^ In Egypt the mean value at Naucratis (29) was 
leh r~" " ** ■•---•• - - • 



nd 

nunn which 
■nost likely 



diffusion of this unit in Egypt; but the usual range is 65*5 to 69*0. 
Next it is found at Troy (44) in three cases, all high examples of 
68*2 to 68*7; and these are very important, since they cannot be 
dissociated from the Greek Attic unit, and yet they are of a variety 
as far removed as may be from the half of the Assyrian, which ranges 
there from 123*5 to 131 ; thus the difference of unit between Assyrian 
•nd Attic in these earliest of all Greek weights is very strongly 
marked. At Athens a low variety of the unit was adopted for the 
coinage, true to the object of Solon in depreciating debts; and the 
first coinage is of only 65*2, or scarcely within the range of the trade 
weights (28); this seems to have been felt, a*, contrary to all other 



states, Athens slowly increased its com weight up to 66*6, or but 
little under the trade average. It gradually supplanted the Aeginetan 
standard in Greece and Italy as the power 01 Athens rose; and it 
was adopted by Philip and Alexander (17) for their great gold 
coinage of 1 33 and 66*5. This system is often known as the " Buboic^ 
owing to its early use in Euboea, and its diffusion by trade from thence. 
The serics*i 



8—otroha, 6— drachma, tw-mina. 6o*»taUntoa. 
i<4 gn. xrt7 4/ 6700 403,000 

Turning now to it$ usual trade values in Greece (44), the mean of 
113 gives 67-15; but they vary more than the Egyptian examples, 
having a sub-variety both above and below the main body, which 
itself ccaetly coi nudes with the Egyptian weights. The greater 
part of those wtighis which bear names indicate a mina of double 
the usual |TQdGOftfflE. *o that there was a light and a heavy system, 
a mina of lhe drachma and a mina of the stater, as in the Phoenician 
and Assyrian weights. In trade both the minac were divided in J, 
}, I. {. find \. regardless of the drachmae. This unit passed also 
into July, the libra of Picenum and the double of the Etrurian 
and Sicilian libra {if); it was there divided in unciae and scripulae 
(44), [he mean of 6 from Italy and Sicily being 6600: one weight 
(bought in Smyrna) has the name " Leitra " on it. In literature 
it is constantly referred to; but we may notice the " general mina " 
(Cleopatra), in Egypt, 16 unciae*- 6600; the Ptolemaic talent, equal 
to t he Attic in weight and divisions (Hero, Didymus) ; the Antiochian 
takm. cciual to the Attic (Hero); the treaty of the Romans with/ 
Antiochus, naming talents of 80 librae, ix. mina of 16 unciae; the; 
Roman mina in Egypt, of 15 unciae, probably the same diminished; 
and the Italic mina of 16 unciae. It seems even to have lasted in 
Egypt till the middle ages, as Jabarti and the " k&tib's guide "I 
both naihe the rati niisri (of Cairo) as 144 dirhems«676o. 

Authorities. — (1) A. Aures, Mltrohgie igyptienne (1880); (2)! 
A. Bockh, Metrologiscke Untersuchungen (1838) (general); (3) P. 
Bortolotti, Del pnmitioo ctUrito egixxo (1883); (4) J. Brandish 
Mdnx-, Mass-, und Geuricht-Wesen (1866) (specially Assyrian); (5) 
H. Brugsch, in Zeils. dr. Sp. (1870) (Edfu); (6) M. F. Chabas. 
Determination mitrioue (1867) (Egyptian volumes) ; (7) Id., /&- 
cherckes sur les pods, mesures, el monnaies des anciens Egypliensi 
(8) Id., Zisckr.f. agyftt. Sprache (1867, p. 57 ; 1870, p. 122) (Egyptian 
volumes); (9) H. W. Chisholm, Weighing and Measuring (1877) 
(history of English measures): (10) Id., Ninth Ref. of Warden of 
Standards (1875) (Assyrian); (11) A. Dumont, Mission en Thrace 
(Greek volumes); (12) Eisenlohr, Ztsckr. dg. Sp. (1875) (Egyptian 
hon); (13) W. Golcmscheff, in Rev. igypL (1881), 177 (Egyptian 
weights) ; (14) C. W.Goodwin, in Ztschr. dr c - '-*--'- -•«_.v. 
(15) B. V. Head, in Num. ~ 



n, in Ztsckr. dr. Sp. (1873), p. 16 Umet), 
Chron. (1875); (16) Id., Jour. JnsL 0} 
weight); (17) Id., Histaria numorum 



Bankers (1879) (systems of • _..... . - 

(1887) (essential for coin weights and history of systems); (18) F. 
Hultsch, Grieckiscke und rdmiscke Metrologie (1882) (essential for 
literary and monumental facts); (19) Ledrain, in Rev. igypt. (1881), 
p. 173 (Assyrian); (20) Lecmans, Monumens igyptuns (1838) 
(Egyptian hon); (21) T. Mommscn, Histoire de la monnaie tomaine\ 
(22) Id., Monuments divers (Egyptian weights); (23) Sir Isaac 
Newton, Dissertation upon the Sacred Cubit (1737); (24) J. Oppcst, 
& ' Jei mesurts auyriennti (1S75); (25) AV. M. F. Pctrie. 
Jndwitve Mttraiaiy 0.677) (fttiflriptai an*l u-injiivrj results); (26) 
Id., 5toHti«n (iliSoJ ; (27 j Id- Pyramid* and Temples of Ciseh 
(1^83); (28) Id-* NaMkratts, i* (18AO) (prindplcs, tisti, and curves of 
weigh!*); (Z9) Id., Toxit. n. (1887) (lists a ntf turves); (30) Id., Arch, 
Jcur, (1*83), 419 (weights, Ecyptmn, &c) . (31) Lth, Proc. Roy. Soc. 
Ed in. (iftu-iblUh 254 (mile); ^32) R. %. Took?, Brit. Mus. Cot. of 
Coins t Egypii (33) Vajqucz Queipo, Essai sar (cj tysitmes mUrioues 

il&5y) genera I, and specially Arab and coins) \ 1.34) Records of the 
'oj/, vols. L ii, r vi. (t^ptian tributes, .fie): (35} E. Revillout. in 
Rev. Ir,. (iSJJi) (n-any [uwn on EigyptLm wtitlits. measures, and 
coins); (30) lv, T, Rogers, Num. Chrevt. (1873) (Arab glass weights); 
(37) M. II, Sjuviirt, in J car. As. Sac (18J7). tujisiation of Elias 
of NUibis, wTth notes (reirui rliable for history of liiil; a nce);SchiUbach 
(lists of weights, all in ncxi J ; (.38) M. C\ Sc^uuo, {L.dons ponderous 
Primiliff (1^4) Oiit* of all weif-hts publiilied to date); (39) Id., 
Systtma monitetrts pnnttiifi (1884) (derivation of units); (40) 
G. Smith, in Zeus. dg. 8* (i 




Tu>in.&c. (W.M.F.P.) 

HI. COMHESCIAL 

t. Denominations. — The denominations of trade weights and 
measures at present used in the United Kingdom are represented 
by " Board of Trade standards/' by which are regulated the 
accuracy of the common weights and measures bandied in 
shops, Src.: 1 

Imperial Measures of Length. — too feet. 66 feet pr a chain* of 
100 links, rod, pole, or perch, measures from 10 feet to 1 foot; 



1 Board of Trade Model Regulations, 1892 ; Weights and Measures 
Acts. 1878. 1889, 1892. 1893. 



COMMERCIAL) 



WEIGHTS AND MEASURES 

18 indies; yard of 36 inches. }, \. I. A yard. naU. Inch, and duodeci- 
mal. decimal and binary parts of the inch. 

Imperial Measures of Capacity.— Liquid measures from 3a 

1 gallon, quart, pint, f pint. gill. | gill. * gill. Dry m 

bushel, i basnet, peck, gallon, quart, pint, \ pint. 



489 



Measures.—^ fluid ounces to 
hrns to I n. dr., 60 minims to 1 minim. 



1 gallons 
' measures 

t fl. oc, 16 fluid 



Avoirdupois Weights.— Cental (too lb), 56 lb (1 cwt.). 28 lb. 14 lb 
• ?* ■ •£• 8 » 4. 2, 1, I ounce (8 drams); - - - • • 



(stone), 7, 4. a, 1 lb; a, 4, 2. 1, | ounce (8 drams); 4. 2, 
Troy Weights.— The. ounce (480 gr.) and multiples and 'decimal 



, 1. I drams. 



parts of the ounce troy from 500 ounces Co o-ooi ox. 

Apothecaries' Weights.— 10 01. to 1 os. (480 gr.); 4 drachms to 
4 or.; 2, 1 drachms; 2 scruples to | scruple; and 6 grains to 
| grain. 

PetmymxithtSf-io dwt. (480 grains). 10. 5, 3, 2,1 dwts. 

Grot* Weigh*.— 4000, 2000, 1000 gr. (making 7000 gr. or 1 lb), 
500 to o-oi gr. ..-.#» 

2. The international trade metric weights and measures 
(1897) bandied in shops, &c, of which there are also Board 
of Trade standards, arc set out as follows:— 



I yard 

1 square yard 
I cubic inch 
I gallon' 



I pound (7000 grains) 
I ounce troy (480 gr.) 
1 fluid drachm 



I fluid ounce 



1 metre (m.) at o* C. 
1 square metre (m a .) 
1 cubic decimetre (c.d.) 

or 

1000 cubic centimetres (c.c.) 
1 litre (I.) 
1 kilogram (kg.) 

1 gramme (g.) 



IMPERIAL to Metric 

0*836126 m'. 

16-387 cc. 

45459631 L 

o-45359243 kg. 
31*1035 grammes. 
- 3-552 mill il it res (ml.). 
• 284123 centilitres (d.). 

Metric to Imperial 

- 39-370H3inchesst62*F 
10-7639 square feet. 



I - 



61*024 cubic inches. 



1-7598 pints. 
2-2046223 lb avoir. 
4323564 grains 



0,, 

( o-; 



0-7716 scruple. 



METRE onfiocn into PtaMtn-ct. OomnCTHCa, em Mirajsumtca. 



Occimctrc 



OOUSLC OCCIMCTWE 










— — ® _ 



FlC. 9.— International Metric Trade Weights and Measures, 1897. A. linear; B, capacity; C. and D, weights. 



Length. — Decametre or 10 metres; double metre; metre or 1000 
millimetres; decimetre or 0-1 metre; centimetre or 0-01 metre; 
millimetre. 

Capacity. — 20 litres; to litres or decalitre; 5. 2, l. 0-5, 0-2, 
0-1 (decilitre); 0-05. o-oa, 0-01 (centilitre); 0*005, 0002, 0-00 1 
(millilitre) litres. 

Cubic Measures.— 1000 (litre), 500. 200. 100, 50, 20, 10. 5. 2 cubic 
centimetres, 1 ex. or 1000 cubic millimetres. 

Weights. — 20, 10. 5. 2, I kilograms; 500 to 1 gramme; 5 to 1 
decigram; 5 to 1 centigram: 5 to 1 milligram. (Series 5, 2, 2/1, Le. 
with a dupneate weight of " 2.") 

3. Equivalents. — The metric equivalents of the units of the 
metric system in terms of the imperial system, as rcralrul.il ed 
in 1897, are ss follows:—* 

1 Metric Equivalents, King's Printers (1898). 



* The equivalent of the litre in gallons may also be derived as 
follows: — 

Let P(l -£/<*) -P l (l-P/* / ). where P is the weight of the water 
contained in the gallon when weighed in Lo n don — g. London -g. 
Paris (45*) X 1 -000577. 

The correction for temperature, 62° F., is — 0-0906 in.; hence 
29-9094 inches. One inch =-25-4 mm.; also 29-9004X25-4 
■759-69876; and 759-698761 -X 1-000577 -760-137 mm. P» a the 
weight of the brass weights (10 lb) A -8-143. 

p, the density (0-00 1 2 1 8738) of dry air. containing 4 vols, of carbonic 
acid-in 10.000 vols.; /- 16-667* C; 8-760-137 mm. of mercury at 
o°, bt. 45*. and at sea-level. Coefficient of expansion of air 
-0-00367 ; A mercury st o* C. -13*595. 4 is the density of water 
at 6a° F. (16*667* C.) -0-998861 1. o\ the density of the brass as 
above. 10 tt> -4-5359241 kg. 

From the above it follows that P -4-5407857 kg* 
1 gallon - P/o-998861 1 - 4'S45963i feres. 



Therefore— 



4-9° 



WEIGHTS AND MEASURES 



[COMMERCIAL 



The equivalents of the Russian weights and measures, in terms 
also of the imperial and metric weights and measures, were re- 
calculated in 1897. 1 The following are the leading equivalents: 
{0-025 pood. 
90 zolotniks. 
9216 dolis. 
-040951240 kg. 
m 0902820 1 8 lb avoir. 

{000060 verst. 
280 liniias. 

-0-71 1200 metre. 

-0777778 yard. 
r u~( m -J loschtoffs 

tvedro -\«ioo tcharkaa 

« 12*299 litres 

—2-7056 gallons. 
1 tchetverta -8 tchetveriks 

■> 2*0991 hectolitres 

«=577i9 bushels. 

4. Local Control.— The necessary local inspection and verifica- 
tion of weights and measures in use for trade (as distinct from 
the verbal and written use of weights and measures) is in the 
United Kingdom undertaken by inspectors of weights and 
measures, who are appointed by the local authorities, as the 
county and borough councils. An inspector is required to hold 
a certificate of qualification, and for his guidance general regula- 
tions are made by his local authority as to modes of testing 
weights, measures and weighing instruments.* In Europe 
the local inspection is generally carried out through the State, 
and a uniform system of local verification is thereby maintained. 
• 5. Errors. — In the verification of weights and measures a margin 
of error is permitted to manufacturers and scale-makers, as it is found 
to be impossible to make two weights, or two measures, so identical 
that between them some difference may not be found either by the 
balance or the microscope. For common weights and ro"*»«<«rcs 
this margin (tolerance, remedy or allowance, ,is it ia also called) 
has been set out by the Board of Trade for all rise V Stt naU* kind* of 
weights and measures in use for commercial •juqwca in the United 
Kingdom, and similar margins of error ar< recognized in oilier 
countries. For instance, on 1 lb avoir, weight made of bra**, 2 
grains in excess arc allowed; on 1 oz. troy or apotfrccojW weqpit, 
+0-2 grain is allowed; on 1 pint pot, 4 fluid 'Inchm* it per mined; 
on l brass yard, 0-05 inch in excess or 0*02 inch in deficiency in k-Ji£th 
is allowed for ordinary trade purposes. 

6. Foreign Weights and Measures. — Throughout the British 
Empire the imperial system of weights and measures is legal 

In Russia, as in the United Kingdom and the United States, 
the national weights and measures are followed ($3 above), 
although the use of metric weights and measures is permissive. 

In India the native weights, &c, ancient and arbitrary, 
are still followed. In 1889 the British yard was adopted for 
the whole of India (Measures of Length Act) at a normal tempera- 
ture of 85° F. as standardized to the imperial yard at 62° F. 
The metric system was also introduced, mainly for railway 
purposes, in 1870 and 1871 (Indian Acts). Certified measures 
of the yard, foot and inch are kept by the Commissioners of 
Police at Calcutta, Madras and Bombay. 

In standardizing a weight for use in India, correction has to be 
made for the weight of air displaced by the material standard, and 
for such purpose the normal temperature of 85°, atmospheric pressure 

298 inches, latitude ai # 35* 6*5* (Calcutta), *-{?.• 0998251 5V 

are taken. The " tola " (180 grains) is properly the Government 
unit of weight for currency: and 80 tolas make the " Government 
seer." 

7. Customary Wrights and Measures*— In some districts of 
the United Kingdom, as well as in provincial districts of other 
countries, old local and customary denominations of weights 
and measures are still found to be in use, although their use 
may have been prohibited by law. So powerful is custom 
with the people. 1 

8. Legislation.— In everyday transactions with reference to 
weights and measures, the British legislature also exefcises 

> C.I.P.M. Proees-terbaux (1807). p. 155. 

1 Regulations, Birmingham, Glasgow, London, Manchester, &c 

1 Report Select Committee (1892); Merchant's Handbook, VJ. A. 

Browne (1802); Reports H.M. Representatives Abroad. Foreign 

Office, 1900-1901. 



oontrol in industrial pursuits. For instance, in weighing live 
cattle, owners of markets are now required to provide adequate 
accommodation. 4 Useful statutes have also been passed to pro- 
tect the working class, as in checking the weighing instruments 
used in mines in Great Britain, over which instruments wages 
are paid, and in the inspection of similar instruments used 
in factories and workshops. The Merchandise Marks Act 1887 
makes it an offence also to apply in trade a false description, 
as to the number, quantity, measure, gauge or weight of goods 
sold; and this Act appears to reach offences that the Weights 
and Measures Acts may perhaps not reach. 

9. Pharmaceutical Weights and Measures. — By the Medical 
Act of 1858, and the Act of 1862, the General Council of Medical 
Education and Registration of the United Kingdom are authorized 
to issue a " Pharmacopoeia " with reference to the weights and 
measures used in the preparation and dispensing of drugs, &c 
The British Pharmacopoeia issued by the Council in 1898 makes 
no alteration in the imperial weights and measures required 
to be used by the Pharmacopoeia of 1864. For all pharmaceutical 
purposes, however, the use of the metric system alone is employed 
in all paragraphs relating to analysis, whether gravimetric or 
volumetric For measures of capacity the Pharmacopoeia 
continues to use imperial measuring vessels graduated at the 
legal temperature of 62 F. The official names of the metric 
capacity units are defined at 4° C, as generally on the Continent. 
The new Pharmacopoeia also follows foreign practice, and 
employs metric measures of capacity and volumetric vessels 
graduated at 15*5 C, or 6o° F. Specific gravity bottles are 
also adjusted at 6o° F., the figures indicating specific gravities 
being quotients obtained by dividing in each instance the weight 
of the solid or liquid by the weight of an equal bulk of water, 
both taken at 6o rf F.» 

to. Gauges. — " Gauges," as understood at one time, included only 
those used in the measurement of barrels, casks, &c, and hence 
the term " gauger." For engineering and manufacturing purposes 
the more important linear gauges are, however, now used, adjusted 
to some fundamental unit of measure as the inch; although in 
certain trades, as for wires and flat metals, gauges continue to be 
used of arbitrary scales and of merely numerical sizes, having no 
reference to a legal unit of measure; and such are rarely accurate. 
A standard gauge, however, exists (Order in Council, August 1883), 
based on the inch, but having numbered sizes from 7/0 (0*5 inch) to 
No. 50 (o-ooi inch) to meet the convenience of certain trades.* 

11. Screws. — The screw is an important productive measuring 
instrument, whether used as a micrometer-screw of less than an 
inch in length, or as a master-screw of 20 feet in length. The probable 
errors and eccentricities of small micrometer-screws have been care- 
fully investigated to •*o*ooooi inch; but the accuracy of leading 
screws used in workshops lias not been sufficiently verified. For 
some engineering purposes it would appear to be desirable to produce 
master-screws to an accuracy of »^j B of an inch to the foot of screw, 
so as to serve indirectly for the verification of " guiding screws 
for general use in workshops. 7 Attempts in this direction were 
originally made by Whitworth, Clement, Donkih, Rogers, Bond and 
others, but we still need a higher accuracy in screw-threads. 

12. Educational.— Ordinary arithmetic books often contain refer- 
ences to local and customary weights and measures and to obsolete 
terms of no practical use to children. It appears to be desirable, 
as the Committee of Council on Education have done, to recognize 
only the legal systems of weights and measures—the imperial and 
metric. The Education Code of Regulations for 1900 prescribes 
that the tables of weights and measures to be learned include those 
only which arc in ordinary use, vis. in all classes or forms above 
the third the tables of 

f Weight— ton, cwt, stone, lb, oz. and dr., 
A Length— mile, furlong, rod or pole, chain, yd., ft. and inch, 
I Capacity— quarter, bushel, pk., gall., qt. and pt. 

In Code standards above the fifth, in addition to the foregoing, the 

tables of 

{Area-— tq. mile, acre, rood, pole, yd., ft. and inch, 
Volume— cubic yard, foot and inch. 
Instruction in the principles of the metric system, and In the ad- 
vantages to be gained from uniformity in the method of forming 
multiples and sup-multiples of the unit, are, under this Code, to be 



Msrkcts and Fairs (Cattle) Acts 1887, 1801 ; Coal Mines Regula- 
tion Aet 1887; Factory and Workshop Act 1878. 
1 Pharmacopoeia (ioot); Calendar Pharmaceutical Society, 1*0*. 
• Order in Council. 26th August 1881. 



' Systtmatique des vis horlogfres, Thury (Geneva, 1878). m Bulletin 
Soc. d'Encouragement pour I'lndustne Nationale, Paris, 1894. 
Report of British Association on Sctew-threads, 1900. 



COMMERCIAL) 

given to the scholar* la Standards IV., V., VI. and VII. Asepmara- 
tion for this it it stated in the Code that it win be useful to give in 
Standard III. (arithmetic) elementary lessons on the notation of 
decimal fractions. (See Arithmetic.) 

Table of the Principal Foreign Weiihts and Measures now in me, and 
of their Eguioalents in Imperial or in Metric Weights and Measures. 



WEIGHTS AND MEASURES 



Almude . . . Portugal . 
Anoman (Ammo- Ceylon . 

nam, Amoraam) 



Ara 

Archin, or Ar- 



Archin . . . 

Archine. or Ar- 

chinne 
Ardeb . . . 



Italy . 
Turkey 



Bulgaria . 
Russia 
Egypt . 



16-8 litres. 

0-699 quarter (dry measure), 5*60 
bushels. 

1 metric are, 1 19.6 sq. yds. 

I new archin (Law 1881) •» I 
metre (39*37 inches) - 10 par- 
males (decimetres) - too khats 
(centimetres). 1 mill •■ 1000 ur- 
chins (kilometre). Pharoagh — 
10 mills. Another pharoagh - 
2 hours' journey. 

0758 metre (masons). 

o-68o metre (tailors). 

28 inches, or 071 12 metre. 



Are . 
Area . 
Arpcnt 

Arroba 
Artaba 
Aune 



Barilo . . 
Bat, or Tical 

Batman . . 

Bchar . . 

Bern . . 

Boisseau. . 
Boutylka 

Braca . . 

Braccio . - 

Brasse • 

Braaa . . 
Bu. or tsubo 

Bushel . . 



Bander • 

Cabot . . . 

Candy . . . 

Cantar . . . 
Cantara piccolo 

Capkha . . . 

Catty . . . 



Cawnie . 
Cental . 

Centigran 
Centilitre 



Spain 
France . 
Canada . 

Portugal . 

Spain 

Persia 

Belgium . 
France . 
Jersey . 
Rome 
Siam . . 
Persia 
Turkey . 
Arabia . 
Turkey . 
Belgium . 
Russia 
Portugal . 
Spain 
Rome 
France 
Argentina 



bushels (Customs). 5 
sure). 
1 196 sq. yds. 



bushels (old measure). 



- 100 sq. metres 
. i metric are. 

{Legal arpent was equal to 100 sq. 
perches -51-07 metric ares, 
in Quebec - 180 French feet. 
14-68 to 15 kilogrammes. 
Mayor -3-55 gaUons,or 1 cantara. 
. 1 -809 bushel. 

Mcnor-276 gallons (liquids). 
. I metre. Formerly 1*312 yard. 
. 1885 metre (1812). 
. 4 feet. 
. 12834 gallons. 
. 234 grains. 
. 6) lb av. ; vaiies locally. 



Japan 
U. States 

Canada , 



toocks. 
439*45 lb »v., nearly. 
1-084 mile (oM measure). 
15 litres. 

t-353 pint (wine bottle). 
222 metres. 

0-670 metre (commercial). 
Braccio-d 'ara- 29-528 inches. 



5082 feet. 

3*0306 square metres. 
. f 2150*42 cubic inches, about 
.1 0*96944 imperial bushel. I 
1 . bushel - 8 gallons— 32 quarts - 
I 64 pints. 
Netherlands. 2*471 acres (old hectare). 

10 pots, or 4 gallons, 1 quart 3 

gills imperial measure. 
560 Ibav. 
493*7 lb av. 
124*7 lb av. (old weight). 



Jersey 

Bombay . 
Madras . 
Turkey . 
Italy . . 
Persia 
China 
N. Borneo 
Siam , . 
Madras . 
U. States 
Canada . 



74-771 Jb «v. 

0-58 gallon. 

illbav. See Tad. 

1 1 lb av. 

2*675 lb av., or t\ hap. 

1*322 acre. 

[ 100 lb av. (As in Great Britain.) 

■rl»p , m.-o*i54.paio 
- r J # litre- 0*07 gill. 



Centimetre -0*394 inch- rh m- 

Centimetre, cubic (cc) . . . -0061 cubic inch, or I 



Centimetre, square 



Centner 



Chain . . . 

Chang ... 

Chapah . . . 
Chce. See Tahil. 
Chek . . . 
Chenica . . . 
Chlen . . . 
Ch'ih . . • 



Austria . 
Denmark 
Switsertaad 
Canada . 

SET : ; 

Siam . . . 
N. Borneo . 

Hong Kong , 

China . . 
China . . 



—0*155 square inch. 

50 kilogrammes- 1 10-231 lb. av. 

50 kilogrammes- 110*231 lb. av. 

50 kilogrammes -110*231 lb. 

66 feet. 

o*33 pic. 

10 ch ih - 1 1 ft. 9 inches (Treaty). 

2'675 lb. 

if m av. 

14! ladies. 

0*289 gallon. 

58} grains (silver weight). 

Varies throughout China from II 
to 15*8 inches. For Customs 
purposes Cfce Treaty ch'ih - 
14* 1 inches, and 5 ch'ih - 1 pu. 



Ch'ih 



Peking 



Shanghai 



49 1 

Z\l'.l \ public works. 
- 12-4 statistics. 
- 12*6 architects. 
— 12«7 common. 
— 13*1 tribunal of mathematics. 
-13*2 Board of Revenue. 
■ 14*1 Customs. 



Chilogramme .• 


Italy . . . 


I kilogramme. 


Chin or Catty . 


China . , 


1 \ Ibav. (Treaty). 


Ching . • . 


China . . 


121 sq. feet (Treaty). 


Ch'ing . . . 


China . . 


72,600 sq. feet (Treaty). 


Chittack. . . 


Bengal * , 


5 tolas, or 900 grains. 


Ch'ok . . . 


Corca . . 


7f »n- (linear); 12} in. (build- 
ing). 
1815 sq. feet (Treaty). 
1 -66 tt> av. of water at 62° F., as a 


Chuo . . . 


China . . 


Chupah . . 


Singapore • 






measure of capacity. 




Malacca . . 


144 ox. av. of water. 


Chupak . . , 


Straits Settle- 
ments 


I quart. 


Collothun . . 


Persia . . 


i*8oq gallon.' 
1*136 metre. 
o-66 metre. 


Coss. . . . 


Bengal . • 


Covado . . . 


Portugal . . 


Covid, or Cubit 


Madras . . 


18 to 21 inches. 




Bombay . • 


18 inches. 




Siam . . . 


18 inches. 


Covido . . . 


Arabia . . 


18 inches approximately. 


Covido (Great) 




27 inches. 


Cuartillo . . 


Spain . . 


I -16 litre (dry); 0*504 litre 
liquid. 



Daktyloo (Royal) Greece . . 1 centimetre. 

Daribah . . Egypt . . 43*58 bushels (Customs). 

Decagramme — 10 grins. — 5-64 drams av. 

Decalitre —10 litres— 2-2 gallons. 

Decametre — 10*936 yards. 

Dcjfatina . . Russia . . —2400 square sagencs- 

acres. 

Decigramme .♦*... —A grm. -1*54 grain, 



.27 



Decilitre 
Decimetre . . . 
Decimetre, cubic 
Decimetre, square 
Denaro . . . 
Dcunam . , 
Diraa, or Dr&a, 
or Pic 



Rome 
Turkey 

(Egypt 

Turkey 
Egypt 



ft litre -0*176 pint. 
■■3*937 inches -o- 1 metre. 
- 1000 cc. -61-024 cub. in. 
— 100 sq. ccntm. - 155 sq. in. 
18*17 grains (old weight). 
I metric are. 



( 27 inches usually. 
•J 21*3 i " "- 



_ inches Nile measure. 

# „ , 27 inches (old measure of pike). 

Dirhem . » . Egypt . . 1*761 dram av. (Customs). 

3*0884 grammes (Cairo). 
Djerib . . . Turkey . . 1 hectare. 
DotI»,orDoU. Ru»ia . . j $*«f ^tnick. 
Drachma . . Netherlands. 3-906 grammes. 
Turkey . . 154324 grains. 
Drachm^ (Royal) Greece . 1 gramme (gold weight). 

Constantinople -57-871 grains. SeeCufc.' 
Dram. See Ok. 



Ducat 
Duim, j 

Eimer . 
El . . 
EH . . 

EUa . . 
Elle . . 
Endasch, 01 
Hindazi 

Faltche . 
Fancga . 



Fass. 
Feddan 



Fen . . . 

Fjerdingfcar. 
Fod . . . 

Foglietto 



Vienna . . 
Netherlands. 

Austria . . 
Netherlands. 
Jersey . . 
N. Borneo . 
Switzerland . 
Egypt . . 



Moldavia 
Argentina 
Portugal . 
Spain 
Peru . . 

Germany 
Egypt . 



China , 
Denmark 
Denmark 
Norway . 
Rome 



Foot. . . . U. States 



Amsterdam . 
South Africa 
Old Rhenish 



53*873. grains. 
I centimetre. 

12*448 gallons. 

1 metre. (Old ell - 27-08 inches). 

4 feet. 

l yard. 

0*6561 yard. 

Usually 25 inches. 



1 hectare, 43 area, 22 centiares. 
3*773 bushels. 
5536A litres 
1*526 busheL 

11 bushel. 

1*615 rav* but varies locally. 

1 hectolitre. 

1*038 acre (Masri). Also 1*127 

acre locally. 
1.266 acre (old). 
5*83 grains (silver weight). 
0*9564 bushel. 
1*0297 foot. 
0*3137 metre. 
0-8 pint. 

12 inches. 
French foot -12-8 inches. 



( n-147 *«*) old 
12-356 In. J 



4-9* 

Fot . . 

Founte, or Funt 

or Livrc 
Foutc, or Pied . 
Fraaco . . . 
Fuss .... 



Gallon . . . 
Gantang . . 



Garnctz . . . 

Gin. See Kati. 

Gisla 

Go ... . 

Grain . . . 

Gramme (gr.) . 



Gramm6 (Royal) 
Gramo . 
Grano . . 
Grao . . 
Grein . . 
Guz, or Gudge 



WEIGHTS AND MEASURES 



Sweden . . 

Russia . . 

Russia . . 
Argentina 

Vienna . . 
Switzerland 

U. States . 

Canada . . 

Straits Settle- 
ments 

N. Borneo . 

Russia . . 

Zanzibar . . 

Japan . . 

Russia . . 



Greece 

Spain 

Rome . . 

Portugal . 

Netherlands . 

India: Bengal 
„ Bombay 
„ Madras. 

Persia . . 



1 1-689 in. 10 fot - 1 stong. I ref 
- 10 st&nger. 1 mil -360 ref. 
0-90282 lb av. 

I English foot. 
2| litres. 

12 zolls- 1*037 foot. 
3I fuss**! metre. ' 
See Slab. 

(231 cubic inches- 8*3389 lb av. 
] of water at t. 39-8* Fahr. At 



■0-8325 imp. gallon. 



Arabia 



HatTi, or Moo- J 
■ lum, or Cubit ( 
Hectare . . 
Hectogramme . 
Hectolitre . . 
Hectometre 
Hiyaka-me 
Hiyak-kin . . 
Hoon. See Tahil. 
Hu . 

Immi 

Joch . 



Bengal 
Bombay . 



Japan 
Japan 

China 



Kaima 
Kan 



Kanne or Kanna 



Kantar, or Can- 
taro 



Karwar . . 
Kassabah . . 
Kati, Catty or 

Gin j 
Keila, or Pishi 
Ken . . 
Kerat . . . 

Kctte, or Chain 
Keu ... 
Khal (New) , 

Kile . . , « 
Killo* . * . 
Kilogramme 
Kilometre . . 
Kin ... . 
KWter . . , 

Koddi . . . 

Kvilon ( Ri > . 1 ' , . 

Koku . 

Kan 

K'>ru tonde . ; 



Switzerland 

Austria- Hun- 
gary 

Sweden . . 
Netherlands 
Hong Kong 
Germany 
Sweden . , 
Egypt . . 



Persia . . 

Egypt . . 
I China, Straits 
I Settlements 

Zanzibar . . 

Japan . . 

Turkey . 

Germany 

Siam . . . 

Turkey . . 

Cyprus . . 

Turkey . . 



Japan, China 
Lujiria , 
Swir/crknd 
Arabia, ♦ . 
Grrctt 



, 62Tahr.- 

32 gallons. 

144 oz. av. weight of water as 

measure of capacity. 
0*3607 peck. 

Measure of 360 lb av. of rice. 
180*39 cubic centimetres. 
0-960 grain (apothecaries). 
" •5*43*35 6 4 grains av. troy. 
—0*2572 drachm, 0-7716 

scruple. 
—0*03215 oz, troy. 
I millimetre. 
1 gramme. 
o*757 grain. 

0-768 grain; also measure o- 18 in. 
- 0*065 gramme. 
36 inches. 
27 inches. 

33 inches. Government Survey. 
The guz, gucza or zcr varies from 

24 to 44 inches. A guz of 40-95 
inches (Guz, Azerbaijani com- 
mon. Government standard 
guz -36 J inches. There is a 
fjuz for retail trade of 25 inches. 
25 inches to 37 inches (Bassorah). 

18 inches. 

18 inches, or cubit. 

— 100 ares, or 2-471 acres. 

100 grm. -3*53 oz. av. 

100 litres -275 bushels. 

- 109-36 yards. 

5797* J9* Pain* 
1321 tt>av. 



12} gallons, nearly. 
1*5 litre! 
1-422 acre. 






0-576 gallon. 

1 litre. 

ii lbav. 

1 litre, or formerly 1*762 pint. 

0-576 pint. 

99*0492 lb av.-ioo rotls (Cus- 
toms). 45 kilogrammes of 
cotton. 44-5 kilogrammes other 
produce. 

100 batman. 

3-8824 yards (Customs). 

| it lbav. 
Measure of 6 lb av. of rice. 
S'965 ft.. 1 '81 metre. 
li inch measure (old). 
3-09 grains weight (old) 
14994 ellen, or 10*936 yards. 
40 inches. 
1 centimetre, 
8 gallons 
0*97 bushel. 

- 1000 £ftij -i 2046273 to av* 
— o-fcitj mile, 

0-601 kiiofiramme— t 315 lb. 
-2*0740 yards. 
1-9685 yard. 
1-6? [jallon. 

1 hrciolitrc. Old koilon -33-16 
lit fa, 

."".I J galls- *M'U6a9 bushels. 



Korn-tondc . 
Korn-top Maal 
Korrel . . . 
Kotylc (Royal) . 
Kouza 

Koyan . . . 
Knna . . . 
Kung . . . 
Kup . . . . 
Kwan or Kuwan 
Kyat . . . 

Lak't . . . 
Last .... 
Leans . 
Lckhl . 
Li . . 



Sweden . . 
Norway . . 
Netherlands . 
Greece . . 
Cyprus . . 
Straits Setts . 
Bulgaria . . 
China . . 
Siam . . . 



Bulgaria . . 
Netherlands . 
China . . 
Bulgaria . . 
China . . 



Liang . . . 
Libbra . . . 
Libra . . . 
Libra (Castilian^ 
Libra, or Arratel 
Ljnc or Ligne . 
Liniia 

Litra (Royal) . 
Litre . . . 
Litre (metric) . 
Litro. . . . 

Livre (lb) . . 



Livre-poids . 
Loth . . . 



Maass . . . 

Maatze . . . 
Mace . . . 

Mahud . . . 
Maik . . . 
Marc, or Mark . 



Marco . 
Maund . 



Megametre (as- 
tronomy) 
Metre (m.) . . 



Metre, cubic 
Metre, square 

Metro . . 



Metz. . 

Micron (*) . 
Miglio . . 
MiHe . . 
Mil or Mill. 



Mile. . . 

Mile (postal) 
Milha . . 
Millc 

Millicr-amme 
MilTilW . 
Millimetre . 
ML«I . . 
Mkono . . 
Mna . . . 
Momme. 
Morgtn . . 



China 
Italy . . 
Argentina 
Spain, Mexico 
Portugal . 
Paris . . 
Russia . 
Greece . 
Cyprus .' 



Spain 
Italy. . 
Russia 

Belgium 

France 

Germany 

Switzerland 

Vienna . . 

Austria . . 

Switzerland . 
Netherlands . 

China . . 

N. Borneo . 

Arabia . . 

Burmah . . 

France . . 

Sweden . . 

Vienna . . 

Portugal . . 

Spain . . 

India . . 



U. States 
Great Britain 



Spain 
Italy . 
Austria 



Rome 

Netherlands 
Turkey . 
Denmark 
France . 
Germany 
Austria - 
Portugal . 
France . 



Persia 
East Africa 
Greece 

Denmark. 
Norway . 



(COMMERCIAL 

3*821 bushels. 
160 litres. 
1 decigramme, 
l decilitre. 

9 quarts. 
5333*. to av. 
12-8 litres. 
78*96 inches (Treaty), 

10 inches. 

8*281 lb -375652 kilogrammes. 
100 kyats-3652 lb av. 

0*650 metre. 1 

30 hectolitres. 

583i grains (silver weight). 

229-83 sq. metres. 

about 4 mile -360 pu. Varies 

with length ofch'ih. 
A small weight 0-583 grain, 
ijoz. i61iang— 1 chin— 1} lbav. 
07477 to av. 
1*0127 lb av. 
1*014 to. 
1*012 lbav. 
A point, or 0*089 inch. 
o*i inch, 1 archine-280 lianas. 
1 litre- 100 mystra. 
2| quarts. 
-1*7598 P»nt 

( I litre. 
0*90282 to av.- Apoth. livre - 

11*5204 oz. troy. 
Kilogramme. ** . 
0*4895 kilogramme. v 
New loth - 1 decagramme. Old 

loth, nearly i oz. av. 
15*625 grammes. • 
270*1 grains. Postal loth, 257-2 

grains. y 
1*245 quart. 
2*64 gallons. 
1 decilitre. 
584 grains. ; 
93} lb av. : \ 
2*04 lb av. 

3 maik— cubit— 19J inches. 
0*2448 kilogramme (old weight). 
0*4645 lb av. 

4331*37 grains -24 karato. 
-8 oncas— 229*5 grammes. 
3550*54Krains. 
82*286 lb av.. Government. 
72! lb (old bazaar). 
74*67 lb av., factory. 
28 lb nearly, Bombay. 
25 lb nearly, Madras. 
37 to 44 lb, luggcrat. 
Local maunds vary on either side 

of 80 lb. 
1,000,000 metres. 

39*37 inches. 

39*370113 inches- 1 m. 

- 1000 c.d. -35*315 cubic feet. 

- 100 square decimetres- 10-764 

• square feet. 

1 1 metre. 
1*691 busheL 

— rVin millimetre. 
0*925 mile. 

l kilometre. 

1000 arcbins (new mil). 

4*680 miles. 

I Nautical mile -1852 metres. 
4-714 miles. 
1*296 mile. 
1 *949 kilometre. 

- riVi gramme -0-015 grain. 
-„>,, litre. 

-0-03937 inch-i«*ti m. 

71 grains. 

45*72 centimetres. 

ij kilogramme - 1 • 1 72 oka. 

T A»kwan. 

( 0*631 acre. 



Netherlands 



COMMERCIAL] 



Mod. . . 

Myriagramme 

Ngoma *. . 
Hm . . . 

Obolos . . 
Ock . . . 



Octavillo 
Oiuvo . 
Oke . . 



Ooca 
Once 
Oncia 

Onze 
Ounce 



Packet! . . . Russia 
Palame (Royal) Greece . 
Palm . . . Holland . 
Palmo . . . Portugal . 

Spain . . 
Para . . . » N. Borneo 
Parah . . . Ceylon . 
Parasang. Sec Ptrsakk 
Parmak. See Archin. 
Passeree . . Bengal . 
PS ... . Portugal . 
Pecheua (Royal) Greece 
Pecul . - . China 
Perch* . . . France . 

Canada . 
Penakh. or Para- Persia 



WEIGHTS AND MEASURES 



493 



ly 806-65*. yds. Varies 

,. Shanghai -6600 sq.ft. 

(Municipal Council). By Cut- 



locall-f. 



tomsTn 



1 on chin of 14*1 inches. 

■ hectolitre. 

-io kilogrammes "32 -046 Jb av. 



East Africa . 7! tolas. 
Siam . . . H inch. 



Greece 

Turkey 



Spain . . 

Portugal . . 

Bulgaria . . 

Cyprus . . 

Egypt . . 

Greece 

Turkey . . 

Portugal . . 

France . . 

Rome . . 

Netherlands . 

U. States . 



t decigram me. 

Legal ock (1881) - 100 drachmas. 
New batman- 10 ocks, and 
kantar— 10 batmans ock-i 
kilogramme. 

0-29 litre. 



1-730 litre. 
1-28 lit 



i litre (for liquids). 
I -282 kilogramme (old). 
i\ lb. av.-400 drams (Cyprus). . 
2-7SI B» av. (Customs). 2 805 

d (Alexandria). 
2*80 lb -1 -282 kilogramme. 
1*33 litre. 
1*1518 pint. 3834 lb av. (old 

weight), 
28-688 grammes. 
30'59 grammes (old). 
436- 16s grains. 

1 hectogramme. 10 onsen -pond. 
Av. ounces 437 -5 grains. 

1083-382 Ibav. 
1 decimetre. 



sang 
Pfund 



Pharosgh. 
Pic . . 
Picul 



Germany 



Pmssia . 
Switzerland 



Vienna 



See Arckin, 
Cyprus 



o 22 metre. 
8 346 in 
90 Ibav. 
559 r 



. sseers. 

. I metre (old). 

. 1 metre- 1-543 old pecheuse 

. 133! lb av. 

. 22 square piedsderoi In Quebec 

18 French feet. 

. Probably 388 miles - 6000 guz. 

. — 16 unxen 
Id to I 2 

Zoll. pfund ( 1 872) -500 grammes. 
Old soil, lb- 1 -1023 lb av. 
16 unze. 
w . «. grammes. 
560-06 grammes. 
Zoll. pfund (1871) -500 grammes. 



nd ( 1 872 ) - 500 gramme 

. Ib-i-io 
500 grammes— 16 
Apoth. pf.-375i 
Pfund -560-06 gr 



Japan 
Strs 

it_ 

Koni 



2 feet. 



Konff . . J 
North Borneo 



PSdd . . 

Pie . . . 

Fie de Burgos 
Pied . . 

PieddeRoi. 
Fike. . . 
Pint • • 
Pinte 
Pipa . . 



Greece 
China 
Rome 
Spain 
Belgium . 
Canada . 
Paris . . 
Turkey . 
U. States 
France 
Portugal . 



Gibraltar. 



Pipe. . 

Pishi. SeeJCeUi. 

Poide de Marc . France . . 

Potegada . . Portugal . . 

Pond , . • Netherlands. 



Pot 



Denmark , 
Switzerland . 
Belgium . , 
Norway • , 



A measure of 180 lb weight of 

water. 

0-648 metre. 

25 gallons (dry measure). 

1 1 -73 inches. 

11-13 inches. 

1 1 81 inches -10 pounces. 

12-79 inches. 

0*3248 metre. 

See Dvaa. 

0-8325 imperial pint. 

0*931 litre. 

534 Ktres (Oporto). 

420 litres (Lisbon). 

500 litres (officially). 

105 to 126 gallons. 

0*2448 Kilo -8 onces. 
27-77 millimetres. 

I kilogramme. Apothecaries 
pond- 375 grammes. 

i-7pmt-4paegle. 
2*64 pints or 1*5 litre. 

I I litre (dry), *} litre (liquid) 
0-965 litre. 



xxvm 9 



Pood, or Pood . 
Pound . . 



Pu . . 
Puddee . 

Pulgada. 
Pund. . 



Quart . . . U. States 
Quarto . . , Rome 

Portugal 
Quintal . . . Spain 

Portugal 
Argentina 
Quintal (metric) France 
Quintale . Italy . 

Rate! . . . Persia 
Rattel, or Rottle Arabia 

Ri . . 



Japan 



Rottol . 
Rubbio . 

Sagene . 
Scheffel . 

Schepel . 
Schoppen 



Sekkl 
Sen . 
Ser . 
Shaku 



Sheng . . 
Shih . . . 
Shod . 
Skaal-pund , 



Skeppe . - 
Skjcppe . . . 
Stab .... 
Stadron (Royal) 
Stere (metric) 
Stero . . 
Strcepe . . 
Stremma 

Strich . . 
Striche . . 
Stuode . . 



France . . 1-066 inch (old me asure) . 

Russia . . 1 inch. 

Russia t . 0-016 122 ton -36 lb. 

U. States . Standard troy lb "5760 grains. 

Avoir, sb—7000 grains. 
Russia . . t>90282lbav.(o-4095kilogramme). 
Jersev . . 7561 grains*- 16 oc Jersey -1 

Kvre. 
China . . 705 inches - 5 ch'ih. 
Madras . , 280 pints. 100 cubk i 

Government puddee. 
Spain . . 0-927 inch. 
Denmark 1-1023 lb av., or 500 j 

Norway . . 0-4981 kilogramme. 
Sweden '. 6560 grains. Varies locally. 
5SOO-S grains (apoth.). 

.See Bushel. 
2-024 bushels. 
3*46 litres. 

100 libras (Castilian) - 101-4 lb. 
58*752 kilogrammes, or 129} ibav. 
100 libras, or 101-27 •*> av. 
-100 kilogrammes -1-968 cwt. 
1 metric quintal. 

1*014 lb av. 

1*02 lb av., nearly (dry measure). 

17-219 lb av. weight. 

2*440 miles (itinerary;. 2*U$ 

miles (natural). 
3*762 metres. 
1 dekametre. 
0-9905 lb av. (Customs). 0*9805 

lb av. (Govt.). 
2*206 lb great rottolo. 
0*715 B> less rottolo. ^ 

, 2*124 lb mat rottolo: Rottob 

mina— f oka. 
2*513 pints (old measure). 
I-OI2 quarter (dry measure). 

7 feet. 

50 litres, formerly 14*56 1 

I decalitre. 

§ litre, formerly Oil gallon. 
0-375 litre. 

1 18-615 square yards (091 1 
Government seer— 2 A lb av. 
Bengal, 80 tolas weight of rice 
(heaped measure), about 69 
cubic inches (struck measure). 
Southern India -weight of 24 

current rupees. 
Madras, 25 ft) nearly. 
Juggerat, weight of 40 local 

rupees. 
Bombay, old seer, about 28 lb. 
Ceylon . . Measure of 1*86 pint, 
Persia . . 16 miscala, or 1136 grains weight 

(Sihr). 
NoU. — In India the seer, like the maund, varies 
considerably; usually 40 seers go to a maund. 
Austria . . 0-6224 pint. 
Siam . . . 44-4 miles, nearly. 
India . . I litre (Indian Law, 1871). 
Japan . . 0-30 metre, also 9*18273 square 
decimetres; also 18-039 cubic 
centimetres. 
China . . 1-811 pint- 
China . . 160 lb. 
Japan . . 1-804 litre. 
Sweden . . 435*076 grammes, or 0-959 lb av. 
Norway . . 0-4981 kilogramme, or officially 

) kilogramme. 
Denmark . 17-39 litres. 
Norway . . 17 '37 Ktna. 
Germany 1 metre, or 3* |okJ fuss, but varied. 

Greece . . 1 kilometre. 

1 cubic metre. 

. Italy . . . t metric stere. 
. Holland . . 1 millimetre. 

Greece . . 1 metric are. 238*1 square 
pecheus (Constantinople). 
, Germany . t millimetre. 
. Switzerland . 3J strich -1 millimetre. 
. Germany . Old itinerary measure, 2-3 to .3*4 



2a, 



Rode . . - Denmark . 
Roede . . . Netherlands . 
RotU or Rottolo Egypt . . 

Cairo. . . 

Alexandria . 

Turkey . . 
Spain 

Russia . . 
Germany 

Netherlands . 
Germany 
Switzerland . 
Japan- . . 



918 are). 



494 

Stunde 
Sultchelc 
Sang 
Tad. . 



Tahil 



WEIGHT-THROWING— WEI-HAI-WEI 



Switzerland . 
Turkey . . 
Corea » . 



4-ft kilometres. Stunder-5*tun- 

den, or 24 kilometres. 
Cubic measure (1881) whose sides 

equal a parmak (decimetre). 
4 tb a v., nearly. 



Tam . 


. Hong Kong 


Tan . . 


. China 


Tang 


. Burma 


Tang-sun 
Tank 


. China 


Bombay . 


Tcharka 


Russia 


Tchetverte 


. Russia . 



Teng 



Thanan 
Thangsat 

To : 

Toise 
Tola. 

Tomand 
Ton . 
T6nde 



Tonne, or MUlier 

Tonne (metric) . 

Tonnclada 

Tonos 

Tou . 

Tovar 

T'sun 

Tu . 



Siam . . . 916} grains. 

Hong Kong . 1} 02. av. 

China . . Silver weight, 1 1 oz. av. 

Japan . . 10 momme. 

(No current coin of the tad.) 
Straits Settle- x } ox. av. - 10 chee - 100 boon, 
ments 

• I33ilhav. 
= 2$ gallons. Also 133I lb weight. 

. 2 miles, nearly. 

About 3$ miles — 1 li. 

I7t\ grains, or 72 tanks -30 pice. 
. o-866 gill -0«2 1 8 pint. 

• 5*77* Dusheb-8 tchetveriks, or 
2-099 hectolitres. 

. Burmese measures of capacity de- 
pend on the teng or basket. 
Officially a basket is 2218-2 
cubic inches, but the teng varies 
locally :— 
Akyab=23 lb of rice. 
Bassein - 51 lb of rice. 
Moulmein -48 lb of rice. 
Rangoon -48 to 50 lb of rice. 
. 1*5 pint. 
. 4-688 gallons. 

18-0391 litres -3*9703 galls. »■ 
1-98 pecks. 
. 2-1315 yards. 

180 grains. Legal weight of 
rupee. 
. 187-17 lb av. of rice. 
, 2 240 lb a v., also a net ton of 2000 lb. 
131-392 Ktres (liquid measure). 
' 139-121 litres (dry measure). 

' 1 1000 kilogrammes. 

1000 kilogrammes - 0*9842 ton. 

• 793*15 kilogrammes. 
. 29-526 cwt. 
. 18 pints approximatdy. 

128*2 kilogrammes. 
. 1-41 inch (Treaty measure). 
. 1 oo- 1 42 miles- 25 li, based on the 
ch'ihof 14-1 inches. 



Burma 



Siam . 
Siam . 
Japan 

France 
India 

Arabia 
U. States 
Denmark 



France 
Germany 

Portugal 

Greece 

China 

Bulgaria 

China 

China 



Vara 



Vat . 

Vedro 



Verchok. *. . 
Vcrsta, or Verst . 
Vierkanteroede . 
Vie/td . ■ . 

Vita ... . 

Wa . . . . 
Wigtje . . . 
Wisse . . . 

Yard . . . 



33 inches. 

2-782 feet. 

2-841 feet. 

l-ii metre. 

I hectolitre. 

2-7056 gallons** 10 schtoffs, or 

12-3 litres. 
12-8 litres. 
1-75 inch. 
0-66288 mile. 
1 metric are. 
1-7 gallon. 
15 litres. 
3rVrjlbav. 

80 inches. 
1 gramme. 
I metric stere. 

36 inches. 

838 centimetres. 

1 hectolitre. 

3t coll -1 decimetre- Old zotl 
nearly one inch. (See also 
PfumL) 

Zolotnik . . Russia , . 65*306 grains, or 96 dolt. 

(II J. C) 

WEIGHT-THROWING, the athletic sport of hurling beavy 
weights either for distance or height. lifting and throwing 
weights of different kind* Lave ah 
Britain, especially Scotland and IffJrW 
of Europe, purttaJarfy la Gorm 
Hungary. ^ n k™™* ~ i 



Peru , 

Spain 

Argentina 

Portugal 

Holland 

Russia 

Bulgaria . 

Russia 

Russia 

Holland 

Denmark 

Switzerland . 

Rangoon 

Siam . . * 
Netherlands . 
Netherlands . 

U. States . 
Mexico . . 



Zac .... Netherlands . 

Zer (Persia). See Cut. 

Zoll Switzerland . 




form 




b lie 



British athletic championship programme, although "putting 
the shot " O7.tr.) and " hammer-throwing " (q.v.) are recognized 
championship events. In America throwing the 56-lb weight 
for distance belongs to the championship programme. It was 
once a common event in Great Britain at all important athletic 
meetings, the ordinary slightly conical half-hundredweight 
being used and thrown by the ring attached to the top; the 
ring, however, was awkward to grip, and a triangular handle was 
afterwards substituted. In America the 56-lb wdght is a ball 
of iron or lead with a triangular or pear-shaped handle. The 
weight used to be thrown standing, but since 1888 it has bees 
thrown from a 7-ft. circle with a raised edge, like that used for 
the hammer and shot in America. 

In throwing the athlete stands slightly stooping, with his feet 
about 18 in. apart and grasping the handle with both hands opposite 
his thighs. The weight is swung round and back past the right leg 
as far as possible, then up, over and round the head, as in the 
hammer-throw. One complete swing round the head is usually 
enough, as too much momentum is apt to throw the athlete off his 
balance. * The wdght is then swung round together with the whole 
body as rapidly as possible, as in hammer-throwing. The athlete 
works himself to the front of the drde just before the moment of 
ddi very and begins the final heave with his back towards the direction 
in which he wishes to throw the wdght. This heave is accomplished 
by completing the final spin of the Dody, giving the legs, back and 
arms a vigorous upward movement at the same time, and following 
the wdght through with the uplifted arms as it leaves the hands, 
but taking care not to overstep the drde. With one hand a smoother 
swing can be made but much less power applied. In throwing for 
height the athlete stands beside the high-jump uprights and casts the 
weight over the cross-piece, making the swing and spin in a more 
vertical direction with a heave upward at the moment of ddivery. 
Throwing for height and with one hand were formerly events in the 
American championship programme, but have been discontinued. 
The record for throwing the 56-lb wdght for height is 15 ft. 61 in., 
made by the American-Irishman J. S. MitchdT. The record for 
distance, 38 ft 8 in., was made in 1907 by the American- Irishman 
John Flanagan. In throwing weights large and heavy men have an 
advantage over small, brute strength Deing the chid requisite, 
while a heavy body makes a better fulcrum while revolving than a 
light one. 

WEI-HAI-WEI, a British naval and coaling station, on the 
N.E. coast of the Shan-tung peninsula, China, about 40 m. £. 
of the treaty port of Chi-fu and 115 m. from Port Arthur. It 
was formerly a Chinese naval station strongly fortified, but was 
captured by the Japanese in February 1895, and occupied by their 
troops until May 1898, pending the payment of the indemnity. 
Port Arthur having in the spring of that year been acquired by 
the Russian government under a lease from China, a similar 
lease was granted of Wci-hai-wei to the British government, 
and on the withdrawal of the Japanese troops the British fleet 
took possession, the flag being hoisted on the 24th of May 1898. 
No period was fixed for the termination of the lease, but it was 
stipulated that it should continue so long as Russia continued 
to hold Port Arthur. The lease of Port Arthur having been 
ceded to Japan in September 1905, the British lease of Wri-hai- 
wei was made to run for as long as Japan held Port Arthur. 

The harbour is formed by an island named Lhi-kung-tao 
running east and west across the mouth of a small bay, leaving 
an entrance at each end. Towards the mainland the water 
shoals, and the best anchorage is under the lee of the island. 
The native dty is walled, and has a population of about 200a 
The chief port is named Port Edward; it has good anchorage 
with a depth of 45 ft. of water. The leased area comprises, 
besides the harbour and island, a belt of the mainland, xo 
English miles wide, skirting the whole length of the bay. The 
coast line of the bay is some 10 m., and the area thus leased 
extends to 285 sq. m. Within this area Great Britain has exdu- 
sivc jurisdiction, and is represented by a commissioner under 
the colonial office ; and has, besides, the right to erect fortifica- 
tions, station troops and take any other measures necessary 
for defensive purposes at any points on or near the coast in 
that p.-.rt of the peninsula east of 121° 40' E. Within that zone, 
which covers 1 505 sq, m., Chinese administration is not interfered 
with, but no troops other than Chinese and British are allowed 
there, TU ? orirory. consists of rugged hills rising to xooo ft. 
and wcll-cuhivuicd alleys. The hills also, as far as possible, 



WEILBURG— WEIMAR 



495 



are terraced for cultivation and in tome Instances are planted 
with dwarf pine and scrub oak. It contains some 310 villages 
and a population of about 150,000. Chinese war- vessels are 
at liberty to use the anchorage, notwithstanding the lease; 
and Chinese jurisdiction may continue to be exercised within the 
walled chy of Wei-hai-wci; so far as not inconsistent with military 
requirements. Wci-hai-wei was made the headquarters of a 
native Chinese regiment in the pay of Great Britain, and organized 
and led by British officers; but this regiment was disbanded in 
190a. Wci-hai-wei is used by the China squadron as a sana- 
torium and exercising ground. Its excellent climate attracts 
many visitors. Wei-hai-wei being a free port no duties of any 
kind are coDected there. The import trade cdnsists of timber, 
maize, paper, crockery, sugar, tobacco, kerosene oD, &c Gold 
has been found in the territory, and silver, tin, lead and iron 
are said to exist. In each of the years 1 903-1009 the expenditure 
exceeded the revenue (about $70,000 in 1000- 19 10), deficits 
being made good by grants from the British parliament. 

WEILBURG, a town of Germany, in the Prussian province 
of Hesse-Nassau, picturesquely situated on the Lahn, just above 
the confluence of the Weil, 50 m. N.E. from Coblenz by the rail- 
way to Giessen. Pop. (1905) 3828. The old town, built on and 
around a rocky hill almost encircled by the river, contains a 
castle of the 16th century, formerly the residence of the dukes 
of Nassau- Weilburg, and later of the grand-dukes of Luxemburg. 
It has an Evangelical and a Roman Catholic church, the former, 
the Stndtkirche, containing the burial vaults of the princes 
of Nassau, a gymnasium and an agricultural college. Its 
industries include wool-spinning, mining, tanning and dyeing. 
In the neighbourhood are the ruins of the castles of Merenberg 
and Freienfels. Weilburg was in the nth century the property 
of the bishops of Worms, from whom it passed to the house of 
Nassau. From 1355 to 1816 it was the residence of the princes 
of Nassau- Weilburg, a branch of this house. 

See C. C. Spiclmann, Fiikrer iurch Weilburg und Umgebung 
(Weilburg. 1894); and Gesckukie da Stodt und Uerrschaft Weiiburt 
(Weilburg, 1896). 

WB1IAR, a city of Germany, the capital of the grand-duchy 
of Saxe-Weimar-Elsenach. It is situated in a fertile valley on 
the Ilrri, a email tributary of the Saale, 50 m. S.W. of Leipzig 
and 141 m. S.W. of Berlin, on the main line of railway to Bebra 
and Frankiort-on-Main, and at the junction of three lines to 
Jena, Gera and Berka and Rastenberg. Pop. (1885) 21,565, 
(1005) 31,121. Weimar owes its importance not to any indust rial 
development, which the grand-dukes discourage within the 
limits of their Resident, but to its intimate association with the 
classical period of German literature, which earned for it the 
title of the " poets* city " and u the German Athens." The 
golden age of Weimar, covered by the reign of Charles Augustus 
(q.v.) from 1775 to 1828, has left an indelible impress on the 
character of the town. 

In spite of its classical associations and of modern improve- 
ments, Weimar still retains much of its medieval character. 
The walls survive, indeed, only in isolated fragments, but the 
narrow winding streets of the older part of the town, and the 
market-place surrounded by houses with high-pitched gables 
and roofs are very picturesque. Of the churches the Siadlkircke 
(parish church), of which Herder became pastor in 1776, is a 
Gothic building dating from about 1400, but much altered in 
detail under " classical *' influences. It contains the tombs of 
the princes of the house of Sa/e- Weimar, including those of the 
elector John Frederick the Magnanimous and his wife, and of 
Duke Bernhard of Weimar, a hero of the Thirty Years' War. 
The altar-piece is a triptych, the centre-piece representing the 
Crucifixion; beside the cross Luther is represented, with the open 
Bible in his hand, while the blood from the pierced side of the 
Saviour pours on to his head. The picture is regarded as the 
masterpiece of Lucas Cranach (q.v.), who lived for a time at 
Weimar, in the BrUck'sckes Haus on the market-place. In front 
of the church is a statue of Herder, whose house still serves as 
Che parsonage. The other church, the Jakobs- or Hofkircke 
{court church) Is also ancient; its disused churchyard contains 



the graves of Lucas Cranach and Musaeus. The most important 
building in Weimar is the palace, a huge structure forming three 
sides of a quadrangle, erected (1780-1803) under the super- 
intendence, of Goethe, on the site of one burned down in 1774. 
A remnant of the old palace, with a tower, survives. The interior 
is very fine, and in one of the wings is a series of rooms dedicated 
to the poets Goethe, Schiller, Herder and Wieland, with appro- 
priate mural paintings. Of more interest, however, is the house 
in which Goethe himself lived from 1782 to 1832. It was built 
by the duke as a surprise present for the poet on his return from 
his Italian tour, and was regarded at the time as a palace of art 
and luxury. It has therefore a double interest, as the home of 
the poet, and as a complete example of a German nobleman's 
house at the beginning of the 19th century, the furniture and 
fittings (in Goethe's study and bedroom down to the smallest 
details) remaining as they were when the poet dicdJ The house 
is built round a quadrangle, in which is the coach-house with 
Goethe's coach, and has a beautiful, old-fashioned garden. 
The interior, apart from the scientific and art collections made by 
Goethe, is mainly remarkable for the extreme simplicity of its 
furnishing. The Goethe-Schiller Museum, as it is now called, 
stands isolated, the adjoining houses having been pulled down 
to avoid risk of fire. 

Of more pathetic interest is the Schiller haus, in the Schitttr- 
sirasse, containing the humble rooms in which Schiller lived and 
died. The atmosphere of the whole town is, indeed, dominated 
by the memory of Goethe and Schiller, whose bronze statues, by 
Rietschel, grouped on one pedestal (unveiled in 1857) stand in 
front of the theatre. The theatre, built under Goethe's super- 
intendence in 1825, memorable in the history of art not only for 
its associations with the golden age of German drama, but as 
having witnessed the first performances of many of Wagner's 
operas and other notable stage pieces, was pulled down and 
replaced by a new building in 1907. The most beautiful monu- 
ment of Goethe's genius in the town is, however, the park, laid 
out in the informal " English " style, without enclosure of any 
kind. Of Goethe's classic " conceits " which it contains, the stone 
altar round which a serpent climbs to eat the votive bread upon 
it, inscribed to the "genius hujus loci," is the most famous. 
Just outside the borders of the park, beyond the Ilm, is the 
" garden house," a simple wooden cottage with a high-pitched 
roof, in which boethe used to pass the greater part of the summer. 
Finally, in the cemetery is the grand ducal family- vault, in which 
Goethe and Schiller also lie, side by side. 

Wieland, who came to Weimar in 1772 as the duke's tutor, is also 
commemorated by a statue (1857), and his house is indicated by • 
tablet. The town has been embellished by several other statues, 
including those of Charles Augustus (1875); Lucas Cranach (i8£6j; 
Marie Seibach (1889); the composer Hummel (1895)' and Frant 
Liszt (1904). Among the other prominent buildings in Weimar are 
the Crunes Sekloss (18th century), containing a library of 200,000 
volumes and a valuable collection of portraits, busts and literary 
and other curiosities; the old ducal dower-house (Wiltumspaloij); 
the museum, built in 1863-1868 in .the Renaissance style with some 
old masters and Preller's famous mural paintings illustrating the 
Odyssey. In 1806 the Goethe-Schiller Archiv, an imposing building' 
on the wooded height above the 11m, containing MbS. by Goethe, 
Schiller. Herder. Wieland, Immermann. Frits Reuter, Mdrike, Otto 
Ludwig and others, was opened. Weimar possesses also archaeo- 
logical, ethnographical and natural science collections and the 
Liszt Museum (in the gardener's house in the park, for many years 
the musician's heme). Among the educational establishments are 
a gymnasium, and Kealsckule, the Sopkienstift (a large school for 
girls of the better class, founded by the grand-ducness Sophia), 
the grand-ducal school of art, geographical institutes, a technical 
school, commercial school, music school, teachers* seminaries, and 
deaf and dumb and blind asylums. An English church was opened 
in 1809. There are • few industries, printing, tanning and cloth- 
weaving. 

Various points in the environs of Weimar are also interesting from 
their associations. A broad avenue of chestnuts, about 2 m. in 
length, leads southwards from the town to the grand-ducal chateau 



1 To be strictly accurate, they thus remained until the death of 
Goethe's last descendant in 1884. The house, which had been left 
to the grand-duke for the nation, was then found to be so structurally 
rotten that the interior had to be largely reconstructed. Everything 
was, however, replaced in the exact position it had previously 
occupied. 



49 6 



WEINHEIM— WEIR 



of Belvedere, in the gardens of which the open-air theatre, used in 
Goethe's day, still exists. To the north-east, at about the same 
distance from the town, are the tiny chateau and park of Tiefurt, 
on the banks of the lira, the scene of many pastoral court revels in 
the past. To the north-west is the Ettersberg, with the Ettersburg, 
a chateau which was another favourite resort of Charles Augustus 
and his friends.. 

The history of Weimar, apart from its association with Charles 
Augustus and bis court, is of little general interest. The town 
is said to have existed so early as the 9th century. Till 1140 it 
belonged to the counts of Orlamtinde; it then fell to Albert the 
Bear and the descendants of his second son. In 1247 Otto III. 
founded a separate Weimar line of counts. In 1345 it became 
a fief of the landgraves of Thuringia, to whom it escheated in 
1385 with the extinction of the line of Otto III. At the partition 
of Saxony in 1485 Weimar, with. Thuringia, fell to the elder, 
Ernestine, branch of the Saxon house of Wcttin, and has been the 
continuous residence of the senior branch of the dukes of this 
line since 1572. Under Charles Augustus Weimar became a 
centre of Liberalism as well as of art. It had previously narrowly 
escaped absorption by Napoleon, who passed through the town 
during the pursuit of the Prussians after the battle of Jena 
in 1806, and was only dissuaded from abolishing the duchy by 
the tact and courage of the duchess Louisa. 

The traditions of Charles Augustus were well maintained by 
his grandson, the grand-duke Charles Alexander (1818-1001), 
whose statue now stands in the Karlsplatz. The grand-duke's 
connexion with the courts of Russia and Holland— his mother 
was a Russian grand-duchess and his wife, Sophia Louisa (1824- 
1897), a princess of the Netherlands— tended to give the Weimar 
society a cosmopolitan character, and the grand-duke devoted 
himself largely to encouraging men of intellect, whether Germans 
or foreigners, who came to visit or to settle in the town. The art 
school, founded by him in 1848, has had a .notable series of 
eminent painters among its professors, including Preller, Bdcklin, 
Kalckreuth, Max Schmidt, Pauwels, Hcumann, Verlat and 
Thtdy. Under the patronage of Charles Alexander, also, 
Weimar became a famous musical centre, principally owing 
to the presence of Franz Liszt, who from 1848 to 1886 made 
Weimar his principal place of residence. Other notable con- 
ductors of the Weimar theatre orchestra were Eduard Lassen 
and Richard Strauss. 

See Sch6h\ Weimar's MerkwSrdigkeiten einst undjelzl (Weimar, 
1857); Springer. Weimar's klassische Stallen (Berlin, 1868); 
Ruland, Die Schdlu des Goethe National- Museums in Weimar 
(Weimar and Leipzig. 1887); Francke, Weimar und Umgebungen 
(3rd cd.. Weimar, 1900); Kuhn, Weimar in Wort und Biid (4th ed., 
Jena, 1905). 

. WEINHEIM, a town of Germany, in the grand-duchy of Baden, 
pleasantly situated on the Bcrgstrasse at the foot of the Odenwald, 
11 m. N. of Heidelberg by the railway to Frankfort -on-Main. 
Pop. (1905) 12,560. It is still in part surrounded by the ruins 
of its ancient walls. The Gothic town hall; the ruins of the 
castle of Windeck and the modern castle of the counts of Bcrck- 
beim; the house of the Teutonic Order; and three churches are 
the principal buildings. The town has various manufactures, 
notably leather, machinery and soap, and cultivates fruit and 
wine. It is a favourite climatic health resort and a great tourist 
centre for excursions in the Odenwald range. Weinheim is 
mentioned in chronicles as early as the 8th century, when it was 
a fief of the abbey of Lorsch, and it was fortified in the 14th 
century. In the Thirty Years' War it was several times taken 
and plundered, and its fortifications dismantled. 

See Hegewald, Der Luflhurort Weinheim an der Bergstnuse (Wein- 
heim, 1895); Ackermann. F&hrer dutch Weinheim und Umgebung 
(Weinheim, 189$): and Zinkgraf, Bilder aus der GesckickU der 
Stadt Weinheim (Weinheim, 1904). 

WEINSBERQ. a small town of Germany, in I he kingdom of 
WurttcmbcTg, pleasantly situ* ltd on thr Mm, 5 m. E. from 
Heflbrorui by the railway to </i utiirlm. Fop, n<»s) ^og7* It 
has an ancient Romane^r 1 

former Occoiaropadius (?.«.}, »m1 rixjatlturc, which 

is the chief occupation 01 
above Uk town Lie th 



its foot is the house once inhabited by Justinus Kerner (e.t.). 
with a public garden and a monument to the poet. 

The German king Conrad III. defeated Count Welf VI. of 
Bavaria near Weinsberg in December 1140, and took the town, 
which later became a free imperial city. In 1331 it joined the 
league of the Swabian cities, but was taken by the nobles In 
1440 and sold to the elector palatine, thus losing its liberties. 
It was burnt in 1525 as a punishment for the atrocities com- 
mitted by the revolted peasants. The famous legend of Weiber- 
treu ("women's faithfulness"), immortalized in a ballad by 
Chamisso, is connected with the siege of 11 40, although the story 
is told of other places. It is said that Conrad III. allowed the 
women to leave the town with whatever they could carry, where- 
upon they came out with their husbands on their backs. 

See Bernhdm, " Die Sage von den trcuen Wcibern zu Weinsberg " 
(in the Forschungen tur deutschen Geschichte, vol. xv., Gdttingen, 
■875); Merk, Geschichte der Sladt Weinsberg und ihrer Burg Wether- 
treu (Heilbronn, 1880). 

WEIR, ROBERT WALTER (1803-1889), American portrait 
and historical painter, was born at New Rochelle, New York, 
on the 18th of June 1803. He was a pupil of Jarvis, was elected 
to the National Academy of Design in 1829, and was teacher of 
drawing at the United States Military Academy at West Point 
in 1834-1846, and professor of drawing there in 1846-1876. 
He died in New York City on the 1st of May 1889.' Among his 
better-known works are: " The Embarkation of the Pilgrims " 
(in the rotunda of the United States Capitol at Washington, D.C.); 
" Landing of Hcndrik Hudson "; " Evening of the Crucifixion"; 
" Columbus before the Council of Salamanca "; " Our Lord on 
the Mount of Olives "; " Virgil and Dante crossing the Styx," and 
several portraits, now at West Point, and " Peace and War " in 
the Chapel there. 

His son, John Ferguson Weir (b. 1841), painter and sculptor, 
became a Member of the National Academy of Design in 1866, 
and was made director of the Yale University Art School in 1868. 
Another son, Julian Alden Weir (b. 1852), studied under his 
father, and under J. L. Ge°r6me, and became a distinguished 
portrait, figure and landscape painter. He was one of the 
founders of the Society of American Artists in 1877, and became 
a member of the National Academy of Design (1880) and of the 
Ten American Painters, New York. 

WEIR (from O. Eng. wer, a dam; cognate with saeriaw, to 
defend, guard; cf. Ger. Wehr, defence), a barrier placed across 
rivers to raise the water-level for catching fish, for milk, for 
navigation or for irrigation, the discharge of the river taking 
place over the crest or through openings made for the purpose. 
Rough weirs, formed of stakes and twigs, were erected across 
English rivers in Saxon times for holding up the water and 
catching fish, and fish-traps, with iron- wire meshes and eel 
baskets, are still used sometimes at weirs. Weirs are essentia* 
for raising the head of water for water-wheels at mills, and for 
diverting some of the flow of a river into irrigation canals; 
but they have received their greatest and most varied extension 
in the canalization of rivers for navigation. There are three 
distinct classes of weirs, namely, solid weirs, draw-door weirs, 
including regulating sluices for irrigation, and movable weirs, 
which- retain the water above them for navigation during the 
low stage of the river, and can be lowered or removed so as to 
leave the channel quite open in flood- time. 

Solid Weirs. — The simplest form of weir is a solid, watertight dam 
of firm earthwork or rubble stone, faced with stone pitching, with 
cribs filled with rubble, with fascine mattresses weighted with stone, 
or with masonry, and protected from undermining by sheet piling 
or one or more rows of well foundations. These weirs, if solidly 
constructed, possess the advantages of simplicity, strength and 
durability, and require no superintendence. They, however, block 
up the river channel tothe extent of their height, and consequently 
raise the flood-level above them. This serious defect of •olid weirs, 
where the riparian lands are liable to be injured by inundations, can 
I10 lightly mitigated by keeping down the crest of the weir some- 
what oelow the required level, and then raising the water-level at 
t fie low stage of the river by placing a row of planks along the top 
9 1 he weir. 

Waste weirs resemble ordinary solid weirs in providing for the 
■ urplus discharge from a reservoir of an impounded river or mountain 

ream over their crest; but in reality they form part of a masonry 



WEIR 



497 



reservoir 'dam for s wiring up i . 

kept purposely lower than the rest of the dam to _ 

of water to escape down the valley (see Water-Supply). 

Drmw-door Weirs. — The discharge of a river at a weir can be 
regulated as required and considerably increased in flood-time by 
Introducing a series of openings in the centre of a solid weir, with 
sluice-gates or panels which slide in grooves at the sides of upright 
or masonry piers erected at convenient intervals apart, 




Fie. i.— Lifting-gate Weir and Foot-bridge at Richmond, Surrey. 

and which can be raised or lowered as desired from a foot-bridge. 
This arrangement has been provided at several weirs on the Thames, 
to afford control of the flood discharge, and reduce the extent of the 
inundations: the largest of these composite weirs on that river is 
at the tidal limit at Teddington, where the two central bays, with a 
total length of 242! ft., are closed by thirty-five draw-doors sliding 
be tween iron frames supporting a foot-bridge, from which the doors 
are raised by a winch/ Ordinary draw-doors, sliding in grooves of 

moderate size and raised 
against a small head of water, 
can be readily worked in 
spite of the friction of the 
sides of the doors against 
their supports; but with 
large draw-doors and a con- 
siderable head, the friction 
of the surfaces in contact 
offers a serious impediment 
in raising them. This fric- 
tion has been greatly re- 
duced by making the draw- 
doors, or sluicegates, slide 
on each side against a verti- 
cal row of free-rollers sus- 
pended by an encircling 
chain; and the working 
is much facilitated by 

F,o.a.-Mec^ of Lifting-gate. ^gSS^SL^LSTSi 
* lcll,non<L large draw-door weir across 

the Thames at Richmond, with three spans of 66 ft. dosed by 
«^ — j — u l2 j t> ijgk ixfi T^jgiung 32 ton^ caa be f u u y 

*-- ' - r — t_each door from the 

' 1 weir retains the 

,_ f the mud-banks 

which had been bared at low tide between Richmond and Teddington 
by the lowering of the low-water level, owing to the removal of 
various obstructions in the river below. _ The weir is 




ffriag doors, each ia ft. high and weighing 32 torn 
opened in seven minutes by two men raising each 
arched double foot-bridge (fig*. 1, 2 and 3). This * 
river above it at half-tide level, in order to cover 1 




Fio. 3*— Plan of Works at Richmond. 



out of the river as soon as the flood-tide on its lower side has 
risen to half-tide level, so as not to impede the flow and ebb 
of the tide up to Teddington above that level, and is not lowered 
till the tide has fallen again to the same level. In order that 
the doors when raised may not impede the view under the arches. 



' L. F. Vernon-Harcourt, Rmrs and Comb, and edition, p. 114, 
d plate iii. figs. 15 and 16. 



the doors are rotated automatically at the top by grooves at 
the sides of the piers, so as to assume a horizontal position and 
pass out of sight in the central space between the two foot-ways 
(fig. 2). The barrage at the head of the Nile delta, and the 
regulating sluices across the Nile at Aadut and Esna in Upper 
Egypt below Assuan, are examples of draw-door weirs, with their 
numerous openings closed by sluice-gates sliding on free rollers, 
which control the discharge 01 water from the river for irrigation. 

Movable Weirs.— There are three main types of movable weirs, 
namely frame weirs, shutter weirs and drum weirs, which, however, 
present several variations in their arrangements. 

The ordinary form of frame weir consists of a series of iron frames 
placed across a river end on to the current, between 3 and 4 ft. 
apart, hinged to a masonry apron on the bed of the -_. 
nver and carrying a foot-bridge alone the top, from which *™T* 
the actual barrier, resting against the frames and cross- * 

bars at the top and a sill at the bottom, 2s put into place or removed 
for closing or opening the weir. The barrier was originally formed 
of a number of long 



square wooden spars 
which could be readily 

handled by one man, 

being inclined slightly — 
from the vertical and 
placed close together for 
shutting the weir; but 
panels of wood or sheet- 
iron closing the space 
between adjacent 
frames and sliding in 
grooves at the sides, 
and rolling-up curtains 
composed of a series of 
horizontal wooden laths 
connected by leathern 
hinges, have also been 




Fic. 4.— Needle Weir, River Moldau. 



employed. The needle weir, so called from the long, slender spars 



being termed aiguiiUs 



the merit of simplicity' 



in its earliest form; and by means of some ingenious contrivances, 
comprising a hook, winch, lever and rotating bar, for assisting the 
weir-keepers in placing and releasing the needles, the system has Men 
applied successfully to the weirs of greater height required on the 
Meuse, the Main and the Moldau (fig. 4). The needle weir has, 
however, attained its greatest development in the United States 
across the Big Sandy river at Louisa, where, instead of needles 
3 to 4 in. square, beams 12 in. square and 18) ft. long have been 
resorted to, provided with a steel eye at the top and a rug near the 
centre of gravity to enable thenl to be worked (fig. 5). The needles 
are put in place one by one against the raised frames, or trestles, by 
a derrick on a barge lifting them by their ring, whilst a man on the 
foot-bridge, taking hold of the eye at the top, arranges them in 
position close together. The weir is opened by joining the needles 
of each bay by a chain passed through the eyes at the top and a 
line of wire through 
the central rings, so 
that when released at 
the top by the tilting 
of the escape bar by 
the derrick, they float ■* 
down as a raft, and are 3 
caught by a man in a "B 
boat, or, when the cur- 
rent is strong, they are » 

drawn to the bank by =^= 

a rope attached to- 

them previously to~ 

their release. The" 

trestles of this weir. 

are, as usua 

to the apron, so 

ia flood-tune they can 

be completely lowered FlG. 5.— Spar Weir, Louisa, Big Sandy 

into a recess across the River, U.S.A. 

chains actuated by a winch, leaving the channel perfectly open fori 
the discharge of floods and for the passage of vessels when the lock, 
is submerged. Whereas, however, ordinary frames placed nearer 
together than their height overlap one another when lowered on to 
the apron, the trestles of the Louisa weir lie clear of each other 
quite flat on the apron. 

The frame weir closed by sliding panels or rolling-up curtains 
(fig. 6) possesses the advantage that the panels or laths can be 
diminished in thickness towards the top in proportion to the reduced 
water-pressure; whereas the needles, being of uniform cross-section, 
have to be made stout enough to sustain the maximum bottom 
pressure. 

An objection has occasionally been urged against frames towered 
on to the bed of a river that they are liable to be covered over by 
detritus or drift brought down by floods, and consequently are 
subject to injury or impediments in being raised. In order to 




500 

Thei 



WEISSENBURG^AMISAND^-WELDING 



i three other placet; the town 



of Wcissenburg-am-Sand in Bavaria (£•*•)'• * Swim invalid resort 
In the Niedemmmental, above Lake Thun, with sulphate of lime 
springs, beneficial for bronchial affections; also a Hungarian comitat 
( Magy ar Fejervar), with Stuhlweissenburg as capital. 

WRISSENBURG-AM-SAND, a town of Germany, in the 
Bavarian district of Middle Fianconia, situated in a pleasant 
and fertile country at the western foot of the Franconian Jura, 
1300 ft. above the sea, and 33 m. by rail S.W. of Nuremberg 
by the railway to Munich. Pop. (1905) 6709. It is still sur- 
rounded by old walls and towers, and has two Gothic churches 
and a Gothic town-haH. The town has a mineral spring, connected 
with which is a bathing establishment. A Roman castle has 
recently been discovered, and there is a collection of antiquities 
in the modern school. The old fortalice of WUlzburg (2060 ft.) 
overlooks the town. Gold and silver fringe, bricks, cement 
wares, beer and doth are manufactured. Weissenburg dates 
from the 8th century, and in the 14th was made a free imperial 
town. It passed to Bavaria in 1806. 

See C. Meyer, Chronik der Stadt Weissenburg in Bayer* (Munich, 
1904); and Fabricius, Das Kastcll Weissenburg (Heidelberg, 1906). 

WBISSENFELS, a town of Germany, in the Prussian province 
of Saxony, situated on the Saale 20 m. S.W. of Leipzig and 19 m. 
S. of HaBe by the main line to Bebra and Frankfort-on-Main. 
Pop. (1905) 30,804. It contains three churches, a spacious 
market-place and various educational and benevolent institu- 
tions. The former palace, called the Augustusburg, built in 
1664-1690, lies on an eminence near the town; this spacious 
edifice is now used as a military school. Weissenfels manu- 
factures machinery, ironware, paper and other goods, and has 
an electrical power-house. In the neighbourhood are large 
deposits of sandstone and lignite. Weissenfels is a place of 
considerable antiquity, and from 1656 till 1746 it was the capital 
of the small duchy of Saxe- Weissenfels, a branch of the electoral 
house of Saxony, founded by Augustus, second son of the elector 
John George L The body of Gustavus Adolphus was embalmed 
at Weissenfels after the battle of Liitzen. 

See Sturm. Chronik der Stadt Weissenfels (Weissenfels, 1846); and 
Gerhardt, GescnickU der Stadt Weissenfels (Weissenfels, 1907). 

WETZSACKER, KARL (1822-1809), German Protestant 
theologian, was born at Oehringen near Heilbronn in Wurttem- 
berg, on the nth of December 1822. After studying at Tubingen 
and Berlin, he became Prieatdotcnt at Tubingen in 1847 and 
eventually (1861) professor of ecclesiastical and dogmatic 
history. From 1856 to 1878 he helped to edit the JakrbUcker 
far deutscke Tkeohgie; and his elaborate studies UnUrsuckungen 
Uber die evangeliscke Gesckichte, ikre QueUen und den Gang ikrtr 
EntmicUung (1864) and Das apostoliscke Zeitalter der ckristl. 
Kirckc (1886, 2nd ed. 1893; EngL trans. 1894-1895) made 
him widely known and respected. He died on the 13th of 
August 1890. His son, Karl von Weizs&cker (b. 1853), was 
appointed in zooo Kultusminister for Wurttemberg. 

Weizsacker's other works include Zur Kritik des Barnabas- 
trufs (1863) and Ferdinand Christian Baur (1893). Cf. Hegler, 
Znr Erinnernng an Karl Weissacker (1900). 

wKkkhLR, SAHTOR [Alexander] (1848- ), Hungarian 
statesman, was born on the 14th of November 1848 at M66r, 
in the comitat of Stuhlweissenburg. After studying law at the 
university of Budapest be graduated dodor juris. He then 
entered the government service, and after a period of probation 
was appointed to a post in the ministry of finance. He still, 
however, continued an academic career by lecturing on political 
economy at the university. In z886 Wekerle was elected to 
the House of Deputies, became in the same year financial 
secretary of state, and in 1889 succeeded Tisza as minister of 
finance. He immediately addressed himself to the task of 
improving the financial position of the country, carried out 
the conversion of the State loans, and succeeded, for the first 
time in the history of the Hungarian budget, in avoiding a deficit. 
In November 1892 Wekerle succeeded Count Szapary as premier, 
though still retaining the portfolio of finance. At the head 
of a strong government he was enabled, in spite of a powerful 
opposition of CathoBOt m*d Urttttt it.to Carry In 1804 the Civil 
Marriage BUI. ttefSft^sMsKm^^ckrfcal party, 




however, brought about his resignation on the sand of December 
1894, when he was succeeded by Banffy. On the 1st of January 
1897 he was appointed president of the newly created judicial 
commission at Budapest, and for the next few years held aloof 
from politics, even under the ex-lex government of Fejervfiry. 
On the reconciliation of the king-emperor with the coalition 
he was therefore selected as the most suitable man to lead the 
new government, and on the 8th of April 1006 was appointed 
prime minister, taking at the same time the portfolio of finance. 
He resigned the premiership on the 27th of April 1909, but was 
not finally relieved of his office until the formation of the Khuen- 
H edervary ca binet on the 17th of January 1910. 

WELCKER, FRIEDRICH OOTTUER (1784-1868), German 
philologist and archaeologist, was bom at Grflnberg in the 
grand duchy of Hesse, Having studied classical philology at 
the university of Giessen, he was appointed (1803) master in 
the high school, an office which he combined with that of lecturer 
at the university. In 1806 he journeyed to Italy, and was for 
more than a year private tutor at Rome in the family of Wilhelm 
von Humboldt, who became his friend and correspondent. 
Welcker returned to Giessen in x8o8, and resuming his school- 
teaching and univeratylectureswasinthefoUowing year appointed 
the first professor of Greek literature and archaeology at that or 
any German university. After serving as a volunteer in the 
campaign of 18x4 he went to Copenhagen to edit the posthumous 
papers of the Danish archaeologist Georg Zoega (1755-1809), 
and published his biography, Zoegas Lebcn (Stutt. 1819). His 
liberalism in politics having brought him into conflict with the 
university authorities of Giessen, he exchanged that university 
for Gttttingen in 1816, and three years later received a chair 
at the new university of Bonn, where he pftfablhhed the art 
museum and the library, of which he became the first librarian. 
In 1841-1843 he travelled in Greece and Italy (cf. his Tagebtuk, 
Berlin, 1865), retired from the librarianship in 1854, and in 
1 861 from his professorship, but continued to reside at Bonn until 
his death. Welcker was a pioneer in the field of archaeology, 
and was one of the first to insist, in opposition to the narrow 
methods of the older Hellenists, on the necessity of co-ordinating 
the study of Greek art and religion with philology. 
- Besides early work on Aristophanes, Pindar, and Sappho, 
whose character he vindicated, he edited Akman (1815), 
Hipponax (1817), Theognis (1826) and the Theogony of Hesiod 
(1865), and published a Sylloge epigrammatum Graecomm (Bonn, 
1828). His Gricckiscke Gdtierlebre (3 vols., Gftttingen, 1857-1862) 
may be regarded as the first scientific treatise on Greek religion. 
Among his works on Greek literature the chief are Die Jiscky~ 
leiscke Tritogie (1824, 6), Der episcke Zyklusoderdie Houeriscken 
Gediekte (a vols. 1835, 49), Die grieckiscken Tragddiett mil 
RMcksickt aufden episcken Zykius geordnet (3 vols., 1839-1841). 
His editions and biography of Zoega, his ZeitickrijlfUr GesekickU 
und AusUgung der alien Kuusi (Gftttingen, 18x7, 8) and bis 
Atie DenkmOler (5 vols., 1840-1864) contain his views on ancient 
art. 

See Kekule, Das Leben F. G. Wekkers (Leipne, 1880); W- nam 
Humboldts Briefe an Welcker fed. R. Haym. Berlin, 18*9); i. E. 
Sandys, History of Classical Scholarship (voL Si., pp. 210, 7, Cam- 
bridge, 1908). 

WELDING (s.t. the action ox the verb " to weld " the same 
word as " to well," to boil or spring up, the history of the word 
being to bo3, to heat to a high degree, to beat heated iron; 
according to Skeat, who points out that in Swedish the compound 
verb uppvtilla means to boil, the simple valla is only used in the 
sense of welding), the process of uniting metallic surfaces by 
pressure exercised when they are in a semi-fused condition. 
It differs therefore from brazing and soldering, in which cold, 
surfaces arc united by the interposition of a fused metallic 
cementing material. The conditions in which welding is a 
suitable process to adopt are stated in the article Foxcxng. 
The technique of the work will be considered here. 

The conditions for successful welding may be summed up as 
clean metallic surfaces in contact, a suitable temperature and 
rapid dosing of the joint. All the variations in the forms of 
welds are either due to differences in shapes of material, or to 



WELD©*, 



the practice of different craftsmen. The typical weld is the 
scarf. If, for iosunce, a bar has to be united to another bar 
or to an eye, the joint is made diagonally (scarfed) because that 
fives a longer surface in contact than a weld at right angles 
(a butt veld), and because the hammer can be brought into 
pJay better. Abutting faces for a scarfed joint are made slightly 
convex; the object is to force out any scale or dirt which might 
otherwise become entangled in the joint at the moment of closing 
and which would impair its union. The ends are upset (enlarged) 
previous to welding, in order to give an excess of metal that 
will permit of slight corrections being effected around the joint 
(" swaging ") without reducing the diameter below that of the 
remainder of the bar. These principles are seen in other joints 
of diverse types, in the butt, the vee and their modifications. 
Joint faces must be clean, both chemically, i.e. free from oxides, 
and mechanically, i.e. free from dust and dirt, else they will 
not unite. The first condition is fulfilled by the use of a fluxing 
agent, the second by ordinary precautions. The flux produces 
with the oxide a fluid slag which is squeezed out at the instant 
of making the weld. The commonest fluxes are sand, used 
chiefly with wrought iron, and borax, used with steel; they are 
dusted over the joint faces both while in the fire and on the 
anvil. Mechanical cleanliness is ensured by heating the ends 
in a dean hollow fire previously prepared, and in brushing off 
any adherent particles of fuel before closing the weld. The 
scarf, the butt and the vee occur in various modificatipns in 
all kinds of forgings, but the principles and precautions to be 
observed are identical in alL But in work involving the use 
of rolled sections, as angles, tees, channels and joists, important 
differences occur, because the awkwardness of the shapes to 
be welded involves cutting and bending and the insertion of 
separate welding pieces ("gluts"). Welds are seldom made 
lengthwise in rolled sections, nor at right angles, because union 
is effected in such cases by means of riveted joints. But welding 
b essential in all bending of sections done at sharp angles or 
to curves of small radius. It is necessary, because a broad 
flange cannot be bent sharply; if the attempt be made when 
it is on an outer curve it is either ruptured or much attenuated, 
while on aa inner curve it is crumpled up. The plater's smith 
therefore cuts the flanges in both cases, and then bends and 
welds them. If it is on an inner curve, the joint is a lap weld; 
if it is on an outer one, a fresh piece or glut is welded in. Gluts 
of rectangular section are used for cylindrical objects and rings 
of .various sections. The edges to be united may or may not 
be scarfed, and the gluts, which are plain bars, are welded 
against the edges, all being brought to a welding beat in separate 
furnaces. The furnace tubes of boilers and the cross tubes 
are welded in this way, sometimes by hand, but often with a 
power hammer, as also are all rings of angle and other sections 
on the vertical web. 

The temperature for welding is very important. It must 
be high enough to render the surfaces in. contact pasty, but must 
not be in excess, else the metal will become badly oxidized 
(burnt) and will not adhere. Iron can be raised to a temperature 
at which minute globules melt and fall off, but steel must not be 
heated nearly so mnch, and a moderate white heat must not 
be exceeded. Welds in steel are not so trustworthy nor so readily 
made as those in iron. 

Thermit Welding.— Tht affinity of finely powdered aluminium 
for metallic oxides, sulphides, chlorides, &c, may be utilized to 
effect a reduction of metals with which oxygen, sulphur or 
chlorine combine. C Vautin in 1804 found that when aluminium 
b a finely divided state was mixed with such compounds and 
ignited, an exceedingly high temperature, about 3000* C, was 
developed by the rapid oxidation of the aluminium. He found 
that metals which are ordinarily regarded as infusible were readily 
reduced, and in a very high degree of purity. These facts were 
turned to practical account by Dr H. Goldschmidt, who first 
welded two iron bars by means of molten iron produced by the 
process, to which the name of " thermit " is now commonly 
applied. The method has also been applied to the production, 
of pure metals for alloying purposes, as of chromium free from 



IVrmjr*,** 

gf »*A*w( „ 



thecoatmu 
doMdwicfc *„,*•, - t -' 
produced, tW w*» ^ " 
alumina or «^r**^-* ff ' ' 
theibf f«*ow»W„ „,//' 
the metal » pp^ u *"' . 

*nd retain themVSSiTJlr *" 



part to be ^Mh^SSJtT, 
tapped from the cnSZTlC ' 
numerous. A wide field U !w?f' "" S 
numbers have been surc«rf22r Zm/'T- 
welded, as also kTvi^^rLrJ*' ' • 
broken shafts, broken «ernpoV»^7£'. " ' 
with a capacity of 7 cwt. iSSulC^T ' ' 



introducing thcrmit'm a block o*L!V?J? 
arpvents or oroatlv I**.**. »u^Tl_ _ m '*J> 



IttJ!2i!S3Ffc#*. * •• **w 



prevents or greatly lessen, the unoum!/!! *'- - - , ' 
shrinkage and occlusion or gasesT^ **H - -* , • 

Electric Wcldi*t.—ln electric weldssc aiU ' '' * 

heat may be communicated to the~metal lOT* mM ' + * 
or by means of the electric resistance of th* » *"*<** ^ 
in the Thomson process. Arc welding isST!*!! 4. 
procedure, and it appears to have been first vm^TzL — ■ 
of by de Men tens in 1881 for uniting the partsoflir ~~ 

plates. The work -piece was placed upon a soonJ« ** *"***+* 

J ...... .. , M f V " 0r ****** Mi 

! Of Curr-_* . . . .' *** 



with the work-piece, and then to effect the rWerser^T'lIT* 
to maintain the arc. The heat of the arc was partly com 2 
cated to the work and partly dissipated in the hot gases^njcatrflt 
into the surrounding air. The result was a fusion of the Inetatne 
lead of the storage-battery plate which united various parts of 
the plate. The process was somewhat similar to the operation of 
lead-burning by the hydrogen and air blowpipe, as used la the 
formation of joints in chemical tanks made of sheet-lead. The 
method of de Meritens has been modified by Bernardos and 
Olszewski, Slavienoff, Coffin and others. 

In the Bernardos and Olszewski process the work is made 
the negative pole of a direct current circuit, and an arc is drawn 
between this and a carbon rod, to which a handle is attached for 
manipulating. As this rod is the positive terminal, particles 
of carbon may be introduced as a constituent of the metal taking 
part in the operation, making it hard and brittle, and causing 
cracks in the joint or filling; the metal may, in met, become 
very hard and unworkable. The Slavienoff modification of the 
arc-welding process consists in the employment of a metal 
dectrode in place of the carbon rod. The metal electrode 
gradually melts, and furnishes fused drops of metal for the 
filling of vacant spaces in csstings, or for forming a joint between 
two parts or pieces. 

In arc welding, with a current source at practically constant 
potential, a choking resistance .in series with the heating arc is 
needed to secure stability in the arc current, as in electric arc lighting 
from constant potential lines. Little effective work can be done by 
the Bernardos and Olszewski method with currents much below ISO 
amperes in the arc, and the value in some cases ranees above 500 
amperes. The potential must be such that an arc 01 2 to 3 in. in 
length is steadily maintained. This may demand a total of about 
ff^o volts for the arc and the choking resistance together. In the 
Slavienoff arc the potential required will be naturally somewhat 
lower than when a carbon electrode is used, and the current strength 
win be, on the other hand, considerably greater, reaching, it appears, 
in certain cases, more than 4000 amperes. In some recent applica- 
tions of the arc process the polarity of the work-piece and the arc- 
controlling electrode has, it is understood, been reversed, the work 
being made the positive pole and the movable electrode the negative. 
More heat energy is thus delivered to the work for a given total of 
electric energy expended. 



502 



WELDING 



The arc method is essentially a fusing process, though with due 
care it is used for heating to plasticity the edges of iron sheets to be 
welded by pressure and hammering. It has been found applicable 
in special cases to the filling of defective spots in iron castings, by 
fusing into blow-holes or other spaces small masses of similar metal, 
added gradually, and melted into union with the body of the piece 
by the heat of the arc. Similarly, a more or less complete union 
between separate pieces of iron plate I to \ in. in thickness has been ' 
effected by fusing additional metal between them. The range of 
operations to which the arc process is applicable is naturally some- 
what limited, and depends to a large extent upon the skill acquired 
by the operator, who necessarily works with his eyes well screened 
from the glare of the large arc Unless the space in which the work 
is carried on is large, the irritating vapours which rise from the arc 
stream add to the difficulty. Strong draughts of air which would 
disturb the arc must also be avoided. These factors, added to the 
relative slowness of the work and the uncertainty as to its result, 
have tended to restrict the application of arc welding in practice. 
Moreover, much heat-energy is dissipated in the arc flame and 
passes into the air, while, owing to the time required for the work, 
the metal undergoing treatment loses much heat by radiation. Yet 
the method requires little special machinery. The current may be 
taken from existing electric lighting and power circuits of moderate 
potential without transformation, and may be utilized with simple 
appliances, consisting chiefly of heavy wire leads, a carbon or metal 
electrode with a suitable handle for its manipulation, a choking or 
steadying resistance, and screen of dark glass for the operator's 
eyes. 

In 1874 Werdcrmann proposed to use, as a sort of electric blow- 
pipe, the flame gases of an electric arc blown or deflected by an 
air jet or the like — a suggestion subsequently revived by Zcrener for 
arc welding. The arc in this instance is deflected from the space 
between the usual carbon electrodes by a magnetic field. The 
metal to be heated takes no part in the conduction of current, 
the heat is communicated by the gases of the arc, and, to a small 
extent, by the radiation from the hot carbon electrodes between 
which the arc is formed. The process is scarcely to he called electric 
in any true sense. Another curious operation, resembling in some 
respects the arc methods, has been proposed for the heating of metal 
pieces before they are brought under the hammer for forging or 
welding. The end of a metal bar is plunged into an electrolytic bath 
while connected with the negative pole of a lighting or other electric 
circuit having a potential of 100 to 150 volts, The positive pole is 
connected with a metal plate as an anode immersed in the electrolyte, 
or forming the side of the containing vat or tank. A solution of 
■odium or potassium carbonate is a suitable electrolyte. That part 
of the bar which is immersed acts as a cathode of limited surface, 
and is at once seen to be surrounded by a luminous glow, with gas 
bubbles arising from it. The immersed end of the bar rapidly heats, 
and may even melt under the liquid of the bath. It is probable 
that an arc forms between the surface of the metal and the adjacent 
liquid layer, the intense heat of which is in part communicated to 
the metal and in part lost in the solution, causing thereby a rapid 
heating of the bath. This singular action appears to have been first 
made Known by Hobo and Lagrange. It is distinctly a form of 
electric heating, having no necessary relation to such subsequent 
operations as welding, and is, moreover, wasteful of energy, as the 
heat is largely carried off in the liquid bath. 

The process of Elihu Thomson first brought to public notice 
in 1886, has since that time been applied commercially on a 
large scale to various metal-welding operations. The 
metal pieces to be united are held in massive clamps and 
pressed together in firm contact; and a current is 
made to traverse the proposed joint, bringing it to the welding 
temperature. The union is effected by forcing the pieces together 
mechanically. The characteristic feature of the process is the 
fact that the beat is given out in the body of the metal. 

The voltage docs not usually exceed two or three, though it 
may reach four or five volts; but as the resistance of the metal 
pieces to be joined is low, the currents are of very large values, 
sometimes reaching between 50,000 and 100,000 amperes. Even fox 
the joining of small wires the current is rarely less than 100 amperes. 
Such currents cannot, of course, be carried more than a few feet 
without excessive loss, unless the conductors are given very large 
section. With alternating currents, also, the effectiveness of the 
work speedily diminishes, on account of the inductive drop in the 
leads, if they are of any considerable length. The carrying of the 
welding currents over a distance of several feet may, in fact, lead 
to serious losses. These difficulties are overcome in the Thomson 
welding transformer, which resembles the step-down transformers 
used in electric lighting distribution by alternating currents, with 
the exception that tht secondary coil or conductor, which forms part 
of the v^htt jCfamLjgUw Consists of only one turn of great 
section, S SjyU^KzSJAlRP* V*^ 6 j n »* (o £ n L°X a copf"* 
casing, wtHfl ■JLAi JPMWWfc cou P P in whole 

* ~ :3B ^^^^^^^^^^^ BK * aw - 1 - ■*« many turns. The 

^provided with the 




usual laminated iron-transformer core. I, constituting a closed iron 
magnetic circuit threading both primary and secondary electric 
circuits. The terminals of the single-turn secondary serve as con- 
nexions and supports for* the welding clamps C D, which hold the 
work. The clamps are variously modified to suit the size, shape ami 
character of the metal pieces, MN, to be welded, and the proportions 
of the transformer itself are made proper for the conditions existing 
in each case. The potential of the primary circuit may be selected 
at any convenient value, provided the winding of the coil P P is 
adapted thereto, but usually 300 volts is employed, and the periodicity 
is about 60 cycles. Inasmuch as only the proposed joint and a 
small amount of metal on each side of it are concerned in the opera- 
tion, the deliver)* of energy is closely localized. The chief electrical 
resistance in the welding circuit is in the projections between the 
clamps, where the electric energy is delivered and appears as heat. 
A portion of the energy is. as usual, lost in the transformation and 
in the resistance of the circuits elsewhere, but, by proper proportion- 




Fie. 1.— Thomson Welding Transformer. 

ing. the loss may be kept down to a moderate percentage of the total, 
as in other electric work. 

The pieces are set firmly in the welding clamps, with the ends 
to be joined in abutment and in electric contact. The projection of 
each piece from the damp varies with the section of the pieces, their 
form and the nature of the metal, and the time in which a joint is 
to be made; but it rarely exceeds the thickness or diameter of the 
pieces, except with metals of high heat conductivity such as copper. 
When the pieces are in place the current is turned into the primary 
coil of the transformer, sometimes suddenly and in full force, but 
more often gradually. Switches and regulating devices in the 
primary circuit permit complete and delicate control. At least one 
of the clamps, D (fig. l), is movable through a limited range towards 
and from the other, and is thus the means of exerting pressure for 
forcing the softened metal into complete union. In large work the 
motion is given by a hydraulic cylinder and piston, under suitable 

control by valves. At about 

the time the current is cut f^ HT M ^^! 

off, it is usual to apply •■sssssssssssi^sssssssssl 

increased pressure. The 

softened metal is upset or 

pressed outwards at the joint . m 

and forms a characteristic Tj-inrMisgieriiM ii i '"Tiiirfif 

1 _.u:_l. _. 1 1 «^^^^^^^^"^l. 



3< 



burr, which may be removed 
by filing or grinding, or be 
hammered down while the 



3» 



Fig. 2. 



metal is still hot. 'Sometimes the burr is not objectionable, and 
is allowed to remain. Lap welds may be made, but butt welds are 
found to be satisfactory for most purposes. The appearance of 
round bars in abutment before welding is shown in fig. a at A; and 
at B they are represented as having been joined by an electric butt 
weld, with the slight upset or burr at the joint. Before the intro- 
duction of the Thomson process a few only of the metals, such as 
platinum, gold and iron, were regarded as weldablc; now nearly 
all metals and alloys may be readily joined. Such combinations as 
tin and lead, copper and brass, brass and iron, iron and nickel, brass 
and German silver, silver and copper, copper and platinum, iron and 
German silver, tin and zinc, zinc and cadmium, &c, are easily made; 
even brittle crystalline metals like bismuth and antimony may 
be welded, as well as different metals and alloys whose fusing or 
softening temperatures do not differ too widely. 

If the meeting ends conduct sufficiently to start the heating, it is 
not necessary that they should fit closely together, nor is it necessary 
that they should be quite clean, the effect of the incipient heating 
being to confer conductivity upon the scale and oxide at the joint. 



WELL 



la tone ow the application of a flux, such as boi** . * n 

welding to be accomplished at a lower tempcratureTuiJ*^ 
risk oi injury by excessive heating. While the piec***,^*.-" - 1 
the increase of temperature may raise the specific rwbut* ' 
metal so that the current required will be lessened per uitttV "' 
while on the other hand the growing perfection of contact <w!T* 
welding, by increasing the conducting area at the joint, compel!' ' 
for this in that it tends to the increase of current. With 2^ 
alloys like brass and German silver, which have a low temper^',. 
coefficient, this compensating effect is nearly absent. The uicrta^. 
of speonc resistance of the metals with increase of temperature 



down 
ibte 



ft. by March 1857. Its total depth is now about 1933 ft. with the 
diameter of 2 ft. 4 in. at the bottom; and it throws up a -- 
tiniious stream of water at the rate of five and a half mi 



i con* 




Fie. 3.— Automatic Welder. 



has another valuable effect in properly distributing the heating 
over the whole section of the joint. Any* portion which may be for 
the moment at a lower temperature than other portions will neces- 
sarily have a lower relative resistance, and more current will be 
diverted to it. This action rapidly brings any cooler portion into 
equality of temperature with the rest. It also prevents the over- 
heating of the interior portions which are not losing heat by radiation 
and convection. The success of the electric process in welding 
metals which were not formerly regarded as wcldable is probably 
due in a measure to this cause, and also to the case of control of the 
operation, for the operator may work within far narrower limits 
of plasticity and fusibility than with the forge fire or blowpipe. 
The mechanical pressure may be automatically applied and the 
current automatically cut off after the completion of the weld. In 
some more recent types of welders the clamping and releasing of the 
pieces are also accomplished automatically, and nothing 'is left for 
the operator to do but to feed the pieces into the clamps. Repetition* 
work is thus rapidly and accurately done. The automatic welder 
represented in fig. 3 has a capacity of nearly 1000 welds per day. 
The pressure required is subject to considerable variation: the more 
rigid the material at the welding temperature, the greater is the 
accessary pressure. With copper the force may be about 600 pounds 
per square inch of section; with wrought iron, 1200 pounds; and 
with steel, 1800 pounds. It is customary to begin the operation with 
a much lighter pressure than that used when all parts of the pieces 
at the joint have come into contact. The pressure exerted in com- 
pleting the weld has the effect of extruding from the joint all dross 
and slag, together with most of the metal which is rendered plastic 
by the neat. The strongest electric welds are those effected by this 
extrusion from the joint, in consequence of heavy pressure quickly 
applied at the time of completion of the weld. The unhammered 
weld, as ordinarily made by the electric process, has substantially 
the same strength as the annealed metal of the bar, the break 
under tensile strain, when the burr at the weld is left on, usually 
occurring a little to one side of the joint proper, where the metal 
has been annealed by heating. Hammering or forging the joint while 
the metal cools, in the case of malleable metals such as iron or copper, 
will usually greatly toughen the metal, and it should be resorted to 
where a maximum of strength is desired. The same object is 
partially effected by placing the weld, while still hot. between dies 
pressed forcibly together so as to give to the weld some desired form, 
as in drop-forging. 

The amount of electric energy necessary for welding by the 
Thomson process varies with the different metals, their electric 
conductivity, their beat conductivity, fusibility, the shape of the 
pieces, section at the joint. &c In the following table are given 
some results obtained in the working of iron, brass and copper. 
The figures are of course only approximate, and refer to one condition 
alone of time-consumption in the making of each weld The more 
rapidly the work is done, the less, as a rule, is the total energy 
required; but the rate of output of the plant must be increased with 
increase of speed, and this, involves a larger plant, the consequent 
expense of which is often disadvantageous. If in the following 



505 

»v» tvuii ucpxn is now arjout 1933 It. si 
■ in. at the bottom; and it throws up 

-™- «~„ „. water at the rate of five and a haU million 

gallons per day to a height of 54 ft. above the ground. " uu » 

Among other deep wclU sunk in the Paris basin subsequently to 

those of Crenelle and Passy, the following may be mooned. A 

igantic bore. 5 ft. 7»n. tn diameter, was begun in January 1866 at 

ChapeUe. and by November 1869 had reached a dep^oliSufu 

intention bang to extend it to a depth of 2950 it, A bore of 

diameter was earned down to a depth of 1570 ft. in about 

I a half years (1864-1867), for thj purpose of obtaining a 

.phr for the sugar refinery of Say in Paris! and the same 

ho executed this work (Dru) Began in 1866 an artesian 

huge dieter of 6| ft. atlJEe part of Pari. naVned 

es, to be earned down to a depth of 2600 to 3900 ft. 

in there are a great many other wells, varying from 

depth, and from 2 to 8 in. in the diameter of the 

__ ' strata over which London stands have been 

boruigs for the sake of pure water supply. 

nd on factories, railways, institutions are 

over 300 ft. deep. At Mcnon in Surrey. 

1 , all along the east coast of Lincolnshire, 

n the chalk wolds near Louth and the 

n 5 ° ccn ,. klK » w n, and go by the name 

f the district. The general level to 

»n district has been very sensibly 

•f perforations that have been 

e water formerly rose to the 

the depths 

. „ average depth of 

sue tunes that of the 

-nany and of America, 

•I the Parisian webe 

cveral wells more 

Dupage county, 

ouis, Missouri, 

w gallons of 

stopped in 

orld are; 

6004 ft. 

water 



f ind a 




In practice, joints in solid bars or in wires are the most conT 
but the process is applicable to pieces of quite varied form i™ "* 
in iron, brass, or lead pipe are readily made; strips of sheet mil 1 ! 
are joined, as in band saws; bars or tubes are joined at varfoui 
angles ; sheet metal is joined to bars, &c One of the more interesting 
of the recent applications of electric welding is the longitudinal 
seaming of thin steel pipe. The metal or skelp is in long strips, bent 
to form a hollow cylinder or pipe, and the longitudinal scam moves 
through a special welder, which passes a current across it. The 
work is completed by drawing the pipe through dies. The welding 
of a ring formed by bending a short bar into a circle affords an 
excellent illustration of the character of the currents employed in 
the Thomson process. Notwithstanding the comparatively free 
path around the ring through the full section of the bent bar, the 
current heats the abutted ends to the welding temperature. In 
this way waggon and carriage wheel tyres, harness nngs, pail and 
barrel hoops, and similar objects are extensively produced. The 
process is also largely applied to the welding of iron and copper 
wires used for electric lines and conductors. of steel axles, tyres and 
metal frames used in carriage work, and of such parts of bicycles as 
pedals, crank hangers, seat posts, forks, and steel tubing for the 
frames. The heat, whether it be utilized in welding or brazing, is so 
sharply localized that no damage is done to the finish of surfaces a 
short distance from the weld or joint. Parts can be accurately formed 
and finished before being joined, as in the welding of taper shanks to 
drills, the lengthening of drills, screw taps, or augers, and the like. 
Electric welding is applicable to forms 01 pieces or to conditions of 
work which would be impracticable with the ordinary forge fire or 
gas blowpipe. A characteristic instance is the wire bands which hold 
in place the solid rubber tyres of vehicles. The proximity of the 
rubber forbids the application of the heat of a fire or blowpipe, but 
by springing the rubber back from the proposed joint and seizing 
the ends of wire by the electric welding clamps, the union is rapidly 
and easily made. When the rubber of the tyre is released, it covers 



5°4 



WELDON— WELL 



the joint, regaining It* complete form. Special manufacture* have 
in tome cases arisen based upon the use of electric welding. 

The welding clamps, and the mechanical devices connected with 
them, vary widely in accordance with the work they have to do. A 
machine for forming metal wheels is so constructed that the hubs are 
made in two sections, which when brought together in the welder 
are caused to embrace the radiating iron or steelspokes of the wheel. 
The two sections are then welded, and hold the spokes in solid union 
with themselves. Another machine, designed for the manufacture 
of wire fences, makes several welds automatically and simultaneously 
Galvanised iron wires are fed into the machine from reels in several 
parallel lines about a foot apart, and at intervals are crossed at 
right angles by wire sections cut automatically from another reel 
of wire. As the wire passes, electric welds are formed between the 
transverse and the parallel lines. The machine delivers a continuous 
web of wire fencing, which is wound upon a drum and removed from 
time to time in large rolls. In the United States, street railway 
rails are welded into a continuous metal structure. A huge welding 
transformer is suspended upon a crane, which is borne upon a car 
arranged to run upon the track as it is laid. The joint be t ween the 
ends of two contiguous rails is made by welding lateral strap pieces, 



covering the joint at each side and taking the place of the ordinary 
fish-plates and bolts. The exertion* of a greatly increased pressure 
at the finish of the welding seems to be decidedly favourable to the 



permanence and strength of the joints. When properly made, the 
joint is strong enough to resist the strains of extension and com- 
pression during temperature changes. For electric railways the 
welded joint obviates all necessity for " bonding " the rails together 
with copper wires to convert them into continuous lines of return 
conductors for the railway current. In railway welding the source 
of energy is usually a current delivered from the trolley line itself to 

• rotary converter mounted on the welding car, whereby an alter- 
nating current is obtained for feeding the primary circuit of the weld- 
ing transformer. Power from a distant station is thus made to 
produce the heat required for track welding, and at exactly the place 
where it is to be utilised. In this instance the work is stationary 
while the welding apparatus is moved from one joint to the next. 
Welding transformers are sometimes used to heat metal for annealing, 
for forging, bending, or shaping, for tempering, or for hard soldering. 
Under special conditions they are well adapted to these purposes, 
on account of the perfect control of the heating or energy deliver)', 
and the rapidity and cleanliness of the operation. 

Divested of its welding damps, the welding transformer has 
found a unique application in the armour-annealing process cf 
Lemp. by means of which spots or lines are locally annealed 
in hard-faced ship's armour, so that it can be drilled or 
cut as desired. Before the introduction of this process, 
it was practically impossible to render any portion of the 
hardened face of such armour workable by cutting tools without 
detriment to the hardness of the rest. A very heavy electric current 
is passed through the spot or area which it is desired to soften, so 
that, notwithstanding the rapid conduction of heat into the body 
of the plate, the metal is brought to a low red heat. In order that 
the spot shall not reharden, it is requisite that the rate of cooling 
shall be slower than when the heating current is cut off suddenly, 
the current therefore undergoes gradual diminution, under control 
of the operator. The welding transformer has for its secondary 
terminals simply two copper blocks fixed inposition, and mounted 
at a distance of an inch or more apart. These arc placed firmly 
against the face of the armour plate, with the spot to be annealed 
bridring the contacts, or situated between them. As in track 
welding, the transformer is made movable, so that it can be brought 
into any position desired. When the annealing is to be done along 

• line, the secondary terminals, with the transformer, arc slowly 
and steadily slid over the face of the plate, new portions of the plate 
being thus continually brought between the terminals, while those 
which had reached the proper heat are slowly removed from the 
terminals and cool gradually. (E. T.) — 

WELDON, WALTER (1832-1885). English technical chemist, 
was born at Loughborough on the 31st of October 1839. In 
1854 he began to work as a journalist in London in connexion 
with the Dial, which was afterwards incorporated in the Morning 
Star, and in i860 he started a monthly magazine, Weldon 1 s 
Register of Facts and Occurrences relating to Literature, Ike 
Sciences and the Arts, which was discontinued after about three 
years' existence. Though he was without practical knowledge 
of the science, Weldon turned to industrial chemistry, and in the 
course of a few years took out the patents which led to his 
" manganese-regeneration " process (see Chlorine). This was 
put into operation about i860, and by 1875 it was being used 
by almost every ctnfettae a*s)jnsfoctunr of importance throughout 
Europe. He ^ffff^Ut^U^Jf .ff****" 1 of ch,orinc 

t of his later 




which was established on a co mm er cia l scale only a year or two 
before bis death — met with equal success. He died at Burstow, 
Surrey, on the 20th of September 1885. He professed Sweden- 
borgian principles and was a believer in spiritualism. 

His son, Walter Frank Raphael Weldon (1860-1006), was 
appointed in 1809 Linacre professor of comparative anatomy 
at Oxford. 

WELF or GUELPH, a princely family of Germany, descended 
from Count Warm of Altorf (8th century), whose son Isenbrand 
is said to have named his family Welfen, ix. whelps. From his 
son Welf I. (d. 824) were descended the kings of Upper Burgundy 
and the elder German line of Welf. Welf 111. (d. 1055) obtained 
the duchy of Carinthia and the March of Verona. With him 
the elder line became extinct, but his grandson in the female 
line, Welf IV. (as duke, Welf 1.), founded the younger line, and 
became duke of Bavaria in 1070. Henry the Black (d. 1 1 >6), by 
his marriage with a daughter of Magnus, duke of Saxony, ob- 
tained half of the latter's hereditary possessions, including 
LQncburg, and his son Henry the Proud (q.v.) inherited by 
marriage the emperor Lothair's lands in Brunswick, &c, and 
received the duchy of Saxony. The power which the family 
thus acquired, and the consequent rivalry with the house of 
Hohenstaufen, occasioned the strife of Guelphs and GhibeUines 
(q.v.) in Italy. Henry the Lion lost the duchies of Bavaria and 
Saxony by his rebellion in 11 80, and Welf VI. (d. 1101) left his 
hereditary lands in Swabia and his Italian possessions to the 
emperor Henry VI. Thus, although one of the Wells reigned as 
the emperor Otto IV., there remained to the family nothing but 
the lands inherited from the emperor Lothair, which were made 
into the duchy of Brunswick in 1235. Of the many branches 
of the house of Brunswick that of Wolfenbullel became extinct 
in 1884, and that of Luneburg received the electoral dignity of 
Hanover in 1602, and founded the Hanoverian dynasty of 
Great Britain and Ireland in 1714. For its further history see 
Hanover. The Hanoverian legitimists in the German Reichs- 
tag are known as Welfen. 

Sec Sir A. Hallidav. History of the House of Gudph (1811); R. D. 
Lloyd. Origin of the Guelphs ; F. Schmidt. Die A nfunge des wetfiscken 
GesekUekts (Hanover, 1000). 

WELHAVEM, JOHANM SEBASTIAN CAaTWERMEYER (1807- 
1873). Norwegian poet and critic, was born at Bergen, the son 
of a pastor, in 1807. He first studied theology, but from 1828 
onwards devoted himself to literature. In 1840 he became 
reader and subsequently professor of philosophy at Christiania, 
and delivered a series of impressive lectures on literary subjects. 
In 1836 he visited France and Germany; and in 1858 be went 
to Italy to study archaeology. His influence was extended by 
his appointment as director of the Society of Arts. He died at 
Christiania on the 21st of October 1873. Welhaven made his 
name as the representative of conservatism in Norwegian litera- 
ture. In a violent attack on Wergeland's poetry he opposed 
the theories of the extreme nationalists. He desired to see 
Norwegian culture brought into line with that of other European 
countries, and he himself followed the romantic tradition, being. 
most closely influenced by J. L. Hdberg. He represented clear- 
ness and moderation against the extravagances of Wergeland. 
He gave an admirable practical exposition of his aesthetic creed 
in the sonnet cycle Norges Daemring (1834). He published 
a volume of Digte in 1839; and in 1845 Nyere Digit. The collec- 
tions of old Norse poetry made by Asbjdrnsen and Moe influenced 
his talent, and he first showed his full powers as a poet in Nytre 
Digte. His descriptive poetry is admirable, but his best work 
was inspired by his poems on old Norse subjects, in which be 
gives himself unreservedly to patriotic enthusiasm. Other poems 
followed in 1848, 185 1 and 1859. 

Hb critical work includes Ewald 09 de norshe Digtere (1863). On 
LuduntHolbtrt(iS^). Welhaven's Samlede Skrifter were published 
in 8 vols, at Copenhagen (1867-1869). 

WELL, the name given to an artificial boring In the earth 
through which water can be obtained. Two classes may be 
distinguished: shallow or ordinary wells, sunk through a per- 
meable stratum until an impermeable stratum is reached; and 
deep and Artesian wells (q.v.), the. fatter named from Artels 



WELL 



to Ftance, wbfch are sunk through an impermeable stratum down 
into a water-bearing stratum which overlies an impermeable 
stratum. Obviou&lyordtaaiywellscan supply water very cheaply, 
bat, since impurities readily reach them, there is great risk of 
contamination. The same does not apply to deep wells, such 
water being usually free from organic impurities. In ordinary 
weus, and hi deep wells, the water requires pumping to the sur- 
face; in artesian wells, on the other hand, the water usually 
spouts up to a greater or less height above it. 

The Secondary and Tertiary geological formations, such as those 
underneath London and Pans, often present the appearance of 
immense basins, the boundary or rim of the basin having Seen formed 
by an upheaval of the subjacent strata. In these formations it often 
happens that a porous stratum is included between two impermeable 
layers of clay, so as to form a flat porous U tube, continuous from 
side to side of the valley, the outcrop on the surrounding hills 
forming the mouth of the tube. The rain filtering down through the 
porous layer to the bottom of the basin forms there a subterranean 
pool, which with the liquid or semi-liquid column pressing upon it 
constitutes a sort of hujje natural hydrostatic bellows. It is obvious 
then, that when a bole is bored down through the upper impermeable 
layer to the surface of the lake, the water will be forced up by this 
pressure to a height above the surface of the valley greater or less 
according to the elevation of the level in the feeding column, thus 
forming a natural fountain. 

In the Tertiary formations, the porous layers are not so thick as 
in the Secondary, and consequently the occurrence of underground 
lakes is not on so grand a scale; but there being a more frequent 
alternation of these sandy beds, we find a greater number of them, 
and often a series of natural fountains may be obtained in the same 
valley, proceeding from water-bearing strata at difierent depths, and 
rising to different heights. 

It does not follow that all the essentials for an artesian well arc 
present, though two impermeable strata with a porous one between 
may crop out round a basin. There must also be continuity of the 
permeable bed for the uninterrupted passage of the water, and no 
breach in either of the confining layers by which the water might 
escape. It has occasionally happened that on deepening the bore, 
with the hope of increasing the flow of water, it has ceased alto- 
gether, doubtless from the lower confining layer being pierced, and 
the water allowed to escape by another outlet. The subterranean 
pool is frequently of small extent, and of the nature of a channel 
rather than of a broad sheet of water; and the existence of one 
spring is no guarantee that another will be found by merely boring 
to the same depth in its neighbourhood. Faults also have an effect 
on the supply, which in many cases has been found to increase by 
cutting headings or adits. The most suitable strata in England are 
the Chalk, Oolite, New Red Sandstone and Lower Greensand; 
London is in part supplied by the' Chalk, whilst Liverpool utilizes 
the New Red. The theoretical determination of the existence of 
artesian conditions can be arrived at only by a thorough acquaint- 
ance with the geology of the district. Although water from deep 
wells is free from organic matter, it usually contains salts such as 
calcium bicarbonate, &c, which make the water unsuitable for wash- 
ing and certain manufacturing purposes although it is fit for drinking. 

The mechanical appliances employed in boring for water are 
practically the same as in boring for petroleum (?.*.). The 
upper part of a deep well may be of brick, the continuation 
being lined with steel pipes, or, better, it may be lined with metal 
for its entire length. 

One of the most remarkable artesian wells is at Crenelle, near 
Paris. The operation of boring extended from 1834 to 1841 ; after a 
depth of 1254 ft. had been reached (May 1837), a length of 370 ft. 
of the boring rods broke and fell to the bottom of the hole, and 
nearly fifteen months' constant labour was required to pick k up 
again. Discouraged by the delay, the French government was to 
have abandoned the project after a depth of 1500 it. had been reached 
without any satisfactory result; but Arago prevailed on them to 
prosecute the work, and an additional depth 01 about 300 ft. proved 
the correctness of Arago's theory. On the 26th February 1841, at 
a depth of 1798 ft., the boring rods suddenly sank a few yards, and 
within a few hours a vast column of water spouted up at the rate of 
600 gallons per minute, and at a t em perature of nearly 83* F. 
Prior to this no artesian boring had reached even 1000 ft.; and that 
of GreneUe was the deepest executed till the completion ( 1 2th August 
1850) of the salt-spring at Kissingen, in Bavaria, which throws up a 
column of water to the height of 58 ft. from a depth of 18781 ft. 
The most remarkable feature of this spring is that the projecting 
force is due, not to hydrostatic pressure, but to that of carbonic acid 
gas generated at the junction of the gypsum with the magnesian 
IWstone, about 1680 ft. down. Modern mechanical improvements 
have enabled engineers to exceed these Artesian dimensions con- 
siderably, and at a greatly diminished cost. The well at Passy. near 
Paris, which is supplied from the same water-bearing stratum as 
that of GreneUe, was bored by Kind in a very short time, having 
bees begiin on ista September 1855. and earned to a depth of 173? 



5°5 



ft. by March 1857. Its total depth is now about 1023 ft. with the 
diameter of 2 ft. 4 in. at the bottom; and it throws up a con- 
tinuous stream of water at the rate of five and a half mili um 
gallons per day to a height of 54 ft. above the ground. 

Among other deep wells sunk in the Paris basin subsequently to 
those of Crenelle and Passy, the following may be mentioned. A 
gigantic bore, 5 ft. 7 in. in diameter, was begun in January 1866 at 
La ChapeUe, and by November 1869 had reached a depth of 181 1 ft., 
the intention being to extend it to a depth of 2950 ft. A bore of 
19 in. diameter was carried down to a depth of 1570 ft. in about 
two and a half years (1864-1867), for the purpose of obtaining a 
water-supply for the sugar refinery of Say in Paris; and the same 
engineer who executed this work (Dru) began in 1866 an artesian 
boring of the huge diameter of 6| ft. at the part of Paris named 
Butte aux CailUs, to be carried down to a depth of 2600 to 2900 ft. 
In the Paris basin there are a great many other wells, varying from 
gjoto 400 ft. in depth, and from 2 to 8 in. in the diameter of the 

• 7i he . Te f t . iar y d** ftrau over which London stands have been 
riddled with artesian borings for the sake of pure water supply. 
Many of the large London factories, railways, institutions are 
supplied by artesian wells over 300 ft. deep. At Merton in Surrey, 
at Brighton, at Southampton, all along the east coast of Lincolnshire, 
and in the low district between the chalk wolds near Louth and the 
Wash, artesian borings have long been known, and go by the name 
of blow-wells among the people of the district. The general level to 
which the water rises in the London district has been very sensibly 
lowered by the immense number of perforations that have been 
made; and in several wells where the water formerly rose to the 
surface, it now requires to be pumped up. 

None of the artesian borings in England approach the depths 
frequent on the Continent and in America. The average depth of 
the water-bearing stratum around Paris is six times that of the 
London chalk beds; and in some parts of Germany and of America, 
wells have been sunk to even double the depth of the Parisian wells 
of Crenelle and Passy. In Chicago there are several wells more 
than 2000 ft. deep; and at West Chicago in Dupage county, 
Illinois, there is one 3081 ft. deep. In the city of St Louis, Missouri, 
there is an artesian well 3" * " 
salty water (temperature, ] 

September 1868. Among . , 

a well in Putnam Heights, Windham county, "Connecticut, 6004ft! 
deep and 6 in. in diameter, yielding 2 gallons per minute with water 



5120 ft. deep and 6 in. in diameter, yielding gas, oil and salt water; 
and one (about 4200 ft.) at Sperenberg 20 m. from Berlin, sunk 
for the purpose of obtaining a supply of rock salt,'— the salt deposit 
here is 3907 ft. thick. 

The following are some of the other most important artesian 
sinkings that have been made. At Louisville, Kentucky, a bore of 
3 in. was carried to a depth of 2086 ft. between April 1857 and the 
summer of 1858; it yields 264 gallons a minute and its fountain 
rises 170 ft, high. At Charleston, South Carolina, there are: one 
well 2050 ft. deep and 4 in. in diameter, yielding 450 gallons a 
minute; another 194s ft. deep and 5 in. in diameter, yielding 695 
gallons a minute; and three more each exceeding 1900 ft. in depth. 
In 1858 a well at Neusalwerlcnear Minden, had reached the depth 
of 2288 ft. At Bourne, Lincolnshire, there is a well 95 ft. deep, which 
yields over half a million gallons of water per day, the pressure being 
sufficient to supply the town and force the water to the tops of the 
highest houses. There is one in Philadelphia (Mount Vernon and 
13th sts»), 3031 ft- deep and 8 in. in diameter, yielding 2600 gallons a 
minute. There are several deep wells in South Dakota : in Aberdeen 
City there arc two 1300 ft. deep with flows of 1350 and 1000 gallons, 
respectively, per minute. Two artesian wells at Croydon supply a 
million gallons of water per day; and Brighton draws over a million 
gallons from artesian sinkings. There is a well at Bages, near 
Perpignan, which gives 330 gallons per minute; and one at Tours, 
which jets about 6 ft. above ground, and gives 237 gallons per minute. 

The boring of wells in the great desert of Sahara is a very ancient 
industry; and some oases are supplied with water wholly from 
artesian wells. The average depth of these is from 160 to 200 ft., 
and the upper strata have only to be pierced to give a constant 
stream. With their primitive methods of boring, the Arabs often 
labour for years before they reach the wished-for pool; and with 
only palm wood as a casing, they have great difficulty in keeping 
the bore-hole from dosing up by the drifting of the sand, and they 
require to scour them out periodically. Since 1858 an immense 
number of perforations have been made by French engineers, and 
the fertilising effect upon the sandy desert plains has already made 
itself apparent. The importance of deep wells in such cases cannot 
be over-estimated. 

Artesian wells have been made to supply warm water, for keeping' 
hospitals, &c, st a constant temperature. Invariably the tempera- 
ture of water from great depths is higher than that at the surface. 1 
The temperature of the water in the well at GreneUe is 82* F., and 
that of Passy the same, showing that th<*y have a common source.' 
Kkstnyen well has a temperature of 66* F., that of St Louk 



506 



WELLES— WELLESLEY, MARQUESS 



one of 7^-4 F. that of Louisville 761* F., and that of Charleston 
87* F. The average rate of increase of temperature is i* for a 
descent of from 40 to 55 ft. In VVurtlemberg the water of artesian 
wells is employed to maintain in large manufactories a constant 
temperature of 47° when it is freezing outside. Artesian waters 
have also been employed to reduce the extreme variations of 
temperature in f sh-porids. 

WELLES, GIDEON (1802-1878), American political leader, 
was born at Glastonbury, Connecticut, on the 1st of July 1802. 
He studied for a time at Norwich University, Vermont, but did 
not graduate. From 1826 to 1837 he edited the Hartford Times, 
making it the official organ of the Jacksonian Democracy in south- 
ern New England. He served in the state House of Representatives 
in 1827, 1820-30, 1832 and 1834-35, was state comptroller in 1835 
and 1842-43, was postmaster at Hartford in 1835-42, and was 
chief of the bureau of provisions and clothing in the Navy Depart- 
ment at Washington in 1846-1849. Leaving the Democratic 
party on the Kansas-Nebraska issue, he assisted in the formation 
of the Republican party in Connecticut, and was its candidate for 
governor in 1856; he was a delegate to the Republican national 
conventions of 1856 and i860. On the inauguration of President 
Lincoln in 186 1 he was appointed secretary of the navy, a position 
which he held until the close of President Andrew Johnson's 
administration in i860. Although deficient in technical training, 
be handled with great skill the difficult problems which were 
presented by the Civil War. The number of naval ships was 
increased between 1861 and 1865 from 90 to 670, the officers 
from 1300 to 6700, the seamen from 7500 to 51,500, and the 
annual expenditure from $12,000,000 to $123,000,000; important 
changes were made in the art of naval construction, and the 
blockade of the Confederate ports was effectively maintained. 
Welles supported President Johnson in his quarrel with Congress, 
took part in the Liberal Republican movement of 1872, and 
returning to the Democratic party, warmly advocated the 
election of Samuel J. Tilden in 1876. He died at Hartford, 
Connecticut, on the nth of February 1878. 

In 1874 Welles published Lincoln and Seward, in which he refutes 
the charge that Seward dominated the Administration during the 
Civil War. His Diary, which appeared in the Atlantic Monthly 
(1909-1911), is extremely valuable for the study of the Civil War 
*nd Reconstruction. See also Albert Welles, History of the Welles 
Family (New York, 1876). 

WELLESLEY, RICHARD COLLEY WESLEY (or Wellesley), 
Marquess (1760-1842), eldest son of the zst earl of Mornington, 
an Irish peer, and brother of the famous duke of Wellington, 
was born on the 20th of June 1760. He was sent to Eton, 
where he was distinguished as a classical scholar, and to Christ 
Church, Oxford. By his father's death in 1781 he became earl 
of Mornington, taking his seat in the Irish House of Peers. In 
1784 he entered the English House of Commons as member for 
Beeralston. Soon afterwards he was appointed a lord of the 
treasury by Pitt. In 1793 he became a member of the board 
of control over Indian affairs; and, although he was best 
known by his speeches in defonce of Pitt's foreign policy, he 
was gaining the acquaintance with Oriental affairs which made 
his rule over India so effective from the moment when, in 1797, 
he accepted the office of governor-general. Wellesley seems to 
have caught Pitt's large political spirit during his intercourse 
with him from 1793 to 1797. That both had consciously formed 
the design of acquiring a great empire in India to compensate for 
the loss of the American colonies is not proved; but the rivalry 
with France, which in Europe placed England at the head of 
coalition after coalition against the French republic and empire, 
made Wellesley's rule in India an epoch of enormous and rapid 
extension of English power. Clive won and Warren Hastings 
consolidated the British ascendancy in India, but Wellesley 
extended it into an empire. On the voyage outwards he formed 
the design of annihilating French influence in the Deccan. Soon 
after his landing, in April 1798, he learnt that an alliance was 
being negotiated between Tippoo Sultan and the French republic. 
Wellesley resolved to anticipate the action of the enemy, and 
ordered preparations for war. The first step was to effect the 
disbandment of the French troops entertained by the Nizam 
of Hyderabad. The invasion of Mysore followed in February 



1799, and the campaign was brought to a rapid close by the 
capture of SeringapaUm. In 1803 the restoration of the peshwa 
proved the prelude to the Mahratta war against Sindhia and the 
raja of Berar. The result of these wars and of the treaties 
which followed them was that French influence in India was 
extinguished, that forty millions of population and ten millions 
of revenue were added to the British dominions, and that the 
powers of the Mahratta and all other princes were so reduced that 
England became the really dominant authority over all India. 
He found the East India Company a trading body, he left it 
an imperial power. He was an excellent administrator, and sought 
to provide, by the foundation of the college of Fort William, 
for the training of a class of men adequate to the great work of 
governing India. In connexion with this college he established 
the governor-general's office, to which civilians who had shown 
talent at the college were transferred, in order that they 
might learn something of the highest statesmanship in the 
immediate service of their chief. A free-trader, like Pitt, he 
endeavoured to remove some of the restrictions on the trade 
between England and India. Both the commercial policy of 
Wellesley and his educational projects brought him into hostility 
with the court of directors, and he more than once tendered his 
resignation, which, however, public necessities led him to post- 
pone till the autumn of 1805. He reached England just in time 
to see Pitt before his death. He had been created an English 
peer in 1797, and in 1799 an Irish marquess. 

On the fall of the coalition ministry in 1807 Wellesley was 
invited by George III. to join the duke of Portland's cabinet, 
but he declined, pending the discussion in parliament of certain 
charges brought against him in respect of his Indian administra- 
tion. Resolutions condemning him for the abuse of power 
were moved in both the Lords and Commons, but defeated by 
large majorities. In 1809 Wellesley was appointed ambassador 
to Spain. He landed at Cadiz just after the battle of Talavcra, 
and endeavoured, but without success, to bring the Spanish 
government into effective co-operation with his brother, who, 
through the failure of his allies, had been compelled to retreat 
into Portugal. A few months later, after the duel between 
Canning and Castlereagh and the resignation of both, Wellesley 
accepted the post of foreign secretary in Perceval's cabinet. 
He held this office until February 1812, when he retired, partly 
from dissatisfaction at the inadequate support given to Wellington 
by the ministry, but also because he had become convinced that 
the question of Catholic emancipation could no longer be kept 
in the background. From early life Wellesley had, unlike his 
brother, been an advocate of Catholic emancipation, and with 
the claim of the Irish Catholics to justice he henceforward 
identified himself. On Perceval's assassination he refused to 
join Lord Liverpool's administration, and he remained out of 
office till 1821, criticizing with severity the proceedings of the 
congress of Vienna and the European settlement of 1814, which, 
while it reduced France to its ancient limits, left to the other great 
powers the territory that they had acquired by the partition of 
Poland and the destruction of Venice. He was one of the peers 
who signed the protest against the enactment of the Corn 
Laws in 1815. In 182 x he was appointed lord-lieutenant of 
Ireland. Catholic emancipation had now become an open 
question in the cabinet, and Wellesley's acceptance of the vice* 
royalty was believed in Ireland to herald the immediate settle- 
ment of the Catholic claims. The Orange faction was incensed 
by the firmness with which their excesses were now repressed, 
and Wellesley was on one occasion mobbed and insulted. But 
the hope of the Catholics still remained unfulfilled. Lord 
Liverpool died without having grappled with the problem. 
Canning in turn passed away; and on the assumption of office 
by Wellington, who was opposed to Catholic emancipation, bis 
brother resigned the lord-lieutenancy. He had, however, the 
satisfaction of seeing the Catholic claims settled in the next year 
by the very statesmen who had declared against them. In 1833 
he resumed the office of lord-lieutenant under Earl Grey, but 
the ministry soon fell, and, with one short exception, Wellesley 
did not further take part in official life. He died on the 



WELLESLEY— WELLINGTON, ist DUKE OF 



*6th of September 1842. He had no successor in the marquisate, 
but the earldom of Mornington and minor honours devolved on 
his brother William, Lord Maryborough, on the failure of whose 
issue in 1863 they fell to the snd duke of Wellington. 

See Montgomery Martin, Despatches of the Marquess Wellesley 
(1840); W. M. Torrens. The Marauds Wellesley (1880); W. H. 
Hutton, Lord Wellesley (" Rulers of India " series, 1893); and G. B. 
Malleson. Wellesley (''Statesmen " series, 1895). 

WELLESLEY, a township of Norfolk county, Massachusetts, 

U.S.A., 14 m. S.W. of Boston. Pop. (1890) 3600, (1900) 507a, 

of whom 1306 were foreign-born and 17 were negroes, (1910 

census) 5413. Area, 10-4 sq. m. Welleslcy is served by 

the Boston 8c Albany railway, and is connected with Natick 

(3 m. W.), Newton, Needham, Boston and Worcester by electric 

fines. The north-eastern boundary of the township is the Charles 

river, which divides it from the city of Newton. The surface 

of the township is billy and abundantly wooded, with many 

small streams and lakes; the two principal villages are Wellcsley 

Hills and Wellcsley, and smaller villages are Welleslcy Falls, 

Wellesley Farms and Wellesley Fells. The highest point is 

MaugusHill (416ft.), neat Wellesley Hills village. In the northern 

part of Wellesley and extending into Weston is a large forest 

tract known as "The Hundreds." Within the township are 

parts of two of the reservations of the Metropolitan Park system, 

66-07 acres of the Charles river reservation, and 4*58 acres of 

Hemlock Gorge. Hunnewell Park is the former home of Dr 

W. T. G. Morton, who discovered the anaesthetic properties of 

sulphuric ether. West of Wellesley village, among the hills, lie 

Morses Fond and Lake Waban, on which are beautiful Italian 

gardens and (on the north side) the buildings and extensive 

grounds (350 acres) .of Wellesley College (undenominational, 

1875) for women, which was established by Henry Towle Durant 

(1822-1881), a prominent Boston lawyer. In 19x0 the college 

bad 130 instructors and 1319 students. The library (65,200 

volumes in 19x0) was endowed by Eben N. Horsford, the chemist 

and ethnologist; it contains a library, of American linguistics 

collected by Major J. W. Powell and Mr Horsford, and the 

Frances Pearson Plimpton library of early Italian literature. 

There are about 30 buildings, of which twelve are residential 

hails or cottages. Instruction is in classical, literary and scientific 

branches, and the degrees of A.B. and A.M. are awarded 

Wellesley was settled about 1640, being then within the limits 
of Dedham. When the township of Needham was set off from 
Dedham in 1711, Wellcsley was included within the new territory, 
and in 1774 was organized as the west parish of Needham or 
West Needham. In x88z it was ipcorporated under its present 



See J. E. Fiske in D. H. Kurd's History of Norfolk County (Boston, 
I884). 

WELLHAUSSH, JULIUS (1844- ), German biblical scholar 
snid Orientalist, was born at Hameln on the Wescr, Westphalia, 
on the 17th of May 1844. Having studied theology at the 
university of Gdttingen under Heinrich Ewald, he established 
himself there in 1870 as privat-doccnt for Old Testament history. 
In 1872 he was appointed professor ordinarius of theology in 
Grcifswald. Resigning in 1882 owing to conscientious scruples, 
be became professor extraordinarius of oriental languages in the 
faculty of philology at Halle, was elected professor ordinarius 
at Marburg in 1885, and was transferred to Gottingen in 1892. 
Wcllhausen made his name famous by his critical investigations 
into Old Testament history and the composition of the Hexateuch, , 
the uncompromising scientific attitude be adopted in testing its 
problems bringing him into antagonism with the older school of 
biblical interpreters. The best known of bis works are De 
gentibus 4$ familiis Judacis (Gdttingen, 2870); Der Text der 
Bicker Samuelis untersuchl (Gdttingen, 1872); Die Pharisder 
und Sadducaer (Grcifswald, 1874); Prolegomena tur Ceschichle 
Israels (Berlin, 1882; Eng. trans., 1885; 5th German edition, 
1899; first published in 1878 as Geschiekte Israels)', Mvhammed 
ft* Medina (Berlin, 1882); Die Komposition des Hexateucks und 
iter Hstariscken Backer des Alien Testaments (1889, 3rd ed. 1809); 
IsraeUUscke und jMdische Geschiekte (1804, 4th ed. 1901); 
Safe arojoischen Heidentums (1897); Das arabiscke Rack und 



5°7 

son Stun (190a); Skiaen und Vororbeiten (1884-1809); and 
new and revised editions of F. Bleck's Einleitung in das AUe 
Testament (4-6, 1878-1893). In 1906 appeared Die christiiche 
Religion, mil Einsckluss der israditisch-judischen Religion, in col- 
laboration with A. JOlicher, A. Harnack and others. He also 
did useful and interesting work as a New Testament commentator. 
He published Das Eoangelium Marei, Ubersetst und erkl&rt in 
1003, Das Eoangelium Mattkat and Das Evangdium Lucae in 
1904, and Binleitunj in die drti ersten Eoongelienm 1005. 

WELLINGBOROUGH, a market town in the eastern parlia- 
mentary division of Northamptonshire, England, 63} m. N.N.W. 
from London by the Midland railway; served also by the London 
ft North-Western railway. Pop. of urban district (1901 ), i8^x a. 
It lies on the declivity of a hill near the junction of the Ise with 
the Nene, in a pleasant well-wooded district. The church of St 
Luke is a beautiful building with Norman and Early English 
portions, but is mainly Decorated, with a western tower and 
spire. The grammar-schools, founded in 1594 and endowed 
with the revenues of a suppressed gild, include a school of the 
second and a school of the third grade, the former a budding of 
red brick in the Renaissance style erected in 1880, and the latter 
an old Elizabethan structure. Another educational endowment 
is Freeman's school, founded by John Freeman in 171 x. There 
are also several charities. The principal public building is 
the corn exchange. The town is of some importance as a centre 
of agricultural trade; but the staple industry is in leather. A 
great impulse to the prosperity of the town was given by the 
introduction of the boot and shoe trade, especially the manu- 
facture of uppers. Smelting, brewing and Iron-founding are also 
carried on, as well as the manufacture of portable steam-engines, 
and iron ore is raised in the vicinity. 

In 948 Edred gave the church at Wellingborough to Crowland 
Abbey, and the grant was confirmed by King Edgar in 966. 
In the reign of Edward II. the abbot was lord in full. The town 
received the grant of a market in iaox. It was formerly famed 
for the chalybeate springs to which it owes its name, and in 162 1 
was visited by Charles I. and his queen, who resided in tents 
during a whole season while taking the waters. It was after 
its almost total destruction by fire in 1738 that the town was 
b uilt o n its present s ite on t he hill. 

WELLINGTON, ARTHUR WELLESLEY, ist Duke or (1769- 
1852), was the fourth son of Garrett (1735-1781) Wellesley or 
Wesley, and baron and xst earl of Mornington, now remem- 
bered only as a musician. He was descended from the family 
of CcHey or Cowley, which had been settled in Ireland for two 
centuries. The duke's grandfather, Richard Colley, ist Baron 
Mornington (d. 1758), assumed the name of Wesley on succeeding 
to the estates of Garrett Wesley, a distant relative of the famous 
divine. In'Wcllmgton's early letters the family name is spelt 
Wesley; the change to Wellesley seems to have been made 
about 1700. Arthur (born in Ireland in. 1769 *) was sent to 
Eton, and subsequently to a military college at Angers. He 
entered the army as ensign in the 73rd Highlanders in 17874 
passed rapidly through the lower ranks (in five different regi- 
ments), became major of the 33rd (now duke of Wellington's 
West Riding), and purchased the lieutenant-colonelcy of that 
regiment in 1793 with money advanced to him by his eldest 
brother. But in all these changes he did little regimental duty, 
for he was aide-de-camp to the lord-lieutenant of Ireland for 
practically the whole of these years. Before reaching full age 
he was returned to the Irish parliament by the family borough 
of Trim. Little is known of his history during these years; 
but neither in boyhood nor in youth does he appear to have made 
any mark among his contemporaries. 

His first cx*pcricnce of active service was in the campaign of 
1 794-1 795, when the British force under the duke of York was 
driven out of Holland by Pichcgru. In 1796 he was sent with his 
regiment to India, being promoted colonel by brevet about the 
same time. It was thus as a commanding officer that he learnt 

'At 24 Upper Merrion Street, Dublin, or at Dungan Castle. 
Meath, on the 29th of April or on 1st May; but both place and date 
are uncertain. 



5 oS 



WELLINGTON, ist DUKE OF 



for the first time the details of regimental duty. He mastered 
them thoroughly, gained a minute acquaintance with every 
detail of the soldier's life, learned the precise amount of food 
required for every mouth, the exact weight that could be carried, 
the distances that could be traversed without exhaustion, the 
whole body of conditions in short which govern the military 
activity of man and beast. It was to the completeness of his 
practical knowledge that Wellington ascribed in great part his 
later success. It is probable, moreover, that he at this time made 
a serious study of the science and history of war. His formal 
training at Angers was altogether too alight to account for his 
great technical knowledge; no record, however, exists of the 
stages by which this was acquired except that as soon as be 
landed in India he began to devote fixed hours to study, giving 
up cards and the violin; This study was directed chief y to the 
/ political situation of India, and when on his advice his eldest 
brother, Lord Mornington, afterwards Marquess Wellesley, 
accepted the governor-generalship of India, he became his 
trusted though unofficial adviser. In the war with Tippoo Saib 
the 33rd was attached to the Nizam's contingent, and Colonel 
Wellesley commanded this division in the army of General (Lord) 
Harris. Though his military services in this short campaign 
were not of a striking character, he was appointed by his brother 
to the supreme military and political command in $f ysore, in 
spite of the claims of his senior, Sir David Baird. 

His great faculties now for the first time found opportunity 
for their exercise. In the settlement and administration of 
the conquered territory he rapidly acquired the habits and 
experience of a statesman, while his military operations against 
Doondiab, a robber chief, were conducted with extraordinary 
energy and success, Doondiab being killed and his army scattered. 
More important, however, than the military side of these opera- 
tions was their political character. When pressed in Mysore, 
Doondiah moved into Mahratta territory, whither Wellesley 
followed him. Here, negotiating and bargaining with the 
Mahratta chiefs, Wellesley acquired a knowledge of their affairs 
and an influence over them such as no other Englishman possessed. 
Simple and honourable himself, he was shrewd and penetrating 
in his judgment of Orientals; and, unlike his great predecessor 
Clive, he rigidly adhered to the rule of good faith in his own 
actions, however depraved and however exasperating the 
conduct of those with whom he had to deaL The result of 
Wellesley's singular personal ascendancy among the Mahrattas 
came into full view when the Mahratta War broke out. In the 
meantime, however, his Indian career seemed likely to be 
sacrificed to the calls of warfare in another quarter. Wellesley 
was ordered in December 1800 to take command of a body of 
troops collected for foreign service at Trincomalee, in Ceylon. 
It was at first intended that these troops should act against 
Java or Mauritius; their destination was, however, altered to 
Egypt, with a view to co-operation with Sir Ralph Abercromby's 
expedition, and Baird was placed in command. Though deeply 
mortified at the loss of the command, Wellesley in his devotion 
to duty moved the troops on his own responsibility from Trinco- 
malee to Bombay, from the conviction that, if they were to be 
of any use in Egypt, it was absolutely necessary that they should 
provision at Bombay without delay. But at Bombay Wellesley 
was attacked by fever, and prevented from going on. The 
troop-ship in which he was to have sailed went down with all on 
board. 

t He returned in May x8oz to Mysore, where he remained until 
the Mahratta War broke out. The power of the Peshwa, nomin- 
ally supreme in the Mahratta territory, had been overthrown 
by his rivals Holkar and others, and he had himself fled. The 
Indian government undertook to restore his authority. Welles- 
ley, now a major-general, was placed in command of a division of 
the army charged with this task. Starting from Scringapatam, 
he crossed the frontier on March 12, 1803, and moved through 
the southern Mahratta territory on Poona. The march was 
one unbroken success, thanks to Wellesley's forethought and 
sagacity in dealing with the physical conditions and his personal 
«nd diplor- " among the chieftains of the district. 



No hand "was raised against htm, and a march of 600 m. was 
conducted without even a skirmish. Wellesley had intended 
to reach Poona on the 33rd of April. On the night of the i8lh 
he heard that a rival of the Peshwa intended to burn the city. 
At once Wellesley pressed on with the cavalry and an infantry 
battalion in light order, and after a forced march of 32 hours 
entered Poona on the afternoon of the 20th, in time to save the 
city. The Peshwa was now restored, and entered into various 
military obligations with Welleslev, which he very imperfectly 
fulfilled. 

In the meantime Sindhia and Holkar, with the raja of Berar, 
maintained a doubtful but threatening aspect farther north. 
It was uncertain whether or not a confederacy of the northern 
Mahrattas had been formed against the British government.. 
In these critical circumstances Wellesley was charged with " the 
general direction and control of military and political affairs in 
the territories of the Nizam, the Peshwa and the Mahratta states 
and chiefs." Armed with these powers, he required Sindhia, as 
a proof of good faith, to withdraw to the north of the Nerbudda. 
Sindhia not doing so, war was declared on the 6th of August 
1803.' Wellesley marched northwards, captured Ahmadnagar 
on the nth, crossed the Godavery ten days later, and moved 
against the combined forces of Sindhia and the raja of Berar. 
Colonel Stevenson was meanwhile approaching with a second 
division from the east, and it was intended that the two should 
unite. On the 23rd of September Wellesley supposed himself 
to be still some miles from the enemy; he suddenly found that 
the entire forces of Sindhia and the raja of Berar were close in 
front of him at Assaye. Weighing the dangers of delay, of 
retreat, and of an attack with his single division of 4500 men, 
supported only by 5000 native levies of doubtful quality, Welles- 
ley convinced himself that an immediate attack, though against 
greatly superior forces (30,000 horse, 10,000 European-drilled 
infantry and 100 well-served guns) in a strong position, was the 
wisest course. He threw himself upon the Mahratta host, and, 
carrying out a bold manoeuvre under an intense fire, ultimately 
gained a complete victory though with the loss of 2500 men out 
of a total probably not much exceeding 7000. In comparison 
with the battle of Assaye, all fighting that had hitherto taken 
place in India was child's play. Wellesley himself had two 
horses killed under him. Uniting with Stevenson's division, the 
conqueror followed up the pursuit, and brought the war to a 
close by a second victory at Argaum on the 29th of November, 
and the storming of Gawilghur on the 151I1 of December. The 
treaties with Sindhia and the raja of Berar, which marked the 
downfall of the Mahratta power, were negotiated and signed by 
Wellesley (who was made K.B. in Sept. 1804) in the course 
of the following month. . Not yet thirty-five years old, he had 
proved himself a master in the sphere of Indian statesmanship 
and diplomacy as on the field of battle. Had his career ended 
at this time, bis Indian despatches alone would have proved 
him to have been one of the wisest and strongest heads that have 
ever served England in the East. 

His ambitions now led him back to Europe, and in the spring 
of 1805 he quitted India. On his return home he was immediately 
sent on the abortive expedition to Hanover. In 1806 he was 
elected M.P. for Rye, in order to defend his brother, the governor- 
general, in the House, and in the following year he was Irish 
secretary for a few months. He was then employed in the 
expedition against Copenhagen, in which he defeated the Danes 
in the action of Kjoge (29th Oct.). In 1808, however, began 
the war (see Peninsula* War) in which his military renown was 
fully established. In April he was promoted lieutenant-general 
and placed in command of a division of the troops destined to 
operate against the French in Spain or Portugal. The conduct 
of events is narrated in a separate article, and need only be 
summarized here. Finding that the junta of Corunna wished 
for no foreign soldiery, he followed his alternative instructions 
to act against Junot at Lisbon. He landed at Mohdego Bay in 
the first week of August, and moved southwards, driving hi 
the enemy at Rolica on the 17th of August. On the 21st the 
battle of Vimeiro was fought and won. • In the midst of this 



WELLINGTON, ist DUKE OP 



5«>9 



, however, Sir Harry Barrard landed, and took over 
the command. Barrard was in turn superceded by Sir Hew 
DalrympJe, and the campaign ended with the convention off 
Cintra, which provided for the evacuation of Portugal by the 
French, bat gave Junot's troops a free return to France. So 
great was the public displeasure in England at the escape of the 
enemy that a court of inquiry was held. After the battle of 
Corunna, WeUesley, who had in the meantime resumed his 
duties as Irish secretary, returned to the Peninsula as chief in 
command. He drove the French out of Oporto by a singularly 
bold and fortunate attack, and then prepared to march against 
Madrid by the valky of the Tagus. He had the support of a 
Spanish army under General Cuesta; but his movements were 
delayed by the neglect of the Spanish government, and Souk 
was able to collect a large force for the purpose of falling upon 
the English tine of communication. WeUesley, unconscious of 
Soult's presence in force on his flank, advanced against Madrid, 
and defeated his immediate opponent, King Joseph, at Talavera 
de la Refna (9.*.) on the 27th-28th of July. The victory of Tala- 
vera, however, brought prestige but nothing else. Within the 
seat few days Soult's approach on the line of communication 
was discovered, and WeUesley, disgusted with his Spanish allies, 
had no choice but to withdraw into Portugal and there stand 
upon the defensive. 

A peerage, with the title of Viscount Wellington and Baron 
Douro, was conferred upon him for Talavera. He was also made 
marshal-general of the Portuguese army and a Spanish captain* 
general. But his conduct after the battle was sharply criticised 
in England, and its negative results were used as a weapon 
against the ministry. Even on the defensive, Wellington's task 
was exceedingly difficult. Austria having made peace, Napoleon 
was at liberty to throw heavy forces into the Peninsula. Welling* 
ton, foreseeing that Portugal would now be invaded by a very 
powerful army, began the fortification of the celebrated lines of 
Torres Vedras (see FoanrncATioN). The English army wintered 
about Almeida. As summer approached Wellington's anticipa- 
tions were realized. Massena moved against Portugal with an 
army of 70,000 men. Wellington, unable to save Ciudad Rodrigo, 
retreated down the valley of the Mondego, devastating the 
country, and at length halted at Busaco and gave battle. The 
French attack was repelled, but other roads were open to the 
invader, and Weffington continued his retreat. Massena followed, 
but was checked completely in front of the lines. He sought m 
vain for an unprotected point. It was with the utmost difficulty 
that he could keep his army from starving.. At length, when the 
country was exhausted, he fell back to Santarcm, where, Welling- 
ton being still too weak to attack, he maintained himself during 
the winter. But in the spring of 181 1 Wellington received 
lemforcements and moved forward. Massena retreated, de- 
vastating the country to check the pursuit, but on several 
occasions his rearguard was deeply engaged, and such were the 
sufferings of Ms army, both in the invasion and in the retreat, 
that the French, when they re-entered Spain, had lost 30/100 men. 
Public opinion, in England, lately so hostile, now became con- 
fident, and Wellington, whose rewards for Talavera had been 
opposed in both Houses, began to gam extraordinary popularity. 

In the meantime Soult, who was besieging Cadis, had moved 
to support Massena. But after capturing Badajos, Souk learnt 
tk.t Massena was in retreat, and also that Ins own forces at 
Cadiz had been beaten. He in consequence returned to the 
south. Wellington, freed from pressure on this side, and believing 
Massena to be thoroughly disabled, considered that the time 
had come for an advance into Spain. The fortresses of Almeida, 
Ciudad Rodrigo and Badajos barred the roads. Almeida was 
besieged, and Wellington was preparing to attack Badajos when 
Massena again took the field, and marched to the relief of 
Almeida. The battle of Fuentes d'Onoro followed, in which 
Wellington was only able to extricate the army from a dangerous 
predicament which " if Boney had been there " would have been 
a disaster. The garrison of Almeida too escaped, after blowing 
up part of the fortress. In the south, in spite of the hard-won 
victory of Albuera, the English attack on Badajos had to be 



given up. The same misfortune attended a fresh stroke against 
Ciudad Rodrigo, and at the end of a campaign in which he had 
used all his skill and care to compensate for inferior numbers, 
he withdrew behind the Coa. He had meanwhile been given the 
local rank of general and had also received the Portuguese title 
of Conde de Vuneiro. 

Wellington had from the first seen that, whatever number of 
men Napoleon might send against him, it was impossible, owing 
to the poverty of the country, that any great mass of troops 
could long be held together, and that the French, used to " making 
war support war," would fare worst in such conditions than his 
own troops with their organised supply service. It was so at the 
end of 181 1. Soult had to move southwards to live, and the 
English were again more than a match for the enemy in front of 
them. Wellington resumed the offensive, and on the 19th of 
January 181 a Ciudad Rodrigo was taken by storm. Again, 
suddenly altering the centre of gravity, Wellington invested 
Badajos in the middle of March. It was necessary at whatever 
cost to anticipate the arrival of Soult with a relieving army, 
and on the 6th of April Wellington ordered the assault. The 
fearful slaughter which took place before the British were 
masters of the defences caused Wellington to be charged with 
indifference to loss, but a postponement of the attack would 
merely have resulted in more battles against Soult Of all 
generals Wellington was the last to waste a single trained man, 
and the sight of the breaches of Badajos after the storm for a 
moment unnerved even his iron sternness. 

The advance from Ciudad Rodrigo into Spain was now begun. 
Marmont, who had succeeded Massena, fell back to the Douro, 
but there turned upon his assailant, and, by superior swiftness, 
threatened to cut the English off from Portugal. Wellington 
retreated as far as Salamanca (9.*), and there extricated himself 
from his peril by a most brilliant victory (Jury it). The French 
fell back on Burgos. Instead of immediately following them, 
Wellington thought it wise to advance upon the Spanish capital. 
King Joseph retired, and the English entered Madrid in triumph. 
The political effect was great, but the delay gave the French 
northern army time to rally. " The vigorous following of a beaten 
enemy was not a prominent characteristic of Lord Wellington's 
warfare," as Napier says. Burgos offered an obstinate defence. 
Moreover, Soult, raising the siege of Cadis, and gathering other 
forces to his own, pressed on towards Madrid. Wellington was 
compelled once more to retire into Portugal The effect of 
the campaign was, however, that the southern provinces were 
finally cleared of the invader. During this retreat he announced 
in general orders that the demoralisation and misconduct 
of the British army surpassed anything that he had ever 
witnessed. Such wholesale criticism was. bitterly resented, but 
indeed throughout his career Wellington, cold and punctilious, 
never secured to himself the affections of officers and men as 
Marlborough or Napoleon did. He subjugated his army and gave 
it brilliant victories, but he inspired few disciples except the 
members of his own staff. To the end of his life his relations 
with the principal generals who served under him were by no 
means Intimate. 

Wellington had been made an earl after the fall of Ciudad 
Rodrigo, and the Spanish government created him duke of 
Ciudad Rodrigo about the same time. For Salamanca his 
reward was a marquessate, and a grant of £100,000 for the 
purchase of an estate. He was also made Duque da Victoria by 
the Portuguese regency, and before the opening of the campaign 
of 1813, which was to crown his work, he was given both the 
Garter and the Golden Fleece. 

He was now invested with the supreme command of the Spanish 
armies. He visited Cadis in December 181 a, and offered counsels 
of moderation to the democratic assembly, which were not 
followed. During the succeeding months he- was occupied with 
plans and preparations, and at length, in May 1813, the hour 
for his final and victorious advance arrived. The Russian dis- 
asters had compelled Napoleon to withdraw some of his best 
troops from the Peninsula. Against a weakened and discouraged 
I adversary Wellington took the field with greatly increased 



5"> 



WELLINGTON, ist DUKE OF 



numbers and with the utmost confidence. The advance of the 
allied army was irresistible. Position after position was evacu- 
ated by the French, until Wellington, driving everything before 
him, came up with the retreating enemy at Vittoria (?.».), and 
won an overwhelming victory (June 21st). Soult 's combats in 
the Pyrenees, and the desperate resistance of St Sebastian, 
prolonged the struggle through the autumn, and cost the English 
thousands of men. But at length the frontier was passed, and 
Soult forced back into his entrenched camp at Bayonne. Both 
armies now rested for some weeks, during which interval Welling- 
ton gained the confidence of the inhabitants by his unsparing 
repression of marauding, his business-like payment for supplies, 
and the excellent discipline which he maintained. In February 
1814 the advance was renewed. The Adour was crossed, and 
Soult was defeated at Orthcs. At Toulouse, after the allies had 
entered Paris, but before the abdication of Napoleon had become 
known, the last battle of the war was fought. Peace being 
proclaimed, Wellington took leave of bis army at Bordeaux, 
and returned to England, where he was received with extra- 
ordinary honours, created duke of Wellington, and awarded a 
fresh grant of £400,000. 

After the treaty of Paris (May 30) Wellington was appointed 
British ambassador at the French capital. During the autumn 
and winter of 1814 he witnessed and reported the mistakes of 
the restored Bourbon dynasty, and warned his government of 
the growing danger from conspiracies and from the army, which 
was visibly hostile to the Bourbons. His insight, however, did 
not extend beyond the circumstances immediately before and 
around him, and he failed to realize that the great mass of the 
French nation was still with Napoleon at heart. He remained in 
France until February 18x5, when he took Lord Castlereagh's 
place at the congress of Vienna. All the great questions of the 
congress had already been settled, and Wellington's diplomatic 
work here was not of importance. His imperfect acquaintance 
with French feeling was strikingly proved in the despatch which 
he sent home on learning of Napoleon's escape from Elba. " He 
has acted," he wrote, " upon false or no information, and the king 
(Louis XVIII.) will destroy him without difficulty and in a short 
time." Almost before Wellington's unfortunate prediction could 
reach London, Louis had fled, and France was at Napoleon's feet. 
The ban of the congress, however, went out against the common 
enemy, and the presence of Wellington at Vienna enabled the 
allies at once to decide upon their plans for the campaign. To 
Wellington and BlUchcr were committed the invasion of France 
from the north, while the Russians and Austrians entered it from 
the east. Wellington, with the English troops and their Dutch, 
German and Belgian allies, took his post in the Netherlands, 
guarding the country west of the Charleroi road. BlUchcr, with 
the Prussians, lay between Charleroi, Namur and Liege. In 
the meantime Napoleon had outstripped the preparations of his 
adversaries. By the 13th of June he had concentrated his main 
army on the northern frontier, and on the 14th crossed the 
Sambre. The four days' campaign that followed, and the crownr 
jng victory of the 18th of June, are described in the article 
Waterloo Campaign. Wellington's reward was a fresh grant 
of £200,000 from parliament, the title of prince of Waterloo and 
great estates from the king of Holland, and the order of the 
Saint-Esprit from Louis XVIIL 

Not only the prestige of his victories, but the chance circum- 
stances of the moment, now made Wellington the most influential 
personality in Europe. The emperors of Russia and Austria 
were still far away at the time of Napoleon's second abdication, 
and it was with Wellington that the commissioners of the 
provisional government opened negotiations preliminary to the 
surrender of Paris. The duke well knew the peril of delaying 
the decision as to the government of France. The emperor 
Alexander was hostile to Louis XVIII. and the Bourbons 
generally; the emperor Francis might have been tempted to 
support the cause of Napoleon's son and his own grandson, who 
had been proclaimed in Paris as Napoleon II.; and if the 
restoration of Louis— which Wellington believed would alone 
restore permanent peace to France and to Europe— was to be 



effected, the allies must be confronted on their arrival in Paris 
with the accomplished fact. He settled the affair in his usual 
downright manner, telling the commissioners bluntly that they 
must take back their legitimate king, and refusing— perhaps 
with more questionable wisdom — to allow the retention of the 
tricolour flag, which to him was a *' symbol of rebellion." At the 
same time the opposition of the most influential member of the 
commission and the most powerful man in France, Foucht, 
was overcome by his appointment, on Wellington's suggestion, 
as minister of police. The result was that when the emperor 
Alexander arrived in Paris he found Louis XVIII. already in 
possession, and the problem before the allies was merely how to 
keep him there. 

In the solution of this problem the common sense of Wellington 
and of Castlereagh, with whom the duke worked throughout in 
complete harmony, played a determining part; it was mainly 
owing to their influence that France escaped the dismemberment 
for which the German powers clamoured, and which was ad- 
vocated for a while by Lord Liverpool and the majority of the 
British cabinet. Wellington realized the supreme necessity, in 
the interests not only of France but of Europe, of confirming 
and maintaining the prestige of the restored monarchy, which 
such a dismemberment would have irretrievably damaged. It 
was this conviction that inspired his whole attitude towards 
French affairs. If he unwillingly refused to intervene in favour 
of Marshal Ney, it was because he believed that so conspicuous 
an example of treason could not safely be allowed to go un- 
punished. If he bore in silence the odium that fell upon hira 
owing to the break-up of the collection of the Louvre, it was 
because he knew that it would be fatal to allow it to be known 
that the first initiative in the matter had come from the king. 
In the same spirit he carried out the immense and unique trust 
imposed upon him by the allies when they placed him in com- 
mand of the international army by which France was to be 
occupied, under the terms of the second peace of Paris, for five 
years. By the terms of his commission he was empowered to 
act, in case of emergency, without waiting for orders; be was, 
moreover, to be kept informed by the French cabinet of the 
whole course of business. His power was immense, and it was 
well and wisely used. If be had no sympathy with revolutionary 
disturbers of the peace, he had even less with the fatuous extra* 
vagances of the comte d'Artois and his reactionary entourage, 
and his influence was thrown into the scale of the moderate 
constitutional policy of which Richelieu and Decases were the 
most conspicuous exponents. The administrative duties con* 
nected with the army of occupation would alone have taxed to 
the uttermost the powers of an ordinary man. 1 Besides this, 
his work included the reconstruction of the military frontier 
of the Netherlands, and the conduct of the financial negotiations 
with Messrs Baring, by which the French government was able 
to pay off the indemnities due from it, and thus render it possible 
for the powers to reduce the period of armed occupation from 
five years to three. He was consulted, moreover, in all matters 
of international importance, notably the affairs of the Spanish 
colonies, in which he associated himself with Castlereagh in 
pressing those views which were afterwards carried into effect 
by George Canning. 

The length, of time during which France was to be occupied 
by the allies practically depended upon Wellington's judgment. 
On the 10th of December 1816 Pozzo di Borgo wrote to the duke 
enclosing a memorandum in which the emperor Alexander ol 
Russia suggested a reduction in the army of occupation: " no 
mere question of finance, but one of general policy, based on 
reason, equity and a severe morality"; at the same time he 
left the question of its postponement entirely to Wellington, To 

1 Isolated fortresses were still holding out for Napoleon In 
September 16x5, e.g. Longwy, which surrendered on the 20th. 
Much trouble was caused by the behaviour of some of the allied 
troops, notably the Prussians. Detailed reports of the condition of 
the country for the first months of the occupation are contained in 
the Bulletins de la eorrespondance ie Clntfrieitr, copies of which are 
preserved m the Foreign Office records (F.O. Congress. Ports. 
CastUreogh, August. &c> i6is)> 



WELLINGTON, ist DUKE OF 



5" 



WeUffigtoD tbe proposal teemed premature; he would prefer to 
wait till " the assembly had published its conduct by its acts "; 
for if the new chambers were to prove as intractable as the 
dissolved Chambre introttfabU, the monarchy would not be able 
to dispense with lis foreign tutors. Tt> Castlereagh he wrote 
(December u, 1810) that although he believed that the common 
people of the departments occupied/ 1 particularly those occupied 
by us," were delighted to have the troops and the money spent 
among them, among the official and middle classes the feeling 
was very different. In view of the weakness of the king's 
governm* ut, to reduce the army would be to expose the excitable 
dements of the population to the temptation of attacking it. 
44 Suppose I or my officers were forced to take military action. 
Suppose this were to happen in the Prussian cantonments. The 
whole Prussian army would be put in motion, and all Europe 
would resound with the alarm of the danger to be apprehended 
from tbe Jacobins in France." * 

The events of the next few months considerably modified his 
opinions in this matter. The new chambers proved their trust- 
worthy quality by passing the budget, and the army of occupa- 
tion was reduced by 30,000 men. Wellington now pressed for the 
total evacuation of France, pointing out that popular irritation 
bad grown to such a pitch that, if the occupation were to be 
prolonged, he must concentrate the army between the Scheldt 
and the Meuse, as the forces, stretched in a thin line across France, 
were no longer safe in the event of a popular rising. But such a 
concentration would in itself be attended with great risk, as the 
detachments might be destroyed piecemeal before they could 
combine. These representations determined the allies to make 
the immediate evacuation of France the principal subject of 
discussion at the congress which it was arranged to hold at Aix- 
la-Chapellc in the autumn of 1818. Here Wellington supported 
the proposal for the immediate evacuation of France, and it was 
owing to his common-sense criticism that the proposal of Prussia, 
supported by the emperor Alexander and Metternich, to establish 
an " army of observation " at Brussels, was nipped in the bud. 
The conduct of the final arrangements with Messrs Baring and 
Hope, which made a definitive financial settlement between 
France and the allies possible, was left entirely to him. 

On Wellington's first entry into Paris he had been received 
with popular enthusiasm, 1 but he had soon become intensely 
unpopular. He was held responsible not only for the occupation 
itself, but for every untoward incident to which it gave rise; 
even BIGcher's attempt to blow up the Pont de Jena, which he 
had prevented, was laid to his charge. His characteristically 
British temperament was wholly unsympathetic to the French, 
whose sensibility was irritated by his cold and slightly con- 
temptuous justice. Two attempts were made to assassinate him > 
After the second the prince regent commanded him to leave 
Paris and proceed to the headquarters at Cambrai. 4 For the 
first time the duke disobeyed orders; the case, he wrote, was 
one in which he was " principally and personally concerned," 
and he alone was in a position to judge what line of action he 
ought to pursue. 1 His work in Paris, however, was now finished, 
and on the joth of October, in a final " order of the day," he took 
leave of the international troops under his command. On the 
93rd of October, while still at Aix, he had received an offer from 
Lord Liverpool of the office of master-general of the ordnance, 
with a seat in the cabinet. He accepted, though with some 
reluctance, and only on condition that he should be at liberty, in 
the event of the Tories going into opposition, to take any line 
he might think proper. 

For the next three years " the Duke " was little before the 
world. He supported the repressive policy of Liverpool's cabinet, 
and organized the military forces held ready in case of a Radical 
rising, It was his influence with George IV. that led to the 

* F. O. Continent; Paris: Wfttintfon (No. 32). 

'See the interest ins letter of Lord Castlereagh to Lord Liverpool 
preserved in the Foreign Office Records (Congress; Paris; Viscount 
Gtsttrreack, July 7-90, 1815). dated July 8, 1815. 

* Maxwell Life, ii. 1 14 H. 

4 SuppL Despatches, xii. 326. 

* Suppl. Despatches, ii. 335. 



rcadmittajice of Canning to the' cabinet alter the affair of the 
royal divorce had been settled. It was only in i8m, however, that 
the tragic death of has friend Londonderry (Castlereagh) brought 
him once more into international prominence. Loctdonderry had 
been on the eve of starting for the conference at Vienna, and tbe 
instructions which be had drawn up for his own guidance went 
handed over by Canning, the new foreign secretary, to Wellington, 
who proceeded in September to Vienna, and thence in October to 
Verona, whither the conference had been adjourned. Welling* 
ton's official part at the congress is outlined elsewhere (see 
Verona, Concress 07). Unofficially, he pointed out to the 
French plenipotentiaries, arguing from Napoleon's experience, 
the extreme danger of an invasion of Spain, but at the same time 
explained, for the benefit of the duke of Angoulemc, the best way 
to conduct a campaign in the Peninsula. 

Wellington's intimate association for several years with the 
sovereigns and statesmen of the Grand Alliance, and bis ex* 
periencc of the evils which the Alliance existed to bold in check, 
naturally led him to dislike Canning's aggressive attitude towards 
the autocratic powers, and to view with some apprehension bis 
determination to break with the European concert. He realized, 
however, that in the matter of Spain and the Spanish colonies 
the British government had no choice, and in this question be 
was in complete harmony with Canning. This was also at first 
the case in respect to the policy to be pursued in the Eastern 
Question raised by the war of Greek independence. Both 
Canning and Wellington were anxious to preserve the integrity 
of Turkey, and therefore to prevent any isolated intervention of 
Russia; and Wellington seemed to Canning the most suitable 
instrument for the purpose of securing an arrangement between 
Great Britain and Russia on the Greek question, through which 
it was hoped to assure peace in the East. In February r8ae> 
accordingly, the duke was sent to St Petersburg, ostensibly to 
congratulate the emperor Nicholas I. on his accession, but mote 
especially — to use Wellington's own words—" to induce the 
emperor of Russia to put himself in our hands." * In this object 
he signally failed. He was, indeed, received in St Petersburg 
with all honour; but as a diplomatist the " Iron Duke "—whom 
Nicholas, writing to his brother Constantine, described as " old 
and broken (ran*)"— was no match for the " Iron Tsar." As 
for the Greeks, the emperor said bluntly that he took no interest 
in "ces messieurs," whom he regarded as "rebels"; his own 
particular quarrel with Turkey, arising out of the non-fulfilment 
of the treaty of Bucharest, was the concern of Russia alone; 
the ultimatum to Turkey had, indeed, been prepared before 
Wellington's arrival, and was despatched during his visit. Under 
stress of the imminence of the peril, which Nicholas was at no 
pains to conceal, the duke was driven from concession to con- 
cession, until at last the tsar, having gained all he wanted, 
condescended to come to an arrangement with Great Britain 
in the Greek question. On the 4th of April was signed the 
Protocol of St Petersburg, an instrument which — as events were 
to prove— fettered the free initiative not of Russia, but of Great 
Britain (see Tuxkey: History; Gxeece: History). 1 

After the death of the duke of York on the 5th of December 
1826 the post of commander-in-chief was conferred upon Welling- 
ton. His relations with Canning had, however, become increas- 
ingly strained, and when, in consequence of Lord Liverpool's 
illness, Canning in April 1877 was called to the head of the 
administration, the duke refused to serve under him. On tbe 
day after the resignation of his seat in the cabinet he also resigned 
his offices of master of the ordnance and commander-in-chief, 
giving as his reason w the tone and temper of Mr Canning's 
letters," though it is difficult to see in these letters any adequate 
reason for such a course (see Maxwell's Life, ii. roo). The 
effect of his withdrawal was momentous in its bearing upon 
Eastern affairs. Canning, freed from Wellington's restraint, 
carried his intervention on behalf of Greece a step further, and 

• Memorandum to Canning of January 26, 1826 (WeM. Des*. iiL) 

1 An interesting account of Wellington s negotiations ia St Peter*- 
burg, based on unpublished documents in the Russian archives, is 
given in T. Schumann's GesdMhURusshmkunlerNikeiousLiBtttitu 
1908), fl. 126-138. 



512 



WELLINGTON 



concluded, on the 97th of July, the treaty of London, whereby 
France, England and Russia bound themselves to put an end 
to the conflict in the East and to enforce the conditions of the 
St Petersburg protocol upon the belligerents. Against this treaty 
Wellington protested, on the ground that it " specified means of 
compulsion which were neither more nor less than measures of 
war." His apprehensions were fulfilled by the battle of Navarino. 

Canning died on the 8th of August 1827, and was succeeded 
as premier by Lord Goderich. The duke was at once again 
offered the post of commander-in-chief, which he accepted on 
the 17th of August On the fall of Lord Goderich's cabinet five 
months later Wellington became prime minister. He had declared 
some time before that it would be an act of madness for him to 
take this post; but the sense of public duty led him to accept it 
when it was pressed upon him by the king. His cabinet included 
at the first Huskisson, Palmerston and other followers of 
Canning. The repeal of the Test and Corporation Acts having 
been carried in the House of Commons in the session of 1828, 
Wellington, to the great disappointment of Tories like Lord 
Eldon, recommended the House of Lords not to offer further 
resistance, and the measure was accordingly carried through. 
Soon afterwards a quarrel between the duke and Huskisson led 
to the retirement from the ministry of all its more liberal members* 
It was now hoped by the so-called Protestant party that Welling- 
ton, at the head of a more united cabinet, would offer a steady 
resistance to Catholic emancipation. Never were men more 
bitterly disappointed. The Clare election and the progress of 
the Catholic Assqciation convinced both Wellington and Peel 
that the time had come when Catholic emancipation must be 
granted; and, submitting when further resistance would have 
led to civil war, the ministry itself brought in at the beginning 
of the session of 1829 a bill for the relief of the Catholics. Well- 
ington, who had hitherto always opposed Catholic emancipation, 
explained and justified his change of front in simple and im- 
pressive language. His undoubted seriousness and his immense 
personal reputation did not, however, save him from the excesses 
of calumny -and misinterpretation; and in order to impose some 
moderation upon his aspersers the duke thought it necessary 
to send a challenge to one of the most violent of these, the earl of 
Winchelsea. No mischief resulted from the encounter. 

Catholic emancipation was the great act of Wellington's 
ministry; in other respects his tenure of office was .not marked 
by much success. The imagination and the breadth of view 
necessary to a statesman of the highest order were not part of 
his endowment, nor had he the power of working harmoniously 
with his subordinates. His Eastern policy was singularly 
short-sighted. There might have been good reason, from 
Wellington's point of view, for condemning Canning's treaty of 
London; but when, in consequence of this treaty, the battle of 
Navarino had been fought, the Turkish fleet sunk, and the 
independence of Greece practically established, it was the weakest 
of all possible courses to withdraw England from its active 
intervention, and to leave to Russia the gains of a private and 
isolated war. This, however, was Wellington's policy; and, 
having permitted Russia to go to war alone in 1828, nothing 
remained for him but to treat Greece as a pawn in Russia's hands, 
and to cut down the territory of the Greek kingdom to the 
narrowest possible limits, as if the restoration to the sultan of 
an inaccessible mountain-tract, inhabited by the bitterest of his 
enemies, could permanently add to the strength of the Ottoman 
empire. The result was the renunciation of the Greek crown 
by Prince Leopold; and, although, after the fall of Wellington's 
ministry, a somewhat better frontier was given to Greece, it was 
then too late to establish this kingdom in adequate strength, 
and to make it, as it might have been made, a counterpoise to 
Russia's influence in the Levant. Nor was the indulgence shown 
by the cabinet towards Dom Miguel and the absolutists of 
Portugal quite, worthy of England. That Wellington actively 

. . " ^ £ * — nU against the constitutional move- 
He had indeed none of the sym- 
1 which began to influence British 
" " ~l became so powerful under 




Palmerston; but the rule which he followed in foreign affairs, 
so far as he considered it possible, was that of non-intervention. 

As soon as Catholic emancipation was carried, the demand for 
parliamentary reform and extension of the franchise agitated 
Great Britain from end to end. The duke was ill informed as 
to the real spirit of the nation. He conceived the agitation for 
reform to be a purely fictitious one, worked up by partisans and 
men of disorder in their own interest, and expressing no real want 
on the part of the public at large. Met with a firm lesistance, 
it would, he believed, vanish away, with no worse result than the 
possible plunder of a few houses by the city . mobs. Wholly 
unaware of the strength of the forces which he wss provoking, 
the duke, at the opening of the parliament which met after the 
death of George IV., declared against any parliamentary reform 
whatever. This declaration led to the immediate fall of his 
government. Lord Grey, the chief of the new ministry, brought 
in the Reform Bill, which was resisted by Wellington as kmg as 
anything was to be gained by resistance. When the creation of 
new peers was known to be imminent, however, Wellington was 
among those who counselled the abandonment of a hopeless 
struggle. His opposition to reform made him for a while un- 
popular. He was hooted by the mob on the anniversary of 
Waterloo, and considered it necessary to protect the windows 
of Apsley House with iron shutters. 

For the next two years the duke was in opposition.- On the 
removal of Lord Althorp to the House of Lords in 1834, William 
IV. unexpectedly dis m issed the Whig ministry and requested 
Wellington to form a cabinet . The duke, however, recommended 
that Peel should be at the head of the government, and served 
under him, during the few months that his ministry lasted, as 
foreign secretary. On Peel's later return to power in 1841 
Wellington was again in the cabinet, but without departmental 
office beyond that of commander-in-chief. He supported Peel 
in his Corn-Law legislation, and throughout all this later period 
of his life, whether in office or in opposition, gained the admira- 
tion of discerning men, and excited the wonder of zealots, by his 
habitual subordination of party spirit and party connexion to 
whatever appeared to him the real interest of the nation. On 
Peel's defeat in 1846 the duke retired from active public life. 
He was now nearly eighty. His organization of the military force 
in London against the Chartists in April 1848, and his letter to 
Sir John Burgoyne on the defences of the country, proved that 
the old man had still something of his youth about him. But 
the general character of Wellington's last years was rather 
that of the old age of a great man idealized. To the unbroken 
splendours of his military career, to his honourable and, con- 
scientious labours as a parliamentary statesman, life unusually 
prolonged added an evening of impressive beauty and calm. 
The passions excited during the stormy epoch of the Reform Bill 
had long passed away. Venerated and beloved by the greatest 
and the lowliest, the old hero entered, as it were, into the 
immortality of his fame while still among his countrymen. 
Death came to him at last in its gentlest form. He passed away 
on the 14th of September 1852, and was buried under the dome 
of St Paul's, in a manner worthy both of the nation and of the 
man. His monument, by Alfred Stevens (9.9.), stands in the nave 
of the cathedral. 

AuTHoaiTiE&r— The Wellington Despatches, edited by Garwood; 
Supplementary Despatches; and Wellington Despatches, New Series, 
edited by the second duke of Wellington. Unlike Napoleon's 
despatches and correspondence, everything from Wellington's pen 
is absolutely trustworthy: not a word is written for effect, and no 
fact is mi sr epres e nted. Almost all the political memoirs of the 
period 4830-1850 contain more or less about Wellington in his 
later life. Those of Greville and Croker have perhaps most of 
interest. A good deal of information, from the unpublished Russian 
archives, is given in F. F. de Martens' Fecmeil des srailis cendus par la 
Russie. See also Sir Herbert Maxwell. Life of Wellington (2 vol** 
London, 1900), and the literature of the Peninsular War (g.».)» 
Waterloo Campaign (g.v.). 

WELLINGTON, a town of Wellington county, New South 
Wales, Australia, 948 m. by rail N.W. of Sydney. Pop. (1001) 
3988. The river Macquarie is here spanned by a fine railway 
bridge. There arc rich gold-bearing reefs in the vicinity of the 



WELLINGTON— WELLS, C. J. 



town and gold dredging is a growing industry; wheat growing 
b the most considerable agricultural pursuit, but fruit trees and 
vines are cultivated with success. Stock-rearing also is exten- 
sively followed on account of the fine pasturage in the district. 
I n the vicinity are the beautiful Wellington caves. 

WELLINGTON, a market town in the Wellington (Mid) 
parliamentary division of Shropshire, England, 10} m. by rail 
E. of Shrewsbury. Fop. of urban district (xooi), 6383. It b an 
important junction on the London & North- Western and Great 
Western railways, being 152 m. N.W. from London by the former 
line. The Shropshire Union canal connects it with the Severn. 
The neighbourhood is picturesque, the Wrekin, about 1} m. 
from the town, rising to a height of 1335 ft. The church of 
AH Saints dates from 1790. The manufacture of agricultural 
Implements and nails, iron and brass founding and malting are 
carried on. The Roman Watling Street, running near the town, 
gives its name to a suburb, of Wellington. 

Before the Conquest Wellington (Wditon, Wdimtun) belonged 
to Earl Edwin of Merda, and after his forfeiture in 1071 was 
granted to Roger, earl of Shrewsbury. It came into the king's 
hands in ixoa through the attainder of Robert de Belesme. 
King John in 1212 granted Wellington to Thomas de Erdington 
M as a reward for services rendered in Rome at the time of the 
Interdict." Among the numerous subsequent lords of the manor 
were the families of Burnell and Lovdl, the present owner being 
Colonel Sir Thomas Mayrick, Bart. Like many other towns in 
Shropshire, Wellington appears to have grown mto4rnportance as 
a border town, and possibly had some manner of corporate 
community in 1177, when it paid three marks to an aid, but its 
privileges seem to have disappeared after the annexation of 
Wales, and it was never incorporated. Markets are held on 
Thursday and Saturday under a charter of 1601-160* to William 
Forester, but the Thursday market was first granted in 1044 to 
Giles de Erdington. Wellington has never been represented in 



WELLINGTON, a market town in the Wellington parlia- 
mentary division of Somersetshire, England, at the foot of the 
Blackdown hills, and near the river Tone, 170} m. W. by S. of 
London by the Great Western railway. Pop. of urban district 
(xoox), 7283. The isth-century church of St John has a fine 
Perpendicular tower and chancel; while the derestoried nave 
is Early English. There b a magnificent altar-tomb to Sir J. 
Fopham, Lord Chief Justice under Elisabeth and James L 
The chief buildings include the West Somerset County School 
and a 17th-century hospital for the aged poor, founded by Sir 
J. Pophaxn. A tower, which stands on the highest peak of the 
Btackdowns, si m. S., wss erected in honour of the duke of 
Wellington. The town has woollen manufactures, iron foundries 
and brick and tile works. 

WELLINGTON, the capital of New Zealand, the seat of 
government and of a bishop. Pop. (1001) 43*638; (1906) 
58,963, and including suburbs, 63,807. It lies on the south- 
■uttxn shore of North Island, on the inner shore of Port Nichol- 
son, an inlet of Cook's Strait, the site affording a splendid 
harbour, walled in by abrupt hills. The original flat shore 
b occupied by massive walls constructed for the reclaiming 
of land, as the bills prevent an inland extension of the city. 
Wood was originally in favour as a building material, owing 
to the prevalence of esrthqnsrry but brick and stone subse- 
quently took its place in the construction of the principal build- 
ings. The main street b a winding thoroughfare named in 
different parts Thorndon Quay, Lambton Quay, Willb Street 
and Manners Street. It runs parallel to the shore, but the 
quays properly so called are sep arated from it by blocks of 
buildings. It b traversed by an electric tramway. There are 
two railway stations In the town and one in the southern suburb 
of Te Aid. Two main lines leave the town, one following the 
west coast, the other an inland route to Napier. The principal 
buiklinfs are governmental; the houses of parliament, formerly 
a wooden erection, are rebuilt in brick and stone; there are 
also the residence of the governor and court house. The fine 
town hall was founded by the prince of Wales in 1001. 



513 

are several fine churches, and among educational institutions 
the chief b the Victoria University. An excellent school of 
art and several public libraries are provided, the latter including 
that in the house of parliament The museum contains a 
beautiful Maori house of carved woodwork, and biological 
collections. There are several public parks and gardens on 
well-chosen elevated sites, the principal being the Botanical 
Garden, from which the city arid port are well seen. Shipping 
b controlled by a harbour board (x88o). The extensive wharves 
are amply served by hydraulic machinery and railways. Welling- 
ton was founded in 1840, being the first settlement of New 
Zealand colonists, and the seat of government was transferred 
here from Auckland in 186$. The town b under municipal 



WBUJ, CHARMM JEREMIAH (1708M879), English poet, 
was born in London, probably in the year 1708. He was 
educated at Cowden Clarke's school at Edmonton, with Tom 
Keats, the younger brother of the poet, and with R. H. Home. 
He became acquainted with John Keats, and was the friend 
" who sent me some roses," to whom Keats wrote a sonnet 
on the soth of June 1816: — 

" When. O Wells! thy roses came to me. 

My sense with their deticiousnesB was spelled; 

Soft voices had they, that, with tender plea, 

Whbper'd of peace and truth and friendliness imquelled. 

Unfortunately, Wells soon afterwards played a cruel practical 
joke on the dying Tom Keats, and reappears in the elder poet's 
c or resp o ndence as " that degraded Wells." Both with Keats 
and Reynolds, Wells was in direct literary emulation, and his 
early writings were the result of this. In x8as he published 
Stories after Nature-* or rather, in the manner of Boccaccio, 
tempered by that of Leigh Hunt — a curious little volume of 
brocaded prose. At the close of 1823, under the pseudonym 
of H. L. Howard, appeared the Biblical drama of Joseph and 
his Brctkren (dated 1824). For the next three years Wens saw 
Hazlitt, as he said, M every night," but in 1827 the two men 
were estranged. When Hazlitt died, in September 1830, Wells 
took Home to see his dead friend, and afterwards raised a monu- 
ment to the memory of Hazlitt in the church of St Anne's, Soho. 
His two books passed almost unnoticed, and although Hazlitt 
said that Joseph and his Brethren was " more than original, 
aboriginal, and a mere experiment in comparison with the 
vast things " Wells could do, he forbore to review it, and even 
dissuaded the young poet from writing any more. Wells was 
now practising as a solicitor in London, but he fancied that 
his health was failing and proceeded to South Wales, where 
he occupied himself with shooting, fishing and writing poetry 
until 1835, when he removed to Brox bourne, in Hertfordshire. 
In 1840 he left England, never to set foot In it again. He 
settled at Quimper, in Brittany, where he lived for some years. 
A story called Qaribel appeared in 184;, and one or two slight 
sketches later, but several important tragedies and a great deal 
of miscellaneous verse belonging to these years are lost. Wells 
stated in a letter to Home (November 1877) that he had com- 
posed eight or ten volumes of poetry during his life, but that, 
having in vain attempted to find a publisher for any of them, 
he burned the whole mass of MSS. at his wife's death. The 
only work he had retained was a revised form of Joseph and his 
Brethren, which was praised in 1838 by Wade, and again, with 
great warmth, by Home, in his New Spirit of the Age, in 1844. 
The drama was then once more forgotten, until in 1863 it was 
read and vehemently praised by D. G. RoatettL The tide 
turned at last; Joseph and his Brethren became a kind of 
shibboleth— a rite of intriation into the true poetic culture— 
but still the world at large remained indifferent. Finally, 
howe v er, Swinburne wrote an eloquent study of ft in the Fort' 
nightly Renew in 187s, and the drama itself was reprinted 
in 1676. The old man found it impossible at first to take bis 
revival seriously, but he woke up at length to take a great 
interest in the matter, and between 1876 and 1878 be added 
various scenes, which are in the r rust wion of Mr Buxton Forman, 
who published one of them in 1805. After leaving Quimper, 



5«4 



WELLS, D. A.— WELLS 



Wells went to reside at Marseilles, where he held a professorial 
chair. He died on the 17th of February 1879. 

From R. H. Home, the author of Orion, the present writer 
received the following account of the personal appearance of 
Wells in youth. He was short and sturdy, with dark red hair, 
a Mn pima complexion, and bright blue eyes; he used to call 
himself " the cub," in reference to the habitual roughness of his 
manners, which he was able to resolve at will into the most 
taking sweetness and good-humour. Wells's wife who had been 
a Miss Emily Jane Hill, died in 1874. Their son, after his 
father's death, achieved a notoriety which was unpoetical, 
although recorded in popular song, for he was the once-famous 
" man who broke the bank at Monte Carlo." 

The famous Joseph and his Brethren, concerning which criticism 
has recovered its self-possession, is an overgrown specimen 
of the pseudo- Jacobean drama in verse which was popular 
in ultra-poetical circles between 1820 and 1830. Its merits are 
those of rich versification, a rather florid and voluble eloquence 
and a subtle trick of reserve, akin to that displayed by Webster 
and Cyril Tourneur in moments of impassioned dialogue. Swin- 
burne has said that there arc lines in Wells " which might more 
naturally be mistaken, even by an expert, for the work of the 
young Shakespeare, than any to be gathered elsewhere in the 
fields of English poetry." This may be the case, but even 
the youngest Shakespeare would have avoided the dulness of 
subject-matter and the slowness of evolution which impede 
the reader's progress through this wholly undramatic play. 
Joseph and his Brethren, in fact, although it has been covered 
with eulogy by the most illustrious enthusiasts, is less a poem 
than an odd poetical curiosity. 

In 1909 a reprint was published of Joseph and his Brethren, with 
S winbu rne's essay, and reminiscences by T. Watts- Dunton. (E. G.) 

WELLS, DAVID AMES (1828-1898), American economist, 
was bom in Springfield, Massachusetts, on the 17th of June 1828. 
He graduated at Williams College in 1847, was on the editorial 
staff of the Springfield Republican in 1848, and at that time 
invented a machine for folding newspapers and book-sheets. 
He then removed to Cambridge, graduated at the Lawrence 
Scientific School in 1851, and published in 1850-1865 with George 
Bliss (1793-1873) an Annual of Scientific Discovery. In 1866 he 
patented a process for preparing textile fabrics. His essay on the 
national debt, Our Burden and Our Strength (1864), secured him 
the appointment in 1865 as chairman of the national revenue 
commission, which laid the basis of scientific taxation in the 
United States. In 1866-1870 he was special commissioner of 
revenue and published important annual reports; during these 
years he became an advocate of free trade, and he argued that 
the natural resources of the United States must lead to industrial 
supremacy without the artificial assistance of a protective tariff 
which must produce an uneven development industrially. The 
ere? ' ion of a Federal Bureau of Statistics in the Department 
of the Treasury was largely due to Wells's influence. In 1871 
he was chairman of the New York State Commission on local 
taxation which urged the abolition of personal taxes, except of 
moneyed corporations, and the levy of a tax on the rental value 
of dwellings to be paid by the occupant; and in 1878 he reported 
on New York canal tolls. In 1877 he was president of the 
American Social Science Association. He died in Norwich, 
Connecticut, on the 5th of November 1898. 

He edited many scientific text-books, and wrote The Creed of the 
Free Trader (1875), Robinson Crusoe's Money (1878), Our Merchant 
Marine (1882), The Primer of Tariff Betorm(i8&A), Practical Economics 
(1885), Principles of TaxaHon{iVo%), Recent Economic Changes (1 889). 

WELLS, HERBERT GEORGE (1866- ). English novelist 
was bom at Bromley, Kent, on the aist of September 1866, the 
son of Joseph Wells, a professional cricketer. He was educated 
at Midhurst grammar school and at the Royal College of Science, 
where he was trained in physics, chemistry, astronomy, geology 
and biology. He graduated B.Sc. of London University in 1888 
with first-class honours, taught science in a private school, and 
subsequently did private coaching. In 1893 he began to write for 
the-PoB M*U GaweUe, of which he was dramatic critic in 1895. 
1U ******* U*#atmcvi&\}ui Saturday Renew. After the 



success of his fantastic story The Time Machine (1895) he gave 
his time chiefly to the writing of romances, in which the newest 
scientific and technical discoveries were used to advance his 
views on politics and sociology. But he did not confine himself 
to fiction. His Anticipations (1002) showed his real gift for 
sociological speculation. Beginning with a chapter on the 
mean* of locomotion in the 20th century, it went on to discuss 
war, the conflict of languages, faith, morals, the elimination of 
the unfit, and other general topics, with remarkable acuteness 
and constructive ability. In The Discovery of the Future (1002), 
Mankind in the Making (1903), A Modem Utopia (1905) and 
New Worlds for Old (1908) bis socialistic theories were further 
developed. As a novelist, meanwhile, he had taken a very high 
place. Some earlier stories, such as The Wheels of Chance 
(1806) and Lou and Mr Lcwisham (1900), had proved his talent 
for drawing character, and pure phantasies like The War of the 
Worlds (1898) his abundant invention; but Kipps (1905) and 
Tono-Bungay (1009) showed a fereat advance in artistic power. 
The list of his works of fiction includes T\p Stolen Bacillus and 
other Stories (1895), The Wonderful Visit (1S95), The Island 
of Doctor Moreau (1896), The PlaUner Story and Others (1897), 
When the Sleeper Wakes (1899), The First Men in the Moon (1901), 
The Food of the Gods (1904). /» the Days of ike Comet (1006), 
The War in the Air (1908), Anne Veronica (1909), The History 
of Mr Polly (1910). 

WEU4, SIR THOMAS SPENCER, 1ST Bakt. (1818-1897), 
English surgeon, was bom at St Albans on the 3rd of February 
1818, and received his medical education in Leeds, Dublin and 
St Thomas's Hospital, London (M.R.C.S. 2841). From 1841 to 
1848 he served as a surgeon in the navy, and in 1848 he went to 
Paris to study pathology. In 1853 he settled in London, and 
took up ophthalmic surgery, interrupting his work to go out to the 
East in the Crimean War. In 1854 he became surgeon to the 
Samaritan Free Hospital for Women and Children, London. 
His reputation in surgery had obtained for him in 1 844 the fellow- 
ship of the Royal College of Surgeons, and he subsequently be- 
came a member of council, Hunterian professor of surgery and 
pathology (1878), President (1882) and Hunterian Orator (1883). 
In 1883 he was made a baronet. His name is best known in con- 
nexion with his successful revival of the operation of ovariotomy, 
which had fallen into disrepute owing to the excessive mortality 
attending it; and in his skilful hands, assisted by modern 
surgical methods, the operation lost almost all its danger. His 
book on Diseases of the Ovaries was published in 1865. Sir 
Spencer Wells married in 1853 Miss Elizabeth Wright, and 
had a son and daughters. He died on the 31st of January 
1897. His estate at (Solder's Hill, Hampstead, was sold 
after his death to the London County Council and converted 
into a public park. 

WELLS, a dty, municipal borough and market town in the 
Wells parliamentary division of Somerset, England, Mm. S. 
of Bristol, on the Great Western and Somerset & Dorset 
railways. Pop. (1901) 4849. It is a quiet, old-fashioned place, 
lying in a hollow under the Mendip Hills, whose spurs rise on all 
sides like islands. The city js said to have derived its name from 
some springs called St Andrew's Wells, which during the middle 
ages were thought to have valuable curative properties. During 
Saxon times Wells was one of the most important towns of 
Wessex, and in 005 it was made the seat of a bishopric by King 
Edward the Elder. About the year 1091-1091 Bishop John de 
Villula removed the see to Bath; and for some years Wells 
ceased to be an episcopal city. After many struggles between the 
secular clergy of Wells and the regulars of Bath, it was finally 
arranged in 1139 that the bishop should take the title of " bishop 
of Bath and Wells," and should for the future be elected by 
delegates appointed partly by the monks of Bath and partly by 
the canons of Wells. The foundation attached to the cathedral 
church of Wells consisted of a college of secular canons of St 
Augustine, governed by a dean, sub-dean, chancellor and other 
officials. The diocese covers the greater part of Somerset. The 
importance of the dty is almost wholly ecclesiastical; and the 
theological college is one of the most important in England, 



WELLSTON— WELS 



WeBs is governed by a mayor, 4 aldermen and xs coondBois. 
Area 720 acres. 

The cathedral, one of the most magnificent of all the secular 
churches of England, was executed principally by Bishops 
Regin ald Fitz-Jocelyn (1171-1191), Savaricus (1x93-1205) and 
Jocdyn (x 206-1 242). According to the usual medieval practice, 
the eastern part of the church was begun first, and the choir was 
consecrated for use long before the completion of the nave, the 
western part of which, with the magnificent series of statues on 
the facade, is commonly attributed to Bishop Jocdyn. With him 
was associated a famous architect in Elias de Derham, who was 
his steward in x 236, and died in 1245. The upper half of the two 
western towers has never been builL The noble central tower, 
160 ft. high, was built early in the 14th century; the beautiful 
octagonal chapter-house on the north side, and the lady chapel 
at the extreme east, were the next important additions in the 
same century. The whole church is covered with stone groining 
of various dates, from the Early English of the choir to the fan 
vaulting of the central tower. Its plan consists of a nave (161 ft. 
in length and 82 in breadth) and aisles, with two short transepts, 
each with a western aisle and two eastern chapels. The choir and 
its aisles are of unusual length (103 ft.), and behind the high 
altar are two smaller transepts, beyond which is the very rich 
Decorated lady chapel, with an eastern semi-octagonal apse. 
On the north of the choir is the octagonal chapter-house, the 
vaulting of which springs from a slender central shaft; as the 
church belonged to secular clergy, it was not necessary to place it 
in its usual position by the cloister. The cloister, 160 by 150 fL, 
extends along the whole southern wall of the nave. Hie extreme 
length of the church from east to west is 383 ft. The oak stalls 
and bishop's throne in the choir are magnificent examples of 15th- 
century woodwork, still well preserved. 

The glory of the church, and that which makes it unique among 
the many splendid buildings of medieval England, is the wonderful 
series of sculptured figures which decorate the exterior of the west 
front. The whole of the facade, 150 ft. wide, including the two 
western towers, is completely covered with this magnificent series; 
there are nine tiers of single figures under canopies, over 600 in 
number, mostly large life size, with some as much as 8 ft. in height, 
and other smaller statues: these represent angels, saints, prophets, 
kings and queens of the Saxon, Norman and Plantagenet dynasties, 
and bishops and others who had been benefactors to the see. There 
are also forty-eight reliefs with subjects from Bible history, and 
immense representations of the Last Judgment and the Resurrection, 
the latter alone containing about 150 figures. The whole com- 
position is devised so as to present a comprehensive scheme of 
theology and history, evidently thought out with much care and 
ingenuity. As works of art, these statues and reliefs are of high 
merit; the faces are noble in type, the folds of the drapery very 
gracefully treated with true sculpturesque simplicity, and the pose 
of the figures remarkable for dignity. A great variety of hands and 
much diversity of workmanship can be traced in this mass of 
sculpture, but in very few cases does the work fall conspicuously 
below the general level of excellence. ' 

The interior of the central tower presents an interesting example 
of the skilful way in which the medieval builders could turn an 
unexpected constructional necessity into a beautiful architectural 
feature. While it was being built the four piers of the great tower 
arches showed signs of failure, and, therefore, in order to strengthen 
them, a second tower arch was built below each mam arch of the 
tower; and on this a third inverted arch was added. Thus the 
piers received a steady support along their whole height from top 
to bottom, and yet the opening of each archway was blocked up in 
the smallest possible degree. The contrasting lines of these three 
adjacent arches on each side of the tower have a very striking and 
graceful effect ; nothing similar exists elsewhere. 

On the south side of the cathedral stands the bishop's palace, a 
moated building, originally built in the form of a quadrangle by 
Bishop Jocelyn, and surrounded by a lofty circuit wall. The hall and 
chapel are beautiful structures, mostly of the 14th century. 

The vicars' college was a secular foundation for two principals 
and twelve vicars; fine remains of this, dating from the 15th century, 
aod other residences of the clergy stand within and near the cathedral 
dose; some of these are among the most beautiful examples of 
medieval domestic architecture in England. 

The church of St 'Cuthbert is one of the finest of the many fine 
parochial churches in Somersetshire, with a noble tower and spire 
at the west end. It was originally an Early English cruciform 
building, but the central tower fell in during the 16th century, and 
the whole building was much altered during the Perpendicular period. 
Though much damaged, a very interesting rercrimetiws behind the 



515 

high altar; it consists of a " Jesse tree M sculptured in relief, erected 
in 1470. Another beautiful reredos was discovered in 1848, hidden 
in the plaster on the east wall of the lady chapel, which is on the 
north side. 

There was a Roman settlement at Wells (Tksorodunvm, 
Fonticuli, TidingUm, Wcttiae, Welle), this site being chosen on 
account of the springs from which the town takes its name, 
and the Roman road to Cheddar passed through Wells. King 
Ine founded a religious house there in 704, and it became an 
episcopal see in 9x0. To this latter event the subsequent growth 
of Wells is due. There is evidence that Wells bad become 
a borough owned by the bishops of Wells before 11 6b, and in that 
year Bishop Robert granted the first charter, which exempted 
his burgesses from certain tolls. Other charters granted by 
Bishop Reginald before 11 80 and by Bishop Savaric about xsox 
gave the burgesses of Wells the right to jurisdiction in their own 
disputes. These charters were confirmed by John in xsox, by 
Edward I. in 1290, by Edward III. with the grant of new privileges 
»n x 334, X34T, X343 And 1345* by Richard II. in 1377, by Henry 
IV. in 1309 and by Henry VI. in 1424. Wells obtained charters 
of incorporation in 1589, 1683, 1688 and 1835. It was represented 
in parliament from 129s to 1868. Fairs on March 3, October 14 
and November 30 were granted before 11 60, and in 1201 fairs 
on May 9, November 25 and June 25 were added. They wens 
important in the middle ages for the sale of cloth made in the 
town, but the fairs which are now held on the first Tuesdays in 
January, May, July, November and December are noted for the 
sale of cheese. The market days for the sale of cattle and provi- 
sions are Wednesdays and Saturdays. Silk-making, stocking- 
making and gloving replaced the cloth trade in Wells, but have 
now given place to brush-making, corn and paper milling, which 
began early in the 19th century. 

See Victoria County History, Somerset; Thomas Serd, Lectures 
on WOs (1680). 

WELLSTON, a city of Jackson county, Ohio, U.S.A., about 
30 m. S.E. of Chilhcothe. Pop. (1880) 952; (1800) 4377; 
(1900) 804 s, of whom 3x1 were foreign-born; (19x0 census) 
6875. Land area (1906)1 6-62 sq. m. Wellston is served by 
the Baltimore & Ohio South-western, the Hocking Valley, the 
Cincinnati, Hamilton & Dayton, and the Detroit, Toledo & Iron- 
ton railways, and is connected by an electric line with Jackson 
(pop. in 1910, 5468), the county-seat, about 10 m. S.W. Immedi- 
ately N. of the city is Lake Alma Park. Wellston is situated in a 
coal and iron mining country; among the city's manufactures 
are iron and cement, and in 1905 the value of the factory product 
was $1,384,295, 41*4% more than in 1900. The municipality 
owns and operates its water-works and its electric lighting plant. 
Wellston (named in honour of Harvey Wells, its founder) was 
se ttled in X871, and was chartered as a city in 1876. 

WELLSVILLE, a city of Columbiana county, Ohio, U.S.A., 
about 35 m. S. of Youngstown, on the Ohio river. Pop. (1800) 
5247; (1900) 6146 (475 being foreign-born and 113 negroes); 
(1910) 7769. Wellsville is served by the Pennsylvania railway, 
and by an interurban electric line connecting with Rochester, 
Pa., and Steubenville, Ohio. It is in a region which has rich 
deposits of coal, natural gas, oil and clay; and there are various 
manufactures. The neighbourhood was first settled in 1795 
by one James Clark of Washington county, Pennsylvania, who 
bought a tract of 304 acres here and who transferred it a year 
afterwards to his son-in-law, William Wells, in whose honour the 
settlement was named in 1820 when it was platted. From 1832 
to x 85 2 Wellsville was an important shipping point on the Ohio, 
with daily steamboats to Pittsburg; it was incorporated as a 
vi llage in 1848, and was chartered as a city in 1890. 

WELS, a town of Austria, in Upper Austria, 17 m. S.S.W. 
of Linz by rail. Pop. (1900) 12,187. It is situated on the river 
Traun and possesses an interesting parish church, in Gothic 
style, rebuilt in the 15th century, but the oldest part supposed to 
date from the 9th century. The town draws a supply of natural 
gas, used for lighting, heat and motive power, from deep artesian 
borings first made in 1891. It has an important trade in corn, 
timber, horned cattle, pigs and horses, fowls, dairy prdtfuce and 
lard; and considerable manufactures, including machinery 



5 i6 



WELSER (FAMILY)— WEM 



cast-iron, copper and bran goods, calico, gunpowder, oil, paper, 
articles in felt, flour, leather and biscuits. Wels stands on the 
site of the Roman Ovilaba, and was in the 8th century toe 
residence of the dukes of Lambach-Wels. The actual town 
d ates f rom the nth century. 

WELSER, the name of a famous family of German merchants, 
members of which held official positions in the city of Augsburg 
during the 13th century. The family first became important 
during the 15th century, when the brothers Bartholomew and 
Lucas Welser carried on an extensive trade with the Levant 
and elsewhere, and had branches in the principal trading centres 
Of south Germany and Italy, and also in Antwerp, London and 
Lisbon. The business was continued by Antony (d. 15x8), a 
son of Lucas Welser, who was one of the first among the Germans 
to use the sea route to the East, which had been discovered by 
Vasco da Gama. The Welsers were also interested in mining ven- 
tures; and, having amassed great wealth, Antony's son Bar- 
tholomew (1488-1561) lent large sums of money to Charles V., 
receiving in return several marks of the imperial favour. 
Bartholomew and his brother Antony, however, are chiefly 
known as the promoters of an expedition under Ambrose 
Dalfinger (d. 153a), which in 1528 seized the province of Caracas 
in Venezuela. With the consent of Charles V., this district was 
governed and exploited by the Welsers; but trouble soon arose 
with the Spanish government, and the undertaking was abandoned 
in 1555. After Bartholomew's death the business was carried 
on by three of his sons and two of his nephews; but the firm 
became bankrupt in 16x4. Bartholomew's niece Philippine 
(1527-1580), the daughter of bis brother Francis (X497-1572), 
married the Archduke Ferdinand, son of the emperor 
Ferdinand I. 

Perhaps the most famous member of the Welser family was 
Antony's grandson, Marcus (1558-1614). Educated in Italy, 
Marcus became burgomaster of Augsburg, but was more dis- 
tinguished for his scholarship and his writings. The most im- 
portant of his many works is his Rcrum Boicarum libri quinque, 
dealing with the early history of the Bavarians, which was 
translated into German by the author's brother Paul (d. 1620). 
His works, Marci Velseri opera kisiorica et pkUctogica, were 
collected and published with a biography of Marcus by C. Arnold 
(Nuremberg, 1682). The Augsburg branch of Welsers became 
extinct in 1797, and a branch which settled at Nuremberg in 
1878; but the Ulm branch of the family is still flourishing. 

See K. Hlbler, Die uberseeischen Unternekmungen der Welser 
(Leipzig, 1003); W. Bdheim, Philippine Welser (Berlin, 1894); 
and A. Klcinschmidt, Augsburg, NUrnberg und ikre Handdsfursteu 
(Castel, 1881). 

WELSH LAWS, or Leges Waixiae. There is, comparatively 
speaking, no great distance of time between the leges barbarorum 
and the Laws of Wales, while the contents of the latter show a 
similar, nay almost ■ the same, idea of law as the former; and, 
apart from the fact that Wales became permanently connected 
at the end of the 13th century with a Teutonic people, the 
English, it has been noticed that in Wales Roman and Germanic, 
but no traces of a specific Welsh, law are found. King Howel 
Dda (i.e. the Good), who died in 950, is the originator of the 
Welsh code. 1 In the preface it is stated that Howel, " seeing 
the laws and customs of the country violated with impunity, 
summoned the archbishop of Menevia, other bishops and the 
chief of the clergy, the nobles of Wales, and six persons (four 
laymen and two clerks) from each comot, to meet at a place 
called Y Ty Gwyn ar Dav, or the white house on the river Tav, 
repaired thither in person, selected from the whole assembly 
twelve of the most experienced persons, added to their number 
a clerk or doctor of laws, named Bllgywryd, and to these. thirteen 
confided the task of examining, retaining, expounding and 
abrogating. Their compilation was, when completed, read to 

1 There is no historical foundation for the legendary laws of a 
prince Dyraal (or Dyvawal) Mod Mud, nor for the Laws of Marsia, 
which are said to belong to a period before the Roman invasion, 
even so early as 400 years before Christ. An English translation by 
the side of the Welsh text of the so-called triads of Dyvnwal Moel 
Mud b given by Owen, in The Ancient Laws of Wales. 



the assembly, and, after having been confirmed, proclaimed. 
Howel caused three copies to be written, one of which was to 
accompany the court for daily use, soother was deposited in 
the court at Abexfraw, 4 and a third at Dinevwr The bishops 
denounced sentence of excommunication against all transgressors, 
and soon after Howel himself went to Rome attended by the 
archbishop of St David's, the bishops of Bangor and St Asaph and 
thirteen other personages. The laws were recited before the 
pope and confirmed by his authority, upon which Howel and his 
companions returned home." All this could not have been 
effected before Howel had subjected Wales to his own rule, 
therefore not before 943. We have three different recensions of 
the code, one for Venedoti^ or North Wales, another for Dimetia 
or South Wales, a third for Gwent or North-east Wales. We 
do not know how far these recensions were uniform in the begin- 
ning; but a variance must have occurred shortly after, for the 
manuscripts In which the codes are preserved differ greatly from 
each other. The code was originally compiled in Welsh, but we 
have no older MSS. than the 12th century, and even the earliest 
ones (especially those of the Venedotia recension) contain many 
interpolations. The Latin translations of the code would seem 
to be very old, though even here we have no earlier MSS. (belong- 
ing to the Dimetia recension) than the 13th century. The 
Latin text is much shorter than the Welsh, but we do not know 
whether this abridgment was made on purpose, or whether the 
translation is an imitation of an earlier text. The texts present 
only a few traces of Roman law, which, however, are evidently 
additions of a later period. 

The whole body of Welsh laws was published in one volume by 
Aneurin Owen under the direction of the commissioners on the 
public records as Ancient Laws and Institutes of Wales (London, 
1 841). The text of Howel's laws has been edited by A. W. Wade- 
Evans as Welsh Medieval Lam (London, 1909). 

WELSHPOOL (or Wekhpool, so called because Pool, its 
old name, led to confusion with Poole, in Dorsetshire; Welsh 
TraUwm), a market town and municipal and contributary 
parliamentary borough of Montgomeryshire, N. Wales, in 
the upper Severn valley, on the Montgomeryshire canal and the 
Cambrian railway, 8 m. N. of Montgomery, and 18a m. from 
Loddon. Pop. (ioox) 6x21. Its buildings and institutions 
include the old Gothic church of St Mary, the Powysland Museum, 
with local fossils and antiquities, and a library, vested (with 
its science and art school) in the corporation in 1887. Powis 
Castle (about a mile S.W. of the town) is the seat of Earl Powis, 
and has been in the possession of the Herberts for many genera- 
tions. The flannel manufacture has been transferred to Newtown, 
but Welshpool has tweeds and woollen shawls, besides a fair 
trade in agricultural produce, malting and tanning. The town 
returned a member to parliament from 1536 to 1728, was again 
enfranchised in 1832, and now (with LlanfyUin, Llanidloes, 
Montgomery, Machynlleth and Newtown) forms the Montgomery 
district of parliamentary boroughs. A charter was granted 
to the town by the lords of Powis, confirmed by James I. (161 5), 
and enlarged by Charles IL The castle was begun, in or about 
1 109, by Cadwgan ab Bleddynab Cynfyn (Cynvyn), and finished 
by Gwenwynwyn; in 1106 it was besieged, undermined and 
taken by Hubert, archbishop of Canterbury. Retaken by 
Gwenwynwyn in 1x97, it was dismantled by Llewelyn, prince 
of N. Wales, in 1233. It then remained for several years in the 
hands of the lords of Powis. During the Civil War, the then 
lord Powis, a royalist, was imprisoned, and the castle was 
later demolished. Powis Castle, being of red sandstone, is usually 
called in Welsh Castel] Coch (red castle). In the park is Uyn 
d u (bla ck pool), whence Welshpool is said to be named. 

WEM, a market town in the northern parliamentary division 
of Shropshire, England, xx m. N. of Shrewsbury on the 
London & North Western railway. Pop. (1901), 3796. It is 
a pleasantly situated town with a considerable agricultural 
trade. The church of St Peter and St Paul retains a Norman 
tower. Flour-milling and tanning are the chief industries. In 
the neighbourhood is the splendid domain of Hawkstone. 

In the reign of Edward the Confessor Wem was held as four 
manors, but at the time of the Domesday Survey William 



WEMBLEY— WENCESLAUS 



517 



Pantulf tot holding the whole as one manor of Roger, earl of 
Shrewsbury, from whom it passed to the Boteiers, barons of 
Wem. The famous Judge Jeffreys was among the subsequent 
lords of the manor and was created Baron Jeffreys of Wem in 
1685, but upon the death of his only son and heir in 1720 the 
title became extinct, The town was a borough by prescription, 
but there appears to be no mention of burgesses before the 
15th century. In 1459 Ralph, Lord Greystock, is said to have 
granted a charter, no longer extant, to his tenants in the manor, 
and in 1674 the freeholders, "borough-holders" and copy- 
holders, of Wem brought an action against Daniel Wicheriey, 
then lord of the manor, for the establishment of customs and 
privileges chiefly connected with the tenure of their lands and 
tenements, which was decided in their favour. The borough 
was governed by two bailiffs, both elected at the court leet of 
the lord of the manor, one by his steward, the other by a borough 
jury, but in the beginning of the xoth century there were only 
seventy-two burgesses and their rights seem to have gradually 
disappeared. An urban district council was formed in 1000. 
Wem has never been r ep re sen ted in parliament. The market 
was originally held on Sunday under grant from John to Warin 
Flu Gerald in 1205, but in 13.5 x, in consequence of a protest 
from the archbishop of Canterbury, it was changed to Thursday, 
on which day it is still held. The grant of 1205 also included 
a fair at the feast of SS. Peter and Paul, which was maintained 
until within recent years, when fairs were also held at the feast 
of St Mark, chiefly for linen doth, under grant from Charles I. 
to Thomas Howard in 1636, and at the feast of St Martin, 
bishop of Tours, for the sale of bops. A great fire which broke 
out at Wem on the 3rd of March 1677 caused damage to the 
extent of £23,677. 

See Victoria County UiOory, Shropshire; Samuel Garbet, The 
History of Wem (18x8). 

WEMBLEY, an urban district in the Harrow parliamentary 
division of Middlesex, England, xo m. W.N.W. of St Paul's 
Cathedral, on the Metropolitan and London & North Western 
railways. Pop. (1001) 45x0. Wembley adjoins Sudbury on 
the east; the district is residential, but lacks natural attractions 
except in the case of Wembley Park, a pleasant wooded recrea- 
tion ground, owned by a company. Here a tower was begun 
on the lines of the Eiffel Tower in Paris, and projected to exceed 
it in height, reaching 1200 ft., but only a short stage was com- 
pleted. The manor of Wembley belonged to the priory of 
Oburn until that foundation was dissolved by Henry VIII. 

WEMYSS, EARLS OF, the title held by a Scottish family who 
had possessed the lands of Wemyss in Fifeshire since the 12th 
century, and of which various members had attained distinction. 
In 16*8 Sir John Wemyss, who had been created a baronet in 
1625, was raised to the peerage as Baron Wemyss of Elcho; 
and in 1633 he became earl of Wemyss, and Baron Elcho and 
Methel, in the peerage of Scotland. He took part with the 
Scottish parliament against Charles I., and died in 1640. On 
the death of David, 2nd earl of Wemyss (1610-1670), the estates 
and titles passed to his daughter Margaret, countess of Wemyss, 
whose son David, 3rd earl of Wemyss, succeeded on her death 
in 1705. His son James, 4th earl (1690-1756), married a great 
heiress, Janet, daughter of Colonel Francis Charteris, who had 
made a large fortune by gambling. His son David, Lord Elcho 
(1721-1787), was implicated in the Jacobite rising of 1745, and 
was consequently attainted, the estates passing to his younger 
brother James, whue the title remained dormant after hisfather's 
death, though It was assumed by Ekho's brother Francis, who 
took the name of Charteris on inheriting his maternal grand- 
father's estate. A reversal of the attainder was granted in 
1826 to his descendant Frands Charteris Wemyss Douglas 
(1772-1853), who had been created Baron Wemyss of Wemyss 
in the peerage of the United Kingdom m 1821, and had assumed 
the name of Charteris Wemyss Douglas on inheriting some of 
the Doughs estates through a female ancestor. Thenceforward 
th e title de scended in the direct line. 

WEMYSS, a parish of Fifeshire, Scotland, embracing the 
villages of East and West Wemyss and the police burgh of 



Buckhaven, a fishing port lying on the northern shore of the 
Fixlh of Forth, 2J m. S.W. of Leven, on the North British 
Railway Company's branch line from Thornton Junction to 
MethiL Coal mining is the principal industry of the district, 
the coal being exported from the port of Methil, of which the 
harbour was constructed by David, and earl of Wemyss (d. 1679), 
the town being made a burgh of barony in 1662. Population of 
Buckhaven, including Methil and Innerleven (xoox), 8828; 
of East Wemyss, 2522; of West Wemyss, 1253; of Wemyss 
parish, 15,031. The district is of much archaeological and 
historic interest. On the shore to the north-east are two 
square towers which are supposed to have formed part of 
Macduff's castle; and near them are the remarkable caves 
(weems, from the Gaelic, uamha) from which the district derives 
its name. Several of them contain archaic sculptures, held by 
some to be the work of the Christian missionaries who found 
shelter here; by others ascribed to the same prehistoric agency 
as the inscribed stones of northern Scotland. Near East Wemyss 
is Wemyss Castle, the ancient seat of the family of the same name 
which has played a conspicuous part in Scottish history. It 
was at Wemyss castle that Mary, queen of Scots, first met the 
earl of Darnlcy, in 1565, and her room is still known as " the 
Presence Chamber." 

WEHCESLAUS (1361-14x9), German king, and, as Wenceslaus 
IV., king of "Bohemia, was the son of the emperor Charles IV. 
and Anna, daughter of Henry II., duke of Schweidnitz. Born 
at Nuremberg on the 26th of February 1361, he was crowned 
king of Bohemia in June 1363, and invested with the margraviate 
of Brandenburg in 1373. In September 1370 he married Joanna 
(d. 1386) daughter of Albert I., duke of Bavaria, and was elected 
king of the Romans or German king at Frankfort on the xoth of 
June 1376, and crowned at Aix-la-Chapelle on the 6th of July 
following. He took some part in the government of the empire 
during his father's lifetime, and when Charles died in November 
1378 became sole ruler of Germany and Bohemia, but handed 
over Brandenburg to his balf-brothcr Sigismund. His reign 
was a period of confusion both in church and state, and although 
he appears to have begun to rule with excellent intentions, he 
was totally unfit to cope with the forces of disorder. Germany 
was torn with feuds, the various orders for the establishment of 
peace were disregarded, and after 1389 the king paid very little 
attention to German affairs. In 1383 he inherited the duchy of 
Luxemburg from his uncle Wenceslaus and in 1387 assisted his 
half-brother Sigismund to obtain the Hungarian throne. 

For some time Wenceslaus ruled Bohemia successfully, but he 
fell under the influence of favourites and aroused the irritation 
of the nobles. A quarrel with John II., archbishop of Prague, 
which led to the murder of John's vicar-general, John of Pomuk, 
at the instigation of the king, provoked a rising led by Jobst, 
margrave of Moravia, a cousin of Wenceslaus; and in 1304 the 
king was taken prisoner and only released under pressure of 
threats from the German princes. Having consented to limita- 
tions on his power in Bohemia, he made a further but spasmodic 
effort to restore peace in Germany. He then met Charles VI., 
king of France at Reims, where the monarchs decided to persuade 
the rival popes Benedict XHI. and Boniface IX. to resign, and 
to end the papal schisms by the election of a new pontiff. Many 
of the princes were angry at this abandonment of Boniface by 
Wenceslaus, who had also aroused much indignation by his 
long absence from Germany and by selling the title of duke of 
Milan to Gian Gnlleawo Visconti The consequence was that in 
August 1400 the four Rhenish electors met at Oberlahnstein and 
declared Wenceslaus deposed. He was charged with attempting 
to dismember the empire to his own advantage, with neglecting to 
end the schism in the church, with allowing favourites to enrich 
themselves, and was further accused of murder. Though be 
remained in Bohemia be took no steps against Rupert III. count 
palatine of the Rhine, who had been elected as his successor. He 
soon quarrelled with Sigismund, who took him prisoner in 1402 
and sent him to Vienna, where he remained in captivity for 
nineteen months after abdicating in Bohemia. In 1404, when 
Sigismund was recalled to Hungary, Wenceslaus regained his 



( 



5*8 



WEN-CHOW-FU— WENLOCK 



freedom and with it his authority in Bohemia; and after the death 
of the German king Rupert in 14 10 appears to have entertained 
hopes of recovering his former throne. Abandoning this idea, 
however, he voted for the election of Sigismund in 141 1, but 
stipulated that he should retain the title of king of the Romans. 
His concluding years were disturbed by the troubles which arose 
in Bohemia over the death of John Huss, and which the vacillat- 
ing king did nothing to check until compelled by Sigismund. 
In the midst of these disturbances he died at Prague on the 16th 
of August 14 1 9. His second wife was Sophia, daughter of John, 
duke of Bavaria-Munich, but he left no children. Wencesla.ua was 
a capable and educated man, but was lacking in perseverance and 
industry. He neglected business for pleasure and was much 
addicted to drunkenness. He favoured the teaching of Huss, 
probably on political grounds, but exercised very little influence 
during the Hussite struggle. 

See Th. Lindner, Ctsehtckte da diuisdstn Retches vtm End* ies 
14UH J . ' mdcrtS bii tut Rjcforni&tien, pan i. (Brunswick.. '$75- 
1880), a ml " Die Wahl Wcnaels," in the Fpnckvngrn £xr dtuitciifn Ct- 
schichte. Bach! \\v. (Goitingen, i8&J-i8d6) . F M. Pclicl. Ubtns- 
geschichtt da rQmisekin ujtd aahmischen Kinig* TrrrtjWtifrf (f'r-icue, 
1788-17 *H.y; F. Palacky, GcschUktc v<m Bokmtn, ftdnile iii. andiv 
(Prague." 1864-1874)1 n. Man, KOnig Wenztt and &w tkttm±cken 
Kurfursten iKckeocW, I&S7), The anicle ty Tu. Lindner "in' the 
Allgemeint dftttjthe llineriiphi£ t Ltand xiL, ehuulil also be consulted 
for a bibliography, and aLothc same writer** work, Das Urkunfitn- 
toesen L m 1 V. tind stintr Afai'Jt/Wjpr (Stuttgart, tH%£}, 

W&N-CHOW-FU, a prefectural city in the province of Cheh- 
kiang, China, and one of the five ports opened by the Chifu 
convention to foreign trade, situated (28 1' N., 120 31' E.) on the 
south bank of the river Gow, about 20 m. from the sea. The 
population is estimated at 80,000. The site is said to have 
been chosen by Kwo P'oh (a.d. 276-324), a celebrated antiquary 
who recognized in the adjacent mountain peaks a correspondence 
with the stars in the constellation of the Great Bear, from whkh 
circumstance the town was first known as the Tow or Great Bear 
city. Subsequently the appearance in its vicinity of a white 
deer carrying a flower in its mouth was deemed so favourable 
an omen as to more than justify the change of its name to Luh 
or Deer city. Its present name, which signifies the " mild 
district," and is correctly descriptive of the climate, though not of 
the inhabitants, was given to it during the Ming dynasty (1368- 
1644) . The walls, which were built in the 10th century, are about 
4 m. in circumference, 35 ft. in height, and 12 ft. broad at the 
top. The streets are paved with brick and are wide, straight and 
clean. The gates, seven in number, were erected in 1598. 
Wen-chow is about 1560 m. S.S.E. by road from Peking and 
600 m. E.S.E. of Hankow. The British consul and the customs 
outdoor staff occupy foreign-built houses on Conquest Island, 
which lies abreast of the city. The neighbourhood is hilly and 
pretty, while opposite the north-west gate Conquest Island 
forms a picturesque object. The island is, however, more 
beautiful than healthy. The port, which was opened to foreign 
trade in 1876, has not justified the expectations which were 
formed of it as a commercial centre, and in 1008 the direct 
foreign trade was valued at £19,000 only. 

There is no foreign settlement at Wcn-chow, and the foreign 
residents are mainly officials and missionaries. The lea trade of 
Wen-chow-Fu, formerly important, has declined owing to care- 
less cultivation. A considerable native export trade in wood, 
charcoal, bamboo, medicines, paper umbrellas, oranges, otter 
skins and tobacco leaf js carried on. The imports are chiefly 
cotton yarn and piece goods, kerosene oil, palm-leaf fans, aniline 
dyes, sugar and matches. 

WENDBN (Lettish Tsaiz), a town of western Russia, in the 
government of Livonia, 60 m. by rail N.E. of Riga. Pop. (1897) 
63 27. Here are the well preserved ruins of a former castle of the 
Brethren of the Sword, afterwards (from 1237) of the grand- 
master of the Teutonic Knights. In 1577 the garrison blew it 
up to prevent it from falling into* the hands of Ivan the Terrible 
of Russia. It was rebuilt, but has been in ruins since a fire in 
1748. 

WEHDOVER, a market town in the Aylesbury parliamentary 
division of Buckinghamshire, England, 33 m. N.W. of London 



by the Metropolitan and the Great Central joint railway. Pop. 
(1901) 2036. It is picturesquely situated in a shallow defile 
of the Chiltern Hills, towards their western face. Wendovcr is 
a quiet town of no great activity. Its church of St Mary is mainly 
Decorated, and a few old houses remain. 

Wendover (Wendovre, Wandovre, Wend our a) is on the Upper 
Icknield Way, which was probably an ancient British road, and 
various traces of a British settlement have been found in the 
town and neighbourhood. In 1087 the king held the manor of 
Wendover, and therefore it belonged to the ancient demesne 
of the crown. There is no trace of any incorporation of the town. 
Two burgesses were summoned to the parliaments of 1300, 1307 
and 1309, but no further returns were made until 1625. In 1832 
Wendover lost its right of separate representation. It is note- 
worthy that John Hampden and Edmund Burke both repre- 
sented the borough. In 1464 Edward IV. confirmed to his 
tenants and the residents within the borough the market that 
they had always held every Thursday For a short period the 
day was changed to Tuesday, but the market was given up 
before 1888. Hugh de Gurnay held a fair in Wendover on the 
eve, feast and morrow of St John the Baptist, granted him in 
12x4. Another fair was granted to John de Molyns in 1347-1348 
on the eve, feast and morrow of St Barnabas, but in 1464 Edward 
IV. granted two fairs to his tenants and residents in the borough, 
to be held on the vigils, feasts and morrows of St Matthew 
and of SS. Philip and James. These fairs have been held without 
interruption till the present day, their dates being October 2 
a nd M ay 13. 

WENDS, the name applied by the Germans to the Slavs (q.v.) 
wherever they came in contact with them. It is now used for the 
Slovenes (q.v.), for the Germanized Polabs (q.v.) in eastern 
Hanover, and especially for the Lusatian Wends or Sorbs (q.v.). 
It is first found in Pliny (Venedae) and in English is used by 
Alfred. 

WENDT, HANS HINRICH (1853- ), German Protestant 
theologian, was born in Hamburg on the 18th of June 1853. 
After studying theology at Leipzig, Gdttingen and Tubingen, he 
became in 1885 professor ordinarius of systematic theology at 
Heidelberg, and in 1893 was called to Jena. His work on the 
teaching of Jesus (Die Lchrc Jesu, 1886-1800; Eng. trans, 
of second part, 1892) made him widely known. He also edited 
several editions (5th to 8th, 1880-1898) of the Commentary on 
the Acts of ike Apostles mH. A. W. Meyer's series. In May 1004 
he delivered two addresses in London on " The Idea and Reality 
of Revelation, and Typical Forms of Christianity," as the 
Essex Hall Lectures (published, 1004). 

His works include: Die christlicke Lehre von der menschlichen 
VoUkommenheit (1882), Der Erfahrungsbeiveis fur die Wahrkeit des 
Chrislenlums (1897), and Das Johanncsevangelium (1900; Eng. 
trans., 1902). 

WENLOCK, a municipal borough in the Ludlow and Wellington 
parliamentary divisions of Shropshire, England, extending on 
both sides of the river Severn. Pop. (1901) 15,866. It includes 
the market towns of Broseley, Madeley and Much Wenlock 
(q.v.). The parish of Madeley includes the small towns of Iron- 
bridge and Coalport, with part of Coalbrookedale (q.v). The 
district is in part agricultural, but contains limestone quarries, 
some coal-mines and iron-works. The borough is under a mayor, 
8 aldermen and 24 councillors. Area, 22,657 acres. 

Wenlock (Weneloche) is said to be of pre-Roman origin, but 
owed its early importance to the nunnery founded c. 680 by 
St Milburg, daughter of Merewald, king of Mercia. This was 
destroyed by the Danes but refounded as a priory by Earl 
Lcofric in z 01 7. It was again deserted after the Conquest until 
Roger de Montgomery founded a house of the Cluniac order on its 
site. The town was a borough by prescription, and its privileges 
began with the. grants made to the priory and its tenants. It 
was incorporated under the name of " Bailiff, Burgesses and 
Commonalty " by Edward IV. in 1468 at the request of Sir John 
Wenlock, Kt., and "in consideration of the laudable services 
which the men of the town performed in assisting the king to 
gain possession of the crown/' and the charter was confirmed in 



WENLOCK GROUP— WENSLEYDALE, BARON 



5*9 



r$47 by Henry VHI. and In 1631 by Charles I. The bailiff was to 
be chosen annually by the burgesses, but his election seems to 
have depended entirely upon the lord of the manor, and, after a 
contest in 182 1 between Lord Forester and Sir W. W. Wynne, 
the lord of the manor at that date, was nominated by each of 
them alternately. In the report of 1835 the borough is said to 
consist of seventeen parishes and to be unfit for corporate govern- 
ment. By the charter of Edward IV. the town obtained the 
right of sending two members to parliament, but was disfranchised 
in 1885. The first grant of a market and fair is dated 1997, when 
the prior of Wenlock obtained licence to hold a fair on the vigil, 
day and morrow of the Nativity of St John the Baptist, and 
a market every Monday. The incorporation charter of 1468 
granted these to the burgesses, who continue to hold them. 

See Victoria County History: Shropshire; John Randall, RandaWs 
Tourists' Guide to Wenlock (1879); " Borough of Wenlock," The 
Salopian and West Midland Monthly Illustrated Journal, March, April, 
November, December, 1877, April and October, 1878, March, 1879 
(1877-1879). 

w Jul LOCK GROUP fWenlockian), in geology, the middle 
series of strata in the Silurian (Upper Silurian) of Great Britain. 
This group in the typical area in the Welsh border counties 
contains the following formations: Wenlock or Dudley lime- 
stone, 00-300 ft.; Wenlock shale, up to 1900 ft.; Woolhope or 
Barr limestone and shale, 150 ft. 

The Woolhope beds consist mainly of shales which are generally 
calcareous ana pass frequently into irregular nodular and lenticular 
limestone. In the Malvern Hills there is much shale at the base, 
•ad in places the limestone may be absent These beds are best 
developed in Herefordshire; they appear also at May Hill in 
Gloucestershire and in Radnorshire. Common fossils are Phacops 
caudalus, Encrinnrus punctatus, Orthis calligramma, A try pa reti- 
cularis, Orthoceras annulatum. 

The Wenlock Shales are pale or dark-grey shales which extend 
through Coalbrookdalc in Shropshire, through Radnorshire into 
Carmarthenshire. They appear again southward in the Silurian 
patches in Gloucestershire, Herefordshire and Monmouthshire. 
They thicken from the south northward. The fossils are on the 
whole closely similar to those in the limestones above with the 
natural difference that corals are comparatively rare in the shales, 
while graptolitcs are abundant. Six graptolite tones have been 
recognized by Miss G. L. EUcs in this formation. 

The Wenlock limestone occurs either as a series of thin limestones 
with chin shales or as thick massive beds; it is sometimes hard and 
crystalline and sometimes soft, earthy or concretionary. It is 
typically developed in Wenlock Edge, where it forms a striking 
feature for some 20 m. It appears very well exposed in a sharp 
anticline at Dudley, whence it is sometimes called the " Dudley 
limestone "; it occurs also at Aymestry, Ludlow, Woolhope, May 
Hill. Usk and Malvern. The fossils include corals in great variety 
{Halysites calenularis, FavosUes aspera, Hdiolite* tnlerstinetus), 
crinoids {Crotalocrinus, Marsupiocrinus, Perieckocrinus),, often very 
beautiful specimens, and trilobites (Calymene Blumenbachii, the 
*' Dudley locust," Phacops eaudatus, Itlaenus {Bumbastes)barriensis t 
Honudonotus ddphinocephalus), Merostomatous crustaceans make 
their first appearance hen(Eurypterus punctatus, Hemiaspis korridus). . 
Brachiopods are abundant (Atrypa reticularis^ Spirifer plicatUis, 
Rhynchonella euneata, Orthis, LeUaena, Pentamerus) ; lamellibranchs 
include the senera Avicula, Cardiola, Granmysta; Murchisonia, 
Bdlerephoa, Omphalotrochus are common gastcropod genera. Conu- 
laria Sowerbyi is by no means rare, and there are several common 
cephalopod genera {Orthoceras, Phragmoeeras, Trochoceras). 

The greater part of the known Silurian fauna of Britain 



> greater part _. 

from Wenlock rocks; J. Davidson and G. Maw obtained no fewer 
than 25,000 specimens of brachiopods from 7 tons of the shale. 
Not only are there many different genera and species but individually 
certain forms are very numerous. The three principal aortal 
graptolhes are, from above downwards: Monograptus testis, Cyrto- 
groptus Linnarssoni, Cyrtograptus MurchisemL 

When traced northward into Denbighshire and Merionethshire 
the rocks change their character and become more slaty or arenace- 
ous; they are represented in this area by the " Mod Fcrna Slates," 
the " Pen-y-glog Grit," and " Pen-y-glog Slates," all of which belong 
to the lower part of a great series (tpoo ft.) of slates and grits known 
as the " Denbighshire Grits." Similar deposits occur on this horizon 
still farther north, in the Lake district, where the Wenlock rocks 
are represented by the " Brathay Flags (lower part of the Coniston 
Flags series), and in southern Scotland, where their place is taken 
by the variable " Riccarton beds " of Kirkcudbright Shore, Dumfries- 
shire, Riocartoo and the Cheviots; by greywackea and shales in 
Lanarkshire; by mudstonea, shales and nits in the Pentbnd Hills, 
and in the Girvan area by the M Blair "and " Stratton beds." In 
Ireland the " Ferritm Cove beds," a thick series of shales, slates 
and sandstones with lavas and tun's in the Dingle promontory; the 



•• Mweelrea beds " and others in Tir>perary and Mayo are of Wenlock 
age. Lime and flagstones are the most important economic products 
of the British Wenlock rocks. 

See the article Silurian, and for recent papers, Geological Litera- 
ture, GeoL Soc, London, annual, and the Q.J. Geol. Soc., London. 

U- A. H.) 

WENHERBHRS, GUNNAR (1817-1001), Swedish poet, 
musician and politician, was born at Lidkoping, of which place 
his father was parish priest, on the and of October 181 7. He 
passed through the public school of Skara, and in his twentieth 
year became a student at Upsala. He was remarkable from the 
first, handsome in face and tall in figure, with a finely trained 
singing voice, and brilliant in wit and conversation. From the 
outset of his career he was accepted in the inner circle of men of 
light and leading for which the university was at that time 
famous. In 1843 he became a member of the musical club who 
called themselves " The Juvenah," nnd for their meetings were 
written the trios and duets, music and words, which Wennerberg 
began to publish in 1846. In the following year appeared the 
earliest numbers of duntame (or " The Boys "), thirty duets for 
baritone and bass, which continued to be issued from 1847 to 
1850. The success of these' remarkable productions, master- 
pieces in two arts, was overwhelming: they presented an 
epitome of all that was most unique and most attractive in the 
curious university life of Sweden. In the second volume of his 
collected works Wennerberg gave, long afterwards, a very 
interesting account of the inception and history of these cele- 
brated duets. His great personal popularity, as the representa- 
tive Swedish student, did not prevent him, however, from 
pursuing his studies, and he became an authority on Spinoza. 
|n 1850 he first travelled through Sweden, singing and reciting in 
public, and his tour was a long popular triumph. In i860 he 
published his collected trios, as The Three, In 1865, at the 
particular wish of the king, Charles XV., Wennerberg entered 
official life in the department of elementary education. He 
succeeded Fahlcranta in 2866 as one of the eighteen of the 
Swedish Academy, and in 1870. became minister for education 
(Ekklesiastjkminister) in the AdlercreuU government, upon the 
fall of which in 187s he retired for a time into private life. He 
was, however, made lord-lieutenant in the province of Kronoberg, 
and shortly afterwards was elected to represent it in the Diet. 
His active parliamentary life continued until he was nearly 
eighty years of age. In 1S81 and 1885 he issued his collected 
works, mainly in verse. In 1893 he was elected to the upper 
house. He preserved his superb appearance in advanced old 
age, and he died, after a very short illness, on the 24th of August 
1901, at the royal castle of Leckd, where he was visiting his 
brother-in-law, Count Axel Rudenschold. His wife, the Countess 
Hedvig Cronstedt, whom he- married in 1852, died in 1900. 
Wennerberg was a most remarkable type of the lyrical, ardent 
Swedish aristocrat, full of the joy of life and the beauty of iL 
In the long roll of his eighty-four years there was scarcely a 
crumpled rose-leaf. His poems, to which their musical accom- 
paniment is almost essential, have not ceased, in half a 
century, to be universally pleasing to Swedish ears; outside 
Sweden it would be difficult to maker their peculiarly local 
charm intelligible. CE.G.) 

WBSSLEYDALE, JAMES PARKE, Bason (1783*1868), 
English judge, was born near Liverpool on the 22nd of March 
1782. He was educated at Macclesfield grammar school and 
Trinity College, Cambridge. He had a brilliant career at the 
university, winning the Craven scholarship, Sir William Browne's 
gold medal, and being fifth wrangler and senior chancellor's 
medallist in classics. Called to the bar at the Inner Temple he 
rapidly acquired an excellent common law practice and in 1828 
was raised to the king's bench, while still of the junior bar. In 
1834 he was transferred from the king's bench to the court of 
exchequer, where for some twenty years be exercised considerable 
influence. The changes introduced by the Common Law 
Procedure Arts of 1854. 1855 proved too much for his legal 
conservatism and he resigned in December of the latter year. 
The government, anxious to have his services as a law lord in the 
House of Lords, proposed to confer on him a life peerage, but this 



520 



WENSLEYDALE— WENTWORTH (FAMILY) 



was opposed by the House of Lords (see Peerage), and be was 
eventually created a peer with the usual remainder (1856). He 
died at his residence, Ampthill Park, Bedfordshire, on the 25th 
of February 1868, and having outlived his three sons, the title 
became extinct. 

WEMBLEYDALB, the name given to the upper part of the 
valley of the river Ure in the North Riding, Yorkshire, England. 
It is celebrated equally for its picturesque scenery and for the 
numerous points of historical and other interest within it. The 
Ure rises near the border of Yorkshire and Westmorland, in 
the uplands of the Pennine Chain. Its course is generally 
easterly as long as it is confined by these uplands, but on de- 
bouching upon tbe central plain of Yorkshire it takes a south- 
easterly turn and flows past Ripon and Boroughbridgc to form, 
by its union with the Swale, the river Ouse, which drains to the 
Humber. The name Wensleydale is derived from the village 
of Wensley, some 95 m. from the source of the river, and is 
primarily applied to a section of the valley extending zo m. 
upstream from that point, but is generally taken to embrace 
tho whole valley from its source to a point near Jervaulx abbey, 
a distance of nearly 40 m., below which the valley widens out 
upon tbe plain. The dale is traversed by a branch of the North- 
Eastern railway from Northallerton. 

As far up as Hawes, the dale presents a series of landscapes 
in which the broken limestone crags of the valley-walls and the 
high-lying moors beyond them contrast finely with the rich land 
at the foot of the hills. Beyond Hawes, towards the source, 
the valley soon becomes wide, bare and shallow, less rich in 
contrast, but wilder. On both sides throughout the dale numer- 
ous narrow tributary vales open out. Small waterfall* are 
numerous. The chief are Aysgarth Force, on the main stream. 
Mill Gill Force on a tributary near Askrigg, and Hardraw Scaur 
beyond Hawes, the finest of all, which shoots forth over a 
projecting ledge of limestone so as to leave a dear passage 
behind it. The surrounding cliffs complete a fine picture. The 
small river Bain, joining the Ure near Askrigg, (pnns a pretty 
lake called Semerer or Semmer Water, f m. in length. 

Following the valley upward, the points of chief interest apart 
from the scenery arc these. Jervaulx Abbey was founded in 1 156 
by Cistercians from Byland, who had previously settled near Askrigg. 
The remains are mainly transitional Norman and Early English, and 
are not extensive. Oi the great church hardly any fragments rise 
above ground-level, but the chapter-house, refectory and cloisters 
remain in part, and the ivy-clad ruins stand in a beautiful setting of 
woodland. Above tbe small town of Middlbbam, where there are 
large training stables, rises the Norman keep of Robert Fits-Ranulph. 
which passed to the Nevills, being held by the " King-maker," 
Warwick. The subsidiary buildings date down to the 14th century. 
In Cover Dale near Middleham is the ruined Premonstratensian 
abbey of Covbxham, founded here in the 13th century and retaining 
a gatehouse and other portions of Decorated date. Farther up 
Wensleydale Bolton Castle stands high on the north side. This 
was the stronghold of the Scrapes, founded by Richard I.'s chan- 
cellor of that name. Its walls, lour corner-towers and fine position 
still give it an appearance of great strength. 

WENTWORTH, the name of an English family distinguished 
in the parliamentary history of the x6th and 17th centuries. 
The Wentworths traced descent from William Wentworth 
(d. 1308) of Wentworth Woodhouse, in Yorkshire, who was 
the ancestor of no fewer than eight distinct lines of the family, 
two main branches of which were settled in the 14th century 
at Wentworth Woodhouse and North Elmshail respectively. 
From the elder, or Wentworth Woodhouse branch, were 
descended Thomas Wentworth the celebrated carl of Strafford 
(qv.), and through him the WaLson-Wentworths, marquesses 
of Rockingham in the x8th century, and the earls Fitz William 
of the present day. To the younger branch belonged Roger 
Wentworth (d. 1452)1 great-great-grandson of the above- 
mentioned William. Roger, who was a son of John Wentworth 
(fl. 1413) of North Elmshail, Yorkshire, acquired the manor 
of Ncttlestead in Suffolk in right of his wife, a grand-daughter 
of Robert, Baron Tlbetot, in whose lands this manor had been 
included, and who died leaving an only daughter in 1372. 
Roger's son Henry (d. 148a) was twice married; by his first 
wife he was the ancestor of the Wentworths of Gosfidd, Essex; 



by his second of the Wentworths of LOfingstone Lovefl, 1 
hamshire. 1 Another of Roger Wentworth's sons, Sir Phflxp 
Wentworth, was the grandfather of Margery, wife of Sir John 
Seymour, mother of the Protector Somerset and of Henry VHI.'s 
wife Jane Seymour, and grandmother of King Edward VL 
Margery's brother Sir Robert Wentworth (d. 1528) married a 
daughter of Sir James Tyrrell, the reputed murdererof Edward V. 
and his brother in the Tower; and Sir Robert's son by Una 
marriage, Thomas Wentworth (1501-1551), was summoned to 
parliament by writ in 1520 as Baron Wentworth of Nettlestead. 
He was one of the peers who signed the letter to the pope in 
favour of Henry VHL's divorce from Catherine of Aragon, and 
was one of the judges of Anne Boleyn. He was lord chamber- 
Iain to Edward VL, and died in 1551 leaving sixteen children. 

Thomas Wentworth, 2nd Baron Wentworth of Ncttlestead 
(1 525-1 584), was the eldest son of the above-mentioned xst 
baron. He served with distinction under his relative the Pro- 
tector Somerset at the battle of Pinkie in 1547; but in 1551 he 
was one of the peers who condemned Somerset to death on a 
charge of felony. He was a trusted counsellor of Queen Mary, 
who appointed him deputy of Calais. Wentworth was the 
last Englishman to hold this post, for on the 7th of January 

1558 he was compelled to surrender Calais to the French, his 
representations as to the defenceless condition of the fortress 
having been disregarded by the English Council some years 
earlier. Wentworth himself remained in France as a prisoner 
of war for more than a year, and on his return to England in 

1559 he was sent to the Tower for having surrendered Calais; 
but he was acquitted of treason. He died on the 13th of January 
1584. His eldest son William married a daughter of Lord 
Burghley, but predeceased his father, whose peerage consequently 
passed to his second son Henry (1 558-1503), who was one of the 
judges of Mary, queen of Scots, at Foiheringay in 1586. 

Thomas Wentworth, xst earl of Cleveland (1591-1667), 
was the eldest son of Henry, whom he succeeded as 4th Baron 
Wentworth of Nettlestead in 1593. In 1614 he inherited from 
an aunt the estate of Toddington in Bedfordshire, till then the 
property of the Cheyney family, and here he made his principal 
residence. In 1626 he was created earl of Cleveland, and in 
the following year he served under Buckingham in the expedi- 
tion to La Rochelle. Adhering to the king's cause in the parlia- 
mentary troubles, he attended his kinsman Strafford at his 
execution, and afterwards was a general on the royalist side 
in the Civil War until he was taken prisoner at the second 
battle of Newbury. Geveland commanded a cavalry regiment 
at Worcester in 1651, when he was again taken prisoner, and 
he remained in the Tower till 1656. He died on the 25th of 
March 1667. His early extravagance and the fortunes of war 
had greatly reduced his estates, and Nettlestead was sold in 
1643. Cleveland was described by Clarendon as "a man of 
signal courage and an excellent officer"; his cavalry charge 
at Cropredy Bridge was one of the most brilliant incidents in 
the Civil War, and it was by his bravery and presence of mind 
that Charles II. was enabled to escape from Worcester. At his 
death the earldom of Cleveland became extinct He outlived 
his son Thomas (16x3-1645), who was called up to the House of 
Lords in his father's lifetime as Baron Wentworth, and whose 
daughter Henrietta Maria became Baroness Wentworth in her 
own right on her grandfather's death. This lady, who was 
the duke of Monmouth's mistress, died unmarried in 1686. 
The barony of Wentworth then reverted to Cleveland's daughter 
Anne, who married the 2nd Lord Lovelace, from whom it 
passed to her grand-daughter Martha (d. 1745), wife of Sir 
Henry Johnson, and afterwards to a descendant of Anne's 
daughter Margaret, Edward Noel, who was created Viscount 
Wentworth of Wellesborough in 1762. The viscount cy became 
extinct at his death, and the barony again passed through the 
female line in the person of Noel's daughter Judith to the 
latter's daughter Anne Isabella, who married Lord Byron the 

1 In the 1 6th century Ltlltngstone Lovdl was in Oxfordshire, that 
portion of tbe county being surrounded by Buckinghamshire, with 
which it was afterwards incorporated. 



WENTWORTH, W. C— WENZEL 



521 



poet; and from her to Byron's daughter Augusta Ada, whose 
husband was in 1838 created earl of Lovelace. The barony of 
Wentworth was thereafter held by the descendants of this 
nobleman in conjunction with the earldom of Lovelace. 

Paul Wentwoeth ( 1 533-i 593) r a prominent member of 
parliament in the reign of Elizabeth, was a member of the 
Lillingstone Lovell branch of the family (see above). His father 
Sir Nicholas Wentworth (d. 1557) was chief porter of Calais. 
Paul Wentworth was of puritan sympathies, and he first came 
into notice by the freedom with which in 1566 he criticised 
Elizabeth's prohibition of discussion in parliament on the 
question of her successor. Paul, who was probably the author 
of the famous puritan devotional book The MisctUanie, or 
Regtstrie and MetkodicaU Director* of Orisons (London, 16x5), 
died in 1593. He became possessed of Burnham Abbey through 
his wife, to whose first husband, William lyldesley, it had been 
granted at the dissolution of the monasteries by Henry VUL 

Petes Wentworth (1530-1596) was the elder brother of 
the above-mentioned Paul, and like his brother was a prominent 
puritan leader in parliament, which he first entered as member 
for Barnstaple in 1571. He took a firm attitude in support 
of the liberties of parliament against encroachments of the royal 
prerogative, on which subject he delivered a memorable speech 
on the 8lh of February 1576, for which after examination by 
the Star Chamber be was committed to the Tower. In February 
1587 Sir Anthony Cope (1548-16x4) presented to the Speaker 
a bill abrogating the existing ecclesiastical law, together with 
a puritan revision of the Prayer Book, and Wentworth supported 
him by bringing forward certain articles touching the liberties 
of the House of Commons; Cope and Wentworth were both 
committed to the Tower for interference with the queen's ecclesi- 
astical prerogative. In 1 593 Wentworth again suffered imprison- 
ment for presenting a petition on the subject of the succession 
to the Crown; and ft is probable that he did not regain his 
freedom, for he died in the Tower on the xoth of November 1506. 
While in the Tower he wrote A Pitkie Exhortation to her Majesty 
for establishing her Successor to the Crown, a famous treatise 
preserved in the British Museum. Peter Wentworth was twice 
married; his first wife, by whom he had no children, was a 
cousin of Catherine Parr, and his second a sister of Sir Francis 
WaJsingham, Elizabeth's secretary of state. His third son, 
Thomas Wentworth (e. 1568-1633), was an ardent and some- 
times a violent opponent of royal prerogative in parliament, 
of whkh he became a member in 1604, continuing to represent 
the city of Oxford from that year until his death. He was 
called to the bar in 1504 and became recorder of Oxford in 1607. 
Another son, Walter Wentworth, was also a member of parlia- 



SDt Pete* Wehtwosth (1599-1675) was a grandson of 
Peter Wentworth, being the son of Peter's eldest son Nicholas, 
from whom he inherited the manor of Liliingstone Lovell. 
As sheriff of Oxfordshire in 1634 he was charged with the duty 
of collecting the levy of ship-money, in which he encountered 
popular opposition. He was member for Tamworth in the Long 
Parliament, but refused to act as a conunissioner for the trial 
of Charles I. He was a member of the council of state during 
the Commonwealth; but was denounced for immorality by 
Cromwell in April 1653, and his speech in reply was interrupted 
by Cromwell's forcible expulsion of the Cotnxnons. Sir Peter, 
who was a friend of Milton, died on the xst of December 1675, 
having never been married. By his will he left a legacy to 
Mffton, and considerable estates to his grand-nephew Fisher 
Dilke, who took the name of Wentworth; and this name was 
borne by his descendants until dropped in the x8th century by 
Wentworth Dilke Wentworth, great-grandfather of Sir Charles 
Wentworth Dilke (q.v.). 

See W. L. Rutton, Three Branches of the Family of "Wentworth of 
Hettlestoad (London, 1891); Joseph Foster, Pedigrees of the County 
Families of Yorkshire (a vols.. London, 1874); Charles Wriothcsley. 
Chronicle of England during the Reign* of the Tudor s, edited by W. D. 
Hamilton (2 vols., London, 1 875-1877); Bulstrode Whitetocke, 
Memorials of the English Affairs: Charles J. to the Restoration 
(London, 173a); John Strype, Annals of the Reforma ti on (7 vols.. 



Oxford, 1824): Mark Noble, Lam of the English Regicides (a voku 
London, 1798) containing a memoir of Sir Peter Wentworth: Lord 
Clarendon, History of the Rebellion (7 vols., Oxford, 1839), and 
Calendar of the Clarendon State Papers; S. R. Gardiner, History of 



England from the Accession of James I. to the Outbreak of the Chk 
War (10 vols., London, 1883-1884), and History of the Great Civil 
War, 1642-16*9 (3 vols., London, 1886-1891); J. A. Froude, 
History of England (12 vols., London, 1856-1870); G. E. C, Com- 
ptele Peerage* vol. viiL (London, 1898). See also articles " Went- 
worth n by A. F. Pollard, C H. Firth and Sir C W. Dilke, in Vict. 
Not. Biog. (London, 1899). (R. J. M.) 

WENTWORTH, WILLIAM ' CHARLES (1793- 1872), the 
M Australian patriot," who claimed descent from the great 
Strafford, but apparently without sufficient reason, was born 
in 1793 in Norfolk Island, the penal settlement of New South 
Wales, where his father D'Arcy Wentworth, an Irish gentleman 
of Roscommon family, who had emigrated in 1700 and later 
became a prominent official, was then government surgeon. 
The son was educated in England, but he spent the interval 
between his schooling at Greenwich and his matriculation (1816) 
at Peterhouse, Cambridge, in Australia, and early attracted 
the attention of Governor Macquarie by some adventurous 
exploration in the Blue Mountains. In 1819 be published in 
London a work on Australasia in two volumes, and in 1823 
he only just missed the chancellor's medal at Cambridge (won 
by W. M. Praed) with a stirring poem on the same subject. 
Having been called to the bar, he returned to Sydney, and soon 
obtained a fine practice. With a fellow barrister, WardeU, he 
started a newspaper, the Australian, in 1824, to advocate the 
cause of self-government and to champion the " emancipists "— 
the incoming class of ex-convicts, now freed and prospering— 
against the " exclusivists " —the officials and the more aristo- 
cratic settlers. With WardeU, Dr William Bland and others, 
he formed the " Patriotic Association," and carried on a deter- 
mined agitation both in Australia and in England, where they 
found able supporters. The earlier object of their attack was 
the governor, Sir Ralph Darling, who was recalled in 1831 in 
consequence, though he was acquitted by a select committee 
of the House of Commons of the charges brought against him 
by Wentworth in connexion with his severe punishment of two 
soldiers. Sudds and Thompson, who had perpetrated a robbery 
in order to obtain their discharge (a favourite dodge at the 
time), and one of whom, Sudds, had died. Wentworth continued, 
under the succeeding governor, Sir Richard Bourke,who was 
guided by him, and Sir George Gipps, with whom he had constant 
differences, to exercise a powerful influence; and in 1843, when 
the Constitution Act was passed, it was generally recognized as 
mainly his work. He became a member of the first legislative 
council and led the " squatter party." He was the founder of 
the university of Sydney (1852), where his son afterwards founded 
bursaries in his honour; and he led the movement resulting in 
the new constitution for the colony (1854), subsequently (1861) 
becoming president of the new legislative council But things 
had* meanwhile moved fast in the colony, and Wentworth's 
old supremacy had waned, since Robert Lowe (afterwards Lord 
Sherbrooke) and others had come into prominence in the political 
arena. He had done his work for colonial autonomy, and was 
N^? mj>, g an old man, somewhat out of touch with the new 
generation. For some years before 1861 he stayed chiefly in 
England, where in 1857 he founded the " General Association for 
the Australian Colonies," with the object of obtaining from the 
government a federal assembly for the whole of Australia; 
and in 1862 he definitely settled in England, dying on the 20th 
of March 1872. His body was taken to Sydney and accorded 
a public funeral by the unanimous vote of the New South Wales 
le gislature. 

WENZEL, KARL FRIEDRICH (1740-1793), German metal- 
lurgist, was born at Dresden in 1740. Disliking his father's 
trade of hookhinding, for which he was intended, he left home 
in 1755, and after taking lessons in surgery and chemistry at 
Amsterdam, became a ship's surgeon in the Dutch service. In 
1766, tired of sea-life, he went to study chemistry at Leipzig, 
and afterwards devoted himself to metallurgy and assaying at 
his native place with such success that in 1780 he wasappoiated 



S2« 



WEPENER— WERGILD 



chemist to the Freiberg foundries by the elector of Saxony. 
In 1785 he became assessor to the superintending board of the 
foundries, and in 1786 chemist to the porcelain works at Meissen. 
He died at Freiberg on the 26th of February 1793. 

In consequence of the quantitative analyses he performed of a 
large number of salts, he has been credited with the discovery of the 
law of neutralization (Vorlesungen iber die ckemische Verwandtschafl 
der Kdrper, 1777)* out this attribution rests on a mistake first 
made by J. J. Berzclins and copied by subsequent writers, and 
Wenxeni published work (as pointed out by G. H. Hess in 1840) 
does not warrant the conclusion that he realized the existence of 
any law of invariable and reciprocal proportions in the combinations 
of acids and bases.. 

WEPENER, a town of the Orange Free State, 82 m. by rail 
S.E. of Bloemfontein, and 2 m. W. of the Basuto border. Pop. 
(1004) 1366, of whom 822 were whites. It lies in a rich grain 
district, and 3 m. north by the Caledon river are large flour mills. 
The town, named after the leader of the Boers in their war with 
the Basuto chief Moshesh in 1865, was founded in 1888. In 
April zooo it was successfully defended against the Boers under 
Christiaan de Wet by a Cape force of Irregulars commanded 
by Colonel £. H. Dalgety. 

WERDAU, a town of Germany, In the kingdom of Saxony, 
on the Pleisse, in the industrial district of Zwickau, and 40 m. S. 
of Leipzig. Pop. (1005) 19,473* Its chief industries are cotton 
and wool-spinning and the weaving of cloth, but machinery of 
various kinds, paper and a few other articles are also manu- 
factured. In addition to the usual schools, Werdau contains a 
weaving-scbooL The town is mentioned as early as 1304 and 
in 1308 it was purchased by the margrave of Meissen, who 
afterwards became elector of Saxony. 

See Sticfaard, Chronik der Fabriksladi Werdau (2nd ed., Werdau, 
1865). 

WBRDEK, a town of Germany, in the Prussian Rhine province, 
on the river Ruhr, 6 m. by rail S. of Essen. Pop. (1005) 1 1,029. 
It has an interesting Roman Catholic church which belonged to 
the Benedictine abbey founded about 800 by St Ludger, whose 
stone coffin is preserved in the crypt. The abbey buildings 
are used at a prison. The manufacture of cloth, woollens, 
shoes and paper, dyeing, tanning, brewing and distilling are the 
principal industries. In the neighbourhood are stone quarries 
and coal mines. Werden grew up around the Benedictine abbey, 
which was dissolved in 1802. The Codex Argenteus of Ulfilas, now 
in the university library at Upsala, was discovered here in the 
16th century. 

See FlOgce, Ckronik der Stadt Werden (Dustddorf, 1887); and 
Funrerdurtk Werden (Werden, 1887). 

WBRDEK, KARL WILHBLM FRIEDRICH AUGUST LEO- 
POLD, Count von (1808-1887), Prussian general, entered the 
Prussian Gardes du Corps in 1825, transferring the following year 
into the Guard Infantry, with which he served for many years as 
a subaltern. In 1839 he was appointed an instructor in the 
Cadet Corps, and later he was employed in the topographical 
bureau of the Great General Staff. In 1842-1843 he took part in 
the Russian operations in the Caucasus, and on his return to 
Germany in 1846, was placed, as a captain, on the staff. In 
1848 he married. Regimental and staff duty alternately occupied 
him until 1863, when he was made major-general, and given the 
command of a brigade of Guard Infantry. In the Austrian War 
of 1866 von Warder greatly distinguished himself at Gitschin 
(Ji£in) and Kdniggritz at the head of the 3rd division. He 
returned home with the rank of lieutenant-general and the order 
pour le nitrite. In 1870, at first employed with the 3rd Army 
Headquarters and in command of the Wilrttemberg and Baden 
force*, he was after the battle of Wflrth entrusted with the 
operations against Strassburg, which he captured after a long 
and famous siege. Promoted general of infantry, and assigned 
to command the new XI Vtn Army Corps, he defeated the French 
at Dijon and at Huits, and, when Bourbaki's army moved forward 
to relieve Belfort, turned upon him and fought the desperate 
action of Villersexel, which enabled him to cover the Germans 
besieging Belfort. On the 15th, 16th and 17th of January 1871, 
von Werder with greatly inferior forces succeeded in holding his 



own on the Lisaine against all Bourbaki's efforts to reach Belfort, 
a victory which aroused great enthusiasm in southern Germany. 
After the war von Werder commanded the Baden forces, now 
called the XlVth Army Corps, until he retired in 1879. On his 
retirement he was raised to the dignity of count. He died in 
1887 at Grussow in Pomerania. The 30th (4th Rhenish) Infantry 
regiment bears his name, and there is a statue of von Werder 
at Freiburg in the Breisgau. 

See von Conrady, Leben des Grajen A. von Werder (Berlin, 1889). 

WERGELAND, HENRIK ARNOLD (1808-1845), Norwegian 
poet and prose writer, was bom at Christiansand on the 17th of 
Jane 1808. He was the eldest son of Professor Nikolai Wergeland 
(1780-1848), who had been a member of the constitutional 
assembly which proclaimed the independence of Norway in 
1814 at Eidsvold. Nikolai was himself pastor of Eidsvold, and 
the poet was thus brought up in the very holy of holies of Nor- 
wegian patriotism. He entered the university of Christiania 
in 1825 to study for the church, and was soon the leader of a band 
of enthusiastic young men who desired to revive in Norway 
the spirit and independence of the old vikings. His earliest 
efforts in literature were wild and formless. He was full of 
imagination, but without taste or knowledge. He published 
poetical farces under the pseudonym of " Siful Sifadda "; 
these were followed in 1828 by an unsuccessful tragedy; and 
in 1829 by a volume of lyrical and patriotic poems, Digte, fdrste 
Ring, which attracted the liveliest attention to his name. At 
the age of twenty-one he became a power in literature, and his 
enthusiastic preaching of the doctrines of the revolution of July 
made him a force in politics also. Meanwhile he was tireless 
in his efforts to advance the national cause. He established 
popular libraries, and tried to alleviate the widespread poverty 
of the Norwegian peasantry. He preached the simple life, 
denounced foreign luxuries, and set an example by wearing 
Norwegian homespun. But his numerous and varied writing* 
were coldly received by the critics, and a monster epic, Skobelsen, 
Menneskct og Messias (Creation, Man and Messiah), 1830, 
showed no improvement in style. It was remodelled in 1845 ** 
Mennesket, From 1831 to 1835 Wergeland was submitted to 
severe satirical attacks from J. S. le Welhaven and others, and 
his style improved in every respect. His nationalist political 
propaganda lacked knowledge and system. His partisans were 
alienated by his inconsistent admiration for King Carl Johan, 
by his unpopular advocacy of the Jewish cause, and by the' 
extravagance of his methods generally. His popularity waned 
as his poetry improved, and in 1840 he found himself a really 
great lyric poet, but an exile from political influence. In that 
year he became keeper of the royal archives. He died on the 
1 2th of July 1845. In 1008 a statue was erected to his memory 
by his compatriots at Fargo, North Dakota. His Jan van 
Huysums Blomslerslykke (1840), Svalen (1841), Jtden (1842), 
JSdinden (1844) and Den Engdshe Lods (1844), form a series of 
narrative poems in short lyrical metres which remain the most 
interesting and important of their kind in Norwegian literature. 
He was less successful in other branches of letters; in the drama 
neither his CtmpbeUeme (1837), Venetianerne (1843). «>* S§ka- 
deUerne (1848), achieved any lasting success; while his elaborate 
contribution to political history, Nor gee Konsiitulions Historic 
(1841-1843), is forgotten. The poems of his later years include 
many lyrics of great beauty, which are among the permanent 
treasures of Norwegian poetry. 

Wergeland's Somlede Skritter (t, . , „ 

were edited by H. Lassen, the author of Henrik Wergeland og I 



Wergeland's Somlede Shifter (9 vols., Christiania, 1852-1857) 

ere edited by H. Lassen, the author of Henrik Wergeland og ham 

Samtid (1866), and the editor of his Breve (1S67). See also 



H. Schwanenflueel, Henrik Wergeland (Copenhagen, 1877); and 
J. G. Kraft, Norsk Forfatier-Lexikon (Christiania, 1857), for a 
detailed bibliography. 

WERGILD, Wekgeld or Wek, the Anglo-Saxon terms for the 
fine paid by, t.g. a murderer to the relatives of the dyntfinl 
in proportion to the rank of the latter. The wer was part of the 
early Teutonic and Celtic customary law, and represented the 
substitution of compensation for personal retaliation, resulting 
from the rise in authority of the power of the community as such. 
(See CanoMAL Law; Homicide; and TgUTWic Peoples.) 



WERMELSKIRCHEN— WERNER 



523 



WBRIDSLSKIBCHEH, a town of Germany, in the Prussian 
Rhine province, situated 4 on. S.W. from Lennep by rail and at the 
junction of a line to Remscheid. Pop. (1900) 1 5,460. It contains 
an Evangelical and a Roman Catholic church and a Latin school. 
Wcnnelskirchen is the centre of many thriving industries, chief 
among which are the manufacture of silks, cotton and silk 
ri bbons , plush, tobacco and steel goods. 

WERMUHD, an ancestor of the Mercian royal family, a son 
of Wihtlaeg and father of Offa. He appears to have reigned in 
Angel, and his story is preserved by certain Danish historians, 
especially Saxo Grammaticus. According to these traditions, his 
reign was long and happy, though its prosperity was eventually 
marred by the raids of a warlike king named Athislus, who slew 
Frowinus, the governor of Schleswig, in battle. Frowinus's 
death was avenged by his two sons, Keto and Wigo, but their 
conduct in fighting together against a single man was thought 
to form a national disgrace, which was only obliterated by 
the subsequent single combat of Offa. It has been suggested 
that Athislus, though called king of the Swedes by Saxo, was 
really identical with the Eadgils, lord of the Myrgingas, men- 
tioned in Widsith. As Eadgils was a contemporary of Ermanaric 
(Eormenric), who died about 370, his date would agree with the 
indication given by the genealogies which place Wcrmund nine 
generations above Penda. Frowinus and Wigo are doubtless to 
be identified with the Freawine and Wig who figure among the 
ancestors of the kings of Wessex. 

For the story of the aggression against Wertnund in his later 
years, told by the Danish historians and also by the Vitas duorum 
Off arum, sec Offa; also Saxo Grammaticus. Gesta Danorum, edited 
by A. Holder, pp. 105 ffr (Strassburc, 1886}; Vilae duorum Off arum 
(in Wats's edition of Matthew Paris, London. 1640). See also H. M. 
Chadwick, Origin of Ike English Nation (Cambridge, 1007). . 

WERNER, ANTON ALEXANDER VON (1843- ). German 
painter, was born at Frankf ort -on- 1 he-Oder, on the 9th of May 
1843. He first studied painting at the Berlin Academy, pursued 
his studies at Carlsruhe, arfd, having won a travelling scholarship 
upon the exhibition of his early works, he visited Paris in 1867, 
and afterwards Italy, where he remained for some time. On his 
return he received several state commissions, and on the out- 
break of the Franco- Prussian War in 1870 he was sent with the 
staff of the third corps d'armee, and stayed in France till the 
dose of the campaign. In 1873 he was appointed professor at 
the Berlin Academy, of which he afterwards became director. 
Among his more important works must be named " The Capitula- 
tion of Sedan," " Proclamation of the German Empire at 
Versailles," " Moltke before Paris," " Moltke at Versailles," 
u The Meeting of Bismarck and Napoleon III.," " Christ and 
.the Tribute Money," " William I. visiting the Tombs," " The 
Congress of Berlin," and some decorations executed in mosaic 
for the Triumphal Arch at Berlin. Von Werner's work is chiefly 
interesting for the historic value of his pictures of the events of 
the Franco-German War. 

See Kunsl fur AlJt, vol. i. ; Knackfuss, KunsHer- Monograpkieen, 
No. 9. 

WERNER, ABRAHAM GOTTLOB (1750-1817), father of Ger- 
man geology, was born in Upper Lusalia, Saxony, on the 25th 
of September 1750. The family to which he belonged had been 
engaged for several hundred years in mining pursuits. His 
father was inspector of Count Solm's iron-works at Wehrau and 
Lorzendorf, and from young Werner's infancy cultivated in 
him a taste for minerals and rocks. The boy showed early 
promise of distinction. He began to collect specimens of stones, 
and one of his favourite employments was to pore over the 
pages of a dictionary of mining. At the age of nine he was sent 
to school at Bunzlau in Silesia, where he remained until 1764, 
when he joined his father at Wehrau with the idea of ultimately 
succeeding him in the post of inspector. When nineteen year* 
of age (1769) he journeyed to Freiberg, where he attracted the 
notice of the officials, who invited him to attend the mining 
school established two years previously. This was the turning 
point in Werner's career. He soon distinguished himself by his 
industry and by the large amount of practical knowledge of 
mineralogy which he acquired. In 1771 he repaired to the 



university of Leipzig and went through the usual curriculum of 
study, paying attention at first chiefly to the subject of law, 
but continuing to devote himself with great ardour to minera- 
logical pursuits. While still a student he wrote his first work 
on the external characters of minerals, Von den Husserlichen 
Kentucichen der Fossilien (1774), which at once gave him a 
name among the mineralogists of the day. In 1775 he was 
appointed inspector in the mining school and teacher of 
mineralogy at Freiberg. To the development of that school 
and to the cultivation of mineralogy and geognosy he thence- 
forth, for about forty years, devoted the whole of his active and 
indefatigable industry. From a mere provincial institution the 
Freiberg academy under his care rose to be one of the great 
centres of scientific light in Europe, to which students from all 
parts of the world flocked to listen to his eloquent teaching. 
He wrote but little, and though he elaborated a complete system 
of geognosy and mineralogy he never could be induced to publish 
it. From the notes of his pupils, however, the general purport 
of his teaching was well known, and it widely influenced the 
science of his time. He died at Freiberg on the 30th of June 
1817. 

One of the distinguishing features of Werner's teaching was the 
care with which he taught lithology and the succession of geological 
formation; a subject to which he applied the name geognosy. Hi* 
views on a definite geological succession were inspired by the works 
of J. G. Lehmann and G. C. Fuchsel (1722-1773;. He showed that 
the rocks of the earth are not disposed at random, but follow each 
other in a certain definite order. Unfortunately he had never 
enlarged his experience by travel, and the' sequence of epek-wasses 
which he had recognized in Saxony was believed by him to be of 
universal application (see his Kurze Klossifikalion und Besckreibung 
der versckiedenen Gebirgsarten, 1787). He taught that the rocks were 
the precipitates of a primeval ocean, and followed each other in 
syroo-^w deposits of world-wide extent. Volcanoes were regarded 
by l.uu .1* abnormal phenomena, probably due to the combustion 
of sat it 1 rr 1 dean beds of coal. Basalt and similar rocks, which even 
thon v.iTi- recognized by other observers as of igneous origin, were 
behcwl by him to be water-formed accumulations of the same 
an 1 . 1 ■. r ■ ... u an. Hence arose one of the great historical controversies 
of geology- Werner's followers preached the doctrine of the aqueous 
origin <jI rjcks, and were known as Neptunists; their opponents, 
who recognized the important part taken in the construction of the 
earth's crust by subterranean heat, were styled Vulcanists. R. 
Jameson, the most distinguished of his British pupils, was for many 
years an ardent teacher of the Wcrnerian doctrines. Though much 
of Werner's theoretical work was erroneous, science is indebted to 
him for so clearly demonstrating the chronological succession of 
rocks, for the enthusiastic zeal which he infused into his pupils, 
and for the impulse which he thereby gave to the study of geology. 

Sec S. G. Fnsch, Lebensbesckreibung A . G. Werners (Leipzig, 1825) ; 
Cuvier, Eloge de Werner; Lyell, Principles of Geology-, and Sir A. 
Gcikie, Founders of Geology (1897; 2nd ed., 1906). 

WERNER, FRIEDRICH LUDWIO ZACHARJAS (1768- 
1823), German poet, dramatist and preacher, was born on the 
1 8th of November 1768 at Konigsberg in Prussia. From his 
m6thcr, who died a religious maniac, Werner inherited a weak 
and unbalanced nature, which his education did nothing to 
correct. At the university of his native place he studied law; 
but Rousseau and Rousseau's German disciples were the in- 
fluences that shaped his view of life. For years he oscillated 
violently between aspirations towards the state of nature, 
which betrayed him into a series of rash and unhappy marriages, 
and a sentimental admiration — in common with so many of 
the Romanticists— for the Roman Catholic Church, which 
ended in 181 1 in his conversion. Werner's talent was early 
recognized and obtained for him, in spite of his character, a 
small government post at Warsaw, which he exchanged after- 
wards for one at Berlin. In the course of his travels, and by 
correspondence, he got into touch with many of the men most 
eminent in literature at the time; and succeeded in having 
his plays put on the stage, where they met with much success. 
In 1814 he was ordained priest, and, exchanging the pen for the 
pulpit, became a popular preacher at Vienna, where, during 
the famous congress of 1814, his eloquent but fanatical sermons 
were listened to by crowded congregations. He died at Vienna 
on the 17th of January 1823. 

Werner was the only dramatist of the Romantic movement 



524 



WERNIGERODE— WERWOLF 



who — thanks to the influence of Schiller—was able to sub- 
ordinate his exuberant imagination to the practical needs of 
the stage. His first tragedy, Die Sdhne des Tals (1803-1804), 
is in two parts, and it was followed by Das Kreut an der Osisee 
(1806). More important is the Reformation drama Martin 
Luther, oier die Weihe der Kraft (1807), which, after his con- 
version to Catholicism, Werner recanted in a poem Weihe der 
Unkraft (18x3). His powerful one-act tragedy, Der vierund- 
vwataigste Februar (1815, but performed 1810), was the first 
of the so-called " fate tragedies." AltUa (1808), Wanda (1810) 
and Die Mutter der Makiobaer (1820) show a falling-off in 
Werner's powers. 

Z. Werner's Theater was first collected (without the author's 
consent) in 6 vols. (1816-1818); Ausgevtihlte Schriflen (15 vols., 
1840-1841), with a biography by K. J. Schutz. See also J. E. 
Hit rig, Lebensabriss F. L. Z. Werners (1823); H. Dontter, Zwei 
Bekehrte (1873); J. Minor, Die Schicksalstragadie in ihren Haupt- 
vertretern (1883) and the same author's volume, Das Schidtsalsdrama 

Jin Kurschner's Deutsche NationaUileratur, vol. 151, 1884); F. 
'oppenberg, Zacharias Werner (1893). 

WERNIGERODE, a town of Germany, in the province of 
Prussian Saxony, 13 m. by rail S.W. of Halberstadt, picturesquely 
situated on the Holzemme, on the north slopes of the Hare 
Mountains. Pop. (1905) 13,137. It contains several interesting 
Gothic buildings, including a fine town hall with a timber facade 
of. 1498. Some of the quaint old houses which have escaped 
the numerous fires that have visited the town are elaborately 
adorned with wood-carving. The gymnasium, occupying a 
modern Gothic building, is the successor of an ancient grammar- 
school, which existed 'until 1825. Brandy, cigars and dye- 
stuffs are among the manufactures of the place. Above the 
town rises the chateau of the prince of Stolberg-Wcrnigerodc. 
A pavilion in the park contains the library of 117,000 volumes, 
the chief feature in which is the collection of over 3000 Bibles 
and over 5000 volumes of hymnology. Wemigerode is the chief 
town of the county (Grafschafl) of Stolberg-Wcrnigerode, which 
has an extent of 107 sq. m., and includes the Bracken within 
its limits. 

The counts of Wemigerode, who can be traced back to the 
early 12th century, were successively vassals of the margraves 
of Brandenburg (1268), and the archbishops of Magdeburg 
(1381). On the extinction of the family in 1429 the county 
fell to the counts of Stolberg, who founded the Stolbcrg- 
Wernigerodc branch in 1645. The latter surrendered its military 
and fiscal independence to Prussia in 1714, but retained some 
of its sovereign rights till 1876. The counts were raised to 
princely rank in 1890. 

See F6rstemann, Die Grtiflich-Stolbergische BiUiothek in Wemige- 
rode (Nordhauscn, 1866), and G. Sommcr, Die Crafschafi Wemi- 
gerode (Halle, 1883). 

WERTH [Weert], JOHANK. Count von (t. 1595-1652), 
German general of cavalry in the Thirty Years' War, was born 
between 1599 and 1600 at But t gen in the duchy of Jtilich. His 
parents belonged to the numerous class of the lesser nobility, 
and at an early age he left home to follow the career of a soldier 
of fortune in the Walloon cavalry of the Spanish service. In 
1622, at the taking of Julich, he won promotion to the rank 
of lieutenant. He served as a colonel of cavalry in the Bavarian 
army in 163a He obtained the command of a regiment, both 
titular and effective, in 1632, and in 1633 and 1634 laid the 
foundations of his reputation as a swift and terrible leader of 
cavalry forays. His services were even more conspicuous in the 
great pitched battle of Ndrdlingen (1634), after which the emperor 
made him a Freiherr of the Empire, and the elector of Bavaria 
gave hi m the rank of lieutenant field-marshal. About this time he 
armed his regiment with the musket as well as the sword. In 
1635 and 1636 his forays extended into Lorraine and Luxemburg, 
after which he projected an expedition into the heart of France. 
Starting in July 1636, from the country of the lower Mcusc, he 
raided far and wide, and even urged the cardinal infante, who 
commanded in chief, to" plant the double eagle on the Louvre." 
Though this was not attempted, Werth's horsemen appeared 
at St Denis before the uprising of the French national spirit in 
^hft^rf* of aa army of fifty thousand men at Compiegne forced 



the invaders to retire whence they had come. The 1 
of this raid lasted long, and the name of " Jean de Wert " figtueff 
in folk-songs and serves as a bogey to quiet unruly children. Is 
1637 Werth was once more in the Rhine valley, destroying 
convoys, relieving besieged towns and surprising the enemy's 
camps. In February 1638 he defeated the Weimar troops in 
an engagement at Rheinfelden, but shortly afterwards was made 
prisoner by Bernhard of Saxe- Weimar. His hopes of being 
exchanged for the Swedish marshal Horn were disappointed, 
(or Bernhard had to deliver up his captive to the French. The 
terrible Jean de Wert was brought to Paris, amidst great rejoic- 
ings from the country people. He was lionized by the society 
of the capital, visited in prison by high ladies, who marvelled 
at his powers of drinking and his devotion to tobacco. So light 
was his captivity that he said that nothing -bound bim but his 
word of honour. However, he looked forward with anxiety 
for his release, which was delayed until March 1642 because the 
imperial government feared to see Horn at the head of the 
Swedish army and would not allow an exchange. 

When at last he reappeared in the field it was as general of 
cavalry in the imperial and Bavarian and Cologne services. 
His first campaign against the French marshal Gu£briant was 
uneventful, but his second (1643) in which Count Mercy was his 
commander-in-chief, ended with the victory of Tuttlingen, a 
surprise on a large scale, in which Werth naturally played the 
leading part. In 1644 he was in the lower Rhine country, but 
he returned to Mercy's headquarters in time to take a brilliant 
share in the battle of Freiburg. In the following year his 
resolution and bravery, and also his uncontrolled rashness, 
played the most conspicuous part in deciding the day at the 
second battle of NorcUingen. Mercy was killed in this action, 
and Werth succeeded to the command of the defeated army, 
but he was soon superseded by Field-marshal Gcleen. Johann 
von Werth was disappointed, but remained thoroughly loyal 
to his soldierly code of honour, and found an outlet for his anger 
in renewed military activity. In 1647 differences arose between 
the elector and the emperor as to the allegiance due from the 
Bavarian troops, in which, after long hesitation, Werth, fearing 
that the cause of the Empire and of the Catholic religion would 
be ruined if the elector resumed control of the troops, attempted 
to take his men over the Austrian border. But they refused to 
follow, and escaping with great difficulty from the elector's 
vengeance Werth found a refuge in Austria. The emperor was 
grateful for his conduct in this affair, ordered the elector to 
rescind his ban, and made Werth a count. The last campaign 
of the war (1648) was uneventful, and shortly after its close 
he retired to live on the estates which he had bought in the course 
of his career, and on one of these, Benatek near Kdniggrata, 
he died on the x6th of January 1652. 

See Lives by F. W. Barthold (Berlin, 1826), W. von Janko (Vienna, 
1874), F. Tcichcr (Augsburg, 1877). 

WERWOLF (from A.S. wer; cf. Lat. tir, man; and wolf; 
or, according to a later suggestion, from O.H.G. weri, wear, 
i.e. wearer of the wolf-skin), a man transformed temporarily 
or permanently into a wolf. The belief in the possibility of 
such a change is a special phase of the general doctrine of lycan- 
thropy (q.v.). In the European history of this singular belief, 
wolf transformations appear as by far the most prominent and 
most frequently recurring instances of alleged metamorphosis, 
and consequently in most European languages the terms expres- 
sive of the belief have a special reference to the wolf. Ex- 
amples of this are found in the Gr. XvKAvOpunrot, Russian 
volkodldh, Eng. " werwolf," Gcr. wBkrwolf, Fr loup-garou. More 
general terms {e.g. Lat., vcrsipcUis; Russ., 6boroUn\ O. Norse, 
hamrantMi Eng. " turnskin," " turncoat ") are sufficiently 
numerous to furnish some evidence that the class of animals 
into which metamorphosis was possible was not viewed as a 
restricted one. But throughout the greater part of Europe the 
werwolf is preferred; there are old traditions of his existence in 
England, in Wales and in Ireland ; in southern France, Germany, 
Lithuania, Bulgaria, Servia, Bohemia, Poland and Russia he 
can hardly be pronounced extinct now; in Denmark, Sweden, 



w *LY)— WESLEY, JOHN 



Norway and Iceland the bear competes with o» ^ . I 

eminence* *- 

In Creek mythology the story oC Lycaon supplies ta* — - 
familiar instance of the werwolf. According to one (on* 4 
Lycaon was transformed into a wolf as a result of eating fc-^ 
flesh; one of those who were present at periodical sacrifice «* 
Mount Lycaon was said to suffer a similar fate. Pliny, quoting 
Fjianthes, tells us (Hist. Nat. viiL a 2) that a man of the family 
of Antaeus was selected by lot and brought to a lake in Arcadia, 
where he hung his clothing on an ash and swam across. This 
resulted in his being transformed into a wolf, and he wandered 
in this shape nine years. Then, if he had attacked no human 
being, he was at liberty to swim back and resume his former 
shape. Probably the two stories are identical, though we hear 
nothing of participation in the Lycaean sacrifice by the descend- 
ant of Antaeus. Herodotus (iv. 105) tells us that the Neuri, 
a tribe of eastern Europe, were annually transformed for a few 
days, and Virgil (Ed. viii 98) is familiar with transformation of 
human beings into wolves. 

There are women, so the Armenian belief runs, who in con- 
sequence of deadly sins are condemned to pass seven years in the 
form of a wolf. A spirit comes to such a woman and brings 
her a wolf's skin. He orders her to put it on, and no sooner has 
she done this than the most frightful wolfish cravings make their 
appearance and soon get the upper hand. Her better nature 
conquered, she makes a meal of her own children, one by one, 
then of her relatives' children according to the degree of relation- 
ship, and finally the children of strangers begin to fall a prey to 
her. She wanders forth only at night, and doors and locks 
spring open at her approach. When morning draws near she 
returns to human form and removes her wolf skin. In these 
cases the transformation was involuntary or virtually so. But 
side by side with this belief in involuntary metamorphosis, we 
find the belief that human beings can change themselves Into 
animals at will and then resume their own form. 

The expedients supposed to be adopted for effecting change of 
shape may here be noticed. One of the simplest apparently was the 
removal of clothing, and in particular of a girdle of human skin, or 
the putting on of such a girdle — more commonly the putting on of 
a girdle of the skin of the animal whose form was to be assumed. 
This last device is doubtless a substitute for the assumption of 
an entire animal skin, which also is frequently found. In other 
cases the body is rubbed with a magic salve. To drink water 
out of the footprint of the animal in question, to partake of its 
brains, to drink of certain enchanted streams, were also con- 
sidered effectual modes of accomplishing metamorphosis. Olaus 
Magnus says that the Lhronian werwolves were initiated by 
draining a cup of beer specially prepared, and repeating a set 
formula. Ralston in his Songs of the Russian People gives the 
form of incantation still familiar in Russia. Various expedients 
also existed for removing the beast-shape. The simplest was 
the act of the enchanter (operating cither on himself or on a 
victim); another was the removal of the animal girdle. To 
kneel in one spot for a hundred years, to be reproached with 
being a' werwolf, to be saluted with the sign of the cross, or 
addressed thrice by baptismal name, to be struck three blows 
on the forehead with a knife, or to have at least three drops of 
blood drawn were -also effectual cures. In other cases the 
transformation was supposed to be accomplished by Satanic 
agency voluntarily submitted to, and that for the most loathsome 
ends, in particular for the gratification of a craving for human 
flesh. H The werwolves," writes Richard Verstegan (Restitution 
of Decayed Intelligence, 1628), " are certayne sorcerers, who having 
annoynted their bodies with an oyntment which they make by 
the instinct of the devul, and putting on a certayne inchaunted 
girdle, doe not onely unto the view of others seeme as wolves, 
bvt to their owne thinking have both the shape and nature of 
wolves, so long as they weare the said girdle. And they do 
dispose themselves as very wolves, in wourrying and killing, and 
most of humane creatures." Such were the views about lycan- 
thropy current throughout the continent of Europe when 
Verstegan wrote. France in particular seems to have been 
XX vm 9* 



327 

Wesley of belaud wished to adopt his young kinsman, but 
Ms oner was declined and the estates were left to Richard 

'ey on condition that he assumed the name Wesley. The 
.->f Wellington was Coney's grandson, and appears in the 
t for 1800 as the Hon. Arthur Wesley. Charles Wesley 
'to Christ Church in 1726. John had become fellow 
f^ c previous March. Charles lost his first twelve 

tv^. ' f I in u diversions," but whilst John was acting 

W * 1 j ate, his brother " awoke out of his lethargy." 

ordiaar, . ( nre * other students to go with him to the 

circtin*> * . s led a young gentleman of Christ Church 

mo * tatxp. ncw *et of Methodists sprung up." 

*hilethUlyr . 'hrough the university and Oxford 

was at its h< y In 1735 Charles Wesley was 

at Bordeaux, in ,, . ' her to Georgia as secretary to 

an insane deto m J ( horpe, the Governor. The 

ceased to be regard* enduring many hardships 

his pre-Christianic po-'.. , . ' " England on July the 

as which he still *urvt v ,» February 1738 John 

Prussia, Livonia and Liih«a" ' 1is * late °* t** 1 ** 

Magnus and Majohis, the w« " M tcr his evan " 

far more destructive than « £?* ' ■ ') , he became 

heterodoxy appears from theiJ!^! *~ - « >hout 0500 

accursed coUege » rf thcee « deE^ '- 't on held 

the divine law." In England^!* **"'- to be 

of the 17th century the punishm*?' V* A ' « of 

zealously prosecuted by James 1 th» Z"-"'* v 

extinct that that pious monarch wis wJ!^ *-* *. ' 
lib. in.) to regard " warwoolfes "^vfe^ ''". ' 
by " a naturall superabundance of melan^S*^ " '. 
creatures, such as the cat, the hare and theW«*i' '"'•' 
the malignant sorcerer to transform himsdf »!?' **-— * ' 
firmly believed to avail himself of tb^ J2£L*T> ** 
witch-animals still survives among the tmedo«?2 T** - 
parts of the United Kingdom. "Seated d*** % 

The werwolves of the Christian dispensation were not k— 
all heretics, all viciously disposed towards mankind " a/*^' 
to Baronius, in the year 617, a number of wolves m^l 
themselves at a monastery, and tore in pieces severalfH 
who entertained heretical opinions. The wolves sent bvn2 
tore the sacrilegious thieves of the army of Francesco Mari? 
duke of Urbino, who had come to sack the treasure of the hoW 
house of Loreto. A wolf guarded and defended from the wild 
beasts the head of St Edmund the martyr, king of England 
St Oddo, abbot of Cluny, assailed in a pilgrimage by foxes 
was delivered and escorted by a wolf" (A. de Gubernatis' 
Zoological Mythology, 1872, vol. ii. p. 145). Many of the wcn 
wolves were most innocent and God-fearing persons, who suffered 
through the witchcraft of others, or simply from an unhappy 
fate, and who as wolves behaved in a truly touching fashion 
fawning upon and protecting their benefactors. Of this sort 
were the '* Bisclaveret " in Marie de France's poem (c. 1200) 
the hero of " William and the Were-wolf " (translated from 
French into English about 1350), and the numerous princes 
and princesses, knights and ladies, who appear temporarily 
in beast form in the MSrcken of the Aryan nations generally. 
Nay, the power of transforming others into wild beasts was 
attributed not only to malignant sorcerers, but also to Christian 
saints. " Omnes angeli, boni et maH, ex virtute naturali habent 
potestatem' transmutandl corpora nostra,"' was the dictum of 
St Thomas Aquinas. St Patrick transformed Vereticus, king of 
Wales, into a wolf; and St Natalia cursed an illustrious Irish 
family, with the result that each member of it was doomed to 
be a wolf for seven years. In other tales the divine agency Js 
still more direct, whue in Russia, again, men are supposed to 
become werwolves through incurring tbe wrath of the deviL 

Literature.— In the numerous medieval works directed to the 
•tody of sorcery and witchcraft, the contemporaneous phases of 
lycaatbiopy occupy a prominent place. In addition to the authors 
who have been already mentioned, the following may be named 
as giving special attention to this subject: Wier, De praesiigiit 
daemonmrn (Amsterdam, 1563); Bodin, Dtmonomame dh sorcters 
(Paris, 1580); Boguet, Diuourt dot sorrier* (Lyons, and ed. 1608); 



526 



WESEL, J. R. VON— WESER 



Lancre, Tableau de timamstanee de matmns emgu (Paris, 1613); 
Psdlus, De operation* daemeuum (Paris, 1615); see also Glanvil, 
Sad&ucismus trimmphatus, for the English equivalents of lycan- 
thropy. Treatises solely confined to tycanthropy are rare both in 
medieval and in modern times; but a few are well known, as, for 
instance, those of Bourquelot and Nynauld, De la lycamlkropie 
(Paris, 1615). See also Leubuscher, Uber die Wekrwdlfe (1850); 
Grimm, Deutsche Mytkolepe. 4, iL and ui.; Herts, Der Werwolf 
(Stuttgart, 1862); Baring Gould, Tie Beck of Were-wohes (London, 
1865J. Also the bibliography to LTCAjrreaorY, and Andree, Etkue- 
trapkiscke ParaUelen, 1st series, 62-eo; Tylor, Primilme Culture, I; 
P. Sebillot, Tradition* de la Haule-Bretague, i. 280. 

(N. WTT.; J. F. M«L.) 

WESEL, JOHANX RUCHRAT VOX (d. 1481), German 
theologian, was bom at Oberwesel early in the 15th century, lie 
appears to have been one of the leaders of the humanist move- 
ment in Germany, and to have had some intercourse and sym- 
pathy with the leaders of the Hussites in Bohemia. Erfurt 
was in his day the headquarters of a humanism which was 
both devout and opposed to the realist metaphysic and the 
Thomist theology which prevailed in the universities of Cologne 
and Heidelberg. Wcsel was one of the professors at Erfurt 
between 7445 and 1456, and was vice-rector in 1458. In 1460 
he was appointed preacher at Mainz, in 1462 at Worms, and 
in 1479, w nen an °ld and worn-out man, he was brought before 
the Dominican inquisitor Gerhard Elten of Cologne, lie charges 
brought against him took a theological turn, though they were 
probably prompted by dislike of his philosophical views. They 
were chiefly based on a treatise, De indulgcnliis, which he had 
composed while at Erfurt twenty-five years before. He had 
also written De potestate e ccle s ias t ic*. He died under sentence of 
imprisonment for life in the Augustinian convent in Mainz in 1481. 
It is somewhat difficult to determine the exact theological 
position of Wesel. Ullmann claims him as a " reformer before 
the Reformation/' but, while he mastered the formal principle 
of Protestantism, that scripture is the sole rule of faith, it is 
more than doubtful that be bad that experimental view of the 
doctrines of grace which lay at the basis of Reformation theology. 
He held that Christ is men's righteousness in so far as they are 
guided by the Holy Ghost, and the love towards God is shed 
abroad in their hearts, which clearly shows that he neld the 
medieval idea that justification is an habitual grace implanted 
in men by the gracious act of God. He seems, however, to have 
protested against certain medieval ecclesiastical ideas which 
he held to be excrescences erroneously grafted on Christian 
faith and practice. He objected to the whole system of indulg- 
ences; he denied the infallibility of the church, on the ground 
that the church contains within it sinners as well as saints; 
he insisted that papal authority could be upheld only when the 
pope remained true to the evangel; and he held that a sharp 
distinction ought to be drawn between ecclesiastical sen t ences 
and punishments, and the judgments of God. 

The best account of Wesel is to be found in K. Ullmann's Reformers 
before the Reformation. His tract on Indulgences is published in 
Walch's Monumenta Medii Aeri, vol. i., while a report of his trial 
is given in Ortuin Gfstius's Fasciculus return extetendarum el 
fuftendarum (ed. by Browne, London, 1690), ana d'Argentre's 
Cotlettie judictorum de %ovis erroribus (Paris, 1728). See abo Otto 
Clemen's art. in Herzog-Hauck's Realeneyldepadiefir prof. Tkeotepe 
und Kircke (3rd ed. ( Leipzig, 1008), zxL 127. 

> WESEL a fortress town of Germany, in the Prussian province 
of Westphalia at the confluence of the Rhine and the Lippe, 
46 m. S W. of Munster and 35 m. N.W. of Duisburg. Pop-(ioos) 
93,237 (43% Protestants), including a considerable garrison. 
There is a junction of five railway lines, and the Rhine is crossed 
by a large railway bridge sad by a bridge of boats. The Inner 
fine of fortifications was razed in 1800, and the defensive works 
now consist only of the citadel and three detached forts, one of 
which, Fort Blucher, serves as a tHc-de-pontonXht kit bank 
of the Rhine. Wesel contains some quaint old houses, and a town 
hall, dating from 1306, with an elaborate facade, and containing 
a valuable collection of old silver plate. The large Protestant 
church of St Waflibrord has a choir, built 1424-1526, which is 
one of the noblest Gothic structures on the Lower Rhine, and a 
modern nave (1882-96). The Matbrna church dates from 



1420-1477. The two Roman Catholic churches, the castle, 
now the commandant's house (built in 1417), the Berliner Tor- 
Berlin gate — (built in 1722 and recently restored), the Lower- 
Rhenish museum of antiquities and the modern gymnasium 
and military hospital, are among the other chief buildings West! 
carries on a considerable trade in grain, timber, colonial goods, 
tobacco, Ac, facilitated by new harbour accommodation and 
wharves at the mouth of the Lippe. It has manufactures of 
wire, leaden pipes and other metal goods, cement, sugar, &c 

Wesd, formerly known as Lippemunde, was one of the points 
from which Charlemagne directed his operations against the 
heathen Saxons. Incorporated in 1241, it became a nourishing 
commercial town, and though repeatedly subject to the counts 
of Cleves, was a member of the Hanseatic League, and as late 
as 1521 a free imperial city. It wasoccupiedby the Spaniards in 
1614, by the Dutch in 1630, by the French m 1672, abo during 
the Seven Years' War, and in 1805, and was ceded to Prussia in 
1814. A monument outside.the town commemorates eleven of 
Ferdinand von Schill's officers who were shot here on the 16th 
of September 1809 after their unsuccessful attempt at Strabund. 
Wesd is occasionally spoken of as Unterwesd, to distinguish 
it from Oberwesel, a small town on the Rhine, above 
St Gear.- 

See Gantesweiler, Ckromk der Stadt Wesel (Wesel, l88l) t ana 
R cinho ld, Verfassungseesekickte Wesels (Breslau. 18S8). 

WESER (O. Ger. Visuradta, Wisura, LaL Visurps), one 
of the chief rivers of Germany, formed by the union of the 
Werra and the Fulda at Munden, in the Prussian province of 
Hanover, flowing generally north and entering the North Sea 
below Bremerhaven, between Jade Bay and the estuary of the 
Elbe. The mouth is 170 m. from Munden, but the winding 
course of the river is 270 m. long; if the measurement be made 
from the source of the Werra, in the Thuringer Wald, the total 
length of the stream is 440 m. At Munden the river surface is 
380 ft. above sea-level; the most rapid fall in its course is be- 
tween Karlshafen and Minden in Westphalia. Nearly the entire 
course of the Weser lies in Prussia, but it also touches part of 
Brunswick and Lippe, and after flowing through Bremen expands 
into an estuary separating the duchy of Oldenburg from the 
Prussian province of Hanover. Between Munden and Minden 
its course lies through a picturesque valley flanked by irregular 
and disjointed ranges of hills (Reinhardswald, Sollinger Wald, 
Weser Hills, &c); but after it emerges from these mountains 
by the narrow pass called the "Porta Westfalica," near 
Minden, its banks become flat and uninteresting. The breadth 
of the river varies from no yds. at Munden to 220 yds. at 
Minden, 250 yds. at Bremen, i\ m. at Elsfleth and 7} m. at its 
entrance into the sea. 

The Weser on the whole is shallow, and navigation above Bremen 
is sometimes interrupted by drought. Until 1894 the fairway up_ to 
Bremen had a minimum depth of little over 8 ft.; thereafter im- 
portant works were undertaken, the minimum depth was made 18 ft-, 
and the importance of Bremen as a port was greatly enhanced. 
Boats of 350 tons can ascend generally as far as Munden. A system 
of waterways (the Gccste and Hadelncr canals, meeting one another 
at Bederkrsa) connects the estuary of the Weser with that of the 
Elbe; a canal between the Hunte and the Leda gives connexion 
with the Ems. On the upper Weser (above Bremen) the navigation, 
which is interrupted by occasional rapids, is assisted by locks and 
weirs. The principal tributaries oh the right are the Aller, Wumme, 
Drepte, Lune and Geeste, and on the left the Diemd, Nethe, Emraer, 
Werra, Aue and Hunte. The Werra and Fulda are both navigable 
when they unite to form the Weser, the Fulda being canalized 
between Cassd and the town of Fulda for a distance of I7t m.; the 
Alkr, Wumme, Geeste and Hunte are also navigable. Below the 
junction of the Hunte the Weser, hitherto a single stream, is divided 
into several channeb by islands. The Weser drains a basin estimated 
st 18,530 sq. m. 

The navigation of the Weser was long hampered by the various 
and vexatious claims and rights of the different states through 
whose territories it ran. Before 1866 the joint stream, including 
the Werra and the Fulda, changed its ruler no less than thirty-five 
times on its way to the sea. In 1823, however, a treaty was made 
establishing a fixed toll and a uniform system of manajrement; this 
was further improved in 1856 and 1 865; and when Prussia took 
possession of Hanover and Hesse-Nassau in 1866 the chief difficulties 
in the way of organiringthe river-trade disappeared. The principal 
town on the Weser is Bremen. Other towns past which it flows 



WESLEY (FAMILY)— WESLEY, JOHN 



ktm MOaden aid the sea are Kerkhefea, Water. Holsmioden. 
Bodenwerder, Hameln, Rinteln.Vlotho, Minden.Stobaaau.Nienburg, 
Vegeaack, Elafleth, Brake, Geestemftnde and Bremerhaven. The 
Water gave name to a department in the short-lived kingdom of 
Westphalia: the chief town was OanabrOck. 
i WESLEY (FAMILY). The Wesley family sprang from Welswe, 
near Wells in Somerset. Their pedigree has been traced back 
to Guy, whom Athelstari made & thane about 938. One branch 
of the family settled in Ireland. Sir Herbert Westley of West- 
Leigh, Devon, married Elisabeth Wellesley of Dangan in Ireland. 
Their third son, Bartholomew, studied both medicine and theo- 
logy at Oxford, and, in 1619, married the daughter of Sir Henry 
Colley of Kfldare. In 1660 he held the rectories of Catherston 
sad Charmouth in Dorset valued at £35, 10s. per annum. He 
was ejected in 1662 and gained his living as a doctor. He was 
buried at Lyme Regis on February 15th, 1670. 

His son, John Westley, grandfather of the founder of 
Methodism, was bora in 1636 and studied at New Ira Hall, 
Oxford, where he became proficient in Oriental languages and 
won the special regard of John Owen, then vice-chancellor. 
Cromwell's Triers approved him ss minister of Winterborn- 
Whitchurch, Dorset, in 1658. The following year he married 
the daughter of John White, the patriarch of Dorchester. In 
1661 he was committed to prison for refusing to use the Book 
of Common Prayer. His candour and zeal made a deep fm- 
pfession on Gilbert Ironside the elder, Bishop of Bristol, with 
whom he had an interview. He was ejected in 166* and became 
a Nonconformist pastor at Poole. He died in 1678; his widow 
survived him for 3s years. One of his sons, Matthew, became 
a surgeon in London, where he died In 1737. 

Another son, Samuel, was trained in London for the Noncon- 
formist ministry, but changed his views, and, in August 1683, 
entered Exeter* College, Oxford, as a sizar. He dropped the 
" t ° m his name and returned to what be said was the original 
speBmg, Wesley. In 1689 he was ordained and married Susanna, 
youngest daughter of Dr Samuel Annesley, vicar of St Giles, 
Crippiegale, and nephew of the 1st earl of Anglesea. Annesley 
gave up his living in 166s and formed a congregation in Little 
St Helen's, Bishopsgate, where he was honoured as the St Paul 
of the Nonconformists. Samuel Wesley was appointed rector 
of South Qrmsby in 1691, and moved to Epworth in 1697. He 
had nineteen children, of whom eight died in infancy. His 
lawless parishioners could not endure his faithful preaching, 
and in 1705 he was confined in Lincoln Castle for a small debt. 
Two-thirds of his parsonage was destroyed by fire in 1702 and 
fat 1769 it was burnt to the ground. He managed to rebuild the 
rectory, but his resources were so heavQy strained that thirteen 
years later it was only half furnished. Samuel Wesley was a 
busy author. At Oxford in 2685 he wrote a volume of poems 
bearing the strange title Maggots. He wrote a Life of Christ 
in verse (1693), The History of the Old and New Testament in 
Verse (1701?), a noble LeUer to a Curate, full of strong sense and 
ripe experience, and Dissertations on the Booh of Job (173 5)- 
He died at Epworth in 1735. Susanna Wesley died at the 
Foundery, London, in 1742 and was buried in Bunhill Fields. 

Their eldest son, Samuel Wesley (1600-1739), was born in 
London, entered Westminster School in 1704, became a Queen's 
scholar in 1707 and in 17 11 went up to Christ Church, Oxford. 
He returned to Westminster as head usher, took orders and 
enjoyed the intimate friendship of Bishop Atterbury, Harley 
earl of Oxford, Addison, Swift and Prior. He became head- 
master of Blundell's School at Tiverton in 1732 and died there 
on the 6th of November 1739. He was a finished, classical 
scholar, a poet and a devout man, but he was never reconciled 
to the Methodism of his brothers. His poems, published in 
1736, reached a second edition in X743, and were reprinted with 
new poems, notes and a Life by W. Nichols, in 186a. 

r>HPt«« Wesley (1707-1788) was the eighteenth child of 
the Rector of Epworth, and was saved from the fire of 1709 
by his nurse. He entered Westminster School in 17x6, became 
a King's Scholar and was captain of the school in 1725. He 
was a plucky boy, and won the life-long friendship of the future 
earl of Mansfield by fighting battles on his behalf. Garret 



327 

Wesley of Ireland wished to adopt his young kinsman, but 
this offer was declined and the estates were left to Richard 
Colley on condition that he assumed the name Wesley. The 
duke of Wellington was Colley's grandson, and appears in the 
Army List for 1800 as the Hon. Arthur Wesley. Charles Wesley 
was elected to Christ Church in 1726. John had become fellow 
of Lincoln the previous March. Charles lost his first twelve 
months at Oxford in " diversions," but whilst John was acting 
as their father's curate, his brother " awoke out of his lethargy." 
He persuaded two or three other students to go with him to the 
weekly sacrament. This led a young gentleman of Christ Church 
to exclaim: "Here is a new set of Methodists sprung up." 
The name quickly spread through the university and Oxford 
Methodism began its course. In 1735 Charles Wesley was 
Ordained and went with his brother to Georgia as secretary to 
Colonel, afterwards General, Oglethorpe, the Governor. The 
work proved uncongenial, and after enduring many hardships 
his health f aOed and he left Frederics, for England on July the 
s6th, 1736. He hoped to return, but In February 1738 John 
Wesley came home, and Charles found that his state of health 
made it necessary to resign his secretaryship. After his evan- 
gelical conversion on Whit Sunday (May 21st, 1738), he became 
the poet of the Evangelical Revival He wrote about 6500 
hymns. They vary greatly in merit, but Canon Overton held 
him, taking quantity and quality into consideration, to be 
" the great hymn-writer of all ages." Their early volumes of 
poetry bear the names of both brothers, but it is generally 
assumed that the original hymns were by Charles and the 
translations by John Wesley. Poetry was like another sense 
to Charles, and he was busy writing verse from his conversion 
up to his death-bed when he dictated to his wife bis last lines, 
" In age and feebleness extreme." For some years he took 
a full share In the hardships and perils of the Methodist itiner- 
ancy, and was often a remarkably powerful preacher. After 
bis marriage in 1749 Ins work was chiefly confined to Bristol, 
where he then lived, and London. He moved to London in 
1771 and died in Marylebone on March the 29th, 1788. He was 
strongly opposed to his brother's ordinations, and refused to 
be burred at City Road, because the ground there was uncon- 
secrated. He was buried in the graveyard of Marylebone Old 
Church, but this appears to have been unconsecrated also. 

Charles Wesley married Sarah Gwynne, daughter of a Welsh 
magistrate living at Garth, on April 8th, 1749. She died in 
1822 at the age of ninety-six. Five of their children died as 
infants and are buried in St James's Churchyard, Bristol Their 
surviving daughter Sarah, who was engaged in literary work, 
died unmarried in 1828. Charles Wesley, Junr. (1750-1834) 
was organist of St George's, Hanover Square. He published 
Six Concertos for the Organ and Harp in 1778. He also died 
unmarried. Samuel, the younger brother (1766-1837), was even 
more gifted than Charles as an organist and composer; be 
was also a lecturer on musical subjects. Two of his sons were 
Dr Wesley, sub-dean of the Chapel Royal, and Dr Samuel 
Sebastian Wesley (1810-1876)', the famous composer and 
organist of Gloucester Cathedral 

Bibliography. — A volume of Charles Wesley's sermons with 

memoir appeared in 18 16. Lives by Thomas Jacloon (184O and John 

Telford (1886). Journal and Letters with Notes by Thomas Jackson 

1849); The Early Journal (1736-1739) with additional matter 



(184 _ 

(iqio); Poetical vorhs of John and dories Wesley (13 vols., 1868); 

Methodist Hymn Booh Illustrated by f. Telford (19 " " J 
rke's Memoirs of the Wesley Family (1822); Dove's b 1 
lorv of the Wesley Family CiS%2): G. I. Stevenson. Mi 

ofS 

WesUyiJiJL. (1866).; ' " ' ' Q. T».) 



ethodist Hymn Booh Illustrated by J. Telford 
Clarke's Memoirs of the Wesley Family (1822); Dove's Btogropttcai 
History of the Wesley Family (1&32); G. 1. Stevenson, Memorials of 
the Wesley Family (1876); Tycrman's Life and Times of Samuel 



WESLEY, JOHN (1703-1791), English divine, was born at 
Epworth Rectory on the 17th of June (O.S.) 1703. He was 
the fifteenth child of Samuel and Susanna Wesley (see Wesley 
Family). His mother's training laid the foundation of his 
character, and under her instruction the children made remark- 
able progress. On February o, 1709* the rectory was burnt 
down, and the children had a narrow escape. On the duke 
of Buckingham's nomination, Wesley was for six years a pupil 
at Charterhouse. In June 1720 he went up to Christ Church. 



528 



WESLEY, JOHN 



Oxford, with an annual allowance of £40 as a Charterhouse 
scholar. His health was poor and he found it hard to keep 
out of debt, but he made good use of his opportunities. A 
scheme of study which he drew up for 172a with a time-table 
for each day of the week is still to be seen in his earliest diary, 
which became the property of Mr George Stampe of Great 
Grimsby. The diary runs from April 5, 1725, to February 19, 
1727. A friend describes Wesley at this time as "a young 
fellow of the finest classical taste, and the most liberal and manly 
sentiments." He was " gay and sprightly, with a turn for wit 
and humour." 

The standard edition of Wesley s Journal (1000) has furnished 
much new material for this period of Wesley's life, the Rev. 
N. Curnock having unravelled the difficult cipher and shorthand 
in which Wesley's early diaries were kept. He reached the 
conclusion that the religious friend who directed Wesley's 
attention to the writings of Thomas a Kempis and Jeremy 
Taylor, in 1725, was Miss Betty Kirkham, whose father was 
rector of Stanton in Gloucestershire, Up to this time Wesley 
says he had no notion of inward holiness, but went on " habitu- 
ally and for the most part very contentedly in some or other 
known sin, indeed with some intermission and short struggles 
especially before and after Holy Communion," which he was 
obliged to attend three times a year. On the 25th of September 
1725 he was ordained deacon, and on the 17th of March 1726 
was elected fellow of Lincoln. His private diaries, seven of 
which are in the hands of Mr Russell J. Cotman of Norwich, 
contain monthly reviews of Wesley's reading. It covered a 
wide range, and he made careful notes and abstracts of it. He 
generally took breakfast or tea with some congenial friend and 
delighted to discuss the deepest subjects. At the coffee house 
he saw the Spectator and other periodicals. He loved riding 
and walking, was an expert swimmer and enjoyed a game at 
tennis. 

He preached frequently in the churches near Oxford in the 
months succeeding his ordination, and in April 1726 he obtained 
leave from his college to act as>his father's curate. The new 
material in the Journal describes the simple matter of his life. 
He read plays, attended the village fairs, shot plovers in the 
fenland, and enjoyed a dance with his sisters. In October 
he returned to Oxford, where he was appointed Greek lecturer 
and moderator of the classes. He gained considerable reputa- 
tion in the disputation for his master's degree in February 1727. 
He was now free to follow his own course of studies and began 
to lose his love for company, unless it were with those who 
were drawn like himself to religion. In August he returned to 
Lincolnshire, where he assisted his father till November 1720. 
During those two years he paid three visits to the university. 
In the summer of 1729 he was up for two month's. Almost 
every evening found him with the little society which had 
gathered round Charles. 

When he came into residence in November he was recognised as 
the father of the Holy Club. It met at first on Sunday evenings, 
then every evening was passed in Wesley's room or that of some 
other member. Tney read the Greek Testament and the classics; 
fasted on Wednesday and Friday ; received tne Lord's Supper every 
week; and brought all their life under review. In 1730 William 
Morgan, an lri*h student , vUEicd the gaol and reported that there 
was a great openine for work among the prisoners. The friends 
agreed to visit the Castle twice a week and to look after the sick 
in any parish where the clergyman wa* willing to accept their help. 



Wesley * spirit at thi* tinrtc is seen from his *ermon on " The Circum- 

of the " 

I tig 
bean/' Wc 



cuion 
January 173; 



Heart/' pleached before the university on the 1st of 
733. In 176$ he said it *' contain* all that I now teach 
; salvation from all tin, and losing God with an undivided 
*csky rose at four, lived on {2& a year and gave away the 
i income. He already displayed those gifts for 
rich worn to 6nd m eowpkatna j riuld in the evangelical 
old, a member of the holy Club, who after- 
iiiihop* say* " be was blest with such 
d such steadiness that he 
jo any were sure to charm 
ys tnc Kime," He wore an air 
" assumed anything to 
i* Law's books ple- 
na his advice the 
lie author*, but be saw that their 




tendency was to make good works appear mean and Insipid, tad he 
soon laid them aside. 

Wesley had not yet found the key to the heart and conscience of 
his hearers. He says, M From the year 1725 to ITSO. I preached 
much, but saw no fruit to my labour. Indeed it could not be that I 
should; for I neither laid the foundation of repentance nor of 
preaching the Gospel, taking it for granted that all to whom I 
preached were believers, and that many of them needed no re- 
pentance. From the year 1729 to 1734, laying a deeper foundation 
of repentance, I saw a little fruit. But h was only a tittle; and no 
wonder: for I did not preach faith in the blood of the covenant. 
From 1734 to 1738, speaking more of faith in Christ. I saw more 
fruit of my preaching. Looking back on these days in 1777, Wesley 
felt " the Methodists at Oxford were all one body, and, as it were, 
one soul; sealous for the religion of the Bible, of the Primitive 
Church, and, in consequence, of the Church of England; as they 
believed it to come nearer the scriptural and primitive plan than any 
other national church upon earth." The number of Oxford Metho- 
dists was small and probably never exceeding twenty-five. John 
Clayton, afterwards chaplain of the Collegiate Church of Manchester, 
who remained a strong High Churchman; James Hervcy, author of 
Meditations among the Tombs, and Therou andAspasio; Benjamin 
Ingham, who became the Yorkshire evangelist ; andThomas Brough- 
ton, afterwards secretary of the S.P.C.K", were members of the Holy 
Club, and George Whitefield joined it on the eve of the Wesley*' 
departure tor Georgia. 

Wesley's father died on April 2$, 1735, *&<1 hi the following 
October John and Charles took ship for Georgia, with Benjamin 
Ingham and Charles Delamotte. John was sent out by the 
Society for the Propagation of the Gospel, and hoped to labour 
as a missionary among the Indians, but though be had many 
interesting conversations with them the mission was found 
to be impracticable. The cabin of the " Simmonds" became a 
study for the four Methodists. The calm confidence of their 
Moravian fellow-passengers amid the Atlantic storms con- 
vinced Wesley that he did not possess the faith which casts 
out fear. Closer acquaintance with these German friends in 
Savannah deepened the impression. Wesley needed help, for 
he was beset by difficulties. Mrs Hawkins and Mrs Welch 
poisoned the mind of Colonel Oglethorpe against the brother* 
for a time, Wesley's attachment to Miss Hookey also led Co 
much pain and disappointment. All this is now seen more 
clearly in the standard edition of the Journal. Wesley was s 
stiff High Churchman, who scrupulously followed every detail 
of the rubrics. He insisted on baptising children by trine 
immersion, and refused the Communion to a pious German 
because he had not been baptized by a minister who had been 
episcopally ordained. At the same time he was accused of 
"introducing into the church and service at the altar com- 
positions of psalms and hymns not inspected or authorized 
by any proper judicature," The list of grievances presented 
by Wesley's enemies to the Grand Jury at Savannah gives 
abundant evidence of his unwearying labours for his flock. The 
foundation of bis future work as the father of Methodist hymnody 
was laid in Georgia. His first Collection of Psalms and Hymns 
(Charlestown, 1737) contains five of his incomparable transla- 
tions from the German, and on bis return to England he pub- 
lished another Collection in 1738, with five more translations 
from the German and one from the Spanish. In April 1736 
Wesley formed a little society of thirty or forty of the •serious 
members of his congregation. He calls this the second rise of 
Methodism, the first being at Oxford in November 1729. The 
company in Savannah met every Wednesday evening " in order 
to a free conversation, begun and ended with singing and prayer." 
A select company of these met at the parsonage on Sunday 
afternoons. In 1 782 he writes, " I cannot but observe that these 
were the first rudiments of the Methodist societies." 

In the presence of such facts we can understand the significance 
of the mission to Georgia. Wesley put down many severe 
things against himself on the return voyage, and he saw after- 
wards that even then be had the faith of a servant though not 
that of a son. In London he met Peter Bonier who had been 
ordained by Zinzendorf for work in Carolina. By Bonier 
Wesley was convinced that he lacked " that faith whereby alone 
we are saved." On Wednesday, May 24, 1738, he went to a 
society meeting in Aldersgate Street where Luther's Preface 
to the EpistU to tkc Romans vns bong, read. " About a quarter 



"WESLEY, JOHN 



529 



before nine, while he- wo describing tbe change which God 
works in the heart through faith in Christ, I felt my heart 
strangely warmed. I felt I did trust in Christ, Christ alone, 
for salvation; and an assurance was given me that he had 
taken away sty sins, even mint, and saved me from the law 
of sin and death." Mr Lecky points out tbe significance of that 
event. " It is scarcely an exaggeration to say that the scene 
which took place at that humble meeting in Aldersgate Street 
forms an epoch in English history. The conviction which then 
flashed upon one of the most powerful and most active intellects 
in England is the true source of English Methodism " {History 
of England in Eighteenth Century, ii. 558). 
. Wesley spent some time during the summer of 1738 in visiting 
the Moravian settlement at Hermhuth and returned to London 
on September 16, 1738, with his faith' greatly strengthened. He 
preached in all the churches that were open to him, spoke in 
many religious societies, visited Newgate and the Oxford prisons. 
On New Year's Day, 1730, the Wesley*, Whitefidd and other 
friends had a Love Feast at Fetter Lane. In February White- 
field went to Bristol, where his popularity was unbounded. 
When the churches were closed against him he spoke to the 
Kingswood colliers in the open air,' and after six memorable 
weeks wrote urging Wesley to come and take up the work. 
Wesley was in his friend's congregation on April x, but says, 
w I could scarcely reconcile myself to this strange way of preach- 
ing in the fields . . . having been all my life (till very lately) so 
tenacious of every point relating to decency and order, that I 
should have thought the saving of souls almost a sin, if it had 
not been done in a church." Next day Wesley followed White- 
field's example. His fears and prejudices melted away as he 
discerned that this was the very method needed for reaching 
the multitudes living in almost heathen darkness He already 
bad the means of shepherding those who were impressed by the 
preaching. On the tst of May 1738 he wrote in his journal: 
" This evening our little society began, which afterwards met 
in Fetter Lane." Among its " fundamental rules " we find * 
provision for dividing the society into bands of five or ten 
persons who spoke freely and plainly to each other as to the 
" real state " of their hearts. The bands united in a conference 
every Wednesday evening. The society first met at James 
Hutton's shop, " Tbe Bible and Sun," Wild Street, west of Temple 
Bar. About the 25th of September it moved to Fetter Lane. 
Wesley describes this as the third beginning of M et hod i s m 



After the field preaching began converts multiplied. They 
found all the world against them, and Wesley advised them to 
strengthen one another and talk, together as often as they could. 
When be tried to visit them at their homes he found the task 
beyond him, snd therefore invited them to meet him on Thursday 
evenings. This meeting was held in the end of 1739 at the 
Foundery in Moorfields which Wesley had just secured as a 
preaching place. Grave disorders had arisen in the sodety at 
Fetter Lane, and on the 15th of July 1740 Wesley withdrew 
from it. About 25 men and 48 women also left and cast in their 
lot with the sodety at the Foundery. The centenary of Method* 
ism was kept in 1839, a hundred years after the society first met 
at the Foundery. 

Wesley's headquarters at Bristol were in the Horse Fair, 
where a room was built in May 1739 for two religious societies 
which had been accustomed to meet in Nicholas Street and 
Baldwin Street. To meet the cost of this Captain Fox suggested 
that each member should give a penny per week. When it 
was urged that some were too poor to do this, he replied, " Then 
put eleven of the poorest with me; and if they can give anything, 
well: I will call on them weekly, and if they can give nothing 
I wul give for them as well as for myself." Othea followed 
his example and were-called leaders, a name given as early as 
the 5th of November 1738 to those who had charge of the bands 
in London. Wesley saw that here was the very means he 
needed to watch over bis flock. The leaders thus became a 
body of lay pastors. Those under their care formed a class. 
It proved more convenient to meet together and this gave 
opportunity for religious conversation and payer. As the 



society increased Wesley found it needed " stffl greater care to 
separate the precious from the vile." He therefore arranged to 
meet the classes himself every quarter and gave a ticket " under 
his own hand" to every one "whose seriousness and good 
conversation " he found no reason to doubt The ticket furnished 
an easy means for guarding the meetings of the sodety against 
intrusion. "Bands" were formed for those who wished for 
closer communion. Love-feasts for fellowship and testimony 
were also introduced, according to the custom of the primitive 
church. Watchnights were due to the suggestion of a Klngswood 
collier in 1740. Wesley issued the rules of the united sodeties 
in February 1743. Those who wished to enter tbe sodety must 
have "a desire to flee from the wrath to come, to be saved from 
their sins." When admitted they were to give evidence of their 
desire for salvation " by doing no harm; by doing good of every 
possible sort; by attending upon all the means of grace." It 
was expected that all who could do so would contribute the 
penny a week suggested in Bristol, and give a shilling at the 
renewal of their quarterly ticket. Wesley had at first to take 
charge of the contributions, but as they grew larger he appointed 
stewards to receive the money, to pay debts, and to relieve the 
needy. The memorable arrangement in Bristol was made a 
few weeks before Wesley's field of labour was extended to the 
north of England in May x 742. He found Newcastle ripe for his . 
message. English Christianity seemed to have no power to 
uplift the people. Dram-drinking was spreading like an epidemic. 
Freethinkers' dubs nourished. " The old religion," Lecky says, 
" seemed everywhere loosening round the minds of men, and 
indeed it had often no great influence even on its defenders." 
Some of the clergy in country parishes were devoted workers, 
but special seal was resented or discouraged. 

The doctrine of election had led to a separation between 
Whitefidd and the Wesleys in 1741* Wesley believed that the 
grace of God could transform every life that received it. He 
preached the doctrine of conscious acceptance with God and 
daily growth in holiness. Victory over sin was the goal which 
he set before all bis people. He made his appeal to the conscience 
in the clearest language, with the most cogent argument, and 
with an the weight of personal conviction. Hearers like John 
Nelson fdt as though every word was aimed at themselves. 
No preacher of tbe century had this mastery over his audience. 
His teaching may be described as Evangelical Arminianism and 
its standards are fafis own four volumes of sermons and his Note* 

„ Up tiU 1743 Wesley's work was chiefly confined to London 
and Bristol, with the adjacent towns and villages or the places 
which lay between them. On his way to Newcastle that year 
Wesley visited Birstal, where John Nelson, the stone-mason, had 
already been working. On his return be held memorable 
services in tbe churchyard at Epworth. Methodism this year 
spread out from Birstal into the West Riding. Sodeties were 
also formed in Somerset, Wilts, Gkwcestershire, Ldcester, 
Wsiwickshire, Nottinghamshire and the south of Yorkshire. 
In tbe summer Charles Wesley visited Wednesbury, Leeds and 
Newcastle. Next year he took CornwaU by storm. The work 
in London was prospering. In 1743 Wesley secured a west-end 
centre at West Street, Seven Dials, which for fifty years had a 
wonderful history. In August 1747 Wesley paid his first visit 
to Ireland, where he had such success that he gave more than 
six years of his life to the country and crossed the Irish Channd 
forty-two times. Ireland has its own conference presided over 
by a delegate from the British conference. Wesley's first visit 
to Scotland was in 1751. He paid twenty-two visits, which 
stirred up afl the Scottish churches. 

Such extension of hh) field would have been impossible had not 
Wesley been helped by a heroic band of preacher*. Wesley says: 
" Joseph Humphreys was the first lay preacher that assisted me ia 
England, in the year 1738." That was probably hdp in the Fetter 
Lane Society, for Wesley then had no preaching place of his own. 
John Cennick, the hymn-writer and schoolmaster at Kingswocd, 
began to preach there in 1730- Thomas Maxwell, who was ldt to 
meet and pray with the members at tbe Foundery during the 
absence of the Wesleys, began to preach. Wesley hurried to London 
to check this irregularity, but Me mother urged ham to hear Maxwell 



53© 



WESLEY, S.— WESLEY, S. S. 



for himself, and he soon saw that such auristanof was of the highest 
value. The autobiographies of these early Methodist preachers are 
among the classics of the Evangelical RevivaL As the work ad- 
vanced Wesley held a conference at the Foundery in 1744. Besides 
himself and his brother, four other clergymen were present and four 
" lay brethren." It was agreed that * r lay assistants " were allow- 
able, but only in cases of necessity. This necessity grew more urgent 
every year as Methodism extended. One of the preachers in each 
circuit was the " assistant," who had general oversight of the work, 
the others were " helpers." The conference became an annual 
gathering of Wesley's preachers. In the early conversations doctrine 
took a prominent place, but as Methodism spread the oversight of 
its growing organization occupied more time and more attention. 
In February 1784. Wesley's deed of declaration gave the conference 
a legal constitution. He named one hundred preachers who after 
his death were to meet once a year, fin up vacancies in their number, 
appoint a president and secretary, station the preachers, admit 
proper persons into the ministry, and take general oversight of the 
societies. In October 1768, a Methodist chapel was opened in New 
York.' At the conference of 1769 two preachers, Richard Boardman 
and Joseph Pilmoor, volunteered to go out to take charge of the 
work. In 1771, Francis Asbury, the Wesley of America, crossed the 
Atlantic Methodism grew rapidly, and it became essential to pro- 
vide its people with the sacraments. In September 1784 Wesley 
ordained his clerical helper, Dr Coke, superintendent (or bishop), and 
instructed him to ordain Asbury as his colleague. Richard Whatcoat 
and Thomas Vasey were ordained by Wesley, Coke and Creighton 
to administer the sacraments in America. Wesley had reached the 
conclusion in 1746 that bishops and presbyters were essentially of 
. one order (see Methodism, sect. " United States "). 

He told his brother in 1785: "I firmly believe that I am a 
scriptural erdrenros as much as any man in England or in Europe; 
for the uninterrupted succession I know to be a fable, which no 
man ever did or can prove." Other ordinations for the admini- 
stration of the sacraments in Scotland, the colonies and England 
followed. The interests of his work stood first with Wesley. 
He did everything that strong, words against separation could 
do to bind his societies to the Church of England; he also did 
everything that legal documents and ordinations could do to 
secure the permanence of that great work for which God had 
raised him up. In the words of Canon Overton and Rev. F. H. 
Relton (Hist, of Eng. Ck. 17 14-1800): " It is purely a modern 
notion that the Wesleyan movement ever was, or ever was in- 
tended to be, except by Wesley, a church movement" Despite 
bis strong sayings, it was Wesley who broke the links to the 
church, for, as Lord Mansfield put it, " ordination is separation." 

Wesley's account of his itinerancy is given in his famous 
Journal, of which the first part appeared about 1739. Mr Birrell 
has called it " the most a ma ring record of human exertion ever 
penned by man." It is certainly Wesley's most picturesque 
biography and the most vivid account of the evangelical revival 
that we possess. The rapid development of his work made a 
tremendous strain upon Wesley's powers. He generally travelled 
about 5000 m. a year and preached fifteen sermons a week. 
He had constant encounters with the mob, but his tact and 
courage never failed. His rule was always to look a mob in the 
face. Many delicious stories are told of his presence of mind 
and the skilful appeals which he made to the better feeling of 
the crowd. 

Wesley's writings did much to open the eyes of candid men 
to his motives and his methods. Besides the incomparable 
Journal, his Appeals to Men of Reason and Religion also pro- 
duced an extraordinary effect in allaying prejudice and winning 
respect. He constantly sought to educate his own people. 
No man in the 18th century did so much to create a taste for 
good reading and to supply it with books at the lowest prices. 
Sir Leslie Stephen pays high praise to Wesley's writings, which 
went " straight to the mark without one superfluous flourish." 
As a social reformer Wesley was far in advance of Ins time. 
He provided work for the deserving poor, supplied them with 
clothes and food in seasons of special distress. The profits on 
his cheap books enabled him to give away as much as £1400 a 
year. He established a lending stock to help struggling business 
men and did much to relieve debtors who had been thrown into 
prison. He opened dispensaries in London and Bristol and was I 
keenly interested in medicine. 

Wesley's supreme gift was his genius for organization. He was I 



by no means ignorant of this. M I taw thisis the peculiar tafcac 
which God has given me." Wesley's special power lay in his 
quickness to avail himself of circumstances and of the suggestions 
made by those about him. The class-meeting, the love-feast, 
the watch-night, the covenant service, leaders, stewards, lay 
preachers, all were the fruit of this readiness to avail himself 
of suggestions made by men or events. Wesley skilfully wove 
these into his system, and kept the whole machinery moving 
harmoniously. He inspired his preachers and his people with 
his own spirit and made everything subordinate to his over- 
mastering purpose, the spread of scriptural holiness throughout 
the land. 

In 1751 Wesley married Mary VaseiUe, a widow, but the union 
was unfortunate and she finally left him. John Fletcher, the 
vicar of Madeky, to whom Wesley had turned as a possible 
successor, died in 1785 He had gone to Wesley's help at West 
Street after his ordination at Whitehall in 1757 and had been one 
of his chief allies ever since. He was beloved by all the preachers, 
and his Checks to Anlinomianism show that he was a courteous 
controversialist. Charles Wesley died three years after Fletcher. 
During the last three years of his life John Wesley reaped the 
harvest he had sown. Honours were lavished upon him. His 
people hailed every appea r anc e among them with delight, and 
his visits to various parts of the country were public holidays. 
His interest in everything about him continued unabated. He 
had a wealth of happy stories which made him the most delightful 
of companions in the homes of his people. Robert Southey never 
forgot how Wesley kissed his little sister and put his hand on his 
head and blessed him. Alexander Knox says, " So fine an old 
man I never saw! The happiness of his mind beamed forth in 
his countenance. Every look showed how fully he enjoyed 
' The gay remembrance of a life well spent.' Wherever Wesley 
went, he diffused a portion of his own felicity." He preached his 
last sermon in Mr Belson's house at Leatherhead on Wednesday, 
the 23rd of February 1791; wrote next day his last letter to Wilber- 
force, urging him to carry on his crusade against the slave trade; 
and died in his house at City Road on the 2nd of March 1791, 
in his eighty-eighth year. He was buried on the 9th of March 
in the graveyard behind City Road chapcL His long life enabled 
him to perfect the organization of Methodism and to inspire his 
preachers and people with his own ideals, while he had con- 
quered opposition by unwearying patience and by dose adherence 
to the principles which he sought to teach. 

See also Methodism, and the articles on the separate Methodist 
bodies; see also Wesley Family. (J. T.*) 

WESLEY,-SAMUEL (1766-1837), English musical composer, 
son of Charles Wesley (see above), was born at Bristol on the 
74th of February 1766, and developed so precocious a talent 
for music that at three years old he played the organ and at 
eight composed an oratorio entitled IbtlM—a. fact which is duly 
chronicled on a curious portrait, painted in 1774, and afterwards 
engraved, wherein be is represented in the childish costume 
of the period. Though suffering for many years from an*acci- 
dental injury to the brain, Wesley was long regarded as the most 
brilliant organist and the most accomplished extempore fugue- 
player in England. He may indeed be regarded as the father of 
modern organ-playing, for he it was who, aided by his' friends 
Benjamin Jacob and C. F. Horn, first introduced the works of 
Sebastian Bach to English organists, not only by his superb 
playing, but by editing with Horn, in 1810, the first copy of 
Das vokUemptrirte Clavier ever printed in England. Wesley's 
last performance took place on the 12th of September 2837 at 
Christ Church, Newgate Street, London, where, after hearing the 
wonderful performances of Mendelssohn, he was himself induced 
to play an extempore fugue. He died on the nth of October 
1837, leaving a vast number of MS. and printed compositions. 

His brother Charles (1757-18x5) was also an accom- 
plished organist, and still more famous was his son, Samuel 
Schmtian (ft*). 

WESLEY, SAMUEL SEBASTIAN (1810-1876), Enghsh com- 
poser and organist, natural son of Samuel Wesley, the eminent 
composer, was born in London on the 14th of August 18x0. fie 



WESLEYAN METHODIST CHURCH 



S3' 



vis one of the Children of the Chapel Royal boot 1819, held 
various unimportant posts as organist from the age of fifteen, 
and in 1832 was appointed to Hereford Cathedral. His career 
as a composer began with hissptendid anthem, " The Wilderness," 
which was probably written for the opening of the Hereford organ 
in that year. In 1834 it fell to him to conduct the Festival of the 
Three Choirs, and in the following year he resigned Hereford 
for Exeter Cathedral; and during the next six years his name 
became gradually more and more widely known. In 1842 
Dr Hook, afterwards dean of Chichester, offered him a large 
salary to become organist of Leeds parish church, and at Leeds 
much of his finest work as a composer was done. In 1849 be 
quitted this post for Winchester, in order to secure educational 
advantages for his sons. He was at Winchester until 1865, 
when he offered himself as a candidate for Gloucester Cathedral, 
the last of his many posts. He again conducted the Three Choirs 
Festivals of 1865, 1868, 1871 and 1874. A civil list pension of 
£100 a year was conferred on him in 1873; he died at Gloucester 
on the 19th of April 1876, and was buried at Exeter. 

Like his father he wasa very eccentric man, but his compositions 
•how powers that are found in very few Englishmen of his date. If 
the list of his compositions it smaller than that of his father's, it 
must be remembered that his anthems, in which is contained his 
best work, are far more important and more extensive than most 
compositions so called: in many of them the whole anthem is no 
longer sung, but even the selections from them make up anthems of 
ordinary length. They are masterly in design, fine in inspiration 
and expression, and noble in character. His " Blessed be the God 
and Father. " " The Wilderness, " already mentioned, " Ascribe unto 
the Lord, ' " O Lord, Thou art my God, " and many others, are 
masterpieces in their way, and in all of these, as in the service in E, 
published with a rather trenchant preface in 1845, there is a happy 
combination of the modern resources of harmony with the dignified 
cathedral style, a combination which naturally alarmed the orthodox 
party of his time. 

WESLE7AH METHODIST CHURCH, one of the chief branches 
of Methodism (q.v.). On the day of John Wesley's death the 
preachers in London sent a brief note to those stationed in the 
country: " Dear Brother, The melancholy period we have so 
long dreaded is now arrived. Our aged and honoured Father, 
Mr Wesley, is no morel He was taken to Paradise this morning, 
in a glorious manner, after a sickness of five days. We have 
not time to say more at present relative to his Demise. Only 
what respects out future Oeconomy. This injunction he laid 
upon us, and all our Brethren on his death-bed, That we each 
continue in our respective Station till the time appointed for the 
next Conference at Manchester. We have, therefore, no doubt 
but you will, with us, readily comply with his Dying Request. 
The more so, as this is consonant with the determination of the 
Conference held at Bristol when be was supposed to be near 
death there, and confirmed in succeeding Conferences." 

In 1790 there were 394 preachers and 71,668 members in 
Great Britain, 19 missionaries and 5300 members on the mission 
stations; xo8 preachers and 43,265 members in the United 
States. The 6th of April was kept as a day of fasting and 
prayer, and the xst of July was thus set apart in order to seek 
divine guidance for the approaching conference. The crisis 
was serious. The large proportion of Wesley's members had been 
gathered by the labours of himself and his helpers. They had 
been taught to observe the sacraments and naturally desired 
that provision should be made for their administration in their 
own chapels. Some felt that they could not go to the Lord's 
Table where the clergyman was a worldly man; others went, 
but with much fear and doubt The Church party was in* 
fiuential and resolute to maintain close relations with the 
Church of England. Their object was to prevent Methodism 
becoming independent. There was also a small bat determined 
party that leaned to dissent. The struggle between these con- 
flicting tendencies soon began. On the 30th of March 1791 
sine preachers sent out the famous Halifax circular making 
suggestions as to the choice of president and other matters that 
must come before the conference. The first signature to this 
circular was that of William Thompson who was afterwards 
elected as the first president. On the 4th of May eighteen lay- 
■en met at Hull and eipiesaed their conviction that the useful- 



ness of Methodism would be promoted by its continued con- 
nexion with the Church of England. They would not consent to 
the administration of the sacraments by the preachers in Hull, 
nor to Methodist preaching at the time when services were held 
in church. A trenchant reply to this circular was prepared by 
Alexander Knham (q.v.), one of the younger Methodist preachers. 
The conference met in Manchester on the 26th of July 1791. 
A letter from Wesley (dated Chester, April 7, 1785) was read, 
beseeching the members of the Legal Conference not to use their 
powers for selfish ends but to be absolutely impartial in station- 
ing the preachers, selecting boys for education at Eingswood 
School, and disposing of connexional funds. The conference 
at once resolved that all privileges conferred by Wesley's Poll 
Deed should be accorded to every preacher in full connexion. 
To supply the lack of Wesley's supervision the circuits were 
now grouped together in districts. At first the preachers of 
the district elected their own chairman, but they were after- 
wards appointed by the /conference. Regulations as to its 
business were issued in 181 a. As to the sacraments and the 
relations of Methodism to the Church of England the decision 
was: " We engage to follow strictly the plan which Mr Wesley 
left us." This was ambiguous and was interpreted variously. 
Some held that it forbade the administration of the sacraments 
except where they were already permitted; others maintained 
that it left Methodism free to follow the leadings of Providence 
as Wesley had always done. During the year the difficulties 
of the situation became more apparent. Wesley had given 
the sacrament to the societies when he visited them and this 
privilege was greatly missed. The conference of 1792 was so 
much perplexed that it resorted to the casting of lots. The 
decision was thus reached that the sacraments should not be 
administered that year. This was really shelving the question, 
but it gave time for opinion to ripen, and in 1793 it was resolved 
by a large majority that " the societies should have the privilege 
of the Lord's Supper where they unanimously desired it." In 
1794, this privilege was definitely granted to ninety-three 
societies. The feeling in Bristol was very strong. The trustees 
of Broadmead, who were opposed to the administration of the 
sacrament by the preachers, forbade Henry Moore to occupy 
that pulpit. Nearly the whole society thereupon withdrew 
to Portland Chapel The conference of 179s had to deal with 
this controversy. It prepared a " Plan of Pacification " which 
was approved by the conference and by an assembly of trustees, 
and was welcomed by the societies. The Lord's Supper, baptism, 
the burial of the dead and service in church hours were not to 
be conducted by the preachers unless a majority of the trustees, 
stewards and leaders of any chapel approved, and assured the 
conference that no separation was likely to ensue. The consent 
of conference had to be given before any change was made. 

In 1796, Alexander Kilham, who refused to abstain from 
agitation for further reform, and accused his brethren of priest- 
craft, was expelled from their ranks and the New Connexion 
was formed with 5000 members (see Methodist New Con- 
nexion). The conference of 1797 set itself to remove any 
ground for distrust among the societies and to enlist their 
hearty support in all branches of the work. Annual accounts 
were to be published of various funds. The Circuit Quarterly 
Meeting had to approve the arrangements for the support of 
the preachers. The preachers had long been accustomed to 
consult the leader's meetings of their societies, but it was now 
clearly decided that stewards and leaders should be appointed 
in connexion with the leaders' meeting, and certain rights were 
granted to that meeting as to the admission and expulsion of 
members. Local preachers had to be accepted by the local 
preachers' meeting, and the powers of trustees of chapels were 
considerably extended. The constitution of Methodism thus 
practically took the shape which it retained till the admission 
of lay representatives to conference in 1878. No period in the 
history of Methodism was more critical than this, and in none 
was the prudence and good sense of its leaders more conspicuous. 
Advance was quietly made along the lines now laid down. The 
preachers had agreed in 1705 that all distinction between those 



532 



WESLEY AN METHODIST CHURCH 



whom Wesley had ordained and their brethren should cease. 
In the minutes of conference for x8x8 " Rev." appears before 
the names of preachers who were members of the Missionary 
Committee. Jabez Bunting (?.p.), who had become the ac- 
knowledged leader of the conference, wished to have its young 
ministers set apart by the imposition of hands, but this scriptural 
custom was not introduced till 1836. 

Meanwhile, Methodism was growing into a great missionary 
church. Its work in the West Indies was firmly established 
in Wesley's lifetime. In 1786 eleven hundred negroes were 
members of the society in Antigua. The burden of superin- 
tending these missions and providing funds for their support 
rested on Dr Coke, who took his place as the missionary bishop 
of Methodism. In 1813 he prevailed on the conference to 
sanction a mission to Ceylon. He 'sailed with six missionaries 
on the 30th of December, but died in the following May in the 
Indian Ocean. To meet these new responsibilities a branch 
Missionary Society had been formed in Leeds in October 18x3, 
and others soon sprang up in various parts of the country. 
The Centenary of the Missionary Society falls in 19x3, but 
Methodist Missions really date from 1786 when Dr Coke landed 
at Antigua. The area of operations gradually extended. 
Missions were begun in Madras, at the Cape of Good Hope, in 
Australia, and on the west coast of Africa. Two missionaries 
were sent to the Friendly Islands in 1826, and in 1835 a mission 
was undertaken among the cannibals of Fiji, which spread and 
deepened till the whole group of islands was transformed. The 
work in China began in 1851; the Burma mission was estab- 
lished in 1887. The rapid progress of the Transvaal and Swazi- 
land missions has been almost embarrassing. The Missionary 
Jubilee in 1863-1868 yielded £179,000 for the work abroad. 
As the growth of the missions permitted conferences have been 
formed in various countries. Upper Canada had its conference 
in 1834, France in 1852, Australia in 1855, South Africa in 1882. 
The missionary revival which marked the Nottingham Con- 
ference of 1906 quickened the interest at home and abroad 
and the Foreign Field (monthly) is prominent among missionary 
periodicals. The Women's Auxiliary, founded in 1858, kept 
its jubilee in xoo8. It supports schools and medical missions, 
homes and orphanages. In 1828 the erection of an organ in 
Brunswick Chapel, Leeds, led to a violent agitation and a small 
body of " Protestant Methodists " was formed. A more formid- 
able division was led by Dr Warren, a preacher of ability and 
influence, who was disappointed because no place was found 
for him in the newly-formed Theological Institution. He tried 
to awaken general opposition to the Institution scheme, and 
being suspended from his office as superintendent by a special 
district meeting, appealed to the law courts, which sustained 
the action of the district meeting. He was expelled from the 
conference and joined the Weslcyan Methodist Association in 
1836, but shortly afterwards became a clergyman in Manchester. 
In his first conference in 1744 Wesley asked, " Can we have a 
seminary for labourers?" The answer was: "If God spare 
us to another Conference." Next year the subject was broached 
with the reply: " Not till God give us a proper tutor." The 
idea was not realized in his lifetime, but Wesley did everything 
in his power to train his preachers. He gathered them together 
and read with them as he had done with his pupils at Oxford; 
he urged them to spend at least five hours a day in reading 
the best books. He made this challenge, " I will give each of 
you, as fast as you will read them, books to the value of £5." In 
1834 Hoxton Academy was taken as a training place for ministers; 
and in 1839 the students moved to Abney House, Stoke Ne wing- 
ton. Didsbury College was opened in 1842, Richmond in 1843. 
Headingley was added in 1868, Handsworth in i88r. 
The Centenary of Methodism was celebrated in 1839 and £221.939 
" """ * : £711609 was devoted to the colleges 
* " was given to the missionary 
site and building of a mission- 
's was set apart for the removal 

one of the great moral and 

— ts» was rapid, but in 1849 

was much jealousy of Dr 




Bunting, the master mind of Methodism, to whose foresight and 
wisdom large part of its success was due. Fty-shects were issued 
attacking him and other eminent ministers. James Everett, Samuel 
Dunn and William Griffith were expelled from the ministry, and an 
agitation began which robbed Wesleyan Methodism of 100,000 
members. Those who now left the Connexion joined the reformers 
of 1 828 and 1 836 and formed the Methodist Free Churches. In 185a 
the constitution of the Quarterly Meeting was dearly denned, and 
the June Quarterly Meeting obtained the right to approach con- 
ference with memorials. Various other provisions were made which 
increased confidence. It was not till 1856 that the Connexion began 
to recover from the loss caused by this agitation. 

Methodism began its work for popular education in a very modest 
way. In 1837 it had nine infant schools and twenty-two schools 
for elder children. A grant of £5000 was made from the Centenary 
Fund for the provision of Wesleyan day-schools. The conference 
of 1843 directed that greater attention must be given to this de- 
partment, and a committee met in the following October which 
resolved that 700 schools should be established if possible within the 
next seven years, and an Education Fund raised of £$000 a year. 
In 1849 the Normal Training College for the education of 'day- 
school teachers was opened in Westminster, and in 1872 a second 
college was opened in Battersea for school-mistresses. Westminster 
provides for 120 and Southlands for 1 10 students. They supply 
teachers not only for Wesleyan, but for council schools all over the 
00—' — . artrl no colleges have a higher reputation. Besides its day- 

lism possesses the Leys School at Cambridge, Rvdal 

yn bay and prosperous boarding-schools for Soya 

sy parts of the country. 

is from the beginning done much work in the army. 

ris Rule (1802-1890), who was appointed chaplain at 

u, won for it fuller recognition from the authorities. 

ly. his colleague at AWershot, and R. W. Allen had 
a Urge «harv in the struggle by which Methodist work both in the 
army and the navy was developed. Capitation grants have made 
it possible to organise the work at every station at nome and abroad. 



M 



Dr William I 
Gi . tr in 
CI \-*H. K 



No homes for soldiers and sailors are more efficient or better liked 
by the men. The service done by Methodist chaplains in war time, 
and especially in the Boer War, won the wannest recognition from 
the authorities. 

In 1878, laymen were introduced into the Wesleyan conference. 
They had been members of the committee appointed in 1803 to 
" guard our privileges in these perilous times, and had gradually 
taken their place on the missionary and other committees. Circuit 
stewards had attended the district meetings before 1817 but in that 
year their right to attend was established. The Financial District 
Meeting of which they were members was created in 1819 and the 
financial business of each district soon came under its control. Out 
of the Annual Home Missionary gathering sprang a system of 
committees of review which, in 1852, James H. Rigg suggested 
might be enlarged and combined into a kind of diet composed of 
ministers and laymen who should consider reports from the various 
departments. The time was not ripe for such a scheme, but in 1861 
the principle of direct representation was introduced into the com- 
mittees of review. The Representative Session which met in 1878 
consisted of 240 ministers and 240 laymen. The Pastoral Session of 
ministers met first to deal with pastoral affairs. In 1891 the Repre- 
sentative Session was sandwiched between the two parts of the 
Pastoral Session. In 1808 it met first and its numbers were enlarged 
to 300 ministers and 300 laymen. In 1892 the district meeting 
became known as the District Synod, and in 1893 the circuits began 
to choose representatives to the Synod in addition to the circuit 
stewards. The great advance in organisation made with such peace 
and goodwill was commemorated in 1878 by the Thanksgiving Fund 
which reached £297,500. Dr Rigg, the president of that year, put 
all his strength into the movement, and every department of Methodist 
work at home and abroad shared in the benefits of the fund. 

The Forward Movement in Methodism dates from that period. 
A bolder policy won favour. Methodism realized its strength and 
its obligations. In 1885 the Rev. S. F. Collier was appointed to. 
Manchester and the Rev. Peter Thompson was sent to work in the 
East End. Next year the Revs. Hugh Price Hughes and Mark Guy 
Pearse began the West London Mission. Every succeeding year baa 
witnessed development and growth. Large mission-halls have 
been built in the principal towns of England, Scotland and Ireland. 
Great congregations have been gathered, and the work done for up- 
lifting the fallen and outcast has earned the gratitude of all good 
men. The. Manchester mission is regarded as one of the glories of 
that city. The Forward Movement wul always be associated with 
the name of Hugh Price Hughes (q.v.). Village Methodism shared 
in the quickening which the Forward Movement brought to the 
large towns. Chapels which had been closed were reopened: an 
entrance was found into many new villages. Weak circuits were 
grouped together and gained fresh energy and hope by the union. 

No work has been dearer to Methodists than that of the National 
Children's Homeand Orphanage founded by Dr Bowman Stephenson 
in i860. Its headquarters are in Bethnal Green, but it has branches 
in various parts of the country and an emigration depot in Canada. 
It cares not only for waifs and strays, but for cripples and delicate 
children. CTphamofrt^pertabk-rarcnuhAvcalfconiaatBirminghsni, 



WESSEL 



533 



mad the reformatory (school has done splendid service for lads who 
have committed a first offence Dr A. E. Gregory, who in 1900 
succeeded Dr Stephenson, has seen remarkable progress in all de- 
part meats of the great institution under his care. Sisters of the 
People " and deaconesses, for whom there is a training home at 
Ilkky, founded by Dr Stephenson in 1903, have also done much to 
help in these modern developments of Methodism. 

The Chapel Committee, which has its headquarters in Manchester, 
has general oversight of 9070 trusts with property valued at about 
twenty-five millions. The number of Methodist chapels in 1818 was 
2000; in 1839. 3500; in 1910, 8606. The sitting increased from 
a million in 1831 to about 2,375,000 in 191a The outlay on trust 
property in that period was more than fifteen millions. Debts 
amounting to £3,266,013 have been paid off since 1854 More than 
half a million has been advanced in loans and of this nothing has 
been lost. In 1907 and 1908 £1 ,292,282 was spent on trust property, 
and of this £892,114 was contributed. London Methodism owes 
more than can be told to the Metropolitan Chapel Building Fund 
which was founded in 1861. The names of the Rev. William Arthur, 
Sir Francis Lyeett, Sir W. Mc Arthur, will always be associated with 
this fund which has promoted the erection of some hundred new 
chapels. The Extension Fund, established in 1874* bifely by the 
help of Sir Francis Lyeett and Mr Mewburn, has done similar work 
for country towns and villages. About two thousand chapels have 
been assisted with grants and loans. Similar work has been done 
in Scotland by a fund established in 1878. North and South Wales 
also have their Chapel Funds. A secretary and committee were 
appointed in 1910 to carry out various developments of work in 
London. The work of the Metropolitan Chapel Building Fund and 
the London Mission is taken over by (his new committee. 

John Wesley felt a lively interest in the Sunday schools which 
began to spring up all over England in the last years of his life. 
The first rules for the management of Methodist Sunday schools were 
issued by the Conference in 1 827. I n 1 837 1 here were 3339 Methodist 
Sunday schools with 59.*97 teachers and 341443 scholars. A 
quarter of the preaching places, however, had no schools. The 
Education Committee was formed in 1838 to take oversight of the 
work in day and Sunday schools. The Methodist Sunday School 
Union, founded in 1873, was formed into a department in 1907 and is 
doing much to guide and develop the work. The Temperance Com- 
mittee was formed in 1875; a temperance secretary was set apart 
in 1890. The department has its monthly organ and has its offices 
in Westminster. The Wesley Guild Movement, established in 1901, 
has its headquarters in Leeds and is doing a great work for the 
young people of Methodism. 

The centenary of Wesley's death was kept In 1891. Memorable 
services were held in City Road Chapel, which was restored and 
rendered more worthy of its historic position. Wesley's statue was 
placed in the forecourt. In 1898 the rooms in Wesley's house, where 
he studied and where he died, were set apart as a Methodist Museum. 
The first Methodist Oecumenical Conference was held in London in 
18S1. the second in Washington in 1891, the third in London in 1901, 
the fourth being fixed for Toronto in 191 1. The Methodist Assembly 
which met in Wesley's Chapel. London, in 1909 brought the branches 
of British Methodism together with good results. A considerable 
extension of the three years' term has been secured In certain cases 
by a legal device for escaping the provisions of the eleventh clause 
of Wesley's Deed Poll, but some more satisfactory method of dealing 
with the subject is under consideration. 

The great event of recent Methodist history was the Twentieth 
Century Fund inaugurated by Sir Robert W. Perks in 1898 To 
bis unwearying seal and business ability the triumph secured was 
chiefly due. The Rev. Albert Clayton, the secretary of the fund, 
lavished his strength on his vast task and the total income exceeded 
£1 ,073.782. The grants were • General Chapel Committee. £290,61 7 ; 
Missionary Society, £102.656; Education Committee, Z 193,705: 

owe Missions, £96,872; Children's Home, (48.436- The Royal 



Aquarium at Westminster was purchased and a central hall and 
church house as the headquarters of Methodism erected. For this 
object £242*206 was set apart. 

Bibliography.— Lives of Wesley, Hampson (1791). Coke and 
Moore (1792), Whitehead (1793-1796). R- Southey (1820). Moore 
1 824). Walton (1 831), Overton (1891 ),Wedgwood (1 870), L. Tvcrman 



I 



1870). Lelievre (1868. 1900). J. Telford (1886, 1899), W. H. Fitchett 
1906), Winchester (1906). 
Histories of Methodism.— Dr George Smith, Dr Abel Stevens, 

£ Telford. W. I. Townsend. H. B. Workman and G. Eayrs, A New 
istory of Methodism (1909); Poetical Works of J, and C. Wesley: 
Wesley's Works <I77«-1774. 1800-1813; ed. Benson, 1820-1831: 
ed. Jackson 1856-1862). Standard ed. of Wesley's Journal fed. 
N. Curnock, 1910); Cambridge Modem History, voL vi.; Luke 
Tyerman, Life of George Whilefield (1876) ; J. H. Overton. Tke Engltsk 
Ckurck tn the Eighteenth Century, J. H. Overton and F Relton, 
The English Ckurck (1 71 a- 1800); J. S. Simon, Rental of Religion 
in England in tke Eighteenth Century; W. E. H. Lecky. History of 
England in tke Eighteenth Century. J. H. Rigg. The Living Wesley, 
The Ckmrthmanshtp of John Wesley, R. Green. Bibliography of the 
Works of J and C. Wesley, Wesley's Veterans', Lives of Early 
Mttmodiu Preachers (Finsbury Library). 0* T**> 



VESSEL, JOHAN 1 (e. 1420-1489), Dutch theologian, was 
born at Groningen. He was educated at the famous school at 
DevcnLer, which waa under the supervision of the Brothers of 
Common Life, and in close connexion with the convent of 
Mount St Agnes at Zwolle, where Thomas a Kempis was then 
living. At Deventer, where the best traditions of the 14th- 
century mysticism were still cultivated, Wessel imbibed that 
earnest devotional mysticism which was the basis of his theology 
and which drew him irresistibly, after a busy life, to spend his 
last days among the Friends of God in the Low Countries. From 
Devenlcr he went to the Dominican school at Cologne to be 
taught the Thomist theology, and came in contact with human- 
ism. He learnt Greek from monks who had been driven out of 
Greece, and Hebrew from some Jews. The Thomist theology 
sent him to study Augustine, and his Greek reading led him to 
Plato, sources which largely enriched his own theological system. 
Interest in the disputes between the realists and the nominalists 
in Paris induced him to go to that city, where he remained for 
sixteen years as scholar and teacher. There he eventually took 
the nominalist side, prompted as much by his mystical anti- 
ecclesiastical tendencies as by any metaphysical insight; for 
the nominalists were then the anti-papal party. A desire to 
know more about humanism sent him to Rome, where in 1470 
he was the intimate friend of Italian scholars and under the 
protection of Cardinals Bessarion and Francis Delia Rovere 
(general of the Franciscan order and afterwards Pope Sixtus 
IV.). It is said that Sixtus would have gladly made Wessel 
a bishop, but that he had no desire for any ecclesiastical 
preferment. From Rome he returned to Paris, and speedily 
became a famous teacher, gathering round him a band of en- 
thusiastic young students, among whom was Reuchlin. In 1475 
he was at Basel and in 1476 At Heidelberg teaching philosophy 
in the university. As old age approached he came to have a 
growing dislike to the wordy theological strife which surrounded 
him, and turned away from that university discipline, "noa 
studia sacrarum litcrarum sed studiorum commixtae cor* 
ruptiones." After thirty years of academic life he went back 
to his native Groningen, and spent the rest of his life partly 
as director in a nuns' cloister there and partly in the convent 
of St Agnes at Zwolle. He was welcomed as the most renowned 
scholar of bis time, and it was fabled that he had travelled 
through all lands, Egypt as well as Greece, gathering every- 
where the fruits of all sciences— "a man of rare erudition," 
says the title-page of the first edition of his collected works, 
" who in the shadow of papal darkness was called the light of 
the world." His remaining years were spent amid a circle of 
warm admirers, friends and disciples, to whom he imparted 
the mystical theology, the seal for higher learning and the 
deep devotional spirit which characterised his own life. He died 
on the 4th of October 1480, with the confession on his lips, 
" I know only Jesus the crucified.'* He is buried in the middle 
of the choir of the church of the " Geestlkhen Macgden," whose 
director he bad been. 

Wessel has been called one of the "reformers before the Refor- 
mation," and the title is justifiable if by it is meant a man of deeply 
spiritual life, who protested against the growing paganizing of the 
papacy, the superstitious and magical uses of the sacraments, the 
authority of ecclesiastical tradition, and that tendency in later 
scholastic theology to by greater stress, in a doctrine of justification, 
upon the instrumentality of the human will than on the objective 
work of Christ for man's salvation. His own theology was, however, 
essentially medieval in type, and he never grasped that experimental 
thought of justification on which Reformation theology rests. 

Martin Luther in 1521 published a collection of Weasel's writings* 
which bad been preserved as relics by his friends, and said that ilbe 
(Luther) had written nothing before he read them, people might well 
have thought that he had stolen all his ideas from them. The books 
are of an aphoristical character, the ideas being rather mechanically 



1 His correct name was Wessel Harmcns Gansfort (or Ganzcvort), 
the Christian name Wessel being a corruption of Basilius, and the 
surname Gansfort being that of a Westphalian village from which 
his family came. . 

•The collection included De procidentia, De causu et effectibms 
incarnalionis et passionis, De dtgnitotc el potentate ecdestastua, De 
sacramente, poenitentiae. Quae stt vera communio sanctorum, De 
purgotorio and a number of letters, 



53+ 



WESSELENYI— WESSEX 



arranged, so that it is not possible to single out any one as the 
centre of the whole system. The authority of the Bible Weasel would 
support when necessary, not by the priest but by the divinity pro- 
fessor His views on the sacraments anticipated those of Zwingli 
rather than of Luther. 

See Vita WesseJi Groninzc* iii, by Albert Jhrdenbefg, published 
in an incomplete form in ilie preface to Wcfocl'* collected Juries 
(Amsterdam, 1614; this preface a!*> contain* estracis ffum the 
works of several writers who have given facts about the life of 
Wesscl); W. Muurling, Ctm„ IhtL rket4, de Wrssctt Garufrrtii tita{ 
&c (1831); K. UUmann, Reformers before the Rrformutw* (the 
second volume of the German edition u a second and enlarged 
edition of a previous work entitled Jahann Wtsid. tin Vift/btter 
Lutkers (1834); J. Friedrich, Johann Wrsstt* tin Bild oa$ set 
KirckengeickichU des is ten Jahrhundcrts {1861); A. Ritschl, History 
of the Christian Doctrine of J ftjfi dcation a nd Rrtoiutiwtuin ( Edi n b u rgh, 
1872); J. J. Doedes, " Hist.Hucrartschc* zur Biographic j. Wc^cli " 
in Tkeol. Stud ten und Kritiken (1870). 

WESSELBNYI, MIKL6S, Baron (1796-1850), Hungarian 
statesman, son of Baron Miklos Wesselenyi and Ilona Cscrei, 
was born at Zsibo, and was educated at his father's castle by 
M6zes Pataky in the most liberal and patriotic direction. In 
1823 he permanently entered public life and made the ac- 
quaintance of Count Stephen Szechenyi whose companion he 
was on a long educative foreign tour, on bis return from which 
he became one of the leaders of the liberal movement in the 
Upper House. In 1833 appeared his BaliUlctck (Prejudices), 
which was for long a prohibited book. He was the foremost 
leader of the Opposition at the diet of 1834, and his freely 
expressed opinions on land-redemption, together with his 
efforts to give greater publicity to the debates of the diet by 
printing them, involved htm in two expensive crown prosecu- 
tions. He was imprisoned at Grafcnbcrg, whither he had gone 
to be cured of an eye trouble, and two years later became quite 
blind. Subsequently he did much for agriculture, children's 
homes and the introduction and extension of the silk industry 
In Hungary. The events of 1848 brought him home from a 
long residence abroad, but he was no longer the man he had been, 
and soon withdrew again to GriLfenberg. He died .on the 21st 
of April 1850, on his way back to Hungary. 

See Ferencz Szilagyi, Life and Career of Baron Nicholas Wessclinyi 
the Younger (Hung. Budapest, 1876). (R. N. B.) 

WESSEX, one of the kingdoms of Anglo-Saxon Britain. The 
story of its origin is given in the Saxon Chronicle. According to 
this the kingdom was founded by two princes, Cerdic, and Cynric 
his son, who landed in 494 or 495 and were followed by other 
settlers in 501 and 514. After several successful battles against 
the Welsh they became kings in 519. Very few of the localities 
connected with the story of these princes have been identified 
with certainty, but such identifications as there are point to the 
southern part of Hampshire. In 530 Cerdic and Cynric are said 
to have conquered the Isle of Wight, which they gave to two of 
their relatives, Stuf and Wihtgar. Cerdic died in 534. Cynric 
defeated the Britons at Salisbury in 552 and again in conjunction 
with his son Ceawlin at Bcranburh, probably Barbury Hill, in 
556. At his death in 560 he was succeeded by Ceawlin, who is 
mentioned by Bede as the second of the English kings to hold an 
imperium in Britain. With him we enter upon a period not 
perhaps of history, but at least of more or less reliable tradition. 
How far the earlier part of the story deserves credence has been 
and still is much debated. At all events no value can be attached 
to the dates given in the Chronicle. The preface to this work 
places Ccrdic's assumption of the sovereignty six years after 
his landing, that is, in the year 500, and assigns him a reign of 
sixteen years, which makes his death fall eighteen years before 
S34, the date recorded in the annals. Again, while the annals 
record Ceawlin's accession in 560 and his expulsion in 592, the 
preface with other early authorities assigns him a reign of only 
seventeen years. Further a number of genealogies, both in the 
Chronicle and elsewhere, represent Cynric as grandson of Cerdic 
and son of a certain Crcoda. Suspicion likewise attaches to the 
name Cerdic, which seems to be Welsh, while we learn from 
Bede that the Isle of Wight, together with part at least of the 
Hampshire coast, was colonized by Jutes, who apparently had a 
kingdom distinct from that of Wesscx. For these reasons the 
story of the foundation of Wesscx, though it appears to possess 



considerable antiquity, must be regarded as open to grave 
suspicion. It is worthy of note that the dynasty claimed to 
be of the same origin as the royal house of Bernicia and that two 
of Cerdic's ancestors, Freawinc and Wig, figure in the story of 
Wenntmd, king of Angel. 

Whatever may be the truth about the origin of the kingdom, 
and it is by no means impossible that the invasion really proceeded 
from a different quarter, we need not doubt that its dimensions 
were largely increased under Ceawlin. In his reign the Chronicle 
mentions two great victories over the Welsh, one at a place 
called Bedcanford in 571, by which Aylesbury and the upper 
part of the Thames valley fell into the hands of the West Saxons, 
and another at Dcorham in 577, which- led to the capture of 
Cirencester, Bath and Gloucester. Ceawlin is also said to have 
defeated i£thelberht at a place called Wibbandun (possibly 
Wimbledon) in 568. In 592 he was expelled and died in the 
following year Of his successors Ceol and Ceolwulf we know 
little though the latter is said to have been engaged in constant 
warfare. Ceolwulf was succeeded in 611 by Cynegils, whose 
son Cwichelm provoked a Northumbrian invasion by the 
attempted murder of Edwin in 626. These kings are also said to 
have come into collision with the Mercian king Penda, and it is 
possible that the province of the Hwicce (q.v.) was lost In their 
time. After the accession of Oswald, who married Cynegils's 
daughter, to the throne of Northumbria, both Cynegils and 
Cwichelm were baptized. Cynegils was succeeded in 642 by his 
son Cenwalh, who married and subsequently divorced Pcnda's 
sister and was on that account expelled by that king. After his 
return he gained a victory over the Welsh near Pen-Selwood, by 
which a large part of Somerset came into his hands. In 661 he 
was again attacked by the Mercians under Wulfhere. At his 
death, probably in 673, the throne is said to have been held for & 
year by his widow Sexburh, who was succeeded by Aescwine, 
674-676, and Centwine, 676-685. According to Bede, however, 
the kingdom was in a state of disunion from the death of Cenwalh 
to the accession of Ceadwalla in 685, who greatly increased its 
prestige and conquered the Isle of Wight, the inhabitants of 
which he treated with great barbarity. After a brief reign Cead- 
walla went to Rome, where he was baptized, and died shortly 
afterwards, leaving the kingdom to Ine. By the end of the 7th 
century a considerable part at least of Devonshire as well as 
the whole of Somerset and Dorset seems to have come into the 
hands of the West Saxons. On the resignation of Ine, in 726, 
the throne was obtained by jEthelhcard, apparently his brother- 
in-law, who had to submit to the Mercian king i£thdbald, by 
whom he seems to have been attacked in 733. Cuthrcd, who 
succeeded in 740, at first acted in concert with ALthclbald, but 
revolted in 752. At his death in 756 Sigebcrht succeeded. The 
latter, however, on account of his misgovernment was deserted by 
most of the leading nobles, and with the exception of Hampshire 
the whole kingdom came into the hands of Cynewulf . Sigeberh t , 
after putting »o death the last of the princes who remained 
faithful to him, was driven into exile and subsequently murdered; 
but vengeance was afterwards taken on Cynewulf by his brother 
Cyneheard. Cynewulf was succeeded in 786 by Berhtric, who 
married Eadburg, daughter of the Mercian king Offa. Her 
violent and murderous conduct led to the king's death in 803; 
and, it is said, caused the title of queen to be denied to the wives 
of later kings. Berhtric was succeeded by Ecgberht (q.v.) , the 
chief event of whose reign was the overthrow of the Mercian 
king Beornwulf in 825, which led to the establishment of West 
Saxon supremacy and to the annexation by Wessex of Sussex, 
Surrey, Kent and Essex. 

iEthdwulf (<7.».), son of Ecgberht, succeeded to the throne of 
Wessex at his father's death in 839, while the eastern provinces 
went to his son or brother j£thclstan. A similar division took 
place on ASthelwulf's death between his two sons ^thelbald 
and iEthelbcrht, but on the death of the former in 858 /Ethcl- 
berht united the whole in his own hands, his younger brothers 
iEthclred and Alfred renouncing their claims, ^thclberht was 
succeeded in 865 by jEthclred, and the latter by Alfred in 871. 
This was the period of the great Danish invasion which culminated 



WEST, B.— WESTBORO 



535 



519 


iEthclheard 


. 728(726) 
. 741(740) 


534 


Cuthred . . 


560 (c. 57i) 
59* (c 5«8) 
597 ifi- 594) 


Sigcbcrht 


• 754(756) 


Cynewulf 
Bcrhtric . . 


• 755 757) 
. 784(786) 
. 800(802} 


611 


Ecgbcrt . . 


643 ic. 64a} 
67a (e. 673) 


. 836(839) 
. 855(858) 


/Ethelbald . 


676 


jEthelberht . 


. 860 


.Cthelred 


. 866 


685 


Alfred , . 


. 871 



in the submission of Guthram in 878. Shortly afterwards the 
kingdom of the Mercians came to an end and their leading earl 
/Ethelred accepted Alfred's overiordahip. By 886 Alfred's 
authority was admitted in all the provinces of England which 
were not under Danish rule. From this time onwards the 
history of Wessex is the history of England. 
Kings of Wessex, 

Cerdic . 

Cynric 

Ceawlin . 

Ceol . . 

Ceolwulf. 

Cyncgils . 

Cenwalh . 

Sexburh . 

AZacwine 

Centwine 

Ceadwalla 

Ine . . 

The dates are those of the annals in the Chronicle, with approximate 
corrections in brackets. 

Sec Anglo-Saxon Chronicle* edited by Earle and Plummer (Oxford, 
189J-1899); Bede. UtsL EccJ. and Continual*, edited by C Plummer 
(Oxford, 1896); " Annates Lindisfarncnses." in the Monuments 
Ctrm. hist. xix. 502-508 (Hanover. 1866); Asser, Life of Ktng 
Alfred, edited by W. R Stevenson (Oxford, 1904): W de G. Birch, 
Cerhthriam Saxomcum (London, 1885-1893). (F G. M. B.) 

VEST, BENJAMIN (1738-1820), English historical and 
portrait-painter, was born on the 10th of October 1738, at 
Springfield, Pennsylvania, of an old Quaker family from 
Buckinghamshire. When a boy of seven he began to show 
His inclinations to art. According to a well-known story, he 
was silting by the cradle of his sister's child, watching its sleep, 
when the infant happened to smile in its dreams, and, struck 
with its beauty, young Benjamin got some paper, and drew its 
portrait. The career thus begun was prosecuted amid many 
difficulties; but his perseverance overcame every obstacle, and 
at the age of eighteen he settled in Philadelphia as a portrait- 
painter. After two years he removed to New York, where 
he practised his profession with considerable success. In 1760, 
through the assistance of some friends, he was enabled to com- 
plete his artistic education by a visit to Italy, where he remained 
nearly three years. Here he acquired reputation, and was elected 
a member of the principal academies of Italy. On the expiry 
of his Italian visit he settled in London as an historical painter. 
His success was not long doubtful. George III. took him under 
his special patronage; and commissions flowed in upon him 
from all quarters. In 1768 be was one of the four artists who 
submitted to the king the plan for a royal academy, of which 
he was one of the earliest members; and in 1772 he was appointed 
historical painter to the king. He devoted his attention mainly 
to the painting of large pictures on historical and religious 
subjects, conceived, as he believed, in the style of the old masters, 
and executed with great care and much taste. So high did he 
stand in public favour that on the death of Sir Joshua Reynolds, 
in 1792, he was elected his successor as president of the Royal 
Academy, an office which he held for twenty-eight years. In 
1802 he took advantage of the opportunity afforded by the 
peace of Amiens to visit Paris, and inspect the magnificent 
collection of the masterpieces of art, pillaged from the gallery 
of almost every capital in Europe, which then adorned the 
Louvre. On his return to London he devoted himself anew 
to the labours of his profession, which were, however, somewhat 
broken in upon by quarrels with some of the members of the 
Royal Academy. In 1804 he resigned his office, but an aD but 
unanimous request that he should return to the chair induced him 
to recall his resignation. Time did not at all weaken the energy 
with which he laboured at his easel When sixty-five he painted 
one of his largest works, " Christ healing the Sick." This was 
originally designed to be presented to the Quakers is Philadelphia, 
to assist in erecting a hospital. On its completion it was exhibited 
in London to immense crowds, and was purchased by the British 
Institution for 3000 guineas, West sending a replica to Phila- 
delphia. His subsequent works were nearly all on the same 
pand scale as the picture which had been so successful, but 



they did not meet with very ready sale. He died m London on 
the xith of March 1820, and was buried in St Paul's. 

West's works, which fond criticism ranked during his life with 
the great productions of the old masters, are now considered as in 
general formal, tame, wanting that freedom of nature and that life 
which genius alone can breathe into the canvas. His " Death of 
Wolfe * is interesting as introducing modern costume instead of the 
classical draperies which had been previously universal in similar 
subjects by English artists: and his " Battle of La Hogue " 
is entitled to an honourable place among British historical 
paintings. 

An account of West's life was published by Gait (The Progress of 
Genius, 1816). See also H. T. Tuckerman, Book of the Artists 
(N.Y.,1868). 

WEST, NICHOLAS (1461-1533)1 English bishop and diplo- 
matist, was born at Putney, and educated at Eton and at King's 
College, Cambridge, of which he became a fellow in 1483. He was 
soon ordained and appointed rector of Egglescliffe, Durham, 
receiving a little later two other livings and becoming chaplain 
to King Henry VII. In 1500 Henry VIII. appointed him dean 
of St George's chapel, Windsor, and in 1515 he was elected 
bishop of Ely. West's long and successful career as a diplo- 
matist began in 150a through his friendship with Richard Fox, 
bishop of Durham. In the interests of Henry VII. he visited 
the German king Maximilian I. and George, duke of Saxony; 
in 1506 he negotiated an important commercial treaty with 
Flanders, and he attempted to arrange marriages between tbe 
king's daughter Mary and the future emperor Charles V., and 
between the king himself and Charles's sister Margaret. By 
Henry VIII. West was sent many times to Scotland and to 
France. Occupied mainly during the years 1513 and 1514 with 
journeys to and from Scotland, he visited Louis XII. of France 
in the autumn of 15x4 and his successor Francis I. in 151s. 
In 1515 also he arranged a defensive treaty between England 
and France, and he was principally responsible for treaties 
concluded between the two countries in 1518 and 1525, and at 
other times. He was trusted and employed on personal matters 
by Cardinal Wolsey. He died on the s8th of April 1 533. The 
bishop built two beautiful chapels, one in Putney church and 
the other in Ely cathedral, where he is buried. 

WESTALL, RICHARD (1765-1836), English subject painter, 
was born in Hertford in 1765, of a Norwich family. In 1779 
he went to London, and was apprenticed to an engraver on silver, 
and in 1785 he began to study in tbe schools of the Royal 
Academy. He painted "Esau seeking Jacob's Blessing," 
" Mary Queen of Scots going to Execution " and other historical 
Subjects in water-colour, and some good portraits in the same 
medium, but he is mainly known as a book-illustrator. He 
produced five subjects for the Shakespeare Gallery, illustrated 
an edition of Milton, executed a very popular scries of illustra- 
tions to the Bible and the prayer-book, and designed plates for 
numerous other works. In 1808 he published a poem, A Day 
in Spring, illustrated by his own pencil. His designs are rather 
tame, mannered and effeminate. He became an associate of 
the Royal Academy in 1792, and a full member in 1794; and 
during his later years he was a pensioner of the Academy. 
He died on the 4th of December 1836. His brother, William 
WestaH, A.R.A. (178 1-1850), landscape painter, is mainly known 
by his illu strations to works of travel. 

WESTBORO, a township of Worcester county, Massachusetts, 
U.S.A., about xa m E. of Worcester. Pop. (1890) 5195; (1000) 
5400 (ixa7 being foreign-born); (1005, state census) 5378, (1910) 
5446. Westboro is served by the Boston & Albany railway and 
by inter urban electric lines. Area, about a 2 sq. m. It has a 
public library, which has belonged to the township since 1857; 
and here are the Lyman School for Boys, a state industrial 
institution (opened in 1886 and succeeding a state reform school 
opened in X846), and the Westboro Insane Hospital (homoeopathic, 
1884), which is under the general supervision of the State Board 
of Insanity. There are manufactures of boots and shoes, straw 
and leather goods, carpets, &c. Westboro was the birthplace 
of Eli Whitney, inventor of the cotton gin. The first settlement 
here was made about 1659 in a part of Marlboro called Chauney 
(because of a grant of 500 acres here to Charles Chauney, president 



536 



WEST BROMWICH— WESTBURY 



of Harvard College, made in 1659 and revoked in 1660 by the 
General Court of Massachusetts) . In 1 7 1 7 this part of Marlboro, 
with other lands, was erected into the township of Westboro, 
to which parts of Sutton (1728), Shrewsbury (1762 and 1793) 
and Upton (1763) were subsequently annexed, and from which 
Northboro was separated in 1766. 

WEST BROMWICH, a market town and municipal, county 
and parliamentary borough of Staffordshire, England, 6 m. N.W. 
of Birmingham, on the northern line of the Great Western 
railway. Pop. (1891) 59,538, (1001) 65,175. The appearance 
of the town, like its growth as an industrial centre of the Black 
Country, is modern. It is, however, of ancient origin; thus the 
church of All Saints, formerly St Clement, was given by Henry I. 
to the convent of Worcester, from which it passed to the priors 
of Sandwell, who rebuilt it in the Decorated period, the present 
structure (1872) following their plan. The chief public buildings 
are the town hall (1875), the Institute (18S6), providing instruc- 
tion in science and art, under the corporation since 1804, the 
free library (1874) and law-courts (1891). The picturesque 
Oak House, of the x6lh century, was opened as a museum and 
art gallery in 1898. Among schools is one for pauper children 
in which engineering, baking, spade-husbandry, &c, are taught. 
Sandwell Hall, formerly a seat of the earls of Dartmouth, con- 
tains a school for daughters of clergymen, &c. The house, 
standing in pleasant wooded grounds, is on the site of the Bene- 
dictine priory of Sandwell, founded in the time of Henry II. 
There are charities founded by the families of Stanley and 
Whorwood (1613 and 1614). Dartmouth Park b a recreation 
ground of about 60 acres; others are Farley, Kcnwick and Hill 
Top Park. Numerous mines work the extensive coalfields, 
which include a thirty-foot seam. There are large iron and brass 
foundries and smelting furnaces, and malting and brickmaking 
are carried on. The parliamentary borough returns one member. 
The town is governed by a mayor 6 aldermen and 18 councillors. 
Area, 5860 acres. 

WESTBROOK, a city of Cumberland county, Maine, U.S.A., 
on the Presumpscot river, 5 m. N.W. of Portland. Pop. (1890) 
6632, (1900) 7283 (1673 foreign-born), (1910) 8281. It is 
served by the Maine Central and the Boston & Maine railways. 
In West brook are the Walker Memorial Library (1894) and the 
Warren Library (1879). The river provides water-power, and 
among the manufactures are paper, silks, cotton goods, &c. In 
1814 West brook was separated from Falmouth and incorporated 
as a township under the name of Stroud water, and in 1815 the 
present name was adopted in honour of Colonel Thomas West- 
brook, who had distinguished himself in wars with the Indians. 
In 1871 Deering, now a part of Portland, was taken from the 
township. A city charter was granted to Westbrook in 1889 
and adopted in 1891. 

WESTBURY, RICHARD BETHELL, ist Babon (1800-1873), 
lord chancellor of Great Britain, was the son of Dr Richard 
Bethell, and was born at Bradford, Wilts. Taking a high degree 
at Oxford in rSi8, he was elected a fellow of Wadham College. 
In 1823 he was called to the bar at the Middle Temple. On 
attaining the dignity of queen's counsel in 1840 he rapidly took 
the foremost place at the Chancery bar and was appointed vice- 
chancellor of the county palatine of Lancaster in 1851. His most 
important public service was the reform of the then existing mode 
of legal education, a reform which ensured that students before 
call to the bar should have at least some acquaintance with the 
elements of the subject which they were to profess. In 185 1 he 
obtained a seat in the House of Commons, where he continued to 
sit, first as member for Aylesbury, then as member for Wolver- 
hampton, until he was raised to the peerage. Attaching himself 
to the liberals, he became solicitor-general in 1852 and attorney- 
general in 1856 and again in 1859. On June 26, 1861, on the 
death of Lord Campbell, he was created lord high chancellor 
of Great Britain, with the title of Baron Westbury of Westbury, 
county Wilts. The ambition of his life was to set on foot the 
compilation of a digest of the whole law, but for various reasons 
this became impracticable. The conclusion of his tenure of the 
chancellorship was unfortunately marked by events which, 



although they did not render personal corruption imputable to 
him, made it evident that he had acted with some laxity and 
want of caution. Owing to the reception by parliament of 
reports of committees nominated to consider the circumstances 
of certain appointments in the Leeds Bankruptcy Court, as well 
as the granting a pension to a Mr Leonard Edmunds, a clerk 
in the patent office, and a clerk of the parliaments, the lord 
chancellor felt it incumbent upon him to resign his office, wliich 
he accordingly did on the 5th of July 1865, and was succeeded 
by Lord Cranworth. After his resignation he continued to take 
part in the judicial sittings of the House of Lords and the privy 
council until his death. In 1872 he was appointed arbitrator 
under the European Assurance Society Act 1872, and his judg- 
ments in that capacity have been collected and published by 
Mr F. S. Reilly. As a writer on law he made no mark, and few 
of his decisions take the highest judicial rank. Perhaps the 
best known is the judgment delivering the opinion of the judicial 
committee of the privy council in 1863 against the heretical 
character of certain extracts from the well-known publication 
Essays and Reviews. His principal legislative achievements were 
the passing of the Divorce Act 1857, and of the Land Registry 
Act 1862 (generally known as Lord Westbury's Act), the latter 
of which in practice proved a failure. What chiefly distinguished 
Lord Westbury was the possession of a certain sarcastic humour; 
and numerous are the stories, authentic and apocryphal, of its 
exercise. In fact, he and Mr Justice Maulc fill a position analo- 
gous to that of Sydney Smith, convenient names to whom " good 
things " may be attributed. Lord Westbury died on the 20th of 
July 1873, within a day of the death of Bishop Wilberforce, his 
special antagonist in debate. 

See Life of Lord Westbury by T. A. Nash. 

WESTBURY, an urban district in the Westbury parliamentary 
division of Wiltshire, England, on the river Biss, a small tributary 
of the Lower Avon. Pop. (1901) 3305. It is 95J m. W. by S. 
of London by the Great Western railway, and lies within 3 m. 
of the Somerset border, sheltered on the east by the high tableland 
of Salisbury Plain. All Saints' church is Norman and later, with 
a magnificent nave. In the south transept stands a monument 
to Sir James Ley, earl of Marlborough and president of the 
council in 1629; the " good earl " addressed in a sonnet by 
Milton. A chained black-letter copy of Erasmus* " Para- 
phrase of the New Testament " is preserved in the south chapel. 
In the suburb of Westbury Leigh is the " Palace Garden," a 
moated site said to have been a royal residence in Saxon times. 

Westbury {Westberic, Wcslburi) figures in Domesday as a 
manor held by the king. The manor was granted by Henry II. 
to Reginald de Pavely in 11 72-1 173, and from then onwards 
passed through various families until in 1810 it was purchased 
by Sir M. M. Lopez from the earl of Abingdon. A post mote was 
held for Westbury in 1361-1362, but the earliest mention of the 
town as a borough occurs in 1442-1443. The charter of incorpora- 
tion is lost (tradition says it was burnt), and the town possesses no 
other charter. The title of the corporation was " Mayor and 
Burgesses of Westbury," and it consisted of a mayor, recorder 
and 13 capital burgesses. The borough returned two members 
to parliament from 1448. In 1832 the number was reduced to 
one, and in 1885 the representation was merged in that of the 
county. In 1252 Henry HI. granted to Walter de Pavely a 
yearly fair for three days from October 31, and a weekly market 
on Friday. Henry VI. in 1460 granted three fairs yearly for 
three days from April 22, Whit Monday and September 13 
respectively, and a market on Thursdays. In 1835 the mayor's 
fair was held at Whitsuntide, and the lord of the manor's at 
Easter. In 1875 a yearly sheep fair took place on the first 
Tuesday in September and a pleasure fair on Easter and Whit 
Monday; in 1888 on the first Tuesday in September and on the 
24th of that month; the former still exists. In 1673 there 
was a market on Friday, in 1835 a nominal one on Tuesday 
and after 1875 it ceased. During the i8th and 19th centuries 
there was a considerable trade in malt, bricks, tiles and cloth. 
The last, once the most extensive, has now sunk into insignifi- 
cance, while the others exist also only on a small scale. 



WEST CHESTER— WESTCOTT 



537 



, a borough and the county-seat of Chester 
county, Pennsylvania, U.S.A., about 20 m. W. of Philadelphia. 
Pop. (1600) 8oa8; (1000) QSH, of whom 566 were foreign-born 
and 1777 were negroes; (1910 census) 11*767. West Chester 
is served directly by the Pennsylvania and the Philadelphia, 
Baltimore & Washington railways and by an interurban electric 
line to Philadelphia, electric lines connect with the Philadelphia 
ft Bunding at Lenape, 4 m. to the south-west, and at Coatesvillc, 
10 m. to the west. The borough lies about 450 ft. above sea-level 
in an undulating country. At West Chester are the West Chester 
State Normal School (1871), the Darlington Seminary (non- 
sectarian; for girls), founded in 1851 by Smedley Darlington 
(1837-1890; principal of the school in 1851-1861 and a repre- 
sentative in Congress in 1887-1891), the Friends' Graded School 
and the Friends' (Orthodox) Select School. There arc fine 
botanical gardens in Marshall Square. Among the public build- 
ings ace a county court house (1847-1848), a county jail and a 
county hospital (1892-1693), the public library and a large 
Y.M.C-A. building, the colonial Turk's Head Hotel here has 
been so called since 1708 and was probably first opened in 1762. 
West Chester is in a farming country with important market* 
garden* and dairy farms; among its manufactures arc dairy 
implements, foundry' and machine-shop products and carriage 
and wagon materials. The factory product in 1905 was valued 
at $2,111,185. There are several large nursery farms here. 
West Chester was first settled in 17 13, succeeded Chester as the 
county-seat in 1784-1786, and was incorporated as a town in 
1788 and as a borough in i 799. During the War of Independence 
the battle of Brandywine was fought about 7 m. S. of West 
Chester on the 1 ith of September 1 777, and on the 20th General 
Anthony Wayne, with a small force, was surprised and routed 
b y the B ritish at Paoli, about 8 m. N.E. 

WESTCOTT, BROOKE FOSS (1835-1901), English divine 
and bishop of Durham, was born on the 12th of January 1825 
in the neighbourhood of Birmingham. His father, Frederick 
Brooke Westcott, was a botanist of some distinction. Westcott 
was educated at King Edward VI. school, Birmingham, under 
James Prince Lee, where he formed his friendship with Joseph 
Barber Lighlfoot (?.*.). In 1844 Westcott obtained a scholarship 
at Trinity College, Cambridge. He took -Sir William Browne's 
medal for a Greek ode in 1846 and 1847, the Members' Prize 
for a Latin essay in 1847 as an undergraduate and in 1849 as 
a bachelor. He took his degree in January 1848, obtaining 
double-first honours. In mathematics he was twenty-fourth 
wrangler, Isaac Todhunter being senior. In classics he was 
senior, being bracketed with C. B. Scott, afterwards headmaster 
of Westminster. After obtaining his degree, Westcott remained 
for four years in residence at Trinity. In 1849 he obtained 
his fellowship; and in the same year he was ordained deacon 
and priest by his old headmaster, Prince Lee, now bishop of 
Manchester. The time spent at Cambridge was devoted to most 
strenuous study. He took pupils; and among his pupils there 
were reading with him, almost at the same time, his school 
friend Lightfoot and two other men who became his attached 
and lifelong friends, E. W. Benson and F. J. A. Hort (qq.v.). The 
inspiring influence of Westcott's intense enthusiasm left its 
mark upon these three distinguished men; they regarded him 
not only as their friend and counsellor, but as in an especial 
degree their teacher and oracle. He devoted much attention 
to philosophical, patristic and historical studies, but it soon 
became evident that he would throw his strength into New 
Testament work. In 1851 he published his Norrisian prize 
essay with the title Elements of the Gospel Harmony. 

In 1852 he became an assistant master at Harrow, and soon 
afterwards he married Miss Whithard. He prosecuted his school 
work with characteristic vigour, and succeeded in combining 
with bis school duties an enormous amount both of theological 
research and of literary activity. He worked at Harrow for 
nearly twenty years under Dr C. J. Vaughan and Dr Montagu 
Butler, but while he was always conspicuously successful in 
inspiring a few senior boys with something of his own intellectual 
and moral enthusiasm, he was never in the same measure capable 



of maintaining discipline among large numbers. The writings 
which he produced at this period created a new epoch in the 
history of modern English theological scholarship. In 1855 
he published the first edition of his History ojthe New Testament 
Canon, which, frequently revised and expanded, became the 
standard English work upon the subject. In 1859 there appeared 
his Characteristics of the Gospel Miracles. In i860 he expanded 
his Norrisian essay into an Introduction to the Study of the Gospels, 
a work remarkable for insight and minuteness of study, as well 
as for reverential treatment combined with considerable freedom 
from traditional lines. Westcott's work for Smith's Dictionary 
of the Bible, notably his articles on " Canon," " Maccabees," 
" Vulgate," entailed most careful and thorough preparation, 
and led to the composition of his subsequent valuable popular 
books, The Bible in the Church (1864) and a History of the English 
Bible (1869). To the same period belongs The Gospel of the 
Resurrection (1866). As a piece of consecutive reasoning upon a 
fundamental Christian doctrine it deservedly attracted great 
attention. Its width of view and its recognition of the claims 
of historical science and pure reason were thoroughly character- 
istic of Westcott's mode of discussing a theological question. 
At the time when the book appeared his method of apologetic 
showed both courage and originality, but the excellence of the 
work is impaired by the difficulty of the style. 

In 1865 be took his B.D., and in 1870 his D.D. He received 
in later years the honorary degrees of D.C.L. from Oxford (1881) 
and of D.D. from Edinburgh (1883). In 1868 Westcott was 
appointed examining chaplain by Bishop Connor Magee (of 
Peterborough); and in the following year he accepted a canonry 
at Peterborough, which necessitated his leaving Harrow. For 
a time he contemplated with eagerness the idea of a renovated 
cathedral life, devoted to the pursuit of learning and to the 
development of opportunities for the religious and intellectual 
benefit of the diocese. But the rcgius professorship of divinity 
at Cambridge fell vacant, and Lighlfoot, who was then Hulsean 
professor, declining to become a candidate himself, insisted upon 
Westcott's standing for the post. It was due to Lightfoot's 
support almost as much as to his own great merits that Westcott 
was elected to the chair on the 1st of November 1870. This was 
the turning-point of his life. He now occupied a great position 
for which he was supremely fitted, and at a juncture in the 
reform of univctsity studies when a theologian of liberal views, 
but universally respected for his massive learning and his devout 
and single-minded character, would enjoy a unique opportunity 
for usefulness. Supported by his friends Lightfoot and Hort, 
he threw himself into the new work with extraordinary energy. 
He deliberately sacrificed many of the social privileges of a 
university career in order that his studies might be more con- 
tinuous and that he might see more of the younger men. His 
lectures were generally on Biblical subjects. His Commentaries 
on St John's Gospel (1881), on the Epistle to the Hebrews (1S89) 
and the Epistles of St John (1883) resulted from his public 
lectures. One of his most valuable works, The Gospel of Life 
(1892), a study of Christian doctrine, incorporated the materials 
upon which he was engaged in a series of more private and 
esoteric lectures delivered on week-day evenings. The work 
of lecturing was an intense strain to him, but its influence was 
immense: to attend one of Westcott's lectures— even to watch 
him lecturing — was an experience which lifted and solemnized 
many a man to whom the references to Origen or Rupert of 
Deutz were almost ludicrously unintelligible. Between the 
years 1870 and 1881 Westcott was also continually engaged in 
work for the revision of the New Testament, and, simultaneously, 
in the preparation of a new text in conjunction with Hort. The 
years in which Westcott, Lightfoot and Hort could thus meet 
frequently and naturally for the discussion of the work in which 
they were all three so deeply engrossed formed a happy and 
privileged period in their lives. In the year 1881 there appeared 
the famous Westcott and Hort text of the New Testament, 
upon which had been expended nearly thirty years of incessant 
labour. The reforms In the regulations for degrees in divinity, 
the formation and first revision of the sew theological tripos, 



538 



WESTERLY 



the inauguration of the Cambridge mission to Delhi, the institu- 
tion of the Church Society (for the discussion of theological 
and ecclesiastical questions by the younger men), the meetings 
for the divinity faculty, the organization of the new Divinity 
School and Library and, later, the institution of the Cambridge 
Clergy Training School, were all, in a very real degree, the result 
of Westcott's energy and influence as regius professor. To this 
list should also be added the Oxford and Cambridge preliminary 
examination for candidates for holy orders, with which he was 
from the first most closely identified. The success of this very 
useful scheme was due chiefly to his sedulous interest and help. 

The departure of Lightfoot to the see of Durham in 1879 
was a great blow to Westcott. Nevertheless it resulted in bring- 
ing him into still greater prominence. He was compelled to 
take the lead in matters where Lightfoot's more practical nature 
had previously been predominant. In 1883 Westcott was elected 
to a professorial fellowship at King's. Shortly afterwards, 
having previously resigned his canonry at Peterborough, he was 
appointed by the crown to a canonry at Westminster, and 
accepted the position of examining chaplain to Archbishop 
Benson. His little edition of the Paragraph Psalter (1879), 
arranged for the use of choirs, and his admirable lectures on the 
Apostles' Creed, entitled Historic Faith (1883), are reminiscences 
of his vacations spent at Peterborough. He held bis canonry 
at Westminster in conjunction with the regius professorship. 
The strain of the joint work was very heavy, and the intensity 
of the interest and study which he brought to bear upon his 
share in the labours of the Ecclesiastical Courts Commission, 
of which he had been appointed a member, added to his burden. 

Preaching at the Abbey gave him a valued opportunity of deal- 
ing with social questions. His sermons were generally portions 
of a series; and to this period belong the volumes Christ us 
Consitmmalor (1886) and Social Aspects of Christianity (1887). 

In March 1800 he was nominated to the see of Durham, there 
to follow in the steps of his beloved friend Lightfoot, who had 
died in December 1889. He was consecrated on the 1st of May 
at Westminster Abbey by Archbishop Thompson (of York), 
Hort being the preacher, and enthroned at Durham cathedral 
on the 15th of May. The change of work and surroundings 
could hardly have been greater. But the sudden immersion 
in the practical administration of a northern diocese gave him 
new strength. He surprised the world, which had supposed 
him to be a recluse and a mystic, by the practical interest he 
took in the mining population of Durham and in the great 
shipping and artisan industries of Sunderland and Gateshead. 
Upon one famous occasion in 1892 he succeeded in bringing to 
a peaceful solution a long and bitter strike which had divided 
the masters and men in the Durham collieries; and his success 
was due to the confidence which he inspired by the extraordinary 
moral energy of his strangely " prophetic " personality, at once 
thoughtful, vehement and affectionate. His constant endeavour 
to call the attention of the Church to the religious aspect of social 
questions was a special note in his public utterances. He was 
a staunch supporter of the co-operative movement. He was 
practically the founder of the Christian Social Union. He 
continually insisted upon the necessity of promoting the cause 
of foreign missions, and he gladly gave four of his sons for the 
work of the Church in India. His energy was remarkable to 
the very end. But during the last two or three years of his 
life he aged considerably. His wife, who bad been for some years 
an invalid, died rather suddenly on the 28th of May 1901, and he 
dedicated to her memory his last book, Lessons from Work (1901). 
He preached a farewell sermon to the miners in Durham cathedral 
at their annual festival on the aoth of July. Then came a 
short, sudden illness, and he passed away on the 27th of July..f 

Westcott was no narrow specialist. He had the keenest love 
of poetry, music and art. He was himself no mean draughtsman, 
and used often to say that if he had not taken orders he would 
have become an architect. His literary sympathies were wide. 
He would never tire of praising Euripides, while few men had 
given such minute study to the writings of Robert Browning. 
He followed with delight the development of natural science 



studies at Cambridge. He spared no pains to be accurate, or to 
widen the basis of his thought. Thus he devoted one summer 
vacation to the careful analysis of Comte's Politique positive. 
He studied assiduously The Sacred Books cfthe East, and earnestly 
contended that no systematic view of Christianity could afford 
to ignore the philosophy of other religions. The outside world 
was wont to regard him as a mystic; and the mystical, or 
sacramental, view of life enters, it is true, very largely into 
his teaching. He had in this respect many points of similarity 
with the Cambridge Platonists of the 17th century, and with 
F. D. Maurice, for whom he had profound regard. But in other 
respects he was very practical; and his strength of will, his 
learning and his force of character made him really masterful 
in influence wherever the subject under discussion was of serious 
moment. He was a strong supporter of Church reform, especially 
in the direction of obtaining larger powers for the laity. 

He kept himself aloof from all party strife. He describes him* 
self when he says, " The student of Christian doctrine, because 
he strives after exactness of phrase, because he is conscious 
of the inadequacy of any one human formula to exhaust the 
truth, will be filled with sympathy for every genuine endeavour 
towards the embodiment of right opinion. . Partial views attract 
and exist in virtue of the fragment of truth — be it great or 
small — which they include; and it is the work of the theologian 
to seize this no less than to detect the first spring of error. It is 
easier and, in one sense, it is more impressive to make a per- 
emptory and exclusive statement, and to refuse to allow any 
place beside it to divergent expositions; but this show of clear- 
ness and power is dearly purchased at the cost of the ennobling 
conviction that the whole truth is far greater than our individual 
minds. He who believes that every judgment on the highest 
matters different from his own is simply a heresy must have * 
mean idea of the faith; and while the qualifications, the reserve, 
the lingering sympathies of the real student make him in many 
cases a poor controversialist, it may be said that a mere con- 
troversialist cannot be a real theologian" {Lessons from Work, 
pp. 84-85). His theological work was always distinguished by 
the place which he assigned to Divine Revelation in Holy 
Scripture and in the teaching of history. His own studies have 
largely contributed in England to the better understanding of the 
doctrines of the Resurrection and the Incarnation. His work 
in conjunction with Hort upon the Greek text of the New Testa- 
ment will endure as one of the greatest achievements of English 
Biblical criticism. The principles which are explained in Hort's 
introduction to the text had been arrived at after years of elabor- 
ate investigation and continual correspondence and discussion 
between the two friends. The place which it almost at once took 
among scientific scholars in Great Britain and throughout 
Europe was a recognition of the great advance which it repre- 
sented in the use and classification of ancient authorities. His 
commentaries rank with Lightfoot's as the best type of Biblical 
exegesis produced by the English Church in the 29th century. 

The following is a bibliography of Westcott** more important 
writings, giving the date of the first editions. — Elements of the Gospel 
Harmony (1851); History of the Canon of First Four Centuries 
(1853)$ Characteristics of Gospel Miracles (1859); Introduction to 
the Study of the Gospels (i860); The Bible in the Church (1864): 
The Gospel of the Resurrection (1866) ;_ Christian Life Manifold 



, ,. . Commentary 
he Epistles of St 



and une (I809; ; Some t ottos tn the Ktttgurus Life of ttu 

(1873); Paragraph Psalter for the Use of Choirs (1879); 

on the Gospel of St John (1881); Commentary on the 1 

John (1863); Revelalum of the Risen Lord (1883); Revelation oj me 

Father (1884); Some Thoughts from the Ordinal (1884); Christus 

Consummalor (1886); Social Aspects of Christianity (1887); The 

Victory of the Cross: Sermons in Holy Week (1888); Commentary 

on the Epistle to the Hebrews (1889) ; From Stret " " *' 

Gospel of Life (1892) : The Incarnation and 

Some Lessons of the Revised Version of the 1 

Christian Aspects of Life (1897); Lessons from Work (1901). 

Lives by his son B. F. Westcott (1903), and by J. Clayton 
(1906). (H.E.R.^) 

WESTERLY, a township of Washington county, Rhode 
Island, U.S.A., in the extreme S.W. part of the state, about 
44 m. S.S.W. of Providence, separated from Connecticut on the 
W. by the Pawcatuck river, which forms the northern boundary 



WESTERMANN— WESTERN AUSTRALIA 



539 



of the township also. Fop. (1890) 6813, (1900) 7541, (1788 
bong foreign-bom and 185 negroes), (1005, state census) 8381, 
(1910) 8606. Area, about 31 sq. m. Westerly Is served by the 
New York, New Haven & Hartford railway, and by interurban 
electric lines connecting with Norwich and New London, Conn. 
The township includes several small villages, connected by 
electric railways, the best known being Watch Hill, which has 
fine tea-bathing. Larger villages are Westerly, in the western 
part of the township and at the head of navigation (for small 
vessels) on the Pawcatuck river, and Niantic, in the north- 
eastern part of the township. In Westerly there is a public 
library (1804), with 23433 volumes in 1009. Beyond Watch 
Hill Point on the S. W. point of an L-shaped peninsula, running 
first W. and then N., is Napatree Point, on which is Fort Mans- 
field, commanding die N.E. entrance to Long Island Sound. 
The township is the centre of the granite industry of the state; 
the quarries are near the villages of Westerly and Niantic. The 
granite is of three kinds: white statuary granite, a quartz 
monzonite, with a fine even-grained texture, used extensively for 
monuments; blue granite, also a quaru monzonite and also much 
used for monuments; and red granite, a biotite granite, reddish 
grey in colour and rather coarse in texture, used for buildings. 1 
Among the manufactures are cotton and woollen goods, thread 
and printing presses. The water supply is from artesian wells. 
The first settlement here was made in 166 1, and the township 
was organized in 1669, when the present name was adopted 
instead of the Indian Misquamicut (meaning " salmon ") by 
which it had been called. In 1686 the name was changed to 
Haversham, but in 1669 the present name was restored. 

See Frederic Denison, Westerly and Us Witnesses, for Two Hundred 
and fifty Years, 1620-1676 (Providence, R.I., 1878). 

WESTERMANN, FRANCOIS JOSEPH (d. 1794). French 
general, was born at Molsheim in Alsace. At an early age he 
entered a cavalry regiment, but soon left the service and went to 
Paris. He embraced enthusiastically the ideas of the Revolution , 
and in 1700 became grcfiUr of the municipality of Haguenau. 
After a short imprisonment on a charge -of inciting imeuUs at 
Haguenau, he returned to Paris, where he joined Danton and 
played an important part in the attack on the Tuileries on the 
10th of August 1792. He accompanied Dumouricz on bis cam- 
paigns tad assisted him in his negotiations with the Austrians, 
being arrested as an accomplice after the general's defection. 
He succeeded, however, in proving his innocence, and was sent 
with the rank of general of brigade into La Vendee, where he 
distinguished himself by his extraordinary courage, by the 
audacity of his manoeuvres, and by his severe treatment of the 
insurgents. After suffering a defeat at Cn&tillon, he vanquished 
the Vendcans at Beaupreau, Laval, Granville and Bauge, and 
in December 1793 annihilated their army at Le Mans and 
Savenay. He was then summoned to Paris, where be was pro- 
scribed with the Dantonist party and executed on the 5th of 
April 1794. 

See P. Holl, Nas gtn£roux ahaciens . . . Westemann (Strassburg, 
19 00). 

WESTERN AUSTRALIA, a British colonial state, forming 
part of the Commonwealth of Australia. (For Map, see Aus- 
tralia.) This portion of Australia lies to the west of 129° £. 
long-, forming considerably more than one-third of the whole; it 
has an area of 1 ,060,000 sq. m,, k 1400 m. in length and 850 
in breadth, and has a coast-line of 3500 m. It is divided into 
five districts—Central, Central Eastern, South-Eastern, North 
and Kimberley. The Central or settled district, in the south- 
west, is divided into twenty-six counties. Apart from the coast 
lands, the map presents almost a blank, as the major portion is 
practically a dry waste of stone and sand, relieved by a few 
shallow salt lakes. The rivers of the south are small— the Black- 
wood being the most considerable. To the north of this are the 
Murray, the well-known Swan, the Moore, the Greenough and 
the Murchison. The last is 400 m long. Shark's Bay receives 
the Gascoyne (200 m. long), with its tributary the Lyons. 

» Sec T. N Dale, The Chief Commercial Granites of Massachusetts, 
New Hampshire and Rhode Island (Washington, 1908). Bulletin 
35* of the United States Geological Surrey. 



Still farther north, where the coast trends eastward, the principal 
rivers are the Ashburton, the Fortescue and the De Grey. 
Kimberley district to the north-cast has some fine streams—the 
Fitzroy and Ord and their tributaries, on some of which (the 
Mary, Elvira, &c.) are the goldfields, 250 m. south of Cambridge 
Gulf. The Darling mountain range is in the south-west, Mount 
William reaching 3000 fL; in the same quarter arc Toolbrunup 
(3341 ft.), Ellen's Peak (3420), and the Stirling and Victoria 
ranges. Gardner and Moresby are flat-topped ranges. Mount 
Elizabeth rises behind Perth. Hampton tableland overlooks the 
Bight. In the north-west are Mount Bruce (4000 ft.), Augustus 
(3580), Dalgaranger (2100), Barlec, Pyrton and the Capricorn 
range. Kimberley has the King Leopold, M'Clintock, Albeit 
Edward, Hardman, Gcikie, Napier, Lubbock, Oscar, Mueller 
and St George ranges. The lake district of the interior is in the 
Gibson and Victoria deserts from 24 to 32 S. The lakes receive 
the trifling drainage of that low region. Almost all of them are 
salt from the presence of saline marl. 

Geology. — The main mass of Wcstralia consists of a vast block of 
Archean rocks, which forms the whole of the western half of the 
Australian continent. The rocks form a plateau, which faces the 
coast, in a scries of scarps, usually a short distance inland. The 
edge of this plateau is separated from the Southern Ocean by the 
Nu Harbor limestones, at the head of the Great Australian Bight; 
but they gradually become narrower to the west; and the Archean 
rocks reach the coast at Port Dempster and to the east of Espcrance 
Bay. Thence the southern boundary of the Archean rocks extends 
due west, while the coast trends southward, and is separated by a 
belt of Lower Palaeozoic and Mesozoic deposits; but the reappear- 
ance of the granitic rocks at King George Sound and Albany may be 
due to an outlier of the Archean tableland. Along the western 
coast, the scarp of the Archean plateau forms the Darling Range 
behind Perth. Further north, behind Shark's Bay, the plateau 
recedes from the coast, and trends north-westward through the 
HanuAersley Mountains and the highlands of Pilbarra. The 
Archean rocks underlie the Kimberley Goldfield; but they are 
separated from the main Archean plateau to the south by the 
Lower Palaeozoic rocks, which extend up the basin of the Fitzroy 
river and form the King Leopold and Oscar Ranges. 

The Archean rocks are of most interest from the auriferous lodes 
which occur in them. The Archean rocks of the area between the 
Darling Range and the goldfield of Coolgardie were classified by 
H. P. Woodward into six parallel belts, running northward and 
southward, but with a slight trend to the west. The westernmost 
belt consists of clay slates, quartzites and schists, and is traversed 
by dykes of diorite and felstonc; the belt forms the western foot 
of the Archean plateau, along the edge of the coastal plain. The 
second belt consists of gneisses and schists, and forms the western 
part of the Archean plateau. Its chief mineral deposit is tin, in 
the Green-bushes tin-field, and various other minerals, such as 
graphite and asbestos. Then follows a wide belt of granitic rocks; 
it has no permanent surface water and is bare of minerals, and, 
therefore, formed for a long time an effective barrier to the settle- 
ment or prospecting of the country to the east. This granitic band 
ends to the east in the first auriferous belt, which extends from the 
Phillips river, on the southern coast, to Southern Cross, on the Perth 
to Kalgoorue railway: thence it goes through Mount Magnet, Lake 
Austin and the Murchison Goldfield at Nannine, and through the 
Peak Goldfield to the heads of the Gascoyne and Ashburton rivers. 
To the east of this belt is a barren band of granites and gneisses, 
succeeded again eastward by the second auriferous belt, including 
the chief goUfields of Westralia. They begin on the south with the 
Dundas Goldfield, and the mining centre of Norseman; then to 
the north follow the goldfields of Kalgoorlie, with its Golden Mile at 
Boulder, and the now less important field of Coolgardie. This line 
continues thence through the goldfields of Leonora and Mount 
Margaret, and reappears behind the western coast in the Pilbarra 
Goldnckl. The rocks of the goldfields consist of amphobolite-schists 
and other basic schists, traversed by dykes of granite, diorite and 
porphyrite, with some peridotite*. Some of the amphibolitcswhavc 
been crushed and then silicified into jasperoids, so that they much 
resemble altered sedimentary slates. 

The Palaeozoic group is represented by the Cambrian rocks of the 
Kimberley Goldfield, which have yielded OUneUus forresti. There 
appear to be no certain r ep r esentatives of the Ordovician system: 
while the Silurian is represented in the King Leopold Range of 
Kimberley, and, according to H. P. Woodward, in the contorted, 
unfossilliferous quartzites and shales of the Stirling Range, north of 
Albany. The Upper Palaeozoic b well represented by an area, of 
some 2000 sq. m. of Devonian sedimentary and volcanic rocks in 
the Kimberley district, and by the Carboniferous system, including 
both a lower, marine type, and an upper, terrestrial type The Lower 
Carboniferous limestones occur in the Napier, Oscar and Geikie 
Ranges of Kimberley, and in the basin of the Gascoyne river, where 
they contain the glacial deposits discovered by Gibb-Maitlaad, 



54° 



WESTERN AUSTRALIA 



between the Wootanel and Mtntlya riven. The upper and terrestnal 
type of the Carboniferous include sandstones with Stigmaria and 
Lepidodemdron in the Kimberley district, and the coals of the Irwin 
coalneld, the age of which is proved by the interstratification of the 
coal scams with beds containing Productus subqmadrahu, Cyrtina 
carbonaria and AviculopecUn subouinquelinealus. The Mcsosoic 
rocks were discovered in 1861, and their chief outcrop is along the 
western coast plains of Wcstralia between Geraldton and Perth. 
They have been pierced by many bores put down for artesian wells. 
The fossils indicate a Lower Jurassic age ; and, according to Etheridge, 
some of the fossils are Lower Cretaceous. The Collie coalneld, to 
the east of .Bunbury. is generally regarded as Mesozoic Its coal is 
inferior in quality to that of Eastern Australia, and contains on an 
average of 34 analyses 11-77% of moisture, and 802% of 
ash. According to Etheridge its age is Permo-Carboniferous. The 
Kaiaosoic rocks include the marine limestones in the Nullarbor 
Plains at the bead of the Great Australian Bight, whence they 
extend inland for 150 m. They have no surface water, but the rain- 
fall in this district nourishes artesian wells. The occurrence of 
marine Kainoaok beds under the western coastal plain is proved 
by the bores, as at Carnarvon, where they appear to be over 1000 ft. 
in thickness. The coastal region also includes sheets of day and 
sandstone, with deposits of brown coal as on the FrUgerala river 
on the southern coast, and in the basin of the Gascoyne. The 
Archean plateau of the interior is covered by wide sheets of sub- 
aerial and lacustrine deposits, which have accumulated in the basins 
and river valleys. They include mottled clays, lateritic ironstones 
and conglomerates. In places the materials have been roughly 
assorted by river action, as in the deep lead of Kanowna. The clays 
contain the bones of the Diprotcdon, so that they are probably of 
Upper Pliocene or Pleistocene age. The Kainozotc volcanic period 
of Australia is represented by the basalts of Bunbury and Black 
Point, cast of Flinders Bay. 

A bibliography of Wcstralian geology has been issued by Maitland, 
Bulletin Gcol. Survey, No. 1, 1898. An excellent summary of the 
mineral wealth of the state has been given bv Maitland, Bulletin 8, 
No. 4, 1900, pp. 7-23, also issued in the Year-book of Western 
Australia. The main literature of the geology of Wcstralia is in the 
Bulletins of the Geol. Survey, and in the reports of the Mines De- 

Srtment. A general account of the gold-mining has been given 
A. G. Charicton, 1902; and also by Donald Clark, Australian 
ining and Metallurgy (1004). (J- W. G.) 

Flora.— Judged by its vegetable forms, Western Australia would 
seem to be older than eastern Australia, South Australia being of 
intermediate age. Indian relations appear on the northern side, 
and South African on the western. There are fewer Antarctic and 
Polynesian representatives than in the eastern colonics. European 
forms are extremely scarce. Compared with the other side of 
Australia, a third of the genera on the south-west is almost wanting 
in the south-east. In the latter, 55, having more than ten species 
each, have 1260 species; but the former has as many in 55 of its 
80 genera. Of those 55. 36 are wanting in the south-east, and 17 
are absolutely peculiar. There are fewer natural orders and genera 
westward, but more species. Baron von Mfiller declared that 
" nearly half of the whole vegetation of the Australian continent has 
been traced to within the boundaries of the Western Australian 
territory." He incl udes 9 Malvaceae, 6 Euphorbiaceae, 2 Rubiaceae, 
9 Proteaceae, 47 Leguminosae, 10 Myrtaceae, 12 Compoeitae, 
5 Labiatae, 6 Cyperarcae, 1% Convolvulaceae, 16 Gramineae, 3 
Filiccs, 10 Amaranthaccae. Yet over 500 of its tropical species 
are identified with those of India or Indian islands. While seven- 
tenths of the orders reach their maximum south-west, three-tenths 
do so south-east. Cypress pines abound in the north, and ordinary 
pines in Rottncst Island. Sandalwood (Samtalum cyrnorum) is 
exported. The gouty stem baobab [Adanstmia) is in the tropics. 
XoHtkorrkoea,thc grass tree, abounds in sandy districts. Mangrove 
bark yields a purple tan. Palms and xamias begin m the north* 
west. The Melaleuca Leueadsndron is the paperbark tree of settlers. 
The rigid-leafed Banksia is known as the honeysuckle. Casuartnae 
are the he and she oaks of colonists, and the Exocarpus is their 
cherry tree. Beautiful flowering shrubs distinguish the south-west; 
and the deserts are all ablaae with flowers after a fall of rain. 
Poison plants are generally showy Leguminosae, Stda and the 
GastroUfbium. 

Tile timber trees of the south-west are almost unequalled. Of 
the Eucalypts, the jarrah or mahogany, E. marginal*, is first for 
value. It runs over five degrees of latitude, and ha wood resists 
the teredo and the ant. Sir Malcolm Fraser assigns 14,000 sq. m. 
to the jarrah, 10,000 to E. viminalis, 2300 to the karri (£. cotossaa 
or E. (/versicolor), 2400 to York gum (£. hxophleba), 800 to the red 
gum (£. calophyila) and 500 to tuart or native pear (E. gompho- 
(tpkala). Not much good wood is got within 20 m. of the coast. 
The coarhbuildcr's coorup rises over 300 ft. Morrd furnishes good 
timber and nch oil. An ever-increasing trade is done in the timber 
of the south-western forests. 

Fauna —Among the mammals are the Maenpms gigankus, M. 
irma, M dama, M breikyurns, Lagorchetfas jasctaius, BtUemgux 
penirillala, Pkataupgta vulpuuta, Pscudocktrus eooki, Dasyurus 
gatfroyt. Tarnpts ros trains. A«i~him*M apicalis, PeramtUs abesula, 
Psramcfe* myosunu, Mr Fossa fonn * partake 



character, Mrotods* befog awed to the 
Nail-bearing kangaroos are in the north* 
sofa rabbit, is on Sharks Bay. Nocturnal 



of the existing marsupial 

wombat and kangaroo. „ 

west; the banded one, size of a rabbit, is on Sharks Bay. _ 

phalangers live in holes of trees or in the ground. Carnivorous 
Pkauogalae are found in south-west. There are three kinds of 
wombat. The rock-loving marsupial Ospknmitr is only in the 
north-east, and PerameUs bougatrmillei at Shark's Bay. The 
dalgyte or Petrogale lagotis is at Swan river and Hypsiprymnus io 
the south. The colony has only two species of wallabies to five in 
New South Wales. The Holmatuna of the Abrolhos is a sort of 
wallaby; a very elegant species is 18 in. long. The pretty D r a mk im, 
6 in. long, lives on stamens and nectar ( like the Tanipes, having* 
brush at the tip of its tongue; its tail uprehensile. The hare-like 
Lagonkestes fascial** is a great leaper. The Hapalotis of the interior 
has nests in trees. Beaver rats and other snail rodents are trouble- 
some, and bats are numerous. The dingo is the wild doc. The 
platypus (Ormlkorkyjukus) and the Echidna are the only forms of 
the Monotrcmala. The seal, whale and dugong occur in the adjacent 
seas. 

The west is not so rich as the east of Australia in birds. Many 
forms are absent and others but poorly represented, though some 
axe .peculiar to the west. The timbered; south-west has the greatest 
variety of birds, which are scarce enough In the dry and treeless 
interior. Of lizards the west has 12 genera not found in eastern 
Australia. Of snakes there are but 15 species to 3 in Tasmania 
and 31 in New South Wales. While the poisonous sorts are a to 1 
in the east, they are 3 to 1 in the west. The turtle is obtained as 
an article of food. The freshwater fishes are not all like those of 
the east. They include the mullet, snapper, ring fish, guard fish, 
bonita, rock cod, shark, saw fish, parrot fish and cobbler. Under 
the bead of fisheries may be mentioned the pearl oyster, which is 
dived for by natives at Shark's Bay; the trepang or beche-de-mer 
is also met with in the north. Insects are well represented, especially 
Coleoptcra, Lepidoptera, Hymenoptera, Hetniptera and Dfptera. 

ChmaU.— With little or no cold anywhere, the heat of summer 
over the whole area » considerable. Western Australia differs 
from the country to the east in having no extensive ranges to collect 
vapour, while the trade winds blow off the dry land instead of from 
the ocean; for these two reasons the climate is very dry. Thunder- 
storms often supply almost the only rainfall in the interior. The 
south-western corner, the seat of settlements, is the only purtioa 
where rains can be depended on for cultivation; but even there few 
places have a rainfall of 40 in. As one goes northward the moisture 
lessens. The north-west and all the coast along to Kimberley. with 
most of that district, suffer much from dryness. The north-east 
comes in summer within the sphere of the north-west monsoons, 
though just over the low coast-range few showers are known. The 
south coast, exposed to polar breezes, with uninterrupted sea, baa 
to endure lengthened droughts. In the Swan river quarter the 
rainfall is in winter, being brought by north-west winds, and summer 
days have little moisture. While the south wind cook the settled 
region, it comes over the parched interior to the northern lands. 
The hot wind of Swan river is from the east and north-east; but it 
is from the south in summer to Kimberley and the north-west. In 
one season the land breeze is hot, in another cool, but always dry. 

The climate of Perth is typical of the south-western districts. 
There axe two distinct seasons, the winter and the summer. The 
winter commences somewhat abruptly, being ushered in bv heavy 
rains; it begins usually not earlier than the middle of April or 
later than the middle of May, and continues until towards the end 
of October. The winters are, as a rule, very mild, but there is some 
cold weather in July and August, and though there is little at the 
coast, frost is not uncommon inland. The summer is heralded by 
an occasional hot day in October, in November the weather becomes 
settled and continues warm until the end of March In the four 
months, December to March, the maximum temperature in the shade 
exceeds 90* on an average on 37 days, but as a rule the heat does 
not last long, the evenings and nights being tempered by a cool 



In the interior the climate resembles that of the south-west m 
regard to the occurrence of two seasons only The winter, however, 
has much less rain than on the coast, and is cold, clear and bracing. 
The summer is, as a rule, hot, but is tempered in the south by 
occasional cool changes, though unrelieved as the tropic is ap- 
proached. Within the tropics there are two seasons, the wet and 
the dry. The wet season is most unpleasant, the temp er a ture 
rarely falfing below 100*; the dry season, which lasts from April 
to November, is usually fine, dear and calm. The average rainfall 



> 75*4 # - 

Po^tJo/toa.— Population made very slow increase under the 
old conditions of settlement, and even when gold was discovered 
in 1882 at Kimberley, and five years later at YUgarn, no great 
impetus was given to the colony, and at the census of 1891 the 
population was still under 30,000. The sensational gold finds 



WESTERN AUSTRALIA 



54-J 



at Cootgardie in 189a, however, had a most important influence in 
drawing population, and in three and a half years the population 
was doubled: during a portion of this time the rush of miners 
to the gold-fields waa so great as to be reminiscent el the ex- 
perience of the eastern colonies daring the 'fifties. At the end 
of 1905 the population was 254,779, comprising 150,495 males 
and 104,284 females. The slowness of the early growth and the 
more rapid strides of later years will be gathered from the follow- 
ing figures: pop, (i860) I5^37t (1870) 35,084, (1880) 29,019, 
(1800) 46,200, (1895) 101,138, (1901) 104,889. The chief 
towns of Western Australia are: Perth— the capital— 56,000, 
Fremantle 23,008, Kalgoorlie 6780, Boulder 5658. The number 
of people in all gold-field towns fluctuates very greatly. Cool- 
gardie, for example, was returned in July 1894 as having within 
its municipal boundaries 12,000 people; in 1905 it had only 383a 

The births daring 1905 numbered 7582 and the deaths 9709, the 
rates per thousand of population being respectively 30-30 and 10-83, 
showing a net increment of 19-47 per 1000. In the period 1861- 
1865 the birth-rate was 39-07 per 1000. Between 1886 and 1890 
it stood at 36-88; then came a rapid decline, and in 1896 was 
fetched the low level of 22-67 per 1000. In 1904 the rate was 
30-34 par looa The decline in the birth-rates has been a common 
experience of all the Australian states; in Western Australia it was 
doe in a large degree to the decline in the proportion of females to 
males. In 1870 the females numbered 62% of the males, and in 
1x80 75%, while in 1895 the proportion was only 45%. The 
iUegirimate births during 1903 were 4*19% of the total births. The 
death-rate, which in 1897 was 16-99 per looo, has steadily declined 
in recent years. The large influx of young unmarried men in the 
years 1894-1898 was followed by the arrival of a large number of 
single women, and the marriage-rates increased from 7 per 1000 in 
the five years 1891-1893 to 10*7 per 1000 in 1897. In 1905 the rate 
stood at the more normal level of 8-48. Except for a slight 



of population in the three years 1885-1887, due to the gold dis- 
coveries at Kimberley, there was very little immigration to Western 
Australia prior to 1891 ; in that year, however, there was a consider- 
able inpouring of population from the eastern colonies, notably 
from Victoria and South Australia, and in the seven years which 
closed with 1897 the population of the colony gained nearly 110,000 
by immigration alone. In 1898 there was still a large inflow of 
population, but the outflow was also great, and m 1898 and the 
following year the two streams balanced one another; but 1900 
showed an excess of 6000, and 1905 of 7617 gained by immigration. 

Western Australia is the most sparsely populated of all the 
states; only the coastal fringe and the gold-fields show any 
evidences of settlement, and if the area were divided amongst 
the population there would be but ten persons to 53 sq. m. 
The population is almost exclusively of British origin, and only 
differs from that of the other states in that there is a larger 
body of Anstrahan-born, who are' not natives of the colony 
itself. About 45% of the population are members of the 
Church of England; one-fourth belong to other Protestant 
denominations, and one-fourth are Roman Catholics. 

Administration.— In 1800 Western Australia, up to that 
time a crown colony administered by a governor, was granted 
responsible government. The legislative authority is vested 
in a parliament composed of two Houses— a Legislative Council, 
whose thirty members are elected for six years, and a Legislative 
Assembly of fifty members, elected by adult suffrage (men and 
women). As a portion of the Commonwealth, Western Australia 
sends six senators and five representatives to the federal parlia- 
ment. In a country so sparsely settled municipal government 
has little scope for operation. 

- So far forty-four municipalities have been gazetted. Besides 
the municipalities there are district roads boards, elected by 
the ratepayers of their respective districts to take charge of the 
formation, construction and maintenance of the public roads 
throughout their districts. There were in 1005 ninety-four such 
boards in existence. Some of the districts are of enormous size: 
Pflbarra, for example, has an area of 14,356 "I- ro -I Co °^ 
gardie North has 75,068 sq. m.; NuDagme has 00438 sq. m., 
and the Upper Gascoyne has 136,000 sq. m. Over areas so vast 
Ettle effective work can be accomplished, but where the districts 
are small the administration is much the same as in the munici- 
palities. The receipts from rates of all local districts in 1005 
was £104,760, and the grants by the government £80,938, making 
a total of £185,698. 



i_-__fl4fcw.*~Attendance at school Is compulsory upon all children 
over six years and under fourteen years of age. Instruction is 
imparted only in secular subjects, but the law allows special religious 
teaching to be given during half an hour each day by clergymen to 
children of their own denomination. Children can claim free educa- 
tion on account of inability to pay fees, of living more than a 
mile from school, or of having attended school for more than 400 
half-days during the preceding year. The state expended in 1905 
£131,585 on public instruction, the great bulk of which was 
devoted to primary schools. The number of schools supported by 
the state in that year was 335, the teachers numbered 888, the 
net enrolment of scholars was 27,978, and the average attendance 
23,703. There were in 1905 99 private schools with 350 teachers 
and 7353 scholars, the average attendance being 6128. 

Judged by the number of persons arrested, crime is more prevalent 
than in any other part of Australia. The gold-fields have attracted 
some of the best and most enterprising of the Australian population; 
at the same time many undesirable persons flocked to the state 
expecting to reap a harvest in the movement and confusion of the 
gold diggings. These latter form a large part of the criminal 
population of the state. The arrests in 1905 numbered 14,646, 
of which 2104 were for serious offences; so that for every thousand 
of the population 49 were arrested for trivial and 8 for serious 



F inane*.— The discovery of gold and the settlement on the gold- 
fields of a large population, for the most part consumers of dutiable 
goods, has entirely revolutionized the public finances of the state. 
In 1891 the revenue was £497*670, that is, £10, 15s. per inhabitant; 
in 1895 it rose to £1,125,941, or £12, 10s. per inhabitant; and in 
1897 to £2,842,751, or £20, 12s. ad. per inhabitant. For 1905 the 
figures were £3*615,340, or £14, 18s. jd. per inhabitant. The chief 
sources of revenue in X905 were: customs and excise, £1,027,898; 
other taxation, £221.738; railways, £1,629,956; public lands 
(including mining), £207,905; all other sources, £527*843. The 
expenditure has risen with the revenue, the figures tor 1905 being 
£3,745^24, equal to £15, 9s. ad. per bead of population. The chief 
items of expenditure in 1905 were: railway working expenses, 
£ir297«499; public works, £337,027; interest and charges upon 
debt, £578.704; mines, £248.496; education, £i4?.55*- The 
public debt is of comparatively recent creation. In August 1872 
an act was passed authorizing the raising of certain sums for the 
construction of public works; in 1881 the amount owing was not 
mom than £511,000, and in 1891 only £1,613*000 or £30, 5s. 8d. per 
inhabitant; from the year last named the indebtedness has uv 
creased by leaps and bounds, and in 1905 had mounted up to 
£16.642,773, a sum equal to £66, 10s. 4d. per inhabitant, involving 
an interest charge of £574406 or £2, 5s. id. per inhabitant. The 
proceeds of the loans were used largely for the purpose of railway 
extension — the expenditure on this service at the middle of 1906* 
was £9,618,970; on water supply and sewerage works, £2,802,390; 
on telegraphs and telephones. £269.308; on harbour and river 
improvements, £2,182,529; on development of gold-fields, £973*082; 
on development of agriculture, £597,189. 

Defence.— The local defence force of Western Australia in 1005 
comprised 57 permanent artillerymen, 772 militia, 580 volunteers, 
and 2534 riflemen— a total of 3943. The defence of the state is 
undertaken by the federal go v er n ment. 

Minerals.— Gold-mining is the main industry, and in 1905 16,832 
miners were directly engaged in it; as large a number is indirectly 
engaged in the industry. Gold, silver, coal, tin and copper are the 
chief minerals mined; the mineral production of the state in 1905 
was valued at £8.555,841. The value of the gold produced waa 
£8.305,654, a failing off of £118,572 as compared with 1904. The 
dividends paid by the gold-mining companies for that year amounted 
to £2.167,639 as against £2.050.547 in 1904. Up to 1905 the total 
recorded mineral production of Western Australia amounted in 



value to £65,012409— gold representing £63,170.911 of that 1 
£»3.739.842 nad been paid in dividends. 
Western Australia ranks as the largest gold producer of the 



while i 

Wes ________ 

Australian group. Coal is worked at Collie,"_5 m" E. of Bunbury: 
boring operations which had been going on between Greenough and 
Mullewa on the Geraldton-Cue railway line were discontinued in 
1905. the bore hole, carried to a depth of 1418 ft. having failed to 
disclose any coal seams. The export of copper In 1905 was valued 
at £16.266; of tin. £86,840; of silver, £44*278- The value of the 
coal produced in that year was £55<3>3- 

Industries.— Tht agricultural possibilities of the state are more 
restricted than those of the eastern states, as the rainfall in the 
southern and temperate portion does not extend far from the coast, 
and the land where the Tall is satisfactory is only good over small 
areas. The area cultivated in 1871 was 52.000 acres; in 1881 it 
was 53.000 acres; in 1891, 64.000 acres; and in 1905. 467.122 
acres. The principal crops grown in the year last 'named were: 
wheat. 195,071 acres; oats. 15,713 acres; hay, 124,906 acres. 
The wheat yield was 11-83 bushels ner acre, and the hay crop 1-12 
tons per acre. In 1905 the number of __t_eodepa_turedwa_3, 120,703; 
cattle. 631,825; horscs.07.397. These figures show an increase for 
all classes of stock. There are in the state about 2000 camels. 
The number of sheep has increased considerably in late years. In 
1871, 2*000,000 lb 04 wool were exported; in 1881, 4.100,000 lb; in 



542 



WESTERN AUSTRALIA 



1891, 8,800,000 lb; in 1900, 9,514,000 lb; «nd in 1905, 17489,402 lb; 
the value of the latter being £594,872. 

Western Australia has very extensive forests of timber, and it 
has been estimated that the forest surfaces cover more than 20 
million acres, of which 8 million acres are jarrah; 1,200,000 acres, 
karri; 200,000 acres, tuart; 7 million acres, wandoo; and i 
million acres, York gum, yate, sandalwood and jam. The principal 
timber exported is jarrah, karri, and sandalwood, the value of the 
exports being about £656,000 annually. There are 30 saw-mills 
in operation, employing altogether 2750 hands. 

Fisheries are taking an important position; they comprise pearl 
shell fishing beche-de-mer, and preserved or tinned fish. The 
pearl shell fisheries in the north-won and in Shark's Bay have been 



a considerable source of wealth, the export of pearls and pea/1 shell 
being valued at £110,667 in 1899, £106,607 in 1900 and £17: 
in 1903. In 1892 the export was valued at £119,519. 



Mandurah, at the mouth of the Murray, and Fremande have 
preserving sheds for mullet and snapper. Guano beds are worked 
to much advantage at the Lacepede Islea Salt is produced largely 
at Rottnest Island. Raisins are dried, and the oil of castor trees is 
expressed. The mulberry tree succeeds well, and sericulture is 
making progress. Dugone oil is got from Shark s Bay. Honey and 
wax are becoming valuable exports; from the abundance of flowers 
the hives can be emptied twice a year. Manna and gums of various 
kinds are among the resources of the country. Among the wines 
made are the Riesling, Burgundy, Sweetwater, Hock and Fontaine- 
bleau. 

Commerce. — All the great lines of steamers trading be t we en 
Australia and Europe make one of the ports a place of call both* on 
the inward and outward voyage; this makes the shipping tonnage 
very large compared with the population. In 1891 the tonnage 
entered and cleared equalled 21 tons per head, and in 1905 14*3 tons. 
The increase of tonnage is shown by the following figures: 1881, 
tonnage entered, 145.048; 1891, 533433; 1905, 1,839,227. In 
1905 the tonnage entering Fremantle was 1,176,982, and the im- 
ports were valued at £6,030,415. The shipping entering Albany 
had a tonnage of S 19.377. *nd the imports were valued at £160,305. 
The trade of Bunbury was: shipping 92,281 tons, imports £59,197; 
Broome, 'shipping 32,191 tons, imports £48,653; other ports, 
shipping 18,396 tons, imports £182,739. 

The trade has increased very rapidly under the Influence of the 
gold discoveries, as the following figures show. — 



Year. 


Imports. 


Exports. 


Total. 


Per Head. 


Total. 


Per Head. 


1861 
1871 
1881 
1891 
1 901 
1905 


H7.913 

226,000 

404.831 

1,280,093 

6,454.171 

6,481.309 


£ a, d. 
9 9 8 
9 10 
■3 14 3 
*5 a 5 
34 4 5 
25 IS 1 


95.789 

209,196 

502,770 

o 799.466 

8,515.623 

9.871,219 


£ s.d. 

6 2 10 
8 6 11 
17 8 
15 13 9 
45 3 
39 9 I 



About 54% of the trade is with Great Britain and 21 % with the 
other Commonwealth states. 

Railways.— Western Australia is the only state of Australia in 
which there is any considerable length of railway lines not owned 
by the state. The total railway mileage in 1905 was 2260, of which 
655 m. were privately owned. The divergence of the policy of 
Western Australia from that pursued by other states was caused 
by the inability of the government to construct lines at a time when 
the extension of the railway was most urgently required in the 
interests of settlement. Private enterprise was therefore encouraged 
by liberal grants of land to undertake the work of construction. 
Changed conditions have modified the state policy in respect of 
land grants, and in 1897 the government acquired the Great Southern 
railway, 243 m. in length, one of the two trunk lines in private hands. 
The cost of constructing and equipping the state lines open for 
traffic in 1905 was £9.808,458; the earnings for that year amounted 
to £1,610,129, the working expenses were £1,256,003, and the net 
receipts £354.126; this represents a return of 3-61% upon the 
capital cost. 

Posts and Telegraphs.— The postal business has grown enormously 
since the gold discoveries. In 1905 there were 295 post offices as 
compared with 86 in 189 1. In the latter year the letters despatched 
and received numbered 3,200,000, and the newspapers 1,665,000; 
in 1905 the letters and postcards totalled 22,107,000, and the news- 

Kapcrs and packets 14,800,000, being respectively 88 and 59 per 
cad of population. There were in the same year 188 telegraph 
stations, 6389 ro. of line, and 9637 m. of telegraph wire in use, while 
the number of telegrams sent and received was 1,634,597. There 
were sixteen public telephone exchanges and 4857 telephones in use 
at the end of that year. 

Banking.— There are six banks of issue, with 109 branches in 
various parts of the country. The liabilities of these banks in 1904 
averaged £5.206,170, and" the assets £6,309,305; the note circulation 
was i354.8io; the deposits bearing interest £1,475.6x6; deposits 



not bearing interest £3.258.294, making the total deposits £1,733.91* 
The gold and silver held by the banks, including bullion, was 
£2,129,304. The savings banks are directly controlled by the 
government and are attached to the post offices; in 1904 there were 
54,873 depositors in these banks with £2,079,764 to their credit — 
an average of £37. 18s. per depositor. In 1891 there were only 
3564 depositors and £46,181 at credit. 

Authorities. — James Bonwick, Western Australia, its Past and 
Future, 8vo (London. 1885); Very Rev. J. Brady, Descriptive 
Vocabulary of ike Native Language of Western Australia (Rome, 
1845); Hon. D. W. Carnegie, Sptnifcx and Sand (London, 1898); 
Ernest Favenc, The Great Australian Plain, 8vo (Sydney, 1881), 
Western Australia,its Past History, Present Trade and Resources, &c. 
(Sydney, 1887); Sir John Forrest, Explorations in Australia, 8vo 
(London, 1875); M. A. C Frazer, Western Australia Year-Book, 
annually (Perth). (T. A. C.) 

History.— -Both the western and northern Coasts of the colony 
are pretty accurately laid down on maps said to date from 1540 
to 1550, where the western side of the continent terminates at 
Cape Leeuwen. The discovery of the coast may be attributed 
to Portuguese and Spanish navigators, who were in the seas 
northward of Australia as early as 1520. The next visitors, 
nearly a century later, were the Dutch. John Edel explored 
northward in 1619, and De Witt in 1628. The " Guide Zee- 
paard " in 1627 sailed along the south coast for 1000 m., the 
territory being named Nuyt's Land. Tasman made a survey 
of the north shore in 1644, but did not advance far on the 
western border. Dampier was off the north-west in 1688 and 
1606, naming Shark's Bay. Vancouver entered King George 
Sound in 1791. The French, under D'Entrecasteaux, were off 
Western Australia in 1792; and their commodore Baudin, of 
the " Geographe " and " Naturalistc," in 1801 and 1802 made 
important discoveries along the western and north-western 
shores. Captain Flinders about the same time paid a visit to 
the Sound, and traced Nuyt's Land to beyond the South 
Australian boundary. Freycinet went thither in 1818. Captain 
King surveyed the northern waters between 1818 and 1822. 

The earliest settlement was made from Port Jackson, at the 
end of 1825. Owing to a fear that the French might occupy 
King George Sound, Major Lockyer carried thither s party of 
convicts and soldiers, seventy-five in all, and took formal British 
possession, though Vancouver had previously done so. Yet the 
Dutch had long before declared New Holland, which then 
meant only the western portion of Australia, to be Dutch 
property. This convict establishment returned to Sydney in 
1829. In 1827 Captain Stirling was sent to report upon the 
Swan river, and his narrative excited such interest in England 
as to lead to an actual free settlement at the Swan river. Captain 
Fremantle, R.N., in 1827 took official possession of the whole 
country. Stirling's account stimulated the emigration ardour 
of Sir F. Vincent, and Messrs Peel, Macqueen, &c, who formed 
an association, securing from the British government permission 
to occupy land in Western Australia proportionate to the 
capital invested, and the number of emigrants they despatched 
thither. In this way Mr Peel had a grant of 250,000 acres, and 
Colonel Latour of 103,000. Captain (afterwards Sir James) 
Stirling was appointed lieutenant-governor, arriving June z, 
1829. The people were scattered on large grants. The land 
was poor, and the forests heavy; provisions were at famine 
prices; and many left for Sydney or Hobart Town. The others 
struggled on, finding a healthful climate, and a soil favouring 
fruits and vegetables, whilst their stock grazed in the more open 
but distant quarters. The overland journey of Eyre from 
Adelaide to King George Sound in 1839-1840, through a water* 
less waste, discouraged settlers; but Grey's overland walk in 
1838 from Shark's Bay to Perth revealed fine rivers and good 
land in Victoria district, subsequently occupied by farmers, 
graziers and miners. The difficulties of the settlers had com* 
pcllcd them to seek help from the British treasury, in the offer 
to accept convicts. These came in 1850; but transportation 
ceased in 1868, in consequence of loud protests from Up other 
colonies. 

The progressive history of Western Australia may be laid 
to commence in 1870, when its energetic and capable governor 
Sir Frederick Weld, began to inaugurate public works 00 a 



WESTFIELb^., 

large scale. It was still the day of small things, ionw* - 
though of the enormous extent of 1,000,000 sq. n^ **?£ 
ticaUy unknown, its resources were restricted, and its pop^^' 
scanty. However, a beginning was then made, and the fel 
Loan Bill to raise money for pushing on telegraphs, for lurveya- 
lines of projected railways, and above all for starting expfarS 
expeditions, passed the Legislative Council. The colony »J 
fortunate in possessing two brothers of the best practical type 
of explorer, John and Alexander Forrest. The object of their 
earliest expeditions was to find more land available for pastoral 
or agricultural settlement, Vast distances in various directions 
were covered, and severe hardship*, chiefly from want of water, 
u nderg on e by these intrepid pioneers. Perhaps the most 
famous of these journeys was that accomplished by Mr (after- 
wards Sir) John Forrest between Euda and Adelaide in 1870. 
Other dauntless explorers— notably Mr Ernest Giles, the 




t 



Pit^i s 



fl 



Gregorys and Mr Austin— had also contributed to the growing 
knowledge of the resources of the vast territory, and the state 
owes and gratefully acknowledges its debt to these stalwart 
and splendid pioneers. Although, in consequence of the vast 
amount of gold which had been found in the eastern colonies, 
principally in Victoria, all these explorers had carefully ex- 
amined any likely country for traces of gold, it was not until 
i88» that the government geologist reported indications of 
auriferous country in the Kimberley district, and the first 
payable gold-field was shortly afterwards " proclaimed " there. 
Exploring expeditions in every direction were then started both 
privately and publicly, and prosecuted with great vigour. 
Within five years gold-fields were proclaimed at Yilgarn, about 
sco m. to the east of Perth, and the discovery of patches of rich 
alluvial gold in the Pflbarra district quickly followed, but the 
rush for the Coolgardie and Kalgoorlie gold-fields did not begin 
until 1S03. 

The year 1889 found the colony on the eve of responsible 
government. Two years before, a practically unanimous vote 
of the Legislature had affirmed the principle of autonomy, and the 
general election in the following year showed still more plainly 
the desire of the people of Western Australia for the self-govern- 
ment which had enabled the eastern colonies to control their own 
affairs successfully for thirty years. The new Legislative Council 
of 1889 therefore drafted a Constitution Bill, which after some 
di sc ussi on was forwarded to Lord Knut&ford, the Secretary of 
State for the Colonies. This Bill was duly laid before the Imperial 
Parliament; but the measure was then rejected by that assembly, 
chiefly owing to the misunderstanding of vital questions, such as the 
control of crown lands, the scantiness of the scattered population, 
and other less important details. However, the governor of that 
day. Sir Frederick Napier Broome, K.C.M.G., having satisfied 
himself that the constitutional change was necessary not only for 
the immediate needs of the rapidly growing colony, but in view 
of the larger question of Imperial Federation, supported the 
demands of the Legislature in every possible way. A clear and 
able statement of the colonists' case, which appeared above his 
signature in Th§ Times in the summer of that year, helped to 
bring about a better understanding of the subject ; and a slightly 
modified Constitution Bill having been passed by the new 
Legislative Council, the governor and two members of the 
Legislature (Sir T. C. Campbell and Mr S. H. Parker, Q.C.) were 
selected to proceed to England as delegates to explain and urge 
the wishes of the colonists upon the Imperial Parliament. A 
select committee, with Baron de Worms as chairman, was 
appointed, and the matter was carefully considered; with the 
satisfactory result that the Bill enabling the Queen to grant a 
constitution to Western Australia passed its third reading in the 
House of Commons on 4th July, and received the royal assent on 
15th August 1800. 

Since then the colony has made great progress. Sir John 
Forrest, who was for ten years its Premier, brought to his arduous 
task not only administrative ability of a very high order, but a 
thorough and intimate knowledge of the needs and resources of 
the vast colony over so much of which he had travelled. 
For a long time the advantages of Federation were not to apparent 




5«pv»!«I 



StUT there *,...,. «* 

£*W for tht^. , 
««y » 1900 Si, :, 
tha concessit r j ' 
un»uccelS3"i^. 

•^^redtoofcfcL'' 

Jhe\S3^, 0fWe *^A^r'*' 
therefore it was con»i«w!5 ^ *• • • • 

of the electors. whe??* 1 ** •• , 

favour of Federation, a.^7' ' ' 

state should have the HgS\ ^"**» . 
swttr states .for the de2r3 Syr*" ^ 
rate of one-fifth of thTwnount <JTC U '-' 
di sappeared . «nount of t^ ^ 

WESTFIELD. a township of Hanm* 
U.S.A.,ontheWestficldriver,aW^ '""< 
(1890) 9805; (1000) 12,3,0 (^beii!?* * 'J-* 
census) 13.611; (,9,0) 16,044! V&T*-** 
New Haven & Hartford and the Bc*^*''/ 
is connected with Springfield, Holyokc an? w ''* 
lines. The township lies in and on either rtH V " r '* ' 
valley, 6-7 m. long from east to west and M * **' ' ' 
includes the large village of Westficld and t»,!" 3 * *'* 
East Farms, Mundale, MidcUe Farms, LittleRi im * M v - . ' 
and Wyben. In the township are the WestfiJi?i*' ,v > . . *' 
School (1844), the Wcstfield Athcneum (inwmor^^' ^ 
which in 1910 had a library of 25,000 volumes *n!i .l % "<l 
hospital (1893). Westfield Academy, a famous second*!! h / 4 -«i 
chartered in 1793 *nd opened in 1800, was closed in iraa 4 » 
building and grounds were sold in 1877 to the to^nSku? 11 / 1 ' u 
public high school. Woronoco Park (200 acres), m the w * 
part of the township, is a tract of great natural beauty \v <Tn 
field manufactures more whips than*any other place mTu* 
United States, the factory of the United States Whip Comnan! 
being one of the largest in the world; this industry was begun 
here early in the 19th century. Other important manufactures 
are foundry and machine-shop products, paper, thread and 
bicycles. In 1005 the value of the factory product was $5,818,130, 
an increase of 31 % since 1900. A trading post, known by the 
Indian name Woronoco (or Woronoko), was established here 
about 1640. In 1669 the township, which had previously been 
part of Springfield, was erected under its present name — it was 
then the westernmost township in Massachusetts. Land was 
added to it in 1713, and parts were taken from it to add to 
Southwick (1770 and 1779), to Montgomery (1780), to Russell 
(1793)1 and to West Springfield (1802). 

See James C. Greenough, " The Town of Westfield, n In vol. ii. 

Sp. 317-456) of A History of Hampden County, iiassaekusetts 
vols., 1903), edited by Alfred M. Copeland; and John Aldcn, 
frtoyy/ Westfield (Springfield, 1851). 

WBSTOATE-OH-8BA, a watering-place in the Isle of Thanet 
parliamentary division of Kent, England, 2 m. W. by S. of 
Margate on the South-Eastern & Chatham railway. Pop. 
(root) 3738. It is of modern growth and noted for its healthy 
climate. Facing the sea there are gardens and promenades 
over 1 m. in length, and there is a marine drive along the top 
of the cliffs. There are also golf links and other appointments of 
a popular resort. Bischinctow, immediately to the west (pop. 
2128), is also a growing resort. The church of All Saint* k 



S4"+ 



WEST HAM— WEST INDIES 



Perpendicular, with an Early English tower, and contains some 
interesting monuments. 

WEST HAM, a municipal, county, and parliamentary borough 
of Essex, England, forming an eastward suburb of London. 
Pop. (1891) 204,903, (1901) 267,358. The parish stretches 
north and south from Wanstead and Leyton to the Thames, and 
east and west from East Ham to the river Lea. It is divided 
into four wards — Church Street, Stratford-Langthorne, Plaistow 
and Upton. The church of All Saints has a good Perpendicular 
tower, but the remainder is extensively restored. There are a 
number of old monument*. In the restoration of 1866 some 
early mural painting was discovered, and a transition Norman 
clerestory was discovered, remaining above the later nave. 
There are several modern churches, and a Franciscan monastery 
end school (St Bonaventure's). West Ham Park (80 acres) 
occupies the site of Ham House and park, for many years the 
residence of Samuel Gurney, the banker and philanthropist. 
The place was purchased for £25,000, and vested in the corpora- 
tion of London for the use of the public Of this amount the 
Gurney family contributed £10,000 and the corporation the same 
sum, the remaining £5000 being collected from the inhabitants 
of West Ham. The house was taken down, and the park was 
opened in 1874. Mrs Elizabeth Fry lived in a house in Upton 
Lane, on the confines of her brother's park. In x 762 the number of 
houses in West Ham parish was stated to be 700, of which " 455 are 
mansions and 245 cottages." Now few large houses remain, but 
the smaller houses have greatly increased. There are numerous 
chemical and other manufactures which have been removed 
from London itself; and the large population can also be traced 
in part to the foundation of the Victoria and Albert docks 
at Plaistow. Included within the borough are the extensive 
railway works of the Great Eastern railway at Stratford. This 
industrial centre is continued eastward in the urban district of 
East Ham (pop. 96,018), where the old village church of St Mary 
Magdalene retains Norman portions. West Ham is governed 
by a mayor, 12 aldermen and 36 councillors. Area 4683 acres. 

At the time of the Conquest West Ham belonged to Alestan 
and Leured, two freemen, and at Domesday to Ralph Gernon 
and Ralph Peverel. West Ham village was included in the 
part which descended to the Gernons, who took the name of 
Montfichet. The manor of West Ham was settled upon Strat- 
ford-Langthorne Abbey, founded by William de Montfichet 
in 1x35 for monks of the Cistercian order. The abbey stood in 
the marshes, on a branch of the Lea known as the Abbey Creek, 
about i m. south of Stratford Broadway. West Ham received 
the grant of a market and annual fair in 1253. The lordship 
was given to the abbey of Stratford, and, passing to the crown 
at the dissolution, formed part of the dowry of Catherine of 
Portugal, and was therefore called the Queen's Manor. In 1885 
the urban sanitary district was erected into a parliamentary 
borough, returning two members for the northern and southern 
divisions respectively. It was incorporated in 1886. 

WEST HAVEN, a borough of Orange township, New Haven 
county, Connecticut, U.S.A., on New Haven Harbor and separ- 
ated from New Haven by the West river. Pop.. (1900) 5247 
(893 foreign-born); (1910) 8543. West Haven is served by the 
New York, New Haven, & Hartford railway. It is mainly a 
residential suburb of New Haven. There is a public park, and 
Savin Rock, rising from Long Island Sound, is a summer resort. 
West Haven was set apart from New Haven in 1822 and was 
united with North Milford to form the township of Orange; 
it was incorporated as a borough in 1873. 

WEST HOBOKEN, a town of Hudson county, New Jersey, 
U.S.A., in the N.E. part of the state, adjoining Hoboken and 
Jersey City. Pop. (1800) 11,665; (1900) 23,094, of whom 91 19 
were foreign-born; (1010, census) 35.403. For transportation 
facilities the town depends upon the railways serving Hoboken 
and Jersey City. West Hoboken lies about i m. W. of the 
Hudson river, occupies a pleasant site somewhat higher than 
that of its neighbouring municipalities, and commands a fine 
view of the surrounding country. Among the prominent build- 
ings are a Carnegie library, St Michael's Monastery (containing 



a theological school), a Dominican Convent, and several fine 
churches; and there are two Roman Catholic orphanages. 
The town is an important centre for the manufacture of silk 
and silk goods; in 1905 the value of these products was 
$4,2x1,018. West Hoboken was created a separate township 
in i86x, from a part of the township of North Bergen, and in 
1 884 w as incorporated as a town. 

WESTHOUQHTON, an urban district in the Westhoughton 
parliamentary division of Lancashire, England, 5 m: W.S.W. 
of Bolton on the Lancashire and Yorkshire railway. Pop. 
(1001) 14,377- There are coal mines in the neighbourhood, and 
the town possesses silk factories, print-works and cotton mills. 
Westhoughton before the time of Richard II. was a manor 
belonging to the abbey of Cockersand. It was confiscated 
at the Reformation, and since then has been vested in the crown. 
The army of Prince Rupert assembled on Westhoughton moor 
before the attack on Bolton. 

WEST INDIES, THE, sometimes called the Antilles (9.9.), 
an archipelago stretching in the shape of a rude arc or parabola 
from Florida in North America and Yucatan in Central America 
to Venezuela in South America, and enclosing the Caribbean 
Sea (615,000 sq. m.) and the Gulf of Mexico (750,000 sq. m. in 
area). The land area of all the islands is nearly 100,000 sq. m., 
with an estimated population of about 6i millions; that of the 
British islands about 12,000 sq. m. The islands differ widely 
one from another in area, population, geographical position, 
and physical characteristics. They are divided into the Bahamas, 
the Greater Antilles (Cuba, Jamaica, Haiti and Porto Rico), and 
the Lesser Antilles (comprising the remainder). The Lesser 
Antilles are again divided into the Windward Islands and 
Leeward Islands. Geographically, the Leeward Islands are those 
to the north of St Lucia, and the Windward, St Lucia and those 
to the south of it; but for administrative purposes the British 
islands in the Lesser Antilles are grouped as is shown in the 
table given later. 

Cedop. — The West Indies are the summits of a submerged 
mountain chain, the continuation of which towards the west must 
be sought in the mountains of Honduras. In Haiti the chain 
divides, one branch passing through Jamaica and the other through 
Cuba, the Cayman Islands and the Misteriosa Bank. In Das Anthiz 
der Erdt, E. Suess divides the Antilles into three zones: (1) The 
first or interior zone, which is confined to the Lesser Antilles, is 
entirely of volcanic origin and contains many recent volcanic cones. 
It forms the inner string of islands which extends from Saba and 
St Kitts to Grenada and the Grenadines. The western part of the 
deep-cleft island Guadeloupe belongs to this zone. (2) The second 
zone consists chiefly of Cretaceous and early Tertiary rocks. In the 
west it is broad, including the whole of the Greater Antilles, but in 
the east it is restricted to a narrow belt which comprises the Virgin 
Islands (except Anegada), Anguilla, St Bartholomew, Antigua, the 
eastern part of Guadeloupe and part of Barbados. (3) The third 
and outermost zone is formed of Miocene and later beds, and the 
islands which compose it are flat and low. Like the second zone it 
is broad in the west and narrow in the east. It includes the Bahamas, 
Anegada, Sombrero, Barbuda and part of Barbados. Geologically, 
Florida and the plain of Yucatan may be looked upon as belonging 
to this zone. Neither Trinidad nor the islands off the Venezuelan 
coast can be said to belong to any of these three zones. Geologically 
they are a part of the mainland itself. They consist of gneisses and 
schists, supposed to be Archaean, eruptive rocks, Cretaceous, Tertiary 
and Quaternary deposits; and the strike of the older rocks varies 
from about W.5.W. to S.W. Geologically, in fact, these islands are 
much more, nearly allied to the Greater Antilles and to Central 
America than they are to the Leaser Antilles; and there is accord- 
ingly son re 15011* to belies* thai the arc formed by the West Indian 
Islands is rcjlly composite in origin. Although the three zones 
recognized by Suess arc fairly clearly defirnd. the geological history 
of the Greater AntiMra. *iih which must be included the Virgin 
Islands, differs considerably from that of I he Leaser. In Cuba and 
Haiti there are schists which are probably of nce-Cretaccous age, 
and have, indeed, been referred to the Archaean; but the oldest 
rocks which have yet been ccnainlv identified in the West Indies 
belong to the Cretaceous period. Throughout the Greater Antilles 
the geological succession begins t» a rule with volcanic tuffs and 
conglomerate* of bombJcnde-andesite, &c, in the midst of which are 
intcrcaLi'i l! '■.■o-n^ional beds of limestom Rudistes and other 

Cretaceous fossils. These are overbid by sediments of terrigenous 
origin, and the whole series was folded before the deposition of the 
next succeeding struts. The nature of these Cretaceous deposits 
clearly Indicate* the fieighlwurhocwi of an c*tenave area of land; 



WEST INDIES 



545 



bat daring the m cce edtn g Eocene period and the early part of the 
OUgecene, a profound subsidence led to the deposition of the Globt- 
genna chalks and white RadicJarian can ha of Jamaica, Cuba and 
Haiti The Greater Antilles must at this time have been almost 
co mp letely submerged, and the similar deposits of Barbados and 
Trinidad point to a similar submergence beyond the Windward 
Islands. In the middle of the Oligocene period a mighty upheaval, 
accompanied by mountain folding and the intrusion of plutonic 
rocks, raised the Greater Antilles far above their present level, and 
united the islands with one another, and perhaps with Florida. A 
subsequent depression and a scries of minor oscillations finally 



resulted in the production of the present topography. 

The geology of the Lesser Antilles is somewhat different. In some 
of the islands there are old volcanic tuffs which may possibly be the 
equivalents of the Cretaceous beds of Jamaica, but volcanic activity 
here continued throughout the Tertiary period and even down to 
the present day. Another important difference is that except in 
Trinidad and Barbados, which do not properly belong to the Carib- 
bean chain, no deep-sea deposits have vet been found in the Lesser 
Antilles and there is no evidence that the area ever sank to abysmal 



depths. 
Inth 



In the foregoing account the chronology of R. T. Hill has been 
. followed; but there is still considerable difference of opinion as to 
the ages and correlation of the various Tertiary deposits and con- 
sequently as to the dates of the great depression and elevation. 
J. W. Spencer, for example, places the greatest elevation of the 
Antilles in the Pliocene and Pleistocene periods. Moreover, chiefly 
on the evidence of submerged valleys, he concludes that practically 
the whole of the Caribbean Sea was land and that a complete con- 
nexion existed, by way of the West Indian bridge, between North 
and South America. 1 

The mineral wealth of the islands is not remarkable. Gold, silver, 
iron, copper, tin, platinum, lead, coal of a poor quality, cobalt, 
mercury, arsenic, antimony, manganese, and rock salt cither have 
been or are worked. Asphalt is worked to considerable advantage 
among the pitch lakes of Trinidad. Opal and chalcedony are the 
principal precious stones. 

Climate.— As in most tropical countries where considerable heights 
are met with — and here over 15.500 sq. m. lie at an elevation of 
more than 1500 ft. above sea-level— the climate of the West Indies 
(in so far at least as heat and cold are concerned) varies at different 
altitudes, and on the higher parts of many of the islands a marked 
degree of coolness may generally be found. With the exception of 
, all the i * * - ' " * * 



part of the Bahamas, 



: islands lie between the isotherms of 



77* and 82* F. The extreme beat, however, b greatly tem p ered by 
toe sea breezes, and by long, cool, refreshing nights. Frost is 
occasionally formed in the cold season when hall falls, but snow is 
unknown. The seasons may be divided as follows. The short wet 
season, or spring, begins in April and lasts from two to six weeks, 
and w succeeded by the short dry season, when the thermometer 
remains almost stationary at about 8o° F. In July the heat 
increases to an extent well nigh unbearable. No change occurs till 
after a period varying from the end of July to the beginning of 
October, when the great rainfall of the year begins, accompanied by 
tremendoos and destructive hurricanes. This season is locally 
known as the " hurricane months." The annual rainfall averages 
6t* in. These storms arise in the Atlantic and towards the east. 
For a day or two they follow a westerly course, inclining, at the same 
time, one or two points towards the north, the polar tendency 
frfffwniqf gradually more marked as the distance from the equator 
increases. When the hurricanes reach latitude 25* N., they curve 
to the north-east, and almost invariably wheel round on arriving 
at the northern jportion of the Gulf of Mexico, after which they 
follow the coast line of North America. Their rate of speed varies 
considerably, but may be said to average 300 m. per day among 
the islands. The usual signs of the approach of the cyclones are an 
ogty and threatening appearance of the weather, sharp and frequent 
puffs of wind, Increasing in force with each blast, accompanied with 
a long heavy swell and confused choppy sea, coming from the 
direction of the approaching storm. December marks the beginning 
of the long dry season, which, accompanied by fresh winds and 
occasional hail showers, lasts till April The average temperature 
of the air at Barbados, which may be taken as a favourable average, 
as, throughout the year, 80 * F. m the forenoon, and about 82* in 
the afternoon. The maximum is 87*, and the minimum 75*. 

Ffrrtf.— The flora of the islands is oT great variety sod richness, 
a* plant 1 tuve been introduced from most part* of the glok\ and 
floDriafi tither m a wild state or under cultivation ; grain, vegetables, 
and fruits, generally common in cool climate*, may be seen growing 
in luxuriance within a fhort dUtafice of ttke plant* whkh only attain 
pcrfcak>n tinder the influence of extreme heat, nothing being here 
required far the sjcmaful propagation of both but a difference in 
thej i ei g ht of the Linda unon which they grow. The ferret*, *hich 



and w i de-s prea d in g, produce the most valuable woods 

and delicious fruits. Palms are in great variety, and there are several 
species of gum-producing trees. Some locust trees have been 
estimated to have attained an age of 4000 years, and are of immense 
height and bulk. m Ptptadenta, on account of its almost imperishable 
character when in the ground, is used as a material for house- 
building. Xantkoxylon, the admired and valuable satin-wood of 
commerce, is common , Sapindus finds a ready market on account 
of its toughness; crab-wood yields a useful oil and affords reliable 
timber; and tree ferns of various species arc common. Pimento 
is peculiar to Jamaica. But it is to the agricultural resources of 
the islands that the greatest importance attaches. For centuries 
almost the whole care of the planters was bestowed upon the culti- 
vation of the sugar-cane and tobacco plant, but in modern times, as 
will be seen later, attention has been turned to the production of 
other and more varying crops. Crops of tobacco, beans, peas, 
maize, and Guinea corn are popular, and a species of rice, which 
requires no flooding for its successful propagation, is largely pro- 
duced. Uymcnackne striatum covers many of the plains, ana affords 
food for cattle 

Fauna. — The fauna of the region is Neotropical, belonging to that 
region which includes South and part of Central America, although 
great numbers of birds from the North-American portion of the 
Tlolarctic realm migrate to the Islands. The resident birds, however, 
eighteen genera 01 which are certainly Neotropical, show beyond 
doubt to which fauna! region the islands properly belong. Mammals 
arc. as in most island groups, rare. The agouti abounds, and wild 

Kigs and dogs are sufficiently numerous to afford good sport to the 
untcr. as well as smaller game, in the shape of armadillos, opossums, 
musk-rats and raccoons. The non-migrating birds include trogons, 



tut; 



"^5™ £, Such, bat AnUti* dft £rdf (witn, '^5: Eng. trans., 
Oxford, f.904): J. W, Spcncef, "Reconstruction of the A mil lean 
Continent." Butt Gat, 5«. A*ur> vol. vs. {1895). p 103 (Abstract 
in Geol. Mag., 1&<H* PP- 4-4*M $1 J * «* also a #ene§ of pipers by 
J. W. Spencer in Qy&tt. Jautn. Gtol. 5o€.+ \ m oU. Ivvii., Ixviii. (1901. 
!90»>: R. T. H21, '* The Geology and Physical Geojrrapny of 
jAmascz." Smtt, Mm. Gump, Zeal, tiarmrd, vol xuiv. (J B99)- 



sugar-birds, chatterers, and many parrots and humming birds. 
Waterfowl and various kinds of pigeons are in abundance. Reptiles 
are numerous: snakes — both the boa and adder — arc innumerable, 
while lizards, scorpions, tarantulas and centipedes arc everywhere. 
Insects are in great numbers, and are often annoying. Among 
domestic animals mules are largely reared, and where the country 
affords suitable pasture and forage cattle-breedins is practised. 
Goats abound, and large flocks of sheep are kept for the sake of their 
flesh alone, as the climate is not adapted for wool-growing. 

Area and Popnlation.—Thc following list of the West Indian 
islands gives their area and population. Notwithstanding the 



Name. 


Area, 


Population. 




1901 




sq. m. 


' 1881. 


(unless 
stated). 


British— 








Bahamas 

Jamaica . . • • • 
Turks Island . . . . 


MS© 

4^07 

169 


43.5*« 

584,170 

4*733 


5.287 


Leeward Islands: 








Virgin Islands 

StKitts .... 

Nevis 


5o5 


5.287 
41.001 


t 4,9 2 8 
J 29.782 

X 12.774 
34.178 


Antigua .... 


108 


34.964 


Montserrat .... 


3*1 


10,083 


12.215 


Dominica .... 


291 


28.211 


28,80a 
195.588 


Barbados .... 
Windward Islands: . . 


166 


171,860 


St Lucia .... 


233 


% 38,55l 


49.833 


St Vincent .... 


140 


40.548 


44.000 « 
63438 


Grenada .... 


.133 % 


42430 


Trinidad 

Tobago 


I.754J 
"4$ 


171.179 


J 233.397 
( 18.751 


French ■ 








Guadeloupe . 


688 




182,110 


Martinique .... 
St Martin (part) 


380 




182,024 * 


17 




3.000 • 


Dutch— 








St Martin (part) 


21 




3.187 « 


Curacao 


212 




30.883 


Buen Ayre .... 


* 




6,233 


Arube 

St Eustatiuf , 




8,555 
1.283 


Saba . ..... 

Dm, F,- 


5 




2,294 


St Thoroai .... 


33 




11,012 


St John ..... 
St trot* 


21 




925 


84 




18,590 


USJt— 








Porto Rico .... 


3.606 




1.118,012* 


Republic* — ■ 








Sin to Di-miru"^ 


18.045 




500.000 • 


Haiti 


10^40 




800,000* 


Cuba [and adjacent islands) . 


45.000 




2,048,980 T 



itimate, 1903. * Estimate. 1006. * 1905. 

• Populations of all Dutch islands are for 1908. 

• 191a • Estimate. T 1907. 



5+6 



WEST INDIES 



operations of educational institution* and of large numbers of 
missionaries of various religious denominations, the percentage 
of illegitimate births among the population of the British West 
Indian islands remains very high— in Barbados about 54, in 
Jamaica, 63; in Trinidad, 59% of the general births; and 
79 % of t he East Indian. 

The population of the West Indies represents many original 
stocks, the descendants of which have developed variations of 
habits and customs in their New World environment. They 
may be divided into six main classes: (1) Europeans — immi- 
grants (British, French, Spanish and in a lesser degree Dutch, 
Danish and German) and West Indian born, (2) African negroes 
— immigrants (a fast vanishing quantity) and West Indian born; 
(3) a mixture of Europeans and Africans, (4) coolies from Indian 
imported and West Indian bom; (5) Chinese, (6) aboriginal 
Indians of more or less pure descent. Of these, the people of 
pure African blood are in a large majority, the " coloured " 
race of mixed European and African blood being next in numerical 
importance. Under British influence the negroes of the West 
Indies have become British in thought and habit i and it would 
seem that the stimulating influence of European direction and 
encouragement is absolutely necessary for the future development 
and progress of these islands. In the republics of Santo Domingo 
and Haiti the negroes are left to drift along, while the French 
and Danish islands show no great sign of progress. 

British Colonies, Government, &•<:.— The British West India 
colonies 1 are either crown colonics — that is to say, their govern- 
ment is absolutely under the control of the British Colonial 
Office, the official members of their councils predominating, 
and the unofficial members being nominated by the crown, 
as in the Windward and Leeward Islands— or they have a 
measure of representative government, as in the Bahamas, 
Barbados and Jamaica, in which all or part of the legislatures 
are elected and are more or less independent of crown control. 
The laws of the various colonies are English, with local statutes 
to meet local needs. The governors and high officials are 
appointed by the crown; other officials are appointed by the 
governor. Each governor acts under the advice of a privy 
council. In matters of detail the colonies present a variety of 
forms of government (for which see the separate articles). 
Federation has been widely discussed and is held desirable by 
many, but in view of the insular character of the colonies, the 
considerable distances separating some of them, and in many 
instances the lack of common interests (apart from certain 
broad issues), the project appears to be far from realization. 

The only fortified places in the British West Indies are Jamaica, 
Barbados and St Lucia — all of importance as coaling stations. 
In many of the islands there are local volunteer forces. The 
police forces of the colonics are in the main modelled on the 
Irish constabulary, supplemented by rural constabulary. The 
force is usually officered by Europeans. 

Economic Conditions.— The West Indian colonies have suffered 
from periods of severe economic depression, though from the 
early years of the 2010 century there has been good evidence of 
recovery and development. An obvious reason for temporary 
depression is the liability of the islands to earthquakes and 
hurricanes, in addition to eruptions in the volcanic islands, 
such as those in St Vincent and Martinique in 1002. For exa mple, 
the great earthquake of January 1907 in Jamaica may be 
recalled, and hurricanes caused serious damage in Jamaica in 
August 1903 and November 2909, and in the Bahamas in 
September and October 1908. A treasury fund has been estab- 
lished in Jamaica as a provision against the effects of such 
disasters. It has been stated that the excessive rainfall which 
nemmnanirs these storms is of great ultimate benefit to the soiL 

The_ B ritish West Indian colonies do not offer opportunities 
for UlKUlJ labouring immigrants. Barbados is the only island 
1 is entirely settled. But the settlement, planting 
: of- lands elsewhere involve a considerable 
I and manual labour is provided by the natives 
to include British Guiana with these. 




or East Indian coolies. Attempts to settle European labourers 
have been unsuccessful. The West Indian negro, as a labouring 
class, has frequently been condemned as averse from regular 
work, apathetic in regard to both his own and his colony's 
affairs, immoral and dishonest. In so far as these shortcomings 
exist, they are due to the tendencies inherited from the period 
of slavery, to the ease with which a bare livelihood may be 
obtained, and to other such causes. But for the most part the 
negroes appreciate their advantages under British government 
and are quick to assimilate British customs and ideas. Advances 
in the system of peasant proprietorship have brought beneficial 
results. The drafting of large numbers of labourers from the 
West Indies to the Panama canal works early in the 20th century, 
though causing a shortage of labour and involving legislation 
in some of the islands, exercised a moral effect on the natives 
by enlarging their horizon. 

The growth of general prosperity in the British West Indies is 
assigned 9 "to the revival of the sugar industry, to the develop- 
ment of the fruit trade; to the increase in the cultivation of 
cocoa and cotton, to the volume of tourist travel, which swells 
year by year; and to such local developments as the ' boom ' in 
Trinidad oil." It was pointed out in the Report of the Royal 
Commission on Trade Relations between Canada and the West 
Indies (Cd. 5369, London, 1910) that " the geographical position ^ 
of the West Indian Colonies must always tend to throw them 
under the influence of the fiscal system either of the United 
States or of the Dominion of Canada. Attempts have been 
made from time to time to obtain for these Colonies special 
advantages in the markets of the United States. . . . The 
Colonial policy of the United States has now finally stopped 
advance in that direction,*' and the connexion with the Dominion 
has therefore become of paramount importance. The Dominion 
government admitted the West Indies to the British preferential 
tariff (25% under existing duties) in 1898. The percentage was 
raised to 33} in 1900. In 1903 the duties imposed on bounty-fed 
beet sugar in the United States, which had opened the market 
there to West Indian sugar, were abolished, and a surtax (since 
removed) was placed on German imports into Canada. Both 
acts enhanced the value of the Canadian market to the West 
Indies, while that of the American sugar market was further 
reduced when in xooi sugar from Porto Rico began to be 
admitted thereto free of duty, and when special terms were 
extended to sugar from the Philippine Islands and Cuba in 1902 
and iooj respectively. The Canadian connexion was thus largely 
instrumental in saving the sugar industry in the West Indies 
from severe depression, if not from the actual extinction foreseen 
by a Royal Commission in 1897. This commission pointed out, 
in particular, the danger which threatened those colonies where 
sugar provided practically the sole industrial and commercial 
interest. On a recommendation of this commission the Imperial 
Department of Agriculture was established in 1898, its cost 
being met from imperial funds. It is under a commissioner 
with headquarters at Ba r bados. Its functions are to maintain 
and supervise botanical and experimental stations, to establish 
agricultural schools, arrange agricultural teaching in other 
schools, create scholarships, and issue publications. The depart- 
ment has been largely instrumental in establishing new industries 
and thus relieving many islands from dependence on the sugar 
industry alone. 

The negotiations for commercial relations between the West 
Indies and Canada began in 1S66; in 1872 proposals for steam- 
ship subsidies were accepted. The Commission of 1909 recom- 
mended that the governments should continue to subsidize a 
service, for which they suggested various improvements. la 
1001 a line of subsidized steamers had been started between 
Jamaica and England, but this contract expired, and the mail 
contract was determined in 1910, and recommendations were 
put forward for a steamship service between Canadian and 
West Indian ports with improvements additional to those 
recommended by the Commission. It may be added that the 

* In The Times of May 24, 1910, where, in an imperial sup 
a number of ankle* oa the \Yc*t Indian colonics appear* 



WESTMACOTT 



547 



GommiaioQ also made recommendations for the reduction of 
the high cable rates between the West Indiei and the United 
Kingdom. 

Besides sugar, the principal products of the islands are cocoa, 
fruits and cotton. Cotton-growing reached importance in a very 
short time owing largely to the efforts of the Imperial Department 
of Agriculture, ben island seed having been planted in St Vincent 
only in 1903, and in that island and elsewhere (Antigua, St Kitts, 
Montserrat) good crops are now obtained. Grenada is almost 
entirely, and Trinidad, Dominica and St Lucia are largely, dependent 
upon cocoa. The fruit and spice trade is of growing importance, 
and there is a demand for bottled fruit in Canada and elsewhere. 
The variety of fruits grown is great; the bananas and oranges of 
Jamaica, the limes of Montserrat, Dominica and St Lucia, and the 
pine-apples of the Bahamas may be mentioned as characteristic. 
It must be borne in mind, however, that the islands as a whole 
cannot be said to possess a community of commercial interests. 
Even the industries already indicated are by no means equally 
distributed throughout the islands; moreover there are certain 
local industries of high importance* such as the manufacture of 
rum in Jamaica, the production of asphahe and the working of 
the oilfields (the development of which was first seriously under- 
taken about 1905) in Trinidad, and the production of arrow- 
root in St Vincent. Sponges are an important product of the 
Bahamas, and salt of the Turks Islands. Rubber plantation has 
been successfully exploited in several islands, such as Trinidad, 
Dominica and St Lucia. (See further articles on the various 
islands.) 

Edition. — In all the British colonies there is full religious tolera- 
tion. The Church of England Province of the West Indies is divided 
into the following bishoprics: Jamaica, Nassau (Le. Bahamas), 
Trinidad, (British) Honduras, Antigua (*.r. Leeward Islands), 
Barbados, Windward Islands, (British) Guiana. With the exception 
of Barbados and British Guiana, the Church of England is dis- 
established, disendowment taking place gradually, the churches 
thus becoming self-supporting. In Barbados the Church is both 
established and endowed. In the Bahamas and Jamaica disen- 
dowment is gradually taking place; in Trinidad and British Guiana 
the Church of England receives endowment concurrently with other 
religions bodies. The Windward Islands, Leeward Islands and 
British Honduras are totally disendowed. In all the islands, except 
Trinidad, St Lucia, Grenada and Dominica, the Church of. England. 
though in all cases in a minority when compared "with the aggregate 
of other bodies, is the most numerous of any denomination. There 
are Roman Catholic bishops at Port-of-Spain (Trinidad), Roseau 
(Dominica — for the Leeward Islands), Jamaica, British Guiana and 
Barbados (resident at Georgetown), British Honduras, Guadeloupe. 
Martinique, Haiti (archbishop and four bishops). Santo Domingo 
(archbishop), Cuba (archbishop and bishop). Porto Rico and 
Curacao. Other religious denominations working actively in the 
West Indies are the Baptists, Wesleyans, Presbyterians, Congre- 
gationalists and Moravians. 

History.— The archipelago received the name of the West 
Indies from Corambus, who hoped that, through the islands, he 
had found a new route to India. The name of Antilles was 
derived from the fact that Columbus, on his arrival here, was 
supposed to have reached the fabled land of Antilia. Columbus 
first landed on San Salvador, generally identified with Walling 
Island of the Bahamas, and several voyages to this new land were 
Bade in rapid succession by the great discoverer, resulting in 
the finding of most of the larger islands, and a more intimate 
knowledge of those already known. The importance of its latest 
possession was at once recognized by the court of Spain, and, as a 
first move towards turning the West Indies to profitable account, 
numbers' of the natives, for the most part a harmless and gentle 
people, were shipped overseas and sold into slavery, others 
being employed in forced labour in the mines which the Spaniards 
had opened throughout the archipelago, and from which large 
returns were expected. Thus early in its history began that 
traffic in humanity with which the West India plantations are 
so widely associated, and which endured for so long a time. 
Goaded to madness by the wrongs inflicted upon them, the 
aborigines at last look arms against their masters, bul with the 
result which might have been expected — their almost utter ex* 
tirpation. Many of the survivors sought release from their 
sufferings in suicide, and numbers of others perished in the 
mines* so that the native race soon almost ceased to exist. Spain 
was not long allowed to retain an undisputed hold upon the 
islands: British and Dutch seamen soon sought the new region, 
accounts concerning the fabulous wealth and treasure of which 
Stirred all Europe, and a desultory warfare began to be waged 



amongst the various voyagers who flocked to this El Dorado, in 
consequence of which the Spaniards found themselves gradually 
but surely forced from many of their vantage grounds, and 
compelled very materially to reduce the area over which they 
bad held unchecked sway. The first care of the English settlers 
was to find out the real agricultural capabilities of the islands, 
and they diligently set about planting tobacco, cotton and 
indigo. A French West India Company was incorporated in 
1635, and a settlement established on the island of St Christopher, 
where a small English colony was already engaged in clearing 
and cultivating the ground; these were driven out by the 
Spaniards in 1630, but only to return and again assume posses- 
sion. About this time, also, the celebrated buccaneers, Dutch 
smugglers, and British and French pirates began to infest the 
neighbouring seas, doing much damage to legitimate traders, 
and causing commerce to be carried on only under force of arms, 
and with much difficulty and danger. Indeed, it was not till 
the beginning of the i8lh century— some time after Spain had, 
in 1670, given up her claim to the exclusive possession of the archi* 
pelago— that these rovers were rendered comparatively harm* 
less; and piracy yet lingered off the coasts down to the early years 
of the 19th century. In 1640 sugar-cane began to be systematic- 
ally planted, and the marvellous prosperity of the West Indies 
began; it was not from the gold and precious stones, to which 
the Spaniards had looked for wealth and power, but from the cane 
that the fortunes of the West Indies were to spring. The success- 
ful propagation of this plant drew to the islands crowds of 
adventurers, many of them men of considerable wealth. The 
West Indies were for many years used by the English govern* 
ment as penal settlements, the prisoners working on the planta- 
tions as slaves. In 1655 a British force made an unsuccessful 
attack on Haiti, but a sudden descent on Jamaica was more 
fortunate in its result, and that rich and beautiful island has since 
remained in the possession of Great Britain. The Portuguese 
were the first to import negroes as slaves, and their example was 
followed by other nations having West-Indian colonies, the 
traffic existing for about 300 years. In 1660 a division of the 
islands was arranged between England and France, the remaining 
aborigines being driven to specified localities, but this- treaty did 
not produce the benefits expected from it, and as wars raged in 
Europe the islands (see separate articles) frequently changed 
hands. 

AuTHOnrrrBS.— Sir C. P. Lucas, A Historical Geography of tat 
British Colonies, voL it (Oxford, revisioa of 1905) ; C. Washington 
Eves, C.M.G., The West Indies (4th edition, London, 1897); A. 
Caldecott, B.D., The Church in the West Indies (Colonial Church 
Histories, London, 1898); Robert T. Hill, Cuba and Porto Rieo, 
with the other Islands of the West Indies (London, 1898); Amos 
Kidder Fislcc. History of the West Indies (New York. 1899) ; H. de R. 
Walker, The West Indies and the British Empire (London, 1901); 
J. H. Stark. Guides to the West Indies (London. 1898, &c); A. E. 
Asptnafl, Guide to the West Indies (London, 1907); V. A. Froude, 
The English in the West Indies (London, 1688); J. Rodway, The, 
West Indies and the Spanish Main (London, 1896); Sir Harry John- 
ston. The Negro in the New World (London. 1910); J. W. Root. 
Tie British West Indies and the Sugar Industry (1899); Colonial 
Office Reports; Reports of Royal Commissions, 1897 and 19 10. 

WESTMACOTT, SIR RICHARD (1775-1856), British sculptor, 
was born in London, and while yet a boy learned the rudiments 
of the plastic art in the studio of his father, who was then a 
sculptor of some reputation. In 1793, at the age of eighteen, 
he went to Rome and became a pupil of Canova, then at the 
height of his fame. Under the prevailing influences of Italy 
at that time, Weslmacott devoted all his energies to the study 
of classical sculpture, and throughout bis life his real sym- 
pathies were with pagan rather than with Christian art. Within 
a year of his arrival in Rome he won the first prize for sculpture 
offered by the Florentine academy of arts, and in the following 
year (1795) he gained the papal gold medal awarded by the 
Roman Academy of St Luke with his bas-relief of Joseph and 
his brethren. In 1708, on the 20th of February, he married 
Dorothy Margaret, daughter of Dr Wilkinson of Jamaica. On 
his return to London Westmacolt began to exhibit his works 
yearly at the Royal Academy, the first work so exhibited being 



548 



WESTMEATH, EARL OF— WESTMEATH 



h!s bust of Sir William Chambers. In 1805 he was elected an 
associate, and in 18x1 a full member of the Royal Academy, 
his diploma work being a " Ganymede " in high relief; in 1827 
he was appointed to succeed Flaxman as Royal Academy 
professor of sculpture, and in 1837 he was knighted. A very 
large number of important public monuments were executed 
by him, including many portrait statues; but little can be said 
in praise of such works as the statue on the duke of York's 
column (1833), the portrait of Fox in Bloomsbury Square, or 
that of the duke of Bedford in Russell Square. Much ad- 
miration was expressed at the time for Westmacott's monu- 
ments to Collingwood and Sir Ralph Abercromby in St Paul's 
Cathedral, and that of Mrs Warren in Westminster Abbey; 
but subjects like these were far less congenial to him than 
sculpture of a more classical type, such as the pedimental 
figures representing the progress- of civilization over the portico 
of the British Museum, completed in 1847, and his colossal nude 
statue of Achilles in bronze, copied from the original on Monte 
Cavallo in Rome, and reared in 1832 by the ladies of England 
in- Hyde Park as a compliment to the duke of Wellington. He 
died on the xst of September 1856. 

WESTMEATH, EARL OF, a title held in the Irish family 
of Nugent since 1621. During the reign of Henry II. Sir Gilbert 
Nugent received the lordship or barony of Delvin in Meath, 
which soon passed by marriage from the Nugcnts to the family 
of Fitzjohn. About two hundred years later the barony 
returned to the Nugent family, Sir William Nugent (d. c. 
1415) marrying Catherine, daughter of John Fitzjohn. The 
barony, however, is considered to date from the time of Sir 
William Nugent and not from that of Sir Gilbert, 1389 being 
generally regarded as the date of its creation. 

Sir William Nugent, who is generally called the xst, but 
sometimes the 9th, baron Delvin, was succeeded by his son 
Sir Richard (d. c. 1460) as and baron. In 1444 and 1449 Sir 
Richard was lord deputy of Ireland. His grandson, Richard, 
the 4th baron (d. c. 1538), was summoned to the Irish parlia- 
ment in 1486. During his whole life he was loyal to the English 
king, and both before and after the years 1527 and 1528 when 
he was lord deputy, he took a vigorous part in the warfare 
against the Irish rebels. Among his descendants was Robert 
Nugent, Earl Nugent (?«.). Richard's grandson, Christopher, 
the 6th baron (c. 1544-1602), also served England well, but 
about 1576 he fell under the displeasure of Queen Elizabeth 
and he was several times imprisoned, being in the intervals 
employed in Ireland. He was a prisoner in Dublin Castle when 
he died. Delvin wrote A Primer of the Irish Language, compiled 
at the request and for Ike use of Queen Elisabeth, 

His son, Richard, the 7th baron (1583-1642), took part 
in 1606 in a plot against the English government and was 
imprisoned, but he soon escaped from captivity and secured 
a pardon from James I. In 1621 he was created earl of West- 
meath. Having refused in 1641 to join the Irish rebellion, -he 
was attacked by a party of rebels and was so seriously injured 
that he died shortly afterwards. His grandson, Richard, the 
and earl (d. 1684), served Charles II. against Cromwell in Ireland 
and afterwards raised some troops for service in Spain. His 
grandson Thomas, the 4th earl (1656-1752), served James II. 
in Ireland. Thomas's brother, John, the 5th earl (167 2-1 754), 
left Ireland after the final defeat of James II. and took service 
m France. He fought against England at the battles of RamuV 
fies, Oudenarde and Malplaquct and remained on active service 
until 1748. He died in Brabant on the 3rd of July 1754. His 
son Thomas, the 6th carl (d. 1792), also served in the French 
army; later he conformed to the established religion, being 
the first Protestant of his house, and took his seat in the Irish 
House of Lords in 1755. His son George Frederick, the 7th 
earl (1760-1814), a member of the Irish House of Commons 
before 1792, was succeeded by his son George Thomas John 
(1785-1871), who was created marquess of Wcstmeath in 1822 
and who was an Irish representative peer from 1831 to 1871. 
He died without legitimate sons on the 5th of May 1871, when 
t> ' -ame extinct. 



The earldom of Westmeath now passed to a distant < 
Anthony Francis Nugent (1805-1879), a descendant of Thomas 
Nugent (d. 17 15) of Pallas, Galway, who was a son of the 2nd 
earl. Thomas was chief justice of Ireland from 1687 until he 
was outlawed by the government of William III. In 1689 he 
was created by James II. baron of Riverston, but the validity 
of this title has never been admitted. In 1883 his descendant, 
Anthony Francis (b. 1870), became the x ith earL 

Cadets of the Nugent family were Nicholas Nugent (d. 1582), 
chief justice of the common bench in Ireland, who was hanged 
for treason on the 6th of April 1582; William Nugent (d. 1625) 
an Irish rebel during the reign of Elizabeth; Sir George Nugent, 
Bart. (1 757-1849), who, after seeing service in America and 
in the Netherlands, was commander-in-chief in India from 181 1 
to 1813 and became a field-marshal in 1846; and Sir Charles 
Edmund Nugent (e. x 759-1844), an admiral of the fleet. More 
famous perhaps was Lavall, Count Nugent (1777*1862), who 
rose to the rank of field-marshal in the Austrian army and was 
made a prince of the empire. His long and honourable military 
career began in 1793 and sixty-six years later he was present 
at the battle of Solfcrino. His most distinguished services to 
Austria were during the war with France in 1813 and 1814, and 
he was also useful during the revolution in Hungary in 1849. 

See D'Alton, Pedigree of the Nugent Family; and Historical Sketch 
of the Nugent Family, printed by J. G Lyons (1853). 

WESTMEATH, a county of Ireland in the province of Leinster, 
bounded N.W. by Longford, N. by Cavan, N.E. and E. by 
Meath, S. by King's county, and W. by Roscommon. The area 
is 454,104 acres, or about 709 sq. m. The Shannon forms the 
western boundary. The average height of the surface of the 
county is over 250 ft. above sea-lcveL The highest summits 
are Knocklayde (795 ft.), Hill of Ben (710 ft.) and Knockayon 
(707 ft.). A large surface is occupied by bog. A special feature 
of Wcstmeath is the number of large loughs, which have a 
combined area of nearly 17,000 acres. In the north, on the 
borders of Cavan, is Lough Sheelin, with a length of 5 m., and 
an average breadth of between 2 and 3 m., and adjoining it is 
the smaller Lough Kinale. In the centre of the county there 
is a group of large loughs, of which Lough Dereveragh is 6 m. 
long by 3 broad at its widest part. To the north of it are Loughs 
Lene, Glore, Bawn and others, and to the south Loughs Iron 
and OweL Farther south is Lough Enncll or Belvidcre, and in 
the south-west Lough Rcc, a great expansion of the river Shan- 
non, forming part of the boundary with Roscommon. The 
river Inny, which rises in Co. Cavan, enters Westmeath from 
Lough Sheelin, and, forming for parts of its course the boundary 
with Longford, falls into Lough Ree. The Inny has as one of 
its tributaries the Glore, flowing from Lough Lene through 
Lough Glore, a considerable part of its course being under- 
ground. From Lough Lene the Dale also flows southwards to 
the Boync and so to the Irish Sea, and thus this lake sends its 
waters to tho opposite shores of the island. The Brosna flows 
from Lough Enncll southwards by King's county into the 
Shannon. The Westmeath loughs have a peculiar fame among 
anglers for the excellence of their trout-fishing. 

Westmeath is essentially a county of the great Carboniferous 
Limestone plain, with numerous lakes occupying the hollows. Two 
or three little inliers of Old Red Sandstone, as at Killucan and 
Moate, form distinctive hills, about 500 ft. in height. At Sron Hill 
near Killucan, a core of Silurian strata appears within the sandstone 
dome. A considerable »vstcm* of eskers, notably north of Tuttamore, 
diversifies the surface of the limestone plain. 

The soil is generally a rich loam of great depth resting on 
limestone, and is well adapted both for tillage and pasturage. 
The occupations are almost wholly agricultural, dairy farming 
predominating. Flour and meal are largely produced. The only 
textile manufactures are those of friezes, flannels, and coarse linens 
for home use. The only mineral of any value is limestone. 

The main line of the Midland Great Western railway enters the 
county from E. and passes W. by Mullingar and Athlone. From 
Mullingar a branch runs N.W. to Inny Junction, where lines 
diverge N. to Cavan (county Cavan), and W.N.W. to Longford 
(county Longford) and Sligo. A branch of the Great Southern ft 
Western railway runs from Portarlington (Queen's county) to 
Athlone, and this and the Midland Great Western main line are 
connected by a short line between Clare and Straanwlow*, worked 



WESTMINSTER, MARQUESSES OF— WESTMINSTER 549 



by the letter company. Water aminiuiiicaiioft with Dublin m 
furnished by the Royal Canal, traversing the centre of the county. 
A branch of the Grand Canal reaches KObegfan in the south. 



The population (68,6x1 in 1891; 61,620 in 1901) decreases 
in excess of the average shown by the Irish counties, and emi- 
gration is considerable. About 92% of the total are Roman 
Catholics, and about 86% constitute the rural population. The 
principal towns are Athlone (pop. 66x7), of which the part 
formerly in Roscommon was added to Westmeath by the Local 
Government (Ireland) Act of 1898, and Mullingar (4500), the 
county town. Castlepollard and Moate are lesser market 
towns. By the Redistribution Act of 1885 Westmeath was 
formed into two parliamentary divisions, North and South, 
each returning one member, Athlone being included in the 
county representation. The county is divided into twelve 
baronies. Assises are held at Mullingar and quarter sessions 
at Mullingar and Moate. The county is in the Protestant 
dioceses of Dublin, Killaloe and Ossory, and in the Roman 
Catholic dioceses of Kildare and Lcighlin, Killaloe and Ossory. 

Westmeath was severed from Meath (9.*.) in 1543. The plan 
for the insurrection of 1641 was concerted in the abbey of 
Multifarnham, and both in the wars of this period and those 
of 1688 the gentry of the county were so deeply implicated 
that the majority of the estates were confiscated. There aw 
a considerable number of raths or encampments: one at Rath- 
conrath is of great extent; another at Ballymore was fortified 
during the wars of the Cromwellian period and those of 1688, 
and was afterwards the headquarters of General Ginkell, when 
preparing to besiege Athlone; and there is a third of con- 
siderable size near Lough Lene. The ruins of the Franciscan 
abbey of Multifarnham, founded in 1236 by William Delaware, 
picturesquely situated near Lough Dereveragh, include a tower 
93 ft. in height. 

WESTMINSTER, MARQUESSES AKD DUKES OF. The 
title of marquess of Westminster was bestowed in 1831 upon 
Robert Grosvenor, and Earl Grosvenor (1767-1845), whose 
grandson, Hugh Lupus Grosvenor (1825-1899), was created 
dukeof Westminster in 1874. The family of Grosvenor isof great 
antiquity in Cheshire, the existence of a knightly house of this 
name (Le Grosvcnur) in the palatine county being proved by 
deeds as early as the z ath century (see The Ancestor, vi. 19). 
The legend of its descent from a nephew of Hugh Lupus, earl of 
Chester, perpetuated in the name of the first duke, and the 
still more extravagant story, repeated by the old genealogists 
and modern " peerages," of its ancestors, the " grand hunts- 
men " (gros veneurs) of the dukes of Normandy, have been 
exploded by the researches of Mr W. H. B. Bird (see " The 
Grosvenor Myth " in The Ancestor, voL i. April 1002). The 
ancestors of the dukes of Westminster, the Grosvenors of Eaton, 
near Chester, were cadets of the knightly house mentioned 
above, and rose to wealth and eminence through a series of 
fortunate nprriages. Their baronetcy dates from 162a. 

Sir Thomas Grosvenor, the 3rd baronet (1656-1700), in 1676 
married Mary (d. 1730), heiress of Alexander Davies (d. 1665), 
a scrivener. This union brought to the Grosvenor family 
certain lands, then on the outskirts of London, but now covered 
by some of the most fashionable quarters of the West End. 
Sir Thomas's sons, Richard (1689-1733), Thomas (1693-1733) 
and Robert (d. 1755), succeeded in turn to the baronetcy, Robert 
being the father of Sir Richard Grosvenor (1731-1803), created 
Baron Grosvenor In 1761 and Viscount Belgrave and Earl 
Grosvenor in 1784. The 1st earl, a great breeder of racehorses, 
was succeeded by his only surviving son Robert (1767-1845), 
who rebuilt Eaton Kill and developed bis London property, 
whkh was rapidly increasing in value. In the House of Commons, 
where he sat from 1788 to x8oa, he was a follower of Pitt, who 
made him a lord of the admiralty and later a commissioner of 
the board of control, but after 1806 he left the Tories and Joined 
the Whigs. He was created a marquess at the coronation of 
Wuliant IV. in 1831. His son, Richard, the and marquess, 
(1795-1869), was a member of parliament from 18x8 to 1835 
and lord steward of the royal household from 1850 to 185a. 



The tatter's son, Hugh Lupus (1825-1899), created a duke hi 
1874, was from 1847 to 1869 member of parliament for Chester 
and from 1880 to 1885 master of the horse under Gladstone, 
but he left the Liberal party when the split came over Home 
Rule for Ireland. His great wealth made him specially con- 
spicuous; but he was a patron of many pr og ressive movements. 
His eldest son, Victor Alexander, Earl Grosvenor (1853-1884), 
predeceased him, and he was succeeded as and duke by his 
grandson, Hugh Richard Arthur Grosvenor (b. 1879), who in 
1901 married Miss Comwallis-West. Ear! Grosvenor's widow, 
Countess Grosvenor, a daughter of the 9th earl of Scarborough, 
had in 1887 married Mr George Wyndham (b. 1863), a grandson 
of the xst baron Leconfield, who subsequently became well- 
known both as a litUraleur and as a Unionist cabinet minister. 

Two other peerages are held by the Grosvenor family. In 
1857 Lord Robert Grosvenor (1801-1893), a younger son of 
the xst marquess, after having sat in the House of Commons 
since 1822, was created Baron Ebury. He was an energetic 
opponent of ritualism in the Church of England; and he was 
associated in philanthropic work with the earl of Shaftesbury. 
On his death his son, Robert Weucsley Grosvenor (b. 1834), 
became the and baron. In x886, Lord Richard Grosvenor 
(b. 1837), a son of the and marquess, was created Baron Stal- 
bridge; from x88o to 1885 he had been " chief whip " of the 
Liberal party. In 1891 he became chairman of the London 
* North Westerp railway. 

WESTMINSTER, a part of London, England; strictly a 
dty in the administrative county of London, bounded E. by 
" the City," S. by the river Thames, W. by the boroughs of 
Chelsea and Kensington, and N. by Paddington, St Marylebone 
and Holbom. Westminster was formed into a borough by 
the London Government Act of 1809. and by a royal charter 
of the aoth of October 1900 it was created a dty. The council 
consists of a mayor, 10 aldermen and 60 councillors. The dty 
comprises the parliamentary boroughs of the Strand, West- 
minster and St George's, Hanover Square, each returning one 
member. Area, 3502-7 acres. The City of Westminster, as 
thus depicted, extends from the western end of Fleet Street 
to Kensington Gardens, and from Oxford Street to the Thames, 
which it borders over a distance of 3 m., between Victoria 
(Chelsea) Bridge and a point below Waterloo Bridge. It thus 
indudes a large number of the finest buildings in London, from 
the Law Courts in the east to the Imperial Institute in the west, 
Buckingham and St James's palaces, the National Gallery, 
and most of the greatest residences of the wealthy classes. But 
the name of Westminster is more generally associated with a 
more confined area, namely, the quarter which indudes the 
Abbey, the Houses of Parliament, the government and other 
buildings in Whitehall, the Roman Catholic Cathedral, and the 
parts immediately adjacent to these. 

Westminster Abbey.— The Abbey of St Peter is the most 
widdy celebrated church in the British empire. The Thames, 

bordered in early times by a great expanse of fen ^ 

on dther hand from Chelsea and Battersea downward, V^f" 9 * 
washed, at the point where the Abbey stands, one thtmj. 
shore of a low island perhaps three-quarters of a mile in 
circumference, known as Tborney or Bramble islet. Tributary 
streams from the north formed channels through the marsh, 
flanking the island north and south, and were once connected 
by a dyke on the west. These channels belonged to the Tyburn, 
which flowed from the high ground of Hampstcad. Relics of 
the Roman occupation have been excavated in the former island, 
and it is supposed that traffic on the Watling Street, from Dover 
to Chester, crossed 'the Thames and the marshes by way of 
Tborney before the construction of London Bridge; the road 
continuing north-west in the line of the modern Park Lane 
(partly) and Edgware Road. Tradition places on the island a 
temple of Apollo, which was destroyed by an earthquake in the 
reign of the emperor Antoninus Pius. On the site King Ludus 
is said to have founded a church (c. aj>. 170), The irruption 
of the Saxons left Tborney desolate. Traditional still, but 
supported by greater probability, a story states that SebtrU 



55° 



WESTMINSTER 



lung of the East Saxons, having taken part in the foundation of 
St Paul's Cathedral, restored or rcfounded the church at Thomey 
" to the honour of God and St Peter, on the west side of the 
City of London " (Stow). A splendid legend relates the coming 
of St Peter in person to hallow his new church. The sons of 
Sebert relapsed into idolatry and left the church to the mercy 
of the Danes. A charter of Offa, king of Mercia (785), deals with 
the conveyance of certain land to the monastery of St Peter; 
and King Edgar restored the church, dearly denning by a charter 
dated 95 r (not certainly genuine) the boundary of Westminster, 
which may bo indicated in modern terms as extending from the 
Marble Arch south to the Thames and east to the City boundary, 
the former river Fleet. Westminster was a Benedictine founda- 
tion. In 1050 Edward the Confessor took up the erection of a 
magnificent new church, cruciform, with a central and two 
western towers. Its building continued after his death, but it 
was consecrated on Childermas Day, 28th December 1065; and 
on the following " twelfth mass eve '* the king died, being buried 
next day in the church. In 1245 Henry III. set about the 
rebuilding of the church east of the nave, and at this point it 
becomes necessary to describe the building as it now appears. 

Westminster Abbey is a cruciform structure consisting of 
nave with aisles, transepts with aisles (but in the south transept 
the place of the western aisle is occupied by the 
eastern cloister walk), and choir of polygonal apsidal 
form, with six chapels (four polygonal) opening north 
and south of it, and an eastern Lady Chapel, known as Henry 
VIL's chapel. There are two western towers, but in the centre 
a low square towet hardly rises above the pitch of the roof. 
The main entrance in common use is that in the north transept. 
The chapter-house, cloisters and other conventual buildings 
and remains lie to the south. The total length of the church 
(exterior) is 531 ft. and of the transepts 303 ft. in all. The 
breadth of the nave without the aisles is 38 ft. 7 in. and its height 
close upon 102 ft. These dimensions are very slightly lessened 
in the choir. Without, viewed from the open Parliament Square 
to the north, the beautiful proportions of the building are 
readily realized, but it is somewhat dwarfed by the absence of a 
central tower and by the vast adjacent pile of the Houses of 
Parliament. From this point (considered as a building merely) 
it appears only as a secondary unit in a magnificent group. 
Seen from the west, however, it is the dominant unit, but here 
it is impossible to overlook the imperfect conception of the 
" Gothic humour " (as he himself termed it) manifested by 
Wren, from whose designs the western towers were completed 
in 174a The north front, called Solomon's Porch from a former 
porch over the main entrance, is from the designs of Sir G. G. 
Scott, considerably altered by J. L. Pearson. 

Within, the Abbey is a superb example of the pointed style. 
The body of the church has a remarkable appearance of uniformity, 
because, although the building of the new nave was continued 
with intermissions from the 14th century until Tudor times, the 
broad design of the Early English work in the eastern part of the 
church was carried on throughout. The choir, with its unusual form 
and radiating chapels, plainly follows French models, but the name 
of the architect is lost. Exquisite ornament is seen in the triforium 
arcade, and between some of the arches in the transept are figures, 
especially finely carved, though much mutilated, known as the 
censing angels. Henry VII.'s Chapel replaces an earlier Lady 
Chapel, and is the most remarkable building of its period. It 
comprises a nave with aisles, and an apsidal eastward end formed 
of five small radiating chapels. Both within and without it is 
ornamented with an extraordinary wealth and minuteness of detail. 
A splendid series of carved oak stalls lines each side of the nave, 
and above them hang the banners of the Knights of the Bath, of 
whom this was the place of installation when the Order was re- 
constituted in 1725. The fan-traceried roof, with its carved stone 
pendants, is the most exquisite architectural feature of the chapel. 

The choir stalls in the body of the church are modern, as is the 
organ, a fine instrument with an " echo " attachment, electrically 
connected, in the triforium of the south transept. The rcredos is 
by Sir G. G. Scott, with mosaic by Salviati. In Abbot Islip's chapel 
there is a series of effigies in wax, representing monarchs and others. 
The earliest, which is weD preserved, is of Charles II., but remnants 
of older figures survive. Some of the effigies were carried in funeral 
processions according to custom, but this was not done later than 
Ijag. There are, however, figures of Lord Chatham and Nelson, 



set up by the officials who received the fees formerly paid by visitors 
to the exhibition. 

But the peculiar fame of the Abbey lies not in its architecture, 
nor in its connexion with the metropolis alone, but in the fact that 
it has long been the place of the coronation of sovereigns 
and the burial-place of many of them and of their greatest ~JJ!^ 
subjects. The original reason for this was the reverence ""r*~ 
attaching to the memory of the Confessor, whose shrine " 

stands in the central chapel behind the high altar. The 
Norman kings were ready to do honour to his name. From William 
the Conqueror onward every sovereign has been crowned here except- 
ing Edward V. The coronation chairs stand in the Confessor's chapel. 
That used by the sovereign dates from the time of Edward I., and 
contains beneath its seat the stone of Scone, or stone of destiny, 
on which the Celtic kings were crowned. It is of Scottish origin, 
but tradition identifies it with Jacob's pillow at Bethel. Here also 
are kept the sword and shield of Edward III., still used in the 
coronation ceremony. The second chair was made for Mary, 
consort of William III. Subsequent to the Conquest many kings 
and queens were buried here, from Henry III. to Geotge II. Not 
all the graves are marked, but of those which are the tomb of Henry 
VII. and bis queen, Elizabeth of York, the central object in his 
own chapel, is the finest. The splendid recumbent effigies in bronze, 
of Italian workmanship, rest upon a tomb of black marble, and the 
whole is enclosed in a magnificent shrine of wrought brass. Monu- 
ments, tombs, busts and memorials crowd the choir, its chapels 
and the transepts, nor is the nave wholly free of them. All but the 
minority of the Gothic period (among which the canopied tombs of 
Edmund Crouchback and Aymer de Valence, in the sanctuary, are 
notable) appear incongruous in a Gothic setting. Many of the 
memorials arc not worthy of their position as works of art, nor are 
the subjects they commemorate always worthy to lie here, for the 
high honour of burial in the Abbey was not always no conscientiously 
guarded as now. Eliminating these considerations, however, a 
wonderful range of sculptural art is found. A part of the south 
transept is famed under the name of the Poet's Corner. The north 
transept contains many monuments to statesmen. 

The monastery was dissolved in 1539. and Westminster was then 
erected into a bishopric, but only one prelate, Thomas Thurleby, 
held the office of bishop. I n 1 553 Mary again appointed an 
abbot, but Elizabeth reinstated the dean, with twelve pre- J2«S«r 
bendaries. Of the conventual buildings, the cloisters are of JfJrfteML 
the 13th and 14th centuries. On the south side of the^^^ 1 ^ 
southern walk remains of a wall of the refectory are seen from 
without. From the eastern walk a porch gives entry to the chapter 
house and the chapel of the Pyx. The first is of the time of Henry 
III., a fine octagonal building, its vaulted roof supported by a 
slender clustered column of marble. It was largely restored by Sir 
Gilbert Scott. There are mural paintings of the 14th and 15th 
centuries. The chapel or chamber of the Pyx is part of the under- 
croft of the original dormitory, and is early Norman work of the 
Confessor's time. It was used as a treasury for the regalia and 
other articles of value in early times, and here were kept the standard 
coins of the realm used in the trial of the pyx now carried out at 
the Mint. The undercroft is divided into compartments by walk, 
and part of it appears in the gymnasium of Westminster School. 
Above it is now the chapter library. To the south-east lies the 
picturesque Little Cloister, with its court and fountain, surrounded 
by residences of canons and officials. Near it are slight ruins of the 
monastic infirmary chapel of St Catherine. West of the main 
cloisters are the Deanery, Jerusalem chamber and College Hall, 
the building surrounding a small court and dating in fabric mainly 
from the 14th century. This was the Abbot's house. Its most 
famoi-3 portion is the Jerusalem chamber, believed to be named 
from the former tapestries on its walls, representing the holy city. 
Here died Henry IV. in 1413, as set forth in Shakespeare's Hetuy / V. 
(Pt. ii., Act iv. Sc, 4). It is a beautiful room, with open timber 
roof, windows partly of stained glass, and walls tapestried and 
panelled The College Hall, adjoining it, is of similar construction, 
but plainly fitted in the common manner of a refectory, with a dais 
for -toe high table at the north and a gallery at the south. It is 
now the dining-hall of Westminster School. 

Westminster School.— $t Peter's College, commonly called 
Westminster School, is one of the most ancient and eminent 
public schools in England, and the only school of such standing 
still occupying its original site in London. A school was main- 
tained by the monks from very early times. Henry V11L took 
steps to raise it in importance, but the school owes its present 
eminence to Queen Elizabeth, who is commemorated as the 
foundress at a Latin commemoration service held periodically 
in the Abbey, where, moreover, the daily school service is held. 
The school buildings lie east of the conventual buildings, sur- 
rounding Little Dean's Yard, which, like the cloisters, communi- 
cates with Dean's Yard, in which are the picturesque houses of 
the headmaster, canons of the Abbey, and others. The build- 
ings are modem or large modernised. The Great Schoolroom 



WESTMINSTER, STATUTES OF 



551 



b a fine panelled hall, bearing on its waOs the anna and 
names of many eminent alumni; it is entered by a gateway 
attributed to Inigo Jones, also covered with names. Ash- 
burnham House, now containing one of the school houses, the 
library and class-rooms, is named from the family for whom 
it was built, traditionally but not certainly, by Inigo Jones. 
The finest part remaining is the grand staircase The number 
of scholars, called King's Scholars, on the foundation fa 60, of 
which 40, who are boarders, represent the original number. 
The great proportion of the boys are home boarders (Town 
Boys). In the College dormitory a Latin play is annually 
presented, in accordance with ancient custom. It is preceded 
by a prologue, and followed by a humorous epilogue, in Latin 
adapted to subjects of the moment. Other customs for which 
the school is noted are the acclamation of the sovereign at 
coronation in the Abbey, in accordance with a privilege jealously 
held by the boys; and the " Pancake Grease," a struggle in the 
Great Schoolroom on Shrove Tuesday to obtain possession of a 
pancake carrying with it a reward from the Dean. The number 
of boys is about 2 50. Valuable close scholarships and exhibitions 
at Christ Church, Oxford, and Trinity College, Cambridge, are 
awarded annually. 

5/ Margarets.— On the north side of the Abbey, close beside it, 
b the parish church of St Margaret. It was founded in or soon 
after the time of the Confessor, but the present building is 
Perpendicular, of greater beauty within than without. St 
Margaret's is officially the church of the House of Commons. 
It is frequently the scene of fashionable weddings, which are 
rarely held in the Abbey. On the south side of Dean's Yard is 
the Church House, a memorial of Queen Victoria's Jubilee (x88?>, 
consisting of a spacious ball of brick and stone, with offices for 
numerous Church societies, 

Westminster Palace: Howe* of Parliament. — A royal palace 
existed at Westminster at least as early as the reign of Canute, 
but the building spoken of by Fitzstephen as an " incomparable 
structure furnished with a breastwork and a bastion " is supposed 
to have been founded by Edward the Confessor and enlarged 
by William the Conqueror. The Hall, called Westminster Hall, 
was built by William Rufus and altered by Richard II. In 151s 
the palace suffered greatly from fire, and thereafter ceased to 
be used as a royal residence. St Stephen's chapel, originally 
built by King Stephen, was used from 1547 for the meetings of 
the House of Commons*, which bad been held previously in the 
chapter house of the Abbey. The Lords used another apartment 
of the palace, but on the x6th of October 1834 the whole of the 
buildings, except the hall, was burnt down. In 1840 the building 
of the New Palace, or Houses of Parliament, began, and it was 
completed in 1867, at a cost of about three millions sterling. 
(For plan, &c, see Architecture. Modem.) It covers an area 
of about 8 acres, and has a frontage of about 300 yds. to the 
Thames. The architect was Sir Charles Barry, and the style 
b late Perpendicular. 

Towards the river it presents a rich facade with a terrace rising 
directly from the water. At the south- west corner rises the vast 
Victoria tower, above the royal entrance, 340 ft. high, and 75 ft. 
square. At the north is the dock tower, 320 ft. high, bearing the 
great clock which chimes the quarters on Tour bells, and strikes the 
Rours on a bell weighing over 13 tons, named Big Ben after Sir 
Benjamin Hall, First Commissioner of Works at the time when the 
clock was erected. The building incorporates Westminster Hall, which 
measures 290 ft. in length, 68 in width, and 00 in height. It has a 
magnificent open root of carved oak, and is used as the vestibule of 
the Houses of Parliament. Of the modem rooms, the House of Peers 
is a splendidly ornate chamber. 07 ft. in length ; that of the Commons 
is 70 ft. long, and less lavishly adorned. The sitting of parliament 
is signified by a flag on Victoria Tower in daytime and by a light 
at the summit'of the clock tower at night. 

Whitehall.'- Northward from Parliament Square a broad, 
slightly curving thoroughfare leads to Trafalgar Square. This 
b Whitehall, which replaced the narrow King Street. Here, 
between the Thames and St James's Park, formerly stood York 
House, a residence of the archbishops of York from 1 248. Wolsey 
beautified the mansion and kept high state there, but on his 
disgrace Henry VIII. acquired and reconstructed it, employed 



Holbefn in its decoration, and made It his principal residence. 
Inigo Jones designed a magnificent new palace for James I., 
but only the banqueting hall was completed (1622), and this 
survived several fires, by one of which (1697) nearly the whole 
of the rest of the palace was destroyed. The hall, converted 
into a royal chapel by George L, and now housing the museum 
of the Royal United Service Institution, the buildings of which 
adjoin it, is a fine specimen of Palladian architecture, and its 
ceiling is adorned with allegorical paintings by Rubens, restored 
and rehung in 1007. The museum contains military and naval 
relics, models and other exhibits. Through this hall Charles I. 
passed on his way to execution beneath its windows; and the 
palace was the scene of the death of Henry VIII., Cromwell 
and Charles IL 

The principal go v ern me nt offices are situated in Whitehall On 
the left, following the northerly direction, are buildings compl et ed 
in 1908, from the designs of J. M. Brydon, for the Boards of Educa- 
tion, Trade, Local Government, &c The Home, Foreign, Colonial 
and India Offices occupy the next block, a heavy building, adorned 
with allegorical figures, by Sir G. G. Scott (1873J. Downing Street, 
separating these from the Treasury, contains the official r esi d en ces 
of the Fust Lord of the Treasury and the Chancellor of the Ex- 
chequer. The Treasury itself dates from 1737, but the facade b 
by Sir Charles Barry. The Horse Guards, containing the offices 
of various military departments, is a low but not unpicturesoue 
building surrounding a court-yard, built in 1753 on the site of a 
guard-house for the security of Whitcha 1 ' pevtace, Hating from 1631. 
On 1 he parade ground between it and hr J nmcs's Park tne ceremony 
cf tmoping the colour is held at the nrM. ration ol the sovereign S 
birthday. The portion of the Admiralty facing Whitehall dates 
frum ijj6 and is plain and wmW: out there are h a n dsome new 
lr.ii Mings on the Park tide. On tht. r^-n of Whitehall, besides the 
banquet hall, afe the fine War Office, completed In 1906, from the 
designs of W. Young, nnd Montagu House, the residence of the 
dulte of Rirctteitch. In front of the war Office an eqin- t rian statue 
of the duke o4 Cambridge (d. 1904) was uri veiled in 19x7. 

Trafalgar Square U an open space sloping sharply to the north. 
On the mulh side, faring the entry of Whitehall, is the Nelson 
column (1643) by W, Ramon, 145 ft. in height, a copy in granite 
from the temple of Mars 1'Jtor in Rome* crowned with a stattfe of 
Nelson by E. Ji, Baily* and having at it* Las* four culussal lions in 
bronze modelled by Sir Edwin Laitdsecr. The centre oE the square 
is luvtlk-d and paved with agplialtr* and contain* !»■> fountains. 
There are Btflturs of George IV.. Napier, f lovelock^ and Gordon. 
Behind the terrace on the north rites the National (.iallery (18(38), 
a Grecian building by William WiLkins, subsequently much enlarged, 
uith its splendid cu fleet inn of painiine,*. The National Portrait 
Gallery ii contained in a building tl&95) on the north-east side of 
the Nations: Caller)'. 

Westminster Cathedral.— A short distance from Victoria Street, 
towards its western end, stands Westminster Cathedral (Roman 
Catholic). Its foundation was laid in 1896, and its consecration 
took place at the close of 1903. Its site is somewhat circum- 
scribed, and this and its great bulk renders impossible any 
general appreciation of its complex outline; but its stately 
domed campanile, 283 ft. in height, forms a landmark from 
far over London. The style was described by the architect, 
J. F. Bentley, as early Christian Byzantine, and the material 
is mainly red brick. The extreme length is 360 ft., the breadth 
156 ft., the breadth of the nave 60 ft., and its height (domes 
wi thin) 1 13 ft. 

WESTMINSTER, STATUTES OP, two English statutes passed 
during the reign of Edward I. Parliament having met at 
Westminster on the 22nd of April 1275, its main work was the 
consideration of the statute of Westminster I. This was drawn 
up, not in Latin, but in Norman French, and was passed " par 
le assentement des erceveskes, eveskes, abbes, priurs, contes, 
barons, ct la communaute de la tere ileokes somons." Its pro- 
visions can be best summarized in the words of Stubbs (Const. 
Hwf.cap.xiv.):— 

" This act is almost a code by itself; it contains fifty-one clauses, 
and covers the whole ground of legislation. Its language now 
recalls that of Canute or Alfred now anticipates that of our own 
day; on the one hand common right is to be done to all, as well 
poor as rich, without respect of persons; on the other, elections are 
to be free, and no man is by force, malice or menace, to disturb 
them. The spirit of the Great Charter is not less discernible: ex* 
cessive amercements, abuses of wardship, irregular demands for 
feudal aids, are forbidden in the same words or by amending enact- 
•testa. The inquest system of Henry IL, the law of wreck, aad 



552 WESTMINSTER, SYNODS OF— WESTMORLAND, EARLS OP 



the institution of coronas, measures of Richard and his ministers, 
come under review as well as the Provisions of Oxford and the 
Statute of Marlborough." 

The second statute of Westminster was passed in the parlia- 
ment of 1385. Like the first statute it is a code in itself, and 
contains the famous clause De donis condiiionalibus (9.*.), 
" one of the fundamental institutes of the medieval land law 
of England." Stubbs says of it: "The law of dower, of ad- 
vowson, of appeal for felonies, i& largely amended; the in- 
stitution of justices of assize is remodelled, and the abuses of 
manorial jurisdiction repressed; the statute De rdigiosis, the 
statutes of Merton and Gloucester, are amended and re-enacted. 
Every clause has a bearing on the growth of the later law." 

The statute Quia Emptores of 1390 is sometimes called the statute 
of Westminster 111. 

WESTMINSTER* 8TO0D6 OF. Under this heading are 
included certain of the more important ecclesiastical councils 
held within the present bounds of London. Though the precise 
locality is occasionally uncertain, the majority of the medieval 
synods assembled in the chapter-house of old St Paul's, or the 
former chapel of St Catherine within the precincts of West- 
minster Abbey or at Lambeth. The councils were of various 
types, each with a constitutional history of its own. Before 
the reign of Edward I., when convocation assumed substantially 
Its present form (see Convocation), there were convened in 
London various diocesan, provincial, national and Iegatine 
synods; during the past six centuries, however, the chief 
ecclesiastical assemblies held there have been convocations of 
the province of Canterbury. 

The first really notable council at St Paul's was that of 1075 
under the presidency of Lanfranc; it renewed ancient regula- 
tions, forbade simony and permitted three bishops to remove 
from country places to Salisbury, Chichester and Chester re- 
spectively. In 1 102 a national synod at Westminster under 
Anselm adopted canons against simony, clerical marriages 
and slavery. The councils of 1x26, 1x27 and 1138 were Iegatine, 
that of 1175 provincial; their canons, chiefly re-enactments, 
throw light on the condition of the clergy at that time. The 
canons of 1200 are based in large measure on recommendations 
of the Lateran Council of 11 79. At St Paul's the kgatine con- 
stitutions of Otto were published in a synod of 1337, those of 
Ottobon in 1268: these were the most important national 
councils held after the independence of York had been estab- 
lished. A synod at Lambeth in 1281 put forth canons none too 
welcome to Edward I.; they included a detailed scheme for 
the religious instruction of the faithful. During the next two 
centuries the councils devoted much attention to heresy: 
eight propositions concerning the body of Christ after his death 
were rejected at St Mary-Ie-Bowin 1286; the expulsion of the 
Jews from England was sanctioned by a Iegatine synod of 
Westminster in X291; ten theses of Wiclif's were condemned 
at the Dominican friary in 1382, and eighteen articles drawn 
from his TriaUgus met the same fate at St Paul's in 1306; and 
the doom of Sir John Oldcastle was sealed at the latter place in 
1413. The 14th-century synods at St Paul's concerned them- 
selves largely with the financial and moral status of the clergy, 
and made many quaint regulations regarding their dress and 
behaviour (1328, 1342, 1343; cf. 1463). From the time of 
Edward VL on, many of the most vital changes in ecclesiastical 
discipline were adopted in convocations at St Paul's and in the 
Abbey. To enumerate them would be to give a running com- 
mentary on the development of the Church of England; among 
the most important were those of 1547, 1552, 1554, X562, 1571, 
1604, 1605, 1640 and 1661. In 1852 there was held the first of 
a series of synods of the newly organized Roman Catholic 
archdiocese of Westminster. For the " Pan-Anglican Synods " 
see Lambeth Coniebxnces. 

BiBUOGRAPBY.—For acts of synods prior to the Reformation see 
Spelean, HarbWia, W. Lynwood, PnrimciaU (Oxford. 1679), and 
best of aO WaUns; for the canons and proceedings of convocations 
1 1547 to 1717 consult E. CardweU, Symodolia (2 vols., Oxford, 
1): for translations and summaries, Guenn, Laadon and Hefele, 
, voL iv. Ctseeabo T. Lathbury. A History ef 
f Urn Qmnk of ffaeW (2nd enlarged edition. 



!*4*>. 



1853); A. P. Stanley, Historical Memorials of Wtttmimtw 
^ [4th and revised ed, London, 1876), 4» 1-413. 495-J 



Full titles under Councils. 



(W.W.R. 



WESTMORLAND, EARLS OF. Ralph Neville, 4th Baron 
Neville of Raby, and xst earl of Westmorland (i364-x4*5), 
eldest son of John, 3rd Baron Neville, and his wife Maud Percy 
(see Nivnut, Family), was knighted by Thomas of Wood* 
stock, afterwards duke of Gloucester, during the French espedi* 
tion of 1380, and succeeded to his father's barony in 1388. He 
had been joint warden of the west march in 1386, and was 
reappointed for a new term in 1390. In X391 he was pot on the 
commission which undertook the duties of constable in place 
of the duke of Gloucester, and he was repeatedly engaged in 
negotiations with the Scots. His support of the court party 
against the lords appellant was rewarded in 1397 by the earldom 
of Westmorland. He married as his second wife Joan Beaufort, 
half-sister of Henry of Lancaster, afterwards Henry IV.* whom 
he joined on his landing in Yorkshire in 1309. He already held 
the castles of Brancepeth, Raby, Middkham and Sheriff Hutton 
when he received from Henry IV. the honour and lordship of 
Richmond for life. The only rivals of the Nevilles in the north 
were the Perries, whose power was broken at Shrewsbury in 
1403. Both marches had been in their hands, but the warden- 
ship of the west marches was now assigned to Westmorland, 
whose influence was also paramount in the east, which was 
under the nominal wardenship of the young Prince John, after- 
wards duke of Bedford. Westmorland had prevented North* 
umberland from marching to reinforce Hotspur in 1403, and 
before embarking on a new revolt he sought to secure his enemy, 
surrounding, but too late, one of Sir Ralph Eure's castles where 
the earl had been staying. In May the Ferries were in revolt, 
with Thomas Mowbray, earl marshal, and Archbishop Scrope. 
Westmorland met them on Shipton Moor, near York, on the 
20th of May 1405, and suggested a parley between the leaders. 
By pretending accord with the archbishop, the earl induced him 
to allow his followers to disperse. Scrope and Mowbray were 
then seised and handed over to Henry at Pontefract on the 
3rd of January. The improbabilities of this narrative have 
led some writers to think, in face of contemporary authorities, 
that Scrope and Mowbray must have surrendered voluntarily. 
If Westmorland betrayed them he at least had no share in their 
execution. Thenceforward he was busily engaged in negotiating 
with the Scots and keeping the peace on the borders. He did 
not play the part assigned to him by Shakespeare in Henry K., 
for during Henry's absence he remained in charge of the north, 
and was a member of Bedford's councfl. He consolidated the 
strength of his family by marriage alliances. His daughter 
Catherine married in 1412 John Mowbray, second duke of 
Norfolk, brother and heir of the earl marshal, who had been 
executed after Shipton Moor; Anne married Humphrey, first 
duke of Buckingham; Eleanor married, after the death of her 
first husband Richard le Despenser, Henry Percy, 2nd earl 
of Northumberland; Cicely married Richard, duke of York, 
and was the mother of Edward IV. and Richard III. The sons 
by his second marriage were Richard Neville, earl of Salisbury, 
William, Baron Fauconbcrg, George, Baron Latimer, Robert, 
bishop of Salisbury and then of Durham, and Edward, Baron 
Abergavenny. The earl died on the 21st of October 1423, and 
a fine alabaster tomb was erected to his memory in Staindrop 
church close by Raby Castle. 

See J. H. Wylie, History of Enfrnd under Henry IV. (4 vohk, 
1884-1898). 

Ralph, »nd earl of Westmorland (c. 1404-1484), the son of 
John, Lord Neville (d. 1423), succeeded his grandfather in 1425, 
and married as his first wife Elisabeth Clifford, daughter of Sir 
Henry Percy (Hotspur), thus forming further bonds with the 
Perdes. The 3rd earl, Ralph Neville (1456-1499), was his 
nephew, and the son of John Neville, Lord Neville, who was 
slain at Towton. His grandson Ralph, 4th earl of Westmorland 
(1490-1550), was an energetic border warrior, who remained 
faithful to the royal cause when the other great northern lords 



WESTMORLAND 



553 



Joined the Pilgrimage of Grace. He was succeeded by his son 
Henry, 5th earl (a 525-1 563). 

Charles, 6th earl (1543-1601), eldest son of the 5th earl by 
his first wife Jane, daughter of Thomas Manners, zst earl of 
Rutland, was brought up a Roman Catholic, and was further 
attached to the Catholic party by his, marriage with Jane, 
daughter of Henry Howard, earl of Surrey. He was a member 
of the council of the north in 1569 when he joined Thomas Percy, 
7th earl of> Northumberland, and his uncle Christopher Neville, 
in-the Catholic rising of the north, which had as its object the 
liberation of Mary, queen of Scots. On the collapse of the ill- 
organised insurrection Westmorland fled with his brother earl 
over the borders, and eventually to the Spanish Netherlands, 
where he lived in receipt of a pension from Philip II. of Spain, 
until his death on the 16th of November 1601. He left no sons, 
and his honours were forfeited by bis formal attainder in 1571. 
Raby Castle remained in the hands of the crown until 1645. 

The title was revived in 1624 in favour of Sir Francis Fane 
(c. 1574-1629), whose mother, Mary Neville, was a descendant 
of a younger son of the first earl. He was created baron of 
Burghersh and earl of Westmorland in 1624, and became Lord 
k Despenser on his mother's death in 1626. His son Mildmay 
Fane, 2nd or 8th earl of Westmorland (c. 1602- 1666), at first 
aded with the king's party, but was afterwards reconciled with 
the parliament. John Fane, 7th or 13th earl of Westmorland 
(i68a?-i762), served under Marlborough, and was made in 
2739 lieutenant-general of the British armies. 

John Fane, nth or 17th earl (1784-1859), only son of John, 
xoth earl, was known as Lord Burghersh until he succeeded to 
the earldom in 1841. He entered the army in 1803, and in 1805 
took part in the Hanoverian campaign as aide-de-camp to 
General Sir George Don. He was assistant adjutant-general 
in Sicily and Egypt (1806-1807), served in the Peninsular War 
from 1808 to 1813, was British military commissioner to the 
allied armies under Schwarzenberg, and marched with the 
allies to Paris in 1814. He was subsequently promoted major- 
general (1825), lieutenant-general (1838) and general (1854), 
although the latter half of his life was given to the diplomatic 
service. He was British resident at Florence from 1814 to 
1830, and British ambassador at Berlin from 1841 to 1851, 
when he was transferred to Vienna. In Berlin he had mediated 
in the Schleswig-Holstetn question, and in Vienna he was one of 
the British plenipotentiaries at the congress of 1855.. He retired 
in 1855, and died at Apthorpe House, Northamptonshire, on 
the 1 6th of October 1859. Himself a musician of considerable 
reputation and the composer of several operas, he took a keen 
interest in the cause of music in England, and in 1822 made 
proposals which led to the foundation in the next year of the 
Royal Academy of Music His wife Prisdlla Anne (1793-1879), 
daughter of William Wellesley-Pole, 3rd earl of Mornington, 
was a distinguished artist. 

1 His published works include Memoirs of lit Early Campaigns of 
the Duke of Wellington m Portugal and Spain (1820), and Memoir of 
the Operations of the Allied Annus under Prince Sckwanenberg and 
Marshal BUUher (1822). 

' Francis William Henry, r 2th or 18th earl (1825-1891), fourth 
son of the preceding, was also a distinguished soldier. He 
entered the* army in 1843 and served through the Punjab cam- 
paign of 1846; was made aide-de-camp to the governor-general 
in 1848, and distinguished himself at Gujrat on the 21st of 
February 1849. He went to the Crimea as aide-de-camp to Lord 
Raglan, and was promoted lieutenant-colonel in 1S55. On his 
return to England he became aide-de-camp to the duke of 
Cambridge, and received the Crimean medal. The death of 
his elder brother in 1851 gave him the style of Lord Burghersh, 
and after his accession to the earldom in 1859 he retired from 
the service with the rank of colonel He died in August 1891 
and was succeeded by his son, Anthony Mildmay Julian Fane 
(b 1859), as 13th carL 

VBTMORLAND, a north-western county of England, 
bounded N.W. by Cumberland, N.E. for a short distance by 
Durham, E. by Yorkshire, S. and S.W. by Lancashire. It 



reaches the sea in the Kent estuary in Morecambe Bay. The 
area is 786*2 sq. m. Physically the county may be roughly 
divided into four areas. (1) The great upland tract in the north- 
eastern part, bordering on the western margin of Yorkshire 
and part of Durham, consists mainly of a wild moorland area, 
rising to elevations of 2780 ft. in Milburn Forest, 2403 in Dufton 
Fell, 2446 in Hilton Fell, 2024 in Bastifell, 2328 in High Seat, 
2323 in Wild Boar Fell and 2235 in Swarth Fell. (2) The second 
area comprises about a third of the Lake District (q.v.), westward 
from Shap Fells. This area includes High Street (2663 ft.), 
Helvellyn (31 18) and Fairfield (2863), Langdale Pikes (2401) 
and on the boundary Bow Fell (2960), Crinkle Crags (2816) and 
Pike o'Blisco (2304). It must also be taken to cover the elevated 
area on the Yorkshire border which includes the Ravenstonedale 
and Langdale Fells to the N. and the Middleton and Barbon 
Fells to the S., of an intrusive angle of Yorkshire. This area, 
however, which reaches in some points over 2200 ft. of altitude, 
is marked off from the Lake District mountains by the Lune 
valley. All but the lower parts of the valleys within these two 
areas lie at or above 1000 ft. above Ordnance datum; and more 
than half the remainder lies between that elevation and 1750 ft., 
the main mass of high land lying in the area first mentioned. 
(3) The third area includes the comparatively low country 
between the northern slopes of that just described and the edge 
of the uplands to the north-east thereof. This covers the Vale 
of Eden. About three-fifths of this area lies between the 500 
and the 1000 ft. contour. (4) The Kendal area consists mainly 
of undulating lowlands, varied by hills ranging in only a few 
cases up to zooo ft. More than half this area lies below the 
500 ft. contour. Westmorland may thus be said to be divided 
in the middle by uplands ranging in a general south-easterly 
direction, and to be bordered all along its eastern side by the 
elevated moorlands of the Pennine chain. The principal rivers 
are — in the northern area the higher part of the Tecs, the Eden 
with its main tributaries, the Lowther and the Eamont, and in 
the southern area the Lune and the Kent, with their numerous 
tributary becks and gills. The lakes include Windermere, 
part of UUswater, Grasmere, Hawes Water and numerous 
smaller lakes and tarns, which are chiefly confined to the north- 
western parts of the county. Amongst the other physical 
features of more or less interest' are numerous crags and scars, 
chiefly in the neighbourhood of the lakes; others are Mallerstang 
Edge, Helbeck, above B rough; Haikable or High Cup Gill, 
near Appleby; Orton Scars, and the limestone crags west of 
Kirkby Lonsdale. Among the waterfalls are Caldron Snout, 
on the northern confines of the county, flowing over the Whin 
Sill, and Stock Gill Force, Rydal Tails, Skclwith Force, and 
Dungeon Gill Force, all situated amongst the volcanic rocks in 
the west. Hell Gill, near the head of the Eden, and Stenkrith, 
near Kirkby Stephen, are conspicuous examples of natural 
arches eroded by the streams flowing through them. 

Geology. — The diversity of scenery and physical features in this 
county are directly traceable to the influence of geological structure 
In the mountainous north-western portion, which includes the 
heights of Helvellyn, Langdale Pikes, and Bow Fell, and the lakes 
UUswater. Hawes Water, Grasmere and Elterwater. we find the 
great mass of igneous rocks known as the Borrowdalc volcanic 
scries— andesites, basalts and tuffs— of Ordovician age. On the 
northern and north-western sides these volcanic rocks pass into the 
neighbouring county of Cumberland; their southern boundary runs 
north-easterly from the upper end of Windermere by Kent mere and 
past the granitic mass of Shap Fell; thence the boundary turns 
nc^ L •* -^fward ihron eh Rasgill to the east end of UUswater. Narrow 
sti Skiddaw date occur on the south banks of 

Ul ife* and ttinw the Borrowdale rocks for some distance cast of 
Wi ruler mere. A lajye area of Silurian rocks occupies most of the 
south-western part of the county from Windermere to near Raven- 
st< ird to Sedbergh, Kendal and Kirkby Lonsdale. 

The Ordovfciafi and Silurian rocks are bordered on the east and 
sou th by Cirboriifcroas limestone from the river Eamont southward 
through Clif("n. >K p, Crosby Garrett and Ravenstonedale; and 
again aourh o( Km<lal. down the Kent valley and eastward to 
Kirkby Lon.<- i it lying patches of limestone rest on the Silurian 

at t-rayrigg t McAlbmk and elsewhere. The Carboniferous lime* 

Isto-ie ii found again lhi the east side of the Eden valley in Milburn 
Fcre»i. Uuuosi 1 ,-'L Stainmore and Winster FelL Here and there 
in the south-east corner MiUsteae Grit and Shales cap the limestone 



55+ 



WESTMORLAND 



and some little distance east of Brough under Stainmore a small 
patch of Coal Measures remains. At the base of the Carboniferous 
rocks in this county is a red conglomeratic deposit, the lower part 
of which may be regarded as of Old Red Sandstone age; it may be 
traced from UUswater through Butterwick, Rasgill and Tcbav, 
and it appears again at Sedbergh, Barton and around Kendal. In 
the limestones on the east side of the Eden the Great Whin Sill, a 
diabase dike, may be followed for a considerable distance. In the 
Eden valley two sets of red sandstones occur, that on the western 
side is of Permian age and includes the conglomerate beds known as 
" brock ram." The Permian extends as a belt from 4 to 2 m. wide 
between Penrith, Appleby and Kirkby Stephen. The sandstone on 
the eastern side of trie valley is of Bunter age. The eastern side 
of the valley is strongly faulted so that small patches of Ordovician 
and Silurian rocks appear all along the margin of the Carboniferous 
limestone. Evidences of glaciation arc abundant in the form of 
tnorainic accumulations and transported or striated blocks. 

Climate and Agriculture.— The rainfall is very heavy, especially 
In the western part (see Lake District), whence it diminishes 
eastward. Thus at Kendal, on the eastern flank of the Lake District, 
the mean annual rainfall is still as high as 48-71 in., whereas at 
Appleby in the Eden valley it is only 32M5 in. The greater part of 
the county may, however, be considered to lie within an area having 
40 to 60 in. mean annual fall. The average temperature in January 
at Appleby is 35-8° F., but at Windermere it is 37'4*« The summer 
temperature is mild ; thus at the same two points 58-4° and 58*7° 
are recorded. The principal characteristic 01 the climate is the pre- 
ponderance of cloudy, wet and cold days, especially in the spring 
and autumn, — combining to retard the growth of vegetation. The 
late stay of cold winds in the spring has much to do with the same, 
especially in the lowlands extending along the foot of the Cross Fell 
escarpment from Brough north-westwards. The helm-wind iq.v.) 
is characteristic of this district. Scarcely one-half of the total area 
of the county is under cultivation, and of this acreage about five- 
sixths is in permanent pasture, both cattle and sheep being largely 
kept. Large portions of the valleys are well wooded. Nearly the 
whole of the acreage under corn crops is occupied by oats; a little 
barley is grown, but the wheat crop is insignificant. About three- 
fourths of the acreage under green crops is occupied by turnips. The 
meadow-land yields excellent grass. Grass of inferior value char- 
acterizes the pasture-lands: while on the feU (or unenclosed) land, 
except in limestone areas, tne herbage consists chiefly of the coarser 
kinds of grass, bents and heather. These, however, furnish nourish- 
ment for the hardier breeds of sheep, which are pastured there in 
large numbers. It is from the sale of these, of their stock cattle, 
horses and pigs t and of their dairy produce that the staple of the 
farmers' income is derived. A large part of Westmorland was formerly 
in the hands of "statesmen" (see Cumberland) whose holdings were 
Usually of small extent, but were sufficient, with careful management, 
for the respectable maintenance of themselves and their families. 
The proportion of landowners of 'this class has greatly decreased. 

Manufactures. — The manufacturing industries, owing to the 
absence of any large supplies of native fuel, are not numerous. 
The principal is woollen manufacture in one form or another, and 
this is chiefly confined to the low country in and near Kendal. 
Bobbin-making, the manufacture of explosives, fulling, snuff- 
grinding and several small industries are carried on, and use the 
water-power available at so many points. Paper-making is also 
carried on. .The quarries occupy a considerable number of hands at 
various points, as in the case of the green slate quarries which are 
detrimental to the scenery in the lower part of Langdalc. 

Communications. — The main line of the London and North- 
western railway from the south serves Oxenholme (branch to 
Kendal and Windermere), Low Gill (branch to Ingleton in York- 
shire), and Tebay, leaving the county after surmounting the heavy 
gradient at Shap. The Midland main line, with a parallel course, 
serves Appleby. A branch of the North Eastern system from 
Darlington serves Kirkby Stephen and Tebay, and another branch 
connects Kirkby Stephen with Appleby and Penrith. 

! Population and Administration. — The area of the ancient 
county is 503,160 acres, with a population in 1891 of 66,098 
and in iooe of 64,303. The natives are prevalently tall, wiry, 
long-armed, big-handed, dark -grey-eyed and fresh-coloured. 
In disposition they are cautious, reserved and unemotional 
and thrifty beyond measure. The general character of the 
dialects of Westmorland is that of a basis of Anglian speech, 
influenced to a certain extent by the speech current amongst 
the non-Anglian peoples of Strathclyde. This is overlaid to a 
much greater though variable extent by the more decidedly 
Scandinavian forms of speech introduced at various periods 
between the 10th and the 12th centuries. Three well-marked 
dialects can be made out. 

The area of the administrative county is 505,330 acres. 
The county contains four wards (corresponding to hundreds). 
The municipal boroughs are Appleby, the county town (pop. 



1764) and Kendal (14,183). The urban districts are Ambleside 
(3536), Bowness and Windermere (5061), Grasmere (781), 
Kirkby Lonsdale (1638) and Shap (1226). The county is in the 
northern circuit, and assizes are held at Appleby. It has one 
court of quarter sessions, and is divided into five petty sessional 
divisions. The borough of Kendal has a separate commission 
of the peace. There are 115 civil parishes. Westmorland is in 
the diocese of Carlisle, and contains 86 ecclesiastical parishes 
or districts, wholly or in part. There are two parliamentary 
divisions, Northern or Appleby and Southern or Kendal, each 
returning one member. 

History.— The earliest English settlements in 'the district 
which is now Westmorland were effected by the Anglian tribes 
who entered Yorkshire by the Humber in the 6th century and 
laid the foundations of the kingdom of Deira, which included 
within its bounds that portion of Westmorland afterwards 
known as the barony of Kendal. The northern district, corre- 
sponding to the later barony of Appleby, meanwhile remained 
unconquered, and it was not until the close of the 7th century 
that Ecgfrith drove out the native Britons and established the 
Northumbrian supremacy over the whole district. With the 
Danish invasions of the 9th century the Kendal district was 
included in the Danelaw, while the barony of Appleby formed 
a portion of the land of Carlisle. The first mention of Westmor- 
land in the Saxon Chronicle occurs under 966, when it was 
harried by Thored son of Gunnar, the term here applying only 
to the barony of Appleby, which at this period was being exten- 
sively colonized by Norwegian settlers, traces of whose occupation 
are especially noticeable in the place-names of the Lake District. 

The Domesday Survey describes only the barony of Kendal 
which appears as part of Amounderness in Yorkshire. Before 
the Conquest it had formed part of the earldom of Tostig of 
Northumbria, and had been bestowed by William I. on Roger 
of Poitou, but, owing to the forfeiture of his estates by the 
latter, at the time of the survey h was in the hands of the crown. 
The annexation of the northern portion of Westmorland to the 
crown of England was accomplished by William Rufus, who m 
109a drove out Dolfin from the land of Carlisle, and fortified 
Brough-under-Stainmore, Brougham, Appleby and Pendragon. 
In the reign of Henry I. the barony of Appleby was included in 
the grant to Ranulph Meschin of the earldom of Carlisle, but on 
the accession of Ranulph to the earldom of Chester in x 120 it 
was surrendered to the crown, and its inclusion in the pipe 
roll of X131 shows that Westmorland was now definitely estab- 
lished on the administrative basis of an English county. 

The barony of Kendal was held in the 12th century by the 
Mowbrays, and from them passed to the family of Lancaster, 
who held it as of the honour of Westmorland. In the 13th 
century it was separated into two moieties; the Lindsay moiety 
which passed from the Lindsays to the Copelands and Coucys 
and in the reign of Henry VI. to the Beauforts and Richmond!, 
whence was derived its later name of Richmond Fee; the Brus 
moiety, which became subdivided into the Marquis Fee held by 
the Parr family, ancestors of Katherine Parr, and the Lumley 
Fee which passed from the Thwengs to the Lumleys and Hothams. 
The barony of Appleby, with the hereditary shrievalty, was 
bestowed by King John on the family of Veteripont, from whom 
it pasted by female descent to the Cliffords in the 13th century, 
and in the i6lh century to the Tuftons, afterwards earls of 
Thanet, who retained the dignity until their descendant, Mr 
Barham of Trecwn, yielded his rights to the crown. 

The division of Westmorland into wards originated with the 
system of defence against the inroads of the Scots, each barony 
being divided into two wards, and each ward placed under a 
high constable, who presided over the wards to be maintained 
at certain fords and other appointed places. The barony of 
Kendal was divided into Kendal and Lonsdale wards, and the 
barony of Appleby, called the Bottom, into east and west wards, 
there being anciently a middle ward between these last two. 
The shire court and assizes for the county were held at Appleby. 

The barony of Appleby was included in the diocese of York 
from the 7th century, and in 1291 formed the deaneries of 



WESTON— WEST ORANGE 



555 



Lonsdale and Kendal within the archdeaconry of Richmond. 
The barony of Appleby, which had been bestowed by Henry I. 
m the see of Carlisle, formed in x 201 the deanery of Westmorland 
within the archdeaconry and diocese of Carlisle. The barony of 
Kendal was placed by Henry VIII. in his new diocese of Chester, 
of which it remained a part until in 1856 it was constituted 
the archdeaconry of Westmorland within the diocese of Carlisle. 
In 1859 the Westmorland portion of the archdeaconry of Carlisle 
was subdivided into the deaneries of Appleby, Kirkby Stephen 
and Lowther; and the additional deanery of Ambleside was 
formed within the archdeaconry of Westmorland. The only 
religious foundation of any importance in Westmorland was the 
Premonstratensian house at Shap founded by Thomas, son. of 
Gospatrk, in the 1 ath century. 

The early political history of Westmorland after the Conquest 
b a record of continuous inroads and devastations from the 
Scots. In the Scottish invasion of the northern counties which 
followed the battle of Bannockburn Brough and Appleby were 
burnt, and the county was twice harried by Robert Bruce in the 
ensuing years. In 1385 a battle was fought at Hoff near Appleby 
against the Scots under Earl Douglas, and in 1388, after Otter- 
burn, the Scots sacked Appleby with such effect that ninc- 
tenths of it lay in ruins and was never rebuilt. In the Wars of 
the Rosea, Westmorland, under the Clifford influence, inclined to 
favour the Lancastrian cause, but was not actively concerned in 
the struggle. In the Civil War of the 17th century the chief 
families of the county were royalist, and in 1641 Anne, countess of 
Pembroke, hereditary high sheriff of the county, garrisoned 
Appleby Castle for the king, placing it in charge of Sir Philip 
Musgrave, the colonel of the train-bands of Westmorland and 
Cumberland. In 164a a memorial was presented to Charles 
signed by nearly 5000 of the inhabitants of Westmorland and 
Cumberland protesting their loyalty and readiness to sacrifice 
their lives and fortunes in bis service. Appleby Cast^surrendered 
in 1648, but the strength of the royalist feeling was shown in the 
joy which greeted the news of the Restoration, the mayor of 
Appleby publicly destroying the charter which the town had 
received from Cromwell. The Jacobite rising of 1 74 5 found many 
adherents in Westmorland, and a skirmish took place on Clifton 
Moor between the forces of Lord George Murray and the duke of 
Cumberland. 

The economic development of Westmorland, both on. account 
of natural disadvantages and of the ravages of border strife, 
has been slow and unimportant; the rugged and barren nature 
of the ground being unfavourable to agricultural prosperity, 
while the lack of fuel hindered the growth of manufactures. 
Sheep-farming was carried on in the moorland districts, however, 
and the Premonstratensian house at Shap supplied wool to the 
Florentine and Flemish markets m the 13th and 14th centuries. 
The clothing industry, which spread from Kendal to the sur- 
rounding districts, is said to have been introduced by one John 
Kempe of Flanders, who settled there in the reign of Edward III., 
and a statute of 1465 alludes to cloths of a distinct make being 
manufactured at Kendal. In 1589 the county suffered severely 
from the ravages of the plague, 2500 deaths being recorded in 
the deanery of Kendal alone. Speed, writing in the 1 7th century, 
says of Westmorland that " it is* not commended either for 
plenty of corn or cattle, being neither stored with arable grounds 
to bring forth the one, nor pasturage to lead up the other; the 
principal profit that the people of this province raise unto 
themselves is by clothing." The comb manufacture was estab- 
lished at Kendal in 1700, and about the same time the develop- 
ment of the boot and shoe trade to some extent supplemented 
the loss consequent on the decline of the clothing industry 
There were two paper-mills at MUnthorpe in 1777, one of which 
existed eighty years before. 

Westmorland returned two knights for the county to the parlia- 
ment of xaoo, and in 1295 two burgesses for the borough of 
Appleby. Under the Reform Act of 1832 Appleby was dis- 
franchised and Kendal returned one member. 

Antiquities.— Notable ecclesiastical buildings are almost 
C&tirely wanting In Westmorland, though mention may be 



made of the ruins of Shap Abbey, which Kes near the small 
market town of that name in the bleak upper valley of the 
Lowther. The Perpendicular western tower and other fragments 
remain. Late Norman work is preserved in some of the churches, 
as at Kirkby Lonsdale, and in a few castles. Among the castles, 
those at Appleby, Brough, Brougham and Kendal are notable, 
but examples are numerous.' Among old houses, Levens Hall 
dates from the 16th century, and Sixergh Hall embodies part 
of an ancient castle; both are in the Kendal district. The formal 
gardens at Levens Hall are remarkable. Lowther Castle, near 
Penrith, the seat of the earl of Lonsdale, is a fine modern mansion , 
in a Gothic style more satisfactory in broad 'effect than in detail. 

See Joseph Nicholson and EetfraM Burn, The fffrfrrv and Attti- 
auities of the Cpitiutts of Wcilmofiind and CumherUnd (3 volt., 
London, 1777) j William WhclUn, The Htitmy and Tf>pc t tapky ef 
the Counties of Cumberland &n4 WestmmlM { Port cf rati, i«Go); 
Transactions of the Cumberland and iVtjtwtend Antiquarian and 
Archaeological Soiuty {Kendal* 1870, &c) ; (t S. Frreu^jn, Hutory 
of Westmorland (Popular County |JS*rori«, 1B94) : Sir D. Fleming 
Description of Wciimetl&nd (1671); T, Gibton, Lfrendi omd Nclts 
on Places of Nctih WtJitmarland (London, i&$j), M, W Taylor. 
Manorial Halls of Wcilmwltind fKrnd<il h IH$2); T. Ell wood, ia«rf* 
name Booh of Iceland a it mwflrvtrs the Diaftrt and Antiquiiiet i*f 
Westmorland (Kendal, 1S94); YLioria County UiitoTy, WeitniortatoL 

WESTON, THOMAS (1 737-1 776), English actor, was the son 
of a cook. His first London appearance was about 1759, and 
from 1763 until his death he was admitted to be the most amusing 
comedian on the English stage. Foote wrote for him the part 
of Jerry Sneak in the Mayor of Garratt. Abel Dreggcr In the 
Alchemist was one of his famous performances; and Garrick, 
who also played this part, praised him highly for it. 

WESTON-SUPER-MARE, a seaside resort in the Wells parlia- 
mentary division of Somersetshire, England, on the Bristol 
Channel, 137I m. W. by S. of London by the Great Western rail- 
way. Pop. of urban district (1001), 19,048. It is built partly on 
level ground near the shore, and partly 00 the slopes of Worlcbury 
Hill, which aids in giving shelter from the north and east. 
Among the fir-clad slopes of the neighbourhood, which command 
a fine view of the Welsh hills across the Channel, there are many 
beautiful walks' and drives. An esplanade extends for about 
3 m., and public gardens have been laid out on Worlebury Hill, 
from the far end of which a long pier projects, linking the rocky 
islet of Birnbcck to the town. Grove Park, once the manor- 
house, is owned by the council, and is used as a free library, 
its grounds being open. Other institutions include a museum 
opened in honour of Queen Victoria's Diamond Jubilee, 
and the West of England Sanatorium, to which two large 
conservatories are attached, as a winter-garden for invalids. 
The town has long been famous for its potteries, and there are 
mineral water-works and fisheries. Large quantities of sprats 
are caught. Intermittent springs exist in Weston, which are 
affected by the ebb and flow of the tide. 

WEST ORANGE, a town of Essex county, New Jersey, U.S.A., 
in the NX. part of the state, about 13 m. W. of New York City. 
Pop. (1890) 4358, (1900) 6889 (1772 foreign-born); (1905, state 
census) 787a; (1910) 10,080. It is served by the Orange branch 
of the Erie railroad, and is connected with neighbouring towns 
and cities by electric lines. The town has an area of about 
7 sq. m. It is crossed in a N E. and S.W. direction by two ridges 
— the First (also called the Orange or Wat c hung) Mountain and 
the Second Mountain. Eagle Rock (about 650 f t.) , on the summit 
of First Mountain, commands a splendid view. On the eastern 
slope of First Mountain are Hutton Park, containing the grounds 
of the Essex County Country Club, and Llewellyn Park, a beauti- 
ful residential tract of 750 acres, named in honour of its originator, 
Llewellyn S. Haskell (1815-1872). West Orange has various 
manufactures, including phonographs, lawn mowers and felt 
hats. In 1862 pails of the townships of Orange, Caldwell and 
Livingston were united into a new township named FairmounL 
In 1863 another part of Orange was added and the name of the 
new township was changed to West Orange. In 1000 West 
Orange was chartered as a town. 

See H. Whittemore, The Founders and Builders of the Oranges 
(Newark, 1896). 



556 



WESTPHAL-^WESTPHALIA 



VESTPHAL, RUDOLF (1826-1893), German classical scholar, 
was born at Obernkircben in Schaumburg on the 3rd of July 
1826 He studied at Marburg and Tubingen, and 'was professor 
at Breslau (185&-1862) and Moscow (1875-1879). He subse- 
quently lived at Buckeburg, and died at Stadthagen in Schaum- 
burg-Lippe on the zoth of July 1892. Westphal was a man of 
varied attainments, but his chief claim to remembrance rests 
upon his contributions on Greek music and metre. His chief 
works are. Gricckisdu Metrik (3rd ed., 1885-1889); System der 
ciUikcn Rkytkmik (1865), Hephaestion's De mdris enchiridion 
(1866); Aristoxenus of Tartntum (translation and commentary, 
1 883-1893, vol. ii. befrig edited after his death by F. Saran); 
Die Musih des picckiscken Altertums (1883), AUgemeine 
Metrik der indogcrmaniscke* und semitisckem VSlker (1892). 
He made translations of Catullus (1870) and of Aristophanes' 
Ackamiaus (1889), in which he successfully reproduced the 
D orismsi n Plaltdcutsch. 

WESTPHALIA (Ger. Wcstfale*), a province of the kingdom 
of Prussia. The ancient duchy and the Napoleonic kingdom 
of the same name, neither of which was conterminous with the 
modern province, are dealt with in the historical part of this 
article. The area of the province is 7801 sq. m., its length both 
from N. to S. and from E. to W. is about 130 m., and it is bounded 
N. by Hanover, E. by Schaumburg-Lippe, Hanover, Lippe- 
Detmold, Brunswick, Hesse-Nassau and Waldeck, S. and S.W. 
by Hesse-Nassau and the Rhine Province, and N.W. by the 
kingdom of the Netherlands. 

Nearly half of Westphalia is an extension of the great North- 
German plain, which here stretches S.E. into an acute angle enclosed 



on the 1 



E. by the long low range of the Teutoburger Wald and its 
ition the Eggegebirge, and on the & by the line of 



w . - - — »w-w ^» •■*■ **" +*~ ** "J *"* »»^ **» 

hills called the Haar or Haaretrang, which divides the basins of the 
Lippe and Ruhr. The Westphalian plain b broken by extensive 
outcrops of the underlying cretaceous beds, and b not very fertile, 
except in the Hellweg, a tone between the Haarstrang and the 
Lippe. There are extensive fens in the N. and W., and N. of Pader- 
born b a sandy waste called the Senne. The plain is drained in the 
N. by the Ems and in the S. by the Lippe, which rise dose together 
in the Teutoburger Wald. Between their basins are the Vechte and 
other small rivers Bowing into the Zuider Zee. The triangalar 
southern portion of Westphalia, most of which b included in Sauer- 
land (" south land "), b a rugged region of slate hilb and wooded 
valleys drained chiefly by the Ruhr with its affluents the Lenne, 
Mdhne, Ac, and in the S. by the Sieg and Eder. The hilb rise in 
the S.E. to the Rotlager or Rothaaigebirge. culminating in the 
Wmterberg plateau with the Kahler Asten (2713 ft.), the highest 
summit in the province. The Rotlagergebtrge, Eggegebirge and 
Teutoburger Wald form with some intermediate ranges the water- 
shed between the basin of the Weser and those of the Rhine and 
Ems. In the N.E. corner of the province the Weser divides the 
Wbhengebirge from the Wesergebtrge by the narrow pass called 
Porta Westfalic*. 

The climate b temperate except in the south, which b cold in 
winter and has a heavy ninfalL Of the total area 43% b occupied 
*-y arable land and gardens, 18% by meadows and pastures and 

\% by forests. The best agricultural land b In the Hellweg and 
the Weser basin. The number of peasant proprietors b propor- 
tionately greater than in any other part of Prussia, and as a class 
they are well-to-do. The crops include grain of aH lands (not 
sufficient, however, for the needs of the province), peas and beans, 
buckwheat, potatoes, fruit and hemp. The cultivation of flax b 
very extensive, especially in the N.E. Swine, which are reared in 
great numbers in the plains, yield the famous Westphalian bams; 
and the rearing of cattle and goats b important. The breeding of 
horses b fostered by the government. 

The mineral wealth b very great, especially in coal and iron. 
The production of coal b greater than that of any otherprovince 



»■ 



Ruhr coal-field extends from the Rhin 
far as Unna, the centre beinj 



of Prussia, and amounted in 1006 to 53,ooo t 

from the Rhindand into the 

. t being Dortmund, and there ba sm 

coal-field in the N. at IbbenbGren. The prod u c t ion of iron ore. 



province 

is a smal 



chiefly & of the Ruhr (1,360,000 tons in 1905) b exceeded in Prussia 
only by that of the Rhine province. After coal and iron the most 
valuable minerals are zinc, lead, pyrites' and copper. Antimony, 
quicksilver, stone, marble, slate and potter's clay are also worked, 
and there are brine springs in the Hellweg and mineral springs at 
Upnsnringe, Oynhausen. ftc 

The manufacturing industry of the province, which chiefly 
depends upon its mineral wealth, b very extensive. Iron and steel 
goods are produced in the so-called " Enneper Strasse," the valley 
of the Ennepe. a ssaalt tributary of the Ruhr with the town of Hagen. 
and m the neighbouring towns of Bochum, Dortmund, Iserlohn and 
Alteon, and also in the Siegen district. The brass and bronze 



industries are carried on at Iserlohn and Akena. those of tin and 

are made 1 " 



Britannia metal at Ludenseheid; needles are 1 



i at Iserlohn and 



wire at Altena. The very important linen industry of Bielefeld. 
Herford, Minden and Warendorf has nourished in this region since 
the 14th century. Jute b manufactured at Bielefeld and cotton 
goods in the W. Paper b extensively made on the lower Lenne, 
and leather around Stegen. Other manufactures are glass, chemicals, 
sugar, sausages and cigars. An active trade b promoted by several 
trunk lines of railway which cross the provi n ce (total mileage an 



1006, 1889 m., exclusive of light railways) and by the navigation of 
the Weser (on which Minden has a port). Ems, Ruhr and Lippe. 
Beverungen b the chief market for corn and Paderborn for wooL 

The population in. 1905 was 3,618,090, or 464 per sq. m. It 
is very unevenly distributed, and in the industrial districts 
is increasing very rapidly. In recent years there has been a great 
influx of Poles into these parts, attracted by the higher wages. 
In 1900 they already numbered more than 100,000. Between 
1895 and 1900 the mean annual increase of the population was 
3*3%, the highest recorded in the German empire, but bet w een 
1900 and 1905 it fell to 2-5%- The percentage of illegitimate 
births (2-6) b the lowest in Germany. 51-0% of the inhabitants 
are Roman Catholics, 47*9% Protestants. The distribution 
of the two communions still closely follows the fines of the settle* 
meat at the peace of Westphalia. Thus the former docby of 
Wcstphaha and the bishoprics of Munster and Paderborn which 
remained in ecclesiastical hands are almost entirely Roman 
Catholic, while the secularized bishopric of Minden and the former 
counties of Ravensberg and Mark, which fell or had fallen to 
Brandenburg, and the Siegen district, which belonged to Nassau, 
arepredominantly Protestant. 

The province b divided into the three go ve rnmental departments 
(Jbftcrjrsjgsocstrae) of Minden, Munster and Arnsberg. Munster b 
the seat of gover nmen t and of the provincial university. West- 
phalia returns thirty-one members to the Prussian Lower House 
and seventeen to the Reichstag. 

The inhabitants are mainly of the Saxon stock and speak Low 
German dialects, except in the Upper Fiankbh district around 
Siegen , wherejthe Hessian dialect b spoken. 

Westphalia, " the western plain" (in early records Wcstfalakt), 
was originally the name of the western province of the early 
duchy of Saxony, including the western portion of the modern 
province and extending north to the borders of Friesland. 
When Duke Henry the Lion of Saxony fell under the ban of the 
empire in 1 180, and his duchy was divided, the bishops of Munster 
and Paderborn became princes of the empire, and the archbishop 
of Cologne, Philip of Heinsberg, received from the emperor 
Frederick L the Sauerland and some other districts which became 
the duchy of Westphalia. Within the duchy were some in- 
dependent secular territories, notably the county of Mark, while 
other districts were held as fiefs from the archbishops, afterwards 
electors. From 1368 the electors themselves held the county of 
Arnsberg as an imperial fief. The duchy received a constitution 
of its own, and was governed for the elector by a marshal (Land* 
marschaU, after 1480 Landdrost) who was also stadtbolder, 
and presided over the Westphalian chancellery. This system 
lasted till 1803. By Maximilian's administrative organization of 
the empire in 1500 the duchy of Westphalia was included as an 
appanage of Cologne in the scattered circle of the Lower Rhine. 
The Westphalian circle which was formed at the same time com- 
prised nearly all the rest of the modern province (including Mark) 
and the lands north of it between the Weser and the frontier of the 
Netherlands, also yerden, Schaumburg, Nassau, Wied, Lippe, 
Berg, Oeves, Julich, Liege, Bouillon and Cambrai. 

Brandenburg laid the foundations of her dominion in West- 
phalia by obtaining the counties of Mark and Ravensberg in 
1614 (confirmed 1666), to which the bishopric of Minden was 
added by the peace of Westphalia in 1648 and Tccklcnburg in 
1707. By the settlement of 1803 the church lands were secular- 
ised, and Prussia received the bishopric of Paderborn and the 
eastern part of Munster, while the electoral duchy of Westphalia 
was given to Hesse-Darmstadt. 

After the peace of Tilsit the kingdom of Westphalia was 
created by Napoleon I. 00 the xSth of August 1807, and given 
to his brother Jerome (see Bonapaktx). It included the present 
governmental department of Minden, but by far the larger part 
of the kingdom lay outside and chiefly to the east of the modem 



WESTPHALIA, TREATY OF 



557 



province, and comprised the Hanoverian department of HHdcs- 
heim and in part that of Arcnsberg, Brunswick, the northern part 
of the province of Saxony as far as the Elbe, Halle, and most of 
Hessc-Cassel. The area was 14,627 sq. m., and the population 
nearly two millions. Cassel was the capital. A constitution 
oa the French imperial pattern granted by the king remained 
practically inoperative, an arbitrary bureaucratic regime was 
instituted, the finances were from the beginning in a hopeless 
condition, and the country was drained of men and money for 
Napoleon's wars. In January 1810 most of Hanover was added, 
but at the end of the same year half the latter, together with the 
city of Minden, was annexed to the French empire. There had 
already been serious revolts and raids, and after the battle of 
Leipzig the Russians drove the king from Cassel (October 1813), 
the kingdom of Westphalia was dissolved and the old order was 
for a time re-established. At the congress of Vienna (1815) 
Hesse-Darmstadt surrendered her share of Westphalia to Prussia, 
and the present province was constituted. 
See Wedditen, WettfaUn. band und Lent* (Paderborn, 1896); 
Btimatskundederfrcmnz WestfaUn (Minden^ 1900); 



G. SchuUe, 
Lembere, Die Hutten 



und KteldUindustrie Rheinlands und 



Vestfalen im ifitm JahrhundeH 



felens (4th ed., Dortmund, 1905); I. S. Seibcrtz, Lander- und 
" ■ sWe 



tUeklsfescksckH dts Hertfums Westfaien (4 vols., Amsbcrv, 1839- 
187$); It Wilmans, Die Kaiserurkunden dcr Pnmue WestfaUu 
(2 vols., Munstcr, 1867-1881); M. Janscn. Die HenotsgewaU der 
Enbischafe ven Kdln in WestfaUn (Munich. 1895); Holzapfcl, Das 
Kdnitreich Westfalen (Magdeburg, 1895): G. Servifres, L'AUemagne 
fnnfaise sous Napoieon I' (Paris, 1904) ; HasclhoJE, Die Entwidulttnt 

der UndcskuUur im der Provinz Wei 

(Mil n>ter, 1900). 

WESTPHALIA, TREATY OF. a collective name given to the 
two treaties concluded on the 24th of October 1648 by the 
empire with France at Mttnster and with Sweden and the Pro- 
testant estates of the empire at Osnabruck, by which the Thirty 
Years' War (9.*.) was brought to an end. 
- As early as 1636 negotiations had been opened at Cologne 
at the instance of Pope Urban VIU., supported by the seigniory 
of Venice, but failed owing to the disinclination of Richelieu to 
stop the progress of the French arms, and to the refusal of 
Sweden to treat with the papal legate. In 1637 the agents of the 
emperor began, to negotiate at Hamburg with Sweden, though the 
mediation of Christian IV., king of Denmark, was rejected by 
Sweden, and the discussions dragged on for years without result. 
In the meantime the new emperor Ferdinand HI. proposed at the 
diet of Regensburg in 1640 to extend the peace of Prague to the 
whole empire, on the basts of an amnesty, from which, however, 
those Protestant estates who were still leagued with foreign 
powers were to be excluded. His aim was by settling the internal 
affairs of the empire to exclude the German princes from 
participation in negotiations with foreign powers; but these 
efforts had no result. 

A move practical suggestion was made by the Comte d'Avaux, 
the French envoy at Hamburg, who proposed in 1641 that the 
negotiations at Cologne and Hamburg should be transferred to 
Monster and OsnabrOck, two cities in the Westphalian circle 
not more than jo m. apart. A preliminary treaty embodying this 
proposal was concluded between the representatives of the 
emperor, France and Sweden at Hamburgon the * 5th of December 
1641. A dispute as to precedence between France and Sweden, 
sad the refusal of the latter power to meet the papal nuncio, 
.made the choice of a single meetingrplace impossible. It was 
arranged, however, that the two assemblies should be regarded as 
a single congress, and that neither should conclude peace without 
the other. 

The date fixed for the meeting of the two conventions was 
the nth of July 1643. but many months elapsed before all the 
representatives arrived, and the settlement of many questions 
of precedence and etiquette caused further delays. England, 
Poland, Muscovy and Turkey were the only European powers 
unrepresented. The war continued during the deliberations, 
which were influenced by its fortunes. 

The chief representative of the emperor was Count Maximilian 
von Trautmaasdorff, to whose sagacity the conclusion of peace 
.was largely due. The French envoys were nominally under 

AX TBI IO 



Henry of Orleans, duke of Uhguevitte, but the msrftnis de 
Sable and the comte d'Avaux were the real agents of France. 
Sweden was represented by John Oxenstierna, son of the chan- 
cellor, and by John Adler Salvius, who had previously acted for 
Sweden at Hamburg. The papal nuncio was Fabio Chigi, 
afterwards Pope Alexander VU. Brandenburg, represented 
by Count Johann von Sayn-Wittgenstem, played the foremost 
part among the Protestant states of the empire. On the 1st of 
June 164s France and Sweden brought forward propositions of 
peace, which were discussed by the estates of the empire from 
October 1645 to April 1646. The settlement of religious matters 
was effected between February 1646 and March 1648. The 
treaty was signed at Mttnster by the members of both conventions 
on the 84th of October 1648* and ratifications were exchanged 
on the 8th of February 1649. The papal protest of January 3, 
1651, was disregarded. 

The results were determined In the first place by the support 
given to each other by France and Sweden in their demands for 
indemnification, the concession of which necessitated compensa- 
tion to the German states affected, and secondly by the deter- 
mination of France to weaken the power of the emperor while 
strengthening the Roman Catholic states, especially Bavaria. 

Sweden received western Pomcrania with Rugen and the 
mouths of the Oder, Wtsmar and Poel, in Mecklenburg, and the 
lands of thearchbishopric of Bremen and the bishopric of Verden, 
together with an indemnity of 5*00,000 thaler*, The privileges 
of the Free Towns were preserved. Sweden thus obtained control 
of the Baltic and a footing on the North Sea, and became an 
estate of the empire with three deliberative voices in the 
diet. 

The elector of Brandenburg received the greater part of 
eastern Pomerania, and, as he had a claim on the whole duchy 
since the death of the last duke in 1635, he was indemnified by 
the bishoprics of Halberstadt, Minden and Kammin, and the 
reversion of the archbishopric of Magdeburg, which came to him 
on the death of the administrator, Prince Augustus of Saxony, 
in 16&0. The elector of Saxony was allowed to retain Lusati*. 
As compensation for Wismar, Mecklenburg-Schwerin obtained 
the bishoprics of Schwcrin and Ratseburg and some lands of the 
Knights of St John. Bmnswick-Luneburg restored Hildesheim 
to the elector of Cologne, and gave Minden to Brandenburg, but 
obtained the alternate succession to the bishopric of Osnabruck 
amltheehurchlandsofWalkenriedandGrdnuigen. Hesee-Gsssel 
received the prince-abbacy of Hersfeld, the county of Schaunv 
burg,&c< The elector of Bavaria was confirmed in his possession 
of the Upper Palatinate, and in his position as an elector which 
he had obtained in 1625. Charles Louis, the son and heir of 
Frederick V., the count palatine of the Rhine, who had been placed 
under the ban of the empire, received back the Lower Palatinate, 
and a new electorate, the eighth, was created for him. 

France obtained the recognition of the sovereignty (which she 
had enjoyed de facto since 155a) over the bishoprics and cities of 
Met*, Toul and Verdun, Pinerolo in Piedmont, the town .of 
Breisach, the landgraviate of Upper and Lower Alsace, the 
Sundgau, the advocacy (Laudvogtn) of the ten imperial cities in 
Alsace, and the right to garrison Philippsburg. During the 
Thirty Years' War France had professed to be fighting against 
the house of Austria, and not against the empire. It was 
stipulated that the immediate possessions of the empire in 
Alsace should remain in enjoyment of their liberties (in m 
Ubertote el possession* immedieiatis erga imperwm Remanum, 
qua kacUnus gavisas sunt), but it was added as a condition that 
the sovereignty of France in the territories ceded to her should 
not be impaired (t/o lamen, stt praesenii hoe declaration* nihil 
dcUactalum inleUigaiur de to omtti tupremi dominii (we, quod 
supra concessum est). The intention of France was to acquire 
the full rights of Austria in Alsace, but as Austria had never 
owned the landgraviate of Lower Alsace, and the Landwgtci of 
the ten free cities did not in itself imply possession, the door was 
left open for disputes. Louis XIV. afterwards availed himself 
of this ambiguous clause in support of his aggressive policy on the 
Rhine. The independence of Switzerland was at last formally 

2a 



55? 



WEST POINT 



recognised, as was that of the United Netherlands in a separate 
treaty signed by Spain at Monster. 

Apart from these territorial changes, a universal and uncon- 
ditional amnesty to all those who had been deprived of their 
possessions was declared, and it was decreed that all secular lands 
should be restored to those who had held them in 1618. Some 
exceptions were made in the case of the hereditary dominions of 
the emperor. 

Even more important than the territorial redistribution was 
the ecclesiastical settlement. By the confirmation of the treaty 
of Passau of 155* and the religious peace of Augsburg of 1555, 
and the extension of their provisions to the Reformed (Calvinist) 
Church, toleration was secured for the three great religious 
communities of the empire. Within these limits the governments 
were bound to allow at bast private worship, liberty of 
conscience and the right of emigration, but these measures 
of toleration were not extended to the hereditary lands of the 
house of Habsburg. The Protestant minority in the imperial diet 
was not to be coerced by the majority, but religious questions 
were to be decided by amicable agreement. Protestant adminis- 
trators of church lands obtained seats in the diet. Religious 
parity was established in the imperial chamber (Reickskammer- 
getuht), and in the imperial deputations and commissions. 

The difficult question of the ownership of spiritual lands 
was decided by a compromise. The edict of restitution of 1620 
was annulled. In Wttrttemberg, Baden and the Palatinate these 
lands were restored to the persons who had held them in 1618 or 
their successors, but for the rest of the empire possession was 
determined by the fact of occupation on the 1st of January 1624 
(annus decretorius or normal year). By the provision that a 
prince should forfeit his lands if he changed his religion an 
obstacle was placed in the way of a further spread of the Reforma- 
tion. The declaration that all protests or vetoes by whomsoever 
pronounced should be null and void dealt a blow at the inter- 
vention of the Roman curia in German affairs. 

The constitutional changes made by the treaty had far-reaching 
effects. The territorial sovereignty of the states of the empire 
was recognised. They were empowered to contract treaties with 
one another and with foreign powers, provided that the emperor 
and the empire suffered no prejudice. By this and other changes 
the princes of the empire became absolute sovereigns in their 
own dominions. The emperor and the diet were left with a mere 
shadow of their former power. The emperor could not pronounce 
the ban of the empire without the consent of the diet. The diet, 
In which the 61 imperial cities gained the right of voting on all 
Imperial business, and thus were put on an equality with the 
princes, retained its legislative and fiscal powers in name, but 
practically lost them by the requirement of unanimity among the 
three colleges, which, moreover, were not to give their several 
decisions by majorities of their members, but by agreement 
between them. 

Not only was the central authority replaced almost entirely 
try the sovereignty of about 300 princes, but the power of the 
empire was materially weakened in other ways. It lost about 
40,000 sq. m.of territory, and obtained a frontier against France 
which was incapable of defence. Sweden and France as 
guarantors of the peace acquired the right of interference in the 
affairs of the empire, and the former gained a voice in its councils. 
For many years Germany thus became the principal theatre of 
European diplomacy and war. But if the treaty of Westphalia 
pronounced the dissolution of the old order in the empire, it 
facilitated the growth of new powers in its component parts, 
especially Austria, Bavaria and Brandenburg. 

The treaty was recognised as a fundamental law of the German 
constitution, and formed the basis of all subsequent treaties until 
the dissolution of the empire. 

Sec the text in Dumont, Corps untversd diplomatique (TheHa| 
17*6-1731), vi. 430 ff.; J. G. von Mciern, Acta parti Wetti ' 
public* (6 vol*., Hanover and Gdttingcn, 1734-1736), 
pacis Caesare+Stucuas et Caesar*o4*allic*t (Gottii 



foci 
^A 
fort, 



„„ _ (GOttineen, 1738): 

A. A. " (Bishop Adam Adamil. Arcana pacts Westpkaltcat (Frank- 
trt, t6o8), edited by J. G. von Mefern (Leiprig, 1737); K. T. Heigel. 
Das WeitfathclieFriadeiunrerk von 1643-1648 "in the Ztibchnft 



fir Cesckuhte mud PdUik (i88t); F. PhKppi and others. Jw 
WcMfaliuhe Fruden. tin Gtdenkbuck (Mflnater, 1898): JmrmU dm 
Contrcs de ifunster par F. Otter, aumOnier du comte dAvaux&\\itd 
by A. Boppe (Paris, 1893): Cambridge Modern History % iv. p. 395 ff. 
and bibliography, p. 866 ff.; J. Bryce, The Holy Roman Empire. 
ch. xix. (A, B. Go.) 

WEST POINT, a village and military post, in Orange county, 
New York, U.S.A., on the west bank of the Hudson river, 
50 m. above New York City. It is served by the West Shore 
railway, and is connected by ferry with the New York Central 
railway at Garrison. The. United States Military Academy 
occupies a plateau 180 ft. above the river, reached by a roadway 
cut into the cliff and commanding a view up and down the river 
for many miles. Between 1002 and 1008 Congress appropriated 
about $7,500,000 for the reconstruction of the academy, but 
most of the old buildings of historic interest have been incor- 
porated. The Headquarters Building and Grant Hall (the mess 
hall) contain portraits of famous A mericen soldiers. The military 
library is one of the finest in existence (80,000 volumes in 1910), 
and its building contains interesting memorials, by Saint 
Gaudens, to J. McNeill Whistler and Edgar Allan Poe, both 
former cadets in the academy. Cullum Memorial Hall (1899) 
was the gift of Major-General George Washington Cullum 
(1809-1892), superintendent of the academy in 1864-1866. 
Opposite it is a monument (1845) to Major F. L. Dade's command 
of no men who were ambushed and killed by the Seminole 
Indians in Florida in December 1835. In the S.E. corner of the 
parade ground (60 acres) is a granite statue to Colonel Sylvan us 
Thayer (1785-1872), who was superintendent of the academy 
from 1817 to 1833. In the N.W. angle is the bronre statue (1868) 
of Major-General John Sedgwick, U.S. Volunteers, who was 
killed by a sharpshooter, on the oth of May 1864, while making 
a personal reconnaissance at Spottsylvania. Between Trophy 
Point and the hotel is the Battle Monument (1874, 78 ft. high, 
surmounted by a statue of Victory by MacMonnies), a memorial 
to the soldiers of the regular army who died in the Civil War. 
Above the cliff towards the N. and E. of the plain is Fort Clinton; 
in its E. front stands a monument erected in 1828 by the Corps 
of Cadets to Kosciuszko, who planned the original fortifications 
here in 1778. About 1 m. N. of the academy is u West Point 
Cemetery " (about 14 acres) on the E. angle of an elevated plain 
overlooking the river, formerly known as " German Flats," 
in which rest the remains of Thayer, Winfield Scott, Robert 
Anderson and other distinguished soldiers. The Cadet Monument 
(i8t7) stands on the E. angle overlooking the river. High abwve 
the academy on Mount Independence (400 ft.) still stands old 
Fort Putnam, commanding a fine view for miles up and down the 
Hudson. In 1908, as the gift of Mrs Russell Sage and Miss Anna 
B. Warner, there was added to the military reservation Con- 
stitution Island (about 280 acres), lying directly opposite West 
Point, with the remains of (wo forts built during the War of 
Independence. 

West Point, " the Gibraltar of the Hudson/' was first occupied 
as a military post in January 1778, when a chain of redoubts 
was erected at various strategic points along the Hudson. At 
West Point were built a half-doren earthwork fortifications, of 
which Fort Putnam on Mt. Independence, Fort Clinton on the 
extremity of the point (not to be confused with the Fort Clinton 
captured by the British in 1777 farther down the river) and 
Battery Knox, just above the river landing, were the largest. 
These were the fortifications that Benedict Arnold, their com- 
mander, in 1780 agreed to deliver into British hands. After 
the discovery of his treason, Washington made his headquarters 
for* some time at West Point before removing to Newburgh. 
Later Washington recommended West Point as a site for a 
military school. Such an establishment had been suggested by 
Henry Knox in May 1776; and in October of that year the 
Continental Congress passed a resolution appointing a committee 
to draw plans for " a military academy of the army." A Corps 
of Invalids was established in June 1777, was organised in 
Philadelphia in July 1777, and was transferred to West Point in 
1 781; this corps was " to serve as a military school for young 
gentlemen previously to their being appointed to marching 



WESTPORT— WEST SPRINGFIELD 



559 



regiments." Three buildings had been erected here to house 
a library, an engineers' school and a laboratory, and practical 
experiments in gunnery had been begun here in February 1780. 
In 1783, at Ncwburgh, Washington laid before his officers the 
matter of a military academy such as Knox had suggested. A 
school for artillerists, engineers and cadets of the corps was 
established here on the president's recommendation in 1794, and 
continued until the buildings were destroyed by fire in 1 796. In 
July 1801, Henry Dearborn, Jefferson's secretary of war, directed 
that all cadets of the corps of artillerists, a subordinate rank which 
had been established in 1704, should report at West Point for in- 
struction, and in September of that year a school was opened 
with five instructors, four of them army officers. On the 16th 
of Match 1802, President Jefferson approved an act establishing 
a military academy at West Point, and on the 4th of July it was 
formally opened wkh ten cadets present. Acts of 1802 and 1808 
authorized 40 cadets from the artillery, 100 from the infantry, 
16 from the dragoons and 20 from the riflemen. But few of 
these were actually appointed, and for several years instruction 
was disorganized and desultory. In 1811-1812 instruction was 
practically abandoned, and in March 181 2 the M academy" 
was without a single instructor. Up to this time 88 cadets had 
been graduated, but they had been admitted without any sort 
of examination, and at any age between ia and 34. An act of 
Congress of the 99th of April 181 2 reorganized the academy, 
and laid down the general principles and plan on which it has 
since been conducted. A maximum of 250 cadets was then 
authorized. Under the able superintendency of Major Sylvanus 
Thayer this plan was perfected and put into successful operation. 
Up to 1843 no territorial requirement was necessary for appoint- 
ment, but in that year a custom that had grown up of providing 
for one cadet from each Congressional district, each Territory 
and the District of Columbia, was embodied in the law. 

By acts of 1900, 1902, 1903 and 1908 the Corps of Cadets as now 
constituted consists of one cadet from each congressional district 
(appointed on recommendation by members of Congress), one from 
each Territory, one from the District of Columbia, one from Porto 
Rico, two from each state at large (on recommendation of the 
senators), and 40 from the United States at large, all to be appointed 
by the president. Four Filipinos may also receive instruction and 
become eligible on graduation for commissions in the Philippine 
scouts. The maximum number of cadets under the apportionment 
of the twelfth census was 533. Candidates for admission roust be 
between 17 and 22 years, unmarried, and at least 5 ft. 4 in. high. 
For entrance there are physical examinations, and examinations in 
algebra, plane geometry, English grammar, composition and litera- 
ture, geography and general history. In 1902 the entrance require- 
ments were raised and the actual amount of work done In the 
academy was thus decreased. The principal courses arc: tactics for 
aH classes; civil and military engineering (first class); practical 
military engineering (fourth, third, second and first classes); 
mechanic* and astronomy (thud and second classes) : mathematics 
(new cadets, fourth and third classes) ; chemistry, mineralogy and 
geology (third and second classes); drawing (third and second 
classes) ; modern languages, ix. French and Spanish (fourth, third, 
second and first classes) ; law (first class); ordnance and gunnery 
(first class); military hygiene (second class); and English and 
history (new cadets and fourth class). The course is four years, and 
academic instruction continues from the 1st of September to the 
5th of June. The summer months are devoted to field work and 
encampments. Each cadet while in attendance receives pay at the 
rate oTgooo a year and one ration per day, or commutation thereof 
at thirty cents per day, amounting to $709*50. The number of 
graduates from 1803- to 1909 inclusive was 4852. The superin- 
tendents of the academy have been: in 1802-1803 and in 1805-1812, 
Jonathan Williams; in 1812-1814. Joseph Gardner Swift (1783- 
1865); in 1815-1817, Alden Partridge (1785-1854); in 1817-1833. 
Sylvanus Thayer; in 1833-1838 Rene E. De Russy (1796-1864); in 
i«3&-l845andin 1856-1861, Richard Delafiekl (1798-1873) ; in 1845- 
1852, Henry Brewerton (1801-1879): in 1852-1855, Robert E. Lee; 
ia 1855-1856, John Gross Barnard (1815-1882); in January 1861, 
P. G. T. Beauregard; in 1861-1864, Alexander Hamilton Bowman 
(1803-1860; in 1864, Zealous Bates Tower (1819-1900); in 1864- 
/866, G. W. Cullum; in 1 866-1 871. Thomas Gamble Pitcher (182a- 
1895); in 1871-1876. Thomas Howard Roger (1833-1907); in 
I876-1881. J. M. Schofjetd; In 1881-1882. O.O. Howard; in 1882- 
1M7. Wesley McTritt: in 1887-1889, John Gnibb Park (1827- 
»90o); |n 1889-1 893, John Moi'tden Wilson (b. 1837); in 1803- 
1898. Oswald Herbert Ernst (b. 1842); In 1898-1906, AK>ert Leopold 
Mills (b. 1851); in 1906-1910, H. L. S 



atss 



1855). 



. Scott (b. 1853); And. 1910, 




of t he sup erintendent. 

WESTPORT, n market-town, seaport and seaside resort of 
County Mayo, Ireland, near the mouth of a small river in Clew 
Bay. Pop. (1901) 3892. The town ia zoo m. W. from Dublin 
by the Midland Great Western railway, Westport Quay at the 
river mouth being served by a branch line. Then is a small 
export trade in grain. The beautiful demesne of the marquess 
of Sligo enriches the neighbourhood. Clew Bay, thickly studded 
with islands and surrounded with mountains, ia one of the most 
magnificent of the great inlets on the W. coast. Near the S. 
shore ia Croagh Patrick (2510 ft.), an isolated conical hill of 
singularly perfect form, in wide repute as a place of pilgrimage. 

WEST PRUSSIA (Gcr. Wcstprcuuen), a province of Prussia, 
bounded on the N. by the Baltic, on the E. by East Prussia, 
on the S. by Russian Poland and the province of Posen, and on 
the W. by Brandenburg and Pomcrania. The area is 0862 
sq. m. The greater part is occupied by the low Baltic plateau, 
intersected by a network of streams and lakes, and rising to the 
Turmberg ( 1086 ft .) near Danzig. East of Konitz is an extensive 
moorland, 70 m. long, called the Tucheler Heide. The lake** 
though very numerous, are not large. The Vistula, here of great 
width,, and subject to destructive floods, enters the province 
near Thorn, and flowing north in a valley which divides the- 
plateau, enters Danzig Bay by a large delta, the Werder. The 
other rivers are chiefly tributaries' of the Vistula, as the Drewena 
on its right bank and the Brahe on its left. 



Prussia, but the climate is less harsh and the fertility of the soil 
greater. Arable land and gardens occupy 55*6% ©I the area, 
meadows and pastures 12-9%, forests 217%, and the rest ia 
mostly waste. The valley and delta of the Vistula are very fertile, 
and produce good crops of wheat and pasturage for homes, cattle 
and sheep. Besides cereals, the chief crops are potatoes, hay, 
tobacco* garden produce, fruit and sugar-beet. Poultry, fish and 
timber are important sources of wealth. Cavalry horses (especially 
at the government stud farm of Marienwerder) and merino sheep 
are reared. The minerals are unimportant, except amber, <poat and 
day. Shipbuilding is carried on at Danzig and Elbing, and ia 
various places there are iron and glass works, saw-mills, sugar 
factories and distilleries. Much of the trade passes through the 
ports of Danzig and Elbing, 

The population in 1905 was 1,641,746, showing a mean density 
of 166 to the sq. m. Of these 567.318 or 34*5 % were Poles, a 
larger proportion than in any other Prussian province except Posen. 
They arc increasing somewhat faster than the Germans, and the 
efforts of the colonization, commission have done little to promote 
the immigration of German farmers. The Ka&hubcs (?•»-). nearly all 
of whom (less than 200,000 ) live in W. Prussia, chiefly in the west, 
from Putzig to Konitz, are here reckoned with the Poles. The 
Poles proper chiefly inhabit the centre of the province, and the 
borders of Russian Poland. Among the Germans, who are most 
numerous ia the north-cast. Low German dialects are spoken, 
except in a Swabian colony round Kulmsee. Roman Catholics 
number 51 4% and Protestants 46-6% of the population, and 
there are 16,000 Jews. The Poles are almost all Roman Catholics. 

The province is divided into the governmental departments of 
Danzig and Marienwerder. It returns twenty-two members to the 
Prussian Lower House and thirteen to the Reichstag. Danzig is 
the capital, and the only large town. 

West Prussia, with the exception of southern Pomerania 
(around Marienwerder) which belonged to Prussia, was a pot* 
session of Poland from 1466 till the first partition of Poland 
in 1772, when it was given to Prussia with the exception of 
Danzig and Thorn, which Poland retained till 1 793. The present 
province was formed in 1808, but from 1824 to 1878 was united 
with East Prussia. For its history see also Prussia and Poland. 

See K. Lohmcycr. Gcukkklt von Ost- und Wcstpreuisen (part i. 
3rd ed., Gotha, 1908); Vallcntin, Hfo/prcuur 11 ieil den etsun 4 
JakruknUn dieses JahrhumUrts (Tubingen, 1893); Ambrassat, 
Wtstpnussen, tin Handbuck dtr Heimaikunde (Danzig, 1906). 

WEST SPRINGFIELD, a township of Hampden, county, 
Massachusetts, U.S.A., on the Connecticut river, opposite 
Springfield. Pop. (1890) 5077; (1900) 7105 (1501 foreign- 
born); (rpio) 9224. Area, about 18 sq. m. The township is 
served by the Boston & Albany railway, and by imerurban 



$6o 



WEST VIRGINIA 



electric railways to Holyoke and Hartford. The principal 
villages are Merrick and West Springfield on the Connecticut 
river and Mittineaguc on the Westfield river. West Springfield 
was originally a part of Springfield. The first settlement was 
not made, however, until about 1653, and there were few settlers 
until after King Philip's War (1676). In 1606 West Springfield 
was organized as a separate parish, and in 1774 was made a 
separate township. Holyoke was set off from it in i860, and 
Agawam in 1855. 

WEST VIRGINIA, the north-westernmost of the so-called 
Southern states of the United States of America, lying between 
latitudes 37 10' and 40 40' N., and longitudes 77* 40' and 
82° 40' W. It is bounded on the north-west by Ohio, from 
which it b separated by the Ohio river, on the north by Penn- 
sylvania and Maryland, the Potomac river dividing it from 
the latter state; on the east and south-east by Pennsylvania, 
Maryland and Virginia, the boundary lines in the first two cases 
being meridians, in the last case a very irregular line following 
the crest of mountain ridges in places; and on the south-west 
by Virginia and Kentucky, the Dig Sandy river separating it 
from the latter state. The extreme length of the state from 
north to south is about 240 m., the extreme breadth from east 
to west about 265 m. Area, 24,170 sq. m., of which 148 sq. m. 
is water surface. 

Physical Features. — The state is divided into two distinct physio- 
graphic provinces: the Alleghany Plateau on the west, comprising 
perhaps two-thirds of the acea of the state, and forming a part elf 
the creat Appalachian Plateau Province which extends Trom New 
York to Alabama; and the Newer Appalachians or Great Valley 
Region on the east, being a part of the large province of the" same 
name which extends from Canada to Central Alabama. The 
Alleghany Plateau consists of nearly horiaontal beds of limestone, 
sandstone and shales, including important seams of coal; inclines 
slightly toward the north-west, and is intricately dissected by 
extensively branching streams into a mate of narrow canyons and 
steep-sided hills. Along the Ohio river, these hills rise to an elevation 
of 800 to f 000 ft. above sea-level, while toward the south-east the 
elevation increases until 3500 and 4000 ft: are reached along the 
south-east margin of the plateau, which is known as the Alleghany 
Front. The entire plateau area is drained by the Ohio river and its 
tributaries. Along the flood-plains of the larger rivers are fertile 
" bottomlands," but the ruegedness of the plateau country as a 
whole has retarded the development of the state, much of which is 
still sparsely populated. The coal beds are of enormous extent, 
and constitute an important clement in the wealth of the state. 
Petroleum and natural gas also occur in the plateau rocks in great 
quantities. 

In the Newer Appalachian region, the beds which still lie hori- 
zontal 'in the plateau province were long ago thrown Into folds and 
planed off by erosion, alternate belts of hard' and soft rock being 
left exposed. Uplift permitted renewed erosion to wear away the 
soft belts, leaving mountain ridges of hard rock separated by 
parallel valleys. Hence the region is variously known as the Ridge 
and Valley Belt, the Great Valley Region, or the Folded Appa- 
lachians. The mountain ridges vary in height up to 4000 ft. and 
more, the highest point in the state being Spruce Knob (4860 ft.). 
The parallel valleys are drained by north-east and south-west 
flowing streams, those in the north-east being tributary to the 
fofomac, those farther south tributary to the Great Kanawha. 
Although the valleys between the ridges are not always easy 
of access, they give broad areas of nearly level agricultural 
land. 

fltowr.— The plateau portion of West Virginia is largely covered 
by hardwood forests, but along the Ohio river and its principal 
tributaries the valuable timber has been removed and considerable 
areas have been wholly cleared for farming and pasture lands. 
Among the most important trees of this area are the white and 
chestnut oaks, the black walnut, the yellow poplar, and the cherry, 
the southern portion of the state containing the largest reserve 
supply. In the area of the Newer Appalachian Mountains, the 
eastejrn Panhandle region has a forest similar to that of the plateau 
district; but between these two areas of hardwood there is a long 
belt where spruce and white pine cover the mountain ridges. Other 
trees common m the state arc the persimmon, sassafras, and, in the 
Ohio Valley region, the sycamore. Hickory, chestnut, locust, maple, 
beech, dogwood, and pawpaw are widely distributed. Among the 
shrubs and vines are the blackberry, black and red raspberry, 
goos eb er r y, huckleberry, hand and grape. Ginseng is an important 
medicinal plant. Wild ginger, elder and sumach are common. 
and in the mountain areas, rhododendrons, mountain laurel and 



Qifsjalf.*^Inasmuch as the state has a range of over 4000 ft. in 
sltitu't* *h» «-»<*«**• varies greatly in different districts. The mean 
a< for typical sections are as fellows: Ohio Valley 



north of the thirty-ninth paralkl, 53° F.; south- weste r n part of 
state, 56°; central plateau district, 52°; mountainous belt along 
south-eastern boundary of state, 48* to 50°. Wellsburg, in the 
northern Panhandle, has a mean winter temperature of 27*, a summer 
mean of 70*. Parleersbuig, farther down the Ohio Valley, has a 
winter mean of 34* and a summer mean of 74 s * Aflartiosburg, in the 
eastern Panhandle, has nearly the same means, 32° and 74°. Terra 
Alta, in the north-eastern mountains, has a winter mean of 26*, a 
summer mean of only 67*. The first killing frosts generally occur 
about the middle of October in the Ohio Valley region, and about the 
first of October in the higher plateau and mountain region; the 
average dates (or the last killing frosts in the same localities are 
the middle and last of- April respectively. In the Ohio Valley and 
eastern Panhandle the summer mean temperature is 74*, the winter 
mean 51* to 34® The highest recorded temperature for the state 
is 107*, the Iowest-35*. Temperatures above 100* and below-*** 
are rare. Precipitation is greatest in the mountains, over 50 in.; 
and least over the Ohio Valley, the eastern Panhandle and the 
extreme south-east, 35 to 40 in. Snows are frequent during the 
winter, and sometimes deep in the higher plateau and mountain 
districts. The prevailing winds are from south to west. 
# Agriculture. — The state is primarily agricultural. Ingeneral the 
richer western part is devoted to crops, and the eastern part to raising 
live-stock. The crop of Indian corn fn 1909 was 27,632,000 bushels, 
and the acreage 880,00a The wheat crop was 4,810,000 bushels, 
and the acreage 370,000. The crop of buckwheat was 499.000 
bushels (grown on 22,000 acres). The rye crop was 148,000 buiheb, 
and the acreage 11,000. The production of oats was 2,156,000 
bushels (grown on 98,000 acres). In 1909 the acreage of hay alone 
was 675,000 acres, and the crop was 844,000 tons, valued at 
$11,225,000. Tobacco is grown throughout the state; in 1909 
on 12,000 acres was grown a crop 01 12,000,000 lb, valued at 
$1,663,200. 

Stock-raising is an important industry, cspecodly in the eastern 
part of the state. 

Mints and Quarries.— The state's great mineral wealth is in coals 
of various kinds, petroleum, and natural gas. 

The coal deposits underlie about 17.000 sq: m. (more than 70 % 
of the total) of the state's area, and bituminous coal has been found 
in 51 of the 55 counties: this is one of the largest continuous coal 
fields in the world. The principal districts are the Fairmont 
(or Upper Monongahela) and the Elk Garden (or Upper Potomac) 
in the northern, and the Pocahontas (or Flat Top) and the New and 
Kanawha rivers districts in the southern part of the state. The 
total output of the state was 44,648 tons in 1863, when the first ship- 
ments outside the state were made; and 41,897,843 tons (valued 
at I40.009.054) in 1908, when the output of West Virginia was 
third in quantity and in value among the states of the Union, being 
exceeded only by that of Pennsylvania and of Illinois. The scams 
arc principally above water levels and in many cases have been laid 
bare bv erosion; and the supply is varied— besides a " fat poking, 
gassy bituminous," there are an excellent grade of splint coal 
(first mined in 1864 at Coalburg, Kanawha county) and (except that 
in Kentucky) the only important supply of cannel coal in the United 
States. Most of the mines are operated under " non-union " rules. 
The bituminous coal of West Virginia is a particularly good coking 
coal, and in 1905, 1906, 1907 and 1908 West Virginia ranked second 
(to Pennsylvania) among the states of the Union in the amount 
of coke manufactured; the Flat Top district is the principal coke- 
making region. 

Petroleum ranks second to coal among the state's mineral re- 
sources. In 1771 Thomas Jefferson described a " burning spring " 
in the Kanawha Valley, and when wells were drilled for salt brine 
near Charleston petroleum and natural gas were found here before 
there was any drilling for oil in Pennsylvania. Immediately before 
the Civil War, petroleum was discovered in shallow wells near 
Parkersburg, and there was a great rush of prospectors and specu- 
lators to the Little Kanawha Valley. Dut the Civil War interrupted 
development. After the war, wells were drilled at Burning Springs, 
Oil Rock, California House. Volcano, Sandhill and Horse neck, and 
in the years 1865-1876 3.000,000 bbls. of oil, valued at $20,000,000. 
were taken out of these districts. A successful well in Marion county, 
near Mannington, far from the region of the earlier wells, was drilled 
in 1889, and the output of the state increased from 1 19448 bbls. 
in 1888 to 544.1 »3 in 1889, and to 2,406,218 in 1891; in 1893 it 
was first more than 8,000,000 bbls. ; and in 1900 it was 16,195,675. 
After 1900 it gradually decreased— although new pools in Wetzel 
county were found in 1902— and 10 1908 it was 9.523,176 bbU. 
(valued at $16,91 1,865). 

Natural gas, like petroleum, was first heard of In West Virginia in 
connexion with a burning spring on the Kanawha, and there were 
gas springs on the Big Sandy and the Little Kanawha. In 1841 
natural gas was found with salt brine in a well on the Kanawha, and 
was used as a fuel to evaporate the $alt water. The production was 
not large until after 1895; it was valued at $1 .334,023 in 1898. at 
$3454.472 in 1901. at $10,075,804 in 1905. at $16,670,962 in 1907. 
and at $14,837,130 in 1908, when (as since 1904, when it first was 
greater than that of Indiana) it was second only in value to that of 
Pennsylvania. The principal field is in Wetsel county, but them 
are important supplies in Lewis, Harrison, Marion, Monongahela. 



WEST VIRGINIA 



Laacola and Wayne counties. Much of the natural gas is piped out 
of the state into Ohio (even into the northern pacta), Kentucky. 
Pennsylvania and Maryland; within the state gas has been utilised 
as a fuel in carbon black and glass factories. 

Brine wells have been mentioned above; the salt industry is 
still carried on in Macon county, nod in 1908 145*157 bbb. were pro- 
duced with a value of $10*481; and there is a small output of 
bromine. Iron ore is found in the state in the coal hills (especially 
Laurel Hills and Beaver Lick Mountain), but the deposits have not 
been worked on a large scale. Pig iron is manufactured cheaply 
because o( the low price of fuel; in 1907 the value of pig iron manu- 
factured in the state was I6454JOOO. There are deposits of ex- 
cellent day, especially for pottery, and in 1007 ($2,159,133) and 
1008 ($2,083,821) the state ranked after Ohio and New Jersey in the 
-----* ' • ' " ' * ' , West 



S6« 



value of pottery. The total value of all clay products in 
Virginia was $3,261,736 in 1908. An excellent glass sand L . 
cured from crushed sandstone near Berkeley Springs, Morgan 
county. Grindstones have been quarried in Wood and Jackson 
counties. There axe black slate deposits near Martinaburc. There 
arc mineral springs, mostly medicinal waters, in Greenbrier, bummers, 
Webster, Ohio and Preston counties. Among the more noted 
medicinal springs are: classed as calcareous and earthy, Sweet 
Springs, 74 F.. in Monroe county, diuretic and diaphoretic; and 
Berkeley Springs, 74° F., in Morgan county, reputed restorative in 
neuralgic cases, and an containing sulphur; Salt Sulphur Springs, 
in Monroe county, of value in scrofula and skin diseases. 

Manujteturcs — Manufacturing is largely localised in the north- 
western part of the state along the Ohio river. The value of 
the factory product in 100$ was $90,040,676. The principal manu- 
facture is iron and steel: in 1905 the product of steel works and 
lolling mills was $13,454,802. The iron milb are almost all in the 
vicinity of Wheeling. The first rolling mill west of the Alleghanies 
was probably one near Morgantown. Next in importance among 
the state's manufactures are lumber and timber, and flour and grist 
milk. The tanning, currying and finishing of leather, an industry 
largely dependent on the pkntiful supply of oak and hemlock bark 
for tanning, is centralized in the northern and eastern parts of the 
state, near the forests. The glass industry began in Wheeling in 
1821. and there a process was discovered by which in 1864 for soda 
ash bicarbonate of lime was substituted, and a lime glass was made 
which was as fine as lead glass; other factors contributing to the 
localisation of the manufacture of glass here are the fine glass sand 
obtained in the state and the plentiful supply of natural gas for 
fuel. 

Transportation and Commerce.— Railway development in West 
Virginia has been due largely to the exploitation of the coal and 
lumber resources of the state. The Baltimore & Ohio railway 
leads in trackage : it enters the state with several lines at its northern 
end; its main line crosses this portion of the state from east to west, 
striking the Ohio at Parkersburg. and one of its lines (Ohio River 
railway) extends nearly the length of the state from Wheeling in 
the north through Parkersburg to Kenova in the south. This road 
serves as a carrier for the northern coal producing districts. The 
Chesapeake & Ohio traverses the southern part of the state, from 
White Sulphur Springs in the east, through Charleston to the Ohio, 
serving the New and Kanawha rivers coal district as a freight carrier ; 
the Norfolk & Western runs Just within the south-western boundary 
along the valley of the Big Sandy, carrying coal both east and west 
from the Pocahontas coal-field; and the new Virginian railway 
entering at the south-east taps the coal-producing region (the 
Kanawha and Pocahontas districts) at Dcepwatcr, serving in 
addition to the Norfolk & Western as a carrier of coal to Norfolk 
on the Virginia coast. The railway mileage of the state grew with 
great rapidity in the decade 1880-1890; it was 691 m. in 1880, 
M3J*3« « 1800. 2^73'34 in 1000 and 3.215-3* in January 1909. 
Natural facilities for transportation, afforded by the Ohio river and 
its branches, the Monongahcla, at the northern end of the state, 
and the Little Kanawha and the Great Kanawha, arc of special value 
for the shipment of lumber and coal. The Monongahela has been 
improved by locks and dams to Fairmont. It is the carrier of a 
heavy tonnage of coal to Pittsburg, Pennsylvania. The Little 
Kanawha, which has also been improved, serves chiefly for the 
transportation of logs which are floated down to the Ohio. 

Population.— The population of West Virginia at the various 
censuses since its organization as a state has been as follows: 
1870, 442,014; 1880, 618,457; »8qo, 76a»704J 1900, 058,800; 
1910, M3i,xiow In 1890-1900 and 1900-1910 the increase in 
population -was more than one fourth. Of the total population 
in 1000, 97-7% ma native-born, 802,854 were native whites, 
43*499 were negroes, 56 were Chinese and is were Indians. 
Of the inhabitant* born in the United States 61,508 were 
natives of Virginia, 40*301 of v Ohio, 28,027 of Pennsylvania 
and 10,867 of Kentucky; and of the foreign-born there were 
6537 Germans, 3342 Irish, aosx Italians and 2623 English. 
Of the total population 71,388 were of foreign parentage — 
ue. either one or both parents were foreign-bom, and 18,232 



were of German and 10,534 of Irish paientige, on both the 
father's and the mother's side. 

In xoo6 there were in the state 301,565 members of religious 
denominations, of whom 86*2% were Protestants. The 
Methodist bodies with 115,825 communicants (38-4% of the 
total communicants or members) were the strongest. There 
were 67,044 Baptists (3226 United Baptists, 2019 Primitive 
Baptists and 1513 Free Baptists); 40,011 Roman Catholics; 
19,993 United Brethren, all of the " New Constitution "; 
19,668 Presbyterians; 13,323 Disciples of Christ; 6506 Lutherans, 
and 5230 Protestant Episcopalians. The principal cities of the 
state* are Wheeling, Huntington, Parkersburg, Charleston (the 
capital), Maxtiasburg, Fairmont and Grafton. 

Administration.— The first constitution of 1863 was super- 
seded by the present instrument which was adopted August 
1872 and was amended in 1880, 1883 and 1902. The constitution 
may be amended by either of two methods. A majority of the 
members elected to each house may submit the question of 
calling a convention to the people; and if a majority of the 
votes cast approve, an election for members of a convention 
shall be held, and all acts of the convention must be submitted 
to the people for ratification or rejection. On the other hand, 
a two-thirds majority of each house of the legislature may 
submit an amendment or amendments to popular vote at the 
next general election, when the approval of a majority of the 
qualified voters is necessary for ratification. All male citisens 
above twenty-one years of age have the right of suffrage, subject 
to a residence of one year in the slate and sixty days in the 
county in which they offer to vote. Paupers, insane, and those 
convicted of treason, felony or bribery in an election are 
barred, " while the disability continues," and no person in the 
military, naval or marine service of the United States is deemed 
a resident of the state by teason of being stationed therein. 
An official blanket ballot containing the names of the candidates 
arranged in columns according to party is provided at public 
expense. 

Executive.— The executive department consists of the governor, 
secretary of state, superintendent of free schools, auditor, treasurer 
and attorney-general, all elected by the people at the time of the 
presidential election and serving for four years from the fourth of 
March following. ( The governor must have been a citizen for five 
years preceding this election, must have attained the age of thirty and 
is ineligible for re-election during the four years succeeding the expira- 
tion of his term. In case of the death, resignation or other dis- 
ability of the governor, the president of the Senate acts as governor, 
and in case of his incapability the Speaker of the House of Dele- 
gates; and these two failing, the legislature on joint ballot elects an 
acting governor. A new election must be called to fill the vacancy 
unless the unexpired term is less than one year. The governor 
appoints, subject to the consent of a majority of the members 
elected to the Senate, all officers whose appointment or election is 
not otherwise provided for. In case of a vacancy in the court of 
appeals or in the circuit court the governor appoints until the next 
general election, or if the unexpired term is less than two years, 
until the end of the term. The .governor sends a message at the 
beginning of each session of the legislature, and may convene the 
houses in extraordinary session when he deems it necessary. He 
may veto a bill, or in case of an appropriation bill, the separate 
items, but this veto may be overridden by a simple majority of the 
total membership of each house. Any bill not returned: with objec- 
tions within five days after presentation becomes a law. An appro* 
priation bill cannot be vetoed after the legislature adjourns. 

Legislative. — The legislature, consisting of the Senate and the 
House of Delegates, meets at the capital on the first Wednesday in 
January of the odd years. The Senate is composed (1910) of thirty 
members, chosen from fifteen districts for a term of four years, but 
one half the membership retires biennially. A senator must be 
twenty-five years of age, and must have been a citizen of the state 
for five years and a resident of the district for one year preceding 
his election.' The Senate elects a president, confirms or rejects the 
nominations of the governor, and acts as a court of impeachment 
for the trial of public officers, besides sharing in legislative functions. 
The House of Delegates is composed (iQioj of eighty-six members, 
of whom each county chooses at least one. A delegate must be a 
citiatn and have resided one year in the county from which he is 
chosen. No person holding a lucrative office under the state 
or the United States, no salaried officer of a railroad company, 
and no officer of any court of record is eligible for membership in 
either house. Besides its legislative functions the House prepares 
articles of impeachment and prosecutes the proceedings before the 
Senate, The length of the legislative session is forty-five days. 



5°2 



WBST VIRGINIA 



bat it nay be extended by a vote of two-fluids of the member* 
elected to each house. No act takes effect until ninety day* after its 
passage unless two-thirds of the members of each house specifically 
order otherwise. 

Judiciary.— -The judicial power is vested in the Supreme Court 
of Appeals, the Circuit courts, such inferior courts as may be 
established, county courts, the powers and duties of which are, 
however, chiefly police and fiscal, and in justices of the peace. The 
Supreme Court of Appeals, consisting of five judges, elected for 
terms of twelve years, holds three terms annually, one at Wheeling, 
one at Charleston and one at Charles Town. It has original juris- 
diction in cases of habeas corpus, mandamus and prohibition, and 
appellate jurisdiction in cases involving a greater amount than one 
hundred dollars; concerning title or boundary of lands, probate of 
wills; the appointment or qualification of personal representatives, 
guardians, curators, committees, Ac; concerning a mill, roadway, 
ferry or landing; the right of a corporation or county to levy tolls 
or taxes; in cases of quo warranto, habeas corpus, mandamui, certio- 
rari and prohibition, and all others involving freedom or the con 



P. 



conviction for felony or misdemeanour in a circuit, criminal or 
Intermediate court; and in cases relating to the public revenues. 
The court designates one of its members as president. Nineteen 
judges elected for terms of eight years in eighteen circuits compose 
the circuit court, the judges of which have original jurisdiction of 
matters involving more than $50; of all cases of habeas corpus, 
mandamus, quo warranto and prohibition; of all cases in equity; 
and of all crimes and misdemeanours. The judges have appellate 
jurisdiction of cases civil and criminal coming up from the lower, 
courts. In order to relieve the circuit judges the legislature has 
established by special acts inferior courts, generally with criminal 
jurisdiction only, in nine counties of the state. The judicial powers 
of the county court are confined to probate, the appointment of 
executors, administrators and other personal representatives, and 
the settlement of their accounts, matters relating to apprentices and 
to contested elections for county and district officers. (See below 
under Local Government.) One or two justices of the peace (de- 
pending on population) are elected from each magisterial district ; 
there must be not less than three, nor more than ten, districts in each 
county. 

Local Gooemmint.—r\& in Virginia, the county is the unit of govern- 
ment, though an unsuccessful attempt to introduce the township sys- 
tem was made in the first constitution. The county court, consisting 
of three commissioners elected for six years but with terms so arranged 
that one retires every two years, is the police and fiscal authority. 
Other officers are the clerk of the county court, elected for six years, 
the sheriff, who also acts as tax-collector and treasurer, the prosecuting 
attorney, one or two assessors, the surveyor of lands and the super- 
intendent of free schools, all elected for the term of four years; the 
sheriff may not serve two consecutive full terms. In addition there 
are boards appointed or elected by various authorities and charged 
with specific duties. They include the local board of health and the 
board of jury commissioners. Each of the magisterial districts (of 
which, as has been said, there must be at least three and not more 
than ten in each county) elects one or two magistrates and con- 
stables, and a board of education of three members. The constitu- 
tion provides that the legislature, on the request of any county, may 
establish a special form of county government, and several of the 
larger and more populous counties have special acts. 

Miscellaneous Laws. — A woman's right to hold, manage and acquire 
property is not affected by marriage, except that unless she lives 
apart from her husband, she may not mortgage or convey real estate 
without his consent. A woman becomes of age at twenty-one. 
Rights of dower and courtesy both exist. When a husband dies 
intestate leaving a widow and issue, the widow is entitled to the life 
use of one-third of the real estate and to one-third of the personal 
estate absolutely. If there is no issue she takes the whole of the 
personal estate, while the real estate, subject to her dower, goes first 
to her husband's father and then to his mother, brothers and sisters. 
If the wife dies intestate the husband has a right to the use of her 
real estate for life, and to one-third of the personal estate if there is 
issue ; otherwise to the whole. Neither can by will deprive the other 
of the right of dower or courtesy m the real estate and of the right to 
one-third of the personal estate. Children may be disinherited with 
or without cause. Any parent or infant children of deceased parents 
may set apart personal estate not exceeding $200 in value which shall 
be exempt from execution. A homestead not exceeding fiooo 
in value may be set apart, provided that it is recorded before the 
debt against which it was claimed was contracted. Marriages 
between whites and negroes, or where either party had a wife or 
husband living, or within the prohibited degrees of consanguinity, 
or where either was insane or physically incapable of marriage, or 
where the male was under eighteen or the female under sixteen 
nay be annulled. No female or male under twelve may be employed 
lirmiats, and 40 cHM under twelve may be employed in a factory, 
J ~~*"**^ — »** t- -' • 'on none under fourteen. 

charitable and penal institutions consist 
tl for the Insane at Weston, the Second 




Spe n cer, three miners' hospitals— one at 
tad on* at Fairmont j the West Virginia 



Asylum for Incurables at Huntington. Schools for the Deaf and 
¥"S. at S onmey '.! he We * *"¥»«» Penitentiary at Moundsville. 
the West Virginia Reform School at Graftoo and the West Virginia 
Industrial Home for Girls near Salem. These are all under 
the supervision of a state board of control of three members, 
appointed by the governor, which was created in 1909, and also has 
control of the finances of the state educational system. There is also 
a state humane society, which was organised in 1899 for the pro- 
tection of children and of the helpless aged, and for the prevention of 
cruelty toanimals. The West Virginia Colored Orphans' Home near 
Huntington » not under state control, but has received appropria- 
tions from the legislature. In loofta law was enacted for establishing 
the West Virginia Children's Home to be under the control of the 
Humane Society. 

Education.— Each magisterial district constitutes a school district 
and there are also a few independent school districts. For each 
school district there is a board of education consisting of a president 
and two commissioners, each elected for a term of four years, one 
commissioner every two years. This board is authorised to establish 
and aher sub-districts. A law enacted in 1908 requires that children 
between eight and fifteen years of age shall attend school twenty-four 
weekseach year, provided the public school in their district is in session 
that length of time. The county supervision of public schools is vested 
in a county superintendent, who is elected for a term of four years. 
The state supervision is vested tnastate superintendent, whots elected 
for a term of four years. A state board of education, consisting of 
the state superintendent and five other persons appointed by Mm, 
constitutes a state board of examiners (for special primary, high 
school and professional certificates) and prescribes the course of 
study. There is also a state school book commission, consisting of 
the state superintendent and eight other members appointed by the 
governor. The state maintains sfat normal schools for whites (at 
Huntington. Fairmont. West Liberty, Glenville, Shepherdstown, 
Athens) and two for negroes (at Institute and at Blueficld). They 
are governed by a board of regents consisting of the state super- 
intendent and six other members appointed by the governor. At 
the head of the educational system Is the West Virginia University 
(1867) at Morgantown (q*.). The principal institutions of higher 
learning not under state control are Bethany College (Christian, 
184O. »t Bethany; Morris Harvey College (Methodist Episcopal. 
Southern. 1888), at BarboursviUe; West Virginia Wesleyan TCotbft 
(Methodist Episcopal. 1890), at Buckfcannon; and Davis and EOrins 
College (Presbyterian. 1904). at Ellrias. 

Finance. — The state revenue is derived mainly from a general pro- 
perty tax, licence taxes levied on various businesses and occupations, 
a collateral inheritance tax and a capitation tax. For the year ending 
on the 30th of September 1908 the receipts were $3,382,131.66 
and the disbursements $3^82,317-03. West Virginia's share of the 
Virginia debt which existed when West Virginia was set off from 
Virginia has not yet been determined (see below, f History), but 
other than this the state has no debt, and the contraction of a 
state debt other than " to meet casual deficits in the revenue, to 
redeem a previous liability of the state, to suppress insurrection, 
repel invasion or defend the state in time of war " is forbidden 
by the constitution. The indebtedness of a county, municipality 
or school district is limited to 5% of the value of its taxable 



History,— Thai part of Virginia beyond the Alleghany moun- 
tains was a favourite haunt of the Indians before the first 
coming of the whites, and there are many Indian mounds, in- 
dicative of an early and high cultural development, within the 
present limits of the state, and especially in the neighbourhood 
of Moundsville (?.».). The western part of Virginia was not 
explored until long after considerable settlements had been made 
in the east. In 167 1 General Abram Wood, at the direction of 
Governor William Berkeley (c. 1610-1677), sent a party which 
discovered Kanawha Falls, and in 1716, Governor Alexander 
Spottswood with about thirty horsemen made an excursion into 
what Is now Pendleton county. John Van Metre, an Indian 
trader, penetrated into the northern portion in 1725, and Morgan 
ap Morgan, a Welshman, built a cabin in the present Berkeley 
county in 1737. The same year German settlers from Penn. 
sylvania founded New Mecklenburg, the present Shepherdstown, 
on the Potomac, and others soon followed. Charles Il.of England, 
in 166 r, granted to a company of gentlemen the land between the 
Potomac and Rappahannock rivers, commonly known as the 
" Northern Neck." The grant finally came into the possession 
of Thomas, Lord Fairfax, and in 1746 a stone was erected at the 
source of the north branch of the Potomac to mark the western 
limit of the grant. A considerable part of this land was surveyed 
by George Washington between 1748 and 1751. The diary kept 
by the young surveyor indicates that there were already many 
squatters, largely of German origin, along the South Branch of 



WEST VIRGINIA 



5^3 



the Potomac. Christopher Cist, a surveyor in the employ of the 
first Ohio Company (see Ohio Company), which was composed 
chiefly of Virginians, in 1751-1752 explored the country along the 
Ohio river north of the mouth of the Kanawha, and the company 
sought to have a fourteenth colony established with the name 
'* Vandalia," Many settlers crossed the mountains after 1750, 
though they were somewhat hindered by Indian depredations. 
Probably no Indians lived within the present limits of the state, 
but the region was a common hunting ground, crossed also 
by many war trails, and during the. French and Indian "war 
(1754-63) the scattered settlements were almost destroyed. In 
1774 the governor of Virginia, Lord Dunmore, himself led a force 
over the mountains, and a body of militia under General Andrew 
Lewis dealt the Shawnee Indians under Cornstalk a crushing blow 
at Point Pleasant (q.v.) at the junction of the Kanawha and the 
Ohio rivers, but Indian attacks continued until after the War of 
Independence. During the war the settlers in Western Virginia 
were generally active Whigs and many served in the Continental 
army. 

Social conditions in western Virginia were entirely unlike 
those existing in the eastern portion of the state. The population 
was not homogeneous, as a considerable part of the immigra- 
tion came by way of Pennsylvania and included Germans, the 
Protestant Scotch-Irish and settlers from the states farther 
north. During the War of Independence the movement to create 
another state beyond the Alleghanies was revived, and a petition 
(1776) for the establishment of " WestsylvamV* was presented to 
Congress, on the ground that the mountains made an almost 
impassable barrier on the east The rugged nature of the country 
made slavery unprofitable, and time only increased the social, 
political and economic differences between the two sections of the 
state. The convention which met in 1829 to form a new con- 
stitution for Virginia, against the protest of the counties beyond 
the mountains, required a property qualification for suffrage, and 
gave the slave-holding counties the benefit of three-fifths of 
their slave population in apportioning the state's representation 
m the lower Federal house. As a result every county beyond 
the Alleghanies except one voted to reject the constitution, which 
was nevertheless carried by eastern votes. Though the Virginia 
constitution of 1850 provided for white manhood suffrage, yet the 
distribution of representation among the counties was such as to 
give control to the section east of the Blue Ridge Mountains. 
Another grievance of the West was the large expenditure for 
internal improvements at state expense in the East compared 
with the scanty proportion allotted to the We$L For an account 
of the Virginia convention of z86x, which adopted the Ordinance 
of Secession, see Vibcinia. Here it is sufficient to say that only 
nine of the forty-six delegates from the present state of West 
Virginia voted to secede Almost immediately after the adoption 
of the ordinance a mass meeting at Clarksburg recommended that 
each county in north-western Virginia send delegates to a conven- 
tion to meet in Wheeling on the 13th of May 1861. When this 
"First Wheeling Convention" met, four hundred and twenty-five 
delegates from twenty-five counties were present, but soon there 
was a division of sentiment. Some delegates favoured the 
Immediate formation of a new state, but the more far-sighted 
members argued that as the ordinance had not yet been voted 
upon by the people, and Virginia was still in the Union, such 
action would be revolutionary, since the United States Constitu- 
tion provides that no state may be divided without its consent. 
Therefore it was voted that in case the ordinance should be 
adopted (of which there was little doubt) another convention 
including the members-elect of the legislature should meet at 
Wheeling on the nth of June. At the election (23rd May 1861) 
the ordinance was ratified by a large majority in the state as a 
whole, but fn the western counties 40,000 votes out of 44,000 
were cast against it The " Second Wheeling Convention " met 
according to agreement (nth June), and declared that, since the 
Secession Convention had been called without the consent of the 
people, all its acts were void, and that all who adhered to it had 
vacated their offices. An act for the " reorganization " of the 
government was passed on the 19th of June. The next day 



Francis H. PSerpont was chosen governor of. Virginia, other 
officers were elected and the convention adjourned. The 
legislature, composed of the members from the western counties 
who had been elected on the 33rd of May and some of the hold- 
over senators who had been elected in 1859, met at Wheeling oil 
the 1st of July, filled the remainder of the state offices, organised 
a state government and elected two United States senators whe 
were recognized at Washington. There were, therefore, two 
state governments in Virginia, one owning allegiance to the 
United States and one to the Confederacy. The Convention, 
which had taken a recess until the 6th of August, then re- 
assembled and (August 20) adopted an ordinance providing for 
a popular vote on the formation of a new state, and for a con- 
vention to frame a constitution if the vote should be favourable. 
At the election (October 24, i86x) 18,489 votes were cast for the 
new state and only 781 against. The convention met on the 
26th of November 1861, and finished its work on the 18th of 
February 1862, and the instrument was ratified by the people 
(18,162 for and 5x4 against) on the xxth of April 1862. Next the 
legislature of the " Reorganized " government on the 13th of May 
gave its consent to the formation of the new state. Application 
for admission to the Union was now made to Congress, and on the 
31st of December 1862 an enabling act was approved by President 
Lincoln admitting the state on the condition that a provision for 
the gradual abolition of slavery be inserted in the Constitution. 
The Convention was reconvened on the 12th of February 1863* 
and the demand of Congress was met. The revised instrument 
was adopted by the people on the 26th of March 1863, and on the 
20th of April 1863 President Lincoln issued a proclamation 
admitting the state at the end of sixty days (June 20, 1863). 
Meanwhile officers for the new state were chosen, and Governor 
Pierpont removed his capital to Alexandria where he asserted 
jurisdiction over the counties of Virginia within the Federal 
lines. The question of the constitutionality of the formation 
of the new state was brought before the Supreme Court of the 
United States in the following manner. Berkeley and Jefferson 
counties lying on the Potomac east of the mountains, in 1&63, 
with the consent of the " Reorganized " government of Virginia 
voted in favour of annexation to West Virginia. Many voters 
absent in the Confederate army when the vote was taken refused 
to acknowledge the transfer on their return. The . Virginia 
legislature repealed the act of cession and in 1866 brought suit 
against West Virginia asking the court to declare the counties 
a part of Virginia. Meanwhile Congress on the xoth of March 
1866 passed a joint resolution recognizing the transfer. The 
Supreme Court in 1871 decided in favour of West Virginia, and 
there has been no further question. During the Civil War West 
Virginia suffered comparatively little. McClcIlan's forces gained 
possession of the greater part of the territory in the summer of 
1 86 1, and Union control was never seriously threatened, m spite 
of Lec> attempt in the same year. In 1863 General John D. 
Imboden, with 5000 Confederates, overran a considerable portion 
of the state. Bands of guerrillas burned and plundered in some 
sections, and were not entirely suppressed until after the war 
was ended. The state furnished about 36,000 soldiers to the 
Federal armies and somewhat less than 10,000 to the Confederate. 
The absence in the army of the Confederate sympathizers helps 
to explain the small vote against the formation of the new state. 
During the war and for years afterwards partisan feeling ran high. 
The property of Confederates might be confiscated, and in 1866 
a constitutional amendment disfranchising all who had given 
aid and comfort to the Confederacy was adopted. The addition 
of the Fourteenth and Fifteenth Amendments to the U.S. 
Constitution caused a reaction, the Democratic party secured 
control in 1870, and in 1871 the constitutional amendment of 
1866 was abrogated. The first steps toward this change had 
been taken, however, by the Republicans in 187a In 1872 an 
entirely new constitution was adopted (August as). 

Though the first constitution provided for the assumption of a 
part of the Virginia debt, negotiations opened by Virginia in 
1870 were fruitless, and in 1871 that state funded two-thirds of 
the debt and arbitrarily assigned the remainder to West Virginia. 



564 



WESTWARD HO-i-WETSTEIN 



The legislature of the latter state in 1873 adopted a report 
declaring that between 1822 and 1861, during which period the 
debt had been incurred, the western counties had paid an excess 
of taxes, more than equal to the amount which had been ex- 
pended in the west for the purposes for which the debt had been 
incurred, and concluded with the statement: " West Virginia 
owes no debt, has no bonds for sale and asks no credit." In 
1006 Virginia entered suit in the U.S. Supreme Court to compel 
West Virginia to assume a portion of the debt. West Virginia 
demurred, but was overruled, and on the 4th of May 1908 a 
master was appointed to take testimony. The state rejected 
decisively the overtures made by Virginia in 1866, looking 
towards a reunion of the commonwealths. 

Governors of West Virginia. 

Arthur I. Boretnan Republican 

D. D. T. Farnsworth (acting) . „ 

Win. E. Stevenson ... „ 

John J. Jacobs .... Democrat 

Henry M. Mathews ... „ 



Jacob B. Jackson 
E. Willis Wilson . 
A. Brooks Fleming l 

- -- - *?c 



1863-1869 

1869 

1869-1871 

1871-1877 

1877-1881 

1 881-1885 

1885-1890 

1890-1893 

1893-1897 

1 897-1901 

1 901-1905 

1905-1909 

1909- 



Wra. A. MacCorkL 

George W. Atkinson . Republican 

Albert B. White . 

Win. M. O. Dawson 

Wm. E. Glasscock 
Bibliography. — For general description see Henry Gannett, 
Gazetteer of West Virginia (Washington, 1904), being Bulletin 233 
of the U.S. Geological Survey; the Reports, and the Bulletins 
of the Geological Survey of West Virginia (Morgantown, 1901 sqq.). 
Bulletin 1 is a Bibliography of Works upon the Geology and Natural 
Resources of West Virginia, by S. S. Brown; /olios 26, 28, 32, 
34, 44, 69, 72, 77 and 160 of the Geologic Atlas of the United States; 
M. F. Maury and W. M. Fontaine, Resources of West Virginia 
f Charleston, 1876) ; and George W. Summers, The Mountain State 
' : bid. 1893). For administration and history see the Manual of 
f est Virginia (Charleston, 1907), issued by the Secretary of State; 



$ 



West Virginia Public Documents (ibid. 1902 sqq.); The Code of 
West Virginia (St Paul. 1906) ; A. R. Whitehill, History of Education 
in West Virginia (Washington, 1902), a Circular of Information of 



the U.S. Bureau of Education; a History of Education in West 
Virginia (Charleston, 1904), by the State Superintendent of Free 
Schools; V. A. Lewis. History of West Virginia (new ed. t New York, 
1904), and History and Government of West Virginia (Chicago, 1806) ; 
R. E. Fast and Hu Maxwell, History and Government of West Virginia 
(Morgantown, 1901; new edition, 1908); A. S. Withers, Chronicles 
of Border Warfare (1831, reprinted Cincinnati,; lOps);* J. P. Hale, 
Trans- Alleghany Pioneers (Cincinnati, 1887); W. P. Willey, Forma- 
tion of West Virginia (Wheeling, 1901); and M. F. Callahan, Evolu- 
tion of the Constitution of West Virginia (Morgantown, 1009)* 

WESTWARD HO, a small seaside village in the Barnstaple 
parliamentary division of Devonshire, England, on the east of 
Barnstaple Bay, 2$ m. N.W. of Bideford, on the Bideford, 
Appledore & Westward Ho railway. Of modern growth, it 
takes its name from a famous novel by Charles Kingsley. Many 
visitors are attracted in summer by its pure and bracing air, its 
quiet, and, above all, by its golf club, with links laid out on the 
sandhills known as Braunton Burrows. Westward Ho forms 
part of the urban district of Norteam, which had a population in 
1001 of 53S5- 

WETHERSFIELD, a township of Hartford county, Connecticut, 
U.S.A., on the Connecticut river, adjoining on the N. the city of 
Hartford, of which it is a residential suburb. Pop. (1800) 2271; 
(1900) 2637 (489 foreign-bom); (1910) 314B. Area, about 13 
sq. m. It is served by the New York, New Haven & Hartford 
. railway and by electric lines to Hartford. Among its old buildings 
are the house in which in 1781 George Washington and Count 
Rochambeau met to plan the Yorktown campaign; the First 
Church of Christ (Congregational), erected in 1761 and re- 
modelled in iftjft and j£8a ; and the old academy building, which 
was bu& ia afefrUMrnitfod vftft town hall, and houses a public 

jjnfifrth. TneConoccti- 
^^tlrititfHI^^^^HHIHhfc!bMl2MtU0wi)Bhip tobacco, 

f interests are of 

\ are small 

- permanently 

t ..legislature 




inhabited township in the state; it. was first settled in the 
winter of 1634-1635 by colonists from Water town. Massachusetts, 
and received its present name in 1637. With Hartford and 
Windsor in 1639 it framed the Fundamental Orders of the 
Colony of Connecticut. Before 1660 its inhabitants aided in the 
founding of Stamford and Milford, Connecticut, and of Hadley, 
Massachusetts. 

See H. R. Stiles, History of Ancient Wetkersfidd (New York, 
1900). 

WETSTE1N (also Wettstein), JOHANN JAKOB (1693-1754), 
New Testament critic, was born at Basel on the 5th of March 
1603. Among his tutors in theology was Samuel Werenfels 
(1657-1740), an influential anticipator of modern scientific 
exegesis. While still a student he began to direct his a ttention to 
the special pursuit of his life — the text of the Gi * k New Testa- 
ment. A relative, Johann Wetstein, who was the university 
librarian, gave him permission to examine and collate the 
principal MSS. of the New Testament in the library, and he 
copied the various readings which they contained into his .copy 
of Gerard of Maastricht's edition of the Greek text. In 17 13 
in his public examination he defended a dissertation entitled 
De variis Novi Testamenti lectionibus, and sought to show 
that variety of readings did not detract from the authority 
of the Bible. Wetstein paid great attention also to Aramaic 
and Talmudk Hebrew. In the spring of 17 14 he undertook 
a learned tour, which led him to Paris and England, the great 
object of his inquiry everywhere being manuscripts of the New 
Testament. In 1716 he made the acquaintance of Richard 
Bcntlcy at Cambridge, who took great interest in his work. 
The great scholar induced him to return to Paris to collate 
carefully the Codex Ephraemi, Bentky having then in view a 
critical edition of the New Testament. In July 17x7 Wetstein 
returned to take the office of a curate at large (diaconus communis) 
at Basel, a post which he held for three years, at the expiration 
of which he exchanged it to become his father's, colleague and 
successor in the parish of St Leonard's. At the same time 
he pursued his favourite study,, and gave private lectures on 
New Testament exegesis. It was then that he decided to prepare 
a critical edition of the Greek New Testament. He had in the 
meantime broken with Bcntlcy, whose famous Proposals appeared 
in x 7 20. His earlier teachers, however, J. C. Isclin and J. L. 
Frey, who were engaged upon work similar to his own, became so 
unfriendly towards him that after a time he was forbidden any 
further use of the manuscripts in the library. Then a rumour 
got abroad that his projected text would take the Socinian side 
in the case of such passages as 1 Timothy iii. 16; and in other 
ways (e.g. by regarding Jcsus's temptation as a subjective 
experience, by explaining some of the miracles in a natural way) 
he gave occasion for the suspicion of heresy. At length in 1729 
the charge of projecting an edition of the Greek Testament 
savouring of Arian and Socinian views was formally laid against 
him. The end of the long and unedifying trial was his dismissal, 
on the 13th of May 1 730, from his office of curate of St Leonard's. 
He then removed from Basel to Amsterdam, where a relative, 
Johann Heinrich Wetstein, had an important printing and 
publishing business, from whose office excellent editions of the 
classics were issued, and also Gerard of Macstricht's edition of the 
Greek Testament. Wetstein had begun to print in this office 
an edition of the Greek Testament, which was suddenly stopped 
for some unknown reason. As soon *as he reached Amsterdam 
he published anonymously the Prolegomena ad Novi Testaments 
Gracci tditioncm, which he had proposed should accompany his 
Greek Testament, and which was republished by him, with 
additions, as part of his great work, 1 751. The next year (1731) 
the Remonstrants offered bim the chair of philosophy in their 
college at Amsterdam, vacated by the illness of Jean le Clerc, 
on condition that he should clear himself of the suspicion of 
heresy. He thereupon returned to Basel, and procured a 
reversal (March 2a, 1732) of the previous decision, and re- 
admission to all his clerical offices. But, on his becoming a 
candidate for the Hebrew chair at Basel, his orthodox opponents 
procured his defeat and his retirement to Amsterdam. At 



WETTIN— WEXFORD 



S65 



length, after much painful contention, he was allowed to instruct 
the Remonstrant students in philosophy and Hebrew on certain 
somewhat humiliating conditions. For the rest of his life he 
continued professor in the Remonstrant college, derlmmg in 
1745 the Greek chair at Basel. In 1746 he once more visited 
England, and collated Syriac MSS. for his great work. At last 
this appeared in 1751-1752, in two folio volumes, under the 
title Novum Testamentum Craeeum editumu receptee cum 
ledumibus variantibus codtcum MSS., &c He did not venture 
to put new readings in the btfdy of his page, but consumed those 
el them which he recommended to a place between the textus 
recejtue and the full list of various readings. Beneath the latter 
be gave a commentary, consisting principally of a mass of 
valuable illustrations and parallels drawn from classical and 
rabbinical literature, which has formed a storehouse for all 
later commentators. In his Prolegomena he gave an admirable 
methodical account of the MSS., the versions and the readings 
of the fathers, as well as the troubled story of the difficulties 
with which he had had to contend in the prosecution of the work 
of his life. He was the first to designate uncial manuscripts 
by Roman capitals, and cursive manuscripts by Arabic figures. 
He did not long survive the completion of this work. He died 
at Amsterdam on the 23rd of March 1754. 

Wetstein's New Testament has never been republished entire. 
The London printer, William Bowyer, published, in 1763, a text in 
which he introduced the readings recommended by Wettteln ; J. G. 
Sender republished the Proieg omena and appendix (1764); A. 
Lots* commenced & new edition of the work, but the Prolegomena 
only appeared (Rotterdam. 1831), and this "castigated." It is 
generally allowed that Wetstetn rendered invaluable service to 
textual criticism by his collection of various readings and his 
methodical account of the MSS. and other sources, and that his 
work was rendered less valuable through his prejudice against the 
Latin version and the principle of grouping MSS. in families which 
feed been recommended by Richard BentJey and J A. Bengel. 

See Wetstcin s account of bis labours and trials in his Nov, Test, 
L; articles in CF.Ilben'sZCfcar./drsulor Tktol. by C R. Hagen- 
bach (1839), by L. J. Van Rhyn in 1843 and again by Hcinrich 
Bflttger in 1870; S. P. TregeUes, Account of the Printed Text of the 
Norn Testament; F. H. A. Scrivener's Introduction to the Criticism 
of tit New Testament', W. Gass, Protestantiscke Dopnahk. vol. iii.; 
the art. in Herzog's Realencyktopddie and in the AUgemeine deuUche 



WltTO, the name of a family from which several of the 
royal houses of Europe have sprung, derived from a castle which 
stood near the small town of that name on the Ssaie. Attempts 
to trace the descent to the Saxon chief Widukind or Wittekind, 
who died about 807, or to BurcharcL margrave of Thurmgia 
(d. 008), have failed, and the earliest known ancestor is one 
Dietrich, who was count of Hassegau or Hosgau, a district on 
the left bank of the Saale. Dietrich was killed in 08s fighting 
the Hungarians, and bis sons Dedo L (d. xcoo) and Frederick 
(d. 10x7) received lands taken from the Wends, including the 
county or Gas* of Wettin on the right bank of the Saale. Dedo's 
sen Dietrich IL inherited these lands, distinguished himself 
in warfare against the Poles, and married Matilda, daughter of 
Ekkard L, margrave of Meissen. Their eon Dedo IL obtained 
the Saxon east mark and lower Lusatia on the death of his 
nude Ekkard II., margrave of Meissen, in 1046, but in 1069 
he quarrelled with the emperor Henry IV. and was compelled 
to surrerid^r bis possessions. He died in 1075, and his lands were 
granted to his son Henry L, who in 1089 was invested with the 
mark of Meissen. In 1103 Henry was succeeded by his cousin 
Thimo (d. 1104), who built a castle at Wettin, and was called 
by this name. Henry IL, son of Henry L, followed, but died 
childless in 11*3; his cousin, Conrad L, son of Thimo, claimed 
Mrirrn, of which he secured poswewaon in 1130, and in 1x35 
the emperor Lothair IL added lower Lusatia to his nosarsBiorts. 
Abdicating in 1x56, Conrad's lands were divided between his 
five sons, when the county of Wettin fell to his fourth son Henry, 
whose family' died out in 12x7. Wettin then passed to the 
descendants of Conrad's youngest son Frederick, and in x 288 
the county, town and castle of Wettin were sold to the aseh- 
btshop of Magdeburg. They were retained by the archbishop 
until the peace of Westphalia in 1046V when, they passed to the 



elector of Brandenburg, and afterwards became incorporated 
in the kingdom of Prussia. 

Conrad L and his successors had added largely to their pos- 
sessions, until under Henry L, the Illustrious, margrave of 
Meissen, the lands of the Wettins stretched from the Oder to the 
Werra, and from the Erzgebirge to the Harz mountains. The 
subsequent history of the family is merged in that of Meissen, 
Saxony and the four Saxon dukedoms. In June 1889 the 800th 
anniversary of the rule of the Wettins in Meissen and Saxony 
was celebrated with great splendour at Dresden. 

See C. E. Hofmeister, Das Baus Wettin (Leipzig. 1889); C. W. 
Bottiger, Gescktckle des Kurstaates und Komgreicks Sachsen (Gotha, 
1867-1873); O. Posse, Die Markgrafen von Metssen und das Haus 
WeUtn (Leipzig, x88i) , K. Wenck. Die WeUtner tm 14** Jokrknndert 
(Leipzig. 1877); Kammel, Festschrift vur Soojanngen Jubelfewr des 
Hamscs Wettin (Leipzig. 1889), and H. B. Meyer, BaJ- und Zenirai- 
venoaitung der WeUtner (Leipzig, 1902). 

WETZLAR, a town of Germany, in the Prussian Rhine 
province, pleasantly situated at the confluence of the Dill and 
Lahn, 64 m. N.E. of Coblenz by the railway to Ciessen. Pop. 
(1905) 12,276. The most conspicuous building is the cathedral, 
dating in part from the nth, in part from the I4th-i6th centuries. 
The municipal archives contain interesting documents of the 
whilom imperial chamber (see infra). The town preserves 
associations of Goethe, who wrote Die Leiden desjumgen Wertkers 
after living here in 1772 as a legal official, and of Charlotte Buff, 
the Lotte of Wertker. Overlooking the town are the ruins of the 
medieval castle of Kalsmunt. There are iron mines and foundries 
and optical instrument factories. Wctalar was originally a 
royal demesne, and in the xsth century became a free imperial 
town. It had grown in importance when, in 1693, the imperial 
chamber (ReicAskammergerickt) was removed hither from Spires. 
The town lost its independence in 1803, and passed to the prince* 
primate Daiberg. Three years later (1806), on the dissolution 
of the empire, the imperial chamber ceased to exist. The French 
were defeated here by the Austrians and Saxons under the 
ar chduk e Charles, 15th June 1796. 

WEXFORD, a county of Ireland in the province of Leinster, 
bounded N. by Wicklow, E. and S. by St George's Channel, 
and W. by Waterford, Kilkenny and Carlow. The area is 
576,757 acres or about 902 sq, m. The coast-line does not 
present any striking features, and owing to the number of 
sandbanks navigation is dangerous near the shore. The only 
inlet of importance on the east coast and the only safe harbour 
is Wexford Harbour, which, owing to a bar, is not accessible to 
large vessels at ebb-tide. The artificial harbour of Rosssue, 
outside Wexford Harbour to the south, was therefore opened in 
xoo6. On the south coast the great inlet of Waterford Harbour 
separates the county from Waterford and Kilkenny, and among 
several inlets Bannow Bay is the largest. Several islets adjoin 
the coast. South from Czoasxarxtogue Point are the Saltee 
Islands, and Coningmore and Coxriugheg, beyono' the latter 
of which is the Saltee lightship. South-east from Greenore 
Point is the Tuskar Rock. 

The surface of the county is chiefly a series of verdant low 
bills, except towards the northern and western boundaries. An 
elevated ridge on the north-western boundaiyfoiiiis the termina- 
tion of the granitic range in Wicklow, and in Croghan KinshHs, 
on the borders of Wicklow, rism to a height of 1085 fU On the 
western border, another range, situated chiefly in Carlow, 
extends from the valley of the Sbney at Ncwtownbarry to the 
confluence of the Barrow with the Nore at New Ross, and 
reaches 8409 ft. in Blackstairs Mountain, and 2610 ft. in Mount 
Ldnster on tlie border of Co. Carlow. In the southern district, 
a haty region, reaching In Forth Mountain a height of 725 fL, 
forms with Wexford Harbour the northern boundaries of the 
baronies of Forth and -Bargy, a peninsula of flat and fertile land. 
The river Slaney enters the county at its north-western ex- 
tremity, and flows south-east to Wexford Hesbour, Its chief 
tributary is the Bann, which flows south-westwards from the 
borders of Wicklow. The Barrow forms the western boundary 
of the county from the Blackstairs range of mountains till its 
confluence with the Soar at Waterford Harbour. 



5^6 



WEXFORD 



Geology.— The Lcinster Chain, with its granite core and margin 
of mica-schist, bounds the county on the west. From this, Silurian 
ground stretches to the sea, like a platform with a hummocky 
surface, numerous intrusive and contemporaneous fdsitic lavas, 
and some dioritcs occurring along the strike in continuation of the 
Waterford series. A granite outlier rises south-cast erf Enniscorthy , 
and granite, in part gneissic, forms Carnsore Pt. From near Cour- 
town to Bannow Bay, greenish slates like the Oldhamian scries of 
Wictrlow form a broad band, with Old Red Sandstone and Carboni- 
ferous Limestone above them near Wexford. Silurian beds appear 
again towards Carnsore. The surface of the county is much modified 
by glacial drift, and by the presence of sands and gravels of pre- 
Glacial and possibly late Pliocene age. These interesting beds arc 
used for liming the fields, under the name of " manure gravels/' on 
account of the fossil shells that they contain. 

Irtdustries.— The soil for the most part is a cold stiff clay resting 
on clay-slate. The interior and western districts are much inferior 
to those round the coasts. In the south-eastern peninsula of Forth 
and Bargy the soil is a rich alluvial mould mixed with coralline 
sandstone and limestone. The peninsula of Hookhead, owing to 
the limestone formation, is specially fruitful. In the western districts 
of the county there are large tracts of turf and peat-moss. The 
acreage under pasture is a little over twice that of tillage, and 
figures show a fair maintenance of the principal crops, barley, of 
which the county produces more than any other Irish county, 
oats, potatoes and turnips. The numbers also of cattle, sheep, 
pigs and poultry arc large and increasing, or well maintained. 
Except in the town of Wexford the manufactures and trade are of 
srrialf importance. The town of Wexford is the headquarters of sea 
and salmon fishing districts, and there are a few fishing villages 
on the inlets of the south coast. 

The main line of the Dublin & South-Eastern railway enters the 
county from N.E., and runs to Wexford by way of Enniscorthy, 
with a branch W. to New Ross, from Macmine Junction. Con- 
necting with this line at Palace East, a branch of the Great Southern 
& Western joins the Kilkenny & Kildare line at Bagcnalstown, 
county Carlow. This company also owns the lines from Rosslare 
harbour to Wexford and across the southern part of the county to 
Waterford. There is water communication for barges by the Slaney 
to Enniscorthy; by the Barrow for larger vessels to New Ross, and 
by this river and the Grand Canal for barges to Dublin. 

Population and Admrtistraiion.— The population decreases 
(112,063 in 1 801; 104,104 in xooi), but this decrease and the 
emigration returns are less serious than the average of Irish 
counties. Of the total about ox % are Roman Catholics, and 
About 83% form the rural population. The principal towns 
•to Wexford (pop. 11,168), New Ross (5847)* Enniscorthy 
(5458) and Gorey (2x78). Newtownbarry, finely situated on 
the Slaney below the outliers of Mount Lcinster, is a lessor 
market town. To the Irish parliament, until the Union of 1800, 
the county returned two members, and the boroughs of Bannow, 
Clonmines, Enniscorthy, Fethard, Gorey, New Ross, Taghmon 
and Wexford two each. By the Redistribution Act of 1885 
Wexford, which had returned two members since 1S00, was 
divided into two parliamentary divisions, North and South, each 
returning one member, the borough of Wexford, which formerly 
returned one member, and the portion of the borough of New 
Ross within the county, being merged in the South Division. The 
county is divided into ten baronies. It is in the Protestant diocese 
of Dublin, and the Roman Catholic dioceses of Dublin, Ferns, and 
Kildare and Leighlin. Assizes are held at Wexford, and quarter 
Sessions at Enniscorthy, Gorey, New Ross and Wexford. 

History and Antiqtktits.—The northern portion of Wexford 
was included in Hy Kinselagk, the peculiar territory of the 
Macmorroughs, overlords, of Lcinster, who had their chief 
residence at Ferns. Dermod Macmorrough, having been de> 
posed from the kingdom of Lcinster, asked help of Henry II., 
king bf England, who authorized him to raise forces in England 
for the assertion of his claim. He secured the aid of Strongbow 
by promising him the hand of Eva, and in addition obtained 
assistance from Robert Fitzatephen and Maurice Fitzgerald of 
Wales. On the 1st of May x 160 Fitxstcphen landed at Bagenbon 
on the south side of Fethard, and after four days' siege captured 
the town of Wexford from its Danish Inhabitants. After this 
Dermod granted the territory of Wexford to Fittstephen and 
Fltagerald and their heirs for ever. Macmorrough having died 
in 1 179, Strongbow became lord of Lcinster. At first Henry IL 
retained Wexford in his own possession; but in 1174 he com* 
aitted ft to Strongbow. The barony of Forth is almost entirely 
peopled by the descendants of those who accotnpanied these 



English expeditions. Wexford was one of the twelve counties 
mto which the conquered territory in Ireland is generally stated 
to have been divided by King John, and formed part of the 
possessions of William Marshal, earl of Pembroke, who bad 
marned Strongbow's daughter Through the female line it 
ultimately passed to John Talbot, earl of Shrewsbury, who in 
1446 was made earl of Waterford and baron of Dungarvan. In 
1474 George Talbot was seneschal of the liberty of Wexford. 
The district was actively concerned in the rebellion of 1641; 
and during the Cromwellian campaign the town of Wexford 
was carried by storm on the oth of October 1649, and a week 
later the garrison at New Ross surrendered— a -* seasonable 
mercy," according to Cromwell, as giving him an " opportunity 
towards Minister." Wexford was the chief seat of the rebellion 
of 1798, the leaders there being the priests. 

Evidences of the Danish occupation are seen in the numerous 
raths, or encampments, especially at.Dunbrody, Enniscorthy and 
New Ross. Among the monastic ruins special mention may be made 
of Dunbrody abbey, of great extent, founded about H78 for Cistercian 
monks by Hcrvcy de Montmorency, marshal of Henry II.; Tintern 
abbey, founded in iaoo by William Marshal, earl of Pembroke, 
and peopled by monks from Tintern abbey in Monmouthshire; the 
abbey of St Sepulchre, Wexford, founded shortly after the invasion 
by the Roches, lords of Fermoy; Ferns abbey, founded by Dermod 
Macmorrough (with other remains including the modernized cathe- 
dral of a former see, and ruins of a church) ; and the abbey of New 
Rocs, founded by St Alban in the 6th century. There are a con- 
siderable number of old castles, including Ferns, dismantled by the 
parliamentary forces under Sir Charles Coote in 1641, and occupying 
the site of the old palace of the Macmorroughs; the massive pale ol 
Enniscorthy, founded by Raymond le Gros; Carrick Castle, near 
Wexford, the first built by the English; and the fort of Duncaanon. 

WEXFORD, a seaport, jnarket town and municipal borough, 
and the county town of Co. Wexford, Ireland, finely situated 
on the south side of the Slaney, where it discharges into Wexford 
Harbour, on the Dublin & South-Eastern railway, o*f m. S. 
of Dublin. Pop. (1001) 11,168. Wexford Harbour, formed by 
the estuary of the Slaney, is about 5 m. from N. to S. and about 
4 from E. to W. There are quays extending nearly 900 yds., 
and the harbour affords good accommodation for shipping, but 
its advantages are in great part lost by a bar at its mouth pre- 
venting the entrance of vessels drawing more than is ft. An 
artificial harbour was therefore opened at Rosslare in 1906, 
outside the southern part of the promontory closing in the 
harbour, and this is connected with Wexford by a railway 
(8} m.) owned by the Great Southern & Western Company, 
and is served by the passenger steamers of the Great Western 
railway of England from Fishguard. The town of Wexford 
consists, for the most part, of extremely narrow streets, of 
picturesque appearance, but inconvenient to traffic* Some 
remains exist of the old walls and flanking towers. The Pro- 
testant church, near the ruins of the ancient abbey of St Sepulchre 
or Selsker, is said to occupy the spot where the treaty was 
signed between the Irish and the English invaders in x 169. The 
principal modem buildings are the town-hall, courthouse, 
barracks, occupying the site of the ancient castle, St Peter's 
College for the education of Catholic clergy, with a striking 
chapel by A. W. Pugin, and a number of convents. At Carrick, 
3 m. W., the Anglo-Normans erected their first castle, and 
opposite this, across the river, tea modern found tower com* 
fhemorating the men of Wexford Who died in the Crimean War. 
The principal exports are agricultural produce, live stock and 
whisky* Shipbuilding is carried on, and also tanning^ xheJtfng, 
brewing, iron-founding, distilling and the manufacture of 
artificial manure, flour, agricultural implements, andTfop* and 
twine. Wexford is the headquarters of 1 " 
districts. Under the Local 
it* retains its mayor and t 

Wexford was boo of t~ 
been taken by 1 
well besieged to 4 
x6oo. Ini 




WBYBMDGE— WEYMOUTH 



567 



By Junes I. it was in 1608 made * free borough corporate, by 
the title of " the town and free borough corporate of Wexford.'* 
It returned two members to parliament from 1574 till the Union, 
when they were reduced to one. In 1885 ft was included in the 
so uth divis ion of the county. 

WBTBRIDOB, an urban district in the Chertsey parliamentary 
division of Surrey, England; 19 m. W.S.W from London by 
the London ft Souths Western railway. Pop. (tool) 5320. It 
hies in the flat valley of the river Wey, 1 m. above its junction 
with the Thames. The river is locked up to Godalming, and 
navigation is assisted by cuts. Weybridge has grown in modern 
times out of a village into a residential town. The church of 
St James is modern but contains numerous ancient memorials, 
and one by Sir F. Chantrey for the duchess of York (d. 1820), 
daughter of Frederick William II. of Prussia, to whose memory 
there is also a column on Weybridge Green. The* summit of 
this column is that which formerly stood at Seven Dials, London. 
The Roman Catholic chapel of St Charles Borromeo was the 
burial-place of Louis Philippe, ex-king of the French (d. 1850), 
who resided at Claremont in the neighbouring parish of Esher, his 
queen and other members of his family, but their bodies were 
subs e q uen tly removed to Dreux in Normandy To the east 
of Weybridge Hes Henry VTIL's park of Oatjands (see Walton- 
Om-Thames). In 1007 the Brooklands racing track for motor- 
cars was opened near Weybridge. It has a circuit of t\i m. 
round the inner edge, and including the straight finishing track 
is 3} m. in total length, its maximum width is too ft., and at the 
c urves it is banked up to a maximum height of 28 ft. 8 in. 

WEYDEH, BOOIBR VAH DER [originally Roger de ia 
Pasture] 1 (c. 1400-1464), Flemish painter, was born in Tournai, 
and there apprenticed in 1427 to Robert Campw He became 
a gfld master in 1432 and in 1435 removed to Brussels, where 
he was shortly after appointed town painter His four historical 
works in the Hotel de Ville have perished, but three tapestries 
In the Bern museum are traditionally based on their designs. 
In 1440 Rogier went to Italy, visiting Rome, Fenrara (where 
he painted two pictures for Lionel d'Este), Milan and probably 
Florence. On returning (1450) he executed for Pierre Bladelin 
the " Magi " triptych, now in the Berlin Gallery, and (1435) «t 
altarpiece for the abbot of Cambrai, which has been identified with 
a triptych in the Frado Gallery representing the " Crucifixion," 
" Expulsion from Paradise " and " Last Judgment." Van der 
Wcyden's style, which was in no way modified by his Itah'an 
journey, is somewhat dry and severe as compared with the painting 
of the Van Eycks, whose pupil Vasan erroneously supposed him to 
be; his colour is less rich than theirs, his brush-work more 
laboured, and he entirely lacks their sense of atmosphere. On the 
other hand, he cared more for dramatic expression, particularly 
of a tragic kind, and his pictures have a deeply religious Inten- 
tion. Comparatively few works are attributed with certainty to 
this painter, chief among such are two altarpieces at Berlin, 
besides that mentioned above, "The Joys and Sorrows of 
Mary," and " Life of St John the Baptist," a " Deposition " 
and " Crucifixion " in the Escorial, the Prado triptych, 
another (" Annunciation,*' " Adoration " and " Presentation '0 
at Munich; a " Madonna " and a " St John the Baptist M at 
Frankfort. The " Seven Sacraments " altarpiece at Antwerp 
Is almost certainly his, likewise the " Deposition " in the Uffizf, 
the triptych of the Beaune hospital, and the "Seven Sorrows" 
at Brussels. Two pictures of St Luke painting the Virgin, at 
Brussels and St Petersburg respectively, are attributed to him. 
None of these Is signed or dated. Van der Weyden attracted 
saatty foreigners, notably Martin Schongauer, to his studio, and 
: one of the mam influences in the northern art of the 
Ijfttntury. He died at Brussels in 1464. His descendant, 
VAX der Weyden the younger, b known to have 
t the Antwerp gild in 1528, but no work of his has yet 
}.ailisfactorily authenticated. 

i fajsv mm der Weyden und Roger aw Briffc (Straw- 



rfy identified with a painter called 
»da Bruggia. 



WBYLBR T mCOUU. VALERIA**, Marquess of Tenerife 
(r83Q- ), Spanish soldier, was born at Palma de Majorca. 
His family were originally Prussians, and served in the Spanish 
army for several generations. He entered at sixteen the military 
college of infantry at Toledo, and, when he attained the rank 
of lieutenant, passed into the staff college, from which he came 
out as the head of has class. Two yean afterwards he became 
captain, and was sent to Cuba at his own request. He distin- 
guished himself in the expedition to Santo Domingo in many 
fights, and especially in a daring reconnaissance with few men 
into the heart of the enemy's lines, for which he got the cross 
with laurels of San Fernando. From 1868 to 1872 he served 
also brilliantly against the Cuban rebels, and commanded a 
corps of volunteers specially raised for him in Havana. He 
returned to Spain in 1873 as brigadier-general, and took an 
active part against the Cariists in the eastern provinces of the 
Peninsula in 1873 and 1876, for which he was raised to the rank 
of general of division. Then he was elected senator and given 
the title of marquess of Tenerife. He held the post of captainv 
general in the Canary Isles from 1878 to 1883, and in the Balearic 
Isles afterwards. In 1888 he was sent out as captain-general 
to the Philippines, where he dealt very sternly with the native 
rebels of the Carolines, of Mindanao and other provinces. On 
his return to Spain in 1892 he was appointed to the command 
first of the 6th Army Corps in the Basque Provinces and Navarre, 
where he soon quelled agitations, and then as captain-general 
at Barcelona, where he remained unto January 1806. In 
Catalonia, with a state of siege, he made himself the terror of 
the anarchists and socialists. After Marshal Campos had failed 
to pacify Cuba, the Conservative government of Canons del 
Castillo sent out Weyler, and this selection met the approval 
of most Spaniards, who thought him the proper man to crush 
the rebellion. Weyler attempted to do this by a policy of 
inexorable repression, which raised a storm of indignation, and 
led to a demand from America for his recall. This recall was 
granted by the Liberal government of Sagasta, but Weyler 
afterwards asserted that, had he been left alone, he would have 
stamped out the rebellion in six months. After bis return to 
Spain his reputation as a strong and ambitious soldier made 
him one of those who in case of any constitutional disturbance 
might be expected to play an important role, and his political 
position was nationally affected by this consideration, his 
appointment in 1000 as captain-general of Madrid resulted 
indeed in more than one ministerial crisis. He was minister of 
war for a short time at the end of 1001, and again in 1005. At 
the end of Ortober xooo be was appointed captain-general at 
Barcelona, where the disturbances connected with the execution 
of Franc isco Ferrer were quelled by him without bloodshed. 

WEYMAN, STANLEY JOHN (1855- )> English novefist, 
was born at Ludlow, Shropshire, on the 7th of August 1855, 
the son of a solicitor. He was educated at Shrewsbury School, 
and at Christ Church, Oxford. He took his degree in modern 
history in 1877, and was called to the bar at the Inner Temple 
In 1 88 1, joining the Oxford circuit. He had been practising a* a 
barrister for eight years when he made his reputation as a 
novelist by a series of romances dealing with French history* 
The House of the Wolf (1889), A Gentleman of France (1803), 
Under the Red Robe (1804), Memoirs of a Minister of Franca 
(1803), &c. Among his later novels were. Shrewsbury (1807), 
The Castle Inn (1898), Sophia (1000), Count Hannibal <iooi), 
In King's Byways (1002), The Long Night (1003), The Abbess 
of Vlaye ( 1004) , Starvecrow Farm (1005), Chipptnge (1906) 

WEYMOUTH, a township of Norfolk county, Massachusetts, 
U.S.A., on Weymouth harbour, a part of Boston Bay, 9 m. S.E. 
of Boston, between Quincy and Braintree (to the W) and 
Hmgham to the E. Pop. (1890) 10,866, (1900) 11,3*4 (184$ 
foreign-born) ; (1005, state census) 1 1 ,585 , (1910) 12,895. Area, 
19 sq. m. Weymouth is served by the New York, New Haven 
ft Hartford railway, and is connected with Boston, Quincy, 
Braintree, Hmgham, Nantasket and Rockland by electric 
lines. In the township there are several villages, including 
Weymouth, North Weymouth, East Weymouth and South 



568 



WEYMOUTH—WHAIiE 



Weymouth, and the smaller villages of Weymouth Centre, 
Weymouth Heights, Lovell's Comer, Nash's Corner and Old 
Spain, and them are also four islands, Round, Grape, Slate and 
Sheep. The mainland itself is largely a peninsula lying between 
the Weymouth Fore river and the Weymouth Back river, to 
the west and east respectively. The surface of the country is 
rough: Great Hill (at one of the narrowest parts of the peninsula) 
is about 140 ft. above the rivers. In the township are the Fogg 
library (1808, in South Weymouth) founded by a bequest 
of John S. Fogg; and the Tufts Library (1879. in Weymouth 
village), endowed by Quincy Tufts and his sister Susan Tufts. 
In 1905 the township's factory products were valued at 
$4,94i,o$S, of which $2,588,213, or 52-6% of the total, was 
the value of boots and shoes. The township owns and operates 
its water works; the water supply is obtained from Weymouth 
Great Pond in the village of South Weymouth. Weymouth was 
first settled in 1623 by Robert Gorges. It was known first as 
the Plantation of Wessaguscus or Wessagusset, was incorpo- 
rated as a township in 1635, and its boundaries .have been prac- 
tically unchanged since 1637, when Round and Grape islands 
were granted to Weymouth. 

See C. F Adams, Jr.. " Wessagusset and Weymouth n in No. 3 
(1905) of the Publications of the Weymouth Historical Society 
(organized in 1879 and incorporated in 1886). and D. H. Hurd, 
Htstory of Norfolk County (Boston, 1884). 

WEYMOUTH and MELCOMBE REGIS, a seaport, watering- 
place, market town and municipal borough in the Southern parlia- 
mentary division of Dorsetshire, England, 14s m. S.W. by W. 
from London, on the London & South-Western and Great 
Western railways. Pop. (1891) 16,100; (1901) 19,843- It is 
formed of Weymouth, a fishing town and seaport on the south- 
west of the Wey, and Melcombe Regis on the north-east of the 
river, the two towns being contiguous. The situation on Wey- 
mouth Bay, which is enclosed to the south by the Isle of Portland, 
and north by the eastward trend of the coast, is picturesque. 
An esplanade about 1 m. in length fronts the sea. To the south 
of the esplanade is a pier of stone on wooden piles, and the 
Alexandra and other public gardens are attractive. The harbour 
lies between the pier on the north and the spur of land called 
the Nothe on the south, and is protected by a concrete wall 
extending 500 ft. northward from the Nothe. The principal 
buildings are the old town-hall, the market house, the guildhall, 
the Royal Dorset Yacht Clubhouse, the theatre, the Royal Victoria 
Jubilee Hall, the Weymouth and Dorset eye infirmary, the 
Weymouth royal hospital and dispensary and the barracks. 
Of the numerous churches none dates from before the 19th 
century. Opposite the Royal Terrace is an equestrian statue 
of George III., erected in 1809 in commemoration of his jubilee. 
A mile S.W. of Weymouth is Sandsfoot Castle, a fort erected 
by Henry VIII. for the protection of the shipping. The principal 
exports are Portland stone, bricks and tiles and provisions, and 
the imports are coal, timber, garden and dairy produce and 
wine. Ship and boat building, rope and sail making, and brewing 
are carried on. The Great Western railway company maintains 
a regular service of passenger steamers to Guernsey and Jersey 
The municipal borough is under a mayor, 8 aldermen and 24 
councillors. Area, 1299 acres. 

Although its convenient harbour was probably used before 
Saxon times, and bronze weapons and Roman interments have 
been found, there is no evidence that Weymouth (JVaimue, 
Waymutk) was a place of early settlement. The first mention 
of " that place called Weymouth" occurs in a charter of King 
iEthelred (866-871), while it is again spoken of in a charter 
of King iCthelstan (895-040). Edward the Confessor gave the 
manor to the church of Winchester in 104a, and it remained 
with the prior and convent of St Swithin until the 13th century, 
when it passed by exchange to Gilbert de Clare, earl of Gloucester, 
though the vassals of the prior and convent remained exempt 
from dues and tronage in the port. Coming by marriage into 
the hands of the earls of March and Plantagenets, the manor 
was finally vested in the crown. The first charter was that 
granted by the prior and convent in 125a, by which Weymouth 



was made a f uee borough and pott for all merchants, the burgesses 
holding their burgages by the same customs as those of Forts- 
mouth and Southampton. The demand of six ships from the 
town by the king in X324 shows its importance in the 14th 
century, but there is no mention of a mayor until 1467. It is 
probable that the town suffered considerably at the hands of the 
French at the beginning of the 15th century, though in 1404 the 
men of Weymouth were victorious over a party which landed 
in the Isle of Portland. Early in the 16th century the commercial 
rivalry between Weymouth and the neighbouring borough of 
Melcombe came to a height. Melcombe bad received a charter 
from Edward I. in 1280 granting to its burgesses half the port 
and privileges similar to those enjoyed by the citizens of London, 
Edward II. in 1307-1308 granted that its men might elect for 
themselves two bailiffs. The date of the giant of the town at 
an annual fee-farm of 8 marks is uncertain, but in the reign of 
Henry VI. a commission was appointed to inspect the destruction 
wrought by the king's enemies on the town, with the result that 
the fee-farm was reduced to 20s. The continual disputes 
between the two boroughs led to the passing of an act of union 
in 1 571, the new borough being incorporated under the title 
of the " Mayor, Bailiffs and Burgesses" by James I. in 1616; 
further charters were granted by Charles II. and George IL 
Melcombe Regis first returned two members to parliament 
in 1307, and Weymouth in 1319, four members being returned 
by the united boroughs until 1832, when the representation was 
reduced to two and ceased in 1885. The medieval fairs are no 
longer held. As early as 1 293 trade was carried on with Bayonne, 
and six years later a receiver of customs on wool and wool-feus 
is mentioned at Weymouth, while wine was imported from 
Aquitaine. In x 586 suganss mentioned as an import, and in 1646 
deal boards were brought here from Hamburg. The town 
suffered severely during the Civil War, being garrisoned by the 
parliamentary troops in 1642, taken by the earl of Carnarvon 
in 1643, and surrendered in the following year. The town is 
described as " but little " in 1733, but a few years afterwards 
it gained a reputation as a watering-place, and the duke of 
Gloucester built a house here; George III. and the royal family 
in 1789 paid Weymouth the first of a series of visits which 
further ensured its popularity. 

See H. J. Motile. Descrip&e Catalog* of the Charters, Minuts 
Books, and other Documents of the Borough of Weymouth and Mdcmne 
Regis, A.D. 1 2 $0 to i860 (Weymouth, 1883); John Hutchins, History 
and Antiquities of the County of Dorset (3rd ed., Westminster, i860). 

WHALE, the English name applied to all the larger and some 
of the smaller representatives of the order Cetacea (qv.). 
Although by their, mode of life far removed from dose observa- 
tion, whales are in many respects the most interesting and 
wonderful of all creatures; and there is much in their structure 
and habits worthy of study- One of the first lessons a study of 
these animals affords is that, in the endeavour to discover what 
a creature really is, from what others it is descended, and to 
which it is related, the outward appearance affords little clue, 
and we must go deep below the surface to find the essential 
characteristics of its nature. There was once, and may be still, 
an idea that a whale is a fish. To realize the fallacy of this notion 
we have only to consider what a fish really is, what under all 
the diversities of form, size and colour there is common to afl 
fishes, and we see that in everything which characterizes a true 
fish and separates if from other classes, as reptiles, birds and 
mammals, the whale resembles the last and differs from ~ 
fish. It is as essentially a mammal as a cow or a hoi 
simply resembles a fish externally because it is a 
the same clement, but it is no more on i~ 
than is a bat (because adapted to pass a g 
on the wing) nearly related to a bird, 
structure of a whale we see the 1 
and reacting upon each other— qat 
type, or rather to fundamental jg 
and, on the other, adaptaQ^|lj 
under which 
fitted. The 1 



i^/p* 




WHALE 



5««9 



swimining through the .water; the tail; however, is ant placed 
vertically as in fishes, but horizontally, a position which accords 
better with the constant necessity for rising to the surface for 
the purpose of breathing. The hairy covering characteristic 
of all mammals, which if present might interfere with rapidity 
of movement through the water, is reduced to the merest rudi- 
ments-ra few short bristles about the chin or upper lip— which 
are often only present in young animals. The function of keeping 
the body warm is performed by a thick layer of non-conducting 




remains in perfect action, filling the whole of the interval. The 
mechanical perfection of the arrangement is completed by the 
great development of the lower lip, which rises stiffly above 
the jaw-bone and prevents the long, slender, flexible ends of the 
whalebone from being carried outwards by the rush of water 
from the mouth, when its cavity is being diminished by the 
closure of the jaws and raising of the tongue. 

If, as appear* highly probable, the " bowhead n of the Okhotsk 
Sea and Bering Strait belongs to this species, its t range is drcum- 
polar. Though found in the seas on both sides of Greenland, 
and passing freely from one to the other, it b never seen so 
far south as Cape Farewell; but on the Labrador coast, 
where a coM stream sets down from the north, its range is 
somewhat farther. In the Bering Sea, according to Scam- 
mon, "it ia seldom seen south of the fifty-fifth parallel, 
which is about the farthest southern extent of the winter 
ice, while in the Sea of Okhotsk its southern limit is about 
the latitude of 54V "Everything tends to prove," 
Scammon says, " that Bataena mysticelus is truly an ' ice 
whale,' for among the scattered floes, or about the borders 
of the ice-fields or barriers, is its home and feeding-ground. 
It is true that these animals are pursued in the open water. 



Fig. i.— The Greenland or Arctic Right Whale (Belseaa nysticdus), 
material, the " blubber," a dense kind of fat placed immediately 
beneath the skin. The fore-limbs, though functionally reduced 
to mere paddles, with no power of motion except at the shoulder- 
Joint, have beneath their smooth and continuous external 
covering all the bones, joints and even most of the muscles, 
nerves and arteries of the human arm and hand; and rudiments 
even of hind-legs are found buried deep in the interior of the 
animal, serving no useful purpose, but pointing a lesson to those 
able to read it. 

In the present article attention is directed only to what may 
be regarded as the typkal whales. Of these the Greenland 
or Arctic right whale (Balactta mystkdus) attains, when full 
grown, a length of from 45 to so ft- In this species (fig. 1) all 
the peculiarities whkh distinguish the head and mouth of the 
whales from those of other mammals have attained their greatest 
development. The head is of enormous sixe, exceeding one-third 
the whole length of the creature. The cavity of the mouth is 
actually larger than that of the body, thorax and abdomen 
together. The upper jaw is very narrow, but greatly arched 
from before backwards, to increase the height of the cavity and 
allow for the great length of the whalebone-blades; the enormous 
lateral halves of the lower jaw are widely separated posteriorly, 
and have a further outward sweep before they meet at the 
symphysis in front, giving the floor of the mouth the shape of 
an immense spoon. The whalebone-blades attain the number 
of 380 or more on each side, and those in the middle of the series 
have a length of 10 or sometimes is ft. They are black in 
colour, fine and highly elastic in texture, and fray out at the 
inner edge and ends into long, delicate, soft, almost silky, but 
tough hairs. The remarkable development of the mouth 
and of the structures in connexion with it,, whkh dis- 
tinguishes the right whale from all its allies, is entirely in 
relation to the nature of its food. By this apparatus 
the creature is enabled to avail itself of the minute 
but highly nutritious crustaceans and pteropods which 
swarm in immense shoals in* the seas it frequents. The 
large month enables it to take in at one time a sufficient 
quantity of water filled with these small organisms, 
and the length and delicate structure of the whale- 
bone provide an efficient strainer or hair-sieve by 
■*>*A tlga fjatfotab 1 ** drained off. If the whalebone were 
... .„^^c^^ ^ - *. .^ .. ._ between the upper 

, a space would be 
ed, through which 
puld escape. But 
■elastic ends of the 
b dosed: the front 
toel lying between 
mouth is opened, 
t like a bow unbent, 
ipareted the strainer 



of their being captured south of where winter ice-fields are 

mally met with.*' The occurrence of this species, therefore, on 

the British or any European coast is unlikely, as when alive and in. 
health the southern timft of its range in the North Sea is from the 
east coast of Greenland at 64° N. lat. along the north of Iceland 
towards Spitsbergen, and a glance at a physical chart .will show tint 
there are no currents setting southwards which could bear a d is a bled 
animal or a floating carcase to the British shores. To this improb- 
ability may be added the fact that no authentic instance has been 
recorded of the capture or stranding of this species upon any 
European coast. Still, as two other Arctic cetaceans, the narwhal 
and the belu ga, have in a few instances found their way to British 
shores, it would be rash to deny the possibility of the Greenland 
right whale doing the same. 

The black whale or southern right whale (5. australis) re- 
sembles the preceding in the absence of a dorsal fin and of 
longitudinal furrows in the skin of the throat and chest, bfft 
differs in that it possesses a smaller head in proportion to its 
body, shorter whalebone, a different-shaped contour of the upper 
margin of the lower Up, and a greater number of vertebrae. 
This type inhabits the temperate seas of both southern and 
northern hemispheres and is divided into several species accord- 
ing to their geographical distribution: B. biscayettsis of the 
North Atlantic, B. japonic* of the North Pacific, B. austraUs 
of the South Atlantic, and B. antipodarum and B. novaeselandiae 
of the South Pacific. But the differential characters by which, 
they are separated are slight, and the number of specimens 
available for comparison is not sufficient to afford the necessary 
data to determine whether these characters can be regarded as 
specific or not 

The Biscay right whale was formerly abundant in the Norm 
Atlantic but is now verging on extinction. This was the whale the 
pursuit of which gave occupation to a numerous population on the 





Fig. a.— The Black Whale or Southern Right Whale (£. esutreJif). 

shores of the Basque provinces of France and Spain in the middle 
ages. From the 10th to the 16th centuries Bayoane, Buceritt, St 
Jean de Lux and San Sebastian, as well as numerous other towns 
on the north coast of Spain, were the centres of an active whale 
" fishery/' which supplied Europe with oil and whalebone. In later 
times the whales were pursued as far as the coast of Newfoundland. 
They were, however, already getting scarce who! the yoynges under- 
taken towards the dose of the 16m century for the dis^^ 
Horth-enstem route to China and India opened the seas round 
Spitsbergen; then for the first time the existence of the Greenland 
whale became known, and henceforth the energies of the European 
whale-ushers became concentrated upon that animal. Among 
instances of the occurrence of this whale in Europe in modern times 



57° 



WHALEBONB— WHALE-FISHERY 



may be meataontd three, Muaely, in the harbour of San Sebastian in 
January 1854* in the Gulf of Taranto, in the Mediterranean, in 
February 1877, and on the Spanish coast between Guctaria and 
Zarauz (Guipuxcoa) in February 1878. The skeletons of these three 
whales are preserved in the museums of Copenhagen, Naples and 
San Sebastian respectively. On the coast of the United States 
several specimens have been taken; and a cargo of whalebone 
belonging to this species was received at New Bedford in 1906. 
During the latter year six examples were killed by whalers from 
Bunevonoader, in the island of Harris (see R. C. Haldane, A nn. Scot. 
Nat. Hist., 1907,0. 13). In the North Pacific a similar if not identical 
whale is regularly bunted by the Japanese, who tow the carcases 
ashore for the purpose of flensing and extracting the whalebone. 
In the tropical seas, however, right whales are never or rarely seen ; 
but the southern temperate ocean, especially in the neighbourhood 
of die Cape of Good Hope, Kerguelen's Island, Australia and New 
Zealand, is inhabited by " black whales," once abundant, but now 
nearly exterminated through the wanton destruction of the females 
as they visit the bays and inlets round the coast, their constant habit 
in the breeding time. The range of these whales southward has not 
been accurately determined; but no species corresponding with the 
Arctic right whale has been met with in the Antarctic seas. 

See also Huvp-back Whale, Rorqual, Sperm- Whale, Bbluga, 
&c (W.H.F.;R.I>) 

WHALEBONE, the inaccurate name under which the baleen 
plates of the right whale are popularly known; the trade-name 
of whale-fin, which the substance receives in commerce, is equally 
misleading. Whalebone is formed in the palate on the roof of 
the mouth and is an exaggeration of the ridges, often horny in 
character, which are found on the roof of the mouth of all 
mammals. Three kinds are recognized by traders — the Green- 
land, yielded by the Greenland whale, Balaena myslkcius; 
the South Sea, the produce of the Antarctic black whale, B. 
oustrolis; and the Pacific or American, which is obtained from 
B. japonica. Very many different names have been given to 
whales of the B. australis group, and it is possible that local 
races exist, whilst some writers are inclined to regard B. japonica 
as not specifically distinct from B. australis. Of these the 
Greenland whalebone is the most valuable. Jt formed the only 
staple known in earlier times, when the northern whale fishery 
was a great and productive industry. This whalebone usually 
comes into the market trimmed and clean, with the hairy fringe 
which edges the plates removed. To prepare whalebone for its 
economic applications, the blades or plates are boiled for about 
twelve hours, till the substance is quite soft, in which state it 
is cut either into narrow strips or into small bristle-like fila- 
ments, according to the, use to which it is to "be devoted. 



Whalebone possesses a unique combination of^ properties which 
render it peculiarly and almost exclusively suitable' for 1 
purposes. It is light, flexible, tough and fibrous, and its fibres run 



several 



parallel to each other without intertwisting. One of its earliest uses, 
referred to by William le Breton in the 13th century, was to form 
the plumes on helmets. It has been found practicable to employ 
flexible steel for several purposes to which whalebone was formerly 
applied, especially in the umbrella and corset industries. In which 
steel is now almost exclusively used. Whalebone, is, however, still 
In targe demand among dressmakers and milliners; but it is princi- 
pally used in the brush trade. In cases where bristles are too soft and 
weak, and where the available vegetable fibres possess insufficient 
elasticity and durability, whalebone offers the great advantage of 
being procurable in strips or filaments, long or short, thick or thin, 
according to requirement. Hence it is principally used for making 
brushes lor mechanical purposes. The use of whalebone in brush- 
making was originally patented by Samuel Crackles in 1808, -and 
various special machines have been adapted for cutting the material 
into filaments. When whalebone came into the English market in 
*the 17th century it cost at first about £700 per ton. In the 18th 
century its price ranged from £350 to £500 per ton, but early in the 
19th century it fell as low as £25. Later it varied from [200 to [ 250 : 
but with the decrease in whaling the article ha^ become very scarce, 
and upwards of £aooo per ton is now pa jd for Greenland whalebone. 
WHALE-FISHERY, or WhaLt.no. the pursuit and capture 
of the larger spedes of cetaceans (see Cftacia and WHAtt). 
Man, in all probability, first became acquainted with the value 
of the products yielded by whales from stranded individuals; 
but at what time he first ventured to hunt and kill these men i 
m the open ocean ft is now impossible to ascertain* T 
however, from King Alfred's account of Qhtbew^l 
the White Sea that the Norwegian* were ti[*t 
least a thousand years ago; and we also trio* 
10th to the 10th centuries the Basque* of 



St Jeao-de-Luz, San Sebastian and certain other Trench and 
Spanish ports were carrying on a lucrative trade in the products 
of a whale-fishery conducted by themselves, which supplied 
Europe with whalebone and oil. In the latter, and not im- 
probably also in the former case, the spedes hunted was the 
Atlantic right-whale, or black whale (Bckma biscaymsis), 
which the Basques seem to have well-nigh exterminated in their 
own waters; and it was not till a later epoch that the pursuit 
of its larger-beaded cousin, the Greenland right-whale (B. 
mystUetus), was initiated. Hunting the sperm-whale, or cacha- 
lot, in the South Sea was a still later development, while rorqual- 
hunting is quite a modern industry. 

Of whaling vessels of the old type, a brief notice will suffice. 
Those engaged in the British South Sea fishery, which was in 
its prime about the year 1700, were from 300 to 400 tons burden, 
and equipped for at least a three-years' voyage. They carried 
from 28 to 33 officers and men, and six whale-boats. Built 
sharp at both ends, these boats were about 37 ft. long, and were 
furnished, in addition to masts and sails, with a couple of 
200-fathom whale-lines. When a whale was sighted from the 
" crow's-nest " at the masthead of the vessel, four boats, each 
carrying a crew of six men, were lowered and despatched in 
pursuit. The crew consisted of a boat-steercr in the bow, four 
rowers and a headsman in the stern. The boat-steerer carried 
the harpoons with which the whale was first attacked, and when 
the boat was once " fast " to a whale by means of the harpoon 
and line, the attack was carried on by the headsman, who waa 
armed with long slender lances. When several whales were seen, 
two or more of the boats might make separate attacks; but in 
other instances they kept together, so that their united lines 
were available when the whale descended or " sounded." After 
the first blow of the harpoon, or at all events after the first 
effective landng, the "sounding'' was deep and prolonged; 
but loss of blood eventuallycaused the victim to keep near the 
surface, when, if all went well, it was finally despatched by lance- 
thrusts behind one of the flippers into the vital parts. 

When a sperm-whale was killed, the carcase was made fast 
to the side of the vessel, and the process of flensing, or " cutting- 
in," commenced. On being made fast to the vessel, the whale 
was enveloped in a framework, and a strip of the blubber cut in 
a spiral direction. By raising this strip with the aid of proper 
apparatus, the whale could be turned round and round on its 
axis, and nearly the whole of the blubber removed in a con- 
tinuous piece, to be cut, as required, into convenient lengths. 
Meanwhile the liquid spermaceti, or "head-matter," was 
ladled out in buckets from the great cavity in the skull and put 
in casks, where it solidified, to be carried to port and there 
refined. The blubber was, however, reduced to oil by " try- 
works" with which the vessel was provided, and stored in 
barrels. A large male sperm-whale will yield as much as eighty 
barrels, or about 3 tons of oil; while the yield of a small female 
does not exceed 1 or 2 tons. In the old days the cargo of a 
successful vessel might include the products of a hundred whales* 
yielding from 150 to 200 tons of boiled sperm-oil in addition to 
the spermaceti. 

In the old days of the Greenland whale-fishery vessels of 
about 350 tons burden were deemed the most eligible, these 
being, constructed in such a manner as to resist so far as possible 
the pressure of the ice. The crew w|M$»u|.Aftjr In number, 
and the vessel wirried tiir~flp - LMjrm -'i' ^'lgj i wa ^f the same 
lenglb as those i. -. J in the i -a tkkcry. The vessels- left 



Peterhead and Dundee (the pot 
as was London for the South ! 
of April, 



reenknd fishery, 
.bout Lht beginning 
tlands, reached the 
jjL Id Apj coaching 




WHALE-FISHERY 



$7« 



was retarded by one or own tuns round the ° bollard," a post 
fixed for this purpose in tin Boat; when this was done the 
friction was so great as to produce quantities of smoke, fire 
being prevented by sluicing the boUaid with water. Even with 
the assistance offered by the bollard, the wbsJe-bne might he 
run oat within ten minutes, when the lines of a, second or even 
a third boat would be attached. In this manner some 6eo or 
700 fathoms of hne would be taken out; the whale commonly 
remaining underwater when first wounded for about 40 minutes, 
although a period of an hour is said to be not unfrequenL' Ota 
rising after its second descent the whale was attacked with 
lances thrust deep into the body and aimed at the vital parts. 
The old-fashioned lanee was a 6-ft. rod and fr-en. iron, flattened 
at one end into the form of a lance-head with cutting edges, 
and at the other expanding into a socket for the reception of 
a short wooden handle. Torrents of blood spouted from the 
blowhole of the whale denoted the approaching end of the 
struggle. So soon as the whale was dead, no time was lost m 
piercing the tail or " fluke*," and thus making the carcase fast 
to the boats by means of a cable, and then towing it in the 
direction of the ship. From fifteen minutes to ss much as 
fifty bourn might be occupied in a whale-hunt. 

The following account of the operation of M flensing,'' or 
securing the blabber and whalebone of the Greenland whale, 
is taken from St William Jardine*s NoturaJisti* Library?— 

"The huge carcase is somewhat extended by strong tackles 
placed at the snout and tail. A band of blubber, two or three feet in 
width, encircling the whale's body at what is the neck in other 
-iwimaV- bcalkdtbe Aral, because by means of it the whale is turned 
over or amies'. To this band is fixed the lower extremity of a com- 



bination of powerful blocks, called the kent purchase, by means of 
which the whole circumference of the animal is, section hy section, 



brought to the surface. The barpooners, having spikes on their feet 

to ncevent their falling from the carcase, then beain with a kind of 

', and with huge knives, to make long parallel cuts from end to 

.L»L AAA. JktmJ+M^A \sj*B -~ A ~ IM»A *— -— — — -^ ,j%f *%«**•**• hilt* * S-tfUfc 



1 with a kind of 

_, . ..„,. uts from end to 

end. which are divided by cross-cuts into pieces of about half a ton. 
These are conveyed on deck, and, after being reduced to smaller 
portions, ate stowed in the hold. Finally, being by other operations 
still further divided, the blubber is put Into casks, which is called 
* oMlrinK-off.' and packed down completely by a suitable instrument. 
** While this flensing is proceeding, and when it reaches the lips, 
which contain much on, the baleen (whalebone) is exposed. This is 
detached by means of bone hand-spikes, bone knives and boas 
spades. The whose whalebone Is hoisted on deck in one mass, when 
it is split by bone wedges into iunks, containing five or ten blades 
each, and stowed away. When tne whole whalebone and blabber are 
thus secured, the two jaw-bones, from the quantity of oil which they 
contain, are usually hoisted on deck, and then only the kreut re* 
wains the huge carcase of flesh and hone, which is abandoned either 
to sink or to be devoured by the birds, sharks and bears, which duly 
attend on such occasions for their share of the prey." 

The largest cargo ever secured by a Scotch whaler was that 
of the " Revolution " of Peterhead in 2814, which comprised 
the products of no less than forty-four whales, The oil, which 
amounted to 290 tons, realized £0568, while the price obtained 
for the whalebone, added to the government bounty then given 
to Greenland whalers, brought up the total sum to £11,000. 
Allowing a ton. to each whale, the whalebone alone at present 
prices would have yielded about £110,000! 

At a later period, say about 1880, the Greenland whaler had 
grown to a vessel of from 400 to 500 tons gross register, rigged 
cither as a ship or a bark, and provided with auxiliary engines 
of ajwot f 5 horse-power. She would be manned by from fifty 
togtey hands, and would carry eight boats of the type men- 
fiqgeaf *bovc Below the hold-beams were fitted about fifty 
me* -Cooks capable of containing from 200 to 250 tons of oiL 
etsel would cost about £17,500 to build, and her working 
^exdusfve of interest and insurance, would be about 
At the period mentioned each whale-boat was 
1 measuring 4 ft. 6 in* in length and 
-_ barrel being 3 ft. long, with ly-in. bore, 
* •» hfcooden stock, tapering behind into a pistol- 
-HfeAsupoon is used solely for first getting on to 
* nA **Wrpoons being employed for getting a bold 

****** to further improvements in the weapons 



and vessels etxnjjfeyed, it wffl sufice to saate that in the Greenland 
whale-fishery the whales are still killed from whale-boats. In 
the rorqual-fishery, as at Newfoundland, on the other hand. 
the actual attack is made from a steam-vessel of considerable 
sire, as is described in the following quotation from a paper 
by Mr G» M. Allen m the American, Naturalist for 1004, refer- 
ring to the fishery at Rose-eu-Rue, Placenlia »ay, New* 
foundland:-* 

u The fishery itself, n obsetvas the author, "w carried on by sseans, 
of small and staunchly built iron steamers of something over one 
hundred tons. A cannon-like gun is mounted on a pivot at the bow, 
and discharges a 5-ft. harpoon of over too lb weight, which at short 
range is nearly burled in the body of the whale. A hollow htm cap 
fitted with blasting powder is e ue w ed to the tip of the harpoon, 
forming its point. Atia>edfusediachari^thebc>a^U)&&thebody 
of the whale. The harpoon carries a stout cable which is handled by 
a powerful 5-sheet winch on the steamer's deck." 

Explosive harpoons of the type referred to were invented by 
Svend Foyn, * Norwegian, and used by him about the year 
186$ or 1866 in the manner described above, as they still an 
in various Norwegian rorqual-fisheries. 

In fisheries of this type the carcases of the whales are towed' 
into harbour for flensing; and in place of the " kreng " being 
wasted, the flesh is worked up to form an excellent manure, 
while the hones are ground up sad also used as fertilisers. 

A somewhat similar mode of proceeding characterizes the 
sperm-whale fishery now carried on in the Azores, so far at least 
as the towing of the carcases to shore for the purpose of flensing 
is concerned. According to an account given by Professor 
E. L. Bouvier in the Bulletin de Vlnstitut Octanopapkupu for 
1007, American whalers have observation stations on most of 
the islands of the Azores group; Horta, in Fayal, being the 
favourite station. The carcases of the cachalots are towed for 
flensing into a small creek adjacent to the port, where, after the 
removal of the spermaceti and blubber, they are left to rot, 
Even the teeth have a commercial value, being either sold as 
curiosities in Horta, or utilised for ivory. Whenever practicable, 
the whales caught by the vessels belonging to the great sperm- 
whaling station at New Bedford are towed into the harbour 
for flensing. 

Passing on to a review of some of the more important whale- 
fisheries of the world, the Atlantic fishery by the Basques 
in the xoth and six succeeding centuries claims first mention. 
Readers desirous of obtaining further insight into the little that 
is known about it are referred to an interesting paper by Sit 
Clements Markham published in the Proceeding of the Zoo- 
logical Society of London for 1881. Although, as already 
mentioned, the black whale (Baiaena biscayensis) was well-nigh 
exterminated in the north Atlantic by the Basques, and for 
many years afterwards was excessively rare, yet quite recently 
several examples have been taken by Scottish whalers off the 
Hebrides, while the whalebone of others has been received at 
New Bedford. 

The discovery in 1596 by the Butch navigator Barents of 
Spitsbergen, followed by the voyage of Hudson in the " Hope- 
well" in 1607, may be said to have inaugurated the second 
phase in the whaling industry; these adventurous voyages 
bringing to light for the first time the existence of the Greenland 
whale (B. mysticelus); a species of much greater value than any 
that had been previously hunted. 

Here it may be well to refer to two common misconceptions 
regarding this whale. In the first place, it does not appear 
to be, as commonly supposed, a drcumpolar species. There is, 
for instance, no evidence of its occurrence eastward of Spits- 
bergen along the Siberian coast between io° and 170* E.; and 
it is not till the latter parallel is reached, at Cape Scbelagskoi, 
that the domain of the so-called bowhead of the American 
vhales is entered. 

" On the ether side of Bering Strait/' writes Mr T. Southwell 
in the Annals at Scottish Natural History for April 1904, '* these 
whales do not appear to penetrate much farther east than Cape 
Bathurst, and h seems highly improbable that there is any later* 
inkation between those at that point and the whaks in 
Bay. On the other hand, the wbafea on the east side of 



572 



WHALE-FISHERY 



Davis Strait do not descend so far sooth as Cape Farewell, nor 
are . those in the Greenland Sea known to pass westward round 
that cape. It seems therefore that, although their range as a species 
is undoubtedly extensive longitudinally, the localities they inhabit 
are greatly restricted, each being inhabited by a local race differing 
from the other in some slight degree." 

The second misconception is that the Greenland whale has 
gradually been driven northward by the whalers. A sufficient 
proof of the falsity of this idea is afforded by the fact that the 
minute organisms constituting the food of the species are re- 
stricted to the icy seas of the far north. The Greenland whale is, 
in fact, essentially an ice-whale. 

To revert to the history of the fishery, no sooner was the 
accessibility of the Spitsbergen seas made known than vessels 
were fitted out for whaling there, at first by the British, and soon 
after by the Dutch. The seas absolutely swarmed with whales, 
which showed little fear of vessels and could thus be captured 
with ease. The first whaling expedition was despatched by the 
Muscovy Company, under the command of Jonas Poole; and 
the success of four voyages (1609-1612) soon attracted the atten- 
tion of other nations. Some indication of the abundance of the 
whales may be gathered from the fact that in the year 1697 no 
less than 1950 of these monsters were killed off Spitsbergen by 
188 vessels. 

The fishery in Davis Strait was begun in 1719 by the Dutch, 
who at first killed large numbers of whales and were subset 
quently followed by the British. Although many whales have 
been seen in recent years, few are taken; and it is the opinion of 
many that in Greenland waters, at any rate, steam has been fatal 
to the industry. 

The following summary of the rise and fall of the British 
Greenland whale-fishery is given by Mr Southwell in the article 
already cited: — 

** For the first quarter of the 10th century scarcely a seaport of any 
importance on the east coast of England was unrepresented in the 
Arctic seas: from Scotland, Berwick, Leith, Kirkcaldy. Dundee, 
Montrose, Aberdeen, Peterhead, Kirkwall, Greenock and for a time 
Banff and Bo'ness, all took part in the whale-fishery. Gradually, 
one by one, they fell off, till only Peterhead, which sent out her first 
whaler in 1788, and Dundee (which started in 1790) were left. In 
1893 Peterhead, which in 1857 * cnt out 34 vessels, ceased to be repre- 
sented in the industry, leaving Dundee in possession of the field'. 
Dundee sent out its largest fleet in 1 88s,— 16 vessels; in 1003 she 
was represented by 5 vessels only, one of which was wrecked." 

According to Mr Southwell's, account of the Arctic fishery 
{Zoologist, 1906), a Dundee vessel, the " Scotia," visited the east 
Greenland seas in the summer of 1906, where she took four 
small right-whales; this visit being the first made to those seas 
by a British vessel since 1899. 

As already mentioned, the British whalers were accustomed 
to sail for the Arctic Ocean early in April; and if their destina- 
tion was the east Greenland sea, off the west coast of Spitsbergen, 
they generally arrived on the grounds about a month later. 
The whales make their appearance amongst the ice near the sea 
edge about the 15th of May, but only remain until the opening 
of the barrier-ice permits them to resume their northward 
journey; for about the middle of June they suddenly disappear 
from these grounds, and are last seen going north-west, when the 
north Greenland whale-fishing is over for the season. If un- 
successful in obtaining a cargo at the northern zrounds. the whale, 
ships were accustomed to prorced southward* as far as laL 75'; 
where, if the sea were sufficiently open, tbey penetrated west- 
wards until the coast of Greenland became visible, There they 
cruised amongst the ice until August, when Lhe darkness of the 
nights put an end to the season's fishing* If (he south- west 
fishery, in Davis Strait, wcte the first ohject of the voyage, the 
vessels arrived at the edge of (he i<x near Resolution Island in 
April. If unsuccessful here they proceeded direct to Disco 
Island, where they usually arrived early in May. The > 
appear about the middle of May nl South East Bay . 
fishing was once carried on. The dangerous 
Bay was next performed; the whales 
in June, and pushing on towards the 
" land-floe across," i.t. if the I .md iu 
tbraous across the entrance of Pr 



whales would be seen in considerable numbers and good cargoes 
might be obtained; but immediately the land-floe broke up 
they departed to the westward. When there was no land-floe 
across, the whales proceeded at once to the secluded waters of 
Eclipse Sound and Prince Regent Inlet for the summer months. 
At this season most of the vessels cruised in the sounds, but a 
few searched the middle ice, until the darkness of the August 
nights compelled them to seek anchorage in some of the harbours 
of the west side, to await the return of the whales south. This 
migration takes place on the formation of young ice in the sounds, 
usually in the latter part of September. Only the larger whales, 
most of which are males, come, however, dose down along the 
land of the west side. These the ships sent their boats to inter- 
cept; this forming the inshore-fishing, or " rock -nosing," which 
continued till the formation of young ice drove the vessels out of 
harbour, usually early in October. 

A few vessels, American as well as British, occasionally entered 
Hudson Bay and prosecuted the fishing in the neighbourhood of 
Southampton Island, even entering Fox Channel. There were 
whaling-stations in Cumberland Inlet, and a few vessels usually 
remained throughout the winter, ready to take advantage of the 
opening of the ice in the following spring. Here both young and 
old whales make their appearance in May; and the fishing 
continued till the whales migrated northwards in June. 

Of the other nationalities which took part in the Spkzbergen- 
Greenland fisheries, it may be mentioned that the Dutch had 
fisheries both at Jan Mayen till 1640 and at Spitzbergen. In 
the Spitzbergen fishery 10,019 whales were taken by them in the 
ten years from 1679 to 1688. About 1680, when the fishing was 
probably most prosperous, they had 260 vessels and 14,000 
seamen employed. The fishery continued to flourish on an 
extensive scale till 1770, when it began to decline, and H finally 
came to a dose before the end of the century. At the same time 
the Germans prosecuted the fishing to a vejy considerable extent; 
79 vessels from Hamburg and Bremen being employed in 1721, 
while during the fifty years from 1670 to 1719 an average of 
45 vessels sailed yearly from Hamburg alone. German vessels 
continued to engage in the fishery until 1873. The Spaniards, 
although they at first supplied tip harpooners to the crews 
of the English and Dutch vessels, never seem to have engaged 
largely in the northern fishery. The Danes, although likewise 
early appearing on the Spitzbergen fishing-grounds, never 
pursued the industry on a large scale until after the commence- 
ment of the Davis Strait fishing in 1721, in which year they 
had 90 vessels engaged; but by 1803 the number had fallen 
to 35- 

The continually increasing rarity of the Greenland whale lias 
caused an enormous appreciation in the value of whalebone of 
recent years, as compared to the prices obtaining the first half of 
the last century. For about twenty years preceding the year 1840 
the average price of this commodity was about £163 per ton; whils 
in the year 1835 whalebone of the Greenland whale •old at £230 per 
ton, and that of the south Atlantic black whale {Balaam atuiroTu ) at 
£145 per ton. At the present date the price is about £2500 per ton, 
but a few years ago it touched £2800, although soon after it fell for a 
short time to £1400. The reason of the fall from £2806 to £2300 (at 
about which figure the price has stood for some time) b believed to be 
owing to the use of strips of horn for many purposes where whale- 
bone was formerly employed. Owing to its much greater length, , the 
vKiMw.m- <«f the Cr( ■- -;,* ind whale t>. a$ vnoi-, 3 U a above, far more 
v.i In a Mi- ch.m 1V1 .■! by the nwiVr-rn -ml -outhern Atlantic 

bhrt uhak-s, u>{ w : , . .ipamivdy Lr irncrJlly comes into the 

■narkL-L The fc*st quality ' « ■ ■■■■■ ■ ft knD*rt in the trade as 

M *uc4>oth:. m and 1 ,,-. .. , ■ 1. i than 6 ft. in length. 

In Mie twtnfv vtrtf* |n>" 1. * v< rj/« price of whale- 

oil fr<Tn tft* iv. - ton: the actual price ta 

lB$l k«-ine £40 t*r 1 - the price is only £23 

I " U'txn.flfl sold at £43 




WHALE-OIL 



573 



' during summer, but return In the autumn, when the 
1 faM-rtshing " is carried on in the neighbourhood of Point 
Barrow; and between the seasons it was customary for the 
▼easels to go south for sperm-whaling. The Bering Strait 
fishery was begun in 1848, and in the three following years 
•50 ships obtained cargoes. In 1671 no less than 34 vessels 
were abandoned in the ice off Cape Belcher, the crews making 
good their escape to other vessels; while again in 1876 a dozen 
mini.! experienced s similar fate. 

The sperm-whale fishery, of which the products are sper- 
maceti, sperm-oil, ambergris (mostly found floating In masses 
In the sea) and teeth, appears to have been initiated, by the 
Americans in 1600, who for a considerable period found sufficient 
occupation in the neighbourhood of their own coasts. The 
British are, however, stated to have opened up the great whaling- 
grounds of the Pacific and Indian Oceans, although- they did 
not embark on sperm-whaling till 1 7 7 5* Within less than twenty 
years from that date their trade had, however, attained its 
maximum; no less than 7s British vessels, all from the port 
of London, being engaged in this industry in the year 1701. 
Alter this there was a steady decline till 1830, when only 31 
vessels were thus employed; and since 1855 sperm-whaling 
has ceased to be a British industry. 

As regards the American fishery, the* island of Nantucket 
embarked in this trade about the year 171?, and by 1774 there 
were 360 American ships engaged in sperm-whaling, while in 
r&tf> t when, the fishery was about at its zenith, the number 
was 735, mostly from New Bedford. Between 1877 **d 1886 the 
average number of. vessels had sunk to 150. New Bedford, on 
the Atlantic, and San Francisco, on the Pacific side, are the two 
great whaling centres; and during the period last mentioned 
the average imports of whaling products into the United States 
totalled 5304 tons of sperm-oil, together with 4863 tons of 
whale-oil and 145 tons of whalebone. 

During the first half of the last century the colony of New 
South Wales wss busily engaged in this trade, and in 1835 
exported 3980 tons of sperm-oil. 

Since the year 188*, when no less than 203 head were taken 
by the Peterhead whaler "Eclipse," the Norwegians have 
carried on a fishery for the bottle-nosed whale {Byperobdon 
rwirasus), a species which although greasy inferior in point of 
size, yields an oil closely akin to sperm-oil, but possessed of even 
greater lubricating power. An average male, bottle-nose will 
yield about aa cwts. of oil, containing 5% of pure spe r ma ce ti 
Bottle*nose fishing is chiefly carried on in the neighbourhood 
of Jan Mayen and Iceland during the months of May, June and 
July, the whales usually disappearing quite suddenly about 
the middle of the last-mentioned month. In 1003 about 1600 
tons of this oil came on the market, which would imply the 
destruction of nearly 2000 whales. 

The invention by Svend Foyn of the explosive harpoon, 
already referred to, inaugurated about the year x866 the Nor- 
wegian fin-whale fishery, an industry which has since been 
taken up by other nationalities. The rorquals or fin-whales 
{BaJacnoptero), which include the largest of all cetaceans, arc 
built tor speed* and are much fiercer animals than either the 
Greenland or the Atlantic right whale; their rush when wounded 
Nag of enormous velocity, while their vitality is such that 
a ft e rs-fri g them in the old-fashioned way with the hand-harpoon 
fc Poetically useless, and at the same time fraught with great 
dexujer to the pursuers. To a considerable extent the same 
■y fcgaffnaed of the humpbacked whale (Uegapiero). Under 
™se ci rcumstances, previous to the invention of the bomb* 
* **P°*"> these whales were left entirely alone by the whalers. 
jedBUfcttwur S8S5 the Norwegians had a fleet of over 30" vessels 
^^^■iUtts fishery off the coast of Finmark, the amount 
Js^Ls^^^^Pfeb comprised 1308 whales in 1885, and 954 » the 
■ ^■■ft Gradually the Norwegians have developed and 

mWm&' lwr 4 aa ^nahery, and they now possess stations in 
Kjr** Faroes and Shetland*, and also at Buneveneader 
T** « *»»« Hebrides. In the Shetlands there are two 
4* the bead of Rous* Voc on the north-west side of the 



mainland where operations are carried on from May and June 
till September, when the whales leave the shore. During the 
first season (1003) the Norrdna Whaling Company's vessels 
killed 64 whales, while 6a were accounted for by the Shetland 
Whaling Company. 

In 1808 a successful rorqual-fishery was established by the 
Newfoundland Steam Whaling Company at Rose-au-Rue, 
Placentia Bay, Newfoundland. Four species of rorquals as well 
as humpbacks are hunted; and during a portion of the season 
in 1903 the catch included 174. of the former and 14 of the latter. 

In addition to the above-mentioned fisheries for the larger 
whales, there are considerable local captures of the smaller kinds, 
commonly known as grampuses or killers, porpoises,and dolphins. 
Of these, however, very brief mention must suffice. The most 
important captures arc generally made in northern seas. The 
black pilot-whale, or grindhval (Gtobiccphalus mdas), is, for in- 
stance, not infrequently taken in large shoals by the Faroe 
islanders; these whales being driven by boats into the shallows, 
where they are sometimes slaughtered by hundreds. Much the 
same may be stated with regard to the grampus or killer {Orca 
gladiator), of which no less than 47 bead were killed at once 
in January 1004 at BildostrOmmen, Norway. Of even more 
importance is the white-whale or beluga {Ddpkinapierus leucos), 
which is hunted for its blubber, hide and flesh; the average yield 
per bead being about 100 gallons of oil In 1871 the Tromsoe 
whalers captured no less than 2167 individuals; while in 1808 
300 out of a school of some 000 were captured on a single occasion 
at Point Barrow, Alaska. These whales, which are worth about 
£3 a head, yield the leather known commercially as " porpoise- 
hide." The narwhal (Monodon monoceros), yielding both blubber 
and the valuable ivory tusks, is usually captured singly by the 
Greenlanders In their " kayaks." Local porpoise and dolphin 
fisheries are carried on by the fishermen In many parts of the 
world, the natives of the Travancore coast being noted for their 
success In this respect; while even the fresh-water susu or Ganges 
dolphin (Platanista gangetica) and the Rio de la Plata dolphin 
(Pontoporio bhimiOei) are also caught in considerable numbers 
for the sake of their blubber. 

Literature.— The following books and papers may be con- 
sulted : T. Bcale, The Natural History of the Sperm- Whale (London, 
« 8 37)J W. S. Tower, A History of Ike American Whole Fishery 
(Philadelphia, 1007); j. R. Spears. Story of Now England Whaling 
(New York, 1008) ; C. R. Markham, " Oa the Whale-Fishery of the 
Basque Provinces of Spain,'* Proc. tool. Sot. London (1881). p. 969; 
TTSouthwell. M Notes on the Seal and Whale Fishery," Zoologist 
(London, 1884-1907), and "On the Whale-Fishery from Scotland, 
with some account of the changes in that industry and of the 



Ann. Scot. Hat. Hist. (1904), p. 77 v - - . - 

Observations on Rorquals off Southern Newfoundland, 



G. M. Allen, " Some 
oundland," American 
Naturalist, xxxviii. 613 (1904); R. C. Haldane, "Whaling 
" t.ScetLNoL"' - 



Shetland, 1904," Ann. ScotL Nat, Hist. (1905), p. 65, and ** Whaling 
in Scotland," tx. (1007), p. to; E. L. Bouvier, "Qutlques iro- 
presMons d'un naturaliste an coura d'une campagne scientinque de 
S.A.S. le Prince de Monaco, 1905,'* Bulletin de Vlns&ut Ociano- 
gfapkique (Monaco, 1907), No. 93. (R. L.*) 

WHALE-OIL, the oil obtained from the blubber of various 
species of the genus Balaena, as B. vtysticetus, Greenland or 
"right" whale (northern whale-oil), B, australis (southern 
whale-oil), Balaenoptera longimana, Balconoplcra borealis 
(Finback oil, Finner whale-oil, Humpback oil). The " orca " 
or " killer " whale, and the " beluga" or white whale, also yield 
" whale-oils." " Train-oil " proper is the northern whale-oil, but 
this term has been applied to all blubber oils, and in Germany, 
to all marine animal oils— fish-oils, liver oils, and blubber oils. 
The most important whale-oil is sperm or spermaceti oil, yielded 
by the sperm-whales. 

Whale-oil varies In colour from a bright honey yellow to a dark 
brown, according to the condition of the blubber from which it has 
been extracted. At best it has a rank fishy odour, and the darker 
the colour the more disagreeable the smell. With lowering of the 
temperature stearin, accompanied with a small proportion of 
spermaceti, separates from the oil, and a little under the freezing- 
point nearly the whole of these constituents may be crystallized 
out. When separated and pressed, this deposit is known as whale 
tallow, and the oil from which h Is removed is distinguished as 
pressed whale-oil; this, owing to its limpidity, is sometime* passed 
aa sperm-oil. Whale-oil U principally used boding wool* lor combing. 



57+ 



WHALLEY— WHARTON (FAMILY) 



in batching flax and Other vegetable fibres, in currying and chamois 
leather-making, and as a lubricant (or machinery. Sperm-oil is 
obtained from the cavity in the head of the sperm-whale, and from 
several smaller receptacles throughout the body of the animal. 
During the life of the whale the contents of these cavities are in a 
fluid condition, but no sooner is the " head matter " removed than 
the solid wax spermaceti separates in white crystalline flakes, leaving 
the oil a clear yellow fluid having a fishy odour. Refined sperm-oil is 
a most valuable lubricant for small and delicate machinery (sec Oils). 

WHALLEY, EDWARD (c. 1615-c. 1675), English regicide, 
the exact dates of whose birth and death are unknown, was the 
second son of Richard Whalley, who had been sheriff of Notting- 
hamshire in 1595, by his second wife Frances Cromwell, aunt oC 
Oliver Cromwell. His great-grandfather was Richard Whalley 
(1400-1583), a prominent adherent of the protector Somerset 
and member of parliament. He is said to have started in the 
trade of a woollen-draper, but on the outbreak of the great 
rebellion he took up arms for the parliament, became major of 
Cromwell's regiment of horse, and greatly distinguished himself 
in the field. His conduct at Gainsborough fight in 1643 was 
especially praised by Cromwell; he fought at Marston Moor, 
commanded one of Cromwell's two regiments of cavalry at 
Naseby and at the capture of Bristol, was then sent into Oxford- 
shire, took Banbury, and was besieging Worcester when he was 
superseded, according to Richard Baxter, the chaplain of his 
regiment, on account of his religious orthodoxy. He, however, 
supported his regiment in their grievances against the parlia- 
ment in 1647. When the king was seized by the army, he was 
entrusted to the keeping of Whalley and his regiment at Hampton 
Court. Whalley refused to remove Charles's chaplains at the 
bidding of the parliamentary commissioners, and treated his 
captive with due courtesy, receiving from Charles after his 
flight a friendly letter of thanks. In the second Civil War, 
Whalley again distinguished himself as a soldier, and when the 
king was brought to trial he was chosen to be one of the tribunal 
and signed his death-warrant. He took part in Cromwell's 
Scottish expedition, was wounded at Dunbar, and in the autumn 
of 1650 was active in dealing with the situation in north Britain. 
Next year he took part in Cromwell's pursuit of Charles IL and 
was in the fight at Worcester. He followed and supported his 
great kinsman in his political career, presented the army petition 
to parliament (August 1652), approved of the protectorate, and 
r epres e nted Nottinghamshire in the parliaments of 1654 and 
1656, taking an active part in the prosecution of the Quaker 
James Naylor. He was one of the administrative major-generals, 
and was responsible for Lincoln, Nottingham, Derby, Warwick 
and Leicester. He supported the " Petition and Advice," except 
as regards the proposed assumption of the royal title by Cromwell, 
and became a member of the newly constituted House of Lords 
in December 1657. On the protector's death, at which he was 
present, he in vain gave his support to Richard; his regiment 
refused to obey his orders, and the Long Parliament dismissed 
him from his command as a representative of the army. In 
November 1659 he undertook an unsuccessful mission to Scotland 
to arrange terms with Monk. At the Restoration, Whalley, with 
his son-in-law, General William Goffe, escaped to America, and 
landed at Boston on the 27th of July 1660, living successively at 
New Haven and at Hadley, Massachusetts, every attempt on the 
part of the government at home to procure his arrest meeting 
with failure. He was alive, but failing in health,, in 1674, and 
probably did not long survive- Whalley was twice married; 
first to Judith DulTi-11, by whom, besides other children, hr bad a 
son John and a daughter Frances (who married Major-General 
William Goffe, the rrgicirU); and serondly to Mary Mid ion, 
sister of Sir George Middlclon, by wJiom he bad lwu wns, 1 1 irv 
and Edward. 

Authoritws.— An account of Whalhv'a life 1* fcn KoM< 
of the Regicides, and of his family in Jl-.-bl'.- 1 * Sf< '" 
tectoral House of Cromwell* vol iij fee a!w Gardi 
don's histories of iht pcriM. F\vk 
Whalley's account of the Idnf'* flight); E 
of the Judges of Ckarlri I, (i™, &t,}„ 
the Diet, if at. Bioz h xn art 
in America b dealt with it. 
Massachusetts H»tork*l 



1865) by the Prince Society; tea ako AHemtic MmtU% 
Pennsylvania Afar„L 55-66, 230, 559; F. B. Dealer's 
1 concerning Whalley and Gone, New Marten Col. Hist, 



published (1865) 
vi. 89-93: Pen*., 

Memoranda concerning , __._ 

Soc Papers, ii. (1877); Poem commemorative 0] Goffe. Whalley 
and Dtxwrll, with abstract of their history, by Pralagathos 
(Boston. 1793); Palfrey's Hist, of New Enfland, U, (1866)* 
NoUs and Queries, 5th series, viii. 359 (bibliography of American 
works on the regicides). 

WHARF, a place for loading or unloading ships or vessels, 
particularly a platform of timber, stone or other material along 
the shore of a harbour or along the bank of a navigable river 
against which vessels may lie and discharge their cargo or be 
loaded. The O. Eng. word kwerf meant literally a turning or 
turning-place (Jrweorfar^ to turn, cf. Goth, kwairbati, Gr. ftapvtt, 
wrist), and was thus used particularly of a bank of earth, a dam 
which turns the flow of a stream, the cognate word in Dutch, 
werf, meant a wharf or a shipbuilder's yard, cf. Dan. vatrfc 
dockyard, and the current meaning of the word is probably 
borrowed from Dutch or Scandinavian languages. 

In English law all water-borne goods must be landed at specified 
places, in particular hours and under supervision ; wharves, which 
by the Merchant Shipping Act 1895, { 492, include quays, docks aud 
other premises on which goods may be lawfully landed, are either 
" sufferance wharves," authorised by the commissioner* of rust ores 
under bond, or " legal wharves " specially appointed by treasury 
warrant and exempt from bond. There are also wharves authorised 
by statute or by prescriptive right. The owner or occupier of a 
wharf is styled a " wharfinger, properly " wharfager," with an 
intrusive n, as in " messenger " ana " passenger." 

WHARNCUFFR, JAMBS ARCHIBALD 8TUART-W0RTLBY* 
MACKENZIE, ist Bason (1776-1845), English statesman, 
was the son of Colonel Stuart, son of the 3rd earl of Bute and of 
his wife Mary Wortlcy-Montagu(Baroness Mountstuart in her own 
right), as whose heir Colonel Stuart added the name of Wortley, 
taking later also that of Mackenzie (which his son in later hie 
discarded) as heir to his uncle J. S. Mackenzie of Rosehaugh. 
He entered the army, becoming colonel in 1797, but retired in 
1801 and devoted himself to, politics, sitting in parliament as a 
Tory for Bossiney in Cornwall till 1818, when be was returned 
for Yorkshire. His attitude on various questions became 
gradually more Liberal, and his support of Catholic emancipation 
lost him his scat in 1826. He was then raised to the peerage as 
Baron Wharncliffe of Wortley, a recognition both of his previous 
parliamentary activity and of bis high position amongthe country 
gentlemen. At first opposing the Reform Bill, he gradually 
came to see the undesirability of a popular conflict, and he separ- 
ated himself from the Tories and took an important part in 
modifying the attitude of the peers and helping to pass the biH, 
though his attempts at amendment only resulted in his pleasing 
neither party. He became lord privy seal in Peel's short ministry 
at the end of 1834. and again joined him in 1841 as lord president 
of the council. In 1837 he brought out an edition of the writings 
of his ancestress, Lady Mary Wortley-Montagu (new ed. 1893). 
On his death in 1845 he was succeeded as and baron by his eldest 
son, John Stuart-Wortley (1801-1855), whose son Edward, 3rd 
baron (1827-1809), best known as chairman of the Manchester, 
Lincoln & Sheffield railway, converted under him into tlie Great 
Central, was created ist earl of Wharncliffe and Viscount Carlton 
in 1876; his name was prominently Identified with railway 
enterprise, and became attached to certain features of its nomen* 
dature. He was succeeded as 2nd earl by his nephew Francis 

Among other member* of th '""family, several of whom dis- 

tingui h: I ihsm 1 'Mtfca, art and the army, may be 

mc 1 *m, James Archibald Stuart* 

a el London and <oUcitor*general; 

lb i-V, i ) , became well known 

r b&inc office (1885, *ad 

>f uittees, 

f Wharton were an old 
imas Wharton (1405- 
p-i Jn border warfare. 
4th batons; and the 
therof Tromas 
vu tnaied earl and n 




WHARTON. F.—WHATBLY 



S lli S?* 1 **" °* Wharton. The i A marquess was one of the 
™ Whig pofiOciant after the Revolution. He is famous in 
r™ 7 . «ry •» the author of the famous political ballad, 
UUHmrtaro, wbfcfc u fAng j timn IL out ^ three kingdoms." 
Wharton was fod-Beutenant of Ireland in Anne's reign, and in- 
?ro the wrath of Swift, who attacked him as Verres in the 
&*mner (No. i 4 ), and drew a separate "character" of him, 
*?** h one of Swift's masterpieces. He was a man of great 
wit and versatfle cleverness and cynically ostentatious in his 
unuwk«Iity, having the reputation of being the greatest rake and 
the truest Whig of his time. Addison dedicated to him the fifth 
volume of the Spectator, >gtving him a very different " character 
from Swift's. Hfc first wife* Akxa Whabton (1632-1685), was 
u authoress, whose poems, including an Elegy on Lard Rochester, 
"ere celebrated by Walter and Dryden. His son, Pmu» 
Wharton (1698-1731), duke of Wharton, succeeded to his 
fetter's mar qucasa teand fortune, and in 171ft was created a duke. 
But he quickly earned for himself, by his wild and profligate 
JroUcs and feckless playing at poEtics, Pope's satire of htm as 
the scorn and wonder of our days "(Moral Essays, L 170). He 
spent his targe estates in a few years, then went abroad and 
gave eccentric support to the Old Pretender. There is a lively 
picture of his appearance at Madrid in 1726 in a letter fram the 
British consul, quoted in Stanhope's History of Enfant (ri. 
Mo). He was outlawed in 1720, and at his death the titles 
hecame extinct. In 1843 a claim was made before the House of 
Lords for a revival of the barony in favour of Air Kemys-Tynte, 
* descendant of the 1st baron in the female line. 

For the history of the family see E. R. Wharton*! Wharton of 
***** Hall (1*98). 

WTURTOH, FRANCIS (18*5-1889), American legal writer 
and educationalist, was born in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, on 
the 7th of March 1820. He graduated at Yale in 1839, was 
admitted to the bar in 1843, became prominent in Pennsylvania 
politics as a Democrat, and in Philadelphia edited the North 
A mtrican and United Slates Gazette. He was professor of English 
history m ^ literature at Kenyon College, Gambier, Ohio, in 
1856-1863. He took orders in the Protestant Episcopal church 
m 1863 and in 1861-1869 was rector of St Paul's Church, Brook- 
line, Massachusetts. In 1871*1881 he taught ecclesiastical polity 
and canon law in the Protestant Episcopal Theological School at 
Cambridge, Massachusetts, and at this time be lectured on the 
conflict of laws at Boston University. For two years he travelled 
in Europe, and after two years in Philadelphia he want to 
Washington, D.C., where he was lecturer on criminal law (1885- 
1886) and then professor of criminal law (1886-1888) at Columbian 
(now George Washington) University; in 1889-1888 be was 
solicitor (or examiner of claims) of the Department of State, 
and from x888 to hit death on the tist of February 1889 was 
employed on an edition (authorized by Congress) of the Jfesw/it- 
tionory Diplomatic Correspondence of the United States (6 vols., 
1889, ed. by J. B Moore), which superseded Sparks'a compilation. 
Wharton was a " broad churchman " and was deeply interested 
in the hymnology of his church. He received the degree of 
U..D. from thef university of Edinburgh in 1883, and was the 
foremost American authorfcy on international law. 

He pubKfhed : A Treatise on the Criminal Lav of the United Stales 
(1846; many times reprinted): State Tnals of the United States 
Mae the Administrations of Washington and Adams (1849)1 A 
Treatise on tie Law of Homteide in the United Slates (1855); with 
Moreton St HIS, A Treatise m Medical Jurisprudence (1855); Modern 
Theism (1839). in which be applied rules of legal evidence to modern 
sceptical theories: A TreoHso on Ike Con/ha of Lams 0873; 3rd ed. 
iom); A Treatise on Ike Law of Negligence (1874) ; A Commentary 
** the &mg of Agency and Agents (1876). A Commentary on the Law 
sues (1877; 3rd ed. 1888); .1 companion work 
Commentary on the Law of Contracts (1882); 
Law (1884); and a Digest of the International Law 
r (t vote. 1886). 

(Philadelphia. 1891) by his daughter, Mrs Viclc, 
K and J. B. Moore's * Brief Sketch of the Life 
n," prefaced to the first volume of the Revolu- 
Carrttpendence. 

. HtKRY (1664*1695), English writer, was 
a from Thomas, and Baron Wharton (rs>o-ts7P)r 



575 




being a son of the Rev. Edmund Wharton, vicar of Woxttead, 
Norfolk. Born *t Womtead on the 9th of November 1664. 
Wharton was educated by his father, and then at Gonville and 
Caius Cottage, Cambridge. Both his industry and his talents 
were exceptional, and his university career was brilliant. la 
1686 he entered the service of the ecclesiastical historian, the 
Rev. William Cave (1637*1713)1 whom he helped in his literary 
workt but considering that his assistance was not sufficiently 
appreciated he soon forsook this employment. In 1687 he was 
ordained deacon, and in 1688 he made the acquaintance of the 
archbishop of Canterbury, William Sancroft, under whose 
generous patroiiageiomeoi bis literary work was done. The arch- 
bishop, who had a very high opinion of Wharton's character and 
talents, made him one of his chaplains, and presented him to the 
Kentish living of Sundridge, and afterwards to that of Chartham 
in the same county. In 1689 he took the oath of allegiance to 
William and Mary, but he wrote e severe criticism of Bishop 
Burnet's History of the Reformation, and it was partly owing to 
the bishop's hostility that he did not obtain further preferment 
in the English church. He died on the 3th of March 1695, and 
was buried in Westminster Abbey. 

Wharton's most valuable work is his AngUa sacra, a collection of 
the lives of English archbishops and bishops, which was published 
in two volumes in 1691. Some of these were written by Wharton 
himself; others were borrowed from early writers. His other 
writings include, in addition to his criticism of the History of the 
Reformation, A treatise of the celibacy of the clergy (1688); The 
enthusiasm of the Church of Rome demonstrated in some observations 
upon the life of Ignatius. Loyola (1688); and A defence of pluralities 
(1692. new ed. 1703). In the Lambeth Library there are sixteen 
volumes of Wharton's manuscripts. Describing him as " this 
wonderful man," Stubbs says that Wharton did for the elucidation 
of English Church history " more than any one before or since." 
A life of Wharton is included in George D'Oyly's Life of W. Sancroft 

WHATELY, RICHABJD (1787-1863), English logician and 
theological writer, archbishop of Dublin, was born in London on 
the 1st of February 1787. He was educated at a private school 
near Bristol, and at Oriel College, Oxford. He obtained double 
second-class honours and the prise for the. English essay; in 
181 r he was elected fellow of Oriel, and in 1814 took orders. 
During bis residence at Oxford he wrote his celebrated tract, 
Historic Doubts relative to Napoleon Bonaparte, .a very clever 
jew d'esprii directed against excessive scepticism as applied to 
the Gospel history. After his marriage in 1831 he settled in 
Oxford, and in 1823 was appointed Bampton lecturer. The 
lectures, On Ike Use and Abuse of Party Spirit in Matters of 
Religion, were published in the same year. In August 1823 he re- 
moved to Haleswoxth in Suffolk, but in 1825, having been ap- 
pointed principal of St Alban Hall, he returned to Oxford. At 
St Alban Hall Whately found much to reform, and he left it a 
different place. In 1825 he published a scries of Essays on Soma 
of the Peculiarities of the Christian Religion, followed in i8a8 by 
a second series On some of the Difficulties in the Writings of 
Si Paul, and in 1830 by a third On the Errors of Romanism traced 
to thetr Origin in Human Nature. While he was at St Alban 
Hall (1826) the work appeared which is perhaps most closely 
associated with his name— his treatise on Logic, originally 
contributed to the Encyclopaedia Mesropolitana, in which he 
raised the study of the subject to a new level. It gave a great 
impetus to the study of logic throughout Great Britain. A 
similar treatise on Rhetoric, also contributed to the Encyclopaedia, 
appeared in 182& In 1829 Whately was elected to the pro- 
fessorship of political economy at Oxford in succession to Nassau 
William Senior. This was a subject admirably suited to his 
lucid, practical intellect; but bis tenure of office was cut short 
by his appointment to the archbishopric of Dublin in 1631, 
He published only one course of Introductory Lectures (1831)* 
but one of his first acts on going to Dublin was to endow a chair 
of political economy in Trinity College out of his private purse. 

Whately's appointment by Lord Grey to the see of Dublin 
came as a great surprise to everybody, for though a decided 
Liberal Whately had from the beginning stood aloof from all 
political parties, and ecclesiastically his position was that of 



576 



WHAT-NOT— WHEAT 



an Ishmaelite fighting for his own hand. The Evangelicals 
regarded him as a dangerous latitadinarian on the ground of 
his views on Catholic emancipation, the Sabbath question, the 
doctrine of election, and certain quasi-SabelUan opinions he was 
supposed to hold about the character and attributes of Christ, 
while his view of the church was diametrically opposed to that 
of the High Church party, and from the beginning he was the 
determined opponent of what was afterwards called the Trac- 
tarian movement. The appointment was challenged in the 
House of Lords, but without success. In Ireland it was im- 
mensely unpopular among the Protestants, both for the reasons 
just mentioned find as being the appointment of an Englishman 
and a Whig. Whately's blunt outspokenness and his " want of 
conciliating manners," which even his friends admit, prevented 
him from ever completely eradicating these prejudices, while 
at the same time he met with determined opposition from his 
own clergy. He ran counter to their most cherished prejudices 
from the first by connecting himself prominently with the 
attempt to establish a national and unsectarian system of 
education. He enforced strict discipline in his diocese, where 
it had been' long unknown; and he published an unanswerable 
statement of his views on the Sabbath (Thought* on the Sabbath, 
1832). He took a small country place at Redesdale, 4 m. out 
of Dublin, where he could enjoy his favourite relaxation of 
gardening. Here his life was one of indefatigable industry. 
Questions of tithes, reform of the Irish church and of the Irish 
Poor Laws, and, in particular, the organization of national 
education occupied much of his time. -But he found leisure 
for the discussion of other public questions, for example, the 
subject of transportation and the general question of secondary 
punishments. In 1837 he wrote his well-known handbook of 
Christian Evidences, which was translated during his lifetime 
into more than a dozen languages. At a later period he also 
wrote, in a similar form, Easy Lessons on Reasoning, on Morals, 
on Mind and on the British Constitution. Among his other 
works may be mentioned Charges and Tracts (1836), Essays 
on Some of the Dangers to Christian Faith (1839), The Kingdom 
of Christ (184 1 ). He also edited Bacon's Essays, Palcys £w- 
deuces and Palcy's Moral Philosophy. His cherished scheme 
of unsectarian religious Instruction for Protestants and Catholics 
alike was carried out for a number of years with a measure of 
success, but in 1852 the scheme broke down owing to the op- 
position of the new Catholic archbishop of Dublin, and Whately 
felt himself constrained to withdraw from the Education Board. 
From the beginning Whately was a keen-sighted observer of 
the condition of Ireland question, and gave much offence by 
openly supporting the state endowment of the Catholic clergy 
as a measure of justice. During the terrible years of 1846 and 
1847 the archbishop and his family were unwearied in their 
efforts to alleviate the miseries of the people. From 1856 
onwards symptoms of dechne began to manifest themselves 
in a paralytic affection of the left side. Still he continued the 
active discharge of his public duties till the summer of 1863, 
when he was prostrated by an ulcer in the leg, and after several 
months of acute suffering he died on the 8th of October 1863. 

Whately was a great talker, much addicted in early life to 
argument, in which he used others as instruments on which to 
hammer out his own views, and as he advanced in life much 
given to didactic monologue. He had a keen wit, whose sharp 
edge often inflicted wounds never deliberately intended by thi|i 
speaker, and a wholly un controllable love of punning Whately. 
often offended people by the eitreme unconventkmalay oi h»s 
manners. When al Oxford his white hat, rough white coat, 
and huge white dog earned for him the sobriquet 
Bear>;md he outraged t-he conventions of Jhc place i 
the exploits of hi-- climbing dog in Chn 
a remarkably fair and lucid mind, his %y\ 
and by his blunt outspokenness 
alienated many. With no 
the Tractarian movement 
the object of his bit 
the Low Church party 



with superstition. He took a practical, almost business-like 
view of Christianity, which seemed to High Churchmen and 
Evangelicals alike little better than Rationalism. In this they 
did Whately less than justice, for his religion was very real and 
genuine. But he may be said to have continued the typical 
Christianity of the 18th century— that of the theologians who 
went out to fight the Rationalists with their own w e apons. It 
was to Whately essentially a belief in certain matters of (act, to 
be accepted or rejected after an examination of " evidences." ■ 
Hence his endeavour always is to convince the logical faculty, 
and his Christianity inevitably appears as a thing of the intellect 
rather than of the heart. Whately's qualities are exhibited at 
their best in his Logic, which is, as it were, the quintessence of 
the views which he afterwards applied to different subjects. 
He wrote nothing better than the luminous Appendix. to this 
work on Ambiguous Terms. 

In 186a his daughter published Miscellaneous Remains from his 
commonplace book and in 1866 his Life and Correspondence in two 
volumes. The Anecdotal Memoirs of Archbishop Whately, by W. J 
Fitxpatrick (1864;, enliven the picture. 

WHAT-NOT* a piece of furniture, derived from the French 
Stogcre, which was exceedingly popular in England in the first 
three-quarters of the 19th century. It usually consists of 
slender uprights or pinars, supporting a series of shelves for 
holding china, ornaments or trifles of any kind — hence the 
allusive name. In its English form, although a convenient 
drawing-room receptacle, it was rarely beautiful. The early 
mahogany examples are, however, sometimes graceful in their 
simplicity. 

WHEAT (Tm^cum), the most important and the most gener- 
ally diffused of cereal grasses. It is an annual plant, with hoUow, 
erect, knotted stems, and pro- 
duces, in addition to the direct 
developments from the seed- 
ling plant, secondary roots and 
secondary shoots (tillers) from 
the base. Its leaves have each 
a long sheath encircling the 
stem, and at the junction of 
the blade or " flag " with the 
sheath a small whitish out- 
growth or " Ugula." The in- 
florescence or ear consists of 
a central stalk bent zigzag, 
forming a series of notches (see 
fig. 1), and bearing a number 
of flattened spikekts, one of 
which grows out of each notch 
and has its inner or upper face 
pressed up against it. At the 
base of each spikelet are two 
empty boat-shaped glumes or 
"chaff-scales," one to the right, 
the other to the left, and then 
a series of flowers, 2 to 8 in 
number, closely crowded to- 
gether; the uppermost are 
abortive or sterile,— indeed, in 
some varietie* oj^y one or two 






FlC. l .—Spikelet and Flowers of 
.Wheat 

% ''■■ '< t magnified. 

t*lu i ■ . ■ i, from side. 

CEumi-a, from back. 

1 ■ 1 ■ ■ ■•■• . i ing glume or lower palea. 

Palttk. 

les at base of j, the 
^surmounted by styles. 
.■'. fed from front and back 
(lively. 

t or central stalk of ear. 
ets removed. 

with infolded margins 

* *rv^gfeme%#rfccj«ely 
ind protca the ovary. 



WHEAT 



$77 



and they only separate for a abort time when flowering takes 
place; after fertilization they close again. Within the pale 
are two minute, ovate, pointed, white membranous scales called 
"lodicuks." These contain three stamens with thread-like 
filament* and oblong, two4obed anthers. The stamens are 
placed round the base of the ovary, which is rounded or oblong, 
much smaller than the glumes, covered with down, and sur- 
mounted by two short styles, extending into feathery brush-like 
stigmas. The ripe fruit or grain, sometimes called the " berry/' 
the matured state of the ovary and its contents, is oblong or 
ovoid, with a longitudinal furrow on one side. The ovary adheres 
firmly to the seed in the interior, so that on examining a longi- 
tudinal section of the grain by the microscope the outer layer 
is seen to consist of epidermal cells, of which the uppermost 
are prolonged into short hairs to cover the apex of the grain. 

Two or three layer* of 
cells inside the epidermis 
constitute the tissue of 
the ovary, .and overlie 
somewhat similar layers 
which form the coats of 
the seed. Within these 
t* the albumen or endo- 
sperm, constituting the 
flowery part of the seed. 
The outermost layer of 
the endosperm consists 
of square cellalarger and 
more regular in form than 
those on each side; these 
contain aleuron grains — 
small particles of gluten 
or nitrogenous matter. 
The remaining central 
mass of the seed is com- 
posed of numerous cells 
of irregular form and size 
containing many starch 
grains as well as gluten 
granules. The several 
layers of cells above re- 
ferred to become more 
Fig. 2.—/. Beardless wheat. //. or less dry and insepar- 

known as "bran." At the lower end of the albumen, and 
placed obliquely, is the minute embryo-plant, which derives its 
nourishment in the first instance from the albumen; this is 
destined to form the future plant. 

The wheat plant is nowhere found m a wild condition. Some 
of the Species of the genus Aegitops (now generally referred to 
Triticum by Bentham and Hooker and by Haeckel) 
2S**^ mav possibly have been the sources of our cultivated 
v "" forms, as they cross freely with wheats. Haeckel 
considers that there are three species, (x) Triticum mono- 
caecum, which undoubtedly grows wild in Greece and Meso- 
potamia, is cultivated in Spain and elsewhere, and was also 
cultivated by the aboriginal Swiss lake-dwellers, as well as at 
Hissarllk, as is shown by the grain 1 found in those localities. 
(a) T. sativum is the ordinary cultivated wheat, of which Haeckel 
recognizes three principal races, speita, dicoccum and tenax. 
Sjpeft wheats (see fig. 2) were cultivated by the aboriginal Swiss, 
by the ancient Egyptians, and throughout the Roman empire. 
The variety dicoccum was also cultivated in prehistoric times, 
and is still grown in Southern Europe as a summer wheat and 
" i for starch-making. TTie variety tenax includes four 
tv/fort (common wheat), ampactum, turgidum and 
,_ e below). (3) The third species, T. poUmkum.or PoUsh 
, Is a very distinct-looking form, with long leafy glumes; 
k is not known. As these varieties intercross with each 
to- wale by Mr Wortbiogtoo Smith an the 
s Ckwmkk (agta OecemW 





other, the presumption is that they, like the species of Aegikps, 
which also intercross with wheat, may have all originated from 
one common stock. 

Basing his conclusions upon philological data, such as the 
names of wheat in the oldest known languages, the writings 

of the most ancient historians, and the observations 

of botanical travellers, De Candolle infers that the 2J2JJJ* 
original home of the wheat plant was in Mesopotamia, ttt„, 
and that from there its cultivation extended in very 
early times to the Canaries on the west and to China on the east. 
In the western hemisphere wheat was not known till the 16th 
century. Humboldt mentions that it was accidentally intro- 
duced into Mexico with rice brought from Spain by a negro 
slave belonging to Cortes, and the same writer saw at Quito the 
earthen vase in which a Flemish monk had introduced from 
Ghent the first wheat grown in South America. 

As might be anticipated from the cultivation of the plant from 
time immemorial and from its wide diffusion throughout the eastern 
hemisphere, the varieties of wheat — that is, of T. satmtm — . 
are very numerous and of every grade of intensity. Those 
cases in which thevariation is most extreme some botanists 
would prefer to consider as forming distinct species; but others, 
as De Yilmorin, having regard to the general facts of the case 
and to the numerous intermediate gradations, look upon all the 
forms as derivatives from one. I n illustration of this tatter point 
it may be .mentioned that not only do the several varieties run one 
into the other, but their chemical composition varies likewise 



according to climate and season. According to Professor ChurcV 
even in the produce of a single ear there may be 3 to a % more of 
albuminoid matters in some grains than in others; but on_ the 



average the proportion of gluten to starch is as o- 1 1 to too. From 
the point of jriew of agriculture it is generally of no great moment 
what rank be assigned to the various forms. It is only important 
to take cognizance of them for purposes of cultivation under varying 
circumstances. Hence we only allude to some of the principal 
variations and to those characteristics which are found to be unstable. 
(1) Setting aside differences of constitution, such as hardihood, size, 
and the tike, there is relatively little variation in the form of the 
organs of vegetation. This indicates that less attention has been 
paid to the straw than to the grain, for it is certain that, were it 
desirable, a great range of variation might be induced in the foliage 
and straw. As it is, some varieties are hardier and taller than 
others, and the straw more solid, varying in colour and having less 
liability to be " laid "; but in the matter of "tillering,'* or the 
production of side-shoots from the base of the stem, there is much 
difference. Spring wheats procured from northern latitudes mature 
more rapidly than those from temperate or hot climates, whilst the 
reverse ts the case with autumn wheats from the ssme source. The 
difference is accounted for by the greater amount of light which the 
plants obtain in northern regions, and, especially, by its comparatively 
uninterrupted continuance during the growing period, when there are 
more working hours for the plants in the day than in more southern 
climes. Autumn wheats, on the other hand, are subjected to an 
enforced rest for a period of several months, and even when grown 
in milder climates remain quiescent for a longer period, and start 
into growth later in spring — much later than varieties of southern 
origin. These latter, accustomed to the mild winters of those 
latitudes, begin to grow early in spring, and are in consequence 
liable to injury from spring frosts. Wheats of dry countries and of 
those exposed to severe winds have, says De Vtlmorin, narrow leaves, 
pliant straw, bearded ears, and velvety chaff— characteristics which 
enable them to resist wind and drought. Wheats of moist climates, 
on the other hand, have broader leaves, to sdmit of more rapid 
transpiration. No doubt careful microscopic scrutiny of the minute 
anatomy of the leaves of plants grown under various conditions 
would reveal further adaptations of structure to external conditions 
of climate. At any rate, it is certain that, as a general rule, the hard 
wheats are almost exclusively cultivated in hot, dry countries, the 
spelt wheats in mountainous districts and on poor soil, turgid 
(durum forms) and common wheats in plains or in valleys— the best 
races of wheat being found on rich alluvial plains and m fertile 
valleys. The wheat used in the neighbourhood of Florence for straw- 
plaiting b a variety with very slender stalks. The seed is sown very 
thickly at the beginning of winter and pulled, not cut, about the end 
of May. before the ear is ripe. In the United Kingdom ordinary 
wheat, such ss old red Lammas and Chiddam white, is used for 
straw-platting, the straw being cut some time before the berry 
ripens. The propensity to " tiller ■ is of the greatest importance, 
as it multiplies the resources of the farmer. An instance of this 
is given in the Philosophical Transactions (1768), where it is stated 
that one seedling plant in the Cambridge botanic garden was divided 
into eighteen parts, each of which was replanted and subsequently 

again divided, till It produced sixty -seven plants in one 1 

In March and April pt the following year these wt Lj - - 

* Food Grains of India, p. 94, 



37« 



WHEAT 



and produced 500 (feats, which in due tine yielded a 1. 109. tat*. 

(?) The variation* in root-development have not been much attended 
to, although it would be well to study them in order to ascertain the 
degree of adaptability to various depths and conditions of soil. 
i3) A most important difference is observable in the liability* to 
attacks of rust \Puccinta), some varieties being almost invariably 
free from it, while others are in particular localities so subject to 
it as to be not worth cultivating. (4) The ears vary, not only in 
size, but also in form, this latter characteristic being dependent on 
the degree of closeness with which the spikelets are set on. In such 
varieties as Talavera the spikelets are loose, while in the dub and 
square-headed varieties they are closely packed. The form of the 
ear depends on the relative width of the anterior and posterior 
surfaces as compared with that of the lateral surfaces. In the 
square-headed varieties the lateral surfaces are nearly as wide as 
the median ones, owing to the form and arrangement of the spikelets. 
The number of abortive or sterile spikelets at the top of the ear also 
varies : in some cases nearly all the spikelets are fertile, while in 
others several of the uppermost ones are barren. 

The classification of the different varieties of cultivated wheat 
has occupied the attention of many botanists and agriculturists. 

^ . „._ The classification adopted by Henry de Vilmorin in his 

2"?*f r fct * Lei BUs mcMeurs {fan*, 1881) is based, in the first 
"•J/JV- instance, on the nature of the ear: when mature its axis 
whettju or * tem rema <> n s unbroken, as in the true wheats, or it 
breaks into a number of joints, as in the spelt wheats. 
In the first class the ripe grain readily detaches itself from 
the chaff-scales, while in the spelts it is more or less adherent to 
them, or not readily separable from them. The true wheats are 
, further subdivided into 
common wheats (F. vulr 
gate), turgid wheats IT. 
turgtdum), hard wheats (7*. 
durum) and Polish wheats 
(T. polonicum). In the 
common wheats the chaff- 
scales are boat-shaped, 
ovoid, of the consistence 
of parchment, and shorter 
than, the spikelet ; the seed 
is usually floury, opaque, 
white, and easily broken. 
In the turgid wheats the 
glumes have long awns, 
and the seed is turgid and 
floury, as in the common 
wheats. In the hard 
wheats the outer glumes 
are keeled, sharply pointed, 
awned, and the seed is 
elongated and of hard 
glassy texture, somewhat 
translucent, and difficult to 
Fie. 3.— Longitudinal Section of a break owing to it* tough- 
Grain of Wheat ; highly magnified, ncss. These seeds are richer 

A. Epidermal cells. in nitrogen than the com- 

B. Cells containing aleuron or gluten mon and turgid wheats, so 

grains. that an approximate notion 

C, CeUs of endosperm or albumen, of the richness in albu- 

filled with starch. imnoids may be gained 

D, Embryo cut through the middle, by simply inspecting the 

root-end pointing downwards. cut surface of the scetT The 

Polish wheat, rarely if ever 
cultivated in the United Kingdom, has very large lanceolate glumes, 
longer than the spikelet, and elongated glassy seeds. Further sub- 
divisions are made, according to the presence or absence of awns 
(bearded and beardless wheats), the colour of the ears (white, fawn- 
coloured or red), the texture of the cars (glabrous — Le. smooth — 
or downy) and the colour of the seed or " berry." In the jointed or 
spelt wheats the distinctions lie in the presence of awns, the direction 
of the points of the glumes (straight, bent outwards, or turned 
inwards], the form of the ear as revested on a croif ^rrction. and the 
entire or cleft palea. As illustrating the fact of the occasional 
insMbilily of these variations. Professor Church xnrjuiuft* J hat a 




single fcrain will be sometime* homy and parti 

in which case it* nmpoftiiion will euntspond 

division into spring *neat and winter wlw.u 

solely. Any variety may be a tpriuK or a * in 

the time at which it is sown. In 

be ohjierved I hat the median Aorets do no 

autumn wheats- Among the turgid whu 

tendency in the spike inTjrar 

which is manifested lo a less degree 

or so-called " mummy " wheat 

the spike branching out Loft 

lion uf the Ked*btacing bra: 

advantageous; but in pi 

be inferior, as if ' 

metur 

in the 



and floury, 
:*ct. The 



With regard to the chemical compositissi of the ripe grain. use 

Roihamsted experiments reveal a singular uniformity, even under 
very varied conditions of manuring, and even where much diversity 
was apparent in the constitution of the straw. A high or low per- 
centage of nitrogen in the grain was also shown to depend more 
directly on the degree of ripening, as influenced by the character 
of the season, than on difference in manure; but it depends more 
upon the variety than upon soil or nutrition. 

Apart from the botanical interest of these diversities, as indica- 
tions of the faculty of variation in plants, and possibly as dues to 
the genealogy and origin of the cultivated plant, their A ^ Mmtmm 
practical importance is very great. Some varieties are vz?* ?* 
suited to hot, others' to cold countries; some will flourish 3^!* 
on one description of soil, others on another. Hence the lZmUt 
paramount importance of ascertaining by experiment, w * 

not only what are the best varieties, but which are the best adapted 
for particular localities and particular climatic conditions. Potion 
and Deherain have shown l the " infinite superiority " in yield over 
the ordinary wheats of a particular square-headed variety grown 
on rica soil in the north of France. A good selection of seed, accord- 
ing, to the nature of the soil, demands, says Dc Vilmorin, intelligence 
and accurate knowledge on the part of the farmer. If a good variety 
be grown in poor soil, the result will be unprofitable, while, if bad 
wheat be grown on good soil, the result may be nil. In botanical 
collections there exist, it is stated, herbarium specimens or other 
evidences of plants grown in Norway as far north as tat. 65° (Schu- 
beler), in Switzerland at an elevation of 1200 ft. above the valley of 
Zermatt (or 6500 ft. above the sea), near the straits of Magellan, as 
well as in Teneriffe, the Cape of Good Hope. Abyssinia, Rodriguez, 
the Philippine Islands and the Malay Archipelago. These widely 
separated localities show the great area over which the culture at 
possible, and illustrate the powers of adaptation of the plant. The 
requirements of the consumer have also to be considered : for some 
purposes the soft floury wheats, with their large relative proportion 
of starch, are the best, for others the harder wheats, with their larger 
quantity of gluten. With the modern processes of milling, the harder 
wheats are preferred, for they make the best flour lor bakers' use; 
and in North America the spring wheats are, as a rule, harder than 
the winter wheats. The bearded varieties are supposed to be 
hardier; at any rate they defy the ravages of predatory birds more 
completely than the unarmed varieties, and they are preferable fa 
countries liable to storms of wind, as less likely to have their seeds 
detached. The durum wheats are specially employed in Italy for 
the fabrication of macaroni. Polish wheat is used for similar pur- 
poses. Spelt wheats are grown in the colder mountainous districts 
of Europe; their flour is very fine, and is used especially for pastry- 
making; but, owing to the construction of the grain, it requires 
special machinery for grinding (see Flour). 

Wheat begins to grow at a temperature of 5° C. (si* P.); and, 
when the aggregate temperature, as represented by the sum of the 
daily means, has mounted up to 185 9 F„ the germ begins to escape 
from the husk, if the seed be not deeply buried; but if it Is deeply 
buried, an amount of heat is required greater, in proportion to the 
depth. If the seed lies at a depth lower than a foot from the surface, 
it rarely germinates. The seedling plant ceases to grow if the mean 
temperature of the day remains below 42* F. When the young plants 
have been influenced by an aggregate temperature amounting to 
1896* F.from the period when sown, or 1715° from the period of 
germination, branching or " tillering " goes on freely, and the young 
ears arc formed. Under the influence of a mean temperature of 
55°, or a little above, the flowers are produced. _ A still higher dairy 

grain. 
" for 




mean is required for the full development and ripening of the gr 
The figures here cited are given by Risler ana are calculated .,. 
the climate of Paris; but, of course, the same principles apply in 
the case of other countries. The amount of light ana of moisture 
has also to be taken into account. The fact that the wheat plant 
requires less water than other cereals, and therefore does not suffer 
so much from drought, is one of great importance to the cultivator, 
and furnishes one reason for the greater proportionate culture of 
wheat in the eastern than in the western counties of England. 

The following figures, cited by De Vilmorin from Jouhe, will give 
an idea of the nature and amount of the demands made upon the 
soil by 3 wheat crop : in order to yield a crop of 44I bushels of wheat 
to the acre, the soil nu^t supply to the crop during its growth in 
ronnd number*— 202 th of nitrogen, 81 lb of phosphoric acid, 55 lb 
of lime, jo Jh oi magnesia, and 255 lb of potash. 
-~The numerous vanities of wheat now in cultivation have bees 
i-d airier 1 } ie tec don or by cross-breeding. In any wheat* 

may lie obj*rved on close inspection plants «»__^ . 
ig if\ cha merer from the majority. If seeds of JZS 
■>}.-<ting " plants be taken and grown in another JJJJ-jL- 
may {at may nqt) reproduce the particular Tmm * MM ' 
ydo, 1 f the same process of selection be continued, 
ttmes in time " fixed/' though it is always more or 
to its original condition. By continuously end 
ing the best grains from the 'best ears. Major 
introducing " pedigree wheats " of fine quality, 
r result s may, be expected from cross-breeding, or 

4 fin. : r ms*n. (January IBM), 0*33* • 



WHEAT 



57$ 



the fertfltattton of die flower* of one description of wheat by Che 
pollen of another. This has been attempted by Shireff, Le Couteur, 
Maund and others m the past, and more recently by H. de Vilmorin 
and Messrs Carter. Under natural circumstances wheat is self* 
fertilised: that is to say, the pollen of any given flowef impregnates 
the stigma and ovule of the same flower; the glumes and coverings 
of the flower being tightly pressed round the stamens and stigmas 
in such a way as to prevent the access of insects and to ensure the 
deposit of the pollen upon the stigmas of the same flower. This 
process of self-fertilization a the usual method, and no doubt keeps 
the variety true or unmixed ; but the occasional presence of varieties 
in a wheat-field shows that cross-fertilization is sometimes secured. 
The stamens of the wheat plant may frequently be seen protruding 
beyond the glumes, and their position might lead to the inference 
that cross-fertilization was the rule; but on closer examination ft 
will be found that the anthers are empty or nearly so, and that they 
are not protruded tiff after they have deposited the pollen upon the 
stigma. The separation of the glumes, which occurs at the time of 
fertilization, and which permits the egress of the useless stamens 
after that operation, occurs only under certain conditions of tempera- 
ture, when the heat, in fact, ts sufficient to cause the lodieules of 
the flower to become turgid and thus to press apart the glumes. A 
temperature of about 75 F. is found by Messrs Carter to be the 
most favourable. From what has been said it will be evident that 
the artificial fertilization of wheat is a very delicate operation. The 
glumes have to be separated and the anthers cut away before the 
pollen is fully formed, care being taken at the same time not to injure 
the stigma, and specially not to introduce, on the scissors of other- 
wise, any pollen except that of the variety desired. De Vflmorin's 
experiments have shown that all the varieties wul intercross, and 
that even such a distinct form as the Fotisb is no exception. From 
this he concludes that all the forms have originated from one stock 
and are to be comprised within one species. Tn the progeny of these 
crossed wheats, especially in the second generation, much variation 
and di ffere n ce of character is observable — a phenomenon commonly 
noticed in the descendants from cresses and hybrids, and styled by 
Naudia " irregular variation. '* Sometimes characteristics appear in 
the crossed wheats which are not found in the parent varieties, 
although they occur in other wheats. Thus. De Vilmorin records 
the presence of turgid wheats among seedlings raised from a common 
wheat fertilised with the pollen of a hard variety, and spelt wheats 
among the descendant* of a common crossed with a turgid wheat. 

The production of wheat, with the use 0/ wheat bread, has in- 
creased enormously since the extension of railways has made possible 
the transportation of grain for great distances (see Git At* trade) 
Of late years the increase of production has been most notable in 
southern Russia* Argentina, Australia, India and North America, 

A 



Wkeat-Parmmg. l -~ That wonderful agricultural 
region, attending from the international line oh the north to 
the 37th parallel, and from the Atlantic Ocean to the icoth 
meridian, and comprising 36 states* produces 76% of the 
American wheat crop. This region, which contains only 30% 
of the land surface of the country, but embraces to% of its total 
farm area and 70% of its improved farm acreage, is the greatest 
cereal-producing region of the world. Besides wheat, it produce* 
*s% of the total corn crop, or % of the total oat crap and Sj% 
of the total bay crop of the United States. The methods pursued 
m the eastern portion of this region an similar to those used 
m other parts of the world; bat in the north-western portion 
wheat-growing u carried on on a gigantic scale, and by methods 
almost unknown a n yw h ere else. The best illustration of the 
great or " bonanza " wheat farms, as they are called, are found 
along the Red river (of the North), where it flows between the 
states of North Dakota and Minnesota. 

The wheat grown in the United States is of two distinct kinds. 
One is the largetanel winter wheat of the Eastern stales; the 
ether is the hard spring wheat. The " bine stem " or the 
" Scotch-Fife " are native varieties of the latter kind grown in 
Minnesota and the two Dakotas. For Dmsr-making this wheat 
is considered the best in the world. Daring the season of 1800 
the product of bard spring wheat amounted to nearly 250,000.000 
bushels, or two-fifths of the entire wheat product of the United 
Slates. Of this, Minnesota and the two Dakotas alone produced 
aoQpoo^ooo toushekj. Minnesota is the greatest wheat-producing 
state in the Union. Her fields in 1809 covered 5,000,000 acres, 
and she produced nearly 80,000^000 bushels, which is twice 
the entire production of all Australia, and more than that of 
Great Britain and Ireland put together. In Minnesota and the 
Dakotas the farms are devoted almost exclusively to wheat* 
growing. Many of' them contain from 3000 to 10,000 acres. 
•For Canadian Wheat see Cavaoa %AfhcuUme. 



The country is a very level one, making it possible to use all 
kinds of machinery with great success. As there are no moun- 
tains or swamps, there is here very little waste land, and every 
square foot of the vast wheat fields can be made productive. 

The first characteristic of a " bonanza " wheat farm m the 
machinery. The smallest agricultural implement used upon 
them fa a plough, and the largest is the elevator. A 
hoe or a spade is almost unknown. Between these 
two there are machines of all sizes adapted to the 
needs of the particular work. Let us assume the conditions 
prevailing upon a bonanza farm of 5000 acres, and briefly 
describe the process of wheat production from the ploughing 
of the land to the delivery of the grain in the final market. 
These great wheat farms were established upon new lands sold 
directly to capitalists by the railroads. The lands became the 
property of the railroads largely through government grants* 
and they attracted capitalists, who bought them in large bodies 
and at low prices. The improvements made upon them consist 
of the cheap wooden dwellings for the managers, dormitories 
and drjung-haus for the men, stables for the horses, and sheds 
and workshops for repairing machinery. Very little of the land 
is under fence, Since the desirable lands of the country have 
been occupied, the prices of these lands have advanced slowly, 
with the result that the big farms are being divided up into 
small holdings. After a generation or two, if land continues 
to rise in the market as it has recently, the bonanza farms will 
become a thing of the past. At present the best of these lands 
in- the valley of the Red river (of the North) are worth from 9a 5 
to $30 an acre. The improvements upon them add about $5 
an acre more, A farm is not considered a big one unless it 
contains from 2000 to 10,000 acres at least. There are, of course, 
many small farmers owning from two to five sections (640 acres 
in each section), but their methods are more like those of the 
small farmers in the eastern United States or on the continent 
of Europe. It is necessary to own a large body of land in order 
to be able to use the machinery and methods here described. 
It is hard to convey a just notion of the size of these farms. They 
stretch away as far as the eye can reach in every direction, 
making it difficult even for the visitor to conceive their size. 
The distances across wheat fields are so great that even horse* 
back communication is too slow. The farms are separated 
into divisions, and lodging-houses and dming-halls and barns 
are scattered over them, so as to keep the workmen and teams 
near the scene of their labour. The men living at one end of the 
farm may not see those at the other for months at a time. Even 
then it is necessary to take the meals to the men in the fields 
rather than allow them to walk or ride to the dining-haUs. It 
Is not an unusual thing for a working crew to find themselves 
at the dinner hour 2 m. from their hall. 

First, after burning the old straw of the previous year-^which is 
real labour in itself, so enormous is its bulk— comes the ploughing. 
This begins in October. The plough used has a 16-in. m iil _ aklaM . 
share, tarns two furrows, and is drawn by five horses. '"V* 
Each plough covers about 250 acres in a season, travelling an average 
of 20 m. a day. The ploughing begins in October, and continues a 
month or six weeks, according to the season. The ploughs are driven 
in " gangs " under the eye of a superintendent, who rides with them. 
From eight to ten of these ploughs follow each other around the vast 
section. If one stands a few rods ahead of them they seem to be 
following one another in a line; but. if one stands to the right of the 
" gang/ one sees that the line is broken, and that the second plough 
is a width farther in the field than the leader, and soon for the entire 
number. Experience shows that it costs about 70 cents an acre to 
plough the land in this way. About forty men are employed upon a 
farm of 5000 acres during the ploughing season. The men are paid 
by the month, and receive about «5, including their board. They 
breakfast at five o'clock, take an hour for their dinner at noon-* 
usually in the field— and have their supper at seven. At tbf end of 
the ploughing season these particular men are usually discharged. 
Only eight or ten are kept on a farm of this size throughout the year. 
The other men go back to their homes or to the factories in the cities, 
where they await the harvesting and threshing season. The eight or 
ten who remain upon the farm are employed in doing odd jobs, such 
as overhauling machinery, or helping the carpenter and blacksmith, 
or looking after the horses. The wheat region is a country of heavy 
snows, and of severe, dry cold; but when March comes the snows 
begin to melt away, and by April the ploughed land is dry enough for 



5»o 



WHEAT 



let, 
the 



harvrL 



the harrow. The harrowing is done with 25-ft. harrows, drawn by 
tour hone*! and operated by a single man. One man can harrow 
60 to 73 acres a day. 

The seeding follows immediately with four-horse press drills that 
cover 12 ft. The harrows and drub are worked in gangs " as the 
„_ .. ploughs were. Each drill will go from ao to 25 m. a day. 

*■*■■* When the weather is good the seeding upon a 5000-acre 
farm will be done in twenty or twenty-five days. It is usual to seed 
a bushel and a peck of wheat to the acre. The wheat used for this 
purpose is carefully selected after the harvest of the previous year, 
and is thoroughly cleaned of foreign seeds. Through years of culti- 
vation, varieties of wheat have been produced which are particu- 
larly well sdapted to the soil and climate of this region. It has been 
found more profitable to use the native " blue stem " or " Scotch- 
Fife " wheat than the seed from any other country, or even from the 
neighbouring states. Counting the seed, wheat and the labour, it 
costs about $1 an acre to harrow the ground and plant rhf tvkrat. 

When the planting is done the extra labourers are disci -- : in. 
and the regular ones are put to work on the corn, oat 
. 1 which are grown to feed the horses. The mei 

most important work are all temporary labo 
come from the cities of the east or the farms of the south, 
with the early harvest in Oklahoma, and work north* an 1* up 
Missouri and the Red river until the season closes in Manitoba. 
They are not tramps, but steady, industrious men, suh tew bad 
habits and few ambitions. On well-managed farms CauL.u^ -nd 
gambling arc strictly forbidden. The work is hard, and, as there 
are few amusements on the farm, the men spend their resting periods 
in sleep. Their dormitories arc usually comfortably furnished, their 
diniug-hatls clean. The bonanza farmers find it good policy to feed 
their men well. Many a strike has occurred in the midst of the 
harvest because the quality or quantity of the food served was not 
what it ought to have been. The largest part of this food a brought 
from the eastern states. Some potatoes, turnips and beans are grown 
upon the farms; but the corned beef, bacon and groceries come 
from the cities. It is estimated that it costs 35 cents a day to feed 
each labourer. Farmers say that a good name in these respects 
enables them to get the choice of workmen, and that no money brings 
such sure returns as that expended in the bedrooms and upon the 
food. 

The harvest labourers begin to arrive from the south about the 
middle of July, and by the end of this month the harvest is at its 

height. A farm of 5000 acres will use 75 or 100 extra men. 

With the men comes the new machinery in train loads. 

It is estimated that at least $5,000,000 worth of agri- 
cultural machines is annually sold in this region. The wheat farmers 
say that it does not pay to take undue care of old machinery, that 
more money is lost in repairing and tinkering an old machine than 
would pay for a new one. The result is that new machinery is bought 
in very large quantities, used until it is worn out or cannot be re- 

B tired without considerable work, and then left in the fields to rust, 
eaps of cast-iron can be seen already upon many of the large farms. 
Of course a great many extra parts are bought to take the place of 
those which break roost frequently, and some men are always kept 
at work repairing machines in the field. One of the big 10,000-acre 
farms will use up two car-loads of twine in a single harvest, enough to 
lay a line around the whole coast of England, Ireland and Scotland. 
The harvesters vary in siz* according to the character of the land. 
Upon the rougher ground and small farms the ordinary binders are 
used ; upon the great plains, like those of California, a great harvester 
is used, which has a cutting line 52 ft. wide. These machines cut, 
thresh sad stack the grain at the rate of 1600 sacks a day. and cover 
an area in that time of 100 acres. These machines can only be used 
where the wheat ripens thoroughly standing in the field. The 
harvest labourer earns $10 a week everywhere in America. The 
bonanza farmer expects one machine to cut at feast 250 acres, and 
three men are required for each of them. The harvest lasts from 
ten days to three weeks, according to the weather. Including the 
labour and the wear and tear, it costs about 60 cents an acre to harvest 
wheat. 

The wheat is not stacked as in the Eastern states and in England, 
but stands upright fri vhorks in tht field. The train cure* v+ry 
tamMu ™P J ™y * n til * dry flirting *o that hy r ht time 1 he » fr.uit 
mm *' U all mi and thocked on one cfld of the division, ii is 
ready for the thresher at the other. The thocks el wheat • rr hauled 
direct ty to the thfrsJu-f ,ind frd ifH.j the -■-" ' fi!er\ lit Jly take* 
a d*v and a quarter to ihrc*h the - ^- 'took y to cut. 

The farmer estimates that a thr ill the 

wheat ordinarily grown iipii" '- ferrm-r 

would haw at Knit two rn 1 T*m* 

is a very important tii.n.; , 

enough grain in one nighi to tmv tvtvrs.1 ejUKtvm*. 
■<-rw>n is Thus a tiirw • ' acti** work 

The wheat straw t* v. .rv than m w*. 
upon thebotwma uim< A '<■ 
and for beddi 
the tbmhinf 
until an onn 
done uhpn^ 1 
fi- 




it to the elevator. The elevator is placed at the railway station, and 
is usually owned by the bonanza farmer. 

From the time the sheaves of wheat are tumbled into the wagon 
until the flour reaches the hands of the cook, no hand touches the 
wheat that passes through the great Minneapolis mills. j^» 
When the box-wagons reach the elevator the loosing of nasi— 
a bolt dumps the grain into the bin, where it remains 
until the pulling of a lever leu it into the cars. Every pound of it is 
weighed and accounted for, and entered upon the books, so as to 
show the exact product of each division of the farm. After the rush 
of the threshing is over the farmer studies these books carefully to 
see what his land is doing, and makes his plans for the next year, so as 
to rest or strengthen those divisions which are failing. It costs 
about $1.50 an acre to thresh the grain and put it into the elevator. 
This sum, added to the estimateacost of the other processes men- 
tioned above, makes the total cost of growing an acre of grain about 
$3.80. This includes the cost of labour, seed and wear and tear 
of machinery, but does not include the interest on land or plant. 
The taxes on land will average 25 cents an acre. The farmers 
estimate that the other improvements, the waterworks, elevators, 
insurance, horse feed, &c, will make this up to $6 an acre. The best 
of these farms will yield 20 bushels to the acre. This makes the 
wheat cost 30 cents a bushel. During the last five years the average 
farm-selling price of wheat in the North-West has been §8 cents. 
An acre thus produces $11.60, making a gross profit of $5.60. Still 
to be provided for is the interest on the operating expenses for 
eighteen months, which will, at 8 % be 48 cents per acre. Interest 
on the capital in land, improvements and machinery, at $30 per acre, 
make $1.80 more, or a total interest charge of J2.28. When this is 
deducted from the gross profits of $5.60 prices found above, we have 
a net profit of $3»32 an acre, not an exorbitant one by any means. 
This is about 8 % on the capital invested in the land, plant and 
operating expenses. But we nave described the conditions on one 
of the best bonanza farms. The average yield per acre in this region 
is not over 18 bushels, and the average expenses would be higher than 
those given. 

Every bonanza farmer's office is connected by wire with the 
markets at Minneapolis, Chicago and Buffalo. Quotations arrive 
hourly in the selling season, and the superintendent , 
keeps in close touch with his agents in the wheat-pits 
of these and other cities. When the instrument tells him of a 
good price, his agent is instructed to sell immediately. The 
fanner on the upper waters of the Red river (of the North) is kept 
fully informed as to the drought in India, the hot winds in the 
Argentine and the floods of the Danube. Any occurrences in 
these distant parts of the world are known to him in a surprisingly 
short time. The world's great wheat fields almost lie within his 
a : ght, so well does he know the conditions that prevail in them. 
Ten days are allowed for delivery, so that he can usually ship the 
wheat after it is sold. In the early days of wheat-fanning the 
bonanza farmer often speculated, but experience has taught him 
that he had better leave this to the men m the cities, and content 
himself with the profit from the business under his eye. The 
great elevator centres are in Duluth, St Paul, Minneapolis, Chicago 
and Buffalo. These elevators have a storage capacity of from 
soowooo to 2,500,000 bushels. The new ones are built of steel, 
operated by steam or electricity, protected from fire by pneu- 
matic water-pipes, and have complete rnachinery for drying and 
scouring the wheat whenever it is necessary. The elevators are 
provided with long spouts containing movable buckets, which 
can be lowered into the hold of a grain-laden vessel. The wheat 
is shovelled into the pathway of the huge steam shoveh, which 
draw it up to the ends of these spouts, where the buckets seize 
it, and carry it upwards into the elevator, and distribute it 
among the various bins according to grade. A cargo of 900,000 
bushels can thus be unloaded in two hours, while spouts on the 
other side of the elevator reload it into cars, five to ten at a time, 
hlUntf a car in from five to ten minutes, or the largest canal boat 
in ao. hour. The entire work of unloading, storing and reloading 
adds only one cent to the price of a bushel of wheat. 

The great wheafegfowmg states like Minnesota have estab- 
lished &y stems of inspecting and grading wheat under state super- 
vision . In M in nrsota the system is carried out by the 
Piilmad and W a rehouse Commission ( 1885) ,which fixes JH**** 
mad defines the different grades of wheat and directs the jm^ 

•rk* At present there are 18 grades recognised in this 

The first is described as "No. i, hard spring wheat, 
Irrtfbt and well cleaned, composed mainly of hard 
:-•-.' mt fcsing not Itst than s&tb to the measured 



£* 



WHEAT 



5«f 



The second grade b knows as u No. t, northern spring 
wheat, sound, and well cleaned, composed of the hard and soft 
varieties of spring wheat." So the varieties run—" No. a, 
northern "; " No. 3, northern," &c— down to the iSth, which 
is M no grade." The official inspectors examine, grade and 
sample the wheat in the cars in which it is received at the great 
markets or elevators. The cars are sealed at the point of original 
shipment. The first thing, therefore, b to examine the seab 
to see that they are unbroken. The inspector then samples 
and examines the- wheat, and enters the grade upon a blank 
opposite the number and letters of the car. His tag and sample 
go to the wheat exchange or chamber of commerce, where they 
are exposed in small tin pans, and form the basb of the trading. 
A few yean ago the wheat received from the north-west was 
very dean indeed, but since the new land has all been cultivated 
the fields are growing more weedy, with the result that the wheat 
bcoognt in b becoming mixed with oats and seeds of weeds, 
requiring more careful separating and inspection. After the 
inspector has finished hb work the cars are rcsealed with the 
state seal, and await orders of the purchaser. The delay will 
not orUnarily be more than one day. The commission keeps 
complete records and samples of each car urttH the wheat has 
passed entirety out of the market. When disputes occur as to the 
grade they can thus be instantly settled. If the grade b 
changed after a second examination the state pays the expense 
of the inspection; If not, it b paid by the agent who raises the 
objection. Only about 5% of the samples are ever reinspected, 
and in less than 2% of these b the grade changed. The com- 
mission collects the small fee of ao cents a car for its services as 
inspector, and later weighs all the wheat as it b distributed into 
the elevators. This small charge pays all the expenses. 

The transportation of the. wheat from the fields of the north* 
west to the seaport b a business of tremendous magnitude. 
Most of thb wheat goes by way of the lakes through the 
Sanlt Sainte Marie canal to Buffalo, where it b shipped 
by rail or inland canal to New York, Philadelphia or 
Baltimore. Duluth, on Lake Superior, b, surprising to say, the 
second port in the United States in point of tonnage. The Sault 
Samte Marie canal passes two and a half times as much 
tonnage during the eight months it b open as the Suez canal 
passes in the entire year. The cheapest transportation in the 
world b found upon these lakes, the rate being only three-fourths 
of a miH per ton of wheat per mile. The greater lake vessels, 
called " Whalcbacks," carry cargoes up to 250,000 bushcb, a 
bulk difficult to conceive. 700 bushels b a car-load. At that 
rate the cargo of 250,000 bushcb wOl fill 36b American cars, or 
o trains of 40 cars each. At 20 busheb to the acre, thb single 
cargo would represent the yield of two and a half farms of 5000 
acres each, like that described above, with every acre in cultiva- 
tion. The railways of the north-west have a monopoly of the 
business of hauling wheat, with the result that it costs 20 cents to 
ship a bushel of wheat from the Dakota field to Duluth, which b 
as much as it costs to forward it from Duluth to Liverpool. 
The bushel of wheat, or an equivalent amount of flour, can be 
shipped from Minneapolfa or Duluth to almost any point in 
western Europe for from 20 to 25 cents. 

What are the prospects of wheat production in the United State*? 
In Us president*! address before the British Association for the 
.Advancement of Science (1900). Sir William Crookea 
. fated a rather dark picture of the future of the worid'e 
wheat production. Among other things he said, "hi* 
!?._" almost certain that within a tiaua tkra the ever-increasing 
mm population of the United States will consume all the 

wheat grown within its border*, and will be driven to import like 
ourMflVe*. " Americans think that thb statement is altogether too 
eeasisabrJc. Not sufficient account had been taken of the unculti- 
vated land in farms* and of the possibilitiea of improving the yield, 
and still further cheapening the product. It b probable that the 
United States wul by 1933 have a popuUtioa of 133,000.000. Thb 
population would require a wheat crop of 700,000.000 busheb for its 
own use alone. Limiting attention to the great cereal-producing 
region described above, let us see what the pro sp ec ts are for increasing 
the acreage and the yield. The fact that these States contain, ac- 
cording to the last census, over 100,000,000 acres of unimproved 
land, already enclosed in farms, suggests at once the great posai- 
faffitk»mwneet. Bat ail this fend boot immediately avaibbbfar 



cultivation. The avaflableness of the unimproved fend in these 
states is chiefly a question of population and physical features. In 
state* like New York and Pmntyfvanb, which are much broken wp 
by hills and mountains, and have already a large popubtion. It b 
probable that the land available for wheat cultivation b now nearly 
alt taken up, although they still have 30% of unimproved bnd fa? 
farms. In the great states of Michigan, Missouri, Wisconsin'. 
Minnesota and the Dakota* there b still 40 to 50% of unimproved 
bnd in farm*. There ass few mountain* and hills in these 'States, 
and there b still room in them for a large population. It b evident 
that in states like these wheat culture b destined to increase greatly. 
Twelve states, in thb vast cereal-growing region—Ohio, Indiana, 
Illinois, Missouri, Kansas, Nebraska, Michigan, Iowa, Wisconsin. 
Minnesota, North and South Dakota— still have from ao to 40% of 
unimproved land in farms. The total area of these states b nearly 
four times that of France. Their soil b primarily as ferrifaas hem 
If we put the population of France at 40,000,000, the- states fa 

Jucstion could, at the same ratio, support* population of 140,000,000. 
ranee produced during the five years ending 1897 eight bushebof 
wheat per caput. At eight busheb per caput, the people in 
these twelve states alone could produce 1,130,000,000 busheb, or 
420,000,000 busheb more than will be required by the popubtion of 
133.000,000 expected by 1933. Thb b a great manufacturing as well 
as a great agricultural region, and it b here, therefore, that a large 
part of thb increase in popubtion will be found. 

It b evident that there bgreat room for improvement also in the 
matter of yield per acre. The average yield of wheat per acre has 
increased slowly in recent years. So long as there was so much 
virgin bnd to be brought under cultivation, it is surprising that it 
has increased at all, since the tendency e v ery w here b to " skin n 
the rich, new lands first. Mr B. W. Snow, formerly one of the statis- 
tician* of the United State* Department of Agriculture, has shown 
(The Forum, vol. xxviii. p. 04) that the producing capacity of the 
wheat lands, under favourable weather, increased steadily during 
the period 1880-1899. He distinguishes between the actual yield 
and the producing capacity, and bases hb comparison upon the 
Utter. He takes the average for each year of five years between 
1880 and 1890, and shows that the producing capacity per acre 
increased 0.5 bushel between the first and the second period, 1.3 
bushels between the second and the third, and 14 bushel* between 
the third and the fourth. In the period 1880-1884, inclusive, the 
maximum capacity was a little less than 14 bushels, while in the 
period 1895-1899 the maximum capacity exceeded slightly 17 
bushel*— an increase of 3*? bushels per acre, or 23%, in lea* than 
twenty year*. He says. "To account tor thb increase in the potential 
yield in our wheat-field* many factor* must be taken into considera- 
tion. Among these may be mentioned improved methods of plough- 
ing, tile drainage, use of the press drill, which result* in greater 
immunity against winter killing, crop rotation, and, to a very small 
extent, fertilization. An important factor to be mentioned in thb 
connexion b the change in the distribution of the acreage under 
wheat, consequent upon falling price*. A decline in the price of 

' at rendered its production unprofitable where the rate of yield 

small. Gradually these lands were passed over to crop* better 

suited to them; whue at the same time the wheat acreage was 
increased in districts having a better rate of yield." He predicts 
that " the increase in the acre yields in this country has only begun. 
All that has been accomplished during the period under review may 
be attributed to improvements in implement* for preparing the anil 
and planting the seed. Wheat b grown year after year without 
rotati on exce pt in a few case*— on a third or more of our wheat 
acreage; not one acre in fifty b directly fertilized for the crop, and 
only a minimum amount of attention m given to the betterment of 
seed stock. If, in the face of what cannot be considered less than 
careless and inefficient agricultural practice, we have increased the 
wheat capacity of our land by 3.2 bushels per acre in so short a 
time, what may we not expect In the way of huge acre yields before 
we experience the hardship* of a true wheat famine? " 

Diseases.— Wheat, Eke other cereals, b lbble to epidemic diseases 
caused by parasitic organisms which, prey on the plant tissues. Of 
these the rust, smut and bunt fungi are by far the most common 
and the most destr u c ti ve. Rust awn* b said to cause an annual loss 
of wheat in Indb amounting to from 4000,000 to 30,000,000 rupees. 
We have no similar calcubtKM of loss for Great Britain, where wheat 
b not so much grown, but ft b well known that there is a continual, 
serious depredation of value in the crops due to parasitic fungi. 

The rust fungus, Puetimia trombus, b a UrecEne belonging to the 
heteroecJous group, that b, one that passes from one host to another 
at different stages of hs life-history, la spring, while the wheat 
plant* are still green sad immature, the rust makes its appearance 
as orange-red spots or streaks on the stalks and leaves. These 
coloured spots are due to the presence of a sorus or layer of countless 
numbers of minute brown spores, the mredespcfes of the summer 
fruitingform. The fine thread-like nuunenmcomposing the mycelium 
of the fungus are embedded in the tissue underneath and around the 
uredo-sorua, and draw from the host the twurWuneut required. The 
spores, when mature, are easily detached, and are carried by insects 
or by the wind to other wheat-plant*. If infection take* place, 
other son are formed in ten day* or a fortnight under favoarabb 
conditions of moisture nad warmth. 



$«« 



WHEATBAR 



Towards the end of the summer the uredosporea are replaced by 
the winter resting-spores. called Ukutotports, which are larger, 
thicker-walled and darker in colour These teleotospores remain 
inactive on the straw until spring, when they germinate in manure 
heaps or on moist ground and produce minute sporidia, which are 
conveyed by air currents to the alternate host, in this case a barberry 
In due time the fungus, known as Aeadium Btrben&u, appears on 
the barberry leaves in the Conn of small duster-caps on autdm* 
each of which is filled with chains of orange-coloured oect dt osptres* 
Infection of the leaves of the young wheat plants follows on the 
scattering of the aecidiospores a sorus of the rusty uredosporea 
is produced, and the life-cycle is complete. 

Though this w the normal and complete development of Pucctma 
gramtnts, it is not invariably followed. In Australia, for instance, 
the berberry is an imported plant and of rare occurrence, yet rust 
is very abundant Teicucospores of heteroecious rusts never reinfect 
the host on which they are produced, so that in many cases the 




Fig. 4. — Puccinia gramtnts. 

A, Mass of teleutosporcs (/) on a wigarts, with a, aecidhfm 

leaf of couch-grass. fruits, p, pcridium, and sp, 

e, Epidermis ruptured. spcrraogonia. (After Sachs.) 

b, Sub-epidermal fibres. (After C, Mass 01 urcdospores (ur) 

De Bary.) with one tcleutospore (I) 

B, Part of vertical section sk, Sub-hymenial hyphae. (After 

through leaf of Bcrbem De Bary ) 

urcdospores probably survive the winter in Europe as well as in 
Australia and give rise to the rust of the following year Wind 
dispersal of the spores would account for mysterious appearances of 
the disease, in some years almost every straw in a wheat-field being 
affected, while in other years scarcely one is attacked Rust disease 
does not directly affect the grams, but both quantity and quality 
are impaired by the exhausted condition of the wheat plants. No 
cure is possible, but as winter wheat suffers less than spring wheat, 
early sowing is recommended. Fungus spores will not germinate 
without moisture, and attention to drainage helps to keep down 
this and other fungus pots. It has also bvrrt observed ihat loo 
heavy nitrogenous manuring stimulate* and |-f -lungs the growing 
period of the wheat , flnwering is retarded, and thus there u a 
greater opportunity for infection to take pia- *. . Wheat growing on 
art old manure hea p b nearly il ways badl y di*L«i *n J . M uch a l tent ion 
has been paid recently to the cultivation of varvcties of wheat that 
are immune to run atiacts, and rate frhcmld I* tnktti to idect 
strains that have been proved abk tu resist the rWaat 

The other two parasites. smtft and bunt, affect principally the 
grain Smut of wheat, U unlaw Fnlm, inlectt the host al the time 
of flowering The funjniv*porc*, from i*rawd plant, -Ji^Iit 

on the stigma of the flower, ami g with >e 

pollen-gram. The devrinpiitg seed fiMgaf fcyphfte, 

which fesnsja dormant wtilun the seed 1 
biottcatty Wrth the growth of the w 
injury nsMHfce time o 



Ijury ttMCVthe time of 
MapVt» > dii ei, ion «■-* 
coloured spot 



1 




Fig. 5.— Germinating Rest- 



.«.«. ,uu K i *» nam j« j ne gomoium. 

wtance occasionally p*. The promycelium. 

f damage Erynpk rf, The sporidia: in B the 

Idew of grasses, has sporidia have coalesced in 



other flowering wheat plants. It is mtpossibte to detect the ant' 

mfcction or to cleanse the seed: 

the only remedy is to procure seed 

from a smut-free source, and to 

prevent further spread of the 

disease by gathering ail smutted 

heads before the spores have 

matured or dispersed 

Tdtitta 7>i*r*, bunt or stinking 
smut of wheat, is so-called because 
the bunted grain has a disagreeable 
odour of stale herrings, Bread 
made from bunted flour is dark in 
colour, and both unpalatable and 
unwholesome The spores of the fm 
fungus remain in the soil or in 
manure-heaps until spring, when 
they germinate and attack the first 
greenleavps of the host plant. The 
after development is similar to that 
of smut, and the seed grain be- 
comes a mere mass of fungus 
spores. Much can be done in this 
case to dean the seed before sowing 

by immersing it in hot water or ing-Goui&iaf A of 1/sHfafo 
in some solution that will kilt the reuptacmttrwmi B of TiUeha 
spores without injuring the gram Cartas. 

Other parasitic fungi of less s p t The gonidium. 
economic importance occasionally - *•" - " 

do considerable dan 

gramtnts, a mildew <__ 

caused great loss in various ooun- m xn at a. 

tries , Ddophia gramtnts sometimes 

causes deformities of the leaves and inflorescence; another s ome- 

what similar fungus, OpmtaMms gramtnis, attacks the leaven and 

stalks near the ground, completely destroying the plants. 

Helmtnthosponum gramtneum, a disease oil barley, has also been 
recorded as growing on wheat; it forms long narrow dark-brown 
streaks on the leaves, which wither and die. The lower leaves are 
usually the only ones attacked, and the yield of grain baa not been 
seriously affected. 

WHBATEAR, a bird's name, perhaps of doubtful i 
though J. Taylor, the " water poet " (d. 1654), in whose 1 
it seems first to occur, and F. Willughby, explain .it (In the words 
of J. Ray, the tatter's translator) as given " because [in] the time 
of wheat harvest they wax very fat." The wheatear, Saxieoia 
amanihe, b one of the earliest migrants of its kind to return to its 
home, often reaching England at the end of February and 
almost always by the middle of March. The cock bird, with his 
bluish grey back and light buff breast, set off by black ear- 
coverts, wings, and part of the tail, is rendered still more con- 
spicuous by his white rump as he takes short flights m front of 
those who disturb him, while his sprightly actions and gay song 
harmonize so well with his delicately-tinted plumage as to 
render him a welcome object to all who delight in free and open 
country. When alarmed both sexes have a sharp monosyllabic 
note that sounds like chat, and this has not only entered into 
some of the local names of this species and of its allies, but has 
caused all to be frequently spoken of as " chats." The nest is 
constantly placed under ground, the bird takes advantage of the 
hole of some other animal, or the shelter of a clod in a fallow-field 
or a recess beneath a rock. A large amount of soft material 
is therein collected, and on them from 5 to 8 pale blue eggs are 
laid. 

Trie wheatear has a very wide range throughout the Old World, 
extending in summer far within the Arctic Carole, from Norway to 
the Lena and Yana valleys, while it winters- in Africa beyond the 
Equator and an India. But it also breeds regularly in Greenland 
and some ports of North America. Its reaching the former and the 
eastern coast of the latter, as well as the Bermudas/ may possibly be 
explained hy the drifting of individuals from Iceland; but far snore 
interesting is the fact of sta continued seasonal appearance in Alaska 
without ever showing itself in British Columbia or California, and 



1 The vulgar supposition of its being an euphemism of an Anglo- 
Samm name jef Bennett s ed of White's NaL HisL Sdbarnc, p. 69. 
note) must be rejected until evidence that such a name ever existed be 
adduced ft is true that "whituile" (cf. Dutch Wiistamri and 
French. I'uliihtmt) is given by Cotgravc in 161 1 ; but the older names, 
according io; Turner, in 1544, of "clotburd" (-clod-bird) and 
smaich ( » 1 haftj 4o not favour the usual derivation. " Fallow-chat " 
is another ulrj^nw stiM locally in use, as is " coney-chuck.'' 




WHHATLEY~WHKATSTONE 



5*3 



j bam observed in Kantchatka. Japan or China, 
flsssajh it is a iMBilr redact in the Tchufctchi peninsula. Hence 
it would seem a* though its annual Sights aero* Bering** Soak 
most be in connexion with a migratory movement that paaese to 
the north and eat of the Stanovei range erf mountain*. 
Many species nunc or km eHied to the wheatear have been <h> 
" * t eight an included in the European iatma; but the 

(habitants of Africa. Several of them 



aaa jority ans u 



) are birds of the 



desert; and here ft may be remarked that, whskr most of these 
exhibit the sand-coloured tints so commonly found in animals of like 
habitat, a few assume a black plumage, which, as explained by 
H. B. Tristram, is equally protective, since it assimilates them to 
the deep shadows cast bv projecting stones and other inequalities 
of the surface. 

Amongst genera closely allied to Soxicola are Prasbuok% which 
co mprise* among others two well-known British birds, the etonechat 
and whjncbat, F. ruhkola and P. rubetra, the latter a summer- 
migrant, while the former is resident as a species, and the black 
head, ruddy breast, and white collar and wing-spot of the cock 
render him a conspicuous object on almost every furze-grown com- 
mon or heath in the British Islands, as he sits on a projecting twig 
or lies from bush to bush. This bird has a wide range in Europe, 
and several other species, more or lets resembling it, inhabit South 



Africa, Madagascar, Reunion and Asia, from some of the islands of 
the Indian Archipelago to Japan. The whinchat, on the other hand, 
much more affects enclosed lands, and with a wide range has no 
vtry near ally. The wheatear and its allies belong to the sub-family 
Turiinae of the thrushes (fl.c). (A. N.) 

WHEATLEY, FRAHCIS (1747-1801), English portrait and 
landscape painter, was born in 1747 at Wild Court, Covent 
Garden, London. He studied at Shipley's drawing-school and 
the Royal Academy, and won several prizes from the Society of 
Arts. He assisted in the decoration of Vauxhall, and aided 
Mortimer in painting a ceiling for Lord Melbourne at Brocket 
Hall (Hertfordshire). In youth bis life was irregular and dis- 
sipated. He eloped to Ireland with the wife of Gresse, a brother 
artist, and established himself in Dublin as a portrait-painter, 
executing, among other works, an interior of the Irish House of 
Commons. His scene from the London Riots of 1780 was admir- 
ably engraved by Heath. He painted several subjects for 
BoydeU's Shakespeare Gallery, designed illustrations to Bell's 
edition of the poets, and practised to some small extent as an 
etcher and mezzotint-engraver. It is, however, as a painter, in 
both oil and water-colour, of landscapes and rustic subjects 
that Wbeatley is best remembered. He was elected, an associate 
of the Royal Academy hi 1700, and an academician in the 
following year. He died on the 28th of June t8oi. His wife, 
afterwards Mrs Pope, was known as a painter of flowers and 
p ortrait s. 

WHEATON, HENRY (1785-1848), American lawyer and 
diplomatist, was born at Providence, Rhode Island, on the 97th 
of November 1785. He graduated at Brown University in 1802, 
was admitted to the bar in 1805, and, alter two years' study 
abroad,practised law at Providence (1807-1 at 2) and at New York 
City (181 2-1827). He was a justice of the Marine Court of the 
dty of New York from 1815 to 1819, and reporter of the United 
States Supreme Court from 18x6 to 1827, aiding in 1825 in the 
revision of the laws of New York. His diplomatic career began 
in 1827, with an appointment to Denmark as charge d'affaires, 
followed by that of minister to Prussia, 1837 to 1846. During 
this period he had published a Digest of the Law cf Maritime 
Captures (1815); twelve volumes of Supreme Court Reports, and 
a Digest; a great number of historical articles, and some collected 
works; Elements of international Law (1836), his most im- 
portant work, of which a 6th edition with memoir was prepared 
by W. B. Lawrence and an eighth by R. H. Dana (q.9.) ; Histoise 
in Progres du Droit des Gens en Europe, written in 1838 for a 
pose ottered by the French Academy of Moral and Political 
Sdence, and translated in 1845 by William B. Lawrence as A 
History of the Law of Nations in Europe and America; and the 
Right of Visitation and Scorch (1842). The History took rank at 
once aa one of the leading works on the subject of which it 
treats. Wheaton's general theory is that international law 
consists of " those rules of conduct which reason deduces, as 
consonant to justice, from the nature of the society existing 
among independent nations, with such defirutic^ and modifica- 
tions as may boestabUshed by general consent/' Int846Wh*aton 



was requested to resign by the new president, Polk, who needed 
his place for another appointment. The request provoked general 
condemnation; but Wbeaton resigned and returned to the 
United States. He was called at once to the Harvard Law 
School as lecturer on international law; but he died at Dor- 
chester, Massachusetts, on the nth of March 1848. 

WHEATSTOHB, SIR CHARLES (1802-1875)1 English physicist 
and the practical founder of modern telegraphy, was born at 
Gloucester in February 1802, Ida father being a musk-seller in 
that city, In 1806 the family removed to London. Wheatstontfs 
education was carried on in several private schools, at which 
he appears to have displayed no remarkable attainments, being 
mainly characterized by a morbid shyness and sensitiveness that 
prevented him from making friends. About 1816 he was sent 
to bis uncle, a musical instrument maker in the Strand, to learn 
the trade; but with his father's countenance he spent more time 
in reading books of all kinds than at work. For some years he 
continued making experiments in acoustics, following out his own 
ideas and devising many beautiful and ingenious arrangements. 
Of these the " acoucryptopbone " was one of the most elegant— 
a light box, shaped like an ancient lyre and suspended by a 
metallic wire from a piano in the room above. When the in- 
strument was played, the vibrations were transmitted sQcntiy, 
and became audible in the lyre, which thus appeased to play of 
itself. On the death of his unde In 1823 Wheatstone and his 
brother- succeeded to the business; but he never seems to have 
taken a very active part in it, and he virtually retired after six 
years, devoting himself to experimental research, at first chiefly 
with regard to sound. Although he occasionally read a paper to 
scientific societies when a young man, be never could become 
a lecturer' on account of his shyness. Hence many of his in- 
vestigations were first described by Faraday in his Friday 
evening discourses at the Royal Institution. By 1834 Ins 
originality and resource in experiment were fuDy recognized, 
and he was appointed professor Of experimental philosophy at 
King's College, London, in that year. This appointment was 
inaugurated by two events,— a course of eight lectures on sound, 
which proved no success and was not repeated, and the deter- 
mination by means of a revolving mirror of the speed of electric 
discharge in conductors, a piece of work leading to enormously 
important results. The great velocity of electrical transmission 
suggested the possibility of utilising it for sending messages; 
and, after many experiments and the practical advice and 
business-like co-operation of William FothergUl Cooke (j8o6- 
1879), a patent for an electric telegraph was taken out in their 
joint names in 1837. Wheatstone's early training in making 
musical instruments now bore rich fruit in the continuous 
designing of new Instruments and pieces of mechanism. His life 
was uneventful except in so far as the variety of bis work lent it 
colour. He became a fellow of the Royal Society in 1837; in 
1847 he married; and in 3868, after the completion of his master- 
piece, the automatic telegraph, he was knighted. ^ While in Paris 
perfecting a receiving instrument for submarine cables, Sir 
Charles Wheatstone caught cold, and died on the 19th of October 

Wheatstone's physical investigations are described in mom than 
thirty-six papers in various scientific journals, the more important 
being in the Philosophical Transactions, the Proceedings of the Royal 
Society, the CompUs rendus and the British Association Reports. 
They naturally divide themselves into researches on sound, light 
and electricity, but extend into other branches of physics as well. 
But his best work by far was in the invention of complicated and 
delicate mechanism for various purposes, in the construction of 
which he employed a staff of workmen trained to the highest degree 
of excellence. For his insight into mechanism and his power over 
it he was unequalled, except perhaps by Charles Babbage. A crypto- 
graphic machine, whkhctian^thecrpherautomatk^llyandrjnntsd 
a message, entirely unintelligible until translated by a duplicate ' 
instrument, was one of the most perfect examples of this. Crypto- 
graphy had a great fascination for Wheatstone; he studied it deeply 
at one time, and deciphered many of the MSS. in the British Museum 
which had defied all other interpreters. In acoustics his principal 
1 research on the transmission of sound through solids, the 



5*4 



WHEATSTONE'S BRIDGE 



The kakidophone, intended to present visibly the movements of a 
sonorous body, consisted of a vibrating wire or rod carrying a 
silvered bead reflecting a point of light, the motions of which, by 
persistence of the successive images on the retina, were thus repre- 
sented in curves of light. In light there are a series of papers on the 
eye. on the physiology of vision, on binocular vision, including the 
invention of one of the popular scientific instruments, the stereoscope 
(q.v.). and on colour. The polar dock, devised, for use in place of a 
sun-dial, applies the fact that the plane of polarization of sty light is 
always 90 from the position of the sun; hence by measuring the 
azimuthal angle of the plane, even when the sun is below the horizon, 
correct apparent solar time may be obtained. In 1835. in a paper on 
" The Prismatic Decomposition of Electrical Light, he proved that 
sparks from different metals give distinctive spectra, which afforded 
a ready means of discriminating between them. But it is by hb 
electrical work that Wheatstone is best remembered. He not only 
guided the growth of scientific telegraphy on land wires, but made the 
earliest experiments with submarine cables, foreseeing the practica- 
bility of this means of communication as early as 1840. He devised 
the "A, B, C" telegraph instrument, the automatic transmitter, 
by which messages may be sent at the rate of 500 words a minute, 
printing telegraph receivers of various forms, electrical chronoscopes, 
and many forms of electrical recording apparatus, — amongst others 
two sets of registering meteorological instruments, of which the 
earlier, described in 184a, was afterwards developed by Father A. 
Secchi and F. van Rysselberghe, but the later, put forward in 1867, 
included metallic thermometers and was less successful. 

Wheatstone's Scientific Papers were collected and published by the 
Physical Society of London in 1879. Biographical notices of him 
will be found in his Proc. Inst. C.E., xlvii. 283, and Proc. Roy. 
Soc., xxiv. xvL For his connexion with the growth of tele- 
graphy, a te N ature, xi. 510, and xii. 30 sq. 

WHEATSTONE'S BRIDGE, an electrical instrument which 
consists of six conductors, joining four points, of such a character 
that when an electromotive force is applied in one branch the 
absence of a current in another branch (called the conjugate 
branch) establishes a relation between the resistance of the four 
others by which we can determine the value of the resistance in 
one of these, that of the others being assumed to be known. 
This arrangement was not invented by Sir Charles Wheatstone — 
although it bears his name and is commonly attributed to him, 
and was employed by him in some of his electrical researches — 
but by S. H. Christie, in 1833. 1 

The arrangement of the six conductors is diagrammatically repre- 
sented in fig. 1. In one of these branches is placed a battery B and 
in another a galvanometer G; the four 
other resistances are denoted by the 
letters P, Q, R, S. The circuits in which 
the battery and galvanometer arc 
placed are called conjugate circuits, 
fcand the circuits P, Q, K, and S arc 
Icalled the arms of the bridge, the 
/branches P and Q being called the ratio 
f arms and S the measuring arm. The 
circuit in which the galvanometer is 
placed is the bridge circuit. Keys are 
inserted in the battery and galvanometer 
circuits to open or close them at pleasure. 
The resistance forming the four arms of 
the bridge can be so adjusted that if 
these resistances have values denoted 
by P.Q.R, and S, then when P:Q " R;5, the current to the galvano- 
meter circuit wUl be zero when an electromotive force is applied 
in the battery circuit. 

. To prove this statement, let the conductors P, Q> R h S, . be arranged 
in a lozenge shape, as in fig. 1. Lut 11 be the electromotive force in 
the battery circuit, and let (*4~Jf) be the current through the re- 
sistance P, y the current through the resistance Q and J that through 
B. Then by G. R. KirchhofJ '« law* (kc Elect rokiw ETIC5 j we have 
the current equations, 

(P+G+R) (jt+vJ-Cj-Rb-O 

(S+S+B^-RU + yJ-Sy-E 
Rearranging the terms and solving for x (the current through the 
galvanometer), we obtain 

where A is a complex expression, involving the rc4i*tarv©?s 
P, Q, R, S, G, and B, which don not concern us, B**T~ 
*-o,P :Q-R : Sand the value of R an be determined in 
P, Q and §. 

In the practical instrument the three arms a 
and S are generally composed of onli of win 
whilst R is the resistance the value of wW 
This last resistance is connected to the ot 

1 See Wheatstone* £r« 




of a galvanometer, and a battery connected up as shown in the 
diagram. The operation of deternuning the vataa of the resistance R 
therefore consists in altering the ratio of the three resistances P t Q, 
and S, until the galvanometer indicates no current through it when 
the battery circuit is completed or closed by the hey. In one form 
of Wheatstone's Bridge, known as the series pattern nfog-ressatancc 
bridge, or Post Office pattern, the two ratio anna, P and Q, each 
consist of a series of coils of wire, viz. two x-ohm coils, two 10-obm 
coils, two 100-ohm coils and two looo-okm coils, which are joined op 




Fie. 2.— Standard Wheatstone's Bridge, 
in series in the order, 1000, too, 10, 1 ; 1, 10, 100, 1000, the junctions 
between each pair being connected to brass blocks, a series of which 
are mounted upon an ebonite slab that forms the lid of the box. 
The blocks are bored out with a hole partly in one block and partly 
in the other (see fig. 2} so that they can be connected by accurately 
fitting conical plugs. When the blocks are interconnected by the 
plugs all the coils are short-circuited; but if the plug or plugs are 
taken out, then a current flowing from one end of the series to the 



other is compelled to pass through the corresponding coils, In series 

with this set of coils is another set, S, which formi 

the resistances of which are generally 1 , 2,3, 4, to, 

300, 400, 1000, 2000, 3000, 4000 ohms. The junction between each 



pair of coils is connected as above described to a block, the blocks 
being interconnected by plugs all of which are made interchangeable. 
Another form of Wheatstone's Bridge, shown in fig. 2, is known 
as the dial pattern. Ten brass blocks are arranged parallel to or 
around another brass block, and by means of a plug which fits into 
holes bored partly out of the common block and partly out of the 
surrounding blocks, any one of the latter can be connected with the 
common one. A series of nine equal resistances, say I -ohm cotls, 
or nine 100-ohm coils, are joined in between these circumferential 
blocks (fig. 3). It will be seen that if a plug is placed so as to connect 




Fig. 3.— Diagram shosrli 




id Plug pattern, 



Mack, mr corttnt fsn drily j 

•*V passing; through a 

ceding to the 

'e any if ling 

four of the 

*•>:<,■, 11.. KS 
Kt 111 the hu 

mat of -ne 
I O. This 



WHEEL—WHEEL, BREAKING ON THE 



5«5 



*?$£ 



- - i plugs; moreover, there are (ewer plugs to manipulate, 
add each plug is occupied. The resistance coils themselves are 
generally wound on brass or copper bobbins, with silk-covered 
mangaam wire, which should first be aged by heating for about ten 
houra to a temperature of tao* C. to remove the sfight tendency to 
change in resistivity which would otherwise present itself. 

For the accurate comparison of resistance coils it is usual to make 
use of the Matthiessen and Hockin bridge, and to employ the method 
of differential comparison due to G. Carey Foster. 1 On a board is 
stretched a uniform metallic woe a b, generally of platinum silver*. 
The ends of this wire are connected to copper blocks, which them* 
selves are connected to a series of four resistance coils. A, B, and P, Q 
(fig. 4)> A and B are the coils to be compared, P and Q are two other 




cofls of convenient value. Over the stretched wire moves a contact 
maker S, which makes contact with it at any desired point, the 
posttioR of which can be ascertained by means of an underlying 
scale. A battery C of two or three cells is connected to the ex- 
tremities of the slide wire, and the sensitive galvanometer C is con- 
nected in between the contact-maker and the junction between the 
coils P and Q. The observer begins by moving the slider until the 
galvanometer shows no current. The position of the coils A and Bis 
then interchanged, and a fresh balance in position on the bridge is 
obtained. It is then easily shown that the difference between the 
resistance of the coils A and B is equal to the resistance of the length 
of the sSde wire intercepted be twe en the two places at which the 
balance was found in the two o b s er v ation s. 

Let the balance be supposed to be attained, and let x be the position 
of the slider on the wire, so that x and /— x arc the two sections of the 
slide wire, then the relation between the resistance is 

(A-fx)/(B+/-x)-P/Q. 
Next, let the position of A and B be interchanged, and the slide- wire 
reading be x*; then 

(B-rV)/(A-K-*0-P/O. 
Hence it follows that A-B-x'-x, or the difference of the. resist- 
ances of the coils A and B » equal to the resistance of that length of 
the slide wire between the two points where balance is obtained. 

Various plans have been suggested for effecting the rapid inter- 
change of the two coils A andB; one of the most convenient was 
designed by J. A. Fleming ia 1880. and has been since used by the 
British Association Committee on Electrical Units for making com- 
parison betwe e n standard coils with great accuracy (see Phil. Mag., 
1880, and Proc. Phys. Soc, 1879), In all very exact resistance 




nts the chief difficulty, however, is not to determine the 

"f a coil, but to determine the temperature of the coil at 

1 the resistance measurement b made. The difficulty is 



It Modified Form of Wheatstone's Bridge, and Methods of 
r Small Resi stan ces," by Professor G. Carey Foster. Proc 
L (187a). I. ^ 



caused by Ac fact that the coll is heated by the t 
measure its resistance, which thus alters in value. In accurate 
comparisons, therefore, H is necessary that the coils to be compared 
should be immersed in melting ice, and that sufficient time should be 
allowed to elapse between the measurements for the heat generated 
in the coil to be removed. 

The standard resistance coil employed as a means of comparison 
by which to regulate and check other coils consists of a wire, generally 
of manganin orplarJnum silver, insulated with silk and wound on a 
brass cylinder (fig. 5). This is soldered to two thick terminal rods of 
copper, and the coil is enclosed in a watertight beam cylinder so that 
it can be placed in water, or preferably in paraffin oil, and brought to 
any required temperature. In the form of standard coil recom- 
mended by the Berlin Rekhsanstak the coil b immersed in an 
insulating oil which is kept stirred by means of a small electric 
motor during the time of making the measurement. The terni 
ture of the on can best be ascertained by means of a plat! 
resistance thermometer. 

For the measurement of low resistances a modification of the 
Wheatstone's bridge devised by Lord Kelvin is employed. The 
Kelvin bridge consists of nine conductors joining six points, and in one 
practical form is known aa a Kelvin and Varley slide. Modifications 
of the ordinary Wheatstone's bridge for very accurate measurements 
have been devised by H. L. Caflendar and by Callendar and E. H. 
Griffiths (seeG. M. Clark, the Electrician, 38, p. 747). A useful bridge 
method for measurement of low resistances has been given by R. T. 
Housman (the Electrician, 40, p. 300, 1897). These and numerous 
modifications of the Wheatstone's bridge will be found described in 

LA. Fleming's Handbook for the Electrical Laboratory and Testing- 
om, vol. i. (1903). 

Ran aXNCEs:—F.E.Smhh," On Methods of High Precision foe the 
Comparison of Resistances," Appendix to the Report of the British 
Association Committee on Electrical Standards, British Association 
Report (York, 1006), or the Electrician, 57, p. 976 (IQ06); C. V. 
Drysdale, " Resistance Cofls and Comparisons, * British Atsocia- 



Design for a Standard of Electrical Resistance," Phil. Mag. (January 
1889); G. Aspinall Parr, Electrical Measuring Instruments (1903); 
W. H. Price, The Practical Measurement of Resistance', A. r 



Absolute Measurements in Electricity and Magnetism (1900); Roll 
Applcyard. " The Conductometer," Proc Phys. Soc. London, 19, p. 29 
(1903); also Proc. Inst. Cie. Eng. 154 (1903); and Proc. Phys. Soc, 
London, 17, p. 685 (1901). (J- A. F.) 

WHEEL (O. Eng. kwtol, kwiokl, ftc, cognate with led. hjdl, 
Dan. hint, cVc; the Indo-European root is seen in Sanskrit 
cJtakrS, Gr. aucXot, drele, whence " cycle ") t a circular frame 
or solid disk revolving on an axis, of which the function is to 
transmit or to modify motion. For the mechanical attributes and 
power of the wheel and for the modification of the lever,- known 
as the " wheel and axis," and of the mechanical powers, see 
Mechanics. The most familiar type of the wheel b of course 
that used in every type of vehicle, but it forms an essential part 
of nearly every kind of mechanism or machinery. Vehicular 
wheels in the earliest times were circular disks either cut out of 
solid pieces of wood, or formed of separate planks of wood fastened 
together and then cut into a circular shape. Such may be still 
'seen in use among primitive peoples to-day, especially where the 
tracks, if any exist, are of the roughest description, and travelling 
is heavy. The ordinary wheel consists of the nave (O. Eng. 
nafu, cf. Ger. Nabe, allied with "navel"), the central portion or 
hub, through which the axle passes, the spokes, the radial bars 
inserted in the nave and reaching to the peripheral rim, the 
felloe or felly (O. Eng. fdge, Ger. Petge, properly that which 
fitted together, lent, fdhen, to fit together). From the monu- 
ments wc see that the ancient Egyptian and Assyrian chariots had 
usually six spokes; the Greek and Roman wheels from four to 
eight. (See further Cabeiage and Chamot; also TM; and 
articles on Bicycle; Tm cycle ; and Moroa Vehicles.) 

WHEEL, BREAKUNI OM THE; a form of torture and execution 
formerly in use, especially in France and Germany. It is said to 
have been first used in the latter country, where the victim was 
placed on a cart-wheel and his limbs stretched out along the 
spokes. The wheel was made to slowly revolve, and the man's 
bones broken with blows of an iron bar. Sometimes it was 
mercifully ordered (hat the executioner shooJd strAc the criminal 
on chest and stomach, blows known as coufs da frdte, which at 
once ended the torture, and in France he was usually strangled 
after the second or third blow. A wheel was not always used 



586 



WHEELER, J.— WHETHAMSTEDE 



Id some countries it was upon a frame shaped like St Andrew's 
Cross that the sufferer was stretched. The punishment was 
abolished in France at the Revolution. It was employed in 
Germany as late as 1827. A murderer was broken on the row 
or wheel at Edinburgh in 1604, and two of the assassins of the 
regent Lennox thus suffered death. 

WHEELER, JOSEPH (1836-1006), American soldier, was 
born at Augusta, Georgia, in 1836, and entered the United States 
cavalry from West Point in 1859. Within two years the Civil 
War broke out, and Wheeler, as a Southerner, resigned to enter the 
Confederate service. In a short time he became colonel of the 
19th Alabama Infantry, with which he took part in the desultory 
operations of 1861 in Kentucky and Tennessee. He commanded 
a brigade at the battle of Shiloh, but soon afterwards he returned 
to the cavalry arm in which he won a reputation second only 
to Stuart's. After the action of Perryville he was promoted 
brigadier-general, and in January 1863 major-general. Thence- 
forward throughout the campaigns of Chkkamauga, Chattanooga 
and Atlanta he commanded the cavalry of the Confederate army 
in the West, and when Hood embarked upon the Tennessee 
expedition, he left Wheeler's cavalry to harass Sherman's army 
during the " March to the Sea." In the closing operations of 
the war, having now the rank of lieutenant-general, he com- 
manded the cavalry of Joseph Johnston's weak army in North 
Carolina, and was included in its surrender. After this he became 
a lawyer and a cotton planter and in 1882-83 and 1885-1000 was 
a representative in Congress. At the outbreak of the Spanish- 
American War in 1898, President M'Kinley, in pursuance of the 
policy of welding the North and the South, commissioned two 
ex-Confederate generals— Wheeler and Fitzhugh Lee— as major- 
generals of United States volunteers, and in this capacity 
Wheeler was placed in command of the cavalry division of 
Shifter's army in Cuba. He commanded in the actions of 
Guasimas and San Juan, was afterwards sent to the Philippines 
In command of a brigade, and in 1900 was commissioned a 
brigadier-general in the regular army. Shortly, afterwards he 
retired. General Wheeler died on the 25th of January 1906. 

WHEELER, WILLIAM AUK)* (1810-1887), vice-president of 
the United States from 1877 to 1881, was born at Malone, New 
York, on the 30th of June 1819. He studied at the university 
of Vermont for two years (1833-1835), and in 1845 was admitted 
to the bar. First as a Whig, and then, after s 856, as a Republican, 
he was prominent for many years in state and national politics. 
He was a member of the state Assembly in 1 849-1850, a member 
and president pro tempore of the state Senate in 1858-1859, and 
a member of the national House of Representatives in 1861- 1863, 
and again from 1869 until 1877. He was the author of the so- 
called " Wheeler Compromise," by which the difficulties between 
contending political factions in Louisiana were adjusted in 
1875. Nominated for vice-president by the Republicans in 
1876 on the ticket with President Hayes, he was installed 
in office through the decision of the Electoral Commission, and 
at the end of his term he retired from public life. He died at 
Malone on the 4th of June 1887. 

WHEELING, a city and the county-seat of Ohio county, 
West Virginia, U.S.A., on the east bank of the Ohio river, at the 
mouth of Wheeling Creek, 66 m. (by rail) S.W. of Pittsburg. 
Pop. (1890) 34)522; (1900) 38,878, of whom 1066 were negroes, 
and 5461 were foreign-born, including 3106 Germans and 876 
Irish; (1910, census) 41,641* Area, 3-2 sq. m. Wheeling is 
served by the Baltimore & Ohio, the Pennsylvania and the 
Wheeling & Lake Erie railways, by the belt line of the Wheeling 
Terminal Company and by interurban electric lines. Wheeling 
is the largest city in West Virginia, and commercially the most 
important place on the Ohio river between Pittsburg and 
Cincinnati. It is built on a narrow strip of bottom land , bet ween 
the river and steep lulls, at an elevation of about 640 ft, above 
tidewater. Between the mainland and Wheeling (formerly 
Zane's) Island, which forms a part of the city, there are a su» pen- 
sion-bridge, which has a spaa of xoio ft., arid a *l«l bridge, 
and from the island across/the back river channel there are two 
bridges .to the Ohio shore, one from the middle of the island to 



Bridgeport on which the Old National Road crosses the river, 

and the other from the northern end of the island to Martin's 
Ferry, Ohio. A fifth bridge connects Wheeling with Bellaire, 
Ohio. Wheeling has a public library, containing 23,261 volumes 
in 1000. Near the city is the Mount de Chantal Academy (Roma* 
Catholic) for girls, and in Wheeling is Linsly Institute, a secondary 
school for boys. The principal public buildings are the Custom- 
House and PostrOffice, the City Hall, a High School, a YJI.C.A. 
building and a Scottish Rite Cathedral* In the city are a City 
Hospital (private, 1890) and the Wheeling Hospital (under the 
Sisters of St Joseph, 1853). On the National Road there is a 
monument to Henry Clay; and in the City Hall Square is a 
Soldiers' Monument. By reason of its situation on the Ohio 
river Wheeling is an important shipping and distributing centre, 
and it has various important manufacturing interests. Its factory 
products were valued in 1905 at $23,297,475. The Chief industry 
is the manufacture of iron and steel, which in 1905 gave employ- 
ment to more than 34% of the city's wage-earners; and yielded 
more than 46% of the total value of its products. The manu- 
facture of nails, begun here in 1849, was for many years of great 
importance. Other products in 1905 were slaughtering and meat 
products, $1,812,348; malt liquors, $1,541,183; tobacco and 
cigars (especially stogies), $1,161,594; foundry and machine- 
shop products, $709,376; lumber and planing mill products, 
$685361; pickles, preserves and sauces, $676,437; glass, 
$508,145; and pottery. Glass was first manufactured here 
in 1821. Coal is found in abundance in the surrounding region, 
and also natural gas, which is much used as fuel in the manu- 
facture of iron, steel and glass. 

The first settlement here was made in x 770 by Colonel Ebenezer 
Zane (1747-1811), and his brothers, Jonathan (one of the 
founders of ZanesviUe, Ohio) and Silas, who in the autumn of 
that year made their way to this point from their home in 
Virginia, and took possession of claims at the mouth of Wheeling 
Creek. Other settlers came soon afterward, and in 1774 a strong 
stockade fort was erected within the present limits of Wheeling 
— at the top of Main Street hill. Until 1776 this fort was called 
Fort Fincastle in honour of Lord Dunmore, Viscount Fincastle, 
governor of Virginia from 1771 to 1776. After 1776 it was called 
Fort Henry, in honour of Patrick Henry. During this period the 
Indians were hostile, and the settlers were frequently forced 
to take refuge m the stockade. On the 1st of September 1777 
the fort was attacked by a large force of Indians and 15 of the 
whites were killed; during this attack, when the ammunition 
of the defenders had failed, Elizabeth Zane (c. 1750-1847), a 
sister of Ebenezer, brought under fire a keg of powder from 
a house sixty yards from the fort. In September 1782 the fort 
was unsuccessfully besieged for two days by a force of about 
40 British regular soldiers and about 250 Indians. The town 
was laid out by Colonel Zane in 1793, was incorporated in 1806, 
and was chartered as a city in 1836. It was designated as the 
capital of the "restored government of Virginia" in 1861, 
after the secession of Virginia at the beginning of the Civil War, 
and was the capital of West Virginia from 1863 to 1869, and again 
from 1875 until May 1885. The name " Wheeling " is a corrup- 
tion of an Indian word, of uncertain meaning, sometimes trans- 
lated as " the place of the head." 

WHETHAMSTEDE, JOHN (d. 1465), English abbot, was a 
son of Hugh Bostock, and was born at Wheathaapstead in 
Hertfordshire, owing his name, the Latin form o£' which is 
Frumentarius, to this circumstance. In early life 1 
Albans Abbey and in 1430 he was chottti ab&ot < 
In u-i he attended a council at Pavia but in t U s]an4 J 
wu mainly occupied with lawsuits, several of wbith Lie ci ■ 
to defend the property and enforce the rights el the *Ww 
1440 he resigned his post, bat in 1451* on the ijralh e 
ceswt, John Slokej he Vwretmr j 
died on the aotti M Januar y J H» 
seen in the sHicy ^ liw 
successful abbot* 
Albans, mhk' 



dhillinif 




WHETSTONE— WHICHCOTE 



587 



College, Qrford, with whkh.be wv connected. He was a friend 
of Puke Humphrey of Gloucester, whom he helped to gather to- 
gether his famous collection of books, and was himself a writer, 
his works including Cranarium de nris iUustribus; Palearium 
poOarum; and Super Valeriuu in Augustinum de Anchona. 

Whethamstede's Chronicle, or the Rostrum abbatiae Johonms 
Whethamstede, is a register compiled soon after the abbot's death, 
which tells the events 0/ his second abbacy. It has been edited by 
H. T. Riley, and is in vol. *. of the Registra quontndam abbot** 
sMSMifir ii 5. Atboui (London, 187a)* The events of his first abbacy 
axe narrated io the A n no let monastern S. Albeni of John Amundes- 
ham. also edited by H. T. Riley (London, 1870-1871). 

WHETSTONE, GEORGE (i544?-is87?), English dramatist 
and author, was the third son of Robert Whetstone (d. 1557). 
A member of a wealthy family that owned the manor of 
Walcot at Beraack, near Stamford, he appears to have inherited 
a smaU patrimony w bich he speedily dissipated, and he com- 
plains bitterly of the failure of a lawsuit to recover an inheritance 
of which he had been unjustly deprived. In 1572 he joined an 
English regiment on active service in the Low Countries, where 
he met George Gascoigne and Thomas Churchyard. Gascoigne 
was bis guest near Stamford when he died in 1577, and Whetstone 
commemorated his friend in a long elegy. Kb first volume, the 
Rock* of Regard* (1576), consisted of tales in prose and verse 
adapted from tho Italian, and in 1578 he pubUsbed The right 
excellent and famous Histarye of. Promos ami Cassandra, a play in 
two parts, drawn from the eighty-fifth novel of Giraldi Cintbios 
HecatomUhi. To this be wrote an interesting preface addressed 
to William Fleetwood, recorder of London, with whom he 
claimed kinship, in which be criticizes the contemporary drama. 
Ia 15*2 he published his deptameron of CiviU Discourses, a 
collection of tales which includes The Ran Historic of Promos 
and Cassandra. From this prose version apparently Shakespeare 
drew the plot of Measure for Measure, though ho was doubtless 
familiar with the story ia its earner dramatic form. Whetstone 
afonsnpaitifri Sir Humphrey Gilbert on his expedition in 1578* 
iS7*» *nd toe next year found him in Italy. The Puritan spirit 
was now abroad in England, and Whetstone followed its dictates 
m his prase tract A Mirow for Magcstroks (1584), which in a 
stcomd edition was called A Touchstone fir the Time. Whetstone 
did not abuse the stage as some Puritan writers did, but he 
objected to the performante of plays on Sundays. In 15S5 he 
returned to the army in Holland, and he was present at the 
battle of Zutphen. His other works ace a collection of military 
anecdotes entitled The Honourable Reputation of a SauUier 
(»5*S); a political traca, the English Myrror (t$86), numerous 
elegies on distinguished persons, and The Censure of a LoyoU 
Subject (1587)* No information about Whetstone is available 
after the publication of this last book, and it b conjectured that 
he died shortly afterwards. 

WHEWEU* WILLIAM (1704-1866), British philosopher and 
historian of science, was bora on the 24th of May 1794 at Lan- 
caster. His father, a- carpenter, wished him to lotto w his trade, 
but his success in mathematics at Lancaster and Heveccham 
grammar-schools enabled him to proceed with an eanthition to 
Trinity, Cambridge (iSis). He was second wrangler in 1816, 
became feuow and tutor of his college, and, in 1841, succeeded 
Dr Wordsworth as master. He was professor of mineralogy from 
stsS 10 -J8j2, and of moral philosophy (then called " moral 
tssssssfey and casuistical divinity ") from 1838 to 1855. He 
1 the 6th of March 1866 from the effects of a fall from 

not only fat scientific research and 

and college admmauratfon. 

THatist on Mechanics (1819), 

and Hcrsctid in lefonvfng the 

" teaching; to him m large 

~ the moral and natural 

curriculum (1850). 

i, he opposed reform? 

in a controversy with 




" fchow-commonere," and the authority of heads of colleges in 
university affairs. He opposed the appointment of the University 
Commission (1850), and wrote two pamphlets {Remarks) against 
the reform of the university (1855). He advocated as the true 
reform, against the scheme of entrusting elections to thcrocmbexs 
of the senate, the use of college funds and the subvention of 
scientific and professorial work. 

In 1826 and 1828, Wbewell was engaged' with Airy in con r 
ducting experiments in Dolcoath mine, Cornwall, in order to 
determine the density of the earth: Their united labours were 
unsuccessful, and Whewcll did little more in the way of ex- 
perimental science. He was the author, however, of an Essay on 
Miner alogkal Classification, published in i8a8, and contributed 
various memoirs on the tides to the Philosophical Transactions 
of the Royal Society between 1833 and 185a But it is on his 
History and Philosophy of the Sciences that his claim to an 
enduring reputation mainly rests. The History of the Indmsun 
Sciences, from the Earliest to the Present Time appeased originally 
in 1837. WheweU's wide, if superficial, acquaintance with various 
branches of science enabled him to writ* a comprehensive 
account of their development, which is still of the peatest value. 
Ia his own opinion, the History was to be regarded as an intro- 
duction to the Philosophy of the Inductm Sciences (1840). The 
latter treatise 1 analyses the method exemplified In the formation 
of ideas, m the new inductions of science, and in the applications 
and systematisation of these inductions, all exhibited by the 
History in the process of development. 

In the Philosophy, Whewetl endeavours to follow Bacon's plan for 
discovery of an effectual art of discovery. He examines ideas 
(" explication of conceptions ") and by the " colligation of /acta 
endeavours to unite these ideas to the facts and so construct science. 
But no art of discovery, such as Bacon anticipated, follows, for 
" invention, sagacity, genius " are needed at each step. He analyses 
induction into three steps:— <i) the selection of the (fundamental) 
idea, such as space, number, cause or likeness; (a) the formation of 
the conception, or more special modification of those ideas, as a 
circle, a uniform force, Ac; and (3) the determination of magni- 
tudes. Upon these follow special methods of induction applicable to 
quantity, viz., the method of curves, the method of means, the 
method of least squares and the method, of residues, and special 
methods depending on resemblance (to which the transition is made 
through the lav of continuity), viz. the method of gradation and the 
method of natural dasrificatioa. 

Here, as in his ethical doctrine (see Ernies), WheweU was moved 
by opposition to contemporary English empiricism. Following Kant, 
he asserted against f . S. Mill the a priori nature of necessary truth, 
and by his rules for the construction of conceptions he dispensed with 
the inductive methods of Mill. 

Between J83* and 1861 WheweU was the author of various works 
on the philosophy of morals and politics, the chief of which, Elements 
of Morality, including Polity, was published in 1845. The peculiarity 
of this work— written, of course, from what is known as the in- 
tuitions! point of view—is its fivefold division of the springs of action 
and of their objects, of the primary and universal rights of man 
(personal security, property, contract, family rights and govern- 
ment), and of the cardinal virtues (benevolence, justice, truth, purity 
and order). Among Whewetl's other works — too numerous to 
mention-' re f er e nce must be made to writings popular in their day, 
such as the firldgewater Treatise on Astronomy (1 833), and the essay. 
Of lbs Plurality of Worlds (1854). in which he argued against the pro- 
bability of planetary life, and also to the Platonic Dialogues for English 
Readers (1850-1861), to the Lectures on thtHistory of Moral Philosophy 
in England (1852), to the essay. Of a Liberal Education in General, 
milh particular reference to the Leading Studies of the Unaersity of 
Cambridge (1845), to the important edition and abridged translation 
of Grotius, De iure belli et pacts (1853X *nd to the edition of the 
Mathematical Works of Isaac Barrow (i860). 

Full bibliographical details are given by Isaac Todhunter, If. 
WheweU: an Account of his Writings (2 vols., 18T6). See also Life 
of W, Whtmdl, by Mrs Stair Douglas (1881). 

WHICHCOTB (or Wi Blcncor *) , BDUAaUM (1009-1683), 
English divine and philosopher, was bom at Whkhcote Halt, 
Stoke, Shropshire, and educated at Emmanuel College, Cam- 
bridge, where he became fellow in 1633. He was ordained in 
1636, and appointed shortly afterwards to be Sunday afternoon 
A ft ci wards broken up into triree parts poolislicQ separately 7 ti 1 
the History of Scientific Ideas <s*5*). substantially a reproduction of 
the first past of the Philosophy; (?) the Nornm organumjeno^um 



588 



WHICKHAM— WHIG AND TORY 



lecturer at Trinity Church, Cambridge. In 1643 he received the 
rectory of North Cadbury, Somerset, and in the following year 
he was appointed provost of King's College, Cambridge, in place 
of Samuel Collins who was ejected. On resigning North Cadbury 
in 1649 he became rector of Milton, Cambridgeshire. In 1650 
he was vice-chancellor of Cambridge University. Cromwell in 
1655 consulted him upon the question of extending tolerance 
to the Jews. His Puritan views lost him the provostship of 
King's College at the Restoration of 1660, but on complying 
with the- Act of Uniformity he was appointed to the living of 
St Anne's, Blackfriars, London. In 1668 he became vicar of 
St Lawrence Jewry, London. He is regarded as the founder of the 
important school of Cambridge Platonists. His works, chiefly 
theological treatises and sermons, were all published posthum- 
ously. He died in May 1683. 

See John Tulloch, Rational Theology, H. 59-84 (1874) '. *nd Masters 
in English Theology, edited by A. Barry (1877). 

WHICKHAM, an urban district in the Chester-le-Street 
parliamentary division of Durham, England, 4 m. S.W. of 
Newcastle-upon-Tyne, near the river Derwent. Pop. (1001) 
x 1,852. There is a station (Swalwell) on a branch of the North- 
Eastern railway. The church of St Mary has Norman and 
Transitional portions, and in the neighbourhood is the mansion 
of Grbside, of the 17th century. The demesne borders the Der- 
went, and is of great beauty, part being laid out in formal 
gardens and straight avenues. It contains a lofty Doric column 
and a detached chapel and banqueting hall, and in the vicinity 
are picturesque fragments of the monastic chapel of Friarside, 
and of the manor house of HoUinside. Whkkham is one of 
the centres of a coal-mining district, the mines employing the 
majority of the industrial population; but there are also iron, 
steel, and chemical works. 

WHIQ AND TORT, the names associated with two opposing 
political parties in England. The origin of " Whig " has been 
much controverted; it has been associated with the Scots for 
" whey," as implying a taunt against the " sour-milk " faces of 
the western Lowlanders; another theory is that it represented 
the initials of the Scots Covenanters' motto, " We hope in God "; 
another derives it from the Scots word " whiggam," used by 
peasants in driving their horses. It was, however, a form of the 
Scots Gaelic term used to describe cattle and horse thieves, and 
transferred to the adherents of the Presbyterian cause in Scot- 
land. " Tory " is derived from the Irish Tar a Ri, " Come, oh 
king! " associated with the creed of the Irish native levies enlisted 
in the civil wars on behalf of the loyalist cause; the outlaws who 
fought for James in Ireland after the revolution were similarly 
nicknamed Rapparees or Tories. 

Parliamentary parties, as such, came into existence in England 
as soon as parliament achieved or aimed at predominance in the 
state. In 1641 , shortly after the meeting of the Long Parliament, 
they were divided on the question of church reform, passing, 
as soon as political questions were involved, into Cavaliers and 
Roundheads. After the expulsion of the Cavaliers in 1642 and 
1643 the Houses were divided into a peace party and a war 
party, and these in 1643 took the shape of Presbyterians and 
Independents. After the Restoration there was a country 
party and a court party, and to these the names of Whig and 
Tory were applied in 1679, in the heat of the struggle which 
preceded the meeting of the first short parliament of Charles 11. 
The words were nicknames given by the opponents of each party. 
To oUl a man a Whig was to compare him with 1 lie Presbyterian 
rebels of the west of Scotland. To call a man a Tory was to 
compare him with the Papist outlaws of Ireland. In fact, at 
this time the Whigs were maintainers of parliamentary power 
over the crown and of toleration for Disaemer*, the Tories 
maintainers of the hereditary indefeasible rights of the wearer 
of the crown and of the refusal of toleration ta Dissenters. The 
relation between the parties was further qualified by the fact that 
the heir to the crown was a Roman Catholic T whose claim to 
succeed was defended by the Tories and assailed by the WMk 

The persistency of the names of the two parties is maid 
owing to their essential uiuneaningbess. As new qv 



arose, the names of the old parties were retained, though the 
objects of contention were no longer the same. The Revolution 
of 1688-89 made it impossible for the Tories to retain their 
old attitude of attachment to the hereditary right of the occupant 
of the throne, with the exception of the extreme wing of the 
party, which remained Jacobite. They still, however, continued, 
though accepting the Toleration Act, to oppose the offering of 
further favours to Dissenters. In Anne's reign, after the war 
with France had gon* on for some time, they supported a peace 
policy, whilst the Whigs advocated a continuance of the war. 
On the whole, during the last years of the 17th and the first years 
of the 18th century the Whigs may be regarded as the party 
of the great landowners, and of the merchants and tradesmen, 
the Tories as the party of the smaller landowners and the country 
clergy. The Whigs established, through their hold upon the 
boroughs under the influence of the great landowners, a firm 
government, which could keep in check, and at last practically 
set aside, the power of the crown. The Tories, distrusting the 
authority of the ministerial government, and fearing a new 
despotism based on parliamentary corruption, became, especially 
after Bolingbroke's return from exile, almost democratic in 
their views and in their demands for the purification of the 
existing system. 

With the accession of George III. Toryism took a new form. 
The struggle about the Dissenters was now a thing of the past, 
and the king was accepted as a leader in carrying on the attack 
against the power of the great Whig families. The attack was the 
easier because the Whig families had split into factions. For 
some time the dividing line between Whigs and Tories was this: 
the Tories asserted that the king' had a right to choose his 
ministers and control their policy, subject to the necessity of 
securing a majority of the House of Commons, whilst the Whigs 
thought that the choice should lie with leading members of 
parliament, and that the king should have no controlling power. 
The Whig view appears to resemble that subsequently adopted; 
but in the middle of the x8th 'century the corruption which 
prevailed rendered the analogy worthless, and the real conflict 
was between the corrupt influence of the crown and the influence 
of a clique of great landowners resting on their possession of 
electoral power through the rotten boroughs. In 1770 the king 
had his way and established Lord North at the treasury as 
his nominee. The Whigs, deprived of power, improved their 
position by the loss of one great instrument of corruption; but 
they were weakened by the establishment of two distinct currents 
of opinion in their own ranks. The main body under Rocking- 
ham was influenced by Burke to demand practical reforms, 
but set its face against any popular changes in the constitution. 
The Whigs who followed Chatham wished to place parliament 
on a more popular basis by the reform of the House of Commons. 
When in 1783 Chatham's son Pitt became prime minister, the 
Tory party took a new start. It retained the Tory principle of 
reliance on the crown, and joined to it Chatham's principle of 
reliance on the people as opposed to the great Whig families: 
It also supported Pitt in practical reforms. 

All this was changed by the French Revolution. In opposition 
to the new democracy, the Tories coalesced with a section of the 
Whig families, the representatives of which entered the ministry 
in 1704* From this time till 182a, in spite of men like Pitt, and 
the personal influence of Tory leaders who supported 1 



reform, Toryism came to be popularly iden ijfigfcjtftfj flsjJBfroo 
retain the existing slate of things, ho weve Mull" *6T"fc2jflaei ti 
might be. When Canning and Fed emrrrd rise ministry in 
lflu, a gradual change took place, fund a tendency to pmctkml 
reform manifested itself, Ifcc rcf uaal of WdJii 
any proposal foe altering the consul utk^ 
moos threw power pn> ■ 
Shortly si 1 cTWSitUti 
live; (i-ffj, I 



*i to listen to 

1 ms* of Com 

■ pin iDjo 
Qmhyi 




WHIG PARTY 



5«9 



reform. The name of Whig was replaced by that of Liberal, 
beenf frequently, however, assigned to the less progressive por- 
tion of the party, the " moderate Liberals," or even to half-end- 
fctttf Conservatives, at a term more or leas of reproach. It ceased 
to be a name accepted by any definite English political section. 
WHIG PASTY, in America, a political party prominent from 
about 18*4 to 1S54. 1 The first national party system of the 
United States came to an end daring the second war with Great 
Britain. The destruction of the Federalist party («.».) through 
a series of suicidal act* which began with the Allen and Sedition 
laws of 1708, and closed with the Hartford Convention of 1814- 
1815, left the Jeffersonian Republican (Democratic) party in 
undisputed control. When, after Waterloo, Napoleon ceased to 
disturb the relations of the new world with the old, the American 
people, f teed for the first time from all trace of political depend- 
ence on Europe, were at liberty to shape their public policy in 
then- own way. During the period of rapid internal develop- 
ment which followed after 18 rs, the all-inclusive Republican 
party began gradually to disintegrate and a new party system 
was evolved, each member of which was the representative of 
such groups of ideas and interests, class and focal, as required 
the support of a separate party. This work of disintegration* 
and rebufldiog proceeded so slowly that for more than a decade 
after the Peace of Ghent each new party, disguised during the 
early stages of organisation as the personal following of a parti- 
cular leader or group of leaders, kept on calling itself Republican. 
Even during the sharply contested election of 18*4 the rival 
p^^faatf were known as Jackson, Crawford and Calhoun, or as 
Clay and Adams Republicans. (See Democratic Pabty.) It 
was not until late in the administration of John Quincy Adams, 
18*5 to f&ao, that the supporters of the president and Henry 
Clay, the secretary of state, were first recognised as a distinct 
party and began to be called by the accurately descriptive term 
National Republicans. But after the party had become con- 
solidated, in the passionate campaign of i$»8, and later in oppos- 
ing the measures of President Jackson, it adopted in 1834 the 
name Whig, which, through memonible associations both British 
end American, served as a protest against executive encroach- 
ments, and thus facilitated union with other parties and factions! 
such as the Anti-Masonic party (<?.*.), that had been alienated by 
the high-handed measures of President Jackson. The new name 
announced not the birth but the maturity of the party, and the 
uVvnite establishment of its principles and general lines of policy. 
The ends for which the Whigs laboured were: first, to maintain 
the integrity of the Union, second, to make the Union thoroughly 
national; third, to maintain the republican character of the 
Union; fourth, while utilising to the full the inheritance from 
and through Europe, to develop a distinctly American type of 
civilisation; fifth, to propagate abroad by peaceful means 
American ideas and institutions. Among the policies or means 
which the Whigs used in order to realize their principles were the 
broad construction of those provisions of the Federal Constitution 
which confer powers on the national government; protective 
tariffs; comprehensive schemes of internal improvements under 
the direction and at the cost of the national government; 
support of the Bank of the United States; resistance to many 
acts of President Jackson as encroachments by the executive on 



the 



Ive branch of the government and therefore hostile to 
Im; coalition with other parties in order to promote 
as Opposed to partisan ends; resort to compromise in 
sectional irritation and compose sectional differ- 
and yet prudent expre ss ion of sympathy 
movement in other lands. 
of the Whig party, reckoned from the election 
organization began, to the repeal of the Missouri 
thirty years. In two respects, 
radical democr ac y under Andrew 
Jonahsm over the slavery issue, 
In view of these events the most 




difficult task of the Whigs, clearly discerned and heartily accepted 
by them, under the patriotic and conservative leadership of 
Henry Clay and Daniel Webster, was to moderate and enlighten, 
rather than antagonize, the new democracy; and— what proved 
to be beyond their powers— to overcome the disrupting influence 
of the slavery issue. 

The inaugural address and the messages to Congress of Presi- 
dent J. Q. Adams set forth clearly the nationalizing, broad- 
construction programme of the new party. But his supporters 
in Congress, imperfectly organized and facing a powerful opposi- 
tion, accomplished very little in the way of legislation. The 
election of 1828 gave to Andrew Jackson the presidency, and to 
the people, in a higher degree than ever before, the control of the 
government. The president's attack upon the Bank, the intro- 
duction of the modern * spoils system " into the Federal civil 
service, the unprecedented use of the veto power, Jackson's 
assumption of powers which his opponents deemed unconstitu- 
tional, and his personal hostility towards Clay,who had succeeded 
Adams in the leadership of the party, brought about, under 
Whig leadership, a coalition of opposition parties which influenced 
deeply and permanently the character,, policy and fortunes of 
the Whig party. It became the champion of the Bank, of the 
right of Congress, and of the older and purer form of the civil 
service. Moreover, as a means of strengthening the bond with 
their new allies, the Whigs learned to practise a tolerance towards 
the opinions and even the principles of their associates which is 
exceptional in the history of American political parties. In strict 
accord with their own principles, however, the Whigs supported 
the president during the Nullification Controversy (see Nullifica- 
tion). The renown of Webster as the foremost expositor of the 
national theory of the Union rests largely on his speeches during 
this controversy, in particular on his celebrated reply to Senator 
R. Y. Hayne of South Carolina. Nevertheless, after vindicating 
the rights of the Union, most of the Whigs supported Clay in 
arranging the compromise tariff of 1832 which enabled the 
Nullifiers to retreat without acknowledging discomfiture. The 
majority of the Northern Whigs, with the entire Southern 
membership of the party, disapproved the propaganda of the 
Abolitionists on the ground of its tendency to endanger the 
Union, and many from a Bke motive voted for the M Gag Rules " 
of 1835-1844 (see Apavs, J. Q), which in spirit, if not in letter, 
violated the constitutional right of petition. In the election 
of 183 J Clay was the nominee of the party for the presidency, 
but in 1836 and 1840, purely on grounds of expediency, the 
Whig conventions nominated General W. H. Harrison. Daring 
the administration of Martin Van Buren the Whigs tried with 
success to make party capital out of the panic of 1837, which they 
ascribed to Jackson, and out of the long depression that followed, 
for which they held Van Buren responsible. The election of 
General Harrison in the "log cabin and hard cider" campaign 
of 1840 proved a fruitless victory: the early death of the presi- 
dent and the anti-Whig politics of his successor, John Tyler 
(?.*.), whom the Whigs had imprudently chosen as vice-president, 
shattered their legislative programme. 

In 1844 Clay was again the Whig candidate, and the annexa- 
tion of Texas, involving the risk of a war with Mexico, was the 
leading issue. The Whigs opposed annexation ; and the prospect 
of success seemed bright, until Clay, in the effort to remove 
Southern misapprehensions, wrote that he " would be glad " at 
some future time to see Texas annexed if it could be done 
" without dishonour, without war, with the common consent 
of the Union, and upon Just and fair terms." It Is widely held 
that this letter turned against Clay the anti-slavery element 
and lost him the presidency. The triumph of Polk in 1844 was 
followed by the annexation of Tessa and by war with Mexico. 
The Whigs opposed the war, but on patriotic grounds voted 
supplies for its prosecution. The acquisition of Teas, and the 
assured prospect of a great territorial enlargement, at the cost of 
Mexico, brought to the front the question of slavery in the new 
domain. The agitation that followed continued throuch the 



590 



WHIP— WHIPPING 



" Compromise Measures of 1850 " (g.v.). To its authors this 
compromise seemed essential tQ the preservation of the Union, 
but it led directly to the destruction of the Whig party. In the 
North, where the inhumane Fugitive Slave Law grew daily more 
odious, the adherence to the Compromise on which Clay and 
Webster insisted weakened the party fatally. The alternative, 
namely, a committal of the party to the repeal of the obnoxious 
law, would have driven the Southern Whigs into the camp of 
the Democrats, leaving the Northern Whigs a sectional party 
powerless to resist the disruption of the Union. The only 
weapons that the Whigs knew how to use in defence of the 
Fugitive Slave Law were appeals to patriotism and sectional bar- 
gaining, and these could be employed only so long as the party 
remained intact. 

The National Whig Convention of 1852, the last that repre- 
sented the party in its entirety, gave to the Northern Whigs the 
naming of the candidate — General Winneld Scott— who was 
defeated in the ensuing election, and to the Southern the framing 
of the platform with its " finality " plank, which, as revised by 
Webster, read as follows: " That the, series of acts of the Thirty- 
second Congress, the act known as the Fugitive Slave Law in- 
cluded, are received and acquiesced in by the Whig party of the 
United States as a settlement in principle and substance of the 
dangerous and exciting questions which they embrace . . . and 
we will maintain this system as essential to the nationality of 
the Whig party and the integrity of the Union." 

Two years later the Repeal of the Missouri Compromise by 
the Kansas-Nebraska Act demonstrated that " this system " 
could not be maintained, and that in committing the Whig 
party to the policy of its maintenance the Convention of 1853 
had signed the death-warrant of the party. 

Among the services of the Whigs the first in importance are 
these: During the thirty critical years in which under the 
leadership of Clay and Webster they maintained the national 
view of the nature of the Union, the Whigs contributed more 
than all their rivals to impress this view upon the hearts and 
minds of the people. During this same extended period as peace- 
makers between the sections they kept North and South together 
until the North had become strong enough to uphold by force the 
integrity of the Union. And lastly they bequeathed to the Re- 
publican party the principles on which, and the leader, Abraham 
Lincoln, through whom the endangered Union was finally saved. 

BtBLfOG*AFHY.—-See Alexander Johnston, American Political 



£ 



UnUed States (fbtf., looo); J. W. Burgess, the Middle Period (ibid. 
1897); Edward Stan wood, History of the Presidency (Boston, 1898). 
- ies SchonVer. Hutory of the UnUed States (New York, 1899). 
... E. von Hoist, Constitutional and Political History of the United 
States (Chicago, 1899), especially the second volume; Nile*' Register 
(Baltimore, 1811-1849); Henry Wilson, History of the Rise and Fall 
of the Slane Power t» America (Boston, 1872-1877): Horace 
Greeley, The American Conflict (Hartford. 1864-1866): F. D. 
Hammond, History of Political Parties %n the State of New York 
(Albany, 1842): G. W. Julian, Political Recollections, 1840-1S72 
(Chicago, 1884); H. A. Wise, Seven Decades of the Union (Phil- 
adelphia.' 1872); The Works of DaniA Webster (Boston, 1*51)5 The 
Works of Henry Pay (New York, 1898)1 and among many important 
biographies, Carl Schurz's Life of Henry Clay (Boston, 1887J. H. C. 
todgPs Daniel Webster (ibid.. 1883), G. T. Curtis's Life of Daniel 
Webster (New York, 1870), H. E. von Hoist's John C. Calhoun 
(Boston, 1882), A. M. Coleman's Life of John J. Crittenden {Phil- 



and 
y(N« 



History (New York, 1890). 



ofa 



(A. D. Mo.) 

, in general, an instniment for striking, usually consisting 
handle of a flexible nature with a lash attached (see- Whip- 
Id English parliamentary usage, a " whip " is a 
members) chosen by the leader or leaders of a 
lor the special duty of securing the attendance 
embers of that party on all necessary occasions, 
I abbreviated from the whipper-in of a bunt, 
so given to the summons urging members of the 
-«, of course* always members of 



parliament, and for the party in power (*.«. the government) 
their serviees are very essential, seeing thai the fate of an im- 
portant measure, or even the existence of the government itself, 
may depend upon the result of a division in the House, Where 
the majority of the party in power is not large it is very necessary 
that there should always be at hand a sufficient mnmbtr:oi its 
supporters to. make up a majority, and without the assistance of 
the whips it would be impossible to secure this. The chief 
whip of the government holds the office of patronage secretary to 
the treasury, so called because when offices were freely dis- 
tributed to secure the support of members, it was his chief duty 
to dispose of the patronage to the best advantage of his party. 
He is still the channel through which such patronage aa is left 
to the prime minister is dispensed. He is.assisted by three junior 
whips, who are officially appointed as junior lords of the treasury ; 
their salaries are £1000 a year each, while the patronage secretary 
has a salary of £2000. The parties not in office have whips 
who are unpaid. Attendance of members is primarily secured 
by lithographed notices sent by the whips to their following, 
the urgency or importance of the notice being indicated by the 
number of lines underscoring the notice, a four-line whip usually 
signifying the extremest urgency. The whips also arrange for 
the " pairing " of such of the members of their party who desire 
to be absent with those members of the opposition party who 
also desire to be absent. The chief whips of either party arrange 
in consultation with each other the leading speakers in an 
important debate, and also its length, and give the list of speakers 
to the speaker or chairman, who usually falls in with the arrange- 
ment They take no part in debate themselves, but are con* 
stantly present in the House during its sittings, keeping a finger, 
as it were, upon the pulse of the House, and constantly informing 
their leader as to the state of the House. When any division 
is regarded as a strictly party one, the whips act as tellers in the 
division. 

. An interesting account of the office of whip is gweu in A. L. 
Lowell's Government of England (1908), vol* i. c xxv. 

WHIPPING, or Flogging, a method of corporal punishment 
which in one form or another has been used in all ages and aU 
lands (see Bastinado, Knout, Cai-o'-Nuw-Taiis), In ancient 
Rome a citizen could not be scourged, it being considered an 
infamous punishment. Slaves were beaten with rods. Similarly 
in early medieval England the whip could not bo used on the 
freeman, but was reserved for the villein. The Anglo-Saxons 
whipped prisoners with a three-corded knotted lash. It was 
not uncommon for mistresses to whip or have their servants 
whipped to death. William of Malmesbury relates that as a 
child King &tbelred was flogged with candles by his mother, 
who had no handier weapon, unto he was insensible with pain. 
During the Saxon period whipping was the ordinary punishment 
for offences, great or smalL Pay men ts for whipping figure largely 
in municipal and parish accounts from an early date. The aboli- 
tion of the monasteries, where the poor had been sure of free 
meals, led during the 16th century to an increase of vagrancy, at 
which the Statute of Labourers (1550) and its provisions as to 
whipping had been early aimed. In the reign of Henry VUL 
was passed (1530) the famous Whipping Act, directing vagrants to 
be carried to some market town or other place " and these tied to 
the end of a cart naked and beaten with whips throughout such 
market town till the body shall be bloody." In the 39th year 
of Elisabeth a new act was passed by which the offender was to 
be stripped to the waist, not quite naked, It was under this 
statute that whipping-posts were substituted for the cart. 
Many of these posts were combined with slocks, as that at 
Walthara Abbey, which bears date " 1598.'" It is of oak. 5 ft. 
9 in. high, with iron clasps for the hands when used ,for whipping, 
and for the feet when used as stocks. Fourpence was the old 
charge for whipping male and female rogues. At quarter* 
sessions in Devonshire at Easter 159& it was ordered that the 
mothers of bastard children should be whipped; the reputed 
fathers suffering a like punishment. In the west of England 
in 1684, ** certain Scotch pedlars and petty chapmen being in the 
habit of selling their goods to the greate damage and hindrance 



WHISKER— WHISKY 



59* 



• the court ordered them to be stripped naked 
The flogging of women was nurrmon Judge 
Jeffreys, in to sentencm* a female prisoner, is repotted to hove 
*Mikn »s r> , H Hangman, I charge you to pay particular attention 
to thai lady. Scourge her soundly, man: sosunje her till 
her blood ruoa dotal It in Christmas: a cold time far madam 
to atrip. See that yea warm her shoulders." Lunatics, too, 
wewvhapped; forin theConstaUe'sAccosmuof Great Staughtan, 
Hunts, occurs the entry, * 1600*1, Paid in charges taking up a 
distracted woman, watching her aad whipping her seat day— 
eVouV' A stitt mo» wmackable entry k " 1710-1, Pd. Thomas 
Hawkins lor whipping two people yt had ainal)pox>-6d." 1ft 
1764 the Pwtiic hoifrr states that a woman who is described as 
44 an old offender" was taken from the QerkcnweU BridewoU 
to Enfield and there publicly whipped at the cart's tail by the 
common hangman for cutting wood in Enfield Chase. A statute 
of t?oa abolished the whipping of females, 

W1USKEB, a word chiefly used in the plural in the sans* of 
the hair worn by a man on the cheeks as opposed to the beard on 
the dun and the moustache on the upper lip (see Beano). It 
is also applied to the bristly fetters growing sound the mouth of 
a cat or other animal The word by derivation means that which 
" whiaks " or " brushes." 

WHISKY, or Whisky, a potable spirit distilled from cereal 
grains. The name is probably derived from the Celtic uisgt- 
beaika (water of life), which was subsequently contracted to 
usquebaugh, and still later to whisky (cf. Skeat, Etym. Diet. s.v.). 
The liquor known as " usquebaugh " in the 17th and 18th 
centuries was not, however, of the same character as the whisky 
of modem times, but was a compound of plain spirit with 
saffron, nutmegs, sugar and other spices and flavouring matters. 
Whether the term whisky to denote a plain type of spirit was used 
concurrently with usquebaugh, or whether the latter name 
covered both varieties, Is not dear. It b certain, however, that 
an alcoholic liquor, dented mainly from grain, has been prepared 
for very many centuries in both Ireland and Scotland (see 
Spiim). Tlieres^thiwniamtypesofwhislfy, namely, Scotch, 
Irish and Atnerican. 

Scotch wkbhies may be broadly divided into two main groups, 
namely (0) pot-still or malt whiskies, and (b) patent-still ot grain 
whiskies; the former are made practically without exception 
from malted barley only, the latter from a mixture of malted 
barley and other unmalted cereals, chiefly rye, oats and mains 
(see Snsrrs). («) There are four main varieties of Scotch malt 
whiskies, namely, Highland Malts, Lowland Malts, Campbeltowns 
and Islays. The Highland Malts are produced (if we except a 
few distilleries on the islands in the west and north) in the district 
on the mainland lying north of an imaginary Ene drawn through 
Dundee on the east and Greenock on the west. The largest 
group of distilleries is in the famous Speyside or Gtenlivet district. 



The Lowland Malta are saadfc south oftheimagteary line alluded 
taw The Campbeltowns are distilled in or near the town of that 
name at the southern end of -the Kintyre peninsula. The Islays 
aieptoduted in the island of that name. These different varieties 
of whisky, although made in much the same way, yet ] 
distinctive characteristics of flavour. The type of 
employed, the quantity of pest employed in curing the malt, 
the quality of the water, the manner of carrying out the various 
distillery processes particularly that of distillation— the shape 
and sine of the stills, &c, all these are factors which affect the 
flavour of the final product. The Islays, which, so a rule, are 
considered to be among the most valuable of Scotch whiskies, 
possess a very full and peaty flavour together with a. strong 
ethereal bouquet. For this reason they -are much used for 
blending with whiskies of a lighter type. The Highland Malts 
proper (Speyside type) are less peaty than the Islays, yet possess 
a full flavour, although many of them are inclined to be 
"elegant "rather than "big." The Lowland Malts, again, are, 
as. a class, less petted than the Highland Malta, and indeed, 
nowadays, in view of the growing taste for a more neutral class 
of beverage, there are sense Lowland Malt distilleries which dis- 
pense with the use of peat altogether. Many of the Lowland 
Malts possess considerable body and flavour, but, on the whole, 
they are lighter and not so fine as those of the Highland variety. 
Lowland distillers are now running their spirit at much the same 
strength as their Highland colleagues, whereas formerly it was 
the custom to work at a far higher strength. The result is that 
the difference between the two classes of spirit is not so marked 
as it was. The Campbeltowns, although in some respects similar 
to the Islays on the one hand, and the Highland Malts on the 
other, are somewhat rougher and less elegant than these. They 
usually possess a full peaty flavour. (6) Patent-still or grain 
whiskies are, as a class, lighter in flavour and " body " than the 
pot-still types. This is due to the fact that the rectification of 
these whiskies is carried a good deal further than is the case with 
the " malts." They are made from a mixture of malted and 
unmalted cereals, and, as no peat is employed in the curing of 
the malt, they lack the " smoky " flavour ©f the other varieties. 
Some controversy has arisen as to whether these patent-still 
spirits have a right to the name of " whisky " or " Scotch 
whisky," but although, no doubt, this controversy is largely due 
to conflicting trade interests, it has also, in the author's opinion, 
been caused by a very general popular misconception as to the 
true character of these whiskies. The idea that they are true 
" silent " or " neutral " spirits— i.e. alcohol and water pure and 
simple— is quite incorrect. They possess a distinct flavour, which 
varies at different distilleries, and analysis discloses the fact 
that they contain very appreciable quantities of the** secondary " 
products which distinguish potable spirits from plain alcohol 
Indeed, as a result of an extensive investigation of the question 



Composition of Scotch Wkishies. 

JVoIe.— The figures below are based on a large number of analyses of typical sample*. Cf. Schidrowiu and Kaye, Journal Sot, 

Gum. Ind. (June 1005). Where two figures are given in the same column, they do not indicate extremes, but merely normal variation. 







(Results expat said in grams per 100 litres of absolute alcohol.) 


Description. 


Alcohol. 


Total 
Acid. 


Non-volatile 
Acid. 


Esters. 


Higher 
Alcohols. 


Aldehydes. 


Furfural. 


Highland Mate— 
New hght type . . 
New heavy type 
Mature light type 
Mature heavy type . 

Lowland Malts- 
New 


Practically all Scotch 
whiskies are distilled at 
about 25 OP. (about 
72% of alcohol by 
volume). Prior to stor- 
age they are reduced 
to 11 0. P. with water. 
Mature whiskies con- 
tain 45 to 60% of alco- 
hol according to age, 
humidity of store. 
Ac. For retail sale, 
whiskies are reduced to 
a strength of roughly 
17 to 34 U.P. 


>5 

30 

\ 20-fio 

30-60 

30-30 
30-80/ 

Trace to 5 
»5-50 


Nil 
Nil 

5r3$ 

Nil ' 
5-20 

Nit 
*-*5 

Nil 
5-*5 


50 
50-100 | 

35-50 

50-75 

50-70 
60-120 

30-4O 
35-50 


140 
300 
150 

230 

UO-I80 
120-200 

I8O-230 
33O-350 

5O-6O 
60-70 


10 
20-40 

) »5-50 | 

30-40 
30-70 

3-fO J 

5-15 s 


a.5-3 
3-5 

»-5-4-5 

*Sr4'5 
2-3 5 

3-« 
3-5-7 

Trace to 0-75 


Mature . . 
Campbeltown — 




Mature . . 
Islay* - 
Gram Wbiskiea— 

New . . 
Mature . 





1 The Islays give similar figures to the Highland Malts except that the Higher Alcohols and Furfurol are slightly higher. 



59* 



WHISKY INSURRECTION 



by the author, it has been shown that the relative proportion of 
"secondary" products in Highland Malt, Lowland Malt and 
" grain " whiskies respectively, is roughly ss 3 : a : i. The 
figures in the foregoing table illustrate, ss far as we are at present 
able to determine them, the general composition of the various 
types of Scotch whiskies referred to. 

The character of Scotch whisky is much influenced by the 
manner in which it is matured. Chief among the factors in this 
connexion is the nature of the cask employed. The main varieties 
are plain wood, sherry and refill casks. Technically the term 
" plain " wood is applied to a cask made from seasoned oak 
which has contained no other liquor than whisky. Similarly 
the term " sherry " wood is as a rule only applied to a cask 
the wood of which has become impregnated with sherry by con- 
tact with that wine, and which has not been used in any other 
manner. A sherry cask which has been filled with whisky, 
then emptied and " refilled " with whisky, is known as a " refill." 
Brandy and Madeira " wood " are also occasionally employed. 
The nature of the atmospheric conditions of the cellar is also 
of importance in determining character and quality (see Smuts). 

Blending.— Scotch whiskies are, as a general rule, " blended " 
prior to sale to the public By " blending 7 ' is understood the art of 
putting together different types and varieties of whisky to form a 
harmonious combination. The general run of " self " whiskies — ».«. 
whiskies from a single distillery — do not appear to be to the public 
taste, but by combining different kinds of whisky blenders have 
succeeded in pro- 
ducing an article Compositi on of Irish Whiskies (Analyses by Schidrowit* mud Kaye) 

the demand for 
which has in- 
creased enor- 
mously during the 
past quarter of a 
century, and 
which may now 
be regarded as a 
staple beverage 
in all English- 
speaking coun- 
tries. The great 
expansion 01 the 
Scotch whisky 
trade of late years 
is undoubtedly 
due in the main 
to the introduc- 
tion of blending 
on scientific lines. 
There are different 

types of blends. In some a Highland Malt, in others an Islay. in 
others again a " grain " flavour may predominate, but, generally 



with that employed for Scotch "grain," but a* a class they ate 
somewhat tighter as regards flavour and body than the latter. 
Irish whiskies are not classified territorially, although occasionally 
the distinction of " Dublin " or " Country makes * is recognised 
in the trade. Broadly speaking, however, the differences between 
Irish whiskies are not due to class, but to individual variation. 

American Whisky.— Then are two main varieties of American 
whisky, namely, Rye whisky, the predominant raw material in 
the manufacture of which is rye, and Bourbon or com whisky, 
made mainly from Indian corn (maise). Both varieties possess 
a much higher flavour and greater body than do the Scotch or 
Irish whiskies, due partly to the class of raw material employed, 
and partly to the method of distillation. Broadly speaking, the 
American self (so-called " straight ") whiskies contain double 
the quantity of secondary or " by " products present In Scotch 
or Irish whiskies. 

American whiskies are almost invariably stored In very heavily 
charted barrels, which, while it very appreciably affects the 
flavour, is necessary, inasmuch as it is doubtful whether it would 
be possible to mature these exceedingly heavy whiskies within 
a commercially reasonable time without the cleansing and 
purifying effect of the charcoal formed by the burning of the cask. 
Even with the aid of the charred cask, the average maturation 
time of the American pot-etill whiskies is certainly two or three 
years longer than that of Scotch and Irish whiskies. (P. S.) 



Description. 


(Results expressed in grams per 100 litres of absolute alcohol.) 


Alcohol 
per cent 
by vol. 1 


Total Acid. 


Non- 
volatile 
Add. 


Esters. 


Higher 
Alcohols. 


Aldehydes. 


Furfurol. 


Dublin Whiskies— 

i.» Pot-still (new) . . 

la. Pot-still. From same 
distillery, 14 years 
old (plain wood) 

2. Pot-still (new) . . 
2a. Pot-still. From same 

distillery, 14 years 
old 

3. Pot-«tin, 14 years old 

4. Patent-still (new) . 


717a 

57-08 
74" 

6047 
634a 
70-76 


7 

1 
% 

17 


Trace 

8 

Nil 

8 

J* 
Trace 


34 

iS 
% 

25 


145 

l8 S 
233 

a* 


12 

68 
8 

a 
21 

3» 


55 

y% 

44 
4*5 



Irish whisky is generally distilled at about 50 O.P. and reduced with water to 23 O.P. prior to 
■ Nos. 1, 2, 3 ant* ' ■ AU * '"-"■ 1M — : — 



speaking, the aim of the blender is to produce an article in which no 
single constituent "comes through" — Le. is markedly apparent. 
The best blends are produced by blending a number ol " vattcd " 
whiskies. A " vat " is produced by blending a number of whiskies of 
the same style or type, for instance, ten or fifteen Highland Malts 
from different distilleries. The " vat " is allowed to mature before 
being blended with other types to form the final blend. The better- 
class blends contain, as a general rule, 50 to 60% of Highland and 
Lowland Malts, 10 to 20%of Islays, and about 20 to 40% of " grain " 



A typical high -class blend would, on analysis, show figures much as 
follows: Alcohol, 45 to 48% by vol.; total acid, 30 to 50; non- 
volatile acid, 20 to 30: esters, 30 to 60; sifter alcohols, 120 to 170; 
aldehydes, 15 to 25; furfurol, 2-5 to 3'$. 

Irish Whisky.— Irish pot-still whisky is sharply differentiated 
from the Scotch variety in that (a) the raw materials employed 
are generally composed largely of unmalted grain, (b) the malt 
is not peat-cured, (c) the process of distillation is entirely different 
both as regards method and apparatus (see Spirits). The result 
is that whereas Scotch whisky possesses a characteristic dry, 
dean flavour, Irish whisky is round and sweet, with a full ethereal 
bouquet. The general run of Irish pot-still whiskies are made 
with 30 to 50% of malted barley, the balance being rye, oats, un- 
malted barley and wheat. A few distilleries employ malted barley 
only, but the product so obtained—owing to the different 
methods employed and the absence of peat curing— is quite 
different from Scotch malt whisky The Irish "grain" or 
" patent still " whiskies are made in a manner practically identical 



WHISKY INSURRECTION, THE, an uprising in Western 
Pennsylvania in 1704 against the Federal Government, occasioned 
by the attempted enforcement of the excise law (enacted by 
Congress March 1 791) on domestic spirits. The common prejudice 
in America against excise in any form was felt with especial 
strength in Western Pennsylvania, Virginia and North Carolina, 
where many small whisky stills existed; and protests were made 
almost immediately by the Pennsylvanians. Albert Gallatin 
(q.v.) took a leading part in expressing their resentment in a 
constitutional manner, but under the agitator David Bradford 
the movement soon developed into excesses. The attempt to 
enforce the law led to stormy scenes and riotous violence, the 
Federal revenue officers in some cases being tarred and feathered; 
but in September 1704 President Washington, using the new 
powers bestowed by Congress in May t79fr d esp atched a con- 
siderable force of militia against the rebellious Pennsylvanians, 
who thereupon submitted without bloodshed, the influence of 
Gallatin being used to that end. Bradford fled to New Orleans; 
some of his more prominent supporters were tried for treason and 
convicted, but promptly pardoned. In American history this 
so-called " rebellion M is important chiefly on account of the 
emphasis it gave to the employment by the Federal Executive 
of die new powers bestowed by Congress for interfering to enforce 
Federal laws within the states. It Is indeed inferred from one 
of Hamilton's own letters that his object in proposing this excise 
law wss less to obtain revenue than to provoke just such a local 
resistance as would enable the central government to d e m ons trate 
its strength. 



WHIST 



593 



, s gtase it cuds. Tte et y molo gy of the um is 
Possibly it is of imitative origin, horn "what" 
(Histl Hushl SUencel). "It is caUod Whist from the silence 
that must he observed in the play " (Cotton, CompUal Gamester). 
In the 16th century a card game called triumph or trump was 
commonly played m England. A game called trionfi m men- 
tioned as early as 1596, and triumpkus Hisponicms in 1541. 
La triomphs ocean id the list of games played by Gargantna 
(Rabelais, not half of idth century). In Giovanni Florio's 
WmUs ofWordes (1508) trionfo is defined as M the play called 
tramp or raff." It is probable that the game referred to by the 
writers quoted Is U triomphe of the early editions of the Academic 
its jeux. It is important to note that this game, called by 
Charles Cotton " French ruff," is similar to ecarte. ** English 
ruff-and-honours," also described by Cotton, is similar to whist. 
If we admit that niff and trump are convertible terms, of which 
there is. scarcely a doubt, the game of trump was the precursor 
of whist. A purely English origin may, therefore, be claimed 
for trump (not la triompke). No record is known to exist of the 
invention of this game, nor of the mode of its growth into ruff- 
sad-honours, and finally into whist. The earliest reference to 
trump in English is believed to .occur in a sermon by Latimer, 
M On the Card," preached at Cambridge, in Advent, about the 
year 1520. He says, " The game that we play at shall be the 
triumph. . . . Now turn up your trump, . . . and cast your 
trump, your heart, on this card." In Gammer Gorton's Needle 
(1575) Dame Chat says, " We be fast set at tnimpe." Eliot 
(Fruits for the French, 1503) calls trump " a verie common ale- 
house game." Richard Price or Rice (Imettht against Vices, 
1579) observes that " renouncing the trompe and conuning in 
againe" (i*. revoking intentionally) is a common sharper's 
trick. Cotton in his Complect Gamester says, " He that can by 
craft overlook his adversary's game hath a great advantage." 
Thomas Dekker (Bdman of London, 1608) speaks of the deceits 
practised at " tromp and such like games." Trump also occurs 
in Antony and Cleopatra (written about 1607), with other punning 
allusions to card-playing— 

"She, Eros, has 

Packed cards with Caesar, and false-played my glory 

Unto an enemy'* triumph." — Act iv. 

Ruff •end-honours, if not the same game as trump, was probably 
the same with the addition of a score for the four highest cards 
of the trump suit. A description of the game is first met with in 
The CompUat Gamester (1674) by Cotton. He states that ruff-and- 
honours (alias slamm) and wmst are games wtry commonly 
known in England. It was played by four players, paired as 
partners, and it was compulsory to follow suit when able. The 
cards ranked as at whist, and honours were scored as now. 
Twelve cards were dealt to each player, four being left in the 
stock. The top card of the stock was turned up for trumps. The 
holder of the ace of trumps was allowed to rnff, i.e. to take in the 
stock and to put out four cards from his hand. The game was 
played nine up; and at the point of eight honours could be called, 
as at long whist. Cotton adds that at whist there was no stock. 
The deuces were put out and the bottom card was turned up for 
trumps. 

It is believed that the earliest mention of whist is by Taylor, 
the Water Poet (Motto, 1621). He spells the word M whisk." 
The earliest known use of the present spelting'is in Hudibras, 
the Second Part (spurious), 1663. The word is afterwards spelt 
indifferently whisk or whist for about half a century. Cotton 
(1674) spells it both ways. Richard Seymour (Court Gamester, 
1734) has " whist, vulgarly called whisk." While whist was 
undergoing this change of name, there was associated with it the 
additional title of swabbers (probably allied to sweep, or sweep- 
stakes). Fielding (History of Mr Jonathan Wild) says that 
wtrisfc-and-swabbers was " the game then (168a] in chief vogue." 
Frauds Grose (Classical Dictionary of the Vulgar Tongue, 1785) 
states that swabbers are " the ace of hearts, knave of dubs, ace 
end duce of trumps at whist." The true function of the swabbers 
b not positively known; it is probable that the holders of these 
cards were entitled to receive a certain stake from the other 



players. Swabbers dropped out of general use' during the 18th 
century. The points of the game rose from nine to ten (" nine 
in all," Cotton, 1735; " ten in all," Seymour, 173* "rectified 
according to the present standard of play "). Simultaneously 
with this alteration, or closely following it, the entire pack of 
fifty-two cards was used, the deuces being no longer discarded. 
This improvement introduces the odd trick, an element of great 
importance in modern whist. Early in the 18th century whist 
was not a fashionable game. The Hon. Dames Barrington 
(Arckaeologia, voL viii.) says it was the game of the servants' hall. 
Contemporary writers refer to it in a disparaging way, as being 
only fit for hunting men and country squires, and not for fine 
ladies or people of quafity. According to Barrington, whist was 
first played on scientific principles by a party of gentlemen who 
frequented the Crown Coffee House in Bedford Row, London, 
about 1728. They hud down the following rules: " Lead from 
the strong suit; study your partner's hand; and attend to the 
score." Shortly afterwards the celebrated Edmond Boyle (9.9.) 
published his Short Treatise (1742)- It has been surmised by 
some that Hoylc belonged to the Crown Coffee House party. 
This, however, is only a conjecture. There is abundant evidence 
to show that, in the middle of the 18th century, whist was 
regularly played at the coffee houses of London and in fashionable 
society. From the time of Hoyle the game continued to increase 
in public estimation, until the introduction of bridge, which has 
to a large extent replaced it, but which has much in common 
with it. 

It will be of interest to mark the successive stages through which 
whist passed from the tune of Cotton. The only suggestions as to 
play in Cotton are that, " though you have but mean cards in your 
own hand, yet you may play them so suitable to those in your 
partner's hand that he may either trump them or play the best of 
that suit " ; also that *' you ought to have a special eye to what cards 
are play'd out, that you may know by that means either what to 
play if you lead or how to trump securely and advantagiously." It 
appears from this that the main ideas were to make trumps by ruffing, 
to make winning cards, and to watch the fall of the cards with these 
objects. In the rules laid down by the Crown Coffee House school a 
distinct advance is to be noticed. Their first rule, " Lead from the 
strong suit." shows a sound knowledge of the game. Their second 
rule, ™ Study your partner's hand." though sou ad t is rather vague. 
Their third rule, " Attend to the score," if amended into " Play to the 
score," is most valuable. From the Crown Coffee House school to 
Hoyle is rather a wide jump; but there is no intervening record. 
Hoyle in his Short Treatise endorses and illustrates the " Crown '* 
rules. He also brought the doctrine of probabilities to hear on the 
game, and gave a number of cases which show a remarkable insignt 
into the play. 

About 1770 was published William Payne's Maxims for Playing 
the Game of Whist. The advance in this book is decided, as it in- 
culcates the rules of leading invariably -from" five trumps and the 
return of the highest card from throe held originally. Matthews** 
Adoice to the Young Whist-Player {anon., 1804) repeats the " maxims 
of the old school, with "observations 00 those he thinks erroneous *' 
and " with several new ones," but some of the maxims which he 
thinks erroneous are now generally allowed to be correct. 

Soon after Matthews wrote the points of the came were cut down 
from ten (long whist) to five (short whist). Clay's account of this 
change is that,, about the beginning of the 19th century. Lord 
Peterborough having lost a large sum of money, the players pro* 
posed to make the game five up, in order to give the loser a chance of 
recovering his loss. The new game, short whist, was found to be so 
lively that it snon became general, and eventually superseded the 
long game. " Coelebs " (Law and Practice ef Whist, 1851), who 
mainly repeats former writers, only calls for mention because he 
first printed in his second edition (1856) an explanation of the call for 
trumps. Catling for trumps was first recognized as part of the game 



ef Short Whist, and a Treatise on the Game {1864). 

Whist then travelled, and about 1830 some of the best French 
whist-players, with Deschapettes at their head, modified and im- 
proved the old-fasmooed system. They were but little influenced 
by the traditions of long whist, and were not content merely to imi- 
tate the English. The French game was the scorn and horror of the 
old school, who vehemently condemned its rash trump leads; those 
who adopted the practice of the new school were found to be winning 

rffwUliam Pole (Philosophy of Whist, 1883) remarks that the long 
experience 'of adepts had led to the introduction of many improve- 
ments in detail since the time of Hoyle. but that nothing bad been 



( 



59* 



WHIST 



done to reduce the various rulet of the game to a systematic form 
Until between 1850 and i860, when a knot of young men proceeded to 
a thorough investigation of whist, and in 1862 Henry Jones, one of 
the men bees of this " little whist school," brought out a work, under 
tee pseudonym of " Cavendish," which " gave for the first time the 
rules which constitute the art of whist-phying according to the most 
modern form of the game,** The little school was first brought 
prominently into notice by an article on whist in the Quarterly 
Rati** of January. Whist had previously been treated as though 



the " art of the game depended on the practice of a number of 
arbitrary conventions. But it was now shown that all rules of whist- 
play depend upon and are referable to general principles. Hence, as 
soon as these general principles were stated, and the reasons for their 
adoption were argued, players began to discuss and to propose inno- 
vations on the previously established rules of play 

A further development was the introduction of the system of dis- 
carding from the best protected suit instead of from the weakest, 
when the adversaries have the command in trumps. Soon after this 
(187J) followed the '* echo " of the call for trumps, and contempo- 
raneously with the echo the lead of the penultimate card from suits of 
five cards or more, not including the ace, a lead that was so vigorously 
opposed by some players that " the grand battle of the penultimate 
ensued. The old players indeed regarded the new system with the 
same horror as they had formerly displayed with respect to the French 
school, ssjgsoatiziog it not only as an innovation, but as a private 
understanding, and even as cheating 1 Even Clay, the greatest 
player of his day, was at first an opponent of the penultimate 
lead, but after consideration adopted it. General Drayson (Art of 
Practical WkisL 1879) was the first to propose an analogous system, 
namely, that six cards in a suit, not including the ace, could be 
shown by leading the anUpemuUtmale card, but nts proposal, logical 
though it was, did not at first find favoui Before this (1874-1875) 
leads from high cards having regard to the number held in the suit, 
had not escaped attention, several innovations being introduced, 
but it yet remained for some one to propound a constant method of 
treating all leads, and to classify isolated rules so as to render it 
possible to lay down general principles This was done in 1883- 
1884 by Nicholas Browse Trist of New Orleans, who introduced the 
system of " American Leads." American leads propose a systematic 
course of play when opening and continuing the lead from the strong 
suit. First, with regard to a low card led When you open a strong 
suit with a low card, lead your fourth best When opening a four- 
card suit with a low card, the lowest, which is the fourth best, is the 
card selected. When opening a five-card suit with a low card, the 
penultimate card is selected. Instead of calling it the penultimate, 
call it the fourth best. So with a six-card suit, but, instead of 
antepenultimate, say fourth best And so on with suits of more than 
six cards disregard all the small cards and lead the fourth best 
Secondly, with regard to a high card led, followed by a low card 
When you open a strong suit with a high card and next lead a low 
card, lead your original fourth best The former rule was to proceed 
with the lowest. Thus, from ace, knave, nine, eight, seven, two. the 
leader was expected to open with the ace, and then to lead the two 
An American leader would lead ace, then eight. Thirdly, with 
regard to a high card led, followed by a high card. When" you 
remain with two high indifferent cards, lead the higher if you opened 
a suit of four, the lower if you opened a suit of five or more A player 
who adopts this system notifies by it to his partner that, when he 
originally leads a tow card, he holds exactly three cards higher than 
the one led: when he originally leads a high card, and next a low 
one, he still holds exactly two cards higher than the second card led; 
and when he originally feads a high card, and follows it with a high 
card, he indicates in many cases, to those who know the analysis of 
leads (as laid down in whist books), whether the strong suit consisted 
originally of four or of more than four cards. (See wkxst Develop- 
ments, by " Cavendish." 1885.) 

• These leads led to an overhauling of the play of the second and 
third hands, whist becoming apparently so complicated as to deter 
players of moderate ability from plunging into its intricacies This 
fact, combined with the introduction of the fascinating and simpler 
game of bridge, caused a distinct d e ca den c e in the popularity of 
whist during the last decade of the 19th century. 

Whist (i.e. modern " short " whist) is played with a full pack 
of 5» cards. The ace is the highest, except in cutting, when it 
is the lowest. After the ace rank king, qoeen. frc , to order, 
down to the two. Four persons play, but with only three or two 
players the game can still be played with certain modifications 
(see Dummy below). The players each draw a card, the one who 
gets the lowest deals, and has choice of cards and seats The 
t who draws the next lowest is his partner; if two or more 
r cards of equal value, they cut again, the lowest 
neat The cards are then cut and 
1 left to rigfot. The last card is turned up 
la America the trump suit is sometimes 
I befog replaced in the pack before shuffling 




(blind trump)- A misdeal pastes the deal, and at. Us* eat ol 
each band it passes in any case to (he player on the left. At the 
end of the first trick the dealer takes the turned trump card into 
his hand If he fails to do so, the card may be called to nay 
subsequent trick. The player on the dealer's feftieada, and it is 
compulsory for the others to follow suit if possible, under penalty 
for " revoke " (by which the adversaries may either add three to 
their score, deduct three from the defaulting side, ox take three 
tricks of theirs and add tbem to their own). A player who 
cannot follow suit may play any card be chooses to the trick 
unless he has exposed a card and the adversaries call it. The 
highest card, or trump (if one is played), wins the trick, the 
winner leading to the next trick. When all the cards have been 
played the tricks gamed by each side are counted, each trick 
over six counting one. Six tricks arc called " a book." Trump 
honours— ace, king, queen, knave— also count to the scote, but a 
side which has a score of four at the beginning of a hand cannot 
score for honours. Tricks count before honours, thns if one side 
has a score of one and holds four honours, while the otheriias a 
score of four and makes the odd trick, the latter wins a doable, 
the honours not counting, as the game has already been won by 
tricks. The scores for honours are as follows, but some players 
halve these scores, or, particularly in America, do not count 
honours at all This is a matter of arrangement* If one side 
holds all four honours, four points; if three, two points; if both 
sides bold two there is no score, honours being "divided," or 
" easy " A rubber consists of the best of three games, unless 
one side wins the first two games. A game consists of five points 
Thus if one side makes nine tricks and holds three honours it 
scores a game— three points by tricks (or " by cards ") and two 
by honours—but if a revoke has been made, i*- if a player, holding 
a card of the suit led, has played a card of another suit, the 
revoking side cannot score more than four, whatever its score 
in points may be The side that wins the rubber scores 1 wo points 
in addition to the game points, which are reckoned thus, three 
points for a " treble," a game in which the adversaries have no 
score; two points for a " double," f\e. when the adversaries have 
made one or two; one point for a "single," i.e. when they have 
made three or four Thus two trebles and the robber (or * rub ") 
count eight points, treble, single and the rub count six points. 
If the losers have won a game, Us value a deducted. Sometimes, 
by arrangement, the rubber points are raised to four. At the 
end of a rubber, or, by arrangement, of two rubbers, the players 
cut again for partners. If others wish to join I he table the original 
players cut, the highest going out It is not customary for more 
than two to join— technically, to "cut in", hence, if two players 
vacate at the end of the next rubber, they now take the place of 
the other original pair, who leave without cutting. When only 
one player " cuts in," the other three retire by rotation, decided 
by cutting, and come back in their turn. If more than four 
players wish to form a table, they cut first to see who shall stand 
out, the highest retiring; they then cut afresh for partners. 

Dummy Whist is played by three players, two being partners 
and the other playing with dummy, whose cards, which must be 
dealt face downwards, are exposed on the table befoie the play 
begins Dummy has the first deal in every rubber His cards 
being exposed he is not considered able to revoke, if he does, 
there is no penalty, nor is his partner liable for any mistake of 
ha own whereby be cannot profit, e g by exposing a card, but 
if he leads from the wrong hand, a suit can be called. At Double 
Dummy each player has a dummy partner, and there is no 
misdeal, as the deal is a disadvantage. 

The leads and the play of the different hands have been so minutely 
systematued that some of the vanouv text-books should be studied 
carefully by any one who wishes to become proficient, but some broad 
general rows may be useful to the beginner The original leader 
shoald lead from his strongest, which is almost always hisTongrsf suit, 
but if his longest suit contains only four cards and is also the trump 



suit, opinions differ, though most players would observe the general 
rule. The same rule applies to subsequent first leads of a suit, unless 
they have to be modified owing to information derived from cards 
already played. Thus a player who has to lead after, say, the third 
or fourth trick may have to sacrifice his lead of his Strangest suit in 
a " call for trumps " by his partner. Such a lead is 



WMJSTLU 



*95 



called a " forced " lead, and from three cards the highest should 
invariably be led. and, a the opportunity occurs, the second best at 
the second lead, but from four the lowest should be led. This lead of 
the highest from three applies to all forced lead*, whether they are 
due to a " call," or to the fail of the cards already played. As a 
broad rule an ace is led always when five or more arc held in the suit, 
but if you have the king also, lead it first; from a five suit without 
the ace lead the worst but one. With ace and two or three small ones, 
lead a small one: with ace and one small one, the ace. The second 
hand generally plays his worst card, but if an honour is led and he 
holds the ace, be should play the ace; also holding quean and king 
he should play the queen, or with knave, queen and lung, the knave. 
If queen is led it is usually unwise to put on the king, but it is 
generally sound piay to put the knave on the ten. With king and one 
other, or oueen and one other, most players advocate the pay of the 
small card; some would play the king under these conditions, but 
not the queen; many play the queen and not the king; but the 
state of the score may affect the play If ft is important to get the 
lead, so as to lead trumps, the honour should be played, but as a rule 
the second hand Deserves his strength. The thud hand should win 
the trick if he can, unless he knows that Jus partner's card' is a 
winning one; consequently be generally plays his highest card. The 
fourth hand should win the trick if he can, as a player is justified in 
passing a trick only if by so doing he is absolutely sure of winning two. 

Returned Iseadsj—A partners lead should be returned at once* 
unless one has a strong suit of one's own, in which event it is ad* 
visable to lead a card of it, to guide one's partner as to his future 
lead, but a lead of trumps must be returned as soon as possible. If 
a player holds three cards originally Hi his partner's suit he should 
invariably return the higher of the two left in his hand after the first 
round. Thus holding ace, three, two only, he should win. with the 
ace and return the three; when the two falls afterwards, bis partner 
witl know that he holds no more. So, with ace, knave, ten only, win 
with the ace and return the knave, though from a scoring pomt of 
view the knave and ten are of equal value. With four originally, 
return the lowest, but a winning card should always be led or played 
in the second round, unless there is any special reason for retaining it. 
If your partner has called for trumps and you get the lead, with four 
trumps lead the smallest, with three lead the highest, and, if it wins, 
go in with the next highest** This law Is universal in trumps (and also 
applies to forced leads from three-card suits) even if aee, king and 
another be held, from which the ordinary lead would be the Icing. 
If, however, one adversary has obviously played his last trump, a 
thud round is not always advisable, as two trumps will fall from the 
leader and bis partner, and only one from the adversaries. On the 
other hand h is generally good play to draw two opposing trumps 
for one, so that they may not make separately. 

In the play of a hand never play an unnecessarily high card— 
unless you are " calling.'* Thus, holding ten and knave, play the 
ten; your partner will infer that you do net hold the nine, but may 
bold the knave, and even the queen as well, though all the cards are 
of equal value for making tricks. Similar inferences should be drawn 
from all cards played, and should be drawn at the moment. Never 
play false cards unless you see your partner is so weak that It can do 
no harm to deceive mm { in such a case, with knave and ten, the 
kaave may be played. It is a maxim that information given by play 
is more valuable to the partner than it is to the two adversaries. 

Trumping or ' ' Ruffing "and Discarding. The second player should 
not trump a doubtful card {i.e. a card that his partner might be able 
to beat), if he is strong m trumps'; if weak, he should trump. A 
winning card from an adversary should be trumped in any case. 
With weak trumps, it is bad play to " force " one's partner, i*. invite 
him to trump; but with strong trumps force him. If your partner 
refuse to trump an adverse winning card, lead a trump at tne first 
opportunity, if you have a ** cross-ruff " (t\e. if you and your 
partner can tramp different suits), those suits should be led alter- 
nately, and not trumps, Force an adversary who is known to be 
strong in trumps* A weak suit in trumps (three only) should be led 
if the adversaries have a cross-ruff, or if the game is hopeless unless 
partner is strong, or if winning cards are held in all plain suits, which 
might be t rumped. 

It is usual to discard originally from the weakest suit, but if the 
adversaries are shown to have strength in trumps, from the strongest, 
XA. the longest, so as to guard the weak suits. With absolute com* 
mand of a suit, if you are compelled to discard from it, discard the 



to " signal, to " hang out buic-Pcter " or to " peter," for trumps, 
consists in playing an unnecessarily high card, followed later by a 
lower one, e.g. by playing the three before the two, or the ten before 
the nine. As the M call " is an imperious command, equivalent to 
M sacrifice everything, partner, for the sake of leading' trumps," it is 
only justified by great strength in the trump suit. The echo: To 
your partner's call you should M echo," if you hold four or more, by 
calling yourself , however low your trumps are. Similarly four trumps 
may be shown la partner's lead of trumps by playing a high card 
followed by a lower one. 

General Maxims. Play to the score. If winning the odd trick 
saves of wins the game, do not try risky combinations for the sake 



of getting two or three tricks. Count your cards before playing. 
If your partner " renounces,'* ue. discards or trumps, always ask 
him if he has a card of the suit led. to save the revoke. Announce 
the score when you mark it. Watch the fall of evrry card. 
Study the rulm.espadally those about penalties and consultation 
with partner. If the winning of one more trick wins or saves 
the game, and you hold the winning caid, .play it, unless it 
be the winning, trump, which is good at any timet ■Retain the 
trump-card if yon can play others of equal trick-making value; your 
partner then knows the position of one trump; m. with nine and ten 
us addition to the eight, the turn-op, play them before parting with 
the eight. Keep command of adversaries' suits as long as is judicious ; 
get rid Of the command of partner's strong suit. Do not finesse (t>. 
play a "-"ver <nrrf than vnur highest in the third hand) in partner's 
suit, unless he leacU a hijjh card in an obviously forced lead. Lead 
throng h a k-ii..*ii sir line m& on your left, and (especially) up to a 
known weak suit on ynur right. If you have to lead from a suit of 
two ha.' I [he liiyruM, r ,, |.||ng from a " singleton " (your only card 
m one mtt), in order to be able to trump — sometimes disparagingly 
called " WhjivrTijpclTing "—is not generally good play, and results 
badly fitesa the tide is strong in trumps* but »n some circumstances 
it is ua i ul Do not lead from a " tenace " (us, best and third best of 
a suit) i f you ru yt an u t he r equally good suit. Remember that whist 
is a game of combination, and that tricks made by your partner are 
just as valuable to you as tricks made by yourself. Sort your hand 
so a» u. L*»j* Ju miuLm Mpantte* red and black alternately, keeping 
the cards each in order of their value. 

For Long Whist the play of the hands and the laws of the game art 
practically the same as at ordinary or "short *' whirt, but a more 
Venturesome style of play may be adopted in view of the number of 
points required, it. a certain amount of rink may betaken when the 
odd trick b a certainty in the hope of getting two or those tricks 
instead. With the score at nine, honours cannot be secured, but at 
eight a player who holds two honours may ask his partner before 
playing ff he too holds an honour, the formula being " Can you one, 
partner? " If the answer is " Yes," the honours are scored and the 
game ends. There is no " treble " at long whist. A double is scored 
when the losers are less than five, a single if they have mad; five or 
more. The game, however, is almost obsolete. 

Progressive Whtst. — This form of the game is social rather than 
scientific, but is a pleasant variety on the ordinary round game. 
The host provides prizes, as a rule— first, second and * booby " 
prizes for both ladies and gentlemen, the " booby " prizes going to 
the players who make the fewest points. Any number of tables 
may be formed. Partners are selected by lot. two ladies and two 
gentlemen never being partners. This can be done by means of two 



sees of tickets of different colours, numbered identically . No. I 
pairing with No. 1 and so on. After the first round there is no 
drawing for partners, as will be seen. The holders of all tickets 



numbered I and a form the first table, of 3 and 4 the second table. 
Only one pack of cards m needed at each table, but every player 
should be provided with a scoring card and pencil. The players at 
all the tables cut for deal, but no dealing is begun before a signal 
given by the master of the ceremonies. At each table one hand only 
Is played. Honours are not counted. The score is marked by the 
number of tricks made, or the winner may mark all tricks above six. 
The winners remain at their original tables. The losers move 00, 
from No. 1 table to No. 2, from No. a to No. 3 and from the last 
table to No. I. Partners are formed afresh, the gentleman who has 
rust won playing with the lady who has just lost, and vice versa. 
Play may last for one or more complete rounds, or for a given time, 
indicated by a signal, after which no fresh hand is begun. The 
scores are then added up and the prizes awarded. In playing the 
ordinary rules 01 whist are observed. 

A printed existence was first given to the laws of whist by Hoylc 
in 1743. The fourteen laws then issued were, subsequently increased 
to twenty-four. These laws were the authority until 1700, when 
the members of White's and Saunders's Chocolate Houses revised 
them. Jhe revised laws (nearly all Hoyle) were accepted by whist 
players for over a century, notwithstanding that they were very 
incomplete. The laws of short whist, a more comprehensive code 
approved by the Portland and Arlington dubs, were brought out in 
1B64. and became the accepted standard, small modifications only 
having been introduced since. The latest editiob of the rules should 
be consulted for what is not indicated in the text. 

See Principles of Whist, Stated and Explained, by " Cavendish ' 
(London, 1902), the most authoritative work. 

WHISTLE, the shrill warbling sound made by forcing the 
breath through the lips, contracted to form a small orifice, or pro- 
duced by means of an instrument of the whistle type; also, gener- 
ally, any similar shrill, hissing, or warbling sound, as of a bird's 
note, of wind through trees, ropes, &c. The 0. Eng. kvristlian, 
to whistle, and toristlere, whistler, piper, are closely allied to 
Inv is prion or frw&strian, to whisper, to speak softly or under one's 
breath; and both are imitative words, representing a shrill 
hissing sound, cf . Ger. vrispcln, to whisper, Dan. hrisie, to whistle. 
The instrument known as a " whistle '* takes many forms, from 



_] 



596 



WHISTLER 



the straight flute and flageolet type made of wood or metal and 
pierced with holes, to the metal signalling pipe used for signalling 
on board ship or by policemen. Similarly the term is used of the 
instruments sounded by the escape of steam on a locomotive or 
other engine and on steamships, &c, as a means of giving signals. 
WHISTLER, JAMBS ABBOTT McNEILL (1834-1903), 
.American artist, was born at Lowell, Massachusetts, on tie 
10th of July 1834. His father was Major G. W. Whistler, and 
his mother one of the Baltimore family of Winans. He was first 
heard of in Europe in 1857, when he had already been an art 
student, in Paris, in the studio of Oleyre. His first etchings, 
those known as " The French Set," were the means of bringing 
him under the notice of certain people interested in art, but the 
circulation of these first, like that of his later etchings, has 
always, of necessity, been more limited than their fame. The 
impressions from each plate are generally few. It was still in 
etching that Whistler continued his labours, and, coming to 
London in 1859, it appears, he almost at once addressed himself 
to the chronicle of the quaint riverside buildings and the craft 
of the great stream— the Thames " below Bridge." The " French 
Set" had included De Hooch-like or Nicholas Maes-like genre 
pieces, such as "La Vicille aux toques," the "Marchande de 
inoutarde," and "The Kitchen," this last incomparably improved 
and perfected by the retouching that was accomplished a quarter 
of a century after the first performance. The Thames series of 
sixteen etchings, wrought chiefly in 1850, disclosed a new vision 
of the river, in which there was expressed, with perfect draughts- 
manship, with a hitherto unparalleled command of vivacious line, 
the form of barge and clipper, of warehouse, wharf and waterside 
tavern. "The Pool," "Thames Police" and "Black Lion 
Wharf " are perhaps the finest of this series. Before it was 
begun, Whistler, ere he left Paris, had proceeded far with a plate, 
existing only in the state of trial proof, and, in that, of extreme 
rarity. It is called " Paris, lie de la Cite," and has distinct and 
curious manifestations of a style to be more generally adopted 
at a later period. For several years after the completion of the 
" Sixteen Etchings," Whistler etched comparatively little; but 
about 1870 we find him entering what has been described as his 
** Leyland period," on account of his connexion with the wealthy 
shipowner and art patron, Mr Frederick R. Leyland, of Prince's 
Gate, whose house became famous for Whistler's Peacock Room, 1 
painted in 1877. In that period he worked greatly in dry-point. 
The " Model Resting," one of the most graceful of his figure 
pieces, and " Fanny Leyland "—an exquisite instance of girl 
portraiture— are notable performances of this time. To it also 
belong the largely conceived dry-points, so economical of means 
and endowed with so singular a unity of effect, the " London 
Bridge " and " Price's Candle-works." A little later came the 
splendid visions of the then disappearing wooden bridges of 
Battersea and Putney, and the plate " The Adam and Eve," 
which records the river-front of old Chelsea. This, however, is 
only seen in perfection in the most rare proofs taken before the 
publication by the firm of Hogarth. From these plates we 
pass almost imperceptibly to the period of the Venetian etchings, 
for in 1879, at the instance of the Fine Art Society, Whistler 
made a sojourn in Venice, and here he wrought, or, to speak 
accurately, commenced, not only the set of prints known as the 
" Venice Set," but also the " Twenty-six Etchings "—likewise 
chiefly, though not wholly, of Venice— issued later by the firm 
of Dowdeswell. One or two of the minor English subjects of the 
" Twenty-six Etchings "—those done after the artist's return 
from Venice— give indications of the phase reached more clearly 
in certain little prints, executed a few years later, and, with 
perhaps one exception, never formally published. "Fruit 
Shop," " Old Clothes Shop," and " Fish Shop, busy Chelsea," 
belong to this time. Later, and bent upon doing justice to quite 
different themes, which demand different methods, the ever 
flexible artist again changes his way, and— not to speak of the 
' little records of the places about the Loire, which in 
' have affinity with the pieces last named— we have 

with LevUnd, and eventually painted his 
ad hoofs. 




"Steps, Amsterdam," "Nocturne, Dance House/' with its 
magical suggestion of movement and light, and the admirable 
landscape " Zaandam." With the mention of these things may 
fitly close a sketch of Whistler's periods in etching; but before 
proceeding to other branches of his work, the main characteristics 
of the whole series of etchings (of which, in Wedmore's WkittUr's 
Etchings, nearly 300 examples are described) should be briefly 
indicated. These main characteristics are precision and vivacity; 
freedom, flexibility, infinite technical resource, at the service 
always of the most alert and comprehensive observation; an 
eye that no picturesqueness of light and shade, no interesting 
grouping of line, can ever escape— an eye, that is, that is emanci- 
pated from conventionality, and sees these things therefore with 
equal willingness in a cathedral and a mass of scaffolding, in a 
Chelsea shop and in a suave nude figure, in the facade of a 
Flemish palace and in a " great wheel " at West Kensington. 
Mr Whistler's pictures have as a chief source of their attractive- 
ness those mental qualities of alertness and emancipation. 
Charm of colour and of handling enhance the hold which they 
obtain upon such people of taste as may be ready to receive 
them. There are but very few of them, however, at least very 
few oil pictures, when one considers the number of years since 
the artist began to labour; and one notable fact must be at 
once understood— the admitted masterpieces in painting belong 
almost entirely to the earlier time. " Sarasate " is an exception, 
and "Lady Archibald Campbell," and in its smaller, but still 
charming, way "The Little Rose of Lyme Regis"; but even 
these— save the " Little Rose "—are of 1885 or thereabouts. 
A few years earlier than they are the " Connie Cilchrist," the 
" Miss Alexander," and the " Rosa Corder," and the Thames 
" Nocturnes "; but we go farther back to reach the " Portrait 
of the Painter's Mother," which is now in the Luxembourg; 
the " Portrait of Carlyie," now at Glasgow; the " Cremorne 
Gardens," the "Nocturne, Valparaiso Harbour," the "Music 
Room," with little Miss Annie Haden standing by the piano 
while her mother plays, and the " White Girl," or " Little White 
Girl," in which Whistler shows the influence, but never the 
domination, of the Japanese. Of the slight but always exquisitely 
harmonious studies in water colour, undertaken by Whistler 
in his middle period, none call for special notice. To the middle 
time, too, belong, not perhaps all of his slight but delicately 
modelled pastels of the figure, but at least his more universally 
accepted pastels of Venetian scenes, in which he caught the 
sleepy beauty of the Venetian by-way. In pastel, as in painting, 
in water colour and in etching, Whistler has never been unmind- 
ful of the particular qualities of the medium in which he has 
worked, nor of the applicability of a given medium to a given 
subject. The result, accordingly, is not now a victory and now 
a failure, now a " hit " and now a " miss," but rather a succession 
of triumphs great and smalL One other medium taken up by 
Whistler must now be mentioned. His lithographs— his drawings 
on the stone in many instances, and in -others his drawings on 
that " lithographic paper " which with some people is the easy 
substitute for the stone to-day — are perhaps half as numerous as 
his etchings. Mr T. R. Way has catalogued about a hundred. 
Some of the lithographs are of figures slightly draped; two or 
three of the very finest are of Thames subjects— including a 
" nocturne " at Umehouse, of unimaginable and poetic mystery; 
others are bright and dainty indications of quaint prettiness 
in the old Faubourg St Germain, and of the sober lines of certain 
Georgian churches in Soho and Bloomsbury. An initiator in 
his own generation, and ever tastefully experimental, Whistler 
no doubt has found enjoyment in the variety of the mediums he 
has worked in, and in the variety of subjects he has brilliantly 
tackled. The absence of concentration in the Whistleriao 
temperament, the lack of great continuity of effort, may probably 
prove a drawback to his taking exactly the place as a painter of 
oil pictures, which, in other circumstances, his genius and his 
taste would most certainly have secured for him* In the future 
Whistler must be accounted, in oil painting, a master exquisite 
but rare. But the number and the range of his etched su bjec t! 
and the extraordinary variety .of perception and of ski0 which 



WHISTON— WHTTBREAD 



S97 



be has brought to bear upon the execution of his nearly three 
hundred coppery, ensure, and have indeed already compassed, 
the acceptance of him ms> a master among masters in that art of 
etching. Rembrandt's, Van Dyck's, Mlryon's, Claude's, are, in 
(act, the only names which there is full warranty for pronouncing 
beside his own. 

No account of Whistler's career would be complete without a 
reference to His supremely controversial personality. In 1878 
he brought a libel action against Ruskin for his criticisms in Fors 
Clavigcra (1877). Ruskin had denounced one of his nocturnes 
at the Grosvcnor Gallery as " a pot of paint flung in the public 
lace." After a long trial, Whistler was awarded a farthing 
damages. His examination caused much .interest, especially in 
artistic circles, on account of his attitude in vindication of the 
purely artistic side of art; and it was in the course of k that he 
answered the question as to how long a certain " impression M 
had taken him to execute by saying, " All my life." His eccen- 
tricity of pose and dress, combined with his artistic arrogance, 
sharp tongue, and bitter humour, made him one of the moat 
talked -about men in London, and his mots were quoted every- 
where. He followed up his quarrel with Ruskin by publishing a 
satirise! pamphlet. Whistler v. Ruskin: Artv. Art Critics. In 
1885 he gave his Ten o'Cloch Lecture in London, afterwards 
embodied in The Gentle Art of Miking Enemies (1890). The 
substance of this flippantly written and amusing outburst was 
an insistence on the liberty of the artist to do what was right in 
his artistic eyes, and the inability of the public or the critics to 
have any ideas about art worth considering at all. In 1895 
another quarrel, with Sir William Eden, whose wife's portrait 
Whistler had painted, but refused to hand over, came into the 
courts in Paris; and Whistler, though allowed to keep his picture, 
was condemned in damages. In later years he lived mainly in 
Paris, but he returned to live in London in 190*; and ha died 
on the 17th of July 1903 at 74 Cheyne Walk, Chelsea. In x888 
he had married Mrs Goodwin, widow of E. W. Goodwin, the 
architect, and daughter of J. B. Philip, the sculptor; she died 
m 1896, leaving no children. In 1886 be became president of the 
Royal Society of British Artists (a title at which afterwards he 
scoffed); and he took a leading part later in founding the 
International Art Society, of which he was the first president. 
His " Nocturne in blue and silver" was presented to the 
National Gallery after his death by the National Ait Collection 
Fund. 

Sec also T. R. Way and G. R. Dennis. The Art of J McN. Whistler 

iiooi); F. Wedmorc, Mr Whistler's Etchings; Theodore Duret, 
ttstoire de J. McN. Whistler el de son muvre (1904): Mortimer 
Menpes, Whistler as I knew him : W. G. Bowdoin, WhtsUer, the Man 
and his Work (1902); Catalogue of Memorial Exhibition (Inter- 
national Society, 1905); and £. R, and J. Pennell, The Life ef 
James McNeill Whistler (1908). (F. We,) 

WHWTOH, WILLIAM (1667-175*), English divine and 
mathematician, was born on the 9th of December 1667 at Norton 
in Leicestershire, of which village his father was rector. He 
was educated privately, partly on account of the delicacy of 
bis health, and partly that he might met as amanuensis to bis 
father, who had lost his sight. He afterwards entered at Clare 
College, Cambridge, where he applied himself to mathematical 
study, and obtained a fellowship in 1693. He neat became 
chaplain to John Moore (1646-1 7 14), the learned bishop of Nor- 
wich, from whom he received the living of Lowestoft- in 1698. 
He had already given several proofs of hi* noble but over- 
scrupulous conscientiousness, and at the same time of a pro- 
pensity to paradoi. His New Theory of the Earth (1696), 
although destitute of sound scientific foundation, obtained the 
pcaise of both Newton and Locke, the latter of whom justly 
darned the author among those who, if not adding much to our 
knowledge, " at least bring some new things to our thoughts.' 
In 1 701 he resigned his living to become deputy at Cambridge 
to Sir Isaac Newton, whom two years later he succeeded as 
I,yrasian professor of mathematics. In 1707 he was Boyle 
lecturer. For several years Whiston continued to write and 
preach both on mathematical and theological subjects with con- 
siderable success; but his study of the A p o st o l i c a l Constitutions 



had convinced him that Arianlsm was the cieed of the primi- 
tive church; and with hkn to form an opinion and to pub- 
lish it were things almost simultaneous. Has heterodoxy toon 
became notorious, and in 1710 he was deprived of his pro- 
fessorship and expelled from the university. The rest of his life 
was spent in incessant controversy— theological, mathematical, 
chronological and miscellaneous. He vindicated bis estimate 
of the Apostolical Constitutions and the Arian views he had 
derived from them in his Primitne Christianity Revived (5 vols., 
1711-1712). In 1713 he produced a reformed liturgy, and soon 
afterwards founded a society for promoting primitive Christianity, 
lecturing in support of his theories at London, Bath and Tun- 
bridge Wells. One of the moat valuable of bis books, the Life 
of Samuel Clarke, appeared in 173a While heretical on so many 
points, he was a firm believer in supernatural Christianity, and 
frequently took the field in defence of prophecy and miracle, 
including anointing the sick and touching for the king's evil. 
His dislike to rationalism in religion also made him one of the 
numerous opponents of Benjamin Hoadly's Plain, Account oj 
the Nature and End of the SacramenL He proved to his own 
satisfaction that Canticles was apocryphal and that Baruch 
was not. He was ever pressing his views of ecclesiastical govern* 
ment and discipline, derived from the Apostolical Constitutions, 
on the ecclesiastical authorities, and marvelled that they could 
not see the matter in the same light as himself. He assailed the 
memory of Athanasius with a virulence at least equal to that 
with which orthodox divines had treated Arius. He attacked 
Sir Isaac Newton's chronological system with success; but he 
himself lost not only time but money in an endeavour to discover 
the longitude, Of all his singular opinions the best known is hs 
advocacy of clerical monogamy, immortalized in the Vicar of 
Wakefield. Of all his laboucs the most useful is his translation of 
Josepbus (1737)1 with valuable notes and dissertations, often 
reprinted. His last " famous discovery, or rather revival of 
Dr Giles Fletcher's," which he mentions in his autobiography 
with infinite complacency, was the identification of the Tatars 
with the lost tribes of Israel. In 1745 he published his PrimiHm 
New Testament. About the same time (1747) he finally left the 
Anglican communion for the Baptist, leaving the church literally 
as well as figuratively by quitting it as the clergyman began to 
read the Athanasian creed. He died in London, at the house of 
his son-in-law, on the sand of August 1752, leaving a memoir 
(3 vols., 1740-175°) which deserves more attention than it has 
received, both for its characteristic individuality and at a store- 
house of curious anecdotes and illustrations of the religious and 
moral tendencies of the age. It does not, however, contain any 
account of the proceedings taken against him at Cambridge, 
these having been published separately at the time. 

Whiston i» a striking example of the association of an entirely 
paradoxical bent of mind with proficiency in the exact sciences. 
He also illustrates the possibility of arriving at rationalistic conclu- 
sions in theology without the slightest tincture of the rationalistic 
He was not only paradoxical to the verge of crasinesa, but 



int to the verge of bigotry. " I had a mind," he says, " t» 

bear Dr (John) Gill preach. But. being informed that he had written 
a fobo book on the Canticles. I declined to go to hear him.'* When 
not engaged in con t rover sy be was not devoid of good sense. He 
often saw men and things very clearly, and some of his doe mots 
are admirable. 

WHTTAKEB, JOSEPH (1820-1895), English publisher, was 
born in London 00 the 4th of May 1820, and apprenticed to a 
bookseller at the age ef fourteen. After a long experience with 
various bookselling firms, he began business on his own account as 
a theological publisher. In January 1858 he started the Book' 
seller, and for 1869 published the first issueof Whitaker's Almanack, 
the annual work of reference, which also met with immediate 
success. In 1874 he pubkahed the first edition of the *^tm*<* 
Catalogue of Current Literature, of wfakh several editions have 
sim* appeared. Whitaker died at Enfield on the 15th of May 
180$. He had been the father of fifteen cbfldren. 

WHUBRIAIX iAMUBL (i 7 5*-i8x$), EngEsh politician, came 
of a Bedfordshire Nonconformist family; ma father had made 
a comoderabfe fortune as owner of the well-known brewery asso- 
ciated with ms name. EdiKatedatEtcmandStJolmtColkgs, 



59* 



WHITBY— WHITCHURCH 



Cambridge (after originally going to Christ Church, Oiford), 
he began by entering the brewing business; but after his marriage 
with the daughter of the ist Earl Grey in 1789 he took to politics, 
and in 1790 was elected for Bedfordshire as a Whig, attaching 
himself to Fox. He became known as a social and financial 
reformer and a constant assailant m parliament of all sorts of 
abuses. It was on his motion in 1805 that Lord Melville was 
impeached for financial maladministration of the navy, and be 
conducted the case for the prosecution. His Poor Law bill in 
1807, an elaborate Radical scheme, came to nothing. Whit bread 
continued to be a constant speaker in parliament, and the 
principal representative of Liberal criticism, a monument of 
opposition tactics. He opposed the regency, championed the 
princess of Wales, and led the peace party, and the caricaturists 
were busy with his personality. In 1B00 he became chairman 
of the committee for rebuilding Drury Lane theatre, and for some 
time he was immersed in controversies connected with it, which 
eventually seem to have unstrung his mind, for he committed 
suicide on the 6th of July 1815. The Whitbread influence in 
Liberal politics continued to be very strong in Bedfordshire in 
later generations, his son William Henry (from 18x8 to 1837) 
and grandson Samuel (from 1852 to 1895) representing Bedford 
for many years. 

WHITBY, a seaport, watering-place and market town in the 
Whitby parliamentary division of the North Riding of Yorkshire, 
England, 245 m. N. from London, on the North-Eastem railway. 
Pop. of urban district (1001) 11,755. There are a terminal 
station in the town and a station at West Cliff on the Saltburn 
branch. Whitby is beautifully situated at the mouth and on 
both banks of the River Esk; the old town of narrow streets and 
picturesque houses standing on the steep slopes above the river, 
while the modern residential quarter is mainly on the summit of 
West Cliff. A long flight of steps leads up the eastern height to 
the abbey, the ruins of which gain a wonderful dignity from their 
commanding position. This was a foundation of Oswy, king of 
Northumbria, in 658, in fulfilment of a vow for a victory over 
Penda, king of Mercia, It embraced an establishment for monks 
and (until the Conquest) for nuns of the Benedictine order, and 
under Hilda, a grand-niece of Edwin, a former king of North- 
umbria, acquired high celebrity. The existing ruins comprise 
parts of the Early English choir, the north transept, also Early 
Enghsh but of later date, and the rich Decorated nave. The west 
side of the nave fell in x 763 and the tower in 183a On the south 
side are foundations of cloisters and domestic buildings. Adjoin- 
ing the abbey is Whitby Hall, built by Sir Francis Cholmley about 
1580 from the materials of the monastic buildings, and enlarged 
and fortified by Sir Hugh Cholmley about 1635. A little below 
the abbey is the parish church of St Mary, originally Norman, 
and retaining traces of the first building; owing to a variety 
of alterations at different periods, and the erection of high 
wooden pews and galleries, its appearance is more remarkable 
than beautiful. A modem cross in the churchyard commemorates 
St Caedmon, the Northumbrian poet (c. 670), who was a monk 
at the abbey and there died. Other features of the town are 
the pleasant promenades and gardens on West Cliff, the anti- 
quarian and geological museum, and an excellent golf course. 
The coast is cliff-bound and very beautiful both to the north and 
to the south, while inland the Esk traverses a lovely wooded vale, 
surrounded by open, high-lying moors. Whitby is a quiet resort, 
possessing none of the brilliance of Scarborough on the same 
coast. A large fishing industry is carried on from the harbour, 
which is formed by the mouth of the river and protected by two 
piers. The manufacture of ornaments from the jet found in the 
vicinity forms a considerable industry. The jet is a species of 
petrified wood found towards the bottom of the Upper Lias, and 
its use for the purpose of ornament dates from very early times. 
A former activity in shipbuilding is of interest through the 
recollection that here ware constructed the ships for Captain 
CsvJt's voyages. Wooden ships and boats are still built, and 
} awd aail-making are carried on. 

c. 657-857; Pmtebi c. 857-1080; 
t 857 onward*) is not mentioned by Bede, who 




states that a religious house was established here about a.d.' 657. 
In the oth century k was destroyed by the Danes, but being 
refounded became the centre of a Danish colony, and until laid 
waste by the Conqueror was the most prosperous town in the 
district. Henry I. made a grant to the abbot and convent of 
Whitby of a burgage in the vill of Whitby, and Richard de 
Waterville, abbot 1175-1 too, granted the town in free burgage 
to the burgesses. In 1200 King John, bnbed by the burgesses, 
confirmed this charter, but in 1201, bribed by the successor of 
Richard de Waterville, quashed it as injurious to the dignity of 
the church of Whitby. A bitter struggle went on, however, till 
the 14th century, when a trial resulted in a judgment against the 
burgesses. In 1629 Whitby petitioned for incorporation on the 
ground that the town was in decay through want of good govern* 
merit and received letters patent giving them self-government. 
However, ih 1674-1675 the crown, probably in gratitude for ihe 
part played by the Cholmleys in the Civtf War, restored to the 
lords of the manor all the liberties ever enjoyed by the abbots of 
Whitby in Whitby and Whitby Strand. Whitby became a 
parliamentary borough under the Reform Act of 1832, returning 
one member until it was disfranchised under the Redistribution 
of Seats Act 1885.* At the beginning of the 14th century Sir 
Alexander Percy claimed the hereditary right of buying and 
selling in Whitby without payment of toll. The market was 
held time out of mind on Sunday until the reign of Henry VI., 
who changed the day to Saturday, still the market day. A 
fortnightly cattle market was granted by Charles I. Henry I. 
granted to the abbot of Whitby a fair at the feast of St Hilda 
and the king's firm peace to all coming to the fair. A second fair 
was used later, but neither of them is any longer held. There was 
a port at Whitby in the 12th century and probably before, and 
though never important there have always since been traces 
of Whitby shipping and merchandise. In medieval times the 
salting and sale of herrings and the sale of cod, fish and other 
products of the North Sea fishery were the only industries. 
Whale-fishing began in 1753. 

See Jf. C. Atkinson, Memorials of Oti Whitby (London, 1894); 
Lionel Charlton, History of Wkttby (York, 1779); George Young, 
History of Whitby (Whitby, 1817); Victoria County History, York* 
shtrt, North Riding. 

WHITCHURCH, a market town in the Newport parliamentary 
division of Shropshire, England, i7r m. N.W. from London on a 
joint line of the London & North-Western and Great Western 
railways, and the terminus of the Cambrian railway. Pop. of 
urban district (1901) 5221. Malting and cheese-making are the 
principal industries. The church of Si Alkmund, rebuilt in the 
i8th century, retains the fine tomb of John Talbot, first earl of 
Shrewsbury, who fell at the battle of Bordeaux (1453). The 
town hall and other public buildings are modern. The grammar 
school was founded in 1550, and here (e. 1 7 01) Reginald Heber, 
Bishop of Calcutta, was educated. The parish of Whitchurch 
extends into Cheshire, 

Whitchurch was at first known as Weshm and belonged before 
the Conquest to King Harold, but was afterwards granted to 
Earl Roger, of whom William de Warenne was holding it at the 
time of the Domesday Survey. The name Is said to have been 
altered to Whitchurch or Album Monasteriunt on account of a 
stone church built there soon after 1086. The manor appears 
to have been held by a younger branch of the Warenne family, 
from whom it passed by marriage to the families cf Lestraage and 
Talbot. It was sold by the Talbots to Thomas Egerton, from 
whom it passed to the earls of Bridgwater and eventually to the 
present owner, Earl Brownlow. Whitchurch is mentioned as a 
borough in the 14th century, and was governed by a bailiff, bat 
Its privileges, which sprang up with the castle, appear to have 
disappeared after itsdecly. The town has never been represented 
in parliament nor noted for any trade except agriculture. In 
1 228 John Fits-Alan received the right of changing the day of 
the market he held at Whitchurch from Thursday to Monday, 
and m 1362 a fair lasting three days from the feast of SS. Simon 
and Jude was granted to John Lestrange. Lord Brownlow 
granted the market rights to the local authority. 



WHITE, A. D.r-*WJHITE, GILpBRT 



599 



WWII, AJUXtRW DICB80R (183*- X American ettuta- 
tiontei, was bom in Homer, New York, on tbe 7th of November 
sSja. He graduated at Yale (A.B.) in 1853, studied et the 
Sorbonne in 1854, and at the University of Berlin in 1855-1856, 
meanwhile serving as attache at the United States Legation at 
St Petersburg in 1854-1855. He was professor of history and 
Engtisb literature in 1857-1863, and lecturer on history in 1863- 
1867 at the University of Michigan. In 1864-1807 he was a 
member of the New York state Senate, and as chairman of the 
Committee on Education took an active pari In formulating 
tbe educational featuresof tbe bill under which Cornell University 
(♦.».) mas incorporated (1865). At Mr Cornell's suggestion Mr 
White drew up a plan of organization for the institution, and in 
1867 became its first president, which post be held continuously 
until 1885, serving thereafter as a member of the board of trustees 
and of it* executive committee. During his administration 
he greatly strengthened the curriculum of the university, to 
which he gave bis architectural library, and, upon bis retirement, 
ha historical and general library of about 20,000 volumes {in- 
cluding hound collections of pamphlets) and about 3000 unbound 
pamphlets, which was installed in a special room m the main 
library building of the university. In recognition of this gift 
the departments of history and political science of the university 
have been named the President White School of History and 
Political Science. In 1870 President Grant appointed Benjamin 
F. Wade, Mr White and Samuel G. Howe a commission to visit 
Santo Domingo and report on the advisability of the president's 
project for annexing it to the United States, and in 1895 he was 
appointed by -President Cleveland a member of the commission 
established to- determine the boundary between Venezuela and 
British Guiana. Dr White was United. States minister to 
Germany in 1879-1801, and to Russia in 1892-1804, and was 
United States ambassador to Germany in 1897-1903. In 1899 
he was president of the American delegation at the Hague Peace 
Conference. He received the degree of LLJX from the Univer- 
sity of Michigan (1867), from Cornell (1886), from Yale (18B7), 
from St Andrews, Scotland (1002), from Johns Hopkins, (190a), 
and from Dartmouth (xcc6); L.H.D. from Columbia (1887) 
and D.C.I* mom Oxford, (toot). He was also made an officer 
of the Legion of Honour, was awarded tbe royal gold medal of 
Prussia for arts and sciences in 1902, was president 'of the 
American Historical Association, of which he was a founder, 
in 1884, and was actively identified with various other learned 



His publications include The Great* Stolen of Continental Europe 
(1874) ; A History of (Mi Warfare of Science with Theoloey in Christen- 
dom (2 vols., 1806), h» most Important work, his Antotrhgrapky 
(a vol*, New York, 1905) and Seven Groat Statesmen (1910). 

WHITE. SIR GEORGE STUART (1835- ), British field 
marshal, the son of an Irish country gentleman, was born in 
County Antrim on the 6th of July 1835. He was educated at 
Sandhurst, and In 1853 joined the Inniskillings, with which 
regiment he served in India during the Mutiny in 1857. In the 
second Afghan War (1878-80) he was second in command of the 
Gordon Highlanders, whom he led in their charge at the battle of 
Charasiah. For conspicuous gallantry In this action, and again 
shortly afterwards at Kandahar, he received the Victoria Cross. 
In 1 88 1 be assumed command of the Gordon Highlanders, and 
took part in the Nile Expedition of 1884-85. As brigadier in 
the Burmese War (1885-87) he rendered distinguished service, 
for which he was promoted major-general; and when Sir 
Frederick (afterwards Lord) Roberts returned to India from 
Burma in 1887, White was left in command of the force charged 
with the duly of suppressing the dacoits and pacifying the 
country. This he accomplished with a thoroughness which 
earned the thanks of the government of India. He was in 
command of the Zhob expedition in 1890, and in 1893 he suc- 
ceeded Lord Roberts as commander-in-chief in India; and 
during his tenure of this office directed the conduct of the 
Chitral expedition in 1895 and t* e Tirah campaign in 1807- 
Li the latter year be was made G.C.B, and in 1898 G.C.S.I. 
Returning to England in 1898 he became ojmrtermastcr<gencral 



to the forces; and on the outbreak of tbe Boer War in 1899 he 
was given command of the forces in Natal. He defeated the 
Boers art Elandslaagte pn the fist of October 1809 and at 
Reitfontein on. the 24th; but the superior numbers of the Boers 
enabled them to invest Ladysmith, which Sir George White 
defended in a siege lasting 1*9 days, from the and of November 
1809 to tbe 1st of March 1900, in tbe course of which he refused 
to entertain Sir Redvers Butler's suggestion that he should arrange 
terms of capitulation with the enemy (see Ladysmtth, Siege 
and Reus? or). After the relief of Ladysmith, White, whose 
health had been impaired by tbe siege, returned to England, and 
was appomted governor of Gibraltar ( 1900-1904). King Edward 
VII., who visited. tbe fortress in 1903. personally gave him the 
baton of a held marshal In 1905 Sir George White was ap- 
pointed governor of Chelsea Hospital, and in the same year was 
. decorated with the Order of Merit. 

SeeT. F. G. Coates, Sir Georfe White (tooo). 

W&ITB, GILBERT (1720-1793), English writer on natural 
history, was born on the 18th of Jury 173© in the hi tie Hampshire 
village of Selborne, which his writings have rendered so familiar 
to afl lovers of either books or nature. He was educated at 
Basingstoke under Thomas Warton, father of the poet, and 
subsequently at Oriel College, Oxford, where in 1744 he was 
. elected to a fellowship. Ordained In 1747, he became curate at 
Swarraton the same year and at Selborne in 17 si. In 1752 he 
was nominated junior proctor at Oxford and became dean of his 
college. In 1753 he accepted the curacy of Durley, and in 2757 
he was a candidate for the prdvostship of Oriel, but failed to 
secure election. Soon afterwards he received the college living 
of Moreton Pinkney, though he did not reside there, and in 
1 761 be became curate at Faringdon, near Sdborne, a position 
which he held until fit 1784 he again became curate in hfe native 
parish. He died in bis home, The Wakes, Selborne, on the aCh 
of June 1793. 

Gilbert White's daily hie was practically unbroken by any 
great changes or incidents; for neariy half a century his pastoral 
duties, his watchful country walks, the assiduous care of his 
garden, and the scrupulous posting of his calendar of observations 
made up the essentials of a full and delightful life, but hardly 
of a biography. At most *we can only fill up the portrait by 
reference to the tinge of simple old-fashioned scholarship, which 
on its historic side made him an eager searcher for antiquities 
and among old records, and on its poetic occasionally stirred him 
to an excursion as far as that gentlest slope of Parnassus in* 
habited by the descriptive muse. Hence we are thrown back 
upon that correspondence with brother naturalists which has 
raised his life and its influence so far beyond the commonplace. 
His strong naturalist tendencies are not, however, properly to' 
be realized without a glance at the history of his younger brothers. 
The eldest, Thomas, Retired from trade to devote himself to 
natural and physical science, and contributed many papers to the 
Royal Society, of which he was a fellow. The next, Benjamin, 
became the publisher of most of the leading works of natural 
history which appeared during his lifetime, including that of his 
brother. The third, John, became chaplain at Gibraltar, where 
be accumulated much material for a work on the natural history 
of the rock and its neighbourhood, and carried on a scientific 
correspondence, not only with his eldest brother, but with 
Linnaeus. The youngest, Henry, was vicar of Fyfield, near 
Andover. The sister's son, Samuel Barker, also became in time 
one of White's most valued correspondents. With other natural* 
ists, too, he had intimate relations: with Thomas Pennant and 
Daines Barrington he was in constant correspondence, often 
too with the botanist John Light foot, and sometimes with Sir 
Joseph Banks and others, while Richard Chandler and other 
antiquaries kept alive his historic zeal. At first he was content 
to furnish information from which the works of Pennant and 
Barrington largely profited; but gradually the ambition of 
separate authorship developed from a suggestion thrown out by 
the latter of these writers in x 77a The next year White sketched 
to Pennant the project of " a natural history of my native parish, 
an annut JfeJsrfc^ftSfawffr, comprising a journal for a whole 



6oo 



WHITE, HENRY KIRKE— WHITE, J. B. 



year, and illustrated with large notes and observations. Such 
a beginning might induce more able naturalists to write the 
history of various districts and might in time occasion the pro- 
duction of a work so much to be wished for— a full and complete 
natural history of these kingdoms." Yet the famous Natural 
History and Antiquities of Sdbornt did not appear until 1780. 
It was well received from the beginning, and has been reprinted 
time after time. 

To be a typical parish natural history so far as completeness or 
order b concerned, it has of course no pretensions; batches of 
letters, an essay on antiquities, a naturalist's calendar and miscel- 
laneous jottings of all kinds are but the unsystematized material 
of the work proper, which was never written. Yet it is largely to 
this very piecemeal character that its popularity has been due. The 
style has the simple, yet fresh and graphic, directness of all good 
letter-writing, and there is no lack of passages of keen observation, 
and even shrewd interpretation. White not only notes the homes 
and ways, the times and seasons, of plants and animals— comparing, 
for instance, the different ways in which the squirrel, the field- 
mouse and the nuthatch eat their hazel-nuts— or watches the 
migrations of birds, which were then only beginning to be properly 
recorded or understood, but he knows more than any other observer 
until Charles Darwin about the habits and the usefulness of the 
earthworms, and is certain that plants distil dew and do not merely 
condense it. The book is also interesting as having appeared on the 
borderland between the medieval and the modern school of natural 
history, avoiding the uncritical blundering of the old Encyclopaedists, 
without entering on the technical anq analytic character of the 
opening age of separate monographs. Moreover, as the first book 
which raised natural history into the region of literature, much as the 
Compkat Angler did for that gentle art, we must affiliate to it the 
more finished products of later writers like Thoreau or Richard 
Jefferies. Yet, while these are essential merfts of the book, its en- 
dearing charm lies deeper, in the sweet and kindly personality of the 
author, who on his rambles gathers no spoil, but watches the birds 
and field-mice without disturbing them from their nests, and quietly 
plants an acorn where he thinks an oak is wanted, or sows beech-nuts 
in what is now a stately row. He overflows with anecdotes, seldom 
indeed gets beyond the anecdotal stage, yet from this all study of 
nature must begin; and he sees everywhere intelligence and beauty, 
love and sociality, where a later view of nature insists primarily on 
mere adaptation of interests or purely competitive struggles. The 
encyclopaedic Interest in nature t although in White's day culminat- 
ing in the monumental synthesis of Button, was also disappearing 
before the analytic specialism inaugurated by Linnaeus; yet the 
catholic interests of the simple naturalist of Sdborne fully reappear 
a century later in the greater naturalist of Down, Charles Darwin. 

The Life and Letters of Gilbert White of Selborne, by his great grand- 
nephew, Rashleigh Holt-White, appeared in 1901. 

WHITE, HENRY KIRKB (1785-1806), English poet, was born 
at Nottingham, the son of a butcher, on the 21st of March 1785. 
He was destined at first for his father's trade, but after a short 
apprenticeship to a stocking-weaver, was eventually articled to 
a lawyer. Meanwhile he studied hard, and his master offered 
to- release him from his contract if he had sufficient means to 
gp to college. He received encouragement from Capel Lofft, 
the friend of Robert Bloomfield, and published in 1803 Clifton 
Grow, a Sketch in Verse t with other Poems, dedicated to Georgiana, 
duchess of Devonshire. The book was violently attacked in the 
Monthly Review (February 1804), but White was in some degree 
compensated by a kind letter from Robert Southey. Through 
the efforts of his friends, he was entered as a sizar at St John's 
College, Cambridge, spending a year beforehand with a. private 
tutor. Close application to study induced a serious illness, and 
fears were entertained for his sanity, but he went into residence 
at Cambridge, with a view to taking holy orders, in the autumn 
of 1805. The strain of continuous study proved fatal, and he 
died on £he 1 oth of October x 806. He was buried in the church of 
All Saints, Cambridge. The genuine piety of his religious verses 
secured * place in popular hymnology for some of his hymns. 
Much of his fame was due to sympathy inspired by his early 
death, but it is noteworthy that Byron agreed with Southey 
in forming a high estimate of the young nun's promise. 

His Remains, with his letters and an account of his life, were edited 
l voBB., 1807-1812) by Robert Southey. See prefatory notices by 
" 'sNicolasAp hbPoetical Works, (newed, 1866) in the " Aldine 
T the British poets; by H. K. Swann in the volume of 
1 MM Conterbnry Potts; and by John Drinkwater 
M*Mm*l£imy." SeenisoJ.TGodfi*yan<t 
wmtnd Uamio of Henry Xitho While (1908). 




WHITE, HUGH LAWSOM (1773-1840), American statesmen, 
was born in Iredell county, North Carolina, on the 30th of 
October 1773. In 1787 be crossed the mountains into East 
Tennessee (then a part of North Carolina) with his father James 
White (1737-1815), who was subsequently prominent in the 
early history of Tennessee. Hugh became in 1700 secretary to 
Governor William Blount, and in 1792-1793 served under John 
Sevier against the Creek and Cherokee Indians, and in the 
battle of Etowah (December 1793), according to the accepted 
tradition, killed with his own hand the Cherokee chief Kingfisher. 
He studied In Philadelphia and in 1796 he was admitted to the 
bar at Knoxville. He was a judge of the Superior Court of 
Tennessee in 1801-1807, a state senator in 1807-1809, and in 
1 800-181 5 was judge of the newly organized Supreme Court of 
Errors and Appeals of the state. From 1812 to 1827 he was 
president of the State Bank of Tennessee at Knoxville, and 
managed it so weH that for several years during this period it 
was the only western bank that in the trying period during and 
after the War of 1812 did not suspend specie payments. In 
1821-1824 he was a member of the Spanish Claims Commission, 
and in 1825 succeeded Andrew Jackson in the United States 
Senate, serving until 1840 and being president pro tern, in 1832- 
1834. In the Senate he opposed internal improvements by the 
Federal government and the recbarter of the United States Bank, 
favoured a protective tariff and Jackson's coercive policy in 
regard to nullification, and in general supported the measures of 
President Jackson, though his opposition to the hitter's indis- 
criminate appointments caused a coolness between himself and 
Jackson, which was increased by White's refusal to vote to ex- 
punge the resolutions of a former Senate censuring the president. 
In 1830, as chairman of the Committee on Indian Affairs, be 
secured the passage of a bill looking to the removal of the Indians 
to lands west of the Mississippi. He was opposed to Van Buren, 
Jackson's candidate for the presidency in 1836, was himself 
nominated in several states as an independent candidate, and 
received the twenty-six electoral votes of Tennessee and Georgia, 
though President Jackson made strong efforts to defeat him in 
the former state. About 1838 he became a Whig in politics, and 
when the Democratic legislature of Tennessee instructed him to 
vote for Van Buren's sub-treasury scheme he objected and 
resigned (Jan. 1840). His strict principles and his conservatism 
won for him the sobriquet of " The Cato of the United States 
Senate." He died at Knoxville on the 10th of April 184a 

See Nancy N. Scott (ed.), A Memoir of Hugh Lawson White 
( Philadelp hia, 1856). 

WHITE, JOSEPH BLANCO (1775-1841), British theologian 
and poet, was born at Seville on the 11th of July 1775 He was 
educated for the Roman Catholic priesthood; but after his 
ordination (1800) religious doubts led him to escape from Spain 
to England (1810), where he ultimately entered the Anglican 
Church, having studied theology at Oxford and made the 
friendship of Arnold, Newman and Whately. He became tutor 
in the family of the last-named when he was made archbishop of 
Dublin (1831). While in this position he embraced Unitarian 
views; and he found an asylum amongst the Unitarians of 
Liverpool, where he died on the 20th of May 1841. 

White edited El EspaAol, a monthly Spanish magazine in 
London, from 1810 to 1814, and afterwards received a civil list 
pension of £250. His principal writings are Dobhdo's Letters 
from Spain (1822); Evidence against Catholicism (182s); 
Second Travels of an Irish Gentleman in Search of a Religion 
(2 vols., 1834); Observations on Heresy and Orthodoxy (1835). 
They all show literary ability, and were extensively read in their 
day. He also translated Paley's Evidences and the Book of 
Common Prayer into Spanish. He is best remembered, however, 
by his sonnet "Night and Death" (*' Mysterious Night! when 
our first parent knew M ), which was dedicated to S. T. Coleridge 
on its appearance in the Bijou for 1828 and has since found its 
way into several anthologies. Three versions are given in the 
Academy of the 12th of September 1891. 

See Life of the Rev. Joseph Blanco While, written by himself, trial 
portions of his Correspondence; edited by John HamffoM Thorn 
(London, j wost, 1845). 



WHITE, R. G.— WHITE, T. 



601 



WHITE, RICHARD GRANT (18M-1885), American Shake- 
spearean scholar, philologist and essayist, was born in New York 
city, on the 23rd of May 1822. He graduated at the university 
of the City of New York in 1S39, studied medicine and then law, 
ind was admitted to the bar in 1845, but made no serious 
attempts to practise. He contributed (anonymously) musical 
criticisms to the New York Courier and Enquirer, of which be 
wis co-editor in 1851-1858, and became a member of the staff 
of the New York World, when that paper was established in 
i860. In 1861-1878 he was chief of the United States Revenue 
Marine Bureau, for the district of New York. When he was 
st .years old he wrote his sonnet, M Washington: Pater Patriae," 
which, published anonymously, was frequently ascribed to 
Wordsworth, and by William Cuttcn Bryant was ascribed to 
Landor; White did not admit his authorship until 1852. In 1853 
he contributed anonymously to Putnam's Magasine (October 
and November), an acute and destructive critidsro of Collier's 
folio manuscript emendations of Shakespeare; 1 and in the 
following year this criticism was republished (with other matter) 
in his Shakespeare's Scholar: bring Historical and Critical 
Studies of Ids Text, Characters, and Commentators; frith an 
Examination of Mr Collier's Folio of 1623. During the Civil War 
he contributed to the Spectator, under the pseudonym, " A 
Yankee,'* a series of articles which greatly influenced English 
public opinion in favour of the North, while his clever and 
pungent satire, The New Gospel of Peace; according to St Ben* 
jamiuyln four books (1 863-1 866)-*-«Iso published anonymously— 
was an effective attack upon M copper-headism '* and the 
advocates of "peace at any price*" He died in New York on the 
8th of April 188$. 

In addition to those mentioned above. Ms Shakespearean publ ta- 
ttoos include, Essay &n th* Author ihip of Mr Thrtt Purtt */ Kinr 
Henry VI. (185a), Memoirs of th* Lift <?/ William Shcltiprc'; uiM 
on Essay towards tk* Expr&ixon »j *» turning W an tUiwnt ej the 
Rue and Progreu of the Erttfii-k £?rar»d 14 iht Time vf Skahasinre 
(1865) ; an annotated cliii^n nf Mufcw peart'* work* in jt volt, f l *s j), 
and Studies in Shakespeare 0^85), pteirfintf for a ration J rr>- nm-iit 
of the plays Without ovcr-an notation textual or scwfi* <n*. On 
linguistic subject* he nsnfa Wordt o.*d thrir Ui^s, Pait and Pre tent 
# (io7o),anda sC'I'jh T, £*#ry Day English 0&*^)+ *hith without Ungu- 
is thoroughness, MintuKiTcd interest in the jjeneral subject of £.rod 
we in Umguagt Hi* -mW p,j( lir^rinm inrlude Na tion al Hymns: 
How they are Wrxitm and Horn they art nut Wntun (iH6i). can ml rung 
•now of the best and worst of 1200 hymns submitted 10 a commie tee 
(of which White w»* a member) in a com petition for a prinr otic-red 
for a national bvn,n: Pottry, Lyrical, wmratb* and Satirkal, of the 
CnU War (l86fcj I The Fafl *f Man; w, The Lme$ tf tHv f^n((as t 
By a Loomed Gcritla (1871): Cktonittts of Gotham, By U. Do* writ 
Onus (1871); The Am*rtc&n View 0/ the CvpyriiM (Jwition n«*o). 
England Without and Within (i^i). and Tkt Fate rf |Ea dd 
Humphreys (188 4 1 . a Mftvrt For estimates of Whi Ce 1 ! rri t iral * m <ng 
■ce the rev i ew of Sh*ktspf***'i SshvUtt in the Etlettic Mafntine t vol. 
xcriv. (1895); and thp ankles in ttie Atlantic Monthly* vol. alia. 
(l&ta) by EL P. Whipple, and vol. toil (1*86). 

His son, Stanford White (1853-1006), the famous architect, 
studied under Henry H. Richardson, whom he assisted in the 
«*- 8 gning of Trinity Church, Boston, and became a member of 
the New York firm of McKim, Mead ft White in 1881. He 
designed the Madison Square Garden, the Century and Metro- 
politan Club* in New York City, the buildings of the New York 
University ind the University of Virginia, and the pedestals 
for several of the statues by Augustus St Gaudens. He was 
1 by Ha rry T haw m 1006. 

ROBERT (1645-1704), English engraver and 
was born in London In 1645. He studied en- 
graving under David Loggan, for whom he executed many 
ar ch it ec t ural subjects; his early works also include landscapes 
and engraved title-pages for books. He acquired great skill in 
portraiture, his works of this data being commonly drawn with 
Mack-lead pendl upon vellum, and afterwards excellently en- 
graved in Una. Portraits executed in this Manner he marked 
od ritmm, and they are prised by collectors for their artistic 
merit and their authenticity. Virtue catalogued 975 portrait 

1 J. Paine CblHer. Holes and Emendations to the Text of Shako- 
spore's Pairs from Early US. Correction! in a Copy of the Polio, 1632 



engravings by White, including the likenesses of many of the 
most celebrated personages of his day; and nine portraits 
engraved in mezzotint are assigned to him by J. Chaloner Smith. 
White died at Bloomsbury, London, in 1704. His son, George 
White, who was born about 1671 and died about 1734, Is also 
known as an engraver and portrait-painter. 

WHITE, SIR THOMAS (1492-1567), founder of St John's 
College, Oxford, was a son of William White, a dothier, and was 
born at Reading. At an early age he became a merchant in 
London and was soon a member, and then master of the Merchant 
Taylors Company; growing wealthier he became an alderman 
and sheriff of the dty of London. One of the promoters df the 
Muscovy Company, he was knighted in 1553, and in October of 
the same year* he was chosen lord mayor. His term of office 
fell in a strenuous time. He had to defend the dty against Sir 
Thomas Wyat and his followers, and he took part in the trial 
of the rebels, as just previously he had done in the case of Lady 
Jane Grey. In 1 555 White received a licence to found a college 
at Oxford, which he endowed with lands in the neighbourhood 
of the dty and which, dedicated to the Virgin Mary and St John 
Baptist, was opened In 1 560. Soon after this event Sir Thomas 
began to lose money, and he was comparatively poor when he died 
at Oxford on the rath of February 1567. His later years were 
mainly spent m Oxford, and he was buried in the chapel of St 
John's College. White had some share m founding the Merchant 
Taylors' School in London. He was twice married, but left no 
children. A portrait of him hangs in the hall of St John's College 
and one on glass, painted In toe 16th century, is in the old 
library. Several carry lives of him are among the college manu- 
scripts. Sir Thomas must be distinguished from another Sir 
Thomas White of South Warnborough, Hampshire, some of 
whose property, by a curious coincidence, passed also into the 
possession of St John's College. 

WHITE, THOMAS (<r. 1550-1694), English divine, was born 
at Bristol about 1550, the son of a dothier. He graduated from 
Magdalen Hall (now Hertford College), Oxford, in 15705 took 
holy orders, and, coming to London, became rector of St Gregory 
by St Paul's and shortly after vicar of St Dunstan's in the West. 
Several of his sermons, attacking play-going and the vices of the 
metropolis, were printed. He was made a prebendary of St 
Paul's, treasurer of Salisbury, canon of Christ Church, Oxford, 
and canon of Windsor. In 1613 he built and endowed an 
almshouse, called the Temple Hospital, in Bristol. In 1621 he 
founded what Is now known as White's chair of moral philosophy 
at Oxford, with a salary of £100 per annum for the reader, and 
several small exhibitions for scholars of Magdalen HaH. He 
died on the 1st of March 1624, bequeathing £3000 for the estab- 
lishment of a college of "all the ministers, parsons, vicars, 
lecturers and curates in London and its suburbs " (afterwards 
Sion College (o.v.», and an almshouse, now abolished, and 
leaving bequests for lectureships at St PanTa, St Dunstan's and 
at Newgate. 

WHITE* THOMAS (1628-1608), bishop of Peterborough, was 
born at Aldington in Kent, and educated at St John's College, 
Cambridge. Having taken holy orders, he became vicar of 
Newark-on-Trent in 1660, vicar of AllhaHows the Great, London, 
in 1666, and vicar of Bottesford, Leicestershire, in 1670. In 
1683 he was arjpomtedchaplaw to the princess Anne, and in 1685 
he was chosen bishop of Peterborough. In 1688 he joined the 
archbishop of Canterbury, William Sancroft, and five of his 
suffragan bishops in petitioning against the declaration of 
indulgence issued by James II., sharing the trial and the triumph- 
ant acquittal of his colleagues. In 1689 he refused to take the 
oath of allegiance to William and Mary and was deprived of his 
see, but be did not become very active among the nonjuror*. 
White died on the 30th of May 1608-. 

The bishop must be distinguished not only from the founder of 
Sion College, but also from Thomas White (1593-1676), philo- 
sopher and controversialist. Educated at St Omer, VaQadoKd 
and Douai, the latter waa ordained priest in 16 17, and taught for 
some years in the college at Douai. Later be was president of . 
the English college at Lisbon. He died in London on the 6th 



WHITE, SIR W. A.— WHITEBAIT 



6oa 

of July 1676. White was a voluminous writer; not only did be 
engage in controversy with Protestants, but be attacked the 
personal infallibility of the pope. 

. WHITE. SIR WILLIAM -ARTHUR (1824-1801), British 
diplomatist, was, bom at Pulawy, in Poland, on the 13th of 
February 1824. He was descended on his father's side from an 
Irish Roman Catholic family. His mother's family* though ao.t 
of Polish extraction, owned considerable estates in Poland, where 
White, though educated at King William's College, Isle of Man, 
and Trinity College, Cambridge, spent a great part of his early 
days, and thus gained an intimate knowledge of the Slavonic 
tongues. From 1843 to 1857 he lived in Poland as a country 
gentleman, but in the latter year he accepted a post in the British 
consulate at Warsaw, and had almost at once to perform the 
duties of acting consul-general. The insurrection of 1863 gave 
him an opportunity of showing his immense knowledge of Eastern 
politics and his combination of diplomatic* tact with resolute 
determination. He was promoted in 1864 to the post of consul 
ft Danzig. The Eastern Question was, however, the great 
passion of his life, and in 1875 he succeeded in getting transferred 
to Belgrade as consul-general for Scrvia. In 1879 he was made 
British Agent at Bucharest. In 1884 he was offered by Lord 
Granville the choice of the legation at Rio or Buenos Aires, *nd 
in 1885 Lord Salisbury, who was then at the Foreign Office, 
urged him to go to Peking, pointing out the increasing import- 
ance of that post. White's devoted friend, Sir Robert Morier, 
wrote in the same sense. But White, who was already acting 
as ambassador ad interim at Constantinople, deckled to wait; 
aad during this year he rendered one of his most conspicuous 
services. It was largely owing to bis efforts that the war between 
Servia and Bulgaria was prevented from spreading into a 
universal conflagration, and that the union of Bulgaria and 
eastern Rumelis was accepted by the powers. In the following 
year he was rewarded with the embassy at Constantinople. He 
was the first Roman Catholic appointed to a British embassy 
since the Reformation. He pursued consistently the policy of 
counteracting Russian influence in the Balkans by erecting a 
barrier of independent states animated with a healthy spirit of 
national life, and by supporting Austrian interests in the East. 
To the furtherance of this policy he brought an unrivalled 
knowledge of all the under-currents of Oriental intrigue, which 
his mastery of languages enabled him to derive not onjy from the 
newspapers, of which he was an assiduous reader, but from the 
obscurest sources. His bluff and straightforward manner, and 
the knowledge that with him the deed was ready to follow the 
word, enabled him at once to inspire confidence and to overawe 
less masterful rivals. The official honours bestowed on him 
culminated in 1888 with the C.CJ3. and a seat on the Privy 
Council He was still ambassador at Constantinople when he 
was attacked by influenza during a visit to Berlin, where be died 
on the 28th ot December 1891. 

WHITE, SIR WILLIAM HENRY (1845- ). English naval 
architect, was born at Devonport on the 2nd of February 1845. 
and at the age of fourteen became an apprentice in the dockyard 
there. In 1864 he took the first place in the scholarship com- 
petition at the Royal School of Naval Architecture, which had 
then just been established by the Admiralty at South Kensington, 
and in 1867 he gained his diploma as fellow of the school with 
first-class honours. At once joining the constructive staff of the 
Admiralty, he acted as confidential assistant to the chief con- 
structor, Sir Edward Reed, until the latter's retirement in 2870. 
The loss of the " Captain " in that year was followed by an 
inquiry into designs for ships of war, and in connexion with this 
White, together with his old fellow-student, William John, 
worked out a long series of calculations as to the stability and 
strength of vessels, the results of which were published in an 
important paper read in 1871 before the Institution of Naval 
Architects. In 1872 White was appointed secretary to the 
Council of Construction at the Admiralty, in 1875 assistant con- 
structor, and in x£8x chief constructor. In April 1883 he left 
the service of the Admiralty, at the invitation of Lord (then Sir 
W ' n order to undertake the difficult task of 



organising a department for the cmstAietiOft of "ttfehletof tht 
largest site at the Elswtck works; but he only remained there 
for two and a half years, for In October 1885 he returned to the 
Admiralty in succession to Sir Nathaniel Baroaby as director of 
naval construction, retaining that post until the beginning of 
190a, when ill-health obliged him to relinquish the arduous 
labours it entailed. During that period, which in Great Britain 
was one of unprecedented activity in navel shipbuilding as a 
result of the awakening of public opinion to the vital importance 
of sea-power, more than 200 vessels of various types were added 
to the British navy, at a total cost of something hex 100 millions 
sterling, and for the design of all of these, as well as for the work 
of their construction, Sir William White was ultimately respon- 
sible. In addition, he did much to further' the knowledge -of 
scientific shipbuilding. He was professor of naval architecture 
at the Royal School from 1870 to 1873, and when in the latter 
year it was moved to Greenwich ta be merged in the Royal Naval 
College, he reorganised the course of instruction and acted as 
professor for eight years more. The lectures he gave in that 
capacity were the foundation of his Manual of Natal Architecture, 
which has been translated into several foreign !»"p"ff and is 
recognised as a standard text-book all over the world. Sit 
William White, who was chosen a fellow of the Royal Society 
in 1888, also read many professional papers before various 
learned and engineering societies, He was created K.C.B. in 
1893. 

WHITBAVES,- JOSEPH^ FREDERICK ^835- ), British 
palaeontologist, was born at Oxford, on the 26th of December 
1835. He was educated at private schools, and afterwards 
worked under John Phillips at Oxford (1858-X861); he was led 
to study the Oolitic rocks, and added largely to our knowledge 
of the fossils of the Great Oolite series, Combrash and Cocalliaa 
{Rep. Brit. Assoc, i860, and Ann., NaL Hist. 1861). In x86x he 
visited Canada and made acquaintance with the geology of 
Quebec and Montreal, and in 1863 he was appointed curator of 
the museum and secretary of the Natural History Society of 
Montreal, posts which he occupied until 1875. He studied the 
land and freshwater molluscs of Lower Canada, and the marine 
invertcbrata of the coasts; and also carried on researches among 
the older Silurian (or Ordovician) fossils of the neighbourhood of 
Montreal. In 187 s he joined the palaeontological branch of 
the Geological Survey of Canada at Montreal; in the following 
year he became palaeontologist, and in 1877 he was further 
appointed zoologist and assistant director of the survey. In 1881 
the offices of the survey were removed to Ottawa. His publica- 
tions on Canadian zoology and palaeontology are numerous and 
important. Dr Whiteaves was one of the original fellows of the 
Royal Society of Canada,, and contributed to its Transactions, 
as well as to the Canadian Naturalist and other journals. He 
received the hon. degree of LL. D. in 1900 from McGill University, 
Montreal. 

WHITEBAIT, the vernacular name of the email fish which 
appears in large shoals in the estuary of the Thames during, the 
summer months, and is held in great esteem as a delicacy for the' 
table. Formerly whitebait was supposed to be a distinct species 
of fish, T. Pennant and G. Shaw believed it to be some kind 
of Cyprinoid fish, similar to the bleak, whilst E. Donovan* in his 
Natural History of British Fishes (i8oa-i8e$), misled by speci- 
mens sent to him as whitebait, declared it tp be the young of the 
shad. . In i£ao W. Yarrell proved conclusively Jbat Donovan's 
opinion was founded upon an error; unfortunately be contented 
himself with comparing whitebait with the shad only, and in 
the end adopted the opinion of the Thames fishermen, whose 
interest it was to .represent it as a distinct adult form; thus the 
whitebait is introduced into Yarrell's History of British Fishu 
(1836) as Clupca alba. The French ichthyologist Valendennet 
went a step forth**, declaring it to be not only specifically but 
also generically distinct from all other Gupeoids. It is now 
known to consist of the young fry of herrings and sprain in 
varying proportions mixed with a few shrimps, gobies, stickle- 
backs, pope-fishes and young flounders; but these impurities 
arc as far as possible picked out from the whitebait before it it 



WHITEFIELD 



603 



marketed. The fishing » carried on from February to August, 
and samples taken in the successive months were found to 
contain the following percentages of herrings, the remainder 
being young sprats: 7, 5, 14, 30, 87, 75, $1. Hence it will be 
seen that sprats predominated in February, March, April and 
May, herrings in June and July. There is reason to bcheve that 
these young herrings are derived from a local " winter " race 
spawning about February and March, and having nothing to do 
with the great shoals of the more open sea spawning in the North 
Sea in November. The Thames being unequal to the supply of 
the large demand for this delicacy, large quantities of whitebait 
are now brought to London and other markets from many parts 
of the coast. In times past whitebait were considered to be 
peculiar to the estuary of the* Thames; and, even after the 
specific identification of Thames whitebait with the young of the 
herring and sprat, it was still thought that there was a dis- 
tinctive superiority in its condition and flavour. It is possible 
that the young fish find in the estuary of the Thames a larger 
amount of suitable food than on other pans of the coast, where 
the water may be of greater purity, but po s se s ses less abundance 
of the minute animal life on which whitebait thrive. Indeed, 
Thames whitebait which have been compared with that from 
the mouth of the Exe, the Cornish coast, Menaf Strait, and the 
Firth of Forth seemed to be better fed; but, of course, the 
specific characteristics of the herring and sprat— into which we 
need not enter here — were nowise modified. 

The fry of fishes is used as an article of diet in almost every 
country: in Germany the young of various species of Cyprinoids, 
in Italy and Japan the young of nearly every fish capable of 
being readily captured in sufficient numbers, in the South Sea 
Islands the fry of Teuthis, in New Zealand young Galaxias 
are consumed at certain seasons in large quantities; and, like 
whitebait, these fry bear distinct names, different from those of 
the adult fish. 

Whitebait are caught on the flood-tide from boats moored in from 
3 to s fathoms of water. The net used is a bag some 30 ft. long, 
aanow and amall m cehtd towards the tail end, the mouth being kept 
opeai*thedire«tioooithcadvaiKM«tkiebyafraincwork3or4it. 
square. It is placed alongside the boat and sunk to a depth of $ ft 
below the surface; from time to time the end of the bag is lifted into 
the boat, to empty it of its contents. The " schools of whitebait 
advancing and retiring with the tide for days, and probably for 
«cek9,haretonanUicniMitktofadoaeao(theaercta.aadtherefon 
gee very much thinned in number by the end of the season. Wheo 
the view commenced to gain ground that whitebait were largely 
young herring, the question arose whether or not the immense 
* 1 of the young brood caused by this mode of fishing tn- 
the fishery of the mature herring. This perhaps it 



does: but, since it has been ascertained that the herring is much 

restricted in its migrations than was formerly believed, and that the 
shoals are to a great extent local, the injury, such as it is, must be 
local and limited to the particular district in which the fishing for 
whitebait is aotthodkaUy psnrtisrd, Similar rrnsnning applies to 
sprats. (J.XX.) 

WBTT01BD, OBORGB (1714-1770), English religious 
leader, was born 00 the 16th of December 1714 at the Bell Inn, 
Gloucester, of which his father was landlord. At about twelve 
years of age he was sent to the school of St Mary de Crypt, 
Gloucester, where he developed some skill in elocution and a 
taste for reading plays, a circumstance which probably had 
considerable influence on his subsequent career. At the age of 
fifteen he was taken from school to assist his mother !n the 
public-house, and for a year and a half was a common drawer. 
Re then again returned to school to prepare for the university, 
and in x 733 entered as a servitor at Pembroke College, Oxford, 
graduating in 1736. Tfare he came under the influence of the 
Methodists (see Wesley), and entered so enthusiastically into 
their practices and habits that he was attacked by a severe 
Ones, which compelled him to return to his native town. His 
enthusiastic piety attracted the notice of Martin Benson, bishop 
of Gloucester, who ordained him deacon on the 20th of June 
1736- He then began an evangelizing tour in Bath, Bristol 
and other towns, his eloquence at once attracting immense 
multitudes. 

In 1736 he was invited by Wesley to go out as missionary to 



Georgia, and went to London to wilt on the trustees. Before 
setting sail he preached in some of the principal London churches, 
and in order to hear him, crowds assembled at the church doors 
long before daybreak. On the 28th of December 1737 he em- 
barked for Georgia, which he reached on the 7th of May 1738. 
After three months' residence there he returned to England to 
receive priest's orders, and to raise contributions for the estab- 
lishment of an orphanage. As the clergy did not welcome him 
to their pulpits, he began to preach in the open air. At Kings- 
wood HU1, Bristol, his addresses to the colliers soon attracted 
crowds, and his voice was so clear and powerful that ft could 
reach 30,000 folk. His fervour and dramatic action held them 
spell-bound, and his homely pathos soon broke down aH barriers 
of resistance. " The first discovery of their being affected," he 
says, " was by seeing the white gutters made by their tears, which 
plentifully fell down theff Mack cheeks." In 1 738 an account of 
Whitefield's voyage from London to Georgia was published with> 
out bis knowledge. In 1739 he published his Journal from 
his arrival in Savannah to hb return to London, and also his 
Jowrnal from his arrival in London to his departure thence on 
his way to Georgia. As his embarkation was further deJayedror 
ten weeks he published A Continuation of Ike Rev. Mr WhUejteUTs 
Journal during the Time he uns delayed in England by the Embargo. 
His unfavourable reception in England by the clergy led him to 
make reprisals. To Joseph Trapp's attack on the Methodists he 
published in 1739 A Preservathe against UnseUUd Nations, in 
which the clergy of the Church of England were denounced with 
some bitterness; he also published shortly afterwards The 
Spirit and Doctrine and Lives of our Modem Clergy , and a reply 
to a pastoral letter of the bishop of London in which he had been 
attacked. In the same year appeared Sermons on Various 
Subjects (a vols.), the Church Companion, or Sermons on Scleral 
Subjects, and a recommendatory epistle to the Life of Thomas 
Hatyburton. He again embarked for America in August 1730, 
and remained there two years, preaching in all the principal 
towns. He left his incumbency of Savannah to a lay delegate 
and the commissary's court at Charleston suspended him fot 
ceremonial irregularities. While there he published Three 
Letters from Mr WhitefieU, in which he referred to the " mystery 
of iniquity " in Tfllotson, and asserted that that divine knew no 
more of Christ than Mahomet did. 

During his absence from England Whitefield found that a 
divergence of doctrine from Calvinism bad been introduced by 
Wesley; and notwithstanding Wesley's exhortations to brotherly 
kindness and forbearance he withdrew from the Westeyan 
connexion. Thereupon his friends built for him near Wesley's 
church a wooden structure, which was named the Moorfields 
Tabernacle. A reconciliation between the two great evangelists 
was soon effected, but each thenceforth went his own way. In 
1741, on the invitation of Ralph and Ebenezer Erskfne, he paid 
a visit to Scotland, commencing his labours in the Sece ss ion 
meeting-house, Dunfermline. But, as he refused to limit his 
ministrations to one sect, the Seceders and he parted company, 
and without their countenance he made a tour through the prin- 
cipal towns of Scotland, the authorities of which In most instances 
presented him with the freedom of the burgh, in token of thefr 
estimate of the benefits to the community resulting from hit 
preaching. From Scotland he went to Wales, where on the 
14th of November he married a widow named James. The 
marriage was not a happy one. On his return to London in r 744 
he preached to the crowds in Moorfields during the Whitsun 
holidays with such effect as to attract nearly all the people 
from the shows. After a second visit to Scotland, June- 
October 1 74 a (where at Cambuslang in particular he wielded a 
great spiritual Influence), and a tour through England and Wales, 
1742-1744, he embarked in August 1744 for America, where he 
remained till June 1748. On returning to London he found his 
congregation at the Tabernacle dispersed; and his circumstances 
were so depressed that he was obliged to sell his hous-hoM 
furniture to pay bis orphan-house debts. Relief soon came 
through his acquaintance with Selina, countess of Huntingdon 
(q.v.), who appointed bim one of her chaplains. 



604. 



WHITEFISH— WHITEHEAD 



The remainder of Whitefield's life was spent chiefly in evangel* 
izing tours in Great Britain, Ireland and America. It has been 
stated that " in the compass of a single week, and that for years, 
he spoke in general forty hours, and in very many sixty, and 
that to thousands." In 1743 the synods of Glasgow, Perth and 
■Lothian passed vain resolutions intended to exclude him from 
churches; in 17 S3 he compiled his hymn-book, and in 1756 opened 
the chapel which still bears his name in Tottenham Court Road. 
On his return from America to England for the last time the 
change in his appearance forcibly impressed Wesley, who wrote 
in his Journal: " He seemed to be an old man, being fairly worn 
out in his Master's service, though he had hardly seen fifty years." 
When health was failing him he placed himself on what he 
called " short allowance," preaching only once every week-day 
and thrice on Sunday. In 1769 he returned to America for the 
seventh and last time, and arranged for the conversion of bis 
orphanage into Bethesda College, which was burned down in 
1773. He was now affected by a severe asthmatic complaint; 
but to those who advised him to take some rest, he answered, 
" I had rather loear out than rust out." He died on the 30th of 
September 1770 at Newburyport, Massachusetts, where he had 
arrived on the previous evening with the intention of preaching 
next day. In accordance with his own desire he was buried 
before the pulpit in the Presbyterian church of the town where 
be died. 

Whitefield's printed works convey a totally inadequate idea of hb 
oratorical powers, and arc all in fact below mediocrity. They ap- 
peared in a collected form in 1771-1773 in seven volumes, the last 
containing Memoirs of his Life, by Dr John Gillies. His Letters 
(1734-1770) were comprised in vols, i., ii. and Hi. of his Works and 
were also published separately. His Select Works, with a memoir by 

t Smith, appeared in 1850. See Lives by Robert Philip (1837), 
.Tyerman (2 vols., 1876-1877),!. P.Clcdstone (1871, new cd. 1900), 
and W. H. Lccky's History of England, vol. ii. 

WH1TBFISH, a collective name applied in different countries 
to very different kinds of freshwater fishes. The numerous 
European species of the Cyprinoid genus Leuciscus are frequently 
comprised under the name of " Whitefisb," but the term is 
employed here for the various species of the Salmonoid genus 
Cor cionus. The Coregouus group arc somewhat herring-shaped, 
silvery salmonids with small, toothless or feebly toothed mouth, 
and rather large scales. They arc distributed over Europe, Asia 
and North America, some species living in the sea, but most 
inhabiting clear lakes. The highly esteemed " lavaret " of Savoy, 
the " felchen," " kilch," " gangfisch," " palec," " gravenche," 
" fera " or Switzerland and southern Germany, the " sik " of 
Sweden, belong to this genus, which is represented in British 
and Irish waters by the houting (C. oxyrhynchus), occasionally 
found in the North Sea, the gwyniad or pawan (C. dupcoides) 
of Loch Lomond, Haweswater, UUswater and Bala, the vendace 
(C. vandesius) of Lochmaben, and its newly described ally 
(C. gracilior) from Derwentwater and Basscnthwaite lakes in 
Cumberland. About eight species arc distinguished from the 
northern parts of North America. The Corcgonus are mostly 
of small sire, few of them attaining a length of 18 in. Secondary 
nuptial sexual characters are by no means so well marked as in 
Salmo, but pearl-like excrescences may appear on the scales 
during the breeding season, and are more prominent in males 
than in females. 

WHITEHALL, a village of Washington county, New York, 
U.S.A., in a township of the same name on the Poultney river 
and the Champlain Canal, at the head of Lake Cbamplain, 
and 78 m. by rail N. by E. of Albany. Pop. (1800) 4434; (1000) 
4377. of whom 347 were foreign-born; (1905) 4148; (1910) 49*7. 
Whitehall is served by the Delaware & Hudson railway, 
and is the N. terminus of the new barge-canal system of New 
York slate. It is situated in a narrow valley between two hills 
called West Mountain and Skene's Mountain, and Wood Creek 
flows through the village and empties into the lake with a fall, 
from which valuable water-power is derived; there are various 
manufactures, and the village owns and operates the water works. 
In 1 759, to strengthen the British hold on Canada, a large tract 
of land at the S. end of Lake Champlain was granted to Colonel 



Philip Skene (1735-1810), who fought at Ticonderoga in 1758 
and in 1759, and who established here in 1761 a settlement of 
about thirty families which he called Skenesborough and which 
was patented in 1765. Skene was a Loyalist, and in May 1773 
Skenesborough was seized by a party of American volunteers. 
In Burgoyne's expedition (1777) Skene and his son, Andrew 
Philip Skene (1 753-1826), served as guides, and Skenesborough 
was recovered by the British after most of it had been burned by 
the Americans. At the close of the war Skene's estate was 
confiscated and in 1786 the place was named Whitehall. In the 
War of 18x2 Whitehall was fortified and was a base of supplies 
for American operations against Canada, It was incorporated ■ 
as a village in 1806. 

WHITEHAVEN, a municipal and parliamentary borough, 
seaport and market town of Cumberland, England, 41 m. 
S.W. of Carlisle. Pop. (1001) 19,324. It lies mainly in a valley 
opening upon the Irish Sea, with high ground to north and south, 
and is served by the London & North- Western, the Cockermouth, 
Keswick & Penrith and the Furness railways. The harbour 
is protected by two main piers, of which the western is a fine 
structure by Sir John Rennie, and divided into four parts by 
others; it has a wet dock and extensive quayage. Regular 
passenger communications are maintained with the Isle of Man. 
The exports are principally coal, pig iron and ore, steel and stone. 
The port was made subordinate to that of Maryport in 1892. 
There are collieries near the town, the workings extending 
beneath the sea; there are also iron mines and works, engineering 
works, shipbuilding yards, breweries, tanneries, atone quarries, 
brick and earthenware works, and other industrial establish- 
ments in anrl near the town. The parliamentary borough 
returns one member. The municipal borough is under a mayor, 
6 aldermen and 18 councillors. Area 18x0 acres. 

Whitehaven (Witofthayen) was an insignificant possession of 
the priory of St Bee which became crown property at the dis- 
solution of the religious houses. It was acquired before 1644 
by relatives of the earl of Lonsdale, who secured the prosperity 
of the town by working the coal-mines. From 1708 the harbour 
was governed by twenty-one trustees, whose power was extended 
and municipalized by frequent legislation, until, in 1885, they 
were incorporated.. In 1894 this government by incorporated 
trustees gave place to that of a municipal corporation created by 
charter in that year. The harbour was entrusted to fifteen 
commissioners. Since the Reform Act of 1832 Whitehaven has 
returned one representative to parliament. A weekly market 
and yearly fairs were granted to Sir John Lowther in 1660; two 
fairs were held in 1888; and the market days are now Tuesday, 
Thursday and Saturday. Whitehaven coal was sent chiefly to 
Ireland in the x8th century. In the first half of the 19th century 
other exports were lime, freestone, and grain; West Indian, 
American and Baltic produce, Irish, flat and Welsh pia> iron 
were imported, and shipbuilding was a growing industry. Paul 
Jones, the notorious buccaneer, served his apprenticeship at the 
port, which in 1778 he successfully raided, burning three vessels. 

WHITEHEAD, WILLIAM (1715-1785), English poet-laureate, 
son of a baker, was born at Cambridge, and baptized on the 
1 2th of February 1715. His father had extravagant tastes, 
and spent large Sums in ornamenting a piece of land near Grant- 
Chester, afterwards known as " Whitehead's Folly." William 
was his second son, and through the patronage of Henry Bromley, 
afterwards Lord Mont fort, was admitted to Winchester College. 
In 1735 he entered Clare Hall, Cambridge, as a sizar, and became 
a fellow in 1 742. At Cambridge Whitehead published an epistle 
"On the Danger of writing Verse" 1 and some other poems, 
notably an heroic epistle, Ann BoUyn to Henry ike Eighth (1743), 
and a didactic Essay an Ridicule (1743)- In *745 he became 
tutor to Viscount Vtlliers, son of the earl of Jersey, and took up 
his residence in London. He produced two tragedies: The 
Roman Father (Drury Lane, 24th of February 1750), and Crevsa, 
Queen of Athens (Drury Lane, 20th of April 1754). The plots 
are based respectively on the Horace of Corneille, and the Ion 
of Euripides. In June 1754 he went abroad with Lord Villiers, 

1 Printed in A Collection of Poms by several Hands (vol. ii., 1748). 



white horse; vale of—whitelsy 



605 



nd bit companion Viscount Nanehem, son of Carl Harcourt, 
only returning to England in the autumn of 1756. In 1757 
he was appointed poet-laureate in succession to Clbber, and 
proceeded to write annual effusions in the royal honour. Thai 
he wa* not altogether happy in his position, which was dis- 
credited by the fierce attacks made on his predecessor, Collejr 
Gbber, appears from " A Pathetic Apology for all Laureates, 
past, present and to come." Charles Churchill attacked him in 
176*, in the third book of The Ghost t as the heir of Dullness and 
Method. In the same year Whitehead produced his most 
successful work in the comedy of the School for Lovers, produced 
at Drury Lane on the 10th of February. This success encouraged 
Davkl Garrick to make him his reader of plays. Whitehead's 
farce. The Trip to Scotland, was performed on the 6th of January 
177a He collected his Plays and Poems in 1774. He had for 
some time, after his return from the Continent, resided in the 
h ouse s of his patrons, but from 1769'he lived In London, where 
he died on the 14th of April 1785. Beside the works already 
mentioned, Whitehead wrote a burlesque poem, The Sweepers; 
a number of verse amies, of Which " Variety " and M The Goat's 
Beard"' are good examples, and much occasional and official 



See memoirs by his friend William Mason, ptefiaed to a eomplete 
edition of his poems (York, 1788). His plays are printed in Bell's 
British ThtQtr* (vols. A. 7, 20) and other collections, and his poems 
appear in Chalmers's Works of the English Poets (vol. 17) and simitar 
compilation*. 

WHRI HORSE, VALE OP, the name of the valley of the 
Ock, a stream which joins the Thames from the west at Abingdon 
fat Berkshire, England. The vale is sat and well wooded, its 
tows and foliage contrasting richly with the bald 
i of the White Horse Hills, which flank it on the south. 
On the north a lower ridge separates ft fromtheupper Thames 
valley; but local usage sometimes extends the vale to cover all 
the ground be t we en the Cptteswolds (on the north) and the 
White Horse H3b. According to the geographical definition, 
however, the vale is from s to 5 m. wide, and the distance by 
road from Abingdon to Shrlvenhani at its head is 18 m. Wantage 
is the only town in the heart of the vale, lying in a sheltered 
hollow at the foot of the hills, along which, moreover, villages are 
more numerous than elsewhere in the vale. Towards the west, 
above Uffington, the hiOs reach a culminating point of 856 ft. 
in White Horse Hill. In its northern flank, just below the summit, 
a gigantic figure of a horse is cut, the turf being removed to show 
the white chalky soil beneath. This figure gives name to the hill, 
the range and the vale. It is 374 ft. long and of the rudest 
outline, the neck, body and tail varying little in width. Its 
origin is unknown. Tradition asserted it to be the monument of 
a victory over the Danes by King Alfred, who was bom at 
Wantage; but the site of the battle, that of Ashdown (871), 
has been variously located. Moreover, the figure, with others of 
a similar character elsewhere in England, is considered to be 
of a far higher antiquity, dating even from before the Roman 
occupation. Many ancient remains occur in the vicinity of the 
Horse. On the summit of the hill there b an extensive and well- 
preserved circular camp, apparently used by the Romans, but 
of earner origin. It is named Uffington Castle from the village 
in the vale below. Within a short distance are Hardwell Castle, 
a square work, and, on the southern slope of the hujs near Ash- 
down Park, a small camp traditionally called Alfred's. A smooth, 
steep gully on the north flank of White Horse HOI is called the 
Manger, and to the west of it rises a bald mound named Dragon's 
Hill, the traditional scene of St George's victory over the dragon, 
the blood of which made the ground bare of grass for ever. But 
the name, properly Pendragon, is a Celtic form signifiymg " chief 
of kings," and may point to an early place of burial. Tb the west 
of White Horse Hill lies a cromlech called Wayland Smith's Cave, 
said to be the home of a smith who was never seen, but shod the 
horses of travellers if they were left at the place with payment. 
The legend is elaborated, and the smith appears as a character, 
in Sir Walter Scott's novel KenUworth. The White Horse 
itself has been carefully cleared of vegetation from time to time, 
and the process, known as the " Scouring of the White Horse," 



was formerly made the occasion of a festival. Sportsof all kinds 
were held, and keen rivalry was maintained, not only between 
the inhabitants of the local villages, but between local champions 
and those from distant parts of England. The first of such 
festivals known took place in 175s, and they died out only 
subsequently to 1857. A grassy track represents the ancient 
road or Ridge Way along the crest of the huls continuing Icknleld 
Street, from the Chiltern Huls to the north-east, across the 
Thames; and other earthworks in addition to those near the 
White Horse overlook the vale, such as Letcombe Castle above 
Wantage. At the foot of the bills not far east of the Horse is 
preserved the so-called Blowing Stone, a mass of sandstone 
pierced whh holes in such a way that when blown like a trumpet 
a loud note is produced. It is believed that m the earliest times 
the stone served the purpose of a bugle. Several of the village 
churches in the vale are of interest, notably the fine Early 
English cruciform building at Uffington. The length of the vale 
Ei traversed by the main line of the Great Western railway, 
between Didcot and Swindon. 

See Thomas Hughes, The Scouring of me Whim Morse (1859). 

WH1TKIMG, RICHARD (1840- ), English author and 
journalist, was born in London on the 97th of July 1840, the son 
of a dvil servant. He was a pupil of Benjamin Wyon, medalhst 
and seal-engraver, and made his Journalistic dlbut by a series 
of papers in the Evening Star in 1866, printed separately in the 
next year as Mr Sprouts, His Opinions. He became leader* 
writer and correspondent on the Morning Star, and was subse- 
quently on the staff of the- Manchester Guardian, the New York 
World, and for many years the Daily Hews, resigning from the 
last-named paper m 1809. His novel The Democracy (3 vols., 
1876) was published under the pseudonym of Whyte Thome. 
His remarkable story The Island (1888) attracted little attention 
until, years afterwards, its successor, No. 5 John Street (x8oo), 
made him famous; the earlier novel was then republished. 
Later works were The Yellow Van (1903), Km>g in the New (1006), 
All Moonshine (1907). 

WHTTBLBY, W1LUAM ^831-1907), English "Universal 
Provider," was born at Agbrfgg, near Wakefield, Yorkshire, on 
the 2otb of September 183 1 , the son of a corn-factor. At the age 
of sixteen he was apprenticed to a firm of drapers at Wakefield; 
In 1851 he made his first visit to London to see the Great Exhibi- 
tion, and was so impressed whh the size and activity of the 
metropolis that be determined to settle there as soon as his 
apprenticeship was over. A year latex he obtained a subordinate 
position in a draper's establishment in the city, and after studying 
the drapery trade in this and other London establishments for 
ten years, in 1863 himself opened a small shop for the sale of 
fancy drapery in Westbourne Grove, Bayswater. 'His capital 
amounted to about £700, which he had saved from his salaries 
and commissions, and he at first employed two young girls and 
an errand boy. Friends in the trade had assured him that 
Westbourne Grove was one of the two worst streets In London 
for his business, but Whiteley had noted the number and quality 
of the people who passed the premises every afternoon, and 
relied on his own judgment. Events justified his confidence, and 
within a year he was employing fifteen hands. He made a con- 
sistent practice of marking all goods in plain figures and of 
"dressing" his shop-window attractively, both unusual features 
in the retail trading of the time, and to this, coupled with the 
fact that he was satisfied with small profits, he largely attributed 
a success in which his own genius for organization and energy 
played a conspicuous part. In 1866. Whiteley added general 
drapery to his other business, opening by degrees shop after 
shop and department after department, till he was finally 
enabled to call himself the " Universal Provider,'* and boast 
that there was nothing which his stores could not 'supply. 
"Whiteley's was, in fact, the first great instance of a large 
general goods store in London, held under one -man's controL 
In 1899 the business, of which the profits then averaged over 
£100,000 per annum, was turned into a limited liability company, 
Whiteley retaining the bulk of the shares. On the 23rd of 
January 1907 he was shot dead, alter an interview in his private 



WHITELOCKE, SIR J.— WHITELOCKE, B 



6©$ 

office, by Horace George Rayner, who claimed (but, as was proved, 
wrongly) to be bis illegitimate son and who bad been refused 
pecuniary assistance. Rayner was found guilty of murder, and 
sentenced to be hanged; but the home secretary (Mr Herbert 
Gladstone), in response to an agitation for his reprieve,commuted 
the sentence to penal servitude for life. 

WHITELOCKE. SIR JAMES (1570-1632), English judge, son 
of Richard Whitelocke, a London merchant, was born on the 28th 
of November 157a Educated at Merchant Taylors' School, 
London, and at St John's College, Oxford, he became a fellow 
of his college and a barrister. He was then engaged in managing 
the estates belonging to St John's College, Eton College and 
Westminster College, before he became recorder of Woodstock 
and member of parliament for the borough in x6io. In 1620 
Whitelocke was made chief justice of the court of session of the 
county palatine of Chester, and was knighted; in 1624 he was 
appointed justice of the court of king's bench. He died at 
Fawley Court, near Reading, an estate which he had bought in 
1616, on the 22nd of June 1632. His wife, Elizabeth, was a 
daughter of Edward Bulstrode of Hedgerley Bulstrode, Bucking- 
hamshire, and his son was Bulstrode Whitelocke. 

Sir James was greatly interested in antiquarian -studies, and was 
the author of several papers which are printed in T. Hearne's Codec- 
turn of Discourses (i77>); his journal, or LibcY famdiau, was edited 
by John Bruce and published by the Camden Society in 1858. 

Whitelocke's elder brother, Edmund Whitelocke (1565-1608), 
was a soldier in France and later a courtier in England. He was 
imprisoned because he was suspected of being concerned in the 
Gunpowder Plot, and although he was most probably innocent, 
he remained for some time in the Tower of London. 

The soldier John Whitelocke (1757-1833) was doubtless a 
descendant of Sir James Whitelocke. He entered the army in 
1778 and served in Jamaica and in San Domingo. In 1805 he 
was made a lieutenant-general and inspector-general of recruit- 
ing, and in 1807 he was appointed to command an expedition 
sent to recover Buenos Aires from the Spaniards. An attack on 
the city was stubbornly resisted, and then Whitelocke concluded 
an arrangement with the opposing general by which he aban- 
doned the undertaking. This proceeding was regarded with 
great disfavour both by the soldiers and others in South America 
and in England, and its author was brought before a court- 
martial in 1808. On all the charges, except one he was found 
guilty and he was dismissed from the service. He lived in retire- 
ment until his death on the 23rd of October 1833. 

WHITELOCKE, BULSTRODE (1605-1675), English lawyer 
and parliamentarian, eldest son of Sir James Whitelocke, was 
baptized on the 19th of August 1605, and educated at Merchant 
Taylors' School and at St John's College, Oxford, where he 
matriculated on the 8th of December 1620. He left Oxford, 
without a degree, for the Middle Temple, and was called to the 
bar in 1626 and chosen treasurer in 1628. He was fond of field 
sports and of music, and in 1633 he had charge of the music in 
the great masque performed by the inns of court before the king 
and queen. Meanwhile he had been elected for Stafford in the 
parliament of 1626 and had been appointed recorder of Abingdon 
and Henley. In 1640 he was chosen member for Great Mario w 
in the Long Parliament. He took a prominent part in the 
proceedings against Strafford, was chairman of the committee 
of management, and had charge of articles XIX.-XXIV. of the 
impeachment. He drew up the bill for making parliaments 
indissoluble except by their own consent, and supported the 
Grand Remonstrance and the action taken in the Commons 
against the illegal canons; on the militia question, however, he 
advocated a joint control by king and parliament. . On the out- 
break of the Great Rebellion he took the side of the parliament, 
using his influence in the country as deputy-lieutenant to prevent 
the king's raising troops in Buckinghamshire and Oxfordshire. 
He was sent to the king at Oxford both in 1643 and 1644 to 
negotiate terms, and the secret communications with Charles 
on the latter occasion were the foundation of a charge of treason 
brought against Whitelocke and Denzil Holies (q.v.) later. 
He was again, one of the commissioners at Uxbridge in 2645.. 



Nevertheless he opposed the policy of Holies and the peace 
party and the proposed disbanding of the army in 1647, and 
though one of the lay members of the assembly of divines, 
repudiated the claims of divine authority put forward by the 
Presbyterians for their church, and approved of religious toler- 
ance. He thus gravitated more towards Cromwell and the 
army party, but he took no part either in the disputes between 
the army and the parliament or in the trial of the king. On the 
establishment of the Commonwealth, though out of sympathy 
with the government, he was nominated to the council of state 
and a commissioner of the new Great SeaL He urged Cromwell 
after the battle of Worcester and again in 165a to recall the royal 
family, while in 1653 he disapproved of the expulsion of the Long 
Parliament and was especially marked out for at tack by Cromwell 
in his speech on that occasion. Later in the autumn, and perhaps 
in consequence, Whitelocke was despatched on a mission to 
Christina, queen of Sweden, to conclude a treaty of alliance and 
assure the freedom of the Sound. On his return he resumed his 
office as commissioner of the Great Seal, was appointed a com- 
missioner of the treasury with a salary of £1000, and was returned 
to the parliament of 1654 for each of the four constituencies of 
Bedford, Exeter, Oxford and Buckinghamshire, electing to sit 
for the latter constituency. 

Whitelocke was a learned and a sound lawyer. He had hitherto 
shown himself not unfavourable to reform, having supported 
the bill introducing the use of English into legal proceedings, 
having drafted a new treason law, and set.on foot some altera- 
tions in chancery procedure. A tract advocating the registering 
of title-deeds is attributed to him. But he opposed the revolu- 
tionary innovations dictated by ignorant and popular prejudices. 
He defeated the strange bill which sought to exclude lawyers 
from parliament; and to the sweeping and ill-considered changes 
in the court of chancery proposed by Cromwell and the council 
he offered an unbending and honourable resistance, being dis- 
missed in consequence, together with his colleague Widdrington, 
on the 6th of June 1655 from his commisswnership of the Great 
Seal (see Lknthaxx, William). He still, however, remained on 
good terms with Cromwell, by whom he was respected; he took 
part in public business, acted as Cromwell's adviser on foreign 
affairs, negotiated the treaty with Sweden of 1656, and, elected 
again to the parliament of the same year as member for Bucking- 
hamshire, was chairman of the committee which conferred with 
Cromwell on the subject of the Petition and Advice and urged 
the protector to assume the title of king. In December 1657 he 
became a member of the new House of Lords. On Richard 
Cromwell's accession he was reappointed a commissioner of the 
Great Seal, and had considerable influence during the former'* 
short tenure of power. He returned to his place in the Long 
Parliament on its recall, was appointed a member of the council 
of state on the 14th of May 1659, and became president in 
August; and subsequently, on the fresh expulsion of the Long 
Parliament, he was included in the committee of safety which, 
superseded the council. He again received the Great Seal into 
his keeping on the 1st of November. During the period which 
immediately preceded the Restoration he endeavoured to oppose 
Monk's schemes, and desired Fleetwood to forestall him and make 
terms with Charles, but in vain. 

On the failure of his plans he retired to the country and awaited 
events. Whitelocke's career, however, had been marked by 
moderation and good sense throughout. The necessity of 
carrying on the government of the country somehow or other 
had been the chief motive of bis adherence to Cromwell rather, 
than any sympathy for a republic or a military dictatorship, 
and his advice to Cromwell to accept the title of king wasdoubu 
less tendered with the object of giving the administration greater 
stability and of protecting its adherents under the Statute of 
Henry VlL Nor had he shown himself unduly ambitious or self- 
seeking in the pursuit of office, and he had proved himself ready 
to sacrifice high place to the claims of professional honour and 
duty. These considerations were not without weight with his 
contemporaries at the Restoration. Accordingly Whitelocke 
was not excepted from the Act of Indemnity, and after the 



WHITE MOUNTAINS— WHITESIDE 



607 



payment of various sens to tke king end others he was allowed to 
retain the balk ol Ms property. He lived henceforth in seclusion 
at ChfltoB In WUUhiie, dying on the 28th of July 1675. 

WhiteJocke married (1) Ret*r*-a h daughter of Tnom;ii Brnnet, 
tx) Frances, daughter of Lord U j.l.n/hhv v \ J^rham. and 13) Mary 
Carleton, widow of Rowland Wit* >n, and left children by eaih of 
his wives. He was the author q[ Mtmeriali of tht Entlnk affairs 
from the beginning of the reign 0/ t ttarto /. . . . t published 1682 
and reprinted, a work which ha* obtained greater authority tkan it 
deserves, being largely a compil.if>. m from various Murrcs, com pu t e d 
after the events and aboundin ■ m-.t . M. . uurk . . 1 ^-.ikm vjiue, 
his .4 mob, still remains in M: ^- «■'* 

collections {HisL Brit. Comm 



MSS. Brit. Mus. 997 .add. 1 — i. 499^ 4*^;; L- -*l \j the 

Swedish Embassy . . . was published 1772 and re-edited by Henry 
, 4991 aad 4995 end HisL MSS. 



Reeve in 1885 (add. MSS. 

Comm. III. Rep. 190, 217); Holes on tke Kinds' Writ for <koosinj 

Members of Parliament . . . were published 1760 (see also add. MSS. 



4993) ; Memorials of EngKsk Affairs from the apposed expedition of 
Brute to this Island to Ike end of tke Reign of James I., were published 



1709; Essays Ecclesiastical andCnril (1706) ; Ouentk not ike 'Spirit 
(1711); some theological treatises remain in MS., and several others 
are attributed to him. 

See the article by C. H. Firth in the Diet NaL Biog. with authorities 
there quoted; Memoirs of B. WhiUhcke by R. H. Whitelocke 
(i860): H. Reeve's edition of the Swedisk Embassy, Foss's Judges 
of England; Eng. HisL Res. xvi. 737 ; Wood's Atk. Qxon. iii. 1042. 

WHITE MOUNTAINS, the portion of the Appalachian Moun* 
tain system which traverses New Hampshire, U.S.A., between 
tke Androscoggin and Upper Ammonoosuc rivers on the north 
and the lake country on the south. They cover an ares of about 
1300 sq. m., are composed of somewhat homogeneous granite 
rocks, and represen t the remnants of long-continued erosion of a 
regno formerly greatly elevated. From a plateau which has been 
cot deep by rivers and streams they rise to rounded summits often 
noble in outline sod of .greater elevation than elsewhere in the 
Aprwlarhian system, except in North Carolina, and culminate 
in Mount Washington, 6393 ft above the sea, Thirteen other 
summits have an elevation exceeding 500© ft. The scenery is so 
beautiful and varied that the region has long been popular as a 
summer resort. It is traversed by railways, one of which ascends 
Mount Washington, and contains numerous villages sad fine 



See the article NBW Hamfshiss; the Guidebook (Psrt 1., Boston. 
1007) published by tke Appalachian Mountain Club; and Appa- 
lochia UbstL, 1876 acq.), a periodical published by the same club. 

WHITS PLAINS, a village and the county-seat of Westchester 
county, New York, U.S.A., about it m. N. of New York City 
am the Bronx river, about midway between the Hudson river and 
Long Island Sound. Pop. (1890) 4508; (1000) 7809, of whom 
1679 were foreign-born and 209 were negroes; (1910 census) 
26,4*5. The village is served by the New York Central ft 
Hudson River railway, and is connected by electric fines with 
New York City, and with Yonkers, Mount Vernon, New RocheUe, 
Taxrytown and Mamaroneck. White Plains is a beautiful 
residential suburb stretching over a considerable area of roffing 
tree-dad hills and picturesque stretches of meadow lands fat the 
vafley of the Bronx and Mamaroneck rivers. Near the village are 
Silver, Kensico and Rye lakes. Among the public buildings and 
the institutions here are a fine Public Library building, a town 
hall, an armoury, the Westchester county court bouse and 
county Jail, several private schools, the White Plains Hospital, 
St Agnes Hospital, the Presbyterian Convalescents' Sanitarium, 
the New York Orthopaedic Hospital, Muldoon's Hygienic In- 
sUtute and Bloomingdale Hospital for the Insane (1821 >. In 
While Plains are the grounds of the Century Country CTub, the 
KnoHwood Gotf and Country Club and the Westchester County 
Fair Association. There are some prosperous farms and market 
gardens. 

When the Dutch first settled Manhattan, the central portion 
of what is now Westchester county was the granary for part of 
the Mahkan tribe; it was called Quarropas by the Indians. To 
the early traders here the region was known as "the White 
Plains " from the groves of white balsam which covered it. The 
first organized settlement (November 1683) was by a party of 
Connectic u t Puritans, who had settled at Rye in what was them 



disputed territory between New York and Connecticut} they 
moved westward in a body and took up lands the title to which 
they bought from the Indians. The heirs of John Rkhbell claimed 
that White Plains was comprised in a tract +*tmt>AU*Q N. fnom 
the Mamaroneck river granted to him by the Dutch and con- 
firmed by the English, and the controversy between these heirs 
and the settlers from Rye was only settled in 1722 by the grant 
to Joseph Budd and sixteen other settlers of a royal patent 
under which the freeholders chose their local officers and managed 
their own affairs. In 1759 White Plains succeeded Westchester 
as the county-seat of Westchester county. In the early summer 
of 1776 the Third Provincial Congress, having adjourned from 
New York City, met here in the old court house on South Broad- 
way—the site is now occupied by an armoury and is marked by 
a monument (1910). From the steps of this building the Declara- 
tion of Independence, brought from Philadelphia, was officially 
read for the first time in New York on the nth of July 2776. 
Here Congress adopted formally the name "Convention of 
Representatives of the State of New York," and from this dates 
the existence of New York as a state. After the British under 
Lord Howe had effected a landing at Throg's Neck on Long 
Island Sound, Washington withdrew (October) all his forces from 
the North end of Manhattan Island except the garrison of Fort 
Washington, and (21st October) concentrated his army near 
While Plains. His right rested on the Bronx river here, and 
there was a small force in rude earthworks on ChaUerton's Hill 
on the W. bank. This point Howe attacked (October 28th), 
his troops advancing in two columns 4000 strong, the British 
under General Alexander Leslie, the Hessians under Colonel 
Johann Gottlieb Rail General Alexander McDougaU, in com- 
mand of the American right wing, reinforced the troops on the 
hill, making the number of the defenders about 1600. The 
attack was stubbornly resisted for some time, after which the 
Americans retreated in good order across the river. The British 
had sustained such a severe loss (about 250) that no attempt 
was made to follow the Americans, who carried their dead and 
wounded, some 125 m number, away with them. Washington's 
forces retired three days later to North Castle township, where 
they occupied a stronger position. The old Miller House, which 
still stands in North White Plains, was occupied at intervals 
by Washington as his headquarters before the battle and again 
in the summer of 1778. In 1779 s Continental force under Aaron 
Burr was stationed hem for some months, and in 1781 (J*ly) 
White Plains was occupied by parts of Laucun's and Rocham- 
beau's French force. 'In 1866 White Plains received a village 
charter, which it still retains in spite of its large population. 

See F. Shooaardand W. W. Spoooer. History of Weskkester County 
(N-Y., 1900), aad J. T. Scharf, History of WesUkester County (2 vols, 
ibkL, 1886). 

WHITESIDE, JAMES (1804^876), Irish judge, son of William 
Whiteside, a clergyman of the Church of Ireland, was born on 
the 1 sth of August 1804, and was educated at Trinity College, 
Dublin, being called to the Irish bar in 1830. He very rapidly 
acquired a large practice, and after laking silk in 1842 he gained 
a reputation for forensic oratory surpassing that of all his con- 
te m porarie s , and rivalling that of his most famous predecessors 
of the i8ih century. He defended Daniel O'ConneU in the state 
trial of 1843, end William Smith O'Brien in 1848; and his 
greatest triumph was m the Yelverton case in 2861. He was 
elected member for EnniskiDen in 1851, and in 1859, became 
member for Dublin University. In parliament he was no less 
successful as a speaker than at the bar, and in 1852 was appointed 
soh'dtor-general for Ireland in the first administration of the 
earl of Derby, becoming attorney-general in 1858, and again in 
1866. In the same year be was appointed chief justice of the 
Queen's Bench; and be died on the 25th of November 
1876. Whiteside was a man of handsome presence, attractive 
personality and cultivated tastes. In 1848, after a vhit to Italy, 
he published Italy in tke Nineteenth Century; and in 1870 he 
collected and republished some papers contributed many years 
before to periodicals, under the title Early Sketches of Eminent 
fersom. In 1833 Whiteside ntsrried Rosette, daughter of 



poS 



WHITETHROAT— WHITGIFT 



WHliam Napier, and sister of Sir Joseph Napier (1804-1882)-, 
lord chancellor of Ireland. 

See J. R. OTlanagan, The Irish Bar (London, 1879). 

WHITBTHROAT, a name commonly given to two species 0! 
little birds, one of which, the MolacUia sylvia of Linnaeus and 
Sylvia rufa or S. cincrea of recent authors, is regarded as the type, 
not only of the genus Syhia f but of the sub-family of thrushes 
known as Syhiinae (cf. Warbler). Very widely spread over 
Great Britain, in some places tolerably common, and by its 
gesticulations and song rather conspicuous, it is one of those birds 
which have gained a familiar nickname, and "peggy whitethroat " 
is the anthropomorphic appellation of schoolboys and milkmaids, 
though it shares "nettle-creeper" and other homely names 
with perhaps more than one congener, while to the writers and 
readers of books it is by way of distinction the greater white- 
throat. The lesser whitethroat, Sylvia currvca, is both in habits 
and plumage a much less sightly bird: the predominant reddish 
brown of the upper surface, and especially the rufous edging of 
the wing4eathers, that are so distinctive of its larger congener, 
are wanting, and the whole plumage above is of a smoky-grey, 
while the bird in its movements is never obtrusive, and it rather 
shuns than courts observation. The nests of each of these 
species are very pretty works of art, firmly built of bents or other 
plant-stalks, and usually lined with horsehair; but the sides 
and bottom are often so finely woven as to be like open basket- 
Work, and the eggs, splashed, spotted or streaked with ohve- 
brown, are frequently visible from beneath through the interstices 
of the fabric. This style of nest-building seems to be common 
to all the species of the genus Sylvia, as now restricted, and in 
many districts has obtained for the builders the name of ** hay- 
jack/' quite without reference to the kind of bird which puts 
the nests together, and thus is also applied to the blackcap, 
S. atricopiUo, and the garden-warbler— this last being merely a 
book-name— 5. salicaria (5. hortensis of some writers). The 
former of these deserves mention as one of the sweetest songsters 
of Great Britain. The name blackcap is applicable only to the 
cock bird, who further differs from his brown-capped mate by 
the purity of his ashy-grey upper plumage; but, notwithstanding 
the marked sexual difference in appearance, he takes on himself 
a considerable share of the duties of incubation. All these four 
birds, as a rule, leave Great Britain at the end of summer to 
winter in the south. Two other species, one certainly belonging 
to the same genus, S. orphea, and the other, 5. nisoria, a some- 
what aberrant form, have occurred two or three times in Great 
Britain. The curious Dartford warbler of English writers, 
Sylvia nndata, is on many accounts a very interesting bird, for 
it is one of the few of its family that winter in England — a fact 
the more remarkable when it is known to be migratory in most 
parts of the continent of Europe. Its distribution in England is 
very local, and chiefly confined to the southern counties.'- It is 
8 pretty little dark-coloured bird, which here and there may be 
seen on furze-grown, heaths from Kent to Cornwall. For a 
species with wings so feebly formed it has a wide range, inhabiting 
nearly. all the countries of the Mediterranean seaboard, from 
Palestine to the Strait of Gibraltar, and thence along the west 
coast of Europe to the English Channel; but everywhere else 
ft seems to be very local. s 

f This may be the most convenient place for noticing the small 
group of warblers belonging to the well-marked genus Hypolais, 
which,, though in general appearance and certain habits resembling 
the PhyUoscopi (cf. [willow] W rbn), would seem usually to have little 
to do with those birds, and to be rather allied to the Syhiinae. 
They have a remarkably loud song, and in consequence are highly 
valued on the continent of Europe, where two species at least spend 
the summer* One of them, H. icterinoy has occurred more than once 
in the British Islands, and their absence as regular visitors is to be 
regretted. Among the minor characteristics of this little group is one 
afforded by their ens, which are of a deeper or paler brownish pink, 
spotted with purplish black. Their nests are beautiful structures, 
combining warmth with lightness in a way that cannot be fully 
appreciated by any description. (A. N.) 

WHrTFfBLD, JOHN CLARKE (1770-1836), English organist 
mod composer, was born at Gloucester on the 13th of December 
j*~~ --*■ '"'•"^ted at Oxford under Dr Philip Hayes. la 178© 



he was appointed organist of the parish church at Ludlow} 
Four years later he took the degree of Mus. Bac at Cambridge,' 
and in 1 705 he was chosen organist of Armagh cathedral, whence) 
he removed in the same year to Dublin, with the appointments 
of organist and master of the children at St Patrick's cathedral 
and Christchurch. Driven from Ireland by the rebellion of 1 708,' 
he accepted the post of organist at Trinity and St John's Colleges, 
Cambridge, and about the same time assumed the surname of 
Whitfield, in addition to that of Clarke, by which he had been 
previously known. He took the degree of Mus. Doc. at Cambridge 
in 1799, and in 1810 proceeded to the same grade at Oxford. 
In 1820 he was elected organist and master of the choristers 
at Hereford cathedral; and on the death of Dr Haig he was 
appointed professor of music at Cambridge. Three years after- 
wards he resigned these appointments in consequence of at 
attack of paralysis, ^ He died at Hereford,, on the 22nd of 
February 1836. 

Whitfield's compositions were very numerous. Among the best 
of them are four volumes of anthems, published in 1805. He also 
composed a great number of songs, one of which — " Bird of the 



. " written to some well-known verses by James Hogg, the 
" Ettrick Shepherd " — attained a high degree of popularity. But the 
great work of his life was the publication, in a popular and eminently 
useful form, of the oratorios of Handel, which he was the first to 
present to the public with a complete pianoforte a 



WHITGIFT, JOHN (c. 1530-1604), English archbishop, was the 
eldest son of Henry Whitgift, merchant of Great Grimsby, 
Lincolnshire, where he was born, according to one account in 
i533> hut according to a calculation founded on a statement of 
his own in 1530. At an early age his education was entrusted 
to his uncle, Robert Whitgift, abbot of the neighbouring monas- 
tery of Wellow, by whose advice he was afterwards sent to St 
Anthony's school, London. In 1549 he matriculated at Queens' 
College, Cambridge, and in May 1550 he migrated to Fejnhroke 
Hall, where be had the martyr John Bradford for a tutor. In 
May 1555 he became a fellow of Peterhouse. Having taken 
orders in 1 560, he became in the same year Hi^pHn to Richard 
Cox, bishop of Ely, who collated him to the rectory of Tevenham, 
Cambridgeshire. In 1563 be was appointed Lady Margaret 
professor of divinity at Cambridge, and his lectures gave such 
satisfaction to the authorities that on the 5th of July 1566 they 
considerably augmented his stipend. The following year he was 
appointed regius professor of divinity, and also became master 
first of Pembroke Hall and then of Trinity. He. bad a principal 
share in compiling the statutes of the university, which passed the 
great seal on the 25th of September 1570, and in November 
following he was chosen vice-chancellor. Macaulay's description 
of Whitgift as " a narrow, mean, tyrannical priest, who gained 
power by servility and adulation," is tinged with rhetorical 
exaggeration; but undoubtedly Whitgift 's extreme High Church 
notions led him to treat the Puritans with exceptional intoler- 
ance. In a pulpit controversy with Thomas Cartwright, regard- 
ing the constitutions and customs of the Church cf Fn g h jiyj he 
showed himself Cartwright's inferior in oratorical effectiveness, 
but the balance was redressed by the exercise of arbitrary 
authority. Whitgift, with other heads of the university, deprived 
Cartwright in 1570 of his professorship, and in September 1571 
exercised his prerogative as master of Trinity to deprive him of 
his fellowship. In June of the same year Whitgift was. nominated 
dean of Lincoln. In the following year he published An Answer* 
to a Certain Libel intituled an Admonition to the Parliament, 
which led to further controversy between the two divines. On 
the 24th of March 1577, Whitgift was appointed bishop oi 
Worcester, and during the absence of Sir Henry Sidney in Ireland 
(1577) he acted as vice-president of Wales. In August 1583 
he was appointed archbishop of Canterbury, and thus was 
largely instrumental in giving its special complexion to the church 
of the Reformation. Although he wrote a letter to Queen 
Elizabeth remonstrating against the alienation of church pro- 
perty, Whitgift always retained her special confidence. In his 
policy against the Puritans, and in his vigorous enforcement of 
the subscription test, be thoroughly carried out the queen's 
policy of religious uniformity. . He drew up articles aimed at 



WHITHORN—WHITMAN, M. 



.609 



aooamfbrming ministers, and obtained incfeased power* for 4he 
Court of High Commission. In 1 586 he became * privy councillor. 
His action gave rise to the Marprclate tract*, in which the bishops 
and clergy were bitterly attacked. Through Whitgift's vigilance 
the printers of the tracts were, however, discovered and punished ; 
and in order more effectually to check the publication of such 
Opinions he got a law passed in 1593 making Puritanism an 
offence against the statute law. In the controversy between 
Walter Travers and Richard Hooker he interposed by prohibiting 
the preaching of the former; and he moreover presented Hooker 
with the rectory of Boscombe in Wiltshire, in order to afford him 
more leisure to complete hi& Ecclesiastical Polity, a work which, 
however, cannot be said to represent either Whitgift's theological 
or bis ecclesiastical standp oi nt. In 1595 he, in conjunction with 
the bishop of London and other prelates, drew up the Calvinistic 
instrument known as the Lambeth Articles, which were not 
accepted by the church. Whitgift attended Elizabeth on her 
deathbed, and crowned James t. He was present at the Hampton 
Court Conference in January 1604, and died at Lambeth on the 
*olh of the following February. . He was buried in the church of 
Croydon, and his monument there with his recumbent effigy 
was in great part destroyed in the fire by which the church was 
burnt down in 1867. 
Whitgift is described by his biographer. Sir G. Paule, as of " middle 



stature, strong and well shaped, o( a grave countenance and brawn 
complexion, black hair and eyes, his beard neither long nor thick." 
He was noted for his hospitality, and was somewhat ostentatious in 



his habits, sometimes visiting Canterbury and other towns attended 
by a retinue of 4oo horsemen. He left several unpublished works, 
which are included among the MSS. Angliae. Many of his letters, 
articles, injunctions, &c. are calendared in the published volumes of 
the " State Paper " series of the reign of Elizabeth; His Collected 
Works, edited for the Parker Society by John Ay re (3 vok. t Cambridge, 
1851-1853). include, besides the controversial tracts already alluded 
to. two sermons published during bis lifetime, a selection, from his 
letters to Cecil and others, and some portions of his unpublished MSS. 
A Life of Whitgift by Sir G. Paule appeared in 161 2, and ed. 1640. 
ft was em bodied by John Strypemh is Lt/t and Acts of Wkilgifi (1718}, 
There is also a life in C. Wordsworth's EuUsvxstkol Biography (1810), 
W. F. Hook's Archbishops of Canterbury (1875). and vol. i. of Whit- 
gift's ColkcUdWorhs. SctaSsoC.H.Cooper'sAtkenaeCantabritunses. 

WHITHORM, a royal burgh of Wigtownshire, Scotland. 
Pop. (ioox) 11x8. It is situated near the southern' extremity 
of the peninsula of Machers, jai m. S. of Wigtown by railway. 
The town consists of one long street running north and south, 
in which the town-ball is situated. It is famous for its associa- 
tions with St Ninian or Ringan, the first Christian missionary 
to Scotland. He landed at the Isle of Whithorn, a small pro- 
montory about 3I m. to the S.E. where he built (397) a church 
of stone and lime, which, out of contrast with the dark mud and 
wattle huts of the natives, was called Candida Casa, the White 
House (Anglo-Saxon, Hvnl arn, Whitherne or Whithorn). This 
he dedicated to his master St Martin of Tours. Ninian died 
probably in 43 a and was buried in the church. A hundred years 
later the Magnum Monasterium, or monastery of Rosnat, was 
founded at Whithorn, and became a noted home of learning 
and, in the 8th century, the seat of the bishopric of Galloway. 
It was succeeded in the 12 th century by St Ninian 's Priory, built 
for Premonstratensian monks by Fergus " Ring " of Galloway, 
of which only the chancel (used as the parish church till 1822) 
with a richly decorated late Norman doorway, and fragments 
of the lady chapel, vaults, cellars, buttresses and tombs remain. 
The priory church was the cathedral church, of the see till the 
Reformation, when it fell into gradual decay. In Roman times 
Whithorn belonged to the Novantae, and William Camden, the 
antiquary, identified it with the Leukopibia of Ptolemy. It 
was made a royal burgh by Robert Bruce. 

WHITING, a dty of Lake county, Indiana, U.S.A., on the 
S.W. shore of Lake Michigan, about 10 m. S.E. of Chicago. 
Pop. (1890) 1408; (1000) 3083 (1597 foreign-born); (1910) 6587. 
It is served by the Baltimore & Ohio, the Lake Shore h Michigan 
Southern, the Pennsylvania, the Chicago, Indiana & Southern 
and (for freight only) the Elgin, JoDet k Eastern, the 
Chicago Terminal Transfer, and the Indiana Harbour Belt rail- 
ways; and is connected with Chicago and with the surrounding 



towns by an eketric line. The dty has a Carnegie library and 
a public park. Manual training, from the fourth to the twelfth 
grades, is a feature of the .public school system. Whiting adjoins 
the cities of Hammond and East Chicago, and is practically a 
part of industrial Chicago, from which it is separated only by a 
state line. It is a shipping point; the Standard Oil Company 
has a large refinery here, and among its manufactures are 
asphaltum for street- paving, linoleum and men's garments. 
Whiting was first settled about 1870, was incorporated as a town 
in 1895, and chartered as a city in 1903. 

WHITING {Cadus merltm$us), a fish of the family Cadidae, 
which « abundant on the shores of the German Ocean and all 
round the coasts of the British Islands; it is distinguished from 
the other species of the genus by having .from 33 to 35 rays in 
the first anal fin, and by lacking the barbel on the chin. ' The 
snout is kmg, and the upper jaw longer than the lower. A black 
spot at the root of the pectoral fin is also very characteristic of 
this species, and but rarely absent. The whiting is one of the 
most valuable food fishes of northern Europe, and is caught 
throughout the year by hook and line and by the trawL It 
is in better condition at the beginning of winter than after the 
spawning season, which falls in the months of February and 
March. Its usual size is from 1 to 1 J lb, but H may attain to 
twice that weight. 

WHITLOW, a name applied loosely to any inflammation 
involving the pulp of the finger, attended by swelling and 
throbbing pain. In the simplest form, which is apt to occur in 
sickly children, the inflammation results in a whitish vesicle of 
the skin, containing watery or bloody fluid. In all such cases, 
where the deeper structures are not implicated, no radical local 
treatment is needed, although the illness is an indication for 
constitutional treatment. The inflammation is not usually 
spoken of as whitlow unless it involves the deeper structures 
of the last joint of the finger, in which case it is associated with 
intense pain. As the result of a scratch or prick of the finger 
septic germs enter the skinand give rise toan acute inflammation, 
with throbbing and bursting pain. If the germs do not spread 
from that spot, they set up an acute localized attack of erysipelas 
which may end in a superficial abscess. More often, however, 
they make their way to the periosteum of the last bone of the 
finger, and involve St in a devastating inflammation which may 
end in death (necrosis) of that bone. Sometimes the .germs find 
their way into the tendon-sheath, and, spreading into the palm 
of the hand, cause a deep abscess with, perhaps, sloughing of 
the tendon, and leaving a permanently stiffened finger. In some 
cases amputation of the finger is eventually .called for. Whitlow 
is especially apt to occur in people who are out of health, as in 
them the micro-organisms of the disease meet with less resistance. 
So soon, therefore, as the acute stage of the disease is over, tonic 
treatment, with quinnieand iron, ianeeded. The local treatment 
of whitlow demands a f see incision into the area in which the 
germs are undergoing cultivation, and the sooner that this 
is done the better. It is wrong, to wait for an abscess to be 
formed. A prompt incision may actually prevent the formation 
of abscess, and the easing of the tension of the inflamed tissue by 
the incision gives immediate relief. Perhaps, even in the early 
stage of the disease, a bead or two of pus may find exit, but 
whether there is abscess or not, the depths of the wound 
should be swabbed out with some strong carbolic or mercuric 
lotion in order to destroy the germs. The hand should then 
be placed upon a splint with antiseptic fomentations around 
the finger. It should, moreover, be kept well raised, or worn 
in a sling. (E. O.*) 

WHITMAN, MARCUS (1802-1847)* American missionary 
and pioneer, was bom at Rushvjlle, New York, on the 4th of 
September 180a. He studied medicine at Pittsfield, Massachu- 
setts, and practised in Canada and in Wheeler, Steuben county, 
New York. In 1834 he was accepted by the American Board of 
Commissioners for Foreign Missions for missionary work among 
the American Indians, and was assigned to the Oregon territory, 
then under the joint occupation of Great Britain and the United 
States. Heaetout early in 183,5, but uetumed almost immediately 



612 



WHITSTABLE— WHITSUNDAY 



was first awakened in i&& and he at once devoted himself 
with enthusiasm to this at that time little-explored field of 
philological labour. After a brief course at Yale with Professor 
Edward Elbrtfge Salisbury (1814-1901), then the only trained 
Orientalist in the United States, Whitney went to Germany (1850) 
and studied for three years at Berlin, under Weber, Bopp and 
Lepsius, and at Tflbingen (two summer semesters) under Roth, 
returning to the United States in 1853. In the following year 
he was appointed professor of Sanskrit in Yale, and in i860 also 
of comparative philology. He also gave instruction m French 
and German in the college until 1867, and in the Sheffield 
scientific school until 1886. An urgent call to a professorship at 
Harvard was declined in i860. The importance of his contribu- 
tions to science was early and widely recognised. He was 
elected to membership in numerous learned societies in all parts 
of the world, and received many honorary degrees, the most 
notable testimonial to his fame being his election 00 the 31st of 
May 1 881, as foreign knight of the Prussian order pour Is 
nitrite for science and arts to fill the vacancy caused by the 
death of Carlyle. In 1870 be received from the Berlin Academy 
of Sciences the first Bopp prise for the most important contribu- 
tion to Sanskrit philology during the preceding three years— *is 
edition of the TdiUirtya-Prdticdkkja {Journal of the American 
Oriental Society, vol ix.). He died at New Haven, Connecticut, 
6n the 7th of June 1804- 

As a philologist Whitney is noted especially for his work in 
Sanskrit, which placed him among the first scholars of his time. 
Re edited (1855-1856), with Professor Roth, the Atharv*-Veda~ 
Sankitd; published (1862) with a translation and notes the 
Athorva-Vcda-PrMicakkya\ made important contributions to 
the great Petersburg lexicon; issued an index verbonrm to the 
published text of the Atkona-Vedo (Journal of the American 
Oriental Society, 1881); made a translation of the Athana-Veda, 
books i.-xix., with a critical commentary, which be did not live 
to publish (edited by Lanman, 1905); and published a large 
number of special articles upon various points of Sanskrit 
philology. His most notable achievement in this field, however, 
is his Sanskrit Grammar (1879), a work which, as Professor 
Delbrtick has said, not only is " the best text-book of Sanskrit 
which we possess," but also places its author, as a scientific 
grammarian, on the same level with such writers as Madvig 
and KrUger. To the general public Whitney is best known 
through his popular works on the science of language and his 
labours as a lexicographer. The former are, perhaps, the most 
widely read of all English books on the subject, and have merited 
their popularity through the soundness of the views which they 
present and the lucidity of their style. 1 His most important 
service to lexicography was his guidance, as editor-in-chief, of 
the work on The Century Dictionary (1880-1891). Apart from 
the permanent value of his contributions to philology, Whitney 
is notable for the great and stimulating influence which hie 
exerted throughout his life upon the development of American 
scholarship. 

The chronological bibliography of Whitney's writings appended to 
vol. xix. (first half) of the Journal of the American Oriental Society, 
issued in May 1897, contains 360 numbers. Of these the most im- 
portant, in addition to those mentioned above, are: Translation of 

.l- ca ;jjla-,~ „ r.-» i~t. -* t/.-j.. Astronomy (Jour. Am. 

I the Study of Language 
r (1869); Oriental and 
Linguistic Studies (1873; second series, 1874); The Life and Growth 
of Language (1875); Essentials of English Grammar 0877); A 
Compendious German and English Dictionary (1877); A Practical 
French Grammar (1886); Max Miller and the Science of Language 
(1 893). (kE.£) 

WHIT8TABLB, a watering-place in the St Augustine's parlia- 
mentary division of Kent, England, on the north coast at the 
east end of the Swale, 6 m. N.N.W. of Canterbury, on the South 
Eastern & Chatham railway. Plop, of urban district (1901), 7086. 

*They are particularly important in that they counteracted the 
popular and in te re sti ngly written book* of Max M Oiler: for instance, 
M Oiler, Uke Reman and WQhelin von Humboldt, regarded language as 
an innate faculty and Whitney considered it the product of experience 
and outward circumstance. See Whitney's article Philology in the 
present edition of the Encyclopaedia Britannic*. 



The branch railway connecting Whitstabte with Canterbury 
was one of the earliest in England, opened in 183a The 
church of All Saints (Decorated and Perpendicular) possesses 
some old brasses; it was restored in 1875. Whitstable has been 
famous for its oyster beds from time immemorial. The fisheries 
were held by the Incorporated Company of Dredgers (incor- 
porated by Act of Parliament in 1793), the affairs being 
administered by a foreman, deputy foreman and jury of twelve; 
but in 1896 an Act of Parliament transferred the management of 
the fishery to a company. The less extensive Seasalter and Ham 
oyster fishery adjoins. There is also a considerable coasting trade 
in coal in conjunction with the South-Eastern & Chatham railway 
company, who are the owners of the harbour, which accom- 
modates vessels of about 400 tons alongside the quay. The 
urban district consists of parts of the old parishes of Whitstable 
and Scasajtcr, In modern times the manor was held by Wynne 
Ellis (1790-1875), who left a valuable collection of paintings to 
the nation. 

Tankerton, adjoining Whitstable to the N.E., is a newly 
established seaside resort. 

WHITSUNDAY, or Pentecost (Lat. Pentccoste, Cz. rempbffrft 
sc. ijuipa, Fr. Pentecdle, Ger. Pfingsten, fr. O.H. Ctr. fimfekustiny, 
one of the principal feasts of the Christian Church, celebrated 
on the fiftieth (rerrniooarh) day after Easter to commemorate 
the descent of the Holy Spirit on the disciples. The day became 
one of the three baptismal seasons, and the name Whitsunday 
is now generally attributed to the white garments formerly worn 
by the candidates for baptism on this feast, as in the case of the 
Dominica in albis. The festival is the third in importance of the 
great feasts of the Church and the last of the annual cycle 
commemorating the Lord. It is connected with the Jewish 
Pentecost (q.v.), not. only in the historical date of its origin (see 
Acts vii.), but in idea; the Jewish festival is one of thanks for 
the first-fruits of the earth, the Christian for the first-fruits of 
the Spirit. In the early Church the name of Pentecost was given 
to the whole fifty days between Easter and Whitsunday, which 
were celebrated as a period of rejoicing (Tertullian, De idolatr. 
c. is, De bapt, 19, De cor. milit. 3, A post. Canons, c. 37, Canons of 
Anliock, 30). In the narrower sense, as the designation of 
the fiftieth day of this period, the word Pentecost occurs for 
the first time in a canon of the council of Elvira (305), which 
denounces as an heretical abuse the tendency to celebrate the 
40th day (Ascension) instead of the 50th, and adds: "juxta 
auctoritatem scripturarum cuncti diem Pentecostis celebremus." 
There is plentiful evidence that the festival was regarded very 
early as one of the great feasts; Gregory Naziansen (Orat. xliv. 
De Penlec.) calls it the " day of the Spirit." (ijuApa rou Tlwdtuaros), 
and in 385 the Percgrinatio Silviae (see Duchesne, Origines, 
App.) describes its elaborate celebration at Jerusalem. The code 
of Theodosius (xv. 5, De speciaculis) forbade theatrical perform- 
ances and the games of the circus during the feast. The custom 
of hallowing the days immediately surrounding the festival is 
comparatively late. Thus, among others, the synod of Mainz in 
813 ordered the celebration of an octave similar to that at 
Easter. The custom of celebrating the vigil by fasting had 
already been introduced. The duration of the festival was, 
however, ultimately fixed at three days. In the Church of 
England this is still the rule (there are special collects, gospels 
and epistles for Monday and Tuesday in Whitsun week); in 
the Lutheran churches two days only are observed. 

In the middle ages the Whitsun services were marked by many 
curious customs. Among these described by Durandus (Rationale 
div. of. vL 107) are the letting down of a dove from the roof into 
the church, the dropping of balls of fire, rose-leaves and the like. 
Whitsun is one of the Scottish quarter-days, and though the 
Church festival is movable, the legal date was fixed for the 15th 
of May by an act of 1 693* Whitxoonday, which, with the Sunday 
itself, was the occasion for the greatest of all the medieval church 
ales, was made an English Bank Hobday by an act passed on the 
35th of May 1871. 

See Duchesne, Origines du eulte Chretien (1889); W. Smith and 
Cheetharo. Die of Christian Antiquities (1874-1880); Heraog-Hauck, 



WHITTIER 



613 



*v, 294. *>v v 



JUatencjutapddi* (1904), 
1 and 

Customs (ii 

edit.. 1905); 

retigieuses de Ions Us peupUs (1723). 



For tie 



many superstitions and observance* of the day aee P. H. Ditch- 
field. Old English Customs (1857); Brand. Antiquities of Great 
Britain (Haalttt's edit.. 1905); »• Ptcart, CMmomUs et coutumes 



WHJ1TMK, JOHH GRBERIBAF (1807-1892), America's 
" Quaker poet M of freedom, faith and the sentiment of the 
common people, was born in a Merrimack Valley farmhouse, 
Haverhill, Massachusetts, on the 17th of December 1807. The 
dwelling was built in the 17th century by his ancestor, the sturdy 
immigrant, Thomas Whittier, notable through hit efforts to 
secure toleration for the disdptes of George Fox in New England. 
Thomas's son Joseph joined the Society of Friends and bore his 
•hare of obloquy. Successive generations obeyed the monitions 
of the Inner light. The poet was bora in the faith, and adhered 
to its liberalised tenets, its garb and speech, throughout his 
lifetime. His father, John, was a farmer of limited means but 
independent spirit. His mother, Abigail Hussey, whom the poet 
strongly resembled, was of good stock. The Rev. Stephen 
Bacbiler, an Oxford man and a Churchman, who became a 
Nonconformist and emigrated to Boston in 1633, was one of her 
forebears and also an ancestor of Daniel Webster. The poet and 
the statesman showed their kinship by the u dark, deep-set and 
lustrous eyes " that impressed one who met either of these 
uncommon men. The former's name of Greenlcaf is thought 
to be derived from the French Feuillevert, and to be of Huguenot 
origin; and there was Huguenot blood as well In Thomss 
Whittier, the settler. The poet thus fairly Inherited his con- 
science, religious exaltation and spirit of protest. All the 
Whittiers were men of suture and bodily strength, John Green- 
leaf being almost the first exception, a lad of delicate mould, 
scarcely adapted for the labour required of a Yankee farmer 
and bis household. He bore a fair proportion of It, but through- 
out his life was frequently brought to a halt by pain and physical 
debility. In youth he was described as M a handsome young man, 
tall, slight, and very erect, bashful, but never awkward.** His 
shyness was extreme, though covered by a grave and quiet 
exterior, winch could not hide Ms love of fun and sense of the 
hsdkrous. In age he retained most of these characteristics, 
refined by a serene expression of peace after contest. His eyes 
never lost their glow, and were said by a woman to be those of 
one M who had kept innocency all his days." 

Wm'ttier's early education was restricted to what he could gain 
from the primitive u district school " -of the neighbourhood. 
His call as a poet came when a teacher lent to him the poems of 
Burns. He was then about fifteen, and his taste for writing, 
bred thus far upon the quaint Journals of Friends, the Bible and 
The Pilgrim's Progress, was at once stimulated. There was 
little art or inspiration in his boyish verse, but in his nineteenth 
year an older sister thought a specimen of it good enough for 
submission to the Free Press, a weekly paper which William 
Lloyd Garrison, the future emancipationist, had started in the 
town of Newburyport. This initiated Whittier's literary career. 
The poem was printed with a eulogy, and the editor sought out 
Ms young contributor: their alliance began, and continued until 
the triumph of the anti-slavery cause thirty-seven years later. 
Garrison overcame the elder Whittier's desire for the full services 
of his son, and gamed permission for the latter to attend the 
Haverhill academy. To meet expenses the youth worked in 
various ways, even making slippers by hand in after-hours; 
but when he came of age bis text-book days were ended. Mean- 
while be had written creditable student verse, and contributed 
both prose and rhyme to u ew s p ap c is , thus gaining friends and 
obtaining * decided if provincial reputation. He soon essayed 
journalism, first spending a year and a half in the service of a 
publisher of two Boston newspapers, the Manufacturer, an organ 
of the Clay protectionists, and the Philanthropist, devoted to 
humane reform. Whittier edited the former, having a bent for 
politics, but wrote for the latter also. His father's last illness 
recalled him to the homestead, where both farm and family 
became Ins pious charge. Money had to be earned, and he now 
1 an editorial post at Hartford, Connecticut, which he 



sustained until forced by ffi-heakh, early in bis twenty-fifth 
year, to re-seek the Haverhill farm. There he remained from 
1832 to 1836, when the property was sold, and the Whittiers 
removed to Amesbury in order to be near their meeting-house 
and to enable toe poet to be in touch with affairs. The new 
home became, as it proved, that of hia whole after-life; a dwelling 
then bought and in time remodelled was the poet's residence 
for fifty-six years, and from it, after his death on the 7th of 
September 1892, bis remains were borne to the Amesbury 
graveyard. 

While in Hartford Whittier issued in prose and verse his first 
book, Legends of New England (1831), and edited the writings of 
the poet John Gardiner C. Brainard. Thenceforward he was 
constantly printing verse, but of the hundred or more pieces 
composed before his settlement at Amesbury less than fifty are 
retained in his final collection. Of these none has more signific- 
ance than the poem to Garrison, which appeared in 1831, and 
was read (December 1833) at the Philadelphia Convention that 
formed the Anti-Slavery Society. To that convention, with 
one-third of its membership composed of Friends, Whittier was 
a delegate, and was appointed one of the committee that drafted 
the famous Declaration of Sentiments. Although a Quaker, 
he bad a polemical spirit; men seeing Whittier only in his saintly 
age knew little of the fire wherewith, setting aside ambition and 
even love, he maintained his warfare against the " national 
crime," employing action, argument and lyric scorn. A future 
was open for him among the Protectionists, who formed the Whig 
party, and doubtless soon would have carried him to the United 
States Congress. As it was, he got no farther than the legislature 
of his own state (1835-1836), elected by his neighbours in an 
anti-slavery town. But if Garrison, Phillips and Sumner and 
Mrs Stowe were to be the rhapsodists of the long emancipation 
struggle, Whittier was its foreordained poet-seer. In 1833 he 
bad issued at his own cost a pamphlet, " Justice and Expediency," 
that provoked vehement discussion North and South. Later 
he shared with the agitators their experience of lawlessness, 
mob-violence and political odium. His sister Elizabeth, who 
became bis life companion, and whose verse is preserved with his 
own, was president of the Woman 1 * Anti-Slavery Society in 
Amesbury. It is to be noted that the first collection of Whittier** 
lyrics wss the Poems mitten during the Progress of tie Abolition 
Question m the Untied Slates, issued by a friend in 1837. But 
Mogg Megona (1836) was his first book, a crude attempt to sppiy 
the manner Of Scott's romantic cantos to a native theme. Among 
his other lyrical volumes, of dates earlier than the Civil War, were 
Lays of my Borne (1843), Voices of Freedom (1846), Songs of 
Labor (1850), The Cha+d of the Hermits (1853), The Panorama 
(1856), Home Ballads (i860). The titles of In War Time (1863) 
and National Lyrics (1865) rightly designate the patriotic rather 
than Tyrtaean contents of these books. The poet was closely 
affiliated with the Atlantic Monthly from the foundation of 
that classic magazine in 1857. His repute became national with 
the welcome awarded to Snow- Bound in tS66, and brought 
a corresponding material reward. Of his later books of verse 
may be mentioned The Tent on the Beach (1867), The Pcnn* 
sytvenia Pilgrim (1872), The Vision of Echard (1878), The King's 
Missive (1B81), At Sundown, his last poems (1800). As early as 
1849 *n illustrated collection of his poems appeared, and his 
Poetical Worhs was issued in London in 1850. During the 
ensuing forty years no less than ten successive collections of his 
poems appeared. Mean while he did much editing and compiling, 
and produced, among other works in prose, The Stranger in 
Lowell (184 s). Supernaturalism in New England (1847), Leases 
from Margaret Smith 9 * Journal (1840), a pleasing treatment in 
old-style English of an early Colonial theme. When he died, 
in 1893, in New Hampshire, among the hills be loved and 
sang so well, he had been an active writer for over sixty years, 
leaving more than that number of publications that bore bis name 
as author or editor. His body was brought to Amesbury for 
interment; the funeral services were held in the open sir, and 
conducted after the simple rites of the Friends, in the presence 
of a large conco u rse, certain of whom "spake as they were 



)6i4 



WHITTINGHAM, 0— WHITTINGHAM, W. 



moved " in tribute 10 die bud. The Amesbury bouse has been 
acquired by tbe ° Whit tier Home Association," so -that the 
building and grounds are guarded as he left them, and form a 
shrine to which there is a constant pilgrimage. The Haverhili 
homestead, memorized in Snow-Bound, is also held by trustees 
" to preserve the natural features of the landscape," and to keep 
the buildings and furniture somewhat as they were in their 
minstrel's boyhood. 

It would be Unjust to consider Whittier's genius from an academic 
point of view. British lovers of poetry — except John Bright and 
others of like faith or spirit — have been slow to comprehend his dis- 
tinctive rank. As a poet he was essentially a balladist, with the faults 
of his qualities; and his ballads, in their freedom, naivete 1 , even in 
their undue length, are among the few modern examples of unso- 
phisticated verse. He returned again and again to their production, 
seldom labouring on sonnets and lyrics of me Victorian mould. His 
car for melody was inferior to his sense of time, but that his over- 
facility and structural defects were due less to lack of taste than to 
early nabit, Georgian models, disassociation from the schools, is indi- 
cated by his work as a writer of prose. In Margaret Smith's Journal 



An artistic, though suppositive. Colonial style is well 
Whit tier became very sensible of his shortcomings ^ and when at 
leisure to devote himself to his art he greatly bettered it, giving much 
of his later verse all the polish that it required. In extended com- 
position, as when he followed Longfellow's Tales of a Wayside Inn 
with his own Tent on the Beach, he often failed to rival his graceful 
brother poet. In American balladry he was pre-eminent; such 
pieces as M The Swan Song of Parson Avery." " Marguerite," " Bar- 
clay of Ury," " Skipper Ireson's Ride," u In the ■ Old South,' " hold 
their place in literature. It is necessary above all to consider the 
relation of a people's years of growth and ferment to the song which 
represents them; for in the strains of Whittier, more than in those 
of any other 19th-century lyrist, the saying of Fletcher of Saitoun 
as to the ballads and laws of a nation fends a historic illustration. 
He was the national bard of justice, humanity and reform, whose 
Voice went up as a trumpet until the victory wa* won. Its lapses 
resembled those of Mrs Browning, who was of his own breed in her 
fervour and exaltation. To the last it was uncertain whether a poem 
by Whittier would " turn out a sang," or " perhaps turn out a 
sermon "; if the latter, it had deep sincerity and was as dose to his 
soul as the other. He began as a liberator, but various causes em- 
ployed his pen; his heart was with the people, and he was under- 
standed of them ; he loved a worker, and the Songs of Labor convey 
the zest of the artisan and pioneer. From 1833 to 1863 no occasion 
escaped him for inspiring the assailants of slavery, or chanting paeans 
of their martyrdom or triumph. No crusade ever had a truer laureate 
than the author of " The Virginia Slave Mother," " The Pastoral 
Letter " — one of his stinging ballads against a time-serving; Church — 
M A Sabbath Scene," and a The Slaves of Martinique." " Randolph 
of Roanoke " is one of the most pathetic and most elevated of 
memorial tributes. " Ichabod " and " The Lost Occasion," both 
evoked by the attitude of Webster, are Roman in their condemnation 
and " wild with all regret." 

The green rusticity of Whittier's farm and village life imparted 
a bucolic charm to such lyrics as M In School Days," " The Bare- 
foot Boy," " Telling the Bees," " Maud Muller," and " My School- 
mate." His idyllic masterpiece is the sustained transcript of winter 
scenery and home-life, Snow-Bound, which has had no equal except 
Longfellow's M Evangeline" in American favour, but, in fact, 
nothing of its class since " The Cottar's Saturday Night " can justly 
be compared with it. Along with the Quaker poet s homing sense 
and passion for liberty of body and soul7 religion and patriotism are 




' Invocation, and " The Two Angels." and are exquisitely blended 
in " The Eternal Goodness," perhaps the most enduring of his lyrical 
poems. " We can do without a Church,'* he wrote in a letter; " we 
cannot do without God. and of Him we are sure." The inward voice 
was his inspiration, and of all American poets he was the one whose 
song was most like a prayer. A knightly celibate, his stainless life, 
bis ardour, caused him to be termed a Yankee Galahad: a pure 
and simple heart was laid bare to those who loved him in My 
Psalm," " My Triumph " and " An Autograph." The spiritual 
habit abated no whit of his inborn sagacity, and it is said that in 
his later years political leaders found no shrewder sage with whom to 
take counsel, when the question of primacy among American poets 
was canvassed by a group of the public men of Lincoln's time, the 
vote was for Whittier; he was at least one whom they understood, 
and who expressed their feeling and convictions. Parkman called 
htm " the poet of New England," but as the North and West then 
were charged with the spirit of the New England states, the two 
verdicts were much the same. The fact remains that no other poet 
has sounded more native notes, or covered so much of the American 
legendary, and that Whittier's name, among the patriotic, clean and 
true, was one with which to conjure. He was revered by the people 



cleaving to their altars and their fires, ana his birthdays' were 
calendared as festivals, on which greetings were sent to him by 



young and old. 
In his 1 _ 

edition, In seven volumes, publ . 

Their metrical portion, annotated by Horace E. Scudder, can be 



_. j age the poet revised his works, classifying them for a 
definitive, edition, in seven volumes, published at Boston, 1888. 



found in the one-volume ''Cambridge Edition," (Boston, 1894). 
Whittier's Life and Letters, prepared oy his kinsman and literary 
executor, Samuel T- Pickard, also appeared in 1894. 

See also G. R. Carpenter, John Grtenkaf Whittier (Boston, 1903) 
in the "American Men of Letters" — ! v '~ ' **- "" " 



a We (1907) by Bliss Perry; 

and B. Wendell. SteUipri (New York. 1893, pp. 149-aoi). (E.C.S.) 

WHITTIHGHAJI, CHARLES (1767-1840), English printer, 
was born on the zoth of June 1767, at Caludon or Calledon, 
Warwickshire, the too. of a farmer, and was apprenticed to a 
Coventry printer and bookseller. In 1789 he set up a small 
printing press in a garret off Fleet Street, London, with a loan 
obtained from the typefounding firm of William Caskn, and by 
1797 his business had so increased that he was enabled to move 
into larger premises. An edition of Gray's Poems, printed by him 
in 1799, secured him the patronage of all the leading publishers. 
Whittingham inaugurated the idea of printing cheap, handy 
editions of standard authors, and, on the bookselling trade 
threatening not to sell bis productions, took a room at a coffee 
house and sold them by auction himself. In 1809 he started a 
paper-pulp factory at Chiswick, near London, and in 181 1 
founded the Chiswick Press. From .1810 to 18x5 he devoted 
bis chief attention to illustrated books, and is credited with having 
been tbe first to use proper overlays in printing woodcuts, as he 
was the first to print a fine, or " Indian Paper " edition. He 
was one of the first to use a steam-engine in a pulp mill, but his 
presses he preferred to have worked by hand. He died at 
Chiswick on the 5th of January 1840. 

His nephew, Charles Whrtxngkaic (1795-1876), who from 
1834 to 1828 had been in partnership with his uncle, in 1838 
assumed control of the business. He already had printing works 
at Took't Court, Chancery Lane, London, and had printed 
various notable books, specially devoting himself to the intro- 
duction of ornamental initial letters, and the artistic arrange- 
ment of the printed page. The imprint of the Chiswick press 
was now placed on the productions of the Took's Court as well 
as, of the Chiswick works, and in 185a the whole business was 
removed to London. Under the management of the younger 
Whittingham the Chiswick Press achieved a considerable 
reputation. He died on the 21st of April 1876. 

WHITTINOHAM, WILLIAM (c. 1524-1579), English scholar, 
who belonged to a Lancashire family, was born at Chester. 
Educated at Brasenose College, Oxford, he became a fellow of 
All Souls' College and a senior student of Christ Church, and 
later he visited several universities in France and Germany. 
A strong Protestant, he returned to England in 1553, but soon 
found it expedient to travel again to France. In 1554 he was a 
leading member of the band of English Protestant exiles who 
were assembled at Frankfort-on-the-Main, and in the contro- 
versies which took place between them concerning tbe form of 
service to be adopted, Whittingham * strongly supported the 
Calvinistic views propounded by John Knox. These opinions, 
however, did not prevail, and soon the Scottish reformer and bis 
follower were found at Geneva; in 1559 Whittingham succeeded 
Knox as minister of the English congregation in that city, and 
here he did his most noteworthy work, that of making an English 
translation of the Bible. He was probably responsible for the 
English translation of the New Testament which appeared in 
1557, and he had certainly a large share in the translation of both 
the Old and the New Testaments which is called the Geneva* 
or Breeches Bible. This was printed at Geneva in 1560 and 
enjoyed a remarkable popularity (see Bible, English). He 
also made a metrical translation of some of the Psalms. Having 
returned to England in 1560, Whittingham went to France in 
the train of Francis Russell, 2nd earl of Bedford, and a little 
later he acted as minister of the English garrison at Havre, 
being in this place during its siege by tbe French in 1562. In the 
following year he was made dean of Durham. He attended well 
to tbe duties ol his office, but his liking for puritan customs made 



WHITTINGTON, IU- WHlTTLUfc/ 



certain prelates and otian look upon him with suspicion, and 
ia 1576 or 1577 a commission was appointed to inquire into his 
conduct. This had no result, and another commission was 
appointed in 1578, on* charge against Whittingham being that 
he had not been duly ordained. The case was still under con- 
sidcra tion w hen the dean died on the 10th of June 1579. 

WHITTIJIGTOJf, RICHARD (d. 1423), mayor of London, 
described himself as son of William and Joan (Dugdale, Mon- 
astic** AngHatnum, vi. 740). This enables him to be identified 
•s the third son of Sir William Whiilingtoa of Paundey in 
Gloucestershire, a knight of good family, who married after 
IJ5S Joan, daughter of William Mantel, and widow of Thomas 
Berkeley of Cubbedey. Consequently Richard was a veiy 
young man when he is mentioned in 1379 as subscribing five 
marks to a city loan. He was a mercer by trade, and clearly 
entered on his commercial career under favourable circumstances. 
He married AKee, daughter of Sir I vo Fitxwaryn, a Dorset knight 
of considerable property. Whittington sat in the common 
council as a representative of Coleman Street Ward, was elected 
alderman of Broad Street in March 1393* and served as sheriff 
*» UOJ-*J04« When Adam Bamme, the mayor, died in June 
1307, Whittington wss appointed by the king to succeed him, 
sad in October was elected mayor for the ensuing year. He had 
acquired great wealth and much commercial importance, and 
was mayor of the staple at London and Calais. He made 
frequent large loans both to Henry IV. and Henry V., and accord- 
ing to the legend, when he gave a banquet to the latter king and 
his queen in 1421* completed the entertainment by burning 
bonds for £60,000, which he had taken up and discharged. 
Henry V. employed him to superintend the expenditure of 
money on completing Westminster Abbey. But except as a 
London commercial magnate Whittington took no great part in 
public affairs. He was mayor for a third term in 1406-1407, 
and for a fourth in 1419*1410. He died in March 1423. His 
wife had predeceased him leaving no children, and Whittington 
bequeathed the whole of his vast fortune to charitable and public 
purposes. In his lifetime he had joined in procuring Leadenhall 
for the city, and had borne nearly all the cost of building the 
Greyfriars Library. In his last year as mayor he had been 
shocked by the foul state of Newgate prison, and one of the first 
works undertaken by his executors was its rebuilding. His 
executors, chief of whom wss John Carpenter, the famous town 
clerk, also contributed to the cost of glazing and paving the new 
Guildhall, and paid half the expense of building the library there; 
they repaired St Bartholomew's hospital, and provided bosses for 
water at Billingsgate and CrippJegate. But the chief of Whitting- 
ton 's foundations was his college at St Michael, Paternoster 
church, and the adjoining hospital. The college was dissolved 
at the Reformation, but the hospital or almshouses are still 
maintained by the Mercers' Company at Highgate. Whittington 
was buried at St Michael's church. Stow relates that his tomb 
was spoiled during the reign of Edward VI., but that under Mary 
the parishioners were compelled to restore it (Survey , i. 243). 
Whittington had a house near St Michael's church; it is doubtful 
whether he had any connexion with the so-called Whittington 
Palace in Hart Street, Mark Lane. There is no proof that he was 
ever knighted; Stow does not call him Sir Richard. Much of 
Whitttngton's fame was probably due to the magnificence of his 
charities. But a writer of the next generation bears witness to 
his commercial success in A Libeil of English Policy by styling 
him "the sunne of marchaundy. that lodestarre and chief -chosen 

" Pen and paper may not me suttee 
Him to describe, so high he was of price." 

The Richard Whittington of history is thus very different from 
the Dick Whittington of popular legend, which makes him a 
poor orphan employed as a scullion by the rich merchant, Sir 
Hugh Fiuwarren, who ventures the cat, his only possession, 
on one of his master's ships. Distressed by iltareaiment he 
runs away, but turns back when be hears from Holloway the 
pr ophetic peal of Bow bells. He returns to find that his venture 
has brought him a fortune, marries his master's daughter, and 



succeeds lobule a, ._ „ 

itoiwteu,^,,:^^; 

him to notice « si * **-«-_, fc 

The fim release i*,^J^~*V ' ' 

VjFiZ'Jr- 'HZ?"**' ■ 

^Jfr£JZ£7r " ' 

"t*y did more wrosTw 'iL"J£Z '' 

Whittington," pcDhabfy mnn^Z ZTL. -, 
mentioned by Beaumont aM %#,„ T', '" ' 
of ike Burning PetUe. The *** »_ _ ' T ' ' 
When a little later Rohm ijJZT JZl* T *" 
supposeoriOrtraitofWIihiiB^toaw*^.^?" '"' 
he had in deference to thTpiL £,?' *" * 
copies in the first sute are very rast >L*JL ' 

which were employed in the North *e» <«*. *, 
octal (purchase). But Thomas lUighSry^M Z .1 ' ' 
Persian, Danish and Italian fouVbte at U**t «+ 'Z "' 
the 13th century. The assertion that a carv** U*~ S" 
existed on Newgate gaol before the meat **• js mT^ 



JS^ES'^^ 




of Patent Roll,, Henry VL^Um. S^X^eZLZt'Z 
facts, but accepted the legend in The Madet Merchant of ik, Uu^L 
A«, (i860), fhe I* E?W. B«.„t «d l. %T K ?£ U '?.?* 
on Lysons. Some useful references will be found in I H V. , !•* 
History of England under Henry tV For Jt££&££i'Z 
legend see T. Keightley't Tales and Popular Fulton, 00, lAtJZl 
(•834). and H. B WheatleyU preface tohb edition* % // ^JJ 
ofSirRuhard WhUtngtm (first published in 1656J. (C U K7 

WHITTINGTON, an urban district in the nortb-easfem 
parliamentary division of Derbyshire, England, 10 m. S. by K, 
of Sheffield and 2 m. N. of Chesterfield, on the Midland railway! 
Pop. (iooi) 0416. The parish church of St Bartholomew was 
restored after its destruction by fire, excepting the tower and 
spire, in 180S- Samuel Pegge, the antiquary (1704-1706), was 
vicar of Whittington and Heath for many years, and was burled 
here. Stone bottles and coarse earthenware are manufactured 
in the town, where there are also large ironworks, collieries and 
brickworks. A small stone cottage, known as Revolution House, 
was the meeting-place of John Darcy, the xst earl of Danby, 
and the 4th earl of Devonshire, who there concerted the plans 
by which, in 1688, the Whig party brought about the fall of 
James IL and the succession of William in. It was then a 
hostelry, known as the u Cock and Pynot "; pynot being the 
local name for a magpie. 

WHITTLESEA (or Whittlesey), WILLIAM (d. 1374), arch- 
bishop of Canterbury, was probably horn in the Cambridgeshire 
village of Whittlesey. He was educated at Oxford, and owing 
principally to the fact that he was a nephew of Simon Ish'p, 
archbishop of Canterbury, he received numerous ecclesiastical 
preferments; be held prebends at Lichfield, Chichester and 
Lincoln, and livings at Ivychurch, Croydon and Cliffe. Later he 
was appointed vicar-general, and then dean of the court of arches 
by Islip. In 1360 he became bishop of Rochester, and two years 
later bishop of Worcester. In 1368 Whittleses was elected 
archbishop of Canterbury in succession to Simon Langham, but 
his term of office was vety uneventful, a circumstance due partly, 
but not wholly, to his feeble health. He died at Lambeth en the 
5th or 6th of June 1374. 

WHITTLESEY, a market town in the Wisbech parliamentary 
division of Cambridgeshire, England, si m, B. of Peterborough, 
between that city and March, on the Great Eastern railway. 
Pop. of urban district (eooi) 3000. It lies on a gentle eminence 
in the Sat fen country, and the fine Perpendicular tower and spire 
of the church of St Mary are a landmark from far. A little to 
the north ia the great artificial cut carrying the water* ~' •■*- 



6i6 



WHITWORTH-— WHOOPING-COUGH 



river Nene; and the neighbourhood is interjected with many 
other navigable "dram*." To trie smith-west is tlie tract known 
aa Whittlesey Mere, 6 m. distant from the town, in Huntingdon- 
shire. It was a lake until modem times, when it was included in 
a scheme of drainage. The so-called Whittlesey Wash, in the 
neighbourhood of the town, is among several tracts in the fen* 
which are perennially flooded. St Mary's church is principally 
Perpendicular, but has Norman and Decorated portions; the 
church of St Andrew as also Decorated and Perpendicular. The 
town has manufactures of bricks and tiles, and a considerable 
agricultural trade. 

WHITWORTH, SIB JOfEPH. Bart (1803-1887), English 
engineer, was born at Stockport, near Manchester, on the sxst 
of December 1803. On leaving school at the age of fourteen, he 
was placed with an unde who was a, cotton-spinner, wkh the view 
of becoming a partner in the business; but his mrrhaniral tastes 
were not satisfied with this occupation, and in about four years 
he gave it up. He then spent some time with various machine 
manufacturers in the neighbourhood of Manchester, and in 
1825 moved to London, where he gained more experience in 
machine shops, Including those of Henry Maudslay. In 1833 
he returned to Manchester and started in business as a tool- 
maker. In 1840 he attended the meeting of the British Associa- 
tion at Glasgow, and read a paper on the preparation and value 
of true planes, describing the method which he had successfully 
used for making them when at Maudslay's, and which depended 
on the principle that if any two of three surfaces exactly fit each 
other, all three must be true planes. The accuracy of workman- 
ship thus indicated was far ahead of what was contemplated 
at the time as possible in mechanical engineering, but Whitworth 
not only proved that it could be attained in practice, but also 
showed how it could be measured. He found that if two true 
planes were arranged parallel to each other, an exceedingly small 
motion towards or from each other was sufficient to determine 
whether an object placed between them was held firmly or 
allowed to drop, and by mounting one of the planes on a screwed 
shaft provided with a comparatively large wheel bearing a scale 
on its periphery, he was able to obtain a very exact measurement 
of the amount, however minute, by which the distance between 
the planes was altered, by observing through what angular 
distance the wheel had been turned. In 1841, in a paper read 
before the Institution of Civil Engineers, he urged the necessity 
for the adoption of a uniform system of screw threads in place 
of the various heterogeneous pitches then employed. His system 
of standard gauges was also widely adopted. The principles 
of exact measurement and workmanship which he advocated 
were strictly observed in his own manufactory, with the result 
that in the Exhibition of 1851 he bad a show of machme tools 
which were far ahead of those of any competitor. It was doubt* 
less this superiority in machine construction that caused the 
government three years later to request him to design, and 
estimate for making, the machinery for producing rifled muskets 
at the new factory at Enfield. He did not see his way to agree to 
the proposition in this form, but it was ultimately settled that he 
should undertake the machinery for the barrels only. Finding 
that there was no established practice to guide him, he began a 
aeries of experiments to determine the best principles for the 
manufacture of rifle barrels and projectiles. He ultimately 
arrived at a weapon in which the necessary rotation of the pro- 
jectile was obtained, not by means of grooving, but by making 
the barrel polygonal in form, with gently rounded angles, the 
bullets also being polygonal and thus travelling on broad bearing- 
surfaces along the rotating polygon. The projectile he favoured 
was 3 to 3) calibre* In length, and the bore he fixed on was 
0*45 in., which was at first looked upon aa too small. It is re- 
ported that at the trial in 1857 weapons made according to these 
principles excelled the Enfield weapons in accuracy of fire, 
penetration and range to a degree M which hardly leaves room 
for comparison." He also constructed heavy guns on the same 
lines; these were tried In competition with Armstrong's ordnance 
in 1M1 »nd 1865, and in their inventor's opinion gave the better 
*. they were not adopted by the government. In 



constructing them Whitworth experien ced difficulty in gettixsxs* 
large steel castings of suitable wmnd it m and ductility, and thus. 
was led about 1870 to devise his compressed steel process, ixt 
which the metal is subjected to high pressure while still in Use 
fluid state, and ia afterwards forged m hydraulic presses, not t»y 
hammers. In 1868 he founded the Whitworth scholarship©, 
setting aside an annual sum of £3000 to be given for " intelligence 
and proficiency in the theory and practice of mechanic* and it* 
cognate sciences," and in the following year he was created a 
baronet. He died at Monte Carlo, whither he had gone for the 
sake of his health, on the 22nd of January 1887. In addition 
to banding over £100,000 to the Science and Art Department for 
the permanent endowment of the thirty Whitworth scholarships, 
his residuary lega t ees, in pursuance of what they knew to be his 
intentions, expended over half a million on charitable and educa- 
tional objects, mainly in Manchester and the neighbourhood. 

WHOOPING-COUGH, or Hooting-Couch (syn. Pertussis, 
Chin-cough), a specific infective disease of the respiratory mucous 
membrane, of nucrobk origin (see Pabasbic Diseases), mani- 
festing itself by frequently recurring paroxysms of convulsive 
coughing accompanied with peculiar sonorous inspirations (or 
whoops). Although specially a disease of childhood, whooping- 
cough u by 110 meaas lumped to that periodontium^ 
time of life. It is one of the most dangerous diseases of infancy, 
the yearly death-rate in England and Wales for each of the 
five years 1004-1908 being greater than that from scarlet fever 
and typhoid added together. The majority of these deaths were 
in infants under one year, 97% in children under 5 years 
(Tatham). It is more common in female than in male children. 
There is a distinct period of incubation variously estimated at 
from two to ten days. Three stages of the disease are recognised, 
viz. (1) the catarrhal stage, (a) the srmsmodir or paroxysmal 
stage, (j) the stage of decline, 

The first stage is characterized by the ordinary phenomenal 
of a catarrh, with sneering, watering of the eyes, irritation of the 
throat, fevcrishness and cough, but in general there is nothing: 
in the symptoms to indicate that they are to develop into 
whooping-cough, but the presence of an uker on the fraenum 
linguae is said to be diagnostic. The catarrhal stage usually 
lasts from ten to fourteen days, The second stage is marked by 
the abatement of the catarrhal symptoms, but at the same time 
by increase in the cough, which now occurs in irregular paroxysms 
both by day and by night. Each paroxysm consists in a series 
of violent and rapid expiratory coughs, succeeded by a loud 
sonorous or crowing inspiration— the "whoop." During the 
coughing efforts the air is driven with great force out of the lungs, 
and as none can enter the chest the symptoms of impending 
asphyxia appear. The patient growsdeep-red or livid in the face, 
the eyes appear as if they would burst from their sockets, and 
suffocation seems imminent till relief is brought by the u whoop '* 
—the louder and more vigorous the better. Occasionally blood 
bursts from the nose, mouth and ears, or is extravasatcd into 
the conjunctiva of the eyes. A single fit rarefy lasts beyond from 
half to three-quarters of a minute, but after the " whoop " 
another recurs, and of these a number may come and go for 
several minutes. The paroxysm ends by the coughing or vomiting 
up of a viscid tenacious secretion, and usually after this the 
patient seems comparatively well, or, it may be, somewhat 
wearied and fretful. The frequency of the paroxysms varies 
according to the severity of the case, being in some instances only 
to the extent of one or two in the whole day, while m others 
there may be several in the course of a single hour. Slight causes 
serve to bring on the fits of coughing, such as the acts of swallow- 
ing, talking, laughing, crying, &c, or they may occur without 
any apparent exciting cause. In general children come to 
recognize an impending stuck by a feeling of tickling in the 
throat, and they cling with dread to their mothers or nurses, or 
take hold of some' object near them for support during the 
paroxysm; but although exhausted by the severe fit of coughing 
they soon resume their play, apparently little the worse. The 
attacks are on the whole most severe at night. This stage of 
the disease usually continues for thirty to fifty days, but it may 



WHYMPER^WHYTE-MELVILLE 



617 



be shorter or longer. It is daring this time that complications 
are apt to arise which may become a source of danger greater 
even than the malady itself. The chief of these are inflamma- 
tory affections of the bronchi and lungs and convulsions, any of 
which may prove fatal When* however, the disease progresses 
favourably, the third or terminal stage is announced by the less 
frequent paroxysms of the cough, which generally loses in great 
measure its " whooping " character. The patient's condition 
altogether undergoes amendment, and the symptoms disappear 
in from one to three weeks. It is to be observed, however, that 
for a long period afterwards in any simple catarrh from which 
the patient suffers the cough often assumes a spasmodic character, 
which may suggest the erroneous notion that a relapse of the 
whooping-cough has occurred. 

la severe cases it occasionally happens that the disease leaves 
behind it such structural changes in the lungs (emphysema, 
&c) f as entail permanent shortness of breathing or a liability to 
attacks of asthma. Further, whooping-cough is well known to 
be one of those diseases of early life which are apt to give rise 
u> a weakened and vulnerable state of the general health, or 
to call into activity any inherited morbid tendency, such as thai 
towards consumption. 

As regards the treatment in mild cases, little h necessary 
beyond keeping the patient warm and carefully attending to the 
general health. The remedies applicable in the case of catarrh 
or the milder forms of bronchitis are of service here, while gentle 
counter-irritation to the chest by stimulating liniments may be 
employed all through the attack. la mild weather the patient 
may be in the open air. An abdominal binder should be worn 
night and day in order to prevent the occurrence of hernia. 
Systematic disinfection of the sputum by means of a solution 
of corrosive sublimate or by burning sbouH be practised in order 
to check the spread of infection. In the more severe forms 
efforts have to be employed to modify the severity of the 
paroxysms. Numerous remedies are recommended, the chief 
of which are the bromides of ammonium or potassium, chloral, 
codeine, && These can only be safety administered under 
medical advice, and with due regard to the symptoms in 
individual cases. During convalescence, where the cough still 
continues to be troublesome, a change of air will often effect its 



WHYMPK1, EDWARD (1840- ), British artist, explorer 
and mountaineer, was born in London on the 17th of April 1840. 
The son of an artist, he was at an early age trained to the profes- 
sion of a wood-engraver. In 1869 be was commissioned to make 
a series of sketches of Alpine scenery, and undertook an extensive 
journey in the Central and Western Alps. Among the objects 
of this tour was the illustration of an attempt, which proved 
unsuccessful, made oy Professor Bonoey*s party, to ascend llont 
rVhroux, at that time beUeved to be the highest peak of the 
Daophine Alps. He successfully accomplished the ascent in 
1861— -the first of a series of expeditions that threw much hgbt 
on the topography of a district at that time very imperfectly 
mapped. From the summit of Mont Pelyoux he discovered that 
it was overtopped by a neighbouring peak, subsequently named 
the Folate des Serins, which, before the annexation of Savoy 
added Moat Blanc to the possessions of France, was the highest 
point m the French Alps. Its ascent by Mr WhymperH party 
in 1864 was perhaps the most remarkable feat of mountaineering 
ap to that date. The years 1861 to 1865 are filled with a mimber 
of newexpedrtkms in the Mont Blanc group and the Pennine Alps, 
among them the ascent of the Aiguille Verte and the crossing of 
the Morning Pass. Professor Tyndafl and Mr Whymper emu- 
lated each other in fruitless attempts to reach the summit of the 
Matteftembythesouth-weateroorltalumcidga Mr Whymper, 
six times repulsed, determined to try the eastern face, convinced 
that its precipitous appearance when viewed from Zennatt was 
an optical illusion, and that the dip of the strata, which on the 
Italian side formed a continuous series of overhangs, should make 
the opposite side a natural staircase. His attempt by what is now 
the usual route was crowned with success (14th of July 1865); 
hut on the descent four of the party slipped and were killed, and 



only the breaking of the rope saved Mr Whymper and the two 
remaining guides from the same fate. The account of his 
attempts on the Matterfaorn occupies the greater part of his 
Scrambles among the Alps (1871), in which the illustrations 
are engraved by the author himself, and are xay beautiful 
His campaign of 1865 had been planned to exercise his judgment 
in the choice of routes as a preparation for an expedition 40 
Greenland (1867). This resulted in an important collection of 
fossil plants, which were described by Professor Hcer and 
deposited in the British Museum. Mr Whymper's report was 
published in the Report of the British Association for the year 
i860. Though hampered by want of means and by the prevalence 
of an epidemic among the natives, he proved that the interior 
could be explored by the use of suitably constructed sledges, and 
thus contributed an important advance to Arctic exploration. 
Another expedition followed in 187 *, and was devoted to a survey 
of the coast-line. He next organized an expedition to Ecuador, 
designed primarily to collect data for the study of mountain- 
sickness and of the effect of diminished pressure on the human 
frame. He took as his chief guide Jean-Antoinc Carrel, whose 
subsequent death from exhaustion on the Matterhorn after 
bringing his employers into safety through a snowstorm forms 
one of the noblest pages in the history of mountaineering. During 
1880 Mr Whymper on two occasions ascended Chunborazo, 
whose summit, 20,500 ft. above sea-level, had never before been 
reached; spent a night on the summit of Cotopaxi, and made 
first ascents of half-a-dozen other great peaks. In 1892 he 
published the results of his journey in a volume, entitled Travels 
amongst the Great Andes of the Equator. His observations on 
mountain-sickness led him to conclude that it was caused by 
"diminution in atmospheric pressure, which operates in at least 
two ways — namely, (a) by lessening the value of the air that can 
be iasptred.in any given lime, and (b) by causing the air or gas 
within the body to expand, and to press upon the internal organs"; 
and that " the effects produced by (6) may be temporary and 
pass away when equilibrium has been restored between the 
internal and external pressure." The publication of his work 
was recognised on the part of the Royal Geographical Society 
by the award of the Patron's medal. His experiences in South 
America having convinced him of certain serious errors in the 
readings of aneroid barometers at high altitudes, be published a 
work, entitled How to Use the Aneroid Barometer, and succeeded 
in introducing important Improvements in their construction. 
He afterwards published two guide-books to Zennatt and 
Chamonix. In 1001-1005 he undertook an expedition in the 
region of the Great Divide of the Canadian Rockies, 

WHYTK. ALEXANDER (1837- ), Scottish divine, was 
bora at Kirriemuir in Forfarshire on the 13th of January 1837, 
and was educated at the university of Aberdeen and at New 
College, Edinburgh. He entered the ministry of the Free Church 
of Scotland and after serving as colleague m Free St John's, 
Glasgow (1866-1870), removed to Edinburgh as colleague and 
successor to Dr R. S. Candlish at Free St George's. In 1909 he 
succeeded Dr Marcus Dods as principal, and professor of New 
Testament literature, at New College, Edinburgh. 

Among his publications are Characters and Charatteristict of 
William Lam (1893); Bunyan Characters (x vols., 1844); Samuel 
Rutherford (1894); An Af>preciation of Jacob Behmen (1895); 
Lancelot Andrews and his Frivol* Devotions (1895) ; Bible Characters 
(7 vols., 1897); Sam* Teresa (1897); Father John of CransUtdt 
(1898); An Appreciation of Browne's ReUgio Medici (1898); Cardinal 
Newman, An Appreciation (1901). 

WHTTB-MalVILLB, GlORwt JOHN (18*1-1878), English 
novelist, son of John Whyte-MelvUle of Strathkinness, Fifeshire, 
and grandson on his mother's side of the 5th duke of Leeds, 
was bora on the 20th of June 1821. Whyte-Merville received his 
education at Eton, entered the army in 1839, became captain in 
the Coldstream Guards in 1846 and retired in 1849. After trans- 
lating Horace (1850) in 'fluent and graceful verse, be-pubhsbed 
his nrst novel, Digby Grand, in 1853. The unflagging verve and 
intimate technical knowledge with which he described sporting 
scenes and sporting characters at once drew attention to him as 
a novelist with a new vesa. He was the laureate of fox-hunting; 



I 



6i8 



WICHITA— WICKLOW 



all his most popular and distinctive heroes and heroines, Digby 
Grand, Tilbury Nogo, the Honourable Crasher, Mr Sawyer, 
Kate Coventry, Mrs Lasceltes, are or would be mighty hunters. 
Tilbury Nogo was contributed to the Sporting Magazine in 1853 
and published separately in 1854. He showed in the adventures 
of Mr Nogo— and it became more apparent in his later works— 
that he had a surer hand in humorous narrative than in pathetic 
description; his pathos is the pathos of the preacher. His next 
novel, Cnteral Bounce, appeared in Fraser*s Magazine (1854). 
When the Crimean War broke out Whyte-Melville went out as 
a volunteer major of Turkish irregular cavalry; but this was 
the only break in his literary career from the time that he began 
to write novels till his death. By a strange accident, he lost his 
life in the hunting-field on the 5th of December 1878, the hero 
of many a stiff ride meeting his fate in galloping quietly over an 
ordinary ploughed field in the Vale of the White Horse. 

Twenty-one novels appeared Tram hiipcn afti-r his return from 
the Crimea:— Kate OneuUy [1856); The Interpret* (1858) ; Holmby 
Bouse (i860); Good for Nothing (1S61 J: Ulurkft ilarborouih (1861); 
The Queen's Maries (1862); Tkr. Gfadicton O&63); Brookes of 
BridUmert <i864); Cerise (1S66); &**ti a«d I {1868); The White 
Rose (1868); M or N (1864); Covimhani (1*70): Serchedon (1871); 
SoiQuella (1873); Uncle •£*» (l*H)j &*** Louise (1875); Kater- 
felto (1875); Kosiue (1875); &»■'* \V,Jt iitip); Black but Comely 
(1878). Several of these novel* art hi>< t Gladiators being 

perhaps the most famous 01 mviu. A. an •••;».vi*lu1 novelist Whyte- 
Melville » not equal to Harrison Ainsworth in painstaking accuracy 
and minuteness of detail; but he makes his characters live and move 
with great vividness. It is on his portraiture of contemporary sport- 
ing society that his reputation as a novelist must rest; and, though 
now and then a character reappears, such as the supercilious stud- 
groom, the dark and wary steeple-chaser, or the fascinating sporting 
widow, his variety in the invention of incidents is amazing. Whyte- 
Melville was not merely the annalist of sporting society for his genera- 
tion, but may also be fairly described as the pnncipal moralist of that 
society; he exerted a considerable and a wholesome influence on the 
manners and morals of the gilded youth of his time. His Songs and 
Verses (1869) and his metrical Legend of the True Cross (1873), though 
respectable in point of versification, are of no particular merit. 

WICHITA, a tribe of North American Indians of Caddoan 
stock. They call themselves Kitikitish or Tawchash. Their 
former range was between the Red and Wa&hita rivers, Oklahoma, 
and they are now on a reservation there. They were kinsmen 
of the Pawnee, and the French called them Pent PiqtU ("Tat- 
tooed Pawnee ')• They were known to other Indians as the 
"Tattooed People" in allusion to the extensive tattooing 
customary among them. They numbered 3000 in or about 1800, 
but only about 300 now survive. 

WICHITA, a city and the county-seat of Sedgwick county, 
Kansas, U.S.A., on the Arkansas river, at the mouth of the 
Little Arkansas, 208 m. (by rail) S.W. of Kansas City. Pop. 
(1880) 4911; (1890) 23,853; (1900) 24,671, of whom 1447 were 
foreign-born and 1389 were negroes; (1910 census), 52,450. 
Area, 18-75 sq. m. Wichita is served by the Atchison, Topeka 
& Santa Fe, the Chicago, Rock Island & Pacific, the Missouri 
Pacific, the St Louis & San Francisco, and the Kansas City, 
Mexico & Orient railways. The site of the city is level, about 
1300 ft above the sea. The principal publk buildings are the 
Federal building, the city hall, the county court house, a Y.M.C.A. 
building, an auditorium and exposition hall and a Masonic 
Temple. In Wichita are Fairmount College (Congregational; 
co-educational; organized as a preparatory school in 1892 and as 
a college in 1895); Friends' University (Society of Friends; 
co-educational; 1898); and Mount Carmel Academy and the 
Pro-Cathedral School (both Roman Catholic). Among the city's 
paths (area in xooo, 325 mes) is one (Riverside) of 146 acres. 
*~ - • ' " - I w£h natural gas. Wichita is a transporter 
I region surrounding it, and is 
In 1905 it ranked third 
. value of its factory product 
jdustry is slaughtering and xneat- 
> & Orient railway has car- 
l an Indian tribe, was settled 
f Jn 1871. In 1909 the city 
l. fcy commission under a 
•four commtssiooers, 




heads of the executive, finance, streets and public i m pro v ements, 
parks, public buildings and health, and water and lights depart- 
ments, all elected for two years and nominated by primary 
election or by petition signed by at least 25 voters. 

WICK, a royal, municipal and police burgh, seaport and 
county town of Caithness, Scotland. Pop. (1001) 7911. It is 
situated at the head of Wick Bay, on the North Sea, 327 m. N. 
of Edinburgh, by the North British and Highland railways. 
It consists of the old burgh and Louisburgb, its continuation, 
on the north bank of the river Wick, and of Pulteneytown, the 
chief seat of commerce and trade, on the south side. Pulteney- 
town, laid out in 1805 by the British Fishery Society, is built on 
a regular plan; and Wick proper consists chiefly of the narrow 
and irregular High Street, with Bridge Street, more regularly 
built, which contains the town hall and the county buildings. 
In Pulteneytown there are an academy, a chamber of commerce, 
a naval reserve station and a fish exchange. Among other 
buildings are the free libraries, the Rhind Charitable Institution 
and the combination hospital. The port consists of two harbours 
of fair size, but the entrance is dangerous in stormy weather. 
The chief exports are fish, cattle and agricultural produce, and 
the imports include coal, wood and provisions. Steamers from 
Leith and Aberdeen run twice a week and* there is also weekly 
communication with Stromness, Kirkwall and Lerwick. It is 
to its fisheries that the town owes its prosperity. For many 
years it was the chief seat of the herring fishing on the east coast, 
but its insufficient harbour accommodation has hampered its 
progress, and both Peterhead and Fraserburgh surpass it as 
fishing ports. Women undertake the cleaning and curing, and 
the work attracts them from all parts. So expert are they that 
on the occasion of a heavy catch they are sent as far even as 
Yarmouth to direct and assist the local hands. Shipbuilding 
has now been discontinued, but boat-building and net-making 
are extensively carried on. There are also cooperage, the 
manufacture of fish-guano and fish products, flour mills, steam 
saw mills, a ropery and a woollen manufactory, a brewery and 
a distillery. The town, with Cromarty, Dingwall, Dornoch, 
Kirkwall and Tain, forms the Wick group of parliamentary 
burghs. Wick (Yik or " bay ") is mentioned as early as 1140. 
It was constituted a royal burgh by James VI. in 1560, its 
superior being then George Sinclair, 5th earl of Caithness. By 
a parliamentary bounty in 1768 some impetus Was given to 
the herring-fishery, but its real importance dates from the 
construction of a harbour in 1808. 

WICKLOW, a county of Ireland in the province of Leinster, 
bounded £. by St George's Channel, N. by the county of Dublin, 
S. by Wexford and W. by Cadow and detached portions of 
Kildare. The area is 500, 2x6 acres or about 782 sq.m. Wicklow 
is among the most famous counties of Ireland for beauty of 
scenery, both coastal and more especially inland. The coast is 
precipitous and picturesque, but very dangerous of approach 
owing to sandbanks. There are no inlets that can be properly 
termed bays. The harbour at Wicklow has a considerable trade; 
but that of Arkkw is suitable only for small vessels. To the 
north of the town of Wicklow there is a remarkable shingle beach, 
partly piled up by the waves and currents. The central portion 
of the county is occuptedby a mountain range, forming one of the 
four principal mountain groups of Ireland. The direction of the 
range is from N.E. to S.W., and the highest elevations are gener- 
ally attained along the central line. The range consists of long 
sweeping moorlands, rising occasionally by precipitous escarp- 
ments into culminating points, the highest summits being 
Kippure (2473 ft.), Duff Hill (2364), Table Mountain (2416) and 
LugnaquUla (3039), the last acquired by the, War Office as a 
manoeuvring ground. The range rises from the north by * 
succession of ridges intersected by deep glens; and subsides 
towards the borders of Wexford and Carlow. To the north its 
foothills enter county Dublin, and add attraction to the southern 
residential outskirts of the capital 

In the valleys there are many instances of old river terraces, 
the more remarkable being those at the lower end of Cleomalurc 
and the lower end of Gtlendalougfr. It is in its deep glens that 



WICKLOW— WICKRAKC 



619 



orach of the peculiar charm of XvTekJdw scenery b to be found, 
the frequently rugged natural features contrasting finely with 
the rich and luxuriant foliage of the extensive woods which line 
their banks. Among the more famous of these glens are Glen- 
dalough, Dargte, Glencree, Glen of the Downs, Devil's Glen, 
Glenmalttre and the beautiful vale of Avoca or Ovoca. The 
principal rivers are the Iiffey, on the north-western border; 
the. Vartry, which passes through Devil's Glen to the sea north 
of Wicklow Head; the Avonmore and the Avonbeg, which unite 
at the " meeting of the waters " to form the Avoca, which is 
afterwards Joined by the Aughrim and falls Into the tea at 
Arklow; and the Slaney, in the west of the county, passing sooth- 
wards into Carlow. There are a number of small bat finely situ- 
ated lakes in the valleys, the principal being Loughs Dan, Bray and 
Tay or Luggelaw, and the loughs of dendafough. The trout- 
fishing is generally fair. Owing to its proximity to Dublin and 
its accessibility from England, the portions of the county possess- 
ing scenic interest have been opened up to great advantage. 
Bray in the north is one of the most popular seaside resorts in 
the country, and Greys tones, 5 m. S., is a smaller one. Of the 
small towns and villages inland which are much frequented for 
the beauty of the country in whkh they lie, are Emuakerry, 
west of Bray, and near the pass of the Scalp; Laragh, near 
Glendalough, from which a great military road runs S.W. across 
*the hills below Lugnaquilla; and, on the railway south of 
Wicklow, Rathdrum, a beautifully situated village, Woodenbridge 
in the Vale of Avoca and Aughrim. Near the village of Shillelagh 
lies the wood which is said to have given the name of shilUlogk 
to the oaken or blackthorn staves used by Irishmen. Ashford 
and Roundwood on the Vastry river, Delgany near the Glen of 
the Downs, and Rathnew, a centre of coach routes, especially 
for the Devil's Glen, must aho be mentioned. The beauty of 
the central district of the Wicklow mountains fies in its wild 
solitude in contradistinction to the more gentle scenery of the 
populated glens. In the extreme north-west of the county 
Blessington is a favourite resort from Dublin, served by a steam 
tramway, which continues up the valley of the Iiffey to the 
waterfalls of PoHaphuca. The climate near the sea b remarkably 
mild, and permits the myrtle and arbutus to grow. 

Geology.— Wicklow, at regards its geology, is mainly an extension 
of county-Wexford, the Leinster chain bounding it on the west, and 
Silurian foothilb sloping thence down to the sea. Thshighland of 



heather-clad moor* give way to more broken country on either side, 
the streams cut deeply into the Silurian region. The water- 
r of Dublin b obtained from an artificial lake 



the first 

« of the foothilb at Roundwood. From Wkrklow town to near 
_.ay, red and greenish slates and yellow-brown quartrites, probably 
Cambrian, form a hilly country, in which rise Carrick Mt., the Great 
Sogarioal and Bray Head. Oidhamna occurs in this series, Volcanic 
ana mtruaivefebites and diorkes abound in the Silurian bods of the 
south, running along the strike of the strata. A considerable amount 
of gold has been extracted from the valley-graveb north of Croghan 
Kmshda on the Wexford border. Tinstone has also been found in 
small quantities. Lead-ore b raised west of Laragh, and the mines 
ia the Avoca valley have been worked for copper.lead and sulphur, 
the last-named being obtained from pyrite. Paving-setts are made 
from the diorite at Arklow, and granite b extensively quarried at 
Ballyknockan on the west side of the mountain-chain. 

Industries.— The land in the lower grounds is fertile; and although 
the greater part of the higher districts b covered with heath and turf. 
it affords good pasturage for sheep. There is a considerable extent of 
natural timber as well as artificial plantations. The acreage under 
pasture b nearly three rimes that of tillage, and, whereas the principal 
crops of oats and potatoes decrease considerably, the numbers of 
sheep* cattle, pigs and poultry are well sssintaioed.. Except in the 
Avoca district, where the mining industry is of some importance, the 
occupations are chiefly agricultural The port of Wicklow b the 
headquarters of a sea-fishery district. 

The Dublin and South-Eastern railway skirts the const by way of 
Bray and the town of Wicklow. touching it again at Arklow, with a 
branch tine from Woodenbridge junction to Shillelagh. A branch 
of the Great Southern & Western line from Sallins skirts the west 
of the county by Baltinglass. 

Papulation and Administration.— The population (64497 In 
1801, 60,824 in 1001) decreases to a less extent than the average 
of the Irish counties, and emigration b considerable. Of the 



total about 80% are Roman Catholics, and 18% Protestant 
Episcorjaiians; about 80% forms the rural population. Bray 
(pop. 74*4), Wicklow (the county town, 3288) and Arklow (4044) 
are the principal towns, all on the coast; Wicklow b the only 
considerable port. Wkklow returned to the Irish parliament, 
until the Union in 1800, two county members and two each for 
the boroughs of Baltinglass, Bray, Tinahety and Arklow; it 
b nowjormed into two parliamentary divisions, an eastern and 
a western, each returning one member. The county b divided 
into eight becomes. It b mainly in the Protestant diocese of 
Dublin and in the Roman Catbofic dioceses of Dublin, Kildareand 
Leightin and Ferns. Assizes are held at Wicklow, and quarter- 
sessions at Bray, Baltinglass, Tmahefy, Arklow and Wicklow. 

History and Antiquities.— Vti&low was not made a county 
until 1006. It was the last Irish ground shired, for in this 
mountainous district the Irish were long able to preserve inde- 
pendence. Wicklow sided, with the royal cause during the 
CromweUian wars, but on Cromwell's advance submitted to him 
without striking a blow. During the rebellion of 1798 some of 
the insurgents took refuge within its mountain fastnesses, and an 
engagement took place near Aughrim between a band of them 
tinder Joseph Holt (1756-1816) and the Brirish troops. A second 
skirmish was fought at Arklow between the rebels and General 
Ncedhami the former being defeated. 

Of the ancient cromlechs there are three of some interest, one near 
FnnbW rry, another on the summit of LugaaquiUa and a thaw, with 
a druidical circle, at Dosaghmore. There are comparatively tin* 
important monastic remains at Rathdrum, Baltinglass and. Wicklow, 
The ruins in the vale of Glendalough, known as the '* seven charches, M 
including a perfect round tower, ate, perhaps excepting Cfenmacnobe, 
the most remarkable ecclesiastical remains in Ireland. They owe 
their origin to St Kevin, who lived in the yab as a hermit, aod b 
reputed to have diejl on the 3rd of June 61 8. Of the old fortalices or 
strongholds associated whh the early wars, those of special interest 
are Black Castle, near Wicklow. originally founded by the Norman 
invaders, but taken by the Irish in 1301. and afterwards rebuilt by 
William Fitxwillbmj the scattered remains of Castle Kevin, the 
ancient stronghold of the OTooles, by whom it was probably 
originally built in the Uth century; and the ruins of the old castle of 
the Ormondes at Arklow, founded by Theobald FitxWaltcr (d. 1285), 
the scene of frequent conflicts up to the time of Cromwell, by whom it 
wasoemoKshed in 164% and now containing within the interior of its 
ruined walls a constabulary barrack. The fine mansion of Powers- 
court occupies the site of an old fortatice founded by De b Poer. one 
of the knights who landed with Strongbow; in the reign of Henry 
VIII. it was taken by the OTooles and O'Brynes. 

WICKLOW, a seaport, market town, and the county town of 
county Wicklow, Ireland, picturesquely situated at 'the mouth 
of a lagoon which receives the river Vartry and other streams, 
28} m, S. of Dublin by the Dublin ft South-Eastern railway. 
Pop. (igu) 3288. The harbour, which b governed by commis- 
sioners and can accommodate vesseb of 1500 tons, has two piers, 
with quayage. There b a considerable import trade in coal, 
timber, iron and slate; and some exports of grain and metallic 
ore, but the latter suffers by competition with the imports to 
Britain of sulphur ore from Spain. The town has county build* 
fogs, a parish church embodying a good Norman door from a 
previous structure, some rums of a Franciscan abbey of the 13th 
century, and remains of Black Castle, on a commanding situation 
above the sea, sounded in Norman times and rebuilt by William 
FitzwilHam after capture by the Irish in 1301. The name shews 
the town to have been a settlement of the Norsemen. The din" 
scenery to the S. towards Wicklow Head b fine, and the town has 
some claims as a seaside resort. It b governed by an urban 
district council 

WICKRAM. J0RO, or Ceo&g (d. c. 1560), German poet and 
novelist, was a native of Colmar in Alsace; the date of hb birth 
b unknown. He passed the latter part of bis life as town clerk 
of Burgheim on the Rhine, and died before 156a. Wickram 
was a many-sided writer. He founded a Mcistersinger school 
in Colmar in 1540, and has left a number of MeistcrsingerliedcrJ 
He edited Albrecht von Halberstadt's Middle High German 
version of Ovid's HeUnorfkoset (1 545), and in 1 555 he published 
Das RoUwogenbitihUin, one of the best of the many German 
Collections of tales and anecdotes which appeared in the 16th 
century. The title of the book implies its object, namely, to 



6ao 



WIDDRINGTON, BARONS— WIDUKIND 



supply readingfor the traveller in the " Rollwagen " or diligences. 
As a dramatist, Wickram wrote Faslnocklsspidt (Das Norren- 
giessen, 1537; Der treue Eckari, 1538; and two dramas on 
biblical subjects, Der verlorenc Sokn (1540) and Tobias (1351), 
A moralizing poem, Der irrereitende P tiger (1556), is half-satiric, 
half-didactic It is, however, as a novelist that Wickram has 
left the deepest mark on his time, his chief romances being Kilter 
Calmy out Sckotihnd (1539), Gabriotlo und Reinkard (j 554)1 
Der Knabenspiegel (1554), Von guten und bdsen Nackbarn (1556) 
and Der Qoldfaden (1557). These may be regarded as the earliest 
attempts in German literature to create that modern type of 
middle-class fiction which ultimately took the place of the 
decadent medieval romance of chivalry. 

Wickram's works have been edited by J. Bolte and W. Scbeel for 
the Stuttgart LUsmriscker Vereiu (vols., 222, 223, 220, 230, 1900- 
1903); Der Ritler Calmy was republished by F. dc la Motte Fouquo" 
in 1806; Der Cold faden' by K. Brentano in 1809; the Rollwagen- 
bickUin was edited by H. Kurz in 1865, and there is also a reprint 
of it in Reclam's Unmrsalbibliotkek. See A. Stober, J. Wickram 
(i860); W. Schercr, Die Anfdnge des dtutscken Prosaromans (1877). 

WIDDRINGTOrf, BARONS. In November 1643 Sir William 
Widdrington (1610-1651), of Widdrington, Northumberland, 
son and heir of Sir Henry Widdrington (d. 1623), was created 
Baron Widdrington, as a reward for his loyalty to Charles I. 
He had been member for Northumberland in both the Short 
and the Long Parliaments in 1640, but in August 1642 he was 
expelled because he had joined the royal standard. He fought 
for the king chiefly in Yorkshire and Lincolnshire during 1642 
and 1643; he was governor of Lincoln in 1643, but in 1644, after 
helping to defend York, be left England. Although in 1648 he 
had been condemned to death by the House of Commons, he 
accompanied Charics II. to Scotland in 1650, and he was mortally 
wounded whilst fighting for him at Wigan, dying on the 3rd of 
September 1651. His great-grandson, William, the 4th baron 
(1678-1743), took part in the Jacobite rising of 1715, and with 
two of his brothers was taken prisoner after the fight at Preston. 
He was convicted of high treason, and his title and estates were 
forfeited, but he was not put to death, and he survived until the 
19th of April 1743. When his son, Henry Francis Widdrington, 
who claimed the barony, died in September 1774, the family 
appears to have become extinct. 

Other eminent members of this family were Sir Thomas Widdring- 
ton and his brother Ralph. Havi ng married a daughter of Fcrdinaado 
Fairfax, afterwards 2nd Lord Fairfax, Thomas Widdrington was 
knighted at York in 1639, and in 1640 he became member of pariia-- 
ment for Berwick. He was already a barrister, and his legal know- 
ledge was very useful during the Civil War, In 1651 be was chosen 
a member of the council of state, although he had declined to have 
any share in the trial of the king. Widdrington was elected Speaker 
in September 1656, and in June 1658 he was appointed chief baron of 
the exchequer. In 1659 and again in 1660 he was a member of the 
Council of state, and on three occasions he was one of the com- 
missioners of the great seal, but he lost some of his offices when 
Charles II. was restored. However, he remained in parliament until 
his death on the 13th of May 1664. He left four daughters, but 
no sons. Widdrington, who founded a school at Scamfordham, 
Northumberland, wrote AnnUcta Eboracensia; worn* Remayues of the 
city of York. This was not published until 1877. when it was edited 
with introduction and notes by the Rev. Caesar Caine. His younger 
brother, Ralph Widdrington (d. r688), was educated at Christ's 
College, Cambridge, where he made the acquaintance of Milton. In 
1634 he was appointed regius professor of Greek at Cambridge, and i» 
1673 Lady Margaret professor of divinity. 

The name- of Roger Widdrington was taken by Thomas Preston 
(1563-1640), a Benedictine monk, who wrote several books of a 
controversial nature, and passed much of his time in prison, being 
still a captive when he died on the 3rd of April 1640. (See Rev. E. 
Taunton, The Emgfisk Black Monks of St Benedict, 1897.) 

In 1840 the writer, Samuel Edward Cook, took the name of 
Widdrington, his mother being the heiress of some of the estates of 
this family. Having served in the British navy he lived for some 
years in Spain, writing Sketches in Spain during the years 1829- 
183a (London, 1834): and Spat* and ike Spaniards in 1843 (London, 
1844). He died at his residence, Newton Hall, Northumberland, on 
the nth of January 1856 and was succeeded in the ownership of his 
estates by* hl» nephew, Stalcros* Fruherbert lacson, who took the 
name Widdrington. See Rev. John Hodgson, History of Nortknmbtr- 
tand (1 820-1840). 

VmU* a municipal borough in the Widnes parliamentary 
division of r»«*~M*» England, on the Mersey, it m. E.S.E. 



from Liverpool, serWby the London & North-Western and 
Lancashire & Yorkshire railways and the Cheshire lines. 
Pop. (1001) 28,580. It is wholly of modern growth, for in 1851 
the population was under 2000. There are capacious docks on 
the river, which is crossed by a wrought-iron bridge, 1000 ft. 
long, and 95 in height, completed in 1868, and having two lines 
of railway and a footpath. Widnes is one of the principal seats 
of the alkali and soap manufacture, and has also grease-works 
for locomotives and waggons, copper works, iron-foundries, oil 
and paint works and sail-cloth manufactories. The barony of 
Widnes in 1554*1555 was declared to be part of the duchy of 
Lancaster. The town was incorporated in 1892, and the corpora- 
tion consists of a mayor, 6 aldermen and 18 councillors. Area, 
3iioacres. 

W1D0R, CHARLES MARIE (1845- )» French composer 
and organist, was born at Lyons on the 22nd of February 1845. 
He studied first at Lyons, then at Brussels under Lemmens for 
the organ and Fetis for composition. In 1870 he became organist 
of the church of Saint Sulpice in Paris. He succeeded Cesar 
Franck as professor of the organ at the Paris Conservatoire, where 
he was also appointed professor of composition, counterpoint 
and fugue in J&96. A very prolific composer, he displayed his 
creative ability in a variety of different styles. His works include 
an opera, Mattre Ambros (Opera Comique, 1896), La Karrigane 
(ballet, given at the Opera, x88o), incidental music to ConU • 
d'awil (1885), Les Jacobites (1885) and Jeanne d'Arc (a panto- 
mime play, 1890), three symphonies, The Walpurgis Night and 
other works for orchestra, a quintet for strings and piano, trio 
for piano and strings, a mass, psalms and other sacred composi- 
tions, symphonies for organ, a large number of piano pieces and 
many songs. 

WIDUKIND, Saxon historian, was the author of Res gestae 
Scxonicoe. Nothing is known of his life except that he was a 
monk at the Benedictine abbey of Corvey, and that be died about 
1004, although various other conjectures have been formed by 
students of his work. He is also supposed to have written lives 
of St Paul and St Thecla, but no traces of these now remain. 
It is uncertain whether he was a resident at the court of the 
emperor Otto the Great or not, and also whether he was on 
intimate terms with Otto's illegitimate son William, archbishop 
of Mains. His Res gestae Saxonkce, dedicated to Matilda, abbess 
of Quedlinburg, who was a daughter of Otto the Great, is divided 
into three books, and the greater part of it was undoubtedly 
written during the lifetime of the emperor, probably about 968. 
Starting with certain surmises upon the origin of the Saxons, 
he deals with the war between Theuderich I., king of Austrasia, 
and the Thurirtgians, in which the Saxons played an important 
part. An allusion to the conversion of the race to Christianity 
under Charlemagne brings him to the early Saxon dukes and the 
reign of Henry the Fowler, whose campaigns are referred, to in 
some detail. The second book opens with the ejection of Otto 
the Great as German king, treats of the risings against his 
authority, and concludes with the death of his wife Edith in 946, 
In the third book the historian deals with Otto's expedition into 
France, his troubles with his son Ludolf and his son-in-law, 
Conrad the Red, duke of Lorraine, and the various wars in 
Germany; but makes only casual reference to Otto's visits to 
Italy in 951 and 96a. He gives a vivid account of the defeat 
of the Hungarians on the Lechfeld in August 955, and ends wRh 
the death of Otto in 973 and b eulogy on his life. 

Widukind formed his style upon that of SaHust; be was 
familiar with the De viiis Caesarmn of Suetonius, the Vita 
Karali magni of Einhard, and probably with Livy and Bede. 
Many quotations from the Vulgate are found in his writings, 
and there are traces of a knowledge of Virgil, Ovid and other 
Roman poets. His sentences are occasionally abrupt and 
lacking in clearness, his Latin words are sometimes germanised 
(as when he writes uticki for miht) and grammatical errors ant 
not always absent. The earlier part of his work is taken from 
tradition, but he wrote the contemporary part as one familiar 
with court life and the events of the day. He ssys very little 
about affairs outside Germany, and although laudatory of 



WIDUKIND— WIELAND 



621 



monastic life gives due prominence to secular affairs. He writes 
as a Saxon, proud of the history of his race and an admirer of 
Henry the Fowler and Otto the Great, 

Three manuscripts exist of the Res gestae, one of which is in the 
British Museum, and the book was first published at Basel in 1532. 
The best edition is that edited by G. Waits in the Monumenta 
Germanuu kiiUnica.. ScHptores, Band iii. (Hanover and Berlin, 
t8a6). A good edition published at Hanover and Leipzig in 1904 
contains an introduction by K. A. Kehr. 

See R. Kdpke. Widukind von Coney (Berlin. 1867); J. Raase. 
Widukind oon Korvei (Rostock. 1880) : and B. Simson, u tax Kritik 
des Widukind " in the Neues Arckiv ier GesoUsckafl fUr titer* 
deutseke Ceukichte, Band xii. (Hanover, 1876). . (L W. H.*) 

WIDUKIND. or Wittekind (d. c. 807), leader of the Saxons 
during the earlier part of their resistance to Charlemagne, 
belonged to a noble Weslphahan family, and is first mentioned 
in 777 when his absence from an assembly of the Saxons held by 
the Frankish king of Paderborn was a matter for remark. It is 
inferred with considerable probability that he had taken a 
leading part in the attacks on two Frankish garrisons in 776, 
and possibly had shared in earlier fights against the Franks,' and 
so feared to meet the king. In 778 he returned from exile" in 
Denmark to lead a fresh rising, and in 782 the Saxons at his 
instigation drove out the Frankish priests, and plundered the 
border territories. It is uncertain whether Widukind shared in 
the Saxon victory at the Suntel mountains, or what part he took 
in the risings of 783 and 784. In 785 Charlemagne, leading an 
expedition towards the mouth of the Elbe, learned that Widukind 
was in the land of the Nordalbingians, on the right bank of the 
river. Negotiations were begun, and the Saxon chief, assured of 
his personal safety, appeared at the Frankish court at Attigny. 
There he was baptized, the king acting as his sponsor and loading 
him with gifts. The details of his later life ate unknown. He 
probably returned to Saxony and occupied there an iniluential 
position, as in 922 the inheritance of the " old count or duke 
Widukind " is referred to. Many legends have gathered around 
his memory, and he was long regarded as a national hero by the 
Saxons. He is reported to have been duke of Engria, to have 
been a devoted Christian and a builder of churches, and to have 
fallen in battle in 807. Kingly and princely houses have sought 
to establish their descent from him, but except in the case of 
Matilda, wife of the German king, Henry I. the Fowler, without 
any success. 

See W. Dickamp, Widukind ier Sacksenjuhrer nock GesckickU und 
Sage (Munstcr, 1877); J. Dettmer, Der SacksenfUkrer Widukind 
mack Gesckukle und Sage (Wurzburg, 1879). 

i WIEDEMANN, GUST A V HBTNRICH (1826-1899)7 German 
physicist, was born at Berlin on the 2nd of October 1826. After 
attending the Cologne gymnasium, he entered the university of 
Berlin in 1844, and took his doctor's degree there three years 
later. His thesis on that occasion was devoted to a question in 
organic chemistry, for he held the opinion that the study of 
chemistry is an indispensable preliminary to the pursuit of 
physics, which was his ultimate aim. In Berlin he made the 
acquaintance of H. von Helmhottz at the house of H. G. Magnus, 
and was one of the founders of the Berlin Physical Society. In 
1854 he left Berlin to become professor of physics in Basel 
University, removing nine years afterwards to Brunswick 
Polytechnic, and in 1866 to Karlsruhe Polytechnic. In 1871 
be accepted the chair of physical chemistry at Leipzig. The 
attention he had paid to chemistry in the earlier part of his 
career enabled him to hold his own in this position, but be found 
bis work more congenial when in 1887- he was transferred to the 
professorship of physics. He died at Leipzig on the 24th oi. 
March 1899. His name is probably most widely known far his 
literary work. In 1877 he undertook the editorship oi the 
AnnaUn der Pkysik und Chemie in succ e ssio n to J. C. Poggen- 
dorff, thus starting the series of that scientific periodical which 
is familiarly cited as WiexL Ann. Another monumental work 
for which he was responsible was Die Lean ton der EkktridtOt, 
or, as it was called in the first instance, Lenre won Gahonismus 
mid Elektromarnetismus, a book that is unsurpassed for accuracy 
and comprehensiveness. He produced the first edition in 
1861, nod a fourth, revised and enlarged, was only completed a 
xxvui a 



short time before his death. But his original work was also 
important. His data for the thermal conductivity of various 
metals were for long the most trustworthy at the disposal of 
physicists, and his determination of the ohm in terms of the 
specific resistance of mercury showed remarkable skill in quanti- 
tative research. He carried out a number of magnetic investiga- 
tions which resulted in the discovery of many interesting pheno- 
mena, some of which have been rediscovered by others; they 
related among other things to the effect of mechanical strain on 
the magnetic properties of the magnetic metals, to the relation 
between the chemical composition of compound bodies and their 
magnetic properties, and to a curious parallelism between the 
laws of torsion and of magnetism. He also investigated electrical 
endosrnosis and the electrical resistance of electrolytes. His 
eldest son, Eilhard Ernst Gustav, born at Berlin on the 1st of 
August 1852, became professor of physics at Erlangen in 1886, 
and his younger son, Alfred, born at Berlin on the 18th of July 
1856, was appointed to the extraordinary professorship of 
Egyptology at Bonn in 1892. 

WIELAND, CHBJ8T0PH MARTIN (1733-1813), German poet 
and man of letters, w» born at Oberholzheim, a village near 
Biberach in Wurttemberg, on the 5th of September 1733. His 
father, who was pastor in Oberholzheim, and subsequently in 
Biberach, took great pains with the child's education, and from 
the town school of Biberach he passed on, before he had reached 
his fourteenth year, to the gymnasium at Klbsterberge, near 
Magdeburg. He was a precocious child, and when he left school 
in 1749 w widely read in the Latin classics and the leading 
contemporary French writers; amongst German poets bis 
favourites were Brockes and Klopstock. While at home in the 
summer of 1750, he fell in love with a kinswoman, Sophie Guter- 
mann, and this love affair seems to have acted as an incentive 
to poetic composition; under this inspiration he planned his 
first ambitious work, Die Naiurder Dinge (1752), a didactic poem 
in sis books. In 1750 he went to the university of Tubingen as 
a student of law, but his time was mainly taken up with literary 
studies. The poems he wrote at the university— Hrmwfw, an 
epic (published by F. Muncker, x886), Zwtlf moralische Brief* 
in Versen (1752), AnHOwid (1752)— -are pietistk in tone and 
dominated by the influence of Klopstock. They attracted the 
attention of the Swiss literary reformer, J. J. Bodmer, who 
invited Wieland to visit him in Zurich in the summer of 1752. 
After, a few months, however, Bodmer felt himself as little in 
sympathy with Wieland as, two years earlier, he had felt himself 
with Klopstock, and the friends parted; but Wieland remained 
in Switzerland until 1760, residing, in the last year, at Bern where 
he obtained a position as private tutor. Here he stood in intimate 
relations with Rousseau's friend Julie de Bondeli. Meanwhile 
a change had come over Wieland's tastes; the writings of his 
early Swiss years— Der geprilfte Abraham (1753), Sympaikiem 
(1756), Empfiudungen eines Christen (1757)— were still in the 
manner of his earlier writings, but with the tragedies, Lady 
Johanna Gray (1758)1 and Clementina won PorreUa (1760)— the 
latter based on Richardson's Sir Charles Grandison—the epic 
fragment Cyrus (1759)1 and the " moral story in dialogues," 
Araspes und Panthea (1760), Wieland, as Leasing said, " forsook 
the ethereal spheres to wander again among the sons of men." 

Wieland's conversion was completed at Biberach, whither he 
had returned in 1760, as director of the chancery. The dullness 
and monotony of his life here was relieved by the friendship of 
a Count Stadion, whose library in the castle of Warthausen, not 
far from Biberach, was well stocked, with French and English 
literature. Here, too, Wieland met again his early love Sophie 
Gutermann, who had meanwhile become the wife of Hofrat La 
Roche, then manager of Count Stadion's estates. The former poet 
of an austere pietism now became the advocate of a light-hearted 
philosophy, from which frivolity and sensuality were not ex- 
cluded In Don Syhio ton Rosaho (1764), • romance in imita- 
tion of Don Quixote, he held up to ridicule bis earlier faith and 
in the Komische Enahlungtn (1765) he gave his extravagant 
imagination only too free a rein. More important is the novel 
GeschiehU des Agathon (1766-1767), in which, under the guise of 

2a 



622 



WIELIGZKA— WIENER1NEUSTADT 



a Greek fiction, Wieland described his own spiritual and intel- 
lectual growth. This work, which Leasing recommended as " a 
novel of classic taste," marks an epoch in the development of 
the modern psychological novel. Of equal importance was 
Widand's translation of twenty-two of Shakespeare's plays into 
prose (8 vols., 1 762-1 766) ; it was the first attempt to present the 
English poet to the German people in something approaching 
entirety. With the poems Musarion oder die Philosophic der 
Graxien (1768), Idris (1768), Combabus (1770), Der nemo Amadis 
(1771), Wieland opened the series of light and graceful romances 
in verse which appealed so irresistibly to his contemporaries 
and acted as an antidote to the sentimental excesses of the 
subsequent Sturm und Drang movement. Wieland married in 
1765, and between 1769 and 1772 was professor of philosophy 
at Erfurt. In the last -mentioned year he published Der goldene 
Spiegel oder die Kdnige ton Scheschian, a pedagogic work in the 
form of oriental stories; this attracted the attention of duchess 
Anna Araalie of Saxe-Weimar and resulted in his appointment 
as tutor to her two sons, Karl August and Konstantin, at Weimar. 
With the exception of some years spent at Ossmannstedt, where 
in later life he bought an estate, Weimar remained Wieland's 
home until his death on the 20th of January 1813. Here, in 
1773, he founded Der teulsche Merhur, which under his editorship 
(1773-1789) became the most influential literary review in 
Germany. Of the writings of his later years the most important 
are the admirable satire on German provinciality — the most 
attractive of all his prose writings— Die Abdcriten, eine sehr 
loahrscheiniiche Ceschichte (1774)1 *nd the charming poetic 
romances, Das Winlermdrchen (1776), Das Sommermdrchendjlj), 
Ccron der Adelige (x777>, Die WUnsche oder Pervonie (1778), a 
series culminating with Wieland's poetic masterpiece, the 
romantic epic of Oberon (1780). Although belonging to a class 
of poetry in which modern readers take but little interest, Oberon 
has still, owing to the facile beauty of its stanzas, the power to 
charm. In Wieland's later novels, such as the Geheime Ceschichte 
des PhUosophen Peregrinus Proteus (1791) and Aristipp und 
einige seiner Zeitgenossen (1800-1 802), a didactic and philosophic 
tendency obscures the small literary interest they possess. He 
also translated Horace's Satires (1786), Lucian's Works (1788- 
1789), Cicero's Letters (1808 ff.), and from 1796 to 1803 be 
edited the AUisches Museum which did valuable service in 
popularizing Greek studies. 

Without creating a school in the strict sense of the term, 
Wieland influenced very considerably the German literature of 
his time. The verse-romance and the novel— more especially 
in Austria— benefited by his example, and even the Romanticists 
of a later date borrowed many a hint from him in their excursions 
into the literatures of the south of Europe. The qualities which 
distinguish his work, his fluent style and light touch, his careless 
frivolity rather than poetic depth, show him to have been in 
literary temperament more akin to Ariosto and Voltaire than to 
the more spiritual and serious leaders of German poetry; but 
these very qualities in Wieland's poetry introduced a balancing 
element into German classical literature and added materially 
to its fullness and completeness. 

Edition* of WirUnd* S&mtiifh* Wrrti appeared io < 1794- 1 Boi, 45 
vo1i.) t t(ttiH^iSj*S, 53 vol*.}, (lft>^l«40 T 3& vol*,), and (iftfiJ-^sC 
Ao vol*.)* The litttui edition (40 vof*.} wa» edited by H. DiLntEer 
1 1 879— 1 a S3 J ; a new critical edition ii at present in preparation by 
the I'nifmiflrt Academy. There are nutnenaj* edition* of selected 
work*, noisily by ll PiOfck in Kurcthncr*! Dcutick* Naiiondl- 
itftratur (vol*. 51-56, i&8j-i^7k by F. Muncker (b voIl, 10B9}; 
by W + Balvrb* (4 vol*.* lytw). Collection* of Wieland's letter* mere 
edited by flii ion I 1 and by H + Gessner ( 1815-* Bt*^> ; 

bti Letter* to Stmhte Lutuclic by F. Horn { iSjo). S*e J. Q. Cruber, 
C **. Wuia*di L* } x* u »U., j*27-tPjS)i H. tViring, C ill. 
W. Lecbdl, C, Af, Wvtond <ita»j; H- Prohle, 
ZmLRtm* ',A*ndiUten 

InwdiviVt i>lt, WMand 

ij*r WuUnd* Klothitiw. 
' )*d dit Aniihe (tSoo); 
• Ufc, Wtetands 
'Viilonds 

■■' 




WIEUCZKA, a mining town in Gaikia, Austria, f jo m 
by rail W. of Lemberg and 9 m. S.E. of Cracow. Pop. (1900) 
6012. It is built on the slopes of a hill which half encircles the 
place, and over the celebrated salt -mines of the same name. 
These mines are the richest in Austria, and among the most 
remarkable in the world. They consist of seven different levels, 
one above the other, and have eleven shafts, two of which are 
in the town. The levels are connected by flights of steps, and 
are composed of a labyrinth of chambers and passages, whose 
length aggregates over 65 m. The length of the mines from 
E. to W. is 2} m., the breadth from N. to S.is 1050 yds. and the 
depth reaches 080 ft. Many of the old chambers, some of which 
are of enormous size, are embellished with portals, candelabra, 
statues, &c, all. hewn in rock-salt. There are also two large 
chapels, containing altars, ornaments, &c, in rock-salt, a room 
called the dancing saloon (Tamsaal), where the objects of 
interest found in the mines are kept; the Kronleuchtersaal, and 
the chamber Michatovice are also worth mention. In the interior 
of the mines are sixteen ponds, ot which the large lake of Przykos 
is 105 ft. long, no ft. broad, and 10-26 ft. deep. The mines 
employ over 1000 workers, and yield about 60,000 tons annually. 
The salt of Wieliczka is well known for its purity and solidity, 
but has generally a grey or blackish colour. The date of the 
discovery of the mines is unknown, but they were already worked 
in the nth century. Since 1814 they have belonged entirely to 
the Austrian government. The mines suffered greatly from 
inundations in 1868 and 1879, and the soil on which the town is 
built shows signs of subsidence. 

See E. Windakiewicx, Das Steinsaizbergwerk in Widicska (Freiberg. 
1896). 

WIELOPOLSKI, ALEKSAXDER, Marquis of Gonzaga-Myss- 
kowski (1803-1877), Polish statesman, was educated in Vienna, 
Warsaw, Paris and Gottingen. In 1830 he was elected a 
member of the Polish diet on the Conservative side. At the 
beginning of the Insurrection of 1831 he was sent to London to 
obtain the assistance, or at least the mediation, of England; but 
the only result of his mission was the publication of the pamphlet 
Mtmoire prisenti d Lord Palmerston (Warsaw, 1831). On the 
collapse of the insurrection he emigrated, and on his return to 
Poland devoted himself exclusively to literature and the cultiva- 
tion of his estates. On the occasion of the Galician outbreak 
of 1845, when the Ruthenian peasantry massacred some hundreds 
of Polish landowners, an outbreak generally attributed to the 
machinations of the Austrian government, Wielopolski wrote 
his famous Lcttre d'un gentiihomme polonais au prince de Metier - 
nich (Brussels, 1846), which caused a great sensation at the time, 
and in which he attempted to prove that the Austrian court was 
acting in collusion with the Russian in the affair. In 186 1, when 
Alexander II. was benevolently disposed towards the Poles and 
made certain political and national concessions to them, Wielo- 
polski was appointed president of the commissions of public 
worship and justice and subsequently president of the council of 
state. A visit to the Russian capital in November still further 
established his influence, and in 1862 he was appointed adjutant 
to the grand-duke Constantine. This office he held till the 
1 2th of September 1863, when finding it impossible to resist the 
rising current of radicalism and revolution be resigned all his 
offices, and obtained at his own request unlimited leave of 
absence. He retired to Dresden, where he died on the 30th of 



December 1877. 

See Henryk Lis -_*---«_- * 

(Vienna, 1880) ; Wlodzimieriz Spasowicz, The Life and Policy of the 



See Henryk Lisicki, Le Marquis Wielopolski, so vie et son temps 



Marquis Wielopolski (Rus.) (St ^Petersburg. 1882"). (R. N. B.) 

W1ENBR-NEUSTADT, a town of Austria, in Lower Austria, 
31 m. S. of Vienna by raiL Pop. (1000) 28,438. It is situated 
between the Fischa and the Leitha and is dose to the Hungarian 
frontier. It was almost entirely rebuilt after a destructive fire 
in 1834, and ranks among the handsomest provincial towns in 
Austria. Its ancient gates, walls and towers have disappeared, 
but it still possesses a few medieval edifices, the moat important 
of which is the old castle of the dukes of Babenberg, founded in 
the 12th century, and converted by Maria Theresa in-1752 into 
a military academy. The Gothic chapel contains the remama 



WIENIAWSKI— WIESBADEN 



G*$ 



of the emperor Maximilian I., who Was born here in 1459. The 
parish church, with its two lofty towen, is substantially a Roman- 
esque building of the 13th century, but the choir and transepts 
are Gothk additions of a later date. The late Gothic church 
of the old Cistercian abbey contains a handsome monument in 
memory of Leonora of Portugal (d. 1467), consort of the emperor 
Frederick III., and possesses a rich library and an interesting 
museum. The town-house is also a noteworthy building and 
contains large and important archives. The chief industrial 
establishments are a large ammunition factory and an engine 
factory; but manufactures of cotton, silk, velvet, pottery and 
paper, sugar-refining and tanning are also extensively carried on. 
Trade is also brisk, and is facilitated by a canal connecting the 
town with Vienna, and used chiefly for the transport of coal and 
timber. 

Neustadt was founded in x 192, and was a favourite residence of 
numerous Austrian sovereigns, acquiring the title of the " ever- 
faithful town" {die alltzcit getreue Sicdl) from its unfailing 
loyalty. In 1 246 it was the scene of a victory of the Hungarians 
over the Austrians; and in 1486 it was taken by Matthias 
Corvinus, king of Hungary, who, however, restored it to Maxi- 
milian I. four years later. In 1529 and 1663 it was besieged by 
the Turks. It was at Neustadt that the emperor Rudolf II. 
granted to the Bohemian Protestants, in 1609, the " Majestits- 
brief," or patent of equal rights, the revocation of which helped 
to precipitate the Thirty Years' War. 

See Hinner, Wande&ilder cms Act GnchkkU Wicuer-Neustadts 
(Wiener-Neustadt, 1898). 

WimriAWSKI, HENRI (1835-1880)," Polish violinist 'and 
composer, was born at Lublin, in Poland, on the 10th of July 
1835. He was a pupil of the Paris Conservatoire from 1843 to 
1846, and again in 1840-1850. Meanwhile he had given concerts 
in his native country and in Russia, and in 1850 entered upon 
the career of a travelling virtuoso, together with his brother 
Joseph, a distinguished pianist. He was appointed solo violinist 
to the tsar in i860, and taught in the Conservatoire of St Peters- 
burg from 1 86 a to 1867. He went on tour again in 1872 with 
Rubinstein in America, and on his return in 1874 was appointed 
to succeed Vieuxtemps as professor in the Brussels Conservatoire; 
but, like his predecessor, he was compelled through ill-health 
to give up the post after three years, returning to a public 
career in spite of his illness, until his death, which occurred in 
a hospital in Moscow, on the 31st of March 1880. He was a 
wonderfully sympathetic solo player, and a good if not a great 
quartet player. His Ltgende, the fantasias on Faust and on 
Russian airs, his two concertos and some other pieces, have 
retained their high place in the violin repertory. 

WIEPRECHT, W1LHELM FRIEDRICH (180^*1873), German 
musical conductor, composer and inventor, was born on the 
10th of August 1802, at Aschersleben, where his father was town 
musician. According to his autobiography, Wieprecht early 
learned from his father to play on nearly all wind instruments. 
It was in violin-playing, however, that his father particularly 
wished him to excel; and in 1819 he went to Dresden, where he 
studied composition and the violin to such good purpose that 
a year later he was given a position in the city orchestra of 
Leipzig, playing also m those of the opera and the famous 
Gewandhaus. At this time, besides playing the violin and 
clarinet in the orchestra, he also gave soto performances on the 
trombone. In 1 824 he went to Berlin, where he became a member 
of the royal orchestra, and was in the same year appointed 
chamber musician to the king. His residence at Berlin gave 
Wieprecht ample opportunity for the exercise of his genius for 
military music, on which his fame mainly rests. Several of his 
marches were early adopted by the regimental bands, and a 
more ambitious military composition attracted the attention 
of Gasparo Spontini, at whose house he became an intimate guest. 
It was now that he began to study acoustics, in order to correct 
the deficiencies in military musical instruments. As the result, 
he improved the valves of the brass instruments, and succeeded, 
by constructing them on sounder acoustic principles, in greatly 
increasing the volume and purity of their tone. lie also invented 



the baas Cuba or bombardon in older to give greater richness and 
power to the bass parts. In recognition of these inventions he 
was, in 1835, honoured by the Royal Academy of Berlin. In 
1838 he was appointed by the Prussian government director- 
general of all the guards' bands, and in recognition of the magnifi- 
cent performance by massed bands on the occasion of the 
emperor Nicholas L's visit the same year, was awarded a special 
uniform* In 1843 he became director-general of the bands of the 
xoth Confederate army corps, and from this time exercised a 
profound influence on the development of military music through- 
out Germany, and beyond. He was the fast to arrange the 
symphonies and overtures of the classical masters for military 
instruments, and to organize those outdoor performances of 
concert pieces by military bands which have done so much to 
popularize good music in Germany and elsewhere. The perform- 
ance arranged by him of Beethoven's " Battle of Vittoria," in 
which the bugle calls were given by trumpeters stationed in 
various parts of the garden and the cannon shots were those of 
real guns, created immense sensation. Besides the great work 
he accomplished in Germany, Wieprecht, in 1847, reorganized the 
military music in Turkey and, in 1852, in Guatemala. He 
composed military songs as well as numerous marches, and con- 
tributed frequently on his favourite subject to the Berlin musical 
papers. He died on the 4th of August 1872. Wieprecht was a 
man of genial, kindly and generous nature, and was associated 
with many charitable foundations established tor the benefit 
of poor musicians. _ 

WIESBADEN, a town and watering-place of Germany, in the 
Prussian province of Hesse-Nassau. Pop. (1005) 100,953. It 
is delightfully situated in a basin under the well-wooded south- 
western spurs of the Taunus range, 5 m. N. of Mainz, 3 m. from 
the right bank of the Rhine (at Biebrich), and 25 m. W. of 
Frankfort -on-Main by rail. The town is on the whole sumptu- 
ously built, with broad and regular streets. Villas and gardens 
engirdle it on the north and east sides and extend up the hills 
behind. Its prosperity is mainly due to its hot springs and mild 
climate, which have rendered it a favourite winter as well as 
summer resort The general character of the place, with its 
numerous hotels, pensions, bathing establishments, villas and 
places of entertainment, is largely determined by the require- 
ments of visitors, who in 1907 numbered x 80,000. The principal 
buildings are the royal palace, built in 1 837-1840 as a residence 
for the dukes of Nassau, and now a residence of the king of 
Prussia; the Court Theatre (erected 1892-X894); the new 
Kurhaus, a large and handsome establishment, with colonnades, 
adjoining a beautiful and shady park; the town-hall, in the 
German Renaissance style (1804-1888); the government offices 
and the museum, with a picture gallery, a collection of antiquities, 
and a library of 150,000 vols. Among the churches, which arc all 
modern, are the Protestant Uarkikirchc, in the Gothic style 
with five towers, built 1853-1862; the Bagkirche; the Roman 
Catholic church of St Boniface; the Anglican church and the 
Russian church on the Neroberg. There are two synagogues. 
Wiesbaden contains numerous scientific and educational institu- 
tions, including a chemical laboratory, an agricultural college 
and two musical conservatoria. 

The alkaline thermal springs contain § % of common salt, and 
smaller quantities of other chlorides; and a great deal of their 
efficacy is due to their high temperature, which varies from 156° 
to 104 Fahr. The water is generally cooled to 93 F. for bathing. 
The principal spring is the Kockbruntun (156 F.), the water of 
which is drunk by sufferers from chronic dyspepsia and obesity. 
There are twenty-eight other springs of nearly identical composi- 
tion, many of which are used for bathing, and arc efficacious 
in cases of rheumatism, gout, nervous and female disorders and 
skin diseases. The season lasts from April to October, but the 
springs are open the whole year through and are also largely 
attended m winter. 

Two miles north-west of the town lies the Neroberg (800 ft.), 
whence a fine view of the surrounding country is obtained, and 
which is reached by a funicular railway from Beausite, and 6 m. 
to the west bos the Hobe Wurxd (1025 ft.) with an ouH<v»k mw*r. 



624 



WIG 



Wiesbaden is one of the oldest watering-places in Germany, 
and may be regarded as the capital of the Taunus spas. The 
springs mentioned by Pliny (Hist, not. xxi. a) as Pontes Mattkiaci 
were known to the Romans, who fortified the place c. 1 1 B.C. The 
massive wall in the centre of the town known as the Heidcn- 
mauer was probably part of the fortifications built under Dio- 
cletian. The name Wisibada (" meadow bath ") appears in 830. 
Under the Carolingian monarchs it was the site of a palace, and 
Otto I. gave it civic rights. In the nth century the town and 
district passed to the counts of Nassau, fell to the Waltam line 
in 1255, and in 1355 Wiesbaden became with Idstein. capital of 
the county Nassau-Idstein. It suffered much from the ravages 
of the Thirty Years' War and was destroyed in 1644. In 1744 
it became the seat of government of the principality Nassau- 
Usingen, and was from 181 5 to 1866 the capital of the duchy of 
Nassau, when it passed with that duchy to Prussia. Though 
the springs were never quite forgotten, they did not attain their 
greatest repute until the close of the x8th century. From 1771 
to 1873 Wiesbaden was a notorious gambling resort; but in the 
latter year public gambling was suppressed by the Prussian 
government. 

See Roth, Gesdtkkte und kistorische Topographic der Stadi Wies- 
baden (Wiesbaden, 1883) ; Pagenstccher, Wiesbaden in medisinisch- 
topoiraphischer Betiehung (Wiesbaden, 1870); Kranz, Wiesbaden 
und se%ne Thermen (Leipzig, 1884); Pfeiffar. Wiesbaden als Kurort 
(5th ed., Wiesbaden. 1899); and Heyl, Wiesbaden und seine Umge- 
bungen (27th ed., Wiesbaden, 1908). 

WIG (short for " periwig," an alternative form of " peruke," 
Fr. permquc; cf. Span, peluca; conjecturally derived from 
Lat. pilus), an artificial head of hair, worn as a personal adorn- 
ment, disguise or symbol of office. The custom of wearing wigs 
is of great antiquity. If, as seems probable, the curious head- 
covering of a prehistoric ivory carving of a female head found 
by M. Piette in the cave of Brassempouy in the Landcs represents 
a wig (see Ray Lankestcr, Science from an Easy Choir, fig. 7) 
the fashion is certainly some 100,00c years old. In historic 
times, wigs were worn among the Egyptians as a royal and 
official head-dress, and specimens of these have been recovered 
from mummies. In Greece they were used by both men and 
women, the most common name being vrpkn or 4m*okv, some- 
times rpoKojuop or kojioi vpaaHrou A reference in Xenopbon 
(Cyr. i. 3. a) to the false hair worn by Cyrus's grandfather 
11 as is customary among the Medes," and also a story in Aristotle 
(Oecon. 4. 14), would suggest that wigs were introduced from 
Persia, and were in use in Asia Minor. Another origin is sug- 
gested by Athenacus (xii. 523), who says that the Iapygian 
immigrants into Italy from Crete were the first to wear wpacbfua 
wpdkrd, and the elaborately frizzled hair worn by some of the 
figures in the frescoes found at Cnossus makes it probable that 
the wearing of artificial hair was known to the Cretans. Lutian, 
in the and century, mentions wigs of both men and women as 
a matter of course (Alex. 50, Dial. met. it). The theatrical wig 
was also in use in Greece, the various comic and tragic masks 
having hair suited to the character represented. A. E. Haigh 
(Attic Theatre, pp. 2az, 339) refers to the black hair and beard 
of the tyrant, the fair curls of the youthful hero, and the red 
hair characteristic of the dishonest slave of comedy. These 
conventions appear to have been handed on to the Roman 
theatre. 

At Rome wigs came into use certainly in the early days of the 
empire. They were also known to the Carthaginians; Polybius 
(Hi. 78) says that Hannibal used wigs as a means of disguise. 
The fashionable ladies of Rome were much addicted to false hair, 
and we learn from Ovid, A mores, i. 14. 45) and Martial (v. 68) 
that the golden hair imported from Germany was most favoured. 
Juvenal (vi. 120) shows us Messalina assuming a yellow wig for 
her visits to places of ill-fame, and the scholiast on the passage 
says that the yellow wig was characteristic of courtesans. 
The chief names for wigs were golems, galcriculum, corymbium, 
capillamentum, caliendrum, or even comae emptae, &c Golems 
meant in the first place a skull-cap, or coif, fastening under the 
chin, and made of hide or fur, worn by peasants, athletes and 
fiamines. The first men's wigs then would have been tight fur 



caps simulating hair, which would naturally suggest wigs of 
false hair. Otho wore a wig (Suetonius, Otho f 1a), which could 
not be distinguished from real hair, while Nero (Dio Cass. lsi. 9) 
wore a wig as a disguise, and Heltogabalus also wore one at times 
(ibid, lxxix. 13). Women continued to have wigs of different 
colours as part of their ordinary wardrobe, and Faustina, wife 
of Marcus Auremis, is said to have had several hundred. An 
amusing development of this is occasionally found in portrait 
busts, e.g. that of Plautilla in the Louvre, in which the hair ta 
made movable, so that by changing the wig of the statue from 
time to time it should never bo out of fashion. 

The Fathers of the Church violently attacked the custom of 
wearing wigs, Tertullian (De cullu fern. C. 7) being particularly 
eloquent against them, but that they did not succeed in stamping 
out the custom was proved by the finding of an. auburn wig in 
the grave of a Christian woman in the cemetery of St Cyriacus. 
In 67a a synod of Constantinople forbade the wearing of artificial 
hair. 

Artificial hair has presumably always been worn by women 
when the fashion required abundant locks. Thus, with the 
development of elaborate coiffures in the 16th century, the 
wearing of false hair became prevalent among ladies in Europe; 
Queen Elizabeth had eighty attires of false hair, and Mary queen 
of Scots was also in the habit of varying the attires of hair she 
wore. The periwig of the 16th century, however, merely simu- 
lated real hair, either as an adornment or to supply the defects 
of nature. It was not till the 17th century that the peruke was 
worn as a distinctive feature of costume. The fashion started in 
France. In 1620 the abbe La Riviere appeared at the court of 
Louis XIII. in a periwig made to simulate long fair hair, and 
four years later the king himself, prematurely bald, also adopted 
one and thus set the fashion. Louis XIV., who was proud of his 
abundant hair, did not wear a wig till after 1670. Meanwhile, 
his courtiers had continued to wear wigs in imitation of the royal 
hair, and from Versailles the fashion spread through Europe. 
In England it came in with the Restoration; for though the 
prince of Wales (Charles I.), while in Paris on his way to Spain, 
had " shadowed himself the most he could under a burly perruque, 
which none in former days but bald-headed people used," he 
had dropped the fashion on returning to England, and he and his 
Cavaliers were distinguished from the " Roundheads " only by 
wearing their own flowing locks. Under Charles II. the wearing 
of the peruke became general. Pepys records that he parted 
with his own hair and " paid £3 for a periwigg ";' and on going 
to church in one he says " it did not prove so strange as I was 
afraid it would." It was under Queen Anne, however, that the 
wig attained its maximum development, covering the back and 
shoulders and floating down over the chest. So far, indeed, 
whatever the exaggeration of its proportions, the wig had been 
a " counterfeit hair " intended to produce the illusion of abundant 
natural locks. But, to quote the inimitable author of Ploca- 
cosmos, u as the perukes became more common, their shape 
and forms altered. Hence we hear of the clerical, the physical, 
and the huge tie peruke for the man of law, the brigadier or 
major for the army and navy; as also the tremendous fox ear, 
or cluster of temple curls, with a pig-tail behind. The merchant, 
the man .of business and of letters, were distinguished by the 
grave full bottom, or more moderate tie, neatly curled; the 
tradesman by the long bob, or natty scratch; the country 
gentleman by the natural fly and hunting peruke. All conditions 
of men were distinguished by the cut of the wig, and none more 
so than the coachman, who wore his, as there does some to this 
day, in imitation of the curled hair of a water-dog."* 

1 This was cheap. The author of Plocacosmos says that " when 
they first were wore, the price was usually one hundred guineas *'; 
ana the article in Diderot's "Encyclopedic says that it sometimes cost 
as much as 1000 tens. 

* Plocacosmos, p. 303. The writer goes on to describe the fashions 
on the stage. " So late as King William's reign, in one of Rowe's 
pieces, Lady Jane Grey, the I,ora Guildford Dudley is dressed in all 
the modern fashion of laced coat, cravat, high peruke, 4c, while the 
heroine is simply drest, her hair parted in the middle, hanging care- 
lessly on her shoulders. . . . Nearer our time, in the tragedy of Caf. 
Mr Booth is dressed a-la-modt, with, the huge peruke.. . . Mr Quip 



mGAN— WIGEON 



625 



TWs differentiation of wigs according to class and profession 
explains why, when early in the reign of George III. the general 
fashion of wearing wigs began to wane and die out, the practice 
held its own among professional men. It was by slow degrees 
that doctors, soldiers and clergymen gave up the custom. In 
the Church it survived- longest among the bishops,, the wig 
ultimately becoming a sort of ensign of the episcopal dignity. 
Wigs were first discarded by the bishops, by permission of the 
king, at the coronation banquet of William IV., the weather being 
hot; and Greville comments on the odd appearance of the pre- 
lates with their cropped polls. At the coronation of Queen 
Victoria the archbishop of Canterbury, alone of the prelates, 
still wore a wig. Wig* are now worn as part of official costume 
only in the United Kingdom and its dependencies, their use 
being confined, except in the case of the speaker of the house of 
commons and the clerks of parliament, to the lord chancellor, 
the judges and members of the bar (see Robes). Wigs of course 
continue to be worn by many to make up for natural deficiencies; 
and on the stage the wig is, as in all times, an indispensable 
adjunct. Many of the modern stage wigs are made of jute, 
a fibre which lends itself to marvellously perfect imitations of 
human hair. 

See F. W. Fafeholt, Coshtme in Engiswd, a vols., ed. Dillon (tWO ; 
C. F. NicoUi, Cber <Un Cebrouch tkr faiscktn Haare tnd PerriUkc* 
(1601); the articles " Coma " and " Galerus " in Darcmbcrg and. 
Saglio's Dictionnairedesantiauitis. There ban admirable article on 
wies and wig-making in Diderot's Encyclopidie (1765), t. xii., s.v. 
M Perraque. James Stewart's Plocacomos, or the Wh*U AH «f 
Hairdrtising (London, 1782) also contains rich material. 

WIGAN, a market town, and municipal, county and parlia- 
mentary borough of Lancashire, England, 104 m..N.W. by N. 
from London by the London ft North-Western railway, served 
also by the Lancashire & Yorkshire and the Great Central rail' 
ways. Pop. (1801) 55,013, (1001) 60,764. It hes on the small 
river Douglas, which flows into the estuary of the Ribble. There 
is connexion by canal with Liverpool, Manchester, &c. The older 
portions of the town occupy the north bank of- the river, the 
modern additions being chiefly on the south bank. The church 
of All Saints, late Perpendicular, consisting of chancel with 
aisles and two chapels^was restored in 1650 and in modern 
times. There are numerous modern churches and chapels. 
The principal public buildings are the Royal Albert Edward 
Infirmary and Dispensary, the public hall, the borough courts 
and offices, the arcade, the market hall, the free public library 
and the county courts and offices (18*8). The educational 
institutions include the free g r amma r school (founded by James 
Leigh in 1610 and rebuilt in 1876), the Wigan and District 
Mining and Technical College (built by public subscription and 
opened in 1003) and the mechanic*' institution, also the convent 
of Notre Dame (1854), with a college for pupil teachers and a 
high school for girls, and several Roman Catholic schools. A 
public park of 27 acres was opened in 1878. The town owes 
much of its prosperity to its coal mines, which employ a large 
proportio n of the inhabitants and supply the factory furnaces. 
The chief manufacture is that of cotton fabrics; the town also 
possesses iron forges, iron and brass foundries, oil and grease 
works, railway waggon factories, end boh, screw and nail works. 
The parliamentary borough, returning one-member since 1885, 
is coextensive with the municipal borough, and falls mainly 
within the Ince division of the county. The county borough was 
created in 1888. The corporation censfcts of a mayor, 10 
aldermen and 30 councillors. Area 5082 acres, including the 
former urban district of Pemberton (pop. 21 ,664 in 1001), which 
was included with Wigan in 1004. 

acted almost ail hit young characters, as Hamlet, Horatio, Pierre, 
Ac in a full-drew suit and large peruke. But Mr Garriek's genius 
. . . first attacked the mode of dress, and no part more than that of 
the head of hair. The consequence of this was, that a capital player's 
wardrobe " [cameto include) " what they call natural heads of hair; 
there is the comedy head of hair and the tragedy ditto; the silver 
locks, and the common gray; the carotty poll, and the yellow 
caxon; the savage black, and the Italian brown and Shylock s and 
FafotasTs very different heads of hair; . . . with the Spanish fly, 
the fonts tail. ftc. Ac." He adds that the tendency is to replace those 
by " the hair, without powder, simply curled.'* 



Roman remains have been found, and ft is probable that the 
town covers the site of a Roman post or fort, Coccium. Wigan, 
otherwise Wygan and Wigham, is not mentioned in Domesday 
Book, but three of the townships, Upholland, Dalton and Orel 
are named. After the Conquest Wigan was part of the barony 
of Newton, and the church was endowed with a carucate of land, 
the origin of the manor. Some time before Henry III.'s reign 
the baron of Newton granted to the rector of Wigan the manorial 
privileges. In 1246 Henry III. granted a charter to the famous 
John Mansel, parson of the church, by which Wigan was con- 
stituted a free borough and the burgesses permitted to have a 
Gild Merchant. In 1249 John Mansel granted by charter to the 
burgesses that each should have five mods of land to his burgage 
as. freehold on payment of xsd, each. Confirmations and eaten* 
skms of Henry III.'s charter were granted by Edward II. (1314), 
Edward UL (1349), Richard II. (1376). Henry IV. (1400), 
Henry V. (1413), Charles IL (1663k James IL (1685) and William 
IV. (1832 and 1836). In 1138 Henry HI. granted by charter 
to John Mansel a weekly market on Monday and two fairs, each 
of three days, beginning on the eve of Ascension Day and on the 
eve of All Saints' Day, October s8th. Edward II. granted a 
three days' fair from the eve of St Wilfrid instead of the All 
Saints' fair, but in 13*9 Edward HI. by charter altered the 
fair again to its original date. Charles II. 's charter granted, 
and James II. 's confirmed, a three days' fair beginning on the 
xoth of July. Pottery and beU-foUnding were formerly Import- 
ant trades here,and the manufacture of woollens, especially of 
blankets, was carried on in the 18th century. The cotton trade 
developed rapidly after the introduction of the cylindrical 
carding machine, which was set up here two years before Feel 
used it at Bolton. During the Civil War the town, from its 
vicinity to Lathom House and the influence of Lord Derby, 
adhered staunchly to the king. On the 1st of April 1643 the 
Parliamentarians under Sir John Season captured Wigan after 
severe fighting. In the following month Lord Derby regained 
it for the Royalists, but Colonel Ashton soon retook it and 
demolished the works. In idsi Lord Derby landed from the 
Isle of Man and marched through Preston to Wigan on the way 
to join Charles II. At Wigan Lane on the 25th of August a 
fierce battle took place between the Royalist forces under Lord 
Derby and Sir Thomas Tyidealey and the Parlfameirtarians under 
Colonel Lilbume, in which the Royalists were defeated, Tyidesley 
was killed and Lord Derby wounded. During the rebellion of 
X74S Prince Charles Edward spent one night (December 10th) 
here on his return march. In 1*05 Wigan returned two members 
to parliament and again in 1307; the right then remained in 
abeyance till 1547, but from that time till 1885, except during 
the Commonwealth, the borough returned two members, and 
since 1885 one member. The church of All Saints is of Saxon 
origin, and was existing in Edward the Confessor's time. The 
list of rectors is complete from xtoo. 

W10B0N, or Widgeon (Fr. Vigeon, from the Lat Vipto)} 
also caUed locally "Whewer" and " Whew " (names imitative 
of the whistling call-note of the male), the Anas pttuhpe of 
Linnaeus and Mnreta ptmUpe of modern ornithologists, one of 
the most abundant species of dtcks throughout the greater part 
of Europe and northern Asia, reaching northern Africa and India 
in winter. A good many pairs breed in the north of Scotland; 
but the nurseries of the vast numbers which resort in autumn to 
the waters of temperate Europe are in Lapland or farther to the 
eastward. Comparatively few breed in Iceland. 

Intermediate in site between the teal and the mallard, and less 
showy in plumage than either, the drake wigeon is a beautifnl bud, 
with the greater part of his bQI blue, his forehead cream-colour, 
his head and neck chestnut,' replaced by greyish-pink below and 
above by lavender-grey, which last, produced by the transverse 
undulations of fine black and white tines* extends over the back and 
upper surface of the wings, except some of the coverts, which are 



* So Pigeon far) from Pipio. Other French names, more or leas 
local, are, according to Roiland, Vttnon, Vtngeon, Warm, Woimft, 
Wiput, WmuU, Viowc and Dipon. In some parts of England the 
small teasing flics, generally called midges, are known as " wigeoas." 

* Hence come the additional local names '* bald-pate *' and " red- 



626 



WIGGIN— WIGHT, ISLE OF 



conspicuously white, and shows itself again on the flanks. The wings 
are further ornamented by a glossy green speculum between two 
black bars; the tail is pointed and dark; the rest of the lowas "its 
is white. The female has the inconspicuous coloration character- 
istic of her sex among most of the duck tribe. In habit* the wigcon 
differs not a little from most of the Anatinae. It cicatty aflcm tidal 
waters during the season of its southern stay, and become a the object 
of slaughter to hundreds of gunners on tbe-cou»L9 of Britain and 
Holland; but, when it resorts to inland localities as it also does to 
some extent, it passes much of its time in grazing, especially by day, 
on the pastures which surround the lakes or moors that it selects. 

The wigeon occurs occasionally on the eastern coast of North 
America, and not uncommonly, it would seem, on the Pribyloff 
Islands in the Pacific But the New World has two allied species 
of its own. One of them, M. americana (a freshly killed example 
of which was once found in a London market), inhabiting the 
northern part of that continent, and in winter reaching Central 
America and the West Indian islands as far as Trinidad, wholly 
resembles its Old- World congener in habits and much in appear- 
ance. But in it the chestnut of the head is replaced by a close 
speckling of black and buff, the white wing-coverts are wanting, 
and nearly all the plumage is subdued in tone. - The other species, 
M. sibilatrix, inhabits the southern portion of South America and 
its islands, from Chile on the west to the Falkland* on the east, 
and is easily recognized by its nearly white head, nape glossy 
with purple and green, and other differences; while the plumage 
hardly differs sexually at all. (A. N.) 

WIGGIN, KATE DOUGLAS (1857* ), American novelist, 
daughter of Robert N. Smith, a lawyer, wss born in Philadelphia, 
Pennsylvania, on the 28th of September 1857. She was educated 
at Abbott Academy, Andover,- Massachusetts, and removed in 
1876 to Los Angeles, California. She taught in Santa Barbara 
College (1877-1878), established in San Francisco the first free 
kindergartens for poor children on the western coast (1878), and, 
with the help of her sister, Miss Nora Archibald Smith, and of 
Mrs Sarah B. Cooper, organized the California Kindergarten 
Training School (1880). She married, in z88o, Samuel Bradley 
Wiggin of San Francisco, who died in 1889. In 1895 she married 
George Christopher Riggs, but continued to write under the 
name of Wiggin. Her interest in children's education was shown 
in numerous books, some written in collaboration with her sister, 
in both prose and verse. But her literary reputation rests 
rather on her works of prose fiction, which show a real gift for 
depicting character and an original vein of humour. The best 
known of these are: The Birds' Christmas Carol (1688) ; Penelope's 
English Experiences (1893); Mart* Lisa (1806); Penelope's 
Progress (1898), being Penelope's experiences in Scotland; 
Penelope's Irish Experiences (xooi); The Diary of a Goose-Girl 
(1002); and Rebecca of Sunnybrook Farm (1903). 

WIQGLESWORTH, MICHAEL (1631-1705), American clergy- 
man and poet, was born in England, probably in Yorkshire, on 
the 1 8th of October 163 1. His father, Edward (d, 1653), perse- 
cuted for bis Puritan faith, emigrated with his family to New 
England in 1638 and settled in New Haven. Michael studied 
for a time at a school kept by Ezekiel Cheever, and in 1651 
graduated at Harvard, where he was a tutor (and a Fellow) 
m 1652-1654. Having fitted himself for the ministry, be 
preached at Chariestown in 1653-1654, and was pastor at 
Maiden from 1656 until his death, though for twenty years or 
more bodily infirmities prevented his regular attendance upon his 
duties— Cotton Mather described him as " a little feeble shadow 
of a man/' During this interval he studied medicine and began 
a successful practice. He was again a Fellow of Harvard in 
1607-1705. He died at Maiden on the xoth of June 1705. 
Wigglesworth is best known as the author of The Day of Doom; 
or a Poetical Description of the Great and Last Judgment (1662). 
At least two English and eight American editions have appeared, 
notable among them being that of 1867 (New York), edited by 
W. H. Burr and including other poems of Wigglesworth, a 
memoir and an autobiography. For a century this realistic 
and terrible expression of the prevailing Calvinistic theology was 
by far the most popular work written in America. His other 
poems include God's Controversy with New England (written in 
'1 the time of the great drought," and first printed in the 



Proceedings of the Mas sa c hu setts Historical Society for 17&1), 
and Meat out of the Eater; or Meditations concerning the Necessity, 
End and Usefulness of AJUctions unto God's Children (1669; 
revised in 1703). 

His son, Samuel (1 680-1 768), also a clergyman, was the 
author of several prose works and of one poem of merit, " A 
Funeral Song" (1709). Another son, Edward (1693-1765), 
. was the first Holfas professor of Divinity at Harvard (1 722-1 765) , 
and the author of various theological works; and a grandson, 
Edward (x732~i794)» was the second HoUis professor of Divinity 
(1765-1791), in which position he was succeeded by Michael 
Wigglesworth 'a great-grandson, Rev. David Tappan (1752-1803). 

See J. W. Deane. Memoir of Sew. Michael Wigglesworth (Boston, 
1871). 

WIGHT, ISLI OF, an island off the south coast of England, 
forming part of Hampshire, separated from the mainland by 
the Solent and Spithead. It is of diamond shape, measuring 
22J m. from E. to W. and 13J from N. to S. (extremes). The area 
is 147 sq. m. The south coast is for the most part cliff-hound 
and grand, and there is much quietly beautiful scenery both 
inland and along the northern shores. Although east winds are 
at times prevalent in winter and spring, and summer heats may 
be excessive, the climate, especially in certain favoured spots, 
is mild and healthy. As a result numerous watering-places have 
grown up on the coasts. 

A range of high chalk downs crosses the island from east to 
west, terminating seaward in the Culver cliffs and the cliffs near 
Freshwater respectively. It is breached eastward by the Yar 
stream flowing N.E., in the centre by the Medina, the principal 
stream in the island, flowing N., and by another Yar, flowing N., 
in the extreme west. These downs reach a height over 700 ft. 
west of the Medina, but east of it do not greatly exceed 400 ft. 
The slope northward is gradual. The north-west and north-east 
coasts, overlooking the Solent and Spithead respectively, rise 
sharply, but hardly ever assume the cliff form; they are beauti- 
fully wooded, and broken by many picturesque estuaries, such 
as those of the western Yar and Newtown on the north-west, 
the Medina opening northward opposite Southampton Water, 
and Wootton Creek and the mouth of the eastern Yar on the 
north-east. The streams mentioned rise very near the south 
coast; the western Yar, indeed, so dose to it that the high land 
west of the stream is nearly insulated. A second range of downs 
in the extreme south, between St Catherine's Point and Dunnose, 
reaches the greatest elevation in the island, exceeding 800 ft. 
in St Catherine's Hill. Below these heights on the seaward side 
occurs the remarkable tract known as the-Undercliff, a kind of 
terrace formed by the collapse of rocks overlying soft strata 
(sand and clay) which have been undermined. The upper cliffs 
shelter this terrace from the north winds; the climate is re- 
markably mild, and many delicate plants flourish luxuriantly. 
This part of the island especially affords a winter resort for 
sufferers from pulmonary complaints. Along the south coast 
the action of small streams on the soft rocks has hollowed out 
steep gullies or ravines, known as chines. Many of these, though 
small, are of great beauty; the most famous are Shanklin and 
Blackgang chines. The western peninsula shows perhaps the 
finest development oi sea-cliffs. Off the westernmost promontory 
rise three detached masses of chalk, about too ft in height, 
known as the Needles, exposed to the full strength of the south- 
westerly gales driving up the Channel. During a storm in 1764 
a fourth spire was undermined and fell. 



Geology.— The geology of the island 
interest. Its form has been determir- 



many features of 

-._- _— , the simple monocltnal 

fold which has thrown up the Chalk with a high northward dip, so 
that it now exists as a narrow ridge running from the Needles east- 
ward to Culver Cliffs. Owing to a kink in the fold the ridge expands 
somewhat south of Carisbrooke. On the north side of the ridge the 
Chalk dips beneath the Tertiaries of the Hampshire Basin. Imme- 
diately north of the Chalk the Lower Eocene, Reading beds and 
London Clay form a narrow parallel strip, followed by a similar strip 
of Upper Eocene. Bracklesham and Bagshot beds. The remainint 
northern portion of the island is occupied by fluvio-marine Oligocene 
strata, including the Headon, Osborne, Bembridge and Hamstead 
beds. The various Tertiary formations are exhibited along the north 



WIGTOWN 



627 



coast, and may also be studied to great advantage in White Cliff and 
Alum Bays, in Alum Bay the vertical disposition of the strata is 
well shown, and the highly-coloured Bagshot sands and clays form a 
conspicuous feature. From the excellent coast sections many fossils 
may be obtained. South of the Chalk ridge that rock has been com- 
pletely removed by denudation so as to expose the underlying Upper 
Greensand, which has slipped in many places over the underlying 
Gault (locally called "blue slipper "), forming picturesque landslips. 
The Lower Greensand formation may best be studied in the cliff 
section from Atherneid Point to Rocken End, and in the chines of 
Shanklin and Blackgang. Beneath the Greensand the Wealden is 
exposed in the section from Brook to Atherneid, and also, to a much 
less extent, in Sandown Bay. The Wealden strata have yielded 
abundant fossil remains of extinct reptiles (Iptanodon). especially 
in the neighbourhood of Brook and Cowleaze Chines; and at Brook 
Point an extensive fossil forest e»st\ being the remains of a great 
rait of timber floated down and deposited in estuarine mud at the 
mouth of a great river. At Brook also the characteristic Wealden 
mollusk. Unto valdensis, occurs abundantly. 

Towns, &c— Newport at the head of the Medina estuary is the 
chief town; Cowes at the mouth the chief port. The principal 
resorts of visitors are Cowes (the headquarters of the Royal Yacht 
Squadron); Ryde on the north-east coast; Sandown, Shanklin 
and Ventnor on the south-east; Freshwater Gate on the south- 
west, and Yarmouth on the Solent. Others axe Totland Bay 
near the mouth of the Solent, Gurnard near Cowes, and Seaview 
and Bembridge south of Ryde. The principal lines of com* 
munication with the mainland are between Cowes and South- 
ampton, Ryde and Portsmouth, and Yarmouth and Lymington. 
Newport is the chief railway centre, lines running N. to Cowes, 
W. to Yarmouth and Freshwater, S. to Ventnor, with a branch 
to Sandown, and £. to Ryde. A direct line connects Ryde, 
Sandown, Shanklin and Ventnor, and has a branch to St Helen's 
and Bembridge. There are few industries in the island. The 
land is chiefly agricultural, a large proportion being devoted to 
sheep-grazing. Fishing is carried on to a considerable extent on 
the south coast— lobsters, crabs and prawns being plentiful 
Oyster cultivation has been attempted in the Medina, in Brading 
Harbour and in the Newtown river. At Cowes shipbuilding is 
carried on, and timber is grown for the British navy in a part 
oi the ancient forest of Parkhurst, between the Medina and the 
Solent. The general trade of the island centres at Newport, 
but in the coast towns the chief occupation of the inhabitants 
consists in providing for visitors. The island shares in the 
defences of the Solent, Spithead and Portsmouth; there are 
batteries at Puckpool near Ryde, and on. the eastern foreland, 
and akmg the west coast between the Needles and Yarmouth. 
Strong associations connect the Isle of Wight with the British 
royal family. Osborne House, near Cowes, was a residence and 
the scene of the death of Queen Victoria, and was presented to 
the nation by King Edward in 190a (see Cowxs). Princess 
Beatrice succeeded her husband Prince Henry of Battenberg as 
honorary governor of the island in 1896. The island is divided 
into two liberties, East and West Medina, excluding the boroughs 
of Newport and Ryde; and h forms one petty and special 
sessional division of the county.. The urban districts are Cowes, 
East Cowes, St Helen's, Sandown, Shanklin and Ventnor. Until 
1885 there was one member of parliament for the island and one 
for the borough of Newport; now, however, there is only one 
member for the whole island. EpiscopaUy the island has for 
many centuries belonged to the see of Winchester. Pop. (1891) 

78,672; (tooO 8m^- 

History.— Among the most interesting relics of the Roman 
occupation of the Isle of Wight following its conquest by Ves- 
pasian in a.d. 43 are the villas at Brading and Carisbrooke, the 
cemetery at Newport, and remains of foundations at Combly 
Farm, Gurnet, and between Brixton and Calbourne. Of the 
settlement of the island by the Jutes no authentic details are 
preserved, but in 661 it was annexed by Wulfhere to Wessex and 
subsequently bestowed on his vassal, the king of Sussex. In 
098 it was the headquarters of the Danes, who levied their supplies 
from the opposite coasts of Hampshire and Sussex. 

From the 14th to the x6th century the island was continuously 
under fear of invasion by the French, who in 1377 burnt Yar- 
mouth and Franchcvillc (the latter being subsequently rebuilt 



and known as Newtown), and so devastated Newport that it lay 
uninhabited for two years. In 1419, on a French force landing 
in the island and demanding tribute m the name of King Richard 
and Queen Isabella, the islanders replied that the king was dead 
and the queen sent home to her parents without any such 
condition of tribute, " but if the Frenchmen's minde were to 
fight, they willed them to come up, and no man should let them 
for the space of five hours, to refresh themselves, but when that 
time was expired they should have battayle given to them "; 
a proposition prudently declined by the Frenchmen, who returned 
to their ships and sailed home again. A more formidable raid 
was attempted in 154s when a French fleet of 150 large ships, 
25 galleys, and 50 smaller vessels drew up off Brading Harbour, 
and in spite of the brave defence of the islanders wrought much 
serious destruction. Worverton near Brading having lain a 
ruined site ever since. As a result of this, the last French inva- 
sion, an organised system of defence was planned for the island, 
and forts were constructed at Cowes, Sandown, Freshwater 
and Yarmouth. During the Civil War of the 17th century the 
island was almost unanimous in support of the parliament, and 
Carisbrooke Castle was the prison of Charles I. from 1647 to 1648, 
and in 1650 of his two children, the princess Elisabeth and the 
duke of Gloucester, the former dying there from the effects of 
a chill after only a few weeks of captivity. 

The lordship of the island was granted by William the Con- 
queror to William Fitz-Osbern, but escheated to the crown by 
the treason of Roger, son of William, and was bestowed by 
Henry I. on Baldwin de Redvers, whose descendant Isabella de 
Fortibus sold it to Edward I. in 1293 for 6000 marks. Hence- 
forth the island was governed by wardens appointed by the 
crown, who in the reign of Henry VII. were styled captains, a 
title revived in 1889 in the person of Prince Henry of Battenberg. 
The ancient place of assembly for the freemen of the island was 
at Shide Bridge near Newport, and at Newport also was held 
the Knighten Court, in which cases of small debt and trespasses 
were judged by those who held a knight's fee or part of a knight's 
fee of Carisbrooke Castle. The feudal tenants held their lands 
for the service of escorting their lords into and out of the island, 
and of serving forty days at their own cost in defence of Caris- 
brooke Castle. In the Domesday purvey twenty-nine mills are 
mentioned, and salt-works at Boarhunt, Bowcombc, Watching- 
wcll and Whitfield. Tne island quarries have been worked from 
remote times, that of Quarr supplying material for Winchester 
cathedral Alum was collected at Parkhurst Forest in 1570. 
Alum and sand for glnss-making were formerly obtained at Alum 
Bay. In 129s the united boroughs of Yarmouth and Newport 
made an isolated return of two members to parliament. From 
1584 the boroughs of Lymington, Newport, Newtown and 
Yarmouth returned two members each, until under the act of 
1832 the two last were disfranchised. By the act of 1868 
Lymington and Newport lost one member each, and by the act 
of 1885 were disfranchised. 

Antiquities.— Early antiquities include British pit villages 
near Rowborough, Celtic tumuli on several of the chalk downs, 
and the so-called Long Stone at Mottiston, a lofty sandstone 
monolith. The Roman villa near Brading contains some beauti- 
ful and well-preserved examples of tesselated pavements. 
Carisbrooke Castle is a beautiful ruin built upon the site of an 
ancient British stronghold. There are slight remains of Quarr 
Abbey near Ryde, founded for Benedictines (afterwards Cis- 
tercians) by Baldwin de Redvers in the first half of the 12th 
century. The most noteworthy ancient churches are those of 
Bonchurch (Norman), Brading (transitional Norman and Early 
English), Shalfleet (Norman and Decorated), and Carisbrooke, 
of various styles. 

See Victoria County History, Hampshire; Sir R. Worsley, Tk$ 
History of tiu Isle of Wight (London, 1781); Richard Warner, Tkt 
.... ' >... .. v~ . *.,A .. - ;B.B. Woodward, 

vols., London. 
IskofWtfM 
(London. 1891). 

WIGTOWN, a royal burgh and the county town of Wigtown- 
shire, Scotland. Pop. (1901) 1329. It is situated on the 1 



628 



WIGTOWNSHIRE 



shore of Wigtown Bay— whence the name, from the Scandinavian 
viJt, " bay " — 7 m. S. by £. of Newton Stewart by railway. 
It is built on an eminence around a spacious central area laid out 
in walks. The town hall stands at a corner of this square, and 
at the opposite side are two crosses, one of 1738 and the other 
commemorating Waterloo. Some fishing is carried on. In the 
old churchyard were buried Margaret MacLachlan, a widow aged 
63, and Margaret^ Wilson, a girl of 18, two covenanting martyrs 
who were tied to stakes in the sands of Wigtown Bay and drowned 
by the rising waters (1685), to whose memory, as well as that of 
three men who were hanged at the same time without trial, an 
obelisk surmounted by an urn was erected in 1858 on the top of 
Windy Hill, outside the town. Wigtown was made a royal 
burgh in 1469. 

WIGTOWNSHIRE (sometimes called West Galloway), a 
south-western county of Scotland, bounded N. by Ayrshire, £. 
by Kirkcudbrightshire and Wigtown Bay, S. by the Irish Sea 
and W. and N. by the North Channel Including the small 
island of St Helena, at the head of Luce Bay, it covers an area 
of 311,609 acres, or 487 sq. m. On the eastern boundary the 
estuary of the Cree expands into Wigtown Bay, between which 
and Luce Bay, farther west, extends the promontory of the 
Machers, terminating in Burrow Head. By the indentation of 
Luce Bay on the south and Loch Ryan on the north the hammer- 
headed peninsula of the Rinns is formed, of which the Mull of 
Galloway, the most southerly point of Scotland, is the southern, 
and Milieux Point the northern extremity. The more or less 
rugged coast has many small inlets, few of which, owing to 
hidden rocks, afford secure landing-places. Excepting Loch 
Ryan, a fine natural harbour of which Stranraer is the port, the 
harbours are not available for vessels of heavy burden, on 
account either of the great distance to which the sea retires, or 
of their exposure to frequent fierce gales. Much of the county 
has a wild, bleak appearance, the higher land being covered with 
heath and whins, while in the lower districts there are long 
stretches of bog and moss, and in the north centre, a few miles 
west of Newton Stewart, is a tract known as the Moors. Only 
towards the Ayrshire border do the hills reach a considerable 
altitude, Benbrake and Craigairie Fell being each 1000 ft. in 
height. The chief rivers are the Cree, forming the boundary 
with Kirkcudbrightshire and flowing past. Newton Stewart 
and Carty into Wigtown Bay; the Bladenoch, issuing from 
Loch Maberry and falling into Wigtown Bay at Wigtown after 
a course of 22 m., its principal affluents, all on the right, being 
Black Burn, the Tarff and the Malzie; and the Luce, formed 
by the junction at New Luce of Main Water and Cross Water of 
Luce, and emptying itself into Luce Bay. Most of the numerous 
lochs are small, several being situated in private parks, as at 
the earl of Stair's estate of Castle Kennedy. Among the larger 
lakes are Loch Maberry and Loch Dornal, both partly in Ayrshire, 
and Loch Ochiltree in the north of the shire, Loch Council in the 
west, Loch Ronald in the centre and the group of Castle Loch 
and four others in the parish of Mochrum, towards the south, 
and Loch Dowalton, at the junction of Kirkinncr, Sorbie and 
Glasserton parishes. 



Geology. — A line drawn in a north-easterly direction from the coast 

" ' *>w Portpatrick, passing sligm' ' ' ' ' ' * 

> by Newton Stewart to the Cairr 

county so that practically all the rocks on the northern side are of 



about 3 m. below Portpatrick, passing slightly north of the head of 
Luce Bay by Newton Stewart to the Cairnsmore of Fleet, divides the 



Ordovieian age, while those on the south are Silurian. 

coincides with the general direction of the strike of the bt 

out the county. Most of the Ordovician rocks are black shales, in 



which graptohtes may be found, along with greywackes and grits; 
they include the Glenkill and Hartfell groups of the Moffat district. 
These rocks may be seen exposed on the coast south of Portpatrick 
and in the valley of the Crcc. The slate quarries of Cairn Ryan arc of 
Llandeilo age. Plearly the whole of the Silurian region is occupied by 
dark grits, greywackes and shales of Llandovery age, though here and 
there a small exposure of the underlying black Moffat shales appears 
on the denuded crest of one of the innumerable folds into which all 
these rocks have been thrown. A series of 'shales, flags and grey- 
wackes of Wcnfock age is found on the shore between Burrow Head 
•nd Whithorn. On the west side of Loch Ryan is a narrow belt of 
Permian breccia and thin sandstones about 9 m. long and 1 m. wide* 
this- rests unconformably upon a similar belt of Carboniferous sand- 
atones* about 8 m. long and I m. in width, which lies on the west 



side of the Permian. A small patch of granite stands out on the coast 
at Laggaatulloch Head, north of the Mull of Galloway. There are 
also a lew patches and dikes of dforite and quarts-felsite. Glacial 
moraines and drumlins are found over much of the older formations, 
and are well seen between deduce and Newton Stewart and south 
of Wigtown. The boulder-clay is used for brick-making near 
Stranraer. On the coasts of Luce Bay and Loch Ryan raised 
beaches are found at levels of 25 ft. and 50 ft. above the sea, and 
tracts of blown sand lie above the shore. There are several peat* 
covered areas in the county. 

Climate and Apiculture. — The mean annual rainfall amounts to 
36*3 in., varying from 49*19 in. at Kirkcowan, a few miles west of 
Newton Stewart, to 36*81 in. at the Mull of Galloway. The average 
temperature for the year is 48*3° F., for January 40* F. and for July 
58*5* F. In spite of its humidity the climate is not unfavourable for 
the ripening of crops, and frosts as a rule are not of long duration. 
Much of the shire consists of stony moors, rendering the work of 
reclamation difficult and in some parts impossible. The gravelly soil 
along the coasts requires heavy manuring to make it fruitful, and in 
the higher arable quarters a rocky soil prevails, better adapted for 
grass and green crops than for grain. A large extent of the surface is 
Black top reclaimed from the moors, and in some districts loam and 
clay are found. By dint of energy, however, and constant resort to 
scientific agriculture, the farrnershave placed half of the shire under 
cultivation, and the standard of farming is as high as that of any 
county in Scotland. OaUuthe leading crop, barley and wheat occupy- 
ing only a small area. Turnips and swedes constitute the great bulk of 
the green crops, potatoes coming next. Large tracts are under clover 
and rotation grasses and in permanent pasture, in consequence of the 
increasing attention paid to dairy-fanning, which is carried on in 
combination and on scientific principles. Several creameries have 
been established in the dairy country, cheese being a leading product. 
Though the size of the herds is surpassed in several other Scottish 
counties, the number of milch cattle is only exceeded in three (Ayr, 
Aberdeen and Lanark). Ayrshire is the favourite breed for dairy 
purposes, and black polled Galloways arc found in the eastern 
districts. A cross of the two breeds b also maintained. The sheep 
are principally black-faced on the hill farms, and in other parts 
Leicester and other long-woolled breeds. The flocks are usually 
heavy, and great numbers of pigs are kept. The shire has acquired 
some reputation for its horses, chiefly Clydesdale. The holdings are 
fairly large, the average being considerably over too acres, one- 
third of them running from loo acres to 30a Most of the park land is 
finely wooded, and there are a few nurseries, market gardens and 
orchards. 

Other Industries.— There are small manufactures in several of the 
towns, as woollens at Kirkcowan; tweeds, leather and agricultural 
implements at Newton Stewart; dairy appliances', beer, flour and 
bricks at Stranraer ; and whisky at Bladenoch. Sandstone and slates 
are quarried, and peat is cut in various places. Fisheries, on a minor 
scale, are conducted chiefly from Stranraer, certain villages on Loch 
Ryan and Luce Bay, and Wigtown, and the Cree, Bladenoch and 
Luce yield salmon. Shipping is mainly carried on from Stranraer, 
but also from Port William, Portpatrick, Wigtown and Garliestown. 

The Glasgow & South-Westcrn railway runs to Stranraer via 
Girvan, and the Portpatrick and Wigtownshire joint railway from 
Newton Stewart to Portpatrick via Stranraer, with a branch line at 
Newton Stewart to Wigtown and Whithorn. There are coach 
services from Stranraer to Ballantrae on the Ayrshire coast and to 
Drumore, 4 m. N. of the Mull, and regular communication by mail 
steamer between Stranraer and Lame in Co. Antrim, Ireland. 

Population and Adminukatum.—In. 1891 the population 
amounted to 36,062; in 1901 to 32,685 or 67 persons to the 
sq. m., the decrease for the decade being the third highest i& 
Scotland. In 1901 there were 88 persons speaking Gaelic and 
English. The principal towns are Stranraer (pop. 6036); 
Newton Stewart (2598), which, however, standing on both banks 
of the Cree, extends into Kirkaidbrightshire; Wigtown (1329)) 
and Whithorn (1x88). Formerly Wigtown, Stranraer and 
Whithorn formed with New Galloway, in Kirkcudbrightshire, 
a group of burghs returning one member, but in 1885 the first 
three were merged in the county, which returns one member to 
parliament. Wigtown, the county town, Stranraer and Whit- 
horn are royal burghs. The shire forms part of the sheriffdom of 
Dumfries and Galloway, and a sheriff-substitute sits at Wigtown 
and Stranraer. The administrative county is divided into the 
Lower district, comprising the shire east of the parishes of New 
Luce and Old Luce, and the Upper district, comprising the 
shire west of and including these parishes. The county is under 
school-board jurisdiction, and there are high schools in Newton 
Stewart and Stranraer. The board-schools in Whithorn and 
Wigtown have secondary departments, and several of the schools 
in the shire cam grants for higher education. The. county 



WIGWAM— WIHTRED 



629 



council expends the " residue " grant in providing bursaries 
for science pupils, and in subsidizing agricultural classes at 
Kilmarnock and Edinburgh University, and the cookery classes 
and science department of the high schools. 

History and Antiquities. — Galloway, or the country west of the 
Nith, belonged to a people whom Ptolemy called Novaatae and 
Agricola subdued in a.d. 70. They were Atecolt Picts, and are 
conjectured to' have replaced a small, dark-haired aboriginal 
race, akin probably to the Basques of the Iberian peninsula. 
Tbey held thb south-western corner of Scotland for centuries, 
protecting themselves from the northern and southern Picts by a 
rampart, called the DeiTs Dyke, which has been traced in a north- 
easterly direction from Beoch on the eastern side of Loch Ryan 
to a spot on the Nith near the present ThornhiH, a distance of 
50 m. Evidences of the Pictish occupation are prevalent in the 
form of hill forts, cairns, standing stones, hnt circles and crannogs 
or lake dwellings (several of which were exposed when Dowalton 
Lock near Sorbie and Barhapple Loch near Glenluce were 
drained), besides canoes and flint, stone and bronze implements. 
The Romans possessed a small camp at Rispain near Whithorn 
and a station at Rerigonium, which has been identified with 
Innennessan on the eastern shore of Loch Ryan; but so few 
remains exist that it has been concluded they effected no per- 
manent settlement in West Galloway. Ninian, the first Christian 
missionary to Scotland, landed at Isle of Whithorn in 396 to 
convert the natives. His efforts were temporarily successful, 
but soon after his death (432) the people relapsed into paganism, 
excepting a faithful remnant who continued to carry on Christian 
work. A monastery was built at Whithorn, and, though the 
bishopric founded in the 8th century was shortly afterwards 
removed, it was established again in the nth, when the priory 
erected by Fergus, " king " of Galloway, became the cathedral 
church of the see of Galloway and so remained till the Reforma- 
tion. In the 6th century the people accepted the suzerainty of 
the Northumbrian kings who allowed them in return autonomy 
under their own Pictish chiefs. On the decay of the Saxon 
power more than two hundred years later this overlordship was 
abandoned, and the Atecotts formed an alliance with the North* 
men then ravaging the Scottish coasts. Because of this relation- 
ship the other Picts styled the Atecotts, by way of reproach, 
Gallgaidhel, or stranger Gaels, whence is derived Galloway, the 
name of their territory. With the aid of the Norsemen and the 
men of Galloway Kenneth Macalpine defeated the northern 
Picts at Forteviot and was crowned king of Scotland at Scone 
in 844. Henceforward the general history of Wigtownshire is 
scarcely distinguishable from that of Kirkcudbrightshire, A few 
particular points, however, must be noted. Malcolm MacHeth, 
who bad married a sister of Somerled, lord of the Isles, headed 
about 1 150 a Celtic revolt against the intrusion of Anglo-Norman 
lords, but was routed at Causewayend near the estuary of the 
Cree. In tioo Roland, lord of Galloway, built for Cistercians 
from Melrose the fine abbey of Glenluce, of which the only 
remains are the foundations of the nave, the gable of the south 
transept, the cloisters, quadrangle and the vaulted chapter-house. 
In the disordered state of the realm during David II. 's reign east 
Galloway had been surrendered to Edward III. (1333)1 hut 
Wigtownshire, which had been constituted a shire in the previous 
century and afterwards called the Shire to distinguish it from the 
Stewartry of Kirkcudbright, remained Scottish territory. In 
1342 Sir Malcolm Fleming, earl of Wigtown, was appointed 
sheriff with power to hold the county separate from the other half 
of Galloway, but falling into straitened circumstances he sold 
his earldom and estates in 1372 to Archibald the Grim, 3rd earl 
of Douglas, thus once more placing all Galloway under one lord. 
Under Douglas's. lordship the laws of Galloway, which had 
obtained from Pictish times and included, among other features, 
trial by battle (unless an accused person chose expressly to forgo 
the native custom and ask for a Jury), were modified, and in 1426 
abolished, the province then coming under the general law. Soon 
after the fall of the Douglases (1455) the Kennedy family, long 
established in the Ayrshire district of Car rick, obtained a 
preponderating influence in Wigtownshire, and in 1509 David 



Kennedy was created earl of Cassulis. Gilbert, the 4th earl, so 
powerful that he was called the " king of Carrick," held the shire 
for Mary, queen of Scots, when she broke with the Lords of the 
Congregation, but could do little for her cause. He profited by 
the Reformation himself, however, to acquire by fraud and 
murder the estate of Glenluce Abbey (about 1570). In 1603 
James VI. instituted a bishop in the see of Galloway— which 
had not been filled for twenty years — and otherwise strove to 
impose episcopacy upon the people, but the inhabitants stood 
firm for the Covenant. The acts against Nonconformity were 
stringently enforced and almost every incumbent in Galloway 
was deprived of his living. Field-preaching was a capital crime 
and attendance at conventicles treason. A reign Of terror 
supervened, and numbers of persons emigrated to Ulster in order 
to escape persecution. John Graham of Claverhouse, Viscount 
Dundee, having replaced Sir Andrew Agnew, who had refused 
the Test, as sheriff (1682), goaded the people into rebellion, the 
drowning of Margaret MacLachlan and Margaret Wilson within 
flood-mark in Wigtown Bay (1685) being an instance of his 
ruthless methods. With the Revolution of 1688 Prcsbyterianism 
was restored, and John Gordon, recently consecrated bishop 
of Galloway, retired to France. The Jacobite risings of 1715 
and 1745 excited only languid interest, but in 1747 heritable 
jurisdictions were abolished and Sir Andrew Agnew ceased to bo 
hereditary sheriff, though he was the only official able to prove 
continuous tenure of the post since it was granted to his family 
in 1451. The first sheriff appointed under the new system was 
Alexander Bosweff, Lord Auchinleck, father of James Boswell, 
the biographer of Dr Johnson. Jjx 1 760 an engagement took place 
in Luce Bay, when the young French seaman, Francois Thurot, 
with three warships, attempting a diversion in Jacobite interests, 
was defeated and killed with the loss of three hundred men and 
his vessels. 

Among ancient castles in Wigtownshire may be mentioned the 
cliff towers, possibly of Norse origin, of Carghidown and Castle 
Feather near Burrow Head; the ruins of Baldoon, south of 
Wigtown, associated with events which suggested to Sir Walter 
Scott the romance of Tke Bride of hanmermoor\ Corsewall near 
the northern extremity of the Rinns; the Norse stronghold of 
Cruggleton, south of Garliestown, which belonged in the 13th 
century to de Quincy, earl of Winchester, who had married a 
daughter of Alan, " king " of Galloway, and to Alexander Comyn, 
2nd earl of Buchan (d. 1289), his son-in-law; Dunskey, south of 
Portpatrick, built in the 16th century, occupying the site of an 
older fortress; the fragments of Long Castle at Dowalton Loch, 
the ancient seat of the MacDonells; Myrton, the seat of the 
MacCuIlochs, in Mochrum parish; and the ruined tower of 
Sorbie, the ancient keep of the Ifannays. 

See Sir Herbert Maxwell, History of Dumfries and GuUomay 



S Edinburgh, 1896) ; Sir Andrew Agnew. The Agums of Lockmmw 
Edinburgh, 1893); The Galloway Herd-Book (Dumfries, 1880); 
Proceedings of tke Soc. s>f Ant. of Scotland, passim', Gordon Fr&ser, 
Wigtown and Whithorn (Wigtown, 1877). 

WIGWAM, a term loosely adopted as a general name for the 
houses x>f North American Indians. It is, however, strictly 
applied to a particular dome-shaped or conical hut made of poles 
lashed together at the tops and covered with bark. The skin 
tents of many of the Plains Indians are tailed tipis. The word 
" wigwam " represents the Europcanixed or Anglicised form of 
th e Algon kian wtkou-on-ut, i.e. u in his (their) house." 

WIHTRED, king of Kent (d. 725), son of Ecgberht, nephew of 
Hlothhere and brother of Eadric, came to the Kentish throne in 
690 after the period of anarchy which followed the death of the 
latter king. Bede states that Wihtred and Swefheard were 
both kings in Kent in 692, and this statement would appear to 
imply a period of East Saxon influence (see Kent), while there 
is also evidence of an attack by Wessex. Wihtred, however, 
seems to have become sole king In 694. At his death, which did 
not take place until 725, he left the kingdom to his sons Aethel- 
beTht, Eadberht and Alric. After the annal 694 in the Chronicle 
there is inserted a grant of privileges to the church, which pur- 
ports to have been issued by Wihtred at a place called Baccan* 
celde. This grant, however, cannot be accepted as genuine and 



630 



WILBERFORCE, R. L— WILBERFORCE, S. 



has merely an illustrative value, but there is still extant a 
code of laws issued by him in a council held at a place called 
fierghamstyde (Barham?) during the fifth year of his reign 
(probably 695). 

See Bede, Hist. Ecd. % ed. C. Plummer (Oxford, 1896); Anglo- 
Saxon Chronicle, cd. Earle and PTummer (Oxford, 1809). 

WILBERFORCE, ROBERT ISAAC (1802-1857), English 
clergyman and writer, second son of William Wilberforce, was 
born on the 19th of December 1802. He was educated at Oriel 
College, Oxford, taking a double first in 1823. In 1826 he was 
chosen fellow of Oriel and was ordained, among his friends and 
colleagues being Newman, Pusey and Keble. For a few years 
he was one of the tutors at Oriel, but the provost, Edward 
Hawkins, disliked his religious views, and in 1831 he resigned 
and left Oxford. In 1832 he obtained the living of East Farleigh, 
Kent, which in 1840 he exchanged for that of Burton Agnes, 
near Hull. In 1841 he was appointed archdeacon of the East 
Riding. About this time Wilberforce became very intimate with 
Manning, and many letters on theological and ecclesiastical 
questions passed between them. In 1851 Manning joined the 
Church of Rome, and three years later Wilberforce took the same 
step. He was preparing for his ordination when he died at 
Albano on the 3rd of February 1857. He left two sons, the 
younger of whom, Edward Wilberforce (b. 1834), became one 
of the masters of the Supreme Court of Judicature. Edward's 
son, Lionel Robert Wilberforce (b. 1861), was in 1900 appointed 
professor of physics in the university of Liverpool.- 

R. I. Wilberforce assisted his brother Samuel to write the Life and 
to edit the Correspondence of his father. His other writings include : 



of Ancient History (1840): A Sketch of the History of Erastionism 
(1851); An Enquiry into the Principles of Church Authority (1854); 
and a romance, Rutilius and Lucius (1842). 

WILBERFORCE, SAMUEL (1805-1873)/ English bishop, 
third son of William Wilberforce, was born at Clapham Common, 
London, on the 7th of September 1805. In 1823 he entered 
Oriel College, Oxford. In the "United Debating Society," 
which afterwards developed into the " Union," he distinguished 
himself as a zealous advocate of liberalism. The set of friends 
with whom he chiefly associated at Oxford were sometimes 
named, on account of their exceptionally decorous conduct, 
the " Bethel Union "; but he was by no means averse to amuse- 
ments, and specially delighted in hurdle jumping and hunting. 
He graduated in 1826, taking a first class in mathematics and a 
second in classics. After his marriage on the nth of June 1828 
to Emily Sargent, he was in December ordained and appointed 
curate-in-charge at Checkenden near Henley-on-Thames. In 
1830 he was presented by Bishop Sumner of Winchester to the 
rectory of Brightstone in the Isle of Wight. In this compara- 
tively retired sphere he soon found scope for that manifold 
activity which so prominently characterized his subsequent 
career. In 1831 he published a tract on tithes, " to correct the 
prejudices of the lower order of farmers," and in the following 
year a collection of hymns for use in his parish, which had a 
large general circulation; a small volume of stories entitled 
the Note Book of a Country Clergyman; and a sermon, The 
Apostolical Ministry. At the close of 1837 he published the 
Letters and Journals of Henry Martyn. Although a High 
Churchman Wilberforce held aloof from the Oxford movement, 
and in 1848 his divergence horn the " Tract " writers became so 
marked I hat J* H. Newman declined! further contributions from 
, not deeming Li advisable that they 
e fery closely," In 1K3& Wilberforce 
1 -rather Robert, the Life of his father, 
tlbex's Ccrretpandtnte. In 1839 he also 
e eld English divines), to which 
s and etlitj Sunday Stories, and 
d in the follow in g year Rocky 
vtmbcr iBjo he was installed 
1840 was collated canon of 
1 the rectory of Alverstoke. | 



Itpudt 



In 1841 he was chosen Bampton lecturer, and shortly afterwards 
made chaplain to Prince Albert, an appointment he owed to 
the impression produced by a speech at an anti-slavery meeting 
some months previously. In October 1843 he was appointed 
by the archbishop of York to be sub-almoner to the queen. In 
1844 appeared his History of the American Church. In March 
of the following year he accepted the deanery of Westminster, 
and in October the bishopric of Oxford. 

The bishop in 1847 became involved in the Hampden con- 
troversy, and signed the remonstrance of the thirteen bishops 
to Lord John Russell against Hampden's appointment to the 
bishopric of Hereford. He also endeavoured to obtain satis- 
factory assurances from Hampden; but, though unsuccessful 
in this, he withdrew from the suit against him. The publication 
of a papal bull in 1850 establishing a Roman hierarchy in England 
brought the High Church party, of whom Wilberforce was the 
most prominent member, into temporary disrepute. The seces- 
sion to the Church of Rome of his brother-in-law, Archdeacon 
(afterwards Cardinal) Manning, and then of his brothers, as well 
as his only daughter and his son-in-law, Mr and Mrs J. H. Pye, 
brought him under further suspicion, and his revival of the 
powers of convocation lessened his influence at court; but his 
unfailing tact and wide sympathies, his marvellous energy in 
church organization, the magnetism of his personality, and his 
eloquence both on the platform and in the pulpit, gradually won 
for him recognition as without a rival on the episcopal bench. 
His diary reveals a tender and devout private life which has 
been overlooked by those who have only considered the versatile 
facility and persuasive expediency that marked the successful 
public career of the bishop, and earned him the sobriquet of 
" Soapy Sam." In the House of Lords he took a prominent part 
in the discussion of social and ecclesiastical questions. He has 
been styled the " bishop of society "; but society occupied only 
a fraction of his time. The great bent of his energies was cease- 
lessly directed to the better organization of his diocese and to 
the furtherance of schemes for increasing the influence and 
efficiency of the church. In 1854 he opened a theological college 
at Cuddesdon, which was afterwards the subject of some con- 
troversy on account of its alleged Romanist tendencies. His 
attitude towards Essays and Reviews in 186 1, against which he 
wrote an article in the Quarterly, won him the special gratitude 
of the Low Church party, and latterly he enjoyed the full con- 
fidence and esteem of all except the extreme men of either side 
and party. On the publication of J. W. Colenso's Commentary 
on the Romans in 1861, Wilberforce endeavoured to induce the 
author to hold a private conference with him; but after the 
publication of the first two parts of the Pentateuch Critically 
Examined he drew up the address of the bishops which called 
on Colenso to resign his bishopric. In 1867 he framed the first 
Report of the Ritualistic Commission, in which coercive measures 
against ritualism were discountenanced by the use of the word 
" restrain " instead of " abolish " or " prohibit." He also 
endeavoured to take the sting out of some resolutions of the 
second Ritualistic Commission in 1868, and was one of the four 
who signed the Report with qualifications. Though strongly 
opposed to the disestablishment of the Irish Church, yet, when 
the constituencies decided for it, he advised that no opposition 
should be made to it by the House of Lords. After twenty-four 
years' labour in the diocese of Oxford, he was translated by 
Gladstone to the bishopric of Winchester. He was killed on the 
19th of July 1873, by the shock of a fall from his horse near 
Dorking, Surrey. 

Wilberforce left three sons. The eldest, Reginald Garton 
Wilberforce, being the author of An Unrecorded Chapter of the 
Indian Mutiny (1894). His two younger sons both attained dis- 
tinction in the English church. Ernest Roland Wilberforce ( x 840- 
1908) was bishop of Newcastle-on-Tyne from 1882 to 1895, and 
bishop of Chichester from 1895 till his death. Albert Basil Orme 
Wilberforce (b. 1841) was appointed canon residentiary of West- 
minster in 1894, chaplain of the House of Commons in 1806 and 
archdeacon of Westminster in xooo; he has published several 
volumes of sermons. 



WILBERFORCE, W.— WILBRANDT 



631 



Besides the works already mentioned, Wflberforce wrote Heroes of 
Hebrew History (1870), originally contributed to Coed Words, and 
several volumes of sermons. See Life of Samuel Wilberforce. wiih 
Selections from kis Diary and Correspondence (1870-1882), vol i., ed. 
by Canon A. R. Ashwcll, and vols. H. and KL, ed. f ' 



by his 1 



R. G. Wilberforce, who also wrote a one-volume Life (1888). One of 
the volumes of the " English Leaders of Religion " is devoted to him, 
and he » included in Dean Burgon's Lues of Twelve Good Men (1888). 

WILBERFORCE, WILLIAM (1750-1833),* English phllan- 
Ihropist whose name is chiefly associated with the abolition of 
the slave trade, was descended from a Yorkshire family which 
possessed the manor of Wilberfoss in the East Riding from the 
time of Henry II. till the middle of the 18th century. He was 
the only son of Robert WiJberforee, member of a commercial 
house at Hull, by his wife Elizabeth, daughter of Thomas Bird of 
Barton, Ozon, and was born at Hull on the 24th of August 1759. 
It was from his mother that he inherited both his feeble frame 
and his many rich mental endowments. He was not a diligent 
scholar, but at the grammar school of Hull his skill in elocution 
attracted the attention of the master. Before he had completed 
his teeth year he lost his father and was transferred to the care 
of a paternal uncle at Wimbledon; but in his twelfth year he 
returned to HuD, and soon afterwards was placed under the care 
of the master of the endowed school of Pocklington. Here his 
love of social pleasures made him neglectful of his studies, but 
he entered St John's College, Cambridge, in October 1766. Left 
by the death of his grandfather and uncle the possessor of aa 
independent fortune Under his mother's sole guardianship, he 
was somewhat idle at the university, though he acquitted himself 
in the examinations with credit; but in his serious years he 
"could not look back without unfeigned remorse" on the 
opportunities he had then neglected. In 1780 he was elected to 
the House of Commons for his native town, his success being 
due to his personal popularity and his lavish expenditure. He 
soon found his way into the fast political society of London, and 
at the club at Goosetrees renewed an ' acquaintance begun at 
Cambridge with Pitt, which ripened into a friendship of the 
closest kind. In the autumn of 1783 he set out with Pitt on a 
tour in France; and after his return his eloquence proved of 
great assistance to Pitt in his struggle against the majority of 
the House of Commons. In 1784 Wilberforos was elected for 
both Hull and Yorkshire, and took his seat for the latter con- 
stituency. 

A journey to Nice in the autumn of the same year with bis 
friend Dr Isaac Milner (1750-1820), who had been a master at 
HuD grammar school when Wilberforce was there as a boy, and 
had since made a reputation as a mathematician, and afterwards 
became president of Queens' College, Cambridge, and dean of 
Carlisle, led to his conversion to Evangelical Christianity and 
the adoption of more serious views of life. The change had a 
marked effect on his public conduct. In the beginning of 1787 
he busied himself with the establishment of a society for the 
reformation of manners. About the same time he made the 
acquaintance of Thomas Clarkson, and began the agitation against 
the slave trade. Pitt entered heartily into their plans, and 
recommended Wilberforce to undertake the guidance of the 
project as a subject suited to his character and talents. While 
Clarkson conducted the agitation throughout the country, 
Wilberforce took every opportunity in the House of Commons 
of exposing the evils and horrors of the trade. In 1788, however, 
a serious illness compelled him to retire for some months from 
public life, and the introduction of the subject in parliament 
therefore devolved on Pitt, whose represen tations were so far 
successful that an act was passed providing that the number of 
slaves carried m ships should be in proportion to the tonnage. 
On the 1 21 h of May of the following year Wilberforce, in co-opera- 
tion with Pitt, brought the subject of abolition again before the 
I House of Commons; but the friends of the planters succeeded 
in getting the matter deferred. On the 27th of January following 
Wilberforce carried a motion for referring to a special committee 
the further examination of witnesses, but after full inquiry the 
motion for abolition in April 1791 was lost by 163 votes to 88. 
In the following April he carried a motion for gradual abolition 



by 238 to 85 votes; but in the House of Lords the discussion 
was finally postponed till the following session. Notwith- 
standing his unremitting labours in educating public opinion 
and annual motions in the House of Commons, it was not till 
1807, the year following Pitt's death, that the first great step 
towards the abofiUon of slavery was accomplished. When the 
anti-slavery society was formed in 1823, Wilberforce and Clarkson 
became vice-presidents; but before their aim was accomplished 
Wilberforce had retired from public life, and the Emancipation 
Bill was not passed till August 1833, a month after his death. 

In 1797 Wilberforce published A Pratkal View of the Prevail- 
ing Religious System of Professed Christians in the Higher and 
Middle Classes of this Country Contrasted with Real Christianity, 
which within half a year went through five editions and was 
afterwards translated into French, Italian, Dutch and German. 
In the same year (May 1797) he married Barbara Ann Spooner 
and took a house at Oapham, where he became one of the 
leaders of what was known as the " Clapham Sect " of Evangeli- 
cals, including Henry Thornton, Charles Grant, E. J. Eliot, 
Zacchary Macaulay and James Stephen. It was in connexion 
with this group that he then occupied himself with a plan for a 
religious periodical which should admit M a moderate degree 
of political and common intelligence," the result being the 
appearance m January 1801 of the Christian Observer. He 
also interested himself in a variety of schemes for the advance- 
ment of the social and religious welfare of the community* 
including the establishment of the Association for the Better 
Observance of Sunday, the foundation, with Hannah More (f p.), 
of schools at Cheddar, Somersetshire, a project for opening a 
school in every parish for the religious instruction of chiidttn, 
a plan for the education of the children of the lower classes, 
a bill for securi.zg better salaries to curates, and a method for 
disseminating, by government help, Christianity in India. In 
parliament he was a supporter of parliamentary reform and of 
Roman Catholic emancipation. In 181 2, on account of failing 
health, he exchanged the representation of Yorkshire for that 
of a constituency which would make less demands on his time, 
and was returned for Bramber, Sussex. In 1825 he retired from 
the House of Commons, and the following year settled at High* 
wood Hill, near Mill Hill, ° just beyond the disk of the metropolis." 
He died at London on the 29th of July 1833, and was buried 
in Westminster Abbey dose to Pitt, Fox and Canning. In 
Westminster Abbey a statue was erected to his memory, and in 
Yorkshire a county asylum for the blind was founded in his 
honour. A column was also erected to bun by his townsmen of 
Hull. Wilberforce left four sons, two of whom, Samuel and 
Robert Isaac, are noticed separately. The youngest, Henry 
William Wilberforce (1807-1873), was educated at Oriel College, 
Oxford, and was president of the Oxford Union. He took 
orders in the English Church, but in 1850 became a Roman 
Catholic He was an active journalist and edited the Catholic 
Standard. 

The chief authorities of the career of William Wilberforce are hia 
Life (5 vols., 1838) by his sons, Robert Isaac and Samuel, and his 
Correspondence (11)40) also pubuahed by his tons A smaller edition 
of the Life was published by Samuel Wilberforce in 1868. See also 
The private papers of William Wilberforce, edited by A. M. Wilberforce 
(1897) ; Sir James Stephen, Essays %n Ecclesiastical Biography (1849) ; 
I. C. Cokrahoun, WOberforce, His Friends and Times (1866); John 
Scoughton. WiMom wilberforce (1880); I. I. Gurney, Familiar 
Sketch of Wilberforce (1838); and J. S. Hartford, Recollections of 
W. Wilberforce (1864). 

WILBRANDT, ADOLF (1837- >, German novelist and 
dramatist, was born at Rostock on the 24th of August 1837, 
the son of & professor at that university. Having received his 
early education at the gymnasium of his native town, he entered 
the university and engaged in the study of law. This, however, 
be soon abandoned in favour of philology and history, and 
continued these studies in Berlin and Munich. After taking 
the degree of doctor of philosophy, be joined the staff of the 
Suddeutsche Zettung in Munich. He travelled abroad for a time 
and in 187 1 settled in Vienna, where, two years later, he married 
the actress, Auguste Baudius. In 1881 Wilbnndt was appointed 



632 



WILBYE--WILDE 



director of the Hofburg theatre in succession to Franz Dingcl- 
stedt, an office he held until 1887. In this year he returned to 
his native town of Rostock, and remained actively engaged in 
literary production. Wilbrandt is distinguished both as a 
dramatist and novelist. His merits were acknowledged by the 
award of the GriUparzer prize on two occasions — in 1875 for 
the tragedy Gracchus dcr Votkslribun, and in 1800 for his dramatic 
poem Dcr Master von Palmyra, while in 1878 he received the 
Schiller prize for his dramatic productions. 

Among tm play* e mentioned the tragedies, Arria und 

Mtssalin* (1074)1 litre {,1*76); KrumkUd (1877); **"* comedies 
UnttrtUkbar {iH;o>. Die Maler (1872), Jugcndliebe (1873) and 
Per Kambf umjl Dastin (1874); and the drama Die Tochter des 
Htrrn Fabruitts (ifiHj). Among his novels the following deserve 
put ice:— MHsUtf Amor (lASo); Hermann Iftnger (1892); Der 
Dornenvft 0&94); Dir Qwrinsei {1895); Die Rotkenburger (1895); 
and Httdegard ALaWiwinn ^897). He also published translations of 
Sophock^ jui.] Uuripi-ii > (1^66), Cedichte (1874. 1889 and 1907), and 
a vol unit 1 of Er inner u» ■;■•>■■>- 05). 

S« V. Klemprrer, AdolJ WtlbraudL Eine Siudit nber seine Werke 
(1907), and A. Stern, Studien *nr LUeratur der Cegenmari (3rd ed., 
1905). 

'• WILBYB, JOHN* English 16th-century madrigal composer, 
was born probably at Bury St Edmunds, but the details of his 
life are obscure. A set of madrigals by him appeared in 1508 
and a second in 1608, the two sets containing sixty-four pieces; 
and from a few contributions known to have been made by him 
to other contemporary sets, we can infer that he was alive in 
1614. He is the most famous of all the English madrigahsts; 
his pieces have long been favourites and are included in modern 
collections. 

WILD, JONATHAN (c. 1682-1725), English criminal, was born 
about 1682 at Wolverhampton, where his father was a wig-maker. 
After being apprenticed to a local buckle-maker, he went to 
London to learn his trade, and, getting into debt, was imprisoned 
for several years. The acquaintance of many criminals which 
he made in prison he turned to account after his release by 
setting up as a receiver of stolen goods. .Wild shrewdly realized 
that it ^was safer, and in most cases more profitable, to dispose 
of such property by returning it to its legitimate owners than 
to sell it, with the attendant risks, in the open market, and he 
thus built up an immense business, posing as a recovercr of 
stolen goods, the thieves receiving a commission on the price 
paid for recovery. A special act of parliament was passed by 
which receivers of stolen property were made accessories to the 
theft, but Wild's professed " lost property office " had little 
difficulty in evading the new law, and became so prosperous 
that two branch offices were opened. From profiling by robberies 
in which he had no share, Wild naturally came to arrange 
robberies himself, and he devised and controlled a huge organiza- 
tion, which plundered London and its approaches wholesale. 
Such thieves as refused to work with him received short shrift. 
The notorious Jack Sheppard, wearied of Wild's exactions, at 
last refused to deal with him, whereupon Wild secured his arrest, 
and himself arrested Shcppard's confederate, "Blueskin." 
In return for Wild's services in tracking down such thieves as 
he did not himself control, the authorities for some time toler- 
ated the offences of his numerous agents, each a specialist in a 
particular kind of robbery, and so themselves strengthened hit 
position. If an arrest were made, Wild had a plentiful supply 
of false evidence at hand to estabfish his agents' alibi, and hie 
did not hesitate to obtain the conviction, by similar means, of 
such thieves as refused to recognize his authority. Such stolen 
property as could not be returned to the Owners with profit 
was taken aoroad in a sloop purchased for this work. At last 
either the authorities became more strict or Wild less cautious. 
He was arrested, tried at the Old Bailey, and after being acquitted 
on a charge of stealing lace, found guilty of taking a reward for 
restoring it to the owner without -informing the police. He was 
hanged at Tyburn on the 24th of May 1725. 

"" ' , a watering-place of Germany, in the kingdom of 

pkturesqueiy situated 1475 ft. above the sea, 

'? pfae-dad gorge of the Enz in the Black Forest, 

t and 14 E. of Baden-Baden by rail Fot> 




(1005) 3734. It contains an Evangelical, a Roman Catholic 
and an English church, and has some small manufactures 
(cigars, paper and toys). Its thermal alkaline springs have a 
temperature of oo e -ioo° Fahr. and are used for bathing in cases 
of paralysis, rheumatism, gout, neuralgia and similar ailments. 
The fact that the springs rise within the baths, and are thus 
used at the fountain-head, is considered to contribute materially 
to their curative value. The water is used internally lor affections 
of the stomach and digestive organs, and of the kidneys, bladder, 
frc. Wildbad possesses all the usual arrangements for the 
comfort and amusement of the visitors (over 15,000 annually), 
including large and well-appointed hotels, a Kurbaus, a Trink- 
Halle and promenades. The neighbourhood is picturesque, 
the most attractive spot being the Wildsee, of which legends 
are told. 

See W. T. v. Renz. Die Knr tu Wildbad (with Guide, Wildbad, 
1888), and Weizsacker, Wildbad (2nd ed., 1905). 

WILDE, OSCAR O'FLAHERTIE WILLS (1856-1000), English 
author, son of Sir William Wilde, a famous Irish surgeon, was 
born in Dublin on the 15th of October 1856; his mother, Jane 
Francisca Elgee, was well known in Dublin as a graceful writer 
of verse and prose, under the pen-name of " Speranza." Having 
distinguished himself in classics at Trinity College, Dublin, 
Oscar Wilde went to Magdalen College, Oxford, in 1874, and won 
the Newdigate prize in 1878 with his poem " Ravenna," besides 
taking a first-class in classical Moderations and in Literae 
Humaniores. But his career at Oxford, brilliant intellectually 
as he showed himself to be, was chiefly signalized by the part 
he played in what came to be known as the aesthetic movement. 
He adopted what to undergraduates appeared the effeminate 
pose of casting scorn on manly sports, wearing his hair long, 
decorating his rooms with peacock's feathers, lilies, sunflowers, 
blue china and other objets d'arl, which be declared his desire 
to " live up to," affecting a lackadaisical manner, and professing 
intense emotions on the subject of " art for art's sake " — then 
a new-fangled doctrine which J. M. Whistler was bringing into 
prominence. Wilde made himself the apostle of this new cult. 
At Oxford his behaviour procured him a ducking in the Cherwell, 
and a wrecking of his rooms, but the cult spread among certain 
sections of society to such an extent that languishing attitudes, 
" too-too " costumes and " aestheticism " generally became a 
recognized pose. Its affectations were burlesqued in Gilbert 
and Sullivan's travesty Patience (1881), which practically 
killed by ridicule the absurdities to which it had grown. At 
the same time it cannot be denied that the " aesthetic " move- 
ment, in the aspect fundamentally represented by the school of 
William Morris and Rossetti, had a permanent influence on 
English decorative art. As the leading "aesthete," Oscar 
Wilde became one of the most prominent personalities of the 
day; apart from the ridicule he encountered, his affected 
paradoxes and his witty sayings were quoted on all sides, and 
in 1882 he went on a lecturing tour in the United States. In 
1884 he married Constance Lloyd. He had already published 
In 1881 a selection of his poems, which, however, only attracted 
admiration in a limited circle. In 1888 appeared The Happy 
Prince and Other Tales, illustrated by Waller Crane and Jacomb 
Hood. This charming volume of fairy tales was followed up 
later by a second collection, The House of Pomegranates (1892), 
acknowledged by the author to be "intended neither for the 
British child nor the British public." In much of his writings, 
and in his general attitude, there was to most people an undertone 
of rather nasty suggestion which created prejudice against him, 
and his novel, The Picture of Dorian Cray (1891), with all its 
sparkle and cleverness, impressed them more from this point 
of view than from its purely literary brilhance. Wilde contri- 
buted some characteristic articles to the reviews, all coloured 
by his peculiar attitude towards art and life, and in 1891 re- 
published three of them as a book called Intentions. His first 1 
real success with the larger public was as a dramatist with 
Lady Windermere's Fan at the St James's Theatre in 1892, 
followed by A Woman of No Importance (1893), •A" Ideai Husband 
(189s) nwi The Importance of Being Earnest (1895). . The 



WILDENBRUCH— WILDERNESS 



633 



dramatic and literary ability shewn in these play*, all of which 
were published later in book form, was as undoubted as their 
diction and ideas were chsncteriaticftUy paradoxical. In 1093 
the licenser of plays refused a licence to Wilde's Salome, but it 
was produced in French in Paris by Sarah Bernhardt in 1694. 
His success as a dramatist had by this time gone some way to 
d i sa b u se hostile critics of the s usp i cions as regards his personal 
character which had been excited by the appanent looseness of 
morals which since bis Oxford days it had. always pleased him 
to affect; but to the consternation of his friends, who had 
ceased to credit the existence of any real moral obliquity, in 
t&95 came fatal revelations as the result of his bringing a libel 
action against the marquis of Queensberry; and at the Old 
Bailey, in May, Wilde was sentenced to two years' imprisonment 
with hard labour for offences under the Criminal Law. Amend- 
ment Act. It was a melancholy end to what might have been 
a singularly brilliant career. Even after leaving prison he was 
necessarily an outcast from decent circles, and he lived mainly 
00 the Continent, under the name of ".Sebastian Melmoth." 
He died in Paris on the 30th of November 1900. In 1898 he 
published his powerful Ballad of Reading Gaol. His Collected 
Poems, containing' some beautiful verse, had been issued in 
1892. While in prison he wrote an apology for his life which 
was placed in the hands of his executor and published in 1005. 
The manuscripts of A Florentine Tragedy and an essay on 
Shakespeare's sonnets were stolen from his house in 1895. In 
1904 a five-act tragedy. The Duchess of Padua, written by Wilde 
about 1883 for Mary Anderson, but<not acted by her, was pub- 
lished in a German translation {Die Hersogin von Padua, trans- 
lated by Max Meyerfeld) in Berlin. It is still impossible to 
take a purely objective view of Oscar Wilde's work. The Old 
Bailey revelations removed all doubt as to the essential un- 
healthiness of his personal influence; but his literary genius was 
none the less remarkable, and his plays were perhaps the most 
original contributions to English dramatic writing during the 
period. (H. Ch.) 

WILDENBRUCH, ERNST VON (1845-1909), German poet and 
dramatist, was born on the 3rd of February 1845 at Beyrout 
in Syria, the son of the Prussian consul-general. Having passed 
his early years at Athens and Constantinople, where his father 
was attached to the Prussian legation, he came in 1857 to 
Germany, received his early schooling at the Ptdagogium at 
Halle and the Franzosische Gymnasium in Berlin, and, after 
passing through the Cadet school, became, in 1863, an officer 
in the Prussian army. He abandoned the military career two 
years later, but was recalled to the colours in 1866 for the war 
with Austria. He next studied law at the university of Berlin, 
and again served in the army during the Franco-Prussian War, 
1870-71. In 1876 Wildenbruch was attached to the. foreign 
office, which he finally quitted in 1900 with the title of counsellor 
of legation. He achieved his first literary successes with the 
epics VionviOe (1874) and Sedan (187$). After publishing 
a volume of poems, Lkder und BaUadcn (BerL, 1877; 7th ed., 
1900), he produced, in 1 882, the tragedy, Die Karolinger. Among 
his chief dramas may be mentioned the tragedy Harold (188a); 
Die Quitxows (1888); Der Generalfcldobcrst (1889); Die Hauben- 
lerche (1891); Heinrich und Hcinrichs Geschlecht (1895); Die 
Tackier des Erasmus (1900); and Kenig Laurin (1902). Wilden- 
bruch was twice (in 1884 and 1896) awarded the Schiller prize, 
and was, in 1893, created a doctor of philosophy honoris causa 
by the university of Jena. He also wrote several volumes of 
short stories (NovcUen, 1883; Ncue NoveUen, 1885; Tieft 
Waster, 1897, &c.). He died on the 15th of January 1909. 

Cf. B. Littmann, Das dculsehe Drama in den Bewegungen der 
Gegenwari (1894; 4th ed., 1897); H. Bukhaupt, Dramaturge des 
Schauepiels, vol. iv. (1901)' 

WILDERNESS, a large forest in' Spottsyhrania county, 
Virginia, U.S.A., on the S. bank of the Rapidan, extending 
from Mine Run on the E. to Chancellorsville on the W. It is 
famous in military history for the battles of Chancellorsville 
(1863) and Wilderness (1864) during the American Civil War. 

ChonceUorsviUc.—Jji May 1863 a three days' battle was fought 



at ChancelloTsville between the Army of the Potomac, under 
General J. Hooker, and General Lee's Army of Northern Virginia, 
which had stemmed the tide of invasion in the East by taking 
up a defensive position along the right or south bank of the 
Rappahannock. General Burnside had suffered a severe repulse 
in front of the Confederate position at Fredericksburg in 
December 1862, and his successor resolved to adopt the alterna- 
tive plan of turning Lee's flank and so gaining the road to' 
Richmond. General Lee had meanwhile weakened his forces 
by detaching Longstreet's two divisions and the cavalry brigades 
of Hampton, Robertson and Jones. Hooker had now at his 
disposal 12,000 cavalry, 400 guns and 120,000 infantry and 
artillery, organized in seven corps (I. Reynolds, II. Couch, 
IIL Sickles, V. Meade, VI. Sedgwick, XI. Howard, XH. Slocum). 
General Lee counted only 45,000 men of all arms effective. 
Hooker detached 10,000 cavalry under Stoneman and Sedg- 
wick's corps (30,000) to demonstrate on his flanks along the 
Rapidan and at Fredericksburg, while with the remainder he 
moved up the Rappahannock and crossed that river and after- 
wards the Rapidan and on the 30th of April fixed his head- 
quarters at Chancellorsville, a farmhouse in the Wilderness. 
Lee's cavalry under Stuart had duly reported the Federal 
movements and Lee called up "Stonewall" Jackson's four 
divisions from below the Massaponax as soon as Sedgwick's 
corps crossed the river at Fredericksburg. At Chancellorsville 
Anderson's division was in position, and McLaws was sent to 
support him, while Jackson took three divisions to the same 
point, leaving Early's division to observe Sedgwick. Hooker 
had cleared and entrenched a position in the forest, inviting 
attack from the E. or S. General Lee, however, discovered a 
route by which the Federals might be attacked from the N. 
and W., and Jackson was instructed to execute the turning 
movement and fall upon them. As soon as a brigade of cavalry 
was placed at his disposal Jackson marched westward with his 
corps of 22,000 men and by a devour of 15 m. gained the Federal 
right flank, while Anderson and McLaws with 20 guns and z 2,000 
men demonstrated in front of Hooker's army and so kept 
90,000 men idle behind their earthworks. One of Stuart's 
cavalry brigades neutralized Stoneman's 10,000 horsemen. 
Sedgwick was being contained by Early. Jackson's attack 
surprised the Federals, who fled in panic at nightfall, but Jackson 
was mortally wounded. Next day the attack was resumed 
under the direction of Stuart, who was reinforced by Anderson, 
while McLaws now threatened the left flank of tie Federals 
and Fitz Lee's cavalry brigade* operated against their line of 
retreat. Hooker finally gained the shelter of an inner line of 
works covering the ford by which he must retreat. Meanwhile, 
Early had checked Sedgwick, but when at last the Federal corps 
was about to overwhelm the Confederate division Lee came to 
succour it. Then Sedgwick was assailed by Early, McLaws and 
Anderson, and driven over the Rappahannock to join the re- 
mainder of Hooker's beaten army, which had rccrosscd the 
Rapidan on the 5th of May and marched back to Falmouth. 
Phistercr's Record states that the Federal loss was 16,000 and 
that of the Confederates 12,000 men. 

See A. C. Hamlin, Ckoncettorsviltei G. F. R. Henderson, Stonewall 
Jackson: A. Doubleday, Chancellorsville and Gettysburg, Batiks and 
Leaders of the Civil War and Official Records of the War of Secession. 

<G. W. R.) 

Grant's Campaign of the Wilderness and Cold Harbor.— On 
the evening of the 3rd of May 1864, after dark, the Army of the 
Potomac, commanded by Major-General G. G. Meade and 
consisting of the II., V. and VI., and Cavalry corps, left its 
winter quarters about Culpcper to manoeuvre across the Rapidan 
with a view to fighting a battle at or near New Hope Church 
and Craig's Church. The army, and the IX. corps (Burnside), 
which was an independent command, were directed by 
Ueutenant-General Grant, the newly appointed commander of 
the armies of the United States, who accompanied Meade's head- 
quarters. The opposing Army of Northern Virginia under-General 
R. E. Lee lay in quarters around Orange Court House (A. P. 
Hill's corps), Verdiersville (Ewell's corps) and Gordonsvffle 



i 



634 



WILDERNESS 



(Longstreet's corps). The respective numbers were: Army of the 
Potomac, 98,000; DC corps, 32,000; Army of Northern Virginia 
rather less than 70,000. 

The crossing of the Rapidan was made at Germanna and Ely's 
Fords, out of reach of Lee's interference, and in a few hours the 
two leading corps had reached their halting-places— V., Wilder- 
ness Tavern; and IL, Chancellorsville. The VI. followed the V. 
' and halted south of Germanna Ford. Two of the three divisions 
of cavalry preceded the march, and scouted to the front and 
flanks. Controversy has arisen as to whether the early halt of 
the Union army in the midst of the Wilderness was not a serious 



Grant's intention of avoiding a battle until he was dear of 
the Wilderness was not achieved, for Confederate infantry 
appeared on the Orange Turnpike east of Mine Run, where on 
his own initiative Warren had posted a division of the V. corps 
overnight as flank-guard, and some cavalry, judiciously left 
behind by Wilson at Parker's Store, became engaged a little 
later with hostile forces on the Orange Plank Road. This led 
to the suspension of the whole manoeuvre towards Lee's right 
rear. The first idea of the Union headquarters was that Lee 
was railing back to the North Anna, covered by a bold rear- 
guard, which Grant and Meade arranged to cut off and destroy 




todnwa Cram Tk» WiUamu «ri Old ITcrfar, by ^mUsa of Hush Res* Ltd. 



error of judgment. The reason assigned was the necessity of 
protecting an enormous wagon train, carrying 15 days' supplies 
for ine whole army, that was crossing after the II. corps at 
Ely's Ford. Burnside's corps was far to the rear when the 
advance began, but by making forced marches it was able to 
reach Germanna Ford during the 5th of May. On that day the 
manoeuvre towards Craig's Church was Tesumed at 5 am., 
Wilson's cavalry division moving from Parker's Store south- 
ward, the V. corps (Warren) moving from Wilderness Tavern 
towards Parker's Store, followed by the VI. under Sedgwick, 
the II. from Chancellorsville by way of Todd's Tavern towards 
Shady Grove Church. Of the other cavalry divisions, Gregg's 
went towards Fredericksburg (near where the Confederate 
cavalry corps had been reported) and Torbert's (which had acted 
as rearguard and watched the upper Rapida" during the first 
day's march), was. not yet across the river. 



by a convergent attack of Warren and Sedgwick. But the 
appearance of infantry on the Plank Road as well as the Pike 
had shown that Lee intended to fight in the Wilderness, and 
Hancock (II. corps) was called in from Todd's Tavern, while 
one division (Getty's) of the VL was hurried to the intersection 
of the Brock and Plank roads to hold that point until Hancock's 
arrival Getty arrived just in time, for Confederate skirmishers 
were found dead and wounded only 30 yds. from the cross roads. 
The division then formed up to await Hancock's arrival up the 
Brock Road, practically unmolested, for Lee had only two of 
his corps on the ground (Hill on the Plank Road, EweJl on the 
Pike), and did not desire to force a decision until Longstreet's 
distant corps should arrive. 

Meanwhile Warren had been slowly forming up his attacking 
line with great difficulty in the woods. Grant appears to have 
used bitter words to Meade on the subject of Warren's delays, 



WILDERNESS 



635 



and Meade passed these on to Wanna, who in tain foraed his 
subordinates into premature action. In the end, about noon. 
Griffin's dinon of Warren's corps attacked directly along the 
Pike and crushed the enemy's first line, but, unsupported by 
the VL corps on the right and Wadsworth's division (V. corps) 
on the left, both of which units were still groping their way for- 
ward in the woods, was forced back .with heavy losses. Wads- 
worth took a wrong direction in the woods and presented himself 
as an easy victim to Ewell's right, soon after Griffin's repulse. 
The VL corps advanced later in the day on Warren's right, 
bat was only partially engagnd The result of the attack on 
Ewell was thus completely unsatisfactory, and for the rest of 
the battle the Y. and VL corps were used principally as reser- 
voirs to find supports for the offensive wing under Hancock, who 
arrived on the Plank Road about a p jt. 

Hancock's divisions, as they came up, entrenched themselves 
along the Brock Road. In the afternoon he was ordered to 
attack whatever force of the enemy was on the Plank Road in 
front of him, but was unwilling to do so until he had his forces 
well in hand. Finally Getty was ordered to attack " whether 
Hancock was ready or not." This may have been an attempt 
to force Hancock's hand by an appeal to his soldierly honour, and 
as a fact he did not leave Getty unsupported. But the dis- 
jointed attacks of the H. corps on Hill's entrenchments, while 
forcing the Confederates to the verge of ruin, were not as success- 
ful as the preponderance of force on the Union side ought to 
have ensured. For four hours the two lines of battle were 
figh ting 50 yds. apafc, until at nightfall the contest was given 
up through mutual TTfhflwrfwtn. 

The battle of the 6th was timed to begin at 5 A.K. and Grant's 
attack was wholly directed on Parker's Store, with the object of 
crushing Hill before Longstrcet could assist him. If Longstreet, 
instead of helping Hill, were to attack the extreme Union left, 
so much the better; but the far more probable course for him 
to take was to support Hill on or north of the Plank Road, and 
Grant not only ordered Hancock with sis of the eleven divisions 
of Meade's army to attack towards Parker's Store, but sent his 
own M mass of manoeuvre " (the IX. corps) thither in such a 
way as to strike Hill's left. The cavalry was drawn back for the 
protection of the trains, 1 for " every musket " was required in 
the ranks of the infantry. Warren and Sedgwick were to hold 
Ewell occupied on the Pike by vigorous attacks. At 5 o'clock 
Hancock advanced, drove back and broke up Hill's divisions, 
and or. his right Wadsworth attacked their left rear. But after 
an hour's wood fighting the Union attack came to a standstill, 
and at this moment, the critical moment for the action of the 
IX. corps, Burnside was still more than a mOe away, having 
scarcely passed through Warren's lines into the woods. Then 
Longstreet's corps, pushing its way in two columns of fours 
through Hut's retreating groups, attacked Hancock with the 
greatest fury, and forced him back some hundreds of yards. 
But the woods broke the force of this attack too, and by 7.50 
the battle had become a stationary fire-fight.. After an interval 
in which both sides rallied their confused masses, Longstreet 
attacked again and gained more ground. Persistent rumours 
came into the Union headquarters of a Confederate advance 
against the Union left rear, and when Grant realised the situation 
he broke off one of BunmoVs divisions from the IX. corps 
column and sent it to the cross roads as direct reserve to Hancock. 
At this moment the battle took .a very urdavourabJe turn on 
the Plank Road. Longstreet had sent four brigades of infantry 
by a detour through the woods south of the Plank Road to attack 
Hancock's left. This was very effective, and the Union troops 
were hustled back to the cross-roads. But Longstreet, like 
Jackson a year before in these- woods, was wounded by his own 
men at the critical moment and the battle again came to a 
standstill (t-s.30 pjl). 

Bmmside's corps, arriving shortly before 10 am. near Ghewn- 

1 Wilson's division, in its movement on Shady Grove Church on 
the 5th, bad been cut off by the enemy's advance on the Plank Road 
and attacked by some Confederate cavalry. But it extricated itself 
and joined Gregg, who had been sent to assist htm, at Todd's Tavern. 



ing's house, the position whence it was to have attacked Hill's 
left in the early morning, was about to attack, in ignorance of 
Hancock's repulse, when fortunately an order reached it to 
suspend the advance and to make its way through the woods 
towards Hancock's right. This dangerous flank march, screened 
by the woods, was completed by a p.m., and General Burnside 
began an attack upon the left of Longstreet's command (R. H. 
Anderson's fresh division of Hill's corps). But Hancock being 
in no condition to support the IX. corps, the whole attack was, 
at 3 P.M., postponed by Grant's order, until 6 p.m. Thus there * 
was a long respite for both sides, varied only by a little skirmish- 
ing. But Lee was determined, as always, to have the last word, 
and about 4.15-4.30 a fierce assault was delivered amidst the 
burning woods upon Hancock's entrenchments along the Brock 
Road. For a moment, aided by the dense smoke, the Con- 
federates seized and held the first line of works, but a counter- 
stroke dislodged them. Burnside, though not expecting to have 
to attack before 6, put into the fight such of bis troops as were 
ready, and at 5.30 or thereabouts the assaulting line receded into 
the woods. Grant cancelled his order to attack at 6, and at 
the decisive point the battle was at an end. But on the extreme 
right of the Union army a sudden attack was delivered at sunset 
upon the hitherto unmolested VI. corps, by Gordon, one of 
Ewell's brigadiers. This carried off two generals and several 
hundred prisoners, and a panic ensued which affected all the 
Union forces on the Pike, and was not quieted until after 
nightfall. 

Lee, therefore, had the last word on both flanks, but in spite 
of this and of the very heavy losses, 1 Grant had already resolved 
to go on, instead of going back like his various predecessors. 
To him, indeed, the battle of the Wilderness was a victory, an 
indecisive victory indeed, but one that had given him a moral 
superiority which he did not intend to forfeit. His scheme, 
drafted early on the morning of the 7 th, was for the army to 
march to Spottsylvania on the night of the 7th-8th, to assemble 
there on the 8th, and thence to undertake a fresh manoeuvre 
against Lee's right rear on the 9th. This movement required 
the trains with the fighting line to be cleared away from the 
roads needed for the troops at once, and Lee promptly discovered 
that a movement was in progress. He mistook its object, however, 
and assuming that Grant was falling back on Fredericksburg, 
he prepared to shift his own forces to the south of that place 
so as to bar the Richmond road. This led to a race for Spott- 
sylvania, which was decided more by accidents to either side 
than by the measures of the two commanding generals. On the 
Union side Warren was to move to the line Spottsylvania Court 
House-Todd's Tavern, followed by Hancock; Sedgwick was 
to take a roundabout route and to come in between the V. and 
II. corps; Burnside to follow Sedgwick. The cavalry was 
ordered to watch the approaches towards the right of the army. 
The movement began promptly after nightfall on the 7th. But 
ere long the head of Warren's column, passing in rear of Han- 
cock's line of battle, was blocked by the headquarters escort 
of Grant and Meade. Next, the head of the V. corps was again 
checked at Todd's Tavern by two cavalry divisions which had 
been seat by Sheridan to regain the ground at Todd's Tavern," 
given up on the 6th, and after fighting the action of Todd's 
Tavern had received no further orders from him. Meade, 
greatly irritated, ordered Gregg's division out towards Corbin's 
Bridge and Merritt's (Torbert's) to Spottsylvania. On the latter 
road the Union cavalry found themselves opposed by Fits Lee's 
cavalry, and after some hours of disheartening work in the 
woods, Merritt asked Warren to send forward infantry to drive 
the enemy. This Warren did, although. he was just preparing 
to rest and to feed his men after their exhausting night-march. 
Robinson's division at the head of the corps deployed and swiftly 
drove in Fit* Lee. A little beyond Alsop's, however, Robinson 
found his path barred by- entrenched infantry. This was part 

* The Union losses in the battle were 18.000. the Confederates at 
least 11.500. 

* In consequence of a mistaken order that the trains which he was 
protecting were to move forward to Pincy Branch Church. 



( 



636 



WILDERNESS 



of Anderson's (Longstreet's) corps. That officer had been 
ordered to draw out of his (Wilderness) works, and to bivouac, 
preparatory to marching at 3 a.m. to the Court House, but, 
finding no good resting-place, he had moved on at once. His 
route took him to the Catharpin Road (Hampton's cavalry 
protecting him towards Todd's Tavern), and thence over Corbin's 
Bridge to Block House Bridge. At or near Block House Bridge 
the corps halted to rest, but Stuart (who was with Fits Lee) 
, called upon Anderson lor assistance and the march was resumed 
at full speed. Sheridan's new orders to Gregg and Merritt did 
not arrive until Meade had given these officers other instruc- 
tions, but Wilson's cavalry division, wjiich was out of the line 
of march of the infantry, acted in accordance, with Sheridan's 
plan of occupying the bridges in front of the army's intended 
position at Spottsylvania Court House, and seized that place, 
inflicting a smart blow upon a brigade of Stuart's force that 
was met there. 

The situation about a.m. on the 8th was therefore curious. 
Warren, facing £., and opposed by part of Anderson's corps, 
was seeking to fight his way to Spottsylvania Court House by 
the Brock Road. Wilson, facing S., was holding the Court 
House and driving Fit* Lee's cavalry partly westward on to the 
backs of the infantry opposing Warren, partly towards Block 
House Bridge, whence the rest of Anderson's infantry was 
approaching. All the troops were weary and hungry, and 
Sheridan ordered Wilson to evacuate the Court House and to 
fall back over the Ny. Warren fruitlessly attacked the Con- 
federate infantry at Spindler's, General Robinson being severely 
wounded, and his division disorganized. The other divisions 
came up by degrees, and another attack was made about ir. 
It was pressed close up to, and in some places over, the Con- 
federate log-works, but it ended in failure like the first. A third 
attempt in the evening dwindled down to a reconnaissance in 
force. Anderson was no longer isolated. Early's division ob- 
served Hancock's corps at Todd's Tavern, but the rest of Ewell's 
and all Hill's corps went to Spottsylvania and prolonged Ander- 
son's line northward towards the Ny. Thus the re-grouping of 
the Union army for manoeuvre, and even the running fight or 
strategic pursuit imagined by Grant when he found Anderson 
at Spottsylvania, were given up, and on the 9th both armies 
rested. On this day General Sedgwick was killed by a long- 
range shot from a Confederate rifle. His place was taken by 
General H. G. Wright. On this day also a violent quarrel 
between Meade and Sheridan led to the departure of the cavalry 
corps on an independent mission. This was the so-called 
Richmond raid, in which Sheridan defeated Stuart at Yellow 
Tavern (where Stuart was killed) and captured the outworks 
of Richmond, but, having started with empty forage wagons, 1 
had then to make his way down the Chickahominy to the nearest 
supply depots of the Army of the James, leaving the Confederate 
cavalry free to rally and to rejoin. Lee. 

Finding the enemy thus gathered in his front, Grant decided 
to fight again on the 10th. While Hancock opposed Early, and 
Warren and Wright Hill and Anderson, Burnside was ordered 
by Grant to work his way to the Fredericksburg-Spottsylvania 
road, thence to attack the enemy's right rear. The first stage 
of this movement of the DC corps was to be made on the oth, 
but not the attack itself, and Burnsridc was consequently ordered 
not to go beyond a place called " Gate " on the maps used by the 
Union staff. This, it turned out, was not the farm of a person 
called Gate, as headquarters supposed, but a mere gate into a 
field. Consequently it was missed, and the DC corps went on 
to Gale's or Gayle's house, where the enemy's skirmishers were 
driven in,* The news of an enemy opposing Burnside at " Gate," 
which Grant still supposed to be the position of the DC corps, 
at once radically altered the plan of battle. Lee was p re sum ed 

^Circumstances of his departure, the angry army 

out at once with the forage that he hid. and 

leserve supplies were at band, made no 

, for the historian at least, it that 
this " Gnyte " is called " Beverly " 




to be moving north towards Fredericksburg, and Grant saw as 
opportunity of a great and decisive success. The DC corps was 
ordered to hold its position at all costs, and the others were to 
follow up the enemy as be concentrated upon Burnside. Hancock 
was called in from Todd's Tavern, sent down to force the fords 
of the Po at and below Tinder's Mill, and directed upon Block 
House Bridge by an officer of Grant's own staff, while Warren 
and Wright were held ready: But once more a handful of 
cavalry in the woods delayed the effective deployment of the 
moving wing, and by the time that the II. corps was collected 
opposite Block House Bridge it was already night. Still there was, 
apparently, no diminution of force opposite Burnside, and Hancock 
was ordered to resume bis advance at early dawn on the 10th. 

Meade, however, had little or no cognizance of Grant's orders 
to the independent DC corps, and his orders, 'conflicting with 
those emanating from the lieutenant-General's staff, puzzled 
Hancock and crippled his advance. At xo the whole scheme 
was given up, and the now widely deployed Union army closed 
on its centre as best it could for a direct attack on the Spott- 
sylvania position. At 4, before the new concentration was 
complete, and while Hancock was still engaged in the difficult 
operation of drawing back over the Po in the face of the enemy, 
Warren attacked unsupported and was repulsed. In the woods 
on the left Wright was more successful, and at 6 p. m. a rush of 
twelve selected regiments under Colonel Emory Upton carried 
the right of Lee's log-works. But for want of support this 
attack too was fruitless, though Upton held the captured works 
for an hour and brought off 1000 prisoners.' Burnside, receiving 
Grant's new orders to attack from Gayle's towards Spottsylvania, 
sent for further orders as to the method of attack, and his advance 
was thus made too late in the day to be of use. Lee had again 
averted disaster, this time by bis magnificent handling of his only 
reserve, Hill's (now Early's) corps, which he used first against 
Hancock and then against Burnside with the greatest effect. 

This was the fourth battle since the evening of the 4th of 
May. On the morning of the iithGrantsent his famous message 
to Washington, " I purpose to fight it out on this line if it takes 
all summer." The 12th was to be the fifth and, Grant hoped, 
the decisive battle. A maze of useful and useless entrench* 
ments had been constructed on both sides, especially on the 
Union side, from mere force of habit. Grant, seeing from the 
experience of the 10th that his corps commanders were manning 
these entrenchments so strongly that they had only feeble forces 
disposable for the attack, ordered all superfluous defences to 
be given up. Three corps were formed in a connected line (from 
right to left, V., VI., DC) during the nth, and that night the 
II. corps moved silently to a position between Wright and 
Burnside and formed up in the open field at Brown's in an 
attacking mass of Napoleonic density — three lines of divisions, 
in line and in battalion and brigade columns. Burnside was to 
attack from Gayle's (Beverly's on the map) towards McCool's. 
Warren and Wright were to have at least one division each ckar 
of their entrenchments and ready to move. 

Up to the nth Lee's line had extended from the woods in 
front of Block House Bridge, through Perry's and Spindler's 
fields to McCool's house, and its right was refused and formed 
a loop round McCbol's. AH these works faced N.W. In addi- 
tion, Bomskk's advance had caused Early's corps to entrench 
Spottsylvania and the church to the south of it, facing E. 
Between these two sections were woods. The connexion made 
between them gave the loop around McCool's the appearance 
from which it derives its historic name of The Salient. Upon 
the northern face of this Salient Hancock's attack was delivered. 

On the nth the abandonment of Burnside 's threatening 
advance, on his rear and other indices had disquieted Lee as to 
his left or Block House flank, and he had drawn off practically 
all Ewell's artillery from the McCool works to aid in that quarter. 
The infantry that manned the Sabent was what remained of 
Stonewall Jackson's "foot cavalry," veterans of Antietam, 
Fredericksburg and Chanccuorsviue. But at 4.35, in the mist, 
Hancock's mass swept over their works at the first rush and 
swarmed in the interior of the Salient, gathering thousands of 



WILDERNESS 



637 



prisoners and •dang the field batteries that Lee had sent back 
just too late. 

The thronging and excited Federal* were completely die- 
ordered by success, and the counter-attack of one or two Con- 
federate brigades in good order drove them back to the line of 
the captured works. Then, about 6, there begaaone of the most 
remarkable struggles in .history. While Early, swiftly drawing 
back from Block House, checked Burnside's attack from the 
east, and Anderson, attacked again and again by parts of the 
V. corps, 1 was fully occupied in preserving his own front, Lee, 
with E well's corps and the few thousand men whom the other 



time came, Lee s ucceeded so weU that after twenty hours' bitter 
fighting the new line was ready and the Confederates gave up 
the barren prise to Hancock. Lee had lost 4000 prisoners as 
well as 4500 killed and wounded, as against 7000 in the Army of 
the Potomac and the IX. corps. 

There were other battles in front of Spottsylvania, but that 
of the 1 ath was the climax. From the 13th to the aoth the 
Federals gradually worked round from west to east, delivering 
a few partial attacks in the vain hope of dWovering a weak 
point. Lee's position, now semicircular, enabled him to con- 
centrate en interior hnes on each occasion. In the end the 



SP0TT5YLVANI 




Ftaa Tkt WMmmammtCtU B**~. by 



generals could spare, delivered all day a series of fierce counter- 
strokes against Hancock. Nearly all Wright's corps and even 
part of Warren's (in the end 45,000 men) were drawn into the 
fight at the Salient, for Grant and Meade well knew that Lee 
was struggling to gain time for the construction of a retrench- 
ment across the base of it. If the counter-attacks failed to gain 
this respite, the Confederates would have to retreat as best 
they could, pressed in front and flank. But the initial superi- 
ority of the Federals was neutralized by their disorder, and, 
keeping the fight alive by successive brigade attacks, while the 
troops not actually employed were held out of danger till their 

1 The tension was to great that, after threatening to deprive 
Warren of his command, Meade sent General Humphreys* his 
chief of staff, to direct the V. corps' attack. 



Federals were entrenched facing E. between Beverly's house 
(Burnside's old " Gayle ") and QuisenberryY, Lee facing W. 
from the new works south of Harrison's through the Court House 
to Snell's Bridge on the Po. In the fork of the Po and the Ny, 
with woods and marshes to obstruct every movement, Grant 
knew that nothing could be done, and he prepared to execute 
a new manoeuvre. But here, as in the Wilderness, Lee managed 
to have the last word. While the Union army was resting in 
camp for the first time since leaving Culpcper, EweU's corps 
suddenly attacked its baggage-train near Harris's house. The 
Confederates were driven off, but Grant had to defer his intended 
manoeuvre for two days. When the armies left Spottsylvania, 
little more than a fortnight after breaking up from winter 
quarters, the casualties had reached the totals of 35,000 out of 



6 3 8 



WILDERNESS 



an original total of 120,000 for the Union army, 26,000 oat of 
70,000 for the Confederates. 

The next manoeuvre attempted by Grant to bring Lee's army 
to action " outside work* " was of an unusual character, though 
it had been foreshadowed in the improvised plan of crushing 
Lee against Burnside's corps on the 9th. Hancock was now 
(20th) ordered to move off under cover of night to Milford; 
thence be was to march south-west as far as possible along the 
Richmond and Fredericksburg railroad, and to attack whatever 




NORTH 
ANNA 

falms about 3*jb. oh Mp 



Tt*m Tit WThUnms—d CM B»r*or, by 



force of the enemy he met. It was hoped that this bold stroke 
by an isolated corps would draw Lee's army upon it, and the 
rest of the Army of the Potomac would, if this hope were realized, 
drive down upon Lee's rear while Hancock held him up in front. 
Supposing, however, that Lee did not take the bait, the man' 
ccuvre would resolve itself into a turning movement with the 
object of compelling Lee to come out of his Spottsylvania lines 
on pain of being surrounded. 

The II. corps started on the night cf the soth-iist. The 
alarm was soon given. At Milford, where he forced the passage 
of the Mattapony, Hancock found himself in the presence of 
hostile infantry fak* Rf rft mon d and heard that more had 



arrived at Hanover Junction, both from Richmond aftd from 
the Shenandoah Valley. He therefore suspended his advance 
and entrenched. The main army began to move off, after giving 
Lee time to turn against Hancock, at 10 a.m. on the 21st, and 
marched to Catlett's, a place a few miles S.W. of Guinea's 
bridge, Warren leading, Burnside and Wright following. But no 
news came in from Hancock until late in the evening, and the 
development of the manoeuvre was consequently delayed, so 
that on the night of the Jist-j?nd Lee's army shpped across 
Warren's front en route for 
Hanover Junction. The other 
Confederate forces that had 
opposed Hancock likewise fell 
back. Grant's manoeuvre had 
failed. Its principal aim was 
to induce Lee to attack the 
IL corps at Milford, its secondary 
and alternative purpose was, 
by dislodging Lee from Spott- 
sylvania, to force on an en- 
counter battle in open ground. 
But he was only offered the 
bait— not compelled to take 
it, as he would have been if 
Hancock with two corps had 
been placed directly athwart the 
road between Spottsylvania and 
Hanover Junction— and, having 
unimpaired freedom of action, 
he chose to retreat to the 
Junction. The four Union corps, 
therefore, could only pursue him 
to the North Anna, at which 
rivet they arrived on the morn* 
ing of the 23rd, Warren on the 
right, Hancock on the left, 
Wright and Burnside being well 
to the rear in second line. The 
same afternoon Warren seized 
Jericho Ford, brought over the 
V. corps to the south side, and 
repulsed a very sharp counter- 
stroke made by one of Lee's 
corps. Hancock at the same 
time stormed a Confederate re- 
doubt which covered the Tele- 
graph Road bridge over the river. 
Wright and Burnside closed up. 
It seemed as if a battle was at 
hand, but in the night reports 
came in that Lee had fallen back 
to the South Anna, and as these 
were more or less confirmed 
by the fact that Warren met 
with no further opposition, and 
by the enemy's retirement from 
the river bank on Hancock's 
front, the Union generals gave 
orders, about midday on the 
_ 24tb, for what was practically a 

genera] pursuit" This led incidentally to an attempt to drive 
Lee's rearguard away from the point of passage, between 
Warren's and Hancock's, required for Burnside, and in the 
course of this it became apparent that Lee's army had 
not fallen back, but was posted in a semicircle to which 
the North Anna formed a tangent. On the morning ol 
the 25th this position was reconnoitred, and found to be 
more formidable than that of Spottsylvania. Moreover, it 
divided the two halves of the Union army that had crossed 
above and below. 

Grant gave up the game as drawn and planned a new move. 
This had as its objects, first, the seizure of a point of passage 



Of MILCS 

1 t 1 




WILDERNESS 



639 



on the Pamunkey; secondly, the deployment of the Army of 
the Potomac and of a contingent expected from the Army of 
the James, and t^rdly, the prevention of Lee's further retire- 
ment, which was not desired by the Union commanders, owing 
to the proximity of the Richmond defences and the consequent 
want of room to manoeuvre. On the 27th Sheridan's cavalry 
and a Kght division of infantry passed the Pamunkey at Hanover 
Town, and the two divided wings of the Army of the Potomac 
were withdrawn over the North Anna without mishap— thanks 
to exactitude in arrangement and punctuality in execution. 
On the *8th the Army of the Potomac had arrived near Hanover 
Town, while at Hawes's Shop, on the road to Richmond, Sheridan 



and anvil battle was agam taken up, the " anvil " being Smith's 
X VIII. corps, which had come up from the James river to While 
House on the 30th; but once more the lure failed because it 
was not made sufficiently tempting. 

The last episode of the campaign centred on Cold Harbor, 
a village dose to the Chickahominy, which Sheridan's cavalry 
seized, on its own initiative, on the 31st. Here, contrary to 
the expectation of the Union staff, a considerable force of 
Confederate infantry—new arrivals from the James— was met, 
and in the hope of bringing on a battle before either side had time 
to entrench, Grant and Meade ordered Sheridan to hold the 
village at all costs, and directed Wrights (VI.) corps from the 



\ TOTOPOTOMOY 
l AND COLD HARBOR. 

positions May 26 




Fma «» W iMvmm ami CM ff«fcr. by penma-wo of Ht«b bo, Liiritod. 



had a severe engagement with the enemy's cavalry Lee was 
now approaching from Hanover Junction via Ashland, and 
the Army of the Potomac swung round somewhat to the right 
so as to face in the presumed direction of the impending attack. 
The Confederate general, however, instead of attacking, swerved 
south, and planted himself behind the Totopotomoy. Here 
he was discovered, entrenched as always, on the agth. and 
skirmishing all along the line, varied at times by more severe 
fighting, occupied that day and the 30th. On the morning of 
the 31st the Union army was arranged from right to left in the 
order VI., II., IX. and V. corps, Sheridan having meantime 
drawn off to the left rear of the infantry. 
Now, for the last time in the campaign, the idea of a hammer 



extreme right wing, and Smith's (XVIII.) from Old Church, 
to march thither with all possible speed, Wright in the night of 
the 31st of May and Smith on the morning of the 1st of June. 
Lee had actually ordered his corps commanders to attack, but 
was too ill to enforce his wishes, and in the evening Wright 
and Smith themielves asiaulted the Confederate front opposite 
Cold Harbor. The assault, though delivered by tired men, was 
successful. The enemy's first or skirmish line was everywhere 
stormed, and parts of the VI. corps even penetrated the main 
line. Nearly 800 prisoners were taken, and Grant at once pre- 
pared to renew the attack, as at Spottsylvania, with larger 
forces, bringing Hancock over from the right of the line on the 
night of the 1 st, and ordering Hancock, Wright and Smith to 



( 



640 



WILDMAN— WILFRID 



assault on the next snorning. But Lee had by now moved more 
forces down, and hi* line extended from the Totopotomoy to 
the ChicWahominy. Hancock's corps, very greatly fatigued 
by its night march, did not form up until after midday, and 
meanwhile Smith, whose corps, originally but 10,000 strong, 
had been severely tried by its hard marching and fighting on the 
ist, refused to consider the idea of renewing the attack. The 
passive resistance thus encountered dominated Grant's fighting 
instinct for a moment. But after reconsidering the problem he 
again ordered the attack to be made by Wright, Smith and 
Hancock at 5 p.m. A last modification was made when, during 
the afternoon, Lee's far distant left wing attacked Burnside 
and Warren. This, showing that Lee had still a considerable 
force to the northward, and being, not very Inaccurately, read 
to mean that the 6 m. of Confederate entrenchments were equally 
— i.e. equally thinly — guarded at all points, led to the order being 
given to all five Union corps to attack at 4*30 a.m. on the 3rd 
of June. 

The resolution to make this plain, unvarnished frontal assault 
on entrenchments has been as severely criticized as any action 
of any commander in the Civil War, and Grant himself subse- 
quently expressed his regret at having formed it. But such 
criticisms derive all their force from the event, not from the 
conditions in which, beforehand, the resolution was made. The 
risks of failure were deliberately accepted, and the battle— if it 
can be called a battle — was fought as ordered. The assault 
was made at the time arranged and was repulsed at all points, 
with a loss to the assailants of about 8000 men: Thereafter the 
two armies lay for ten days less than a hundred yards apart. 
There was more or less severe fighting at times, and an almost 
ceaseless bickering of skirmishers. Owing to Grant's refusal 
to sue for permission to remove his dead and wounded in the 
terms demanded, Lee turned back the Federalambulance parties, 
and many wounded were left to die between the lines. It was 
only on the 7th that Grant pocketed his feelings and the dead 
were buried. 

This is one of the many incidents of Cold Harbor that 
must always rouse painful memories — though to blame Lee or 
Grant supposes that these great generals were infinitely more 
inhuman here than at any other occasion In their lives, and takes 
no account of the consequences of admitting a defeat at this 
critical moment, when the causes for which the Union army 
and people contended were about to be put to the hazard of a 
presidential election: 

The Federal army lost, in this month of almost incessant 
campaigning, about 50.000 men, the Confederates about 33,000. 
Though the aggregate of the Union losses awed both contem- 
poraries and historians of a later generation, proportionately 
the losses of the South were heavier (46% of the original strength 
as compared with 41% on the Union side), and whereas within 
a few weeks Grant was able to replace nearly every man he had 
lost by a new recruit, the Confederate government was almost 
at the end of its resources. 

See A. A. Humphreys, The Campaign of Virtinia, 1864-65 (New 
York, lM»); Military History Society of Massachusetts, The 
Wilderness Campaign ; Official Records of Ike Rebellion, serial number* 
67, 68 and 69; and C. F. Atkinson. The Wilderness and Cold Harbor 
(London, 1908). (C.F.A.) 

WILDWAN, SIR JOHN (c. 1621-1693), English agitator, was 
educated at the university of Cambridge, and during the Civil 
War served for a short time under Sir Thomas Fairfax. He 
became prominent, however, not as a soldier but as an agitator, 
being In 1647 one of the leaders of that section of the army 
Which objected to-all compromise with the king. In a pamphlet. 
Putney Projects, he attacked Cromwell; he was responsible 
fot TkiOtstafrnW Army stated, and he put the views of his assoei- 
1 Of the army at a meeting in Putney church 
hies looked upon him with suspicion, 
i[tnd John LOburne were imprisoned, 
n, befng made M for his trial and 
'However, he was released in the 
~>1irae lie was associated with the 




party known as the levellers, but 1st quickly severed his 
connexion with them and became an officer in the army. He 
was a large buyer of the land forfeited by the royalists, and in 
1654 he was sent to the House of Commons as member tor 
Scarborough. In the following year he was arrested for con- 
spiring against Cromwell, and after his release lour months 
later be resumed the career of plotting, intriguing alike with 
royalists and republicans for the overthrow of the existing 
regime. In 1659 he helped to seise Windsor castle for the Long 
Parliament, and then in November 1661 he was again a prisoner 
on some suspicion of participating in republican plots. For 
six years he was a captive, only regaining his freedom after 
the fall of Clarendon in October 1667. 

In or before 1681 Wildman became prominent among those 
who were discontented with the rule of Charles II., being 
especially intimate with Algernon Sydney. He was undoubtedly 
concerned in the Rye House Plot, and under James II. he 
was active in the interests of the duke of Monmouth, but 
owing to some disagreements, or perhaps to his cowardice, he 
took no part in the rising of 1685. He found it advisable, 
however, to escape to Holland, and returned to England with 
the army of William of Orange in 1688. In 1689 he was a 
member of the convention parliament. 

Wildman was postmaster - general from April 1689 to 
February 1691, when some ugly rumours about his con- 
duct brought about his dismissal, Nevertheless L he was 
knighted by 'William HI. in 1692, and he died on the 2nd 
of June 1693. Sir John, who was the author of many political 
pamphlets, left an only son, John, who died childless in 
17x0. 

WILES, IRVING RAMSAY (1861- ), American artist, was 
born at Utica, New York, on the 8th of April 1861. He studied 
under his father, the landscape painter, Lemuel Maynard Wiles 
(1826-1905), in the Art Students' League, New York, and under 
Carolus Duran, at Paris. His earlier work was as an illustrator 
for American magazines, and later he devoted himself with great 
success to portraiture. He became a full member of the National 
Academy of Design (1897) and a member of the American Water 
Color Society. 

WILFRID {c. 634-709), English archbishop, was born of good 
parentage in Northumbria, c. 634. When serving in King Oswio's 
court, he attracted the notice of the queen, Eanfied, who, foster- 
ing his inclination for a religious life, placed pirn under the care 
of an old noble, Cudda, now a monk at Lindisfarne. Later on 
Eanflcd enabled him to visit Rome in the company of Benedict 
Biscop. At Lyons Wilfrid's pleasing features and quick intelli- 
gence made Annemund, the archbishop, desire to adopt him and 
marry him to his niece. Resisting his offers, the youth went on 
to Rome, received the papal benediction, and then, in accordance 
with his promise, returned to Lyons, where he stayed for three 
years, till the murder of his patron, whose fate the executioners 
would not let him share. On his return home, Oswio's son 
Alchfrid gave him a monastery at Ripon, and, before long, 
Agilbert, bishop of the Gewissae, or West Saxons, ordained him 
priest 

He was probably already regarded as the leading exponent 
of the Roman discipline in England when his speech at the 
council of Whitby determined the overthrow of the Celtic 
party (664). About a year later he was consecrated to the see 
of York, not. however, in England, where perhaps he could not 
find the fitting number of orthodox prelates, but at Compiegne, 
Agilbert being now bishop of Paris. On his return journey he 
narrowly escaped the pagan wreckers of Sussex, and only 
reached his own country to find Ceadda (St Chad) installed 
in his see. 

The Test of his life is largely a record of wandering and 
misfortune. For three years (665-668) he ruled his mon- 
astery at Ripon in peace, though acting as bishop in Mercia and 
Kent during vacancies in sees there. On Archbishop Theodore's 
arrival (668) he wa« restored to his see, and spent in it nine years 
of ceaseless activity, especially in building churches, only to be 
driven out through the anger of King Ecgfrith's queen (677)* 



WILHELMINA (NETHERLANDS)— WILHELMSHAVEN 641 



Theodore now divided Wilfrid's large diocese into three; and 
the aggrieved prelate went to lay his case before the bishop of 
Rome. On his way a west wind drove him to Friesland, where 
he evangelized the natives and prepared the way for Willibrord 
(f.v.). Late in life he ordained Suidbert bishop of the Frisians. 
A synod held at Rome under Agatho (680) ordained his restitu- 
tion; bat even this decision could not prevent his being cast into 
prison on his return home. When released he wandered first to 
Mercia, then to Wessex and finally to Sussex. Here he rescued 
the pagan folk from an impending famine, sent preachers to the 
Isle of Wight and founded a monastery at Selsey. After Ecgfrilh's 
death (20th May 685) Wilfrid was restored to York (much 
circumscribed), and Ripoa (686-087). He was once more driven 
out in 691-692, and spent seven years in Mercia. A great council 
of the English Church held in Northumbria excommunicated htm 
in 703. He again appealed to Rome in person, and obtained 
another decision in his favour (703-704). Despioe the intercession 
of Brihwald, archbishop of Canterbury, Aldfrith king of North 
urabria refused to admit the aged prelate into his kingdom till 
his last illness (705). This year or the next a council was held 
near the River Nidd, the papal letters were read, and, despite the 
opposition of the bishops, Wilfrid once more received the abbeys 
of Ripon and Hexham. Not long after he died at Oundle in 
Northamptonshire as he was going on a visit to Ceolred, king of 
Mercia (709). He was buried at Rlpon, whence, according to 
Eadmer, his bones were afterwards removed to Canterbury. 

Wilfrid's is a memorable name in English history, not only because 
of the large part he played in supplanting the Celtic discipline and 
in establishing a precedent of appeal to papal authority, but also by 
reason of his services to architecture and learning. At York he re- 
newed Paulinus's old church, roofing it with lead and furnishing it 
with glass windows; at Ripon he built an entirely new basilica with 
columns and porches; at Hexham in honour of St Andrew he reared a 
still nobler church, over which Eddius grows eloquent. In the early 
days of his bishopric he used to travel about his diocese attended by 
a little troop of skilled masons. He seems to have also reformed the 
method of conducting the divine services by the aid of his skilled 
chanters, dSdde and iEona, and to have established or renewed 
the rule of St Benedict in the monasteries. On each visit to Rome it 
was his delight to collect relics for his native land; and to his 
favourite basilica at Ripon he gave a bookcase wrought in gold and 
precious stones, besides a splendid copy of the Gospels. 

Wilfrid's life was written shortly alter his death by Eddius at the 
request of Acca, his successor at Hexham, and Tatbert, abbot of 
Ripon — both intimate friends of the great bishop. Other lives were 
written by Frithegode in the 10th, by Folcard in the nth, and by 
Eadmer early in the 12th century. See also Bede's Hist. Ecd. v. 19, 
iii. 23, iv. 13, &c. AH the lives are printed in J. Raine's Historian* of 
Ike Chunk of York, vol. L " Roils " series. 

.WILHELMXA [Wilhelmina Helena Pauline Maria 
or Orangk-NassauI (1880- ), queen of the Nether- 
lands, was born at the Hague on the 31st of August 1880. 
Her father, William HI. (Willem Paul Alexander Frederik 
Lodewijk), had by his first wife, Sophia Frederika Mathilde of 
WurtUmberg, three sons, all of whom predeceased him. Having 
been left a widower on the 3rd of June 1877, he married on the 
7th of January 1879 Adelheid Emma Wilhelmina Thercsja, 
second daughter of Prince George Victor of Waldeck-Pyrmont, 
born on the 2nd of August 1858, and Wilhelmina was the only 
issue of that union. She succeeded to the throne on her father's 
death, which took place on the 23rd of November 1890, but until 
her eighteenth year, when she was " inaugurated " at Amsterdam 
on the 6th of September 1898, the business of the state was 
carried on under the regency of the queen-mother, in accordance 
with a law made on the 2nd of August 1884. On the 7th of 
February 1001 Queen Wilhelmina married Henry Wladiroir 
Albert Ernst, duke of Mecklenburg-Schwerfn (born on the 19th 
of April 1876). To the great joy of the Dutch people, Queen 
Wilhelmina, on the 30th of April 1009, gave birth to an heir 
to the throne, the Princess. Juliana (Juliana Louise Emma 
Maria Wilhelmina). (See Holland: History.) 

WILHELMINA (Sophia Fudertjca Wilhelmina) (1700- 
1758), margravine of Baireuth, was born in Berlin on the 
3rd of July 1709, the daughter of Frederick William I., crown 
prince, afterwards king of Prussia, and of Sophia Dorothea, 
4fight»r of tut elector of Hanover (George I. of England). 



Wilhelmina shared the unhappy childhood of her brother* 
Frederick the Great; whose friend and confidante she remained, 
with the exception of one short interval, all her life. Sophia 
Dorothea wished to marry her daughter to Frederick, prince of 
Wales, but on the English side there was no disposition to make 
the offer except m exchange for substantial concessions, to which 
the king of Prussia was not prepared to assent. The fruitless 
intrigues carried on by Sophia Dorothea to bring about this 
match played a large part in Wilhelmina's early life. After 
much talk of other matches, which came to nothing, she was 
eventually married in 1731 to Frederick, hereditary prince of 
Baireuth. The marriage, only accepted by Wilhelmina under 
threats from her father and with a view to lightening her brother's 
•disgrace, proved at the outset a happy one, though it was 
clouded at first by narrow means, and afterwards by the 
infidelities of the future margrave with Dorothea von Marwitz, 
whose ascendancy at the court of Baireuth was bitterly resented 
by Frederick the Great, and caused an estrangement of some 
three years between Wilhelmina and the brother she so devotedly 
loved. When Wilhelmina's husband came into his inheritance in 
1735 the pair set about making Baireuth a miniature Versailles. 
Their building operations included the rebuilding of their 
summer residence, the Ermitage, the great Baireuth opera-house, 
the building of a theatre and the reconstruction of the Baireuth 
palace and of the new opera boose. They also founded the 
university of Erlangen, the undertakings bringing the court 
to the verge of bankruptcy. 

The margravine made Baireuth one of the intellectual centres 
of Germany, surrounding herself with a little court of wits and 
artists which gained added prestige from the occasional visits 
of Voltaire and Frederick the Great. With the outbreak of the 
Seven Years' War, Wilhelmina's interests shifted from dilettant- 
ism to diplomacy. She acted as eyes and ears for her brother in 
southern Germany until her death on the 14th of October 1758, 
the day of Frederick's defeat by the Austrians at Hochkirch. 
Her only daughter Frederic* had contracted in 1 748 aa unhappy 
marriage with Charles Eugene, duke of Wttrttemberg. 

The margravine's memoirs, Mimoires Aetna vie, written or revised 
between 1748 and her death, are preserved in the Royal Library of 
Berlin. They were first printed in two forms in 1810 — a German 
translation down to the year T733 from the firm of Cotta of Tubingen ; 
and in French published by Viewer of Brunswick, and coming down 
to 174a. There have been several subsequent editions, including a 
German one published at Leipzig in 1906. An English translation 
was published in Berlin in 1904. For the discussion on the authen- 
ticity of these entertaining, though not very trustworthy, memoirs, 
see G. H. Pert*, Ober dUMerkwtirditkeileu der Martrrafin (1851). 
See also Arvede Barine, Princesses et gravies dames (Paris, 1890); 
E. E. Cuttell, Wilkelmine, Margravine of Baireuth (London, 2 volt, 
1005); and R. Fester, Die Bayreuther Sckwester Friedrichs des 
Grossen (Berlin, 1902). 

WILHELMSHAVEN, or Wilhelmshafen, a town of Germany, 
and the chief naval station and war harbour of the empire on the 
North Sea, situated on the north-west shore of the Jade Bu&en, 
a large shallow basin formed by inundations and united with 
the sea by the Jade, a channel 3 m. long. Pop. (1885), 19,422; 
(1005), 26,012, of whom 8227 belonged to the navy or army. 
The ground on which it stands (4 sq. m.) was purchased by 
Prussia from the grand-duke of Oldenburg in 1853, when the 
Prussian navy was being formed. The construction of the 
"harbour and town was begun in 1855, and the former was opened 
in 1869. Though reckoned a part of the Prussian province of 
Hanover it is completely surrounded on the landward side by 
Oldenburg territory. The town is laid out on a regular plan 
and ample scale, and the streets are wide and shaded with trees. 
The main thoroughfare is the Roonstrasse, which, running E. 
and W., passes the market-square, upon which stand the town 
hall and the post office. There are two Evangelical and two 
Roman Catholic churches, a gymnasium, schools for warrant 
officers and engineers and other naval educational institutions. 
The original harbour, constructed in 1855-1869, consists of an 
inner and outer basin. To the south-east of the inner harbour 
a large new harbour has been more recently constructed for 
war vessels in commission. This so-called new harbour (170 



642 



WILKES, C— WILKES, J. 



acres in area and 26} ft. deep) is connected by means of a lock 
(571 ft. long) with the new harbour entrance, which was com- 
pleted in 1886. On the north it is connected with the fitting-out 
basin (3832 ft. long, 446 ft. wide), which again is connected by a 
lock (1 58 ft. long) with the outer basin (617 ft. long, 410 ft. wide), 
and so with the old harbour entrance. North of this the " third 
entrance " has been recently constructed, with two enormous 
locks, one of which in an emergency could be used as an additional 
dock. On the west side of the fitting-out basin lies the shipbuild- 
ing basin (1237 ft. long by 742 ft. wide), with three dry-docks 
(of which two are each 453 ft. long, 85 ft. wide and more than 
30 ft. deep, whilst the third is 304 ft. long), and also with two 
slips of the largest size. Further new docks (each about 617 fL 
by 97 ft.), capable of containing large battle-ships, were com- 
pleted in 1006. A torpedo harbour lies to the south-east of the 
new harbour. The three entrances to the old and new harbours 
are sheltered by long and massive moles; and the whole complex 
of docks, building slips, machine shops, &c t forms the govern* 
ment dockyard, which is enclosed by a lofty wall with fourteen 
iron gates. The establishment is defended by strong fortifica- 
tions. The commercial harbour lies on the south side of the town 
at the east end of the Ems-Jade canal. The industries of the place 
are almost exclusively connected with the requirements of the 
dockyard, and embrace machine shops, iron foundries and boiler 
works. Wilhelmshaven is visited for its sea-bathing. It poss es s e s 
depots for artillery and mines, a meteorological observatory and 
a signalling station. A battalion of marines is stationed here. 
Since 1000 the development of the naval establishment and of the 
town has been exceptionally rapid, coincident with the growth 
of the German navy, and with the shifting of political and naval 
activity from the Baltic to the North Sea. 

See Eberhard, Fukrer durch WUhdmshaoen und seine Umgebnng 
(Wilhelmshaven. 1906) ; L. v. Krohn, ViersigJahre m einem denischen 
Kriegshafen (Wilhelmshaven, 1905). 

WILKES. CHARLES (1 708-1877), American naval officer and 
explorer, was bom in New York City on the 3rd of April 1708. 
He entered the United States Navy as a midshipman in 1818, 
and became a lieutenant in 1826. In 1830 he was placed in 
charge of the division of instruments and charts, and in 1838 
was appointed to command an exploring and surveying expedi- 
tion in the Southern Seas, authorized by Congress in 1836. The 
expedition, including naturalists, botanists, a mineralogist, 
taxidermists, a philologist, &c, was carried by the sloops-of-war 
" Vincennes " and " Peacock," the brig " Porpoise," the store- 
ship " Relief " and two tenders. Leaving Hampton Roads on 
the i8ih of August 1838, it stopped at Madeira and Rio de 
Janeiro; visited Tierra del Fuego, Chile, Peru, the Paumotu 
group of the Low Archipelago, the Samoan islands and New 
South Wales; from Sydney sailed into the Antarctic Ocean in 
December 1839 and reported the discovery of an Antarctic 
continent west of the Balleny islands; 1 visited the Fiji and 
the Hawaiian islands in 1840, explored the west coast of the 
United States, including the Columbia river, San Francisco Bay 
and the Sacramento river, in 1 841, and returned by way of the 
Philippine islands, the Sulu archipelago, Borneo, Singapore, 
Polynesia and the Cape of Good Hope, reaching New York on 
the 10th of June 1842. He was court-martialjed on his return, 
but was acquitted on all charges except that of illegally punishing 
men in his squadron. For a short time he was attached to the 
Coast Survey, but from 1844 to 186 x he was chiefly engaged in 
preparing the report of the expedition. Twenty-eight volumes 
were planned but only nineteen were published. Of these Wilkes 
wrote the Narrative (6 vols., 1845; 5 vols., 1850) and the volumes 
Hydrography and Meteorology (1851). The Narraihe contains 
much interesting material concerning the manners and customs 

on the 19th of January 1840, one day 
tted Adelie Land about 400 m. farther 
Antarctic Continent was long doubted, 
"" *■ ' when he was court-tnartialled 
but the expedition of Su- 
ited Wilkes. That part 
Land was named in his 




and political and economic conditions in many places then little 
known. Other valuable contributions were the three reports of 
James D. Dana on Zoophytes (1846), Geology (1849) and Crustacea 
(2 vols., 1852-1854). At the outbreak of the Civil War, Wilkes 
(who had reached the rank of commander in 1843 and that of 
captain in 1855) was assigned to the command of the " San 
Jacinto " to search for the Confederate commerce destroyer, 
"Sumter." On the 8th of November 1861 he stopped the 
British mail packet "Trent," and took off the Confederate 
commissioners to Europe, James M. Mason and John SlideiL 
Though he was officially thanked by Congress, his action was 
later disavowed by President Lincoln. His next service was in 
the James river flotilla, but after reaching the rank of commodore, 
on the 16th of July 1862, be was assigned to duty against blockade 
runners in the West Indies. He was disrated (becoming a captain 
on the retired list) in November 1862 on the ground that be had 
been too old to receive the rank of commodore under the act 
then governing promotions; and engaged in a long controversy 
with Gideon Welles, secretary of the navy. This controversy 
ended in his being court-martialled in 1864 and being found 
guilty on several counts and sentenced to public reprimand and 
suspension for three years. But on the 2sih of July 1866 be was 
promoted to the rank of rear-admiral on the retired Jist. He 
died at Washington on the 8th of February 1877. 

In addition to many shorter articles, reports, Ac., he published 
Western America, including California and Oregon (1849) and Theory 
of Ike Winds (1856). 

WILKES, JOHN (1727-1797). English politician, descended 
from a family long connected with Leighton-Buzzard in Bedford- 
shire, was born at Clerkenwcll, London, on the 17th of October 
1727, being the second son of Israel Wilkes, a rich distiller, 
and the owner, through his wife Sarah, daughter of John Heaton 
of Hoxton, of considerable house property in its north-eastern 
suburbs. After some training under private tuition John Wilkes 
was sent to the university of Leyden, matriculating there on 
the 8th of September 1744. Several young men of talent from 
Scotland and England were studying in this Dutch university 
at that period, and a lively picture of their life, in which Wilkes 
displays the gaiety of temper which remained faithful to him all 
his days, is presented to us by Alexander Cariyle (Autobiot., 
i860, ed. J. H. Burton). With this training he acquired an 
intimate knowledge of classical literature, and he enlarged his 
mind by travelling through Holland, Flanders and part of 
Germany. At the close of 1748 he returned to his native land, 
and in a few months (October 1749) was drawn by his relations 
into marrying >f ftry, sole daughter and heiress of John Mead, 
citizen and grocer of London, who was ten years his senior. The 
ill-assorted pair— for she was grave and staid, while he rioted in 
exuberant spirits and love of society— lived together at Ayles- 
bury for some months, when, to make matters worse, they 
returned to town to dwell with the wife's mother. One child, a 
daughter, was born to them (5th of August 1 7 50) , and then Wilkes 
left his wife and removed to Westminster, where he kept open 
house for many young men about town possessing more wit than 
morals. In 1754 he contested the constituency of Berwick-upon- 
Tweed, but failed to gain the seat. 

Wilkes was now a well-known figure in the life of the west end, 
and among Ms associates were Thomas Potter, the son of the 
archbishop of Canterbury, Sir Francis Dashwood, afterwards 
Lord le Despcncer, and Lord Sandwich, the last of whom in 
after years showed great animosity towards his old companion in 
revelry. In July 1757, by a triangular arrangement in which 
Potter and the first William Pitt played the other parts, Wilkes 
was elected for Aylesbury, and for this constituency he was again 
returned at the general election in March 1701. Pitt was his 
leader in politics; but to Pitt he applied in vain for a seat at the 
Board of Trade, nor was he successful in his application for 
the post of ambassador at Constantinople, or for that of governor 
oTQuebec. As he attributed these failures to the opposition 
of Lord Bute, he established a paper called the North Briton 
(June 1762), in which he from the first attacked the Scotch 
prime minister with exceeding bitterness, and grew bolder as it 



WILKES-BARRfi 



643 



proceeded in its course. One of its articles ridiculed Lord Talbot, 
the steward of the royal household, and a dud was the result. 
When Bute resigned, the issue of the journal was suspended; 
but, when the royal speech framed by George Grenvflle's ministry 
showed that the change was one of men only, not of measures, 
a supplementary number, No. 45, was published, 93rd of April 
1763, containing a caustic criticism of the king's message to bis 
parliament. Lord Halifax, the leading secretary of state, issued 
a general warrant " to search for authors, printers and pub* 
lishers," and to bring them before him for examination. Charles 
Churchill, the poet and a coadjutor m this newspaper enterprise, 
escaped through the good offices of Wilkes; but the chief offender 
was arrested and thrown into the Tower (30th of April 1763). A 
week later, however, he was released by order of the Court of 
Common Fleas on the ground that his privilege as a member 
of parliament afforded him immunity from arrest. General 
warrants were afterwards declared illegal, and Halifax himself, 
after a series of discreditable shifts, was cast in heavy sums, on 
actions brought against him by the persons whom be had injured 
—the total expenses incurred by the ministry in these lawless 
proceedings amonnting to at least £100,000. So far Wilkes had 
triumphed over his enemies, but he gave them cause for rejoicing 
by an indiscreet reprint of the obnoxious No. 45, and by striking 
off at his private press thirteen copies of an obscene Essay on 
Woman, written by his friend Potter, in parody of Pope's Essay 
on Man, one of which got into the hands of Lord Sandwich. 
Immediately on the meeting of the House of Commons (15th 
of November X763) proceedings were taken against him. Lord 
North moved that No. 45 was " a false, scandalous and seditious 
libel," and the paper was publicly burnt in Cheapside on the 4th 
of December. The Essay on Woman was on the same day brought 
before the Upper House by Lord Sandwich, and, on account of 
the improper use which had been made of Bishop Warburton's 
name as the author of some coarse notes, the work was voted a 
breach of privilege, and Wilkes was ordered to be prosecuted in 
the Court of King's Bench for printing and publishing an impious 
libel. He was expelled from the House of Commons on the 
19th of January 1764; and on the 21st of February he was found 
guilty in the King's Bench of reprinting No. 45 and of printing 
and publishing the Essay on Woman. Wilkes was on these dates 
absent from England. Some strong expressions applied to him 
by .Samuel Martin, an ex-secretary of the treasury; had provoked 
a duel (x6tb of November 1763), in which Wilkes was severely 
wounded in the stomach. He withdrew to Paris, and as he did 
not return to England to receive his sentence in the law courts 
was pronounced an outlaw. 

For several years Wilkes remained abroad, receiving £rooo a 
year from the leading Whigs, and in the course of his travels he 
visited many parts of Italy. In February 1768 he returned to 
London and sued the king for pardon, but in vain. His next step 
was to offer himself as a candidate for the representation of the 
city of London, when he was the lowest at the poll. Undaunted 
by this defeat, he solicited the freeholders of Middlesex to return 
him as their champion, and they placed him at the head of all 
competitors (28th of March). He appeared before the King's 
Bench, and on a technical point procured a reversal of his out- 
lawry; but the original verdict was maintained, and he was 
sentenced to imprisonment for twenty-two months as well as to 
a fine of £1000, and he was further ordered to produce securities 
for good behaviour for seven years after his liberation. His 
conduct was brought before the House of Commons, with the 
result that he was expelled from the Houseon the 3rd of February 
1769, and with this proceeding there began a series of contests 
between the ministry and the electors of Middlesex without 
parallel in English history. They promptly re-elected him 
(x6th of February), only to find him pronounced incapable of 
sitting and his election void. Again they returned him (16th of 
March) and again he was rejected. A fourth election then 
followed (13th of April), when Colonel Henry Lawes Luttrell, 
with all the influence of the court and the Fox family in his 
favour, obtained 296 votes, while 1143 wefC given for Wilkes, 
but two days later the House declared that Luttrell had been 



duty elected. Through these a uda cious proceedings a storm of 
fury broke out throughout the country. In the cause of " Wilkes 
and liberty " high and low enlisted themselves. His prison cell 
was thronged daily by the chief of the Whigs, and large sums 
of money were subscribed for his support. So great was the 
popular sympathy in his favour, that a keen judge of contem- 
porary politics declared that, had George IIL possessed a bad 
and Wilkes a good character, the king would have been an 
outcast from his dominions. At the height of the combat in 
January 1700 Wilkes was elected an alderman for the dty of 
London; in 1771 he served as sheriff for London and Middlesex* 
and as alderman he took an active port in the struggle between 
the corporation and the House of Commons by which freedom 
of publication of the parliamentary debates was obtained. 
His admirers endeavoured in 177a to procure his election as lord 
mayor of London, but he was set aside by the aldermen, some 
of whom were allied with the ministry of Lord North, while others; 
as pliver and Townshend, leant to the Liberalism of Lord 
Shdburne. In 1774, however, he obtained that dignity, and 
he retained his seat for Middlesex from the dissolution in 1774 
until 1700. He moved in 1776 for leave, to bring in a bill " for 
a just and equal representation of the people of England in 
parliament"; but attempts at parliamentary reform were 
premature by at least half a century. After several failures 
better fortune attended bis efforts in another direction, for on 
the 3rd of May 1782 all the declarations and orders against him 
for his elections in Middlesex were ordered to be expunged from 
the journals of the House. In 1779 Wilkes was elected chamber* 
lain of the city by a large majority, and the office became his 
freehold for life. He died at his house in Grosvenor Square, 
London, on the 26th of December 1797. His daughter Mary, 
to whom he was tenderly attached, died on the 12th of March 
1802. 

Wilkes printed editions of Catullus (1788) and Theophrastus (1790), 
and at the time of his death had made considerable progress with a 
translation of Anacreon. His conversation was often sullied by 
obscenity and profanity; but he knew how to suit his conversation 
to his company, and his well-known assertion that, in spite of his 
squint and ugly as he was, with the start of a quarter of an hour he 
could get the better of any man, however good-looking, in the graces 
of any lady, shows his confidence in his powers of fascination. The 



king was obliged to own that he had never met so well-bred a lord 
mayor, and Dr Johnson, who made his acquaintance at the house of 
Dally, the bookseller in the Poultry, confessed that " Jack has great 
variety of talk, Jack is a scholar, and lack has the manners of a 
gentleman." It is doubtful how far he himself believed in the justice 
of the principles which he espoused. To George 1 1 1, he remarked of 
his devoted friend and legal adviser, Serjeant Glynn, " Ah, sir! he 
was a Wilkitc, which I never was." His writings were marked by 
great power of sarcasm. Two collections of his letters were published, 
one of Letters to his Daughter, in four volumes in 1804, the other 
Correspondence with kis Friends, in which are introduced Memoirs of 
his Life, by John Almon. in five volumes, in 1805. A Life by Percy 
Fitzgerald was published in 1888. Essays on him are in Historical 
Gleanings, by J . E. Thorold Rogers, 2nd ser. (1870); W tikes and 

by J. S. y -— - ~ • ' - ■ 



Cobbett, I 



W. F. Rae (1874). His connexion with Bath is set out in John 

'"Uhes, by W. Gregory (t888), and that with the city of London in 

odern History of the City, by Charles Welch (1896). A fragment of 

his autobiography (Br. Museum Addit. MSS. 30865), chiefly de- 



scriptive of his exile in France and Italy, was printed for W. F. 
Taylor of Harrow in 1888. (W. P. C) 

WILKES-BARR& a dty and the county-seat of Luaerne 
county, Pennsylvania, U.S.A., on the north branch of the 
Susquehanna river, about 100 m. N.N.W. of Philadelphia. 
Pop. (1800), 37.718; (1000), 5i,7»r, of whom 12,188 were foreign- 
born, including 2792 Germans, 2083 Welsh, 2034 Irish, 1578 
English and 1000 Russian Poles; (19 10 census), 67,105. Area, 
48 sq. m. Wilkes-Barrt Is served by the Central Railroad of 
New Jersey, the Lehigh Valley, the Delaware,. Lackawanna & 
Western, the Delaware & Hudson, the New York, Susquehanna 
or Western and the Pennsylvania railways, and by three inter- 
urban electric lines— the Wilkes-Barre & Hazleton, connecting 
with Hazleton, about 20 m. S., the Wilkcs-Barre & Wyoming 
Valley, and the Lackawanna & Wyoming Valley, connecting 
with Scranton about 17 m. N.E. On the opposite bank of the 
river (which is here spanned by two iron bridges) lies Kingston. 



i 



6 4 + 



WILKIE, SIR DAVID 



The city is attractively situated in the historic Wyoming Valley. 
The principal public buildings include the county court-house, 
the post office, the city hall, the county gaol and the 9th Regiment 
Armory. Among the city parks are Hollenback (102 acres) 
and Riverside (19 acres) parks, the River Common (35 acres) 
and the Frances Slocum Playground. In the city are the Harry 
Hillman Academy (non-sectarian), a secondary school for boys; 
the Malinckrodt Convent, the Wilkes-Barrt Institute (Presby- 
terian), a school for girls; St Mary's Academy (Roman Catholic), 
for girls; the Osterhout Free Library (44,000 vols.), the Library 
of the Law and Library Association (10,000 vols.) and that of 
the Wyoming Historical and Geological Society (18,000 vols.), 
which was founded in 1858. Wilkes-Barrt is situated in the centre 
of the richest anthracite coal region in the United States, Luzerne 
county ranking first in 1908 in the production of anthracite in 
Pennsylvania; and the value of the factory products increased 
from $8,616,765 in 1900 to $11,2401893 in 1905, or 30-5 %. 
Among important manufactures are foundry and machine-shop 
products, valued at $1,273,491 in 1905; silk and silk goods 
($1,054,863); lace curtains, cotton 'goods, wirework, &c. The 
city is governed by a mayor elected for three years, and by a 
legislative body composed of a select council (one member from 
each of the 16 wards elected for four years) and of a common 
council (one member from each ward, elected for two years). 

The township of Wilkes-Barrt was one of five townships 
the free grant of which, in December 1768, by the Susque- 
hanna Land Company of Connecticut was intended to encourage 
settlement and make good the company's claim to the 
Wyoming Valley (q.v.). In May 1769 more than 100 settlers 
from New England, in command of Major John Durkee (1728- 
1782), arrived at this place. With others who came a few days 
later they erected the necessary log cabins on the river bank, 
near the present Ross Street, and in June began to enclose 
these within a stockade, known as Fort Durkee. During the 
same summer Major Durkee gave the town its present name in 
honour of John Wilkes (1 727-1 797) and Colonel Isaac Barr6 
(1726-1802), both stout defenders in parliament of the American 
colonists' cause before and during the War of Independence, and 
in the following year the town plat was made. In September 
1769 the " First Pennamite- Yankee War," as the conflict 
between Connecticut and Pennsylvania for the possession of the 
valley is called, broke out. The Yankees lost Fort Durkee in 
November, but recovered it in the following February. The 
Pennamites erected Fort Wyoming on the river bank near the 
present Northampton Street in January 1 771, but the Yankees 
took it from them in the following August. In the War of 
Independence, immediately after the battle of Wyoming {July 3, 
1778), Wilkes-Barr6 was burned by the Indians and British 
Rangers; and again in July 1784, during the " Second Pennamite* 
Yankee War," twenty-three of the twenty-six buildings .were 
burned. In 1786 the Pennsylvania legislature sent here Colonel 
Timothy Pickering (q.v.) to organize Luzerne county, and to 
effect a reconciliation between the Connecticut settlers and the 
government of Pennsylvania. Colonel John Franklin (1749- 
183 1) led a counter movement, and was imprisoned on a charge 
of treason in October 1787, but Franklin's followers retaliated 
by kidnapping Pickering in June 1788, and kept him in the 
woods for nearly three weeks in a vain effort to make him 
promise to intercede for Franklin's pardon. Wilkes-Barre 
was gradually rebuilt after its destruction aftjtftU* mqejin 1806 
Ibe borough was t fit led, I hough it was nnt separated polite xlly 
from the lownship until 1I1S (or i8io}« A «". * cliirur was 
granted to l he borough in i£s5. and WfLkc**BaEr£ win thin cud 
as a city in 1S71. *JM 

Sec l>. J . Harvey, A fflitoryvf W 
im-iQio)- 

WILKIE, IIR 
on Ihe 181! ol 
of Culls In rif< 
love fur 
Kettle 




Leven Wilkie was admitted to the Trustees' Academy in 
Edinburgh, and began the study of art under John Graham, 
the teacher of the school. From William Allan (afterwards 
Sir William Allan and president of the Royal Scottish Academy) 
and John Burnet, the engraver of Wilkie's works, we have an 
interesting account of his early studies, of his indomitable 
perseverance and power of dose application, of his habit of 
haunting fairs and market-places, and transferring to his sketch- 
book all that struck him as characteristic and telling in figure or 
incident, and of his admiration for the works of Carse and David 
Allan, two Scottish painters of scenes from humble life. Among 
his pictures of this period are mentioned a subject from Macbeth, 
" Ceres in Search of Proserpine," and " Diana and Calisto," 
which in 1803 gained a premium of ten guineas at the Trustees' 
Academy, while his pencil portraits of himself and his mother, 
dated that year, and now in the possession of the duke of 
Buccleuch, prove that he had already attained considerable 
certainty of touch and power of rendering character. A scene 
from Allan Ramsay, and a sketch from MacneiU's ballad of 
Scotland's Skaith, afterwards developed into the well-known 
11 Village Politicians," were the first subjects in which his true 
artistic individuality began to assert itself. 

In 1804 Wilkie returned to Cults, established himself in the 
manse, and began his first important subject-picture, " Pitlessie 
Fair," which includes about 140 figures, and in which he intro- 
duced portraits of his neighbours and of several members of 
his family circle. In addition to this elaborate figure-piece, 
Wilkie was much employed at the time upon portraits, both at 
home and in Kinghorn, St Andrews and Aberdeen. In the 
spring of 1805 he left Scotland for London, carrying with him 
his " Bounty-Money, or the Village Recruit," which he soon 
disposed of for £6, and began to study in the schools of the Royal 
Academy. One of his first patrons in London was Stodart, a 
pianoforte maker, a distant connexion of the Wilkie family, 
who commissioned his portrait and other works and introduced 
the young artist to the dowager-countess of Mansfield. This 
lady's son was the purchaser of the " Village Politicians," which 
attracted great attention when it was exhibited in the Royal 
Academy of 1806, where it was followed in the succeeding year 
by the " Blind Fiddler," a commission from the painter's 
lifelong friend Sir George Beaumont. Wilkie now turned aside 
into the paths of historical art, and painted his " Alfred in the 
Neatherd's Cottage," for the gallery illustrative of English 
history which was being formed by Alexander Davison. After 
its completion he returned to genre-painting, producing the 
" Card-Players " and the admirable picture of the " Rent Day," 
which was composed during recovery from a fever contracted 
in 1807 while on a visit to his native village. His next great 
work was the " Ale-House Door," afterwards entitled the 
" Village Festival " (now in the National Gallery), which was 
purchased by J J. Angerstein for 800 guineas. It was followed 
in 1813 by the well-known " Blind Man's Buff," a commission 
from the prince regent, to which a companion picture, the 
" Penny Wedding," was added in 18 18. 

Meanwhile Wilkie's eminent success in art had been rewarded 
by professional honours. In November 1809 he was elected 
an associate of the Royal Academy, when he had hardly at- 
tained the age prescribed by its laws, and in February 181 1 he 
became a full academician. In 181 2 he opened an exhibition 
of his collected works in Pall Mall, but the experiment was 
unsuccessful, entailing pecuniary loss upon the artist. In 18 14 
be executed the " Letter of Introduction," one of the most 

!■■ .i\-:v finished and perfect of his cabinet pictures. In the 
>imc year lie -made his first visit to the continent, and at Paris 
entered upon a profitable and delighted study of the works of 
n toUccud in the Louvre. Interesting particulars of the time 
l>r served in his own matter-of-fact diary, and in the more 
IS 1 Jy a/>d flowing pages of the journal of Hay don, his fellow- 
T, On his return he began "Distraining for Rent," 
Ik- most popular and dramatic of his works. In 1816 he 
a tour through Holland and Belgium in company with 

wLach, the engraver of many of his paintings. The " Sir 



WILKINS, SIR C. 



6+5 



Walter Scott and his Family," a cabinet-sized picture with small 
full-length -figures in the .dress of Scottish peasants, was the 
result of a visit to Abbotsford in x6x8. " Reading a Will,". a 
commission from the king of Bavaria, now in the New Pinakothek 
at Munich, was completed in 1820; and two years later the 
great picture of " Chelsea Pensioners Reading the Gazette of 
the Battle of Waterloo," commissioned by the duke of Wellington 
in 1816, at a cost of xaoo guineas, was exhibited at the Royal 
Academy. 

In 1822 Wilkie visited Edinburgh, in order to select from 
the royal progress of George IV. a fitting subject for a picture. 
The "Reception of the King at the Entrance of Holyrood 
Palace " was the incident ultimately chosen; and in the follow- 
ing year, when the artist, upon the death of Racburn, had been 
appointed royal limner for Scotland, he received sittings from 
the monarch, and began to work diligently upon the subject. 
But several years elapsed before its completion; for, like all 
such ceremonial works, it proved a harassing commission, 
uncongenial to the painter while in progress and unsatisfactory 
when finished. His health suffered from the strain to which 
he was subjected, and his condition was aggravated by heavy 
domestic trials and responsibilities. In 1825 he sought relief 
in foreign travel: after visiting Paris, he passed into Italy, 
where, at Rome, he received the news of fresh disasters through 
the failure of his publishers. A residence at Ttfplitx and Carlsbad 
was tried in 1826, with little good result, and then Wilkie re- 
turned to Italy, to Venice and Florence. The summer of 1827 
was spent in Geneva, where he had sufficiently recovered to 
paint his " Princess Doria Washing the Pilgrims' Feet," a work 
which, like several small pictures executed at Rome, was strongly 
influenced by the Italian art by which the painter had been 
Surrounded. In October he passed into Spain, whence he 
returned to England in June 1828. 

It is impossible to over-estimate the influence upon WOkie's 
art of these three years of foreign travel. It amounts to nothing 
short of a complete change of style. Up to the period of his 
leaving England he had been mainly influenced by the Dutch 
genre-painters, whose technique he had carefully studied, whose 
works he frequently kept beside him in his studio for reference 
as he painted, and whose method he applied to the rendering 
of those scenes of English and Scottish life of which he was so 
dose and faithful an observer. Teniers, in particular, appears 
to have been his chief master; and in his earlier productions 
we find the sharp, precise, spirited touch, the rather subdued 
colouring, and the clear, silvery grey tone which distinguish 
this master; while in his. subjects of a slightly later period — 
those, such as the " Chelsea Pensioners," the " Highland Whisky 
StOl " and the " Rabbit on the Wall," executed in what Burnet 
styles his second manner, which, however, may be regarded 
as only the development and maturity of his first — he begins 
to unite to the qualities of Teniers that greater richness and 
fulness of effect which are characteristic of Ostadc. But now he 
experienced the spell of the Italian masters, and of Velazquez 
and the great Spaniards. 

In the works which Wilkie produced in his final period he 
exchanged the detailed handling, the delicate finish and the 
reticent hues of his earlier works for a style distinguished by 
breadth of touch, largeness of effect, richness of tone and full 
force of melting and powerful colour. His subjects, too, were 
no longer the homely things of the genre-painter: with his 
broader method he attempted the portrayal of scenes from 
history, suggested for the most part by the associations of his 
foreign travel. His change of style and change of subject were 
stvercly criticized at the time; to some extent he lost his hold 
upon the public, who regretted the familiar subjects and the 
interest and pathos of bis earlier productions, and were less 
ready to follow him into the historic scenes towards which this 
&ul phase of his art sought to lead them. The popular verdict 
had in it a basis of truth: Wilkie was indeed greatest as a genre- 
painter. But on technical grounds his change of style was 
criticized with undue severity. While his later works are 
admittedly more frequently faulty in form and draughtsmanship 



than those of his earlier period, some of then! at least (the 
"Bride's Toilet," 1837, for instance) show a true gain and 
development in power of handling, and in mastery over com- 
plex and forcible colour harmonies. Most of Wilkie's foreign 
subjects— the " Pifferari," "Princess Doria," the " Maid of 
Saragossa," the " Spanish Fodado," a " Guerilla Council of 
War," the " Guerilla Taking Leave of his Family " and the 
" Guerilla's Return to his Family "—passed into the English 
royal collection; but the dramatic "Two Spanish Monks of 
Toledo," also entitled the " Confessor Confessing," became the 
property of the marquis qf Lansdowne. On his return to 
England Wilkie completed the " Reception of the King at the 
Entrance of Holyrood Palace," — a curious »yflmplp of a union 
of his earlier and later styles, a "mixture" which was very 
justly pronounced by Haydon to be " like ofl and water." His 
" Preaching of John Knox before the Lords of the Congrega- 
tion " had also been begun before he left for abroad; but it 
was painted throughout in the later style, and consequently 
presents a more satisfactory unity and harmony of treatment 
and handling. It was one of the most successful pictures of 
the artist's later period. 

In the beginning of 1830 Wilkie was appointed to succeed 
Sir T. Lawrence as painter in ordinary to the king, and in 1836 
he received the honour of knighthood. The main figure-pictures 
which occupied him until the end were "Columbus in the 
Convent at La Rabida" (1835); "Napoleon and Pius VIL 
at Fontainebleau " (1836); " Sir David Baird Discovering the 
Body of Tippoo Sahib " (1838); the " Empress Josephine and 
the Fortune-Tcller " (1838); and "Queen Victoria Presiding 
at her First Council " (1838). His time was also much occupied 
with portraiture, many of his works of this class being royal 
commissions. His portraits are pictorial and excellent in 
general distribution, but the faces are frequently wanting in 
drawing and character. He seldom succeeded in showing his 
sitters at their best, and his female portraits, in particular, 
rarely gave satisfaction. A favourable example of las cabinet- 
sized, portraits is that of Sir Robert Lis ton; his likeness of 
W. Esdaile is an admirable three-quarter length; and one of 
his finest full-lengths is the gallery portrait of Lord Kellie, in 
the town hall of Cupar. 

In the autumn of 1840 Wilkie resolved on a voyage to the 
East. Passing through Holland and Germany; be reached 
Constantinople, where, while detained by the war in Syria, he 
painted a portrait of the young sultan. He then sailed for 
Smyrna and travelled to Jerusalem, where he remained for some 
five busy weeks. The last work of all upon which he was en- 
gaged was a portrait of Mehemet Ali, done at Alexandria. On 
his return voyage he suffered from an attack of illness at Malta, 
and died at sea off Gibraltar on the morning of the 1st of June 
1841. His body was consigned to the deep in the Bay of 
Gibraltar. 

An elaborate Life of Sir David Wilkie, by Allan Cunningham, 



ing_ the painter's journals and his observant and wefl-con- 
sidered " Critical Remarks on Works of Art," was published in 1643. 
Redgrave's Century of Painters of the English School and John 
Burnet's Practical Essays on ike Fine Arts may also be referred to for 
a critical estimate of his works. A list of the exceptionally numerous 
and excellent engravings from his pictures will be found in the Art 
Union Journal for January 1840. Apart from his skill as a painter 
WHkie was an admirable etcher. The best of his plates, such as the 
" Gentleman at his Desk " (Laing, VIL), the " Pope examining a 
Censer " (Laing, VTIL). and the '^Seat of Hands " (laing, IV.), are 
worthy to rank with the work of the greatest figure-etchers. During 
his lifetime he issued a portfolio of seven plates, and in 1875 Dr David 
Laing catalogued and published the complete series of his etchings 
and dry-points, supplying the place of a few copper-plates that had 
been lost by reproductions, in his Etchings of David Witkie and 
Andrew Geddes. ' (JMG.) 

WILKDfS, SIR CHARLES (i749?-x836), English Orientalist, 
was born at Frome, Somersetshire, probably in 1749, and in 
x 7 70 he went to India as a writer in the East India Company's 
service. He was soon attracted to the study of Oriental languages, 
particularly Sanskrit, and did an important work towards 
facilitating such study by founding a printing press for these 
languages, taking a large personal share in the practical work of 



6 4 6 



WILKINS, G.— WILKINSON, J. 



preparing- the type. He returned to England in 1786, but con- 
tinued his study of Sanskrit, and he afterwards became librarian 
to the East India Company, and examiner at Haileybury on the 
establishment of the college there in 1805. Wilkins was knighted 
in 1833 in recognition of his services to Oriental scholarship, and 
he died in London in 1836. He was a pioneer in the department 
of learning with which his name was associated, being the first 
Englishman to acquire mastery of Sanskrit, and to make a 
thorough study of Indian inscriptions in that script. He compiled 
a Sanskrit grammar and published several translations from the 
sacred books of the East, besides preparing a new edition of 
Richardson's Persian and Arabic dictionary, and a catalogue of 
the manuscripts collected by Sir William Jones, who acknow- 
ledged his indebtedness to Wilkins, and whom the latter assisted 
in founding the Asiatic Society of Bengal. 

WILKINS, GEORGE (fl. 1607), English playwright and 
pamphleteer, is first mentioned as the author of a pamphlet on 
the Thru Miseries of Bdrbary, which probably dates from 1604. 
He was associated with the King's Men, and was thus a colleague 
of Shakespeare. He was chiefly employed in remodelling old 
plays. He collaborated in 1607 with William Rowley and John 
Day in The Travailcs of the Three English Brothers. In the 
same year a play was produced which was apparently entirely 
Wilkins's work. It is The Miseries of Inforst Mortage, and 
treats the story of Walter Calverley, whose identity is thinly 
veiled under the name of " Scarborough." This roan had killed 
his two children and had attempted to murder his wife. The 
play had originally a tragic ending, but as played in 1607 ended 
in comedy, and the story stopped short before the catastrophe, 
perhaps because of objections raised by Mrs Calverley's family, 
the Cobhams. The crime itself is dealt with in A. Yorkshire 
Tragedy, which was originally performed with three other plays 
under the title of All's One. It was entered on the Stationers' 
Register in 1608 as " written by William Shakespeare," pub- 
lished with the same ascription in that year, and reprinted in 
16 1 9 without contradiction of the statement. Mr Sidney Lee 
assigns to George Wilkins a share in Shakespeare's Pericles and 
possibly in Timon of Athens. Dclius conjectured that Wilkins 
was the original author of Pericles and that Shakespeare re- 
modelled it. However that may be, Wilkins published in 1608 
a novel entitled The Painfull Adventures of Pericles, Prynce of 
Tyre, being the true history of Pericles as it was lately presented 
by . . . John Cower, which sometimes follows the play very 
ciosely. 

Mr Fleay (Biog. Chron, of the Drama) says that the external evi- 
dence for the Shakespearian authorship of the Yorkshire Tragedy 
cannot be impugned, and in the absence of other authorship cannot 
be lightly «et aside, but he does not abandon 'the hope of establishing 

contrary opinion. Both Mr Flcay and Professor A. W. Ward 
J,ng. Dram. Lit. ii. p. 182) seem to think that the story of Marina in 
'ericUs was a complete original play by Shakespeare, and that the 
remodelling story should be reversed, i.e. that Perieles is a Shake- 
spearian play remodelled by a playwright, possibly Wilkins. Mr 
Lee (Diet. Nat. Biog., Art. '* Wilkins ") says the Yorkshire Tragedy 
was " fraudulently _ assigned to Shakespeare by Thomas Pavier, the 
publisher. 

WILKINS, JOHN (1614-1672), bishop of Chester, was born 
at Fawslcy, Northamptonshire, and educated at Magdalen Hall, 
Oxford. He was ordained and became vicar of Fawsley in 1637, 
but soon resigned and became chaplain successively to Lord Saye 
and Sele, Lord Berkeley, and Prince Charles Louis, nephew of 
Chark-s I. and afterwards elector palatine of the Rhine, In 164& 
he bet anie warden of Wadhim College, Dtiotd. .Uglier him iTm 
college was extraordinarily prosperous, for, although a supports 
of Cromwell, he was in touch with the most cultured royaliilt, 
who placed their sons in his charge. In 1S5.0 Richard 
appointed him master of Trinity College, C*iol 
Restoration in 1660 he was deprive 
of York and rector of Oxford, 
preacher at Gray's Inn, and in ift 
London. He becarm 
in 1 666. prebendary 
prebendary of St Pa 
scientific losicr. 



JS 




and its first secretary. He died in London on the 19th of 
November 1672. 

The chief of his numerous works is an Essay towards a Real Char- 
acter and a Philosophical Language (London, 1668), in which he ex- 
pounds a new universal language for the use of philosophers. He is 
remembered also for a curious work entitled The Discovery of a 
World in the Moon (1638, trd ed., with an appendix " The possibility 
of a passage thither/' 1^0). Other works are A Discourse concerning 
a New Planet (1640); Mercury,- or the Secret and Swift Messenger 
(1641)1 a work of some ingenuity on the means of rapid correspond- 
ence; and Mathematical Magick(i6s8). 

See P. A. Wright Henderson, The Life and Times of John Wilkins 
(1910), and also the ankle Aeronautics. 

WILKINS, MARY ELEANOR (1862- ),* American novelist, 
was born in Randolph, Massachusetts, on the 7th of January 
1862, of Puritan ancestry. Her early education, chiefly from 
reading and observation, was supplemented by a course at 
Mount Holyoke Seminary, South Hadlcy, Mass. Her home was 
in her native village and in Brattleboro, Vermont, until her 
marriage in 1902 to Dr Charles M. Freeman of Metuchcn, New 
Jersey. She contributed poems and stories to children's 
magazines, and published several books for children, including 
Young Lucretia and other Stories (1892), The Pot of Cold and 
other Stories (1892), and Once upon a Time and other Child 
Verses (1897). For older readers she wrote the following volumes 
of short stories: A Humble Romance and other Stories (1887), 
A New England Nun and other Stories (1891), Silence and other 
Stories (1898), three books which gave her a prominent place 
among American short-story writers; The People of Our Neigh- 
borhood (1898), The Love of Parson Lord and other Stories (1900), 
Understudies (1901) and The Givers (1904); the novels Jane 
Field (1892), Pembroke (1894), M addon (1&96), Jerome, a Poor 
Man (1897), The Jamesons (1899), The Portion of Labor (1001) 
and The Debtor (1905); and Giles Corey, Yeoman (1893), a prose 
tragedy founded on incidents from New England history. Her 
longer novels, though successful in the portrayal of character, 
lack something of the unity, suggestiveness and charm of her 
short stories, which are notable contributions to modern American 
literature. She deals usually with a few traits peculiar to the 
village and country life of New England, and she gave literary 
permanence to certain characteristics of New England life which 
are fast disappearing. 

WILKINSBURG, a borough of Allegheny county, Pennsyl- 
vania, U.S.A., immediately E. of Pittsburg, of which it is a 
residential suburb. Pop. (1890) 4662; (1900) 11, 886, of whom 
1336 were foreign-born and 275 were negroes; (rgio census) 
18,924. Wflkinsburg is served by the Pennsylvania railway and 
by interurban electric fines. It is a post-station of Pittsburg. 
In the borough are a Home for Aged Protestants C1882), the 
United Presbyterian Home for the Aged (1879), and Columbia 
hospital (1908). Settled in 1798 and known first as McNairville 
and then as Rippeyvillc, the place was renamed about 1840 in 
honour of William Wilkins (1 779-1865), a member of the United 
States Senate in 1831-1834, minister to Russia in 1834-1835, 
a representative in Congress in 1843-1844, and secretary of war 
in President John Tyler's cabinet in 1844-1845. In 1887 
Wilkinsburg was incorporated as a borough. 

WILKINSON. JAMES (1 757-1825), American soldier and 

adventurer, was born in Calvert county, Maryland, in 1757. At 

the outbreak of the War of Independence he abandoned the 

study of medieinc to enter the American army, and he served 

with General Benedict Arnold in the Quebec campaign and was 

General Horatio Gates, acting from May 1777 to 

adjutant-general of the Northern Department 

it u> Congress to report Gates's success against Bur- 

tarriiQcs* secured for him a sarcastic reception. 

,1 him tor a brigadier-general's commission 

ictually performed, and succeeded 

rVdship was broken by the collapse 

t Washington in which both were 

Wilkinson had indiscreetly blabbed. 

fcMarch 1778) his newly-acquired 

1 1 l ; ed the service in the quartermaster 



WILKINSON, j. J. G.— WILKINSON, J. 



6+7 



general's department, and was dothfer-generml fawn Jury 1779 
to March 1781. 

In common with many other army officers Wilkinson now 
turned toward the West, and in 1784 settled near the Falls of 
the Ohio (Louisville), where be speedily became a prominent 
merchant and farmer and a man of considerable influence. He 
began to take an active part in the movement for separate state- 
hood for .Kentucky, and in 1787 he entered into an irregular 
commercial agreement with the Spanish officials of Louisiana. 
At this time, as his own papers in the Spanish archives show, he 
took an oath of allegiance to Spain and began to Intrigue with his 
fellow-Kentuckians to detach the western settlements from the 
Union and bring them under the influence of the Louisiana 
authorities. His commercial connections at New Orleans enabled 
him to hold out the lore of a ready market at that port for 
Kentucky products, and this added greatly to the strength of the 
separatist movement. He neutralized the intrigues of certain 
British agents who were then working in Kentucky. For these 
various services be received until 1800 a substantial pension from 
the Spanish authorities, being officially known in their corre- 
spondence as " Number Thirteen." At the same time he worked 
actively against the Spanish authorities, especially through 
Philip Nolan. Wilkinson's ventures were not as lucrative as he 
hoped for, and in October 1791 he was given a lieut.-colonel's 
commission in the regular army, possibly, as a contemporary 
suggested, to keep him out of mischief. During this year be took 
an active part in the minor campaigns which preceded General 
Arthur St Clair's disastrous defeat by the Indians. As brigadier- 
general (from March 1792) and second in command, he served 
under General Anthony Wayne in the latter's successful cam- 
paign of 1794 against the Indians, and in this campaign he seems 
to have tried to arouse discontent against his superior among 
the Kentucky troops, and to have intrigued to supplant him 
upon the reduction of the army. Upon Wayne's death in 1796, 
Wilkinson became general in command of the regular army, 
retaining his rank as brigadier and likewise his Spanish pension. 
He seems to have tried to stir up both the Indians and the 
Spaniards to prevent the survey of the southern boundary of 
the United States in 1797 and 1798, and succeeded in delaying 
Commissioner Andrew Ellicott for several months in this import- 
ant task. At the same time his protege 1 , the filibusterer, Philip 
Nolan, was engaged in a reconnaissance for him west of the 
Mississippi. In 1803 Wilkinson was one of the commissioners 
to receive Louisiana from France, and in 1805 became governor 
of that portion of the Purchase above the 33rd parallel, with 
headquarters at St Louis. In his double capacity as governor 
of the Territory and commanding officer of the army, reasonably 
certain of bis hold on Jefferson, and favourably situated upon 
the frontier remote from the centre of government, he attempted 
to realize his ambition to conquer the Mexican provinces of Spain. 
For this purpose in 1805 he entered into some sort of agreement 
with Aaron Burr, and in x8o6 sent Z. M. Pike to explore the most 
favourable route for the conquest of the south-west. Before his 
agent returned, however, he had betrayed his colleague's plans 
to Jefferson, formed the Neutral Ground Agreement with the 
Spanish commander of the Texas frontier, placed New Orleans 
under martial law, and apprehended Burr and some of his alleged 
accomplices. In the ensuing trial at Richmond the prisoners 
were released for lack of sufficient evidence to convict, and 
Wilkinson himself emerged with a much damaged reputation. 
He was then subjected to a scries of courts-martial and con- 
gressional investigations, but succeeded so well m hiding traces of 
his duplicity that in 181 2 he resumed his military command at 
New Orleans, and in 1813 was promoted major-general and took 
possession of Mobile. Later in this year he made a most miserable 
fiasco of the campaign against Montreal, and this finally brought 
Jus military career to a dishonourable end. For a time he lived 

Shis plantation near New Orleans, but later appeared in 
ft City as an applicant for a fond grant, incidentally acting 
m for the American Bible Society. Here on the 28th of 
— ' r 1825 he succumbed to the combined effects of climate 
f opium. 



See WiUmxmV Jfaamto of My Own 7mm (Philadelphia, 18 16); 
untrustworthy and* to be used with caution; W. R. Shepherd, 
"Wilkinson and the Beginning of the Spanish Conspiracy" In 
American Historical itofcv, voL ix. (New York, 1904). (I. J, C) 

WILKINSON. JAMBS JOHN GARTH (181 2-1800), Sweden- 
borgian writer, the son of James John Wilkinson (died 1845), 
a writer on mercantile law and judge of the County Palatine of 
Durham, was born in London on the 3rd of June 181 2. He 
studied medicine, and set up as a homoeopathic doctor in 
Wimpofe Street in 1834. He was early attracted by the works of 
William Blake, whose Sengs of Experience he endeavoured to 
interpret, and of Swedenborg, to the elucidation of whose writings 
he devoted the best energies of his life. Between 1840 and 1850 
he edited Swedenborg's treatises on The Doctrine of Charity, 
The Animal Kingdom^ Outlines of a Philosophic Argument on the 
Infinite, and Hieroglyphic Key to Natural and Spiritual Mysteries. 
Wilkinson's preliminary discourses to these translations- and his 
criticisms of Coleridge's comments upon Swedenborg displayed 
a striking aptitude not only for mystical research, but also for 
original philosophic debate. .The vigour of his thought won 
admiration from Henry James (father of the novelist) and from 
Emerson, through whom he became Known to Carlyle and Froudc; 
and his speculation further attracted Tennyson, the Oliphants 
and Edward Maitland. He wrote an able sketch of Swedenborg 
for the Penny Cyclopaedia, and a standard biography, Emanuel 
Strcdenborg (published in 1849); but interest in this subject far 
from exhausted his intellectual energy, which was, indeed, 
multiform. He was a traveller, a linguist, well versed in Scan- 
dinavian literature and philology, the author of mystical poems 
entitled Improvisations from the Spirit (1857), a social and 
medical reformer, and a convinced opponent of vivisection and 
also of vaccination. He died at Finchley Road, South Hamp- 
stead, where he had resided for nearly fifty years, on 18th 
October 1809. He is commemorated by a bust and portrait in 
the rooms of the Swedenborgian Society in Bloomsbury Street, 
London. 

WILKINSON/ JOHN (i7a8-s8o8), "the great Staffordshire 
iron-master," was born in 1728 at Clifton, Cumberland, where 
his father had risen from day labourer to be overlooker in an 
iron furnace. A box-iron, patented by his father, but said to 
have been invented by the son, helping laundresses to gratify 
the frilled taste of the dandies of the day, was the beginning of 
their fortunes. This they made at Blackbarrow, near Furness. 
When he was about twenty, John moved to Staffordshire, and 
built, at Bilston, the first furnace there, and, after many experi- 
ments, succeeded in utilizing coal instead of wood-charcoal in 
puddling and smelting. The father, who now had works' at 
Bersham, near Chester, was again joined by his son, who con- 
structed a new boring machine, of an accuracy heretofore 
unequalled. James Watt found that the work of this machine 
exactly filled bis requirements for his " fire-engine " for cylinders 
bored with greater precision. Wilkinson, who now owned the 
Bersham works, resolved to start the manufacture of wrought 
iron at Broseleyon a larger scale, and the first engine made by 
Boulton and Watt was for him to blow the bellows there. Here- 
tofore bellows were worked by a water wheel or, when power 
failed, by horses. His neighbours in the business, who were 
contemplating installing Newcomen engines, waited to see. how 
his would turn out. Great care was taken in all its parts, and 
Watt himself set it up early in 1776. Its success made the re- 
putation of Boulton and Watt in the Midland counties. Wilkin- 
son now found he had the power alike for the nicest and the most 
stupendous operations. The steam cylinder suggested to him 
the plan of producing blast now in use. He was near coal; he 
surrounded himself with capable men, whom he fully trusted; 
he made a good article, and soon obtained large orders and 
prospered. In 1786 he was making 32-pounders, howitzers, 
swivels, mortars and shells for government. The difficulty of 
getting barges to carry his war material down the Severn led 
him, in 1787, to construct the first iron b a r ge crea ting a wonder- 
ful sensation among owners and builders. Wilkinson* taught the 
French the art of boring cannon from the solid, and cast all the 



( 



6 4 S 



WILKINSON, SIR J. G.— WILL 



tubes, cylinders and iron work required for the Paris water- works, 
the most formidable undertaking of the day. He also erected 
the first steam engine in France, in connexion with these works. 

Wilkinson is said to have anticipated by many years the 
introduction of the hot blast for furnaces, but the leathern pipes, 
then used, scorched, and it was not a success. His were the first 
coal-cutting machines. He proposed and cast the first iron bridge. 
It connected Broseley and Maddey, across the Severn, and its 
span of 100 ft- 6 in. was considered a triumphal wonder. Wilkin* 
son was now a man of great means and greater influence. He 
issued tokens of copper, bearing his likeness and on the reverse 
a forge and tools of the trade, silver coins for 3s. 6A, and also 
pound notes, as other tradesmen of that day did. He never 
wrote a letter without using the word iron, indeed be was iron- 
mad, and provided by wiU that he should be buried in an iron 
coffin, preferably in his garden at Castle Head, near LandaL He 
died on the 14th of July 1808. 

Wilkinson was twice married without issue. His very large 
property was frittered away during a lawsuit brought by a 
nephew against the illegitimate children whom he bad named as 
his heirs. It was carried from various courts in the kingdom to 
the House of Lords and then to the Court of Chancery. Here 
Lord Eldon decided for the defendants, thus reversing all previous 
decisions taken upon the law of the case. 

W1LKWS0M, SIR JOHN GARDNER (1797-1875), English 
traveller and Egyptologist, was born on the 5th of October 
1797, the son of the Rev. John Wilkinson, a well-known student 
of antiquarian subjects. Having inherited a sufficient income 
from his parents, who died when he was young, he was sent by 
his guardian to Harrow in 1813, and to Exeter College, Oxford, 
in 1816. He took no degree, and, suffering from ill-health, 
went to Italy, where he met Sir William Cell, and resolved to 
study Egyptology. Between 1821 and 1833 he travelled widely 
in the Nile Valley and began to publish the results. He returned 
to England in 1833 for the sake of his health, was elected fellow 
of the Royal Society in 1834, published The Topography of 
Thebes and General Survey of Egypt (1835) and Manners and 
Customs of the Ancient Egyptians (3 vols., 1837), and on the 
96th of August 1839 was knighted by the Melbourne ministry. 
In 1842 he returned to Egypt and contributed to the Journal 
of the Geographical Society an article entitled "Survey of 
the Valley of the Natron Lakes." This appeared in 1843, in 
which year he also published an enlarged edition of his Topo- 
graphy, entitled Moslem Egypt and Thebes, a work afterwards 
reissued in Murray's series. During 1844 he travelled in Monte- 
negro, Bosnia and Herzegovina, an account of his observations 
being published in 1848 {Dalmatia and Montenegro, 2 vols.). 
A third visit to Egypt in 1 848-1849 resulted in a further article 
in the Journal, " On the Country between Wady Halfah and 
Jebei Bcrkel " (1851); in 1855 he again visited Thebes. Subse- 
quently he investigated Cornish antiquities, and studied zoology. 
He died at Llandovery on the 29th of October 1875. To his 
old school, Harrow, he had already in 1864 presented his collec- 
tions with an elaborate catalogue. 

' Besides the works mentioned he published Materia Hiere&ypkica 
(Malta, 1828); Extracts from several Hiero&yphual Subjects (1830); 
Topographical Survey of Thebes (1830); facsimile of the Tunn 
papyrus (1851), previously edited without the writing on the back 
of the papyrus by Lepsius; Architecture of Ancient Egypt (1850); 
A Popular Account of ike Ancient Egyptians (1854) ; important notes 
in Rawlinson's Herodotus; Colour and Taste (1858); articles in 
archaeological and scientific periodicals. 

WILKIKSOsT, f ATB (1 730-1803), English actor and manager, 
was bom on the 37th of October 1739, the son of a clergyman. 
His first attempts at acting were badly received, and it was to 
his wonderful gift of mimicry that he owed his success. His 
imitations, however, naturally gave offence to the important 
actors and managers whose peculiarities he hit off to the life. 
Ganick^Je» .WolJ&ngton, Samuel Foote and Sheridan, after 
Wtog; «p|ti|f|j$4lftli JJ* imitations of the others, were among 
i to their turn, and threatened never 
L never- did. As an actor, Wilkinson 
e'a plays, but his list of parts was a 




long one. In Shakespearian characters he was very popular 

in the provinces. In 1766 he became a partner of Joseph Baker 
in the management . of several Yorkshire theatres, and sole 
manager after bis partner's death in 1770 of these and others. 
la this capacity be was both liberal and successful. He died 
on the 16th of November 1803. 

See his Memoirs (4 vol*. 1790) and The Wandering Patentee (4 
vols., 1795). 

WILL, in philosophy.' The M Problem of Freedom " provides 
in reality a common title under which are grouped difficulties 
and questions, of varying and divergent interest and character. 
These difficulties arise quite naturally from the obligation, 
which metaphysicians, theologians, moral philosophers, men 
of science, and psychologists alike recognize, to give an account, 
consistent with their theories, of the relation of man's power 
of deliberate and purposive activity to the rest of the universe. 
In the main, no doubt, the problem is a metaphysical problem, 
and has its origin in the effort to reconcile that belief in man's 
freedom which is regarded by the unsophisticated moral con- 
sciousness as indisputable, with a belief in a universe governed by 
rational and necessary laws. But the historical origin of the 
questions at issue is to be sought rather in theology than in 
metaphysics, while the discovery made from time to time by 
men of science of the inapplicability of natural laws or modes 
of operation (which they have been accustomed to regard as of 
universal range and necessity) to the facts or assumed facts of 
human activity, is a constant source of fresh disaivaons of the 
problem. Similarly the modern attempt upon the part of 
psychology to analyse (under whatever limitations and with 
whatever object of inquiry) all the forms and processes of 
human consciousness has inevitably fed to an examination of 
the consciousness of human freedom: while the postulate 
of most modern psychologists that conscious processes are not 
to be considered^ removed from the sphere of those necessary 
causal sequences with which science deals, produces, if the 
consciousness of freedom be admitted as a fact of mental 
history, the old metaphysical difficulty in a new and highly 
specialized form. 



There is some ground nevertheless for maintaining, contrary 
to much modern opinion, that the controversy is fundamentally 
and in the main a moral controversy. It is true that the precise 
relation between the activities of human wills and other forms 
of activity in the natural world is a highly speculative problem 
and one with which the ordinary man is not immediately con- 
cerned. It is true also that the ordinary moral consciousness 
accepts without hesitation the postulate of freedom, and is 
unaware of, or imperfectly acquainted with, the speculative 
difficulties that surround its possibility. Moreover, much work 
of the highest importance in ethics in modem as well as ancient 
times has been completed with but scanty, if any, reference to 
the subject of the freedom of the will, or upon a metaphysical 
basis compatible with most of the doctrines of both the rival 
theories. - The dcterminist equally with the libertarian moral 
philosopher can give an account of morality possessing internal 
coherence and a certain degree of verisimilitude. Yet it may be 
doubted (1) whether the problem would ever have arisen at all 
except for the necessity of reconciling the theological and 
metaphysical hypotheses of the omniscience and omnipotence 
of God with the needs of a moral universe: and (2) whether it 
would retain its perennial interest if the incursions of modern 
scientific and psychological inquiry into the domain of human 
consciousness did not appear to come into conflict from time 
to time with the presuppositions of morality. The arguments 
proceeding from either of the disputants by means of which 
the controversy is debated may be largely or almost wholly 
speculative and philosophical. But that which produces the 
rival arguments is primarily a moral need. And there are not 
wanting signs of a revival in recent years of the earlier tendency 
of philosophical speculation to subordinate the necessities of 
metaphysical, scientific and even psychological inquiries to 
the prima facie demands of the moral consciousness. 

There is no trace of the emergence of the problem of freedom 



WILL 



649 



in any intelligible or distinct form in the minds of early 
Greek physicists or philosopher*. Their doctrines were mainly 
baaed upon a belief in the government of the universe 
by some form of physical necessity, and though 
different opinions might prevail as to the mode of opera- 
tion' of the various forms of physical necessity the 
occasional recognition of non-material contributory causes never 
amounted to a recognition of the independence of human volition 
or intelligence. Nor can it be seriously maintained that the 
problem of freedom in the form in which it is presented to the 
modern mind ever became the subject of debate in the philosophy 
of Socrates, Plato or Aristotle. It is true that Socrates brought 
into prominence the moral importance of rational and intelligent 
conduct as opposed to action which is the result of unintelligent 
caprice. Moral conduct was, according to Socrates, the result 
of knowledge while it is strictly impossible to do wrong knowingly. 
Vice, therefore, is the result of ignorance and to this extent 
Socrates is a determinist. But the subsequent speculations of 
Aristotle upon the extent to which ignorance invalidates responsi- 
bility, though they seem to assume man's immediate conscious* 
ness of freedom, do not in reality amount to very much more 
than an analysis of the conditions 'ordinarily held sufficient to 
constitute .voluntary or involuntary action. The further 
question whether the voluntary acts for which a man is ordinarily 
held responsible are really the outcome of iris freedom of choice, 
is barely touched upon, and most of the problems which surround 
the attempt to distinguish human agency from natural and 
necessary causation and caprice or chance are left unsolved. 
For Aristotle remained content with a successful demonstration 
of the dependence of " voluntariness w as an attribute of conduct 
upon knowledge and human personality. And though ultimately 
the attribution of responsibility for conduct is further limited to 
actions which are the result of purposive choice (irpoalptaii), 
Aristotle appears to waver between a view which regards 
wpoaiptffis as involving an ultimate choice between divergent 
ends of moral action and one which would make it consist in 
the choice of means to an end already determined. A similar 
absence of discussion of the main problem at issue is noticeable in 
Plato. It is true that in a famous passage in the tenth book 
of the Republic (x. 617 ff.) be seems to make human souls respon- 
sible through their power of choice for the destinies which they 
meet with during their respective lives. But, as with Socrates, 
their power of making a right choice is limited by their degree 
of knowledge or of ignorance, and the vexed question of the 
relation of this determining intelligence to the human wfll is left 
unsolved. - With the Stoic and Epicurean philosophies the 
problem as it shapes itself for the consideration of the modern 
world begins to appear in clearer outlines. Stoic loyalty to a 
belief in responsibility based on freedom of choice appeared 
difficult to reconcile with a belief in an all-pervading Ammo 
Uundi, a world power directing and controlling actions of 
every kind. And though the Stoic doctrine of determinism 
tfid not, when applied to moral problems, advance mucli beyond 
the reiteration of arguments derived from the universal 
validity of the principles of causality, nor the Epicurean 
counter-assertion of freedom avoid the error of regarding 
chance as a real cause and universal contingency as an 
explanation of' the universe, it was nevertheless a real step 
forward to perceive the existence of the problem. Moreover, 
the argument by means of which Chrysippus endeavoured to 
prove the compatibility of determinism with ethical responsibility 
is in some respects an anticipation of modern views. For the 
distinction between main and contributory causes of conduct 
(causae adjuvant** and causae principaUs—iht alrto* and 
ivpoinor of Platonic and Aristotelian philosophy) preserved 
the possibility of regarding character, the main cause, as the 
responsible and accountable element in morality. And there 
is much that is anticipatory of modem libertarian views in the 
psychological argument by which Carneades attempted at once 
to avoid the Epicurean identification of will with chance, and 
to prove the rationality of choice, undetermined by any external 
or antecedent necessity, as an explanation of human actions 



Christ* 
UtXy. 



(cf. Janet and ScaOles, Hist, of Problem of Pkilosopky—Psy 
ckelogy, p. 3*4). 

It was not until the rise of Christianity as an historical religion 
that the difficulty of reconciling a belief in human freedom with 
a belief in the Divine government of the world became 
apparent to its fullest extent. The Christian doctrine 
of the Creation at once challenged the pantheistic 
presuppositions of Hellenic thought and reinforced the belief 
already existing in will as a real cause. At the same time the 
dualism involved In the simultaneous acceptance of an optimistic 
account of the origin and nature of the universe (such as is implied 
in Christian theology) and a belief in the reality of moral evS 
witnessed to by the Christian doctrine of Redemption, intensified 
the difficulties already felt concerning man's responsibility and 
Cod's omnipotence. Neoplatontc philosophy had been in the 
main content either to formulate the contradiction or to deny 
the reality of one of the opposing terms. And traces of Neo- 
platonic influence, more especially as regards their doctrine 
of the unreality of the material and sensible world, are to be 
found everywhere in the Christian philosophers of Alexandria, 
preventing or impeding their formulation of the problem of free- 
dom in its full scope and urgency. St Augustine was, perhaps, 
the first thinker to face, though not to solve, the true theological 
and moral difficulty inherent in Christian thought. . Two lines of 
thought are to be traced in the most implacable hostility and 
contradiction throughout his system. On the one hand no 
thinker reiterates or emphasises more cogently the reality of 
individual responsibility and of will. He affirms the priority 
of will to knowledge and the dependence of consciousness upon 
physical attention. He asserts also the fact that our human 
power of receiving divine illumination (t\e. a capacity of spiritual 
insight in no sense dependent upon the creative activity of the 
intellect) is conditioned by our spontaneous acts of faith. And 
he finds in the existence of divine foreknowledge ao argument 
for the impotence or determined character of human acts of will. 
The timeless foreknowledge of the Deity foresees human actions 
as contingent, not as causally determined. But when Augustine 
is concerned to reconcile the reality of individual freedom 
with humanity's universal need of redemption and with the 
absolute voluntariness of Divine Grace, he is constrained to 
contradict most of those postulates of which in his advocacy 
of Kbertarianism he was an eager champion. He limits the 
possession of freedom to Adam, the first man, who, by abusing 
his prerogative, has corrupted the human race. Man as he now 
is cannot do otherwise than evil Inherited incapacity for the 
choice of good is the punishment for Adam's misuse of freedom. 
The possibility of redemption depends upon the bestowal of 
Divine Grace, which, because it is in no instance deserved, can be 
awarded or withdrawn without injustice. And because Adam's 
choice necessitates punishment it follows that in some instances 
Divine Grace can never be bestowed. Hence arises in Augustine's 
system the doctrine of Predestination (?.».). From the theo- 
logical standpoint every individual is predestined either by his 
natural birthright to evil or by Divine Grace to good, and the 
absolute foreknowledge and omnipotence of God excludes even 
the possibility of any initiative on the part of the individual 
by means of which he might influence God's timeless choice. 

The medieval treatment of the problem follows in the main 
Augustinian or Aristotelian traditional lines of thought, though 
successive thinkers arrive at very diverse conclusions. ^^^ 
Thomas Aquinas, for example, develops the Platonic Jaw* 
argument which proves the dependence of the will 
upon the intellect and makes the identification of morality 
with knowledge. Freedom exists for Thomas, if it exists at all. 
only as the power of choosing what is necessarily determined 
by the intellect to be chokewotthy, the various possibilities 
of choice being themselves presented by the understanding to 
the will. And though in a certain sense Divine foreknowledge 
is compatible upon his view with human freedom, the freedom 
with which men act is itself the product of Divine determination. 
Man Is predetermined to act freely, and Divine foreknowledge 
foresees himan^oioasaaoontinfent. Duns Scotus on the other 



650 



WILL 



hand is the great champion of inotaeruMttitak Upon htt view 
the intellect mast always be subordinate to the will, and to the 
will belongs the power of complete sett-determination. Morality 
in effect — to such an extreme position is he driven in his opposi- 
tion to the Thomists-— becomes the arbitrary creation of the 
Divine Will and in no sense depends (or its authority upon 
rational principles or is a form of knowledge. 

.The modern treatment of the problem from Descartes, Hoboes, 
Sptnoxa and Leibnitz down to Kant b too much inwoven into 
the metaphysical systems of individual great phfloso- 
awawsa" peers to afford the possibility of detailed treatment 
0^ | faf < in the present article. Reference should be made 
either to the individual philosophers themselves or 
to articles on metaphysics or on ethics. Hobbes is the great 
exponent of materialistic detenmnisrn. Ideals and volitions are 
upon his view ultimately movements of the brain. Will is 
identified with appetite or fear, the causes of which are to be 
found only in the external world. Descartes advocates a kind 
of freedom which is apparently consistent with forms both of 
determinism and indeterminism. He explains the possibility 
of error on the ground that the mind panoses the liberum 
arbUrium imdiffemUiat and can always refuse to affirm the 
truth of a conclusion drawn from premises which are not self- 
evident. And even when the presentations before the mind 
are so dear that assent to their truth cannot be refused, the 
possibility of assenting still rests with the will, which can refuse 
to attend to any presentation, or can refuse assent with the sole 
motive of proving its freedom. Spinoza is a convinced deter- 
mintst regarding the will as necessarily determined by ideas. 
Extension, U. the spatial world, and the world of 
consciousness are alike attributes of the one sub- 
stance which can only be called free in the sense of 
being determined by nothing but itself. Freedom in 
the moral sphere consists simply in the control of the passi o ns 
by reason. Leibnitz retains this attenuated belief in moral 
freedom and combines with it a belief in the spontaneity of 
moral agents in the sense that they possess the power of acting 
and need no other principle of action save the laws of their own 
natures. But inasmuch as the agreement between the acts of 
Leibnitz's monads is due to a divine pre-established harmony, 
and the theoretical contingency which in the abstract, Le. as 
logically possible, can be predicated of their acts, is in practice 
non-existent, Leibnitz is in effect a determinist. 

Locke's treatment of the problem is in some respects more 
interesting than the theories of other English philosophers 
of his school. Freedom, according to Locke, belongs 
£ft» —tf to tbe nuj|j ^ t0 tne wi u u if we will at all we are 
to that extent free, i.e. our actions express our pur- 
poses. If, on the other hand, we press Leibnitz's objection, i-e. 
that such an argument is no answer to the question whether an 
act of wiH can be free in the sense that it is not determined by 
reasons presented by the understanding, Locke replies that 
the will is in effect determined by the uneasiness of desire, »-*- 
by the desire to avoid pain. Hume's doctrine follows logically 
from his theory as to the nature of causality. If our belief in 
necessary connexion in the physical world is in reality an illusion, 
it follows that the opposition between freedom and necessity 
will be illusory also. On the other hand if our belief in the 
necessity of causal connexion is the result of custom, to custom 
will be due also the belief in a necessity governing human actions 
observable everywhere in men's ordinary opinions and prartkr 
Contrasted with this belief an necessity the supposition we have 
of freedom is flluaary, and, if extended so as to involve a belief 
that men's actions do not proceed from character or habitual 
disposition, immoraL 

Kant's theory of freedom is, perhaps, the most characteristic 
thiftthir? of his system of ethics. Distinguishing between two 
^^ worlds, the sensuous and the inlHItgJMe, the pheno- 
*^ menal add the noumenal, Kant allows no freedom to 
I witt determined by the succession of motives, desires 
1 which form the empirical and sensuous self. But 



laws Kant sets the nonmrwal mad intdfigible world in which 
by a timeless act of will man is free to accept the moral command 
of an unconditional imperative for no reason other than its own 
rational necessity as the defiverance of his highest nature. The 
difficulties of the Kantian system are mainly to be looked for 
of the relation between the phenomenal and 



In more recent times the controversy has been concerned 
either with the attempted proof of determinism by the advo- 
cates of psychological Hedonism, an attempt which 
at the present time is generally admitted to have J ^ Li * m 
failed; or with the new biological knowledge con- £^ n 
ceming the mnuence of heredity and environment 
in its bearing upon the development of character and the possi- 
bility of freedom. The great advance of biological knowledge 
in recent times though it has in no sense created a new problem 
(men have always been aware of the importance of racial or 
hereditary physical qualities in their influence upon human 
conduct) has certainly rendered the existence of complete 
individual freedom (in the sense in which it was advocated by 
older libertarians) in the highest degree unlikely. The ad- 
vocates of freedom are content in the present day to postulate 
a relative power of influencing conduct, e.& a power of contxolEag 
inherited temperament or subduing natural r*" 8 — Such a 
relative freedom,' indeed, taking into account the admitted 
inviolability of natural laws, was from the very beginning all 
that they could claim. 

But it was inevitable that the enormous advances made by 
the physical and other sciences in modem times should bring 
with them a reasoned attempt to bring the phenomena of 
consciousness within the sphere controlled by physical laws and 
natural necessity. There will never perhaps in any period of 
the world's history be wanting advocates of materialism, who 
find in the sensible the only reality. But the materialism of 
modern times a more subtle than that of Hobbes. And the 
detenninism of modern science no longer consists in a crude 
denial of the reality of conscious processes, or an attempt to 
explain them as only a sublimated form of matter and its move- 
ments; it is content to admit the relative independence of the 
world of consciousness, while it maintains that laws and hypo- 
theses sufficient to explain material processes may be extended 
to and wiH be discovered to be valid of the changing sequences 
of conscious states of mind. Moreover, much of the apparent 
cogency of modern s ci ent i fi c detenninist arguments has been 
derived from.tbe unguarded admissions or timorous acquiescence 
of their opponents. It is not enough merely to repel the in- 
cursions of physiological science, armed with hypotheses and 
theories valid enough in their own sphere, upon the.damain of 
consciousness. If the attack is to be finally rep ulsed it will be 
imperatively necessary for the libertarian to maintain that no 
full explanation of the physical universe can ever gain assent, 
which does not take account of the reality and influence within 
the material world of human power of initiative and freedom. 
Of this necessity there is a growing consciousness in recent years, 
and no more notable exposition of it has been published than is 
contained in James Ward's Naimrclism end AgntsticuMU Nor 
is there any lack of evidence of a growing dissatisfaction on the 
part of many physiologists with the complacent assumption 
that the methods of physical science, and particularly the con- 
ception of causal activity common to the sciences which study 
inorganic nature, can be transferred without further criticism 
to the examination of life and mind. Meanwhile the scientific 
onslaught upon the libertarian position has been directed from 
two chief quarters It has been maintained, on the one hand, 
that any theory which presupposes a direct correspondence 
between the molecular movements of the brain, and the states 
of consciousness which accompany them must make the freedom 
of the will impossible. On the other hand it is asserted that 
quite apart from any particular view as to the relation between 
mind and body the existence of the freedom of the will is 
necessarily incompatible with the principle of the conserva- 
tion of energy and is therefore in direct contradiction to 



WILL 



many if not noil of the assured conclusion* of the physical 



As regards the first of these two main contentions, it must 
suffice here to point out. the main difficulties in which a 
m ^ detenninist and especially materialist account of 
2£*£22^the relation between consciousness and the organic 
te processes which accompany it appears to be involved. 

The arguments of thorough-going materialism can in 
most cases be met with a direct negative* No kind of evidence 
can be adduced sufficient to prove that consciousness is a secre- 
tion of the brain, an effect or even a consequent of material 
processes or modes of motion. No direct causal relationship 
between a molecular movement and a state of consciousness 
has ever been established. No physiologist has ever claimed 
the power to prophesy with any approach to accuracy the future 
mental states of any individual fsom an examination of his 
brain. And, though some kind of correspondence between the 
physical and conscious series of states has been observed and is 
commonly taken for granted in a number of instances, proof 
that entire correspondence exists is still wanting, and the precise 
kind of correspondence is left undetermined. Nevertheless, the 
belief that material processes must be held sufficient to account 
for material changes in the human organism as in all other 
regions of the material world, can be held quite independently 
of any particular theory as to the relation between mind and 
body, and in many of its forms is equally destructive of a belief in 
the freedom of the will. It is a belief, too, which is increasingly 
prevalent in modern science. The theory of psychophysical 
parallelism involves no doubt in the minds of the majority of 
its upholders the further assumption of some unity underlying 
both the physical and psychical series which may one day be 
discove r ed to be susceptible of scientific expression and inter- 
pretation. Certainly without some such assumption the hypo- 
thesis of an exact correspondence between, the scries described 
as parallel becomes, as Professor Ward has shown, unmeaning. 
And many scientific thinkers, while professing allegiance to a 
theory which insists upon, the independence of each parallel 
series, in reality tacitly assume the superior importance if not 
the controlling force of the physical over the psychical terms. 
But a mere insistence upon the complete independence of the 
physical series coupled with the belief that its changes are 
wholly explicable as modes of motion, i.e. that the study of 
molecular physics is competent to explain all the phenomena 
of life and organic movements, is sufficient to eliminate the 
possibility of spontaneity and free origination from the universe. 
For if consciousness be looked upon as simply an epiphenomenon, 
an unaccountable appearance accompanying the succession of 
material changes, the possibility either of active interference 
by human volition at any point within the physical series or of 
any controlling or dvecting efficacy of consciousness over the 
whole set of material changes which accompany its activity 
becomes unthinkable. There are, nevertheless, serious diffi- 
culties involved in the supposition that the changes in the brain 
with which physiology and the biological sciences deal can be 
satisfactorily explained by the mechanical and mathematical 
conceptions common to all these scieoces, or, indeed, that 
any of these organic changes is susceptible in the last resort 
of explanation derived from purely material premises. The 
phenomena of life and growth and assimilation have not been 
satisfactorily explained as mechanical modes of motion, and 
the fact that identical cerebral movements have not been dis- 
covered to recur makes scientific and accurate prediction of 
future cerebral changes an impossibility. But more convincing 
than most of the philosophical arguments by which the theories 
of psydiophysicsiparanelism have been assailed fa the fact that 
k runs counter to the plain evidence of the ordinary conscious- 
ness. No matter to what extent the unphibsophical thinker 
may be under the influence of materialistic presuppositions, he 
always recoils from the conclusion that the facts of his mental 
life have no influence upon his physical movements. Meaning, 
design sad purpose are to him terms far more explanatory of 
fens movements in the outer world than the mechsnical and 



To 



6 53 



Pe****** t m 



whkhun^Tr;;; 

facts: he is |*r «^ 
efficacy of ca**, ,^_ 
for which they a** * ' 

Nor, finally, • ij« _, 
mimsm— the theory, ,**„ ." ' '- 
incompatible with tW '„J^ J 
to be accepted w,tu<*a ,,„.*/* 
possess cogency as a pcoUvf ^ 
position, must assume tl^t u* *^, ' 
account for physical a rH i*y'*w< -fc '7 * 
invariable an quantity, an *m*+£^~ '•■ 
vestigator is competent to p»/v* ' <*/ ' 
may possess great value when ef^M? *" 
comparatively abstract material <4iu t *" " 
mathematical sciences is highly d**^,/ "* 
investigation of living bodies. H la M> *£ ( * . 
the development of the mechanical ihun,^" " 
of the conservation of energy certainly £, **~ 
whole range of physico-chemical phcnomt#!T* k. "''' ' 
tell whether the study of physiological pfc^ •»»' * , 

and of nervous phenomena in particular, will'*"*** * *>' . 
besides the vis viva or kinetic energy of' which? " ' 
and the potential energy which was a later and ' * ' '"'■ 
juncl, some new kind of energy which may differ ttT* "*"' ' 
two by rebelling against calculation " (Bcrgson TiZH '*" ^*-* 
Will, Eng. trans, by F. L. Pogson, pp. x$ i, 1$a ). m »* >*,. 

It is, however, from the development of the' scieniifir 
of psychology more than from any other region of iL^' 
that light has been thrown upon the problem of <** 

freedom. The dcterminist presuppositions of psy. *•*»» 
chology (dcterminist because they involve the appliea- '^'^^l** 
tkm of the causal conceptions of modern science to mental 
phenomena) have in many instances in no way retarded the 
utilization of new information concerning mental procesica 
in order to prove the reality of freedom. Bergson is perhaps 
the most notable instance of a philosopher fully conversant with 
psychological studies and methods who remains a convinced 
libertarian. But the contribution made by psychology to the 
solution of the problem has taken the form not so much of a 
direct reinforcement of the arguments of either of the opponent 
systems, as of a searching criticism of the false assumptions 
concerning conative processes and the phenomena of choice 
common alike to determinists and libertarians. It has already 
been pointed out that the problem as it presented itself to 
utilitarian philosophers could lead only to a false solution, 
depending as it did upon a wholly fictitious theory as to the 
nature of desire. There are still many traces to be found in 
modern psychology of a similar unreal identification of desire 
with will. But, nevertheless, the new light thrown upon the 
unity of the self and the more careful and accurate scrutiny 
made by recent psychologists of the phenomena of decision have 
rendered it no longer possible cither for determinists to deny 
the fact of choice (whatever be their theory as to its nature) 
or for libertarians to regard the self oc the will as isolated from 
and unaffected by other mental constituents and antecedents, 
and hence, by an appeal to wholly fictitious entities, to prove 
the truth of freedom. The self or the will can no longer be 
looked upon as possessing a kind of impcrium in imperio, " this 
way and that dividing the swift mind." And if freedom of 
choice be a possibility at all, it must in future be regarded as the 
prerogative of a man's whole personality, exhibited continuously 
throughout the development of his character, displayed to some 
extent in all conscious conative processes, though especially 
apparent in crises necessitating deliberate and serious purpose. 
The mistake of earlier advocates of deterniinism lay in the 



bs* 



WILL 



supposition that self-conscious moral action could be explained 
by the use of the same categories and upon the same hypotheses 
usually considered sufficient to explain the causal sequences 
observable in the physical world. Conduct was regarded as 
the result of interaction between character and environment; 
or it was asserted to be the resultant effect of a struggle between 
motives in which the strongest prevailed. And the libertarian 
critic had before him a comparatively easy task when he ex- 
hibited the complete interdependence of character and en- 
vironment, or rather the impossibility of treating either as 
definite and fixed factors in a process explicable by the use of 
ordinary scientific categories. 

It was not difficult to show that motives have meaning only 
with reference to a self, and that it is the serf which alone has 
power to erect a desire into a motive, or that the attraction of 
an object of appetite derives much of its power from the character 
of the self to which it makes its appeal. What is possibly not 
so obvious is the extent to which libertarians have themselves 
been guilty of a similar fallacy. It is comparatively unimportant 
to the dcterminist whether the cause to which he attributes 
conduct be the self, or the will, or character, or the strongest 
motive, provided that each of these causes be regarded as 
definitely ascertainable and that its effects in sufficiently known 
circumstances be calculable. It is possible to treat will as a 
permanent cause manifesting itself through a series of sequent 
changes, and obedient to the laws which govern the development 
of the personality of the single individual. 

And the libertarian, by his arguments showing that appeal 
must be made to an act of will or of the self in the explanation 
of the phenomena of choice, does nothing directly 
I to disprove the truth of such a contention. If, how- 
' ever, it be argued by libertarians that no explanation 
is possible of the manner in which the self or the will 
makes its decisions and inclines to this motive or to that, while 
they still assert the independent existence of the self or will, 
then they are undoubtedly open' to the retort of their opponents 
that upon such a theory no rational explanation of conduct 
will be possible. For to regard a particular decision as the 
effect of the " fiat" of a self or will unmotived and uninfluenced 
by the idea of a future object of attainment seems to be equiva- 
lent to the simple statement that the choice was made or the 
decision taken. Such a theory can prove nothing either for 
or against the possibility of freedom. 

Moreover, many of the arguments by which the position of 
rigid libertarians of the older school has been proved untenable 
Idtaltt navc * >ccn a< *vanced by moral philosophers, and by 
"^ thinkers not always inclined to regard psychology 
with complete sympathy. The doctrine of self-determination, 
advocated by T. H. Green and idealist writers of his school, 
has little or nothing in common with the doctrine that the self 
manifests its freedom in unmotived acts of will. The advocates 
of self-determination maintain that conduct is never determined, 
in the sense in which, e.g. movements in the physical world are 
determined, because man in virtue of his self-consciousness has 
a power of distinguishing himself from, even while he identifies 
himself with, a purely natural object of desire; and this must always 
make it impossible to regard him as an object governed by purely 
natural forces. Consciousness and especially self -consciousness, 
can never be explained upon hypotheses adequate only to 
explain the blind working oflthfr nftportadotts wStld. But the 
insistence of idealist writers uixm iKc relation of the world of 
nature to conscious mldli^'Ticc. and especially to a universal 
consciousness reading itself tbruufboat ih* history of in- 
dividual* . rendered U alike i \V> deny altogether some 

influence of wwiro*"— - * I ^^^M r * *nd 4t > rrjwrd the 
history of ; Individ Ing ta twlatcd 

and «fctonn«ciP ~ i ii be 

cOWdttV i »l. Jfffom 

tfctttftf.- 

4 rid to 

aWf*. 



Nor is that obscurity to any appreciable degree ffluminated 
by the tendency also noticeable in idealist writers to find the 
true possession of freedom only in a self emancipated from the 
influence of irrational passion, and liberated by knowledge from 
the dominion of chance or the despotism of unknown natural 
forces. Here also psychology, by its elucidation of the important 
part which instinctive appetites and animal impulses play in 
the development of intelligence, still more perhaps by arguments 
(based largely upon the examination of hypnotic subjects or 
the phenomena of fixed ideas) which show the permanent 
influence of irrational or semi-rational suggestions or habits 
upon human conduct, has done much to aid and abet idealists 
in their contentions. It cannot in fact be denied that from 
one point of view human freedom is strictly relative, a posses- 
sion to be won only after painful effort, exhibiting itself in its 
entirety only in supreme moments when the self is unswayed 
by habit, and out of full knowledge makes an individual and 
personal choice. Ideal freedom will be the supreme achieve* 
ment of a self completely moralized. But the process by which 
such freedom is eventually to be gained must, if the prise is to 
be worth the having, itself exhibit the gradual development 
of a self which, under whatever limitations, possesses the same 
liberty of choice in its early stages as in its latest. And no 
theory which limits the exercise of freedom to the choice only 
of what is strictly good or rational can avoid the imputation of 
destroying man's responsibility for the choice of evil. 

But the most important point at issue between the opposing 
theories has remained throughout the history of the controversy, 
the morality or immorality of their respective solutions 
of the problem. The advocates of either theory must IHH^T 
in the last resort appeal to the direct evidence of the 
moral consciousness. It remains to give a brief sketch of the 
arguments advanced on either side. 

It has always been maintained by convinced libertarians thaf 
without a belief in the freedom of the will morality becomes; 
unmeaning (see Determinism). Moreover, without a belief in 
the freedom of the will the conception of moral obligation upon 
which the existence of morality depends and from which aM other 
moral terms derive their meaning loses its chief significance. 
What is opposed to obligation, or at least always distinguished 
from it, is that very domain of necessity within which deter- 
minists would bring the will. For even when the felt obligation 
is absolute, where the will is completely moralized, where it 
is inconceivable in the case of a good man that the act which he 
performs should be other than it is, there the obligation which 
he recognizes is an obligation to choose autonomously, and as 
such is distinguished from desire or appetite or any of the other 
alleged determinants of action. If the question be asked " Where 
is the evidence for this alleged freedom to choose between 
alternatives?" the appeal is always made to the witness of the 
moral consciousness itself. No one, it is said, who ever feels 
remorse for the committal of a wrong act can honestly avoid the 
admission that at the moment when the act was committed he 
conld have acted otherwise. No one at the moment of action 
is ever aware that h>s will is being necessitated. What he is 
clearly conscious of is the power to choose. Any proof, in the 
scientific sense, that a man's acts are due to his power of free 
initiative would be from the nature of the case impossible. 
' For, inasmuch as scientific proof depends upon the evidence of 
causality, such efforts after scientific demonstration would end 
only by bringing either the man's whole personality or some 
element in it within the sequence of the chain of natural causes 
and effects, under the domination of that natural necessity from 
which as a conscious being he is free. The science of morality 
must be content in its search for causes to recognize the rationality 
of choice as a real determining agent in human affairs. And no 
account of the psychology of human action which regards conduct 
as due to self-determination, but leaves open the question 
whether the self is free to choose is, so it is argued, capable of 
providing an adequate theory of the admitted facts of moral 
consciousness. 

We must now consider the arguments by which delerminisls 



WILL 



653 



attack the position of their opponents and the evidence which 
they adduce to show that the freedom of the will is no necessary 
-^^ post ulale for moral action. For thorough-going deter- 
mia*t minimi of the older type the dependence of morality 
«cmcs. upon freedom did not of necessity prove an obstacle. 
Hedonistic psychology denied thclibertarian hypothesis, 
but it denied also the absoluteness and intuitive character of moral 
obligation, and attached no validity to the ordinary interpreta- 
tion of terms like " ought " and duty. Modern determinists 
differ from the earlier advocates of their theory in their endeavour 
to exhibit at least the compatibility of morality with the absence 
of freedom, if not the enhancement of moral values which, 
according to some of its advocates, follows upon the acceptance 
of the deterministic account of conduct. 

If a coherent theory capable of giving an explanation of the 
ordinary facts of morality and not involving too violent a breach 
with the meaning of moral terms in their accepted usage 
were all that need be required of determinists in order to 
reconcile the defenders of the moral consciousness to the 
loss of their belief in the will's freedom, it would follow without 
question that the determinists have proved their case. Neither the 
deterrent nor the reformatory theories of punishment (q.t.) neces- 
sariiy depend upon or carry with them a belief in the freedom of the 
will. On the contrary, a belief that conduct necessarily results upon 
the presence of certain motives, and that upon the application of 
certain incentives, whether of pain or pleasure, upon the presence of 
certain stimuli whether in the shape of rewards or punishments, 
actions of a certain character will necessarily en»ue. would seem to 
vindicate the rationality of ordinary penal legislation, if its aim be 
deterrent or reformatory, to a far greater extent than is possible upon 
the libertarian hypothesis. Humanitarian moralists, who hesitate 
to believe in the retributive theory of punishment because, as they 
think, its aim is not the criminal's future well-being but merely the 
vindication through pain of an outrage upon the moral law which 
the criminal need never have committed, might welcome a theory 
which urges that the sole aim of punishment should be the exercise 
of an influence determining the criminal's future conduct for his own 
or the social good. 

Moreover, the belief that the justice of punishment depends upon 
the responsibility of the criminal for his past offences and the ad- 
mission of the moral consciousness that his previous wrong-doing 
was freely chosen carries with it, so it is argued, consequences which 
the libertarian moralist might be willing to accept with reluctance. 
For whatever may have been the character of the individual in the 
past, it is possible upon the libertarian view that by the exercise of 
bis freedom he has brought about in himself a complete change of 
character: he may be now the exact opposite in character of what he 
was then. Upon what grounds, therefore, shall we discriminate 
between the justice of punishing him for what he was at a previous 
period in his life and the injustice of forgiving him because of what 
he is in the present ? While if the deterrent and reformatory theories 
alone provide a rational end for punishment to aim at then the 
libertarian hypothesis pushed to its extreme conclusion must make 
all punishments equally useless. For no punishments can prevent 
the individual from becoming a person of whatsoever character he 
chooses or from committing acts of whatsoever moral quality he 
determines to prefer. A similar line of argument would lead to the 
conclusion that the conception of the state as an educating, controlling 
and civilizing agency involves the belief that individual/citizens can 
be influenced and directed by motives which have their origin in 
external suggestion, i-e. that the determinist theory alone provides a 
rational basis for state activity of whatever land. 

It might, however, be thought that whatever be the compati- 
bility of theories of punishment or of the activity of the state as a 
BW--J-, moralizing agency with determinism, to reconcile the 
"* —* denial of freedom with a belief in the reality of remorse 
or peohenu e will be plainly impossible Nevertheless there is no 
tendency on the part of modern determinists to evade the difficulty. 
They argue with considerable cogency that determinism is very far 
from affording any ground for believing in the impotence of will. 
The belief that our actions have been determined in the past carries 
with it no argument that they will be of a like character in the future. 
Though in the future as in the past they must be equally determined, 
yet the forces that will determine their character in the future may 
be as yet ananatysed and unappareat No man can exhaust by 
introspective analysis the hidden elements in his personality. The 
existence of feelings of remorse and penitence testify to the presence 
in the individual of motives to good conduct which, if acted upon and 
allowed full scope and development, may produce a complete change 
of character. Determinism is not necessarily the logic of despair. 
Moreover, in a certain sense the very feelings of remorse and penitence 
which are the chief weapons in the libertarians' armoury testify to 
the truth of the determinists' contention. For they are the natural 
and logical consequence of the acts which the penitent deplores. 
Such feelings follow the committal of acts of a certain character in a 
Consciousness sufficiently moralised as inevitably as pain in the 
XXVtll II* 



natural world follows upon the violation of one of nature's laws. 
And they would lose a great part of their significance if they did not 
testify to the continued existence in a man s personality of motives 
and tendencies likely to influence his conduct in the future as they 
have already influenced it in the past. Nor is it possible to give any 
rational explanation of the idea of responsibility itself upon tnde- 
terminist assumptions. For to hold a person to be a responsible agent 
is to believe that he possesses a certain fixity and stability of char- 
acter. Freedom in the sense of complete liberty of choice would 
seem to lead to the conclusion that free agents are irresponsible, un- 
accountable. The truth seems to be that throughout the history 
of the controversy the chief arguments for cither side have been pro- 
vided by the extreme and exaggerated statements to which their 
opponents have been driven in the presentation of their case. So 
long as libertarians contend that what alone possesses moral value is 
unmotived choice, acts of will of which no explanation can be given 
save the arbitrary fiat of individual selves at the moment of decision, 
it is not difficult for determinists to exhibit the absurdities to which 
their arguments lead. It can easily be shown that men do as a 
matter of fact attach moral adjectives to environment, tempera- 
mental tendencies, natural endowments, instinctive desires, in a 
word to all or most of those forces moulding character, from which, 
according to libertarians, the individual's freedom of choice should be- 
clearly distinguished and separated, and to which it can be and is 
frequently opposed. While it is not easy to avoid the suspicion that 
a choice of which nothing can be predicated, which is guided by no 
motive, influenced by no desire, which is due neither to the natural 
display of character nor to the influence of environment, is either 
merely fortuitous or the product of a philosophical theory. 

But. as has been already suggested, the libertarian argument by 
no means necessarily leads to such extreme conclusions. The 
libertarian is not pledged to the belief that acts which alone exhibit 
real freedom are isolated acts which depend upon a complete change 
of character, a change which is in no sense continuous with, and is in 
no kind of relation to, the series of successive changes which make up 
an individual's mental and moral history. It is true that a consistent 
advocate of indeterminism must deny that the will is determined by 
motives, and must admit that no reason can finally be eiven for the 
individual's choice beyond the act of choice itself. For to give a 
reason for choosing (where " reason " is not merely equivalent to the 
determinists' " cause " or " necessary antecedent "J would simply 
be to find the explanation of the individual's choice in some previous 
decision. Moral conduct is conduct which follows upon the choice of 
ends, and to give a reason for the choice of an end in any particular 
instance is either to explain the nature of the end chosen and thus to 
describe the choice (a process which can in no sense show that the act 
of choice was itself necessitated), or it is to find the ground of the 
particular decision in its relation to an end already chosen. But 
whatever be the nature of the end chosen the libertarian is not con- 
cerned to deny that it must possess a fixed determinate character. 
If duty be chosen as opposed to pleasure the opposition between 
duty and pleasure is a necessary one. The recognition of such a 
necessary opposition is involved in the determinate act of choice. 
But the choice itself is neither necessary nor determined. The belief 
that fibertarianism denies the binding force of habit or the gradual 
development of unchecked tendencies in character depends upon a 
similar misconception. The continuity of a man's life and purposes 
would be equally apparent whether he habitually performed the same 
acts and made the same decisions in virtue of nis freedom of choice 
or as the product of necessary forces moulding his character in ac- 
cordance with fixed laws. Just as the phenomena of sudden con' 
version, complete revolutions of character occurring to outward 
appearance in a momentary space of time, are no valid argument 
against determinism — they may be due to the sudden emergence of 
elements in life and character long concealed — so what kicks like 
the orderly and necessary development of a character growing and 
exhibiting its activity in accordance with fixed laws may in reality 
be due to innumerable secret struggles and momentous decisions, 
acts of choice of which only the results are outwardly apparent. The 
ends which at any moment the individual is free to choose or reject 
possess a determinate character: their existence or non-existence as 
possibilities is also to a very large extent determined for him. No 
roan can choose to become whatsoever he will, for the ends which he 
can accomplish are restricted in number as well as definite in quality. 
But the real strength of the libertarian position is to be found in the 
fact that consciousness is capable of distinguishing ends at all. 
Whenever, for example, there is an admission on the part of any 
individual that in any previous act he made the attainment of 
pleasure his end rather than the performance of duty, there is also a 
tacit admission that he might have acted otherwise. And the exist- 
ence of penitence and remorse is not merely a sign of the emergence in 
consciousness of elements in character nobler than and opposed to 
those tendencies which once held sway. They are feelings which 
are incapable of coming into being at all save when coupled with the 
judgment. " I ought to have acted otherwise because I possessed the 
power. " The same argument holds good concerning our feelings 
with regard to the justice or injustice of punishing a criminal if we 
believe that his will was determined. It may be politic or expedient 
to inflict pain upon a criminal in order either to effect an alteration 
in his character or to deter him or others from future performance o( 



( 



^54 



WILL 



The 



acts of a certain character. But even with regard to the expediency 
of such punishments we may have doubts. For the very argument 
from the undeveloped possibilities of each man's character by which 
the dcterminist proves the compatibility of his theory with the 
phenomenon of sudden conversion and the like is sufficient also to 
prove that the state can never be sure that the punishments which it 
inflicts upon the individual will have the effect upon his character and 
conduct which it desires. It may be replied that experience makes it 
reasonably certain that the infliction of certain penalties will produce 
acts of a certain character and that the influence of certain incentives 
upon conduct may be established as reasonably probable by in- 
duction. But when the data are admittedly so uncertain is a valid 
inductive argument of such a character possible? And even if it 
were what would be its bearing upon the justice or injustice of 
inflicting punishments at all? The unsophisticated moral conscious- 
ness will still consider it unjust to punish a man for deeds of which 
he could not avoid the performance, and regard the alleged desire 
to produce in his future life consequences favourable to him- 
self or society as beside the mark and irrelevant to the question 
at issue. 

At the moment of action the individual invariably regards 
himself as free to choose between alternatives. This immediate 
consciousness of freedom persists upon another 
occasion even though subsequent reflection upon 
conduct should lead the individual to regard himself 
as determined at the very moment when he was aware 
of himself as free. It is this immediate consciousness of the 
power of choosing between alternatives which the delerminist 
finds so difficult to explain. He may regard it as an illusion, 
and attempt to prove the incompatibility of our consciousness of 
freedom with the facts of existence and the nature of the world. 
But, in ordinary cases of illusion, once let the reason for the 
illusion be discovered, and there is no longer the possibility of 
our being longer deceived, The phenomena which deceived us 
may continue to persist, but they no longer persist as illusory: 
the appearance which deceived us is seen in its true nature, even 
though it should still retain those characteristic marks or signs 
of reality which hitherto we regarded as significant of a nature 
which wc now no longer believe it to possess. But can it be 
maintained that the same truth holds good of our consciousness 
of freedom? Is it possible to hold that determinist arguments 
are of so convincing a character as to enable us to perceive at 
the moment of action the untrustworthy nature of our con- 
sciousness that we are free to choose between alternatives and 
to grasp beneath the appearance the underlying necessity which 
rules our wills? Our actual consciousness of freedom is not 
seriously disputed. And though reflection upon conduct may 
lead us to suppose that our past acts were determined, that desire 
of pleasure or the wish to avoid pain controlled our wills, the 
unphflosophical observer interprets, in offenders against morality, 
such arguments as a mere excuse. Moreover, remorse and penit- 
ence are witnesses in the wrongdoer to the truth of the interpreta- 
tion. On the other hand we have no such immediate conscious- 
ness of the necessity which is said to control our wills. We 
sharply distinguish that freedom which is the prerogative of 
human action from the necessary causation discoverable in 
nature. Within the domain of consciousness introspective 
analysis is unable to discover those chains of necessary sequences 
which it is the province of science to investigate in the physical 
world. And until the determinist can successfully explain to us 
how in a world obeying throughout its history necessary laws 
and limited in its nature to the exhibition of causal sequences 
the consciousness of freedom could ever have arisen, we may 
be consent to trust the immediate affirmation of our moral 
selves. 

For modern discussions of the problem consult Lotze, Micro- 
cotmus, i. «6 seq M English trans. Martineau; Study of Religion, 
'}. bk. yX chap, a; Ward, Naturalism and Agnosticism; Rashdalt, 
-* -* ~- - T and Ed&, vol. ii. bk. iii.; Taylor, Elements of 

f ; McTaggart, Some Dogmas of Religion, 
The Philosophy of Experience, iv. 
r fff (he Philosophy of Religion; Bergson, 
""Uts de la conscience; James. The Will 
t _J fur le libre arbitre; Rcnouvier, Les 
I fun; Bout roux. La Conlingence des lois 
*~- a — e du libre arbitre; Boyce Gibson, 
he Problem of Freedom. " 

CH. H. W.) 



voLiM 




W 



WILL, or Testament, the legal documentary instrument by 
which a person regulates the rights of others over bis property or 
family after his death. 1 For the devolution of property not 
disposed of by will, see Inheritance, Intestacy. In strictness 
" will " is a general term whilst " testament " applies only to 
dispositions of personalty; but this distinction is seldom 
observed. The conception of freedom of disposition by will, 
familiar as it is in modern England, is by no means universal. In 
fact, complete freedom is the exception rather than the rule 
Legal systems which are based upon Roman law, such as those 
of Scotland and France, allow the whole property to be alienated 
only where the deceased leaves no widow or near relatives. In 
France this restriction has met with condemnation from eminent 
legal and economical authorities. R. T. Troplong, for instance, 
held that "un peuple n'est pas libre, s'iln'a pas le droit de tester, 
et la liberte du testament est la plus grande preuve de la Uberte 
civile." • 

History. — The will, if not purely Roman in origin, at least owes to 
Roman law its complete development — a development which in 
most European countries was greatly aided at a later period rtx-nmrn 
by ecclesiastics versed in Roman law. In India, accord- law 
ing to the better opinion, it was unknown before the English 
conquest; in the Mosaic law and in ancient Athens the will, if it 
existed at all, was of a very rudimentary character. The same is the 
case with the Leges barbororum, where they are unaffected by Roman 
law. The will is, on the other hand, recognized by Rabbinical and 
Mohammedan law. The early Roman will, as Sir H. Maine shows, » 
differed from the modern will in most important respects. It was at 
first effectual during the lifetime of the person who made it; it 
was made in public; and it was irrevocable. Its original object, like 
that of adoption, was to secure the perpetuation of the family. 
This was done by securing the due vesting of the keeeditas in a person 
who could be relied upon to keep up the family rites. There is much 
probability in the conjecture that a will was only allowed to be made 
when the testator had no gentiles discoverable, or when the gentiles 
had waived their rights. It is certain from the text of Gains 4 that the 
earliest forms of will were those made in the comitio total* and those 
made in procinctu, or on t he eve of battle. The former were published 
before the comitia, as representative of the patrician gentes, and were 
originally a legislative act. These wills were the peculiar privilege of 
patricians. At a later time grew up a form of plebeian will (testa- 
mentum per aes et libram), and the law of succession under testament 
was further modified by the influence of the praetor, especially in 
the direction of recognition of fideicommissa or testamentary trusts. 
CoditiUi or informal wills, also came into use, and were sufficient for 
almost every purpose but the appointment of an heir. In the time 
of Justinian a will founded partly on the jus civile, partly on the edict 
of the praetor, partly on imperial constitutions and so called testa- 
mentum tripertitum, was generally in use. The main points essential 
to its validity were that the testator should possess testamentary 
capacity, and that the will should be signed or acknowledged by the 
testator in the presence of seven witnesses, or published orally in 
open court. The witnesses must be idonei, or free from legal dis- 
ability. For instance, women and slaves were not good witnesses. 
The whole property of the testator could not be alienated. The 
right** of heirs and descendants were protected by enactments which 
secured to them a legal minimum, the querela inqfficion testament* 
being the remedy of those passed over. The age at which testa- 
mentary capacity began was fourteen in the case of males, twelve in 
the case of females. Up to a.d. 439 a will must have been in Latin; 
after that date Creek was allowed. Certain persons, especially 
soldiers, were privileged from observing the ordinary forms. The 
liability of the heir to the debts of the testator varied at different 
periods. At first it was practically unlimited. Then the law was 
gradually modified in his favour, until in the time of Justinian the 
heir who duly made an inventory of the property of the deceased was 
liable only to the assets to which he had succeeded. This limitation 
of liability is generally termed by the civilians beneficium ttnenlani. 
Something like the English probate is to be found in the rules for 
breaking the seals of a will in presence of the praetor. Closely con* 
netted with the will was the donatio mortis cams*, the rules of which 
have been as a whole adopted in England (see below). An immense 
space in the Corpus juris is occupied with testamentary law. The 
whole of part v. of the Digest (books xxviii.-xxxvi.) deals with the 
subject, and so do a large number of constitutions in the Code and 
Novels. 

The effect of Christianity upon the will was very marked. For 
instance, the duty of bequeathing to the Church was inculcated as 



1 This is practically in accordance with the definition of Modestinus 
in Digest xxvtii. 1,1, voluntatis nostrae fusta sententia de to quod qnis 
Post mortem suam fieri velit. 

* Truiti des donations entre-vifs et des testaments (1855), preface. 

'Ancient Law, chap. vi. 

4 ii.. 101. 



WILL 



655 



rly as C01 

ability to make a will or take gift* left by will. A will was often de- 
posited in a church. The canon law follows the Roman law 

■*• with a still greater leaning to the advantage of the Church. 
mw ' NoChurch property could bebequcatbed. Manifest usurers 

were added to the list of those under disability. For the validity 
of a will it was generally necessary that it should be made in the 
pr esen c e of a priest and two witnesses, unless where it was made in 
pias causa*. The witnesses, as in Roman law, must be idonei. Gifts 
to the Church were not subject to the deductions in favour of the heir 
and the children necessary in ordinary cases. ' la England t he Church 
succeeded in holding in its own hands for centuries jurisdiction in 
testamentary matters. 

The Roman bw of wills has had considerable effect upon English 
law. In the words of Sir H. Maine, " The English law of testa- 
_ , . mentary succession to personalty has become a modified 
gj*** form of the dispensation under which the inheritances of 
mw ' Roman citizens were administered." * At the same time 

there are some broad and striking differences which should be borne 
jn mind. The following among others may be noticed, (t ) A Roman 
testator could not. unless a soldier, die partly testate and partly 
intestate. The will must stand or fall as a whole. This is not the 
case in England, (2) There is no one in English law to whom the 
mmtmrtitas juris of the testator descends as it did to the Roman hern, 
whose appointment was essential to the validity of a formal will, and 
who partook of the nature of the English heir, executor, adminis- 
trator, devisee and legatee, (3) The disabilities of testators differed 
in the two systems. The disability of a slave or a heretic is peculiar 
to Roman law, of a youth between fourteen and twenty-one to 
English law. (4) The whole property may be disposed of in England; 
but it was not so at Rome, where, except by the wills of soldiers, 
children could not be disinherited unless for specified acts of mis- 
conduct. During the greater part of the period of Roman hw the 
heir roost also have had hisFalcidbn fourth in order to induce him to 
accept the inheritance. (5) In English hw all wills must conform to 
certain statutory requirements; the Romans recognised from the 
time of Augustus an informal will called codicilli. The English codicil 

1 little in common with this but the name. It is not an informal 



will, but an addition to a will, read as a part of it, and needing the 
same formalities of execution. (6) The Roman Upturn applied to 
both movables and immovables; in England a legacy or bequest is a 
gift of personalty only, a gift of real estate being called a devise.' 
(7) The Roman will spoke from the time of making; the English 
speaks from the rime of death. This difference bec o mes very im- 
portant in case of alteration in the position of the testator between 
the making of the will and his death. As a rule the Roman will 
could not, the English can. pass af ter-acquired property. 

Liberty of alienation by will is found at an early period in England. 
To judge from the words of a law of Canute, intestacy appears to 
have been the exception at that time. 4 How far Che liberty extended 
b uncertain; it is the opinion of some authorities that complete 
disposition of land and goods was allowed, of others that limited 
rights of wife and children were recognized. However this may be, 
•iter the Conquest a distinction, the result of feudalism, to use a 
convenient if inaccurate term, arose between real and personal 
property. It will be convenient to treat the history of the two kinds 
of will separately. 

It became the bw after the Conquest, according to Sir E. Coke,' 
that no estate greater than for a term of years could be disposed of 
by will, unless in Kent, where the custom of gavelkind 
prevailed, and in some manors and boroughs (especially 
the City of London), where the pre-Conquest law was 
preserved by special indulgence. The reason why devise of land was 
not acknowledged by bw was, no doubt, partly todiscourage death- 
bed gifts in mortmain, a view supported by Glanvill, partly because 
the testator could not give the devisee that seisin which was the 
principal element in a feudal conveyance. By means of the doctrine 
of uses, however, the devise of bnd was teemed by a circuitous 
method, generally by conveyance to feoffees to uses in the lifetime of 
the feoffor to such uses as he should appoint by his will (see Trust).* 
Up to comparatively recent times a wul of bnds still bore traces of 
its origin in the conveyance to uses inter vivos. On the passing of the 
Statute of Uses lands again became non-devisable, with a saving in 
the statute for the validity of wills made before the 1st of May 1536. 
The inconve n ien c e of this state of things soon began to be felt, and 
was probably aggravated by the large amount of land thrown into 
the market after the dissolution of the monasteries. As a remedy an 
act was passed in 1540, and a further explanatory act in 1541-1543. 



1 Most of the bw is contained in Decretals, iii. 26, " De Testa- 



* Ancient Lam. chap, vi. 

* The distinction between bequest and devise did not always exist. 
For instance, the Assixe of Northampton, c. 4. speaks of a device 
{diriid) of chattels (sec Bequest). 

* Secular Laws, c. 68. • * Just. 7. 

1 Many instances of such conveyances occur in Sir Harris Nicobs' 
Tesuvmenla uttusta and in Fifty Earliest Entluk Wilts (13*7-1439). 
edited by Dr F. J. FurnivaU in ltMte. 



The effect of these acta was to make lands held in fee simple devisable 

by will in writing, to the extent of two-thirds where the tenure was by 
knight service, and the whole where it was in socage. Corporations 
were incapacitated to receive, and married women, infants, idiots and 
lunatics to devise. An act of 1660, by abolishing tenure by knight 
service, made all bnds devisable. In the same reign the Statute of 
Frauds (1677) dealt with the formalities of execution. Up to this 
time simple notes, even in the handwriting of another person, con- 
stituted a sufficient will, if published by the testator as such. The 
Statute of Frauds required, iaicr alia, that all devises should be in 
writing, signed by the testator or by some person for him in his 
presence and by his direction, and should also be subscribed by 
three or four credible witnesses. The strict interpretation by the 
courts of the credibility of witnesses led to the passing of an act in 
» 75 »-i 75*. making interested witnesses sufficient for the due execu- 
tion of the will, but decbring gifts to them void. The will of a man 
was revoked by marriage and the birth of a child, of a woman by 
marriage only. A will was also revoked by an alteration in circum- 
stances, and even by a void conveyance inter moos of bnd devised by 
the will made subsequently to the date of the will, which was pre- 
sumed to be an attempt by the grantor to give legal effect to a change 
of intention. As in Roman bw, a will spoke from the time of the 
making, so that it could not avail to pass after-acquired property 
without republication, which was equivalent to making a new will. 
Copyholds were not devisable before 1815, but were usually sur- 
rendered to the use of the will of the copyhold tenant ; an act of 1815 
made them devisable simply. Devises of bnds have gradually been 
made liable to the claims of creditors by a series of statutes beginning 
with the year 1691. 

The history of wills of personalty was considerably different, 
but to some extent followed parallel lines. In both cases partial 
preceded complete power of disposition. The general 
opinion of the best authorities is that by the common bw 
of Engbnd a man could only dispose of his whole personal 

property if he left no wife or children; if he left either wife c 

he could only dispose of one-half, and one-third if he left both wife 
and children. The shares of wife and children were called their pars 
roiionabilis. This pars ratiouabilis is expressly recognized in Magna 
Carta and was sued for by the writ de rationabili parte. At what 
period the right of disposition of the whole personalty superseded the 
old bw is uncertain. That it did so is certain, and the places where 
the old rule still existed— the province of York, Wales and the City 
of London— were regarded as exceptions. The right of bequest in 
these places was not assimuated to the general bw until compara- 
tively recent times by acts passed between 1693 and 1726. A will of 
personalty could be made by a male at fourteen, by a female at 
twelve. The formalities in the case of wills of personalty were not as 
numerous as in the case of wills of bnd. Up to 1838 a nuncupative 
or oral will was sufficient, subject, where the gift was of/30 or more, 
to the restrictions contained in the Statute of Frauds. The witnesses 
to a written will need not be " credible," and it was specially enacted 
by an act of 1 705 that any one who could give evidence in a court of 
bw was a good witness to a will of personalty. A will entirely in the 
testator's handwriting, called a holograph will, was valid without 
signature. At one time the executor was entitled to the residue in 
default of a residuary legatee. But the Executors Act 1830 made 
him in such an event trustee for the next of kin. 

Jurisdiction over wills of personalty was till 1858 In the ecclesi- 
astical courts, probate being granted by the diocesan court 7 if the 
goods of the deceased by in the same diocese, in the provincial court 
of Canterbury (the prerogative court) or York (the chancery court) 
if the deceased had bona notabitia, that is, goods to the value of £5 in 



The ecclesiastical jurisdiction was of a very ancient 
It was fully established under Henry II., as it is mentioned 
by Cbnvill. In the city of London wills were enrolled in the Court of 
Hustings from 1258 to 1688 after having been proved before the 
ordinary. Contested cases before 1858 were tried in the provincial 
court with an appeal originally to the Court of Delegates, bter to the 
judical commit teeof the privy council. There were also a few special 
local jurisdictions, courts baron, the university courts, and others, 
probably for the most part survivals of the pre-Conquest period, when 
wilts seem to have been published in the county court. The ecclesi- 
astical courts had no jurisdiction over wills of bnd, and the common 
bw courts wore careful to keep the ecclesiastical courts within their 
limits by means of prohibition. No probate of a will of bnd was 
necessary, and title to real estate by will might be made by pro- 
duction of the will as a document of tide. The liability of the 
executor and legatee for the debts of the testator has been gradually 
established by legislation. In general it is limited to the amount of 
the succession. Personal liability of the executor beyond this can 
by the Statute of Frauds only be established by contract in writing. 
Modern English Law— Such were the principal stages in the 
history of the bw as it affected wills made before 1838 or proved 
before 1858. The principal acts now in force are the Wills Act 
1637. the amending act of 1852, the Court of Probate Act 1857, 

T The testamentary jurisdiction of the archdeacon's court ts 
alluded to by Chaucer in the " Friar's Tab." but it was afterwards 
completely superseded by the bishop's court. 



656 



WILL 



the Judicature Acts 1873 and 1875 and the Land Transfer Act 
1897. All but the acts of 1837 and 1852 deal mainly with what 
happens to the will after death, whether under the voluntary or 
contentious jurisdiction of the Probate Division (see Probate). 
Some of the earlier acts are still law, though of little importance 
since the more modern and comprehensive enactments. 

The earliest on the statute roll is an act of Henry III. (1236), 
enabling a widow to bequeath the crops of her lands. Before the 
Wills Act uniformity in the law had been urgently recommended by 
the Real Property Commissioners in 1833. It appears from their 
report 1 that at the time of its appearance there were ten different 
ways in which a will might be made under different circumstances. 

The act of 1837 affected both the making and the interpretation 
of wills.* Excluding the latter for the present, its main provisions 
were these. All property, real and personal, and of whatever tenure, 
may be disposed of by will. If customary freeholds or copyholds 
be devised, the will must be entered on the court rolls. No wilf made 
by any person under the age of twenty-one is valid. Every will is to 
be in writing, signed at the foot or end thereof by the testator or by 
some person in his presence and by his direction, and such signature 
is to be made or acknowledged by the testator in the presence of two 
or more witnesses present at the same time, who are to subscribe the 
. will in the presence of the testator. It is usual for the testator and 
the witnesses to sign every sheet. Publication is not necessary. A 
will is not void on account of the incompetency of a witness. Gifts 
to a witness or the husband or wife of a witness are void. A creditor 
or executor may attest. A will is revoked (except where made in 
exercise of a power of appointment of a certain kind) by a later will. 
or by destruction with the intention of revoking, but not by pre- 
sumption arising from an alteration in circumstances. Alterations in 
a will must be executed and attested as a wflL A will speaks from 
the death of the testator, unless a contrary intention appear. An 
unattested document may be, if properly identified, incorporated in 
a will, but such a document, if executed subsequently to the will, is 
inoperative. 

Rules of interpretation or construction depend chiefly on decisions 
of the courts, to a smaller extent on statutory enactment. The 
law was gradually brought into its present condition through pre- 
cedents extending back for centuries, especially decisions of the 
court of chancery, the court par excellence of construction, as dis- 
tinguished from the court of probate. The court of probate did 
not deal unless incidentally with the meaning of the will; its juris- 
diction was confined to seeing that it was duly executed. The 
present state of the law of interpretation is highly technical Some 
phrases have obtained a conventional meaning which the testators 
who used them probably did not dream of. Many of the judicial 
doctrines which had gradually become established were altered by 
the Wills Act. These provisions of the act have since that time 
themselves become the subject of judicial decision. Among other 
provisions are these, most of them to take effect only in the absence 
of a contrary intention. A residuary devise is to include estates 
comprised in lapsed and void devises. A general gift of the testator's 
lands is to include copyholds and leaseholds. A general gift of real 
or personal estate is to include real or personal estate over which the 
testator had a general power of appointment. A devise without 
words of limitation is to pass the fee simple. The words " die without 
issue," or similar words, are to mean die without issue living at the 
time of the death of the person whose issue was named, not as before 
the act, an indefinite failure of issue, an estate tail being thus created. 
Trustees under an unlimited devise are to take the fee simple. 
Devises of estates tail are not to lapse if the devisee, though he pre- 
deceased the testator, left issue inheritable under the entail. Gifts 
to children or other issue leaving issue living at the testator's death 
are not to lapse. Rules of interpretation founded on principles of 
equity independent of statute arc very numerous, and lor them the 
works devoted to the subject must be consulted. Some of the more 
important, stated in as general a form as possible, are these. The 
intention of the testator is to be observed. This rule is called by 
Sir E. Coke the pole star to guide the judges. There is a presumption 
against intestacy, against double portions, against constructing 
merely precatory word* to import I trrnt, 81c One 1 >:t of tV L t*- i ft 
is L« be evpoondcO by anther. Interlineations ami alterations are 
prcsumrd to have been made al*cr, not a* in dredt brfore, rxreuci^n. 
Words are vippo^d lo be us*d in their strict and primary <xntt. 
Many word* and phrases, however t*ucli a* ,h money," ' residue 11 and 
" i»«U'.- " ■ wirfUi of relationship, have become invested with 

a technical mi-.imrjg. but there Ha* been a recent icmlrncv to irulude 

n." Evidence k*>l mi ' : Die 
■ ■ -. .-Jinbiguiry.Afid parol evideme of the 

K-rmi of a U< ■ ol Sugd-c* v. 

Lot4 St Lr*i\ 1 54- 

r-MOfe*. which 

m*j ' .ii.. ntrual 

< If. The main 




examples of the former class are revocation by burning, tearing. &c, 
by a later will, or by marriage of the testator (except as below), 
incapacity of the testator from insanity, infancy or legal disability 
(such as being a convict), undue influence and fraud, any one of 
which is ground for the court to refuse or revoke probate of a will. 
A will being ambulatory is always revocable, unless in one or two 
exceptional instances. Undue influence is a ground npon which 
frequent attempts are made to set aside wills. Its nature b well 
explained in a judgment of Lord Penzance's: " Pressure of whatever 
character, whether acting on the fears or the hopes, if so exerted as to 
overpower the volition without convincing the judgment, is a species 
of restraint under which no valid will can be made."' There is 
nothing corresponding to the querela inojfuiosi testaments, but un- 
natural provisions may be evidence of mental defect. The circum- 
stances appearing on the face of the will which make it open to ob- 
jection may either avoid it altogether or create a partial intestacy, 
the will remaining good as a whole. Where the will is not dufy 
executed, e.g. if it is a forgery or if it is not signed by the testator or 
the proper number of witnesses, the will is not admitted to probate at 
all. Where it contains devises or bequests bad in law, as in general 
restraint of marriage, or tending to create perpetuities, or contrary 
to public policy, or to some particular enactment, only the illegal 
part is void. A remarkable instance is a well-known case in which a 
condition subsequent in a devise was held void as against public 
policy, being a gift over of the estate devised in case the first devisee, 
the eldest son of an earl, did not before his death obtain the lapsed 
title of duke of Bridgewater.* 

There arc some wills of an exceptional kind which demand special 
notice. The King. — It was resolved in parliament in Richard ll.'s 
reign (1392) that the king, his heirs and successors, might lawfully 
make their testaments.* In some later cases parliamentary authority 
has been given to royal wills, in others not. The executors of 
Henry IV. were confirmed in their office by letters patent of Henry V.» 
those of Henry V. by parliament. The largest testamentary powers 
ever conferred on an English king were given to Henry VIII. by an 
act of 1 533-1 534. empowering him to limit and appoint thesr — 



to the crown by will, in default of children by Jane Seymour or any 
future wife. By 39 & 40 Geo. III. c. 88 the lung and his successor 
may devise or bequeath their private property.* No court, however, 
has jurisdiction to grant probate of the will of a king. Gnardian- 
shtp. — As a general rule wills deal with property, but even at common 
law a will simply appointing a guardian was good. The common law 
was superseded by an act of 1660. under which a father may dispose 
of the custody of his unmarried infant children by will. The 
Guardianship of Infants Act 1886 extended such powers in certain 
cases to the mother. Married Woman.— At common law a married 
woman could not (with a few exceptions) make a will without her 
husband's licence and consent, and this disability was specially pre- 
served by the Wills Acts of Henry VIII. and of 1837. A common 
mode of avoiding this difficulty was for the husband to contract before 
marriage to permit the wife to make an appointment disposing of 
personalty to a certain value. Courts of equity from an early time 
allowed her, under certain restrictions, to make a will of property 
held for her separate use. In some cases her husband could dispose 
of her property by will, in others not. The law as it existed previously 
to 1883 is now practically obsolete, the Married Women's Property 
Act 1882 enabling a married woman to dispose by will of any real or 
personal property as her separate property as a feme sole without the 
intervention of any trustee. The act also enables a married woman 
who is executrix of a will to act as if she were a Jc me sole. The 
Married Women's Property Act 1893 extended the act of 1882 by 
making it unnecessary for the will of a married woman to be re- 
executed or republished after the death of her husband. Alien. — 
Before 1870 an alien enemy resident in England could only dispose 
of property by will with the king's licence. The Naturalization Act 
1870 enables him to do so as fully as a natural -born British subject. 
But if he be an alien domiciled abroad he cannot avail himself of Lord 
Kingsdown's Act- (sec below). Soldier and Sailor — Wills of soldiers 
in actual military service, and of sailors, are subject to special legis- 
lation, and are excepted from the operation of the Wills Act. The 
privilege only applies to wills of personal estate. Such wills may 
usually be made when the testator has attained the age of fourteen, 
and are not revoked by marriage only but by marriage and the birth 
of a child. Wills of soldiers on an expedition may be made by un- 
attested writing or by nuncupative testament before two witnesses. 
Wills of petty officers and seamen in the navy, and of marines, as far 
as relates to their pay or prize-money, must be attested by an officer, 
and wills made by a seaman in the merchant service must, if made at 
sea, be attested by the master or mate, if made on land by a super- 
intendent of a mercantile marine office, a minister of religion, justice 
of the peace, or consular or customs officer. See the Merchant 
Shipping Act 1894. s. 177. The wills of prisoners of war are subject 
to special regulations, and the Admiralty may at its discretion waive 



* Hall v. Hall, L.R. 1 Prob. 481. 

4 Egerion v. Earl BrotonUno, 4 House of Lords Cases, 2 to. 

• See the Coll'eehon of Royal Wills printed for the Society of Anti- 
quaries by J. Nichols (1780). 



WILL 



657 



the due execution of wills in other instances. The effects of seamen, 
marines and soldiers, killed or dying in the service, are exempt 
from duty. Pay, wages, prize money and pensions due to persons 
employed in the navy may be paid out without probate where the 
whole assets do not exceed £32. The Board of Trade may at its dis- 
cretion dispense with probate of the will of a merchant seaman whose 
effects do not exceed £50 in value. By an act passed in 1868 the 
existing exemptions are extended to the sum of £loo in the case of 
civil service pay or annuities, of civil or military allowances charge- 
able to the army votes, and of army prize money. Will made under 
rtr. — A will made under a power of appointment is not revoked 
marriage when the real or personal estate thereby appointed 
would not m default of appointment pass to the testator's executor 
or administrator or to the next of kin. Before the Wills Act a will 
exercising a power of appointment had to conform to any special 
requisitions in the power, but since the act the power is duly exercised 
if executed and attested like an ordinary will. Registration. — In the 
register counties memorials of wills affecting lands in those counties 
must be registered. Member of friendly society, &c.-^Mcmbers of 
friendly, industrial and provident societies, depositors in savings 
banks, and servants in certain public offices, may under the pro- 
visions of numerous acta make a nomination to an amount not ex- 
ceeding £100. Such nomination is practically equivalent to a will, 
and may be made at the age of sixteen. 

At common law there could be no larceny of a will of lands. But 
now by the Larceny Act of 1861 stealing, injuring or concealing a 
will, whether of real or personal estate, is punishable with penal 
servitude for life. Forgery of a will (at one time a capital crime) 
renders the offender liable to the same penalty. Fraudulent con- 
cealment of a will material to the title by a vendor or mortgagor of 
land or chattels is, by the Law of Property Amendment Act 1859, a 
misdemeanour punishable by fine or imprisonment or both. It 
should be noticed that a contract to make a will containing pro- 
visions in favour of a certain person or certain persons is valid if it 
fulfil the requirements of the law regulating contract. A good 
example is Synte v. Synge (1894) 1 KB. 466. 

For death duties see Estate Duty, Legacy, Succession Duty. 

The principal authorities for the English law are, for the formalities, 
Sir E. V. Williams, Executors', Holdsworth and Vickers, Law of 
Succession; J. Williams, Wills and Succession; for the construction, 
the works of Sir James Wigram and of Messrs Jarman, F. V. 
Hawkins and Theobald. Precedents will be found in Hayes and 
Jarman's Concise forms of Wills, and in ordinary collections of pre- 
cedents in conveyancing. For comparative law see E. Lambert, 
he Rigime successoral (Paris, 1903). 

The act of 1837 applies to Ireland. The main difference between 
the law of the two countries is that in Ireland a bequest for masses 
. .._^ for the repose of the testator's soul is valid, provided that 
■■■■* the masses be public, in England such a bequest is void as 
tending to superstitious uses. 

Up to 1868 wills of immovables were not allowed in Scotland. The 
usual means of obtaining disposition of heritage after death was a 
- . . trust disposition and settlement by deed de praesenli, under 
iiiimnaa w j,i cn ^be truster disponed the property to trustees 
according to the trusts of the settlement, reserving a life interest. 
Thus something very similar to a testamentary disposition was 
secured by means resembling those employed in England before the 
Wills Act of Henry VIII. The main disadvantage of the trust dis- 
position was that it was liable to be overthrown by the heir, who 
could reduce ex capite kcti all voluntary deeds made to his prejudice 
within sixty days of the death of his ancestor. In 1868 the Titles to 
Land Consolidation Act made it competent to any owner of lands to 
settle the succession to the same in the event of death by testa- 
mentary or mortis causa deeds or writings. In 1871 reduction ex 
capite tecfi was abolished. A will of immovables must be executed 
with the formalities of a deed and registered to give title. The dis- 
ability of a woman as a witness was removed by the Titles to Land 
Consolidation Act. As to wills of movables, there are several im- 
portant points in which they differ from corresponding wills in 
England, the influence of Roman law being more marked,. Males 
may make a will at fourteen, females at twelve. A nuncupative 
legacy is good to the amount of £100 Scots (£8, 6s. 8d.). and a holo- 
graph testament is good without witnesses, but it must be signed by 
the testator, differing in this from the old Engtish holograph. By the 
Conveyancing Act 1874 such a will is presumed to have been executed 
on the date which it bears. Not all movables can be left, as in 
England. The movable property of the deceased is subject to jus 
relutae and legilim. See McLaren, Wills and Succession, for the law, 
and Judicial Styles for styles. 

United Stales.—By the constitutions of many states Jaws 
giving effect to informal or invalid wills are forbidden. The 
age of testamentary capacity varies very much. Eighteen is a 
common one. Full liberty of disposition is not universal Home- 
steads generally, and dower estates frequently, are not devisable. 
In some stales only a disposable portion of the property can 
be left, so that children cannot be dismherited without good 
cause, and in some children omitted in a will may stfll take 



their share. It is frequently provided that a certain amount 
must be left to the widow. Louisiana follows French law, by 
which the testator can under no circumstances alienate by will 
more than half his property if he leave issue or ascendants. In 
some states a married woman may not leave more than half her 
property away from her husband. Some require the husband's 
consent and subscription to make the will of a married woman 
valid. Nuncupative and holograph wills are in use. The 
former are confined to personalty and must generally be reduced 
to writing within a short time after the words are spoken. In 
Louisiana the mystic or sealed will still exists. The number of 
witnesses necessary for the validity of a will of any kind is 
usually two, sometimes three. Wilis of soldiers and sailors are 
privileged, as in England. There are several decisions of state 
courts that belief in spiritualism docs not of itself constitute 
testamentary incapacity. 

See Jarman, American edition by Randolph and Talcott. 

France.— The law is mainly contained in ss. 967-1074 of the 
Code Civil. Wills in France may be of three kinds: (1) holo- 
graph, which must be wholly written, dated and signed by the 
testator; (2) made as a public instrument, i.e. received. by two 
notaries before two witnesses or by one notary before four 
witnesses; this form of will must be dictated by the testator 
and written by the notary, must be read over to the testator 
in the presence of the witnesses and must be signed by testator 
and witnesses; (3) mystic, which are signed by the testator, 
then closed and sealed and delivered by him to a notary before 
six witnesses; the notary then draws up an account of the 
proceedings on the instrument which is signed by the testator, 
notary and witnesses. Legatees and their blood relations to 
the fourth degree may not be witnesses. Nuncupative wills 
are not recognised. Soldiers' and sailors' wills are subject to 
special rules as in most other countries. Full liberty of dis- 
position only exists where the testator has no ascendants or 
descendants, in other cases. his quanliU disponible is subject 
to reserve; if the testator has one child he may only dispose 
of half his estate, if two only one-third, if three or more only 
one-fourth; if he has no descendants but ascendants in both 
lines he may dispose of half, if ascendants in one line only he 
may dispose of three-fourths. The full age of testamentary 
capacity is twenty-one years, but minors over the age of sixteen 
may dispose by will of half of the estate of which they could 
dispose had they been of full age. There is no restriction against 
married women making wills. A contract to dispose of the 
succession is invalid, s. 791. 

The codes of the Latin races in Europe arc in general accord- 
ance with the French law. 

Germany. — Most of the law will be found in the BiirgerlUhes 
Gesetzbuch, ss. 2064-2273. A holograph will, either single or 
joint, is allowed. Other wills must be declared before a judge 
or notary or (outside Germany) a consul. Two witnesses are 
required, unless the witness be a notary or the registrar of the 
court, who is sufficient alone. The formalities may be relaxed 
in certain cases, such as imminent death, a state of siege, a 
prevailing epidemic, &c. Descendants, ascendants and the 
husband and wife, are entitled to compulsory portions (pflicht- 
leUsbercchtigi), But those prima fade entitled may be deprived 
of their share for certain specified kinds of misconduct. A con- 
tract to make any specified testamentary disposition is in- 
operative. But a contract of inheritance (Erbvertrog) made 
inter vivos by direct disposition is valid in certain cases and 
will operate on the death of the contractor. The modes of 
revocation are much the same as in England (except marriage). 
But there is one peculiar to Germany, the inconsistency of a will 
with an Erbvertrog; in such an event the will is whoDy or pro 
tanlo revoked. 

International Lav.— There are three main directions which the 
opinion of jurists and the practice of courts have taken, . (1) The 
whole property of the testator may be subjected to the law of hU 
domicii. To this effect is the opinion of Savignv and the German 
practice. Certain modifications have been made by modern law, 
especially by the Einfukrunrsgesett of 1 896. (2) The property may 
be subjected to the law of the place where it happens to be at the 



6S* 



WILLARD— W1LLESDEN 



time of the testator'* death. (3) The movable property may be sub- 
jected to the law of the domicilTthc immovable (including leaseholds) 
to the law of the place where it is situate, the lex loci rei sitae. England 
and the United States follow this rule. Testamentary capacity is 
generally governed by the law of the testator's domicil at the time 
of his death, the form of the instrument in most countries either by 
the law of his domicil or the law of the place where the will was made, 
at his option. The old rule of English taw was to allow the former 
alternative only. The law was altered for the United Kingdom in 
1861 by the Wills Act 1861 (known as Lord Kingsdpwns Act), 
by which a will made out of the United Kingdom by a British subject 
is, as far as regards personal estate, good if made according to the 
forms required by the law of the place where it was made, or by the 
law of the testator's domicil at the time of making it, or by the law 
of the place of his domicil of origin. Subsequent change of domicil 
does not avoid such a wilL Another act passed on the same day, the 
Domicile Act 1861, enacted that by convention with any foreign 
government foreign domicil with regard to wills could not be acquired 
by a testator without a year's residence and a written declaration 
of intention to become domiciled. By the same act foreign consuls 
may by convention have certain authority over the wills and property 
of subjects of foreign states dying in England. In the United States 
some states have adopted the narrow policy of enacting by statute 
the old common law rule, and providing that no will is valid unless 
made in the form required by the law of the state of the testator's 
domicil. The capacity of the testator, revocation and construction 
of a will, are governed by the law of the domicil of the testator at the 
time of his death — except in cases affected by Lord Kingsdown's 
Act, as he must be supposed to have used language in consonance 
with that law, unless indeed he express himself in technical language 
of another country. A good instance is Groos' Case (1904), Prob. 269, 
where it was held that the will of a Dutch woman (at the time of her 
death domiciled in England) duly made in Holland was not revoked 
by her marriage, that being no ground of revocation by the law of 
Holland. 1 The persons who are to take under a will are decided by 
different rules according as the property is movable or immovable, 
the former being governed by the law of the domicil, the latter by the 
tex loci ret sitae. It was held, however, in 1881 by the court of appeal 
in England that, under the will of an Englishman domiciled in 
Holland, leaving personal property to children, children legitimated 
per subsequent matrimonium could take, as they were legitimate by 
the law of Holland, though not by the law of England (re Goodmans 
Trusts, 17 Ch. D. 266). This principle was carried further in re 
Grey's Trusts (1802), 3 Ch. 88, where it was held that a legitimated 
child was entitled to share in a devise of English realty. But it is 
to be noted that a person born out of lawful wedlock, though legiti- 
mated, cannot succeed as heir to real estate in England (BtrtwkutU 
v. Vardilt, 2 CI. and F. 899). A will duly executed abroad is generally 
required to be clothed with the authority of a court of the country 
where any property affected by the will is situate. • W.) 

WILLARD. FRANCES ELIZABETH (1839-1898), American 
reformer, was born at Churchvflle, Monroe county, New York, 
on the 28th of September 1839. She attended the Milwaukee 
Female College in 1857 and in 1859 graduated at the North- 
western Female College at Evanston, Illinois. She then became 
a teacher, and in 1871-1874 she was president and professor 
of aesthetics of the Woman's College at Evanston, which became 
part of the North-Western University in 1873. In 1874 she 
became corresponding secretary and from 1879 until her death 
was president of the National Woman's Christian Temperance 
Union, and from 1887 until her death was president of*the 
World's Woman's Christian Temperance Union. She first spoke 
In favour of woman's suffrage in 1877; and in 1884 she was 
a member of the Executive Committee of the Prohibition party. 
In 1890 she was elected, president of the Woman's National 
Council, which represented nearly all of the women's societies in 
America. She was one of the founders of Out Union, a New 
York publication in the interests of the National Woman's 
Christian Temperance Union, and of the Signal (after 1882 the 
Union Signal), which she edited in 1892-1808 and which was 
the Illinois organ of the union. She died in New York City 
on the x8th of February 1808. 

With Mary A. Livermore she edited A Woman of the Century 
(Buffalo, N.Y., 1893), which includes a sketch of ber life; and she 
published Nineteen Beautiful Years (1864), a life of her sis! ~ 



to Win: 



r sister; How 



A Book for Girls (1886), Glimpses of Fifty Years (1889), 

and, in collaboration with H. M. Winslow, Mrs 5. J. white and others, 

->..». - . — , v g^ A A Gordon, The Beautiful Life 

iiMgw, 1898), with an introduction by Lady 

M. Thayer, Women Who Win (New York, 




will be found set out in the case. It is in 
that of France. 



WILLEMITE, a mineral consisting of zinc orthosflieate, 
Zn s SiO«, crystallizing in the parallel-faced hemihcdral class 
of the rbombohedral system. Crystals have the form of hexa- 
gonal prisms terminated by rbombohedral planes: there are 
distinct cleavages parallel to the prism-faces and to the base. 
Granular and cleavage masses are of more common occurrence. 
The colour varies considerably, being colourless, white, greenish- 
yellow, apple-green, flesh-red, &c. The hardness is sJ, and the 
specific gravity 3-0-4*2. A variety containing much manganese 
replacing zinc is called " troostite." Willemite occurs at Sterling 
Hill, Sussex county, and Franklin Furnace in New Jersey, 
where it is associated with other zinc ores (franklinite and 
zindte) in crystalline limestone. It has been found at only 
a few other localities, one of which is near Liege, and for this 
reason the mineral was named after William I. of the Nether- 
lands. Under the influence of radium radiations, willemite 
fluoresces with a brilliant green colour. (L. J. S.) 

WILLEMS, FLORENT JOSEPH MARIE (1823-1905), Belgian 
painter, was born at Liege on the 8th of January 1823. He had 
no regular tuition in painting, but learnt by copying and restoring 
old pictures at Malines, where he lived from 1832. He made 
his debut at the Brussels Salon in 1842 with a " Music Party " 
and an "Interior of a 17th-century Guard-room" in the style 
of Terburg and Metsu. Soon afterwards he settled in Paris, 
where his pictures enjoyed considerable popularity under the 
second empire. Among his most famous works may be men- 
tioned " The Wedding Dress " (Brussels Gallery), " La Fete des 
grands-parents " (Brussels Gallery), " Le Baise-main " (Mme. 
Cardon's collection, Brussels), "Farewell" (Willems coll., 
Brussels), " The Arches of the Peace " (Delahaye colL, Antwerp) 
and "The Widow" (engraved by Desvachez). He died at 
Neuilly-sur-Seine on the 23rd of October 1905. 

WILLEMS. JEAN FRANCOIS (1 793-1846), Flemish writer, 
began life in the office of a notary at Anvcrs. He devoted bis 
leisure to literature, and in 1810 he gained a prize for poetry 
with an ode in celebration of the peace of Tilsit. He hailed with 
enthusiasm the constitution of the kingdom of the Netherlands, 
and the revival of Flemish literature; and he published a 
number of spirited and eloquent writings in support of the 
claims of the native tongue of the Netherlands. His political 
sympathies were with the Orange party at the revolution of 
1830, and these views led him into trouble with the provisional 
'government. Willems, however, was soon recognized as the 
unquestioned leader of the Flemish popular movement, the chief 
plank in whose platform he made the complete equality of the 
languages in the government and the law courts. He died it 
Ghent in 1846. 

Among his writings, which were very numerous, the most im- 
portant were: Les Sciences el les arts (181 6), Aux Beiges (1818); 
Etude sur les origines et Vhistoire des tempt primttifs de la vale d'Anters 
(1828); Melanges de literature et d'hxsUnre (1829); besides several 
learned criticafeditions of old Flemish texts. 

WILLESDEN, an urban district in the Harrow parliamentary 
division of Middlesex, England, suburban to London, lying 
immediately outside the boundary of the county of London 
(boroughs of Hammersmith and Kensington). Fop. (x88i) 
27r453i.(?ooi) 114,811. It has increased greatly as a residential 
district^ mainly of the working classes. There are, moreover, 
considerable railway works attached to Willesden Junction, 
where the suburban lines of the London & North Western, North 
London, and Great Western railways connect with the main line 
of the first-named company. Remains of Norman building have 
been discovered in the church of St Mary, which is of various 
dates, and has been much enlarged in modern times. Several 
ancient monuments and brasses are retained. There is a Jewish 
cemetery in Willesden Lane. The adjoining residential districts 
are Hariesden on the south, Kilbum and Brondesbury on the 
east, Cricklewood and Neasden (with the works of the Metro- 
politan railway) on the north. 

At Domesday the manor of Willesden and Hariesden was held 
by the canons of St Paul's. In the 12th century it was formed 
into eight distinct manors, seven of which were held by the same 
number of prebendarws. . A shrine or image of St Mary (Our 



WILLETTE— WILLIAM I. (ENGLAND) 



659 



Lady of Wulesden) was in the 15th century an object of pilgrim- 
age, but by the middle of the century following the ceremonies 
had fallen into abuse, and the shrine was suppressed. 

WILLBTTB, LEON ADOLPHB (1857- ). French painter, 
illustrator, caricaturist, and lithographer, was born in Chalons- 
sur-Marne. He studied for four years at the Ecole des Beaux- 
Arts under Caband— a training which gave him a unique position 
among the graphic humorists of France. Whether comedy or 
tragedy, dainty triviality or political satire, his work is instinct 
with the profound sincerity of the artist. He set Pierrot upon a 
lofty pedestal among the imaginary heroes of France, and 
established Mimi Pinson, frail, lovable, and essentially good- 
hearted, in the affections of the nation. WiHctte is at once the 
modern Watteau of the pencil, and the exponent of sentiments 
that move the more emotional section of the public. Always a 
poet, and usually gay, fresh, and delicate, in his presentation of 
idyDs exquisitely dainty and characteristically Gallic, illustrating 
the more " charming" side of love, often pure and sometimes 
unnecessarily materialistic, Willette frequently reveals himself 
bitter and fierce, even ferocious, in his hatreds, hcing a violent 
though at the same time a generous pa r t i sa n ;of political ideas, 
furiously compassionate with love and pity for the people — 
whether they be ground down under the heel of political oppres- 
sion, or are merely the victims of unrequited love, suffering all 
the pangs of graceful anguish that are born of scornful treatment. 
There is charm even in his thrilling apotheosis of the guillotine, 
and in the introduction into his caricatures of the figure of Death 
itself. The artist was a prolific contributor to the French illus- 
trated, press under the pseudonyms " Cemoi," "Pierrot, 
" Louison," " Bene," and " Nox," but more often under his own 
name. He illustrated Meiandri's La Pierrot* and Les Ciboullis 
d'avril, and has published his own Pawre Pierrot and other 
works, in which be tells his stories in scenes in the manner of 
Busch. He decorated several " brasseries artistiques " with 
wall-paintings, stained glass, &c, notably Le Chat noir and 
La Palette d'or, and he painted the highly imaginative ceiling 
for La Cigale music balL His characteristically fantastic " Parce 
Domino" was shown in the Franco-British Exhibition in 1008. 
A remarkable collection of his works was exhibited in 1888. 
His " Valmy " is in the Luxembourg, Paris. 

WILLIAM (A.S. Wilkdm, O. Norse VUkWmr; O. H. Ger. 
WiOoietm, WUlahalm, M. H. Ger. WUUkelm, WiUckalm, Mod.Ger. 
Wilkdm; Du. WiUem; O. Ft. VUlclme, Mod. Fr. CuiUcume; 
from " will," Goth, vilja, and " helm," Goth, kiim, Old Norse 
ktilmr, meaning possibly "one who wills to protect"), a 
msfinilinr proper name borne by many European sovereigns 
and others, of whom the more important are treated below in the 
following order:— (1) kings of England and Scotland, (2) 
Other sovereigns in the alphabetical order of their states. (3) 
Other ruling princes. (4) Prelates, Chroniclers, &c. 

WILLIAM I. (1027 or 1028-1087), king of England, surnamed 
the Conqueror, was born in 1027 or 1028. He was the bastard 
son of Robert the Devil, duke of Normandy, by Arietta, the 
daughter of a tanner at Falaise. In 1034 Robert resolved on a 
pilgrimage to Jerusalem. Having no legitimate son be induced 
the Norman barons to acknowledge William as his successor. 
They kept their engagement when Robert died on his journey 
(1035), though the young duke-elect was a mere boy. But the 
next twelve years was a period of the wildest anarchy. Three ' 
of William's guardians were murdered; and for some lime 
he was kept in strict concealment by his relatives, who feared 
that he might experience the same fate. Trained in a hard 
school, he snowed a precocious aptitude for war and government. 
He was but twenty years old when he stamped out, with the help 
of bis overlord, Henry I. of France, a serious rising in tbe districts 
of the Bessin and Cotentin, the object of which was to put in his 
place his kinsman, Guy of Brionne. Accompanied by King Henry, 
he met and overthrew the rebels at Val-des-Dunes near Caen 
(1047). It was by no means his last encounter with Norman 
traitor*, but for the moment the victory gave him an assured 
position. Next year he joined Henry in attacking their common 
enemy, Geoffrey Martel, count of Anjou. Geoffrey occupied the 



border fortress of Alencon with the good will of the inhabitants. 
But the duke recovered the place after a severe siege, and inflicted 
a terrible vengeance on the defenders, who had taunted him with 
his base birth; he also captured the castle of Domfront from the 
Angevins (1049). 

In 1051 the duke visited England, and probably received from 
his kinsm a n , Edward the Confessor, a promise of the English 
succession. Two years later he strengthened the claims which he 
had thus established by marrying Matilda, a daughter of Baldwin 
V. of Flanders, who traced her descent in the female line from 
Alfred the Great. This union took place in defiance of a prohibi- 
tion which had been promulgated, in 1040, by the papal council, 
of Reims. But the affinity of William and Matilda was so remote 
that political rather than moral considerations may have deter- 
mined the pope's action. The marriage was zealously opposed 
by Archbishop Malger of Rouen and Lanfranc, the prior of Bee; 
but Lanfranc was persuaded to intercede with the Curia, and 
Pope Nicholas IL at length granted the needful dispensation 
(1059).' By way of penance William and his wife founded the 
abbeys of 4 Stephen and the Holy Trinity at Caen. The political 
difficulties caused by the marriage were more serious. Alarmed 
at the dose connexion of Normandy with Flanders, Henry I. 
renounced the alliance which had long existed between the Capets 
and the house of R0U0. He joined forces with Geoffrey Martel 
in' order to crush the duke, and Normandy was twice invaded b} 
the allies. In each case William decided the campaign by a signal 
victory. The invasion of 1054 was checked by the battle of 
Mortemer; in 1058 the French rearguard was cut to pieces at 
Varaville on the Dive, in the act of crossing the stream. Between 
these two wars William aggrandized his power at the expense 
of Anjou by annexing Mayenne. Soon after the campaign of 
Varaville both Henry L and Geoffrey Martel were removed from 
his path by death (1060). He at once recovered Maine from the 
Angevins, nominally in the interest of Herbert II., the lawful 
count, who became his vassal. In 1062, however, Herbert died 
and Maine was formally annexed to Normandy. This acquisition 
brought the Norman frontier almost to the Loire and isolated 
Brittany, long coveted by the Norman dukes, from the rest of 
France. 

About 1064 the accidental visit of Harold to the Norman 
court added another link to the chain of events by which William's 
fortunes were connected with England. Whatever doubt hangs 
over tbe details of tbe story, it seems dear that the earl made 
a promise to support the claims of his host upon the English 
succession. This promise be was invited to fulfil in 1066, after 
the Confessor's death and his own coronation. Harold's perjury 
formed the chid excuse for the Norman Conquest of England, 
which in reality was a piratical venture resembling that of the 
sons of Tancred d'Hautcvillc in Lower Italy. William had some 
difficulty in securing the help of his barons. When consulted 
in a great council at Lillebonne they returned an unfavourable 
reply,* and it was necessary to convince them individually by 
threats and persuasions. Otherwise the conditions were favour- 
able. William secured the benevolent neutrality of the emperor 
Henry IV.; tbe influence of the archdeacon Hildebrand obtained 
for the- expedition' the solemn approval of Pope Alexander II. 
Philip I. of France was a minor under the guardianship of 
William's father-in-law, the count of Flanders. With Tostig, 
the banished brother of Harold, William formed an alliance 
which proved of the utmost service. The duke and his Normans 
were enabled, by Tostig's invasion of northern England, to land 
unmolested at Pevensey on the 28th of September 1066. On 
the 14th of October a crushing defeat was inflicted on Harold 
at the battle of Senlac or Hastings; and on Christmas Day 
William was crowned at Westminster. 

Five years more were to elapse before he became master 
of the west and north. Early in 1067 be made a progress through 
parts of the south, receiving submissions, disposing of the lands 
of those who had fought against him, and ordering castles to 
be built; he then crossed tbe Channel to celebrate his triumph 
in Normandy. Disturbances at once occurred in Northumbria, 
on the Welsh marrbrs and in Kent; and he was compelled to 



66o 



WILLIAM I. (ENGLAND) 



return in December. The year 1068 was spent in military 
expeditions against Exeter and York, in both of which the 
adherents of Harold had found a welcome. In 1069 Robert of 
Comines, a Norman to whom William had given the earldom 
of Northumberland, was murdered by the English at Durham; 
the north declared for Edgar Atheling, the last male representa- 
tive of the West-Saxon dynasty; and Sweyn Estrithson of 
Denmark sent a fleet to aid the rebels. Joining forces, the Danes 
and English captured York, although it was defended by two 
Norman castles. The position seemed critical; but, fortunately 
for the king, the south and west gave no effective support to 
the rebellion. Marching rapidly on York he drove the Danes 
to their ships; and the city was then reduced by a blockade. 
The king ravaged the country as far north as Durham with such 
completeness that traces of devastation were still to be seen 
sixty years later. But the English leaders were treated with 
politic clemency, and the Danish leader, Jarl Osbiorn, was 
bribed to withdraw his fleet. Early in 1070 the reduction of the 
north was completed by a march over the moors to Chester, 
which had not hitherto submitted but was now placei under an 
earl of William's choice. From this point we hear no more of 
general rebellions against the foreign rule. In 1071 a local rising 
in the fens caused some trouble. An outlawed Englishman, 
Hereward by name, fortified the Isle of Ely and attracted a 
number of desperate spirits to his side; amongst others came 
Morcar, formerly earl of Northumbria, who had been dis- 
appointed in the hopes which he based on William's personal 
favour. The king in person undertook the siege of Ely, which 
proved unexpectedly difficult. But the failure of the insurgents 
was a foregone conclusion. 

Of the measures which William took to consolidate his 
authority we have many details; but the chronological order 
of his proceedings is obscure. The redistribution of land appears 
to have proceeded pari passu with the reduction of the country; 
and at every stage of the conquest each important follower 
received a new reward. Thus were formed the vast but straggling 
fiefs which are recorded in Domesday. The great earldoms 
of the West-Saxon period were allowed to lapse; the new earls, 
for the most part closely connected with William by the ties of 
blood or friendship, were lords of single shires; and only on the 
marches of the kingdom was the whole of the royal jurisdiction 
delegated to such feudatories. William's writs show not only 
that he kept intact the old system of governing through the 
sheriffs and the courts of shire and hundred, but also that he 
found it highly serviceable. Those whom he enfeoffed with 
land held it according to the law of Norman feudalism, which 
was already becoming precise. They were thus brought into 
close personal relations with the king. But he forced the most 
powerful of them to acknowledge the jurisdiction of the ancient 
local courts; and the old fyrd-system was maintained in order 
that the crown might not be wholly dependent on feudal levies. 
Though his forest-laws and his heavy taxation caused bitter 
complaints, William soon won the respect of his English subjects. 
They appear to have accepted him as the. lawful heir of the 
Confessor; and they regarded him as their natural protector 
against feudal oppression. This is to be explained by his regard 
for legal forms, by his confirmation of the " laws of Edward " 
and by the support which he received from the church. Domes- 
day Book shows that in his confiscations he can have paid little 
attention to abstract justice. Almost every English landholder 
of importance was dispossessed, though only those who had 
actually borne arms against William should have been so treated. 
As far as possible Englishmen were excluded from all responsible 
positions both in church and state. After 1071 our accounts 
of William's doings become jejune and disconnected. Much of 
his attention must have been engrossed by the work of adminis- 
tration, 4&k A j * M&faKll the help of those elaborate institu- 
tiootLJiMSHHsfltt *Woh wwe perfected by Henry I. 

1 of note. William 

1 his right-hand man 

f Wanders (1071). Odo, 

*, lost favour and was 




finally thrown into prison on a charge of disloyalty (ro8a). 
Another half-brother, Robert of Mortain, earl of Cornwall, 
showed little capacity. Of the king's sons Robert, though 
titular count of Maine, was kept in leading strings; and even 
William Rufus, who was in constant attendance on his father, 
never held a public office. The Conqueror reposed much con* 
fidence in two prelates, Lanfranc of Canterbury and Geoffrey 
of Coutances. They took an active part in the civil no less than 
the ecclesiastical government. But the king himself worked 
hard in hearing lawsuits, in holding councils and ceremonious 
courts, in travelling between England and Normandy, and 
finally in conducting military operations. 

In 1072 he undertook a campaign against Malcolm, king of 
Scots, who had married Margaret, the sister of Edgar Atheling, 
and was inclined to promote English rebellions. When William 
reached the Forth his adversary submitted, did homage as a 
vassal, and consented to expel Edgar Atheling, who was subse- 
quently endowed with an English estate and admitted to 
William's favour. From Scotland the king turned 'to Maine, 
which had profited by the troubles of 1069 to expel the Norman 
garrisons. Since then the Manceaux had fallen out among 
themselves. The barons supported Azo of Liguria, the lawful 
successor of Herbert II.; the citizens of Le Mans set up a 
commune, expelled Azo's representatives and made war on the 
barons. William had therefore no difficulty in reducing the 
country, even though Le Mans was assisted by Folk of Anjon 
(1073). ^ 1075 the king's attention was claimed by a conspiracy 
of the earls of Hereford and Norfolk, in which the Englishman 
Waltheof, earl of Northampton, was implicated to some degree. 
The rebels were defeated by Lanfranc in the king's absence; 
but William returned to settle the difficult question of their 
punishment, and tb stamp out the last sparks of disaffection. 
The execution of Waltheof, though strictly in accordance with 
the English law of treason, was a measure which he sanctioned 
after long hesitation, and probably from considerations of 
expediency rather than justice. This severity to a man who 
was generally thought innocent, is one of the dark stains on his 
career. In 1076 he invaded Brittany to get possession of the 
fugitive earl of Norfolk; but Philip of France came to the aid of 
the Bretons, and William gave way before his suzerain. The 
next few years were troubled by a quarrel between the king and 
his eldest son. Robert fled from Normandy and after aimless 
wanderings obtained from King Philip the castle of Gerberoi, 
in the Beauvaisis, from which he harassed the Norman marches. 
William besieged Gerberoi in 1070, and was wounded in single 
combat by his son. A little later they were reconciled; bat the 
reconciliation was short-lived; to the end of the reign Robert 
was a source of trouble. In the years 1083-1085 there was a 
second rising in Maine which was not laid to rest until William 
had granted liberal terms to the leader, Hubert of Beaumont. 
In 108s news arrived that Cnut the Saint, king of Denmark, 
was preparing to assert the claims of his house in England. 
The project fell through, but gave occasion for the famous 
moot at Salisbury in which William took an oath of direct 
allegiance from " all the land-sitting men that were in England " 
(1086). While the danger was still impending he took in hand the 
compilation of Domesday Book. The necessary inquiries were 
.ordered at the. Christmas Council of 1085, and carried out in 
the following year. It is probable that William never saw the 
Domesday Book as we possess it, since he left England in the 
summer of 1086 and never returned. In 1087 he invaded the 
French Vexin to retaliate on the garrison of Mantes for raids 
committed on his territory. He sacked and burned the town. 
But as he rode out to view the ruins his horse plunged on the 
burning cinders and inflicted on him an internal injury. He 
was carried in great suffering to Rouen and there died on the- 
oth of September 1087. He was buried In St Stephen's at Caen. 
A plain slab still marks the place of his tomb, before the high 
altar; but his bones were scattered by the Huguenots in 1562. 

In a profligate age William was distinguished by the purity 
of his married life, by temperate habits and by a sincere piety. 
His most severe measures were taken in cold blood, aa part of 



WILLIAM II. (ENGLAND) 



bis general policy; but his natural disposition wi 
unnecessary bloodshed or cruelty. His. one act of 
devastation, the clearing of the New Forest, has been grossly 
exaggerated. He was avaricious, but his church policy (see 
actide English Histoxy) shows a disinterestedness as rare as 
it was honourable. In personal appea r anc e he was tall and 
corpulent, of a di g nified presence and extremely powerful 
physique, with a bald forehead, dos e ' cropped heir and short 
moustaches. 

By Matilda, who died in Normandy on the 3rd of November 
1083, William had four sons, Robert, duke of Normandy, 
Richard, who was killed whilst hunting, and the future kings, 
William II. and Henry I., and five or six daughters, faM»indi«g 
Adela, who married Stephen, count of Bkris. 

Of the original authorities the most important are 'the Casta 
WUUimi, by William of Poitiers (ed. A. Duchesne in Hisioriae 
Normounerum scripterts, Paris, 1619); the Winchester, Worcester 
and Peterborough texts of the Anglo-Saxon Chronicle (ed. B. Thorpe, 
" Rolls " series, 2 vols., 1 86 1, and also C. Plummer, 2 vols., Oxford, 
1892-1899); William of Malmcsbury's De testis return (ed. W. 
Stubbs, u Rolls" series, 2 vols.. 1887-1 889) ; William of Iumieges' 
Historia Normannomm (ed. A, Duchesne, op. cit.); Ordencus 
Vitalis' Historia etcle tiashea (ed. A. le Prevost, Soc. de Fhistorie de 
France, 5 vols., Paris, 1838-1855). Of modern works the most 
elaborate is E. A. Freeman's History of the Norman Conquest, vols, 
iil-v. (Oxford. 1870-1876). Domesday Book was edited in 1783- 
1816 by H. Farley and Sir H. Ellis in four volumes. Of commeatanw 
the following are important: Domesday Studies (ed. P. E. Dove, a 
vols., London, 1888-1891); Feudal England, by J. H. Round 
(London, 1895); Domesday Book and Beyond, by F. W. Maitland 
(Cambridge, 1807); Engluk Society m tie Bleeentk Century, by P. 
Vtaogradoff (Oxford, 1908). See also F. M. Stenton, WiWam ike 
Conqueror (1008). (H. W. C D.) 

WILLIAM IL (c. 1056-1100), king of England, suraamed 
Rufus, was the third son of William I. by his queen Matilda of 
Flanders. Rufus was born some years before the conquest 
of England, but the exact date is uncertain. He seems to have 
been bis father's favourite son, and constantly appears in the 
Conqueror's company, although like his brothers he was carefully 
deluded from any share in the government either of England 
or Normandy. A squabble with Rufus was the immediate cause 
of Robert's first rupture with the Conqueror; in the ensuing 
civil war we find Rufus bearing arms on the royal side (1077- 
1080). On this death-bed the Conqueror was inclined to dis- 
inherit his eldest son in favour of Rufus, who, by the early death 
of Prince Richard, was now left second in the order of succession. 
The king's advisers, however, used their Influence to obtain a 
partition; Normandy was accordingly bequeathed to Robert, 
while Rufus was designated as the son on whom the Conqueror 
desired that the kingdom of England should devolve. With 
the help of Lanfranc the English were easily induced to accept 
this arrangement. Rufus was crowned at Westminster on the 
aotn of September 1087, fifteen days after the death of his father. 

It may be in part the fault of our authorities that the reign 
of Rufus presents itself to us as a series of episodes between 
which the connexion is often of the slightest. In his domestic 
administration we can trace a certain continuity of purpose, and 
in his dealings with the Welsh and Scots he proceeded, though 
intermittently, along the broad lines of policy which his father 
had marked out. Beyond the Channel he busied himself with 
schemes, first for the reunion of England and Normandy, then 
for the aggrandisement of Normandy at the expense of France. 
But his attention was perpetually distracted by the exigencies 
of the moment. He threw himself into each particular design 
with unreflecting impetuosity, but never completed whet had 
been well begun. The violence, the irregularity, the shameless- 
ttess of his private life are faithfully reflected in his public career. 
Even in cases where his general purpose could be justified, his 
methods of execution were crudely conceived, brutal and short- 
sighted. Rufus may well stand as the typical product of early 
feudalism. He was not without valour or glimmerings of chivalry, 
hut perfidious to his equals, oppressive to his subjects, contemptu- 
ous of religion; with no sense of his responsibilities, and possessed 
by a fixed determination to exact the last farthing of his rights. 
The first year of his reign was troubled by a general conspiracy 



661 

among the baronage, who took up arms far Robert in the name 
of the hereditary principle, but with the secret design of sub- 
stituting a weak and indolent for a ruthless and energetic 
sovereign. Local risings in Norfolk, Somerset and the Welsh 
marches were easily repressed by the king's lieutenants. The 
castles of Kent and Sussex offered a more formidable resistance, 
since their lords were In direct communication with Robert of 
Normandy, and were led by the able Odo of Bayeux (©.».), the 
king's uncle, who had been released from prison at the opening 
of the reign. Rufus, however, made an earnest appeal to the 
native English, promising good laws, the abolition of unjust 
taxes and redress for those who had suffered by the afforestments 
of the late king. These promises, which he never attempted 
to fulfil, served the purpose of the moment. Followed by large 
contingents of the national militia he successfully laid siege to 
the strongholds of the rebels. They were leniently treated, and 
the arch-conspirator, Odo of Bayeux, left England under a 
safe-conduct to sow fresh seeds of discord in Normandy. But 
Rufus resolved to take vengeance on his brother, and two yean 
later inva^d eastern Normandy. Encountering tytle resistance 
—tor under Robert's rule the duchy had relapsed into a state 
of anarchy— lie might hav^ expelled the duke with no great 
trouble. But la 1001 a treaty wss hastily patched up. Rufus 
retained the eastern marches of the duchy, and also received 
certain seaports. In return he undertook to aid Robert in 
reducing the rebellious county of Maine, and in recovering the 
Cotentin from their younger brother, Henry Beauderk, to whom 
it had been pledged by the impecunious duke. The last part of 
the agreement was duly executed. But Rufus then recrossed 
the Channel to chastise the Scots who in his absence bad raided 
the north country. By a march to the Firth of Forth he vindi- 
cated English honour; Malcolm III. of Scotland prudently 
purchased his withdrawal, by doing homage (Aug. 1001) on the 
same terms which William I. had imposed in 107s. Next year 
Rufus broke the treaty by seizing the stronghold of Carlisle 
and the other lands held or claimed by Malcolm in Cumberland 
and Westmorland. Malcolm in vain demanded satisfaction; 
while attempting reprisals on Northumberland he was slain m 
an obscure skirmish (1003). Rufus immediately put forward a 
candidate for the vacant throne; and this policy, though at 
first unsuccessful, finally resulted in the accession of Edgar 
(1097), a son of Malcolm, who had acknowledged the English 
overlordship. Carlisle remained an English possession; in the 
next reign Cumberland and Westmorland appear as* shires in 
the accounts of the Exchequer. The Scottish policy of Rufus, 
though legally unjustifiable, was thus comparatively successful. 
In dealing with the Welsh he wss less fortunate. Three cam- 
paigns which be conducted in North Wales, during 1095 and 
1007, yielded no tangible result. The expansion of the Welsh 
marches in this reign was due to the enterprise of individual 
adventurers. 

The affairs of Wales and Scotland did not prevent Rufus 
from resuming hut designs on Normandy at the first opportunity. 
Robert was rash enough to reproach his brother with non- 
fulfilment of the terms arranged in 1091; and Rufus seised the 
excuse for a second invasion of the duchy (1094). Less prosper- 
ous than the first, and interrupted by a baronial conspiracy, 
which kept Rufus in England for the whole of 1095, this enter- 
prise found an unexpected termination. Robert resolved to 
go upon Crusade and, to obtain the necessary funds, gave 
Normandy in pledge to his brother (1006). There can be no 
doubt that Rufus intended to remain in lasting possession of 
this rich security. The interests of Normandy at once became 
the first consideration of his policy. In 1008- 1099 he recovered 
Maine at the cost of a vast expenditure on mercenaries, snd 
commenced operations for the recovery of the Vexin. Early in 
1 100 he accepted a proposal, made by William IX. of Aquitaine, 
that he should take over that duchy on terms similar to those 
arranged in the case of Normandy. Contemporaries were 
startled at the rapid piugiess of the king's ambitions, and saw 
the direct interposition of heaven in the fate which cut them 
short. On the snd of August 1100 Rufus fell, in the New 



662 



WILLIAM III. (ENGLAND) 



Forest, the victim of an arrow from an unknown hand. The 
common story names Walter Tire!, who was certainly close at 
band and fled the country without venturing to abide the issue 
of a trial. But a certain Ralph of Aix is also accused; and 
Tirel, from a safe distance, solemnly protested his innocence. 

It remains to notice the main features of the domestic ad- 
ministration which made the names of William and his minister, 
Ralph Flambard, infamous. Respecting the grievances of the 
laity we have few specific details. But we are told that the 
" moots " all over England were " driven " in the interests of 
the king; which perhaps means that aids were extorted from 
the shire-courts. We also learn that the forest-laws were 
rigorously administered; that the king revived, for certain 
offences, the death-penalty which his father had abolished; 
that all men were vexed by unjust gelds and the feudal classes 
by unscrupulous misinterpretations of the customs relating to 
the incidents of wardship, marriage and relief. On one occasion 
the militia were summoned in considerable numbers for a Norman 
expedition, which was no part of their duty; but when they 
arrived at the sea-coast they were bidden to hancLover their 
journey money and go home. The incident is not uninstructive 
as a side-light on the king's finance. As to the' oppression of 
the church we are more fully informed; after allowing for 
exaggeration there still remains evidence enough to prove that 
the ecclesiastical policy of Rufus was unscrupulously venal. 
Vacant sees and abbacies were either kept for years in the hands 
of the king, who claimed the right of a feudal guardian to 
appropriate the revenues so long as the vacancy continued; 
or they were openly sold to the highest bidder, lite history of 
Anselm's relations with the king is fully narrated by the bio- 
grapher Eadmer. Anselm received the see of Canterbury in 
1093, after it had been in the king's hands for upwards of 
four years. William made the appointment in a moment of 
repentance, when sick and at death's door. But he resented 
Anselm's demand for full restitution of the temporalities and 
his refusal to make any payment, in the nature of an aid or 
relief, which might be construed as simoniacal. Other grounds 
of quarrel were found in the reproofs which the primate aimed 
at the vices of the court, and in his requests for leave to hold a 
church-council and initiate reforms. Finally, in 1095, Anselm 
exasperated the king by insisting on his right to recognize 
Urban II. as the lawful pope. By the " customs " of the Con- 
queror it had been the rule that no pope should be recognized 
in England without the king's permission; and Rufus was 
unwilling that the English Church should be committed to 
either party in the papal schism which had already lasted 
fifteen years. Anselm, on the other hand, asserted that he had 
accepted the primacy on the distinct condition that be should 
be allowed to acknowledge Urban. The dispute came before a 
great council which was held at Rockingham (Feb. 25, 1095). 
The king demanded that the assembly should adjudge Anselm 
guilty of contumacy, and was supported by the bishops. The 
lay barons, however, showed their ill-will towards the king's 
general policy by taking Anselm's part. Rufus was forced to 
give way. He recognized Urban, but entered upon intrigues 
at Rome to procure the suspension of the archbishop. Finding 
that Urban would not betray a loyal supporter, the king fell 
back upon his authority as a feudal suzerain. He taxed Anselm 
with having failed to provide a satisfactory quota of knights 
for the Welsh war (1097). The archb*'shcp. seeing that he was 
never to be left in peace, and despairing of an opportunity to 
effect the reforms on which his heart was set, ckmantfrr ,-Rcmly 
thai he should be allowed Lo leave England for the purpose 
of v Liking Urban, fiolh the king and the barons iusprctcd 
that this was the first step towards a& 
jurisdiction against (bat of 1 1 j c- royal oou/l, 
refused; but ultimately, a* 
demand, he was sufficed to 
same petty insult* 00 his vwtf 
king's apparent clcmrnty 
estates of the arch? 
for the future. 




in their assertion that the seal of Rufus for his father's 
" customs " was a mere cloak for avarice and tyranny. 

In appearance William II. was unattractive; bull-necked, 
with sloping shoulders, extremely corpulent and awkward in 
his gait. His long locks and clean-shaven face marked his 
predilection for the new-fangled fashions which contemporary 
ecclesiastics were never weary of denouncing. His features were 
strongly marked and coarse, his eyes grey and deeply set; he 
owed his nickname to the 6ery hue of his complexion. He 
stuttered violently and in moments of passion was almost 
inarticulate. His familiar conversation was witty and blas- 
phemous. He was surrounded by a circle of vicious parasites, 
and no semblance of decorum was maintained in his-household. 
His character was assailed by the darkest rumours which he 
never attempted to confute. He died unmarried and without 
issue. 

The main authorities for the reign are the Peterborough Chronicle 
(ed. C Plummer, 2 vols., Oxford, 1892-1809); Eadmer"* Vila 
Anselmi and Historic Nervorum (ed. M. Rule, " Rolls " series, 1884); 
William of Malmesbury's De gestis regum (ed. W. Stubbs, " Rolls " 
series, 2 vols., 1887-1889); Orderic VitahY Historic ecclesiastic* 
(ed. A. le Provost, 5 vols., Paris. 1 838-1855). Of modern works the 
most exhaustive is E. A. Freeman's Reign of William Rufus (2 vols., 
Oxford, 1882). See also J. H. Rounds Feudal England (London, 
1895). (H. W. C. D.) 

WILLIAM III. (1650-1702), king of England and prince of 
Orange, was the only son of William II., prince of Orange, 
stadtholder of the Dutch republic, and Mary, daughter of 
Charles I. of England, and was born at the Hague on the 4th of 
November 1650, eight days after his father's death. His father 
had attempted a coup d'etat, which had failed, with the result 
that on his death the office of stadtholder was abolished. Power 
passed into the hands of John de Witt, who represented the 
oligarchic element and the special interests of one province, 
Holland, and was taken from the Orange party which repre- 
sented the more democratic element and the more general 
interests of the Seven Provinces. William inherited the baleful 
lustre, without the substantial power, which his ancestors had 
given to the name of Orange. He grew up among enemies, and 
became artful, suspicious and self-controlled, concealing his 
feeling behind the mask of an immobile, almost repulsive, cold- 
ness. Like Charles XII. of Sweden and the younger Pitt, he 
was a wonderful example of premature mental development. 

In 1672 Louis XIV. suddenly invaded Dutch territory. The 
startling successes of the French produced a revolution among 
the Dutch people, who naturally turned for help to the scion 
of the house of Orange. On the 8th of July 1672 the states 
general revived the stadtholderate, and declared William stadt- 
holder, captain-general and admiral for life. This revolution 
was followed by a riot, in which John de Witt and his brother 
Cornelius were murdered by the mob at the Hague. Evidence 
may be sought in vain to connect William with the outrage, 
but since he lavishly rewarded its leaders and promoters thb 
circumstance is not very much to his credit. The cold cynicism 
with which he acted towards de Witt is only matched by the 
heroic obstinacy with which he confronted Louis. Resolved as 
he said " to die in the last ditch," he rejected all thought of sur- 
render and appealed to the last resource of Dutch patriotism 
by opening the sluices and laying vast tracts under water. The 
French army could not advance, while the French and English 
fleets were defeated by the Dutch admiral, De Ruyter. William 
summoned Brandenburg to his aid (1672) and made treaties 
with Auitfia and Spain (1673). Io August 1674 he fought his 
first peat battle at Scneffe, where, though the straggle was not 
inequj.1. the honour* Jay with Condi. The French evacuated 
Dutch territory early in 1674, but continued to hold places on 
Rhine and in Flanders. In April 1677 William was badly 
' 5t Omer, but balanced his military defeat by Fiance 
tic victory over England. In November 1677 he 
, eldest daughter of James, duke of York, after- 
II t and undertook negotiations with England 
year which forced Louis to make terms and 
of jmwegen m August 1678, which gave 



WILLIAM III. (ENGLAND) 



663 



Pnache Comti and other places in Spanish Flanders to France. 
For some reason never yet made dear, but perhaps in order to 
produce a modification of terms which threatened the balance 
of power, William attacked the French army at Mons four days 
•iter the signature of peace. Luxembourg defeated him after 
a sanguinary and resultless struggle, and William gained nothing 
by his inexplicable action. 

After the war Louis continued a course of aggression, absorb- 
ing frontier-towns in imperial or Spanish territory. William 
started a new coalition against him in October x68i by making 
a treaty with Sweden, and subsequently with the empire, Spain 
and several German princes. .After absorbing Strassburg (168 1), 
Louis invaded Spanish Flanders and took Luxemburg (1684). 
Even then the new league would not fight and allowed Louis 
to retain his conquests by the truce of Regensburg (1685), but 
none the less these humiliations gave rise to a more closely- 
knit and aggressive coalition, which was organized in 16S6 and 
known as the League of Augsburg. 

From 1677 onwards William had carefully watched the 
politics of England. On the accession of James II. in 1685 he 
forced the duke of Monmouth to leave Holland, and sought to 
dissuade him from his ill-starred expedition to England. He 
apparently tried to conciliate his father-in-law in the hope of 
bringing him into the League of Augsburg. At the same time 
he astutely avoided offending the party in England which was 
opposed to James. By November 1687 he had decided that 
it was hopeless to expect that James would join the league 
against Louis, and he therefore turned for support to the English 
opposition. He caused his chief minister Fagel to write a letter 
expressing his disapprobation of the religious policy of James, 
which was published in November 1687. This announcement 
of his views was received with wild enthusiasm by the English 
who saw in him the friend of their liberties and their Church. 
But be knew too much of the English to suppose they would 
tolerate an armed invasion, and he accordingly made it clear 
thai he would not undertake active interference unless he 
received a definite invitation from leading Englishmen. On 
the 30th of June 1688 Admiral Herbert, disguised as a blue- 
jacket, set out from England with a letter from seven influential 
Englishmen, asking William to " bring over an army and secure 
the infringed liberties " of England. 

William set out from Holland with an army on the and of 
November and landed at Torbay (Nov. 5th 1688). After a few 
days of hesitation, many influential noblemen declared for him 
. in different parts of the country. James, who had at first joined 
his army at Salisbury, fell back to London and tried to negotiate. 
While his commissioners were amusing William, James sent off 
his wife and son to France, and tried to follow them. He was 
stopped in his flight by some fishermen at Faversham, and was 
forced to return to London. William insisted that he should be 
sent to Rochester, and there allowed him to escape to France. 
After this final flight of James, William, on the advice of an 
assembly of notables, summoned a convention parliament on 
the 22nd of January 1689. After a great deal of discussion, 
William was at length proclaimed joint-sovereign of England 
in conjunction with his wife, Mary (Feb. 13th 1689). 

A constitutional settlement was effected by the end of 1689, 
almost all the disputed points between king and parliament 
being settled in favour of the latter. Though William by no 
means appreciated this confinement of his prerogative, he was 
too wise to oppose it. His own initiative is more clearly trace- 
able in the Toleration Act, extending liberty of private worship 
to Dissenters. He also succeeded in passing an Act of Grace 
and Indemnity in 1600, by which he calmed the violence of 
party passion. But in general his domestic policy was not very 
fortunate, and he can hardly claim any personal credit for the 
reassessment of the land-tax (1602), the creation of the national 
debt or the recoinage act (1693-1695). Further, he threatened 
the existence of the Bank of England, by lending his support 
to a counter-institution, the Land Bank, which ignominiously 
couapsed. Though he was not blind to the commercial interests 
of England, he was neglectful of the administration and affairs 



of her oversea colonies. But though he. was unable to extract 
the best results from parliament he was always able to avert 
it* worst excesses. In spite of strong personal opinions to the 
contrary, he accepted the Triennial Act (1694), the vote reducing 
the army to 10,000 men (1697), the vote disbanding his favourite 
Dutch Guards (1699) and even (November 1699) a bill re- 
scinding the grants of forfeited Irish estates, which he had made 
to his favourites. The main cause of the humiliations William 
suffered from parliament lay in his incapacity to understand the 
party or cabinet system. In bis view the best way to govern 
was to have both parties represented in the ministry, so that, 
as Whig and Tory fell out, the king came by his own. A study 
of his reign shows that this method was unsuccessful, and that 
his affairs went most smoothly when the parliamentary majority 
held the same views as the ministry. It is not often remembered 
that William possessed an experience of the workings of repre- 
sentative government in Holland, which was remarkably 
similar to that in England. Hence his mistakes though easy 
to understand are by no means so pardonable as were, for 
example, toose of the Georges, who had been absolute monarch* 
in their own country. William's unpopularity with his new 
people was, on the whole, unjustified, but his memory is rightly 
darkened by the stain of the " Massacre of Glencoe." In 169a 
he signed an order for the "extirpation" of the Macdonalds, 
a small clan in the vale of Glencoe. It is improbable that he 
meant his order to be literjally executed, it is not certain that 
be knew they had taken the oath of allegiance to him. None 
the less, when the massacre was carried out with. circumstances 
of revolting barbarity, William behaved as he had done after 
the murder of De Witt. Popular pressure forced him to bring, 
the murderers to justice, to punish them and dismiss them his 
service. But shortly afterwards they were all received into favour; 
' " one became a colonel, another a knight, a third a peer." 

These and other actions indicate that William could show 
on occasion a cold and cynical ruthlessncss. But while admit- 
ting that his means were sometimes unprincipled, it must be 
recollected that his real ends were high and noble. While he 
sometimes disregarded the wishes of. others, no one was more 
ready to sacrifice his own feelings for the attainment of the 
master aim of his life, the restoration of the " Balance of Power," 
by the overthrow of the predominance of 'France. This was 
the real aim of William in going to England in 1088. He had 
set off to secure an ally against Louis, and he came back from 
his expedition with a crown on bis head and a new nation at 
bis back, united in its detestation of popery and of France. 

As king of England he concluded treaties of alliance with 
the members of the League of Augsburg and sent a large army 
to oppose the French in Flanders. But his greatest immediate 
peril during 1689-1690 came from the circumstance that the 
French disputed the mastery of the seas with the Anglo-Dutch 
fleet, and that Ireland was strongly for King James. On the 1st 
of July 1690 the allies were badly beaten at sea off Beachy Head, 
but on the same day William himself won a decisive victory over 
James's army at the Boyne in Ireland. Dublin and Drogheda 
soon fell and James fled from Ireland. The chances of continued 
resistance in Ireland, which depended on communication with 
France, were finally destroyed by the great victory off Cape La 
Hogne (May 19th, 1692). Ireland was speedily conquered when 
once the supremacy of England on the sea became assured. Now 
the French fleet was definitely destroyed, and though a destruc- 
tive privateering warfare continued, England was no longer in 
danger of invasion. 

The decisive successes for the Alliance were gained by its naval 
victories, whose importance William somewhat underrated and 
for whose execution he had only an indirect responsibility. In 
1692 he lost Namur and was badly defeated at Steinkirk (August 
atb), 'and in 1693 he was disastrously beaten at Neerwinden or 
Landen (Jury 19th). In 169s he was able to resume the offensive 
and to retake Namur in a brilliant and, what was more unusual, 
a successful campaign. William had assumed the duties of 
commander-in-chief too young to learn the full duties of a pro- 
fessional soldier himself, and his imperious will did not suffer 



66 4 



WILLIAM IV. (ENGLAND) 



others to direct him. Hence though often fertile in resource 
and ingenious in plan, he was always a brilliant amateur; and, 
though sometimes unlucky, he was never really the equal of such 
generals as Conde or Luxembourg. 

In diplomacy William was as uniformly successful as in 
war he was the reverse. His unity of aim and constancy of 
purpose make him one of the greatest of modern diplomatists. 
He held together his ill-assorted coalition, and finally concluded 
peace at Ryswick in September 1697. Louis restored all his 
acquisitions since 1678, except Strassburg, and recognized William 
as king of England. During the subsequent years William tried 
to arrange a partition treaty with France, by which the domains 
of the childless Charles II. of Spain were to be divided at his 
death. But on the death of Charles in 1700 the whole heritage 
was left to France. William endeavoured to oppose this, and 
used Louis's recognition of James Edward the " Old Pretender " 
as king of England (September 1701) to set the English people 
in a flame. War was already declared in 1702, but William, 
who had long been ailing, died from the combined effects of a fall 
from his horse and a chill on the 8th of March 17052. It was 
truly tragic that his doom should have come at the moment when 
he had once more drawn together a great alliance in Europe, 
and when he possessed a popularity in England such as he had 
never before enjoyed. 

In viewing William's character as a whole one is struck by its 
entire absence of ostentation, a circumstance which reveals his 
mind and policy more clearly than would otherwise be the case. 
No one can doubt his real belief in religion in spite of many 
moral failings or weaknesses. He was an unfaithful husband 
and often treated his wife with scant consideration; he was 
too fond of Dutch favourites like Keppel or worthless women 
like Lady Orkney. When it suited his interests he sanctioned the 
systematic corruption of members of parliament, and he con- 
doned massacres like those at the Hague or in Glencoe. On the 
other hand he did not hesitate to inflict considerable injury on his 
own people, the Dutch, by the terms of the treaty with England 
(1689), when it became clear that only in this way could England's 
co-operation be secured. The Dutch criticism on him has been 
that he might ha"e done more to reform the clumsiness of their 
constitutional procedure, and thus given them some return for 
the crippling expenses of the war. English criticism avers that 
he ought to have recognized more fully the system of party 
government, and to have done more to promote our colonial 
and commercial development. Military historians point out 
that he sometimes sacrificed great advantages to impetuosity; 
naval experts that he sometimes threw away great opportunities 
by indifference. Some of these criticisms are rather beside the 
mark, but were all true, they would not impair his essential 
greatness, which lay in another sphere. The best proof of his 
real powers of statesmanship is that the peace of Utrecht was 
subsequently made on the broad lines which he had laid down 
as the only security for European peace nearly a dozen years 
before its conclusion. While he lacked in diplomacy the arts of 
a Louis XIV. or the graces of a Marlborough, he grasped the 
central problems of his time with more clearness, or advanced 
solutions with more ultimate success, than any other statesman 
of his age. Often baffled, but never despairing, William fought 
on to the end, and the ideas and the spirit of his policy continued 
to triumph long after the death of their author. 

Original Authorities.— Gilbert Burnet. History of my Own Time, 
ed.O. Airy (London, 1807); William Car*t»ir* (The fangl Secretary) 
Papers, edited by J. McCocmick (London, 1774); Queen Mary* 
Letters with Those of James //. and Wmmm ll! > ed. R T Docbiirr 
(Leipzig, 1886); Lt tires et memeites, edited by Connie** Remind 
(London, 1880); duke of Portland. Hist. M55. Cp»m. Effort, tlv. 
A pp. pt. iv. (London. 1897); Shrmntwry Cam 1 pondtui r , cd. w< Cove 
(London, 1821): Shrewsbury M$S+—Hi*L ArSS, Cot^m, Rsp. w. 
vol. ii. pts. i. ana ii. (London, iga&J: Letter j a ed. P. Grim blot (a„Yot*., 
London, 1848). 

Modern Works (see also uixfrr Jawes II.).— Dr Paul 
Brandenburgisehe PoiUtk in i6$S-i6S9 <Ka*kI, 1896*- M4* 
Halifax, Life, H. C. FoxcroU (j vol v. Lon.Jan, i*s 
History, vols, i.-vi. ; Essays* vol*, i.iii i.[ .-■ ■■ 1 

Nycvelt. Court Life in the Dtttrk Republic (Idgpi 
Mazurc, Histoire ae la revolution de i&SS 



WILLIAM IV. (1765-1837), king of England, third son of 
George III., was born at Buckingham Palace on the a 1st of 
August 1765. In 1779 he was sent to sea and became a midship- 
man under Admiral Digby. Next year he sailed under Rodney 
and took part in the action off Cape St Vincent (16th of January 
1780). During the rest of the war the young prince saw plenty 
of service, for which he imbibed a strong liking, and so laid the 
foundation of his popularity. On the conclusion of the war he 
travelled in Germany, visiting Hanover and Berlin, where he 
was entertained by Frederick the Great. In 1785 he passed for 
lieutenant*, next year he was made captain and stationed in the 
West Indies. Shortly after 1787, being tired of his station, he 
sailed home without orders, and was punished for his insub- 
ordination by being obliged to stay at Plymouth till his ship was 
refitted, when he again sailed for the West Indies. 

In 1789 he was made duke of Clarence. When war was 
declared against the French republic in 1793, be strongly sup- 
ported it and was anxious for active employment; but, though 
he was made rear-admiral of the red, he could obtain no com- 
mand. Thus condemned to inactivity, he amused or revenged 
himself by joining the prince of Wales and the duke of York 
in their opposition to the king. He threw himself into the. dissi- 
pations of society, and his hearty geniality and bluff, sailor-like 
manners gained him popularity, though they did not secure him 
respect. He took his seat in the House of Lords, where he 
defended the extravagancies of the prince of Wales, spoke on 
the Divorce Bill, vehemently opposed the emancipation of slaves 
and defended slavery on the ground of his experience in the West 
Indies. Meanwhile he formed a connexion with Mrs Jordan, 
the actress, with whom he lived on terms of mutual affection 
and fidelity for nearly twenty years, and the union was only 
broken off eventually for political reasons. During all this 
period the prince had lived in comparative obscurity. The death 
of Princess Charlotte in 181 7 brought him forward as in the line 
of succession to the crown. In 181 8 he married Adelaide of Saxe- 
Meiningen, a lady half his age, without special attractions, but 
of a strong, self-willed nature, which enabled her subsequently 
to obtain great influence over her husband. On the death of the 
duke of York in 1827 the duke of Clarence became heir to the 
throne, and in the same year he was appointed lord high admiral. 
In discharging the functions of that office he endeavoured to 
assume independent control of naval affairs, although his patent 
precluded him from acting without the advice of two members 
of his council This involved him in a quarrel with Sir George 
Cockbuin, in which he had to give way. As he still continued 
to act in defiance of rules, the king was at length obliged to call 
upon him to resign. 

On the a8th of June 1830 the death of George IV. placed him 
on the throne. During the first two years of his reign England 
underwent an agitation more violent than any from which it 
had suffered since 1688. William IV. was well-meaning and 
conscientious; but his timidity and irresolution drove ministers 
to despair, while bis anxiety to avoid extremes and his want of 
insight into affairs prolonged a dangerous crisis and brought the 
country to the verge of revolution. Immediately after his acces- 
sion the revolution of July broke out in France and gave a great 
impulse to the reform movement in England. The king, though 
he called himself an " old Whig," did not dismiss the Tory 
ministry which bad governed the country during the last two 
years of his brother's reign; hut. the elections for the new 
parliament placed iTvm in a minority Within a fortnight of the 
opening of parliament they were WMtn on a motion for the 
reform at lite dvil Iki, and mignt d, \j*t6 Grey undertook to 
fofm ■ ministry, with the avowed intention of bringing in a 
latnf mmwKifv ii was rot iftjjsclf diseasing to the 

•jKforc had 

le in 

altitude 

Reform 

second 

ly of one. 

committee. 




WILLIAM (SCOTLAND)— WILLIAM I. (GERMANY) 66s 



I to resign. Ine king declined to accept their resigna- 
tion, bat at the aame time was unwilling to dissolve, although it 
was obvious that in the easting parliament a ministry pledged 
to reform could not retain office. From this dilemma William 
was rescued by the conduct of the opposition, which, anxious 
to bring on a change of ministry, moved an address against 
dissolution. Regarding this as an attack on his prerogative, 
William at once dissolved parliament (April 1831). The elections 
gave the ministry an overwhelming majority. The second 
Reform Bill was brought in in June, and passed its third reading 
(sist of September) by a majority of 109. A fortnight later 
(8th of October) the Lords threw out the bill by * majority of 41. 
But after a protracted political crisis (see the article on Guy, 
CautiEs Gicy, sad earl) the king was compelled to consent to 
create a sufficient number of new peers to carry the bill, and the 
threat was successful in bringing about the passing of the act in 
1832. 

During the rest of his reign William IV. had not much oppor- 
tunity of active political interference, but on one other occasion 
he made an unjustifiable use of his prerogative. Two years alter 
the passing of the Reform Bill the ministry of Lord Grey had 
become unpopular. In July 1834 Lord Grey himself retired and 
Lord Melbourne took the lead. There were divergences of 
opinion in 'the cabinet, and the king strongly objected to the 
ministerial policy respecting the Irish Church. On the shallow 
pretext that Lord Althorp's removal to the Upper House would 
weaken the ministry in the House of Commons, where, however, 
they still bad a majority, he suddenly dismissed them and 
summoned Sir Robert Peel (14th of November). Peel's ministry, 
containing many members who had been in the government on 
ihe king's accession, was called from its short duration " the 
ministry of the hundred days." Its formation clearly indicated 
that the Whig proclivities of the king, which had never been more 
than partial or lukewarm, had wholly disappeared. The step 
was regarded with general disapprobation. It was immediately 
followed by a dissolution, and the ministry soon found themselves 
in a minority. Beaten on Lord John Russell's motion respecting 
the Irish Church (3rd of April 1835), Peel resigned and Melbourne 
again came into power. Under him the Whigs retained the lead 
daring the remainder of the reign. This coup f&ai of November 
1834 was the last occasion on which the English sovereign has 
attempted to impose an unpopular ministry on the majority in 
parliament. 

In May 1837 the king began to show signs of debility, and died 
from an affection of the heart on the aoth of June, leaving behind 
him the memory of a genial, frank, warm-hearted man, but a 
blundering, though well-intentioned prince. He was succeeded 
by his niece Queen Victoria. 

Avtbouxtibs.— Correspondent* if Earl Cray with William IV. and 
Sir Herbert Taylor (London, 1867); Fitzgerald's Life and Times of 
William IV.; Crevttle't Memoirs', Memoirs of Sir Robert Peel; the 
Crrroey Paters; Civil Correspondence of the Duke of Wellington; 
WalpoVs History of England; >fartineau's History of ike Peace. 

WILLIAM (1143-1214), king of Scotland, surnamed "the 
Lion," wss the second son of Henry, earl of Huntingdon (<L 1152), 
a son of King David I., and became king of Scotland on the death 
of his brother, Malcolm IV., in December 1x65, being crowned 
at Scone during the same month. After his accession to the 
throne William spent some time at the court of the English 
king, Henry IL; then, quarrelling with Henry, he arranged 
in x 168 the first definite treaty of alliance between France and 
Scotland, and with Louis VII. of France assisted Henry's sons 
in their revolt against their father in 11 73- In return for this 
aid the younger Henry granted to William the earldom of 
Northumberland, a possession which the latter had vainly sought 
_, and which was possibly the cause of their 
However, when ravaging the country near 
^vas taken prisoner in July 1174, and after a 
I was carried to Normandy, where he 
(release by assenting in December 1x74 to the 
By this arrangement the king and his nobles, 
["undertook to do homage to Henry and his son; 




this and other provisions placing both the church and state of 
Scotland thoroughly under the suaerainty of England. William's 
neat quarrel was with Pope Alexander in., and arose out of a 
double choice for the vacant bishopric of St Andrews. The king 
put forward his chaplain, Hugh; the pope supported the arch- 
deacon, John the Scot, who had been canotricaliy elected. The 
usual interchange of threats ana defiances followed; then after 
the death of Alexander in xi8i his successor, Lucius III., con* 
sentedto aoompromi&e by which Hugh got the coveted bishopric 
and John became bishop of Dunkeld. In 1 188 William secured a 
papal bull which drrburd that the Church of Scotland was directly 
subject only to the see of Rome, thus rejecting the claims to 
supremacy put forward by the English archbishop. This step 
was followed by the temporal independence of faAwij which 
was one result of the conthmal poverty of Richard I. In 
December 1x80, by the treaty of Canterbury, Richard gave up 
all claim to suzerainty over Scotland in return for 10,000 marks, 
the treaty of Falaise being thus definitely annulled. 

In 1186 at Woodstock William married Ermengarde de 
Beaumont, a cousin of Henry II., and peace with re«flU»«i being 
assured three yean later, he turned his arms against the turbulent 
chiefs in the outlying parts of his kingdom His authority was 
recognized in Galloway which, hitherto, had been practically 
independent;* he put an end to a formidable insurrection in 
Moray and Inverness; and a series of campaigns taught the 
far north, Caithness and Sutherland, to respect the power of the 
crown. The story of William's relations with King John is 
interesting, although the details are somewhat obscure. Soon 
after John's accession in 1109 the Scottish king asked for the 
earldom of Northumberland, which. Richard L, like his father, 
had refused to restore to Scotland. John, too, refused this de- 
mand, but the threatened war did not take place, and in isco 
William did homage to the English king at Lincoln with the 
ambiguous phrase " saving his own rights." After a period of 
inaction war between the two countries again became imminent 
in 1209; but a peace was made at Norham, and about three 
years later another amicable arrangement was reached. Both 
these treaties seem to have been more favourable to England 
than to Scotland, and it is possible that Wilfiam acknowkdged 
John as overlord of his kingdom. William died at Stirling on the 
4th of December 12x4 and was buried at Arbroath. He left one 
son, his successor Alexander II., and two daughters, Margaret and 
Isabella, who were sent to England after the treaty of 1*00, 
and who both married English nobles, Margaret becoming the 
wife of Hubert de Burgh. He also left some illegitimate children. 
William's reign is a very important period in the early history of 
Scotland, and may almost be said to mark an epoch in every 
department of public life. The relations of England and Scotland 
and of Scotland and France; the rise of towns, the development 
of trade and the establishment of order in Scotland itself; and 
the attitude of the Scottish Church, both to the papal see and to 
England, were all vitally affected by the events of this reign. 
William founded and richly endowed the abbey at Arbroath, 
and many of the Scottish towns owe their origin to his charters. 

See E. W. Robertson, Scotland under ker Early Kings Edinburgh, 
1 86s) ; Lord Hailes, Annals of Scotland (Edinburgh. 1819) ; A. Lang, 
History of Scotland, voL i. (1900); also Scotland: History. ' 

WILUAJf I. (1 797-1888), king of Prussia and German emperor, 
was the second son of Frederick William IIL of Prussia and 
Louise, a princess of Mecklenburg-StreliU. He was bom at 
Berlin on the sand of March 1797, and received the names jof 
Wundm Friedrkh Ludwig. He was a delicate child and had to 
be carefully nurtured. His constitution, however, was sound, 
and he became one of the most vigorous men in Germany. After 
the battle of Jena he spent three years at Konigsberg andMemeL 
Meanwhile he had given evidence of sterling honesty, a strict 
love of order, and an almost passionate interest in everything 
relating to war. On the 1st of January 1807 he received an 
officer's patent, and on the 30th of October 1813 was appointed 
a captain. William accompanied his father in the campaign of 
1814, and early in the following year received the iron cross for 
personal bravery shown at Ber-sur-Aube. He took part in the 



666 



WILLIAM I. (GERMANY) 



entry into Paris on the 31st of March 1814, and afterwards 
visited London. He joined the Prussian army in the final 
campaign of the Napoleonic wars, and again entered Paris. The 
prince was made a colonel and a member of the permanent 
military commission immediately after his twentieth birthday, 
and at the age of twenty-one became a major-general In 1820 
be received the command of a division; and during the following 
nine years he had not only made himself master of the military 
system of his own country but studied closely those of tfce other 
European states. In 1825 he was promoted to the rank of 
lieutenant-general, and obtained the command of the corps of 
guards. On the nth of June 1829 he married Augusta, daughter 
of Charles Frederick, grand duke of Saxe- Weimar. This lady, 
who had imbibed the Liberal tendencies of the court of 
Weimar and later developed a keen sympathy with Catholicism, 
exercised afterwards as queen and empress a considerable 
influence at court, in a sense generally hostile to Bismarck's 
views. She died on the 7th of January 1800. 

On the death of his father in 1840 — the new king, Frederick 
William IV., being childless—Prince William, as heir presumptive 
to the throne, received the title of prince of Prussia. He was also 
made lieutenant-governor of Pomerama and appointed a general 
of infantry. In politics he was decidedly conservative; but at 
the outbreak of the revolutionary movement of 1848 he saw that 
some concessions to the popular demand for liberal forms of 
government were necessary. He urged, however, that order 
should be restored before the establishment of a constitutional 
system. At this time he was the best-hated man in Germany, 
the mass of the Prussian people believing him to be a vehement 
supporter of an absolutist and reactionary policy. He was even 
held responsible for the blood shed in Berlin on the 18th of March, 
and was nicknamed the " Cartridge Prince," although he had 
been relieved nine days before of his command of the guards. 
So bitter was the feeling against him that the king entreated 
him to leave the country for some time, and accordingly he went 
to London, where he formed intimate personal relations with 
Prince Albert, Sir Robert Peel, Lord John Russell, Lord Palmer- 
ston and other English statesmen. On the 8th of June he was 
back at Berlin, and on the same day he took his seat as member 
for Wirsitz in the Prussian national assembly, and delivered a 
speech in which he expressed belief in constitutional principles. 
In 1849, when the revolutionary party in the grand-duchy of 
Baden became dangerous, he accepted the command of " the 
army of operation in Baden and the Palatinate," and his plans 
were so judiciously formed and so skilfully executed that in the 
course of a few days the rebellion was crashed. At the beginning 
of the campaign an unsuccessful attempt was made on his life. 
In October 1849 he was appointed military governor of the 
Rhineland and Westphalia, and took up his residence at'Coblenz. 
In 1854 the prince was raised to the rank of a field-marshal and 
made governor of the federal fortress of Mainz. When the king 
was attacked with a disease of the brain, Prince William assumed 
the regency (7th October 1858), and on his brother's death, on 
the 2nd of January x86x, succeeded him as William I. 

The political events of William's regency and reign are told 
elsewhere (see Gerhanv: History) Prussia: History). Hip 
personal influence upon these events is h however, of great 
importance and deserves separate notice- William was not a. 
ruler of the intellectual type of Frederick the Groat; but he 
believed intensely in the " God of battles " and in his own divine 
right as the vicegerent of God so conceived. He believed al*o 
in the ultimate union of Germany and in the destiny of Prussia 
as its instrument; and be held that whoever aspired to rule 
Germany must ecbe it for himself (Letter to von Naumcr 
20th of May 1849, in Natzmex's Unier den Htfaawltem] 
an attitude so wholly alien to the Liberal temper of 
Germany was tempered by shrewd common 
all, by a capacity to choose his advitirri 
advice. Thus it came about 
views were feared, called the LB 
advice, though later he did 
tion when the refusal of 



made this course necessary. From September x86a, when 
Bismarck took office as minister president, William's personality 
tends to be obscured by that of his masterful servant, who 
remained beside him till his death. But Bismarck's Reminis- 
cences contain plentiful proof that his master was by no means a 
cipher. His prejudices, indeed, were apt to run athwart the 
minister's plans; as in the Schleswig-Hoktein question, when 
the king's conscience in the matter of the claims of the Augusten- 
burg prince threatened to wreck Bismarck's combinations. 
But, as Bismarck put it, the annexation of the duchies gave him 
" a taste for conquest," and in the campaign of 1866 the difficulty 
was to restrain the king, who wished to enter Vienna in triumph. 
Whatever may have been the feelings of the Prussians before 
the war, its striking success fully justified the king's policy, 
and on his return to Berlin he was received with unbounded 
enthusiasm. 

In the events immediately preceding the Franco-German War 
of 1870-71 again it was Bismarck and not the king that gave 
the determining impulse. In the matter of the Hoheazollern 
candidature King William's attitude was strictly "correct." 
He was justified in refusing to discuss further with Benedetti 
the question of " guarantees," a matter which touched his honour; 
and if the refusal, courteously framed, was read in Paris, as an 
insult, this was due to Bismarck's " editing " of the Ems telegram 
(see Bismarck) The result of the outcry in France and of the 
French declaration of war was that all Germany rallied round the 
king of Prussia, and when, on the 31st of July, he quitted Berlin 
to join his army, he knew that he had the support of a united 
nation. He crossed the French frontier on the nth of August, 
and personally commanded at the battles of Gravelotte and 
Sedan. It was during the siege of Paris, at his headquarters in 
Versailles, that he was proclaimed German emperor on the 18th 
of January 1871. On the 3rd of March 1871 he signed the pre- 
liminaries of peace which had been accepted by the French 
Assembly; and on the 21st of March he opened the first imperial 
parliament of Germany. On the 16th of June hetritnrphantly 
entered Berlin at the head of his troops. 

After that period the emperor left the destinies of Germany 
almost entirely in the hands of Bismarck, who held the office of 
imperial chancellor. In his personal history the most notable 
events were two attempts upon his life in 1878— one by a working 
lad called Hddel, another by an educated man, Karl Nobiiing. 
On the first occasion the emperor escaped without injury, but 
on the second he was seriously wounded. These attacks grew 
out of the Socialist agitation; and a new Reichstag, elected for 
the purpose, passed a severe anti-Socialist law,. which was after- 
wards from time to time renewed. Until within a few days of 
his death the emperor's health was remarkably robust; he died 
at Berlin on the oth of March 1888. 

The reign of William I. marked an era of vast importance in the 
history of Germany. In his time Prussia became the first power 
in Germany and Germany the first power in Europe, though these 
momentous changes were due in a less degree ta him than to 
Bismarck and Moltke; but to him belongs the credit of having 
recognized the genius of these men, and 01 having trusted them 



absolutely. Personally William maintained the best traditions of the 

luerns, not only * 

nd i.?nght.. 
marriage with Aiig'iits of S&ic* Weiir 



Hohcnzouerns, not only by the splendo ur of the achievements with 

always be mtinvitely associated, but by the 

of his dally life. By his 



which hi§ name will always be jniinvitcly a&Boeiated, but by the 
simplicity, manliness and uprightr".:- of his daily life. By his 
marriage with A ig'jita of Sale* Weimar William 1. had two children: 
the '.Tom-n prince Frederick \\ Wis. m(li 1 831 ), who succeeded him as 
Fntk-rkk HI. iqv), and the [irirjcos Lovit/t (b. 18538), 1 * * * 
I8*& 10 the grand-duke o\ Bt ' 



■ tetter* • 




: published in 2 vols, at Berlin 

■s several collections -have ap- 

KWJWwij/. (1890); Kaiser 

n vok, 1905), and 

*W. Leipzig, 1000). A 

erman, of which 

Kaiser WUMms 

Bernhardt, Die 

j ,-7 (Leipzig, 1895); 

i>. t Berlin, itso-iflpa); 

dtuh WiPielm IV. ««n 



hrlm I TaielmcktUttter 

■inJ . . . Rtien ais JBiUner 

R Marcka, Keiur 



WILLIAM II. (GERMANY) 



667 



WUhdm /. (Leipzig, 1897 ; 5th ed. 1905). In English have appeared 
William of Germany, by Archibald Forbes (18$), a traasbtioa of 
Edouard Simon's The Emperor William and his foit* (2 vols., 1886). 
See also Sybel's Pounding of the German Empire (Eng. trans., New 
York, 1 890-1891). 

WILUAH 11. [Fbiedrxck WtiHcm Victor Albmt] 
(1859- "), king of Prussia and German emperor, was born 
on the 27th of January* 1859 at Berlin, being the eldest child 
of Prince Frederick of Prussia, afterwards crown prince and 
second German emperor, and of Victoria, princess royal of Great 
Britain and Ireland. On his tenth birthday he was appointed 
second lieutenant in the First Regiment of the Guards. From 
September 1874 to January 1877 he attended the gymnasium 
at Cassel; he studied for two years at Bonn, and was then for 
some time chiefly occupied with his military duties. In 1885 
he was appointed colonel of the Hussars of the Guard. He was 
much influenced by the military atmosphere in which his life 
was spent, and was more in sympathy with the strongly mon- 
archical feelings of the emperor William and Bismarck than 
with the more liberal views of his own parents, but until the 
illness of his father in 1887 he took no part in political life. The 
death of his grandfather was quickly followed by- that of his 
father, and on the 15th of June he became ninth king of Prussia 
and third German emperor? The chief events of his reign up 
to 1910 are narrated under Germany: History, but here it is 
necessary to dwell rather on the personality of the emperor 
himself. His first act was an address to the army and navy, 
-while that to bis people followed after three days. Throughout 
his reign, indeed, he repeatedly stated that the army was the 
true basis of his throne: " The soldier and the army, not parlia- 
mentary majorities, have welded together the German Empire. 
My confidence is placed on the army." 

From the first he showed his intention to be his own chancellor, 
and it was this which brought about the quarrel with Bismarck, 
who could not endure to be less than all-powerful. The 
dismissal and disgrace of the great statesman first revealed the 
resolution of the new ruler; but, as regards foreign affairs, 
the apprehensions felt at his accession were not fulfilled. While 
he maintained and confirmed the alliance with Austria and Italy, 
In obedience to the last injunctions of his grandfather, he 
repeatedly attempted to establish more cordial relations with 
Russia. His overtures, indeed, were scarcely received with 
corresponding cordiality. The intimacy of Russia with France 
increased, and more than a year passed before the Russian 
emperor appeared on a short visit to Berlin. . In 1890 the 
emperor again went to Russia, and the last meeting between 
him and Alexander III. took place at Kiel in the autumn of 
189;, but was marked by considerable coolness. By his visit 
to Copenhagen, as in his treatment of the duke of Cumberland 
and in his frequent overtures to France, the emperor showed the 
strong desire, by the exercise of his own great personal charm 
and ability, to heal the wounds left by the events of a generation 
before. In the autumn of 1888 he visited not only the courts 
of the confederate princes, but those of Austria and Italy. 
While at Rome he went to the Vatican and had a private con- 
versation with Pope Leo XIII., and this visit was repeated in 
1895 and again in 1903. In 1889 the marriage of his sister, the 
Princess Sophie, to the duke of Sparta, took him to Athens; 
and thence he sailed to Constantinople. It was the first time 
that one of the great rulers of Christendom had been the guest 
of the sultan. A more active interest was now taken by Germany 
in the affairs of the Levant, and the emperor showed that he 
' I content to follow the secure and ascertained roads 
narck had so long guided the country. It was 
I Berlin had become the centre of the European 
nperor was the apostle of a new Germany, 
J -that her voice should be heard in all political 
ver quarter of the globe they might rise. Once 
, he went to Constantinople. It was the time 
Unenian massacres had made the name of Abd-ul 
►rious, and the very striking friendliness shown 
1 scarcely seemed consistent with the frequent 




claims made by the emperor to be the leader of Christendom; 
but any scruples were doubtless outweighed by the great impulse 
he was able to give to German influence in the East. From 
Constantinople he passed on to Palestine. He was present at 
the consecration of the German Protestant church of the Re- 
deemer. By the favour of the sultan he was able to present to 
the German Catholics a plot of ground, the Ponnhioa de la 
Sainte Vierge, very near to the Holy Places. 

The motive of his frequent travels, which gained for him 
the nickname of Der Reise-Kaistr, was not solely political, but 
a keen interest in men and things. His love of the sea was 
shown in an annual voyage to Norway, and in repeated visits 
to the Cowes regatta. He was a keen yachtsman and fond of 
all sorts of sport, and, though deprived of the use of his left 
arm through an accident when he was a child, he became an 
excellent shot and rider. 

At the time of his accession there was a strong manifestation 
of anti-British feeling in Berlin, and there seemed reason to 
suppose that the party from which it proceeded had the patronage 
of the emperor. Any temporary misunderstanding was removed, 
however, by his visit to England in 1889. For the next six years 
he was every year the guest of Queen Victoria, and during the 
period that Caprivi held office the political relations between 
Germany and Great Britain were very close. While the emperor's 
visits were largely prompted by personal reasons, they had an 
important political effect; and in 1890, when he was entertained 
at the Mansion House in London and visited Lord Salisbury 
at Hatfield, the basis for an entente cordiale seemed to be under 
discussion. But after 1895 the growth of the colonial spirit 
in Germany and the strong commercial rivalry with Great 
Britain, which was creating in Germany a feeling that a navy 
must be built adequate to protect German interests, made the 
situation as regards England more difficult. And an unexpected 
incident occurred at the end of that year, which brought to a 
head all the latent feelings of suspicion and jealousy in. both 
countries. On the occasion of the Jameson Raid he despatched 
to the president of the Transvaal a telegram, in which he con- 
gratulated him that " without appealing to the help of friendly 
powers," he had succeeded in restoring peace and preserving the 
independence of his country. It was very difficult to regard 
this merely as an impulsive act of generous sympathy with a 
weak state unjustly attacked, and though warmly approved 
in Germany, it caused a long alienation from Great Britain. 
The emperor did not again visit England till the beginning of 
xooi, when he attended the deathbed and funeral of Queen 
Victoria. On this occasion he placed himself in strong opposition 
to the feelings of the large majority of his countrymen by 
conferring on Lord Roberts the Order of the Black Eagle, the 
most highly prized of Prussian decorations. He had already 
refused to receive the ex-president of the Transvaal on his visit 
to Europe. Meanwhile, with the other great branch of the 
English-speaking people in the United States, it was the emperor's 
policy to cultivate more cordial relations. In 1903, on the 
occasion of the launching of a yacht built for him in America, 
he sent his brother Prince Henry to the United States' as his 
representative. The occasion was rendered of international 
importance by his official attitude and by his gifts to the American 
people, which included a Statue of Frederick the Great. The 
emperor also initiated in 1906 the exchange of professors between 
German and American universities. 

As regards home policy, the most important work to which 
the emperor turned his attention was the increase of the German 
naval forces. From the moment of his accession he constantly 
showed the keenest interest in naval affairs, and the numerous 
changes made in the organization were due to his personal 
initiative. It .was in January 1895, at an evening reception to 
members of the Reichstag, that he publicly put himself at the 
head of the movement for making Germany a sea power. In 
all the subsequent discussions on the naval bills his influence 
was decisively used to overcome the resistance of the Reichstag. 
" Our future," he declared," is on the water," and in speeches 
in all parts of the country he combated the indifference of 



668 



WILLIAM II. (GERMANY) 



the inland Germans to the sea; " I will not rest," he telegraphed 
to his brother, " till I have brought my navy to the same height 
at which my army stands." The development of German 
armaments during the next few years (see Navy) showed that 
this was no idle boast. But, while it was inevitable that the 
inference should be drawn that the increase of the German 
navy was directed towards eventual hostilities with Great Britain, 
the emperor himself insisted that the real object was the preserva- 
tion of peace consistently with the maintenance of Germany's 
" place in the sun." In March 1905, in a speech at Bremen, 
he declared the aim of the HohenzoUerns to be " a world-wide 
dominion founded upon conquests not gained by the sword, 
but by the mutual confidence of nations that press towards 
the same goal." " Every German warship launched," he said, 
"is one guarantee more for peace on earth." In the same 
spirit he protested later, in an "interview" published in the 
Daily Telegraph of the 28th of October 1008, that he had always 
been actuated by the friendliest feelings towards England, but 
that " Germany must be prepared for any eventualities in the 
East," and that, in view of the growing naval power of Japan, 
England should welcome the existence of a German fleet " when 
they speak together on the same side in the great debates of the 
future" For to the emperor, who had published a cartoon, 
drawn by himself, representing the European powers in league 
against the Yellow Peril, the Anglo- Japanese alliance seemed 
a betrayal of the white race, an unnatural league which could 
not last.. The justification of his naval policy so far as European 
affairs were concerned was revealed in the effective intervention 
of Germany in regard to France and Morocco in 1905, and 
in 1000 in the defiance of British policy when Austria, 
backed by Germany, tore up the treaty of Berlin in regard to 
Bosnia and Herzegovina. 

In numerous rhetorical speeches the emperor had impressed 
the world with his personal conviction of autocratic sovereignty, 
and his monarchical activity was certain, sooner or later, to bring 
him into conflict with the constitutional limitations of his 
position as king of Prussia and German emperor. His imperial 
style, constitutionally but the honorary title of the primus inter 
pares in a free confederation of sovereign princes, was invested 
by him with something of the glamour of that of the Holy Roman 
emperors, with their shadowy claim to world-dominion. In 
speech after speech he proclaimed the world-mission of Germany, 
of which he >»mg<»]f was the divinely appointed instrument; 
Germans are " the salt of the earth 1 ;" they must not " weary 
in the work of civilization," and Germanism, like the spirit of 
imperial Rome, must expand and impose itself. 1 This new 
imperialism, too, had a religious basis, for " the whole of human 
life hinges simply and solely on our attitude towards our Lord 
and Saviour." 2 The emperor's progresses in the East were 
conceived in the spirit of the new crusade, at once Christian 
and German; and a solemn service, to which none but the 
emperor and his train were admitted, was held on the summit of 
the Mount of Olives. In the same spirit, too, the emperor dis- 
pensed the marks of his approval and disapproval beyond the 
borders of his own jurisdiction, sometimes with results which 
were open to criticism. The "Kruger telegram" has been 
mentioned; scarcely less characteristic was the message 
despatched by him on Lhc qih ol April igo6 t after the Algrcifas 
conference, to Count Goluchnwski, the Aust to-Hungarian 
foreign minister, congratulating him on having proved " a 
brilliant second on Lhc duelling ground." GoIudHm ski's retire- 
ment was mainly due to this compliment. In 1005 he b 
the order Four it MErite not only on the Japantie gen 
but also on the Russian general St&ssd, the deft 
Arthur, who was afterwards comlcEnncd by 
martial for dereliction oj duty, I 
regent of Bavaria condemning the n 
in the diet to vote £5000 fat 
to supply the money. 




* Speech at 
« Eg 4*ch at 
»5petth|| 



ference in the internal affairs of Bavaria and lowed strong 
resentment among the clericals all over Germany. 

Owing to the political conditions in Germany it was generally 
left for the Socialists to attack these excursions on the part of 
the emperor into fields which lay beyond his strict prerogative. 
But, apart from the traditional lines of political cleavage, such 
as the inherited hatred of the Liberal South for. the Hohenzollern 
" corporal's cane," other centres of dissatisfaction were coming 
into being. The emperor was isolated in his efforts to impose 
the old, strenuous, Prussian ideals of "«elf -denial, discipline, 
religion, avoidance of foreign contagion." With the growth 
of wealth Germany was becoming materialized and to some 
extent Americanized, partly through the actual reflux of emi- 
grants grown rich in the United States. In this new society, 
far removed from the days, denounced by the historian Gervinus, 
when the Germans were content to " fiddle and be slaves," the 
phrases which still woke responsive echoes in the squires of the 
Old Mark of Brandenburg were apt to create surprise, if not 
indignation; and in the great industrial classes the principles of 
Social Democracy spread apace. The emperor himself here and 
there even yielded a little to the new ideas, as when, in the 
famous " Babel and Bible " controversy of 1003, arising out of 
lectures in which Professor Delitzsch had derived Jewish mono- 
theism from Babylonian polytheism, he publicly accepted the 
main conclusion of the " higher criticism " of the Old Testament, 
while maintaining that the kernel and contents, God and His 
works, remain always the same; or when on the x 7th of November 
1006, on the 25th anniversary of William L's edict announcing 
national insurance, he promised further social reforms. But he 
was impatient of what he considered factious opposition, and 
was apt to appeal from the nation in parliament to the nation 
in arms, as when in 1006, at the Silesian manoeuvres, he con- 
demned the critical spirit exercised towards the government, and 
invoked once more the protection of Germany's " Divine Ally." 
Clearly, this was an attitude which was inconsistent with the 
development of what prided itself on being a constitutional 
state; but there were obvious difficulties in the way of 
controlling the utterances of' a ruler, vigorous, self-confident 
and conscious of the best intentions, who was also the master 
of many legions, whose military spirit he could evoke at 
will. In October 1006 the publication of Prince Hohenlohc's 
Memoirs, containing indiscreet revelations of the emperors 
action in the dismissal of Bismarck, caused a profound 
sensation. A few months later, in February 1907, the prestige 
of the court was further damaged by various unsavoury revela- 
tions, made by Herr Harden in the Zukunfi, as to the character 
pf the " camarilla " by which the emperor was surrounded, and 
it was affirmed that a connexion could here be traced with the 
fall of Caprivi in 1894. TheJong-drawn-out trials and counter- 
trials left the character of the emperor entirely unstained, but 
they resulted in the disgrace of men who had been his confidants 
— Prince Philip Eulenburg, Count Kuno Moltke and others. 
The attitude of the emperor throughout was manly and sensible; 
and not the least satisfactory outcome of the whole sorry business 
was the issue, on the 28th of January r 007, of an edict, afterwards 
embodied fn a bill, greatly modifying the law of Use-wajtsU t 
which in the earlier part of the reign had been used to ridiculous 
excess in the imprisonment of the authors of the slightest 
retleftten on the person of the sovereign. 

rmaa relations wrre apparently improved by a visit 
igland in November 1007. But early b roo8 
I by the revelation, made in The Times 
h t <il a. correspondence between the emperor 
1 r it o[ the admiralty, in which, 
n the emperor's part, the 
unicated to him an outline 
it had even been laid on the 
The angry controversy to 
r's attempts to allay it, led 
is in his relations with his 
had met Edward VII. at 
■ : uassburg, he reiterated 



WILLIAM L (NETHERLANDS) 



669 



the intention of Germany to maintain the high level of her 
armaments; and on the 28th of October there appeared in the 
Daily Telegraph an extraordinary " interview," authorized by 
him, in which he expounded his attitude. The document was a 
resume of his table-talk during his stay at Highdiffe Castle, on 
the Hampshire coast opposite the Isle of Wight, in the autumn 
of 1907. In it he reiterated that his heart was set on peace; 
he declared that, so far from being hostile to the English, he had 
offended large sections of his people by his friendship for England. 
He instanced his refusal to receive the Boer delegates and his 
rejection of the proposals of France and Russia for a joint inter- 
vention to stop the South African War; he also mentioned the 
curious fact that at an early stage of the war he had himself 
drawn up a plan of campaign for the British and sent it to 
Windsor. It was on this occasion, too, that he made the sugges- 
tion of an eventual co-operation of the British and German fleets 
in the Far East. This pronouncement created a profound 
sensation, not only in Germany, where the indignation was 
intense, but in Russia, France and Japan, where it was regarded 
as a Machiavellian attempt to loosen existing alliances. In 
the German press and parliament a storm of protest arose. 
Prince BOlow, as technically responsible, handed in his resigna- 
tion, which was not accepted, and he was forced to make in the 
Reichstag the best defence that he could for the imperial indis- 
cretion, declaring that henceforth the emperor would show more 
reserve. The emperor publicly endorsed the chancellor's ex- 
planations, and for nearly two years maintained in public an 
almost unbroken silence. But this came to an end in a speech 
delivered at Konigsberg, on the 25th of August 1910. In this 
the emperor again laid special stress upon the divine right 
by which alone the kings of Prussia rule, adding: " considering 
myself as the instrument of the Lord, without heeding the views 
and opinions of the day, I go my way." This speech led to a 
debate, on a Socialist interpellation, in the Reichstag (November 
26). in reply to the enquiry what the government intended to 
do in fulfilment of the pledge given in 1908, the chancellor 
denied that the emperor had exceeded his constitutional, rights, 
a view supported by the majority of the House. 

The emperor married on the 27th of Februi ry rfrGl Princess 
Auguste victoria, daughter of Frederick, duke of 1 
in 1864. had come forward as claimant to thedu 
Hobtewi; the marriage had, therefore, some pat 
f or it sealed the reconciliation of one of the dynastia 
by the rise of Prussia. They had mx sons and 
Wnbelm, born 6th May 1882, Crown Prince, w 



-Tcnbure, who 
hlcs«lg- 

3 

u«r: (l) 
n v.i 1 c .. f age 



. Jl ...... 

was celebrated with much ceremony on his eighteenth birthday. 

and who married on the 6th of Tune 1905 the tfudwaA Cecilia of 

Mecklenburg, their eldest son, Wilhelm, being bom on the 4th of Jaly 

ioo6;(2)EitdFriedrich.bornonthe7thof Jul ' 

born on the 14th of July 1884; (4) August ti 

20th of January 1887; (5) Oskar, born on the 271b of July j888; 

J 6) Joachim, born on the 17th of December 1890; anil {7) Vikt 
,ube. born on the 13th of September 1802. 



b 7th of July 1 - m , ( 1) Adalbert, 
1 August WnVlnv born Oft the 



For the emperor's speeches, &c, see Kaiserreden. Reden und 
Erlasst, Brief* and Telegramme Kaiser WUhelms II. (Leipzig, 1902); 
translated by L. Elkind, as The German Emperor's Speeches (London, 
1904). 

WILLIAM L (1772-1844), king of the Netherlands, bom at 
the Hague on the 24th of August 1772* was the son of William V., 
prince of Orange and hereditary stadtholder of the United 
Netherlands by Sophia Wilhelmina, princess of Prussia. In 
1791 he married Frederica Wilhelmina, daughter of Frederick 
William IL, king of Prussia, thus cementing very closely the 
relations between the houses of Orange-Nassau and HohensoUern. 
After the outbreak of war with the French republic in 1793, 
he distinguished himself in the struggle against the revolutionary 
army under Dumouriex by the capture of Landredes and the 
By the victories of Pkhegru the stadtholder 
j were, however, compelled to leave Holland and 
1 England, where the palace of Hampton Court was 
r their use. He afterwards made Berlin his residence, 
1 active part in the unfortunate campaign under the 
: for the reconquest of the Netherlands. After the 
X Amiens he had an interview with Napoleon at Paris, 
lived some territory adjoining the hereditary domains 




of the house of Nassau in Westpbnha aa a compensation for the 
abandonment of the stadtholderate and the domains of his house. 
William refused, however, in 1806, in which year by the death of 
his father he became prince of Orange, to separate his interests 
from those of his Prussian relatives, and fought bravely at Jena. 
He was therefore despoiled by Napoleon of all his possessions. 
In 1809 he accepted a command in the Austrian army under the 
archduke Charles and was wounded at the battle of Wagram. 
When Holland rose in revolt against French domination in 1813, 
after eighteen years of exile he landed at Scheveningen (on the 
roth of November) and was on the 3rd of December, amid uni- 
versal rejoicing, proclaimed prince sovereign of the Netherlands. 
His assumption in the following year of the title of king of the 
Netherlands was recognised by the powers, and by the treaty 
of Paris his sovereignty was extended over the southern as well 
as the northern Netherlands, Belgium being added to Holland 
M as an increase of territory. 1 ' After the battle of Waterloo, in 
which Dutch and Belgian troops fought side by side under his 
command, the congress of Vienna further aggrandized him by 
making him sovereign of the territory of Luxemburg with the 
title of grand duke. 

William had many excellent qualities, but his long life of exile 
and hardship had made him niggardly and narrow. He was 
unable to rise to the great opportunity which lay before him 
of creating out of the Dutch and Belgian provinces a strong and 
united state. Two-hundred and fifty years of political separation 
and widely differing experiences had caused the two kindred 
populations on this and that side of the Scheldt to grow apart 
in sentiment and tradition. TTus -difference was still further 
accentuated by strong divergence in religious creed. Further, 
one-third of the Belgian provinces was inhabited by a Walloon 
population divided from the Flemings by racial characteristics 
and their use of a Romance instead of a Teutonic dialect. Ail 
these things William was inclined to ignore. He drew up a 
constitution, which was accepted unanimously by the Dutch, 
but was rejected by the Belgians, because it contained provisions 
for. liberty- of worship. The king, however, by a subterfuge 
declared that the fundamental law bad been approved. The 
new constitution, therefore,' started badly, and it was soon 
evident that William intended to make his will prevail, and to 
carry out his projects for what he conceived the social, industrial 
and educational welfare of the kingdom regardless of the opposi- 
tion of Belgian public opinion. The Belgians had many griev- 
ances. Their representation in the states general was exactly 
equal to that of the Dutch, though their population was in the 
proportion of seven to five. With the help of the official vote of 
ministers the Dutch were thus able to have a perpetual majority. 
The whole machinery of government was centralised at the 
Hague, and Dutchmen filled nearly all the principal posts. The 
attempt of the king to enforce the official use of the Dutch 
language, and the foundation of the so-called philosophical 
college at Louvain helped to exacerbate the growing discontent. 
The rapid advance of Belgium in industrial and manufacturing 
prosperity, due largely to the stimulus of William's personal 
initiative, did nothing to bring north and south together, but 
rather increased their rivalry and jealousy, for the Dutch pro- 
vinces had neither manufactures nor iron- and coal-mines, but 
were dependent on agriculture and sea-borne commerce for 
their welfare. Such clashing of interests was sure to produce 
alienation, but the king remained apparently blind to the signs 
of the times, and the severe enforcement of a harsh law restricting 
freedom of the press led suddenly in 1830 to .a revolt (see 
Belgium), which, beginning at Brussels at the end of August) 
rapidly spread over the whole country. The Dutch were almost 
without striking a blow expelled from the country, the strongly 
fortified seaport of Antwerp alone remaining in their hands. 
Had the king consented at once to the administrative autonomy 
of Belgium, and appointed the prince of Orange governor of the 
southern Netherlands, it is probable that the revolt might have 
been appeased. At the first there was undoubtedly a strong 
body of public opinion in favour of such a compromise, and the 
house of Orange had many adherents in the country. William, 



670 WILLIAM II. (NETHERLANDS)— WILLIAM OF HOLLAND 



however, was too proud and too obstinate to lend himself to audi 
a course. He appealed to the powers, who had, in 1815, created 
and guaranteed the independence of the kingdom of the Nether- 
lands. By the treaty of the eighteen articles, however, concluded 
at London on the 20th of June 1831, the kingdom of Belgium 
was recognized, and Leopold of Saxe-Coburg was elected king. 
William refused his assent, and in August suddenly invaded 
Belgium. The Belgian forces were dispersed, and the Dutch 
would have entered Brussels in triumph but for the intervention 
of the French. Still, however, William declined to recognise 
the new throne, and he had behind him the unanimous support 
of Dutch public opinion. For nine years he maintained this 
attitude, and resolutely refused to append his signature to the 
treaty of 183 1, I lis subjects at length grew weary of the heavy 
expense of maintaining a large military force on the Belgian 
frontier and in 1839 the king gave way. He did so, however, 
on favourable terms and was able to insist on the Belgians yielding 
up their possession of portions of Limburg and Luxemburg, 
which they had occupied since 1830. 

A cry now arose in Holland for a revision of the fundamental 
law and for more liberal institutions; ministerial responsibility 
was introduced, and the royal control over finance diminished. 
William, however, disliked these changes, and finding further 
that his proposed marriage with the countess d'Oultremont, a 
Belgian and a Roman Catholic, was very unpopular, he suddenly 
abdicated on the 7th of October 1840. After his abdication he 
married the countess and spent the rest of his life in quiet 
retirement upon his private estate in Silesia. He died in 2844. 

See L. Jottsand, GuiUaume d'Orante avant son avenemeni au 
trSnc des Pays-Bos; E. C. de Gerlachc, Histoire du royaume des Pays- 
Bas depuis 1814 jusqu'en 1830 (3 vols., Brussels, 1843) ; W. H. de 
Beaufort, Deeerste regeeringsjaren van Koning WiUem I. (Amsterdam, 
1886); H. C. Colenbrander, De Belgiscke Omwenteling (The Hague, 
1905) ; T. Juste, Le Soulevement de la Holland* en 1813 et lafondation 
du royaume des Pays-Bos (Brussels, 1870) ; and P. Blok, Gesckiedenis 
der Nederlandsche Yelk, vols. vii. and viii. (Leiden, 1907.-1908). 

WILLIAM n. (1792-1849), king of the Netherlands, son of 
William I., was born at the Hague on the 6th of December 179a. 
When he was three years old his family was driven out of Holland 
by the French republican armies, and lived in exile until 1813. 
He was educated at the military school at Berlin and afterwards 
at the university of Oxford. He entered the English army, 
and in 181 1, as aide-de-camp to the duke of Wellington, took part 
in several .campaigns of the Peninsula War. In 18x5 be com- 
manded the Dutch and Belgian contingents, and won high 
commendations for his courage and conduct at the battles of 
Quatre Bras and Waterloo, at the latter of which he was wounded. 
The prince of Orange married in 1816 the* grand duchess Anna 
Paulowna, sister of the tear Alexander I. He enjoyed consider* 
able popularity in Belgium, as well as in Holland for his affability 
and moderation, and in 1830, on the outbreak of the Belgian 
revolution, he betook himself to Brussels, and did his utmost 
by personal conferences with the most influential men in the 
Belgian capital to bring about a peaceable settlement on the 
basis of the administrative autonomy of the southern provinces 
under the house of Orange. His father had given him powers 
to treat, but afterwards threw him over and rejected the terms 
of accommodation that he had proposed. He withdrew on 
this to England and resided there for several months. In April 
1831 William took the command of s Dutch army for the invasion 
of Belgium, and in a ten-days* campaign defeated and dispersed 
the Belgian forces under Leopold 1- nh.es a &harp fight near 
Louvain. He would have entered Brussels in Lriumph, but hi* 
victorious advance was stayed by Lhc intervention of the French. 
In 1.840, on the abdication of his f&Lher, he ascended the limine 
as William II. The peace of 1S30 had set lied nil differences 
between Holland and Belgium, and ilu- new king found himwll 
confronted with the task of the rooffganiiaiion of 
and the necessity of meeting Lhc popular 
ot the fundamental law F and the esUblii 
franchise on a wider basis, 
moderation, and, although by no 
ideas, he saw the necessity 



frankly gave his support to larger measures of reform. The 
fundamental law was altered in 1848 and the Dutch monarchy, 
from being autocratic, became henceforth constitutional. The 
king's attitude secured for him the good will and affection of a 
people, loyal by tradition to the house of Orange, and the 
revolutionary disturbances of 1848 found no echo in Holland. 
William died suddenly on the 17th of March 1849. 

See J. J. Abbink, Leven van, Koning WiUem II. (Amsterdam,* 
1849); J- Bosscha, Het Leven van Willem den Tweede, Koning der 
Nederlanden, 1703-1849 (Amsterdam, 1852) ; P. Blok, Gesckiedenis 
dtr Nedertondsdu Voll (Leiden, 1908). (G. E.) 

WILLIAM m. (18x7-1800), king of the Netherlands, son of 
William II., was born at Brussels on the 19th of February 1817. 
He married in 1839 Sophia, daughter of William I., king of 
WQrttemberg. Sophia was an accomplished woman of high 
intelligence, but unfortunately the relations between the royal 
pair were far from cordial and finally ended in complete disagree- 
ment, and the breach between them continued until the death 
of the queen in 1877. The private life of the king in fact gave 
rise to much scandal; nevertheless he was an excellent con- 
stitutional monarch, and, though he never sought to win 
popular favour, succeeded in winning and retaining in a remark- 
able degree his people's affectionate loyalty. He had no sym- 
pathy with political liberalism, but throughout his long reign 
of forty-two years, with a constant interchange of ministries 
and many ministerial crises, he never had a serious conflict with 
the states-general, and his ministers could always count upon 
his fair-mindedness and an earnest desire to help them to further 
the national welfare. He was economical, and gave up a third 
of his civil list in order to help forward the task of establishing 
an equilibrium in the annual budget, and he was always ready 
from his large private fortune to help forward all schemes for the 
social or industrial progress of the country. It was largely 
due to his prudent diplomacy that Holland passed pacifically 
through the difficult period of the Luxemburg settlement in 
1866 and the Franco-German War of 187a 

William III. had two sons by his marriage with Sophia of 
Wurttemberg, William (1841-1879), and Alexander (1843-1884). 
Both of them died unmarried. The decease of Prince Alexander 
left the house of Orange without a direct heir male, but the 
prospect of a disputed succession had fortunately been averted 
by the marriage of the king in 1879 with the princess Emma 
of Waldeck-Pyrmont. From this Ainion a daughter, Wilhelmina, 
was born in 1880. On her father's death at the Loo, on the 
23rd of November 1890, she succeeded as queen of the Nether- 
lands under the regency of her mother. 

William was grand duke of Luxemburg by a personal title, 
and his death severed the dynastic relation between the kingdom 
of the Netherlands and the grand duchy. The sovereignty of 
the Luxemburg duchy passed to the next heir male of the house 
of Nassau, Adolphus, ex-duke of Nassau. 

See T. A. Bruijne, Gesckiedenis van Nederland in omen Hjd. (5 vofe.,' 
Schiedam, 1889-1906); P. Blok, Gesckiedenis der NedeHandsrko 
Volk (Leiden, 1908), vol. viii.; and G. L. Keepers, De regeerint van 
Koning WiUem III. (Groningen, 1887). (G. £.) 

WILLIAM (1227-1256), king of the Romans and count of 
Holland, was the son of Count Floris IV. and his wife Matilda, 
daughter of Henry, duke of Brabant. He was about six years 
of age when his father was killed in a tournament, and the fact 
that his long minority was peaceful and uneventful speaks well 
for the goon] gfvv mment of Mi two paternal uncles, who were 
his gu&tdi&Eiiu William w«a r however, suddenly in 1247 to 
become a premium t figure in the great Guelph-Gbibelline 
Mf ugg|e< which it ital time was di ,t urbusg the peace of Europe. 
e» the church and the emperor Frederick II. 
*iagc. t'ope Innocent IV., who had 
bus ;>ri|flci to accept the 
ed 
ready to 
succeeded 
he was 
lopgmxcd head of 
far himself friends 




WILLIAM I. (SICILY)— WILLIAM I. (WURTTEMBERG) 671 



in Germany, but he never really succeeded in faming a party 
or saining for himself a footing la the Empire during the lifetime 
of Frederick. With the extinction of. the Hohenstauf en house 
in 1*54 ms chances were much improved, but shortly afterwards 
his death occurred on the s8th of January 1356 through his 
horse breaking through the ice during an obscure campaign 
among the Frisian manned. William was more successful in 
his struggles with Margaret, countess of Flanders and Hainaut, 
known as " Black Meg." She wished her succession to pass to 
the sons of her second marriage with William of Dampierre in 
preference to those of his first- marriage with Bouchard of 
Avennes. But John of Avennes, her eldest son, had married 
William's sister Aleidis. William took up arms in defence of 
bis brother-in-law's rights and Margaret was decisively beaten 
at West Kappel in 1253, and was compelled to acknowledge 
John of Avennes as her successor to the county of Hainaut. 

See A. Ulrich, GeschidUe da rSmiscken Kdwigs, WUkdm *m 
HotUmd (Hanover, 1883). 

WILLIAM I. (d. 1x66), king of Sicily, son of King Roger II. 
by Elvira of Castile, succeeded in 11 54. His title the Bad " 
seems little merited and expresses the bias of the historian 
Falcandus and the baronial class against the king and the official 
class by whom he was guided. It is obvious, however, that 
William was far inferior in character and energy to ms father, 
and was attached to the semi-Moslem life of his gorgeous palaces 
of Palermo. The real power in the kingdom was at first exercised 
by Maio of Ban, a man of low birth, whose title awtrnkaSus 
ammiratorum was the highest in the realm. Maio continued 
Roger's policy of excluding the nobles from the administration! 
and sought also to curtail the liberties of the towns. The barons, 
always chafing against the-royal power, were encouraged to revolt 
by Pope Adrian IV., whose recognition Wunam had not yet 
sought, by the Basileus Manuel and the emperor Frederick II. 
At the end of 1x55 Greek troops reco v ered Ban and began to 
besiege Brmdisi. WiHiam, however, was not devoid of military 
energy; landing in Italy he destroyed the Greek fleet and army 
at Brindisi (28th May 1156) and recovered Ban. Adrian came 
to terms at Benevento (18th* June XX56), abandoned the rebels 
and confirmed William as king, and in 1158 peace was made with 
the Greeks. These diplomatic successes were probably due to 
Maio; on the other hand, the African dominions were lost to 
the Almohads (1 156-1 160), and it is possible that he advised their 
abandonment in face of the dangers threatening the kingdom 
down from the north. The policy of the minister led to a general 
conspiracy, and in November 1160 he was murdered in Palermo 
by Matthew Bonello, leader of the Sicilian nobles. For a while 
the king was in the hands of the conspirators, who purposed 
murdering or deposing him, but the people and the army tallied 
round him; he recovered power, crushed the Sicilian rebels, 
had Bonello blinded, and in a short c am paign reduced the rest 
of the Regno. Thus freed from feudaiTOrolts, William confided 
the government to men trained in Maio's school, such as the 
grand notary, Matthew d'Agello. His latter years were peaceful; 
he was now the champion of the true pope against the e mperor, 
and Alexander III. was installed in the Lateran in November 
1165 by a guard of Normans. William died on the 7th of May 
ij66. (E. Cxj.) 

WILLIAM IL (d. 1x89), king of Sicily, was only thirteen 
years old at the death of his father William I. when he was 
placed under the regency of his mother, Marguerite of Navarre.' 
Until the king came of age in 1x71 the government was controlled 
fixst by the chancellor Stephen of Perche, cousin of Marguerite 
(1166-1168), and then by Walter Opbamil, archbishop of Palermo, 
and Matthew d'Ajeuo, the vice-chancellor. William's character 
k very indistinct. Lacking in military enterprise, secluded and 
plat<na4aj|a^afleJdom emerged from his palace life at Palermo. 
¥efJHHH^^Kfi|gd by an ambitious foreign policy and a 
^^^^Hbsssss^K; Champion of the papacy and in secret 
H^^^^^^^Btid cities he was able to defy the common 
f Tp In 1x74 and 1175 he made treaties with 

I rand his marriage in February 1x77 *fth 

f Tenry II. of England, marks his high position 



in European politics. To secure peace with the emperor he 
sanctioned the marriage of his aunt Constance, daughter of 
Roger IL, with Frederick's son Henry, afterwards the emperor 
Henry VI., causing a general oath to be taken to her as bis 
successor m case of his death without heirs* This step, fatal to 
the Norman kingdom, was. possibly taken that William might 
devote himself to foreign conquests. 1 - 

Unable to revive the African dominion, William directed his 
attack on Egypt, from which Saladin threatened the Latin 
kingdom of Jerusalem. In July 1x74, 50,000 men were landed 
before Alexandria, but Saladm's arrival forced the Sicilians to 
re-embark in disorder. A better prospect opened in the confusion 
in Byzantine affairs which followed the death of Manuel Com- 
nenus (xx8o), and WBiam took up the old design and feud 
against Constantinople. Duraszo was captur e d (xxth June 1x85) 
and in August Thessalonica surrendered to the joint attach of 
the Sicilian fleet and army. The troops then marched upon the 
capital, but the troop of the emperor Isaac Angelas overthrew 
the Invaders on the banks of the Strymon (7th Sept. 1x85). 
Tnessalonica was at once abandoned and in 1189 William made 
peace with Isaac, abandoning all the conquests. He was now 
planning to induce the crusading armies of the West to pass 
through his territories, and seemed about to play a leading part 
m the third Crusade. His admiral Margarito, a naval genius 
equal to George of Antioch, with 600 vessels kept the eastern 
Mediterranean open for the Franks, and forced' the all-victorious 
Saladin to retire from before Tripoli in the spring of rr88. In 
November 1189 WiHiam died, leaving no children. His title 
of " the Good " is due perhaps less to his character than to the 
cessation of internal troubles in his reign. The " Voyage " of 
Ibn-Giobair, a traveller in Sicily in 1x83-1 185, shows William 
surrounded by Moslem women and eunuchs, speaking and reading 
Arabic and living like " a Moslem king." (£. CtJ.) 

WILLIAM I. [Fxteorich Karl] (1781-1864), king of Wiirt- 
temberg, son of Frederick, afterwards King Frederick I. of 
Wurttembcrg, was born at Lflben in Silesia on the 47th of 
September 1781. In his early days he was debarred from public 
life owing to a quarrel with his father, whose time-serving 
deference to Napoleon was distasteful to him. In 18x4-18x5 he 
suddenly rose into prominence through the Wars tof Liberation 
against France, in which he commanded an army corps with no 
little credit to himself. On his accession to the throne of WUrttem- 
berg In 1816 he realized the expectations formed of him as a 
liberal-minded ruler by promulgating a constitution (18x9), 
under which serfdom and obsolete class privileges were swept 
away, and by issuing ordinances which greatly assisted the 
financial and industrial development and the educational progress 
of his country. In 1848 he sought to disarm the revolutionary 
movement by a series of further liberal reforms which removed 
the restrictions more recently imposed at Mctternkh's instance 
by the Germanic diet. But his relations with the legislature, 
which had from time to .time become strained owing to the 
bureaucratic spirit which he kept alive in the administration, 
were definitely broken off in consequence of a prolonged conflict 
on questions of Germanic policy. He cut the knot by repudiating 
the enactments of 1848*1849 and by summoning a packed 
parliament (x8$r), which re-enforced the code of 1819. 

The same difficulties which beset William as a constitutional 
reformer impeded him as a champion of Germanic union. Intent 
above all on preserving the rights of the Middle Germanic states 
against encroachments by Austria and Prussia he lapsed Into 
a policy of mere obstruction. The protests whkh he made in 
1820-1813 against Metternich's policy of making the minor 
German states subservient to Austria met with less success than 
they perhaps deserved. In 1849-1850 he made a firm stand 
against the proposals for a Germanic union propounded in the 
National Parliament a> Frankfort, for fear lest the exaltation 
of Prussia should ecBpse the lesser princ ip alities. Though forced 
to accede to the proffering of the imperial crown to the king of 
Prussia, he joined heartily in Prince Schwarzenberg's schemes for 
undoing the work of the National Parliament, and by means of 
'Chafaadon. £0 D o min o* '** nmtmdt. «L 389. 



672 WILLIAM IV. (OF HESSE)— WILLIAM OF ORANGE 



the coup d'itat described above forced his country into a policy 
of alliance with Austria against Prussia. Nevertheless his 
devotion to the cause of Germanic onion is proved by the eager- 
ness with which he helped the formation of the Zollverein (1828- 
1830), and in spite of his conflicts with his chambers he achieved 
unusual' popularity among his subjects. He died on the 35th of 
June 1864, and was succeeded by his son Charles. 

See Nick, WWulm /., Kdmg von WirtUmberr, und seine Rtgienmg 
(Stuttgart, 1864); P. Stalin, " Kdnig Wilhelro I. von Wflrttemberg," 
ZeOsckriftfiir augemein* Geschkkte, 1685, pp. 353-367, 417-434. 

WILLIAM IV., landgrave of Hesse (1532-1592), was the 
son and successor of the landgrave Philip the Magnanimous. 
He took a leading part in safeguarding the results of the Reforma- 
tion and was indefatigable in his endeavours to unite the different 
sections of Protestantism for the sake of effective resistance 
against the Catholic reaction. His counsels were marred by 
bis reluctance to appeal to arms at the critical moments of action, 
and by the slenderness of his own resources, but they deserve 
attention for their broad common sense and spirit of tolerance. 
As an administrator of his principality he displayed rare energy, 
issuing numerous ordinances, appointing expert officials, and in 
particular establishing the finances on a scientific basis. By 
a law of primogeniture he secured his land against such testa- 
mentary divisions as had diminished his own portion of his 
father's estate. He not only patronised art and science, but 
continued as ruler the intercourse with scholars which he had 
cultivated in his youth. 

William was a pioneer in astronomical research and perhaps owes 
his most lasting fame to his discoveries in this branch of study. 
Most of the mechanical contrivances which made Tycho Brahcs 
instruments so superior to those of his contemporaries were adopted 
at Cassel about. 1584, and from that time the observations made 
there seem to have been about as accurate as Tycho 's; but the re- 
sulting longitudes were 6' too great in consequence of the adopted 
solar parallax of 3'. The principal fruit of the observations was a 
catalogue of about a thousand stars, the places of which were deter- 
mined by the methods usually employed in the 16th century, con- 
necting a fundamental star by means of Venus with the sun, and 
thus finding its longitude ana latitude, while other stars could at 
any time be referred to the fundamental star. It should be noticed 
that clocks, on which Tycho Brahe depended very little, were used 



at Cassel for finding the difference of right ascension between Venus 
and the sun before sunset; Tycho preferred observing the angular 
distance between the sun and Venus when the latter was visible in 



the daytime. The Hessian star catalogue was published in Lucius 
Barettus's Historia coelestis (Augsburg, 1668), and a number of other 
observations are to be found in Coat et siderum in to errantium 
observations Hassiaeae (Leiden, 1618), edited by Willebrord Snell. 
R. Wolf, in his " Astronomische Mitthctlungen," No. 45 {Viertel- 
jahrsschrift der nalurforsckenden CeseUsehaft in Zirich, 1878), has 
given a resume 1 of the manuscripts still preserved at Cassel, which 
throw much light on the methods adopted in the observations and 
reductions. 

WILLIAM {1533-1584), surnamed the Silent, prince of 
Orange and count of Nassau, was born at the castle of DiUenburg 
in Nassau, on the 25th of Aoril 1533. His grandfather, John, 
count of Nassau, had left his Netberland possessions to his 
elder son Henry, his German to his younger son William. This 
William of Nassau (d. 1559) had by his wife, Juliana of Stolberg, 
a family of five sons, of whom the subject of this notice was the 
eldest, and seven daughters. Henry became the trusted friend 
and counsellor of Charles V., and married (1515) Claude, sister 
of Phflibert, prince of Orange. Philibert, having no issue, 
made Rene", the son of Henry and Claude, his heir. Rem?, at 
the age of twenty-six, was killed at the siege of St Dizier in 1544, 
and left his titles and great possessions by will to bis cousin 
William, who thus became prince of Orange. William's parents 
were Lutherans, but the emperor insisted that the boy-successor 
to Rene's heritage should be brought up in his court at Brussels, 
as a Catholic. The remembrance of his ancestors' services and 
his own high qualities endeared William to Charles, who secured 
for him, at the age of seventeen, the hand of Anne of Egmont, 
heiress of the count of Buren. Anne died in 2558, leaving issue 
a son Philip William, prince of Orange and count of Buren, 
and a daughter. It was on the shoulder of the young prince of 
Orange that Charles V. leant when, in 1555, in the presence 
of a great assembly at Brussels, he abdicated, in favour of his 



son Philip, the sovereignty of the Netherlands, William was 
also selected to carry the insignia of the empire to Ferdinand, 
king of the Romans, when Charles resigned the imperial crown. 
He had, at the age of twenty-one, been placed by the emperor, 
before his abdication, at the head of an army of 20*000 men in 
the war with France, and he continued to fill that post under 
Philip in 1556, but without distinction. His services, as a 
diplomatist, were much more brilliant. He was one of the three 
plenipotentiaries who negotiated the treaty of Cateau-Caxnbresis 
(1559), and was largely responsible for bringing about a settle- 
ment so favourable to Spanish interests. After the conclusion 
of the peace, the prince spent some time at the French court, 
in the capacity of a state hostage for the carrying out of the 
treaty. It was during his sojourn in France that William by 
bis discreetness acquired the soubriquet of le Taciturnc (the 
Silent), which has ever since dung to his name. The appellation 
is in no way expressive of the character of the man, who was 
fond of conversation, most eloquent in speech, and A master of 
persuasion. His two great adversaries of the decade, which 
followed the peace of Cateau-Cambresis, were in 1559 closely 
associated with him; Granvelle as a plenipotentiary, Alva 
as a fellow hostage. 

Up to this time the life of Orange had been marked by lavish 
display and extravagance. As a grand seigneur in one of the most 
splendid of courts, he surrounded himself with a retinue of gay 
young noblemen and dependentsi, kept open house in his magni- 
ficent Nassau palace at Brussels, and indulged in every kind of 
pleasure and dissipation. The revenue of his vast estates was 
not sufficient to prevent him being crippled by debt. But after 
his return from France, a change began to come over Orange. 
Philip made him councillor of state, knight of the Golden Fleece, 
and stadtbolder of Holland, Zeeland and Utrecht; but there 
was a latent antagonism between the natures of the two men 
which speedily developed into relations of coolness and then of 
distrust. The harshness with which the stern laws against 
heretics were carried out, the presence of Spanish troops, the 
filling up of ministerial offices by Spaniards and other foreigners 
had, even before the departure of Philip for Spain (August 1559)., 
stirred the most influential Nctherland noblemen — foremost 
among them the prince of Orange, and the counts of Egmont 
and Hoorn— to a policy of constitutional opposition. With the 
advent of Margaret of Parma the situation became more serious. 
All state business was carried out by the Consulta; all power 
virtually placed in the hands of Cardinal Granvelle; the edicts 
against heretics enforced with the utmost severity; the number 
of bishoprics increased from three to fourteen (see Nether- 
lands). As a protest, Orange, Egmont and Hoorn withdrew 
from the council of state, and wrote to the king setting forth 
their grievances. At this time Orange was still nominally a 
Catholic, but his marriage in August 1561 with Anne, daughter 
and heiress of the elector Maurice of Saxony, with Lutheran 
rites, at Dresden, was significant of what was to come. It 
marked the beginning of that gradual change in his religious 
opinions, which was to lead William through Lutheranism to 
that moderate Calvinism which he professed after 1573. Of the 
sincerity of the man during this period of transformation there 
can be little doubt. Policy possibly played its part in dictating 
the particular moments at which the changes of faith were 
acknowledged. No student of the prince's voluminous corre- 
spondence can fail, however, to see that he was a deeply religious 
man. The charges of insincerity brought against him by his 
enemies arise from the fact that in an age of bigotry and fanati- 
cism the statesmanlike breadth and tolerance of William's 
treatment of religious questions, and his aversion to persecution 
for matters of opinion, were misunderstood. His point of view 
was in advance of that of his time. 

In the spring of 1564 the constitutional opposition of the 
great nobles to the policy of the king appeared to be successful. 
Granvelle was withdrawn, the Consulta abolished, and Orange, 
Egmont and Hoorn look their seats once more on the Council. 
They speedily found, however, that things did not mend. 
Granvelle bad gone, but the royal policy was unchanged. la 



WILLIAM OF ORANGE 



673 



August 1564 Philip issued mo older for carrying out the decrees 
of the Council of Trent, and for the strict execution of the 
placards against heretics. Protests, letters, personal missions 
were in vain, the king's will was not to be moved from its purpose. 
The spirit of resistance spread first to the lesser nobles, then to 
the people. In the memorable year 1566 came " the Com- 
promise," " the Request, 1 ' the banquet at the Hotel Culemburg 
with its cries of " VivaU ks Cuettx" followed by the wild 
iconoclastic riots and outrages by bodies of fanatical Protestant 
sectaries at Antwerp and elsewhere. The effect of this last 
outbreak was disastrous. Philip was filled with anger and vowed 
vengeance. The national leaders drew back, afraid to identify 
themselves with revolutionary movements, or the cause of 
extreme Protestantism. Egmont was a good Catholic, and took 
active steps to suppress disorder, and Orange himself at the 
request of the regent betook himself to Antwerp, where the 
citizens in arms were on the point of engaging in civil strife. 
At the risk of his life the prince succeeded in bringing about an 
accord, and as he proclaimed its terms to a sullen and half-hostile 
crowd he uttered for the last time the words, " Long live the 
King!" It was his final act of loyal service to a sovereign, 
who from secret emissaries that he kept at Madrid, he knew to 
be plotting the destruction of himself and his friends. In vain 
be endeavoured to rouse Egmont to a sense of his danger, and 
to induce him and other prominent leaden to take steps, if 
necessary by armed resistance, to avert their doom. Finding 
all his efforts fruitless William, after resigning all his posts, left 
the country (22nd of April 1567), and took up his residence with 
his family at the ancestral home of the Nassau* at DiUenburg. 

At that very time Alva was quitting Madrid for his- terrible 
mission of vengeance in the Netherlands (see Alva). The 
story of the Council of Blood and of the executions of Egmont 
and Hoorn is told elsewhere. The prince of Orange was out of 
peach of the tyrant's arm, but by an act of imprudence he had 
left his eldest son, Philip William, count of Buren, studying at 
the university of Louvain. He was seised (February 1566) and 
carried off to Spain, to be brought up as an enemy to the political 
and religious principles of his father. He himself was outlawed, 
and his property confiscated. In March he published a lengthy 
defence of his conduct, entitled " Justification of the Prince of 
Orange against his Calumniators," and meanwhile strained 
every nerve to enlist an armed force for the invasion of the 
Netherlands. To raise money bis brother, John of Nassau, 
pledged his estates. William himself sold his plate and jewels. 
An attack was made m three directions, but with disastrous 
results. The force under Louis of Nassau indeed gained a victory 
at Heiligerlee in Friesland (May 23rd), but met with a crushing 
defeat at the hands of Alva in person (July sist) at Jemmingen. 
All seemed lost, but William's indomitable spirit did not despair. 
M With God's help," he wrote to his brother Louis, " I am 
determined to go on." In September he himself crossed the 
Mouse at the head of 18,000 infantry and 7000 cavalry. Bat 
Alva, while clinging to his steps, refused to fight, and William, 
through lack of funds, was compelled to disband hjs mercenaries, 
and withdraw over the French frontier (November 17th). 

Then followed the most miserable period of Orange's life. 
In fear of assassination, in fear of creditors, he wandered about 
from place to place, and his misfortunes were aggravated by the 
bad conduct of his wife, Anne of Saxony, who left him. She was 
finally, on the ground of insanity, placed in close confinement 
by her own family, and remained incarcerated until her death 
six years later. During the years 1 560-1 573 the brothers William 
and Louis, the one in Germany, the other in France, were, 
however, actively preparing for a renewal of the struggle for the 
freedom of the Netherlands. The barbarities of AWa had caused 
Spanish rule to be universally hated, and the agents of the 
Nassau* were busy in the provinces rousing the spirit of resistance 
and trying to raise funds. In 1560 eighteen vessels provided 
with letters of marque from the prince of Orange were preying 
upon Spanish commerce in the narrow seas. Stimulated by the 
hope of plunder their number rapidly grew, until the wild and 
fierce corsair*— named " Beggars of the sea " (Gucux 4* nwr>— 



became a terror to their enemies. The refusal of Queen Elizabeth 
in 157a to allow the Beggars to refit in English harbours led to 
the first success of the patriot cause. On the 1st of April a force 
under the command of Lumbres and Treating, being compelled 
to take refuge in the Maaa, seized the town of Brill by surprise, 
Encouraged by their success they likewise took by assault the 
important sea-port of Flushing. Like wildfire the revolt spread 
through Holland, Zecland, Utrecht and Friesland, and the 
principal towns, one after the other, submitted themselves to the 
authority of the prince of Orange as their lawful stadtholdcr. 
Louis of Nassau immediately afterwards dashed with a small 
force from France into Hainault, and captured Valenciennes 
and Mons. In Mons, however, Louis was blockaded by a 
superior Spanish force, and eventually forced to surrender. 
William crossed the Rhine with 20,000 men to relieve him, but 
he was out-generalled by AWa, nearly lost his life during a night 
attack on his camp at Harmignies (September nth), and retired 
into Holland. Delft became henceforth his home, and he cast 
in his lot for good and all with the brave Hollanders and Zee- 
landers in their struggle for freedom, " being resolved," as he 
wrote to his brother John, " to maintain the affair there as long 
as possible and decided to find there my grave." It was his 
spirit that animated the desperate resistance that was offered 
to the Spanish arms at Haarlem and Alkmaar, and it was through 
his personal and unremitting exertions that, despite an attack 
of fever which kept him to his bed, the relief of Leiden, on the 
3rd of October 1574, was effected just as the town had been 
reduced to the last extremity. 

In order to identify himself more closely with the cause for 
which he was fighting, Orange had, on October 23rd, 1573, made 
a public profession of the Calvinist religion. But he was never 
a bigot in religious matters. The three conditions which he 
laid down as the irreducible minimum on which negotiations 
could be based, and from which he never departed, were: (1) 
freedom of worship and liberty to preach the Gospel according 
to the word of God; (2) the restoration and maintenance of all 
the ancient charters, privileges and liberties of the land; (3) the 
withdrawal of all Spaniards and other foreigners from all posts 
and employments, civil and military. On these points he was 
indexible, but he was a thoroughly moderate man. He hated 
religious tyranny whether it were exercised by Papist or Calvinist, 
and his political aims were not self-seeking. His object was to 
prevent the liberties of the Netherlands from being trampled 
underfoot by a foreign despotism, and he did not counsel the 
provinces to abjure their allegiance to Philip, until he found the 
Spanish monarch was intractable. But when the abjuration 
became a necessity he sought to find in Elizabeth of England 
or the duke of Anjou, a sovereign possessing sufficient resources 
to protect the land from the Spaniard. 

William (24th of June 1575) took as his third wife, Charlotte 
de Bourbon, daughter of the duke of Montpensier. This marriage 
gave great offence to the Catholic party, for Charlotte was a 
renegade nun, having been abbess of Jouarre, and Anne of 
Saxony was still alive. In April 1 $76, an act of Union between 
Holland and Zecland was agreed upon and signed at Delft, 
by which supreme authority was conferred upon the prince, 
as ad interim ruler. In this year (1S76) the outrages of the 
Spanish troops in the southern Netherlands, who had mutinied 
for want of pay, caused a revulsion of feeling. The horrors of 
the " Spanish Fury " at Antwerp (November 4th) led to a 
definite treaty being concluded, known as the Pacification of 
Ghent, by which under the leadership of the prince of Orange, the 
whole seventeen provinces bound themselves together to drive 
the foreigners out of the country. This was supplemented by 
the Union of Brussels (January 1577) by which the Southerners 
pledged themselves to expel the Spaniards, but to. maintain the 
Catholic religion and the king's authority. To these conditions. 
William willingly assented; he desired to force no man's con* 
science, and as yet he professed to be acting as stadtholdcr 
under the king's commission. On September 23rd he entered 
Brussels in triumph as the acknowledged leader of the whole 
I people of the Netherlands, Catholic as well as Protestant* in 



67* 



WILLIAM II. OF ORANGE 



their resistance to foreign oppression. At this moment he 
touched the zenith of his career. It was, however, but a short- 
lived position of eminence. After the entry into Brussels 
followed the period of tangled intrigue during which the archduke 
Matthias, the duke of Anjou, the palatine count John Casunir 
and Don John of Austria were all striving to secure for themselves 
a position of supremacy in the land. William had to steer a 
difficult course amidst shoals and quicksands, and never did his 
brilliant talents as diplomatist and statesman shine more 
brightly. But after the sudden death of Don John he found 
himself face to face with an opponent of .abilities equal to his own 
in the person of Alexander Farnese, prince of Parma, appointed 
governor general by Philip. Farnese skilfully fomented the 
jealousy of the Catholic nobles of the south— the Malcontents — 
against the prince of Orange, and the Pacification of Ghent was 
henceforth doomed. The Walloon provinces bound themselves 
together in a defensive league, known as the league of Arras 
(5th of January 1579) and by the exertions of John of Nassau 
(at that time governor of Gdderland) Holland, Zetland, Utrecht, 
Gelderland and Zutphen replied by signing (29th of January) 
the compact known as the Union of Utrecht. William stUI 
struggled to keep the larger federation together, but in vain. 
The die was now cast, and the Northern and Southern Nether- 
lands from this time forward had separate histories. 

On the 25th of March 1581 a ban was promulgated by King 
Philip against the prince of Orange, in which William was de- 
nounced as a traitor and enemy of the human race, and a reward 
of 25,000 crowns in gold or land with a patent of nobility was 
offered to any one who should deliver the world of this pest. 
William replied in a lengthy document, the Apology, m which he 
defended himself from the accusations brought against him, and 
on his part charged the Spanish king with a series of misdeeds 
and crimes. The Apology is valuable for the biographical details 
which it contains. William now> felt that his struggle with 
Philip was a war d outrance, and knowing that the United Pro- 
vinces were too weak to resist the Spanish armies unaided, he 
endeavoured to secure the powerful aid of France, by making 
the duke of Anjou sovereign of the Netherlands. Holland and 
Zeeland were averse to this project, and to conciliate their 
prejudices Orange, provisionally, and after some demur, accepted 
from those provinces the offer of the countship (24th of July 
1 s8i>. Two days later the representatives of Brabant, Flanders, 
Utrecht, Gelderland, Holland and Zeeland assembled at The 
Hague, solemnly abjured the sovereignty of Philip, and agreed to 
accept the French duke as their sovereign in his place. Anjou 
was solemnly inaugurated by tho prince in person at Antwerp, 
as duke of Brabant, on the 19th of February 1582. While at 
Antwerp an attempt was made upon William's life (March 18th) 
by a Biscayan youth, named Juan Jaureguy. Professing to offer 
a petition he fired a- pistol at the prince's head, the ball passing 
in at the right ear and out by the left jaw. After banging for 
some time between life and death, William ultimately recovered 
and was able to attend a thanksgiving service on the 2nd of May. 
The shock and anxiety proved, however, fatal to his wife, Char- 
lotte de Bourbon. She expired on the 5th of May after a very 
short illness. 

The French sovereign soon made himself impossible to his new 
subjects, and the hopes that William had based upon Anjou were 
sorely disappointed. The duke was dissatisfied with his position, 
aimed at being an absolute ruler, and tried to carry his ambitious 
ideas into effect by the treacherous attack on Antwerp, which 
bears the name of the " French Fury." Its failure rendered 
Anjou at once ridiculous and detested, and his shameless mis- 
conduct brought no small share of opprobrium on William him- 
self. The trusty Hollanders and Zeelanders remained, however 
staunchly loyal to him, and Orange now fixed his residence 
permanently in their midst. On the 7th of April 1583 be married 
in fourth wedlock Louise de Coligny, daughter of the famous 
HBgurnaC leader, and widow of the Seigneur de Teiigny. With 
^FjatheeWiuHum,'' as he was affectionately styled, settled 
* Delft, and lived like a plain, homely Dutch 
sly, as became a man who had 




spent his all In his country catise, aiid whose res ou rce s^ e r e now 
of the most modest description. 

Ever since the promulgation of the ban and the offer of a 
reward upon his life, religion and political fanaticism had been 
continually compassing his assassination, and the free access 
which the prince gave to bis person offered facilities for such a 
purpose, despite the careful watch and ward kept over him by 
the burghers of Delft and his own household. He was shot dead 
by a Burgundian, Balthazar Gerard, on the 9th of July 1584, 
as he was leaving his dining hall. Gerard was moved by devoted 
loyalty to his faith and king, and endured the torments of a 
barbarous death with supreme courage and resignation. William 
was buried with great pomp at the public charges in the Neuwe 
Kerk at Delft amidst the tears of a mourning people. 

William the Silent was tall and well formed, of a dark, com- 
plexion, with brown hair and eyes. He was the foremost states- 
man of his time, capable of forming wise and far-reaching plans 
and of modifying them to suit the changing circumstances in 
which it was necessary to put them in execution. In moments 
of difficulty he displayed splendid resource and courage, and he 
had a will of iron, which misfortunes were never able to bend or 
break. To rescue the Netherlands from the tyrannical power 
of Spain, he sacrificed a great position, vast wealth and eventu- 
ally his life. He had the satisfaction, however, of knowing before 
he died that the cause for which he bad endured so much and 
striven so hard bad survived many dangers, and had acquired 
strength to offer successful resistance to the overwhelming 
power of King Philip. He was the real founder of the independ- 
ence and greatness of the Dutch republic. 

He left a large number of children. By Anne of Egmont he had 
a son Philip William, who was kidnapped from Lou vain (1567) 
and educated at Madrid, and a daughter. By Anne of Saxony, 
a son Maurice (see Maurice op Nassau, prince of Orange) and 
two daughters. By Charlotte de Bourbon, six daughters. By 
Louise de Coligny, one son, Frederick Henry (see Feeoxucz 
Henry, prince of Orange). 

See Genhard, Correspondence de Gutilaume U Taciturn*; Groen von 
Priosterer, Archives ou correspondance inediie de la motion d'Orange- 
Nassau; Commelin, WUhelm en Maurits van Nassau, prinsen van 
Orangien, haer leven en bedrijf; Meursius, Culielmus Auriacus; 
Putnam, William the Silent, Prince of Orange, Ike Moderate Man of Ike 
Sixteenth Century; Harrison, William the Silent; Vorstermen van 
Oyen, Ret Vorstenkuis Orange-Nassau; Delaborde. Charlotte de 
Bourbon, princesse d' Orange; Delaborde, Louise de Coligny, princtsse 
d' Orange; Blok, Ceschiedenis van ket Nederlandsche Yolk, vol. it; 
R. Frum, Hei voorspel van den laehtigjarigen oortog; Motley, Rise of 
the Dutch Republic; Cambridge Modern History, vol. in. cc. vi, 
vii. (G. E.) 

WILLIAM It (1626-1650),, prince of Orange, born at The 
Hague on the 27th of May 1626, was the son of Frederick Henry, 
prince of Orange, and his wife Amalia von Solms, and grandson 
of William the Silent. By the act of survivance passed in 1631 
the offices and dignities held by Frederick Henry were made 
hereditary in his family. On the 12th of May 1641 William 
married, in the royal chapel at Whitehall, Mary, princess royal 
of England, eldest daughter of King Charles I. At the time of 
the wedding the bridegroom was not yet fifteen years old, the 
bride was five years younger. William from his early youth 
accompanied his father in his campaigns, and already in 1643 
highly distinguished himself in a brilliant cavalry fight at 
Burgerhout (September 5). On the death of Frederick Henry 
William succeeded him, not only in the family honours and 
possessions, but in accordance with the terms of the act of 
survivance in all his official posts, as stadtholder of Holland, 
Zeeland, Utrecht, Gelderland, Overyssel and Groningen and 
captain-general and admiral-general of the Union. At the 
moment of his accession to power the negotiations for a separate 
treaty of peace with Spain were almost concluded, and peace was 
actually signed at Mttnster on the 30th of January 1648. By 
this treaty Spain recognized the independence of the United 
Netherlands and made large concessions to the Dutch. William, 
who had always been bitterly opposed to the policy of abandoning 
the French alliance in order to gain better terms from Spain, did 
his utmost to prevent the ratification, but matters were too. far 



WILLIAM THE BRETON— WILLIAM OF MALMESBURY 675 



advanced for Ms interposition to prevail in the face of the deter- 
mination of the states of Holland to conclude a peace so advan- 
tageous to their trade interests. William, however, speedily 
opened secret negotiations with France in the hope of securing 
the armed assistance of that power for the carrying out of his 
ambitious projects of a war of aggrandisement against the Spanish 
Netherlands and of a restoration of his brother-in-law, Charles II., 
to the throne of England. The states of Holland, on the other 
hand, were determined to thwart any attempts for a renewal of 
war, and insisted, in defiance of the authoiity of the captain- 
general supported by the states-general, in virtue of their claim 
to be a sovereign province, in disbanding a large part of the 
regiments in their pay. A prolonged controversy arose, which 
ended in the states-general in June 1650 commissioning the 
prince of Orange to visit the towns qf Holland and secure a 
recognition of their authority. . The mission was unsuccessful 
Amsterdam refused any hearing, at alL William resolved 
therefore to use force and crush resistance. On the 30th of 
July six leading members of the states of Holland were seized 
and imprisoned in the castle of Loevestein. On the same day 
an attempt was made to occupy Amsterdam with troops. The 
citizens were, however, warned in time, and the gates closed. 
William's triumph was nevertheless complete. Cowed by the 
bold seizure of their leaders, the states of Holland submitted. 
The prince had now obtained that position of supremacy in the 
republic at which he had been aiming, and could count on the 
support alike of the states-general and of the provincial states 
for his policy. He lost no time in entering into fresh negotiations 
with the French government, and a draft treaty was already 
early in October drawn up in Paris and the Count d'Estrades 
was commissioned to deliver it in person to the prince of Orange. 
It was, however, never to reach his hands. William had, on the 
8th of October, after his victory was assured, gone to his hunting 
scat at Dieren. Here on the 37th he became ill and returned 
to The Hague. The complaint proved to be small-pox, and on 
the 6th of November he died. William was one of the ablest 
of a race rich in great men, and had he lived he would 
probably have left his mark upon history. A week after his 
death his widow gave birth to a son, who was one day to become 
William III., king of England. (C. E.) 

WILLIAM THE BRETON («. 1160-c 122s), French chronicler 
and poet, was as his name indicates born in Brittany. He was 
educated at Mantes and at the university of Paris, afterwards 
becoming chaplain to the French king Philip Augustus* who 
employed him on diplomatic errands, and entrusted him with 
the education -of his natural son, Pierre Chariot. William is 
supposed to have been present at the battle of Bouvincs. His 
works are the PhUippide and the Gesto Pkilippi //. regis Fran- 
coram The former, a poem three versions of which were written 
by the author, gives some very interesting details about Philip 
Augustus and his time, including some information about 
military matters and shows that William was an excellent Latin 
scholar. In its final form the Gesta is an abbreviation of the work 
of Rigord (9.?.), who wrote a life of Philip Augustus from 1170 
to iso6, and a continuation by William himself from 1207 to 
1210. In both works William speaks in very laudatory terms 
of the king; but bis writings are valuable because he had personal 
knowledge of many of the facts which he relates. He also wrote 
a poem KarUtit, dedicated to Pierre Chariot, which is lost. 

William's world have been edited with introduction by H. F. 
Dclaborde as (Euores de Rigord el de GmUaume U Breton (Paris, 
1882-1883)* *°d have been translated into French by Guisot in 
Collection des mtmoirts reUUfs a I'hisioire de Frame, tomes xi. and 
*m. (Pari*. 1823-1835). See Ddaborde'a introduction, and A. 
Molinicr, Let Sources de Fkisloire de Frame*, tome tii. (Paris, 1903). 

WILLIAM THE CUTO (xxox-xxsft) was the son of Robert, 
duke of Normandy, by his marriage with Sibylla of Conversano. 
After his father's defeat and capture by Henry I. of England at 
the battle of Tinchebrai (xioo) the young William fell into the 
hands of the conqueror. Henry magnanimously placed his 
nephew in the custody of Helias of Saint Saens, who had married 
• natural daughter of Duke Robert. Fearing for the safety 



of the boy, Helias carried him, in mi, to the court of Louis VI. 
of France. That sovereign joined with the discontented Norman 
barons and others of Henry's enemies in recognizing William as 
the rightful claimant to the duchy; Robert, a prisoner whom 
there was no hope of releasing, they appear to have regarded as 
dead in the eye of the law. William's claims furnished the pretext 
for two Norman rebellions. The first which lasted from 11x2 to 
1 1 20 was abetted by Louis, by Fulk V. of Anjou and by Baldwin 
VIL of Flanders. In the second, which broke out during 1123, 
Henry I. had merely to encounter the forces of his own Norman 
subjects; his diplomatic skill had been successfully employed 
to paralyse the ill-will of other enemies. In 1x22 or 1123 William 
married Sibylle, daughter of Fulk of Anjou, and with her received 
the county of Maine; but Henry I. prevailed upon the Curia 
to annul this union, as being within the forbidden degrees. 
In xi 27, however, the pretender obtained from Louis the hand 
of Johanna of Montferrat, half-sister of the French queen, and 
the vacant fief of Flanders. His own rigorous government or the 
intrigues of Henry I. raised up against William a host of rebels; 
a rival claimant to Flanders appeared in the person of Thierry 
or Dirk of Alsace. In besieging Alost, one of the strongholds 
of the rival party, William received a wound which mortified 
and proved fatal (Jury 28, 11 a8). He left no issue; although 
Duke Robert survived him and only died in 1134, the power 
of Henry I. was thenceforth undisputed by the Normans. 

See Ordericus Vital!*, Hist. eedesiasHca, and Sir James Ramsay's 
Foundations qf England, vol ii. (1898). 

WILLIAM OF MALMESBURY (c. 1080-c 1x43), English 
historian of the 12th century, was born about the year 1080, 
in the south country. He had French as well as English blood 
in his veins, but he appears to have spent his whole life in England, 
and the bat years of it as a monk at Malmesbury. His tastes 
were literary, and the earliest fact which he records of his career 
is that he assisted Abbot Godfrey (1081-1105) in collecting a 
library for the use of the community. The education which 
he received at Malmesbury included a smattering of logic and 
physics; but moral philosophy and history, especially the latter, 
were the subjects to which he devoted most attention. Later 
he made for himself a collection of the histories of foreign 
countries, from reading which he conceived an ambition to 
produce a popular account of English history, modelled on the 
great work of Bede. In fulfilment of this idea, William produced 
about x 1 20 the first edition of his Gesta regum, which at once gave 
him a reputation. It was followed by the first edition of the 
Gtsta poniiJUum (1x25). Subsequently the author turned aside 
to write on theological subjects. A second edition of the Gtsta 
regum (1127) was dedicated to Earl Robert of Gloucester, whose 
literary tastes made him an appreciative patron. William also 
formed an acquaintance with Bishop Roger of Salisbury, who 
had a castle at Malmesbury. It may have been due to these 
friends that he was offered the abbacy of Malmesbury in 11 40. 
But he preferred to remain a simple bibliothecartus. His one 
public appearance was made at the council of Winchester (1x41), 
in which the clergy declared for the empress Matilda. About 
this date he undertook to write the Historic novella, giving an 
account of events since 11 25. This work breaks off abruptly 
at the end of 1x42, with an unfulfilled promise that it will be 
continued. Presumably William died before he could redeem 
his pledge. 

He is the best English historian of his time. The master of 
a good Latin style, he shows literary instincts which are, for his 
time, remarkably sound. But his contempt for the annalistk 
form makes him at times careless in ms chronology and arbitrary 
in his method of arranging his material; he not infrequently 
flies off at a tangent to relate stories which have little or no 
connexion with the main narrative; bis critical faculty is too 
often allowed to lie dormant. His researches were by no means 
profound; he gives us less of the history of his own time than 
we have a right to expect — far less, for example, than Orderic. 
He is, however, an authority of considerable value from 1066 
onwards; many telling anecdotes, many shrewd judgments on 
persons and events, can be gleaned from his pages. 



676 



WILLIAM OF NANGIS— WILLIAM OF ST CALAIS 



Printed Works.— The Gesta regmm coven, in its final form, the 
yean 449-1127. But the later recensions add little, beyond fulsome 
dedications to Earl Robert, to the edition of 1 1 20. The sources used 
are not always easy to trace. But for the pre-Conquest period 
William had at his disposal the works of Bede, Ado of Vienne and 
William of Tumieges; one or more English chronicles similar to the 
extant " Worcester " and " Peterborough " texts: Asser's life of 
Alfred, and a metrical biography of iEthelstan; the chronicles of 
S. Riquier and Fontanelle ; a collection of talcs relating to the reign 
of the emperor Henry III.; and the lives of various saints. For 
the life of William I. he draws on William of Poitiers; for the first 
crusade be mainly follows Fulcher of Chart res; his knowledge of 
Anselm's primacy comes mainly from Eadmer; and at least up to 
1 100, he makes use of an English chronicle. The fifth and last book, 
dealing with the reign of Henry 1., is chiefly remarkable for its de- 
miltonness and an obvious desire to make the best case for that 
monarch, whose treatment of Anselm he prudently ascribes to 
Robert of Meulan (d. u 18). Both in this work and in the Gesta 
pontificum the later recensions are remarkable for the omission of 
certain passages which might give offence to those in high places. 
The deleted sentences usually relate to eminent persons; they some* 
times repeat scandal, sometimes give the author's own opinion. 
The Gesta pontificum gives accounts of the several English sees and 
their bishops, from the beginning to about 1120; the later recensions 
continue the work, in part, to 1 140. Many saints of the south end 
midlands are also noticed. This work, like the Gesta regum, contains 
five books; the fifth relates the life and miracles of St Aldhclm of 
Malmesbury, and is based upon the biography by Abbot Faricius; 
it is less useful than books L-iv., which are of the greatest value to 
the ecclesiastical historian. The Historia novella is annalistic in form. 
It was projected soon after the battle of Lincoln, as an apology for the 
supporters of the empress. The author embark* on special pleading 
in favour of Earl Robert and Bishop Roger of Salisbury, but shows 
a certain liking for the personal character of Stephen, whose case 
he states with studious fairness. 

The historical works of William of Malmesbury were edited by 
Savile in his Scriptores post Bedam (London, 1596); but the text of 
that edition is full of errors. Sir T. D. Hardy edited the Gesta return 
and Historia novella for the English Historical Society in 1840, and 
put the criticism of the manuscripts on a sound basis. But the 
standard edition of these works is that of W. Stubbs in the " Rolls " 
series (1 vol., in a, 18,87-1889); the second part of this edition 
contains a valuable introduction on the sources and value of the 
chronicler. • The Gesta pontificum has been edited for the " Rolls " 
series by N. G. S. A. Hamilton (London, 1870) from a manuscript 
which he was the first to identify as the archetype. Another work, 
De antiquitate Glasloniensis ecclesiao (a.d. 63-1136), is .printed in 
Gale's Scriptores XV. (Oxford, 1691). Wharton in the second 
volume of his Angfia sacra (London, 1691) gives considerable portions 
of a life of Wulfstan which is an amplified translation of an Anglo- 
Saxon biography. Finally Stubbs in his Memorials 0/ St Dunstan 
(" Rolls " series, London, 1874) prints a Vita S. Dunstoni which was 
written about 1126. 

Unprinted Extant Works.— Among these are Miracles of the Virgin ; 
Liber super explanationem lamenlationum Yeremiae prophetae; 
an abridgment of Amalarius' De durinis officUs; De dictu el factis 



nsemorabtiibus philosopkorum ; an epitome of the Historia of Haymo 
of Fleury and some other works, historical and legal (autograph in the 
Bodleian) ; Lives of the English Saints. The MSS. of these works are 
to be found partly in the British Museum, partly in the Bodleian. 

Lost Works.— A Vita Sanctt PatricU and Miracula SancH Benign* 
are mentioned in the prologue to the book on Glastonbury; a 
metrical life of St jClfgyfu is quoted in the Gesta pontificum; 
Chronica tribus libellis arc mentioned in the prologue to the Historta 
novella, and a fragment of them is apparently preserved in the Brit. 
Mas. Lansdowne MS. 436. Leland gives extracts from an Hint- 
rarium Jokannis abbatis, describing the journey of Abbot John to 
Rome in 1 140 (Leland, Collectanea, ui. 272). (H . W. C. D.) 

WILLIAM OF NAN6I8 (d. 1300), French chronicler, was a 
monk in the abbey of St Denis. About 1265 he was placed 
in charge of the abbey library as custos cartarttm, and he died 
in June or July 1300. Having doubtless done some work on the 
Latin manuscripts on which the Grande* Ckroniqucs do France 
are based, William wrote a long Ckronicon, dealing with the 
history of the world from the creation until 1300. For the 
period before 1x13 this work merely repeats that of Sigebert 
of Gemblonx and Others; but after this date it contains some 
newantt " mn Ml 

VC.;(ksta Philippi 

rogum Praneotum; and a 

.en for the laity. Making 

Denis, William was a coro- 

.exctption of the latter 

I materially to our know- 

W, became very popular 

being among those 




who made use of the Ckronicon. This work from 1113 to 1300, 

with continuations to 1368, has been edited by H. Geraud for the 
SociiU de Vkistoire de France (Paris, 1843), and practically all 
William's writings are found in tome xx. of Dom Bouquets Recueil des 
kistonens des Gaulos et de la Franco (Paris, 1738-1876). A French 
translation of the Ckronicon is in tome xiii. of Guizot s ColUcOou des 



mimoires relalifs a Vkistoire de France (Paris. 1823-1835). 

See A. Potthast, Bibliotkeca kistorica (Berlin, 1896); 
Molinier, Les Sources de Vkistoire de Prance, tome ui. (Paris 



and A. 
I9p3)- 

WILLIAM OF NEWBURGH (d. c. 1198), or, as he is sometimes 
styled, Guillelmus Parvus, English ecclesiastic and chronicler, 
was a canon of the Augustinian priory of Newburgh in the North 
Riding of Yorkshire. He was born about 1136, and lived at 
Newburgh from his boyhood. Shortly before 11 06 he began his 
Historia rerum Angiicarum. This work, divided into five books, 
covers the period 1006-1 198. A great part of it is derived from 
known sources, especially from Henry of Huntingdon, Jordan 
Fantosme, the Itinerarium regis Ricardi, or its French original, 
and a lost account, by Anselm the chaplain, of the captivity of 
Richard I. The value of Newburgh's work lies in his estimates of 
men and situations. Except for the years 11 54-1 173 and the 
reign of Richard he records few facts which cannot be found 
elsewhere; and in matters of detail he is prone to inaccuracy. 
But his political insight and his impartiality entitle him to a high 
place among the historians of the 1 2th century. 

See the editions of the Historia by H. C. Hamilton (2 vols. , London, 



-. jfiioj r 

monk of Furness Abbey, Lancashire, is also given. See also Sir T. D. 
Hardy's Descriptive Catalogue (" Rolls " series, 1865), ii. p. 512; and 
H. E. Salter in the English Historical Review, vol. xxii. (1907). 

(H.vTC.D.) 

WILLIAM OF POITIERS (c. ioio-t. 1000), Norman chronicler, 
was born at Preaux, near Pont Audemer, and belonged to an 
influential Norman family. After serving as a soldier he studied 
at Poitiers, and then returning to Normandy became chaplain 
to Duke William (William the Conqueror) and archdeacon of 
Lisieux. He wrote an eulogistic life of the duke, the earlier and 
concluding parts of which are lost; and Ordericus Vitatis, who 
gives a short biography of him in his Historia eccUsiastica, says 
that he also wrote verses. William's Gesta Guilelmi IT. ducts 
Normannorum, the extant part of which covers the period between 
1047 and 1068, is valuable for details of the Conqueror's life, 
although untrustworthy with regard to affairs in England. 
According to Freeman, " the work is disfigured by his constant 
spirit* of violent partisanship." It was written between 1071 
and 1077, and was used by Ordericus Vitalis. 

The Gesta was first published by A. Duchesne in the Histories 
Normannorum scriptores (Paris, 1619); and it is also found in the 
Scriptores return gestarum Willclmt Conquestoris of j. A. Giles 
(London, 1843). There is a French translation in tome xxix. of 
Guizot 's Collection des mimoires relalifs t Vhisloire de France (Paris, 
1826). See G. K6rting. Wilhelms von Poitiers Gesta Guildmt duds 
(Dresden, 1875); and A. Molinier, Les Sources de Vkistoire de Franco, 
tome iii. (Paris, 1903). 

WILLIAM OF ST CALAIS (Caxxief) (d. 1006), bishop of 
Durham and chief counsellor of William Rufus, was a Norman 
monk and prior of St Calais in Maine, who received the see of 
Durham from the Conqueror (xo8i). In Durham annals he is 
honourably remembered as the prelate who designed the existing 
cathedral, and also for his reform of ecclesiastical discipline. 
His political career is less creditable. Honoured with the special 
confidence of William Rufus he deserted his patron's cause at 
the first sign of rebellion, and joined with Odo of Bayeux in 
urging Duke "Robert of Normandy to claim the crown (1088). 
After the collapse of -this plot William was put upon his trial 
before the Great Council. He claimed the right to be judged by 
his fellow-bishops alone; this claim being rejected he appealed to 
the see of Rome. This was the first case of an appeal to the 
pope from an English tribunal which had occurred since the 
7th century. Rufus and Lanfranc did not venture to dispute 
the right of appeal, but contended that the bishop, as a royal 
vassal, could not appeal against the forfeiture of his temporalities. 
These were confiscated, and William left the kingdom, but no 
mora was heard of his appeal, and in 1091 he regained the royal 



WILLIAM «OF TYRE"— WILLIAM OF WYKEHAM 



677 



favour and his see. Thenceforward he showed the utmost 
subservience. He managed the king's case against Anselm, and 
at Rockingham (1005) actually claimed the right of appeal, when 
it was claimed by the archbishop. Notwithstanding his zeal for 
the royal interests, William was soon afterwards disgraced. He 
died m January 1006. 

See E. A. Freeman. William Rufus (1883), and Sywuon of Durham, 
vot L pp. 170-195 (Rolls ed.). 

WILLIAM (c 1 130-c. 1 100), archbishop of Tyre and chronicler, 
belonged to a noble French family and was probably born in 
Palestine about 113a This, however, is only an inference from his 
works, borne out by the fact that he had seen Ralph, the patriarch 
of Antioch, who died about 1 141 ; that he seems to call himself a 
contemporary historian from the accession of Baldwin III. to the 
throne of Jerusalem, an event which he places in November 
X142; and that he remembered the fall of Edessa in 1x44. 
Unfortunately the chapter (six. 12) which relates to his early 
life has. been excised or omitted from every extant manuscript 
of his Historic, and this remark holds good, not only for the 
original Latin, but also for the French translation of the 13th 
century. William was still pursuing his studies in Europe when 
Amalric I. became king of Jerusalem in n 62, but be returned 
to Palestine towards the close of 1166, or early in 1x67, and was 
appointed archdeacon of Tyre at the request of Amalric in August 
1 167. In xx68 he was sent on an embassy, the forerunner of 
several others, to the emperor Manuel I. at Constantinople, and 
in x x6o, at the tixne of the disastrous 'campaign against Damictta, 
be was obliged to take refuge in Rome from the " unmerited 
anger'* of his archbishop. ButhewassoonmPalestineagain,and 
about xi 70 he was appointed tutor to Amalrk's son, Baldwin, 
afterwards King Baldwin IV. Towards the end of x 1 74, soon after 
Baldwin's accession to the throne, he was made chancellor of 
the kingdom of Jerusalem, an office which he held until 1183, 
and less than a year later (May 11 75) he was consecrated arch- 
bishop of Tyre. He was one of those who went to negotiate 
with Philip I., count of Flanders, in 1 177, and in x 1 79 he was one 
of the bishops who represented the Latin Church of the East at 
the Lateran council in Rome. On his return to Palestine he 
stayed seven months at Constantinople with Manuel. This is 
William's last appearance in history, but he was writing his history 
in x 181, and this breaks off abruptly at the end of x 183 or early 
in 1x84. He died probably between 1187 and 11 00. About 
fifty years later one of his continuators accused Heraclius, the 
patriarch of Jerusalem, of procuring his death by poison at Rome, 
but this story appears to be legendary. Equally untrustworthy 
is the theory which identifies William with the archbishop of Tyre 
sent to Europe to preach a new crusade in xx88. It is true that 
Matthew Paris speaks of the English king, Henry II., as receiving 
the cross from the hands of WUldmus episcopus Tyrensis; but 
more contemporary writers omit the Christian name, while 
others write it Josce or Josdus. 

If not the greatest, William of Tyre is at least among the greatest, 
~ historians. His Historia return m partibus transmarinis 



of medieval _ . . . . 

§tstarum, or Historia Hierosolymilana or Belli sacri Atitoria covers the 
period between 1095 and 1 184, and is the main authority for the 
history of the Latin kingdom of Jerusalem between XI27, where 
Fukher of Chartrcs leaves off, and 1 1 83 or 1 184, where Emoul takes 
up the narrative. It was translated into French in the 13th century, 
or possibly before the end of the 12th, and this translation, known as 
the Ckronicue d'outremer, or Lxvrt <f Erodes or Livre du conquest, is 
quoted by Jean de Joinvifte, and increased by various continuations, 
ts the standard account of the exploits of the French warriors in the 
East. William's work consists of twenty-two books and a fragment 
of another book; it extends from the preaching of the first crusade by 
Peter the Hermit and Pope Urban .II. to the end of nBx or the 
beginning of 1 184. It was undertaken at the request of Amalric, 
who was himself a lover of history and who supplied the author with 
Arabic manuscripts, and William says of it, in this work we have 
had no guide, whether Creek or Arab, bat have had recourse to 
traditions only, save as regards a few things that we ourselves have 
seen." The traditions here referred to must be taken to include 
the Gtsta Francontm of Tudebode, the writings of Fnlcher of Chartres, 
of Baudry of Bourgueil and, above all. of Albert of Aix. From the 
beginning to about 1144 the Historic is taken from these writers; 
from 1 144 to the end it ts contemporary and original. 

William also wrote Historia de orientalibus principibus. This 
work, which is now unfortunately lost, was partly based upon the 



Arabic chronicle of a certain Snid^ibn-Batrik (d. $40), patriarch of 
Alexandria. 

No medieval writer, except perhaps Giraldus Cambrensis, possesses 
William's power of delineating the physical and mental features of 
his heroes. Very few, moreover, had his instinctive insight into what 
would be of real value to future ages; genealogy, tonography, 
archaeology, social life, both political and ecclesiastical, and military 
and naval matters all find due exposition in his pages. It is hardly 
too much to say that from his work alone a fairly detailed map of the 
Levant, as it was in the 12th century, might be constructed ; and it is 
impossible to praise too highly the scrupulous fidelity with which he 
defines nearly all the technical terms, whether relating to land or sea, 
which be uses. His chief fault is in his chronology, where, indeed, he 
is often at discord with himself. In the later books of the Historia 
his information, even regardingevents taking place beyond the Nile' 
or the Euphrates as well as in Europe, is singularly exact. 

His powers of industry were exceptionally great, and although a 
man of much learning and almost certainly acquainted with Greek 
and Arabic, he is as ready to enliven his pages with a homely proverb 
as he is to embellish them with quotations from Cicero, Virgil, Ovid 
or Plata A nrelate of pious character, he was inclined to see the 
judgment of Cod on the iniquities of his fellow-countrymen in every 
disaster that overtook them and in every success which attended the 
arms of the Saracens. 

As Belli sacri kistona the Historia rerum was first published in 1549 
at Basel. More recent editions are in I. P. Mignc's Patrototia. Latina, 
tome cci., and in the " Recucil des historiens des croisadW' Hist, 
occid. i. (Paris, 1 844). Manuscripts arc in the British M useum , London, 
and in Corpus Chnsti College, Cambridge. It has been translated iuto 
German by E. and R. Kansler (Stuttgart, 1848); into French in 
Guisot's Collection des mhnoires, tomes xvi., xviiL (Paris, 1824); 
into Italian and into Spanish. An English translation has been made 
for the Early English Text Society byM. N. Colvin (London, 1893). 
See the HistoirelitUraire de la France, tome xiv. (1869); B - Kuglcr, 
Sludien tur Geschickte des tweiten Krcuzxures (Stuttgart, 1866); 
H. Prutx, Studien iber Wilkdm von Tyrus (Hanover* 1883); and 
H. von Sybel, GesckUhle des ersten Kreussugts (Leipzig, 1881). 

WILLIAM OF VALENCE (d. 1206), brother of Henry HI. of 
England, was a sol! of John's widow, Isabelle of Angouleme, 
by her second marriage. William came to England with his 
brothers in 1247, and at once became a court favourite. He 
married Joan de Munchensi, the heiress to the Pembroke 
estates, whence be Is sometimes styled earl of Pembroke.' 
In X3$ft he was attacked by the baronial opposition and forced 
to leave England. He returned in 1261, after Henry III. had 
repudiated the Provisions of Oxford, and fought on the royal side 
at Lewes (1264). Escaping from the pursuit of the victorious 
Montfortians, he later appeared at the head of a small army in 
Pembrokeshire. This gave the signal for the outbreak of a new 
civil war which ended with the defeat of Montfort at Evesham 
(1265). Valence accompanied Prince Edward to the Holy Land 
and, in later years, became a trusted agent of the crown, especially 
in the Welsh wars. The position of his estates made him the 
natural leader of all expeditions undertaken against Llewelyn 
from South Wales. He was also employed in Aquitaine. 
He died at Bayonne in 1206. Despite his origin he had 
become, in course of time, a respected leader of the baronage; 
and as a military commander rose high above the average 
level. 

See R. Fault's Geschickte von England, vol. fit. (Hamburg, 1853)$ 
W. H. Blaauw, Barons' War (1871). 

WILLIAM OF WYKEHAM (1323-1404), English lord chan- 
cellor and bishop of Winchester. William de Wykham, as he 
is called in earlier, William Wykeham In later life, has been 
variously guessed to be the son of a freedman carpenter, and an 
illegitimate son of Queen Isabella and Roger Mortimer (Notes 
and Queries, xoth s. L 222). In sober truth (Life by Robert 
Heete in Reg. Winch. Coll, c. 1430) he was born at Wickham, 
Hants, in 1323 or 1324, son of John, whose name was probably 
Wykeham, but nicknamed Long, who was " endowed with- the 
freedom of his ancestors," and "according to some" had a 
brother called Henry Aas. His mother Sibyl was " of gentle 
birth," a daughter of Wihiam Bowate and granddaughter of 
William Stratton of Stratton, Hants. His education at Win- 
chester, no doubt in the Great Grammar school or High school 
in Minster Street, was paid for by some patron unnamed by the 
biographer, perhaps Sir Ralph Sutton, who is named first by 
Wykeham among his benefactors to be prayed for by his colleges. 
That he was, as stated by Archdeacon Thomas Martin, the 



678 



WILLIAM OF WYKEHAM 






author of a Life of Wykeham, published in 1507, taught classics, 
French and geometry by a learned Frenchman on the site of 
Winchester College, is a guess due to Wykeham's extant letters 
being in French and to the assumption that he was an architect. 
After some unspecified secular employment, Wykeham became 
" under-notary (vice tabcUio) to a certain squire, constable of 
Winchester Castle," probably Robert of Popham, sheriff of 
Hampshire, appointed constable on the 25th of April 1340, not 
as commonly asserted Sir John Scures, the lord of Wykeham, 
who was not a squire but a knight, and had held the office from 
13 11, though, from Scures being named as second of his bene- 
factors, Wykeham perhaps owed this appointment to his influence. 
" Two or three years afterwards, namely after he was twenty," 
Wykeham " was transferred to the king's court," i.e. e. 1343. 
Wykeham has been credited (Gent. Mag. lxxxv. 189) with the 
living of Irstead, Norfolk, of the king's gift on the 12th of July 
1349. But apart from the fact that this Wykeham is described 
in the grant as " chaplain," the probate of his will on the 8th of 
March 1376-1377 (Norwich Reg. Heydon, f. 139) shows that he 
was a different person (H. Chitty in Notes and Queries, 10th ser. 
iv. 130). Our Wykeham first appears in the public records in 
1350 as keeper of the manor of Rochford, Hants, during the 
minority of the heir, William Botreaux. 

On the 1 2th of October 1352 Henry Sturmy of Elvetham, 
sheriff and escheator of Hants, and frequently a justice in eyre 
for the forests of Hants and Wilts, at Winchester, describes 
William of Wykeham as " my clerk " in a power of attorney 
dated at Winchester, to deliver seisin of lands in Meonstoke 
Ferrand, Hants, which he had sold to William of Edyndon, 
bishop of Winchester (Win. Coll. Lib. H. 249). On the 10th of 
November (not December as Lowth, Life of Wykeham, 14) 
Edyndon, by a letter dated at London, appointed William of 
Wykeham, clerk (not " my clerk " as Kirby, Archaed. 57, ii. 292, 
where the deed is also misdated 1353), his attorney to take 
seisin of lands in Meonstoke Tour, Hants, which he had bought 
from Alice de Roche, daughter of William of Tour (ibid. f. 250). 
These lands were afterwards bought by Wykeham and given to 
Winchester College. On the 14th of April 1353 (Claus. 29 E. III. 
m. 29 d) Wykeham served as attorney of John of Foxle, of 
Bramshill, Hants, son of Thomas of Foxle, constable of Windsor 
Castle, in acknowledging payment of a debt due from John of 
Palton, sheriff of Somerset and of Hants. On the 15th of April 
1356 schedules touching the New Forest and other forests in 
Hants and Wilts were delivered out of the Tower of London to 
William of Wykeham to take to the justices in eyre (Claus. 30 
J2. IH. m. 19 d). In the same year on the 24th of August Peter- 
atte-Wode and William of Wykeham, clerk, were appointed 
keepers of the rolls and writs in the eyre for the forests of Hants 
and Wilts, of which Henry Sturmy was one of the justices. On 
the 10th of May 1356 Wykeham first appears in the direct 
employment of the king, being appointed clerk of the king's 
works in the manors of Henley and Yeshampsted (Easthamp- 
stead) to pay all outgoings and expenses, including wages of 
masons and carpenters and other workmen, the purchase of stone, 
timber and other materials, and their carriage, under the view 
of one controller in Henley and two in Easthampstead. On the 
8th of June Walter Nuthirst and Wykeham were made com- 
missioners to keep the statute of labourers and servants in the 
liberty of the Free Chapel (St George's), Windsor. On the 30th 
of October 1356 Wykeham was appointed during pleasure sur- 
veyor (supervisor) of the tint's wnrlfs in the castle of Windsor, 
for the same purposes as at Henley, with power lo take work mm 
everywhere, except in the fee of the church or those employed 
in the Ling's works at Westminster, the Tower of Dart Ford, at 
(he Kime wages as Robert of Eemham, prob:iUy Bximham, Buck*, 




who bud I 
and i&. i i 
of Ridba 

VVvkdmtii was the 



(££&, used to have, vk is a day 

He was lo do this under supervision 

. fejniour itht painter) *nd 

has btxxi inferred that 

^^^^^^hkto M at Windsor, 

1 outer, and a stary 

, wriling lhirt> yean 



afterwards (Antic. BrU. Ecdes. ed. 17*9, p. 385), relates that 
Wykeham nearly got into trouble for inscribing on it, " This made 
Wickam," which he only escaped by explaining that it did not 
mean that Wykeham made the tower, but that the tower was 
the making of Wykeham. But Wykeham had nothing to do 
with building either the Round Tower or the Round Table. 
The Round Tower, called the High Tower in Wykeham's day, 
is the Norman Keep. It was being refitted for apartments for 
the king and queen a little before Wykeham's time, and his first 
accounts include the last items for its internal decoration, 
including 28 stained glass windows. The Round Table, a 
building 200 ft. in diameter for the knights of the Round Table, 
who preceded the knights of the Garter, had been built in 1344 
(Chron. Angl. " Rolls" ser. No. 61, p. 17) when Wykeham had 
nothing to do with Windsor. The inscription, "This made 
Wykeham/' did exist on a small square tower in the Middle 
Bailey formerly known as Wykeham Tower, now entirely rebuilt 
with the inscription recopied and known as Winchester Tower. 
But it could hardly be of sufficient importance to cause Wykeham 
to play the sphinx, and the story is apparently due to the Eliza- 
bethan love of quips. All that was built during the five years, 
1356 to 1361, when Wykeham was clerk of the works, were the 
new royal apartments, two long halls and some chambers in 
the upper ward, quite unconnected with and east of the Round 
Tower, and a gateway or two leading to them, the order for 
building which was given on the 1st of August 1351 (Pipe Roll 
30 Ed. III.). The accounts of Robert of Bernham, Wykeham's 
predecessor, who was a canon of St George's Chapel (Le Neve's 
Fasti, iii. 378), are extant, and from the payments of is. a day 
to Mr John Sponle, mason and orderer or setter-out (ordinator) 
of the king's works, and Geoffrey of Carlton " apparelkr " of 
the carpentry work, it is clear that they, and not Bernham, were 
the architects and builders. Canon Bernham was only the 
paymaster and overlooker to see that men and materials were 
provided and to pay for them. While in 1353-1354 £1440 and 
in 1355-1356 £747 was expended under the supervision of 
Robert of Bernham, in 1357-1358 £867 was spent by Wykeham, 
including Winchester Tower. In 1358-1359 the expenditure 
rose to £1254, while between the 6th of June 1360 and the 12th 
of April 1361 it amounted to £2817. The chief items were a new 
Great Gate with two flanking towers, a belfry for St George's 
Chapel and houses in the Lower Bailey, probably for the canons, 
and in the Upper Bailey, probably for the royal household. 
On the 1st of November 1361 Wykeham was succeeded as clerk 
of the works by William of Mulsho, another canon of Windsor, 
who afterwards succeeded him also as dean of St Martin-le- 
Grand. Under Wykeham, William of Wynford, who appears 
in 1360*8* " apparellcr " under Sponle, in 1361 became chief 
mason and ordinator, and he was probably what we should call 
the architect of the Great Gate, the rest of which was built under 
Wykeham's supervision. For wherever we find Wykeham 
building afterwards, we find Wynford as chief mason. When 
Wykeham was provost of Wells, Wynford was retained as 
architect on the 1st of February 1364-1365 at a fee of 40s. a 
year and 6d. a day when in Wells (Wells, Lib. Abb. f. 253). He 
was architect to Abingdon Abbey (at a fee of £3, 6s. 8d. and a 
furred robe) in 1375-1376 when the existing Outer Gate of the 
abbey was buOt (Abingdon Obed. Ace. Camd. Soc., 1892). He 
was chief mason for Wykeham's works at Winchester Cathedral 
and for Winchester College, where his portrait may be seen 
in the east window of the chapel, and where his contract with 
the clerk of the works, an ex-scholar of the college, for the 
building of the outer gate, is still preserved. 

The ascription to Wykeham of the invention of the Perpen- 
dicular style of medieval architecture is now an abandoned 
theory. In so far as he gave vogue lo that style the credit 
must be given to William of Wynford, not to William of Wyke- 
ham. At all events he had very little to do with building 
Windsor Castle. How far he really was responsible for the other 
great castle attributed to him, that of Queenborough Castle 
in the Isle of Sbeppey, cannot be tested, as the building accounts 
for it are only partially extant. The account from the 1st of 




WILLIAM OF WYKEHAM 



679 



November 1361 to 2369 shorn Simon of Bradstede, clerk of the 
works, then expending £1773, of which £100 was received by 
the hands of William of Wykeham at the exchequer, and that 
from 1360 shows Bernard Cokks, clerk of the works, expending 
£2306. The chief evidence cited in support of the theory that 
Wykeham owed his advancement to his skill as an architect is 
the remark in a tract Why Poor Priests Juno no benefices that 
" Lords will not present a clerk able of cunning of God's law 
and good life and holy ensample . . . but a kitchen derk or a 
fancy clerk or wise in building castles or worldly doing, though 
he cannot well read his psalter." This tract has been attributed 
to Wydiffe, but without adequate authority, and it is thought 
to be of later date, and if Wykeham is meant by the castle- 
building clerk it only shows that popular repute is no guide to 
met. That Wykeham, who was clearly an extremely good man 
of business, should, when clerk of the works, have played a 
considerable part in determining what works should be done and 
the general character of the buildings with which he was con- 
nected, we may believe; but to think that this attorney and 
notary, this keeper of the king's dogs (aoth Aug. 1356, Devon's 
Issues of Ike Exchequer, 163) and of the king's forests, this carrier 
of rolls and paymaster at the exchequer, was also the architect 
of Windsor and Queenborough Castles, of Winchester Cathedral 
and College, is to credit Wykeham with a superhuman combina- 
fjon of knowledge, of training and of functions. 

That he gave great satisfaction to the king when once be was 
appointed surveyor at Windsor in 1356 is unquestionable. He 
is first called king's clerk on the 14th of November 1357, when 
be was given is. a day, beyond the wages he was already receiving 
for his offices at Windsor and elsewhere, "until peacefully 
advanced to some benefice.'' Ecclesiastical benefices were the 
chief means by which, before the Reformation, the dvil servants 
of the crown were paid for services which, being clerical, were 
also ecclesiastical, and for which the settled stipends were wholly 
inadequate. In his accumulation of benefices Wykeham seems 
to have distanced an his predecessors and successors, except 
perhaps John Maunsell, the chancellor of Henry in., and Thomas 
Wobey, the chancellor of Henry VIII., the latter being a pluralist 
not in canonries and livings but in bishoprics. 

Wykeham's first benefice was the rectory of Pulham, the 
richest in Norfolk, worth £53 *" y** r » or some £1600 of our money, 
to whkh he was presented on the 30th of November 1357. 
But this was not a " peaceful " advancement, for it was only in 
the king's patronage by reason of the temporalities of the see 
of Ely having been seized Into the king's hands the year before, 
on account of the bishop being implicated in certain murders 
and robberies, which he denied, contesting the king's action in 
the papal court. On the 16th of April 1350 the long gave 
Wykeham a pension of £20 a year from the exchequer until he 
could obtain peaceful possession of Pulham. On this, and what 
may have been a similarly contested presentation to the canonry 
and prebend of Flixton in Lichfield cathedral on the 1st of 
March 1359, repeated on the >tnd of August 1360, and supported 
by a mandate to the new bishop on the *oth of January 1361, 
Wykeham's latest biographer (George Herbert Moberly, Life of 
Wykeham, 1887, and ed., 1893) has built an elaborate stoiy of 
Wykeham's advancement being opposed by the pope because 
be was the leader of a national party against papal authority in 
England. The baselessness of this Is dear when we find that 
Wykeham had obtained from Innocent VI., on the 37th of 
January 1357, an indulgence to choose his own confessor (Cat. 
Pap Ret), and on the 8th of July 1358 (CoL Pap. Pet. i. 33O 
asked and obtained a papal provision to this very church of 
Pulham on the ground that it had passed to the pope's patronage 
by the promotion of its former possessor to the see of London.' 
In spite of papal and royal authority, it is doubtful whether 
Wykeham obtained peaceful possession of Pulham till again 
presented to it by the king on the xotb of July 1361 after the 
bkhop of Ely's death. The difficulty as to the prebend of 
Flixton was no doubt something of the same kind. Between 
bishop, pope and king the next vacant prebend in every great 
church was generally promised two or three deep before it was 



vacant, and the episcopal and chapter registers are full of the 
contests which ensued. 

Wykeham's dvil offices rapidly increased. On the Ides 
(15th) of March 1359 a French fleet sacked Winchelsea, carrying 
off the women and girls. On the 10th of July 1359 Wykeham 
was made chief keener and surveyor, not only of Windsor, but 
of the castles of Dover, Hadley and Leeds (Kent), and of the 
manors of Foliejohn, Eton, Guildford, Kennmgton, Sheen (now 
Richmond), Eltham and Langjy and their parks, with power 
to repair them and to pay for workmen and materials. On the 
aoth of February 1360, when another French invasion .was 
feared, the bailiff of Sandwich was ordered to send all the lead 
he had to Wykeham for the* works at Dover. In April the 
sheriffs of four batches of counties were each ordered to send 
forty masons to Wykeham at Windsor This secular activity 
was rew ar ded by presentation to the deanery of St Martin-te 
Grand, with an order for induction on the axst of May, on which 
day he was commissioned to inquire by a jury of men of Kent 
into the defects of the walls and tower of Dover (Pat. 34 E. HI. pL 
i. m, ia). On the 15th of August he was directed to hand over 
£40 given him for the purpose, to a successor, the treaty of 
Brftigny having been made meanwhile and confirmed at Calais 
with Wykeham as one of the witnesses on the 34th of October. 
In January 2361 building work at Windsor was vigorously 
resumed, and again the sheriffs were ordered to contribute their 
quotas of 40 freestone masons and 40 cementaru to Wykeham's 
charge. On the 23th of February, on the joint petition of the 
kings of England and of France, the pope " provided " Wyke- 
ham to a canonry and dignity at Lincoln, notwithstanding his 
deanery and a prebend at I Jandaff. On the and of April four com- 
missioners were appointed to superintend the construction of 
the new castle ordered in the Isle of Sheppey, which when 
finished was called Queenborough, the purchases and payments, 
not the works, being under the beloved clerk, Wykeham In 
this year came the second visitation of the Black Death, the 
Second Hague, as it was called, and carried off four bishops and 
several magnates, with- many clerics, whose vacated preferments 
were poured on Wykeham. The bishop of Hereford being dead, 
on the 1 a th of July 1361, the king presented Wykeham to a 
prebend in Hereford cathedral, and on the 24th of July to one 
in Bromyard collegiate church; the bishop of St David's being 
dead, prebends in the collegiate churches of Abergwilly and 
Lundewybrewi were given him on the 26th of July. On the 
nth of August the pope, on the king's request, provided him 
with a prebend in. St Andrew's Auckland collegiate church. 
This Mr Moberly curiously misrepresents as action against 
Wykeham. He in fact never obtained possession of it, probably 
because the pope had already "provided" it to Robert of 
Stretton, a papal chaplain, who, however, asked in January 
.1363 for a canonry at Lincoln instead, because he was " in feai 
and terror of a certain William of Wykeham.'' On the 24th of 
September 1361 the king gave Wykeham a prebend in Beverley 
Minster, on the xst of October the prebend of Oxgate in St 
Paul's (which he exchanged for Tattenhall on the 10th of 
December), on the aand of November a prebend in St David's 
cathedral, on the aoth of December a prebend in Wherwell 
Abbey, Hants. So far the Patent Rolls. The Salisbury records 
show him also admitted to a prebend there on the 16th of August, 
which be exchanged for other prebends on the 9th and 15th 
of October. All these clerical preferments Wykeham held when 
be was a simple derk, who had no doubt undergone the " first 
tonsure," but was not even ordained an acolyte till the 5th .of 
December of this golden year. He added to his dvil offices 
during the year that of clerk (officium cirograffie) of the exchequer 
on the 24th of October. On the 9th of October he acted as 
attorney to the king in the purchase of the manor of Thunderley, 
Essex. Next year, 1369, he entered holy orders, being ordained 
subdeacon on the lath of March and priest on the lath of June, 
and adding to his canonries and prebends one in Shaftesbury 
Abbey on the 15th of July and another in Lincoln cathedral 
on the aoth of August. Wykeham meanwhile was acting as 
keeper of the forests south of Trent and as a trustee for Juliana, 



68o 



WILLIAM OF WYKEHAM 



countess of Huntingdon. Next year, 1363, he was made a canon 
of the collegiate church in Hastings Castle on the 3rd of February, 
and of the royal chapel of St Stephen's, Westminster, then newly 
founded, or re-founded, on the 21st of April. He obtained the 
archdeaconry of Northampton on the 26th of April, and resigned 
it on the 12th of June, having been promoted to that of Lincoln, 
the richest of all his preferments, on the 23rd of May. On the 
31st of October he was made a canon of York, and on the 15th 
of December provost of the fourteen prebends of Combe in Wells 
cathedral, while at some date unknown he obtained also prebends 
in Bridgenorth collegiate church and St Patrick's, Dublin, and 
the rectory of Menheniot in Cornwall. On the 5th of May 1364 
he became privy seal, and in June is addressed by the new pope, 
Urban V., as king's secretary. On the 14th of March 1365 he 
was given 20s. a day from the exchequer " notwithstanding 
that he is living in the household." He was so much the king's 
factotum that Froissart (i. 249) says " a priest called Sir William 
de Wican reigned in England ... by him everything was done 
and without him they did nothing." In fact, as privy seal he 
was practically prime minister, as Thomas Cromwell was after- 
wards to Henry VIII. On the 7th of October 1366, William 
Edingdon, the treasurer of England and bishop of Winchester, 
died; on the 13th of October Wykcham was recommended 
by the king to the chapter of monks of St Swithun's cathedral 
priory and elected bishop. 

A long story has been made out of Pope Urban V. 's delay in 
the recognition of Wykcham, which has been conjectured to 
have been because of his nationalist proclivities. But little 
more than the ordinary delays took place. On the 1st of 
December the king, " for a large sum of money paid down," 
gave Wykeham, not only tne custody of the temporalities of the 
see, but all the profits from the day of Edingdon 's death. On 
the nth the pope granted him the administration of the spiritu- 
alities. The papal court was then moving from Avignon to 
Rome, and on the 14th of July 1367 the bull of " provision " 
issued at Viterbo. Wykeham was in no hurry himself, as it 
was not till the 10th of October 1367 that he was consecrated, 
nor till the 9th of July 1368, after the war parliament which 
met on the 3rd of June had been dissolved on the 10th of June, 
that he was enthroned. Meanwhile he had been made chancellor 
on the 17th of September 1367 — thus at the age of forty-three 
he held the richest ecclesiastical, and the best-paid civil, office 
in the kingdom at the same time. The war in France was 
disastrous, how far through Wykeham's fault we have no means 
of knowing. When parliament again met in 1371, the blame 
was laid on the clerical ministers, under the influence of Wyclifle. 
He had been born in the same year as Wykcham, and like him 
had profited by papal provisions to prebends in 1362, but had 
since led an attack on papal and clerical abuses. Parliament 
demanded that laymen only should be chancellor, treasurcrv- 
privy seal and chamberlain of the exchequer. On the 8th of 
March 1372 Wykeham resigned the chancellorship, and Bishop 
Brantingham of Exeter the treasurcrship, and laymen were 
appointed in their places, though Sir Robert Thorp, who became 
chancellor, was master of Pembroke Hall at Cambridge, and as 
much a cleric as Wykeham had been when he was dean of St 
Martin-le-Grand and surveyor of Windsor Castle. 

As soon as he became bishop Wykeham had begun his career 
as founder. In 1367 (Pit. 41 E, 111, pt, 2, ra 5) he purth-iscd 
the estates of Sir John of Boar hunt, near South wick, with which 
he endowed a chantry in South wirk Priory for his parents Xcit 
year he began* buying lands in UpsomUjroc* Hants, which he 
gave to Winchester College, and in Oxford, which he gavo to 
New College. On the isi of September 1373 he emcu'd 
an agreement (Epiu. Rc$. iii 08} with Master Richard vi Hi 
" gramaticus " for ten venr^ Faithfully 10 teach and insii 
poor scholars, whom iV bishop maintains) at his 
the art of grammar, and to provide an usher ti 
while the war with France was even 
lay ministry and John of Gaunt. In 
Wykcham was named by the Coaanm 
to treat with them on the state blli 



which met on the 12th of February 1376, Lord Latimer and 
Alice Ferrers, the king's mistress, a lady of good birth, and not 
(as the mendacious St Albans chronicler alleged) the ugly but 
persuasive daughter of a tiler, were impeached, and Wykeham 
took a leading part against Latimer, even to the extent of 
opposing his being allowed counsel. At the dissolution of 
parliament a council of nine, of whom Wykeham was one, was 
appointed to assist the king. But on the 8th of June the Black 
Prince died. Alice Perrers returned. John of Gaunt called a 
council on the 16th of October to impeach Wykeham on articles 
which alleged misapplication of the revenues, oppressive fines 
on the leaders of the free companies, taking bribes for the release 
of the royal French prisoners, especially of the duke of Bourbon, 
who helped to make him bishop, failing to send relief to Ponthieu 
and making illegal profits by buying up crown, debts cheap. 
He was condemned on one only, that of halving a fine of £80 
paid by Sir John Grey of Rotherfiekl for licence to alienate lands, 
and tampering with the rolls of chancery to conceal the transac- 
tion. Wykeham's answer was that he had reduced the fine 
because it was too large, and that he had received nothing for 
doing so. Skip with, a judge of the common pleas, cited a statute 
under which for any erasure in the rolls to the deceit of the king 
100 marks fine was imposed for every penny, and so Wykcham 
owed 060,000 marks. Wykcham was convicted, and on the 
17th of November his revenues were seized and bestowed on 
the 15th of March 1377 on the young prince Richard, and he was 
ordered not to come within 20 m. of the king. He " brake up 
household . . . sending also to Oxford, whear upon almose and 
for God's sake he found 70 scollers, that they should depart to 
their frendis for he could no longer help or finde them " {Ckron. 
Angliae, lxxx.). Bui when convocation met in 1377 the bishops 
refused to proceed to business without Wykeham, and he was 
fetched back from Wa verley Abbey. He was exempted, ho we ver, 
from the general pardon issued on the occasion of Edward III.'s 
jubilee. But on the 13th of June the prince restored his tempor- 
alities, on condition of his maintaining three galleys with 50 
men-at-arms and 50 archers for three months, or providing the 
wages of 300 men. The St Albans monk says that this was 
obtained by a bribe to Alice Perrers. Meonstoke Perrers, part 
of the endowment of Winchester College, was certainly bought 
on the 1 2th of June 1380 from Sir William Windsor, her 
husband, whose name seems to be derived from Windsor, 
near Southampton water. As Hampshire people they may have 
helped Wykeham. But as Wykeham was of the party of the 
Black Prince and his widow Joan of Kent, no dea ex matkina 
was needed* 

On the 21st of June 1377 Edward III. died. Wykeham was 
present at the coronation of Richard II. on the 19th of July, 
and on the 31st of July full pardons were granted him under the 
privy seal, which at the request of Richard's first parliament were 
ratified under the great seal on the 4th of December 1377. Wyke- 
ham at once took an active part in the financial affairs of the new 
king, giving security for his debts and himself lending 500 marks, 
afterwards secured on the customs (Pat. 4 Rkh. II. pt. i. m. 4). 
He then set to work to buy endowments for Winchester and 
New Colleges. On the 30th of June he obtained licence in 
mortmain and on the 26th of November issued bis charter of 
foundation of " Seynt Marie College of Wynchestre in Oxenford " 
for a warden and 30 scholars to study theology, canon and civil 
bw and uris, who were temporarily housed in various old halls. 
Of 1 the cih ol March tA&Q tbe nrat stone was laid of the present 
bmlitrngs, which wtre rnlernl on by the college on the 14th of 
ti ol Wki'.heiicr was began with a bull 
w t iffi, enabling Wykeham 
jli&h for 70 poor 
nt^atudy in gram- 
Qpropriate to it 
belonging to his 
'id, as he asserts, 
■ of life to scholars 
the ,6th of October 
J, Q» the lotb-ijth 




WILLIAMS, JOHN 



681 



of October the site was conveyed, and on the 20th of October 
1382 " Sancle Marie collegium " or in vulgar tongue " Seinte 
&larie College of Wynchestre by Wyncheatre " was founded for a 
warden and " 70 pore and needy scholars studying and becoming 
proficient in grammaticals or the art and science oi grammar." 
The first stone of the buildings was laid on the 26th of March 
1388, and they were entered on by the scholars on the 28th of 
March 1304, not, as supposed at the quincentenary celebration 
in 1893, in 1303. While the new buildings were being erected, 
the college remained in the parish oi " St John the Baptist on 
the Hill " of St Giles, supplying scholars to New College then 
as since. A reference to this in a letter of Wykeham's of the 
8th of April 1388 has given rise to the creation of an imaginary 
college of St John the Baptist at Winchester by the Rev. W. 
Hunt (Die. Nat. Biog. sub. ** Chlchcley "). The foundation was on 
the model of Merton and Queen's colleges at Oxford, to which 
gram mar schools were attached by their founders, while fellows 
of Merton were the first wardens of both of Wykeham's colleges. 
Both were double the size of Merton, and the same size as the 
Navarre college of the queen of France and Navarre, founded 
at Paris in 1304, which also contained a school. But each of 
Wykeham's colleges contained as many members as the French 
queen's. The severance of the school which was to feed the 
college exclusively, placing it not at Oxford, but at Winchester, 
and constituting it a separate college, was a new departure of 
great importance in the history of education. Ten fellows and 
16 choristers were added in 1304 to the 70 scholars, the choristers 
attending the school like the scholars, and being generally, 
during the first three centuries of the foundation, promoted to be 
scholars. The original statutes have not come down to us. 
Those which governed the colleges until 1857 were made in 1400. 
They state that the colleges were provided to repair the ravages 
caused by the Black Deaths in the ranks of the clergy, and for 
the benefit of those whose parents could not without help main- 
tain them at the universities, and the names of the boys ap- 
pointed by Wykeham and in his time show that " poor and 
indigent " meant the younger sons of the gentry, and the sons 
of yeomen, citizens of Winchester or London, and the middle 
classes generally, who needed the help of exhibitions. 

The time which elapsed between the foundation and com- 
pletion of the colleges may be attributed to Wykeham's pre- 
occupation with politics in the disturbed state of affairs, due to 
the papal schism begun in 1379, in which England adhered to 
Urban VI. and France to Clement VjUL, to the rising of the 
Commons in 138 1, and the wars with France, Scotland and 
Spain during John of Gaunt'* ascendancy. Then followed the 
constitutional revolution of the lords appellant in 1388. When 
Richard II. took power on himself, on the 3rd of May 1389, he 
at once made Wykeham chancellor, with Brantingham of Exeter 
again as treasurer. Wykeham's business capacity is shown 
perhaps by the first record of the minutes of the privy council 
being kept during his term of office, and his promulgation in 
1390 of general orders as to its business. At least one occasion 
is recorded in the minutes on which Wykeham, on behalf of the 
councu, took a firm stand against Richard II. and that in. spite 
of the king's leaving the council in a rage. Peace was made with 
France in August. On the meeting of parliament in January 
2390 Wykeham resigned the great seal; and asked for an 
inquiry into the conduct of the privy council, and on being assured 
that all was well resumed it. He now showed that he had not 
by his charities wronged his relations by settling on bis great- 
nephew and heir Thomas Wykeham, whom be bad educated at 
Winchester and New College, Broughton Castle and estates, 
still held by his descendants in the female line, the family of 
^-^'ngg^Wjrkduun-Fienncs (peerage of Saye and Sele). In 
^obtained a papal bull enabling him to appoint at 
Tutors to do his episcopal business. 
I of September 1391, Wykeham finally resigned the 
« For **"** years after there are no minutes of 
fr'Jr? UlC a4lh * Novcmbcr "394 Wykeham lent the 
J« £1000 (some £30,000 of our money), which same 
^ £1000 he promised on the 21st of February 1395 




to repay by midsummer, and did so (Pat. 18, Rich. II. pt. ii. 
m. 23, 41). The murder of the duke of Gloucester, Richard's 
uncle; in 1397, was followed next year by the assumption of 
absolute power by Richard. Wykeham was clearly against these 
proceedings. He excused himself from convocation in 1397, 
and from the subservient parliament at Shrewsbury in 1398. 
The extraordinary comings and goings of strangers to Winchester 
College, just opposite the gates of the bishop's palace at Wolvesey 
in 1399, suggest that he took part in the revolution of Henry IV. 
He appeared in the privy council four times at the beginning of 
Henry's reign (Prar. P.C. L 100). On the 23rd of July 1400 he 
lent Henry IV. £500 for his journey towards Scotland, and in 
140a another £500, while a general loan for the war with France 
and Scotland on the 1st of April 1403 was headed by Wykeham 




with £1000, the bishop of Durham lending 1000 marts 
(£666, 13s. 4d.), and no one else more than £500. Meanwhile 
on the 29th of September 1394 he had begun the recasting of the 
nave of the cathedral with William Wynford, the architect of 
the college, as chief mason, and Simon Membury, an old Wyke- 
hamist, as clerk of the works. On the 24th of July 1403, he 
made his will, giving large bequests amounting to some £10,000 
(£300,000 of our money), to friends and relations and every kind 
of religious house. On the z6th of August 1404, be signed an 
agreement with the prior and convent for three monks to sing 
daily three masses in bis beautiful chantry chapel in the nave of 
the cathedral, while the boys of the almonry, the cathedral 
choir-boys, were to say their evening prayers there for bit soul. 
He died on the 27 th of September 1404, aged eighty. 

His effigy in the cathedral chantry and a bust on the groining of the 
muniment tower at Winchester college are no doubt authentic 
portraits. The pictures at Winchester and New College are late 
iftlwcniunr productions. Three autograph letters of his, all in 
Frc-n. k. .j 1 dot the years 1364-1366, are preserved, one at the British 
MuatMtt, one at the Record Office, a third at New College, Oxford. 
A Inurt h 5 iter imputed to Wykeham at the British Museum is shown 
ali! 1 contents and its handwriting not to be his. 

I wnas Martin, Wiihdmi Wicami (1597); &• Lowth, Lift 

of WyUham (1736); Mackenzie, E^ C, Walcott, William of Wyke- 




WILLIAMS, JOHN (1582-1650), English archbishop and lord 
keeper, son of Edmund Williams of Conway, a Welsh gentleman 
of property, was bom in March 1582 and educated at St John's 
College, Cambridge. He was ordained about x6o$, and in 16 10 
he preached before King James L, whose favour he quickly 
gained by his love of compromise. The result was the rapid 
promotion of Williams in the church; he obtained, several 
livings besides prebends at Hereford, Lincoln and Peterborough. 
In 1617 he became chaplain to the king, in 16x9 dean of Salisbury, 
and in the following year dean of Westminster. On the fall of 
Bacon in 1621 Williams, who had meantime ingratiated himself 
with the duke of Buckingham, was appointed lord keeper, and 
was at the same time made bishop of Lincoln, retaining also 
the deanery of Westminster. As a political adviser of the king 



682 



WILLIAMS, JOHN— WILLIAMS, ROGER 



Williams consistently counselled moderation and compromise 
between the unqualified assertion of the royal prerogative and 
the puritan views of popular liberties which were now coming 
to the front. He warned Buckingham and Prince Charles of the 
perils of their project for the Spanish marriage, and after their 
return from Madrid he encountered their resentment by opposing 
war with Spain. The lord keeper's counsel of moderation was 
less pleasing to Charles L than it had been to his father. The 
new king was offended by Williams's advice to proceed with 
caution in dealing with the parliament, with the result that 
within a few months of Charles's accession the Great Seal was 
taken from Williams. In the quarrel between the king and the 
Commons over the petition of right, Williams took the popular 
side in condemning arbitrary imprisonment by the sovereign. 
In the matter of ecclesiastical administration he similarly 
followed a middle course; but he had now to contend against the 
growing influence of Laud and the extreme high church party. 
A case was preferred against him in the Star Chamber of revealing 
state secrets, to which was added in 1635 a charge of subornation 
of perjury, of which he had undoubtedly been guilty and for 
which he was condemned in 1637 to pay a fine of £10,000, to be 
deprived of the temporalities of all his benefices, and to be 
imprisoned during the king's pleasure. He was sent to the 
Tower. In 1639 he was again condemned by the Star Chamber 
for libelling Laud, a further heavy fine being imposed for this 
offence. In 1641 he recovered his liberty on the demand of the 
House of Lords, who maintained that as a peer he was entitled 
to be summoned to parliament. When the Long Parliament 
met, Williams was made chairman of a committee of inquiry 
into innovations in the church; and he was one of the bishops 
consulted by Charles as to whether he should veto the bill for 
the attainder of Strafford. In December 1641* the king, anxious 
to conciliate public opinion, appointed Williams archbishop of 
York. In the same month he was one of the twelve bishops 
impeached by the Commons for high treason, and committed to 
the Tower. Released on an undertaking not to go to Yorkshire, 
a promise which he did not observe, the archbishop was en- 
throned in York Minster in June 1642. On the outbreak of the 
Civil War, after visiting Conway in the Royalist interest, he 
joined the king at Oxford; he then returned to Wales, and 
finding that Sir John Owen, acting on Charles's orders, had 
seized certain property in Conway Castle that had been deposited 
with the archbishop for safe-keeping, he went over to the Parlia- 
mentary side and assisted in the recapture of Conway Castle 
in November 1646. Williams, who was a generous benefactor 
of St John's College, Cambridge, died on the 25th of March 1650. 
WILLIAMS, JOHN (1796-1839), English Nonconformist 
missionary, was- born at Tottenham near London on the 29th of 
June 1796. He was trained as- an ironmonger, and acquired 
considerable experience in mechanical work. Having offered 
himself to the London Missionary Society, he was sent, after 
some training, in 1816 to Eimeo, in the Society Islands, where 
he rapidly acquired a knowledge of the native language. After 
Staying there for a short time, he finally settled at Raiatea, 
which became his permanent headquarters. His success as a 
missionary here and elsewhere, was remarkable. The people 
rapidly became Christianized and adopted many of the habits 
of civilization. Williams was fairly liberal for his age, and the 
results of his labours among the Pacific Islands were essentially 
beneficiaL He travelled unceasingly among the various island 
groups, planting stations and settling native missionaries whom 
he himself had trained. From the Society Islands he visited 
the Hervey group, where he discovered, and stayed for a con- 
siderable time on, the island of Rarotonga. Most of the in- 
habitants of the group were converted in a remarkably short 
time, and Williams's influence over them, as over the people of 
, was very great. Besides establishing Christianity 
among them, he also, at their own request, 
r up a code of laws for civil administration 
I -the new religion. While at Rarotonga he, 
' " enatives, bu3t himself a 60-fL ship, " The 
** within about four months; with this he 




returned to Raiatea, and made voyages among other island 
groups, including Samoa and the neighbouring islands. Williams 
returned to England in 1834 (having previously visited New 
South Wales in 1821); and during his four years' stay at home 
he had the New Testament, which he had translated into Raro- 
tongan, printed. Returning in 1838 to the Pacific, he visited 
the stations already established by him, as well as several fresh 
groups. He went as far west as the New Hebrides, and, while 
visiting Eromanga, one of the group, for the first time, was 
murdered by cannibal natives on the 20th of November 1839. 

His Narrative of Missionary Enterprises in (he South Sea Islands 
was published in 1837, and formed an important contribution to 6ur 
knowledge of the islands with which the author was acquainted 
See Memoir of John Williams, by Ebenezer Prout (London, 1843); 
C. S. Horne, The Story of tie L.UJS., pp. 4154. 

WILLIAMS, ROGER (c. 1604-1684), founder of the colony of 
Rhode Island in America and pioneer of religious liberty, son of 
a merchant tailor, was born (probably) about 1604 in London. 
It seems reasonably certain that he was educated, Under the 
patronage of Sir Edward Coke, at the Charter House and at 
Pembroke College, Cambridge, where be received his degree in 
i627r» According to tradition (probably untrue), he studied law 
under Sir Edward Coke; he certainly devoted himself to the study 
of theology, and in 1629 was chaplain to Sir William Masham 
of Otes, in the parish of High Laver, Essex, but from conscientious 
scruples, in view of the condition of ecclesiastical affairs in 
England at the time, refused preferment. He soon deridcdOo 
emigrate to New England, and, with his wife Mary, arrived at 
Boston early in February 1631. In April he became teacher of 
the church at Salem, Mass., as assistant to the Reverend Samuel 
Skekon. Owing to the opposition of the ecclesiastical authorities 
at Boston, with whose views his own were not in accord, he 
removed to Plymouth in the summer, and there remained for two 
years as assistant pastor. In August 1633 he again became 
assistant teacher at Salem, and in the following year succeeded 
Skdton as teacher. Here he incurred the hostility of the 
authorities of the Massachusetts Bay Colony by asserting, 
among other things, that the civil power of a state could properly 
have no jurisdiction over the consciences of men, that the King's 
patent conveyed no just title to the land of the colonists, which 
should be bought from its rightful owners, the Indians, and that 
a magistrate should not tender an oath to an unregenerate man, 
an oath being, in reality, a form of worship. For the expression 
of these opinions he was formally tried in July 163s by the 
Massachusetts General Court, and at the next meeting of the 
General Court in October, he not having taken advantage of the 
opportunity given to him to recant, a sentence of banishment 
was passed upon him, and he was ordered to leave the juris- 
diction of Massachusetts within six weeks. The time was 
subsequently extended, conditionally, but in January 1636 an 
attempt was made to seixe him and transport him to England, 
and he, forewarned, escaped from his home at Salem and pro* 
ceeded alone to Manton's Neck, on the east bank of the Seekonk 
river. At the instance of the authorities at Plymouth, within 
whose jurisdiction Manton's Neck was included, Williams, with 
four companions, who had joined him, founded in June 1636 the 
first settlement in Rhode Island, to which, in remembrance of 
" God's merciful providence to him in his distress," he gave the 
name Providence. He immediately established friendly relations 
with the Indians in the vicinity, whose language he had learned, 
and, in accordance with his principles, bought the land upon 
which he had settled from the sachems Canonkus (c 1565-1647) 
and Miantonomo. His Influence with the Indians, and their 
implicit confidence in him, enabled him in 1636, soon after 
arriving at Providence, to induce the Narragansets to ally 
themselves with the Massachusetts colonists at the time of the 
Pequot War, and thus to render a most effective service to those 
who had driven him from their community. Williams and his 
companions founded their new. settlement upon the basis of 
complete religious toleration, with a view to its becoming " a 
shelter for persons distressed for conscience'' (see Rhode 
Island). Many settlers came from Massachusetts and elsewhere, 



WILLIAMS, ROWLAND— WILLIAMSBURG 



683 



summg others some Anabaptists, by one of whom in 1639 Williams 
was baptized, he baptizing others in turn and thus establishing 
what has been considered the first Baptist church in America. 
Williams, however, maintained his connexion with this church 
for only three or four months, and then became what Was known 
as a " Seeker," or Independent, though he continued to preach. 
In June 1643 be went to England, and there in the following 
year obtained a charter for Providence, Newport and Forts- 
mouth, under the title "The Providence Plantations in the 
Narragansett Bay." He returned to Providence in the autumn 
of 1644, and soon afterwards was instrumental in averting an 
attack by the Narragansets upon the United Colonies of New. 
England and the Mohegans. In 1646 he removed from 
Providence to a place now known as Wickford, R.l. He was at 
various times a member of the general assembly of the colony, 
acted as deputy president for a short time in 1649, was president, 
or governor, from September 1654 to May 1657, and was an 
assistant in 1664, 1667 and 1670. In 1651, with John Clarke 
(1600-1676), he went to England to secure the annulment of 
a commission which had been obtained by William Coddington 
for the government of Rhode Island (Newport and Portsmouth) 
and Connecticut, and the issue of a new and more explicit charter, 
and in the following year succeeded in having the Coddington 
commission vacated. He returned in the summer of 1654, 
having enjoyed the friendship of Cromwell, Milton and other 
prominent Puritans; but Clarke remained in England and in 
Z663 obtained from Charles II. a new charter for "Rhode 
Island and Providence Plantations." Williams died at Provi- 
dence in March or April 1684; the exact date is unknown. 

Though headstrong, opinfonative and rigid in his theological 
views, he was uniformly tolerant, and he occupies a high place 
among those who have striven for complete liberty of conscience. 
He was the first and the foremost exponent in America of the 
theory of the absolute freedom of the individual in matters of 
religion; and Rhode Island, of which he was pre-eminently the 
founder, was the first colony consistently to apply this principle 
in practice. 



t Indians qf A 

(1643); reprinted in vol. i of .the Collections of the Rhode Island 
Historical Society (1827), and in series i. vol. iii. of the Massachusetts 
Historical Society Collections)', Mr Cotton's Letter Examined and 
Answered (1644)* The Btondy Teneni of Persecution for Ike Cause of 
Conscience (1644); Queries of Highest Consideration (1644); The 
Btoudy Tenent yet more BUmiy (1652); The Hireling Ministry none 
of Chrises (1652); Experiments of Spiritual Life and HcaUh(l6$2); 
and George Fox Digged out of his Bwrowes (1676). 

His writing* nave been republished in the Publications of the 
NarrapsnseU Quo (6 vols.. Providence, 1866-1874), the last volume 
containing his extant letters, written between 1633 and 168a. The 
best biographies are those by Oscar Straus (New York, 1894) and 



lor, I iily and October 1 889, and January 1 8oo ; and M .C.Tyler, Hi story 
of American Literature, 1607-1765 (New York, 1878). For the best 
apology for his expulsion from Massachusetts, see Henry M. Dexter's 
As to Roger Williams and his "Banishment "from the Massachusetts 
Plantation (Boston, 1876), an unsuccessful attempt to prevent 
Massachusetts from revoking the order of banishment. 

WILLIAMS, ROWLAND (1817-1870), English divine and 
scholar, was born at Halkyn, Flint, the son of Rowland Williams 
(d. 1854), canon of St Asaph, and educated at Eton and Cam- 
bridge. He was elected fellow of King's College, Cambridge, 
m 1839, and took orders in 184a. During the next few years he 
actively opposed the amalgamation of the sees of St Asaph and 
Bangor. In 1830 he became vice-principal and Hebrew lecturer 
at St David's College, Lampeter, where he introduced much* 
needed educational and financial reforms. He was appointed 
select preacher of Cambridge University in 1*54, and preached a 
sermon on Inspiration, afterwards published in his Rational 
Godliness after Ike Mind of Christ and the Written Yokes of Ike 
Cmwek (London, 1855). He was charged with heterodoxy, and 
Alfred OUivant (1798-1882), bishop of Llandaff, required him 
to resign his chaplaincy, but he remained at the college in spite 



of these difficulties. His views were further defined in Christi- 
anity and Hinduism (Cambridge, 1856), an expansion of the Muir 
priee essay which he had won in 1848. He became vicar in 1858 
of Broadchalke with Bowerchalke and Alvedistone, Wiltshire. 
As a result of his favourable review of Bunsen's " Biblical Re- 
searches" contributed to Essays and Reviews (i860) he was 
prosecuted for heterodoxy. An unfavourable judgment was given 
by the Canterbury Court of Arches in 1862, but reversed by the 
Privy Council in 1864. Williams died on the z8th of January 
1870. 

Besides the above works his most important production was a 
translation of the Hebrew Prophets with commentary (pt. i. 1866; 
pt. ii. edited by Mrs Williams 1871 ;pt.iiL though planned was never 
written). See Life and Letters, editedby Mrs Williams (2 vols., 1874) : 
and T. K. Chcyne, Founders of Old Testament Criticism (1893). 

WILLIAMS, SIR WILLIAM FEHWICK, Bart. (1800-1883), 
British general, second son of Commissary-General Thomas 
Williams, barrack-master at Halifax, Nova Scotia, was born at 
Annapolis, Nova Scotia, on the 4th of December 1800. He 
entered the Royal Artillery as second lieutenant in 1825. His 
services were lent to Turkey in 1841, and he was employed as a 
captain in the arsenal at Constantinople. He was British com- 
missioner in the conferences preceding the treaty of Erzerum in 
1847, and again in the settlement of the Turko- Persian boundary 
in 1848 (brevet majority and lieutenant-colonelcy and C.B.). 
Promoted colonel, he was British commissioner with the Turkish 
army in Anatolia in the Russian War of 1854-56, and, having been 
made a fcrik (lieutenant-general) and a pasha, he practically 
commanded the Turks during the heroic defence of Kars, repuls- 
ing several Russian attacks and severely defeating the Russian 
general Muraviev in the battle of Kars on 29th September 1855. 
Cold, cholera, famine and hopelessness of succour from without, 
however, compelled Williams to make an honourable capitulation 
on the 28th of November following. A baronetcy with pension 
for life, the K.C.B., the grand cross of the Legion of Honour and 
of the Turkish Mcdjidie, the freedom of the City of London with 
a sword of honour, and the honorary degree of D.C.L. of Oxford 
University, were the distinctions conferred upon him for his 
valour. Promoted major-general in November 1855 on his 
return from captivity in Russia, he held the Woolwich command, 
and represented the borough of Calne in parliament from 1856 to 
1859. He became lieutenant-general and colonel-commandant 
Royal Artillery in 1864, general in 1868, commanded the forces 
in Canada from 1859 to 1865, held the governorship of Nova 
Scotia until 1870, and the governorship of Gibraltar until 1876. 
He was made G.C.B. in 1871, and Constable of the Tower of 
London in 1881. He died in London on the 26th of July 1883. 

WILLIAMSBURG, a city and the county-seat of James City 
county, Virginia, U.S.A., on a peninsula between the York and 
James rivers, 48 m. by rail E.S.E. of Richmond. Pop. (1900) 
2044; (1910) 2714. Williamsburg is served by the Chesapeake & 
Ohio railway. It is the seat of the Williamsburg Female Instit ute 
(Presbyterian) , and of the College of William and Mary, chartered 
by the Crown in 1693 and the second oldest college in the United 
States. Besides the main building and the president's house, 
the College of William and Mary has a science hall, a gymnasium, 
a library building, an infirmary and dormitories; in front of 
the main building is a statue by Richard Hayward of Norborne 
Berkeley, Lord Botetourt (1717-1770)1 the most popular royal 
governor of Virginia. The college offers a classical course and a 
scientific course, two-thirds of the work in each being prescribed, 
and in connexion with the normal department, is the Matthew 
Whaley Model and Practice School In 1009 there were 21 
instructors and 228 students in the college, 6 instructors and 140 
pupils in the model school, and 20,000 volumes, many of them 
rare, in the library. Since 1892 the college has published the 
William and Mary College Quarterly, an historical 1 



Here in December 1776 was established the Phi Beta Kappa 
Society, the first American college "Greek Letter" Society, 
now an inter-collegiate honorary fraternity. The college suf- 
fered heavy losses during the War of Independence and in the 
Civil War. In June 1781 Lord Coniwallis made the president's 
house his headquarters, and the institution was closed for a few 



68 4 



WILLIAMSON, A. W.— WILLIAMSON, W. C. 



months of that year. It was closed in 1861 because of the Civil War, 
and the main building was occupied in turn by Confederate troops 
and by Federal troops- until some of the latter burned it in 1862. 
Although reopened in 1869, the college was closed again from 1881 to 
1888 because of the low state of its finances. In 1888 it was reorgan- 
ized under an act of the state legislature which provided for the 
addition of a normal course and an annual appropriation towards its 
maintenance. In 1895 Congress passed an act indemnifying it in 
some measure for its loss during the Civil War; and in 1906 its 
endowment was increased to more than $150,000 and it was made a 
state institution governed by a board (appointed by the governor) 
and receiving $35,000 annually from the state. Peyton Randolph, 
Edmund Randolph, Thomas Jefferson, James Monroe, John Tyler, 
Chief Justice John Marshall and General Winfield Scott were 
graduates of the college. 

Bruton Parish Church, completed in 171 7 and enlarged in 175*, 
is the second church of a parish dating from 1674. It contains a 
Bible given by King Edward VII., a lectern given by President 
Roosevelt, and some old relics. The church itself has been 
restored (1005-1907) so far as practicable to its original form 
and appearance. The Association for the Preservation of 
Virginia Antiquities has preserved a powder magazine, erected 
in 1 7 14, from which the last royal governor of Virginia, Lord 
Dimmore, removed the powder on the day after the encounter 
at Lexington, Massachusetts, and thus occasioned the first armed 
uprising of the Virginia patriots. The County and City Court- 
House was erected in 1769. The Eastern State Hospital for the 
Insane was opened here in 1773, but its original building was 
burned in 1885. Among several colonial residences are the 
George Wythe House, which was the headquarters of Washington 
during the siege ot Yorktown in 1781, and the Peyton Randolph 
House. The principal industries are the manufacture of men's 
winter underwear, lumber and ice, and the shipment of lumber 
and farm and garden produce. 

Williamsburg, originally named Middle Plantation from its 
position midway between the York and James rivers, was 
founded in 1632. It was immediately walled in and for several 
years it served as a refuge from Indian attacks. On the 3rd of 
August 1676 Nathaniel Bacon held here his " rebel n assembly 
of the leading men of the province, and in January 1677 two 
of the " rebels " were hanged here. In 1698 Middle Plantation 
was made the provincial capital; and in 1699 the present name 
was adopted in honour of William III. Williamsburg was 
chartered as a city in 1722. In 1736 the Virginia Gazette, the 
oldest newspaper in the South, was established here. In the 
capitol here Patrick Henry, on the 30th of May 1765, presented 
his historic resolutions and made his famous speech against 
the Stamp Act On the 15th of May 1776, the Virginia Conven- 
tion in session here passed resolutions urging the Continental 
Congress to declare for Independence. In 1779 Richmond 
became the seat of the state government, and in 1832 fire 
destroyed the last of the old capitol at Williamsburg with the 
exception of the foundations, which since 1897 have been cared 
for by the Association for the Preservation of Virginia Antiquities. 
In the Peninsula campaign of the Civil War the Battle of 
Williamsburg was fought on the 5th of May 1862 on the south- 
eastern outskirts of the city. The Confederate army under 
General J. E. Johnston was retreating from Yorktown toward 
Richmond and a part of it under General James Longstrcct 
waited here to check the pursuit of the advance portion of the 
Union army under General E. V. Sumner. A Union division 
Under General J. D. Hooker began a spirited attack at 7.30 a.m., 
other Union divisions dealt heavy blows, but they failed from 
lack of co-operation to rout the Confederates and at night the 
latter continued their retreat. The Union loss in killed, wounded 
and missing was 2228; the Confederate about 1 560. 

See L. G. Tyler, Williamsburg, the Old Colonial Capital (Richmond, 
1907), and his" Williamsburg, the Ancient Capital, in L.P. Powell's 
Historic Towns of the Southern Stales (New York. 1900). 

WILLIAMSON, ALEXANDER WILLIAM (1824-1004), English 
chemist, was born at Wandsworth, London, on the 1st of May 
1824. After working under Leopold Gmelin at Heidelberg, 
and Liebig at Giessen, he spent three yean in Paris studying 
the higher mathematics under Comte. In 1 849 he was appointed 
professor of practical chemistry at University College, Loudon, 



and from 1&55 until his retirement in 1887 he also held the 
professorship of chemistry. He had the credit of being the 
first to explain the process of etherificatioa and to elucidate the 
formation of ether by the interaction of sulphuric acid and 
alcohol. Ether and alcohol he regarded aa substances analogous 
to and built up on the same type as "water, and he further intro- 
duced the water-type as a widely applicable basis for the classifi- 
cation of chemical compounds. The method of stating the 
rational constitution of bodies by comparison with water he 
believed capable of wide extension, and that one type, he 
thought, would suffice for all inorganic compounds, as well as 
for the best-known organic ones, the formula of water being 
taken in certain cases as doubled or tripled. So far back as 1850 
he also suggested a view which, in a modified form, is of funda- 
mental importance in the modern theory of ionic dissociation, 
for, in a paper on the theory of the formation of ether, he urged 
that in an aggregate of molecules of any compound there is an 
exchange constantly going on between the elements which are 
contained in it; for instance, in hydrochloric acid each atom 
of hydrogen does not remain quietly in juxtaposition with the 
atom of chlorine with which it first united, but changes places 
with other atoms of hydrogen. A somewhat similar hypothesis 
was put forward by R. J. £. Clausius about the same time. 
For his work on etherification Williamson in 1862 received a 
Royal medal from the Royal Society, of which he became a 
fellow in 1855, and which he served as foreign secretary from 
1873 to 1889. He was twice president of the London Chemical 
Society, in 1863-1865, and again in 1869-1871. His death 
occurred on the 6th of May 1904, at Hindhead, Surrey, England. 

WILLIAMSON. SIR JOSEPH (1633-1701), English politician, 
was born at Bridekirk, near Cockermouth, his father, Joseph 
Williamson, being vicar of this place. He was educated at 
St Bees, at Westminster school and at Queen's College, Oxford, 
of which he became a fellow, and in 1660 he entered the service 
of the secretary of state, Sir Edward Nicholas, retaining his 
position under the succeeding secretary, Sir Henry Bennct, 
afterwards earl of Arlington. For his connexion with the 
foundation of the London Gazelle in 1665 see Newspapers. He 
entered parliament in 1669, and in 1672 was made one of the 
clerks of the council and a knight. In 1673 and 1674 he repre* 
sentcd his country at the congress of Cologne, and in the latter 
year he became secretary of state, having practically purchased 
this position from Arlington for £6000, a sum which he required 
from his successor when he left office in 1679. J ust before his 
removal he had been arrested on a charge of sharing in the 
popish plots, but he had been at once released by order of 
Charles II. After a period of comparative inactivity Sir Joseph 
represented England at the congress of Nijmwegen in 1697, and 
in 1698 he signed the first treaty for the partition of the Spanish 
monarchy. He died at Cobham, Kent, on the 3rd of October 
1 701. Williamson was the second president of the Royal Society, 
but his main interests, after politics, were rather in antiquarian 
than in scientific matters. Taking advantage of the many 
opportunities of making money which his official position gave 
him, he became very rich. He left £6000 and his library to 
Queen's College, Oxford; £5000 to found a school at Rochester; 
and £2000 to Thetford. 

A great number of Williamson's letters, despatches, memoranda, 
&c, arc among the English state papers. 

WILLIAMSON, WILLIAM CRAWFORD (1816-1895), English 
naturalist, was born at Scarborough on the 34th of November 
1816. His father, John Williamson, after beginning life as a 
gardener, became a well-known local naturalist, who, in con- 
junction with William Bean, first explored the rich fossiliferous 
beds of the Yorkshire coast. He was for many years curator 
of the Scarborough natural history museum, and the younger 
Williamson was thus from the first brought up among scientific 1 
surroundings and in association with scientific people. William 
Smith, the " father of English geology," lived for two yean 
in the Williamsons' house. Young Williamson's maternal 
grandfather was a lapidary, and from him he learnt trie art of 
culling stones, an accomplishment which he found of great use 



WILLIAMSPORT— WILLIAMSTOWN 



685 



in later years, when he undertook his work on the structure 
of fossil plants. Williamson very early made a beginning as an 
original contributor to science. When little more than sixteen 
he published a paper on the rare birds of Yorkshire, and a little 
later (in 1834) presented to the Geological Society of London 
his first memoir on the Mesozoic fossils of his native district. 
In the meantime he had assisted Lindley and Hutton in the 
preparation of their well-known Fossil Flora of Great Britain. 
On entering the medical profession he still found time to carry 
on his scientific work during his student days, and for three 
years acted as curator of the Natural History Society's museum 
at Manchester. After completing his medical studies at Univer- 
sity College, London, in 1841, he- returned to Manchester to 
practise his profession, in which he met with much success. 
When Owens College at Manchester was founded in 1851 he 
became professor of natural history there, with the duty of 
teaching geology, zoology and botany. A very necessary 
division of labour took place as additional professors were 
appointed, but he retained the chair of botany down to 1892. 
Shortly afterwards he removed to Clapham, where he died on 
the 23rd of June 1805. Williamson's teaching work was not 
confined to his university classes, for he was also a successful 
popular lecturer, especially for the Gilchrist Trustees. His 
scientific work, pursued with remarkable energy throughout 
life, in the midst of official and professional duties, had a wide 
scope. In geology, his early work on the zones of distribution 
of Mesozoic fossils (begun in 1834), and on the part played by 
microscopic organisms in the formation of marine deposits 
(1845), was of fundamental importance. In zoology, his investi- 
gations of the development of the teeth and bones of fishes 
(1842-1851), and on recent Foraminifera, a group an which he 
wrote a monograph for the Ray Society in 1857, were no less 
valuable. In botany, in addition to a remarkable memoir on 
the minute structure of Volwx (1852), his work on the structure 
of fossil plants established British paleobotany on a scientific 
basis; on the ground of these researches Williamson may rank 
with A. T. Brongniart as one of the founders of this branch 
of science. His contributions to fossil botany began in the 
earliest. days of his career, and he returned to the subject from 
time to time during the period of his geological and zoological 
activity. His investigation of the Mesozoic cycadioid fossil 
Zamia (now WtUiamsonia) gigas was the chief palaeobotanical 
work of this intermediate period. His long course of researches 
on the structure of Carboniferous plants belongs mainly to the 
latter part of his life, and his results are chiefly, though* not 
wholly, embodied in a series of nineteen memoirs, ranging in 
date from 1871 to 1893, in the Philosophical Transactions. In 
this series, and in some works (notably the monograph on 
Stigmaria ficoides, Falaeontographical Society, 1886), published 
elsewhere, Williamson elucidated the structure of every group 
of Palaeozoic vascular plants. Among the chief results of his 
researches may be mentioned the discovery of plants intermediate 
between ferns and cycads, the description of the true structure 
of the fructification in the extinct cryptogamk family Spheno- 
phylkae, and the demonstration of the cryptogamk nature of the 
dominant Palaeozoic orders Calamarieae, Lcpidodendreae and 
StgQIarieac, plants which on. account of the growth of their 
stems in thickness, after the manner of gymnospermous trees, 
were regarded as phanerogams by Brongniart and his followers. 
After, a long controversy the truth of Williamson's views has 
been fully established, and it is now known that the mode of 
growth, characteristic in present times, of dicotyledons and 
gymnosperms prevailed in Palaeozoic ages in every family 
of vascular cryptogams. Thus, as Count Sohns-Laubach has 
pointed out, palaeobotany for the first time spoke the decisive 
word in an important question of general botany. Williamson's 
work in fossil botany was scarcely appreciated at the time as 
it deserved, for its great merits were somewhat obscured by the 
author's want of familiarity with the modern technicalities of 
the science. Since, however, the subject 'has been seriously 
taken up by botanists of a newer school, the soundness of the 
foundation he laid has become fully recognized. It may be 
XXVIH I* 



added that be was a skilled draughtsman, illustrating all his 
works by bis own drawings, and practising water-colour painting 
as his favourite recreation. 

A full account of Williamson's career will be found in his auto- 
biography, entitled Reminiscences of a Yorkshire Naturalist, edited 
by his wife (London, 1896). Among obituary notices may be 
mentioned that by Count Solms-Laubach, Nature (5th September 
I895), and one by D. H. Scott in Froc. R.S. vol be (1897). 

(D. H. S.) 

WILLIAMSPORT, a dty and the county-seat of Lycoming 
county, Pennsylvania', U.S.A., on the north bank of the west 
branch of the Susquehanna river, about 70 m. N. by W. of 
Harrisburg. Pop. (1890) 27,132; (1000) 28,757, °* whom 1144 
were negroes and 2228 were foreign-born, including 1089 Ger- 
mans; (1910 census), 31,860. Area, about 7 sq. m. Williamsport 
is served by the New York Central & Hudson River, the Penn- 
sylvania, the Susquehanna ft New York, and the Philadelphia 
ft Reading railways, and by electric lines connecting with the 
neighbouring towns of Montoursville (pop. in 1000, 1665), 
South Williamsport (pop. in 1000, 3328), on the S. bank of the 
river, and Du Boistown (pop. in xooo, 650). The dty has an 
attractive site, on a high plain, nearly surrounded by hills. It 
has five parks, Brandon (44 acres) within the dty limits, and 
Vallamont, Starr Island, Sylvan Dell and Nippono in its suburbs. 
Williamsport is the seat of Williamsport Dickinson Seminary 
(Methodist Episcopal, co-educational, 1848), a secondary school.* 
Among the principal buildings are the county court house,, 
the dty hall, the United States Government building, the 
Scottish Rite Cathedral, the Masonic Temple, a Y.M.CA. 
building, and the James V.* Brown Memorial Library (1007). 
In the dty arc a Boys' Industrial Home (1898), a Girls' Training 
School (1895), a Florence Crittenton Home (1895), a Home for 
Aged Coloured Women (1898), a Home for the Friendless" (1872), 
and Williamsport Hospital (1873). There are practically no 
tenement houses. The value of factory products in 1905 was 
$11,738,473, 20-7% more than in 1000. Williamsport has the 
largest lumber market in Pennsylvania; lumber was for forty 
years the most important of its manufactures, and Williamsport 
was styled the "sawdust dty." The decreasing importance 
of the industry is due to the virtual exhaustion of standing 
timber in the neighbourhood. Lumber and timber products 
were valued at $1,310,368 in 1905, and lumber and planing mill 
products at $579,667. Among other manufactures arc silk 
and silk goods, valued at $1,191,273 in X905; foundry and 
machine shop products, $1,164,737; rubber and leather boots 
and shoes, furniture, &c. The dty has a large trade with the 
surrounding country. The water supply is derived from moun- 
tain streams S. of the dty. Lycoming county was erected in 
1795) *a which year Williamsport was founded and became 
the county-seat, after a bitter contest with Jaysburg, which was 
then a village of only some half a dozen houses and which 
subsequently ceased to exist. Williamsport was incorporated 
as a borough in 1806, and was chartered as a dty in 1866. 

WILLIAMSTOWN, a town of Bourke county, Victoria, 
Australia, 9 m. by rail S.W. of Melbourne. Pop. (1901) 14,083. 
Shipping is the chief business of the place, there being com- 
modious piers, breakwater, also provision for the repair of 
vessels, patent slips and shipbuilding yards. Several quarries 
of superior basalt are worked near the town, and brown coal 
of good quality has also been found. The flourishing industries 
indude woollen-milling, bottle-making, fodder-compressing, 
meat-freezing and cycle-making. 

WILLIAMSTOWN, a township of Berkshire county, Massa- 
chusetts, U.S.A., on the Hoosick and Green rivers, in the N.W. 
corner of the state, and about 20 m. N. of Pittsfidd. Pop. 
(1800) 4221; (1900) 5013, of' whom 929 were xordgn-born 
and 138 were negroes; (1910 census), 3708. Wuliamstown is 
served by the Boston ft Maine railway and by an interurban 
electric fine to North Adams. It covers an area of about 49 sq . m. 
and contains five villages. Williamstown, the principal village, 
is a pleasant residential centre on the Green river; it is sur- 
rounded by beautiful scenery and its streets are shaded by some 
fine old trees. Mission Park (to acres) here is adorned by native 

2a 



686 



WILLIAMS-WYNN— WILLIS, N. P. 



and foreign shrubs and by maples, elms, pines and arbor vitae, 
and " Haystack Monument " in this park marks the place where 
Samuel John Mills (1783-2818), in 1806, held the prayer meeting 
which was the forerunner of the American foreign missionary 
movement. Williamstown village is best known as the seat 
of Williams College*, chartered in 1793 as a successor to a " free 
school " in Williamstown (chartered in 2785 and endowed by a 
bequest of Colonel Ephraim Williams). Besides recital ion and 
residence halls, it has the Lawrence Hall Library (1846), contain- 
ing (2920) 68,000 volumes, the Thompson Memorial Chapel 
(1004), the Lasell Gymnasium (1886), an infirmary (2895), the 
Hopkins Observatory (2837) and the Field Memorial Observatory 
(2882), the Thompson Chemical Laboratory (2892), the Thompson 
'Biological Laboratory (2893) and the Thompson Physical 
Laboratory (2893). In 2920 the college had 59 instructors and 
537 students. The fourth president of the college was Mark 
Hopkins (q.v.), and one of its most distinguished alumni was 
James A. Garfield, president of the United States, whose son, 
Harry Augustus Garfield (b. 1863), became president of the 
college in 2908. 

The principal manufactures of the township are cotton and 
woollen goods (especially corduroy), and market gardening is an 
important industry. The limits of the township, originally 
called West Hoosac, were determined by a committee of the 
General Court of Massachusetts in 2749, and two or three years 
later the village was laid out. Two of the lota were immediately 
purchased by Captain Ephraim Williams (17x5*1755)) who was 
at the time commander of Fort Massachusetts in the vicinity; 
several other lots were bought by soldiers under him; and in 
2 7 53 the proprietors organized a township government. Williams 
was killed in the battle of Lake George on the 8th of September 
2755, but while in camp in Albany, New York, a few days before 
the battle, he drew a will containing a small bequest for a free 
school at West Hoosac on condition that the township when 
incorporated should be called Williamstown. The township was 
incorporated with that name in 2765. 

See A L. Perry, Origins in Williamstown (New York, 1894: 3rd 
ed. 1000) ; and Williamstown and Williams College (Norwood, Mass., 

WILLIAMS-WYNN, SIR WATKIN, Bast. (2692-1740), Welsh 
politician, was the eldest son and heir of Sir William Williams, 
Bart., of Llanforda near Oswestry; his mother, Jane Thelwall, 
was a descendant of the antiquary, Sir John Wynn of Gwydir, 
Carnarvonshire. Educated at Jesus College, Oxford, Williams 
succeeded to Wynnstay near Ruabon and the estates of the Wynns 
on the death of a later Sir John Wynn in 2729, and took the 
name of Williams- Wynn. He was member of parliament for 
Denbighshire from 2726 to 2742, and was prominent among the 
opponents of Sir Robert Walpole; as a leading and influential 
Jacobite he was in communication with the supporters of Prince 
Charles Edward before the rising of 2745, but his definite offer 
of help did not reach the prince until the retreat to Scotland had 
begun. He died on the 26th of September 2749. His first wife, 
Ann Vaughan (d. 2748), was the heiress of extensive estates in 
Montgomeryshire which still belong to the family. His son and 
heir, Sir Watkin Williams-Wynn, Bart. (2740-1789). *as the 
father of another Sir Watkin (2 77 2-2842), the 5th baronet Two 
other sons attained some measure of distinction: Charles (2775- 
2850), a prominent Tory politician, and Sir Henry (2783-2856), 
a diplomatist. A daughter, Frances Williams-Wynn (d. 2857), 
was the authoress of Diaries of a Lady of Quality, 1797-1844, 
which were edited with notes by Abraham Hayward in 2864. 

See Askew Roberts, Wynnstay and the Wynns (Oswestry, 1876). 

WILLIBRORD (or Wxlbrord), ST (d. 738), English missionary, 
" the apostle of the Frisians," was born about 657. His father, 
Wilgils, an Angle or, as Alcuin styles him, a Saxon, of North- 
umbria, withdrew from the world and constructed for himself 
a little oratory dedicated to St Andrew. The king and nobles 
of the district endowed him with estates till he was at last able 
to build a church, over which Alcuin afterwards ruled. Willi- 
brord, almost as soon as he was weaned, was sent to be brought 
up at Ripon, where he must doubtless have come under the 



influence of Wilfrid. About the age of twenty the desire of 
increasing his stock of knowledge (c. 679) drew him to Ireland, 
which had so long been the headquarters of learning in western 
Europe. Here he stayed for twelve years, enjoying the society of 
Ecgberht and Wihtberht, from the former of whom he received his 
commission to missionary work among the North-German tribes. 
In his thirty-third year (c. 690) he started with twelve com- 
panions for the mouth of the Rhine. These districts were then 
occupied by the Frisians under their king, Rathbod, who gave 
allegiance to Pippin of HcrstaL Pippin befriended him and sent 
him to Rome, where he was consecrated archbishop (with the 
name Clemens) by Pope Sergius on St Cecilia's Day 606. 1 Bede 
says that when he returned to Frisia his see was fixed in Ultra- 
jectum (Utrecht). He spent several years in founding churches 
and evangelizing, till his success tempted him to pass into other 
districts. From Denmark he carried away thirty boys to be 
brought up among the Franks. On his return he was wrecked 
on the holy island of Fosite (Heligoland), where his disregard of 
the pagan superstition nearly cost him his life. When Pippin 
died, Willibrord found a supporter in his son Charles Mattel. 
He was assisted for three years in his missionary work by St 
Boniface (729-723), who, however, was not willing to become his 
successor. 

He was still living when Bede wrote in 731. A passage in one 
of Boniface's letters to Stephen III. speaks of his preaching to the 
Frisians for fifty years, apparently reckoning from the time of 
his consecration. This would fix the date of his death in 738; 
and, as Alcuin tells us he was eighty-one years old when he died, 
it may be inferred that he was born in 657— a theory on which 
all the dates given above are based, though it must be added 
that they are substantially confirmed by the incidental notices 
of Bede. The day of his death was the 6th of November, and his 
body was buried in the monastery of Echternach, near Trier, 
which he had himself founded. Even in Alcuin's time miracles 
were reported to be still wrought at his tomb. 

The chief authorities for Wiliibrord'a life are Alcuin's Vita Willi- 
brordi, both in prose and in verse, and Bedc's HisL. Ecel. v. cc. 9-1 1. 
See also Eddius's Vita Wilfridii, and J. Mabillon, Annates ordinis 
saneti Benedicts lib. xviii. 

WILUMANTIC, a city of Windham county, Connecticut, 
U.S. A., in the township of Windham, at the junction of the 
Willimantic and Natchaug rivers to form the She tucket, in the 
E. part of the state, about 26 m. N.W. of Norwich. Pop. (2890) 
8648; (2900) 8937, of whom 2492 were foreign-born; (1920 
census) 22,230. It is served by the New York, New Haven & 
Hartford and the Central Vermont railways, and by electric 
lines to Baltic, Norwich and New London, and to South Coventry. 
It is the seat of a State Normal Training School, and has a public 
library and Dunham Hall Library (2878). The Willimantic 
river provides good water-power, and there are various manu- 
factures. The total value of the factory product in 2905 was 
$4,002,447. The township of Windham was incorporated in 
2692. Willimantic was settled in 1822, incorporated as a borough 
in 2833, and chartered as a dty in 2803. The name is from an 
Indian word meaning " good look-out " or " good cedar swamps." 

WILLIS, NATHANIEL PARKER (2806-2867), American 
author, was descended from George Willis, described as a " Puritan 
of considerable distinction," who arrived in New England about 
2630 and settled in Cambridge, Massachusetts. Nathaniel 
Parker was the eldest son and second child of Nathaniel Willis, 
a newspaper proprietor in Boston, and was born in Portland, 
Maine, on the 20th of January 1806. After attending Boston 
grammar school and the academy at Andover, he entered Yale 
College, in October 1823. Although he did not specially dis- 
tinguish himself as a student, university lire had considerable 
influence in. the development of his character, and furnished him 
with much of his literary material Immediately after leaving 
Yale he published in 1827 a volume of poetical Sketches, which 
attracted tome attention, although the critics found in his 
verses more to blame than to praise. It was followed by Fugitive 
Poetry (28x9) and another volume of verse (2832). He also 

1 He had been consecrated bishop, also by Sergius, on a previous 
visit in 69a. 



WILLIS, T.— WILLOBIE 



687 



contributed frequently to magazines and periodicals. Id 1829 
he started the A merkan Monthly Magazine, which was continued 
from April of that year to August 1831, but failed to achieve 
success. On its discontinuance he went to Europe as foreign 
editor and correspondent of the New York Minor. To this 
journal he contributed a series of letters, which, under the title 
Pencilling! by the Way, were published at London in 1835 
(3 vols.; Philadelphia, 1836, a vols.; and first complete edition, 
New York, 1841). Their vivid and rapid sketches of scenes and 
modes of life in the old world at once gained them a wide popu- 
larity; but he was censured by some critics for indiscretion In 
reporting conversations in private gatherings. Notwithstanding, 
however, the small affectations and fopperies which were his 
besetting weaknesses as a man as well as an author, the grace, 
ease and artistic finish of his style won general recognition. 
His M Slingsby Papers," a series of magazine articles descriptive 
of American life and adventure, republished in 1836 under the 
title Inklings of Adventure, were as successful in England as were 
his PenciUings by the Way in America. He also published while 
in England Melanie and other Poems (London, 1835; New York, 
1837), which was introduced by a preface by Barry Cornwall 
(Procter). After his marriage to Mary Stace, daughter of 
General William Stace of Woolwich, he returned to America, 
and settled at a small estate on Oswego Creek, just above its 
junction with the Susquehanna. Here he lived off and on from 
1837 to 1842, and wrote Letters from under a Bridge (London, 
1840; first complete edition, New York, 1844), the most charm- 
ing of all his works. During a short visit to England in 1839- 
1840 he published Two Ways of Dying for a Husband. Returning 
to New York, he .established, along with George P. Morris, a 
newspaper entitled the Evening Mirror. On the death of his 
wife in 1845 he again visited England. Returning to America 
in the spring of 1846, he married Cornelia Grinnell, and estab- 
lished the National Press, afterwards named the Home Journal. 
In 1845 he published Dashes at Life with a Free Pencil, in 1846 
a collected edition of his Prose and Poetical Works, in 1849 Rural 
Letters, and in 1850 Life Here and There. In that year he settled 
at Idlewild on the Hudson river, and on account of failing 
health spent the remainder of his life chiefly in retirement. 
Among his later works were Hurry-Graphs (1S51), Outdoors at 
IdlewiU (1854)1 Ragbag (1855), Paul Fane (1856), and the 
Convalescent (1859), but he had survived his great reputation. 
He died on the 20th of January 1867, and was buried in Mount 
Auburn, Boston. 
The best edition of his vene writings is The Poems, Sacred, 
N. P. Wil 



Passionate and Humorous, of . 



Wis (New York, 1868); 



iMiivmiw viw uamvrinu, oj «. r. rw utvs yicw IOTK, tooofi 

it volumes of his prose. Complete Prose Works, were published at 
New York (1849-1859), and a Selection from his Prose Writings 
was edited by Henry A. Beers fNew York, 1885). His Life, by 
Henry A. Been, appeared in the series of "American Men of 
Letters" the same year. See also E. P. Whipple, Essays and 
Reviews (vol. i., 1848); M. A. de Wolfe Howe, American Bookmen 
(New York, 1898)/ 

WILUS, TH0HA8 (1621-1675), English anatomist and 
physician, was bom at Great Bcdwin, Wiltshire, on the 27th 
of January i6sr. He studied at Christ Church, Oxford; and 
when that city was garrisoned for the king he bore arms for the 
Royalists. He took the degree of bachelor of medicine in 1646, 
and applied himself to the practice of his profession. In 1660, 
shortly after the Restoration, he became Sedleian professor 
of natural philosophy in place of Dr Joshua Cross, who was 
ejected, and the same year he took the degree of doctor of physic 
In 1664 he discovered the medicinal spring at Astrop, near 
Brackley in Northamptonshire. He was one of the first members 
of the Royal Society, and was elected an honorary fellow of the 
Royal College of Physicians in 1664. In 1666, after the fire of 
London, be took a house in St Martin's Lane, and there rapidly 
acquired an extensive practice, his reputation and skill marking 
him out as one of the first physicians of his time. He died in 
St Martin's Lane on the 1 ith of November 1675 and was buried 
in Westminster Abbey. 

Willis was admired for his piety and charity, for his deep insight 
into natural and experimental philosophy, anatomy and encm^try, 
inty of his 



•ad for the el ega nte and punty < 



Latin style. Among his 



wntran were Cerebri onatome nervorumgue descripHo et usus (1664), 
in which he described what b still known, in the anatomy of the 
brain, as the circle of Willis, and Pharmaceutice rationaks (1674), in 
which he characterized diabetes mellitus. He wrote in English A 
Platn and Easy Method for Preserving those that are Well from the 
Infection of the Plague, and for Curing such as are Infected. His 
Latin works were printed in two vols, ato at Geneva in 1676, and at 
Amsterdam in 1682. Browne Willis (1682-1760), the antiquarian, 
author of three volumes of Surveys of the cathedrals of England, 
was his grandson. 

See Munk, Rett of the Royal College of Physicians, London (2nd 
ed., vol. u, London, 1878). 

WILLMORB, JAMBS TIBBITTS (1800-1863), English line 
engraver, was born at Bristnall's End, Handsworth, near 
Bir min g h a m, on the rcth of September 1800. At the age of 
fourteen he was apprenticed to William Radcliffe, a Birmingham 
engraver, and in 1823 he went to London and was employed for 
three years by Charles Heath. He was afterwards engaged 
upon the plates of Brockedon's Passes of the Alps and Turner's 
England and Wales. He engraved after Chalon, Leitch, Stan- 
field, Landseer, East lake, Creswick and Ansdell, and especially 
after Turner, from whose " Alnwick Castle by Moonlight," " The 
Old Temeraire," " Mercury and Argus," «■ Ancient Rome," 
and the subjects of the rivers of France, he executed many 
admirable plates. He was elected an associate engraver of the 
Royal Academy in 1843. He died on the 12th of March 1863. 

WILLOBIE (or Willoughby), HENRY (i575?-i596?), the 
supposed author of a poem called Willobie his Avisa, which 
derives interest from its possible connexion with Shakespeare's 
personal history. Henry Willoughby was the second son of a 
Wiltshire gentleman of the same name, and matriculated from 
St John's College, Oxford, in December 1591, at the age of 
sixteen. He is probably identical with the Henrj Willoughby 
who graduated B.A. from Exeter College early in 1595, and 
he died before the 30th of June 1596, when to a new edition of 
the poem Hadrian Dorrell added an " Apologie " in defence of 
his friend the author " now of late gone to God," and another 
poem in praise of chastity written by Henry's brother, Thomas 
Willoughby. Willobie his Avisa was licensed for the press on 
the 3rd of September 1594, four months after the entry of 
S h akespea r e's Rape of Lucrece, and printed by John Windet. 
It is preceded by two commendatory poems, the second of which, 
signed " Contraria Contrariis; Vigilantius; Dormitanus," 
contains the earliest known printed allusion to Shakespeare by 



" Yet Tarqoyne pluckt his glistering grape. 
And Sbake-speaxe paints poore Lucrece rape." 
In the poem itself, Avisa, whose name is explained in DorreU's 
" Epistle to the Reader " as Amans Uxor Inviolata Semper 
Amanda, takes up the parable alternately with her suitors, one 
of whom is introduced to the reader in a prose interlude signed 
by the author H. W., as Henrico Willobego Italo Hispalensis. 
This passage contains a reference which may fairly be applied 
to the sonnets of Shakespeare. It runs: 

" H. W. being sodenly infected with the contagion of a fantastical 
fit, at the first sight of A, . bewrayeth the secresy of his disease 
unto his familiar frend W. S. who not long before had tryed the 
curtesy of the like passion, and was now newly rccoucred he 

determined to see whether it would sort to a happier end for this 
new actor, then H did for the old player." 

Then follows a dialogue between H. W. and W. S., in which 
W S., M the old player," a phrase susceptible of a double sense, 
gives somewhat commonplace advice to the disconsolate wooer. 
Dorrell alleges that he found the MS. of Willobie his Avisa 
among his friend's papers left in his charge when Willoughby 
departed from Oxford on her majesty's service. There is no 
trace of any Hadrian Dorrell, and the name is probably fictitious; 
there is, indeed, good reason to think that the pseudonym, 
if such it is, covers the personality of the real author of the 
work. Willobie his Avisa proved extremely popular, and passed 
through numerous editions, and Peter Colse produced in 1596 an 
imitation named Penelope's Complaint. 

See Shakspere Allusion-Books, part I, ed. C. M. Inrieby (M 
Shakspere Society, 1874); A. B. Grosart'a •• Introduction* to 1 
reprint of Wiilobie his Avisa (1880). 



lew 
his 



688 



WILLOCK— WILLOW 



WILLOCK (or WtLLoexs), JOHN (c. 1515-1585)1 Scottish 
reformer, was a native of Ayrshire and was educated at the 
university of Glasgow. After being a monk for a short time 
he embraced the reformed religion and went to London, where, 
about 1542, he became chaplain to Henry Grey, afterwards 
duke of Suffolk, the father of Lady Jane Grey. On the accession 
of Mary to the English throne in 1553 he went to Emden in 
Friesland, where he practised as a physician, varying this pro- 
fession with visits to Scotland He was associated with the 
leading Scottish reformers in their opposition to the queen regent, 
Mary of Lorraine, and the Roman Catholic religion, and in 1558 
he returned definitely to his native land. Willock now began 
to preach and in 1559 was outlawed. Popular sympathy, 
however, rendered this sentence fruitless, and in the same year, 
being Knox's deputy as minister of St Giles' cathedral, Edinburgh, 
he frustrated the efforts of the regent to restore the Roman 
Catholic religion, and administered the communion for the first 
time in accordance with the ideas of the reformers. He was one 
of the four ministers chosen by the convention of October 1559 
to seats on the council of government, and was one of those 
appointed to compile the first book of discipline. About 156a 
he became rector of Loughborough in Leicestershire, but he 
retained his connexion with the Scottish church and was 
moderator of the general assembly in 1562, and again in 1564, 
in 1565 and in 156S. He died at Loughborough on the 4th of 
December 1585. 

WILLOUGHBY, the name of an English family long settled 
in Nottinghamshire, and now represented by Baron Middleton. 
Having exchanged his name of Bugge for that of Willoughby, 
Richard de Willoughby became a judge during the reign of 
Edward II. and purchased the manors of Wollaton in Notting- 
hamshire and of Risley in Derbyshire. His son, Richard de 
Willoughby (d. 1362), was justice of the common pleas under 
Edward IJJ. Richard's descendant, Dorothy, who became the 
heiress of the family estates, married Robert Willoughby of 
Bore Place, Kent, and their descendant, Sir Thomas Willoughby, 
Bart. (c. 1670-17 29), of Wollaton, was created Baron Middleton 
in 171 2. In 1877 his descendant, Digby Wentworth Bayard 
Willoughby (b. 1844), became the 9th baron. This title must 
be distinguished from that of Viscount Midleton, borne by the 
Brodrick family. 

Sir Hugh Willoughby, the seaman, was a member of this 
family. He was a son of Sir Henry Willoughby (d. 1528), and 
a grandson of Sir Hugh Willoughby of Wollaton. His early 
services were as a soldier on the Scottish borders, but he soon 
turned his thoughts to the sea, and was appointed captain of a 
fleet of three ships which set out in 1553 with the object of 
discovering a north-eastern passage to Cathay and India. Two 
of the three ships reached the coast of Lapland, where it was 
proposed to winter, and here Willoughby and his companions 
died of cold and starvation soon after January 1 554. A few years 
later their remains were found, and with them Willoughby's 
Journal, which is printed in vol i. of R. Hakluyt's Principal 
Navigations. 

Another famous member of this family was Sir Nesbit Josiah 
Willoughby (1 777-1849), who entered the British navy in 1790 
and was present at the battle of Copenhagen. In 1800, however, 
he was dismissed from the service by the sentence of a court- 
martial for his insolent conduct towards a superior officer, a 
previous offence of this kind having been punished less severely. 
In 1803, on the renewal of war, as a volunteer he joined an 
English squadron bound for the West Indies, and was soon 
admitted again to the navy; his courage and promptness at 
Cape Francais were responsible for saving 900 lives, and he 
distinguished himself on other occasions, being soon restored 
to his former rank in the service. After further services in the 
West Indies, during which he displayed marked gallantry on 
several occasions, Willoughby was tried by court-martial at 
Cape Town in 1808 on charges of cruelty; he seems to have taken 
a great delight in inflicting punishment, but he was acquitted 
with the advice to be more moderate in future in his language. 
\ffain in the West Indies, where he commanded theNereide 



frigate, he was responsible for the heroic defence made by his 
ship against a much stronger French force at Port Louis, 
Mauritius, in August 1810, when 122 out of his crew of 281 men 
were disabled before he surrendered. Undeterred by the severe 
wounds which be had received, and seeing no prospect of active 
service with the British fleet, Willoughby offered his services 
in 181 2 to the Russian government, and while serving with the 
Russian army he was captured by the French. He was taken to 
France, whence he escaped to England. Having seen a little 
more service in the navy, he was knighted in 1827, was made 
a rear-admiral in 1847, and died unmarried in London on the 
19th of May 1849. 

WILLOW (Salix), a very well-marked genus of plants con- 
stituting, with the poplar (Pop dm), the order Salicaceae. 
Willows are trees or shrubs, varying in stature from a few inches, 
like the small British S. kerbacea and arctic species generally, 
to 100 ft., and occurring most abundantly in cold or temperate 
climates in both hemispheres, and generally in moist situations; 
a few species occur in the tropical and sub-tropical portions of 
the three great continents. Their leaves are deciduous, alternate, 
simple, and generally much longer than broad, whence the term 
willow-leaved has become proverbial. At their base they are pro- 
vided with stipules, which are also modified to form the scales 
investing the winter buds. The flowers are borne in catkins 
(fig. 1), which are on one tree male (staminatc) only, on another 
female (pistillate). Each male flower consists of a small scale or 
bract, in the axil of which are usually two, sometimes three, rarely 
five stamens, and still more rarely a larger number. In addition 
there is a small glandular disk, which assumes different shapes in 




Fie. 1.— Salix caprea— Common Sallow or Goat Willow. 

1, Leaf shoot. 4. Female calkin. 

2, Branchlet bearing male cat- 5. Female flower. 

kins. 6. Capsule, opened. 

3, Male flower. 7. Seed. 

1. ». 4 reduced; 3, 5-? enlarged. 

different species. The female flowers arc equally simple, consist- 
ing of a bract, from whose axil arises usually a very short slalk, 
surmounted by two carpels adherent one to the other for their 
whole length, except that the upper ends of the styles are 
separated into two stigmas. When ripe the two carpels separate 
in the form of two valves and liberate a large number of seeds, 
each provided at the base wiih a tuft of silky hairs, and containing 
a straight embryo without any investing albumen. The flowers 
appear generally before the leaves and are thus rendered more 
conspicuous, while passage of pollen by the wind is facilitated. 
Fertilization is effected by insects, especially by bees, which are 
directed in their search by the colour and fragrance of the 



WILLOW-HERB— WILLS 



689 



flowers; but some pollen roost also be transported by tbe 
wind to tbe female flowers, especially 'in arctic species which, 
in spite of the poverty of insect life, set abundant fruit. The 
tuft of hairs at the base facilitates rapid dispersion of the 
seed, early germination of which is rendered desirable owing to 
its tenuity. Although the limitations of the genus are well 
marked, and its recognition in consequence easy, it is otherwise 
with regard to tbe species. Tbe greatest difference of opinion 
exists among botanists as to their number and the bounds to be 
atsignod to each; and the cross-fertilization that takes place 
between the species intensifies the difficulty. Andersson, a 
Swede, spent nearly a quarter of a century in their investigation, 
and ultimately published a monograph which is tbe standard 
authority on tbe subject. He admits about a hundred species. 
Professor C.S. Sargent (Siiva of North America) suggests 160 
to 170 as the number of distinguishable species. Some botanists 
have enumerated 80 species from Great Britain alone, while 
others count only 12 or 15. Dr Buchanan White, woo made 
a special study of the British willows, grouped them under 17 
species with numerous varieties and hybrids.- To illustrate tbe 
great perplexity surrounding the subject, we may mention that 
to one species, 5. nigricans, one hundred and twenty synonyms 




Fig. 2.— Salixfragilis— Crack Willow. 

A, Flowering shoot from male 4. Female flower with and with- 

plant. . out bract. 

B, Flowering shoot from female 5, Single fruit from which the 

plant. hairy seeds are escaping; 

I, Foliage. one seed shown separately. 

a. Catkin of traits. A, B, 1, a, about half nat. size, 
3, Male flower. 3-5 enlarged. 

have been attached. Some of these are doubtless such as no 
botanist, with adequate material for forming an opinion, would 
accept; but, after making the necessary deductions for actual 
mistakes and misstatements, there still remains a large number 
upon which legitimate differences of opinion prevail. Andersson 
says that he has rarely seen two specimens of this species which 
were alike in the collective characters offered by the stature, 
foliage and catkins. No better example could be found of the 
almost limitless variation in so-called species. 

Few genera have greater daunt to notice from an economic point 
of view. As timber trees many of the species are valuable from 
their rapidity of growth and for the production of light durable 
wood, serviceable for many purposes. Among the best trees of this 
kind are S.frariiis, the crack willow (fig. 2), especially the variety 
known as S. fiagiliu var. RmsMUiaua, and S, alba, the white or 



Huntingdon willow. These trees are usually found growing by 
rivers' banks or in other moist situations, and are generally pollarded 
for the purpose of securing a crop of straight poles. This plan is, 
however, objectionable, as inducing decay in the centre of the 
trunk. Where poles are required, it is better to treat tbe trees as 
coppice and to cut the trunk level with the soiL The wood of 5. 
frogilis a used for cricket-bajs; there is a great difference in the 
value for this purpose of timber from different soils; and wood 
of tbe female tree is said to be preferable to that of the male. 
5. capna (Its. 1), a hedgerow tree, generally grows m drier situations. 
It is a useful timber tree, and its wood, like that of S. alba, is prised 
in the manufacture of charcoal. Its catkins are collected in England 
in celebration of Palm Sunday, the bright-coloured flowers being 
available in early spring when other decorations of the kind are 
scarce. Certain sorts of willow are largely used for basket-making 
and wicker-work. The species employed for this purpose are 
mostly of shrubby habit, and arc known under the collective name 
of osiers (see Basket, and Osier). The best for planting is the 
bitter osier, S. purpurea; planted on rich, well-drained soil, subject 
to occasional immersion, this willow may be grown profitably for 
basket-work. It is also well adapted lor forming wind-breaks or 
screens, or for holding the banks of streams and preventing the 
removal of the soil by the current. 5. viminalis is one of the best of 
tbe green osiers, suitable for hoops and valuable for retaining the 
soil on sloping embankments. S. tiidlina yields the yellow osiers. 
S, acuminata and other species do well by the seaside, and are 
serviceable as wind-screens, nurse-trees and hedges. 5. daphnouUt, 
S. repent and other dwarf kinds are useful for binding heathy or 
sandy soil. In addition to their use for timber or basket-making; 
willows contain a large quantity of tannin in their bark. A valuable 
medicinal glucoside named sahcin {g.v.)i» also extracted from the 
bark. The wood, especially of S. alba, is used for paper pulp. As 
ornamental trees some willows also take a high rank. The white 
willow is a great favourite, while the drooping habit of the weeping 
willow renders it very attractive. Though named S. babyhnica, it 
is really a native of China, from which ithas been widely spread by 
man ; the willow of tbe Euphrates (Ps. cxxxviL) is in all probability 
Pobulus euphralica. S. babylonica is sometimes spoken of as Pope s 
willow, having been cultivated by that poet, or as Napoleon's 
willow, because his tomb at Sc Helena is overshadowed by a tree 
of this species, from which many offsets exist or are reputed to 
exist in modern gardens. S. retalis has very white, silvery leaves. 
S. roxmarinifoKa is remarkable for its very narrow leaves — purplish 
above, silvery beneath. 

The larvae of several nocturnal Lepidoptera feed upon the leaves 
of the willows, and the trunk of the sallow is often injured by the 
perforations of the lunar hornet sphinx {Trockilium crabroniforme). 

WILLOW-HERB, in botany, the popular name for the species 
of Epilobium, a genus of often tall herbaceous plants, several 
of which are natives of Britain. Tbe slender stems bear narrow 
leaves and pink or purple flowers, which in the rose-bay (E. 
anguslifolium), found by moist river-sides and in copses, arc x in. 
in diameter and form showy spikes. E. hirsutum, found by sides 
of ditches and rivers, a tall plant with many large rose-purple 
flowers, is known popularly as codlins-and-cream. 

WILIS, WILLIAM GORMAN (1828*1801), Irish dramatist, 
was born at Kilmurry, Ireland, on the aSth of January 1828, 
the son of James Wills (1700- 1868), author of Lists of Illustrious 
and Distinguished Irishmen (1 830-1847). The son was educated 
at Waterford Grammar School and Trinity College, Dublin. 
After several years of journalistic and literary work in Dublin, 
he settled in London, where he wrote stories for the magazines. 
In 1868 he determined that he could make a better living at 
portrait-painting, for which, though his art education had been 
meagre, he had always had talent. He soon made a fair income, 
though in the long run his excessive Bohemianism, coupled with 
persistent absent-mindedness, lost him many sitters. Meanwhile 
he had begun to write for the stage. His first original work was 
tbe Man o'Airlie, produced at the Princess's theatre, London, 
in 1867. Early in 1872 he was engaged by Colonel Bateman 
as " dramatist to the Lyceum " at an annual salary. Under 
the terms of his agreement he wrote Medea in Corinth, Charles /. 
and Eugene Aram, all of whkh were produced at the Lyceum 
in 1872-1873. With Chariot /., in which Mr (afterwards Sir 
Henry) Irving confirmed the reputation be had earned by his 
performance in The Balls, Wills made a popular success, which 
he repeated in Olm* (adapted from Goldsmith's Vicar of Wake- 
field) in 1873. From this date onwards Wills wrote continuously, 
and till 1887 his name was practically never absent from tbe mil 
of some London theatre. His work never, however, quite came 
op to tbe expectations which were based on bis genuine ability, 



6go 



WILLUGHBY— WILMINGTON 



and much of it is of in Inferior quality. In Claudian (Princess's 
Theatre, 2883) and Faust (Lyceum Theatre, 1885) he merely 
supplied the text to a variety of dramatic situations. In 1887 
his mother, whom he had supported for many years, died, and 
after her death he seemed to have less incentive for work. Wills 
was a painter by choice, and never put his whole heart into his 
dramatic work. He had some skill in ballad-writing, shown 
in the well-known " I'll sing thee songs of Araby." He died 
on the 13th of December 1891. 

WILLUGHBY, FRANCIS (1635-1672), English ornithologist 
and ichthyologist, son of Sir Francis Willughby, was bom at 
Middkton, Warwickshire, in 1 635. He is memorable as the pupil, 
friend and patron as well as the active and original co-worker 
of John Ray (q.v.) t and hence to be reckoned as one of the roost 
important precursors of Linnaeus. His connexion with Ray 
dated from his studies at Trinity College, Cambridge (1653-1659) ; 
and, after concluding his* academic life by a brief sojourn at 
Oxford, and acquiring considerable experience of travel in 
England, he made an extensive Continental tour in his company. 
The specimens, figures and notes thus accumulated were in great 
part elaborated on his return into his Ornithologia, which, how- 
ever, he did not live to publish, having injured a naturally delicate 
constitution by alternate exposure and over-study. This work 
was published in 1676, and translated by Ray as the Ornithology 
of Fr. Willughby (London, 1678, fol.); the same friend published 
his Historic Piscium (1686, fol.). Willughby died at Middleton 
Hall on the 3rd of July 167a., 



their irrelevancies, being careful to exclude " hieroglyphics, emblems, 
morals, fables, presages or ought else pertaining to divinity, ethics, 
grammar, or any sort of humane learning, and present him [the 
reader] with what properly belongs only to natural history." Again, 
he not only devised artificial keys to his species and genera, but, 
" that he might clear up all these obscurities [of former writers] 
and render the knowledge and distinction of species facile to all 
that should come after, he bent his endeavours mainly to find out. 
certain characteristic notes of each kind/' while finally, in apolo- 
gizing for his engravings, he yet not unjustly claims that " they 
are best and truest of any hitherto graven tn brass." (See also 
Ornithology.) 

WILMINGTON, a city, a port of entry and the county-teat of 
New Castle county, Delaware, U.S.A., in the N. part of the state, 
near the Delaware river, at the mouth of Brandywine and 
Christiana creeks. Pop. (1800) 61,431; (1000) 76,508, of whom 
10,478 were foreign-born (3820 Irish, 1762 German, 908 English) 
ai\d 9736 were negroes; (1910 census) 87,411. Area, to- 18 
sq. m. It is served by the Baltimore ft Ohio, the Philadelphia, 
Baltimore ft Washington (Pennsylvania) and the Philadelphia 
& Reading railways, and by several steamship lines. Wilmington 
Harbor includes Christiana Creek for 4 m. above its mouth and 
the navigable part (a m.) of the Brandywine, which enters the 
Christiana about if m. above its mouth. By 1881 the channel 
depth had been increased from 8 J to 15 ft., in 1 806-1006 it was 
increased to si ft. in the lower part of the harbour, and in 1908 
the upper part was dredged to 18 or 19 ft. for widths of 100, 200 
and 350 ft. Between 1836 and 1009 $994404 was expended on 
the improvement of the harbour. Most of the streets which run 
from E. to W. are numbered; those which run from N. to S. 
are named, often hi honour of prominent American statesmen.. 
The public parks and squares have a total area of 381 acres; 
the most important parks are Brandywine and Rockford, which 
He along and near Brandywine creek, in the northern part of the 
city. Among the buildings of interest are the City frail (1708) ; 
Holy Trinity (Old Swedes) Church (1698), probably the oldest 
church in the United States which has been in continuous use; 
the building occupied by the Historical Society of Delaware 
(organised in 1864), which was the old First Presbyterian Meeting 
House, built in 1740; the County Court House; and the Federal 
building. In Wilmington, besides other educational institutions, 
Cs the Wilmington Friends' School (1748), the oldest preparatory 
school in the state. The Wilmington Institute Free Library 
(60,000 volumes an 19x0) was founded in 1788, but was not made 



free to the public until 1894. Wflmington is the see of a Roman 
Catholic bishop, and of a Protestant Episcopal bishop. 

The favourable situation, railway facilities and proximity to 
the coal-fields of Pennsylvania, West Virginia and Virginia, to 
the sources of supply of raw materials, and the water-power 
furnished by the Brandywine, combined with the enterprise of 
its dtizens, have made Wilmington the most important manu- 
facturing centre of Delaware. In 1005 the value of the factory 
product of the city, $30,300,039, was 73*8% of the total product 
value of the state. The principal manufactures are tanned, 
curried and finished leather ($10,350,842), steam railway cart 
($3,597,736), foundry and machine-shop products ($3432,118), 
paper and wood pulp ($1 ,904,556), &c. Shipbuilding ($1 ,780,904 
in 1905) was established as early as 1739, and in 1836 the first iron 
steamship and in 1854 the first iron sailing-boat built in the 
United States were built here. On the Brandywine, near the city, 
are the works of the Du Pont Powder Company, which extend 
over nearly 1000 acres, the largest powder plant in the world. 
The company was founded in 1802 by the French refugee, 
Elcuthere Irenee du Pont de Nemours (1 771-1834), who had 
learned from Lavoisier the modern methods of powder-making, 
and here introduced them into the United States. Wilmington 
is the port of entry of the customs district of Delaware, with 
branch offices at New Castle and Lewes. In 1909 the imports 
of the district were valued at $463,092. 

The city is governed under a charter of 1886, amended in 1893, 
by a mayor, who is chosen biennially and who appoints the board 
of water commissioners and the board of directors of the street 
and sewer departments, and by a unicameral legislature, the 
twelve members of which are elected by wards (except the presi- 
dent of the council, who is elected at large, and is acting mayor 
in the absence of the mayor). The council appoints the auditor, 
the clerk of council who acts as city clerk and various inspectors, 
&c. The police commission is appointed by the resident associate 
judge of New Castle county court. A board of education (two 
members from each ward), the city attorney and the city 
treasurer are elected by popular vote. 

The site of Wilmington was settled in 1638 on behalf of the 
South Company of Sweden by Swedish and Dutch colonists, 
under the leadership of Peter Minuit. The fort which they built 
was called Christina, snd the settlement that grew up around it, 
Christinaham, in honour of Queen Christina, daughter of Gustavus 
Adolphus. TTie fort was captured, without bloodshed, by 
Governor Peter Stuyvesant of New Netherland in 1655, but very 
few of the Swedes left Christinaham. The Swedish language 
and Swedish customs persisted, and the religion of the Swedes 
was tolerated. After the English conquest in 1664, especially 
after the annexation of the Delaware counties to Pennsylvania 
in 1682, Swedish influence declined. In 173 1 a large part of the 
territory now included in the city was owned by Thomas Willing, 
who named it Willingtown. About eight years later, by a 
borough charter granted by William Perm, this named was changed 
to Wilmington, in honour of Spencer Compton, Earl of Wilming- 
ton (c. 1 673-1 743). During the War of Independence the 
battle of Brandywine was fought 13 m. N.W. of Wilmington. 
In the first half of the 19th century Wilmington was the centre 
of a strong anti-slavery sentiment and was a " station M of the 
" Underground Railroad." In 1809 the borough was enlarged 
by a new charter; in 1832 Wilmington was chartered as a city. 
In 1000 the dty contained 41-4% of the total population of the 
state and, under the state constitution of 1897, it elects five of 
the thirty-five representatives and two of the seventeen senators 
in the state legislature. 

See Records of Holy Trinity (Old Swedes) Church (Wilmington. 
1800); Benjamin Ferris, History of the Original Settlements on the 
Delaware, part iii. (Wilmington. 1846); and Elizabeth Montgomery, 
Reminiscences of Wilmington (Philadelphia, 1851). 

WILMINGTON, • dty, a port of entry and the county-seat 
of New Hanover county, North Carolina, U.S.A., on the Cape 
Fear river, about 30 m. from its mouth, 10 m. in direct line from 
the ocean, and about 145 m. S.S.E. of Raleigh. Pop. (1800) 
ao,o$6; (1900) 00,976, of whom 10407 were negroes and 467 



WILMOT— WILSON, A. 



691 



were foreign-born; (roio centos) 35,748- It it the largest city 
and the chief seaport of the ttate. Wilmington it served by 
the Atlantic Coast line and the Seaboard Air Line railways, 
and by steamboat lines to New York, Philadelphia and Baltimore 
and to ports 00 the Cape Fear and Black rivers, and isconnccted 
by an electric line with Wrightsville Beach, a pleasure resort 
12 m. distant on the Atlantic Ocean. Below Wilmington the 
channel of the Cape Fear river is ao f t. deep throughout and in 
some parts ta and 34 ft. deep; the width of the channel is to be 
made 270 ft. under Federal projects on which, up to the 30th of 
June 1009, there had been expended $4,344,029. Above Wil- 
mington the Cape Fear river is navigable for boats drawing a f L 
for 115 m. to Fayetteville. The city lies on an elevated sand 
ridge and extends along the river front for about *\ m. Among 
its prominent buildings are the United States Government 
Building, the United States marine hospital, the city and county 
hospital, the county court house, the city hall (which bouses the 
public library) and the masonic temple. The city is the seat of 
Cape Fear Academy (187a) for boys, of the Academy of the 
Incarnation (Roman Catholic) and of the Gregory Normal School 
(for negroes). The city is the see of a Protestant Episcopal 
bishop. Wilmington is chiefly a commercial city, and ships 
large quantities of cotton, lumber, naval stores, rice, market- 
garden produce and turpentine! in 1000 the value of its exports 
was 1*3,310,070 and the value of its imports $1,282,724. The 
total value of the factory product in 1005 was $3,155,458, of which 
$893,715 was the value of lumber and timber products. 

A settlement was established here in 1730 and was named 
New Liverpool; about 173a the name was changed to New 
Town; in 1739 the town was incorporated, was made the 
county-seat and was renamed, this time in honour of Spencer 
Compton, Earl of Wilmington (c. 1673-1743). In 1760 it was 
incorporated as a borough and in 1866 was chartered as a dty. 
Some of Wilmington's citizens were among the first to offer 
armed resistance to the carrying out of the Stamp Act, compelling 
the stamp-master to take an oath that he would distribute no 
stamps. During most of 178 1 the borough was occupied by the 
British, and Lord Cornwallis had his headquarters here. 
Although blockaded by the Union fleet, Wilmington was during 
the Civil War the centre of an important intercourse between 
the Confederacy and foreign countries by means of blockade 
runners, and was the last important port open to the Confederates. 
It was defended by Fort Fisher, a heavy earthwork on the 
peninsula between the ocean and Cape Fear river, manned by 
1400 men under Colonel William Lamb. A federal expedition 
of 1 50 vessels under Admiral D. D. Porter and land forces (about 
3000) under General B. F. Butler approached the fort on the 
aoth of December 1804; on the 24th the " Louisiana," loaded 
with 215 tons of powder, was exploded 400 yds. from the fort 
without doing any damage; on the 24th and 25th there was a 
terrific naval bombardment, which General Butler decided had 
not sufficiently injured the fort to make an assault by land 
possible; on the 13th and 14th of January there was another 
bombardment, and on the 15th a combined naval and land at tack, 
in which General A. H. Terry, who had succeeded General 
Butler in command, stormed the fort with the help of the 
marines and sailors, and took aooo prisoners and 169 guns. 
The Union losses were 266 killed, 57 missing and 1018 wounded. 
A magazine explosion on the morning of the 16th killed about 
100 men in each army. The city was evacuated immediately 
afterwards. 

WILMOT. DAVID (1814-1868), American political leader, 
was born at Bethany, Pennsylvania, on the aoth of January 1814. 
He was admitted to the bar in 1834 end practised law in Towanda. 
He entered politics as a Democrat, served in the National House 
of Representatives from 1845 to 1851, and although he favoured 
the Walker Tariff, the Mexican War and other party measures, 
opposed the extension of slavery. On the 8th of August 1846, 
when a bill was introduced appropriating $2,000,000 to be used 
by the president in negotiating a treaty of peace with Mexico, 
Wilmot immediately offered the following amendment: " Pro- 
vided, That, as an express and fundamental condition to the 



acquisition of any territory from the Republic of Mexico by 
the United States, by virtue of any treaty which may be negoti- 
ated between them, and to the use by the Executive of the 
moneys herein appropriated, neither slavery nor involuntary 
servitude shall ever exist in any part of said territory, except 
for crime, whereof the party shall first be duly convicted." 
The amendment, famous in American history as the " Wilmot 
Proviso," was adopted by the House, but was defeated, with 
the original bill, by the Senate's adjournment. A similar 
measure was brought forward at the next session, the appropria- 
tion, however, being increased to $3,000,000, and the amendment 
being extended to include all territory which might be acquired 
by the United States; in this form it passed the House by a 
vote of 1x5 to 105; but the Senate refused to concur, passed 
a bill of its own without the amendment; and the House, 
owing largely to the influence of General Lewis Cassf in March 
1847, receded from its position. The amendment was never 
actually adopted by Congress, and was in fact expressly repudi- 
ated in the Compromise of 1850, and its content declared 
unconstitutional by the Supreme Court in the Died Scott case. 
Although known as the Wilmot Proviso it really originated with 
Jacob Brinkerhoff (18x0-1880) of Ohio, Wilmot being selected 
to present it only because his party standing was more regular. 
The extension of the principle to territory other than that to be 
acquired from Mexico was probably due to Preston King (1806- 
1865) of New York. Wilmot supported Van Buren in 1848 and 
entered the Republican party at the time of its formation, and 
was a delegate to the national conventions of 1856 and i860. 
He was president judge of the 13th Judicial District of Penn- 
sylvania in 1853-1861, United States senator in 1861-1863 
and Judge of the United States Court of Claims in 1863-1868. 
He died at Towanda, Pennsylvania, on the x6th of March 1868. 

See G. P. Garrison, Westward Extension (New York and London, 
1006). 

WILSON, ALEXANDER (1766-18x3), American ornithologist, 
was born in Paisley, Scotland, on the 6th of July 1766. His. 
father, a handloom weaver, soon removed to the country, and 
there combined weaving with agriculture, distilling and smuggling 
— conditions which no doubt helped to develop in the boy that 
love of rural pursuits and adventure which was to determine 
his career. At first he was placed with a tutor and destined 
for the church, but afterwards he was apprenticed as a weaver. 
Then he became a peddler and spent a year or two in travelling 
through Scotland, recording in his journal every matter of 
natural history or antiquarian interest. Having incurred a 
short imprisonment for lampooning the master-weavers in a 
trade dispute, he emigrated to America in 1794. After a few 
years of weaving, peddling and desultory observation, he 
became a village schoolmaster, and in 1802 obtained an appoint- 
ment near Philadelphia, where he formed the acquaintance of 
William Bartram the naturalist. Under his influence Wilson 
began to draw birds, having conceived the idea of illustrating 
the ornithology of the United States; and thenceforward he 
steadily accumulated materials snd made many expeditions. 
In 1806 he obtained the assistant-editorship of the American 
edition of Rett's Encyclopaedia, and thus acquired more means 
and leisure for his great work, American Ornithology, the first 
volume of which appeared in the autumn of 1808, after which 
he spent the winter in a journey" in search of birds and sub- 
scribers." By the spring of 1813 seven volumes had appeared; 
but the arduous expedition of that summer, in search of the 
marine waterfowl to which the remaining volume was to be 
devoted, gave a shock to his already Impaired health, and he 
succumbed to dysentery at Philadelphia on the 23rd of August 

1813. 

Of hi* poems, not excepting the Foresters (Philadelphia, 1805), 
nothing need now be said, save that they no doubt served to develop 
his descriptive powers. The eighth and ninth volumes of the 
American Ornithology were edited after his decease by his fnend 
George Ord. and the work was continued by Lucien Bonaparte 
(4 vols., Philadelphia. 1 825-1833). The complete work was re- 
published several times, and his Miscellaneous Pros* Worts and 
Poem* was edited with a memoir by the Rev. A. B. Grosart (Paisley. 
1876). A statue was erected to him at Paisley in 1876. 



692 



WILSON, SIR D.— WILSON, H. H. 



WILSON, SIR DANIEL (1816-1892), archaeologist and 
Canadian educational reformer, was born in Edinburgh on the 
5th of January 18 16, the son of Archibald Wilson, a wine- 
merchant, and Janet Aitken. After studying at the High School 
and the University of Edinburgh, he spent the next ten years 
in journalism and in other forms of literary work (London 
1837-1842, Edinburgh 1842-1847). In 1845 he became secretary 
to the Scottish Society of Antiquaries, and in 1848 published 
Memorials of Edinburgh in the Olden Time, of which the chief 
value lies in the numerous illustrations, done by himself. In 
1851 appeared his most important work, Prehistoric Annals 
of Scotland, which placed him in the front rank of archaeologists. 
In 1853 he became professor of History and English Literature 
in the University of Toronto, where his practical ability and 
energy soon made him the most important member of the staff. 
While writing extensively on the archaeology and anthropology 
of Canada, and giving an impetus to the study, he produced 
nothing of lasting importance. His main work lay in asserting 
the claims of the University of Toronto, and of University 
College, the teaching body in connexion with it, against the 
sectarian universities of the province which denounced the 
provincial university as godless, and against the private medical 
schools in Toronto. Largely owing to Wilson's energy in 
6ghting for what be called " the maintenance of a national 
system of university education in opposition to sectarian or 
denominational colleges," the provincial university gained the 
chief position in the intellectual life of Ontario. Two of the 
sectarian universities, the Methodist and the Anglican, have 
now become united to the provincial university, but the Baptist 
and the Presbyterian (see Kingston) still retain a vigorous 
existence. He was equally successful in his struggle against the 
rival medical schools in Toronto, the chief of which is now 
incorporated with Toronto university. In his efforts to escape 
the control of local politicians he was less successful, and in some 
cases appointments to the provincial university were made for 
political rather than for academic reasons. Though seeing that 
in a young and democratic country the Scotch-American model 
must be followed rather than the English, and though resisting 
attempts to follow the practice of Oxford or Cambridge, Wilson 
was a believer in the merits of a modified form of the residential 
system. He was. one of the first in Canada to cast aside the 
classical tradition, and as early as i860 had the courage to say: 
" It is just because . . . German and French are now the keys 
of so much modern philosophy and science that all wise Univer- 
sity reformers are learning to give to modern languages the place 
they justly claim in a liberal education." In 1881 he was made 
president of Toronto university; and in 1885 president of the 
literature section of the Canadian Royal Society; in 1888 he 
was knighted; and in 1891 given the freedom of the city of 
Edinburgh. He died at Toronto on the 6th of August 1892. 



Record of Historical Publications relating to Canada, edited by 
G. M. Wrong, vol. v. (Toronto and London, 1001), pp. 
gives a good sketch of his career, and a bibliography of his numerous 



works. 



1), pp. 199-217. 

f his numeral 

(W. L. G.) 



WILSON, HENRY (1812-1875), vice-president of the United 
States from 1873 to 1875, was born at Farmington, New Hamp- 
shire, on the 16th of February 18x2. His name originally was 
Jeremiah J. Colbaith. His father was a day-labourer and very 
poor. At ten years of age the son went to work as a farm- 
labourer. He was fond of reading, and before the end of his 
apprenticeship had read more than a thousand volumes. At 
the age of twenty-one, for some unstated reason, he had his 
name changed by Act of the Legislature to that of Henry Wilson. 
At Natick, Massachusetts, whither he travelled on foot, he 
learned the trade of shoemaker, and during his leisure hours 
studied much and read with avidity. For short periods, also, 
he studied in the academies of Strafford, N.H., Wolfeborough, 
N.H., and Concord, N.H. After successfully establishing himself 
as a shoe manufacturer, he attracted attention as a public 
speaker in support of William Henry Harrison during the 
presidential campaign of 1840. He was in the state House of 
Representatives in 1841-42, 1846 and 1850, and in the Senate ia 



1844-45 ud 1851-52. Tn 1848 he left the Whig party and 
became one of the chief leaders of the Free Soil party, serving 
as presiding officer of that party's national convention in 1852, 
acting as chairman of the Free Soil national committee and 
editing from 1848 to 1851 the Boston Republican, which he made 
the chief Free Soil organ. The Free Soil party nominated him 
for governor of the state in 1853, but he was defeated. For a 
short time (1855) he identified himself with the American or Know 
Nothing party, and afterwards acted with the Republican party. 
In 1855 he was elected to the United States Senate and remained 
there by re-elections until 1873. His uncompromising opposit ton 
to the institution of slavery furnished the keynote of his earlier 
senatorial career, and he soon took rank as one of the ablest and 
most effective anti-slavery orators in the United States. He hod 
been deeply interested from 1840 until 1850 in the militia of his 
state, and had risen through its grades of service to that of 
brigadier- general. Upon the outbreak of the Civil War he was 
made chairman of the military committee of the Senate, ami in 
this position performed most laborious and important work for 
the four years of the war. The Republicans nominated Wilson for 
the vice-presidency in 1872, and be was elected; but he died on 
the 22nd of November 187s before completing his term of office 

He published, besides many orations, a History of the Anti-Slavery 
Measures of the Thirty-Seventh and Thirty-Eighth United States 
Congresses (1865); Military Measures of the Untied States Congress 
(1868); a History of the Reconstruction Measures of the Thirty-Ninth 
and Fortieth Congresses (1868) and a History of the Rise and Fall of 
the Slave Power in America (3 vols., 1872-1875), his most important 
work. 

The best biography is that by Elias Nason and Thomas Russell, 
The Life and Public Services of Henry Wilson (Boston, 1876). 

WILSON, HORACE HAYMAN (1 786-1860), English orientalist, 
was born in London on the 26th of September x 786. He studied 
medicine at St Thomas's Hospital, and went out to India in 
1808 as assistant-surgeon .on the Bengal establishment of the 
East India* Company. His knowledge of metallurgy caused him 
to be attached to the mint at Calcutta, where he was for a time 
associated with John Leyden. He became deeply interested 
in the ancient language and literature of India, and by the 
recommendation of Henry T. Colebrooke, he was in 181 1 ap- 
pointed secretary to the Asiatic Society of Bengal. In 18x3 
he published the Sanskrit text— with a graceful, if somewhat 
free, translation in English rhymed verse— of Kalidfsa's charming 
lyrical poem, the Meghaduta, or Cloud-Messenger. He prepared 
the first Sanskrit- English Dictionary (1810) from materials 
compiled by native scholars, supplemented by his own researches. 
This work was only superseded by the Sanskritworterbuck (1853- 
1876) of R. von Roth and Otto Bdhtlingk, who expressed their 
obligations to Wilson in the preface to their great work. Wilson 
published in 1827 Select Specimens of tht Theatre of the Hindus, 
which contained a very full survey of the Indian drama, transla- 
tions of six complete plays and short accounts of twenty-three 
others. His Mackenzie Collection ( 1 828) is a descriptive catalogue 
of the extensive collection of Oriental, especially South Indian, 
MSS. and antiquities made by Colonel Colin Mackenzie, now 
deposited partly in the India Office, London, and partly at 
Madras. He also wrote a Historical Sketch of the First Burmese 
War, with Documents, Political and Geographical (1827), a 
Review of the External Commerce of Bengal from 181 3 la 1828 
(1830) and a History of British India from 180$ to 183s* in 
continuation of Mill's History (1844-2848). He acted for many 
years as secretary to the committee of public instruction, and 
superintended the studies of the Sanskrit College in Calcutta. 
He was one of the staunchest opponents of the proposal that 
English should be made the sole medium of instruction in native 
schools, and became for a time the object of bitter attacks. In 
1832 the university of Oxford selected Dr Wilson to be the 
first occupant of the newly founded Boden chair of Sanskrit, 
and in 1836 he was appointed librarian to the East India 
Company. He was an original member of the Royal Asiatic 
-Society, of which he was director from 1837 up to the time 
of his death, which took place in London on the 8th of May 
x86o. 



WILSON, JAMES 



693 



A full Oft of Wilson's works may be found in an Annual Report 
of the Royal Asiatic Society for i860. A considerable number of 
Sanskrit MSS. (540 vols.) collected by Wilson in India are now in 
the Bodleian Library. 

WILSON,^ JAMES (1742-1798)**. American statesman and 
jurist, was born in or near St Andrews, Scotland, on the 14th 
of September 1742* He matriculated at the University of St 
Andrews in 1757 and was subsequently a student at the universe 
ties of Glasgow and Edinburgh. In 1765 he emigrated to America. 
Landing at New York in June, he went to Philadelphia in the 
following year and in 1766-1767 was instructor of Latin in 
the college of Philadelphia, later the university of Pennsylvania. 
Meanwhile he studied law in the office of John Dickinson, was 
admitted to the bar in 1767* removed first to Reading and soon 
afterward to Carlisle, and rapidly rose to prominence. In August 
1774 he published a pamphlet Considerations on the Nature 
and Extent of the Legislative Authority of ike British Parliament, 
in which he argued that parliament had no constitutional power 
to legislate for the colonies; this pamphlet strongly influenced 
members of the Continental Congress which met- in September. 
Wilson was a delegate to the Pennsylvania provincial convention 
m January 1775, and he sustained there the right of Massa- 
chusetts to resist the change in its charter, declaring that as the 
force which the British Government was exercising to compel 
obedience was " force unwarranted by any act of parliament, 
unsupported by any principle of the common law, unauthorized 
by any commission from the crown," resistance was justified 
by " both the letter and the spirit of the British constitution "; 
he also, by his speech, led the colonies in shifting the burden 
of responsibility from parliament or the king's ministers to the 
king himself. In May 1775 Wilson became a member of the 
Continental Congress. When a declaration of independence 
was first proposed in that body he expressed the belief that a 
majority of the people of Pennsylvania were in favour of it, 
but as the instructions of the delegates from Pennsylvania and 
tone of the other colonies opposed such a declaration, he urged 
postponement of action for the purpose of giving the constituents 
in those colonies an opportunity of removing such instructions. 
When independence was finally declared the unanimity of all 
the colonies except New York had been obtained. Receiving 
a commission as colonel in May 1775, Wilson raised a battalion 
of troops in his county of Cumberland, and for a short time in 
1776 he took part in the New Jersey campaign, but his principal 
labours in 1776 and 1777 were in Congress. In January 1776 be 
was appointed a member of a committee to prepare an address 
to the colonies, and the address was written by him; he served 
on a similar committee in May 1777, and wrote the address 
To ike Inhabitants of the United States, urging their firm support 
of the cause of Independence; he drafted the plan of treaty with 
France together with instructions for negotiating it; he was a 
member of the Board of War from its establishment in June 
1776 until his retirement from Congress in September 1777; 
from January to September 1777 he was chairman of the Com- 
mittee on Appeals, to hear and determine appeals from the 
courts of admiralty in the several states; and he was a member 
of many other important committees. In September 1777 the 
political faction in his state which had opposed Independence 
again came into power, and Wilson was kept out of Congress 
until the close of the war; he was back again, however, in 1783, 
and 1785-1786, and, -advocating a sound currency, laboured 
in co-operation with Robert Morris to direct the financial policy 
of the Confederation. 

Soon after leaving Congress in 1777 Wilson removed to 
Annapolis, Maryland, to practise law, but he returned to Phila- 
delphia in the following year. In 1770 he was commissioned 
Advocate-General for France, and in this capacity he represented 
Louis XVL in all daims arising out of the French alliance 
until the close of the war. In 1781-1782 he was the principal 
counsel for Pennsylvania in the Wyoming Valley dispute with 
Connecticut, which was decided in favour of Pennsylvania In 
December 178s by an arbitration court appointed by Congress. 
Wilson was closely assoristrri with Robert Morris in organizing 



the Bank of North America, and in the Act of Congress Incorpor- 
ating it (December 31, 1781) he was made one of the directors. 
In 1782 the legislature of Pennsylvania granted a charter to this 
bank* but three years later it passed an act to repeal it Wilson 
res pon de d with a famous constitutional argument in which he 
sustained the constitutionality of the bank on the basis of the 
implied powers of Congress. 

As a constructive statesman Wilson had no superior in the 
Federal Convention of 1787. He favoured the mdependence of 
the executive, legislative and judicial departments, the supremacy 
of the Federal government over the state govesaments t and the 
election of senators as well as 'representatives by the people, 
and was opposed to the election of the President or the judges 
by Congress. His political philosophy was based upon implicit 
confidence in the people, and he strove for such provisions as 
he thought would best guarantee a government by the people. 
When the constitution had been framed Wilson pronounced it 
" the best form of government which has ever been offered to the 
world," and he, at least, among the framers regarded it not as a 
compact but as an ordinance to be established by the people. 
During the struggle for ratification he made a speech before 
a mass meeting in Philadelphia which has been characterixed 
as " the ablest single presentation of the whole subject." In 
the Pennsylvania ratification convention (November si to 
December 15, 1787) he was the constitution's principal defender. 
Having been appointed professor of law in, the university of 
Pennsylvania in 1700, he delivered at that institution in 1700- 
1 791 a course of lectures on public and private law; some of these 
lectures, together wkh his speeches in the Federal convention, 
before the mass meeting in Philadelphia, and in the Pennsylvania 
ratification convention, are among the most valuable commen- 
taries on the constitution. 

Wilson was a delegate to the state constitutional convention 
of 1780-1700, and a member of the committee which drafted 
the new constitution. In 1789 Washington appointed him an 
associate justice of the United States Supreme Court, and in 
1793 he wrote the important decision in the case of Chiselm 
v. Georgia, the purport of which was that the people of the 
United States constituted a sovereign nation and that the United 
States were not a mere confederacy of sovereign states. He 
continued to serve as associate justice until his death,, near 
Edenton, North Carolina, on the o8th of August 1798. 

Wilson's Works, co n sis tin g principally of his law lectures and a 
few speeches, were published under the direction of his son. Bird 



Wilson (3 vohu, Philadelphia, 
two volumes with notes by Ji 



1803-1604). A nevised edition in 
D. Andrews was published in 



Constitution, 1787-1788 (Pluladetplua, 1888); L. H. ,__ 

(ed.). James Wilson (Philadelphia, 1008); a biographical sketch 
entitled " James Wilson, Natkm-Btrildcr/' by L. R. Alexander, in 
the Green Bar, vol 19 (1907); " James Wilson, Patriot, and the 
Wilson Doctrine," by Alexander, in the North American Rmew, 
vol. 1S3 (1906): Justice ). M. Harlan. " James Wilson and the 
Formation of the Constitution/' in the American Lam Revirm. 
vol. 34; B. A. Konkle et al. "The James Wilson Memorial," in 
the American Law Register, voL 55 (1907). 

WILSON, JAMBS (1835- )# American administrator, was 
born in Ayrshire, Scotland, on the x6th of August 1835. In 1851 
he was taken by his parents to America, where they originally 
settled In Connecticut, but in 1855 removed to Tama county 
Iowa. He studied at Iowa College, and in 1861 became a farmer. 
He was a Republican member of the state House of Representa- 
tives in 1868-1873, and was its speaker in 1872*1873, and he 
was a member of the National House of Representatives from 
1873 to 1877 and again in 1883*1885. From 1870 to 1874 he 
was a regent of the State University of Iowa; in 1877*1883 was 
a member of the Iowa State Railway Commission, and from 1800 
to 1897 was professor of agriculture at the Iowa Agricultural 
College, at Ames, and director of the State Agricultural Experi- 
ment Station. In March 1897 he became Secretary of Agriculture 
in President Mckinley's Cabinet and served into President 
Taft's administration, holding office longer than any other 
cabinet officer since the organisation of the government* 



6g+ 



WILSON, JOHN 



WILSON/ JOHN (1627-1696), English playwright, son of 
Aaron Wilson, a royalist divine, was born in London in 1627. 
He matriculated from Exeter College, Oxford, in 1644, and 
entered Lincoln's Inn two years later, being called to the bar 
in 1649. His unswerving support of the royal pretensions 
recommended him to James, duke of York, through whose 
influence he became Recorder of Londonderry about x68i. 
His Discourse of Monarchy (1684), a tract in favour of the 
succession of the duke of York, was followed (1685) by a 
" Pindarique " on his coronation. In 1688 he wrote Jus regium 
Coronae, a learned .defence of James's action in dispensing with 
the penal statutes. He died in obscurity, due perhaps to his 
political opinions, in 1606. Wilson was the author of four 
plays, showing a vigorous and learned wit, .and a power of 
character-drawing that place him rather among the followers 
of Ben Jonson than with the Restoration dramatists. 

Tk& Cheats (written in tSfo h printed 1664, 1671, Ac.) was played 
with great *uccc*a in 166^ John Lacy found ae of his best parts 
in SurLi[>[t.\ a Giirk-iiture of a Prcsbj-tcrun mini u-( of accommodating 
morality, Androniius Comnrniiu [1664) ik verse tragedy, is 

tascd on the story el Andronicus Comnemjs a* [i)ld by Peter Heylin 
in hii Ooimofraphy. It contains a «cn* betwt-en the usurper and 
1 fie widow of hi* victim Mean* which follows very closely Shake- 
sjx-.irc'fi treatment of a parallel situation in Richard 111. The 
Ptajccton (1665), a pro*c comedy of London life, is, like Moliere's 
L'Avort, founded on the Aulularia of rbutua. hut there is no evidence 
that Wilson was acquainted with the French play. Belpkegor, or the 
Harriatr cj the Ur.>rf; a Trap-comedy (1690}, treats of a theme 
familiar to Elizabethan drama, but Wilson took the subject from the 
Bclptezor attributed to Machiavelli, and allude also to Straparola's 
version in the Noiti. He also translated into English Erasmus's 
lintftmium Marias ( 1 W$). 

See Th* Pramaih Works &f lehn Wit sou, edited with intro- 
duction and notes by lames Maidnwnt and W. H. Logan in 1874 
for the " Drama tu.u of the Restoration H series, 

WILSON, JOHN (1785-1854), Scottish writer, the Christopher 
North of Blackwood's Magazine, was born at Paisley on the 18th 
of May 1785, the son of a wealthy gauze manufacturer who died 
when John was eleven years old. He was the fourth child, but 
the eldest son, and he had nine brothers and sisters. 1 He was 
only twelve when he was first entered at the university of 
Glasgow, and he continued to attend various classes in that 
university for six years, being for the most part under the 
tutorship of Professor George Jardine, with whose family he lived. 
In these six years Wilson " made himself " in all ways, acquiring 
not inconsiderable scholarship, perfecting himself in all sports 
and exercises, and falling in love with a certain " Margaret," 
who was the object of his affections for several years. 

In 1803 Wilson was entered as a gentleman commoner at 
Magdalen College, Oxford. Few men have felt more than he 
the charm of Oxford, and in much of his later work, notably in 
the essay called " Old North and Young North," he has expressed 
his feeling. But it does not appear that his Magdalen days were 
altogether happy, though he perfected himself in " bruising," 
pedestrianism and other sports, and read so as to obtain a 
brilliant first class. His love affairs did not go happily, and he 
seems to have made no Intimate friends at his own college and 
few in the university. He took his degree in 2807, and found 
himself at twenty-two his own master, with a good income, 
no father or guardian to control him, and apparently not under 
any of the influences which in similar circumstances generally 
make it necessary for a young man to adopt some profession, 
if only in name. His profession was an estate on Windermere 
called EUeray, ever since connected with his name. Here he 
built, boated, wrestled, shot, fished, walked and otherwise 
diverted himself for four years, besides composing or collecting 
from previous compositions a considerable volume of poems, 
published in 181 2 as the Isle of Palms. Here he became 
intimate with Wordsworth, Coleridge, Southey and De Quincey. 

■His youngest brother was James Wilson "of Woodvule" 
<I705-i8$6). the zoologist. He purchased, on behalf of Edinburgh 
University, in Paris, the Dufresne collection of birds, and arranged 
them on his return, to Scotland. He contributed to Blackwood's 
Magamne and to the North British Quarterly Review, and wrote many 
of the articles on natural htonrv fa the seventh edition of the 
Encyclopaedia &rikr 



He married in 181 1 Jane Penny, a Liverpool lady of good family, 
and four years of happy married life at EUeray succeeded; then 
came the event which made a working man of letters of Wilson, 
and without which he would probably have produced a few 
volumes of verse and nothing more. The major part of his 
fortune was lost by the dishonest speculation of an uncle, in 
whose hands Wilson had carelessly left it. But this hard fate 
was by no means unqualified. His mother had a house in 
Edinburgh, in which she was able and willing to receive her son 
and his family; nor had he even to give up EUeray, though 
henceforward he was not able constantly to reside in it. He 
read law and was called to the Scottish bar, in 181 5, still taking 
many a sporting and pedestrian excursion, and publishing in 
1816 a second volume of poems, The City of the Plague. In 1817, 
soon after the founding of Blackwood's Magasine, Wilson began 
his connexion with that great Tory monthly by joining with 
J. G. Lockhart in the October number, in a satire called the 
Ckaldee Manuscript, in the form of biblical parody, on the rival 
Edinburgh Review, its publisher and his contributors. Front 
this time he was the principal writer for Blackwood's, though 
never its nominal editor, the publisher retaining a certain 
supervision even over Lockhart's and " Christopher North's " 
contributions, which were the making of the magazine. In 
182a began the series of Nodes Ambrosianae, after 1825 mostly 
Wilson's work. These are discussions in the form of convivial 
table-talk, giving occasion to wonderfully various digressions 
of criticism, description and miscellaneous writing. From their 
origin it necessarily followed that there was much ephemeral, 
a certain amount purely local, and something wholly trivial 
in them. But their dramatic force, their incessant flashes of 
happy thought and happy expression, their almost incompar- 
able fulness of life, and their magnificent humour give them 
all but the highest place among genial and recreative literature. 
" The Ettrick Shepherd," an idealized portrait of James Hogg, 
one of the talkers, is a most delightful creation. Before this, 
Wilson had contributed to Blackwood's prose tales and sketches, 
and novels, some of which were afterwards published separately 
in Lights and Shadows of Scottish life (1822), The Trials of 
Margaret Lyndsay (1823) and The Foresters (1825); later 
appeared essays on Spenser, Homer and all sorts of modern 
subjects and authors. 

The first result of his new occupation on Wilson's general 
mode of life was that he left his mother's house and established 
himself (1810) in Ann Street, Edinburgh, with his wife and 
family of five children. The second was much more unlocked 
for, his election to the chair of moral philosophy in the university 
of Edinburgh (1820). His qualifications for the post were by 
no means obvious, even if the fact that the best qualified man 
in Great Britain, Sir William Hamilton, was also a candidate, 
be left out of the question. But the matter was made a political 
one; the Tories still had a majority in the town council; Wilson 
was powerfully backed by friends, Sir Walter Scott at their 
head; and his adversaries played into his hands by attacking 
his moral character, which was not open to any fair reproach. 
Wilson made a very excellent professor, never perhaps attaining 
to any great scientific knowledge in his subject or power of 
expounding it, but acting on generation after generation of 
students with a stimulating force that is far more valuable 
than the most exhaustive knowledge of a particular topic 
His duties left him plenty of time for magazine work, and for 
many years his contributions to Blackwood were extraordinarily 
voluminous, in one year (1834) amounting to over fifty separate 
articles. Most of die best and best known of them appeared 
between 1825 and 1835. 

The domestic events of Wilson's life in the last thirty years 
of it may be briefly told. He oscillated between Edinburgh 
and EUeray, with excursions and summer residences elsewhere, 
a sea trip on board the Experimental Squadron in the Ch*m*l 
during the summer of 1832, and a few other unimportant diver- 
sions. The death of his wife in 1837 was an exceedingly severe 
blow to him, especially as it followed within three years that of 
his friend Blackwood. For many years after, his literary work 



WILSON, J. H.—WILSON, SIR R. T. 



695 



was intermittent, and, with tome exceptions, not up to the level 
of his earlier years. Late in 1850 his health showed definite 
signs of breaking up; and in the next year he resigned his 
professorship, and a Civil List pension of j&oo a year was 
conferred on him. He died at Edinburgh on the 3rd of April 
1B54- 

Onry a verv small part of Wilson's extensive work was published 
in a collec t e d and generally accessible form during his lifetime, the 
chief and almost sole exceptions being the two volumes of poems 
referred to, the Lights and Shadows of Scottish Lift, and the Re- 
creations ofChristopher North (1842), a selection from his magazine 
articles. These volumes, with a selected edition of the Nodes 
Ambrotianae in four volumes, and of further essays, critical and 
imaginative, also in four volumes, were collected and reissued 
uniformly after his death by his son-in-law, Professor J. F. Ferrier. 
The collection is very far from exhaustive; and, though it un- 
doubtedly contains most of his best work and comparatively little 
that is not good, it has been complained, with some Justice, that the 
characteristic, if rather immature, productions of his first eight 
years on Blackwood are almost entirely omitted, that the Noctts are 
given but in part, if in their best part, and that at least three long, 
important and interesting scries of papers, less desultory than is 
his wont, on " Spenser," on " British Critics " and the set called 
" Dies Boreales," have been left out altogether. Wilson's char- 
acteristics are, however, uniform enough, and the standard edition 
exhibits them sufficiently, if not exhaustively. His poems may be 
dismissed at once as little more than interesting. They would 
probably not have been written at all if he had not been a young 
man in the time of the full flood of the Lake school influence. His 
prose talcs have in some estimates stood higher, but will hardly 
survive the tests of universal criticism. It is as an essayist and 
critic of the most abounding geniality, if not genius, of great acute- 
nets, of extraordinary eloquence and of a fervid and manifold 
sympathy, in which he has hardly an equal, that Christopher North 
will live. His defects lay in the directions of measure and of taste 
properly so called, that u to say. of the modification of capricious 
likes and dislikes by reason and principle. He is constantly ex- 
aggerated, boisterous, wanting in refinement. But these are the 
almost necessary defects of his qualities of enthusiasm, eloquence 
and generous feeling. The well-known adaptation of phrase in which 
he did not recant but made up for numerous earlier attacks on Leigh 
Hunt, " the Animosities are mortal, but the Humanities live for 
ever," shows him as a writer at his very best, but not without 
a little characteristic touch of grandiosity and emphasis. As a 
literary critic, as a sportsman, ss a lover of nature and as a convivial 
humorist, he is not to be shown at equal advantage in miniature; 
but almost any volume of his miscellaneous works will exhibit him 
at full length in one of these capacities, if not in all. 

See Chrtstopher North, by Mrs Mary Cordon, his daughter (1862) ; 
and Mrs Oliphant, Annals of a Publishing House; William Black- 
wood and his Sons (1897). 



WIUOW, JAMBS HARRISO* (1837- ), American cavalry 
soldier, was born at Shawneetown, Illinois, in 1837 and entered 
West Point military academy in 1855, graduating in i860. He 
was appointed to the engineer branch of the United States army, 
served in the Port Royal and Fort Pulaski operations, being 
breveted major for his gallant conduct at Pulaski, was on 
If 'Clcllan'f staff at Antictam as a lieutenant-colonel in 1862, 
and as a topographical engineer on the headquarters staff of 
the Army of the Tennessee during the Vicksburg and Chattanooga 
campaigns. His services in the intricate operations before 
Vicksburg were rewarded by promotion to brigadier-general 
U.S.V. In 1864 he was appointed to command a division in 
Sheridan's cavalry corps, and played a distinguished part in the 
cavalry operations of the 4th to 6th of May during the battle 
of the Wilderness (for which he was breveted colonel U.S.A.), 
the so-called Richmond Raid, the operations on the Totopotomoy, 
Ac Later in 1864 he commanded the cavalry of Thomas's 
army in Tennessee. During the dosing operations of the war 
he led a cavalry expedition on a grand scale through the South- 
western states, occupying Selma, Montgomery and Macon, and 
capturing at different time? nearly 7000 prisoners, including 
President Davis. He was promoted major-general of volunteers 
and breveted major-general U.S.A. shortly before the end of 
the war. Returning to duty in the regular army as a lieutenant- 
colonel of infantry for some years, he resigned in 1870 and 
engaged in engineering and railway construction. In 1898, 
during the Spanish-American War, he was appointed a major- 
general in the new volunteer army, and took part in the operations 
in Porto Rica. He served in the China expedition of 1900 as a 



brigadier-general and in xooi was placed on the retired list as a 
brigadier-general U.S.A. 

WILSON. RICHARD (1714-1782), English landscape painter, 
was born at Penegoes, Montgomeryshire, where his father was a 
clergyman, on the 1st of August 17x4. His early taste for art 
was observed by a relative of his mother, Sir George Wynne, 
who in 1739 sent him to London to study under Thomas Wright, 
a little-known portrait painter of the time, by whom he was 
i nst r u ct ed for six years. He then started on his own account, 
and was soon in a good practice. Among bis commissions was 
a full-length of the prince of Wales and the duke of York, painted 
for their tutor, the bishop of Norwich. Examples of his portraits 
may be studied in Greenwich Hospital, in the Garrick Club, 
and in various private collections. In 1740 Wilson visited 
Italy, where he spent six years. He had previously executed 
some landscapes, but it was now that the advice of Zuocarelli 
and Joseph Vernet decided him to adopt this department of art 
exclusively. He studied Claude and Pbussin, but retained his 
own individuality, and produced some admirable views of Rome 
andtheCampagna. In 1755 he returned to England, and became 
one of the first of English landscape painters. M Niobe," one 
of his most powerful works, was exhibited at the Society of 
Artists in 1760. On the establishment of the Royal Academy 
in 1768 he was appointed one of the original members, and 
he was a regular contributor to its exhibitions till 178a He 
frequently executed replicas of his more important subjects, 
repeating some of them several times; in the figures which he 
introduced in his landscapes he was occasionally assisted by 
Mortimer and Hayman. During his lifetime his landscapes 
were never widely popular; his temper was consequently 
embittered by neglect, and so impoverished was he that he was 
obliged to seclude himself in an obscure, half -furnished room in 
Tottenham Court Road, London. In 1776, however, he obtained 
the post of librarian to the Academy; and by the death of a 
brother he acquired a small property nearlJanferras, Denbigh- 
shire, to which he retired to spend his last days, and where he 
died suddenly hi May 1782. After his death his fame increased, 
and in 1814 about seventy of his works were exhibited in the 
British Institution. The National Gallery, London, contains 
nine of his landscapes. 

The works of Wilson are skilled and learned compositions 
rather than direct transcripts from nature. His landscapes are 
treated with great breadth, and with a power of generalization 
which occasionally led to a disregard of detail. They are full 
of clawical feeling and poetic sentiment; they possess noble 
qualities of colour, and of delicate silvern tone; and their 
handling is vigorous and easy, the work of a painter who was 
thoroughly master of bis materials. 

See Studies and Designs by JHchard Wilson, done at Rome in the 
year 17$* (Oxford, 181 1); T. Wright, Some Account of the Life oj 
Richard Wilson (London, 1821); Thomas Hastings, Etchings from 
the Works of Rxchard Wilson, vtlh some Memoirs of his Life (London, 
1825). Many of Wilson's best works were reproduced by Woollett 
and other engravers of the time. 

WILSON, ROBERT (d. x6oo), English actor and playwright, 
was a comedian in the earl of Leicester's company, beginning 
with its establishment in 1574, and from 1583 to 1588 in the 
Queen's and afterwards in Lord St range's company. He wrote 
several morality plays. In his Three Ladies of London (1584) 
he has the episode of the attempt of the Jew to recover his 
debt, afterwards adapted by Shakespeare in The Merchant of 
Venice. Another Robert Wilson (1579-16x0), probably his son, 
was one of Hcnslowe's dramatic hack-writers. 

WIUON, SIR ROBERT THOMAS (1777-1840), British 
general, was a son of the painter Benjamin Wilson (1721-1 788), 
and obtained a commission in the 15th light dragoons in 1704, 
taking part in the famous charge at ViBers-en-Cauchics. He 
was one of eight officers who received the emperor's commemora- 
tion medal (of which only nine were struck), the order of Maria 
Theresa and the dignity of Freiherr of the Empire. In the 
campaigns of Tourcoing and Tournay and in the retreat through 
Holland, Wilson repeatedly distinguished himself. In 1706 
be became captain by purchase, in 1708 he served as a 



6 9 6 



WILSON, T.— WILSON, SIR ERASMUS 



brigade-major during the suppression of the Irish Rebellion, and in 
1 709 was with the 1 5th in the Helder expedition. Having in 1800 
purchased a majority in a regiment aerving in the Mediterranean 
he was sent on a military mission to Vienna in that yeas, but 
returned to take part in- the battle of Alexandria. In 1802 he 
published an account of the expedition to Egypt, which was 
shortly afterwards translated into French, and created a con- 
siderable impression by its strictures upon French officers' 
barbarity. Wilson shortly afterwards produced a translation 
of General Regnier's work on the same campaign, with comments. 
Shortly afterwards Wilson published a work on the defects of 
the British army system which is remembered as the first protest 
against flogging. In 1804 he bought the colonelcy of the 19th 
light dragoons, in 1805 exchanged into the aoth, and in 1806 
served with the 20th in the Cape of Good Hope expedition. In 
1807 he was employed as military attach* of a mission to the 
king of Prussia, and so was present at Eylau, Heilsberg and 
Friedland, of which battles he published an account in 18 10. 
Returning to England with despatches from St Petersburg he 
reached London before the Russian declaration of war and so 
gave the admiralty twenty-four hours' start in the operation 
at sea. In the early part of the Peninsular War Wilson raised 
and commanded the Lusitanian Legion, an irregular Portuguese 
corps which did good service in 1808 and 1809 and formed the 
starting-point of the new Portuguese army organized by Beresford 
in 1810. His services were rewarded by knighthood, a colonelcy 
in the British army and the Portuguese order of the Tower and 
Swprd. In 18x1, with the rank of brigadier-general, he went 
to Turkey, and in 18x2 he travelled thence to Russia, where 
he was attached to Kutuzov's headquarters during the pursuit 
of the retreating French, being present at Malo-Jaroslavietz, 
Vyazma, and Krasnoye. His account of the campaign, published 
in i860, is one of the most valuable works on these events. He 
continued to serve with the Russian army during 1813 and 
distinguished himself at Ltttxen and Bautzen, the emperor 
Alexander decorating him with the knighthood of the St George 
order on the battlefield. He was promoted major-general in the 
British army about the same time. He was at Dresden, Kulm 
and Leipzig, and distinguished himself at the last great battle 
so much that Schwarzenberg writing to the British ambassador 
at Vienna attributed to Wilson's skill a large part in the successful 
issue of the battle. But his services in the counsels of the Allies 
were still more important on account of the confidence reposed 
in him personally by the allied sovereigns. But Castlereagh, 
treating Wilson as a political opponent, removed him to the 
minor theatre of Italy, in spite of the protests of the British 
ambassador. With the Austrian Army of Italy he served through 
the campaign of 1814. In 18x6 after Waterloo he contrived the 
escape of one of Napoleon's supporters, condemned to death 
by the Restoration government, and was imprisoned for three 
months with his comrade in this adventure, Captain Hcly- 
Hutchinson (3rd earl of Donoughmore), and censured by the 
commander-in-chief in a general order. In 18x7 he published 
The Military and Political Power of Russia, in 1818 he became 
member of parliament for Southwark and in 1821 he interposed 
between the mob and the troops on the occasion of Queen 
Caroline's funeral, for which his political opponents secured his 
dismissal from the army, without compensation for the price 
of his commissions. He took an active part in politics on the 
opposition side, and also spent some time in Spain during the 
wars of 1822-23. On the accession of William IV., his political 
services in the formation of the Canning ministry of 1827 were 
rewarded by reinstatement in the army with the rank of 
lieutenant-general. But, disapproving of the Reform bill, he 
resigned his place in the Commons. He was promoted general 
in 184s Mid appointed governor of Gibraltar in 1842. He died 
»l4ntasMb«Utflf May 1849. 

) above, Wilson left a diary of his 
-1814, published in 1 861, and aa 
' 1 two years later. 

1581), English statesman and 
t of Strubby, in Lincolnshire, 




was born about 1525. He was educated at Eton and King's 
College, Cambridge, where he joined the school of Hellenists to 
which Cheke, Thomas Smith, Walter Haddon and others belonged. 
Hie graduated B.A* in 1546 and M.A. in 1540- In T551 he 
produced, in conjunction with Walter Haddon, a Latin life of 
Henry and Charles Brandon, dukes of Suffolk. His earliest work 
of importance was The Rule of Reason, contdnynre the Arte of 
Logiqut set forth inEnglishe (x 55 1) , which was frequently reprinted. 
It has been maintained that the book on which Wilson's fame 
mainly rests, The Arte of Rkelorique, was printed about the same 
time, but this is probably an error: the first edition extant is 
dated January 1553. It is the earliest systematic work of 
literary criticism existing in the English language. Wilson 
threw in his lot with the Dudley family, and when they fell, he 
fled to the Continent. He was with Sir John Cheke in Padua 
in 1555-1557, and afterwards at Rome, whither in 1558 Queen 
Mary wrote, ordering him to return to England to stand his 
trial as a heretic. He refused to come, but was arrested by the 
Roman Inquisition and tortured. He escaped, and fled to 
Fefrara, but in 1560 he was once more in London. Wilson 
became Master of St Katherine's Hospital in the Tower, and 
entered parliament in January 1563. In 1570 he published a 
translation, the first attempted in English, of the Olynthiacs 
and Philippics of Demosthenes, on which he had been engaged 
since 1 556. His Discourse upon Usury appeared in x 572. From 
1574 to 1577, Wilson, who had now become a prominent person 
in the diplomatic world, was principally engaged on embassies 
to the Low Countries, and on his return to England he was made 
a privy councillor and sworn secretary of state; Walsingham 
was his colleague. In x 580, although he was not in holy orders. 
Queen Elizabeth made Wilson dean of Durham. He died at 
St Katherine's Hospital on the 16th of June 1581, and was 
buried next day, " without charge or pomp," at his express 
wish. The Arte of Rkelorique gives Wilson a high place among 
the earliest artificers of English style; and it is interesting to 
see that he was opposed to pedantry of phrase, and above all 
to a revival of uncouth medieval forms of speech, and encouraged 
a simpler manner of prose writing than was generally appreciated 
in the middle of the 16th century. 

WILSON, THOMAS (1663-1755), English bishop, was born 
at Burton, Cheshire, and educated at Trinity College, Dublin. 
He was ordained in x686, and became curate at Newchurch 
Kenyon, Lancashire. In 1692 he was appointed chaplain to 
the 9th eari of Derby, who in 1697 offered him the bishopric 
of Sodor and Man. He was consecrated bishop in 1698. His 
episcopat e was marked by a number of reforms in the Isle of 
Man. New churches were built, libraries founded and books 
were printed in Manx, his Principles and Duties of Christianity 
(London, 1707) being the first book published in that language. 
He also encouraged farming, and set the example of planting 
fruit and forest trees. In order to restore discipline in the island 
he drew up in 1704 his well-known Ecclesiastical Constitutions. 
The judgments of his courts often brought him into conflict 
with the governors of the island, and in 1722 he was even im- 
prisoned for a time in Castle Rushen. In 1737, however, the 
jurisdiction of the dvil and spiritual courts was better defined 
by new statutes, the lordship of the island having passed in 
1736 to James Murray, 2nd duke of AthoU, with whom Wilson 
had no personal difficulties. In 1749 on Zinzendorf s invitation 
he accepted the title of Antistea— a synonym for bishop— in the 
Moravian Church. 



A life of Wfl.cn, by John Keble, was published with his Works 
(Oxford, 1847-1863) The Sodor and Man Theological School in 
the Isle of Man is called in his memory the Bishop Wilson School. 



WILSON, SIR WILLIAM JAMES ERASMUS, generally 
known as Sir Erasmus Wilson (1809-1884), British surgeon 
and philanthropist, was born in London on the 25th of November 
1809, studied at St Bartholomew's Hospital in London, and 
at Aberdeen, and early in life became known as a skilful operator 
and dissector. It was his sympathy with the poor of London 
and a suggestion from Thomas Waklcy of the Lancet, of which 
Wilson acted for a time as sub-editor, which first led him to take 



WILSON, W.— WILTON 



697 



tip stlii diseases as a special study. The horrible cases of 
scrofula, anaemia. and blood-poisoning which he saw made him 
set to work to alleviate the sufferings of persons so afflicted, 
and he quickly established a reputation for treating this class 
of patient. It was said that he cured the rich by ordering them 
to give up luxuries; the poor, by prescribing for them proper 
nourishment, which was often provided out of his own pocket. 
In the opinion of one of his biographers, we owe to Wilson in 
great measure the habit of the daily bath, and he helped very 
much to bring the Turkish bath into use in Great Britain. He 
wrote much upon the diseases which specially occupied his 
attention, and his books, A Healthy Skin and Student's Booh of 
Diseases of the Skin, though they were not received without 
criticism at the time of their appearance, long remained text- 
books of their subject. He visited the East in order to study 
leprosy, Switzerland that he might investigate the causes of 
goitre, and Italy with the purpose of adding to his knowledge 
of the skin diseases affecting an ill-nourished peasantry. He 
made a large fortune by his successful practice and by skilful 
investments, and, since he had no family, he devoted a great 
deal of his money to charitable and educational purposes. He 
founded in 1869 the chair and museum of dermatology in the 
Royal College of Surgeons, of which he was chosen president in 
x88r, and which just before his death awarded him its honorary 
gold medal, founded in 1800 and only six times previously 
awarded. He also founded a professorship of pathology at 
Aberdeen University. After the death of his wife the bulk of 
his property, some £300,000, went to the Royal College of 
Surgeons. In 1878 he earned the thanks of the nation, upon 
different grounds, by defraying the expense of bringing the 
Egyptian obelisk called Cleopatra's Needle from Alexandria 
to London, where it was erected on the Thames Embankment 
The British government had not thought it worth the expense 
of transportation. He was knighted by Queen Victoria in x88x, 
and died at Westgate-on-Sca on the 7th of August 2884. 

WILSON, WOODROW (1856- ), American educationist, 
was born in Staunton, Virginia, on the 28th of December -1856. 
He graduated at Princeton in 1879, studied law at the University 
of Virginia in 1 879-1 880, practised law in Atlanta in 1882-1883, 
and received the degree of Ph.D. at Johns Hopkins University 
in 1886, his thesis being on Congressional Government (1885; 
and often reprinted). He was associate professor of history 
and political economy at Bryn Mawr in X885-1888 and at 
Wesleyan University in 1888-1890; professor of jurisprudence 
and political economy at Princeton in 1800-1895, of juris- 
prudence in 1895-1897, and subsequently of jurisprudence and 
politics; and in 1902 he became president of Princeton Univer- 
sity, being the first layman to hold that office. He retired in 
1 9 10, and was elected Democratic governor of New Jersey. 
His administration of the University was marked by the intro- 
duction of the "preceptorial" system, by the provision of 
dormitories and college eating-halls for members of the lower 
classes, and by the development of the graduate school. 

He wrote: The Slate: Elements of Historical and Practical 
Politics, Sketch of Institutional History and Administration (1889); 
The Stat* and Federal Government of the United States (1801) 



Division and Reunion, 182^ i88q (1803) in the "Epochs of American 
History " series; An Old Master and Other Political Essays (1893); 
Mere Literature and Other . Essays (1893); George Washington 



fc 



1896), an excellent biography; the popular History of the Amertcan 
^copl* (1902); Constitutional Government in the United States 
(1908), being Columbia University Lectures; and in the seventh 
volume of the Cambridge Modern History the chapter on " State 
Rights. 1850-1860." 

WILTON, a market town and municipal borough In the Wilton 
parliamentary division of Wiltshire, England, 86 m. W. by S. 
of London, on the London & South-Westera and Great Western 
railways. Pop. (1901) 3203. It lies among the pastures beside 
the rivers Nadder and Wylye. The church of St Mary and St 
Nicholas was built in 1844 by Lord Herbert of Lea, in a Roman- 
esque style, richly adorned with marbles and mosaics. The 
central entrance is upheld by twisted columns based upon stone 
Uons. The belfry is detached. Wilton House, a little to the 
sooth, was founded by William Herbert, first earl of Pembroke 



by the second creation, on the estates of the dissolved convent, 1 
which were granted him by Henry VIII. 

Tradition says that Shakespeare and his company played here 
before Junes 1. in 1603, and the house is rich in memories of Sir 



death, to the third earl and his brother. In style Wilton House is 
Italian of the 16th century, with a porch added by Holbein. The 
garden front was rebuilt and other changes made by the advice of 
Charles I., a frequent visitor; and many subsequent alterations 
were made. The art collections include the marbles gathered 
together by the eighth earL 

Carpet-making forms the main Industry of Wilton; the 
most famous fabrics being those known as Wilton carpets; 
Saxony carpets made of short-staple wool; and the rich and 
durable Axminsters, long woven by hand at Axminster in 
Devonshire. It is also an important centre for the sale of sheep. 
The town is governed by a mayor, 4 aldermen and 12 councillors. 
Area, 1915 acres. 

A chantry was founded here about * a.d. 800, afterwards 
changed into a priory of Benedictine sisters, and refounded by 
Alfred. In 968 Wulftrude, a mistress of King Edgar, became 
abbess; and the same office was declined by her daughter 
Edith, who died at twenty-three. Miracles, it was said, were 
worked by Edith's remains, and she became patron saint of the 
convent, which afterwards gave shelter to many noble ladies 
and survived until the Dissolution. Its abbess was a baroness 
of England. Antiquaries have seen in Wilton the capital of 
a British kingdom. It was certainly the chief town of the 
Wilsactas, or men of Wilts, whom Cynric the- Saxon leader 
crashed in 556. It afterwards became a residence of the Wesscx 
kings; and here, in 871, Alfred was severely defeated by the 
Danes. Wilton was burned in 1003 by Sweyn, the Danish 
king. After the Conquest it ranked among the richest of royal 
boroughs. In 1x41 Queen Matilda celebrated Easter here with 
great pomp, and two years later Stephen, who came to found 
a castle, was driven off by her adherents. The prosperity of 
Wilton began to fail when Icknicld Street, the great highway 
of commerce, was diverted to pass through Salisbury in 1224; 
and its decline was hastened by the plague, by which a third 
of the townsfolk were swept away in 1349. 

Wilton (Wylton, Willune) was a seat of the West Saxon kings 
and a prosperous town until the removal thence in 1075 of the 
scat of the bishop of Sherborne to Sarum. The excessive number 
of markets held at the latter town in the 13th century caused 
its further decline into a poor and unimportant place. Sweyn 
burnt and sacked it in 1003.. consequently under Edward the 
Confessor it rendered only £22. However, Domesday presents 
it as a valuable royal borough held in farm by the burgesses for 
£50. From 1204 onwards Wilton figures in various grants. 
Richard, earl of Cornwall, obtained it from Henry HI., and 
William, earl of Pembroke, finally from Elizabeth. The first 
charter given by Henry I. (probably in 1x01) granted franchises 
to the burgesses of the merchant gild and company of Wilton 
as enjoyed by London and Winchester, and was confirmed by 
succeeding monarch* from Henry IL to Henry VI. The corpora-, 
tion consisted in 1350 of a mayor, recorder, 5 aldermen, 3 
capital burgesses, xi common councilmen and other officers, 
the mayor being the returning officer. Two members were 
returned to parliament from 1293 to 1832 and one from 1832 
to 1885, at which date Wilton lost its separate representation. • 

In 1414 Henry V. granted a fair on July 21 and 22, This 
was cancelled in 14x6 and another substituted on July 22 and 
the three preceding days. Two yearly fairs were obtained by 
the burgesses from Henry VII. for four days from April 23 
and September x. In 1792 the fair days were November 13, 
September 12 and May 4, the two latter are still held, that in 
September being one of the largest sheep fairs in the west of 
England. Henry III. granted three markets weekly on Monday, 
Wednesday and Friday, and Henry VI., in 1433, one on 
Wednesday. The latter was still held in 1825, but had ceased 
in 1888. 



6 9 8 



WILTSHIRE 



WILTSHIRE [Wilts], a south-western county of England, 
bounded N.W. and N. by Gloucestershire, N.E. and £. by 
Berkshire, S.E. by Hampshire, S.W. and S. by Dorsetshire, 
and W. by Somersetshire. The area is 1374*9 sq. m. A great 
upland covers two-thirds of the county, comprising, in the 
north-east, Marlborough Downs, with Savernake Forest; in 
the centre, the broad undulating sweep of Salisbury Plain; 
and in the south, the more varied hills and dales of the Nadder 
watershed, the vale of Chalk and Cranborne Chase. Large 
tracts of the Chalk are over 600 ft. above the sea, rising in many 
parts into steep and picturesque escarpments. Several peaks 
attain an altitude of 900 ft., and Inkpen Beacon, on the 
borders of Berkshire, Wiltshire and Hampshire, reaches ion ft. 
Scattered in thousands over the downs lie huge blocks of silicious 
Tertiary grits, called sarsen stones or grey wethers, which were 
used by the primitive builders of Stonehenge and Avebury. 
The underlying Greensand is exposed in the deeper valleys of the 
Chalk, such as the vale of Pewscy, dividing Salisbury Plain from 
Marlborough Downs, and the vale of Chalk, dividing the Nadder 
westward from the heights of Cranborne Chase. One of the most 
charming features of the county is its fertile and well-wooded 
valleys. Three ancient forests remain: Cranborne Chase, which 
extends into Dorset, was a royal deer-park as early as the reign 
of John, and, like Savernake Forest, contains many noble old 
oaks and beeches. The main part of the New Forest belongs to 
Hampshire; but No Man's Land and Hampworth Common, 
its outlying heaths and coppices, encroach upon the south-eastern 
corner of Wilts. Bentley Wood, 5 m. E. of Salisbury, and the 
Great Ridge and Grovcly Woods between the Nadder and 
Wylye, are fine uplands parks. There is no great sheet of water, 
but the reservoir near Swindon, and the lakes of Longleat, 
Stourton and Fonthill in the south-west of Earl Stoke near 
Westbury, and of Bowood, Corsham and Seagry near Chippen- 
ham, deserve mention for the beauty of their scenery. The 
upper reaches of the Thames skirt the north-eastern border, 
and three other considerable rivers drain the Wiltshire Downs. 
The Kennct, rising west of Marlborough, winds eastward into 
Berkshire and meets the Thames at Reading. The Lower or 
Bristol Avon flows from its source among the Cotteswolds in 
southern Gloucestershire, past Malmesbury, Chippenham, 
Mclksham and Bradford, where it curves north-eastward into 
Somerset, finally falling into the Bristol Channel. Besides 
many lesser tributaries it receives from the south the Frome, 
which forms for about 5 m. the boundary between Wilts and 
Somerset. The East or Christchurch Avon, which rises near 
Bishops Cannings in the centre of the county, flows east and 
south into Hampshire, and enters the sea at Christchurch. 
Close to Salisbury it is joined by the united streams of the 
Nadder and the Wylye; by the Ebble, which drains the vale of 
Chalk; and by the Bourne, which flows south by west from its 
head near LudgershalL 

Geology. — As has been said, about two-thirds, of the surface of 
Wilts is occupied by a great Chalk upland. Cropping out from 
beneath the Chalk is a fringe of the Selbornian — Upper Greensand 
and Gault — the former is well exposed in the vale of Pewsey, west 
of Devises, and along the margins of the vale of Wardour; it forms 
a broad, hilly tract from Mere through Stourton to Warminster. 
The Gault Clay rum regularly at the fu-ot .f the Upper Greeniand; 
it a cucavau-d! in several place* for It!- ki talcing. The Lower 
Greenund. whkh oversterw l he underlying formal ions, appear* from 
beneath the Gault at Poulshot and follow the umc line of outcrop 
northwards; a small outlier at Seend is worked for the iron jt 
contains. About one-third of the county lying on the north-vur-H 
side of the Chalk downs* including a portsoq of the vale «/ the 
While Horse, is occupied by Jtint-^ic roc la. _ The Uoow Lias — 
oldest formation in inr county — 1> 
Box; it is followed by the a 
Earrh, Then succeed* the Gi 

f.irm-iu-. Iiui1dirig**lciry.-i of (3*1 

Bradford, and at TV... C 
bourhoxl. Above the f 1 
day h with flip v 
by the Forcer ' 
crop* st WcsMfljort* 
lie-n 1 he outcrop of 
bed* and avedy 
tract 



Rising up from the eastern margin of the Oxfordian 

irregular scarp formed by the Coraluan oolitic limestones 

and marls. The iron ores of Westbury are obtained in this forma- 



Cricklade. 
vale is the i 



tion. Another clay-bottomed vale lies on the eastern aide of the 
Corallian ground, from near Calne to Swindon, where it is exploited 
for bricks. It appears also between Seend, Coulston and West- 
bury; also between Mere and Semley. About the former place 
it is brought into apposition with Cretaceous rocks through the 
agency of an east to west fault. At Tisbury and near Potterne are 
small outcrops of Portlandian rocks which yield the familiar building* 
stones of Tisbury and Chilmark. Limestones and days of Purbeck 
age lie in the vale of Wardour about Teffont Evias. At Dinton in 
the same vale the Wealden formation just makes its appearance. 

In the south-eastern corner of the county there are tracts of 
Tertiary Reading Beds and London Clay east of Downton and on 
the Clarendon Hills; these arc covered by Bagshot Beds at Alder* 
bury and Grinstead, also on Hampworth Common. Outliers ol 
Reading Beds and London Clay occur about Great Bedwin; the 
sarsen stones previously referred to represent the last remnants of 
a mantle of Tertiary rocks which formerly covered the district. 
Here and there drift gravels and brick earths, besides low-level river 
gravels, rest upon the older rocks. 

Agriculture. — Some five-sixths of the total area, a high proportion, 
is under cultivation, but a large amount of this is in permanent 
pasture. The soil, a heavy reddish loam, with a subsoil of broken 
stones, in the north-west, but lighter in the chalk region, is essentially 
that of a pastoral country, although there arc wide tracts of richer 
land, suitable for wheat and beans. Oats, however, are the largest 
grain crop. There is a small acreage classified as hill pasture. The 
green crops consist mainly of turnips, mangolds and swedes. Bacon- 
curing is carried on. Large numbers of sheep are bred on the 
downs, and dairy-farming is practised in the north-west. There are 
manufactures of condensed milk. An agricultural college is esta- 
blished at Downton. 

Manufactures. — A majority of the hands employed in factories 
and workshops are occupied in the locomotive works of the Great 
Western railway at Swindon. There are also large engineering 
works at Devizes. Cloth is still woven, though in greatly diminished 
at Trowbridge, Mclksham, Chippenham and othe 



quantities. 



eryml 
which MJt 





? laces where water-power b available. Carpets are woven at 
t'ilton, haircloth and coco-nut fibre at Mclksham, silk at Malmes- 
bury, Mere and Warminster. Portland and Bath stone are quarried 
for building purposes, while iron ore from mines near Westbury is 
smelted in that town. 

Communications. — Three great railway lines traverse Wiltshire 
from £. to W., throwing out a number 01 branch lines to the larger 
towns. In the N. the Great Western main line passes through 
Swindon on its way from London to Bath. A second fine of the same 
system runs also to Bath from Hungerford, by way of Devices. 
South of Salisbury Plain the South-Western main line goes through 
Salisbury and the southern quarter of Wilts on its way into Somerset. 
The chief branch line is that between Salisbury and Westbury on 
the Great Western. The Midland & South-Western function rail- 
way runs north from Andover by Swindon, Cricklade and Ciren- 
cester. Swindon, Salisbury and Westbury are the three centres of 
railway traffic. The Avon is navigable as far as Salisbury, and 
goods are carried on the Thames & Severn Canal in the N.E., 
and on the Kennet & Avon Canal across Salisbury Plain. These 
waterways were formerly connected by a branch of the Berks & 
Wilts Canal, which runs S.W. from Berkshire, through Swindon and 
Melksham, but was closed in 1899. 

The area of the ancient county is 879,043 acres, with a popula- 
tion in 1 891 of 264.997 and in 1901 of 273,869. The area of the 
administrative county is 864,105 acres. The county contains 
29 hundreds. The municipal boroughs are — Calne (pop. 3457), 
Chippenham (5074), Devizes (6532), Malmesbury (2854), Marl- 
borough (3887), Salisbury, a city and the county town (17,117), 
Swindon (45,006), Wilton (2203). The urban districts arc — 
Bridford-oa-Avon (45 m), Mclksham (245o),Trowbridge (11,526), 
Warminster (5547)1 Westbury (3305). Other small towns are 
Cricklade (1517), Downton (1786), Highworth (2047), Mere 
(1077). Pewscy (1722), Wootton Bassett (2258). The county 
is in the western circuit, and assizes are held at Salisbury and 
Devizes. 1 1 has one court of quarter sessions, and is divided into 
16 petty sessional divisions. The boroughs of Devizes and 
Salisbury have separate courts of quarter sessions and commis- 
sions of the peace, and the borough of Marlborough has a separate 
i ■--•-[■■!, of the peace. There are $2 5 civil parishes. Wiltshire 
.nly in the diocese of Salisbury, but a considerable part is 
: of Bristol, and small parts in those of Gloucester, Oxford 
Winchester. It contains 322 ecclesiastical parishes or 
ias wholly or in part. The county is divided into five 
itniary divisions, each returning one member — Northern 
UJe, North-western or Chippenham, Western or West* 



WILTSHIRE 



699 



bury, Eastern or Devises and Southern or Wilton. It also 
contains the parliamentary borough of Salisbury, returning one 
member. 

History.— The English conquest of the district now known 
as Wiltshire began in 55a with the victory of Cynric at Old 
Saruin, by which the way was opened to Salisbury Plain. Four 
years later, pushing his way through the vale of Pewsey, Cynric 
extended the limit* of the West Saxon kingdom to the Marl* 
borough Downs by a victory at Barbury Hill At this period 
the district south of the Avon and the Nadder was occupied 
by dense woodland, the relics of which survive in Cranborne 
Chase, and the first wave of West Saxon colonization was chiefly 
confined to the valleys of the Avon and the Wylye, the little 
township of Wilton which arose in the latter giving the name 
of Wilsaetan to the new settlers. By the oth century the 
district had acquired a definite administrative and territorial 
organization, Walstan, ealdorman of the Wilsaetan, being 
mentioned as early as 800 as repelling an attempted invasion 
of the Mercians. Moreover, " Wiltunsdre " is mentioned by 
Asser in 878, in which year the Danes established their head- 
quarters at Chippenham and remained there a year, plundering 
the surrounding country. In the time of iEthelstan mints 
existed at Old Sarum, Malmesbury, Wilton, Cricklade and 
Marlborough. Wilton and Salisbury were destroyed by the 
Danish invaders under Sweyn in 1003, and in 1015 the district 
was harried by Canute. 

With the redistribution of estates after the Conquest more 
than two-fifths of the county fell into the hands of the church; 
the possessions of the crown covered one-fifth; while among 
the chief lay proprietors were Edward of Salisbury, William, 
count of Ewe, Ralph de Mortimer, Aubrey de Vcre, Robert 
Fitzgerald, Miles Crispin, Robert d'Oily and Osbcrn GifTard. 
The first carl of Wiltshire after the Conquest was William Ic 
Scrope, who received the honour in 1397. The title subsequently 
passed to Sir James Butler in 1449, Sir John Strafford in 1470, 
Sir Thomas Bolcyn in 1529, and in 1550 to the Paulett family. 
The Benedictine foundations at Wilton, Malmesbury and 
Amesbury existed before the Conquest; the Augustinian house 
at Bradenstokc was founded by Walter d'Evrcux in 114a; 
that at Lacock by Ela, countess of Salisbury, in 123a; that at 
Longjeat by Sir John Vernon before 1272* The Cluniac priory 
of Mookton Farleigh was founded by Humphrey de Bohun in 
ix 25; the Cistercian house at Kingswood by William de Berkeley 
in 1 139; and that of Stanley by the Empress Maud in 1154. 

Of the forty Wiltshire hundreds mentioned in the Domesday 
Survey, Selkley, Ratnsbury, Bradford, Melksham, Calne, 
Whorwellsdown, Westbury, Warminster, Heytcsbury, Kinward- 
stone, Ambresbury, Underditch, Furstficld, Aldcrbury and 
Downton remain to the present day practically unaltered in 
name and extent; Thorngrave, Dunelawe and Cepeham hundreds 
form the modern hundred of Chippenham; Malmesbury hundred 
represents the Domesday hundreds of Cicemcthorn and Sterchelce, 
which were held at farm by the abbot of Malmesbury; High- 
worth represents the Domesday hundreds of Crechelade, Sdpe, 
Wurde and Staple; Kingbridge the hundreds of Chingbridge, 
Blachegrave and Thornhylle; Swanborough the hundreds of 
Rugeberge, Stodfcd and Swaneberg; Branch the hundreds 
of Branchesberge and Dolesfeld; Cawden the hundreds of 
Cawdon and Cadworth. A noticeable feature in the 14th century 
is the aggregation of church manors into distinct hundreds, 
at the court of which their ecclesiastical owners required their 
tenants to do suit and service. Thus the bishop of Winchester 
had a separate hundred called Kurwel Bishop, afterwards 
absorbed in Downton hundred; the abbot of Damerham had 
that of Damerham; and the prior of St Swtthin's that of Elstub, 
under each of which were included manors situate in different 
parts of the county. 

The meeting-place of Swanborough hundred was at Swan- 
borough Tump, a hillock in the parish of Manningford Abbots 
identified as the moot -place mentioned in the will of King Alfred; 
that of Malmesbury was at Colepark; that of Bradford at Brad- 
ford Leigh; that of Warminster at Iky Oak, about * m. south of 



Warminster, near Southleigh Wood. The shire court for Wilt' 
shire was held at Wilton, and until 1446 the shrievalty was 
enjoyed ex officio by the castellans of Old Sarum. Edward of 
Salisbury was sheriff at the time of the Domesday Survey, 
and the office remained hereditary in his family, dtmwling to 
William Longespee by bis marriage with Ela, great-grand- 
daughter of Edward. In the 13th century the assizes were held 
at Wilton, Malmesbury and New Sarum. 

On the division of the West Saxon see in 703 Wiltshire was 
included in the diocese of Sherborne, but in 005 a separate 
diocese of Wilton was founded, the see being fixed alternately 
at Ramsbury, Wilton and Sunning in Berkshire. Shortly 
before the Conquest Wilton was reunited to the Sherborne 
diocese, and by the synod of 1075-1076 the see was transferred 
to Salisbury. The archdeaconries of Wiltshire and Salisbury are 
mentioned in 1180; in 1291 the former included the deaneries 
of Avebury, Malmesbury, Marlborough and Cricklade within 
this county, and the latter the deaneries of Amesbury, Potterne, 
Wilton, Chalke and Wylye. In 1535 the archdeaconry of 
Salisbury included the additional deanery of Salisbury, while 
Potterne deanery had been transferred to the archdeaconry of 
Wiltshire. The deaneries of the archdeaconry of Salisbury have 
remained unaltered; Wiltshire archdeaconry now includes the 
deaneries of Avebury, Marlborough and Potterne; and the 
deaneries of Chippenham, Cricklade and Malmesbury form part 
of the archdeaconry and diocese of Bristol. 

The inhabitants of Wiltshire have always been . addicted 
to industrial rather than warlike pursuits, and the political 
history of the county is not remarkable. In 1086, after the 
completion of the Domesday Survey, Salisbury was the scene 
of a great council, in which all the landholders took oaths of 
allegiance to the king, and a council (or the same purpose 
assembled at Salisbury in 11 16. At Clarendon in n 66 was 
drawn up the assize which remodelled the provincial administra- 
tion of justice. Parliaments were held at Marlborough in 1267 
and at Salisbury in 1328 and 1384. During the wars of Stephen's 
reign Salisbury, Devizes and Malmesbury were garrisoned by 
Roger, bishop of Salisbury, for the empress, but in 1138 Stephen 
seized the bishop and captured Devizes Castle. In 1216 Marl- 
borough Castle was surrendered to Louis by Hugh de Neville. 
Hubert de Burgh escaped in 1233 from Devizes Castle, where he 
had been imprisoned in the previous year. In the Civil War 
of the 17th century Wiltshire actively supported the parlia- 
mentary cause, displaying a spirit of violent anti-Catholicism, 
and the efforts of the marquess of Hertford and of Lord Seymour 
to raise a party for the king met with vigorous resistance from 
the inhabitants. The Royalists, however, made some progress 
in the early stage of the struggle, Marlborough being captured 
for the king in 1642, while in 1643 the fotces of the earl of Essex 
were routed by Charles I. and Prince Rupert at Aldbournc, and 
in the same year Waller, after failing to capture Devizes, was 
defeated in a skirmish at Roundway Down. The year 1645 
saw the rise of the " Clubmen " of Dorset and Wiltshire, whose 
sole object was peace; they systematically punished any member 
of either party discovered in acts of plunder. Devizes, the last 
stronghold of the Royalists, was captured by Cromwell in 1645. 
In 165s a rising organized on behalf of the king at Salisbury 
was dispersed in the same year. 

At the time of the Domesday Survey the industrial pursuits 
of Wiltshire were almost exclusively agricultural; 390 mills 
are mentioned, and vineyards at Tollord and Lacock. In the 
succeeding centuries sheep-farming was vigorously pursued, 
and the Cistercian monasteries of Kingswood and Stanlegh 
exported wool to the Florentine and Flemish markets in the 13th 
and 14th centuries. Wiltshire at this time was already reckoned 
among the chief of the clothing counties, the principal centres 
of the industry being Bradford, Malmesbury, Trowbridge, 
Devizes and Chippenham. In the 16th century Devizes was 
noted for its blankets, Warminster had a famous corn-market, 
and cheese was extensively made in north Wiltshire. Amesbury 
was famous for its tobacco pipes in the 16th century. The 
clothing trade went through a period of great depression in the 



700 



WIMBLEDON 



17th century, partly owing to the constant outbreaks of plague, 
linen, cotton, gloves and cutlery were also manufactured in 
the county, silk at Malmesbury and carpets at Wilton. 

In 1295 Wiltshire was represented by no less than twenty-eight 
members in parliament, the shire returning two knights, and the 
boroughs of Bedwin, Bradford, Calne, Chippenham, Cricklade, 
Devises, Down ton, Ludgershall, Malmesbury, Marlborough, 
Old Sarum, Salisbury and Wilton, two burgesses each, but the 
boroughs for the most part made very irregular returns. Hindon, 
Heytesbury and Wootton Bassctt were enfranchised in the 
15th century, and at the time of the Reform Act of 1832 the 
county with sixteen boroughs returned a total of thirty-four 
members. Under the latter act Great Bedwin, Downton, 
Heytesbury, Hindon, Ludgershall, Old Sarum and Wootton 
Bassett were disfranchised, and Calne, Malmesbury, Westbury 
and Wilton lost one member each. Under the act of 1868 the 
county returned two members in two divisions, and Chippenham, 
Devizes and Marlborough lost one member each . Under the act 
of 1885 the county returned five members in five divisions; 
Cricklade, Calne, Chippenham, Devizes, Malmesbury, Marl- 
borough, Westbury and Wilton were disfranchised; and 
Salisbury lost one member. 

Antiquities. — Wiltshire is extraordinarily rich in prehistoric 
antiquities. The stone age is represented by a number of flint and 
stone implements, preserved in the unsurpassed collection at Salis- 
bury Museum. Stonehengc, with its circles of giant stones, and 
Avebury. with its avenues of monoliths leading to what was once a 
stone circle, surrounded by an earthwork, and enclosing two lesser 
circles, are the largest and most famous megalithic works in England. 
A valley near Avebury is filled with immense sarscn blocks, re- 
sembling a river of stone, and perhaps laid there by prehistoric 
architects. There are also menhirs, dolmens and cromlechs. Sur- 
rounded as they were by forests and marshy hollows, it is clear that 
the downs were densely peopled at a very early period. Circles, 
formed by a ditch within a bank, are common, as are grave-mounds 
or barrows. These have been classified according to their shape 
as bell-barrows, bowl-barrows and long barrows. Bones, ashes, 
tools, weapons and ornaments have been dug up from such mounds, 
many of which contain kistvaens or chambers of stone. The 
" lynchets " or terraces which score some of the hillsides arc said 
to be the work of primitive agriculturists. Ancient strongholds 
arc scattered over the county. Among the most remarkable are 
Vespasian's Camp, near Amcsbury; Silbury Hill, the largest artificial 
mound in Europe, near Avebury; the mounds of Marlborough and 
Old Sarum; the camps of Battlcsburv and # Scratchbury, near 
Warminster; Yarnbury, to the N. of Wylye, in very perfect pre- 
servation; Casterlcy, on a ridgeway about 7 m. E.S.E. of Devizes; 
Whitesheet and Winkelbury, overlooking the vale of Chalk; Chis- 
bury, near Savemake; Sidbury, near Ludgershall; and Figbury 
Ring, 3 m. N.E. of Salisbury. Ogbury, 6 m. N. of Salisbury, is an 
undoubted British enclosure. Durrington Walls, N. of Amcsbury, 
are probably the remains of a British village, and there are vestiges 
of others on Salisbury Plain and Marlborough Downs. 

There are many signs of the Roman rule. Wans Dyke or Woden's 
Dyke, one of the largest extant entrenchments, runs west for about 
60 m. from a point east of Savemake, nearly as far as the Bristol 
Channel, and is almost unaltered for several miles along the Marl- 
borough Downs. Its date is uncertain; but the work has been 
proved, wherever excavated, to be Roman or Romano-British. It 
consists of a bank, with a trench on the north side, and was clearly 
meant for defence, not as a boundary. Forts strengthened it at 
intervals. Bokerly Dyke, which forms a part of the boundary 
between Wilts and Dorset, is the largest among several similar 
entrenchments, and has also a ditch north of the rampart. 

Chief among the few monastic buildings of which any vestiges 
remain are the ruined abbeys of Malmesbury and of Lacock near 
Mclksham. There are some traces of the hospital for leprous women 
afterwards converted into an Austin priory at Maiden Bradley. 
Monkton Farleigh, farther north along th* Somerset border, had its 
Cluniac priory, founded as a cell of Lewes in the Tjth century, and 
represented by some outbuilding* of the Tuanor-hou>c. A collrgc 
for a dean and 12 prebendaries, afterwards a monastery of Bon- 
hommes, was founded in i.\47 at Edington. The church, Decorated 
and Perpendicular, resembU-s n cathedral in size and stately beauty, 
The 14th century building; of Hradeai.tofce Priory ot ClecJc Abbey, 
founded near Chippenham for Austin canons, are incorporated 
in a farmhouse. The finest churches of Wiltshire, generaJly P 
pcndicular, were built in the districts where ptKxi **an#> con" * 
obtained, while the architecture ii more sirapk in the Che 
where flint was used perforre. Small woodi 
midal bell-turrets are not uooomaiov; nnd thi 
3 J m. N.W. of Swindon, and Wflnbomuyli, 
two steeples, one in the ccntnr, f>ne at the 
church at Bradford-on-A^ on is one of 



ecclesiastical buildings in England; and elsewhere there are 
fragments of Saxon work imbedded in later masonry. Such are three 
arches in the nave of Brit ford church, within a mile of Salisbury; 
the. east end of the chancel at Burcombe, near Wilton; and parts 
of the churches at Bremhill, and at Manningford Bruce or Braose 
in the vale of Pewsey. St John's at Devizes retains its original 
Norman tower and has Norman masonry in its chancel; while the 
chancel of St Mary's, in the same town, is also Norman, and the 
porch has characteristic Norman mouldings. The churches of 
Preshutc. near Marlborough, Ditteridge or Ditcheridge, near Box, 
and Nether Avon, near Amesbury, preserve sundry Norman features. 
Early English is illustrated by Salisbury Cathedral, its purest and 
most beautiful example; ana, on a smaller scale, at Amcsbury, 
Bishops Cannings, Boyton in the vale of the Wylye, Collingbournc 
Kingston, east of Salisbury Plain, Downton and Potterne, near 
Devises. Bishopstone, in the vale of Chalk, has the finest Decorated 
church in the county, with a curious external cloister, and unique 
south chancel doorway, recessed beneath a stone canopy. Mere, 
close to the borders of Dorset and Somerset, is interesting not only 
for its Perpendicular church, but for a medieval chantry, used as 
a schoolhouse by Barnes, the Dorsetshire poet, and for its 14th- 
century dwelling-houses. 

The castles of Wiltshire have been almost entirely swept away. 
At Old Sarum, Marlborough and Devizes only a few vestiges are left 
in walls and vaults. Castle Combe and Trowbridge castle have 
long been demolished, and of Ludgershall castle only a small frag- 
ment survives. The ruins of Wardour castle, standing in a richly 
wooded park near Tisbury, date from the 14th century, and consist 
of a hexagonal outer waif of great height, enclosing an open court. 
Two towers overlook the entrance. The 18th-century castle, one 
mile distant, across the park, is noteworthy for its collection of 
paintings, and, among other curiosities, for the "Glastonbury 
Cup," said to be fashioned out of a branch of the celebrated thorn- 
tree at Glastonbury. The number of old country houses is a marked 
feature in Wilts. Few parishes, especially in the N.W., are without 
their old manor-house, usually converted into a farm, but preserving 
its flagged roof, stonc-mullioned windows, gabled front, two-storeyed 

gjrch and oak-panelled interior. Place House, in Tisbury, and 
arton Farm, at Bradford, date from the 14th century. Fifteenth- 
century work is best exemplified in the manor-houses of Norrington, 
in the vale of Chalk: Tcffont Evias, in the vale of Naddcr; 
Potterne; and Great Chaldfield. near Monkton Farleigh. At South 
Wraxall the hall of a very beautiful house of the same period is 
celebrated in local tradition as the spot where tobacco was first 
smoked in England by Sir Walter Raleigh and his host, Sir Walter 
Long. Later styles are represented By Longford Castle, near 
Salisbury, where the picture galleries are of great interest; by 
Heytesbury Park; by Wilton House at Wilton, Kingston House at 
Bradford, Bowood near Calne, Longlcat near Warminster, Corsham 
Court, Littlecote near Ramsbury, Charlton House near Malmes- 
bury, Compton Chamberlayne in the Nadder valley, Grittleton 
House and the modern Castle Combe, both near Chippenham and 
Stourhead, on the borders of Dorset and Somerset. Each of these 
is noteworthy for its architecture, its art treasures or the beauty of 
its surroundings. 

See Victoria County History, Wiltshire, Sir R. C. Hoare, The 
Ancient History of Wiltshire (2 vols., London, 1812-1821), The 
History of Modern Wiltshire (14 pts., London, 1822-1844); Aubrey's 
Collections for Wiltshire, edited by Sir T. Phillipps, pts. 1, 2 (London, 
1821); Lcfand's Journey through Wiltshire, A.D. '1540-1542, with 
notes by J. E. Jackson (Devizes, 1875); W. H. Jones, Domesday for 
Wiltshire (Bath, 1865); John Britton, The Beauties of Wiltshire 
(3 vols., London, 1801-1825); J. E. Jackson, The Shtrifs Town, 
Co. Wilis, AD. J439 (Devizes, 1872) ; see also Proceedings of the 
Wiltshire Archaeological and Natural History Society. 

WIMBLEDON, a municipal borough and western residential 
suburb of London, in the Wimbledon parliamentary division 
of Surrey, England, adjoining the metropolitan borough of 
Wandsworth, 8 m. S.W. of Charing Cross. Pop. (1891), 25,777; 
(1001) 41,652. Wimbledon Common, to the north-west of the 
district, forms a continuation of Putney Heath and a pleasant 
recreation ground. Il was the meeting place of the Rifle Associa- 
tion from its loundsJi- n in i860 till iSSS, The parish church 
of St Mflty ia supposcil to dale Irotn Snon times; but, after 
it had, undergone various restorations and reconstructions, 
ie Berprndini1.iT style. There are 
A free library 
arc numerous, 
and 18 coun- 

n the scene of 

and jEthelberht, 

and an earthwork 

ked the site. At 




WIMBORNE— WINCHCOMB 



701 



Coombc's HOI and elsewhere British relics have been found. 
At Domesday Wimbledon Conned part of the manor of Mortlake, 
held by the archbishops of Canterbury. Afterwards the name 
was sometimes used interchangeably with Mortlake, and in 
13*7 it is described as a grange or farm belonging to Mortlake. 
On the impeachment of Arundel, archbishop of Canterbury, 
in 1308, it was confiscated. In the reign of Henry VIII. Cromwell, 
earl of Essex, held the manor of Wimbledon, with Bristow Park 
as an appendage. On the confiscation of Cromwell's estates 
in 1540 it again fell to the crown, and by Henry VIII. it was 
set tied on Catherine Parr for life. By Queen Mary it was granted 
to Cardinal Pole. In 1574 Elizabeth bestowed the manor-house, 
while retaining the manor, on Sir Christopher Hat ton, who sold 
it the same year to Sir Thomas Cecil In 1588 Elisabeth trans- 
ferred the manor to his son Sir Edward Cecil, in exchange for 
an estate in Lincolnshire. At the time of the Civil War the manor 
was sold to Adam Baynes, a Yorkshireman who shortly after- 
wards sold it to General Lambert; and at the Restoration it 
was granted to the queen dowager, Henrietta Maria, who sold 
it in 1661 to George Digby, earl of Bristol. On. his death in 
1676 it was sold by his widow to the lord-treasurer Panby. 
Some years after Danby's death it was purchased by Sarah, 
duchess of Marlborough, who bequeathed it to her grandson, 
John Spencer. It was sold by the fifth Earl Spencer in 1877. 
Wimbledon House, built by Sir Thomas Cecil in 1588, was 
replaced by another building in 1735 by the duchess of Marl- 
borough; this was destroyed by fire in 1785, and a new bouse, 
called Wimbledon Park House, was erected about 1801. Wimble- 
don was incorporated in 1905. 

WIMBORMB (Wimborne Minster), a market town, In the 
eastern parliamentary division of. Dorsetshire, England, nij m. 
S.W. by W. from London by the London & South-Western 
railway; served also by the Somerset and Dorset railway. 
Pop. of urban district (xoox) 3606. It is situated on a gentle 
slope above the river Allen near its confluence with the Stour. 
The church or minster of St Cuthberga is a fine cruciform 
structure of various styles from Early Norman to Perpendicular, 
and consists of a central lantern tower, nave and choir with 
aisles, transepts without aisles, western or bell tower, north 
and south porches, crypt and vestry or sacristy, with the library 
over it. It contains a large number of interesting monuments, 
irehirfii^g s brass with the date 873 (supposed to mark the resting- 
place of King i£thelred I.), a lunar orrery of the 14th century and 
an octagonal Norman font of Purbeck marble. There is a church 
dedicated to St John the Evangelist. The free grammar school 
occupies modern buildings in the Elizabethan style. Near 
Wimhome is Canford Manor, the seat of Lord Wimborne, a 
mansion in the Tudor style, built by Blore in i8a6, and improved 
from designs of Sir Charles Barry. The town depends chiefly 
on agriculture; but the manufacture of hose is carried on to a 
small extent, and there are also coachbuilding works. 

Although Wimborne (Wimburn) has been identified with the 
Vimdogladia of the Antonine Itinerary, the first undoubted 
evidence of settlement is the entry of the Anglo-Saxon Chronicle, 
under the date 718, that Cuthburb, sister of King Ine, founded 
the abbey here and became the first abbess; the house is also 
mentioned in a somewhat doubtful epistle of St Aldhelm in 705. 
The importance of the foundation made it the burial-place of 
Kinfe jEthdred in 871. and of King Sifferth in 96a. iEthelwald 
seized and fortified Wimborne in his revolt in 001 against Edward 
the Elder. • The early abbey was probably destroyed by the 
Danes in the reign of ALthdred the Unready (078-1015), for in 
X043 Edward the Confessor founded here a college of secular 
canons. The college remained unaltered until 1406, when 
Margaret, countess of Richmond, obtained letters patent from 
her son, Henry VU., to found a chantry, in connexion with 
i established a school The continuance of this was 
I by the commissioners of 1547, and in 1562 Elica- 
l a great part of the property of the former college 
1 corporation of twelve go ve rnors, who had charge of 
New charters for the school were obtained from 
1 1562 and from Charles I. At the conq ue st Wimborne 



was a royal borough, ancient demesne of the crown, and part of 
the manor of Kingston Lacy, which Henry I. gave to Robert 
Mellent, carl of Leicester. From him it descemW by marriage 
to the earls of Lincoln, and, then passing by Krriage to Earl 
Thomas of Lancaster, it became parcel of the csWy and later 
of the duchy of Lancaster; an inquisition of 1352 found that 
Henry, duke of Lancaster, had 77s. 3d. rent of assise in the 
borough of Wimborne. The borough is again mentioned in 
1487-1488, when John Plecy held six messuages in free burgage 
of the king as of his borough of Wimborne, but it seems to have 
been entirely prescriptive, add was never a parliamentary 
borough. The town was governed until the 10th century by 
two bailiffs, chosen annually at a court leet of the royal manor, 
of Wimborne borough, part of the manor of Kingston Lacy. 
The market held here on Friday of each week is oot mentioned 
in Domesday Book, but seems to be of early origin. Wimborne 
carried on considerable manufactures of linen and woollen goods 
until the time of Charles IL, when they declined, their place 
being taken by the stocking-knitting industry of the 2 8th century; 



her son, Henrj 

^sssssssC^ 1 

^^ssPW] 



See John Hutchins, The History and Antiquities of the County e§ 
uorsct (3rd edition, Westminster, 1861); Anon., History of Wim 
borne Minster (London, i860). 



WIMPPFfcN, EMMANUEL FELIX DB (1811-1884), French 
soldier. Entering the army from the military school of St Cyr t 
he saw considerable active service in Algeria, and in 1840 became 
captain, in 1847 chef de bataUlon. He first earned marked 
distinction in the Crimean War as colonel of a Turco regiment, 
and his conduct at the storm of the Mamelon won him the grade 
of general of brigade. In the campaign of 1859 he was with 
General MacMahon at Magenta at the head of a brigade of Guard 
Infantry, and again won promotion on the field of battle. 
Between this campaign and that of 1870 he was mainly employed 
in Algeria, and was not at first given a command in the ill-fated 
M Army of the Rhine." But whe'n the earlier battles revealed 
incapacity in the commander of the 5th corps, De Wimpffen 
was ordered to take it over, and was given a dormant commission 
appointing him to command the Army of Chalons in case of 
Marshal MacMahon 's disablement. He only arrived at the front 
in time to rally the fugitives of the 5th corps, beaten at Beaumont, 
and to march them to Sedan. In the disastrous battle of the 1st 
of September, MacMahon was soon wounded, and the senior 
officer, General Ducrot, assumed the command. Ducrot was 
beginning to withdraw the troops when Wimpffen produced his 
commission and countermanded the orders. In consequence 
it fell to him to negotiate the surrender of the whole French 
army. After his release from captivity, he lived in retirement 
at Algiers, and died at Paris in 1884, His later years were 
occupied with polemical discussions on the surrender of Sedan, 
the responsibility for which was laid upon him. 

He wrote, amongst other works, Sedan (1871), La Situation de la 
France* et let rtformes uicessaires (1873) and La Nation armeo 
C1875). 

WHfBOBO, a town in the Orange Free State, 90 m. N.E. by rail 
of Bloemfontein. Pop. (1004) 1762, of whom 1003 were whites. 
It is built by the banks of a tributary of the Vet affluent of the 
Vaal, and is a trading centre for a large grain and pastoral 
district. It is joined to the trunk railway from Port Elisabeth 
to the Transvaal by a branch line from Smaldeel, 28 m. N.W. 
The town was founded in 1837 by Commandant H. Potgieter, 
one of the voortrekers, and was named by him in commemoration 
of a victory gained over the Matabele chief Mosilikatse. It 
became the capital of a quasi-independent Boer state, which 
included considerable areas north of the Vaal. In 1848 the town 
and district were annexed to Great Britain and thereafter followed 
the fortunes of the Orange river sovereignty (see Orange Fee* 
State). In the Boer War of 1800-1902 Winburg was one of the 
Boer centres in the guerrilla fighting which followed the fall of 
Pretoria. 

WIMCHCOMB, a market town in the northern parliamentary 
division of Gloucestershire, England, 7 m. N.E. of Cheltenham. 
Pop. (1001) 2864. It is picturesquely situated among the 
Cotteswold Hills, in the narrow valley of the Isboume stream. 
The Perpendicular church of St Peter, cruciform, with a central 



7 02 WINCHELSEA, COUNTESS OF— WINCHELSEA, R. 



tower, is a good example of its period. In the vicinity is Sudeley 
Castle, originally built by Thomas Boteler, Lord Sudeley (d. 
1308). By gift of Edward VI. it came into the hands of Sir 
Thomas Seymour, fourth husband of Catherine Parr; this 
queen died here and was buried in the chapel. The castle suffered 
severely at the hands of the parliamentarians in 1644, and 
remained ruinous until 1837, when a careful restoration was 
begun. There are a tower of the 14th century, and considerable 
remains of the 15th, the inhabited portion being mainly of 
Tudor date. There are flour mills, paper-works and tanneries 
at Winchcomb. 

Excavations prove that there were both British and Roman 
settlements at Winchcomb (Wincekumbe, Winchelcumbe). It 
owed its growth to the foundation of religious houses by Oflfa 
and Coenwulf of Mercia in the 8th century. It became a borough 
in Saxon times, was the chief town of a shire to which it gave 
its name, and was the seat of government of the Mercian kings. 
Witenagemots were held there in 771 and 942. Harold, earl of 
Wessex, was the first overlord. It had become a royal borough 
by 1087, and Was granted by a charter of 1224 to the abbots of 
St Mary's to be held of the king by a rent of £50. Winchcomb 
never received a. charter and was not incorporated, but as a 
borough by prescription it was governed by 2 bailiffs and xo 
chief burgesses until the corporate body was dissolved by act 
of parliament in 1883. It was never represented in parliament 
except by its mitred abbots before the dissolution of the 
monasteries. There is no trace of the original grant of a fair 
on July 17 (now held on July 28), but it is mentioned as already 
existing in a charter of 1221, which changed the market day 
from Sunday to Saturday. Elizabeth granted another fair 
on April 25 by charter in 157s. A Tuesday market was also 
granted under this charter, but the Saturday market only is now 
held. Both the modern fairs are horse and cattle fairs, but in the 
middle ages they were centres of the cloth manufacture. Tanning 
has been a local industry since the beginning of the 19th century, 
and paper and silk factories were introduced about 1830. Winch- 
comb took the side of the king in the Civil War and was twice 
plundered. 

See Victoria County History, Gloucestershire; Emma Dent, Annals 
of Winchecombt (1877); David Royce, Winchecombt Cartulary 
(189*). 

WINCHELSEA, ANNE FINCH, Countess op (1661-1720), 
English author, daughter of Sir William Kingsmill of Sidmonton, 
near Southampton, was born in April 1661. Five months later 
her father died, and her mother married in 1662 Sir Thomas 
Ogle. Lady Ogle died in 1664, and nothing is heard of her 
daughter Anne until 1683, when she is mentioned as one of the 
maids of honour of Mary of Modena, duchess of York. She 
married in May 1684 Colonel Heneage Finch, who was attached 
to the duke of York's household. To him she addressed poems 
and versified epistles, in which he figures as Daphnis and she 
as Ardelia. At the Revolution Heneage Finch refused the 
oath of allegiance to William and Mary, and he and his wife had 
no fixed home until they were invited in 1690 to East well Park, 
Kent, by Finch's nephew Charles, 4th earl of Winchelsea, on 
whose death in 1712 Heneage Finch succeeded to the earldom. 
The countess of Winchelsea died in London on the 5th of August 
1720, leaving no issue, her husband surviving until 1726. 

Lady Winchelsea's poems contain many copies of verse 
addressed to her friends and contemporaries. She was to some 
extent a follower of the " matchless Orinda J> in. the fervour of 
her friendships. During her lifetime she published her poem 
" The Spleen " in Gildon's Miscdhny {1701) and a volume of 
Poems in 17x3 which included a tragedy called Artstomenoj. 
With Alexander Pope she was on friendly terms, and one of the 
seven commendatory poems printed with the ijtj edition of " " 
works was by her. But in the farce Thru JJWj afi 
(17x7) attributed to Gay, but really the work of Pope, 
and Gay, she is ridiculed as the learned lady, " 
a character assigned to Pope's hand . Lady 
were almost forgotten when Wordsworth tn the 
mentary to the Preface " of his Potm (tB(s)< 



to her nature-poetry, asserting that with the exception of 
Pope's "Windsor Forest" and her "Nocturnal Reverie,- 
English poetry between Paradise Lost and Thomson's Seasons 
did not present " a single new image of external nature." Words- 
worth sent at Christmas 1819 a MS. of extracts from Lady 
Winchelsea and other writers to Lady Mary Lowther, and his 
correspondence with Alexander Dyce contains some minute 
criticism and appreciation of her poetry. 

Mr Edmund Gosse wrote a notice of her poems for T. H. Ward's 
English Poets (vol. iii., 1880), and in 1884 came into possession of a 
MS- volume of her poems. A complete editbn of her verse, The 
Poems of Anne, Countess of Winchelsea, wasedited by Myra Reynolds 
"~ , - : — — 1903) with an exhaustive essay. See also E, Gosse, 



jossib in a Library (1891), and E. Dowden, Essays, Modern and 
Elizabethan. Wordsworth's anthology for Lady Mary Lowther was 
first printed in 1905 (Oxford). Some of her work remains in MS. in 
the possession of Professor Dowden. 

WINCHELSEA, ROBERT (d. 1313), archbishop of Canterbury, 
was probably born at Old Winchelsea. He studied and then 
taught at the universities of Paris and Oxford, where he attained 
celebrity as a scholar, and became rector of the former, and 
subsequently chancellor of the latter university. He held 
prebcndal stalls in the cathedrals of Lincoln and St Paul's, and 
was made archdeacon of Essex about 1283. In December 129a 
John Peckham, archbishop of Canterbury, died, and early in 
the following year Winchelsea was elected as his successor. 
His consecration, which took place at Aquila in September 1204, 
was delayed owing to the vacancy in the papacy, but he found 
no difficulty in obtaining the temporalities of the see from King 
Edward I. Winchelsea is chiefly renowned as a strenuous 
upholder of the privileges of the clergy and the authority of the 
pope, and as a fearless opponent of Edward I. Strengthened 
by the issue of the papal bull CUricis laicos in x 206, he stimulated 
the clergy to refuse pecuniary assistance to Edward in 1297; 
but after the king had pronounced sentence of outlawry against 
the delinquents he instructed each clerk to decide this question 
for himself. Personally the archbishop still decUned to make 
any contribution towards the expenses of the French war, 
and his lands were seized and held by Edward until July 1397, 
when a somewhat ostentatious reconciliation between king and 
prelate took place at Westminster. He took some part in the 
movement which led to the confirmation of the charters by 
Edward later in the same year, but the struggle with the king 
did not exhaust his energies. He asserted his authority over 
his suffragans to the full; quarrelled with Pope Boniface VIII. 
over the presentation to a Sussex living, and was excommunicated 
by one of the pope's minions; and vigorously contested the 
claim of the archbishop of York to carry his cross erect in the 
province of Canterbury. Before these events, however, the 
quarrel with Edward had been renewed, although Winchelsea 
officiated in 1209 at the king's marriage with Margaret, daughter 
of Philip III., king of France. Joining the barons in demanding 
certain reforms from Edward at the parliament of Lincoln in 
1301, he compelled the king to give way on the main issues; 
but the indignation which followed the claim of Pope Boniface 
to be the protector of Scotland, a claim which was supported 
by Winchelsea, led to the rupture of this alliance. It is probable 
that one of the reasons which led the archbishop to join in these 
proceedings was his hostility to Edwsjt£f--«dvJ»er, Walter 
Langton, bishop of Lichfield, whom Ht soup*! To disgrace bnih 
in England and at Rome, The king chpriihi?-! Ms indignation 
until his friend Clement V. became pope m t jej, when he made 
his Jjnal move flgafwttflM| 1 : ng to Edward's 

envoys, Langlon xbAhH Lincoln. Clement 

nly inploring ihe 

iaicm-stion nl nilaw ' 




WINCHELSEA— WINCHESTER, EARLS & MARQUESSES OF 703 



with Edward II. by a frequent use of spiritual weapons, and took 
part in the proceedings against the Templars. He died at Otford 
on the 1 ith of May 13 13. Miracles were said to have been worked 
at his tomb in Canterbury cathedral, but efforts to procure his 
canonisation were unavailing. Although a secular priest Winchcl- 
sea was somewhat ascetic, and his private tif e was distinguished 
for sanctity and generosity. As an ecclesiastic, however, he was 
haughty and fond of power; and he has been not inappropriately 
described as " the greatest churchman of the time." 

See Chronicles of the Rrigns of Edward /. and Edward //..edited 
with introduction by W. Stubbs (London, 18&2-1883); S. Birching- 
ton, in the Anglia sacra, edited by H. Wharton (London; 1691); 
and W. Stubbs, Constitutional History, vol. ii. (Oxford, 1696). 

WIJfCHBLSBA, a village in the Rye parliamentary division 
of Sussex, England, 9 m. N.E. by E. from. Hastings by the 
South Eastern and Chatham railways. Pop. (1001) 67a It 
stands on an abrupt hill-spur rising above flat lowlands which 
form a southward continuation of Romney marsh. This was 
within historic times a great inlet of the English Channel, and 
Winchelaea was a famous seaport until the 15th century. Two 
antes, the one of the time of Edward I., the other erected early 
in the 15th century, overlook the marshes; a third stands 
at a considerable distance west of the town, its position pointing 
the contrast between the extent of the ancient town and that 
of the shrunken village of to-day. The town was laid out by 
Edward h with regular streets intersecting at right angles; 
the form is preserved, and in a picturesque open space in the 
centre stands the church of St Thomas aBecket This comprises 
only the chancel and aisles of a building which, if entire, would 
rank as one of the finest parish churches in England. As it 
stands it is of the highest interest, showing remarkable Decorated 
work, with windows of beautiful and unusual design, and a 
magnificent series of canopied tombs. In the grounds of the 
residence called the Friars stands the shell of the apsidal choir 
of a Decorated chapel whkh belonged to a Franciscan house. 
Of a Dominican convent and other religious foundations and 
churches there are no remains. 

The town of which the relics have been described was not the 
first of its name. On a site supposed to be about 3 m. S.E., and 
now therefore about 1} m. out in the English Channel, a seaport 
had grown up on a low peninsula. In 1336 and at various 
subsequent dates in the same century this town suffered severely 
from encroachments of the sea, and in 1266 it paid the penalty 
for its adherence to the cause of Simon de Montfort. The waves 
finally obliterated the site in 1288, and Edward I. thereafter 
planted the new town in a safe position. In the 14th and 15th 
centuries Winchelsea was frequently attacked by the French, 
and in 1350 Edward III. defeated the Spaniards in a naval 
action close by. 

In the time of the Confessor Winchelsea (Winchentsd, Win- 
tkdest, Wynckdse) was included in Rameslie which was granted 
by him to the abbey of Fecamp. The town remained under the 
lordship of the abbey until H was resumed by Henry III. Its 
early importance was due to its harbour, and by 1066 it was 
probably already a port of some consequence. By the reign of 
Henry II., if not before, Winchelsea was practically added to the 
Cinque Ports and shared their liberties. After the destruction 
of Old Winchelsea, New Winchelsea, a walled town, flourished 
jar »j> nil a hundred years and provided a large proportion of 
r furnished by the Cinque Ports to the crown; but the 
i French destroyed it, its walls were broken down, 
r of the harbour, owing to the recession of the sea, 
i any later return of its prosperity. The corporation, 
~ a mayor, barons and bailiffs, was dissolved 

Port was summoned to parliament in 
members from 1366 till 1832, when it 
>t of Fecamp seems to have originally 
, _ market was held on Saturdays and a 
but no market or fair now exists. Ship- 
tarried on in the 13th and 14th centuries, 
became a great resort (or smugglers, and 
tructed for the Gascon wine trade were 
I goods. 




WINCHESTER. BAKU AMD MARQUESSES OF. . the title 
of earl of Winchester was first borne by Saier, or Seer, de Quincy, 
who was endowed by King John on the 13th of March 1207, 
with the earldom of Winchester, or the county of Southampton. 
Saier de Quincy was one of the twenty-five barons named to 
enforce the observance of the Great Charter. He served in the 
Crusades at the siege of Damietta in 1219, and died soon after- 
wards, probably on the 3rd of November of that year. His 
second son Roger de Quincy (c. 1105-1264), who is said to have 
usurped the earldom during the absence of his elder brother 
Robert in the Holy Land, took part in the struggle between 
Henry III. and the barons. He died without male issue' in April 
1264, and the earldom reverted to the crown. It was revived 
in 1322 in favour of Hugh le Dcspenser, favourite of King 
Edward II., and was forfeited when he was put to death by the 
barons as a traitor in 1326. In 1472 the title, together with a 
pension of £200 a year from the customs of Southampton, but 
not the right of sitting in parliament, was given by King Edward 
IV. to a Burgundian, Louis de Bruges, lord of Gruthuyse and 
prince of Steenhuyse, as a reward for services rendered to 
himself while an exile on the continent. Louis de Bruges 
surrendered his patent to Henry VII. in 1490. 

The marquessate of Winchester was created in 1551 in favour 
of William Paulet, or Pawlet, K.G., a successful courtier during 
four reigns, who died on the 10th of March 1572. It has de- 
scended in the male line of his family to the sixteenth possessor. 
John Paulet, 2nd marques (c. 1517-1576), was summoned to 
parliament as Baron St John during the life of his father, a 
distinction which was shared by his three immediate successors— 
Wiliiam Paulet (c. x 535-1 598), William Paulet (c. 1560-1628) 
and John Paulet (c. 1508-1674). Charles Paulet, son and heir 
of John Paulet, the eighth marquess, was created duke of Bolton, 
on the 9th of April 1689, and the marquessate of Winchester 
remained In connexion with the duchy of Bolton (q.v.) till the 
death of Harry Paulet, sixth duke and eleventh marquess, 
without male issue in December 1794. There being no make 
representative of the dukes of Bolton this title lapsed, but the 
marquessate of Winchester was inherited by George Paulet 
(1722-1800), great-grandson of Lord Henry Paulet (d. 1672), 
second son of William, the fourth marquess. On George's 
death on the 22nd of April x8oo he was succeeded by his son 
Charles Ingoldesby Burroughs- Paulet (1 764-1843), who, in 1839, 
prefixed the name of Burroughs to his own by royal licence. 
Upon his death on the 29th of November 1843, the title passed 
to his son John Paulet (1801-1887), fourteenth marquess, who 
was succeeded, on the 4th of July 1887, by his son, Augustus 
John Henry Beaumont (1858-1809), officer in the Guards, who 
was killed at Magersfontein during the Boer War on the nth 
of December 1899, and was followed in the peerage by his brother, 
Henry William Montague Paulet (b. 1862). 

Three of the marquesses of Winchester were men of note. 
It is recorded of the founder of the family, William Paulet, that 
when asked how he had contrived to live through a long period 
of troubled times during four reigns, he replied that he came 
of the willow and not of the oak, ortus sum $ salict non ex qutrc*. 
This saying, repeated by Sir Robert Naunton in his Fragmenta 
regalia, may possibly not have been due to the marquess 
himself, but if not it was well invented of a man who passed 
through many dangers and always contrived to keep, or to 
improve, his places. He was the son of Sir John Paulet of 
Basing, near Basingstoke in Hampshire, and his wife Alice or 
Elizabeth, daughter of Sir William Paulet of Hinton St George, 
Somerset. The year of his birth has been variously given as 
1474 and 1485. Between 15x2 and 1527 he was several times 
sheriff of Hampshire. He was knighted before 1525, and in that 
year became privy councillor. He was, henceforth, continually 
employed in the royal household and on the council, but his 
only military service was in the easy suppression of the Pilgrimage 
of Grace in 1536. In X525 he was named master of the wards 
and keeper of the king's widows and idiots, that is to say he had 
the lucrative charge of persons of property who were wards in 
chivalry. He was a member of the House of Commons which 



704 



WINCHESTER 



co-operated with the long in carrying oat the separation of the 
Church from Rome between 1529 and 1536. He served on the 
courts which tried Sir Thomas More and Anne Boleyn, and he 
was employed to tell Catharine of Aragon that she and her 
daughter were degraded from their rank. It is characteristic 
of the type of man that he did his work gently, and with a constant 
recollection of the changes of fortune.. His personal kindness 
to Anne Boleyn, which she acknowledged, no doubt stood him 
in good stead on the accession of her daughter Queen Elizabeth. 
In 1538 he was created Lord St John, and he was enriched by a 
grant of the lands of Netley Abbey, near Southampton. He 
was appointed lord steward of the household, and lord chamber- 
lain, and became a knight of the garter in 1543. Henry VIII. 
named him one of the council of regency for his son Edward VI. 
During the reign of Edward VI., St John kept the favour both 
of the Protector Somerset, who made him lord keeper of the great 
seal, and of Somerset's enemy, the duke of Northumberland, 
who kept him in office. He was created earl of Wiltshire in 
1550, and marquess of Winchester in 1551. On the death of 
Edward VI., he trimmed cleverly between the parties of Lady 
Jane Grey, and Mary Tudor till he saw which was going to win, 
and then threw himself on the winning side. He opposed Queen 
Mary's marriage to Philip, prince of Spain (Philip II.), till he 
saw she was set on it, and then gave his approval, for it was 
his wise rule to show just as much independence as enhanced 
the merit of his obedience. He was lord treasurer under Mary, 
and kept his place under .Elizabeth, to whose ecclesiastical policy 
he gave his usual discreet opposition and final obedience. Win- 
chester died at his house of Basing on the 10th of March 1572. 
He had built it on so grand a scale that his descendants are said 
to have found it necessary to pull down a part. He married, 
first Elizabeth, daughter of Sir William Capcl, Lord Mayor of 
London, by whom he had four sons and four daughters, and then 
Winifred, daughter of Sir John Bruges, alderman of London, 
and widow of Sir Richard Sackville, by whom he had no children. 
It is said that one hundred and three of his descendants were 
alive at the date of his death. 

His grandson, William Paulet, third marquess (c. 1535-1 59 s ) 
was one of the judges of Mary, queen of Scots, and author of a 
book called The Lord Marquesses Idleness which contains a 
Latin acrostic of extreme ingenuity On the words Rcgina nostra 
Angliae. 

The fifth marquess, John Paulet (1628-1674), was a Roman 
Catholic. He lived much in retirement in order to be able to 
pay off debts left by his father. He is remembered by the 
ardour and sincerity of his loyalty to King Charles I. It is said 
that he caused the words "Aimez LoyauU" to be engraved 
on every pane of glass in his house of Basing. During the first 
Civil War it was fortified for the king, and stood a succession 
of sieges by the parliamentary forces between 1643 and 1645. 
On the 14th of October 1645, it was stormed by Oliver Cromwell. 
The marquess, who' fought valiantly, told Hugh Peters, chaplain 
of the New Model Army of the parliament, who had the vulgarity 
to crow over him, " That if the king had no more ground in 
England but Basing House, he would adventure as he did, and 
to maintain it to the utmost," for " that Basing House was 
called Loyalty." The house caught fire during the storm and 
was burnt down, the very ruins being carried away by order of 
the parliament. The marquess was imprisoned in the Tower of 
London, but was finally allowed to compound for his estate; 
after the restoration of King Charles II. he was promised com- 
pensation for his losses, but nothing was given to him. He died 
in Englefield Park on the 5th of March 1674. He was three 
times married, first to Jane, daughter of Viscount Savage, by 
whom he bad one son; then to Honors de Burgh, daughter of 
Richard, earl of St Albans and Clanricarde, by whom he had 
four sons; and then to Isabella Howard, daughter of Viscount 
Stafford. 

See Doyle. Official Baronate (London, 1886); and J. A. Froude, 
History of England (London, 1856-1870}, for the first marquess; 
I. P. Collier, Bibliographical Account of Early English Literaturo 
(London, 1865), for the aecond marquess; and Clarendon, History of 
tiu fUbeUion (Oxford, 1886). for the fifth marquess. 



WINCHESTER, a city and municipal and parliamentary 
borough of Hampshire, England, 66} m. S.W. by W. from 
London by the London & South-Western railway; served 
also by the Southampton branch of the Great Western railway, 
with a separate station. Pop. (1901) 20,929. It occupies a 
hilly and picturesque site in and above the valley of the Itchen, 
lying principally on the left bank. The surrounding hills axe 
chalk downs, but the valley is well wooded. 

Setting aside for the present the legends which place, the 
foundation of a great Christian church at Winchester in the 
2nd century, the erection of Winchester into an episcopal see 
may be placed early in the second half of the 7th century, though 
it cannot be dated exactly. The West Saxon see was removed 
hither from Dorchester on the Thame, and the first bishop of 
Winchester was Hedda (d. 705). The modern diocese includes 
nearly the whole of Hampshire, part of Surrey and very small 
portions of Wiltshire, Dorsetshire and Sussex. St Swithin 
(853-862), well known through the connexion of his feast day 
(15th July) with the superstition that weather-conditions thereon 
determine those of the next forty days, is considered to have 
enlarged the cathedral, as are jEthelwold (963-084) and Alphege 
(984-1005). The history of the Saxon building, however, & 
very slight, and as usual, its place was taken by a Norman one, 
erected by Bishop Walkelin (1070-1098). The cathedral church 
of St Swithin lies in the lower part of the dty in a wide and 
beautiful walled close. It is not very conspicuous from a 
•distance, a low central tower alone rising above the general level 
of the roof. It consists of a nave, transepts, choir and retrochoir, 
all with aisles, and a lady-chapel forms the eastward termination. 
The work of the exterior, of whatever date, is severely plain. 
The cathedral, however, is the longest in England, and indeed 
exceeds any other church of its character in length, which is 
close upon 556 ft. Within, the effect of this feature is very fine. 
The magnificent Perpendicular nave 4s the work of Bishop 
Edinglon (1346-1366) and the famous William of Wykeham 
(1367-1404), by whom only the skeleton of Walkelin's work was 
retained. The massive Norman work of the original building, 
however, remains comparatively intact in both transepts. The 
central tower is Norman, but later than Walkelin's structure, 
which fell in 1107, a mishap which was readily attributed to 
divine wrath because King William II., who fell to the arrow 
in the neighbouring New Forest, had been buried here seven years 
earlier, in spite of his unchristian life. The tomb believed to 
be his is in the choir, but its identity has been widely disputed, 
and even an examination of the remains has failed to establish 
the truth. The choir is largely Edington's work, though the 
clerestory is later, and the eastern part of the cathedral shows 
construction of several dates. Here appears the fine Early 
English construction of Bishop de Lucy (1180-1204), in the 
retrochoir and the lady-chapel, though this was considerably 
altered later. Beneath the cathedral east of the choir there are 
three crypts, connected together. The western and the central 
chambers are Norman, and have apsidal terminations, while 
the eastern is Early English. The cathedral contains many 
objects of interest. The square font of black marble is a fine 
example of Norman art, its sides sculptured with scenes from 
the life of St Nicholas of Myra. The m ?gninornt reredos behind 
the high altar must have been erected late in the z 5th century; 
it consists of a lofty wall, the full width of the choir, pierced 
by two processional doors, and covered with tiersof rich canopied 
niches, the statues in which are modern. A cross of plain ashlar 
stone in the centre shows where an im *?*p*r silver c 
once attached; and a plain rectangular recess above) I 
once contained a massive silver-gilt rotable, i 
and repousse* statuettes and reliefs. A 1 
placed at the interval of one bay behind J 
served to enclose the small chapel tel 
studded with jewels, the gift 1 ' 
the body of St Swithin. U» 
and choir axe a number % 
containing the tojnfe.r' J 
recumbent « 




WINCHESTER 



705 



the most notable are the monuments of Bishops Edington, 
Wykeham, Waynflete, Cardinal Beaufort, Langtoa and Fox. 
The door of iron grills, of beautiful design, now in the north 
nave aisle, is considered to be the oldest work of its character 
in England; its date is placed in the 11th or 12th century. 
The mortuary chests in the presbytery contain the bones of 
Saxon kings who were buried here. The remains were collected 
in this manner by Bishop Henry dc Blois (1 120-1171), and again 
after they had been scattered by the soldiers of CromwclL The 
choir stalls furnish a magnificent example of Decorated wood- 
work, and much stained glass of the Decorated and Perpendicular 
periods remains in fragmentary form. The library contains a 
Vulgate of the 12th century, a finely ornamented MS. on 
vellum. 

In 1905 serious signs of weakness were manifested in the 
fabric of the cathedral, and it was found that a large part of 
the foundation was insecure, being laid on piles, or tree-trunks 
set flat, in soft and watery soil. Extensive works of restoration, 
including the underpinning of the foundations with cement 
concrete (which necessitated the employment of divers), were 
undertaken under the direction of Mr T. G. Jackson. 

Relics of the monastic buildings are slight, and there are 
Early English arches and Perpendicular work in the deanery. 
Other old houses in the Close are very picturesque. Here 
formerly stood the house which Charles II. desired of Ken for 
Nell Gwyu. Ken refused it, but the king bore no malice, settling 
Nell Gwyn in another house near by, and afterwards raising 
Ken to the bishopric of Bath and Wells. 

King Alfred founded a minster immediately north of the 
present site of the cathedral, and here he and other Saxon kings 
were buried. The house, known as Hyde Abbey, was removed 
(as was Alfred's body) to a point outside the walls considerably 
north of the cathedral, during the reign of Henry I. Here 
foundations may be traced, and a gateway remains. To the 
east of the cathedral are ruins of Wolvesey Castle, a foundation 
of Henry de Blois, where the bishops resided. On the southern 
outskirts of the city, in a pleasant meadow by the lichen, is the 
Hospital of St Cross. This also was founded by Henry de Blois, 
in 1 136, whose wish was to provide board and lodging for 13 poor 
men and a daily dinner for 100 others. It was reformed by 
William of Wykeham, and enlarged and mostly rebuilt by 
Cardinal Beaufort (1405-1447). The buildings form three sides 
of a quadrangle, with a lawn and sun-dial in its midst; while the 
fourth side is partly open, and partly formed by the magnificent 
cruciform church. The earliest parts of this building are late 
or transitional Norman, but other parts are Early English or 
Decorated. The work throughout is very rich and massive. 
St Cross is a unique example of a medieval almshouse, and its 
picturesqueness is enhanced by the curious costume of its 
inmates. It is still customary to provide a dole of bread and beer 
to all who desire it. The parish churches of Winchester arc not 
of special interest, but the church of St Swithin is curious as 
occupying the upper part of the King's Gate. This gate and the 
West Gate alone remain of the gates in the walls which formerly 
surrounded the city. The West Gate is a fine structure of the 
13th century. In the High Street stands the graceful Per- 
pendicular city cross. The county hall embodies remains of the 
Norman castle, and in it is preserved the so-called King Arthur's 
round table. This is supposed to date actually from the time 
of King Stephen, but the painted designs upon it are of the 

I famous as an educational centre, and in addition 

[^College there are several modern preparatory 

"*~ • of St Mary, lying to the south of the 

atcst of English public schools. 

: here from very early 

r by William of Wykeham, 

braced this foundation 

t members on the founda- 

i chaplains, 70 scholars 

3 were completed about 

e fine chapel, tower, hall 




and cloister are noteworthy, and there are. extensive modern 

buildings. 

The principal public buildings of the city are the gild-hall, 
public library and art school, museum, market house, mechanics' 
institution and barracks. The parliamentary borough returns 
one member and falls within the Andover division of the county. 
The corporation consists of a mayor, 6 aldermen and 18 
councillors. Area, 1931 acres. 

History.— Tht history of the earliest Winchester (Winlon, 
Wynton) is lost in legend; tradition ascribes its foundation to 
Ludor Rous Hudibras and dates it ninety-nine years before the 
first building of Rome; earthworks and relics show that the 
Itchen valley was occupied by Celts, and it is certain from its 
position at the centre of six Roman roads and from the Roman 
relics found there that the Caer Gwent (White City) of the Celts 
was, under the name of Venta Bdgarum, an important Romano- 
British country town. Hardly any traces of this survive*, but 
mosaic pavements-, coins, &c, have been discovered on the 
south side of High Street. The name of Winchester is indis- 
solubly linked with that of King Arthur and his knights, but its 
historical greatness begins when, after the conquest of the present 
Hampshire by the Gcwissas, it became the capital of Wessex. 
Its importance was increased by the introduction of Christianity, 
although it was not at first the scat of a bishop, because, accord- 
ing to the later Winchester chronicler. King Cynegils wished 
for time to build a worthy church in the royal city; bis son 
Cenwalh is said to have built the old minster. When the kings 
of Wessex became kings of all England, Winchester became, 
in a sense, the capital of England, though it always had a formid- 
able rival in London, which was more central in position and 
possessed greater commercial advantages. The parallel position 
of the two cities in Anglo-Saxon times is illustrated by the law 
of Edgar, ordaining that the standard of weights and measures 
for the whole kingdom should be " such as is observed at London 
and at Winchester." Under Alfred it became a centre of learning 
and education, to which distinguished strangers, such as St 
Grimbald and Asser the Welshman, resorted. It was the seat of 
Canute's government; many of the kings, including Ecgberht, 
Alfred, Edward the Elder and Canute, were buried there, and, 
in 1043, Edward the Confessor was crowned in the old minster. 
The city was sometimes granted as part of the dowry of a queen 
consort, and it was the home of Emma, the wife of /Ethclred 
the Unready and of Canute, and latex of Edith, the wife of the 
Confessor. 

Winchester was very prosperous in the years succeeding the 
Conquest, and its omission, together with London, from Domes- 
day Book is probably an indication of its peculiar position and 
importance; its proximity to the New Forest commended it 
to the Norman kings, and Southampton, only 12 m. distant, was 
one of the chief ports for the continent. The Conqueror wore 
his crown in state at Winchester every Easter, as he wore it 
at Westminster at Whitsuntide and at Gloucester at Christmas. 
The royal treasure continued to be stored there as it bad been 
in Anglo-Saxon times, and was there seized by William Rufus, 
who, after his father's death, " rode to Winchester and opened 
the Treasure House." In the reign of Stephen and again in the 
reign of Henry II. the Court of Exchequer was held at Winchester, 
and the charter of John promises that the exchequer and the 
mint shall ever remain in the city; the mint was an important 
one, and when in 1 125 all the coiners of England were tried for 
false coining those of Winchester alone were acquitted with 
honour. 

Under the Norman kings Winchester was of great commercial 
importance; it was one of the earliest seats of the woollen trade, 
which in its different branches was the chief industry of the town, 
although the evidence furnished by the liUr Winlon (temp. 
Henry L and Stephen) indicates also a varied industrial life. 
As early as the reign of Henry I. the gfld of weavers is mentioned, 
and the millers at the same date render their account to the 
exchequer. 

The gild merchant of Winchester claims an Anglo-Saxon 
origin, but the first authentic reference to it is in one of the 



706 



WINCHESTER 



charters granted to the city by Henry II. The Liber Win ton 
speaks of a " cnihts' gild/' which certainly existed in the time of 
the Confessor. The prosperity of Winchester was increased 
by the St Giles's Fair, originally granted by Rufus to Bishop 
Walkelin. It was held on St Giles's Hill up to the 19th century, 
and in the middle ages was one of the chief commercial events 
of the year. While it lasted St Giles's Hill was covered by 
a busy town, and no trade was permitted to be done outside 
the fair within seven leagues, or at Southampton; the juris- 
diction of the mayor and bailiffs of the city was in abeyance, 
that of the bishop's officials taking its place. 

From the time of the Conqueror until their expulsion by 
Edward I., Winchester was the home of a large colony of Jews, 
whose quarter in the city- is marked to the present day by 
Jewry Street; Winchester is called by Richard of Devizes " the 
Jerusalem of England" on account of its kind treatment of 
its Jews, and there alone no anti-Jewish riots broke out after 
the coronation of Richard I. The corporation of Winchester 
claims to be one of the oldest in England, but the earliest existing 
charters are two given by Henry II., one merely granting to 
" my citizens of Winchester, who are of the gild merchant with 
their goods, freedom from toll, passage and custom," the other 
confirming to them all liberties and customs which they enjoyed 
in the time of Henry I.; further charters, amplified and con- 
firmed by succeeding sovereigns, were granted by Richard I. 
and John. The governing charter till 1835 was that of 1587, 
incorporating the city under the title of the " Mayor, Bailiffs 
and Commonalty of the City of Winchester "; this is the first 
charter which mentions a mayor, but it says that such an officer 
had existed " time out of mind," and as early as 897 the town 
was governed by a wiegcrefa, by name Bcornwulf , whose death 
is recorded in the Anglo-Saxon Chronicle. There is a doubtful 
reference to a mayor in n 94, and the office certainly existed 
early in the 13th century. Until 1832 the liberty of the soke 
encompassing the city on almost every side was outside the 
jurisdiction of tfie city magistrates, being under the seignioralty 
of the bishop of Winchester. 

Winchester seems to have reached its zenith of prosperity 
at the beginning of the 12th century; the first check was given 
during the civil wars of Stephen's reign, when the city was 
burned. However, the last entry concerning it in the Anglo- 
Saxon Chronicle says that Henry Plantagenet, after the treaty 
of Wallingford, was received with " great worship" in Winchester 
and London, thus recognizing the equality of the two cities; 
but the latter was rising at Winchester's expense, and at the 
second coronation of Richard I. (1294) the citizens of Winchester 
had the significant mortification of seeing in their own dty the 
citizens of London take their place as cupbearers to the king. 
The loss of Normandy further favoured the rise of London by 
depriving Winchester of the advantages it had enjoyed from its 
convenient position with regard to the continent. Moreover, 
it suffered severely at the hands of Simon de Montfort the 
Younger (1265), although it still continued to be an occasional 
royal residence, and the Statute of Winchester (1285) was passed 
in a council held there. Meanwhile the woollen trade had drifted 
in great measure to the east of England; and an attempt made 
to revive the prosperity of Winchester in the 14th century by 
making it cne of the staple towns proved unsuccessful. The 
wine trade, which had been considerable, waa ruined by the 
sack of Southampton (1338); 1 few years later the dty was 
devastated by the black death > and the charter oE Elii&beth 
speaks of "our city of Winchester now fallen into great ruin. 
decay and poverty." During the Civil War the city suffered 
much for its loyalty to Charles I, and lost its ancient castle 
founded by William I. After the Restoration a scheme was 
started to restore trade by making the lichen navigable 
Southampton, but neither then nor when revived in ih 
century was it successful. Charles II., imendi 
Winchester again a royal residence, began a 
being unfinished at his death was used evmi 
It was burnt down in r8o4 and rebuilt in 
Southgate were pulled down in 1781. 



Westgate still stands at the top of the High Street. The guard- 
room was formerly used as a debtors' prison, now as a museum. 
The two weekly markets, still held in the Corn Exchange of 
Wednesday and Saturday, were confirmed by Elizabeth's 
charter; the latter dates from a grant of Henry VI. abolishing 
the Sunday market, which had existed from early times. The 
same grant established three fairs — one on October 13 (the day 
of the translation of St Edward, king and confessor), one on the 
Monday and Tuesday of the first week in Lent, and another on 
St Swithin*s day; the former two are still held. Winchester 
sent two members to parliament from .1295 to 1885, when the 
representation was reduced to one. 

WINCHESTER, a town and the county-scat of Clark county, 
Kentucky, U.S.A., in the E. part of the Blue Grass region of 
the state, about 18 m. E. by S. of Lexington. Pop. (1800) 45x9; 
(1900) 5964, including 3128 negroes; (1910) 7156. It is served 
by the Louisville & Nashville, the Chesapeake & Ohio and the 
Lexington & Eastern railways, the last being a short road (from 
Lexington to Jackson) extending into the mineral and timber 
region of Eastern Kentucky. The town is the seat of the Ken- 
tucky Wesleyan College (co-educational; Methodist Episcopal, 
South), opened in 1866, and of the Winchester Trades and 
Industrial School (1900). Winchester is in an agricultural, 
lumbering and stock-raising region, and has various manufactures. 
It was first incorporated in 1792. 

WINCHESTER, a township of Middlesex county, Massa- 
chusetts, U.S.A., about 8 m. W. of Boston at the head of Upper 
Mystic Pond, one of the sources of the Mystic river. Pop. ( 1 000) 
7248, of whom 1968 were foreign-born and 140 were negroes; 
(1910) 9309. Area, 6 sq. m. Winchester is served by the 
southern division of the Boston & Maine railway, and is connected 
with Boston, Arlington, Med ford, Stoneham and Wobura by 
electric lines. It is chiefly a residential suburb of $oston« 
Through the centre of the township winds the Aberjona river, 
which empties into Mystic Pond, in Winchester township, both 
favourite resorts for canoeing, &c. Wedge Pond and Winter 
Pond, in the centre of the township, are clear and beautiful 
sheets of water. The streets of Winchester are heavily shaded, 
the view as presented from the neighbouring hills being that of a 
continuous forest stretching from the beautiful Mystic Valley 
parkway (of the Metropolitan park system), of which more than 
one-half (50*2 acres) is in the southern part of the, township, to 
the Middlesex Fells Reservation (another Metropolitan park) 
of which 261-9 acres are in the eastern part; and there are a 
large public playground and a common. Horn Pond Mountain 
and Indian Hill are about 320 ft. above sea-level. One of trie 
pleasantest residential districts is Rangely, a restricted private 
park. The town-hall and library building is a fine structure; 
the library contains about 20,000 volumes, and the museum and 
collections of the Winchester Historical and Genealogical Society. 
The principal manufactures are leather and felt goods* 

Winchester was originally within the limits of Charlestown. 
In 1638 allotments of land between the Mystic Pond and the 
present Woburn were made to various Charlestown settlers, 
including John Harvard and Increase Nowell (1590-1655), 
secretary of the Massachusetts Bay Colony in 1644-1649, and 
the new settlement was called Waterfield. Most of this territory 
in 1642 was incorporated in Woburn and was called South 
Wobum. In 1S50 Winchester vf« separately incorporated, 
parts of Arlington (then West Cambridge} tnd Med ford going 
to make up its area, and was natn'd ii> honour of Colonel W. P. 
Winchester ul Wrtiert#wn, who left to the township a legacy 
for munic ipal 5 

WmCKEFTtSt div and the county-seat 

x 105 

& 

.try 

above 

site 

Sji-Valley 

irndftt library 




WINCKELMANN 



707 



(1910), a memorial to John Handley, a part of whose estate 
was bequeathed to establish industrial schools lor the poor oi 
Winchester, and an auditorium are owned by the municipality. 
The United States National Military Cemetery at Winchester 
contains the graves of 4480 Union soldiers, 2382 of them unknown, 
and adjoining it is the Confederate Stonewall Cemetery, with 
about 8000 graves. The manufacture of gloves is the leading 
industry; among the other manufactures are woollen and knit 
goods, flour, leather, lumber, paper and bricks. Electricity, 
generated at the Shenandoah river, is used for power in many 
of the factories. 

A settlement was established in this vicinity as early as 1732. 
In 1752 the present name was adopted and the town was estab- 
lished by act of the colonial legislature. In 1756, during the 
Seven Years' War, George Washington, in command of the 
provincial troops of Virginia, established his headquarters here 
and built Fort Loudoun. The town was incorporated in 1770. 
The Virgsnta CaxetU and Winchester Advertiser, the first news- 
paper published in the Shenandoah Valley, was established here 
in 1787. In the Civil War, Winchester, because of its position 
in the lower Shenandoah Valley, played a great part, and was 
several times the scene of engagements between the Union 
and Confederate forces— in 1862, Jackson's actions of Kerns- 
town and Winchester; in the Gettysburg campaign,, the capture 
of a Union garrison by Ewell (14-15 June 1863); and in Sheridan's 
campaign of 1864 the battle of Winchester or Opequon 
(Sept. 19, 1S64), for all of which see Shenandoah Valley 
Campaigns. Winchester was chartered as a city in 1852 and in 
1006 the corporate limits were enlarged. 

See J. E. Norris (ed.), History of the Lower Shenandoah VaUey 
(Chicago, 1890). and T. K. Cartmell, Shenandoah Valley Pioneers 
(Winchester, 1909). 

WWCKELMAinr, JOHAMN JOACHIM (1717-1768), German 
archaeologist, was born at Stendal in Brandenburg on the 9th 
of December 17 17, the son of a poor shoemaker. He attended 
a gymnasium at Berlin and the school at Salzwedel, and in 1758 
was induced to go as a student of theology to Halle. But he 
was no theologian, and he soon devoted himself with enthusiasm 
to Greek art and literature. With the intention of becoming 
a physician he attended medical classes at Jena; but means 
were insufficient and he was obliged to accept a tutorship near 
Magdeburg. From 1743 to 1748 he was associate-rector of a 
school at Seehausen in the Altraark. He then went to Ndthenitz 
near Dresden as librarian to Count Henry von Bunau, for whose 
history of the Holy Roman empire he collected materials. The 
treasures in the Dresden gallery awakened an Intense interest 
in art, which was deepened by association with various artists, 
and especially with A. F. Oeser, who afterwards exercised so 
powerful an influence over Goethe. Winckelmann's study of 
ancient literature had inspired him with a desire to visit Rome, 
and he became librarian to Cardinal Passionei in 1754. This 
compelled him reluctantly to join the Roman Catholic Church. 

In 1755, before leaving for Rome, Winckelmann published 
bis Gedanken fiber die Nachahmung der gruchischen Werke in 
MaUrei und Bildhauerhmsi ("Thoughts on the Imitation of 
Greek Works in Painting and Sculpture"), followed by a 
pretended attack on the work, and a defence of its principles, 
nominally by an impartial critic. The Cedanhen contains the 
first statement of the doctrines he afterwards developed, and 
was warmly admired not only for the ideas it contained but for 
its style. Augustus III., elector of Saxony and king of Poland, 
granted him a pension of 200 thalers, that he might prosecute 
his studies in Rome. He arrived in Rome in November 1755, 
became librarian to Cardinal Archinto, and received much 
kindness from Cardinal Passionei. After their deaths he was 
i and as a friend into the house of Cardinal 
forming his magnificent collection at Porta 
63, while retaining this position, Winckelmann 
t of antiquities. 

rlf earnestly, at first with the aid of his friend 
to the study of Roman antiquities, and gradually 
utrivalled knowledge of ancient art. In 1760 




appeared his Description des pierrts gravies dm feu Bare* da 
Stosch; in 1762 his Anmerkungen liber die Bauhunst der Allen 
(" Observations on the Architecture of the Ancients "), including 
an account of the temples at Paestum. In 1758 and 1762 he 
visited Naples, and from his Sendschreiben von den herculanischen 
Entdexhungen (1762) and his Nachricht von den neuesten her- 
culanischen Entdeckungen (1764) scholars obtained their first 
real information about the -treasures excavated at Pompeii and 
Heiculaneum. Winckelmann again visited Naples in 1765 
and 1767, and wrote for the use of the electoral prince and 
princess of Saxony his Briefe an Bianami, which were published, 
eleven years after his death, in the Aniologia romana. His 
masterpiece, the Ccschichte der Kunst des Allerlhums (" History 
of Ancient Art "), issued in 1764, was soon recognized as a 
permanent contribution to European literature. In this work 
Winckelmann sets forth both the history of Greek art and the 
principles on which it seemed to him to be based. He also 
presents a glowing picture of the conditions, political, social and 
intellectual, which tended to foster creative activity in ancient 
Greece. The fundamental idea of his theory is that the end of 
art is beauty, and that this end can be attained only when 
individual and characteristic features are strictly subordinated 
to the artist's general scheme. The true artist, selecting from 
nature the phenomena fitted for his purpose, and combining 
them through the imagination, creates an ideal type marked 
in action by " noble simplicity and calm greatness " — an ideal 
type in which normal proportions are maintained, particular 
parts, such as muscles and veins, not being permitted to break 
the harmony of the general outlines. In the historical portion 
he used not only the works of art he himself had studied but the 
scattered notices on the subject to be found in ancient writers; 
and his wide knowledge and active imagination enabled him to 
offer many fruitful suggestions as to periods about which he had 
little direct information. Irlany of his conclusions based on the 
inadequate evidence of Roman copies have been modified or 
reversed by subsequent research, but the fine enthusiasm of 
the work, its strong and yet graceful style, and its vivid descrip- 
tions of works of art give it enduring value and interest. It 
marked an epoch by indicating the spirit in which the study of 
Greek art should be approached, and the methods by which 
investigators might hope to attain to solid results. To Winckel- 
mann's contemporaries it came as a revelation, and exercised 
a profound influence on the best minds of the age. It was read 
with intense interest by Leasing, who had found in the earliest 
of Winckelmann's works the starting-point for his Laocoon. 

Winckelmann contributed various admirable essays to the 
BibRothck der schSncnWissenschafien; and in 1766 he published 
his Versnch et]ner Allegoric, which, although containing the results 
of much thought and reading, is not conceived in a thoroughly * 
critical spirit. Of far greater importance was the splendid 
work entitled Uonumenti antichi inediii (1 767-1 768), prefaced 
by a TraUato prelinmare, presenting a general sketch of the 
history of art. The plates in this work are representations of 
objects which had either been falsely explained or not explained 
at all. Winckelmann's explanations were of the highest service 
to archaeology, by showing that in the case of many works oi 
art supposed to be connected with Roman history the ultimate 
sources of inspiration were to be found in Homer. 

In 1768 Winckelmann went to Vienna, where he was received 
with honour by Maria Theresa. At Trieste on his way back ho 
was murdered in an bote! by a man named Arcangeli to whom 
he had shown some coins presented by Maria Theresa (June 8th, 
1768). He was buried in the churchyard of the cathedral of 
St Giusto at Trieste, 

An edition of his works was begun by Fernow in 1808 and com- 
pleted by Meyer and Schulze (1808-1820). There are admirable 
studies 01 his character and work in Goethe's Winckelmann und sein 
Jahrknndert (1S05), to which contributions were made by Meyer and 
Wolf, and in Walter Pater's Renaissance (1902). The best biography 
of Winckelmann is by Justi, Winckelmann und seine Zeitgenossen 
(2nd ed.. 3 vols.. Leipzig, 1898). A collection of letters, Briefe an 
seine Zuricher Freunde, was published by BlQmner (Freiburg, 1882I 

U.SMj.alM.) 



708 



WIND— WINDHAM 



WIND (a common Tent, word, cognate with Skt. vatas, Lat. 
mttus, d. "weather," to be of course distinguished from to 
" wind," to coil or twist, O.Eng. windan, cf. "wander," "wend," 
&c.)t a natural motion of the air, a current of air coming from any 
particular direction or with any degree of velocity. For the 
general account of winds, their causes, &c, see Meteorology. 
Winds may be classified according to the strength or velocity 
with which they blow, varying from a calm, a breeze to a gale, 
storm or hurricane; for the varying scale of velocity per hour 
of these see Beaufort Scale, and for the measurement Anemo- 
meter. Another classification divides them into " regular" or 
"constant" winds, such as the "trade winds" (q.v.), and 
" periodic" winds, such as the " monsoon " (q.v.). There are 
many special winds, such as the " Foiin," "chinook," " mistral," 
" harmattan," " sirocco," which are treated under their in- 
dividual names. For the group of musical instruments known 
by the generic name of Wind Instruments see that heading. 

WINDAU (Russian Vindava, Lettish Wcntcpils), a seaport 
and sea-bathing resort of western Russia, in the government 
of Courland, at the mouth of the Windau, on the Baltic Sea, 
no m. by rail N.W. of Riga. Pop. (1807), 713a. It has a castle 
built in X2oo. The harbour, 20 and 25 ft. deep, is free from ice 
all the year round. Timber, grain and other commodities are 
exported to the annual value of two to three millions sterling; 
the imports range between three-quarters and one million 
sterling. 

WIND BRACES* in architecture, diagonal braces to tie the 
rafters of a roof together and prevent " racking." In the better 
sort of medieval roofs they are arched, and run from the principal 
rafters to catch the purlins. 

WINDEBANK, SIR FRANCIS (1582-1646), English secretary 
of state, was the only son of Sir Thomas Windebank of Hougham, 
Lines., who owed his advancement to the Cecil family. Francis 
entered St John's College, Oxford, in 1599, coming there under 
the influence of Laud. After a few years' continental travel 
(1605-1608), he was employed for many years in minor public 
offices, and became clerk of the council. In June 1032 he was 
appointed by Charles I. secretary of state in succession to Lord 
Dorchester, his senior colleague being Sir John Coke, and he 
was knighted. His appointment was mainly due to his Spanish 
and Roman Catholic sympathies. The first earl of Portland, 
Francis, Lord Cottington, and Windebank formed an inner 
group in the council, and with their aid the king carried on 
various secret negotiations, especially with Spain. In December 
1634 Windebank was appointed to discuss with the papal agent 
Gregorio Panzani the possibility of a union between the Anglican 
and Roman Churches, and expressed the opinion that the Puritan 
opposition might be crippled by sending their leaders to the war 
in the Netherlands. Windebank's efforts as treasury com- 
missioner in 1635 to shield some of those guilty of corruption led 
to a breach with Archbishop Laud, and the next year be was 
for a time disgraced for issuing an order for the conveyance of 
Spanish money to pay the Spanish troops in the Netherlands. 
In July 1638 he urged upon the king instant war with the Scots, 
and in 1640, when tumults were breaking out in England, he 
sent an appeal from the queen to the pope for money and men. 
He was elected in March 1640 member of the Short Parliament 
for Oxford University, and be entered the Long Parliament in 
October as member for Corf c. In Decern be r the House learm that 
be had signed letters of grace to recusant priests and Jesuits, 
and summoned him to answer the charge, but with the king's 
connivance he fled to Fmnte. From Calais he wrote to Uie 
first Lord Hat ton, defending his integrity, and affirming his belief 
that the church of England was the pun-i( and nearest the 
primitive Church. He remained in Paris until his J cat 
xst of September X646, shortly after he to 
the Roman communion, 

WINDERMERE, the Largest lake In 
eastern part of the Lake District (if 
Westmorland, the boundary wit^> 
the head southward along the 
and northward along about 01 



It forms a narrow trough with a slightly curved axis of xo| m. 
The width at right angles to the axis never reaches 1 m. The 
area is 5*69 sq. m. The shores are generally steep, beautifully 
wooded and fretted with numerous little sheltered bays. The 
hills immediately surrounding the lake rarely reach 1000 ft., 
but the distant views of the mountains to the north and west 
contrast finely with the sylvan beauty of the lake itself. The 
middle of the lake, immediately opposite Bowness, is especially 
beautiful, for here a group of islands (Belle Isle, Thompson's 
Holme, the Lilies and others) divide the lake into two basins, 
the water about them seldom exceeding 50 ft. in depth. On the 
other hand, the greatest depth sounded in the northern basin is 
219 ft., and in the southern 134. The lake receives the Rothay 
and Brathay streams at the head; Trout Beck also flows into the 
north basin, and Cunsey Beck from Esthwaite into the south. 
The lake is drained by the Leven. Steamers belonging to the 
Furness Railway Company ply regularly on Windermere, the 
chief stations being Lakeside, the terminus of a branch railway, 
beautifully situated at the foot, Ferry on the west shore below 
the islands, Bowness on the east and Waterhead, at the bead, 
for Ambleside. The lake contains perch, pike, trout and char; 
there are several large hotels at Bowness and elsewhere on its 
shores. 

The town of Windermere, above the eastern shore adjacent 
to Bowness (q.v.), is in the Appleby parliamentary division of 
Westmorland, and is the terminus of a branch of the London 
and North- Western railway from Oxenholroe junction. Numer- 
ous mansions and villas have grown up in the vicinity. Here, 
from Orrest Head, in the grounds of Elleray, where lived Pro- 
fessor Wilson (Christopher North), superb views over the whole 
lake and its surroundings are obtained. In 1005 Bowness and 
Windermere were united as a single urban district. 

WINDHAM, WILLIAM (1750-1810), English politician, came 
from an ancient family long resident at Felbrigg, near Cramer in 
Norfolk. His father, Colonel William Windham ( 1 7 1 7-1 761 ) was 
an adventurous soldier with a taste for languages, both ancient 
and modern; his son was bom in Golden Square, London, on 
the 3rd of May 1 7 5a He went to Eton, which he quitted in 1 766 
for the university of Glasgow, where he acquired the taste for 
mathematics which always distinguished, him. In 1767 he 
matriculated as gentleman commoner at University College, 
Oxford, where he remained until 1771.. He never took the degree 
of B.A., but qualified as M.A. on the 7th of October 1782, and 
received the degree of D.C.L. on the 3rd of July 1793. He made 
a tour in Norway in 1773 and visited Switzerland and Italy 
between 1778 and 1780. His maiden speech on the political 
platform was delivered at Norwich on the 28th of January 1778, 
when he vehemently opposed the prosecution of the American 
war. His entrance into public life took place in April 1783, 
when he went to Ireland as chief secretary to Lord Northington, 
the lord-lieutenant in the coalition ministry of Fox and Lord 
North. Windham was his own keenest critic, his distrust in 
his own powers and his disappointment at his own achievements 
being conspicuous on every page of his Diary. Sickness com- 
pelled his return to England early in July 1783, and he resigned 
his position in August; but change of scene and constant 
exercise restored Win to health before the end of that year. 



In April 1784 h< 
Xonvich by * tn» 
attain* 
*J Hi 5 *£*t£MMMl 
of hi* 




to parliament as member for 
ea, ihuf. scoring one of the few 
:nii of the coalition cabinet 
■then he was beaten on account 
jfr year. 

.<n! all proposals for parlia* 
>vt9 deeply corn- 
party until after 
and several 
j-at-war was 
t he same time 
1 the cabinet, 
•flagging zeal, 
cliorating the 
be autumn of 



WIND INSTRUMENTS 



709 



1794 he was despatched to the -duke of York*s camp in Flanders 
with the views of his ministerial colleagues, but their advice 
could not counteract the military incapacity of the royal duke. 
When Pitt was frustrated in his intention of freeing the Roman 
Catholics from their political disabilities, Windham, who in 
religious matters always inclined to liberal opinions, was one of 
the ministers who retired from office in February 1801. He 
was a constant opponent of all negotiations for peace with France, 
prefer ri ng to prosecute the campaign at whatever cost until 
some decisive victory had been gained, and the temporary peace 
of Amiens, which was carried through under Addjngton's 
administration, did not meet with his approval. When he was 
ousted from the representation of Norwich in June 2602, a seat 
for the pocket borough of St Mawcs in Cornwall was found, for 
him. He declined a place in Pitt's new cabinet (May 1804) on 
the ground that the exclusion of Fox prevented the formation 
of an administration sufficiently strong in' parliament and the 
country to cope with the dangers which threatened the safety 
of the nation, and he offered a general opposition to the measures 
which the prime minister proposed. On Pitt's death in January 
1806 the ministry of " All the Talents " was formed under the 
leadership of Lord Grenville, and Windham accepted the seals 
as secretary of state for war and the colonies. Fox's death 
necessitated several official changes; and a peerage was proposed 
for Windham, but he declined the proffered honour, and re- 
mained in office as long as the ministry existed. A general 
election took place in November 1806 and Windham was elected 
for the county of Norfolk; but the election was declared void 
on petition, and he was compelled to sit for the borough of New 
Romitey, for which he had also been elected. In 1807, when 
parliament was dissolved under the influence of the "No 
Popery " cry of Spencer Perceval, a seat was found for Windham 
at Higham Ferrers. Liberty of religious opinion he uniformly 
supported at all periods of his life, and with equal consistency he 
opposed all outbreaks of religious fanaticism; hence with these 
convictions in his mind few of the domestic measures of the new 
ministers met with his approbation. Moreover, he disapproved of 
the expedition to the Scheldt, and thought the charges brought 
against the Duke of York, as commander-in-chief, required 
his retirement from office. At the same time he actively 
opposed the bill of Sir Samuel Romilly, his colleague on most 
political questions, for reducing the number of offences visited 
with the punishment of death. In July 1800 he received a blow 
on the hip whilst rendering assistance at a fire, which he thought 
little of at the time; but a tumour subsequently formed on the 
spot and an operation became necessary. This brought on a 
fever, and Windham rapidly sank. He died on the 4th of June 
1810, and was buried in the family vault at Felbrigg. 

HI* speeches were published in three volumes in 1806, with a 
memoir by Thomas Amypt, his private secretary while he was in 
office in 1806, and his Diary was edited by Mrs Henry Baring in 
1866. The passages in the latter work relative to Dr Johnson's 
declining days have been of considerable use to the later editors of 



WIND nKTRUmRS (Fr. instruments d ft**, Ger. Bias- 
instrumente, Ital. strumenU da fiaio), a numerous and powerful 
tectkm of the orchestra, classified according to the acoustic 
properties of the Instruments and to certain important structural 
features. The first great natural subdivision is that of (A) 
mouth blown, and (B) mechanically blown, instruments. 

Section A falls into the classes of (z) wood wind* (a) brass 
wind, with their numerous subdivisions. 

f. (a) Wood ITinrf.— Pipes without embouchure or mouthpiece, 
such as the ancient Egyptian 11417, a long flute with narrow bore 
■--"-•-" |ue|y, and the syrinx or pan-pipes, both of which are blown 
the breath not into the pipe but across the open end, so 
s against the sharp edge of the rim. (b) Pipes with 
it no mouthpiece, such as the transverse flute, piccolo 
#te Flute and MotrrnriECB. (c) Pipes with whistle 
fit, an ancient contrivance, extensively used by primitive 
•ages, which finds application at the present day in the 
It whistle, and in organ pipes known as the flue-work. 
it of medieval instruments, widely diffused but now 
t known as recorders, beak or fippicvflutes, Mus a bee, 
Huies angfaiut (Fr.), Piock or Blochflitm, Scknabtifidtm 




(Ger.). (d) Reed instruments, by which are to be understood not reed 
pipes but instruments with reed mouthpieces, which subdivide again 
into two families owing to the very different acoustic conditions pro- 
duced by the combination of a reed mouthpiece with ( 1 ) a cylindrical 
pipe and (2) a conical pipe. These combinations influence not only the 
timbre, but principally the harmonics obtained by overblowing and 
used to supplement the fundamental scale given out as the lateral 
holes are uncovered One by one; the practical difference to the 
performer may be summed up as one of fingering, (di) comprises 
pipes with cylindrical bore with either single or double reed mouth- 
piece, such as the clarinet family, the obsolete batyphone (*.».) and 
the family of cromorncs («.».). To these we may add theaulosand 
tibia of ancient Greece,and Rome, which at different tiroes bad single 
and double reed mouthpieces. These pipes all overblow a twelfth. 
(d2) Pipes with conical bore and either single or double reed mouth- 
piece. This class comprises the important members of the oboe 
family (with double reed) derived from the Schalmey and Pommer of 
the middle ages, the Schryori, an instrument which had an ephemeral 
existence at the end of the 16th century and consisted of an inverted 
cone with a double reed placed within a pirouette or capsule, which 
had the remit of restricting the compass of the instrument to the 
fundamental scale, for harmonics can only be produced when the 
reed is controlled by the lips (see Reed Instruments). The modern 
family of saxophones with single reed mouthpiece, intended to 
replace the clarinets in military bands, may be classed with the 
wood wind, although actually made of brass for durability. The 
same may be said 01 the sarrusophonea, a family of brass oboes with 
double reed, invented by M. Sarrus to replace the oboe in military 
bands. To these we may add the Cheni (q.v.) of Chinese organ, 
consisting of a set of pipes arranged in a hollow gourd and sounded 
by means of free-reeds, the air being fed to the pipes in the reservoir 
by the mouth through a pipe shaped like the spout of a tea-pot. 
The Cheng Uimportant,asembodying the principle of the harmonium. 
(e) Wooden tubes of conical bore having lateral holes and sometimes 
from one to three keys, played by 1 



... . . of a cup or funnel mouth- 

piece, such as the obsolete comet {$».) or Zinke, which enjoyed such 
widespread popularity during the 16th and 17th centuries, and 
their bass the serpent. # The bagpipe and its drones and chaunter 
are indirectly mouthblown, with the exception of the Union or Irish 
and of the Border bagpipes, and of the French bagpipe known as 
musette, in which the bag is fed with air by means of bellows, instead 
of through an insufflation pipe. 

2. The Brass Wind consists of the following classes: (a) Tubes of 
fixed length, such as the natural trumpet and French horn, all 
medieval horns and trumpets, including the busine, the tuba, the 
oltphant, the hunting horn and the bugle, the classical buccina, 
cornu, lituus and tuba. The compass of all these was restricted to 
the few notes of the harmonic series obtained by overblowing. (0) 
Tubes of which the length is varied by a slide, such as the ssckbut 
family, the slide trombone and slide trumpet. When the slide is 
drawn out the column of air b lengthened and the pitch proportion- 
aily lowered. Each position or shift of the slide enables the per- 
former to overblow the harmonic series a semitone lower, "(c) Tubes 
of which the length is varied by lateral holes and keys. To this class 
belong the keyed bugle and its bass the ophideide, the obsolete 
keyed trumpet and the bass horns and Russian bassoon, which 
immediately preceded the invention of valves. The saxophones 
and sarmsopbones might also be classed with these (see above, I da). 
(d) Tubes 01 which the length is varied by valves or pistons. This 
class is the most modern of all, dating from the invention of valves 
in 18 15, which revolutionized the technique and scoring for brass 
instruments. A rational subdivision of valve instruments is made 
in Germany into whole and half instruments (see Bombaxdon and 
Valves), according as to whether the whole length of tubing comes 
into practical use' or only half, or from the performer's point of 
view whether the fundamental note of the harmonic series can be 
produced, or whether the series begins with the second member, an 
octave above the first, in which case it is obvious that half the tubing 
is of no practical value. The principal piston instruments are: 
the whole instruments— contrabass ana bass tubas, bombardons or 
helicons; the euphonium or tenor tuba; the half instruments — 
saxhorns, Flugelnorns, tenor horns, cornets, the valve trombone, 
valve trumpet and valve horn (French born), and the Wagner tubas, 
which arc really the basses of the French horn and are played with 
funnel-shaped mouthpieces. The brass wind is further divided 
according to the shape of the mouthpiece used, (a) With funnel- 
shaped mouthpiece, such as the French horn, tenor horn and Wagner 
tubas: and (b) with cup-shaped mouthpiece, comprising all the 
other brass wind instruments except the bugle, of which the mouth- 
piece Is a hybrid, neither true funnel nor true cup. 

Section B: Mechanically Blown Instruments. —This section 
consists mainly of instruments having the air supply fed by 
means of bellows; it comprises the two classes: (1) with 
keyboard, (a) without keyboard. 

1. This Includes all kinds of organs: the ancient hydraulic organ 
or hydraulus, differing from the pneumatic only in that water 
pressure was used to compress the air supply instead of the bellows 



710 



WINDISCHGRATZ— WINDMILL 



being weighted by means of the toot and body of the performer at 
first and later by means of weights; the reed organ, consisting of 
pipes furnished with beating reeds, known also as the reed work 
when incorporated with the lane church organ; the medieval 

fDrtative and positive organs; the large modern church organ, 
o this class also belong the accordion and concertina and 
the numerous instruments of the harmonium type which 
have free instead of beating reeds, a difference which confers 
upon them the power of dynamic expression denied to all organs 
fitted with flue pipes or pipes having beating reeds. The com- 
plex instruments known as organized pianos also come within this 
category. 

2. This comprises the bagpipes known as musette, and the Union 
or Irish and the Border bagpipes having a wind supply fed by 
bellows instead of by the insufflation pipe proper to the bagpipe; 
the barrel organ having instead of a keyboard a barrel studded with 
nails, which Tift the valves admitting air to the flue pipes generally 
hidden within the case. (K« S.) 

WINDISCHGR&TZ, PRINCE ALFRED (i 787-1862), Austrian 
field-marshal, entered the Austrian army in 1804, participated 
in all the wars against Napoleon and fought with distinction 
at Leipzig and in the campaign of 1814. In the following years 
of peace he held successive commands in Prague, being appointed 
head of the army in Bohemia in 1840. Having gained a reputa- 
tion as a champion of energetic measures against revolution 
he was called upon to suppress the insurrection of March 1848 
in Vienna, but finding himself ill-supported by the ministers he 
speedily threw up his post. Having returned to Prague he there 
showed firmness in quelling an armed outbreak of the Czech 
separatists (June 1848). Upon the recrudescence of revolt 
in Vienna he was summoned at the head of a large army and 
reduced the city by a formal siege (Oct. 20-29). Appointed 
to the chief command against the Hungarian rebels he gained 
some early successes and rcoccupied Budapest (Jan. 1849), 
but by his slowness in pursuit he allowed the enemy to rally 
in superior numbers and to prevent an effective concentra- 
tion of the Austrian forces. In April 1849 he was relieved of 
his command and henceforth rarely appeared again in public 
life. 

See First Windischgr&tz. Eine Lebens-Skizse. Ausden Papier en 
tines Zeitgenotstn der Sturm-Jahre 1848 und 1849 (2nd ed., Leipzig, 
1898). 

WINDMILL, a term used, in the widest sense, for a machine 
by which the energy of the wind is applied to useful purposes. 

Windmills were cer- 
tainly used as early 
as the 1 2th century 
and are still largely 
employed in Holland 
in draining the 
polders and grinding 
trass. They are some- 
what extensively 
used in America for 
pumping and driving 
agricult u ral 
machinery. In spite 
of the competition 
of more powerful and 
tractable motors, 
they are serviceable, 
especially in new 
countries, where fuel 
is scarce and where 
work can be done in- 
termittently. An 
inquiry was made in 
India in 1879 as to 
the possibility of 
using windmills for 
irrigation {Profes- 
sional Papers on 
Indian Engineering, July 1879), with the result that it was 
concluded their usefulness would be very limited. 
A windmill is not in any case a very powerful or efficient 




Fio. x— Windmill near Delft. 



motor, and its work is variable and intermittent. In favourable 
positions, it will run on an average for eight hours out of the 
twenty-four. For pumping on a small scale, the intermittent 
action is least an objection, because there is generally a tank or 
storage reservoir regulating the delivery of the water. For 
driving dynamos windmills are least suitable, on account 
of the variation of speed, though some attempts to 
generate electricity by wind power have been made, special 
arrangements being adopted for automatically regulating the 
speed. 

European Windmills. — In all the older windmills a shaft, 
called the wind shaft, carried four to six arms or whips on which 
long rectangular narrow sails were spread. The wind shaft was 
placed at an inclination of io° or 15° with the horizontal, to 
enable the sails to clear the lower part of the milL The whip 
carrying the sail was often 30 to 40 ft. in length, so that the tips 
of the sails described a circle 60 to 80 ft. in diameter. The sails 
were rectangular, 5 to 6 ft. wide, and occupying five-sixths of 
the length of the whip. A triangular leading sail was sometimes 
added. Sometimes the sails consisted of a sail-doth spread 
on a framework; at other times narrow boards were used. 
The oldest mill was no doubt the post mill, the whole structure 
being carried on a post; to bring the sails to face the wind, 
the structure was turned round by a long lever. The post mill 
was succeeded by the lower, smock or frock mill, in which the 
mill itself consisted of a stationary tower, and the wind shaft 
and sails were carried in a revolving cap rotating on the top 
of the tower. Andrew Meikle introduced in 1750 an auxiliary 
rotating fan at right angles to the principal sails, which came 
into action whenever the wind was oblique to the axis of the sails, 
automatically veering the sails or placing them normal to the 
wind. For safety, the sails must be reefed in high winds. In 
1807, Sir W. Cubitt introduced automatic reefing arrangements. 
The sails were made of thin boards held up to the wind by weights. 
If the force of the wind exceeded a certain value the boards were 
pressed back and exposed little surface. 

American Windmills. — These generally have the sails, 18 or 
more in number, arranged in an annulus or disk. The sails 
consist of narrow boards or slats arranged radially, each board 
having a constant or variable inclination to the wind's direction. 
An American mill presents a larger surface for a given length of 
sail than the older type, and consequently the construction is 
lighter. To turn the mill face to the wind a rudder is sometimes 
used projecting backward in a plane at right angles to the plane 
of rotation of the sails. Various arrangements are adopted for 
reefing the sails automatically, (a) In some an action equivalent 
to reefing is obtained by turning the sail disk oblique to the 
wind. The pressure on a side vane in the plane of rotation, 
controlled by a weight, turns the sail disk edgeways to the wind 
if the pressure exceeds a safe amount, (b) In centrifugal governor 
mills the slats forming the sails are connected in sets of six or 
eight, each set being fixed to a bar at the middle of its length. 
By rotating this bar the slats are brought end on to the wind, 
the action being analogous to shutting an umbrella. The slats 
are held up to the wind by a weight. A centrifugal governor 
lifts the weight if the speed becomes excessive and the sails are 
partially or completely furled. Many of the veering and reefing 
arrangements are very ingenious and too complicated to be 
described without detailed drawings. A description of some of 
these arrangements will be found in a paper by J. A. Griffiths 
(Proc. Inst. Civ. Eng. t 119, p. 321) and in a " Report on Trials of 
Wind Pumping Engines at Park Royal in 1903" (Journ. Roy. 
Agric. t Soc, 64, p. 174). 

Warner's A nnular Sail Windmill. — Messrs Warner of London make 
a windmill somewhat similar to American mills. The shutters or 
vanes consist of a frame covered with canvas, and these are pivoted 
between two angle-iron rings so as to form an annular sail. The 
vanes are connected with spiral springs, which keep them up to the 
best angle of weather for light winds. If the strength of the wind 
increases, the vanes give to the wind, forcing back the springs, and 
thus the area on which the wind acts diminishes. In addition, 
there are a striking lever and tackle for setting the vanes edgeways 
to the wind when the mill is stopped or a storm is expected. The 



WINDMILL 



711 



wheel is kept face to the wind by a rodder la mall mills; in lame 
mill* a subsidiary fan and gear are used. Fig. 2 shows a large mill 
of this load, erected in a similar manner to a tower mill. The tower 
is a framework of iron, and carries a revolving cap, on which the 
wind shaft is fixed. Behind is the subsidiary fan with its gearine 

acting on a toothed 
wheel fixed to the cap. 
It is important that 
a wind-mill should con* 
trol itself so that it 
works efficiently in 
moderately strong 
winds and at the same 
time runs in very light 
winds, whkh are much 
more prevalent. It 
should also, by reefing 
or otherwise, secure 
safety in storms. 

Table I. gives the 
mean velocity of the 
wind in miles per hour 
for an inland station, 
Kew, and a very ex- 
posed station. Scilly, 
for each month during 
the period 1890-1899. 

The pressure of the 
wind on a plane normal 
to its direction, com- 
posed partly of an 
excess front pressure 
and negative back 
pressure f is given by 
the relation 

£ -0-003 tJ, 
where p is in pounds 
per square foot and » 
the velocity of the 
wind in miles per hour. 
It varies a little with the form and site of the surface, but for 
the presentpurpose this variation may be disregarded. (See experi- 
ments by Dr Stanton at the National Physical Laboratory, Proc. 
Inst. Ct9. Eng. 156, p. 78.) , For velocities of 5, 10 and ao m. per 
hour the pressures on a plane normal to the wind would be about 
0-075, 03 and 1-3 lb per sq. ft. respectively, and these may be 
taken to be ordinary working velocities for windmills. In storms 
the pressures are much greater, and must be reckoned with in 
considering the stability of the mill. A favourable wind velocity 
for windmills is 15 m. per hour. 

Table I. 




Fie. 2.— Warner's Annular 
SailWindmiU. 



Kew . 

Scilly . 


Jan. 


Feb. 


March. 


April. 


May. 


June. 


80 
ao-6 


8-5 
195 


S' 5 
18-4 


r 5 
161 


75 
141 


7-0 

12-9 


Kew . 

Sally . 


July. 


Aug. 


Sept. 


Oct. 


Nov. 


Dec 


7-0 

12'4 


7-o 
13-9 


60 

146 


6-5 

17-2 


70 
19-3 


80 
22 -o 



Pnssurt on Surfaces oblique to tke Wind.— let fig. 3 represent a 
plane at rest on which a wind current impinges in the direction YY, 
making an angle 9 with the normal Qa to the plane. Then the 
pressure « normal to the plane is given very approximately by 
Diichemin's rule 

"s the pressure in pounds per square foot on a plane struck 



In fig. 3 let AB be part of a windmill sail or vane at rest, XX 
being the plane of rotation and YY the direction of the wind. The 
angle * is termed the _. 

weather of the sail. This *; 

is generally a constant • « A 

angle for the sail, but in !**«#" 

some cases varies from a 
small angle at the outer 
end to a larger angle near r . o# 6 V 

the axis of rotation. In ► / r *V"if •'"'"'•* 

millsof the European type, m % - ■• 

#-12* to 18*. and the 

speed of the tips of the 

sails is 21 to 3 times the 

velocity of the wind. la . 

mills of the American x « 

type, #-»f * to 40°. and Flo. 3. 

the speed of the tips of the 

vanes is \ to 1 time that of the wind. Then if Go «* be the normal 

pressure on the sail or vane p er sq uare foot, fa « J is the effective 

component of pressure in the direction of rotation and 

J-asinJ-j |+oot ,, . 

When the sail is rotating in a plane at right angles to the wind 
direction the conditions are more complicated. In fig. 4 let XX be 
the plane of rotation of the vane and V Y the direction of the wind. 
Let Oo be the normal to the vane, $ being the weather of the vane. 
Let Op-p be the velocity of the wind, Own the velocity of the 
vane. Completing the parallelogram, On,-* is the velocity and 
direction of the wind relatively to the vane. 
•V-V (•>+«*) ■»» sec* 
tan *»«/*, 
and the angle b e tween the relative direction of wind and normal to 
the vane is *+*. It is clear that *+* cannot be greater than 90*. 
or the vane would press on the wind instead of the wind on the vane. 
Substituting these values in the equations already given, the normal 
pressure on the oblique moving vane is 



-««*'**£&&&• 



The comooncnt of this pressure in the direction of motion of the 
vane is 

and the work done in driving the vane is 
/*-=totan* 



per hour. 



foot lb persq. ft. of vane per sec., where vis taken in miles 
For such angles and 
velocities as are 
usual in windmills 
this would give for a 
square foot of vane, 
near the tip about 
0003 *» ft. lb pcrT 
sec. But parts of "' 
the vane or sail 
nearer the axis of 
rotation are less 
effective, and there 
are mechanical fric- 
tion and other 
causes of inefiici- Xl 

ency. An old rule Flc . 

based on expen- *•«*.«. 

menu by Coulomb on mills of the European type gave for the 
average effective work in foot H> per sec. per sq. ft. of sail 

W -0-0011 1". 






Table I] 


.—/a i$o Working Hours. 










I. 


II. 


HI. 


IV. 


V. 


VI. 


Revolutions of wheel .... 


208,000 


308,000 


264,000 


322.000 


222,000 


202,000 


Double strokes of pump 


40,000 


122,000 


264,000 


160,000 


78,000 


202 000 


Gallons lifted 


78.000 


40,000 


46,000 


40,000 


30,000 


48,00O 


Average effective horse-power . 


0-53 


027 


0-31 


027 


0*24 


0-32 



I. Coold Shapley and Muir, Ontario; wheel 16 ft. diameter, 18 vanes, 131 sq. ft. area (first prise). II. Thomas & Son 
(second prize). Ill J. W. Titt. IV. R. Warner. V. J.W.Titt. VI.H.Syken, 



712 



WINDOW 



Some data given by Wolff on mills of the American type gave for 
the same quantity 

W-o-ooo45»*. 

From some of the data of experiments by Griffiths on mills of the 
American type used in pumping, the effective work in pumping 
when the mill was working in the best conditions amounted to from 
O'oooss* to o*ooo3S* ft. tb per sec per sq. ft. 

In 1903 trials of wind-pumping engines were carried out at Park 
Royal by the Royal Agricultural Society (Joum. Roy. Agrie. Soc. 
lxiv. 174). The mills were run for two months altogether, pumping 
against a head of 300 ft. The final results on six of the best mills are 
given in Table II. 

A valuable paper by J. A. Griffiths (Proc. Inst. Civ. Eng. cxix. 
321) contains details of a number of windmills of American type 
used for pumping and the results of a aeries of trials. Table III. 
contains an abstract of the results of his observations on six types of 
windmills used for pumping :-»- 



eastern doorway of the Erechtheum, which formed part of the 
original building of 430 B.C., have lately been found; they were 
rectangular windows with moulded and enriched architrave, resting 
on a ml and crowned with the cymatium moulding. Of later date, 
at Ephesus, remains of similar windows have been discovered. 
Of Roman windows many examples have been found, those of the 
Tabularium being the oldest known. A coin of Tiberius representing 
the temple of Concord shows features in the side wings which might 
be windows, but as statues arc shown in them they are possibly 
only niches. Over the door of the Pantheon is an open bronze 
grating, which is thought to be the prototype of the windows which 
lighted the large halls of the Thermae, as it was absolutely necessary 
that these should be closed so as to retain the heat, the openings in 
the gratings being filled with glass. In some cases window openings 
were closed with thin slabs of marble, of which there are examples 
still existing in the churches of S. Martino and the Quattro Santi 
Incoronati at Rome. Similar slabs exist in the upper storey of the 
amphitheatre at Pola; it still remains, however, an open question 



Table III. 



I. 



II. 



III. 



IV. 



V. 



VI. 



Diameter of wheel, feet ...... 

Sail area, square feet ....•». 

Weather angle, outer ends ...... 

„ „ inner ends ...... 

Pitch of vanes, outer ends, feet 

„ „ inner ends, feet ...... 

Height of lift, feet 

Velocity of wind at maximum efficiency, miles 
per hour 

Ratio of velocity of tips of vanes to velocity of wind 

Revolutions of mill, per minute 

Actual horse-power 

In 100 average hours in a calm locality — 

Quantity of water lifted, gallons per hour 
In 100 average hours in a windy locality — 

Quantity of water lifted, gallons per hour 



25 



223 

•?< 

38° 20' 

238 
206 

ICO 



292 



"•5 
I04 o 

43* 
337 
131 

6 1 '2 



43 70 
•93 '11 

50 6-8 

o-oi8 0*098 



5-8 6§ 
♦92 -82 

130 13-3 

001 1 0-025 



i6-o 


142 


IO«2 


201 


»57 


81 


36° 


K 


28* 


36° 


30° 


28° 


36-5 


V, 


170 


137 


64 


390 


663 


387 


60 


ro 


% 


■65 


•91 


7-5 


12-6 


205 


0-024 


0-065 


0-028 



495 
816 



306 
629 



153 
287 



135 
271 



259 
525 



267 
540 



115 
237 



9-8 
80 

5°: 

14* 
224 

72 
30-7 

6-0 

73 
125 
001 a 

i45 
270 



I. Toowoomba; conical sail wheel with reefing vane. II. Stover; solid sail wheel with rudder; hand control 
III. Perkins; solid wheel, automatic rudder. IV. and V. Althouse; folding sail wheel, rudderless. VI. Cariyle; special type, 
automatic rudder. 



Table IV. gives the horse-power which may be expected, according 
to Wolff, for an average of 8 hours per day for wheels of the American 
type. 



Diameter of 


Velocity of 

Wind in Miles 

per Hour. 


Horse-power of 
Mill. 


Revolutions of 


Wheel in Feet. 


Wheel per Minute. 


8} 


16 


0-04 


70-75 


10 


16 


0-12 


60-65 


12 


16 


0-21 


55-60 


\t 


16 


0-28 


5o-55 


16 


0.41 

0-6I 


45-5o 


18 


16 


40-45 


20 


16 


0-78 


35-40 


25 


16 


1-34 


30-35 



_ 



Further information will be found in Ranklne, The Steam Engine 
and other Prime Movers-, Wcisbach, The Mechanics of Engineering', 
and Wolff, The Windmill as a Prime Mover. (W. C. U.) 

WINDOW (properly " wind eye" ), the term applied in archi- 
tecture (Ital. fenestra, Fr. fcn&re, Span. ventana t Ger. FcnsUr) 
to an aperture or opening in a wall for the admission of light and 
air to the interior of a hall or room. 

The earliest windows are those which constituted the clerestory 

windows of the Great Hall of Columns at Karnak; they were filled 

with vertical slabs of masonry pierced with narrow slits. Other 

Egyptian temples w<-rt lighted in the wniB way. In one at Der el 

Mc\firn:i at Thebes the window was divided by miniature columns 

with lotus capital t> Some of the jnnntl Ivory carvings found at 

Ntmruud by Ltyard, tiow in the British Museum, are evidently of 

in workmanship, as they have lotus columns forming a 

balustrade in the lower p*rt of the window; and such features are 

■hown in the Assyrian baweKef* «6 window-, in the towers. Dr 

Arthur EimnA 1 * discoveries at Cuossus hove revealed, in the eastern 

portion of the pobre, rrc lingular openings which were certainly 

9 and ctone benches inside, and the reprc- 

. . ■! Cnofims on a series of plaques 

I v jih openings in the 

1 in with transoms 

time thought that there were no 

r-t front of the Erech- 

• ''(■«is of the Roman 

wi $it,jEft] on either aide of the 



pwad, 



as to the lighting of some of the temples in Rome, in which were 
placed all the magnificent statues from Greece, so as to enable them 
to be seen properly. The Pantheon was lighted by a circular 
opening in the dome 30 ft. in diameter; the ram therefore fell in at 
times, and consequently the pavement had a convex contour, there 
being also holes under the hypaethral opening in connexion with 
drains beneath the pavement. There was a window at the south end 
of the tepidarium of the Forum baths at Pompeii, said to have been 
filled with a bronze frame with glass in it, half an inch thick. Although 
no window frames have been found in Pom peii.the openings in the walls 
show that some of the rooms were lighted by windows; one of them 
in the house of Diomede takes the form of a bow window with three 
lights in it. 

In the later styles the windows assume much greater importance, 
and in Gothic cathedrals almost govern the whole design. Already, 
however, in the earliest Byzantine church, Sta Sophia at Con- 
stantinople, the windows constituted one of the chief features of the 
church; the forty windows round the base of the cupola giving an 
exceptional lightness to the structure; besides, there are windows in 
the larger and smaller apses and in the north and south walls. The 
windows in the latter, which are of great size, are subdivided by 
marble mullions with pierced lattices between of transparent marbles. 

In the later Byzantine churches the windows were of smaller 
dimensions, but always filled with marble screens, sometimes 
pierced, and the grouping of two or three under a single arch is the 
prevailing design. 

In the Romanesque styles the windows are universally round- 
headed, with infinite variety of design in the mouldings and their 
enrichment, greater importance being sometimes given by having 
two or more rings of arches, the outer ones carried by small columns; 
this is varied in Norman work by dividing them with a shaft into 
two or more lights placed in shallow recesses under an arched head. 
Circular windows occur occasionally, as in the eastern transept of 
Canterbury, at Iffley church. Oxford, Barfreston and Patricksbourne 
in Kent. In all these early windows which are usually small, 
greater light is obtained by splaying the jambs inside with a scoinson 
arch over them. The coupling together of two or more windows 
under a single arch, and the piercing of the tympanum above, led 
to the development of plate and rib tracery (see Tracbry) ; also 
to that of the circular or rose windows, which throughout the Roman- 
esque and Gothic periods constituted very important features in the 
church, being placed high up in the west front over the porch or in 
the transepts: sometimes, and more particularly in French churches* 
thev occupied the whole of the upper portion of the windows, 
having vertical lights under them, but the junction was never quite 
satisfactory. 



_ 



WINDOW CORNICE— WINDSOR 



713 



Although the employ nmt of tracery continued long site' the 
elastic revival, the examples generally are poor in design, and even in 
those that are more elaborate (as those of the period of Henry II. 
in the church at Le Grand Andely) the introduction of classic details 
in the ordinary and rose windows was of too capricious a character 
to make them worthy of much attention. The early Renaissance 
architects in France in some cases, and notably in the apstdal chapels 
of St Pierre at Caen (1520), seemed to feel that the stained glass was 
too much cut up by the tracery and mullions. and omitted them 
altogether, trusting to the iron stanchions and cross-bars to carry 
their glass, so that a return was made to the simple semicircular- 
headed window of Roman times, retaining only the mouldings of the 
late Flamboyant period for the jambs and arch-moulds. Windows 
of this description, however, would be out of place in domestic 
architecture, so that the mullion window was there retained with 
two or three transom*, all moulded and with square heads; in the 
Tudor period cusping was introduced in the upper lights and occasionr 
ally in those below, and this custom lingered for a long time in the 
collegiate buildings of Oxford and Cambridge and in various houses 
throughout England. In France, square-headed windows were 
almost always employed, owing to the earlier introduction there of 
the Renaissance style, when the decoration of the mullions, generally 
consisting of classic pilasters, required some kind of architrave, 
frieze and cornice, to render the order complete; eventually the 
mullion and transom disappear, and in the earlier work of the Louvre 
the windows are simple rectangular openings, fitted with wooden 
framework, and, like those in Rome, Milan and Genoa, depend for 
their architectural effect on the moulded clastic jambs, and the lintel, 
frieze and small cornice over; and in cases where more importance 
was required, with small semicircular columns or pilasters carrying 
the usual entablature, with small pediments sometimes angular and 
sometimes semicircular, repeating tn fact an ancient Roman design, 
of which almost the only examples known are the blank windows 
and niches which decorated some of the enclosure walls of the Roman 
thermae. In Florence and Siena the early windows of the Renais- 
sance often had semicircular heads and were coupled together, there 
being two lights to the window graded by shafts, thus continuing 
the tradition of those of the earlier Tuscan palaces; the same 
treatment was followed in Venice, Verona and other towns in the 
north-east, where the Gothic influence of the palaces in Venice 
created a transition; thus the mouldings of the windows of the 
Vendramini and Corner Spinelli palaces follow closely those of the 
Ducal Palace, but the arches are semicircular instead of being 
either pointed or ogee in form. Another type peculiar to Venice is a 
lofty window with semicircular head enclosed in a rectangular panel 
and crowned with a small entablature and pediment. 

The only new combination of the 16th century in Italy, which was- 
largely adopted in England by Inigo Jones and his followers in. the 
17th and i*tb centuries, is the so-called Venetian or Palladian 
window, the finest example of which is that found in the Sala della 
Ragione or the basilica at Vicenza; it is true that it was here em- 
plo> cd by Palladio to light an open gallery, but the composition was 
so generally approved that it led to its constant adoption for a 
window of more importance than the ordinary simple rectangular 
form. It consists ot a central light with semicircular arch over, 
carried on an impost consisting of a small entablature, under which, 
and enclosing two other lights, one on each side, are pilasters. In 
the library at Venice, Sansovino varied the design by substituting 
columns for the two inner pilasters. The Palladian window was 
introduced by Inigo Jones in the centre of the garden front at 
Wilton, by Lord Burlington in the centres of the wings of the Royal 
Academy, and good examples exist in Holkham House, Norfolk, by 
Kent, and in Worcester College, Oxford. There do not seem to be 
any examples in either Germany, Franco or Spain. Circular and 
oval windows, lighting a mezzanine or the upper part of a hall, are 
found in Italy, France and England, sometimes over ordinary 
rectangular windows when the main front is decorated with semi- 
detached columns as in Hampton Court Palace. (R. P. S.) 

WI1D0W CORNICE, an ornamental framework of wood or 
composition to which window curtains are attached by rods with 
rings or books. Cornices are often gilded and of elaborate 
design, but they axe less fashionable in the 20th century than 
before it had been discovered that elaborate draperies harbour 
dust and microbes. Like other pieces of furniture, they have 
reflected taste as it passed, and many of the carefully constructed 
examples of the latter part of the 18th century are still in use 
in the rooms for which they were made. Chippendale provided 
a famous series still in situ tot the gallery at Harewood House, 
the valances of which are, like the cornices themselves, of carved 
and painted wood. 

WINDOW BEAT, a miniature sofa without a back, intended to 
fill the recess of a window. In the latter part of the 18th century, 
when tall narrow sash windows were almost universal, the window 
seat was in high favour, and was no doubt in keeping with the 



formalism of Georgian interiors. It differed much in decorative 
detail, but fittle in form. It stood as high from the floor as a 
chair; the two ends were identical, with a roll-over curve, more or 
less pronounced. The seats and ends were usually upholstered 
in rich fabrics which in many cases have remained intact. The 
legs followed the fashion in chairs and were square and tapered, 
or, somewhat later, round and reeded. Hepplewhite and the 
brothers Adam designed many graceful window seats, but they 
were produced by all the cabinet-makers of the period. 

WINDOW TAX, a tax first levied in England in the year 1697 
for the purpose of defraying the expenses and making up the 
deficiency arising from clipped and defaced coin in the recoinage 
c4 silver during the reign of William TIL It was an assessed tax 
on the rental value of the house, levied according to the number 
of windows and openings on houses having more than six 
windows and worth more than £5 per annum. Owing to the 
method of assessment the tax fell with peculiar hardship on the 
middle classes, and to this day traces of the endeavours to tighten 
its burden may be seen in numerous bricked-up windows. 

The revenue derived from the tax in the first year of its levy 
amounted to £1,200,000. The tax was increased no fewer than six 
times between 1747 and 1808, but was reduced in 1833. There was 
a strong agitation in favour of the abolition of the tax during the 
winter of 1850-1851, and it was accordingly repealed on the 24th of 
July 1851, and a tax on inhabited houses substituted. The tax 
contributed £1,856,000 to the imperial revenue the year before its 
repeal. There were in England in that year about 6000 houses 
having fifty windows and upwards; about 275,000 having ten 
windows and upwards, and about 725,000 having seven windows or 
less. 

In France there is still a tax on doors and windows, and this forms 
an appreciable amount of the revenue. 

WINDPIPE, the trachea (Gr. rpax***, sc. apnjipla, literally, 
rough artery), the air tube which leads from the larynx to the 
bronchi and lungs (see Respiratory System). 

WINDSOR* a city and port of entry of Essex county, Ontario, 
Canada, on the left bank of the Detroit river, opposite the city 
of Detroit. Pop. (1001) 12,153. It is on the Grand Trunk, 
Canadian Pacific, Pere Marquette and Michigan Central railways, 
which connect at this point with the railways of the United 
States by means of large and powerful car-ferries. It is the centre 
of an important agricultural and fruit-growing district, in which 
tobacco is also produced* Salt works, flour mills, canning 
factories, and the manufacture of type-setting machines are 
the principal industries. During the season of navigation it is 
the centre of a large coasting trade on the Great Lakes. 

WINDSOR, a township of Hartford county, Connecticut, 
U.S.A., on the Connecticut and Farmington rivers, adjoining 
the city of Hartford on the N. Pop. (1890) 2954; (1900) 3614, 
596 being foreign-bom; (1910) 4178. Area about 27 sq. m. It is 
served by the New York, New Haven & Hartford railway and 
by electric lines to Hartford and to Springfield, M a ssa ch usetts. 
Among the buildings are the Congregational Church, built in 
1794 (the church itself was organized in 1630 in England), the 
Protestant Episcopal Church (1864) and the Roger Ludlow 
School. In Windsor are the Campbell School (for girls) and a 
public library (1888). The Loomis Institute (incorporated 1874 
and 1905) for the gratuitous education of persons between 12 
and 20 years of age has been heavily endowed by gifts of the 
Loomis family. Tobacco and market vegetables are raised in 
Windsor, and among its manufactures are paper, canned goods, 
knit and woollen goods, cigars and electrical supplies. 1 

In 1633 Captain William Holmes, of the Plymouth Colony, 
established near the mouth of the Farmington river a trading 
post, the first settlement by Englishmen in Connecticut; a 
more important and a permanent settlement (until 1637 called 
New Dorchester) was made in 1635 by immigrants from Dor- 
chester, Massachusetts, led by the Rev. John Wareham, Roger 
Ludlow and others. In 1639 representatives from Windsor, 
with those from Wethersfield and Hartford, organized the Con-, 
necticut Colony. Among the original land-holders were Matthew 
Grant and Thomas Dewey, ancestors respectively of General 

1 !n the township of Windsor Locks (pop 1910,3715). immediately 
north, cotton yarn and thread, silk, paper, steel and machinery are 



7H 



WINDSOR 



U. S. Grant and Admiral George Dewey; and Captain John 
Maaon (1600-1672), the friend of Miles Standish, was one of its 
early citizens. It was the birthplace of Roger Wolcott, of the 
older Oliver Wolcott (x 736-1797), of Oliver Ellsworth (whose 
home is now a historical museum), and of Edward Rowland SilL 
Windsor has been called " The Mother of Towns" ; it originally 
included the territory now constituting the present township, 
and the townships of East Windsor (1768), Ellington (1786), 
South Windsor (1845). Simsbury (1670), Granby (1786), East 
Granby (1858), Bloomfield (1835) and Windsor Locks (1854). 

See H. R. Stiles, AncUnt Winter (a vols., New York, 1891; 
revised edition). 

WINDSOR (properly New Windsor), a municipal borough 
of Berkshire, England, and a parliamentary borough extending 
Into Buckinghamshire. Pop. (1001) 14*130. The town, which 
is famous for its royal castle, lies on the west (right) bank of the 
Thames, *\\ m. W. of London by the Great Western railway, 
which serves it with a branch line from Slough. It is also the 
terminus of a branch of the London & South- Western railway. 
Here the Thames, from an easterly course, sweeps first nearly 
northward and then south-eastward. 

The castle lies at the north-eastern edge of the town, on a 
alight but commanding eminence, while the massive round 
tower in the centre, on its artificial mound, is conspicu- 
ous from far over the flat land to the east, north and 
west. The site of the castle is an irregular parallelo- 
gram measuring about 630 yds. by 180. On the west the walls 
enclosing the " lower ward," with the Clewer, Garter, Salisbury 
and Henry HI. towers, overlook Thames Street and High Street, 
from which the "hundred steps" give access to the ward on the 
north, and the Henry VIII. gateway, opening from Castle Hill, 
on the south. This ward contains St George's Chapel in the 
centre, with the Albert Memorial Chapel on the east and the 
Horseshoe Cloisters on the west. To the north are the deanery 
and the canon's residences, for the foundation attached to the 
royal chapel has the privileges of a " royal peculiar," the dean 
being exempt from episcopal jurisdiction. To the south are the 
guard-room and the houses of the military knights, or pensioners. 
The round tower occupies the "middle ward" ; on its flag- 
turret the Union Jack or the Royal Standard is hoisted accord- 
big as the sovereign is absent or present. The buildings in 
the " upper ward," east of this, form three sides of a square; 
the state apartments on the north, the private apartments on the 
east and the visitors' apartments on the south. Along the 
north side of the castle extends the north terrace, commanding, 
from its position above a steep slope, splendid views across the 
river to Eton on the Buckinghamshire side, and far over the 
valley. The east terrace, continuing the north, overlooks the 
gardens in front of the private apartments, and the south terrace 
continues farther, as far as the George IV. gateway. The Home 
Park lies adjacent to the castle on the south, east and north. 
The Great Park extends south of Windsor, where the land, 
rising gently, is magnificently timbered with the remnant of 
the old royal forest. The village of Old Windsor (in distinction 
from which the name of New Windsor is given to the borough) 
lies by the river, south of the Home Park. To the west of 
Windsor itself the village of Clewer has become a suburb of the 
town. 

i As early as the time of the Heptarchy a stronghold of some 
importance existed at Windsor, the great mound, which is 
moated, circular and about 1 25 ft. in diameter, being a remnant of 
this period. William the Conqueror was attracted by the forest 
as a bunting preserve, and obtained the land by exchange from 
Westminster Abbey, to which Edward the Confessor had given 
it. Thereafter the castle became what it remains, the chief 
residence of the English sovereigns. The Conqueror replaced the 
primitive wooden enclosure by a stone circuit-wall, and the first 
complete round tower was built by Henry III. about 1272, but 
- ' ' SUV wholly reconstructed it on a more massive scale, 
meeting-place for his newry established 
Garter. He selected this spot because, 
quoted by the chronicler Froissart, it 
t King Arthur used to ait 



dswawMfttdawdawB * 



■ 1 .i_ m 



surrounded by his Knights of the Round Table. The bulk of 
the existing round tower is of Edward's time, but its walls were 
heightened and the tall flag-turret added by the court architect, 
Sir Jeffrey Wyatville, in the reign of George IV. In addition to 
the Round Tower, Henry III. had constructed Jong lines of 
circuit-walls, crowned at intervals with smaller towers. He also 
built a great hall (the present chapter library) and other apart- 
ments, together with a chapel, which was afterwards pulled 
down to make room for the chapel of St George. The beautiful 
little dean's cloister preserves a portion of Henry's work in the 
south wall, a contemporary portrait of the king appearing in dis- 
temper on one of the arches. Another chapel was built by him 
and dedicated to his favourite saint, Edward the Confessor. 
This graceful building, with an eastern apse, is now called the 
Albert Memorial Chapel, some of Henry Ill's work still exists 
in the lower part of its walls, but the upper part was rebuilt 
in 1 501-1503 by Henry VII., who intended it as a burial-place 
for himself and his line, before he began the chapel which bears 
his name and contains his tomb at Westminster Abbey. Some 
years later the unfinished chapel was given by. Henry yill. to 
Cardinal Wolsey, and for long after it was known as " Wolsey's 
tomb-house." Wolsey engaged a Florentine sculptor named 
Benedetto, probably a son or nephew of Benedetto da Maiano 
(d. 1497)1 &lso a Florentine artist, to make him a costly tomb of 
marble and gilt bronze, with a recumbent effigy at the top, 
no doubt similar in design to Torrigiano'a tomb of Henry VII. 
at Westminster. The rich bronze work of Wolsey's tomb was 
torn off and melted by order of the Commonwealth in 1642, 
and the metal was sold for the then large sum of £600. In 1805 
the black marble sarcophagus, stripped of its bronze ornaments, 
was moved from Windsor and used as a monument over Nelson's 
grave in the crypt of St Paul's. Though Wolsey's tomb-house 
was roofed in and used for mass by James II., the stone vaulting 
was not completed until the whole chapel was fitted by Sir 
Gilbert Scott as a memorial to Albert, Prince Consort. Its internal 
walls were then lined with rich marbles, and decorated with 
reliefs by Baron Triqueti. The cenotaph of the Prince Consort 
stands before the altar, with the tombs of Prince Leopold, duke of 
Albany, and the duke of Clarence, the last erected by King 
Edward VII., who was himself buried here in May 191a In a 
vault beneath the chapel George III. and members of his family 
are buried. 

The chapel of St George is one of the finest examples of 
Perpendicular architecture in England, comparable with two 
other royal chapels, that of Ring's College at Cambridge and that 
of Henry VII. at Westminster, which are a little later in date. 
The building was begun by Edward IV., who in 1473 pulled down 
almost the whole of the earlier chapel, which had been completed 
and filled with stained glass by Edward III. in 1363. The nave 
of St George's was vaulted about the year 1490, but the choir 
groining was not finished till 1507; the hanging pendants from 
the fan vaulting of the choir mark a later development of style, 
which contrasts strongly with the simpler lines of the earlier nave 
vault. In 1 516 the lantern and the rood-screen were completed, 
but the stalls and other fittings were not finished till after 1519. 
The chapel ranks next to Westminster Abbey as a royal mau- 
soleum, though no king was buried there before Edward IV., 
who left directions in his will that a splendid tomb was to be 
erected with an effigy of himself in silver. Nothing remains of this 
except part of the wrought iron grille which surrounded the tomb, 
one of the most elaborate and skilfully wrought pieces of iron- 
work in the world, said to be the work of Qumtin Matsys. The 
next sovereign buried here was Henry VITL.who directed that his 
body should be laid beside that of Jane Seymour, in a magnificent 
bronze and marble tomb. The tomb was never completed, and 
what existed of its metal-work was probably melted down by 
the Commonwealth. No trace of it remains. Charles I. was 
buried here without service in 1649. Above the dark oak stalls 
hang the historic insignia of the Knights of the Garter, their 
swords, helmets and banners. On the stalls themselves appear 
a remarkable series of enamelled brass plates commemorating 
knights of the order. Many tombs and memorials are seen in the 
chantry chapels. 



WINDTHORST 



7i5 



The deanery, adjoining the dean's cloister, is dated 1500, but 
the Winehester tower to the north-east of it is the work of the 
famous prelate and architect William of Wykeham, who was 
employed by Edward III. on "the greater part of this extension 
and alteration of Henry III.'* work. The Horseshoe cloisters 
were restored in Tudor style by Sir Gilbert Scott. The Norman 
gate on the north aide of the round tower was rebuilt by Wyke 



The site of the upper ward was built upon by Henry II., and, 
to a greater extent, by Edward III., but only in the foundations 
and lowest storey are remains of so early a period to be found. 
The buildings were wanting in homogeneity until their recon- 
struction was undertaken by Sir Jeffrey Wyatville under the 
direction of George IV., for Charles II. was unable to carry out 
a similar intention, perhaps fortunately, as Sir Christopher Wren 
proposed drastic alterations. Charles, however, completed the 
so-called Star Building, named from the representation of 
the star of the Order of the Garter on the north front. Here the 
state apartments are situated. They include the throne room, 
St George's Hall, where meetings of the Order of the Garter are 
held, the audience and presence chambers, and the grand re- 
ception room, adorned with Gobelins tapestries, and the guard- 
room with armour. All these chambers contain also splendid 
pictures and other objects of art; but more notable in this 
connexion are the picture gallery, the Rubens room or king's 
drawing-room, and the magnificent Van Dyck room. The 
ceilings of several of the chambers were decorated by Antonio 
Verrio, under the direction of Charles II. In the royal library, 
which is included among the private apartments, is a fine collec- 
tion of drawings by the old masters, including three volumes 
from the hand of Leonardo da Vinci. Here is also a magnificent 
aeries of eighty-seven portraits by Holbein, highly finished in 
sepia and chalk, representing the chief personages of the court of 
Henry VIII. There are, moreover, examples by Michelangelo 
and Raphael, though the series attributed to these masters are 
not accepted as genuine in their entirety. 

South of the castle, beside the Home Park, is the Royal Mews. 
Within the bounds of the park is Frogmore (f .».), with the Royal 
Thmaartam Mausoleum and that of the duchess of Kent, and the 
*""^ royal gardens. An oak-tree marks the supposed site of 
Heme's Oak, said to be haunted by the ghost of " Heme the 
hunter," a forest-ranger who hanged himself here, having fallen 
under the displeasure of Queen Elizabeth (Shakespeare, Merry 
Witts of Windsor, Act iv. sc 4)- A splendid avenue, the Long 
Walk, laid out in the time of Charles II. and William IH.,*leads 
from George IV.'s gate on the south side of the castle straight 
into the heart of the Great Park, a distance of 3 m. Another 
fine and still longer straight avenue is Queen Anne's Ride, 
planted in 1707. Among various buildings within the park is 
Cumberland Lodge, built by Charles II. and taking name from 
the duke of Cumberland, who commanded the victorious royal 
troops at the battle of CuUoden in 1746, ami resided here as 
chief ranger. At the southern boundary of the park is a beautiful 
artificial lake called Virginia Water, formed by the duke. 
Windsor Forest formerly extended far over the south of Berk- 
shire, and into the adjacent county of Surrey, .and even in 1790 
still covered nearly 60,000 acres. It was disafforested by an 
act of 1813. 

A few old booses remain in the town of Windsor, but the 
greater part is modernised. The church of St John the Baptist 
was rebuilt in x8??. but contains some fine examples 
ofGrinlinsGibbons's wood-carving. There are statues 
of Queen Victoria, unveiled in the first Jubilee year, 
1887, and of Prince Albert (1890). The town hall was built in 
1686 by Sir Christopher Wren, who represented the borough In 
parliament. The town was formerly celebrated for the number 
of its inns, of which there were seventy in 165a The most 
famous were the " Garter n and the " White Hart," the first of 
which was the favourite of Shakespeare's Sir John Falstaff, and 
Is frequently mentioned in The Merry Wipes of Windsor. The 
borough is under a mayor, 6 aldermen and 18 councillors. 
Area, 3717 ***** 



History.— Windsor (Wyndeskour, Wyndsore, Windksore) was 
probably the site of a Roman settlement, two Roman tombs 
having been discovered at Tyle-Place Farm in 1865, while a 
Roman camp and various antiquities were unearthed at St 
Leonard's Hill in 1705. The early history of Windsor centres 
round the now unimportant village of Old Windsor, which was a 
royal residence under Edward the Confessor; and Robert of 
Gloucester relates that it was at a fair feast which the king held 
there in 1053 that Earl Godwin met with his tragic end. By 
the Confessor it was granted to Westminster Abbey, but wss 
recovered in exchange for two other manors by William L, who 
erected the castle about a m. north-west of the village and 
within the manor of Clewcr, round which the later important 
town of New Windsor was to grow up. The earliest existing 
charter of New Windsor is that from Edward I. in x 377, which wai 
confirmed by Edward II. in 1315-1316 and by Edward HI. 
in 1328. This constituted it a free borough and granted to it a 
gild merchant and other privileges. The same king later leased 
it as fee farm to the burgesses on condition that they " did justice 
to merchants, denizen and alien and to the poor." The town 
does not seem to have been prosperous, and the fee-farm rent 
was reduced by several succceeding sovereigns. In 1430 extensive 
privileges wive accorded to the burgesses by Henry VI., and 
Edward IV. in 1467 granted a charter of incorporation under 
the title of the "mayor, bailiffs and burgesses." Further 
confirmations of existing privileges were granted by Edward IV. 
in 1477, by Henry VII. in 1499, by Henry VIII. in 151$ and by 
Edward VI. in 1549- A fresh charter was granted by James I. 
in 1603, and the renewal of this by Charles II. in 1664 incorporat- 
ing the town under the title of the " mayor, bailiffs and burgesses 
of the borough of New Windsor," remained the governing 
charter until 2835. By the charter of Edward I. the county gaol 
was fixed at Windsor, but on the petition of the men of Berkshire 
it was removed thence to a more central town in the reign of 
Edward IL New Windsor sent two members to parliament 
from 1302 to 1335 and again from 1446 to 1865, omitting the 
parliaments of 1654 and 1656; by the act of 1867 it lost one 
member. The market is of ancient date, and in 1273 the abbess 
of Burnham is said to hold markets at Buraham and Beaconsfield 
to the prejudice of the market at Windsor. Edward IV. in 1467 
granted a fair on the feast of St Edward the Confessor, and the 
charter of 1603 mentions a Saturday market and three yearly 
fairs. No fairs are now held, but the Saturday market is still 
maintained. Windsor bridge is mentioned in the reign of 
Edward I.; the present structure dates from 1822. The town 
has never had an important industry, but has depended almost 
entirely upon the castle and court. 

The political history of Windsor centres round the castle, at 
which the Norman kings held their courts and assembled their 
witan. Robert Mowbray was imprisoned in its dungeons in 1095, 
and at the Christmas court celebrated at Windsor in 1x27 
David of Scotland swore allegiance to the empress Maud. In 
11 75 it was the scene of the ratification of the treaty of Windsor. 
The castle was bestowed by Richard I. on Hugh, bishop of 
Durham, but in the next year was treacherously seised by 
Prince John and only surrendered after a siege. In 1217 Ingd- 
ram de Achie with a garrison of sixty men gallantly held the 
fortress against a French force under the count de Never*. It 
was a centre of activity in the Barons' War, and the meeting-place 
of the parliament summoned by Henry in 1261 in rivalry to that 
of the barons at St Albans; two years later, however, it sur- 
rendered to Simon de Montfort. The appeal of high treason 
against Thomas Mowbray, duke of Norfolk, was heard by 
Richard II. in Windsor Castle in 1398. During the Civil War 
of the 17th century the castle was garrisoned for the parliament, 
and Is 1648 became the prison of Charles, who spent Ins last 
Christmas within Its walls. 

See J. E. Tigfae, Annals of Windsor (1858); Vidorio County 
History • Berwsnin* 

wlMDTHORST, UJDWIO (1812-1891), German potttidan, 
was bora on the 17th of January 181 2 at Kaldenhof, a country 
house near OsnabrUck. He sprang from a Roman Catholic 



jib 



WINDWARD ISLANDS— WINE 



family which for some generations had held important potts in 
the Hanoverian civil service. He was educated at the Carotinum, 
an endowed school at Osnabruck, and studied at the universities 
of Gottingen and Heidelberg. In 1836 he settled down as an 
advocate in Osnabruck: his abilities soon procured him a con- 
siderable practice, and he was appointed president of the Catholic 
Consistorium. In 1848 he received an appointment at the 
supreme court of appeal for the kingdom of Hanover, which 
sat at Celle. In the next year the revolution opened for him, 
as for so many of his contemporaries, the way to public life, and 
he was elected as representative for bis native district in the 
second chamber of the reformed Hanoverian parliament. He 
belonged to what was called the Great German party, and 
opposed the project of reconstituting Germany under the leader- 
ship of Prussia; he defended the government against the liberal 
and democratic opposition; at this time he began the struggle 
against the secularization of schools, which continued throughout 
his life. In 1851 he was elected president of the chamber, and 
in the same year minister of justice, being the first Catholic 
who had held so high an office in Hanover. As minister he 
carried through an important judicial 'reform which had been 
prepared by his predecessor, but bad to retire from office be- 
cause he was opposed to the reactionary measures for restoring 
the influence and privileges of the nobility. Though he was 
always an enemy to liberalism, his natural independence of 
character prevented him from acquiescing in the reactionary 
measures of the king. In 1862 he again was appointed minister, 
but with others of his colleagues he resigned when the king 
refused his assent to a measure for extending the franchise. 
Windthorst took no part in the critical events of 1866; contrary 
to the opinion of many of his friends, after the annexation of 
Hanover by Prussia he accepted the fail accompli, took the oath 
of allegiance, and was elected a member both of the Prussian 
parliament and of the North German diet. At Berlin he found 
a wider field for his abilities. He acted as representative of his 
exiled king in the negotiations with the Prussian government 
concerning his private property and opposed the sequestration, 
thus for the first time being placed in a position of hostility to 
Bismarck. He was recognized as the leader of the Hanoverians 
and of all those who opposed the " revolution from above." 
He took a leading part in the formation of the party of the 
Centre in 1 870-1871, but he did not become a member of it, 
fearing that his reputation as a follower of the king of Hanover 
would injure the party, until be was formally requested to join 
them by the leaders. 

' After the death of Hermann von Mallinckrodt (1821-1874) 
in 1874, Windthorst became leader of the party, and maintained 
that position till his death. It was chiefly owing to his skill and 
courage as a parliamentary debater and his tact as a leader that 
the party held its own and constantly increased in numbers 
during the great struggle with the Prussian government. He 
was especially exposed to the attacksof Bismarck, who attempted 
personally to discredit him and to separate him from the rest 
of the party. And he was far the ablest and most dangerous 
critic of Bismarck's policy. The change of policy in 1879 led to 
a great alteration in his position: he was reconciled to Bismarck, 
and even sometimes attended receptions at his bouse. Never, 
however, was his position so difficult as during the negotiations 
which led to a repeal of the May laws. In 1887 Bismarck 
appealed to the pope to use his authority to order the Centre to 
support the military proposals of the government- Windthorst 
took the responsibility of keeping the papal instructions secret 
from the rest of his party and of disobeying them. In a great 
meeting at Cologne in March 1887 he defended and justified bis 
action, and claimed for the Centre full independence of action in 
all purely political questions. In the aodal reform he supported 
Bismarck, and as the undisputed leader of the largest party in 
the Reichstag he was able to exercise, influence over the 
action of the government after Bismarck's retirement. His 
relations with the emperor William II. became very cordial, 
and in 189s he achieved a great parliamentary triumph by 
defeating the School bill and compelling Gossler to resign. A 



few days afterwards be died, on the 14th of March 1801, at Berlin. 
He was buried in the Marienkirche in Hanover, wbkh had been 
erected from the money subscribed as a testimonial to himself. 
His funeral was a most remarkable display of public esteem, 
in which nearly all the ruling princes of Germany joined, and 
was a striking sign of the position to which, after twenty years 
of incessant struggle, he had raised his party. Windthorst was 
undoubtedly one of the greatest of German parliamentary 
leaders: no one equalled him in his readiness as a debater, 
his defective eyesight compelling him to depend entirely upon 
his memory. It was his misfortune that nearly all his life was 
spent in opposition, and he had no opportunity of showing his 
abilities as an administrator. He enjoyed unbounded popularity 
and confidence among the German Catholics, but he was in no 
way an ecclesiastic: he was at first opposed to the Vatican 
decrees of 1870, but quickly accepted them after they had been 
proclaimed. He was a very agreeable companion and a thorough 
man of the world, singularly free from arrogance and pomposity; 
owing to his small suture, he was often known as "die kleine 
ExceUenz." He married in 1839. Of his three children, two 
died before him; his wife survived him only a few months. 



labruck, 1901 -1903). See also J. N. Knopp. Lmdmt Wtmdtkant: 
Lebensbild (Dresden; 1898); and Husgen, Ludvnt Windthorst 
logne. 1907). (JW.Hb.) 



-Windthorst '• Atagewdhlit Redtn were published In three volumes 
"* * Qck, J901-1903). See also J. N. iCno ' ' ' "' "' 

stuhUd fDreaden: 1808): ini 

(Cologm 

WINDWARD ISLANDS, a group and colony in the West 
Indies. They consist of the British island of St Lucia, St Vincent 
and Grenada, with a chain of small islands, the Grenadines, 
between the two latter islands. They are not a single colony, 
but a confederation of three separate colonics with a common 
governor-in-chief, who resides at St George's, Grenada. Each 
island retains its own institutions, and they have neither legis- 
lature, laws, revenue nor tariff in common. There is, however, 
a common court of appeal for the group as well as for Barbados, 
composed of the chief justices of the respective islands, and there 
is also a common audit system, while the islands unite in maintain- 
ing certain institutions of general utility. The Windward Islands, 
which, as a geographical division, properly include Barbados, 
derive their name from the fact that they are the most exposed 
of the Lesser Antilles to the N.E. Trade, the prevailing wind 
throughout the West Indies. 

WINS (Lat. tiitum, Gr. olios), a term which when used in its 
modern sense without qualification, designates the fermented 
product of grape juice. The fermented juices of other fruits 
or plants, such as the date, ginger, plum, &c, are also termed 
wine, but the material from which the wine is derived is in such 
cases also added in qualification. The present article dcab 
solely with wine derived from the grape (see Vine). 

Hislorical.—Tht art of viticulture or wine-making is a very 
ancient one. In the East it dates back almost as far as we have 
historical records of any kind. In Egypt and In Greece the 
introduction of wine was ascribed to gods; in Greece to Dionysus; 
in Egypt to Osiris. The Hebrews ascribed the art of wine-making 
to Noah. It is probable that the discovery that an intoxicating 
and pleasant beverage could be made from grape juice was purely, 
accidental, and that it arose from observations made in connexion 
with crushed or bruised wild grapes, much as the manufacture 
of beer, or in its earliest form, mead, may be traced back to the 
accidental fermentation of wild honey. In ancient times the 
cultivation of the vine indicated a relatively settled and stable 
form of civilization, inasmuch as the vine requires a considerable 
maturation period. It is probable, therefore, that viticulture 
was introduced subsequent to the raising of cereal crops. The 
Nabataeans were forbidden to cultivate the vine, the object 
being to prevent any departure from their traditional nomadic 
habits. The earliest examples of specific wines of which we hare 
any record are the Chalybon wine, produced near Damascus, 
in which the Phoenicians traded in the time of Ezekiel (xxvS. 
18), and which at a later date was much appreciated by the 
Persian kings; and the wines from the Greek islands (Chios, 
Lesbos, Cos). With regard to the introduction of the vine into 
other parts of Europe, it appears that it was brought to Spain 



WINE-MAK1NGI 



WINE 



717 



by the Phoenicians, and to Italy and southern Gaol from Greece. 
In the earliest Roman times the vine was very little cultivated 
in Italy, but gradually Rome and Italy generally became a great 
wine country. At a later date the republic sought to stimulate 
its home industry by prohibiting the importation of wine, and 
by restricting its cultivation in the colonies, thus preserving 
the latter as a useful market for Italian wines. According to 
Pliny, Spanish, Gallk and Greek wines were all consumed in 
Rome during the 1st century of the Christian era, but in Gaul the 
production of wine appears to have been limited to certain 
districts on the Rhone and Gironde. The cultivation of the 
vine in more northern parts (i.e. on the Seine and Moselle) was 
not commenced until after the death of Probus. Owing no doubt 
to the difficulties of transportation, wine was, in the middle 
ages, made in the south of England, and in parts of Germany, 
where it is now no longer produced (cf . Helm, Culturpfianzen, &c , 
and Mommsen, Rbmiscke Geschickle, v 98 et seq.). We know 
very little of the ancient methods of cultivating the vine, but 
the Romans— no doubt owing to the luxuriant ease with which 
the vine grows in Italy— appear to have trained it on trees, 
trellis work, palisades, &c. The dwarf form of cultivation now 
common in northern Europe docs not appear to have obtained 
to any extent. It seems likely that the quality of the wine 
produced in ancient times was scarcely comparable to that of 
the modern product, inasmuch as the addition of resin, salts 
and spices to wine was a common practice With regard to the 
actual making of the wine, this does not appear to have differed 
very much in principle from the methods obtaining at the 
present day. Plastering appears to have been known at an early 
date, and when the juice of the grapes was too thin for the pro- 
duction of a good wine, it was occasionally boiled down with a 
view to concentration. The first wme receptacles were made of 
skins or hides, treated with oil or resin to make them impervious. 
Later, earthenware vessels were employed, but the wooden cask 
— not to mention the glass bottle— was not generally known 
until a much later period. 

Production.— The total wine production of the world, which, 
of course, fluctuates considerably from year to year, amounts to 
roughly 3000 million gallons. France and Italy are the chief 
wine-producing countries, the former generally producing rather 
more than the latter. During the phylloxera period Italy in 
some years had the greater output (e.g. 1 886-1888 and 1890- 
1892). The average production of the chief wine-producing 
countries will be gathered from the following table: — 

Wins Production. Average Annual Production in Millions of Gallons 
for Quinquennial Periods 



Country. 



France . . . 
Italy . . . 
Spain . . . 
Portugal . . 
Austria- Hungary 
Germany . . 



Period. 



891-1895. 1896-1900. 1902-1905. 



770 
674 
521 

74 
"3 

49 



412 
"3 
120 
6* 



1126 
840 
390 
io< 
178 
74 



The United States produces roughly 50, Bulgaria and Rumania 
each 40 and Senna 10 million gallons. The United Kingdom 
produces no wine, but the Cape and the Australian Common- 
wealth each produce some 5 million gallons. 

The variation from year to year in the quantity of wine produced 
in individual countries is. of course, far greater than that observed 
in the case of beer or spirit*. Tht 
the quantity of wine produced 
million gallons, whereas in 1806 

larry the French production, which was 587 million gallons in 1895, 
amounted to no less than 1482 millions tn 1900. In the same wav 
the Italian production has varied between 583 million gallons (1895) 
and 793 millions (1901), and the Spanish between 331 million gallons 
in 1890 and 656 millions in 1892. 

Consumption.— It is only natural that the coosumptidn of wine 
should be greatest in the countries where it is produced 00 the 
largest scale, but the discrepancy between the consumption of 

XXVlff 11* 



01 coune, lar greater man mac o tw e i vco 
\. Thus, owing to purely climatic vagaries, 
duced in Germany in 1891 was only 16 
1 1896 it amounted to 1 1 1 millions. Simi- 



diffcrent countries is little short of astonishing. Thus, at the 
present time, the consumption per head in France is practically 
a hundred times that of the United Kingdom and twenty times 
that of Germany— the latter, it must be remembered, being itself 
an important wine-producing area. 

The following table will give some idea of the relative con- 
sumption of wine in different countries; — 

Average Consumption of Wine per Tlead of Population. 



Country. 


Period 










1 891-1895 


1896-1900 


1901-1905. 




Gallons. 


Gallons. 


Gallons. 


France 


23-0 


288 


308 


Italy 


20-6 


20-0 


2VI 

185 


Spain ....;. 


311 


164 


Portugal .... 


1 l-O 


203 


171 


Austria-Hungary . • . 


29 


* a « 


3-9 


Germany . . t • 
United States . . , . 


1-19 


138 


i'45 


0-30 


0-32 


©•43 


British Empire — 
United Kingdom , . 


0-37 


040 


032 


Australia .... 


109 


112 


1 -30 


Cape* 









* Has varied between 1-9 and 37. 

The whole of the wine consumed in the United Kingdom is 
imported. On the average somewhat more than one-third of the 
wine imported is derived from France, and about a quarter from 
Spain and Portugal respectively. 

Wine* imported into the United Kingdom in 1906. 



From 


Nature of Wines. 


Quantity. 


Value. 






(Gallons). 


£ 


France . . . 


Claret, burgundy. 








champagne, &c. 


4.105.302 


2,221,423 


Portugal . . 


Chiefly port 


3W.377 l 


i*99.7*7 


Spain . . . 


Sherry, tarra- 






Germany' I 
Netherlands f 


gona. Sue . . 


2.808,751 


397.840 


Hock, Moselle . 


1,268,662 


729.002 


Italy . . . 


,, 


*43.*47 


42.S13 


Total for foreign 








countries 
Australia . . 


•• 


***£© 


4,094.67* 
100,161 


Total British 








possessions . 




777.689 


123.891 



•The quantity of port received was exceptionally large. The 
average quantity is rather under 3 million gallons and the value 
about £850,000. 

* A considerable proportion of the German wines come to the 
United Kingdom via the Netherlands. 

Of the wines imported from France, about one-quarter was 
Champagne and Saumur the remainder consisting almost entirely 
of still wines, such as claret and burgundy. 

VXTICULTOKE AND WlNT-MAKWO 

General Considerations. — Although the wine is cultivated in 
practically every part of the world possessing an appropriate 
climate and soil, from California in the West to Persia in the East, 
and from Germany in the North to the Cape of Good Hope and 
some of the South American republics in the South, yet, as is the 
case also with the cereal crops and many fruits and vegetables, 
the wines produced in countries possessing temperate climates 
arc-when the vintage is successful— finer than those made in 
hot or semi-tropical regions. Although, for instance, the wines 
of Italy, Greece, the Cape, ftc, possess great body and strength, 
they cannot compare as regards elegance of flavour and bouquet 
with the wines of France and Germany. On the other hand, of 
course, the vagaries of the temperate climate of northern Europe 
frequently lead to a partial or complete failure of the vintage, 
whereas the wines produced in relatively hot countries, although 
they undoubtedly vary in quality from year to year, are rarely, 
if ever, total failures. The character of a wine depends mainly 
(a) on the nature of the soil; (6) on the general type of the 
climate; (c) on the variety of vine cultivated. The quality, 
as distinct from general character, depends almost entirely on 



718 



WINE 



[CHEMISTRY OF WINE 



the vintage, i.e. on the weather conditions preceding and during 
the gathering of the grapes and the subsequent fermentation 
Of all these factors, that of the nature of the soil on which the 
vine is grown is perhaps the most important The same vine, ex- 
posed to practically identical conditions of climate, will produce 
markedly different wines if planted in different soils. On the 
other hand, different varieties of the vine, provided they are 
otherwise not unsuitable, may, if planted in the same soil, after 
a time produce wines which may not differ seriously in character 
Thus the planting of French and German vines in other countries 
(e.g. Australia, the Cape) has not led to the production of directly 
comparable wines, although there may at first have been some 
general resemblance in character. On the other hand, the re- 
planting of some of the French vineyards (after the ravages due 
to the phylloxera) with American vines, or, as was more generally 
the case, the grafting of the old French stock on the hardy 
American roots, resulted, after a time, in many cases, in the 
production of wines practically indistinguishable from those 
formerly made. 

Wine-making. — The art of wine-making is, compared with the 
manufacture of beer or spirits, both in principle and in practice 
a relatively simple operation. When the grapes have attained to 
maturity they are collected by hand and then transferred in 
baskets or carts to the press house. After the stalks have been 
removed cither by hand or by a simple apparatus the juice is 
expressed either — as is still the case in many quarters — by 
trampling under foot or by means of a simple lever or screw 
press or by rollers. In the case of red wines the skins are not re- 
moved, inasmuch as it is from the latter that the colour of the 
wine is derived. The must, as the expressed juice of the grape is 
termed, is now exposed to the process of fermentation, which 
consists essentially in the conversion of the sugar of the must 
into alcohol and various subsidiary products. The fermenting 
operations in wine-making differ radically from those obtaining 
in the case of beer or of spirits in that (if we except certain special 
cases) no yeast is added from without. Fermentation is induced 
spontaneously by the yeast cells which are always present in 
large numbers in the grape itself. The result is that— as com- 
pared with beer or spirits — the fermentation at first is relatively 
slow, but it rapidly increases in intensity and continues until 
practically the whole of the sugar is converted. In the case of the 
production of certain sweet wines (such as the sweet Sauternes, 
Fort and Tokay) the fermentation only proceeds up to a certain 
extent. It then cither stops naturally, owing to the fact that the 
yeast cells will not work rapidly in a liquid containing more than 
a certain percentage of alcohol, or it is stopped artificially either 
by the addition of spirit or by other means which will be referred 
to below. As the character of a wine depends to a considerable 
extent on the nature of the yeast (see Fermentation), many 
attempts have been made of late years to improve the character of 
inferior wines by adding to the unfermented must a pure culture of 
yeast derived from a superior wine. If pure yeast is added in this 
manner in relatively large quantities, it will tend to predominate, 
inasmuch as the number of yeast cells derived from the grapes is 
at the commencement of fermentation relatively smalL In this 
way, by making pure cultures derived from some of the finest 
French and German wines it has been possible to lend something 
of their character to the inferior growths of, for instance, Cali- 
fornia and Australia. It is not possible, however, by this method 
to entirely reproduce the character of the wine from which the 
yeast is derived inasmuch as this depends on other' factors as 
well, particularly the constitution of the grape juice, conditions 
of climate, &c. The other micro-organisms naturally present in 
the must which is pitched with the pure culture are not without 
their influence on the result. . If it were possible to sterilize 
the must prior to pitching with pure yeast no doubt better 
results might be obtained, but this appears to be out of the 
question inasmuch as the heating of the must which sterilization 
involves is not a practicable operation. After the main fermenta- 
tion is finished, the young wine is transferred to casks or vats. 
The general method followed is to fill the casks to the bung-bole 
and to keep them full by an occasional addition of wine. The 



secondary fermentation proceeds slowly and the carbonic acid 
formed is allowed to escape by way of the bung-hole, which in 
order to prevent undue access of air is kept lightly coveted or is 
fitted with a water seal, which permits gas to pass out of the 
cask, but prevents any return flow of air. During this secondary 
fermentation the wine gradually throws down a deposit which 
forms a coherent crust, known as argol or lees. This consists 
chiefly of cream of tartar (bitartrate of potash), tartrate of lime, 
yeast cells and of albuminous and colouring matters. At the 
end of some four to five months this primary deposition is prac- 
tically finished and the wine more or less bright. At this stage it 
receives its first racking Racking consists merely in separating 
the bright wine from the deposit. The wine is racked into clean 
casks, and this operation is repeated at intervals of some months, 
in all three to four times. As a general rule, it is not possible by 
racking alone to obtain the wine in an absolutely bright condition. 
In order to bring this about, a further operation, namely that of 
fining, is necessary This consists, in most cases, in adding to 
the wine proteid matter in a finely divided state. For this 
purpose isinglass, gelatin or, in the case of high-class red wines, 
white of egg is employed. The proteid matter combines with 
a part of the tannin in the wine, forming an insoluble Unnate, 
and this gradually subsides to the bottom of the cask, dragging 
with it the mechanically suspended matters which are the main 
cause of the wine's turbidity. In some cases purely mechanical 
means such as the use of Spanish clay or filtration are employed 
for fining purposes. Some wines, particularly those which lack 
acid or tannin, arc very difficult to fine. The greatest care is 
necessary to ensure the cleanliness and asepticity of the casks in 
which wine is stored or into which it is racked. The most common 
method of ensuring cask cleanliness is the operation known as 
" sulphuring." This consists in burning a portion of a sulphur 
"match" (i.e. a flat wick which has been steeped in melted 
sulphur, or simply a stick of melted sulphur) in the interior of the 
cask. The sulphurous acid evolved destroys such micro-organisms 
as may be in the cask, and in addition, as it reduces the supply 
of oxygen, renders the wine less prone to acidulous fermentation. 
Sweet wines, which are liable to fret, are more highly and 
frequently sulphured than dry wines. After the wine has been 
sufficiently racked and fined, and when it has reached a certain 
stage of maturation — varying according to the type of wine 
from, as a rule, two to four years — the wine is ready for bottling. 
Certain wines, however, such as some of the varieties of port, 
are not bottled, but are kept in the wood, at any rate for a 
considerable number of years. Wines so preserved, however, 
develop an entirely different character from those placed in bottle. 

Chemistry of Wine 

Maturation of Ike Grape.— The processes which take place in the 
grape during its growth and maturation are of considerable interest. 
E. Mach has made some interesting observations on this point. 
At first — i.e. at the beginning of July when the berries have attained 
to an appreciable size — the specific gravity of the juice is very low: 
it mains i . little sugar, but a good deal of acid, chiefly free 
taruriL ,i- v.l j[,<l mil lie acid. The juice at this period contains an 
appifx'LJjIf a maun i nf tannin. As the berry grows the amount of 
sugar gradually inert -i- es, and the same up to a certain point applies 
to Cite acidity. The character of the acidity, however, changes, the 
free r art ark acid pr.idually disappearing, forming bitartrate of 
pot a*h a nd being 01 h-. rwise broken up. On the other hand, the free 
malic acid increase* sad the tannin decreases. When the grape is 
ripe, tUe sugar has an lined to a maximum and the acidity is very 
much rvttueeJ < the (attain has entirely disappeared. 

» obtained by Mach afford an interesting 
illustration *>l ioe**i processes: — 

Ai first tli? HJii-tr in the juice consists entirely of dextrose, but 
later true I*** (IneYut.. *) is formed. The sugar in ripe grape juice 
ig practically mu-i -jar. Le. consists of practically equal parts of 
da The proportion of sugar present in the juice 

of nr*- empc* varies considerably according to the type of grape, 
the !■ .rainy and the h irvest. In temperate climates it varies as a 
rule bet ween, \$ ami lo % but in the case of hot climates or where 
the crapes are treated in a special manner, it may rise as high as 
35% and more. .... 

Fermentation— The fermentation of gTape juice. t.e. the must, », 
as we have seen, a relatively simple operation, consisting as it does 
in exposing it to the spontaneous action of the micro-organisms 
contained in it. The main products formed are. as in ail cases of 



VINE DISEASES) 



WINE 



719 



OmsiUmtiom of Crap* Juice at Various Periods of Maturation, 

(E. Mach.) 





Date of Analyst* of Juice. 


6th July. 


12th Aug. 


9th Sept. 


12th Oct 


Specific gravity . 


I-OIO 


1-029 


1-083 


IO93 




Percent. 


PerccsL. 


Percnt 


Prrcrat. 


5°s* r 


O-86 


2-02 


18-52 


23. 17 


Total acid (as 










tartaric acid) . 


2-66 


346 


0-87 


0-71 


Tartar . . . 


0-67 


055 


054 


o-55 


Malic acid . . 


116 


247 


o-5S 


O-42 


Tannin 


0-106 


0-012 







alcoholic fermentation, cthylic alcohol, water and carbonic acid. 
At the same time various subsidiary products such as glycerin, 
succinic add, small quantities of higher alcohols, volatile acids and 
compound esters are produced. In the case of red wines colouring 
matter is dissolved from the skins and a certain amount of mineral 
matter and tannin is extracted. It is to these subsidiary matters 
that the flavour and bouquet in wine arc particularly due, at any rate 
in the first stages of maturation, although some of the substances 
originally present in the grape, such as ready formed esters, essential 
oils, fat and so on, also play a r61e in this regard. In view of the 
fact that fresh grape juice contains innumerable bacteria and moulds, 
in addition to the yeast cells which bring about the alcoholic fermen- 
tation, and that the means which are adopted by the brewer and 
the distiller for checking the action of these undesirable organisms 
t be employed by the wine-maker, it is no doubt remarkable 



that the natural wine yeast so seldom fails to assert a preponderating 
action, particularly as the number of yeast cells at the beginning 01 
fermentation is relatively small. The fact is that the constitution 
of average grape juice and the temperatures of fermentation which 
generally prevail are particularly well suited to the life action of 
wine yeast, and are inimical to the development of the other organ- 
urns. When these conditions fail, as is, for instance, the case when 
the must is lacking in acidity, or when the weather during the 
fermentation periodis very hot and means are not at hand to cool 
the must, bacterial side fermentations may, and do, often take 
place. The most suitable temperature for fermentation varies 
according to the type of wine. In the case of Rhine wines it is 
be t ween 20 and 25 C. If the temperatures rise above this, the 
fermentation is liable to be too rapid, too much alcohol is formed at 
a relatively early stage, and the result is that the fermentation 
ceases before the whole of the sugar has been transformed. Wines 
which have received a check of this description during the main 
fermentation are very liable to bacterial troubles and frets. In the 
case of wines made in more southerly latitudes temperatures between 
25 and 30* are not excessive, hut temperatures appreciably over 30* 
frequently lead to mischief. The young wine immediately after the 
cessation of the main fermentation ts very differently constituted from 
the must from which it was derived. The sugar, as we have seen, 
has disappeared, and alcohol, glycerin and other substances have 
been formed. At the same time the acidity b markedly reduced. 
This reduction of acidity is partly due to the -deposition of various 
salts of tartaric acid, which arc less soluble in a dilute alcoholic 
medium than in water, and partly to the action of micro-organisms. 
Young wines differ very widely in their composition according to 
class and vintage. The alcohol in naturally fermented wines may 
vary between 7 and 16%. although these are not the outside limits. 
The acidity may vary between o-j and 1 %accordingtocircumstanccs. 
The normal proportion of glycerin varies between 7 and id parts for 
every loo parts of alcohol in the wine, but even these limits are 
frequently not reached or exceeded. The total solid matter or 
** extract," as it is called, will vary between 1-5 and 3-5% for dry 
wines, and the mineral matter or ash generally amounts to about 
one-tenth of the " extract." The tannin in young red wines may 
amount to as much as 0-4 or 0-3 %. but in white wines it is much less. 
The amount of volatile acid should be very small, and, except in 
special cases, a percentage of volatile acid exceeding 0-1 to o 1*%, 
according to the class 01 wine, will indicate that an abnormal or 
undesirable fermentation has taken place. As the wine matures 
the most noticeable feature in the first instance » the reduction in 
the acidity, which is mainly due to a deposition of tartar, and the 
disappearance of tannin and colouring matter, due to fining and the 
action of oxygen. 

The taste and bouquet of wines in the earlier stages of their 
development, or within the first four or five years of the vintage, are 
almost entirely dependent upon constituents derived from the must, 
either directly or as a result of the main fermentation. In the caw 
of dry wines, the quality which is known as " body " (palate-fulness) 
is mainly dependent on the solid, i.e. non-volatile, constituents 
These comprise gummy and albuminous matters, acid, salts, glycerin 
and other matters of which we have so fan little knowledge. The 
apparent " body " of the wine, however, is not merely dependent 
upon the absolute quantity of solid — non-volatile— matters it con- 
tains, but is influenced also by the relative proportions in which 



the various constituents exist. For instance, a wine which under 
favourable conditions would seem full and round may appear 
harsh or rough, merely owing to the fact that it contains a small 
quantity of suspended tartar, the latter causing temporary hyper- 
acidity and apparent " greenness." It has been found by experience 
also that wines which are normally constituted as regards the relative 
proportions of their various constituents, provided that the quantities 
of these do not fall below certain limits, are likely to develop well, 
whereas wines which, although perfectly sound, show an abnormal 
constitution, will rarely turn out successful The bouquet of young 
wines is due principally to the compound esters which exist in the 
juice or are formed by the primary fermentation. It was at one time 
thought that the quality of the bouquet was dependent upon the 
absolute quantity of these compound esters present, but the author 
and others have plainly shown that this is not the case. Among 
the characteristic esters present in wine is the well-known " oenanthic 
ether," which consists principally of ethylic pelargonatc. It does 
not follow that a wine which shows a pretty bouquet in the primary 
stages will turn out well. On the contrary, it is frequently the case 
that the most successful wines in after years are those which at first 
show very little bouquet. The maturation of wine, whether it be in 
bottle or in cask, is an exceedingly interesting operation. The 
wines which remain for a long period in cask gradually lose alcohol 
and water by evaporation, and therefore become in time extremely 
concentrated as regards the solid and relatively non-volatile matters 
contained in them. As a rule, wines which arc kept for many years 
in cask become very dry. and the loss of alcohol by evaporation- 
part icuUrly in the case of light wines — has as a result the production 
of acidity by oxidation. Although these old wines may contain 
absolutely a very large quantity of acid, they may not appear acid 
to the palate inasmuch as the other constituents, particularly the 
glycerin and gummy matters, will have likewise increased in relative 
quantity to such an extent as to hide the acid flavour. In the case 
of maturation in bottle the most prominent features are the mellowing 
of the somewhat hard taste associated with new wine and the 
development of the secondary bouquet. The softening effect of age 
is due to the deposition of a part of the tartar together with a part 
of the tannin and some of the colouring matter. The mechanism 
of the development of the secondary bouquet appears to be dependent 
firstly on purely chemical processes, principally that of oxidation, 
and secondly on the life activity of certain micro-organisms. L. 
Pasteur filled glass tubes entirely with new wine and then sealed 
them up. It was found that wine so treated remained unchanged 
in taste and flavour for years. On the other hand, he filled some 
other tubes partly with wine, the remaining space being occupied 
by air. In this case the wine gradually matured and acquired the 
properties which were associated with age. Wortmann examined a 
number of old wines and found that in all cases in which the wine 
was still in good condition or of fine character a small number of 
living organisms (yeast cells, Ac.) were still present. He also 
found that in the case of old wines which had frankly deteriorated, 
the presence of micro-organisms could not be detected. It is, how- 
ever, not absolutely clear whether the improvement observed on 
maturation is actually due to the action 01 these micro-organisms. 
It may be that the conditions which are favourable to the improve- 
ment of the wine are also favourable to the continued existence of 
the micro-organisms, and that their disappearance is coincident 
with, and not the cause of, a wine's deterioration. It is frequently 
assumed that a wine is necessarily good because it is old, and that the 
quality of a wine increases indefinitely with age. This is, however, 
a very mistaken idea. Theie is a period in the life history of every 
wine at which it attains its maximum of quality. This period as a 
rule is short, and it then commences " to go back " or deteriorate. 
The age at which a wine is at its best is by no means so great as is 
popularly supposed. This age naturally depends upon the character 
of the wine and on the vintage. Highly alcoholic wines, such as port 
and sherry, will improve and remain good for a much longer period 
than relatively light wines, such as claret, champagne or Moselle. 
As regards the latter, indeed, it is nowadays held that it is at its best 
within a very short period of the vintage, and that when the charac- 
teristic slight " prickling " taste due to carbonic acid derived from 
the secondary fermentation has disappeared, the wine has lost its 
attraction for the modern palate. In the same way champagne 
rarely, if ever, improves after twelve to fourteen years. With 
regard to claret it may be said that as a general rule the wine will not 
improve after twenty-five to thirty years, and that after this time it 
will commence to deteriorate. At the same time there are excep- 
tional cases in which claret may be found in very fine condition after 
a lapse of as much as forty years, but even in such cases it will be 
found that for every bottle that is good there may be one which k 
distinctly inferior. 

Diseases 
Diseases of the Vine.— The vine n subject to a number of diseases 
some of which are due to micro-organisms (moulds, bacteria), others 
to insect life. The most destructive of all these diseases is that of 
the phylloxera. The Phylloxera tastatrtx is an insect belonging to 
t he grren fly tribe, which destroys t he roots and leaves of the growing 
plant by forming galls and nodosities. Practically every wine* 
growing country has been afflicted with this disease at onetime or 



J20 



WINE 



(WINES OF FRANCE 



another. The mat epidemic in the French vineyards in the years 
1882 to 1S85 led to a reduction of the yield of about 50%. Many 
remedies for this disease haw been suggested, including total 
submersion of the vineyards, the use of carbon bisulphide for spray- 
ing, and of copper salts, but there appears to be little doubt that a 
really serious epidemic can only be dealt with by systematic destruc- 
tion of the vines, followed by replanting with resistant varieties. 
This, of course, naturally leads to the production of a wine somewhat 



different in character to that produced before the epidemic, but this 
difficulty may be overcome to some extent, as it was in the Bordeaux 
vineyards, by grafting ancient stock on the roots of new and resistant 
vines. Oidimm or mildew b only second in importance to the 
phylloxera. It is caused by a species of mould which Kves on the 
green part of the plant. The leaves shrivel, the plant ceases to grow, 
and the grapes that are formed also shrivel and die. The most 
effective cure, short of des t ruc t ion and replantation, appears to 
be spraying with finely divided sulphur. Another evil, which is 
caused by unseasonable weather during and shortly after the 
flowering, is known as conlnre. This causes the flowers, or at a 
later period the young fruit, to fall off the growing plant in large 
numbers. 

Diseases of Wine.— These are numerous, and may be derived either 
directly from the vine, from an abnormal constitution of the grape 
juke, or to subsequent infection. Thus the disease known as tonne 
or casse is generally caused by the wine having been made or partly 
made from grapes affected by mildew. The micro-organism giving 
rise to this disease generally appears in the form of small jointed rods 
and tangled masses under the microscope. Wine which is affected 
bv this disease loses its colour and flavour. The colour in the case 
of red wines b first altered from red to brown, and in bad cases 
disappears altogether, leaving an almost colourless solution. Thb 
disease b also caused by the wine lacking alcohol, add and tannin, 
and to the pr esen c e of an excess of albuminous matters. The most 
common disease to which wine b subject by infection b that caused 
by a micro-organism termed mjcoderma-vini (French fieurs de tin). 
Thb micro-organism, which resembles ordinary yeast cells in appear- 
ance, forms a pellicle on the surface of wine, particularly when the 
latter b e x posed to the ah* more than it should be, and its develop- 
ment b favoured by lack of alcohol. The micro-organism splits up 
the alcohol of the wine and some of the other constituents, forming 
carbonic acid and water. This proce ss indicates a very intensive 
form of oxidation inasmuch as no intermediary acid b formed. 
One of the most common diseases, namely that producing acetous 
fermentation, differs from the disease caused by it. rini in that the 
alcohol b transformed into acetic acid. It b caused by a micro- 
organism termed ilycoderma aceti, which occurs in wine in small 
groups and chapicts of round cells. It b principally due to a lack of 
alcohol hi the wine or to bck of acidity in the must. The micro- 
organism which causes the disease of bitterness (amer) forms longish 
branched filaments in the wine. Hand in hand with the development 
of a disagreeable bitter taste there b a precipitation of colouring 
matter and the formation of certain disagreeable secondary con- 
stituents. Thb disease b generally caused by infection and b 
favoured by a lack of alcohol, acid and tannin. Another disease 
which generally occurs only in white wines b that which converts 
the wine into a thick stringy liquid. It b the viscous or graisse 
dbease. As a rule this disease b due to a lack of tannin (hence its 
more frequent occurrence in white wines). The mannitic disease, 
which b due to high temperatures during fermentation and bck of 
acid in the must, b rarely of serious consequence in temperate 
countries. The mkro-organbm splits up the laevulose in the must, 
forming mannitol and different acids, particularly volatile acid. 
The wine becomes turbid and acquires a peculiarly bitter sweet 
taste, and if the dbease goes further Be c ome s quite undrinkabte. 
It would appear from the researches of the author and others that 
the mannitol ferment b more generally present in wines than b 
s u pposed to be the case. Thus the author found in some very okl 
and fine wines very appreciable quantities of mannitol. In these 
cases the mannitic fermentation had obviously not developed to 
any extent, and small quantities of mannitol appear to exercise no 
prejudicial effect on flavour. 

treatment of Diseases. — It was found by Pasteur that by heating 
wine out of contact with air to about 66* C the various germs 
causing wine maladies could be checked in their action or destroyed. 
The one disadvantage of thb method b that unless very carefully 
applied the normal development of the wine may be seriously 
retarded. In the case of cheap wines or of wines which are already 
more or less mature! thb b not a matter of any great importance, 
but in the case of the finer wines it may be a serious consideration. 
Pasteurizing alone, however, win only avail in cases where the dbease 
has not gone beyond the initial stages, inasmuch as it cannot restore 



www., taste or flavour where those have already been affected. 
In such cases, and also in others where pnstcariaing » not — «—■-■- 




some direct treatment with a view to cfianmatMg or adding con- 
mkmta** whsth ate in excess or lacking b indicated. lo thb regard 
fe feaunajnAat, daScatt to draw the bee bit «m that which is a 



- . w e of good material 

It*** eianpfc. it appears to the author, bow- 
ls are employed merely with a view to 
and there boo httesfljon of increasing 



thequantttyofthewineforrjorposesofgam.orofgWinf ttal 

appearance of quality, these operations are perfectly justifiable and 
may be compared to the mndinrarJons of procedure which are forced 
upon the brewer or distiller who has to deal with somewhat abnormal 
raw material. It has been found, for instanre. that in the case of 
the mannitic dbease the action of the mkxo-organbm may be 
checked, or prevented altogether, by bringing the aadity of the mast 
up to a certain level by the addition of a small quantity of tartaric* 
acid. Again, it b well known that in the case of the viscous dbease 
the difficulty mav be overcome by the addition of a small quantity 
of tannin. In the same way the dbease caused by the mildew 
organism may be counteracted by a alight addition of alcohol and 
tannin. One method of assisting nature in wine- making, which b. 
in the opinion of the author, not justifiable if the resulting prodnct 
b sold as wine or in such a manner as to indicate that it m natural 
wine, b the process termed " gallbiring," so called from its i aventu r 
H. L. L. Gall, which has been largely practised, parfirnfarly on the 
Rhine. The process of Gall consists in adding sugar and water hi 
sufficient quantity to establish the percentages of free acid and sugar 
which are characteristic of the best years in the meat riNsinul urn 
inferior years. Although there b no objection to thb prodnct (roam 
a purely hygienic point of view, it b not natural wine, and the 
products present in the must other than sugar and acid are by that 
process seriously affected. Another method of dealing wkh inierior 
must, due to J. A. C Chaptal, consists in nentraHring umnux add 
by means of po wdered marble, and bringing up the soger to normal 
proportions by adding appropriate amounts of thb substance in a 
solid form. There b less objection to thb j 
former, inasmuch as it does not resnh in a < 
It b scarcely necessary to say that the in. 
alcohol and water, or of either to must or to wine. 1 
as a reprehensible operation. 

Plastering. — In some countries, partkuhrfy in Italy, Spain 1 

Portugal, it has been and still b a common practice to add a aa 

quantity of gypsum to the fermenting must or to dust it over the 
grapes prior to pressing. It b said that wines treated in thb manner 
mature more quickly, and that they are more stable and of better 
colour. It certainly appears to be the case that masts which are 
plastered rarely suffer from abnormal fermentation, and that the 
wines which result very rarely turn acid. The main result of 
plastering b that the soluble tartrates in the wine are decomposed, 
forming insoluble tartrate of lime and soluble sulphate of r*rt,*ifr, 
It b held that aa excess of the latter b undesirable in wine, but 
unless the quantity appreciably exceeds two grama per litre, no 
reasonable objection can be raised. 

Basis Wines. — Wines which are made not from fresh grape joke 
but from raisins or concentrated must, or similar material, are gener- 
ally termed basb wines. They are prepared by adding water to the 
concentrated saccharine matter and subsequently pitching with 
wine yeast at an appropriate temperature. Frequently alcohol. 
tannin, glycerin, ana similar wine constituents are also added. If 
carefully prepared there is no objection to these basb wines from a 
hygienic point of view, alt hough they have not the delicate qualities 
and stimulating effects of natural wines; unfortunately, however. 
these wines have in the past been vended 00 a large scale in a manner 
calculated to deceive the consumer as to their real nature, but 
energetic measures, which have of late been taken in most 
countries affected by thb trade, have done much to mitigate the 
eviL 

Wines or Fiamce 

It may be safely said that there is no other country in which 
the general conditions are so favourable for the production of 
wine of high quality and on a large scale as is the case ia France. 
The dimate b essentially of a moderate character; the winters 
are rarely very cold, and the summers are seldom of the intensely 
hot and dry nature which b characteristic of most southerly 
wine countries. There are large tracts of gently undulating or 
relatively flat country which b, inasmuch as it ensures effective 
exposal of the vines to the sun, of a type particularly suited to 
viticulture. There is almost, everywhere an efficient supply of 
water, and lastly the character of the soil is in many parts an ideal 
one for the production of wine high in quality and abundant m 
Quantity. It may here be stated that a rich soil such as is suitable 
for the growth of cereal oops or vegetables a not, as a rule, an 
ideal one for the production of fine wines. The ideal soil for vine- 
growing is that which possesses a sufficiency, out not an excess, of 
nutriment for the phut, and which is so constituted that it will 
affcird good drainage. The most important qualification, however, 
b that it should be so constituted as to preserve and store up 
during the relatively cold weather the heat which it has derived 
from the atmosphere during the summer. In tins respect the 
famous Bordeaux or Gironde district is, perhaps, more fortunate 
than any other part of the world. The thrifty and 1 



WINES OF FRANCE) 



WINE 



721 



habits of the French peasantry, and also the system of small 
holdings which prevails in France, have, there is little doubt, 
done much to raise the French wine iodustry to the pre-eminent 
position which it holds. There is perhaps no branch of agri- 
culture which requires more minute attention or for which a 
system of small holdings is more suitable than wine culture. 
At the present day, wine is produced in no less than 77 depart- 
ments in France, the average total yield during the past ten years 
being roughly 1000 million gallons. -This is considerably more 
than the average produced previous to the phylloxera period 
(1882-1887). The highest production on record was in the year 
1875, when roughly 1840 million gallons were produced. Although 
France produces such enormous quantities of wine it is a remark- 
able fact that more wine is imported into France than is expo/ted 
from that country. The average imports are in the neighbour- 
hood of 120 million gallons, of which rather more than one-half 
comes from Algeria. The exports amount to roughly 40 million 
gallons. Of recent years (1896-1907) the only vintages which 
have been deficient as regards quantity ate those- of 1897, 1898, 
190a and 1903, but even in the most unfavourable of these years 
(1898) the quantity exceeded .700 million gallons. The greatest 
yield in this same period was in 1900, when over 1470 million 
gallons were produced. The number of different varieties of 
wines produced in France is remarkable. The red wines include 
the elegant and delicate (though not unstable) wines of the 
Gironde, and again the full, though not coarse, wines of the Bur- 
gundy district. Among the white wines we have the full sweet 
Sauteroes, the relatively dry and elegant Graves and Chablis, 
and the light white wines 'which produce champagne and 
brandy. 

Gironde (Bordeaux) Wines.— U France is the wine-growing country. 
par exccUtnc*, the Bordeaux district may be regarded as the heart 
and centre 01 the French wine industry. Although other pacts of 
France produce excellent wines, the Gironde is easily first if high 
and stable character, elegance and delicacy, variety and quantity 
are considered together. The total area of the departments of the 
Gironde is about 2} million acres, and roughly one-fifth of this as 
under the vine. It forms a tract of country some 90 nv long by 
60 ra. broad, in which the chief watersheds are those of the Garonne, 
Dordogne, and their confluent the Gironde. The soil varies very 
considerably in its character, and it is due to these variations that so 
many different types of wine are produced in this district. It gener- 
ally consists of limestone, or of mixed limestone and day, or of sand 
and day, or of gravel, with here and there flint and rolled quartz. 
The subsoil is either of clay, of limestone, or mixed sand and day, 
gravel, or of a peculiar kind of pudding stone which exists in a hard 
and a soft variety. It is formed of sand or fine gravel cemented by 
infiltrated oxide of iron. This stone is known locally under the name 
of alios. It is generally found at a depth of about 2 ft. under the 
better growths of the Medoc and Graves. The subsoils of some of the 
other districts (Cotes and St Emilion) contain much stone in the 
shape of flint and quarts. The finest wines of the Medoc and Graves 
are largely grown on a mixture of gravel, quarts and sand with 
a subsoil of alios or clay. The Gironde viticultural region is divided 
into six main districts, namely, Medoc, Sautemes, Graves, Cotes, 
Entre-deux-Mers and Pains. Although properly belonging to the 
COtes, the St Emilion district is sometimes classified separately, as 
indeed, having regard to the excellence and variety of its wines, it 
has a right to be. 

Mbdoc— The most important subdivision of the Gironde district b 
that of the Medoc It is here that the wine which is known to us as 
claret is produced in greatest excellence and variety. The Medoc 
consists of a tongue of land to the north of Bordeaux, bounded by 
the Garonne and Gironde on the east, and by the sea on the west and 
north. It is, roQgbly, 59 ra. long by 6 to 10 ra. broad. The soil 



varies considerably in nature, but consists mostly of graveL quarts, 
limestone and sand on the surface, and of day and alios beneath. 
The principal vines grown in die Medoc are the Cabcrnet-Sauvignon, 



which is the most important, the Gros Cabernet, the Meriot, the 
Carmenere, the Malbec, and the Verdot. All these produce red 
wines. Very little white wine is made in the Medoc proper. The 
method of viae cultivation is peculiar and characteristic. The vines 
are kept very low, and as a rule only two branches or arms, which are 
trained at right angles to the stem, are permitted to form. This 
dwarf system of culture gives the Medoc vineyards at a distance the 
appearance of a sea of small bushes, thereby producing an effect 
entirely different from, for instance, that seen on the Rhine with its 
high basket-shaped plants. The methods of making the wine in 
the Medoc axe of the simplest description. The vintage generally 
takes place towards the end of September or the beginning of October. 
The grapes from which the stalks are partly or wholly (and occasion- 
ally not at all) removed are crushed by treading or some other simple 



method, but sometimes even this is omitted, the juice being expies s td 
by the weight of the grapes themselves, or by the pressure caused 
by incipient fermentation. Presses are not used in the case of red 
wines until after fermentation, when they are employed in order 
to separate the wine from the murk. As a rule the fermentation 
occupies from 6 to 10 days; by this time the roust has practically 
lost the whole of its sugar, and the young wine is drawn off and filled 
into hogsheads. The secondary fermentation proper is generally 
finished at the end of about six weeks to two months, and the first 
racking takes place, as a rule, in February or March. Subsequent 
rackings are made about June and November of the same year, 
but in the following years, until bottling, two rackings a year 
suffice. 

The Medoc is divided into a number of communes (such as St 
Julien, Margaux, Pauillac &c), and in these communes are situated 
the different vineyards from which the actual name of the wine is 
derived. Unlike the products of the different vineyards of most 
other districts, which are purchased by the merchants and vatted 
to supply a general wine for commerce, the yield of the prindpal 
estates of the Medoc are kept distinct and reach the consumer as the 
products of a particular growth and of a particular year. This 
practice Is almost without exception resorted to with what are 
known as the " classed growths^' and the superior " bourgeois " 
wines, whilst in seasons in which the wines are of good quality it is 
continued down to the lower grades. This classification of the 
Medoc growths became necessary owing to the great variety of 
qualities produced and the distinct characteristic excellence of the 
individual vintages. There are four main classes or cms (literally 
growths, but more correctly types or qualities), namely, the grands 
crus dasses " or " classed growths " and the bourgeois, artisan and 
peasant growths. The "classed growths," which indude all the 
most famous wines of the Medoc, are themselves subdivided Into 
five sections or growths. This general classification, which was 
made by a conference of brokers in 18*5 as a result of many years of 
observation dating back to the 18th century, is still very fairly 
descriptive of the average merit of the wines classified. The following 
is a list of the classed red wines of the Medoc (».r. claret) together 
with the names of the communes in which they arc situated. 

Classed Growths of the Medoc (Claret) 

First Growths, 
Chateau Lafite, Pauillac. 

„ . Margaux, Margaux. 

M Latour, Pauillac 

Second Growths, 
Chateau Mouton- Rothschild, feuillac 

„ Rauzan-Scgla, Margaux. 

„ Rausan-Gasstes, Margaux. 

„ Lebvillc-Lascascs, St lulien. 

„ Lfoville-PoyferreVSt Julien. 
Lcbville-Barton, St Julien. 

„ Durfort-Vrvens, Margaux. 

„ Lascombes, Margaux 

„ Gfuaud-Larose-Sarget, St Julien. 

„• Gruaud Larose, St Julien. 

„ Brane-Cantenac, Cantcnac 

„ Pichon-Longueville, Pauillac 

„ Pkhon-Longueville-Lalande, Pauillac 

„ Ducru-Beaucaillou, St Julien. 
Cos d'Estourncl, St Estephe. 
Chateau Montrose, St Estephe. 

Third Growths. 
Chateau Klrwan, Cantcnac 

„ D'Issan, Cantenac 

„ Lagrange, St Julien. 

„ Langoa, St Julien. 

„ Giscours, Labarde. 
Malescot, Margaux. 
Brown Cantenac, Canfrnag. 

„ Palmer, Cantenac 

„ La Laguner Ludon. 

„ Desmirail, Margaux. 
Calon-Segur. St Estephe. 

„ Ferriere, Margaux. 

„ Becker, Margaux. 

Fourth Growths. 
Chateau Saint-Pierre. St Julien. 
„ Branaire-Duluc 5t Jufien. 
„ Talbot, St lulien. 
,, Duhart-Milon, Pauillac 
„ Pbujet, Cantenac 
„ La Tour Camet.St Laurent. 
Rochet, St Estephe. 
Beychcvelle, St Juuen. 
Le Prieuri, Cantenac 
Marquis de Terme, Margaux. 



722 



WINE 



[WINES OF FRANCE 



Fifth Growths. 

Chlieau Pontet-Canet, Pauillac 

„ Bataulcy, Paiullac. 

Graud-Puy-Lacosre, Pauillac 
Ducasse-Crand-Puy, Pauillac 
ChAteau Lynch-Bagcs, Pauillac 

„ Lynch-Moussas, Pauillac 

„ Dauxac, Labarde. 

„ Moutoo-d'Armailhacq, PatuUac 

„ Le Tertre, Arsac 

„ Haut-Bages, Pauillac 

„ Pedesdaux, Pauillac 

f , Belgrave, St Laurent. 

„ Camensac, St Laurent. 
Cos-Labory, St Estephc 
Chiteau Clerc-Milon. Pauillac 

„ Croixet-Bages, Pauillac 

M Cantemerle, Macau. 

The quality of the Medoc red wines (and this applies alao to some 
of the liner growths of the other Bordeaux districts) is radically 
different from that of wines similar in type grown in other parts of 
the world. The Gironde red wines have sufficient body and alcohol 
to ensure stability without being heavy or fiery. At the same time, 
their acidity is very low and their bouquet characteristically delicate 
and elegant. It is to this relatively large amount of body and 
absence of an excess of acid and of tannin that the peculiarly soft 
effect of the Bordeaux wines on the palate is due It has been said 
that chemistry is of little avail in determining the value of a wine, 
and this is undoubtedly true as regards the bouquet and flavour, 
but there is no gainsaying the fact that many hundreds of analyses 
of the wines of the Gironde have shown that they are, as a dass, 
distinctly different in the particulars r e f erre d to from wines of the 
claret type produced, for instance, in Spain, Australia or the Cape. 
The quality of the wines naturally varies considerably with the 
vintage; but it is almost invariably the case that the wines of 
successful vintages will contain practically the same relative propor- 
tions of their various constituents, although the absolute amounts 
present of these constituents may differ widely. It is the author's 
experience also that where a wine displays aome abnormality as 
regards one or more constituents, that although it may be sound, it 
is rarely a wine of the highest class. The tables below will give a 
fair idea of the variations which occur in the same wine as a result 
of different vintages, and the variations due to differences of 
" growth " in the same vintage. These figures are selected from 
among a number published by the author in the Journal of the 
Institute of Brewing, April 1907. 



and at a maximum in 1907, when dose on 1000 hogshead* were 
obtained. Similarly, the Chiteau Margaux. which yielded 1120 
hogsheads in 1900, produced 280 hogsheads in 190$. The prices of 
the wines also are subject to great fluctuation, but in fair years will 
vary, according to dass and quality, from £10 to £30 per hogshead 
for the better growths. 

The principal claret vintages of modern times have beea those of 
1858. 1864. 1869, 1870, 1874, 1875, t87?, 1878. 1888. 1893. 1896. 
1899 and 1900. while it was thought probable that many of the wines 
of 1904 to 1907 inclusive would turn out weJL From 1882 to 1886 
inclusive, the vintages were almost total failures owing to mildew. 
In 1887 to 1895 a number of fair wines were produced in each year. 
and the first really good vintage of the post-mildew-ptiyUoxera 
period was that of 1888. 

Most of the wines grown on a purely gravelly soil are termed 
** Graves," but there is a specific district of Graves which lies south 
of Bordeaux and west of the river, and extends as far as m 
Langon. The soil is almost a pure sandy gravel with a 
subsoil of varied nature, but prindpally a/Mi, gravd. day or sand. 
This district produces both red and white wines. The vines, the 
methods of viticulture and vinincation as regards the red wines of 
the Graves district, are similar to those of the Medoc The wines 
are, if anything, slightly fuller in body and more alcoholic than 
those of the tatter region. They port si a characteristic flavour 
which differentiates them somewhat sharply from the Medoc wines. 
The Graves contains one vineyard, namely Chiteau Haut-Brion, 
which ranks in quality together with the three first growths of the 
Medoc The remainder of the red Graves are not classified, but 
among the more important wines may be mentioned the following 
in the commune of Pessac Chiteau La Mission and Chateau Pa| 

Clement; in the commune of Villenave D'Ornon, Chiteau 

Ferrade; in Leognan, Chiteau Haut-Bailly, Chateau Haut-Brkm- 
Larrivet and Chiteau Branon-Licterie; in MartuTac, Chateau 
Smith-Haut-Lafite. 

The district of Sautemes produces the finest white wines of the 
Gironde, one might say of the whole of France. Whereas the 
white wines of the Graves are on the whole fairly dry and «^^^_ 
light in character, the white wines of Sauterncs are full ammmmmmm ' 
and sweet, with a very fine characteristic bouquet. The district of 
Sautemes covers the communes of Sautemes, Bonuses and a part 
of Barsac Preignac, Fargues and St Pierre-de-Mon*. The general 
configuration of the country is markedly different from that of the 
Medoc, consisting of a series of low hills rising easily from the river. 
The soil consists chiefly of mixed day and gravd. or day and lime- 
stone, and the vines chiefly used are the Sauvignon, the Semilkm 
and the Muscatdte. The wines are made entirely from white grapes, 
and the methods of collecting the latter, and of working them up 



iPane- 
an La 







Analyses of ChStean LafiU of Different Vintage*- 1 








Vintage. 


Description. 


Alcohol 
Per Cent. 
byVoL 


Total 
Acidity. 


Extract 
(Solid 
Matter). 


Ash. 


Total 

Tartaric 

Acid. 


Glycerin. 


Sogar. 


1865 

i«75 
1893 
1896 
1899 
1905 


Chiteau Lafite 


11-26 

10*31 
II-OO 

1 1 05 
u-47 
10-75 


417 

23 

3-51 
3*49 
302 


26-83 

27-91 
25*34 


218 

2-4* 
2-68 
3-ot 
24a 


2-28 

2- 1 1 
171 
1-78 

2-42 


7*99 
725 

71 x 
7-5* 


1-69 

«-74 

2-12 



Analyses of Different Clarets of the Same Vintage. 1 







Alcohol 


Total 
Acidity. 


Extract 




Total 






Vintage. 


Description. 


PerCent. 
byVoL 


(Solid 
Matter). 


Ash. 


Tartaric 
Acid. 


Glycerin. 


Sugar. 


1900 


Ch. Margaux 


12-14 


3-06 


26-32 


2-09 


150 


876 


iH 




Ch. Moutoa-Rothscbild 


Xt-82 


a-97 


28-98 


1-23 


12 




Ch.Larose 


12-06 


3-23 


29-01 

££ 

27-48 


2-29 


1-50 


3-97 




Ch.Bataiuey 


I2-H 


3*15 


3-39 


t.48 


8-45 


*-27 




Ch. Palmer (Margaux) 
Ch. Smith-Haut-Lafite 


11-73 
13-70 


3-19 
3«io 


272 

2- IO 


■S 


tt 


227 

2-33 




Second growth 


10-91 


3*33 


39-44 


2» 


S3 


6-99 


1-73 




Bourgeois growth 


12-71 


3*33 


«9-57 


9-oi 


3-49 




Peasant growth 


n-47 


3*5« 


30-97 


I-7I 


2-50 


718 


t-ao 



'Results (excepting alcohol) are cxpiesaed in grams per litre, Le, roughly p**U per thousand. 



The annual output of the Gironde during; the last few years has been 
roughly 70 to 100 million gallons. In the decade 1876 to 1886 the 
average amount was barely 30 miBios gallons owing to the small 
yields of the years 1881 to 1885. In the years 1874 and 187s the 
yield exceeded 100 million gallons. The output of the classed 
growths varies considerably according to the vintage, but is on the 
' ' " care exercised in the vineyards, greater 

ft anas. Thus within recent years the 
l*ss at a minimum in 1903 when only 
tdarct-46 gallons) were produced, 




into wine, are entirely different from those prevalent in the red 
wine districts. The grapes are allowed to remain on the vines some 
three to four weeks longer than is the case in the Medoc, and the 
result is that they shrivel up and become over-ripe, and so contain 
relatively little water and a very large quantity of sugar. This 
alone, however, does not account for the peculiar character of the 
Sautemes, for during the latter period of ripening a specific micro- 
organism termed Botrytis txnerea develops on the grape, causing a 
peculiar condition termed pourritmre noble (German Edetfduie). 
which appears to be responsible for the remarkable bouquet obeuxd 



WINES OF FRANCE) WINE 

to the wine*. When the grape* tan attained the 



723 



ben the grape* have attained the proper 
ir over-ripeness, they are gathered with th 
being frequently cat off from the branch 



i branches singly, 
_ . „ The grape* are then not 

crushed, but are immediately pressed, and the juice alone i* subjected 
to fermentation. A* a rule, three wines are made in the principal 
vineyards in three successive periods. The first wine, which is 
••—•■- -ally the a 



care, the berries t 

and sorted according to their appearance. 



J the sin do lite, is generally the sweetest and noest, the next 

(called the miiiom) being somewhat drier and the last (sin do earns) 
being the least valuable. For some markets these wines are shipped 
separately, for others they are blended according to the prevalent 
taste. The musts from which the Sauternes wines are made are so 
concentrated that only a part of the sugar is transformed into 
alcohol, an appreciable portion remaining nnfermented. These 
wines, therefore, require very careful handling in order to prevent 
nodestxabte secondary fermentations taking puce at a later period. 
They are subjected to frequent racking, the casks into which they are 
racked being more highly sulphured than is the case with red wines. 
This is necessary, not only to prevent fermentation recommencing, 
but also in order to preserve the light golden colour of the wine, 
which, if brought into contact with an excess of air, rapidly assumes 
an unsightly brown shade. 

The Sauternes generally are full-bodied wines, very luscious and 
yet delicate ; they possess a special sevr, or, in other words, that special 
taste which, while it remains in the mouth, leaves the palate perfectly 
fresh. The finer growths of the Sauternes are classified in much the 
same way as the red wines of the Modoc. There are two main growths, 
the wines being as follows :— 

Classification or Sautbrhw 

Grand First Growth. 
Chateau Yquem, Sauternes. 

First Growths. 
Chateau La Tour Blanche, Bommes. 

Peyraguey, Bommes. 
„ Vigneau, Bommes. 
„ Suduiraud, Preignac. 

Coutet, Barsac. 
„ Climens, Barsac. 
„ Bayle (Guiraud), Sauternes. 
„ Rieusaec, Fargues. 
„ Rabaud, Bommes. 
Second Growths. 
Chateau Mirat, Barsac 
„ Doisy, Barsac. 
„ Peyxotto, Bommes. 
„ d'Arche. Sauternes. 
„ Filhot, Sauternes. 

Broustct-Nerac Barsac 
„ Caillou, Barsac. 

Suau, Barsac 

Malle, Preignac. 

Romer. Preignac. 
„ Lamothe, Sauternes. 

The production of the Sauternes vineyards is, as a rule, smaller 
than that of the chief red growths, and in consequence of this, and 
that the district is a relatively small one, the prices of the finer 
growths are often very high. 

The Cotes district consists of the slopes rising from the lower marshy 
regions to the east of the Garonne and the Dordogne respectively. 

The best of the C6tes wines are grown in the St Emilion 

arosBJB*. ^gjo,^ fh^ region consists of the commune of St 
Emilion, together with the four surrounding communes. It 
produces wines of a decidedly bigger type than those of the 
Modoc, and is frequently called the Burgundy of the Bordeaux 
district. The classification of the St Emilion wines is very compli- 
cated, but in principle is similar to that of the Medoc wines. Among 
the better known wines of the first growths are the following: 
Chateau Ausone, Chateau Belair, Chateau Clos Fourtet, Chateau 
Pa vie. Chateau Coutet, Chateau Cheval-Blanc. Chateau Figeac. 
The Chateau Ausone is of peculiar interest, inasmuch as ft is here 
that the poet Ausonius possessed a magnificent villa and cultivated 
a vineyard (a.d. 300). 

Pains and Entre-denx-Afers.— The above wines are grown in the 
marshy regions m the immediate neighbourhood of the Garonne and 
Doidogne. They produce useful but rather rough wines. The 
Entre-deux-Mers district forms a peninsula. between the Garonne 
and Dordogne, comprising the arrondissements of La Reole, the south 
of Libourne and the east of Bordeaux. This district produces both 
red and white wines, but their character is not comparable to that 
of the Medoc or of the Cotes. They are generally employed for local 
consumption and blending. 



The sparkling wine known to os as ,_ 

the former province which is now replaced 



takes its 
the 



Marne, Haute-Marne, Aube and Ardennes. ' The best 
wines, however, are grown almost exclusively in the Marne 
district. The cultivation of the vine in the Champagne b 
of very ancient date. It appears that both red and white wines 
were produced there in the reign of the Roman emperor, Probus 
(in the 3rd century A.O.), and according to Victor Rendu the garar 
of wine was already worth 19 Uvres in the time of Francis II., and 
had, in 1694, attained to the value of 1000 hvres. It was at about 
the latter date that sparkling or effervescent wine was first made, 
for, according to M. Perrier, a publication of the year 17 18 refer* 
to the fact that wine of this description had then Men known for 
some twenty years. The actual discovery of this type of wine is 
ascribed to Dom Perignon, a monk who managed the cellars of the 
abbey of Haut Villers from 1670 to 1715. It appears also that it 
was this same Dom Perignon who first used cork as a material for 
closing wine bottles. Up till then such primitive means as pads of 
hemp or cloth steeped in oil had been employed. It is very likely 
that the discovery of the utility of cork tor stoppering led to the 
invention of effervescent wine, the most plausible explanation being 
that Dom Perignon closed some bottles filled with partially fermented 
wine, with the new material, and on opening them later observed 
the effects produced by the confined carbonic acid gas. The art of 
making the wine was kept secret for some time, and many mysterious 
fables were circulated concerning it; inter alia it was believed that 
the Evil One had a band in its manufacture. It does not appear, 
however, to have become popular or consumed on a large scale until 
the end of the 18th century. 

The district producing the finest champagne is divided into two 
distinct regions, popularly known as the riser and the mountain 
respectively. The former consists of the vineyards situated 00 or in 
the neighbourhood of the banks of the Marne. The principal vine- 
yards in the valley, on the right bank of the river, are those at Ay. 
Dixy, Hautvillers and Marcuil: on the left bank, on the slopes of 
Epernay and parallel wkh the river, those at Pierrv and Mousey: 
in the district towards the south-east, on the slopes of A viae, those of 
Avize, Cramant, Vertus and MesniL The duef vineyards in the 
" mountain " district are at Vcrsy, Verxenay, SOkry, Riily and 
Bouxy. 

The soil in the champagne district consists on the slopes largely of 
chalk and in the plain of alluvial soiL It is interspersed with some 
clay and sand. The chief red vines of the champagne district are 
the Plant-dor*, Frane-Pineau and the Plant vert dote, The Plant 
gris, or Meunier, yields grapes of a somewhat inferior quality. The 
chief white vine is the Pineau, also known as Chardonay. The best 
qualities of wine are made almost exclusively from the black grapes. 
For this reason it is necessary that the process of collection, separation 
and pressing should proceed as quickly as possible at vintage time 
In order that the juice may not, through incipient fermentation, 
dissolve any of the colouring matter from the skins. For the same 
reason the grapes are collected in baskets In order to avoid excessive 
pressure, and are transported in these to the press house. As there 
is no preliminary crushing, the presses used for extracting the juice 
have to be of a powerful character. As a rale, three qualities of 
wine are made from one batch of grapes, the first pressing yielding 
the best quality, whilst the seconcf and third are relatively inferior. 
After the must has been allowed to rest for some hoars in order to 
effect a partial clearing, h} is drawn off into barrels and fermented in 
the latter. The first racking and fining takes place about December. 
The wine b allowed to rest for a further short period, and if not bright 
Is again racked and fined. It is then ready for bottling, but previous 
to this operation it is necessary to ascertain whether the wine contains 
sufficient remanent sugar to develop the "gas" necessary for 
effervescence. If this is not the case, sugar b added, generally in 
the form of fine cane or candied sugar. The bottles employed have 
to be of very fine quality, as the pressure which they have to stand 
may be as much as 7 to S atmospheres or more. Formerly the loss 
through breakage was very great, but the art of making ana selecting 
these Dottles has greatly improved, and the loss now amounts to 
little more than 5%, whereas formerly 25% and even 30% was 
not an uncommon figure. In the spring-time, shortly after bottling, 
the rise in temperature produces a secondary fermentation, and this 
converts the sugar into alcohol and carbonic acid. Tim fermentat ion 
proceeds throughout the summer months, and in the meantime 
a sediment which adheres to the side of the bottle is gradually formed. 
The bottles, which up till now have been in a horizontal position, 
are then, in order to prepare them for the next process, namely. 
that known as disgorging, placed in a slanting position, neck down- 
wards, and are daily shaken very slishtly. so that by degrees the 
sediment works its way on to the cork. This process, mhich takes 
several weeks, ba very delicate one, and requires much skill on the 
part of the workman. When the whole of the sediment is on the 
cork, the iron clip, with which the latter is kept in posit ion, is removed 
for a moment, and the force of the wine ejects the sediment and 
cork simultaneously. This operation also requires much skill in 
order to avoid an excessive escape of wine. An ingenious modificat ion 
has of modern times been introduced, which consists in freezing part 
of the contents of the neck of the bottle. The cork may then be 
withdrawn and the sediment removed without any wine being lost. 



724 



WINE 



(WINES OF FRANCE 



After the sediment has been removed the win* is sn b jeetcd to ietage, 
or licjueuring. It is by this process that the degree oJ PMOfftaess 
required to suit the particular class of wine being made is attained. 
For wines exported to England very little liqueur in employed J in 
the case of some wines, known as End or Nature , done at all is added. 
Win*-* intended for consumption in France Teccive a. moderate 
quantity of Liqueur, but those for the Russian and South American 
markets, where very tweet wines are Liked, receive more. This 
liqueur is made of fine wine, brandy and candied sugar. The 
liqueuring U nowadays generally carried out by means of a machine 
which regulates the quantity to a nicety. Champagne is not. as is 
the caw, lor instance, with the classified growths of the Girondc, the 
product ol 0- single vineyard. The bulk of the wine is made in vine- 
yards belonging to small peasant proprietors, who sell their produce 
to the great mercantile houses. The latter blend the wines received 
from the various proprietors, and the chief aim In this blending is 
to maintain the character of the wine which is *nld under a particular 
trade mark or brand* Similarly* it has been said that, strictly 
speaking, there I* oo such thing as vintage champagne, for it is almost 
invariably the practice, in order to maintain the general character 
of a specific brand < to blend the new wines with wme old wtne or 
wines which have been vatted for this particular purpose. These 
vattings, and indeed all blending* of any particular batch of wines, 
are termed twits. The vintage date, therefore, which is borne by 
" vintage champagne.' 4 refers rather to the date of vintage prior to 
bottling than to the age of the wine, although the main bulk £.[' the 
wine of a certain 4 " vintage " will actually have been made in the year 
indicated. It is not unusual in the case of champagne to add some 
in gar to the must in the years in which the latter is deficient in this 
regard- No legitimate objection can be raised to thi* practice 
inasmuch as champagne in any case must be regarded in the Lijht 
of a manufactured article rather than as a natural product. The 
principal centres of the champagne trade are at Reims. Epernay, 
Ay and Avize, The total output of the Marne district has for the 
past three years averaged about 9 million gallons, but it occasionally 
runs ai high as 20 million gallons, A great 'part of this wine, how- 
ever, is not suitable for mating high -class champagne. As a rule, 
tiic ju^i-ty considerably i-jlll-vu.> liic demand, and Lbe utock in hand 
at the present time amounts to roughly four years' consumption of 
finished wine, but to this must be added the stock existing in cask, 
which is considerable. For the period 1906-1907 the total number 
of bottles in stock amounted to over 1 2 1 millions, the bottles exported 
to over 23 millions, and the bottles required for internal commerce 
in France to something over 10 millions. There is, thus, at the 
present a total annual consumption of rather over £0 millions of 
bottles. The chief trade in champagne is with the United Kingdom, 
to which the finest varieties are exported. In the year 1906, 



of access and of remarkably even temperature, at a very small cost. 
The method of manufacture is similar to that followed in the 
Champagne. 

In the east of France, not far from the Jura, lies the oldest viti* 
cultural district of Europe, nameiy that of Burgundy* It is still » 
called, after the old French provinces, Upper and Lower Burgundy, 
It comprises the departments of the Yonne on the north-west, 
the Cote d'Or in the centre, and the 5aonc-et- Loire on the south. 
In the Yonne arc made chiefly the white wines known to j»__ -taIlrf u 
us as ChabJk; in the Saonc-et-Loine are made the red *"^* r+ 
and whiie wines of Macon, and there is also, stretching into the 
department of the Rhone, the district producing the BeaujoUi* 
wines. The most important wine*, however, the ^Burgundy wioes 
proper, are made in the centre of this region on the range of tow hilt* 
running north-east by ■outh-wcjt called the Cote d'Or, or the golden. 
slffM-. The soil of the Cote d'Or i* chiefly limestone, with a little 
clay and sand. The vim-yards producing the best wines are situaxed 
about half-way up the slopes, those at the top producing somewhat 
inferior, and those at the foot and in the plain ordinary growths. 
Practically all the best vineyards (which are grown on flat terraces 
on the slopes, and not on the slopes themwlves) face south-west and 
so get the lull benefit of the sun's rays. The must important vine — - 
in tart on th<* slopes of the Cute d'Or practically the only vine— is the 
Pineau or Noirien, but in the plain and in the districts of Macon and 
Beaujolais the Camay is much cultivated The influence of the soil 
on one and the same vine is interestingly illustrated by the different 
character of the vines grown in those districts, the Beaujolais wipes 
having far greater distinction than 1 hose of Micon. The commune 
of Be/ujnc must be regarded a.* the centre of the Burgundy district w 
and possessvs numerous vineyards of the highest class. To the 
north of Braunc lie the famous vineyards of Chambertin, Oca 
Vougeot* Roma nee* Riehebourg, Nuits St Georges and Cortoni to 
the south thusc of Pommard T VoLnay, Montheiie and MeunauU with 
its famous white wines. 

The vilification of the Burgundy wines takes place in cuves of 
500 to joco gallons capacity* and it has («r very many years been 
the common practice in vintages In which the must is deficient in 
saccharine to ensure the stability of the wine by the addition of 
some sugar in the cuve. The first rackings generally take place in 



February or March, and the second in July. The practice of sugaring 
has ensured greater stability and keeping power to the wines, which 
formerly were frequently irregular in character and difficult to 
preserve. 



There is no official classification of the Burgundy wines, but the 
ome of the finest growths in geograpt' 
together with the localities in or 1 



following is a list comprising some of the finest growths in geographical 
order, from north to south, 



which they are situated. 



Analyses of Champagne* 



No. 


Description of Wine. 


Vintage. 


Alcohol 

percent. 

by vol. 


Total 
Acid. 


Extract. 


Ash. 


Total 

Tartaric 

Acid. 


Sugar 

(as invert 

Sugar). 


Glycerin. 


Carbonic 
Acid. 


1 
a 
3 
4 

I 


Champagne nature 
Brut 

Extra see 
Extra dry 
Dry 


189a 
1892 
1892 
1893 
1893 
1893 


14*01 
1257 
1350 
*3-53 
12-56 

14-44 


52a 
3-^3 
599 
501 
543 
480 


20-95 
1978 
27-07 

22-95 

23-18 
30-33 


117 

I-IO 

113 

1*05 


2-20 
2-76 
2-10 
218 

2-49 

2-04 


336 
1-3* 
9-20 
7-84 

13-86 


755 
764 
9- 10 
6-50 

818 
905 


827 
7*79 
9-55 

8-12 

7-75 



* Results, excepting alcohol, are in grams per litre. 



1,161,339 gallons of champagne, to the value of £1,679,611, were 
imported into the United Kingdom. The general composition of 
high-class champagnes, as supplied to the English market, will be 
gathered from the preceding table, which is taken from a large 
number of analyses published by the author and a collaborator in 
the /Ua/yj/ for January 1900. 

It will be seen that, compared with the dry, light red wines, the 
proportion of sugar, alcohol and acidity is comparatively high in 
champagne, and the extract (solid matter) rather low. 

The fruitful departments watered by the Loire and its tributaries 
produce considerable quantities of wine. The white growths of the 
-_,. Loire have ocen known for many centuries, but up to 

fl,-r * 1834 were used only as still wines. At that date, however, 
it was found that the wines of Saumur (situated in the department 
of the Maine-et-Loire) could be successfully converted into sparkling 
wines, and since then a considerable trade in this class of wine has 
developed. At first it was chiefly used for blending with the wines 
of the Champagne when the vintage in this district was insufficient, 
but at the present time it fa largely sold under its own name. The 
imports of sparkling Saumur into the United Kingdom in 1906 
amounted to 114,234 gallons, valued at £73.984- Although the 
average wholesale value of Saumur is considerably less than that of 
champagne, it compares favourably with the lower grades of that 
article, and in flavour and character is similar to the latter. The 
successful evolution of the Saumur sparkling wine industry is largely 
due to the fact that the range of limestone hills, at the foot of which 
the town is situated, afford by excavation illimitable cellarage, easy 



1. Red Wines. 



Locality. 
Fixey . 
Fixin . 
ChambertiQ 
Moray. 
Chambolle 
Vougeot . 
Flagey 
Vosne. 

Nuits . 



Aloxe .' 
Savigny 
Beaune 
Pomraard » 
Volnay 
Santenay . 



Meursault . 
PuUgny . 



Growth. 
Les Arvelets. 
Clos de la Perriere. 

Chambertin, Clos de Bize, Clos St Jacques. 
Clos de Tart, Les Bonnes Mares, Les Larrets. 
Les Musigny. 
Clos de Vougeot. 
Les Grandes Eschcrcaux. 
Romanee-Conti, Les Richebourgs, La Tache, 

Romance la Tache. 
Les Saint-Georges, Les Vaucrains, Lea 

Porrets, Les Pruliers, Les Boudots, Les 

Thorey. 
Le Corton, Le Clos-du-Roi-Corton. 
Les Vergelcsses. 

Les Tcves, Les Greves. Le Clos de la Mousse. 
Les Arvelets, Les Rugiens. 
Les Caillerets, Les Cnarnpans. 
, Les Santenots, Le Clos-Tavannes. 

• 2. White Wines. 

Les Perrieres, Les Genevrieres. 
Montrachet, Les Chevaliers-Montrachet, Le 
Batard Montrachet. 



SPAIN] 



WINE 



725 



An interesting feature of the C6*e d'Or is (he Hospice de Beaune, 
a celebrated charitable institution and hospital, the revenues of 
which are principally derived from certain vineyards in Beaune, 
Corton. Volnay and Pommard. The wines of these vineyards are 
sold every* year by auction early in November, and the prices they 
make serve as standards for the valuation of the other growths. 

To the south of Lyons* in the department of the Drome, are made 
in the district of Valence the celebrated Hermitage red and white 
KmrmMmmt wnes. The quality of some of these, particularly of the 
^*^* sweet white wines, is considered very fine. The quantity 



produced is very smalL The red wines made at the present time are 
after the style of Burgundy and possess good keeping qualities. 

If we except the wines 01 Roussillon, prndnced in the old province 
of that name, in the extreme south of Fr;iiv-e, the abov* constitute 
MSil ^ the principal varieties of Fiend) Irlnfea fcfUfWi in the 

^"^ United Kingdom. ^ They form, hovvcviT. but a &mall 

fraction of the entire production of the CM nt ry. The mo? t prolific 
viticultural district of France is that knon n as the Midi, -comprising 
the four departments of the Herault, AikU\ Card, and (be PyttnCes- 
Orientales. Thus in 1001 the departmvnt of the Hvraull alone 
produced nearly 300 million gallons of Pkttk or approximately a 
quarter of the whole output of France The average ajpottfl of 
wine made in the four departments for the put rh.ri.-e yun had. been 
roughly 500 million gallons. These wines Formerly were lately 
exported as vm de cargtnson to South AinerJetf ihf United Scmcs, 
Australia, &c, and were also much emp ■■ l.J Ijc luc^i cunauukpiion 
in other parts of France. Owing, however, to the fact that viti- 
culture has made much progress in South America, in California, in 
Australia and particularly in Algeria, and also to the fact that the 
quality of these Midi wines has fallen off considerably since the 
phylloxera period, the outlet for them has become much reduced. 
These and other reasons, notably the manufacture of much fictitious 
wine with the aid of sugar (fortunately stopped by the rigid new wine 
laws), led to the grave wine crisis, which almost amounted to a 
revolution in the Midi in the spring and summer of 1907. 

Viticulture has made great strides in Algeria during recent years. 
The first impetus to this department was given by the destruction 
±Ulli . or crippling of many of the French vineyards during 
*■— - the phylloxera period The present output amounts to 
roughly 150 million gallons, and the acreage under the vine has 
increased from 107.048 hectares in 1890 to 167,6^7 hectares in 1905. 
The wines, moreover, of Algeria are on the whole of decidedly fair 
quality, possessing body and strength and also stability. In this 
regard they are superior to the wines of the Midi. 

Wines o? Spain 

The wines of Spain may be regarded as second in importance 
to those of France. Although the quantity produced is not so 
large as in Italy, the quality on the whole is decidedly superior 
to that of the latter country. There are three main types of 
wine with which consumers in the United Kingdom are familiar, 
namely Sherry, Tarragona (Spanish Port or Spanish Red) and 
wines of a claret type. The trade with the United Kingdom is 
of considerable proportions, the total quantity of Spanish wines 
imported in 1006 amounting to 1,689,049 gallons of red wine (to 
the value of £1 54,963), and white wines to the extent of 1,1 19,702 
gallons (to the value of £242,877). J . ,_ . , . . . . 

The most important wine produced in the province of Andalusia, 
which is the chief vine-growing district of Spain, is that known to 
efc- us as sherry, so called from the town of J ores de la Frontera , 

***"* which is the centre of the industry. Sherry is produced 
in a small district bounded by San Lucar in the north-east, Jerez 
in the cast and Port St Mary on the south. The total viticultural 
area amounts to about 20,000 acres. The soil is of very varying 
nature, and consists in some districts of the so<alled albariza (mainly 
chalk with some sand and clay), in others of barros, which is mainly 
sand cemented together with chalk and clay, and of arenas, which 
consists of nearly pure sand. Most of the vineyards in the Jerez 
district are upon albariza soil, those to the north and north-east 
are mainly of barros, and those close to the seashore of arenas. 
The dominating vine is the Palomino, which produces amontillados 
and finos. Other important vines are the Perruno and the Mantua 
Castetlano. There is also a variety of Pedro-Ximcnes, which, 
however, fa not used for making ordinary wine, but for the purpose 
of preparing the so-called dulce. a very sweet must orwine^made 
from over-ripe grapes, which, after fortification with spirit, is em- 
ployed for sweetening other wines. The process of vinincation u 
comparatively simple. The grapes are, after gathering, dusted over 
withplaster of Paris, and then crushed by treading in a shallow 
rectangular vessel termed the lagar. The juice, which Is so obtained 
together with that which results from the pressing of the murk, 
is fermented in much the same manner as is customary in other 
countries. There are two main types of sherry known in the United 
Kingdom, namely, those of the amontillado and those # of the mantan- 
Via classes. The former are generally sweet and full-bodied, the 
latter light and dry. The mantanillas are mostly shipped in the 
natural state, except for the addition of a small quantity of spirit. 



The amontHhios may be again divided into tht finos and the ctorosoi 
the former being the more delicate. These distinctions are not of a 
hard and fast character, for they frequently merely represent different 
developments of the same wine. Thus, according to Thudicum, the 
regular heavy sherry from albarisa soil remains immature for a 
number of years and then becomes a fino After five to eight years 
it may become an amonttUadOj and if it is left in cask and allowed to 
develop, it will, after it attains an age of nine to fourteen years, 
become an oloroso, and still later it may become a secco. In Jerea 
itself a different classification, namely that according to quality and 
not age, exists, which, however, is only employed locally. Thus the 
term paltna b applied to fine dry wines when in their second or 
third years. These may be amontillados, but according to some 
they never become olorosos Then there are varieties known as 
double and treble palmo, and single, double and treble polo, the 
latter being the finest form of oloroso. Then there is the quality of 
wine termed raya. This is dry and sound, and forms a great part of 
the sherry exported to the United Kingdom. The sweetness of the 
sweet sherries is partly due to an inherent property of the wine 
(apart from any sugar they may contain) and partly to natural or 
added sugar.^ In some cases the fermentation of the must is stopped 
by the addition of spirit before the whole of the saccharine is con- 
verted, and the wines so prepared retain a proportion of the sugar 
naturally present in the must. In other cases dry wines are prepared 
and sugar is added to them in the form of duke (see above). In 
order to prevent refcrmentation it is then necessary to fortify these 
wines with spirit. The standard of colour required for certain 
quantities is maintained by the addition of color. The latter is 
made by boiling wine down until it attains the consistency of a 
liqueur. The great bulk of sherry shipped to the United Kingdom 
is blended. The system of blending sherry in some respects recalls 
that of the blending of Scotch whiskies. Wines of the same type are 
stored in vats or soleras, and the contents of the soleras are kept as 
far as possible up to a particular style of colour, flavour and sweet- 
ness. Prior to shipment the contents of various soleras are blended 
according to the nature of the article required. 

In addition to the wines described above.tbere are others of a similar 
nature grown in the vicinity, such as montilla (made in Cordova) 
and motuer (produced on the right bank of the Guadalquivir). 

The bulk of the sherry imported into the United Kingdom still 
consists of the heavier, fortified wines, varying in strength from 
17 to 21 % of absolute alcohol, although the fiscal change introduced 
in 1 886, whereby wines not exceeding 30* proof (Le. about 17% of 
alcohol) were admitted at a duty of is. 3d., as against 4s. for heavier 
wines, naturally tended to promote the shipment of the lighter dry 
varieties. In this connexion it is interesting to note that the im- 
portation of sherry into the United Kingdom on a considerable 
scale commenced in the 15th century, and that the wine shipped 
at that time was of the dry variety. It seems possible that sherry 
was the first wine known as sack in this country, but it is at least 
doubtful whether this word is, as some contend, derived from seek 
or sec, Le. dry. According to Morewood it is more likely to have 
come from the Japanese Sake" or Sacki (see Sak£), derived in its turn 
from the name of the city of Osaka. 

Chemically the sweet sherry differs from the natural dry light 
wines in that it contains relatively high proportions of alcohol, 
extractives, sugar and sulphates, and small quantities of acid ana 
glycerin, jlus is well illustrated by the following analysis:— 

Analysis of Sherry (Fresenius). 



Alcohol 
percent 
by vol. 


Grams per Litre. 


Extract. 


Total 
Add. 


Ash. 


Glycerin. 


Sugar. 


Sulphates. 


19-94 


4«-9 


3-3 


4-3 


4-3 


30-2 


3*75 



Malaga is a sweet wine (produced in the province of that name) 
which is little known in England, but enjoys considerable favour on 
the Continent. It is generally, as exported, a blend made j, jfat> . 
from vino dulce and vino secco, together with varying *"«"^*» 

Juantities of vino maestro, vino tiemo, arope and color. The vino 
nice and vino secco are both made as a rule from the Pedro Jimenez 
(white) grape, the former in much the same way as the dulce which 
is employed in the sherry industry, the latter by permitting fermenta- 
tion to take its normal course. The vino maestro consists of must 
which has only fermented to a slight degree and which has been 
" killed " by the addition of about 17 % of alcohol. The vino tiemo 
b made by mashing raisins (6 parts) with water (2 parts) pressing, 
and then adding alcohol (1 part) to the must. Arope is obtained by 
concentrating vino dulce to one-third, and odor by concentrating the 
arope over a naked fire. Malaga is therefore an interesting example 
of a composite wine. Besides the sweet variety, a coarse dry wine 
is also made, but this Is little known abroad. 

Another well-known wine district in the south of Spain b that of 
Rota, where a sweet red wine, known in England as tent (tinto), 
chiefly used for ecclesiastical purposes, b produced. 

Wtnes of the Centre and Nortk.— While the most important Spanish 
nes are those grown in the southern province of Andalusia, the 



726 



central and northern districts also produce wine in considerable 
quantity, and much of this is of very fair quality. Thus in the 
central district of Val de Penas and in the Rioja region (situated 
between Old Castile and Navarre) in the north-east are produced 
red wines which in regard to vinoeity , body and in some other respects 
resemble the heavier clarets or burgundies of France — although not 
possessing the delicacy and elegance of the latter. They are shipped 
in some quantity to the United Kingdom as Spanish " claret or 
Spanish burgundy." The most important industry, outside the 
southern districts, is, however, that in Catalonia, where, in the 
neighbourhood of the town of that name, the wine known as Tarra- 
gona or Spanish " port " is produced. The finest Tarragona (which 
much resembles port) is made in the Priorato region, about 15 m. 
inland. 

Wines or Portugal 

In the north-east of Portugal, not far from the town of Oporto 
—from which it takes its name and whence it is exported — 
is produced the wine, unique in its full-bodied and generous char- 
acter, known as port. 

Port is grown in the Alto Douro district, a rugged tract of land 
some 30 to 40 m. long by 10 ra. wide, which commences at a point 
-. on the river Douro some 60 m. above Oporto. The 

^^ character of the Alto Douro is extremely mountainous 

and nigged. J. L. W. Thudichum, in his Treatise on Wines, gives a 
striking and almost poetical description of it as compared with 
Jerez. He says: " The vineyards of Jerez are so beautiful and 
productive that they might well be termed the vineyards of Venus. 
Undulating hills, easily accessible from all sides, are covered with a 
luxurious growth of vines. . . . Very different is the aspect of the 
Alto Douro. Here all is rock, gorge, almost inaccessible mountain, 
precipice and torrent, while over or along all these rude features of 
nature are drawn countless lines of stone walls by which man makes 
or supports the soil in which the vines find their subsistence. ... I 
thought that if Teres was the vineyard of Venus, this Alto Douro 
vineyard must be termed the vineyard of Hercules." The vine- 
yards are, in fact, situated on artificially made terraces, supported 
by walls on the mountain sides. If this were not the case the 
heavy winter rains would wash away the soil. The climate of the 
Alto Douro is very variable. Intense heat in summer is followed by 
severe cold in winter. The soil is a peculiar clay-schist, on or 
alternating with granite, and it is to the peculiar conditions of 
climate and soil tnat port owes its remarkable qualities of colour, 
body and high flavour. There appears to be no predominant and 
distinct type of vine, such as is the case in other viticulture! districts, 
but a number of varieties, mostly yielding grapes of a medium size 
are common to the Douro vineyards. The method of cultivation 
is generally that of a rational low culture, and in this respect differs 
from that employed in other parts of the country, where the vines are 
either trained on trees or over trellis-work at some height from the 
ground. 

Vinificatidn.— The process of converting the Alto Douro grapes 
into wine differs in some material particulars from those employed 
elsewhere. The grapes arc cut and then conveyed in baskets by the 
Gallegos (as the labourers who come specially from Galicia in Spain 
for this purpose arc termed) to the winery. Here the stalks are 
removed, generally by a machine similar to the French tgroppoir, 
and the grapes then placed in the latar. This is a square stone 
vessel of considerable size made to hold up to fifteen pipes (the pipe 
equals 115 gallons) of wine. It is roughly 2 ft. deep and from 3 to 
to yds. wide. The grapes are first trodden for a period varying 
from twenty-four hours upwards, and are then allowed to ferment 
in the lagar itself. When the fermentation has reached a certain 
point it is generally the custom to again tread the must in order 
to extract as much colour as possible from the skins. In order to 
preserve the sweet quality of the wine, fermentation is not permitted 
to continue beyond a certain point. When this is reached the wine 
is drawn from the lagar over a strainer or some similar arrangement 
into vats yielding from five to thirty pipes. The murk remaining in 
the lagar is then pressed by means of a lever or V:~; 7 '= with 
which this vessel is fitted. In order to prevail the wine from fer- 
menting further and so becoming dry, from 4 to s volumes of bi.nidy 
arc added to every 100 volumes of wine in ihe vats. The akulid 
employed for this purpose is as a rule of high quality and made 
solely from wine. When, after the approac of the cold weather, 
the lees have dropped, the wines are racked md a further addition 
of brandy is made. The second racking ta « * ptact in March or 
April, and the wine is now placed in casks and scat to Oporto, where 
it is stored in large over-ground buildings tenm-d lodges. A further 
addition of brandy is generally added before shipment- The great 
bulk of the wine is stored for many years before shipping, bui this 
does not apply to the commoner varieties, nor to the finest wines, 
which, being the produce of a specific year, arc ^hipped, unblended 
and as a vintage wine. The most famous vintages of recent times 
were those of 1847. 1851, 1863, 1868, 1870, t$j$ t tB;8 t 1681* 1SB4 
and 1887. A white port is also made in the Alto Douro, And this, 
although little known in England, is exported in eonud arable 
quantities to Germany and Russia. The wLuv you is grown in 
vineyards which are not quite so favoured as regards position as 



WINE (PORTUGAL 

the red port growths. White port is made from white grapes, and a 
peculiarity outs manufacture is that the must is frequently fermented 
in the presence of the skins, which is most unusual in the case of 
white wines. This gives a certain stringency to white port, which 
is characteristic of the wine. 

Diseases.— The Alto Douro has from time to time been sadly 
ravaged by the oidium and phylloxera. The former first made ita 
appearance about the middle of the 19th century, and reached a 
climax in 1856, when only about 15,000 pipes, that is, about one- 
sixth of the usual quantity, was vintaged. In consequence of this, 
the exportation of port dropped from over 40,000 pipes in 1856 to 
about 16,000 pipes in 1858. Since then oidium has reappeared from 
time to time, but the remedy of spraying with finely divided sulphur, 
which was discovered at the time of the epidemic, has enabled the 
wine farmers to keep it under. The phylloxera, which appeared in. 
Alto Douro in about 1868, also did enormous damage, and at one 
time reduced the yield to about one-half of the normal. At one 
time the position appeared to be desperate, particularly in view 
of the fact that the farmers refused to believe that the trouble was 
due to anything other than the continuous drought of successive 
dry seasons, but at the present time, after much expenditure of 
energy and capital, the condition of affairs is once more fairly 
satisfactory. 

Port Wine Trade.— The port wine trade is of considerable import- 
ance to the United Kingdom not only because the chief trade in this 
wine is with that country, but also because a very large proportion 
of the capital invested in the industry is English. It is probable 
that the English capital locked up in the port industry amounts to 
some 2 millions sterling. In the period preceding the 'seventies of. 
the last century practically the whole of the wine exported from' 
Oporto came to Great Britain. Thus in the year 1864 there were 
exported to Great Britain 29,942 pipes and to the rest of the world 
5677 pipes. The trade with the rest of the world, however, has 
gradually grown since then, the figures being aa follows: — 





Exports of Wine from Oporto. 


Year. 


To 
Great Britain. 


To Rest 
of the World, 


1898 
1903 
1906 


Pipes. 
35.753 
30,281 
4».093 
32.832 
34.356 


Pipes. 
20.778 
31.741 
69.932 
65,058 

80,934 



The growth of the export trade from Oporto with the rest of the 
world is principally due to the enormous increase in the quantity of 
wine sent to South America, chiefly Brazil, but only a small propor- 
tion of this (probably one-eighth) u port wine proper. The bulk of 
it consists of wine from the Minho and Bcira districts. These facts 
also account for the apparent anomaly that the exports from Oporto 
are much higher than the total production of wine in the Alto Douro. 
At the present time the average production of the Alto Douro is 
about 50,000 pipes. During the last decade it was at a maximum in 
1904, when 70,000 pipes were produced, and at a minimum in 1903, 
when only 18,000 pipes were obtained. The value of the port taken 
by the United Kingdom was in the year 1906 over one million sterling, 
that is, rather less than half of the total value of all the French wines 
imported, but more than double the value of the total of Spanish 
wines. 

The chemical features of interest in port are the relatively high 
proportions of alcohol (the bulk of the wine imported into the United 
Kingdom containing some 18 to 22 % of alcohol), sugar and tannin. 
The sugar varies considerably according to the vintage, but as a rule 
amounts to from 7 % to 1 5 %. 

Other Portuguese Wines.— The wines of the Altb Douro only form 
a smaH proportion of the total quantity of wine produced in Portugal. 
The main wine-crowing district outside that of Oporto is in the 
neighbourhood of Lisbon. The chief varieties arc those grown at 
Torres Vedras, which are of a coarse claret type; at Collares, where 
a wine of a somewhat higher quality is produced ; at Careavellos, 
at the mouth of the Tagus; and at Bucelfas. In the latter district 
te produced a n-li lie wine from the Riessling grape, which is commonly 
known in the United Kingdom as Bucellas Hock. 

hi fjr a* iJiv United Kingdom is concerned, the Madeira wine 
industry Is m.iinly of interest in that it was largely developed by 
and it ft ill thi< ify in the hands of British merchants. M _^_._ 
The shipment ;.> the United Kingdom, however, which ■■■"■* 

reached a maximum in 1820, when over half a million gallons were 
imported, has 1 .lien off to one-tenth of that amount, and the con* 
tuTnpn-Jii in tlbv-e islands was barely 20,000 gallons in 1906. This 
failing away in ihe taste for Madeira is partly ascribable to fashion 
and partly to the temporary devastation of the vineyards by the 
pbyUuJtCTu in the middle of last century. The re-establishment of 
l lie vineyard* and the consequent development of the industry did 
not, however, lead to a renewal of the trade on the former scale with 
this country. The output in 1906 amounted to 10,000 pipes (Madeira 



GERMANY . ITALY] WINE 

pipe *o» gallons) and the export to 6010 pipe*, of which q ua nt i t y 
1951 pipe* went 10 Germany. 1680 pipes to France. 796 pipe* to 
Russia and 755 pipes to «hc United Kingdom Madeira, tike sherry 
and port, u a fortified wine. The method of vinification is similar 
to that employed in other parts of Portugal, but the method employed 
for hastening the maturation of the wine is peculiar and character* 
istic Thw consists in subjecting the wine, in buildings specially 
designed for this purpose, to a high temperature for a period of some 
months. The temperature vanes from too* to 140" F. according 
to the quality of the wine, the lower temperature being used for the 
better wines. The buildings in which this process is earned out are 
buih of stone and are divided into compartments heated by means of 
hot air derived from a system of stoves and flues. Much of the 
characteristic flavour of Madeira is due to this practice, which 
hastens the mellowing of the wine and also tends to check secondary 
fermentation inasmuch as it is. in effect, a mild kind of pasteurisation. 

Wines op Cebmant 
Although (he quantity of wine produced in Germany is com- 
paratively small and subject to great variations, the quality of the 
finer wines is, in successful years, of a very high order. In fact 
Germany is the only country which produces natural (U. un- 
fortified) wines of so high a class as to be comparable with — 
although of an entirely different character from— the wines 
of France. The finer wines possess great breed and distinction, 
coupled with a very fine and pronounced bouquet, and in addi- 
tion they are endowed with the—in the case of lighter wines- 
rare quality of stability. The great inequalities observed in the 
different vintages and the exceptionally fine character of the 
wines in good years are, generally, due to the same cause, namely, 
to the geographical position of the vineyards. The wines of the 
Rhine are grown in the most northerly latitude at which viti- 
culture is successful in Europe, and consequently, when the 
seasons are not too unpropitious, they display the hardiness and 
distinction characteristic of northern products. During the 
period 1891-1005 the total production of Germany has averaged 
roughly 62 million gallons, attaining a maximum of 1x1 million 
gallons in x8o6 and a minimum of 16 million gallons in 1891. 
The trade with the United Kingdom is now a very considerable 
one, amounting in 1006 to roughly ij million gallons to the 
value of three-quarters of a million sterling. 

The wines grown in the Rheingau, Rbeinhessen and in parts of the 
Palatinate are generally known by the name of Rhine wines, although 
0Mmm many of these are actually produced on tributaries of 
V" that river. Thus the well-known llochheimer, from 
which the curious generic term "hock" employed in 
England for Rhine wines is derived, is made in the vicinity of the 
little village of that name situated on the Main, a number of miles 
above the junction of the latter with the Rhine. The Rheingau 
district proper stretches along the north bank of the Rhine from 
Bingen on the west to Mainz on the east. The most important 
wines in this region are those of the Johannxsbere and of the Stein- 
berg. The vineyards of the former are said to nave been planted 
originally in the 1 nh century, but were destroyed during the Thirty 
Years* War. They were replanted by the abbot of Fulda in the 18th 
century. During the French Revolution the property passed into 
the hands of the prince of Orange, but after the battle of Jena, 
Napoleon deprived nim of it and presented it to Marshal Kdlermann. 
On the fall of Napoleon, the emperor of Austria took possession of 
the vineyard and gave it to Prince Metternich. At the present time 
the property still belongs to the descendants of the latter. The 
vineyards of Steinberg belong to the state of Prussia. The vineyards 
of these two properties are tended with extraordinary care, and the 



727 



Moseue ceases to show signs of the 
fermentation, characterized bj 



rised by the slight prickling sensation produced 
by the presence of bubbles of carbonic acid 



on the palate (caused I, .... r 

gas in the wine), that it has passed its best. The best-known growths 
of the Moselle are those of Brauneberg, Bernkastel, Piesport and 
Zetttngen. Some of the tributaries of the Moselle also produce 
wines which in quality approach those of the parent river. Among 
these may be cited the growths of Scharxhofberg, Gdaberg ana 
Bockstein. 
Large quantities of wine are produced in Alsace-Lorraine, Baden 



and WQrttemberg. but the majority of these have little interest, 
' for home eoi 

nown may .... 

Franconian growths, amongst which the celebrated Stein wane, 



inasmuch as they are used only 
wines, however, 



home consumption. Among the 
which are well known may be mentioned the 



wanes, of which several qualities are made in each case, fetch ex- 
ceedingly high prices. The finest wines are produced in a mannei 
newhat similar to that employed for making the Sauternes. 



1 finest wines are produced in a manner 
employed for making the Sauternes. 
The grapes are allowed to become over-ripe and are then selected by 
hand. This process produces the so-called Ausku wines, which 
frequently fetch as much as 30s. or 40s. a bottle. The other most 
important wines produced in the Rheingau and its extensions are 
those of Marcobrunn, Geisenheim, Rudesheim and Hochheim. The 
most important wines produced in Rheinhessen (on the left bank of 
the Rhine and south of the Rheingau) are those of Uebfraumuch, 
Nierstein. Oppenheim. Bode*heim,Laubenheim and Scharlachberg. 
In the Palatinate the moat important growths are those of Font, 
Deidesheim and Durkheim. 

The wines of the Moselle are of a somewhat different character to 
those of the Rhine. Whereas the Rhine wine* of the finer descriptions 
^ M gu are as a rule fairly full bodied and of marked vinosity. the 
Moselle wines are mostly light and of a somewhat delicate 
nature. While the Rhine wines generally improve in bottle for a 
lengthy period, the Moselles are as a rule at their best when com- 
paratively fresh. Indeed* many connoisseurs hold that when a 



which is grown at the foot of the citadel of the town of Wurxburg, 
and in the grand duchy of Baden the celebrated growths of Affenthal 
Ired) and Markgrifler. 

Practically alfthe important wines of Germany are white, although 
there are a few red growths of some quality, for instance that of 
Assmannshausen in the Rheingau. The latter is produced from the 
black Burgundy vine, the Pineau. In the Rheingau the predo min ant 
vine is the Riessling. This plant appears to be indigenous to the 
Rhine valley, and the finest wines are made exclusively from its 
grapes. In the hope of reproducing the characteristic of the Rhine 
wines, the Riessling has beenplanted in many young wine-producing 
countries, such as Australia. California and the Cape, and not entirely 
without success. It thrives best on rocky mountain slopes freely 
exposed to the sun. and requires a relatively high temperature to 
reach perfect maturity. I n the lower lands, therefore, it is customary 
to plant, in addition to the Riessling, vines such as Osterrekher and 
Kleinberger, which mature more readily than the former. Other 
vines, such as the Orleans and the Trammer, are also found in small 
quantities in the Rheingau. On the Moselle the Riessling and the 
Kleinberger are the chief growths. The vintage on the Rhine is, 
in order to permit the grapes to acquire the " over-ripeness " necessary 
to the peculiar character of the wines, generally very late, rarely 
taking place before the end of October. The process of vinification 
is peculiar in that fermentation takes place in relatively small casks, 
the result being that there are frequently marked differences in the 
produce of the same growth and vintage. 

The very great variations which are shown by the same growths 
of different vintages makes it impracticable in the case of the German 
white wines to give represe n tative analyses of them. Comparing 
the fine wines ol the better vintages with, for instance, the red wines 
of the Gironde, the main features of interest are the relatively high 
proportions of acid and glycerin and the low proportion of tannin 
which they contain. 



Wines or Italy 



ely possible. 



Italy ranks second to France as regards the quantity of 
produced, but in respect to quality a comparison is scarcely post 
inasmuch as the Italian wanes are on the whole of a poor character. 
They display many of the features characteristic of southern wines, 
showing either an excessive vinosity coupled with a somewhat crude 
bouquet, or where the alcoholic strength is not high, a decided lack 
of stability. The reason for this is to be sought partly in the un- 
scientific methods of cultivation, and partly, in many districts, in 
the haphazard methods of vinification employed. The vines are to 
a great extent still trained on trees or trelhs-work, or allowed to 
grow among the rest of the vegetation in the most casual manner. 
It must be stated, nevertheless, that of recent years a decided im- 
provement has set in in some quarters owing to the lively interest 
which the Italian government has taken in the subject, principally 
owing to the important export trade to America, Switzerland and 
other countries. The trade with the United States, which in 1887 
amounted to little over 120,000 gallons, has risen to considerably 
over a million gallons. The exports to the Argentine Republic 
amount to roughly* million gallons, and to Switzerland from 4 to 6 
million gallons. The trade with the United Kingdom is small, 
amounting to little over a quarter of a million gallons annually, and 
of a value rather teas than &°,ooo. The total exports of Italy are 
on the average not far from 40 million gallons. The wines of northern 
Italy are on the whole of eood colour, but somewhat harsh. Among 
the best-known wines in Piedmont are the Baroloa and the wines of 
Aati, which are made from a species of muscatel grapes. They are 
of an agreeable flavour, and this especially applies to the white de- 
scriptions. A considerable quantity of sparkling wine ts manu- 
factured in this district. Among the best-known wines ol L ombar dy 
are the Passella wines of Valtelina. In central 1 taiy the best growths 
are those of Chianti. Pomino, Montalcino, Carmignano and Monte- 
pulciano. Tuscany produces the greater part of these wines, which 
are of good but not excessive alcoholic strength, containing as a rule 
some !0| % to 111 % of alcohol. The Monteputcian© wines have a 
brilliant colour and high bouquet, and are of a ?'^»™ >c . ,ous 
flavour. The wines of Chianti. near Siena, are often desenbed 
as being of the claret type, but actually they are somewhat similar 
to the growths of Beaujolais. The best Italian wines, however.*** 
probably those grown in the Neapolitan distnet. The best ot_ these 
» the celebrated Lacrima Christi. which is grown on the slopes of 



728 



WINE 



[AUSTRIA: UNITED STATES 



Vesuvius from a vine bearing the same 
colour, and unites delicacy and a 



It has a fine red 

high bouquet with a sweet elegant 
taste. The white muscat wines of Vesuvius are also of good quality, 
and the island of Capri produces some excellent wine. Perhaps the 
best known of Italian wines in the United Kingdom is that produced 
in the neighbourhood of Marsala in the island of Sicily, which bears 
the name of the town from which it is exported. Marsala is a 
fortified white wine which is grown and made with considerable care. 
It is somewhat similar in character to the wines of Madeira, but its 
character also recalls some of the sherry types. It is vatted and 
blended in much the same way as sherry, and there is a considerable 
trade in this wine with the United Kingdom. In the neighbourhood 
of Palermo, Muscat and Malvotsk wines of very fair quality are made. 
The islands of Sardinia and Elba produce considerable quantities of 
wine, some of which is of fair quality. 

Wines op Austria-Hungary 
In point of quantity Austria-Hungary takes the fourth place among 
the wine-producing nations. The average production for the period 
iooi-ioo« was 178 million gallons. Of this quantity Austria is 
responsible for roughly three-fifths and Hungary for the remaining 
two-fifths. The character of the Hungarian wine is, however, much 
higher than that of the Austrian growths. The quality of the bulk 
of the A ustro- Hungarian wines has been improved of late years, 
principally owing to the endeavours of the respective governments to 
introduce scientific and modern methods among the wine-farmers. 
Since the recovery of the Hungarian vineyards bom the phylloxera 
considerable efforts have been made to develop an export trade, but 
so far the wines of Hungary are not generally known in the United 
Kingdom. Nevertheless, Hungary produces at least one class of 
wine which may be considered of international importance, namely, 
the famous Tokay. This is produced in the mountainous Hcgyalia 
region in a district which has the town of Tokay for its centre. m The 
vine from which Tokay is made is the Furmint. The finest varieties 
of Tokay are made entirely or mainly from Furmint grapes which 
have been allowed to become over-ripe in a manner somewhat 
similar to that obtaining in the Sauternes districts. In the case of 
Tokay, however, the transformation of the grape into what is 
practically a raisin is not brought about by the intervention of any 
particular micro-organism. The sun is sufficiently powerful to cause 
the evaporation of the water in the grape through the skin without 
any preliminary loosening of the latter by the action of the botrytis 
cintrea or any other micro-organism. The most precious variety 
ot Tokay is the so-called essence. This is produced by placing the 
finest grapes in casks and drawing off the juice which exudes naturally 
as a result of the weight of the material. The Tokay essence is, even 
after many years, still a partially fermented wine, rarely containing 
more than 7% to 9% of alcohol. Indeed, it may be said that the 
main fermentation rarely, if ever, reaches a climax. Another variety 
of Tokay is the so-called ssamorod. This is produced by pressing a 
mixture of dried grapes and fully ripe grapes and fermenting the 
must so obtained. It contains up to about 14% of alcohol and 
relatively little sugar. The most common kind of Tokay is the so- 
called Ausbruch wine. This is obtained by extracting dried grapes 
with the must of ordinary grapes. According to the amount of 
dried grapes (zibets) employed, the wine b termed 1 to 5 " buttig." 
The Ausbruch wines take from three to four years to ripen, and they 
may contain from 12% to 15% of alcohol and a little or a fair 
quantity of sugar, these factors varying according to the vintage 
and the number of " butts " of tibebs employed. Another variety 
of Tokay is the so-called mdslds. The term is applied to different 
varieties of wines according to the district, but in the neighbourhood 
of Tokay it generally refers to wines obtained by treating ssamorod 
or Ausbruch residues with dry wine. In the neighbourhood of Menes 
sweet red wines produced by the Ausbruch system are also termed 
mdslds. Hungary produces a variety of other wines both strong, 
such as those of central Hungary, ana relatively light, such as those 
of Croatia and Transylvania. The wines produced at Carlowitz (on 
the Danube), some 40 m. north-west 01 Belgrade, are somewhat 
stronger. They have a flavour somewhat resembling port, but are 
coarser, and lack the fine bouquet of the latter. The other chief 
vine-crowing countries of the empire are Dalmatia, Lower Austria 
and Styria. Some of the Dalmatian wines are of fair quality, and 
somewhat resemble Burgundy. 

Wines of the United States 
The cultivation of the vine has made very rapid strides in the 
United States during the past half-century. Whereas in 1850 the 
production amounted to little more than a million gallons, the output 
to-day is, in good years, not far short of 50 million gallons. The 
result has been that the domestic wines have now very largely 
displaced the foreign product for ordinary beverage purposes. At 
the same time, there is no reason to believe that the finer European 
wines will be entirely displaced, inasmuch as these are characterized 
by qualities of delicacy and breed which cannot be reproduced at 
will. At the same time, there is no doubt that much of the wine 
produced in the United States is of very fair quality, and this is 
largely due to the fact that the Americans have been at great pains 
to introduce the latest scientific methods in regard to the vine and 
»*i~~nakiag. Thus in part* of California, where high temperatures 



are liable to prevail during the vintage* the system— first employed 
in Algeria — of cooling the must during fermentation to the proper 
temperature by means of a series of pipes in which iced water circu- 
lates is now largely employed. The use of pure culture yeast derived 
from many of the most famous European vineyards has also done 
much towards improving the quality. In California there are, in 
addition to the native growths, vines from almost every' European 
winegrowing centre, and the produce of these goes by such names as 
Riesling, Hermitage, Sauternes, Chianri, &c ( La accordance with 
the district of origin of the vine. California is the largest wine- 
growing state, as the Pacific slope seems particularly suitable to 
vine-growing. At the present time there are about 280,000 acres 
under the vine in California, and the number of vines is about 90 
millions. The annual production is about 30 million gallons, of 
which rather more than one-half is dry wine. A good deal of sweet 
wine is also made, particularly in the Fresno district, where, however, 
a. large proportion of the grapes is grown with a view to making 
raisins. Following California, New York and Ohio are the most 
important wine-producing states. The centre of the wine trade of 
Ohio is at Sandusky on the shores of Lake Erie. Here, as well as at 
Cleveland, " champagnes " and " clarets " and " sparkling Catawba " 
are the chief wines produced. The latter was first made by Nicolas 
Longworth of Cincinnati. The Catawba is the chief growth of the 
Lake Erie district; the other important vines being the Delaware, 
and Concord. New York state, in which wine has been grown from 
a very early period, produces roughly three-quarters of alt the 
domestic " champagnes." There are about 75,000 acres under the 
vine in this state, and roughly § million gallons are produced annually. 
The wines grown on the Pacific slope are generally of a mild and 
sweet character, resembling in general nature the wines of southern 
Europe (Italy. Spain, Portugal). In the eastern and middle states 
the wines produced are of a lighter type and of drier flavour, and are 
somewhat similar to the growths of Germany and France. At the 
present time America exports a considerable quantity of wine, and 
there is some trade in the United Kingdom in CaUfornian * claret." 

Wines op trb British Empire 
The production of the British empire Is very small, amounting to 
roughly 10 million gallons, and this is produced almost entirely in 
the Cape of Good Hope and in the Australian Commonwealth. At 
present the average vintage of the Cape and of Australia is in each 
case roughly 5 to 6 million gallons. In 1905 New South Wales pro- 
duced 831,000, Victoria 1,726,000, and South Australia 2,846,000 
gallons respectively. The trade of Australia with the united 
Kingdom is now considerable, having increased from 168,188 gallons 
in 1B87 to 622,836 gallons in 1906. It b possible that the trade 
would grow much more rapidly than it has done if it were practicable 
to ship the lighter varieties of wines. These, which would be suitable 
for ordinary oeverage purposes, cannot as a rule stand the passage 
through the Red Sea, ana it is therefore only possible to ship the 
heavier or fortified wines. It is doubtful, therefore, whether the 
products of the British Empire will ever displace European wines 
in the United Kingdom on a really large scale, for they cannot 
compete at present as regards quality with the finer wines of Europe, 
nor, for the reason stated, with the lighter beverage wines. The 
quality of the wine produced in the Cape and in Australia has im- 
proved very much 01 recent years, chiefly owing to the introduction 
of scientific methods of wine cultivation ana of wine-making in 
much the same manner as has been the case in California. The 
red wines of Australia, particularly those of South Australia, some- 
what resemble French wines, being intermediate between claret and 
burgundy as regards their principal characteristics. There are 
several types of white wines, some resembling French Sauternes 
and Chablis and others the wines of the Rhine. It has been recog- 
nized, however, that it is impossible to actually reproduce the 
character of the European wines, and it is now generally held to be 
desirable to recognize the fact that Australian and Cape wines repre- 
sent distinct types, and to sell them as such without any reference 
to the European parent types from which they have been derived. 

Other Countries 
Considerable quantities of wine are produced in the Balkan states, 
but the bulk of this is of a coarse description and only fit for local 
consumption. The average yield of Bulgaria and Rumania is prob- 
ably some 30 to 40 million gallons for each country, but in some years 
it is much larger. Thus in 1896 Rumania produced no less than lot 
million gallons and Bulgaria 81 million gallons. The wine industry 
in Greece, which in ancient times and during the middle ages was 
of great importance, has now become, at any rate in point of quality, 
quite insignificant. At the present time a great part of the industry 
is devoted to the cultivation of the currant vine (Vitis corinikiaco). 
There is a considerable export of currants and raisins and con* 
ccntrated wine must from this country. Many of the islands of 
the Mediterranean, from which the ancients drew their supplies of 
wine, such as Chios, Cos, Tenedos, Crete and Cyprus, still produce 
considerable quantities of wine, but the bulk of this is scarcely to 
the modern European taste In Asia wine is produced, according to 
Thudichum, principally in Caucasia and Armenia. In Persia, also, 
wines are made, especially in the Shiraz district. Russia also pro- 
duces a small quantity ofwine. principally in the Crimea. (PS.) 



WINEBRENNER— WINGATE 



729 



WINEBRENNER. JOHN (1747-1860), American clergyman, 
founder of the " Church of God," was bora in Glade Valley, 
Frederick county, Maryland, on the 25th of March 1797 He 
studied at Dickinson College, Carlisle, Pennsylvania, was ordained 
in the German Reformed Church in 1820 and became a pastor 
at Harrisburg. Pennsylvania, where his revival preaching and his 
Revival Hymn- Book (1825) brought about a break between his 
followers and the Reformed Church In 1830 he founded the 
Church of God (whose members are commonly called Wroe- 
brennerians), he was speaker of its conference and edited Us 
organ. The Church Advocate, until his death in Harrisburg on 
the 1 2th of September i860 He wrote Brief Views of Ike 
Church of God (1840), A Treatise on Regeneration (1844), 
Doctrinal and Practical Sermons (i860), and with I B Rupp, 
The History of all the. Religious Denominations in the United 
Stales (1844) 

The Church of God has three sacraments baptism (by immersion). 
feet washing and the Lord's Supper (administered to Christians 
only, in a sitting posture, and in the evening), it is generally Ar 
minian and pre-nriUenarian, and in government has local elders and 
deacons, an annual eldership composed of pastors and lay ciders, and. 
chosen by (and from) the annual elderships, a general eldership 
which meets since 1905 once in four yean The denomination in 
1906 numbered 518 organizations and 24456 communicants, in the 
' Ohio (2980). Indjana 



following 

(199?), nij 

Virginia./ 



Missouri (1053). Iowa West 



states Pennsylvania (11.157)* 

, „ ri niinoU0555) Maryland (1204). ML 

Virginia. Arkansas. Kansas. Oklahoma, Nebraska, Michigan, Wash- 
ington. Oregon and Minnesota Under the general eldership are 
Fmdlay College. Findlay. Ohio, Fort Scott Collegiate institute. Fort 
Scott, Kansas, and an academy at Barkeyville, Pennsylvania 
Some foreign missionary work is done in Bengal. 

WINER, OBORQ BENEDICT (1789-1858), German Pro- 
testant theologian, was born at Leipzig on the 13th of April 
1789. He studied theology at Leipzig, where eventually (1832) 
he became professor ordinarius. From 1824 to 1830 he edited 
with J. G. V. Engelhardt the Seues kntisches Journal der thec- 
logischcn Literalur, and alone from 1826 to 1832 the Zcttschnft 
fur wissenschafilkhe Theologie He is well known as the author 
of a Grammatik des ne u te s ta men tlichen Sprachtdioms (1821, 
8th cd. revised by P W Schmiedel. 1894 ff ), of which several 
translations have appeared, the latest being by W F Moulton 
(1870, 3rd ed 1882) He died on the 12th of May 1858. 

His other works include Komjparatwe Darstcllung des Lekrbegrxffes 
der verschiedenen cknstluhen Kirchenparteten (1824. 4th ed by 
P Ewald, 1882. Eng trans. 1873). Btohsckes Realwdrterbuch (1820. 
3rd ed 1 847-1 848. a vols. ). Grammatik des bibltscken und tarpmnscken 
CkaUaumus (1624. 3rd ed by B Fischer, Ckaldduehe Grammatik 
Mr BtM und Talmud. 1882. bog trans. 1843) and a useful Hand- 
buck der theotoguchen Lxteralur (1820 3rd ed 1838-1840, a vols., 
supplement, 1842) Cf W Schmidt, " Zum Gedachtnis Dr G. B. 
Winers." in the Bettrage tut s&ckstschen Knckengeschichte. 

WINE-TABLE, a late 18th-century device for facilitating 
after-dinner drinking— the cabinetmakers called it a ° Gentle- 
man's Social Table " It was always narrow and of semicircular 
or horseshoe form, and the guests sat round the outer circum- 
ference. In the earlier and simpler shapes metal wells for bottles 
and ice were sunk in the surface of the table, they were fitted 
with brass lids. In later and more elaborate examples the tables 
were fitted with a revolving wine-carriage, bottle-holder or tray 
working upon a balanced arm which enabled the bottles to hie 
passed to any guest without shaking The side opposite the 
guests was often fitted with a network bag It has been con- 
jectured that this bag was intended to hold biscuits, but it is 
much more likely that its function was to prevent glasses and 
bottles whkh might be upset from falling to the floor That 
the wine-table might be drawn up to the fire in cold weather 
without inconvenience from the heat it was fitted with curtains 
hung upon a brass frame and running upon rings Sometimes 
the table was accompanied by a circular bottle-stand supported 
on a tripod into which the bottles were deeply sunk to preserve 
them from the heat of the fire. Yet another form was circular 
with a socket in the centre for the bottle Wine-tables followed 
the fashion of other tables and were often inlaid with wood or 
brass. They are now exceedingly scarce 

WINFIEU), a city and the county-seat of Cowley county, 
, U.S.A.. in the S- part of the state, on the Walnut river, 



about 40 m. S.S.E. of Wichita. Pop, (1800) 5184; (1000) 
5554. of whom 203 were foreign born and 282 were negroes; 
(1905) 7845* Ooio) 6700 It is served by the Atchison, Topeka 
8c Santa Fe, the Missouri Pacific, and the St Louis & San Francisco 
railways, and is connected by electric line with Arkansas City, 
Arkansas. In the city arc St John's Lutheran College (1893), 
the South-west Kansas College (Methodist Episcopal, opened in 
1886), St Mary's Hospital and Training School (1808), Winfield 
Hospital (1000), a Lutheran orphans' home and a State School 
for Feeble-minded Youth Island Park (50 acres) is the meeting- 
place of a summer Chautauqua. Winfield is a supply and dis- 
tributing point for a rich fanning country, hi which large 
quantities of wheat and alfalfa are raised. Limestone is quarried 
near the dty, and natural gas is found in the vicinity and piped 
in from eastern fields for general use in the city The munici- 
pality owns and operates the waterworks and the electric-lighting 
plant Winfield was settled in 1870 and incorporated in 1871. 

WINGATE. SIR FRANCIS REGINALD (1861- ), British 
general and administrator in the Sudan, was born at Broadfield, 
Renfrewshire, on the 25th of June 1861, being the seventh son 
of Andrew Wingate of Glasgow and Elizabeth, daughter of 
Richard Turner of Dublin He was educated at the Royal 
Military Academy, Woolwich, and became a lieutenant in the 
Royal Artillery in 1880. He served in India and Aden, 1881- 
1883, and in the last named year joined the Egyptian army on 
its reorganization by Sir Evelyn Wood, and in the Gordon Relief 
Expedition of 1884-1885 was A.D C and military secretary to 
Sir Evelyn For his services he received the bievet rank of 
major. After holding an appointment in England for a brief 
period he rejoined the Egyptian army in 1886 He took part 
in the operations on the Sudan frontier in 1880, including the 
engagement at Toski and m the further operations in 1891, 
being present at the capture of Tokar In 1894 he was governor 
of Suakin His principal work was in the Intelligence branch 
of the service, of which he became director in 1892 A master 
of Arabic, his knowledge of the country, the examination of 
prisoners, refugees and others from the Sudan, and the study of 
documents captured from the Dervishes enabled him to publish 
in 1891 Makdiism and the Egyptian Sudan, an authoritative 
account of the rise of the Mahdi and of subsequent events in 
the Sudan up to that date Largely through his instrumentality 
Father Ohrwaldcr and two nuns escaped from. Omdurman in 
1891 Wingate also made the arrangements which led to the 
escape of SUtin Pasha in 1895. The English versions of Father 
Ohrwalder's narrative {Ten Years in the MahdVs Camp, 1892) 
and of Slatin's book (Fire and Sword in the Sudan, 1896) were 
from Wingate's pen, being rewritten from a rough translation 
of the original German. 

As director of military intelligence he served in the campaigns 
of 1896-1898 which resulted in the reconquest of the Sudan, 
including the engagement at Firkct, the battles of the Atbara 
and Omdurman and the expedition to Fashoda. In an interval 
(March- June 1897) he went to Abyssinia as second in command 
of the Rcnnell Rodd mission. For bis services he was made 
colonel, an extra A.D C to Queen Victoria, received the thanks 
of parliament and was created K.C M G Wingate was in com- 
mand of an expeditionary force which in November 1899 defeated 
the remnant of the Dervish host at Om Dcbrcikat, Kordofan, 
the khalifa being among the slain. For this achievement he 
was made K.C.B In December of the same year, on Lord 
Kitchener being summoned to South Africa, Sir Reginald 
Wingate succeeded him as governor-general of the Sudan and 
sirdar of the Egyptian army His adrninistration of the 
Anglo- Egyptian Sudan was conspicuously successful, the country, 
after the desolation of the Mabdia, rapidly regaining a measure 
of prosperity In 1003 he was raised to the rank of major-general 
and in 1908 became lieutenant-general. He was also created a 
pasha and in 1905 received the honorary degree of D CX. from 
Oxford University In 1009, at the request of the British 
government, Wingate undertook a special mission to Somaliland 
to report on the military situation in connexion with the proposed 
evacuation of the interior of the protectorate 



WINGFIELD, E. M.— WINKELRIED 



730 

WmOPHUX EDWAHD MARIA (c. 1560-c. 1614), English 
colonist in America, was bom at Stondey, Huntingdonshire, 
about 156a He served as a soldier both in Ireland and the Low 
Countries, was one of the patentees of Virginia in 1606, and in 
1607 accompanied the first colonists to Jamestown. He was 
elected president of the Council (1 51b May 1607), but his arbitrary 
manners, the fact that he was a Roman Catholic, and the 
suspicion that he was friendly toward Spam led to his deposition 
in September He returned to England in April 1608, and 
died after 1613 

His amplified diary, entitled " A Discourse of Virginia," was pub- 
lished in Archaeolotta Americana, vol tv (Worcester, i860), with 
introduction and notes by Charles Deane. 

WINGFIELD, SIR RICHARD (c 1469-1525), English diplo- 
matist, was one of the twelve or thirteen sons of Sir John Wing- 
field (d 1481) of Lethenngham, Suffolk He became a courtier 
during the reign of Henry V1L and was made marshal of Calais 
in 1511 With Sir Edward Poynings and others he was sent in 
1512 to arrange a holy league between the pope, the English 
king and other sovereigns, and in 1514 he went to the Nether- 
lands to try and arrange a marriage between the archduke 
Charles, afterwards the emperor Charles V , and Henry VIII 's 
daughter Mary In the intervals between these and similar 
errands Wingfield was occupied in discharging his duties at 
Calais, but in 1 519 he resigned his post there and returned to 
England In 1520 Sir Richard was appointed ambassador to 
the French court, and be helped to make the arrangements for 
the meeting between Henry VIII. and Francis I at the Field 
of the Cloth of Gold. Twice during 1521 he visited Charles V., 
his object being to deter him from making war on France, and 
he was on an errand to Spain when he died at Toledo on the 22nd 
of July 1 525. In 1 524 he had been made chancellor of the duchy 
of Lancaster For his services Wingfield received lands in various 
parts of England, including Kimbolton in Huntingdonshire, 
where he enlarged the castle. 

Sir Richard had two brothers who attained some celebrity- 
Sir Robert (c 1464-1539)1 a djfelomatist, and Sir Humphrey 
(d. 1545), speaker of the House of Commons from 1533 to 1536. 
An elder brother, Sir John, sheriff of Norfolk and Suffolk in 1483, 
had a son Sir Anthony (c. 1458-1552), who was present at the 
Field of the Goth of Gold, and became a member of the privy 
council and captain of the guard. One of his grandsons, Anthony 
Wingfield (c. 1550-c. 1615), was public orator in the university 
of Cambridge, and another was Sir John Wingfield (ct 1506), 
a soldier who was governor of Gertruydenberg from 1587 and 
1589. Another of Sir Anthony's descendants, Sir Anthony 
Wingfield (ct 1638), was created a baronet in 1627 Another 
brother of Sir Richard, Ludovic, had a son, Sir Richard Wingfield, 
who was governor of Portsmouth under Queen Elizabeth. He 
was the father of another Sir Richard Wingfield (d. 1634), who 
served in Ireland and was created Viscount Powerscourt in 161 8. 
He died without issue, and his Irish estates passed to a cousin, 
Sir Edward Wingfield (d. 1638), whose grandson, Folliott Wing- 
field (d. 17 x 7), was created Viscount Powerscourt in 1665, but 
the title again became extinct when he died. In 1744 his cousin, 
Richard Wingfield (1697-1751), was created Viscount Powers- 
court, and his descendants have held this title until the present 
day Mcrvyn Wingfield (1 836-1 004), the 7th viscount, was 
created a peer of the United Kingdom as Baron Powerscourt 
in 1885. 

See Lord Powerscourt, Mumments of the Ancient Family of 
Wingfield (1894). 

W1NKELMANN, EDUARD (1838-1896), German historian, 
was born at Danzig on the 25th of June 1838. He studied at 
the universities of Berlin and Gottingen, worked at the Monu- 
ments Germomae kistorica, and in 1869 became professor of 
history at the university of Bern, and four years later at Heidel- 
berg. He also spent some time in Russia, teaching at Reval 
and at the university of Dorpat. He died at Heidelberg on the 
toth of February 1896. 

Winkdmann wrote a Geschichie der Angdsachsen bis firm Tode 
Kdntg Alfreds (Berlin, 1883): and his residence in Russia induced 
him to oomoile a BibUaiheca Lwoniae huiorica (St Petersburg, 1869- 



1870, and Berlin, 1878) . but his chief works deal whh the history of 
the Empire during the later middle ages. The most important of 
these arc Pktltpp von Sckwaben und Otto IV von Braunschweig 
(Leipzig 1873-1878J CeschichU Katser Fnedrtchs 11 und seiner 



1213-129$ (Berlin, 1863) and 1235-1250 (Reval, 1865). 
Frtedruh J I (Leipcis, 1889- 1898) and other wri * 
Frederick in the J akr bucket der deulscken G e s ck t c hl e (Leip 



1889-1898) and other writings cm 
deulscken G e s ck t c kl e (Leipzig, i86> 
fol ) He edited the Acta impem tnedtla (Innsbruck, 1880-1885), 
and with J Fickcr, Die Regesten des Katserretcks unlet Wtlhem, 
Aljons X und Richard (Innsbruck, 1882, 1901) Among Winkd- 
mann's other works are AUgemetne Verfassungsteschuhle (Leipzig. 
1901) and the Vrhundenbuch der UnwersUat HeuUlberg (Heidelberg, 
1886) 

WINKELRIED, ARNOLD VON. The incident with which 
this name is connected is, after the feat of William Tell, the best 
known and most popular in the early history of the Swiss Con- 
federation. We are told how, at a critical moment in the great 
battle of Sempach, when the Swiss had failed to break the serried 
ranks of the Austrian knights, a man of Unterwalden, Arnold 
von Winkelried by name, came to the rescue. Commending 
his wife and children to the care of his comrades, .he rushed 
towards the Austnans, gathered a number of their spears to- 
gether against his breast, and fell pierced through and through, 
having opened a way into the hostile ranks for his fellow-country- 
men, though at the price of his own bfe But the Tell and Win* 
kelried stories stand in a very different position when looked at 
in the dry light of history, for, while in the former case imaginary 
and impossible men (bearing now and then a real historical 
name) do imaginary and impossible deeds at a very uncertain 
period, in the latter we have some solid ground to rest on, and 
Winkelried's act might very well have been performed, though, 
as yet, the amount of genuine and early evidence in support of 
it is very far from being sufficient 

The history of the Winkelneds of Stans from 1148 to 1534 
has been minutely worked out from the original documents 
by Hermann von Liebenau, in a paper published in 1854, and 
reprinted at Aarau in 1862, with much other matter, in his 
book, Arnold von Wtnkelned, seine Zett und seine That. They 
were a knightly family when we first hear of them about 1250, 
though towards the end of the 14th century they seem to have 
been but simple men without the honours of knighthood, and not 
always using their prefix " von." Among its members we firid 
an Erni Winkelried acting as a witness to a contract of sale on 
the 1st of May 1367, while the same man, or perhaps another 
member of the family, Erni von Winkelried, is plaintiff in a suit 
at Stans on the 29th of September 1389, and in 141 7 is the landanv 
man (or head man) of Unterwalden, being then called Arnold 
Winkelriet. We have, therefore, a real man named Arnold Win- 
kelried living at Stans about the time of the battle of Sempach, 
The question is thus narrowed to the points, Was he present at 
the battle, and did he then perform the deed commonly attri- 
buted to him r This involves a minute investigation of the history 
of that battle, to ascertain if there are any authentic traces of 
this incident, or any opportunity for it to have taken place. 

1 Emdence ef Chronicles.— The earliest known mention of the 
incident is found in a Zurich chronicle (discovered in 1862 by 
G. von Wyss), which is a copy, made in 1476, of a chronicle written 
in or at any rate not earlier than 1438, though it is wanting in the 
16th-century transcript of another chronicle written in 1466, which 
up to 1389 closely agrees with the former It appears in the well- 
known form, but the hero is stated to be em getr&wer man under 
den Eideenozen, no name being given, and it seems clear that bis 
death did not take place at that tune. No other mention has 
been found in any of the numerous Swiss or Austrian chronictes 
till we come to the book De Hehmtiaa origtne, written in 1538 by 
Rudolph Gwalther (Zwingli's son-in-law), when the hero is still 
nameless, being compared to Deous or Codrus, but is said to have 
been killed by his brave act Finally, we read the full story la 
the original draft of Giles Tschudi's chronicle, where the hero is 
described as " a man of Unterwalden, of the Winkelried family/* 
this being expanded in the final recension of the chronide (1564) 
into " a man of Unterwalden, Arnold von Winckeiried by name { a 
brave knight," while he is entered (in the same book, on the authority 
of the " Anniversary Book " of Suns, now lost) 00 the list of those 
who fell at Sempach at the head of the NidwaMen (or Stans) men as 
" Herr Arnold von Winckelriet, Ritter," this being in the first draft 
" Arnold Winckelriet." 

a. Ballads.— Then are several war songs on the battle of Sempach 
which have come down to us, but in one only is there mention of 



WINNIPEG 



731 



WtakdrMaadhisdeed. This is a tag ballad of 67 four-tine stt^uaa, 

part of which (including the WinkeTried section) is found in the 
additions made between 1531 and 1545 to Ettcrlin's chronicle by 
H. Beriinger of Basel, and the whole in Werner Steiner's chronicle 
(written 1532). It is agreed on all sides that the last stanza, attribut- 
ing the authorship to Halbsuter of Lucerne, " as he came bock from 
the battle," is a very late addition. Many authorities regard it as 
made up of three distinct songs (one of which refers to the battle and 
Winkdried). possibly put together by the younger Halbsuter (citizen 
of Lucerne in 1435. died between 1470 and 14*0), though others 
tntend that the Sempach- Winkelried section bears dear traces of 



with spears falling to the ground, 
for Winkdried, while in that of 



having been composed after the Reformation began, that is, about 
1520 or 1530. borne recent discoveries have proved that certain 
statements in the song usually regarded as anachronisms are quite 
accurate; but no nearer approach has been made towards fixing its 
exact date, or that of any of the three bits into which it has been cut 
up. In this song the story appears in its f uU-biown shape, the name 
of Winckelriet being given. 

3. Lists of thou who fell at Sempach.— Wt find in the "Anni- 
versary Book " of Emmetten in Unterwaldcn (drawn up in 1560) 
the name of " der Winkelriedt " at the head of the Nidwalden men, 
and in a book by Horolanus, a pastor at Lucerne (about 1563). 
that of " Erni Winckelried " occurs some way down the list of 
Unterwaldcn men. 

4. Pictures and Drawings — In the MS. of the chronicle of Die- 
bold Schilling of Bern (c. 1480) there is in the picture of the battle 
of Sempach a warrior pierced * ■--.-•.- 
which may possibly be meant 

Dicbold Schilling of Lucerne (151 1), though in the text no allusion 
is made to any such incident, there is a similar picture of a man who 
has accomplished Winkelried's feat, but he is dressed in the colours 
of Lucerne Then there is an engraving in Scumpf *s chronide (1548)* 
and. finally, the celebrated one by Hans Rudolf Manud (1551). 
which follows the chronicle of 1476 rather than the ballad. 

The story seems to have been first questioned about 1850 by 
Moritz von Stnrler of Bern, but the public discussion of the subject 
originated with a lecture by O. Lorenz on Leopold HI und du 
Stkweiter Bund*, which he delivered in Vienna on March at, i860. 
This began the lively paper war humorously called " the second war 
of Sempach," in which the Swiss (with but rare exceptions) main- 
tained the historical character of the feat against various foreigners 
— Aostrians and others. 

Most of the arguments against the genuineness of the story have 
been already more or less directly indicated. (1) There is the 
total silence of all the old Swiss and Austrian chroniclers until 1538. 
with the solitary exception of the Zurich chronicle of 1476 (and this 
while they nearly all describe the battle in more or less detail). The 
tale, as told in the 1476 chronicle, is dearly an interpolation, for it 
comes immediately alter a distinct statement that " Cod had helped 
the Confederates, and that with great labour they had defeated the 
knights and Duke Leopold," while the passage immediately following 
joins on to the former quite naturally if we strike out the episode of 
the " true man," who is not even called Winkdried. (2) The date of 
the ballad is extremely uncertain, but cannot be placed earlier than 
at least 60 or 70 years after the battle, possibly 130 or 140, so that its 
chums to be regarded as embodying an oral contemporary tradition 
are of the slightest. (3) Similar feats have been frequently recorded, 
but in each case they are supported by authentic evidence which is 
lacking in this case. Five cases at least are known ■ a follower of 
the count of Hapsburg. in a skirmish with the Bernese in 1271; 
Stulinger of Ratisbon (Regensburg) in 1332, in the war of the count 
of Kyburg against the men of Bern and Solothorn; Conrad Royt of 
Lucerne, at Nancy in 1477: Henri WoUeben, at Frastanz in 1499. in 
the course of the Swabian War; and a man at the battle of Kappel 
in 1 531 (4) I* »« argued that the course of the battle was such that 
there was little or no chance of such an act bring performed, or, if 
per f ormed, of having turned the day This argument rests on the 
careful critical narrative of the fight constructed by Herr Klcissner and 
Herr Hart man n from the contemporary accounts which have come 
down to us. in which the pride of the knights, then heavy armour. 
the beat of the July sun, the panic which befell a sudden part of the 
Austrian army, added to the valour of the Swiss fully explain the 
complete rout. Herr Hartmann, too. points out that, even if the 
knights (on foot) had been ranged in serried ranks, there must have 
been sufficient space left between them to allow them to move their 
arms, and therefore that no man, however gigantic he might have 
been, could have seized hold of more than ball a dozen spears at once. 

Herr K. Burkli {Der wahro Wtnkdritd,—dt* Taktik der ohm 
Urschweiur, Zurich. 1886) has put forth a theory of the battle 
which is, he allows, opposed to all modern accounts, but entirely 
agrees, he strongly maintain*, with the contemporary authorities. 
According to this the fight was not a pitched battle but a surprise. 
the Austnans not having had time to form up into ranks. Assuming 
this, and rejecting the evidence of the 1476 chronide as an inter- 

Clation and full of mistakes, and that of the song as not proved to 
ve been in existence before 1531, Herr Burkli comes to the startling 
condusicn that the phalanx formation of the Austnans, as well as the 
e and act of Winkdried, have been transferred to Sempach from 



the fight of Bicocca, near Milan (April 27. 1522), where a real leader 
of the Swiss mercenaries in the pay of France, Arnold Winkdried. 



really met We death in very ranch the way that his tuunesake 
perished according to the story. Herr Burkli confines his criticism 
to the first struggle, in which alone mention is made of the driving 
back of the Swiss, pointing out also that the chronide of 1476 and 
other later accounts attribute to the Austrians the manner of attack 
and the long spears which were the special characteristics of Swiss 
warriors, and that if Winkdried were a knight (as is asserted by 
Tschudi) he would have been dad in a coat oimail, or at least had a 
breastplate, nether of which could have been pierced by hostile 
lances. 

Whatever may be thought of this daring theory, it seems dear 
that, while there is some doubt as to whether such an act as Winkel- 
ried's was possible at Sempach, taking into account the known 
details of the battle, there can be none as to the utter lack of any 
early and trustworthy evidence in support of his having performed 
that act in that battle. It is quite conceivable that such evidence 
may later come to light; for the present it is wanting. 

Authorities.— See in particular Theodor von Liebcnau's Die 
Schlacht bet Sempach— Cedenhbuch tmr funften Sdcularfeter (1886), 
published at the w pen-g of the government of Lucerne. This 
contain* every mcniinn or description of the battle or of anything 
relating 10 it. p utilised or unpublished, in prose or in verse, com* 
poio.J within joo years after the battle, and is a most marvellous 
an<i invaluihTe collection of original materials, In which all the 
evidence for Winkelried's deed has been brought together in a handy 
shape. Besides the works mentioned in the text, and the life of 
Wuikdried by W Oeduli Lb vol liii. of the AUtemeine deutscke 
Bi'WJphie, the following ace the most noteworthy publications 
relating to this controversy In support of Winkelried's act: G. v. 
Wvss, Vbtr eine Ztirehtr-Chrimik aus dem i$ten Jahrhttndert (Zurich, 
i8oj>: Am Daguet h " U Question de Winkdried," in the Musi* 
Ntmkfadtds for December 1/483; C. H. Ochsenbdn, " Die Winkd* 
riedfi-JLTi'," in The 5. - \tt of the Bund newspaper for January 

' F'i rnoulli, Winkdrieds That bet Sempach 



Zur Sempacher SeHochtfeier (Zurich, 
\ ei Winkelried (Lausanne, 1886), and 



and February tflr?; 
(Basel, rWGh w. * 

18H6); E. Secretin, . ... 

the Hjnjnury in K- Dandliker's larger Ceschickte der Sckweis, L 550- 
550 (3rd aL ZUrith, tHuj). Against Winkelried's claims we have 
thV n martcable stodv of O. Kleissner, Die Quellen tur Sempacher 
Schlaths ttnd die WinJteJrif.ii if* (Gdttingen, 1 873); O. Hartmann, 
Dk .SVtiofftf be* Sempath (Frtoenfdd. 1886); and the concise sum* 
raary of the evidence given by M. v. Srurlcr (the first to suspect the 
story) m the A nui£rr ftir JJasris. Geschtchte (1881). 39- > -394> 

WTNHIPEO, the capital of Manitoba, and chief dty of Western 
Canada. It is situated at the junction of the Assiniboinc and 
Red rivers In the middle of a wide plain. The river valley, being 
of exceptional richness, early attracted the traders, and so in the 
beginning of the 19th century gained the attention of Lord Selkirk, 
a benevolent Scottish nobleman who sent out in 1811-1815 
several hundreds of Highland settlers. On the site at the junction! 
of the two rivers where Verandreye, the first white explorer to 
visit the Red river, had three-quarters of a century before this 
time erected Fort Rouge, and where some ten years earlier in 
the century the Nor'-Wcsters of Montreal had erected Fort 
Gibraltar, the Hudson's Bay Company, which at the time Lord 
Selkirk and his friends controlled, erected Fort Douglas, bearing 
the family name of the colonizer. After bloodshed between the 
rival fur companies, and their union in 1821, Fort Garry was 
erected, as a trading post and settlers' depot, and with some- 
what elaborate structure, with stone walls, bastions and port- 
holes. Fort Garry (2) was erected at a considerable cost in 1835. 
A short distance north of this fort, about the year i860, the first 
house on the plain was erected, and to the hamlet rising there was 
given the name of the lake 45 m. north, Winnipeg (Cree, Win, 
murky, nipty, water). The name referred to the contrast 
between its water and that of the transparent lakes to the 
east For ten years the hamlet grew—though very slowly, it 
being more than four hundred miles from St Paul, the nearest 
town in Minnesota, to the south. The fur-traders did not seek 
to increase its size. When the transfer of Rupert's Land took 
place to Canada in 1870, the governor of Assiniboia had his 
residence at Fort Garry, and here was the centre of government 
for the settlers over the area surrounding Fort Garry. Its 
acquisition by Canada and the influx of settlers from Eastern 
Canada led to the greater importance of Winnipeg, as the new 
town was now generally called. '1 he establishment of Dominion 
government agencies, the formation of a local government, 
the machinery required for the government of the province, 
the influx of a small army of surveyors who mapped out and 
surveyed wide districts of the country, and the taking up of 



732 



WINNIPEG— WINONA 



free lands in all directions by Canadian settlers, all tended to build 
op the hamlet of Winnipeg into a considerable town. 

The following figures of population show the remarkable 
increase of Winnipeg: (1870) 215, (1874) l 1869, (1885) 
io,574i (1*98) 39»384, (1001) 4*^4<>; (1005) 79*975. (1906) 
00,153; (>9°7) 100,000 (estimated). The rapid growth of the 
dty, the character of the soil, and the high prices of material for 
street construction have led to a large and expensive civic 
organization. The dty is governed by a mayor, four controllers, 
and twelve aldermen. The dty possesses the public utility 
of water, but the dty street car system, gas, and private electric 
lighting are in the hands of a private company The dty 
has decided to introduce electric power from Winnipeg river, 
at a point some 50 m. distant The streets are in some cases 
macadamized and in other cases block paved, and in still others 
asphalted. The Parks Board is a board appointed by the dty 
council, and has the complete administration of a fixed percentage 
of the dty taxes. The streets are boulevarded, trees planted on 
them, and both of these kept by the Parks Board. A number of 
well-kept small parks are found throughout the dty, and a large 
park— the Assiniboine— is being prepared and beautified. The 
greatest business street is Main Street, on which (north) the 
Great Canadian Pacific railway station and Royal Alexandra 
Hotd are situated, and (south) the Union station of the Canadian 
Northern and Grand Trunk Pacific railways are found. On or 
near this street (133 ft. wide) are placed the great financial 
institutions of the dty, including dghteen chartered banks, 
maby of which are ornaments to the dty, and many loan, 
insurance, and real estate buildings and offices. The depart- 
mental stores and offices of the Hudson's Bay Company and its 
Fort Garry court, which stand on Main Street South, are worthy 
of that ancient company. The dty hall, with park and volunteers' 
monument, are on the same street, while the lofty Union Bank, 
Mclntyre, and Bon Accord blocks are here wildernesses of offices 
of every description. The second great street, Portage Avenue, 
of the same width as Main Street, runs at right angles to Main 
Street, and is the mercantile street of the city On this are the 
post office, Free Press office, Y.M.C.A. building, Aikins Block, 
T. Eaton & Co.'s enormous departmental shop, and the Ideal 
Building, which are worthy of note. The wholesale business 
street of the dty is Princess, running parallel to Main Street, 
and the two most beautiful residential streets are Broadway and 
Assiniboine Avenues. All parts of the dty are reached by the 
Winnipeg electric street railway, which runs north for 25 m. 
on the continuation of Main Street to the town of Selkirk, west 
along Portage Avenue for 12 m. to St James, Silver Heights, 
St Charles and Headingly, and south through Fort Rouge to 
River Park. At the north of the dty are St John's episcopal 
buildings, induding St John's College and boys' school. In the 
central part of the dty are the parliament building, governor's 
residence, barracks, law courts, university, Manitoba College 
and Wesley College buildings. More than eighty churches, 
many of them of architectural value, are found scattered over 
the dty, while the General Hospital, Women's Home, Children's 
Home, Children's Aid Shelter and Deaf and Dumb Institute 
speak of the benevolence of the citizens. One of the most 
striking features of Winnipeg is seen in the elaborate system of 
public schools. The buildings are not exceeded for beauty of 
design or for completeness of finish by any Canadian dty and by 
few American dties. 

The geographical position of Winnipeg is unique for the 
purposes of trade. Like Chicago it stands on the eastern border 
of the prairies. All western trade in Canada of the vast provinces 
of Manitoba, Saskatchewan, Alberta and British Columbia, 
must pass through the narrow belt of 100 m., lying between 
the international boundary line and Lake Winnipeg. Midway 
in this bdt stands Winnipeg. The trade from the wide extent 
of three-quarters of a million of square miles of prairie and 
woodland, becoming more populous every year, must flow as 
through a narrow spout at Winnipeg; every railway must 
pass through Winnipeg. In consequence Winnipeg is already a 
1 Incorporated in this year as a dty. 



considerable manufacturing centre. Its lumber and flour mills 
are its largest industries, but the following are found: aerated 
waters and breweries, tent makers, baking-powder manufactories, 
box manufacturers, brick makers, broom, brushes and carriage 
makers, cement blocks, manufacturing chemists, chocolate and 
agar manufacturers, confectionery, copper plate, cornice makers, 
engine builders, gas fitters, ink manufacturers, jewelry makers, 
lime makers, milliners, opticians, paint makers, paper-box 
makers, photographers, pickle makers, planing mills, pork 
packers, publishers, pump makers, rubber-stamp makers, 
sash, door and blind factories, upholsterers, ventilating manu- 
factory, vinegar factories, foundries, wire and fence manu- 
factories. The area of the dty is x 2,700 acres. 

WINNIPEG, a lake and river of Canada. The lake is in 
Saskatchewan, Manitoba and Keewatin, and is situated between 
50 20' and 53* So' N and 96 20' and oo° 15' W. It covers an 
area of 8555 sq. m., is at an altitude of 7x0 ft. above the sea, is 260 
m. long, 25 to 60 m. wide, and contains several large islands, 
including Reindeer (70 sq m.) and Big Island (60 sq. m.). It is 
shallow, being nowhere more than 70 ft. in depth, and in con- 
sequence extremely stormy and dangerous. It abounds in fish, 
its white fish being especially celebrated. Its shores are low 
and on the south extremely marshy. The principal affluent 
rivers are: Red river, from the south; Winnipeg, Bloodvein, 
Berens and Poplar from the east, and the Dauphin and Sas- 
katchewan from the west. It receives the surplus waters of lakes 
Manitoba and Winnipegosis, and discharges by the river Nelson 
into Hudson Bay. The river Winnipeg rises near Savanne station 
in 48° 47' N. and 8o° 57' W , and flows in a westerly direction 
under the names of Savanne, Sdne, and Rainy rivers to the 
Lake of the Woods; issuing thence as the Winnipeg, it flows 
N.W. with an exceedingly tortuous and turbulent course to the 
lake of the same name. It is navigable from the foot of the Lake 
of the Woods to the head of Rainy lake— with a short portage at 
Fort Frances falls— a distance of 208 m. Its prindpal tributary 
is English river. 

WINNIPEGOSIS, a lake of Manitoba and Saskatchewan, 
Canada, between 51° 34' and 53° xx' N. and oo° 37' and xoi° 06' 
W Its greatest length is X22 m., greatest width 17 m.; shore- 
line 570 m., and area, exclusive of islands, 2000 sq, m. Its 
greatest ascertained depth is 38 fL, and mean altitude 828 ft*, 
above the sea. Mossy river from the south, draining Lake 
Dauphin, Swan, and Red Deer rivers are the only considerable 
streams that fall into it. It drains by the Waterhen river through 
Waterhen lake into Lake Manitoba, and thence by the Little 
Saskatchewan into Lake Winnipeg. It was discovered by the 
chevalier de la Verendrve in 1730. 

WINONA, a dty and the county-seat of Winona county, 
Minnesota, U.S-A., about 95 m. S.E. of St Paul, on the W. bank 
of the Mississippi river, here crossed by three steel bridges. 
Pop. (1880) 10,208; (1890) x8,2o8; (1900) 19,7x4, of whom 
5000 were foreign-born and 30 negroes, (1910 census) 18,583. 
There are large German and Polish elements in the population; 
and German and Polish journals, besides two dailies in English, 
are published here. Winona is served by the Chicago , Burlington 
& Quincy, the Chicago Great Western, the Chicago, Milwaukee 
& St Paul, the Green Bay & Western, and the Chicago & North- 
western railways, and by river steamboat lines. lit is pictur- 
esquely situated on a broad, level terrace, slightly devated above 
the river, and surmounted by steep bluffs rising to 400-500 ft. 
At Winona are the Winona General Hospital (1894), to which is 
attached a Nurses' Training School; the first State Normal 
School (opened in 1860), and Winona Seminary (1804) for girls, 
conducted by the Sisters of Saint Frands. The dty has a public 
library (about 30,000 vols.), with a mural decoration by Kenyon 
Cox; a Federal building; a Masonic Temple, and several 
parks; and it owns its own water supply (operated by the Holly 
system). In 1005 the total value of the factory product was 
$7,850,236 (30*5% more than in 1000). The site of the dty was 
frequently used as a landing place in the old fur-trading days, 
but was not permanently settled until about 1853. Winona was 
first chartered as a dty in 1857. A large part of it was destroyed 



WINSFORD— WINSTED 



733 



by fire in 1 860. The name Winona, is said to be a Sioux word 
meaning " first-born daughter." 

WINSFOBD, an urban district in the Northwicb parliamentary 
division of Cheshire, England, on the river Weaver, 6 m. S. of 
Northwicb, on the London & North- Western railway and the 
Cheshire lines. Pop. (1901) 10,382. In the town, which is only 
second to North wich in this respect, large quantities of salt are 
raised and conveyed to Liverpool for exportation; being shipped 
in flats down the Weaver, which has been rendered navigable 
by an elaborate system of locks. Rock-salt is procured, as 
well as that obtained from the brine-pools. Boat-building is 
an important accompanying industry, and more than half a 
million tons of salt are shipped annually. Owing to the pumping 
of the brine, large tracts of land have been submerged, and 
there is thus a constant danger to houses. The iron bridge across 
the Weaver, which was built in 1856, had to be raised thrice in 
the following twenty-six years. The town has received much 
benefit from philanthropists, Sir Joseph Verdin providing a 
technical school, and Sir John Brunner a guildhall and other 
buildings. 

WINSLOW, EDWARD (1595-1655), one of the founders of 
the Plymouth colony in America, was bom in Droitwich, 
Worcestershire, England, on the 18th of October 1595. In 
161 7 he removed to Leiden, united with John Robinson's church 
there, and in 1620 was one of the " pilgrims " who emigrated to 
New England on the '* Mayflower " and founded the Plymouth 
colony. His wife, Elizabeth (Barker) Winstow, whom he had 
married in May 1618 at Leiden, having died soon after their 
arrival, he married, in May 1621, Mrs Susannah White, the mother 
of Peregrine White (1620-1704), the first white child born in 
New England. This was the first marriage in the New England 
colonies. Winslow was delegated by his associates to treat with 
the Indians in the vicinity and succeeded in winning the friend- 
ship of their chief, Massasoit (c. 1580-1661). He was one of 
the assistants from 1624 to 1647, except in 1633-1634, 1636- 
1637 and 1644-1645, when he was governor of the colony. 
He was also, in 1643, one of the commissioners of the United 
Colonies of New England. On several occasions he was sent to 
England to look after the interests of Plymouth and Massa- 
chusetts Bay, and defend these colonies from the attacks of such 
men as John Lyford, Thomas Morton (q.v.) and Samuel Gorton 
(q.v). He left on his last mission as the agent of Massachusetts 
Bay, m October 1646, and spent nine years in England, where 
he held a minor office under Cromwell, and in 1654 was made a 
member of the commission appointed to determine the value of 
certain English ships destroyed by Denmark. In 1655 he was the 
chief of the three English commissioners whom Cromwell sent 
on his expedition against the West Indies to advise with its leaders 
Admiral Vcnablcs and Admiral William Penn, but died near 
Jamaica on the 8th of May 1655, and was buried at sea. Window's 
portrait, the only authentic likeness of any of the " Mayflower" 
■• pilgrims/' is in the gallery of the Pilgrim Society at Plymouth, 



His writings, though fragmentary, are of the greatest value to the 
historian of the Plymouth colony. They include : Good Naves from 
New England, or a True Relation of Things very Remarkable at the 
Plantation of Plimouth in New England ( 1624) ; Hypocrisie Unmasked; 



against Samuel Gorton, a Notorious Disturber of the Peace (1646), to 
which was added a chapter entitled " A Brief Narration of the True 
Grounds or Cause of the First Plantation of New England " ; New 
England's Salamander (1647) ; and The Glorious Progress of the Gospel 
amongst the Indians in New England (1640)- With William Bradford 
he also is supposed to have prepared a Journal of the Beginning and 
Proceeding of the English Plantation settled at Plymouth in New Eng- 
land (1622), which is generally known as " Mourt's Relation," owing 
to its preface having been signed by "G. Mourt." Some of his 
writings may be found reprinted in Alexander Young's Chronicles of 
the Pilgrims (Boston, 1841). 

See/. B. Moore's Memoirs of American Governors (New York, 1 846) ; 
David P. and Frances K. Holton's Winslow Memorial (New York, 
1877) and J. G. Palfrey's History of New England (3 vols., Boston, 
1858-1864). Also see a paper by W. C. Winslow. "Governor 
Edward Winslow, his Place and Part in Plymouth Colony." in the 
Annual Report of the American Historical Association lor 1895 
(Washington, 1896). 



His son, JoaiAH Winslow (1620-1680), was educated at 
Harvard College. He was elected a deputy to the General 
Court in 1653, was an " assistant " from 1657 to 1673, and 
governor from June 1673 until his death. From 1658 to 167a 
he was one of. the commissioners of the United Colonies of 
New England, and in 1675, during King Philip's War, he was 
commander-in-chief of the united forces of New England. 

WINSOR, JUSTIN (1831-1897), American writer and librarian, 
was born in Boston, Massachusetts, on the 2nd of January 1831. 
At the age of nineteen he printed a History of Duxbury, Mass., 
the home of his ancestors. He left Harvard before graduation 
to study in Paris and Heidelberg, but not until he had planned 
an extended memoir of Garrick and his Contemporaries, the 
manuscript of which, in ten folio volumes with a mass of notes, 
is in the library of Harvard University. In 1866 Winsor was 
appointed a trustee of the Boston public library, and in 1868 
its superintendent. In 1877 he became librarian of Harvard 
University, a position he retained until his death. He greatly 
popularized the in* of both these great collections of books. 
While at the B«Mon public library he edited a most useful 
catalogue of books in history, biography and travel, and com- 
piled the first of a series of separate lists of works of historical 
fiction. In 1876 he began a series of monumental publications. 
The first was a Bibliography of the Original Quartos and Folios 
of Shakespeare with Particular Reference to Copies in America. 
Unfortunately, all except about a hundred copies of this work 
were destroyed by fire. A small volume entitled The Reader's 
Handbook of the American Revolution (1879) is the model of a 
reasonable bibliography. In 1880 he began the editing of the 
Memorial History of Boston (4 vols., 4to), with the co-operation 
of seventy writers. He so manipulated the contributions and 
supplemented them with notes as to give an air of unity to the 
whole work, and completed it in twenty-three months. He then 
set to work on a still larger co-operative book, The Narrative and 
Critical History of America, which was completed (1889) in eight 
royal octavo volumes. These great tasks had compelled Winsor 
to make a careful and systematic study of historical problems 
with the aid of contemporaneous cartography. Among the 
early results of this study were the Bibliography of Ptolemy's 
Geography (1884), and the Catalogue of the Kohl Collection of 
Maps relating to America (1886), published in the Harvard 
Library Bulletins. His vast knowledge took the final form of 
four volumes entitled Christopher Columbus (1891), Carlier to 
Fronlenac (1894), The Mississippi Basin (1895), and The 
Westward Movement (1897). Besides great stores of information 
hitherto accessible only to the specialist, these contain many 
strong expressions of dissent from currently received views. 
Winsor served for many years on the Massachusetts Archives 
Commission. His careful Report on the Maps of the Orinoco- 
Essequibo Region was prepared at the request of the Venezuela 
Boundary Commission. He was one of the founders of both the 
American Library Association and the American Historical 
Association, and was president of botli — of the former for ten 
years, 1876-1885, and the latter in 1886-1887. He died in 
Cambridge on the 22nd of October 1897. 

See Horace E. Scudder's " Memoir of Justin Winsor " in the 
Proceedings of the Massachusetts Historical Society (2nd series), vol. 
xii. Also the Harvard Graduates' Magazine (December 1897). A 
bibliography of his writings is in Harvard College Library, Biblio- 
graphical Contributions. No. 54. 

WINSTED, a borough in the township of Winchester, Litchfield 
county, Connecticut, U.S.A., on the Mad and Still rivers, in the 
N.W. part of the state, about 26 m. N.W. of Hartford. Pop. 
of the township (1890) 6183; (1900) 7763: of the borough 
(1900) 6804, of whom 12 13 were foreign-born; (1910) 7754. 
The borough is served by the New York, New Haven 8: Hartford 
and the Central New England railways, and by electric railway 
to Torrington. Among the public institutions are the William 
L. Gilbert Home for friendless children and the Gilbert free high 
school, each endowed with more than $600,000 by William L. 
Gilbert, a prominent citizen; the Bcardslcy public library 
(1874), the Convent of Saint Margaret of Cortona, a Franciscan 
monastery, and the Litchfield County Hospital. In a park in 



734 



WINSTON-SALEM— WINTERFELDT 



the central part of the borough there is a tower (60 ft. high) to 
the memory of the soldiers of Winsted who fell in the Civil War, 
and another park contains a soldiers' monument and a memorial 
fountain. Watei power is derived from the Mad river and High- 
land lake, which is west of the borough and b encircled by the 
Wakefield boulevard, a seven-mile drive, along which there are 
many summer cottages. The manufactures include cutlery and 
edge tools, clocks, silk twist, hosiery, leather, &c. Winsted was 
settled in 1756 and chartered as a borough in 1858. The name 
Winsted was coined from Winchester and Barkhamsted, the 
latter being the name of the township immediately east of 
Winchester. The township of Winchester was incorporated in 

1771. 

WINSTON-SALEM, two contiguous cities of Forsyth county, 
North Carolina, U.S.A., about 115m. N. W. of Raleigh. Pop. of 
Winston (1880) 2854; (r8oo) 8018; Oooe) 10,008 (5043 negroes); 
(iqio) 17,167. Pop. of Salem (1800) 2711.(1900) 3642 (488 being 
negroes); (iqio) 5533. Both cities are served by the Southern 
and the Norfolk & Western railways. Since July 1809, when the 
post office in Salem was made a sub-station of that of Winston, 
the cities (officially two independent municipalities) have been 
known by postal and railway authorities as Winston-Salem. 
Winston is the county-seat and a manufacturing centre. Salem 
is largely a residential and educational city, with many old- 
fashioned dwellings, but there are some important manufactories 
here also; it is the scat of the Salem Academy and College 
(Moravian) for women, opened as a boarding-school in 1802; 
and of the Slater Normal and Industrial School (non-sectarian) 
foi negroes, founded from the Slater Fund in 1802. The surround- 
ing country produces tobacco of a very superior quality, and to 
the tobacco industry, introduced in 1873, the growth of Winston 
is chiefly due; the manufacture of flat plug tobacco here is 
especially important. The total value of Winston's factory 
products increased from $4,887,649 in 1900 to $11,353,296 in 
190s, or 132-3%. 

Salem was founded in 1766 by Friedrich Wilhclm von Marschall 
(1 721-1802), a friend of Zinzendorf, and the financial manager 
of the board controlling the Moravian purchase made in North 
Carolina in 1753, consisting of 100,000 acres, and called Wachovia. 
The town was to be the centre of this colony, where missionary 
work and religious liberty were to be promoted, and it remained 
the home of the governing board of the Moravian Church in 
the South. In 1849 exclusive Moravian control of Salem's 
industries and trades was abolished; in 1856 land was first 
sold to others than Moravians, and in the same year the town 
was incorporated. Winston was founded in 1851 as the county- 
seat and was named in honour of Major Joseph Winston (1746- 
1815), a famous Indian fighter, a soldier during the War of 
Independence and a representative in Congress in 1793-1795 
and 1803-1807. The growth of the two cities has been rapid 
since 1000. 

See J. H. Clewell, History of Wachovia in North Carolina (New 
York, 1902). 

WINTER, JOHN STRANGE, the pen-name of Henrietta 
Eliza Vaughan Stannard (1856- ), English novelist, who was 
born on the 13th of January 1856, the daughter of the Rev. H. V. 
Palmer, rector of St Margaret's, York. She early began to 
write fiction for different magazines, producing sentimental 
stories, chiefly of army life. Two of these, Booties* Baby and 
Houpla, which appeared originally in The Graphic in 1885, 
established her reputation, and she became a prolific novelist, 
producing some sixty other light and amusing books, the best 
of which deal with military life. An indefatigable journalist 
on matters affecting women, she was the first president of the 
Writers' Club (1892), and presided from 1001 to 1903 over the 
Society of Women Journalists. She married in 1884 Arthur 
Stannard, a civil enejneer. 

WINTER, PETER (c. 1755-1825), German dramatic composer, 
was born at Mannheim about 1755. He received some instruc- 
tion from the Abt Voder, but was practically self-taught. 
After nlaying in the Kapellc of the Elector Karl Theodor, at 
Munich, he became in 1776 director of the court theatre. When 



Mozart produced his Idomeueo at Munich in 1781, Winter, 
annoyed at his success, conceived a violent hatred for him; 
yet of more than thirty operas written by Winter between 1778 
and 1820 very few were unsuccessful. His most popular work, 
Das unterbrochent Opferfest, was produced in 1796 at Vienna, 
where in 1797*1798 he composed Die Pyramid™ mm Babylon 
and Das Labyrinth, both written for him by Schickanedcr in 
continuation of the story of Mozart's Zaubcrfidte. He returned 
to Munich in 1798. Five years later he visited London, where 
he produced Calypso in 1803, Proserpina in 1804, and Zaira in 
1805, with great success. His last opera, Stinger and Schneider, 
was produced in 1820 at Munich, where he died on the 17th of 
October 182s. Besides his dramatic works he composed some 
effective sacred music, including twenty-six masses. 

WINTERFELDT. HANS KARL VON (1707-1757). Prussian 
general, was born on the 4th of April 1707 at Vanselow in 
Pomerania. His education was imperfect, and in later life he 
always regretted his want of familiarity with the French language. 
He entered the cuirassier regiment of Jus uncle, Major-Cencral 
von Winterfeldt (now the 12th) in 1720, and was promoted 
cornet after two years' service. But he was fortunate enough, 
by his suture and soldierly bearing, to attract the notice of 
Frederick William I., who transferred him to the so-called giant 
regiment of grenadiers as a lieutenant. Before long he became 
a pcisonal aide-de-camp to the king, and in 1732 he was sent 
with a party of selected non-commissioned officers to assist in 
the organization of the Russian army. While the guest of 
Marshal MOnnich at St Petersburg, Winterfeldt fell in love with 
and married his cousin Julie von Mallzahn, who was the marshal's 
stepdaughter and a maid-of-honour to the grand-duchess 
Elizabeth. On returning to Prussia he became intimate with 
the crown prince, afterwards Frederick the Great, whom be 
accompanied in the Rhine campaign of 1734. This intimacy, 
in view of his personal relations with the king, made Winler- 
fcldt's position very delicate and difficult, for Frederick William 
and his son were so far estranged that, as every one knows, 
the prince was sent before a court-martial by his father, on the 
charge of attempting to desert, and was condemned to death. 
Winterfeldt was the prince's constant friend through all these 
troubles, and on Frederick II.'s accession he was promoted 
major and appointed aide-de-camp to the new sovereign. 

When the first Silcsian War broke out Winterfeldt was sent 
on a mission to St Petersburg, which, however, failed. He then 
commanded a grenadier battalion with great distinction at Moll- 
witz, and won further glory in the celebrated minor combat of 
Rothschloss, where the Prussian hussars defeated the Austrian* 
(May 17, 1741). One month from this day Winterfeldt was 
made a colonel, as also was Zietcn (?.».), the cavalry leader who 
had actually commanded at Rothschloss, though the latter, as 
the older in years and service, bitterly resented the rapid pro- 
motion of his junior. After this Frederick chiefly employed 
Winterfeldt as a confidential staff officer to represent his views 
to the generals, a position in which he needed extraordinary 
tact and knowledge of men and affairs, and as a matter of course 
made many enemies. 

In the short peace before the outbreak of the second war he 
was constantly in attendance upon the king, who employed him 
again, when the war was resumed, in the same capacity as before, 
and, after he had been instrumental in winning a series of success- 
ful minor engagements, promoted him (1745) major-general, 
to date from January 1743. 

For his great services at Hohenfriedberg Frederick gave him 
the captaincy of Tatiau, which carried with it a salary of 500 
thalers a year. At Katholisch-Henncrsdorf, where the sudden 
and unexpected invasion of the Austro-Saxons was checked by 
the vigour of Zieten, Winterfeldt arrived on the field in time to 
take a decisive share. Once again the rivals had to share their 
laurels, and Zieten actually wrote to the king in disparagement 
of Winterfeldt, receiving in reply a full and generous recognition 
of his own worth and services, coupled with the curt remark that 
the king intended to employ General von Winterfeldt in anyway 
that he thought fit. During the ten years' peace that preceded 



WINTERGREEN— WINTHER 



735 



the next great war, Winterfeldt was in constant attendance 
upon the king, except when employed on confidential missions 
in the provinces or abroad. In 1756 he was made a lieutenant- 
general and received the order of the Black Eagle. 

In this year he was feverishly active in collecting information 
as to the coalition that was secretly preparing to crush Prussia, 
and in preparing for the war. He took a leading part in the 
discussions which eventuated in Frederick's decision to strike 
the first blow. He was at Pirna with the king, and advised him 
against absorbing the Saxon prisoners into his own army. He 
accompanied Schwerin in the advance on Prague in 1757 and 
took a conspicuous part in the battle there. After the defeat of 
Kolin, however, Winterfeldt, whom Frederick seems to have 
regarded as the only man of character whom he could trust to 
conduct the more delicate and difficult operations of the retreat, 
found himself obliged to work in dose contact with the king's 
brother, Prince William, the duke of Brunswick-Bevcrn, Zieten 
and others of his enemies. The operations which followed may 
be summarized by the phrase "everything went wrong"; 
after an angry scene with his brother, the prince of Prussia 
retired from the army, and when Frederick gave Winterfeldt 
renewed marks of his confidence, the general animosity reached 
its height. As it chanced, however, Winterfeldt fell a victim 
to his own bravery in the skirmish of Moys near Gdrlitz on the 
7th of September. His wound, the first serious wound he had 
ever received, proved fatal and he died on the 8th. The court 
enmities provoked by his twenty years' unbroken intimacy 
and influence with the king, and the denigration of less gifted 
or less fortunate soldiers, followed him beyond death. Prince 
William expressed the bitterness of his hatred in almost his last 
words, and Prince Henry's memoirs give a wholly incredible 
portrait of Winterfeldt's arrogance, dishonesty, immorality 
and incapacity. Frederick, however, was not apt to encourage 
incompetence in his most trusted officers, and as for the rest, 
Winterfeldt stood first amongst the very few to whom the king 
gave his friendship and his entire confidence. On hearing of 
Winterfeldt's death he said, " Einen Winterfeldt finde ich nie 
wieder," and a little later, " Er war ein guter Mensch, ein 
Seelenmensch, er war mein Freund." Winterfeldt was buried 
at his estate of Barschau, whence, a hundred years later, his body 
was transferred to the Invaliden Kirchhof at Berlin. A statue 
was erected to his memory, which stands in the WUhelmsplatz 
there, and another forms part of the memorial to Frederick the 
Great in Unter den Linden. 

See Hans Karl 9. Winterfeldt und der Tag ton Moys (Gorlits, 
1857); and K. W. v. Schoning, Winterfddts Beisetxung; eine 
biograpkiscke Skisu (Berlin, 1857). 

W1NTBRGRBHN, known botanically as Caullheria procumbent, 
a member of the heath family {Ericaceae), is a small creeping, 
evergreen shrub with numerous short erect branches bearing 
in the upper part shortly-stalked oval, thick, smooth shining 
leaves with sharp-toothed edge. The flowers arc borne singly 
in the leaf axels* and are pendulous, with a pale pink waxy-, 
looking urn-shaped corolla. The bright crimson-red sub- 
globular, berry-like fruit consists of the much-enlarged fleshy 
calyx which surrounds the small thin- walled many-seeded capsule. 
The plant is a native of shady woods on sandy soil, especially in 
mountainous districts, in southern Canada and the northern 
United States; it is quite hardy in England- The leaves are 
sharply astringent and have a peculiar aromatic smell and taste 
due to a volatile oil known as oil of winter green, used in 
medicine in the treatment of muscular rheumatism (for the 
therapeutic action see Salicylic Acid) . An infusion of the leaves 
is used, under the name mountain or Salvador tea, in some parts 
of North America as a substitute for tea; and the fruits are eaten 
under the name of partridge or deer berries. Other names for 
the plant are tea-berry, checker-berry, box-berry, jersey tea, 
spice-berry and ground holly. 

See Bentley and Trimen, Medicinal Plants, t. 164. 

WINTER'S BARK, the bark of Drimys Winters, an evergreen 
tree belonging to the Magnolia family. It was formerly officinal 
in Europe, and is still held in esteem in Brazil and other parts 



of South. America as a popular remedy for scurvy and other 
diseas e s. The plant is a native of the mountains and highlands 
from Mexico to the Straits of Magellan. 

WINTERTHUR, a flourishing industrial town in the Toss 
valley, canton of Zurich, Switzerland, and by rail 17 m. N.E. of 
Zurich. It is 1450 ft. above sea-level, and has a rapidly increasing 
population (in 1870, 93x7; in 1880, 13,50a; in 1888, 15,805; and 
in 1900, 22,335)1 *H German-speaking and nearly all Protestants. 
It is the point of junction of seven lines of railway, and is 
therefore of considerable commercial importance. Its main in- 
dustries are cambric-weaving, cotton-printing, the manufacture of 
machinery, and wine-growing, Stadtberg being the best variety 
of wine grown in the neighbourhood of the town. It is a modern, 
well-built town, with a fine town-hall and well-arranged school 
buildings. .It suffered severely from the disastrous financial 
enterprise of the National Railway of Switzerland which it 
promoted. In 1878 it had to sell its property in that line, and 
from z88x to 1885 it was in great difficulties in the matter of a 
loan of nine million francs guaranteed in 1874 by the town, 
together with three others in Aargau, to that ill-fated railway. 
As the three co-guarantor towns were unable to pay their share, 
the whole burden fell on Winterthur, which struggled valiantly 
to meet its liabilities, and was helped by large loans from the 
cantonal and federal governments. 

The Roman settlement of Vitudurutn [Celtic dur, water] was a 
little north-east of the present town, at the place now known 
as Ober Winterthur. It was there that in 919 Burkhard II., 
duke of Alamannia, defeated Rudolf II., king of Transjuran 
Burgundy. It was refounded in the valley in 1 180 by the counts 
of Kyburg (their castle rises on a hill, 4 m. to the south of the 
town), who granted it great liberties and privileges, making it 
the seat of their district court for the Thurgau. In 1264 the 
town passed with the rest of the Kyburg inheritance to the 
Iiabsburgs, who showed very great favour to it, and thus secured 
its unswerving loyalty. In 1292 the men of Zurich were beaten 
back in an attempt to take the town. For a short time after the 
outlawry of Duke Frederick of Austria, it became a free imperial 
dty (14x5-1442); but after the conquest of the Thurgau by the 
Swiss Confederates (1460-1461) Winterthur, which had gallantly 
stood a nine-weeks' siege, was isolated in the midst of non- 
Austrian territory. Hence it was sold by the duke to the town 
of Zttrich in 1467, its rights and liberties being reserved, and its 
history since then has been that cf the other lands ruled by Zurich. 
In 17 17-1726 Zurich tried hard by means of heavy dues to crush 
the rival silk and cotton industries at Winterthur, which, how- 
ever, on the whole very successfully maintained its ancient 
rights and liberties against the encroachments of Zurich. 

See H. Glitsch, Beitrdge s. dltem Wintertkurer Verfassungsgeschickle 
(Winterthur, 1906); J. C. Troll, Geschickte d. Stadt Winterthur (8 
vols., 1840-1850). (W. A. B. C.) 

WINTHER, CHRISTIAN (1 796-1876), Danish lyrical poet, 
was born on the 29th of July 1796 at Fensmark, in the province 
of Praestd, where his father was priest. He went to the university 
of Copenhagen in 1815, and studied theology, taking his degree 
in 1824. He began to publish verses in 1819, but no collected 
volume appeared until 1828. Meanwhile, from 1824 to 1830, 
Winther was supporting himself as a tutor, and with so much 
success that in the latter year he was able to go to Italy on his 
savings. In 1835 a second volume of lyrics appeared, and in 
1838 a third. In 1841 King Christian VUI. appointed Winther 
to travel to Mecklenburg to instruct the princess Caroline, on 
the occasion of her betrothal to the Crown Prince of Penmark, 
in the Danish language. Further collections of lyrics appeared 
in 1842, 1848, 1850, 1853, 1865 and 187a. When he was past 
his fiftieth year Winther married. In 1851 he received a pension 
from the state as a poet, and for the next quarter of a century he 
resided mainly in Paris. Besides the nine or ten. volumes of 
lyrical verse mentioned above, Winther published The Slag's 
Flight, an epical romance in verse (1855); In the Year of Grace, 
a novel (1874); and other works in prose. He died in Paris on 
the 30th of December 1876, but the body* was brought to Den- 
mark, and was buried in the heart of the woods. In the verse of 



736 



WINTHROP, J.— WINTHROP, R. C. 



Christian Whither the scenery of Denmark, its beechwoods, lakes 
and meadows, its violet-scented dingles, its hollows perfumed by 
wild strawberries, found such a loving and masterly painter as 
they are never likely to find again. He is the most spontaneous 
of lyrists; his little poems are steeped in the dew and light and 
odour of a cool, sunshiny morning in May. His melodies are art- 
less, but full of variety and delicate harmony. When be was 
forty-seven he fell in love, and at that mature age startled 
his admirers by publishing for the first time a cycle of love- 
songs. They were what were to be expected from a spirit so 
unfaded; they still stand alone for tender homage and simple 
sweetness of passion. The technical perfection of Winthcr's 
verse, in its extreme simplicity, makes him the first song-writer 
of Denmark. (£. G.) 

; WINTHROP, JOHN (x 588-1649), a Puritan leader and governor 
of Massachusetts, was born in Edwardston, Suffolk, on the 12th 
of January (O.S.) 1588, the son of Adam Winthrop of Groton 
Manor, and Anne (Browne) Winthrop. In December 1602 he 
matriculated at Trinity College, Cambridge, but he did not 
graduate. The years after his brief course at the university 
were devoted to the practice of law, in which he achieved con- 
siderable success, being appointed, about 1623, an attorney in 
the Court of Wards and Liveries, and also being engaged in the 
drafting of parliamentary bills. Though his residence was at 
Groton Manor, much of his time was spent in London. Mean- 
while he passed through the deep spiritual experiences char- 
acteristic of Puritanism, and made wide acquaintance among the 
leaders of the Puritan party. On the 26th of August 1629 he 
joined in the " Cambridge Agreement," by which he, and his 
associates, pledged themselves to remove to New England, 
provided the government and patent of the Massachusetts colony 
should be removed thither. On the 20th of October following he 
was chosen governor of the " Governor and Company of the 
Massachusetts Bay in New England/' and sailed in the " Arbella " 
in March 1630, reaching Salem (Mass.) on the 12th of June (O.S.), 
accompanied by a large party of Puritan immigrants. After a 
brief sojourn in Charlestown, Winthrop and many of his imme- 
diate associates settled in Boston in the autumn of 1630. He 
shared in the formation of a church at Charlestown (afterwards 
the First Church in Boston) on the 30th of July 1630, of which 
he was thenceforth a member. At Boston he erected a large 
house, and there he lived till his death on the 26th of March 
(O.S.) 1649. 

Winthrop's history in New England was very largely that of 
the Massachusetts colony, of which he was twelve times chosen 
governor by annual election, serving in 1620-1634, 1637-1640, 
in i642-:i644, and in 1646-1649, and dying in office. To the 
service of the colony he gave not merely unwearied devotion; 
but in its interests consumed strength and fortune. His own 
temper of mind was conservative and somewhat aristocratic, 
but he guided political development, often under circumstances 
of great difficulty, with singular fairness and conspicuous 
magnanimity. In 1634-1635 he was a leader in putting the 
colony in a state of defence against possible coercion by the 
English government. He opposed the majority of his fellow- 
townsmen in the so-called " Antinomian controversy " of 1636- 
1637, taking a strongly conservative attitude towards the ques- 
tions ra dispute. He was the first president of the Commissioners 
of the United Colonies of New England, organized in 1643. 
He defended Massachusetts against threatened parliamentary 
interference once more in 1645-1646. That the colony success- 
fully weathered its early perils was due more to Winthrop's 
skill and wisdom than to the services of any other of its citizens, 

Winthrop was four times married. His first wife, to whom 
he was united on the x6th of April 1605, was Mary Forth, 
daughter of John Forth, of Great Stambridge, Essex. She bore 
him six children, of whom the eldest was John Winthrop, Jr. 
(?.».). She was buried in Groton on the 26th of June 1615. 
On the 6th of December 1615 he married Thomasine Clopton, 
daughter of William Clopton of Castleins, near Groton. She 
died in childbirth about a year later. He married, on the 29th 
of April 1618, Margaret Tyndal, daughter of Sir John Tyndal, 



of Great Maplested, Essex. She followed him to New England 
in 1631, bore him eight children, and died on the 14th of June 
1647. Late in 1647 or early in 1648 he married Mrs Martha 
Coytmore, widow of Thomas Coytmore, who survived him, and 
by whom he had one son. 

Winthrop's Journal, an invaluable record of early Massachusetts 
history, was printed in part in Hartford in 1790; the whole in Boston, 
edited by James Savage, as The History of New England from i6jo 
to 164Q, in 1825-1826, and again in 1853; and in New York, edited 
by James K. Hosmer, in 1908. His biography has been written by 
Robert C. Winthrop, Life and Letters of John Winthrop (2 vols., 
Boston, 1864, 1867; new ed. 1869); and by Joseph H. Twtchell. 
John Winthrop (New York, 1891). See also Mrs Alice M. Earle. 
Margaret Winthrop (New York, 1895). (W. Wa.) 

WINTHROP, JOHN (1606-1676), generally known as John 
Winthrop the Younger, son of the preceding, born at Groton, 
England, on the x 2th of February 1606. He was educated at 
the Bury St Edmunds grammar school and at Trinity College, 
Dublin, studied law for a short time after 1624 at the Inner 
Temple, London, accompanied the ill-fated expedition of the 
duke of Buckingham for the relief of the Protestants of La 
Rochelle, and then travelled in Italy and the Levant, returning 
to England in 1629. In 1631 he followed his father to Massa- 
chusetts, and was one of the " assistants " in 1635, 1640 and 
1641, and from 1644 to 1649. He was the chief founder of 
Agawam (now Ipswich), Mass., in 1633, went to England in 
1634, and in the following year returned as governor, for one 
year, of Connecticut, under the Save and Sele patent, sending out 
the party which built the fort at Saybrook, at the mouth of the 
Connecticut river. He then lived for a time in Massachusetts, 
where he devoted himself to the study of science and attempted 
to interest the settlers in the development of the colony's mineral 
resources. He was again in England in 1641-1643, and on his 
return established iron-works at Lynn and Braintree, Mass. 
In 1645 he obtained a title to lands in south-eastern Connecticut, 
and founded there in 1646 what is now New London, whither he 
removed in 1650. He became one of the magistrates of Connecti- 
cut in 1651; in 1657-1658 was governor of the colony; and in 
1659 again became governor, being annually re-elected until his 
death. In 1662 he obtained in England the charter by which 
the colonies of Connecticut and New Haven were united. Besides 
being governor of Connecticut, he was also in 167s one of the 
commissioners of the United Colonies of New England. While 
in England he was elected to membership in the newly organized 
Royal Society, to whose Philosophical Transactions he con* 
tributed two papers, " Some Natural Curiosities from New 
England," and " Description, Culture and Use of Maize." He 
died on the 5th of April 1676 in Boston, whither he had gone to 
attend a meeting of the commissioners of the United Colonies 
of New England. 

His correspondence with the Royal Society was published ta 
series I, vol. xvi. of the Massachusetts Historical Society's Proceeding*. 
See T. F. Watcrs's Sketch of the Life of John Winthrop the Younger 
(Ipswich, Mass., 1899). 

• Winthrop's son, Fitz-John Winthrop (1638-1707), was 
educated at Harvard, though he did not take a degree; served 
in the parliamentary army in Scotland under Monck, whom he 
accompanied on his march to London, and returned to Connecti- 
cut in 1663. As major-general he commanded the unsuccessful 
expedition Of the New York and Connecticut forces against 
Canada in 1600; from 1693 to 1697 he was the agent of Con- 
necticut In London; and from 1698 until his death be was 
governor of Connecticut. 

WINTHROP, ROBERT CHARLES (1809-1894), American 
orator and statesman, a descendant of Governor John Winthrop 
(1588-1649), was born in Boston, Massachusetts, on the 12th of 
May 1809. He graduated at Harvard in 1828, studied law with 
Daniel Webster and in 1831 was admitted to the bar. He was a 
member of the Massachusetts House of Representatives in 
1 834-1 840— for the last three years as speaker, — and in 1840 
was elected to the national House of Representatives as a 
Whig, serving from December 1840 to 1850 (with a short inter- 
mission, April-December 1842). He soon became prominent and 
was speaker of the Thirtieth Congress (1647-1849), though kis 



WINTHROP— WINZE'I 



conservatism on slavery and kindred questions displeased ex- 
tremist*, North and South, who prevented his re-election as 
speaker of the Thirty-first Congress. On the resignation of 
Daniel Webster to become secretary of state, Winthrop was 
appointed to the Senate (July 1850), but was defeated in the 
Massachusetts legislature for the short term (Jan. 30, 1851) 
and for the long term (April 34, 1851) by a coalition of Democrats 
and Free Soilers and served only until February 1851. In the 
same year he received a plurality of the votes cast for governor, 
but as the constitution required a majority vote, the election was 
thrown into the legislature, where he was defeated by the same 
coalition. Thereafter, he was never a candidate for political 
office. With the breaking up of the Whig party he became an 
independent and supported Millard Fillmore in 1856, John Bell 
in i860, and General G. B. McClellan in 1864. He was president 
of the Massachusetts Historical Society from 1855 to 1885, and 
for the last twenty-seven years of his life was president of the 
Peabody Trust for the advancement of education intheSouthern 
States. Among his noteworthy orations of a patriotic character 
were those delivered at Boston in 1876, at Yorktown in 1881, 
and in Washington on the completion of the Washington Monu- 
ment in 1885. . He died in Boston on the x6th of November 

Among his publications were Addresses end Speeches (Boston, 
1852-18*6); Life and Letters ef Jehn Winthrop (2 vols., Boston, 
1 864-1 867); and Washington, Bewdoin and Franklin (Boston, 
1876). See R. C Winthrop, Jr., Memoir ef R. C. Winthrop 
( Boston, 1 897). 

WINTHROP, a township and a summer resort of Suffolk 
county, Massachusetts, U.S.A., occupying a peninsula jutting 
out into Massachusetts Bay about 5 m. N.E. of Boston and 3 m. 
S.E. of Chelsea, and forming part of the north-eastern boundary 
of Boston Harbour. Pop. (1900) 6058, of whom 1437 were foreign- 
born and 43 were negroes; (1910, U.S. census) 10,13a. Between 
May and October the population is wrimatfri to be between 
14,000 and 16,000. Area, 16 sq. m. Winthrop is served by the 
Winthrop branch of the Boston, Revere Beach & Lynn railway, 
and by electric railway from Orient Heights to Revere, Chelsea, 
East Boston, Lynn and Boston. The township contains several 
villages connected by a railway loop; there are nine stations in 
its 5-3 m. of track. The peninsula has about 8 m. of water front 
on the ocean and the harbour. The northern part nearest the 
narrow neck connecting with the mainland is a high bluff, 
known as Winthrop Highlands, having its north-eastern terminus 
in Graver's Cliff, a bold headland which forms the north-eastern- 
most point of the peninsula. On Graver's Giff is Fort Heath, a 
battery of three powerful long-range guns. At the western end 
of the Highlands is Fort Banks (a part of Boston's harbour 
defence), consisting of a masked battery of sixteen x a in. mortars, 
each able to drop a 600 lb shell on a ship 6 m. at sea. From 
Graver's Cliff a fine sandy beach facing the open ocean leads to 
Great Head, the highest elevation on the peninsula. Winthrop 
Shore Drive (16-73 acres), one of the reservations of the Metro- 
politan park system, is a public parkway along the shore. From 
Great Head, a long sandy spit curves away southward, ending 
in Point Shirley, a hillock and fiat sandy plain, separated by 
Shirley Gut, a narrow channel of deep water, from Deer Island, 
on which are the Boston House of Correction and City Prison. 
At Point Shirley is the Point Shirley Gub house; at the western 
foot of Great Head, on Crystal Bay, is the Winthrop Yacht Club 
house and anchorage; and at Winthrop Center on the west side 
are the Town Hall, the High School, the Public Library, the 
Masonic Hall, College Park Yacht Gub and Ingkside Park. 
There are several large summer hotels. 

Winthrop, first known as " Pullen Poynt " (Pulling Point) 
because the tide made hard pulling here for boatmen, was origin- 
ally a part of Boston; it was part of Chelsea from 1739 until 1846, 
when with Rumney Marsh it was separately incorporated as North 
Chelsea, from which it was set off as a township in 185a under 
its present name, in honour of Deane Winthrop (1623-1704), 
who was a son of Governor John Winthrop, the elder, and whose 
house is still standing. Point Shirley takes its name from 
Governor William Shirley who helped to establish a cod fishery 



therein im , **„ f<uf ^ 
Winthrop was a f ****** *,.,,,,„ 

prominent families, Uvisl /« >»* * , 
Emersons, Lorings «* U „^ ' ', ' 
Thecommuwtywaaatedudirfr*., „ ,' 

^ifPHSr's 1 ?*^ i$ 7° ""<*/•*» * ",; . 

See C W. Hall. HistorU Wtntkr.,*, ,/,., , ' , / 

TOWOQD. SIR RALPH fc ,„„ *i,* *, - : 
was born at Aynhoein Northamptw , .' M \ ; 

John's College Oxford. In ,509 he U,„,„ M . /, 

HeniyNevme(c^564-^ . ' 

and he succeeded Neville in this position 4*4, /4 l% 
taining it until 1603. In this year Winwood w./Jj" // /, . 
Hague as agent to the States-General of th* \] h \uA t,.,, . > 
and according to custom he became a memUr of 1U U 
council of state. His hearty dislike of Spain uAwruj „j , ' 
actions in Holland; he was anxious to see a continuatM* of iu 
war between Spain and the United Netherlands, and he r« t , M %u ,j 
both his own views and those of the English government at iu 
time when he wrote, " how convenient this war would be for tha 
good of His Majesty's realms, if it might be maintained without 
his charge." In June 1608 Winwood signed the league between 
England and the United Provinces, and he was in Holland when 
the trouble over the succession to the duchies of JUlich and Clcvca 
threatened to cause a European war. In this matter he negotiated 
with the Protestant princes of Germany on behalf of James I. 
Having returned to England Sir Ralph became secretary of 
state in March 1614 and a member of parliament. In the House 
of Commons he defended the king's right to levy impositions, 
and other events of his secretaryship were the inquiry into 
the murder of Sir Thomas Overbury and the release of Raleigh 
in 1616. Raleigh was urged by Winwood to attack the Spanish 
fleet and the Spanish settlements in South America, and the 
secretary's share in this undertaking was the subject of com- 
plaints on the part of the representatives of Spain. In the 
midst of this he died in London on the 27th of October 16x7. 
" It can hardly be doubted," says Gardiner, " that, if he had 
lived till the following summer, he would have shared in Raleigh's 
ruin." One of Winwood's daughters, Anne (d. 1643), married 
Edward Montagu, 2nd Baron Montagu of Boughton, and their son 
was Ralph Montagu, xst duke of Montagu. 

Winwood's official correspondence and other papers passed to the 
duke of Montagu, and are now in the possession of the duke of 
Buccleuch. They are calendared in the Report of the Historical 
Manuscripts Commission on the manuscripts of the duke of Buc- 
cleuch. See the Introduction to this Report (1899); and also S. R. 
Gardiner, History of England, vols. ii. and iii. (1904-1907). 

WINZET, NINIAN (1518-1593), Scottish polemical writer, 
was born in Renfrew, and was probably educated at the university 
of Glasgow. He was ordained priest in 1540, and in 1552 was 
appointed master of the grammar school of Linlithgow, from 
which town he was later " expellit and schott out " by the 
partisans of Dean Patrick Kinlochy, "preacher" there. He 
had also enjoyed the office of Provost of the Collegiate Church 
of St Michael in that town. He retired to Edinburgh, where 
the return of Queen Mary had given heart to the Catholics. 
There he took part in the pamphlet war which then raged, 
and entered into conflict with Knox and other leading reformers. 
He appears to have acted for a time as confessor to the queen. 
In July 1562, when engaged in the printing of his Last Blast, 
he narrowly escaped the vengeance of his opponents, who had by 
that time gained the upper hand in the capital, and he fled, 
on the 3rd of September, with the nuncio Gouda to Louvain. 
He reached Paris in 1565 and became a member of the " German 
Nation ** of the university. At Queen Mary's request he joined 
Bishop Leslie on his embassy to Queen Elizabeth in 1571, 
and remained with the bishop after his removal by Elizabeth's 
orders to ward at Fenny Staunton, Huntingdonshire. When 
further suspicion fell on Leslie and he was committed to the 
Tower, Winzet was permitted to return to Paris. There he 
continued his studies, and in 1574 left for Douai, where in the 
following year he became a licentiate. He was in residence at 
Rome from 1575 to 1577, and was then appointed by Pope 



74© 



WIRKSWORTH— WISCONSIN 



W1RKSW0RTH. a market town in the western parliamentary 
division of Derbyshire, England, 14 m. N.N.W. of Derby, on a 
branch of the Midland railway. Pop. of urban district (1901) 
3807. It is picturesquely situated at the head of the valley of 
a small tributary of the Derwent, at an elevation exceeding 
500 ft., and is almost encircled by sharply rising hills. The 
cruciform church of St Mary, with a central tower and short spire, 
is in great part Early English, with Perpendicular additions; 
but considerable traces of a Norman building were revealed 
during a modern restoration. There is a manufacture of tape in 
the town, and lead-mining and stone-quarrying are carried on 
in the neighbourhood; relics of the Roman working of the lead 
mines have been discovered. A large brass vessel used as a 
standard measure for the lead ore, and dating from the time 
of Henry VIII., is preserved. 

WISBECH, a municipal borough, market town, and port 
in the Wisbech parliamentary division of Cambridgeshire, 
England, 38 m. N. by W. of Cambridge, on the Great Eastern and 
the Great Northern and Midland joint railways. It lies in the 
flat fen country, on the river Nene (mainly on the east bank), 
ix m. from its outlet on the Wash. By the Wisbech canal it 
has communication with the Ouse. The church of St Peter 
and St Paul has a double nave, with aisles, the north arcade 
being Norman; but the rest of the building is mainly Decorated 
and Perpendicular. There arc remains o( a Norman west tower; 
the Perpendicular tower stands on the north side. The museum 
contains a valuable library and various collections, including 
antiquities and objects of art and natural history. Other in- 
stitutions include a grammar school founded in the middle of 
the 1 6th century and provided for by a charter of Edward VI., 
the Cambridgeshire hospital, a custom-house, a cattle-market, 
and an important corn-exchange, for Wisbech has a large trade 
in grain. A Gothic monument commemorates Thomas Clarkson 
(1760-1846), a powerful opponent of the slave-trade, and a 
native of the town. The shipping trade is carried on both at the 
town itself and at Sutton Bridge, 8 m. lower down the river. 
The chief imports are coal, timber and iron, and the exports 
grain and other agricultural products and salt. Foreign trade is 
chiefly with the Russian Baltic ports. In the neighbourhood 
large quantities of fruit are grown, including apples, pears, 
plums, gooseberries, and strawberries. Potatoes, asparagus, 
and other vegetables are also grown for the London market. 
The town possesses agricultural implement works, coach- 
building works, breweries, ropeworks, planing and sawing mills,, 
and corn and oil-cake mills. The borough is under a mayor, 
6 aldermen, and 18 councillors. Area, 6476 acres. 

Wisbech (Wisebtc, i.e. Ousebec) is near a Roman embankment 
and tumuli. About 040 the manor is said to have been given 
to the abbey of Ely by Oswy and Lcoflcdc; the abbot held it 
in 1086; and it became attached to the sec of Ely with the other 
possessions of the monastery. The castle is alleged to have been 
built by William I., and was converted from a fortress in the fens 
into an episcopal palace between 147 1 and 1473. The growth 
of Wisbech depended on its position and episcopal patronage. 
In 1 100 tenants of Wisbech Barton acquired an exemption 
from tolls throughout England, confirmed by John, Henry IV. 
and Henry V. The Gild of the Holy Trinity is mentioned in 
1379, and grew rich and powerful. After its dissolution the 
townsmen became, in 1549, a corporation holding of the king, 
by a charter which transferred to them the property and duties 
of the gild, and was renewed in 1610 and 1669. By the Municipal 
Corporations Act of 1835 a mayor, aldermen and a council 
replaced the capital burgesses, the older governing body. The 
borough returned a member only to the parliament of 1658; 
its elected member, Secretary Thurloe, chose then to represent 
another constituency. A fair of twenty days from the vigil of 
Holy Trinity was granted to the bishop of Ely in 1327. The mart 
still occupies by custom the interval between Lynn mart, of 
which it is probably an offshoot, and Stamford fair in mid-Lent. 
A pleasure fair, called the Statute Fair, takes place shortly 
before Michaelmas. Importance attaches to the horse fair, 
•he week before Whitsuntide and now on the 



second Thursday in May and on July 15, and to the cattle fair 
in the beginning of August. Saturday was market day in 1792; 
a corn market is now held on Saturday, a cattle market on 
Thursday and Saturday. In 1086 eels were prolific in Wisbech 
water. The port was noteworthy until a diversion of the Ouse, 
before 1292, rendered it hardly accessible. Drainage restored 
trade before 1634, and the act of 1773 for making Kinderley's 
Cut was the beginning of prosperity. From 1783 to 1825 agricul- 
tural produce was exported and coal imported. Hemp and flax 
had an importance, lost between 1827 and 1849, but responsible 
in 1792 for fairs on Saturday and Monday before Palm Sunday. 

See W. Watson, History of Wisbech (Wisbech, 1827); N. Walker 
and C. Thomas, History of Wisbech (Wisbech, 1 849); History of 
Wisbech (Wisbech and London, 1833). 

WISCONSIN (known as " the Badger 1 state '\ one of the 
North Central states of the United States of America. It is 
bounded on the E. by Lake Michigan, on the N. by the Upper 
Peninsula of Michigan and Lake Superior, on the W. by Min- 
nesota and Iowa, and on the S. by Illinois. Its greatest length 
from N. to S. (4a 30' N. Lat. to 47° 3' N. Lat.) is 300 rn., and its 
greatest breadth (86° 49' W, Long, to 92 54' W. Long.) is 250 m. 
The greater part of the western boundary separating the state 
from Minnesota and Iowa consists of the Mississippi and St 
Croix rivers flovmg S. and the Saint Louis river flowing* into 
Lake Superior, The Menominee and Montreal rivers form a 
considerable part of the boundary line on the N. and E., separating 
it from the Upper Peninsula of Michigan. The state's lake 
shore boundary is more than 550 m. long. Included in Wis- 
consin are tho Apostle Islands in Lake Superior, an<f Washington 
Island and n. group of smaller islands at the entrance to Green 
Bay on the Lake Michigan side. The state occupies a total 
area of 56,066 sq. m.,* 810 of which are water surface. Roughly 
speaking, it divides the Great Lakes region from the upper valley 
of the Mississippi. 

Physical Features.— Wisconsin forms part of the inner margin of 
an ancient coastal plain and the oldland of crystalline rocks about 
which the plain sediments were deposited. The plain and the old- 
land were well worn down by erosion and then were uplifted ; were 
dissected by stream valleys, and were glaciated. The surface b 
generally rolling and undulating, comprising, with the Upper Penin- 
sula of Michigan, a swelling elevation of land between the three 
depressions represented by Lakes Michigan and Superior and the 
Mississippi and the St Croix rivers. The lowest elevations arc in the 
southern and central portions of the state, where the altitude 
averse* between 580 and 600 ft. above sea-level. The highest 
point.* in tliu state are residual masses of relatively resistant rock 
rising Above the erosion surface; such are: Rib Hill (1940 ft.) in 
Mar j thou county, in the north-central part, and some 6\ the peaks 
of the Penokie iLinu* in the N. part 01 the state, which arc about 
1800 ft. hivh. V ram the N. highland two heights of land (1200 to 
1600 Ft.) extend, southward well into the central portions of the 
state, dividing the v." -iter part of its area into two natural drainage 
batiiM* lli<-' ■ CTtenu afcst of these elevations separates the valleys 
of the Mi&5i)5j[jpi. andl be St Croix from that of the Wisconsin river. 
The- eastern elevation Is a ridge or cuesta formed by an outcropping 
hard lays* of the ancient coastal plain : and it separates the Wisconsin 
river basin from the Fox River Valley and the streams flowing into 
Lake Michigan. Alanp the Mississippi and the Wisconsin runs a 
chain of bluffs varying tn height from 200 to 300 ft., and in the E. a 
rocky limestone ridge or cuesta some 30 m. back from Lake Michigan 
extends from tin- ( to r ounty peninsula, E. of Lake Winnebago and 
as far south a 101s line. There are no large rivers flowing 

intu L-Lki^iuiJcriji uud very little drainage in that direction, as 
from a point some 30 m. S. of the lake all the streams flow in a 
southerly direction. The Mississippi is the drainage basin for a 
greater part of the state. The St Croix river rises in the S.W. part 
of the Pcnokee Range and flows W. and S., forming the western 
boundary of the state for 135 m. before it joins the Mississippi 70 m. 
below St Paul. Before it is joined by the Wisconsin, the Mississippi 



1 The badger is not found in the state, and the name probably 
originated as a nickname for those lead miners. N. of the Illinois 
line who came fronrthc East, who lived in dug-outs like the hillside 
burrows of the badger, and who did not go home in winter like the 
miners from southern Illinois and farther south, who were called 
" suckers," a name borrowed from the migrating fish in the Rock, 
Illinois and other rivers flowing south. The name " suckers " was 
applied generally to all the people of Illinois, and the name " badgers " 
to the people of Wisconsin and " badger state " to the state. 

■ Besides the area as given here, the state has jurisdiction over 
approximately 7500 sq. m. of Lake Michigan and 2378 aq.-m. of 
Lake Superior. 



t 



CD 



MICHIGAN 




WISCONSIN 



74i 



r e cei ves several riven of co ns i d erable length, the meet important of 
which are the Chippewa and the Black. The Wisconsin river rise* 
on the Upper Michigan border and Hows S. and W. for 600 m., 
joining the Mississippi near Prairie* du Cbien. It U navigable as far 
as Portage, tome aoo m. from its mouth. The Fox river (more than 
260 m. long) rises in the south central portion of the state, flows N. 
and E. by a circuitous route through Lake Winnebago, and thence 
N. into Green Bay, and is the longest and most important stream 
draining into Lake Michigan. The Wolf river is its most important 
tributary, joining it from the N. f in its upper course. Besides the 
Fox several smaller streams drain into the Lake Michigan basin. 
Among these are the Menominee and Oconto, which flow into Green 
Bay; an arm of Lake Michigan, and the Sheboygan and Milwaukee 
rivers emptying directly into the lake. The southern portion of the 
state is drained try several streams flowing across the Illinois boundary 
and finding their way eventually through other rivers into the 
Mississippi. The largest of these are the Rock, Des Plaines, Fox 
(of the Illinois), or Pishtaka, and the Pecatonica rivers. On account 
of glacial disturbance of the drainage, Wisconsin's many streams 
provide water-powers of great value that have contributed much 
to theindustrial prosperity of the state. The most valuable of these 
are the Fox, the Rock and the upper Wisconsin and its tributaries. 
Wisconsin has more than 2500 lakes, mostly in the glaciated N. 
and E. parts of the state. Of these the largest is Lake Winnebago, 
b etwe e n Calumet. Outagamie, Fond du Lac and Winnebago counties, 
with an extreme length of 30 m. and a breadth of 10 m., and one of 
the largest bodies or water lying wholly within any state in the 
Union. On its banks are the important manufacturing cities of 
Oahkosh, Fond du Lac, Neenah and Menasha, and through it flows 
the Fox river. In the S. and E. portions of the state the lakes are 
beautiful clear bodies of water with sandy or gravelled shores, and, 
as a rule, high banks heavily wooded. Many of them are famous as 
summer resorts, notably Lake Geneva, Green Lake, the lakes in 
Waukesha county and tne famous " four lakes " near Madison. 

FUtra and Fauna. — Wisconsin was originally the native home of 
most of the wild fowl and animals found in the other North Central 
states. Deer were found in large numbers in all sections of the state, 
bear were common in the central and northern parts, bison were 
found in the south-west, wolves, lynx (" wild cats ), and foxes and 
other smaller animals particularly of fur-bearing varieties. The 
streams abounded in fish. The abundance of game made the region 
b e t we en the lakes and the Mississippi a favourite hunting ground of 
the Indians, and later a productive field for the trapper and for 
trader. Bear, deer and lynx are still to be found in the less settled 
forest regions of the N. parts, and the fisheries are still important. 

The ari-founal life of Wisconsin is exceedingly varied; C. B. Cory 

{see Bibliography) enumerates 398 species for Wisconsin and 
llinois, and of these probably not less than 350 occur in Wisconsin. 
The more characteristic and useful birds include many species of 
the sparrow, such as the song, swamp, Lincoln's chipping and field 
sparrow; the bank, barn, cliff, white-bellied and rough-winged 
swallow, as well as the purple martin and the chimney swift ; ten 
or more species of fly-catchers, including the least, arcadian, phoebe, 
wood pewee, olive-sided and king bird; about ten species of wood- 
peckers, of which the more common are the downy, hairy, yellow- 
bellied and golden-winged (flicker); about thirty species 01 warblers, 
including the parula, cerulean, Blackburnian, prothonotary, yellow 
Nashville, red-start, worm-eating and chestnut-sided ; and four or five 
species of vireos. The song-birds are well represented in the hermit 
thrush, wood thrush, Wilson's thrush (or veery), brown thrasher, 
robin, blue bird, bobolink, meadow lark, gold finch, Ac. Among 
the game birds are the ruffed grouse (partridge), quail, prairie hen 
and wild turkey. The birds of prey include the red-shouldered, red- 
tailed, broad-winged, Cooper's, sharp-shinned and sparrow hawk 
and the bald eagle; the great horned, barred, barn, snowy, short- 
eared and screech owls. The ducks include the mallard, black 
deck, canvas-back and red-head ; the Canadian goose, the snowy 
goose and the blue goose also appear during the migrating seasons. 

Originally the greater portion of what is now Wisconsin was 
covered with forests, although in the S. and W. there were consider- 
able tracts of rolling prairie lands. In the S. portion the predominat- 
ing trees were hickory, elm, oak and poplar. Along the shore of 
Lake Michigan, and extending inland a quarter of the distance across 
the state and northward through the Fox River Valley, there was a 
heavy belt of oak, maple, birch, ash, hickory, elm and some pine. 
From the N. shores of Green Bay there stretched away to the N. and 
W. an enormous and unbroken forest of pines, hemlocks and spruce. 
Climate.— The climate of the whole state is influenced by the 
storms which move eastward along the Canadian border and by 
those which move northward up the Mississippi Valley, and that of 
the eastern and northern sections b moderated by the Great Lakes. 
The winters, especially in the central and north-western sections, are 
long and severe, and the summers in the central and south-western 
sections are very warm ; but the air b so dry that cold and heat are 
less felt here than they are in some humid climates with less 
me temperatures. The mean annual temperature for the 
■ b 44° F. July, with an average temperature for the state 
>*, b tne warmest month, and February, with an average of 15", 



state 
of 70' 



is the coldest. Within a period of thirty-eight years, from 1870 to 
1908, extremes at Milwaukee ranged from 100* to - 23*. while at 



La Crosse, on the n uuuu border and leas than 60 m. farther north, 
they ranged during the same period from 104* to - 43". The greatest 
extremes recorded at regular observing stations range from 1 1 1 * at 
Brodhead, in Green county and near the southern border, on the 2tst 
of July loot to - 48* at Barron, in Barron county in the north-western 
part of the state, on the 10th of February 1889. The average annual 
precipitation for the state b 31 5 in. Two-thirds of thb comes in the 
six growing months from April to Se pt ember inclusive, and the rain- 
fall is well distributed over all sections. There b an annual snowfall 
of 53 in. in the northern section. 40 in. in the southern section and 
36 in. in the central section, which is quite evenly distributed through 
the months of December, January, February and March. In the 
northern section the heavy snowfall b caused by the cyclonic storms 
along the Canadian border, and in the southern section the snowfall 
b increased by the storms which ascend the Mississippi Valley. All 
sections of the state are subject to tornadoes. They occur more 
frequently in the western portion than in the eastern portion, but 
one of the most destructive in the history of the state occurred at 
Racine on the 18th of May 1883. Thb storm killed 25 persons, 
injured 100, and destroyed considerable property. 

Agriculture. — Hay and grain are the most important crops. In 
1909 the acreage of hay was 2,369,000 and the value of the crop 
$34,800,000. In the production of the hardy cereab, barley, rye and 
buckwheat, Wisconsin ranks high among the states of tne Union; 
but oats and Indian corn are the largest cereal crops in the state. 
The crop of oats was 79.800,000 bushels (raised on 2,280,000 acres and 
valued at $31,122,000) in 1909; of Indian corn, 50,589,000 bushels 
(raised on 1,533,000 acres and valued at $30,353,000); of barley, 
24,248,000 bushels (raised on 866,000 acres and valued at $13,579,000 
—a crop exceeded only by that of California and that of Minnesota) ; 
of wheat, 3484,000 bushels (raised on 179,000 acres and valued at 
$3»345. OTO );°fO^»4.727»ooobushels (raised on 29o,oooacresand valued 
at $3,214,000— a crop exceeded only by that of Pennsylvania and 
that of Michigan) ;and of buckwbeat,22i ,000 bushels (grown on 18,000 
acres and valued at $172*000). The potato crop is Urge, 26,724,000 
busheb being raised in 1900 on 262,000 acres, a crop exceeded only 
in New York, Michigan ana Maine. Tobacco also isa valuable crop: 
m I 9°9 37.170,000 ft, valued at $3419,640, were grown on 31,500 
acres. In 1909 14,000 acres of sugar beets were harvested and 
34*340,000 lb of sugar were manufactured in the four beet sugar 
factories in the state. In the south<entral part of the state there are 
valuable cranberry marshes. Orchard fruits, especially apples, are 
of increasing importance. 

The raising of live-stock, particularly of dairy cows, b an important 
Industry. In 1910, out of a total of 2,587,000 neat cattle, there were 
1,506,000 milch cows. The total number of horses in the state was 
669,000 in 1910, when they were valued at $80,949,000. There were 
1,034,000 sheep, and 1,651,000 swine. 

Manufactures.— The growth of manufacturing has been rapid: in 
1850 the value of the manufactures was $9,293,068; in i860, 
$27,849,467; in 1870, $77,214,326; in 1880, $128,255480; in 
1890, $248,546,164; and in 1900, $360,818,942. The product 
under the factory system, excluding hand trades and neighbourhood 
industries, was $326,752,878 in 1900 and $411,139,681 in 1905. 
The most important of the state's manufactures in 1900 and in 1905 
were lumber and timber products, valued in the btter year at 
£44 '395.766 (Wisconsin being second in rank to the state of Wash- 
ington). About 60% (both in quantity and value) of the lumber 
sawed in 1905 was white pine; next in importance were hemlock 
(more than one-fourth in quantity), basswood (nearly 4%) and, in 
smaller quantities, birch, oak, elm, maple, ash, tamarack, Norway 
pine, cedar and spruce. The value of the product of planing mills 
was $11,210,205 in 1905; and other important manufactures based 
on raw materiab from forests were paper and wood pulp ($1 7,844.174) 
and furniture (1 1.569,591). Second in value in 1905 were cheese, 
butter and condensed milk ($20,004,791), in the product of which 
Wisconsin ranked second to New York in 1900 and 1905. In 1905 
Wisconsin ranked first of all the states in the value of butter, second 
in the value of cheese and fifth in the value of condensed milk; the 
dairy product of Wisconsin in thb year was 17*8% (by value) of that 
of the entire country. Foundry and machine-shop products ranked 
third in value in 1005, when they were valued at $29,908,001, and 
when iron and steel manufactures were valued at $10453.750. 

Among the other important manufactures in 1905 were: malt 
liquors ($28,692,340) and malt ($8,740,103. being 1137 % more than 
in 1900); flour and grist-mill products ($28,352,237; about 60% 
was wheat flour); bather ($25,845,123); wholesale slaughtering and 
meat-packing ($16,060433); agricultural implements ($10,076,760); 
carriages and wagons ($7,511,392); men's clothing ($6,525,276): 
boots and shoes ($6,513.563) ; steam railway cars, constructed and 



repaired ($6411,731); hosiery and knit goods ($4,941,744); cigars 



($4J7.a.«39); 

electrical machinery, apparatus 



and 



and spring ,_„.„ .__ 

_ jttus and supplies ($3,194.13*)* 

In 1905, out of a total factory product of $411,139,681, $259420,044 



was the value of goods made in factories in the twenty-two muni- 
cipalities of the state, with a popuUtion (1900) of at least 8000; but 
only 36*3% of the total number of factories were in urban districts. 
More than one-third of the value of factory products was that of the 
manufactures of Milwaukee ($138,881445). Racine ranked second 
with a factory product valued at $16458,965. The manufacture of 



742 



WISCONSIN 



furniture in Wisconsin is centralized especially in Sheboygan, where 
in 1905 was manufactured about one-third of the furniture made in 
the state. 

Mines and Qttarr ies. —The lead mines of south-western Wisconsin 
played an important part in the early development of the state (sec 
$ History). When the main deposits had been worked down to the 
water level, mining (up to that time principally of lead) stopped and did 
not start again until about 1900, when the high price of zinc stimulated 
renewed working of these deposits. The principal ores arc galena, 
sphalerite or zinc blende ana smithsonite or zinc carbonate, which 
is locally called " dry bone " and which was the first zinc ore mined 
in the state. In 1908 the lead product was valued at $347,592 
and the zinc product at $1, 7 1 1,364, Wisconsin ranking fourth among 
the zinc-mining states. The production of iron ore m the Gogebic 
and Menominee ranges on the upper Michigan border is important. 
Red haematite was mined in Dodge county before 1854; in 1877 
the deposits in Florence county were first worked, and in 1882 
276,017 tons were shipped from that county; and about 18&1 began 
the development of the Gogebic deposits in Iron and Ashland 
counties. The maximum output was in 1890, being 948,965 long 
tons; in 1902 it was 783.996 long tons (79% from Iron county); 
and in 1908, 733.993 tons. The output is almost entirely haematite. 
There are large deposits of stratified day along the shores of Lake 
Michigan, from which is made a cream-coloured brick, so largely used 
in Milwaukee that that city has been called the "cream city"; 
the total value of clav products in 1907 was $i,i27,8i9and in 1908 
$95 8 .395- By far the most valuable mineral output is building 
stone, which was valued in 1908 at $2,850,920, including granite 
($1 •529.781). limestone ($1,102,009) and sandstone ($2x9,130). 
In 1907 and 1908 the state ranked fifth among the states of the 
country in the value of granite quarried; in 1902 it ranked fifteenth. 
The industry began in 1880, when the first quarry (at Granite 
Heights, Marathon county) was opened. The principal quarries 
are in Dodge, Green Lake (a blackish granite is quarried at Utley 
and a pinkish rhyolitc at Berlin), Marathon, Marinette, Marquette, 
Sauk, Waupaca and Waushara counties. Wisconsin granite is 
especially suitable for monumental work. Limestone is found in a 
broad belt in the cast, south and west; more than 40% of the total 
output in 1908, which was valued at $1,102,009, was used for road- 
making ana more than one-sixth in the manufacture of concrete. 
In 1907 and 1908 Wisconsin ranked seventh among the states in the 
value of limestone quarried. The first limestone quarries were 
opened at Genesee, Waukesha county, in 1848; at Wauwatosa, near 
Milwaukee, in 1855; and near Bridgeport in 1856. Freshwater 
pearls are found in many of the streams; and in 1907 and 1908 
Wisconsin ranked first among the states in the value of mineral 
waters sold, with a value of $1,526,703 in 1907 and $1413,107 in 
1908, although in both years the quantity sold in Wisconsin was 
less than in Minnesota or in New York. The most famous of these 
springs are in Waukesha county, whence White Rock, Bethesda, 
Clysrnic and other waters are shipped. 

Forests. — In 1890 and in 1900 (when the wooded area was esti- 
mated at 31,750 sq. m., or 58% of the total area of the state) Wis- 
consin was the foremost state in the Union in the production of 
lumber and timber. In 1905 the value of the lumber and timber 
product was exceeded by that of Washington; but as late as 1908 
Wisconsin was the chief source of the white pine supply. Next to 
white pine (used largely in shipbuilding) in value in 1908 were red or 
Norway pine (used in house building), hemlock (used for lumber and 
wood pulp) and white spruce, a very valuable lumber tree. In 1908 
the area of the state forest reserve lands under a state board of 
forestry (chiefly in Oneida, Forest, Iron, Price and Vilas counties) 
was 253,573 acres. Forest fires have been numerous and exceedingly 
destructive in Wisconsin; the loss of timber and other property 
from this cause in 1908 was about $9,000,000. 

Fisheries. — The fisheries of Wisconsin are of considerable import- 
ance: the catch in 1008 was valued at $1,067,170, lake trout and 
herring being the most valuable. There is a state board of com- 
missioners of fisheries (see below, § Government), which distributed 
in 1908 149,338,069 eggs, fry and fingertings, including 112,075,000 
wall-eyed pike and about 12,000,000 each of lake trout and whitefish. 
There are state hatcheries at Madison (for brook and rainbow trout), 
Bayfield (brook, rainbow and lake trout and whitefish), Oshkosh 
(lake trout, whitefish and wall-eyed pike), Minocqua (pike, bass and 
muskallongc). Delafield (black bass and wall-eyed pike) and Wild 
Rose (brook trout). 

Transportation and Commerce.-— Railway building in Wisconsin 
began in 1851. when a track was laid from Milwaukee to Waukesha 
(20 m.), which was extended westward in 1654 to Madison and in 
1857 to the Mississippi at Prairie du Chien. This line was the fore- 
runner of the great Chicago, Milwaukee & St Paul system, which 
now crosses the southern half of the state with two trunk lines and 
with one line parallels the shore of Lake Michigan. The Chicago & 
North-Western and the Chicago, St Paul, Minneapolis & Omaha, 
which it controls, are together known as " The North- Western Line." 
The tracks of the Chicago & North-Western (built to Janesville in 
1855 and to Fond du Lac in 1858) form a network in the eastern 
part of the state, affording direct connexions with Chicago. The 
Chicago, St Paul, Minneapolis & Omaha extends into the western 
part of the state, where it connects with the trans-Mississippi lines 



of the Chicago & North-Western. The Chicago, Burlington & 
Quincy (owned by the Great Northern and the Northern Pacific 
railways) inverse** the ftite along its western boundary and gives 
it kqm Ki a third great raj I* ay system with transcontinental 
service. The Minrwapuliv St Raul & Sauk Stc Marie, ip which has 
been absorbed \hc old Wisconsin Central, crosses the state and 
extend* into the Canadian North- West, sharing m the heavy grain 
traffic of that section, and, like the Dultirh, South Shore & Atlantic, 
which runs along the Lake Superior *hi>te, is a Tink in the trans- 
contiuOfltaUysiemof the Canadian Pacific, wfekh infii rols both these 
mad*. The Northern Pacific Liners Wisconsin in EtB north western 
corner and extends to the Lake Superior cuuntry. The Green Bay 
& Wiinili laihvay hctwurn Winona and Kc^^uncc has ferry con- 
nexion across Lake Michigan. In 1900 there were 6538 m. of track, 
and on the 1st of January 1909 7512 m. Characteristic of the 
commerce of the state is the shipment by the Great Lakes of bulky 
freight, chiefly iron ore, grain and flour and lumber. The return 
freight movement to the Wisconsin lake ports is made up chiefly 
of coal from the Lake Eric shipping points tor the coalfields of Penn- 
sylvania and West Virginia. Milwaukee is one of the leading lake 
ports, and is the only port of entry in the state; its imports were 
valued at $796,285 in 1899 and at $4493*635 in 1909, and its 
exports at $2726 in 1899 and at $244,890 in 1909. 

To connect the upper Mississippi river and the Great Lakes, 
between 1840 and 1850 a canal was begun between the Fox. flowing 
into Green Bay, an arm of Lake Michigan and the Wisconsin river, 
flowing^ into the Mississippi. 1 and improvement of navigation on 
these rivers was undertaken by the state with the assistance of the 
Federal government; in 1853 the work came into the bands of a 
private corporation which in 1856 opened the canal. In 1872 it 
was taken over by the United States. In 1887 the route through the 
Wisconsin river was abandoned, and thereafter only the Fox river 
was improved. Up to June 1909^3,810,421 had been spent by 
the Federal government on this improvement. Green Bay has 
communication with Lake Michigan, not only by way of its natural 
entrance, but by a government ship canal (built 1872-1881 by a 
private company; taken over by the Federal government in 1893; 
maximum draft in 1909, 20 ft.; projected channel depth, 21 ft.) at 
Sturgeon Bay, an arm of Green Bay, which cuts across the Door 
county peninsula. In 1908 there passed through this canal 2307 
vessels carrying cargoes of an estimated value of $18,261 ,455- 15. 

Population. — The population of Wisconsin in 1890 was 1,686,880 
(exclusive of 6450 persons specially enumerated); in 1900 the total 
was 2,069,042 — an increase of 22*2% on the basis of the total at 
each enumeration; and in, 1910 it reached a total of 2,333,860 * 
The density of the population in 1910 was 42.2 to the square mile. 
Of the total population in 1900, 1,553,071, or 75" 1% were native- 
born, the increase in native-born since 1890 having been 32-3%. 
while there was a decrease of foreign-born of o-6 %. The falling off 
in foreign immigration in the decade 1 890-1900 contrasts strongly 
with the increase of 28*1 % in the number of foreign-born in 1880- 
1890. Of the native-born population in 1900, 84% or 1,304,918, 
were born within the state. Of the foreign-born 242,777 were 
Germans, 61,575 were Norwegians, 26,196 were Swedes, 25.607 
were natives of German Poland, 23,860 were English-Canadians 
and 23,544 were Irish. Of the total population 1,472.327 persons, or 
more than seven-tenths (71-2%), were of foreign parentage — ue, 
either one or both parents were foreign-born — and 576,746 were of 
German, 134.293 of Norwegian, 76,593 of Irish and 70,585 of Polish 
parentage, both on the father's and on the mothers side. At the 
census of 1840, with the exception of a few thousand French- 
Canadians, the population was made up of American-born pioneers 
from the Eastern states, and in the southern portion of the terri- 



tory of a sprinkling of men from Kentucky, Virginia and farther 
Before the next census was taken the revolutionary movc- 



south. 



ment of 1848 in Germany led to the emigration of thousands from 
that country to Wisconsin, and there was an increase of 886-9% 
in the population from 1840 to 1850. Norwegians and other 
Scandinavians, Irish, Poles, Dutch, Belgians and Swiss followed. 
Germans and Irish are now scattered throughout the state: but 
the German element predominates markedly in Milwaukee. 
Norwegians, Danes and Swedes are more numerous in the western 
and northern counties. There are Finns in Douglas county and 
Icelanders on Washington Island, in Green Bay. Poles are chiefly 
in Milwaukee, Manitowoc and Portage counties, Belgians and Dutch 
in Brown and Door counties, German Swiss in Green, Fond du Lac, 
Winnebago, Buffalo and Pierce counties, and Bohemians in Kewaunee 
county, where they form almost 50% of the population. Some 
Italians are massed in Vernon and Florence counties, and there are 
French Canadians in the north. There were 8372 Indians, of whom 
1657 were not taxed, 2542 negroes, 212 Chinese and 5 Japanese in 
the state in 1900. The Indians include representatives of the 
Menominee (1487 in 1909), Stockbridge and Munsec (582) tribes under 
the Keshena School. Chippewa under the Lac du Flambeau School 
(705) and the La Pointc School (4453), Oneida (2259) under the Oneida 



1 The Fox and Wisconsin rivers are separated at Portage by a 
distance of only 2 m. 

1 At each preceding census the population was as follows: (1840) 
30.945. (1850) 305.391. (i860) 775.881, (1870) 1,054,67a By the 
state census of 1905 it was 2,228,949. 



WISCONSIN 



743 



School, Winnebago (1094) under the Wittenberg School and Pots- 
watomi (440) not under an agent. The civilized Brotherton and 
Stockbridge Indians live principally in Calumet county. Among 
religious denominations the Roman Catholics, with 505,364 members 
in 1906, had 50-5% of the total communicants or church members 
in the state. The Lutheran bodies ranked next with 284,386 
m embers (including 155,690 of the Evangelical church, 49,535 of the 
United Norwegian church, 23,937 of the Synod for the Norwegian 
Evangelical church 15471 of the Evangelical Lutheran Joint Synod 
of Ohio, 15.230 of the Evangelical Lutheran Synod of Iowa and 
8695 of the General Council). Only one other state (Pennsylvania) 
bad a larger percentage of the total membership of this denomination. 
There were 57473 Methodists (chiefly of the Methodist Episcopal 
Church), 26,163 Congregationalists and 21,716 Baptists. 

Guvernmeni.—lhc original constitution of the state, adopted 
in 1848, and amended in 1869, 1870, 1874, 1877, 1881, 1882, 
1902 and 1008, is still in force. An amendment may be proposed 
by either house of the legislature, and if passed by two successive 
legislatures by a majority of the members elected to each house 
must be submitted to the people for ratification by a majority 
vote. A constitutional convention may be called on the recom- 
mendation of a majority of the Senate and Assembly if this 
proposal receives a majority vote at the next election for members 
of the legislature. Suffrage was originally granted to every 
male 1 twenty-one years of age or upwards resident in the state 
for one year preceding any election — if he were a white citizen 
of the United States, or a white of foreign birth who had declared 
his intention to be naturalized, or an Indian declared by Congress 
a citizen of the United States, or a civilized person of Indian 
descent not a member of any tribe; and the constitution pro- 
vided that the legislature might by law give suffrage to others 
than those enumerated if such an act of legislature were approved 
fay a majority of the popular vote at a general election. By an 
amendment of 1882 the word " white " was omitted and by an 
amendment of 1008 it was provided that those foreign-born and 
unnaturalized in order to become electors must have declared 
their intentions to become citizens before the xst of December 
1908, and that " the rights hereby granted to such persons 
shall cease on the first day of December a.d. 191 3." The amend- 
ment of 1908 also permits the legislature to provide for the 
registration of electors in incorporated cities and villages. 

The official ballot is of the blanket type, with names of candi- 
dates in party columns, but with no candidate's name repeated 
on the ballot and with no emblems to mark the party columns. 
In 1909 an act was passed permitting county boards to adopt a 
M coupon " ballot.* Since 1005 there has been a direct nomina- 
tion system of primaries for all officers except delegates to national 
nominating conventions. 

Executive power is vested in a governor and a lieutenant- 
governor, elected for two years. The governor's salary (since 
1869) is $5000 a year and the lieutenant-governor's $1000. 
Candidates for either office must be citizens of the United States 
and qualified electors of the state. The lieutenant-governor is pre- 
sident of the Senate with a casting vote only. A bill vetoed by 
the governor becomes a law if it is approved by two-thirds of 
the members present in each house; and a bill not returned by 
the governor within six days (excepting Sunday; before 1908 
the constitutional limit was three days) after its presentation 
to him becomes a law unless the return of the bill is prevented 
by the adjournment of the legislature. The governor has power 
to grant reprieves, commutations and pardons, except for treason 
— he may suspend execution of sentence for treason until action 
is taken by the legislature— and in cases of impeachment. 

The administrative officers, a secretary of state, a treasurer 
and an attorney-general, are elected for two years and act as 
commissioners of public lands. The secretary of state is «x- 
ojuio auditor; and he acts as governor if the regularly elected 

1 Excepting persons under guardianship, those weak-minded or 
* sane, those c 



e convicted (without restoration to civil rights) of treason 

or felony, and those who have engaged (directly or indirectly) in a 
duel. 

'The coupon ballot was proposed for use throughout the state, but 
was defeated by popular vote in April 1906. The ticket is made up 
of as many coloured sheets as there are party organizations (plus 
one for independent nominations), and the name o7 each candidate 
b 00 a perforated slip, which must be detached if it is to be voted. 



governor and lieutenant-governor die, are removed from office 
or are absent from the state. A state superintendent of public 
instruction is chosen by popular vote for a four-year term. 
Other administrative officers are a commissioner of insurance 
(from 1867 to 1878 the secretary of the state was commissioner 
of insurance; the office became elective in 188 1); a commissioner 
of labour and industrial statistics; three railroad commissioners, 9 
who have jurisdiction over all public utilities, including telegraph 
and telephone; a commissioner of banking; a dairy and food 
commissioner; a state superintendent of public property; 
three tax commissioners who act (since 1001) as a state board of 
assessment; commissioners of fisheries (established 1874); a 
state board of agriculture (1897); and a state board of forestry 
(1005, succeeding a department created in 1903). 

The legislature consists of a Senate and an Assembly and 
meets biennially, and when called in special session by the governor 
to transact special business definitely named in the governor's 
call. The number of assemblymen cannot be less than 54 or 
more than 100, and the number of senators must be not more than 
one-third or less than one-fourth the number of members of the 
Assembly. In 1910 there were 33 senators and 100 assemblymen. 
Elections to the Senate and Assembly are biennial 4 and the term 
of members of the Assembly is two years, but the senatorial 
term is four years and only one-half of the members are elected 
each two years. A candidate for either house must have resided 
in the state at least one year, must be a qualified elector in the 
district from which he is chosen, and may not be a member of 
Congress or hold any military or civil office under the United 
States. Since 1855 a state census has been taken every ten years, 
and on the basis of these censuses the legislature reapportions 
the Senate and Assembly districts. Each member of the legis- 
lature receives $500 a year and 10 cents a mile for mileage. 
Any bill may originate in either house, and either house may 
amend a bill passed by the other. Special legislation of several 
specified kinds is forbidden, especially by amendments of 1871 
and 1892; and the constitution as adopted in 1848 prohibited 
the legislature's authorizing any lottery or granting any divorce. 
The Assembly may impeach civil officers by a majority of all 
elected members, and the Senate to try impeachments; for 
conviction a two-thirds vote of all me m bers present is required. 

The judicial power of the state is vested: in a supreme 
court' of seven members (salary 86000 a year; elected for a 
term of ten years; the senior justice is chief justice) with 
appellate jurisdiction throughout the state, general superintend- 
ence over all inferior courts, power to issue, hear and determine 
writs of habeas corpus, mandamus, injunction, quo warranto, 
certiorari and other original and remedial writs; nineteen (only 
five under the constitution of 1848) circuit courts, of one judge 
each except in the second circuit (including Milwaukee) in which 
there are four judges, elected (at a spring election, and not at 
the general state election) by the voters of the circuit district; 
probate judges, one elected (for two years) in each county, 
except where the legislature confers probate powers on inferior 
courts; and in towns, cities and villages, justices of the peace, 
elected for two years. 




. jostices of the peace, from one to three constables, 
and, if the town has a library, a librarian. Justices of the peace 
hold office for two years, other town officers for one year only, except 
that in a county having a population of 100,000 or more (Milwaukee 
county), town meetings are biennial and all officers are elected for 
two years. For other than school purposes rates must not exceed 
3 % of the assessed valuation of the taxable property in the town. 
The chairmen of the several town boards of supervisors, with the 



■ The office of railroad comnmsioner was created in 1874, became 
elective m 1881 and was replaced under an act of 1905 by a com- 
mission of three members, which received jurisdiction over other 
public service corporations in 1007. 

4 Until 1881 elections to the legislature were held annually, and 
the term of assemblymen was one year and of senators two years. 

* Not separately organized until 1853, the judges of the circuit 
courf acted as justices of the supreme court. 



744 



WISCONSIN 



supervisor of each ward of a city and the supervisor of each village 
in the county, constitute the county board of supervisors, and each 
county elects biennially, at the general election in November, a 
clerk, a treasurer, a sheriff, a coroner, a clerk of the circuit court, a 
district-attorney, a register of deeds and a surveyor. The county 
board represent* the county, is entrusted with the care of the county 
property and the management of the county business, appoints a 
supervisor of assessments and levies the taxes necessary to defray 
the county expenses. The county board also elects a county high- 
way commissioner for a term of three years, is required to designate 
a system of prospective county highways, and may levy a special 
tax and borrow money for the development of the system. Cities are 
chartered according to population, 1 with a mayor, a single legislative 
chamber known as the board of aldermen or city council and the usual 
administrative officers and boards. The mayor, aldermen, treasurer, 
comptroller, justices of the peace and supervisors must be elected by 
the people, but the other offices are filled as the council of each city 
directs. An act of 1909 provides for the adoption of government by 
commission in any city of the second, third or fourth class which 
votes for this form of government at an election called by a petition 
signed by as % of the voters at the preceding election for mayor. 

Miscellaneous Laws. — A married woman may manage her separate 
property as if she were single. A widow is entitled to a dower in 
one-third of her husband's real estate, and a widower is life tenant by 
courtesy of all the real estate of which his wife died seized and not dis- 
posed 01 by her last will, unless she leaves issue by a former husband, 
to whom the estate might descend, in which case her estate passes 
immediately to such issue. If either husband or wife dies intestate 
and leaves no issue the surviving spouse is entitled to the entire 
estate of the deceased, both real and personal. The causes for an 
absolute divorce are adultery, impotency, sentence to imprisonment 
for a term of three years or more, wilful desertion for one year, 
cruel or inhuman treatment, habitual drunkenness and voluntary 
separation for five years. For any other cause than adultery an 
action for a divorce cannot be brought unless one of the parties has 
been a resident of the state for two years immediately preceding the 
suit. Neither party is permitted to marry a third party until one 
year after the divorce has been obtained. Adultery is punishable 
by imprisonment in the state prison for not more than three years 
nor less than one year, or by a fine not exceeding $1000 nor less than 
9200. A husband who wilfully abandons his wife, leaving her 
destitute, or who refuses to support her when he is able to do so, 
may be punished by imprisonment in the state prison not exceeding 
one year or in the county jail or workhouse not more than six months 
nor less than fifteen days, and for ten days, in the discretion of the 
judge, he may be kept on a bread and water diet. A homestead 
owned and occupied by any resident of the state and consisting of 
not more than 40 acres of agricultural land outside the limits of a 
city or village, or one-fourth of an acre within a city or village, 
together with the dwelling-house and other appurtenances, is exempt 
from liability for debts other than labourers , mechanics' and pur- 
chase-money liens, mortgages and taxes. If the homestead is sold 
the proceeds from the sale, to an amount not exceeding S5000, are 
likewise exempt for a period of two years, provided they are held 
for the purpose of procuring another homestead. If the owner is 
a married man his homestead cannot be sold or mortgaged without 
his wife's consent. The employment of children under fourteen 
years of age in any factory, workshop, mine, bowling alley or beer 
garden is forbidden, and their employment at any gainful occupation 
is permitted only during the vacation of the public school. A child 
between fourteen and sixteen years of age may be employed at a 
gainful occupation only upon the recommendation of the school 
principal or clerk of the board of education. No child under sixteen 
years of age may be employed longer than fifty-five hours in any 
one week, more than ten hours in any one day, more than six days 
in any one week, or between 6-o p.m. and 7-0 a.m. 

Other radical legislation, especially in regard to railways, has 
included : the Porter Law, regulating rates, which was enacted in 
1874 during the " Granger Movement," was modified from time to 
time, and was displaced by a law of 190$ (in 1908 declared constitu- 
tional so long as stockholders receive a reasonable compensation " 
on investments) creatine a state railway commission, and providing for 
the physical valuation of railways on an ad valorem basis for taxation ; 
a law (1907) making 2 cents a mile the maximum fare; an anti- 
tipping law (1905); a law forbidding the sale of cigarettes: an act 
(1907) forbiddtng insurance companies to do both participating and 
non-participating business; and an eight-hour labour law in effect 
on the 1st of January 1908. 

Finance. — Revenue for state purposes is derived principally from 
taxes on corporations, from an inheritance tax and from depart mental 
and institutional fees and charges; that for counties, towns, villages 
and cities from a general property tax. The general property tax 
has long been employed almost wholly for educational purposes only. 
The state tax on railways and other public service corporations is 



1 The first class comprises cities having a population of 150.000 
or more (Milwaukee) ; the second class those having a population 
between '40,000 and 150,000; the third class those having a popu- 
lation between 10.000 and 40,000; the fourth class those having a 
population let- ' 



levied on an ad valorem basis; but telephone companies are taxed 
by collecting a percentage of the gross receipts. Insurance companies 
arc taxed on premiums and income. In 1908 the constitution was 
amended to permit a graduated tax on incomes, privileges and 
occupations. A poll tax is levied for highway purposes in towns and 
villages, but the general charter law docs not provide for the collec- 
tion of poll taxes in cities. The proceeds from corporation taxes in- 
creased from $1,711,387 in 1899 to $3,069,771 in 1908. The state 
receipts from all sources increased from $4,070,3i6fortbeycarcnding 
September 30, 1899, to $8,299,982 for the year ending June 30, 1908; 
the disbursements in the latter year were $7,762,771 or $537,211 
less than the receipts. 

As a result of the failure of " wildcat " banks during the Territorial 
period, a clause was inserted in the state constitution forbidding the 
legislature to charter a bank or pass a general banking law until the 
people had voted in favour of banks, and providing further that no 
bank charter or general banking law should be of any force until 
a majority of the voters at a general election had approved of it. 
The people gave their approval to a general banking law in 1852, 
and state banks were incorporated under it. Private banks and one 
savings bank were also chartered. In 1901 a state banking depart- 
ment was created under the management of a commissioner of bank- 
ing appointed by the governor with the concurrence of the Senate 
for a term of five years. Under this law private banks became 
state banks, and all except national banks are examined by the 
commissioner, his deputy or some person appointed by the com- 
missioner, at least once a year. When satisfied that a bank has 
become insolvent, the commissioner may take possession of it and 
wind up its affairs. In 1909 there were 470 state banks and 3 savings 
banks with total resources amounting to $140,155,455. 

To prevent such extravagant expenditures for internal improve- 
ments as had brought disaster to Michigan and other states, the 
framers of the constitution of Wisconsin inserted a clause limiting 
its aggregate indebtedness to $100,000 for all purposes other than 
to repel an invasion, to suppress an insurrection or for defence in 
time of war, and the state is free from debt with the exception of 
that contracted on account of the Civil War. This war debt, 
although amounting to $2,251,000, is held by four state educational 
funds. A constitutional amendment, adopted in 1874, limits the 
indebtedness of each county, city, town, village and school district 
to 5% of the value of its taxable property. 

Education. — Wisconsin has an excellent free public school 
system, which was established in 1848 and which provides a 
graded system of instruction in country district and city schools, 
high schools and normal schools and the University of Wisconsin 
(incorporated 1848; see Wisconsin, University op). By a 
law of 1007 school attendance (24 weeks per annum in the country 
— a law of 1003 had required only 20 weeks— 32 weeks in cities) 
was made compulsory for children between seven and fourteen 
years of age who do not live more than 2 m. from school by the 
nearest travelled public highway. In 1 907-1908 27*2% of 
those between seven and fourteen years of age in the state 
attended no school. The total public school enrolment in 1909 
1910 was 466,554. In 1901 a law was enacted providing for 
state graded schools of two classes, which must be opened for at 
least nine months each year; graded schools of the first class 
(of three or more departments) receive $300 a year each from 
the state, and graded schools of the second class (of two depart- 
ments only) receive $200 a year each from the state. About 
1006 rural graded schools, outside of villages, were first organised 
There are twenty-two day schools for the deaf. There are a 
few township high schools (28 out of 285 in 1009), and these 
receive from the state one-half of the total annually paid for 
teachers' salaries; for free high schools the first state provision 
was made in 1875. There are special kindergarten training 
departments in the Milwaukee and Superior schools, depart- 
ments for manual training at Oshkosh and Platteville, and a 
training department in domestic science at the Stevens Point 
school. The first kindergarten officially connected with any 
American state normal school was opened at Oshkosh in 18S0. 
The state normal schools are supported largely from the interest 
($89,137 in 1008) of a fund ($1,957,230 in 1908) created in 1865 
from the sale of swamp and overflowed lands, and from an 
annual state tax ($230,000 in 1908). In addition to the 
state university the state maintains at Platteville a school of 
mines, opened in 1008. Under state control there is a system 
of teachers' and farmers' institutes. A Free Library Commission 
of five members created in 1895 maintains about 650 circulating 
free public libraries comprising more than 40,000 volumes. 
In 1907 there were about 960,000 volumes in public township 



WISCONSIN 



745 



libraries for which a law of 1887 "had made provision; since 
1895 the formation of such libraries has been mandatory, and 
books, chosen by the county superintendent, arc bought from a 
fund of 10 cents for every person of school age in towns, villages 
and cities of the fourth class. An art of 1001 permits county 
boards to establish county systems of travelling libraries. In 
1908 the total expenditure for public education in the state was 
$12,547,574; of this sum $10,604,294 was spent for common 
schools, high schools and graded schools, $1,091,135 for the 
university, and $547,661 for normal schools. The total income 
for schools in 1907-1908 wis $1,773,659, of which $1,3794x0 
was from the* seven-tenths-of-a-mill tax, $200,000 was from 
licence fees and taxes upon corporations (for salaries of rural 
school inspectors) and $194,249 the Income from the common 
school fund which in that year amounted to $3*845,929. 

Educational institutions of collegiate rank are Beloit College 
(1846; originally Congregational, now undenominational) 
at Beloit; Carroll College (1846, Presbyterian), at Waukesha; 
Lawrence College (1847; Methodist Episcopal), at Appleton; 
Concordia College (1S81; Lutheran), Marquette University 
(1864, Roman Catholic), and Milwaukee-Downer College (1895; 
non-sectarian, for women; an outgrowth of Downer College, 
Congregational and Presbyterian, founded at Fox Lake in 1853), 
all at Milwaukee; Milton College (1867; Seventh Day Baptist), 
at Milton; North-western University (1865; Lutheran) at 
Watertown; Ripon College (1851; originally under Presbyterian 
and Congregational control, now non-sectarian), at Ripon; 
Wayland University (1855; co-educational; Baptist), at Beaver 
Dam; and the following Roman Catholic schools: St Clara 
Academy (1847; Dominican) at Sinsiniwa, St Francis Seminary 
(1853) at St Frauds, and St Lawrence College (1861, Capuchin) 
at Mt Calvary. There are also many private academies and 
trade or technical schools, and six industrial schools for Indians. 

CkariktoU and Penal Institutions.— la the number and equipment 
of its reformatory, charitable and penal institutions, Wisconsin 
stands high. These institutions are under the general direction of a 
state board of control (established in 1905) of five members (one a 



woman), appointed by the governor for a term of five years. This 

board baa charge of the following institutions: a State Hospital for 

--'-**-) *t Mendota; the Northern Hospital for the 

Vinnebago, 4 m. N. of Oshkosh; a School for the 



the Insane (1060) at Mendota; the Northern Hospital for the 
Insane (1873) at Winnebago, 4 m. N. of Oshkosh; a School for the 
Deaf (1852) at Delavan, Walworth county, in which the teaching is 



Waukesha, with a farm of 404 acres; the Stale Prison (1851) at 
Waupun; State Public School for Dependent and Neglected Children 
(1866) at Sparta, with a farm of 234 acres; Wisconsin Home for 
Feeble Minded (1896) at Chippewa Falls; Wisconsin State Re- 
formatory (1898), near Green Bay : and Wisconsin State Tubercu- 
losis Sanatorium (1907) at Wales, Waukesha county. In addition 
the board has partial control over the Wisconsin Workshop for the 
Blind (1903) at Milwaukee, where there is a willow ware factory, 
and the Wisconsin Industrial School for Girls (1875) also at Mil- 
waukee. Its powers of inspection extend over 5 semi-state in- 
stitutions, 33 county insane asylums, 69 gaols, 48 poor-houses, 50 
¥rivate benevolent institutions and 206 police stations and lockups, 
he board has also power of visitation and inspection over the 
Wisconsin Veterans' Home at Waupaca, founded in 1887 by the 
stare department of the Grand Army of the Republic In the 
state's treatment of the insane, chronic cases are separated and sent 
to the county asylums. The labour of convicts in the state prison 
is leased; until 1878 the state itself supervised manufacturing in 
the prison; then for twenty-five years the convicts were employed 
in making shoes for a Chicago firm; and since 1903 the state has 
received 65 cents a day for the labour of each convict, and at least 
-too convicts are employed in the manufacture of socks and stockings, 
from which in 1906-1908 (two years) the income to the state was 
Si 56,890. In 1910 a binding twine factory was established in the 
prison. In the state reformatory the labour of some inmates » 
leased to tailors, and the others make brooms or bricks, or work 
in a cabinet shop or on the farm. Since 1907 a parole law has been 
in force for prisoners with a good record at the state prison. By a 
taw of 1909 certain offenders are placed under probation under the 
supervision of the State Board of Control. 

History.— Politically Wisconsin has been under French 
domination (from 1634 to 1760); under British domination 
(from 1760, formally X7*3. to 1783); and under that of the 
United States since 1783. But the British influence on the com- 
munity was negligible, and British rule was never move than 



nominal and was confined to the military posts. When American 
troops occupied the posts at Green Bay and Prairie du Chien 
in 18 1 6, thirty-three years after it had become a part of the 
territory of the United States, the region was still almost ex- 
clusively French in manners, customs and population; and so 
it remained for nearly two decades. 

The region comprised in the present state of Wisconsin, when 
first explored by Europeans, was a favourite hunting-ground 
for the Indians who constantly crossed this region between the 
Great Lakes and the upper Mississippi. The Indian population 
of Wisconsin in the first half of the 17th century was probably 
larger than that of any region of similar size east of the Mississippi. 
Among the many different tribes were the Sioux, Chippewa, 
Kickapoo, Menominee, Mascoutin, Potawatomi, Winnebago, 
and Sauk and Foxes. In the eastern and southern portions of 
the region there are still numerous mounds, the relics of an 
earlier Indian civilization. 1 In the lead regions in the S.W., with 
the help of Pawnee slaves, the Indians worked the lead diggings 
in a rough way. The whole course of the early history of Wis- 
consin was profoundly influenced by these racial and geographic 
considerations. The French adventurers, bent on finding either 
a " North-west passage " or some land route to the Pacific (which 
they believed to be no farther west than the Mississippi) , naturally 
went west by the water routes of Wisconsin; as a fine field for their 
bartering and trading with water-courses by which they could con- 
vey their pelts and skins back to Montreal, the region attracted the 
coureurs de bois and fur traders; and it seemed promising also to 
the zealous French Catholic missionaries. The impelling influences 
on the French settlement of the region were the love of explora- 
tion and adventure, the commercial instinct and religious zeaL 

Jean Nicolet, an experienced explorer, was sent west by 
Samuel de Champlain, the governor-general of New France, 
in the summer of 1634 to investigate mysterious rumours of a 
people known as " the men of the sea " who were thought by 
some to be Tatars or Chinese. 1 After a long and difficult journey 
into a region which he seems to have been the first white man 
to enter, Nicolet landed on the soil of Wisconsin at a point on 
Green Bay about 10 m. below the present dty of Green Bay. 
Near what is now known as Red Banks there was a populous 
village of Winnebago, which welcomed and entertained him. 
He made a treaty with the Indians, went up the Fox river to a 
point somewhere near the present dty of Berlin (Green Lake 
county) where he found another Large village, and returned to 
Green Bay and thence to his post on Lake Huron. 

Twenty years later Pierre Esprit, Sieur de Radisson, and 
Medard Chouart, Sieur des Groseilliers, started (1654) from 
Quebec, crossed Lakes Huron and Michigan, wintered in Wis- 
consin, ascended the Fox, crossed to the Wisconsin and possibly 
reached the Mississippi river eighteen years before Jacques 
Marquette and Louis Jotiet. In 1659-1660 they were again 
m the West, but the opposition of the French authorities pre- 
vented their further explorations. 

The first of the missionary pioneers was the Jesuit, Father 
Rene Menard, who in 1661 lost his life on the upper Wisconsin 
river. In 1665 Father Claude Attoucz established the first per- 
manent mission in Wisconsin on the shores of Chequamegon Bay, 
near the first trading post established by Radisson and Groseilliers. 
In 1669 he was succeeded by Father Jacques Marquette (q.v.) 
and went to the Fox River Valley; there he established the 
mission of St Francis Xavier at the first rapids' on the Fox 
river near a populous Indian village. About this mission, one 

* One of the most famous of these mounds is the so-called Elephant 
Mound, 4 m. S. of Wyalusing. in Grant county in the S.W. corner 
of the state, near the Mississippi river; it is an effigy mound, and a 
drifting of earth changed its original shape, that of a bear, so that it 



roughly resembled an elephant; see pp. 91 -93 of the Twelfth Annual 
Report (1894), Bureau of American Ethnology. 

'These ft gens de mer " were the Winnebago Indians; 
" ouinipegou," meaning " men of t 1 e fetid water," was interpreted 



?the 



* It was from these 
that De Pere 



mng 

_ipply to will water, wnonw n w\w»uij 
near Lake Winnipeg, from which the Winnebago 

rapides des perns" (rapids of the fathers) 



by the French to apply to salt water, whereas it probably referred 
to sulphur springs near Lake Winnipeg, from which the Win 
came to Green Bay. 



746 



WISCONSIN 



of the most successful established by the Jesuits in the West, 
gathered a group of traders who formed a settlement that for many 
years existed as a transient post and store-house for trappers. 

Father Marquette, forced in 1671 by Indian wars to abandon 
his post on Chequamegon Bay, settled with the Huron at the 
Straits of Mackinac, whence in May 1673 accompanied by Louis 
Joliet he set out for the Mississippi river. They baited at De 
Pere, set off down the Fox-Wisconsin route, followed the Wis- 
consin to its mouth and came out upon the Mississippi near the 
site of the present dty of Prairie du Chicn, on July 17th, exactly 
two months after they left St Ignace mission on Mackinac Island. 
After descending the Mississippi to the mouth of the Arkansas 
they returned by way of the Des Plaines portage, paddled along 
the western shore of Lake Michigan, and arrived at De Pere. 
In September 1670 Robert Cavelier, Sieur de la Salle, and Henri 
de Tonty entered the mouth of the Fox river in the *' Griffon," 
the first ship to sail the Great Lakes. In the same year Daniel 
Greysolon Du Luth, a coureur de bois, explored the upper Missis- 
sippi and the Wisconsin and Black rivers. In 1680 Father Louis 
Hennepin, a Recollet Franciscan who had accompanied La Salle, 
followed the Mississippi northward from the mouth of the Illinois 
along the western border of Wisconsin to the site of the present 
city of St PauL The same course was followed by the fur-trader, 
Pierre Charles Le Sueur, in 1683. 

In 1 67 1 Simon Francois Daumont Saint-Lusson at Sault Ste 
Marie had taken formal possession of the region in the name 
of the king of France; in 1685 Nicolas Perrot (1644-c. 1700), 
a trader who had first visited the wilds of Wisconsin probably 
as early as 1665, was appointed " commandant of the West," 
and this event closes the period of exploration and begins that 
of actual occupation. Traders had begun to swarm into the 
country in increasing numbers, and to protect them from the 
Indians and to control properly the licensed fur-trade a military 
force was necessary. Perrot built a chain of forts along the 
Mississippi and a post (the present Galena, Illinois) near the 
southern boundary of the state, where he discovered and worked 
a lead mine. In 1712 the slaughter of a band of Foxes near 
Detroit was the signal for hostilities which lasted almost con- 
tinuously until 1740, 1 and in which every tribe in the Wisconsin 
country was sooner or later involved either in alliance with the 
Foxes or with the French; the Chippewa, always hostile to the 
Foxes, the Potawatomi and the Menominee sided with the French. 
This war seriously interfered with the French plans of trade 
development and exploitation, and by rendering difficult the 
maintenance of a chain of settlements which might have con- 
nected Canada and Louisiana was a contributing cause of the 
final overthrow of French dominion. In this period permanent 
military posts were established at Green Bay and Chequamegon 
(1718); in 1718 it was reported that traders had settled at Green 
Bay and De Pere; in 1727 a post was established on Lake Pepin. 

Wisconsin was little disturbed by the Seven Years' War. 
Yet the French and Indians of Wisconsin contributed their 
quota to the French armies— a force of half-breeds and Indians 
under a half -breed, Charles Michel de Langlade (1 720-1800). 
After the fall of Montreal (Sept. 1760) Robert Rogers, who had 
been sent to Detroit to occupy the French posts in the West, 
dispatched Captain Henry Balfour with a force of British and 
Colonial troops to garrison Mackinac and the Wisconsin posts 
which had been dismantled and were almost deserted. He 
arrived at La Baye (Green Bay) in October 1761, and left there a 
garrison under Lieut. James Gorrell of the 60th (Royal American 
Foot) Regiment. The traders who accompanied them were the 
nucleus of the first English-speaking colony on Wisconsin soil. 
The French fort was rechristened Fort Edward Augustus. The 
period of British occupation was brief. On the outbreak of the 
conspiracy of Pontiac Lieut. Gorrell was compelled (in July x 763) 
to evacuate the fort, and make his way to Montreal. 1 When 

* In that year the Foxes were scattered or forced to surrender by 
Pierre Paul le Perriere, sieur Marin, who had been appointed com- 
mandant of the West in 1729. 

•It was not until 18 14 that a British force again occupied a 
Wise* 



the conspiracy was crushed in 1765, Wisconsin was reopened 
for traders, and not only French but American merchants and 
travellers flocked into the region. Among these were Alexander 
Henry (1739-1824), who as early as 1760 had visited the site 
of Milwaukee, and who now obtained a monopoly of the Lake 
Superior trade, and Jonathan Carver (?.».), who in 1766 reached 
Green Bay on his way to the Mississippi 

In 1774 was passed the Quebec Act for the government of 
the Province of Quebec into which the Wisconsin region was 
incorporated by this act, but it had little effect on the French 
settlements west of Lake Michigan, which remained throughout 
the entire British period a group of detached and periodically 
self-governing communities. Little as they cared for their 
British rulers the Wisconsin voyagews and habilans, influenced 
probably by their cupidity and by actual money payments, 
for the most part adhered to the British cause during the War 
of Independence. De Langlade led his French and Indian 
forces against the American frontier communities west of the 
Alleghanies. This pro-British spirit, however, did not dominate 
the whole Wisconsin region, and while De Langlade was harassing 
the Pennsylvania and Virginia frontier, Godefrey de Linctot, 
a trader of Prairie du Chien, acting as agent for George Rogers 
Clark, detached several western tribes from the British adherence, 
and personally led a band of French settlers to his aid. The close 
of the war, although it conveyed the region to the sovereignty 
of the United States, was not followed by American occupation. 
In this period, however, the fur-trade assumed proportions of 
greater importance, and trading posts were established by the 
North-west Company (Canadian). In 1786 a more systematic 
attempt was made to work the lead mines by Julicn Dubuque, 
who obtained the privilege from the Indians. In 1787 Wisconsin 
became part of the North-west Territory, but it was not until 
after the ratification of Jay's treaty that in 1706 the western 
posts were evacuated by the British. Before the actual military 
occupation (1816) by the United States, American traders had 
begun to enter into a sharp rivalry for the Indian trade. In 
1800 Wisconsin was included in the newly organised Indiana 
Territory; and in 1809 on the admission of Indiana as a state 
it was attached to Illinois. During the second war with Great 
Britain, the Wisconsin Indians and French settlers generally 
sided with the British, and in 1814 many of them participated 
in Major William McKay's expedition against Fort Shelby at 
Prairie du Chien. In 1816 Fort Howard was built at Green Bay, 
and Fort Crawford at Prairie du Chien. In the same year was 
confirmed the treaty negotiated in 1804 by William Henry 
Harrison, by the terms of which the Indian title to the lead 
region was extinguished. In 1810 the product of lead had been 
about 400,000 lb, largely mined and smelted by Indians, but 
the output was now increased enormously by the American 
miners who introduced new machinery and new methods, and 
by 1820 there were several thousand miners in the region, in- 
cluding negro slaves who had been brought north by Southern 
prospectors from Kentucky and Missouri. In 1818 Illinois 
was admitted to the Union and Wisconsin was incorporated in 
Michigan Territory, and at that time American civil government 
in the Wisconsin region was first established on an orderly and 
permanent basis. Wisconsin then comprised two counties, 
Brown (east) and Crawford (west), with county seats at Green 
Bay and Prairie du Chien. Until 1830 the fur-trade, controlled 
largely by John Jacob Astor's American Fur Company, con- 
tinued to be the predominating interest in the Wisconsin 
region, but then the growing lead mining industry began to 
overshadow the fur-trade, and in the mining region towns and 
smelting furnaces were rapidly built. Indian miners were soon 
driven out of business and were nearly crowded out of their 
homes. Friction between the settlers and the Indians could not 
long be avoided, and in 1827 Red Bird and his band of Winnebago 
attacked the whites, but after some bloodshed they were defeated 
by Major William Whistler (1780-1863) of Fort Howard. Five 
years later occurred a more serious revolt, the Black Hawk War 
(see Black Hawk), which also grew out of the dispute over the 



WISCONSIN 



747 



The Black Hawk War not merely settled the Indian question 
so far as Wisconsin was concerned, but made the region better 
known, and gave an appreciable impetus to its growth. A 
series of Indian treaties in 1829, 1831, 1832 and 1833 extinguished 
the Indian titles and opened up to settlement a vast area of new 
land. The first newspaper, the Green Bay InUHigenar, began 
publication in 1833. In 1834 two land offices were opened, and 
by 1836, 878,014 acres of land had been sold to settlers and 
speculators. A special census showed a population of more than 
11,000 in 1836. The new growth started a movement for a 
separate Territorial organization for that part of Michigan lying 
west of Lake Michigan, but this was not finally accomplished 
until 1836, when Michigan entered the Union. The new Territory 
of Wisconsin comprised not only the area included in the present 
state, but the present Iowa and Minnesota and a considerable 
portion of North and South Dakota. 1 Henry Dodge (1781- 
1867) was appointed its first governor by President Jackson 
The first Territorial Council met in 1836 at Old Belmont, now 
Leslie, Lafayette county, but in December of that year Madison 
was selected as the capital, after a contest in which Fond du 
Lac, Milwaukee, Racine, Green Bay, Portage and other places 
were considered, and in which James Duane Doty, later governor, 
owner of the Madison town plat, was charged with bribing 
legislators with town lots in Madison. In 1838 the Territory of 
Iowa was erected out of all that part of Wisconsin lying west 
of the Mississippi The movement for the admission of Wiscon- 
sin to the Union was taken up in earnest soon after 1840, and 
after several years' agitation, in which Governor Doty took a 
leading part, on the 10th of August 1846 an Enabling Act intro- 
duced in Congress by Morgan L. Martin, the Territorial delegate, 
received the approval of President Polk. Meanwhile the Terri- 
torial legislature had passed favourably on the matter, and in 
April the act was ratified by a popular vote of 12,334 t0 2 4 8 7> 
The first constitution drafted was rejected (5th April 2847) 
owing to the articles relating to the rights of married women, 
exemptions, the elective judiciary, &c A second convention, 
thought to be more conservative than the first, drafted another 
constitution, which on the 13th of March 1848 was adopted by 
16,709 ayes and 6394 noes. The constitution was approved by 
Congress and signed by the president on the 29th of May 1848; 
the first state election had already been held on the 8th of 
May, and Governor Nelson Dewey and other state officers were 
sworn into office on the 7th of June. In the same year the free 
public school system was established, and the great stream of Ger- 
man immigration set in. Railway construction began in 1851. 
Wisconsin was a strong anti-slavery state. In 1854 one of the 
first steps in the organization of the Republican party (q.v.) 
was taken at Ripon. In the same year a fugitive slave named 
Glover was seized at Racine and was afterward rescued by an 
anti-slavery mob from Milwaukee; the State Supreme Court 
rendered a decision which declared the Fugitive Slave Law to 
be null and void in Wisconsin. 

In 1856 a contested election for the governorship between 
Governor William A. Barstow (18x3-1865), a candidate for 
re-election, and his Republican opponent, Coles Bashford (1816- 
1878), threatened to result in civil war. But the courts threw 
out " supplementary returns" (possibly forged by the canvassers) 
and decided in favour of Bashford, who was the first Republican 
to hold an office; with two exceptions Wisconsin has elected 
Republican governors ever since. The state gave its electoral 

1 Wisconsin, as the last state to be created wholly out of the old 
h-WestT< 



North-West Territory, was the loser in boundary disputes with neigh- 
bouring states. As originally plumed, Wisconsin would have ut- 
. . . . ..#•«._.. ^_#_« • ii» the southern 

> tract actually 



cluded'that part of Illinois west of a line running across the southern 
end of Lake Michigan; and the inhabitants of this 



Mkbigan'for her losses to Ohio the northern peninsula', geographically 
a Dart of the Wisconsin region, was given to Michigan. Finally a 
larger tract of land E. of the Mississippi which include St Paul. 
part of Minneapolis and Duluth, was cut off from Wisconsin on her 
admission to the Union to form with other land farther west the new 
Territory of Minnesota. See " The Boundaries of Wisconsin " in 
vol. ai. of Wisamvn Historical Cdltctiont . 



vote for Lincoln in i860 and supported the administration during 
the Civil War. The policy of the state to keep its regiments 
f ull.rather than send new regiments to the front made the strength 
of a Wisconsin regiment, according to General W. T. Sherman, 
frequently equal to a brigade. The whole number of troops 
furnished by Wisconsin during the war was 91,379. In January 
1874 a Democratic Liberal Reform administration came into 
power in the state with William R. Taylor as go senior. At the 
legislative session which followed, the Potter law, one of the first 
attempts to regulate railway rates, was passed. The railways 
determined to evade the law, but Taylor promptly brought suit 
in the State Supreme Court and an injunction was issued re- 
straining the companies from disobedience. In 1876, however, 
the Republicans regained control of the state government and 
the law was modified. In 1889 the passage of the Bennett law, 
providing for the enforcement of the teaching of English in all 
public and parochial schools, had a wide political effect. The 
Germans, usually Republicans, roused for the defence of their 
schools, voted the Democratic state ticket at the next state 
election (1890), with the result that George Wilbur Peck, 1 the 
Democratic nominee, was chosen governor by 30,000 plurality. 
The Bennett law was at once repealed, but not until 1895 did 
the Republicans regain control of the administration. It was 
accomplished then after a Democratic gerrymander bad been 
twice overthrown in the courts. Since that time, however, 
the Republican party has grown more secure, and it has placed 
on the statute books a series of radical and progressive enactments 
in regard to railway rate legislation and taxation, publicity of 
campaign expenditures and a state-wide direct primary law 
(roos). In all these reforms a leading part was taken by 
Governor Robert M. LaFollette (b. 1855), who was elected to 
the United States Senate in 1905. Opposition to his political 
programme resulted in a serious split in the Republican ranks, 
the opposition taking the old name of " Stalwarts " and his 
followers came to be known as M Halfbreeds." Governor 
LaFollette, however, could draw enough support from the 
Democrats to maintain the control of the state by the Republicans. 
Wisconsin had several times been visited by disastrous forest 
fires. One in the north-eastern counties (Oconto, Brown, Door, 
Shawano, Manitowoc and Kewaunee) in 1871 resulted in the 
loss of more than a thousand lives. Another serious fire occurred 
in the north-west in July 1804. 

GovBuions or Wiscosfsuc 
Territorial. 
Henry Dodge « Democrat 

tames Duane Doty 
lathaniel P. Tallmadge 
Henry Dodge * 



Nelson Dewey 
Leonard J. Farwetl 
William A. Barstow . 
Arthur McArthur " 
Coles Bashford . . 
Alex. W. Randall . . 
Louis P. Harvey . 
Edward Salomon . 
James T. Lewis . 
Lucius Fairchild . 
C.C.Washburn . . 
William R. Taylor 
Harrison Ludington . 
Willum E. Smith. 
Jeremiah M. Rusk 
William D. Hoard • 
George W. Perk . . 
William H. Upham , 
Edward Scoficld . . 
Robert M. LaFollette* 
James O. Davidson 
F. E. McGovern . . 



State. 



Whig 

Democrat 

Democrat 



1836-1 841 
1841-1844 

1 845-1848 



Republican. 



Democrat 

Republican 



Democrat 
Republican 



1 848-1852 
1852-1854 

1856-1858 

1858-2862 

1863 

1863-1864 

1864-1866 

1866-1872 

1872-1874 

1874-1876 

1876-1878 

1878-1883 

1883-1889 

1889-1891 

1891-1895 

1895-1897 

1897-1901 

1 901-1906 

1906-191 z 

1911- 



* Peck (b. 1840) was a printer and then a journalist, founded in 
1874 at La Crosse the Sun, which in 1878 he removed to Milwaukee, 
and was the author of many humorous sketches, notably a series of 
volumes of which the hero is " Peck's Bad Boy." m 

* Lieut.-Governor : succeeded Barstow, who resigned during 
a contest with Bashford. 

4 Resigned to become a member of the United States Senate. 

* Lieui-Governor: elected governor in 1906 and 1908. 



7+8 



WISCONSIN, UNIVERSITY OF 



Bibliography.— For physical description and natural resource* 
vectht Reports (biennial) and the Bulletins (Madison) of the Wisconsin 
Geological and Natural History Survey, especially important Cor 
economic geology, hydrography and agriculture, and the Annual 
Reports of the Wisconsin State Board of Agriculture-; the Reports 
(biennial) of the State Forester, the Reports of the U.S. Census, 
and the Mineral Resources of the United States, published annually 
by the U.S. Geological Survey. A good school manual is E. C. 
Case's Wisconsin, its Geology and Physical Geography (Milwaukee, 



Hi., new series, of the Bulletin (Milwaukee) of the Wisconsin Natural 
History Society, are valuable. On state government see The Blue 
Booh of the State of Wisconsin (Madison), published under the direc- 
tion ol the commissioner of labour and industrial statistics and D. £. 
Spencer, Local Government in Wisconsin (Madison, 1888). For a 
list of works on the history of the state see D. S. Durric's " Biblio 

¥nphy of Wisconsin " in vol. vi., new series, Historical Magazine. 
he best short history ia R. G. Thwaites, Wisconsin (Boston, 1008), 
in the " American Commonwealths " series. The same author's 
Story of Wisconsin (Ibid. 1890) in the " Story of the States " series, 
and H. £. Letter's Leading Events in Wisconsin History (Milwaukee, 
1898), a good brief summary, are other single- volume works covering 
the entire period of the state's history. One of the best accounts 
of the state's early history is E. H. Neville and D. B. Martin's 
Historic Green Bay (Green Bay. 1893). S. S. Hebberd's Wisconsin 
under the Dominion of France (Madison, 1890) contains an account 
of the earlier period written, however, before much recent material 
was brought to light. "Much material of value is contained in the 
Historical Collections (18 vols., Madison, 1855 sqq.) of the State 
Historical Society of Wisconsin (1846; reorganized, 1849), and in 
the Bulletins of Information, Proceedings and Draper Series of the 
same society are many valuable historical papers and monographs. 
See also W. R. Smith's History of Wisconsin (3 vols., Madison, 1854). 
The Parkman Society Papers (Milwaukee, 1 895-1 899) provide a 
collection of good articles on special topics of Wisconsin history, and 
the Original Narratives and Reprints published by the Wisconsin 
History Commission (created by an act of 1905) deal with Wisconsin 
in the Civil War. See also Auguste Gosselin, Jean Nicolet 1618- 
1641 (1893); B. A. Hinsdale, The Old North-West (New York, 1888); 
Charles Moore, The North-West under Three Flags (New York, 1900J ; 
R. V. Phelan, Financial History of Wisconsin (Madison, X908); 
F. J. Turner, Character and Influence of the Indian Trade in Wts- 
cousin, vol. ix. of Johns Hopkins University Studies (Baltimore, 
1899); F. Parkman, The Jesuits in North America (Boston, 1870); 
and the volumes of the Jesuit Relations, edited by R. G. Thwaites. 

WISCONSIN, UNIVERSITY OF, a co-educational institution 
of higher learning at Madison, Wisconsin, the capital of the slate, 
established in 1848 under state control, supported largely by the 
state, and a part of the state educational system. The university 
occupies a picturesque and beautiful site on an irregular tract 
(600 acres), including both wooded hills and undulating meadow 
lands stretching for 1 m. along the shores of Lake Mendota. 
The main building, University Hall (1859; enlarged 1897-1899 
and 1005-1906), which crowns University Hill, is exactly 1 m. 
from the state capitol. The other buildings include North Hall 
(1850), South Hall (1854), Science Hall (1887), the Biology Build- 
ing (1911), the Chemical Building (1904-1905), the Hydraulic 
Laboratory (1905), the Engineering Building (1900), the Law 
School (1894), Chadbourne Hall (1870; remodelled in 1896) for 
women, Lathrop Hall (1910) for women, Assembly Hall (1879), 
the Chemical Engineering Building (1S85), Machine Shops 
(1885), the armoury and gymnasium (1894), a group of half 
a dozen buildings belonging to the College of Agriculture and 
the Washburn Observatory (1878; a gift of Governor C. C. 
Washburn). On the lower campus is the building of the 
Wisconsin State Historical Society. 

The university includes a college of letters and science, with 
general courses in liberal arts and special courses in chemistry, 
commerce, journalism, music, pharmacy and training of teachers 
and library work; a college of engineering, with courses in civil, 
mechanical, electrical, chemical and mining engineering, and an 
applied electro-chemistry course; a college of agriculture, with a 
government experiment station, long, middle and short courses in 
agriculture, a department of home economics, a dairy course and 
farmers' institutes; a college of law (3 years' course); a college of 
medicine, giving the 6rst two years of a medical course; a graduate 
school; and an extension division, including departments of in- 
struction by lectures, of correspondence study, of general information 
and welfare,, and of debating and public discussion. There is a 
summer session, in which, in addition to courses in all the colleges 
and schools, instruction is offered to artisans and apprentices and in 
library training. The college of agriculture, one of the largest and 



best equipped in the country, provides also briefer courses of practical 
training for farmers and farmers' wives. In connexion with the 
state department of health, instruction on the prevention and treat- 
ment of tuberculosis is provided, exhibits and instructors or demon- 
strators being sent to every part of the state. The state hygienic 
laboratory is conducted by the university. On the university campus 
is the forest products laboratory (1910) of the United States govern- 
ment. At Milwaukee there is a university settlement associated 
with the social work of the university. 

Admission to the university is on examination or cer t ificate from 
accredited high schools or academies. Tuition is free for residents 
of the state. Courses in the first two years arc largely prescribed, 
in the last two years elective " under a definite system. In 1910 
there were 395 instructors and 4947 students (3560 men and 1387 
women). The university library proper, of 163,000 volumes and 
40,000 pamphlets, is housed in the Historical Society's building, in 
which are also the collection of the Historical Society and that of 
the Wisconsin Academy of Arts and Sciences — a total in 1910 of 
404,000 books and 202,000 pamphlets. 

The grounds, buildings and equipments of the university are valued 
at $2,000,000. The income of the university, including income from 
the Federal land grants, from invested productive funds and from 
state tax levies, exceeds one million dollars annually. Since 1905 
the state legislature has appropriated for the current expenses of 
the university a f mill tax. More than $2,000,000 was left to the 
university in 1908 for a memorial theatre, research professorships 
and graduate fellowships by William Freeman Vilas (1840-1906), 
who graduated at the university in 1858 and was postmaster-general 
of the United States in 1885-1888, secretary of the interior in 18&8- 
1889 and U.S. senator from Wisconsin in 1891-1897. 

An act for the creation of a university to be supported by the 
Territory was passed by the first session of the Territorial legis- 
lature in 1836, but except for the naming of a board of trustees 
the plan was never put into operation. A similar act for the 
establishment of a university at Green Bay had no more result. 
In 1838 a university of the Territory of Wisconsin was created 
by act of the Territorial legislature and was endowed with two 
townships of land. This was the germ of the state university, 
provision for which was made in the state constitution adopted 
in 1848. The university was incorporated by act of the legislature 
in that year with a board of regents as the governing body, 
chosen by the legislature. 1 A preparatory department was 
opened in the autumn of that year, and John H. Lathrop (1799- 
1866), a graduate of Yale, then president of the university of 
Missouri, was chosen as the first chancellor of the new institution. 
He was inaugurated in 1850, and in that year North Hall, the 
first building, was erected. The first academic class graduated in 
1854. In the same year the Federal Congress (which had granted 
to the state seventy-two sections of salt-spring lands, and as no 
such lands were found in the state, had been petitioned to change 
the nature of the grant) granted seventy-two sections to be "sold 
in such manner as the legislature may direct for the benefit and 
in aid of the university." The Federal land grants, however, 
which ought to have supported the university, were sacrificed to 
a desire to attract immigrants, and the institution for many 
years was compelled to get along on a small margin which rendered 
extension difficult; and the university permanent fund was soon 
impaired for the construction of buildings. Henry Barnard in 
1859 succeeded Lathrop as chancellor, but resigned in 1861. 
After the Civil War, the office of chancellor was displaced by that 
of president. Paul Ansel Chadbourne (1823-1883), a graduate 
(and afterwards president) of Williams College, became presi- 
dent in 1867, and in his presidency (1867-1870) the university 
was reorganized, a coDcgc of law was founded, co-educalion 
was established and the agricultural college was consolidated 
with the university, a radical departure from the plan adopted 
in most of the Western states. In 1871-1874 John Hanson 
Twombly, a graduate of Wesleyan University and one of the 
founders of Boston University, was president, and the legislature 
first provided for an annual state tax of $10,000 for the university. 
With the coming to the presidency (1874) of John Bascom (b. 
2827), another graduate of Williams, the university began a new 
period of development; the preparatory department was 

1 The university is now governed by regents, of whom two— the 
president of the university and the state superintendent of public 
instruction— are ex officio, and the others are appointed by the 
governor for a term of three years, two from the state at large and 
one from each congressional district. 



WISDOM, BOOK OF 



749 



abolhbed in t88o, and the finances of the university were put on 
a firm basis by the grant of a stale tax of one-tenth of a milL 
Under the presidency ( 1887-1802) of Thomas Chrowder Chamber- 
lin (b. 1843), a graduate of Beloit College and a member of 
the U.S. Geological Survey, the university attendance grew from 
500 to 1000 students, and buildings were erected for the college 
of law, dairy school and science haiL Under. President Charles 
Kendall Adams (1835-1002), who was a graduate of the univer- 
sity of Michigan, where as professor of history lie had introduced 
in 1860-1870 the German method of "seminar" study and 
research, and who had just resigned the presidency (1885-1802) 
of Cornell University, the enrolment of the university increased 
from 1000 in 189a to 2600 in iooi, and the growth of the graduate 
school was particularly notable. Under Charles Richard Van- 
Hise, 1 who was the first alumnus to become president and who 
succeeded President Adams in 1904, the growth of the university 
continued, and its activities were constantly enlarged and the 
scope of its work was widened. 

See & H. Carpenter. A Historical Sketch of the University of 
Wisconsin from sSjo to 1876 (Madison, 1876), and R. G. Thwaites, 
The University of Wisconsin, Us History end its Alumni (Ibid., 1900). 

WISDOM. BOOK OF, or Wisdom of Solomon (Sept. ±o<pla 
ZaXuftwrvi; Lat. Vulg. Liber safnenliae), an apocryphal book of 
the " Wisdom Literature " (q.v.), the most brilliant production 
of pre-Christian Hebrew philosophical thought, remarkable both 
for the elevation of its ideas and for the splendour of its diction. 
It divides itself naturally, by its contents, into two parts, in one 
of which the theme is righteousness and wisdom, in the other the 
early fortunes of the .Israelite people considered as a righteous 
nation beloved by God. 

The first part (ch. i.-ut.) faHs also into two divisions, the first 
(i.-v.) dwelling on the contrast between the righteous and the wicked, 
the second (vl-ul) setting forth the glories of wisdom. After an 
exhortation tc the judges of the earth to put away evil counsels and 
thus avoid death, the author declares that God has made no kingdom 
of death on the earth, but ungodly men have made a covenant with 
it : certain sceptics (probably both Gentile and Jewish) holding this 



and oppress the poor and the righteous; but God created man to be 
immortal (il 23). and there will be compensation and retribution 
in the future: the good will rule (on earth), the wicked will be hurled 
down to destruction, though they seem now to flourish with long life 
and abundance of children (u--v.). At this point Solomon is intro* 
duced.and from the following section (vi.-ix.) the book seems to have 
taken its title. Solomon reminds kings and rulers that they will be 
held to strict account by God, and, urging them to learn wisdom 
from his words, proceeds to give his own experience: devoting 
himself from his youth to the pursuit of wisdom he had found her 
to be a treasure that never failed, the source and embodiment of all 
that is most excellent and beautiful in the world — through her he 
looks to obtain influence over men and immortality, and he concludes 
with a prayer that God would send her out of his holy heavens to be 
his companion and guide. 

The second part of the book (x.-xix.) connects itself formally with 
the first by a summary description of the role of wisdom in the early 
times: she directed and preserved the fathers from Adam to Moses 
(x. l-xl 1). From this point, however, nothing is said of wisdom— 
thff rest of the book b a philosophical and imaginative narrative of 
Israelite affairs from the Egyptian oppression to the settlement in 
Canaan. A brief description of how the Egyptians were punished 
through the very things with which they sinned (though the punish- 
ment was not fatal, for God love* all things that exist), and how 
judgments on the Canaanites were exccutcdgradually (so as to give 
them time to repent), is followed by a dissertation on the origin, 
various forms, absurdity and results of polytheism and idolatry 
(xiii.-xv.): the worship of natural objects ts said to be less blame- 
worthy than the worship of images — this latter, arising from the 
desire to honour dead children and living kings (the Euhemerfetic 
theory), is inherently absurd, and led to aft sorts of moral depravity. 
In the four last chapters the author, returning to the history, gives 
a detailed account of the provision made for the Israelites in the 
wilderness and of the pains and terrors with which the Egyptians 
were plagued. 



■President VanHise (b. 1857) graduated at the university of 
Wisconsin in 1879, became instructor in geology there in 1883. in 
1897 became consulting geologist of the Wisconsin Geological and 
Natural History Survey, and in 1900 became geologist in charge of 
the Division of Pre-Cantbrian and Metamorphic Geology, U.S. 
Geological Survey. He wrote Correlation Papers— Archaean, and 
Algonkian (1892), Some Principles Controlling tie Deposition of Ores 
(tool). A Treatise on Metamorphism (I903) and several works with 
other authors on the different iron regions of Michigan. 
xxvm 13 



It is not easy to determine whether the book is all from the 
same author. On the one hand, it may be said that one general 
theme — the salvation and final prosperity of the righteous — is 
visible throughout the work, that God is everywhere represented 
as the supreme moral governor of the world, and that the con- 
ception of immortality is found in both parts; the second part, 
though differing in form from the first, may be regarded as the 
historical illustration of the principles set forth in the latter. 
On the other hand, it must be admitted that the points of view 
in the two parts axe very different: the philosophical conception 
of wisdom and the general Greek colouring, so prominent in 
the first part, are quite lacking in the second (x. i-xi.i being 
regarded as a transition or connecting section inserted by an 
editor). While the first has the form of a treatise, the second is an 
address to God; the first, though it has the Jewish people in 
mind, does not refer to them by name except incidentally in 
Solomon's prayer; the second is wholly devoted to the Jewish 
national experiences (this is true even of the section on idolatry). 
It is in the second that we have the finer ethical conception of God 
as father and saviour of all men, lover of souls, merciful in his 
dealings with the wicked— in the first, part it is his justice that is 
emphasised; the hope of immortality is prominent in the first, 
but is mentioned only once (in xv. 3) in the second. The two 
parts are distinguished by difference of style; the Hebrew 
principle of parallelism of clauses is employed far more in the 
first than in the second, which has a number of plain prose 
passages, and Is also rich in uncommon compound terms. In 
view of these differences there is ground for holding that the 
second part is a separate production which has been united with 
the first by an editor, an historical haggadic sketch, a midrash, 
full of imaginative additions to the Biblical narrative, and en- 
livened by many striking ethical reflections. The question, 
however, may be left undecided. 

Both parts of the book ignore the Jewish sacrificial cult. Sacrifices 
are not mentioned at all ; a passing reference to the temple is put 
into Solomon's mouth (be 8). Moses is described (xi. 1) not as the 
great lawgiver, but as the holy prophet through whom the works of 
the people were prospered. (It may be noted, as an illustration of 
the allusive style of the book, that, though a number of men are 
spoken of, not one of them is mentioned by name; in iv. 10-14, 
which is an expansion of Gen. v. 34, the reader is left to recognize 
Enoch from his knowledge of the Biblical narrative.) In the second 
part of the book there is no expression of " messianic" hope; in 
the first part the picture of the national future agrees in general 
(if its expressions are to be taken literally) with that given in the book 
of Daniel: the Jews are to have dominion over the peoples (iii. 8), 
and to receive from the Lord's hand the diadem of beauty (v. 16), 
but there js no mention of particular nations. The historical review 
in the second part is coloured by a bitter hatred of the ancient 
Egyptians; whether this springs from resentment of the former 
sufferings of the Israelites or is meant as an allusion to the circum- 
stances of the author's own time it is hardly possible to say. 

The book appears to teach individual ethical immortality, though 
its treatment of the subject is somewhat vague. On the basts of 
Gen. i.-iii. it is said (ii. *3 f.) that God created man for immortality 
(that is, apparently, on earth) and made him an image of his own 
being, but through the envy of the devil death came into the world, 
yet (iii. 1-4) the souls of the righteous are in the hand of God, and, 
though they seem to die, their hope is full of immortality. The 
description, however, appears to glide into the conception of national 
immortality (iii. 8, v. 16), especially in the fine sorites in vi. 17-20: 
the beginning of wisdom is desire for instruction, and devoted regard 
to instruction is love, and love is observance of her laws, arid obedience 
to her laws is assurance of incorruption, and mcorruption brings us 
near to God, and therefore desire for wisdom leads to a kingdom 
(but the nature of the kingdom is not stated). The individualistic 
view is expressed in xv. 3 : the knowledge of God's power (that is, 
a righteous life) is the root of immortality. This passage appears 
to exclude the wicked, who, however, are said (iv. 20) to be punished 
hereafter. The figurative nature of the language respecting the 
future makes it difficult to determine precisely the thought of the 
book on this point; but it 6cems to contemplate continued existence 
hereafter for both righteous and wicked, and rewards and punishments 
allotted on the basis of moral character. Angels are not mentioned; 
but the serpent of Gen. iii. is; for the first time in literature, identified 
with the devil (" Diabolos," U. 24. the Greek translation of the 
Hebrew " Satan ") ; the role assigned him (envy) is similar to that 
expressed in "Secrets of Enoch, xxxi. 3-6; he ts here introduced 
to account for the fact of death in the world. In iii. 4 the writer, in 
his polemic against the p r os pe r ous ungodly men of his time, denies 
that death* short life and lack of children arc to be considered 

2a 



75° 



WISDOM LITERATURE 



misfortunes for the righteous— over against these things the possession 
of wisdom is declared to be the supreme good. The ethical standard 
of the book is high except in the bitterness displayed towards the 
° wicked/' that is, the enemies of the Jews. The only occurrence 
in old Jewish literature (except in Ecclus. xtv. a) of a word for 
"conscience" is found in xvii. II ( uwnflyt i): wickedness is timorous 
under the condemnation of conscience (the same thought in Prov. 
xxviii/ i). The book is absolutely monotheistic, and the character 
ascribed to the deity b ethically pure with the exception mentioned 
above. 

The style shows that the book was written in Greek, though 
naturally it contains Hebraisms. The author of the first part 
was in all probability an Alexandrian Jew; nothing further is 
known of him; and this is true of the author of the second part, 
if that be a separate production. As to the date, the decided 
Greek colouring (the conception of wisdom, the list of Stoic 
virtues, viii. 7, the idea of pre-existence, viiL 20, and the ethical 
conception of the future life) points to a time not earlier than the 
1st century B.C., while the fact that the history is not allegorized 
suggests priority to Fhilo; probably the work was composed 
late in the 1st century B.C. (this date would agree with the social 
situation described). Its exclusion from the Jewish Canon of 
Scripture resulted naturally from its Alexandrian, thought and 
from the fact that it was written in Greek. It was used, however* 
by New Testament writers (vii. 22 f., Jas. iii. 17, viL 26; Heb. i. 
2 f., ix. 15; 2 Cor. v. 1-4, xL 23; Acts xvii, 30, xiiL x-5, xiv. 
22-26; Rom. i. 18-32, xvi. 7; x Tim. iv. 10), and is quoted freely 
by Patristic and later authors, generally as inspired. It was 
recognized as canonical by the council of Trent, but is .not so 
regarded by Protestants. 

J Literature.— The Greek text is given in O. P. Fritzsche, Lib. 
Apocr. Vet. Test. (1871); W. J. Deane, Bk. of Wisd. (1881); H. B. 
Swete, Old Test, in Crk. (1st cd., 1891 ; 2nd ed., 1897; En*, trans, in 
Deane, 1881); W. R. Churton, Uncan.and Apocr. Script. (1884); 
C. J. Ball. Variorum Apocr. (1892); Revised Vers, of Apocr. (1895). 
Introductions and Comma.: C. L. W. Grimm in Kurtgef. Exet. 
Hdbck. m. d. Apocr. d. A. T. (r86o); E. C. BisseU in Lange-Schaff 
(i860); W. J. Deane (1881); F. W. Farrar in Wace's Apocr. (1888); 
Ed. Rcuss, French ed. (1878), Ger. ed. (1894); E. SchQrer, Jew. 
People (Eng. trans., 1891); C. Siegfried in Kautzsch, Apocr. (1900); 
Tony' Andre, Les Apocr. (1903). See also the articles in Hcrzog- 
Hauck's KeaUncychpddu; Hastings, Did. Bible; Cheyne and 
Black, Encyd.BibL (CRT.*) 

WISDOM LITERATURE, the name applied to the body of 
Old Testament and Apocryphal writings that contain the philo- 
sophical thought of the Utter pre-Christian Judaism. Old Semitic 
philosophy was a science not of ontology in the modern sense of 
the term, but of practical life. For the Greeks " love of wisdom " 
involved inquiry into the basis and origin of things; the Hebrew 
" wisdom " was the capacity so to order life as to get out of it 
the greatest possible good. Though the early Hebrews (of the 
time before the 5th century B.C.) must have reflected on life, 
there is ho trace of such reflection, of a systematic sort, in their 
extant literature. " Wise men " are distrusted and opposed 
by the prophets. The latter were concerned only with the 
maintenance of the sole worship of Yahweh and of social morality. 
This was the task of the early Hebrew thinkers, and to it a large 
part of the higher energy of the nation was devoted. The external 
law given, as was believed, by the God of Israel, was held to be 
the sufficient guide of life, and everything that looked like reliance 
on human* wisdom was regarded as disloyalty to the Divine 
Lawgiver. While the priests developed the sacrificial ritual, 
it was the prophets that represented the theocratic element of 
the national life— they devoted themselves to their task with 
noteworthy persistence and ability, and their efforts were crowned 
with success; but their virtue of singlemindcdncss carried with it 
the defect of narrowness— they despised all peoples and all 
countries but their own, and were intolerant of opinions, held by 
their fellow-citizens, that were not wholly in accordance with 
their own principles. 

The reports of the earlier wist men, men of practical sagacity 
In political and social affairs, have come to us from unfriendly 
sources; it is quite possible that among them were some who 
•took interest in life for its own sake, and reflected on its human 
moral basis. But, if this was so, no record of their reflections 
has been preserved. The class of sages to whom we owe the 



Wisdom Books did not arise tiD a change bad come over the 
national fortunes and life. The firm establishment of the doctrine 
of practical monotheism happened to coincide in time with the 
destruction of the national political life (in the 6th century B.C.). 
At the moment when this doctrine had come to be generally 
accepted by the thinking part of the nation, the Jews found 
themselves dispersed among foreign communities, and from 
that time were a subject people environed by aliens, Babylonian, 
Persian and Greek. The prophetic office ceased to exist when 
its work was done, and part of the intellectual energy of the 
people was thus set free for other tasks than the establishment 
of theistic dogma. The ritual law was substantially completed 
by the end of the 5th century B.C.; it became the object of 
study, and thus arose a class of scholars, among whom were 
some who, under the influence of the general culture of the time, 
native and foreign, pushed their investigations beyond the 
limits of the national law and became students and critics of 
life. These last came to form a separate class, though without 
formal organization. There was a tradition of learning (Job 
viiL 8, xv. 10)— the results of observation and experience were 
handed down orally. In the 2nd century B.C., about the time 
when the synagogue took shape, there were established schools 
presided over by eminent sages, in which along with instruction 
in the law much was said concerning the general conduct of 
life (see Pjbjce Abotb). The social unification produced by 
the conquests of Alexander, brought the Jews into intimate 
relations with Greek thought. It may be inferred from Ben- 
Sira's statements (Ecclus. xxxix. x-xi) that it was the custom 
for scholars to travel abroad and, like the scholars of medieval 
Europe, to increase their knowledge by personal association with 
wise men throughout the world. Jews seem to have entered 
eagerly into the larger intellectual life of the last three centuries 
before the beginning of our era. For some the influence of this 
association was of a general nature, merely modifying their 
conception of the moral life; others adopted to a greater or 
less extent some of the peculiar ideas of the current systems of 
philosophy. Scholars were held in honour in those days by 
princes and people, and Ben-Sira frankly adduces this fact as 
one of the great advantages of the pursuit of wisdom. It was 
in cities that the study of life and philosophy was best carried on, 
and it is chiefly with city life that Jewish wisdom deals. 

The extant writings of the Jewish sages are contained in the 
books of Job, Proverbs, Psalms, Ben-Sira, Tobit, Ecclesiastes, 
Wisdom of Solomon, '4th Maccabees, to which may be added the 
first chapter of 'Pirke Aboth (a Talmudic tract giving, probably, 
pre-Christian, material). Of these Job, Pss. xlix., Ixxiii., xcii. 
6-& (5-7) » Cedes., Wisdom, are discussions of the moral govern- 
ment of the world; Prov., Pss. xxxvii., cxix., Ben-Sira, Tob. iv.,' 
xii. 7-1 1, Pirke, are manuals of conduct, and 4th Maccab. 
treats of the autonomy of reason in the moral life; Pss. viiL, 
xix. 3-7 (1-6), xxix. 3-10, xc i-xa, cvii. 17-32, cxxxix.,cxliv. 3 f., 
cxlvii.*8 f. are reflections on man and physical nature (cf. the 
Yahweh addresses in Job, and Ecclus. xlii. 15-xliiL 33). 
Sceptical views are expressed in Job, Prov. xxx. 2-4 (Agur), 
Eccles.; the rest take the current orthodox position. 

Though the intellectual world of the sages is different from that of 
the prophetic and legal Hebraism, they do not break with the 
fundamental Jewish theistic and ethical creeds. Their monotheism 
remains Semitic— even in their conception of the cosmogonic and 
illuminating function of Wisdom they regard God as standing outside 
the world of physical nature and man. and do not grasp or accept the 
idea of the identity of the human and the divine; there is thus a 
sharp distinction between their general theistic position and that of 
Greek philosophy.- They retain the old high standard of morals, 
and in some instances go beyond it, as in the injunctions to be kind 
to enemies (Prov. xxv. 21 f.) and to do to no man what is hateful to 
one's self (Tob. iv. 15); in these finer maxims they doubtless repre- 
sent the general ethical advance of the time. 

They differ from the older, writers in practically ignoring the 
physical supernatural— that is, though they regard the miracles «f 
the ancient times (referred to particularly in wisdom xvi.*xix.) as 
historical facts, they say nothing of a miraculous element in the life 
of their own time. Angels occur only in Job and Tobit, and there la 
noteworthy characters : in Job they are beings whom God charges 
with folly (iv. 18), or they are mediators between God and man 



WISE, H. A.— WISE, I. M 



7Si 



(v. t, noon. 93), that is, they are humanized, and the Elohira being* 
(including the Satan) in the prologue belong to a popular story, the 
figure of Satan being used by the author to account for job's 
calamities; in Tobit the " affable " Raphael is a clever man of the 
world. Except in Wisdom ii. 24 (where the serpent of Gen. iii. is 
called " Diabolos "), there is mention of one demon only (Asmodeus, 
in Tob. iii. 8, 17). and that a Persian figure. Job alone introduces 
the mythical dragons (iii. 8, vii. 12, ix. 13, xxvi. 12) that occur in 
late prophetical writings (Amos is. 3; lea. xxvii. l); as the earliest 
of the Wisdom books, it is the friendliest to supernatural machinery. 

Like the prophetical writings before Ezekiel, the Wisdom books, 
while they recognize the sacrificial ritual as an existing custom, 
attach little importance to it as an. element of religious life (the 
fullest mention of it is in Ecclus. ixxv. 4 ff., 1); the difference 
between prophets and sages is that the former do not regard the 
ritual as of divine appointment (Jer. vii 23) and oppose it as non- 
moral, while the latter, probably accepting the law as divine, by 
laying most stress on the universal side of religion, lose sight of its local 
and mechanical side (see Ecclus. xxxv. r-3). Their broad culture 
(reinforced, perhaps, by the political conditions of the time) made 
them comparatively indifferent to Messianic hopes and to that 
conception of a final judgment of the nations that was* closely 
connected with these hopes: a Messiah is not mentioned in their 
writings (not in Prov. xvi. 10-15), and a final judgment only in 
Wisdom of Solomon, where it is not of nations but of individuals. 
In this regard a comparison between them and Daniel, Enoch and 
Psalms of Solomon is instructive. Their interest is in the ethical 
training of the individual on earth. 

There was nothing in their general position to make them in- 
hospitable to ethical conceptions of the future life, as is shown by 
the fact that so soon as the Egyptian-Creek idea of immortality 
made itself felt in Jewish circles it was adopted by the author of 
the Wisdom of Solomon; but prior to the 1st century B.C. it does 
not appear in the Wisdom literature, and the nationalistic dogma of 
resurrection is not mentioned in it at all. Everywhere, except in 
the Wisdom of Solomon, the Underworld is the old Hebrew inane 
abode of all the dead, and therefore a negligible quantity for the 
moralist. Nor do the sages go beyond the old position in their 
ethical theory: they have no philosophical discussion of the basis 
of the moral life; their standard of good conduct is existing law and 
custom; their motive for right-doing is individual eudaemonistic, 
Dot the good of society, or loyalty to an ideal of righteousness for its 
Own sake, but advantage for one's self. They do not attempt a 
psychological explanation of the origin of human sin; bad thought 
{yiier ra\ Ecclus. xxxvti. 3) is accepted as a fact, or its entrance into 
the mind of man Is attributed (Wisd. ii. 24 )to the devil (the serpent 
of Gen. iii.). In fine, they eschew theories and confine themselves to 
visible facts. 

It is in keeping with their whole point of view that they claim no 
divine inspiration for themselves: they speak with authority, but 
their authority is that of reason and conscience. It is this definitely 
rational tone that constitutes the differentia of the teaching of the 
sages. For the old external law they substitute the internal law: 
conscience is recognized as the power that approves or condemns 
conduct (torf. Ecclus. xiv. 2; 9tmttm$, Wisd. Sol. avii. 11). 
Wisdom is represented as the result of human reflection, and thus as 
the guide in all the affairs of life. It is also sometimes conceived of 
as divine (in Wisd. of Sol. and in parts of Prov. and Ecclus., but not 
in Eccles.), in accordance with the Hebrew view, which regards all 
human powers as bestowed directly by God; it is identified with the 
fear of God (Job xxviii. 28; Prov. i. 7; Ecclus. xv. 1 ff.) and even 
with the Jewish law (Ecclus. mriv. 23). But m such passages it 
remains fundamentally human; no attempt is made to define the 
limits of the human and the divine in its composition — it is all human 
and all divine. The personification of wisdom reaches almost the 
verge of hypostasis: in Job xxviii. it is the most precious of things; 
in Prov. viii. it is the companion of God in His creative work, itself 
created before the world: in Ecclus. xxiv. the nationalistic con- 
ception is set forth: wisdom, created in the beginning, compasses 
heaven and earth seeking rest and finds at last its dwelling-place in 
Jerusalem (and so substantially 4th Maccabees); the height of 
sublimity is reached in Wisd. of Sol. vii., where wisdom, the bright- 
ness of the everlasting light, is the source of all that is noblest in 
human life. 

Greek influence appears clearly in the sages' attitude toward the 
phenomena of fife. God, they hold, is the sole creator and ruler 
of the world; yet man is free, autonomous— God is not responsible 
for men's faults (Ecclus. xv. 11.20); divine wisdom is visible in the 
works of nature and in beasts and man (Job xxxviii. f.; Pss. viii., 
exxxtx.). On the. other hand, there is recognition of the inequalities 
and miseries of life (fob; Ecclus. xxxiii. 11 ff., xl. 1-1 1; Eccles.), 
and. as a result, scepticism as to a moral government of the world. 
la Job, which b probably the earliest of the philosophical books, 
the question whether God is just is not definitely answered : the 
prologue affirms that the sufferings of good men, suggested by the 
sneer of Satan, are intended to demonstrate the reality of human 
goodness; elsewhere (v. 17, xxxiii. 17 ff.) they 'are regarded as 
disciplinary; the Yahweh speeches declare man's inability to 
■udersiand God's dealings; the prosperity of the wicked is nowhere 
explained. The ethical manuals, Prov. (except xxx. 2-4) and Ecclus., 



scepticism (in the original form of Ecclesiastes) is deep-seated and 
far-reaching: though he is a theist, he sees no justice in the world, 
and looks on human life as meaningless and resultless. For him 
death is the end-all, and it is against some such view as this that the 
argument in Wisd. of Sol. ii.-v. is directed. With the establishment 
of the belief in ethical immortality this phase of scepticism vanished 
from the Jewish world, not, however, without leaving behind it 
works of enduring value. 

In all the Wisdom books virtue is conceived of as conterminous 
with knowledge. Salvation is attained not by believing but by the 
perception of what is right: wisdom is resident in the soul and 
identical with the thought of man. Yet, with this adoption of the 
Greek point of view, the tone and spirit of this literature remain 
Hebrew. 

The writings of the sages are all anonymous. No single man 
appeals as creator of the tendency of thought they represent; 
they are the product of a period extending over several centuries, 
but they form an intellectual unity, and presuppose a great body 
of thinkers. The sages may be regarded as the beginners of a 
universal religion: they felt the need of permanent principles 
of life, and were able to set aside to some extent the local features 
of the current creed. That they did not found a universal 
religion was due, in part at least, to the fact that the time was 
not ripe for such a faith; but they left material that was taken 
up into later systems. 

Literature.— K. Siegfried, PHUo von Alexandria (1875) ; 1. 
Drummond, Philo Judatus (1888); H. Bois, Origines d. I. pkil. 
JudhhAkx. (1890): T. K. Chevne. Job and SoL (1887) and Jem. 
Reiig. Life, &c. (1898). (C. H. T.*) 

WISE. HENRY AUXAHDBR (1806-1876), American poli- 
tician and soldier, was born at Drummondtown (or Acooniac), 
Accomack county, Virginia, on the 3rd of December 1806. 
He graduated from Washington (now Washington and Jefferson) 
College, Pennsylvania, in 1825, and began to practise law in 
NashviDe, Tennessee, in 1828. He returned to Accomack 
county, Va., in 1830, and served in the National House of Repre- 
sentatives in 1833-1837 as an anti-nufiification Democrat, tut 
broke with the party on the withdrawal of the deposits from the 
United States Bank, and was re-elected to Congress in 1837, 
1839 and 1841 as a Whig, and in 1843 as a Tyler Democrat. 
From 1844 to 1847 he was minister to Brazil In 1850*1851 
he was a member of the convention to revise the Virginia con- 
stitution, and advocated white manhood suffrage, internal 
improvements, and the abolition of imprisonment for debt 
In 1855 he was elected governor of the state (1856-1860) as a 
Democrat. John Brown's raid occurred during his term, and 
Wise refused to reprieve Brown after sentence had been passed. 
He strongly opposed secession, but finally voted for the Virginia 
ordinance, was commissioned brigadier-general in the Confederate 
army and served throughout the war. He died at Richmond, 
Va., on the 12th of September 1876. He wrote Seven Decades 
of the Union 1700-1860 (1872). 

His son, John Sergeant Wise (b. 1846), United States 
attorney for the Eastern District of Virginia in 1881-1883, and 
a member of the National House of Representatives in 1883-1885, 
wrote The End of an Era (1899) and Recollections of Thirteen 
Presidents (1006). 

See the Life of H. A. Wise, by his grandson, B. H. Wise (1899). 

WISE, ISAAC MATER (18 10-1000), American Jewish theo- 
logian, was born in Bohemia, but his career is associated with 
the organization of the Jewish reform movement in the United 
States. From the moment of his arrival in America (1846) bis 
influence made itself felt. In 1854 he was appointed rabbi at 
Cincinnati. Some of his actions roused considerable opposition. 
Thus he was instrumental in compiling a new prayer-book, 
which he designed as the " American Rite " (Minhag America). 
He was opposed to political Zionism, and the Montreal Con* 
ference (1897), at his instigation, passed resolutions disapproving 
of the attempt to establish a Jewish state, and affirming that the 
Jewish Messianic hope pointed to a great universal brotherhood. 
In keeping with thi&denial of a Jewish nationality, Wise believed 
in national varieties of Judaism, and strove to harmonise the 
synagogue with focal circumstances and sympathies, la 1848 



_L 



752 



WISEMAN, CARDINAL 



he conceived the idea of a union, and after a campaign lasting 
a quarter of a century the Union of American Hebrew Congrega- 
tions was founded (1873) in Cincinnati. As a corollary of this 
be founded in 1875 the " Hebrew Union College " in the same 
city, and this institution has since trained a large number of 
the rabbis of America. Wise also organized various general 
assemblies of rabbis, and in 1889 established the Central Con- 
ference of American Rabbis. He was the first to introduce 
family pews in synagogues, and in many other ways " occidental- 
izcd " Jewish worship. 
See D. Philipson, The Reform Movement in Judaism (1907). (I. A.) 
WISEMAN. NICHOLAS PATRICK STEPHEN (1802-1865), 
English cardinal, was born at Seville on the 2nd of August 1802, 
the child of Anglo-Irish parents recently settled in Spain for 
business purposes. On his father's death in 1805 he was brought 
to Waterford, and in 18 10 he was sent to Ushaw College, near 
Durham, where he was educated until the age of sixteen, when 
he proceeded to the English College in Rome, reopened in 1818 
after having been closed by the Revolution for twenty years. 
He graduated doctor of theology with distinction in 182s, and 
was ordained priest in the following year. He was apppointed 
vice-rector of the English College in 1827, and rector in 1828 
when not yet twenty-six years of age. This office he held until 
1840. From the first a devoted student and antiquary, he 
devoted much time to the examination of oriental MSS. in the 
Vatican library, and a first volume, entitled Horae Syriacae, 
published in 1827, gave promise of a great scholar. Leo XII. 
apppointed him curator of the Arabic MSS. in the Vatican, and 
professor of oriental languages in the Roman university. At 
this date he had close relations, personal and by correspondence, 
with Mai, Bunsen, Burgess (bishop of Salisbury), Tholuck and 
Kluge. His student life was, however, broken by the pope's 
command to preach to the English in Rome; and a course of his 
lectures, On the Connexion between Science and Revealed Religion, 
deservedly attracted much attention, his general thesis being that 
whereas scientific teaching has repeatedly been thought to 
disprove Christian doctrine, further investigation has shown 
that a reconstruction is possible. He visited England in 1835- 
1836, and delivered lectures on the principles and main doctrines 
of Roman Catholicism 'in the Sardinian Chapel, Lincoln's Inn 
Fields, and in the church at Moorfields, now pulled down. 
Their effect was considerable; and at Pusey's request Newman 
reviewed them in the British Critic (December 1836), treating 
them for the most part with sympathy as a triumph over popular 
Protestantism. To another critic, who had taken occasion to 
point out the resemblance between Catholic and pagan cere- 
monies, Wiseman replied, boldly admitting the likeness, and 
maintaining that it could be shown equally well to exist between 
Christian and heathen doctrines. In 1836 he founded the 
Dublin Review, partly to infuse into the lethargic English Catholics 
higher ideals of their own religion and some enthusiasm for the 
papacy, and partly to enable him to deal with the progress of the 
Oxford Movement, in which he was keenly interested. At this 
date he was already distinguished as an accomplished -scholar 
and critic, able to converse fluently in half-a-dozen languages, 
and well informed on most questions of scientific, artistic or 
antiquarian interest. In the winter of 1838 he was visited in 
Rome by Macaulay, Manning and Gladstone. An article by 
him on the Donatist schism appearing in the Dublin Review in 
July 1839 made a great impression in Oxford, Newman and others 
seeing the force of the analogy between Donatists and Anglicans. 
Some words he quoted from St Augustine influenced Newman pro- 
foundly: " Quapropter securus. judicat orbis terrarum bonos 
non esse qui se dividunt ab orbe terrarum." And preaching at 
the opening of St Mary's church, Derby, in the same year, 
he anticipated Newman's argument on religious development, 
published six years later. In 1840 he was consecrated bishop, 
And sent to England as coadjutor to Bishop Walsh, vicar-apostolic 
of the Central district, and was also appointed president of Oscott 
College near Birmingham. Oscott, under his presidency, became 
a centre for English Catholics, where he was also visited by many 
distinguished men, including foreigners, and non-Catholics. The 



Oxford converts (1845 and later) added considerably to Wise- 
man's responsibilities, as many of them found themselves wholly 
without means, while the old Catholic body looked on the new- 
comers with distrust. It was by his advice that Newman and his 
companions spent some time in Rome before undertaking clerical 
work in England. Shortly after the accession of Pius IX. 
Wiseman was appointed temporarily vicar-apostolic of the 
London district, the appointment becoming permanent in 
February 1849. On his arrival from Rome in 1847 he acted 
as informal diplomatic envoy from the pope, to ascertain from 
the government what support England was likely to give in 
carrying out the liberal policy with which Pius inaugurated his 
reign. In response Lord Minto was sent to Romeas "an authentic 
organ of the British Government," but the policy in question 
proved abortive. Residing in London in Golden Square, Wiseman 
threw himself into his new duties with many-sided activity, 
working especially for the reclamation of Catholic criminals and 
for the restoration of the lapsed poor to the practice of their 
religion. He was zealous for the establishment of religious 
communities, both of men and women, and for the holding of 
retreats and missions. He preached (4th July 1848) at the 
opening of St George's, Southwark, an occasion unique in 
England since the Reformation, 14 bishops and 240 priests being 
present, and six religious orders of men being represented. The 
progress of Catholicism was undeniable, but yet Wiseman found 
himself steadily opposed by a minority among his own clergy, 
who disliked his Ultramontane ideas, his " Romanizing And in- 
novating zeal," especially in regard to the introduction of sacred 
images into the churches and the use of devotions to the Blessed 
Virgin and the Blessed Sacrament, hitherto unknown among 
English Catholics. In July 1850 he heard of the pope's intention 
to create him a cardinal, and he took this to mean that he was 
to be permanently recalled to Rome. Bat on his arrival there 
he ascertained that a part of the pope's plan for restoring a 
diocesan hierarchy in England was that he himself should return 
to England as cardinal and archbishop of Westminster. The 
papal brief establishing the hierarchy was dated 29th September 
1850, and on 7th October Wiseman wrote a pastoral, dated 
" from out of the Flaminian Gate " — a form diplomatically 
correct, but of bombastic tone for Protestant ears — in which 
he spoke enthusiastically, if also a little pompously, of the 
" restoration of Catholic England to its orbit in the ecclesiastical 
firmament." Wiseman travelled slowly to England, round by 
Vienna; and when he reached London (nth November) the 
whole country was ablaze with indignation at the " papal 
aggression," which was misunderstood to imply a new and 
unjustifiable claim to territorial rule. Some indeed feared that 
his life was endangered by the violence of popular feeling. But 
Wiseman displayed calmness and courage, and immediately 
penned an admirable Appeal to the English People (a pamphlet of 
over 30 pages), in which he explained the nature of the pope's 
action, and argued that the admitted principle of toleration 
included leave to establish a diocesan hierarchy; and in his con- 
cluding paragraphs he effectively contrasted that dominion 
over Westminster, which he was taunted with claiming, with his 
duties towards the poor Catholics resident there, with which alone 
he was really concerned. A course of lectures at St George's, 
Southwark, further moderated the storm. In July 1852 he pre- 
sided at Oscott over the first provincial synod of Westminster, at 
which Newman preached his sermon on the " Second Spring "; 
and at this date Wiseman's dream of the rapid conversion of 
England to the ancient faith seemed not incapable of realization. 
But many difficulties with his own people shortly beset his path, 
due largely to the suspicions aroused by his evident preference 
for the ardent Roman zeal of the converts, and especially of 
Manning, to the dull and cautious formalism of the old Catholics. 
The year 1854 was marked by his presence in Rome at the 
definition of the dogma of the immaculate conception of the 
Blessed Virgin (8th December), and by the publication of his 
historical romance, Fabida, a tale of the Church of the Cata- 
combs, which had a very wide circulation and was translated into 
ten languages. In 1855 Wiseman applied for a coadjutor, and 



WISHART— WISLICENUS 



753 



George Errington, bishop of Plymouth, his friend since boyhood, 
was appointed, with the title of archbishop of Trcbiaond. Two 
years later Manning was appointed provost of Westminster 
and he established in Bayswater his community of the " Oblatea 
of St Charles." All Wiseman's later years were darkened by 
Errington's conscientious but implacable hostility to Manning, 
and to himself in so far as he was supposed to be acting under 
Manning's influence. The story of the estrangement, which was 
largely a matter of temperament, is fully told in Ward's biography. 
Ultimately, in July i860, Errington was deprived by the pope 
of his coadjutorship with right of succession, and he retired to 
Prior Park, near Bath, where he died in 1886. In the summer 
of 1858 Wiseman paid a visit to Ireland, where, us a cardinal of 
Irish race, be was received with enthusiasm. His speeches, 
sermons and lectures, delivered during his tour, were printednn a 
volume of 400 pages, and show an extraordinary power of rising 
to the occasion and of speaking with sympathy and tact. Wise- 
man was able to use considerable influence with English poli- 
ticians, partly because in his day English Catholics were wavering 
in their historical allegiance to the Liberal party. As the director 
of votes thus doubtful, he was in a position to secure concessions 
that bettered the position of Catholics in regard to poor schools, 
reformatories and workhouses, and in the status of their army 
chaplains. Inx863,addretsmgtheOohoUcCkingrcmatMalines, 
he stated that since 1830 the number of priests in England had 
increased from 434 to 124?, and of convents of women from 16 
to 162, while there were 55 religious houses of men in 1863 and 
none in 1830. The last two years of his life were troubled by 
illness and by controversies in which he found himself, under 
Manning's influence, compelled to adopt a policy less liberal than 
that which had been his in earlier years. Thus he had to con- 
demn the Association for the Promotion of the Unity of Christen- 
dom, with which he had shown some sympathy in its inception 
in 1857; and to forbid Catholic parents to send their sons to 
Oxford or Cambridge, though at an earlier date he had hoped 
(with Newman) that at Oxford at least a college or hall might 
be assigned to them. ' But in other respects his last years were 
cheered by marks of general regard and admiration, in which 
non-Catholics joined; and after his death (16th February 1865) 
there was an extraordinary demonstration of popular respect as 
his body was taken from St Mary's, Moorfields, to the cemetery 
at Kensal Green, where it was intended that it should rest only 
until a more fitting place could be found in a Roman Ca t h o lic 
cathedral church of Westminster. On the 30th of January 1007 
the body was removed with great ceremony from Kensal Green 
and reburied in the crypt of the new cathedral, where it lies 
beneath a Gothic altar tomb, with a recumbent effigy of the 
archbishop in full pontificals. 

Wiseman was undoubtedly an eminent Englishman, and one of 
the most learned men of his time. He was the friend and corre- 
spondent of many foreigners of distinction, among whom may be 
* DoHinger, Lamennais, Montalembcrt and Napoleon III. As 



a writer he was apt to be turgid and prolix, and there 
what un-English element of ostentation in his manner. But his 
accomplishments and ability were such as would have secured for 
him influence and prominence in any age of the Church; and 
being highly gifted tntellectualty and morally, he was 
1 by those specially human qualities which command the 
._*.,p^ of all students of life and character. He combined with 
the principles known as Ultramontane no little liberality of view 
in nutters ecclesiastical. He insisted on a poetical interpretation 
of the Church's liturgy; and while strenuously maintaining her 
Divine commission to teach faith and morals, be regarded the 
Church as in other respects a learner; and he advocated a policy 
of conciliation with the world, and an alliance with the best tendencies 
of contemporary thought. It was, ta his judgment, Quite in accord- 
ance with the genius of the Catholic Church that she should con- 
tinuously assimilate all that is worthy in the crviKxation around. 

See the biography by Wilfrid Ward. The Lift and Times of Cardinal 
Wiseman (2 vols.. 1897; fifth and cheaper edition, 1900). 

(A. W. Hu.) 

WISHART, OBORGB (c. 1513-1546), Scottish reformer, born 
about 1513, belonged to a younger branch of the Wisharts of 
Pitarrow. His early life has been the subject of many conjectures; 
but apparently he graduated MA., probably at King's College, 
Aberdeen, and taught as a schoolmaster at Montrose. Accused 



of heresy in 1538, he fled to England, where a similar charge was 
brought against him at Bristol in the following year. In 1539 
or 1540 be started for Germany and Switzerland, and returning 
to England became a member of Corpus Christ! College, Cam- 
bridge. In 1543 he went to Scotland in the train of a Scottish 
embassy which had come to London to consider the treaty of 
marriage between Prince Edward and the infant queen of Soots. 
There has been much controversy whether he was the Wishart 
who in April 1544 approached the English government with a 
proposal for getting rid of Cardinal Beaton. Roman Catholic 
historians such as Belksheim, and Anglicans like Canon Dixon, 
have accepted the identification, while Fronde does not dispute 
it and Dr Gairdner avoids committing himself (Utters ami Pipers 
of Henry VIII. voL xix. pt. L, Introd. pp. xxvii-xrvtii). There 
was another George Wishart, bailie of Dundee, who alUedhhnsett 
with Beaton's murderers; and Sir John Wishart (d. 1576), 
afterwards a Scottish judge, has also claims to the doubtful 
distinction. Sir John was certainly a friend of Creighton, laird 



of Branston, who was deeply implicated in the plot, but Creighton 
also befriended the reformer during his evangelical labours in 
Midlothian. The case against the reformer is not proven and is 
not probable. 

His career aa a preacher began in 1544* *nd the story has been 
told in glowing colours by Ins disciple John Knox, lie went 
from place to place in peril of his life denouncing the errors of 
Rome and the abuses in the church at Montrose, Dundee, Ayr, 
in Kyle, at Perth, Edinburgh, Lehh, Haddington and elsewhere. 
At Onntston, in December 1545, he was seised by the eari of 
Bothwefl, and transferred by order of the privy council to Edin- 
burgh castle on January 19, 1546. Thence he was handed over 
to Cardinal Beaton, 'who had him burnt at St Andrews on 
March x. Foxe and Knox attribute to him a prophecy of the 
death of the Cardinal, who was assassinated on May 99 follow- 
ing, partly at any rate in revenge for Wishart's death. 

Knox's Hiss\\ Reg. P.C. Scotland; Foxe't Acts and Monuments; 
Hay Fleming's Martyrs and Confessors of St Andrews; Cramood's 
Truth about Wishart (1898) ; and Did. of Nat. Biogr. vol. lxii. (248-251, 
*53-*54)- (A. F. PJ 

WISHAW, a municipal and police burgh of Lanarkshire, 
Scotland. Pop. (ioot) 20,873. K occupies the face of a hfll a 
short distance south of the South Calder and about 2 m. N. of the 
Clyde, 15 m. E.S.E. of Glasgow by the Caledonian railway. It 
owes its importance to the development of the coal and iron 
industry, and was created a police burgh in 1S55. It was ex- 
tended to include the villages of Cambusnethan and Craigneuk 
in 1874. The chief public buildings arc the town -hall, Victoria 
hall, the public library and the parish hall, and there is also a 
public park. 

WISLICENUS, JOHANVES (1835-1902), German chemist, 
was born on the 24th of June 1835 at Klcin-Eichstedt, in Thu- 
ringia. In 1853 he entered Halle University, but in a few 
months emigrated to America with his father. For a time he 
acted as assistant to Professor E. N. Horsford at Harvard, and 
in 1855 was appointed lecturer at the Mechanics' Institute in 
New York. Returning to Europe in 1 856, be continued his studies 
at Zurich University, where nine years later he became professor 
of chemistry. This post he held till 1872. He then succeeded 
A. F. L. Strecker in the chair of chemistry at Wiirzburg, and 
in 1885, on the death of A. W. H. Kolbe, was appointed to the 
same professorship at Leipzig, where he died on the 6th of 
December 1002. As an original investigator he devoted himself 
almost exclusively to organic chemistry, and especially to stereo- 
chemistry. His work on the lactic acids cleared up many 
difficulties concerning the combination of acid and alcoholic 
properties in oxy-acids in general, and resulted in the discovery of 
two substances differing in physical properties though possessing 
a structure of proved chemical identity. To this phenomenon, 
then noticed for the first time, he gave the name of " geometrical 
isomerism." So far back as 1869, before the publication of the 
doctrine of J. H. van't Hon* and J. A. Le Bel, he expressed the 
opinion that the ordinary constitutional formulae did not afford 
an adequate explanation of certain carbon compounds, and 



J 



75$ 



WITCHCRAFT 



In the first of these three periods ire find (i) the conception 
of the malefico, who, in common with her male counterpart, 
uses poison, spells and waxen images, produces tempests, works 
by means of the evil eye and is regarded as the cause of impotence, 



a feature which continually called the attention of theologians 
and jurists to the question of magic by the problems raised by 
suits for divorce or nullity of marriage, (2) Side by side with 
her, w« find, this time without a male counterpart, the striga, 
frequently embodying also the ideas of the lamia and larva; 
originally she is a female demon, in bird form (and in many parts 
of the world female demons are specially malignant), who flies 
by night, kills children or even handsome young men, in order 
to eat them, assumes animal form, sometimes by means of an 
ointment, or has an animal familiar, rides on a besom, a piece of 
wood or an animal, and is somffimrB brought into connexion 
with the souls of the dead. This latter feature arises from the 
gradual fusion of the belief in the striga, the Unholde, with the 
kindly suite of Frau Holde, the souls for whom the tabulae 
fortunae were spread. The flight through the air Is so common 
a feature In the savage creed that the demon-idea of the striga 
in Europe can hardly be a genuine folk-belief; or, if it is, it 
must have existed side by side with a similar witch-belief, of 
which no traces seem to exist in the earlier literature. The same 
remark applies to belief in transformation. Although the develop- 
ment of tip sexual element is mainly of later date and con- 
temporaneous with the evolution of the Sabbath idea, the eon- 
eubitus daemenum was certainly not unknown to the period 
before 800. This intrusion of the incubus in the domain of 
witchcraft was probably due to the attitude of the church 
towards magic. 

Ecclesiastical and Civil Law.— For the attitude of the church 
to witchcraft there are three factors to be considered: (1) the 
Biblical recognition of its reality; (2) the universal belief in 
demons and magic; and (3) the identification of these demons 
with heathen deities. The orthodox view fluctuates between 
the theory that witchcraft is idolatry, a recognition of real powers, 
and that it is disobedience, a superstitious following of non- 
existent gods. The Biblical conception of a witch is a person 
who deals with familiar spirits (Lev. xx. so), and the express 
provision that a witch should not be suffered to live (Ex. xxii. 
18) could have left no doubt that the crime was a real one in 
the Mosaic law. Although the familiar plays but a small part 
m tins early period, we find that the church early came to the 
conclusion that witchcraft depended on a compact with demons; 
m the synod of Elvira (a.d. 306) it was pronounced to be one of 
the three canonical sins— apostasy— and punished by the refusal 
of communion, even on the death-bed. Augustine lays down 
(De doct. chr. n. xx.) that witchcraft depends on a pact with the 
devil; at Worms in a.d. 820 the Frankish bishops declared that 
Che devil sided both sexes to prepare love potions, to cause storms 
end to abstract milk, fruits of the field, ftc. 

It must not, however, be supposed that all kinds of witchcraft 
were equally recognized. The inmissores Umfestatum and the 
poisoners by magical means were commonly recognised as real, 
but the striga was usually regarded as a pure superstition. An 
Irish synod (c. a.d. 800) pronounces a Christian to be anathema, 
who ventures to believe ra the possibility of flight through the 
air and blood-sucking; Stephen of Hungary (007-X038) like- 
wise distinguishes the matcfica from the striga; Regino of 
Prttm {c. 006) concludes that the flight by night with the devil 
and the goddess Diana is a delusion, the work of the devil. 
Burchard of Worms (d. 1025) prescribes two years' penance 
for the belief that the Unholde kiD Christians, cook them and eat 
their hearts, which they replace by a piece of wood, and then 
wake them. Agobard and others even express doubts as to the 
reality of weather-making. For those who took this view, 
end even for others who, like John of Damascus, accepted the 
striga, a mild attitude, in strong contrast to the later persecutions, 
was the accepted policy. The Synod of Reisbach (700) demands 
penance for witchcraft, but no punishment m this life. John 
of Damascus, Agobard, John of Salisbury and Burchard are 
equally mild. 



For the church witchcraft was a canonical sin, or superstition; 
for the civil law it was a violation of the civil rights of others, 
so far as real results were produced. Consequently we find the 
legal distinction between the malefica and the striga is equally 
marked. The Frankish and Alemannish laws of aj>. 500-600 
accept the former but regard the latter as mere superstition. 
The Lex Salica indeed punished the striga as a murderess, but 
only exacted wergeld. Rothar forbade judges to kill the striga, 
and Charlemagne even punished the belief in them. The 
Alemanni (a.d. 600) forbade private torture of women suspected 
of witchcraft or strigjsm. But although witchcraft was criminal, 
and we find occasional laws against sortiarias (Westfranks, 
A-D. 873), or expulsions (from Pomerania, 1x24, &c), in this 
period the crime is unimportant save where malefieium is com- 
bined with treason and the person of the king is aimed at. 

Further Development.— In. the second period (1230-1430) 
we have to deal with two factors of fundamental importance: 
(1) the elaboration of demonology end allied ideas by the schol- 
astics, and (2) the institution of the Inquisition to deal with the 
rising flood of heresy. At the beginning of this era the prevalent 
view of the striga seems fcfhave been that she really existed; 
Caesar of Heisterbach (c. 1225) recognizes the female monster 
who kills children; William of Paris (c. 1230) agrees that 
lamiae and strigae eat children, but they are allied to the dommae 
sMctentM; that they are real women is a foolish belief. Scholastic 
ingenuity, however, soon disposed of rationalistic objections 
to human flights through the air; the ride of disembodied 
spirits, led by the devil, Diana, Herodias (the Aradia of modem 
Italy), Arc, became the assemblies of witches to do homage to 
the devu. But this fusion was not the work of the scholastics 
alone; for the church, witchcraft had long consisted in the 
recognition of demons. The new sects, especially the Cathars, 
whohdd that themfluenceof the devil had perverted the teachings 
of Christianity, were, like the early Christiana, the object of 
unfounded charges, in this case of worship of the devil, this 
naturally led to the belief that they were given to witchcraft. 

From the 7th century onwards women and priests figure largely 
in the accusations of witchcraft, the latter because their office 
made the canonical offence more serious, the former because 
love potions, and especially impetentia ex makficio, are the 
weapons of the female sex. With the rise and development of 
the belief in the heretics' Sabbath, which first appears early 
in the nth century, another sexual element—the eoucubUus 
daeme num bega n to play its part, and soon the predominance 
of woman in magic was assured. In 1250 certain bishops 
gave to the Dominican Etienne de Bourbon (Stephanus de 
Borbone, d. c xa6x) a description of the Sabbath; and twenty- 
five years later the Inquisition took cognisance of the first case 
of this kind; from the 14th century onwards the idea was 
indissolubly connected with witchcraft. 

In the first half of this second period, witchcraft was still 
superstition for the canon law, a civil wrong for the secular 
law; later, although these ideas still persisted, all magic was 
held to be heresy; its reality and heretical nature was expressly 
maintained by Thomas Aquinas. Already in x 258 the inquisitors 
took cognisance of magic as heresy, and from 1320 onwards 
there was a great increase in the number of cases. At first the 
witch was handed over to the secular arm for execution, either 
as an obstinate heretic or as the worker of evil magic; later 
it was found necessary to make provision for the numerous cases 
in which the offender abjured; it was decided that repentance 
due to fear did not release the witch from the consequences of 



Towards the end of the second period the jurisdiction passed 
in France from the spiritual to the secular courts by a decision 
of the parlement of Paris in 1301. The inquisitors did not, 
however, resign their work, but extended their sphere of opera- 
tions; the great European persecution from 1434 to 1447 was 
ecdesiastica] as well as secular. In the third period (1430 
onwards) the opening of which Is marked by this attempt to 
root out witchcraft, we find that the work of the scholastics 
and iaquisitett has resulted in the complete fusion of originally 



WITCHCRAFT 



distinct ideas and the crystallixaUon of our modem idea of 
witch. To the methods of the inquisitors must be ascribed in 
great part the spread of these conceptions amongst the people; 
for the Malleus Maleficarum or Inquisitor's Manual (1489), 
following closely on the important bull Summis desiderantes 
ejections (Innocent VIII., 1434), gave them a handbook from 
which they plied their tortured victims with questions and 
were able to extract such confessions as they desired; by a 
strange perversion these admissions, wrung from their victims 
by rack or thumb-screw, were described as voluntary. 

The subsequent history of witchcraft may be treated in less 
detail. In England the trials were most numerous in the 17 th 
century; but the absence of judicial torture made the cases 
proporticnately less numerous than they were on the European 
continent. One of the most famous witch-finders was Matthew 
Hopkins, himself hanged for witchcraft after a career of some 
three years. Many of his methods were not far removed from 
actual torture; he pricked the body of the witch to find anaes- 
thetic areas; other signs were the inability to shed tears, 
or repeat the Lord's Prayer, the practice of walkmg'backwarda 
or against the sun, throwing the hair loose, intertwining the 
fingers, Ac. Witches were also weighed against the Bible, or 
thrown into water, the thumbs and toes tied crosswise, and 
those who did not sink were adjudged guilty; a very common 
practice was to shave the witch, perhaps to discover insensible 
spots, but more probably because originally the familiar spirit 
was supposed to ding to the hair. The last English trial for 
witchcraft was in 1712, when Jane Wenham was convicted, but 
not executed. Occasional cases of lynching continue to occur, 
even at the present day. 

In Scotland trials, accompanied by torture r were very frequent 
in the 17th century. A famous witch-finder was Kincaid. 
The last trial and execution took place in 1722. 

In New England there was a remarkable outburst of fanaticism 
—the famous Salem witchcraft delusion— in r6gi-i6oa;but many 
of the prisoners were not convicted and some of the convicts 
received the governor's pardon (see Salem, Mass.). 

On the continent of Europe the beginning of the 16th century 
saw the trial of witchcraft cases taken oat of the hands of the 
Inquisition in France and Germany, and the influence of the 
Malleus became predominant in these countries. Among famous 
continental trials may be mentioned that of a woman named 
Votsin in 1660, who was burnt alive for poisoning, in connexion 
with the Marquise de Brinvilliers. Trials and executions did 
not finally cease till the end of the 18th century. In Spain a 
woman was burnt in 1781 at Seville by the Inquisition; the 
secular courts condemned a girl to decapitation in 1782; in 
Germany an execution took place in Posen in 1703. In South 
America and Mexico witch-burning seems to have lasted till 
well on into the second half of the 10th century, the latest 
instance apparently being in 1*88 in Pent. 

The total number of victims of the witch persecutions is 
variously estimated at from 100,000 to several millions. If 
it is true that Benedict Carpzov (1595*16166) passed sentence on 
20,000 victims, the former figure is undoubtedly too low. 

Rise of the Critical Spirit.— \t is commonly assumed and has 
been asserted by Leery that the historical evidence for witch- 
craft is vast and varied. It is true that a vast amount of authority 
for the belief in witchcraft may be quoted; but the testimony 
for the occurrence of marveb is small in quantity, If we except 
the valueless declaration of the victims of torture; testimony 
as to the pathological side of witchcraft is abundant, but affords 
no proof of the erroneous inferences drawn from the genuine 
phenomena. If this uncritical attitude is found in our own day, 
it is not surprising that the rationalistic spirit was long in making 
its appearance and slow in gaining the victory over superstition. 
From the 15th century onwards the old view that transformation 
and transportation were not realities but delusions, caused 
directly by the devil, began to gather force. Among the import- 
ant works may be mentioned Johann Weier*s De Praestigiis 
Daemon** (1563), Reginald Scott's (c. 1 538-1 500) Discovery 
of Witchcraft (1584) which was ordered to be burnt by King 



7S7 

James I., who had himself replied to ft in his Daemonohgte 
(i597)> Balthasar Better's Betooverde Wertld (1691), which, 
though it went farther in the direction of scepticism, had less 
influence than Friedrich v. Spec's Caettio crindnalis (1631). 
In France Jean Uvier defended the rationalistic view, and 
Jean Bodin demanded that he should be sent to the stake for 
his temerity. 

Psychology of Witchcraft.— Although at the height' of the witch 
persecution torture wrung from innocent victims valueless 
confessions which are at best evidence that long-continued 
agony of body may be instrumental in provoking hallucinations, 
there can be no doubt that witches commonly, like the magician 
in lower planes of culture, firmly believe in their own powers, 
and the causes of this seem to be not merely subjective, (x) 
Ignorance of the effects of suggestion leads both the witch and 
others to regard as supernormal effects which are really due to 
the victim's belief in the possibility of witchcraft. This applies 
especially to cases of " ligature. " (2) Telepathy (?.».) seems in 
some cases to play a part in establishing the witch's reputation; 
some evidence has been produced that hypnotism at a distance 
is possible, and an account of her powers given by a French 
witch to Dr Gibottea* suggests that this element cannot be 
neglected in appraising the evidence for witchcraft. (3) Whatever 
be the real explanation of the belief In poltergeists fa.t.) and 
" physical phenomena " ($.».), the belief in them rests on a very 
different basis from that of the belief in lycanthropy; exaggera- 
tion and credulity alone will not explain how these phenomena 
come to be associated with witchcraft. On the other hand, 
subjective causes played their part in causing the witch to bdievf 
in herself. (4) Auto-suggestion may produce hallucinations 
and delusions in otherwise sane subjects; and for those who do 
not question the reality of witchcraft this must operate power- 
fully. {5) The descriptions of witches show that in many cases 
their sanity was more than questionable; trance and hysteria 
also played their part. (6) It is uncertain to what extent drugs 
and salves have helped to cause hallucination; but that they had 
some share seems certain, though modern experimenters have 
been led to throw doubt on the alleged effects of some .of the 
drugs; here too, however, the effects of suggestion must be 
reckoned with; we do not associate the use of tobacco with 
hallucinations, but it wss employed to produce them in Haiti 
in the same way as hemp among the Bantu of the present day. 
(7) Hallucinations occurring under torture must have tended 
to convince bystanders and victims alike, no less than the accept- 
ance of suggestions, positive and negative. 

As regards the nature of the ideas accepted as a result of 
suggestion or auto-suggestion, they were on the one hand derived, 
as we have seen, from ecclesiastical and especially scholastic 
sources; but beneath these elements is a stratum of popular 
belief, derived in the main perhaps from pagan sources, for to 
this day in Italy witchcraft is known as la vecchia tdtgionc, 
and has been handed down in an unbroken tradition for countless 
generations. 

Bibliography.— For a abort list of general works and a tope- 

pp. 378-438; O. L. Burr in Papers of American Hist. Ass. hr. 237- 
266, For classical time* see Darenberg a and Saglio, Dfctiomuwe 
des antigniUs. *.». " Magia." For Scotland, see C. K. Sharpe, 
Historical Account, pp. 255-262: J. Ferguson, Witchcraft Literature, 
reprint from publications of Edinburgh Bibliographical I See. , 11L 
For New England see J art in Winsor in Proc. Am. Ant. Sac. (Oct. 1 895) 
and G. H. Moore in do. -M.S. v. 245*273. For France, see R. Yye- 
Plessts. Essai d'une bibliographic francaise de la sorccUene. For 
Italy, see C. G- Leland, Etruscan-Roman Remains, Legends of Florence, 
and Aradia; G. Cavagnari, // Romano dei Setttmant; FolMore, 
viiL 1-9T Nieeforo and Sigbele, La MaU Vita a Rama; E. N. Roue, 
Naples in the Nineties. For Africa, see R« E. Dennett, Seeen Years 
among the Pjort, Folklore of the Fjort and A (the Bach of the Black 
Man's Mind. For the American negro, see M. A. Owen, Old Rabbit 
the Voodoo. For India, see W. Crooke. Introduction to Popular 
Religion and Folklore in N. India. For a survey of European witch- 
craft up to the 16th century, see J. Hansen. Zanberttahn (toco) and 
Quetlen (1901). See also Graf v. Hoabrock. Du Papsttunu v; 
0. Ston, Suggestion und Hypnotismus-, Tylor, Primitive Culture. 
On sake* andmagical plants, see E. Gilbert, Us Plonks mogtaues; 



758 



WITCH-HAZEL— WITHER 




Bastain, Der Mcnsch in der Gtsckkfa. On witchcraft and insanity, 
see Hack-Tuke, History of Insanity; O. Snell, Hexemprocesse und 
Ceistesstorung. For a discussion of the evidence for the real existence 
of witchcraft, tee E. Gurney, Phantasms of the Living, vol. i. ; F. 
ftximore, Modern SpirituoUsm, I 13. (N. W. T.) 

WITCH-HAZEL, in botany, the common name for a North 
American shrub, HamameHs virginica, known in gardens. The 
clusters of rich yellow flowers begin to expand in the autumn 
before the leaves fall and continue throughout the winter. The 
bark and leaves are astringent, and the seeds contain a quantity 
of oil and are edible. The name is derived from the use of the 
twigs as divining rods, just as hazel twigs were used in England. 

Britten and Holland {Dictionary of English Plant Names, p. 247) 
quote three British plants under this name: (1) Wych elm (Ulmus 
ntontana), which, according to Parkinson (Theatr. 1403), was called 
" Witch nasell," because the leaves are " like unto- the leaves of 
the Hasell nut "; (2) Hornbeam (Carpinus Bctidus), which, according 
to Gerard, was so called in some places from its likeness to the elm or 
" wkh Hazell tree "; and (3) Mountain ash {Pyras Aucuparia). 

WITCH OF AGNESI, in geometry, a cubic curve invented 
by Maria Gaetana AgnesL It is constructed by the following 
method: Let AQB be a semicircle of diameter 
AB, produce MQ the ordinate of Q to P so that 
MQ : MP :: AM : AB. Then the locus of P is the 
witch. The cartesian equation, if A be taken as 
origin and AB(-aa) for the axis of x, is 
xy , "=4o*(2a— *). The curve consists of one 
branch entirely to the left of the line x=2a and 
having the axis of y as an asymptote. 

WITHAM, an urban district in the Maldon 
parliamentary division of Essex, England, .39 m. 
N.E. by E. from London by the Great Eastern rail- 
way. Pop. (1001) 3454. It lies on the River Brain, 
an affluent of the Bkckwater, also known as the 
Guilh, a form connected with the name Witham. The church of 
St Nicholas is principally Decorated, but retains earlier portions. 
Roman bricks appear in Us fabric, and premise a Roman station 
in the vicinity. Surrounding the church (which stands in a high- 
lying portion of the town known as Chipping Hill) there are 
earthworks, possibly the remains of a fortification recorded as 
made oy order of Edward the Elder in 913, but perhaps of 
British origin. 

WITHER, GEORGE (158S-1667), English poet and satirist, son 
of George Wither, of Hampshire, was born at Bentworth, near 
Alton, on the nth of June 1588. He was sent to Magdalen 
College, Oxford, at the age of fifteen, and remained at the univer- 
sity for two years. His neighbours appear to have had no great 
opinion of him, for they advised his father to put him to " some 
mechanic trade." He was, however, sent to one of the Inns of 
Chancery, eventually obtaining an introduction at court. He 
wrote an elegy (161 2) on the death of Prince Henry, and a volume* 
of gratulatory poems (1613) on the marriage of the princess 
Elizabeth, but his uncompromising character soon prepared 
trouble for him. In 161 1 he published Abuses Strip* and Whipt, 
twenty satires of general application directed against Revenge, 
Ambition, Lust and other abstractions. The volume included 
a poem called " The Scourge," in which the lord chancellor was 
attacked, and a series of epigrams. No copy of this edition is 
known, and it was perhaps suppressed, but in 1613 five editions 
appeared, and the author was lodged in the Marshalsea prison. 
The influence of the Princess Elizabeth, supported by a loyal 
" Satyre " to the king, in which he hints that an enemy at court 
had fitted personal meanings to his general invective, secured his 
release at the end of a few months. He had figured as one of the 
Interlocutors, " Roget," in his friend WiBJam Browne's Shepherd's 
Pipe, with wfafch were hound up eclogues by other poets, among 
them one tyVMftijri; swd daring his imprisonment he wrote what 

.of Browne's work, The 

i ra which the two 

(hi later editions 

1 contains a famous 

1 he was admitted 

r he printed privately 

, unique copy in the 




Bodleian. Other editions of this book, which contained the 
lyric " Shall I, wasting in despair,'* appeared in 1617 and 16x9. 
In 1621 he returned to the satiric vein with Wither** Motto. Nee 
habeo, nee careo, nee euro. Over 30,000 copies of this poem were 
sold, according to his own account, within a few months. Like 
his earlier invective, it was said to be libellous, and Wither was 
again imprisoned, but shortly afterwards released without formal 
trial on the plea that the book had been duly licensed. In 1622 
appeared his Paire-Vitlue, The Mistress* of PkiF Arete, a long 
panegyric of a mistress, partly real, partly allegorical, written 
chiefly in the»seven-syllabled verse of which he was a master. 
Wither began as a moderate in politics and religion, but from 
this time his Puritan leanings became more and more pronounced, 
and his later work consists of religious poetry, and of con- 
troversial and political tracts. His Hymnes and Songs of the 
Church (1622-1623) were issued under a patent of King James L 
ordaining that they should be bound up with every copy of the 
authorized metrical psalms offered for sale (see Hymns). This 
patent was opposed, as inconsistent with their privilege to print 
the ".singing-psalms," by the Stationers' Company, to Wither's 
great mortification and loss, and a second similar patent was 
finally disallowed by the House of Lords. Wither was in London 
during the plague of 1625, and in 1628 published Britain's 
Remembrancer, a voluminous poem on the subject, interspersed 
with denunciations of the wickedness of the times, and prophecies 
of the disasters about to fall upon England. He also incidentally 
avenged Ben Jonson's satire on him as the " Chronomastix " of 
Time Vindicated, by a reference to Ben's " drunken conclave." 
This book he was obliged to print with his own hand in con- 
sequence of his quarrel with the Stationers' Company. In 1635 
he was employed by Henry Taunton, a London publisher, to 
write English verses illustrative of the allegorical plates of 
Crispin van Passe, originally designed for Gabriel Rollenhagen's 
Nucleus emblematum selectissimorum (1610-1613). The book 
was published as a Collection of Emblemes, Ancient and Mademe, 
of which the only perfect copy known is in the British Museum. 
The best of Wither's religious poetry is contained in Helduiak: 
or Britain's Second Remembrancer, which was printed in Holland 
in 1641. Many of the poems rise to a high point of excellence. 
Besides those properly entitled to the designation of hymns, the 
book contains songs of singular beauty, especially the Cradle- 
song (" Sleep, baby, sleep, what ails my dear "), the Anniversary 
Marriage Song (" Lord, living here are we "), the Perambulation 
Song (" Lord, it hath pleased Thee to say "), the Song for Lovers 
(" Come, sweet heart, come, let us prove "), the Song for the 
Happily Married (" Since they in singing take delight ") and 
that for a Shepherd ("Renowned men their herds to keep") 
— (Nos. 50 in the first part, 17 and 24 in the second, and 20, stand 
41 in the third). There is also in the second part a fine song 
(No. 59), full of historical as well as poetical interest, upon the 
evil times in which the poet lived, beginning— 

" Now are the times, these are the days) 

Which will those men approve 
Who take delight in honest ways 

And pious courses love; 
Now to the world it will appear 

That innocence of heart 
Will keep us far more free from fear 

Than helmet, shield or dart." 

Wither wrote, generally, in a pure nervous English idiom, and 
preferred the reputation of " rusticity " (an epithet applied to him 
even by Baxter) to the tricks and artifices of poetical style which 
were then in favour. It may be partly on that account that he 
was better appreciated by posterity than by his contemporaries. 

Wither had served as captain of horse in 1639 in the expedition 
of Charles L against the Scottish Covenanters, and his religions 
rather than his political convictions must be accepted .as the 
explanation of the fact that, three years after the Scottish 
expedition, at the. outbreak of the Great Rebellion, he is found 
definitely siding with the parliament. He sold his estate to raise 
a troop of horse, and was placefi by a parliamentary committee 
in command of Farnham Castle. After a few days' occupation 
he left the place undefended, and marched to London. His own 



WITHERITE— WITNESS 



759 



house near Farnham was plundered, and he himself was captured 
by a troop of koyalist horse, owing his life to the intervention of 
Six John Denham oa the ground that so long as Wither lived 
he himself could not be accounted the worst poet in England. 
After this episode he was promoted to the rank of major. He 
was present at the siege of Gloucester (1643) and at Naseby 
(1645). He had been deprived in 1643 of his nominal command; 
and of his commission as justice of the peace, in consequence of 
an attack upon Sir Richard Onslow, who was, he maintained, 
responsible for the Farnham disaster. In the same year parlia- 
ment made him a grant of £2000 for the loss of his property, 
but he apparently never received the full amount, and complained 
from time to time of his embarrassments and of the slight re- 
wards be received for his services. An order was made to settle 
a yearly income of £150 on Wither, chargeable on Sir John 
Denham's sequestrated estate, but there is no evidence that he 
ever received it. A small place given him by the Protector was 
forfeited " by declaring unto him (Cromwell) those truths which 
he was not willing to hear of." At the Restoration be was 
arrested, and remained in prison for three years. He died in 
London on the 2nd of May 1667. 

Hb extant writings, catalogued in Park's British Bibliographer, 
number over a hundred. Sir S. E. Brydges published The Shepherd's 



........ twenty 

Spenser Society (1 871-1882); a selection was included by Henry 
Morley in hb Companion Poets (1891); Fidelia and Tair Virtue are 
included in Edward Arber's English Garner (vol. iv. ( 1882; vol. vi. 
1883), and an excellent edition of The Poetry oj George Wither was 
edited by F. Sidgwick in 1902. Among A. C. Swinburne's 
Miscellanies there is an amusine account of a copy of a selection 
from Wither's poems annotated by Lamb, then by Dr Nott* whose 
notes were the subject of further ruthless comment from Lamb. 

WfTHERITB, a mineral consisting of barium carbonate 
(BaCOj), crystallizing in the orthorhombic system. The crystals 
are invariably twinned together in groups of three, giving rise 
to pseudo-bexagonal forms somewhat resembling bipyramidal 
crystals of quartz, the faces are usually rough and striated 
horizontally. The colour is dull white or sometimes greyish, 
the hardness b 3} and the specific gravity 4-3. The mineral b 
named after W. Withering, who in 1784 recognized it to be 
chemically distinct from barytes. It occurs in veins of lead ore 
at Hexham in Northumberland, Alston in Cumberland, Angle- 
zark, near Chorley in Lancashire, and a few other localities. 
Witherile u readily altered to barium sulphate by the action of 
water containing calcium sulphate in solution, and crystab are 
therefore frequently encrusted with barytes. It is the chief source 
of barium salts, and b mined in considerable amounts in North- 
umberland. It b used for the preparation of rat poison, in the 
manufacture of glass and porcelain, and formerly for refining 
su gar. (L. J. S.) 

wTTHSRSPOON, JOHHXx 733-1794), Scottish-American divine 
and educationalist, was born at Gifford, Yester parish, East 
Lothian, Scotland, on the 5th of February 1 722/1 723, the son of 
a minister of the Scotch Established Church, James Wither- 
spoon (d. 1759), and a descendant on the distaff side from John 
Wekh and John Knox. He studied at Haddington, and gradu- 
ated in 1730 at the university of Edinburgh, where he completed 
a divinity course in 1743. He was licensed to pTeach by the 
Haddington presbytery in 1743, and after two years as a pro- 
bationer was ordained (174s) minbter of the parish of Bcith. 
Hb Ecclesiastical Characteristics (1753). Serious Apology (1764)1 
and History of a Corporation of Servants discovered a few years ago 
in the Interior Parts of South America (1765), attacked various 
abuses in the church and satirized the " moderate " party. In 
1757 he had become pastor at Paisley; and in 1760 he received 
the degree of D.D. from Aberdeen. He was sued for libel for 
printing a rebuke to some of hb parishioners who bad travestied 
the sacrament of the Lord's Supper, and after several years in 
the courts he was ordered to pay damages of £150, which was 
raised by hb parishioners. He refused calls to churches in 
Dublin and Rotterdam, and in 1766 declined an invitation 
brought him by Richard Stockton to go to America as president 



of the College of New Jersey (now Princeton University); but he 
accepted a second invitation and left Paisley in May 1768. His 
close relation with the Scotch Church secured important material 
assfrt a nor for the college of which he now became president, 
and he toured New England to collect contributions. He secured 
an excellent set of scientific apparatus and improved the in- 
struction in the natural sciences; be introduced courses in 
Hebrew and French about 1772; and he did a large part of the 
actual teaching, having courses in languages* divinity, moral 
philosophy and eloquence. In the American Presbyterian 
church he was a prominent figure; he worked for union with the 
Congregationalbts and with the Dutch Reformed body; and at 
the synod of 1786 he was one of the committee which reported in 
favour of the formation of a General Assembly and which 
drafted " a system of general rules for . . . government." 
In politics he did much to influence Irish and Scotch-Irish 
Presbyterians to support the Whig party. He was a member 
of the provincial congress which met at New Brunswick in July 
1774; presided over the Somerset county committee of corre- 
spondence in I774-I77S; was a member of the New Jersey 
constitutional convention in the spring of 1776; and from June 
1776 to the autumn of 1779 and in 1780-1783 he was a member 
of the Continental Congress, where he urged the adoption of the 
Declaration of Independence, being the only clergyman to 
sign it. He became a member of tbe secret committee of corre- 
spondence in October 1776, of the Board of War in October 
1777, and of the committee on finance in 1778. He opposed 
the issue of paper money, supported Robert Morris's plan for a 
national bank, and was prominently connected with all Con- 
gressional action in regard to the peace with Great Britain. 
He had lost the sight of one eye in 1784, and in 1791 became quite 
blind. He died on hb farm, Tusculum, near Princeton, on the 
15th of November 1704. 

There b a statue of Witherepoon in Fairmount Park, Philadelphia, 
and another on the University Library at Princeton. Hb Essay 
on the Connexion between the Doctrine of Justification +y the Imputed 
Righteousness of Christ and Holiness of Life (1756) was hb principal 
theological work. He also published several sermons, and Con- 
siderations on the Nature and Extent of the Legislative Authority of me 
British Parliament (1774), sometimes attributed to Benjamin 
Franklin. Hb collected works, with a memoir by hb son-in-bw, 
Samuel Stanhope Smith (who succeeded him as president of the 
college), were edited by Dr Ashbel Green (New York, 1801-1802). 
See also David Walker Woods, John Wilherspoon (New York, 1906); 
and M. C. Tyler, Literary History of the American Revolution, vol. ii. 
(1897). 

WITNESS (from 0. Eng. witan, to know), in law, a person who 
b able from hb knowledge or experience to make statements 
relevant to matters of fact in dispute in a court of justice. The 
relevancy and probative effect of the statements which be makes 
belong to the law of evidence (?.«.)• In the present article it b 
only proposed to deal with matters concerning the position of the 
witness himself. In England, in the earlier stages of the common 
law, the juror* seem to have been the witnesses, for they were 
originally chosen for their knowledge or presumed knowledge 
of the facts in dispute, and they could (and can) be challenged 
and excluded from the jury if related to the parties or otherwise 
likely to show bias (see Juky). The Scottish jurors' oath con- 
tains the words " aid no truth conceal," an obvious survival 
from the time when a juror was a witness. 

Modern views as to toe persons competent to give evidence are 
very different from those of Roman law and the systems derived 
from it- In Roman law the testimony of many persons 
was not admissible without the application of torture, and 
a brae body o( possible witnesses was excluded for reasons 
which have now ceased to be considered expedient, and witnesses were 
subject to rules which have long become obsolete. Witnesses must 
be idonei, or duly qualified. Minors, certain heretics, infamous 
persons (such as women convicted of adultery), and those interested 
in the result of the trial were inadmissible. Parents and children 
could not testify against one another, nor could slaves against their 
masters, nor those at enmity with the party against whom their 
evidence was offered. Women and slaves could not act as witnesses 
to a will. There were also some hard and fast rules as to number. 
Seven witnesses were necessary for a will, five for a mancipalio or 
manumwoon, or to determine the question whether a person were 
free or a slave. As under the Mosaic law. two witnesses were gener- 

Vnims 



ally 1 



nry as a minimum number to prove any fact. 



760 



WITNESS 



rtsponsio testis omnino mm audiaittr are the words of a constitution 
of Constantine. The evidence of a single witness was simply semi- 
plena probatio, to be supplemented, in default of a second witness, by 
torture or by reference to oath. The canon law followed the Roman 
law as to competence, but extended the disabilities to excommuni- 
cated persons and to a layman in a criminal charge against a clerk, 
unless he were actually the prosecutor. The evidence of a notary 
was generally equivalent to that of two ordinary witnesses. The 
evidence of the pope and that of a witness who simply proved 
baptism or heresy (according to some authorities) are perhaps the 
only other cases m which canon law dispensed with confirmatory 
evidence. It is probable that the incompetence of Jews as*witnesscs 
in Spain in the 14th and 15th centuries was based on what is termed 
" want of religion," Le. heresy or unwillingness to take the Christian 
oath on the gospels. But in England until their expulsion they 
were in the status of slaves (caPtivi) of the king. A policy similar 
to that of Roman Iaw^was followed for centuries in England by 
excluding the testimony 01 parties or, persons interested, of witnesses 
for a prisoner, and of infamous persons, such as those who had been 
attainted or had been vanquished in the trial by battle, or bad 
stood in the pillory. All these were said vocem non habere. In the 
days of trial by battle a party could render a witness against him 
incompetent by challenging and defeating him in the judicial combat. 
Women were generally regarded as wholly or partially incompetent. 
English law had also certain rules as to the number of witnesses 
necessary. Thus under a statute of 1383 (6 Rich. II. at. a, c 5) 
the number of compurgators necessary to free an accused person 
from complicity in the peasant revolt was fixed at three or four. 
Five was the number necessary under the Liber feudorum for 
proving ingratitude to the lord. In one instance in old Scots law 
the number of Witnesses had the curious effect of determining the 
punishment. By the assizes of King William, the ordeal of water 
was undergone by the accused on the oaths of three witnesses; if 
to them the oaths of three seniores were added, the penalty was 
immediate hanging. 

In the course of the gradual development of the law of evidence, 
which is in a sense peculiar to the English system, the fetters of the 
Roman rules as to witnesses were gradually shaken off. In .civil 
cases alt disabilities by interest, relationship, sex or crime have 
been swept away. The witness need not be idoneus in the Roman 
sense, and objections which in Roman law went to his competence, 
in English law go to his credibility. The only general tert of cot pot- 
ency w now understanding. It excludes lunatics, id> 1 . cl-iUids 
and children of tender years; a person convicted of perjury t» said 
to be competent if convicted at common law, but incompetent if 
convicted under the act of Elizabeth. No trial ever takes place 
now under this act, and on this point the act seems to have been 
virtually repealed by Lord Denman's Art (1843; 6 & 7 Viet, c 85). 
The disqualification is not absolute as to lunatics; as to children it 
is sometimes made to depend on whether they are able to wv lers Land 
the nature of the witness's oath. And in certain cases within the 
Criminal Law Amendment Act 1885 and the Prevention of Cruelty 
to Children Act 1904, the unsworn evidence of children of tender 
years b admissible but needs corroboration. 

Non-judicial witnesses' are those who attest an act of unusual 
importance, for the due execution of which evidence may afterwards 
be required. They are either made necessary by law, as the witnesses 
to marriages and wills, or used by general custom; as the witnesses 
to deeds. In some cases the attestation has become a mere form, 
such as the attestation of the lord chancellor to a writ of summons 
(see Wwt). 

The rule of English law as to the number ot witnesses necessary 
is expressed in the phrase testes ponderontur non numerantur. But 
there are certain exceptions, all statutory. Two witnesses are 
necessary to make a will valid; two are required to be present at a 
marriage and to attest the entry in the marriage register; 1 and in 
the case of blasphemy, perjury, personation and most forms of 
treason, two or more witnesses are necessary to justify conviction. 
Witnesses to bills of sale under the Bills of Sale Act 1882, and wit- 
nesses on a charge of personation at elections, are required to be 
" credible." Ana in the case of dishonour of a foreign bill of ex- 
change the evidence of a notary public is required t probably a survival 
from the law merchant or a concession to continental practice. A 
warrant of attorney must be attested by a solicitor, and certain 
conveyances of property held on charitable uses must be attested 
by two solicitors. In certain civil cases the evidence of a single 
witness is not sufficient unless corroborated in some material 

Particular — not necessarily by another witness — e.g. in actions of 
reach of promise of marriage, or affiliation proceedings and matri- 
monial causes, or where unsworn evidence of children is admissible. 
In practice, but not in strict law, the evidence of an accomplice is 
required to be corroborated. 

The English common law in theory has never permitted examina- 
tion by torture — unless certain forms of cross-examination can be 
so described. In trials in the court of admiralty the Roman system 
was used until 1536 (28 Henry VIII. c 15). Torture in Scotland 
abolished at the Union. 



1 The provisions of the Marriage Act 1823 appear to be directory. 
•» does not invalidate the marriage, but creates difiv 
of in other proceedings, e.g. for bigamy. 



In criminal cases an accused person could not formerly be 
sworn as a witness or examined by the court, though he was free to 
make statements. The origin of this rule is by some traced to the 
maxim nemo tenetur prodere seipsum, by others to the theory that 
the petty jury were the prisoner's witnesses. Moreover, witnesses 
for the defence could not be examined on oath in cases of treason and 
felony until 1702 in England, 171 1 in Ireland and 1735 in Scotland. 
The husband or wife of the accused could not be examined on oath 
as a witness either for the prosecution or the defence except in pro- 
secutions for treason or for personal injuries done by one spouse to 
the other. This exclusion was in accord with the disqualification of 
parties to civil causes; but there was a lack of reciprocity, for the 
prosecutor was a competent witness because the crown is the nominal 
prosecutor. The rule had to a certain extent a beneficial effect for 
the defence, in saving; the accused from cross-examination, which in 
certain periods and in political trials would have led to abuse. On 
the abolition of other disqualifications that of the accused was left. 
This inconsistency led to much legal discussion and to piecemeal, 
and ultimately complete, change in the law. In 1878 the Criminal 
Code Commission recommended that prisoners should be allowed to 
give evidence on their own behalf on oath. Since 1 872 many statutes 
have been passed rendering accused persons and their husbands or 
wives competent witnesses on charges of particular offences. Most 
of these acts do not make them compellable witnesses. 

By the Criminal Evidence Act 1898 (60 and 61 Vict, c 36) the 
defendant, or the wife or husband of the defendant, is made a com- 
petent but not a compellable witness for the defence at every stage 
of criminal proceedings, subject to certain conditions, of which the 
principal are that a prisoner shall not be called except on his or her 
own application, and that the failure of the prisoner or his wife 
or her husband to give evidence is not to be the subject of comment 
by the prosecution, and that the prisoner may not be cross-examined 
as to any previous offence or conviction or as to character, unless 
the proof of a previous offence is admissible evidence in the case, 
or unless he or she has given evidence of his or her good character, 
or cross-examined with that vicw t or unless the nature and conduct of 
the defence is such as to involve imputations on the character of the 
prosecutor or the witnesses for the prosecution. The act applies to 
Great Britain but not to Ireland. It has been extended to proceed- 
ings before naval and military courts-martial. This statute abrogates 
the common taw rule making an accused person incompetent, and 
in practice supersedes most of the prior particular statutes. But 
it is necessary to observe that as to certain offences named in the 
schedule of the act and in other earlier or later acts, the husband or 
wife is competent without the consent of the accused; and that 
proceedings by indictment for obstruction or non-repair of public 
ways, bridges and rivers are for purposes of evidence treated as civil 
proceedings. 

Quite apart from statute a husband or wife has always and neces- 
sarily been a competent witness in criminal proceedings against the 
other spouse in respect of personal injuries. 

Even where a witness is competent, his statements, whether of 
fact or of expert opinion, arc not admissible in evidence unless he has 
taken the required oath,* or, where he conscientiously objects to 
taking an oath or by want of religion would not be bound by the oath, 
has made the substituted affirmation or declaration. This question 
was settled in 1888 after the entry of Mr Bradlaugh into parliament. 
Unless he is duly sworn, &c, there is no enforceable sanction for 
false evidence (see Perjury). English law has gradually accepted 
as sufficient any form of oath which the witness b prepared to accept 
as binding on him in accordance with his religious beliefs, whether 
he be Christian or Jew, Mahommedan, Hindu. Sikh or Buddhist. 
At one time peers in certain proceedings testified on their honour 
unsworn, but now no distinction is made except as' already stated in 
the case of young children. 

The attestation of documents out of courts of justice is ordinarily 
not on oath; but where the documents have to be proved in court 
the attesting witnesses are sworn' like others, and the only judicial 
exception is that of witnesses ordered to produce documents (called 
in Scotland " havers ") who are not sworn unless they have to verify 
the documents produced. Questions as to competence (including 

fiuestions of the right to affirm instead of swearing or as to the proper 
orm of oath) are settled by examination by the court without oath, 
on what is termed the voir dire. The evidence of judicial witnesses 
is taken visa voce at the trial, except in interlocutory proceedings and 
in certain matters in the chancery division and in bankruptcy courts. 
Where the witness cannot attend the court or is abroad his evidence 
may be taken in writing by a commissioner delegated by the court, 
or by a foreign tribunalunder letters of request issued by the court 
in which the cause is pending. The depositions are returned by 
the delegated authority to the court of trial. Under English law 
evidence must be taken viva voce in a criminal trial, with a few 
exceptions, e.g. where a witness who has made a deposition before a 
magistrate at an earlier stage in the case is dead or unable to travel, 
or in certain cases within the Merchant ShippingActs, or of offences 
in I ndia or by crown officials out of England. I n Europe commissions 



7 The giving of evidence unsworn appears to have been at one 
time regarded as a privilege. The men of Ripon, for instance, were 
by a charter of jEthelstan to be believed on their yea and aay in all 
disputes. 



WITNEY 



761 



snsaJsmsre freely used to obtain written deposition* far the purpose 
oicriminal trials, and are allowed to be executed in England. In 
England the viva voce examination of witnesses is not conducted by 
the presiding judge but by the advocates in the cause, and the 
witness is catted not by the court but by the party. The court, 
however, has foil power to call witnesses not called by either party, 
or to examine witnesses on questions not inquired into by the 
advocates of either party. 

The examination of a witness by the advocate of the aide for which 
he is called is termed " examination-in-chief " ; when by the advocate 
of the other party it is called " cross examination, " The judge, and 
by his leave the jurors, are free to question the witness, out the 
main duty of the judge b not himself to interrogate, the witness but 
to see that neither side asks irrelevant or vexatious questions (see 
R.S.C 1883, order 36, rule 38). 

As a general rule competent witnesses are also compellable, except 
the long; i.e. they can be required to attend the court and to take 
the -oath and to answer all relevant questions. But by 
the statutes as to evidence in criminal cases the accused 
is not a compellable witness, nor in many specified cases 
is the husband or wife of the accused. The attendance of witnesses 
is secured in the following manner: In civil actions in the High 
Court of Justice by writ of subpoena personally served with tender 
of the necessary journey money (see Writ) ; in civil actions in county 
courts by witness summons; in criminal proceedings before the 
High Court of Justice or a court of assise or quarter sessions by crown 
office subpoena or by recognizance entered into before justices 
when the accused was committed for trial. In proceedings before 
justices out of quarter sessions the attendance of a witness is secured 
by witness summons or if neod be by arrest on warrant of a justice. 
In criminal cases tender of expenses is not essential. Where a witness 
refuses to attend or to be sworn or to answer, he is summarily 
punishable for contempt if the court is one of record, 1 and liable to 
imprisonment if the proceedings are before a court of summary 
jurisdiction. Various acts of parliament deal with compelling; 
appearance before committees of parliament, courts martial ana 
Other tribunals of a special nature. The attendance of a witness 
who is in custody is obtained by writ of habeas corpus ad testificandum 
or by judge's order in certain cases, or by order of the home secretary 
under the Prison Act 1898. A witness's expenses in a civil case are 
payable by the party calling him and are included in the costs of the 
cause. Scales of allowance* are scheduled to the Rules of the 
Supreme Court and the County Court Rules. Failure of a witness 
duly sum m oned to attend in a civil action exposes him to liability 
. .. _* : — j j — ... ..l. *.. u-. jjjj abgem^, 

calling him, 



in respect of pecuniary damage done to the party by ! 
In criminal cases the witness's expenses fall on the party 
but iu prosecutions for felony and many misdemeanours 1 



nd many misdemeanours the expenses 
are paid out of the local rate in accordance with scales fixed by the 
borne secretary (see Costs). 

A witness h privileged from arrest on civil p r oces s while he is in 
attendance on a court of justice or is on bis way to or from the court 
(eundo t *morando a redeundo). The privilege docs not exempt from 
arrest on a criminal charge. All witnesses except the defendant in a 
criminal case are entitled to object to answer any question put 
to them in court on the ground that the answer might tend to 
criminate them or tP expose them to a penalty or forfeiture, or where 
the question is as to the fact of adultery. The defendant in a 
criminal case if sworn as a witness is not entitled to refuse to answer 
questions tending to prove him guilty of the offence for which he is 
being tried, and a witness cannot refuse to answer a question on the 
ground that the answer might involve admission of a debt or subject 
him to a civil action (1806, c. 37). 

Witnesses are also privileged from making disclosure of matters 
known to them in the following cases: (1) Public officers, as to 
matters coming within their official cognizance if they can swear that 
it is inconsistent with the public service to disclose them. This 
applies to state secrets, and extends to jurors as to what passed among 
them, and the public prosecutor: and the police on this ground 
refuse to disclose the sources of information leading to prosecutions 
for crime. (2) Lawyers, as to communications between themselves 
and their clients, unless the communications are in themselves part 
of a criminal or unlawful enterprise. English law declines to extend 
professional privilege to communications between doctor and patient 
or Driest and penitent. In most European countries, and in many 
British colonies, medical privilege is recognised as to matter* com- 
municated to the doctor or even discovered by him in attending the 
patient. In Catholic countries confessions to a priest are sacred. 
In England it is not now the practice to insist on evidence by a 
minister of religion as to matters confessed to him as such. (3) 
Communications between husband and wife during the marriage 
have always been privileged from disclosure, and this privilege is 
i by modern legislation (1853, c - *3* •• 3: i8o8,c 36, a. 1. d.). 



It is correlative to the obligation of a witness to testify that no 
action may be brought against him under English law for any 
statement however defamatory, however irrelevant, and however 
malicious, made by him in the course of his testimony in judicial 
proceedings [Seaman v. Netkerdift, 1876. 1 C.P.D. 540: Hodso * v - 
Pare, 1800, x Q.B. 453). The only remedy, if the statement is deliber- 
ately false, is to prosecute him for perjury. 



1 In rrrlnisttiral courts the punishment was by excommunication. 



apitalofl 
Scotiam 



On charge* of treason lists of the witnesses to be called by the 
crown must be supplied to the accused. In ordinary indictable 
cases there is no such obligation, but the names of the witnesses for 
the crown are written on the back of the indictment; and where the 
witnesses have not been examined at the preliminary inquiry it is 
now established practice to require notice to the accused of their 
names, and a precis of what they will be called to prove. In Scotland 
in all indictable cases a list of witnesses must be served on the 
accused (the panel) (1887, c. 33). and. the same rule is observed in 
France. In the United States the same course is adopted where a 
Ital offence is charged. 

cotiand— The rules as to competence of witnesses have been 
made substantially the same as in England by modern legislation 
(1837, c. 37, s. 9; 1840, c. 50, a. 1; 183a, c 37; 1874, c 64). Their 
attendance is procured by citation. Witnesses to produce document* 
are called " havers. " 

The evidence of witnesses is taken on oath (m the Scots form) 
or affirmation. Their privileges are substantially the same as in 
England, but they may be sued for irrelevant defamatory statement* 
volunteered during their evidence, the law of Scotland on this point 
being the same as under the Dutch Roman law (see Nathan, Common 
Law of S. Africa, ft 1593). 

British Possessions. — In India the law as to witnesses and evidence 
is consolidated in the Indian Evidence Act 187a, which contains in 
code form the substance of the English law on the subject. The 
test of competency is understanding: " all persons shall be competent 
to testify unless the court considers that they are prevented from 
understanding the questions put to them or from giving rational 
answers to these questions by tender years, extreme old age, disease 
whether of body or mind, or of any other cause of the same kind. 
A lunatic is not incompetent to testify unless be is prevented by his 
lunacy from understanding the questions put to him and giving 
rational answers to them f*. 118). la criminal proceedings the 
defendant is not, but the husband or wife of the defendant is, com- 
petent (*. 120). Under the Indian Oaths Act (x. of 1873) Hindus or 
Mahommedans or persons objecting to make an oath may affirm 
(s. 6). The court may accept an oath or solemn affirmation in any 
form common amongst or held as binding by persons of the per- 
suasion or religion to which the witness belongs, unless it is repugnant 
to justice or decency (s. 8). In the rest of the British empire the 
law as to witnesses does not differ materially from that of England, 
but has in most colonies been incorporated in statutes or codes (e.g. 
British Guiana, Ord. No. so of 1893). Colonial legislation has 
provided for the evidence of accused persons under conditions 
similar to but not identical with those prevailing in England, la 
colonies with a large native population there is from time to time a 
tendency to reject the evidence of coloured witnesses against 
Europeans. 

United Stale*.— The rulesof the United States as to witnesses have 
a common origin with those of England and are on the same Hues, 
but in most states depend on the particular provisions of state codes. 
The number of witnesses necessary for the attestation of a marriage 
or will is not uniform in all the states. While slavery was lawful, 
the evidence of slaves (and in some states that of free persons of 
colour) was not received for or against whites. These rules appear 
not to have been absolutely overridden by the 14th amendment to 
the Federal Constitution, and the laws of Delaware and Nebraska 
discriminate against free persons of colour. Incompetency by con- 
viction of perjury or subornation is retained in federal laws (Rev. 



Stat, ft 539a) and in those of a few states (see Wigmore. p. 



% 



«)■ 



European Countries. — In the law of most European states the 
Roman law as to the competency and examination of witnesses is 
more closely followed than in countries whose law is. based on that 
of England. In criminal cases the prisoner is not only competent 
but neces sa ry, and the whole system of procedure is inquisitorial, 
beginning with interrogation of the accused, not by the state prow- 
cutor. but by the president of the court. In view of this system it is 
not surprising chat the English conception of the rules of proof 
and relevancy, known as the law of evidence, is not accepted ; since 
under the continental system the person who puts the questions is 
the person who has to determine their relevancy. In France con- 
sanguinity and affinity to the parties disqualify a witness in civil 
cases, and he is also asked whether he is employe or servant of the 
parties (Code Civil, Proc 262, 268). In criminal cases a like inquiry 
is made. Consanguinity and affinity in the case of lineals may be 
made ground of disqualification if the objection is taken, as may 
pecuniary interest in the penalty (Code d'instr. Crim. 75, 322). 
Husband and wife cannot testify for or against each other even after 
divorce (to.). In France disability to be a witness may be inflicted 
as part of the punishment on conviction for certain crimes (Code 
Penal, art. 42). (W.F.C.) 

WnWlT, a market town in the Woodstock parliamentary 
division of Oxfordshire, England, on the river Windrush, a 
tributary of the Thames, 75} m. W.N.W. of London on the East 
Gloucestershire branch of the Great Western railway. Pop. of 
urban district (1901) 3574. The urban district was extended in 
1898 to include portions of the scattered villages of Hauey and 



764 



WITTEN— WITTGENSTEIN 



to his brother's sons, Rudolph n. (4. 1353) and Rupert I. Rupert, 
who from 1353 to 1300 was sole ruler, gained the electoral dignity 
for the Palatinate of the Rhine in 1356 by a grant of some lands 
in upper Bavaria to the emperor Charles IV. It had been exer- 
cised .from the division of 1329 by both branches in turn. The 
descendants of Louis IV. retained the rest of Bavaria, but made 
several divisions of their territory, the most important of which 
was in 1392, when the branches of Ingoldstadt, Munich and 
Landshut were founded. These were reunited under Albert IV., 
duke of Bavaria-Munich (1447-1508) and the upper Palatinate 
was added to them in 1628. Albert's descendants ruled over a 
united Bavaria, until the death of Duke Maximilian III. in 
1777, when it passed to the Elector Palatine, Charles Theodore. 
The Palatinate of the Rhine, after the death of Rupert I. in 
1390, passed to his nephew, Rupert II., and in 1308 to his son, 
Rupert III., who was German king from 1400 to 14x0. On his 
death it was divided into four branches. Three of these had died 
out by 1559, and their possessions were inherited by the fourth 
or Simmern line, among whom the Palatinate was again divided 
(see Palatinate). 

In 1742, after the extinction of the two senior lines of this 
family, the Sulzbach branch became the senior line, and its head, 
the elector Charles Theodore, inherited Bavaria in 1777. He 
died in 1799, and Maximilian Joseph, the head of the Zweibriicken 
branch, inherited Bavaria and the Palatinate. He took the title 
of king as Maximilian I. 

In 1623, when the elector Frederick V. (the " Winter King ") 
was driven from his dominions, the electoral privilege was trans- 
ferred to Bavaria, and in 1648, by the Peace of Westphalia, an. 
eighth electorate was created for the Wittelsbachs of the 
Palatinate, and was exercised by the senior branch of the 
family. 

The Wittelsbachs gave three kings to Germany, Louis IV., 
Rupert and Charles VII. Members of the family were also 
margraves of Brandenburg from 1323 to 1373, and kings of 
Sweden from 1654 to 1718. 

See J. Ddllinger, Das Hans Wittelsback und seine Bedeulung in der 
deutscken Gescktckte (Munich, 1880); J. F. Bdhmer, Wittelsbackiscke 
Regesten bis 1340 (Stuttgart, 1854); F. M. Wittmann, Monumenta 
WtUelsboeensia (Urkundenbuch, Munich, 1857-1861); K. T 
Hcigel, Die WHielsbacker (Munich, 1880); F. Leitachuh, Die Witlels- 



cigel, Die WHielsbacker (Munich, 1880); F. Leitachuh, I 
backer in Bayern (Bamberg, 1894). 

WITTER* a town of Germany, in the Prussian province of 
Westphalia, favourably situated among the coal-fields of the 
Ruhr, 14 m. E. of Essen and 15 m. N.E. of Elberfeld by rail 
Pop. (1905) 3 5,84 x. It is an important seat of the steel industry. 
Other industries are the making of soap, chemicals and beer. 
Witten was made a town in 1825. 

See Hanel, Witttner Ortskunde und Ortsgesehe (Witten, 1903). 

WITTENBERG, a town of Germany, in the Prussian province 
of Saxony, situated on the Elbe, 59 m. by rail S.W. of Berlin, 
on the main line to Halle and at the junction of railways to 
Falkenberg,TorgauandRosslau. Pop. (1905) 20,332. The three 
suburbs which adjoin the town are not older than 181 7. Witten- 
berg is interesting chiefly on account of its close connexion 
with Luther and the dawn of the Reformation, and several of 
Its buildings are associated with the events of that time. Part 
of the August inian monastery in which Luther dwelt, at first 
as a monk and in later life as owner with bis wife and family, 
is. still preserved, and has been fitted up as a Luther museum. 
It contains numerous relics of Luther and portraits and other 
paintings by the Cranachs. The Augusteum, built in 1564- 
1 583 on the site of the monastery, is now a theological seminary 
The Schlosskirche, to the doors of which Luther nailed his famous 
ninety-five theses in 1517, dates frpm 1 439-1 499; it was, 
however, seriously damaged by fire during the bombardment of 
1760, was practically rebuilt, and has since (1885-1892) been 
restored. The old wooden doors, burnt in 1760, were replaced 
in 1858 by bronze doors, bearing the Latin text of the theses. 
In the interior of the church are the tombs of Luther and 
Meknchthon, and of the electors Frederick the Wise, by Peter 
Vischer the elder (15*7), and John the Constant, by Hans Vischer, 
also portraits of the reformers by Lucas Cranach the younger. 



The parish church, in which Luther often preached, was built 
in the 14th century, but has been much altered since Luther's 
time. It contains a magnificent painting by Lucas Cranach the 
elder, representing the Lord's Supper, Baptism and Confession, 
also a font by Hermann Vischer (1457)- The present infantry 
barracks were at one time occupied by the university of Witten- 
berg, founded in 1502, but merged in the university of Halle 
in 18x5. Luther was appointed professor of philosophy here 
in 1508; and the new university rapidly acquired a considerable 
reputation from its connexion with the early Reformers- In 
opposition to the strict Lutheran orthodoxy of Jean it repre- 
sented the more moderate doctrines of Mdanchthon. . In the 
Wittenberg Concord (1536) the reformers agreed to a settlement 
of the eucharistic controversy. Shakespeare makes Hamlet 
and Horatio study at Wittenberg. The ancient electoral 
palace is another of the buildings that suffered severely in 1760; 
it now contains archives. Melanchthon's house and the bouse 
of Lucas Cranach the elder (i47*-i553)» who was burgomaster 
of Wittenberg, are also pointed out. Statues of Luther (by 
Schadow), Melanchthon and Bugenhagen embellish the town. 
The spot, outside the Elster Gate, where Luther publicly burned 
the papal bull in 1520, is marked by an oak tree. Floriculture, 
iron-founding, distilling and brewing are carried on. The 
formerly considerable manufacture of the heavier kinds of 
doth has died out. 

Wittenberg is mentioned as early as 1x80. It was the capital 
of the little duchy of Saxe-Wittenberg, the rulers of which after- 
wards became electors of Saxony; and it continued to be a 
Saxon residence under the Ernestine electors. The Capitulation 
of Wittenberg (1547) is the name given to the treaty by which 
John Frederick the Magnanimous was compelled to resign the 
electoral dignity and most of his territory to the Albertine 
branch of the Saxon family. In 1760 the town was bombarded 
by the Austrians. It was occupied by the French in 1806, 
and refortified in 18x3 by command of Napoleon; but in 1814 
it was stormed by the Prussians under Tauentsien, who received 
the title of "von Wittenberg" as a reward. Wittenberg 
continued to be a fortress of the third class until the reorganiza- 
tion of the German defences after the foundation of the new 
empire led to its being dismantled in 1873. 

See Meynert, Gescktckte der Stadt Wittenberg (Destau. 184s); 
Sticr, Die Schlosskirche tu Wittenberg (Wittenberg, i860); Zitzlaff, 
Die BegrabnissstAUen Wittenbcrgs una tkre Denkmdler fWittcnbcrtf. 
1897); and Guriitt, "Die Lutherstadt Wittenberg," in Mutbcrs 
Dps Kunsl (Berlin, 190a). 

W1TTENBERGE, a town of Germany, in the Prussian province 
of Brandenburg, on the Elbe, near the influx of the Stepenits 
into that river, 77 m. N.W. from Berlin by the main line of rail- 
way to Hamburg, and at the junction of railways to Stendal, 
LQneburg and Perleberg. Pop. (1905) 18,501. The magnificent 
bridge here spanning the Elbe, one mile in length, was built 
in 1851 at a cost of £337,500. The chief industries are the 
manufacture of railway plant, cloth, wool, soap, shoddy, furniture, 
bricks and ceme nt. 

WITTGENSTEIN, LUDWIO ADOLF PETER, Count, prince 
of Sayn-Wittgenstein-Ludwtgsburg (1760-1843), Russian soldier, 
was descended from a family of formerly independent counts 
in Westphalia. His father had settled in Russia, and he entered 
the army, distinguishing himself in the Polish War of 1704- 
95, and then serving in the Caucasus. In 1805 he fought 
at Austexiitz, in 1806 against the Turks and in 1807 against 
Napoleon at Friedland and against the Swedes in Finland. 
In the war of 18x2 he commanded the right wing army of the 
Russians. In the campaign of 1813 in January he took over 
the command of the Russian army after Kutuxov's death. 
But after the defeats of the Spring campaign be laid down this 
command and led an army corps during the Dresden and Leipzig 
campaigns, and at Bar-sur-Aube in the 1814 campaign he was 
severely wounded. In 1823 he was promoted field-marshal, 
and in 1828 he was appointed to command the Russian array in 
the war against Turkey. But ill health soon obliged him to 
retire. In 1834 the king of Prussia gave him the tide of prince, 
He died on the nth of June 1843. 



wrrriNGAU— wladislaus 



765 



WmOfOAII (Czech, ThUt), a town of Bohemia, 95 m. S. 
of Prague by rafl. Pop. (1900) 5467, mostly Czech. The parish 
church is a Gothic edifice of the 14th century, with fine doistecs; 
«nd the LuSnic chateau, once belonging to the family of Rosen- 
berg, and now to Prince Schwarzenberg, dating from the 15th 
century, is xeputed to contain the most extensive and valuable 
archives in Bohemia. The artificial cultivation of fish, now 
chiefly carp, in the numerous ponds that surround the town 
dates from the 14th century. 

WITU, or Vrru, a sultanate of East Africa included in the 
Tanaknd province of the British East Africa protectorate; 
It extends along the coast from the town of Ripini at the mouth 
of the Ozi river (a* 30' S.) to the northern limit of Manda Bay 
(2 S.)>, area 1200 sq. m. The chief town, Witu, is 16 m. N. 
of Kipini. The state was founded by Ahmed-bin-Fumo Luti, 
the last Nabhan sultan of Patta (an island off the coast), who was 
conquered by Seyyid Majid of Zanzibar. Ahmed, about 1860, 
took refuge in the forest district, and made himself an indepen- 
dent chief, acquiring the title of Smba or the Lion. In 1885 
Ahmed was induced to place his country under German protec- 
tion, and in 1887 the limits of Witu were fixed by international 
agreement. In 1890 Germany transferred her protectorate to 
Great Britain. In the September of that year a British naval 
force under Admiral Sir £. Frcmantle was sent against the sultan 
Bakati, who had succeeded Ahmed in 1887 and by whose orders 
nine German traders and settlers had been murdered. Disorders 
continued until 1804, and in the following year Omar-bio-Hamed 
of the Nabhan dynasty— an ancient race of Asiatic origin— was 
recognized as sultan. The sultan is guided by a British resident, 
and the state since the accession of Sultan Omar has been both 
peaceful and prosperous. The population of the sultanate is 
over 15,000; of the town of Witu 6000, chiefly Swahilia.^Tbe 
port of Witu is Mkonumbi (pop. 1000). 

WIVEUSGOMBB (pronounced Wuscomb), a market town in 
the western parliamentary division of Somersetshire, England, 
oi m. W. of Taunton by the Great Western railway. Pop. 
(tool), 2246. It stands on a picturesque sloping site in a hilly 
district, and has some agricultural trade and a brewing industry, 
while in the neighbourhood are slate quarries. 

Traces of a large Roman camp may still be seen to the south- 
east of Wiveliscombe (WclkscontU, WilscomU, Wmscombe), 
which is near the line of a Roman road, and hoards of Roman 
coins have been discovered in the neighbourhood. The town 
probably owed its origin to the suitability of its position for 
defence, and it was the site of a Danish fort, later replaced by a 
Saxon settlement. The overlords were the bishops of Bath and 
Wells, who had a palace and park here. They obtained a grant 
of freewarren in 1257. No charter granting self-government 
to Wiveliscorabc has been found, and the only evidence for the 
traditional existence of a borough is that part of the town is called 
" the borough," and that until the middle of the 19th century 
a bailiff and a portreeve were annually chosen by the court leet. 
A weekly market on Tuesdays, granted to the bishop of Bath, 
and Wells in. 1284, is still held. During the 17th and x8th 
centuries the town was a centre of the woollen manufacture. 

WLADISLAUS (Wladislaw), the name of four kingi of Poland 
and two Polish kings of Hungary. 1 

Wladislaus I. (1 260-1333), king of Poland, called Lokietek, 
or " Span-long," from his diminutive stature, was the re-creator 
of the Polish- realm, which in consequence of internal quarrels 
had at the end of the 13th century split up into fourteen in- 
dependent principalities, and become an easy prey to her neigh- 
bours, Bohemia, Lithuania, and, most dangerous of all, the 
Teutonic Order. In 1206 the gentry of Great Poland elected 
Wladislaus, then prince of Cujavia, to reign over them; but 

•In Hungarian history the Polish Wladislaos (Mar. UUsdo) is 
distinguished from the Hungarian Ladisuma (Lasdo). They are 
reckoned separately for purposes of numbering. Besides th* 
Wladislaus kings of Poland, there were three earlier dukes of this 
name: Wladislaus 1. (d. 1102). Wladislaus IT. (of Cracow, d. 1163) 
and Wladidaos III., duke of Great Poland and Cracow (6. 12 ti). 
By some historians these are included in the numbering of the Pwiah 
so v er ei gns, King Wladislaus I. being thus IV. and soon, 



distrusting the capacity cf the taciturn little man, they changed 
their minds and placed themselves under the protection of the 
powerful Wenceslaus, king of Bohemia, who was crowned at 
Onesen in 1300. Wladislaus thereupon went to Rome, where 
Pope Boniface VIII., Jealous of the growing influence of Bohemia, 
adopted his cause; and 011 Che death of Wenceslaus in 1305 
Wladislaus succeeded in uniting beneath, his sway the princi- 
palities of Little and Great Poland. From the first he was 
beset with great difficulties. The towns, mostly of German 
origin, and the prelates headed by Muskata, bishop of Cracow, 
were against him because he endeavoured to make use of their 
riches for the defence of the sorely pressed state. The rebellious 
magistrates of Cracow he succeeded in suppressing, but he had 
to invoke the aid of the Teutonic Order to save Danzig from the 
margraves of Brandenburg/thus saddling Poland with a far more 
dangerous enemy; for the Order not only proceeded to treat 
Danzig as a conquered dty, but claimed possession of the whole 
of Pomcrania. Wladislaus thereupon (131 7) appealed to Pope 
John XXII., and a tribunal of local prelates appointed by 
the holy see ultimately (Feb. o, 1321) pronounced judgment in 
favour of Wladislaus, and condemned the. Order not only to 
restore Pomcrania but also to pay heavy damages. But the 
knights appealed to Rome; the pope reversed the judgment ot 
his own tribunal; and the only result of these negotiations 
was a long and bloody six years* war (1327-1333) between Poland 
and the Order, in which all the princes of Central Europe took 
part, Hungary and Lithuania, siding with Wladislaus, and 
Bohemia, Masovia and Silesia with the Order. It was not till 
the last year but one of his life that Wladislaus succeeded 
with the aid of his Hungarian allies in inflicting upon the knights 
their first serious reverse at Plowce (27th of September 1332). 
In March 1333 he died. He had laid the foundations of a strong 
Polish monarchy, and with the consent of the pope revived the 
royal dignity, being solemnly crowned king of Poland at Cracow 
on the 20th of January 1320. His reign b remarkable for the 
development of the Polish constitution, the gentry and prelates 
being admitted to some share in the government of the country. 
Sec Max Perlbach. PreussucX-poinische Slvdien xur GtschichU det 
MiUdaiters (Halle. tB96): Julius A. G. von Pflugk-Harttung. Dcr 
deutsche Ordm 4m Kimpfe Lmdwip da Bayer* mU la Rwie (Leipzig, 
1900). 

Wladislaus n.rjACnxLO (13S0-1434), king of Poland* 
was one of the twelve sons of Olgicrd, grand-duke of Lithuania, 
whom he succeeded in 1377. From the very beginning of his 
reign Jagiello was involved in disputes with the Teutonic Order, 
and with his uncle, the valiant Kicjstut, who ruled Samogitia 
independently. By the treaty of Dawidyszek (June i, 1380) 
he contracted an alfiance with the knights, and two years later, 
acting on the advice of his evil counsellor, Wojdyllo, enticed 
Kicjstut and his consort to Krewo and there treacherously 
murdered them (Aug. 15, 1382). TTiis foul deed naturally drove 
Witowt (q.v.), the son of Kiejstut, into the arms of the Order; 
but both princes speedily recognised that the knights were the 
real enemies of Lithuania, and prudently composing their differ- 
ences invaded Prussian territory. This was the beginning of the 
fifty years' struggle with the Teutonic Order which was to make 
the reign of Jagiello so memorable. He looked about him 
betimes for allies against the common enemy cf the Slavonic races, 
and fortune singularly favoured him. The Poles bad brought 
their young queen Jadwiga home from Hungary, and in 1384 
Jagiello tent a magnificent embassy to Cracow offering her his 
hand on condition that they shared the Polish crown. Jadwiga 
had long been betrothed to William of Austria; but she sacrificed 
her predilections for her country's good. On the 1 5th of February 
1386 Jagiello, who had previously been elected king of Poland 
* under the title of Wladislaus IL ( accepted the Roman faith in 
the cathedral of Cracow, and on the 18th his espousals with 
Queen Jadwiga were solemnized. 

JagieUo's first political act after his coronation wan the 

conversion of Lithuania to the true religion. This solemn act was 

. accomplished at VUna, the Lithuanian capital, on the 17th oi 

I February 1387, when a stately concourse of nobles and prelates, 



766 



WLADISLAUS 



headed by the king, proceeded to the grove of secular oaks 
beneath which stood the statue of Perkunos and other idofe, 
and in the presence of an immense multitude hewed down the 
oaks, destroyed the idols, extinguished the sacred fire and elevated 
the cross on the desecrated heathen altars, 30,000 Lithuanians 
receiving Christian baptism. A Catholic hierarchy was imme- 
diately set up. A Polish Franciscan, Andrew Wassilo, was con- 
secrated as the hrst Catholic bishop of Vilna, and Lithuania 
was divided ecclesiastically into seven dioceses. Mainly, on the 
initiative of Queen Jadwiga, Red Russia with its capital the great 
trading city of Lemberg was persuaded to acknowledge the 
dominion of Poland; and there on the 27th of September 1387 
the hospodars of Walachia and Moldavia for the first time 
voluntarily enrolled themselves among the vassals of Poland. 

With savage Lithuania converted and in close alliance with 
Catholic Poland, the Teutonic Order was seriously threatened. 
The knights endeavoured to re-establish their position by sowing 
dissensions between Poland and Lithuania. In this for a time 
they succeeded (see Witowt); but in 1401 Jagiello recognised 
Witowt as independent grand-duke of Lithuania (union of Vilna, 
January 18, 1401), and their union was cemented in the battle 
of Grimcwald, which shook the whole fabric of the Teutonic 
Order to its very foundations. Henceforth a remarkable .change 
in the whole policy of the Order was apparent. The struggle was 
no longer for dominion but for existence. Fortunate for them, 
in Jagiello they possessed an equally cautious and pacific opponent. 
Wladislaus II., in sharp contrast to Witowt, was of anything 
but a martial temperament. He never swerved from his main 
object, to unite Poland and Lithuania against the dangerous 
denationalizing German influences which environed him. But 
he would take no risks and always preferred craft to violence. 
Hence his leaning upon the holy see in all his disputes with his 
neighbours. Hence, too, his moderation at the peace of Thorn 
(xst of February 141 1), when the knights skilfully extricated 
themselves from their difficulties by renouncing their pretensions 
to Samogitia, restoring Dobrzyn and paying a war indemnity; 
Jagiello was content to discredit them rather than provoke them 
to a war & outrance. Equally skilful was Jagicllo's long diplo- 
matic duel with the emperor Sigismund, then the disturbing 
element of Central Europe, who aimed at the remodelling of 
the whole continent and was responsible for the first projected 
partition of Poland. 

Jagiello was married four times. At the dying request of the 
childless Jadwiga he espoused a Styrian lady, Maria Cillei, who 
bore him a daughter, also called Jadwiga. His third wife, 
Elizabeth Grabowska, died without issue, and the question of 
the succession then became so serious that Jagiello's advisers 
counselled him to betroth his daughter to Frederick of Hohen- 
zollcrn, who was to be educated in Poland as the heir to the throne. 
But in 142a Jagiello himself solved the difficulty by wedding 
Soma, princess of Vyazma, a Russian lady rechristened Sophia, 
who bore him two sons, Wladislaus and Casimir, both of whom 
ultimately succeeded him. Jagiello died at Grodko near Lemberg 
in 1434. During his reign of half a century Poland had risen to 
the rank of a great power, a position she was to retain tor nearly 
two hundred years under the dynasty which Jagiello had 
founded. 

See August Sokolowskt, History of Poland, vol. 1. (Pol.) (Vienna, 
I903); Carl Edward Napicrski. Russo- Lithuanian Acts (Rus.) (St 
Petersburg, 1868); Monumenta Mrdii Am (Cracow, 1882): Karol 
Stajnocha, Jadwiga and JagitUo (Pol.) (Lemberg, 1855-1856) 

Wladislaus HI. (1424-1444), king of Poland and Hungary, 
the eldest son of Wladislaus II. Jagiello, by his fourth wife, 
Sophia of Vyazma, was born at Cracow on the 31st of October 
1424, succeeding to the throne in his tenth year. The domestic 
troubles which occurred during his minority had an important* 
influence upon the development of the Polish constitution; 
but under the wise administration of Zbigmcw Olcsntcki Poland 
suffered far less from her rebels than might have been anticipated, 
and Wladislaus gave the first proof of his manhood by defeating 
the arch-traitor Spytek of Melztyn in his camp at Grotnik on 
the 4th of May 1439. On the sudden death of the emperor Albert, 
who was also kins of Bohemia and, Hungary, the Hungarians 



elected Wladislaus as their king, despite the opposition of the 
widowed empress Elizabeth, already big with the child who 
subsequently ascended the Hungarian throne as Wladislaus V. 
But Wladislaus IIL, who was solemnly crowned king of Hungary 
at Buda by the Magyar primate in July 1440, had to fight against 
the partisans of the empress for three yean till Pope Eugcnius 
IV. mediated between them so as to enable Wladislaus to lead 
a crusade against the Turks. War was proclaimed against 
Sultan Murad IL at the diet of Buda on Palm Sunday 1443, 
and with an army of 40,000 men, mostly Magyars, the young 
monarch, with Hunyadi commanding under him, crossed the 
Danube, took Niah and Sofia, and advancing to the- slope of 
the Balkans, returned to Hungary covered with glory. Europe 
resounded with the praises of the youthful hero, and the Venetians, 
the Genoese, the duke of Burgundy and the pope encouraged 
Wladislaus to continue the war by offering him every assistance. 
But at this juncture the sultan offered terms to Wladislaus 
through George Brankovic, despot of Servia, and, by the peace 
of Szeged (July 1, 1444), Murad engaged to surrender Servia, 
Albania and whatever territory the Ottomans had ever con- 
quered from Hungary, including 24 fortresses, besides paying 
an indemnity of 100,000 florins in gold. Unfortunately, Wladis- 
laus listened to the representations of the papal legate, Cardinal 
Julian Cesarini, who urged him in the name of religion to break 
the peace of Saeged and resume the war. Despite the repre- 
sentations of the Poles and of the majority of the Magyars, 
the long, only two days after solemnly swearing to observe the 
terms of the treaty, crossed the Danube a second time to co- 
operate with a fleet from the West which was to join hands with 
the land army at Gallipoli, whither also the Greeks and the 
Balkan Slavs were to direct their auxiliaries. But the Walachians 
were the sole allies of Hungary who kept faith with her, and on 
the bloody field of. Varna, November the 10th, 1444, Wladislaus 
lost his life and more than a fourth of his army. 

See Julian Bartoacewtcs, View of Ike Relations 0/ Poland with tkt 
' ** " - "* * 4 '"' -»— »- August Sokolowski, 

'; Ignacz Acsady, 
Budapest, 1905). 

Wladislaus IV. (1595-1648), king of Poland, son of Sigismund 
ILL, king of Poland, and Anne of Austria, succeeded his father 
on the throne in 1632. From his early youth he gave promise 
of great military talent, and served his apprenticeship in the 
science of war under Zolkiewski in the Muscovite campaigns 
of 1610-161 2, and under Chodkiewicz in 161 7-1618. Wladislaus's 
first official act was to march against the Muscovites, who had 
declared war' against Poland immediately after the death of 
Sigismund, and were besieging Smolensk, the key of Poland's 
eastern frontier. After a series of bloody engagements (Aug. 
7-22, 1632) Wladislaus compelled the tsar's general to abandon 
the siege, and eventually to surrender (March x, 2634) with his 
whole army. Meanwhile the Turks were threatening in the south, 
and Wladislaus found it expedient to secure his Muscovite 
conquests. Peace was concluded at the river Polyankova on 
the 28th of May 1634, the Poles conceding the title of tsar to 
Michael Romanov, who renounced all his claims upon Livonia, 
Esthonia and Courland, besides paying a war indemnity of 
200,000 rubles. These tidings profoundly impressed Sultan 
Murad, and when the victorious Wladislaus appeared at Lemberg, 
the usual starting-point for Turkish expeditions, the Porte 
offered terms which were accepted in October, each power 
engaging to keep their borderers, the Cossacks and Tatars, in 
order, and divide between them the- suzerainty of Moldavia 
and Walachia, the sultan binding himself always to place 
philo-Polish hospodars on those slippery thrones. In the follow- 
ing year the long-pending differences with Sweden were settled, 
very much to the advantage of Poland, by the truce of Stumdorf, 
which was to last for twenty-six years from the 12th September 
1635. Thus externally Poland was everywhere triumphant. 
Internally, however, things were in their usually deplorable 
state owing to the suspicion, jealousy and parsimony of the 
estates of the realm. They had double reason to be grateful to 
Wladislaus for defeating the enemies of the republic, for he had 
also paid for the expenses of his campaigns out of bis own pocket. 



bee Julian Bartouewtcz, v%em of lot Jtetatums 0/ 
Turks and Tatars (Pol.) (Warsaw, i860); Augu 
History of Poland, vol. iu (Pol.) (Vienna, 1904); 
History of the Hungarian Realm, vol. L (Hung.) (Buc 



WOAI>— WODEN 



767 



jet lie could not obtain payment of the debt due to him from the 
state till 1643. He was bound by the pacta convent* which he 
signed on his accession to maintain a fleet on the Baltic. He 
proposed to do so by levying tolls on all imports and exports 
passing through the Prussian ports which had been regained 
by the truce of Stumdorf . Sweden during her temporary occupa- 
tion of these ports had derived from them an annual income of 
3,600,000 gulden. But when Wladislaus, their lawful possessor, 
imposed similar toDs in the interests of the republic, Danzig pro- 
tested and appealed to the Scandinavian powers. Wladislaus^ 
little fleet attempted to blockade the port of the rebellious city, 
whereupon a Danish admiral broke the blockade and practically 
destroyed the Polish flotilla. Yet the sejm, so sensitive to its 
own privileges, allowed the insult to the king and the injury to 
the state to pass unnoticed, conniving at the destruction of the 
national navy and the depletion of the treasury,." lest warships 
► should make the crown too powerful." For some years after 
this humiliation, Wladislaus. became indifferent to affairs and 
sank into a sort of apathy; but the birth of his son Sigismund 
(by his first wife, Cecilia Renata of Austria, in 1640) gave him 
fresh hopes, and he began with renewed energy to labour for 
the dynasty as well as for the nation. He saw that Poland, 
with her existing constitution, could not hope for a long future, 
and he determined to bring about a royalist reaction and a 
reform along with it by every means in his power. He began 
by founding the Order of the Immaculate Conception, consisting 
of 7a young noblemen who swore a special oath of allegiance 
to the crown, and were to form the nucleus of* a patriotic move- 
ment antagonistic to the constant usurpations of the diet, but 
the sejm promptly intervened and quashed the attempt. Then 
he conceived the idea of using the Cossacks, who were deeply 
attached to him, as a meant of chastising the alackta, and at the 
same time forcing a war with Turkey, which would make his 
military genius indispensable to the republic, and enable him 
if successful to carry out domestic reforms by force of arms. 
His chief confidant in this still mysterious affair was the veteran 
grand hetman of the crown, Stanislaw Koniccpolski, who under- 
stood the Cossacks better than any man then living, but differed 
from the king in preferring the conquest of the Crimea to an open 
war with Turkey. Simultaneously Wladislaus contracted an 
offensive "and defensive alliance with Venice against the Forte, 
a treaty directly contrary indeed to the pacta cement* he had 
■worn to observe, bat excusable in the desperate circumstances. 
The whole enterprise fell through, owing partly to the death 
of Koniccpolski before it was matured, partly to the hastiness 
with which the king published his intentions, and partly to the 
careful avoidance by the Porte of the slightest occasion of a 
rupture. Frustrated in all his plans, broken-hearted by the death 
of his son (by his second wife, Marie Ludwika of Angouleme, 
Wladislaus had no issue), the king, worn out and disillusioned, 
died at Merecz on the 20th of May 1648, in his 52nd year. 
After his cousin Custavus Adolphus, whom in many respects 
he strikingly resembled, he was indubitably the most amiable 
and brilliant of all the princes of the House of Vasa, 

See Wiktor Csermak. The flans of the Turkish Wars ofWladislaus 
IV. (Pol.) (Cracow, 1895); V. V. VoHc-Karachcvsky. The Struggle 
of Poland with the Cossacks (Rus.) (Kiev, 1899): Letters and other 
Writings of Wladislaus IV. (Pol.) (Cracow, 1845). (R. N. B.) 

WOAD, a herbaceous plant, known botanically as J satis 
tincleria (natural order Crudferac), which occurs sporadically 
in England in fields, on banks and chalk-pits. The erect branched 
stem, 1 to 3 ft. in height, bears sessile leaves and terminal dusters 
of smalt yellow flowers; the brown pendulous pods are i in. 
long. The ancient Britons stained themselves with this plant. 
It is still cultivated in Lincolnshire. 

WOBURN, a market town in the northern parliamentary 
division of Bedfordshire, England, with a station (Woburn Sands), 
on a branch of the London & North- Western railway, 9 m. from 
the town and si ra. N.W. by N. from London. Pop. (1001) 
1 1 20. It lies in a hollow of a northern spur of the Chiltern Hills, 
in a finely wooded locality. There is some agricultural trade, and 
a little straw-plaiting and lace-making are carried on. To the west 



of the town lies Woburn Park, the demesne of Woburn Abbey, 
the seat of the dukes of Bedford. The abbey was a Cistercian 
foundation of 1145, but only scanty remains of the buildings are 
seen in the mansion which rose on its site. This, with most 
of the abbey lands, was granted by Henry VIII. to John, Lord 
Russell, in 1547, who was created earl of Bedford in 1550 (the 
dukedom dating from 1604). The mansion was begun in 1744; 
It contains a magnificent collection of paintings and other 
objects of art. 

WOBURN; a dty of Middlesex county, Massachusetts, U.S.A., 
10 m. W. by N.W. of Boston. Pop. (1800) 13,400; (rooo) 
14,154, of whom 3840 were foreign-born and 261 were negroes; 
(19x0, U.S. census) 15,308. Area, ia>6 sq. m» Woburn is 
served by the southern division of the Boston & Maine railway, 
and is connected with Burlington, Lexington, Reading, Stoneham, 
Wilmington, Winchester, Arlington, Boston and Lowell by 
electric railways. In the dty area are several villages, including 
Woburn proper, known as "the Centre," North Woburn, 
Woburn Highlands, CmrimingsvHle (in the western part), Mis* 
hawum (in the north-east), MontvsJe (In the east) and Walnut 
Hill (also in the east). There are two ancient burying-grounds^ 
the oldest, on Park Street, dates from about 1642 and contains 
the graves of ancestors of four presidents— Cleveland, Benjamin 
Harrison, Franklin Pierce and Garfield— and a granite obelisk 
to the memory of Loammi Baldwin (1744-1807). On Academy 
Hill is the Warren Academy building used by a Free Industrial 
School. Forest Park (53 acres) is a fine stretch of natural woods, 
and there are several small parks and squares; on Woburn Com- 
mon is the Public Library, by H. H. Richardson, the gift of 
Charles Winn. The building houses an art gallery and historical 
museum, and a library of about 50,000 volumes especially rich 
in Americana. Among colonial houses still standing are the 
birthplace of Count Rumford (in North Wobum), built about 
1 7 14, and now preserved by the Rumford Historical Association 
as a depository for the Rumford Library and historical memorials, 
and the Baldwin mansion (built partly in 1661 and later enlarged), 
the home of Loammi Baldwin (1780-1838), known as " the father 
of civil engineering in America." Woburn's manufactories are 
concentrated within a small area. The dty is the most important 
leather manufacturing centre of New England: in 1905 the value 
of the leather product was $2,851,554, being 61-3% of the 
value of all factory products ($4,654,067); other manufactures 
are chemicals, leather-working machinery, boots and shoes, glue 
and cotton goods. Market gardening is an important industry. 

Woburn, first settled about 1638-1640, was incorporated at 
a township under its present name in 1642, and was the first 
township set off from Charlestown. It then included a large 
part of the present Winchester and the greater part of the 
present Wilmington and Burlington, separately organised in 
1730 and 1799 respectively. It was named after Woburn in 
Bedfordshire by its chief founder, Edward Johnson (1500-1672), 
whose work, The Wander-Working Providence of Zfon's Saviour 
(1654; latest ed. 1910), was one of the earliest historical accounts 
of the Massachusetts Bay Colony. The leather industry was 
established by David Cummhtgs at Cummingsville shortly before 
the War of Independence. Woburn's industrial growth dates 
from the construction through the township of the old Middlesex 
Canal. The dty was chartered in 1888. 

See P. L. Converse. Legends of Woburn, 1642-1892 (a vole... Woburn, 
1892*1896) : Samuel Scvail. History of Weburn t 1*40 to i860 (Boston, 
1868); F. EL Wetherell, Two Hundred and Fiftieth Anniversary of 
Wobum (Woburn, 1893); and G. M. ChampneV in S. A. Drake's 
History of Middlesex County (2 vol*., Boston. 1880). 

WOCHUA (Achtta), a pygmy people of Africa, living in the 
forests of the Mabode district, south of the Welle. They were 
discovered (1880-1883) by Dr W. Junker, who described them 
as "well proportioned, though the oval-shaped head seemed 
somewhat too large for the size of the body." Some are of light 
complexion, like the Akka and Batwa, but as a general rule they 
belong to the darker, crisper-haired, more genuine negro stock. 

WODEK, a deity of the Anglo-Saxons, the name being the 
Anglo-Saxon counterpart of the Scandinavian Odirt (a.v.). 
In German the same god was called Wodan or Wuotan. Owing 



768 



WODROW— WOHLER 



to the very small amount of information which has come down 
to us regarding the gods of ancient England and Germany, it 
cannot be determined how far the character and adventures 
attributed to Odin in Scandinavian mythology were known to 
other Teutonic peoples. It is dear, however, that the god was 
credited with special skill in magic, both in England and 
Germany, while the story of the Langobardic migration (see 
Loxbaids) represents him as the dispenser of victory. From 
Woden also most of the anglo-Saxon royal families traced their 
descent. By the Romans he was identified at an early date with 
Mercurius, whence our name " Wednesday " (Woden's day) 
as a translation of dies MercurU. Tacitus states that the ancient 
Germans worshipped Mercurius more than any other god, and 
that they offered him human sacrifices. Many scholars connect 
the origin of the deity with the popular German and Swedish 
belief in a raging host (in Germany called das -wUlende Heer or 
Wutes Hetr, but in Sweden Odens Jagt), which passes through the 
forests on stormy nights. There is evidence, however, that 
deities similar to Woden were known to some of the ancient 
peoples of central Europe, e.f . the Gauls and Thracians. See 
Teutonic Peoples, ad fin. (H. M . C.) 

WODROW, ROBERT (1670-1734), Scottish historian, was 
born at Glasgow, being a son of James Wodrow, professor of 
divinity. He was educated at the university and was librarian 
from 1697 to 1701. From 1703 till his death, on the 21st of 
March 1734, he was parish minister at Eastwood, near Glasgow* 
He had sixteen children, his son Patrick being the " auld 
Wodrow " of Burns's poem " Twa Herds." His great work, 
The History of the Sufferings of the Church of Scotland from the 
Restoration to the Revolution, was published in two volumes in 
17*1-172* (new ed. with a life of Wodrow by Robert Burns, 
D.D., 1807-1808). Wodrow also wrote a Life (1828) of his father. 
He left two other works in MS.— Memoirs of Reformers and 
Ministers of the Church of Scotland, and Analecta: or Materials for 
a History of Remarkable Providences, mostly relating to Scotch 
Ministers and Christians. Of the former, two volumes were 
published by the Maitland Club in 1834-1845 and one volume by 
the New Spalding Club in 1800; the latter was published in 
four volumes by the Maitland Club in 1842-1843. 

Wodrow left a great man of correspondence, thi 

which, edited by T. M'Cric, appeared in 1843- 1844. The Wodrow 



Wodrow left a great man of correspondence, three volumes of 
riuch, edited by T. M'Cric, appeared in 1843- 1844. The Wodrow 
Society, founded in Edinburgh to perpetuate his memory, was in 



existence from 1841 to 1847, several works being published under its 
auspices. 

WOBLFU JOSEPH (1 772-181 2), Austrian pianist and com- 
poser, was bom in 1773 at Salzburg, where he studied music 
under Leopold Moaart and Michael Haydn.. After a short 
residence at Warsaw he produced bis first opera, Der Hbllenbcrg, 
with some success at Vienna, where it was soon followed by Das 
schone MiUhmddehen and some other dramatic pieces. His fame 
now rests upon his compositions for the pianoforte, and the skill 
with which he is said to have met their formidable demands 
upon his power as an executant. The perfection. of his technique 
was immeasurably enhanced by the enormous stretch of his 
fingers (his hand could strike a thirteenth with ease); and to his 
wide grasp of the keyboard he owed a facility of execution which 
he turned to excellent account, especially in his extempore 
performances. His technique was superior even to that of the 
young Beethoven, who played in company with him at the 
house of Count Wetzlar, and in memory of this exhibition of 
good-humoured rivalry he dedicated to Beethoven his " Three 
Sonatas," Op. 6. Quitting Vienna in 1798, he exhibited his 
skill in most of the great European capitals, and, after spending 
tome years in Paris, made his first appearance in London on 
the 27th of May 1805. Here he enjoyed a long term of popularity, 
crowned about 1808 by the publication of his sonata, Op. 41, 
containing some variations on " Life let us cherish." This, 
on account of its technical difficulty, he entitled No» Plus 
Ultra; and, in reply to the challenge* Dussek's London pub- 
lishers reprinted a sonata by that composer, originally called 
Le Retour 4 Paris, with the title Plus l/Uro, and an ironical 
dedication to Nou Plus Ultra. ( Woclfl died in Great Marylebone 
Street, London, oa the 21st of May 181a, 



WOFFINGTON, MARGARET [Pbc] (c. 1714-1760), English 
actress, was born at Dublin, of poor parents. As a child of ten 
she played Polly Peachum in a liUiputian presentation of The 
Beggar's Opera, and danced and acted at various Dublin theatres 
until 1 740, when her success as Sir Harry Wildair in The Constant 
Couple secured her a London engagement. In this, and as 
Sylvia in The Recruiting Officer, she had a pronounced success; 
and at Drury Lane and Covent Garden, as well as in Dublin, 
she appeared in all the plays of the day to ever growing popularity. 
Among her best impersonations were the elegant women of 
fashion, like Lady Betty Modish and Lady Townlcy, and in 
" breeches parts " she was unapproachable. She lived openly 
with Garrick, and her other love affairs were numerous and 
notorious, but her generosity and kindness of heart were equally 
well known. She educated her sister Mary, and cared for and 
pensioned her mother. She built and endowed by will some 
almshouses at Teddington, where she lived quietly after her , 
retirement in 1757. 

See Austin Dobson's introduction to Charles Rcade's novel Peg 
Woffington (London, 1899), and Augustin Daly's Woffington: a Tribute 
to the Actress and the Woman (1888). 

W0HLER, FRIEDR1CH (1800-1882), German chemist, was 
born at Eschersheim, near Frankfort-on-the-Main, on the 31st 
of July x8oo. In 1814 he began to attend the gymnasium at 
Frankfort, where he carried out experiments with his friend 
Dr J. J. C. Buch. In 1820 he entered Marburg University, 
and next year removed to Heidelberg, where he worked in 
Leopold Gmclin's laboratory. Intending to practise as a 
physician, he took his degree in medicine and surgery (1823), 
but was persuaded by Gmclin to devote himself to chemistry. 
He studied in Berzelius's laboratory at Stockholm, and there began 
a lifelong friendship with the Swedish chemist. On his return 
he had proposed to settle as a Prhatdozent at Heidelberg, 
but accepted the post of teacher of chemistry in the newly 
established technical school {Gewerbeschule) m Berlin (1825), 
where he remained till 183 1. Private affairs then called him to 
Casscl, where he soon became professor at the higher technical 
school. In 1836 he was appointed to the chair of chemistry 
in the medical faculty at Gottingen, holding also the office of 
inspector-general of pharmacies in the kingdom of Hanover. 
This professorship he held until his death on the 23rd of 
September 1882. 

Wohlcr had made the acquaintance of LteMg, h» junior by three 
years, in 182$. and the two men remained close friends and allies 
lor the rest of their lives. Together they carried out a number of 
joint researches. One of the earliest, if not the earliest, was the 
investigation, published in 1830, which proved the polymerism of 
cyanic 5 and cvanuric acid, but the most famous were those on the 
oil of bitter almonds (benxaldehyde) and the radicle benzoyl (1832), 
and on uric acid (1837), which are of fundamental importance in 
the history of organic chemistry. But it was the achievement 
of Wohlcr alone, in 1828, to break down the barrier held to exist 
between organic and inorganic chemistry by anmdany preparing 
urea, one of those substances which up to that time it had been 
thought could only be produced through the agency of " vital force. 1 * 
Most of his work, however, lay in the domain of inorganic chemistry. 
The isolation of the elementary bodies and the investigation of their 
properties was one tf his favourite pursuits. In 1827 he obtained 
metallic aluminium as a fine powder, and in 1845 improved methods 
enabled him to get it in fully metallic globules. Nine years after- 
wards H. E. Sainte-CIatre Deville, ignorant of what he bad done, 
adopted the same methods in his efforts to prepare the metal on an 
industrial scale; the result of Wdhler's claim of priority was that 
the two became good friends and joined in a research, published 
in 1 856-1 857, which yielded " adamantine boron.*' By the same 
method as had succeeded with aluminium (reduction of the chloride 
by potassium) W6hler in 1828 obtained metallic beryllium and 
yttrium. Later, in 1849, titanium enga ge d his attention, and, 
proving chat what had up to that time passed as the metal was 
really a cyanonitride, he showed how the true metal was to be ob- 
tained. He also worked at the nitrides, and in 1857 with H. Buff 
carried out an inquiry on the compound* of silicon m which they 
prepared the previously unknown gas, silicon hydride or stttcarettcd 
hydrogen. A problem to which he returned repeatedly was that of 
separating nickel and cobalt from their ores and freeing them from 
arsenic; and in the course of his long laboratory practice he worked 



out numerous proce ss e s for the preparation < 
methods of exact analysis. 

The Royal Society's Catalogue enumerates 376 separate memoirs 
written by him, apart from 43 in which be collaborated with others. 



WOHLGEMUTH— WOLCOT 



769 



In 1811 he published Grundriu der anorganuchen Chemie, and in 
1840 Crundrtss der organixhen Chemie, both of which went through 
many edition*. Still more valuable for teaching purposes was his 
Mineralanatyse in Beispielen (1861), which first appeared in 1833 as 
Praktisck* Otmngen in der chemiseheu Analyst. Chemists also had 
to thank him for translating three editions of the Lehr buck of Berzelius 
and all the successive volumes of the Jahresberuht into German from 
the original Swedish. He assisted Liebig and Poggendorff in the 
Handworterbuch dtr reinen und angewndten Chemie. and was joint- 
editor with Liebig of the Annalen der Chemu und Pharmacie. 

A memoir by Hofmann appeared in the Ber. deut. ckem. GeseUsch. 
(1882), reprinted in Zur Erinnerung an vorangegangene Freunde 
(1888). 

WOHLGEMUTH, MICHAEL (1434-15x9), German pointer, 
was born at Nuremberg in 1434. Little is known of his private 
life beyond the fact that in 1479 he married the widow of the 
painter Hans Pleydenwurff, whose son Wilhdm worked as an 
assistant to his stepfather. The importance of Wohlgemuth as 
an artist rests, not only on his own individual paintings, but also 
on the fact that he was the head of a large workshop, in which 
many different branches of the fine arts were carried on by a 
great number of pupil-assistants, including Albert Durer. In this 
atelier not only large altar-pieces and other sacred paintings 
were executed, but also elaborate rotables in carved wood, con- 
sisting of crowded subjects in high relief, richly decorated with 
gold and colour, such as pleased the rather doubtful Teutonic 
taste of that time. Wood-engraving was also carried on in the 
the blocks being cut from Wohlgemuth'* 
of which are remarkable for their vigour and 
clever adaptation to the special necessities of the technique 
of woodcutting. Two large and copiously illustrated books 
have woodcuts supplied by Wohlgemuth and his stepson 
Wilhehn Pleydenwurff. The first is the Sdutftkamm* der 
wakrem ReichthUmer des Heils, printed by Koburger in 1401; 
the other is the Historic mundi, by Schedd, 1403-1404* usually 
known as the Nuremberg Chronicle, which is highly valued, not 
for the text, but for its remarkable collection of spirited 
engravings. 

The earliest known work by Wohlgemuth is a rotable con- 
sisting of four panels, dated 1465, now in the Munich gallery, 
a decorative work of much beauty. In 1470 he painted the 
retable of the high altar in the church of St Mary at Zwickau, 
which still exists, receiving for it the large sum of 1400 gulden. 
One of his finest and largest works is the great retable painted 
for the church of the Austin friars at Nuremberg, now moved 
into the museum; it consists of a great many panels, with figures 
of those saints whose worship was specially popular at Nuremberg. 
In 1501 Wohlgemuth was employed t* decorate the town hall 
at Gosiar with a large series of paintings; some on the ceiling 
are on panel, and others on the walls are painted thinly In tempera 
on canvas. As a portrait-painter be enjoyed much repute, 
and some of his works of this class are very admirable for their 
realistic vigour and minute finish. Outside Germany Wohl- 
gemuth'* pointings are scarce: the Royal Institution at Liverpool 
possesses two good examples—'' Pilate washing his Hands/' and 
" The Deposition from the Cross,'' parts probably of a large altar- 
piece. During the last ten years of his life Wohlgemuth appears 
to have produced little by his own hand. One of his latest 
P*mting» is the retable at Scfawabach, executed in isoft, the 
contract for which still exists. He died at Nuremberg in 
1510. 

See the reproductions in Die Gemdlde von Direr und Wohlgemuth, 
by Riehl and Thode (Nuremberg. 1 889-1895). 

WOKING, a market town in the Chertsey parliamentary 
division of Surrey, England, 24 m. S.W. of London by the 
London and South- Western railway. Fop. of urban district 
(1891) 9786; (1901) 16,244. The river Wey and the Basing- 
stoke canal pass through the parish. St Peter's church dates 
from the 13th century. Modern structures include a public 
hall, and an Oriental institute (in the building erected for the 
Royal Dramatic College, including a museum of Eastern anti- 
quities, a mosque, and residences for Orientals). In the vicinity 
are the Surrey county asylum and a female convict prison. 
Near Woking is Brook wood cemetery, belonging to the London 
Necropolis Company, with a crematorium. 



WOKINGHAM, a market town and municipal borough in the 
Wokingham parliamentary division of Berkshire, England, 36 m. 
W. by S. of London by the South- Western railway, served also 
by the South-Eastern and Chatham railway. Pop. (1001) 3551. 
It lies on a slight eminence above a valley tributary to that of the 
river Loddon, in a well-wooded district on the outskirts of the 
former royal forest of Windsor. The church of St Laurence is 
Perpendicular, greatly altered by restoration. Two miles west of 
the town is the village of Bearwood. The trade of Wokingham 
is principally agricultural. The borough is under a mayor, 4 
aldermen and 12 councillors. Area, 557 acres. 

Wokingham {Wokingham, Oakingham, Ockingham), which was 
within the limits of Windsor Forest, was formerly situated partly in 
Berkshire and partly in a detached piece of Wiltshire, which is now 
annexed to Berkshire; the Berkshire portion of the town was in the 
manor of Sonning, which was- held by the bishops of Salisbury from 
before the Conquest until the reign of Elizabeth. The earliest 
existing charter to Wokingham is that of Elizabeth (1583), which 
recites and confirms some ancient customary privileges respecting 
the election of an alderman and other corporate officers. The 
governing charter for more than 250 years was that of James 1. 
(1612), incorporating it as a free town under the title of the u Alder- 
man and Burgesses of the Town of Wokingham in the Counties of 
Berks and Wilts." Under the provisions of the Municipal Corpora- 
tions Act of 1882 a new charter of incorporation was granted, in- 
stituting a municipal body to consist of a mayor, 4 aldermen and 
12 councillors. Wokingham was assessed at £50 for ship-money, 
Reading being assessed at £220. It had at this time a manufacture 
of silk stockings, which flourished as early as 1625, and survived up 
to the 19th century. The town shared in the benefactions of Laud, 
whose father was born there. The Tuesday market, which is still 
held and which, during the first half of the 19th century, was famous 
for poultry, was granted to the bishop of Salisbury by Henry III. 
(1219), who aho granted (1258) two annual fairs to be held on the 
vigil, day and morrow of St Barnabas and All Saints respectively; 
the latter is still kept up, the former appears in the list of fairs hck) 
in 1792. 

WOLCOT, JOHN (1735-1819), English satirist and poet, 
known under the pseudonym of Peter Pindar, was the son of 
Alexander Wolcot, surgeon at Dodbrooke, adjoining Kingsbridge, 
in Devonshire, and was baptized there on the 9th of May 1738. 
He was educated at Kingsbridge free school, at the Bodmin 
and Liskeard grammar schools, and in France. For seven years 
he was apprenticed to his uncle, John Wolcot, a surgeon at 
Fowey, and he took his degree of M.D. at Aberdeen in 1767. In 
1769 he was ordained, and went to Jamaica with his uncle's 
patient, Sir William Trelawny, the new governor In 1772 he 
became incumbent of Vere, Jamaica, but on the death of his 
patron (xxth of December 1772) he returned to England, and 
settled as a physician at Truro. In x 781 Wolcot went to London, 
and took with him the young Cornish artist, John Opie, whose 
talents in painting he had been the first to recognize. Before 
they left Cornwall Opie apparently made a rash engagement to 
share his profits with Wolcot, but a breach between them 
occurred soon after they settled in London. Wolcot had already 
achieved some success in a Supplicating Epistle to the Reviewers 
(1778), and after his settlement in London he threw off with 
marvellous rapidity a succession of pungent satires. George III. 
was his favourite subject of ridicule, and his peculiarities were 
described or distorted in The Lousiad (1785), Peeps at St James's 
(1787) and The Royal Visit to Exeter. Two of Wolcot 's happiest 
satires on the "farmer king 1 ' depicted the royal survey of 
Whitbrcad's brewery, and the king's naive wonder how the 
apples got into the apple dumplings. In his Expostulatory Odes 
(1 789) he eulogized the prince of Wales. BoswelTs biography of 
Johnson was ridiculed in An Epistle to James Boswell (1786), 
and in the same year followed another piece, called Bony and 
Piom. Other subjects were found in Sir Joseph Banks and 
the Emperor of Morocco (1790), and a Complimentary Epistle 
to James Bruce (1790). Among his early satires were Lyric Odes 
to the A cademicians (1782) , and another series on the same subject, 
Farewell Odes (1786). He specially attacked Benjamin West, 
but expressed great admiration for the landscapes of Gains- 
borough and Richard Wilson. Wolcot was himself no mean 
artist, and in 1 797 appeared Six Picturesque Views from Paintings 
by Peter Pindar ; engraved by Aiken. In 1795 he disposed of 
his works to the booksellers for an annuity of £250. His 



77° 



WOLCOTT— WOLF, F. A. 



various pieces were published in 1796 in four octavo volumes 
and often reprinted. Wolcot cared little whether he hit above 
or below the belt, and the gross vituperation he indulged in 
spoils much of his work for present-day readers; but he had a 
broad sense of humour, a keen eye for the ridiculous, and great 
felicity of imagery and expression. Some of his serious pieces — 
his rendering of Thomas Warton's epigram on Sleep and his Lard 
Gregory, for example — reveal an unexpected fund of genuine 
tenderness. In William Gifford, who attacked him in the 
Epistle to P. Pindar, he for once met with more than his match. 
Wolcot made a personal assault on his enemy in Wright's shop 
in Piccadilly, but Gifford was too quick for him, and Wolcot was 
soundly thrashed. He died at Latham Place, Somen Town, 
London, on the 14th of January 18x9, and seven days later was 
buried, as he had desired, near Samuel Butler, the author of 
Hudibras, in St Paul's, Covent Garden. 

Polwhele, the Cornish historian, was well acquainted with Wolcot 
in his early life, and the best account of his residence in the west 
is found in voL I 01 Polwhele's Traditions and in Pdwheles 
Biographical Sketches, vol. ii. Cyras Redding was a frequent 
visitor at the old man's house, and has described Wolcot's later 
days in his Part Celebrities, voL L, and his Fifty Years* Recollections, 
vols. i. and ii. 

WOLCOTT, ROGER (1670-1767), American administrator, 
was born in Windsor, Connecticut, on the 4th of January 1679, 
the son of Simon Wolcot t (d. 1687). He was a grandson of Henry 
Wolcott (1578-1655) of Galdon Manor, Tolland, Somerset, 
who emigrated to New England in 1628, assisted John Mason 
and others to found Windsor, Conn., in 1635, and was a member 
of the first General Assembly of Connecticut in 1637 and of the 
House of Magistrates from 1643 to his death. 1 Roger Wolcott 
was early apprenticed to a weaver and throve at this trade, he 
was a member of the Connecticut General Assembly in 1709, one 
of the Bench of Justices in 1710, commissary of the Connecticut 
forces in the expedition of 171 1 against Canada, a member of the 
Council in 1714, judge of the county court in 1721 and of the 
superior court in 1732, and deputy-governor and chief-justice 
of the superior court in 1741. He was second in command to Sir 
William Pepperrell, with rank of major-general in the expedition 
(1745) against Louisbourg, and was governor of Connecticut in 
1751-1754- He died in what is now East Windsor, on the 
17th of May 1767. 

He wrote Poetical Meditations (1725), an epic on The Agency of 
the Honourable John Winthroj> in the t Court of King Charles the Second 

Stinted in pp. 262-298 of vol. iv., series 1 , Collections of Massachusetts 
Utorical Society), and a pamphlet to prove that " the New England 
Congregational churches are and always have been consoaated 
churches." His Journal at the Siege of Louisbourg is printed in 

B). 131-161 of voL I (i860) of the Collections of the Connecticut 
istorical Society. 

His son, Erastus Wolcott (1722-1793) was a member of 
the Connecticut General Assembly and its speaker; he was a 
brigadier-general of Connecticut militia in the War of Inde- 
pendence, and afterwards a judge of the Superior Court of 
Connecticut. 

Another son, Oliver Wolcott (1726-1797), graduated at 
Yale in 1747 and studied medicine with his brother Alexander 
(17 1 2-1795). In 1 751 he was made sheriff of the newly estab- 
lished Litchfield county and settled in Litchfield, where he 
practised law. He was a member of the Council in 1774-1786 
and of the Continental Congress in 1775-1776, 1778 and 1780- 
1784. Congress made him a commissioner of Indian affairs for 
the Northern Department in 1775, and during the early years 
of the War of Independence he was active in raising militia in 
Connecticut. He was one of the signers of the Declaration of 
Independence; commanded Connecticut militia that helped to 
defend New York City in August 1776; in 1777 organized more 
Connecticut volunteers and took part in the last few days of 
the campaign against General John Burgoyne; and in 1779 
commanded the militia during the British invasion of Con- 
necticut. In 1784, as one of the commissioners of Indian affairs 
for the Northern Department, he negotiated the treaty of Fort 
Stanwix (22nd Oct.) settling the boundaries of the Six Nations. 

1 Henry Wolcott the younger (cl t69o) was one of the patentees 
of Connecticut under the charter of 1662. 



In 1786-1796 he was lieutenant-governor of Connecticut, and 
in November 1787 was a member of the Connecticut Convention 
which ratified the Federal Constitution, he became governor in 
1796 upon the death (15th Jan.) of Samuel Huntington, and 
served until his death on the ist of December 1797. 

See the sketch by bis son Oliver in Sanderson's Biography of the 
Signers of the Declaration of Independence (Philadelphia, 1820-1827). 

Oliver's son, Oliver Wolcott, jun. (1760-1833), graduated 
at Yale in 1778, studied law in Litchfield under Judge Tapping 
Reeve, and was admitted to the bar in 1781. With Oliver 
Ellsworth he was appointed (May 1784) a commissioner to adjust 
the claims of Connecticut against the United States. In 1788 
he was made comptroller of public accounts of Connecticut; 
in the next year was appointed auditor of the Federal Treasury; 
in June 1791 became comptroller of the Treasury, and in February 
1795 succeeded Alexander Hamilton as Secretary of the Treasury. 
At the end of 1800 he resigned after a bitter attack by the 
Democratic-Republican press, against which he defended himself 
in an Address to the People of Ike United States. In 1801-1802 
he was judge of the Circuit Court of the Second District (Connecti- 
cut, Vermont and New York), and then entered business in New 
York City, where he was president of the short-lived Merchants' 
Bank (1803) and president (1812-1814) of the Bank of North 
America. With a brother he then founded factories at Wolcott- 
ville (near Litchfield). He re-entered politics as a leader of the 
" Toleration Republicans," attempting to oust the Congregational 
clergy from power by adopting a more liberal constitution in 
place of the charter; he was defeated for governor in 1815, 
but in 18 1 7 presided over the state convention which adopted 
a new constitution, and in the same year was elected governor, 
serving until 1827. He died in New York City on the ist of 
June 1833. 

His grandson, George Gibbs (1815-1873), in 1846 edited Memoirs 
of the Administration of Washington and John Adams , from the 
Papers of Oltrer Wolcott, Secretary of the Treasury. Wolcott wrote 
British Influence on the Affatrs of the United States Proved and Ex- 
plained (1804). 

A grandson of the second Oliver's brother Frederick was 
Room Wolcott (1847-1901), who graduated at Harvard in 
1870, and was admitted to the Suffolk bar in 1874. He practised 
law in Boston, and served in the Massachusetts House of Repre- 
sentatives in 1882-1884 a* * Republican. In 1892 he was elected 
lieutenant-governor (re-elected 1893 and 1805), and in 1806 
became acting-governor upon the death (5th March) of Governor 
Frederick T. Greenhalge. He was elected governor in 1896 
and served until 1900. He died on the 21st of December 1001. 

Edward Oliver Wolcott (i848-i90s),aniemberofthesame 
family ,went to Colorado, became interested in silver mining there, 
was a U.S. Senator in 1889-1001, and was a prominent Republican 
bimetallism 

See William Lawrence, Roger Wolcott [1847-1901] (Boston, 1902), 
and for all the family, Samuel Wolcott, Memorial of Henry Wolcott, 
one of the first Settlers of Windsor, Connecticut, and of some of his 
Descendants (New York. 1881). J 

WOLF, FRIBORICH AUGUST (1750-1824), German philo- 
logist and critic, was born on the 15th of February 1759 at 
Hainrodc, a little village not for from Nordbausen, in the province 
of Hanover. His father was the village schoolmaster and organist. 
In time the family removed to Nordhausen, and there young 
Wolf went to the grammar school, where be soon acquired all 
the Latin and Greek that the masters could teach him, besides 
learning French, Italian, Spanish and music The precocity 
of his attainments was only equalled by the force of will and 
confidence in his own powers which characterized him throughout 
life. After two years of solitary study, at the age of eighteen. 
Wolf went (1777) to the university of Gottingcn. His first act 
there was a prophecy— one of those prophecies which spring 
from the conscious power to bring about their fulfilment. Be 
bad to choose his " faculty," and chose one which then existed 
only In his own mind, the faculty d! " philology " What is even 
more remarkable, the omen was accepted. He carried his point, 
and was enrolled as he desired. C. G. Heyne was then the chief 
ornament of Gdttingen, and Wolf and he were not on good terms. 
Heyne excluded him from his lectures, and brusquely condemned 



WOLF, H. 



771 



Wolff view* on Homer. Wolf, however, penned fab studies 
in the university library, from which he borrowed with his old 
avidity. During 1770-1783 Wolf was a schoolmaster, first at 
Ilf eld, then at Ostercde. His success as a teacher was striking, 
and he found time to publish an edition of the Symposium of 
Plato, which excited notice, and led to his promotion (1783) 
to a chair in the Prussian university of Halle. The moment 
was a critical one in the history of education. The literary 
impulse of the Renaissance was almost spent; scholarship had 
become dry and trivial. A new school, that of Locke and 
Rousseau, sought to make teaching more modern and more 
human, but at the sacrifice of mental discipline and scientific 
aim. Wolf was eager to throw himself into the contest on the 
side of antiquity. In Halle (1 783-1807), by the force of his will 
and the enlightened aid of the ministers of Frederick the Great, 
he was able to carry out his long-cherished ideas and found the 
science of philology. Wolf defined philology broadly as " know- 
ledge of human nature as exhibited in antiquity." The matter 
of such a science, he held, must be sought in the history and 
education of some highly cultivated nation, to be studied in 
written remains, works of art, and whatever else bears the stamp 
of national thought or skill It has therefore to do with both 
history and language, but primarily as a science oi interpretation, 
in which historical facts and linguistic facts take their place in 
an organic whole. Such was the ideal which Wolf had in his 
mind when he established the philological seminarium at Halle. 

Wolf's writings make little show in a library, and were always 
subordinate to his teaching. During his time at Halle he pub- 
lished his commentary on the Leptines of Demosthenes (1789) — 
which suggested to his pupil, Aug. Boeckh, the Public Economy 
of Athens— and a little later the celebrated Prolegomena to Homer 
(1705). This book, the work with which his name is chiefly 
associated, was thrown off in comparative haste to meet an 
immediate need. It has all the merits of a great piece of oral 
teaching — command of method, suggestiveness, breadth of view. 
The reader does not feel that he has to do with a theory, but with 
great ideas, which are left to bear fruit in his mind (see Homer). 
The publication led to an unpleasant polemic with Hcyne, 
who absurdly accused him of reproducing what he had heard 
from him at Gdttingen. 

The Halle professorship ended tragically, and with it the happy 
and productive period of Wolf's life. He was swept away, and 
his university with him, by the deluge of the French invasion. 
A painful gloom oppressed his remaining years (1807-1834), 
which he spent at Berlin. He became so fractious and intolerant 
as to alienate some of his warmest friends. He gained a place 
in the department of education, through the exertions of W. 
von Humboldt. When this became unendurable, he once more 
took a professorship. But he no longer taught with his old 
success; and he wrote very little. His most finished work, 
the DarsttUung dcr Alterthumswissenschaft, though published 
at Berlin (1807), belongs essentially to the Halle time. At 
length his health gave way. He was advised to try the south 
of France. He got as far as Marseilles, and, dying there on the 
8th of August 1824, was laid in the classic soil of that ancient 
Hellenic city. 

Mark Pattison wrote an admirable 'sketch of Wolf's life and work 
in the North British Review of June 1865, reproduced in his Essays 
(1889); tee also J. E. Sandys. Hist, of Class. Schd. iii. (1908). 
pp. M-60. Wolf's Kleine Sckriften were edited by G. Bcrnhardy 
(Halle, 1869). Works not included arc the Prolegomena, the Letters 
to Hcyne (Berlin, 1797), the commentary on the Leptines (Halle, 
1789) and a translation of the Clouds of Aristophanes (Berlin, 181 1). 
To these must be added the Vorlesungen on Iliad i.-iv., taken from 
the notes of a pupil and edited by Ustcri (Bern, 1830). (D. B. M.) 

WOLF, HUGO (1860-1003), German composer, was born on 
the 13th of March i860 at Windischgraz in Styria. His father, 
who was in the leather trade, was a keen musician. From him 
Hugo learned the rudiments of the piano and the violin. After 
an unhappy school life, in which he showed little aptitude for 
anything but music, he went in 1875 to the Conservatoire. He 
appears to have learned very little there, and was dismissed in 
1877 because of a practical joke in the form of a threatening 



letter to the director, for which he was perhaps unjustly held 
responsible. From the age of seventeen he had to depend upon 
himself for his musical training. By giving lesions on the piano 
and with occasional small help from his father he managed to 
live for several years in Vienna, but it was a life of extreme 
hardship and privation, for which his delicate constitution and 
his proud, sensitive and nervous temperament were particularly 
ill-suited. In 1884 he became musical critic to the Salonblatt\ 
a Viennese society paper, and contrived by his uncompromisingly 
trenchant and sarcastic style to win a notoriety which was not 
helpful to his future prospects. His ardent discipJeship of 
Wagner was unfortunately linked with a bitter opposition to 
Brahms, for whose works be always retained an ineradicable 
dislike. The publication at the end of 1887 of twelve of his songs 
seems to have definitely decided the course of his genius, for 
about this time he retired from the SalomNatt, and resolved to 
devote his whole energies to song-compositioo. The nine years 
which followed practically represent his life as a composer. They 
were marked by periods of feverish creative activity, alternating 
with periods of mental and physical exhaustion, during which he 
was sometimes unable even to bear the sound of music By the 
end of 1891 he had composed the bulk of his works, on which his 
fame chiefly rests, 43 Morike Lieder, so EScheodorS JUeder, 
51 Goethe Lieder, 44 Lieder from Geibd and Heyse's Spaniscka 
LiederspieJ f and 12 from Heyse's llalicnischtt Licderbuch, a 
second part consisting of 24 songs being added in 1806. Besides 
these were 23 settings of lyrics by different authors, incidental 
music to Ibsen's Fesi auf SoUtaug, a few choral *nd instrumental 
works, an opera in four acts, Dtr Corregidor, successfully produced 
at Mannheim in June 1896, and finally settings of three sonnets 
by Michelangelo in March 1897* la September of this'year the 
malady which had long threatened descended upon him; he 
was placed in an asylum, released in the following January, only 
to be immured again some months later by his own wish, after 
an attempt to drown himself in the Traunsee. Four painful years 
elapsed before his death on the and of February 1003. Apart 
from his works and the tragedy of his last years there is little 
in Wolf's life to distinguish it from that of other struggling and 
unsuccessful musicians. His touchy and difficult temperament 
perpetually stood in the way of worldly success. What little be 
obtained was due to the persevering efforts of a small band of 
friends, critics and singers, to make his songs known, to the 
support of the Vienna Wagner-Verein, and to the formation in 
1895 of the Hogc-Wolf-Verein in Berlin. No doubt it was als* 
a good thing for his reputation that the firm of Schott undertook 
in 1891 the publication of his songs, but the financial result after 
five years amounted to 85 marks 35 pfennigs (about £4, 10s.). 
He lived in cheap lodgings till in 1806 the generosity of his friends 
provided him with a house of his own, which he enjoyed for one 
year. 

Among the song composers who have adopted the modern 
standpoint, according to which accepted canons of beauty and 
of form must yield if they interfere with a closer or more vivid 
realization of dramatic or emotional expression, Wolf holds a 
place in which he has no rival, not because of the daring origin- 
ality of his methods and the remarkable idiosyncrasies of his 
style, but because these are the direct outcome of rare poetical 
insight and imaginative power. He has that gift of vision which 
makes the difference between genius and talent. His frequent 
adoption of a type of song built upon a single phrase or leit-motiv 
in the accompaniment has led to the misleading statement that 
his work represents merely the transference of Wagnerian 
principles to song. In reality the forms of Wolf's songs vary as 
widely as those of the poems which he set. No less remarkable 
is the immense range of style at his command. But with Wolf 
methods of form and style are so inseparably linked with the 
poetical conceptions which they embody, that they can hardly 
be considered apart. His place among the greatest song-writers 
is due to the essential truth and originality of his creations, and 
to the vivid intensity with which he has presented them. These 
results depend not merely on musical gifts that are exceptional, 
but also upon a critical grasp of poetry of the highest order. 



772 

No other composer has exhibited so scrupulous a reverence for 
the poems which he set. To displace an accent was for him as 
heinous an act of sacrilege as to misinterpret a conception or to 
ignore an essential suggestion. Fineness of declamation has 
never reached a higher point than in Wolf's songs. Emphasis 
should also be laid upon the objective and dramatic attitude of 
his mind. He preferred to make himself the mouthpiece of the 
poetry rather than to use his art for purposes of self-revelation, 
avoiding for his songs the works of those whom with healthy 
scorn he termed the Ich-Poeten. Hence the men and women 
characterized in his songs are living realities, forming a veritable 
portrait gallery, of which the figures, though unmistakably the 
work of a single hand, yet maintain their own separate identity. 
These statements can be verified as well by a reference to the 
simpler and more melodious of his songs, as to those which are 
of extreme elaboration arid difficulty. Among the former may 
be named Das vertassene Mdgdlein in der FrUke and Der Gartner 
(Marike), Versckwiegene Liebe and Der Musikani (Eichendorff), 
Anakreons Grab (Goethe), Alte gingen, Hen, wr Ruh f and Hen, 
wasfragst {Spanisches Liederspid),Hoi, x and 4 of the Italienisches 
Liederbuch, and among the latter Aedsharfe and Der FeuerreiUr 
(M6rike), Ganymed and Prometheus (Goethe). (W. A. J. F.) 

WOLF, JOSEPH (1820-1800), Anglo-German artist, the son 
of a German fanner, was born in 1820 at Mdnstermaif eld, on the 
river Moselle, in the Rhine Province. In his boyhood he was an 
assiduous student of bird and animal life, and showed a remark- 
able capacity as a draughtsman of natural history subjects. His 
powers were first recognized by'Professor Schlegel of the Leiden 
museum, who gave him employment as an illustrator. In 1848 
he settled in London, where he remained till his death on the 
aotb of April 1899. He made many drawings for the Zoological 
Society, and a very large number of illustrations for books on 
natural history and on travel in various countries; but he also 
won a considerable success as a painter. 

See A. H. Palmer, The Life of Joseph Wolf (London. 1895). 

WOLF (Canis lupus), the common English name for any wild 
member of the typical section of the genus Cents (see Carnivora). 
Excluding some varieties of domestic dogs, wolves are the largest 
members of the genus, and have a wide geographical range, 
extending over nearly the whole of Europe and Asia, and North 
America from Greenland to Mexico, but are not found in South 
America or Africa, where they are replaced by other members 
of the family. They present great diversities of size, length 
and thickness of fur, and coloration, although resembling each 
other in all important structural characters. These differences 
have given rise to a supposed multiplicity of species, expressed 
by the names Clyceon (Central Europe), C. laniger and C. niger 
(Tibet), the C. occidentals, C. nubilus, C. mexieanus, &c, of • 
North America, and the great blackish-brown Alaskan C. 
pambasilcus, the largest of them all. But it is doubtful whether 
these should be regarded as more than local varieties. In North 
America there is a second distinct smaller species, called the 
coyote or prairie-wolf {Cams latrans), an4 perhaps the Japanese 
wolf (C hodophylax) may be distinct, although, except for its 
smaller size and shorter legs, it is scarcely distinguishable from 
the common species. The wolf enters the N.W. corner of India, 
but in the peninsula is" replaced by the more jackal-like C. pallipes, 
which is probably a member of the jackal group, and not a wolf 
Mall. 

The ordinary colour of the wolf is yellowish or fulvous grey, 
but almost pure white and entirely black wolves are known. 
In northern countries the fur is longer and thicker, and the animal 
generally larger and more powerful than in the southern portion 
of its range. Its habits are similar everywhere and it is still, 
and htt been from. tine, immemorial, especially known to man 
m ail th* devastator of sheep flocks. 
tyMyfalgin ambush, or stealing up 
a- «^.. * fakly running it down 
remarkable endurance 
when the young 
for by their parents, 
(days, and by their 



WOLF, J.— WOLFDIETRICH 




combined and persevering efforts are able to overpower and kill 
deer, antelopes and wounded animals of all sizes. It is singular 
that such closely allied species as the domestic dog and the 
Arctic fox are among the favourite prey of wolves, and, as is 
well known, children and even full-grown people are not in- 
frequently the objects of their attack when pressed by hunger. 
Notwithstanding the proverbial ferocity of the wolf in a wild 
state, many instances are recorded of animals taken when quite 
young becoming tame and attached to the person who has 
brought them up, when they exhibit many of the ways of a dog. 
They can, however, rarely be trusted by strangers. 

The history of the wolf in the British Isles, and its gradual extir- 
pation, has been thoroughly investigated by Mr J. E. Raiting in his 
work on Extinct British Animals, from which the following account 
is abridged. To judge by the osteological remains which the re- 
searches of geologists have brought to light, there was perhaps 
scarcely a county in England or Wales in which, at one time or 
another, wolves did not abound, while in Scotland and Ireland they 
must have been still more numerous. The fossil remains which 
have been discovered in Britain are not larger than, nor in any 
way to be distinguished from, the corresponding bones and teeth of 
European wolves of the present day. Wolf-hunting was a favourite 
pursuit of the ancient Britons as well as of the Anglo-Saxons. In 
Athelstan's reign these animals abounded to such an extent in York- 
shire that a retreat was built by one Acehorn, at Flixton, near Filey, 
wherein travellers might seek refuge if attacked by them. As is well 
known, great efforts were made by King Edgar to reduce the number 
of wolves in the country, but, notwithstanding the annual tribute of 
300 skins paid to him during several years by the king of Wales, he 
was not altogether so successful as has been commonly imagined. 
In the reign of Henry III. wolves were sufficiently numerous in some 
parts of the country to induce the king to make grants of land to 
various individuals upon the express condition of their taking 
measures to destroy these animals wherever they could be found. 
In Edward II.'s time, the king's forest of the Peak, in Derbyshire, 
is especially mentioned as infested with wolves, and it was not 
until the reign of Henry VII. (1485-1^9) that wolves appear to 
have become finally extinct in England. This, however, is rather 
a matter of inference from the cessation of all mention of them in 
local records than from any definite evidence of their extirpation. 
Their last retreat was probably in the desolate wolds of Yorkshire. 
In Scotland, as might be supposed from the nature of the country, 
the wolf maintained its hold for a much longer period. There is a 
well-known story of the last of the race being lolled by Sir Ewen 
Cameron of Lochiel in 1680, but there is evidence of wolves having 
survived in Sutherlandshire and other parts into the following 
century (perhaps as late as 1743). though the date of their final 
extinction cannot be accurately fixed. In Ireland, in Cromwell's 
time, wolves were particularly troublesome, and said to be increas- 
ing in numbers, so that special measures were taken for their destruc- 
tion, such as the offering of large rewards for their heads, and the 
prohibition (in 1652) of the exportation of " wolf-dogs,'* the large 
dogs used for hunting; the wolves. The active measures taken 
then and later reduced their numbers greatly, so that towards the 
end of the ccptury they became scarce, but, as in the case of the 
sister island, the date of their final disappearance cannot now be 
ascertained. It has been placed, upon the evidence of somewhat 
doubtful traditions, as late as 1766. 

It is owing to their position that the British Islands have been 
able to clear themselves of these formidable and destructive animals, 
for France, with no natural barriers to prevent their incursions from 
the continent to the cast, is liable every winter to visits from numbers 
of these animals. (W.H.F.; R.L.*) 

WOLFDIETRICH. German hero of romance. The talc of 
Wolf dietrich isconnccted with the Merovingian princes, Theodoric 
and Theodcbert, son and grandson of Clovis; but in the Middle 
High German poems of Ortnit and Wolf dietrich in the Heldenbuck 
(q.v.) Wolfdietrich is the son of Hugdietrich, emperor of Con* 
stantinople. Repudiated and exposed by his father, the child 
was spared by the wolves of the forest, and was educated by the 
faithful Berchtung of Meran. The account of his parents and 
their wooing, however, differs in various texts. After the 
emperor's death Wolfdietrich was driven from his inheritance 
by his brothers at the instigation of the traitor Sabene. Berch- 
tung and his sixteen sons stood by Wolfdietrich. Six of these 
were slain and. the other ten imprisoned. It was only after long 
exile in Lombardy at the court of King Ortnit that the hero 
returned to deliver the captives and regain his kingdom. Wolfdie- 
trich's exile and return suggested a parallel' with the history of 
Dietrich of Bern, with whom he was often actually identified; 
and the Mentors of the two heroes, HUdebrand and Berch- 
tung, are cast in the same mould. Presently features of the 



WOLFE, C— WOLFF, C F. 



773 



Wolfdietrich legend were transferred to the Dietrich cycle, and in 
the Ankang to the Heldenhuck it is stated in despite of all his- 
torical considerations that Wolfdietrich was the grandfather of 
the Veronese hero. Among the exploits of Wolfdietrich was the 
slaughter of the dragon .which had slain Ortnit (q.v.). He thus 
took the. place of Hardheri, one of the mythical Hartung brothers, 
the original hero of this feat. The myth attached itself to the 
family of Ck>vis, around which epic tradition rapidly gathered. 
Hugdietrich is generally considered to be the epic counterpart 
of Theodoric (Dietrich), eldest son of Clovjs. The prefix was the 
barbarian equivalent of Frank., 1 and was employed to distinguish 
him from Theodoric the Goth. After his father's death he 
divided the kingdom with his brothers. Wolfdietrich represents 
his son Theodebert (d. 548), whose succession was disputed by 
his uncles, but was secured by the loyalty of the Frankish nobles. 
But father and son are merged by a process of epic fusion in 
Wolfdietrich. The rape of Sydrat, daughter of the heathen 
Walgunt of Salnecke, by Hugdietrich disguised as a woman, 
is typical of the tales of the wooing of heathen princesses made 
fashionable by the Crusades, and was probably extraneous to 
the original legend. It may, however, ako be put on a semi- 
historical .basis by adopting the suggestion of C. Voretzsch 
{Epische Studien I. Die Comp. des Huon von Bordeaux, Halle 
1000), that Wolfdietrich is far more closely connected with 
Theodoric than Theodebert, and that Hugdietrich, therefore, 
stands for Clovis, the hero, in the Merovingian historians, of a 
well-known Brautfahrtsaca. 

Ortnit and Wolfdietrich have been edited by Dr J. L. Edlen von 
Lindhauscn (Tubingen, 1906). G. Sarrazin, in Zeitsckr. fur deulsche 
Phil. (1806), compared the legend of Wolfdietrich with the history of 
Gundovald, as given by Gregory of Tours in books vL and vii. of his 
HisL Francorum. 

WOLFE, CHARLES (1791-1823), Irish poet, son of Theobald 
Wolfe of Blackball, Co. Rildare, was born on the 14th of 
December 1701. He was educated at English schools and at 
Trinity College, Dublin, where he matriculated in 1809 and 
graduated in 18 14. He was ordained priest in 1 81 7, and obtained 
the curacy of Ballydog, Co. Tyrone, which he shortly exchanged 
for that of Donoughmore in the same county. He died at Cork 
on the 2 1 st of February 1823 in his thirty-second year. Wolfe 
was well known as a poet in Trinity College circles. He is 
remembered, however, solely by his stirring stanzas on the 
" Burial of Sir John Moore," written in 1816 in the rooms of 
Samuel CSullivan, a college friend, and printed in the Ncwry 
Telegraph. 

See John Russell, Remains of the Rev. Charles Wolfe (2 vols., 1825; 
4th eo\, 1829), and a corre s pondence in Notes and Queries, 8th series, 
•vol vtii. pp. 145, 178, 235, 253, 331 and 418. 

WOLFE, JAMES (1727-1759). British general, the hero of 
Quebec, was born at Westerham in Kent on the 2nd of January 
1727. At .an early age he accompanied his father, Colonel 
(afterwards Lieutenant-General) Edward Wolfe, one of Marl- 
borough's veterans, to the Carthagena expedition, and in 1741 
his ardent desire for a military career was gratified by his appoint- 
ment to an ensigncy. At the age of fifteen he proceeded with 
the 1 2th Foot (now Suffolk Regiment) to the Rhine Campaign, 
and at Dettingen he distinguished himself so much as acting 
adjutant that be was made lieutenant. In 1 744 he received a 
company in Barrel's regiment (now the 4th King's Own). In 
the Scottish rising of the " Forty-five " he was employed as a 
brigade-major. He was present at Hawley's defeat at Falkirk, 
and at CuUoden. With his old regiment, the 12th, Wolfe 
served in the Flanders campaigns of the duke of Cumberland, 
and at Val (Lauffcld) won by his valour the commendation of 
the duke. Promotion followed in 1749 to a majority, and in 
1750 to the heutenant-colondcy of the 20th, with which he served 
in Scotland. Some years later he spent six months in Paris. 
When war broke out afresh in 1757 he served as a staff officer in 
the unfortunate Rochefort expedition, but his prospects were 
not affected by the failure, for had his advice been taken the 
result might well have been different. Next year he was sent to 

* " HufoTheodoricuB iste dichur, id est Francus. quia olim omnes 
Franci Hugones vocabantur . . ., " Annates QuedRnburt,. (Peru 
Script, m. 420.) 



N. America as a brigadier-general in the Loutsburg expedition 
under Amherst and Boscawen. The landing was effected in 
the face of strenuous opposition, Wolfe leading the foremost 
troops. On the 27th of Jury the place surrendered after an 
obstinate defence; during the siege Wolfe had bad charge of 
a most important section of the attack, and on his lines the 
fiercest fighting took place. Soon afterwards he returned to 
England to recruit his shattered health, but on learning that 
Pitt desired him to continue in America he at once offered to 
return. It was now that the famous expedition against Quebec 
was decided upon, Wolfe to be in command, with, the local rank 
of major-general In a brief holiday before his departure he met 
at Bath Miss Lowther, to whom he became engaged. Very shortly 
afterwards he sailed, and on the xst of June 1759 the Quebec 
expedition sailed from Louisburg (see Quebec). After wearisome 
and disheartening failures, embittered by the pain of an internal 
disease, Wolfe crowned his work by the decisive victory on the 
Plains of Abraham (13th of September 1 759) by which the French 
permanently lost Quebec Twice wounded earlier In the fight, 
he had refused to leave the field, and a third bullet passing through 
his lungs inflicted a mortal injury. While he was lying in a swoon 
some one near him exclaimed, "They run; see how they runt" 
" Who run? " demanded Wolfe, as one roused from sleep. " The 
enemy," was the answer; " they give way everywhere." Wolfe 
rallied for a moment, gave a last order for cutting off the retreat, 
and murmuring, " Now God be praised, I will die in peace," 
breathed his last. On the battle-ground a tall column bears the 
words, " Here died Wolfe victorious on the 13$ of September 
Z759." In the governor's garden, in Quebec, there is also a 
monument to the memory of Wolfe and his gallant opponent 
If ontcalm, who survived him only a few hours, with the inscrip- 
tion " Wolfe and Montcalm. Mortem virtus communem, famam 
historic, monumentum postetUas dedit.** In Westminster Abbey 
a public memorial to Wolfe was unveiled on the 4th of October 

1773- 

See R. Wright, Life of if ajar-General James Wolfe (London, 1864) ; 
F. Parkman, Montcalm and Wolfe (London, 1884); Twelve British 
Soldiers (London, 1899); General Wolfe's Instructions to Young 
Officers (1768-1780); Beckles Willson. The Life and Letters of James 
Wolfe (1909) ; and A . G. Bradley, Wolfe (1895). 

WOLFENBtiTTEL, a town of Germany, in the duchy of 
Brunswick, situated on both banks of the Oker, 7 m. S. of 
Brunswick on the railway to Harzburg. Fop. (1905) 19,083. 
Lessing was ducal librarian here, and the old library building, 
designed in 1723 in imitation of the Pantheon at Rome, contains 
a marble statue of him. The library, including 300,000 printed 
books and 10,000 MSS., was, however, transferred to a large 
and new Renaissance edifice in 1887. It is especially rich in 
Bibles, incunabula and books of the early Reformation period, 
and contains some fragments of the Gothic bible of Ulfilas. 
Opposite the old library is the palace, now occupied by a seminary. 
The ducal burial-vault is in the church of St Mary. 

A castle is said to have been founded on the site of Wolfen- 
bQttel by a margrave of Meissen about 1046. When this began 
in 1267 to be the residence of the early Brunswick or Wolfen- 
butlel line of counts, a town gradually grew up around it. In 
1542 it was taken by the Saxons and Hessians, who, however, 
evacuated it five years later after the battle of MUhlberg. In 
the Thirty Years' War, in June 1641, the Swedes, under Wrangel 
and K&nigsmark, defeated the Austrians under the archduke 
Leopold at WolfenbCittcL The town passed wholly into the 
possession of the Brunswick- Wolfenbuttel family in 167 1, and 
for nearly one hundred years enjoyed the distinction of being 
the ducal capital. In 1754, however, Duke Charles transferred 
the ducal residence to Brunswick. 

See Voges, Ersdhlunten a%s der Ceschichle der Sladt WotfenbOttet 
(Wolfenbuttel. 1882); von Heinemann, Die henegluke Bibliothek 
tu Wolfenbuttel (2nd ed., Wolfenbuttel, 1894)* For toe " Wolfen* 
bQttel fragments "see Lbssing and Reimaeus. 

WOLFF, CASPAR FRJEDRICH (1 733-1 794), German anato- 
mist and physiologist,. justly reckoned the founder of modern 
embryology, was born in X733 at Berlin, where be studied 
anatomy and physiology under the elder J. F. MeckeL He 



774- 

graduated in medicine at Halle in 1759, h» thetis being his famous 
Thteria generationis. After serving as a surgeon in the Seven 
Years' War, he wished to lecture on anatomy and physiology 
in Berlin, but being refused permission he accepted a call from 
the empress Catharine to become professor of those subjects at 
the academy of St Petersburg, and acted in this capacity until 
his death there in 1 704. 



WOLFF, C— WOLFF, J. 



inposscssK _._ ____ __ ___ r 

merit of the alimentary canal in the chick first clearly established 
the converse view, that of epigenesis, i.e. of progressive formation 
and differentiation of organs from a germ primitively homogeneous. 
He also largely anticipated the modern conception of embryonic 
layers, and is said even to have foreshadowed the cell theory. 

WOLPP (less correctly Wolf), CHRISTIAN (1670-1754), 
German philosopher and mathematician, the son of a tanner, 
was born at Breslau on the 24th of January 1679. At the 
university of Jena he studied first mathematics and physics, 
to which he soon added philosophy. In 1703 he qualified as 
Prhatdozent in the university of Leipzig, where he lectured 
till 1706, when he was called as professor of mathematics and 
natural philosophy to Halle. Before this time he had made the 
acquaintance of Leibnitz, of whose philosophy his own system 
is a modification. In Halle Wolf! limited himself at first. to 
mathematics, but on the departure of a colleague he added 
physics, and presently included all the main philosophical 
disciplines. But the claims which Wolff advanced on behalf 
of the philosophic reason (see Rationalism) appeared impious to 
his theological colleagues. Halle was the headquarters of Pietism, 
which, after a long struggle against Lutheran dogmatism, had 
itself assumed the characteristics of a new orthodoxy. Wolff's 
professed ideal was to base theological truths on evidence of 
mathematical certitude, and strife with the Pietists broke out 
openly in 1721, when Wolff, on the occasion of laying down the 
office of pro-rector, delivered an oration " On the Practical 
Philosophy of the Chinese " (Eng. tr. 1750), in which he praised 
the purity of the moral precepts of Confucius, pointing to them 
as an evidence of the power of human reason to attain by its 
own efforts to moral truth. For ten years Wolff was subjected 
to attack, until in a fit of exasperation he appealed to the court 
for protection. His enemies, however, gained the ear of the king 
Frederick William I. and represented to him that, if Wolff's 
determinism were recognized, no soldier who deserted could be 
punished, since he would only have acted as it was necessarily 
predetermined that he should. This so enraged the king that 
he at once deprived Wolff of his office, and commanded him to 
leave Prussian territory within forty-eight hours on pain of a 
halter. The same day Wolff passed into Saxony, and presently 
proceeded to Marburg, to which university he had received a call 
before this crisis. The landgrave of Hesse received him with 
every mark of distinction, and the circumstances of his expulsion 
drew universal attention to his philosophy. It was everywhere 
discussed, and over two hundred books and pamphlets appeared 
for or against it before 1 737, not reckoning the systematic treatises 
of Wolff and his followers. In 1740 Frederick William, who had 
already made overtures to Wolff to return, died suddenly, and 
one of the first acts of his successor, Frederick the Great, was to 
recall him to Halle. His entry into the town on the 6th of 
December 1740 partook of the nature of a triumphal procession. 
In 1743 he became chancellor of the university, and in 1745 he 
received the title of Frtihcrr from the elector of Bavaria. But 
his matter was no longer fresh, he had outlived his power of 
attracting student 5, and his class rooms remained empty, H* 
died on the oth of April 1751 _ 

The Wolffian philosophy heM almost undisputed sway in Germany 
till it was displaced by the K sntun revolution. It 11 w 
common-sense adaptation or w.iu-ring-down of the 
system; or, as We ran hardly speak of a system In 
Leibnitz, Wolff may be Mid to haw mtil 
dogmatic form the thoughts of his peat 
however, lose the pejfer part of their iur 
Since his philosophy disappeared before ' 
the appearance of mure speculate 
dwell almost exchiiively on '" 



ness of insight, and the aridity of its neo-seholastic formalism, which 
tends to relapse into verbose platitudes. But this is to do injustice 
to WoUTs real merits. These are mainly his comprehensive view of 
philosophy, as embracing in its survey the whole field of human 
knowledge, his insistence everywhere on clear and methodic ex- 
position, and his confidence in the power of reason to reduce all 
subjects to this form. To these must be added that he was practically 
the first to "teach philosophy to speak German." The Wolffian 
system retains the determinism and optimism of Leibnitz, but the 
monadology recedes into the background, the monads falling asunder 
into souls \>r conscious beings on the one hand and mere atoms on 
the other. The doctrine of the pre-established harmony also loses its 
metaphysical significance, and the principle of sufficient reason 
introduced by Leibnitz is once more discarded in favour of the 
principle of contradiction which Wolff seeks to make the funda- 
mental principle of philosophy. Philosophy is defined by him as the 
science of the possible, and divided, according to the two faculties 
of the human individual, into a theoretical and a practical part. 
Logic, sometimes called philosophic ralionalis, forms the introduc- 
tion or propaedeutic to both. Theoretical philosophy has for its 
parts ontology or pkiloscphia prima, cosmology, rational psycho- 
logy and natural theology; ontology treats of the existent in 
general, psychology of the soul as a simple non-extended substance, 
cosmology of the world as a whole, and rational theology of the 
existence and attributes of God. These are best known to philo- 
sophical students by Kant's treatment of them in the Criiiqtu oj 
Pure Reason. Practical philosophy is subdivided into ethics, 
economics and politics. Wolff's moral principle is the realization 
of human perfection. 

Wolff's most important works are as follows: AnfangsgrOnd* oiler 
mathematischen Wissenschaften (1710; in Latin, EUmhta matkestos 
universae, 1 713-1715); Veminftige Gedanken von den Kraften des 
menschlichen Verstandes (17 12; Eng. trans. 1770); Vem. Ged. von 
Colt, der Welt und der Seele des Menschen (1719); Vem.' Ged. von der 
Menschen Tkun und Lassen (1720); Vem. Ged. von dem geseUsckafl- 
lichen Ltbender Menschen (1721); Vem. Ged. von den Wirkungen der 
Natur (1723); Vem. Ged. von den Absichten der naWrlichen Dinge 
(1724); Vem. Ged. von dem Gebrauche der Thetie in Menschen, 
Thicrenvnd Pflanzen (1725) ; the last seven may briefly be described 
as * : — - rt " logic, metaphysics, moral philosophy, political 



ph 



oretical physics, teloology , physiology : Pkuosophia 
opca (1728); Philosophia prima, sive Ontotogia 



(172a); Cotmotogta generalis (1731); psychologia empirica (1732); 
Psy.hrln^.i r ntwnalu (1734); Theologia naturalis (1736-1737); 
Pkd*>u*pkia prwiica universalis (1738-1739); J** naturae and Jus 
Ge 1749): Philosophia . moralis (1750-1753)'. Hi» 



1749); Philosophia . moralis (1750-1753). 

sche Schrifttn have been collected and edited by 




Gt 

Ki 

G. F. H u n i.l 736-1 740). In addition to Wolff's autobiography 
(£ schretbung, cd. H. Wuttke, 1841) and the usual 

histories ut philosophy, see W. Schrader in AUgemein* deutsche 
Biographie, xliv. ; C. G. Ludovici, A usWtrlicher Enswurf einer voll- 
stdndigen Ifistorie der Wolff* schen Philosophie (1736-1738); j. 
Dcscharnps, Cours abrfgi dela philosophie wolffienne (1743); F. W. 
Kluge. Chrisfian von Wolff der Philosoph (i8ti); W. Arnspcrger, 
Christian Wolffs Verh&llnis zu Leibniz (t 897). (A. S. P.-P. ; X.) 

WOLFF, JOSEPH (1795-1862), Jewish Christian missionary, 
was born at Weilersbach, near Bamberg, Germany, in 1795. 
His father became rabbi at Wiirt tern berg in 1806, and sent his son 
to the Protestant lyceum at Stuttgart. He was converted to 
Christianity through reading the books of Johann Michael von 
Sailer, bishop of Regensburg, and was baptized in 181 2 by the 
Benedictine abbot of Emaus, near Prague. Wolff was a keen 
Oriental scholar and pursued his studies at Tubingen and at 
Rome, where he was expelled from the Collcgio di Propaganda in 
r8i8 for attacking the doctrine of infallibility and criticizing his 
tutors. After a short stay in the monastery of the Redcmptorists 
at Val Sainte near Fribourg, he went to London, entered the 
Anglican Church, and resumed his Oriental and theological 
studies at Cambridge. In 1821 he began his missionary wander- 
ings in the East by visiting 'Egypt, the Sinaitic peninsula, 
Jerusalem, Aleppo, Mesopdlamia, Persia, Tiflis and the Crimea, 
returning to England in iSiG t when Edward Irving introduced 
'.■'. ■ rg 1 na W a] pole , 6 th d a u ghter of Horatio Walpole, 
wd, whom he married in February 1827. In 1828 
irch for the ten tribes, travelling through 
u, Turkestan and Afghanistan to Simla and 
any hardships but preaching with cn- 
Fondieherry, Tinnevelly, Goa and 
Egypt and Malta. In 1836 he 
nil, took him to Jiddah, and him- 
goi r,\ m on to the United States, 
in 1837, and priest in 1838 



WOLFRAMITE— WOLFRAM VON ESCHENBACH 



775 



In the same year he was given the rectory of Lmtbwaite in 
Yorkshire. In 1843 he went to Bokhara to seek two British 
officers, Lieut.-Cokmel C. Stoddart and Captain A. Conolly, 
and narrowly escaped the death that had overtaken them; his 
NamUve of this mission went through seven editions between 
1845 and 1852. In 1845 he was presented to the vicarage of 
Ik Brewers, Somerset, and was planning another great missionary 
tour when he died on the 2nd of May 1869. 

He published several Journals of his expeditions, especially 
Travels and Adventures of Joseph Wolff (2 vols., London, i860). 

His son, Sir Henry Drummond Wolff (1830-1008), was a 
well-known English diplomatist and Conservative politician, 
who started as a clerk in the foreign office and was created 
K.C.M.G. in z86a for various services abroad. In 1874*1880 he 
sat in parliament for Cbristchurcb, and in 1 880-1 885 for Ports- 
mouth, being one of the group known as the " Fourth Party." 
In 1885 he went on a special mission to Constantinople in con- 
nexion with the Egyptian question, and as the result various 
awkward difficulties, hinging on the sultan's suzerainty, were 
got over. In 1888 he was sent as minister to Teheran, and from 
1892 to 1000 was ambassador at Madrid. He died on the nth 
of October 1908. Sir Henry was a notable raconteur, and he did 
good service to the Conservative party by helping to found the 
Primrose League. He was created G.C.M.G. in 1878 and G.C.B. 
iniSSg. . 

WOLFRAMITE, or Wolfram, a mineral consisting of iron- 
manganese tungstate, (Fe, Mn)W0 4 . The name is of doubtful 
origin, but it has been assumed that it is derived from the 
German Wolf and Rakm (froth), corresponding with the spume 
Impi of old writers, a term hardly appropriate, however, to the 
mineral in question. Wolframite crystallizes in the monoclinic 
system, with approximation to an ort ho rhombic type; and the 
crystals offer perfect pinacoidal cleavage. The colour of wol- 
framite is generally dark brownish-black, the lustre metallic or 
adamantine, the hardness 5 to 5*5, and the specific gravity 7*1 
to 75. Wolframite may be regarded as an isomorphous mixture, 
in variable ratio, of iron and manganese tungstates, sometimes, 
with a small proportion of niobic and tantalic acids. It was in 
wolframite that the metal tungsten was first recognized in 1785 
by two brothers, J. J. and F. d'Elhuyar. At the present time 
the mineral is used in the manufacture of tungsten-steel and in 



the preparation of certain tungstates. 

Wolframite is commonly associated with tin-ores, as in many | 
of Cornwall, Saxony and Bohemia. In consequence of the two 



minerals, cassiterite and wolframite, having nearly the same density, 
their separation becomes difficult by the ordinary processes of ore- 
dressing^ btrt may be effected by means of magnetic separators, the 
wolframite beiog attracted by powerful magnets* A process intro- 
duced many years ago by R. Oxland consisted in roasting the mixed 
ore with carbonate of soda, when the wolfram was converted into 
sodium tungstate, which was easily removed as a soluble salt. 
Wolframite occurs at many localities in the United States, notably 
at Trumbuil. Conn., where it has been mined, and at Monroe. Conn., 
where it accompanies bismuth ores. Other localities are in Mecklen- 
burg county, N.C., and in the Mammoth mining' district. Nevada. 
Wolframite has in some cases resulted from the alteration of scheclite 
(9.*.). though on the contrary pscudomorphs are known in which 
scheelite has taken the form of wolf ra mite. By oxidation wolframite 
may become encrusted with tungstic ochre, or tungstite, sometimes 
known as wolframme. a name to be carefully distinguished from 
wolframite. 

As the relative proportions of iron and manganese vary in wolfram- 
ite, the composition tends towards that of other minerals. Thus 
there is a manganoos tungstate (MnWO«) known as hubnerite, a 
name given by E. N. Riotte, in 1865. in compliment to Adolph 
Hubner, a Saxon mineralogist. There is al«*> a mineral' which 
contains little more than ferrous tungstate (FeWO«), and is known 
as ferberite. having been named by A. Brrithaupt in 1863 after 
Rudolph Ferber. The original hubnerite came from the Mammoth 
district. Nevada, and the ferberite from the Sierra Almagrera in 
Spain. It is possible that such minerals may represent the extreme 
terms in the series formed by the varieties of wolframite. 

(F.W.R.*) 

f/OtFRAii V0N ESCHEKBACH. the most important and 
*~ " 1 poet of medieval Germany, flourished during the end 
r>th and beginning of the 13th century. He was one of 
K anl group of Minnesingers whom the Landgrave 
of Thuringia gathered round him at the historic 




castle of the Wartburg. We know by his own statement that he 
was a Bavarian, and came of a knightly race, counting his achieve- 
ments with spear and shield far above his poetical gifts. The 
Eschenbach from which he derived his name was most prob- 
ably Ober-Eschenbach, not far from Plelnfeld and Nuremberg; 
there is no doubt that this was the place of his burial, and so late 
as the 17th century his tomb was to be seen in the church of 
Ober~Eschenbach, which was then the burial place of the Teutonic 
knights. Wolfram probably belonged to the small nobility, 
for he alludes to men of importance, such as the counts of 
Abenberg, and of Wertheim, as if he had been in their service. 
Certainly, he was a poor man, for he makes frequent and jesting 
allusions to his poverty. Bartsch concludes that he was a 
younger son, and that while the family seat was at Eschenbach, 
Wolfram's home was the insignificant estate of Wildenburg (to 
which he alludes), now the village of Wehlcnberg. Wolfram 
seems to have disdained all literary accomplishments, and in 
fact insists on bis unlettered condition both in Panival and m 
WUlehalm. But this is somewhat perplexing, for these poems are 
beyond all doubt renderings of French originals. Were the poems 
read to him, and did he dictate his translation to a scribe? The 
date of Wolfram's death is uncertain. We know that he was alive 
in 1 216, as in WUUkclm he laments the death of the Landgrave 
Herrmann, which took place in that year, but how kmg he 
survived his friend and patron we do not know. 

Wolfram von Eschenbach lives in, and is revealed by, his 
work, which shows him to have been a man of remarkable force 
and personality. He has left two long epic poems, Panival 
and WUlehalm (the latter a translation of the French chan- 
son de geste Aliscans), certain fragments, TUurel (apparently 
intended as an introduction to the Panival), and a group of 
lyrical poems, WUchler-LUder. These last derive their name from 
the fact that they record the feelings of lovers who, having passed 
the night in each other's company, are called to separate by the 
cry of the watchman, heralding the dawn. These Tage Lieder, 
or Wdchter Lieder, are a feature of Old German folk-poetry, of 
which Wagner has preserved the tradition in the* warning cry 
of Brangaene in the second act of Tristan. But the principal 
interest of Wolfram's work lies in his Panival, immeasurably 
the finest and most spiritual rendering of the Perceval-Grail 
story. 

The problemof the source of the Panival is the crux of medieval 
literary criticism (see Pescevai). These are the leading points. 
The poem is divided into sixteen books. From iii. to xii., in- 
clusive, the story marches pari passu with the Perceval. of 
Chrttien de Troyes, at one moment agreeing* almost literally 
with the French text, at the next introducing details quite un- 
known to it. Books i. and ii., unrepresented in Chretien, relate 
the fortunes of the hero's father, and connect the story closely 
with the house of Anjou; the four concluding books agree with 
the commencement, and further connect the Grail story with 
that of the Swan Knight, for the first time identifying that 
hero with Paraval's son, a version followed by the later German 
romance of Lohengrin.- At the conclusion Wolfram definitely 
blames Chretien for having mistold the tale, while a certain Kiot, 
the Provencal (whom he has before named as his source), had 
told it aright from beginning to end. Other peculiarities of this 
version are the representation of the Grail itself as a stone, 
and of the inhabitants of the castle as an ordered knighthood, 
TtmpUistn; the numerous allusions to, and evident familiarity 
with, Oriental learning in its various branches; and above all, 
the connecting thread of ethical interpretation which runs 
through the whole poem. The Panival is a sonl-drama; the 
conflict between light and darkness, faith and doubt, is its 
theme, and the evolution of the hero's character is steadily and 
consistently worked ont. The teaching is of a character strangely 
at variance with the other romances of the cycle. Instead of an 
asceticism, based upon a fundamentally low and degrading view 
of women, Wolfram upholds a sane and healthy morality; 
chastity, rather than celibacy, is his ideal, and a loyal observance 
of the marriage bond is in his eyes the highest virtue. Not 
retirement from the world, but fulfilment of duty m the world, 



776 



WOLGAST— WOLLASTONITE 



U the goal be marks out for attainment. Whether views so large, 
so sane and so wholesome, are to be placed to the credit of the 
German poet, or of bis French source (and modern criticism is 
leaning more and more to a belief in the existence of Kiot), 
the Panivcl is the work of a remarkable personality, and, given 
the age and the environment, a unique literary achievement. 

Wolfram bas moments of the highest poetical inspiration, 
but his meaning, even for his compatriots, is often obscure. 
He is in no sense a master of language, as was Gottfried von 
Strasbourg. This latter, in a very interesting passage of the 
Tristan, passes in review the poets of the day, awarding to tbe 
majority praise for the excellence of their style, but one he does 
not name, only blaming him as being so obscure and involved 
that none can tell what his meaning may be; this un-named poet 
has always been understood to be Wolfram von Eschenbach, and 
in a passage of Willehalm the author refers to the unfavourable 
criticisms passed on Panival. Wolfram and Gottfried were 
both true poets, but of widely differing style. Wolfram was, 
above all, a man of deeply religious character (witness his intro- 
duction to Wiliehalm), and it seems to have been this which 
specially impressed the mind of his compatriots; in the 13th- 
century poem of Der Warlburg-Krieg it is Wolfram who is 
chosen as the representative of Christianity, to oppose the 
enchanter Klingsor von Ungerland. 0- L. W,) 

WOLGAST, a seaport town of Germany, in the Prussian 
province of Pomerania, situated on the river Peene, which 
separates it from the island of Usedom, 30 m. by rail E. of 
Grcifswald. Pop. (1005) $346, There are various manufactures. 
Wolgast became a town in 1247, and after being the residence of 
the duke of Pomerania- Wolgast, it was ceded to Sweden in 
2648. It was captured four times during the Thirty Years' War, 
and in 1675 by Frederick William, elector of Brandenburg. It 
was restored to Germany in 181 5. 

See B. Heberiein, Beitr&ge tur Ceschichfe der Burg und Stadt Wolgast 
(Wolgast. 1892). 

W0LLAST0N, WILLIAM (1650-1724), English philosophical 
writer, was born at Coton-Clanford in Staffordshire, on the 26th 
of March 1659. On leaving Sidney Sussex College, Cambridge, in 
x6&x, he became an assistant master at the Birmingham grammar- 
school, and took holy orders. In 1688 an uncle left him a fortune. 
He then moved to London, married a lady of wealth, and devoted 
himself to learning and philosophy. He embodied his views in 
the one book by which he is remembered, The Religion of Nature 
Delineated (1st ed. 1722; and ed. 1724)* He died in October 
1724. 

Wollaston's Religion of Nature, which falls between Clarke's 
Discourse of the Unchangeable Obligations of Natural Religion and 
Butler's Sermons, was one of the popular philosophical books of its 
day. To the 8th edition (1750) was added a ufe of the author. 
Hie book was designed to be an answer to two questions: Is there 
such a thirfg as natural religion? and. If there is, what is it? Wol- 
laston starts with the assumption that religion and morality are 
identical, and labours to show that religion is " the pursuit of happi- 
ness by the practice of truth and reason." He claims originality 
for hi* theory that the moral evil is the practical denial of a true 
proposition and moral good the ararraation.of it (see Ethics). Wol- 
laston also published anonymously a small book, On the Design of the 
Book of EcdesiaiUs, or the Unreasonableness of Men's Restless Con- 
tention for the Present Enjoyments, represented in an English Poem 
(London, 1691). 

See John Clarke, Examination ofthe Notion of Moral Good and Evil 
advanced ih a tote bturJt entitled The Rtlt£im cf Nalwe Delitteoifd 
(London, 1725): Drcchsler. tibrr Wollaiton's Maral-Phifowphie 
(Erlangen. 1802k Sir Lnlta Stephen** Hiifoty of Enriiih Theurki 
in the Eightttnifi Ctnlury (London, 1P76), ch. in. ana ch- ix.; H. 
Sidgwick's Huioty of Eihici {1902}. pp* J 98 sq, 

WOLLASTON, WILUAM BYDR (t ? 6fr*i3^8\ English <h*mfel 
and natural philosopher, was born at East Dereham, N 
on the 6th of April 1766, the second of wvcni 
His father, the Rev. Francis WoLlaalon (17, 
Cbi&lehurst, grandson of the Wiliuim Wol 
was an enthusiastic astronomer Woll 
Charterhouse, and afterwards at Cd< 
which he became a felloe , Hr 
andM.D (179O. «*i 
St Edmunds, whence 



little way, and failed to obtain a vacant physkiansbtp at StGeorge^i 
hospital; the result was that he abandoned medicine and took 
to original research. He devoted much attention to the affairs 
of the Royal Society, of which he was elected a fellow in 1793 
and made secretary in 1806. He was elected interim president 
in June 1820, on the death of Sir Joseph Banks; but he did not 
care to enter into competition with Sir Humphry Davy, and 
the latter was elected president.at the anniversary meeting ha 
November 1820. Wollaston became a member of the Geological 
Society of London ih 181 2, and served frequently on the Council 
and for some time as a vice-president. Beyond appearing at tbe 
meetings of learned societies he took little part in public affairs; 
he lived alone, conducting his investigations in a deliberate and 
exhaustive manner, but in the most rigid seclusion, no person 
being admitted to bis laboratory on any pretext. Towards the 
close of 1828 he felt the approach of a fatal malady — a tumour in 
the brain — and devoted his last days to a careful revisal of his 
unpublished researches and industrial processes, dictating several 
papers on these subjects, which were afterwards published in 
the Philosophical Transactions. He died in London on the 22nd 
of December 1828. 

Most of Wollaston's original work* deals more or less directly with 
chemical subjects, but diverges on all sides into optics, acoustics, 
mineralogy, astronomy, physiology, botany and even art. In 
chemistry he made a speciality of the platinum metals. Platinum 
itself he discovered how to work on a practical scale, and be is said 
to have made a fortune from the secret, which, however, he disclosed 
in a posthumous paper (1820); and he was the first to detect the 
metals palladium (1804) and rhodium (1805) in crude platinum. 
In regard to palladium his conduct was open to criticism. He 
anonymously offered a quantity of the metal for sale at an instru- 
ment-maker s shop, issuing an advertisement in which some of its 
main properties were described. Richard Chevenix (1774-1830), a 
chemist, having bought some of the substance, decided after ex- 
periment that it was not a simple body as claimed, but an alloy of 
mercury with platinum, and in 1803 presented a paper to the Royal 
Society setting forth this view. As secretary, Wollaston saw this 
paper when it was sent in, and is said to have tried to persuade the 
author to withdraw it. But having failed, he allowed the paper, 
and also a second by Chevenix of the same tenor in 1805, to be read 
without avowing that it was he himself who had originally detected 
the metal, although he had an excellent opportunity of stating the 
fact in 1804 when he discussed the substance in the paper which 
announced the discovery of rhodium. In 1809 he proved the ele- 
mentary character of columbium (niobium) and titanium. In 
optics he was the first, in 1802, to observe the dark lines in the solar 
spectrum. Of the seven lines he saw, he regarded the five most 
prominent as the natural boundaries or dividing lines of the pure 
simple colours of the prismatic spectrum, which he supposed to have 
four primary divisions. He described the reflecting goniometer in 
1809 and the camera lucida in 181 2, provided microsoopists with the 
u Wollaston doublet," and applied concave-convex lenses to the 
purposes of the oculist. His cryophorus was described in 1813, in a 
paper " On a method of freezing at a distance." In 1821, after 
H. C. Oersted (1777-1851) had ihown that a magnetic needle ts 
deflected by an electric current, he attempted, in the laboratory of 
the Royal Institution in the presence of Humphry Davy, to convert 
that deflection into a continuous rotation, and also to obtain the 
reciprocal effect of a current rotating round a magnet. He failed in 
both respects, and when Michael Faraday, who overheard a portion 
of his conversation with Davy on the subject, was subsequently 
more successful, he was inclined to assert the merit. of pnonty, to 
which Faraday did not admit his claim* Among his other papers 
may be mentioned those dealing with the formation of fairy rings 
(1807), a synoptic scale of chemical equivalents (1814), sounds in- 
audible to ordinary ears (1820). the physiology of vision (1824), the 
apparent direction of the eyes in a portrait (1824) and I the comparison 
of the Jijrht nf the sun with that of the moon and fixed stars (1829). 

In r.™lofti.-al circle* Wolbston is famous for the medal which 

bear * hi « n-ntic. ami which (together with a donation fund) is annually 

■wsrded by th* roimrrt of the Geological Society of London, being 

I of the intctwt on £1000 Vnuraihed by Wollaston for 

*t d rth(" ciwictTiTiTig the mineral structure of the earth." 

8 » 1 , The medal is the highest honour 

is originally made of palladium, but 



Wollaston 





n% be found in George 



ming mineral consisting of calcium 

",ig in the monoclinic system and 

s>] group* It differs, however, 

1 having cleavages, not parallel 

rtttfcms perpendicular to the 



WOLLIN— WOLSELEY, VISCOUNT 



777 



ntssvof symmetry. Crystafa am usitaByeiMigs*^ parallel to the 
a axis of symmetry and flattened parallel to the orthe-ptnaootd, 

e hence the early name *' tabulae spar "; the name wotlaftonite 

is after W. H. Wollajton. The mineral usually occur* in white 
s cleavage masses. The hardness is 5, and the specific gravity 

s 4-85. It is a characteristic product of contact-metamorpbism» 

x occurring especially, with garnet, dJoptide, &c, in crystalline 

1 limestones. Crystals are found In the cavities of the ejected 
s limestone blocks of Monte Somma, Vesuvius. At Santa Fe in 

the State of Chiapas, Mexico, a large rock-mass of v/oUastonite 

2 carries ores of gold and copper: here are found Urge pink crystals 
B which are often partially or wholly altered to opal (L. J. S.) 

WOLUN, an island of Germany, in the Prussian province of 
T Pomerania, the more easterly of the islands at the mouth of the 

, Oder which separate the Stettiner Half from the Baltic Sea. 

It is divided from the mainland on the £. by the Dievenow 
Channel, and from Usedom on the W. by the Swine. It fa roughly 
triangular in shape, and has an area of 95 sq.m. Heath and sand 
alternate with swamps, lakes and forest on its surface, which is 
- flat, except towards the south-west, where the low hills of Lebbin 

rise. Cattle-rearing and fishing are the chief resources of the 
inhabitants, who number about 14,000. Misdroy, on the N.W. 
coast, is a favourite sea-bathing resort, and some of the other 
villages, as Ostswine, opposite Swinemunde, Pritter, famous for 
its eels, and Lebbin, are also visited in summer. Wollin, the only 
town, is situated on the Dievenow, and is connected with the 
mainland by three bridges. It carries on the industries of a small 
seaport and fishing-town. Pop. (1000) 4670. 

Near the modern town once stood the ancient and opulent 
Wendish city of Wolin or Jumne, called Julin by the Danes, 
and Winetha or Vineta (f*. Wendish town) by the Germans. 
In the 10th and nth centuries it was the centre of an active and 
extensive trade. Adam of Bremen (d. 1076) extols its sise and 
wealth, and mentions that Greeks and other foreigners frequented 
it, and that Saxons were permitted to settle there on equal terms 
with the Wends, so long as they did not obtrude the fact of their 
Christianity. The Northmen made a settlement here about 970, 
and built a fortress on the " silver hill," called Jomsburg, which 
is often mentioned in the sagas. Its foundation was attributed 
to a legendary Viking exiled from Denmark, called Palnotoke 
or Palnatoki. The stronghold of Jomsburg was destroyed In 
1008 by King Magnus Barfod of Norway. This is probably 
the origin of the legend that Vineta was overthrown by a storm 
or earthquake and overwhelmed by the sea. Some submarine 
granite rocks near Damerow in Usedom are still popularly 
regarded as its ruins. The town of Wollin became In 1x40 the 
seat of the Pomeranian bishopric, which was transferred to 
Kammin about 1 170. Wollin was burnt by Canute VI. of. Den- 
mark in 1 183, and was taken by the Swedes in 1630 and -1759 
and by the Brandenburgers in 1659 and 1675. 

See Khufl, Die Gesckkhte J>alnatokis und dcr Jomsbnrter (Gnu, 

1892); Koch, Vineta in Prasa und Poesie (Stettin, 1905); W. von 

y. Die Inset WoUin (Berlin, 1 851); Haas, Sagen und Enik- 

I WoUin ***■■■■ 



lemgeu am den lutein Usedom und 1 



1 (Stettin, 1904). 



HOUV0H0OHG, a seaport of Camden County, New South 
Wales, Australia, 49 m. by rail S. of Sydney, the third port and 
chief harbour on the S. coast of the colony. Pop. (1901) 3545. 
Its harbour, known as Belmont Basin, is excavated out of the 
rock, having an area of 3 acres, and a depth of 18 ft. at low water. 
A breakwater protects its mouth; it has a lighthouse, and is 
defended by a fort on Signal HOI. It is the port for the Osborne- 
Wallsend and Mount Pleasant collieries, which are connected 
with it by rail. It lies at the foot of Mount Kejra, amid fine, 
m ount ain and coast scenery. . 

WOLD? (Woxorr, Jolof), a Negroid people of Senegal, French 
West Africa. They occupy the seaboard between St Louis and 
Cape Verde and the south bank of the Senegal from its mouth 
tgsDagana. * Farther inland the districts of the Walo, Cayor 
ftaej and Jolof (the last, the name of a chief division of the nation, 
feting sometimes used as the national name) are almost exclu- 
sively peopled by Wolof . The cities of St Louis and Dakar are 
both in the Wolof country, and throughout the French Sudan 



bo mflUary station Is without a Wolof colony , pteserving national 
speech and usages. The name is variously explained as meaning 
"speaker -or "black." The Womf justify both meanings, for 
they are at once far the blackest and among the most garrulous 
of all African peoples. . They are a very tall race, with splendidly 
proportioned busts but weak and undeveloped legs and flat feet. 
The Wolof language fa 



numerous grammars,' dictionaries and vocabularies have appeared 
since i8as. There is. however, no written literature. The Wolof 
e their national songs, legends and proverbs by memory, but 



knowledge of letters beyond the Arabic characters on 
• spells and amulets. Wolof, a typical agglutinating 
iflers from all other African forms of speech. The roots, 



b nominally Mabonune 

»'ptofe» Christianity* but many pagan rites arc 

■ u_ :. prevalent. The capture of a 



ive little 
their paper . 

language, differs .. , 

almost all monosyllables ending in consonants, are determined by 
means of suffixes, and coa l esce while remaining invariable in their 
various mcanimrs. By these suffixes the meaning of the words fa 
endlessly modified. 

Most Wolof are nominally 
Christian missions prof ess Qi 

still observed. Animal worship is prevale___ _.. .. _ 

shark fa hailed with delight, and family genii have offerings made to 
them, the most popular of these household deities, the lisard, having 
in many houses a bowl of milk set aside for it daily. The Wolof 
have three hereditary castes, the nobles, the tradesmen and musicians 
(who are despised), and the slaves. These latter are kindly treated. 
Polygyny is customary. 

The ofd kingdom of Cayor, the largest of Wolof states, has been 
preserved by the French. The king » elected, but always from the 
ruune family, and the electors, themselves unable to succeed, only 
number four. When elected the king receives a vase said to contain 
the seeds of all plants growing in Cayor, and he fa thus made lord of 
the land. In earlier days there was the Bur or " Great Wobf." to 
whom all petty chiefs owed allegiance. The Wolof are very loyal 
to the French, and have constantly proved themselves co nra gnmi s 
soldiers. 

WOLOWSKI, LOUIS FRAJQOIS MICHEL BAYMOMD (1810- 
1876), French economist and politician, was born in Warsaw 
and educated in Paris, but returned to Warsaw and took part in 
the revolution of 183a Sent to Paris as secretary to the legation 
by the provisional government, he settled there on the suppression 
of the Polish rebellion and was naturalised in 1834. In 1833 he 
founded the Revue de legislation et de jurisprudence, and wrote 
voluminously on economic and financial subjects. He estab- 
lished the first Credit Fonder in France in 1852, and in 1864 
became professor of political economy at the Conservatoire in 
succession to J. A. BlanquL He was a member of the national 
assembly from 1848 to 1851, and again from 1871 till his election 
as a senator in 1876. He was a strong free-trader and an ardent 
bimetallisL. 



Of his works the following are the more important: Mobilisaiwn 
_j cridii fancier (1839); De F organisation industridle de la France 
aeant Colbert (1842) ; Let Finances de la Russie (1864) ; La Question des 



bonques (1864) -LaLiberii commerciah (1869) ; V Or et Tor rent (1870). 
WOLSELEY, GARNET JOSEPH WOLSELEY, Vtscotnit 
(1833- ), British field marshal, eldest son of Major Garnet 
Joseph Wolseley of the King's Own Borderers (25th Foot), was 
born at Golden Bridge, Co. Dublin, on the 4th of June 1833. 
Educated at Dublin, he obtained a commission as ensign in the 
1 2th Foot In March 1852, and was transferred to the 80th Foot, 
with which he served in the second Burmese War. He was 
severely wounded on the 19th of March. 1853 in the attack of 
Donabyu, was mentioned in despatches, and received the war 
medal Promoted to be lieutenant and invalided home, he 
exchanged into the 90th Light Infantry, then in Dublin. He 
accompanied the regiment to the Crimea, and landed at Balaklava 
in December 1854. He was selected to be an assistant engineer, 
and did duty with the Royal Engineers in the trenches before 
Sevastopol. He was promoted to be captain in January 1855, 
after less than three years' service, and served throughout the 
siege, was wounded at the Quarries on the 7th of June, and again 
in the trenches on the 30th of August. After the fall of Sevastopol 
Wolseley was employed on the quartermaster-general's staff, 
assisted in the embarkation of the troops and stores, and was one 
of the last to leave the Crimea in July 1856. For his services 
he was twice mentioned in despatches, was noted for a brevet 
majority, received the war medal with clasp, the 5th class of the 
French Legion of Honour, the 5th class of the Turkish Mejidie 
and the Turkish medal. After six months' duty with the ooth 



778 



WOLSELEY, VISCOUNT 



Foot at Aldenhot, he went with it again, in March 1857, to join 
the expedition to China under Major-General the Hon. T. 
Ashburnham. Wolseley embarked in command of three com- 
panies in the transport " Transit/' which was wrecked in the 
Strait of Banka. The troops were all saved, but with only their 
arms and a few rounds of ammunition, and were taken to Singa- 
pore, whence, on account of the Indian Mutiny, they were 
despatched with all haste to Calcutta. Wolseley distinguished 
himself at the relief of Lucknow under Sir Colin Campbell in 
November, and in the defence of the Alambagh position under 
Outram, taking part in the actions of the 22nd of December 1857, 
the 1 2th and x6th of January 1858, and the repulse of the grand 
attack of the 21st of February. In March he served at the final 
siege and capture of Lucknow. He was then appointed deputy- 
assistant quartermaster-general on the staff of Sir Hope Grant's 
Oudh division, and was engaged in all the operations of the 
campaign, including the actions of Bari, Sarsi, Nawabganj, the 
capture of Faizabad, the passage of the Gumti and the action of 
Sultanpur. In the autumn and winter of 1858 he took part in 
the Baiswara, trans-Gogra and trans-Rapti campaigns, ending 
with the complete suppression of the rebellion. For his services 
he was frequently mentioned in despatches, and, having received 
his Crimean majority in March 1858, was in April 1859 promoted 
to be lieutenant-colonel, and received the Mutiny medal and clasp. 
Wolseley continued to serve on Sir Hope Grant's staff in Oudh, 
and when Grant was nominated to the command of the British 
troops in the Anglo-French expedition to China in i860, accom- 
panied him as deputy-assistant quartermaster-general. He was 
present at the action at Shvho, the capture of Tang-ku, the 
storming of the Taku Forts, the occupation of Tientsin, the 
battle of Pa-le-chcau and the entry into Peking. He assisted 
in the re-embarkation of the troops before the winter set in. 
He was mentioned in despatches, and for his services received 
the medal and two clasps. On his return home he published the 
Narrative of the War with China in i860. 

In November i86x Wolseley was one of the special service 
officers sent to Canada to make arrangements for the reception 
of troops in case of war with the United States in connexion 
with the mail steamer "Trent" incident, and when the matter 
was amicably settled he remained on the headquarters staff in 
Canada as assistant quartermaster-general. In 1865 he became 
a brevet colonel, was actively employed the following year in 
connexion with the Fenian raids from the United States, and in 
1867 was appointed deputy quartermaster-general in Canada. 
In 1869 his Soldiers 1 Pocket Book for Field Service was published, 
and has since run through many editions. In 1870 he success- 
fully commanded the Red river expedition to put down a rising 
under Louis Riel at Fort Garry, now the city of Winnipeg, 
the capital of Manitoba, then an outpost in the Wilderness, 
which could only be reached through a network of rivers and 
lakes extending for 600 m. from Lake Superior, traversed only 
by Indians, and where no supplies were obtainable. The admir- 
able arrangements made and the careful organization of the 
transport reflected great credit on the commander, who on his 
return home was made K.C.M.G. and C.B. 

Appointed assistant adjutant-general at the war office in 
1871 he worked hard in furthering the Cardwell schemes of army 
reform, was a member of the localization committee, and a keen 
advocate of short service, territorial regiments and linked 
battalions. From this time till he became commander-in- 
chief Wolseley was the prime mover. and the deciding influcr.ee 
in practically all the steps taken at the war office for promoting 
the efficiency of the army under the altered conditions at the 
day. In 1873 he commanded the expedition to Ashanl and, 
having made all his arrangements at the Gold Coast before 
the arrival of the white troops in January 1874, was able to com- 
plete the campaign in two months, and re-embark them for home 
before the unhealthy season began. This was the campaign 
which made his name a household word in England. He fought 
the battle of Amoaful on the '31st of January, and, after five 
days' fighting, ending with the battle of Ordahsu, entered Kuma*i . 
which he burned, He received the. thanks of. both House* of 



Parliament and a grant of £25,000, was promoted to be major, 
general for distinguished service in the field, received the medal 
and clasp and was made G.C.M.G. and K.C.B. The freedom 
of the city of London was conferred upon him with a sword of 
honour, and he was made honorary D.C.L. of Oxford and LL J>. 
of Cambridge universities. On his return home he was appointed 
inspector-general of auxiliary forces, but had not held the peat 
for a year when, in consequence of the native unrest in Natal, 
he was sent to that colony as governor and general commanding. 
In November 1876 he accepted a seat on the council of India, 
from which in 1878, having been promoted lieutenant-general, 
he went as high-commissioner to the newly acquired possession 
of Cyprus, and in the following year to South Africa to supersede 
Lord Chelmsford in command of the forces in the Zulu War, 
and as governor of Natal and the Transvaal and high com- 
missioner of South-East Africa. But on his arrival at Durban 
in July he found that the war in Zululand was practically over, 
and after effecting a temporary settlement he went to the 
Transvaal. Having reorganized the administration there and 
reduced the powerful chief Sikukuni to submission, he returned 
home in May 1880 and was appointed quartermaster-general to 
the forces. For his services in South Africa he received the Zulu 
medal with clasp, and was made G.C.B. 

In 1882 he was appointed adjutant-general to the forces, 
and in August of that year was given the command of the British 
forces in Egypt to suppress the rebellion of Arabi Pasha (see 
Egypt: Military Operations). Having seized the Suez Canal, 
he disembarked his troops at Ismailia, and after a very short 
and brilliant campaign completely defeated Arabi Pasha at 
Tel-el-Kebir, and suppressed the rebellion. For his services 
he received the thanks of parliament, the medal with clasp, 
the bronze star, was promoted general for distinguished service 
in the field, raised to the peerage as Baron Wolseley of Cairo 
and Wolseley, and received from the Khedive the 1st class of 
the order of the Osmanieh. In 1884 he was again called away 
from his duties as adjutant-general to command the Nile expedi- 
tion for the relief of General Gordon and the besieged garrison 
of Khartum. The expedition arrived too late: Khartum had 
fallen, and Gordon was dead; and in the spring of 1885 com- 
plications with Russia over the Penjdeh incident occurred, and 
the withdrawal of the expedition followed. For his services he 
received two clasps to his Egyptian medal, the thanks of parlia- 
ment, and was created a viscount and a knight of St Patrick. 
He continued at the war office as adjutant-general to the forces 
until 1890, when he was given the command in Ireland. He 
was promoted to be field marshal in 1894, and was nominated 
colonel of the Royal Horse Guards in 1895, in which year he 
was appointed by the Unionist government to succeed the duke 
of Cambridge as commander-in-chief of the forces. This was 
the position to which his great experience in the field and his 
previous signal success at the war office itself had fully entitled 
him. His powers were, however, limited by a new order in 
council, and after holding the appointment for over five years, 
he handed over the command-in-chief to Earl Roberts at the 
commencement of 1901. The fact that the unexpectedly large 
force required for South Africa was mainly furnished by means 
o( the system of reserves which Lord Wolseley had originated 
was in itself a high tribute to his foresight and sagacity; but 
the new conditions at the war office had never been to M|J4te 
and on being released from respond bj lily be brought the «»ak 
subject he Tore the House of Lords in a speech 
in somE remarkable disclosures. 

Lord U'aUeley bad been Appointed colore f-hv 
Royal Ir[?h Regiment in i-SoS, and in JO 
stick in wailing. He married in 1&A7 ] 
A. Erikinc, his only child, Fn 
under special remainder, 
he also published T l 
Th* Lift of J*** 
of Queen Jn* 
giving ™ 
lb*"' 




WOLSEY 



779 



i\ THOMAf (c. 1475*1530)1 English cardinal and 
statesman, bora at Ipswich about 1475. was son of Robert Wobey 
Cor Wuley, as his name was always spelt) by his wife Joan. His 
father is generally described as a butcher, but he sold other things 
than meat; and although a man of some property and a church- 
warden of St Nicholas, Ipswich, his character seems to have borne 
a striking resemblance to that of Thomas Cromwell's father. 
He was continually being fined for allowing his pigs to stray in 
the street, selling bad meat, letting his house to doubtful char- 
acters for illegal purposes, and generally infringing the by-laws 
respecting' weights and measures (extracts from the Ipswich 
records, printed in the Athenaeum, 1000, i. 400)1 He died in 
September 1406, and his will, which has been preserved, was 
proved a few days later. 

Thomas was educated at Magdalen College, Oxford; but the 
details of his university career are doubtful owing to the defective- 
ness of the university and college registers. He is said to have 
graduated B.A. at the age of fifteen (i.e. about 1400); but his 
earliest definite appearance in the records is as junior bursar 
of Magdalen College in 1499-1499, and senior bursar in 1400- 
1500, an office he was compelled to resign for applying funds 
to the completion of the great tower without sufficient authority 
(W. D. Hacray, Reg. of Magdalen College, i. 20-30, 133-134)* 
He must have been elected fellow of Magdalen some years before; 
and as master of Magdalen College school he had under his 
charge three sons of Thomas Grey, first marquess of Dorset. 
Dorset's beneficent intentions for his sons' pedagogue probably 
suggested Wolscy's ordination as priest at Marlborough on 
March 10, 1408, and on October 10, 1500, he was instituted, 
on Dorset's presentation, to the rectory of Limington in Somerset. 
His connexion with Magdalen had perhaps terminated with his 
resignation of the bursarship, though he supplicated for the 
degrees of B.D. and D.D. in 1510; and the college appears to 
have derived no advantage from Wolsey's subsequent greatness. 
At Limington he came into conflict with law and order as 
represented by the sheriff, Sir Amias Paulet, who is said by 
Cavendish to have placed Wobey in the stocks; Wolsey retali- 
ated long afterwards by. confining Paulet to his chambers in 
the Temple for five or six years. Dorset died in 2 501, but Wolsey 
found other patrons in his pursuit of wealth and fame. Before 
the end of that year he obtained from the pope a dispensation 
to hold two livings in conjunction with Limington, and Arch- 
bishop Deane of Canterbury also appointed him his domestic 
chaplain. Deane, however, died in 1503, and Wobey became 
chaplain to Sir Richard Nanfan, deputy of Calais, who apparently 
recommended him to Henry VII. Nanfan died in 1507, but the 
king made Wolsey his chaplain and employed him in diplomatic 
work. In 1508 he was sent to James IV. of Scotland, and in 
the same year he pleased Henry by the extraordinary expedition 
with which he crossed and recrossed the Channel on an errand 
connected with the king's proposal of marriage to Margaret of 
Savoy. His ecclesiastical preferments, of which he received 
several in 1506-1509, culminated In his appointment by Henry 
to the deanery of Lincoln on February 2, 1 509. 

Henry VIII. made Wolsey his almoner immediately on his 
accession, and the receipt of some half-doren further ecclesiastical 
preferments in the first two years of the reign marks his growth 
in royal favour. But it was not till towards the end of 151 1 that 
Wolsey became a privy councillor and secured a controlling voice 
in the government . His influence then made itself felt on English 
V^^T The young king took tittle pains with the government, 
flairs was snared between the clerical and 
aid Fox {q.v.) and Archbishop Warhaih, 
' party led by Surrey. Hitherto pacific 
>le prevailed ; but Wolsey, who was nothing 
the balance in favour of war, and his 
stive energy first found full scope in the 
t English expedition to Biscay in 151a, and 
I northern France in 2513. He brought about 
fence and marriage between Mary Tudor and 
4 , and reaped his reward in the bishoprics of 
mai, the archbishopric of York, which was 




conferred on him by papal ball hi September, and the canhnal- 
ate which he had sent Porydore Vergil to beg from Leo X. in 
May 1514, but did not receive till the following year. Neverthe- 
less, when Frauds I. in 1515 succeeded Lotus XII. and won the 
battle of Marignano, Wolsey took the lead in assisting the 
emperor Maximilian to oppose htm; and this revival of warlike 
designs was resented by Fox and Warham, who retired from 
the government, leaving Wobey supreme. Maximilian proved 
a broken reed, and in 1518 Wobey brought about a general 
pacification, securing at the same time his appointment as 
legate e latere in England. He thus superseded Warham, who 
was legahu natus, in ecclesiastical authority; and though legates 
d latere were supposed to exercise only special and temporary 
powers, Wobey secured the practical permanence of hb office. 

The election of Charles V. as emperor in 15x9 brought the 
rivalry between him and Francis I. to a head, and Wobey was 
mainly responsible for the attitude adopted by the English 
government. Both monarchs were eager for England's alliance, 
and their suit enabled Wolsey to appear for the moment as the 
arbiter of Europe. England's commercial relations with Charles 
V.'s subjects in the Netherlands put war with the emperor almost 
out of the question; and cool observers thought that England's 
obvious policy was to stand by while the two rivals enfeebled 
each other, and then make her own profit out of their weakness. 
But, although a gorgeous show of friendship with France was 
kept jip at the Field of Cloth of Gold in 1520, it had been deter* 
mined before the conference of Calais in 15s r, at which Wolsey 
pretended to adjudicate on the merits of the dispute, to side 
actively with Charles V.' Wolsey had vested interests in such a 
policy. Parliament had in 1513-15x5 showed signs of strong 
anti-clerical feeling; Wolsey had in the latter year urged its 
speedy dissolution, and had not called another; and he prob- 
ably hoped to distract' attention from the church by a spirited 
foreign policy, as Henry V. had done a century before. He had, 
moreover, received assurances from the emperor that, he would 
further Wolsey's candidature for the papacy; and although he 
protested to Henry VIH. that he would rather continue in his 
service than be ten popes, that did not prevent him from secretly 
instructing hb agents at feome to press hb claims to the utmost. 
Charles, however, paid Wolsey the sincere compliment of thinking 
that he would not be sufficiently subservient on the papal throne; 
while he wrote letters fa Wolsey's favour, he took care that they 
should not reach their destination in time; and Wobey failed 
to secure election both in 15*1 and 1524. This ambition dis- 
tinguishes hb foreign policy from that of Henry VII., to which it 
has been likened. Henry Vn. cared only for England; Wolsey's 
object was to play a great part on the European stage. The aim 
of the one was national, that of the other wasoecumenkal. 

In any case the decision taken in 1 521 was a blunder. Wolsey's 
assistance helped Charles V. to that position of predominance 
which was strikingly illustrated by the defeat and capture of 
Francis I. at Pavia in 1525; and the balance of power upon 
which England's influence rested was destroyed. Her efforts' 
to restore it in 1536-1528 were ineffectual; her prestige had 
depended upon her reputation for wealth derived from the fact 
that she had acted in recent years as the paymaster of Europe. 
Bat Henry VII. 's accumulations had disappeared; parliament 
resisted in 1523 the imposition of new taxation; and the at tempt t 
to raise forced loans and benevolences in 1526-1528 created a 
storm of opposition. Still more unpopular was the brief war with 
Charles V. in which Wobey involved England in 1528. The sack 
of Rome in 1527 and the defeat of the French before Naples 
in 1528 confirmed Charles V.'s supremacy. Peace was made in 
1529 between the two rivab without England being consulted, 
and her influence at Wolsey's fall was less than it had been at 
his accession to power. 

This failure reacted upon Wolsey's position at home. Has 
domestic was sounder than his foreign policy: by his develop- 
ment of the star chamber, by his firm administration of justice 
and maintenance of order, and by his repression of feudal 
jurisdiction, he rendered great services to the monarchy. But 
the inevitable opposition of the nobility to this poKcy was not 



700 



WOLTER 



mitigated by the net that it was carried out by a churchman; 

the result was to embitter the antagonism of the secular party 

r*r8 to the chorch and to concentrate it upon Wolsey's head. The 

' control of the papacy by Charles V., moreover, made it impossible 

root for Wolsey to succeed in his efforts to obtain from Clement VII. 

he « the divorce which Henry VIII. was seeking from Charles V.'s 

Vshb aunt, Catherine of Aragon. An inscription on a contemporary 

jMtnii portrait of Wolsey at Arras calls him tbt author of the divorce, 

Strai *nd Roman Catholic historians from Sanders downwards have 

arms generally adopted the view that Wolsey advocated this measure 

pore merely as a means to break England's alliance with Spain and 

desc confirm its alliance with France. This view is unhistorical, 

him and it ignores the various personal and national motives which 

No' lay behind that movement. There is no evidence that Wolsey 

Out first suggested the divorce, though when he found that Henry 

the was bent upon it, he pressed for two points: (i.) that an apphcar 

att tion should be made to Rome, instead of deciding the matter in 

sic: England, and (ii.) that Henry, when divorced, should marry a 

ass French princess. 

Ok The appeal to Rome was a natural course to be advocated by 

ca Wolsey, whose despotism over the English church depended upon 

ca an authority derived from Rome; but it was probably a mistake. 

Si It ran counter to the ideas suggested in 1527 on the captivity of 

tl Clement VII., that England and France should set up indepen- 

« dent patriarchates; and its success depended upon the problem- 

n atical destruction of Charles V.'s power in Italy- At first this 

k seemed not improbable; French armies marched south on 

t Naples, and the pope sent Campeggio with full powers to pro- 

1 nounce the divorce in England. But he had hardly started when 

the French were defeated in 1528; their ruin was completed 

in 1529, and Clement VII. was obliged to come to terms with 

Charles V., which included Campeggio'* recall in August 1520. 

Wolsey clearly foresaw his own fall, the consequent attack 
on the church and the triumph of the secular party. Parlia- 
ment, which he had kept at arm's length, was hostile; be was 
hated by the nobility, and his general unpopularity is reflected 
in Skelton's satires and in Hall's Chronicle. Even churchmen 
had been alienated by his suppression of monasteries and by his 
monopoly of ecclesiastical power; and his only support was the 
king, who had now developed a determination to rule himself. 
He surrendered all his offices and all his preferments except the 
archbishopric of York, receiving in return a pension of 1000 
marks (equal to six or seven thousand pounds a' year in modern 
currency) from the bishopric of Winchester, and retired to his see, 
which he had never before visited. A bill of attainder, passed by 
the Lords, was rejected at Cromwell's instigation and probably 
with Henry's goodwill by the Commons. The last lew months 
of his life were spent in the exemplary discbarge of his archi- 
episcopal duties; but a not altogether unfounded suspicion that 
he had invoked the assistance of Francis I., if not of Charles V. 
and the pope, to prevent his fall involved him in a charge of 
treason. He was summoned to London, but died on his way at 
Leicester abbey on November 30, and was buried there on the 
following day. 

The completeness of Wolsey's fall enhanced his former appear- 
ance of greatness, and, indeed, he is one of the outstanding figures 
in English history. His qualities and his defects were alike 
exhibited on a generous scale; and if his greed and arrogance 
were colossal, so were his administrative capacity and his appetite 
for work, " He is," wrote the Venetian ambassador Giustiniani, 
" very handsome, learned, extremely eloquent, of vast ability 
and indefatigable. He alone transacts the business which 
occupies all the magistrates and councils of Venice, both civil 
and criminal; and all state affairs are managed by him, let their 
nature be what it may. He is grave, and has the reputation of 
being extremely just; he favours the people exceedingly, and 
especially the poor, hearing their suits and seeking to despatch 
them instantly." As a diplomatist he has had few rivals and 
perhaps no superiors. But his pride was equal to his abilities. 
The familiar charge, repeated in Shakespeare, of. having written 
Ego el mens rex, while true in fact, is false in intention, because 
no Latin scholar could put the words in any other order; but 



ii reflects faithfully enough Wolsey's mesial attrtufc. Gz 
tiniani explains that he had to make proposals to the ar_ | 
before he broached them to Henry, lest Wolsey * 4 should *<■ 
the precedence conceded to the king." " He is," wrote n<r \ 
diplomatist, "the proudest prelate that ever breatatd u 
arrogated to himself the privileges of royalty, made smv 
attend him upon their knees, compelled bishop* to tie ka if* 
latchets and dukes to hold the basin while be washed his br. 
and considered it condescension when he allowed ambaa^- 
to kiss his fingers; he paid little heed to their sacrosanct c_ 
acter, and himself laid violent hands on a papal nuncio. L ] 
egotism equalled Henry VIU.'s; his jealousy and ill-treats 
of Richard Pace, dean of St Paul's, referred to by Shakcspc- 
but vehemently denied by Dr Brewer, has been proved bj a ] 
publication of the Spanish state papers; and Polydore Vet 
the historian, and Sir R. Sheffield, speaker of the Hossr . 
Commons, were both sent to the Tower for complaining d ~ 
conduct. His morals were of the laxest description, aas - 1 
had as many illegitimate children as Henry VIII. himself. U 
bis son, before he was eighteen years old, he procured a deaocr. 
four archdeaconries, five prebends and a chancellorship, ^ - 
sought to thrust him into the bishopric of Durham. For his*. 
he obtained, in addition to his archbishopric and lord chanctUs 
ship, the abbey of St Albans, reputed to be the richest in Engbn 
and the bishopric first of Bath and Wells, then of Durham, ai 
finally that of Winchester. He also used his power to ex^st 
enormous pensions from Charles V. and Francis I, and kvsi 
gifts from English suitors. His New Year's presents w. 
reckoned by Giustiniani at 15,000 ducats, and the emperor pax 
— or owed— him- 18,000 livres a year. His palaces outshone 
those of his king, and few monarch* could afford such a dispbj 
of plate as commonly graced the cardinal's table. His founda- 
tions at Oxford and Ipswich were, nevertheless, not made oat of 
his superabundant revenues, but out of the proceeds of the 
dissolution of monasteries, not all of which were devoted to those 
laudable objects. 

That such a man would ever have used the unparalleled powers 
of ecclesiastical jurisdiction with which. he had been entrusted 
for a genuine reformation of the church is only a pious opinion 
cherished by those who regret that the Reformation was left for 
the secular arm to achieve; and it is useless to plead lack of 
opportunity on behalf of a man who for sixteen years had enjoyed 
an authority never before or since wielded by an English subject. 
Wolsey must be judged by his deeds and not by doubtful in- 
tentions. During the first half of bis government he materially 
strengthened the Tudor monarchy by the vigorous administration 
of justice at home and by the brilliance of his foreign policy 
abroad. But the prestige he secured by 1521 was delusive; 
its decline was as rapid as its growth, and the expense of the 
policy involved taxation which seriously weakened the loyalty 
of the people. The concentration of civil and ecclesiastical power 
by Wolsey in the hands of a churchman provided a precedent for 
its concentration by Henry VIII. in the hands of the crown; 
and the personal example of lavish ostentation and loose morals 
which the cardinal-archbishop exhibited cannot have been 
without influence on the king, who grew to maturity under 
Wolsey's guidance. 

The Letters and Paters of Henry, VIII., vols, i.-iv., supplemented 
by the Spanish and Venetian Calendars, contain almost all that is 
known >>i Wuhty's public cafOftr. though additional light on the 
divoi hi* been thrown bv Stephen Ehses* RUmiscke Doknnunie 
(1895), Cavendihiri brjef Lift, which is almost contemporary, has 
been ofu-n i-ftiie*J. FuliLV* huge tome (1724) is fairly exhaustive. 
Brewrr, in his ctabormr prefaces to the Letters and Paters (reissued 
as his History of thr Feign p/ Henry VIII.), originated modern ad- 
miration for Wol*cv: anrf hw wfeya are reflected in Crcighton's 

Gain 1 r- « «ffur article in the met* Not. *< .. Cambri j tf 
JtSim Hi-.tory, A Jest enthusiastic view ts adopt^j f i„ h alT 
Fisher's volume (v.) in Longmans' Political History (1 jy?""2i w> 
A. F. Pollard's Henry VIII. (100a «nd 1905*. (AT*-. p #) 

WGLTER, CHARLOTTE (1B34-1807), Austrian actress, ^^ 
born at Cologne on the 1st of March 1834, and began her artist / c 
career at Budapest in 1857. <5he played minor parts at the Karl 



WOLVERHAMPTON, VISCOUNT—WOMBAT 



iirr- 



a» r- - ^ 



781 



^Jteafre In Vienna, and soon obtained an engagement at the 

Victoria, theatre in Berlin, where she remained until 1861. Her 

performance of Hermione in the Winter's Tale took the playgoing 

- world by storm, and she was given in x86a an appointment at the 

Vienna Hofburg theatre, to which she remained faithful until 

"- her death on the 14th of June 1807. According to her wish, she 

-was buried in the costume of Iphigenia, in which role she had 

- achieved' her most brilliant success, Charlotte Wolter was one 

- of the great tragic actresses of modern times. Her repertory 

- included Medea, Sappho, Lady Macbeth, Mary Stuart, Preciosa, 
-Phddre, Adrienae Lecouvreur, Jane Eyre and Messalina, in 

- which character she was immortalized by the painter Hans 
Makart. She was also an inimitable exponent of the heroines in 

' plays by Grillparrer.Hebbd, Dumas and Sardou. 

See Ehrenfeld. Charlotte Waller (Vienna, 1887): Hirachfeld. 
Charlotte Wolter, ein ErinnerungsbiaU (1897). 

WOLVERHAMPTON, HURY HARTLEY FOWLER. Vis- 
covvt (1830- ), English statesman, was born at Durham on 
the 16th of May 183a He became a prosperous solicitor in 
Wolverhampton, and coming of a Liberal nonconformist family 
took a prominent part in politics. In 1880 be was elected Liberal 
member of parliament for Wolverhampton, and was re-elected 
for the east division at successive contests. In 1884-1885 be 
was Under-secretary for the Home Office, and in 1886 financial 
secretary to tbe treasury. In Mr Gladstone's 1892-1804 ministry 
he was president of the local government board, and in Lord 
Roeebery's cabinet, 1804-1895, secretary of state for India. 
In these and the succeeding years of opposition he was recognized 
as a sound economist and a sober administrator, as well as a 
universally respected representative of nonconformist views. 
In Sir Henry CampbeU-Bannerman's cabinet, 1005-1908, he was 
chancellor of the duchy of Lancaster, and he retained this office 
in Mr Asquith's ministry, but was transferred to the House of 
Lords with a viscountcy (April 1908). He retired in 191a His 
daughter, Ellen Thorneycroft Fowler, who married Mr A. L. 
FeJkin in 1003, became well known as a novelist with her Cen- 
cemin% Isabel Carnaby ( 1 808) and other books. 

WOLVERHAMPTON, a market town, and municipal, county 
and parliamentary borough of Staffordshire, England, 125 m. 
N.W. from London by tbe London & North- Western railway, 
served also by tbe northern line of the Great Western and by 
a branch of the Midland railway. Pop. (1891) 83,611; (1901) 
94,187. It lies at the north-western edge of the group of great 
manufacturing towns extending S.E. to Birmingham, but there 
are pleasant residential suburbs to the west, where the country is 
rich and well wooded. Tbe situation is elevated and healthy * 
The church of St Peter is a fine cruciform building, with S. 
porch and central tower. The lower part of the tower and the 
S. transept date from the 13th century; the nave, clerestory, 
upper part of the tower and N. transept from the 15th; the 
chancel was rebuilt in the restoration, completed in 1865, with an 
apsidal termination. Tbe chief public buildings are the town 
hall (1871), exchange, agricultural hall, free library and theatres. 
A large free grammar school, founded in 1515 by Sir Stephen 
Jermyns, a native of the town and alderman of London, occupies 
modern buildings (1876). There are a Blue Coat school (1710) 
and -a school of art. Tbe benevolent institutions include a 
general hospital, tbe eye infirmary, orphan asylum, nursing 
institution and institute of the society for outdoor blind. In 
Queen Square fa an equestrian statue of Albert, Prince Consort, 
unveiled by Queen Victoria in 1866, and on Snow Hill a statue 
(1879) of Charles Pelham Vflliers. There are parks on the east 
and west of the town, and a new racecourse (1887) replaces that 
formerly on the site of the west park. In the district S. and E. 
of Wolverhampton (the Black Country) coal and ironstone are 
mined. Ironmongery and steel goods of all kinds, especially 
locks, machinery, tools and cycles, are produced; there are 
also tin and sine works. Large agricultural markets are supplied 
from the districts W. and N. of the town. An annual fair is held 
at Whitsuntide. In 1003 an industrial and art exhibition was 
held. The parliamentary borough of Wolverhampton has three 
divisions, each returning one member. The town is governed 

XAvra 13 * 



by a mayor, is aldermen and 36 councillors. Area, 3595 
acres. Wednespield (pop. 4883), Heath Town or Wednesfield 
Heath (9441) and Willenhall (18,515) are neighbouring urban 
districts, with populations employed in the manufacture of locks, • 
keys and small iron goods, in iron and brass foundries, varnish 
works, 80c 

The town of Wolverhampton {Handone, Wolvemehamptone, 
WeUernekampton) seems to have grown up round the church of 
St Mary, afterwards the royal free chapel of Wolverhampton, 
probably founded in 006 by Wulfruna, widow of the earl of 
Northampton, who in that year endowed it with extensive lands. 
The estates of the clerks of Handone are enumerated in Domes- 
day. In rao4 John granted tbe manor of Wolverhampton to the 
church, and at tbe Reformation it was held by the dean of the 
collegiate body; in 1553 Edward VL granted the college and 
manor to Dudley, duke of Northumberland, but Mary, at the 
beginning of her reign, refounded the college and restored to it its 
property, and this arrangement was confirmed by Elizabeth. 
Henry III. {1958) granted the Wednesday market, which is still 
held, and a fair for eight days, beginning on the eve of tbe feast 
of SS. Peter and Paul (June 29). During tbe Great Rebellion 
the sympathies of .Wolverhampton were royalist. In 1645 it 
was for a time the headquarters of Prince Rupert, while Charles L 
lay at Busbbury to tbe north. At the end of the 17th century 
the market was esteemed the second market in the county. An 
account of Wolverhampton published in 1751 stated that the 
chief manufacture was locks, " here being the most ingenious 
locksmiths in England," and attributed the slow growth of the 
town to the fact that most of the land was church property. 
Wolverhampton was incorporated in 1848 as a municipal borough. 
It was not represented in parliament until after the passing of tbe 
Reform Bill (1832), under which it returned two members until 
in 1885 the representation was increased to three. Tbe county 
borough dates from 1888. 

WOLVERTON, a town in the Buckingham parliamentary 
division of Buckinghamshire, England, near the river Ouse, 
sA m. N.W. by N. of London by the London & North- Western 
railway. Pop. (1901) 5323. Its modern growth and importance 
are the result of the establishment of carriage works by the 
railway company. There are also printing works. A steam 
tramway connects the town with tbe old market town of Stony 
Stratford on the Ouse, 2 m. W. 

WOMBAT, the title of the typical representatives of the 
marsupial family Pkaseehmyidae (see Marsupiaua). Tbcy have 
the dental formula: i\, c, f , p. |, m. 2 ;« 24. All the teeth are 




Tasmanian Wombat {Pkascohmys mr sinus). 

of continuous growth, having persistent pulps. The incisors 
are large and chisel-like, much as in rodents. The body is broad 
and depressed, the neck short, the head large and flat, the eyes 
small and the tail rudimentary and hidden in the fur. The 



7»2 



WOMBWELL— WOMEN 



Kmbs are equal, stout and short.* The feet have broad, naked, 
tuberculated soles; the forefeet with five distinct toes, each 
furnished with a long, strong and slightly curved nail, the first 
- and fifth considerably shorter than the other three. The hind- 
feet have a very short nailless first toe; the second, third and 
fourth toes partially united by integument, of nearly equal 
length; the fifth distinct and rather shorter, these four are 
provided with long and curved nails. In the typical group of 
the genus Pkascolomys we find the following characters: — Fur 
rough and coarse; ears short and rounded; muzzle naked; 
postorbital process of the frontal bone obsolete; ribs fifteen 
pairs. Vertebrae: C. 7, D. 15, L. 4, S. 4, Ca. 10-12. The 
wombat of Tasmania and the islands of Bass's Straits ( P. ursinus) , 
and the closely similar but larger P. plaiyrhinus of the southern 
portion of the mainland of Australia, belong to this group. On 
the other hand, in the hairy-nosed wombat (P. tatifrons) of 
Southern Australia, the fur is smooth and silky; the ears are 
large and more pointed; the muzzle is hairy; the frontal region 
ol the skull is broader than in the other section, with well-marked 
postorbital processes; and there are thirteen ribs. Vertebrae: 
C. 7, D. 13, L. 6,S.4, Ca. 15-16. 

In general form and action wombats resemble small bears, 
having a somewhat similar shuffling manner of walking, but they 
are still shorter in the legs, and have a broader and flatter back. 
They live entirely on the ground, or in burrows or holes among 
rocks, and feed on grass, roots and other vegetable substances. 
They sleep during the day, but wander forth at night in search 
of food, and are shy and gentle, though they can bite strongly 
when provoked. The only noise the Tasmanian wombat makes 
is a low hissing, but the hairy-nosed wombat is said to emit a 
short quick grunt when annoyed. The prevailing colour of 
the last-named species, as well as P. ursinus of Tasmania, is 
brownish grey. The large wombat of the mainland is variable 
in colour, some individuals being pale yellowish brown, others 
dark- grey and some black. The length of the head and body 
is about 3 ft. Fossil remains of wombats, some of larger size 
than any now existing, have been found in caves and Pleistocene 
deposits i n Au stralia. (R-L.*) 

WOMBWELL, an urban district in the Barnsley parliamentary 
division of the West Riding of Yorkshire, England, 4 m. S.E. 
of Barnsley, on the Great Central and Midland railways. The 
inhabitants are chiefly employed in the extensive collieries. 
Pop. (1001) 13,35a. 

WOMEN. The very word "woman" (O. Eng. vrifmann), 
etymologically meaning a wife (or the wife division of the human 
race, the female of the species Homo), sums up a long history of 
dependence and subordination, from which the women of to-day 
have only gradually emancipated themselves in such parts of 
the world as come under " Western civilization." Though 
married life and its duties necessarily form a predominant element 
in the woman's sphere, they are not necessarily the whole of it; 
and the " woman's movement " is essentially a struggle for the 
recognition of equality of opportunity with men, and for equal 
rights irrespective of sex, even if special relations and conditions 
are willingly incurred under the form of partnership involved 
in marriage. The difficulties of obtaining this recognition are 
obviously due to historical causes combined with the habits and 
customs which history has produced. 

The dependent position of women In early law is proved by 
the evidence of most ancient systems which have in whole or 
Batty law, m P* 1 * f fe" ce nded to us. 1 In the Mosaie law divorce 
^^ * was a privilege of the husband only,' the vow of a 
woman might be disallowed by her father or husband, 3 and 
daughters could inherit only in the absence of sons, and then 
they must marry in their tribe. 4 The guilt or innocence of a 
wife accused of adultery might be tried by the ordeal of the 
bitter water.* Besides these instances, which illustrate the 

1 But in the earliest extant code, however, that of Khammurabi, 
the position of women was free and dignified. See Babylonian 
Law. 

1 Deut. xxiv. 1. ■ Numb. xxx. 3. 

4 Numb — "- J * Numb. v. u. 



subordination of women, there was much legislation dealing with, 
inter alia, offences against chastity, and marriage of a man with 
a captive heathen woman or with a purchased slave. So far 
from second marriages being restrained, as they were by Christian 
legislation, it was the duty of a childless widow to marry her 
deceased husband's brother. In India subjection was a cardinal 
principle. " Day and night must women be held by their pro- 
tectors in a state of dependence," says Manu * The rule of in- 
heritance was agnatic, that is, descent traced through males 
to the exclusion of females.' The gradual growth of stridhana, 
or property of a woman given by the husband before or after 
marriage, or by the wife's family, may have led to the suttee, 
for both the family of the widow and the Brahmans had an 
interest in getting the life estate of a woman out of the way* 
Women in Hindu law had only limited rights of inheritance, 
and were disqualified as witnesses. 

In Roman law a woman was even in historic times completely 
dependent. If married she and her property passed into the 
power of her husband; if unmarried she was (unless a vestal 
virgin) under the perpetual tutelage of her father during his life, 
and after his death of her agnates, that is, those of her kinsmen 
by blood or adoption who would have been under the power of 
the common ancestor had he lived. Failing agnates, the tutelage 
probably passed to the gens. The wife was the purchased 
property of her husband, and, like a slave, acquired only for 
his benefit. A woman could not exercise any civil or public 
office. * In the words of 'Ulpian, " feminae ab omnibus officiis 
civilibus vel publids remotae sunt." 9 A woman could not 
continue a family, for she was "caput et finis familiae suae,"* 
could not be a witness, surety, tutor, or curator; she could not 
adopt or be adopted, or make a will or contract. She could not 
succeed ab intestate as an agnate, if further removed than a sister. 
A daughter might be disinherited by a general clause, a son 
only by name. On the other hand, a woman was privileged 
in some matters, but rather from a feeling of pity for her bodily 
weakness and presumed mental incapacity" than for any more 
worthy reason. Thus she could plead ignorance of law as a 
ground for dissolving an obligation, which a man could not as a 
rule do; she could accuse only in cases of treason and witchcraft; 
and she was in certain cases exempt from torture. In succession 
ab intestate to immovable property Roman law did not, as does 
English , recognize any privilege of males over females. 

Legal disabilities were gradually mitigated by the influence of 
fictions, the praetorian equity and legislation. An example 
of the first was the mode by which a woman freed herself from 
the authority of her tutor by fictitious cession into the authority 
of a tutor nominated by herself, or by sale of herself into the 
power of a nominal husband on the understanding that he was 
at once to emancipate her to another person, who then manu- 
mitted her. The action of equity is illustrated by the recognition 
by the praetor of cognatic or natural as distinguished from 
agnatic or artificial relationship, and of a widow's claim to succeed 
on the death of her husband intestate and without relations. 
Legislation, beginning as early as the Twelve Tables, which for- 
bade excessive mourning for the dead by female mourners, 
did not progress uniformly towards enfranchisement of women. 
For instance, the Lex Voconia (about 160 B.C.), called by St 
Augustine the most unjust of all laws., provided that a woman 
could not be instituted heir to a man who was registered as owner 
of a fortune of 100,000 asses. 1 * A constitution of Valentinian I. 
forbade bequests by women to ecclesiastics. But the tendency 

* Ch. ix. | 2 (Sir W. Jones's translation). 

T Whether this was the oldest rule of inheritance has been much 
debated. That birth of a child gave the mother certain legal rights 
in a primitive stage of society is the view of many, writers. See 
especially Das Mutterrefht of J. J. Bachofen (Stuttgart, 1861). 

* Maine, Early History of Institutions, lect. xi. 

* Dig. i. 16, 10S. M Ibid. 

u ImbeciUitas is the term used more than once in the texts of 
Roman law. 

u The way in which this law was evaded was by non-enrolment of 
the testator in the census (see Montesquieu, Esprit des lots, bk. 
xxvii.). Another way was by leaving her the inheritance by fid*uom» 
missum (see Trust). 



'OMEN 



785 



of legislation was undoubtedly in the direction fooV 
Adoption of women was allowed by Diocletian and Max^" 
in 291. The tutelage of women of full age wu removJiT ^ 




?erseded the period of mama. The result was that, in I set*" * . 
1 few remaining disabilities, such as the general Incapacity ?!*?*' *** . 
orety or witness to a will or contract, of a wife to make the^T* w "• 



married woman, the period of dos had by the time of Justuuaa 
long superseded the period of menus. 
spite of a 
to be surety 

a gift to her husband, of a* widow to marry within a year of 
hex husband's death, the position of women had become, in the 
words of Sir H. Maine, " one of great personal and proprietary 
independence." 1 For this improvement in their position they 
were largely indebted to the legislation of the Christian emperors, 
especially of Justinian, who prided himself on being a protector 
of women. 

The following are a few of the matters in which Christianity appears 
to have made alterations, generally but perhaps not always improve- 
ments, in the law. As a rule the influence of the church was exercised 
in favour of the abolition of the disabilities imposed by the older law 
upon celibacy and childlessness, of increased facilities for entering 
a professed religious life,' and of due provision for the wife. The 
church also supported the political power of those who were her best 
friends. The government of Pulcheria or Irene would hardly have 
been endured in the days of the pagan empire. Other cases in which 
Christianity probably exercised influence may be briefly stated, (l) 
All differences in the law of succession ab intestate of males and females 
were abolished by Justinian. (2) The appointment of mothers and 

Sandmothers as tutors was sanctioned t>y the same emperor. (3) 
e extended to all cases the principle established by the Senatus 
Consultum TertulKanum (158), enabling the mother of three (if a 
freed woman four) children to succeed to the property of her children 
who died intestate, and gave increased rights of succession to a widow. 
<4) The restrictions on the marriage of senators and other men of high 
rank with women of low rank were extended by Constantine, but 
almost entirely removed by Justinian. (5) Second marriages were 
discouraged (especially by making it legal to impose a condition that 
a widow s right to property should cease on re-marriage), and the 
Leonine Constitutions at the end of the oth century made third 
marriages punishable. (6) The same constitutions made the bene- 
diction of a priest a necessary part of the ceremony of marriage. 1 
The criminal law in its relation to women presents some points of 
interest. Adultery was punished with death by Constantine, but 
the penalty was reduced by Justinian to relegation to a convent. 
A woman condemned for adultery could not re-marry. A marriage 
between a Christian and a Jew rendered the parties euflty of adultery. 
Severe laws were enacted against offences of unchastity, especially 
procurement and incest. It was a capital crime to carry off or offer 
violence to a nun. A wife could not commit furtum of her husband's 
goods, but he had a special action return ametorum against her. 
By several sumptuary constitutions, contained in the Cod*, bk. xi., 
.women as well as men were subject to penalties for wearing dress or 
ornaments (except rings) imitating those reserved for the emperor 
and his family. Actresses and women of bad fame were not to wear 
the dress of virgins dedicated to Heaven. If a consul had a wife or 
mother living with him, he was allowed to incur greater expense than 
if he lived alone. The interests of working women were protected 
by enactments for the regulation of the tynoecia, or workshops for 
spinning, dyeing, Ac 

The canon law, looking with disfavour on the female inde- 
pendence prevailing in the later Roman law, tended rather in 
the opposite direction. The Decretum specially inculcated 
subjection of the wife to the husband, and obedience to his will 
in ail things. 4 The chief differences between canon and Roman 
law were in the law of marriage, especially in the introduction 
of publicity and of the formalities of the ring and the kiss. The 
benediction of a priest was made a necessary part of the ceremony, 
as indeed it had been made by the civil power, as has been already 
stated, in the post-Justinian period of Roman law. But in 
practice this rule appears to have fallen into disuse until it was 
again revived by the council of Trent. It was, however, the 

1 Ancient Law, ch. v. Hence the necessity of such laws as the Lex 
Oppia (see Sumptuary Laws). 

* A remarkable example of this tendency was the provision that 
an actress might leave the stage and break her contract of service 
with impunity in order to become a nun. Even under the pagan 
em p eror s a constitution of Diocletian and Maximian in 285 had 
enacted that no one was to be compelled to marry (Cod. v. 4, 14). 

» See R. T. Troplong, De r influence dm thristtanirme sur It droit 

6SMS. 

* Pt. ii. caus. xxxiit. qu. v. ch. 16. 



+>***£;. 



slightly from that of England. 

' ment specially reserved for 

commit incest; has always 

and fornication are still 

in these cases have fallen 

a parity is still twelve, 

al life, and their 

ny question of 

t;ed 




'han those falling within k. The doctrine of coercion and the 

'-ties of separate acknowledgment of deeds by married women 

5sary before the Married Women'B Property Act) seem to be 

*s of the period when women, besides being chattels, were 

\s chattels. Formerly a wife could not steal her husband's 

but since the Married Women'* 'Property, Act this has 

sible. Adultery is no crime, England being almost the 

where such is the case. It was punished by fine in the 

ourts up to the 17th century, and was made criminal 

" by an ordinance of the Long Parliament. The 

n be committed only against women are chiefly 

ncy, such as rape, procurement and similar 

tfce'cwV"* • msidcrable change in the law in the direction 

mi»*«C^' *** . ' t0 women was made by the Criminal Law 

In regard to the protection given to a wife 

'n legislation has considerably strengthened 

'6 of judicial separation and maintenance 

receivable, 1 ** **• •' cb). The whipping of female offenders 

The earlv u_ tisement of a wife by a husband, 

frmn tk. a* ** * tk. » » reasonable extent, would now 

2P2 B^^weT "*■-. The husbands rights are limited 

wSirH. afai»#C?5*«. iseofl * ^^ 

systems of iahtti^^ 

inherit, either as SSl^'-* \ 

thessinegenmtSi^^: 
herit, but transmit .iL^ 
Sometimes- they succeedti* *■«*-'' 
part movable property wSJF'.V • 
in producing by their hoSw?^- 
real Salic law (not in thelsswbi!^** 
of succession which, in myomV ,< '^ •'" 
their descendants to a share* i**^ 
property, but confine land exdusivrf? ***** * 
ants of males. . . . The idea is that l^J^^Z 
for a woman is by giving her a marrii£ 0|, * T *"- 
is once married into a separate coinmuS J? nW * •*. - 
in blood, neither she nor her children mL^u*"***' 
further claim on the parent group.'* Amen 1 ** ** H' '*• 
races women were under perpetual tutelage** i** *u*/" * 
unmarried. The first to obtain f reeoW ǣ?" ȥȣ> 
As late as the code of Christian V., at the end of tlL lW *£? 
it was enacted that if a woman married without ti!* ****> 
her tutor, he might have, if he wished, ndmmutration ****** ii 
of her goods during her lifc t The provision iSt?*****. 
Scandinavian laws under the name of morning-gift** ^ ll * 
the parent of the modern settled property.* The Brth* 1 ***** 
of Ireland excepted women from the ordinary course of • 
law. They could distrain or contract only in certain nLn^ 
cases, and distress upon their property was regulated by specUi 
rules. In the pre-Conquest codes in England severe Uwswem 
denounced against unchastity, and by a law of Canute a woman 
was to lose nose and ears for adultery. The laws of Athelstan 
contained the peculiarly brutal provision for the punishment 
of a female slave convicted of theft by her being burned 
alive by eighty other female slaves. Other laws were directed 
against the practice of witchcraft (?.«.) by women. Monogamy 
was enforced both by the civil and ecclesiastical law; and second 
and third marriages involved penance* A glimpse of cruelty 
in the household is afforded by the provision, occurring no less 
than three times in the ecclesiastical legislation, that if a woman 
scourged her female slave to death she must do penance. Traces 
of wife-purchase are seen in the law of Ethelbert, enacting that 
if a man carry off a freeman's wife he must at his own. expense 
procure the husband another wife. The codes contain few 
provisions as to the property of married women, but those few 
appear to prove that she was in a better position than at a later 

* On this branch of the subject see' Mansscn's Bet Christendom en 
de Vroum (Leiden, 1877). 

* Early Law end Custom, ch. v. 

* See Stiernhook. Dejurt Svevnum (Stockholm, 1672), bk. ii ch. L ; 
Messenius, Leges Svecorum (Stockholm. 1714)- 

* Bk. iii. ch. xvi f f 1, 3. 

* The development of the bride-price no doubt was in the same 
direction. Its original meaning was. however, different. It was the 
sum paid by the husband to the wife s family for the purchase of part 
of the family property, while the morning-gift was paid as pretium 
meginilaHs to the bride herself. In its English form rooming-gift 
occurs in the laws of Canute; in its Latinized form of ssorgoftgssu it 
occurs in the Leges Henrici Primu 



7 8 4 



WOMEN 



period. The laws 61 Ine gave her a, third of her husband's property; 
the laws of Edmund as to bejtrothal allowed this to be increased 
to half by antenuptial contract, to the whole if she had children 
and did not re-marry after her husband's death. No doubt 
the dower ad ostium ecclesiae favoured by the church generally 
superseded the legal rights where the property was large (in 
fact this is specially provided by Magna Carta, c 7). " Provisio 
hominis tollit provisionem legis." The legal rights of a married 
woman apart from contract were gradually limited, until by 
the time of Glanvill her person and property had become during 
her husband's lifetime entirely at his disposal, and after his death 
limited to her dower and her pars raHonabilis. 

A few of the more interesting matters in which the old common 
and statute law of England placed women in a special position 
may be noticed. A woman was exempt from legal duties more 
particularly attaching to men and not performable by deputy. 
She could apparently originally not hold a proper feud, i.e. one 
of which the tenure was by military service. 1 The same principle 
appears in the rule that she could not be endowed of a castle 
maintained for the defence of the realm and not for the private 
use of the owner. She could receive homage, but not render it 
in the form used by men, and she was privileged from suit and 
service at the sheriff's tourn. She was not sworn to the law 
by the oath of allegiance in the leet or tourn, and so could not be 
outlawed, but was said to be waived. She could be constable, 
either of a castle or a vill, but not sheriff, unless in the one case 
of Westmorland, an hereditary office, exercised in person in the 
17th century by the famous Anne, countess of Dorset, Pembroke 
and Montgomery. In certain cases a woman could transmit 
rights which she could not enjoy. On such a power of trans* 
mission, as Sir H. Maine shows, 1 rested the claim of Edward III. 
to the crown of France. The claim through a woman was not a 
breach of the French constitutional law, which rejected the claim 
of a woman. The jealousy of a woman's political influence is 
strikingly shown by 'the case of Alice Perrers, the mistress of 
Edward III. She was accused of breaking an ordinance by 
which women had been forbidden to do business for hire and by 
way of maintenance in the king's court. 1 

By Magna Carta a woman could not accuse a man of murder 
except of that of her husband. This disability no doubt arose from 
the fact that in trial by battle she naturally did "not appear in person 
but by a champion, She was not admitted as a witness to prqve the 
status of a man on the question arising whether he were tree or a 
villein. She could not appoint a testamentary guardian, and could 
only be a guardian even of her own children to a limited extent. 
Her will was revoked by marriage, that of a man only by marriage 
and. the subsequent birth of a child. By 31 Hen. VI. c. Q the king's 
writ out of chancery was granted to a woman alleging that she had 
become bound by an obligation through force or fraud. By 39 
Hen. VI. c 2 a woman might have livery of land as heiress at fourteen. 
Benefit of clergy was first allowed to women partially by si Jac 1. 
c 6, fully by 3 Will & M. c 9 and 4 and 5 W0L& M. c. 24. Public 
whipping. was not abolished until §7 Geo. III. c 75, whipping in 
all cases until 1 Geo. IV c. 57. Burning was the punishment specially 
appropriated to women convkted of treason of witchcraft. A' case 
01 sentence to execution by burning for petit treason occurred as 
lately as 1784. In some old statutes very curious sumptuary regula* 
tions as to women's dress occur. By the sumptuary laws of Edward 
III. in 1363 (37 Edw. III.cc. 8-14) women were in general to be dressed 
according to the position of their fathers or husbands. Wives and 
daughters of servants were not to wear veils above twdvepenee in 
value*. Handicraftsmen's and yeomen's wives were not to wear silk 
veils. The use of fur was confined to the ladies of knights with a 
rental above 200 marks a year. Careful observance of difference 
of rank in the dress was also inculcated by 3 Edw IV. c. 5. The wife 
or daughter of a knight was not to wear cloth of gold or sable fur, 
ot a knight-bachelor not velvet, of an esquire or gentleman not 
"velvet, satin or ermine, of a labourer not clothes beyonda certain price 
or a girdle garnished with silver. By 22 Edw. IV. c 1, doth of gold 
and purple silk were confined to women of the royal family. It is 
worthy of notice that at the times of passing these sumptuary laws 
the trade interests of women were protected by the legislature, By 
37 Edw. III. c 6, handicraftsmen were to use only one mystery, but 
women might work as they had been accustomed. 3 Edw. IV. c 3 



1 It is remarkable that the great fiefs of France, except the Isle of 
France, the special apanage of the crown, all became in time female 
fiefs. This is shown by the table at the end of Laboulaye'a ReckercJu*. 

1 Early Law and Custom, ch. v 

* RoL Pari., vol. ui. p. 12. 



forbade importation of silk and lace by Lombards and other alien 
strangers, imagining to destroy the craft of the silk spinsters and all 
such virtuous occupations for women. In some cases the wives and 
daughters of tradesmen were allowed to assist in the trades of their 
husbands and fathers; see, for instance, the act concerning tanners, 
1 Jac. I. c 22. Some trading corporations, such as the East India 
Company, recognized no distinction of sex in their members. The 
disabilities imposed on women by substantive law are sometimes 
traceable in the early law of procedure. For instance, by the Statute 
of Essoins (12 Edw. II. st. 2), essoin <U senitio reps did not lie where 
the party was a woman; that is, a woman (with a few exceptions) 
could not excuse her absence from court by alleging that she was on 
public duty. The influence of the church is very clearly traceable in 
some of the earlier criminal legislation. Thus by 13 Edw. 1. st. 1, c 
34, it was punishable with threeyears' imprisonment to carry away 
a nun, even with her consent. The Six Articles, 31 Hen. VIII. c 14, 
forbade marriage and concubinage of priests and sanctioned vows 
of chastity by women. 

In Scotland, as early as Reriam Makstatem (12th century) women 
were the object of special legal regulation. In that work the mtrcktts 
mulieris (probably a tax paid to the lord on the marriage of his 
tenant's daughter; was fixed at a sum differing according to the rank 
of the woman. Numerous anciant laws dealt with t rade and sumptu- 
ary matters. By the Ltgts Quaiuor Burgorum female brewsters mak- 
ing bad ale were to forfeit cightpence and be put on the cucking-stool, 
and were to set an ale-wand outside their houses under a penalty 
of fourpence. The same laws also provided that a married woman 
committing a trespass without her husband's knowledge might be 
chastised like a child under age. The Statuta Gild* of the 1 3th century 
enacted that a married woman might not buy wool in the streets or 
buy more than a limited amount ofoata. The same code also ensured 
a provision for the daughter of one of the gild-brethren unable to 
provide for herself through poverty, either by marrying her or 
putting her in a convent. By the act 1429, c. 9, wives were to be 
arrayed after the estate of their husbands. By 1437, c * l &* no WOOtt * n 
was to go to church with her face covered so that she could not 
be known. 1581, c 18, was conceived in a more liberal spirit, and 
allowed women to wear any head-dress to which they had been 
accustomed. 162 1, c 25, permitted servants to wear their mistress's 
cast-off clothes. 1681, c. 80, contained the remarkable provision 
that not more than two changes of raiment were to be made by a bride 
at her wedding. In its more modern aspect the law is in most respects 
similar to that of England. Q. w.) 

In separate legal articles attention is drawn, on various sub- 
jects, to any special provisions or disabilities affecting 
women; see, for instance, Evidence, Divorce, 
Marriage, Children (Law relating to). Infant, 
Husband and Wire. The movement for removing 
the older disabilities has progressed at such different 
rates in various countries that it is impossible to do 
more than note here the chief distinctions remaining under 
English law in 1910. 

Civil Rights." -The age at which a girl can contract a valid marriage, 
in English law, is, following the Roman law, twelve; she is thus two 
years in advance of a boy, who must be fourteen. Under the Infants 
Settlement Act 1855, a valid settlement could be made by a' woman 
at seventeen with the approval of the court, the age for a man being 
twenty; by the Married Women's Property Act 1907 any settle- 
ment by a husband of his wife's property is not valid unless executed 
by her if she is of full age, of confirmed by her after she attains full 
age. An unmarried woman is liable for the support of illegitimate 
children till they attain the age of sixteen. She is generally assisted, 
in the absence 01 agreement, by an affiliation order granted by magis- 
trates. A married woman having separate property is, under the 
Married Women's Property Acts 1 882 and 1908, liable for the support 
of her parents, husband, children and grandchildren becoming 



up to the age ot sixteen, and could only lorleit such right by mis- 
conduct. But the' Court of Chancery, wherever there was trust 
property and the infant could be made a ward of court, took a less 
rigid view of the paternal rights and looked more to the interest of 
the child, and consequently in some cases to the extension of the 
mother's rights at common law. Legislation has tended in the same 
direction. By the Infants' Custody Act 1873. the Court of Chancery 
was empowe r ed to enforce a provision in a separation deed, giving up 
the custody or control of a child to the mother. The Judicature Act 



1873* * 25 (10), enacted that in questions relating to the custody 
and education of infants the rules of equity should prevail. The 
Guardianship of Infants Act 1886 largely extended the mother's 



powers of appointing and acting as a guardian, and gave the court 
a discretion to regard the mother's wishes as to the custody of the 
children. The Summary Jurisdiction (Married Women} Act 1895 
enabled a court of summary jurisdiction, to whom a married woman 
has made application, to commit to the applicant the custody ol any 
children of the marriage between the applicant and her husband, 
while under the age of sixteen years. 



WOMEN 



785 



The met remarkable disabilities under which women •« still 
placed in 1910 were (1) the exdution of female heirs from intestate 
succession -to real estate, unless in the absence of a male heir (see 
Inheritance; (Succession); and (a) the fact that a husband could 
obtain a divorce for the adultery of his wife* while a wife could only 
obtain it for her husband's adultery if coupled with some other cause, 
such as cruelty or desertion. 

Suits in which either necessarily or practically only women are 
plaintiffs are: breach of promise, affiliation (g.v.) and (though not 
nominally) seduction (q.vj. 

The action for breach of promise 1 may indeed be brought by a 
man, but this is very rare, and its only real interest is as a protection 
for women. It may be brought by but not against an infant, and not 
against ait adult if he or she has merely rati6ed a promise made 
during infancy; it may be brought against but not oy a married 
man or woman (in spite of the inherent incapacity of such a person 
to have married the plaintiff), and neither by nor against the personal 
representatives of a deceased party to the promise (unless where 
special damage has accrued to the personal estate of the deceased). 
The promise need not be in writing. The parties to an action are 
by 32 and 33 Vict- c 68 competent witnesses; die plaintiff cannot, 
however, recover a verdict without his or her testimony being 
corroborated by other material evidence. The measure of damages 
is to a greater extent than In most actions at the discretion of the 
jury: they may take into consideration the injury to the plaintiff's 
feelings, especially if the breach of promise be aggravated by seduc- 
tion. Either patty has a right to trial by jury under the rules of the 
Supreme Court, 1883. The action cannot be tried in a county court, 
unless by consent, or unless remitted for trial there by the High 
Court. Unchastity of the plaintiff unknown to the defendant when 
the promise was made and dissolution of the contract by mutual 
consent are the principal defences which are usually raised to the 
action. Bodily infirmity of the defendant is no defence to the 
action, though it may justify the other party in refusing to marry 
the person thus affected. Where the betrothed are within prohibited 
d>grmof conssjiguuuty or sAnity, there can be no valid promise at 
aU, and so no action for its breach. 

Criminal Law. — There are some offences which can be committed 
only by women, others which can be committed only against them. 
Among the former are concealment of birth (in ninety-nine cases 
out of a hundred), the now obsolete offence of being a common 
scold, and prostitution (?.».} and kindred offences. Where a married 
woman commit* a crime in company with her husband, she is 
generally presumed to have acted by his coercion, and so to be 
entitled to acquittal. This presumption, however, was never made 
in witchcraft cases, and is not now made in cases of treason, murder 
and other grave crimes, or in crimes in which the principal part is 
most usually taken bv the wife, such as keeping a brotheL In fact, 
the exceptions to the old presumption are now perhaps more numerous 



1 The action for breach of promise of marriage is in some of its 
incidents peculiar to English law. In Roman law, betrothal (span- 
salia) imposed a duty on the betrothed to become husband and wife 
within a reasonable time, subject to the termination of the obligation 
by death, repudiation by the words *ondilio*o tma non titer, or lapse 
of time, the time fixed being two years. No action lay for breach of 
promise to marry unless arrhao sponsalitiae had been given, ix. 
earnest of the bargain, to be forfeited by the party refusing to carry 
it out. The onto might also be given by a parent, and was equally 
liable to forfeiture. A provincial governor, or one of his relations or 
household, could not recover any arrha that might have been given, 
h being supposed that he was in a position of authority and able to 
exercise influence in forcing consent to a betrothal. In the canon 
law breach of the promise made by the spotuaiia, whether rfc praaemti 
or do futmo, a division unknown to Roman law, does not without 
more appear to have sufficed to found an action for its breach, 
except so far as it fell under ecclesiastical cognizance as laesioftdti, 
but it had the more serious legal effect of avoiding as a canonical 
disability the subsequent marriage, while the original spotuaiia 
continued, of a betrothed person to any other than the one to whom 
be or she was originally betrothed. The spotuaiia became inoperative, 
either by mutual consent or by certain supervening impediments, 
such as ordination or a vow of chastity. The canonical disability 
of pre-contract was removed in England by 31 Hen. VIIL a 30, 
re-established in the reign of Edward VI., and finally abolished in 
1753. In England the duty of the parties is the same as in Roman 
law. vis. to carry out the contract within a reasonable time, if no 
time be specially fixed. Formerly a contract to marry could be 
specifically enforced by the ccrksimtirel court co m p ell i n g a cele- 
bration of the marriage i* facio ouktioo. The last instance 



i of a 



by consummation may be resiled from, subject to the 
the party in fault to an action for the breach, which by 6 Geo. IV. c 
120, s. 38, is a proper cause for trial by jury. If, however, the 
spotuaiia be do praams*, and, according to the more probable 
opinion, if they be do future followed by consummation, a pre- 
contract is constituted, giving a right to a decree of declarator of 
marriage and equivalent to marriage, unless declared void during 
the lifetime of the parties. 



than those smiling within k. The doctrine of coercion and the 
practice of separate acknowledgment of deeds by married women 
( necessary before the Married Women's Property Act) seem to be 
vestiges of the period when women, besides being chattels, were 
treated as chattels. Formerly a wife could not steal her husband's 
property, but since the Married Women's 'Property Act this has 
become possible. Adultery is no crime, England being almost the 
only country where such is the case. It was punished by fine in the 
ecclesiastical courts up to the 17th century, and was made criminal 
for a short time by an ordinance of the Long Parliament. The 
offences which can be committed only against women are chiefly 
those against decency, such as rape, procurement and similar 
crimes, in which a considerable change in the law in the direction 
of increased protection to women was made by the Criminal Law 
Amendment Act 1885. In regard to the protection given to a wife 
against her husband modern legislation has considerably strengthened 
the wife's position by means of judicial separation and maintenance 
in case of desertion (see Divorce). The whipping of female offenders 
was abolished in 1830. Chastisement of a wife by a husband, 
possibly at one time lawful to a reasonable extent, would now 
certainly constitute an assault. The husband's rights are limited 
to restraining the wife's liberty in case of her misconduct. 

In Scotland the criminal law differs slightly from that of England. 
At one time drowning was a punishment specially reserved for 
women. Incest (ff.s.), or an attempt to commit incest, has always 
been punishable as a crime. Adultery and fornication are still 
nominally crimes, but criminal proceedings in these cases have fallen 
into desuetude. The age of testamentary capacity is still twelve, 
not twenty-one, as in England. 

The whole idea of women's position in social life, and their 
ability to take their place, independently of any question of 
sex, in the work of the world, was radically changed 
in die English-speaking countries, and also in the more 
progressive nations beyond their bounds, during the 
19th century. This is due primarily to the movement 
for women's higher education and its results. To deal in detail 
with this movement in various countries would here be too 
intricate a matter; but in the English-speaking countries at 
all events the change is so complete that the only curious thing 
now is, not what spheres women may not enter, more or less 
equally with men, but the few from which they arc still excluded. 

Before the accession of Queen Victoria, there was no systematic 
education for English women, but as the first half of the 19th 
century drew to a close, broader views began to be held on the 
subject, while the humanitarian movement, as well as the rapidly 
increasing number of women, helped to put their education on 
a sounder basis. It became more thorough; its methods were 
better calculated to stimulate intellectual power; and the con- 
viction that it was neither good, nor politic, for women to remain 
intellectually in their former state of ignorance, was gradually 
accepted by every one. The movement owed much to Frederick 
Derason Maurice. He was its pioneer; and Queen's College 
(1848), which he founded, was the first to give a wider scope to 
the training of its scholars. Out of its teaching, and that of 
its professors (including Charles Kingsley), grew nearly all the 
educational advantages which women enjoy to-day; and to 
the women who were trained at Queen's College we owe some 
of the best teaching in England. Bedford College, Cheltenham 
College, the North London Collegiate School for Girls, the Girls' 
Public Day School Company's schools, are some of those which 
sprang into life in different parts of England, and were filled, 
as rapidly as they were opened, by the girls of the middle and 
professional classes. From their teaching came the final stage 
which gave women the same academic advantages as men. 
SomervUle College and Lady Margaret Hall at Oxford, Girton 
and Newnham Colleges at Cambridge, Westfield College in 
London, St Hilda's College. St Hugh's Hall, Hollowsy College, 
Owens College, the Manchester and Birmingham and Victoria 
Universities, and other colleges for women in all parts of the 
United Kingdom, are some of the later but equally successful 
results of the movement. The necessity for testing the quality 
of the education of women, however, soon began to be felt. The 
University of Cambridge was the first to institute a special 
examination for women over eighteen, and its example was 
followed by Oxford; but while London, Dublin (Trinity College), 
Belfast (Queen's), Victoria, Edinburgh, Glasgow, and St Andrews 
universities now grant degrees, Oxford and Cambridge still denied 
them in igxo. In the act of 1008 establishing the new Roman 



786 



WOMEN 



Catholic university in Ireland, it was provided that two members 
of the senate should be women; and Queen's University, Belfast, 
had three women in 19x0 in its senate. Women may point with 
justifiable pride to the fact that within a very few years of their 
admission to university examinations.they provided at Cambridge 
both a senior classic and a senior wrangler. In America (see 
Co-education) the movement has gone much farther than in 
Great Britain. 

The temperate, calm, earnest demeanour of women, both in 
the schools and in university life, awakened admiration and 
respect from all; and the movement brought into existence a 
vast number of women, as well-educated as men, hard-working, 
persevering and capable, who invaded many professions, and 
could hold their ground where a sound education was the found- 
ation of success. The pioneers of female education spent their 
energies in developing their higher and more intellectual ideals, 
but later years opened up other positions which better education 
has enabled women to filL In the literary field they soon invaded 
journalism (see Newspapers), and took an important place on 
the stafis of libraries and museums. They form an important 
(and in America, the predominating) section of the teaching 
profession in the state schools, and in all research work play an 
increasingly valuable part. It is hot possible for every woman 
to be a scholar, a doctor (see below), a lawyer, 1 or possibly to 
attain the highest position in professions where competition 
with men is keen, but the development of women's work has 
opened many other outlets for their energies. As members of 
school boards, factory inspectors, poor law guardians, sanitary 
inspectors, they have had ample scope for gratifying their ambition 
and energy. The progress made in philanthropy and religious 
activity* is largely due to their devotion, under the auspices 
of countless new societies. And increasing provision has been 
made, in the arts and crafts, for the furtherance of their careers. 
There are successful women architects now working in England, 
and in 1905 a woman won the silver medal of the Royal Society 
of British Architects; a large number of women travel for business 
firms; in decorative work, as silversmiths, dentists, law copyists, 
proof-readers, and in plan tracing women work with success; 
wood-carving has become almost as recognized a career for them 
as that of typewriting and shorthand, in which an increasing 

1 Women have Ions practised law in the United States, and in* 
1896 the benchera of the Ontario Law Society decided to admit 
them to the bar In France in December 1900 an act was passed 
enabling women to practise as barristers, and Madame Petit was 
•worn in Paris, while a woman was briefed for the defence in a murder 
case in Toulouse in 1903, this being the first case of a woman pleading 
in a European criminarcourt. In Finland and Norway women have 
long practised as barristers, and in Denmark since 1908 they have 
been admitted as assistants to lawyers. By the la* of the Nether- 
lands they are admitted as notaries. In England a special tribunal 
of the House of Lords presided over by the Lord ChancellortJecided 
in 1903 not to admit women to the English bar, on the grounds that 
there was no precedent and that they were not desirous of creating 
one; but numbers of women take degrees in law in British universi- 
ties, and several have become solicitors. 



* In the olden times before the Reformation in England 
religious communities absorbed a large number of the surplus 
female population, and in High Church and Roman Catholic circles 
many lames still enter various sisterhoods and devote their lives to 
teaching the young, visiting the poor and nursing the sick. In the 
Church of England the only office which remained open to women 
was the modest one of churchwarden, and this office is not infre- 
quently filled by women. The Convocation of Canterbury in 1908 
refused by a majority of two to admit women to parochial church 
councils, though qualified persons of the female sex may vote for 
parochial lay representatives on the church councfl. In the Inde- 
pendent Churches there are fewer restrictions. Among the Con- 
gregationalists women have equal votes on all questions and may 
become deacons or even ministers; Miss Jane Brown has been 
recognised as pastor of Brotherton Congregational Church. York- 
shire, and Miss L, Smith as pastor of that in Cardiff, and in the 
Methodist Church women frequently act as local preachers. The 
same equality and share in religious work is accorded to women by 
the Baptists, the Society of Fnends and the Salvation Army, the 
success of which is largely due to them. In Unitarian congregations 
in the United States and Australia many women have been ap- 
pointed ministers, and in England the Rev. Gertrude von Petaold 
held in 1910 the post of minister of the Narborough Road Free 
Christian Church, Leicester. 



number are finding employment. Agriculture and gardening 
have opened up a new field of work, and, with it, kindred occupa- 
tions. 

Women have always found a peculiarly fitting sphere as 
nurses, though it is only in recent years, that nursing (9.9.) has 
been professionalized by means of proper education. Ma ^^ m ^ 
But their admission to the medical profession itself 
was one of the earliest triumphs of the 19th-century movement. 
It began in America, but was quickly followed up in England. 
After having been refused admission to instruction by numerous 
American medical schools, Miss Elizabeth BlackweH was alio wed 
to enter as a student by the Geneva Medical College, N.Y., 
in 184/, from which she graduated in 1849. Hera was the first 
woman's name to be placed on the Medical Register of the 
United Kingdom (1859). In Great Britain the struggle to obtain 
admission to the teaching schools and to the examinations for 
medical degrees and diplomas was long and bitter. Though 
the Society of the Apothecaries admitted Mrs Garrett Anderson 
(q.v.) to their diploma in 1865, it Was only after a series of rebuffs 
and failures that women were admitted to the degree examina- 
tions of the various universities. In August 1876 an " enabling " 
act was passed, empowering the nineteen British medical 
examining bodies to confer their degrees or diplomas without 
distinction of sex. In 1008 the Royal College of Physicians 
and Surgeons decided to admit women to their diplomas and 
fellowships. In the meantime women doctors had become a 
common phenomenon. 

Women in England may fill some of the highest positions in 
the state. A woman may be a queen, or a regent, and as queen 
regnant has, by 1 Mary, sess. 3, c. 1, as full rights 
as a king. Among the public offices a woman may 
hold are those of county, borough, parish and rural or 
urban district councillor, overseer, guardian of the poor, church- 
warden and sexton. In 1908 Mrs Garrett Anderson was elected 
mayor of Aldeburgh, the first case of a woman holding that 
position. Women have also been nominated as members of 
Royal Commissions (e.g. those on the Poor Law and Divorce). 
A woman cannot serve on a jury, but may, if married, be one of 
a " jury of matrons " empanelled to determine the condition of 
a female prisoner on a writ de venire inspiciendo. She can vote 
(if unmarried or a widow) in county council, municipal, poor 
law and other local elections. The granting of the parliamentary 
franchise to women was, however, still withheld in 1910. The 
history of the movement for women's suffrage is told beiow. 
It may be remarked that, with or without the possession of a 
vote on their own account, politics in England have in modern 
times been very considerably influenced by the work of women 
as speakers, canvassers and organizers. The great Conservative 
auxiliary political organization, the Primrose League, owes its 
main success to women, and the Women's Liberal Federation, 
on the opposite side, has done much for the Liberal party. 
The Women's Liberal Unionist Association, which came into 
being in 1886 at the time of the Irish Home Rule Bill, also played 
an active part in defence of the Unionist cause. 

The movement for the abolition of the sex distinction in respect 
of the right conferred upon certain citizens to share in the 
election of parliamentary representatives dates for 
practical purposes from the middle of the 19th century. sm ^^J 
The governmental systems of the ancient world were 
based without exception on the view that women could take 
no part in state politics, except in oriental countries as monarch*. 
Exceptional women such as Cleopatra, Scmiramis, Axsinoe, 
might in the absence of men of the royal house, and by reason 
of royal descent or personal prestige, occupy the throne, and an 
Aspasia might be recognized as the able head of a political salon, 
but women in general derived thence no political status. Though 
Christianity anbVa broadening of men's theories of life tended to 
raise the moral and soda! status of women, yet Paul definitely 
assigns subservience as the proper function of women, and 
many of the fathers looked upon them mainly as inheriting the 
temptress function of Eve. This view generally obtained through- 
out the middle ages, though here and there gummerings of anew 



WOMEN 



787 



Idea are seen; many of the great EngSsh abbesses discharged 
their territorial duties as landowners, and women as custodians 
of castles voted for knights of the shire. In the 17th and x8th 
centuries in England and America, under the influence of advanc- 
ing political theory, and in France in the 18th century, this idea 
began to take shape. In England the writings of Mary Astelt 
(Serious Proposal to Ladies, 1607) and others led to the gradual 
revision of the inherited idea of the education and the true sphere 
of women, while in 1700 Mary Wollstonecraft published her 
Vindication of the Rights cf Women. In America the dawning of 
a political consciousness is evidenced by the claim made in 1647 
by Margaret Brent to sit in the Assembly of Maryland as the 
executor of Lord Baltimore, and by the requests made by 
Abigail Adams (wife of John Adams), Mercy Otis Warren and 
Hannah Lee Corbin, that women taxpayers should enjoy direct 
representation. In France the movement towards democracy 
did not in the hands of Rousseau include the enfranchisement 
of women, and Comte taught that women were politically inferior 
to men; Condorcet, however, demanded equal rights for both 
sexes. Although, through an oversight, women could vote under 
the first constitution of New Jersey from 1776 to 1S07, there is no 
doubt that women's suffrage had made practically no progress in 
any country till comparatively late in the 19th century. There 
has been considerable discussion as to whether women had 
constitutionally a right to vote in England prior to the Reform 
Act of 1832 (see Mrs C. C. Slopes, British Freewoman). The 
discussion, however, is one of purely antiquarian interest, and 
the Reform Act made quite clear what had certainly been 
the recognized custom before, by introducing specifically the 
word " male " in the new franchise law (2 and 3 Will. IV., cap. 
45, sections 19 and 20). 

The earliest known handbul representing the modern " women's 
suffrage" movement in England dates from about 1847, and in 
1857 the first society was formed in Sheffield, the "Sheffield 
Female Political Association," due largely to the work of a 
Quaker lady, Anne Kent of Chelmsford. In July of the same year 
Mrs John Stuart Mill published an article in the Westminster 
Review} The earliest outstanding figure, however, is Lydia 
Ernestine Becker (1827-1800), descended on the mother's side 
from an old Lancashire family, her father being the son of a 
German who settled in England in early youth. She became a 
well-known botanist, and an intimate friend of Charles Darwin. 
In 1858 the Englishwoman's Journal was started, and by this 
time there was a vigorous agitation fox the alteration of the 
law relating to the property and earnings of married women. 
Among the leaders of that movement were Barbara Leigh Smith 
(Mrs Bodichon) and Bessie Rayner Parkcs (Madame Belloc). 
At the same time a famous group of women, Emily Davics, 
Miss Beale and Miss Buss (founders respectively of the Cheltenham 
Ladies' College and the North London Collegiate School) and 
Miss Garrett (Dr Garrett Anderson), Miss Helen Taylor (John 
Stuart Mill's stepdaughter) and Miss Wolstcnholme (afterwards 
Mrs Elmy), discussed women's suffrage at the "Kensington 
Society." 

A new era began with the election in 1865, as member for West- 
minster, of John Stuart Mill, who placed women's suffrage in 
his election address. From that time the subject became more 
or less prominent in each successive parliament. Mill presented 
the first petition in May 1867. In x868 the case of Chorlton ». 
Lings was decided against women applicants for the vote by the 
Court of Common Pleas, and a similar decision was given by 
the Supreme Court of Appeal in Scotland. From this time 
the efforts of the various local committees (in London, Manchester, 
Bristol, Edinburgh and Birmingham) were directed to promoting 
a bill in parliament, and to forwarding petitions (an average 
of 200,000 signatures a year was maintained from 1870 to 1880). 
The Women's Su£ro%e Journal was founded in 1870, and in the 
same year Jacob Bright moved the second reading of the Women's 
Disabilities Bill which was carried by a majority of 33 votes. Mr 
Gladstone then threw his opposition into the scale, and the bill 

*Thb article was written in reference to the Women's Rights 
Convention- held in Worcester, Mae*-, U.S.A., in October 1850. 



was rejected In committee by 220 to 04. In 1871 the same 
bill was again lost by 220 to 151, in spite of a memorial headed 
by Florence Nightingale, Mary Carpenter, Augusta Webster, 
Harriet Martineau, Frances Power Cobbe and Anna Louisa 
Chisholm (Mrs H. W. Chisholm). G. O. Trevelyan's Household 
Franchise Bill in 1873 raised the hopes of the women's suffragist, 
and Mt Joseph Chamberlain at a great Liberal meeting in 
Birmingham carried a resolution in favour of the proposed change. 
From 1874 to 1876 the bill was in charge of a conservative, 
Mr Forsyth, and, despite the opposition of John Bright and the 
efforts of a parliamentary committee for " maintaining the 
integrity of the franchise," the number of supporters was well 
maintained. The work proceeded uneventfully from 1870" to 
1884., huge meetings being held in aU the chief towns. In 1880 
the franchise was conferred upon women owners in the Isle of 
Man, subsequently upon women occupiers also. In 1883 a great 
Liberal conference at Leeds voted in favour of women's suffrage 
under the leadership of Dr Crosskey and Walter S. B. M'Laren. 
The nest notable event in the movement was the defeat of W. 
WoodaU's amendment to the Reform Bill (1884), providing that 
words importing the masculine gender should include women, 
by 271 votes to 135, Mr Gladstone again making a powerful 
appeal to his party to withdraw the support which they had given 
in the past. 104 Liberal members crossed over in answer to 
this appeal Numerous bills and resolutions followed year 
by year in the names of W. Woodall, L. H. Courtney (Lord 
Courtney, whose bill was read a second time without a division, 
x886), W. S. B. M'Laren, Baron Dimsdale, Caleb Wright, Sir 
Albert K. Rollit, F. Faithfull Begg (1897; second reading 
majority 71). Up to 1906 all those attempts had failed, in most 
cases owing to time being taken for government business. 

The period 1006 to 19x0 witnessed entirely new developments. 
The suffragists of the existing societies still carried on their 
constitutional propaganda, and various bills were introduced. 
In 1007 Mr W. H. Dickinson's bill was talked out, and in xooS 
Mr H. Y. Stanger's bill was carried on its second reading by a 
majority of 179, but the government refused facilities for its 
progress. Prior to this, however, a number of suffragists had 
come to the conclusion that the failure of the various bills was 
due primarily to government hostility. Furthermore the advent 
of a Liberal government in 1906 had aroused hopes among them 
that the question would be officially taken up. Questions were 
therefore put by women to liberal cabinet ministers at party 
meetings, and disturbances occurred, with the result that Miss 
Christabel Pankhurst and Miss Annie Kenney were fined in 
Manchester in xoofi. A certain section of suffragists thereafter 
decided upon comprehensive opposition to the government of 
the day, until such time as one or other party should officially 
adopt a measure for the enfranchisement of women. This 
opposition took two forms, one that of conducting campaigns 
against government nominees (whether friendly or not) at bye- 
elections, and the other that of committing breaches of the law 
with a view to drawing the widest possible attention to their 
cause and so forcing the authorities to fine or imprison them. 
Large numbers of women assembled while parliament was sitting, 
in contravention of the regulations, and on several occasions 
many arrests were made. Fines were imposed, but practically 
all refused to pay them and suffered imprisonment. At a later 
stage some of the prisoners adopted the further course of refusing 
food and were forcibly fed in the gaols. 

The failure of all the bills previously drafted on the basis of 
exact equality between the sexes, and the fact that both Unionists 
and Liberals refused to make the matter a party question, 
coupled with a general feeling of discomfort at the relations 
between the so-called " militant " suffragists and the authorities, 
led in the spring of 19x0 to the formation of a committee (called 
the Conciliation Committee) of members of parliament under 
the presidency of the earl of Lytton. This committee, consisting 
of some ss members belonging to aU parties, succeeded in agree- 
ing upon a new bill based upon the occupier franchise established 
by the Municipal Franchise Act of x 884. It was urged on behalf 
of this bill that it would establish the principle on a sufficiently 



YKVi\ ANTHONY A 




J^Tby Mi \ ***' 

*^,outof<** 



..>• .n. scaled 

w.». AOvi the 

\ :. :>b*c*ie- 

v k ;»w Attempt 

x «u >> i r$ votes; 

*x a .v *tak bouse, 

»x gtv« further 



- ^i^ a***""^ £" * ,> .v Wl wasopposed 



<k. • •>*»• •*)•**«» *«* evidence 



"* " "^s* • g0W *L ~# ~<s «***«• **■* **« be mentioned. 
- J%Zv?Jt^ A " ,* ~^ «**«««» privileges as men. 

* ' ^Sk Lf '?jLl7»f eTSaber of separate local 

* _-. it bff * !?~-Mw««ftmMtitta« a great amalgamation 

.- -^J« rwrvi TrJiy^^5U und<5 the present title. 

'-^JS-iic *•* A^T* t*wv All the early suffragists 

-£ £d 200 ****; *^ >*« t he chief name is that 

., ctis b» h ' •*• vw Mk« pursued continuously the 

*" *Js*T *•***" *L I *v*2H apart altogether from the 

^a^^^^tX^organrr** C^ Cawe, was 

„ Jl rt »**• , !»•_.*>< S ^W ens' Political Union, associated 
— ^ .«***** pr '7\* , i^mdine Pankhurst and Miss Christa- 

, «t» th» •**!!, < r**, originated the more M militant " 

' u» v-«*t. M- 1 !J v^.» igio reached the figure of £60,000, and 

.:» »°* roaK ' l ^, v » ^vrtw 500 of its members had undergone 

* '. ^-.n.^! u^K^ti^k * widespread campaign of meetings, 

„. w a*»*« " ' M x>*lEers were subjected to an opposition of 
4 *»•«*» *' tfc»<r ««s no doubt that the movement received 
^.^.Jk*r** ,|vl ' ^iK<4ly new stimulus. Its official organ. Votes 
". i> * rt, \!! lfc i!Ltl a Urge circulation. 

r^-.K!^ Mnd» ""^P^ „.! n ^ 9 ?7. we ^. fo J! l l!? 9> the 

whose 

" and 



>,*..«*• <■ J*J lUtrw* (chiefly associated with the name of 1 
I. •— ** * / J*VwouM»en t supporter of the Labour party), wh 
v v**"**. • *J w the internal administration of the Social 1.. _ 
. „ „..v* ;?^ rt hut ajirecd in adopting its policy in a modified 
'>••-*• 1 ?S t* JrV»W League for Women** Suffrage, a society 
• . .» **J„rJi men of all parties, and in September 1910 adopted 
*• "** ^^Jwctimeat election policy. Numerous other party 1 and 
• .* '""''^irktics were formed, and resolutions supporting the 
* '^ ny Jthcr in the abstract or as a part of adult suffrage, were 
,» ""^various Conservative, Liberal and Labour conferences 

»4*t **°2Lf|table prominence of the movement and the fact that 
'"* -"Vplrliaments contained a majority of pledged suffragists 

v4*>vs*£ formation of opposition societies. In 1908 was formed 

'•>■ j-^frt'* National Anti-Suffrage League, of men and women, 
N -kHrrw into its ranks prominent persons such as Lord Cromer, 

%H *|V ari oo. Lady Jersey and Mrs Humphry Ward; and about 

•am* time l ^ c Men's League for Opposing Women's Suffrage 

**!!*. into existence. These two leagues amalgamated in December 

"% «• the National League for Opposing Women's Suffrage, with 

y*% Cromer as president. The Anti-Suffrage Renew was founded 

« tf°9> 

In New Zealand a measure for the enfranchisement of women, 
produced by Richard Seddon, was carried in September 1893 
(fn the upper house by a majority of 2). In Australia the vote 
ȣ* been extended to all adult women both in the states (the first 
{icing South Australia, 1894, the last Victoria, 1908) and for the 
Commonwealth parliament. Thev have, moreover, the right 
to sit in the representative assemblies. 

The movement assumed an organized form in the United 
States somewhat earlier than in the United Kingdom. It arose 
out of the interest taken by women in the temperance and anti- 
slavery agitations, and was fostered by the discussion en women's 
property rights. In 1840 the question was raised in a more 
acute form by the exclusion of women delegates from the World's 
Convention, and in 1848 the first women's suffrage convention 
was held at Seneca Falls, the leading spirits being Mrs Elizabeth 
Cady Stanton, Martha C. Wright and Lucretia Mott. Later 
»tions at Salem and Worcester, Massachusetts, in 1850, 
he ConstmOSm and Unionist Women's Franchise Astocia- 
*uch the countess of Selborne became president in 1910. 



wete the predecessors of annual meetings, but the extravagant 
dress adopted by some of the women brought ridicule upon the 
movement, which was further thrown into the background by 
the Civil War. In 1869 were formed: (1) in New York, the 
Notional Women's Suffrage Association, and (2) in Cleveland, 
the American Woman's Suffrage Association. In 1890 these two 
societies amalgamated as the National American Woman* s 
Suffrage Association, of which in 1900 Mrs Carrie Chapman 
Catt became president. The question was considered by a 
select committee in the 48th Congress, and 200 petitions, repre- 
senting millions of individuals, were presented in 1900. The 
Labour and Socialist parties in general supported the women's 
claim, but there was considerable opposition in other parties. 
In s states (Wyoming since 1869; Colorado, 1893; Utah, 1896; 
Idaho, 1806; and Washington^ 1910) women are electors, and in 
a 5 states they have exercised the school suffrage. In Louisiana 
they obtained the suffrage in connexion with tax levies in 1898. 
Anti-suffrage societies have also been formed in Brooklyn (1894), 
Massachusetts (1895), Illinois (1897), Oregon (1809). 

In Finland all adult men and women over the age of 24, 
excluding paupers, received the right to vote for members of 
the Diet in 1906, in which year nineteen women became members 
of the Diet. In Norway, where there is male suffrage for men 
over 25 years of age, women were entitled to vote by a law of 
1007, provided they or, if married, their husbands (i.e. where 
property is jointly owned) had paid income tax on an annual 
income of 400 kroner (£22) in the towns, or 300 kroner (£16, 10s.) 
in country districts. In Sweden a suffrage bill was carried "in 
the lower but rejected in the upper house in 1909. In all the 
chief countries there are suffrage societies of greater or less 
strength. In Russia the question was placed in the forefront of 
the demands made by the Duma in 1906, and in 1907 propertied 
women received the right to confer votes on their sons who would 
otherwise be unenfranchised. In France a feminist congress mat 
at Lyons in 1909. 

The International Woman Suffrage Alliance originated in the 
United States in 1888. Its membership increased steadily, and at 
the Convention held in London in 1909 delegates were present from 
twenty-two countries. In the United Kingdom this Alliance is 
represented by the National Union of Women s Suffrage Societies. 
A social and propagandist club was founded in London in 1909 
with an international membership. An international journal 
under the title Jus Suffragii (Brussels) was founded in 1907. 

Authorities. — It is impossible to do more than mention a few 
works out of many dealing with various phases of the modern 
" women's movement. " See Alice Ziramern s Renaissance of Girls' 
Education in England (1896); A. R. Cleveland, Women under 
English Imw (1896); I. L. de Lancssan, L' Education de la fevtme 
n !i9o8); m. Ostrogprski, Femme au point de rue du droit 

public (1^92); Mrs C. P. Oilman, Women and Economics (1899): 
A I. Collet, Report on Changes in the Employment of Women 

(m.^; I'ui papers, C. 8794); B. and M. Van Vorst, Woman in 
si 1908) ; A. Loria, Le Feminisme au point de vue sociotogiqm* 

{1907} ; 1 ielen Blackburn, Record of Women's Suffrage, in the United 
(1902) ; Susan B. Anthony, History of Woman's Suffrage, 
lilted States (4 vols., 1881-1902); C. C. Stopes, British 
Hen (1894); W. Lyon Blcase, The Emancipation of Women 
The classical exposition of the arguments on behalf of 
suffrage is J. S. Mill's Subjection of Women; the most 
important statement in opposition is perhaps that of Professor 
A. V. Dicey in the Quarterly Review (Oct. 1908). (X.) 

WOOD, ANTHONY A* (1632-1695), English antiquary, was 
the fourth son of Thomas Wood (1580-1643), B.C.L. of Oxford, 
where Anthony was born on the 17th of December 1632. He 
was sent to New College school in 1641, and at the age of twelve 
was removed to the free grammar school at Thame, where his 
studies were interrupted by rivfl war skirmishes. He was then 
placed under the tuition of his brother Edward (1627-1655), 
of Trinity College; and, as he telb us, "while he continued 
in this condition his mother would alwaies be soliciting him to 
be an apprentice which he could never endure to heare of." 
He was entered at Merton College in 1647, and made postmaster. 
& 1652 he amused himself with ploughing and bell-ringing, 

* In the Life he speaks of himself and his family as Wood or 
a Wood, the last form being a pedantic return to old usage adopted 
by himself. A pedigree is given in Clark's edition. 



ii 
F 
(19«0). 

women's 



~± Wt 



WOOD, MRS HENRY— WOOD, SIR H. EVELYN 



789 



sad " taring had from his most tender years an extraordinary 
ravishing delight in music/' began to teach himself the violin, 
and was examined for the degree of B.A. He engaged a music* 
master, and obtained permission to use the Bodleian, " which 
he took to be the happiness of his life." He was admitted M.A. 
in i6$s, and in the following year published a volume of sermons 
by his late brother Edward. He began systematically to copy 
monumental inscriptions and to search for antiquities in the 
city and neighbourhood. He went through the Christ Church 
registers, " at this time being resolved to set himself to the 
•tody of antiquities." Dr John Wallis, the keeper, allowed him 
free access to the university registers in 1660; " here he layd 
the foundation of that book which was fourteen years afterwards 
published, vis. Hist, et Anthq. Urns. Oxon" He also came to 
know the Oxford collections of Brian Twyne to which he was 
greatly indebted. He steadily investigated the muniments of 
all the colleges, and in 1667 made his first journey to London, 
where he visited Dugdale, who introduced him into the Cottonian 
library, and Prynne showed him the same civility for the Tower 
records. On October 22, 1669, he was sent for by the delegates 
of the press, " that whereas he had taken a great deal of paints 
in writing the Hist, and Antuj of the UnsversUie of Oxon, they 
would for his paines give him an 100 It. for his copie, conditionally, 
that he would suffer the book to be translated into Latine." 
He accepted the offer and set to work to prepare his English 
MS. for the translators* Richard Peers and Richard Reeve, 
both appointed by Dr Fell, dean of Christ Church, who under- 
took the expense of printing. In 1674 appeared Historia et 
antiquitales UnhersitaHs Oxomensis, handsomely reprinted " e 
TheatfO Sheldom'ano, ,t in two folio volumes, the first devoted 
to the university in general and the second to the colleges. Copies 
were widely distributed, and university and author received 
much praise. On the other hand, Bishop Barlow told a corre- 
spondent that " not only the Latine but the history itself is in 
many things ridiculously false" {Genuine Remains, 1603, p.183). 
In 1678 the university registers which had been in his custody 
for eighteen years were removed, as it was feared that he would 
be implicated in the Popish plot. To relieve himself from 
suspicion he took the oaths of supremacy and allegiance. During 
this time he had been gradually completing his great work, 
which was produced by a London publisher in 1691-1692, 
2 vols, folio, Atkenoe Oxonienses: an Exact History of all the 
Writers and Bishops who have had their Education in the University 
of Oxford from 1500 to 1690, to which are added the Fasti, or Annals 
for the said time. On the 29th of July 1693 he was condemned 
in the vice-chancellor's court for certain libels against the late 
earl of Clarendon, fined, banished from the university until he 
recanted, and the offending pages burnt. The proceedings were 
printed in a volume of Miscellanies published by Curll in 1714. 
Wood was attacked by Bishop Burnet in a Ldier to the Bishop 
of Lichfield and Coventry (1693, 4 to), and defended by his nephew 
Dr Thomas Wood, in a Vindication of the Historiographer, to 
which is added the Historiographer's Answer (1693), 4to, reproduced 
in the subsequent editions of the Athenae. The nephew also 
defended his uncle in An Appendix to the Life of Bishop Seth 
Ward, 1607, 8vo. After a short umess be died on the 28th of 
November 1695, and was buried in the outer chapel of St John 
Baptist (Merton College), in Oxford, where he superintended the 
digging of his own grave but a few days before. 

He is described as " a very strong lusty man, " of uncouth manners 
and appearance, not so deaf as he pretended, of reserved and temper- 
ate habits, not avaricious and a despiser of honours. He received 
neither office nor reward from the university which owed so much to 
his labours. He never married, and led a life of self-dental, entirely 
devoted to antiquarian research. Bell-ringing and music were his 
chief relaxations. His literary style i> poor, and his taste and judg- 
ment are frequently warped by prejudice, bat his two great works 
and unpublished collections form a priceless source of information on 
Oxford and her worthies. He was always suspected of being a Roman 
Catholic, and invariably treated Jacobites and Papists better than 
Dissenters in the Athenae, but he died in communion with the Church 
of England. 

Wood's original manuscript (purchased by the Bodleian in 1846) 
was first published by John Gutch as The History and Antiquities 
of the Colleges and Malls in the University of Oxford, with a con- 



tinuation (1786-1700. 2 vols. 4to), and The History and Antiquities 
of the University of Oxford (1702- 1796, 3 vols. 4to). with portrait of 
Wood. To these should be added The Antient and Present Stale 



of the City of Oxford, chiefly collected by A. A Wood, with additions 
by the Res. Sir J. PeshaU (1773, 4to; the text is garbled and the 
editing very imperfect). An admirable edition of the Survey of the 



A ntiquilies of the City of Oxford, 
edited by Andrew Clark, 



by the 



in 1661-66 by Anthony Wood, 
he Oxford Historical Society 



:iety 



(1889-1899, 3 vols. 8vo). Modtus Solium, a Collection of Pieces 
of Humour, chH 1 -' M — * ■ ■ ■'— »-•.-•—• — 



of Humour, chiefly ill-natured personal stories, was published at 
Oxford in 1751. i2mo. Some letters between Aubrey and Wood were 
given in the Gentleman's, Magazine (3rd ser., ix. x. xi.). Wood 
consulted Dr Hudson about getting a third volume of the Athenae 
printed in Holland, saving, "When this volume comes out 111 make 
you laugh again " (Rdiq. Heamianae, i. 59). This was included in a 
second edition of the Athenae published by R. Knaplock and J. 
Tonson in 1721 (a vols, folio), " very much corrected and enlarged, 
with the addition of above 500 new lives." The third appeared as " a 
new edition, with additions, and a continuation by Philip Bliss" 
(1813-1820, 4 vols. 4to). The Ecclesiastical History Society proposed 
to bring out a fourth edition, which stopped at the Life, ed. by Bliss 
(1848, 8vo; see GeuL Mag., N.S., xxix. 135* 368). Dr Bliss's inter- 
leaved copy is in the Bodleian, and Dr Griffiths announced in 1859 
that a new edition was contemplated by the Press, and asked for 
additional matter (see Notes and Queries, 2nd ser., vii. 514, and 6th 
ser., vL 5, 51). Wood bequeathed his library (127 MSS. and 970 
printed books) to the Ashmolean Museum, and the keeper, William 
Huddcsford, printed a catalogue of the MSS. in 1761. In 1858 
the whole collection was transferred to the Bodleian, where 25 
volumes of Wood's MSS. had been since 1690. Many of the original 
papers from which the Athenae was written, as well as several large 
volumes of Wood's correspondence and all his diaries, are in the 
Bodleian. 

We are intimately acquainted with the most minute particulars 
of Wood's life from his Diaries (1657-1695) and autobiography: 
all earlier editions are now su p ersede d by the elaborate work of 
Andrew Clark. The Life and Times of Anthony Wood, Antiquary, 
' Oxford, 163 2-1695, described by himself (Oxford Historical 
"1 1-1900. 5 vols. 8vo). See also Reliquiae Heamianae, 
2nd ed., 1869, 3 vols, tamo); Hcarne's Remarks 
ons (Oxford Historical Society, 1885-1907), vols. 
L-viiL: Macray'e Annals of the Bodleian Library (ami ed., 1890); 
Nichols's Literary Anecdotes, L iv. v. viii.; Noble's Biogr. History 
of England, I (H. R.T.) 

WOOD, MRS HEtfRY [Ellen] (1814-1887), English novelist, 
was born at Worcester on the 17th of January 1814. Her 
maiden name was Price; her father was a glove manufacturer 
in Worcester. She married Henry Wood in 1836, and after 
her marriage lived for the most part in France, her husband, 
who died in 1866, being at the head of a large shipping and 
banking, firm. In i860 she wrote a temperance tale, Danesbury 
House, which gained a prize of £100 offered by the Scottish 
Temperance League; but before this she had regularly contri- 
buted anonymous stories to periodicals. Her first great success 
was made with East Lynns (1861), which obtained enormous 
popularity. It was translated into several languages, and a 
number of dramatic versions were made. The Channings and 
Mrs Halliburton's Troubles followed in 1862; Verner's Pride 
and The Shadow of AsUydyat in 1863; Lord Oakbum's Daughters, 
Oswald Cray and Trevlyn Hold in 1864. She became proprietor 
and editor of the Argosy magazine in 1867, and the Johnny Ludlow 
tales,- published anonymously there, are the most artistic of 
hex works. Among the thirty-five novels Mrs Henry Wood 
produced, the best of those not hitherto mentioned were 
Roland Yorke (1869); Wilkin the Mate (1872) and Edina (1876). 
She continued to edit the Argosy, with the assistance of her son, 
Mr C. W. Wood, till her death, which occurred on the 10th of 
February 1887. 

Memorials of Mrs Hen ry Wood, by her son, were published in 1894. 

WOOD, SIR HEKRY EVELYN (1838- ), British field 
marshal, was born at Braintree, Essex, on the 9th of February 
1838, the youngest son of Sir John Page Wood, Bart. Educated 
at Marlborough, he entered the Royal Navy in 1852, and served 
as a midshipman in the Russian war, being employed on shore 
with the naval brigade in the siege operations before Sevastopol, 
mentioned in despatches, and severely wounded at the assault on 
the Redan on June 18, 1855. Immediately afterwards he left 
the navy for the army, becoming a cornet in the 13th Light 
Dragoons. Promoted lieutenant in 1856, he exchanged into 
the 17th Lancers in 1857, and served in the Indian Mutiny with 
distinction as brigade-major of a flying column, winning the 



79© 

Victoria Cross. In i86r he became captain, in 1862 brevet- 
major, exchanging about the same time into the 73rd Highlanders 
(Black Watch), but returned to the cavalry three years later. 
Having meantime served as an aide-de-camp at Dublin, he was 
next employed on the staff at Aldershot until 1871, when he was 
appointed to the ooth (now and Scottish Rifles) as a regimental 
major. In 1867 he had married the Hon. Mary Pauline South- 
well, sister of the 4th Lord Southwell In 1873 he was promoted 
brevet lieutenant-colonel, and in 1874 served in the Ashanti War 
(brevet-colonel); in 1874-1878 he was again on the staff at 
Aldershot, and in November 1878 he became regimental lieu- 
tenant-colonel, the ooth being at that time in South Africa 
engaged in the Kaffir War. In January 1879 he was in command 
of the left column of the army that crossed the Zulu frontier, 
and shortly afterwards he received the local rank of brigadier- 
general. Under htm served Colonel Redvers Buller and also 
the Boer leader, Piet Uys t who fell at Inhlobana, but the re- 
pulse at that place was more than counterbalanced by the 
successful battle of Kambula. At the dose of the war Sir 
Evelyn Wood, who received the K.C.B. for his services, was 
appointed to command the Chatham district. But in January 
1 88 1 he was again in South Africa with the local rank of major- 
general, and after Sir G. P. Colley's death at Majuba it fell to 
his lot to negotiate the armistice with General Joubert. Re- 
maining in Natal until February 1883, he then returned to the 
Chatham command, having meantime been promoted sub- 
stantive major-general. In 1882 he was made a G.C.M.G. 
and commanded a brigade in the Egyptian expedition. He 
remained in Egypt for six years. From 1883 to 1885 he was 
Sirdar of the Egyptian army, which he reorganized and in fact 
created. During the Nile operations of 1884-85 he commanded 
the forces on the line of communication of Lord Wolseley's army. 
In 1886 he returned to an English command, and two years later 
(January 1889), with the local rank of lieutenant-general, he 
was appointed to the Aldershot command. He became lieu- 
tenant-general in 1891, and was given the G.C.B. at the close of 
his tenure of the command, when he went to the War Office 
as quartermaster-general Four years afterwards he became 
adjutant-general. He was promoted full general in 1895. He 
commanded the II. Army Corps and Southern Command from 
1901 to 1904, being promoted field marshal on the 8th of April 
1003. In r 907 be became colonel of the Royal Horse Guards. 
After retiring from active service he took a leading part, as chair- 
man of the Association for the City of London, in the organization 
of the Territorial Force. Sir Evelyn Wood published several 
works, perhaps the best known of which to the soldier are 
Achievements of Cavalry (1897) and Cavalry in the Waterloo 
Campaign (1806). He also wrote The Crimea in 1854 and in 1894; 
an autobiography, From Midshipman to Field Marshal', and 
The Revolt in Hindostan. 

WOOD, JOHN GEORGE (1827-1889), English writer and 
lecturer on natural history, was born in London on the 21st of 
July 1827. He was educated at Ashbourne grammar school 
and at Merton College, Oxford; and after he had taken his 
degree in 1848 he worked for two years in the anatomical museum 
at Christ Church under Sir Henry Acland. In 1852 he was 
ordained a deacon of the Church of England, became curate of the 
parish of St Thomas the Martyr, Oxford, and also took up the 
post of chaplain to the Boatmen's Floating Chapel at Oxford. 
He was ordained priest in 1854, and in that year gave up his 
curacy to devote himself for a time to literary work. In 1858 
he accepted a readership at Christ Church, Newgate Street, and 
he was assistant-chaplain to St Bartholomew's Hospital, London, 
from 1856 until 1862. Between 1868 and 1876 he held the office 
of precentor to the Canterbury Diocesan Choral Union. After 
1876 'he devoted himself to the production of books and to 
delivering in all parts of the country lectures on zoology, which 
he illustrated by drawing on a black-board or on large sheets 
of white paper with coloured crayons. These " sketch lectures," 
as he called them, were very popular, and made his name widely 
v *>own both in Great Britain and in the United States. In 1883- 
v c delivered the Lowell lectures at Boston. Wood was 



WOOD, J. G.— WOODBURY 



for a time editor of the Boy's Own Magdtine. His moat 
important work was a Natural History in three volumes, but he 
was better known by the serin of books which began with 
Common Objects of the Sea-Share, and which included popular 
monographs on shells, moths, beetles, the microscope and Com- 
mon* Objects of the Country. Our Garden Friends and Foes was 
another book which found hosts of appreciative readers* He 
died at Coventry on the 3rd of March 1880. 

WOOD, 8BARLES VALENTINE (1708-1880), English palaeon- 
tologist, was born on the 14th of February 1798. He went to sea 
in 1811 as a midshipman in the East India Company's service, 
which he left, however, in 1826. He then settled at Hasketon 
near Woodbridge, Suffolk. He devoted himself to a study of the 
mottusca of the Newer Tertiary (Crag) of Suffolk and Norfolk, 
and the Older Tertiary (Eocene) of the Hampshire basin. On 
the latter subject he published A Monograph of the Eocene 
Bivalves of England (1861-1871), issued by the Palaeonto- 
graphical Society. His chief work was A Monograph of the Crag 
MoUusca (1848- 1 856), published by the same society, for which 
he was awarded the Wollaston medal in i860 by the Geological 
Society of London; a supplement was issued by him in 1&72- 
1874, a second in 1879, and a third (edited by his son) in 1882. 
He died at Martlesham, near Woodbridge, on the s6th of October 
1880. His son, Searles Valentine Wood (1830-1884), was for 
some years a solicitor at Woodbridge, but gave up the pro- 
fession and devoted his energies to geology, studying especially 
the structure of the deposits of the Crag and glacial drifts. 

WOODBRIDGE, a market town in the Woodbridge parlia- 
mentary division of Suffolk, England; 79 m. N.E. by E. from 
London by the Great Eastern railway. Pop. of urban district 
(1901) 4640. It is prettily situated near the head of the Deben 
estuary, which enters the North Sea 10 m. S. by E. The church 
of St Mary the Virgin is a beautiful Perpendicular structure, 
with a massive and lofty tower of flint work. The large estate 
left by Thomas Seekford of Sekforde (1578) endows the grammar 
school and hospital. Woodbridge Abbey, built by Seekford, 
occupies the site of an Augustinian foundation of the 12th 
century. There is a large agricultural trade, and general fair* 
and horse fairs are held. 

WOODBURY, CHARLES HERBERT (1864- ), American 
marine painter, was born at Lynn, Massachusetts, on the 14th 
of July 1864. He graduated at the Massachusetts Institute 
of Technology, Boston, in 1886, was a pupil of the Academic 
Julien, Paris. He was president of the Boston Water Color 
Club, and became associate of the National Academy of Design, 
New York. His wife, Marcia Oakes Woodbury, born in 1865 at 
South Berwick, also became known as a painter. 

WOODBURY, LEVI (1780-1851), American political leader, 
was born at Francestown, New Hampshire, on the 2 and of 
December 1789. He graduated from Dartmouth College in 
1809, was admitted to the bar in 181 2, and was a judge of the 
superior court from 1816 to 1833. In 1823-2824 he was governor 
of the state, in 1825 was a member and speaker of the state 
House of Representatives, and in 1825-1831 and again in 1841- 
1845 was a member of the U.S. Senate. He was secretary of the 
navy in 1831-1834. secretary of the treasury in 1834-1841, 
and associate justice of the U.S. Supreme Court from 1846 until 
his death, at Portsmouth, New Hampshire, on the ath of 
September 1851. From about 182s to 184s Woodbury was the 
undisputed leader of the Jacksonian Democracy in New England. 

See hit Writings, Political, Judicial and Literary (3 vols., Boston. 
1852), edited by Nahura Capen; and an article in the New England 
Magazine, new series, xxxviL p. 658 (February 1908). 

WOODBURY, a city and the county-seat of Gloucester county, 
New Jersey, U.S.A., in the western part of the state, 9 m. S. 
of Philadelphia. , Pop. (1000) 4087, including S46 foreign-born 
and si 7 negroes; (1910)4642. It is served by the West Jersey & 
Seashore Railroad. Among its public institutions is the Dept- 
ford Institute Free Library. There are various manufactures, 
Woodbury is said to have been settled about 1684; it became 
the county-seat in 1787. It was chartered as a borough in 1854 
and as a city in 187a 



WOOD-CARVING 



791 



WOOD-CAHvTJIO, the process whereby wood is ornamented 
with design by means ol sharp cutting tools held in the hand. 
The term includes anything within the limit of sculpture in the 
round up to hand-worked mouldings such as help to compose the 
tracery of screens, &c. 

Material.— The texture of wood limits the scope of the carver 
in that the substance consists of bundles of fibres (called grain) 
growing in a vertical direction without much lateral cohesive 
strength: It is therefore essential to arrange the more delicate 
parts of a design " with the grain " instead of across it, and the 
more slender stalks or leaf -points should not be too much separ- 
ated from their adjacent surroundings. The failure to appreciate 
these primary rules may constantly be seen in damaged work, 
when it will be noticed that, whereas tendrils, tips of birds' 
beaks, &c., arranged across the grain have been broken away, 
similar details designed more in harmony with the growth of the 
wood and not too deeply undercut remain intact. Oak is the 
most suitable wood for carving, on account of its durability and 
toughness without being too hard. Chestnut (very like oak), 
American walnut, mahogany and teak are also very good 
woods; while for fine work Italian walnut, lime, sycamore, 
apple, pear or plum, are generally chosen. Decoration that is 
to be painted and of not too delicate a nature is as a rule 
carved in pine. 

Tools. — The carver requires but few kinds of tools :— (1) the 
gouge— a tool with a curved cutting edge — used m a variety of 
forms and sizes for carving hollows, rounds and sweeping curves; 
(a) the chisel, large and small, whose straight cutting edge is 
used for tines and cleaning up flat surfaces; (3) the ".V" tool 
used for veining, and in certain clsstw of fiat work for emphasizing 
lines. A special screw for fixing work to the bench, and a mallet, 
complete the carver's kit, though other tools, more or less 
legitimate, are often used, such as a router for bringing grounds 
to a uniform level, bent gouges and bent chisels for cutting 
hollows too deep for the ordinary tool. 

Method.— The process for relief carving is usually as follows. 
The carver first fixes the wood to his bench by means of the screw 
already referred to. He then (a) sketches on the main lines 
of his idea, indicating the flowers, foliage, &c; or (6) should the 
design be very intricate or of a geometrical character, he traces 
the whole design from a pattern first prepared on paper; or 
(c) he may combine the first two methods. Next he grounds 
out the spaces between the lines with a gouge to a more or less 
uniform depth. Then he " bosts " the upstanding pattern that 
remains, «'.«. he models and shapes the details of his design, 
carefully balancing the lights and shadows; and finally, after 
having obtained the result he desires, be deans up the whole. 
The quicker he works, the fewer times he goes over the same 
part, the more sketchy the subsidiary portions, the less high 
finish he puts into the detail, the better the result. Incised 
work, chip-carving, &c, are generally finished at once and not 
in stages. M uch carved work, that of savage nations for instance, 
is of course carved without the assistance of a bench. Many 
small articles, too, arc carved in the hand. Little models of 
antelopes or bears, so familiar in Switzerland, are carved in this 
way with a tool somewhat like a half-open knife but with the 
blade fixed. 

Style.— From the remotest ages the decoration of wood has 
been a foremost art. The tendency of human nature has always 
been to ornament every article in use. Just as a child of to-day 
instinctively cuts patterns on the bark of bis switch freshly 
taken from the hedgerow, so the primitive man, to say nothing 
of his more civilized successor, has from the earliest times cut 
designs on every wooden article he is accustomed to handle. 
The North American Indian carves his wooden fish-hook or his 
pipe stem just as the Polynesian works patterns on his paddle. 
The native of British Guiana decorates his cavassa grater with 
a well-conceived scheme of incised scrolls, while the savage of 
Loango Bay distorts his spoon with a hopelessly unsuitable 
design of perhaps figures standing up in full relief carrying a 
hammock. 

Figure-work seems to have been universal. The craving to 



represent one's god in a tangible form finds expression in number- 
less ways. The early carver, and, for that matter,- the native 
of the present day, has always found a difficulty in 
giving expression to the eye, and at all times has evaded 
it by inlaying this feature with coloured material. 
Obsidian, for example, is used by the modem Easter Islander 
in common with the Egyptian craftsman of the earlier dynasties. 
To carve a figure in wood is not only more difficult but is less 
satisfactory than marble (for which see Sculpture), owing to the 
tendency of wood to crack, to be injured by insect*, or to suffer 
from changes in the atmosphere. The texture of the material, 
too, often proves fatal to the expression of the features, especially 
in the classic type of youthful face. On the other hand, magni- 
ficent examples exist of the more rugged features of age: the 
beetling brows, the furrows and lines neutralizing the defects 
of the grain of the wood. However, in andent work the surface 
was not of such consequence, for figures as a rule were painted. 

It is not always realised at the present day to what extent colour 
has even from the most ancient times been used to enhance 
the effect of wood-carving and sculpture. The modern 
prejudice against gold and other tints is perhaps due to 
the fact that painted work has been vulgarized. One associates 
coloured carvings too readily with theatre galleries and the 
triumphal car of the circus procession. The " restored " work too 
of some church screens docs anything but encourage the revival 
of this time-honoured custom. The arrangement of a proper 
and harmonious scheme of colour is not the work of the house- 
painter, but of the specially trained artist. Witness the old 
coloured screens of Norfolk, the harmonious greens and reds, 
the proper proportion of gold, the panels adorned with saints 
on backgrounds dt delicate diaper work, and compare these 
triumphs of decoration with the rougher blues and reds of the 
Average restored screen, and one ceases to wonder why we now 
prefer the wood plain. 

Of late years carving has gone out of fashion; a change has 
come about. The work is necessarily slow, thus causing charges 
to appear high. Other and cheaper methods of decoration have 
driven carving from its former place. Machine work has much 
to answer for, and the endeavour to popularise the craft by means 
of the village, class has not always achieved its own end. The 
gradual disappearance of the individual artist, elbowed out as 
be has been by the contractor, is fatal to the continuance of an 
art whkh can never flourish when done at so much a yard. 
So long as the carver is expected to work to some one else's 
pattern — so long as he is, in detail at least, not bis own designer— 
this art, which attained its zenith in the glories of the 15th-century 
cathedral and in the continental domestic work of the hundred 
years to follow, can never hope to live again. 

Ancient Work before the Christian Era.— The extreme dryness of 
the climate of Egypt accounts for the existence of a number of wood- 
carvings from this remote period (sec Egypt: Art and - . 
Archaeoloty). Some wood panels from the tomb of Hosul *•>*• 
at Sakkarah are of the III. dynasty (over 4000 b.c). The carving 
consists of hieroglyphs and figures in low relief, and the style is ex- 
tremely delicate and fine. A stool shown on one of the panels has 
the legs shaped like the fore and hind limbs of an animal, a form 
common in Egypt for thousands of years. 

In the Cairo museum may be seen the statoe of a man of 50 
years of age, of the period of the great pyramid, possibly 4000 B.C 
TCc expression of the face and the realism of the carriage 
have never been surpassed by any Egyptian sculptor of 
this or any other period. The figure is carved out of a 
solid block of sycamore, and in accordance with the Egyptian 
custom the arms are joined on. The eyes are inlaid with pieces of 
opaque white quartz, with a line of bronze surrounding to imitate the 
lid ; a smalt disk of transparent rock crystal forms the iris, while a 
tiny bit of polished ebony fixed behind the crystal imparts to it a 
lifelike sparkle. " The IV., V. and VI. dynasties cover the finest 
period of Egyptian sculpture. The statues found in the tombs show 
a freedom of treatment which was never reached in later times. 
They are all portraits, which the artist strove his utmost to render 
exactly like his model. For these are not, like more modem statues, 
simply works of art, but had primarily a religious signification 
(Maspero). As the spirits of the deceased might inhabit these 
" Ka " statues, the features and proportions were closely copied. 

There are to be found in the principal museums of Europe many 
Egyptian examples of the utmost interest — mummy cases of human 



792 



WOOD-CARVING 



beings with the face alone carved, animal mummy cases, some- 
times boxes, with jbe figure of a lizard, perhaps, carved in full 
Mummr relief standing on the lid. Sometimes the animal, a 
fMfg cat t sitting on its haunches, for example, or a jackal, 
crouching on all fours, would be carved in the round and its 
hollowed, body used as the case itself. 

Of furhiture t folding seats like the modern campstool, and chairs 
with legs terminating in the heads of beasts or the feet of animals, 
g^ umKauia _ «till exist. Beds supported by lions' paws (XI. and Xll. 
rarmtm9t dynasties, from Gebelein, nowln the Cairo Museum), head- 
rests, 6 or 8 in. high, shaped like a crutch on afoot, very like 
those used by the native of New Guinea to-day, are carved with 
, &c. r in outline. In the British Museum may be seen a tiny 



little coffer, a in. by a} in., with very delicate figures carved in low 
relief. This little box stands on cabriole legs f of an inch long with 
claw feet, quite Louis Quinze in character. There are incense ladles, 
the handle re p re s e n ting a bouquet of lotus flowers, the bowl formed 
like the leaf of an aquatic plant with serrated edges (from Gurnah', 
XVI II. dynasty); mirror handles, representing a little pillar, or a 
lotus stalk, sometimes surmounted by a head of Hathor (the 
Egyptian Venus) or of Besu (god of the toilet) ; pin-cushions, in the 
shape of a small round tortoise with holes in the back for toilet pins, 
which were also of wood with dog-head ends (XI. dynasty. Cairo 
Museum); and perfume boxes such as a fish, the two halves forming 
the bottom and top— the perfume or pomatum was removed by 
little wooden spoons, one shaped in the form of a cartouche emerging 
from a full-blown lotus, another shaped like the neck of a goose, a 
third consisting of a doe running with a fish in its mouth, the fish 
forming the bowL The fist might be prolonged, but enough has been 
said to show to what a pitch of refinement the art of wood-carving 
had reached thousands of years before the birth of Christ. 

Of the work of Assyria, Greece and Rome, little is actually known 
except from history or inference. It may be safely assumed that the 
AtarrlM. cnit ***?' P*** witn **** varying taste and refinement of 
Ot***mb4 •" the ol " CT civilizations. Important pieces of wood 
jfr Mt sculpture which once existed in Greece and other ancient 
countries are only known to us from the descriptions of 
Pausanlas and other classic writers. Many examples of the wooden 
images of the gods (tftora) were preserved down to late historic times. 
The Palladium, or sacred figure qf Pallas, which was guarded by the , 
Vestal Virgins in Rome and was fabled to have been brought by 
Aeneas from the burning Troy, was one of these wooden Ctar*. 

First Eleven Centuries after Christ. — Wood-carving examples of 
this period are extremely rare. The carved panels of the main doors 
of St Sabina on the Aventine Hill, Rome, are very interesting speci- 
mens of early Christian relief sculpture in wood, dating, as the dresses 
show, from the 5th century. The doors are made up of a large number 
of •mall square panels, each minutely carved with a scene from the 
Old or New Testament. The whole feeling of these reliefs is 
thoroughly classic, though of course in a very debased form. A very 
fine fragment of Byzantine art (nth-iath centuries) is preserved 
in a monastery at Mount Athos m Macedonia. It consists of two 
panels (one aoove the other) of relief sculpture, surmounted by a 
semicircular arch of conventional foliage springing from columns 
ornamented with animals in foliage of spiral form. The capitals and 
bases are square, each (ace being carved with a figure. ' It is a 
wonderfully tine piece of work, conceived in the best decorative spirit. 

In Scandinavian countries we find some very early work of ex- 
cellent design. In the Christiania Museum there are some fine chairs 

a rfft| - l of the 9th or loth centuries carved with that particular 

vlmmwork. flat a ™ broad treatment of scroll and strapwork so 
eminently suited to soft wood. In the Copenhagen 
Museum there are panels from Iceland in the same style. The cele- 
brated wooden doorways of Aal (a.d. 1200) (Plate 1 1, fig. 3), Sauland, 
Flaa, Soloer and other Norwegian churches (Christiania Museum) are 
only an elaboration of the same treatment of dragons and intricate 
scroll work, a style which we still see carried on in the door-posts of the 
15th century in the Nordiska Museum, Stockholm, and in the Ice- 
landic work of quite modern times. In these early days the leaf was 
not much developed in design. The carver depended almost entirely 
on the stalk, a style of work which has its counterpart in Burmese 
work of the 17th century. 

Gothic Period (12th- 151k Centuries).— It was towards the end of thfs 
epoch that wood-carving reached its culminating point The choir 
stalls, rood-screens, roofs, retables, of England, France and the 
Teutonic countries of Europe, have in execution, balance and pro- 
portion, never at any time been approached. In small designs, in 
detail, in minuteness, in mechanical accuracy, the carver of this time 
has had his rivals, but for greatness of architectural conception, for 
a just appreciation of decorative treatment, the designer of the 15th 
century stands alone. 

It should always be borne in mind that colour was the keynote of 
this scheme. The custom was practically universal, and enough 
traces remain to show how splendid was the effect of these old Gothic 
churches and cathedrals in their perfection. The priests in their 
gorgeous vestments, the lights, the crucifix, the banners and incense, 
the frescoed or diapered walls, and that crowning glory of Gothic art, 
the stained glass, were all in harmony with these beautiful schemes 
of c ' *\ Red, blue, green, white and gilding were 

Ch 1 Not only were the screens painted in 



colours, but the parts painted white were of fen further decorated with 
.delicate lines and sprigs of foliage in conventional pattern. The 
plain surfaces of the panels were also adorned with saints, often on 
a background of delicate gesse diaper, coloured or gilded (Southwold). 
Nothing could exceed the beauty of the triptychs or retables of 
Germany, Flanders (Plate I. fig. 1) or France; carved with scenes 
from the New Testament in high relief arranged under a delicate lace- 
work of canopies and clustered pinnacles glistening with gold and 
brilliant colours. In Germany the effect was further enhanced by em- 
phasizing parts of the gilding by means of a transparent varnish tinted 
with red or green, thus giving a special tone to the metallic lustre. 

The style of design used during this great period owes much of its 
interest to the now obsolete custom of employing -direct the crafts- 
man and his men, instead of the present-day habit of giving the work 
to a contractor. It is easy to trace how those bands of carvers 
travelled about from church to church. In one district the designer 
would employ a particular form and arrangement of vine leaf, while 
in another adjoining quite a different style repeatedly appears. 
Judging by results, this system produced the best class of work both 
in design and execution. The general scheme was of course planned 
by one master mind, but the carrying out of each section, each part, 
each detail, was left to the individual workman. Hence that variety 
of treatment, that endless diversity, which gives a charm and interest 
to Gothic art, unknown in more symmetrical epochs. The Gothic 
craftsman appreciated the cardinal fact that in design beautiful 
detail does not necessarily insure a beautiful composition, and sub- 
ordinated the individual part to the general effect. He also often 
carved in situ, a practice seldom if ever followed in the present day. 
Here and there one comes across the work of long years ago still 
unfinished. A half-completed bench-end, a fragment of screen left 
plain, clearly show that sometimes at least the church was the 
workshop. 

Gothic and Renaissance: a Comparison.— Gothic design roughly 
divides itself into two classes: (1) the geometrical, i.e. tracery and 
diaper patterns, and (2) the foliage designs, where the mechanical 
scroll of the Renaissance is as a rule absent. The line* of foliage 
treatment, so common in the bands of the 15th-century rood- 
screens and the panel work especially of Germany, serve to illustrate 
the widely different motives of the craftsmen of these two great 
epochs. Again, while the Renaissance designer as a rule made the 
two sides of the panel alike, the Gothic carver seldom repeated a 
single detail. While his main lines and grouping corresponded, his 
detail differed. Of numberless examples a 15th-century chest 
(Plate III. fig. 6) in the Kunstgewerbe Museum, Berlin, may be re- 
ferred to. The arrangements of foliage, &c, on top, back and front, 
are typical of Gothic at its best. 

End 0/ the 12th century- 1300.— fa this section treats of wood- 
carving in Europe generally, and not of any one country alone, the 
dates just named must be of necessity only approximate. The 13th 
century was marked not only by great skill both in design and treat- 
ment, out also much devotional feeling. The craftsman seems to 
have not merely carved, but to have carved to the glory of God. At 
no time was work more delicately conceived or more beautifully cut. 
This early Gothic style certainly lent itself to fine finish, and in this 
respect was more suited to stone treatment than to wood. But the 
loving care bestowed on each detail seems to point to a religious 
devotion which is sometimes absent from later work. Very good 
examples of capitals (now, alas, divided down the centre) are to be 
seen in Peterborough cathedral. Scrolls and foliage spring from 
groups of columns 01 four. Some Italian columns of the same date 
(Victoria and Albert Museum) should be compared, much to the 
advantage of the former. Exeter cathedral boasts misereres un- 
surpassed for skilful workmanship; mermaids, dragons, elephants, 
masks, knights and other subjects introduced into foliage, form the 
designs. m Salisbury cathedral is noted for its stall elbows, and the 
reredos in the south transept of Addisham, Kent, is another fine 
example testifying to the great skill of the 13th-century wood- 
carvers. A very interesting set of stalls, the early history of which is 
unknown, was placed in Banning church, Kent, about the year 
1868. The book rest ends arc carved with two scrolls and an animal 
standing between, and the ends of the stalls with figure sculpture: 
Christ rescuing souls from Hell, Samson slaying the lion, St George 
and the dragon, Ac. The work of these stalls is that of an artist who 
knew what effect he wanted to produce and got it. There is in the 
Berlin Museum a very fine example of a 13th-century prayer desk 
from Johanniskirche in Herford. The front is carved tn three 
panels under arches, two with vine leaves and grapes and the other 
with an oak tree conventionally treated. Along the arches is carved 
in Latin " this three-divisioned desk has John with the help of 
Thomas carved. Who will not praise this work may he then be 
removed," a somewhat drastic method of obtaining favourable 
criticism. 

j joo-jj£o.— During thb period foliage forms, though stid conven- 
tional, more closely followed nature. The canopy work of the choir 
of Winchester contains exquisite carvings of oak and other leaves. 
The choir stalls of Ely and Chichester and the tomb of Edward III. 
in Westminster Abbey are all fine examples of this period. Exeter 
boasts a throne— that of Bishop Stapledon (A.D. 1308-1326) stand- 
ing 57 ft. high — which remains unequalled for perfection of pro- 
portion and delicacy of detail (Plate IV. fig. 8). In France the stalls 



WOOD-CARVING 



793 



Tawieed 



of St Beooit-sur-Uwn^ Lisieux, and Evreux are food 14th-century 
examples. But little Gothic work is now to be seen in the churches 
of this country It is to the museums we have to look for traces of 
the old Gothic carvers. The two retables in Dijon Museum, the work 
of Jacques de Bacra (1301). a sculptor of Flanders, who carved for 
Philippe le Hardi, duke of Burgundy, are masterpieces of design and 
workmanship The tracery is of the very finest, chiefly gill on back- 
grounds of diapered gesso (Plate I fig 1). 

§380-1510 — Towards the end of the 14th century carvers gave up 
natural foliage treatment to a great extent, and took to more con- 
ventional forms (Plate III fig. a). The oak and the maple no 
longer inspired the designer, bat the vine was constantly employed. 
A very large amount of 15th century work remains to us, but the 
briefest reference only can be made to some of the more beautiful 
examples that help to make this period so great. 

The rood screen, that wonderful feature of the medieval church, 
was now universal. It consisted of a tall screen of usually about 
x l ft. high, on the top of which rested a loft, Le, a platform 
about 6 ft. in width guarded on either side by a gallery 
and either on the top or in front of that, facing the nave, 
was placed the rood, \*. a large crucifix with figures of St Mary and 
St John on either side. This rood screen sometimes spanned the 
church in one continuous length (Leeds, Kent), but often filled in the 
aisle and chancel arches in three separate divisions (Church Hand- 
borough, Oxon.). The loft was as a rule approached by a winding 
stair built in the thickness of the aisle wall. The lower part of the 
screen itself was solid panelled to a height of about 3 ft. 6 in. and the 
upper part of this panelling was filled in with tracery (Carbrook, 
Norfolk:), while the remaining flat surfaces of the panels were often 
pict u red with saints on a background of delicate gesso diaper (South- 
wold, Suffolk). Towards the end of this period the employment of 
figures became less common as a means of decoration, and the panels 
wen sometimes filled entirely with carved foliage (Swimbridge, 
Devon). The upper part of the rood screen consisted of open arches 
with the heads filled in with pierced tracery, often enriched with 
crockets (Seaming, Norfolk) , embattled transoms (Castle Hedingham, 
Essex), or floriated cusps (Eye. Suffolk). The mullions were con- 
stantly carved with foliage (Cheddar, S om ers et ), pinnacles (Causton, 
Norfolk}, angels (Pilton, Devon), or decorated with canopy work in 
gesso (Southwold). But the feature of these beautiful screens was 
the loft with rt» gallery and vaulting. The loft floor rested on the top 
of the rood screen ana was usually balanced and kept in position by 
means of a groined vaulting (Harberton, Devon) or a cove (Eddington, 
Somerset). The finest examples of vaulting are to be seen in Devon 
(Plate IV. fig xo). The bosses at the intersections of the ribs and the 
carved tracery of the screen at Honiton stand unrivaDed. Many 
is still possess the beam which formed the edge of the loft floor 
1 which the gallery rested. It was here that the medieval rood- 

j carver gave most play to his fancy, and carved the finest 

designs in foliage to be seen throughout the whole Gothic period. 
Although these massed moulds, crests and bands have the appearance 
of being carved out of one log, they were in practice invariably built 
ttpinparts, much of the foliage, &c, being pierced and placed in hollow 
moulds in order to increase the shadow. As a rule the arrangement 



consisted of a crest running along the top, with a smaller one de- 
pending from the lower edge, and three bands of foliage and vine 
between them (Feniton, Devon). The designs of vine leaves at 



Kenton (Plate IV. fig. 10), Bow and Dartmouth, all in Devon, 
illustrate three very beautiful treatments of this plant. At Swim- 
bridge, Devon, there is a very elaborate combination; the usual 
plain beads which separate the bands are carved with twisted foliage 
also. At Abbots Kerswell and other places in the district round 
Totnea the carvers introduced birdsin the foliage with the best effect. 
The variety of cresting used is very great. That at Winchcomb. 
Gloucester, consists of dragons combined with vine leaves and 
fotiage. It illustrates how Gothic carvers sometimes repeated their 
patterns in aa mechanical a way as the worst workmen of the present 
time. little can be said of the gall e ries, so few remain to us. They 
were nearly all pulled down when the order to destroy the roods was 
issued in 1548. That they were decorated with carved saints under 
niches (Uananno. Wales), or painted figures (Strencham, Worcester), 
is certain from the examples that have survived the Reformation. 
At Atberiiigton. Devon, the galleiy front is decorated with the royal 
coat of arms, other heraldic devices, and with prayers. The Breton 
screen at St Fiacre-le-Faouet is a wonderful example of French work 
of this time, but does not compare with the best English examples. 
Its flamboyant lines and Ha small tracery never obtained any foot* 
hold in England, though screens carved in thb way (Cofebrook, 
Devon) are sometimes to be found. 

The rood was sometimes of such dimensions at to require some 
support in addition to the gallery on which it rested. A carved 
beam was used from which a chain connected the rood hself. At 
Cutto m pt o n, Devon, such a beam still exists, and hi carved with 
foliage; an open creating ornaments the under side and two angels 
support the ends. This particular rood stood on a base of rocks, 
skulls and bones, carved out of two solid logs averaging 18 in. wide 
and ai in. high, and together measuring 15 ft. 6 in. long: there are 
round boles along the top which were probably used for lights. 



No country in Europe pos s es s es roofs to equal those of England hi 
the 15th century. The great roof of Westminster Hall (see ROOT) 



remains to the present day without an equal In Norfolk and 
Suffolk roofs abound of the hammer-beam class; that at Woolpit, 
Suffolk, is of the first rank. Each bracket is carved with -_- 
strongly designed foliage, the end of every beam termio- «*•*• 
ates in an angel carrying a shield, and the purlins are crested, while 
each truss is supported by a canopied niche (containing a figure) 
resting on an angel corbel. Here, too, as at Ipswich and many other 
churches, there is a row of angels with outspread wings under the 
wall-plate. This idea of angels in the roof is a very beautiful one, 
and the effect was of course much enhanced by the colouring. The 
roof at St Nicholas, King's Lynn, is a magnificent example of tie- 
beam construction. The trusses are filled in with tracery at the sides 
and the centres more or less open, and the beams, which are crested 
and embattled, contain a row of angels on either side. In Devon, 
Cullomoton possesses a very fine semicircular ceiling supported at 
intervals by ribs pierced with carving. Each compartment is divided 
up into small square panels, crossed by diagonal ribs of cresting, 
while every joint is ornamented with a boas carved in the decorative 
way peculiar to the Gothic craftsman. The nave roof of Manchester 
cathedral is nearly flat, and is also divided up into small compart* 
ments and bossed, the beams are supported by carved brackets 
resting on corbels with angels at each base. 

In the 15th century, choir stalls with their canopies continued to 
increase in magnificence, Manchester cathedral (middle of 15th 
century) and Henry VII.'s chapel in Westminster Abbey 
(early 16th) are good examples of the fashion of massing 
pinnacles and canopies; a custom which hardly com- 
pares with the more simple beauty of the 14th-century work of Ely 
cathedral. The stalls of Amiens cathedral were perhaps the finest 
in the world at the beginning of the x6th century. The cresting 
employed, though common on the Continent, is of a kind hardly 
known in England, consisting as it docs of arches springing from 
arches, and decorated with crockets and finials. The tabernacle 
work over the end seats, with its pinnacles and flying buttresses, 
stretches up towards the roof in tapering lines of the utmost delicacy. 



The choir stalls (the work of jorg Syrlin, 1468) in Ulm cathedral are 
among the finest produced by the German carver (Plate III. fig. 4). 
The front panels are carved with foliage of splendid decorative bold- 



ness, strength and character; the stall ends were carved with foliage 
and sculpture along the top edge, as was sometimes the case in 
Bavaria and France as well as Germany. 

In early times the choir alone possessed seats, the nave being left 
bare. Gradually benches were introduced, and during the 15th 
century became universal. The " poppy-bead " form of 
ornament now reached perfection and was constantly used 
for seats other than those of the choir. The name refers 
to the carved finial which as so often used to complete the top of the 
bench end and is peculiarly English in character. In Devon and 
Cornwall it is rarely met with (lUington, Devon). In Somerset it is 
more common, while in the eastern counties thousands of examples 



The quite simple fleur-de-lys form of poppy-head, suitable 
for the village, is seen in perfection at Trunch, Norfolk, and the very 
elaborate form when the poppy-head springs from a crocketed circle 
filled in with sculpture, at St Nicholas, King's Lynn. Often the 
foliage contained a face (Cley, Norfolk), or the poppy-head consisted 
of figures or birds only (Thurston, Suffolk) or a figure standing on a 
dragon (Great Brincton, Northampton); occasionally the traditional 
form was departed from and the finial carved like a lemon in outline 
(Bury St Edmunds) or a diamond (Tirley, Glos.). In Denmark an 
ornament in the form of a large circle sometimes takes the place of 
the Enghah poppy-head. In the Copenhagen Museum there is a 
set of bench ends of the 15th century with such a decoration carved 
with coats of arms, interlacing strap-work, &c But the old 15th- 
century bench end did not depend entirely on the poppy-head for its 
embellishment. The side was constantly enrich/d with elaborate 
tracery (Dennington, Norfolk) or with tracery and domestic scenes 
(North Cadbury, Somerset), or would consist of a mass of sculpture in 
perspective, with canopy work, buttresses and sculptured niches, 
while the top of the bench end would be crowned with figures carved 
in the round, of the finest craftsmanship. Such work at Amiens 
cathedral is a marvel alike of conception, design and execution. In 
the Kanstgewerbe Museum, Berlin, some beautiful stall ends are to 
be seen. Out of a dragon's mouth grows a conventional tree arranged 
excellent proportion. On another stall end a tree is 



carved growing out of the mouth of a fool. This custom of making 
foliage grow out of the mouth or eyes is hardly defensible, and was 
by no means confined to any country or time. We have plenty of 



Renaissance examples of the — 

Before the 15th century preaching bad not become a regular 
institution in England, and pulpits were not so common. However, 
the value of the sermon began to be appreciated from the 
use to which the Lollards and other sects put this method 
of teaching doctrine, and pulmta became a 



beautiful one exists at Kenton l 
octagonal, and stands on a foot. 



It is, as is _ 
Each angle is 



A very 

the case, 
with an 



is noted for its fine figure carving. A large figure standing under a 
canopy fills each of the paneUed aides, while many other smaller 



794- 



WOOD-CARVING 



figures help to enrich the general effect. Examples of Gothic sound- 
ing boards are very rare; that, together with the pulpit, in the choir 
of Winchester is of the time of Prior Silkstede (1520), and is carved 
with his rebus, a skein.of twisted silk. 

The usual form of font cover during the hundred years before the 
Reformation was pyramidal, the ribs of the salient angles being 
,. . straight and cusped (Frindsbury, Kentior of curved outline 

and cusped (St Mildred, Canterbury). There is a very 
charming one of this form at Colebrook, Devon. It is 



quite plain but for a little angel kneeling on the top, with its hands 
clasped in prayer. But the most beautiful form is the massed 
collection 01 pinnacles and canopy work, of which there is such a fine 



example at Sudbury, Suffolk. It was not uncommon to carve a dove 
on the topmost pinnacle {Castleacre, Norfolk), in allusion to the 
descent of the Holy Spirit. The finest font in England is un- 
doubtedly that of Ufford, Suffolk. It rises some 20 ft. in height, and 
when the panels were painted with saints and the exquisite taber- 
nacle work coloured and gilded, must have been a masterpiece of 
Gothic craftsmanship. A cord connecting the tops of these covers 
with the roof or with a carved beam standing out from the wall, 
something tike a crane (Salle, Norfolk), was used to remove the cover 
on the occasion of baptism. 

Many lecterns of the Gothic period do not exist to-day. They 
usually had a double sloping desk which revolved round a central 
rft moulded post. The lectern at Swanscombe, Kent, has a 

circle of good foliage ornamenting each face of the book 
rest, and some tracery work at either end. The box form is more 
common in France than in England, the pedestal of such % lectern 
being surrounded by a casing of three or more sides. A good ex- 
ample with six sides is in the church of Vance (France), and one of 
triangular form in the Musee of Bourges, while a four-sided box 
lectern is still in use in the church of Lenham, Kent. The Gothic 
prayer desk, used for private devotional purposes, is hardly known 
in England, but is not uncommon on the Continent. There is a 
beautiful specimen in the Musee, Bourges; the front and sides of the 
part for kneeling are carved with that small tracery of flowing char- 
acter so common in France and Belgium during the latter part of the 
15th century, and the back, which rises to a height of 6 ft., contains a 
little crucifix with traceried decoration above and below. 

A word should be said about the ciboria, so often found on the 
^ 3ht%rl . continent of Europe. In tapering arrangement of taber- 
%4 ° ona ' nacle work they rival the English font covers in delicacy 
of outline (Musee, Rouen). 

Numbers of doors are to be met with not only in churches but also 
en private houses. Lavenham, Suffolk, is rich in work of this latter 
^ class. In England the general custom was to carve the 

*"*"■ head of the door only with tracery (East Brent, Somerset), 
but in the Tudor period doors were sometimes covered entirely with 
" linenfold " panelling (St Albans Abbey). This form of decoration 
was exceedingly common on the Continent as well as in England. In 
France the doors towards the latter part of the 15th century were 
often square-headed, or perhaps had the corners roundedt These 
doors were usually divided into some six or eight oblong panels of 
more or less equal size. One of the doors of Bourges Cathedral is 
treated thus, the panels being filled in with very good tracery en- 
riched with crockets and coats of arms. But a-more restrained form 
of treatment is constantly employed, as at the church of St Godard, 
Rouen, where the upper panels only are carved with tracery and coats 
of arms and the lower adorned with simple linenfold design. 

To Spain and the Teutonic countries of Europe we look for the most 
important object of church decoration, the ratable; the Reformation 
accounting for the absence in England of any work of this 
kind. The magnificent altar-piece in Schleswig cathedral 
was carved by Hans Bruggerman,and consists, like many 
others, of a number of panels filled with figures standing some four 
or five deep. The figures in the foremost rows are carved entirely 
separate, and stand out by themselves, while the background is 
composed of figure work and architecture, Ac, in diminishing per- 
spective. The panels are grouped together under canopy work 
forming one harmonious whole. The genius of this great carver 
shows itself in the large variety of the facial expressi on of those 
wonderful figures all instinct with life and movement. In France 
few retables exist outside the museums. In the little church of 
Marissel, not far from Beauvais, there is a ratable consisting of eleven 
panels, the crucifixion being, of course, the principal subject. And 
there is a beautiful example from Antwerp in the Musee Cluny, 
Paris; the pierced tracery work which decorates the upper part being 
a good example of the style composed of interlacing segments of 
circles so common on the Continent during late Gothic times and but 
seldom practised in England. In Spain the cathedral of Valladolid 
was famous for its ratable, and Alonso Cano and other sculptors 
frequently used wood for large statuary, which was painted in a 
very realistic way with the most startlingly lifelike effect. Denmark 
abo possessed a school of able wood-carvers who imitated the great 
altar-pieces of Germany. A very large and well-carved example still 
exists in the cathedral of Roskdde. But besides these great altar- 
pieces tiny little models were carved on a scale the minuteness of 
which stag gers the beholder. Triptychs and shrines, &c„ measuring 
but a few inches were filled in with tracery and figures that excite 
"most wonder. In the British Museum there is such a triptych 



AMar* 



(Flemish, 15 
crowded wiu 

the custom c ______ 

carved with the Lord's Supper, and is further ornamented with 
figures and animals. The whole thing inclusive measures about 9 in. 
high, and, with the triptych wings open, 5 in. wide. The extra- 
ordinary delicacy and minuteness of detail of this microscopic work 
baffle description. There is another such a piece, also Flemish, in 
the Wallace collection, which rivals that just referred to in mis- 
applied talent. For, marvellous as these works of art are, they fail to 
satisfy They make one's eyes ache, they worry one as to how the 
result could ever have been obtained, and after the first astonish- 
ment one must ever feel that the same work of art on a scale large 
enough for a cathedral could have been carved with half the labour. 

With regard to panelling generally, there were, during the last 
fifty years of the period now under review, three styles of design 
followed by most European carvers, each of which at- rM niffTw , 
tained great notoriety Firstly, a developed form of small f " JMJU "X- 
tracery which was very common in France and the Netherlands. 
A square-headed panel would be filled in with small detail of flam- 
boyant character, the perpendicular line or roullion being always 
subordinate, as in the German chasse (Mus6e Cluny), and in some 
cases absent, as the screen work of Evreux cathedral shows us. 
Secondly, the " linenfold " design. The great majority of examples 
are of a very conventional form, but at Bere Regis, Dorsetshire, the 
designs with tassels,and at St Sauveur, Caen, those with fringe work, 
readily justify the universal title applied to this very decorative 
treatment of large surfaces. At the beginning of the 16th century 
yet anotherpattern became the fashion. The main tines of the design 
consisted of flat hollow mouldings sometimes in the form of inter- 
lacing circles (Gatton, Surrey), at other rimes chiefly straight 
(Rochester cathedral), and the intervening spaces would be filled in 
with cusps or sprigs of foliage. It marks the last struggle of this 
great school of design to withstand the oncoming flood of the new 
art— the great Renaissance. From this time onward Gothic work, 
in spite or various attempts, has never again taken a place in domestic 
decoration. The lines of the tracery style, the pinnacle, and the 
crocket — unequalled as they have always been in devotional ex- 
pression — are universally considered unsuited for decoration in the 
ordinary dwelling-house. 

But little reference can be made to the domestic side of the period 
which ended with the dawn of the x6th century, because so few 
remains exist. On the Continent we have a certain pro- 
portion of timbered houses, the feature of which is the 
sculpture. At Bayeux, Bourges, Reims and pre-eminently 
Rouen, we see by the figures of saints, bishops or virgins, how much 
the religious feeling of the middle ages entered into the domestic life. 
In England the canned corner post (which generally carried a bracket 
at the top to support the overhanging storey) calls for comment. 
In Ipswich there are several such posts. On one house near the 
river, that celebrated subject, the fox preaching to geese, is carved in 



graphic allusion to the dissemination of false c 

Of mantelpieces there is a good example in the Rouen Museum. 
The overhanging corners are supported by dragons and the plain 
mouldings have little bunches 01 foliage carved at either end, a 
custom as common in France during the 15th century as it was in 
England a century earlier; the screen beam at Eastbourne parish 
church, for example. 

As a rule, cabinets of the 15th century were rectangular in plan. 
In Germany and Austria the lower part was often enclosed, as well 
as the upper; the top, middle and lower rails being carved with 
geometrical design or with bands of foliage (Museum, Vienna). 
But it was also the custom to make these cupboards with the corners 
cut off, thus giving five sides to the piece of furniture. A very pretty 
instance, which is greatly enhanced by the metal work of the lock 
plates and hinges, is in the Musee Cluny, and there are other good 
specimens with the -lower part open in the Victoria and Albert 
Museum, South Kensington. 

The chest was a very important piece of furniture, and is often to 
be met with covered with the most elaborate carving (Orleans 
Museum). There is a splendid chest (14th century) in the Cluny 
Museum ; the front is carved with twelve knights in armour standing 
under as many arches, and the spandrels are filled in with faces, 
dragons and soon. But it is to the 15th century that we look for the 
best work of this class; there is no finer example than that in the 
Kunstgewerbe Museum, Berlin (Plate III. fig. 6). The front is a 
very animated hunting scene most decoratively arranged in a scheme 
of foliage, and the topbeaxs two coats of arms with helms, crests and 
mantling. But the more general custom in chest decoration was to 
employ tracery with or without figure work; Avignon MuEcvm 
contains some typical examples of the latter class. 

A certain number of seats used for domestic purposes are of great 
interest. A good example of the long bench placed against the wall, 
with lofty panelled back and canopy over, is in the Musee Cluny, 
Paris. In the Museum at Rouen is a long seat of a movable kind with 
a low panelled back of pierced tracery, and in the Dijon Museum 
there is a good example of the typical chair of the period, with anna 
and high panelled and traceried back. There was a style of design 
admirably suited to the decoration of furniture when made of softwood 
such as pine. It somewhat resembled the excellent Scandinavian 



WOOD-CARVING 



795 



of the lotb-mh centuries already referred to. A 

pattern of Gothic foliage, often of beautiful outline, would be simply 
grounded out to a shallow depth. The shadows, curves and twists 
only being: emphasized by a few well-disposed cuts with a " V " 
tool; and of course the whole effect greatly improved by colour. 
A Swiss door of the 15th century in the Berlin Museum, and some 
German, Swiss and Tirolese work in the Victoria and Albert Museum, 
offer patterns that might well be imitated to-day by those who 
require simple decoration while avoiding the hackneyed Elizabethan 
forms. 

It is hard to compare the figure work of England with that on the 
Continent owing to the disastrous effect of the Reformation. But 
when we examine the roofs of the Eastern counties, the 
bench ends of Somerset, or the misereres in many parts of 
the country, we can appreciate how largely wood sculpture 



was used for purposes of decoration. If as a rule the figure work was 
not of a very hign order, we have conspicuous exceptions in the stall 
elbows of Sherborne, and the pulpit of Trull, Somerset. Perhaps the 



oldest instance is the much-mutilated and much-restored effigy of 
Robert, duke of Normandy, in Gloucester Cathedral (12th century), 
and carved, as was generally the case in England, in oak. At Clifton 
Reynes, Buckingham, there are two figures of the 13th century. 
They are both hollowed out from the rack in order to facilitate 
seasoning the wood and to prevent cracking. During the 13th, 14th 
and 15th centuries there are numberless instances of figure carving of 
the most graphic description afforded in the misereres in many of our 
churches and cathedrals. But of figures carved in the round apart 
from their surroundings hardly an instance remains. At the little 
chapel of Cartmel Fell, in the wilds of Westmorland, there is a figure 
of Our Lord from a crucifix, some 2 ft. 6 in. in length. The cross is 
gone, the arms are broken away, and the feet have been burned off. 
A second figure of Our Lord {originally in the church of Keynes 
Inferior) » m the museum of Caeneon, and a third, from a church 
in Lincolnshire, is now in a private collection. On the conti- 
nent some of the finest figure work is to be found in the retables, 
some of which are in the Victoria and Albert Museum. A Tirolese 
panel of the 15th century carved in high relief, representing St John 
seated with bis back to the onlooker, is a masterpiece of perspective 
and foreshortening, and the drapery folds are perfect. The same 
may be said of a small statue of the Virigin, carved in lime by a Swiss 
hand, and some work of the great Tylman Reimenschneider of 
Wurzburg (1468-1531) shows that stone sculptors of medieval times 
were not ashamed of wood. 

Renaissance Period (j6th-iph Centuries).— With the beginning of 
the 16th century the great Renaissance began to elbow its way in to 
the exclusion of Gothic design. But the process was not sudden, and 
much transition work has great merit. The rood screen at Hurst, 
Berkshire, the stall work of Cartmel Priory, Westmorland, and the 
bench ends of many of the churches in Somerset, give good illustra- 
tions. But the new style was unequal to the old in devotional feeling, 
except in classic buildings like St Paul's cathedral, where the stalls 
of Grinling Gibbons better suit their own surroundings. The rest of 
this article wiH therefore be devoted in the main to domestic work, 
and the exact location of examples can only be given when not the 
property of private owners or where the public have access. 

During the 1 6th century the best work is undoubtedly to be found 
on the Continent, France, Germany and the Netherlands producing 
numberless examples not only of house decoration but of furniture as 
well. The wealth of the newly discovered American continent was 
only one factor which assisted in the civilizing influence of this time, 
and hand in hand with the spread of commerce came the desire for 
refinement. The custom of building houses chiefly in wood wherever 
timber was plentiful continued. Pilasters took the place of pinnacles, 
and vases or dolphins assisted the acanthus leaf to oust the older 
forms of design. House fronts of wood gave ample scope to the 
carver. That of Sir Paul Pinder (1600), formerly in Bishopsgate, but 
now preserved in the Victoria and Albert Museum, is a good example 
of decorative treatment without overloading. The brackets carved in 
the shape of monsters which support the projecting upper storey are 
typical of hundreds of dwellings, as for instance St Peter's Hospital, 
Bristol. The panels, too, of Sir Paul Pinder's house should be noted 
as good examples of that Jacobean form of medallion surrounded by 
scroll work which is at once as decorative as it is simple. 

In England that familiar style known as Elizabethan and Jacobean 
prevailed throughout the 16th and 17th centuries. At the present 
time hardly a home in the land has not its old oak chest carved with 
the familiar half circle or scroll border along the top rail, or the arch 
pattern on the panels. The court cupboards, with their solid or open 
under parts and upper cornice supported by turned balusters of 
extravagant thickness, are to be seen wherever one goes. And chairs, 
real as well as spurious, with solid backs carved in the usual flat 
relief, are bought up with an avidity inseparable from fashion. 
Four-post bedsteads are harder to come by. The back is usually 
broken up into small panels and carved, the best effect being seen in 
those examples where the panelling or the framework only is decorated. 
The dining-hall tables often had six legs of great substance, which 
were turned somewhat after the shape of a covered cup, and were 
carved with foliage bearing a distant resemblance to the acanthus. 
Rooms were generally panelled with oak, somet i mes divided at 
intervals by flat pilasters and the upper frieze carved with scroll 



work or dolphins. But the feature which distinguished the period 
was the fire manteL It always must be the principal object in a room, 
and the Elizabethan carver fully appreciated this fact. By carving the 
chimney breast as a rule to the ceiling and covering the surrounding 
walls with more or less plain panelling, the designer, by thus concen- 
trating the attention on one point, often produced results of a high 
order. Caryatid figures, pilasters and friezes were among the custom- 
ary details employed to produce good effects. No finer example exists 
than that lately removed from the old palace at Bromky-by-Bow to 
the Victoria and Albert Museum. The mantelshelf is 6 ft. from the 
ground and consists of a deep quadrant mould decorated with flat 
scroll work of good design. The supporting pilasters on either side 
are shaped and mouldedin the customary Jacobean manner and are 
crowned by busts with Ionic capitals on the heads. Above the shelf 
the large centre panel is deeply carved with the royal coat of arms 
with supporters and mantling, and on either side a semicircular 
arched niche contains a figure in classic dress. The Elizabethan 
carver often produced splendid staircases, sometimes carving the 
newel posts with heraldic figures bearing coats of arms, &c. The newels 
of a staircase at Higbgate support different types of Cromwellian 
soldiers, carved with great vivacity and life. But in spite of ex- 
cellent work, as for example the beautiful gallery at Hatfield, the 
carving of this period did not, so far as England was concerned, 
compare with other epochs, or with contemporary work in other 
parts of Europe. Much of the work is badly drawn and badly exe- 
cuted. It is true that good decorative effects were constantly ob- 
tained at the very minimum of cost, but it is difficult to discover 
much merit in work which really looks best when badly cut. 

In France this flat and simple treatment was to a certain extent 
used. Doors were most suitably adorned in this way, and the split 
baluster so characteristic of Jacobean work is often to be met with. 
There are some very good cabinets in the museum at Lyngby, 
Denmark, illustrating these two methods of treatment in com- 
bination. But the Swiss and Austrians elaborated this style, greatly 
improving the effect by the addition of colour. However, the best 
Continental designs adopted the typical acanthus foliage of Italy, 
while still retaining a certain amount of Gothic feeling in the strength 
of the tines and the " cut " of the detail (Plate IV. fig. 9). Panelling 
— often long and narrow — was commonly used for all sorts of domestic 
purposes, a feature being a medallion in the centre with a simple 
arrangement of vase, dolphins, dragons, or birds and foliage filling 
in the spaces above and below. 

The cabinets of Holland and Belgium are excellent models of 
design. These pieces of furniture were usually arranged in two 
storeys with a fine moulded and carved cornice, mid division and 
plinth. The pilasters at the sides, and small raised panels carved 
only on the projecting part, would compose a very harmonious 
whole. A proportion of the French cabmeta are decorated with 
caryatids not carved in the best taste, and, like other French wood- 
work of this period, are sometimes overloaded with sculpture. 
The doors of St Maclou, Rouen, fine as they are, would hardly to-day 
be held up as models for imitation. A noteworthy set of doors 
belong to the Hotel de Ville, Oudenarde. The central door contains 
twelve and that on either side eight panels, each of which is carved 
with Renaissance foliage surrounding an unobtrusive figure. In the 
Palais de Justice we see that great scheme of decoration which takes 
up the whole of the fireplace end of the halL Five large figures 
carved in the round are surrounded by small ones and with foliage 
and coats of arms. 

In Italy, the birthplace of the Renaissance, there is much fine 
work of the 16th century. A very important school of design was 
promoted by Raphael, whose patterns were used or adapted by a 
large number of craftsmen. The shutters of " Raphaels Stance " 
in the Vatican, and the choir stalls in the church of St Pietro de' 
Cassincsi at Perugia, are among the most beautiful examples of this 
style of carving. The work is in slight relief, and carved in walnut 
with those graceful patterns which Raphael developed out of the 
newly discovered remains of ancient Roman wall painting from the 
palace of Nero and other places. In the Victoria and Albert M useum 
are many examples of Italian work (Plate IV. fig. 1 1) : the door from 
a convent near Parma,.with its three prominent masks and heavy 
gadroon moulds; a picture frame with a charming acanthus border 
and egg and tongue moulds on either side; and various marriage 
chests in-walnut covered with very elaborate schemes of carving. It 
is sometimes difficult to distinguish Spanish, or for that matter 
South of France work, from Italian, so much alike is the character. 
The Spaniards yield to none in good workmanship. Some Spanish 

Snels of typical Italian design are in the Victoria and Albert 
useum as well as cabinets of the purest Renaissance order. There 
is a wonderful Portuguese coffer (17th century) in this section. The 
top is deeply carved in little compartments with scenes from the life 
of Our Lord. 

I7tk-i8th Centuries.— In England the great school of Grinling 
Gibbons arose. Although be carved many beautiful mouldings of 
conventional form (Hampton Court Palace, Chatswortb, Ac), his 
name Is usually associated with a very heavy form of decoration 
which was copied direct from nature. Great swags of drapery and 
foliage with fruit and dead birds, &c, would be carved m luneafoot 
thick. For technical skill these examples are unsurpassed; each 
grape would be undercut, the finer stal ks and birds' legs stand ouiqutte 



796 



WOOD-CARVING 



separate, and as a consequence toon succumb to the energy of the 
housemaid's broom. Good work of this class b to be Found at 
Petworth; Trinity College, Oxford; Trinity College, Caml 
St Paul's cathedral; St James', Piccadilly; and many 
London churches. 

During the reigns of Louis XIV. and XV. the principal merit of 
carved design, \<*. its appropriateness and suitability, gradually 
disappeared. Furniture was often carved in a way hardly legitimate. 
The legs, the rails of tables and chairs, the frames of cabinets, of 
looking-glasses, instead of being first made for construction and 
strength, and then decorated, were first designed to carry cherubs' 
heads and " rococo " («\tf. rock and shell ornament), quite regardless 
of utility or convenience. A wealth of such mistaken design was also 
applied to state carriages, to say nothing of bedsteads and other 
furniture. However, the wall panelling of the mansions of the rich, 
and sometimes the panelling of furniture, was decorated with rococo 
design in its least illegitimate form. The main part of the wood 
surface would be left plain, while the centre would be carved with 
a medallion surrounded by foliage, vases or trophies of torches and 
musical instruments, Ac, or perhaps the upper part of the panel 
would be thus treated. France led the fashion, which was more or 
less followed all over Europe. In England gilt chairs in the style of 
Louis XV. were made in some quantities. But Thomas Chippen- 
dale, Ince and Mayhew, Sheraton, Johnson, Heppelwhite and other 
cabinet-makers did not as a rule use much carving in their designs. 
Scrolls, shells, ribbon, ears of corn. &c, in very fine relief, were. How. 
ever, used in the embellishment of chairs, &c, and the claw and ball 
foot was employed as a termination to the cabriole legs of cabinets 
and other furniture. 

The mantelpieces of the 18th century were as a rule carved in pine 
and painted white. Usually the shelves were narrow and supported 
by pilasters often of fiat elliptic plan, sometimes by caryatids, and 
the frieze would consist of a raised centre panel carved with a classic 
scene in relief, or with a mask alone, and on either side a swag of 
flowers, fruit and foliage. 

Interior doorways were often decorated with a broken pediment 
more or less ornate, and a swag of foliage commonly depended from 
either side over a background of scroll work. The outside porches 
so often seen in Queen Anne houses were of a character peculiar to 
the 1 8th century. A small platform or curved roof was supported 
by two large and heavy brackets carved with acanthus scroll work. 
The staircases were as a rule exceedingly good. Carved and pierced 
brackets were fixed to the " open strings " (i.e. the sides of the steps), 
giving a very pretty effect to the graceful balustrade of turned and 
twisted columns. 

Renaissance figure work calls for little comment. During the 
16th century many good examples were produced— those priestly 
statues in the museum of Sens for example. But the figure work 
used in the decoration of cabinets, &c, seldom rose above the ordinary 
level. In the 18th century cherubs' heads were fashionable and 
statuettes were sometimes carved in boxwood as ornaments, but as a 
means of decorating houses wood sculpture ceased to be. The Swiss, 
however, have kept up their reputation for animal sculpture to the 
present day, and still turn out cleverly carved chamois and bears, 
&c. ; as a rule the more sketchily cut the better the merit. Their 
more ambitious works, their groups of cows, &c, sometimes reach a 
high level of excellence. 

Of the work of the 19th century little can be said in praise. Out- 
side and beyond the present-day fashion for collecting old oak there 
seems to be no demand for carved decoration. In church work a 
certain number of carvers find occupation, as also for repairs or the 
production of imitations. But the carving one is accustomed to see 
in hotels or onboard the modern ocean palace is in the main the work 
of the machine. There is no objection to the machine in itself, as it 
only grounds out and roughly models the design which is finished by 
hand. Its fatal drawback is that it is of commercial value only when 
a large number of panels of the same pattern are turned out at the 
same time. It is this repetition which takes away the life of good 
work, which places that gulf between the contract job and the indi- 
vidual effort of the artist. The price of all labour has so greatly in- 
creased, to build a house is so much more expensive than it was before 
the days of the trades union that none but the very rich can afford 
to beautify their home in the way to which our forefathers were 
accustomed. . 

Coptic.— \n the early medieval period, screens and other fittings 
were produced for the Coptic churches of Egypt by native Christian 
workmen. In the British Museum there is a set of ten small cedar 
panels from die church door of Sitt Miriam, Cairo (13th century). 
The sue sculptured figure panels are carved in very low relief and the 
four foliage panels are quite Oriental in character, intricate and fine 
both in detail and finish. In the Cairo Museum there is much work 
treated after the familiar Arab style, while other designs are quite 
Bysantine in character. The figure work is not of a very high order. 

Msmummdo* Wmh.— Nothing can exceed the skill with which the 
Moslem wood-carvers of Persia, Syria, Egypt and Spain designed 
and executed the richest panelling and other decorations for wall 
linings, cefltngs, pulpits and all kinds of fittings and furniture. The 
mosques and private houses of Cairo, Damascus and other Oriental 
cities are full of the most elaborate and minutely delicate wood- 
mark. Afavouritestyloof ornament was to cover the surface with 



very intricate interlacing patterns, farmed by finely moulded ribs; 
the various geometrical spaces between the ribs were then filled in 
with small pieces of wood carved with foliage in slight relief. The 
use of different woods such as ebony or box, inlaid so as to emphasize 
the design, combined with the ingenious richness of the patterns, 
give this class of woodwork an almost unrivalled splendour of effect. 
Carved ivory is also often used for the filling in of the spaces. The 
Arabs are past masters in the art of carving fiat surfaces in this way. 
A gate in the mosque of the sultan Bargoug (Cairo, 14th century) 
well illustrates this appreciation of lines and surfaces. The pulpit or 
mimhar (15th century) from a Cairo mosque, now in the Victoria and 
Albert Museum, is also a good example in the same style, the small 
spaces in this case being filled in with ivory carved in fiat relief. 

Screens made up of labyrinths of complicated joinery, consisting of 
multitudes of tiny balusters connecting hexagons, squares or other 
forms, with the flat surfaces constantly enriched with small carvings* 
are familiar to every one. In Cairo we also have examples in the 
mosque of Qous (12th century) of that finely arranged geometrical 
interlacing of curves with foliage terminations which distinguishes 
the Saracenic designer. Six panels in the Victoria and Albert 
Museum (13th century; Plate IL fig. 5), and work on the tomb of 
the sultan El Ghoury (16th century), show how deeply this form. of 
decoration was ingrained in the Arab nature. Figure work and 
animals were sometimes introduced, in .medieval fashion, as in the 
six panels just referred to, and at the htoital du Moristan (13th 
century) and the mosque of El Nesfy Qeycoun (14th century). 
There is a magnificent panel on the door of Beyt-el-Emyr. This 
exquisite design is composed of vine leaves and grapes of conven- 
tional treatment in low relief. The Arab designer was fond of 
breaking up his panelling in a way reminding one of a similar 
Jacobean custom. The main panel would be divided into a number 
of hexagonal, triangular or other shapes, and each small space filled 
in with conventional scroll work. Much of this simple fiat design 
reminds one of that Byzantine method from which the Elizabethan 
carvers were inspired. 

Persia. — The Persian carvers closely followed Arab design. A 
pair of doors of the 14th century from Samarkand (Victoria and 
Albert Museum) are typical. Boxes, spoons and other small articles 
were often fretted with interlacing lines of Saracenic character, the 
delicacy and minuteness of the work requiring the utmost patience 
and skill. Many of the patterns remind one of the sandalwood work 
of Madras, with the difference that die Persians were satisfied with 
a much lower relief. Sometimes a very beautiful result was obtained 
by the sparing use of fretted lattice pattern among foliage. A fine 
panel of the 14th century in the Victoria and Albert Museum show* 
how active was Arab influence even as far as Bokhara. > 

India and Burma. — Throughout the great Indian peninsula wood- 
carving of the most luxurious kind has been continuously produced 
for many centuries. The ancient Hindu temples were decorated with 
doors, ceilings and various fittings carved in teak and other woods 
with patterns of extreme richness and minute elaboration. We have 
architectural remains from Kashmir Smats (Punjab) dating from 
the 3rd or. 4th century, the patterns employed being of a bold and 
decorative character strongly resembling the best Elizabethan 
design. The doors of the temple of, Somnath, on the north-west 
coast, were famed for their magnificence and were highly valued as 
sacred relics. In 1024 they were carried off to Ghaxni by the Moslem 
conqueror, Sultan Mahmud, and are now lying at the fort at Agra. 
The gates which now exist are very fine specimens of ancient wood- 
carving, but are probably only copies of the original very early 
doors. The Asiatic carver, like certain of bis European brethren, is 
apt to be carried away by his own enthusiasm and to overcrowd his 
surfaces. Many a door, column, gallery or even a whole house-front 
is covered with the most intricate design bewildering to behold 
(Bhera, Shahpur). But this is not always the case, and the Oriental 
is at times more restrained in his methods. Architectural detail is 
to be seen with only a simple enrichment carved round the framing, 
producing the happiest result. The Hindu treatment of the circle » 
often exceedingly good, and might perhaps less rarely inspire western 
design. Sometimes native work strongly resembles Scandinavian of 
the 1 2th century. The scrolls are designed on the same lines, and 
foliage and flowers (beyond elementary buds) are not employed 
(Burma, 17th century, Victoria and Albert Museum). The pierced 
work of Bombay calls for note. Foliage, fruit and flowers are con- 
stantly adapted to a scheme of fret-cut decoration for doors or 
windows as well as the frames of chairs and the edges of tables. A 
reference should also be made to those wonderful sandalwood tables, 
cabinets and boxes to be seen in Southern India, always co v ered with 
design, often with scores of figures and monsters with every apace 
filled in with the minutest decoration. Many at the gong stands of 
Burma show the highest skill; the arrangement of two figures 
bearing a pole from which a gong hangs is familiar. The Burmese are 
sculptors of proved merit. 

China and Japan, — In these countries the carver is unrivalled for 
deftness of hand. Grotesque and imitative work of the utmost 
perfection is produced, and many of the carvings of these countries. 
Japan in particular, are beautiful works of art, especially when the 
carver copies the lotus, lily or other aquatic plant. A favourite form 
of decoration consists of breaking up the architectural surfaces, 
such as ceilings,, friezes, &c, into framed squares and filling up each 



WOODCARVING 



Plate I. 




Photo,F.A.Crallan. 
Fig. i. — Centre Panel of Retable in Dijon Museum. Flemish, 1301 A.D. 



WOODCARVING 





WOODCARVING 



Plate III. 




Fig. 4. — Panel from Front of Stalls, 
Ulm Cathedral. 1468-1474. 




Fig. 5. — Arabian Panel 
13th Century. 




From Lessing* t Hoi* sc knit zertuHi by permission of Ernst Wasmuth. 

Fig. 6. — German Chest. Late 15 th Century. 



Plate IV. 



WOODCARVING 




Fig. 7. — Japanese Panel from a Buddhist Temple. Early 18th Century. 




Photo, FA. Crallan. 

Fig. 8. — Detail of Bishop 

Stapledon's Throne, 1 308-1326 

A.D. Exeter Cathedral. 




Fig. 



9. — Flemish Panel. 
Renaissance, 
16th Century. 




Photo, P. A . Crallan. 

Fig. 10. — Detail of Rood-Screen 

Vaulting. Late 15th Century. 

Kenton, Devon. 




Fig. 11. — Front of Walnut Coffer, 16th Century. Renaissance. Italian. 



WOCn>„ n ENGRATING 



. Jth a circle, or diamond of rnnrrnikssl - *ng 

^ivli^m each coracr (door of rai-WHalirpSW^f^* ,, 
feature is the finial of the newel pott, so constantly left mJ 
straight in profile and deeply carved with monster* and £.' 
heavily enriched moulding bearing a strong reaembtaac* L 
gadroon pattern ia commonly used to give emphasis to edawT '" 
the dragon arranged in curves imitative of nature is fr*qi£' 
employed over a closely designed and subordinated backgroui^ 
The general rule that in every country designers use much thV 
same means whereby a pattern is obtained holds good in Chins 1 
There are forms of band decoration here which closely resemble those I 



799 

dark shading, but so far is this piece of local colour from being carried 
out in the rest of the composition that the important foreground 
figures, with their draperies, are shaded as if they were white statues. 
\ ?ain, the sky itself it false in its shading, for it U without gradation. 



^ closely arranged patterns of Bombay also have tbetr 

counterparts. The imperial daia in the Ch'ien-Ch'ing Hall, Pekin, is 
a masterpiece of intricate design. The back consists of one central 
panel of considerable height, with two of lesser degree on either side 
luxuriously carved. The whole is crowned with a very heavy crest 
of dragons and scroll work; the throne alto is a wonderful example 
of carved treatment, and the doors of a cabinet in the tame building 
show how rich an effect of foliage can be produced without the em- 
ployment of stalk or scroll. The Chinaman, who is unequalled as a 
microscopic worker, does not limit himself to ivory or metal. One 
might almost aay, he wattes his talent on such an ungrateful material 
aa wood, la this material fans and other trifles are carved with a 
delicacy that courts disaster. 

In Japan much of the Chinese type is apparent. The native carver 
b fond of massing foliage without the stalk to lead him. He appears 
to pat in his foliage, fruit and flowers first and then to indicate a 
stalk here and there, thus reverting the order of the Western method. 
Such a treatment, especially when birds and beasts are introduced, 
has the highest decorative effect. But, as such dose treatment is 
bound to do, it depends for success to some extent upon its scheme of 
A king panel in the Victoria and Albert Museum, depicting 



their packborse (Plate IV. fig. 7). strongly resembles 

in its grouping and treatment Gothic work of the 15th century, as 
for example the panel of St Hubert in the museum at Chalons. 
The strength and character of Japanese figure work ht quite equal to 
the beat Gothic sculpture of the 15th century. 

Samatt Racu. — There is a general similarity running through the 
carved design of most races of primitive culture, the chip form 
of ornament being almost universally employed. Decorated sur- 
faces depending almost entirely upon the incised lhtc also obtain all 
over the uocrriluwd world* and may no doubt be accounted for by 
the extensive use of stonecutting tods. The savage carver shows 
the same tendency to over-exalt his art by crowding on too much 
design as the more civilized craftsman of other lands, while he also 
on occasion exercises a good deal of restraint by a harmonious balance 
of decoration and plain space. So far as hit chip designs and those 
patterns more or less depending on the line are concerned, hit work 
as a rule it good and suitable, but when he takes to figure work his 
attempts do not usually meet with success. Primitive carving, 
generally, shows that verv similar stages of artistic development are 
passed through by men of every age and race. 

A very favourite style of " chip '* pattern is that formed by small 
triangles and squares entirely covering a surface (Hervey Islanders), 
the monotony being sometimes variedly a band of d i f f ere n t arrange- 
ment in the middle of the article or at the top or bottom. This form 
of art is hardly of a kind calculated 
so far at the cultivation of 1 ' 

equaL But many natives, w . , „ 

chip designs rivalling those of Europe in variety. Upon occasion the 
savage appreciates the way in which plain surfaces cootrast and 
emphasise decorated parts, and judiciously restricts hit skul to 
bands of decoration or to special points (Marquesa Islands). The 
lios of the lower Niger design their paddles in a masterly way, and 
show a fine sense of proportion between the plain and the decorated 
surface. Their designs, though slightly in relief, are of the chip 
nature. The method of decorating a subject with groups of incised 
Kims, straight or curved, though often very effective and in every 
way suitable, it not a very advanced form of art and hat decided 
limits. The native of the Congo does good work of this kind. 

Carving in relief u common enough, idols being produced in many 
forms, but savage relief work seldom calls for praise. The Kafir 
carves the handle of his spoon perhaps in the form of a giraffe, and in 
the round, with, each kg cut separately and the four hoofs meeting 
atthebowthardlyacomforubkformofbandktobold. The North 
American Indian shows a wider invention than tome nations, the 
twist in various shapes being a favourite treatment say of pipe stems. 
The Papuan has quite a style of hit own; he uses a tcrou of the 
form familiar in Indian shawls, and in some cases the scroll entwines 
in a way which faintly suggests the guilloche. The native of New 
Guinea also employs the scroll for a motive, the flat treatment of 
which reminds one of a similar method in use In Scandinavian 
countries. The work of the New Zealander is greatly in advance of 
the average primitive type; he uses a very good scheme of scroll 
work for decorative purposes, the tines of the scrolls often being en- 
riched with a small pattern in a way reminding one of the familiar 
Norman treatment, as for example the prows of hit canoes. The 



I*. 

A: 

alh 

ran 

but 

and 

spcx. 

abou 

it is 1 

and 1 

chest: 

other t 



» to this expedient in defiance alike of pictorial 

id of natural, truth. In Holbein's admirable series of 

'cd compositions, the " Dance of Death." the firm and 

''rawing » accompanied by a tort of ught-and-shade 

'or convenience, with as little reference to natural 

expected in a stained-glass window. There is 

net of little woodcuts drawn and engraved in 

J. Amman at illustrations of the different 

rnd entitled " The Baker/' " The Miller." 

Nothing is more striking in this valuable 

Aeneas with which the artist observed 

rd fact, such aa the shape of a hatchet 

-v anywhere— be can draw leaves 

'image. locks but not hair, a hill 

hes Kitchen," a woodcut by 

'ated 1510, the steam rising 

>neaimnce of two trunks of 

ndant in the composition 

es not look more sub- 

'•rfln. It was Oarer's 

'1 the engravers of 



WOODCOCK (O.l.,. 
the Scoiopax rustkula 1 of onuu- 



prized both by the sportsman and for \x 

It has a long bill, abort leg. ail iL^*' 



more those of a 

carve in high 

' in the same 

'tightsmen 

nocturnal or crepuscular haWta^S^not?& ^*^ ^ lA ** 
chestnut- and umber-brown, ashy-grey hJtt *}**-*, " • ' %f *' 
the last being confined to the tip c7thVk\!! Ui S2L* - . (,t 
quills, but the rest intermixed for the moat «?*• *^** - ' 
combination. Setting aside the many extreml ** ***«V 
from the normal colouring which examples^ tiJ ,,T,M ^*L 
occasionally present (and some of them are extremdv ***** 
not to say beautiful), there is much variation toK ft Cu ? 0U| . 
constantly observed in the plumage of individuals, in aim!!?* 
which the richer tints prevail while others exhibit a eJlii 
coloration. This variation is often, but not always, accompanWi 
by a variation in size or at least in weight.* The palerbfau 
are generally the larger, but the difference, whether in bulk 
or tint, cannot be attributed to age, sex, season or, so far aa 
can be ascertained, to locality. It is, notwithstanding, a very 
common belief among sportsmen that there are two " species " 
of woodcock, and many persons of experience will have it that, 
beside the differences just named, the " little red woodcock " 
invariably flies more sharply than the other. However, a sluggish 
behaviour is not really associated with colour, though it may 
possibly be correlated with weight— for it is quite conceivable 
that a fat bird will rise more slowly, when flushed, than one 
which is in poor condition. Ornithologists are practically 
unanimous in declaring against the existence of two " species " 
or even " races," and, moreover, in agreeing that the sex of the 
bird cannot be determined from its plumage, though there are a 
few who believe that the young of the year can be discriminated 
from the adults by having the outer web of the first quill-feather 
in the wing marked with angular notches of a light colour, whik 
the old birds have no trace of this "vandykc "ornament. 
Careful dissections, weighings and measurings seem to show 
that the mak varies most in size; on an average he is slightly 
heavier than the female, yet some of the lightest birds have proved 
to be cocks.' 

Though there are probably few if any counties In the United 
Kingdom in which the woodcock docs not almost yearly breed, 
especially since a " close time " has been afforded by the legislature 
for the protection of the species, there can be no doubt that by far the 
greater number of those shot in the British Islands have come from 



1 By Linnaeus, and many others after him, misspelt rustkola. 
The correct form of Pliny and the older writers seems to have been 
first restored in 1816 by Oken {Zodf** "- P- Sty). 

• The difference in weight is very great, though this seems to have 
been exaggerated by tome writers. A friend who hat had much 
experience tells us that the heaviest bird he ever knew weighed 164 
ox., and the lightest o oa. and a fraction. 

' Cf. Dr Hoffmann 9 monograph DU Walduhnepfe, ed. 2, p. 35, 
published at Stuttgart in 1887. 



79» 



WOOD ENGRAVING 



abroad,— -mostly, it ii presumed, from Scandinavia. These arrive 
on the east coast in autumn— generally about the middle of October 
—often in an exhausted and impoverished state. If unmolested, 
they are soon rested, pass inland, and, as would appear, in a marvel- 
lously short time recover their condition. Their future destination 
seems to be greatly influenced by the state of the weather. If cold or 
frost stop their supply of food on the eastern side of Great Britain 
they press onward and, letting alone Ireland, into which the im- 
migrant stream is pretty constant, often crowd into the extreme 
south-west, as Devonshire and Cornwall, and to the Isles of Scilly, 
while not a few betake themselves to the unknown ocean, finding 
there doubtless a watery grave, though instances are on record of 
examples having successfully crossed the Atlantic and reaching 
Newfoundland, New Jersey and Virginia. 

With regard to the woodcock which breed in Britain, pairing 
takes place very early in February and the eggs are laid often before 
the middle of March. These are four in number, of a yellowish 
cream-colour blotched and spotted with reddish brown, and seldom 
take the pyriform shape so common among those of Ltmkoline birds. 
The nest— always made on the ground amid trees or underwood, and 
usually near water or at least in a damp locality^- is at first little 
more than a slight hollow in the soil, but as incubation proceeds dead 
leaves are collected around its margin until a considerable mass Is 
accumulated. During this season the male woodcock performs at 
twilight flights of a remarkable kind, repeating evening alter evening 
(and it is believed at dawn also) precisely the same course, whicn 
generally describes a triangle, the sides of which may be a quarter 
of a mile or more lone. On these occasions the bird's appearance on 
the wing is quite unlike that which it presents when hurriedly flying 
after being flushed, and though its speed is great the beats of the 
wings are steady and slow. At intervals an extraordinary sound is 
produced, whether from the throat of the bird, as is commonly 
averred, or from the plumage is uncertain. This characteristic flight 
is in some parts of England called " roading," and the track taken by 
the bird a "cock-road." 1 In England in former times advantage 
was taken of this habit to catch the simple performer in nets called 
" cock-shutts," which were hung between trees across the open glades 
or rides of a wood. A still more interesting matter in relation to the 
breeding of woodcocks is the fact, finally established on good evi- 
dence, that the old birds transport their newly hatched offspring, 
presumably to places where food is more accessible. The young are 
clasped between the thighs of the parent, whose legs hang down 
during the operation, while the bill is to some extent, possible only at 
starting, brought into operation to assist in adjusting the load if not 
in bearing it through the sir.' 

Woodcock inhabit suitable localities across the northern part 
of the Old World, from Ireland to Japan, migrating southward 
towards autumn. As a species they are said to be resident in the 
Azores and other Atlantic Islands; but they are not known to 
penetrate very far into Africa during the winter, though in many 
parts of India they are abundant during the cold weather, and reach 
even Ceylon and Tcnasserim. The popular belief that woodcock live 
" by suction " is perhaps hardly yet exploded: but those who have 
observed them in confinement know that they have an almost 
insatiable appetite for earthworms, which the birds seek by probing 
soft ground with their highly sensitive and flexible bill. 1 This 
fact seems to have been first placed on record by Bowles, 4 who 
noticed ft in the royal aviary at San Ildefonso in Spain, and it has 
been corroborated by other observers, and especially by Montagu, 
who discovered that bread and milk made an excellent substitute 
for their ordinary food. They also do well on chopped raw meat. 

The eastern part of North America possesses a woodcock, much 
smaller than, though generally (and especially in habits) similar to, 
that of the Old continent. It is the Scolopax minor of most authors; 
but, chiefly on account of its having the outer three primaries re- 
markably attenuated, it has been placed in a separate genus, Phitohela. 
In Java is found a distinct and curiously coloured species, described 
and figured by Horsfteld (Trans. Lmtu Society, xiri. p. 191, and 
Zoolog. Researches, pi.) as & saturate. To this H. Seebohm (Geo- 
graphical Distribution of the Family Charadriidae, p. sod) referred the 
5. rosenbergi of Schlegcl (Nederl. Tijds. v. d. Ditrhunde, iv. p. 54) from 
New Guinea. Another species is 5. rochusseni from the Moluccas ; this 
lias, like the snipe, the lower part of the tibia bare of feathers. (A. N.) 



P 1 
fr 



The etymology and consequently the correct spelling of these ex- 
pressions seem to be very uncertain. Some would derive the word 
rom the French rBder, to rove or wander, but others connect it with 
the Scandinavian rode, an open space in a wood (see Notes and Queries, 
ser. 5. ix. p. 214. and ser. 6, viii. pp. 523, $24). Looking to the 
regular routine followed by the bird, the natural supposition would be 
that it is simply an application of the English word road. 

« Cf. J. E. Hailing, Zoologist (1879), pp. 433-440, and Mr Wolfs 
excellent illustration. Sir K. Payne-Gallwey, in the " Badminton 
Library " (Shooting, ii. p. 1 18, note), states that he himself has 
witnessed the performance. 

> The pair of muscles said by Loche (Bxpl. Scient. de VAlgerie, ii. 
p. 393) to exist in the maxilla, and presumably to direct the move- 
ment of the bill, do not seem to have been precisely described. 

4 Introduction a la historic natural y a la geografia fiscia de 
Espaha, pp. 454. 455 (Madrid, 1775). 



WOOD BKORAVmO, the art of engraving (9.9.) on wood, 
by lines so cut that the design stands in relief. This method 
of engraving was historically the earliest, done for the purpose 
of taking impressions upon paper or other material. It is natural 
that wood engraving should have occurred first to the primitive 
mind, because the manner in which woodcuts are printed is 
the most obvious of all the kinds of printing. If a block of wood 
is inked with a greasy ink and then pressed on a piece of paper, 
the ink from the block will be transferred at once to the paper, 
on which we shall have a black patch exactly the siie and shape 
of the inked surface. Now, suppose that the simple Chinese 
who first discovered this was ingenious enough to go a step 
further, it would evidently occur to him that if one of the 
elaborate signs, each of which in his own language stood for a 
word, were drawn upon the block of wood, in reverse, and then 
the whole of the white wood sufficiently cut away to leave the 
sign in relief, an image of it might be taken on the paper much 
more quickly than the sign could be copied with a camel-hair 
brush and Indian ink. No sooner had this experiment been 
tried and found to answer than block-printing was discovered, 
and from the printing of signs to the printing of rude images 
of things, exactly in the same manner, the step was so easy that 
it must have been made insensibly. Wood engraving, then, is 
really nothing but that primitive block-cutting which prepared 
for the printer the letters in relief now replaced by movable 
types, and the only difference between a delicate modern woodcut 
and the rude letters in the first printed books is a difference of 
artistic skill and knowledge. In Chinese and Japanese woodcuts 
we can still recognize traditions of treatment which come from 
the designing of their written characters. The main elements 
of a Chinese or a Japanese woodcut, uninfluenced by European 
example, are dashing or delicate outlines and markings of various 
thickness, exactly such as a clever writer with the brush would 
make with his Indian ink or vermilion. Often we get a perfectly 
black blot, exquisitely shaped and full of careful purpose, and 
these broad vigorous blacks are quite in harmony with the kind 
of printing for which wood engraving is intended. 

It has not hitherto been satisfactorily ascertained whether 
wood engraving came to Europe from the East or was re- 
discovered by some European artificer. The precise date of 
the first European woodcut is also a matter of doubt, but here 
we have certain data which at least set limits to the possibility 
of error. European wood engraving dates certainly from the 
first quarter of the 15th century. It used to be believed that a 
cut of St Christopher (now in the Rylands library, Manchester), 
rudely executed and dated 1423, was the Adam of all our wood- 
cuts, but since 1844 investigations have somewhat shaken this 
theory. There is a cut in the Brussels library, of the " Virgin 
and Child " surrounded by four saints, which is dated 1418, 
but the composition is so elegant and the drawing so refined and 
beautiful, that one has a difficulty in accepting the date, though 
it is received by many as authentic, while it is repudiated by 
others in the belief that the letters have been tampered with. 
The " Virgin and Child " of the Paris library is without date, 
but is supposed, apparently with reason, to be earlier than either 
of the two mentioned; and Delaborde proved that two cuts 
were printed in 1400. The " Virgin and Child " at Paris may 
be taken as a good representative specimen of very early 
European wood engraving. It is simple art, but not bad art. 
The forms are drawn in bold thick lines, and the black blot is 
used with much effect in the hollows and recesses of the design. 
Beyond this there is no shading. Rude as the work is, the artist 
has expressed exquisite maternal tenderness in the chief details 
of the design. The Virgin is crowned, and stands against a 
niche-like decoration with pinnacles as often seen in illuminated 
manuscripts. In the woodcut this architectural decoration is 
boldly but effectively drawn. Here, then, we have real art 
already, art in which appeared both vigour of style and tenderness 
of feeling. 

The earliest wood engraving consisted of outlines and white 
spaces with smaller black spaces, cut with a knife, not with a 
graver, and shading lines are rare or absent. Before passing 



WOOD ENGRAVING 



799 



to shaded woodcuts we may mention a kind of wood engraving 
practised in the middle of the 15th century by a French engraver 
(often called Bernard Milnet, though his name is a matter of 
doubt) and by other engravers nearer the beginning of that 
century. This method is called the cribli, a word for which 
there is no convenient translation in English, unless we call it 
drilled. It means riddled with small holes, as a target may be 
riddled with small shot. The effect of light and dark is produced 
in this kind of engraving by sinking a great number of round 
holes of different diameters in the substance of the wood, which, 
of course, all come white in the printing; it is, in effect, a sort 
of stippling in white. When a more advanced kind of wood 
engraving had become prevalent the cribU was no longer used 
for general purposes, but it was retained for the grounds of 
decorative wood engraving, being used occasionally in borders 
for pages, in printers' marks and other designs, which were 
survivals in black and white of the ancient art of illuminating. 
Curiously enough, this kind of wood engraving, though long 
disused for purposes of art, was in recent times revived with 
excellent effect for scientific purposes, mainly as a method of 
illustration for astronomical books. The black given by the 
untouched wooden block represents the night sky, and the holes, 
smaller or larger, represent in white the stars and planets of 
lesser or greater magnitude. The process was perfectly adapted 
to this purpose, being cheap, rapid and simple. It has also been 
used in a spasmodic and experimental manner by one or two 
modern engravers. 

The earlier workmen turned their attention to woodcut in 
simple black lines, including outline and shading. In early work 
the outline is firm and very distinct, being thicker in line than 
the shading, and in the shading the tines are simple, without 
cross-hatchings, as the workmen found it easier and more 
natural to take out a white line-like space between two parallel 
or nearly parallel black lines than to cut out the twenty or 
thirty small white lozenges into which the same space would 
have been divided by cross-hatchings. The early work would 
also sometimes retain the simple black patch which we find in 
Japanese woodcuts, for example, in the " Christmas Dancers/ 1 
of Wohlgemuth, all the shoes are black patches, though there 
is no discrimination of local colour in anything dae. A precise 
parallel to this treatment is to be found in a Japanese woodcut 
of the M Wild Boar and Hare," given by Aim* Humbert in his 
book on Japan, in which the boar has a cap which is a perfectly 
black patch though all other local colour is omitted. The 
similarity of method between Wohlgemuth and the Japanese 
artist is close: they both take pleasure in drawing thin black 
lines at a little distance from the patch and following its shape 
like a border. In course of time, as wood engravers became 
more expert, they were not so careful to spare themselves 
trouble and pains, and then cross-hatchings were introduced, 
but at first more as a variety to relieve the eye than as a common 
method of shading. In the 16th century a simple kind of wood 
engraving reached such a high degree of perfection that the best 
work of that time has never been surpassed in its own way. 

Wood engraving in the 16th century was much more conventional 
than it became in more recent timet, and this very conventionalism 
enabled it to express what it had to express with greater decision and 
power. The wood engraver in those days was free from many difficult 
conditions which hampered his modern successor. He did not care in 
the least about aerial perspective, and nobody expected htm to care 
about it; he did not trouble his mmd about local colour, but gener- 
ally omitted it, sometimes, however, giving it here and there* but 
only when it suited his fancy. As for Ught-and-shade, he shaded only 
when he wanted to give relief, but never worked out anything like a 
studied and balanced effect of light-and-shade, nor did he feel any 
responsibility about the matter. What he really cared for, and 
generally attained, was a firm, clear, simple land of drawing, con- 
ventional in its indifference to the mystery of nature and to the 
poetic sentiment which comes to us from that mystery, but by no 
means indifferent to fact of a decided and tangible land. The wood 
engraving of the 16th century was a singularly positive art, as 
positive as carving; indeed* moat of the famous woodcuts of that 
time might be translated into carved panels without much loss of 
character. Their complete independence of pictorial conditions 
might be Illustrated by many examples. In Oarer's " Salutation '* 
the dark blue of the sky above the Alpine mountains is translated by 



dark shading, but so far is this piece of local colour from being carried 
out in the rest of the composition that the important foreground 
figures, with their draperies, are shaded as if they were white statues. 
Again, the sky itself is false in its shading, for it is without gradation, 
but the shading upon it has a purpose, which is to prevent the upper 
part of the composition from looking too empty, and the convention' 
alism of wood engraving was so accepted in those days that the artist 
could have recourse to this expedient in defiance alike of pictorial 
harmony and of natural truth. In Holbein's admirable series of 
small well-filled compositions, the " Dance of Death," the firm and 
matter-of-fact drawing is accompanied by a sort of ligh)-and-*hade 
adopted simply for convenience, with as little reference to natural 
truth as might be expected in a stained-glass window. There is 
a most interesting series of little woodcuts drawn and engraved in 
the 16th century by J. Amman as illustrations of the different 
handicrafts and trades, and entitled " The Baker," " The Miller," 
" The Butcher," and so on. Nothing is more striking in this valuable 
series than the remarkable closeness with which the artist observed 
everything in the nature of a hard fact, such as the shape of a hatchet 
or a e-pade; but be tees no mystery anywhere — he can draw leaves 
but nod (wage, U.n»ier> bui n-.-f i ks but not hair, a hill 

but not a LindNT^ftc- \n ihe " WitrhcV Kiichen," a woodcut by 
Ham BaMLing (Grun) of Strawburfc, dated 1510, the steam rising 
from the [>h 1* *> harJ that it ha* the appearance of two trunks of 
trixi dtny.fetl *J chcir bark, and makes a pendant in the composition 
to a mil ifOi on the opposite side whii.h dots not look more sub- 
stantial. Nor «a* thw a personal deficiency in Grfln. It was Dtirer's 
own way of engraving cloud* and vapour, and all the engravers of 
that time followed it. Their concept iom »nc much more those of a 
carver than those of a painter. Durer m 1 • illy did carve in high 
relief and GruV* " Witches' Kitchen " might be carved in the same 
manner 1 wirhout lo** When the enslaver* were rather draughtsmen 
than carver*, ilnir drawing was oi a decorative character. For 
example, in the magnificent portrait of Christian HI. of Denmark by 
Jacih Hinrk, one of the vtry finest example* of old wood engraving, 
the fao: and tpcanlare drawn with lew Mm.- and very powerfully, but 
the co- m me i* treated *trictly aa decoration, the lines of the patterns 
being all given, with ai little shading a* t:*nvible, and what shading 
there u ii simple* without eras*- hatching. 

The perfection of simple wood engraving having been attained 
so early as the 16th century by the use of the graver, the art 
became extremely productive. During the 17th and 18th 
centuries it still remained a comparatively severe and con- 
ventional form of art, because the workmen shaded as much as 
possible either with straight lines or simple curves, so that there 
was never much appearance of freedom. Modern wood engraving 
is quite a distinct art, being based on different principles, but 
between the two stands the work of an original genius, Thomas 
Bewick (1753-1828). Although apprenticed to an engraver 
In 1767, he was never taught to draw, and got into ways and 
habits of his own which add to the originality of bis work, 
though his defective training is always evident. His work is 
the more genuine from his frequent habit of engraving his own 
designs, which left htm perfect freedom of interpretation; bat 
the genuineness of it is not only of the kind which comes from 
independence of spirit, it is doe also to his fidelity to the technical 
nature of the process, a fidelity very rare in the art. 

The reader will r e mem ber that in wood engraving every cutting 
prints white, and every space left untouched prinu black. Simple 
black lines are obtained by cutting out white lines or spaces between 
them, and crossed black lines have to be obtained by laboriously 
cutting out all the white lozenges between them. In Bewick's cuts 
white fines, which had appeared before him in the FabUs of 177a, are 
abundant and are often crossed, but black lines are never crossed; 
he is also quite willing to utilize the black space, as the Japanese 
wood-engravers and Durer's master Wohlgemuth used to do. The 
side of the frying-pan in the vignette of " The Cat and the Mouse " is 
treated precisely on their principles, so precisely indeed that we have 
the line at the edge for a border. In the vignette of " The Fisher- 
man," at the end of the twentieth chapter of the Memoir, the space 
of dark shade under the bushes is left quite black, whilst the leaves 
and twigs, and the rod and line too, are all drawn in pure white lines. 
Bewick, indeed, was more careful in his adherence to the technical 
conditions of the art than any of the primitive woodcutters except 
those who worked in cribli and who used white lines as well as their 
dots. Such a thing as a fishing-net is an excellent test of this dis- 
position. In the interesting series by J. Amman already mentioned 
there is a cut of a man fishing in a river, from a small punt, with a 
net. The net comes dark against the light surface of the river, and 
Amman took the trouble to cut a white lozenge for every mesh. 
Bewick, in one of his vignettes, represents a fisherman mending his 
nets by the side of a stream. A long net b hung to dry on four up- 
right sticks, but to avoid the trouble of cutting out the lozenges. 
Bewick artfully contrives his arrangement of light and shade so that 
the net shall be in light against a space of black shade under some 



8oo 



WOOD ENGRAVING 



bushes. This permits him to cut every string of the net by a simple 
white line, according to hb practice of using the white line whenever 
he could. He used it with great ability in the scales of his fish, but 
this was simply from a regard to technical convenience, for when he 
engraved on metal he marked the scales of his fish by black tinea, 
These may seem very trifling considerations to persons unacquainted 
with the fine arts, who may think that it can matter tittle whether a 
fishing-net is drawn in black lines or in white, but the fact is that the 
entire destiny of wood engraving depended on preserving or rejecting 



the white line. Had it been g . . 

original artists might have followed his example in engraving their 
own inventions, because then wood engraving would have been a 
natural and comparatively rapid art; but when the black tine was 
preferred the art became a handicraft, because original artists have 
not time to cut out thousands of little white spaces. The reader may 
at once realise for himself the tediousness of the process by compar- 
ing the ease with which one writes a page of manuscript with the 
labour which would be involved in cutting away, with perfect 
accuracy, every space, however minute, which the pen had not 
blackened with ink. 

Wood engraving in the first three quarters of the 19th century 
had no special character of its own, nothing tike Bewick's work, 
which had a character derived from the nature of the process; 
but on the other hand, the modern art is set to imitate every kind 
of engraving and every kind of drawing. Thus we have woodcuts 
that imitate line engraving, others that copy etching and even 
mezzotint, whilst others try to imitate the crumbling touch of 
charcoal or of chalk, or the wash of water-colour, the greyness 
of pencil, or even the wash and the pen-tine together. The art has 
been put to all sorts of purposes; and though it is not and cannot 
be free, it is made to pretend to a freedom which the old masters 
would have rejected as an affectation. Rapid sketches are made, 
on the block with the pen, and the modern wood-engraver set 
himself patiently to cut out all the spaces of white, in which 
case the engraver is in reality less free than his predecessor in 
the 16th century, though the result has a false appearance 
of liberty. The woodcut is like a polyglot who has learned to 
speak many other languages at the risk of forgetting his own. 
And, wonderful as may be its powers of imitation, it can only 
approximate to the arts which it imitates; it can never rival each 
of them on its own ground. It can convey the idea of etching or 
water-colour, but not their quality; it can imitate the manner 
of a tine engraver on steel, but it cannot give the delicacy of his 
tines. In its most modern development it has practically 
succeeded in imitating the grey tonalities of the photograph. 
Whatever be the art which the wood engraver imitates, a 
practised eye sees at the first glance that the result is nothing but 
a woodcut. Therefore, although we may admire the supple- 
ness of an art which can assume so many transformations, 
it is certain that these transformations give tittle satisfaction 
to severe judges. At the same time, as the ultimate object was 
not only reproduction, but reduplication by the printing-press, 
the drawbacks mentioned are far outweighed by the practical 
advantages. In manual skill and in variety of resource modern 
wood engravers far excel their predecessors. A Belgian wood 
engraver, Stephane Pannemaker, exhibited at the Salon of 1876 
a woodcut entitled " La Baigneuse," which astonished the art- 
world by the amazing perfection of its method, all the delicate 
modelling of a nude figure being rendered by simple modula- 
tions of unbroken line. Both English and French publications 
have abounded in striking proofs of skill. The modern art, as 
exhibited in these publications, may be broadly divided into two 
sections, one depending upon line, in which case the black tine 
of a pen or pencil sketch is carefully preserved, and the other 
depending upon tone, when the tones of a sketch with the brush 
are translated by the wood engraver into shades obtained in his 
own way by the burin. The first of these methods requires 
extreme care, skill and patience, but makes tittle demand upon 
the intelligence of the artist; the second leaves him more free to 
interpret, but he cannot do this rightly without understanding 
both tone and texture. 

The woodcuts in Dore's Don Quixote are done by each method 
alternately, many of the designs having been sketched with a pen 
upon the block, whilst others are shaded with a brush in Indian ink 
and white, the latter being engraved by interpreting the shades of the 
brush. In the pen drawings the lines are Dore's, in the brush draw- 
ings the tines are the engraver's. In the night "" 



adopted Bewick's system of white tines, the block being left untouched 
in its blackness wherever the effect permitted. English wood 
engraving showed to great advantage in such newspapers as the 
Illustrated London Newt and the Graphic of that day. and also in 
vignettes for book illustration. A certain standard of vignette 
engraving was reached by Edmund Evans in Birket Foster's edition 
of Cowper's Task, not likely to be surpassed in its own way, either 
for delicacy of tone or for careful preservation of the drawing. 

An important extension of wood engraving was doc to the 
invention of compound blocks by Charles Wells about the year 
i860. Formerly a woodcut was limited in size to the dimensions 
of a block of boxwood cut across the grain, except in the primitive 
condition of the art, when commoner woods were used in the 
direction of the grain; but by this invention many small blocks 
were fitted together so as to form a single large one, sometimes 
of great size, They could be separated or joined together again 
at will, and it was this facility which rendered possible the 
rapid production of large cuts for the newspapers, many 
cutters working on the same subject at once, each taking his 
own section. 

The process employed for wood engraving may be briefly 
described as follows. The surface of the block is lightly whitened 
with Chinese white so as to produce a tight yellowish-grey tint, 
and on this the artist draws, either with a pen if the work is 
intended to be in line, or with a hard-pointed pencil and a brush 
if it is intended to be a m shade. If it is to be a line woodcut the 
cutter simply digs out the whites with a sharp graver or scalpel 
(he has these tools of various shapes and sixes), and that is 
all he has to do; but if the drawing on the wood is shaded with 
a brush, then the cutter has to work upon the tones in such a 
manner that they will come relatively true in the printing. 
This is by no means easy, and the result is often a disappoint- 
ment, besides which the artist's drawing is destroyed in the 
process. It therefore became customary to have the block 
photographed before the engraver touches it, when the drawing 
b specially worth preserving. This was done for Leighton's 
illustrations to Romolo. By a later development the drawing, 
made upon paper, was by photography printed on the block, 
and the drawing remained untouched as a witness for or against 
the engraver. 

In recent yean the position of wood engraving in Great 
Britain has wholly changed. Up to 1880 and for a little while 
longer it was the chief means of book and newspaper illustration, 
and a frequent method of fine-art reproduction; but by the 
beginning of the aoth century it had been all but driven out 
of the field by "process "work of various kinds. It still nourishes 
in its commoner style for commercial and mechanical work; it is 
still occasionally maintained in its finest form by a sympathetic 
publisher here and there, who deplores and would arrest Its 
decay. But the photograph and its facsimile reproduction have 
captivated the public, who want " illustration " and who do 
not want " art." The great body of the wood engravers have 
therefore found their occupation entirely gone, while the minority 
have found themselves forced to devote their skill to " re- 
touching " the process-block— sometimes carrying their work so 
far that the print from the finished block is a close imitation of 
a wood engraving. This system has been carried farthest in 
America; it is rarely seen elsewhere. 

It is not only to considerations of economy that is due the 
supersession of engraving by " process." The apparent supe- 
riority of truthfulness claimed by the photograph over the artist's 
drawing is a factor m the case— the public fo-getting that a 
photographic print shows us what a thing or a scene looks tike 
to the undiscruninating lens, rather than what it looks tike to the 
two eyes of the spectator, who unconsciously eelects that part 
of the scene which he specially wishes to see. The rank and fife 
of the engravers— even those who can " engrave " after a picture* 
as well as "cut " a "special artist's " sketchr-succumbed not 
only to the public, but to the artists themselves, who frequently 
insisted upon the process-block for the translation of their work. 
They preferred the greater truth of outline (though not necessarily 
of tone) which is yielded by " process," to all the inherent charm 
of the beautiful (and expensive) art of xylography. 



WOODFALL— WOOD GREEN 



801 



la Great Britain a few engraven of high rank and ability still 
followed the ait which was raised to so high a pitch by W. J. Linton 
(d. 1898). Such were Mr Charles Roberts, Mr Biecombe Gardner, 
Mr Comfort, Mr Ulrich and a few more— the first two the better 
engraven for being also practising artists. But there is every reason 
to Tear that if wood engraving as a craft, for ordinary purposes, ceases 
to exist, wood engraving as a fine art must disappear as well — as 
there would be nothing to support the young craftsman during the 
years of apprenticeship and practice required to make an " artist *' 
of him. and nothing to compensate him if be fail to attain at once the 



Another circumstance which has contributed to the overthrow of 
wood engraving in England is the rapture begotten of the extra- 
ordinary executive perfection to which the art had been brought in 
America. These engravings, published in magazines and books 
having wide circulation in England, awakened not an intelligent 
but a foolish appreciation among the public Just as the over- 

e » ~t JL .:_ _*. 1 j v. rL 1 l*_ 1 1 i-:it~i u:- 




i xylography i w ...... 

degree in America. The reason is simple. With the object of " dis- 
individualizing " himself, as he called it, the engraver sought to 
suppress his own recognizable manner of craftsmanship when trans- 
lating the work of the artist for the public; and the more he suc- 
ceeded in effacing himself, and the more be refined and elaborated 
his technique and imitated textures, and the more he developed 
extreme minuteness and excessive dexterity (so as to secure faithful- 
ness and smoothness), the more closely did the result approximate to 
a photograph and nothing more. The result, in fact, became the 
rodudio ad absurdnm of the passion for the minute and the perfection 
of mere technique. The result was amazing in its completeness, but 
curiously grey and monotonous; and matter-of-fact publishers and 
public alike p re f er r ed the photograph, which in their eyes did not 
* differ to very much (except in being a little greyer and more 
monotonous) reproduced by the half-tone block, while the cost of 
the latter waa but a fraction of that of the former. The extreme 
elaboration, satisfying a craving of an acrobatic kind, defeated its 
own end. The public were pleased for a time, and the result has been 
disastrous for the art. 

In England, in spite of the International Society of Wood En- 
gravers, of which little is now beard, there areino signs of a general 
revival, and it seems as if the art must be born again, so long as the 
public interest in photographs continues. Charles Ricketts and Miss 
Housman have gone back to a Dureresque, or Florentine, manner of 
the Early Renaissance woodcut, while others are striving to begin 
engraving where Bewick began it. If the true art is ever restored, 
the revival will rather be based on a revolt against the g rey ness of the 
p ro ces s-block, and the offensively shiny surface of the chalk-coated 
paper on which it is printed, than on any aesthetic delight in intelligent 
wood engraving, ha expressive line, its delicate, pearly tones, and ha 

In America, where the power of resuscitation jajgreat, the miracu- 
lous technical perfection brought about by Timothy Cole and 
Frederick J uendrng, as leaders ofthe school, has promptly given way 
to a greater feeling Tor art and a lesser worship of mechanical achieve* 
ment, and, within strict limits, wood engraving b saved. Curi- 
ously enough. Cole (an Englishman by birth) was equally a leader in 
recognizing the danger which his own brilliant proficiency had 
helped to bring about. The " decadent " de luxe who had over- 
whelmed his art in the r e fin e m ents which threatened to destroy it, 
and who had been seconded by the splendid printing-presses of 
America (which might without exaggeration be called instruments 
of precision), gave up what may be termed hyper-engraving, and, 



prospers in the United States. 

In France, where the art has reached the highest perfection and 
the most consummate and logical development, it flourishes up to 
a certain point on the true artistic instinct of the engraver, on the 
taste of aa intelligent and appreciative public, and c« official recogni- 
tion and encouragement. Nevertheless, it was found necessary to 
establish a " Society of Wood Engraven " (with a magazine of its 
own) to protect it against the inroad of the process-block. The art 
doobtless prod u ce s more engraven of skill than it can provide work 
for; but that is evidence rather of vitality than of decay. Lepere, 
Baode, Jounard and Ftorian have been among the leaden who, in 
different styles of wood engraving, have sustained the extraordinarily 
Ugh level which has been attained in France, and which is fairly well 
maintained by virtue of the encouragement on which it has thriven 
h er e t o f ore . Florien, who died in 1900, was a man who successfully 
•ought to obtain effects of tone rather than line, leaving masses of 
unengraved surface to enhance the delicate beauty of his pearly greys. 
But u rebelling against the mechanical style formerly so much in 
vogue in Germany, of indicating roundness of form by curved lines 

-'' ' right angles to the convexity, and in 



carried aa far as possible at right angles to 1 
substituting more or less longitudinal lines of 
• good deafo f the log ic of form-rendering, and 
has not been entirely s 



shading, he sacrificed 
started a method that 



In Germany the artistic standard is lower than in France. It is 
true that few outside Germany could model a head as finely aa M, 
Klinkicht in his own style of a judicious mingling of the black line 
and the white line; but, as a rule, German engraving is far more 
precise, more mechanical, more according to formula, and heavier 
and more old-fashioned than that of either France or America. The 
art has been injured by the great " studios " or factories designed to 
flourish on strictly business principles, workshops which, in ue edu- 
cation of the craftsman, to some extent annihilated the artist. A 
few there are, however, of great ability and taste. The attempt to 
print wood engravings in colours has done little to improve the status 
of the art. In other countries, however, M original ,r work helped to 
raise the standard. Thus the work of Etbndge Kingsley, who would 
sit down in the woods and engrave the scene before him directly on 
to the block, exercised no little influence in America. The similar 
ability of Lepere to engrave directly from nature, whether from the 
trees of Fontainebleau Forest or the palace of Westminster, has in 
its time been much appreciated in bis own country and in England. 
The efforts at block-printing by Charpentier and others^ not only with 
colour, but by reinforcing it with blocks that print neither lines nor 
colour but " blind " pattern, raised or d epr e ss ed upon the paper, are 
evidence of the movement by which new methods have been sought 
to interest the public. The immediate results have not been very 
serious, yet the fact shows the existence of a vitality that gives some 
hope for the future. But while the practice of dry-printing upon 
" surface paper " is maintained, it is hopeless to expect in the im- 
mediate future* in Great Britain at least, any permanently good 
results from orthodox wood engraving. 

See the works cited under Engraving; and also J. Jackson, 
Treatise on Wood-Engraving (1839) ; Didot's Essai sur Vhtstotre de la 
gravure sur bots (1863); W7 S. Baker, American Engravers and their 
Work (Philadelphia. 1875); L Jackson and W. A. ChattOj, Treatise on 
Wood-Engraving (Chatto, 18" 



l); P.^G. Hamerton, The Graphic Arts 

(Seeley, 1882) ; W.J. Linton, History of Wood-Engraving in America 
(Chatto, 1882); G. E. Woodberry, History of Wood-Engravtng 
fc. Low, 1883); Sir W. M. Conway, The Wood-cutters of Ike Nether- 
lands iss the 15th century. (Cambridge Press, 1884); W.J Linton. 
Wood-Engraving (G. BeD & Sons, London, 1884) ; Or F. Oppmann. 
Wood-Engraving in Italy in the ifth century (Quaritch, 1888) , John 
Ruskin, Ariadne Florentina (Allen, 1890); W. J. Linton, The 
Masters of Wood-Engraving: folio, issued to subscribers only 
(London, Stevens, Charing Cross, 1889 and 189s) ; P. G. Hamerton, 
Drawing and Engraving (A.& C. Black, 1 892), an extended reprint 
of the article on " Engraving " in the 9th edition of the Encyclo- 
paedia Britannica; Louis Fagan, History of Engraving in England 
(text and three portfolios of plates) (Low, 1 893-1894); George and 
Edward Dalziel, The Daletel Brothers: a record of ko year s r work, 
1848-1809 (Methuen, 1901). (P. G. H. ; M. H. S.) 

WOODFALL, HENRY SAMPSON (1739-1805), English printer 
and journalist, was bom in London on the 21st of June 1739. 
His father, Henry Woodfall, was the printer of the newspaper 
the Public Advertiser, and the author of the ballad Darby and 
Joan, for which his son's employer, John Darby, and his wife, 
were the originals. H. S. Woodfall was apprenticed to his father, 
and at the age of nineteen took over the control of the Public 
Advertiser. In it appeared the famous letters of "Junius." 
Woodfall sold his interest in the Public Advertiser in 1793. He 
died on the 12th of December 1805. His younger brother, 
William Woodfall (1746-1803), also a journalist, established 
in 1789 a daily paper called the Diary ; in which, for the first time, 
reports of the parliamentary debates were published on the 
morning after they had taken place. 

WOODFORD, an urban district in the Walthamstow (S.W.) 
parliamentary division of Essex, England, 9 m. N.E. from 
Liverpool Street station, London, by a branch of the Great 
Eastern railway. Pop. (1001) 13,798. Its proximity to the 
southern outskirts of Epping Forest has brought it into f avow 
both with residents and with holiday visitors from London. 
A converted mansion, Woodford Hall, forms a convalescent 
home. On high ground to the N. is the errlrtisstifil parish 
(one of three) of Woodford Wells, where there is a mineral 



WOOD GREEK, aa urban district in the Tottenham parifcv 
mentary division of Middlesex, England, suburban to London, 
7 m. N. of St Paul's Cathedral, on the Great Northern railway. 
Pop. (1891) *S»33!,(*9oi) 34,»33- The name covers a populous 
residential district lying north of Hornsey and west of Tottenham. 
To the west lies Muswdl Hill, with the grounds and building 
of the Alexandra Palace, an establishment somewhat similar 
to the Crystal Palace. It was opened in 1873, destroyed by 
fire almost immediately, and reopened in 1875. Muswell Hill 



802 



WOOD-LOUSE—WOODPECKER 



took name from a holy well, of high repute for curative powers, 
over which an oratory was erected early in the 12th century, 
attached to the priory of St John of Jerusalem in ClerkcnwclL 

WOOD-LOUSE, a name commonly applied to certain terres- 
trial Crustacea of the order Isopoda (see Malacostkaca), which 
are found in damp places, under stones or dead leaves, or among 
decaying wood. They form the tribe Oniscoidea and are distin- 
guished from all other Isopoda by their habit of living on land 
and breathing air, and by a number of structural characters, 
such as the small size of the antennules and the absence of the 
mandibular pulp. As in most Isopods, the body is flattened, 
and consists of a head, seven thoracic segments which are always 
free, and six abdominal segments which may be free or fused. 
The " telson " is not separated from the last abdominal segment 
The bead bears a pair of sessile compound eyes as well as the 
minute antennules and the longer antennae. Bach of the seven 
thoracic segments carries a pair of walking legs. The appendages 
of the abdomen (with the exception of the last pair) are flat 
membranous plates and serve as organs of respiration. In 
many cases their outer branches have small cavities opening 
to the outside by slit-like apertures, and giving rise internally 
to a system of ramifying tubules filled with air. From their 
similarity to the air tubes or tracheae of insects and Other 
air-breathing Arthropods these tubules are known as " pseudo- 
tracheae." 

The female wood-louse carries her eggs, after they are extruded 
from the body, in a pouch or " marsupium " which covers the 
under surface of the thorax and is formed by overlapping plates 
attached to the bases of the first five pairs of legs. The young, 
on leaving this pouch, are like miniature adults except that they 
are without the last pair of legs. Like all Arthropoda, they cast 
their skin frequently during growth. As a rule the skin of the 
hinder half of the body is moulted some days before that of the 
front half, so that individuals in process of moulting have a 
very peculiar appearance. 

Some twenty-four specv i of wood-lice occur in the British Islands. 
Some, like the very common slit y- blue Forcellio scahtr f art practically 
cosmopolitan in their distribution, hiving 
bevn transported* probably by the uncon- 
scious agency of man f to nearly all parti of 
the globe. Equally common is ihc hn:-vn, 
yelW-spotled Qnistus tedtus. AnmtdMlidium 
ndgore Mting* to a group which have the 
powi-r of felling themselves up into a ball 
when touched and resemble* the mi] fi rede 
Ghmtris, It ^ was formerly em played in 
popular medicine as a ready-made pill. The 
largest British' species \§ Ligia octant f a, which 
frequents the sea-abort, just above high- 
waur mark, In many points of structure, 
Common Wood-louse, f or {ftttanre in the lung 1 , many-jointed 
Onucus asalus. antennae, it is intermedia te t a* it h in 
hal.iK between the truly terrestrial forms 
and their marine allies. 1 in ally, one of the most interesting spixies 
is the little, blind, and coluurkAA FLityarSktus kojfrfntnntt^gi, which 
lives as a guest or comnv =■■■ ■! in the nests of am*. [\\. "I. Ca.) 

WOODPECKER* a bird that pecks or picks holes in wood, 
and from this habit is commonly reputed to have its name; 
but it is in some parts of England also known as " Woodspeight " 
(erroneously written " Woodspite ") — the latter syllable being 
cognate with Ger. Speckt and Fr. Epeichc, possibly with Lat. 
Picus. 1 More than 300 species have been described, and they 
have been very variously grouped by systematists; but all 
admit that they form a very natural family Picidae of Coraciiform 

'The number of Englbh names, ancient and modern, by which 
these birds are known is very great, and even a bare list of them could 
not be here given. The Anglo-Saxon was kigpra or Asgere, and to 
this may plausibly be traced " hickwall." nowadays used in some 
parts of the country, and the older " hickway," corrupted first into 
highhaw," and, after its original meaning was lost, into " hewhole." 
which in North America has been still further corrupted into " high- 
hole " and more recently into " high-holder." Another set of names 
includes " whetile" and " woodwalc." which, different as they look, 
nave a common derivation perceptible in the intermediate form 
" witwale." The Mid. Eng. wodehake ( ■ wood hack) is another name 
apparently identical in meaning with that commonly applied to 
woodpecker. 




birds, their nearest allies being the toucans. They are generally 
of bright particoloured plumage, in which black, white, brown, 
olive, green, yellow, orange or scarlet/— the last commonly 
visible on some part of the head — mingled in varying proportions, 
and most often strongly contrasted with one another, appear; 
while the less conspicuous markings take the form of bars, 
spangles, tear-drops, arrow-heads or scales. . Woodpeckers 
inhabit most parts of the world, with the exception of Madagascar 
and the Australian Region, save Celebes and Flo res, but it 
may be worth stating that no member of the group is known 
to have occurred in Egypt. 

Of the three British species, the green woodpecker, Gecintu 
or Ptcus vindis, though almost unknown in Scotland or Ireland, 
is the commonest, frequenting wooded districts, and more often 
heard than seen, its laughing cry (whence the name " Yaffil " or 
" Yaffle," by which it is in many parts known), and undulating 
flight afford equally good means of recognition, even when it is 
not near enough for its colours to be discerned. About the size 
of a jay, its scarlet crown and bright yellow rump, added to its 
prevailing grass-green plumage, make it a sightly bird, and 
hence it often suffers at the hands of those who wish to keep 
its stuffed skin as an ornament. Besides the scarlet crown, 
the cock bird has a patch of the same colour running backward 
from the base of the lower mandible, a patch that in the hen is 
black.* Woodpeckers in general are very shy birds, and to 
observe the habits of the species is not easy. Its ways, however, 
are well worth watching, since the ease with which it mounts, 
almost always spirally, the vertical trunks and obbque arms* 
of trees as it searches the interstices of the bark for its food, 
flying off when it reaches the smaller or upper branches— cither 
to return to the base of the same tree and renew its course 
on a fresh line, or to begin upon another tree near by — and the 
care it shows in its close examination, will repay a patient 
observer. The nest almost always consists of a hole chiselled 
by the bird's strong beak, impelled by very powerful muscles, 
in the upright trunk or«arm of a tree, the opening being quite 
circular, and continued as a horizontal passage that reaches 
to the core, whence it is pierced downward for nearly a foot. 
There a chamber is hollowed out in which the eggs, often to the 
number of six, white, translucent and glossy, are laid with no 
bedding but a few chips that may have not been thrown out.* 
The young are not only hatched entirely naked, but seem to 
become fledged without any of the downy growth common to 
most birds. Their first plumage is dull in colour, and much 
marked beneath with bars, crescents and arrowheads. 

Of generally similar habits are the two other woodpeckers 
which inhabit Britain — the pied or greater spotted and the 
barred or lesser spotted woodpecker — Dcndrocopus major and 
D. minor — each of great beauty, from the contrasted white, 
blue-black and scarlet that enter into its plumage. Both of 
these birds have an extraordinary habit of causing by quickly- 
repeated blows of their beak on a branch, or even on a small 
bough, a vibrating noise, louder than that of a watchman's 
rattle, and enough to excite the attention of the most incurious. 
Though the pied woodpecker is a resident in Britain, its numbers 
receive a considerable accession nearly every autumn. 

'A patch of conspicuous colour, generally red, on this part b 
characteristic of very many woodpeckers, and careless writers often 
call it " mystacial, or some more barbarously " moustachial." 
Considering that moustaches spring from above the mouth, and have 
nothing to do with the mandible or lower jaw, no term could be more 
misleading. 

* It often happens that, just as the woodpecker's labours are over, 
a pair of starlings will take possession of the newly-bored hole, and, 
by conveying into it some nesting furniture, render it un6t for the 
rightful tenants, who thereby suffer ejectment, and have to begin 
all their trouble again. It has been stated of this and other wood- 
peckers that the chips made in cutting the hole are carefully removed 
by the birds to guard against their leading to the discovery of the 
nest. The present writer, however, had ample opportunity of ob- 
serving the contrary as regards this species and, to some extent, the 
pied woodpecker next to be mentioned, indeed there is no surer way 
of finding the nest of the green woodpecker than by scanning the 
ground in the presumed locality, for the tree which holds the nest is 
always recognizable by the chips scattered at its foot. 



WOODS, SIR A.— WOODSTOCK 



803 




The three spedes just mentioned are the only woodpeckers 
that inhabit Britain, though several others are mistakenly 
recorded as occurring hi the country—and especially the great 
black woodpecker, the Picus 
martins of Linnaeus, which 
must be regarded as the type 
of that genus. 1 This fine 
spedes considerably exceeds 
the green woodpecker in size, 
and except for its red cap is 
wholly black. It is chiefly an 
inhabitant of the fir forests of 
the Old World, from Lapland 
to Galida and across Siberia 
to Japan. In North America 
this species is replaced by 
Picus pUeatus, there generally 
known as the logoock, an 
equally fine species, but varie- 
gated with white; and farther 
to the southward occur two 
that are finer still, P. princi- 
palis, the ivory-bOled woodpeckerand P. imperial**. The Picinae 
indeed flourish in the New World, nearly one-half of the described 
species being American, but of the large number that inhabit 
Canada and the United States we can mention only a few. 

First of these is the Califomian woodpecker, MAanerpct for- 
mictoorus. which has been said to display an amount of providence 
beyond almost any other bird in the number of acorns it fixes tfehtly 
in holes which it makes in the bark of trees, and thus " a large 
pine forty or fifty feet high will present the appearance of being 
closely studded with brass nails, the heads only being visible." This 
is not done to furnish food in winter, for the spedes migrates, and 
only returns in spring to the forests where its supplies are laid 
up. It has been asserted that the acorns thus stored are always 
those which contain a maggot, and, bang fitted into the sockets pre- 
pared for them cup-end foremost, the enclosed insects are unable to 
escape, as they otherwise would, and are thus ready for consump- 
tion by the birds on their return from the south. But this state- 
ment oat again been contradicted, and, moreover, it is alleged that 
these woodpeckers follow their instinct so blindly that " they do not 
distinguish between an acorn and a pebble," so that they " fill up 
the hows they have drilled with so much labor, not only with acorns 
but occasionally with stones" (cf. Bawd, Brewer and Ridgway, 



Tram Csu&rMs« Ntbtrot History, vol. 
St.. "BiidV by pttateioa «f Maooflaa * 
Co., Lid. 

Lesser Spotted Woodpecker. 



The next North-American form deserving notice is the genus 
CclapUt, represented in the north and east by C. auraius, the eolden- 
winged woodpecker or flicker, in most parts of the country a familiar 
bird; but in the south and west replaced by the allied C. mexicanus, 
easily distinguishable among other characteristics by having the 
shafts of its quills red insteadof yellow. It is curious, however, that, 
in the valleys of the upper Missouri and Yellowstone rivers, where 
the range of the two kinds overlaps, birds are found presenting an 
extraordinary mixture of the otherwise distinctive features of each. 

Other North American forms are the downy and hairy wood- 
peckers, small birds with spotted black and white plumage, which are 
very valuable as destroyers of harmful grubs and borers; the red- 
headed woodpecker, a very handsome form with strongly contrasted 
red, black and white plumage, common west of the Alleghany 
Mountains; and the yellow-bellied woodpecker (" sapsucker ). 

Some other woodpeckers deserve especial notice — the Colaptes or 
Scroplex campestrU, which inhabits the treeless plains of Paraguay 
and La Plata; also die South* African woodpecker Ceocotaptes 
eiaaceus, which lives almost entirely on the ground or rocks, and picks 
a hole for its nest in the bank of a stream (Zoolotist, 1882, p. 208). 

The woodpeckers, together with the wrynecks ($.».). form a very 
natural division of scansorial birds with zygodactylous feet, and were 
regarded by T. H. Huxley as forming a distinct division of birds to 
which he gave the name CeUomorphae, whilst W. K. Parker separated 
them from all other birds as Saurognathae. (A. N ) 

WOODS, €IR ALBERT (18x6-1004), English herald, son of Sir 
William Woods, Gaiter king-of-arms from 1838 to his death in 
184s, was born 011 the 16th of April 1816. In 1838 he became 
a member of the chapter of the Heralds' College, of which he 
was appointed registrar in 1866. In i860 he was knighted and 
became Garter king-of-arms. In this capacity he was entrusted 

1 The expression Picns martins was by old writers used in a very 
general sense for all birds that climbed trees, not only woo dp etkei s . 
but for the nuthatch and t r ee-cre ep er (of*.) as well. The adjective 
martius loses all its significance if it be removed from Picus, as some 
even respectable authorities have separated it. 



with many missions to convey the order to foreign sovereigns; 
he was also registrar from 1878 of the orders of the Star of India 
and of the Indian Empire; and from 1869 was king-of-arms 
of the order of St Michael and St George. He officiated at the 
coronations, both of Queen Victoria and of King Edward VII., 
and his authority on questions of pr ec edence was unique. His 
later distinctions were K.C.B. (1807), K.C.M.G. (1809) and 
G .C.V. O. (1003). He died on the 7th of January 1004. 

WOODS, LEONARD (1774-1854), American theologian, was 
born at Princeton, Massachusetts, on the 19th of June 1774. He 
graduated at Harvard in 1706, and in 1708 was ordained pastor 
of the Congregational Church at West Newbury. He was 
prominent among the founders of Andover Theological Seminary, 
and was its first professor, occupying the chair of Christian theo- 
logy from 1808 to 1846, and being professor emeritus until his 
death in Andover on the 94th of August 1854. He helped to 
establish the American Tract Society, the American Education 
Society, the Temperance Society and the American Board of 
Commissioners for Foreign Missions. He was an orthodox 
Calvinist and an able dialectician. His principal works (5 vols., 
Andover, 1840*50) were Lectures on the Inspiration of the Scriptures 
<x8ao), Memoirs of American Missionaries (1833), Examination 
of the Doctrine of Perfection (1841), Lectures on Church Government 
(1843)1 and Lectures on Swedenborgianism (1846); he also wrote 
a History of Andover Seminary (1848), completed by his son. 

His son, Leonard Woods (1807-1878), was born in West 
Newbury, Mass., on the 24th of November 1807, and gradu- 
ated at Union College in 1827 and at Andover Theological 
Seminary in 1830. His translation of Georg Christian Knapp's 
Christian Theology (1831-1833) was long used as a text-book in 
American theological seminaries. He was assistant Hebrew 
instructor (1832-1833) at Andover, and having been licensed to 
preach by the Londonderry Presbytery in 1830 was ordained 
as an evangelist by the Third Presbytery of New York in 1833. 
In 1834-1837 he edited the newly-established Literary and 
Theological Review, in which he opposed the " New Haven " 
theology. After being professor of sacred literature in the 
Bangor Theological Seminary for three years, he was president 
of Bowdoin College from 1830 to 1866, and introduced there 
many important reforms. From June 1867 to September 1868 
Dr Woods worked in London and Paris for the Maine Historical 
Society, collecting materials for the early history of Maine; he 
induced J. G. Kohl of Bremen to prepare the first volume (1868) 
of the Historical Society's Documentary History, and he dis- 
covered a MS. of Hakluyt's Discourse on Western Planting, 
which was edited, partly with Woods's notes, by Charles Dean 
in 1877. He died in Boston on the 24th of December 1878. 
He was a remarkable linguist, conversationalist and orator, 
notable for his uncompromising independence, his opinion 
that the German reformation was a misfortune and that the 
reformation should have been within the church. 

See E. A. Park, Life and Character of Leonard Woods, Jr. (Andover, 
X880). 

Alva Woods (1794-1887), a nephew of the elder Leonard and 
the son of Abel Woods (x 765-1850), a Baptist preacher, graduated 
at Harvard in 1817 and at Andover Theological Seminary in 1821, 
and was ordained as a Baptist minister. In 1824-1828 he was 
professor of mathematics and natural philosophy at Brown 
University, acting as president in 1826-1827; in 1828-1831 
was president of Transylvania University, Lexington, Kentucky; 
and in 1831-1837 was president of the University of Alabama 
at Tuscaloosa, where he organized the Alabama Female 
Athenaeum. After 1839 he lived in Providence, R.I. 

WOODSTOCK, a town and port of entry of Oxford county, 
Ontario, Canada, 80 m. S.W. of Toronto by rail, on Cedar 
creek, the Thames river and the Grand Trunk and Canadian 
Pacific railways. Pop. (1001) 8833. It is in one of the best 
agricultural sections of the province, and has a large export 
trade in cheese, butter and farm produce. Organs, pianos and 
agricultural implements are manufactured. It contains a resi- 
dential school, under the control of the Baptist church, affiliated 
with McMaster University, Toronto. 



804 



WOODSTOCK— WOODWARD, S. 



WOODSTOCK, a market town and municipal borough in the 
Woodstock parliamentary division of Oxfordshire, England, 
7 aim. W.N.W. of London, the terminus (Blenheim and Wood- 
stock) of a branch of the Great Western railway. Pop. (ioox) 
1684. The little river Glyme, in a steep and picturesque valley, 
divides the town into New and Old Woodstock. The church of 
St Mary Magdalene, in New Woodstock, is of Norman date, 
but has additions in the later styles, and a west tower built in 
1 785. The town-hall was erected in 1766 after the designs of Sir 
William Chambers. The picturesque almshouses were erected 
in 1798 by Caroline, duchess of Marlborough. The town is 
dependent chiefly on. agriculture, but a manufacture of leather 
gloves (dating from the 16th century) is carried on. Wood- 
stock is governed by a mayor, 4 aldermen, and 12 councillors. 
Area, 156 acres. 

After the battle of Blenheim the manor of Woodstock was 
by Act 3 and 4 of Queen Anne, chap. 4, bestowed in perpetuity 
on John, duke of Marlborough. In 17 23 it was destroyed, being 
already ruinous, and the site levelled after the erection of 
Blenheim House, a princely mansion erected by Parliament for 
the duke of Marlborough in consideration of his military services, 
and especially his decisive victory at Blenheim. The sum of 
£500,000 was voted for the purchase of the manor and the 
erection of the building, a huge pile built by Sir John Vanbrugh 
(q.v.), in a heavy Italo-Corinthian style. The greater part of the 
art treasures and curios were sold in 1886, and the great library 
collected by Charles Spencer, earl of Sunderland, the son-in-law 
of the first duke of Marlborough, in 1881. The magnificent park 
contains Fair Rosamund's well, near which stood her bower. 
On the summit of a hill stands a column commemorating the 
duke. Blenheim Park forms a separate parish. 

Domesday describes Woodstock {Wodestock, WodestoV, Wode- 
stok) as a royal forest; it was a royal seat from early times and 
vEthelred is said to have held a council there, and Henry I. to 
have kept a menagerie in the park. Woodstock was the scene 
of Henry II.'s courtship of Rosamund Clifford (" Fair Rosa- 
mund ")• It was a favourite royal residence until the Civil War, 
when the manor house was " almost totally destroyed." 

In the Hundred Rous of 1279 Woodstock is described as a vill, but 
a burgess is alluded to in the same document, and it returned two 
members to parliament as a borough in 1302 and 1305. A mayor of 
Woodstock was witness to a deed in 1398, but the earliest known 
charter of incorporation was that from Henry VI. in 1453, establish- 
ing the vill of New Woodstock a free borough, with a merchant gild 
and the same liberties and customs as New Windsor; and incorporat- 
ing the burgesses under the title of the " Mayor and Commonalty of the 
Vfll of New Woodstock." The mayor and a serjeant-at-mace were 
to be elected by the commonalty, and an independent borough court 
was established for the trial of all civil actions and criminal offences. 
The borough was also exempted from the burden of sending repre- 
sentatives to parliament, but it again returned two members in 1553 
and then regularly from 1570 until 188 1, when the representation 
was reduced to one member. In 188$ the borough was dis- 
franchised. The charter of Henry VI. was confirmed by Henry VI I., 
Edward VI. and Elizabeth, but before 1580, when an ordinance was 
drawn up for the government of the borough, the corporation had 
considerably developed, including a high steward, recorder, mayor, 
6 aldermen, 90 common councillors, a town clerk and a crier of the 
court ; and the new charter granted by Charles II. in 1665 did little 
more than confirm this corporation. The hamlet of Old Woodstock 
is said to have been founded by Henry L, and was never included 
within the borough. The existing Tuesday market is stated in the 
Hundred Rolls of 1279 to have been granted by Henry II. and the 
St Matthew's fair by John. The latter was confirmed tn 1453, with 
the addition of a fair at the feast of St Mary Magdalen. Queen 
Elizabeth in 1565 granted to the mayor and commonalty a market on 
Friday, and two fairs of four days each at the feast of St Nicholas and 
Lady Day. 

Sec Rev. E. Marshall. Early History of Woodstock Manor (Oxford, 
1873); Adolphus Ballard, Chronicles of Royal Borough of Wood- 
stock', Victoria County History, Oxfordshire. 

WOODWARD, JOHN (166 5-1 728), English naturalist and 
geologist, was born in Derbyshire on the 1st of May 1665. At 
the age of sixteen he went to London, where he studied with 
Dr Peter Barwick, physician to Charles II. In 1692 be was 
appointed professor of physic in Gresham college. In 1693 he 
was elected F.R.S., in 1695 was made M.D. by Archbish6pv 
Tenison and also by Cambridge, and in 170a became F.R.C.P* 



While still a student he became Interested in botany and natural 
history, and during visits to Gloucestershire his attention was 
attracted by the fossils that are abundant in many parts of that 
county; and he began to form the great collection with which 
his name is associated. His views were set forth in An Essay 
toward a Natural History of the Earth and Terrestrial Bodies, 
especially Minerals, &c. (1695; and ed. 170a, 3rd ed. 1723). 
This was followed by Brief Instructions for making Observations 
in ail Parts of the World (1696). He was author also of An Attempt 
towards a Natural History of the Fossils of England (a vols., 1 7 28 
and 1739). In these works he showed that the stony surface of 
the earth was divided into strata, and that the enclosed shells 
were originally generated at sea; but his views of the method of 
formation of the rocks were entirely erroneous. In his elaborate 
Catalogue he described his rocks, minerals and fossils in a manner 
far in advance of the age. He died on the 25th of April 1728, 
and was buried in Westminster Abbey. 

By his will he directed that his personal estate and effects were 
to be sold, and that land of the yearly value of one hundred and 
fifty pounds was to be puchased and conveyed to the University 
of Cambridge. A lecturer was to be chosen, and paid £1 00 a year 
to read at least four lectures every year, on some one or other of 
the subjects treated of in his Natural History of the Earth. Hence 
arose the Woodwardian professorship of geology. To the same 
university he bequeathed his collection of English fossils, to be 
under the care of the lecturer, and these formed the nucleus of 
the Woodwardian museum at Cambridge. The specimens have 
since been removed to the new Sedgwick museum. 

A full account of Woodward's life and views and a portrait of him 
are given in the Life and Letters of the Rev. Adam Sedgwick, by J. W. 
Clark and T. McK. Hughes, where it is mentioned that his paper, read 
before the Royal Society in 1699, entitled Some Thoughts and Experi- 
ments concerning Vegetation, shows that the author should be 
ranked as a founder of experimental plant-physiology, for he was one 
of the first to employ the method of water-culture, and to make 
refined experiments for the investigation of plant-life." 

See also The Lines of the Professors of Gresham College, by John 
Ward (1740). 

WOODWARD, SAMUEL (1700-1838), English geologist and 
antiquary, was born at Norwich on the 3rd of October 1790. 
He was for the most part self-educated. Apprenticed in 2804 
to a manufacturer of camlets and bombazines, a taste for serious 
study was stimulated by his master, Alderman John Herring 
and by Joseph John Gurney. Becoming interested in geology and 
archaeology, he began to form the collection which after his death 
was purchased for the Norwich museum. In 1820 he obtained a 
clerkship in Gurney *s (afterwards Barclay's) bank at Norwich, 
and Hudson Gurney and Dawson Turner (of Yarmouth), both 
fellows of the Royal Society, encouraged his scientific work. 
He communicated to the Archaeologia articles on the round church 
towers of Norfolk, the Roman remains of the country, 8rc, and 
other papers on natural history and geology to the Mag. Nat. 
Hist, and Phil. Mag. He died at Norwich on the 14th of January 
1838. He was author of A Synoptical Table of British Organic 
Remains (1830), the first work of its kind in Britain; An Outline 
of the Geology of Norfolk (1833); and of two works issued post* 
humously, The Norfolk Topographer's Manual (184a) and The 
History and Antiquities of Norwich Castle (1847). 

His eldest son, Bernard Bolingbroke Woodward (18x6-1869), 
was librarian and keeper of the prints and drawings at Windsor 
Castle from i860 until his death. The second son, Samuel 
Pickworth Woodward (1821-1865), became in 1845 professor of 
geology and natural history in the Royal Agricultural College, 
Cirencester, and -in 1848 was appointed assistant in the depart- 
ment of geology and mineralogy in the British M useum. He was 
author of A Manual of the MoUusca (in three pans, 1851, 1853 
and 1856). 

S. P- Woodward's son, Horace Bolingbroke Woodward (b. 
2848), became in 2863 an assistant in the library of the Geological 
Society, and joined the Geological Survey in 2867, rising to be 
assistant-director. In 1893-2894 he was president of the 
Geologists' Association, and he published many important works 
on geology. Samuel Woodward's youngest son, Henry Woodward 



WOOL, WORSTED AND WOOLLEN MANUFACTURES 805 



(b. 183s) became assistant in the geological department of the 
British Museum in 1858, and in 1880 keeper of that depart- 
ment. He became F.R.S. in 1873, LL.D. (St Andrews) in 1878, 
president of the Geological Society of London (1804-1806), 
and was awarded the WoUaston medal of that society in 
1906. He published a Monograph of Iko British Fossil 
Crustacea, Order Merostomata (Palaeontograph. Soc 1866^ 
1878); A Monograph of Carboniferous Trilobitcs (Pal. Soc. 
1883-1884)1 and many articles in scientific journals. He was 
editor of the Geological Magauno from its commencement in 
1864. 

S«Me^lot^ofS.Wooo^rwd(withbl^)lio^^^)hy)in^mlw.^^o/* 
NaL Soc (1879). and of & P. Woodward (with portrait and biblio- 
graphy), Ibid. (i88a), by H. B. Woodward. 

WOOL, WORSTED AMD WOOLLEN MANUFACTURES. 
Wool it a modified form of hair, distinguished by its slender, 
soft and wavy or curly structure, and,, as seen under the micro- 
scope, by its highly imbricated or serrated surface. At what 
point an animal fibre ceases to be hair and becomes wool it is 
impossible to determine, because the one by imperceptible 
gradations merges into the other, so that a continuous chain can 
be formed from the finest and softest merino to the rigid bristles 
of the wild boar. Thus the fine soft wool of the Australian 
merino merges into the cross-bred of New Zealand; the cross- 
bred of New Zealand merges into the long English and lustre wool, 
which in turn merges into alpaca and mohair-materials with 
dearly marked but undeveloped scale structure. • Again, such 
animals as the camel and the Cashmere goat yield fibres, which 
it would perhaps be difficult to class rigidly as either wool 
or hair. 

Wool is one of the most important of the textile fibres. Owing 
to the ease with which it may be spun into thread, and the com- 
fort derived from clothing made of wool, it would 
JrtJaT naturally be one of the first textile* used by mankind 
for clothing. Ancient records prove the high antiquity 
of wool textures and the early importance of the sheep. The 
different kinds of wool and the cloth made from them in antiquity 
are described by Pliny and referred to by other writers, and among 
the aits which the British Isles owe to the Romans not the 
least important is the spinning and weaving of wooL The sheep 
certainly was a domestic animal in Britain long before the period 
of the Roman occupation; and it is probable that some use was 
made of sheep skins and of wool. But the Romans established a 
wool factory whence the occupying army was supplied with cloth- 
ing, and the value of the manufacture was soon recognized by the 
Britons, of whom Tacitus remarks, " Inde etiam habitus nostri 
honor et frequens toga " (Agric. c 21). The product of the 
Winchester looms soon established a reputation abroad, it being 
remarked that " the wool of Britain is often spun so fine that it is 
in a manner comparable to the spider's thread." This reputation 
was maintained throughout the middle ages, and the fibre was 
in great demand in the Low Countries and othci continental 
centres. There are many allusions to woollen manufactures in 
England in early times; but the native industry could not rival 
the products of the continent, although the troubles in various 
industrial centres, from time to time, caused skilled workers in 
wool to seek an asylum in England. In the time of William 
the Conqueror Flemish weavers settled under the protection of 
the queen at Carlisle, but subsequently they were removed to 
Pembrokeshire. At various subsequent periods there were 
further immigrations of skilled Flemish weavers, who were 
planted at different places throughout the country. The doth 
fair in the church yard of the priory of St Bartholomew was 
instituted by Henry II.; gilds of weavers were established; and 
the exclusive privilege of exporting woollen cloth was granted 
to the city of London. Edward III. made special efforts to 
encourage wool industries. He brought weavers, dyers and 
fullers from Flanders; be himself wore British cloth; but to 
stimulate native industry he prohibited, under pain of life and 
limb, the exportation of English wool. Previous to this time 
English wool had been in large demand on the continent, where 
ft had a reputation exceeded only by the wool of Spain. The 



customs duties levied on the export of wool were' an important 
source of the royal revenue. Edward HL's prohibitory law 
was, however, found to be unworkable, and the utmost that both 
he and his successors were able to effect was to hamper toe export 
trade by vexatious restrictions and to encourage much smuggling 
of wool. Thus while Edward IIL limited the right of exporting 
to merchant strangers, Edward IV. decreed that no alien should 
export wool and that denizens should export it only to Calais. 
Legislation of this kind prevailed till the reign of Elizabeth, when 
the free exportation of English wool was permitted; and Smith, 
in his Memoirs of Wool, points out that it was during this reign 
that the manufacture made the most rapid progress. In 1660 
the absolute prohibition of the export of wool was again decreed , 
and it was not till 1825 that this law was finally repealed. The 
results of the prohibitory law were exceedingly detrimental; the 
production of wool far exceeded the consumption; the price of 
the raw material fell; wool-" running ".or smuggling became 
an organized traffic; and the whole Industry became disorganized. 
Extraordinary expedients were resorted to for stimulating the 
demand for woollen manufactures, among .which was an act 
passed in the reign of Charles IL decreeing that all dead bodies 
should be buried in woollen shrouds— -an enactment which 
remained in the Statute Book, if not in force, for a period of 1 so 
years. On the opening up of the colonies, every effort was made 
to encourage the use of English cloth, and the manufacture was 
discouraged and even prohibited in Ireland* 

It was not without reason that the attention of monarchs and 
legislators was so frequently directed to the wool industries. 
Wool was indeed " the flower and strength* and revenue and 
blood of England," and till the development of the cotton trade, 
towards the end of the x8th century, the wool industries were, 
beyond comparison, the most important sources of wealth in the 
country. Towards the dose of the 17th century the wool 
produced in England was estimated to be worth £2,000,000 
yearly, furnishing £8,000,000 worth of manufactured goods, ol 
which there was exported about £2,000,000 in value. In 1700 
the official value of woollen goods exported was about £3,000,000, 
and in the third quarter of the century the exports bad increased 
in value by about £500,000 only. In x 7 74 Dr Campbril {Political 
Survey of Great Britain) estimated^ the number of sheep in 
England at 10,000,000 or 12,000,000, the value of the wool 
produced yearly at £3,000,000, the manufactured products at 
£13,000,000, and the exports at £3,000,000 to £4,000,000. He 
also reckoned that the industry then gave employment to 
1,000,000 persons. These figures, in the light of the dimension* 
of present-day industries, may appear small, but they bore A 
predominant relationship to the other great sources of employ- 
ment and trade of the period. In 1800 the native crop of wool 
was estimated to amount to 06,000,000 lb; and, import duty 
not being imposed till x8oa, the quantity brought from abroad 
was 8,600,000 lb, 6,000,000 1b of which came from Spain. In' 
1825 the importation of colonial wool became free, the duty 
leviable having been tor several previous years aa high as 6d« 
per lb, and in 1844 the duty was finally remitted on foreign wool 
also. 

Sheep were introduced at Jamestown in Virginia in 1609, and 
in 1633 the animals were first brought to Boston, Ten years 
latef a fulling mill was erected at Rowley, Mass., 
" by Mr Rowley's people, who were the first that set 
upon making doth in this western world." The 
factory woollen industry was, however, not established tiU th* 
dose of the x8th century, and it is recorded that the first 
carding machine put in operation in the United States was 
constructed in 1704 tinder the supervision ol John and Arthur 
Schofield. 

For centuries the finer wools used for doth-maldrig throughout 
Europe had been obtained from Spain— the home of the famous 
merino breed developed from races of sheep originally M . 
introduced into the Peninsula by the Moon. Till «** 
early in the 19th century the superiority of Spanish 
merinos remained unchallenged, but the Peninsular War and its 
attendant evils produced a depredation of quality concunsoUy 



806 WOOL, WORSTED AND WOOLLEN MANUFACTURES 



Woo/ la 



with the introduction of Saxon and Silesian wools, which suddenly 
supplanted the product of Spain. The Spanish merino sheep 
had been introduced into Saxony by the elector in 1765, and by 
judicious crossing with the best native race developed the famous 
electoral breed. Merinos were carried to Hungary in 1775, and to 
France in 1776, and in 1786 Daubenton brought them to Ram- 
bouillet, whence a famous race developed. In 1802 the first 
merinos known to have left pure descendants were taken to the 
United States, and in 1 809-1810 an importation (4000) of merino 
sheep was made. 

The introduction of the merino sheep into the United States 
was an important move, but its results are not to be compared 
with the results of the introduction of the merino sheep 
jl°H into Australasia about the end of the 18th century and 
«Eu Into South America a little later. It is probable that 
the marked improvement in the appearance of the first 
sheep taken out by the early colonists suggested the possibilities 
of Australia as a wool-growing country. As has been noted 
above, marked endeavours were being made at this time to extend 
the merino breed of sheep, so that it was but natural that this 
breed should be given the first chance. That marked 
success did not attend the first endeavours is shown 
by the fact that the London Colonial Wool Sales 
originated in the necessity of selling Australian wools just for 
what they would bring under the hammer, as distinct from the 
private treaty method of selling and buying the more highly 
priced continental merinos. It should here be noted that the 
Australian fine wools were first shipped from Botany Bay, hence 
the now universal term " botany " for fine wools. The colonists 
were not to be repressed however, and eventually, through the 
endeavours of Captain MacArtHur, Sir J. Banks, the Rev. 
Samuel Marsden and others, the merino breed became established 
on a firm basis, and in a comparatively short time Australian 
wools were no longer a drug on the market. The evolution was 
not to stop, however, with the development of merino flocks and 
the exporting of merino wooL No doubt early in the 19th century 
the possibilities of raising larger sheep on the better coastal 
pasturage was naturally suggested. Until about 1885 this 
tendency was largely repressed owing to the demand for merino 
as distinct from cross-bred wool. In other words wool was the 
dominating factor. But with the possibilities and the develop- 
ment of the frozen meat trade from 1880 to 1890 this condition 
was changed, and the tendency to breed a large sheep with a 
valuable carcass and mediocre wool grew apace. New Zealand 
was specially adapted for this development; thus New Zealand 
frozen mutton completely dominated New Zealand wool. In 
this manner it came about that cross-bred wool supplanted merino 
wool to a very considerable extent throughout Australasia. 
This change would have been serious for the woq| comber and 
spinner had not the Bradford combers, spinners and manu- 
facturers put their shoulder to the wheel and developed a world- 
wide renown for their cross-bred tops, yarns and fabrics. Again 
the change was not altogether for the bad so far as the Australian 
sheep was concerned. Sheep-breeding developed into a real 
science, and remarkable results were obtained with such crosses 
as Merino-Lincoln, Merino-Leicester, Merino-Shropshire; all 
probably originating in the first place in the desire to produce 
a large-bodied early-fattening sheep, but later developing into a 
strenuous endeavour to develop more useful types of wools. 
Thus the wool produced from the first cross Merino-Lincoln 
might be very defective judged from a pure merino stand- 
point, but by breeding back to the merino practically none of 
the useful merino characteristics were sacrificed, while length 
of staple was added and the weight of the fleece perhaps 
doubled. 

A somewhat different evolution has taken place In later years 
with reference to the interior sheep stations. The merino sheep 
will thrive where a larger sheep would starve, hence its value 
for the stations where salt-bush dominates all vegetation. But. 
the merino sheep is a " wool " sheep, not a " frozen mutton n 
sheep, hence all crossing here was carried out with the idea of 
' "doping the weight of fleece and if possible retaining 



the merino wool characteristics. The most marked develop- 
ment in this direction was effected by the introduction of the 
United States merino or Vermont breed. Opinions differ as to 
the wisdom of this introduction. The weight of fleece carried per 
sheep has been remarkably increased, and the fact that up to the 
present weight multiplied by price per lb paid In London, or 
elsewhere has been entirely in favour of first and second cross 
Vermonts, has undoubtedly influenced breeders in its favour 
Against this must be placed the fact that the Australian-Vermont 
merino cross produces a sheep of unstable physique, naturally 
unable to withstand drought, and — worst of all so far as London 
is concerned — producing a fleece very difficult to judge for yield 
of pure scoured wool. Again, the Australian- Vermont first cross 
is very liable to produce a very strong botany wool, while what 
is required is a long but fine wool technically termed a long and 
shafty 6o's to 64's quality. 

Hardly second in importance to Australia as a wool-growing 
country comes South America, or more correctly Argentina along 
with Patagonia, Punta Arenas and the Falkland 
Islands. In most years Australia has produced the 32* 
greater bulk, but just occasionally S. America has come inuii» 
out top and is likely to do so more frequently m the 
future owing to the remarkable developments there taking place. 
The history of the introduction of the merino sheep into S. 
America may be briefly summed up as follows. In 1842 Henri 
Solanet, a Frenchman, began to shear the comparatively few 
sheep round Buenos Aires. His example was soon followed by 
Edouardo Olivera and Jose" Planer. The idea almost at once 
came to these pioneers of importing well-bred rams, and as S. 
America is essentially a Latin country it was but natural that the 
French flocks of RambouiUet should be first drawn upon. With 
the development of the meat trade— just as in the case of Australia 
and New Zealand — a larger carcass was then sought after. 
This led to the introduction of the Lincoln ram and the develop- 
ment of cross-bred flocks about the year 1885. Perhaps this 
cross was favoured owing to the skill of the Bradford spinners, 
who made excellent use of the cross-bred wool produced. Flocks 
of sheep were first introduced into the Falkland Islands in 1867. 
The pasturage here being limited, the flocks have probably 
attained their limit, but from the Falkland Islands flocks have 
been passed on. to Punta Arenas, where there is practically un- 
limited pasturage. The chief centres from whkh wool from S. 
America comes to Europe arc Buenos Aires, which exports chiefly 
long and cross-bred wools, Montevideo, which exports chiefly 
merino wools, and the Falkland Islands and Punta Arenas, which 
export mostly wools of the finer type. The industry is largely in 
the hands of Englishmen. Unfortunately, however, the British 
manufacturer early took a dislike to the Buenos Aires, fix., wools, 
and consequently these wools go largely to the continent of 
Europe. To-day they by no means merit their previous bad 
name, and the Bradford comber and spinner are endeavouring 
to make up for lost opportunities. 

Prior to the introduction of the merino sheep into Australia it 
had been introduced into S. Africa by the Dutch. There the 
climate was not so helpful as was that of Australia. 
The newly acclimatized sheep appears to have cast its 23* 1 * 
wool at about the fifth generation and to have generally a***. 
deteriorated, necessitating the rcintroduction of fresh 
blood form Europe. In this manner have been developed the 
Cape flocks and the considerable Cape wool trade— largely 
centred at Port Elizabeth, East London, Cape Town, Mossd 
Bay and Port Natal. The country is evidently specially adapted 
for the rearing of the merino type of sheep, as cross-bred Cape 
wool is practically unknown. The term snow-white Cape wool, on 
the other hand, betokens a quality of whiteness no doubt due 
to the atmospheric and pasturage conditions. Cape wools are 
also known as non-fclting wools, and consequently are largely 
employed in the manufacture of flannels. In 1007 most marked 
endeavours were being made to develop the Cape flocks by the 
introduction of some thousands of Australian merino sheep. 
The opinion of wool experts was that the Cape had a great future 
before it as a wool-producing country. 



WOOL, WORSTED AND WOOLLEN MANUFACTURES 807 



Large quantities of woo! dso come from the East and from 
Russia, while even Iceland contributes its quota. It is interesting 

to note that, notwithstanding all the developments in- 
JJjJJ etanced, Europe still maintains its supremacy as the 
wfifci. chief wool-producing continent, though, as the wool 

is largely manufactured locally, one hears little of 
European wools. 

The following statistics rive an idea of the development of the 
colonial and foreign wool trade as gauged by the " 



wool sales: 

1S14 
1824 

«»34 
1840 
1850 



Bales. 

165 

i,6ao 

16,926 



1870 
1890 
1901 
1903 



14091666 
1,602,726 
■419465 



It must not be forgotten, however, that a large quantity of S. 
American, W. Indian, Russian, &c, wools, along with mohair and 
alpaca, come through Liverpool, and consequently are not taken 
into account here. 

With reference to wools grown in the United Kingdom the 
truth seems to be that a fine short wool has never been produced. 
n<<Mfci English wool is known the world over as being of a long 
r fl fr and lustrous type, which was doubtless that so much in 
demand in the middle ages. That it was as long and 
lustrous as the typical Leicester or Lincoln of to-day is doubtful, 
as the new Leicester breed of sheep was only fully developed 
by Mr Bakewell after the year 1747, and the latter day Lincoln 
was even a later development of a similar character. What the 
exact type of English wool or wools was prior to the 18th century 
will probably never be decided, but from the closing years of 
that century there is no difficulty in being fairly precise. As 
already remarked, the long and lustrous wools are the typical 
English, being grown in Lincolnshire, Yorkshire, Nottingham- 
shire, Devonshire, &c, in fact in all those districts where the 
pasturage is rich and specially fitted for carrying a heavy sheep. 
It is claimed that the lustre upon the wool is a direct result of 
the environment, and that to take a Lincoln sheep into Norfolk 
means the loss of the lustre. This is partially true, but it is 
perhaps better to take a larger view and remember that the 
two influencing factors are race and environment: which fs 
the more potent it is impossible to say. Attempts were made In 
the 1 8th century to develop a fine wool breed in England, 
George IV. importing a number of merino sheep from Spain. 
The discovery was soon made that it was impossible to maintain 
a breed of pure merinos in Great Britain, but the final outcome 
was by no means unsatisfactory. By crossing with the in- 
digenons sheep a race of fairly fine woolled sheep was developed, 
of which the present day representative is the Southdown— 
a^ sheep which feeds naturally on the Downs of Sussex, &c, 
forming a marked contrast to the artificially turnip-fed Lincoln, 
Leicester, &c, sheep. Following the short, curly Southdown, but 
rather longer, come such as the Sussex, Oxford and Hampshire 
Down sheep; these are followed by such as the Shropshires and 
Shropshire crosses, Kent and Romney Marsh, until at last the 
chain from the Southdown to the Lincoln is completed. Of 
course there are several British wools not included in this chain. 
Scotch or black-face wool is long and rough, but well adapted 
for being spun into carpet yams. Welsh wool has the peculiarity 
of carry attaining its limit of shrinkage when washed, and 
hence is specially chosen for flannels. Shetland wool is of a soft 
nature specially suited for knitting yarns, while Cheviot wool- 
said to be a cross between merino sheep saved from the wreck of 
the Great Armada and the native Cheviot sheep—has made the 
reputation of the Scottish manufacturers for tweeds. North 
wool— wool from an animal of the Border Leicester and Cheviot 
breed— Ripon, Wensleydale and Teasdale wools are also specially 
noted as lustre wools, Ripon and Wensleydale wools being, by 
many judges, considered superior solar as lustre is concerned to 
Lincoln and Leicester. 

Such remarkable advances have been made in the weights of 
ieeces carried by sheep of particular breeds that it Is difficult to 



The following list gives average 



Breed. 



Breed. 


Weight of 
Average Fleece. 


Southdown . 


6aS 


Lincoln . . 


12 lb 


Shetland 


4& 


Cashmere 


dor. 



say if finality has been reached. 

weights: 

Weight of 
Average Fleece 
Merino (Australian) 6 tt> 
Merino (South 

American) ... 6| lb 
Merino-Lincoln 8-10 lb 

In 1885 the average weight of wool per sheep per year was about 
5 ft), while 7 to 8 lb is now the average weight. Roughly speaking 
the weights of Australian fleeces are to-day about double as compared 
with 1885. 

' The prevailing colour of sheep's wool is white, but there 89 
races with buck, brown, fawn, yellow and grey shades of wool 
For manufacturing purposes generally white wool is, rij,«,f 
of course, most valuable, but for the homespuns, which cfrawtsr* 
in earlier times absorbed the bulk of wool, natural JJJJ** 
colours were in many cases used with good effect. In arM ^ 
domestic spinning, knitting, and weaving, natural colours axe 
still largely taken advantage of, as in the cases of rough yarns, 
Shetland knitted shawls, Highland tweeds, Ac 

As has already been indicated, the distinction between' wool 
and hair lies chiefly in the great fineness, softness, and waved 
delicacy of woollen fibre, combined with a highly serrated surface. 
These peculiarities are precisely the characters which give wool its 
distinctive value as a textile fibre, the most distinctive character- 
istic of all being the serrated structure which specially belongs to 
wool and markedly aids the important property of felting, upon 
which many of its applications depend. The serrations of wool and 
the wavy structure it assumes are closely connected, those wools 
which have the greatest number of serrations being usually 
most finely waved in structure. The- appearance presented by 
wool under the microscope is shown fin figs. 1-6 (Plate). Under 
the influence of moisture and pressure, aided by alkalis or adds, 
masses of wool thoroughly mat together, by the mutual inter- 
locking of the fibres. It is thus that the shrinking and thickening 
of woollen textures under washing is accounted for, the capacity 
of wool doth for felting or fulling being due to this condition of 
the fibre, possibly along with a certain shrinkage of the true fibre 
mass. The serrations are most numerous, acute, pointed and 
distinct in fine merino wools, as many as 28c© per in. being 
counted in specimens of the finest Saxony wools. In the Leicester 
wool of England, on the other hand, which is a long bright staple, 
the scrratures are not only much fewer in number, counting about 
1800, but they are also leas pronounced in character, so that the 
fibre presents a smoother, less waved character. In some inferior 
wools the serrations are not so many as 500 per in. A similar 
difference may be noted in the fineness of the fibres. The finest 
wool has a diameter of from y&fj to rsVr in., whilst coarse 
Algerian wools may rise to a maximum diameter of about tV» In- 
Other distinguishing qualities of good wool consist in uni- 
formity and strength of fibre with freedom from tender or weak 
portions in its length, a condition which not unirequenUy arises 
from ill health in the sheep, or is due to violent climatic changes. 
In ill-bred wool there may also be found intermingled ■* kemps " 
or dead hairs— straight, coarse, dull fibres which show con- 
spicuously among the wool, and become even more prominent 
in the manufactured and dyed goods, as they will not take dye. 
Wool also possesses a softness of touch and an elasticity both in 
the raw and manufactured condition which distinguish it from 
all other fibres. In length of staple it varies very much, attaining 
in combing wools to a length of as much as 15 to 20 in. 

In dealing with wool from a practical point of view ft must 
be recognized that it is by no means a simple body, but has a 
somewhat complex physical structure. Its composi- riiwssf 
Hon in the raw state may be said to be threefold. «* * ■ ■' ■' 
Thus there is the wool-yolk— what may be termed a JJJJ* 
natural impurity; the wool-fat, which is not only 
present in the yolk but also permeates the fibre and seems to 
give it its plastic and soft handle; and the cell structure proper 
of the fibre. The natural impurity or wool-yolk is truly a skin 
product and is a protector of the wool-fibre rather than part of the 
true fibre substance. The wool-fat also may be regarded as 



8o8 WOOL, WORSTED AND WOOLLEN MANUFACTURES 



independent of the tine fibrous substance, but it is well to 
recognize that if the wool-fibre be entirely freed from the wool-fat 
it loses its plastic and elastic nature and is considerably damaged. 
In cleansing wool the true fibre mass may be disturbed and 
partially destroyed not only by dry bat also by " wet " heat, 
and may be entirely disintegrated by means of alkalies, &c, 
with heat. The wool-fibre will almost free itself from the natural 
impurities— the yolk—in the presence of tepid water. This is 
taken advantage of in the various steeping machine* placed on 
the market, which partially scour the wool by means of its own 
yolk— principally through the potash salts present. 

According to Hummel the composition of the average wool-yolk 
is as follows:— 



Moisture 
Yolk . 



?3*l 



Dirt . . 
Wool-fibre. 



. 15 .. 72% 



The potash salts are usually recovered from the wash-water 
products and a marked economy thereby effected. 

The natural wool-fat — popularly known as " lanoline ** — may be 
partially got rid of in the steeping process, but it is almost invariably 
necessary to free the wool still further from it by actually scouring 
the woof on either the " emulsion " or " solvent method, in either 
case the action beine largely physical. As previously pointed out, 
however, all the wool-fat must not be taken away from the fibre, or 
the fibre will lose its " nature." According to Dr Bowman, the 
chemical composition of the cell structure oftbe average wool-fibre 
ist— 

Carbon 50-8 

Hydrogen 7*3 

Nitrogen 18*5 

~ *i-a 

a-3 



It Is said to be a most complex body of which the probable formula 
laC«H«N.SQ».. . 

If wool is burnt, it largely resolves itself into ammonia gas— whence 
it derives its characteristic odour — and carbon "beads" or "re- 
mains," which serve to distinguish wool from cotton, which, upon 
being burnt, does not smoulder but burns with a flash and leaves no 
beads. For further particulars on the organic nature of the wool- 
fibre see Fibres. 

The bulk of the wool of commerce comes into the market in the 

form of fleece wool, the product of a single year's growth, cut from 

the body of the living animal. The first and finest dip, 

"" called lambs' wool, may be taken from the young sheep at 

about the age of eight months. When the animal is not 

shorn till it attains the age of twelve or fourteen months 



Hogg mad 
Wstasr 



**** the wool n known as hose or hogget, and, like lambs' 
wool, is fine and tapers to a point. All subsequently cut fleeces are 
known as wether wool, and possess relatively somewhat less value 
than the first clip. Fleece wool as it comes into the market is " in 
the grease/* that is, unwashed, and with all the dirt which gathers to 
the surface of the greasy wool present ; or it is received as " washed " 
wool, the washing being done as a preliminary to the sheep-shearing, 
or, in some few cases, it is scoured and is consequently stated as 
*' scoured." Skin wool is that which is obtained from sheep which 
either die or are killed. Typical skin wool is that which has been 
removed by a sweating process. The worst type of skin wool — 
technically known as " shoe " — is removed from the skins by lime, 
which naturally affects the handle of the wool and renders it difficult 
to bring into a workable condition later. Mazamet in France is the 
great continental centre for skin wools. 

Where there is abundance of water and other conveniences it is 
the practice to wash or half-wash sheep previous to shearing, and 
such wool comes into the market as washed or half- 
washed fleece. The surface of a fleece has usually a thick 
coating of dirt, and in the case of merino breeds the fleece 
surface is firmly caked together into solid masses, from the adhesion 
of dirt to the wool constantly moist with the exudation from the skin 
of the greasy yolk or " suint," so that in an unwashed very greasy 
fleece 30% of weight may represent dirt, and about 40% the greasy 
suint which lubricates the wool, while the pure wool is not more than 
one-third part of the whole. Where running streams exist, the sheep 
are penned by the side of the water, and taken one by one and held in 
the stream while they are washed, one man holding and the other 
washing. The operation is objectionable in many ways, as it pollutes 
the stream, and it dissipates no mean amount of potash salts, valuable 
for manure or for other chemical purposes. Sheep washing appliances 
are now largely employed, the ar r a n g e m ent consisting of a pen into 



which the sheep are driven and subjected to a strong spray of water 
either hot or cold, which soaks the fleece and softens the dirt. This 
done, they are caused to swim along a tank which narrows towards 
the exit, and just as they pass out of the pen they are caught and 
subjected to a strong douche of pure water. They should then be kept 



on grass land free from straw, sand, &c so that the wool may be 
sheared free from vegetable matter, &c After a few days the wool 
of a washed sheep is sufficiently dry for shearing or clipping. 

The relative advantages of shipping wool in the greasy or washed 
state have been fiercely debated. Although there are naturally 
exceptions, the superiority of greasy wool is now generally recognized. 
This is not only because the wool more fully retains its nature, but 
because it is more readily fudged for "yield" and its spinning 



75} 

80 f 



8' 



qualities are, t r , 

The following list gives an idea of the yield in clean wool of the 
chief commercial varieties, from which it will be noted that roughly 
merino greasy wool yields about 50% clean wool and English about 
75% clean wooL 

Type of WooL Yield per cent of 

Clean WooL 

Australian Merino . . . 

Cape „ . . . 

South American Merino . 

New Zealand Cross-bred . 

South American Cross-bred 

English Southdown . . 
„ Shropshire . . 
,, Lincoln . . . 

Mohair 

Alpaca ..,.,, 
A skilful shearer will dip the fleece from a sheep in one unbrdken 
continuous sheet, retaining the form and relative positions of the 
mass almost as if the creature had been skinned.' In this ntm 
unbroken condition each fleece is rolled up by itself and l*3s«m 
tied with its own wool, which greatly facilitates the sorting - 

or stapling which all wool undergoes for the separation oTthe several 
qualities which make up the fleece. Mechanical shears have almost 
revolutionized the shearing industry, a good shearer shearing from 
100 to 3O0 sheep per day. 

On the great Australian sheep stations wool classing is one of the 
most important operations, largely taking the place of sorting in the 
English wool trade. This is no doubt due to the wonderful n , T , , r 
success which has attended the efforts of the Australian ^T .__ 
sheep breeders to breed a sheep of uniform staple through- «""™^ 
out. Thus the fleeces as taken from the sheep are skirted and 
trimmed on one table and then passed on to the classer, who places 
them in the 56's, 6o's, 64's, 70's, 80 sor 90'sdass according to their fine- 
ness, these numbers approximately indicating the worsted counts to 
which it is supposed they will spin. The shorter Australian woob not 
under any of these beads are classed assuperclothing, ordin- 
Jiing. &c, being more suitable for the woollen industry. 
art of sheep shearing, skirting, classing, packing and trans- 
porting has been brought up to a wonderful state of perfection in 
Australia, and the " get up of the wool is usually much superior to 
the " get up " of the home-clip." Of late there has been an outcry 
against the prevalence of vegetable matter in colonial wools, but it 
seems probable that with the adoption of a suitable woolpack, and 
the exercising of a little more care in sorting at the home end, this 
difficulty will be satisfactorily surmounted. 

Sorting or stapling was formerly a distinct industry* and to some 
extent it is so still, though frequently the work is done on the 
premises of the comber or spinner. Carding wools are 
separated and classed differently from combing wools t and 
in dealing with fleeces from different breeds, the classifica- 
tion of the sorter varies. In the woollen trade short-staple wool b 
separated into qualities, known, in descending series from the finest 
to the most worthless, as picklock, prime, choice, super, head* 
seconds, abb and breech, and the proportions in which the higher and 
lower qualities are present are determined by the " class™ of the 
fleece. In the worsted trade the clsssifiration goes, also in descending 
series, from fine, blue, neat, brown, breech, downright, seconds, 1 




of the animal. The quality decreases towards the tad end of the 
sheep, the *' britch " being frequently long, strong and irregular. 
The belly wool is short, worn and dirty, as is also the front of the 



ly wool is snort, worn and amy, as is also tne iront 01 the 

throat, while on the head and shins the product is short, stiff and 
straight, more like hair than wool and is liable to contain grey hairs. 
The colonial woob come " classed," and consequently are only as a 
rule sorted into three or four qualities. Thus a 60's fleece may be 
sorted into 56's, ordinary 6o's, super 60'a and skirtings. 

The sorter works at a table or frame covered with wire netting 
through which dust and dirt fall as he handles the wool Fleeces 
which have been hard packed in bales, especially if unwashed, go into 
dense hard masses, which may be heated till the softening of the yolk 
and the swelling of the fibres make them pliable and easily opened up. 
When the fleece is spread out the stapler first divides it into two equal 
sides; then he picks away all straws, large burrs, and tarry frag- 
ments which are visible; and then with marvellous precision and 
certainty he picks out his separate qualities, throwing each lot into 



WOOL, WORSTED AND WOOLLEN MANUFACTURES 809 



it* allotted receptacle. Sotting is very far removed from being a mere 
mechanical process of selecting and separating the wool from certain 
parts of the fleece, because in each individual fleece qualities and 
proportions differ, and it is only by long experience that a stapler is 
enabled, almost as it were by instinct, rightly to divide up his lots, 
so as to produce even qualities of saw material. Cleanliness is most 
essential if the wool sorter is to keep his health and not succumb to 
the dread disease known as " anthrax " or " wool-sorters' disease." 
Certain wools such as Person, Van mohair, Ac, are known to be very 
liable to cany the anthrax bacilli, and must be sorted under the con- 
ditions imposed by government for " dangerous wools." Ordinary or 
non-dangerous wools are perfectly harmless from this point of view. 

The washing which a fleece may have received on the live sheep 
ia not sufficient for the ordinary purposes of the manufacturer. 
On the careful and complete manner ia which scouring is 
effected much depends. The qualities of the fibre maybe 
seriously injured by injudicious treatment, while, if the 
wool is imperfectly cleansed, it will dye unevenly, and the manufactur- 
ing operations will be more or less unsatisfactory. The water used 
for scouring should be soft and pure, both to save soap and still more 
w.m. vv because the insoluble lime 

soap formed in dissolving 
soap in bard water is de- 
posited on the wool fibres 
and becomes so fixed that its 
removal is a matter of ex- 
treme difficulty. In former 
times stale urine was a 
favourite medium in which 
to scour, wool; but that is 
now a thing of the past, and 



a specially prepared potash 
soap is the detergent prin- 
cipally relied on. Excess of 
alkali has to be guarded 
against, since uncombined 
caustic acts energetically on 
the wool fibre— especially hi 
the presence of heat — and is 
indeed a solvent of it. A 
soap solution of too great 
strength leaves the wool 
harsh and brittle, and the 
same detrimental result 
arises when the soapy solu- 
tion is applied too hot. 

In former days, when the 
method of hand-scouring 
_, .... . 1^ t prevailed, the wool to be 

The numbers indicate the quality of hashed was placed with hot 
wool taken from the respective sections goao-aud in a large scouring 
of the fleece. Thus the finest quality 1. ^ w j •• «, ^ j^ ^ 
—44'a— isfound on the shoulders, while men ^j, i^g ,»!„ 1^ 
the coarsest bntch is found on the fining it gen^y about till 
bud-quarters of the sheep. t^ detergent loosened and 

separated the dirt and dis- 
sociated the grease. The wool was then lilted out and drained, after 
which it was rinsed in a current of dean water to remove the" scour " 
and then dried. These operations are now performed in scouring 
machines. Many firms now steep the wool previous to the true 
scouring operation, the object being to scour the wool with its own 
potash salts, to obtain wash-waters so fully charged with the potash 
salts that these salts, Ac, may be readily extracted and put to some 
good use, and lastly to save the artificial scouringagent employed in 
die true scouring operation. The scouring of wool has passed through 
sonny vicissitudes during the past fifty years, but to-day the principle 
upon which all scouring machines are based is that wool naturally 
opens out in water. The mechanical arrangementsof the machines 
are such as to ensure the passage of the wool without undue lifting 
and " stringing," to obviate the mixing of wool grease, sand, dirt, 
Ac, once taken out of the wool with that wool again, to give time for 
the thorough action of the scouring agents, so that neither too strong 
a solution nor too great a beat be employed, and to allow of the ready 
«4— .«..iff of the machines so that there is no unnecessary waste of 
time. In England the recognized type of merino wool-washing 
machine ia the fork-frame bowl. Three to five of these m a chi n es are 
employed. The " scour " is strongest and hottest in the first bowl 
(unless this ia used as a " steeper '0 as the wool at first it protected 
from the caustic by the wool-fat. Ac. present. The last bowl is 
abashr a rinsing bowL With modern M nip rollers " botany wool is 
wrficssatly dry to be passed on directly— say by pneumatic conveyers 
—to the carding. This the worsted spinner does, thereby saving 
time and money. The woollen spinner, however, may require the 
wool for blending* *«* ■» may require it dry and in a fit state for 
oiling. He, therefore, will employ one or other of the drying pro- 
cesses to be immediately described. For English and cross-bred 
wools more agitation in the scouring bath may be desirable. If so, 
the eccentric fork action machine b employed* in which the agitation 
of the bath is satisfactorily controlled by the setting of the forks 
which propel the wool forward. An average wool will be in the 




Fie. 7.— Qualities of Wool in a 
Lincoln Fleece. 



scouring liquor about eight minutes, the temper a ture will vary from 
120* F. to 1 10* F., and the length of bath through which it will have 

method of wool 



will be from 45* to 60 ft. 
It b interesting to note that the ' 



emulsion " 
scouring as described above b practically universal in England. In 
the United States of America the " solvent " method b largely in 
use, for the two points aimed at are quantity of production and 
cheapness. Quality is sacrificed to quantity and cheapness results 
from the ease with which the agent employed— say carbon disulphide 
—4s recovered by volatilising and condensing, thus being used over 
and over again. 

Botany wools should leave the wool-washing machine in a fit 
condition to be fed immediately on to the carder, provided that the 
first cylinders are clothed witii galvanized wire. Cross-bred and 
English wool, however, require artificially drying. 

The more gently and uniformly the drying can be effected the 
better is the result attained ; over-drying of wool has to be specially 
guarded against. By some manufacturers the wool from wol 
the squeezing rollers b whizzed in a hydro-extractor, «wawt 
which drives out so much of the moisture that the further 
drying b easily effected. The commonest way, however, of drying b 
to spread the wool as uniformly as possible over a framework of wire 
netting, under or over which b a range of steam-heated pipes. A 
fan blast blows air over these hot pipes, and the heated air passes up 
and is forced upwards through the layer of wool which rests on the 
netting or downwards, as the case may be. In thb case, unless the 
wool b spread with great evenness, it gets unequally dried, and at 
points where the hot air escapes freely it may be much over-dried. 
A more rapid and uniform result may be obtained by the use of the 
mechanical wool drier, a dose chamber divided into horizontal com- 
partments, the floors of which have alternate fixed and movable barm. 
Under the chamber b a tubular beating apparatus, and a fan by 
which a powerful current of heated air is blown up the side of the 
chamber, and through all the shelves or compartments successively, 
either following or opposing the wool in its passage through the 
machine. The wool is introduced by a continuous feed at one side 
of the chamber; the strength of the blast carries it up and deposits it 
on the upper shelf, and by the action of the movable bars, which are 
worked by cranks, it b carried forward to the opposite end, whence 
it drops to the next lower shelf, and so on it travels till at the ex- 
tremity of the lower shelf it passes out by the delivery lattice well 
and equally dried. Another drying machine in extensive use b 
what is known as the " Jumbo Dryer." Thb consists of a large 
revolving cylinder or churn which turns over the wool— as a churn 
turns butter — and owing to its inclination passes it from one end to 
the other. A hot air blast follows the wool through the machine. 
In thb and in all drying machines it b more important to get the 
moisture laden air away from the wool than to develop a great heat. 

The dried wool may be in a partially matted condition. If so, it 
must be opened out and the whole material brought into a uniformly 
free and loose condition. This b effected in the Willey, r«aa*« 
which consists of a large drum and three small cylinders w 

mounted in an enclosed frame. The drum b armed with ranges of 
powerful hooked teeth or spikes, and b geared to rotate with great 
rapidity, making about 500 revolutions per minute. The smaller 
cylinders, called workers, are also provided with strong spikes; they 
are mounted over the drum and revolve more slowly in a direction 
contrary to the drum, the spikes of which just dear those of the 
workers. The wool b fed into the drum, which carries it round with 
great velocity; but, as it passes on, the locks are caught by the spikes 
of the workers, and in the contest for possessing the wool the matted 
locks are torn asunder till the whole wool is delivered in a light, free 
and disentangled condition. It b a debatable point as to whether 
willowing should precede scouring. Some scourers always willow 
prior to scouring, while others never subject the wool to thb opera- 
tion, which b advantageous in some cases and not in others. 

Far certain classes of wool, notably Buenos Aires, still another 
preparing operation is essential at this stage— that is, the removal 
of burrs or small persistently adherent seeds and other Bmrrtam. 
fragments of vegetable matter which remain in the wool. 
Two methods of effecting thb— one chemical, the other mechanical—* 
may be pursued. The chemical treatment consists in steeping the 
wool in a dilute solution of sulphuric acid (or other carbonizing 
agent), draining off the dilute add by means of the hydro exti actor, 
and then beat-drying in a t em p e ra ture of about 250* F. The acid 
leaves the wool practically uninjured, but b concentrated on the 
more absorbent vegetable matter, and the high heat causes it to act 
so that the vegetable matter becomes completely carbonized. The 
burrs are then crushed and the wool washed in water rendered 
sufficiently alkaline to neutralize any free add which may remain, 
and dried- The same burr-removing effect b obtained by the use of a 
ion of chloride of aluminium, a method said to be safer for the 
and less hurtful to the attendant workmen than b the sulphuric 
For mechanical removing of burrs, a machine some- 



solution c 
wool and 



thing" like the Wiley in appearance is employed. The main feature of 
this apparatus is a large drum or swift armed with fine short spikes 



curved'slightly in the direction in which it rotates. By a series of 
beaters and circular brushes the wool b carried toand led on these 
short spikes, and in its rotation the burrs, owing to their weight, 
hang out from the swift. The swift as it travels round b met by a 



810 WOOL, WORSTED AND WOOLLEN MANUFACTURES 



•cries of three burring rollers rotating in an opposite direction, the 
projecting' rails of which knock the burrs off the wool. The burn 
tail on a grating and are ejected, with a certain amount of wool ad* 
hering to them, by another routing cylinder. With wools not too 
burry the worsted spinner largely depends upon burring rollers 
placed upon the first cylinder of the " carder," and possibly to one 
or other of the patent pulverizing proc es s es applied further on in the 
card. In the latter process a complete pulverizing of the burrs is 
aimed at, this being effected by the introduction of specially con- 
structed pulverizing rollers between the first doffer and the last swift 
of the carding engine. 

The processes hitherto de scri be d are-common to merino, cross-bred 
or botany wools be they intended for woollen or worsted yarns. 
From this point, however, differentiation starts. Wool 
may now be manipulated with the idea of converting it 
into felt ($.».), woollen or worsted fabrics. In a general 
way it may be said that woollen yarns are those made from 
short wools possessed of high felting qualities, which are prepared by 
the process of carding; whereby the fibres are as far as possible 
crossed and interlaced with each other, and that the carded-slivers, 
though perhaps hard spun on the mule frame, form a light fluffy 
yarn, which suits the conditions when woven into cloth tor being 
brought into the semi-felted condition by milling which is the dis- 
tinguishing characteristic of woollen cloth. On the other hand, 
worsted yarns are generally made from the long lustrous varieties of 
wool; the fibres are so combed as to bring them as far as possible 
parallel to each other; the spinning is usually effected on the frame, 
and the yarn is spun into a compact, smooth and level thread, which, 
when woven into cloth, is not necessarily milled or felted. At all 
points, however, woollen and worsted yarns as thus defined overlap 
each other, some woollens being made from 
longer wool than certain worsteds, and 
some worsteds made from short staple 
wool, carded as well as combed. Worsted 
yarn is now largely spun on the mule frame, 
while milling or felting is a process done in 
all d egr e es woollen being sometimes not 
at all milled, while to some worsteds a 
certain milled finish is given. The fun- 
damental distinction between the two rests 
in the crossing and interlacing of the *J 
fibres in preparing woollen yarn— an M 
operation confined to this alone among all 
textiles, while for worsted yarn the fibres 
are treated, as in the case of all other 
textile materials, by pr oc esses designed to 
bring them into a smooth parallel relation- 
ship to each other. 

To obtain a sliver which can be satis- 
factorily span into a typical woollen thread 
m,,,*.. the following operations are 
~~^ iiecessary:wtQowing. oiling and 
JJJJL blending, teasing, carding (two 
T~T~" or three operations), condensing and roving. Spinning 
naan * upon the woollen mule completes the series of operations 
all of which are designed to lead up to the desired result. Of 
the foregoing operations the carding is perhaps the most important 
as it is certainly one of the most interesting. At the same time it most 
be fully realized that deficiencies in any one of these operations will 
result in bad work at every subsequent process. For example, let an 
unsatisfactory combination of materials be blended together and 
there will be trouble in both carding and spinning. The roving opera- 
tion included above is not always necessary. In the old days, if a 
really fine thread were required, roving was absolutely necessary, as 
the carder could not turn off a sliver fine enough to be spun at 



ling of v 
to obtain a cheap Mend which may be spun into a satisfactory warp 
or weft yarn. The blender proceeds as follows: first a layer of No. I 
material— say wool — is spread over the required area on the floor; it 
is then lightly oiled. A layer of No. 2 material — say noils — is now 
added to the first layer; then another layer of wool with rather more 
oiling; then No. 2, then No. 1 with still more oil until all the material 
is budt up into layers in the stack. The suck b now beaten down 
sideways with sticks, and then the more or less mixed mass is passed 
through the willow and fearnaught still further to mix it prior to 
carding, where the true and really fine mixing takes place. After 
passing through the fearnaught the material is sheeted and left to 
" mellow," this no doubt consisting in the oil applied distributing 
itself throughout the material. It wool and cotton are blended 
together the wool must be oiled first, or the blend will not work to the 
greatest advantage. The oil may be best Gallipoli olive oil— which 
should not turn rancid— but there are many good oils — and un- 
fortunately many bad oils—placed on the market at a reasonable 
rate which the really skilled judge may use to advantage. The per- 
cenuge of oil varies from 2 % to 10 %■— this remark applies both to 
the woollen and worsted trades— and there is no guide as to the 
amount required, saving and excepting experience, observation and 
common sense. Automatic oiling arrangements have been applied 
in the woollen trade with only a moderate amount of success, the 
sprinkling of the oil by means of a watering-can on the stack, made 
as described above, still being most in favour. The oil serves to 
lubricate the fibres, and to render them more plastic and consequently 
more workable, and to bind the fibrous mass together and thus pre- 
vent " fly " during the passage through the cards. 
Carding was originally effected by hand, two flat boards with con- 




operation. To-day, however, with the " Upe 

stivers can be turned off the condenser that there b no difficulty in 
% directly to the required count. In some few cases, h o we ver. 



cloth constructor. 

At the beginning of the 19th century woollen cloths were made of 
woo l some of them of the very finest wool obuinable. To-day 
woollen cloths are made from any and every kind of 
material, of which the following are the most important: 
noils (botany, cross-bred, English, alpaca and mohair), 
mungo, shoddy, extract, flocks, fud (short null waste), 
cotton sweeping, silk waste. &c, Ac; in fact it b said that anything 
which has two ends to it can be incorporated into a woollen thread 
and doth. It does not follow, however, that all woollen doth b 
cheap and nasty. On the contrary the west of England still pro- 
duces the finest woollen fabrics of really marvellous texture and 
beauty, and Batley. Dewsbury, Ac, produce many fabrics which are 
certainty cheap and yet anything but nasty. The first essent ial for 
blending b that the materials to be bjended should be fairly finely 
divided. This b effected by passing each material, if necessary, 
through the willow or through the " fearnaught "—a machine coming 
between the willow and card— prior to beginning the " blend-stack." 
'nay be that a blending of different colours of wools to 
. « -j~. t mixture ' b necessary, more often it will 



Flo. 8.— Sectional View of Carder; illustrating the principles of carding. 



venient handles, covere d with teeth or card clothing, serving as a 
means of teasing out lock by lock, fibre by fibre, reversing root to tip 
and tip to root, so that a perfect mixing of the fibres re- f, , lltAl , 
suited. It was but natural that, whenan attempt was made u 

to render the carding operation more mechanical, the operation should 
be converted into a continuous one through the adoption of rollers 
in place of flats. Flats combined with rollers still maintain their 
position in cotton carding, but in wool carding the pure roller card b 
employed. The factors of carding are sue of rollers, speeds of 
rollers, inclination of teeth and density of card clothing. Probably 
no operation in the textile industries b so little understood as carding. 
Thus the long wool carder would think a man an idiot who suggested 
the running of the teeth of the various cylinders actually into one 
,whil. • ■ ■ '■ • * .. .. 



ifle the short mungo carder regularly carries out this idea, 
and so on. The underlying principle of canting, however, » shown in 
fig. 8, in which a sectional drawing of pact of a card b given. The 
wool b carried into the machine on a travelling lattice and de- 
livered to the feed rollers A, A', A* of which A and A* in torn am 
stripped by tbelicker-in B working at a greater speed point to smooth 



side. Thb in turn b stripped by the angle stripper c again 1 
at d greater speed point to smooth side, which in its 
by the swift D— the 



iter speed point to smooth side, which in its torn-b 1 
swift D— the " carrying-forward " and swiftest carding 
cylinder in the machine. The swift carries the wool forward past 
the stripper E— ■which as a matter of fact b stripped by the swift 
still working point to smooth side— into the dowry retreating 
teeth of the first worker F, which, being set a fair distance from 
the swift, just allows well laid-down wool to pass, but catches 
any projecting and uncarded staples. The worker in its turn b 
stripped by the stripper E', which in turn b s u i p ped by die swift as 
already described. The passage of the wool forward through the 
machine depends upon its being carried past each worker in turn. 
Thus from beginning to end of a machine the workers are set closer 
and closer to the swift, so that the bat worker only allows com* 
pfetdy carded wool to pass it. Immediateh/ on passing the Isst 
worker F' the wool b brushed up on the surface of the swift by the 
" fancy " G— as a rule the only cylinder whose teeth actuaUy work 
into the teeth of the swift and the only cylinder with a ants 
surface speed than the swift. The swift then throws its brushed- 



WOOL, WORSTED AND 



ND WOOLLENS 



Plate I. 



ooattaff of wool into the slowly retreating teeth el the <MU* « 
which carries it forward until angle stripper C strips the dofkr.*,** * 
in hs turn stripped by swift D' and so on. The speeds of the cyWj^ 
are in the first place obviously dependent upon the principle >A % ' 
carding adopted, the greater speed always stripping (save in the ca* i ?*L~ 
of the fancy). As to whether the speed shall be obtained by actual I £ ' 

ions or by a larger diameter of cylinder depends upon the I •*£/"' 



revolutions „ „ . — r r ^ 

nature of the wool to be carded (long or short), the part which each 
cylinder has to play in the card, and upon the question of wear 
of clothing and power consumed, As a rule the strippers are all 
driven from a smaller circumference of the swift to obtain conveni- 
ently the necessary reduction in speed, and the slowly revolving 
workers are chain driven from the doffer, which indirectly receives 
its motion from the swift. The principles involved m the relative 
inclinations of teeth are very apparent, but the principle* involved 
in the relative densities of teeth on the respective cylinders are again 
much involved and little understood. 

A complete scribbler or first card engine consists of a breast, or 
•mall swift, and two swifts with the accompanying workers, strippers, 
fancies, doffers, Ac. The wool is stripped from this card as a thin 
film by means of the doffing comb. This Is usually weighed on* to the 
next machine— whether intermediate or condenser-^a given weight 
giving a definite count of condensed sliver. Should an Intermediate 
be employed, there must be an automatic feed, taking the wool, as 
stripped from the last doffer of the intermediate, and feeding it 
perfectly evenly on to the feed sheet of the condenser. The con- 
denser is usually a one-swifted card, the only difference in principle 
being that, .whereas the sliver comes out of the scribbler or inter- 
mediate in one broad film, it is broken up into a number of small 
continuous slivers or films, each one of which will ultimately be 
drafted or drawn out and twisted into a more or less perfect thread. 
These slivers — which are delicate and pith-like in substance — are 
wound on to light bobbins, and these bobbins are placed on the mule 
for the final roving and spinning operations. There are many forms 
of condensing mechanisms such as the single-doffer, the double- 
doffer and the tape-condensers, but their construction is too complex 
to be described here. Whatever the type may be, the result is that 
noted above, but it should be noted that the tape enables a much 
finer sliver to be taken from the card than is possible with either the 
single- or double-doffer condenser. 

TThe principles involved in mule spinning are comparatively simple, 
but the necessary machinery is very complex; indeed it it question- 
„ A able it a more ingenious machine than the mule exists. 

*T* The pith-like slivers received from the card-loom must be 

•J 1 ** - ** attenuated until the correct count of yarn is obtained; 
they most be twisted while this attenuation or drafting is in process, 
otherwise they would at once break; and after being attenuated to 
the required finenessthe requisite number of turns must be inserted. 
Great stress must be laid on the effects of what is termed the " draft- 
ing-twist " noted above; it is probably this simultaneous drafting 
and twisting which develops the most pronounced characteristics 
of the woollen yarn and cloth, and differentiates it entirely from the 




Fig. 9.— Sectional View of the Woollen Mule, 
worsted yarn and cloth. The mule (see fig. 9) consists of the de- 
livery cylinders A, upon which the sliver bobbins B from the con- 
denser are placed, which deliver the slivers as required to the front 
delivery rollers C (these rollers controlling perfectly the delivery 
of sliver for each stretch of the carriage), and the carriage EE 
carrying the spindles which may be run close up to the front de- 
livery rollers and about two yards away from them to effect the 
" spin, " which is of an intermittent character. The spindles D are 
turned by bands passing round a tin drum K In the carriage, but 
this motion, and trv^ry other motion in the mule, is controlled 
perfectly from the hcadsrock. In brief, the operation of spinning is 
as follows: as the carriage begins to recede from the delivery rollers 
these rollers deliver condensed sliver at about the same rate as the 
carriage moves out, the spindles putting in a little twist. When the 
carriage has perhaps completed half its traverse (say 36*) away from 
the front rollers these suddenly stop delivering the condensed sliver, 
the carriage goes more and more slowly outwards until it completes 
its traverse, drafting the sliver out to perhaps double the length. 
This drafting could not be effected but for the " drafting-twist, " 
which, running into the thin parts of the yarn during drafting. 



tW*c^ * 
now rut., „ '.' 

details which requSZ, 
spindles, for cxamoU , 
And when all the B&J- * 
the necessity of correct iu+Ll''' 
hand, for in this case tJrE!^ " 
must be adjusted ~hESft$ 





Fic. 10. — Plan and Section of a Preparing Box (Sheeter). 



A i» the back-shaft receiving its motion from the driving shaft 
upon which are the pulleys. This back-shaft A drives the back- 
rollers B at a slow speed by the reducing train of wheels C; also the 
front rollers D at a much quicker speed through the train of wheels E, 
and the fallers F at an intermediary speed by means of the levels and 
screws G. G. The wool is " made up " on the feed sheet and on 
emerging from the front rollers is built up layer by layer into the lap 
H, which is finally broken across and feeds up at the next machine. 

The yarn as delivered by the mule is " single " and will serve as 
warp or weft for the great bulk of woollen cloths, warp being as a 
rule twisted harder than weft. Sometimes for strength, sometimes 
for colour, however, it will be necessary to twist two or more of thoe 
single strands together. This is best effected on a twisting frame of 
the ring type, which consists of delivery rollers, to deliver a specified 
length of yarn in relationship to the turns of the spindles, and the 
spindles, which serve to put in twist and to wind the yarn upon the 
bobbin or tube, which they carry by reason of the retarding action 
of the traveller. Fancy twists such as knops, loops, slubs, &c, may 
also be produced if the frame is fitted op with two pairs of delivery 
rollers and two or three special but simple appliances. 

The essential feature of a worsted yarn is straightness of fibre. 
Prior to the introduction of automatic machinery there was little 
difficulty in attaining this characteristic, as long wool was ^ ^ 
Invariably employedand the sliver was made up by hand "T"""** 
and then twisted. With the introduction of Arkwright's mmumm 
" water frame " or " throstle " the necessity for prepared § aetmn , 
slivers became apparent, and with the later introduction 
of cap and mule spinning the necessity for perfectly prepared slivers 
has been so accentuated that the preparatory machinery has quite 



8 12 WOOL, WORSTED AND WOOLLEN MANUFACTURES 

exceeded the actual spinning machine in extent and complexity. I scour the sfivera again, this being effected in what is termed a bade- 
To-day there arc three distinct methods of producing worsted yarn. I washing machine. This machine as shown in fig. n usually consist! 







FiC. ii.— Sectional View of Back-washer. 

A are the delivering rollers, B, B are the immersing rollers in the first tank, C, C are the press rollers to squeeze out superfluous liquors. 
D is the immersing roller in the second tank, and C, C are the press rollers for the second tank. Dryingcylinden fc to E" may be 
arranged as " Hvc-hcat " cylinders, as secondary heated cylinders or as air drying cylinders. The roller T directs the slivers into the 
back rollers G of the gill-box, which in turn delivers up the slivers to the fallen H, which in turn delivers the wool to the front rollers I. 

Firstly, there is the preparing and spinning of the true worsted | of two scouring tanks with immersing rollers, drying cylinders, a 

thread, this being made from long English and colonial wool. In ' gill-box and oiling motion. The slivers on emerging from this machine 

this class should also be included mohair and 

alpaca. Secondly, there is the preparing and 

spinning of what are known as cross-bred and 

botany yarns, these being made from cross-bred 

and botany wools. Thirdly, there is the preparing 

and spinning of short botany wools on the Fncnch 

system. There is a fourth class of worsted yarns, 

principally carpet and knitting yarns, which are 

treated in a much readier manner than any of the 

foregoing, but as the treatment is analogous — with 

the elimination of certain processes — to the second 

of the foregoing, it is not necessary to refer specially 

to it. 

To obtain a sliver or *' roving " which can be 
satisfactorily spun into a typical worsted thread the 
following operations are necessary. — preparing (five 
or six operations), back- washing, straightening, 
combing, straightening and drawing (say six opera- 
tions), and finally spinning on the flyer frame. 

After long wool has been scoured and dried it is 
necessarily considerably entangled, and if it were to 




be combed straight away a large propor- 
tion of the long fibres would be broken 

and combed out as " noil " or short fibre. To 

obviate this the wool is fed as straight as pos- 
sible into a sheeter gill-box; after this it passes 

through other two sheeter gill-boxes, then through 

say three can gill-boxes. As shown in fig. 10 the 

main features of a preparing or gill-box are the 

following: the feed sheet upon which the wool is 

" made up," the back rollers B which take hold of 

the wool and deliver it to the fallen F which, work- 
ing away from the back rollers more quickly than 

the wool is delivered, comb it out. The fallen in 

turn deliver the wool to the front rotten D, which, 

taking in the wool more quickly than the fallen 

delivering it, again draft and comb it, but with a 

reversing of the former combing operation. The wool 

emerges from the front rollers as thin attenuated 

continuous fibre about 12 in*-widc, which is wound 

upon an endless leather sheet H from which the box 

takes its name. When a sliver of sufficient thickness 

has been wqund upon the sheet, it is broken across 

and fed up at the next gill-box. The fourth gill- 
box delivers into cans instead of on to a sheet. A 

number of cans are then placed behind the fifth box 

and the sliven from these fed upinto the back rollers, 

and similarly with the sixth. The primary object of 

** preparing or gilling n to straighten and parallelise 

the fibres in the sliver. This is effected by means 

of the combining or doubling and drafting to which 

the sliven are subjected. In addition to this, how- 
ever, a level sliver suitable for combing is formed by a, A is the large comb circle and B, B' the two small comb circles. The slivers are 

the combined action of the drafting and doubling delivered by the mechanism C to the feed boxes D, being thrown across the pins of 

which has taken place at each box. the large and small circles at position E. A stroke at F suitably directs the fringes of 

OU wiU have been added to the wool at the first fibre as the circles separate and the combed fibres are taken hold of by drawingoff 

prcparing-box to cause the fibres to work well, roilcn G and G' andcombined to form the " top." The brushes H. Hand the noil 

Back* !?_ cre w w . '• ™ >e l re T^J T*™*f* ™°* knives I clear the small circles of the " noiL" The feed knife J in conjunction with 

•Mlaf *£ *™ rwcessity for back-washing But the inclined planes at K are instrumental in feeding a previously directed length of 
the sliven during their passage through sliver over the two circles as they practically touch one another at the point E, and so 

the nrepanng-boxes become sullied naturally, and the process is continued. 

in addition, owing to the opening out of the 

locks of wool, dirt which was not " got at *' in the scouring now works I should be clean, fairly straight and in good condition for combing. 

out and further sullies the slivers. It is consequently necessary to I Their condition may be further improved by passing them through 



WOOL, WORSTED, AND WOOLLENS 



Plate I. 




Plate II 



WOOL, WORSTED, AND WOOLLENS 




I 



S 



S c 

f .1 



.2P x 






8 



tJ a 



c 

esj o 

a *• 



to 



WOOL, WORSTED AND WOOLLEN MANUFACTURES 813 



ooe or two more gill-boxes, prior to combing , to ensure ctraightness 
of fibre and even distribution of the lubricant. 

Prior to the mechanical era wool was combed immediately after 
scouring; there was no preparatory process. As a matter of fact 
the first combing process took the place of the processes 
just described and was termed " straightening," the 
" combing proper " following. Prior to the invention of a really 
satisfactory mechanical comb, between 1850 and i860, the combing 
operation was the limitation of the worsted trade. English wools 
could be satisfactorily combed by hand, and perhaps the result* of 
combing botany or fine wools by hand were satisfactory so far as 
quality of result was concerned, but the cost was largely prohibitive 
The history of the colonial wool trade is inextricably bound up with 
the combing industry How eventually botany wools were combed 
by machinery and how the wool industry was thereby revolutionized 
can only be briefly referred to here. About 1779 Dr Edmund Cart- 
wright invented two distinct types of combs, the vertical and the 
horaontal circular. The former type was developed on the conti- 
nent by Heilmann and others, and has only within the last five years 
taken its rightful place as a successful short wool comb in this 
country. The latter type was worked upon by Donisthorpe, Noble, 
Lister, the Holdens and others, and largely through the *' driving " 
force of lister (later Lord Masham) was made a truly practical 
success about the year 1850. Latter-day combs of this type may 
be readily grouped under three heads. * The Lister or " nip comb 
is specially suitable for long wools and mohair and alpaca. The 
Holden or square-motion comb is specially suited for snort and very 
good quality wools. The last type, the Noble, is the most popular of 
all and, by a change of large and small circles, may be adapted to the 
combing of long, medium or short wools. As the great bulk of cross- 
bred and a considerable proportion of botany wool is combed upon 
the Noble comb a brief description is here called for. The object of 
all wool combing is to straighten the long fibres and to comb out from 
the slivers treated all the fibres under a certain length, leaving the 
long fibres or " top " to form the silver which is eventually spun into 
the worsted yarn. The Noble comb, which so effectually accom- 
plishes this, consists in the main of a large revolving circle A inside 
which revolve two smaller circles B, B' as shown in fig. 12, each of 
which touches the larger comb circle at one point only. At this 
point the slivers of wool to be carded are firmly dabbed into the pins 
of both the large and small circles. As the circles continue to revolve 




Fig. 13.— Section of Wool Drawing Rouen. 
A, A' are the back-roller* in a drawing box of which A is positively 
driven and A' driven by friction which may be varied at will. 
Carriers B, B', B r simply control the fibres of which the sliver is 
composed during drafting. The front rollers C, C— of whkh C is 
positively driven and C r driven by friction — running at a greater 
speed than A. A' draft or elongate the slivers as required. The 
carriers B, B\ B' should be speeded to run at a suitable rate to assist 
the drafting operation, more Dy support than by direct aid. Rollers 
A, A' must hold the sliver, hence they are fluted. Rollers C, C must 
pull the sliver somewhat severely, hence roller C* is covered with 
leather. The yarn delivered by the front rollers is slightly twisted 
and wound into a double-headed bobbin of convenient sue on the 
" flyer-system.'* 

they naturally begin to separate, combing the wool fibres bet w een 
them, the short fibres or " noil " being retained in the teeth of both 
small and large circles, the long fibres hanging on the inside of the 
huge circle and on the outside of the small circle- A stroker or air 
XXvm 14 



blast at F now directs these long fibres into the vertical tollers, C 
and G', shown herein phut, whkh draw them out, thus separatingthem 
from the short fibres. There are at least four pairs of drawTng-on* 
rollers in a comb, and the fibres drawn off by each— be it noted 
continuously—are united to form a sliver which is passed through a 




Fie. 14.— Two-Spindle Drawing-Box. 

revolving funnel into a can. The short fibres, or " noQ," are lifted 
out of the pins of the small circle by "noil knives.** The continuous 
slivers, the ends of which remain in the pins of the large circle after 
the drawing-off rollers have been passed, are now lilted up until 
these ends are above the pins, at the same time an additional length 
of sliver being drawn into the comb, so that, as they reach the second 
small circle, they are ready to be again dabbed into the pins of both 
circles and the combing operation repeated. Thus the combing; on a 
Noble comb is absolutely continuous. Afl the movements of this 
machine— with the exception of the dabbing-brush motion— are 
circular, so that mechanically it is an almost perfect machine. As 
illustrating the extent of the combing industry, it is interesting to 
note that even the making of dabbing-brushes is a separate ana by 
no means unimportant trade. 

After combing h is usual to pass the " top " through two gill-boxes 
termed " finishers." The last of these boxes, and often the first, 
delivers the " top " in the form of a ball, thus it is often spoken of as 
a " balling gill-box.'' This stage marks one of the great divisions of 
the worsted trade, the comber taking the wool up to this point, but 
now handing it forward in the shape of top to the '* worsted spinner,'* 
who draws and spins the slivers into the most desirable wor st e d yarns. 

English tops are usually prepared for spaaing by seven or eight 

1 in gil-boxes of a 



operations. Three of these operations are effected in gil-1 
somewhat similar type to the prcparing-box, only lighta 
in build. The remaining four are drawing-boxes, \x. ai_ 
shown in figs. 13 and 14, they consist of back and front rollers with 
small carrying-rollers — not gills— to support the wool in between. 
Thus an English set of drawing usually consists of a single-can gill- 
box, a double-can gill-box, a two**ptndle gill-box, a four-spindle 
drawing-box, a four-spindle weigh-box, a sec-spindle drawing-box, 
two six-spindle finishers and three thirty-spindle rovers. About 
fifteen flyer frames of 160 spindles each will be required to follow this 
set, although the balance varies partly in accordance with the counts 
spun to, in this case 1/32*8 English being the standard. 

The object of drawing is to obtain firstly a level sliver from which 
an even thread may be spun, and secondly to reduce the compara- 
tively thick top down to a relatively thin roving from which the 
required count of yarn may be spun. Of course parallelism of fibres 
must be retained throughout, so far ss possible. To accomplish 
these objects doubling and drafting is resorted to. Thus the ends 
put up st the back of the above boxes will be 6, 6, 4, 4, 3, 3, 3 re- 
spectively, while the drafts may be 5, 6, 8, 8, 6,9, 9 s^prcodmately. 



8 1 4 WOOL, WORSTED AND WOOLLEN MANUFACTURES 



As the drafts markedly preponderate over the doublings, so in 
exactly this proportion will the sliver be reduced in thickness. 

The flyer spinning frame is very similar to the drawing fiame, 
consisting of back rollers, carriers and front rollers, with the necessary 
Sotoaio* spindle and flyer to put twist into the yarn and to wind it 
spmmag. upon ^ j X) j ) |jj n< F rora the two-spindle gill-box to the 
spinning frame the spindle, bobbin and flyer combination is em- 
ployed with the object just mentioned. From fig. 15 the action of 
this combination will be clearly understood. Drafting lakes place as 
usual between the back and front rollers, the carriers controlling the 
yarn between the two. On emerging 
from the front rollers the yarn usually 
passes through an eyelet, to centre it 
over the centre of the spindle, it then 
takes a turn or twu round the flyer leg. | 
through the rwitA- it v !..»t on the flyer 
and on to the bobbin F. The flyer may 
be freely routed by means of the wharl 
J and through the spindle C upon the 
top uj which it U screwed. The bobbin 
fits loosely over the spindle and rests 
upon the biter plate 1: this latter, being 
controlled by the lifter mechanism, 
slowly raises and lower-* the bobbin 
during the ■" spin " past the fixed plane 
of delivery ol the yarn, if. the eyelet of 
the revolving flvef. Now, if lor one 
moment it be considered ihat the bobbin 
may oat revolve on the spindle but may be 



the operation of carding. On first thought it might be imagined 
that carding would result in broken fibres and a poor yield of 

top. That this b not so is evident from the fact that there , ^__ 

b a tendency to card wools from 7 to 10 in. long, this i^T* °* 
tendency being due to the relative cheapness of carding —fr-T^ 
as compared with preparing. If long wools were fed directly 
on to a swift, no doubt serious breakage of fibre would 
occur, but it b customary to place before the first swift 
of a worsted card a series of four opening rollers and ' 
dividers — with their accompanying " burring rollers "—to open out 
the wool gradually, so that when it eventually reaches the first swift it 
b so opened out that further opening out instead of breakage occurs. 
Some carders use a breast or small swift in place of those opening 
rollers — mostly on account of economy The swift b usually sur- 
mounted with four workers and strippers and b very similar to the 
woollen carder, save that the workers and doffer are larger, thereby 
effecting more of a combing action and working economically by 
reason of the greater wearing surface brought into play As botany 
wool is usually brought directly from the wash bowl to the feed sheet 
ol t he card, it is usual to clothe the first cylinders with galvanized wire 
clothing. 

After the carding the wool b back-washed and gillcd — on similar 
lines to English wool—and then is ready for combing The largest 
combers of botany wools, Messrs Isaac Holden A Co., 
employ the square-motion comb, in fact this comb b 
known in the trade as the Holden comb. Other combers, 
however, almost without exception employ the Noble 
comb with a fine " set over," %Jt. fine spinning of the comb 
circles Alter combing, the tops are " finished " by being passed 



to 
Flc 15.— Section of 
Flyer Spindle. 

C, Care the front rollers 
of a drawing or spinning 
frame, delivering the sliver 
to a centring board D, con- 
taining an eye for each 
sliver, from which the 
sliver passes to the flyer E 
and finally to the bobbin 
F, which rests on the 
lifter-plate I and b tra- 
versed up and down by this 
plate according to the 
lengthof bobbineraployed. 
The flyer E is screwed on 
to the spindle G which 
b suitably held by the 
sheath, bolster, &c., shown 
at H, and in the footstep at 
K. The spindle b turned 
by a tape passing round 
the wharl J and thence to 
an ordinary tin-drum. 




Fig. 16.— Spindle Cone Drawing-Box. 



slid up and down by the lifter motion, then, if the front rollers deliver 
the necessary yarn, the flyer will wrap it in turcessive layers 1 >on 
the bobbin— but no twist will be inter u-d. On t he other hand, ii the 
bobbin b perfectly free upon the spindle and the front roller* cease 
delivering yarn, then the flyer, by roe*** of the yam, will pull the 
bobbin round at the same speed as it rocs itself, and the yarn will be 
twisted but not wound upon the bobbin. By obtaining an action in 
between these two extremes both twisting and winding 00 to the 
bobbin b effected. The speed of the bobbin i* suitably retarded by 
washers placed between it and the lifter plate, so that it just drags 
sufficiently to wind up the yarn " paid out " by the front rollers. 
The turns per inch are inproportion to the yarn delivered and the 
revolutions of the flyer. Thus if, while 1 in. of yarn it delivered, the 
flyer revolves twelve times the turns per inch will be approximately 
twelve. This in brief b the theory ol the spindle, flyer and bobbin 
action, 
v Wools not more than 7 in. long are usually prepared for combing by 



through two finisher-boxes, the last of which " balls " the tops ready 
for marketing. 

Short wools are drawn and spun on very similar lines to the longer 
wools, save that the boxes arc more in number and are in some cases 
lighter in build. The boxes usually employed in a botany . . 
set are as follows: two double-head can gill-boxes, two ^f* ** 
two-spindle gill-boxes, a four-spindle drawing-box, a six- mm f_ . 
spindle weigh-box, an eight -spindle dra wing-box.twoeight- **■■■■> 
spindle finishing-boxes, two twenty-four-spindle second finishers, 
three thirty -t wo-spindlc dandy reducers, ten thirty-two-spindle dandy 
rovers, with ten two-hundred-spindle cap spinners to follow. 

The doublings as a rule are about 7, 6. 6, 6, 5, 5, 5, 4, 4. 2 and the 
drafts 5, 6, 6, 7, 7, 7, 8, 8, 8 at the respective boxes, an endeavour as a 
rule being made to obtain a roving of which 40 yds, -r2 drams, as this 
is the most convenient sue for being spun into fine botany count of 
yarn 

Following the lead of the cotton trade endeavours have been made 



WOOL, WORSTED AND WOOLLEN MANUFACTURES 815 



to positively control the driving and speed of both flyer and Bobbin 
in all the drawing frames of such sets as that described above 
Such control is usually effected by a pair of cones, from which this 
system has taken its name. via. '* cone " drawing. In fig. 16 a usual 
type of cone drawing-box is illustrated. The chief advantages of this 
system seem to be the possibilities of employing larger bobbins, and 
thus obtaining greater production, the consumption of relatively 
less power, and more particularly the production of a softer sliver 
with less twist, partaking more of the character of a French roving. 
Spinning is usually effected upon the cap frame (see fig. 17)— -a 
frame in which the bobbin, resting upon a fixed spindle, is itself 
driven at say 5000 revolutions per minute 
to put in the twist, while the friction of 
the yarn on the cap which covers the 
bobbin enables the bobbin to wind up 
upon itself the yarn as delivered by the 
front rollers. The weakness and the 
strength of the cap frame is that to 
make reasonably hard bobbins the 
bobbins must be driven at a high speed. 

The French are noted for a special 
system of worsted spinning, which, pro- 
ducing soft botany yarns of a 
marked type, is worthy of 
more than passing comment. 
The preparation is very 
similar to the preparation of 
botany yarns for the English system 
save that as a rule the order of the 
operations are carding, tilling, combing, 
back-washing and finishing The char- 
acteristic features of the method fie in 
the subsequent drawing and spinning. 
The drawing-box as shown in fig. 18 con- 
sists of back rollers, porcupine or re- 
volving gill, front rollers, rubbers and 
winding-up srrangement. Thus there is 
no twist inserted, the slivers being treated 
softly and openly right away through the 
processes. A set of this type usually con- 
sists of two gill-boxes preparing for 
combing, comb, back-washing machine 
and two finishing gill-boxes* first draw- 
ing frame, second drawing frame, the 
stubbing frame, the roving frame and the 
celf-acting mule. After leaving the last 
box as a fine soft pith-like sliver, spin- 
ning is effected upon the worsted mule. 
The main differences between the worsted 
and the woollen mule are firstly, the 
worsted mule is fitted with preliminary 
drafting rollers, and secondly, there b 
little or no spindle draft. As the mule is 
an intermittent worker it 'is natural to 
contrast it with the cap frame, which 
runs continuously. What the real advan- 
Fio. 17.— Section of Cap tage is it b difficult to say, but the mule- 
Spindle, spun worsted yarn trade b becoming 
C, Care the front rollers yearly of more importance, and it is 
of a cap spinning frame de- pleasing to note that English spinners 
livcring the yarn through are at last doing a fair share of this 
the centring board D under business. 

the edge of the cap E to Upon whichever system the yarns have 
the bobbin F, which rests been spun it will frequently be necessary 
upon the tube and wharIG, OombAtr. to twofoW thcm *rf 8 ° J me : 
which in turn rest upon the rw SS time * to three " ?■?. fourfold 
lifter-rail I, which effects s*T^ thcm * Again the fashion some- 
the necessary traversing. . times runs upon fancy twists, 

The spindle H b simply, and then it is necessary to be able to 
screwed into the frame- produce the various styles of cloud, loop, 
work, and docs not re- curl, knop. &c, yams. Twofolding is 
volve. but simply acts as done upon the flyer, cap and nag frames, 
a support for the cap and The main difference between the cap 
as a centre of motion for and the ring frame is that in the- latter 
the tube and bobbin. a small bent piece of wire, termed a 

traveller, revolved round a ring by the 
pull of the spindle through the yarn, serves as the rctarder to enable 
the bobbin to wind the yarn, delivered by the front rollers on to 
itsdf (see fig. 19). Fancy twisters are almost aniversally on the 
ring system. 

Yarns are placed on the market in eight forms, viz. in hank, on 

spools, on paper tubes, on bobbins, on cops, in che eses , in the warp 

Ysns. ball form and dressed upon the loom beam- Thus the 

manufacturer can order the yarn which he requires in 

the form best suited to hb purpose. 

Although in some few cases special means must be employed for 
the weaving of woollens, worsteds and stuff goods, still the main 
n/Mrfac principles are the same for all classes of goods (see Wbav- 
*-'-"• INC). Attention may here be concentrated on the char- 
acteristic principles of woolkn and worsted manufacture. 




The rhanirfrn' tir feature of wool and of wool yarns and cloths is 
the qua lay (A " felling," Thb quality has always been made use of 
in woollen ^Mhs, but in worsted cloths, until compara- 
tively recently, it has been largely ignored. To-day, 
however, dot Its are made* ranging from the truest woollen 
to the typical worsted, Of which it would be impossible to 



i nil irate the type of yam employed without very careful analysis. 
As it is obviously impossible to give here every variety of finish 





Fig. 1 ft,— Section of French Drawing-Box. 

A, A', delivery rollers which control the slivers during the drafting 
operation. is the porcupine (or circular gill) and C are the front 
drafting rollers, t> i* the funnel through which the slivers pass to 
the consolidating rubbers E, E, F is a second funnel and G b the 
oundi'ined sliver wound up at a uniform rate on the roller H. 
employed, the two typical styles for woollen and worsted cloths are 
dean with in detail, ,ind further to elucidate the matter the finishing 
of a Bradford " stuff '" or " lustre " piece b also given in outline. 

The i j brie on leaving the loom b first mended and then scoured. 
The operation of scouring b effected in a '* dotty,** 
thoroughly clear the piece so that it b free to take the 
defined fi rush. The piece is now soaped and " milled," 4*. 
felted. M illine miy be effected either in the* stocks or in 
t f <-: m i I i 1 n c ma c hi ne. The stocks, the main features of which 
are huge Lim men which are caused to fall or are driven positively 
into the doth, exert a 
bursting action eliminat- 
ing the thread structure. 
The milling machine acts 
more by compression, 
arrangements being 
n>ad*.- to cum press the 
cloth in length or breadth 
at will, After milling 
Flouring follows to clear 
the cloth thoroughly of 
the milling agent * 
previous to the finishing 
proper. The elot h ii now 
takcm in a damp aisle to 
the (entering machine 
and* being hooked upon 
a frame running into a 
heated rhuml.rr, if 
stretched in width And 
dried In this condition^ 
Halting follows, tHU 
being effected by *ub- 
jee Errag [ he surface of the 
labrk 10 the action of 
" texdes " fixed on a 
1 trge [evolving cylinder, 
the whole machine being 
termed a " gig/* After 
raising the fabric is 
" cropped H " by bfin; 
passed over a bfade near 
which revolving knives 
work* on the principle 
(A a (awB-mrjwrr H sbcsir- 
ittg. sod Icvcthnjihe 
piece, Somel imes fab' 
t'ks arc raised wet, 
especially if a velvet 
finish i* required. Brush- 
ing follows it* clear the 



ST 




ml 
9 

1 



Fie. 19.— Section of Ring Spindle. 

A is the spindle suitably shaped to re- 
n-ece of *U dt ray fibres. ^^ the x^^xn at B, with a whari for 
The fabric 1* now ready turning at C. running in the specially 
for tfabbin K , which designed receptacle D, which may be 
f.>n*i«ra ui wmdnifi it Krcwc d firmly into the spindle rail. The 
tightly onto a « iterated trave ||er E is drawn round the ring F by 
r . r rWgfc which thc spindI e acting through the yarn aa 
steam may be Mown or Aown m the FUn . jt^ ,pj„d1e » a 
upon which the prece fixture ud the ring.raji jg traversed to 
may be boiled. The distribute thc yarn on the bobbin. 
pieces are then rewound 
a r.d t he operation re pea ted at least once, to obtain even distribution 



of fim*h„ tiring now ready for Messing, the fabric is curt Jed, usually 
> papers between each cuttle, and placed in the hydraulic 



with press 1 



816 WOOL, WORSTED AND WOOLLEN MANUFACTURES 

press either hot or cokL After prosing dry steaming b frequently 
necessary to take away calcines* and a certain false lustre which some- 



ana centering axe similar, i am ramng as ■ nue » 

by brushing, although it is by no means un- 

a to raise worsteds on the gig. Cropping, crabbing, 

' and steaming are the same as for woollen fabrics. 



, eaway ...... 

times develops. Final cuttling completes the finishing operations. 

Worsted cloth finishing is very similar to woollen doth finishing 
save that some of the operations are less severe. Mending, scouring, 

milling and tentcring are similar. The raising as a rule is 

effected * * *' * * • •- • ■ 

common 

pressing and steaming are 
Of course the real difference between the woollen and the worsted 
cloth is due to the selection of the right material, to correct roving, 
spinning and fabric structure: finishing simply comes as a "de- 
veloper " in the case of the woollen fabric, while in the case of the 
typical worsted fabric it simply serves as a "dearer," the cloth really 
being made in the loom. A woollen cloth as it leaves the loom is 
unsightly and in a sense may be said to be made in the finishing, 
although it is truer to say "developed" in the finishing: in the case 
of the worsted cloth it is altogether otherwise. 

A cotton warp, lustre weft style, is treated altogether differently 
from either of the foregoing. It is first crabbed, then steamed, then 
Lamirm scoured and dried, then singed by being passed over a 
*^* m * w red-hot copper plate or through gas jets, then scoured 

again, and if necessary dyed. It is then washed, dried. 



be considerably varied from the foregoing, being more complex, while 
other styles, such as plain all-wool goods, are treated very simply. 

It will be gathered from the foregoing remarks that the varieties of 
wool textures are many and very different in character. This is 

perhaps realized best by contrasting a heavy melton cloth 

weighing say 24-30 ox. per yard with a fine mohair texture 
* weighing say 2-3 ox. per yard. None the less remarkable 

is the difference in appearance of varieties of wool textures. 

A rough Harris tweed, for example, contrasts strangely 
with a smooth fine wool Italian. Of course these differences are not 
created in any one process or merely by the selection of the raw 
material or yarn. Every process of manufacture must be directed to 
attain the desired end, and it is wdl to realize that huge businesses 
have been built up upon what, by the outsider, would only be 
regarded as unimportant details. 

The principal styles of woollen doth arc tweeds, meltons, Venetians, 
beavers, doeskins, buckskins, cassimeres and diagonals. The largest 
class is the tweed, as this ranges from very expensive coatings and 
trouserings to the cheap styles made of the re-manufactured 
materials. Tweeds for ladies' wear also form a large class. 

The principal styles of worsted cloths are coatings and trouserings, 
delaines, voiles, merinos, cashmeres, tastings, % crfipe-de-chines, 
amazons, Orleans, lustres of various types (plain and figured), 
alpacas, Italians, moreens, &c, &c. Many of these are made entirely 
of worsted yarns, but others are compound so far as material or yarn 
is concerned. Thus amazons are made from mule-spun worsted 
warp and a woollen weft. Lustres are made from fine hard spun 
cotton warp and English or mohair weft, and so on. Perhaps the 
most interesting point to note is the skill developed by English de- 
signers during recent years. Fifty years ago the continental designer 
ruled the market. To-day the English designer can at least claim 
an equality with and in some respects is already considered as 
superior to his continental rival. 

Prior to the development of native ingenuity and skill England 



was r em ark ab l e as a wool-growing country, most of the wool being 
shipped to the continent, so that it may be said that the wool of 
England met the skill of southern EuropeinFl.-inr'-'r^Tirh.ieh ^ 
thus became the >;rcat textile tent re *o Jar as w<m_.1 u.is . at , 0i ^ 
concerned. With the development of native akill under ^ tbr ^ Sm 
the foitenng can? of several of the English monarch*— 
notably Edward lit. and Janien f. — it was but natural to expect that 
endeavours would be made to manufacture English wool at home 
and export the woven cloth. With the remarkable colonial develop- 
ments of the nth, 18th and XQth centuries, in conjunction with the 
invention of the spinning frame and power-loom, this expectation 
was most fully realised, at least so far as ordinary wearing fabric* 
were concerned. Latterly, however, with the development of skill 
in newly developed countries, the tendency has been to partially 
revert to the ©Id conditions. Thus in 1850 Bradford's chief export 
was cloth, in 1875 the yarn trade had markedly developed, in 1900 
the top trade was well established, and to-day Bradford has a large 
wool export trade* Fabrics are made for the home and general 
export trade; yarns are exported mostly to the continent: tops 
and wool mostly to the United States ol America. 

The following tables give a useful idea of (a) the sources of supply 
of the raw material, wool, al*o of the changes which have taken 
place in the trade since 1S00; {b) the channel in monetary stttimtM^ 
value of the chief sorts of wool d urine; recent years; (c) 
the number of factories and of persons employed in the textile 
industries during the past half -century; (d) growth of the export 
trade in woollens and worsted 5 of the United Kingdom during the 
past century. For further details see Hooper's admirable tables 
now issued by the Bradford Chamber of Commerce, 

Prior to the development of the factory system and the remarkable 
development in textile appliances at the end of the 18th and beginning 
of the 19th centuries, the textile Industries were scattered &a(f _, a * 
all over the country, only in some few eases more or less ^ « *— 
accidental centralizing occurring. To-diy it may be said 
that the wool industry is centralized where the coal supply of 
south Yorkshire mcou the wool supply of north Yorkshire, ijt, in the 
Bradford and Leeds districts, though much of the wool dealt vftta in 
this district is Imported and consequently can only be said to follow 
the trend already established. Of course there are wool mano* 
fact u ring districts other than I how mentioned, Scotland is noted 
for its Scotch tweods manufactured In the Hawick and Galashiels 
district, the West of England still makes some magnificent all-wool 
cloths; Norwich guards a remnant of its once flourishing worsted 
industry and Leicester has developed a remarkable hosiery trade. 
Again, firms whose existence is due to individual enterprise are still 
studded tip and down the country, and manage to compete fairly 
well wtth the main manufacturing districts. Since about 13*56, 
however, there can be no doubt that the English wool trade has 
been centring more and more round Bradford, while the rcmanu- 
factured materials and the blanket trade is centred round Bat ley 
and Dewsbury, ^ Wales retains only a fragment of its once targe 
flannel trade, this trade now being located in Yorkshire, with the 
exception of one or two individual firms elsewhere. The carpet trade 
is centred in Halifax, Kidderminster and Glasgow, Whether further 
central izatlon may be looked for is questionable, Special ization 
undoubtedly favours Bradford, as there the wool, top, yarn and 
fabric branches of the industry arc individually developed to 
great advantage; bjt the development of means of communication 
and some such factor as electric or water power may radically disturb 
the present balance of the industry. (A. F, B.) 



Imports of Wool into the United Kingdom from the Principal Countries, Foreign and Colonial. 



Count ry. 



x8oo. 



182a 



1840. 



1 86a 



188a 



1900. 



1905. 



1907. 



New South Wales 
Queensland 
Victorian 
Tasmanian . 
South Australian 
West Australian 
New Zealand 
Cape and Natal . 



I: 



Bales 



658 



213 
180 



20 



25,820 

HJ2I 
3.484 



3.477 



46.092 
78,186 
»6,73i 
23.554 
1,992 
17.870 
55.7U 



306317 
23.653 
109.917 
9,211 
189,441 
190.614 



\ 248,408 

1 124.401 

255. 131 

18,225 

50,720 

26,317 

395.093 

102,268 



240,922 
148.059 
261.724 

70469 
44.623 
394.390 
192,210 



308.628 
130,128 
330.326 
22,147 

89.637 

41467 

442.973 

259.691 



Total Colonial 



Bales 



658 



East Indian and Persian . 

Chinese 

German 

Spanish 

Portuguese 

Russian 

Turkish, Egyptian and North African 
Peruvian and Chilean 
Buenos Aires and Montevidean 
Falkland Islands and Punt a Arenas 
Italian and Trieste .... 

Sundry 'W 

Goat's Wool] 



♦a! Bales 



1,170 

30,318 

9,622 

25 



S 4 
487 



42440 



422 



17,681 

475 



25 



334 
M79 



33.555 



44.502 
7,611 

63,278 
5.273 
1.569 

11,776 
5492 

40,004 



4*055 
2,519 



186.079 



240,136 

62,226 
119 
19,681 
4.199 
24.503 
22,150 

& 

5.058 

719 
15.172 
n.9iS 

492491 



1,054,430 

112,716 

1,672 

28,119 

14.603 

14^56 

45417 

49.853 

52.876 

9.852 

4.700 

2.565 

35.973 

57449 

«4«4.58l 



1,221,163 



1. 327. 167 



1.680,869 



1.853.177 



1,624,997 

I59.8I8 
15.060 
".533 
4.077 
10,214 
15.889 
51.725 
53493 
70.348 
53*249 
2,761 
43.176 

'Q9.Q77 

2,225417 



WOOLLETT— WOOLNER 817 

Frkmt per lb *» each Year of some Colonial. Foreign ami Emglisk Wools, also of Alpaca ami Mokoir. 



Material. 


1874.' 


1880. 


1885. 


1890. 


1895. 


1900. 


1901.* 


1902." 


1905. 




d. 


d. 


d. 


d. 


d. 


d. 


d. 


d. 


d. 


Port Philip— Greasy . 


I4 i 


13 




10 


10I 


l\ 


11 




It 


i 


I3» 


Adelaide-— Greasy . 


"f 


10 




6! 


n 


7 




9 


Cape— Greasy 


I6[ 


12 




9, 


?! 


7, 


9 




7. 


10* 


Buenos Aires—Greasy . 


7* 


7 




4) 


5t 


J 


4 




ft 


6 ! 


British Wool . . . 


22 


16 


. *t 


10 


7 




"1 


Alpaca m 


33-35 


13-15 




12H4I 


22-14* 
I8-I3J 


141-27 


16-13 


12I-16 


151-19* 


13J-16 


Mohair .... 


35-45 


27-35-21 


14-19 


14-30 


20I-17 


19-17 


15 



1 Year of the highest values of wools ever reached within recent times. 
• Years of the lowest values of wools ever reached within recent times. 



Summary of Woollen and Worsted Factories and of Persons employed in the same in the United Kintiom. 






1867 


1874. 


1885. 


1889. 


1901. 


1904. 


Factories 

Rag grinding machines . 
Woollen carding sets 
Worsted combing machines . 
Spinning spindles . 
Doubling spindles . 
Power looms .... 

Children (half timers) 
Persons working full time — 

Males 

Females .... 


2.649 

1,038 

6455.879 

519.629 

H8.875 

33*54 

94.8i8 
134.368 


2,617 

1.276 

5449495 

558.914 

140.274 

38416 

106,005 
135.712 


*.75» 

5.375.102 
769492 
139.902 

24.636 


2.517 

5.604535 
969.812 
131.506 

22*940 

120441 
158.175 


7.475 

102,876 
149558 


2.382 

900 

6,700 

, 2.924 

5.625477 

1.059.049 

104.514 



Summary of Exports of Wool, Wool Waste, Sous, Tops, Yams and Fabrics from (he United Kingdom. 



1840. 



1882. 



1890. 



1900. 



1907. 



British Wool . . 
Foreign and Colonial 
Waste .... 
Noils . . . . 
Tops . 

Worsted Yarn . . 
Mohair, Ac. Yarn . 
Woollen Yarn . . 
Cloths . . . . 
Apparel 



lb 
5.000,000 
2,000,000 



lb 

J} 1 

264,100,000 



20340.300 

S.752,200 

1.992400 

£18.768,634 

£1 .380.000 



lb 

19,500,000 

342,200,000 

2.397.6CO 

10,234,700 

9,016,000 

39.510,100 

12,959.600 

, 1 .572.700 

£20418482 

£1,700,000 



lb 

24,900,000 

I97.5oo.ooo 

1.593100 

7,897400 

28,031,200 

36.075.900 

10,397,700 

1,088.300 

£15.682.154 

£1.700,000 



B> 

34^500^000 

314,200,000 

o.937.ioo 

12.689,700 

35.580,000 

55.52 1. Too 

17,782,800 

2,576.100 

£22,153,680 

£2.550.546 



WOOLLETT. WILLIAM (1735-1785). English engraver, was 
bora at Maidstone, of a family which came originally from 
Holland, on the 15th of August 1735. He was apprenticed to 
John Tinney, an engraver in Fleet Street, London, and studied 
in the St Martin's Lane academy. His first important plate 
was from the " Niobe " of Richard Wilson, published by Boydell 
in 1761, which was followed in 1763 by a companion engraving 
from the " Phaethon " of the same painter. After West he 
engraved his fine plate of the " Battle of La Hogue "(1781), 
and the " Death of General Wolfe " (1776), which is usually 
considered WooOctt's masterpiece. In 1775 he was appointed 
engraver-in-ordinary to George III.; and he was a member of 
the Incorporated Society of Artists, of which for several years 
he acted as secretary. He died in London on the 23rd of May 

I7°5- 

In hisrplates, which unite work with the etching-needle, the 
dry-point and the graver, Woollett shows the greatest richness 
and variety of execution. In his landscapes the rendering of 
water is particularly excellent. In his portraits and historical 
subjects the rendering of flesh is characterized by great softness 
and delicacy. His works rank among the great productions of 
the English school of engraving. Louis Pagan, m his Catalogue 
Raisonni of the Engraved Works of William WooUeU (1885), has 
enumerated 123 plates by this engraver. 

WOOLMAN. JOHX (1720-1772), American Quaker preacher, 
was born in Northampton, Burlington county; New Jersey, in 
August 1720. When he was twenty-one he went to Mount Holly, 
where he was a clerk in a store, opened a school for poor children 
and became a tailor. After 1743 he spent most of his time as an 
itinerant preacher, visiting meetings of the Friends in various 
parts of the colonies. In 1772 lie sailed for London to visit Friends 
in the north of England, especially Yorkshire, and died in York of 



smallpox on the 7th of October. He spoke and wrote against 
slavery, refused to draw up wills transferring slaves, induced 
many of the Friends to set their negroes free, and in 1760 at 
Newport, Rhode Island, memorialized the Legislature to forbid 
the slave trade. In 1763 at Wehalooaing (now Wyalusing), 
on the Susquehanna, he preached to the Indians; and he always 
urged the whites to pay the Indians for their lands and to forbid 
the sale of liquor to them. 

Wootnum wrote Some C^ntHtrUhnt on (kr Keeping of Negroes 

il754; part iL, 176*); Conjiifaatietii ("* Pv*e Wisdom and Human 
*oltcy, on Labor, on Sikooli t and an tht Rirkl Use of the Lord's 
Outward Gifii <t;6* ) ; Coniideraium* on the 1 rue Harmony of Man- 
kind, and tie* ti u to t* Maintained (1770): and A Word of Re- 



membrane * and Camtun to far Rick 1 1 79)} ; *nd " »» most important of 

fe and Travels in the 
Service of iht Gospel (1775). which wa» twjjun in his thirty-sixth year 
il tKt year of his death. The best-1 



his writings, The Jonmai of Jeki 



and was continued until the year of hi* death. The best-known 
edition h that prepared, with an iotrodoUioB, In/ John G. Whittier 
in 1871. The Works of John Waakman appeared in two part* at 
Philadelphia, in 1774- 177s. *nd have ufti-n been republished; a 
German version was printed in 1852. 

WOOUTER, THOMAS (1825-1892), British sculptor and poet, 
was born at Hadleigh, Suffolk, on the 17th of December 1825. 
When a boy he showed talent for modelling, and when barely 
thirteen years old was taken as an assistant into the studio of 
William Behnes, and trained during four years. In December 
1842 Weolner was admitted a student in the Royal Academy, 
and in 1843 exhibited bis " Eleanor sucking Poison from the 
Wound of Prince Edward." In 1844, among the competitive 
works for decorating the Houses of Parliament was his life-size 
group of " The Death of Boadicea." In 1846 he had at the 
Royal Academy a graceful bas-relief of Shelley's " Alastor." 
Then came (1847) " Feeding the Hungry/' a bas-relief, at the 
Academy; and at the British Institution a brilliant statuette 



8i8 



WOOLSACK— WOOLSTON 



of " Puck" perched upon a toadstool and with hit toe routing a 
frog. " Eros and Euphrosync " and " The Rainbow " were seen 
at the Academy in 1848. 

Woolner became, in the autumn of 1848, one of the seven 
Pre-Raphaelite Brethren, and took a leading part in The Germ 
(1850), the opening poem in which, called " My Beautiful Lady," 
was written by him. He had already modelled and exhibited 
portraits of Carlyle, Browning and Tennyson. Unable to make 
his way in art as he wished, Woolner in 1852 tried his luck as a 
gold-digger in Australia. Failing in this, he returned to England 
in 1857, where during his absence his reputation had been in- 
creased by means of a statue of " Love " as a damsel lost in a day- 
dream. Then came his second portraits of Carlyle, Tennyson 
and Browning, the 6gures of Moses, David, St John the Baptist 
and St Paul for the pulpit of Llandaff cathedral, the medallion 
portrait of Wordsworth in Grasmere church, the likenesses of Sir 
Thomas Fairbairn, Rajah Brooke of Sarawak, Mrs Tennyson, 
Sir W. Hooker and Sir F. Palgrave. The fine statue of Bacon in 
the New Museum at Oxford was succeeded by full-size statues of 
Prince Albert for Oxford, Macaulay for Cambridge, William III. 
for the Houses of Parliament, London, and Sir Bartle Frere for 
Bombay, busts of Tennyson, for Trinity College, Cambridge, 
Dr Whewell, and Archdeacon Hare; statues of Lord Lawrence 
for Calcutta, Queen Victoria for Birmingham, Field for the Law 
Courts, London, Palmerston for Palace Yard, the noble colossal 
standing figure of Captain Cook that overlooks the harbour of 
Sydney, New South Wales, which is Woolner's masterpiece in that 
class; the recumbent effigy of Lord F. Cavendish (murdered in 
Dublin) in Cartmel church, the seated Lord Chief Justice White- 
tide for the Four Courts, Dublin, and John Stuart Mill for the 
Thames Embankment, London; Landseer, and Bishop Jackson 
for St Paul's, Bishop Fraser for Manchester, and Sir Stamford 
Raffles for Singapore. Among Woolner's busts are those of 
Newman, Darwin, Sedgwick, Huxley, Cobden, Professor Lush- 
ington, Dickens, Kingsley, and Sir William Gull, besides the 
repetition, with variations, of Gladstone for the Bodleian, 
Oxford, and Mansion House, London, and Tennyson. The last 
was acquired for Adelaide, South Australia. Woolner's poetic 
and imaginative sculptures include " Elaine with the Shield of 
Lancelot," three fine panels for the pedestal of the Gladstone bust 
at Cambridge, the noble and original " Moses " which was 
commissioned in z 861 and is on the apex of the gable of the 
Manchester Assize Courts, and two other works in the same 
building; "Ophelia," a statue (1869); "In Mcmoriam "; 
" Virgilia sees in a vision Coriolanus routing the Volsccs"; 
" Guinevere ", " Mercury teaching a shepherd to sing," for the 
Royal College of Music; " Ophelia," a bust (1878); " Godiva," 
and "The Water- Lily." 

In 1864 he married Alice Gertrude Waugh, by whom he had 
two sons and four daughters. He was elected an associate of the 
Royal Academy in 1871, and a full member in 1874. Woolner 
wrote and published two amended versions of " My Beautiful 
Lady'* from The Germ, as well as "Pygmalion" (1881), 
"Silenus" (1884), "Tiresias" (1886), and "Poems" (1887) 
comprising " Nelly Dale " ( 1 886) and " Children," Having been 
elected professor of sculpture in the Royal Academy, Woolner 
began to prepare lectures, but they were never delivered, for he 
resigned the office In 1879. He died suddenly on the 7th of 
October 1892, and was buried in the churchyard of St Mary's, 
Hendon. 

WOOLSACK, i.e. a sack or cushion stuffed with woo), a name 
more particularly given to the seat of the lord chancellor in the 
House of Lords. It is a large square cushion of wool, without 
back or arms, covered with red doth. It is stated to have been 
placed in the House of Lords in the reign of Edward HI. to re- 
mind the peers of the importance of the wool trade of England. 
The earliest legislative mention, however, is in an act of Henry 
VIII. (c. 10 s. 8): "The lord chancellor, lord treasurer and all 
other officers who shall be under the degree of a baron of a parlia- 
ment shall sit and be placed at the uppermost part of the tacks 
in the midst of the said parliament chamber, either there to sit 
upon one form or upon the uppermost sack." The woolsack b 



technically outside the precincts of the house, and the lord 
chancellor, wishing to speak in a debate, has to advance to his 
place as a peer. 

WOOLSEY, THEODORE ftWIGHT (1 801-1880), American 
educationalist, was born in New York City on the 31st of October 
1801. He was the son of a New York merchant, a nephew of 
Timothy D wight , president of Yale, and a descendant of Jonathan 
Edwards. He graduated at Yale in 1820; was a tutor at Yale 
in 1823-1825, studied Greek at Leipzig, Berlin and Bonn in 
1827-1830, became professor of Greek language and literature 
at Yale in 1831, and was elected president of the college and 
entered the Congregational ministry in 1846 He resigned the 
presidency in 1871, and died on the xst of July 1889 in New 
Haven. During his administration the college grew rapidly, 
the scientific school and the school of fine arts were established, 
and the scholarly tone of the college was greatly improved. 
Much of his attention in his last years was devoted to the 
American commission for the revision of the authorized version 
of the New Testament, of which he was chairman (1871-1881). 
He prepared excellent editions of Alcestis (1834), Antigone (1835), 
Prometheus (1837) and Gorgias (1843). He published several 
volumes of sermons and wrote for the New Englander, of which 
he was a founder, for the North American Review, for the Prince- 
ton Review and for the Century, and his Introduction to the Study 
of International Law, designed as an Aid in Teaching and in 
Historical Studies (i860) and his Divorce and Divorce Legislation 
(1882) went through many editions. He also wrote Political 
Science, or (he State Theoretically and Practically Considered (1877), 
and Communism and Socialism, in their History and Theory (1880). 
His son, Theodore Salisbury Woolsey (b. 1852), became pro- 
fessor of international law at Yale in 1878.- He was one of the 
founders of the Yale Review (189?, a continuation of the New 
Engtander), and is the author of America's Foreign Policy (1892). 

WOOLSTON, THOMAS (1660-173O, English debt, born at 
Northampton in 1669, the son of a " reputable tradesman," 
entered Sidney College, Cambridge, in 1685, studied theology, 
took orders and was made a fellow of his college. After a time, 
by the study of Origen, he became possessed with the notion of 
the importance of an allegorical interpretation of Scripture, 
and advocated its use in the defence of Christianity both in his 
sermons and in his first book, The Old Apology for the Truth 
of the Christian Religion against the Jews and Gentiles Revived 
( 1 705) . For many years he published nothing, but in 1 7 20- 1 7 2 1 
the publication of letters and pamphlets in advocacy of his 
notions, with open challenges to the clergy to refute .them, brought 
him into trouble. It was reported that his mind was disordered, 
and he lost his fellowship. From 1 721 he lived for the most part 
in London, on an allowance of £30 a year from his brother and 
other presents. His influence on the course of the deistical con- 
troversy began with his book, The Moderator between an Infidel 
and an Apostate (172s, 3rd ed. 1729). The " infidel " intended 
was Anthony Collins (g.v.), who had maintained in his book 
alluded to that the New Testament is based on the Old, and that 
not the literal but only the allegorical sense of the prophecies can 
be quoted in proof of the Messiahship of Jesus; the " apostate " 
was the clergy who had forsaken the allegorical method of the 
fathers. Woolston denied absolutely the proof from miracles, 
called-in question the fact of the resurrection of Christ and other 
miracles of the New Testament, and maintained that they must 
be interpreted allegorically, or as types of spiritual things. Two 
years later he began a series of Discourses on the same subject, 
in which he applied the principles of his Moderator to the miracles 
of the Gospels in detail. The Discourses, 30,000 copies of which 
were said to have been sold, were six in number, the first appear- 
ing in 1727, the next five 1728-1729, with two Drfenees in 17*0- 
173a For these publications he was tried before Chief Justice 
Raymond m 1720 and sentenced (November 98) to pay a fine 
of £25 for each of the first four Discourses, with imprisonment 
till paid, and also to a year's imprisonment and to give security 
for his good behaviour during life. He failed to find this security, 
and remained in confinement until his death oa the tist of 
January 1731. 



WOOLWICH— WOONSOCKET 



Upwards of sixty mote or less weighty pamphlets appeared in 
reply to his Moderator and Discourses. Amongst the abler and most 
popular of them may be mentioned Z. Pearce's The Miracles of Jesus 
Vindicated (17*9); T. Sherlock's The Tfyal of the Witnesses of the 
Resurrection of Jesus (1720, 13th ed. 1755); and N. Lardner's 
Vindication of Three of Our Saviour's Miracles (1729). Lardner being 
one of those who did not approve of the prosecution of Woolstoa (see 
Lardner's Life by Kippis, in Lardner's Works ', vol. L). 

See Life of Woolston prefixed to his Works in five volumes (London, 
1733); Memoirs of Life and Writings of- William Whiston (London. 



8l9 



the article Deism, with its bibliography. 

WOOLWICH, a S.E. metropolitan borough of London, 
England, bounded W. by Greenwich and Lewisham, and ex- 
tending N., £. and S., to the boundary of the county of London. 
Pop. (1901) 117.178. Area, 8276-6 acres. Its N. boundary is in 
part the river Thames, but it includes two separate small areas 
on the N. bank, embracing a portion of the district called N. 
Woolwich. The area, is second to that of Wandsworth among 
the metropolitan boroughs, but is not wholly built over. The 
most populous part is that lying between Shooter's Hill Road 
(the Roman Watling Street) and the river, the site falling from an 
elevation of 41A ft. at Shooter's Hill to the river level. To the E- 
lies Plumstead, with the Plumstead marshes bordering the river 
to the N., and in the S. of the borough is Ettham. A large working 
population is employed in the Royal Arsenal, which occupies 
a large area on the river-bank, and includes the Royal Gun 
Factory, Royal Carriage Department, Royal Laboratory and 
Building Works Department. The former Royal Dockyard was 
made over to the War Office in 1872 and converted into stores, 
wharves for the loading of troopships, &c. The Royal Artillery 
Barracks, facing Woolwich Common, originally erected in 1775. 
has been greatly extended at different times, and consists of six 
ranges of brick building, including a church in the Italian Gothic 
style erected in 1863, a theatre, and a library in connexion with 
the officers' mess-room. Opposite the barracks is the memorial 
to the officers and men of the Royal Artillery who fell in the 
Crimean War, a bronze figure of Victory cast out of cannon 
captured in the Crimea. Near the barracks is the Royal Artillery 
Institution, with a fine museum and a lecture hall. On the W. 
of the barrack field is the Royal Military Repository, within 
the enclosure of which is the Rotunda, originally erected in St 
James's Park for the reception of the allied sovereigns in 1814, 
and shortly afterwards transferred to its present site. It contains 
models of the principal dockyards and fortifications of the 
British empire, naval models of all dates, and numerous specimens 
of weapons of war from the remotest times to the present day. 
On the Common b the Royal Military Academy, a castellated 
building erected from the design of Sir J. Wyatville in 1801, 
where cadets are trained for the artillery and engineer services. 
There are a number of other barracks. At the S.E. extremity 
of the Common is the Herbert Military Hospital. Among several 
military memorials, one in the Academy grounds was erected 
to the Prince Imperial of France, for two years a student in the 
Academy. Other institutions include the Woolwich polytechnic 
and the Brook fever hospital, Shooter's Hill. The parish church 
of St Mary Magdalene was rebuilt, m 1726-1729, near the site of 
the old one dating from before the 12th century. Woolwich 
Common (142 acres) is partly within this borough, but mainly 
in Greenwich. South of it is Eltham Common (37 acres), and 
in the E. of the borough are Plumstead Common (103 acres) 
and Bostall Heath (134 acres). Behind the Royal Military 
Academy is a mineral well, the " Shooter's Hill waters M men- 
tioned by Evelyn. Near Woolwich Common there are brick and 
tile kilns and sand and chalk pits, and there are extensive market- 
gardens in the locality. The parliamentary borough of Woolwich 
returns one member. The borough council consists of a mayor, 
6 aldermen, and 60 councillors. It was only by the London 
Government Act 1809 that Woolwich was brought into fine whh 
other London districts, for in 1855, as It had previously become 
a local government district under a local board, it was left 
untouched by the Metropolis Management Act* 



Wootwfch (Wulewich) is mentioned in a grant of land by King 
Edward in 964 to the abbey of St Peter at Ghent. In Domesday 
the manor is mentioned as consisting of 63 acres of land. The Roman 
Watling Street crossed Shooter's Hill, and a Roman cemetery is 
supposed to have occupied the site of the Royal Arsenal, numerous 
Roman urns and fragments of Roman pottery having been dug up in 
the neighbourhood. Woolwich teems to have been a small fishing 
village until in the beginning of the 16th century it rose into pro- 
minence as a dockyard and naval station. There is evidence that 
ships were built at Woolwich in the reign of Henry VII., but it was 
with the purchase by Henry VIII. of two parcels of land in the manor 
of Woolwich, called Boughton's Docks, that the foundation of the 
town a prosperity was bid, the launching of the " Harry Grace de 
Dieu," of 1000 tons burden, making an epoch in its history. Wool- 
wich remained the chief dockyard of the English navy until the 
introduction of iron ship building, but the dockyard was dosed in 
i860. The town became the headquarters of the Royal Artillery on 
the establishment of a separate branch of this service in the reign of 
George 1. Land was probably acquired for a military post and store 
depdt at Woolwich in 1667, in order to erect batteries against the 
invading Dutch fleet, although in 1664 mention is made of store- 
houses and sheds for repairing ship carriages. In 1668 guns, carriages 
and stores were concentrated at Woolwich, and in 169s the laboratory 
was # moved hither from Greenwich. Before 1716 ordnance was 
obtained from private manufacturers and proved by the Board of 
Ordnance. In 17 16 an explosion took place at the Moorfidds 
Foundry, and it was decided to build a royal brass foundry at the 
" Tower Place," as the establishment at Woolwich was called untU 
1805. Founders were advertised for, and records show that Andrew 
Schalch of Douai was selected. In 1741 a school of instruction for 
the military branch of the ordnance was established here. It was 
not until 1803, however, that the collection of establishments at 
Woolwich became the Royal Arsenal 

See C. H. Grinling, T. A. Ingram and B. C. Polkinghorne, Survey 
and Record of Woolwich and West Kent (Woolwich, 1909). 

WOOLWICH-AND-READIrfO BEDS, in geology, a scnes of 
argillaceous and sandy deposits of lower Eocene age found in the 
London and Hampshire basins. By the earlier geologists this 
formation was known as the " Plastic Clay " so called by T. 
Webster in 1816 after the Argik plastiquc of G. C. F. D. Cuvicr 
and A. Brongniart. It was called the " Mottled Clay " by 
J. Prestwich in 1846, but in 1853 he proposed the name " Wool- 
wich-and-Rcading Beds" because tnc other terms were not 
applicable to the different local aspects of the series. 

Three distinct types of this formation are recognized: (1) The 
Reading type, a series of lenticular mottled clays and sands, here and 
there with pebbly beds and masses of fine sand converted into 
quarttite. These beds are generally unf ossiferous. They are found 
in the N. and W. portions of the London Basin and in the Hampshire 
Basin. (2) The Woolwich type, grey clays and pal*» sands, often full 
of estuarine shells and in places with a well-marked oyster bed. At 
the*base of the shell-bearing clays in S.E. London there are pebble 
beds and hgnitic layers. The Woolwich beds occur in W. Kent, the 
E. borders of Surrey, the borders of E. Kent, in S. Essex and at 
Newhaven in Sussex. (3) A third type consistingof light-coloured 
false-bedded sands with marine fossils occurs inHE. Kent Where 
it rem on tfir "Hianet beds it is an argillaceous groensand with 
roaad d flint pebbles; where it rests on the Chalk it is more clayey 
and s he flints arc Jess rounded and ate green-coated. Except in the 
Hampshire basin the Wool wich-and- Reading beds usually rest on 
thr Th-inct L»cds. but they are found on the Chalk near Bromley, 
CharHoa, tittliftrford. Hertford, Reading, &c In Dorsetshire the 
Reading beds appear on the coast at Studland Bay and at other 
poum inland. The " Hertfordshire Pudding Stone " is a well-known 
rock itom near the base of the formation; it is a flint pebble con- 
glenn-rate in a sroctous matrix. The fossils, estuarine. freshwater a r.d 
nuui.u. hiUuuv ^>iincula cuneiformis, C tellmella, OslreabeUovanna, 
Vhoporus leutus, Planorbis hemistoma, Metania {Metanatrta) tn- 
qutnata, Neritma globulus, and the remains of turtles, crocodiles, 
sharks, birds (Gastornis) and the mammal Coryphodon. Bricks, tiles 
and coarse pottery and occasionally firebricks have been made from 
the clay beds in this formation. 



See Eocene; also J. Prestwich, QJXJS. (1854), x.; W. Whitakcr, 
" Geology of London," Mem, God. Survey, I ami ii. (1689) and Sheet 
McnunrTri*. 268. 

WOOKSOCKBT, a city of Providence county, Rhode Island; 
U.S-A., on both banks of the Blackstone river, about 16 m. N. 
by W. of Providence. Pop. (1000) 28,204; (1005, state census) 
5 2, 1 06 ( 1 3,734 foreign-born, including 8930 French Canadians and 
1360 Insh), (1910) 38,12$. Woonsocket is served by the New 
York, New Haven k Hartford railway and by an interurban 
electric line. Among its institutions are the Sacred Heart College 
and the Harris Institute Public Library, founded (1863) by 
Edward Harris, a local manufacturer. Woonsocket has ample 



820 



WOOSTER— WORCESTER, EARL OF 



water power from the Blackstone river end its tributaries, the 
Mill and the Peters rivers. The value of its factory products in 
1005 was $19,260,537. Worsted and woollen yarns are manu- 
factured in Woonsocket by the French and Belgian processes. 
Other manufactures are cotton goods and yarns, rubber goods, 
clothes wringers, silks,bobbins and shuttles, and foundry products. 

The first settlement in the vicinity was made apparently about 
1666 by Richard Arnold, who at about that time built a saw-mill on 
the bank of the Blackstone river. Woonsocket was set off from 
Cumberland and was incorporated as a township in 1867; was en- 
larged by the addition of a part of Smithfield in 1871, and was 
chartered as a city in 1888. 

WOOSTER, a city and the county-seat of Wayne county, 
Ohio, U.S.A., on Killbuck Creek, about 50 xn. S. by W. of 
Cleveland. Pop. (1900) 0063 U°7 foreign-born); (19x0) 6x36. 
Wooster is served by the Baltimore & Ohio and the Penn- 
sylvania railways. It is the seat of the university of Wooster 
(co-educational; Presbyterian; founded in 1866 and opened in 
1870), which in 1909 had 37 instructors and 1547 students. 
The Ohio Agricultural Experiment Station is in the city, which 
also has various manufactures. Wooster was laid out in 1808, 
was incorporated as a town in 1817, and became a city of the 
second class in 1869. It was named in honour of General David 
Wooster (1710-177 7), w ho was killed in the War of Independence. 

WOOTTON BASSETT, a market town in the N. parliamentary 
division of Wiltshire, England, 83 m. W. of London by the Great 
Western railway. Pop. (1901) 220a It is the junction of the 
direct railway (1903) between London and the Severn tunnel 
with the main line of the Great Western system. The town 
has large cattle markets and an agricultural trade. 

Wootton Bassctt (Wodeton, WoUon) was held in the reign of 
Edward the Confessor by one Levenod, and after the Norman 
Conquest was included in the fief of Miles Crispin. About a 
century later the manor was acquired by the Bassot family. 
The town received its first charter from Henry VI., and returned 
members to parliament from 1446-1447 until the passing of the 
Reform Act of 1832. In 1571 Elizabeth granted to the town a 
market on Tuesday and two fairs each to last two days, at the 
feasts of St George the Martyr and the Conception of the Virgin. 
In 1679 the town received a charter from Charles II., and the 
corporation consisted of a mayor, two aldermen and 12 capital 
burgesses, until abolished by the Municipal Corporations Act of 
1886, under which the property is now vested in seven trustees, 
one of whom is appointed by the lord of the manor, and there are 
also two aldermen and four elected members. In 1836 fairs were 
instituted on the Tuesday before the 6th of April and on the 
Tuesday before the nth of October, which are still maintained, 
and a large cattle market is held on the first Wednesday of every 
month. The manufacture of broadcloth was formerly carried on, 
but is now entirely decayed. 

WORCESTER, EARLS AND MARQUESSES OF. Urso de 
Abitot, constable of Worcester castle and sheriff of Worcester- 
shire, is erroneously said to have been created earl of Worcester 
in 1076. Waleran de Beaumont (1x04-1 f 66), count of Meulan 
in France, a partisan of King Stephen in his war with the empress 
Matilda, was probably earl of Worcester from x 136 to 1145. He 
was deprived of his earldom, became a crusader and died a monk. 
From 1397 to 1403 the earldom was held by Sir Thomas Percy 
(fi. x 343- x 403), a brother of Henry Percy, 1st carl of Northumber- 
land. Percy served with distinction in France during the reign 
of Edward III.; he also held an official position on the Scottish 
borders, and under Richard II. he was the admiral of a fleet. 
He deserted Richard II. in 1399, and was employed and trusted by 
Henry IV., but in 1403 he joined the other Perries in their revolt; 
lie was taken prisoner at Shrewsbury, and subsequently beheaded, 
the earldom becoming extinct. The title of earl of Worcester 
was revived in 14 21 in favour of .Richard Beauchamp, Lord 
Abergavenny, but lapsed on his death in 1422. The next carl 
was John Tip toft, or Tibetot, a noted Yorkist leader during the 
wars of the Roses, who was executed in 1470 (see below). On 
the death of his son, Edward, in 1485 the earldom reverted to the 
crown. 

In February 15x4 the earldom was bestowed by Henry VUL 



on Cuaxlxs Somerset {e. 1460-1526), a bastard ion of Henry 
Beaufort, duke of Somerset. Having married Elizabeth, 
daughter of William Herbert, earl of Huntingdon, he was styled 
Baron Herbert in right of his wife, and in 1506 he was created 
Baron Herbert of Ragland, Chepstow and Gower. He was 
chamberlain of the household to Henry VIII. His son Henry, 
2nd earl (c. 1495-1548), obtained Tintern Abbey after the 
dissolution of the monasteries. The title descended in direct line 
to Henry, the 5th earl (157 7-1646), who advanced large sums 
of money to Charles I. at the outbreak of the Great Rebellion 
and was created marquess of Worcester in 1643. 

Edward Somerset, 2nd marquess of Worcester (1601-1667), 
is better known by the title of earl of Glamorgan, this earldom 
having been conferred upon him, although somewhat irregularly, 
by Charles I. in 1644. He became very prominent in 1644 and 
1645 in connexion with Charles's scheme for obtaining military 
help from Ireland and abroad, and in 1645 he signed at Kilkenny, 
on behalf of Charles, a treaty with the Irish Roman Catholics; 
but the king was obliged by the opposition of Ormonde and the 
Irish loyalists to repudiate his action. Under the Common- 
wealth he was formally banished from England and his estates 
were seized. At the Restoration his estates were restored, and 
he claimed the dukedom of Somerset promised to him by Charles 
I. r but he did not Obtain this, nor was his earldom of Glamorgan 
recognised. He was greatly interested in mechanical experi- 
ments, end his name is intimately connected with the early 
history of the steam-engine (?.«.). His Century of the Names 
and Scantlings of suck Inventions as at present I can call to mind t* 
have tried and perfected (1663) has often been reprinted. He 
died on the 3rd of April 1667. 

See Henry Dircks, Life, Times and Scientific Labours of the 2nd 
Marquess of Worcester (1865) ; Sir J. T. Gilbert, History of the Irish 
Confederation and the War tn Ireland (Dublin, 1882-1891). 

His only son Henry (1 620-1 700), the 3rd marquess, abandoned 
the Roman Catholic religion and was a member of one of Crom- 
well's parliaments. But he was quietly loyal to Charles II., who 
in 1682 created him duke of Beaufort. As the defender of Bristol, 
the duke took a considerable pert in checking the progress of the 
duke of Monmouth in 1685, but in 1688 he surrendered the ciiy 
to William of Orange. He inherited Badminton, still the resi- 
dence of the dukes of Beaufort, and died there on the 21st of 
January 1700. The Worcester title was henceforth merged in 
that of Beaufort (q.v.). Henry, the 7U1 duke (1792-1853), was 
one of the greatest sportsmen of his day, and the Badminton 
hunt owed much to him and his successors, the 8th duke (1824- 
1899) a nd 9th duke (b. 1847). 

WORCESTER. JOHN T1PT0FT, Eabl of (1427-147©), was son 
of John Tiptoft (X375-X443), who was Speaker of the House of 
Commons in 1406, much employed in diplomacy by Henry V., 
a member of the council during the minority of Henry VI., and 
created Baron Tiptoft in 1426. The younger Tiptoft was 
educated at Oxford, where John Rous says that he was one of his 
fellow-students; he is stated to have been a member of Balbol 
College. He married Cicely, daughter of Richard Neville, 
earl of Salisbury, and widow of Henry Beauchamp (d. 1445), 
duke of Warwick. In x 449 he was created earl of Worcester. 
His wife died in 1450, but he continued the association with the 
Yorkist party. During York's protectorate he was treasurer of 
the exchequer, and in 1456-1457 deputy of Ireland. In 1457 
and again in 1459 ne was sent on embassies to the pope. He 
was abroad three years, during which he made a pilgrimage to 
Jerusalem; the rest of the time be spent in Italy, at Padua, 
where he studied law and Latin; at Ferrara, where he made the 
acquaintance of Guarino of Verona; and at Florence, where he 
heard the lectures of John Argyropoulos, the teacher of Greek. 
He returned to England early in the reign of Edward IV., and 
on the 7th of February X462 was made constable of England. 
In this office he had at once to try the earl of Oxford, and judged 
him by " lawe padoue " (sc. of Padua; Warkworth, 5). In 1463 
be commanded at sea, without success. In the following year as 
constable he tried and condemned Sir Ralph Grey and other 
Lancastrians. In 1467 he was again appointed deputy of Ireland. 



WORCESTER, W.~ WORCESTER 



821 



During a yew's office there he had the Mil of Desmond attainted, 
and cruelly put to death the earl's two infant sons. In 1470* 
as constable, he condemned twenty of Warwick's adherents, 
and had them Impaled, " for which ever afterwards the carl was 
greatly hated among the people, for their disordinate death that 
he used contrary to the law of the land " (Warkworth, 4). 
On the Lancastrian restoration Worcester fled Into hiding, 
but was discovered and tried before the earl of Oxford, son of 
the man whom he had condemned in 1469. He was executed 
on Tower Hill on the 18th of October 147a 

Worcester was detested for his brutality and abuse of the 
law, and was called " the butcher of England " (Fabyan, 659). 
More than any of his contemporaries in this country he represents 
the combination of culture and cruelty that was distinctive of the 
Italians of the Renaissance. Apart from his moral character he 
was an accomplished scholar, and a great purchaser of books in 
Italy, many of which he presented to the university of Oxford. 
He translated Cicero's Da amicitia and Buonaccorso's Declara- 
tion of Nobleness, which were printed by Caxton in 1481. Caxton 
in his epilogue eulogized Worcester as superior to all the temporal 
fords of the kingdom in moral virtue as well as in science. 
Worcester is also credited with a translation of Caesar's Com- 
mentaries printed in 1530. His M ordinances for justes and 
triumphes," made as constable in 1466, are printed in Harring- 
ton's Nu$at anliquce. Worcester was a patron of the early 
English humanist John Free, and his Italian friends included, 
besides those already mentioned, Lodovtco Carbo of Ferrara, 
and the famous Florentine bookseller Vespaslano da Bistkci. 

Authorities.— For Worcester's English career see especially the 
contemporary accounts in Three Fifteenth Century Chronicles, 
Collections of a London Citizen (Gregory's Chronicle), and Wark- 
worth's Chronicle— all three published by the Camden Society. 
Vespasiano da Bisticci gave an account of nini in his Vile di nomini 
iUustru L 322-526. an. Opera tnediU o rate setts provincia deff Emilia. 
See also Blades' Life of Cotton, L 79» "- 73- (C. L. K.) 

t • WORCESTER, WILLIAM (c. 141 5-*. i4**)f English chronicler, 
was a son of William of Worcester, a Bristol citizen, and as some- 
times caUcd William Botoner, his mother being a daughter of 
Thomas Botoner. He was educated at Oxford and became 
secretary to Sir John Fastolf. When the knight died in M59> 
Worcester, although one of his executors, found that nothing 
had been bequeathed to him, and with one of his colleagues, Sir 
William Yctverton, he disputed the validity of the wilL How- 
ever, an amicable arrangement was made and Worcester obtained 
some lands near Norwich and in Southwark. He died about 
1482. Worcester made several journeys through England, and 
his llinerarium contains much information. The survey of 
Bristol is of the highest value to antiquaries. Portions of the 
work were printed by James Nasmith in 17781 and the part 
relating to Bristol is in James Dallaway's Antiquities of Bristowe 
(Bristol, 1834). 

Worcester also wrote Annates rerum AngtUarmw, a work of some 
value for the history of England under Henry VI. This was published 
byT. Hcarae in 1738. and by Joseph Stevenson for the '* Rolls " scries 
with his Letters and Papers Qlattratvee of the Wars of Ike English in 
France during Ike Reign of Henry VI. (1864). Stevenson also printed 
here collections of papers made by Worcester respecting the wars of 
the English in France and Normandy. Worcester's other writings 
•ndude the last Acta domini Jokannis Fastolf. See the Potion 
Letters edited by J. Gahdner (1904); and F. A. Casqoet. An Old 
English Bible and other Essays (1897). 

" WORCESTER, a town of the Cape province, S. Africa, 109m. 
by rail (58 in a direct line) N.E. of Cape Town, and the starting 
point of the railway to Mosscl Bay and Port Elizabeth. Pop. 
(1004) 7885. It lies in the Little Karroo, about 800 ft. above 
the sea at the foot of the Hex River mountains. Tanning and 
wagon-building are among the industries, but the surrounding 
country is one of the largest wine and brandy producing districts 
in the province. At Brandvlei, 9 m. S., near the Breede river are 
therma l springs with a temperature of 14s* F. 

WORCESTER, an episcopal dty and county of a city, muni- 
cipal, parliamentary, and county borough, and county town of 
Worcestershire, England, on the river Severn, xaoj m. W.N.W. 
of London. Pop. (1001) 46,624- It is served by the Great 
Western railway and by the Bristol-Birmingham line of the 



Midland railway. Branches of the Great Western diverge to 
Malvern and Hereford, and to Leominster. Worcester lies 
mainly upon the left (E.) bank of the Severn, which is here a 
broad and placid river, the main part of the city lying on a 
ridge parallel with its banks. The dty is governed by a mayor, 
is aldermen and 36 councillors. Area 3242 acres. 

The cathedral church of Our Lord and the Blessed Virgin 
Mary is beautifully placed dose to the river. The sec was founded 
by the advice of Archbishop Theodore of Canterbury about 679 
or 680, though, owing to the opposition of the bishop of Lichfield 
it was not finally established till 780. In its formation the tribal 
division was followed, and it contained the people of the Hwiccas. 
The bishop's church of St Peter's, with its secular canons, was 
absorbed by Bishop Oswald into the monastery of St Mary. 
The canons became monks, and in 983 Oswald finished the 
building of a new monastic cathedraL After the Norman 
Conquest the saintly bishop of Worcester, WuUstan, was the 
only English prelate who was left in possession of his see, and 
it was he who first undertook the building of a great church 
of stone according to the Norman pattern. Of the work of Wulf- 
stan, the outer walls of the nave, aisles, a part of the walls of 
the transepts, some shafts and the crypt remain. The crypt 
(1084) is one of the four npsidal crypts in England, the others 
being those in Winchester, Gloucester and Canterbury cathedrals. 
Wulfstan's building seems to have extended no farther than 
the transepts, but the nave was continued, though much of it 
was destroyed by the fall of the central tower in 1 175. The two 
W. bays of the nave date from about 1160. In 1203 Wulfstan, 
who had died in 1095, was canonized, and on the completion 
and dedication of the cathedral in 1218, his body was placed in 
a shrine, which became a place of pilgrimage, and thereby brought 
wealth to the monks. They devoted this to the building of a 
lady chapel at the E. end, extending the building by 50 ft.; 
and in 1324 was begun the rebuilding of the choir, in its present 
splendid Early English style. The nave was remodelled in the 
14th century, and, excepting the W.bays, shows partly Decorated 
but principally early Perpendicular work. The building is 
cruciform, and is without aisles in the transepts, but has secondary 
choir-transepts. A Jesus chapel (an uncommon feature) opens 
from the N. nave aisle, from which it is separated by a very 
beautiful modern screen of stone, in the Perpendicular style. 
Without, the cathedral is severely plain, with the exception of 
the ornate tower, which dates from 1374, and is 106 ft. in height. 
The prindpal dimensions of the cathedral are— extreme length 
425 ft. (nave 170 ft., choir 180 ft.), extreme width 145 ft. (choir 
78 ft.), height of nave 68 ft. The monastic remains lie to the S. 
The cloisters are of Perpendicular work engrafted upon Norman 
walls, being entered from the S. through a fine Norman doorway. 
In them the effect of the warm red sandstone is particularly 
beautiful. An interesting Norman chapter house adjoins 
them on the E., its Perpendicular roof supported on a central 
column, while on the S. lies the Refectory, a fine Decorated 
room (1372) now devoted to the uses of the Cathedral SchooL 
There -are also picturesque ruins of the Guesten Hall (1320). 
A very extensive restoration was begun in 1857, upwards of 
£100,000 being spent. Among the monuments in the cathedral, 
that of King John, in the choir, is the earliest sepulchral effigy 
of an English king in the country. There is an altar tomb, in 
a very fine late Perpendicular chantry chapel, of Arthur, Prince 
of Wales, son of Henry VII., who died in 1502. There are also 
monuments of John Gauden, the bishop who wrote Icon basilike, 
often attributed to Charles I., of Bishop Hough by Roubillac, 
and of Mrs Digby by Chantrey. 

Of the eleven parish churches, St Alban's has considerable 
Norman remains, St Peter's contains portions of all Gothic 
styles, St Helen's, with a fine peal of bells commemorating the 
victories of Marlborough, has also Gothic portions, but the 
majority were either rebuilt in the 18th century, or are modern. 
St Andrews has a beautiful spire, erected in 1751 155 ft. 6 In. 
in height . Holy Trinity preserves the ancient roof of the Guesten 
Hall. St John's in Bedwardine was made a parish church in 
1371. 



822 



WORCESTER 



There are* no remains of the old castle of Worcester; it adjoined 
the monastery so closely that King John gave its yard to the 
monks, and after that time it ceased to be a stronghold. The 
Commandery, founded by St Wulfstan in 1085, was a hospital, 
and its name appears to lack authority. It was rebuilt in Tudor 
times, and there remains a beautiful hall, with music gallery, 
canopied dais, and a fine bay window, together with other 
parts. The wood-carving is exquisite. There are many old 
half-timbered houses. The guild-hall (1723) is an admirable 
building in the Italian style; it contains a portrait of George III., 
by Sir Joshua Reynolds, presented by the king to commemorate 
his visit to the city at the triennial musical festival in 1 788. This, 
the Festival of the Three Choirs, is maintained here alternately 
with Gloucester and Hereford. The corporation 'possesses 
some interesting old charters and manuscripts, and good muni- 
cipal regalia. Public buildings include the shire-hall (1835), 
Corn Exchange and market-house. Fairs are held thrice 
annually. The Victoria Institute includes a library, museum 
and art gallery. The cathedral school was founded by Henry 
VIII. in 1 54 1, Queen Elizabeth's, in a modern building, in 1563; 
there arc also a choir school, and municipal art, science and 
technical schools. In the vicinity of the city there is a large 
Benedictine convent, at Stanbrook Hall, with a beautiful 
modern chapel. The Clothiers' Company possesses a charter 
granted by Queen Elizabeth; but the great industries are now 
the manufacture of gloves and of porcelain. A company of 
glovers was incorporated in 1661. The manufacture of porcelain 
is famous. The materials employed are china clay and china 
stone from Cornwall, felspar from Sweden, Axe-clay from Stour- 
bridge and Broseley, marl, flint and calcined bones. The Royal 
Porcelain works cover 5 acres. Among Worcester's other trades 
are those of iron, iron goods and engineering works, carriage 
making, rope spinning, boat building, tanning and the produc- 
tion of chemical manures and of cider and perry. There is a 
considerable carrying trade on the Severn; 

The charities are numerous, and include St Oswald's hospital, 
Nash's almshouses, Wyatt's almshouses, the Berkeley hospital, 
Goulding hospital, Shewring's hospital, Inglcthorpe's alms- 
houses, Waldgrave's almshouses, Moore's blue-coat school, 
Queen Elizabeth's charity, and others. 

Traces of British and Roman occupation have been discovered 
at Worcester QVigcran Ccoslcr, Wigornia), but its history begins 
with the foundation of the episcopal see. Being the chief city 
on the borders of Wales, Worcester was frequently visited by 
the kings of England. In n 39 it was taken by the Empress 
Maud and retaken and burnt by Stephen in 1 149. It surrendered 
to Simon de Montfort in 1263. In 1642, during the Great 
Rebellion, a handful of cavaliers was besieged here, and in spite 
of an attempted relief by Prince Rupert, the city was pillaged, 
as it was again in 1646. In 1651 Charles II. with the Scottish 
army marched into Worcester, where he was welcomed by the 
citizens. Cromwell took up his position on the Red Hill just 
outside the city gates. Lambert succeeded in passing the Severn 
at Upton, and drove back the Royalist troops towards Worcester. 
Charles, seeking an advantage of this division of the enemy 
on opposite sides of the river, attacked Cromwell's camp. At 
first he was successful, but Cromwell was reinforced by Lambert's 
troops in time to drive back Charles's foot, who were not supported 
by the Scottish horse, and the rout of the King's force was complete. 
I In the reign of King Alfred, iEthelred and iEthclflead, ealdor- 
man and lady of the Mercians, at the request of the bishop 
" built a burgh at Worcester " and granted to him half of their 
rights and privileges there " both in market and street within 
the borough and without." Richard I. in 1 189 granted the town 
to the burgesses at a fee-farm of £24, and Henry III. in 1227 
granted a gild merchant and exemption from toll, and raised 
the farm to £30. The first incorporation charter was granted 
by Philip and Mary in 1554 under the title of bailiffs, aldermen, 
chamberlains and citizens, but James I. in 1622 made the city 
a separate county and granted a corporation of a mayor, 6 
aldermen, and a common council consisting of one body of 
24 citizens, including the mayor and aldermen, and another 



body of 48, who elected the mayor from among the 24. By the 
Municipal Reform Act of 183 5 the government was again altered, 
The burgesses returned two members to parliament from 1295 
to 1 885, when the number was reduced to one. As early as 1 203 
the men of the town paid 100*. for licence to buy and sell doth 
as they had done in the time of Henry HI., and in 1590 the 
weavers, walkers and clothiers received an incorporation charter, 
but the trade bad already begun to decline and by 1789 had 
ceased to exist. Its place was taken by the manufacture of 
porcelain, introduced in 1751 by Dr-Wall, and by the increasing 
manufacture of gloves, a trade in which is known to have been 
carried on in the 15th century. 

See Victoria County History, Worcester; John Noake, Worcester 
in Olden Times (1840) ; Valentine Green, The History and Antiquities 
of the City and Suburb^ of Worcester (1796). 

WORCESTER, a city and the county-seat of Worcester 
county, Massachusetts, U-S.A., about 44 ni. W. of Boston on 
the Blaclutonc river, a branch of the Providence river. Pop. 
(1000) 118,421 (37,652 foreign-bom); (1905, state census) 128,135; 
(1010) 145*986. Area, 39 sq. m. Worcester is served by the 
Boston & Albany, the New York, New Haven & Hartford and 
the Boston & Maine railways, and is connected with Springfield 
anJ Boston by interurban electric lines. The park system of 
the city comprises about twenty tracts with a total area of more 
than 1 100 acres; among them are Elm Park (88 acres) in the W. 
including Newton Hill (670 fL above sea-levct), and Green Hill 
Park (500 acres) in the N.E. Other parks are Institute Park 
(18 acres) and Boynton Park (t 13 acres) in the N.W. on Salisbury 
Pond, given to the city by Stephen Salisbury; Dodge Park 
(13 acres, N); Burocoat Park (42 acres, N.E.); Chandler Hill 
Park (80 acres, E.); Had wen (50 acres), University (14 acres) 
and Crompton Park (15-25 acres) in the S.W. and S.; and 
Greenwood (ia-6s acres), Beaver Brook (15*5 acres), Tatnuck 
(2-94 acres), Kendrick (14-87 acres) and Vernon Hill (16-4 acres). 
Two miles N.E. of the centre of the city lies lake Quinsigamond, 
4 m. long, from which flows the river of the same name, a branch 
of the Blackstone. On its shores is Lake Park (no acres). 
Fronting the Common, a wooded square in the centre of the city, 
is the City Hall, near which is a bronze statue, by D. C. French, 
of G. F. Hoar. On the Common there is a monument, designed 
by Randolph Rogers, to the soldiers and sailors of the Civil 
War, and one to Colonel Timothy Bigelow (1730-1700), one of 
Worcester's soldiers of the War of Independence. The E. side 
of the Common was the site of an old burying ground, and the 
W. side of the First Church, built in 1663. About } m. N. of the 
Common is Lincoln Square, adjacent to which is the granite 
Court House; in front of it is a statue of General Charles Devcrts 
(1820-1891) by French. The old Salisbury mansion, dating 
back to Colonial days, stands m this square. At Salisbury 
Street and Park Avenue are the library and museum (1910) 
of the American Antiquarian Society, established in 18x3 
by Isaiah Thomas, with a collection of interesting portraits, a 
library of 09,000 vols, and many thousands of pamphlets, particu- 
larly rich in Americana. The Art Museum was erected and 
endowed (1899-1903) by Stephen Salisbury, and contains a 
fine collection of casts, many valuable paintings, and the Ban- 
croft Collection of Japanese art. The city has many fine 
churches. 

Worcester is an important educational centre. Clark 
University was established here in 1889 by Jonas Gilman Clark 
as a purely graduate institution. In 2902 Clark College was 
opened for undergraduate work under the presidency of Carroll 
D. Wright, with a separate endowment of $1,300,000. In 1910 
it had 30 teachers and 177 students, The university in 1910 had 
15 instructors, 103 students and a Hbrary of 50,000 volumes. 
Under G. Stanley Hall, who was made president in 1888, the 
university became well known for its work in child-psychology. 
Worcester Polytechnic Institute (founded in 1865 by John 
Boynton of Templeton, Massachusetts; opened in x868) is one 
of the best-equipped technical schools of college rank in the 
country; in 1910 it had 49 instructors, 515 students and a 
library of 12,700 vols.; the buildings are near Institute Park. 



WORCESTERSHIRE 



823 



On Packaehoag Hill or Mt. St James (690 ft.) is the Jesuit 
college of the Holy Cross, with a preparatory school, founded fa 
1843 by Benedict J. Fen wick, bishop of Boston, and chartered 
in 1865; In 1910 it had 30 instructors and 450 students. There 
is a State Normal School (1874), and connected with it a 
kindergarten training school (1910)* 

The city library (175,000 vols.), founded in 1859, was one of 
the first in the country to be open on Sunday. There are four 
daily newspapers, one printed in French. From 1775 to 1848 
was published here the weekly edition of the Worcester Spy, 
established by Isaiah Thomas in 1770 in Boston as the Massa- 
chusetts Spy and removed by him to Worcester at the outbreak 
of the War of Independence; a daily edition was published 
from 1845 to 1904. Early in the 19th century the city was an 
important publishing centre. 

Worcester is one of the most important manufacturing 
centres in New England:' in 1005 the value of the factory 
product was $52,144,065. ranking the city third among the 
cities of the state. Manufacturers of hardware and tools at an 
early date laid the foundation for the present steel and other 
metal industries, in which 4 * 8 % of all the workers were employed 
in 1905. A large proportion are employed in the wire and wire- 
working industries, one plant, that of the American Steel and 
Wire Company, employing about 5000 hands; in 1005 the total 
value of wire-work was $1,726,088, and of foundry and machine 
shop products $7*3 J 7.°95- 

The first grant of land in this part of the Blackstone Valley 
was made in 1657, and the town, Quansigamond (or Quinsiga- 
mond) Plantation, was laid out in October 1668. In 1675, on 
the outbreak of King Philip's War, it was temporarily abandoned. 
In 1684 it was settled again and its name was changed to Wor- 
cester because several leaders in the settlement were natives of 
Worcester, England. In 1713 the vicinity was opened up to 
settlement, a tavern and a mill were constructed, and a turnpike 
road was built to Boston. Worcester was incorporated as a town 
fn 17s*. In 1755 a small colony of the exiled Acadians settled 
here. At the outbreak of the War of Independence Worcester was 
little more than a country market town. During Shays's Rebellion 
it was taken by the rebels and the courts were closed. The 
first real impetus to its growth came in 183 s with the construct ion 
of the Boston & Worcester railway, and it received a city charter 
in 1848. The strong anti-slavery sentiment of the city led in 
1854 to a serious riot, owing to an apparent attempt to enforce 
the Fugitive Slave Law. In Worcester, or within a radius of 
a dozen miles of it, were the homes of Elias Howe, Inventor of 
the sewing machine; Eli Whitney, inventor of the cotton gin; 
Erastus Bigclow (18 14- 1870), inventor of the carpet weaving 
machine; Dr Russell L. Hawcs, inventor of an envelope machine; 
Thomas Blanchard (1788-1864), inventor of the machine for 
turning irregular forms; Samuel Cromplon (1753-18*7) and 
Lucius James Knowles (1819-1884), the perfectors of the modern 
loom; and Draper Rugglcs, Joel Nourse and J. C. Mason, per- 
fectors of the modern plough and originators of many inventions 
in agricultural machinery. 

See F. E. Blake. Incidents of Ike First and Second SetiUments of 
Worcester (Worcester, 1884); Wm. Lincoln. History of Worcester to 
l8\6 (Worcester, 1837); alto same extended to 1 86a by Charles 
Hersey (Worcester. 1862); D. H. Hurd. History of Worcester County 
(Worcester. 2 vols.. 1889); I. N. MctcaJf, Illustrated Business Guide 
to City of Worcester (Worcester. 1880): C. F. lewett, History of 
Worcester County (2 vols.. Worcester. »8?o): the Collections and Pro- 
ceedings (f 88t sqq.) of the Worcester Society of Antiquity (instituted 
in 1877). 

WORCESTERSHIRE, a midland county of England, bounded 
N. by Staffordshire. E. by Warwickshire, S. by Gloucestershire, 
W. by Herefordshire, and N.W. by Shropshire. The area b 
751 sq. m. It covers a portion of the rich valleys of the Severn 
and Avon, with their tributary valleys and the hills separating 
them. The Severn runs through the county from N. at Bewdley 
to S. near Tewkesbury, t ravening the Vale of Worcester. Follow- 
ing this direction it receives from the B. the Stour at Stourport, 
the Salwarpe above Worcester, and the Avon, whose point of 
junction b just outside the county. _ The Avon valley is known 



in this county as the Vale of Evesham, and is devoted to orchards 
and market gardening. The Cotteswold Hills rise sharply from 
it on the S.E., of which Bredon Hill, within this county, is 
a conspicuous spur. The Avon forms the county boundary 
with Gloucestershire for a short distance above its mouth. 
The Tcmc joins the Severn from the W. below Worcester, and 
forms short stretches of the W. boundary. Salmon and lam- 
preys are taken fn the Severn; trout and grayling abound in 
the Teme and its feeders. Besides the Cotteswolds, the most 
important hills are the Malvern and the Lackey or Hagley 
ranges. The Malvems rise abruptly from the fiat Vale of 
Worcester on the W. boundary, being partly in Herefordshire, 
and reach a height of 1395 ft. in the Worcester Beacon, and 
1114 in the Hereford Beacon. They are divided by the Teme 
from a lower N. continuation, the Abbcriey Hills. TheLickcy 
Hills cross the N.E. corner of the county, rarely exceeding 1000 
ft. Their N. part is called the Clent Hills. Partly *ithin the 
county are the sites of two ancient forests. That of Wyre, 
bordering the Severn on the W. in the N. of Worcestershire and 
in Shropshire, retains to tome extent its ancient character; 
but Malvern Chase, which clothed the slopes of the Malvern 
Hills, b hardly recognisable. 

Ctafofy.~Archean gneisses and schists fMalvernian) and volcanic 
rocks (Uriconkin) form the core of the Malvern Hills; being the most 
durable rocks in the district, they form the highest ground. Similarly 
tuffs and volcanic grits (Barnt Green rocks) crop out in the Lickey 
HuTs near Bromsgrove. They are succeeded by the Cambrian rocka 
(HoRybuah Sandstone and Malvern Shales), which are wcU developed 
at the & end of the Malvern Hills, where in places the Archeaa rocks 
have been thrust over them. The Lickey Quartrite, probably of the 
same age as the Hoflybush Sandstone, is extensively quarried for 
roadstonc. Strata of Ordovician age being absent in Worcestershire* 
the Silurian rocks rest unconformablv on the earlier formation; 
they include the Upper Llandovery, wenlock and Ludlow series. 
These dip steeply W. from the Malvern and Abbcriey axis and plunge 
under the Old Red Sandstone: some of the lower beds arc represented 
at the Lickey, while the Wenlock Limestone forms some sharp anti- 
clines at Dudley. The Silurian strata are rich in marine fossils, and 
the included limestones (Woolhopc, Wenlock and Aymestry) are 
all represented in the Malvern district. The Old Red Sandstone 
'succeeds the Silurian on the W. boiders of the county. The Carboni- 
ferous Limestone and Millstone Grit were not deposited, so that the 
Coal Measures rest unconformabty on the older rocks. These are 
represented in the Wyre Forest coalfield near Bewdley and in the & 
end of the S. Staffordshire coalfield near Halesowen: they contain 
rich seams of coal and ironstone and several intrusions of basalt 
(dhustonc. Rowley-rag). The so-called Permian red rocks are now 
grouped with the Coal Measures; some intercalated breccias cap the 
Clent Hills (1036 ft.). The Triassic red rocks— unconformable to all 
below— cover the centre of the county, and on the W. arc faulted 
against the older, rocks of the Malvems; they include the Bunter 
sandstones and pcbblc-bcds, and the Keuper sandstones and marls, 
the beds of rock-salt in the latter yielding brine-springs (Droitwich, 
Stoke Prior). A narrow and seldom-exposed outcrop of Rhaetic 
beds introduces the marine Liassic formation which occupies most 
of the S.E. of the county; the Lower Lias consists of blue clays and 
limestones; the latter are burnt for lime and yield abundant 
ammonites. The sands and lime st one s of the Middle Lias and the 
days of the Upper Lias arc present in the lower slopes of Bredon Hill 
and of the Cotteswolds, and arc succeeded by the sands and oolitic 
limestones of the Inferior Oolite. Glacial deposits— boulder-clay, 
isolated boulders, sand and gravel— are met with in many pans 
of the county, while later valley-gravels have yielded remains of 
mammoth, rhinoceros, Ac Coal, ironstone, salt, fimestone and road* 
•tone are the chief mineral products. 

Climate and Agriculture.— -The climate is generally equable and 
healthy, and is very favourable to the cultivation of fruit, vegetables 
and hops, for which Worce s tershire has long held a high reputation, 
the red maris and the rich loams being good both for market gardens 
and tillage. About five-sixths of the area of the county is under 
cultivation, and of this about 6ve-eighths is in permanent pasture. 
Orchards are extensive, and there are large tracts of woodland, 
Wheat and oats are the principal grain crops. Turnips are grown on 
about one-third of the green crop acreage, and potatoes on about 
one-fourth. There is a considerable acreage under beans. la the 
neighbourhood of Worcester there are large nurseries. 

Industries.— In the N. Worcester includes a portion of the Black 
Country, one of the most active industrial districts in England. 
Dudley. Netherton and Brierley Hill. Stourbridge, Halesowen. 
Oidbury and the S. and W. suburbs of Birmingham, have a vast 

a_ *• a *— ! — _ I • i_ _tt !a— * ^ - * ,^«fc— nj>asw 



< 



82 + 



WORCESTERSHIRE 



Redditch for needles, fish-hooks, Ac Selt k produced from brine at 
Droitwich and Stoke. The fire-clays and limestone of the N. unite 
with the coal measures to form a basis of the industries in the Black 
Country. Furniture, clothing and paper-making and leather-work- 
ing are also important. 

Communications.— The Great Western railway serves Evesham, 
Worcester, Droitwich and Kidderminster, with branches from 
Worcester to Malvern and into Herefordshire, from Kidderminster 
to Tenbury and the W., and from the same junction to Dudley 
and Birmingham. The London & North-Western system touches 
Dudley. The Midland company's line between Derby, Birmingham 
and Bristol runs from N. to S. through the county, with a branch 
diverging through Droitwich and Worcester, another serving 
Malvern from Ashchurch, and an alternative route from Birmingham 
to Ashchurch by Redditch and Evesham. The Severn is an im- 
portant highway; the Avon, though locked up to Evesham, is little 
used save by pleasure-boats. Canals follow toe courses of the Stour 
and the Salwarpe, and serve the towns of the Black Country. 

Administration and Population— The area of the ancient 
county is 480,560 acres, with a population in ioot of 489>33&< 
The area of the administrative county is 4*0,059 acres. The 
county is of very irregular shape, and has detached portions 
endaved in Herefordshire, Staffordshire, Warwickshire and 
Gloucestershire. It comprises five hundreds. The municipal 
boroughs are Bcwdley (2866), Droitwich (4201), Dudley (48,733), 
Evesham (7101), Kidderminster (24,681) and Worcester (46,624). 
Dudley and the city and county town of Worcester are county 
boroughs. The urban districts are Bromsgrove (8418), King's 
Norton and Northfield (57,122; forming a S. suburb of Birming- 
ham), Lye and WoUescote (10,976; adjacent to Stourbridge), 
Malvern (16,449), North Bromsgrove (5688), Oldbury (25,101), 
Redditch (13,403). Stourbridge (16,302) and Stourport (4520). 
Halesowen (4057)1 Pershore (3348), Tenbury (2080) and Upton- 
upon-Severa (2225) may be mentioned among other towns. 
The county is in the Oxford circuit, and assizes are held at 
Worcester. It has one court of quarter-sessions, and is divided 
into 17 petty sessional divisions. Worcester and Dudley have 
separate courts of quarter-sessions, and all the boroughs have 
commissions of the peace. The total number of civil parishes 
is 239. TJic ancient county, which is mostly in the diocese of 
Worcester, with a few parishes in that of Hereford, contains 
231 ecclesiastical parishes or districts wholly or in part. The 
county contains five parliamentary divisions— West or Bcwdley, 
East, South or Evesham, Mid or Droitwich, and North or 
Oldbury. The parliamentary boroughs of Kidderminster and 
Worcester return one member each, and parts of the boroughs 
of Dudley and Birmingham are included in the county. 

History. — The earliest English settlers in the district now known 
as Worcestershire were a tribe of the Hwiccas of Gloucestershire, 
who spread along the Severn and Avon valleys in the 6th cen- 
tury. By 679 the Hwiccan kingdom was formed into a separate 
diocese with its sec at Worcester, and the Hwiccas had made 
themselves masters of the modern county, with the exception 
of the N.W. corner beyond the Abbcrlcy Hills. From this date 
the town of Worcester became not only the religious centre of 
the district, but the chief point of trading and military communi- 
cation between England and Wales. A charter of the reign of 
Alfred alludes to the erection of a " burh " at Worcester by 
Edward and iEthelflead, and it was after the recovery of Mercia 
from the Danes by Edward that the shire originated as an 
administrative area. The first political event recorded by the 
Saxon Chronicle in Worcestershire is the destruction of Worcester 
by Hardicanute in 104 1 in revenge for the murder of two of his 
tax-gatherers by the citizens. 

In no county has the monastic movement played a more 
important part than in Worcestershire. Foundations existed 
at Worcester, Evesham, Pershore and Fladbury in the 8th 
century; at Great Malvern in the nth century, and in the 12th 
and 13th centuries at Little Malvern, Westwood, Bordcsley, 
Whistones, Cookhill, Dudley, Halesowen and Astley. At the 
time of the Domesday Survey more than half Worcestershire was 
In the hands of the church. The church of Worcester held the 
triple hundred of Oswaldslow, with such privileges as to exclude 
the sheriff's jurisdiction entirely, the profits of all the local 
courts accruing to the bishop, whose bailiffs in 1276 claimed 



to bold his hundred outside Worcester, at Dryhurst, and at 
Wimborntrec. The two hundreds owned by the church of West- 
minster, and that owned by Pershore, had in the 13th century 
been combined to form the hundred of Pershore, while the 
hundred of Evesham owned by Evesham Abbey had been con- 
verted into Blakenhurst hundred; and the irregular boundaries 
and outlying portions of these hundreds are explained by their 
having been formed out of the scattered endowments of their 
ecclesiastical owners. Of the remaining Domesday hundreds, 
Came, Clent, Crcsselaw and Esch had been combined to form the 
hundred of Halfshire by the 13th century, while Doddingtree 
remained unchanged. The shire-court was held at Worcester. 

The vast possessions of the church prevented the growth of 
a great territorial aristocracy in Worcestershire, and Dudley 
Castle, which passed from William Fitz-Ansculf to the families 
of Paynel and Somen, was the sole residence of a feudal baron. 
The Domesday fief of Urse d'Abitot the sheriff, founder of 
Worcester Castle, and of his brother Robert le Despenser passed 
in the 12th century to the Bcauchamps, who owned Elmley 
and Hanlcy Castles. The possessions of William FiU Osbern 
in Doddingtree hundred and the Tcrae valley fell to the crown 
after his rebellion in 1074 and passed to the Mortimers. Hanlcy 
Castle and Malvern Chase were granted by Henry III. to Gilbert 
de Clare, with exemption from the sheriff's jurisdiction. 

The early political history of Worcestershire centres round the 
city of Worcester. In the Civil War of the 1 7th century Worcester- 
shire was conspicuously loyal. On the retreat of Essex from 
Worcester in 1642 the city was occupied by Sir William Russell 
for the king, and only surrendered in 1646. In 1642 Prince 
Rupert defeated the parliamentary troops near Powick. Sudelcy 
Castle surrendered in 1644, and Dudley and Hartlebury by 
command of the king in 1646. 

The Droitwich salt-industry was very important at the time of the 
Domesday Survey, Bromsgrove alone sending 300 cartloads of wood 
yearly to the salt-works. In the 13th and 14th centuries Bordesley 
monastery and the abbeys of Evesham and Pershore exported wool 
to the Florentine and Flemish markets, and in the 16th century the 
Worcestershire clothing industry gave employment to 8000 people: 
fruit-culture with the manufacture of cider and perry, nail-making 
and glass-making also flourished at this period. The clothing in- 
dustry declined in the 17th century, but the silk-manu/actare re* 
placed it at Kidderminster and Blockley. Coal and iron were mined 
at Dudley in the 13th century. 

As cany as 1295 Worcestershire was represented by sixteen 
members in parliament, returning two knights for the shire and two 
burgesses each for the city of Worcester and the boroughs of Broma* 
grove, Droitwich, Dudley, Evesham, Kidderminster and Pershore. 
With the exception of Droitwich, however, which was represented 
until 131 1 and again recovered representation in 1554, the boroughs 
ceased to make returns. Evesham was re-enfranchised in 1604, and 
in 1606 Bewdlcy returned one member. Under the Reform Act of 
183a the county returned four members in two divisions; Droitwich 
lost one member; Dudley and Kidderminster were rc-cnfranchiscd, 
returning one member each. In 1867 Evesham lost one member. 

Antiquities— Remains of early camps are scarce, but there are 
examples at Bcrrow Hill near the Tcme, W. of Worcester, at 
Round Hill by Spetchley, 3 m. E. of Worcester, and on the 
Herefordshire Beacon. Roman remains have been discovered 
on a few sites, as at Kempsey on the Severn, S. of Worcester, 
at Ripple, in the S. near Upton, and at Droitwich. There are 
remains of the great abbeys at Evesham and Pershore, and the 
fine priory church at Malvern, besides the cathedral at Worcester. 
There are further monastic remains at Halesowen and atBordesley 
near Redditch, and there was a Benedictine priory at Astley, 
j m. S.W. of Stourport. There are fine churches in several of 
the larger towns, as Bromsgrove. The village churches are 
generally of mixed styles. Good Norman work remains in those 
of Martlcy, 8 m. N.W. of Worcester, Astley, Rous Lench in the 
Evesham district, Bredon near Pershore, and Bocklcton in the 
N.W. of the county; while the Early English churches of 
Kempsey and Ripple are noteworthy. In domestic architecture, 
the half-timbered style adds to the picturcsqucness of many 
streets in the towns and villages; and among country houses 
this style is well exemplified in Birts Morton Court and Easting- 
ton HaU, in the district S. of Malvern, in Elmley Lovelt Manor 
between Droitwich and Kidderminster, and in Pirton Court near 



WORDSWORTH, Q— WORDSWORTH, D. 



825 



Kempsey. Westwood Park is a mansion of the 16th and 17th 
centuries, with a picturesque gatehouse oi brick; the site was 
formerly occupied by a Benedictine nunnery. Madresfield 
Court, between Worcester and Malvern, embodies remains of 
a line Elitabethan moated mansion. 

See Victoria Comity History, Worcestershire; T. R. Nash. CeUec- 
lions tor the History of Worcestershire (2 volt., London, 1781-1799); 
Sir Charles Hastings, Illustrations oflke Natural History of Worcester- 
shire (London, 1834); W. D. Curzon, Manufacturing Industries of 
Worcestershire (Birmingham, 1883); W. S. Brawington, Historic 
Worcestershire (Birmingham, 1893). See abo publications of the 
Worcester Historical Society. 

WORDSWORTH, CHARLES (1806-1892), Scottish bishop, 
son of Christopher Wordsworth, Master of Trinity, was born in 
London on the sand of August 1806, and educated at Harrow 
and Christ Church, Oxford. He was a brilliant classical scholar, 
and a famous cricketer and athlete; he was in the Harrow 
cricket eleven in the first regular matches with Eton (182a) 
and Winchester (1825), and is credited with bringing about the 
first Oxford and Cambridge match in 1817, and the first university 
boat-race in 1828, in both of which he took part. He won the 
Chancellor's Latin verse at Oxford in 1827, and the Latin essay 
in 183 1, and took a first-class in classics. From 1830 to 1833 he 
had as pupils a number of men (including W. E. Gladstone and 
H. E. Manning) who afterwards became famous. He then 
travelled abroad during 1833-1834, and after a year's work at 
tutor at Christ Church (1 834-1 835) was appointed second master 
at Winchester. He had previously taken holy orders, though he 
only became priest in 1840, and he had a strong religious influence 
with the boys. In 1839 he brought out his Creeh Grammar, 
which had a great success. In* 1846, however, he 'resigned; 
and then accepted the wardenship of Trinity College, Glenalmond, 
the new Scottish Episcopal public school and divinity college, 
where he remained from 1847 to 1854, having great educational 
success in all respects; though his views on Scottish Church 
question* brought him into opposition at some important points 
to W. E. Gladstone. In 1852 he was elected bishop of St Andrews, 
Dunkeld and Dunblane, and was consecrated in Aberdeen early 
next year. He was a strong supporter of the establishment, 
but conciliatory towards the Free churches, and this brought 
him into a good deal of controversy. He was a voluminous 
writer, and one of the company of revisers of the New Testament 
(1870-1881), among whom he displayed a conservative tendency. 
He died at St Andrews on the 5th of December 189a. He was 
twice married, first in 1835 to Charlotte Day (d. 1839), and 
secondly in 1846 to Katherine Mary Barter (d. 1897). He had 
thirteen children altogether. 

See his Annals of my Early Life (1891), and Annals of My Life, 
edited by W. Earl Hodgson (1891); abo The Episcopate of Charles 
Wordsworth* by bis nephew John, bishop of Salisbury (1899). 

WORDSWORTH, CHRISTOPHER (1774-1846), English 
divine and scholar, youngest brother of the poet William Words- 
worth, was bom on the 9th of June 1774, and was educated at 
Trinity College, Cambridge, where he became a fellow in 1708. 
Twelve years later he received the degree of D.D. He took holy 
orders, and obtained successive preferments through the patron- 
age of Manners Sutton, bishop of Norwich, afterwards (1805) 
archbishop of Canterbury, to whose son Charles (afterwards 
Speaker of the House of Commons, and viscount Canterbury) 
he had been tutor. He had in 1802 attracted attention by his 
defence of Granville Sharp's then novel canon " on the uses of 
the definitive article" in New Testament textual criticism. In 
x8io he published an Ecclesiastical Biography in 6 volumes. 
Chi the death of Bishop Mansel, in 1820, he was elected Master 
of Trinity, and retained that position till 1841, when be resigned. 
He is regarded as the father of the modem " classical tripos," 
since he had, as vice-chancellor, originated in 1821 a proposal for 
a public examination in classics and divinity, which, though then 
rejected, bore fruit in 1822. Otherwise his mastership was un- 
distinguished, and he was not a popular head with the college. 
He died on the and of February 1846, at Buxted. In his Who 
wrote Ikon BasUihet (1824), and in other writings, he advocated 
the claims of Charles I. to its authorship; and in 1836 he 



published, in 4 volumes, a work of Christian Institutes, selected 
from English divines. He married in 1804 Miss PriscilJa Lloyd 
(d. 1815), a sister of Charles Lamb's friend Charles Lloyd; and 
he had three sons, John W. (1805-1839), Charles <?.».), and 
Christopher (q.v.); the two latter both became bishops, and 
John, who became a fellow and classical lecturer at Trinity 
College, Cambridge, was an industrious and erudite scholar. 

WORDSWORTH, CHRISTOPHER (1807-1885), English bishop 
and man of fetters, youngest son of Christopher Wordsworth, 
Master of Trinity, was bom in London on the 30th of October 
1807, and was educated at Winchester and Trinity, Cam- 
bridge. He, like his brother Charles, was distinguished as an 
athlete as well as for scholarship. He became senior classic, 
and was elected a fellow and tutor oi Trinity in 1830; shortly 
afterwards he took holy orders. He went for a tour in Greece 
in 1832-1833, and published various works on its topography 
and archaeology, the most famous of which is " Wordsworth's " 
Greece (1839). In 1836 he became Public Orator at Cambridge, 
and in the same year was appointed headmaster of Harrow, 
a post he resigned in 1844. He then became a canon of West- 
minster, and from 1850 to 1870 he held a country living in 
Berkshire. In 1865 he was made archdeacon of Westminster, 
and in 1869 bishop of Lincoln. He died on the 20th of March 
1885. He was a man of fine character, with a high ideal of 
ecclesiastical duty, and he spent his money generously on church 
objects. As a scholar he is best known for his edition of the 
Greek New Testament (1856-1860), and the Old Testament 
(1864-1870), with commentaries; but his writings were many 
in number, and included a volume of devotional verse, The 
Holy Year (1862), Church History up to A.D. 451 (1881-1883), 
and Memoirs of his uncle the poet (1851), to whom he was literary 
executor. His InscripHones Pompeianae (1837) was an important 
contribution to epigraphy. He married in 1838 Susanna Hartley 
Frere (d. 1884), and had a family of seven; the eldest son was 
John (b. 1843), bishop of Salisbury (1885), and author of Frag- 
ments of Early Latin (1874); the eldest daughter, Elizabeth 
(b. 1840), was the first principal (1879) of Lady Margaret Hall, 
Oxford. 

His Life, by J. H. Overton and Elizabeth Wordsworth, was pub- 
lished in 1888. 

WORDSWORTH, DOROTHY (1771-1855)1 English writer 
and diarist, was the third child and only daughter of John 
Wordsworth of Cockermouth and his wife, Anne Cookson- 
Crackanthorpe. The poet William Wordsworth was her 
brother and a year her senior. On the death of her father in 
1783, Dorothy found a home at Penrith, in the house of her 
maternal grandfather, and afterwards for a time with a maiden 
lady at Halifax. In 1787, on the death of the elder William 
Cookson, she was adopted by her uncle, and lived in his Norfolk 
parish of Forncett. She and her brother William, who dedicated 
to his sister the Evening Walk of 1792, were early drawn to one 
another, and in 1794 they visited the Lakes together. They 
determined that it would be best to combine their small capitals, 
and that Dorothy should keep house for the poet. From this 
time forth her life ran on lines closely parallel to those of her 
great brother, whose companion she continued to be till his death. 
It is thought that they made the acquaintance of Coleridge in 
1797. 

From the autumn of 1795 to July 1797 William and Dorothy 
Wordsworth took up their abode at Racedown, in Dorsetshire. 
At the latter date they moved to a large manor-house, Alfoxden, 
in the N. slope of the Quantock hills, in W. Somerset, S. T. Cole- 
ridge about the same time settling near by in the town of Nether 
Stowey. On the aoth of January 1798 Dorothy Wordsworth 
began her invaluable Journal, used by successive biographers of 
her brother, but first printed in its quasi-entirety by Professor 
W. Knight in 1897. The Wordsworths, Coleridge, and Chester 
left England for Germany on the 14th of September 1798; and 
of this journey also Dorothy Wordsworth preserved an account, 
portions of which were published in 1897. On the 14th of May 
1800 she started another Journal at Grasmere, which she kept 
very folly until the 3ist*of December of the same year. Slst 



( 



8 2 6 



WORDSWORTH, W. 



resumed It on the xst of January 180a for another twelve months, 
closing on the nth of January 1803. These were printed first 
in 1889. She composed Recollections of a Tour in Scotland, in 
1803, with her brother and Coleridge; this was first published 
in 1874. Her next contribution to the family history was her 
Journal of a Mountain Ramble, in November 1805, an account of 
a walking tour in the Lake district with her brothei. In July 
1820 the Wordsworths made a tour on the continent of Europe, 
of which Dorothy preserved a very careful record, portions of 
which were given to the world in 1884, the writer having refused 
to publish it in 1824 on the ground that her " object was not to 
make a book, but to leave to her niece a neatly-penned memorial 
of those few interesting months of our lives." Meanwhile, 
without her brother, but in the company of Joanna Hutchinson, 
Dorothy Wordsworth had travelled over Scotland in 1822, 
and had composed a Journal of that tour. Other MSS. exist 
and have been examined carefully by the editors and biographers 
of the poets, but the records which we have mentioned and her 
letters form the principal literary relics of Dorothy Wordsworth. 
In 1829 she was attacked by very serious illness, and was never 
again in good health. After 1836 she could not be considered 
to be in possession of her mental faculties, and became a pathetic 
member of the interesting household at Grasmere. She outlived 
the poet, however, by several years, dying at Grasmere on the 
25th of January 1855. 

It would be difficult to exaggerate the importance of Dorothy 
Wordsworth's companionship to her illustrious brother. He 
has left numerous tributes to it, and to the sympathetic 
originality of her perceptions. " She," he said, 
" gave me eyes, she gave me ears; 
And humble cares, and delicate fears; 
A heart the fountain of sweet tears; 
And love, and thought, and joy." 

The value of the records preserved by Dorothy Wordsworth, 
especially in earlier years, is hardly to be over-estimated by those 
who desire to form an exact impression of the revival of English 
poetry. When Wordsworth and Coleridge refashioned imagina- 
tive literature at the close of the 18th century, they were daily 
and hourly accompanied by a feminine presence exquisitely 
attuned to sympathize with their efforts, and by an intelligence 
which was able and anxious to move in step with theirs. 
" S. T. C. and my beloved sister," William Wordsworth wrote 
in 1832, "are the two beings to whom my intellect is most 
indebted." In her pages we can put our finger on the very pulse 
of the machine; we are present while the New Poetry is evolved, 
and the sensitive descriptions in her prose lack nothing but the 
accomplishment of verse. Moreover, it is certain that the sharp- 
ness and fineness of Dorothy's observation, "the shooting lights 
of het wild eyes," actually afforded material to the poets. 
Coleridge, for instance, when he wrote his famous lines about 
" The one red leaf, the last of its clan," used almost the very 
words in which, on the 7th of March 1798, Dorothy Wordsworth 
had recorded " One only leaf upon the top of a tree . . . danced 
round and round like i tz.% blown by the wind." 

It Ii not merely by the biojjtaphical value of her note* that Dorothy 
Wordsworth liv« H She claims an independent p| acc J fl the history 
of Engliih prose 49 one of the very earliest writers who not. J, in 
Language delicately chosen, and with no other object than to pre- 
serve {keif fugitive beauty, the little picturesque phenomena of 
homely country life. When we *ptak with very hiph praiw of her 
art in this direction, it if only fair to add that it i* DUHd forth almost 
entirely by what she wrote between t?9J and jBoj. for 1 dedine 
similar to thai which fell upon her brother - ! poetry early invaded 
her prose: and her later journals, like her Ltlieti, are leu interest* 
ing because less inspired* A Lift, by Eh Lee was published in iriio: 
but it is crnly since 1807, when Professor Knight collected and 
edited her scattered MSS., that Dorothy Wordiworth has taken her 
independent place ia iitcrary history* (E. GJ 

WORDSWORTH, WILLIAM (1770-1850), English poet, 
was born at Cockermoath, on the Derwent, in Cumberland, 
on the 7th of April 1770. He was the son of John Wordsworth 
(1741-1783), an attorney, law agent to the first earl of Lonsdale, 
a prosperous man in his profession, descended from an old 
Yorkshire family of landed gentry. On the mother's side also 
Wordsworth was connected with the middle territorial class: 



his mother, Anne Cookson, was the daughter of a* well-to-do 
mercer in Penrith, but her mother was Dorothy Crackanthorpe, 
whose ancestors had been lords of the manor of Newbiggin, near 
Penrith, from the time of Edward III. He thus came of " gentle " 
kin, and was proud of it. The country squires and farmer* 
whose blood flowed in Wordsworth's veins were not far enough 
above local life to be out of sympathy with it, and the 
poet's interest in the common scenes and common folk of the 
North country hills and dales had a traceable hereditary bias. 
William Wordsworth was one of a family of five, the others being 
Richard (1 768-1816), Dorothy (q.v.) t John (1772-1805), and 
Christopher (q.t.). 

Though his parents were of sturdy stock, both died prematurely, 
his mother when he was eight years old, his father when he was 
thirteen. At the age of eight Wordsworth was sent to school 
at Hawkshead, in the Esthwaite valley in Lancashire. His 
father died while he was there, and at the age of seventeen he 
was sent to St John's College, Cambridge. He did not distin- 
guish himself in the studies of the university, and for some 
time after taking his degree of B.A., in January 1791, he showed 
what seemed to his relatives a most perverse reluctance to adopt 
any regular profession. His mother had noted his " stiff, moody 
and violent temper " in childhood, and it seemed as if this family 
judgment was to be confirmed in his manhood. After taking 
his degree, he was pressed to take holy orders, but would not; 
he had no taste for the law; he idled a few months aimlessly 
in London, a few months more with a Welsh college friend, 
with whom he had made a pedestrian tour in France and Switzer- 
land during his last Cambridge vacation; then in the November 
of 1 791 he crossed to France, ostensibly to learn the language, 
made the acquaintance of revolutionaries, sympathized with 
them vehemently, and was within an ace of throwing in his lot 
with the Girondins. When it came to this, his relatives cut off 
his supplies, and he was obliged to return to London towards 
the close of 1792. But still he resisted all pressure to enter 
any of the regular professions, published his poems An Eoening 
Walk and Descriptive Sketches in 1793, and in 1794, still moving 
about to all appearance in stubborn aimlessness among his friends 
and relatives, had no more rational purpose of livelihood than 
drawing up the prospectus of a periodical of strictly republican 
principles to be called " The Philanthropist." 

But all the time from his boyhood upwards a great purpose 
had been growing and maturing in his mind. The Prelude 
expounds in lofty impassioned strain how his sensibility for 
nature was " augmented and sustained," and how it never, 
except for a brief interval, ceased to be " creative " in the special 
sense of his subsequent theory. But it is with his feelings to- 
wards nature that The Prelude mainly deals; it says little 
regarding the history of his ambition to express those feelings in 
verse. It is the autobiography, not of the poet of nature, but 
of the worshipper and priest. The salient incidents in the history 
of the poet he communicated in prose notes and in familiar 
discourses. Commenting on the couplet in the Evening Walk— 

" And, fronting the bright west, yon oak entwines 
Its darkening boughs and leaves in stronger " 

he said: 

" This is feebly and imperfectly exprest; but I recollect distinctly 
the very spot where this first struck me. It was on the way between 
Hawkshead and Ambleside, and gave me extreme pleasure. The 
moment was important in my poetical history; for I date from it 
my consciousness of the infinite variety of natural appearances 
which had been unnoticed by the poets of any age or country, to 
far as I was acquainted with them; and I mace a resolution to 
supply in some deirte the deficiency. I could not at that time have 
been above fourteen years of age. 

About the same time he wrote, as a school task at Hawkshead, 
verses that show considerable acquaintance with the poets of 
his own country at least, as well as some previous practice in 
the art of verse-making. 1 The fragment that stands at the 

> Memoirs of William Wordsworth, by Canon Wordsworth, vol i. 
pp. io, 11. According to his own statement in the memoranda 
dictated to his biographer, it was the success of this exercise that 
*' put it into his head to compose verses from the impulse of his own 



WORDSWORTH, W. 



827 



beginning of his collected work*, recording a resolution to end 
Iris life among his native bills, was the conclusion of a long poem 
written while he was still at school. And, undistinguished as 
he was- at Cambridge in the contest for academic honours, the 
Evening Walk, his first publication, was written during his 
vacations. 1 He published it in 1793, to show, as he said, that 
he could do something, although he had not distinguished himself 
in university work. There are touches here and there of the 
bent of imagination that became dominant in him soon after- 
wards, notably in the moral aspiration that accompanies his 
Remembrance of Collins on the Thames :— 

" O glide, fair stream! for ever so 
Thy quiet soul on all bestowing, 
Till ail our minds for ever flow 
As thy deep waters now are flowing.*' 

But in the main this first publication represents the poet in the 
stage described in the twelfth book of The Prelude*- 
" Bent overmuch on superficial things. 
Pampering myself with meagre novelties 
Of colour and proportion; to the moods 
Of time and season, to the moral power, 
The affections, and the spirit of the place 
Insensible." 

But, though he had not yet found his distinctive aim as a poet, 
he was inwardly bent upon poetry as " his office upon earth." 

In this determination he was strengthened by his sister 
Dorothy (?.».), who with rare devotion consecrated her life 
henceforward to his service. A timely legacy enabled them to 
Carry their purpose into effect. A friend of his, whom he had 
nursed in a last illness, Raisley Calvert, son of the steward of 
the duke of Norfolk, who had large estates in Cumberland, died 
early in 1795, leaving him a legacy of £900. It may be well to 
notice how opportunely, as De Quincey half -ruefully remarked, 
money always fell in to Wordsworth, enabling him to pursue 
his poetic career without distraction. Calvert's bequest came to 
him when he was on the point of concluding an engagement 
as a journalist in London. On it and other small resources he 
and his sister, thanks to her frugal management, contrived to 
live for nearly eight years. By the end of that time Lord 
Lonsdale, who owed Wordsworth's father a large sum for pro- 
fessional services, and had steadily refused to pay it, died, and 
his successor paid the debt with interest. His wife, Mary 
Hutchinson, whom he married on the 4th of October 180?, brought 
him some fortune; and in 1813, when in spite of his plain living 
his family began to press upon bis income, he was appointed 
stamp-distributor for Westmorland, with an income of £500, 
afterwards nearly doubled by the increase of his district. In 
184s, when he resigned his stamp-distributorship, Sir Robert 
Feel gave him a Civil List pension of £300. 

To return, however, to the course of his life from the time 
when he resolved to labour with all his powers in the office of 
poet. The first two years, during which he lived with his self- 
sacrificing sister at Raced own, in Dorset, were spent in half- 
hearted and very imperfectly successful experiments, satires 
in imitation of Juvenal, the tragedy of The Borderers? and a poem 
in the Spenserian stanza, now entitled Guilt and Sorrow. How 
much longer this time of self-distrustful endeavour might have 
continued is a subject for curious speculation, an end was put 
to it by a fortunate incident, a visit from Coleridge, who had 
read his first publication, and seen in it, what none of the public 
critics had discerned, the advent of " an original poetic genius." 
mind." The resolution to supply the deficiencies of poetry in the 
exact description of natural appearances was probably formed »hile 
he was in this state of boyish ecstasy at the accidental revelation of 
his own powers. The date of his beginnings as a poet is confirmed by 
the line* in The Idiot Boy, written in 1798— 

" I to the Muses have been bound 
These fourteen years by strong indentures '* 

1 In The Prelude, book iv.. he speaks of himself during hi* first 
vacation as " harassed with the toil of verse, much pains and little 

"Not published till 1843. For the history of this tragedy w 
Memoirs, vol. i. p. 113; lor a sound, if severe, criticism of it. A C 
Swinburne's Miscellanies, p. 1 18. And yet it was of the blank verse 
of The Borderers that Coleridge spoke when he wrote to Cottle that 
" be felt a little man by the side of bis friend." 



Stubborn and independent as Wordsworth was, he needed some 
friendly voice from the outer world to give him confidence in 
himself. Coleridge rendered him this indispensable service. 
He had begun to seek his themes in 

" Sorrow, that is not sorrow, but delight; 
And miserable love, that is not pain 
To hear of, for the glory that redounds 
Therefrom to human kind, and what we are.** 
He read to his visitor one of these experiments, the story of the 
ruined cottage, afterwards introduced into the first book of 
The Excursion* Coleridge, who had already seen original poetic 
genius in the poems published before, was enthusiastic in his 
praise of them as having " a character, by books not hitherto 
reflected." 

June 1797 was the date of this memorable visit. So pleasant 
was the companionship on both sides that, when Coleridge returned 
to Nether Stowey, in Somerset, Wordsworth at his instance 
changed his quarters to Alfoxden, within a mile and a half of 
Coleridge's temporary residence, and the two poets lived in 
almost daily intercourse for the next twelve months. During 
that period Wordsworth's powers rapidly expanded and matured; 
ideas that had been gathering in his mind for years, and lying 
there in dim confusion, felt the stir of a new life, and ranged 
themselves in clearer shapes under the fresh quickening breath 
of Coleridge's swift and discursive dialectic. 

The Lyrical Ballads were the poetic fruits of their companion- 
ship. Out of their frequent discussions of the relative value of 
common life and supernatural incidents as themes for imaginative 
treatment grew the idea of writing a volume together, composed 
of poems of the two kinds. Coleridge was to take the super- 
natural; and, as his industry was not equal to his friend's, this 
kind was represented by the Ancient Mariner alone. Among 
Wordsworth's contributions were The Female Vagrant, We are 
Seven, Complaint of a Forsaken Indian Woman, The Last of 
the Flock, The Idiot Boy, The Mad Mother (" Her eyes are wild "), 
The Thorn, Goody Blake and Harry Gill, The Reverie of Poor 
Susan, Simon Lee, Expostulation and Reply, The Tables Turned^ 
Lines left upon a Yew-tree Seal, An Old Man Travelling (" Animal 
Tranquillity and Decay"), Lines above Tintern Abbey. The 
volume was published by Cottle of Bristol in September 1798. 

It is necessary to enumerate the contents of this volume in 
fairness to the contemporaries of Wordsworth, for their cold 
or scoffing receptior of his first distinctive work. Those Words- 
worthians who give up The Idiot Boy* Goody Blake and The 
Thorn as mistaken experiments have no right to triumph over 
the first derisive critics of the Lyrical Ballads, or to wonder at 
the dullness that failed to see at once in this humble issue from 
an obscure provincial press the advent of a great master in 
literature. It is true that Tintern Abbey was in the volume, 
and that all the highest qualities of Wordsworth's imagination 
and of his verse could be illustrated from the lyrical ballads 
proper in this first publication; but clear vision is easier for 
us than it was when the revelation was fragmentary and 
incomplete. 

Although Wordsworth was not received at first with the 
respect to which he was entitled, his power was not entirely 
without recognition. There is a curious commercial evidence 
of this, which ought to be noted, because a perversion of the 
fact is sometimes used to exaggerate the supposed neglect of 
Wordsworth at the outset of his career. When the Longmans 

* The version read to Coleridge, however, must have been in Spen- 
serian stanzas, if Coleridge was right in his recollection that it was in 
the sa.ne metre with The Female Vagrant, the original title of Guilt 
and Sorrow 

* The defect of The Idiot Boy is really rhetorical, rather than poetic. 
Wordsworth himself said that " he never wrote anything with to much 
glee." and. once the source of his glee is felt in the nobly affectionate 
relations between the two half-witted irrational old women and the 
glorious imbecile, the work is seen ro be executed with a harmony 
that should satisfy the most exacting criticism. Poetically, there* 
fore, the poem is a success. But rhetorically this particular attempt 
to "breathe grandeur upon the very humblest face of human life " 
must be pronounced a failure, inasmuch as the writer did not 
use sufficiently forcible means to disabuse his readers of vulgar 
prepossessions. 



828 



WORDSWORTH, W 



took over Cottle's publishing business in 1700, the value of the 
copyright of the Lyrical Ballads, for which Cottle had paid 
thirty guineas, was assessed at nil. Cottle therefore begged 
that it might be excluded altogether from the bargain, and 
presented it to the authors. But in 1800, when the first edition 
was exhausted, the Longmans offered Wordsworth £100 for two 
issues of a new edition with an additional volume and an explana- 
tory preface. The sum was small compared with what Scott and 
Byron soon afterwards received, but it shows that the public 
neglect was not quite so complete as is sometimes represented. 
Another edition was called for in 1802, and a fourth in 1805. 
The new volume in the 1800 edition was made up of poems 
composed during his residence at Goslar in Germany (where he 
went with Coleridge) in the winter of 1 798-1 709, and after his 
settlement at Grasmere in December 1709. It contained a 
large portion of poems now universally accepted:— Ruth, Nutting, 
Three Years She Crew, A Poet's Epitaph, Harlleap Well, Lucy 
Gray, The Brothers, Michael, The Old Cumberland Beggar, Poems 
on the Naming of Places. But it contained also the famous 
Preface, in which he infuriated critics by presuming to defend his 
eccentricities in an elaborate theory of poetry and poetic diction. 

This document (and let it be noted that all Wordsworth's 
Prefaces are of the utmost interest in historical literary criticism) 
is constantly referred to as a sort of revolutionary proclamation 
against the established taste of the 18th century. For one who 
has read Wordsworth's original, hundreds have read Coleridge's 
brilliant criticism, and the fixed conception of the doctrines 
put forth by Wordsworth is taken from that. 1 It is desirable, 
therefore, considering the celebrity of the affair, that Words- 
worth's own position should be made clear. Coleridge's criticism 
of his friend's theory proceeded avowedly " on the assumption 
that his words had been rightly interpreted, as purporting that 
the proper diction for poetry in general consists altogether in 
a language taken, with due exceptions, from the mouths of men 
in real life, a language which actually constitutes the natural 
conversation of men under the influence of natural feelings." 
Coleridge assumed further that, when Wordsworth spoke of 
there being " no essential difference between the language of 
prose and metrical composition," he meant by language not the 
mere words but the style, the structure and the order of the 
sentences; on this assumption he argued as if Wordsworth 
had held that the metrical order should always be the same 
as the prose order. Given these assumptions, which formed 
the popular interpretation of the theory by its opponents, it 
was easy to demonstrate its absurdity, and Coleridge is very 
generally supposed to have given Wordsworth's theory in its 
bare and naked extravagance the coup de grdce. But the truth 
is that neither of the two assumptions is warranted; both were 
expressly disclaimed by Wordsworth in the Preface itself. There 
is not a single qualification introduced by Coleridge that was not 
made by Wordsworth himself in the original statement.*" In 
the first place, it was not put forward as a theory of poetry in 
general, though from the vigour with which he carried the war 
into the enemy's country it was naturally enough for polemic 
purposes taken as such; it was a statement and defence of the 
principles on which his own poems of humbler life were composed. 
Wordsworth also assailed the public taste as " depraved," first 

1 Sir Henry Taylor, one of the most acute and judicious of Words- 
worth's champions, came to this conclusion in 1834. 

* Although Coleridge makes the qualifications more prominent than 
they were in the original statement, the two theories are at bottom 
so closely the same that one is sometimes inclined to suspect that 
parts, at least, of the original emanated from the fertile mind of 
Coleridge himself. The two poets certainly discussed the subject 
together in Somerset when the first ballads were written, and 
Coleridge was at Grasmere when the Preface was prepared in 1800. 
The diction of the Preface is curiously Hartlcian, and, when they first 
met, Coleridge was a devoted disciple of Hartley, naming his first 




rate, he evidently wrote nis criticism without making a close 
f *hf Preface, and what he did in effect was to restate the 
fJstory against popular misconceptions of it. 



and mainly in so far as it was advene to simple incidents simply 
treated, being accustomed to " gross and violent stimulants," 
"craving after extraordinary incident," possessed with a 
"degrading thirst after outrageous stimulation," "frantic 
novels, sickly and stupid German tragedies, and deluges of idle 
and extravagant stories in verse." This, and not adherence 
to the classical rule of Pope, which had really suffered deposition 
a good half century before, was the first count in Wordsworth's 
defensive indictment of the taste of his age. As regards the 
" poetic diction," the liking for which was the second count in 
his indictment of the public taste, it is most explicitly dear that, 
when he said that there was no essential difference between the 
language of poetry and the language of prose, he meant words, 
plain and figurative, and not structure and order, or, as Coleridge 
otherwise puts it, the " ordonnance " of composition. Coleridge 
says that if he meant this he was only uttering a truism, which 
nobody who knew Wordsworth would suspect him of doing; 
but, strange to say, it is as a truism, nominally acknowledged 
by everybody, that Wordsworth does advance his doctrine on 
this point. Only be adds—" if in what I am about to say it 
shall appear to some that my labour is unnecessary, and that 
I am like a man fighting a battle without enemies, such persons 
may be reminded that, whatever be the language outwardly 
holden by men, a practical faith in the opinions which I am 
wishing to establish is almost unknown." 

What he wished to establish was the simple truth that what is 
false, unreal, affected, bombastic or nonsensical in prose is 
not less so in verse. The form in which he expresses the theory 
was conditioned by the circumstances of the polemic, and 
readers were put on a false scent by his purely incidental and 
collateral and very much overstrained defence of the language 
of rustics, as being less conventional and more permanent, 
and therefore better fitted to afford materials for the poet's 
selection. But this was a side issue, a paradoxical retort on 
his critics, seized upon by them in turn and made prominent 
as a matter for easy ridicule; all that he says on this head 
might be cut out of the Preface without affecting in the least 
his main thesis. The drift of this is fairly apparent all through, 
but stands out in unmistakable clearness in his criticism of the 
passages from Johnson and Cowper: — 

" But the sound of the church-going bell 
These valleys and rocks never heard, 
Ne'er sighed at the sound of a knell 
Or smiled when a Sabbath appeared." 

The epithet "church-going" offends him as a puritan in 
grammar; whether his objection is well founded or ill founded, 
it applies equally to prose and verse. To represent the valleys 
and rocks as sighing and smiling in the circumstances would 
appear feeble and absurd in prose composition, and is not less 
so in metrical composition; "the occasion does not justify 
such violent expressions." These are examples of all that 
Wordsworth meant by saying that " there is no essential differ- 
ence between the language of prose and metrical composition.*' 
So far is Wordsworth from contending that the metrical order 
should always be the same as the prose order, that part of the 
Preface is devoted to a subtle analysis of the peculiar effect of 
.metrical arrangement. What he objects to is not departure from 
the structure of prose, but the assumption, which seemed to him 
to underlie the criticisms of his ballads, that a writer of verse is 
not a poet unless he uses artificially ornamental language, not 
justified by the strength of the emotion expressed. The furthest 
that he went in defence of prose structure in poetry was to main- 
tain that, if the words in a verse happened to be in the order of 
prose, it did not follow that they were prosaic in the sense cf 
being unpoetic— a side-stroke at critics who complained of his 
prosaisms for no belter reason than that the words stood in 
the order of prose composition. Wordsworth was far from 
repudiating elevation of style in poetry. " If," he said, " the 
poet's subject be judiciously chosen, it will naturally, and upon 
fit occasion, lead him to passions the language of which, if 
selected truly and judiciously, must necessarily be dignified 
and variegated, and alive with metaphors and figures." 



WORDSWORTH, W. 



829 



Such was Wordsworth's theory of noetic dktioa. Nothing 
cooid be more grossly mistaken than the notion that the greater 
part of Wordsworth's poetry was composed in defiance of bis 
own theory, and that be succeeded best when be set his own 
theory most at defiance. The misconception is traceable to 
the authority of Coleridge. His just, sympathetic and penetrat- 
ing criticism on Wordsworth's work as a poet did immense 
service in securing (or him a wider recognition; but his proved 
friendship and brilliant style have done sad in justice to the poet 
as a theorist. It was' natural to assume that Coleridge, if any- 
body, must have known what his friend's theory was; and it 
was natural also that readers under the charm of his lucid and 
melodious prose should gladly grant themselves a dispensation 
from the trouble of verifying his facts m the harsh and cumbrous 
exposition of the theorist himself. 1 

The question of diction made most noise, but It was far from 
being the most important point of poetic doctrine set forth in 
the Preface. If in this be merely enunciated a truism, generally 
admitted in words but too generally ignored in practice, there 
was real novelty in his plea for humble subjects, and in his theory 
of poetic composition. Wordsworth's remarks on poetry in 
general, on the supreme function of the imagination in dignifying 
humble and commonplace incidents, and on the need of active 
exercise of imagination in the reader as well as in the poet, are 
imrneasnrably more important than his theory of poetic diction. 
Such sayings as that poetry " takes its origin from emotion 
recollected in tranquillity," or that it is the business of a poet 
to trace " how men associate ideas in a state of excitement," 
are significant of Wordsworth's endeavour to lay the foundations 
of his art in an independent study of the feelings and faculties 
of men in real life, unbiased as far as possible by poetic custom 
and convention. This does not mean that the new poet was to 
turn his back on his predecessors and never look behind him to 
what they had done. Wordsworth was guilty of no such extra- 
vagance. He was from boyhood upwards a diligent student of 
poetry, and was not insensible to his obligations to the past. 
His purpose was only to use real life as a touchstone of poetic 
substance. The poet, in Wordsworth's conception, is distinctively 
a man in whom the beneficent energy of imagination, operative 
as a blind instinct more or less in all men, is stronger than in 
others, and is voluntarily and rationally exercised for the benefit 
of all in its proper work of increase and consolation. Not every 
image that the exdted mind conjures up in real life is necessarily 
poetical. It is the business of the poet to select and modify 
lor his special purpose of producing immediate pleasure. 

There were several respects in which the formal recognition 
of such elementary principles of poetic evolution powerfully 
affected Wordsworth's practice. One of these may be indicated 
by saving that he endeavoured always to work out an emotional 
motive from within. Instead of choosing a striking theme 
and working at it like a decorative painter, embellishing, enrich- 
ing, dressing to advantage, standing back from it and studying 
effects, his plan was to take Incidents that had set his own 
imagination spontaneously to work, and to study and reproduce 
with artistic judgment the modification of the initial feeling, 
the emotional motive, within himself. To this method he owed 
much of his strength and also much of Us unpopularity. By 
keeping his eye on the object, as spontaneously modified by his 
•wn imaginative energy, be was. able to give full and undis- 
tracted scope to all his powers in poetk coinage of the wealth 
that his imagination brought. On the other hand, readers 

1 Wordsworth was not an adroit expositor in prose, and he did 
not make his qualifications sufficiently prominent, but his theory of 
diction taken with those qualifications left htm free without in- 
consistency to use any language that was aot contrary to " true taste 
and feeling." He acknowledged that he might occasionally have 
substituted M particular for general associations," and that thus 
language charged with poetic feeling to himself might appear trivial 
and ridtculous to others, as in TO* Uiot B*y and Goody Btakt. he 



even went so far at to withdraw Aha PtU, first published in 1807. 
d several subsequent editions; but he argued that it was danger- 
for a poet to make alteration* on the simple authority of a Tew 
viduals or even classes of men. because if he did not follow httowa 



judgment and feelings his mind would mfalUbry be debilitated. 



whose nature or education was different from his own, wen 
repelled or left cold and indifferent, or obliged to make the sym- 
pathetic effort to see with his eyes, which be refused to make ill 
order that he might see with theirs. 

" He is retired as noontide dew 
Or fountain in a noon-day grove. 
And you must love him ere to you 
He will seem worthy of your love." 

From this habit of taking the processes of his own mind at 
the standard of the way in which " men associate ideas in a state 
of excitement," and language familiar to himself as the standard 
of the language of " real men," arises a superficial anomaly in 
Wordsworth's poetry, an apparent contradiction between his 
practice and his theory. His own imagination, judged by ordinary 
standards, was easily excited by emotional motives that have 
little force with ordinary men. Most of his poems start from 
humbler, slighter, less generally striking themes than those of 
any other poet of high rank. But bis poetry is not correspond- 
ingly simple. On the contrary, much of it, much of the best of 
it— for example, the Ode to Duty, and that on the Intimations 
of Immortality— is intricate, elaborate and abstruse. The 
emotional motive is simple; the passion has almost always a 
simple origin, and often is of no great intensity; but the imagina- 
tive structure is generally elaborate, and, when the poet is at 
his best, supremely splendid and gorgeous. No poet has built 
such magnificent palaces of rare material for the ordinary 
everyday homely human affections. It is because he has in- 
vested our ordinary everyday principles of conduct, which are 
so apt to become threadbare, with such imperishable robes of 
finest texture and richest design that Wordsworth holds so high 
a place among the great moralists in verse. 

His practice was influenced also, and not always for good, 
by his theory that poetry " takes its origin from emotion 
recollected in tranquillity." This was a somewhat doubtful 
corollary from his general theory of poetic evolution. A poem 
is complete in itself; there must be no sting in it to disturb 
the reader's content with the whole; through whatever agita- 
tions it progresses, to whatever elevations it soars, to this end 
it must come, otherwise it is imperfect as a poem. Now the 
imagination in ordinary men, though the process is not expressed 
in verse, and the poet's special art has thus no share in producing 
the effect, reaches the poetic end when it has so transfigured 
a disturbing experience, whether of joy or grief, that this rests 
tranquilly in the memory, can be recalled without disquietude, 
and dwelt upon with some mode and degree of pleasure, more 
or less keen, more or less pure or mixed with pain. True to hat 
idea of imitating real life, Wordsworth made it a rule for himself 
not to write on any theme till his imagination had operated 
upon it for some time involuntarily; it was not in his view ripe 
for poetic treatment till tins tiansforming agency had subdued 
the original emotion to a state of tranquillity.* Out of this 
tranquillity arises the favourable moment for poetic composition, 
some day when, as he contemplates the subject, the tranquillity 
disappears, an emotion kindred to the original emotion is re- 
instated, and the poet retraces and supplements with all his 
art the previous in voluntary and perhaps unconscious imagina- 
tive chemistry. 

When we study the moments that Wordsworth found favour- 
able for successful composition, a very curious law reveals itself, 
somewhat at variance with the common conception of him as 
a poet who derived all bis strength from solitary communion 
with nature. We find that the recluse's best poems were written 
under the excitement of some break in the monotony of his 
quiet life— change of scene, change of companionship, change 
of occupation. The law holds from the beginning to the end 
of his poetic career. An immense stimulus was given to his 
powers by his first contact with Coleridge after two years of 
solitary and abortive effort. A hove Tintcrn A bbty was composed 

• Tke Prdmd* cootains a record of his practice, after the opening 
lines of the first book-* 

" Thus far, O friend! did I. not osed to make 
A present joy the matter of a song, 
Pour forth, * 4c 



83© 



WORDSWORTH, W. 



during a four days' ramble with his sister; he began it on 
leaving Tintern, and oonduded it as he was entering Bristol. 
His residence amidst strange scenes and " unknown men " at 
Goslar was particularly fruitful. She Dwelt among the Untrodden 
Ways, Ruth, Nutting, There was a Boy, Wisdom and Spirit of 
the Universe, all belong to those few months of unfamiliar en- 
vironment. The breeze that met him as he issued from the city 
gates on his homeward journey brought him the first thought of 
The Prelude. 

At the end of 1790 he was settled at Grasmere, in the Lake 
District, and seeing much of Coleridge. The second year of his 
residence at Grasmere was unproductive, he was " hard at 
work " then on The Excursion, but the excitement of a tour 
on the Continent in the autumn of 1802, combined perhaps with 
a ^appy change in his pecuniary circumstances and the near 
prospect of marriage, roused him to one of his happiest fits 
of activity. His first great sonnet, the Lines on Westminster 
Bridge, was composed on the roof of the Dover coach; the first 
of the splendid series " dedicated to national independence and 
liberty," the most generally impressive and universally intelli- 
gible of his poems, Fair Star of Evening, Once did She hold the 
Gorgeous East in Fee, Toussaint; Milton, thou shouldst be Living 
at this Hour; It is not to be Thought of that the Flood, When I have 
Borne in Memory what has Tamed, were all written in the course 
of the tour, or in London in the month after his return. A tour 
in Scotland in the following year, 1803, yielded the Highland 
Girl and The Solitary Reaper. Soon after his return he resumed 
The Prelude; and The Affliction of Margaret and the Ode to Duty, 
his greatest poems in two different veins, were coincident with 
the exaltation of spirit due to the triumphant and successful 
prosecution of the long-delayed work. The Character of the 
Happy Warrior, which he described to Harriet Martineau as 
" a chain of extremely volooabte thoughts," though it did not 
fulfil " poetic conditions," 1 was the product of a calmer period. 
The excitement of preparing for publication always had a rousing 
effect upon him; the preparation for the edition of 1807 resulted 
in the completion of the ode on the Intimations of Immortality, 
the sonnets The World is too much with us, Met nought I saw the 
Footsteps of a Throne, Two Voices are there, and Lady, the Songs 
of Spring were in the Grove, and the Song at the Feast of Brougham 
Castle. After 1807 there is a marked falling off in the quality, 
though not in the quantity, of Wordsworth's poetic work. It is 
significant of the comparatively sober and laborious spirit in 
which he wrote The Excursion that its progress was accompanied 
by none of those casual sallies of exulting and exuberant power 
that mark the period of the happier Prelude. The completion 
of The Excursion was signalized by the production of Itaodamia 
The chorus of adverse criticism with which it was received 
inspired him in the noble sonnet to Haydon— High is our Calling, 
Friend. He rarely or never again touched the same lofty 
height. 

It is interesting to compare with what he actually accom- 
plished the plan of life-work with which Wordsworth settled 
at Grasmere in the last month of 1790.* The plan was definitely 
conceived as he left the German town of Goslar in the spring 
of 1799. Tired of the wandering unsettled life that he had led 
hitherto, dissatisfied also with the fragmentary occasional and 
disconnected character of his lyrical poems, he longed for a 
permanent home among his native hills, where he might, as one 
called and consecrated to the task, devote his powers con- 
tinuously to the composition of a great philosophical poem on 
" Man, Nature and Society." The poem was to be called The 
Recluse, " as having for its principal subject the sensations and 

* This casual estimate of his own work is not merely amusing but 
also instructive, as showing— what is sometimes denied— that Words* 
worth himself knew well enough the difference between " poetry " 
and such " valuable thoughts as he propounded in The Excursion. 

4 Wordsworth's residences in the Lake District were at Dove 
Cottage. Towneud, Grasmere. from December 1799 till the spring of 
1808; Allan Bank, from 1808 to 181 1; the parsonage at Grasmere. 
from 181 1 to 1813; Rydal Mount, for the rest off his life. Dove 
Cottage was bought in 1891 as a public memorial, and is held by 



opinions of a poet living in retirement." Re communicated the 
design to Coleridge, who gave him enthusiastic encouragement 
to proceed. But, though he had still before him fifty years 
of peaceful life amidst his beloved scenery, the work in the pro- 
jected form at least was destined to remain incomplete. Doubts 
and misgivings soon arose, and favourable moments of felt 
inspiration delayed their coming. To sustain him in his resolu- 
tion he thought of writing as an introduction, or, as he pot it, 
an antechapel to the church which he proposed to build, a 
history of his own mind up to the time when he recognised the 
great mission of his life. One of the many laughs at his expense 
by unsympathetic critics has been directed against his saying 
that he wrote this Prelude of fourteen books about himself out 
of diffidence. But in truth the original motive was distrust of 
his own powers. He turned aside to prepare the second volume 
of the Lyrical Ballads and write the explanatory Preface, 
which as a statement of his aims in poetry had partly the same 
purpose of strengthening his self-confidence. From his sister's 
Journal we learn that in the winter of 2 801-1802 he was " hard 
at work on The Pedlar "—the original title of The Excursion. 
But this experiment on the larger work was also soon abandoned. 
It appears from a letter to his friend Sir George Beaumont that 
his health was far from robust, and in particular that he could 
not write without intolerable physical uneasiness. His next 
start with The Prelude, in the spring of 1804, was more pr o sp e r - 
ous; he dropped ft for several months, but, resuming again 
in the spring of 1805, he completed it in the summer of that year. 
In 1807 appeared two volumes of collected poems. It was not 
till 18 14 that the second of the three divisions of The Recluse, 
ultimately named The Excursion, was ready for publication; 
and he went no further in the execution of his great design. 

The derisive fury with which The Excursion was assailed 
upon its first appearance has long been a stock example of 
critical blindness, yet the error of the first critics is seen to He 
not in their indictment of faults, but in the prominence they 
gave to the faults and their generally disrespectful tone towards 
a poet of Wordsworth's greatness. Jeffrey's petulant "This 
will never do," uttered, professedly at least, more in sorrow than 
in anger, because the poet would persist in spite of all friendly 
counsel in misapplying his powers, has become a byword of 
critical cocksureness. But The Excursion has not "done," 
and even Wordsworthians who laugh at Jeffrey are in the habit 
of repeating the substance of his criticism. 

Jeffrey, it will be seen, was not blind to the occasional felicities 
and unforgetable lines celebrated by Coleridge, and his general 
judgment on The Excursion has been abundantly ratified.* It 
is not upon The Excursion that Wordsworth's reputation as a 
poet can ever rest The two " books " entitled The Church- 
yard among the Mountains are the only parts of the poem that 
derive much force from the scenic setting; if they had been 
published separately, they would probably have obtained at 
once a reception very different from that given to The Excursion 
as a whole. The dramatic setting is merely dead weight, not 
because the chief speaker is a pedlar— Wordsworth fairly justifies 
this selection— but because the pedlar, as a personality to be 
knowd, and loved, and respected, and listened to with interest, 
is not completely created. 

There can be little doubt that adverse criticism had a depressing 
influence on Wordsworth's poetical powers, . notwithstanding 
his nobly expressed defiance of it and his determination to hold 
on in his own path undisturbed. Its effect in retarding the sale 
of his poems was a favourite topic with him in his later years,- 4 
but the absence of general appreciation, and the ridicule of what 
be considered his best and most distinctive work, contributed 
in all probability to a still more unfortunate result^-the pre- 
mature depression and deadening of his powers. 

1 Ward's English Poets, tv. 13. 

• Matthew Arnold heard him say that " for he knew not how 
many years his poetry had never brought htm in enough to buy his 
shoe-strings " (preface to Selection, p. v.). The literal facta are that 
he received £100 from the Longmans in itoo, and nothing more tilt 
be was sixty-five,, when Moxon bought the copyright of his \ 
tat £1000 CProse Worhs. in. 437)» 



WORKINGTON— WORKSOP 



For fhrt years after the condemnation of The Excursion 
Wordsworth published almost nothing that had not been com- 
posed before. The chief exception is the Thanksgiving Ode of 
1816. In X815 he published a new edition of his poems, in 
the arrangement according to faculties and feelings in which 
they have since stood; and he sought to explain his purposes 
more completely than before in an essay on " Poetry as a Study." 
In the same year he was persuaded to publish The While Doe 
of Rylslone, written mainly eight years before. In purely poetic 
charm The White Doe ought to be ranked among the most perfect 
of Wordsworth's poems. But Jeffrey, who was too busy to enter 
into a vein of poetry so remote from common romantic sentiment, 
would have none of The White Doe: he pronounced it " the very 
worst poem ever written/' and the public too readily endorsed 
his judgment. Two other poems, with which Wordsworth 
made another appeal, were not more successful Peter BeU, 
written in 1798, was published in 18x9; and at the instigation 
of Charles Lamb it was followed by The Waggoner, written in 
1805. Both were mercilessly ridiculed and parodied. These 
tales from humble life are written in Wordsworth's most uncon- 
ventional style, and with them emphatically " not to sympathise 
is not to understand." 

Meantime, the great design of The Reduse languished. The 
neglect of what Wordsworth himself conceived to be his best 
and most characteristic work was not encouraging; and there 
was another reason why the philosophical poem on man, nature, 
and society did not make progress. Again and again in his 
poetry Wordsworth celebrates the value of constraint, and the 
disadvantage of " too much liberty," of " unchartered freedom." l 
The formlessness of the scheme prevented his working at it con- 
tinuously. Hence his " philosophy " was expressed in casual 
disconnected sonnets, or in sonnets and other short poems 
connected by the simplest of all links, sequence in time or place. 
He stumbled upon three or four such serial ideas in the latter 
part of his life, and thus found beginning and end for chains of 
considerable length, which may be regarded as fragments of 
the project which he had not sufficient energy of constructive 
power to execute. The Sonnets on the Xsocr Duddon, written in 
1 8 x>, follow the river from its source to the sea, and form a 
partial embodiment of his philosophy of nature. The Ecclesi- 
astical Sonnets, written in 1820-1831, trace the history of the 
church from the Druids onwards, following one of the great 
streams of human affairs, and exhibit part of his philosophy 
of society. A tour on the continent in xSao, a tour in Scotland 
in 1831, a tour on the west coast in 1833, * tour in Italy in 1837, 
furnished him with other serial forms, serving to connect mis- 
cellaneous reflections on man, nature and society; and his 
views on the punishment of death were strung together in still 
another series in X840. 

It was Coleridge's criticism in the Biographic LUeraria (18x7), 
together with the enthusiastic and unreserved championship 
of Wilson in Blackwood's Magazine in a series of articles 
between 1819 and 1822 (Recreations of Christopher North), that 
formed the turning-point in Wordsworth's reputation. From 
1820 to 1830 De Quincey says it was militant, from 1830 to 
1840 triumphant. On the death of Southey in 1843 he was 
made poet laureate. He bargained with Sir Robert Peel, 
before accepting, that no official verse should be required of 
him; and his only official composition, an ode on the installa- 
tion of the Prince Consort as chancellor of Cambridge university 
in 1847, is believed to have really been written either by his 
son-in-law Edward QuHlinan or by his nephew Christopher 
(afterwards bishop of Lincoln). He died at Rydal Mount, after 
a short illness, on the 23rd of April 1850, and was buried in 
Grasmere churchyard. His wife survived him till 1859, when she 
died in her 90th year. They had five children, two of whom 
had died in 2812; the two surviving sons, John (d. 1875) and 
William (d. 1883), had families; the other child, a daughter, 
Dora, Wordsworth's favourite, married Edward QuiUinan 
in 184s and died in 1847. 

'See the Sonnet. Nuns fret not. &c. The Pass of Kirkstome and 
the Ode to Duty. 



*3" 

■eor Knight broisxht out in f88s-iSS6 an dght-volwne 
of the Peetual Works, and in 1889 a Life in three volumes. 
The Memoirs of the met were published (1851) by his nephew. 



(1895), edited by Thomas Hutchinson, contains every piece of verse 
known to have been published or authorized by Wordsworth, his 
Prefaces, &c, and a useful chronology and notes. Among critics of 
Wordsworth especially interesting lor various reasons we may 
ssttstisji Vt Quincey (Works, vols. u. and v.), Sir Henry Taylor 
(ivorki. vol. v.), Matthew Arnold (preface to Selection), Swinburne 
). F. W. H. Myers ("Men of Letters " series). Leslie 



(MttcrtJanitf), 



,, j,. . u, jr,j-, jr , /# »-. w«. mm . um»j%MW \ CTOVW «M ItCIWII •««»/• IAWIB 

SttrT.cn {Hours in a Library, 3rd series, M Wordsworth's Ethics "), 
Walter Pater (Appreciations), Walter Raleigh (Wordsworth. 1003). 
Wordsworth "s writings in prose were collected by DrGrosart (London, 
1 9 76) 1 hit collection contained the previously unpublished Apology 
far a French Revolution, written in 1 793, besides the scarce tract on the 
Cenvrntim of Cintro (1809) and the political addresses To the Free* 
keUaf 5 „/ Westmoreland (1818). Wordsworth's Guide to Ike Lakes 
origtw I ly appeared in x8io as an introduction to Wilkinson's Select 
fWm and was first published separately in 1822. (W. M.; H. Cm.) 

WORKINGTON, a municipal borough, seaport and market 
town in the Cockermouth parliamentary division of Cumberland, 
England, 34 m. S.W. of Carlisle, served by the Cockermouth, 
Keswick & Penrith, the London & North-Western and the 
Cleator & Workington Junction railways. Pop. (1901) 26,143. 
It lies on the S. bank of the river Derwent, at its outflow into the 
Irish Sea. The harbour is safe, being protected by a stony beach 
and by a breakwater. The Lonsdale dock is 4 J acres in extent. 
The port was made subordinate to that of Maryport in 1892. 
There are large collieries in the neighbourhood of the town, the 
workings in some cases extending beneath the sea, and blast- 
furnaces, engineering works, cycle and motor works, ship- 
building yards and paper mills. The borough is under a mayor, 
7 aldermen and 21 councillors. Area, 2245 acres. Near the town 
is Workington Hall, a castellated structure retaining some of the 
ancient rooms, including that in which Mary, queen of Scots, 
is said to have slept when she escaped to England after the 
battle of Langside in May 1568. 

WORKS AND PUBLIC BUILDINGS. BOARD OP, an adminis- 
trative department in England. In 1832 the public works and 
buildings of Great Britain were for the first time placed under 
the control of a responsible rninister of the crown, and were 
assigned to the commissioners of woods and forests. In 1851 
the department of public works was erected into a board under 
the name of Office of Works and Public Buildings. The first 
cornnussioner of works is the head of the board, and has the 
custody of the royal palaces and parks and of all public buildings 
not specially assigned to other departments; he is a member 
of the government and frequently has a seat in the cabinet. 

WORKSOP, a market town in the Bassetlaw parliamentary 
division of Nottinghamshire, England, on the Great Central 
and the Midland railways, and on the Chesterfield Canal, x si m. 
E.S.E. of Sheffield. Pop. of urban district (1001) 16,1x2. To 
the S. lies that portion of Sherwood Forest popularly known 
as the dukeries. The church of St Mary and St Cuthbert is an 
old priory church, once divided internally into two parts, the 
E. dedicated to St Mary being for the use of the canons, and 
the W. dedicated to St Cuthbert for the parishioners. At the 
Reformation only the W. portion of the church was spared, and 
for many years it was in a dilapidated condition until it was 
restored with Perpendicular additions. Behind it are the ruins 
of the lady chapel, containing some fine Early English work. 
The priory gatehouse, chiefly in the Decorated style, now forms 
the entrance to the precincts of the church. It is supposed to 
have been built early in the 14th century by the 3rd Lord 
Furnival, when the market was established. Of the priory itself 
the only remains are a wall at the N. W. corner of the church 
which includes the cloister gateway. There was formerly a 
Norman keep on the castle hill. The manor-house, buOt by 
John Talbot, xst earl of Shrewsbury, and occasionally occupied 
by Mary, queen of Scots, during her captivity under the 6th 
earl, was in great part destroyed by fire in 1761, and when the 
estate came into the possession of the duke of Newcastle in 1840 
the ruined portion was removed and a smaller mansion built. 



832 



WORLD— WORMS 



The town ball and free library are the principal publk buildings 
of Worksop. Malting is the principal industry. A large corn 
market and a cattle and bone fair are held. The town also 
possesses brass and iron foundries, agricultural implement 
works, saw-mills and chemical works; and there is a consider- 
able trade in Windsor chairs and wood for packing-cases for 
Sheffield cutlery. There are collieries at Shireoaks, 3 m. W. 

WORLD, a word which has developed a wide variety of mean- 
ings from its original etymological sense of the " age of man," 
" course of man's life." In O. Eng. it appears under its true 
form weoruld, being a compound of voer, man (cf. Lat. vir), and 
yldo, age, from eald, eld, old. Of the various meanings the 
principal are the earth (9.9.), as a planet, or a large division of 
the earth, such as the " old world," the eastern, the " new world," 
the western hemisphere; the whole of created things upon the 
earth, particularly its human inhabitants, mankind, the human 
race, or a great division of mankind united by a common racial 
origin, language, religion or civilization, &c A derived meaning 
is that of social life, society, as distinct from a religious life. 

WORM, 1 a term used popularly to denote almost any kind of 
elongated, apparently limbless creature, from a lizard, like the 
blindworm, to the grub of an insect or an earthworm. Linnaeus 
applied the Latin term Vermes to the modern zoological divisions 
Moltusca, Coelentera, Protozoa, Tunicala, Eckinoderma (qq.v.), 
as well as to those forms which more modern zoologists have 
recognized as worms. As a matter of convenience the term 
Vermes or Vermidea is still employed, for instance in the Inter' 
national Catalogue of Zoological Literature and the Zoological 
Record, to cover a number of wormlike animals. In systematic 
zoology, however, the use of a division Vermes has been 
abandoned, as it is now recognized that many of the animals 
that even a zoologist would describe as worms belong to different 
divisions of the animal kingdom. The so-called natworms 
(Platyelmia, q.v.), including the Planarians (q.v.), Flukes 
(sec Trematooes), Cestodes (see Tapeworm) and the curious 
Mesozoa (q.v.), are no doubt related. The marine Nemcrtine 
worms (see NeKertina) are isolated. The thick-skinned round 
worms, such as the common horse-worm and the threadworms 
(see Neuatoda), together with the Nematomorpha (q.v.), 
Chaetosomatida (q.v.), Desmoscolecida (q.v.) and Acanthocephala 
(q.v.), form a fairly natural group. The Rotifera (q.v.), with 
probably the Kinorhyncha (q.v.) and Gastrotricha (q.v.), are 
again isolated. The remaining worms are probably all coelomate 
animals. There is. a definite Annelid group (sec Annelida), 
including the Archiannelida, the bristleworms (see Chaeto- 
poda), of which the earthworm (q.v.) is the most familiar type, 
the Myzostomida (q.v.), Hirudinea (see Leech) and the armed 
Gephyreans (see Echiuroidea). The unarmed Gephyreans 
(see Gephyrea) are now separated from their former associates 
and divided into two groups of little affinity, the Sipuncmloidea 
and the Priapuloidea (qq.v.). The Phoronidea (q.v.) are now 
associated with Heroichordata (q.v.) in the line of vertebrate 
ancestry, whilst the Chaetognatka (9.9.) remain in solitary 
isolation. 

Mention Is made under Tapeworm of the worms of that species 
inhabiting the human body as parasites, and it will be convenient 
here to mention other parasitic varieties. The most common human 
parasite is the Ascaris lumbricoidts or round worm, found chiefly in 
children and occupying the upper portion of the intestine. They 
are usually few in number, but occasionally occur in such large 
numbers that they cause intestinal obstruction. Unlike the tape- 
worm no intermediate host is required for the development of this 
worm. It develops from direct ingestion of- the larvae. Various 



1 The O. Eng. wyrm represent s a word com mon to Teutonic languages 
for a snake or worm, cf . Ger. Wurm, Dan. and Swed. orm, Du. Worm. 
The Lat. vermis must be connected. The Sanskrit word is krimi, 
which has given Vermes, the cochineal insect, Whence " crimson." 
Skeat takes the ultimate root to be kar, to move, especially in a 
circular motion, seen in " curve," " circle," &c. The word " worm " 
is applied to many objects resembling the animals in having a spiral 
shape or motion, as the spiral thread of a screw, or the spiral pipe 
through which vapour is passed in distillation (q.v.). As a term of 
disparagement and contempt the word is also used of persons, from 
the idea of wriggling or creeping on the ground, partly, too, perhaps, 
with a remuuscenr* *t r.*n**i« til, 14. 



symptoms, such as diarrhoea, anaemia, intermittent fever, restless- 
ness, irritability and convulsions are attributed to these worms. 
The treatment is the administration of santonin, followed ' by a 
purgative. The threadworm or Oxyuris vtrmiculatis is a common 
parasite infecting the rectum. The larvae of this worm are also 
directly swallowed, and infection probably takes place through 
water, or possibly through lettuces and watercress. The symptoms 
caused by threadworms are loss of appetite, anaemia and intense 
irritation and itching. The treatment consists in the use of enemata, 
containing quassia, carbolic acid, vinegar or turpentine or even 
common salt. In addition mild purgatives should be given. 

WORMS, a city of Germany, in the grand-duchy of Hesse- 
Darmstadt, situated in a fertile plain called the Wonncgau, 
on the left bank of the Rhine, 25 m. S. of Mainz, 20 m. N.W. of 
Heidelberg, and 9 m. by rail N.W. of Mannheim. Pop. (1895) 
28,636; (1005) 43,841, about a third of whom are Roman 
Catholics. The town is irregularly built, and some of the old walls 
and towers still remain, but its general aspect is modern. The 
principal church and chief building is the spacious cathedral of 
SS. Peter and Paul, which ranks beside those of Spires and 
Mainz among the noblest Romanesque churches of the Rhine 
(see Architecture: Romanesque and Gothic in Germany). 
This magnificent basilica, with four round towers, two large 
domes, and a choir at each end, has a specially imposing exterior, 
though the impression produced by the interior is also one of 
great dignity and simplicity, heightened by the natural colour 
of the red sandstone of which it is built. Only the ground plan 
and the lower part of the western towers belong to the original 
building consecrated in 11 10; the remainder was mostly finished 
by n8r, but the west choir and the vaulting were built in the 
T3th century, the elaborate south portal was added in the 14th 
century, and the central dome has been rebuilt. The ornamenta- 
tion of the older parts is simple to the verge of rudeness; and 
even the more elaborate later forms show no high development 
of workmanship. The baptistery contains five remarkable stone 
reliefs of the late 15th century. The cathedral is 358 ft. long, and 
89 ft. wide, or including the transepts, which are near the west 
end, 118 ft. (inside measurements). It belongs to the Roman 
Catholic community, who possess also the church of St Martin 
and the church of Our Lady (IJebfrauaikirckc), a handsome 
Gothic edifice outside the town, finished in 1467. The principal 
Protestant place of worship is the Trinity church, built in 1726. 
Second in interest to the cathedral is the church of St Paul, also 
in the Romanesque style, and dating from uo»-iii6, with a 
choir of the early 13th century, cloisters and other monastic 
buildings. This church has been converted into an interesting 
museum of national antiquities. The late Romanesque church 
of St Andrew is not used. The old synagogue, an unassuming 
building erected in the .nth century and restored in the 13th, 
is completely modernized. The Jewish community of Worms 
(about 1300 in number) claims to be the most ancient in Germany 
and to have existed continuously since the Christian era, though 
the earliest authentic mention of it occurs in 588. A curious 
tradition, illustrating the efforts of the dispersed people to 
conciliate their oppressors, asserts that the Jews of Worms gave 
their voice against the crucifixion, but that their messenger did 
not anive at Jerusalem until after the event. 

The town hall was rebuilt in 1884. The Bischofshof, in which 
the most famous diet of Worms (1522) was held, is now replaced 
by a handsome modern residence. The Luginsland is an old 
watch-tower of the 13th century. In the Luthcrplatz rises the 
imposing Luther monument (unveiled in 1868), on a platform 
48 ft. sq. In the centre the colossal statue of Luther rises, on a 
pedestal at the base of which are sitting figures of Peter Waldo, 
Wycliffc, Hua and Savonarola, the heralds of the Reformation; 
at the corners of the platform, on lower pedestals, are statues 
of Luther's contemporaries, Melanchthon, Reuchlin, Philip of. 
Hesse, and Frederick the Wise of Saxony, between which are 
allegorical figures of Magdeburg (mourning), Spires (protesting) 
and Augsburg (confessing). The greater part of the work, 
which took nine years to execute, was designed by Rietschel, and 
carried out after his death in 1861 by Gustav Kiets (1826-1008), 
Adolf von Donndorf (b. 1835) and Johannes Schilling (b, 18*8). 
The " Rosengarten " on the opposite bank of the Rhine. 



WORMWOOD— WORSLEY 



«33 



associated with the stories of Che wooing of Krtemhild (see infra), 
has been laid out in keeping with the old traditions and was 
opened with great festivities in 1906. Extensive burial-grounds, 
ranging In date from neolithic to Merovingian times, have recently 
been discovered near the city. 

The trade and industry of Worms are important, and not 
the least resource of the inhabitants is vine-growing, the most 
famous vintage being known as Iiebfraumilch, grown on vine- 
yards near the Iiebfrauenkirche. The manufacture of patent 
leather employs about 5000 hands. Machinery, wool, doth, 
chicory, slates, 8ec, are also produced. Worms possesses a good 
river harbour, and carries on a considerable trade by water. 

Worms was known in Roman times as Borbetomagus, which 
in the Merovingian age became Wormatia, afterwards by popular 
etymology connected with Wumt, a dragon. The name Borbeto- 
magus indicates a Celtic origin for the town, which had, however, 
before Caesar's time become the capital of a German tribe, the 
Vangiones. Drusus is said to have erected a fort here in 14 B.C. 
In 413 the emperor Jovinus permitted the Burgundians under 
their king Gunlar or Guntiar to settle on the left bank of the 
Rhine between the Lauter and the Nahe, Here they founded 
a kingdom with Worms as its capital. Adopting Ariaoism they 
came into conflict with the Romans, and under their king 
Gundahar or Gundicar (the Gunther of the Nibdungeulied) rose 
in 435 against the Roman governor Aetius, who called in the 
Huns against them. The destruction of Worms and the Bur- 
gundian kingdom by the Huns in 436 was the subject of heroic 
legends afterwards incorporated in the NibeluMgenlied (9.9.) and 
the Rosengarten (an epic probably of the late 13th century). 
In the NiMungcnlied King Gunther and Queen Brunhild 
bold their court at Worms, and Siegfried comes hither to woo 
Kriemhild. 

Worms was rebuilt by the Merovingians, and became an 
episcopal see, first mentioned in 6x4, although a bishop of the 
Vangiones had attended a council at Cologne as early as 347. 
There was a royal palace from the 8th century, in which 
the Frankiah kings, including Charlemagne, occasionally resided. 
The scene of the graceful though unhistorical romance of Einhard 
and Emma, the daughter of Charlemagne, is laid here. 

Under the German kings the power of the bishops of Worms 
gradually increased, although they never attained the importance 
of the other Rhenish bishops. Otto I. granted extensive lands 
to the bishop, and in 079 Bishop HUdbold acquired comital 
rights in his city. Burchard I. (bishop from 1000 to 102 5)destroyed 
the castle of the Franconian house at Worms, built the cathedral 
and laid the foundations of the subsequent territorial power of 
the see. There were frequent struggles between the bishops and 
the citizens, who espoused the cause of the emperors against 
them, and were rewarded by privileges which fostered trade. 
Herny IV. granted a charter to Worms in 1074, and held a synod 
there in X076, by which Pope Gregory VII. was declared deposed. 
Henry V. acquired Worms in xiax by the treaty of Wttrzburg, 
built a castle and granted privileges to the city, which retained 
its freedom until 1801, in spite of the bishops, who ruled a small 
territory south of the city, on both sides of the Rhine, and 
resided at Ladenburgnear Mannheim till 1622. 

The dty of Worms was frequently visited by the imperial 
court, and won the title of M Mother of Diets." The concordat 
of Worms closed the investiture controversy in 1x22. The 
" perpetual peace " (ewiger Landfriede) was proclaimed by the 
emperor Maximilian L at the diet of 149$, and Luther appeared 
before the famous diet of 1521 to defend his doctrines in the 
presence of Charles V. Four years later, Worms formally 
embraced Protestantism, and religious lonfeieaces were held 
there in 1540 and 1557. It suffered severely during the Thirty 
Years' War. After being sacked in turn by Mansfeld, Tilly 
and the Spaniards, it was taken by Oxenstiema io 1632, who 
held ^convention here with his German allies. The imperial- 
ists again took Worms in 1635, and it admitted the French 
under Turenne in 1644. The French under Meiac burnt the 
city almost entirely in 1689, and it has only fully recovered 
from this blow in recent years. Thus the population, which 



in Us prosperous days is said to have exceeded 50,000, bad 
sunk in 1815106250. 

By the treaty of Worms in 1743 an offensive alliance was 
formed between Great Britain, Austria and Sardinia. The 
French under Custine took the city by surprise in 1792 and it 
was annexed by the peace of Luneville in 180 1 to France, together 
with the bishop's territories on the left bank of the Rhine. The 
remaining episcopal dominions were secularized in 1803 and 
given to Hesse-Darmstadt, which acquired the whole by the 
Vienna Congress in 1815. In 1849 the Baden revolutionaries 
seized Worms, but were overthrown by the Meckienburgers and 
Prussians in May of that year. 

See Zorn, Wormser Chronik (Stuttgart, 1857): Fuchs, Gesckichte 
der Sladl Worms (Worms, 1868) ; F. Soldan, Der Rtichilag at Worms, 
J$2I (Worms, 1883): BeitrAgezur Gesckichte der Stadt Worms 
(Worms, 1896) ; G. Wolf, Zur Gcukickte der Juden in Warms (Breslau, 
1862); Nover, Das alte und neue Worms (Worms, 1895). 

WORMWOOD, the popular name for an aromatic herb known 
botanically as Artemisia Absinthium, a member of the family 
Compositae. It grows from x to 3 ft. high and is silkily hairy; 
the leaves are small and much cut, and the flowers are small 
yellow hemispherical heads among the leaves at the end of the 
branches. It grows in waste places. It is a tonic and vermifuge 
and used to flavour drinks. A closely allied species is A . vulgaris, 
mugwort, also an aromatic herb, with larger and broader leaves, 
which are white woolly beneath, and erect woolly heads of 
reddish-yellow flowers. 

WORSBOROUGH, an urban district in the Holmfirth parlia- 
mentary division of the W. Riding of Yorkshire, England, 
3 m. S. of Barnsley, near the Sheffield ft Bamsley branch of 
the Great Central railway, and on a branch of the Dearne ft 
Dove canal. Pop. (xoox) 10,336. The church of St Mary is 
an interesting structure with remains of Norman work, but 
chiefly of Early English date. There are extensive collieries 
and gunpowder mills near, and in the town iron and steel works 
and corn mills. 

WORSHIP («.«. " worth-ship," O. Eng. weorQscipc), honour, 
dignity, reverence, respect. * The word is used in a special sense 
of the service, reverence and honour paid, by means of devotional 
words or acts, to God, to the gods, or to hallowed persons, such 
as the Virgin Mary or the saints, and hallowed objects, such as 
holy images or relics. In this sense, however, it must be borne 
in mind that the Roman Catholic Church distinguishes three 
kinds of worship: (i)latria, the worship due to God alone (from 
Gr. Xarpda, service, cap. the service of the gods, worship) , and (2) 
hypcrdulia, the worship or adoration due to the Virgin Mary as 
the Mother of God (from Gr. hrip y above, and 6aoKda t service), 
and (3) dulia, that due to the saints. (See also Adoration.) 
The public service of God in church is known as " divine worship " 
or " divine service " (see Litukgy). In the sense of " revere " 
or " respect," the verb " to worship " occurs in the English 
Prayer-book, in the phrase " with my body I thee worship " 
in the Marriage Service. In this sense the term "worship" 
is also used as a title of honour in speaking of or addressing 
other persons of position. Thus a mayor is spoken of as " his 
worship the mayor," or " the worshipful the mayor." Magis- 
trates are addressed as " your worship." 

WORSLEY, PHILIP RANHOPB (1835-1866), English poet, 
son of the Rev. Charles Worsley, was born on the 12th of August 
1835, and was educated at Highgate grammar school and Corpus 
Christi College, Oxford, where he won the Newdigate prise in 
1857 with a poem on "The Temple of Janus." In 1861 he 
published a translation of the Odyssey, followed in 1865 by a 
translation of the first twelve books of the Iliad, m both of 
which he employed the Spenserian stanza with success. In 1863 
appeared a volume of Poems and Translations. Worsley died 
on the 8th of May 1866. His translation of the Iliad was com* 
pleted after his death by John Conington. 

WORSLEY, an urban district in the Eccles parliamentary 
division of Lancashire, England, 6 m. W.N.W. of Manchester 
by the London ft North- Western railway. Pop. (ioox) 12,462. 
Its growth is a result of the development of the cotton manu- 
facture and of the neighbouring collieries. 



»34 



WORTH, C. F.— WORTH 



WORTH, CHARLES FREDERICK (1835-1895), the famous 
dressmaker, was born at Bourne, Lincolnshire, in 1825. His 
father, a country solicitor, having lost his money in speculation. 
Charles was sent to London as an apprentice to Swan & Edgar, 
drapers. Thence, in 1846, he went to Paris, without capital or 
friends, and after twelve years in a wholesale silk bouse he began 
business as a dressmaker in partnership with a Swede named 
Dobergh. His originality and skill in design won the patronage 
of the empress Eugenie, and, through her, of fashionable Paris. 
After the Franco-German War, during which he turned his house 
into a military hospital, his partner retired, and Worth con- 
tinued the business, which employed 1200 hands, with his two 
sons John and Gaston— both naturalized Frenchmen. For more 
than thirty years he set the taste and ordained the fashions of 
Paris, and extended his sway over all the civilized and much of 
the uncivilized world. He died on the xoth of March 1895. 

WORTH, a village of Alsace, on the Sauer, 6 m. N. of Hagenau, 
which gives its name to the battle of the 6th of August 1870, 
fought between the Germans under the crown prince of Prussia 
and the French under Marshal MacMahon. The battle is also 
called Rcichshoffcn and Froschweiler. 

The events which led up to the engagement, and the general 
situation on the 6th are dealt with under Fxanco-German 
Wax. During the 5th of August the French concentrated in 
a selected position running nearly N. and S. along the Sauer 
Bach on the left front of the German HI. army which was moving 
S. to seek them. The position is marked from right to left by 
Morsbronn, the Nicdcrwald, the heights W. of Wttrth and the 
woods N.E. of Frdschwcilcr. E. of the Sauer the German HI. 
army was moving S. towards Hagenau, when their cavalry 
found the French position about noon. Thereafter the German 
vedettes held the French under close observation, while the 
latter moved about within their lines and as far as the village 
of \V6rth as if in peace quarters, and this notwithstanding the 
defeat of a portion of the army at Wcisscnburg on the previous 
day. The remnant of the force which bad been engaged, with 
many of its wounded still in the ranks, marched in about noon 
with so soldierly a bearing that, so far from their depressing 
the morale of the rest, their appearance actually raised it. 

About 5 p.m. some horses were watered at the Sauer, as in 
peace, without escort, though hostile scouts were in sight. A 
sudden swoop of the enemy's hussars drove the party back to 
camp. The alarm was sounded, tents were struck and the 
troops fell in all along the line and remained under arms until 
the confusion died down, when orders were sent to fall out, but 
not to pitch the tents. The army therefore bivouacked, and but 
for this incident the battle of the next day would probably not 
have been fought. A sudden and violent storm broke over the 
bivouacs, and when it was over, the men, wet and restless, began 
to move about, light fires, &c. Many of them broke out of camp 
and went into Worth, which was unoccupied, though Prussians 
were only 300 yds. from the sentries. These fired, and the 
officer commanding the Prussian outposts, hearing the confused 
murmur of voices, ordered up a battery, and as soon as there 
was light enough dropped a few shells into Wfirth. The stragglers 
rushed back, the French lines were again alarmed, and several 
batteries on their side took up the challenge. 

The Prussian guns, as strict orders had been given to avoid 
all engagement that day, soon withdrew and were about to 
return to camp, when renewed artillery fire was heard from the 
S. and presently also from the N. In the latter direction, the 
H. Bavarian corps had bivouacked along the Mattstall-Langen- 
sulzbach road with orders to continue the inarch if artillery 
were heard to the S. This order was. contrary to the spirit of 
the III. army orders, and moreover the V. Prussian corps to 
the S. was in ignorance of its having been given. 

The outpost battery near Worth was heard, and the Bavarians 
at once moved forward. Soon the leading troops were on the 
crest of the ridge between the Sauer and the Sulzbach, and the 
divisional comnwnrfpr nnvinn* »o prove his loyally to his new 
allies — his enr ed his troops to attack, giving 

the spire of is visible over the woods, as 



the point of direction. The French, however, were quite ready 
and a furious fusillade broke out, which was multiplied by the 
echoes of the forest -clad hills out of all proportion to the numbers 
engaged. The Prussian officers of the V. corps near Dicffenbach, 
knowing nothing of the orders the Bavarians had received, 
were amazed , but at length when about 10.30 a.m. their comrades 
were seen retiring, in some cases in great disorder, the corps 
commander. General von Kirchbach, decided that an effort 
must at once be made to relieve the Bavarians. His chief of 
staff had already ordered up the divisional and corps artillery 
(84 guns in all), and he himself communicated his intention of 
attacking to the XI. corps (General von Bose) on his left and asked 
for all available assistance. A report was also despatched to 
the crown prince at Sulz, 5 m. away. 

Meanwhile the XI. corps had become involved in an engage- 
ment. The left of the V. corps' outposts had over night occupied 
Gunstett and the bank of the Sauer, and the French shortly after 
daylight on the 6th sent down an unarmed party to fetch water. 
As this appeared through the mist, the Prussians naturally 
fired upon it, and the French General Lartigue (to whose division 
the party belonged), puzzled to account for the firing, brought 
up some batteries in readiness to repel an attack. These fired a 
few rounds only, but remained in position as a precaution. 

Hearing the firing, the XI. corps' advanced guard, which had 
marched up behind in accordance with the general movement of 
the corps in changing front to. the west, and had halted on reaching 
the Kreuzhecke Wood, promptly came up to Spachbach and 
Gunstett. In this movement across country to Spachbach 
some bodies appear to have exposed themselves, for French 
artillery at Elsasshauscn suddenly opened fire, and the shrapnel 
bursting high, sent showers of bullets on to the house roofs of 
Spachbach, in which village a battalion had just halted. As 
the falling tiles made the position undesirable, the major in 
command ordered the march to be resumed, and as he gave the 
order, his horse ran away with him towards the Sauer. The 
leading company, seeing the battalion commander gallop, 
moved off at the double, and the others of course followed. 
Coming within sight of the enemy, they drew a heavy shell fire, and, 
still under the impression that they were intended to attack, 
deployed into line of columns and doubled down to the river, 
which they crossed. One or two companies in the neighbourhood 
had already begun to do so, and the stream being too wide for 
the mounted officers to jump, presently eight or ten companies 
were across the river and out of superior control. By this time 
the French outposts (some 1500 rifles), lining the edge of the 
Niederwald, were firing heavily. The line of smoke was naturally 
accepted by all as the objective, and the German companies 
with a wild rush reached the edge of the wood. 

The same thing had happened at Gunstett. A most obstinate 
struggle ensued and both sides brought up reinforcements. The 
Prussians, with all their attention concentrated on the wood 
in their front, and having as yet no superior commanders, soon 
exhibited signs of confusion, and thereupon General Lartigue 
ordered a counter attack towards the heights of Gunstett, 
when all the Prussians between the Niederwald and the Sauer 
gave way. The French followed with a rush, and, fording the 
Sauer opposite Gunstett, for a moment placed the long line of 
German guns upon the heights in considerable danger. At this 
crisis a fresh battalion of the XI. corps arrived by the road from 
Surburg to Gunstett, and attacked the French on one flank 
whilst the guns swept the other. The momentum of the charge 
died out, and the French drifted backwards after an effort 
which compelled the admiration of both sides. 

In the centre the fight had been going badly for the V. corps. 
As soon as the 84 guns between Dfeffcnbach and Spachbach 
opened fire the French disappeared from sight. There was no 
longer a target, and, perhaps to compel his adversary to show 
himself, von Kirchbach ordered four battalions to cross the 
river. These battalions, however, were widely separated, and 
coming under fire as soon as they appeared, they attacked 
in two groups, one from Worth towards Froschweiler, the 
other from near Spachbach towards the Calvary spur, E. of 



WORTH 



»3S 



Ebftssh&Hscn. Both were overpowered by infantry fire. A frac* 
tion of the S. party maintained iUelf all day in the elbow of the 
Hagenau rhanssee, which formed a starting-point for subsequent 
attacks. But the rest were driven back in great confusion. 
Once more tne dashing counter-attack of the French was thrown 
into confusion by the Prussian shell fire, and as the French fell 



the attack against the Ntederwald with such of his forces as had 
arrived, and had ordered General von Schkopp's brigade, which 
was then approaching, to join the troops collecting to the east 
of GunstetL Schkopp, however, seeing that his present line of 
advance led him direct on to the French right about Morsbronn 
and kept him clear of the confusion to be seen around Gunstett, 




back the Prussian infantry, now reinforced, followed them up 
(about 1 p.m.). The commander-in-chief of the German III. 
army (the crown prince Frederick) now appeared on the field and 
ordered Kirchbach to stand fast until the pressure of the XI. 
corps and Wfirttemberg division could take effect against the 
French right wing. The majority of these troops had not yet 
reached the field. Von Bose, however, seeing the retreat of the 
troops of the V. corps, had independently determined to renew 



disregarded the order and continued to advance on Morsbronn. 
This deliberate acceptance of responsibility really decided the 
battle, for his brigade quietly deployed as a unit and compelled 
the French right wing to fall back. 

To cover the French retreat Michel's brigade of cavalry was 
ordered to charge. The order was somewhat vague, and in his 
position under cover near Eberbach, General Michel had no know- 
ledge of the actual situation. Thus it came about that, without 



I 



8 3 6 



WORTHING— WOTTON, SIR H. 



reconnoitring or manoeuvring for position, the French cavalry 
rode straight at the first objective which offered itself, and struck 
the victorious Prussians as they were crossing the hills between 
the Albrecbtshauscrhof and Morsbronn. Hence the charge was 
costly and only partly successful. However, the Prussians were 
ridden over here and there, and their attention was sufficiently 
absorbed while the French infantry rallied for a fresh counter- 
stroke. This was made about 1 .20 p.m. with the utmost gallantry, 
and the Prussians were driven off the hillsides between the 
Albrechtshauserhof and Morsbronn which they had already won. 
But the counter-attack soon came under the fire of the great 
artillery mass above Gunstett, and, von Bose having at length 
concentrated the main body of the XI. corps in the meadows 
between the Niederwald and the Sauer, the French had to with- 
draw. Their withdrawal involved the retreat of the troops who 
had fought all day in defence of the Niederwald. 

By 3 p.m. the Prussians were masters of the Niederwald and 
the ground S. of it on which the French right wing had originally 
stood, but they were in indescribable confusion after the prolonged 
fighting in the dense undergrowth. Before order could be 
restored came another fierce counter-stroke. As the Prussians 
emerged from the N. edge of the wood, the French reserves 
suddenly came out from behind the Elsasshausen heights, and 
striking due S. drove the Prussians back* It was a grave crisis, 
but at this moment von Schkopp, who throughout all this had 
kept two of his battalions intact, came round the N.W. corner 
of the Wald, and these fresh battalions again brought the French 
to a standstill. Meanwhile von Kirchbach, seeing the progress 
of the XI. corps, bad ordered the whole of his command forward 
to assault the French centre, and away to the right the two 
Bavarian corps moved against the French left, which still main- 
tained its original position in the woods N.E. of Froschweiler. 

MacMahon, however, was not beaten yet. Ordering Bonne- 
mains' cavalry division to charge, by squadrons to gain time, he 
brought up his reserve artillery, and sent it forward to case-shot 
range to cover a final counter-stroke by his last intact battalions. 
But from his position near Froschweiler he could not see into the 
hollow between Elsasshausen and the Niederwald. The order 
was too late, and the artillery unlimbered just as the counter 
attack on the Niederwald alluded to above gave way before 
von Schkopp's reserve. The guns were submerged in a flood 
of fugitives and pursuers. Elsasshausen passed into the hands 
of the Germans. To rescue the guns the nearest French in- 
fantry attacked in a succession of groups, charging home the 
bayonet with the utmost determination. Before each attack 
the Prussians immediately in front gave way, but those on the 
flanks swung inwards and under this converging fire each French 
attempt died out, the Prussians following up their retreat. In 
this manner, step by step, in confusion which almost defies 
analysis, the Prussians conquered the whole of the ground to the 
S. of the Froschweiler- VV&rth road, but the French still held on 
in the village of Froschweiler itself and in the woods to the N. 
of the road, where throughout the day they had held the two 
Bavarian corps in check with little difficulty. To break down 
this last stronghold, the guns of the V. and XI. corps, which 
had now come forward to the captured ridge of Elsasshausen, 
took the village as their target; and the great crowd of infantry, 
now flushed with victory but in the direst confusion, encouraged 
by the example of two horse artillery batteries which galloped 
boldly forward to case-shot range, delivered one final rush which 
swept all resistance before it. 

The battle was won and cavalry only were needed to reap its 
consequences, but the Prussian cavalry division had been left 
behind without orders and did not reach the battlefield till late 
at night. The divisional cavalry squadrons did their best, but 
each pursued on its own account, and the results in prisoners 
and guns fell far short of what the opportunity offered. Under 
cover of darkness the French escaped, and on the following day 
the jsjsajry division was quite unable to discover the direction of 

* no support from the neighbouring French 
uan War). The bdttle was won by over- 



powering weight of numbers. The Prussian general staff were able 
to direct upon the field no fewer than 75,000 infantry, 6000 cavalry, 
and 300 guns, of which 71,000 rifles, 4250 sabres and 234 guns 
came into action, against 32,000 rifles, 4850 sabres and IOI guns 
on the French side. The superiority of the French chaaaepot to the 
needle guns may reasonably be set against the superior number 
of rifles on the German side, for though the Germans were generally, 
thanks to their numbers, able to bnng a converging fire upon the 
French, the latter made nearly double the number of hits for about 
the same weight of ammunition fired, but the French had nothing 
to oppose to the superior German artillery, and in almost every 
instance it was the terrible shell fire which broke up the French 
counter attack. All of these attacks were in the highest degree 
honourable to the French army, and many came nearer to imperilling 
the ultimate success of the Germans than is generally supposed. 
One other point deserves special attention. As soon as the fighting 
became general, all order in the skirmisher tines disappeared on both 
sides, and invariably, except where the Prussian artillery fire inter- 
vened, it was the appearance of closed bodies of troops in rear of 
the fighting line which determined the retreat of their opponents. 
Even in the confused fight inp in the Niederwald. the mere sound of 
the Prussian drums or the French bugles induced the adversary to 
give way even though drums and bugles frequently appealed to non- 
existent troops. 

The losses of the Germans were 0270 killed and wounded and 1370 
missing, or 13%; those of the French were about 8000 killed and 
wounded, and perhaps 12,000 missing, and prisoners, representing a 
total loss of about 41 %- Some French regiments retained a sem- 
blance of discipline after suffering enormous losses. The 2nd Turcos 
lost 93% 13th hussars 87 % ana thirteen regiments in all lost over 
50% of their strength. 

See the French and German' official histories of the war; H. 
Bonnal, FrtxkwiUer (1899); H. Kuns, Scklachl von Wdrth (1891) 
and Kricesgesch. BeispUU. Nos. 13-18; R. Tournes, De Gunstett an 
Nitderuaid and Le Cafvaire ; and Commandant Grange, " Les Realites 
du champ de bataiUe,'* Revue (TinfanUrie (1908-1910). (F. N. M.) 

WORTHING, a municipal borough and seaside resort in the 
Lewes parliamentary division of Sussex, England, 61 m. S. by 
W. from London by the London, Brighton & South Coast rail- 
way. Pop. (1901) 20,015. It has a fine marine parade, and a 
promenade pier, and there is a long range of firm sands. A 
public park, 21 acres in extent, was opened in 1881. The principal 
buildings are several modern churches, the town hall (1834), 
municipal buildings, free library, literary institute, infirmary and 
convalescent homes. The mother parish of Worthing is Broad- 
water, the church of which, 1 m. north of Worthing, is a cruciform 
building, and a fine example of transitional Norman work. A 
Roman villa, evidence of the existence of pottery works, and 
a so-called mile-stone, have been discovered at Worthing. The 
town was incorporated in xSoo, and is under a mayor, 8 alder* 
men and 24 councillors. Area, 1439 acres. 

WOTTON, SIR HENRY (1568-1639), English author and 
diplomatist, son of Thomas Wotton (1521-1587) and grand- 
nephew of the diplomatist Nicholas Wotton (q.v.), was born at 
Bocton Hall in the parish of Bocton or Boughton Malherbe, 
Kent. 1 He was educated at Winchester School and at New 
College, Oxford, where he matriculated on the 5th of June 1584. 
Two years later he removed to Queen's College, graduating B.A. 
in 1588. At Oxford he was the friend of Albericus Gentilis, 
then professor of Civil Law, and of John Donne. During his 
residence at Queen's he wrote a play, Tancredo, which has not 
survived, but his chief interests appear to have been scientific. 
In qualifying for his M.A. degree he read three lectures De ocxdo, 
and to the end of his life he continued to interest himself in 
physical experiments. His father, Thomas Wotton, died in 
1587, leaving to his son the very inadequate maintenance of 
a hundred marks a year. About x 589 Wotton went abroad, with 
a view probably to preparation for a diplomatic career, and his 
travels appear to have lasted for about six years. At Altdorf 
he met Edward, Lord Zouch, to whom lie later addressed a series 
of letters (1500-1593) which contain much political aad other 
news. These (Rdujuiat WotUnuutat, pp. 585 et seq. 1685) 
provide a record of the journey. He travelled by way of Vienna 

' His elder half-brother, Edward Wotton (1548-1626), entered the 
service of Sir Franca Walsingham. and in 1585 was sent on ao im- 
portant errand to James VI. of Scotland. In 1602 he was made 
comptroller of the royal household, and in 1603 he was created 
Baron Wotton of Marlcy. The peerage became extinct on the death 
of his son Thomas, the and baron (1588-1630). 



WOTTON, N.— WOUND 



and Venice to Rome, and in 1593 spent some time at Geneva in 
the house of Isaac Casaubon, to whom he contracted a consider- 
able debt. He returned to England in 1594. and in the next 
year was admitted to the Middle Temple. While abroad he had 
from time to time provided Robert Devereux, second earl of 
Essex, with information, and he now definitely entered his 
service as one of his agents or secretaries. It was his duty to 
supply intelligence of affairs to Transylvania, Poland, Italy and 
Germany. Wotton was not, like his unfortunate fellow-secretary, 
Henry Cuffe, who was hanged at Tyburn in 1601, actually in- 
volved in Essex's downfall, but he thought it prudent to leave 
England, and within sixteen hours of his patron's apprehension 
he was safe in France, whence he travelled to Venice and Rome. 
In 1602 he was resident # Florence, and a plot to murder James 
VI. of Scotland having come to the ears of the grand-duke of 
Tuscany, Wotton was entrusted with letters to warn him of the 
danger, and with Italian antidotes against poison. As " Ottavio 
Baldi " he travelled to Scotland by way of Norway. He was well 
received by James, and remained three months at the Scottish 
court, retaining his Italian incognito. He then returned to 
Florence, but on receiving the news of James's accession hurried 
to England. James knighted him, and offered him the embassy 
at Madrid or Paris; but Wotton, knowing that both these offices 
involved ruinous expense, desired rather to represent James at 
Venice. He left London to 1604 accompanied by Sir Albertus 
Morton, his half-nephew, as secretary, and William Bedell, the 
author of an Irish translation of the Bible, as chaplain. Wotton 
spent most of the next twenty years, with two breaks (161 2-1616 
and 1610-162 1), at Venice. He helped the Doge in his resistance 
to ecclesiastical aggression, and was closely associated with 
Paolo Sarpi, whose history of the Council of Trent was sent to 
King James as fast as it was written. Wotton had offended the 
scholar Caspar Schoppc, who had been a fellow student at 
Altdorf . In 161 1 Schoppe wrote a scurrilous book against James 
entitled EccUsiaslUus, in which he fastened on Wotton a saying 
which he had incautiously written in a friend's album years 
before. It was the famous definition of an ambassador as an 
"honest man sent to lie abroad for the good of his country." 
It should be noticed that the original Latin form of the epigram 
did not admit of the double meaning. This was adduced as an 
example of the morals of James and his servants, and brought 
Wotton into temporary disgrace. Wotton was at the time on 
leave in England, and made two formal defences of himself, one 
a personal attack on his accuser addressed to Marcus Weber of 
Strasbourg, and the other privately to the king. He failed to 
secure further diplomatic employment for some time, and seems 
to have finally won back the royal favour by obsequious support 
in parliament of James's claim to impose arbitrary taxes on 
merchandise. In 1614 he was sent to the Hague and in 1616 he 
returned to Venice. In 1620 he was sent on a special embassy to 
Ferdinand II. at Vienna, to do what he could on behalf of James's 
daughter Elizabeth, queen of Bohemia. Wotton's devotion to 
this princess, expressed in his exquisite verses beginning " You 
meaner beauties of the night," was sincere and unchanging. 
At his departure the emperor presented him with a jewel of great 
value, which Wotton received with due respect, but before 
leaving the city he gave it to his hostess, because, he said, he 
would accept no gifts from the enemy of the Bohemian queen. 
After a third term of service in Venice he returned to London 
early in 1624 and in July he was installed as provost of Eton 
College. This office did not relieve him from his pecuniary 
embarrassments, and he was even on one occasion arrested for 
debt, but he received in 1627 a pension of £200, and in 1630 this 
was raJ<ed to £500 on the understanding that he should write 
a history of England. He did not neglect the duties of his pro- 
vostshipt and was happy in being able to entertain his friends 
lavishly. His most constant associates were Izaak Walton and 
John Hales. A bend in the Thames below the Playing Fields, 
known at " Black Potts," is still pointed out as the spot where 
Wotton and Izaak Walton fished in company. He died at the 
beginning of December 1639 and was buried m the chapel of 



Sir Henry Won** »*.« «^ «. ^ -•/..„ 
writings are very Mfc «« *, v.* -/ ,. 
printed in Reliquiae W*u~u,~a *., u 
But of tnose fifteen two **,« ,*, * ,„ . ,„. . 
knownpoems in the langus*,, iU *•** .... /, „ ' 
his Mistrb, the Queen uf Bob****,' a** t « . %m 
Happy Life." " * - ' ' 

During his 1 lifetime ho publMuri < m \ y 7 V f'Um^rU s / , 
(1624), which is a paraphraie from M*,* .,. V , ., V " 

Latin prose address to the king on hi* u >>*($, \,.,.. >, 
V» ,6 5« appeared the Rdiauuu Wotlonumu* , 1 |, „ , 
Life. An admirable Life and LetUrt. r«*i*« » *. • .«.* „ 
material, by Logan Pcarsall Smith, wu twUL+.\ . t ,',„ ' 
A. W. Ward, St Henry Wotton. a BiovVpHunl '\.. h ' L*r " ' 

WOTTOM. NICHOLAS (c. 1497-1367), F.r.*.* *.£,'„.. , 
was a son of Sir Robert Wotton of Bough ton M.j. - <\ A y k ,, 
and a descendant of Nicholas Wotton, lord mayor $A iws ttt >L 
141 5 «d 1430, and member of parliament for the. tn y i„„ ti 
1406 to 1429. He early became vicar of Bough ton Malhrrt,* *, 4 
of Sutton Valence, and later of Ivychurch, Kent; but, drsmr.g 4 
more worldly career, he entered the service of Cuthbcrt Tumuli 
bishop of London. Having helped to draw up the InHiluhon 
of a Christian Man, Wotton in 1530 went to arrange the marriage 
between Henry VIII and Anne of Clcvcs and the union of 
Protestant princes which was to be the complement of this union. 
He crossed over to England with the royal bride, but, unlike 
Thomas Cromwell, he did not lose the royal favour when the king 
repudiated Anne, and in 1 541 , having already refused the bishopric 
of Hereford, he became dean of Canterbury and in 1544 dean of 
York. In 1543 he went on diplomatic business to the Nether- 
lands, and for the next yea* or two be had much intercourse with 
the emperor Charles V. He helped to conclude the treaty of 
peace between England and France in 1546, and was resident 
ambassador in France from 1546 to 1549. Henry VIII. made 
Wotton an executor of his will and left him £300, and in 1549, 
under Edward VI., he became a secretary of state, but he only 
held this post for about a year. In 15 so he was again sent as 
envoy to Charles V., and he was ambassador to France during 
the reign of Mary, doing valuable work in that capacity. * He 
left France in 1557, but in 1558 he was again in that country, 
helping to arrange the preliminaries of the treaty of Cateau 
Cambresis. In 1560 he signed the treaty of Edinburgh on behalf 
of Elizabeth, and he had again visited the Netherlands before 
his death In London on the 26th of January 1567. 

His brother, Sir Edward Wotton (1489-1551), was made 
treasurer of Calais in 1540, and was one of those who took part 
in the overthrow of the protector Somerset. His son, Thomas 
Wotton (1521-1587) was the father of Sir Henry Wotton (q.i.) 

WOTTON. WILLIAM (1666-1727), English scholar, son of 
the Rev. Henry Wotton, was born in his father's parish of 
Wrentham, Suffolk, on the 13th of August 1666. He was not 
yet ten years old when he was sent to Catherine Halt, Cambridge, 
having by this time a good knowledge of Latin, Greek and 
Hebrew. He obtained a fellowship at St John's College, and 
was elected an F.R.S. in 1687. Wotton is chiefly remembered 
for his share to the controversy about the respective merits of 
ancient and modern learning. In his Reflections upon Ancient 
and Modern Learning (1604, and again 1697) he took the part of 
the moderns, although in a fair and judicial spirit, and was 
attacked by Swift in the Battle of the Books. During some of his 
later years Wotton resided in Wales and gave himself to the study 
of Celtic, making a translation of the laws of HowelDda, which 
was published after his death (1730). Having taken holy orders, 
he was a prebend of Salisbury from 1705 until his death at 
Buxted, Essex, on the 13th of February 1727. 

Wotton wrote a History of Rome (1701) and Miscellaneous Dis- 
coveries relating to the Traditions and Usages of the Scribes and Phari- 
sees (1718). 

WOUND (O. Eng.irwiuf .connected with a Teutonic verb, meaning 
to strive, fight, suffer, seen in O. Eng. vrinnan, whence Eng. " win "), 
a solution in the continuity of the soft parts of the body. Con- 
tused wounds, or bruises, are injuries to the cellular tissues in 
which the skin is not broken. In parts where the tissues are lax 
the signs of swelling and discoloration are more noticeable than 



8 3 8 



WOUWERMAN, P.— WRANGEL, K. G. VON 



in the tenser tissues. The discoloration is caused by haemorrhage 
into the tissues (eccAyMMu), and passes from dark purple through 
green to yellow before it disappears. If a considerable amount of 
blood is poured forth into the injured tissues it is termed a 
kaematoma. The treatment of a bruise consists in (he application 
of cold lotion, preferably an evaporating spirit -lotion, to limit 
the subcutaneous bleeding. The haemorrhage usually becomes 
absorbed of its own accord even in haematomata, but should 
suppuration threaten an incision must be made and the cavity 
aseptically evacuated. 

Open wounds are divided into incised, lacerated, punctured and 
gunshot wounds. Incised wounds are made by any sharp instrument 
and have their edges evenly cut. In these wounds there U usually 
free haemorrhage, as the vessels are cleanly divided. Lacerated 
wounds arc those in which the edges of the wound are lorn irregularly. 
Such injuries occur frequently from accidents with machinery or 
blunt instruments, or from bites by animals. The haemorrhage 
is less than from incised wounds, and the edges may be bruised. 
Punctured wounds are those in which the depth is greater than the 
external opening. They are generally produced by sharp-pointed 
instruments. The chief danger arises from puncture of targe blood- 
vessels, or injury to important structures such as occur in the thorax 
and abdomen. It is also difficult to keep such wounds surgically 
clean and to obtain apposition of their deeper parts, and septic germs 
are often carried in with the instrument. 

The treatment of inched wounds is to arrest the bleeding (see. 
Haemorrhage), cleanse the wound and its surroundings, removing 
all foreign bodies (splinters, glass, &c), and obtain apposition of the 
cut surfaces. This is usually done by means of sutures or stitches of 
silk, catgut, silkwprmgut or silver wire. If the wound can be 
rendered aseptic, incised wounds usually heal by first intention. 
In lacerated wounds there is danger of suppuration, sloughing, 
erysipelas or tetanus. These wounds do not heal by first intention, 
and there is consequently considerable scarring. The exact amount 
of time occupied in the repair depends upon the presence or not of 
septic material, as lacerated wounds are very difficult to cleanse 
properly. Carbolic acid lotion should be used for cleansing, while 
torn or ragged portions should be cut away and provision made for 
free drainage. It is not always possible to apply sutures at first, 
but the wound may be packed with iodoform gauze, and later, 
when a clean granulating surface has been obtained, skin-crafting 
may be required. In extensive lacerated wounds, where the flesh 
has been stripped from the bones, where there is spreading gangrene, 
or in such wounds in conjunction with comminuted fractures or with 
severe sepsis supervening, amputation of a limb may be called for. 
Punctured wounds should be syringed with carbolic lotion, and all 
splinters and foreign bodies removed. The location of needles is 
rendered comparatively easy by the use of the Rdntgcn rays; the 
wound can then be packed with gauze and drained. If a large vessel 
should have been injured, the wound may have to be laid open and 
the bleeding vessel secured. Should paralysis indicate that a large 
nerve has been divided, the wound must also be laid open in order 
to suture the injured structure. 

It is only possible here to mention some of the special character- 
istics of gunshot wounds. In the modern small-bore rifle (Lee- 
Metford, Mauser) the aperture of entry is small and the aperture of 
exit larger and more slit-like. There is usually but little haemorrhage. 
Should no large vessel be torn, and should no portion of septic 
clothing be carried in, the wound may heal by first intention. Such 
bullets may be said to disable without killing. They may drill a 
clean hole in a bone without a fracture, but sometimes there is much 
splintering. Abdominal wounds may be so small that the intestine 
may be penetrated and adhesions of neighbouring coils of intestine 
cover the aperture. Martini-Henry bullets make larger apertures, 
while soft-nosed or " dum-dum " bullets spread out as soon as the 
bullet strikes, causing great mutilation and destruction of the tissues. 
Shell wounds cause extensive lacerations. Small shot may inflict 
serious injury should one of the pellets enter the eye. In gunshot 
wounds at short distance the skin may be blackened owing to the 
particles of carbon lodging in it. The chief dancers of gunshot 
wounds are haemorrhage, shock and the carrying in of septic material 
or clothing into the wound. 

WOUWERMAN. PHILIP (1619-1668), Dutch painter of 
battle and hunting scenes, was born at Haarlem in May 1610. 
He learned the elements of his art from his father, Paul Joosten 
Wouwerman, an historical painter of moderate ability, and he 
then studied with the landscape painter, Jan Wynants (1620- 
1679). Returning to Haarlem, he became a member of its gild 
of painters in 1642, and there he died in May 1668. About 
800 pictures were enumerated in John Smith's Catalogue raisvttnS 
(1840) as the work of Philip Wouwerman, and in C. Hofstede 
de Groot's enlarged Catalogue, vol. ii. (1900), the number exceeds 
1200; but probably many of these are the productions of his 
brothers Peter (1623-1682) and Jan (1629-1666), and of his 



many other imitators. His authentic works are distinguished by 
great spirit and are infinitely varied, though dealing recurrently 
with cavalry battle-pieces, military encampments, cavalcades, 
and hunting or hawking parties. He is equally excellent in his 
vivacious treatment of figures, in his skilful animal painting, 
and in his admirable and appropriate landscape backgrounds. 
Three different styles have been observed as characteristic of 
the various periods of his art. His arlier works are marked 
by the prevalence of a foxy-brown colouring, and by a tendency 
to angularity in draughtsmanship; the productions of his middle 
period have greater purity and brillianoy; and his latest and 
greatest pictures possess more of force and breadth, and are full 
of a delicate silvery-grey tone. 

See the Catalogue ratsonni of the agrfa of the most eminent 
Dutch and Flemish Painters of the 17th. Century, by De Groot. vol. n. 
(1909). referred to above. 

WRAITH, a general term in popular parlance for the appear- 
'ance of the spirit of a living person. (See " Phantasms of the 
Living," under Psychical Research.) 

WRANGEL. FR1EDRICH HEINRICH ERNST, Count von 
(1784-1877), Prussian general field marshal, was born at Stettin, 
on the 13th of April 1784. He entered a dragoon regiment 
in 1796, became cornet in 1797, and second lieutenant in 1798. 
He fought as a subaltern against Napoleon, especially distinguish- 
ing himself as Heilsbcrg in 1807, and receiving the order pout 
le mirite. In the reorganization of the army, Wrangel became 
successively first lieutenant and captain, and won distinction 
and promotion to lieutenant-colonel in the War of Liberation 
in 1813, won the Iron Cross at Wachau near Leipzig, and became 
colonel in 1815. He commanded a cavalry brigade in 1821, 
and two years later was promoted major-general. He commanded 
the 13th Division, with headquarters at MUnster, in Westphalia, 
in 1834, when riots occurred owing to differences between the 
archbishop of Cologne and the crown, and the determination and 
resolution with which he treated the clerical party prevented 
serious trouble. He was promoted lieutenant-general, received 
many honours from the court, enjoyed the confidence of the 
Junker party, and commanded successively at Konigsberg 
and Stettin. In 1848 he commanded the II. Corps of the German 
Federal army in the Schleswig- Hoist eta campaign, was promoted 
general of cavalry, and won several actions. In the autumn he 
was summoned to Berlin to suppress the riots there. As governor 
of Berlin and commander-in-chief of the Mark of Brandenburg 
(appointments which he held till his death) he proclaimed a 
state of siege, and ejected the Liberal president and members 
of the Chamber. Thus on two occasions in the troubled history 
of Prussian revival Wrangel's uncompromising sternness achieved 
its object without bloodshed. From this time onwards he was 
most prominent in connexion with the revival of the Prussian 
cavalry from the neglect and inefficiency into which it had fallen 
during the years of peace and poverty after 181 5. In 1856, 
having then seen sixty years' service, he was made a field marshal. 
At the age of eighty he commanded the A ustro- Prussian army 
in the war with Denmark in 1864 and though he was too old 
for active work, and often issued vague or impracticable orders 
(he himself had always desired that the young and brilliant 
'* Red Prince," Frederick Charles, should have the command), 
the prestige of his name, and the actual good work of Frederick 
Charles, Moltkc and Vogel von Falckenstein among the Prussian, 
and of Gableru among the Austrian generals, made the campaign 
a brilliant success. After the capture of DOppel he resigned 
the command, was created a count, and received other honours. 
In 1S66 "Papa" Wrangel assisted in the Bohemian campaign, 
but without a command on account of his great age. He took 
a keen interest in the second reorganization of the cavalry arm 
1866-1870, and in the war with France in 1870-71. He died 
at Berlin on the 2nd of November 1877. On the seventieth 
anniversary of his entering the army his regiment, the 3rd 
Cuinssiers. was given the title " Graf Wrangel." 

See supplement to Militar Waehenbtatt (1877). and lives by von 
Koppen and von Maltitz (Berlin. 1884). 

WRANGEL, KARL GUSTAV VON (161 3-1676), Swedish 
soldier, was descended from a family of Esthonian origin, branches 



WRASSE— WRECK 



839 



of which settled in Sweden, Russia and Germany. His father, 
Hermann von Wrangcl (1 587-1643), was a Swedish field marshal 
in Gustavus Adolphus's wars. Karl Gustav was born near 
Upsala on the 23rd of December 1613, and at the age of twenty 
distinguished himself as a cavalry captain in the war against 
the Army of the League. Three years later he was colonel, 
and in 1638 major-general,. still serving in Germany. In 1644 
he commanded a fleet at sea, which defeated the Danes at 
Fehmarn on the 23rd of October. In 1646 he returned to 
Germany as a field marshal and succeeded Torstensson as 
commander-in-chief of the Swedish army in Germany, which 
post he held during the last three campaigns of the Thirty Years* 
Wax. Under Wrangcl and Turenne the allied Swedish and 
French armies marched and fought in Bavaria and Wurttemberg. 
At the outbreak of a fresh Polish war in i6$s Wrangcl com- 
manded a fleet, but in 1656 he was serving on land again and 
commanding, along with the Great Elector of Brandenburg, 
in the three days' battle of Warsaw. In 1657 he invaded Jutland 
and in 1658 passed over the ice into the islands and took Kronborg. 
In 1657 he was appointed admiral and in 1664 general of the 
realm, and as such he was a member of the regency during the 
minority of Charles XI. But his last campaign was unfortunate. 
Commanding, ineffectively owing to his broken health, in the 
war against Brandenburg, he was recalled after his stepbrother 
Waldemar, Freiherr von Wrangcl (1647-1676), had been defeated 
at FcbrbeUin. He died at Riigen shortly afterwards, on the 
5th of July 1676. 

WRASSE, a name given to the fishes of the family Labridae 
generally, and more especially to certain members of the 
family. They are very abundant in the tropical zone, less so 
in the temperate, and disappear altogether in the Arctic and 
Antarctic Circles. Their body is gener- 
ally compressed, like' that of a carp, 
covered with smooth (cycloid) scales; 
they possess one dorsal fin only, the 
anterior portion of which consists of 
numerous spines. Many wrasses are 
readily recognized by their thick lips, 
the inside of which is sometimes curi- 
ously folded, a peculiarity which has 
given to them the German name of 
*' lip-fishes." The dentition of their 
Jaws consists of strong conical teeth, of which some in front, and 
often one at the hinder end of the upper jaw, are larger than the 
others. But the principal organs with which they crush shell- 
fish, crustaceans and other hard substances are the solid and 
strongly-toothed pharyngeal bones, of which the lower are 
coalesced into a single fiat triangular plate. All wrasses are 
surface fishes, and rocky parts of the coast overgrown with 
seaweed are their favourite haunts in the temperate, and coral- 
reefs in the tropical seas. Some 450 species of wrasses (including 
parrot-wrasses) are known, chiefly from the tropics. 




Lips of Labnu festivus. 



Of the British \ 



w . t the ballan wrasse (Labrus maculahu) and 

the striped or red or cook wrasse (Labnu mitius) are the most 

« .. .... ^ »-»-«, in which the teeth 

tpraeoper- 



aT~Both belong to the genus Labnu, m which the teeth 
stand in a single series, and which has a smooth edge of the praepper- 
culum and only three spines in the anal fin. The ballan wrasse ts the 
larger, attaining to a length of 18 in., and. it is said, to a weight of 
8 lb: its colours are singularly variegated, green or brownish, with 
red and blue lines and spots ; the dorsal spines are twenty in number. 
The cook wrasse offers an instance of well-marked secondary sexual 
difference— the male being ornamented with blue streaks or a blackish 
band along the side of the body, whilst the female has two or three 
large black spots across the back of .the itafl. This species possesses 
only from sixteen to eighteen spines iq the dorsal fin. The goldsinny 
or corkwing tCrenilabrus mehps) is much more frequent on the 5. 
coasts of England and Ireland than farther N., and rarely exceeds a 
length of loin. As in other wrasses, its colours are beautiful, but 
variable; but it may be readily distinguished from thetwo preceding 
■pedes by the toothed edge of the praeoperailurn. The three other 
British wrasses are much scarcer and more local, viz. Jago s goldsinny 
(Qenolabnu rupestris), with a large black spot on the anterior dorsal 
spines and another on the base of the upper caudal rays; Accntho- 
Zbriu PaUoni, which is so rarely captured that it lacks a vernacular 
name, but may be easily recognued by its five anal spines and by 
Ustteeth in the jaws forming a band; and the rock-cook (Centra- 



labnu flubfau), which also baa five anal sntnes, but has the jaws 
armed with a single series of teeth. 

On the Atlantic coasts of the N. states of the United States the 
wrasses are represented by the genus Tautoga. The onlv species of 
this genus, known by the names of tautog or blackravh, is much 
esteemed as food. It is caught in great numbers, and generally sold 
of a weight of about a lb. 

WRAXJOL. SIR NATHANIEL WILLIAM (1751-1831), 
English auibor, was born in Queen's Square, Bristol, on the 
8th of April 1751. He was the son of a Bristol merchant, 
Nathaniel Wraxall, and his wife Anne, great niece of Sir James 
Thornhill the painter. He entered the employment of the East 
India Company in 1769, and served as judge-advocale and 
paymaster during the expeditions against Guaerat and Baroche 
in 1 77 1. In the following year he left the service of the company 
and returned to Europe. He visited Portugal and was pre- 
sented to the court, of which he gives a curious account in his 
Historical Memoirs; and in the N. of Europe he made the 
acquaintance of several Danish nobles who had been exiled for 
their support of the deposed Queen Caroline Matilda, sister of 
George III. Wraxall at their suggestion undertook to endeavour 
to persuade the king to act on her behalf. He was able to secure 
an interview with her at Zell in September 1774. His exertions 
are told m his Posthumous Memoirs. As the queen died on the 
1 xth of May 1 775, his schemes came to nothing and he complained 
that he was out of pocket, but George III. took no notice of him 
for some time. In 1775 he published his first book, Cursory 
Remarks made in a Tour through some- of the Northern Parts of 
Europe, which reached its fourth edition by 1607, when it was 
renamed A Tour Round the Baltic, In 1777 ne travelled again 
in Germany and Italy. As be had by this time secured the 
patronage of important people, he obtained a complimentary 
Keuterant's commission from the king on the application of 
Lord Robert Manners, which gave him the right to wear uniform 
though he never performed any military service. In this year 
he published his Memoirs of the Kings of France of the Race of 
Valois, to which be appended an account of his tour in the 
Western, Southern and Interior Provinces of France. In 1778 
he went again on his travels to Germany and Italy, and accumu- 
lated materials for his Memoirs of the Courts of Berlin, Dresden, 
Warsaw and Vienna (1709). In 1780 he entered parliament 
and sat till 1704 for Hinton in Wiltshire, Ludgershall and 
Wallingford, in succession. He published in 179s the beginning 
of a History of France from the Accession of Henry III. to the 
Death of Louis A"/ V., which was never completed. Little is known 
of his later years' except, that he was made a baronet by the 
prince regent in 1813. His Historical Memoirs appeared in 
18x5. Both they and the Posthumous Memoirs (1836) are very 
readable and have real historical value, Wraxall married Miss 
Jane LasceHes in 1789, and died suddenly at Dover on the 7th 
of November 1831. His grandson, Sir F. C LasceHes Wraxall 
(1828*1865), was a miscellaneous writer of some note. 

See preface to The Historical and Posthumous Memoirs of Sir If. W. 
Wraxall. by H. B. Wheatley (London, 1884). 

WREATH (0. Eng. sw£0, from wridan, to twist), a band of 
leaves, flowers or metal, twisted into a circular form, and used 
cither as a chaplet or diadem for the head or as an ornament 
to be hung upon or round an object. For the ancient usages 
of crowning victors In the games with wreaths, and the bestowal 
of them as marks of honour see Cao wn and Corokbt. 

WRECK, a term which in its widest sense means anything 
without an apparent owner that is afloat upon, sunk in, or 
cast ashore by the sea; in legal phraseology , as appears below, 
it has a narrower meaning. Old Norman forms of the word, tarec 
and veresc, are to be found in charters of xi8x and later date; 
and the former is still in use in Normandy. Latinized it becomes 
wreccum, vrechum or wareclum.) and such phrases as maris 
ejectum, jactura maris, advenlura maris, shipbryche, are all used 
as descriptions of wreck. In Anglo-Saxon charters sm-apuryrp, 
and in the charters of the Cinque Ports inventions, a translation 
of ' ( findalls, n probably a local word, are synonymous with 
wreck. Formerly an appreciable source of revenue to the crown, 
afterwards a valuable addition to the income of a landowner 



840 



WRECK 



on the- sea coast, wreck has almost within modern times ceased 
to be a perquisite of either, or to enrich the casual finder at the 
expense of its rightful owner. The history of the law as sketched 
below will indicate how this has come about. 

History. — Of old it seems to have been the general rule in the 
civilized maritime countries of Europe that the right to wreck be- 
longed to the sovereign, and formed part of the royal revenue. 
This was so under the Roman, French and feudal law; and in Eng- 
land the common law set out in the statute De praerogativa regis 
(t 7 Ed w. 1 1 ., 1324), provided that the long has wreck of the sea, whales 
and sturgeons taken in the sea and elsewhere within the kingdom, 
except in certain places privileged by the king. This right, which it 
is said had for its object the prevention of the practice of destroying 
the property of the shipwrecked, was, however, gradually relaxed; 
and the owner of wreck was allowed to recover it if he made claim 
to it, and gave proof of his ownership within a certain time — fixed 
at a year or a year and a -day alike by a decree of Antonine the 
Great, the feudal law, the general maritime law, the law of France 
and English law. Richard I. released his prerogative right to 
wreck to the extent 
brothers and sisters 

Henry III., bv a charter of 1231 . _..... 

goods to have bis property again if he claimed within three months, 
provided that any man or beast escaped from the ship* The statute 
of Westminster the First (1276, 3 Edw. I.) provided that where a 



Kicnard 1. released his prerogative ngnt to 
it of allowing children, or if there were none, 
1 of a perishing owner, to have his goods; and 
iharter of 1236, allowed the owner of wrecked 



roan, a dog or a cat escape alive out of the ship, such ship or barge 
or anything in it shall not be adjudged wreck, but the goods shall be 
saved and kept by view of the sheriff, coroner or the king's bailiff, 



and delivered into the hands of such as are of the town where the 
goods were found, so that if any one sue for those goods and prove 
that they were his, or perished within his keeping, within a year and 
a day, they shall be restored to him without delay, and if not they 
shall remain to the king or to such others to whom the wreck be- 
longed. In 1277 the statute De officio toronatoris made provision for 
the safe custody of wreck, but coroners were relieved 01 their duties 
in respect of wreck by the Coroners Act 1887. An act of 1353 pro- 
vided for the delivery to the merchants of goods coming to land 
which may not be said to be wreck, on payment of salvage.. In 
Scotland, a statute of Alexander II., similar to that of Westminster, 
declared that where any creature escapes alive from a wrecked 
vessel, the goods cast away are not accounted wreck, but are to be 
preserved by the sheriff for those who within a year shall prove their 
property therein; otherwise they shall escheat to the crown. For a 
long time the view of English law was that the right to recover 
wrecked property depended on the fact of a live creature escaping, 
though in Hale's words, " because it was lex odiosa to add affliction 
to the afflicted, it was bound up with as many limits and circum- 
stances, and restricted to as narrow a compass as might be " ; and 
the admiralty records illustrate the statement. Thus in 1382 the 
prior of Wymondham claimed as wreck a ship which came ashore 
with no one on board, the men having left her for fear of their lives 
because of an* enemy ship which was about to capture her; but the 
king's council, before whom it came, by certiorari from the admiral 
of the north, decided against the claim. In 1543, ships grounded on 
the Goodwins were held to be waif and wreck, although their crews to 



save their lives made their way to shore; and in 1637a ship in the 
Cinque Ports was proceeded against in admiralty and condemned, 
" no man or dog being on board, but only a dead' man with his head 
shot off. " Upon the institution of the office of lord high admiral 
early in the 15th or at the close of the 14th century, it became usual 
for the crown to grant to the lord admiral by his patent of appoint- 
ment, amongst other proficua et commoditates appertaining to his 
office, wreck of the sea; and when, early in the reign of Henry VIII., 
vice-admirals of the coast were created, the lord admiral by patent 
under his own hand delegated to them his rights and duties in the 
several counties, including those in connexion with wreck.' He did 
not, however, part with the whole of his emoluments; his vice- 
admirals were required to render an account of the proceeds of 
wreck, and to handover to him a part, usually one-half, of their gains. 
This system, depending not upon any statute, but apparently upon 
an arrangement between the lord-admiral and his vice-admirals, 
continued until the year 1846. In that year an act (9 & 10 Vict 
c. 99) was passed forbidding the vice-admirals to intermeddle with 
wreck, and it required the receivers of droits of admiralty to receive 
all wreck from the finders and to detain it for twelve calendar 
months; at the end of that period it was to be sold and the proceeds 
carried to the credit of the consolidated fund. The transfer to this 
fund of the hereditary casual revenues of the crown had previously 
been effected by legislation in the first years of the reigns of William 
IV. and Victoria, by which the civil list was instituted. The last 
lord-admiral, however, who beneficially enjoyed the proceeds of 
wreck was the duke of Buckingham in the reign of Charles I. Prince 
George of Denmark, Queen Anne's husband and lord-admiral, took 
wreck by his patent, but by a collateral instrument he surrendered 
the. greater part of the revenues of his office to the crown. Not- 
withstanding this arrangement, the vice-admirals of counties, who, 
in the absence of a lord high admiral, received their appointments 
sometimes from the crown and sometimes from the commissioners 
of the admiralty, appear to have taken the whole or part of the 



proceeds of wreck until the passing of the act of 1846. The indent 
law by which the unfortunate owner was deprived of his property, 
if no living thing escaped from the wreck, had during the 16th and 
17th centuries been gradually but tacitly relaxed; it required, 
however, a decision of Lord Mansfield and the king's bench in 1771 
(Hamilton v. Dans, 5 Burr. 2732) to settle the law definitely that, 
whether or no any living creature escaped, the property in a wreck 
remains in the owner. In Scotland it seems that the same law had 
been laid down in .1725, and there are indications that upon the 
continent of Europe there had before this date been a relaxation of 
the old law in the same direction. As early as 1269 a treaty with 
Norway provides that owners of ships wrecked upon the coasts of 
England or Norway should not be deprived of their goods (Ryan. 
Foed. 1450). The system under which the lord-admiral and the vice- 
admirals of counties had. for more than three centuries taken charge 
of wreck never worked well. Their interest was directly opposed 
to their duty; for it. was to the interest of every one concerned, 
except the owners and crews of ships in distress, that nothing should 
land alive. Apart from this, the system discouraged legitimate 
salvors. The admirals and vice-admirals had by degrees assumed 
that all salvage operations were exclusively their business; they 
took possession of wreck brought or cast ashore, whether it was 
legal wreck or not, and this often gave rise to conflicts with outside 
working salvors. It was not until the 17th century that working 
salvors established the right, which they now have, to a lien upon 
property saved as a security for adequate remuneration of their 
exertions in saving it; and if the vice-admirals restored to ks 
owners wreck that had come to their hands, they did so only upon 
payment of extravagant demands for salvage, storage ana often 
legal expenses. A curious side light is thrown upon their practices 
by the case of an English ship that went ashore on the coast of 
Prussia in 1743. Frederick the Great restored her to her owner*, 
but before doing so he exacted from them a bond for the full value 
of ship and cargo, and the condition of the bond was that the owners 
would within six months produce a certificate under seal of the 
English admiralty that by the law of England no " salvage " was 
payable to the crown or to the admiral of England in the like case 
of a Prussian ship going ashore upon an English coast. The records 
of the admiralty court show that Frederick^ action in this case was 
intended as a protest, not against the payment of a fair reward to 
salvors of Prussian ships, but against exactions by English vice- 
admirals and their officers. Stories of wilful wrecking of ships and 
of even more evil deeds are probably exaggerations, but modern 
research has authenticated sufficient abuses to show that further 
legislation was necessary to regulate the taking possession of wreck 
and ships in distress by " sea-coasters. " Previously to the passing 
of the act of 1846 the only substantial protection against plunder 
which owners of a wrecked ship could get was to apply to the ad- 
miralty judge for a commission enabling them or their agents to take 
possession of what came ashore: but to obtain such a commission 
took time and cost money, and before the commissioners arrived 
at the scene of the wreck a valuable cargo would have disappeared 
and been dispersed through the country. Plunder of wrecks was 
common, and the crowds that collected for the purpose set law at 
defiance. The vice-admirals, even if they bad been able, did little 
to protect the ship wrecked. Complaints from the lard-admtral 
that they neglected to render accounts of their profits were constant; 
and although the crown' and the lord-admiral profited little by 
wreck, there is reason to think that the gains of vice-admirals and 
their officers, and also of landowners and dwellers on the coast, 
were more considerable. Many of the vice-admirals' accounts of the 
17th and following centuries are extant. Most of them are for 
trifling sums, but occasionally the amounts are considerable. A 
vice-admiral for Cornwall charges himself in his account for the years 
1 628-1 634 with a sum of £29,253, and in 1624 the duke of 
Buckingham found it worth his while to buy out the rights 
of. the warden of the Cinque Ports over wreck within hb 
jurisdiction for £1000 in addition to an annuity of £500 for the 
warden's life. At the close of the 17th century the vice-admirals 
were required to make affidavits as to the amount of their gains; in 
j 709 twenty .of them swore that their office was worth less than £50 
in the year. 

The right of the warden of the Cinque Ports to wreck, above 
alluded to, was derived from charters granted to the ports by Edward 
I. and his successors; many other seaports enjoyed a similar right 
under early charters. It would seem that these rights were of some 
value, for in 1829 the little towns of Dunwich and South wold litigated 
at a cost of £1000 the question whether a tub of whisky picked up at 
sea belonged to the admiralty jurisdiction of the one town or the 
other; and the town of Yarmouth is said to have spent no less than 
£7000 upon a similar question. It was partly in order to put an end 
to all dealings with wreck by local admiralty courts that the Municipal 
Corporations Act of 1833 was passed, abolishing all of them, except 
that of the Cinque Ports. 

Grants of wreck to individuals are earlier than those to towns. 
Even before the conquest it seems to have been not unusual for 
grantees from the crown of lands adjoining the sea to get the fran- 
chise of wreck included in their grants. A charter purporting to be 
of the year 1023 contains a grant by King Canute to the abbot of 
Canterbury of wreck found at sea below low-water mark as*fax as a 



WRECK 



841 



nan coum oy waning coucn it witn a sprit (nemou 

K7). There is reason to think that before the en 
snry II. the crown had granted away its right t 
great part of the ooaat of England. Although a I 



Janes, 



man could by wading touch it with a tprit (Kemble, Cod. Dip!., No. 
* ...... '• end of the reign of 

; to wreck round a 

_ r ^_ - ■ ■ r- l landowner of die 

present day, who under such a grant is entitled to wreck, will, in 
respect of wreck itself, derive no substantial benefit, nevertheless 
the grant may be of great value a* evidence of his right to the fore- 
shore; and even where no grant of wreck can be produced, if he can 
show that he and his predecessors have been accustomed to take 
possession of wreck on the foreshore, it is strong evidence as against 
the crown of his right to the foreshore, and a lost grant may be 
presumed. As to these grants of wreck Hale says that " though 
wreck of the sea doth do jure commmni belong to the king, yet it may 
belong to a subject by charter or by prescription. . :. Sometime 
wreck hath belonged to an honour by prescription, as in the honour 
of Arundel, sometimes to the owner of a county. The lords of all 
counties palatini* regularly had wreccum maris within their counties 
palatine as part of their Jura regalia, but yet inferior lords might 
prescribe for wreck belonging to their several manors within a 
county palatine The earl of Cornwall had wreccum maris per 
latum comilatum Comubiae; for though Cornwall was not a county 
palatine, it had many royalties belonging to it, viz. as against the 
king, though particular lords might prescribe for wreck against 
the earl " IDs jure maris, I vii; Hargrave, 41). In the Isle of 
Man unreclaimed wreck, whether cast on shore or found in the 
sea, within the headlands of Man, belongs to the lord, now the 
crown by purchase from the duke of Atbol; in the Channel Islands 
all wreck cast on shore or within reach of a person standing on 
shore, except certain valuables which go to the crown, belongs to 
the lord of the manor if not reclaimed within a year and a day; 
while in Wales the old law made everything thrown on shore belong 
to the king, for " the sea is a packhorse of the king " (A. G. v. 
J H, ft C 347). In Scotland, as in England, unclaimed 
\ to the crown and was often granted to subjects, 

r the style of " wrak, waith and ware," the last two 

ifying derelict and seaweed. It was so granted to the earl 
of Orkney in 1581. It was occasionally dealt with by the Scottish 
parliament. Thus by an act of 1436, snips wrecked on the coast of 
Scotland were to be escheat to the king if they belonged to a cou n try 
observing a similar law, otherwise to have the favour shown to ships 
of Scotland. In France under the name of droit de Ms or droit 
d'ipave similar grants were made to feudal seigneurs. 
' From early times a distinction was made in English law betwee n 
wreck cast ashore and wreck that is floating or sunken below low- 
water mark. Wreck proper, or common law wreck, ejectum maris. 
is what is cast by the sea upon the shore; for " nothing shall be said 
so be wreccum maris, but such goods as are cast or left upon the land " 
{Sir H. Constable's Case, 1599, 5 Rep. 106), and this belonged to the 
wjure corona*, and was dealt with by the common law. Floating 

J sunken wreck belonged to the crown as inter regalia, but was 

granted to the lord-admiral Jure reps. Even when the office of lord 
high admiral b in abeyance, and the duties performed by com- 
missi! wins, as now, these rights are distinguished from the other royal 
revenues as belonging to the crown in its office of admiralty, or, as 
they are commonly known, droits of the admiralty. From early 
times the lord-admiral tried to usurp, and there are several instances 
of his actually usurping jurisdiction over wreck proper; and in the 
reign of Richard II. special statutes (which were only declaratory 
of the common law) were passed for the purpose of confining his 
jurisdiction to its proper limits. One of these (15 Hie. II.) declared 
that " of all manner of contracts, pleas and quereles, and all other 
" g within the bodies of the counties as well by land as 
1 also of wreck of the sea, the admiral's court shall have 

r of cognisance, power nor jurisdiction, but all such manner 

of contracts, pleas and quereles, and all other things rising within 
the bodies of counties as well by land as by water as afore, and also 
wreck of the sea, shall be tried by the laws of the land and not before 
nor by the admiral nor his lieutenant in any wise." 
) In spite of this statute, instances still occurred of the admiralty 
court exercising this jurisdiction, until by frequent prohibition by 
the common law courts, especially in the 17th century, and by the 
admission of the admiralty judges themselves, it was recognised at 
beyond the scope of their authority. These admiralty droits are 
classified as flotsam, jetsam, lagan and derelict. In Lord Coke's 
words, flotsam is " when a ship sinks or otherwise perishes, and the 

Side float on the sea ": jetsam is " when goods are cast out of a 
to lighten her when in danger of sinking, and afterwards the ship 
perishes ; and ligan, or lagan, is " when heavy goods are. to lighten 
the ship, cast out and sunk in the sea tied to a buoy or cork, or some- 
thing that will not sink, in order that they may be found again and 
recovered.'' Derelict is a ship or cargo, or part of it, abandoned by 
its master and crew sine sfe reeuperondi el sine animo revcrlendt. 
"None of these goods, ** adds Coke, " which are so called, are called 
wreck so long as they remain in or upon- the sea-; but if any of them 
by the sea be put upon the land then they shall be said to be wreck" 
(Sir H. Constable's Case, 1509, 5 Rep. 106; and 2 Inst. 167}. Hale 
says" they are not wreck of the tea but of another nature, neither do 
they pass by wreccum maris as is recorded in Sir Henry Constable s 
case and the case of the 3 Edw. II., where they are styled admmtmrae 
ptaris. _ And as they, are of another nature, so tbey.are of another.. 



and * 



things arising within 1 
by water and a 



cognisance or jurisdiction, vie the admiral jurisdiction. Flotsam, 
jetsam and lagan, and other sea estrays, if they are taken up in the 
wide ocean, belong to the taker of them if the owner cannot be known. 
But if they be taken up within the narrow seas that do belong to the 
king, or in any haven, port or creek or arm of the sea, they do jprima 
facie and of common right belong to the king, in ease where the ship 

perisbeth or the owner cannot be known But if the owner can 

be known he ought to have his goods again, for the casting them 
overboard is not a loss of his property. Although the right of these 
adventures of the sea within the king s seas belongs to him where the 
owner cannot be known, yet the king hath little advantage of It. for 
by the custom of the English seas the one moiety of what is gained 

belongs to him that saves it [this b not the present rule] A 

subject may be entitled to these as he may be entitled to wreck— 
(1) by charter: (2) by prescription" (Dejure maris; Hargrove, 
41, 43). The difference between these two kinds of wreck is clearly 
brought out in R. v. 4p Casks of Brandy (1836, 3 Hagg. Ad. 257; 
and K. v. a Casks of Tallow, tbmi. 294)— a dispute between the 
crown and a grantee of wreck, where it was decided that objects 
picked up -below low-water mark, and within 3 m. of it, as also 
objects afloat be t w e e n high- and low-water marks, never having 
touched the ground, are droits of the crown, whereas objects picked 
up aground between high- and low-water marks, or though aground, 
yet covered by the waves, are wreck. 

The distinction that Hale draws in the above passage between 
sea waifs or estrays taken on the high seas, and those taken in the 
seas of the realm, seems to be founded on the occupatio of the civil 
law; but although favoured by the similar rule existing in the case 
of royal fish, it has not been recognized by the courts, which have 
always held that in both cases they are droits of the crown in its 
office of admiralty, and, subject to the right of the salvor to reward 
and the right of the owner to reclaim them in a year and a day, go 
to the royal revenue (Lord Stowell, The Aquila, 1798, i C. Rob. 37). 
Lord Stowell bases this prerogative right " on the general rule of 
civilised countries that what is found derelict on the seas is acquired 
beneficially for the sovereign, if no owner shall appear." It seems 
that this was also Coke's view (2 Inst 168). 

The provisions of the Merchant Shipping Act 1894, mentioned 
below, upon the subject of droits of admiralty are not clear. In 
practice the only droits of the admiralty that are commonly dealt 
with are anchors that have been slipped or parted from in heavy 
weather. In the Downs and other roadsteads these are "swept-, 
for by cr ee pers towed over the sea bottom, and in former days 
sweeping for anchors was a common industry. In the Downs targe 
sums have been made after gales in this way. In the 17th. century 
it became customary to obtain from the crown granta of the right to 
fish for sunken wreck and treasure not only upon English coasts but 
all over the world. 

Although a ship on board which, or by means of which a man was 
killed, might be a deodand (ff.v.), yet qua wreck she was not subject 
to forfeiture as deodand. 

Present British taw. — From the above sketch of the develop-; 
ment of the law of wreck it will be seen that it owes little to the 
legislature. After the act of 1353 no statute dealt with the sub-' 
ject untO 27x2. In that year a salvage act was passed, but it 
made no material alteration In the law; and although during 
the z8th and early 19th centuries several acts were passed 
dealing fragmentarily with wreck and salvage, the act of 1846, 
above mentioned, is the only one that calls for notice. That 
act was embodied in and added to by the Merchant Shipping 
Act 1854, which again was repealed, re-enacted and added to 
by the Merchant Shipping Act 1804. The last mentioned act 
contains the whole of the existing statute law upon the subject 
of wreck within the territorial waters of the United Kingdom.! 
For its purposes wreck includes jetsam, flotsam, lagan and 
derelict, found in or on the shores of the sea or any tidal water. 1 
The term does not extend to a barge adrift in the Thames, nor 
a raft of timber adrift; it must be the hull, cargo or appurten- 
ances of a vessel Under the Sea Fisheries Act 1883, passed to 
give effect to the North Sea Fisheries Convention, the provisions 
of the Merchant Shipping Act as to wreck, apply to fishing boats 
with their rigging and gear. , 

The provisions of the Merchant Snipping Act dealing with wreck' 
(ninth part) may be summarised as follows 1 The Board of Trade 
(as the receiver-general of droits of admiralty) has the general super- 
intendence of wreck in the United Kingdom, and appoints receivers 
of wreck for the whole coast, who are paid by fees. Where a British 
or foreign vessel is wracked, stranded or in distress, at any place on 



cargo and apparel He can require the assistance of any person, 
especially the master of any vessel, or the use of any waggons, carts 
or. horses, near at hand; and for this .purpose any person, mays 



842 



WREDE 



unless then » a public mud equally cxmvco«edt, t**— **& repass 
with or without bone* or carriages over any adjoining bad* without 
the owner'* or occupier's consent, doing as little damage as possible, 
and may also deposit there any things recovered from the ship; any 
damage so done is a charge on the ship, cargo or articles, and n 
recoverable like salvage (?.».). Penalties are imposed on any owner 

The receiver has power to 
' any hindering of the preser- 
apparet. Where any vessel, 
wrecked or in distress as above, is plundered, damaged or destroyed, 
by any riotous or tumultuous assembly ashore or afloat, corapeesa- 
Uon must be made to her owner in England and Scotland by the 
same authority which would be liable to pay compensation in cases 
of riot (?.».). and in Ireland in cases of malicious injuries to property. 
In the absence of the receiver, his powers may be eur cisr d by the 



rccoverarjie uice salvage \q.o.). renames are 
or occupier hindering the operations. The 
suppress any plundering or disorder, or any 1 
vatjoa of the ship, persons, cargo or appan 



following officers or 
of customs, princii 



ive order, vie a chief officer 
officer of coast-guard, inland revenue officer, 



sheriff, justice of the peace, and naval or military officer on full pay. 
These persons act as the receiver'* agent and put the salvage in his 



custody, but they are not entitled to any fees nor arc they deprived 
of any right to salvage by so doing. An examination is also directed 
to be held, in cases of ships in distress on the coasts of the kingdom, 
by a wreck receiver, wreck commissioner or his deputy, at the request 
of the Board of Trade or a justice of the peace, by evidence on oath 
as to the name and description of ship, name of master, shipowner 
and owner of cargo, ports to and from which the ship was bound, the 
occasion of the ship's distress, the services rendered and the like. 
The act provides as follows for dealing with wreck: Any one finding 
wreck, if he is the owner of it, must give notice of his having done so 
to the receiver of the district, and if lie is not the owner he must de- 
liver it to that officer as soon as possible, except for reasonable cause, 
e.g. if, as a ealvor, he retains it with the knowledge of the receiver. 
No articles belonging to a wrecked ship found at the time of the 
casualty must be taken or kept by any person, whether their owner 
or not. but must be handed over to the receiver. The receiver 
taking possession of any wreck must give notice of it, withadeacrip- 
tion, at the nearest custom-bouse; and if the wreck is in his opinion 
worth more than £ao, also to Lloyd's. The owner of any wreck in the 
hands of a receiver must establish his claim to it within a year, and 
on so doing, and paying all expenses, is entitled to have it restored 
to him. Where a foreign ship has been wrecked on or near the coast, 
and any articles forming part of her cargo are found on or near the 
coast, or are brought into any port, the consular officer of the foreign 
country to which the ship or cargo belongs is deemed to be the agent 
for the owner so far as the custody and disposal of the articles is 
concerned. The receiver may in certain cases, e.g. where the value 
is small, sell the wreck and hold the proceeds till claimed. The right 
to unclaimed wreck belongs to the crown, except in places where the 
crown has granted that right to others. Persons so entitled, such as 
admirals — vice-admirals are mentioned in the act (sed quaere) — 
lords of manors and the like, arc entitled, after giving the receiver 
notice and particulars of their title, to receive notice from the receiver 
of any wreck there found. Where wreck is not claimed by an owner 
within a year after it was found, and has been in the hands of a 
receiver, it can be claimed by the person entitled to wreck in the place 
where it was found, and he is entitled to have it after paying expenses 
and salvage connected with it; if no such person claims it, it is sold 
by the receiver, and the net proceeds are applied for the benefit of the 
crown, either for the duchy of Lancaster or the duchy of Cornwall ; 
or if these do not claim it, it goes to the crown. Where the title to 
unclaimed wreck is disputed, the dispute may be settled summarily 
as in cases of salvage; either party, u dissatisfied, may within three 
months after a year since the wreck came into the hands of the 
receiver proceed in any competent court to establish his title. 
Delivery of unclaimed wreck by the receiver discharges him from 
liability, but does not prejudice the title thereto. The Board of 
Trade has power to purchase rights of wreck. No person exercising 
admiralty jurisdiction as grantee of wreck may interfere with wreck 
otherwise than in accordance with the act. Duties are payable on 
w r e cke d goods coming into the United Kingdom or Isle of Man as if 
they had been imported thither; and goods wrecked on their home- 
ward voyage may be forwarded to their original destination, or. if 
wrecked on their outward voyage, to their port of shipment, on due 
security being taken for the protection of the revenue. Wreck com- 
missioners may be appointed by the lord chancellor to hold investi- 
gations into shipping casualties, to act as judges of courts of survey, 
and to take examinations in respect of ships in distress. 
■ The owner of a wrecked ship, sunk by his negligence in a navigable 
highway, so as to be an obstruction to navigation, if he retains the 
ownership of her, is liable in damages to the owner of any other ship 
which without negligence runs into her. If, however, the owner has 
taken steps to indicate her position, or the harbour authority at hia 
request has undertaken to do so, no action* lies against him for 
negligence either in rem or in personam. He may, however (whether 
the sinking was due to his negligence or not), abandon the ship, and 
can thus free himself from any further liability in respect of her. 
If he abandons her to any other person — e.g. an underwriter — who 

eys for her as for a total loss, that person does not become liable 
* her unless he takes possession or control in any way. Harbour 
authorities generally have by local statute, as they have by the 



general Harbours, Doc *s and Piers Classes Act 1*47 (If incorporated! 
in their own act), the power of removing the wreck in such a case, 
and recouping themselves for their expenses from its proceeds. The 
general act also gives a personal right of action against the owner 
lor any balance of expense over the value of the wreck; but if the 
owner has abandoned it, and no one else has taken it, neither he nor 
any one else is liable. A particular or local act (as e.g . one of the 
State of Victoria) may, however, fasten this liability on the person 
who is owner at the time when the ship is wrecked, and then he 
cannot free himself of it. A harbour authority is not obliged to 
remove a wreck because it has power to do so. unless it takes dues 
from vessels using the harbour where the wreck lies, or in some way 
warrants that the harbour is safe for navigation, in which case it is 
under an obligation to do so. Further statutory provision is now 
made in this respect by the Merchant Shipping Act, which empower s 
harbour authorities to raise, remove or destroy (and meantime buoy 
or light), or to sell and reimburse themselves out of the proceeds 
of any vessel or part of a vessel, her tackle, cargo, equipment and 
stores, sunk, stranded or abandoned in any water under their control. 
or any approach thereto, which is an obstruction or danger to navi- 
gation or lifeboat service. They must first give due notice of such 
intention, and must allow the owner to have the wreck on his paying 
the fair market value. The act gives similar powers to lighthouse 
authorities, with a provision that any dispute b e twe e n a harbour and 
lighthouse authority in this respect is to be determined finally by 
the Board of Trade. Provision is also made by statute for the burial 
of bodies cast on shore from the sea by wreck or otherwise within the 
limits of parishes, or. in extra-parochial places, by the parish officers 
or constables at the cost of the county: and lords of manors entitled 
to wreck may defray part of the cost of burial of bodies cast up; 
within the manor, as evidence of their right of wreck. 

The method of dealing with wreck outside territorial waters (which 
does not come within the scope of the act) is governed by thejprcvious 
general law relating to droits of admiralty. The Board of Trade, as 
receiver-general, in its instructions to receivers, directs that wreck 
picked up at sea out of the limits of the United Kingdom, or brought 
to it by British ships, is to be taken possession of by the receiver 
and held by him on behalf of the owners, or, if the owners do not claim 
it, on behalf of the crown. Derelict ships picked up at sea outside 
territorial limits and brought into British ports must be delivered to 
the receiver and kept by him until the owner can be found (but not 
longer than a year and a day). Wreck picked up out of territorial 
limits by a foreign ship need not be interfered with by the receiver, 
unless upon application by a party interested. For the receiver's 
rights with respect to property in duties* and its liability to salvage, 
see Salvage. 

By an act of 1896 it is the duty of die master of a British ship to 
report to Lloyd's agent, or to the secretary of Lloyd's, any floating 
derelict ship which he may fall in with at sea. Under the Merchant 
Shipping Act, it is a felony to take wreck found in territorial limits 
to a foreign port, and it is punishable by fine to interfere with a 
wreck. The receiver has power, by means of a search warrant from 
a justice, to search for wreck which he has reason to believe is con- 
cealed. By the general criminal law in Scotland plundering wreck is 
punishable at common law; and in England and Ireland it is a felony 
to plunder or steal any wreck or part thereof, to destroy any wreck 
or part thereof, to prevent or impede any person on .board a wreck 
from saving himself, and to exhibit any false signal with the intent 
of endangering any ship, or to do anything tending to the immediate 
loss or destruction of a ship for which no other punishment is 
provided. 

Authorities.— Du Cange, Glossarium, tit. " Wreckum "; Chief- 
Justice Hale, De jure maris; Hargrave, Tracts (London, 1787): 
Palmer, Law of Wreck, Law Tracts (London. 1843); Marsden, 
Select Pleas of Admiralty. Selden Society (London. 1892 and 1897); 
Records of the Admiralty and of the High Court of Admiralty, Public 
Record Office (London) ; Victoria County History, Cornwall, and other 
seaboard counties; Maritime History, by M. Oppenheim (1906, &c); 
Board of Trade Instructions as to Wreck and Salvage* (London). 

(R.G.M.; Q.G.P.*) 

WRBDB, KARL PHTUPP, Prince von (1767-1838), Bavarian 
field-marshal, was born at Heidelberg on the 29th of April 
1767, and educated for the career of a civil official under the 
Palatinate government, but on the outbreak of the campaign 
of 1709 he raised a volunteer corps in the Palatinate and was 
made its coloneL This corps excited the mirth of the well- 
drilled Austrians with whom it served, but its colonel soon brought 
it into a good condition, and it distinguished itself during Kray/s 
retreat on Ulm. At Hohenlind™ Wrede commanded one of 
the Palatinate infantry brigades with credit, and after the peace 
of Luneville be was made lieutenant-general in the Bavarian 
army, which was entering upon a period of reforms. Wrede 
soon made himself very popular, and distinguished himself 
in opposing the Austrian invasion of 1805. The Bavarians were 
for several years the active allies of Napoleon, and Wrede was. 



WREN, SIR C. 



843 



engaged in the campaign iigainstT^russia^wmhing* especial dis- 
tinction at Pultusk. But the contemptuous attitude of the 
French towards the Bavarian troops, and accusations of looting 
against himself, exasperated the general's fiery temper, and 
both in 1807 and in 1809 even outward harmony was only 
maintained by the tact of the king of Bavaria. In the latter 
year, under Lef ebvre; Wxede conducted the rearguard operations 
on the Isar and the Abens, commanded the Bavarians in the 
hitter Tirolese war, was wounded in the decisive attack at 
Wagram, and returned to Tirol in November to complete the 
subjection of the mountaineers. Napoleon made him a count of 
the Empire in this year. But after a visit to France, recognizing 
that Napoleon would not respect the independence of the Rhine 
states, and that the empire would collapse under the emperor's 
ambitions, he gradually went over, to the anti-French party in 
Bavaria, and though he displayed his usual vigour in the Russian 
campaign, the retreat convinced him that Napoleon's was a 
losing cause and he left the army. At first his resignation was 
not accepted, but early in 18x3 he was allowed to return to 
Bavaria to reorganize the Bavarian army. ' But he had ho 
intention of using that army on Napoleon's side, and when the 
king of Bavaria resolved at last to join Napoleon's enemies, 
Wrede's army was ready to take the field. In concert with 
Schwarzenberg Wrede threw himself across- Napoleon's line of 
retreat from Germany at Hanan, but on the 30th of October 
he was driven off the road with heavy losses. Next year, 
after recovering from a dangerous wound, he led a corps in the 
invasion of France, and supported Blttcbcr's vigorous policy. 
In 1815 the Bavarians took the field but were not actively 
engaged. After Waterloo, Wrede, who had been made a prince 
in X814, played a conspicuous part in Bavarian politics as the 
opponent of Montgelas, whom be succeeded in power in 28x7, 
and in 1835 J* <vras made head of the council of regency during 
the king's absence. He died on the nth of December 1838. 

See lives by Riedel (1844) and Heilmann (1881). 
• WREN, SIR CHRISTOPHER (1633-1723). English architect, 
the son of a clergyman, was born at East Knoyie, Wiltshire, 
on the 20th of October 1632; be entered at Wadham College, 
Oxford, in 1646, took his degree in 1650, and in 1653 was made a 
fellow of All Souls. While at Oxford Wren distinguished himself 
in geometry and applied mathematics, and Newton, in his Prin- 
eipiay p. xo (ed. of 17x3), speaks very highly of his work as a 
geometrician. In 1657 he became professor of astronomy at 
Gresham College, and in 1660 was elected Savikan professor of 
astronomy at Oxford. It is, however, as an architect that Wren 
is best known, and the great fire of London, by its destruction 
of the cathedral and nearly all the city churches, gave Wren a 
unique opportunity- Just before the fire Wren was asked by 
Charles 11. to prepare a scheme for the restoration of the old St 
Paul's. In May 1666 Wren submitted his report and designs 
<in the All Souls collection), fof this work; the old cathedral was 
in a very ruinous state, and Wren proposed to remodel the greater 
part, as he said, " alter a good Roman manner," and not, " to 
follow the Gothick Rudeness of the old Design." According to 
this scheme only the old choir was left; the nave and transepts 
were to be rebuilt after the classical style, with a lofty dome at 
the crossing*— not unlike the plan eventually carried out. 
. In September of the same year (1666) the fire occu r red, and the 
old St Paul's was completely gutted. From 1668 to 1670 
attempts were being made by the chapter to restore the ruined 
building; but Dean Sancroft was anxious to have it wholly 
rebuflt, and in 1668 he had asked Wren to prepare a design for a 
wholly new church. This first design, the model for which is 
preserved in the South Kensington Museum, is very inferior to 
what Wren afterwards devised. In plan it is an immense 
rotunda surrounded by a wide aisle, and approached by a 
double portico; the rotunda is covered with a dome taken 
Trom that of the Pantheon in Rome; on this a second dome 
stands, set on a lofty drum, and this second dome is crowned by a 
tall sptre. But the dean and chapter objected to the absence of a 
structural choir, nave and aisles, and wished to follow the 
medieval cathedral arrangement. Thus, in spite of its having 



been approved by the king, (nfs design was happily abandoned—: 
much to Wren's disgust; and he prepared another scheme with a* 
similar treatment of a dome crowned by a spire, which in 1675 
was ordered to be carried out. Wren apparently did not himself 
approve of this second design, for he got the king to give him 
permission to alter it as much as he liked, without showing 
models or drawings to any. one, and the actual building bears 
little resemblance to the approved design, to which it is very 
superior in almost every possible point. Wren's earlier designs 
have the exterior of the church arranged with one order of 
columns; the division of the whole height into two orders was 
an immense gain in increasing the apparent scale of the whole,' 
and makes the exterior of St Paul's very superior to that of St 
Peter's in Rome, which is utterly dwarfed by the colossal size of 
the columns and pilasters of its single order. The present dome 
and the drum on which it stands, masterpieces of graceful line' 
and harmonious proportion, were very important alterations from 
the earlier scheme. As a scientific engineer and practical architect 
Wren was perhaps more remarkable than as an artistic designer.' 
The construction of the wooden external dome, and the support 
of the stone lantern by an inner cone of brickwork, quite inde- 
pendent of either the external or internal dome, are wonderful 
examples of his constructive ingenuity. The first stone of the 
new St Paul's was laid on the 21st of June 167s; the choir was 
opened for use on the 2nd of December 1697; and the last stone 
of the cathedral was set in 17x0. 

• Wren also designed a colonnade to enclose a large piazza forming 
a clear space round the church, somewhat after the fashion of 
Bernini's colonnade in front of St Peter's, but space in the city! 
was too valuable to admit of this. Wren was an enthusiastic 
admirer of Bernini's designs, and visited Paris in 1665 in order; 
to see him and his proposed scheme for the rebuilding of the 
Louvre. Bernini showed his design to Wren, but would not let, 
him copy it, though, as he said, he " would have given his skin " 
to be allowed to do so. 

After the destruction of the dty of London Wren was employed 
to make designs for rebuilding its fifty burnt churches, and he 
also prepared a scheme for laying out the whole city on a new plan, 1 
with a series of wide streets radiating from a central space. 
Difficulties arising from the various ownerships of the ground 
prevented the accomplishment of this scheme. 

Among Wren's city churches the most noteworthy are St 
Michael's, Cornhill; St Bride's, Fleet Street, and St Mary-le-Bow, 
Cheapside, the latter remarkable for its graceful spire; and. St 
Stephen's, Walbrook, with a plain exterior, but very elaborate 
and graceful interior. In the design of spires Wren showed much 
taste and wonderful power of invention. He was also very 
judicious in the way in which he expended the limited money at 
his command; he did not fritter it away in an attempt to make 
the whole of a building remarkable, but devoted it chiefly to 
one port or feature, such as a spire or a rich scheme of internal 
decoration. Thus he was in some cases, as in that of St 
James's, Piccadilly, content to make the exterior of an almost' 
barnlike plainness. 

The other buildings designed by Wren were very numerous., 
Only a few of the principal ones can be mentioned:— the Custom 
House, the Royal Exchange, Marlborough House, Buckingham' 
House, and the Hall of the College of Physicians— now destroyed; 
others which exist are— at Oxford, the Sheldonian theatre, the 
Ashmolean museum, the Tom Tower of Christ Church, and 
Queen's College chapel; at Cambridge, the library of Trinity 
College and the chapel of Pembroke, the latter at the cost of 
Bishop Matthew Wren, his uncle. The western towers of West- 
minster Abbey are usually attributed to Wren, but they were not 
carried out till x 735-1745, .many years after Wren's death, and 
there is no reason to think that his design was used. Wren 
(D.C.L. from 1660) was knighted in 1673, *nd **& elected 
president of the Royal Society in xo8x. He was in parliament 
for many years, representing Plympton from 1685, Windsor from 
x6So, and Weymouth from 1700. He occupied the post of 
surveyor of the royal works for fifty years, but by a shameful 
cabal was dismtssfd from this office a few years before his death. 



8** 



WRJEN— WRESTLING 



He died in 1723, and is buried under the choir of St Paul's; 
on a tablet over the inner north doorway is the well-known 
epitaph— Si monumentum requiris, cvatmpice. 
[■ For further information the reader should consult the Fcrentalia, 
published by Wirn's grandson in 1750, an account of the Wren 
family and espedittv of Sir Chnatopltftr and his works, also the 
two biographic* oi Wren by Etmcs and MLs$ Philtimore; MUman, 
Annals of St Paul's U86&): and Longman, Three Cathedrals dedi- 
cated to St Paul in Lvtuk-n (1873), pp_77 *eq. See alto Clayton, 
Churches of Sir C* Wren U»i&-i«*o>; Taylor* Taveri ami Steeples 
of Wren (London, t&Si): Nivcn, City Churches (Landoa t 1SS7), 
illustrated with fine etching; A, U. Markmurdov Wren's City 
Churches (1883); A. Stration. The Life, Wvrk and Influence of Str 
Christopher Wtcn (1847)1 Lena Mitotan. Sir Christopher Wren (1008). 
In the library «jf All Souls at Oxford are preserved & lar/e number of 
drawings by Wren, including the design* for almosi all his chief 
works, and a fine wriea showing his various schemes for St Paul's 
CathedraL (J.H.M.) 

WREN (0. Hng7 wrdhtna, Mid. EngTw«ifi«;Icel. r*mx**tf), the 
popular name for birds of the Passerine family Troglodytidae, 
of which the best known example is Troglodytes parvulus, the 
little brown bird— with its short tail, cocked on high — inquisitive 
and familiar, that braves the winter of the British Islands, and 
even that of the European continent. Great interest is taken in 
this bird throughout all European countries, and, though in 
Britain comparatively few vernacular names have been applied 
to it, two of them—" jenny " or " kitty-wren "—are terms of 
endearment. M. Rolland records no fewer than 139 local names 
for it in France; and Italy, Germany and other lands are only 
less prolific. . Many of these carry on the old belief that the wren 
was the king of birds, a belief connected with the fable that once 
the fowls of the air resolved to choose for their leader that one 
of them which should mount highest. This the eagle seemed to 
do, and all were ready to accept his rule, when a loud burst of 
song was heard, and perched upon him was seen the wren, which 
unseen had been borne aloft by the giant. The curious associa- 
tion of this bird with the Feast of the Three Kings, on which day 
in S. Wales, or, in Ireland and in the S. of France, on or about 
Christmas Day, men and boys used to "hunt the wren," 
addressing it in a song as " the king of birds," is remarkable. 
> The better known forms in the United States are the house- 
wren, common in the eastern states; the winter-wren, remarkable 
for its resonant and brilliant song; the Carolina- wren, also a 
fine singer, and the marsh-wren, besides the cactus wrens and 
the canon-wrens of the western states. . 

r Wrens have the bill slender and somewhat arched: their 
food consists of insects, larvae and spiders, but they will also take 
any small creatures, such as worms and snails, and occasionally 
eat seeds. The note is shrill. The nest is usually a domed struc- 
ture of ferns, grass, moss and leaves, lined with hair or feathers, and 
from three to nine eggs are produced, in most of the species white. 
r The headquarters of the wrens are in tropical America, but 
they reach Greenland in the N. and the Falkland Islands in the S. 
Some genera are confined to the hills of tropical Asia, but Tro- 
glodytes, the best known, ranges over N. and S. America, Asia 
and Europe. v 

{• The Troglodytidae by no means contain all the birds to which the 
name " wren " is applied. Several of the Sylviinae (of. Warbler) 
bear it, especially the beautiful little golden-crested wren (cf. Kinglet) 
and the group commonly known in Britain as " willow-wrens " — 
forming the genus Phylloscopus. Three of these are habitual summer- 
visitants. The largest, usually called the wood-wren, P. sibilatrix, is 
more abundant in the N. than in the S. of England, and chiefly 
frequents woods of oak or beech. It has a loud and peculiar song, 
like the word tw&, sounded very long, and repeated at first slowly, 
but afterwards more quickly, while at Uncertain intervals comes 
another note, which has been syllabled as chea, uttered about three 
times in succession. The willow-wren proper, P. trochilus, is in 
many parts of Great Britain the commonest summer-bird, and is 
the most generally dispersed. The third species, P. collybila or 
minor (frequently but most wrongly called Sylvia rufa or P. rufus), 
commonly known as the chiffchan, from the peculiarity of its con- 
stantly repeated two-noted cry, is very numerous in the S. and W. 
of England, but seems to be scarcer N. These three species 
make their nest upon or very close to the ground, and the building is 
always domed. Hence they are commonly called " oven-birds," 
and occasionally, from the grass used in their structure, " hay-jacks/', 
a name common to the white-throat (a*.) and its allies. (A. N.) ♦' 



WRESTLING (0. Eng. wrastiion), a sport b which two persons 
strive to throw each other to the ground. It is one of the most 
primitive and universal of sports. Upon the walls of the temple- 
tombs of Beni Hasan, near the Nile, are sculptured many hundred 
scenes from wrestling matches, depicting practically all the holds 
and falls known at the present day, thus proving that wrestling 
was a highly developed sport at least 3000 years before the 
Christian era. As the description of the bout between Odysseus 
and Ajax in the 23rd book of the Iliad, and the evolutions of the 
classic Greek wrestlers, tally with the sculptures of Beni Hasan 
and Nineveh, the sport may have been introduced into Greece 
from Egypt or Asia. In Homer's celebrated description of the 
match between Ajax and Odysseus the two champions wore only 
a girdle, which was, however, not used in the classic Greek games. 
Neither Homer nor Eustathius, who also minutely depicted the 
battle between Ajax and Odysseus, mentions the use of oil, 
which, however, was invariable at the Olympic games, where 
wrestling was introduced during the x8th Olympiad. The Greek 
wrestlers were, after the application of the oil, rubbed with fine 
sand, to afford a better hold. 

Wrestling was a very important branch of athletics in the 
Greek games, since it formed the chief event of the pentathlon, or 
quintuple games (see Games, Classical). All holds were allowed, 
even strangling, butting and kicking. Crushing the fingers was 
used especially in the pancration, a combination of wrestling and 
boxing. Wrestlers were taught to be graceful in all their move- 
ments, in accordance with the Greek ideas of aesthetics. There 
were two varieties of Greek wrestling, the rdX* 6f6n, or upright 
wrestling, which was that generally practised, and the dXiiw^ns 
(xvXiffts, lucta tdutatoric) or squirming contest after the con- 
testants had fallen, which continued until one acknowledged 
defeat. . It was this variety that was employed in the pancration. 
The upright wrestling was very similar to the modern catch-as- 
catch-can style. In this three falls out of five decided a match. 
A variation of this style was that in which one of the contestants 
stood within a small ring and resisted the efforts of his adversary 
to pull him out of it. Other local varieties existed in the different 
provinces. The most celebrated wrestler of ancient times was 
Milo of Crotona (c. 520 B.C.), who scored thirty-two victories in 
the different national games, six of them at Olympia, Greek 
athletic sports were introduced into Rome in the last quarter 
of the 2nd century B.C., but it never attained to the popularity 
that it enjoyed in Greece. ' 

Among the Teutonic peoples wrestling, at least as a method 
of fighting, was of course always known; how popular it had 
become as a sport during the middle ages is proved by the 
voluminous literature which appeared on the subject after the 
invention of printing, the most celebrated work being the Ringer- 
Kunst of Fabian von Auerswald (1539). Albreoht Durer made 
x 19 drawings illustrating the different holds and falls in vogue in 
the 15th and x6th centuries. TKese singularly resembled those 
used in the Greek games, even to certain brutal tricks, which, 
however, were considered by the German masters as not gtstl- 
liglkh (friendly) and were not commonly used. Wrestling was 
adopted by the German Turnvereine as one of their exercises, 
but with the elimination of tripping and all holds below the hips. 
At present the most popular style in Europe is the so-called 
Graeco-Roman. 

In Switzerland and some of the Tirolese valleys a kind* of 
wrestling flourishes under the name of Sckmngen (swinging). 
The wrestlers wear sckwinghasen or wrestling-breeches, with 
stout belts, on which the holds are taken. The first man down 
loses the bout. In Styria, wrestlers stand firmly on both feet 
with right hands clasped. When the word is given each tries to 
push or pull the other from his stance, the slightest movement 
of a foot sufficing to lose. 

The popularity of wrestling has survived in many Asiatic 
countries, particularly in Japan, where the first match recorded 
took place in 23 B.C., the victor being Sukune, who has ever 
since been regarded as the tutelary deity of wrestlers. In the 
8lh century the emperor Sh6mu made wrestling one of the 
features of the annual harvest " Festival of the Five Grains," 



WRESTLING 



845 



fhe vktor being appointed official referee and presented with a 
fan bearing the legend, " Prince of Lions." In 858 the throne 
of Japan was wrestled for by the two sons of the emperor 
Buntoku, and the victor, Korcshito, succeeded his father under 
the name of Seiwa. Imperial patronage of wrestling ceased in 
1175, *f ler the war which resulted in the establishment of the 
Shogunate, but continued to be a part of the training of the 
samurai or military caste. About 1600, professional wrestling 
again rose to importance, the best men being in the employ of 
the great daimics or feudal nobles. It was, nevertheless, still 
kept up by the samurai, and eventually developed into the 
peculiar combination of wrestling and system of doing bodily 
injury called ju-jutsu (q.v.), which survives with wrestling 
as a separate though allied art. The. national championships 
were re-established in 1624, when the celebrated Shiganosuke 
won the honour, and have continued to the present day. The 
Japanese wrestlers, like those of India, lay much stress upon 
weight and are generally men of great bulk, although surprisingly 
light on their feet. They form a gild which is divided into several 
ranks, the highest being composed of the josftiyori, or elders, 
in whose hands the superintendence of the wrestling schools 
and tournaments lies, and who in feudal times used to rank next 
to the samurai. The badges of the three highest ranks are 
damask aprons richly embroidered. Every public wrestler must 
have passed through a thorough course of instruction under one 
of the joshiyori and have undergone numerous practical tests. 
The wrestling takes place in a ring 12 ft. in diameter, the wrestlers 
being naked but for a loin-cloth. At the command of the referee 
the two adversaries crouch with their hands on the ground and 
watch for an opening. The method is very similar to that of 
the ancient Greeks and the modern catch-as-catch-can style, 
except that a wrestler who touches the ground with any part of 
his person except the feet, after the first hold has been taken, 
loses the bout. 

Indian wrestling resembles that of Japan in the great size of 
its exponents or Puhoans t and the number and subtlety of its 
attacks, called pendus. It is of -the H loose " order, the men 
fadng each other nude, except for a loin-doth, and xnanosnvring 
warily for a hold. Both shoulders placed on the ground simul- 
taneously constitute a fall. 

In Great Britain wrestling was cultivated at a very early age, 
both Saxons and Celts having always been addicted to it, and 
English literature is full of references to the sport. On St James's 
and St Bartholomew's days special matches took'place through* 
oat England, those in London being held in St Gfles's Field, 
whence they were afterwards transferred to ClerkenwdL The 
lord mayor and his sheriffs were often present on these occasions, 
but the frequent brawls among the spectators eventually brought 
public matches into disrepute. English monarchs have not 
disdained to patronise the sport, and Henry VIIL is known to 
have been a powerful wrestler. 

It was inevitable, in a country where the sport was so ancient 
and so universal, that different methods of wrestling should 
grow up. It is likely that the " loose " style, in which the con- 
testants took any hold they could obtain, generally prevailed 
throughout Great Britain until the close of the 18th century, 
when the several local fashions became gradually coherent; but 
it was not until well into the 10th that their several rules were 
codified. Of these the " Cumberland and Westmorland " style, 
which prevails principally in the N. of England (except Lanca- 
shire) and the S. of Scotland, is the most important. In this 
the wrestlers stand chest to chest, each grasping the other with 
locked hands round the body with his chin on the other's right 
shoulder. The right arm is below and the left above the ad- 
versary's. When this hold has been firmly taken the umpire 
gives the word and the bout proceeds until one man touches 
the ground with any part of his person except his feet, or he 
fails to retain his hold, in either of which cases he loses. When 
both fall together the one who is underneath, or first touches 
the ground, loses. If both fall simultaneously side by side, it 
n a "dog-fall," and the bout begins anew. The different 
AUnerwres used in British wrestling to throw the adversary are 

X&vja i4 » 



called "chips," those most important in the " Cumberland and 
Westmorland " or " North Country " style being the " back- 
heel," in which a wrestler gets a leg behind his opponent's heel 
on the outside; the " outside stroke," in which after a sudden 
twist of his body to the left the opponent is struck with the left 
foot on the outside of his ankle; the " hank," or lifting the 
opponent off the ground after a sudden turn, so that both fall 
together, but with the opponent underneath; the "inside 
dick," a hank applied after Jerking the opponent forward, the 
pressure then being straight back; the " outside click," a back- 
heel applied by a wrestler as he is on the point of being lifted 
from the ground— it prevents this and often results in over* 
setting the opponent; the " cross-buttock," executed by getting 
one's hip underneath the opponent's, throwing one's leg across 
both his, lifting and throwing him; the " buttock," in which 
one's hip is worked still further under that of the opponent, who 
is then thrown right over one's back; the " hipe " or " hype," 
executed by lifting the opponent, and, while swinging him to 
the right, placing the left knee under his right leg and carrying 
it as high as possible before the throw; the " swinging hipe," 
in which the opponent is swung nearly or quite round before 
the hipe is applied; and the " breast-stroke," which is a sudden 
double twist, first to one side and then to the other, followed 
by a throw. 

In the "Cornwall and Devon" or "West Country" style 
the men wrestle in stout, loosely cut linen jackets, the hold befoul 
anywhere above the waist or on any part of the jacket. A 
bout is won by throwing the opponent on his back so that two 
shoulders and a hip, or two hips and a shoulder (three points), 
shall touch the ground simultaneously. This is a difficult 
matter, since ground wrestling is forbidden, and a man, when 
he feels himself falling, will usually turn and land on his side 
or face. Many of the " chips " common to other styles are used 
here, the most celebrated being the " flying mare," in which 
the opponent's left wrist is seized with one's right, one's back 
turned on him, his left elbow grasped with the left hand and be 
is then thrown over one's back, as in the buttock. Until com- 
paratively recently there was a difference between the styles of 
Cornwall and Devon, the wrestlers of the latter county having 
worn heavfly-sokd shoes, with which it was legitimate to 
belabour the adversary's shins. In 1826 a memorable match 
took place between Polkmhorne, the Cornish champion, and 
the best wrestler of Devon, Abraham Cann, who wore 
"kJcking-boots of an appalling pattern." Polkinhorne, 
however, encased his shins In leather, and the match was 
eventually drawn. 

The M Lancashire " style,' more generally known as " catch* 
as-catcfa-can," is practised not only in Lancashire and the 
adjacent districts, but throughout America, Australia, Turkey 
and other countries. It is the legitimate descendant and repre- 
sentative of the ancient Greek sport and of the wrestling of the 
middle ages. A bout is won when both shoulders of one wrestler 
touch the floor together. No kicking, striking or other foul 
practices are allowed, but theoretically every hold is legitimate. 
Exceptions are, however, made of the so-called strangleholds, 
which are sufficiently described by their designation, and any 
holdresulUnginstdisfecationorafractnrew This style contains 
practically aU the manoeuvres known to other methods, and 
in its freedom and opportunity for a display of strategy, strength 
and skill, is the moat preferable. A fall, though invariably 
begun standing, is nearly always completed on the ground (mat). 
The holds and " chips " are so numerous and complicated as to 
make anything but an elaborate description inadequate. The 
best book on the subject is the Handbook of Wrestling by Hugh 
F. Leonard (1897). 

In Scotland a combination of the Cumberland and catch-as- 
catch-can styles has attained some popularity, in which the 
wrestlers begin with the North Country hold, but continue the 
bout on the ground should the fall not be a clean one with two 
shoulders down. 

In Ireland the national style is called "collar and elbow" 
(in America, "back-wrestling"), from the holds taken by the 



< 



846 



WREXHAM— WRIGHT, S. 



two hands. The man loses, any part of whose person, except 
the feet, touches the ground. 

The style mostly affected by the professional wrestlers of 
Europe at the present day is the Graeco-Roman (falsely so 
called, since it bears almost no resemblance to classic wrestling), 
which arose about i860 and is a product of the French wrestling 
schools. It is a very restricted style, as no tripping is allowed, 
nor any hold below the hips, the result being that the bouts, 
which are contested almost entirely prone on the mat, are usually 
tediously long. British and American wrestlers, being accus-. 
tomed to their own styles, are naturally at a disadvantage when 
wrestling under Graeco-Roman rules. 

WREXHAM (Welsh Gwrecsam, in the Anglo-Saxon Chronicle 
WrighUskam), a market town and parliamentary and municipal 
borough of Denbighshire, N. Wales, n m. S.S.W. of Chester, 
with stations on the Great Western railway, and on the Great 
Central railway, 20a m. from London. Pop. (1001) 14,066. 
" One of the seven wonders of Wales " is St Giles's church, of 
the 14th, 15th and x6th centuries, with a panelled tower of 
several stages erected between 1506 and 1520, and containing 
ten famous bells cast (1726) by Rudhall; the interior is Decor- 
ated, and has two monuments by Roubilliac to the Myddletons. 
Wrexham is the seat of the Roman Catholic bishop of Menevia, 
whose diocese includes all Wales except Glamorganshire. The 
endowed free school was established in 1603. The markets and 
fairs are good, and the ales, mills (corn and paper) and tanneries 
locally famous. Brymbo Hall, in the neighbourhood, is said 
to have been built from a design by Inigo Jones, as were probably 
Gwydyr chapel (1633) and the Conwy bridge (1636), both at 
Llanrwst. Erddig Hall was noted for its Welsh MSS. Near 
Wrexham, but in a detached portion of Flintshire, to the S.E., 
is Bangor-is-coed (Bangor yn Maelor), the site of the most 
ancient monastery in the kingdom, founded before 180; some 
1200 monks we're slain here by iEthelfrith of Northumbria, who 
also spoiled the monastery. Bangor-is-coed was probably 
Antoninus'* Bovium, and the Banchorium of Richard of Ciren- 
cester. Wrightesham was of Saxon origin, and lying E. of 
Ofla's Dyke, was yet reckoned in Mercia. It was given (with 
Bromneld and Yale, or Idl) by Edward L to Earl Warenne. 

WRIGHT, CARROLL DAVIDSON (1840-1900), American 
statistician, was born at Dunbarton, New Hampshire, on the 
25th of July 1840. He began to study law in i860, but in 1862 
enlisted as a private in a New Hampshire volunteer regiment. 
He became colonel in 1864, and served as assistant-adjutant- 
general of a brigade in the Shenandoah Valley campaign. He 
was admitted to the New Hampshire bar after the war, and in 
1867 became a member of the Massachusetts and United States 
bars. From 1872 to 1873 he served in the Senate of Massachu- 
setts, and from 1873 to 1878 he was chief of the Massachusetts 
Bureau of Statistics of Labor. He was U.S. commissioner of 
labour from 1885 to 1905, and in 1893 was placed in charge of 
the Eleventh Census. In 1894 he was chairman of the com- 
mission which investigated the great railway strike of Chicago, 
and in 1902 was a member of the Anthracite Strike Commission. 
He was honorary professor of social economics in the. Catholic 
university of America from 1895 to 1904; in 1900 became 
professor of statistics and social economics in Columbian (now 
George Washington) University, from 2000 to 1901 was univer- 
sity lecturer on wage statistics at Harvard, and in 1903 was a 
member of the special committee appointed to revise the labour 
laws of Massachusetts. In 1902 he was chosen president of 
Clark College, Worcester, Mass., where he was also professor 
of statistics and social economics from 1904 until his death. 
Dr Wright was president of the American Association for the 
Advancement of Science in 1003, and in 1907 received the Cross 
of the Xegion of Honour for his work in improving industrial 
conditions, a similar honour having been conferred upon him in 
1906 by the Italian government. Ha died on the 20th of 
February 1909. 

His publications include The Factory System of the United States 
(1880); Relation of Political Economy to the Labor Question (1882); 
**" of Wa&i and frict* in MassadwuUs. 1752-1883 (1885); 



The Industrial Evolution of the United Slates (188*7); Oudim of 
Practical Socioloty (1899); Battles of Labor (1906); and numerous 
pamphlets and monographs on social and economic topics. 

WRIGHT. CHAUNCEY (1830-187 5), American philosopher 
and mathematician, was born at Northampton, Mass., on the 
20th of September 1830, and died at Cambridge, Mass., on the 
1 2th of September X875. In 1852 he graduated at Harvard, 
and became computer to the American Ephcmeris and Nautical 
Almanac. He made his name by contributions on mathematical 
and physical subjects in the Mathematical Monthly. He soon, 
however, turned his attention to metaphysics and psychology, 
and for the North American Review and later for the National 
he wrote philosophical essays on the lines of Mill, Darwin and 
Spencer. In 1870-71 he lectured on psychology at Harvard. 
Although, in general, he adhered to the evolution theory, he 
was a free lance in thought. Among his essays may be men- 
tioned The Evolution of Sdf-Consciousncss and two articles 
published in 1871 on the Genesis of Species. Of these, the 
former endeavours to explain the most elaborate psychical 
activities of men as developments of elementary forms of con- 
scious processes in the animal kingdom as a whole; the latter 
is a defence of the theory of natural selection against the attacks 
of St George Mivart, and appeared in an English edition on the 
suggestion of Darwin. From 1863 to 1870 he was secretary 
and recorder to the American Academy of Arts and Sciences, 
and in the last year of his ltfe he lectured on mathematical 
physics at Harvard. 

His essays were collected and published by C. E. Norton in 1877, 
and his Letters were edited and privately printed at Cambridge* 
Mass., in 1878 by James Bradley Thayer.* 

WRIGHT, JOSEPH (1734-1707), styled Wright of Derby, 
English subject, landscape and portrait painter, was born at 
Derby on the 3rd of September 1734, the son of an. attorney, 
who was afterwards town-clerk. Deciding to become a painter, 
he went to London in 1751 and for two years studied under 
Thomas Hudson, the master of Reynolds. After painting 
portraits for a while at Derby, he again placed himself for fifteen 
months under his former master. He then settled in Derby, 
and varied his work in portraiture by the production of the 
subjects seen under artificial light with which his name is chiefly 
associated, and by landscape painting.. He married in 1773, 
and in the end of that year he visited Italy, where he remained 
till x 775. While at Naples he witnessed an eruption of Vesuvius, 
which formed the subject of many of his subsequent pictures. 
On his return from Italy he established himself at Bath as a 
portrait-painter; but meeting with little encouragement he 
returned to Derby, where he spent the rest of his life. He was 
a frequent contributor to the exhibitions of the Society of 
Artists, and to those of the Royal Academy, of which he was 
elected an associate in 1781 and a full member in 1784. He, 
however, declined the latter honour on account of a slight which 
he believed that he had received, and severed his official con* 
nexion with the Academy, though he continued to contribute to 
the exhibitions from 1783 till 1794. He died at Derby on the 
29th of August 1797. Wright's portraits are frequently defective 
in drawing, and without quality or variety of handling, while 
their flesh tints are often hard. He is seen at his best in his 
subjects of artificial light, of which the " Orrery " (1766), the 
property of the corporation of Derby, and the " Air-pump " 
(1768), in the National Gallery, are excellent examples. His 
" Old Man and Death " (1774) » also a striking and individual 
production. An exhibition of Wright's works was brought 
together at Derby in 1883, and twelve of his pictures were shown 
in the winter exhibition of the Royal Academy in 1886. 

His biography, by William Berarose, was published in 1885. 

WRIGHT, SILAS (1 705-184 7)r American political leader* 
was bom at Amherst, Mass., on the 24th of May 1795. He 
graduated at Middlebury College, Vermont, in 181 5, was ad- 
mitted to the bar in 1819, and began practice at Canton, in 
northern New York. He was appointed surrogate of St Lawrence 
county in 1820, and was successively a member of the state 
Senate In 1824-1826, a member of the national House of Repre- 
sentatives in 1827^x829, comptroller of the state in i8jor*8.u, 



WRIGHT, T.— WRIT 



847 



V.S. senator in 1839-1844, and g ove rnor of New York in 1844- 
1846. During his public life he had become a leader of the 
Democratic party in New York, Martin Van Buren being his 
closest associate. He was an influential member of the so-called 
" Albany Regency," a group of Democrats in New York, includ- 
ing such men as J. A. Dix and W. L. Marry, who for many years 
virtually controlled their party within the state. Wright's 
integrity in office was illustrated in 1845, when the " anti-rent 
troubles " (see New Yoik) broke out and it seemed probable 
that the votes of the disaffected would decide the coming election. 
The governor asked and obtained from the legislature the power 
to suppress the disturbance by armed force, and put an end to 
what was really an insurrection. When the national Demo- 
cratic party in 1844 nominated and elected James K. Polk to 
the presidency, instead of Martin Van Buren, Wright and the 
state organization took an attitude of armed neutrality towards 
the new administration. Renominated for governor in 1846, 
Wright was defeated, and the result was by many ascribed in 
part to the alleged hostility of the Polk administration. He 
died at Canton on the 27th of August 1847. 

The best biography is that by J. D. Hammond, Life and Timet of 
Silas Wright (Syracuse, N.Y., 1848). which was republished as voL 
iii. of that author's Political History of New York, 

WRIGHT, THOMAS (1800-1884), British palaeontologist, 
was born at Paisley in Renfrewshire on the 9th of November 
1809. He studied at the Royal College of Surgeons in Dublin, 
and qualified as a doctor in 183a. Soon afterwards he settled 
at Cheltenham, and graduated M.D. at St Andrews in 1846. 
He devoted his leisure to geological pursuits, became an active 
member of the Cotteswold Naturalists' Club (founded in 1846), 
and gathered a fine collection of Jurassic ammonites and ecbino- 
derms. He contributed to the Palaeon^ographical Society 
monographs on the British fossil Echinodermata from the 
Oolitic and Cretaceous formations (1855-1882); he also began 
(1878) a monograph on the Lias ammonites of the British 
Islands, of which the last part was issued in 1885, after his 
death. He wrote many papers in the Ann. and Mag. Nat. Hist. 
and Proc. Cotteswold Club. The WoQaston medal was awarded 
to him by the Geological Society of London in 1878, and he was 
elected F.R.S. in 1879. He died at Cheltenham on the 17th 
of November 1884. 

WRIGHT, THOMAS (1810-1877), English antiquary, was born 
near Ludlow, in Shropshire, on the 21st of April 1810. He was 
descended from a Quaker family formerly living at Bradford, 
Yorkshire. He was educated at the old grammar school, Ludlow, 
and at Trinity College, Cambridge, where he graduated in 1834. 
While at Cambridge he contributed to the Gentleman's Magazine 
and other periodicals, and in 1833 he came to London to devote 
himself to a literary career. His first separate work was Early 
English Poetry in Black Letter, vUb Prefaces and Notes (1836, 
4 vols. 1 2 mo), which was followed during the nest forty years 
by a very extensive series of publications, many of lasting value. 
He helped to found the British Archaeological Association and 
the Percy, Camden and Shakespeare societies. In 1842 he was 
elected corresponding member of the Academic des Inscriptions 
et Belles Lettres of Paris, and was a fellow of the Society of 
Antiquaries as well as member of many other learned British 
and foreign bodies. In 1859 he superintended the excavations 
of the Roman city of Uriconium, near Shrewsbury, of which 
he issued a description. He died at Chelsea on the 23rd of 
December 1877, in his sixty-seventh year. A portrait of him 
is in the Drawing Room Portrait Cattery for October 1st, 1859. 
He was a great scholar, but will be chiefly remembered as an 
industrious antiquary and the editor of many relics of the 
middle ages. 

His chief publications are— Queen Elisabeth and her Times, a 
Series ' ~ " * ** " " "' ' "" 



W. 

Ballads 

Treatises on Scienci {1&41): ifisiory of Ludlow (184 1 .' Ac.; again 
1853); Collection of Latin Stories (184a, Percy Society); The Vision 
and Creed of Fieri Ploughman (184a, a vols.; 2nd ed.. 1895); Bio- 
graphio liitraria, vol. i. Anglo-Saxon Period (1842), vol. u. Anglo- 



JfarmanPcnod .(184$); The Chester Plays (1843-1847. * vohv, 
Shakespeare Society); St Patrick's Purgatory X1844); Anecdote 
lUoma (1844); Archaeological Album (1845,410); Essays connected 
with EmgJonTtn the Middle Ages (1846, a vols.); Chaucer's Canter- 
s~~> tvj- /.o. -_.«.-. d c _v . with notes, re- 

Palestine (1848, 
Hanower (1848, 




and Songs from Edward 111. to Richard 111. (1859-1861, a vols., 
" Roll* ,r series) ; Songs and Ballads of the Reign of Philip and Mary 
(i860, 4to, Roxburghe Club); Essays on Archaeological Subjects 
(1861.2 vol*.); Domestic Manners and Sentim ' ' * 



Caricature History of 

' , Camden Society); 

Caxton Society); 

__ The Celt, the Roman 

and the Saxon (1852; 4th ed.. 1885};" History 'of Fulhe Fits Wariue 
(1855); Jo. de Garlandia, Dt trhunpkis ecdestae (1856, 4to, Rox- 
burjrbe Cub) ; Dictionary of Obsolete and Provincial English (1857); 
A Vomne of Vocabularies (1857; and ed.. by R. P. Wulcker, 1884, 
2 vols.) ; Les Cent NomeUes neuteUes (Pans, 1858, 2 vols.) : Malory's 
History of King Arthur (1858, 2 vols., revised 1865) ; Political Poems 
' * 111. to Richard HI. (1851 ~ 

10/ J 
xhaet 
(1861J a' vols.); Domestic Manners and Sentiments tn England in the 
Middle Ages (1862, 410, reproduced in 1871 as The Homes of other 
Days); Roll of Arms of Edward I. (1864, 4 to): Autobiography of 
Thomas Wright (1 736-1797). his grandfather (1864); History of 
Caricature (1865, 4to) 5 WomanhimTin Western Europe (1869, 4 to): 
Anglo-Latin Satirical Poets of 12th Century (1872, 2 vols., " Rolls * 

WRIGHT, WILLIAM ALDIS (1836- ), English man of 
letters, was educated at Trinity College, Cambridge, and in 1888 
became vice-master of the college. He was one of the editors 
of the Journal of Philology from its foundation in 1868, and was 
secretary to the Old Testament revision company from 1870 to 
1885. He edited the plays of Shakespeare published in the 
" Clarendon Press " series (1868-1897), also with W. G. Clark the 
"Cambridge" Shakespeare (1863-1866; 2nd ed. 1891-1893) 
and the " Globe " edition (1864). He published (1899) a fac- 
simile of the Milton M9>. in the Trinity College library, and edited 
Milton's poems with critical notes (1903). He was the intimate 
friend and literary executor of Edward FitzGerald, whose 
Letters and Literary Remains he edited in 1889. This was 
followed by the Letters of Edward FitzGerald to Fanny Kemble 
(1895), bis Miscellanies (1900), More Letters of Edward Fits- 
Gerald (1901), The Works of Edward FitsCerald (7 vols., 1903). 
He edited the metrical chronicle of Robert of Gloucester (1887), 
Generydes (1878) for the Early English Text Society, and other 
texts. 

WRIST, in anatomy, the carpus or carpal articulation in man, 
the joint by which the hand is articulated with the fore-arm 
(see Anatomy: Superficial and Artistic; and Skeleton: Ap- 
pendicular). The word means by origin " that which turns," 
and is formed from the O. Eng. vridan, to twist. 

WRIT (O. Eng. gewrit, writ, from writan, to write), in law, a 
formal order from the crown or a delegated executive officer 
to an inferior executive officer or to a private person, enjoining 
some act or omission. 1 The word represents the Latin brevis 
or breve (sometimes Englished into "brief" in the older authori- 
ties), so called, according to Bracton and Fleta, from its 
" shortly " expressing the intention of the fratner {quia breviler 
et paucis verbis intentionem proferenlis exponit).* 

The breve can be traced back as far as Paulus (about a.D. 2*0), 
who wrote a work Ad edictum de brevibus, cited in the Vatican 
Fragment, | 310. In the Corpus juris the word generally means a 
summary or report. In Cod. vii. 44, breviculum means a summary 
cf the grounds of a judgment. The tnterdictum of Roman law some- 
times represents the writ of English law; e.g. there is considerable 
likeness between the Roman tnterdictum de libero homine exhibende 
and the English writs of habeas corpus and de homine replegiando. 
From Roman taw the breoe passed into the Liber feudorum and the 
canon law, in both in a sense differing from that at present borne 
by the writ of English law. The breee.testatum of the Liber feudorum 
was an instrument in writing made on the land at the time of giving 
seisin by the lord to the tenant, and attested by the seals of the lord 



1 There seems to be no authentic definition of writ. That of 
Reeves is " a settled form of precept applicable to the purpose of 
compelling defendants to answer the charge alleged by plaintiffs" 
(1 Hist, of the Eng. Law. 415)- . 

* It is perhaps doubtful whether intentto Is here used in its ordinary 
sense or in the technical signification which it bore as a pan of the 
Roman formula. 



848 



WRIT 



and the pom oris* or other witnesses, la England 
were part of the inquest, and joined in the verdict in caw of disputed 
right until 12 Edw. II. it I, & 2. The brave testatum in England 
developed into the feoffment, later into the deed of giant; in Scot- 
land into the charter r and later into the disposition. In canon law 
breve or brevUegium denoted a letter from the pope, sealed with the 
seal of the fisherman and less formal than a bull. In old English 
ecclesiastical law a brief— still named in one of the rubrics of the 
Book of Common Prayer meant letters patent to churchwardens 
or other officers for the collection of money for church or charitable 
purposes. 1 (For counsel's brief see under Banr.) 

The writ in English law still occupies a very important position, 
which can scarcely be understood without a sketch of its history. 
The whole theory of pleading depends in the last 
resort upon the writ, the plaintiff's claim simply 
expanding its terms. 

Writ or breve was at first used in a less technical sense than that 
which it afterwards assumed: thus in the Leges Benrid Prtm it 
simply means a letter from the king, and in the Assise of Clarendon 
(1 106) imbrcviari means to be registered. It became formalized by 
the reign of Henry II., and precedents are given by Glanvill. The 
writ process was at that date the foundation of all civil justice in the 
king's court, and of much in the lower courts, and was a profitable 
source of revenue to the exchequer. Writs were not framed on any 
scientific scheme, but as occasion arose, and were frequently the 
result of compromise in the struggle between the king's and the 
lords' courts. Every writ had to be purchased (breve perquirere was 
the technical term). This purchase developed in later times into 
the payment of a fine to the king where the damages were laid above 
£40. The usual scale was 6s. 8d. for every 100 marks churned. In 
suing out a writ of covenant, the basis of the proceedings in levying 
a fine, the king was entitled to his primer fine, ue, one-tenth of the 
annual value ofthe land concerned. The sale of writs was forbidden 
by Magna Carta and other statutes in certain cases, especially that 
of the writ de odio et alia in favour of the liberty of the subject. A 
solicitor was so called because his original duty was to solicit or sue 
out a writ and take the due proceedings by paying the proper fine. 
The costs of a writ purchased were first allowed to a successful 
demandant by the Statute of Gloucester, 1278. The counterpart of 
the writ {contrabreve) was usually filed in court with the custos brerium. 
Through the Norman period the prerogative of issuing writs seems 
to have been undisputed. GlsnvilTs precedents did not exhaust all 
possible forms, for in the time of Bracton, in the 13th century, it was 
still possible to frame new writs at the pleasure of the crown. The 
Provisions of Oxford in 125S put an end to this by enacting that the 
chancellor should not seal anything out of course {i.e. any writ for 
which there was no precedent) by the will or the king, but that he 
should do it by the council. In 1285 the£tatute of Westminster the 
Second re-established the power of the crown within certain limits, 
that is, in causes of action in a similar case falling under the same 
law {in consimiU casu eadeute mo eodem jure) as those for which 
precedents of writs already existed in the chancery. These pre- 
cedents were recorded about 1227 in the Registrum brerium, called 
by Sir Edward Coke the oldest book in the common law.* Apart 
from the powers given by the statute, new writs could only be issued 
by the authority of parliament, and writs are sometimes found set 
out in statutes, especially in the Siatuium WaUiae. 1284. where 
precedents of the most usual writs will be found. The Statute of 
Westminster the Second itself contained precedents of the writ of 
formedon and of many others. The original flexibility of the writ 
was thus limited within comparatively narrow bounds. The right 
to the issue of the writ determined the right of action. If the writ 
was not sufficient to found an action, the writ was said to fail (cadere). 
So essential was the writ that it was a legal axiom in Bracton that 
no one could sue at law without a writ, and it was called by Coke, 
in his introduction to Littleton, " the heartstrings of the common 
law." As such it occupied an important place in some of the leading 
statutes dealing with constitutional rights. The Statute of Marl- 
bridge, 1267. forbade a lord to distrain his freeholders to answer 
for their freeholds, or for anything touching their freeholds, without 
the king's writ. By 25 Edw. III. st. 5, c. 4 .(»34*). it was accorded, 
asserted and stabushed that none should be taken by petition or 
suggestion made to the king or his council unless by indictment or 
presentment in due manner or by process made by writ original at 
the common law. 4* Edw. HI. c 3 (1359) provided that no man 
should be put to answer without presentment before justices, or 
matter of record, or by due process and writ original according to 
the old law of the land. Both these statutes were recited and the 
general principle confirmed by 16 Car. I. c. 10 (1641). Uniformity 
of procedure was secured by 27 Hen. VIII. c. 24 (1536), by which all 
writs were to be in the king's name in a county palatine or liberty. 



> See W. A. Bewes, Church Briefs (1896). The lines in Cowper's 
" Charity " allude to «ich a brief:— 

" The *•■ "'wis every pew, 

But ntiplunent but due." 

* See article b ward Lam Rev. 9 177. 



Uit tested by those who had the county 
not until 1731 that, by virtue of 4 Geo. 



or liberty. Iti 
c. 26, writs were framed 



in the English language. They had previously been in Latin: 
this accounts for the Latin names by which a large number are still 
known. 

The writ was issued from the common law ride of the chancery, 
and was in the special charge of the hanaper and petty bag offices.' 
Though issuing from the king's chancery, it did not necessarily 
direct the trial of the question in the king's court, In whatever 
court it was returnable, it called in the aid of the sheriff as executive 
It was either addressed to him or, if addressed to the party 

„ to be in default, it concluded with a threat of constraint by 
the sheriff in the event of disobedience, generally in those terms, et, 
nisi feceris, vicecomes de N. facial ne amplius damorem audiam pro 
defectm jusHtiae. If the writ was returnable in the county court or 
the lord's court, the sheriff or the lord sat as the deputy of the king, 
not by virtue of his inherent jurisdiction. The writ was not necessary 
for the initiation of proceedings in these courts or before the justices 
in eyre, but a custom seems to have grown up of suing out a writ 
from the king where die claim was above 40s. Cases were transferred 
from the lord's court to the county court by writ of loU (so called 
because it removed, tollit, the case), from the latter to the king's 
court by writ of pone (so called from its first word). By Magna 
Carta the power of bringing a suit in the king's court in the first 
"" * and the writ was thence- 



instance by writ of praecipe was taken away, and 
forth only returnable in the king's court where the tenant held of the 
king in cattle, or where the lord had no court or abandoned his right. 
Hence it became a common form in the writ of right to allege that 
the lord had renounced his court {dominus remisil curiam) so as to 
secure trial in the king's court. 

Besides being used for the trial of disputes, writs addressed to 
sheriffs, mayors, commissioners or others were in constant use for 
financial and political purposes, e.£. for the collection of fifteenths, 
ecutage, tallage, Ac., for summons to the council and later to parlia- 
ment, and for dissolving a parliament, the last by means of the rarely 
occurring writ de reeocatione parliaments. 

There were several divisions of writs (excluding those purely 
financial and political), the most important being that into original 
and judicial, the former (tested in the name of the kingj issued to 



bring a suit before the proper court, the latter (tested in the 1 „ 

of a ludge) issued during the progress of a suit or to enforce judgment. 
Original were either optional, t.c. giving an option of doing a certain 
act or of showing cause why it was not done, beginning with the 
words praecipe quod reddat, the principal example being the writ on 
which proceedings in a common recovery (see Fine) were based, or 



those nxed in form and depending on precedent, the latter those 
framed by the masters in chancery under the powers of the Statute 
of Westminster the Second. They were also either general or special, 
the latter setting forth the grounds of the demand with greater 
particularity than the former. In regard to real estate they might 
be possessory or ancestral By 3 Geo. II. c. 27 (1732) special writs 



* -j - - - r - . 27(173*) ■ 

were confined to causes of action amounting to £10 c 

There was also a division of writs into writs of right (ex deUtojus- 



or upwards. 



tiiiae), such as habeas corpus, and prerogative writs (ex gratia), such 
as mandamus and prohibition. Coke and other authorities mention 
numerous other divisions, but those which have been named appear 
to be the principal. 

The most interesting form of writ from the historical point of view 
was the writ of right {breve de recto), called by Blackstone^' the highest 
writ in the law, used at first for debt and other personal claims, 
afterwards manned to the recovery of real estate as the writ of right 
par excellence. It was so called from the words plenum rectum 
contained in it, and was the remedy for obtaining justice for ouster 
from or privation of the freehold. By it property as well as posses- 
sion could be recovered. It generally lay in the king's court, as has 
been said, by virtue-of a fictitious allegation. In that case it was 
addressed to the sheriff and was called a writ of right close. When 
addressed to the lord and tried in his court, it was generally a writ 
of right patent. After the appearance of the tenant the demandant 
in a writ of right counted, that is, claimed against the tenant accord- 
ing to the writ, but in more precise terms, the writ being as it were 
the embryo of the future count. The trial was originally by battle 
(see Trial), but in the reign of Henry II. an alternative and optional 
procedure was introduced, interesting as the earliest example of the 
substitution of something like the jury ($.».) for the judicial combat. 
A writ de magna assisa cKtenda was directed to the sheriff command- 
ing him to return four knights of the county and vicinage to the court, 
there to return twelve other knights of the vicinage to try upon oath 
the question contained in the writ of right (technically called the 



ise). This mode of trial was known as trial by the grand a 
Generally the whole of the sixteen knights were sworn, though twelve 
was a sufficient number. The last occasion of trial by the grand 



•The place where writs were deposited was called bremarimm or 
breviorinnu This use of the word must be distinguished from legal 
compendia, such as the Breviarimm Atarici or Bremarium txtt ava 



WRIT 



849 



t wu Ul 18^5. But loaf before that date po ss ess o r y had f nom 
their greater convenience tended to supercede proprietary remedies, 
and in most cases the title was surociently determined by the arises 
Of other lands, espedaUythat of novel disseisin mod later by pro- 
ceedings in ejectment. The oath of the champion on proceedings 
in a writ of right where the alternative of the judicial torn tat was 
accepted was regulated by statu u, 3 Edw. L c ii (tJ7jh The writ 
of right is also interesting as being the basis of the law of limitation. 
By the Statute of Merton (1226} no *d>iri could be alleged by the 
demandant but from the time oi Henry I L By 3 Edw, Lc, 39 the 
time was fixed at the reign of Richard L, by 31 Hen- VUl.c . * (1591) 
at sixty years at the most. There were other writ* ol right with 
special names, e\g. the writ of rifclit by the cmtoni of London for Und 
in London, the writ of right by <n. brought by the patron to 

recover bis right of presentation to a benefice, and the writs of right 
of dower, ns injuste sexes and dt nUumabiti parte* lb* tatter brought 
by coparceners or brothers in £.iwtkiod. Coheir* and coparceners 
also had the nuper obiif for dii ! .in by out o( ihemsettfe*. There 
•■•-•-* ht 

& 

lit 



were also writs in the nature of.a writ ul right, t .r» formedo 
by a reversioner on discontinua «: hy a tenant in tail a. 
the statute De Donis Condition^ ^u-. ; e- 



where the tenant died without an h« 



«ch*at, brought I 



the lord from exacting services or rent* be; wuu, 
habendo, to recover the inheritance in a villein; and the little writ 
of right close according to the custom of the manor, to try in the 
lord's court the right of the king's tenants in antient demesne. 
They had slso the writ of monstraverunL 

r Up to 18A3 an action was (except as against certain privileged 
persons, such as attorneys) begun at law by original writ, and writ 
practically became the equivalent of action, and is so used in old 
books of practice. The law was gradually altered by legislation 
and still more by the introduction of fictitious proceedings in the 
common law courts, by which the issue of the original writ was 
suspended, except in real actions, which were of comparatively rare 
occurrence. The original writ is no longer in use in civil procedure, 
an action being now in all cases commenced by the writ of summons, 
a judicial writ, a procedure first introduced in 1832 by 2 WilL IV. 
c 59. In the following year an immense number of the old writs 
was abolished by the Real Property Limitation Act 1833. An 
exception was made in favour .of the writ of right of dower, writ of 
dower unde nihil habet, quare impedit and ejectment, ana of the 
plaints for freebench ana dower in the nature of writs of right: 
Ejectment was remodelled by the Common Law Procedure Act 
1853; the other writs and plaints remained up to the Common 
Law Procedure Act i860, by which they were abolished. Other 



estrepement and waste, false judgment, monstrous de droit, nuisance, 
partition, praemunire, quo warranto, stir* facias, subpoena and 
warrantia chartae. 

The number of writs, especially those connected with ecclesiastical 
procedure, was so large that any exhaustive list of them is almost 

... impossible, but a few of those of more special interest 

2JJJ*** which have become obsolete may be shortly mentioned. 
***** Admauuratio lay against persons usurping more than 
their share of property. It was either dotis or pasturae, the latter, 
like the Scottish souming and rooming, " being the remedy for 
surcharge of common, for which also quod permittas lay. Alias and 
piuries writs were issued when a previous writ had been disobeyed. 
Apostata capiendo was the mode of apprehension of a monk who 
had broken from his cloister. Assistance went to the sheriff to assist 
the party or an officer of chancery to gain possession of land. Attaint 
lay to inquire by a jury of twenty-four whether a jury of twelve 
had given a false verdict. Decies tantum also by against a juror who 
had accepted a bribe, so called because he had to refund ten timet 
the sum received. Audita querela was a means of relieving a de- 
fendant by a matter of discharge occurring after judgment. After 
having been long practically superseded by stay of execution it was 
finally abolished by the rules made under the Judicature Act 1875. 
BeaupUadtr lay to prohibit the taking,of a line depulcre placitando t 



forbidden by the Statute of Marlbridge (1268). 
emominus are interesting as showing the 
fi ct it i ous allegation *--«--•• 
before 1832. "* 



Capias, latitat and 
inordinary mass of 

in the old procedure of the common law courts 

. .. __„__ By capias ad respondendum followed by alias and 

piuries the court of common pleas was enabled to take cognizance 
of an action without the actual issue of an original writ. The capias 
was a judicial writ issued to follow an original writ of trespass quia 
ctousum {regit. The issue of the original writ and after a time the 
issue of the capias became mere fictions, and proceedings commenced 
with the issue of another writ called capias testatum. On return of 
the writ the plaintiff elected to proceed with a cause of action other 
than trespass, and the real merits of the case were eventually reached 
m this tortuous manner. After being served with the capias the 
defendant was bound to put in common or special bail, the former 
being sufficient in all but exceptional cases. Here again there was a 



• l Relief from " miskenning " or " mescheninga, " or fine for beau* 
pleader, was often grantodin charters to towns, as by that of Henry I. 
to London, 



fictKm. for his common ball were John Doe and Richard Roe. The 
same fictitious pair also appeared on the side of the plaintiff as his 
pledges for the due prosecution of his action. By latitat and que* 
minus the courts of king's bench and exchequer respectively assumed 
jurisdiction by a further series of fictions over ordinary civil actions. 
The writ of latitat, following the bill of Middlesex, itself in later times 
generally a fiction, alledged that the defendant was in hiding out of 
Middlesex, after committing a trespass quia clausumf regit, for which 
he was in the custody of the king's marshal in the Marshalsea prison. 
The real cause of action was then stated in what was called the ac 
etiam clause. The writ of queminus alleged that the plaintiff was the 
king's debtor, and that through the defendant's default he was unable 
to discharge the debt. De caution* admiUenda was a curiosity. It 
enjoined a bishop to admit an excommunicated person to absolution 
on condition of his giving security to obey the commands of the 
church. Deceit or duceit lay for the redress of anything done 
deceitfully in the name of another, but was especially used to reverse 
a judgment in a real action obtained by collusion. Distraint ef 
kniiktheed was a mode of obtaining money for the crown by the 
exercise of thejwerogative of forcing every one who held a knight's 
fee under the crown to be knighted or to pay a fine. The earliest 
extant writ was issued in 1278. It was abolished in 1641 by 16 Car. 
I.caa Entry was a possessory remedy against one alleged to hold 
land unlawfully. It was divided into a large number of kinds. 



heir from the original disseisor. When writ had come to be eauivalent 
in meaning to action, one of the divisions of possessory actions was 
into writs of entry and writs of assise. A special writ of entry for 
dower was given by 6 Edw. I.e. 7. Excommunicato capiendo was the 
authority for arresting an excommunicated person and detaining 
him until he was reconciled to the church, when he was liberated by 
the writ de excommunicato liberando. These proceedings were 
abolished and the writ de contumace capiendo substituted m 1817. 
Faux judgment was for revising the decision of an inferior court. 
Haeretko comburendo was issued on certificate of conviction for 
heresy by the eccl es ia stica l court. A case of burning two Arians 
under this writ occurred as lately as the reign of lames I. It was 
abolished by 29 Car. II. c. 9. Homine reptegiondo, mainprise and 
edio et atia (or bono et male) were all ancient means of securing the 
liberty of the subject, tongjniperseded by the more effective pro- 
cedure of habeas corpus. The last of the three enjoined the sheriff 
to inquire whether a committal on suspicion of murder was on just 
cause or from malice and ill-will. It was regulated by Magna Carta 
and the Statute of Westminster the Second, but, having been 
abused to the advantage of sheriffs, it was abolished in 1355 by 
28 Edw. III. c. 9. It was possibly among the means— like the writ 
of right— by which the trial by battle and the appeal of felony tended 
to become obsolete. Leproso amoeendo explains itself. Moderata 
misericordia was the means of reviewing an excessive amercement 
of an inferior court, especially after an amercement had tended to 
become a fixed sum of twelve pence. Nisi prius was given by the 
Statute of Westminster the Second, 13 Edw. 1. c 30. Its place 
is now taken by the commission of nisi prius. Orando pro rege et 



beyond seas. It was dealt with by a large number of old statutes, 
but none has been issued since 1092. Quare ejecit infra terminum 
was the old remedy of the lessee for eviction by the lessor. Rebellion 
was a means of enforcing obedience to the process of the court of 
chancery. In modern procedure attachment takes its place. Rege 
tncensuUo commanded judges of a court not to proceed in a case 
which might prejudice the king until his pleasure should be known. 
Replevin was a survival of the most archaic law. The procedure 
consisted of writ on writ to an almost unlimited extent. It origin- 
ally began by the issue of a writ of replevin or replegiari facias. The 
case might be removed from the county court to a superior court by 
writ clrecordari facias loquelam. If the distrainor claimed a property 
in the goods distrained, the question of p roper ty or no property was 
determined by a writ de proprietate probanda, and, if decided in 
favour of the distrainor, the distress was to be returned to him by 
writ de reterno habendo. If the goods were removed or concealed, 
a writ of tescous or capias in withernam enabled the sheriff, after due 
issue of alias and piuries writs, to take a second distress in place 
of the one removed. It is said that the question whether goods 
taken in withernam could be replevied was the only one which the 
Admirable Crichton found himself unable to answer. Restitutione 
extracti ab ecclesia lay for restoring a man to a sanctuary from 
which he had been wrongfully taken. Secta lay for enforcing the 
duties of tenants to their lord's court, e.g. secta ad molendmum, 
where the tenants were bound to have their corn ground at the lord's 
mill. Seisina habendo allowed delivery of lands of a felon to the lord 
after the king had had his year, day and waste. Vi latca removenda 
is curiously illustrative 01 ancient manners. It lay where two 
parsons contended for a church, and one of them entered with a great 
number of laymen and kept out the other by force. As lately as 
1867 an application for the issue of the writ was made to the chancery 
court of the Bermuda Islands, but refused on the ground that the 



850 



WRIT 



writ was obsolete, and that the same relief could be obtained by 
injunction. On appeal this refusal was sustained by the privy 
council. 

Of writs now in use, other than those for elections, ail are judicial, 
or part of the process' of the court, except perhaps the writ of error 
WHtm—w M criminal cases. They are to be hereafter issued out 
to of the central office of the supreme court, or the office 

of the clerk of the crown in chancery. By the Crown 
Office Act 1877 the wafer great seal or the wafer privy seal may be 
attached to writs instead otthe impression of the great or privy seal. 
The judicial writs issue chiefly, if not entirely, from the central office, 
with which the old crown office was incorporated by the Judicature 
(Officers) Act 1879. The crown office had charge 01 writs occurring 
in crown practice, such as quo warranto and certiorari. 

In local civil courts, other than county courts, writs are usually 
issued out of the office of the registrar, or an officer of similar juris- 
diction. By the Borough and Local Courts of Record Act 187a, 
writs of execution from such courts for sums under £20 may be 
stamped or sealed as of course by the registrar of a county court, 
and executed as if they had issued from the county court. In county 
court practice the warrant corresponds generally to the writ of the 
supreme court. Most of the present law on the subject of writs is 
contained in the Rules of the Supreme Court, 1883, Ord. xlii.-xliv., 
and in the Crown Office Rules 1006. Both sets of rules contain 
numerous precedents in their schedules. By Ord. u. r. 8 of the rules 
of 1883 all writs (with certain exceptions) are to be tested in the name 
of the lord chancellor, or, if that office be vacant, in the name of the 
lord chief justice. The main exceptions are those which occurirf 
crown practice, which are tested by the lord chief justice. The writ 
of error bears the teste vi the king "witness ourselves." Before the 
issue of most writs a praecipe, or authority to the proper officer to 
issue the writ, is necessary. This is of course not to be confounded 
with the old original writ of praecipe. Writs affecting land must 
generally be registered in order to bind the land (see Land Registra- 
tion). A writ cannot as a rule be served on Sunday. Some of the 
more important modern writs (other than those of an extrajudicial 
nature) may be shortly noticed. Habeas corpus, mandamus, prohibi- 
tion, scire facias and others are treated separately. Writs are gener- 
ally, unless where the contrary is stated, addressed to the sheriff. 
Abatement or nocumento amovendo enjoins the removal of a nuisance 
in pursuance of a judgment to that effect. Ad quod damnum is for 
the purpose of inquiring whether a proposed crown grant will be to 
the damage of the crown or others. If the inquiry be determined in 
favour of the subject, a reasonable fine is payable to the exchequer 
by 27 Edw. I. st. 2 (1200). Attachment is issued as a means of 
supporting the dignity of the court by punishment for contempt of 
its orders (see Contempt of Couet). Since the Judicature Acts a 
uniform practice has been followed in all the branches of the high 
court, and a writ of attachment can now only be issued by leave of 
the court or a judge after notice to the party against whom it is to 
be issued. Capias: the old writs of capias ad satisfaciendum and 
capias utligatum may still be used, but their importance has been 
much diminished since the alterations made in the law by the 
Debtors Act 1869 and the abolition of civil outlawry (see Out- 
lawry). Certiorari is a writ in very frequent use, by which the pro- 
ceedings of an inferior court are brought up for review by the high 
court. In general it lies for excess of jurisdiction as mandamus 
does for defect. The Summary Jurisdiction Act 1879 makes the 
writ no longer necessary where a special case has been stated by a 
court of quarter sessions. Delivery enforces a judgment for the 
delivery of property without giving the defendant (unless at the 
option of the plaintiff) power to retain it on payment of the assessed 
value. Distringas lay to distrain a person for a crown debt or for 
his appearance on a certain day. Its operation has been much 
curtailed by the substitution of other proceedings by the Crown 
Suits Act 1865 and the rules of the supreme court. It now seems 
to lie only against inhabitants for non-repair of a highway. Dis- 
tringas nuf^r vicernvtiirm 15 a writ calling on an ex-shenff to account 
for the pr »nyJs of goods taken in execution. Elegit is founded on 
the Statu tv of Westminster the Second, 128$, and is so named from 
the words of the writ, rhm [he plaintiff has chosen (elegit) this 
particular mode of satisfaction. It originally ordered the sheriff to 
seize a moiety of the debtor's land and all his goods, save his oxen 
and beast* of the plough. By the Judgments Act 1838, the elegit 
hole of the lands, and copyholds as 
1 ■ ccy Act 1883, an elegit no longer 
itnaining example of an original 
1 •■-.- 1 in both civil and criminal pro- 

„_. .. j citil procedure by the rules made 

under the Judicature Act 1872, and in criminal cases by the Criminal 
Appeal Act 1907. Exigent (with proclamation) forms part of the 
process of outlawry now existing only against a criminal. It 
depends on several statutes, commencing in 1344, and is specially 
mentioned in the Statute of Provisors of Edward III., 25 Edw. 
III. st. 6. Extent is the writ of execution issued by the crown for a 
crown debt of record. The sale of chattels seized under an extent 
takes place under a writ of venditioni exponas. A crown debtor is 



was extended ro in- :lu< I. 
well as freeholds By ill 
applies to Rood*. Error 
writ was at one t 
cecdings. 



t * It may be noticed •■-— ■*■■ 
Act 1887 the exprr 



^-orctation clause of the Sheriffs 
'■» any process. 



enritled to an esiesrf ii» otrf against a personlndebted to him. When 
a crown debtor has died a writ reciting his death, and so called diem 
clausU e x te rnum , issues against his property. Fieri facias is the 
ordinary writ of execution on a judgment commanding the sheriff to 
levy the sum, interest and costs on the personal pr o p e rt y of the party. 
Where the sheriff has not sold the goods, venditioni exponas issues to 
compel him to do so. Where the party b a beneficed clergyman,the 
writ is one at fieri facias de bonis ec clesiast icis or of seqmstrari facias 
(addressed to the bishop). The latter writ also issues in other cases 
of an exceptional nature, as against a corporation and to seize a 
pension. It is addressed to commissioners, not to the sheriff. 
Habere facias possessionem b given to the owner of a tithe or rent 
charge, enabling him to have possession of the lands chargeable there- 
with until arrears due to him are paid. Jndicavit is still nominally 
grantable under the statute De Conjunctim Feoffors of 1306, and b a 
particular kind of prohibition granted to the patron of an advowson. 
Inquiry issues for the assessment of damages by the sheriff or Ms 
deputy. It represents to some extent the old writ of justicies, 
and the later writ of trial allowed by 3 & 4 Will. IV. c. 42, but b 
narrower In its operation, for under the last-named writs the whole 
case or issues under it could be tried. Before an inquiry the liability 
has been already established. Levari facias is the means of levying 
execution for forfeited recognizances. The Bankruptcy Act 1883 
abolished it in civil proceedings. Ne exeat regno was at one time 
issued by virtue of the prerogative to prevent any person from 
leaving the realm, a form of restraint of liberty recognized by 
parliament in 5 Ric. 1 1, c. 2. It has now become a means of prevent- 
ing one who owes an equitable debt of £50 or more from quitting 
the kingdom, and so withdrawing himself from the jurisdiction off 
the court without giving security for the debt. It b usually issued 
on an ex parte motion in the chancery division, but is rare in practice, 
having been superseded by proceedings under the Debtors Act 1869. 
Non omittas b for executing process by the sheriff in a liberty or 
franchise, where the proper officer has neglected to do so. It rested 
originally chiefly upon the Statute of Westminster the Second, c. 39, 
and b now regulated by the Sheriffs Act 1887, which repeab the 
previous enactment. Possession enjoins the sheriff to give possession 
of land to the party entitled thereto under a judgment for such 
possession. It nib the place of the old writ of assistance. In 
admiralty, where the judgment b for possession of a ship, the writ 
is addressed to the marshal. Procedendo b the converse of prohibi- 
tion. It directs the lower court to proceed with the case. It also 
lies to restore the authority of commissioners suspended by super- 
sedeas. Restitution restores property, either real or personal, after 
the right to it has been judicially declared. Thus it lies on behalf 
of the owner of real property under the statutes of forcible entry 
and of the owner of personal property under the Larceny Act 1861. 
Significant, once a writ, appears since 57 Geo. III. c. 127 to be merely 
a notice. It is a part of the process against a person disobeying the 
order of an ecclesiastical court, and consists in a notification to the 
crown in chancery of the disobedience. Thereupon a writ de con- 
tumace capiendo issues for his arrest. On hb subsequent obedience 
or satisfaction, a writ of deliverance is granted. Precedents of these 
writs are given in the act named. Subpoena b the ordinary means 
of securing the presence of a witness in court, and is addressed to 
the person whose attendance is required. It b so called from its 
containing the words " and this you are not to omit under the 
penalty 01/100," &c. The subpoena may be either ad testificandum, 
to give evidence, or duces tecum, to produce documents, Ac. or both 
combined. By special order of a nidge a subpoena may be issued 
from any court in England, Scotland or Ireland to compel the attend- 
ance of a witness out of the jurisdiction. Summons b the universal 
means of commencing an action in the high court. It b addressed to 
the defendant, and may be either generally or specially indorsed with 
a statement of the nature of the claim made. The latter form of in- 
dorsement is allowed in certain cases of debt or liquidated demand, 
and gives the plaintiff the great advantage of entitling him to final 
judgment in default of appearance by the defendant, and even in 
spite of appearance unless the defendant can satisfy a judge that 
he ought to be allowed to defend. No statement of claim is necessary 
in case of a speciallyindorsedwrit, the indorsement being deemed to 
be the statement. The writ may be issued out of the central office or 
out of a district registry, and the plaintiff may name on hb writ the 
division of the high court in which he proposes to have the case tried. 
There are special rules governing the issue of writs in probate and 
admiralty actions. The writ remains in force for twelve months, but 
may be renewed for good cause after the expiration of that time. 
Service must be personal, unless where substituted service is allowed, 
and in special cases, such as actions to recover land and admiralty 
actions. Service out of the jurisdiction of a writ or notice of a writ is 
allowed only by leave of the court or a judge. Notice of the issue of 
a writ, and not the writ itself, is served on a defendant who is neither 
a British subject nor in British dominions. The law is contained in 
the Rules of the Supreme Court, especially orders ii.-xi. and adv. 
Supersedeas commands the stay of proceedings on another writ. It 
is often combined with procedendo, where on a certiorari or prohibition 
the high court has decided in favour of the jurisdiction of the inferior 
court. It is also used for removing from the commission of the peace, 
and for putting an end to the authority of any persons acting under 
commission from the crown. Venire facias b the first proceeding in 



WRITERS TO THE SIGNET 



85* 



of cnw , 



y, calling upon the party to appear. Under the old practice 

a. venire facias de novo was the means 01 obtaining a new trial. Ventre 
{uspiciendo appears still to be competent, and is a curious relic of 
antiquity. It issues on the application of an heir presumptive in 
order to determine by a jury of matrons whether the widow of a 
deceased owner of lands be with child or not. Almost exactly the 
name proceeding was known in Roman law. 

The principal writs of a non-judicial nature relate to parliament 
ot some of its constituent elements. Parliament is summoned by 
the king's writ issued out of chancery by advice of the privy council. 
The period of forty days once necessary b e t we eu the writ and the 
assembling is now by an act of 185a reduced to thirty-five days. 
Writs of summons are issued to the lords spiritual and temporal 
before every new parliament. Those to Irish representative peers 
are regulated by the Act of Union, those to archbishops and bishops 
by the Ecclesiastical Commissioners Act 1847. New P** 1 *?** •** 
no longer created by writ, but the eldest son ot a peer is occasionally 
summoned to the House of Lords in the name of a barony of his 
father's. With respect to election of members of the House of 
Commons, the procedure differs as the election takes place after a 
dissolution or on a casual vacancy. After a dissolution the writ 
is issued, as already stated, by order of the crown in council. For 
a single election the warrant for a new writ is issued during the 
session by the speaker after an order of the house made upon motion; 
during the recess by the speaker's authority alone. The warrant is 
addressed to the clerk of the crown in chancery for Great Britain, to 
the clerk of the crown and hanaper of Ireland. A supersedeas to a 
writ has sometimes been ordered where the writ was improvidently 
issued. The time allowed to elapse between the receipt of the writ 
and the election b fixed by the Ballot Act 1872, sched. 1, at nine days 
for a county or a district borough, four days for any other borough. 
The writ is to be returned by the returning officer to the clerk of the 
crown with the name of the member elected endorsed on the writ 
Sched. 2 gives a form of the writ, which is tested, like the writ 
w, by the king himself. The returning officer is the sheriff 
_ nties and counties of cities, generally the mayor in cities and 
boroughs, and the vice-chancellor in universities. Other writs for 
election are those for convocation, which b by 25 Hen. VIII. c 19 
summoned by the archbishop of the province on receipt of the king's 
writ, and for election of -coroners, verderers of royal forests, and some 
other officers whose office b of great antiquity. The writ deeoronatore 
digendo, addressed to the sheriff, b specially preserved by the 
Coroners Act 1887. 

Offences relating to writs are dealt with by the Criminal Law 
Consolidation Acts of 1861 and other statutes. The maximum 
penalty b seven years' penal servitude. 

Scotland.—" writ " is a more extensive term than in England. 
Writs are either judicial or extrajudicial, the latter including deeds 
and other instruments— as, for instance, in the Lord Clerk Register 
Act 1879. and in the co m mon use of the phrase " oath or writ as a 
means of proof. In the narrower English sense both M writ " and 
" brieve " are used. The brieve was as indispensable a part of the 
old procedure as it was in England, and many forms are given in 
Regtam Majestalem and Quoniam Attackiamenta. It was a command 
issued in the king's name, addressed to a judge, and ordering trial 
of a question stated therein. It was drawn by the writers to the 
signet, originally clerks In the office of the secretary of state. Its 
conclusion was the will of the summons. In some cases proceedings 
which were by writ in England took another form in Scotland. 
For Instance, the writ of attaint was not known in Scotland, but a 
similar end was reached by trial of the jury for wilful error. 1 The 
English writ of ne exeat ret** is represented by the meditatio fugae 
warrant. Most proceedings by brieve, being addressed to the sheriff, 
became obsolete after the institution of the court of session, when 
the sheriffs lost much of that judicial power which they had enjoyed 
to a greater extent than the English sheriff (see Sheriff)/ An 
English writ of execution b represented in Scotland by diligence, 
chiefly by means of warrants to messengers-at-arms under the 
authority of signet letters in the name of the king. See the Writs 
Execution Act 1868. The brieve, however, has not wholly dis- 
appeared. Brieves of tutory, terce and division among hcir-por- 
tioners are still competent but not in use. Other kinds of brieve 
have been superseded by simpler procedure, e.g. the brieve of service 
of heirs, representing the older breve de marie antecessoris, by a petition 
to the sheriff under the Titles to Land Consolidation Act 1868 and 
the brieve of perambulation by a declaratory action. The brieve of 
cognition of insane persons is now on! of the few of practical im- 
portance. The old brieves of furiosity and idiotcy were abolished, 
and this new form was introduced by the act last named. Writs 
eo nomine have been the subject of much modern legislation. The 
writs of capias, habeas, certiorari and extent were replaced by other 
proceedings by the Exchequer Court Act 1856. The writs of dare 
constat, resignation and confirmation (whether granted by the crown 
or a subject superior) were regulated by the act of 1808. By the 



1 An example occurring in the reign of James VI. will be found in 
Phcairn, Criminal Trials, i. 2 16. 
* Explanations of many of the older writs will be found in Lord 

P&J&™? %V*5 &y tt f orwm *P*fi**»** (««4t). Md styles 
in Spotbwood, SHU of Writs (1715) 



same act crown writs are to be in the English language and registered 
in the register of crown writs. Writs need not be sealed unless at 
the instance of the party against whom they are issued. Writs of 
progress (except crown writs, writs of dare constat and writs of 
acknowledgment) were abolished by the Conveyancing Act 1874. 
The dare constat writ is one granted by the crown or a subject superior 
for the purpose of completing title of a vassal's heirs to lands held 
by the deceased vassal. Where the lands are leasehold the writ of 
acknowledgment under the Registration of Leases Act 1857 is used 
for the same purpose. By the Writs Execution Act 1877 the form of 
warrant of execution on certainextiacts of registered wntsb amended 
Extracts of registered writs are to be equivalent to the registered 
writs themselves. Writs registered in the register of sasines for 
preservation only may afterwards be registered tor preservation and 
execution. By 22 Geo. II. c 48, passed for the purpose of assimi- 
lating the practice of outlawry for treason in Scotland to that in 
use in England, the court before which an indictment for treason 
or misprision of treason b found, is entitled on proper cause to 
issue writs of capias, proclamation and exigent In some respects 
imentary «" 



of capias, proclamation and exigent. 
the proceedings in parliamentary elections differ from those in use in 
England. Thus the writ in university elections b directed to the 



vicoKJnncellors of Edinburgh and Glasgow respectively, but not to 
those of St Andrews and Aberdeen, and there b an extension of the 
time for the return in elections for Orkney and Shetland, and for the 
Wick burghs. Representative peers of Scotland were by the Act of 
Union to be elected after writ issued to the privy council of Scotland. 
On the abolition of the privy council a proclamation under the great 
seal was substituted by 6 Anne, c. 23. 

United States.— Writ* in United States courts are by Act of 
Congress to be tested in the name of the chief justice of the United 
States. By state laws writs are generally bound to be in the name 
of the people of the state, in the English language, and tested in 
the name of a judge. Writs of error have been the subject of much 
legislation by the United States and by the states. In New York 
writs of error and of ne exeat have been abolished. Writs as parts 
of real actions have been generally superseded, but in Massachu- 
setts a writ of entry on disseisin b still a mode of trying title. Writs 
of dower and of estrepement are still in use in some states. By the 
law of some states, «.{. New Jersey, writs of election are issued to 
supply casualty occurring vacancies in the legislature. The writ of 
assistance, already named, has its interest in constitutional hbtory. 
Before the War of Independence it was issued to revenue officers 
to search premises for smuggled goods. It was on this writ that it 
was first contended in 1761 that a colonial court had jurisdiction 
to examine the constitutionality of a legislative act authorizing the 
bene of the writ. See Quincy's Aianacuutetts Rep. Ado,, I. 520. 

AuTHOUTiss.— The importance of die writ in procedure led to the 
compilation of a great body of law and precedent at an early date. 
In addition to the Registntm brev i um there were, among other old 
works, the Natura brevium, first published in 152s; Tbeloall, Le 
Digest des brief es originates (1579); Fitxberbert, Le Nouvd Natura 
brevium (1588); Hughes, Ongsnal Writs (1635); Thesaurus brevium 
(1661); Brownlow, Brevia Judicialia (1662); QffUina brevium 
(1679). See too Coke upon Littleton. 158. 159. 2 Coke's Inst. 39: 
and Du Cange. 1 Many precedents will be found in the collection of 
parliamentary writs and in Stubbs's Sded Charters. The Crown 
Office Rules. 1906, < 



many precedents of the modern writs 

r Jld books of practi . 

Practice, Corner's Crown Practice and Booth's Real Actions, contain 



used in crown practice. Old 



nice, such as Tidd's 



much law on the subject. For the history, Spruce's Equitable Juris- 
diction, voL i. bk. ii. ch. viii. : Forsyth's Hist, of Trial by Jury, Stephen ; 
On Pleading, Bigelow's Hist, of Procedure, ch. iv. : Pollock and Mait- 
land. HisL ofEng. Low; and W. S. M'Kechiue, Magna Carta may be 
consulted. There appears to be no book dealing with the writ in 
modern practice, but sufficient information b contained in the 
ordinary treatises on procedure. (J* W.) 

WRITERS 10 TUB SIGNET, in Scotland, a society of law 
agents corresponding to solicitors in England. They were 
originally clerks in the secretary of state's office and prepared 
the different writings passing the signet; every summons b 
still signed on its last page by a writer to the signet. By the 
Titles to Land Consolidation (Scotland) Act 1868, they have 
the exclusive privilege of preparing all crown writs, charters, 
precepts, &c, from the sovereign or the prince of Scotland. They 
have no charter bat are usually considered a corporation by long 
custom; they have office-bearers and are members of the 
College of Justice. On the Act of Union there was much debate 
as to whether writers to the signet should be eligible to the 
Scottish bench. It was finally decided that they should be 
eligible aften ten years' practice. But, with the exception of 
Hamilton of Pencaitland in 1712, no writer to the signet has 
ever had a seat on the bench. 

a A reference to Du Cange will show the great variety of the 
non-legal uses of brevis or breve. It may mean, inter alia, an annual 
rent, an amulet, a notice of the death of a monk. Brevetum signified 
what are now known as ship's papers. 



85* 



WRITING 



WRITING (the verbal noun of " to write/' O. Eng. wriicn, to 
inscribe), the use of letters, symbols or other conventional 
characters, for the recording by visible means of significant 
sounds; more specifically, the art of tracing by hand these 
symbols on paper or other material, by pen and ink, pencil, 
stylus or other such means, as opposed to mechanical methods 
such as printing. The principal features in the development 
of writing in its primary sense are dealt with in separate articles 
(see Alphabet, Palaeography, Inscriptions, Book, Manu- 
script, Shorthand, &c). Here it is only necessary briefly to 
refer to the origins of a system which has eventually followed 
the history of the various languages and has been stereotyped 
by the progress of typography (?.».). Very early in the history 
of mankind three needs become pressing. These are (a) to recall 
at a particular time something that has to be done; (b) to com- 
municate with some other person who is not present, nor for the 
moment easily accessible; (c) to assert rights over tools, cattle, 
&c, by a distinctive mark, or by a similar mark to distinguish 
one's own production (e.g. a special make of pottery) from that of 
others. The last-named use, out of which in time develops 
every kind of trade-mark, is itself a development of the earlier 
property mark. The right to property must be established 
before traffic, whether by way of barter or of sale, is possible. 

Every one is familiar with devices to achieve the first of 
these aims; one of the commonest is to tie a knot in a hand- 
kerchief. It is obvious that by multiplying the 
number of knots a number of points equal to the 
number of knots might in this way be referred to, 
though it is probable that the untrained memory would fail to 
recall the meaning attached to more than a very limited number 
of knots. The simplest application of these knots is in keeping 
a record of a number of days, as in the story related by Herodotus 
(iv. 08), to the effect that Darius, on crossing the Ister in his 
Scythian expedition, left with the Greeks appointed to guard 
the bridge a thong with a number of knots equal to the number 
of days that their watch over the bridge was to be continued. 
One knot was to be undone each day, and if the king had not 
returned by the time that all the knots were undone, the Greeks 
were to break down the bridge and go away. A development of 
this is found in the Peruvian qui pus, which consists of a number 
of thongs or cords hanging from a top-band or cross-bar. In 
its simplified form, knots are merely tied upon the individual 
cords. In its more elaborate forms the cords are of different 
colours, and are knotted together so as to form open loops of 
various shapes. In the Anliguedades Peruana*, 1 we are told 
that the knots of the quipus in all probability indicated only 
numbers originally, but that as time went on the skill of the 
makers became so great that historical events, laws and edicts 
could thus be communicated. In every place of any importance 
there was an official whose business it was to interpret quipus 
received from a distance, and to make quipus himself. If, 
however, the quipus which was received came from a distant 
province, it was not intelligible without an oral explanation. 
Unfortunately, the art of interpretation of quipus is lost, so 
that it is impossible to ascertain how far the knots were merely 
a mnemonic for the messenger, and how far they were intelligible 
without explanation fo a stranger. Similar mnemonics are said 
to have been used in the remotest antiquity amongst the Chinese, 
the Tibetans, and other peoples of the Old World. 1 

Simitar in character to the quipus is the message-stick, which 
is still in use amongst the natives of Australia. A branch of a 
■ tree is taken and notches made upon it. These are 

212**" n° w cut w * t * 1 a Kflife; » n earlier times they were made 
with the edge of a mussel shell. The notches are made 
in the presence of the messenger, who receives his instructions 
while they are being made. The notches are thus merely aids 
to memory, and not self-explanatory, though if messages fre- 
quently passed between two persons, practice would in time 
help the person to whom the message was sent to guess at the 

1 Quoted by Middendorf, Das Runa Simi oder die Keskua Sprache 
(Leipzig, 1890), p. 8. 
* C^Andree, Ethnologist** ParalkUn und Vergleith*, a. p. 184 sqq, 1 



meaning, even without a verbal explanation. The following 
was the method of the Wotjoballuk of the Wimmera river in 
Victoria. 1 " The messenger carried the message-stick in a net 
bag, and on arriving at the camp to which he was sent, he handed 
it to the headman at some place apart from the others, saying to 
him, ' So-and-so sent you this,' and he then gives his message, 
referring as he does so to the notches on the message-stick; 
and if his message requires it, also enumerates the days or stages, 
as the case may be," by a method of counting on different parts 
of the body. 

For the purposes of communication with absent persona, 
however, another method commended itself, which in time was 
adopted also for mnemonic purposes. This method 
was the beginning whence some forms at least of later 
writing have been derived. From the veiy earliest 
times to which the energy of man can be traced, date two 
kinds of writing: (a) engraving of a visible object on some 
hard substance, such as the flat surface of a bone; (6) drawing, 
painting or engraving marks which could again be identified. 
Of the first kind are the engravings of reindeer, buffaloes and 
other animals by the cave men of prehistoric times; of the second 
are a large number of pebbles discovered by M. Ed. Piette at 
Mas d'Azil, on the left bank of the Arize, an account of which 
was published by the discoverer in L' Anlkropologu (x8oo), 
vii. 384 sqq. This layer of coloured pebbles is intercalated 
between the last layer of the Reindeer Age and the first of the 
Neolithic period. The layer is over 2 ft thick, of a reddish-black 
colour, and along with the pebbles are found cinders, peroxide 
of iron, teeth of deer perforated, probably in order to be strung 
like beads, harpoons of various kinds, and the bones of a large 
number of animals, some wheat, and, in the. upper part of the 
layer, nuts, cherry-stones and plums. The stones were coloured 
with peroxide of iron. The characters are of two kinds: («) 
a series of strokes which possibly indicate numbers, (ft) graphic 
symbols. The stones were scattered about without connexion 
or relation one with another. Whatever the meaning may be, 
it is clear that the markings are not accidental It is noticeable, 
however, that none of them definitely represent any animal, 
though some of them bear a certain resemblance to caterpillars 
or serpents. Others look like rough attempts to represent trees 
and river plants. A great number closely resemble symbols 
of the alphabet. Piette himself was inclined to see in the symbols 
the forerunners of the later syllabaries and alphabets of the East* 
nine of them agreeing with forms in the Cypriot syllabary (see 
below) and eleven with those of the Phoenician alphabet. A 
certain amount of likeness, however, could not well be avoided, 
for as soon as the artist advances beyond the single perpendicular 
or horizontal line he must, by crossing two lines, get forms 
which resemble alphabetical symbols. It might be therefore 
a safer conclusion to suppose that if they passed beyond magic 
symbols, to be buried like the Australian churinga, they were 
conventional marks understood by the members of the clan or 
tribe which frequented the caves of Mas d'Azil. It has been 
suggested that, like similar things among the American Indians, 
they may have been used in playing games or gambling. 

A very large number of conventional marks, however, are 
demonstrably reductions from still older forms, conventional 
marks often developing out of pictographs. Picto- 
graphy has, in fact, left its traces in all parts of the 
world. It has, however, been most widely developed 
in the New World as a system lasting down to modern * 
times. The American Indians, besides picture-writing, used also 
(1) the simple mnemonic of a notched stick to record various 
incidents, such as the number of days spent on an expedition, 
the number of enemies slain and the like; (a) wampum belts, 
consisting of strung beads, which could be utilized as a mnemonic, 
exactly like a rosary. Wampum belts, however, were employed 
in more intricate forms; white beads indicated peace, purple or 
violet meant war. Sometimes a pattern was made In the belt 
with beads of a different colour, as in the belt presented to 

' A. W. Howht in Journal of Ike Anthropological Institute, xviuV 
(1889), p. 318 «qq. 



WRITING 



»53 



WDBtm tan on the making of a treaty viththeLeai-Lenape 
duels in 1682. Here, in the centre of the belt, two figures, In- 
tended to represent Perm and an Indian, join hands, thus clearly 
indicating a treaty. Very simple pictures are drawn upon birch 
bark, fndiraffng by their order the subjects in a aeries of song- 
chants with sufficient precision to enable the singer to recall the 
theme of each in his recitation. An account can be kept of sales 
or purchases by representing in perpendicular strokes the number 
of items, and adding at the end of each series a picture of the 
animal or object to which the particular series refers. Thus 
three strokes followed by the picture of a deer indicate that the 
hunter has brought three deer for sale. A conventional symbol 
(a drde with a line across it) is used to indicate a dollar, a cross 
represents ten cents, and an upright stroke one cent, ao that the 
price can be quite clearly set forth. This practice is followed in 
many other parts of the world. In day tablets discovered by 
Dr Arthur Evans during his exploration of the great palace at 
Knossos, in Crete, a somewhat similar, method of enumeration is 
followed; while at Athens conventional symbols were used to 
distinguish drachmae and obob upon the revenue records, of 
which considerable fragments are still preserved. 

In comparatively recent times, according to Colonel MaHery 
(jotk Annual Report of American Bureau of Ethnology), the 
Dakota Indians invented a chronological table, or winter count, 
wherein each year is recorded by a picture of some important 
event which befell during that year. In these pictures a con- 
siderable amount of symbolism was necessary. A black upright 
stroke indicates that a Dakota Indian was killed, a rough outline 
of the head and body spotted with blotches indicates that m the 
year thus indicated the tribe suffered from smallpox. Some* 
times, in referring to persons, the symbol is of the nature of a 
rebus. Thus, Red Coat , an Indian chief, was killed in the winter 
of 1807*1808; this fact is recorded by a picture of a red coat 
with two arrows piercing it and blood dripping. There is, 
however, nothing of the nature of a play upon words intended, 
and even when General Manyadier is represented as a figure in 
European dress, with the heads of two deer behind his head and 
connected with his mouth, no rebus was intended (many a deer), 
but the Indians supposed that his name really meant this, like 
their own names Big Crow, Little Beaver, and so forth. Here 
the Mexicans proceeded a stage further, as in the often quoted 
case of the name of Itx-coatl, literally knife-snake, which is 
ordinarily represented by a reptile (coaU) with a number of 
knives (in) projecting from its back. It is, however, also found 
divided into three words, itx-co-atl— knife-pot-wmter---and 
represented by a different picture accordingly. The Mexicans, 
moreover, to indicate that the picture was a proper name, drew 
the upper part of the human figure below the symbol, and joined 
them by a line, a practice adopted also amongst their northern 
neighbours when, as in names like little-Ring, the representation 
would hardly be sufficiently definite. Simple abstract notions 
could also be expressed in this picture-writing. Starvation or 
famine was graphically represented by a human figure with the 
ribs showing prominently. A noose amongst the Mexicans was 
the symbol for robbery, though more logically belonging to its 
punishment. In a California* rock-pamiing reproduced by 
Mattery (p. 638), sorrow is represented by a figure from whose 
eyes drop tears. This could be abbreviated to an eye with tears 
falling from it, a form recorded by Schoolcraft as existing 
amongst the Ojtbwa Indians. The symbol is so obvious that it 
b found with the same value among Egyptian hierogryphics. 

The civilization of the American Indians was nowhere very 
high, and for their simple needs this system, without further 
development, sufficed. It was different in the more elaborate 
civilizations which prevailed among the ancient peoples of the 
Old World, to whom with certainty the development of writing 
from pictography can be ascribed— the Assyrians (see Cunei- 
form), Egyptians (see Egypt) and Chinese (see China). Here 
more complex notions had to be expressed. The development 
of the system can be traced through many centuries, and, 
as might be expected, this development shows a tendency 
to conventionalise the pictorial symbols employed Out of 



conventionalised forms develop (a) syllabaries, ft) alphabets. 
As regards the latter the historical evolution is traced in the 
article Alphabet. The account given under China (language) 
gives a good idea of the development of a syllabary (rompicto- 
grapbic writing. 
The Egyptian system of writing is perhaps the oldest of known 
wai carried on till the Ptolemaic period, when the more 



scripts. an< 

convenient Greek alphabet led to its gradual di 
But, as in Chinese, the fact that It was so long in use led 
to the conventionalizing of the pictures, and in many cases to a ' 
complete divorcement between the symbol and the sound repre- 
sented, the original word having often become obsolete. In thb 
case it is no longer possible to trace it. Attempts have been made to 
connect the three great pictographic systems of the Old World. 
some authorities holding that the Chinese migrated eastwards from 
Babylonia, while others contend that the civilisation of Egypt 
sprang originally from the valley of the Euphrates, and that the 
ancient Egyptians were of the same stock as the Somali and were 
overlaid and permeated by a Semitic conquest and civilization. 
But there b no clear evidence that the Egyptian system of writing 
was not a development in the Nile Valley itself, or that it was either 
the descendant or the parent of the pictographic system which 
developed into the cuneiiorm of Assyria and neighbouring lands. 

Egyptian started from the same point as every other pictographic 
system — the representation of the object or the concrete expression 
of the idea. But, like the Chinese, it took the further step, short of 
which the American Indian pfctographs stopped; it converted its 
pictures into a syllabary from which there was an imperfect develop- 
ment towards an alphabet. Egyptian, however, never became 
alphabetic in the sense in which the western languages of modern 
Europe are alphabetic Thb b attributed to the natural conserva- 
tism of the people, and the influence of the artist scribes, who, as 
Mr F. U. Griffith has pointed out, " fully appreciated the effect of 
decorative writing ; to have limited their choice of signs by alphabetic 
signs would have constituted a serious loss to that highly important 
body. " The effect of thb love for decoration, combined with a 
desire for precision, b shown by the repetition several times over in 
the symbols of the sounds contained in a word. The development 
of Egyptian was exactly parallel to Chinese. A combination of 
sounds, which was originally the name of an object, was represented 
by the picture of that object. Thb picture again, like Chinese, and 
like the Indian name " Little-Ring," required at the end a determin- 
ative— a picture of the kind of object intended — in order to avoid 
ambiguity. As the alphabet represented only consonants and semi- 
consonants, and the Egyptian roots consisted mostly of only three 
letters, the parallelism with Chinese b remarkably close. 

The cuneiform script spread to other people who spoke tongues in 
no way akin to those of either its inventors, the Sumcrians, or their 
conquerors, the Semitic Babylonians, A widespread wn^ 
series of inscriptionst found in many parts of Asia and «■«■* 
even in the Aegean, which are generally described as Hittite (?.*•.) 
are written in a script of rjsctographic origin, though probably 
independent of Babyloabn in its development. 

It b noteworthy that at a very early period a colony of Greeks 
from the Petoponnesc, speaking a dialect closely akin to the Arcadian 
dialect (which b known to us only from a much bter 
period), had settled in the bland of Cyprus. Alone 
among the Greeks thb colony did not write in an alphabet, but under 
some Asiatic influence adopted a syllabary. Even when the island 
came again closely in touch with their Greek kinsfolk, after the 
Persian wars, the Greek inhabitants continued to write in their 
syllabary. In the recent excavations made by the authorities of the 
Britbn Museum an inscription of the 4th century s.c. was dis- 
covered, whereon a dedication to Demeter and Persephone was given 
first in Greek letters and repeated below in the syllabary, the Greek 
(as universally at so late a period) reading from left to right, the 
syllabary from right to left. Thb syllabary has five vowel symbols, 
but it could not distinguish between long and short vowels. In its 
consonant system it is unable to distinguish between breathed, 
voiced and aspirated stops, thus having but one symbol to represent 
rt. Stand #1. It b. of course, unable to represent a final consonant. 
but thb is achieved by using the symbol for a syllable ending in « 



conventionally for the final consonant. Thus aa-ss stands for «*$, 
the Cyprian equivalent of ««i. " and. " There are symbols for la, 
for fe. lor /*, for to, for lu, though none for /, and similarly for most 
of the other consonants. There b, however, no symbol for aw (r~v); 
ya, ye, yi occur, but no JO or ya. A*jrt*«« b expressed by la-me-fs-rt, 
where ti stands for I alone; as-ia-sn-is-ra stands or Ztm«>s>m 
(genitive). Here it b to be observed (1) that 9 preceding another 
consonant b omitted altogether, the vowel being probably nasalized 
as in French ; (2) that, as in the previous word, there is a sort of 
vowel euphony whereby the unnecessary vowel accompanying f 
takes the colour of the succeeding vowel. In other cases, however, 
it follows the preceding vowel, as in a+uri-khpa-to-o-a-ri'Si'la-ffh 
T*-u-"AptoT6*mrTo(*) I A**rmy4fi—. 

For literature on the history of writing, see the bibliographies to 
the articles Alphabet. Ac., and under the headings of the various 
languages and peoples. 



*54 



WROTHAM— WUHU 



WROTHAM, an urban district in the Medway parliamentary 
division of Kent, England, xo m. W. by N. of Maidstone, on 
tbe South-Eastern ft Chatham railway. Pop. (iooi) 3571. The 
church of St George, Early English and later, contains numerous 
brasses; and near it is the site of a palace of the archbishops 
of Canterbury, maintained until the time of Archbishop Simon 
Islip (c. 1350). S.W. of Wrotham is the village of Ightham, 
in which is a fine quadrangular moated manor-house, the Mote, 
in part of the 14th century, but with portions of Tudor dates. 

WRYNECK (Ger. Wendckals, Dutch drooikohen, Fr. torcoC), 
a bird so called from its way of writhing its head and neck, 
especially when captured on its nest in a hollow tree. The lynx l 
torquilla is a regular summer visitant to most parts of Europe, 
generally arriving a few days before the cuckoo, and is known 
in England as " cuckoo's leader " and " cuckoo's mate," but 
occasionally is called " snake-bird," not only from the undulatory 
motions just mentioned, but from the violent hissing with which 
it seeks- to repel an intruder from its hole.' 

The unmistakable note of the wryneck is merely a repetition of 



what may be syllabled que, que, que, many times in succession, 
rapidly uttered at first, but gradually slowing and in a continually 
falling key. This is only heard during a few weeks, and for the rest 



of the bird s stay in Europe it seems to be mute. It feeds.almost 
exclusively on insects, especially on ants. It is larger than a sparrow, 
but its plumage is not easily described, being beautifully variegated 
with black, brown, buff and grey — the last produced by minute 
specks of blackish-brown on a light ground — the darker markings 
disposed in patches, vcrmiculated bars, freckles, streaks or arrow- 
heads — and the whole blended most harmoniously, so as to recall 
the coloration of a goatsucker (q.v.) or of a woodcock (qv.). The 
wryneck commonly lays its translucent white eggs on the bare wood 
of a hole in a tree, and it is one of the few wild birds that can be 
induced to go on laying by abstracting its eggs day after day, and 
thus upwards of forty have been taken from a single hole — but the 
proper complement is from six to ten. As regards Britain, the bird 
is most common in the S.E., its numbers decreasing rapidly towards 
the W. and N., so that in Cornwall and Wales and beyond Cheshire 
and Yorkshire its occurrence is but rare,- while it appears only by 
accident in Scotland and "^ — A 

Some writers have beer inclined to rvcognae five other species of 
the genus lynx; but the so-called /, japvnim it «rx<dfifaily in- 
distinguishable from /. tcfntOh'i whtk that designated, through a 
mistake in the locality assigned to it r /. imiwti. h,^ l-.-n f.>und t.. be 
identical with the /. pectoral t f of S, Africa, Near ( o t his is L ptdthri- 
coilis, discovered by Emin Pa»ha in the E, of the Bar-tl-Djebc! {I Ms, 
1884, p. 28, pi. hi.). A 'Other disimct African species is the /. 
aequatorialis, originally described from Abyssinia. The wrynecks 
(see Woodpecker) form .1 >ubfamily lyn&nae of the Picidae. from 
the more normal groups A which they differ but little in internal 
structure, but much in operation and in hiving the tail -quills 
flexible, or at least not stiJicntd to serve ai props as in tht t limbing 
Picinae. (A. N.) 

WRY-NECK (Lat. Torticollis), a congenital or acquired 
deformity, characterized by the affected side of the head being 
drawn downwards towards the shoulder together with deviation 
of the face towards the sound side. There are various forms, 
(t) The congenital, due to a lesion of the sterno-mastoid muscle, 
either the result of a malposition in utero or due to the rupture 
of the muscle in the delivery of the aftercoming head in the birth 
of the breech presentation. (2) The rheumatic, due to exposure 
to a draught or cold. This is commonly known as " stiff-neck." 
(3) The nervous or spasmodic, the result of (a) direct irritation 
of the spinal accessory nerve or its roots, or (6) the result of 
cerebral irritation. In this form there is generally a family 
history of nervous diseases, notably epilepsy. This spasm is 
one of a group of nervous spasms known as " tics," a variety 
of habit spasm. The character of the movements varies with 
the muscles involved, the most usual muscle being the sterno- 
mastoid. The spasm ceases during sleep. Many cases are also 
due to hysteria and some to spinal caries. When wry-neck is 
congenital, m assag e and manipulation may be tried and some 
form of apparatus. Failing this, division of the muscle surgically 

1 Frequently misspelt, as by Linnaeus in his later years, Yunx. 

• The peculiarity was known to Aristotle, and possibly led to the 
cruel use of the bird as a love-charm, to which several classical writers 
refer, as Pindar (Pylh. iv. 214; Nem, iv. 35), Theocritus (iv. 17. 30) 
and Xenophon (Memorabilia, iii. ti. 17, 18). In one part at least 
of China a name, Shay-Ung, signifying " Snake's neck/' is given to 
it (Ibis. 1875. P. «5). 



may be practised. In tbe spasmodic forms, anti-neurotic treat- 
ment is recommended, the use of the bromides, valerianates 
and belladonna, and hydrobro'mide of hyoscine injected into 
the muscles has been found of value. T. Grainger Stewart re- 
commends in persistent tic the trial of continuous and regular 
movements in the affected group of muscles with a view to 
replacing the abnormal movements by normal ones. In severe 
cases it may be necessary to cut down on and stretch or excise 
the spinal accessory nerve. In rheumatic torticollis the spasm 
is usually overcome by the application of hot compresses and 
appropriate anti-rheumatic treatment. 

WUCHANG, the capital of the combined provinces of Hup-eh 
and Hu-nan, China. It is one of the three cities, Wuchang, 
Hanyang and Hankow, which stand together at the mouth of 
the Han river, and is situated on the Tight bank of the river 
Yangtsze, almost directly opposite the foreign settlement of 
Hankow, It is tbe seat of the provincial government of the 
two Hu or Hu-kwang, as these provinces are collectively termed, 
at the head of which is a viceroy. Next to Nanking and Canton, 
it is one of the most important vice-royalties in the empire. It 
possesses an arsenal and a mint. The provincial government 
has established ironworks for the manufacture of rails and other 
railway material. As the works did not pay under official 
management, they were transferred to the director-general of 
railways. Wuchang is not open to foreign trade and residence, 
but a considerable number of missionaries, both Roman Catholic 
and Protestant, live within tbe walls. The native population 
is estimated at 800,000, including cities on both banks. Wuchang 
is an important junction on the trunk railway from Peking to 
Canton; and is on the route of the Sze-ch'uen railway. 

WUCHOW, a treaty port in the province of Kwang-si, China, 
opened to foreign trade in 1897, and situated on the left bank 
of the Si-kiang (West river) at its junction with the Fu or 
Kwei-Kiang (Cassia) river. It is 220 m. above Canton, with which 
it is in navigable connexion for vessels drawing up to 8 ft of 
water. In 1008 the value of the. trade passing through the 
maritime customs amounted to £1,566,000, representing, how- 
ever, only a portion of the trade. Of this total, two-thirds were 
for imports, consisting principally of cotton and cotton goods, 
kerosene oil, woollens, &c. Sugar, various oils, hides and aniseed 
were the chief exports. The native population is estimated at 
65,000. At Shuihing the river flows for 5 m. through a deep 
gorge bordered by limestone cliffs 2000 ft. in height. Farther 
up the river threads its way through a series of rocky defiles, 
forming at intervals what seems an inland lake with no apparent 
outlet. During summer floods the water thus pent up by the 
gorges rises at Wuchow 50 or 60 ft. In consequence of the 
variation of river level, the principal offices and shops are built 
upon pontoons which are moored alongside the river-bank. The 
situation of Wuchow makes it the natural distributing centre 
between Kwei-chow, Kwang-si and Canton. Great things were 
therefore expected of it as a treaty port, but disorders in Kwang- 
si delayed the fulfilment of the hopes. Trade, however, has 
improved, and a large native passenger traffic has sprung up 
between it and Canton. It is connected with Hong Kong and 
Shanghai by telegraph. 

WUHU, a district city in the province of Ngan-hui, China, 
about 1 m. from the S. bank of the Yangtsze-kiang, with which 
it is connected by a straggling suburb. It is about 50 m. above 
Nanking, and in 2858 it was marked out as a treaty port, but 
was not opened to trade until 1877. It is connected by canals 
with the important cities of Ning-Kwo Fu, Tai-p'ing Hien, 
Nan-ling Hien and Ching Hien, the silk districts in the neigh- 
bourhood of the two last cities being within 50 m. of Wuhu. 
Coal to a considerable extent exists in the country round. At 
first its commercial progress was very slow, the older ports of 
Kiu-kiang and Chin-kiang militating against its success; but 
of late there has been a distinct improvement in the trade of the 
port, the net value of which was about £3,000,000 in 1906. The 
principal exports are rice, cotton, wheat, tea, furs and feathers. 
For the production of feathers large quantities of ducks are 
reared in the surrounding districts. Of imports, opium formed 



WULFENITE— WUNDT 



«55 



the most considerable item; other Imports being matches, 
needles, sandalwood and window glass. The city, which is one 
of the largest of its rank in China, was laid desolate daring the 
Tai-p'ing rebellion, but has been repeopkd, the population 
being estimated (1006) at 137,000. The streets are compara- 
tively broad and are well paved. The land set apart for the 
British settlement, advantageously situated, was little built 
upon. A new g eneral foreign settlement was opened in 100$. 

WULFENITE, a mineral consisting of lead molybdate, 
PbMoO«, crystallizing in the hemimorphic-tetartohcdraJ class of 
the tetragonal system. Crystals usually have the form of thin 
square plates bevelled at the edges by pyramidal planes. They 
have a brilliant resinous to adamantine bistre, and vary in 
colour from greyish to bright yellow or red: the hardness Is 3, 
and the specific gravity 6-7. Small amounts of calcium are 
sometimes present iso m orphously replacing lead. The mineral 
occurs in veins of lead ore, and was first found in the 18th 
Century in the lead mines at Bleiberg in Carinthia. Bright 
yellow crystals are found in New Mexico and Utah, and brilliant 
re d cry stals in Arizona. 

WULFHERB (d. 67s), king of the Mercians, was a younger 
ton of King Penda, and was kept in concealment for some 
time after his father's defeat and death in 655. In 658 or 659, 
however, the Mercians threw off the supremacy of Oswio, king 
of Northumbria, and Wulihere became their king. He took 
energetic measures to spread Christianity, and was greatly helped 
by his bishop, Jaruman, and afterwards by St Chad. Outside 
Mercia he did something to induce the East and the South 
Saxons to accept Christianity, and is said to have founded one 
or two monasteries. He gained Lindsey from Northumbria 
in 657, and was successful against Wessex. He extended his 
borders in all directions, and was the founder of the passing 
greatness of Mercia, although he lost Lindsey just before his 
death. Wulfhere's wife was Eormenhild, a daughter of Ercon- 
berht, king of Rent, and he was succeeded by his brother Aethel- 
red. His only son Coenred became king in 704 in succession 
to Aethelred. His only daughter was St Werburga or Werburh, 
abbess of Ely. 

See Bede. Bistort* udtsiostica, ed. C. Plimuner (Oxford, 1896); 
and J. R. Green, Tke Making of England (1897-1899)* 

WULFSTAN, archbishop of York from 1003 until his death 
in May 1093, and also bishop of Worcester from 1003 to 1016, 
Is generally held to be the author of a re mark ab l e homiry in 
alliterative English prose. Its title, taken from a manuscript, 
Is Lupi sermo ad Angles, quando Dam maxime proueuti sunt cos, 
quodfuit armo 1014. It is an appeal to all classes to repent in the 
prospect of the imminent day of judgment, and gives a vivid 
picture of the desperate condition of England in the year of King 
Aethelred II.'s flight (1014). Of the many other homilies 
ascribed to Wulfstan very few are authentic. Subsequent 
legislation, especially that of Canute, bears clear traces of his 
influence. 

See the edition of hit homilies by A. Napier (Berlin, 1883) ; also the 
tame writer's Ober die Wtrke its aUengucken Enbisckofs Wulfstan 
(Got tingrn dissertation, 188a). and his paper in A n English Miscellany 
(Oxford, loot, pp. 35s f.) ; also A. Brandl in H. Paul a Grundriss dor 
tt rm a niic l U n Philology (and ed., 1901-1909), ii. pp. 1 1 10-1113. 

WULFSTAN. ST (c. 1512-1095), bishop of Worcester, was bora 
at Little Itchington near Warwick and was educated in the 
monastic schools of Evesham and Peterborough. He became 
a monk at Worcester, and schoolmaster and prior in the cathedral 
monastery there. In 1062 he was chosen bishop of Worcester, 
and the choice was approved by the witan; with some reluctance 
Wulfstan accepted, and was consecrated at York in September. 
The sec of Worcester and the archbishopric of York had been held 
together before 1062 by Archbishop Aldred, who, when he was 
compelled to resign Worcester, retained twelve manors belonging 
to the see, which Wulfstan did not recover for some years. 
About 1070, however, it was decided that Worcester was in the 
province of Canterbury. Although he bad been on friendly 
terms with Harold, the bishop submitted to William at Berk- 
hampstead, and he was very useful in checking the rebellious 
barons daring the revolt of 1075. He was equally loyal to 



Wflfiam 0. In bis straggle with the Welsh. Wulf Stan's relations 
with his ecclesiastical superiors were not so harmonious, and at 
one time both Lanfranc of Canterbury and Thomas of York 
unsuccessfully demanded his removal. He was the only survivor 
of the Anglo-Saxon bishops when he died on the 18th of January 
Z095. In 1203 he was canonised by Pope Innocent UL By his 
preaching at Bristol Wulfstan is said to have put an end to the 
kidnapping of English men and women and selling them as slaves. 
He rebuilt the cathedral church of Worcester, and some parts of 
his building still remain. 

Lives of St Wulfstan by Hemming and Florence of Worcester are 
in H. Wharton's Anpia sacra (1691). See also E. A. Freeman, 
N orman Conquest (1867-1879). 

VULLBHWBBER, XOfiGEIf (c. 1492-1537), burgomaster of 
Ltlbeck, was born probably at Hamburg. Settling in LUbeck 
as a merchant he took some part in the risings of the inhabitants 
in 1530 and 1531, being strongly in sympathy with the demo- 
cratic ideas in religion and politics which inspired them. Having 
joined the governing council of the city and become leader of the 
democratic party, he was appointed burgomaster early in 1533' 
and threw himself into the movement for restoring LUbeck to 
her former position of influence. Preparations were made to 
attack the Dutch towns, the principal trading rivals of LUbeck, 
when the death of Frederick I., king of Denmark, in April 1533 
changed the position of affairs. The LObeckers objected to the 
bestowal of the Danish crown upon any prince favourable to 
the Empire or the Roman religion, and Wullenweber went to 
Copenhagen to discuss the matter. At length an alliance was 
concluded with Henry VIII. of England; considerable support 
was obtained in N. Germany; and in 1534 an attack was made 
on Christian, duke of Holstein, afterwards King Christian III., 
who claimed the throne. At first the LQbeckers gained several 
successes, but Christian of Holstein appeared before Ltibeck; 
the efforts of Wullenweber to secure allies failed; and the citizens 
were compelled to make peace. The imperial court of justice at 
Spires restored the old constitution, and in August 1535 the 
aristocratic party returned to power. Soon afterwards Wullen- 
weber was seized by Christopher, archbishop of Bremen, and 
handed over to his brother Henry II., duke of Brunswick* 
WolfenbHttel. Having been tortured and sentenced to death as 
a traitor and an Anabaptist, he was beheaded at Wolfenbuttd 
on the 19th of September 1537. Wullenweber, who was long 
regarded as a popular hero in LUbeck, inspired tragedies by 
Heinrich Kruse and Karl Ferdinand Gutzkow, and a novel 
by Ludwig Kohler. 

See G. Waits, LObeck unttr Jirgen WuUcmoeher und ii* europiische 
Palitik (Berlin, 1855-1856). 

WUNDT, W1LHKLM MAX (1832- ), German physiologist 
and philosopher, was born on the 16th of August 1832 at Neck- 
arau, in Baden. He studied medicine at Tubingen, Heidelberg 
and Berlin, and in 1857 began to lecture at Heidelberg. In 
1864 he became assistant professor there, and in 1806 was chosen 
to represent Heidelberg in the Baden Chamber, but soon resigned. 
In 1874 he was elected regular professor of philosophy at Zurich, 
and in the following year was called to the corresponding chair 
at Leipzig, where he founded an Institute for Experimental 
Psychology, the precursor of many similar institutes. The list 
of Wundt's works is long and comprehensive, including physi- 
ology, psychology, logic and ethics. His earlier works deal 
chiefly with physiology, though often in close connexion with 
psychology, as in the Vorlcsungen fiber die Menseken- und Tier* 
seek (1863; 4th ed., 1006; trans. Creighton and Titchener, 1896), 
Lekrbuck der Physiologic des Menscken (1865; 4th ed., 1878), 
and GrundzUge der pkysidogischen Psychologic (1874; 6th ed., 
3 vols., 1908). He published an important work on Logik (1880- 
1883; 3rd ed., 1 906-1907), and this was followed in 1886 by 
hi* Etkik (3rd ed., 1903). According to Wundt, the straight road 
to ethics lies through ethnic psychology, whose especial business 
it is to consider the history of custom and of ethical ideas from 
the psychological standpoint. We must look for ethics to supply 
the corner-stone of metaphysics, and psychology is a necessary 
propaedeutic. The System der Philosophic (1899; 3rd ed., 1907) 
contained the results of Wundt's work up to that date, both is 



856 



WUNTHO— WURTTEMBERG 



the domain of science and m the move strictly philosophic field. 
Hie metaphysical or ontologies! part of psychology bin Wundt's 
view the actual part! and with this the science of nature and the 
science of mind are to be brought into relation, and thus con- 
stitnted as far as pcaaible philosophical sciences. Ini89aWundt 
published Hypnotism** und Situ/uUo*. Subsequent important 
works are the Gru n d rus der Psyckohgie (x8o6; 8th ed., 1007; 
trans. Judd, 3rd ed., 1007); V&kerpsyckUogi* (1000-1006); 
Binleiiuni in du Philos. (1901 ; 4th ed., 1006). Two other works, 
containing accounts of the work of himself and his pupils, are 
PkOosopkUcke Studien (1883-1002) and Psychohgische Studien 
(lOosfolL). 

WUNTHO, a native state of Upper Burma annexed by the 
British and incorporated in the district of Kathain 18^2. Wuntho 
was classed by the Burmese as a Shan state, but was never on 
the same footing as the true Shan states, and only escaped be- 
coming an integral part of the Burmese empire through Burmese 
want of system. The Shan name is Wying Hs5, " the city of the 
high." Jt had an area of about 2400 sq. m. with 150,000 in- 
habitants, and lay midway between the Irrawaddy and Chindwin 
rivers. When the British annexed Upper Burma in 1885 the 
state became a refuge for rebels and dacoit leaders. Finally in 
i8ox the state broke out into open rebellion, the sawbwa was 
deposed, and a force of 1800 troops under. General Sir George 
Wolseley occupied the town of Wuntho and reduced the state to 
or der. 

WTJPPER, a river of Germany, a right-bank tributary of the 
Rhine, rising in the Sauerland near Mdnerzhagen. The most 
remarkable part of its course is that in the so-called Wuppcrtal. 
In this section, 30 m. in length, it passes through the populous 
towns of Barmen and Elberfeld and supplies water-power to 
about five hundred mills and factories. Leaving the hills above 
Opladen, it debouches on to the plain and enters the Rhine at 
Rheindorf between Cologne and Dusseldorf, after a course of 
63 m. 

See A. Schmidt, Die Wupper (Lcnnep, 1902). 

WURTTEMBERG, a kingdom of Germany, forming a tolerably 
compact mass in the S.W. angle of the empire. In the south it is 
cleft by the long narrow territory of Hohenzollem, belonging to 
Prussia; snd it encloses six small enclaves of Baden and Hohen- 
sollern, while it owns nine small exclaves within the limits of 
these two states. It lies between 47 34' 48* and 49 35* 17* N., 
and between 8° 15' and io° 30' £. Its greatest length from N. 
to S. is 140 m.; its greatest breadth is zoo m.; its boundaries, 
almost entirely arbitrary, have a circuit of 1x16 m.; and its 
total area is 7534 sq. m., or about -/gin of the entire empire. 
It is bounded on the £. by Bavaria, and on the other three 
sides by Baden, with the exception of a short distance on the 
S., where it touches Hohenzollem and the lake of Constance. 

Physical Features.— WOrttcmberg forms part of the South-German 
tableland, and is hilly rather than mountainous. In fact the un- 
dulating fertile terraces of Upper and Lower Swabia may be taken as 
the characteristic parts of this agricultural country. The usual 
estimates return one-fourth of the entire surface as " plain," less than 
one-third as " mountainous," and nearly one-half as " hilly." The 
average elevation above the sea-level is 1640 ft. ; the lowest point is 
at Bottingen (410 ft.), where the Neckar quits the country; the 
highest is the Katxenkopf (3775 ft.), on the Hornisgrinde, on the 
western border. 

The chief mountains are the Black Forest (q.v.) on the west, the 
Swabian Jura or Rauhe Alb stretching across the middle of the 
country from south-west to north-east, and the Adekgg Mountains 
in the extreme south-east, adjoining the Algau Alps in Bavaria. The 
Rauhe Alb or Alp slopes gradually down into the plateau on its south 
side, but on the north it is sometimes rugged and steep, and has its 
line broken by isolated projecting hills. The highest summits are 
in the south-west, viz. the L*mberg_(3326 ft.), Obcr-Hohenberg 
(3312 ft.) and Plettenberg (^393 ft.). To the south of the Rauhe Alb 
the plateau of Upper Swabia stretches to the lake of Constance and 
eastwards across the Iller into Bavaria. Between the Alb and the 
Black Forest in the north-west are the fertile terraces of Lower 
Swabia, continued on the north-east by those of Franconia 

About 70% of WQrttemberg belongs to the basin ol the Rhine, 
and about 30% to that of the Danube; The principal river is the 
Neckar, which flows northward for 186 m. through the country to 
join the Rhine, and with its tributaries the Rcms, Kocher. Jagst, 
Ens, Ac * **»e kingdom. The Danube flows from east 



to west across the south half of WOrttcmberg, a distance of 69 m, a 
small section of which is in Hohensoucrn. Just above Ulm it it 
joined by the Iller, which forms the boundary between Bavaria and 
WQrttemberg for about 35 m. The Tauber in the north-east joins 
the Main; the Argen and Schuasen in the south enter the lake ol 
Constance. The lakes of WQrttemberg, with the exception of those 
in the Black Forest, all lie south of the Danube. The largest is the 
Federsee (1 sq. ra.), near Buchau. About one-fifth of the lake of 
Constance is reckoned to belong to W&rttemberg. Mineral springs 
are abundant; the most famous spa is Wildbad, in the Black Forest. 
The climate is temperate, and colder among the n*>u «ttaips in 
the south than in the north. The mean temperature varies at 
different points from 43* to »• F. The abundant forests induce 
much rain, most of which falls in the summer. The soH is on the 
whole fertile and well cultivated, and agriculture is the 1 
tionof thai- *--*-' 



PopuIaIum.—Tht population of the four departments (Krtise) 
into which the kingdom is divided is shown below:"- 



District (Kreis). 


i» ■ ' j 
Area in 
sq. m. 


Pop. 
1900. 


Pop. 
1905. 


Density 
1905- 


Neckar. . . . 
Black Forest (Schwarx- 
wald) .... 

Jagst 

Danube (Donau) . . 


1286 

1844 
1985 
2419 


745.«9 

509.258 
400,126 

5»4.4*7 


811478 

541,66a 
407.059 
541.980 


631 

205 
223 


Total 


7534 


2,169,480 


2.302,179 


306 



The population is particularly dense in the Neckar valley from 
Esslingcn northward. The mean annual increase from 1000 to 
X005 amounted to 1*22%. 8>s% of the births are illegitimate. 
Classified according to religion, about 69% are Protestants, 
30% Roman Catholics, and Jews amount to about $%. Pro- 
testants largely preponderate in the Neckar district, Roman 
Catholics in that of the Danube. The people of the north-west 
belong to the Alamannic stock, those of the north-east to the 
Franconian, and those of the centre and south to the Swabian. 
According to the latest occupation census, nearly half of the 
entire population is supported by agriculture, and a third by 
industrial pursuits, mining and commerce. In 1910, 506,061 
persons were engaged in agriculture and kindred occupations, 
432,114 in industrial occupations, and 100,109 in trade and 
commerce. 

The largest towns in the kingdom are Stuttgart (with Cann- 
stadt), Ulm, Heilbronn, Esslingen, Reuthngen, Ludwigsburg, 
Gdppingen, Gmund, Tubingen, Tuttlingen and Rnvensburg. 

^fjtcMttwe.— -Wort t e mb er g is essentially an agricultural state, 
and of its 4,821,760 acres, 44*9 % are agricultural land and gardens, 
I'l % vineyards. 17*9 % meadows and pastures, and 30*8 % forest. 
It possesses rich meadowlands, cornfields, orchards, gardens, and 
hills covered with vines. The chief agricultural products are oats, 
spelt, rye, wheat, barley, hops. To these must be added wine (mostly 
of excellent quality) of an annual value of about one million sterling, 
peas and beans, maize, fruit, chiefly cherries and apples, beets and 
tobacco, and garden and dairy produce. Of live stock, cattle, sheep 
and pigs are reared in considerable numbers, and great attention is 
paid to the breeding of horses. 

Mining. — Salt and iron are the only minerals of great industrial 
importance found in Wfirttemberg. The salt industry only began 
to be of importance at the beginning of the 19th century. The iron 
industry, on the other hand, is of great antiquity, but it is hampered 
by the entire absence of coal mines in the country. Other minerals 
produced are granite, limestone, ironstone and fireclay. 

Manufactures. — The old-established manufactures embrace linen, 
woollen and cotton fabrics, particularly at Esslingen and Gdppingen, 
iafiy at Ravensburg, Heilbronn and otr — 

toe 
hes of it 



and paper-making, especially a 

places in Lower Swabia. The manufacturing industries assisted by 
the government developed rapidly during the later years of ' 
—.1. — . — — *_ui.. — .-i 1 s-ti u bcancf 



19th century, notably metal-working, especially such 
as require exact and delicate workmanship. Of particular import- 
ance are iron and steel goods, locomotives (for which Esslingen 
enjoys a great reputation), machinery, motorcars, bicycles, small 
arms (in toe Mauser factory at Oberndorf). all kinds of scientific and 
artistic appliances, pianos (at Stuttgart), organs and other musical 
instruments, photographic apparatus, clocks fin the Black Forest), 
electrical apparatus, and gold and silver goods. There are also ex- 
tensive chemical works, potteries, cabinet -making workshops, sugar 
factories, breweries and distilleries. Water-power and petrol largely 
compensate for the lack of coal. ( Among other interesting develop- 
ments is the manufacture of liquid carbonic acid gas procured from 
natural gas springs beside the Eyach, a tributary of the Neckar. - 
Commerce.— The principal exports are cattle, cereals, wood, pianos, 



WURTTEMBERG 



857 



nit, o9, leather, cotton and linen fabrics, beer, wine and 

The chief commercial cities are Stuttgart, Ulm, Heflbconn and rried- 
richsnafen. The book trade of Stuttgart, called the Leipzig of South 
Germany, is very extensive. 

Communications. — In 1907 there were 13 19 m. of railways, of which 
all except 159 m. belonged to the state. The Neckar, the Schustcn 
and the lake of Constance are all navigable for boats; the Danube 
begins to be navigable at Ulm. The roads of Wurttemberg are 
fairly good: the oldest of them are Roman. Wurttcmberf. like 
Bavaria, retained the control of its own postal and telegraph service 
on the foundation of the new German empire. 

Constitution.— Wtirttemberg is a constitutional monarchy and 
a member of the German empire, with four votes in the federal 
council (Bundesrat), and seventeen in the imperial diet. The 
constitution rests on a law of 1&19, amended in 1868, in 1874, and 
again in 1906 The crown is hereditary, and conveys the simple 
title of king of Wurttembcrg. The king receives a civil list of 
£103.227 The legislature is bi-cameral. The upper chamber 
(Standcskerren) is composed of adult princes of the blood, heads 
of noble families from the rank of count {Graf) upwards, repre- 
sentatives of territories (Standeskerrsckajten), which possessed 
votes in the old German imperial diet or in the local diet; it has 
also members (not more than 6) nominated by the king, 8 
members of knightly rank, 6 ecclesiastical dignitaries, a repre- 
sentative of the university of Tubingen, and 1 of the technical 
high school of Stuttgart, a representatives of commerce and 
industry, a of agriculture, and 1 of handicrafts. The lower 
house (Abgeordneicnkaus) has 92 members, viz. a representa- 
tive from each of the administrative divisions (Obcramlsbctirke), 
63 in all without Stuttgart, which has 6 representatives; also 
1 60m each of the six chief provincial towns, and 17 members 
elected by the two electoral divisions (JLandcswaMkrcise) into 
which the kingdom is divided. The latter class of members 
as well as those for Stuttgart are elected on the principle of 
proportional representation. The king appoints the president 
of the upper chamber; since 1874 the lower chamber has 
elected its own chairman. Members of both booses must be 
over twenty-five years of age, and parliaments are elected for six 
years; the suffrage is enjoyed by all male citizens over twenty- 
five years of age, and voting is by ballot. 

The highest executive is in the bands of a ministry of state 
(StaatsminisUrium), consisting of six ministers respectively of 
Justice, foreign affairs (with the royal household, railways, posts 
sad telegraphs), the interior, public worship and education, war 
and finance. There is also a privy council, consisting of the 
ministers and some nominated councillors (unrklickc Staaisrdte), 
who advise the- sovereign at his command. The judges of a 
special supreme court of justice, called the Slcalsgtricktskof 
(which is the guardian of the constitution), are partly elected 
by the chambers and partly appointed by the king. Each of the 
chambers has the right to impeach the ministers. The country 
is divided into four governmental departments (Kreise) and 
subdivided into sixty-four divisions (Obercmtsbczirke), each of 
which b under a headman (Oberamtmann) assisted by a local 
council (Amtsvcrsammtung). At the head of each of the four 
departments is a government (Regierung). 

Religion.— The right of direction over the churches resides in the 
king, who has also, so long as he belongs to the Protestant Church, 
the guardianship of the spiritual rights of that Church. The Pro- 
testant Church is controlled (under the minister of religion' and 
education) by a consistory and a synod— the former consisting of a 
president. 9 councillors and 6 general superintendents or " prelates " 
from she principal towns, and the latter of a representative council, 
including both lay and clerical members. The Roman Catholic 
Church is subject to the bishop of Rottenburg, in the archdiocese 
of Freiburg. Politically it is under a Roman Catholic council, 
appointed By government. The Tews also, since 1828, have been 
subject to a state-appointed council (Oberkirckembekirde). 

Education. — According to official returns there is not an individual 
in the kingdom above the age of ten years who cannot both read and 
write. The higher branches of learning are provided in the uni- 
versity of Tubingen, in the technical high school (with academic 
rank) of Stuttgart, the veterinary high school at Stuttgart, the 
co mm er ci al coflege at Stuttgart, and the agricultural college of 
Hohenheim. There are gymnasia and other schools in aft the larger 
towns, while every commune has a school. There are numerous 
schools and colleges for women. There is also t school of viticulture 
at Weinsberf. 



Army.— By terms of the convention of 1871 the troops of Wurttem- 
bcrg form the XI! 1. array corps of the imperial German army. 

Finances.— The state revenue for 1909-1910 was estimated at 
£4340.520, which n nearly halanrH by the expenditure. About 
one-third of the revenue is derived from railways, forests and mines; 
about £1,400,000 from direct taxation; and the remainder from in- 
direct taxes, the post-office and sundry items. In 1909 the public 
debt amounted to £29,285.335, of which more than £27,000,000 was 
incurred for railway construction. Of the expenditure over £900,000 
is spent upon public worship and education, and over £1,200,000 
goes in interest and repayment of the national debt. To the treasury 
of the German empire the kingdom contributed £660,000. 

Authokities.— See Wurtiembergucke Jakrbucker fUr Statistik und 
Landesknnde, Das Kontrreuk Wurttemberg, tint Besckreibung nock 
Kreisen, OberduUeru una Gemeinden (Stuttgart. 1904) ; Statistisckes 
Handbuck fur das Kdntrrcuk WurUemberi (Stuttgart, 1885 fol.); 
Das Kdntgretck WurUemberi, erne Besckreibung von Land, Votk und 
Stoat (1893): the Jakresbenckte der Hamlets- und Gewerbekammem 
m WtrUemberg; Lang, Die EntwtcJtetunj der Bceotkerung Wurttem. 
bergs im Laufe des lateu Jakrhtmderts (Tubingen, 1903); Engel and 
Schulxe. GeognosHcker Wegweiser durck Wurttemberg (Stuttgart, 
1908); Goa, Slaatsreckt des Konigretcks WArttemberg (Tabingen, 
1906) ; and F Bitter. Regierung und Stdnde in Wurttemberg (Stutt- 
gart, 1882). 

History.— The origin of the name Wurttemberg is uncertain, 
but the once popular derivation from Winh am Berg is now 
universally rejected. Some Authorities derive it from a proper 
name, Wiruto or Wirtino; others from a Celtic place-name, 
Virolunum or Verdunum. At all events from being the name of 
a castle near the village of Rothenberg, not far from Stuttgart, 
it was extended over the surrounding country, and as the lords 
of this district increased their possessions so the name covered 
an ever-widening area, until it reached its present denotation. 
Early forms of it are Wirtenberg, Wirtembenc and Wirtcnberc 
Wirtcmberg was long current, and in the latter part of the 16th 
century Wurtemberg and Wurttemberg appeared. In 1806 
Wurttemberg was adopted as the official spelling, though 
Wurtemberg is also common and occurs sometimes in official 
documents and even on coins issued after that date. 

As far as we know, the first inhabitants of the country were the 
Celts, and then the Suebi. In the 1st century A.D. the Romans 
conquered the land and defended their position there by a ram- 
part (limes). Early in the 3rd century the Alamanni drove the 
Romans beyond the Rhine and the Danube, but in their turn 
they were conquered by the Franks under Clovis, the decisive 
battle being fought in 406. For about four hundred years the 
district was part of the Prankish empire, being administered by 
counts, but in the 9th century h was incorporated with the 
German duchy of Swabia. The duchy of Swabia was ruled by 
the Hohenstaufen family until the death of Conradin in 1268, 
when a considerable part of H fell to the count of Wurttemberg, 
the representative of a family first mentioned about 1080, a 
certain Conrad von Beutelsbach, having called himself after his 
ancestral castle of Wurttemberg. The earliest count about 
whom anything is known is one Ulrich, who ruled from 1241 
to 1265. He was marshal of Swabia and advocate of the town 
of Ulm, and had large possessions in the valleys of the Neckar 
and the Rem*. Under his sons, Ulrich II. and Eberbard I., and 
their successors the power of the family grew steadily. Eberbard 
(d. 1325) was the opponent, and not always the unsuccessful 
one, of three German kings; he doubled the area of his county 
and transferred his residence from Wurttemberg to Stuttgart. 
His successors were not perhaps equally important, but all 
added something to the area of Wurttemberg. The lands of 
the family were several times divided, but in 1482 they were 
declared indivisible and were united under Count Eberbard V., 
called im Bart. This arrangement was confirmed by the German 
king, Maximilian L, and the imperial diet in 1495- 

Eberbard was one of the meet energetic rulers that Wurttem- 
berg ever had, and in 149$ his county was raised to the rank of 
duchy. Dying in 1406, he was succeeded by bis cousin, Duke 
Eberbard II., who, however, was deposed after a short reign of 
two years, Tbelongrdgn (1408-1550) of Ulrich I., who succeeded 
to the duchy while still a child, was a most eventful period for 
the country, and many traditions cluster round the name of this 
gifted, unscrupulous and ambitious man* The extortions by 



858 



WURTTEMBERG 



which he sought to raise money for his extravagant pleasures 
excited a rising known as that of the armc Konrad (poor Conrad ) , 
not unlike the rebellion in England led by Wat Tyler; order was 
soon restored, and in 15x4 by the treaty of Tubingen, the people 
undertook to pay the duke's debts in return for various political 
privileges, which in effect laid the foundation of the constitutional 
liberties of the country. A few years later Ulrich quarrelled 
with the Swabian League, and its forces, helped by William IV., 
duke of Bavaria, who was angered by the treatment meted out 
by Ulrich to his wife Sabina, a Bavarian princess, invaded 
WUrttemberg, expelled the duke and sold his duchy to the 
emperor Charles V. for 220,000 gulden. Charles handed over 
Wilrttemberg to his brother, the German king, Ferdinand I., 
who was its nominal ruler for a few years. Soon, however, the 
discontent caused by the oppressive Austrian rule, the disturb- 
ances in Germany leading to the Peasants' War and the commo- 
tions aroused by the Reformation gave Ulrich an opportunity 
to recover it. Aided by Philip, landgrave of Hesse, and other 
Protestant princes, he fought a victorious battle against Fer- 
dinand's troops at Lauffcn in May 1534, and then by the treaty 
of Cadan he was again recognized as duke, but was forced to 
accept his duchy as an Austrian fief. He now introduced the 
reformed doctrines and proceeded to endow Protestant churches 
and schools throughout his land. Ulrich's connexion with the 
league of Schmalkalden led to another expulsion, but in 1547 he 
was reinstated by Charles V., although on somewhat onerous 
terms. 

Ulrich's son and successor, Christopher (1 51 5-1568), completed 
the work of converting his subjects to the reformed faith. He 
introduced a system of church government, the Crosse Kirchen- 
ordnung, which has endured in part to the present day. In this 
reign a standing commission was established to superintend 
the finances, and the members of this body, all of whom belonged 
to the upper classes, gained considerable power m the state, 
mainly at the expense of the towns. Christopher's son Louis, 
the founder of the Collegium illusirc, died childless in 1593 and 
was succeeded by a kinsman, Frederick I. (1557-1608). This 
energetic prince, who disregarded the limits placed to his 
authority by the rudimentary constitution, by paying a large 
sum of money, induced the emperor Rudolph IX. in 1599 to free 
the duchy from the suzerainty of Austria. Thus once again 
WUrttemberg became a. direct fief of the Empire. Unlike his 
predecessor, the next duke, John Frederick (1582-X628), was 
not allowed to become an absolute ruler, but was forced to 
recognize the checks on his power. During this reign, which 
ended in July 1628, Wurttemberg suffered severely from the 
Thirty Years' War, although the duke himself took no part 
in it. His son and successor Eberhard III. (1614-1674), however, 
plunged into it as an ally of France and Sweden as soon as he 
came of age in 1633, but after the battle of NoitUingen in 1634 
the duchy was occupied by the imperialists and he himself was 
for some years an exile. He was restored by the peace of West- 
phalia, but it was to a depopulated and impoverished country, 
and he spent his remaining years in efforts to tcpair the disasters 
of the great war. During the reign of Eberhard IV (1676-1733), 
who was only one year old when his father Duke William Louis 
died in 1677, Wilrttemberg made the acquaintance of another 
destructive enemy. In 1688, 1703 and 1707 the French entered 
the duchy and inflicted brutalities and sufferings upon the 
inhabitants. The sparsely populated country afforded a welcome 
to the fugitive Waldenses, who did something to restore it to 
prosperity, but this benefit was partly neutralized by the extrava- 
gance of the duke, anxious to provide It the expensive tastes 
of his mistress, Christiana Wilhelmina voj Gravcnitz. Charles 
Alexander, who became duke in 1733, had embraced the Roman 
Catholic faith while an officer in the Austrian service. His 
favourite adviser was the Jew Suss Oppenheimer, and it was 
thought that master and servant were aiming at the suppression 
of the diet and the introduction of the Roman Catholic religion. 
However, the sudden death of Charles Alexander in March 1737 
flytjin abrupt end to these plans, and the regent, Charles Rudolph 
9 fWrtteinberg-Ncuenstadt, had Oppenheimer hanged. 



Charles Eugene (17 28-1 703), who came of age in 1744, was 
gifted, but vicious and extravagant, and he soon fell into the 
hands of unworthy favountes. He spent a great deal of money 
in building palaces at Stuttgart and elsewhere, and took the 
course, unpopular to his Protestant subjects, of fighting against 
Prussia dunng the Seven Years' War. His whole reign was 
disturbed by dissensions between the ruler and the ruled, the 
duke's irregular and arbitrary methods of raising money arousing 
great discontent. The intervention of the emperor and even of 
foreign powers was invoked, and in 1770 a formal arrangement 
removed some of the grievances of the people. But Charles 
Eugene did not keep his promises, although in his old age he 
made a few further concessions. He died childless, and was 
succeeded by one brother, Louis Eugene (d. 1795), and then 
by another, Frederick Eugene (d. 1797) This latter prince, 
who had served in the army of Frederick the Great, to whom be 
was related by marriage, educated his children in the Protestant 
faith. Thus, when his son Frederick II became duke in 1797, the 
ruler of WUrttemberg was again a Protestant, and the royal house 
has adhered to this faith since that date. During Frederick 
Eugene's short reign the French invaded WUrttemberg, com- 
pelled the duke .to withdraw his troops from the imperial army 
and to pay a sum of money. 

Frederick II. (1754-1816), a prince whose model was Frederick 
the Great, took part in the war against France in defiance of the 
wishes of his people, and when the French again invaded and 
devastated the country he retired to Erlangen, where he re- 
mained until after the conclusion of the peace of LuneVille in 
1801 By a private treaty with France, signed in March 1802, 
he ceded his possessions on the left bank of the Rhine, receiving 
in return nine imperial towns, among them Reutlingen and Heil- 
bronn, and some other territories, amounting altogether to 
about 850 sq. m. and containing about 124,000 inhabitants. 
He also accepted from Napoleon the title of elector. These new 
districts were not incorporated with the duchy, but remained 
separate, they were known as New Wurttemberg and were 
ruled without a diet. In 1805 WUrttemberg took up aims on the 
side of France, and by the peace of Prcssburg in December 1805 
the elector was rewarded with various Austrian possessions in 
Swabia and with other lands in the neighbourhood. On the 
1st of January 1806 Frederick assumed the title of king, abrogated 
the constitution and united old and new WUrttemberg. Sub- 
sequently he placed the property of the church under the control 
of the state. In 1806 he joined the Confederation of the Rhine 
and received further additions of territory containing 160,000 
inhabitants; a little later, by the peace of Vienna in October 
1809, about izo,ooo more persons were placed under his rule. 
In return for these favours Frederick joined Napoleon in his 
campaigns against Prussia, Austria and Russia, and of 16,000 of 
his subjects who marched to Moscow only a few hundreds re- 
turned. Then after the battle of Leipzig he deserted the waning 
fortunes of the French emperor, and by a treaty made with 
Mettenuch at Fulda in November 18x3 he secured the confirma- 
tion of his royal title and of his recent acquisitions of territory, 
while his troops marched with those of the allies into France. 
In 181 5 the king joined the Germanic Confederation, but the 
congress of Vienna made no change in the extent of his lands. 
In the same year he laid before the representatives of his people the 
sketch of a new constitut ion, but this was rejected, and in the midst 
of the commotion Frederick died on the 30th of October 18x6. 

At once the new king, William I., took up the consideration 
of this question and after much discussion a new constitution 
was granted in September 181 9. This is the constitution which, 
with subsequent modifications, is still in force, and it is described 
in an earlier section of this article. A period of quietness now 
set in, and the condition of the kingdom, its education, its 
agriculture and its trade and manufactures, began to receive 
earnest attention, while by frugality, both in public and in private 
matters, King William helped to repair the shattered finances of 
the country. But the desire for greater political freedom had 
not been entirely satisfied by the constitution of 1819, and after 
1830 there was a certain amount of unrest. This, however. 



WURTZ 



859 



man passed away, white trade was fostered by the mdusioa of 
Wurttemberg in the German Zollverein end by the construction 
of railways. The revolutionary movement of 1848 did not leave 
Wurttemberg untouched, although no actual violence took 
place within the kingdom. The king was compelled to dismiss 
Johannes ScbJayer (1793-1860) and his other ministers, and to call 
to power men with more liberal ideas, the exponents of the 
idea of a united Germany. A democratic constitution was pro- 
claimed, but as soon as the movement had spent its force the liberal 
ministers were dismissed, and in October 1849 Schlayer and his 
associates were again in power. By interfering with popular 
electoral rights the king and his ministers succeeded in assembling 
a servile diet in 1851, and this surrendered ajl the privileges 
gained since 1848. In this way the constitution of 28x9 was 
restored, and power passed into the hands of a bureaucracy. Al- 
most the last act of William's long reign was to conclude a 
concordat with the Papacy, but this was repudiated by the 
diet, which preferred to regulate the relations between church 
and state in its own way. 

In Jury 1864 Charles I. (1823-1S01) succeeded his father 
William as king and had almost at once to face considerable 
difficulties. In the duel between Austria and Prussia for supre- 
macy in Germany, William I. had consistently taken the part of 
the former power, and this policy was equally acceptable to the 
new king and his advisers. In 1866 Wurtteinberg took up arms 
on behalf of Austria, but three weeks after the battle of Kdnig- 
gratx her troops were decisively beaten at Tauberbischofsheim, 
and the country was at the mercy of Prussia. The Prussians 
occupied the northern part of Wurtteinberg and peace was made 
in August 1866; by this Wurttemberg paid an indemnity of 
8,000,000 gulden, but at once concluded a secret offensive and 
defensive treaty with her conqueror. 

The end of the struggle was followed by a renewal of the 
democratic agitation in Wurttemberg, but this had achieved no 
tangible results when the great war between France and Prussia 
broke out in 1870. Although the policy of Wurttemberg had 
continued antagonistic to Prussia, the country shared in the 
national enthusiasm which swept over Germany, and its troops 
took a creditable part in the battle of Worth and in other opera- 
tions of the war. In 1871 Wurttemberg became a member of 
the new German empire, but retained control of her own post 
office, telegraphs and railways. She bad also certain special 
privileges with regard to taxation and the army, and for the next 
ten years the policy of Wurttemberg was one of enthusiastic 
loyalty to the new order. Many important reforms, especially 
in the realm of finance, were introduced, but a proposal for a 
onion of the railway system with that of the rest of Germany was 
rejected. Certain reductions in taxation having been made in 
r 880, the reform of the constitution became the question of the 
hour The king and his ministers wished to strengthen the con- 
servative element in the chambers, but only slight reforms were 
effected by the laws of 1874. 1876 and 1879. *• more thorough 
settlement being postponed. On the 6th of October 1891 King 
Charles died suddenly, and was succeeded by his cousin William 
II. (b 1848), who continued the policy of his predecessor. The 
reform of the constitution continued to be discussed, and the 
election of 1895 was memorable because of the return of a power- 
ful party of democrats. King William had no sons, nor had 
his only Protestant kinsman, Duke Nicholas (1833-1903), 
consequently the succession would ultimately pass to a Roman 
Catholic branch of the family, and this prospect raised up certain 
difficulties about the relations between church and state The 
heir to the throne in 19 10 was the Roman Catholic Duke Albert 
(b 1865). 

Between 1900 and 1910 the poHtical history of Wurttemberg 
centred round the settlement of the constitutional and the 
educational questions. The constitution was revised in 1006 
on the lines already indicated, and a settlement of the education 
difficulty was brought about in 1009. In 1004 the railway 
system was united with that of the rest of Germany. 

For the history of WQrttctnbcrjr we the XVirttembtrgisckes Ur- 
kundenbmh (Stuttgart, 1649-1907). and the Darsteilungen ant der 



wtrUemberguchtn Gesekukte Stuttgart, 1904 foL). Histories are 
those of P. F. Stalin. Geukichte WuVttembergs (Gotha, 1882-1887); 
E. Schneider, WmrUembergiuhe Geukukte (Stuttgart, 1896); Bel- 
schner, Geschickte von Wurttemberg s» Wort und Bild (Stuttgart, 
1903); Wetter, Wurttemberg in der deutscken Gcsckichtc (Stuttgart, 
1900); K. V. Fricker and Th. von Gesslcr, Gesekiekte der Verfassung 
WurtUmbcrt* (Stuttgart, 1869); Hieber, Die wurUembergiseke 
Verjassungsreferm von 1006 (Stuttgart, 1906); and R. Schraid. 
Xeformationsgesckiekte WirUembergs (Hdlbronn, 1904). See also 
Golther. Der Stoat und die katkoliscke Kirch* im Konigreiek Wurttem- 
berg (Stuttgart, 1874); B. Kaisser, Gesekiekte des Vdksschutwesens 
in wurttemberg (Stuttgart, 1895-1897): Bartens, Die wirtsckaftiicke 
Entmckelung da Komgreicks Wirttemberg (Frankfort, 1901); W. 
yon Heyd, Bibliogmphte der w&rttembergiscken Cesckickle (1895- 
1896). Band iii. by Th. Schon (1907); D. Schafer, Wwttembtrtucme 
GesekuktsgueUen (Stuttgart. 1894 fol.); and A. Pfister, Kdnig 
Friednck von Wurttemberg und seine ZeU (Stuttgart, 1888). 

WURTZ, CHARLES ADOLPHB (1817-1884), French chemist, 
was born on the 26th of November 18x7 at Wolfisheim, near 
Strassburg, where his father was Lutheran pastor. When he 
left the Protestant gymnasium at Strassburg in 1834, his father 
allowed him to study medicine as next best to theology. He 
devoted himself specially to the chemical side of bis profession 
with such success that in 1839 he was appointed " Chef des 
travaux chimiques" at the Strassburg faculty of medicine. 
After graduating there as M.D. in 1843, with a thesis on albumin 
and fibrin, he studied for a year under J. von Licbig at Giessen, 
and then went to Paris, where be worked in J. B. A. Dumas's 
private laboratory. In 1845 he became assistant to Dumas 
at the £cole de Medecine, and four years later began to give 
lectures on organic chemistry in his place. His laboratory at 
the ficole de Medecine was very poor, and to supplement it he 
opened a private one in 1850 in the Rue Garenciere; but soon 
afterwards the house was sold, and the laboratory had to be 
abandoned. In 1850 he received the professorship of chemistry 
at the new Institut Agronomique at Versailles, but the Institut 
was abolished in 1852. In the following year the chair of organic 
chemistry at the faculty of medicine became vacant by the 
resignation of Dumas and the chair of mineral chemistry and 
toxicology by the death of M. J. B. Orfila. The two were united, 
and Wurtz appointed to the new post. In 1866 he undertook 
the duties of dean of the faculty of medicine. In this position 
he exerted himself to secure the rearrangement and reconstruc- 
tion of the buildings devoted to scientific instruction, urging 
that in the provision of properly equipped teaching laboratories 
France was much behind Germany (see his report Les Hautes 
Etudes pratiques dans Us nrmersUis attemandes, 1870) In 
1875, resigning the office of dean but retaining the title of honor- 
ary dean, he became the first occupant of the chair of organic 
chemistry, which be induced the government to establish at the 
Sorbonne, but he had great difficulty in obtaining an adequate 
laboratory, and the building ultimately provided was not 
opened until after his death, which happened at Paris on the 
roth of May 1884. Wurtx was an honorary member of almost 
every scientific society in Europe. He was one of the founders 
of the Paris Chemical Society (1838), was its first secretary and 
thrice served as its president. In 1880 be was vice-president 
and in 1 88 1 president of the Academy, which he entered m 1867 
in succession toT. J. Peloute. He was made a senator in 1881. 

Wurtz's first published paper was on hypophosphorous acid (1842), 
and the continuation of his work on the acids of phosphorus (1845) 
resulted in the discovery of sulphophosphoric acid and phosphorus 
oxychtoride, as well as of copper hydride. But his original work 
was mainly in the domain of organic chemistry. Investigation of 
the cyanic ethers (1848) yielded a class of substances which opened 
out a new field in organic chemistry, for. by treating those ethers 
with caustic potash, he obtained methylamme, the simplest organic 
derivative of ammonia (1849), and later (1851) the compound ureas. 
In 1855, reviewing the various substances that had been obtained 
from glycerin, he reached the conclusion that glycerin is a body of 
alcoholic nature formed on the type of three molecules of water, as 
common alcohol is on that of one, and was thus led (1856) to the 
discovery of the glycols or diatomic alcohols, bodies similarly 
related to the double water type, This discovery he worked out 
very thoroughly in investigations of ethylene oxide and the poly- 
ethylene alcohols. The oxidation of the glycols led him to homo- 
logues of lactic acid, and a controversy about the constitution of 
the latter with H. Kofbe resulted in the discovery of many new facts 



86o 



WURZBURG--WURZEN 



and in a better understanding of the relation* between the oxy- 
and the amido-acids. In 1867 Wurtz prepared neurine synthetically 
by the action of trimethylamine on glycol-chlorhydrin, and in 1871 
he discovered aldol, pointing out its double character as at once an 
alcohol and an aldehyde. In addition to this list of some of the new 
substances he prepa r ed, reference may be made to his work on 
abnormal vapour densities. While working on the defines he noticed 
that a change takes place in the density of the vapour of amylene 
hydrochloride, hydrobromidc, &c, as the temperature is increased, 
and in the gradual passage from a gas of approximately normal 
density to one of half-normal density he saw a powerful argument in 
favour of the view that abnormal vapour densities, such as are 
exhibited by sal-ammoniac or phosphorus pentachloride, are to be 
explained by dissociation. From 1865 onwards he treated this 
question in several papers, and in particular maintained the dis- 
sociation of vapour of chloral hydrate, in opposition to H. Sainte- 
Claire Deville and M. Berthelot. 

For twenty-one years (1 852-1 872) Wurtz published in the Annates 
de chimie et de physique abstracts of chemical work done out of 
France. The publication of his great Dictionnaire de chimie pure 
it apptiquie, in which he was assisted by many other French 
chemists, was begun in 1869 and finished in 1878: two supple- 
mentary volumes were issued 1880-1886, and in 1802 the publication 
of a second supplement was begun. Among his books are Chimie 
tnidicale (1864), Learns iUmcntaircs de chimie mod/erne (1867), 
Theorie des atones dans la conception du monde (1874), La Thiorte 
atomique (1878), Proercs de I Industrie des maiieres caiorantes arti- 
ficiclles (1876) and fraiti de chimie biologique (1880-1885). His 
Histoire des doctrines chimiques, the introductory discourse to his 
Dictionnaire, but published separately in 1868, opens with the well- 
known dictum, " La chimie est une science franchise." 

For his life and work, with a list of his publications, see Charles 
Frisdel's memoir in the Bulletin de la SociiU Chimique (1885); also 
A. W. von Hofmann in the Ber. deuL chem. GcseUsch. (1887), re- 
printed in vol. iii. of his Zur Erinnerung an vorangegangene Freunde 
(1888). 

WtiRZBURG, a university town and episcopal see of Bavaria, 
Germany, capital of the province of Lower Franconia, situated 
on the Main, 60 m. by rail S.E. from Frankfort and at the junction 
of main lines to Bamberg and Nuremberg. Pop. (1905) 80,220. 
An ancient stone bridge (1474-1607), 650 ft. long and adorned 
with statues of saints, and two modern bridges, the Luitpold 
(1887) and the Ludwig (1804), connect the two parts of the town 
on each side of the river. On the lofty Leistenberg stands the 
fortress of Marienberg, which from 1261 to 1720 was the residence 
of the bishops. The main part of the town, on the right bank, 
is surrounded by shady promenades, the Ringstrasse and the 
quay. 

Wilrzburg is quaintly and irregularly built; many of the 
houses are interesting specimens of medieval architecture; and 
the numerous old churches recall the fact that it was long the 
capital of an ecclesiastical principality. The principal church 
is the imposing Romanesque cathedral, a basilica with transepts, 
begun in 1042 and consecrated in 1189. The four towers, how- 
ever, date from 1240, the (rococo) facade from 1711-17x9, and 
the dome f rom 1 73 1 . The spacious transepts terminate in apses. 
The exterior was restored in 188 2- 1883. The beautiful Marien- 
kapelle, a Gothic edifice of 1377-1441, was restored in 1856, 
it is embellished with twenty statues by Tilman Riemcn- 
schneider(d. 1531). The Haugcrstifts church, with two towers and 
a lofty dome, was built in the Italian Renaissance style in 1670- 
1691. The bones of St Kilian, the patron saint of Wtirzburg, 
are preserved in the NeumUnster church, which dates from the 
nth century; Walther von der Vogelweide is buried in the 
adjoining cloisters. The church of St Burkhard is externally 
one of the best-preserved architectural monuments in the city. 
It was built in 1033-1042, in the Romanesque style, and was 
restored in 1168. The Late Gothic choir dates from 1494-1497. 
The Neubaukirche, or university church, curiously unites a 
Gothic exterior with a Classical interior. The Protestant church 
of St Stephen (1 782-1789) originally belonged to a Benedictine 
abbey. Of the secular buildings in Wilrzburg the most con- 
spicuous is the palace, a huge and magnificent edifice built in 
17 20-1 744 in imitation of Versailles, and formerly the residence 
of the bishops and grand-dukes of Wilrzburg. The Julius 
hospital, a large and richly endowed institution affording food 
and lodging to 600 persons daily, was founded in 1576 by Bishop 
Julius T 'brunn (1545-1619). In 1906 it was 



arranged to convert this into a residential college for students, 
the hospital being removed to a site outside the town. The 
quaint town hall dates in part from 1456. Among the other 
chief buildings are the government offices, the law courts, the 
theatre, the Maxschule, the observatory and the various univer- 
sity buildings. 

A university was founded at Wilrzburg in 1403, but it only 
existed for a few years. The present university was founded 
by Bishop Julius in x 582. The medical faculty speedily became 
famous, and has remained the most important faculty in Wtirz- 
burg ever since. Here W. K. Rdntgen discovered the " Rdntgen 
rays. " in 1896. Wilrzburg was long the stronghold of Jesuitism 
in Germany, and the Roman Catholic theological faculty still 
attracts a large number of students. The university has a 
library containing 300,000 volumes, and is attended by about 
1400 students. In no other university city of Germany has so 
much of the medieval academic life been preserved. 

Wurzburg is surrounded by vineyards, which yield some of 
the best wine in Germany. Its principal industries are the 
manufacture of tobacco, furniture, machinery, scientific instru- 
ments and railway carriages. It has also breweries, and produces 
bricks, vinegar, malt and chocolate. 

The site of the Leistenberg was occupied by a Roman fort, 
and was probably fortified early in the 13th century. Wircc- 
birgum is the old Latin form of the name of the town; Hcrbi' 
polls (herb town) first appears in the x 2th century. The 
bishopric was probably founded in 741, but the town appears 
to have existed in the previous century. The first bishop was 
St Burkhard, and his successors soon acquired much temporal 
power; about the 12th century they had ducal authority in 
Eastern Franconia. It is not surprising that quarrels broke 
out between the bishops and the citizens, and the latter espoused 
the cause of the emperor Henry IV., while the former joined the 
emperor's foes. The struggle continued intermittently until 
1400, when the citizens were decisively defeated and submitted. 
Several imperial diets were held in Wtirzburg, chief among these 
being the one of 11 80 when Henry the Lion, duke of Saxony, 
was placed under the ban. 

By the peace of LuneviHe the bishopric was secularized, and 
in 1803 Wurzburg passed to Bavaria. The peace of Pressburg 
in x 805 transferred it, under the name of an electorate, to 
Ferdinand, formerly grand-duke of Tuscany, who joined the 
confederation of the Rhine and took the title of grand-duke 
of Wurzburg. In 18x5 the congress of Vienna restored Wurzburg 
to Bavaria. The Wurzburg Conference is the name given to the 
meeting of representatives of the smaller German states in 1859 
to devise some means of mutual support. The conference, 
however, had no result. Wurzburg was bombarded and taken 
by the Prussians in 1866, in which year it ceased to be a fortress. 
The bishopric of Wurzburg at one time embraced an area of 
about 1900 sq. m. and had about 250,000 inhabitants. A new 
bishopric of Wurzburg was created in 1817. 

For the town se* S, CtibT, Wrfrzburj;. Etn k*lfurkistorischet 
Stiidiebtid (.Wanfaurtf, i£<>cj)> j. Gramich, Vttfaisu*g. und Ver* 
— t'-nt dvr Stodl WuribME (MiJrzbure, 1BS2}; M. ' Yonthal, Die 
Wunbtirg im Eaucrnkrieee (VV unburn, 1887}, Ht-rfaer, Wurx- 
un/t sc^ne UttiptbtiHtrit (\Vurr.burg t 1B71); Becliu.arin, Fuhrct 



xturg (tqob); and HoklUndcr and Hester, Mcleristkes aus 
-jf [U Qntxirg, i0qSJ. For the univtrbiiy «* F. X. von 



Si 

far 

rfi 

Ai 

WcrcIc. Gcsfhttttte Jcr U'inttsit&t Wtinburg (Wflraburg, 1882). For 

the bishopric w.-c [ Hufm-inn, Die ftc&tgen und Sditfn des Bistttms 

Wfn&mri iWurfburK, 1 889)1 F J. B. SlammmKer and A. Aairhein, 

FtiMiOma jocrs, CtKkuktr dei Bwfams Wurtburg (Wurzburg, 

1889-190]); and T. 1 tenner, Die hersogjttke Gfvait <fc# Bisckofe ton 

Wurzburg (Wurzburg, 1874). 

WURZEN, a town of Germany in the kingdom of Saxony, on 
the Mulde, here crossed by two bridges, 1 s\ ». by rail NX. of 
Leipzig on the main line (via Riesa) to Dresden. Pop. (1005) 
17,212. It has a cathedral dating from the 12th century, a 
castle, at one time a residence of the bishops of Meissen and 
now utilized as law courts, several schools and an agricultural 
college. The industries comprise iron-founding, weaving and 
brewing, and the making of machinery, carpets, cigars, furniture, 
leather and paper. 



WUTTKE— WYAT, SIR THOMAS 



86 1 



■ Women vai founded by the Sorbs, and wit a town early in. the 
12th century, when Herwig, bishop of Meissen, founded a monastery 
here. In 1581 it passed to the elector of Saxony, and in the Thirty 
Yean' War was sacked by the Swedes. 

WUTTKE, KARL FREEDRICH ADOLF (1810-1870), German 
Protestant theologian, was born at Breslau on the ioLh of 
November 181 9. He studied theology at Breslau, Berlin and 
Halle,, where he eventually became professor ordinarius; and 
is known as the author of a treatise on Christian ethics {Hand' 
buck der christlichen SiUenlekre, 1860-1863, 3rd ed. 1874-1875; 
Eng. trans., New York, 1873) and works on heathen religion 
(Die GcsckichU des Heidenlums, 1851-1853) and superstition 
(Der deulsche Voiksabcrghube der Gc&nwart, 1865, and ed. 
1869). He diedon the 12th of April 1870. 

WYANDOT, or Huxon (q.v.) t a tribe of.N. American Indians 
of Iroquoian stock. When first met by the French early in the 
17th century, the Wyandots lived between Georgian Bay and 
Lake Simcoe, Ontario. They were then estimated at about 
10,000, scattered over twenty villages. They were continually 
the victims of raids on the part of their neighbours the Iroquoian 
league of six nations and the Sioux, being driven from place 
to place, and a dispersal in 1650 resulted in one section settling 
in Quebec, while others found their way to Ohio, where they 
fought for the English in the Wars of Independence and 1812. 
By a treaty made in 1817 the Utter section was granted 
territory in Ohio and Michigan, but the larger part of this was 
sold in 1810. In 184a they migrated to Kansas. In 1855 
many became citizens, the remainder being in 1867 removed to a 
reservation (now N.E. Oklahoma), numbering about 400 in 1005* 
The Hurons at Lorette, in Quebec, also number about 400. 

Sec Handbook of American Indians, ed. F. W. Hodge (Washington. 
1907)1 av. " Huron." 

WYAMDOfTB, a city of Wayne county, Michigan, USA., 
on the Detroit river, about 6 m. S. by W. of Detroit. Pop. 
(xooo) 5183, of whom 1267 were foreign-born; (1004) 5495; 
(1910) 8287. It is served by the Michigan Central, the Lake 
Snore ft Michigan Southern, the Detroit, Toledo ft Ironton,and 
(for freight only) the Detroit ft Toledo Shore Line railways, and 
by two interurban electric lines. Salt and limestone are found 
here and the dty has various manufactures. Wyandotte was 
first settled about 1820, was laid out as a town in 1854, and 
chartered as a dty in 1867. 

WYANDOTTE CAVE, a cave in Jennings township, Crawford 
county, Indiana, U.S.A., 5 m. N.E. of Leavenworth, an the 
Ohio river, and 12 m. from Corydon, the early territorial capital 
The nearest railway station is Milltown, 9 m. distant. The cave 
b in a nigged region of high limestone mils, in one of which its 
main entrance is found, 220 ft. above the level of the Blue 
river, whose original name, the Wyandotte, was transferred to 
the cave by Governor David Wallace; it having previously been 
styled the Mammoth Cave of Indiana, the Epsom Salts Cave, 
and the Indiana Saltpetre Cave. The exact date of discovery 
is not known; but early records show k to have been pre- 
empted by a Dr Adams in 181 2 for the manufacture of saltpetre, 
and his vats and hoppers are still to be seen. After the War of 
18x2 he relinquished his claim; and in 1819 the ground was 
bought from the United States government by Henry P. Roth- 
rock, whose heirs are its owners, The earliest account a in 
Flint's Geography (1831); the first official report of it was by 
Dr R. T. Brown (1831); and it was first mapped by the writer 
(1855), whose map was revised by John Collett, state geologist 
(1878). No instrumental survey has been made, nor have all 
its intricate windings been explored. Its known passages 
aggregate more than 24 m. in length, and 144 places are named 
as noteworthy. The Old Cave " contains the saltpetre works, 
and ends in a remarkable chamber exactly 144 ft. long and 56 ft. 
wide, in which stands the Pillar of the Constitution, a stalagmitic 
column perfectly cylindrical and 71 ft in circumference, entirely 
composed of crystalline carbonate of lime (satin-spar), fluted 
and snow-white. A cavity in the column was first claimed by 
H. C Hovcy as a prehistoric quarry, proved to be such by the 
stag horns and boulder, pounders found _m _hsjyidnity. His 



careful estimate of the rate of stalagmitic growth showed that 
1000 years would have been needed to form the lip now covering 
the incision. 

In the N. arm of the newer part of the cave, opened in 1850, is an 
immense room, styled Rothrock's Cathedral, 1000 ft. in circumference 
and 200 ft high, with a rugged central hill 135 ft. high, surmounted 
by statuesque stalagmites, near which is another quarry of sarin* 
spar with similar fragments, pounders 
and aboriginal reucs. When Mr 
Hovey visited this cave in 1855 he 
found many extinct torches, charcoal 
h poles and pounders, as wdl 



. numerous footprints, in the soft 
nitreous earth of certain 



which were left by 
previous to the coming of 



avenues, 
parties 
white 




In the Pillared Palace a number of 
large alabaster shafts had been thrown 
down and fragments carried away. 
Near by were so-called M bear- wallows, " 
which proved to be the remains of 
an aboriginal workshop, where masses 
of flint were broken into rectangular 
blocks; and spalls and flint-chips en- 
cumber the floor and choke the 
passage-way. Milroy's Temple is a 
magnificent room, 100 by 150 ft. in 
its dimensions. It contains many 
remarkable formations; and its dis- 
play of helictites, or twisted stalactites, 
Is unsurpassed. 

As Wyandotte Cave has no large 
streams and few pools or springs, its 
fauna and flora are not extensive. 
Formerly bears, wolves and other wild 
animals took refuge in its fastnesses; 
and bats, rats, mice and salamanders 
arc frequent visitors. Blind crawfish 
(Cambarus peBmtdus)inha.bit the Craw- 
fish Spring. Cave crickets (Hodenoec us 
subterronens) abound. A dosen kinds 
of insects, with a few varieties of 
spiders, flies and worms, complete 
the meagre Gst. The flora include 
mainly forms brought in from the 
outside. -"■"'J 

For more full descriptions of Wyandotte Cave and its contents,' 
see Hover's Celebrated American Caverns, pp. 123-153; Indiana 
State Geological Reports, by R. T Brown, E. T. Cox, John Collett 
and W. S. Blatchley; and concerning cave fauna reports and 
papers by CH. Eigenmaaa, professor of xoology, Indiana State 
University. ^^ (RCH.) 

WYANT, ALEXANDER H. (1836-1892), American artist, 
was born at Port Washington, Ohio, on the nth of January 
1836. He was a pupil of Hans Gude in Carlsruhe, Germany. 
A trip with a government exploring expedition in the West 
of America undermmed his health, and he painted mainly in 
the high altitudes of the Adirondack Mountains. He was elected 
a full member of the National Academy of Design, New York, 
in 1869, and died in New York City on the 20th of November 
1892. He was only moderately appreciated during his lifetime, 
though after his death his works were eagerly sought for. 

WYAT, SIR THOMAS (1503-1 542), English poet and states- 
man, elder son of Henry Wyat, or Wiat, afterwards knighted, 
and his wife Anne, daughter of John Skinner of Reigate, Surrey, 
was born at Allington Castle, near Maidstone, Rent, in 1503. 
His father (1460-1537) belonged to a Yorkshire family, but 
bought Allington about 1493. He was an adherent of the 
Lancastrian party, and was imprisoned and put to the torture 
by Richard IH. The family records (in the possession of the 
earl of Romney) relate that during his imprisonment he was saved 
from starvation by a cat that brought him pigeons. At the 
accession of Henry VTL he became knight of the Bath (1509), 
knight banneret (1513) and held various offices at court. His 
son, Thomas Wyat, was admitted at St John's ColIege,Cambridge, 
when about twelve years of age, took his B.A. degree in 15 18, 
and proceeded M.A. in 1522. The vague statement of Anthony 
a Wood (Aiken, Oxon. I. 124), that he was transferred to Oxford 
to attend Wobcy's new college there, has no foundation In fact.' 
He married very early Elisabeth Brooke, daughter of the 3rd 



862 



WYAT, SIR THOMAS 



Lord Cobham, The marriage was an unhappy one, for a letter 
(20th March 1537) from the lady's brother to Thomas Cromwell 
complains that Wyat had gone abroad and made no provision 
(or his wife, and a letter from the Spanish ambassador Chapuys 
to Charles V. (9th Feb. 1542) speaks of her having been re- 
pudiated by her husband. As early as 15x6 Wyat was server 
extraordinary to the king, and in 1524 he was at court as keeper 
of the king's jewels. He was one of the champions in the 
Christmas tournament of 1525. His father had been associated 
with Sir Thomas Boleyn as constable of Norwich Castle, and he 
had thus been early acquainted with Anne Boleyn. He appears 
to have been generally regarded as her lover, but it is possible 
that the relations between them were merely of the fashionable 
poetic sort. In 1526 he was sent with Sir Thomas Cheney to 
Congratulate Francis I. on his safe return from Spain; in 1527 
he accompanied Sir John Russell, afterwards 1st earl of Bedford, 
on an embassy to the papal court. He was sent by Russell, 
who was incapacitated by a broken leg, to negotiate with the 
Venetian republic. On his return journey to Rome he was 
taken prisoner by the Spanish troops, who demanded 3000 ducats 
for his ransom, but he contrived to escape. In 1528 he was 
acting as high marshal at Calais with a salary of two shillings per 
day, and was only superseded in November 1530. During the 
following years he was constantly employed in Henry's service, 
and was apparently high in his favour. He was, however, sent 
to the Tower in 1536, perhaps because it was desired that he 
should incriminate the queen. His father's correspondence with 
Cromwell does not suggest that his arrest had anything to do 
with the proceedings against Anne Boleyn, but the connexion 
is assumed {Letters and Papers of Henry VIII, vol. x. No. 9x9) 
in the letters of John Hussey to Lord Lisle, deputy of Calais. 
The Roman Catholic writer, Nicholas Harpsneld, makes a 
circumstantial statement {Pretended Divorce . . . Camden Sec 
p. 253) that Wyat had confessed his intimacy with Anne to 
Henry VIII. and warned him against marrying her; but tins, 
in view of his continued favour, seems highly improbable. He 
was released after a month's imprisonment, and in the autumn 
of that year took part in the suppression of the Lincolnshire 
rising. In March 1537 he was knighted, and a month later was 
sent abroad as ambassador to Charles V., whose ill-will had been 
revived by the declaration of the illegitimacy of the princess 
Mary. In 1 538 he was joined by Edmund Bonner, then a simple 
priest, and one Simon Haynes, and seems to have been ashamed 
of their bad manners, and to have offended them in various ways. 
Bonner had evidently been desired by Thomas Cromwell to send 
his own account of the negotiations. He wrote to Cromwell 
(2nd Sept. 1538) a long letter (Pctyt MS. 47. Middle Temple; 
first printed in the Gentleman's Magasine, June 1850) in which he 
accused Wyat of disloyalty to the king's interests, and of many 
personal slights to himself. Wyat was unsuccessful in the 
difficult affairs entrusted to him, but so long as Cromwell ruled 
he had a firm friend at court, and no notice was taken of Bonner's 
allegations. Cromwell even seems to have taken some care of 
his private affairs, which were left in considerable disorder. He 
was recalled in April 1539, but later in the same year he was 
employed on another embassy to the emperor, who was on his 
way to the Low Countries. After Cromwell's death Wyat's 
enemies renewed their attacks, and he was imprisoned (17th 
Jan. 1541) in the Tower on the old charges, with the additional 
accusation of treasonable correspondence with Cardinal Reginald 
Pole. Being privately informed of the nature of the charges, 
he prepared an eloquent and manly defence of his conduct in two 
documents addressed to the Privy Council and to his judges, in 
which he cleared himself effectually and exposed his accusers' 
motives. He was released at the intercession of the queen, 
Catherine Howard, on condition that he confessed his guilt and 
took back his wife, from whom he had been separated for fifteen 
years, on pain of death if he were thenceforth untrue to her (see 
Chapuys to Charles V., March 1541). He received a formal 
pardon on the 21st of March, and received during the year 
substantial marks of the king's favour. In the summer of the 
next year he was sent to Falmouth to meet the ambassadors 



of the emperor. The heat brought on a fever to whlrb he 
succumbed at Sherborne, Dorset, on the xith of October. A 
Latin elegy on his death was written by his friend John Leland, 
" Naenia in mortem Thomae Viati equitis incomparabilis "; 
and Henry Howard, earl of Surrey, celebrated his memory in 
some well-known lines beginning "Wyat resteth here, t^*f 
quick could never rest," and in two sonnets. 

Wyat's work falls readily into two divisions: the sonnets, 
rondeaus, and lyric poems dealing with love; and the satires and 
the version of the penitential psalms. The love poems probably 
date from before his first imprisonment. A large number were 
published in 1557 in Songes and Sonettes {TeiteFs Miscellany). 
Wyat's contributions number 96 out of a total of 3x0. These 
have been supplemented from MSS. He was the pioneer of the 
sonnet in England, and the acknowledged leader of the " company 
of courtly makers who . . . having travailed in Italic and there 
tasted the sweet and stately measures and stile of the Italian 
Poesie, as novices newly crept out of the schooles of Dante, 
Arioste and Petrarche, greatly pollished our rude and homely 
maner of vulgar Poesie, from that it had been before " (Putten- 
ham's Art of English Poesie, 1589).' Wyat wrote in all thirty-one 
sonnets, ten of which are direct translations of Petrarch. The 
sentiment is strained and artificial. Wyat shows to greater 
advantage in his lyrical metres, in his epigrams and songs, 
especially in those written' for music,' where he is less hampered 
by the conventions of the Petrarcan tradition, to which his 
singularly robust and frank nature was ill-fitted. His thought is 
generally far in advance of his technical skill, and his disciple 
Surrey has been far more widely recognised, chiefly because of the 
superior smoothness of his versification. His works are preserved 
in a MS. in possession of the Harrington family, which 
originally belonged to Wyat himself, and in another belonging 
to the duke of Devonshire in which are inscribed the named of 
Wyat's sister, Margaret Lee, and of the duchess of Richmond, 
Surrey's sister. The text differs considerably from Tottd's, 
which has been generally adopted. Wyat wrote three excellent 
satires—" On the mean and sure estate," dedicated to John Foins, 
" Of the Courtier's Life," to the same, and " How to use the 
court and himself." They are written in tena rima and in form 
and matter owe much to Luigi AlamannL In the " Penitential 
Psalms " each is preceded by a prologue describing the circum- 
stances under which the psalmist wrote, and the psalms them- 
selves are very freely paraphrased, with much original matter 
from the author. They were published in 1549 by Thomas 
Raynald and John Harrington as Certayne Psalmes .. . . drawn 
into English meter by Sir Thomas Wyat Knyght. 

None of Wyat's other poems were printed until fifteen years after 
his death, in Songes and Sonettes. The standard edition of his work* 
is that by Dr G. T. Nott, forming the second volume (1816) of Tke 
Works of Henry Howard, Earl of Surrey, and of Sir Thomas Wyat tke 
Elder, with an exhaustive memoir. Some family papers, now in 
the possession of the earl of Romney, were collected by Richard 

•• — --•- yafBotlty 
f Giurdner, 



Wyat in 1727. Some use of these is made in Tke History of Betley 
[), by J. Cave Browne. See also Brewer and Gairdner, 
Voters of Henry VIII. (especially from 1536 to 1542): 

The Poetiral Works of Sir Thomas Wyatt (1866), with a memoir in the 



Aldine Edition of the British Poets; Professor E. Arber's introductory 
matter to the edition of Songes and Sonnettes (1870) in his English 
Rt prints; R. Alscher, " Sir Thomas Wyatt ..." (1886), in Wiener 
Bettrige zur deutschen u. end. Philologie, giving a full account of 
Wyat's metrical practice; W. E. Stmonds, Sir Thomas Wyatt 
(Boston, 1889); W. J. Courthope, Hist of Eng. Poetry, vol. 0.(1897), 
the second chapter of which is devoted to a critical study of Wyat; 
E. FlOgel, " Die handschriftliche Uberiieferungder Gedichte von Sir 
Thomas Wyat," in Anglia, vol. xviii.; F. M. Padelford, Early 
Sixteenth Century Lyrics (1907). 

WYAT, SIR THOMAS (d. 1554), English conspirator, son of the 
preceding, was over twenty-one in 1543, but the date of his birth 
is uncertain. He is said to have accompanied his father on his 
mission to Spain, and to have been turned into an enemy of the 

1 Ed. J. Haslewood, Ancient Critical Essays, t. 48 (181 1). 

'One of the most musical of the pieces printed in his works, 
however, " The Lover complayneth the unlrindnes of his Love," 
beginning " My lute, awake," is sometimes attributed to George 
Boleyn. Lord Rochford (see E. Bapst, Deux Ce ntilth om mu poms 
J*h tour de Henri VIII, p. 142). 



WYATT— WYCHERLEY 



863 



Spaniards by the menaces of the Inquisition. In 1537 he 
married Jane, daughter of Sir William Hawte of Bishopsbourne 
in Kent, by whom he had ten children. Wyat was noted in his 
youth as dissipated, and even as disorderly. He is known to 
have had a natural son, whose mother Elisabeth was a daughter 
of Sir Edward Darrell of Littlccote. In 154a he inherited the 
family property of Allington Castle and Bozley Abbey on the 
death of his father. From 1543 to 15 50 he saw service abroad as 
a soldier. In 1 5 54 he joined with the conspirators who combined 
to prevent the marriage of Queen Mary with Philip the prince of 
Spain, afterwards Ring Philip II. A general movement was 
planned; but his fellow-conspirators were timid and inept, 
the rising was serious only in Kent, and Wyat became a formid- 
able rebel mostly by accident. On the 22nd of January 1554 
he summoned a meeting of his friends at his castle of Allington, 
and the 25th was fixed for the rising. On the 26th Wyat occupied 
Rochester, and issued a proclamation to the county. The 
country people and local gentry collected, but at first the queen's 
supporters, led by Lord Abergavenny and Sir Robert Southwell, 
the sheriff, appeared to be able to suppress the rising with ease, 
gaining some successes against isolated bands of the insurgents. 
But the Spanish marriage was unpopular, and Kent was more 
affected by the preaching of the reformers than most of the 
country districts of England. Abergavenny, and Southwell 
were deserted by their men, who either disbanded or went over to 
Wyat. A detachment of the London train-bands sent against 
him by Queen Mary, under the command of the duke of Norfolk, 
followed their example. The rising now seemed so formidable 
that a deputation was sent to Wyat by the queen and council 
to ask for his terms. He insisted that the Tower should be 
surrendered to him, and the queen put under his charge. The 
insolence of these demands caused a reaction in London, where 
the reformers were strong and were at first in sympathy with him. 
When he reached Southwark on the 3rd of February he found 
London Bridge occupied in force, and was unable to penetrate 
into the city. He was driven from Southwark by the threats of 
Sir John Brydges (or Bruges), afterwards Lord Chandos, who 
was prepared to fire on the suburb with the guns of the Tower. 
Wyat now marched up the river to Kingston, where he crossed 
the Thames, and made his way to Ludgate with a part of his 
following. Some of his men were cut off. Others lost heart and 
deserted. His only hope was that a rising would take place, 
but the loyal forces kept order, and after a futile attempt to force 
the gate Wyat surrendered. He was brought to trial on the r 5th 
of March, and could make no defence. Execution was for a time 
delayed, no doubt in the hope that in order to save his life 
he would say enough to compromise the queen's sister Elizabeth, 
afterwards Queen Elizabeth, in whose interests the rising was 
supposed to have been made. But he would not confess enough 
to render her liable to a trial for treason. He was executed on the 
1 ith of April, and on the scaffold expressly cleared the princess 
of all complicity in the rising. His estates were afterwards partly 
restored to his son George, the father of the Sir Francis Wyat 
(<L 1644) who was governor of Virginia in 1621-26 and 1630- 
1642. A fragment of the castle of Allington is still inhabited 
as a farm-house, near Maidstone, on the bank of the Medway. 

See G. F. Nott, Works of Surrey and of Sir Thomas Wyat (1815); 
and Froudc, History of England. 

WYATT, JAKES (1746-1813), English architect, was born at 
Burton Constable in Staffordshire on the 3rd of August 1746. 
He was the sixth son of Benjamin Wyatt, a farmer, timber 
merchant and builder. At the age of fourteen his taste for 
drawing attracted the attention of Lord Bagot, newly appointed 
ambassador to the pope, who took him with him to Rome, where 
he spent five or six years in studying architecture. He returned 
to England in 1766, and gained his first great success by the 
adaptation for dramatic purposes of the Pantheon in Oxford 
Street, London (1772), a work which was destroyed by fire 
twenty years later. In 1776 he was made surveyor of West- 
minster Abbey, and in 1778 and the following years executed 
many important commissions at Oxford. 

During this earlier period Wyatt shared the prevailing 



contempt for Gothic architecture; thus the New Buildings at 
Magdalen College, Oxford, designed by him, formed part of a 
scheme, the plans for which are extant, which involved the 
demolition of the famous medieval quadrangle and cloisters. He 
built many country houses in the classic style, of whkh he proved 
himself a master. Gradually, however, he turned his attention 
to Gothic, the spirit of which, in spite of his diligent study of 
medieval models, he never understood. The result is still visible 
in such " Gothic " freaks as that at Ashridge Park, Hertfordshire, 
built for Lord Bridgewater to replace the ancient priory, and in 
the lamentable ° restorations," e.g. in Salisbury and Lichfield 
cathedrals, which earned for him even among contemporary 
archaeologists the title of " the Destroyer." Of these Gothic 
experiments the most celebrated was Fonthfll Abbey, built 
for Beckford (the eccentric author of Valkek), the great 
tower of which speedily collapsed, while much of the 
rest has been pulled down. None the less, Wyatt must be 
regarded as the pioneer of the "Gothic revival," while his 
general influence may be gauged by the fact that nearly every 
county and large town in England p o ss esses or po s se ss ed 
buildings by Jum. 

On the death of Sir William Chambers in 1706, he was 
appointed surveyor-general to the Board of Works. In 1785 he 
became a member of the Royal Academy, and during a mis- 
understanding between Benjamin West and the Academy, in 
1805, he filled the presidential office at the wish of King George 
III. He was killed by a fall from his carriage on the 4th of 
September 1813, and was buried in Westminster Abbey. His 
son, Benjamin Dean Wyatt (t775-»8so?), who succeeded him 
as surveyor of Westminster Abbey, was also an architect of some 
distinction. 

WYCHERLEY, WILLIAM (c. 1640-1 716), English dramatist, 
was born about 1640 at CKve, near Shrewsbury, where for 
several generations his family had been settled on a moderate 
estate of about t 6oo a year. Like Vanbrugh, Wycherley spent 
his early years in France, whither, at the age of fifteen, he was 
sent to be educated in the very heart of the " precious ** circle 
on the banks of the Charente. Wycheriey's friend, Major Pack, 
tells us that his hero " improved, with the greatest refinements," 
the M extraordinary talents" for which he was "obliged to 
nature/' Although the harmless affectations of the circle of 
Madame de Montausier, formerly Madame de Ramboufllet, 
are certainly not chargeable with the " refinements " of Wycher- 
iey's comedies— comedies which caused even his great admirer 
Voltaire to say afterwards of them, " II semble que les Anglais 
prennent trop de liberie et que les Franchises n'en prennent 
pas asses "—these same affectations seem to have been much 
more potent in regard to the " refinements " of Wycheriey's 
religion. 

Wycherley, though a man of far more intellectual power than 
b generally supposed, was a fine gentleman first, a responsible 
being afterwards. Hence under the manipulations of the 
heroine of the " Garland " he turned from the Protestantism 
of his fathers to Romanism — turned at once, and with the same 
easy alacrity as afterwards, at Oxford, he turned back to Pro- 
testantism under the manipulations of such an accomplished 
master in the art of turning as Bishop Barlow. And if, as 
Macaulay hints, Wycheriey's turning back to Romanism once 
more had something to do with the patronage and unwonted 
liberality of James II., this merely proves that the deity be 
worshipped was the deity of the " polite world " of his time- 
gentility. Moreover, as a professional fine gentleman, at a 
period when, as the genial Major Pack says, " the amours of 
Britain would furnish as diverting memoirs, if well related, as 
those of France published by Rabutin, or those of Nero's court 
writ by Fetronius," Wycherley was obliged to be a loose liver.' 
But, for all that, Wycheriey's sobriquet of " Manly Wycherley " 
seems to have been fairly earned by him, earned by that frank 
and straightforward way of confronting life which, according 
to Pope and Swift, characterized also his brilliant successor 
Vanbrugh. 

That effort of Wycheriey's to bring to Buckingham's notice 



86 4 



WYCHERLEY 



the case of Samuel Butler (so shamefully neglected by the court 
Butler had served) shows that the writer of even such heartless 
plays as The Country Wife may be familiar with generous im- 
pulses, while his uncompromising lines in defence of Buckingham, 
when the duke in his turn fell into trouble, show that the in- 
ventor of so shameless a fraud as that which forms the pivot of 
The Plain Dealer may in actual life possess that passion for 
fairplay which is believed to be a specially English quality. But 
among the "ninety-nine" religions with which Voltaire ac- 
credited England there is one whose permanency has never been 
shaken — the worship of gentility. To this Wycherley remained 
as faithful to the day of his death as Congreve himself. And, 
if his relations to that " other world beyond this," which the 
Puritans had adopted, were liable to change with his environ- 
ments, it was because that " other world " was really out of 
fashion altogether. 

» Wycherley's university career seems also to have been in- 
fluenced by the same causes. Although Puritanism had certainly 
not contaminated the universities, yet English "quality and 
politeness " (to use Major Pack's words) have always, since the 
great rebellion, been rather ashamed of possessing too much 
learning. As a fellow-commoner of Queen's College, Oxford, 
Wycherley only lived (according to Wood) in the provost's 
lodgings, being entered in the public library under the title of 
" Philosophiae Studiosus " in July 1660. And he does not seem 
to have matriculated or to have taken a degree. 
- Nor when, on quitting Oxford, he took up his residence in 
the Inner Temple, where he had been entered in 1659, did he 
give any more attention to the dry study of the law than was 
proper to one so warmly caressed " by the persons most eminent 
for their quality or politeness." Pleasure and the stage were 
alone open to him, and probably early in 167 1 was produced, 
at the Theatre Royal, Love in a Wood. It was published the next 
year. With regard to this comedy Wycherley told Pope — told 
him " over and over " till Pope believed him — believed him, 
at least, until they quarrelled about Wycherley's verses— that 
he wrote it the year before he went to Oxford. But we need 
not believe him: the worst witness against a man is mostly 
himself. To pose as the wicked boy of genius has been the 
foolish ambition of many writers, but on inquiry it will generally 
be found that these inkhorn Lotharios are not nearly so wicked 
as they would have us believe. When Wycherley charges 
himself with having written, as a boy of nineteen, scenes so 
callous and so depraved that even Barbara Palmer's appetite 
for profligacy was, if not satisfied, appeased, there is, we repeat, 
no need to believe him. Indeed, there is every reason to dis- 
believe bim, — not for the reasons advanced by Macaulay, how- 
ever, who in challenging Wycherley's date does not go nearly 
deep enough. Macaulay points to the allusions in the play to 
gentlemen's periwigs, to guineas, to the vests which Charles 
ordered to be worn at court, to the great fire, &c, as showing that 
the comedy could not have been written the year before the 
author went to Oxford. We must remember, however, that 
even if the play had been written in that year, and delayed in 
its production till 1672, it is exactly this kind of allusion to 
recent events which any dramatist with an eye to freshness of 
colour would be certain to weave into his dialogue. It is not 
that " the whole air and spirit of the piece belong to a period 
subsequent to that mentioned by Wycherley," but that " the 
whole air and spirit of the piece " belong to a man — an experi- 
enced and hardened young man of the world— and not to a boy 
who would fain pose as an experienced and hardened young man 
of the world. The real defence of Wycherley against his foolish 
impeachment of himself is this, that Love in a Wood, howsoever 
inferior in structure and in all the artistic economies to The 
Country Wife and The Plain Dealer, contains scenes which 
no inexperienced boy could have written— scenes which, not 
for moral hardness merely, but often for real dramatic ripeness, 
are almost the strongest to be found amongst his four plays. 
With regard ♦« /*r*martr ripeness, indeed, if we were asked to 
indicate " U Wycherley, we should very likely 

•elect r xne of the third act of this very 



play, where the vain, foolish and boastful "rake Dapperwit, 
having taken his friend to see his mistress for the express pur- 
pose of advertising his lordship over her, is coolly denied 
by her and insolently repulsed. " I think," says Dapperwit, 
" women take inconstancy from me worse than from- any man 
breathing." 

Now, does the subsequent development of Wycherley's 
dramatic genius lead us to believe that, at nineteen, he could 
have given this touch, worthy of the hand that drew Malvolio? 
Is there anything in his two masterpieces— The Country Wife or 
The Plain Dealer— tint makes it credible that Wycherley, the 
boy, could have thus delineated by a single quiet touch vanity 
as a chain-armour which no shaft can pierce— vanity, that is 
to say, in its perfect development? However, Macaulay 
(forgetting that, among the myriad vanities of the writing frater- 
nity, this of pretending to an early development of intellectual 
powers that ought not to be, even if they could be, developed 
early is at once the most comic and the most common) is rather 
too severe upon Wycherley's dismgenuousness in regard to the 
dates of his plays. That the writer of a play far more daring 
than Etheredge's She Would if She Could— and far more brilliant 
too^— should at once become the talk of Charles's court was 
inevitable; equally inevitable was it that the author of the 
song at the end of the first act, in praise of harlots and their 
offspring, should touch to its depths the soul of the duchess of 
Cleveland. Possibly Wycherley intended this famous song as a 
glorification of Her Grace and her profession, for he seems to 
have been more delighted than surprised when, as he passed 
in his coach through Pall Mall, he heard the duchess address 
him from her coach window as a " rascal," a " villain/' and as a 
son of the very kind of lady his song had lauded. For his answer 
was perfect in its readiness: " Madam, you have been pleased 
to bestow a title on me which belongs only to the fortunate." 
Perceiving that Her Grace received the compliment in the spirit 
in which it was meant, he lost no time in calling upon her, and 
was from that moment the recipient of those " favours " to which 
he alludes with pride in the dedication of the play to her. Vol- 
taire's story (in his Letters on the Engfish Notion) that Her 
Grace used to go to Wycherley's chambers in the Temple dis- 
guised as a country wench, in a straw hat, with pattens on and 
a basket in her hand, may be apocryphal— very likely it is— 
for disguise was quite superfluous in the case of the mistress of 
Charles n. and Jacob Hall, but it at least shows how general 
was the opinion that, under such patronage as this, Wycherley's 
fortune as poet and dramatist, " eminent for his quality and 
politeness," wss now made. 

Charles, who had determined to bring up his son, the duke 
of Richmond, like a prince, was desirous of securing for tutor 
a man so entirely qualified as was Wycherley to impart what 
was then recognised as the princely education, and it seems 
pretty clear that, but for the accident, to which we shall have 
to recur, of his meeting the countess of Drogheda at Bath and 
secretly marrying her, the education of the young man would 
actually have been entrusted by his father to Wycherley as a 
reward for the dramatist's having written Love in a Wood. 

Whether Wycherley's experiences as a naval officer, which he 
alludes to in his lines " On a Sea Fight which the Author 
was in betwixt the English and the Dutch," occurred before or 
after the production of Love in a Wood is a point upon which 
opinions differ, but on the whole we are inclined to agree with 
Macaulay, against Leigh Hunt, that these experiences took place 
not only after the production of Love in a Wood but after the 
production of The Gentleman Dancing Master, in 1673. We also 
think, with Macaulay, that he went to sea simply because it was 
the " polite " thing to do so— simply because, as he himself in the 
epilogue to The Gentleman Dancing Master says, " all gentlemen 
must pack to sea." _ 

This second comedy was published in 1673, but was probably 
acted late in 1671. It is inferior to Lowe in a Wood. In The 
Relapse the artistic mistake of blending comedy and farce 
damages a splendid play, but leaves it a splendid play still. Id 
The Gentleman Dancing Master this mingling of discordant 



WYCHERLEY 



865 



1 destroys a play that would never in any dreumstauces 
have been strong— a play nevertheless which abounds in animal 
spirits, and is luminous here and there with true dramatic 



It is, however, on his two last comedies— Tas Country Wife 
and The Plain Dealer—thai must rest Wycherley's fame as a 
master of that comedy of repartee which, inaugurated by 
Etheredge, and afterwards brought to perfection by Congreve 
and Vanbrught supplanted the humoristic comedy of the Eliza- 
bethans. The Country Wife, produced in 167a or 1673 and 
published in 1675, is so full of wit, ingenuity, animal spirits and 
conventional humour that, had it not been for ita motive—a 
motive which in any healthy state of society must always be as 
repulsive to the most lax as to the most moral reader— it would 
probably have survived as long as the acted drama remained a 
literary form in England. So strong, indeed, is the hand that 
could draw such a character as Majory Pmchwife (the un- 
doubted original not only of Congreve's Miss Pruc but of Van- 
brugh's Hoyden), such a character as Sparkish (the undoubted 
original of Congreve's Tattle), such a character as Horner 
(the undoubted original of all those, cool impudent rakes with 
whom our stage has since been familiar), that Wycherley is 
certainly entitled to a place alongside Congreve and Vanbrugh. 
And, indeed, if priority of date is to have its fair and full weight, 
it seems difficult to challenge Professor Spalding's dictum that 
Wycherley is " the most vigorous of the set." 

In order to do justice to the life and brilliance of The Country 
Wife we have only to compare it with The Country Girl $ after- 
wards made famous by the acting of Mrs Jordan, that Bo wdlerixed 
form of The Country Wife in which Carrick, with an object more 
praiseworthy than his success, endeavoured to free it of its load 
of unparalleled licentiousness by disturbing and sweetening the 
motive— even as Voltaire afterwards (with an object also more 
praiseworthy than his success) endeavoured to disturb and 
sweeten the motive of The Plain Dealer in La Prude. While the 
two Bowdlerized forms of Garrick and Voltaire are as dull as 
the Msof of Boursault, the texture of Wycherley's scandalous 
dialogue would seem to scintillate with the changing hues of 
shot silk or of the neck of a pigeon or of a shaken prism, were it 
not that the many-coloured lights rather suggest the miasmatic 
radiance of a foul ditch shimmering in the sun. It b easy to share 
Macaulay's indignation at Wycherley's satyr-like defilement of 
art, and yet, at the same time, to protest against that disparage 
ment of their literary riches which nullifies the value of Macaulay's 
criticism. And scarcely inferior to The Country Wife is The 
Plain Dealer* produced probably early in 1674 and published 
three years later,— a play of which Voltaire said, " Je ne connais 
point de comtdie chez les andens ni cheales moderns ou il y ait 
autant d'esprit." This comedy had an immense influence, as 
regards manipulation of dialogue, upon all subsequent English 
comedies of repartee, and he who wants to trace the ancestry 
of Tony Lumpkin and Mrs Hardcastle has only to turn to Jerry 
Blackacre and his mother, while Manly (for whom Wycherley's 
early patron, the duke of Montausier, sat), though he is perhaps 
overdone, has dominated this kind of stage character ever since. 
If but few leaders know how constantly the blunt sententious 
utterances of this character are reappearing, not on the stage 
alone, but m the novel and even m poetry, it b because a 
play whose motive b monstrous and intolerable can only Hve 
in a monstrous and intolerable state of society; it b because 
Wycherley's genius was followed by Nemesis, who always 
dop the footsteps of the denier of literary art. When Bum* 

" The rank b but the guinea stamp, 
The man's the gowd lor a' that ; 
when Sterne, to Tristram Shandy, said, « Honours, like impres- 
sions upon coin, may give an ideal and local value to a bit of 
base metal, but gold and silver will pass all the world over 
without any other recommendation than their own weight," 
what did these writers do but adopt— adopt without improving 
— Manly's fine saying to Freeman, in the first act;— 4 ' I weigh 
the man, not his title; 'Us not the king's stamp can make the 



metal better or heavier'? And yet it b in the fourth and fifth 
acta that the coruscations of, Wycherley's comic genius are the 
most dassling; also, it b there that the licentiousness b the 
most astonishing. Not that the worst scenes in this play are 
really more wicked than the worst scenes in Vanbrugh's Rdapsc, 
but they are more seriously imagined. Being less humorous than 
Vanbrugh's scenes, they are more terribly and earnestly realistic; 
therefore they seem more wicked. They form indeed a striking 
instance of the folly of the artist who selects a story which cannot 
be actualized without hurting the finer instincts of human nature. 
When Menander declared that, having selected hb plot, he 
looked upon hb comedy as three parts finished, he touched upon 
a subject which all workers in drama— all workers in imaginative 
literature of every kind— would do well to consider. In all 
literatures— ancient and modem— an infinite wealth of materia) 
has been wasted upon subjects that are unworthy, or else in- 
capable, of artistic realisation; and yet Wycherley's case is, 
in our literature at least, .without a parallel, No doubt it may 
be right to say, with Aristotle, that comedy ban imitation of 
bad characters, but this does not mean that in comedy art may 
imitate bad characters as earnestly as she may imitate good ones, 
—a fact which Thackeray forgot when he made Becky Sharp 
a murderess, -thereby destroying at once what would otherwise 
have been the finest specimen of the comedy of convention in the 
world. And perhaps it was because Vanbrugh was conscious of 
tab law of art that he blended comedy with farce. Perhaps he 
felt that the colossal depravity of intrigue in which the English 
comedians indulged needs to be not only wanned by a super- 
abundance of humour but softened by the playful mockery of 
farce before a dramatic circle such as that of the Restoration 
drama can be really brought within human sympathy. Plu- 
tarch's impeachment of Aristophanes, which affirms that the 
master of the old comedy wrote less for honest men than for 
men sunk in baseness and debauchery, was no doubt unjust to 
the Greek poet, one side of whose humour, and one alone, could 
thus be impeached. But does it not touch all sides of a comedy 
like Wycherley's— a comedy which strikes at the very root of the 
social compact upon which civilisation b built? As to comparing 
such a comedy as that of the Restoration with the comedy of 
the Elizabethans, Jeremy Collier did but a poor service to the 
cause be undertook to advocate when he set the occasional 
coarseness of Shakespeare alongside the wickedness of Congreve 
and Vanbrugh. And yet, ever since Macaulay's essay, it has 
been the fashion to speak of Collier's attack as being levelled 
against the immorality of the " Restoration dramatists." It b 
nothing of the kind. It b (as was pointed out so long ago as 1699 
by Dr Drake in bis little-known vigorous reply to Collier) an 
attack upon the English drama generally, with a special reference 
to the case of Shakespeare. While dwelling upon that noxious 
and highly immoral play Hamlet, Collier actually leaves un- 
scathed the author of The Country Wife, but fastens on Congreve 
and Vanbrugh, whose plays— profligate enough in all conscience- 
seem almost decent beside a comedy whose incredible vis matrix 
b "the modish distemper." 

That a stage, indeed, upon which was given with applause 
A Woman Killed with Kindness (where a wife dies of a broken 
heart fox doing what any one of Wycherley's married women 
would nave gloried in doing) should, in seventy years, have given 
with applause The Country Wife shows that in historic and social 
evolution as in the evolution of organisms, " change " and 
" progress " are very far from being convertible terms, For 
the barbarism of the society depicted in these plays was, in the 
true sense of the word, far deeper and more brutal than any 
barbarism that has ever exbted in these islands within the historic 
period. If civilization has any meaning at all for the soul of 
man, the Englishmen of Chaucer's time, the Anglo-Saxons of 
the Heptarchy, nay, those half-naked heroes, who in the dawn of 
English history clustered along the southern coast to defend it 
from the invasion of Caesar, were far more civilized than that 
"race gangrene* "— the treacherous rakes, mercenary slaves 
and brazen strumpets of the court of Charles II., who did their 
best to substitute for the human passion of love (a passion which 



866 



WYCLIFFE 



was known perhaps even to palaeolithic man) the promiscuous 
intercourse of the beasts of the field. Yet Collier leaves 
Wycherley unassailed, and classes Vanbrugh and Congreve with 
Shakespeare 1 

It was after the success of The Plain Dealer that the turning- 
point came in Wycherley's career. The great dream of all the 
men about town in Charles's time, as Wycherley's plays all 
show, was to marry a widow, young and handsome, a peer's 
daughter if possible— but in any event rich, and spend her 
money upon wine, and women. While talking to a friend in a 
bookseller's shop at Tunbridge, Wycherley heard The Plain 
Dealer asked for by a lady who, in the person of the countess of 
Drogheda, answered all the requirements. An introduction 
ensued, then love-making, then marriage— a secret marriage, 
probably in 1680, for, fearing to lose the king's patronage and 
the income therefrom, Wycherley still thought it politic to pass 
as a bachelor. He had not seen enough of life to learn that in the 
long run nothing is politic but " straightforwardness." Whether 
because his countenance wore a pensive and subdued expression, 
suggestive of a poet who had married a dowager countess and 
awakened to the situation, or whether because treacherous con- 
fidants divulged his secret, does not appear, but the news of his 
marriage oozed out—- it reached the royal ears, and deeply 
wounded the father anxious about the education of his son. 
Wycherley lost the appointment that was so nearly within his 
grasp— lost indeed the royal favour for ever. He never had an 
opportunity of regaining it, for the countess seems to have really 
loved him, and Love in a Wood had proclaimed the writer to be 
the kind of husband whose virtue prospers best when closely 
guarded at the domestic hearth. Wherever p he went the countess 
followed him, and when she did allow him to meet his boon 
companions it was in a tavern in Bow Street opposite to his own 
house, and even there under certain protective conditions. 
In summer or in winter he was obliged to sit with the window 
open and the blinds up, so that his wife might see that the party 
included no member of a sex for which her husband's plays had 
advertised his partiality. She died, however, in the year after 
her marriage and left him the whole of her fortune. But the 
title to the property was disputed; the costs of the litigation 
were heavy— so heavy that his father was unable (or else he 
was unwilling) to come to his aid; and the result of his marrying 
the rich, beautiful and titled widow was that the poet was 
thrown into the Fleet prison. There he remained for 6cven 
years, being finally released by the liberality of James II. — 
a liberality which, incredible as it seems, is too well authenticated 
to be challenged. James had been so much gratified by seeing 
The Plain Dealer acted that, finding a parallel between Manly's 
"manliness" and his own, such as no spectator had before 
discovered, he paid off Wycherley's execution creditor and 
settled on him a pension of £200 a year. Other debts still 
troubled Wycherley, however, and he never was released from 
his embarrassments, not even after succeeding to a life estate in 
the family property. In coming to Wycherley's death, we come 
to the worst allegation that has ever been made against him 
as a man and as a gentleman. At the age of seventy-five he 
married a young girl, and is said to have done so in order to spite 
his nephew, the next in succession, knowing that he himself 
must shortly die and that the jointure would impoverish the 
estate. 

Wycherley wrote verses, and, when quite an old man, prepared 
them for the press by the aid of Alexander Pope, then not much 
more than a boy. But, notwithstanding aU Pope's tinkering, 
they remain contemptible. Pope's published correspondence 
with the dramatist was probably edited by him with a view to 
giving an impression of his own precocity. The friendship be- 
tween the two cooled, according to Pope's account, because 
Wycherley took offence at the numerous corrections on his verses. 
It seems more likely that Wycherley discovered that Pope, while 
still professing friendship and admiration, satirized his friend in 
the Essay 0* rrM*i<m. Wycherley died on the 1st of January 
1716, ar e vault of the church in Covent 

Garder CT.W.-D.: 



WYCLIFFE 1 (or Wvctxr), JOHH {e. 1390-1384), English 
reformer, was born, according to John Leland,* our single 
authority on the point, at Ipreswd (evidently Hipswell), x m. 
from Richmond in Yorkshire. The date may have been some- 
where about 1 3 jo. Leland elsewhere mentions that he " drew his 
origin " from Wyeliffe-on-Tees (Collectanea, ii. '329), so that his 
lineage was of the ancient family which is celebrated by Scott in 
liarnrion. The Wycliffes had a natural connexion with the 
college at Oxford which had been founded in the latter part of 
the previous century by their neighbours, the Balliols of Barnard 
Castle; and to Balliol College, then distinctively an " arts " 
college,* John Wycliffe in due time proceeded. It has been 
generally believed, and was in fact believed not many years 
after his death, that he was a fellow of Merton College in 1356; 
but this identification probably rests on a confusion with a con- 
temporary. That the future reformer was a fellow of Balliol 
is implied in the fact that some time after 1356, but before the 
summer of 1360, he was elected master. This office he held but a 
short time. So soon as 1361 he accepted a college living, that of 
Fillingham in Lincolnshire, and probably left Oxford for some 
time. In the same year the name of a certain *' John de Wydif 
of the diocese of York, M.A." appears as a suppliant to the 
Roman Curia for a provision to a prebend, canonry and dignity 
at York (Col. of Entries in Ike Papal Registries, ed. Bliss, Petitions, 
i. 300). This was not granted, but Wycliffe received instead 
the prebend of Aust in the collegiate church of Wcstbury-oo» 
Trym. In 1365 one " John dc Wyclif " was appointed by Simon 
Islip, archbishop of Canterbury, to the wardenship of Canterbury 
Hall, a house which the archbishop founded for a mixed body of 
monks and secular clergy, and then — as a result of the inevitable 
quarrels— filled exclusively with the latter. Two years later, 
however, Islip's successor, the monk Simon Langham, reversed 
the process, replacing the intruded seculars by monks. The 
dispossessed warden and fellows appealed to Rome, and in 1371 
judgment was given against them. The question of the identity 
of the warden of Canterbury Hall with the reformer is still a matter 
of dispute. It has been understood as referred to by Wycliffe him- 
self (De ecctesia, cap. xvi. pp. 370 sq.), and was assumed by the 
contemporary monk of St Albans (Chron. A ngl. "Rolls " scr.p. 115) 
and by Wycliffe's opponent William Woodford (Fasc Zizan. 
p. 517), who found in Wycliffe's resentment at this treatment 
the motive for his attacks on the religious orders, it has likewise 
been assumed by a series of modern scholars, including Loserth 
(ReolencyMopddie, 1908 ed., vol. xxi. p. 228, §35), who only 
denies the deductions that Woodford drew from it. Dr Rashdall, 
on the other hand, following Shirley, brings evidence to show 
that the Wycliffe of Canterbury Hall could not have been the 
reformer, but was the same person as the fellow of Merton, this 
being the strongest argument against the identification of the 
latter with the reformer. The confusion is increased by the 
appearance of yet another " John Wyclif " or " Wiclif " on the 

1 A note is necessary as to the spelling of Wycliffe's name. Out 
of thirteen contemporary entries in documents, twelve give " y " in 
the first syllable. In not one of these is there a " ck " (though 



kc ") (see F. D. Matthew in the Academy, Tune 7, 1884). 
1 ne cnroniclers, &c, offer every imaginable variety of spelling, and" 
it is possible that one favourite form in more recent times, " Wick 



line,' oenvea its popularity from tne old play on the name, " nequara 
vita," which we find in Gascoigne. The spelling adopted in the 
present article is that of the village from which Wycliffe derived 
his name; it is also preferred by the editors of the Wycliffe Bible, 
by Milman and by Stubbs. " Wyclif " Jias the support of Shirley, 
of T. Arnold and of the Wyclif Society; while ^Wiclif " is the 
popular form in Germany. 

1 Itinerary, Stow's transcript, Bodleian Library, Tanner MS. 
464, f. 45 (Leland's original being mutilated at this place). Hearne 
misprinted the name ,T Spreswel , and thus set all Wycliffe's bio- 
graphers on a search after a vox nihili. The identification of Sprcs* 
well with the site of a vanished hamlet near Wycliffe on the Tees, 
about 1 m. from that of a supposed " Old Richmond,*' accepted 
by Loserth on the authority of Lechler, is unsupported by any 
trustworthy evidence. 

* See a document of 1325 printed in the appendix to the Fourth 
Report of the Historical Manuscripts Commission, pp. 44a sq. 
Provision for theological study was made by the benefaction of Sir 
Philip Somervilte in 1340 (Lytc, Hist, of the Unto, of Oxford, p. 134, 
18oo). 



WYCLIFFE 



867 



books of Queen's College; ss paying rent for rooms as a " pen- 
sioner " or " commoner " for the years 1371-1372, i374-»375 
and 1380-1381. It has thus been commonly assumed (e.g. by 
Loserth) that the reformer was at one time in residence at Queen's, 
the date being given as 1363. It is probable, however, that the 
John Wklif of the Queen's College accounts is the same as the 
John Wyclif who appears in the College computus for 2371-1372 
as one of the " almonry boys " of the College, and, therefore, 
certainly not the reformer. 1 

These questions, even that of the wardenship of Canterbury, 
are, however, essentially unimportant, unless we are prepared 
with Woodford to impute mean motives to a great man. What 
is certain is that long before Wycliffe had become a power outside 
Oxford his fame was established in the university. He was 
acknowledged supreme in the philosophical disputations of the 
schools, and his lectures were crowded. His influence was, 
however, purely academic, nor does it seem to have been inspired 
at the outset by any conscious opposition to the established 
order in the church; and, as Loserth points out, it was not 
until he was drawn into the arena of the politico-ecclesisstical 
conflicts of the day that Wycliffe became of world-importance. 
It has been generally assumed that this happened first in 1366, 
and that Wycliffe published his DeterminaHo quaedam de dominie 
in support of the action of parliament in refusing the tribute 
demanded by Pope Urban V.; but Loserth has shown that this 
work, which contains the first trace of that doctrine of dominium 
or lordship which Wycliffe afterwards developed in a sense 
hostile to the whole papal system, must be assigned to a date 
some eight years later. Wycliffe, in fact, for some years to come 
had the reputation of a good " curialisL" Had it been other- 
wise, the pope would scarcely have granted him (January 1373) 
a licence to keep his Westbury prebend even after he should have 
obtained one at Lincoln (Cat. Papal Letters, ed. Bliss and Twem- 
low, iv. 103). Moreover, it is uniformly asserted that Wycliffe 
fell into heresy after ms admission to the degree of doctor 
(Fate. Za. p. a), and the papal document above quoted shows 
that he had only just become, a doctor of theology, that b 
in 137a. 

This, of course, does not mean that Wydiffe's tendencies may 
not already have been sufficiently pronounced to call attention 
to him in high places as a possibly useful instrument for the 
anti-papal policy of John of Gaunt and his party. Evidence 
of royal favour was soon not wanting. On the 7th of April 1374, 
he was presented by the crown to the rectory of Lutterworth 
in Leicestershire, which he held until his death; and on the 
26th of July he was nominated one of the royal envoys to proceed 
to Bruges to confer with the papal representatives on the long 
vexed question of " provisions " (o.v.). It is probable that he 
was attached to this mission as theologian, and that this was 
so is sufficient proof that he was not yet considered a persona 
ingraft at the Curia. The rank he took is shown by the fact 
that his name stands second, next after that of the bishop of 
Bangor, on the commission, and that he received pay at the 
princely rate of twenty shillings a day. The commission itself 
was appointed in consequence of urgent and repeated com- 
plaints on the part of the Commons; but the king was himself 
interested in keeping up the papal system of provisions and 
reservations, and the negotiations were practically fruitless. 

After his return to England Wycliffe lived chiefly at Lutter- 
worth and Oxford, making frequent and prolonged visits to 
London, where his fame as a popular preacher was rapidly 
established. It is from this period, indeed, that dates the 
development of the trenchant criticisms of the folly and corrup- 
tion of the clergy, which had gained him a ready hearing, into 
a systematic attack on the whole established order in the church. 
It was not at the outset the dogmatic, but the political elements 

« See H. T. Riley's remarks in the Second Report of the Historical 
Manuscript* Commission, appendix, pp. 141 tq. The appearance 
of a John Wyclif on the books of Queen is led to the common mistake. 
repeated in Milman's Hist, of Latin Christianity (bk. xfii. cb. vi)., 
that Wydiffe began his university career at Queen's College. The 
whole question w argued at length by Dt Rashdall in the Diet. 
NaLBtog, 



in the papal system that provoked his censure. The negotiations 
at Bruges had doubtless strengthened the sympathy which he 
already felt for the anti-curial tendencies in English politics 
from Edward I.'s time onwards, and a final impulse was given by 
the attitude of the " Good Parliament " in 1376; in the autumn 
of that year he was reading his treatise on civil lordship (De 
cimli dominio) to his students at Oxford. Of its propositions 
some, according to Loserth, were taken bodily from the 140 
titles of the bill dealing with ecclesiastical abuses introduced 
in the parliament; but it may perhaps be questioned whether 
Wycliffe did not rather inspire the bill than the bill Wycliffe. 
However this may be, the reformer now for the first time publicly 
proclaimed the revolutionary doctrine that righteousness is 
the sole indefeasible title to dominion and to property, that an 
unrighteous clergy has no such title, and that the decision as 
to whether or no the property of ecclesiastics should be taken 
away rests with the civil power—" politicorum qui intendunt 
praxi et statui regnorum " (De civ. dom. i. 37, p. 269). It was 
unlikely that a doctrine so convenient to the secular authorities 
should long have remained a mere subject of obscure debate 
in the schools; as it was, it was advertised abroad by the in- 
discreet zeal of its orthodox opponents, and Wycliffe could 
declare that it was not his fault if it had been brought down 
into the streets and " every sparrow twittered about it." 

If the position at which Wycliffe had now arrived was originally 
inspired, as Loserth asserts, by his intimate knowledge of and 
sympathy with the legislation of Edward I„ is. by political rather 
than theological considerations, the necessity for giving to it a, 
philosophical and religious basis led inevitably to its development 
into a criticism not only of the political claims but of the doctrinal 
standpoint of the church. As a philosopher, indeed, Wycliffe was 
no more than the last of the conspicuous Oxford scholastics, and his 
philosophy is of importance mainly in so far as it determined hw 
doctrine of dominium, and so set the direction in which his political 
and religious views were to develop. In the great controversy 
be tw e e n Realism and Nominalism he stood on the side of the former, 
though his doctrine of univeraals showed the influence of the criti- 
cisms of Ockham and the nominalists. He is Platonic in his con* 
ception of Cod as the forma rerum in whom the rationes exemphrts 
exist eternally, being In fact his Word, who is omnia in omnibus 
(1 Cor. xv. 28) ; every creature m respect of it* esse inieUigibik is 
Cod, since every creature is in essence the same as the idea, and all 
rationes ideates are essentially the same as the Word of Cod (De 
dominio divino, pp. 42, 43). There is one ens, the ens analogum, 
which includes in itself and comprehends all other eutia—aM uni- 
versals and all the individual parts of the universe (De dom. die. 
pp. 58 so.). The process by which the primary ens is specificated, or 
by which a higher and more general class passes into sensible exist- 



_„ higher and more general 

ence, is that it receives the addition of 



iss passes into 

, substantial form whereby it 

U rendered capable of acquiring qualities and other accidents (ibi&\ 



pp. 48 so.). To Wycliffe the doctrine of arbitrary divine decrees 
was anathema. The will of God is his essential and eternal nature, 
by which all his acts are determined; it was thus with the creation, 
since Cod created all things in their primordial causes, as genera 
and species, or else in their material essences, secundum rationes 
abscondiios seminales (ibid, p. 66). God's creation is conditio, .d by 
his own eternal nature; the world is therefore not merely one 
among an infinity of alternatives, an arbitrary selection, so to speak, 
but is the only possible world; it is, moreover, not in the nature 
of an eternal emanation from God, but was created at a given 
moment of time— to think otherwise would be to admit its absolute 
necessity, which would destroy free-will and merit. Since, however, 
all things came into being in this way, it follows that the creature 
can produce nothing save what God has already created. 1 So then 
all human lordship is derived from the supreme overiordship 
of God and is inseparable from it, since whatever God gives to his 
servants is part of himself, from the first gift, which is the esse 
mteUigibik, ue. really the divine essence, down to those special gifts 
which flow from the communication of his Holy Spirit; so that in 
him we live and move and have our being. But, in giving, God 
does not part with the lordship of the thing given; his gifts are of 
the nature of fiefs, and whatever lordship the creature may po s s es s 



is held subject to due service to the supreme overlord, 
feudalism, lordship is distinguished from 



Thus, as in 
Lordship is 



•This leads to the question of predestination and free-will, in 
which Wycliffe takes a middle position with the aid of the Aristotelian 
distinction between that which is necessary absolutely and that 
which is necessary on a given supposition. God does not will sin. 
for he only wills that which has being, and sin is the negation of 
being: he necessitates men to perform actions which are ui them- 
selves neither right nor wrong; they become right or wrong through 
man's free agency. 



{ 



868 



WYCLIFFE 



not properly proprietary, and property is the result of sfo; Christ 
and nis apostles had none. 1 The lervice, however, by which lord- 
ship is held of God is righteousness and its works; it follows that 
the unrighteous forfeit their right to exercise it, and may be deprived 
of their possessions by competent authority. 

The question, of course, follows as to what this authority is, and 
this Wycliffe sets out to answer in the Detcrminatio quoedom de 
dominie and, more elaborately, in the De civili dominio. Briefly, his 
argument is that the church has no concern with temporal matters 
at all, that for the clergy to hold property is sinful, and that it is 
lawful for statesmen (fo/ttict)— ^whoare God's stewards in temporals— 
to take away the goods of such of the clergy as, by reason of their 
unrighteousness, no longer render the service by which they hold 
them. That the church was actually in a condition to deserve 
spoliation he refused, indeed— though only under p r e s s ure t o 
affirm; but his theories fitted in too well with the notorious aims of 
the duke of Lancaster not to rouse the bitter hostility of the endowed 
dergy. With the mendicant orders he continued lor a while to be 
on good terms. 

Hitherto Wycliffe had made no open attack on the doctrinal 
system of the church, and for some time he had been allowed 
to spread his doctrines without hindrance. Early in X377, 
however, Archbishop Sudbury summoned him to appear before 
the bishop of London, and answer certain charges, laid against 
him. The nature of these accusations is not stated, but their 
purport can hardly be doubtful On the 19th of February 2377, 
Wycliffe made his appearance at St Paul's. He was accom- 
panied by the duke of Lancaster, by Lord Percy, marshal of 
England, and by four doctors .of the four mendicant orders. 
The triai, however,' came to nothing; before Wycliffe could 
open his mouth, the court was broken up by a rude brawl between 
his protectors and Bishop Courtcnay, ending in a general riot 
of the citizens of London, who were so much enraged by the 
insult to their bishop in his own cathedral church— coming as 
this did at the same time as a serious attempt at an invasion by 
the duke in parliament of their civic liberties (Chron. Angl. 
p. iao)— that they would have sacked his palace of the Savoy 
had not Courtenay himself intervened. 

Wycliffe had escaped for the time, but his enemies did not 
rely solely on their own weapons. Probably before this they 
had set their case before the pope; and on the sand of May 
five bulls were issued by Gregory XI., who had just returned to 
Rome from Avignon, condemning eighteen (or in other copies 
nineteen) " conclusions " drawn from WyclinVs writings. All 
the articles but one are taken from his De civili dominio. The 
bulls truly stated WyclinVs intellectual lineage; he was following 
ra the error of Marsilius of Padua; and the articles laid against 
him are concerned entirely with questions agitated between 
church and state— how far ecclesiastical censures could lawfully 
affect a man's civil position, and whether the church had a 
right to receive and hold temporal endowments. The bulls were 
addressed to the archbishop of Canterbury and the bishop of 
London, the university of Oxford, and the king. The university 
was to take Wycliffe and send him to the prelates; the latter 
were then to examine the truth of the charges and to report to 
the pope, Wycliffe being meanwhile kept in confinement. The 
execution of the papal bulls was impeded by three separate 
pauses— the king's death on the aist of June; the tardy action of 
the bishops, who enjoined the university to make a report, instead 
of simply sending Wycliffe to them; and the unwillingness of 
the university to admit external authority, and, above all, the 
pope's right to order the imprisonment of any man in England. 
The convocation of the university, indeed, as the St Albans 

1 See R. L. Poole's preface to his edition of the D* dominio divino, 
when WyclinVs indebtedness to Richard Fits Ralph, archbishop of 
Armagh, for his views on lordship and property is shown at some 
length (pp. xxxrv sq.). Fits Ralph had been a fellow of Balliol, and 
was vice-chancellor of the university in or about 1393 (A. a Wood, 
Fasti Oxon. p. at, ed. Gutch, 1790). The first four books of his Da 
Pauperis Sahatoris were edited by R. L. Poole for the Wycliffe 
Society, and published in 1890 in an appendix to the edition of the 
De dominio dmno. Fits Ralph also taught that lordship was con- 
ditioncd by grace, and that property had come into the world with 
sin. Fits Ralph's work was, however, directed to the settlement of 
the controversy raised bv the mendicant orders as to " possession " 
and " Mr Hied the scope of the doctrine so as to 



chronicler* states with lamentation, ' made serious objections 
to receiving the bull at all; and in the end it merely directed 
Wycliffe to keep within his lodgings at Black Hall foretime. 

If the university was disposed to favour the reformer, tbe 
government was not less so. John of Gaunt was for the moment 
in retirement; but the mother of the young king appears to 
have adopted his policy in church affairs, and she naturally 
occupied a chief position in the new council. As soon as parlia- 
ment met in the autumn of 1377, Wycliffe was consulted by it as 
to the lawfulness of prohibiting that treasure should pass out 
of the country in obedience to the pope's demand. WycKffe's 
affirmative judgment is contained in a state paper still extant; 
and its tone is plain proof enough of his confidence that his 
views on the main question of church and state had the support 
of the nation.* Indeed he had laid before this same parliament 
his answer to the pope's bulls, with a defence of the soundness 
of his opinions. His university, moreover, confirmed his argu- 
ment; his tenets, it said, were true (*.«. orthodox), though their 
expression was such as to admit of an incorrect interpretation. 
But Wycliffe was still bound to clear himself before the prelates 
who had summoned him, and early in 1378 he appeared for this 
purpose in the chapel of Lambeth Palace. His written defence, 
expressed in some respects in more cautious language than he had 
previously used, was laid before the council; but its session 
was rudely interrupted, not only by an inroad of the London 
citisens with a crowd of the rabble, but also by a messenger from 
the princess of Wales enjoining them not to pass judgment 
against Wycliffe; and thus a second time he escaped, either 
without sentence, or at most with a gentle request that he would 
avoid discussing the matters in question. Meanwhile his " pro- 
testatio " was sent on to Rome. Before, however, any further 
step could be taken at Rome, Gregory XI. died. 

In the autumn of this year Wycliffe was once more called upon 
to prove his loyalty to John of Gaunt. The duke had violated 
the sanctuary of Westminster by sending a band of armed men 
to seize two squires who had taken refuge there. One of them 
was taken by a stratagem, the other murdered, together with the 
servant of the church who attempted to resist his arrest. After 
a while the bishop of London excommunicated all concerned in 
the crime (except only the king, his mother and his uncle), 
and preached against the culprits at Paul's Cross. At the 
parliament held at Gloucester in October, in the presence of the 
legates of Pope Urban VI., Wycliffe read an apology for tbe 
duke's action at Westminster, pleading that the men were killed 
in resisting legal arrest. The paper, which forms part of the Da 
ecclesic, lays down the permissible limits of the right of asylum, 
and maintains the right of the civil power to invade the sanctuary 
in order to bring escaped prisoners to justice. 

The schism in the papacy, owing to the election of Clement VII. 
in opposition to Urban VI., accentuated Wycliffe's hostility to 
the Holy See and its claims. His attitude was not, indeed, as 
yet fully developed. He did not object to a visible head of 
the church so long as this head possessed the essential quali- 
fication of righteousness, as a member of the elect. It was only 
later, with the development of the scandals of the schism, that 
Wycliffe definitely branded the pope, quo pope, as Antichrist; 4 
the sin of Silvester L in accepting the donation of Constantine 
had made all his successors apostates (Sermona, ii, 37). 
The year 1378, indeed, saw the beginning of an agressive pro- 
paganda which was bound sooner or later to issue in a position 
wholly revolutionary. Wycliffe's criticism of the established 
order and of the accepted doctrines had hitherto been mainly 

"When he says that the bull was only received at Oxford 
shortly before Christmas, he is apparently confounding it with the 
prelates* mandate, which is dated December 18 (Lewis, appendix 
xviU. — Ckron. Angl. p. 173. 

• In one text of this document a note is a p pended, to the effect 
that the council enjoined silence on the writer as touching the matter 
therein contained {Fasciculi Zisauiontm, p. 271). This, if true, was 
apparently a measure of precaution. 

« So he describes the popes in the first sermon in vol. 5. of the 
Sarmones. This may very probably refer to the two rival popes (cL, 
Buddensieg, Polemical Works, intr. p. xm). Book Hi. of his Opt 
mangelicum is also significantly entitled De Awtkkristo. 



WYCLIFFE 



869 



coafioed to the schools; he now determined to any it down 
into the streets. For this purpose ho chose two means, both 
based on the thesis which he had long maintained as to the 
supreme authority of Holy Scripture, as the great charter of the 
Christian religion. The first means was his institution of the 
"poor" or "simple" priests to preach his doctrines throughout 
the country; the second was the translation of the Vulgate into 
English, which he accomplished with the aid of his friends 
Nicholas Hereford and John Purvey (see Bible, English). 
This version of the Bible, and still more bis numerous sermons 
and tracts, established Wycliffe's now undisputed position as 
the founder of English prose writing. 

The choice of secular priests to be his itinerant preachers 
was significant of another change of attitude on Wydiffe's part. 
Hitherto he had been on good terms with the friars, whose ideal 
of poverty appealed to him; as already mentioned, four doctors 
of the mendicant orders had appeared with him at his trial in 
1377. But he had come to recognise that all organised societies 
within the church, " sects " as he called them, were liable to the 
same corruption, while he objected fundamentally to the principle 
which had established a special standard of morality for the 
" religious." On the other hand, Wycliffe's itinerant preachers 
were not necessarily intended to work as rivals to the beneficed 
clergy. The idea that underlay their mission was rather 
analogous to that which animated Wesley four centuries later. 
Wycliffe aimed at supplementing the services of the church 
by regular religious instruction in the vernacular; and his 
organisation included a good number of men who held or had 
held respectable positions in their colleges at Oxford. The 
influence of their teaching was soon Celt throughout the country. 
The common people wore rejoiced by the plain and homely 
doctrine which dwelt chiefly on the simple " law " of the gospel, 
while they no doubt relished the denunciation of existing evils 
in the church which formed, as it were, the burthen of such 
discourses. The feeling of disaffection against the rich and 
careless clergy, monks and friars was widespread but undefined* 
Wycliffe turned it into a definite channel. 

Meanwhile, in addition to his popular propaganda and his 
interventions in politics, Wycliffe was appealing to the world of 
Iffwwfig in a series of Latin treatises, which followed each other 
in rapid succession, and collectively form his summa tkeologia*. 1 
During the years 1378 and 1379 he produced his works on the 
truth of Holy Scripture, on the church, on the office of king, on 
the papal power. 

Ol all these, except the third, the general character hat already 
been indicated. The De officio regis is practically a declaration of 
war against the papal monarchy, an anticipation of the theocratic 
concep t ion of national kingship as established later by the Reforma- 
tion. The king is God's vicar, to be r egarded with a spiritual fear 
second only to that due to God, and resistance to him tor personal 
wrong suffered is wicked. His jurisdiction extends over all causes. 
The bishops—who are to the king as Christ's Humanity b to his 
Divinity— derive their jurisdiction from him, and whatever they do 



is don* by his authority.* Thus in his palpable dignity, towards the 
*" " " * '----* • *- • ^ ! i his* «--•-•- 

i kins 
» papal to an assailant of the 



r to the priest; it is only in his impalpable 



world, the king is superior to the priest; it w only m his isnpalpab 
dignity, towards God, thafthe priest is superior to the king. Wyclif 
thus passed from an assailant of the papal to an assailant of tl 



jtal power; and in this way he was ultimately led to examine 

and to reject the distinctive symbol of that power, the doctrine of 
traasabstanrJatlon. s 



»J. Loscrth, in his paper "Die Genesis von Wiclifs Summa 
Thcologiac "* (SUxungsber. dor k. Akad. der Wissensch., Vienna, 
1908, vol. 156) gives proofs that the Summa was not produced on a 
previously thought out plan, but that even the larger works forming 
part of it " were the outcome of those conflicts which were ( fought 
out inside and outside the Good Parliament," ix. tbey were primarily 
intended as weapons in the cccksiastico-political controversies of 
the time. 

* Episcopi, sui officiates el curati sui, teneulur tn qualicunque tali 
causa spiritualUer cognoscere auctoritoU regis: ergo rex per iUos. 
Suut cum tales legii homines regis. See De officio regis (ed. A. W 
Pollard and Charles Sayle. from Vienna MSS. 45M. 3933. Wyclif 
Soc 1887), cap. vi. p. iiq. 

' Sporadic attacks had been made on this before, though it had 
not been formally challenged in the schools See the interesting case 
of the heretic priest Ralph of Tremur in the Register of John do 
Gmndisow, Bishop of Exeter, edited by F. C. Hingestoa-Raadolph 
(London and Exeter, 1894), pp. 1147 and 1179. 



Wydifie himself had for some time, both in speech and writing, 
indicated the main characteristics of his teaching on the Euchar- 
ist. It was not, however, till 1379 or X380 4 that began a formal 
public attack on what he calls the "new" doctrine in a set of 
theses propounded at Oxford. These ware followed by sermons, 
tracts, and, in 1381, by his great treatise De euckoristia. Finally, 
at the close of his life, he summed up his doctrine in this as in 
other matters in the Trialogus. 

The language in winch he denounced transubstantSation antici- 
pated that of the Protestant reformers: it is a " blasphemous folly," 
a " deceit," which " despoils the people and leads them to commit 
idolatry "; * philosophically it is nonsense, since it presupposes the 
possibility of an accident existing without its substance; it over- 
throws the very nature of a sacrament. Yet the consecrated bread 
and wine are the body and blood of Christ, for Christ himself says so 
(Fasc. Zixan. p. 115); we do not, however, corporeally touch and 
break the Lord's body, which is present only uuramentaltier,spirUua- 
liter et virtualiter—9* the soul is present in the body. The real 
presence is not denied; what Wycliffe " dares not affirm " is that 
the bread is after consecration " essentially, substantially, corpore- 
ally and identically " the body of Christ (**.). His doctrine, which 
was by no means always consistent or clear, would thus seem to 
approximate closely to the Lutheran doctrine of consubstahtiation, 
as distinguished from the 2winghan teaching accepted in the xxviii. 
Article of Religion 'of the Church of England, that " the means 
whereby the body of Christ is received and eaten in the Supper is 
Faith." • 

A public attack by a theologian of Wycliffe's influence on 
the doctrine on which the whole system of the medieval church 
was based could not be passed over as of mere academic interest. 
The theologians of the university were at once aroused. The 
chancellor, William Barton, sat with twelve doctors (six of whom 
were friars), and solemnly condemned the theses, Wycliffe 
appealed, in accordance with his principles, not to the pope, but 
to the king. But the lay magnates, who were perfectly ready to 
help the church to attain to the ideal of apostolic poverty, 
shrank from the responsibility of lending their support to obscure 
propositions of the schools, which, for no practical end, involved 
undoubted heresy and therefore the pains of hell. John of 
Gaunt, accordingly, hastily sent down a messenger enjoining the 
reformer to keep silence on the subject. The rift thus created 
between Wycliffe and his patrons in high places was, moreover, 
almost immediately widened by the outbreak of the great 
Peasants' Revolt of X381, the result of which was to draw the 
conservative elements in church and state together, in defence 
of their common interests. 

With the Peasants' Revolt it has been supposed that Wycliffe 
had something to do. The only positive fact implicating him 
is the confession of one of its leaders, John Bail, that he learned 
his subversive doctrines from Wycliffe. But the confession 
of a condemned man can seldom be accepted without reserve; 
and we have not only the precise and repeated testimony of 
Knyghton that he was a " precursor " of Wycliffe, but also 
documentary evidence that he was excommunicated as early 
as 1366, long before Wycliffe exposed himself to ecclesiastical 
censure. Wycliffe in truth was always careful to state his 
communistic views in a theoretical way; they are confined to his 
Latin scholastic writings, and thus could not reach the people 
from him directly. At the same time it is very possible that his 
less scrupulous followers translated them in their popular dis- 
courses, and thus fed the flame that burst forth in the rebellion. 
Perhaps it was a consciousness of a share of responsibility for 
it that led them to cast the blame on the friars. In any case 
Wycliffe's advocates must regret that in all his known works 
there is only one trace of any reprobation of the excesses that 
accompanied the outbreak. 

4 1381 (corre cte d by the editcv from 1380) is the date given in 
Shirley's edition of the Fasciculi Ziwauiorum. F. D. Matthew, m the 
Bug. Hist. Rev. for April 1890 (v. 328), proves that the date must 
have been 1379 or 1380. 

* Trialogus. lib. iv., cap. vt\ De Each, p. 240. 

• The difference is summed up by Melanchthon, in his rejection of 
Bucer's eirenicon, thus: — Fucum faciuni hominibus per hoe cued 
dicuut vere adesse corpus, el tamen postea addunt contcmplalione fidei, 
i.e. imagination*. Sic iierum uegant praesentiam realem. No* 
docemus, quod corpus Chrisfi vere et reolilor adest cum pane uel in pan* 
(Corpus Rcformaiorum t U. 222 sq.). 



870 



WYCLIFFE 



, In the spring following the Revolt his old enemy, William 
Courtenay, who had succeeded the murdered archbishop Sud- 
bury as archbishop of Canterbury, resolved to take measures 
lor stamping out Wycliffe's crowning heresy. He called a court 
of bishops, theologians and canonists at the Blackf riars' convent 
in London, which assembled on the 27th to 21st of May and sat 
with intervals until July. This proceeding was met by a hardly 
expected manifestation of university feeling on Wycliffe's side. 
The chancellor, Robert Rygge, though he had joined in the 
condemnation of the theses, stood by him, as did also both the 
proctors. On Ascension Day (the 15th of May) his most pro- 
minent disciple, Nicholas Hereford, was allowed to preach 
a violent sermon against the regulars in the churchyard of 
St Fridcswyde. The archbishop protested through his com- 
missary, the Carmelite Dr Peter Stokes, who was charged 
with the execution of the archbishop's mandate (on the aSth 
of May) for the publication in the university of the decision 
■of the Blackfriars' council, by which 24 articles extracted 
from Wycliffe's works were condemned, ten as heretical and 
fourteen as erroneous. The reply of the chancellor was to 
deny the archbishop's jurisdiction within the university, and 
to allow Philip Rcpington, another of Wycliffe's disciples, 
to preach on Corpus Christi day before the university. 
Chancellor and preacher were guarded by armed men, and 
Stokes wrote that his life was not safe at Oxford. The chan- 
cellor and proctors were now summoned to Lambeth, and 
directed to appear before the Blackfriars' court on the 12th of 
June. The result was that the university officers were soon 
brought to submission. Though they were, with the majority 
of regent masters at Oxford, on the side of Wycliffc, the main 
question at issue was for them one of philosophy rather than 
faith, and they were quite prepared to make formal submission to 
the authority of the Church. For the rest, a few of the reformer's 
more prominent adherents were arrested, and Imprisoned until 
they recanted. 

Wycliffc himself remained at large and unmolested. It 
is said indeed by Knyghton that at a council held by 
Courtenay at Oxford in the following November Wycliffe was 
brought forward and made a recantation; but our authority 
fortunately gives the text of the recantation, which proves to be 
nothing more nor less than a plain English statement of the 
condemned doctrine. It is therefore lawful to doubt whether 
Wycliffe appeared before the council at all, and even whether he 
was ever summoned before it. Probably after the overthrow 
of his party at Oxford by the action of the Blackfriars* council 
Wycliffe found it advisable to withdraw permanently to Lutter- 
worth. That his strength among the laity was undiminished 
is shown by the fact that an ordinance passed by the House of 
Lords alone, in May 1382, against the itinerant preachers was 
annulled on the petition of the Commons in the following autumn. 
In London, Leicester and elsewhere there is abundant evidence 
of his popularity. The reformer, however, was growing old. 
There was work, he probably felt, for him to do, more lasting 
than personal controversy. So in his retirement he occupied him- 
self, with restless activity, in writing numerous tracts, Latin and 
English. To this period, too, belong two of his most important 
works:— the Triatogns and the unfinished Opus evangclicum. 

The Trialogus is as it were his summa summarum ihertogiae. a 
summing up of his arguments and conclusions on philosophy and 
doctrine, cast in the form of a discussion between three persons, 
Alilhia, representing " solid theology," Phroncsis, representing 
" subtle and mature theology," and Pseustis, representing captious 
infidelity " whose function is to bring out the truth by arguing and 
demonstrating against it. The Trialogus was the best known and 
most influential of all Wycliffe's works, and was the first to be 
printed (1525), a fact which gave it a still greater vogue. It is also 
significant that all the only four known complete MSS. of the work, 
preserved in the Imperial Library at Vienna, are of Hussite origin. 
The note of both the Trialogus and of the Opus eoangelUum, Wy- 
cliffe's last work, is their insistence on the sufficiency of Holy 
Scripture." 

j n , .0. ~~,,t„ t n 13 g 3| Wycliffe was seized with a paralytic 
sir H he continued his labours. In 1384 il is 

st by Pope Urban VI. to appear before him 



at Rome , but to Rome he' never went. On the 28th of Dec em b er 
of this year, while he was hearing mass in his own church, he 
received a final stroke, from the effects of which he died on the 
New Year's eve. He was buried at Lutterworth ; but by a decree 
of the council of Constance, May 4, 1415, his remains were 
ordered to be dug up and burned, an order which was carried out, 
at the command of Pope Martin V., by Bishop Fleming in 1428. 

A sober study of Wycliffe's life and works justifies a conviction 
of his complete sincerity and earnest striving after what he 
believed to be right. If he cannot be credited (as he has been 
by most of his biographers) with all the Protestant virtues, he 
may at least claim to have discovered the secret of the immediate 
dependence ot the individual Christian upon God, a relation 
which needs no mediation of any priest, and to which the very 
sacraments of the Church, however desirable, are not essentially 
necessary. When he divorces the idea of the Church from any 
connexion with its official or formal constitution, and conceives it 
as consisting exclusively of the righteous, he may seem to have 
gone the whole length of the most radical reformers of the 
1 6th century. And yet, powerful as was his influence in England, 
his doctrines in his own country were doomed to perish, or at 
best to become for a century and a half the creed of obscure 
and persecuted sectaries (see Lollards). It was otherwise in 
Bohemia, whither his works had been carried by the scholars 
who came to England in the train of Richard U.'s queen, Anne of 
Bohemia. Here his writings were eagerly read and multiplied, 
and here his disciple, John Huss (?.».), with less originality 
but greater simplicity of character and greater moral force, raised 
Wycliffe's doctrine to the dignity of a national religion. Extracts 
from the De ccclesia and the De poteslate Pa pat of the English 
reformer made up the greater part of the De eedesia of Huss, a 
work for centuries ascribed solely to the Bohemian divine, and 
for which he was condemned and burnt. It was Wycliffe's 
De sufficients legis Christi that Huss carried with him to convert 
the council of Constance; cf the fiery discourses now included 
in the published edition of Wycliffe's Strmones many were like- 
wise long attributed to Huss. Finally, it was from the De 
eucharistia that the Taboritcs derived their doctrine of the 
Lord's Supper, with the exception of the granting of the chalice 
to the laity. To Huss, again, Luther and other continental 
reformers owed much, and thus the spirit of the English reformer 
had its influence on the reformed churches of Europe. 

Bibliography.— The documentary materials for Wycliffe's 
biography arc to be found in John Lewis's Life and Sufferings of J. 
Wkltf (new ed., Oxford, 1820), which contains a valuable appendix 
of illustrative papers and records; Foxe's Acts and Monuments* vol. 
Hi., ed. 1855. with app.; Forahall and Maddens preface to the 
Wycliffc Bible, p. vii. note. Oxford, 4851 , W W Shirley's edition 
of the Fasciculi Zitantorum, a collection of contemporary documents 
bearing on the history of Wycliffc and the Lollards, with inter- 
spersed narrative and comments' (probably the work of Thomas 
Kettcr of Waldcn) ( 1 858) . and H. T. Riley's notices in the appendices 
to the Second and Fourth Reports of the Historical Manuscripts 
Commission. Among contemporary records the narrative of a monk 
of St Albans — a bitter opponent of John of Caunt — is of conspicuous 
value, it was published under the title of Chronicon Angiiae, by 
Sir E. Maunde Thompson (1874). Of this the account in Walsing 
ham's Historia Anglicana (ed. H. T. Riley, -—--—-»• 



modified version. 



w . 1863, 1864) » mainly a 
who wrote De eventihus Angiiae at 



Knyghton, 
l^iccstcr in the heart of what may be called the Wycliffe country, is 
very well informed as 10 certain passage* in the reformer's history, 
though his chronology is extremely faulty (ed. J. R. Lumby, 1860- 
1895) There are valuable notices also in the continuation of the 
Eniogtum histortarum (vol ifi., ed F. S. Haydon, 1663), in the 
Chrontcle of Adam of Usk (ed. E. M Thompson, 1876), and in more, 
than one of the continual ions of Higden. For the study of Wycliffe's 
theology the controversial works of Wodeford and WaWen are 
important, but must necessarily be used with caution. 

Of modern biographies that by G. V. Lechler (Jokann von Widit 
nnd die Vorgeschtchte der Reformation, a vols.. Leipzig. 1873; partial 
Eng. trans., by P. Lorimer, 1878. 1881 and 1884) is by far the most 
comprehensive; it includes a detailed exposition of the reformer's 
system, based to a considerable extent on works which were then 
unpublished. Shirley's masterly introduction to the Fasciculi 
Zisaniomm. and F D. Matthew's to his edition of EngUsk Works 
of Wydif hitherto unprinted (1880), as well as Creighton's History of 
the Papacy, vol. i.. 188a, and Sir H. C. Maxwell Lyte's account in his 
History of the University of Oxford (1886). add to or correct our stock 
of biographical materials, and contain much valuable criticism. 



WYCOMBE— WYUE, A. 



871 



Wydiffe's political doctrine is discussed by Mr R. L. Poole (Wustra- 
liens of the History of Medieval Thought, 1884) \ and his relation to 
Hum is elaborately demonstrated by Dr J. Loaerth (Hus und Witty, 
Prague, 1884; also Eng. trans.). 

See also G. M. Trevelyan, England m the Agt of Wydiffe (London, 
1899): Oman, History of England 1377-14&S (London, 1906), 
511 B. for authorities; W. W. Capes, " History of the En_ 
Church in the 14th and 15th Centuries." in Hist, of the Eng. Chunk, 
ed Stephen and Hunt (London, 1900). Many references to more 
recent monographs on particular points wiD be found in J. Loserth's 
article "Wcbr/' m Herxog-Hauck, Realencyklopddi* (3rd ed., 

WydinVs works are enumerated in a Catalogue by Shirley (Oxford, 
1665). Of his Latin works only two had been published previously 
to 1880. the De officio pasiorali, ed. G. V. Lechler (Leipzig, 1863) and 
the Trtalogus, ed. Lechler (Oxford, 1869). The pious hope expressed 
by the learned editor of the Trioleins in his preface, that English 
scholars might be moved to publish all Wycli/fe s Latin works, began 
to be realized in 1882 with the foundation at Oxford of the Wyclif 
Society, under the auspices of which the following have been 
published :— Polemical Tracts, ed. R. Buddensieg, (a vols., 1883); 
De cinl$ dominto, voL L ed. R. L. Poole, vols, ii.-iv., ed. J. Loaerth 
(1885-1905); Do composition* kominis, ed. R. Beer (1884); Dt 
Ecclesia, ed. Loscrth (1886); Dialogus sis* speculum ecclesiae mili- 
lantts, ed. A. W. Pollard (1886); Sermones, ed. Loserth, vols, i.-iv. 
(1887-1890) ; Dt officio regis, ed. A. W Pollard and C. Sayle (1887) I 
De apasUxsia, ed. M. Dziewicki (1889) ; De dominio dwino, ed. R. L 
Poole (1890); Qmaestioms. Do onto praedicam e ntali, ed. R. Beer 
(1891); De eucharisiia traciatus major, ed. Loserth (1893); De 
blasphemia, ed. Dziewicki (1894); Logic* (3 vols., ed. Dziewicki, 
1895-1899); Opus evangelicum, ed. Loserth (4 vols., 1898), parts 
HL and iv. also bear the title De AnHckristo; De Simonia, ed. Hera* 
berg-Frankel and Dziewicki (1898); De veritaiae sacra* scripture*, 
ed. R. Buddensieg (3 vols., 1005); Miscellanea philosophic*, ed. 
P^. : ewkki (2 vols., 1905) (vol. 1. has an introduction on WycUAe's 
ciiilosophy); De potestate papa*, ed. Loserth (1907). 

For Wydiffe's English works see Select English Works, ed T. 
Arnold (3 vols., 1869-1871), and English Works hitherto imprinted. 
ed. F. D. Matthew (1880), chiefly sermons and short tracts, of many 
of which the authenticity b uncertain. The Wicket (Nuremberg, 
1546; reprinted at Oxford, 1828) is not included in either of these 
collections. (R. L. P. , W. A. P.) 

WYCOMBE (officially Chefkng Wycombe, also Chipping or 
Hich Wycombe), a market town and municipal borough in the 
Wycombe parliamentary division of Buckinghamshire, England, 
34 m. W by N. of London by the Great Western railway. Pop. 
(1001) 15,549. The church of All Saints, originally of Norman 
foundation, was rebuilt in 2273 by the abbess and nuns of 
Godstow near Oxford, and was largely reconstructed early in 
the 15th century. For the grammar school, founded c, 1550 by 
the mayor and burgesses, a new building was erected in 1883. 
There are remains of a Norman hospital of St John the Baptist, 
consisting of arches of the chapel. The market-house and 
guildhall was erected in 1757. The family of Petty, with whom 
the town has long been connected, occupied the mansion called 
Wycombe Abbey. Lord Beaconsneld's mansion of Hugbenden 
is 1} m. N of the town. Among a number of almshouses are 
some bearing the name of Queen Elizabeth, endowed in 156a out 
of the revenues of a dissolved fraternity of St Mary. The 
principal industry is chair-making, and there are also flour and 
paper mills. The borough is under a mayor, 8 aldermen and 
24 councillors. Area, 1734 acres. The burgesses of Wycombe 
have ancient rights of common pasturage on the neighbouring 
Rye Mead. 

There are various British remains in the neighbourhood of Chipping 
Wycombe {Wicumbe, Wycnmbet, Ckeping Wycombe, Cketnug Wick- 
ham), but the traces of a Roman settlement are more important. 
In Domesday Book the manor only is mentioned, but in 1 199 the 
men of Wycombe paid tallage to the king. In 1225-1320 Alan 
Basset granted to the burgesses the whole town as a free borough. 
This grant was confirmed by Henry III . Edward I., Henry IV. and 
Mary. In 1558. however, a new charter of incorporation was granted 
In reward for the loyalty shown to Queen Mary. It was confirmed 
by Elizabeth in 1598 and by James 17 in 1609 with certain additions. 
Cromwell prantcd another charter, but it was burnt after the Restora- 
tion, and the last charter was granted by Charles II. in 1663. The 
corporation was remodelled under the Municipal Corporations Act of 
1835, and now consists of a mayor. 6 aldermen and 18 councillors. 
Wycombe returned two burgesses to parliament in 1300 and con- 
tinued to send members until 1885. The franchise was enlarged 
after 1832, and in 1867 the borough was deprived of one of iti 
members. A market was granted oy Basset to the burgesses in 
1226, and at the present day it is held every Friday, the day fixed by 
the charter of Queen Mary. Two statutory fairs were held under the 



charter of 1558, but in 179a only one fair was add on the Monday 
before Michaelmas for luring, but there is now a pleasure fair on the 
same day. 

See. John Parker, History and Antiquities of Wycombe (1878). 

WYB, a river of England, famous for its beautiful scenery. 
It rises in Montgomeryshire on the E. slope of Plinlimmon, 
dose to the source of the Severn, the estuary of which it joins 
after a widely divergent course. Its length is 130 m.; Us 
drainage area (which is included in the basin of the Severn), 
1609 sq. m. Running at first S.E. it crosses the W. of Radnor- 
shire, passing Rhayader, and receiving the Elan, in the basin of 
which are the Birmingham reservoirs. It then divides Radnor- 
shire from Brecknockshire, receives the Ithon on the left, passes 
Builth, and presently turns N.E. to Hay, separating Radnorshire 
from Herefordshire, and thus forming a short stretch of the 
Welsh boundary The river, which rose at an elevation exceeding 
2000 ft , has now reached a level of 250 ft., 55 m. from its source. 
As it enters Herefordshire it bends E. by S. to reach the city of 
Hereford. It soon receives the Lugg, which, augmented by the 
Arrow and the Frome, joins from the N. The course of the 
Wye now becomes extremely sinuous; and the valley narrows 
nearly to Chepstow. For a short distance the Wye divides 
Herefordshire from Gloucestershire, and for the rest of its 
course Gloucestershire and Monmouthshire. It passes Mon- 
mouth, where it receives the Monnow on the right, and finally 
Chepstow, 2 m. above its junction with the Severn estuary. 
The river is navigable for small vessels for 15 m. up from the 
mouth on high tides, but there is not much traffic above Chep- 
stow. The average spring rise of the tide is 38 ft. at Chepstow, 
while 50 ft. is sometimes exceeded; the average neap rise is 
28) ft. The scenery is finest between Rhayader and Hay in the 
upper part, and from Goodrich, below Ross, to Chepstow in the 
lower, the second being the portion which gives the Wye its fame. 



The name of Wye belongs also to two smaller English rivers— (1) 
a right-bank tributary of the Derbyshire Derwent, rising in the 
uplands near Buxton, and having part of its early course through one 
of the caverns characteristic of the district; (2) a left-bank tributary 
of the Thames, watering the valley of the Chilterns in which lies 
Wycombe and joining the main river near Bourne End. 

WYKES, THOMAS, English chronicler, was a canon regular 
of Oseney Abbey, near Oxford. He was the author of a chronicle 
extending from 1066 to 1 2S9, which is printed among the monastic 
annals edited by H. R. Luard for the " Rolls " Series. He gives 
an account of the barons' war from a royalist standpoint, and is 
a severe critic of Montfort's policy. He is of some value for the 
reign of Edward I. His work is closely connected with the 
Oseney Annals, which are printed parallel with his work by 
Luard, but from 1 258 to x 278 Wykes is an independent authority. 

Sec H. R. Luard's Annates monastici, vol. iv. (1869); and earlier 
edition in Gale's Scriptores quinque, pp. 21-128. 

WYLIB, ALEXANDER (1815-1887), British missionary, was 
born in London on the 6th of April 181 5, and went to school 
at Drumlithie, Kincardineshire, and at Chelsea. While appren- 
ticed to a cabinet-maker he picked up a Chinese grammar written 
in Latin, and after mastering the latter tongue made such good 
progress with the former, that in 1846 James Legge engaged 
him to superintend the London Missionary Society's press at 
Shanghai. In this position he acquired a wide knowledge of 
Chinese religion and civilization, and especially of their mathe- 
matics, so that be was able to show that Sir George Horner's 
method (1819) of solving equations of all orders had been known 
to the Chinese mathematicians of the 14th century. He made 
several journeys into the interior, notably in 1858 with Lord 
Elgin up the Yang-tsze and in 1868 with Griffith John to the 
capital of Sze-ch'uen and the source of the Han. From 1863 he 
was an agent of the British and Foreign Bible Society. He settled 
in London in 1877, and died on the 10th of February 1887. 

In Chinese he published books on arithmetic, geometry, algebra 

S>e Morgan'*), mechanics, astronomy (Herschel's), and The 
arine Steam Engine (T. J. Main and T. Brown), as well as trans- 
lations of the first two gospels. In English his chief works were 
Notes on Chinese Literature (Shanghai. 1867), and scattered articles 
collected under the title Chines* Researches by Alexander Wylio 
(Shanghai, 1897). 
See H. Cordier. Life and Labours of A. Wytu (1887). 



1 



872 



WYLIE, R.— WYNDHAM 



WYLIS, ROBERT (1839-1877), American artist, was born in 
the Isle of Man in 1839. He was taken to the United States 
when a child, and studied in the schools of the Pennsylvania 
Academy of the Fine Arts, Philadelphia, the directors of which 
sent him to France in 1863 to study. He won a medal of the 
second class at the Paris Salon of 1872. He went to Pont Aven, 
Brittany, in the early sixties, where he remained until his death 
on the 4th of February 1877. He painted Breton peasants and 
scenes in the history of Brittany; among his important works 
was a large canvas, " The Death of a Vendean Chief/' now at 
the Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York. 

WYMONOHAM (pronounced Windham), a market town in 
the mid-parliamentary division of Norfolk, England, 10 m. S.W. 
of Norwich by (he Great Eastern railway. Pop. (1001) 4764* 
The church of St Mary the Virgin rises on an eminence on the 
outskirts of the town. It was attached to a Benedictine priory, 
founded about the beginning of the lath century as a cell of 
St Albans abbey by William de Albini. In 1448 this foundation 
became an abbey. The nave is of ornate Norman work, with a 
massive triforium, surmounted by a Perpendicular clerestory 
and a beautiful wooden roof. The broad N. aisle is Perpendicular, 
and has also a very fine rood screen. At the W. end there is a 
lofty and graceful Perpendicular tower. The choir, which was 
used as the conventual church, has left only slight traces, and one 
arch is standing of a large chapel which adjoined it on the S. 
In the centre of the town is a picturesque half-timbered market 
cross (16 1 6), with an octagonal upper chamber raised on massive 
pillars of wood. A chapel, dedicated to St Thomas of Canterbury, 
is used as a grammar school At Wymondham on the 7th of 
July a festival was formerly held in honour of the saint. It 
was at this festival in 1549 that the rebellion of Robert Ket or 
Kelt came to a head. 

WYNAAD, or Waxnad, a highland tract in S. India, forming 
part of Malabar district, Madras. It consists of a table-land 
amid the W. Ghats, 60 m. long by 30 m. broad, with an average 
elevation of 3000 ft.; pop. (1901) 75.M9- It is best known as 
the district where. a large amount of British capital was sunk 
during the decade 1876-1886 in gold mines. It had yet earlier 
been a coffee-planting district, but this industry has recently 
declined. Tea, pepper and cardamoms are produced in increasing 
quantities. There are also valuable forest reserves. 

WYNDHAM. SIR CHARLES (1837- ), English' actor, was 
born in Liverpool on the 23rd of March 1837, the son of a doctor. 
He was educated abroad, at King's College, London and at the 
College of Surgeons and the Peter Street Anatomical School, 
Dublin, but his taste for the stage was too strong for him to 
take up either the clerical or the medical career, suggested for him, 
and early in 1862 he made a first appearance in London as an 
actor. Later in the year, being in America, he volunteered 
during the Civil War', and became brigade surgeon in the Federal 
array, resigning in 1864 to appear on the stage in New York 
with John Wilkes Booth. Returning to England, he played at 
Manchester and Dublin in Her Ladyship's Guardian, his own 
adaptation of Edward B. Hamley's novel Lady Lee's Widowhood. 
He reappeared in London in 1866 as Sir Arthur Lascelles in 
Morton's All that Glitters is not Gold, but his great success at 
that time was in F. C. Burnand's burlesque of Black-eyed Susan, 
as Hatchctt, " with dance." This brought him to the St James's 
theatre, where he played with Henry Irving in Idalia; then with 
Ellen Terry in Charles Readc's Double Marriage, and Tom 
Taylor's Still Waters Run Deep. As Charles Surface, his best 
part for many years, and in a breezy three-act farce, Pink 
Dominoes, by James Albery, and in Brighton, an anglicized 
version of Saratoga by Bronson Howard (1847-1908), who 
married his sister, he added greatly to his popularity both at 
home and abroad. In 1876 he took control of the Criterion 
theatre. Here he produced a long succession of plays, in which 
he took the leading part, notably a number of old English 
comedies, and in such modern plays as The Liars, The Case of 
RtbtflitW Smnu and others by Henry Arthur Jones; and he 
, r~» vfe acting in Datid Garrick. In 1899 he 
called Wyndham's. la 1902 he was 



knighted. From 1885 onwards Ins leading actress was Mi* 
Mary Moore (Mrs Albery), who became his partner in the 
proprietorship of the Criterion and Wyndham's theatres, and of 
his New Theatre, opened in 1903; and her delightful acting in 
comedy made their long association memorable on the London 
stage. 

WYNDHAM, SIR WILLIAM. BAST. (1687-1740), English 
politician, was the only son of Sir Edward Wyndham, Bart., and 
a grandson of William Wyndham (d. 1683) of Orchard Wynd- 
ham, Somerset, who was created a baronet in i66x. Educated 
at Eton and at Christ Church, Oxford, he entered parliament 
in 1 7 10 and became secretary~at-war in the Tory ministry in 
1712 and chancellor of the exchequer in 17x3. He was closely 
associated with Lord Bolingbroke, and he was privy to the 
attempts made to bring about a Jacobite restoration on the death 
of Queen Anne; when these failed he was dismissed from office. 
In 1715 the failure of a Jacobite movement led to his imprison- 
ment, but he was soon set at liberty. Under George I. Wyndham 
was the leader of the opposition in the House of Commons, 
fighting for his High Church and Tory principles against Sir 
Robert Walpole. He was in constant communication with the 
exiled Bolingbroke, and after 1723 the two were actively associ- 
ated in abortive plans for the overthrow of Walpole. He died 
at Wells on the 17th of June 1740. Wyndham's first wife was 
Catherine, daughter of Charles Seymour, 6th duke of Somerset. 
By her he had two sons, Charles, who became and earl of Egre- 
mont in 1750, and Percy, who took the name of O'Brien and was 
created earl of Thomond in 1756. 

The Wyndham Family. Sir John Wyndham, a Norfolk man, 
was knighted after the battle of Stoke in 1487 and beheaded 
for high treason on the 2nd of May 1 502. He married Margaret, 
daughter of John Howard, duke of Norfolk, and his son Sir 
Thomas Wyndham (d. 1521), of Felbrigg, Norfolk, was vice- 
admiral of England under Henry VHI. By his first wife Sir 
Thomas was the father of Sir John Wyndham, who married 
Elisabeth, daughter of John Sydenham of Orchard, Somerset, 
and founded the Somerset branch of the family, and also of Sir 
Edmund Wyndham of Felbrigg, who was sheriff of Norfolk at 
the time of Robert Ket's rebellion. By his second wife Sir 
Thomas was the father of the seaman Thomas Wyndham 
(c 15x0-1553), sn account of whose voyage to Morocco in 155* 
is printed in Hakluyt's Voyages. 

From Sir John Wyndham of Orchard Wyndham was de- 
scended Thomas Wyndham (1 681-174 5), lord chancellor of 
Ireland from 1726 to 1739, who in 1731 was created Baton Wynd- 
ham of Finglass, a title which became extinct on his death. His 
nephew, Henry Penniddocke Wyndham- (x 736-18x9), the topo- 
grapher, wrote A Gentleman's Tour through Monmoutkthwe and 
Wales in June and July 1774 (1 775); and Wiltshire from Domes- 
day Book, with a Translation of the Original Latin into English 
(Salisbury, 1788). 

Sir John Wyndham of Orchard Wyndham was also the ancestor 
of the Windhams of Felbrigg, who adopted this form of spelling 
the family name, the most noteworthy members of which were 
the statesman William Windham (*».), and Sir Charles Ash 
Windham (1810-1870), a soldier who mrnmannVd in the Crimea 
and in the Indian Mutiny. 

The Wyndhams are also connected through a female fine with 
the family of Wyndham-Quin, which holds the earldom of Dun- 
raven. Valentine Richard Quin (1752-1824), of Adare, county 
Limerick, was created Baron Adare on the union with England 
in 1 800, and earl of Dunraven and Mount -Earl in 1822. His son, 
the 2nd earl (1782-1850), mairied Caroline (d. 1870), daughter 
and heiress of Thomas Wyndham of Dunraven Castle, Glamorgan- 
shire, and took the name of Wyndham-Quin. Their son, the 
3rd earl (181 2-1871), who was created a peer of the United 
Kingdom as Baron Kenry in 1866, was a well-known man of 
science, especially interested in archaeology. His son, Windham 
Thomas Wyndham-Quin (b. 1841), the 4th earl, was under" 
secretary for the colonies in 1885-1887, and became later a 
prominent figure in Irish politics, as chairman of the Irish Land 
Conferencr and president of the Irish Reform Association; 



WYNN— WYOMING 



»73 



be was also prominent as a yachtsman, competing for the 
America cup (see Yachting) in 1803 and x8o$. 

WYNN, SIR JOHN (1553-1627), Welsh antiquary, was the son 
of Morris Wynn and descended from the princes of Wales. He 
was educated at Oxford, succeeded to his father's estate of 
Gwydir in Carnarvonshire in 1580, and was member of parlia- 
ment for this county in x 586. In 1606 he was made a knight and 
in 16 x 1 a baronet. He was interested in several mining ventures 
and also found time for antiquarian studies. He died on the 1st 
of March 1627. At Llanrwst Wynn founded an hospital and 
endowed a school. His History of the Gwydir Family, which had 
a great reputation ra North Wales, was first published by Daines 
Barrington in 1770, and in 1878 an edition was published at 
Oswestry. It is valuable as the only work which describes the 
state of society in North Wales in the 15th and the earlier part 
of the x6th century. Hisson Richard (d. 1640) was in attendance 
on Prince Charles, afterwards Charles L, when he visited Spain 
hi 1623, and was afterwards treasurer to Queen Henrietta Maria; 
be wrote an account of the journey to Spain, published by T. 
Hearnc in 1729 with the Historic vita* et regrU Rkardi II. He 
built the bridge over the Conway at Llanrwst. The baronetcy 
became extinct in 17 19, when Wynnstay, near Ruabon, passed 
to Sir Watkin Williams, who took the name of Williams- Wynn 
and founded the family of that name. 

Sir John Wynn's estate of Gwydir came to the 1st duke of 
Ancaster in the 17th century by his marriage with the heiress 
of the Wynns. On the death of the last duke in 1779, Gwydir 
was inherited by his sister Priscilla, Lady WUIoughby de Eresby 
in her own right, whose husband was created Baron Gwydir. 
On the death of Alberic, Lord WUIoughby de Eresby (1870), 
this title (now merged in that of earl of Ancaster) fell into 
abeyance between his two daughters, while that of Baron 
Gwydir passed to his cousin and heir male Gwydir itself was 
sold by the earl of Ancaster in 1895, the house and part of the 
estate being bought by Earl Carrington, who also claimed descent 
from Sir John Wynn. 

WYNTOUN, ANDREW OF (?i35©-?i42o), author of a long 
metrical history of Scotland, called the Ory%ynaU Cronykil of 
Scotland, was a canon regular of St Andrews, and prior of St 
Serfs in Lochlevcn. He wrote the Chronicle at the request of 
his patron, Sir John of Wemyss, whose representative, Mr 
Erskinc Wemyss of Wemyss Castle, Fifeshire, possesses the oldest 
extant MS. of the work. The subject is the history of Scotland 
from the mythical period (hence the epithet " original ") down 
to the accession of James I. in 1406. The earlier books are of no 
historical value, but the later have in all outstanding matters 
stood the test of comparison with contemporary records. The 
philological interest is great, for few works of this date, and no 
other of like magnitude, are extant in the vernacular. 

The text is preserved in eight MSS., of which three are in the British 
Museum, the Royal (17 D xx.), the Cottonian (Nero D. xi.) and the 
Lansdowne (197); two in the Advocates' library, Edinburgh (19, 
2. 3 and 19, 2, 4), one at Wemyss Castle (u.s.) ; one in the university 
library at St Andrews, and one, formerly in the possession of the 
Bo«wells of Auchinlcck. now the property of Mr John Ferguson, 
Duns, Berwickshire. The first edition of the CkronicU (based on the 
Royal MS.) was published by David Macpherson in 1795: the 
second by David Laing, in the series of " Scottish Historians " (Edin., 
1872). Both are superseded by the elaborate edition by Mr Amours 
for the Scottish Text Society (1906). 

WYOMING, one of the Central Western states of the United 
States of America, situated between the parallels of latitude 41° 
and 4$° N., and the meridians of longitude 37 s and 34 s W. of 
Washington. It is bounded on the N. by Montana on the E. 
by S. Dakota and Nebraska, on the S. by Colorado and Utah, 
and on the W. by Utah, Idaho, and a small southward projection 
of Montana. The state has a length of about 375 m. E. and W. 
along its southern border and a breadth of 376 m. N. and S. It 
has an area of 97,914 tq. m. t of which 320 sq. m. are water surface 
Pkytical Featum.— The greater portion of the state belongs to the 
Great Plains Province, which extends from N. to S. across the 
United States between the tooth meridian and the Rocky Mountains. 
Within this province are found the Black Hills of S. Dakota, and 
their W. slopes extend across the boundary into N.E. Wyoming. 
The N.W. portion of the state is occupied by the & end of the 



Northern Rocky Mountain Province; and the>f . end of the Southern 
Rockies extends across the Colorado line into southern Wyoming. 
The Great Plains in Wyoming have an elevation of from 5000 to 
7000 ft. over much of the state, and consist of flat or gently rolling 
country, barren of tree growth, but often covered with nutritious 
grasses, and affording pasturage for vast numbers of live stock. 
Erosion buttesand mesas occasionally rise as picturesque monuments 
above the general level of the plains, and In the vicinity of the 
mountains the plains strata, elsewhere nearly horizontal, are bent 
sharply upward and carved by erosion into " hogback " ridges. 
These features are well developed about the Bighorn Mountains, an 
outlying member of the Rockies which boldly interrupts the con- 
tinuity of the plains in north-central Wyoming. The plains sedi- 
ments contain important coal beds, which are worked in nearly 
every county in the state. In the region between the Northern and 
Southern Rockies, the plains are interrupted by minor Mountain 
groups, volcanic buttes and lava flows, among which the Leucite 
Hills and Pilot Butte are prominent examples. 

Notwithstanding these elevations, this portion of the state makes 
a distinct break in the continuity of the Northern and Southern 
Rockies, givin 
Trail in early 

The Black H 

Buttes and the Mato Tepee (or Devil's Tower), prominent erosion 
remnants of volcanic intrusions. Local glaciation has modified the 
higher levels of the Bighorn Mountains, giving glacial cirques, 
alpine peaks and many mountain lakes and waterfalls. Several 
small glaciers still remain about the base of Cloud Peak, the highest 
summit in the range (13,165 ft.). The Southern Rockies end in 
broken ranges with elevations of 9000 ft. and over. That portion of 
the Northern Rockies extending into the N. W. of the state affords the 
most magnificent scenery. Here is the Yellowstone National Park 



(ex.). Just S. of the Park the Teton Mountains, rising abruptly from 

the low basin of lacksonV " ' * ' 

form a striking feature. 



low basin of Jackson's Hole to elevations of io,oop and 1 1,000 ft., 
n a striking feature. In the Wind River Range, farther S.E., are 
Gannett Peak (13.775 ft.), the highest point in the state, and Fremont 
Peak (13,7^0 ft.). In addition to the not springs of the Yellowstone 
region, mention should be made of large hot springs at Thcrmopplis 
and Saratoga, where the water has a temperature of about 135" F. 

Much of the state is drained by branches of the Missouri nver, the 
most important being the Yellowstone, Bighorn and Powder rivers 
flowing N., and the Cheyenne and North Platte flowing E. The 
Green river, a branch of the Colorado, flows S. from the S.W. of the 
state, while the Snake river rises farther N. and flows W. to the 
Pacific drainage. S.W. of the centre of the state is an area with no 
outward drainage, the streams emptying into desert lakes. 

faun*.— Great herds of bison formerly ranged the plains and a 
few are still preserved in the National Park. The white-tailed 
Virginia deer inhabits the bottom lands and the mule deer the more 
open country. Lewis's prairie dog, the cottontail rabbit, the coyote, 
the grey wolf and the kit fox are all animals of the plains. In the 
mountains are elk, puma, lynx, the varying hare and snowshoe rabbit, 
the yellow-haired porcupine, Fremont's and Bailey's squirrels, the 
mountain sheep, the four-striped chipmunk, Townsend's spermo- 
phile, the prong-horned antelope, the cinnamon pack-rat, grizzly, 
brown, silveitip and black bears and the wolverine. Other animals, 
more or less common, are the black-tailed deer, the jackrabbit, the 
badger, the skunk, the beaver, the moose and the weasel. The 
prairie rattlesnake is common in the dry plains country. 

The streams are well stocked with rainbow and brook trout. The 
former fish were introduced from California in 1 885. They thrive in the 
Wyoming streams and rivers and are superior game fish. Specimens 
of eight and ten pounds weight have been taken by rod and fly 
fishermen from the Big Laramie river. Other fish native to the waters 
of the state are the sturgeon, catfish, perch (locally called pike), 
buffalo fish, flathead and sucker. 

There is a great variety of birds. Eared grebes and ring-billed 
gulls breed on the sloughs of the plains, and rarely the white pelican 
nests about the lake shores. Here, too, breed many specks of ducks, 
the mallard, gadwall, baldpate, three species of teal shovcler, pin- 
tail, hooded mergansers, and Canada geese; other ducks and geese 
are migrants only. Formerly the trumpeter swan nested here. On 
the plains a few waders breed, as the avocet, western willct and long- 
billed curlew; but most are birds of passage. At high altitudes the 
mountain plover is found ; the dusky grouse haunts the forests above 
8000 ft. ; the white-tailed ptarmigan is resident in the alpine regions; 
and on the plains are found the prairie sharp-tailed grouse and the 
sage-hen. The turkey-buzzard is found mainly in the plains country. 
Various hawks and owls are common: the golden eagle nests on the 
mountain crags and the burrowing owl on the plains. The red-naped 
sapsucker ana Lewis's woodpecker are conspicuous in wooded lands; 
NuttalTs poor-will, Say's phocbe, the desert horned lark, Bullock's 
oriole, the yellow-headed blackbird and McCowns longspur are 
characteristic of the open lowlands. 

Flora. — Forest growth in Wyoming is limited to the highest 
mountain ranges, the most important forests being in the Black If ills 
region in the N.E., on the lower slopes of the Bighorn Mountains, 
and in the Rocky Mountain ranges of the N.W. of the state, including 
Yellowstone National Park, The yellow pine is the most important 
and small lodgt-pok pine snakes up the greater 



tree in the Bighorns, a 



874 



WYOMING 



put oC the N.W .forests. White fir la found above the foothill cone, 
and heavy growths of cottonwood along the streams in the Bighorn 
region. The Douglas spruce and Rocky Mountain white pine are 
common in the forests of the Medicine Bow Mountains, from which 
much of the native lumber used in the S. of the state is secured. 
Other trees are the juniper, willow, green ash, box eldci scrub oak, 
wild plum and wild cherry. Occasional cottonwoods along streams 
are the only trees on the plains. The common sage brush artemisia, 
is the characteristic shrub of the plains where the soil is comparatively 
free from alkali, and is abundant in the valleys of the arid foothills. 
Where alkali is present, the plains may be nearly barren, or covered 
with grease wood and species of atriplex, including the so-called while 
sage. Grease wood is bkewise abundant m the foothills wherever 
the soil contains alkali. Various species of nutritious grasses cover 
much of the plains and foothills, and even clothe the apparently 
barren mountain peaks. 

CltmaU. — In the lower Bighorn Valley, summer temperatures rise 
to 95° or ioo°, but at heights of tooo to 7000 ft on neighbouring 
ranges, summer temperatures seldom rise above 90", and frosts may 
occur at any time Elevations under 6000 ft. have a mean annual 
temperature of from 40° to 47*, but high mountain areas and cold 
valleys may have mean temperatures as low as 34* The air is 
clear and dry, and although temperatures of 100* arc recorded, sun- 
strokes are practically unknown. Winter temperatures as low as 
-51 * have been recorded, but these very low temperatures occur in the 
valleys rather than on the higher elevations. The cold is sharp and 
bracing rather than disagreeable, on account of the dryness of the 
air; and the periods of cold weather are generally of short duration. 
The winter climate is remarkably pleasant as a rule, and outdoor 
work may usually be carried on without discomfort. 

The following figures give some idea of the climatic variations. 
At Basin, in the Bighorn Valley, the mean winter temperature is 
16°, the summer mean 72°. Thayne, on the mountainous W. border 
of the state, has a winter mean of 19°, aod a summer mean of but 
59°; Cheyenne in the S.E., has a winter mean of 27*. and a summer 
mean of 65*. The percentage of sunshine in the state is high. 
Precipitation varies in different areas from 8 to 20 in., the average 
for the state being 12*5 in. Wyoming thus belongs with the and 
states, and irrigation is necessary for agriculture. A greater pre- 
cipitation doubtless prevails on the higher mountains, but trust- 
worthy records are not available. Spring is the wettest season. 
The prevailing winds are W. and reach a high velocity on the level 
plains. 

Soil— While some of the more arid districts have soils so strongly 
alkaline as to be practically unrcclaimablc, there are extensive areas 
of fertile lands which only require irrigation to make them highly 
productive. Alluvial deposits Drought down by mountain streams, 
and strips of Aoodplain along larger streams on the plains are very 
fertile and well repay irrigation. Lack of water rather than poverty 
of soil renders most of the plains region fit for grazing only. In the 
mountains, rugged neas combines with thin and scattered soil to make 
these districts of small agricultural value. 

AgrkuUurt. — The total area in farms in 1 880 was 124433 acres, of 
which 83,122 acres (66-8%) were improved; in 1900 it was 8,124,536 
acres, of which 792,332 acres (08%) were improved. The large 
increase in unimproved acreage in farms was principally due to the 
increased importance in sheep-raising. In 1909 Wyoming ranked 
first among the states in the number of sheep and the production of 
wool. The number of sheep in loop was 7 316,000, valued at 
$32,190,000. being more than one-eighth in numbers and nearly one- 
seventh in value of all sheep in the United States. The production of 
wool in 1909 was 38400,000 tb of washed and unwashed wool and 
12.288.000 ft) of scoured wool. The average weight per fleece was 
8 lb. The Bureau of Animal I ndustry of the U.S. Department of Agri- 
culture has made experiments in breeding range sheep in Wyoming. 
The total number of neat cattle on farms and ranges in 1910 was 
986,000 (including 27,000 milch cows) valued at $26,277,000; 
horses, 148.000, valued at $1 2.284,000 ;* mules, 2000, valued at 
$212,000; and swine, at, 000. valued at $178,000. 

In 1909 the hay crop (alfalfa, native hay, timothy bay, Sec) was 
665,000 tons, valued at $5,918,000 and raised on 277,000 acres. 
The cereal crops increased enormously in the decade 1809-1909. 
The principal cereal crop in 1909 was oats, the product of which was 
3.500,000 bushels, grown on 100,000 acres and valued at $1,750,000. 
The wheat crop increased from 4674 bushels in 1879 to 2,297,000 
bushels in 1900, grown on 80,000 acres and valued at $2,274,000. 
The product of Indian corn in 1909 was 140,000 bushels, grown on 
5000 acres and valued at $109,000, 

Mining .— The development of Wyoming's naturally rich mineral 
resources has been retarded by inadequate transport and by in- 
sufficient capital. The value of the state's mineral product was 
$5,684,286 in 1902 and $945344 ( » n 1 £° a - la 1908 Wyoming 
ranked twelfth among the states of the Union in the value of its 
output of bituminous coal. Other mineral products of the state are 



1 The breed of horses *n Wyoming has improved rapidly ; in 1904, 
when the VS. Department of Agriculture purchased eighteen 
mares and a stallion in hope of improving the American carriage 
bone, six of the mares were from Wyoming and were principally of 
Morfjuatoci*. 



copper, gold, iron, petroteam, asbestos, soda, silver and lend, gypsum, 
stone and clay product*. The original coal supply of the present 
state has been estimated (by the United States Geological Survey) at 
424.085.000,000 short tons of the bituminous or sub-bituminous 
variety, this amount being second only to that for North Dakota, . 

500,000,000 000 short tons, which, however, is entirely lignite. Coat ' 

was first mined in what is now Wyoming in 1865. probably in con- 
nexion with the building of the Union Pacific railway, and the pro- 
duct in that year was 800 short tons. Thereafter the industry 
developed steadily and the product in 1908 was 5.489,902 tons, 
valued at $8,868,157. In 1908 (and for several years before) the | 

largest product of coal (2.180.933 tons) came from Sweetwater 
county, in the S.W. of the state, and Uinta county (adjoining Swcet- 
wa;r*r county on the W.) had the next largest product. 1 .380,488 tons. 
Sheridan county, in the north-central part of the state. Carbon 
couaty in the south-central part and Weston county in the N.E. 
were the next largest producers. The product of coal to the end of 
1908 was 1 25.000.000 short tons, or 0-029 % of the estimated supply. 

The mining product next in value to coal in 1908 was copper, 
taken chiefly in Carbon county in a cone of brecciated quartzite 
underlying schist, the original ore being chalcopyrite, with possibly 
some pynte, a secondary enrichment, which has produced im- 
portant bodies of chalcocite in the upper workings, but these are 
replaced by chalcopyrite at greater depth. The production in 1908 
was 2416,197 lb, valued at $318,938. The gypsum product (fron* 
the Laramie plains) in 1908 was 31.188 tons, valued at 894.935. 

There are extensive deposits of petroleum and natural gas, which 
have become of commercial rmportance. Oil has been found in 
eighteen different districts, the fields being known as follows: — The 
Carter. Hilliard. Spring Valley and Twin Creek in Uinta county; the 
Popo <Agie, Lander, Shoshone, Beaver and a part of Dutton in 
Fremont county; the Rattlesnake, Arrago, Oil Mountain and a part 
of Dutton, Powder river and Salt Creek in Natrona county; part of 
Powder nver and Salt Creek in Johnson county; Newcastle in 
Weston county; Belle Fourche In Crook county; Douglas in 
Converse county and Bonanza in Bighorn county. The Popo Agie 
and Lander fields produce the largest quantities of oil the wells being 
partly gushers from which a> heavy fuel oil is obtained. This is now 
being used by the Chicago & North Western Railroad Company on its 
locomotives, and it is also used in Omaha (Nebraska) by manufactur- 
ing establishments. There is a great variety in the grades of oils 
produced in the state, ranging from the heavy asphaltic oils of the 
Popo Agie and Lander fields to the high-grade lubricants and superior 
light products obtained from the wells in the Douglas, Salt Creek and 
Uinta county fields. Natural gas in quantity has been found in the 
Douglas field and in Bighorn county. 

The iron deposits are very extensive, and the ores consist of red 
haematites, magnetites, titanic, chrome and manganese irons. In 
nearly every county there are veins of iron ore of varying extent and 

Jiuality, the most important being at Hartville. Laramie county, 
ran Mountain, Albany county, the Seminole and Rawlins in Carbon 
county. The Hartville ores are remarkable for their high grade and 
purity, running from 60 to 70% metallic iron, with 2) to 5% silica, 
and only traces of sulphur and phosphorus. The ore is a red haema- 
tite occurring in slate. The iron ore from this district obtained the 
grand prize at the World's Fair held in Chicago in 1893. in competi- 
tion with iron ores from all parts of the world. The Hartville iron 
deposits arc worked by the Colorado Fuel & Iron Company, which 
ships large quantities of ore to its furnaces at Pueblo, Colorado. 
The discovery of natural gas in the Douglas oil field has opened up 
the possibility of working a smelting plant at the mines by means of 
this cheap and convenient fuel. The distance to be covered by a 
pipe line is not prohibitive, and the matter has been under considera- 
tion by the owners and lessees of the iron mines. 

There are sandstone deposits in Carbon county, which supplied the 
stone for the Capitol at Cheyenne and the state penitentiary; and 
from the Iron mountain quarries in Laramie county was taken the 
white variety used in building the Carnegie library and the Federal 
building in Cheyenne. Sandstones and quartaites were also quarried 
in 1902 in Albany, Crook and Uinta counties. Limestone occurs in 
thick formations near Lava Creek, and in the valley of the East Fork 
of the Yellowstone river; also near the summit of the Owl Creek 
range, and in the Wind River range. Gold was discovered on the 
Sweetwater river in 1867, and placer and quartz deposits have been 
found in almost every county in the state. Sulphur has been found 
near Cody and Thcrraopolis. 

Irrigation.— The irrigable area of Wyoming Is estimated at about 
6.200,000 acres. Wing chiefly in Bighorn. Sheridan and Johnson 
counties in the N.W. of the state, and in Laramie, Albany and Carbon 
counties in the S.EL, though there are large tracts around the head- 
waters of the Bighorn river, in Fremont county in the vest-central 
part, along the North Platte river and its tributaries in Converse 
county in the central part, and along the Green river and its tribu- 
taries in Sweetwater and Uinta counties in the S. W. U ndcr the Carey 
Act and its amendments Congress had in 1009 given to the state 
about 2,000.000 acres of desert land on condition that it should be 
reclaimed, and in that year about 800,000 acres were in pio cess of 
reclamation, mostly by private companies. Settlers intending ts> 
occupy such kinds must satisfy the state that they have entered into 
contracts with the irrigating company for a sufficient water-right 



WYOMING 




WYOMING 



«75 



aad a perpetual interest in the irrigation works. The principal 
undertaking of the Federal government is the Shoshone project ia 
Bighorn county. This provides for a storage reservoir, controlled 
by Shoshone dam on Shoshone river, about B m. above Cody; a 
canal diverting water from Shoshone reservoir round the N. of 
Shoshone dam and covering lands in the vicinity of Cody, Corbett, 
Eagle Nest and Ralston: a dam at Corbett about 16 m. bdow the 
reservoir diverting water to Ralston reservoir and thence to lands 
in the vicinity of Ralston, Powell, Garland, Mantua and Frannte, and 
a dam on the Shoshone river near Eagle Nest diverting water into a 
canal covering the lands of the Shoshone River Valley. This project 
was authorized in 1901; it will affect, when completed, 131,900 
acres, of which in 1909 about 10,000 acres were actually under irriga- 
tion. Near Douglas, in Converse county, there is a reinforced con- 
crete dam, impounding the waters of Laprele Creek, to furnish 
water for over 30,000 acres, and power for transmitting electricity. 
There are large irrigated areas in Johnson and Sheridan counties. 

Forests. — The woodland area of Wyoming in 1900 was estimated at 
12.500 sq. m. (13% of the area of the state), of which the United 
States bad reserved about 3500 sq. ro. in the Yellowstone National 
Park and 5207 sq. m., chiefly in the Bighorn Mountains in the N., 
and the Medicine Bow Mountains in the S.E. of the state. The 
saleable timber consists almost entirely of yellow pine, though there 
is a relatively small growth of other conifers and of hard-wood trees. 

Manufactures.— Wyoming's manufacturing industries arc relatively 
unimportant. In the period 1900-1905 the value of factory pro- 
ducts increased from $3.a68.555 to f3.523.260: the amount of 
capita] invested, from $3,047,883 to $2,695,869, and the number of 
establishments from 139 to 169;. the average number of employees 
decreased from 2060 to 1834. In the same period (1900-1905), the 
value of the products 01 urban l establishments decreased from 
$1,332,288 to $1,244,223, and the amount of capital invested in- 
creased from $871,531 to $988,615; but the value of the products 



of rural establishments increased from $1,936,267 to $2,279,037, and 
the capital invested from $1,176,352 to $1,707,274. The values of 
the products of the principal industries of the state in 1905 were: 



car and general shop construction and repairs by steam railway 
companies, $1,640,361; lumber and timber products, $426,433; 
flour and grist mill products, $283,653; butter, $114,354. Among 
other manufactures were gypsum wall-plaster, saddlery and harness, 
malt liquors and tobacco, cigars and cigarettes. 

Transport.— There has been relatively little development of trans- 
port facilities in Wyoming. The railway mileage, which was only 
459 m. in 1870, increased to 1002 m. in 1800, 1280 m. in 1905, and 
1623 m. on the 1st of January 1909. The Union Pacific railway 
crosses the S. of the state, connects with the Oregon Short Line at 
Green river and extends both E. and S. from Cheyenne. The 
Colorado ft Southern (controlled by the Chicago, Burlington & 
Quincy Railroad Company) extends N. from Cheyenne to Orin 
Junction, where it connects with the Chicago & North Western, which 
runs across the south-central part of the state as far as Lander (under 
the name of the Wyoming ft North Western railroad). Four branches 
of the Chicago, Burlington ft Quincy system enter or cross the state. 
One extends from Cheyenne STE. to Holdredge. Nebraska; the main 
line crosses the N.E. of the state to Billings, Montana, whence it 
extends S. to Cody and Kirby in the Bighorn basin, Wyoming; 
while another branch from Alliance, Nebraska, extends to the iron 
mines at Guernsey. The Chicago, Burlington ft puincy was build- 
ing in 1910 a new line from the N. W. to connect with the Colorado ft 
Southern line at Orin Junction, passing through Douglas. When 
completed to Orin Junction this will be a main through route from 
the Mexican Gulf to the N.W. Pacific coast. There are also several 
shorter railways in the state, and various stage lines reach the more 
inaccessible regions. 

Population*— 'The population in 1870 was 91x8; in 1880, 
20.789; in 1890, 60,705; in 1900, 93,531; in 1910, 145465. 
The density of the population was 0-6 per sq. m. in 1890 and 
t'S per sq. m. in 1910, there being in this year only one state with 
a smaller average number of inhabitants to (be sq. m., namely 
Nevada, with 0-7. Of the total population In 1000, 88,051, 
or 96- 2%, were whites; 1686 were Indians; 040 were negroes; 
461 were Chinese and 393 were Japanese. The Indians are all 
taxed. They belong to the Arapaho and Shothoni tribes.* 
The Wind River Reservation, under the Shothoni School, is in 
the central part of the state. There were 174x5 foreign-born 
in the state in 1900, of whom 2506 were English, 2146 Germans, 
1727 Swedes, 15QI Irish, 1253 Scotch and 1220 Finns. Of tbo 
41,093 persons of foreign parentage (i.e. having cither or both 
parents of foreign birth) in that year 4973 were of English, 4571 of 
German, and 4482 of Irish parentage, i.e. on both the father's 
and the mother's side. Of the 75,1 16 born in the United States, 

'That is, those in the two municipalities (Cheyenne and Laramie) 
having a population in 1900 of more than 800a 

1 The Report of the Commissioner of Indian Affairs for 1909 gives 
854 Arapaho and 816 Shoshoni under the Shoshont School. 



i9,S©7 were natives of Wyoming, 6ira were bora In Iowa, 5009 
in Nebraska, 4923 in Illinois, 4412 in Missouri and 3750 in Utah. 
Among the numbers of teiigious denominationa in 1906 the 
Roman Catholics, with 10,264 communicants, had the largest 
membership, followed by the Latter-day Saints, or Mormons, 
with 521Z communicants (21*8% of the total church membership 
for the state), the Protestant Episcopalians with 1741, the 
Methodists with 1612 and the Presbyterians with 984. The 
urban population (i.e. the population of places having 4000 
inhabitants or more) increased from 18,078 in 1800 to 26,657 in 
1900 or 47*5%. the urban being 28-8% of the total population 
in 1900. The semi-urban population (i.e. population of incor- 
porated places, or the approximate equivalent, having fewer 
than 4000 inhabitants) decreased in the same period from 14,910 
to 12,725, and the rural population (U. the population outside 
of incorporated places) increased from 29,567 to 53,149, which waa 
78-7% of the total increase. The principal cities of the state 
(with population) in xooo were: Cheyenne, 14,087; Laramie, 
8207; Rock Springs, 4363; Rawlins, 2317, and Evonston, 2110. 
After 1900 the population of the centre and N. of the state 
increased in proportion faster than the older settled portions in 
the S. In 1910 Sheridan (8408) in Sheridan county, Douglas in 
Converse county and Lander in Fremont county were as import- 
ant as some of the older towns of the southern part of the state. 

Government.— Wyoming is governed under its first constitution, 
which was adopted in November 1889. An amendment may be 
proposed by either branch of the legislature. If it is approved 
by two-thirds of the members of each branch, it must be sub- 
mitted to the people at the next general election and, if approved 
by a majority of the electors, it then becomes a part of the con- 
stitution. Whenever two-thirds of the members elected to 
each branch of the legislature vote for a convention to revise 
or amend the constitution and a majority of the people voting 
at the next general election favour ft, the legislature must 
provide for calling a convention. Suffrage is conferred upon 
both men and women, and the right to vote at a general election 
is given to all dtiaens of the United States who have attained 
the age of twenty-one years, are able to read the constitution, 
and have resided in the state one year and in the county sixty 
days immediately preceding, with the exception of idiots, insane 
persons, and persons convicted of an infamous crime; at a 
school election the voter must also own property on which taxes 
are paid. General elections are held biennially, in even-numbered 
years, the first Tuesday after the first Monday in November, 
and each new administration begins the first Monday in the 
following January. 

Executive. — The governor ia elected for a term of four years, He 
must be at least thirty years of age, and have resided in the state for 
five years next preceding his election. If the office becomes vacant 
the secretary of state becomes acting governor; there » no lieu- 
tenant-governor. The governor, with the concurrence of the Senate, 
appoints the attorney-general, the state engineer and the members 
of several boards and commissions. He has the power to veto bills, to 
pardon, to grant reprieves and commutations, and to remit fines and 
forfeitures, but the Board of Charities and Reform constitutes a 
Board of Pardons for investigating all applications for executive 
clemency and advising the governor with respect to them. The 
secretary of state, auditor, treasurer and superintendent of public 
instruction are elected for the same term as the governor. 

Legislature. — The legislature consists of a Senate and a House of 
Representatives. The number of representatives must be not less 
than twice nor more than three times the number of senators. One- 
half the senators and all the representatives arc elected every two 
years. ( Both senators and representatives are apportioned among the 

, now- 



several counties according to their population; each county, 
ever, is entitled to at least one senator and one representative. 



The 



legislature meets biennially, in odd-numbered years, on the second 
Tuesday in January, and the length of its sessions is limited to forty 
days. All bills for raising a revenue must originate in the House of 
Representatives, but the Senate may propose amendments. The 
governor has three days (Sundays excepted) in which to veto any 
bill or any item in an appropriation bill, and a two-thirds vote of the 
membrrs elected to each house is required to override his veto. 

Judiciary. — The administration of justice is vested principally in a 
supreme court, district courts, justices of the' peace and municipal 
courts. The supreme court consists of three justices who are elected 
by the state at large for a term of eight years, and the one having 
the shortest term to serve is chief justice. The court has original 



876 



WYOMING 



juricdiction in auo warranto and mandamus proceedings against state 
officers and in habeas corpus cases, general appellate jurisdiction, and 
a superintending control over the inferior courts. It holds two terms 
annually, at the capital, one beginning the first Monday in April and 
one beginning the brst Monday in October. The state is divided into 
four judicial districts, and in each of these a district judge is elected 
for a term of eight years. The district courts have original juris- 
diction in all actions and matters not expressly vested in some other 
court and appellate jurisdiction in cases arising in the lower courts. 
Justices of the peace, one of whom is elected biennially in each 
precinct, have jurisdiction in civil actions in which the amount in 
controversy does not exceed $200 and the title to or boundary of real 
estate is not involved, and in criminal actions less than a felony and 
in which the punishment prescribed by law does not exceed a fine of 
$100 and imprisonment for six months. Each incorporated city or 
town has a municipal court for the trial of offences arising under its 
ordinances. 

Local Government.— A board of three commissioners is elected in 
each county, one for four years and one for two years at each biennial 
election. It has the care of the county pr op e r t y , manages the county 
business, builds and repairs the county buildings, apportion* and 
orders the levying of taxes, and establishes the election precincts. 
The other county officers are a treasurer, a clerk, an attorney, a 
surveyor, a sheriff, a coroner and a superintendent of schools, each 
elected for a term of two years. A justice of the peace aad a con- 
stable are elected for and by each precinct. Cities and towns are 
incorporated under general laws. 

Miscellaneous Laws.— A married woman may hold, acquire, 
manage and convey property and carry on business independently 
of her husband, when a husband or a wife dies intestate one-half 
of the property of the deceased goes to the survivor; if there are no 
children or descendants of any child three-fourths of it goes to the 
survivor; if there are no children or descendants of any child and 
the estate does not exceed $10,000 the whole of it goes to the sur- 
vivor. The causes for a divorce are adultery, Incompetency, con- 
viction of a felony and sentence to imprisonment therefor after 
marriage, conviction of a felony or infamous crime before marriage 
provided it was unknown to the other party, habitual drunkenness, 
extreme cruelty, intolerable indignities, neglect of the husband to 
provide the common necessaries of life, vagrancy of the husband 
and pregnancy of the wife before marriage by another man than her 
husband and without his knowledge. The plaintiff must reside in 
the state for one year immediately preceding his or her application 
for a divorce unless the parties were married in the state and the 
applicant has resided there since the marriage. Neither party is 
permitted to marry a third party until one year after the divorce has 
been granted. The desertion of a wife or of children under fifteen 
years of age is a felony punishable with imprisonment for not more 
than three years nor less than one year. The homestead of a house- 
holder who is the head of a family or of any resident of the state who 
has attained the age of sixty years is exempt, to the value of ft 300, 
or 160 acres of land, from execution and atiachmcn* arising (Tom 
any debt, contract or civil obligation other ihjn taxes, nun Mase 
money or improvements, so long as it is occupied by thfowflbrot his 
or her family, and the exemption inures for ihe hem fit r.f a v> idiiw, 
widower or minor children. If the owner l, m .im. .1 « V h.-m. -ti«d 
can be alienated only with the consent ol both hu^m.J an.-] wife. 
The family Bible, school books, a lot in a bwyiflg-ground and £500 
worth of personal property are likewise exempt io any perflbd ^ho 
is entitled to a homestead exemption. A dav'f labour in mines ind 
in works for the reduction of ores is limited to eight hours except 
in cases of emergency where life or property is in imminent danger. 
The sale of intoxicating liquors is licensed only in incorporated cities 
and towns. 

Charities and Corrections.— -The state charitable and penal institu- 
tions consist of the Wyoming General Hospital at Rock Springs, with 
one branch at Sheridan and another branch at Casper; the Big Horn 
Hot Springs at Thermopolis, the Wyoming State Hospital for the 
Insane at Evanston, the Wyoming Home for the Feeble-Minded and 
Epileptic at Lander, the Wyoming Soldiers' and Sailors* Home 
near Buffalo, and the State Penitentiary at Rawlins. The general 
supervision and control of all these institutions is vested in the 
Board of Charities and Reform, consisting of the governor, the 
secretary of state, the treasurer, the auditor, and the superintendent of 

Public instruction; the same officers also constitute the Board of 
urdons. Convicts other than those for life are sentenced to the 
penitentiary for a maximum aod a minimum term, and when one has 
served his minimum term the governor, under rules prescribed by the 
Board of Pardons, may release him on parole, but he may be returned 
io prison at anytime upon the request of the Board of Pardons. 

Education. — The administration of the common school system is 
vested in the state superintendent of public instruction, county 
superintendents and district boards. Whenever 100 freeholders 
request it, the county commissioners must submit to the voters of a 
proposed high school district the question of establishing a high 
school district, and each precinct giving a majority vote for it consti- 
tutes ? «*•* «* «•"•»» « district for establishing ana maintaining a high 
sen*- tween seven and fourteen years of age must 

a* or parochial school during the entire time 

f heir district is in session unless cxdised by 



the district board. The common schools are maintained with the 
proceeds of school taxes and an annual income from school funds 
which are derived principally from lands. At the head of the educa- 
tional system is the University of Wyoming (1886). at Laramie (9.9.) ; 
it is governed by a board of trustees consisting of its president, the 
superintendent of public instruction, and nine other members ap- 
pointed by the governor with the concurrence of the Senate for a 
term oi six years. It is maintained with the proceeds from funds 
derived principally from lands and with a university tax amounting 
in 1909 to one-half mill on a dollar. 

Finance.— The principal sources of revenue are a general property 
tax, a tax on the gross receipts of express companies, a tax on the 
gross products of mines, an inheritance tax, a poll tax and the sale of 
liquor licences. Railways, telegraph lines and mines are assessed by 
the state board of equalization, which consists of the secretary of 
state, the treasurer and the auditor. Other pr operty is »«rMt— d by 
the county assessors. The county commissioners constitute the 
county board of equalization. A commissioner of taxation who is 
appointed by the governor with the concurrence of the Senate for 
a term of four years exercises a generar supervision over all tax 
officers and the boards of equalization. By a law enacted in 1009 
county commissioners are forbidden to levy a tax which will yield 
more than 10% in excess of that raised the preceding year. The 
constitution limits the state tax for other than the support of educa- 
tional and charitable institutions and the payment of the state debt 
and the interest thereon to four mills on the doUar; the county tax 
for other than the payment of the county debt and the interest 
thereon to twelve mills on the dollar; the tax of an incorporated city 
or town for other than the payment of its debt and the interest 
thereon to eight mills on the dollar. The constitution also forbids 
the creation of a state debt in excess of 1 % of the assessed value of 
the taxable property in the state; of a county debt in excess of 2 % 
of the assessed value of the taxable property in the county ; or of a 
municipal debt for any other purpose than obtaining a water supply 
in excess of 2 %, unless for building sewerage, when a debt of 4 % 
may be authorized. Wyoming entered the Union with a bonded 
indebtedness of $320,000. This has been reduced as rapidly as the 
bonds permit, and on the 30th of June 1910 the debt was only 
$140,000. 

History.— Spanish historians have claimed that adventurers 
from the Spanish settlements in the S. penetrated almost to the 
Missouri river during the first half of the 17th century and even 
formed settlements within the present limits of Wyoming, 
but these stories are more than doubtful. The first white men 
certainly known to have traversed the region were Sieur de la 
Verendrye and his sons, who working down from Canada spent 
a part of the year 1743-1744 examining the possibilities of the 
fur trade. Apparently no further French explorations were made 
from that direction, and the transfer of Canada from France to 
Great Britain (1763) was followed by lessened interest in ex- 
ploration. The expedition of Meriwether Lewis and William 
Clark in 1804-1806 did not touch the region, but a discharged 
member of the party, John Colter, in 1807 discovered the 
Yellowstone Park region and then crossed the Rocky Mountains 
to the head of Green river. Trappers began to cover the X. 
portion about the same time, and in 181 1 the overland party of 
the Pacific Fur Company crossed the country on their way to 
Astoria. In 1824 William H. Ashley with a considerable party 
explored and trapped in the Sweetwater and Green river 
valleys, and in 1826 wagons were driven from St Louis to Wind 
river for the Rocky Mountain Fur Company. Captain B. L. £. 
Bonneville was the first to cross the Rockies with wagons 
(1832), 1 and two years later Fort Laramie, near the mouth of 
the Laramie river, was established to control the fur trade oi 
the Arapahoes, Chcyennes and Sioux. 

The United States exploring expedition, commanded by John 
Charles Fremont, explored the Wind River Mountains and the 
South Pass in 1842, under the guidance of Kit Carson. From 
this time the favourite roate to the Pacific led through Wyoming;' 
but of all the thousands who passed few or none settled per- 
manently within the present limits of the state, partly because 
of the aridity of the land and partly because of the 
pronounced hostility of the Indians. For the latter reason 
the National Congress on the 19th of May 1846 authorized the 
construction at intervals along the trail of military stations for 
the protection of the emigrant trains, and Fort Kearny was 
built (1848) and Fort Laramie was purchased (1849). The great 

1 See Washington Irving, Adventures of Captain BonnerilU (New 
York. i860). 
* See Francis Parkman. The Oregon Trail (Boston, 1849). 



WYOMING 



877 



Mormon ongraUon passed along the trail in 1847-1849, and in 
1853 fifty-five Mormons settled on Green river at the trading 
pest of James Bridger, which they purchased and named Fort 
Supply. This S-W. comer ol the present state was at that time 
a part of Utah. With the approach of United States troops under 
Albert Sidney Johnston in 1857, Fort Supply was abandoned, and 
in the next year the Mormon settlers retired to Salt Lake City, 
again leaving the region almost without permanent inhabitants. 

The Indians saw with alarm the movement of so many whites 
through their bunting grounds and became increasingly un- 
friendly By a treaty negotiated at Fort Laramie in 1851, the 
Arapahoe*. Sioux, Cheyenne* and others agreed to confine 
themselves within the territory bounded by xoo* and 107° W. 
longitude and' 30° and 44° N. latitude, but, besides minor con- 
flicts, a considerable portion of the garrison of Fort Laramie was 
lulled in 1854 and there was trouble for mort than twenty years. 
During the Civil War (1861*1865) the Indians were especially 
hold as they realized that the Federal troops were needed else* 
where. Meanwhile, there began a considerable migration to 
Montana, and the protection of the N. of the trail demanded 
the construction of posts, of which the most important were 
Fort Reno, on the Powder river, and Fort Phil Kearny in the 
Bighorn Mountains. In spite of the treaty allowing the 
opening of the road, during a period of six months fifty-one 
hostile demonstrations were made, and on the 11st of December 
1866 Captain W. J. Fetterman and seventy-eight men from 
Fort Phil Kearny were ambushed and slain. Hostilities con- 
tinued in 1867. but the troops were hampered on account of the 
scarcity ol cavalry. Congress in 1867 appointed a commission 
to arrange a peace, but not until 1868 (aoth April, at Fort 
Laramie) were any terms agreed upon. The pasts on the Montana 
trail were abandoned, and the Indians agreed to remove farther 
E. and to cease attacking trains, not to oppose railway construc- 
tion, ftc. The territory N. of the Platte river and E. of the Big- 
horn Mountains was to be reserved as an Indian hunting ground 
and no white men were to settle on it without the consent of the 
Indians. Cold was discovered on the Sweetwater river in 1867, 
and a large inrush of population followed. This unorganized 
territory E. of the Rocky Mountains was a part of Dakota, and in 
January 1868 Carter (later Sweetwater) county was erected. 
Farther E. Cheyenne was laid out by the Union Pacific Railroad 
(July 1867), a city government was established hi August, 
newspapers began publication, and Laramie county was organized 
before the arrival of the first railway tram on the 13th of 
November 1867. About six thousand persons spent the winter 
in Cheyenne, and disorder was checked only by the organization 
of a vigilance committee. Almost the same scenes followed 
the laying off of Laramte in April 1868, when 400 lots were sold 
during the first week and 500 habitations were erected within 
a fortnight. Albany and Carbon counties were organized farther 
W in the same year. 

A b91 to organise the Territory of Wyoming had been intro- 
duced into Congress in 1865, and in 1867 the voters of Laramie 
county had chosen a delegate to Congress. He was not permitted 
to take a seat, but his presence in Washington hastened action, 
and on the 95th of July 1868 the act of Congress establishing a 
Territory with the present boundaries was approved by President 
Andrew Johnson. The portion of the Territory E. of the Rocky 
Mountains was taken from Dakota and that W. from Utah and 
Idaho, and Included parts of the three great additions to the 
original territory of the United State*. That portion E. of the 
mountains was a part of the Louisiana Purchase (1803), the W. 
portion above 4a* was a part of the Oregon country, and that S. 
of that parallel came by the Mexican cession of 1848. The first 
governor, John A. Campbell, was appointed In April 1869, and 
the organization of the Territory was completed in May of the 
same year. At- the first election, on the and of September i860, 
5*66 votes were cast, the legislature established the seat of 
go vernm ent at Cheyenne, and granted full suffrage and the right 
of holding office to women. The first great inrush of population, 
following the discovery of gold and the opening of the rail- 
way, brought many desperate characters, who were held in check 
xx via is 



only by the stern, swift measures of frontier justice. After the 
organization of the Territory, except for the appearance of 
organized bands of highwaymen in 1877-1879, there was little 
turbulence, in marked contrast with conditions in some of the 
neighbouring Territories Agriculture began in the narrow 
but fertile river valleys, and stock-raising became an important 
industry, as the native grasses are especially nutritious. The 
history of the Territory was marked by few striking events other 
than Indian troubles. The N.E. of the Territory, as has been 
already said, had been set apart (1868) as a hunting ground for 
the Sioux Indians, but the rumour of the discovery of gold in the 
Black Hills and the Bighorn Mountains in 1874-1875 caused a 
rush to the region which the military seemed powerless to prevent. 
The resentful Indians resorted to war. After a long and arduous 
contest in Wyoming, Montana and Dakota, which lasted from 
1874 to 1879, and during which General George A. Custer [q .v.) 
and bis command were killed in 1876 on the little Bighorn in 
Montana, the Indians were thoroughly subdued and confined 
to reservations. The settlers in Wyoming shared the general 
antipathy to the Chinese, common to the western country. 
On the and of September 1885 the miners at Rock Springs 
attacked about 400 Chinamen who had been brought by the 
railway to work in the mines, killing about fifty of them and 
driving the remainder from the district. Governor Warren 
summoned Federal troops and prevented further destruction 
of life and property. 

The Territory increased in population and more rapidly in 
wealth, owing chiefly to the large profits in cattle raising, though 
this prosperity suffered a check during the severe winter of 
1886-1887, when nearly three-fourths of the range cattle died 
of exposure. Agitation for statehood increased, and on the 30th of 
September 1889 a constitution was formed which was adopted by 
the people in November of the same year. The Constitution, which 
continued the Territorial provision of full suffrage for women, 
met the approval of Congress, and on the 10th of July 1800 
Wyoming was formally admitted as a state. Since admission 
the progress of the state has been steady. Extensive irrigation 
projects have made available many thousand acres of fertile 
land, and much more will be subjected to cultivation in the 
future as the large ranges are broken up into smaller tracts. 
In some sections a system of dry-farming, by which the scanty 
rainfall is protected from evaporation by deep ploughing and 
mulching the sou, has proved profitable. 

The transition of the principal stock-raising industry from 
large herds of cattle to small, and the utilization of the ranges for 
sheep grazing almost exclusively covered a period of over twenty 
years preceding 1910, during which time many conflicts occurred 
between range cattle-owners and sheep floes masters over the use 
of the grazing grounds. The settler also, who selected his home- 
stead covering watering places to which the range cattle formerly 
had free access, came into conflict with the cattlemen. Some of 
these small settlers owned no cattle, and subsisted by stealing 
calves and unbranded cattle (mavericks) belonging to the range 
cattlemen. In pans of the state it became impossible to get a 
jury composed of these small squatters to convict anybody for 
stealing or killing cattle, and so bad did this become that, in 1 892, 
certain cattlemen formed a small army of mounted men and in- 
vaded the central part of the state with the avowed intention 
of killing all the men generally considered to be stock thieves, 
an episode known as the Johnson County Raid. This armed 
body, consisting of over fifty men, surrounded a log cabin and shot 
down two of the supposed cattle " rustlers," the latter defending 
themselves bravely. The country round was roused and large 
numbers of settlers and others turned out and besieged the 
cattlemen, who had taken refuge in some ranch buildings. Their 
case was becoming desperate when a troop of Federal cavalry 
arrived, raised the siege, and took the cattlemen back to 
Cheyenne as prisoners. They were subsequently held for 
murder, but were finally released without trial. Since that time 
experience has proved that the grazing ranges of the state are 
better suited to sheep than cattle, the former being much more 
profitable and better able to stand the cold on the open range. 

2a 



878 



WYOMING VALLEY 



While many cattlemen have been driven out of business by the 
encroachments of sheep, the majority of the present fiockmaaters 
were range cattle owners in the past and have changed to the 
more profitable occupation. At the present time serious collisions 
between sheep and cattle owners are rare. There are still many 
cattle in the slate, but they are divided up into small herds, no 
longer depending upon the open range for a precarious sub* 
sistence during the winter, but are sheltered and fed during 
winter storms on the hay ranches. The breeds of cattle are 
far superior now to the old range slock, so that it pays to take 
care of them, many thousands are fed during the winter 00 
alfalfa hay Governors of Wyoming 

Territorial 

John A Campbell 1 869-1 875 
ohn M Thayer .'..... 1 87 5- 1 878 
ohn W. Hoyt ....... 1878-1882 
Villiam Hale 1882-188$ 

Francit E. Warren 1885-1886 

George W. Baxter (acting) .... 1886-1887 

Thomas Moonlight ...„■•• 1887-1880 
Francis E. Warren ...... 1889-1890 

State. 
Francis E. Warren . Republican 1890 

Amos W. Barber (acting) . ., 1890-1892 

I.E. Osborne .... Dem.-Populist 1892-1895 

W. A. Richards . . . Republican 1895-1899 

De Forest Richards ... .. 1899-1903 

Fenimore Chatterton l (acting) . „ 1903-1905 

Bryant B. Brooks ... „ 1905-191 1 

J.M.Carey . Democrat 1911- 

Bibliography.— H. C. Beder, Report to the Governor of Wyoming 
by the State Geologist (Cheyenne. 1904), and " Geology and Mineral 
Resources of Wyoming," pp. 113-118 of Ropt. of Proc Am. Mtmut 
Cong , 7th Ann. Seas. (1905), a ecneral account of the geology 
minrral resources of Wyoming; C. A. White, " Goolo^y and rfi> 
cr.\ phv of a portkan of North- western Colorado ami 2 
Uuh an" 



and 



1^0- 

awl Wyoming.'" pp, 6777 12 of 9th Ann Re'pi. U.£ Geol. 
Survey. ifiB7-jSsa (W M hin^oo, 1880.}; F, E- Mai-hca. " Glacial 
Scutoture oi Bighorn MounUron, Wyomiii( ( H r*p 1&7 tooof Ft. ii.of 
Jtst Ann. Rtpi, U-5. GeoV Survey* 1890-1900 (WaaKtngton,, 1900); 
N. H. Dartan* '* Preliminary Description of the Grtjlufjy arid Water 
Resource* of the Southern Hall" of the Black Kills and adjoining 
region* in South Dakota and Wyoming/' pp. 4*9/599 rji P^ i v * of 
2tit Aim, RtpL US. Geo! Survey, iBoo^tgoo {Washington, i-K>0: 
A. C. Spencer. "Mineral Rcaourcea of the Encampment Copper 



Rcvion, Wyoming/' pp, 163-1G9, U.S. GeoL Surrey BuIL No. 21* 
(waibingron t 1901} : Mtit&al Resources of the United Stain published 
annually by the U.S. Geological Survey; and material indexed in 



I he vinous bibliographies ((.*. Bulli. j0i t 37 2 and atio,} of the U.S. 
Geologic*! Surveys Aven Nelson , Re pert fin the Ffore <ff Wyoming, 



Wyoming Experiment Station. BvU. 28 ft89frk A, J* Henry, 
Cttmoioiogy of the United Stated US Weather Hiitmu hail. Q 
(Wellington* igooj; for industries, pu^iUlion, fa., the Report* of 



the U.S. Census generally j IX-pan mtot of Jmnugration of the state. 
Some Vi&si nf wyeming (iptrfj; Tht Slat? of Wyoming, pubtiahed by 
authority of the state legisbuire {igO&}; F- Chatterton, secretary of 
tt*te T Tk* i'late 0/ St'jwintiai [[904); *nri rtport* of the varioua state 
officer* mentioned In the text; Rtxiitd Staitdti of Wyoming (Laramie, 
(899} E Wyoming Irrigation Lnwi (1908): G* R- Hebard, Ctfvtm- 
mtnt of Wyoming fSan FrancUeo, 1904}; H. H. Bancroft, Nt*-c&a t 
Colorado and Wyoming (San Franetwo 1 1800^ and Utah (San Fran* 
cihcrt. iflftul; E. R. Talbot, My FeapU of the Plains (New York, 
1006} ; W. M. RaJne, Wyoming, a Story of the Outdoor Wejt I New 
York, 1909). An interesting picture of firmer conditions in Wyoming 
\i given in Owen Wi&tcr's- novel, The Virginian (1907). 

WYOMING VALLEY, a valley on the N. branch of the Susque- 
hanna river, in Luserne county, Pennsylvania, U.S.A. Its 
name is a corruption of a Delaware Indian word meaning " large 
plains." The valley, properly speaking, is about 3) m. wide and 
about 25 m. long, but the term is sometimes used historically in 
a broader sense to include all of the territory in the N.E. of the 
state once in dispute bet ween. Pennsylvania and Connecticut. 
In Connecticut the Susquehanna Land Company was formed 
in 1753 to colonize the valley, and the Delaware Land Company 
was formed in 1754 for the region immediately W. of the Delaware 
river. The rights of the Six Nations to all this territory were 
purchased at Albany, New York, by the Susquehanna Company 
u> I754r but the work of colonization was delayed for a time by 
the Seven Years' War. A few colonists sent out by the Susque- 
hanna Company ***» , - J -* **•" Creek near the present site of 
1 In pfc vda, deceased. 



Wilkes-Barr* in 1763, but were (October 15th) attacked and 
driven away by the Indians. In December 1768 the company 
divided a part of the valley into five townships of 5 sq. m. each, 
granting to forty proprietors the choice of one of these on con- 
dition that they should take possession of it by the 1st of February 
1760, and the other four townships to 300 settlers on condition 
that they should follow by theist of May The first group 
arrived on the 8th of February, the first division of the larger 
body on the 12th of May, and the five original towns of Wtlkes- 
Barre (y\t.), Kingston (?.f.), Hanover,* Plymouth and Pulsion 
were soon founded. 

In the meantime the Six Nations (in 1768) had repudiated 
their sale of the region to the Susquehanna Company and had 
sold it to the Penns; the Penns had erected here the manors of 
Stoke and Sunbury, the government of Pennsylvania had com- 
missioned Charles Stewart, Amos Ogden and others to lay out 
these manors, and they had arrived and taken possession -of 
the block 'house and huts at Mill Creek in January 1760. The 
conflict which followed between the Pennsylvania and the Con* 
nectkut settlers is known as the first Pennamite- Yankee Warv 
Although defeated in the early stages of the conflict, the Yankees 
or Connecticut settlers finally rallied in August 177 1 and com- 
pelled the Pennsylvanians to retreat, and the war terminated 
with the defeat of Colonel William Plunket (1720-1701) and 
about 700 Pennsylvanians by a force of 300 Yankees under 
Colonel Zebulon Butkr (1 731-1795) in the battle of " Rampart 
Rocks " on the 25th of December 1775. The General Assembly 
of Connecticut, in January 1774, erected the valley into the town- 
ship of Westmoreland and attached it to Litchfield county, and 
in October X776 the same body erected it into Westmoreland 
county. On the 3rd of July 1778, while a considerable number 
of the able-bodied men were absent in the Connecticut service, 
a motley force of about 400 men and boys under Colonel Zebulon 
Butler were attacked and defeated near Kingston in the " battle 
of Wyoming" by about 1100 British, Provincial (Tory) and 
Indian troops under Major John Butler, and nearly three-fourths 
were killed or taken prisoners and subsequently massacred. 
Thomas Campbell's poem y Gertrude of Wyoming (r8oo), is based 
on this episode, various liberties being taken with the facts. 
As the War of Independence came to a dose the old trouble with 
Pennsylvania was revived. A court of arbitration appointed 
by the Continental Congress met at Trenton, New Jersey, in 
1782, and on December 30th gave a unanimous decision in 
favour of Pennsylvania. The refusal of the Pennsylvania 
government to confirm the private land titles of the settlers, and 
the arbitrary conduct of a certain Alexander Patterson whom 
they sent up to take charge of affairs, resulted in 1784 in the 
outbreak of the second Pennamite- Yankee Wat. The Yankees 
were dispossessed, but they took up arms and the government 
of Pennsylvania despatched General John Armstrong with a 
force of 400 men to aid Patterson. Armstrong induced both 
parties to give up their arms with a promise of impartial justice 
and protection, and as soon as the Yankees were defenceless he 
made them prisoners* This treachery and the harsh treatment 
by Patterson created a strong public opinion in favour of the 
Yankees, and the government was compelled to adopt a milder 
policy. Patterson was withdrawn, the disputed territory was 
erected into the new county of Luzerne (1786), the land titles 
were confirmed (1787), and Colonel Timothy Pickering (e.t.) 
was commissioned to organize the new county and to effect s 
reconciliation. But a few of the settlers under the lead of Colonel 
John Franklin (1740-1831) attempted to form a separate state 
government. Franklin was seized and imprisoned, under s 
warrant from the State Supreme Court. As Pickering was held 
responsible for Franklin's imprisonment, some of Franklin's 
followers in retaliation kidnapped Pickering and carrying him into 
the woods, tried in vain for nearly three weeks to get from him 
a promise to intercede for Franklin's pardon. The trouble 
was again revived by the repeal in 1790 of the confirming act 

1 Se v eral Scotch-Irish families from Lancaster county, Pennsyl- 
vania, accepted Connecticut titles and settled at Hanover under 



WYON^w-r: ° NE 



of 1787 and by a subsequent decision of the Unit*) % tM - 
Circuit Court, unfavourable to the Yankees, in the cast ofrZ 
HornvtmuDorrance. All of the claims were finally- confirms 
by a series of statutes passed in 1709, 1802 and 1 807 . Since 180ft' 
mainly through the development of its coal mines (see Prrrsrow 
Pa), the valley has made remarkable progress both in w**hh 
and in population. 

For a thorough study of the early history pf w Y°™ingVa11ey «« 
O. J. Harvey. A History^ef WUker-Barti^ j^'^WwBurt, 






1009-1010); W"aboH/M' Hoyt. Brief of* r «ft*» «** 

WTO*, THOMAS (i79*-i8i7), English medallist, was born 
at Birmingham. He was apprenticed to his father, the chief 
engraver of the king's seals, and studied in the schools of the 
Royal Academy, London, where he gained silver medals in both 
the. antique and the life class; he also obtained a gold medal 
from the Society of Arts. He was appointed probationary 
engraver to the mint in 1811, and soon after engraved his medal 
commemorative of the peace, and his Manchester Pitt medal 
In 1815 he was appointed chkf engraver to the mint. His 
younger brother, Benjamin Wyon (1802-1858), Jus nephews, 
Joseph Shepherd Wyon (1836-1873) *»d Alfred Benjamin 
Wyon (1837-1884), and his cousin, William Wyon (i795-x«S»). 
were also distinguished medallists. 

WTSB. SIR THOMAS (1791-1861), Irish politician, belonged 
to a family claiming descent from a Devon man, Andrew 
Wyse, who is said to have crossed over to Ireland during the 
reign of Henry II. and obtained lands near Watcrford, of which 
dty thirty-three members of the family are said to have been 
mayors or other municipal officers. From the Reformation 
the family had been consistently attached to the Roman CathoHc 
Church. Thomas Wyse was educated at Stonyburst College and 
at Trinity College, Dublin, where he distinguished himself as a 
scholar. After 181 5 he passed some years in travel, visiting 
Italy, Greece, Egypt and Palestine. In 1821 be married 
Laetltia (d. 1872), daughter of Lurien Buonaparte, and after 
residing for a time at Viterbo he returned to Ireland in 1825, 
having by this time inherited the family estates. He now devoted 
his great oratorical and other talents to forwarding the cause of 
Roman Catholic emancipation, and his influence was specially 
marked in his own county of Waterford, while his standing 
among his associates was shown by his being chosen to write the 
address to the people of England. In 1830, after the passing 
of the Roman Catholic Relief Act, he was returned to parliament 
for county Upperary, and he attached himself to the Liberal 
party and voted for the great measures of the reform era. But 
he was specially anxious to secure some improvement in the 
education of the Irish people, and some of his proposals were 
accepted by Mr E. G. Stanley, afterwards xatb earl of Derby, and 
the government. He was chairman of a committee which in- 
quired into the condition of education in Ireland, and it was partly 
owing to his efforts that provincial colleges were established at 
Cork, Galway and Belfast. His work as an educational pioneer 
also bore fruit in England, where the principles of state control 
and inspection, for which he had fought, were adopted, and 
where a training college for teachers at Battersea was established 
on lines suggested by him. From 1835 to 1847 he was M.P. for 
the city of Waterford and from 1839 to 1841 he was a lord of the 
treasury; from 1846 to 1849 he was secretary to the board of 
control, and in 1849 he was sent as British minister to Greece. 
He was very successful in his diplomacy, and he showed a great 
interest in the educational and other internal affairs of Greece. Jn 
1857 he was made a K.C.B., and he died at Athens on the 16th . 
of April 1861. Wy* wrote 0istoric<d Sketch of folate Catholic 
Association of Ireland (1829); An Excursion in Ike Pdofownesus 
(1858, new ed. 1865); and Impressions of Greece (1871). His 
two sons shared his literary tastes. They were Napoleon Alfred 
Bonaparte Wyse (1822-1895); and William Charles Bonaparte 
W yse (1826 -1892), a student of the dialect of Provence. 

VTTTBMBACH, DAJflEL ALBERT (1746-1820), German- 
Swiss classical scholar, was born at Bern, of a family whose 
nobffity and distinction he loved to recall. In particular, he was 






the 



***** 



22fi£» 



fourteen the 



%*•*«* 



years' coumtaW""i' ' 
• Lutlieranpeau* -,* 
education, wSckU!* - 



f^^ great b»nuea2t2* 



88l 



salt crystalUzes in colourless 

' ing carbon bisulphide with a 

- late alcohol. On the adds* 

-s solution it yields a yellow 

>' x^sium *? w *?»Tto is used 

tntidote fox phylloxera. 

used the xantbic ester 

'«Tpcncvthe methyl 

i pressure decom- 

-,-O.CSSCH,- 

hor molecular 

agent is used 



seriousness and piety 
mathematician, whe 
measure and weight. 






of that age meant Hebrew^c, - 
were generally handled by tSZ^ 11 * 
almost solely to theological sttiStl 1 *^* ' 
course at Marburg was trou^£*f ^ ' 
by mental unrest, due to the fa^cwL 11 * *'i. 
Bunyan'sWZrim's *,*«,. rESZ**" ** / 
"&P T^P^^^^^theto^* 4 '^ 



nei 

maligned, 

pe," ia 

•ide>, 

on* 

he 

h 



which took Wyttenbach enrW*n^^ w *i> - 
year was to be devoted to theoEr/' Pi t-mTZ ' 
Wyttenbach had hitherto «bn*te7£j^;*£X 
wishes concernint! his career, in tu~ ijLr"™* to vt. 7^ 



**W 



wishes concerning his career, in the ho\*u£L_ - w 
occurrence might set him free. But he now tJS2 tt "«w; 
theological lectures, and privately devoted his {£?♦*** *»! 
of deepening and extending his knowledge of Swi^,*** «** 
He possessed at the time, as he teUs us/no molT!. "*7*^»e. 
with Greek than his own pupils at a later tim? ZSu* 1 *** 
from him during four months' study. He was aW*? ****** 
without equipment beyond the bare texts of the authorT 1 ^ 
Wyttenbach was undaunted, and four years' persist™ '- B J l 
gave him a knowledge of Greek such si few Gern?Jn? J ftS 
time Possessed Hb love for philosophy carried htatowa^ 
the ^ Greek philosophers, especially Plato. During this Sod 
Ruhnken's notes on the Platonic lexicon of Timaeus fell into Ms 
hands, Ruhnken was for him almost a superhuman beine 
whom he worshipped day and night, and with whom he imagined 
himself as holding converse in the spirit. When Wyttenbach 
was twenty-two he determined to seek elsewhere the aids to 
study which Marburg could not afford. His father, fully realizing 
the strength of his son's pure passion for scholarship, permitted 
and even advised him to seek Heyne at Gottingen. Prom this 
teacher he received the utmost kindness and encouragement, 
and he was urged by him to dedicate to Ruhnken the first-fruits 
of his scholarships. Wyttenbach therefore set to work on some 
notes to Julian, Eunapius and Aristaenetus, and Hcyne wrote 
to Ruhnken to bespeak his favourable consideration for the 
work. Before it reached him Ruhnken wrote a kind letter to 
Wyttenbach, which the recipient "read, re-read and kissed," 
and another on receipt of the tract, in which the great scholar 
declared that he had not looked to -find in Germany such know- 
ledge of Greek, such power of criticism, and such mature judg- 
ment, especially in one so young. By Heyne's advice, he 
worked hard at Latin, which he knew far less thoroughly than 
Greek, and we soon find Heyne praising his progress in Latin 
style to both Ruhnken and Valckenaer. He now wrote to ask 
their advice about his scheme of coming to the Netherlands 
to follow the profession of a scholar. Ruhnken strongly exhorted 
Wyttenbach to follow his own example, for he too had been 
designed by his parents for the Christian ministry in Germany, 
but had settled at Leiden on the invitation of Hemsterhuis. 
Valckenaer's answer was to the same effect, but he added that 
Wyttenbach's letter would have been pleasanter to him had 
it been free toon excessive qompHmenrs. These letters wen 



88o 



WYVERN 



forwarded to the ekkr Wyttenbach, with* strong recommendation 
from Heyne. The old man had been himself in Leiden in hit 
youth, and entertained an admiration for the scholarship of the 
Netherlands ; so his consent was easily won. Young Wyttenbach 
reached Leiden in 1770. A year was spent with great content- 
ment, in learning the language of the people, in attending the 
lectures of the great " duumviri " of Leiden, and in collating 
MSS. of Plutarch. At the end of 1771 * professor was wanted 
at Amsterdam for the College of the Remonstrants. By the 
recommendation of Ruhnken, Wyttenbach obtained the chair, 
whkh be filled with great success for eight years. His lectures 
took a wide range. Those on Greek were repeated also to the 
students of the university of Amsterdam (the " Athenaeum "). 
In 1775 a visit was made to Paris, which was fruitful both of 
new friendships and of progress in study. About this time, on 
the advice of Ruhnken, Wyttenbach began the issue of his 
Jtibliotkeca criiko, which appeared at intervals for the next 
thirty years. The methods of criticism employed were in the 
main those established by Hemsterhuis, and carried on by 
Valckenaer and Ruhnken, and the publication met with accept- 
ance from the learned all over Europe. In 1777 the younger 
Burmann (" Burmannus Secundus ") retired from his professor- 
ship at the Athenaeum, and Wyttenbach hoped to succeed 
him. When another received the appointment, he was sorely 
' discouraged. Only his regard for Ruhnken and for Dutch 
freedom (in his own words " Ruhnkeni et Bstavae libertatis 
cogiutio ") kept him in Holland. For fear of losing him, the 
authorities at Amsterdam nominated him in 1779, professor of 
philosophy. In 1785 Toll, Burmann's successor, resigned, and 
Wyttenbach was at once appointed to succeed him. His full 
title was " professor of history and eloquence and Greek and 
Latin literature." He had hardly got to work in his new office 
when Valckenaer died, and he received a call to Leiden. Greatly 
to Ruhnken's disappointment, he declined to abandon the 
duties be had so recently undertaken. In 1 787 began the interna) 
commotions in Holland, afterwards to be aggravated by foreign 
interference. Scarcely during the remaining thirty-three years 
of Wyttenbach 's life was there a moment of peace in the land. 
About this time two requests were made to him for an edition of 
the M or alia of Plutarch, for. which a recension of the tract 
De sera numinis vindicta had marked him out in the eyes 
of scholars. One request came from the famous "Societas 
Bipontina," the other from the delegates of the Clarendon 
Press at Oxford. Wyttenbach, influenced at once by the reputa- 
tion of the university, and by the liberality of the Oxonians in 
tendering him assistance of different kinds, declined the offer of 
the Bipontine Society, — very fortunately, since their press was 
soon destroyed by the French. The fortunes of Wyttenbach's 
edition curiously illustrate the text " habent sua fata libelU." 
The first portion was safely conveyed to Oxford in 1794. Then 
war broke out between Holland and Great Britain. Randolph, 
Wyttenbach's Oxford .. correspondent, advised that the next 
portion should be sent through the British ambassador at Ham- 
burg, and the MS. was duly consigned to him " in a little chest 
well protected by pitch." After sending Randolph a number 
of letters without getting any answer, Wyttenbach in disgust 
put all thought of the edition from him, but at last the missing 
box was discovered in a forgotten corner at Hamburg, where it 
had lain for two years and a half. The work was finally com- 
pleted in 1805. Meanwhile Wyttenbach received invitations 
from his native city Bern, and from Leiden, where vacancies 
had been created by the refusal of professors to swear allegiance 
to the new Dutch republic set up in 1795, to which Wyttenbach 



had made submission. But he only left Amsterdam in 1709, 
when on Ruhnken's death he succeeded him at Leiden. Even 
then bis chief object io removing was to facilitate an arrangement 
by which the necessities of his old master's family might be 
relieved. His removal came too late in life, and he was never 
so happy at Leiden as he bad been at Amsterdam. Before long 
appeared the ever-delightful Life of David Ruhnken. Though 
written in Latin, this biography deserves to rank high in the 
modern literature of its class. Of Wyttenbach's life at Leiden 
there is little to teU. The continual changes in state affairs 
gready disorganised the universities of Holland, and Wyttenbach 
had to work in face of much detraction; still, bis success as a 
teacher was vtry great. In 1805 he narrowly escaped with his 
life from the great gunpowder explosion, which killed 150 people, 
among them the Greek scholar Luzac, Wyttenbach's colleague 
in the university. One of Wyttenbach's letters gives a vivid 
account of the disaster. During the last years of his life he 
suffered severely from illness and became nearly blind. After 
the conclusion of his edition of Plutarch's M or alia in 1805, the 
only important work he was able to publish was his well-known 
edition of Plato's Phacdo. Many honours were conferred upon 
him both at home and abroad, and in particular he was made a 
member of the French Institute. Shortly before his death, be 
obtained the licence of the king of Holland to marry his sister's 
daughter, Johanna Gallien, who had for twenty years devoted 
herself to him as housekeeper, secretary and aider in his studies. 
The sole object of the marriage was to secure for her a better 
provision after her husband's death, because as the widow of a 
professor she would be entitled to a pension. Johanna Gallien 
was a woman of remarkable culture and ability, and wrote works 
held in great repute at that time. On the festival of the ter- 
centenary of the foundation of the university of Marburg, 
celebrated in 1827, the degree of doctor was conferred upon 
her. Wyttenbach died of apoplexy in 1820, and he was buried 
in the garden of his country house near Amsterdam, which stood, 
as he noted, within sight of the dwellings of Descartes and 
Boerhaave. 

Although his work can hardly be set on the same level as that 
of Hemsterhuis, Valckenaer and Ruhnken, yet he was a very eminent 
exponent of the sound methods of criticism whkh they established. 
T^heae four men, more than any others after Bentley, Uud the founda- 
tions of modern Greek scholarship. The precise study of grammar, 
syntax and style, and the careful criticism of texts by the light of the 
best manuscript evidence, were upheld by these scholars in the 
Netherlands when they wen almost entirely neglected elsewhere on 
the Continent, and were only pursued with partial success in England. 
Wyttenbach may fairly be retarded as closing a great period in the 
history of scholarship. He lived Indeed to see the new birth of 
German classical learning, but his work was done, and he was un- 
affected by it. Wyttenbach's criticism was lew rigorasw. precise 
and masterly, but perhaps more sensitive and sympathetic, than that 
of his great predecessors in the Netherlands. In actual acquaintance 
with the philosophical writings of the ancients, be has probably never 
been surpassed. In character he was upright and simple-minded , but 
shy and retiring, and often failed to make himself appreciated. His 
life was not passed without strife, but his few friends were warmly 
attached to him, and his many pupils were (or the most part his 
enthusiastic admirers. Wyttenbach's biography was written in a 
somewhat dry and lifeless manner by Mahne, one of his pupils, who 
also published some of his letters. His OptacitU, other than those 
published in the BHUoiJuca critics were coUected in two volumes 
(Leiden, 1823). (J. S. R.) 

WYVEfcH, or Wivern, the name of an heraldic monster, with 
the forepart of a winged dragon and the hind part of a serpent 01 
lizard (see Heraldry). The earlier spelling of the word was 
wiver or vnvcrc; Ol Eng. wyvrc; 0. Fr. wivre, mod. pvre. It 
is a doublet of " viper/ 7 with an excrescent *, as in " bittern,'' 
M. Eng. bitorc 



XrrXANTHONE 



881 



Xthe twenty-fourth letter of the English alphabet. Its 
petition and form are derived from the Latin alphabet, 
which received them from the Western Greek alphabet. 
The alphabet of the Western Greeks differed from the 
Ionic, which is the Greek alphabet now in general use, by the 
shape and position of X and of tome other consonants. The 
Ionic alphabet placed % (Q immediately after N and, in the 
oldest records, in the form ^, from which the ordinary Greek 
capital 3 was developed. The position and shape of this 
symbol show clearly that it was taken from the Semitic Samekh, 
which on the Moabite stone appears as- ^. Why the Greeks 
attached this value to the symbol it not clear; in Semitic the 
symbol indicates the ordinary i. Still less dear is the origin 
of the form X. which in the Ionic alphabet stands for x (* 
followed by a breath). In a very ancient alphabet on a small 
vase found in 188a at Formello near the ancient Veii in Etqiria, 
a symbol appears after N consisting of three horizontal and 
three vertical lines, ffl- From this it has been suggested that 
both forms of the Greek % are derived, £ by removing the 
vertical lines, X in its earliest form + by removing the four 
marginal lines. The Ionic symbol, however, corresponds closely 
to the earliest Phoenician, so that this theory is not very plausible 
for S, and there are various other possibilities for the develop- 
ment of X (see Alphabet). This symbol appears in the very 
early Latin inscriptions found in the Roman Forum in 1809 
as >. In its usual value as ks it is superfluous. In the Ionic 
alphabet it was useful, because there it represented a single 
sound, which before the invention of the symbol had to be 
represented by kk. In the alphabet in use officially at Athens 
before 403 B.C. s was written by r<s (kks). In English there is 
an interesting variation of pronunciation in many words accord- 
ing to the position of the accent: if the accent precedes, x is 
pronounced ks; if it follows, x is pronounced gt: compare exit 
(e/trir) with exSd (egtacl). 

The symbol X was used both by the Romans and the Etruscans 
for the numeral 10. Which borrowed from the other is uncertain, 
but the Etruscans did not use X as part of their alphabet. X 
with a horizontal line over it was used for 10,000, and when a 
line on each side was added, fXL for a million. (P. Gi.) 

XAJrTH! (Turkish Eskije), a town of European Turkey in the 
vilayet of Adrianople; situated on the right bonk of the river 
Eskije and at the S. foot of the Rhodope Mountains, 29 m. 
W. of Gumuljina by the Constantinople-Salonica railway. 
Pop. (1005) about 14,000, of whom the bulk are Turks and 
Greeks in about equal proportions, and the remainder (about 
4000) Armenians, Roman Catholics or Jews. There are re- 
mains of a medieval citadel, and on the plain to the S. the ruins 
of an ancient Greek town. Xanthi is built in the form of an 
amphitheatre and possesses several mosques, churches and 
monasteries, a theatre with a public garden, and a municipal 
garden. A preparatory school for boys and girls was founded 
and endowed by MaxzinL The town is chiefly notable for the 
famous Yenidje" tobacco. 

XANTHIC ACID (xanthogenic acid), C,H«0CS-SH, an organic 
add named from the Greek gavto, yellow, in allusion to the 
bright yellow colour of its copper salt. The salts of this 
acid are formed by the action of carbon bisulphide on the 
alcoholates, or on alcoholic solutions of the caustic alkalis. 
They react with the alkyl iodides to form dialkyl esters of the 
dithio-carbonk add, which readily decompose into mcrcap- 
tans and thiocarbamic esters on treatment with ammonia: 
C 1 HACSSR I 4-NH*-C,H I QCS-NHH-R,SH; with the alkali 
alcoholates they give salts of the alkyl thiocarbonic adds: 
CH^OCSSR+CHjOK+H^-CHjCKXtSK+CH^H+RSH. 
Ethyl xanthic add, C1H1OCSSH, is obtained by the ac- 
tion of dilute sulphuric add on the potassium salt at o* C. 
(Zetse, Ben. Jakresb., 3, p. 83). It is a colourless oil which is 
very iinH yM", decomposing at as* C. into carbon bisulphide 



and alcohol. The potassium salt crystallizes in colourless 
needles and it formed by shaking carbon bisulphide with a 
solution of caustic potash in ab s olut e alcohol. On the addi- 
tion of cupric sulphate to its aqueous solution it yields a yellow 
predpitate of cupric xantbate. Potassium Tsnthste is used 
in indigo printing and also as an antidote for phylloxera. 
Tschugaeff (Per., 1809, 3s, p. 3332) has used the xanthic ester 
formation for the preparation of various terpenes,'the methyl 
ester when distilled under slightly diminished pressure decom- 
posing, in the sense of the equation, CJita-iO.CS-SCH,- 
Caite-t+COS+CHjSH. According to the author molecular 
chan ge in the hy drocarbon it prevented, since no add agent is used, 

XAATHIPPB, the wife of Socrates (?.?.). Her name hat 
become proverbial in the sense of a nagging, quarrelsome woman. 
Attempts have been made to show that she has been maligned, 
notably by E. Zeller (" Zur Ehrenrcttung der Xanthippe," in 
his VortrUge mnd Abkandlungen, L, 1875). 

XANTHOMB (dibenze-'y-pyrone, or diphenylene ketone oxide), 
CuHdOt, in organic chemistry, a heterocyclic compound con* 
taming the ring system shown below. It is obtained by the 
oxidation of xanthene (methylene diphenylene oxide) with 
chromic add; by the action of phosphorus oxychloride on 
disodium salicylate; by heating a-s'-dioxybenaophenone with 
concentrated sulphuric add; by distilling fluoran with lime; 
by the oxidation of xanthydrol (R. Meyer, Bar., 1893, s6, 
p. 1377); by boiling diaaotized 2'S^iaminobentophenone with 
water (HeyL, Ber. t 1898, 31, p. 3034); by beating salal with 
concentrated sulphuric add (C. Graebe, An*., 1889, 254. 
p. 280), and by beating rjotassium-onho-chiorobentoate with 
sodium phenobte and a small quantity of copper powder to 
180-190 C. (F. UUmann, Ber., 190s, 38, pp. 729, 2120, 2211). It 
crystallizes in needles which melt at 173-174* and boil 
•* 349-350* C, and are volatile in steam. Its solution in 
concentrated sulphuric add is of a yellow colour and 
shows a marked blue fluorescence. The carbonyi group is 
not kctonic m character since it yidds neither an oxime nor 
hydrazone. When fused with caustic potash it yields phenol 
and salicylic add. Mild redudng agents convert it into 
xanthydrol, the group >CO becoming >CHOH, whilst a strong 
redudng agent like hydriodic add con v ert s it into xanthene, 
the group > CO becoming>CH», Phosphorus pentasulphide at 
140-150° C. converts it into xantbkui by transformation of >CO 
to >CS (R. Meyer, Ber., 1900, S3, P- »58o)* and this latter com- 
pound condenses with hydroxylamine to form xantbone oxfane. 

All four mono-hydroxvxanthones are known, and are prepared by 
heating salicylic add with either resorcirt, pyrocatechin or hydro- 
quinone; they are yellow crystalline aobds, which act as dyeatuffa. 
The i'7-dihydroxyxanthone, known as euxanthone, is prepared by 
heating •uxanthic acid with hydrochloric acid or by heating hydro- 
quinone carboxylic acid with 0-resorcylic acid and acetic anhydride 
(5. Kostanecki, Ber. % 1891, 24. p. 3983: C. Graebe, Aim., 1889, 
254, p. 298). It is also obtained from Indian yellow (Graebe, ibkJ.X 
formed in the urine of cows fed on mango leaves. It crystallizes ia 
yellow needles which sublime readily. On fusion with caustic 
potash it decomposes with formation of tctrahydroxy-benzophenone. 
which then breaks up into resordn and hydroquinone. The 
isomeric i-o-dihydroxyxanthooe, isoeuxanthone, is formed when 
0-rcsorcylic add is heated with acetic anhydride. Geatieeia, or 
1-3-7-trihydroxyxantbooe, is found in the form of its methyl ether 
(sentisin) in gentian root; it is obtained synthetically by condensing 
phlorogludn with hydroquinone carboxylic acid. 

Xanthene, C,,H„0, may be synthesized fay condensing phenol 
with ortho-cresol in the presence of aluminium chloride. Its 
tetramethyl-diamino derivative, which is formed by conde n sing 
formaldehyde with dimethyl-meta-aminopbenol and subsequent 
elimination of water from the resulting diphenyl methane derivative, 
is the kuco base of pytooine. into which It passes by o x id ati on. 

^\J\o/\^ c*ch*nA/\o/\/ 



882 



XANTHUS— XAVTER 



XAMTRU3 (mod. GunUk), an ancient dty of Lyda, on the 
river Xanthus {Esken Chat) about 8 m. above its mouth. It 
was besieged by the Persian general Harpagus (546 B.C.), when 
the acropolis was burned and all the inhabitants perished 
(Herod. L 176). The city was afterwards rebuilt; and in 42 B.C. 
it was besieged by the Romans under M. Junius Brutus. 
It was taken by storm and set on fire, and the inhabitants 
perished in the flames. The ruins lie 00 a plateau, high above 
the left bank of the river. The nearest port is Kalamaki, 
whence a tedious ride of three to four hours round the edge 
of the great marsh of the Eshen Chai brings the traveller to 
Xanthus. The whole plan of the dty with its walls and gates 
can be discerned. The well-preserved theatre is remarkable 
for a break in the curve of its auditorium, which has been con* 
structed so as not to interfere with a sarcophagus on a pedestal 
and with the " Harpy Monument " which still stands to its full 
height, robbed of the reliefs of its parapet (now in the British 
Museum). In front of the theatre stands the famous stele of 
Xanthus inscribed on all four sides in Lydan and Greek. Be- 
hind the theatre is a terrace on which probably the temple of 
either the Xanthian Apollo or Sarpedon stood. The best of the 
tombs— the " Payava Tomb," the " Nereid Monument," the 
" Ionic Monument " and the " Lion Tomb "—are in the British 
Museum, as the result of Sir Chas. Fellows'* expedition; only 
their bases can be seen on the site. A fine triple gateway, 
much polygonal masonry, and the walls of the acropolis are the 
Other objects of most interest. 

See O. Benndorf and C. Niemann, Reisen in Lykien tnd Karitu 
(1B84). (D. G. H.) 

XAVIER, FRAHCISCO DB (1506-1552), Jesuit missionary 
and saint, commonly known in English as St Frauds Xavier 
and also called the "Apostle of the Indies." He was the 
youngest son of Juan de Jasso, privy Councillor to Jean d'Albret, 
king of Navarre, and his wife, Maria de Axpilcueta y Xavier, sole 
heiress of two noble Navarrese families. He was born at his 
mother's castle of Xavier or Xavero, at the foot of the Pyrenees 
and close to the little town of Sanguesa, on the 7th of April 1506, 
according to a family register, though his earlier biographers 
fix his birth in 1497. Following a Spanish custom of the 
lime, which left the surname of either parent optional with 
children, he was called after his mother; the best authorities 
write " Francisco de Xavier " (Lat. Xaverius) rather than 
" Francisco Xavier," as Xavier is originally a place-name. In 
1524 he went to the university of Paris, where he entered the 
College of St Barbara, then the headquarters of the Spanish 
and Portuguese students, and in 1528 was appointed lecturer 
in Aristotelian philosophy at the College de Beauvais. In 
1530 he took bis degree as master of arts. He and the Savoyard 
Pierre Lefevrc, who shared his lodging, had already, in 1529, 
made the acquaintance of Ignatius of Loyola — like Xavier a 
native of the Spanish Basque country. Ignatius succeeded, 
though in Xavier's case after some opposition, in gaining their 
sympathy for his missionary schemes (see Loyola, Igvatius or); 
and they were among the company of seven persons, including 
Loyola himself, who took the original Jesuit vows on the 15th 
tof August 1534. They continued in Paris for two years longer; 
but on November 15th, 1536, they started for Italy, to concert 
with Ignatius plans for converting the Moslems of Palestine. In 
January 1537 they arrived in Venice. As some months must 
elapse before they could sail for Palestine, Ignatius determined 
that the time should be spent partly in hospital work at Venice 
and later in the journey to Rome. Accordingly, Xavier devoted 
himself for nine weeks to the hospital for incurables, and then 
set out with eight companions for Rome, where Pope Paul III. 
sanctioned their enterprise. Retaining to Venice, Xavier was 
ordained priest on Midsummer Day 1537; but the outbreak 
of war between Venice and Turkey put an end to the Palestine 
expedition, and the companions dispersed for a twelvemonth's 
home mission work in the Italian cities. Nicolas Bobadilla 
and Xaviet betook themselves first to Monselice and thence 
to Bologna, where they remained till summoned to Rome by 
Ignatius at the close of 1538. 



Ignatius retained Xavier at Rome until 1541 as secretary 
to the Society of Jesus (see Jesuits for the events of the period 
1538-41). Meanwhile John III., king of Portugal, had re- 
solved on sending a mission to his Indian dominions, and had 
applied through his envoy Pedro Mascarenhas to the pope for six 
Jesuits. Ignatius could spare but two, and chose Bobadilla 
and a Portuguese named Simio Rodrigues for the purpose. 
Rodrigues set out at once for Lisbon to confer with the king, 
who ultimately dedded to retain him in Portugal. Bobadilla, 
sent for to Rome, arrived there just before Mascarenhas was about 
to depart, but fell too ill to respond to the call made on him. 

Hereupon Ignatius, on March 15th, 1540, told Xavier to leave 
Rome the next day with Mascarenhas, in order to join Rodrigues 
in the Indian mission. Xavier complied, merely waiting long 
enough to obtain the pope's benediction, and set out for Lisbon, 
where he was presented to the king, and soon woo his entire 
confidence, attested notably by procuring for him from the 
pope four briefs, one of them appointing him papal nuncio in 
the Indies. On April 7th, 1541, he sailed from Lisbon with 
Martini Alfonso de Sousa, governor designate of India, and 
lived amongst the common sailors, ministering to their religious 
and temporal needs, especially during an outbreak of scurvy. 
After five months' voyage the ship reached Mozambique, where 
the captain resolved to winter, and Xavier was prostrated with 
a severe attack of fever. When the voyage was resomed, the 
ship touched at Maiindi and Sokotra, and readied Goa on 
May 6th, 1542. Exhibiting his brief to D. Joao d'Albuquerque, 
bishop of boa, he asked his permission to officiate in the diocese, 
and at once began walking through the streets 'ringing a small 
bell, and telling all to come, and send their children and servants, 
to the " Christian doctrine " or catechetical instruction in the 
prindpal church. He spent five months in Goa, and then 
turned his attention to the " Fishery Coast," where he had 
heard that the Paravas, a tribe engaged in the pearl fishery, 
had relapsed into heathenism after having professed Christianity. 
He laboured assiduously amongst them for fifteen months, and 
at the end of 154* returned to Goa. 

At Travancore he is said to have founded no fewer than forty- 
five Christian settlements. It is to be noted that his own letters 
contain, both at this time and later on, express disproof of 
that miraculous gift of tongues with which he was credited even 
in his lifetime, and which is attributed to him in the Breviary 
office for his festival. Not only was he obliged to employ 
interpreters, but he relates that in their absence he was com- 
pelled to use signs only. 

He sent a missionary to the isle of Manaar, and himself visited 
Ceylon and Mailapur (Meliapur), the traditional tomb of St 
Thomas the apostle, which he reached in April 1544, remaining 
there four months. At Malacca, where he arrived on September 
25th, 1545, he remained another four months, but had compara- 
tively little success. While in Malacca he urged King John III. of 
Portugal to set up the Inquisition in Goa to repress Judaism, but 
the tribunal was not set up until 1 560. After visiting Amboyna, 
the Moluccas and other isles of the Malay archipelago, he 
returned to Malacca in July 1547, and found three Jesuit 
recruits from Europe awaiting him. About this time an attack 
upon the dty was made by the Achinese fleet, under the raja 
of Pedir in Sumatra; and Xavier's early biographers relate a 
dramatic story of how he roused the governor to action. This 
story is open to grave suspicion, as, apart from the miracles 
recorded, there are wide discrepancies between the secular 
Portuguese histories and the narratives written or inspired 
by Jesuit chroniclers of the 17th century. 

While in Malacca Xavier met one Yajiro, a Japanese exile 
(known to the biographies as Anger, Angero or Anjiro), who 
fired him with seal for the conversion of Japan. But he 
first revisited India and then, returning to Malacca, took ship 
for Japan, accompanied by Yajiro, now known as Paul of the 
Holy Faith. They reached Kagoshirna on the 15th of August 
1540, and remained in Japan until the 20th of November 1551. 
(See Japan, fi viii.) On board the " Santa Cruz," the vessel 
in which he returned from Japan 10 Malacca, Xavier disevssed 



XENIA— XENOCRATES 



8«3 



with Diogo Petefta, the captain, t project for t missionary 
journey to China. He devised the plan of persuading the 
viceroy oi Portuguese India to despatch an embassy to China, 
in whose train he might enter, despite the law which then ex- 
cluded foreigners from that empire. He reached Goa in February 
155?, and obtained from the viceroy consent to the plan of a 
Chinese embassy and to the nomination of Pereira as envoy. 
Xavier left India on the 25th of April 1552 for Malacca, intending 
there to meet Pereira and to re-embark on the "Santa Crux." 

The story of his detention by the governor (officially styled 
captain) of Malacca— a son of Vasco da Gama named Alvaro 
de Ataide or Athayde— is told with many picturesque details 
fay F- M. Pinto and some of the Jesuit biographers, who have 
pilloried Ataide as actuated solely by malice and self-interest. 
Ataide appears to have objected not so much to the mission as 
to the rank assigned to Pereira, whom he regarded aa unfit for 
the office of envoy. The right to send a ship to trade with China 
was one for which large sums were paid, and Pereira, as com- 
mander of the expedition, would enjoy commercial privileges 
which Ataide had, ex officio, the power to grant or withhold. It 
seems doubtful if the governor exceeded his legal right in re- 
fusing to allow Pereira to proceed; 1 in this attitude he remained 
firm even when Xavier, if the Jesuit biographers may be 
trusted, exhibited the brief by which be held the rank of papal 
nuncio, and threatened Ataide with excommunication, On 
Xavier's personal liberty no restraint was placed. He embarked 
without Pereira on July 16th, 1552. After a short stay at 
Singapore, whence be despatched several letters to India and 
Europe, the ship at the end of August 155a reached Chang- 
chuen-shan (St John .Island) off the coast of Kwang-tung, 
which served as port and rendezvous for Europeans, not then 
admitted to visit the Chinese mainland. 

Xavier was seized with fever soon after his arrival, and was 
delayed by the failure of the interpreter he had engaged, as well 
as by the reluctance of the Portuguese to attempt the voyage 
to Canton for the purpose of landing him. He had arranged 
for his passage in a Chinese junk, when he was again attacked 
by fever, and died on December 2nd, or, according to some 
authorities, November 27th, 1552. lie was buried close to 
the cabin in which he had died, but bis body was later transferred 
to Malacca, and thence to Goa, where it still lies in a magnificent 
shrine (see J. N. da Fooseca, An Historical and Archaeological 
Sketch of Goa, Bombay, 1878). He was beatified by Paul V. 
in 1 61 9 and canonized by Gregory XV. in 1621. 

In appearance Xavier was neither Spanish nor Basque. He 
had blue or grey eyes, and fair hair and beard, which turned 
white through the hardships he endured in Japan. That he 
was of short stature is proved by the length of the coffin in 
which his body is still preserved, less than 5 ft. 1 in. (Fonscca, 
op. cit. p. 206). Many miracles have been ascribed to him; 
an official list of these, said to have been attested by eye- 
witnesses, was drawn up by the auditors of the Rota when the 
processes for his canonization were formed, and is preserved 
in manuscript in the Vatican library. The contention that 
Xavier should be regarded as the greatest of Christian mis- 
sionaries since the first century A.D. rests upon more tangible 
evidence. His Jesuit biographers attribute to him the con- 
version of more than 700,000 persons in less than ten years; 
and though these figures are absurd, the work which Xavier 
accomplished was enormous. He inaugurated new missionary 
enterprises from Hormuz to Japan and the Malay Archipelago, 
leaving an organized Christian community wherever he preached; 
he directed by correspondence the ecclesiastical policy of 
John III. and his viceroy in India; he established and con- 
trolled the Society of Jesus m the East. Himself an ascetic 
and a mystic, to whom things spiritual were more real than 
the visible world, be had the strong common sense which 



»See R. S. Whkeway, R**j£ the Portugmso Power in 
(London, 1808). appendix A. The question u complicated by the 
fact that the Sixth Decade of Diogo do Couto, the bctt c o ntempor a ry 
historian of these events, was suppressed by the censor in its original 
form, and the extant version was revised by an ecclesiastical editor. 



distinguished the other Spanish mystics, St Theresa, Luis 
de Leon or Ralmon LuH This quality is nowhere better 
exemplified than in his letters to Gaspar Baertz (Barzaeus), 
the Flemish Jesuit whom he sent to Hormuz, or in his sugges- 
tions for the establishment of a Portuguese staple in Japan. 
Supreme as an organizer, he seems also to have had a singularly 
attractive personality, which won him the friendship even of 
the pirates and bravos with whom he was forced to consort 
on his voyages. Modern critics of his work note that he made 
no attempt to understand the oriental religions which he 
attacked, and censure him for invoking the aid of the Inquisi- 
tion and sanctioning persecution of the Nestorians* in Malabar. 
He strove, with a success disastrous to the Portuguese empire, 
to convert the government in Goa Into a proselytizing agency. 
Throughout his life he remained In close touch with Ignatius of 
Loyola, who is said to have selected Xavier as his own successor 
at the head of the Society of Jesus. Within a few weeks of 
Xavier's death, indeed, Ignatius sent letters recalling him to 
Europe with that end in view. 

Bibliography. — Many of theauthorities on which the biographies 
of Xavier have been baaed are untrustworthy, notably the Fere* 
pinacam of F. M. Pinto (£».)• whkh minutely describes certain 
incidents of his life in the Far East (especially in Japan and Malacca). 
Xavier's extant letters, supplemented by a few other loth-century 
documents, outweigh all other evidence, It is perhaps noteworthy 
that Xavier himself never mentions Pinto; but the omission may be 
explained by the numerous gaps in his corre sp ondence. A critical 
text of the letters, with notes, bibliography and a life in Spanish, 
will be found in Monnmenta Xaveriana ex Antogropkis vd ex Anli- 
ouiorious Exempli* coUetta. vol. I (Madrid, i89Q-iooo),JpcIuded in 
Monumenta kistorica Sorirtatit Jesu. For translations. The Life and 



libri sex, by O. Toraellino (Tursellinus) (Antwerp, 1 596; English by 
T. F., The Admirable Life of St Francis Xavier, Paris. 1633); and 
Historic da Vida do Padre Francisco de Xavier, Ac, by Jolo Lucena 
(Lisbon, 1600). Later works by the Jesuits Bartoli, Mafici* da 
Sousa, Poussincs, Menchacha. Leon Pages and others owe much to 
Torscilino and Lucena, but also incorporate many traditions which 



de Xavier, sa vie et see 



f J. M. Cros. S.J. (2 vols., Toulouse, 1900), embodies the 
I lone research. The Missionary Life of St Francis Xavier, 
Lev. H. Venn, prebendary of St Paul's cathedral, London 



can no longer be verified. St Francois di 
letlres, by J. M. Cros, S.J. (2 vols., Toulow 
results of to 

by the Rev. H. Venn, prebend—, 

(London, 1863), is polemical, but contains an interesting man of 
Xavier's journeys. For a non-partisan account of Xaviers work in 
the East, see K. G. Jaync, Vasco da Coma and his Successors, chapter* 
25-32 (London, 1910) ; and Otis Cary, A History of Christianity am 
Japan (a vols., London, 1909). (K. C. J.) 

XENIA, a dty and the county-seat of Greene county, Ohio, 
U.S.A., in the township of Xenia, about 3 m. E. of the Little 
Miami river, and about 55 m. S.W. of Columbus and about 
65 m. N.E. of Cincinnati. Pop. (xooo) .8696, of whom 410 
were foreign-bom; (19x0 census) 8706. Xenia is served 
by the Cincinnati, Hamilton & Dayton, and the Pittsburg, 
Cincinnati, Chicago & St Louis (Pennsylvania System) rail- 
ways, and by interurban electric hnes to Springfield and 
Dayton. It is the seat of the Ohio Soldiers' and Sailors* Orphans' 
Home and of the Xenia Theological Seminary (United Presby- 
terian; founded in 1704 at Service, Pa., and united in 1874 with 
the Theological Seminary of the North-West, founded in 1839 
at Oxford, Ohio). About 3 m. N.E., at Wflbcrforce, is Wubcr- 
force University (co-educational; opened in 1856 and reorganized 
in 1863), conducted by the African Methodist Episcopal Church. 
The public buildings of Xenia include a public library, the county 
court-house and the municipal building. Xenia is situated in 
a fine farming and stock-raising region, and among its manu- 
factures are cordage and twine, boots and shoes, carriages and 
machinery. The township was first settled about 1797. Xenia 
was laid out as a village in 1803, was incorporated as a town 
in 1808 and was chartered aa a city in 1870. 

XBNOCRATES, of Chalcedon, Greek philosopher, schohuch or 
rector of the Academy from 339 to 3x4 B.C., was born in 396. 
Removing to Athens in early youth, he became the pupil of 
the Socratic Aeschinca, but presently joined himself to Plato, 
whom he attended to Sicily in 361. Upon Ms master's death 



88+ 



XENOPHANES 



(347 bx.), in company with Aristotle he paid a visit to Hermias 
at Atarneus. In 330, Aristotle being then in Macedonia, 
Xenocrates succeeded Speusippus in the presidency of the 
school, defeating his competitors Menedemus and Heracleides 
by a few votes. On three occasions he was member of an 
Athenian legation, once to Philip, twice to Antipater. Soon 
after the death of Demosthenes in 332, resenting the Macedonian 
influence then dominant at Athens, Xenocrates declined the 
citizenship offered to him at the instance of Pbocion, and, 
being unable to pay the tax levied upon resident aliens, was, 
it is said, sold, or on the point of being sold, into slavery. He 
died in 314, and was succeeded as scholarch by Polemon, whom 
he had reclaimed from a life of profligacy. Besides Polemon, 
the statesman Phorioi), Chaeron, tyrant of Pellene, the Academic 
Crantor, the Stoic Zeno and Epicurus are alleged to have 
frequented his lectures. 

Xenocrates's earnestness and strength of character won for him 
universal respect, and stories were r e membered in proof of his purity, 
integrity and benevolence. Wanting in quickness of apprehen s ion 
and in native grace, he made up for these deficiencies by a con- 
scientious love of truth and an untiring industry. Less original 
than Speusippus, he adhered more dosely to the letter of Platonic 
doctrine, ana is accounted the typical re p r es en tative of the Old 
Academy. In his writings, which were numerous, he seems to have 
covered nearly the whole of the Academic programme; but meta- 

Ehysies and ethics were the subjects which principally engaged 
is thoughts. He is said to have invented, or at least to have 
emphasized, the tripartition of philosophy under the heads of 
physic, dialectic and ethic. 

In his ontology Xenocrates built upon Plato's foundations: that 
fa to say, with Plato he postulated ideas or numbers to be the causes 
of nature's organic products, and derived these ideas or numbers 
from unity (which is active) and plurality f^which is passive). But 
he put upon this fundamental dogma a new interpretation. Accord- 
ing to Plato, existence fa mind pluralized : mind as a unity, ix. 
universal mind, apprehends its own plurality as eternal, immutable, 
intelligible ideas; and mind as a plurality, i.e. particular mind, 
perceives its own plurality as transitory, mutable, sensible things. 
The idea, inasmuch as it is a law of universal mind, which in par- 
ticular minds produces aggregates of sensations called things, is a 
"determinant* (rtpcu *xw), and as such fa styled "quantity" 
{rocim ) and perhaps " number " (ApcMO ; but the ideal numbers 
are distinct from arithmetical numbers. Xenocrates, however, 
failing, as it would seem, to grasp the ideatism which was the meta- 
physical foundation of Plato's theory of natural kinds, took for his 
principles arithmetical unity and plurality, and accordingly identi- 
fied ideal numbers with arithmetical numbers. In thus reverting 
to the crudities of certain Pythagoreans, he laid himself open to the 
criticisms of Aristotle, who. in his Metaphysics, recognizing amongst 
contemporary Platonists three principal groups — (1) those who, like 
Plato, distinguished mathematical and ideal numbers; (2) those 
who, like Xenocrates, identified them; and (3) those who. like 
Speusippus, postulated mathematical numbers only — has much to 
say agamst the Xenocratean interpretation of the theory, and in 
particular points out that, if the ideas are numbers made up of 
arithmetical units, they not only cease to be principles, but also 
become subject to arithmetical operations. Xenocrates's theory of 
inorganic nature was substantially identical with the theory of the 
elements which is propounded In the Timacus, 53 C son. Neverthe- 
less, holding that every dimension has a principle of its own, he 
rejected the derivation of the elemental solids — pyramid, octahedron, 
icosahedron and cube — from triangular surfaces, and in so far ap- 
proximated to atomism. Moreover, to the tetrad of simple elements 
—vis. fire, air, water, earth — he added the r**rrtf ofoia, ether. 
His cosmology, which is drawn almost entirely from the Timaeus, 

Sd, as he intimated., is not to be regarded as a cosmogony, should 
studied in connexion with his psychology. Soul is a self-moving 
number, derived from the two fundamental principles, unity (Ir) 
and plurality (fait ibpirroi), whence it obtains its powers of rest 
and motion. It fa incor p oreal, and may exist apart from body. 
The irrational soul, as well as the rational soul, fa immortal. The 
universe, the heavenly bodies, roan, animals, and presumably 
plants, are each of them endowed with a soul, which is more or leas 
perfect according to the position which it occupies in the descending 
scale of creation. With this Platonic philosopheme Xenocrates 
combines the current theology, identifying the universe and the 
heavenly bodies with the greater gods, and reserving a place be- 
tween them and mortals for the lesser divinities. 

If the extant authorities are to be trusted, Xenocrates recog- 
nised three grades of cognition, each appropriated to a region of its 
own— via. knowledge, opinion and sensation, having lor their 
respective objects supra -celestials or ideas, celestials or stars, and 
infra-celestials or things. Even here the mythological tendency 
displays itself— wvra, i^awrk and afosV* being severally 
committed to Atvopee, Lachesfa and Cloth©. Of Xenocrates's 



logic we know only that- with Plato hedfatiagufahed ri «*r s*r* and 
r* wpbt ri, rejecting the Aristotelian list of ten categories as a super- 
fluity. 

Valuing philosophy chiefly for its influence upon conduct, Xeno- 
crates bestowed especial attention upon ethics. The catalogue of 
his works shows that he had written largely upon this subject; but 
the indications of doctrine which have survived arc scanty, and 
may be summed up in a few sentences. Things are goods, ills or 
neutrals. Goods are of three sorts- me nt al, bodily, external; but 
of all goods virtue is incomparably the greatest. Happiness con- 
sists in the pos s e ss ion of virtue, and consequently is independent of 
personal and extraneous advantages. The virtuous man is pure, 
not in act only, but also in heart. To the attainment of virtue the 
best help fa philosophy; for the philosopher does of his own accord 



what others do under the compulsion of law. Speculative wisdom 
and practical wisdom are to be distinguished. Meagre as these 
statements arc. they suffice to show that in ethics, as elsewhere. 



Xenocrates worked upon Platonic lines. 

Xenocrates was not in any sense a great thinker. His meta- 
physic was a travesty rather than a reproduction of that of his 
master. His ethic had little which was distinctive. But his 
austere life and commanding personality made him an effective 
teacher, and his influence, kept alive by his pupils Polemon and 
Crates, ceased only when Arccsilaiis, the founder of the so-called 
Second Academy, gave a new direction to the studies of the school. 

See D. Van de Wynpersse, De XenocraU Chalctdmtu (Leiden, 
1822); C. A. Brandis, Ccsch. d. triechiuh-ritmische* Philosophic 
(Berlin, 1853), ii. 3, 1 ; E. Zctler, Philosophic d. Criechen (Leipzig, 
1875), ii. 1; F. W. A. Muflach, Fragmenla Phihsophontm Croe- 
canon (Paris, 1881), iii. (H. Ja.) 

XEMOPHANES of Colophon, the reputed founder of the 
Eleatic school of philosophy, fa supposed to have been born in 
the third or fourth decade of the 6th century B.C. An exile from 
his Ionian home, he resided for a time In Sicily, at Zandc and 
at Catana, and afterwards established' himself in southern 
Italy, at Elea, a Phocaean colony founded in the sixty-first 
Olympiad (536-533). In one of the extant fragments he speaks 
of himself as having begun his wanderings sixty-seven years 
before, when he was twenty-five years of age, so that he was not 
less than ninety-two when he died. His teaching found expres- 
sion in poems, which, he recited rhapsodhrally in the course of 
bis travels. In the more considerable of the elegiac fragments 
which have survived, he ridicules the doctrine of the migration 
of souls (xviii.), asserts the claims of wisdom against the pre- 
valent athleticism, which seemed to him to conduce neither to 
the good government of states nor to their material prosperity 
(xix), reprobates the introduction of Lydian luxury into 
Colophon (xx.), and recommends the reasonable enjoyment of 
social pleasures (xxi.). Of the epic fragments, the more important 
are those in which he attacks the M anthropomorphic and an- 
thropopathic polytheism " of his contemporaries. According 
to Aristotle, " the first of Eleafic unitarians was not careful 
to say whether the unity which he postulated was finite or in- 
finite, but, contemplating the whole firmament, declared that 
the One is God." Whether Xenophanes was a monot heist, 
whose assertion of the unity of God suggested to Paimenides 
the doctrine of the unity of Being, or a pantheist, whose 
assertion of the unity of God was also a declaration of 
the unity of Being, so that he anticipated Parmenides— in 
other words, whether Xcnophanes's teaching was purely theo- 
logical or had also a philosophical significance— is a question 
about which authorities have differed and will probably 
continue to differ. The silence of the extant fragments, 
which have not one word about the unity of Being, favours the 
one view; the voice of antiquity, which proclaims Xenophanes 
the founder of Eleaticism, has been thought to favour the other. 

Of Xenophanes's utterances about (l) God, (2) the world, (3) 
knowledge, the following survive: (1) " There fa one God, greatest 
among gods and men, neither in shape nor in thought like unto 
mortals. ... He fa all sight, all mind, all ear (<•*• not a composite 
organism). . . . Without an effort ruleth he all things by thought. 
. . . He abidcth ever in the same place motionless, and it be- 
fitteth him not to wander hither and thither. . . . Yet men imagine 
gods to be born, and to have raiment and voice and body, like 
themselves. . . . Even so the gods of the Ethiopians are swarthy 
and flat-nosed, the gods of the Thracians are fair-haired and blue- 

3 red. . . . Even so Homer and Hesiod attributed to the gods 
I that fa a shame and a reproach among men — theft, adultery, 
deceit and other lawless acts. . . . Even so oxen, lions and horses, 
if they had hands wherewith to grave images, would fashion gods 



XBNOPHON 



88s 



•Iter their own shapes and make them bodies like to their own. 

ia) From earth all things are and to earth ail things return. . . . 
r rom earth and water come all of us. . . . The sea is the well 
whence water springeth. . . . Here at our feet is the end of the 
earth where it reacheth unto air, but. below, its foundations are 
without end. . . . The rainbow, which men call Iris, is a cloud 
that is purple and red and yellow. (3) No man hath certainly 
known, nor shall certainly know, that which he saith about the 
gods and about all things; for, be that which he saith ever so 
perfect, yet doth he not know it ; all things are matters of opinion. 
. . . That which 1 say is opinion like unto truth. . . . The gods 
did not reveal all things to morula in the beginning; long is the 
search ere man findcth that which is better." 

There is very little secondary evidence to record. "The Eleatic 
school," says the Stranger in Plato's Sophist, 242 D, " beginning 
with Xenophanes, and even earlier, starts from the principle of the 
unity of all things.'* Aristotle, in a passage already cited, Jfetn- 
physic*, A5, speaks of Xenophanes as the first of the Eleatic unitarians, 
adding that his monotheism was reached through the contempts* 
tion of the «*>**«*. Theophrastus (in Simplicities Ad Pkysica. $) 
sunt* up Xenophanes's teaching in the propositions, " The All is 
One and the One is God." Timon (in Sext. Empir. Pvrrh. i. 224), 
ignoring Xenophanes's theology, makes him resolve all things into 
one and the same unity. The demonstrations of the unity and the 
attributes of God. with which the treatise De Metis so, Xenophon* cl 
Gorria. (now no longer ascribed to Aristotle or Theophrastus) ae» 
credits Xenophanes r are plainly framed on the model of Eleatk proofs 
of the unity and the attributes of the Ent, and must therefore be 
set aside. The epitomators of a later time add nothing to the 
testimonies already enumerated. 

Thus, whereas in his writings, so far as they are known to us, 
Xenophanes appears as a theologian protesting against an anthro- 
pomorphic polytheism, the ancients seem to have regarded him as a 
philosopher asserting the unity of Being. How are we to under* 
stand these conflicting, though not irreconcilable, testimonies? 
According to Zeller , the discrepancy is only apparent. The Greek 
gods being the powers of nature personified, pantheism lay nearer 
to hand than monotheism. Xenophanes was, then, a pantheist. 
Accordingly his assertion of the unity of God was at the same time 
a declaration of the unity of Being, and in virtue of this declaration 
he is entitled to rank as the founder of Eteaticism, inasmuch as 
the philosophy of Pannenides was his forerunner's pantheism 
divested of its theistic element. This reconciliation of the internal 



and the external evidence, countenanced as it is by Theophrastus, 
one of the best informed of the ancient historians, and approved 
by Zeller, one of the most learned of the modern critics, is more 
than plausible: but there is something to be said on the contrary 
part. In the first place, it may be doubted whether to a Greek of 
the 6th century pantheism was nearer than monotheism. Secondly, 
the external evidence does not bear examination. The Platonic 
testimony, if it proved anything, would prove too much, namely, 
that the doctrine of the unity of Being originated, not with Xeno- 
phanes, but before him; and, in fact, the passage from the Sophist 
no more proves that Plato attributed to Xenophanes the philosophy 
of Parmenidea than Theaetetus, 160 O, proves that Plato attributed 
to Homer the philosophy of Heraclitus. Again, Aristotle's de- 
scription of Xenophanes as the first of the Eleatic unitarianadoea not 
necessarily imply that the unity asserted by Xenophanes was the 
unity asserted by Pannenides; the phrase, "contemplating the 
firmament, he declared that the One is God." leaves it doubtful 
whether Aristotle attributed to Xenophanes any philosophical 
theory whatever; and the epithet kypwmkrtm discourages the belief 
that Aristotle regarded Xenophanes as the author of a new and 
important departure. Thirdly, when Xenophanes himself says 
that theories about gods and about things are not knowledge, that 
his own utterances are not verities but verisimilitudes, and that, 
so far from learning things by revelation, man must laboriously 
seek a better opinion, he plainly renounces the "disinterested 
pursuit of truth. If then he was indifferent to the problem, he 
can hardly be credited with the Eleatic solution. In the judgment 
of the present writer, Xenophanes was neither a philosopher nor a 
sceptic. He was not a philosopher, for he despaired of knowledge. 
He was not a sceptic, if by "sceptic" is meant the miaologist 
whose despair of knowledge Is the consequence of disappointed 
endeavour, for he had never hoped. Rather be was a theologian 
who arrived at his theory of the unity of the Supreme Being by 
criticism of the contemporary mythology. But, while he thus 
stood aloof from philosophy, Xenophanes influenced its development 
in two ways: first, his theological heniam led the way to the philo- 
sophical beaism of Parmenides and Zeno; secondly, his assertion 
that so-called knowledge was in reality no more than opinion 
taught his successors to distinguish knowledge and opinion, and to 
assign to each a separate province. 

Apart from the old controversy about Xenophanes's relations to 
philosophy, doubts have recently arisen about his theological 
position. In fragments i., xiv., xvu, xxi., Ac. he recognises, thinks 
Freudenthal, a plurality of deities; whence it is inferred that, 
besides the One God, most high, perfect, eternal, who. as immanent 
intelligent cause, unifies the plurality of things, there were also 



•leaser divinities, who govern portions of the universe, being thorn*- 
selves eternal parts of the one all-embracing frirrthflad Whilst 
it can hardly be allowed that Xenophanes, so far from deny- 
ing, actually affirms a plurality of gods, it must be conceded to 
Freudenthal that Xenophanes's polemic was directed against the 
anthropomorphic tendencies and the mythological details of the con* 
temporary polytheism rather than against the polytheistic principle, 
and that, apart from the treatise Do Mdisso Xenophane el Gerrie, 
now generally discredited, there is no direct evidence to prove him a 
consistent monotheist. The wisdom of Xenophanes, like the wisdom 
of the Hebrew Preacher, showed itself, not in a theory of the uni- 
verse, but in a sorrowful recognition of the nothingness of things 
and the futility of endeavour. His theism was a declaration not 
so much of the greatness of God as rather of the littleness of man. 
His cosmology was an assertion not so much of the immutability 
of the One as rather of the mutability of the Many. Like Socrates, 
he was not a philosopher, and did not pretend to be one: but, aa 
the reasoned scepticism of Socrates cleared the way for the philo- 
sophy of Plato, so did Xenophanes's " abnormis sapicntia" for the 
philosophy of Parmenides. 

B»U0GRArHY.~-S. Karsten, Xcnophonis Colophon* Carminum 
Reliquiae (Brussels, 1850); F. W. A. Mullach, frog. Phil. Grata. 
(Pans, i860), i. 99-108; G. TeichmuUcr. Studicn a Gosch. d. Berriff* 



(Berlin, 1874), pp. 589-623; E. Zeller, Phil. d. Griuhen (Leipzig, 
1877). i. 486-507; J. Freudenthal, Utbcr d. ThtotofU d. Xeno- 
phanes (Breslau, 1886), and " Zur Lehre d. Xen.." in Archh /. 
Gesck. d. Philos. (Berlin, 1888). L 322-347; H. Oiels, Poetart 
PhUosophornm Fropnenta (Berlin, 1001); and Die Fragment* c 
Vorsekrahker (Berlin, 1906). For fuller bibliography, including t 
controversy about the De Melisso Xen. et Corgi*, see Ueberwi 



Gesck. d. Philos. (Berlin, 1888). L 322-347; H. Oiels, Poetarum 
* " .«..-» . -• - ■ dtr 

the 

.. .. Ueberweg, 

Gmndriss d. Gosch. d. Philos. (Berlin, 1871). i. 1 17. See also PasV 
Mampiw. (H- Ja.) 

XBNOPHON, Greek historian and philosophical essayist, the 
son of Gryllus, was born at Athens about 430 B.C. 1 He 
belonged to an equestrian family of the deme of Ercbia. It 
may be inferred from passages in the HeUenica that he fought 
at Arginusae (406), and that he was present at the return of 
Aldbiades (408), the trial of the Generals and the overthrow 
of the Thirty. Early in life lie came under the influence of 
Socrates, but an active Hfe had more attraction for him. In 
401, being invited by his friend Proxenus to join the expedition 
of the younger Cyrus against his brother, Artaxcrxes II. of 
Persia, he at once accepted the offer. It held out the prospect 
of riches and honour, while he was little likely to find favour 
in democratic Athens, where the knights were regarded with 
suspicion as having supported the Thirty. At the suggestion 
of Socrates, Xenophon went to Delphi to consult the oracle; 
but his mind was already made up, and he at once proceeded to 
Sardis, the place of rendezvous. Of the expedition itself he 
has given a full and detailed account in his Anabasis, or the 
" Up-Country March." After the battle of Cunaxa (401), in 
which Cyrus lost his life, the officers in command of the Greeks 
were treacherously murdered by the Persian satrap Tissapherncs, 
with whom they were negotiating an armistice with a view to 
a safe return. The army was now in the heart of an unknown 
country, more than a thousand miles from home and in the 
presence of a troublesome enemy. It was decided to march 
northwards np the Tigris valley and make for the shores of the 
Euxine, on which there were several Greek colonies. Xenophon 
became the leading spirit of the army; he was elected an officer, 
and he it was who mainly directed the retreat. Part of the 
way lay through the wilds of Kurdistan, where they had to 
encounter the harassing guerrilla attacks of savage mountain 
tribes, and part through the highlands of Armenia and Georgia. 
After a five months' march they reached Trapetiis [Trebizondl 
on the Euxine (February 400), where a tendency to demoraliza- 
tion began to show itself, and even Xenophon almost lost his 
control over the soldiery. At Cotyora he aspired to found a 
new colony; but the idea, not being unanimously accepted, was 
abandoned, and ultimately Xenophon with his Greeks arrived 
at Chrysopolis (Scutari] on the Bosporus, opposite Byzantium. 
After a brief period of service under a Thracian chief, Soothes, 
they were finally incorporated in a Lacedaemonian army which 

* As the description of the Ionian campaign of Thrasyttus in 410 
(BeUemcOti. 2) is clearly derived from Xenophon *s ownrenuniscences, 
he must have taken part in this campaign, and cannot therefore have 
been leu than twenty years of age at the time. 



886 



XENOPHON 



bad crossed over into Asu. to wage war against the Persian 
satraps TSssaphernes and Pharnabazus. Xenophon, who 
accompanied them, captured a wealthy Persian nobleman, with 
his family, near Pergamum, and the ransom paid for his recovery 
secured Xenophon a competency for life. 
• On his return to Greece Xenophon served under Agesilaus, 
king of Sparta, at that time the chief power in the Greek world. 
With his native Athens and its general policy and institutions 
he was not in sympathy. At Coroneia (304) he fought with the 
Spartans against the Athenians and Thebans, for which his 
fellow-dtisens decreed his banishment. The Spartans provided 
a home Cor him at Scillus in Elis, about two miles from Olympia; 
there he settled down to indulge his tastes for sport and literature. 
After Sparta's crushing defeat at Leuctra (371), Xenophon was 
driven from his home by the people of Elis. Meantime Sparta 
and Athens had become allies, and the Athenians repealed the 
decree which had condemned him to exile. There is, however, 
no evidence that he ever returned to his native city. According 
to Diogenes LaCrtius, he made his home at Corinth. The year 
of his death is not known; all that can be said is that it was 
later than 355, the date of hU work on the Revenues of Athens. 

The Anabasis (composed at Scillus between 379 and 371) is a work 



of singular interest, and is brightly and pleasantly written. Xeno- 
phon, like Caesar, tells the story m the third person, and there is a 
straightforward manliness about the style, with a distinct flavour of 



a cheerful Ugbtheartedness, which at once enlists our sympathies. 
His description of places and of relative distances is very minute 
and painstaking. The researches of modern travellers attest his 
general accuracy. It is expressly stated by Plutarch and Diogenes 
Lacrtios that the Anabasis was the work of Xenophon, and the 
evidence from style is conclusive. The allusion {Heuenica,m. 1, a) 
to Thesaistngenes of Syracuse as the author shows that Xenophon 
published it under an assumed name. 

The Cyropaedda, a political and philosophical romance, which 
describes the boyhood and training of Cyrus, hardly answers to its 
name, being for the most part an account of the beginnings of the 
Persian empire and of the victorious career of Cyrus its founder. 
The Cvropaedia contains in fact the author's own ideas of training 
and education, as derived conjointly from the teachings of Socrates 
and his favourite Spartan institutions. It was said to have been 
written in opposition to the Republic of Plato. A distinct moral 
purpose, fee which literal truth is sacrificed, runs through the work. 
For instance, Cyrus is re p r esen ted as dying peacefully in his bed, 
whereas, according to Herodotus, he fell in a campaign against the 
Massagetae. 

The Hellcniea written at Corinth, after 362, b the only contem- 
porary account of the period covered by it (41 1-362) that has come 
down to us. It consists of two distinct parts; books i. and ii., 
which are intended to form a continuation of the work of Thucydidea, 
and bring the history down to the fall of the Thirty, and books 
ifi.-vh., the HeUeniea proper, which deal with the period from -101 
to 36a, and give the history of the Spartan and Theban hegemomes. 
down to the death of Epaminondas. There is, however, no ground 
for the view that these two parts were written and published as 
separate works. There is probably no justification for the charge of 
deliberate falsification. It must be admitted, however, that he had 
strong political prejudices, and that these prejudices have influenced 
his narrative. He was a partisan of the reactionary movement 
which triumphed after the tall of. Athens; Sparta is his ideal, and 
Agesilaus his hero. At the same time, he was a believer in a divine 
overruling providence. He b compelled, therefore, to see in the 
fall of Sparta the punishment inflicted by heaven on the treacherous 
policy which had prompted the seisure of the Cadmea and the raid 
of Sphodrias. Hardly less serious defects than his political bias 
are his omissions, his want of the sense of proportion and his failure 
to grasp the meaning of historical criticism. The most that can be 
said in his favour b that as a witness he is at once honest and well- 
informed. ' For this period of Greek history he is, at any rate, an 
indispensable witness. 

The Memorabilia, or'" Recollections of Socrates," In four books. 
was written to defend Socra t es against the charges of impiety and 
corrupting the youth, repeated after his death by the sophist 
Polycratea. The work is not a literary masterpiece; it lacks 
coherence and unity, and the picture it gives of Socrates fails to do 
him justice. Still, as far as it goes, it no doubt faithfully describes 
the philosopher's manner of life and style of conversation. 
the moral and practical aide of Socrates's teachf 
interested Xenophon; into bis abstruse metaphi ' 
he seems to have made no attempt to enter: for tl_ 

neither taste nor genius. Moving within a limited _ 

doubtless gives us " cotuiderably less than the real Socrates, while 
Plato gives us something more/' It b probable that the work in 
its preser* * 




1 left seve^mmoTwott*soaM<rfwm\* are very 
interesting and give an insight into the home life of the Greeks. 

The Octonomics (to some extent a continuation of the Memorabilia, 
a regarded as the fifth book of the same) deals with the 
of the house and of the farm, and presents a pleasant 
w picture of the Greek wife and of her home duties. 
There are some good practical remarks on matrimony and on the 
respective duties of husband and wife. The treatise, which is in the 
form of a dialogue between Socrates and a certain Iscbomachus, 
was translated into Latin by Cicero. 

In theesssyson horsemanship (Hipftikt) and hunting (Cyaeg efirsu). 
Xenophon deals with matters of which he had a thorough practical 
.knowledge. In the first he gives rules how to choose a horse, and 
then tells how it b to be groomed and ridden and generally managed. 
The Cyntteticus deab chiefly with the hare, though the author 
speaks also of boar-bunting and describes the hounds, tells how they 
are to be bred and trained, and gives specimens of suitable names 
for them. On all thb he writes with the zest of an enthusiastic 
sportsman, and he observes that those nations whose upper classes 
have a taste for field-sports will be most likely to be successful in 

- Both treatises may still be read with interest by the modern 



The Hipfarehiau explains the duties of a cavalry officer ; it b 
not, according to our ideas, a very scientific treatise, showing that 
the art of war was but very imperfectly developed and that the 
military operations of the Greeks were on a somewhat petty scale. 
He dweUs at some length on the moral qualities which go to the 
making of a good cavalry officer, and hints very plainly that there 
must be strict attention to religious duties. 

The Agesilaus is a eulogy of the Spartan king, who had two special 
merits in Xenophon's eyes: he was a rigid disciplinarian, and he 
was particularly attentive to all religious observances. We have 
a summary of Ms virtues rather than a good and striking picture 
of the man himself. 

The Hierv works out the line of thought indicated in the story 
of the Sword of Damocles. It b a protest against the notion that 
the " tyrant "b a man to be envied, as having more abundant 
means of happiness than a private person. Thb is one of the most 
pleasing of hb minor works; it b cast into the form of a dialogue 
between Hiero, tyrant of Syracuse, and the lyric poet Simontde*. 

The Symposium, or " Banquet, to some extent the complement 
of the Memorabilia, b a brilliant little dialogue in which Socrates 
b the prominent figure. He b represented^ as " improving the 
occasion," which is that of a lively Atheman supper-party, at which 
there b much drinking, with flute-playing, and a dancing-girl from 
Syracuse, who amuses the guests with the feats of a professional 
conjuror. Socrates's table-talk runs through a variety of topics, 

oft *" 



i the superiority 



winds up with a philosophical disquisition on 

ue heavenly love to its earthly or sensual counterfeit, and with 

amest exhortation to one of the party, who I ' 



_ _ _. ___ ,-_-„. had |ust won l_ 

victory in the public games, to lead a noble life and do bb duty to 
hb country. 

There are aim two short essays, attributed to him, on the political 
constitution of Sparta and Athens, written with a decided bias in 
favour of the former, which he praises without attempting to criticize. 
Sparta seems to have presented to Xenophon the best conceivable 
mature of monarchy and aristocracy. The second is certainly not 
by Xenophon, but was probably written by a member of the oli- 
garchical party shortly after the beginning of the Petoponneatan War. 

In the essay on the Revenues of Athens (written in 355) he offers 
suggestions for making Athens less dependent on tribute received 
from its allies. Above all, he would have Athens use its influence 
for the maintenance of peace in the Greek world and for the settle- 
ment of questions by diplomacy, the temple at Delphi being for 
this purpose an independent centre and supplying a divine sanction. 

The Apdory, Socrates's defence before his judges, b rather a 
feeble production, and in the general opinion of modern critics b 
not a genuine work of Xenophon, but belongs to a much later period. 
• Xenophon was a man of great personal beauty and considerable 
intellectual gifts; but he was of too practical a 'nature to take an 
interest In abstruse philosophical speculation. Hb dislike of the 
democracy of Athens induced such lack of patriotism that he even 
fought on the side of Sparta against hb own country. In religious 
matten he was narrow minded, a believer in the efficacy of sacrifice 
and in the prophetic art. Hb plain and simple style, which at 
times becomes wearbome, was greatly admired and pr o cur e d him 

imitators. _ 

" " * separate 

be given here. " Ed"itio princeps (1516, incomplete): 
J. G. Schneider TlToo-iSao); G. Sauppe (1*65-66): L. EKndorf 
(1875); & C. Merchant (1900- , in the Clarendon Press Scrip 
torum Classicorum Bibliotheca). Anabasis: R. Kfihner (18% 
I. F. Macmichael (1883! ; F. Vollbrecht (1887): A. Pretor (18BI,. 
C. W. Kroger and W. Poke! (1888); WW. Goodwin and J. W. White 
(L-iv., 1894). CvaorASDiA: G. M. Gorham (1870); L. Brehen- 
bach (18753: A - Goodwin (vi.-viii., 1880); F. Hertlein and W. 
Nitsche (1886): H. A. Holden (1887-90). Hsllsmica: L. Breiten- 
bach (1874-84); R. Buehsenschuts (1860-91); J. I. Menatt 



many mutators. 

The editions of Xenophon's works, both complete and of 1 
portions, are ytry numerous, especially of the Anabasis; 



XERXES— X-RAY TREATMENT 



R-ev., ifiSt); L. D. DowdaD 0*. fit 1890). Memoxabiua 
Frost (1867) ; A. R. Clucr (t88o) ; R. Kuhner C»88a) ; L. Breiten* 
bsch (1889); J. Marshall (1890). Obconomicus: H. A. Holden 
<i895); C. Gram and A. Jacob (1886). Hum: H. A. Hokfea 
(1888). Aobslaim: R. W. Taylor (i88oh O. Gutfcliag (1888). 
Rasp. Laced A£M,: G. Pierieoni (jooa). Knsr. Athenibnsium: 
A. Kurhhoff (1874); E. Bdot (1880J; H. Mailer and Strobing 
(1880). Cynkgbticus: G. Pierieoni (1903). Hirnxt: Tom- 
masini (1903). Rbmtws Aran*. : A. Zurborg (1876). Scmxrr a 
Minora: L. Dindorf (1888). There is a good English translation 
of the complete works by H. G. Oakyns (1890-94), and of the 
Art of Horsemanship by M. H. Morgan (U.S.A., 1890). Of general 
works bearing 00 the subject may be mentioned: G. Sauppe, 
Lexilogu* Xenefhonteus (1869); A. Croiset, X., ton tender* et sen 
' (1873); Roqnette. De Xmnopkontu Vita (1884); I. Han- 
Anatocta XenotikonU* (1887) and AnaUcta Xenopkontea 



887 



Nooa (1889); C Joel, Der eckte und der Xenophontoische Socrates 
(189a); Lange, X., sein Leben, seine Geistesart und seine Werhe 
(1900). See also GftsecB: Ancient History, I ** Authorities." 
and works quoted; J. B. Bury, Ancient Greek Historian* (19091; 
Mute's History of Greek Literature and Grant's monograph in Btath- 
mood's Ancient Classics lor Engfish Readers may be read with 
advantage. Bibliographies in Engelmann-Preuss, BMiofheca 
Scriptonm Oassicorum (L, 1880) and in C Banian's Jakreskerkkt 
(c, 1900) by E. Richter. (E. M. W.; J. H. F.) 

X8RXHS (the Greek form of the Pen. KJukayirskd' y Old 
Testament Akasvcrus, Akkaskttrosh — i*. Ahasuerot (f*)— 
with wrong vocalization and substitution of y for v, instead of 
Akhskatarsk; fn Aramaic inscriptions and papyri from Egypt 
the name is written KhsnaTarsk), the name of two Persian kings 
of the Achaemenid dynasty. 

t. Xsxxes I., son of Darius I. and Atossa, the daughter of 
Cyrus the Great, and therefore appointed successor to his father 
in preference to his eldest half-brothers, who were born before 
Darius had become king (Herod, vii. s f.). After his accession 
in October 485 b.c he suppressed the revolt in Egypt which 
had broken out in 486, appointed hb brother Achaemenes as 
satrap and " brought Egypt under a much heavier yoke than 
it had been before " (Herod, vii. 7). His predecessors, especially 
Darius, had not been successful in their attempts to conciliate 
the ancient civilizations. This probably was the reason why 
Xerxes in 484 abolished the " kingdom of Babel " and took 
away the golden statue of Bel (Marduk, Merodach), the hands 
of which the legitimate king of Babel had to seise on the first 
day of each year, and lofted the priest who tried to hinder him. 1 
Therefore Xerxes does not bear the title of M King of Babel M 
m the Babylonian documents dated from his reign, but " King 
of Persia and Media," or simply " King of countries " (i.e. of the 
world). This proceeding led to two rebellions, probably hi 484 
and 479; in the Babylonian documents occur the names of two 
ephemeral kings, Shamash-irbl and Tarziya, who belong to this 
time. One of these rebellions was suppressed by Megabysus, 
son of Zopyrus, the satrap whom t]ie Babylonians had slain.* 

Darius had left to his son the task of punishing the Greeks 
for their interference in the Ionian rebellion and the victory of 
Marathon. Prom 483 Xerxes prepared his expedition with 
great care: a channel was dug through the isthmus of the 
peninsula of Mount Athos; provisions were stored in the 
stations on the road through Thrace; two bridges were thrown 
across the Hellespont. Xerxes concluded an alliance with 
Carthage, and thus deprived Greece of the support of the power* 
ful monarchs of Syracuse and Agrigentum. Many smaller 
Greek states, moreover, took the side of the Persians 
(" Medized "), especially Thcssaiy, Thebes and Argos. A large 
fleet and a numerous army were gathered. In the spring of 
480 Xerxes set out from Sardts. At first Xerxes was victorious 
everywhere. The Greek fleet was beaten at Artemisium, 
Thermopylae stormed, Athens conquered, the Greeks driven 
back to their last line of defence at the Isthmus of Corinth and 
in the Bay of Salamis. But Xerxes was induced by the astute 
message of Themistocles (against the advice of Artemisia of 
Halicarnassus) to attack the Greek fleet under unfavourable 

1 Herod, i. 183. by Ctesias changed into aphindering of the tomb 
of Belitanas or Bclus: cf. Aefian, Var. But. 13. 3; Aristobulus 
ep. Arrian vii. 17, a, and Strabo xvi. p. 738. 

• Ctesias. Pen. 32; his legendary history Is transferred by 
Hssmftotva, ii. 150 ff., to the f< 



conditions, instead of sending, a part of hfi snips to the Pelopon- 
nesus and awaiting the dissolution of the Greek armament.* 
The battle of Salamis (a8th of September 480) decided the war 
(see Saiamxs). Having lost his communication by sea with 
Asia, Xerxes was forced to retire to Sardis; the army which 
he left in Greece under Mardonius was in 479 beaten at Plataea 
(«.«.). The defeat of the Persians at Mycale roused the Greek 
cities of Asia. 

Of the later years of" Xerxes little Is known. He sent out 
Satas p es to attempt the circumnavigation of Africa (Herod, 
iv. 143)1 but the victory of the Greeks threw the empire into a 
state of languid torpor, from which it could not rise again* 
The king himself became involved in intrigues of the harem 
(cf. Herod, ix. 108 ft*.— compare the late Jewish novel of 
Esther, in which a remembrance of the true character of the 
king is retained) and was much dependent upon courtiers 
and eunuchs. He left inscriptions at Persepohs, where he 
added a new palace to that of Darius, at Van in Armenia, and 
on Mount Elvend near Ecbatana; in these texts he merely 
copies tbe words of his father. In 465 he was murdered by his 
vizier Artabanus (?•».), who raised Artaxerxes I. to the throne. 

z. Xerxes IL, son and successor of Artaxerxes I., was 
assassinated in 424 after a reign of forty-five days by his brother 
Secydianus or Sogdianus, who in his turn was murdered by 
Darius IL (q.v.). 

See Ctesias, Pets. 44; Diod. xS., 64, 71, and the chronographers: 
neither of the two ephemeral kings is mentioned in the canon of 
Ptolemy nor in the dates of Babylonian con tr ac ts of tab time. 

The name Xlrxss was also borne by a king of Armenia, killed 
about sx a sx. by Antiochus the Great (Polyb. viiL 25; Johannes 
AnUochenus, p. 53 ; his name occurs on copper coins); and by 
a son of Mithradatcs the Great of Pontus CAppian, Mttkr. 108, 
U7). (Ed. M.) 

XIPHIUNUS, JOANNES, epitomator of Dio Cassius, lived 
at Constantinople during the latter half of the nth century a.d. 
He was a monk and the nephew of the patriarch of Con- 
stantinople of the same name, a well-known preacher (Migne, 
PaUoiogia Greece, cxx.). The epitome (kXjryai) of Dio was 
prepared by order of Michael Parapinaces (1071-1078), but is 
unfortunately incomplete. It comprises books 36-80, the period 
included being from the times of Pompcy and Caesar down to 
Alexander Severus. In book 70 the reign of Antoninus Pius 
and the early years of Marcus Aurelius appear to have been 
missing in his copy, while in books 78 and 79 a mutilated original 
must have been used. Xiphilinus divided the work into 
sections, each containing the life of an emperor. He omitted 
the name of the consuls and sometimes altered or emended the 
original. The epitome is valuable as preserving the chief inci- 
dents of the period for which the authority of Dio is wanting. 

See ti. Rdmera edition of Dio Cassias. XL; J. Mdber's pio 
in Teubner series: C. Wachsmuth, Einleitung in das Stadium der 
aUen Ceschickte (1895); W. Quirt, Gescktchte der erieckiuhen 
Litteratnr (1898). 

X-RAY TREATMENT. The X rays (see RCntgek Rays) are 
now used extensively in medical work for purposes of treatment 
They have been found to be valuable in many forms of skin 
disease, more particularly in those of a chronic character. 
They have a favourable Influence upon glandular tumours, as 
for example in enlargements of the lymphatic glands, of the 
spleen and of the thyroid gland. They give useful palliative 
effects in certain forms of malignant disease, although it is not 
yet certain that any permanent cures of cancerous conditions 
have been obtained by their use. In the disease known as 
rodent ulcer, which is a process of destructive ulceration, and 
to that extent presents features allied to cancer, there is no 
doubt of the efficacy of X-ray treatment for bringing about a 
complete cure in the majority of cases, provided that the disease 
has not advanced too deeply into the tissues. 

• See G. B. Grundy. Great Persian War (raor), and in criticism 
W. W. Tarn, "The Fleet of Xerxes," in Jonrndt of HeUenic Stndier 
(1908). aoa-34; also Macau's notes on Herod, iv.-vi (1895), and 
authorities for Plataea. Salamis. 



I 



888 



X-RAY TREATMENT 



The ides off using X rays' in the treatment of disease arose 
from the recognition of the injurious effects which followed 
the prolonged application of the rays for diagnostic purposes 
It fell to the lot of many early workers with X rays to notice 
the production of an inflammation of the skin, or a falling out of 
the hair over parts which had been subjected to X rays, and 
Leopold Freund, of Vienna, has stated that his first attempts 
to utilize X rays in treatment were made in 1806 to cure a hairy 
mole and were prompted by what he had read of such occur- 
rences A definite action of the rays upon the skin having been 
observed, their employment in the treatment of skin diseases 
followed as a natural <x>rollary. Amongst the earliest investi- 
gators of the possible therapeutic effects of X rays the names of 
Schiff, Freund, Kienbock, Holtzknecht, Sjdgren and Stenbeck 
may be mentioned. In Great Britain Sir Malcolm Morris, 
E. Dore and J. H. Sequeira were amongst the earliest investi- 
gators. 

. For operating successfully with an agent capable of producing 
decidedly harmful effects when given in large doses it is neces- 
sary to have some method of measurement, and the need lor 
this quickly became apparent when X rays were used for treat- 
ment. The results of X-ray photography had already shown 
that the tubes employed were capable of emitting radiations 
of very varying powers of penetration, and that the tubes were 
by no means constant in this respect; and the question whether 
highly penetrating rays or rays of feeble penetration were to be 
preferred for therapeutic use became the subject of much 
discussion. It is now recognized that the rays which act upon 
the tissues are those which are absorbed by the tissues, and 
consequently the softer or less penetrating rays are now regarded 
as those to be used in treatment. So too the problem of 
measuring the quantity of rays emitted by a tube during a 
given time began to call for a solution, if that were in any 
way possible. In iqox Benoist designed an apparatus by 
which the quality of the rays emitted by a tube at any moment 
could be accurately determined, and in 1002 Holtzknecht brought 
out the first quantitative device. It was called a chromo- 
tadiometer, and it enabled the dose administered to a patient to 
be observed, and recorded for future guidance. Holtzknecht 
also drew up a scale of units by means of which the indications 
of his apparatus could be interpreted. -The units of Holtz- 
knecht are still used to express the dosage of X rays, though 
his apparatus has been superseded. Holtzknccht's method of 
measurement consisted in observing the change of colour in 
certain pastilles when exposed to X rays, and his apparatus 
consisted of a scale of tints, and a number of pastilles of a 
yellow tint which acquired a green colour during exposure. 
The composition of these was kept a secret, but analysis revealed 
in them the presence of potassium sulphate combined with 
celluloid or gelatine. The pastilles were laid upon the surface 
under treatment, and their change of colour was compared at 
intervals with the scale of standard tints. 

It was next thought that under suitable conditions the 
measurement of the current passing through' the X-ray tube 
might serve as a guide to the quantity of X rays emitted by 
the tube, but, although this is the case to a certain extent, 
the method of quantity measurement which is now employed 
almost universally in X-ray treatment is that devised by 
Sabouraud and Noire, and used with signal success by them in 
an enormous number of cases of ringworm, in which disease 
measurement of dose is of the most critical importance, for 
the following reason. The cure of ringworm by X rays requires 
that all the hair of the affected region shall be caused to fall 
out, but, nevertheless, it is necessary for obvious reasons that 
the hair should grow again after the disease has disappeared. 
Now if the dose of X rays be insufficient the hair does not come 
out and no cure results, while if the dose be too great the hair 
comes out but does not grow again; and the margin of safety 
it quite a narrow one. The method of Sabouraud and Noire 

which has «■ * : *~ ,r —liable for such critical measurements 

of dour v ringworm treatment, has to-day. 

the ur II X-ray workers for other forma 



of X-ray treatment, although the use of their paatiQes has 
certain disadvantages. 

Sabouraud's pastilles consist of small disks of platino- 
cyanide of barium. This chemical compound has a bright 
yellow-green colour when freshly prepared, and changes through 
gradations of yellow to a brown colour when exposed to X rays. 
The pastilles are supplied in a book with which a permanent 
tint of colour is supplied, to indicate the colour change in the 
pastille which corresponds with a quantity of X rays equal 
to the maximum dose which the healthy skin will stand with- 
out inflammatory consequences. This is often spoken of 
as a "pastille dose." As the amount of irradiation needed 
to produce the change of colour is considerable, the salt is 
fixed, during the treatment, at a point half-way between the 
source of the rays and the skin surface under treatment. During 
an exposure the chemical salt, in the form of a small disk of 
the material on cardboard, is adjusted in the required position 
by means of a pastille holder, and it is examined at intervals 
during the course of the exposure, until it has reached the 
required tint. When in the holder the pastille must be pro- 
tected from light, and should have a piece of metal as a backing, 
if its indications are to be accurate. 

In X-ray treatment some protection of the surrounding 
healthy parts is usually necessary. With this object various 
methods of shielding have been devised, either by coverings 
of the patient by impermeable materials, or try enclosing the 
tube in an impermeable box. Both methods are used, but 
tube-boxes are the most convenient, and most instrument 
makers now supply these boxes with suitable windows or 
openings of different sizes for the passage of the pencil of rays 
which is to fall upon the part under treatment 

The effect of the rays on healthy tissues is in the main a 
destructive one, but some of the cells of the tissues are more 
sensitive to the rays than are others; and this permits of a 
selective effect being obtained, with the destruction of some cells 
and not of the whole tissue. Young cells, and actively growing 
cells, are the most susceptible, and for this reason it is possible 
to influence the glands of the skin and the papillae of the hairs 
with a dose which will not destroy the skin itself. The art of 
successful working with X rays is based upon a careful adjust- 
ment of the dose so as to secure a selective destruction of the 
morbid elements, and to avoid wholesale damage to the part 
treated. The effects of excessive doses of X rays is to pro- 
duce an inflammation which may result in painful sores which 
obstinately refuse to heal for many weeks or months. A 
quantity up to double* that of the . usual maximum or pastille 
dose may be employed in urgent cases without risk of any 
serious inflammation, but anything over this is to be avoided 
most carefully. • In the treatment of ringworm the exact 
pastille dose must not be exceeded, for after a dose of about one 
and a half pastilles the fall of the hair is likely to be followed 
by permanent baldness. 

In X-ray treatment it is customary to make use of moderate 
-currents, and to bring the X-ray tube in its tube-holder and box 
into position so that the pencil of rays may fall upon the part 
to be treated. The distance of the skin surface from the centre 
of the tube must be known, and the pastille arranged in place 
accordingly. Fifteen centimetres is a usual distance, and at 
this distance a tube working with a current of a milliampere 
should give the full therapeutic dose or " pastille dose " in 
about 15 minutes. In general X-ray treatment it is quite usual 
at the present time to proceed by the method of full doses 
at rather long intervals. From the experience obtained by 
Sabouraud in numerous cases of ringworm it has been found 
that a full dose must not be repeated until a month haselapsed. 
So too in the treatment of rodent ulcer full doses at long intervals 
are now thought better than smaller doses repeated more often, 
and such doses are more easily measured by the Sabouraud 
pastille, which records large doses more simply than small ones, 
in which the slighter changes of tint are not easy to distinguish. 

A great amount of work has been done with X rays for the 
treatment of cancer, but it is now recognized that the X cays 



XYfcANDBk— XYSfTUS 



889 



do not cure a cancer, although they are of value for the relief 
of pain and for the healing of cancerous ulcers. Diminution 
of sue in cancerous growths has frequently been observed, 
and in some instances sarcomatous tumours have completely 
disappeared under X-ray treatment. Sooner or later, however, 
the cancer or sarcoma returns either in the original site or 
elsewhere, and the patient dies of the disease. It is probable 
that X-ray treatment is able to prolong life In a fair number 
of cases, and by its agency in causing a healing of ulceration in 
cancer cases it is able to give valuable relief both to the body and 
mind of the patient, and this relief may last for a year or mora. 

In rodent ulcer X rays are usually sufficient to provide a 
lasting cure, but there are some exceptions, as for instance 
when the rodent ulcer has been long neglected, and has spread 
deeply so as to invade bony structures. An important factor 
in the successful treatment of rodent ulcer by X rays is to 
continue the applications at intervals for several months after 
apparent cure. If this precaution is omitted there is a very 
great likelihood of relapse taking place later on. 

In the treatment of skin diseases by X rays the method finds 
a very suitable field. Almost all chronic skin affections yield 
to X-ray treatment fairly quickly, and mammal doses are not 
usually necessary. 

In ringworm X rays have achieved wonderful results. The 
rays act upon the hair papillae, and not upon the ringworm 
fungus. They cause a shedding of the hair fifteen days after 
exposure and the fungus then dies out from the hair follicles, 
so that when in due course the hair begins to grow again after 
a period of two months it grows healthily and without disease. 
The X-ray treatment of ringworm has been a real advance, and 
Sabouraud has told us of the enormous pecuniary saving which 
has been effected in Paris by the shortening of the stay -of the 
ringworm cases in the special schools maintained there for the 
affected children. 

In lupus X rays are valuable, but not fully satisfactory. 
The treatment by the rays will often succeed in bringing about 
a healing of the ulceration of lupus, but relapses are frejuent, 
because foci of infection are apt to remain in the healed scar 
tissue and after a period of quiescence these may gradually 
provoke fresh mischief. 

X-ray treatment is of service for the treatment of enlarged 
"strumous" glands in the neck. When these glands are in 
the early stages, and there has not been any softening or breaking 
down of the gland tissue, the application of X rays, a few times 
repeated in moderate doses, will determine the subsi d enc e of 
the enlargement and may effect a complete cure. 

In the massive glandular enlargements of lymphadenoma 
a great reduction of the tumours can be brought about by 
heavy doses of X rays, but the results are to give a symptomatic 
rather than a real cure, for fresh glandular growths take place 
internally, and the usual course of the disease is not fundamentally 
modified. 

So too in leukemia, the symptom of excessive abundance of 
white cells in the circulating blood can be surprisingly altered 
for the better by X rays, but generally without real cure of the 
underlying condition. The effect appears to be due to a direct 
destructive action upon the leucocytes or white corpuscles of 
the blood. 

Quite recently the use of X rays in fibroid tumours of the 
uterus has been advocated, particularly by Courmellcs in 
France and Albext-Schoaberg in Germany. The action of the 
rays seems to be in part due to their influence upon the activity 
of the ovaries and in part to a direct effect upon the growing 
fibroids themselves, causing decrease of activity, relief of 
symptoms and reduction of the tumours. (H. U J.) 

XYULNDBR, GUIUELMTJS (Wilhelm Holtzxan, accord- 
ing to his own spelling) (1532-1576), German classical scholar, 



was born at Augsburg on the 26th of December 1532. He 
studied at Tubingen, and in 1558, when in a state of abject 
poverty (caused, according to some, by his intemperate habits), 
he was appointed to succeed Micyllus (Molshem, Molseym or 
Molsheym) in the professorship of Creek at Heidelberg, which 
he exchanged for that of logic (publicus organi Aristotelii 
interpres) in 1562. He died at Heidelberg on the xoth of 
February 1576. Xylander was the author of a number of 
important works, among whkh his Latin translations of Pio 
Cassius (1558), Plutarch (1560-1570) and Strabo (1571) deserve 
special mention. He also edited (2568) the geographical 
lexicon of Stepbanus of Byzantium; the travels of Pausanias 
(completed after his death by F. Sylburg, 1583) ; the Meditations 
of Marcus Aurclius (1558, the editio princeps based upon a 
Heidelberg MS. now lost; a second edition in 1568 with the 
addition of Antoninus Liberalis, Phlegon of TraUes, an unknown 
Apollonius, and Antigonus of Carystus— all pamdoxographers); 
and the chronicle of George Cedrenus (1566). He translated 
the first six books of Euclid into German with notes, the Arilk- 
wutica of Diophantus, and the Dc quottuor matkematicU scientiis 
of Michael Psellus into Latin. 

XYLENE, or Dimethyl Bvnzene, CA(CHa)s. Three 
isomeric hydrocarbons of this formula exist; they occur in the 
light oil fraction of the coal tar distillate, but they cannot be 
separated by fractional distillation owing to the closeness of 
their boiling points. The mixture can be separated by shaking 
with sulphuric acid, whereupon the ortho and meta forms are 
converted into soluble sulphonic acids, the para form being 
soluble only in concentrated add; the ortho and meta adds 
may be separated by crystallization of their salts or sulphon* 
amides. Ortho-xylene is obtained from ortho-bromtoluene, 
methyl iodide and sodium as a colourless mobile liquid boiling 
at 14 a , mdting at -28 , and having a specific gravity of 0*8931 
at o°. Oxidation by potassium permanganate gives phthalic 
add; whilst chromic add gives carbon dioxide and water. 
Meta- or iso-xylcnc, the most important isomer, may be prepared 
by nucleus-synthetic reactions, or by distilling mesitylenic 
add, C*Hi(CHi)tCO»H, an oxidation product of mesitylene, 
CcH»(CH»)», which is produced on the condensation of acetone, 
with lime; this reaction is very important, for it orientates 
metarcompounds. It boils at 139°, melts at -54*1 and has a 
specific gravity of 0-881 a. Para-xylene is obtained when 
camphor is distilled with zinc chloride, but it is best prepared 
from para-brom-toluene or dibrombenzene, methyl iodide and 
sodium. Dilute nitric add oxidizes it first to para-toluic add 
.and then to terephthalic add. It boils at 138 , melts at 15% 
and has a specific gravity of 08801 at o\ 

XYLOPHONE* (Fr. xylophone; Gcr. Xybpkon, SlrokjUdcl 
or Bohkarvtonika; ItaL arnumka it Ugno), a small instrument 
of percussion, of definite sonorousness, used in the orchestra 
to mark the rhythm. The xylophone consists of a series of 
little wooden staves in the form of a half cylinder and graduated 
in size. The staves, each of which represents a semitone, rest 
on two, three or four wooden bars, covered with straw and 
converging to form an acute angle. They are so arranged that 
each stave is isolated. In some models the staves are grouped 
in two rows, comprising the naturals and the accidentals. The 
xylophone is played with two little wooden hammers, and has a 
compass of two or three octaves. The quality of tone is inferior 
to that of the steel harmonica or gVockmspirl. (K.S.) 

XYSTU8, the Greek architectural term for the covered portico 
of the gymnasium, in which the exercises took place during 
the winter or in rainy weather; this was known as the {tvrfe 
4p6pos, from its polished floor ({tew, to polish). The Romans 
applied the term to the garden walk in front of the porticoes, 
which was divided into flower beds with borders of box, and to 
a promenade between rows of large trees. 



890 



Y— YACHTING 



Ytbe twenty-fifth letter of the English alphabet, one of 
four variants (*, t, to, y) which have been developed 
out of one Greek symbol. It was taken into the 

Roman alphabet as a form distinct from V in the 
1st century B.C., when it was desired to represent the sound 
of the Greek v more accurately than could be done by the 
ordinary Roman alphabet. Many Greek words had been 
borrowed from Greek long before this and pronounced like 
genuine Latin words. Thus the proper name UOppos was 
borrowed as Bunas, QpOytt as Bruges, But with the growth 
of literary knowledge thfs was felt to be a very inexact repre- 
sentation of the Greek sounds, and the words were respelt as 
Pyrrhus and Phryges. The philosopher Pythagoras is said 
to have regarded this letter as a symbol of human life (Servius, 
on Virgil, Aeneid vi. 136). To this there are various references 
in the Roman poets. Two lines of Persius (Hi. 56-57) seem 
to throw some light upon the particular form of Y intended* 
" Et tibi quae Sanrios diduxit Uttera ramos 

•urgentem dextro monstravit lunite calfetn." 
These lines appear to imply that the letter took the form y, 
which can only be one of the oldest forms (Y) written from right 
to left. The straight road is the difficult, the deviating line js 
the easier path of vice. Anglo-Saxon took over the Roman Y 
with its Roman value of the ''modified «" («), and employed it 
accordingly for the sound which arose from a u sound under the 
influence of an i in the following syllable:/y0aff, " nil," cp. Gothic 
fulljon; mus, " mouse," plural mus, from an earlier lost musis. 
The y sounds were often confused with », whence, in modern 
English, mice. 

Thevowdusewastheonlyuseof the old symbol. The consonant 
Y is of a different origin. The early English g (always hard as 
in gig) was palatalized before e and i sounds into a consonant i 
(*) or y, which was written in Middle English with the symbol 5. 
With this letter also was written the original consonant i GO, ' 
which appears in Latin as i (j) in iugum, iuvencus. This Latin 
sound seems, at least initially, to have represented two originally 
separate sounds, for Greek represents the first sound of iugum 
by f (taroV), while in other words it represents a % (y) of other 
languages by the " rough breathing " (A or "): 6yrk, " holy," 
is the same word as the Sanskrit yajnas. The English words that 
correspond etymologically to iugum and iuvencus are " yoke " 
and "young." In Northern English the symbol 5 survived 
longer than in the southern part of the island, and in Scottish 
documents of the 16th century was confused with s. From 
this cause various Scottish names that were never pronounced 
with a are so spelt, as Menzies (Mengies), Dalziel, Cadzow. 
In others like Mackenzie, s is now universally pronounced, 
though as late as the middle of the x8th century Lord Karnes 
declared that to hear Mackenzie pronounced with a s turned his 
stomach. (P. Gi.) 

YABLONOI, or Yabl6novoi (" Apple Mountains," known to 
the Mongols as Dynte-daban), a range of E. Siberia, stretching 
N.E. from near the sources of the river Kerulen (N.E. of U'rga 
in N. Mongolia) to the bend of the river Olekma in 56° N., 
and forming the S.E. border ridge of the upper terrace of the 
great plateau of Central and E. Asia. Its summits reach alti- 
tudes of 5000-6000 ft, culminating in. Mount Sokhondo (8040 
ft) near the TTansfaorikal-Mongolia frontier. The range serves 
as the water-parting between the streams which flow to the 
Pacific and those which flow to the Arctic Ocean, and is a dividing 
fine between the Siberian and the Daurian flora. The passes 
have altitudes of 2000-3500 ft. The range is a continuation 
of the Kentei Mountains of Mongolia, but is not orographically 
connected with the Stanovoi Mountains, farther to the N.E., 
though the names Yablonoi. and Stanovoi are commonly used 
alternatively. The latter are the S.E. border-range of the 
lower terrace and are connected with the Great Khingan 
Mountafn*. 



YACHOW-FU, a prefectural dty in the province' of Sze- 
ch'uen, China, in 30° N., 103° E.; pop. about 40,000. It is situ- 
ated in a valley on the banks of the river Ya, where tea is grown. 
The town owes its importance to the fact that it stands at the 
parting of the tea and tobacco trade route to Tibet via Tachien- 
lu and the cotton trade route to west Yun-nan via Ningyuen-Fu. 
The city wall measures 2 m. in circumference, and is pierced by 
four gates. Yachow-Fu is first mentioned during the Chow 
dynast y (1 122-255 b.c). 

YACHTING, the sport of racing in yachts 1 and boats with 
sails, and also the pastime of cruising for pleasure in sailing 
steam or motor vessels. Yacht racing dates from the beginning 
of the 19th century; for, although there were sailing yachts long 
before, they were but few, and belonged exclusively to princes 
and other illustrious personages. For instance, in the Anglo- 
Saxon period Athelsian had presented to him by the king of 
Norway a magnificent royal vessel, the sails of which were purple 
and the head and deck wrought with gold, apparently a kind of 
state barge. Elizabeth had one, and so has every English sove- 
reign since.- During her reign a pleasure ship was built (1588) at 
Cowes (Isle of Wight), so that the association of that place 
with the sport goes back a very long time. In 1660 Charles II. 
was presented by the Dutch with a yacht named the " Mary," 
until which time the word " yacht " was unknown in England. 
The Merrie Monarch was fond of sailing, for he designed a yacht 
of 25 tons called the " Jamie," built at Lambeth in 1662, as well 
as several others later on. In that year the " Jamie " was matched 
for £100 against a small Dutch yacht, under the duke of York, 
from Greenwich to Gravesend and back, and beat her, the king 
steering part of tho time — apparently the first record of a yacht 
match and of an amateur helmsman. Mr Arthur H. Clark, in 
his History of Yachting (1004), traces the history of pleasure 
craft from 1600 to 1815, and gives an interesting illustrated 
account of the yachts belonging to Charles II. 

The first authentic record of a sailing club is in 1720, when the 
Cork Harbour Water Club, now known as the Royal Cork Yacht 
Club, was established in Ireland, but the yachts were small. 
Maitland, in his History of London (1739) mentions sailing and 
rowing on the Thames as among the amusements then indulged 
in; and Strutt, in his Sports and Pastimes (1801), says that the 
Cumberland Society, consisting of gentlemen partial to this pas- 
time, gave yearly a silver cup to be sailed for in the vicinity 
of London. The boats usually started from Blackfriars Bridge, 
went up the Thames to Putney, and returned to Vauxhall, 
being, no doubt, mere sailing boats and not yachts or decked 
vessels. From the middle to the end of the z8th century yacht- 
ing developed very slowly: although matches were sailed at 
Cowes as far back as 1780, very few yachts of any size, say 
35 tons, existed in 1800 there or elsewhere. In 18x2 the Royal 
Yacht Squadron was established by fifty yacht-owners at Cowes 
and was called the Yacht Cub, altered to the Royal Yacht Club 
in 1820; but no regular regatta was held there until some years 
later. The yachts of the time were built of heavy materials, 
like the revenue cutters, full in the fore body and fine aft; but it 
was soon discovered that their timbers and scantlings were 
unnecessarily strong, and they were made much lighter. It 
was also found that the single-masted cutter was more weatheriy 
than the brigs and schooners of the time, and the former rig was 
adopted for racing, and, as there was no time allowance for 
difference of size, they were all built of considerable dimensions. 

Early English Yachts.^Among the earliest of which there 
is any record were the u Pearl," 95 tons, built by Sainty at 
Wyvenhoe near Colchester in 2820, for the marquess of Anglesey, 
and the "Arrow," 84 tons, originally 61 ft. 0} in. long and 
18 ft. si in. beam, buQt by Joseph Weld in 1822, which for many 
years remained extant as & racing yacht, having been rebuilt and 

1 The English word " yacht " is the Dutch hcki, jagt, from jachten, 
" to hurry, " to hunt.*' See also Ship and Shipbuilding. 



YACHTING 



891 



abend several times, and again entirely rebuilt in 1887-88. 
lias Thame* aoon followed the. example of the Solent and 
established the Royal Thame* Yacht Club in 18*3, the Clyde 
founding the Royal Northern Yacht Club in 18241 and Plymouth 
the Royal Western in 1827. In this year the Royal Yacht 
Squadron passed a resolution disqualifying any member who 
should apply steam to his yacht— the enactment being aimed at 
T. Aasheton Smith, an enthusiastic yachtsman and fox-hunter, 
who was having a paddle-wheel steam yacht called the " Menai " 
built on the Clyde. In 1830 one of the largest cutters ever 
constructed was launched, via. the " Alarm," built by Inman 
at Lymington lor Joseph Weld of Lulworth Castle, from the 
fines of a famous smuggler captured off the Isle of Wight. She 
was 82 ft. on the load-line by 24 ft. beam, and was reckoned 
of 193 tons, old measurement, in which length, breadth and 
half-breadth (supposed to represent depth) were the factors for 
computation. Some yachtsmen at this time pr e fe r r ed still 
larger vessels and owned square-topsail schooners and brigs 
Rke the man-o'-war brigs of the day, such as the " Waterwitch," 
381 tons, built by White of Cowes, in 1832, for Lord Belfast, 
and the " Brilliant," barque; 493 tons, belonging to J. Holland 
Ackers, who invented a scale of time allowance for competitive 
sailing. In 1834 the first royal cup was given by William IV. 
to the Royal Yacht Squadron. In 1836 the Royal Eastern 
Yacht Club was founded at Granton near Edinburgh; in 1838 
the Royal St George's at Kingstown and the Royal London; 
m 1843 tttc Royal Southern at Southampton and the Royal 
Harwich; in 1844 the Royal Mersey at Liverpool and the Royal 
Victoria at Ryde. The number of vessels kept pace with the 
dubs— the fifty yachts of 18x2 increasing nearly tenfold before 
the middle of the century. 

First AUtrotum in Type,— -In 1848. after J. Scott Russell had 
repeatedly drawn attention to the unwisdom of constructing 
sailing vessels on the "cod's head and mackerel tail" plan, and 
had enunciated his wave-line theory, Mare built at Blackwall 
an entirely new .type of vessel, with a long hollow bow and 
a short after-body of considerable fulness. This was the iron 
cutter " Mosquito," of 59 ft- 2 in. water-line, 15 ft. 3 in. beam, 
and measuring 50 tons. Prejudice against the new type of 
yacht being as strong as against the introduction of steam, 
there were no vessels built like the " Mosquito," with the excep- 
tion of the " Volante," 59 tons, by Harvey of Wyveuhoe, until 
the eyes of English yachtsmen were opened by the Americans 
three years later. About this period yacht racing had been 
gradually coming into favour in the United States, the first 
yacht club being founded at New York in 1844 by nine yacht- 
owners; and in 1846 the first match between yachts in the 
States was sailed, 25 m, to windward and back from Sandy 
Hook lightship, between J. C. Stevens's new centre-board sloop 
" Maria," 170 tons, 100 ft. water-line and 26 ft. 8 in. beam, 
with a draught of 5 ft. 3 in. of water, and the " Coquette," 
schooner, 74 tons, belonging to J. H. Perkins, the latter winning; 
but the appearance of the " Maria)" which had a dipper or 
schooner bow, something like that of the racing, cutters of 
1887-88", did much for yachting in America. Stevens then 
commissioned George Steers of New Yorjt, builder of the crack 
pilot schooners, to construct a racing schooner to visit England 
in the year of the great exhibition, and the result was the 
" America " of 1 70 tons. She crossed the Atlantic in the summer 
of 1851, but failed to compete for the Queen's cup at Cowes 
in August, although the dub for that occasion threw the prize 
open to all the world, as her owner declined to concede the 
usual time allowance for difference of size. The members of 
the Yacht Squadron, not wishing to risk the reproach of denying 
the visitor a fair race, dedded that their match for a cup given 
by the dub, to be sailed round the Isle of Wight later in the 
same month, should be without any time allowance. The 
" America," thus exceptionally treated, entered and competed 
against fifteen other vessels. The three most dangerous com- 
petitors being put out through accidents, the "America" 
passed the winning-post 18 minutes ahead of the 47-ton cutter 
M Aurora/' and won the cup; but, even if the time allowance 



had not been waived, the American schooner yacht would itiU 
have won by fuUy a couple of minutes. The prise was given 
to the New York Yacht Club and constituted a challenge cup, 
called " the America's cup," for the yachts of all nations, by 
the deed of gift of the owners of the winner. (See below for a 
complete account of these races.) 

Not only was the " America " as great a departure from the 
conventional British type of yacht as the " Mosquito," but the 
set of her sails was a decided novelty. In England it had been 
the practice to make them baggy, whereas those of the " America " 
were flat, which told materially in working to windward. The 
revolution in yacht designing and canvasing was complete, and 
the bows of existing cutters were lengthened, that of the " Arrow " 
among others. The " Alarm " was also lengthened and turned 
into a schooner of 248 tons, and the " Wildfire," cutter, 59 tons, 
was likewise converted. Indeed there was a complete craze 
for schooners, the " Flying Claud," " Gtoriana," " Lalla Rookh," 
"Albertine," u Aline," "Egerhv," " Pantomime " and others 
being built between iCga and 1865, during which period the 
centre-board, or sliding keel, was applied to schooners as well 
as sloops in America. The national or cutter rig was nevertheless 
not neglected in England, for Hatcher of Southampton built 
the 35-ton cutter " Glance "—the pioneer of the subsequent 
40-tonners— in 1855, and the " Vampire "—the pioneer of the 
so-tonners— in 1857, in winch year Weld also had the " Lul- 
worth/' an 82-ton cutter of comparatively shallow draught, 
constructed at Lymington. At this time too there came into 
existence a group of cutters, called " flying fifties " from their 
tonnage, taking after the " Mosquito " as their pioneer; such 
were the " Extravaganza," " Audax " and " Vanguard." In 
1866 a large cutter was constructed on the Clyde called the 
" Condor," 13$ tons, followed by the stilt larger " Oimara,** 
163 tons, in 1867. In 1868 the " Cambria " schooner was built 
by Ratsey at Cowes for Ashbury of Brighton, and, having proved 
a successful match-sailer, was taken to the United States in 
1870 to compete for the America's cup, but was badly beaten, as 
also was the " Livonia " in 187 1. 

The First Great Era of Yacht Racing.— The decade between 
1870 and 1880 may be termed the first Golden Age of yachting, 
inasmuch as the racing fleet had some very notable additions 
made to it, of which it will suffice to mention the schooners 
" GwendoHn," "Cetonia," "Corinne," " Miranda" and 
"Waterwitch"; the large cutters "KrianhildV' "Vol au 
Vent," "Formosa," " Samcena " and "Vanduara," a cutter 
built of steel; the 40-tonners "Foxhound," "Bloodhound," 
"Myosotis" and "Norman"; the 20-tonners "Vanessa" 
(Hatcher's masterpiece), " Quickstep," " Enriqueta," " Louise " 
and "Freda"; and the yawls "Florinda," " Coriaande," 
" JuUanar " and " Latona." The " JuUanar " may be noted as 
a spedaHy clever design. Built in 1874 from the ideas of Bentall, 
an agricultural implement maker of Maldon, Essex, she had no 
dead wood forward or aft, and possessed many improvements 
in design which were embodied and developed by the more 
sdentific naval architects, G. L. Watson, William Fife, jun., 
and others in later years. Lead, the use of which commenced 
in 1846, was entirely used for ballast after 1870 and placed on 
the keel outside. 

Of races there was a plethora; indeed no fewer than 409 
matches took place in i&76> as against 63 matches in 1856, 
with classes for schooners and yawls, for large cutters, for 40- 
tonners, 20-tonners and io-tonners. The sport, too, was better 
regulated, and was conducted on a uniform system: the Yacht- 
Racing Association, established in 1875, drew up a simple code 
of laws for the regulation of yacht races, which was accepted 
by the yacht dubs generally, though a previous attempt to 
introduce uniformity, made by the Royal Victoria Yacht Club 
in x868, had failed. The Association adopted the rule for 
ascertaining the sise or tonnage of yachts which had been for 
many years in force, known as the Thames rule; but in 1879 
they altered the pan of reckoning length from that taken on 
deck to that taken at the load water-line, and two years later, 
they adopted an entirely new system of calculation. 



Soa 



YACHTING 



The Phnh-on-cdgt.—Thetc changes ted to a decline in yacht- 
axing, the new measurement exercising a prejudicial effect 
on the sport, as it enabled vessels of extreme length, depth 
and narrowness, kept upright by enormous masses of lead 
on the outside of the keel, to compete on equal terms with 
vessels of greater width and less depth, in other words, smaller 
yachts carrying an inferior area of sail. The new type was 
known as the " lead mine " or plank-on-edge type. Of this 
type were the yawls " Lorna " and " Wendur," the cutters 
" May," " Annasona," " Sleuth-hound," " Tara," " Marjorie " 
and " Margarite "-—the most extreme of all being perhaps 
the 40-tonner "Tara," six times as long as she was broad, 
and unusually deep, with a displacement of 75 tons, 38 tons 
of lead on her keel, and the sail-spread of a 60-tonner like 
" Neva." 

In 1884 two large 80-ton cutters of the above type were 
built for racing, the " Genesta " on the Clyde and the " Irex " 
at Southampton. Having been successful in her first season, 
the former went to the United States in 1685 in quest of the 
America's cup; but she was beaten by the " Puritan," which 
had a moderate draught of 8 ft. 3 iu. of water, considerable 
beam and a deep centre-board. The defeat of the " Genesta " 
was not surprising; she drew 13 ft. of water, had a displacement 
or weight of 141 as against the " Puritan's " xo6 tons, and a 
sail area of 7887 sq. ft. to the American's 7082 — a greater 
mass with less driving power. Still, she did not leave the 
States empty-handed, as she won and brought back the Cape 
May and Brenton Reef challenge cups, though they were wrested 
from her by the " Irex " in the following year. The same thing 
happened to the " Galatea," which was beaten by the " May- 
flower " in 1886. In all classes in British waters the narrow 
type was not carried to excess; indeed, as the narrowness 
of the new yachts increased annually, so did the popularity of 
racing decrease. 

Planh-en-edge Type abandoned.— -Prior to x886 it had been 
the custom in Great Britain for several reasons to build the 
yachts deep, narrow, wall-sided, with very heavy lead keels 
and heavy displacement. The system of measurement had 
been a tonnage measurement, and under this system designees 
found, from the knowledge they had then attained from racing, 
trials, that a narrow heavy vessel would beat a wider and 
lighter craft when both were measured by the tonnage rules. 
In America this was not the case. There a much lighter and 
wider form of yacht had been in vogue, having shallower draught 
and relying upon a centre-board for weatherliness instead 
of a deep lead keel. Hence in the International contests 
from 1884 to 1886 for the America's cup and other events the 
trials were between deep and narrow British yachts and shallow 
and broad American yachts. Even in 1887, when G. L. Watson 
built the "Thistle," much broader than "Genesta" and 
" Galatea," this vessel was met and defeated by a far wider and 
shallower American sloop, namely, the "Volunteer" above 
referred to. British yachtsmen claimed that their narrow 
deep-keeled vessels were more weatherly and better sea-boats 
than the light American sloops, but racing honours rested with 
the Americans. 

In 1887 the plank-on-edge type was completely abandoned 
in the United Kingdom. Thenceforward, therefore, the old 
spirited contests between deep British yachts and shallow 
American sloops ceased. Whilst Britain abandoned her narrow 
deep type, America soon also began to modify the old shallow 
centre-board sloop type, and so between 1887 and 1893 the 
rival types began to converge very rapidly, until the old idea 
of a race for the America's cup being a test of a British type 
against an American type -completely died out. Races sailed 
for that trophy, after 2887, were. less and less trials of oppos- 
ing national types, but merely contests between British and 
American designed yachts built upon the same general principle 
of similar type. 

Dixon Kemp in 1887 induced British yachtsmen to abandon 
the system 0' *** by tonnage and to adopt a 

new system ater-iine length and sail area. 



The new system contained no taxes or penalties upon beam 
or depth nor upon " over all " length. The only factors 
measured were the water-line and the area of the sails. All 
the old tonnage rules taxed the length and the breadth. The 
effect of this- change of the system measurement was electrical. 
It crushed the plank-on-edge type completely. There was not 
another boat of the kind built. 

Rental of Yacht-Racing under Length and Sail Area Rale.^ 
Yachtsmen were greatly pleased with the broader and lighter 
types of yachts that designers began to turn out under the 
length and sail area rule. They were more comfortable and 
drier in a seaway than the old vessels. The first large cutters 
built with considerable beam were " Yarana " and " PetroniUa " 
in 1888, and in 1889 the first of Lord Dunraven's Valkyries 
was a vessel that was much admired. Then in 1890 " Iverna," 
a handsome cHpper-bowed cutter owned by Mr Jameson, came 
out and raced against "Thistle." Meanwhile, up to 1892 
a host of splendid 40-raters had been built; "Mohawk,'* 
"Deerhound," "Castanet," "Reverie," "Creole," " Thalia, - 
"Corsair," "White Slave," "Queen Mab" and "Vanma" 
formed a class the like of which had never been surpassed in 
British waters. Watson, Fife and Payne were the most suc- 
cessful designers. 

While a revival of yachting in the larger classes was notable 
under the rule Dixon Kemp had originated, the midden popularity 
attained in the small classes in the Solent was even more remark- 
able Under the tonnage rules deep narrow 3-toaner*, 5-tonnera 
and 10-tonners had raced about the coast, but the Solent did not 
seem to attract a greater number of yachtsmen as small boat sailors 
than the Thames, Mersey or Irish ports. Moreover, the Clyde 
really remained the most advanced centre of small yacht sailing. 
At Southampton, prior to Dixon Kemp's rule being adopted by the. 
Yacht-Racing Association in 1887, there were some sporting classes 
of so-called lichen Ferry boats which raced on a rating consisting 
of length on the water-line only. As there was no tax upon then* 
sail, they were built (according to the ideas of designers in 1885 
or 1886, who had not by that time absorbed the knowledge of the 
value of bulb-keels) with great beam, immense displacement and 
very thick heavy lead keels and huge sail-spread. A sail area of 
2200 sq. ft. was crowded on to a 30-foot yacht, and one 30-fooief 
even carried a fainted spinnaker boom 56* ft. in length. It was 
not surprising that such a type never became popular; indeed the 
Southampton length classes tn the 'eighties were no better than the 
extremely narrow 5-tonncrs and 3-tonncrs. The 5-tOnner ** Doris," 
built by Watson in 1885, was 33 ft. 8 in. L.W.L., 5 ft. 7 in. beam, 7 ft. 
draught; displacement of 12*55 tons; x68x sq. ft. of sail. The 
" Yvonne," built by Fife in (889, was 34-1 ft. L.W.L., 9 ft. beam. 
8-1 ft. draught, with a displacement of 12*9 tons and a sail area of 
1726 sq. ft. The difference in dimensions between " Doris" and 
" Yvonne " shows how the beam and sail-carrying power was in- 
creased in the new type, for " Yvonne "could beat the " Doris " 
with the greatest ease. With the advent of the length and sail area 
rule the Solent at once became the fashionable rendezvous for small 
racing yachts, and the craft known as the Solent classes, 5-raters, 
at-raters, i-raters and i-ratera, nourished greatly. 

The Second Great Era in Yachting.— As the years 1870 to 
1880 will always be remembered for the great schooners and 
the glorious fleet of old-fashioned cutters and yawls, which 
showed such fine sport before they were outbuilt by the planks- 
on-edge, so will the seasons following 1892 be identified with 
the big cutter racing. In that year it was commonly said that 
yachtsmen would build no more very large cutters. The 
revival under the length and sail area rule had so far extended 
to " Iverna," " Tarana," " Petronilla," and " Valkyrie I." being 
built in the first class, but then there had been a pause of some 
years during which large numbers of 40-raters, 20-raters and the 
Solent classes had been built. Just when the critics were declaring 
that in the future no yachtsmen would build a class racer 
larger than a 40-rater (60 ft. L.W.L. with 4000 sq. ft. of sail), 
the prince of Wales (afterwards Edward VII.) gave an order 
for the cutter " Britannia," while Lord Dunxaven built " Val- 
kyrie II V* Mr A. tf. Clarke " Satanita " and Mr Peter Donald- 
son " Calluna "; and in this same season (1893), an American 
yachtsman took the Herreshoff yacht " Navaboe " over the 
Atlantic. The new vessels averaged 87 ft. L.W.L. and carried 
about 10,300 sq. ft. of canvas, their beam being as much as 
S3 ft. They were an entirely different type front " I vera* " or 



YACHTING 



*93 



M Thistle," Wing developed from the Corar of the 40-raters 
u Vamna " and " Queen Mab." The main differences between 
the " Britannia " and other yachts of her year and the older 
vessels was that the new yachts had an overhanging shallow* 
sectioned mussel or pram bow instead of a fiddle of clipper 
bow with a wedge-shaped transverse section; the outline of the 
under-walcr profile was hollow, sloping in a concave curve from 
the deep part of the keel under the mast to the forward end of 
the water-line; the keel was deep, practically developing into 
a fin. The new vessels skimmed over the waves instead of 
cutting and plunging through them. The seaworthiness, speed, 
weatherlincss and general handiness for racing purposes of the 
cutters of 1893 far exceeded all previous results. Yacht 
designing and building now became a science demanding the 
highest tax upon the skill and ingenuity of the naval architect. 
The cutter " Valkyrie II." visited the United Slates in 1893, 
but Lord Dunraven's vessel was beaten by the "Vigilant." 
Curiously enough, when the crack Herreshoff cutters " Navahoc " 
and " Vigilant " visited the British Isles they were severely 
beaten by the British yachts. In 1893 the " Navahoc " started 
13 times and only wpn two first prizes. In 1894 " Vigilant " did 
a little better, but she only won six races in 19 starts. During the 
years that followed the " Britannia " held a wonderful record:— 





Starts. 


First 
Prices. 


Other 
Prizes. 


Total. 


Prizes 
Value. 


Illll 


3 

IS 

20 


3 

38 

»4 
10 


9 

2 

2 

to 

a 


ii 

40 
*4 
13 


£1572 
3799 

££ 

1000 


219 


122 


25 


147 


Z9973 



Some other famous racing yachts which were built under the 
length and sail area rule were " Ailsa " (1895), a first-das* cutter 
designed by Fife, " Isolde." a very beautiful 40-ratcr for Mr Donald- 
son oy the same designer, " Caress," a 40-rater by Watson, and the 
30-raters " Audrey," from Lord Dunraven's own model, " Niagara " 
by HcrreahorT, and the "Sibbick "•designed skater "Norman," 
owned by Captain Orr-Ewing. Since the Introduction of Dixon 
Kemp's rule the smaller classes from 20- rating right down to 
j-rating had been built in great numbers, but whilst these classes 
had nourished exceedingly, the type of boat built had developed 
a very peculiar form. Each succeeding craft was made lighter and 
lighter m weight and more extreme in the overhang at the bow 
and stern. The stability was now attained by means of a cigar- 
shaped piece of lead placed at the bottom of a steel plate or fin, 
the hull of the boat being nothing more than the bowl of a dessert 
spoon resting upon the water. 

Fin and Bulb Keels. Downfall of Lenglh and SaU Area Rule. 
— It was apparent in 1895 that if plate and bulb skimming- 
dishes could win all the prizes in the 20-rating and smaller 
classes, it would be easy to design a modified form of fin and 
bulb yacht to beat "Isolde," "Britannia" and "AHu" in 
the larger classes. It was equally obvious that a skimming- 
dish of " Britannia's " or " Isolde's " rating would be an utterly 
useless machine with no cabin accommodation or head room, 
and that the evolution of such type would be as bad for the sport 
as the development of the old plank-on-cdge had been in 1885. 
It seemed strange that whilst the old tonnage rule Had evolved 
the plank-on-edge ten years previously, the sail area measure- 
ment now evolved a plank-on-side, balanced by a fin. The fact 
was that designers had solved the problem. The rule measured 
only the length and the area of canvas. Taking the length of 
the vessel on the water-line as constant, then the vessel with 
the smallest possible weight could be driven with less sail at 
the same speed as vessels with greater weight and greater sail. 
This solution of the problem was not apparent to designers from 
1880 to 1885, because of the difficulty of obtaining stability. 
From 1880 to 1885 stability was obtained by means of very 
heavy keels. In 1895 the stability was obtained by means of 
a light piece of lead placed at the bottom of a deep steel fin. 
*• Niagara," " Audrey " (20-raters) and " Norman "(5-ratcr) were 
thus built. They were wonderful sailing machines in heavy 
weather,— fast, powerful, handy and efficient in all weathers. 



But if bead room and cabin accommodation are considered 

essential parts of a yacht these fliers, as" yachts." were entirely 
inefficient. 

The FirU linear Rating Rule.— To endeavour to check the 
tendency to build skimming-dishes the Yacht-Racing Association 
introduced in 1896 a new system of measurement which was 
proposed by Mr R. £. Froudc. the novelty of the system 
consisted of a tax upon the skin girth of the yacht, whereby a 
vessel with hollow midship section was penalised by her girth 
being measured round the skin surface. Froude's first system 
of rating began on the xst of January 1806 and ended at the 
close of the year 1000. It therefore had a career of five seasons. 
The measurement of the yacht was obtained by the following 
formula:— • 

Length LW.L.+beam+f sine t*th+t Vail area gflUf rating 

This rule partially failed in its object. It was hoped that the 
skin-surface measurement would prevent the fin*bulb type being 
successful, but Fronde and his colleagues had under-estimated 
the possible developments of exaggerated pram bows, immense 
scow-shaped shoulders and stem-lines, all of which could be 
introduced Into the skimming-dish type with great success. So, 
notwithstanding the small premium on displacement this rule 
contained, the dishes could still beat the full-bodied yachts. 

Yachts built In the smalt classes were very shallow bodied, and 
in the 20-rating and 40-rating, now called the 52 ft. and 65 ft. 
classes respectively, were uncomfortably shallow. The best vessels 
in the large classes were undoubtedly well formed and useful yachts; 
indeed in the larger classes the rule seems to have checked excesses. 
Under this rule tn 1896 the German Emperor ordered a huge first- 
class cutter, the" Meteor II.," from Watson. By sheer sue and power 
this vessel outsailed " Britannia." She carried a main boom of 96 ft. 
long against the " Britannia's ** boom of Of ft. In 1900 Watson 
designed another great cutter called the " Distant Shore,*' the same 
size as " Britannia," but she was not launched until 1901. In 1900 
also Watson crowned all Ms previous successes by turning out 
the yawl " Sybarita," the same siac as " Meteor." *' Senta Tutty," 
M Eclin M and *' Asrrild," and finally " Khama," were amongst 
the 65-footers, and " Penitent," •• The Saint," " Morning Star" 
and " Seng* " about the best tt-footers. Probably the yacht which 
emphasized the possibilities of the rule more than any of her con- 
temporaries was Captain Orr-Ewing's 36-footer " Sakunula," built 



by Slbbick.. She was a complete scow-shaped skimming-dish. 
30-footers " Marjory "and u Flatfish " were similar craft, and 



The 3 



they outsailed everything in their respective classes in the Solent. 
Although many fine vessels, including the schooner " Rainbow " 
and others, were built under this rule, it was obviously insufficient 
to check the hollow-sectioned type. 

The Second Linear Rating Rule.— This rule, also suggested 
by Fronde, was introduced on the 1st of January 1901. The 
confidence of yachtsmen had been decidedly shaken by the 
previous rule, and the Y.R.A. agreed to fix this rule for a period 
of seven years. The object of the rule was to ensure a big- 
bodied vessel. The formula was:— 

Length -I- breadth + fglrth + 4*+ W«ail area r Hgnr ^^ 

Now the novelty of this rale was the new tax a?. This sf represents 
the difference in feet between the measurement of the girth of 
the yacht's hull taken round the skin surface and the girth at 
the same place measured with a string pulled taut. This 
measurement is taken A tft s of the distance from the fore end 
of the water-line. It is easy to see that in a full-bodied yacht 
7" a small unit, whilst in a hollow-bodied yacht o*» a larger 
unit. Four times 2 being taken, it followed that hollow-bodied 
yachts were heavily penalized. This ingenious J measurement 
was evolved by Alfred Benzon, a Danish scientist and yachtsman. 
The rule, so far as the development of a full-bodied cabin yacht 
went, proved very successful. It had certain marked faults: 
the measurement of the girth at a fixed station caused a shallow- 
ness of keel at that particular spot, and there was no check 
upon the full pram bows, which when introduced into vessels 
of heavy displacement strained the ships terribly as they 
smashed into a heavy seaway. The new racing yachts generallv. 
however, from 1896 onwards, proved worthy and fast vessels. 



As an instance of what could be done with them, in tool a 1 
able match was sailed on the Clyde between the Watson cutter 



i 



«94 



YACHTING 



iMiwu ^uifgHNuajr tire i- r iotoiii. ennuis, ^ivTMiaijr lucuuviicu; 

and the «ame designer's 90-foot yawl " Sybanta." It was blowing a 
gale of wind, and the yachts raced front Rothesay round Ailsa Craig 
and back, a distance of 75 m., averaging 12-3 knots, with closed 
reefed sails, housed topmasts and in a mountainous sea. Several 
steam yachts attempted to accompany them, but all put back 
owing to the roaring sea that was running near the Craig. The 
yawl had the advantage of being the larger vessel, and " Sybarita " 
on this occasion won one of the greatest races ever recorded in 
Scottish waters. 

Class Racing, Handicapping and Cruiser Racing. — Yacht 
racing may be subdivided under these three heads. Yacht 
racing by rating measurement or tonnage, when either the 
first yacht to finish is the winner, or the yacht saving her time 
by a fixed scale of time allowance in proportion to the rating 
of the vessel and the length of the course, is called dais racing, 
and it obviously tends to encourage the fastest possible vessel 
under the current rating rule to be produced. It has always 
been regarded as the highest form of the sport. It is naturally, 
however, the most expensive form, because only the most 
up-to-date and perfectly equipped vessels can keep in the first 
flight. 

From time to time, chiefly from about the years 1864 and 1885 
onwards, handicaps framed according to merits have been fashion- 
able amongst yachtsmen. They were originally devised to afford 
amusement and sport to out-classed racera and cruisers, but they 
obviously did nothing to encourage owners to build very fast vessels, 
nor to stimulate improvement in design. When a handicap is 
allotted to each vessel according to her assumed speed, the slowest 
and most ill-designed craft should have an equal chance with the 
best. Nevertheless, owing to the expense of class racing, handicap 
racing thrived greatly during the period of the first and second 
Girth Rules. During these periods, too, the third style of yacht 
racing came into vogue, namely cruiser racing; either very fast 
cruisers were built specially for the purpose of handicap racing, or 
a number of yachts of exactly similar design were built specially 
to the owner's orders for the purpose of racing in a class together. 
The fast handicap cruisers had the great advantage over class racers 
from 1896 up to 1906, inasmuch as they were much more strongly 
built. ,r Vaidora (107 tons), " Brynhild " (160 tons), " Leander, 
" Namara," " Rosamond," Mcrrymaid " and many others were 
yachts of the former type. In form they did not differ vastly from 
the racers of their period, but in scantling of hull, fittings, bulwarks 
and rig they were more comfortable and better vessels than their 
class-racing sisters. It was obvious in the larger classes that many 
yacht-owners were not prepared to put up with the discomfort of 
the thin-skinned racers. During the whole period of the Girth 
Rules (1896 to 1906), while the class racers developed a good enough 
form of body— they were latterly yachts with plenty of cabin room — 
they were necessarily built in the lightest possible manner, the 
lightest steel frames being covered with the thinnest planking and 
decks for the sake of saving weight. The light scantling began to tell 
severely upon large yacht racing. Meanwhile, m the small classes, 
the Solent one-design class. South Coast one-design class, numerous 
Belfast one-design classes, Redwings, Whitewings and a host' of 
others, show how an inexpensive form of cruiser ratine had usurped 
the place of class racing and competitive designing. Many yachts- 
men felt that if handicap racing and one-design racing were to usurp 
the place of the higher form of class racing the whole sport of yacht- 
ing must soon deteriorate. It was obvious that had handicap 
racing and the one-design principle been seriously introduced in 
1880 or 1886 and obtained a strong hold on yachtsmen such im- 
proved types as the modern cruisers of 1906 would never have been 
evolved. For all the best cruisers, even the " Valdora " and the 
ketches " Cariad I." and " Cariad II.," are but modified types 
evolved from the crack racers. Hence yachtsmen began to give 
careful attention— during the early period of the Second Linear 
Rating rule — to suggestions that in the future every class-racing 
yacht should be built according to a fixed table of scantlings, so 
that her hull should be as strong as a bona fide cruiser. 

Yachts Built under the Second Linear Rating Ruk.—Fm 
large vessels were built expressly for racing under this rule; 
indeed the Fife 65-footer " Zinita " "(1904) was the only light- 
scantling yacht of any importance. However, two very hand- 
some first-class vessels were constructed to the rule: " White 
Heather I." by Fife in 19041 and " Nyria " by Nicholson in 
sooo; they were some 1a ft. shorter than the great cutters 
of " Britannia's " year and altogether smaller, having less beam 
and draught and some 1700 sq. ft. less sail area. The growing 
dissatisfaction of yacht-owners at the extreme light scantling 
of modern racing yachts was strongly demonstrated by the 
fact that both ♦' White Heather V * and " Nyria " were specially 
ordered to be of heaw scantling, and they were classed Ai at 



Lloyd's. They were therefore of the semi-cruiser type. 
"Nyria," however, was the extreme type of a yacht of her 
period in shape, although heavy in construction. The only 
conspicuous fault to be found with the form of the racing 
yachts under the rule was a skimping of the mean draught and 
an exaggeration of the full pram-shaped overhanging bow. 

The gt-foettri were a wry popular class. Fife made a great 
advance in yacht architecture with a 52- foot cutter called the " Mag- 
dalen " (1901); All the other successful vessels under the rule—- 
*' Camellia " (Payne ), *' Ludda "and" Maymon " (Fife), '* Moyana" 
and " Brit amain " (Mylne). and the first-class cutter " Nyna " — 
foil owed her closely in type. An interesting trial took place in 
1906, when the first nilaja cutter " Kariad " (1900) was brought out 
to compete with *' Nyria " and " White Heather 1.," and decidedly 
out -Bailed,— showing that y.icht architecture had steadily unproved 
in the past six s 



International Rules Introduced.— In April 1004 Mr Heckstall 
Smith drew the attention of German, French and British 
yachtsmen to the fact that the yacht measurement rules (then 
different in the various countries) were generally due to terminate 
about the end of 1907, and suggested that many advantages 
would accrue if an international rule could be agreed upon. 
The Yacht-Racing Association agreed to take the matter up, 
and at two International Conferences, held in London in January 
and June 1906, an international rule of yacht measurement 
and rating was unanimously agreed to by all the nations of 
Europe. America alone refused to attend the Conference. 
Mr R. £. Froude struck the keynote of the object of the Confer- 
ence by a statement that the ideal yacht should be a vessel 
combining " habitability with speed." The truth of this axiom 
was generally accepted. Old plank-on-edge types under the 
tonnage rules were habitable but slow. Skimming-dishes at- 
tained the maximum speed, but were uninhabitable. Neither 
therefore attained the ideal type. A good form was attained 
in 1 00 1 with " Magdalen," but since that year the bane of 
light construction had become harmful to yachting. Hence 
the conference aimed at a rule which would produce a yacht 
combining habitability with speed. They adopted a form of 
linear rating comprising certain penalties upon hollow mid- 
ship section (i.e. Benzon's i tax) and also upon full pram bows. 
The following was adopted as the rule by which all racing 
yachts in Europe are rated: — 

L+B-HG+aJ-UVS-F ^Rating in linear units, *>. either ft. or 
2 metres. 

Where L- Length in linear units. 

. „ B ■ Extreme beam in linear units. 
„ G -Girth in linear units. 
„ 3 "Girth difference in linear units* 
. „ S » Sail area in square units. 
„ F - Freeboard in linear units. 

The length L for the formula is the length on the water-line, 
with the addition (1) of the difference between the girth, covering- 
board to covering-board, at the bow water-line ending, and twice 
the freeboard at that point, and (a) one-fifth of the difference 
between the girth, covering-board to covering-board, at the stern 
water-line ending, and twice the freeboard at that point. The 
additions (1) and (a) penalize the full overhangs and the bow 
overhang in particular. The girth, G, is the chain girth 
measured at that part of the yacht at which the measurement 
is greatest, less twice the freeboard at the same station, but 
there are certain provisions allowing the measurement of girth 
generally to be taken 055 from the bow end of the water-line. 
The girth difference, i in the formula, is the difference between 
the chain girth, measured as above described, from covering- 
board to covering-board, and the skin girth between the 
same points, measured along the actual outline of the cross- 
section. 

For racing the yachts are divided into eleven classes. Class A 
is for schooners and yawls only, above 23 metres (75*4 ft.) of 
rating, with a time allowance of four seconds per metre per 
mile. All the yachts in this class must be classed Ax. In 
racing, yawls sail at their actual rating and schooners at 12% 
less than their actual rating. The other classes are the ten 



YACHTING 



895 



separate cutter classes, in which there la 

whatever: — 


no time allowance 


Herreshoff built a wonderful racing schooner of A class for 
the international rules called the " Westward, and in the 
races this Yankee dipper sailed at Cowes she proved the 
most weatherly schooner ever built. 

It is interring to recall some old records of speed over 
courses inside the Isle of Wight. 


International 

Classes approximating 

to L.W.L of Yacht. 


\»oi responding 

Classes in English 

Feet. 


Limit to Number 
of Persons allowed 
on Board during 
a Race. 




754 
623 
492 
39-4 
328 

29-5 
36*2 
23*0 

197 

16-4 


No limit 
20 
14 
10 

8 

6 

S 

4 

3 

2 




23 metre* rating 
19 « . 

15 M „ 

14 .. 

«o » 
9 .. •» 
8 „ „ 

7 .. 

6 .. „ 

5 » 


: 


Date, 


Yacht. 


Distance. 


Time. 


Remarks. 


1858 
1872 
1872 
1883 
1883 
1885 
1885 
1870 
1875 
1879 

1008 
1902 
1908 

1908 


The Arrow 

The Arrow 

Kriemhtlda 

Marjorie 

Samoena 

Lorna 

Irex 

Egeria 

Olga 

Enchantress 

Cicely 
Meteor 
Shamrock 

Germania 


45 miles 
50 « 
50 .. 
50 .. 
50 '.. 
50 .. 
50 ,. 

50 U 

y> .. 
y> .» 

4« H 

47 .. 

47 .. 

47 .. 


4 h. 19 m. 
4 h. 40 m. 
4 h 37 m. 
4 h. 26 m. 
4 h. 15 m. 
4 h. 14 ro. 
4h.7m. 
4 h. 27 m. 
4h. 25 m. 
4 h. 18 m. 

3 h. 43 «. 
3h. 90 m. 

4 b. om. 

3h. 35 m. 


Cutter ) Same 

Cutter ) vessel. 

Cutter. 

Cutter. 

Cutter. 

Yawl. 

Cutter. 

Schooner. 

Schooner. 

American 

schooner. 
British sch. 
American sch. 
British cutter, 

German sch. 


Under the international rule the old trouble of ultra-light 
scantling in racing yachts has been completely abolished, for 
all yachts musf be built under the survey and classed with one 
of the three classification societies— Lloyd's Register of British 
and Foreign Shipping, Cennanischer Lloyd, or Bureau Veritas; 
and yachts of the international cutter classes enumerated above 
so built will be classed R., denoting that their scantlings are 


as required for their respective rating classes. This rule was 
introduced on the 1st of January 1908; England, Germany, 
France, Norway, Sweden, Denmark, Austria-Hungary, Belgium, 
Holland, Italy, Spain, Finland, Russia and the Argentine 
Republic agreed to adopt it until December 31st, 1917. England 
adopted the new system a year before it formally became 
international, on the 1st of January 1907. 

Racing YacMs Built under the International J?«fe*.— The new 
rule produced the type of yacht desired— a vessel combining 
habitabQity with speed. Amongst the handsomest examples 
were the German Emperor's schooner " Meteor" (1009), and 
the schooner "Germania" (1008), 400 tons or 31} metres 
measurement, Class A, both built by Krupp's at Kiel. German 
designed, German built, and German rigged and manned, they 
demonstrated the wonderful strides made by Germany in yacht- 
ing. A f ew years before there were not a dozen smart yachts 
in Germany, and indeed the Kaiserlicher Yacht Club at Kiel 
was only founded in 1887. The " Germania " holds the record 
over the old " Queen's course " at Cowes, having in 1008 sailed 
it a quarter of an hour faster than any other vessel. Her time 
over the distance of about 47 to 48 nautical ra. was 3 hours 
35 min. xi sees., or at the rate of \yi knots. In 19x0 


In 1907, 1908, 1000 and 19x0, 389 yachts were built under the 
international rules: — A class, 3; 93 metres class, 3; 15 metres 
class, 15; xs metres, 31; to metres, 33; 9 metres, 17; 
8 metres, 8S; 7 metres, 46; 6 metres, 144; and 5 metres, 21. 
The 33-metre cutters "Shamrock," designed by Fife (1008), 
belonging to Sir Thomas Lipton, " White Heather II." (Fife; 
1007), owned by Mr Kennedy, and "Brynhild" (Nicholson; 
1907), owned by Sir James Pender; and also "Ostara," 
15 metres (Mylne; 1909), owned by Mr W. P. Burton*, 
"Hispania," 15 metres (Fife*, 1909), owned by the king of 
Spain; " Alachie and Cintra " (Fife) in the 12-metre class, have 
been amongst the best yachts built for the international rules. 
During the seasons of 1908, 1909 and 1910 there was splendid 
sport in England, Germany, France, Belgium, Norway and 
Sweden, and indeed all over the continent; the yachts were 
very closely matched, the xs-metres (49- 2 »*.), 8-metres (26-2 ft.) 
and 6-metres (19-7 ft.) proving perhaps the most popular. The 
national authorities of the countries which adopted the inter* 
national rules in 1906 have now formed an International 
Yacht-Racing Union, under the chairmanship of the British 
Yacht-Racing Association. 



YACHT-BUILDING STATISTICS. 
The number and tonnage of yachts shown on Lloyd's Register (1909) as built in the several countries are as follows*— 






COUNTRIES. 


TOTAL 


UMm» 
XsmsasL 


lom 


BcuviJM 

ROUAMD. 


Dsmutx. 


FlAWX 


CttMAMY 

■ad 

Amu*. 


ItALT. 


NoftWAY 

■ad 

BWMOf. 


Onre* 
Comma. 


SrtAM in M<m* Y*am- Totsl . 

Saumo Yacbh:- Tool . 
Gfsad Total . 


N^Ttou. 


No. 1 Too* 


No. | Tow. 


N*|Tcw. 


N«-| Tom. 


No. 1 Tom. 


Na|Ton 


N»|Tw» 


No.) Tarn. 


No. | Tarn. 


JJffl S7.HO 


ft ls,tjl 


7*1 MS4 
l*| f.&4S 


rot [1,011 


>&*l 0.745 
M7| 4fi*» 


S»| 6.6m 
647 | 6.SS4 


46 | 57 1 


S7IUM 
jesfsA6 


<S6|66^o| 
•AolfS^sS 


>.J«4| sS^4i8 
S.174I Q4jeoe 


4^h|«47A7» 


4**|7.«* 


*»s| $«7 


<u| 7.4*9 


Si?|lo£o7 


TU | ***** 


6o| «el 


S4*J S.S47 


55S | 7IM0S 


7^6»| 377.4»7 



American yachts of 



Other Countries"""; the 



upwards are 
r of these yachts 
bode in America is 248 of 67,1 19 tons. 

In 1909, in the United Kingdom, from January to May, the time 
of the year when ya * 
building, or built, 27 
yachts of 963 
' Esrl 



sited rungoom, irom January to may, w time 
yachts are generally constructed* there were 
17 steam yachts of 3471 tons, and 28 sailing; 

„ j: this includes only yachts of 10 tons and 

upwards. Excluding the small craft buflt in America, particulars 
of which are difficult to obtain, these were on the register 7568 

* 1 a total of 



yachts 



that date. 



1 with a tonnage of 3774*7* In l**7 there was a * 
3000 yachts on the register with a tonnage of 132,718. 
late, therefore, in round figures, 1500 had been added 



„_' and more than 100.000 tons to the tonnage, 
1 to show clearly the extension of the pastime of yi 



Since 
.... to the 
... This fact 
yachting. 



The America' $ Cup. 

This international trophy was originally a cup given by the Royal 
Yacht Squadron at Cowes,. Isle of Wight, on the 22nd of August 
1851, for a race open to all yachts, with no time allowance of any 
kind, the course being " round the Isle of Wight, inside the No Man s 
buoy and Sand Head buoy and outside the Nab." Fifteen vessels 
took up their stations on Cowes and started from moorings. In 
the table on the following page ate the names of the competitors. 

The fleet started at 10 o clock. At the No Man's buoy the yachts 
were in a duster, " Volante " leading, then " Freak " Aurora,'* 
11 Gipsy Queen,'' " America." " Beatrice. ,, " Alarm." "Arrow " and 
' Bacchante '* in the order named. The other six brought 



rear, and the " Wyvern ' 



.... up the 

returned to Cowes. Passing out to the 



8 9 6 



YACHTING 



Yacht. 


Rig. 


Tons. 


Owner. 


Beatrice » 


Schooner 


161 


Sir W. P. Carew« 


Volante * 


Cutter 


« 


Mr L L. Craijic. 
Mr Ti Chambcrbyne. 
The duke of Marlhortjugrk 


Arrow * 


Cutter 


Wyvern *. 


Schooner 


*>5 


lone 


Schooner 


7 § 
218 


Mr A, Hill. 


Constance . 


Schooner 


The niarquiiof Cooyngltam. 


Gipsy Queen 


Schooner 


160 


Sir H. R. Hoghioa. 


Alarm 


Cutter 


•8 


Mr f, Weld, 
Lort! Alfred Paget, 


Mona 


Cutter 


America 


Schooner 


170 


Messrs Stcvena, 


Brilliant . 


3-masted 
schooner 


39* 


Mr G, H. Ackers, 


Bacchante . 


Cutter 


80 


Mr B. H. Jones. 


Freak 


Cutter 


60 


Mr W. Curling. 


Eclipse i 


Cutter 


5 


Mr H. S. Fearon. 


Aurora 


Cutter 


Mr T. Le Marchant. 



eastward the " America " went inside the Nab, a course which was 
contrary to the printed programme, but an objection afterwards 
made 00 this score against her was not persisted in. Off Sandown 
Bay the " America " obtained a long lead and in a freshening wind 
carried away her jibboom. Here the " Aurora " was second boat. 
The " Volante " sprung her bowsprit and gave up. The " Arrow " 
ran ashore and the " Alarm " went to her assistance, so both were 
out of the race. Abreast of Ventnor the American schooner was 
a mile ahead of " Aurora," which was the last British craft to keep 
her in sight in a thick haze that blew up from the S.W. late in the 
afternoon. At the Needles the wind dropped until it was very light, 
and the " America " was then some 6 m. ahead of " Aurora/' the tune 
being about 6 p.m. The finish was. — 

America (winner) . .. 8.37 p.m. Aug. 22. 

Aurora .... 8.58 p.m. Aug. 22. 

Bacchante « t . 9.30 p.m. Aug. i2. 

Eclipse .• 4 . 9-45 P»«. Aug. 22. 

Brilliant • . . 1.20 a.m. Aug. 23. 

The " America " was built at New York by the firm of George & 
James R. Steers for the special purpose of competing with British 
yachts at Cowes. George Steers, who was born in New York, 
designed her, the designer being a son of Henry Steers, a shipwright 
at Dartmouth. The registered owners of the vessel were Mr J. C. 
Stevens, the commodore of the NewYorkYacht Club.Mr CA.Stevens, 
Mr H. Wilkes and Mr J. B. Finlay. Her crew consisted of thirteen 
all told, seven seamen before the mast, two mates, cook, steward, 
boy and master. The cost of building was set down at £24 per ton, 
and her builder was to receive one-third more should she succeed 
" in out-sailing any competitors of the same tonnage in England." 
The vessel had a long lean hollow entrance and rather short but fine 
run, but her lines were graceful and clean and the transverse sections 
amidships very gentle and shapely. She bad a clipper bow and 
elliptical stern. Her sails particularly were superior in cut to those 
of the English vessels. Her masts raked, and she carried a mainsail 
laced to the boom, which in those days was almost unknown in 
England, a foresail, and a jib, also set on a boom and on an immensely 
heavy forestay which was the chief support of the foremast. She 
carried a small main topsail with a short yard and small jackyard. 
Occasionally she set also a flying jib on a jibboom, but this was not 
regarded as of much account. The principal dimensions of the 
••America" were: tonnage 171; length over all 94 ft.; on the 
keel 82 ft. ; beam 22 ft. 6 in.; foremast 70 ft. 6 in.; mainmast 81 ft. 
(with a rake of 2\ in. to the foot in each mast); hollow bowsprit 
17 ft. out board only; foregaff 24 ft.; maingaff 28 ft.: mainboom 
56 ft. She was ballasted with pig-iron; 21 tons of the iron were 
permanently built into the vessel and the rest stowed inside. Below 
deck she was comfortably fitted for the living accommodation of the 
owner, guests and crew, and a cockpit on deck was a feature that few 
English yachts of the period possessed. 

The cup won at Cowes by the " America," although not originally 
Intended as a challenge cup, was afterwards given to the New York 
Yacht Club by the owner of the " America as a challenge trophy 
and named the " America's cup." In 1887 the sole surviving owner 
of the cup, George L. S. Schuyler, attached to the trophy a deed of 
gift which sets forth the conditions under which all races for the cup 
must take place. In brief the conditions are: (1) That the races 
must be between one yacht built in the country of the challenging 
club and one yacht built in the country of the club holding the cup. 

(2) That the site of the yachts, if of one mast, must be not less than 
65 ft. L.W.L. and not more than 00 ft. L.W.L. If of two-masted 
rig not less than 80 ft. L.W.L. and not more than 115 ft. L.W.L. 

(3) The challenging club must give ten months' notice of the race, 
and accompanying the challenge must be sent the name, rig and 
the following dimensions: length L.W.L.; beam and draught of 
water of the challenging vessel (which dimensions shall not be 
exceeded), and as soon as possible a custom-house registry of the 
vessel, U) tk ~ "-*" 1 ■«"•* proceed under sail on her own bottom 
to the pla* »* to take place. 



The deed of gift, however, is an elastic document, for it contains 
the following clause which is known as the Mutual Agreement 
Clause: ** The club challenging for the cup and the club holding the 
same may by mutual consent make any arrangement satisfactory 
to both as to the dates, courses, number of trials, rules and sailing 
regulations, and any and all other conditions of the match, in which 
case also the ten months' notice may be waived." 

In 1870 Mr James Ashbury of Brighton challenged with the 
schooner " Cambria." and in 1871 with another schooner the 
" Livonia." In both cases the event was a test of rival types, 
" Cambria n and " Livonia " being old-fashioned British schooners 
while the vessels they met were the pick of the American broader 
and shallower types. " Cambria " had to meet fourteen opponents, 
but in 1871 the * Livonia " raced against one opponent only. The 
Americans, however, although they agreed to race one vessel only 
against the " Livonia," brought several yachts up to the line and 
only selected their defender at the last moment. The first defender 
which " Livonia " had to meet was the " Columbia," which won the 
first and second events. In the third meeting, however, in a very 
strong wind the British schooner hammered the " Columbia * 
severely, and eventually the American yacht, having carried away 
some gear, was beaten by a quarter of an hour. In the two remain- 
ing races of the series the Americans were represented by the 



' Sappho," which easily defeated the " Livonia." 
The next * " ' « • • -• 



next challenges came from Canada in 1876 and 1881, but 
neither the schooner " Countess of Dufferin " nor the sloop " Ata- 
lanta " met with any success. 

The races of 1885 and 1886, when Sir Richard Sutton challenged 
with " Genesta " and Lieutenant Henn, R.N., with " Galatea," 
were interesting chiefly because they were of the nature of trials 
between the heavy plank-on-edge type of cotter and the prevailing 
American type of fcroad light-draught sloop. The con t ests proved 
the superiority of the American sloops. 

In 1886 the plank-on-edge type was abandoned in England, 
and when the Scottish yacht " Thistle " was built in 1887 to chal- 
lenge for the cup it was hoped that she would meet with success. 
" Thistle," however, although of greater beam and proportionately 
lighter displacement than such vessels as " Genesta " and ** Galatea, 
was quite easily defeated by the centre-board sloop " Volunteer." 
Thus once again did the lighter American type prevail even against 
the modified form of the "Thistle." 

The race between the "Thistle" and M Volunteer "of 1887 
may be said to have been the last race for the cup wherein there 
was any marked difference between the type of the boats contesting. 
In all subsequent races the form of the challenger and defender 
became approximately similar, but while the types were gradually 
converging the American yachts were still asuaUy somewhat lighter 
in displacement than the challengers. The " Thistle " was the first 
vessel built in Great Britain expressly for the match, and after her 
race in 1887 the types in fashion on both sides of the Atlantic rapidly 
converged, and deep-draught fin-keeled vessels with deep fins and 
light shallow hulls took the place of the former types of the shallow 
American sloops and deep-keeled wall-sided British cutters. In 
i8~~ — nc spler.^M semi- fin-keeled cutters of the new pattern were 
bush in [he 4n-raiing class for the ordinary English coast regattas, 
and fa iHfjj the fin- keel type in England was even more successful. 
The fir*.* tkv* sutlers "Britannia, "Valkyrie II.," "Satanita" 
and ■* Call una/' built in 1803, handsomely defeated a Herreshoff 
yarht, the " Navahoe," which went over from America to race 
against iUm. On the strength of the victories of " Valkyrie II." 
and " Britannia " many British yachtsmen anticipated success for 
LotiI T ■■'"::. 1 ■■ ■. !■ ■■■■•>■■' n he raced for the America's cup with his cutter 
" Vatkyric 11." in Lhe autumn of 1893. The Americans, however, 
had built a fine fleet of defenders, " Cofonia," " Pilgrim," ** Jubilee 
and " Vigilant," and the latter beat " Valkyrie II." In the follow- 
ing season the " Vigilant " crossed the Atlantic and raced in British 
waters in 1894 against the " Britannia," and was frequently beaten. 
G. L. Watson, who had designed "Thistle" and ''Valkyrie II." 
as well as " Britannia," was commissioned by Lord Dunravcn to 
design M Valkyrie 111." specially for an "" America's cup " race in 
1895. "Valkyrie Hi." was a very extreme fin-keeled boat, and 
for the first time the challenger appeared to have outbuilt the 
defending designer. " Valkyrie III. carried 13,027 so. ft. of sail 
to the American " Defender's " 12,602. It was said that the 
Watson boat actually had less displacement. Both were 90 ft. 
L.W.L., M Valkyrie III." being 129 ft. over all against " Defender's " 
123, and " Valkyrie III." 26*2 ft. beam against " Defender's " 
23*03 ft. The races were unsatisfactory. In the first race Lord 
Dunraven claimed that " Valkyrie ill." was hampered by the wash 



mpered I 
1 8 m. 49 



of steamers following the race, and his yacht was 8 m. 49 sec. astern. 
In the second race " Valkyrie " beat " Defender " by 49 seconds 
on the corrected time and actually by 1 m. 14 sec, but there was a 
foul at the start in which " Defender " was partially disabled. 
On protest the English yacht was disqualified, so that both events 
counted to " Defender." In the third race Lord Dunraven objected 
that ballast had been added to the American yacht since measure- 
ment, and the" Valkyrie III." merely crossed the line and retired, 
giving the " Defender " the match. 
In 1899, 1901 and 1903 Sir Thomas Liptoo tried to win the cop 



•YACHTING 



897 



with three very costly and extreme vesseja,~*' Shamrock I./' 

« Shamrock II.'' and "Shamrock III.' No. I. and No. III. were 
designed by W. Fife, and No. II. by G. L. Watson. In 1899 
" Shamrock I." was rather easily defeated by M Columbia." In 
1901 the Americana were not especially successful in boildlnf the 
vessel which they had prepared to defend the cup, and ia the trial 
races the old 1899 yacht " Columbia," sailed by Captain Charles 
Barr— a half-brother of the skipper of the Scottish yacht " Thistle " 
—defeated the new vessel " Constitution," which had been built 
for the defence of the trophy for 1901; consequently the New York 
Yacht Club again selected the " Columbia '' to defend the cup 
against ** Shamrock II." After very dose raring the " Columbia u 
—which was the better handled boat— retained the prise. 



The nest contest for the cup was in 1903. On this occasion 
Herrcshoff turned out in " Reliance " a wonderful example of a large 
fin-keclcd boat with full pram-bow and light skimming-dish hull. 
She was of the lightest possible construction (bronze with steel 
web frames), 90 ft. length L.W.L., 144 ft. length over all. with 
16,160 so. ft. of sail area, 25 ft. 10 in. beam, and a draught of 19 ft. 

?io. " Reliance " was a far more extreme vessel than^' Shamrock 
II." The latter had a deeper body and a less prammed overhang 
forward. With the same water-line as " Reliance," the English 
yacht had rather over a foot less beam. The chief difference in 
dimensions, however, was in the sail area: "Shamrock III." 
carried 14437 sq. It., or 1823 sq. ft. less than " Reliance.'.' The 
result was a very easy victory for, the " Reliance" 



Racbs fob thb America's Cup 



Name. 



Tonnage. 



Course. 



Allows 



kts: 



Elapsed 
Time. 



Corrected 
Time. 



H. M 5. 
10 37 o 
10 55 o 

4 7 54 
4 34 57 

6 17 42 
643 o 
3 »33} 
3 6 491 

3 S3 5 

4 i* 3* 

1*23 

4 38 5 

5 4 41 
S 24 55 

5 34 53 

7 19 47 
7 46 o 

454 53 

ini 

6 22 5a 
5 3 14 
5 5M 
5 2641 
5 39 21 

**L ° 

7 1* 4« 

5 W46I 
5 4* 5°$ 
5 54 S< 



H. M. 5. 
10 37 o 

"M 

4 37 3* 
6 19 41 
6 46 45, 

3 2 41 } 

3 18 151 

4 2 25 

4 17 35 

5 3* a 

6 9 23 

4 46 17 

5 " 44 

5 23 54 

'1* 

7 46 o 
4 17 9, 

4 45*9* 
454 53 

11% 

6 23 24 

3 3 14 

5 452 
5 2641 

5 38 43 

6 49 © 

7 18 4 

4 53 1* 

5 12.41} 
5 42 561 
5 54 45 



Wins by 



M. S. 
18 o 

39 127 

«7 4 

»0 33l 

15 10 
33 at 
25 27 
«0 59 

27 14 

28 20} 

38 54 

16 19 
138 

12 2 

29 9 

I923I 
II 48! 



Aug. m, 1851 
Aug. 8, 1870 
Oct. 16, 1871 
Oct. 18, 1871 
Oct. 19, 1871 
Oct. 21, 1871 
Oct. 23, 1871 
Aug. 11, 1876 
Aug. 12, 1876 
Nov. 9, 1881 
Nov. 10, 1881 
Sept. 14. 1885 
Sept. 16, 1885 
Sept. 0,1886 
Sept. II, 1886 
Sept. 27, 1887 
Sept. 30,1887 



America 

Aurora 

Magic 

Cambria 

Columbia 

Livonia 

Columbia 

Livonia 

Livonia 

Columbia 

Sappho 

Livonia 

Sappho 

Livonia 

Madeleine 
Ctess.of Dufferin 

Madeleine 
Ctess.of Dufferin 

Mischief 

Atlanta 

Mischief 

Atlanta 

Puritan 

Cenesta 

Puritan 

Genesta 

Mayflower 

Galatea 

Mayflower 

Galatea 

Volunteer 

Thistle 

Volunteer 

Thistle 



170 

47 

97-2 
227-6 
220 
280 
220 
280 
280 
220 

US 
?£ 

151-49 
13820 
151*49 
138*20 

ST 7 

•« 

17174 
171*14 

171-74 
1711a 
209-08 

253*94 
209*08 

253-94 



From Cowes around Isle of Wight (Aurora 

second). 
N.Y.Y.C. Course (Cambria tenth). 

N.Y.Y.C Course. 

20 miles to windward off Sandy Hook Light- 
ship and return. 
N.Y.Y.C Course (Columbia disabled). 

20 miles to windward off Sandy Hook Lightship 

and return. 
N.Y.Y.C Course. 

N.Y.Y.C. Course. 

20 mtfes to windward] off Sandy Hook Lightship 

and return. 
N.Y.Y.C Course, 

16 miles to leeward from Buoy 5 off Sandy Hook 

and return. 
N.Y.Y.C. Course. 

20 miles to leeward off Sandy Hook Lightship 

and return. 
N.Y.Y.C Course. 

jo,railes to leeward off Sandyf Hook Lightship 

and return. 
N.Y.Y.C Course. 

20 miles to windward off Scotland Lightship 



o 28 
o 38 
o 38 
©39 
0**5 
o"6 



Sailing Length. 



H. M. 5. 
4 5 47 

4 13 23 
3 25 1 
3 37 24 
3 2a 39 
3 26 52 

5 024 
5 J44 
3 56 25 

3 55 .91 

4 44 12 

4 53 53 

5 4 7 
3 37 © 

3 38 25 

3 44 43 

4 31 7 
4 31 44 
3 13 I* 

3 16 10 

4 33 40 
433 38 
3 32 17 
A 4» 17 
$14 54 

3 18 10 

4 28 o 
Didne 



U. M. 3. 
4 5 47 
4 n 35 
3 25 I 
3 35 36 
3 24 39 

3 23 19 

4 59 55 

5 844 
3 55 5-5 

3 55 9 
443 43 

4 53 53 
5. 4 " 

3 38 9 

3 44 43 

4 30 24 
4 31 44 
3 12 35 

3 16 10 

4 32 57 
4 33 38 
3 32 17 
339 20 
3 14 54 

3 l§ 12 

4 28 o 



548 
10 35 

o 40 

849 

47 
10 8 

634 

1 20 

335 

041 
7 3 
I 19 



Oct. 7.1893 
Oct. 9,1893 
Oct. 13, 1893 
Sept. 7. 1895 
Sept. 10, 1895 
Sept. 12, 1895 
Oct. 16, 1899 
Oct. 17. 1899 
Oct. 20, 1899 
Sept. 28, 1901 
Oct. 3.1901 
Oct. 4* I90t 
Aug. 22, 1903 
Aug. 25. 1903 
Sept. 3.t903 



Vigilant 

Valkyrie II. 

Vigilant 

Valkyrie IL 

Vigilant 

Valkyrie II. 

Defender 

Valkyrie III. 

Defender 

Valkyrie HI. 

Defender 

Valkyrie HI. 

Columbia 

Shamrock 

Columbia 

Shamrock 

Columbia 

Shamrock 

Columbia 

Shamrock II. 

Columbia 

Shamrock U. 

Columbia 

Shamrock II. 

Reliance 

Shamrock III. 

Reliance 

Shamrock III. 

Reliance 

Shamrock III. 



96-78 
93" 
96-78 

5KJ. 

93-57* 
10036 

101-49 

100-36 

101-49 

100*36 

101-49^ 

10213s 

101092 

102135 
101-092 

102-1, ' 
X02-5I 

102355 

10379 

102-355 

103-79 

102-355 

103-79 

108-41 

10437 

108-41 

104-37 

108-39 

104-37 



15 miles to windward off Scotland Lightship and 

return. 
Courser-equilateral triangle— 30 miles. 

15 miles to windward off Scotland Lightshipand 

return. 
1 5 miles to windward off Scotland Lightshipand 



Course— equilateral triangle— 30 miles. 

15 miles to windward and return from Sandy 

Hook Lightship. 
15 miles E.S.E. from Sandy Hook Lightshipand 

return — 30 miles. 
10 miles triangular from Sandy Hook Lightship 

—30 miles. 
IS miles S. by W. from Sandy Hook Lightship 



and return — 30 

IS rules E. by S. from Sandy Hook Lightship 

and return— 30 miles. 
Course — equilateral triangle— 30 miles. 

15 miles S&E. from Sandy Hook Lightship and 

return— 30 mites. 
IS miles to windward and return— 30 miles. 

Course— equilateral triangle— 30 miles. 

15 miles to windward and return— 30 miles. 



' TTwnraiaml t Disqanlmed lor fouling •• Defender/' t Withdrew on crossing the line. | Carried away topmast and withdrew.* 

(d. n.o.) 



.£g8 



YAK— YAKUTSK 



YAK, the wild (and domesticated) ox of the Tibetan plateau; 
a species nearly allied to tbe bison group. The yak, Bos 
(Poepkagus) grunnieus, is one of the finest and largest of the 
wild oxen, characterized by the growth of long shaggy hair on 
the flanks and under parts of the body and the well-known bushy 
tail. In Europe a false impression of the yak is prevalent, owing 
to the fact that all the specimens imported have belonged either 
to a small domesticated breed from Darjiling, or to half-breeds; 
the latter being generally black and white, instead of the uniform 




Domesticated Yak, Bos (P6epha[us) trunniens. 



black of the pure-bred and wild animal. None of such half- 
breeds can compare with the magnificent half-tamed animals 
kept by the natives of the elevated Rupsu plateau, S. of the 
Indus, where they afford the only means of transport by this 
route between Ladak and India. But even these are inferior 
to the wild yak, which stands nearly 6 ft. at the shoulder, 
and is absolutely confined to the arid central plateau of Tibet. 
Yak have the great disadvantage that they will not eat corn, 
and the large pure-bred animals will not live at low elevations. 
The tails are used in India as fly-whisks, under the name of 
chowris. The title of "grunting ox" properly belongs only 
to the domesticated breed. 

YAKUB KHAN (1840- ), ex-amir of Afghanistan, son of 
the amir Shere Ah", was born in 1849. He showed great ability 
at an early age, and was made governor of Herat by his father, 
but broke into open rebellion against him in 1870, and was 
imprisoned in 1874 in Kabul. However, when Shore Ali in 1878 
fled before the British, he handed over the government to Yakub, 
who, on his father's death in the following February, was pro- 
claimed amir, and signed a treaty of peace with the British at 
Gandamak. He agreed to receive a British resident, and was in 
turn to receive a subsidy and support against foreign attack. 
But in September of the same year his revolted troops attacked 
the British residency, and the resident, Sir Louis Cavagnari, 
and his staff and suite were cut to pieces. This outrage was 
instantly avenged, for in October Earl (then Sir Frederick) 
Roberts with a large force defeated the Afghans on the 6th and 
took possession of Kabul on the 12th. Yakub Khan thereupon 
abdicated, took refuge in the British camp; and was sent to India 
on the 13th of December. 

1 YAKU-SHIMA, an island belonging to Japan, lying S. of Kiu- 
shiu, in 30° 30/ N. and 130 30' E. It is an irregular pentagon, 
14 m. in width and the same in length. It is separated from 
Tanega-shima by the Vincennes Strait (Yaku-kaiky6), 12} m. 
wide, and its surface is broken by lofty mountains, of which 
Yae-dakc rises to a height of 651 5 ft., and Eboshi-dake to a height 
of 4846 ft. It is covered with dense forest, in which are some 
of th e finest cryptomeria in Japan, known as Yahu-sugi. 

YAKUTSK, a province of E. Siberia, including nearly the 
whole of the basin of the Lena, and covering an area of 1,530,253 
iq.m.. It has th^ *— : - n on the N. f the governments of 



Yeniseisk and Irkutsk on the W., and Irkutsk and Amur 00 
the S., and is separated from the Pacific (Sea of Okhotsk) by 
the narrow Maritime Province. The Vitim plateau, 2500 to 
3500 ft. in altitude, bordered on the S.E. by the Stanovoi Moun- 
tains, occupies the S.E. portion of the province. Its moist, 
elevated valleys, intersected by ranges of flat, dome-shaped 
hills, which rise nearly 1000 ft. above the plateau, form an 
immense desert of forest and marsh, visited only by Tungus 
hunters, save in the S.W., where there are a few gold-mining 
settlements. The high border-ridge of the plateau (see Siberia) 
stretches from the South Muya Mountains towards the N.E., 
thus compelling the river Aldan to make a great bend in 
that direction. An alpine country skirts the plateau all 
along its N.W. margin, and contains productive gold-mines 
in the spurs between the Vitim and the Lena. The. latter 
stream drains the outer base of this alpine region. It is a wild 
land, traversed by several chains of mountains, ail having a 
N.E. strike, and intersected by deep, narrow valleys, down 
which the mountain-streams tumble uncontrolled. The whole 
is clothed with dense forests, through which none but the 
Tunguses can find their way. The summits of tbe mountains, 
4000 to 6000 ft., mostly rise above the limits of tree vegetation, 
but in no case pass the snow-line. The summits and slopes 
alike are strewn with dibris of crystalline rock, mostly hidden 
under thick incrustations of lichens, amid which the larch 
alone is able to find sustenance. Birch and aspen grow on 
the lower slopes; and in the narrow valley bottoms thickets 
of poplar and willow or patches of grass spring up on the 
scanty alluvium. All the necessaries of life for the gold-diggings 
have to be shipped from Irkutsk down the Lena, and deposited 
at entrepdts, whence they are transported in winter by means 
of reindeer to their destination. A line drawn from the mouth 
Of the Vitim N.E.. towards that of the Aldan separates the 
mountain regions from the elevated plains (1500 to sooo ft.) 
which fringe the highlands all the way from the upper Lena 
to Verkhne-Kolymsk, and probably to. the mouth of the 
Kolyma. Vast meadows, sometimes marshy, extend over these 
plains in the S.W.; farther N. mosses and lichens are the 
predominant vegetation. The surface is much furrowed by 
rivers and diversified by mountain-chains (Verkhoyansk, 
Kolymsk and Alazeya) about the real character of which little 
is known. Beyond the elevated plains vast tundras, carpeted 
with mosses and lichens, stretch to tbe shores of the ice-bound 



The Arctic coasf is indented by several bays — Borlchaya and 
Yana E. of the Lena delta, and Omulakh, Kolyma and Chaun still 
farther. E. The islands fall into three groups— the Lyakhov. the 
Anjou or New Siberian and the De Long islands. The Medvyezhie 
(Bear) Islands off the Kolyma and the two Ayun Islands in Chaun 
Bay are merely littoral. Wrangel Land seems to be the outer 
island of a great and as yet unknown archipelago. Every year a 
narrow passage close to the coast is left almost free of ice, enabling 
a ship or two sometimes to reach tbe estuary of the Yenisei, or even 
the delta of the Lena: 

The great artery of Yakutsk, the Lena, rises on the W. slope of 
the Baikal Mountains, dose to Lake Baikal. About 60* ft. it 
receives from the right its first great tributary, the Vitim (1250 m. 
in length), which is navigable by steamers in its lower course. The 
Olckma (700 m.) is navigable only in the very lowest part of its 
course, and the Aldan (1155 m.) is navigated from Ust-Maysk. 
On the left is the Vilyui (1300 m.), which has an immense drainage 
area on the lower plains, and has been navigated since 1887. The 
lower course of the Lena is subject to terrible inundations when 
the ice breaks up on its upper reaches. The Olenek (1200 m.). 
which enters the Arctic Ocean to the W. of the Lena, is also a con* 
siderable river; the Yana (750 m.). Indigirka (050) and Kolyma 
(1 100) all rise in the mountain region between 61* and 6a* N., and 
flow N. and N.E. into the Arctic Ocean. 

The granites, granitic syenites and gneisses of the high plateau 
are wrapped about by a variety of crystalline slates, Huronmn and 
Laurent ian ; and Silurian and Devonian limestones and sandstones 
extend over vast areas. Farther N. the Carboniferous, Cretaceous 
and Jurassic formations are spread over a wide region, and the 



whole is covered with Glacial deposits in the highlands and with 
post-Glacial elsewhere. The mineral wealth of YaF * ' 

great: but gold and salt (obtained from springs) onL 

Coal has been discovered on the Vilyui ana on the lower Lena. 



t: but gold and salt (obtained from springs) only are_n 
1 has been discovered on the Vilyui ana on the lower LtOL 
Yakutsk has unparalleled extremes of cold and heat. At 



YAKUTSK— YALE UNIVERSITY 



899 



Verkhoyansk on the Yam (67* 34' N. and 134* »' E,), trot* of 
-795 F- have been observed, and the avenge temperature of the 
three winter month* is —MI*; even that of March only U little 
above the freering-poiot ofmercury (— 37-Q*). Neither Ust-Yansk 
(70 s 53' N., but close to the tern coast) nor Yakutsk, nor even the polar 
station of Sagastyr at the mouth oC the Una (73* 33' N;), hat a 
winter ao cold ana to protracted. And yet at Sagaityr temperatures 
of -63-6* have been obterved. and the average temperature of 
February is only —43*6°. At Yakutsk the average temperature of 
the winter it -40*» . and the toil is frosen to a depth of 600 ft. 
(MkJdendorff). The Lena, both at Kirentk and at Yakutsk, is 
free from ice for only 161 days in the year, the Yana at Ust»Yansk 
for 103. At Yakutsk only 145 days and at Verkhoyansk only 73 
have no snow; the interval between the latest frosts of one 
season and the earliest frosts of the next is barely 37 days. 

The bulk of the inhabitants are Yakuts; there are some 
20,000 Russians, many of them exiles, ana a certain number 
of Tunguses, Tatars, LamuU and Chukchis. The estimated 
pop. in xoo6 was 300,600. The Yakuts belong to the 
Turkish stock, and speak a dialect of Turkish, with an ad- 
mixture of Mongolian words. They call themselves SokJba or 
Sakbov (pL Sokhalar or Sakhalov), their present name having 
been borrowed by the Russians from the Tunguses, who call 
them Yeko or Yekot. Most probably they once inhabited 
S. Siberia, especially the upper Yenisei, where a Tatar tribe 
calling itself Sakha still survives in Minusinsk. They are 
middle-sized, have dark and rather narrow, eyes, a broad 
flat nose, thick black hair and little beard. They are very 
laborious and enterprising, and display in schools much more 
intelligence than the Tunguses or Buryats. Their implements 
show a great degree of skill and some artistic taste. They 
live in log yurtas or huts, with small windows, into which 
plates of ice or pieces of skin are inserted instead of glass. 
During summer they abandon their wooden dwellings and 
encamp in conical tents of birch bark. Their food is chiefly 
flesh, and they drink kumiss, or mares' milk. Though nearly 
all are nominally Christians, they retain much of their original 
Shamanism. Their settlements are now steadily advancing 
S. into the hunting domains of the Tunguses, who give way 
before their superior civilization. 

The province is divided into five' districts, the chief towns 
of which are Yakutsk, Olekminsk, Sredne-Korymsk, Verk- 
hoyansk and Vfluisk. Though the production of gold from 
gold washings has been on the decrease, over 15,000 workers 
are employed in the Olekma and Vitim gold-mines. Only 
43,000 acres are under crops, chiefly barley.- Most of the 
inhabitants are engaged in live-stock breeding, and keep rein- 
deer and sledge-dogs. Fish is an important artidcLof food, especi- 
ally in the Kolyma region. In the N. hunting is important, 
the skins taken being principally those of squirrels, ermines, 
hares, foxes, Arctic foxes, and a few sables, beavers and bears. 

The principal channel of communication is the Lena. As 
soon as the spring arrives, scores of boats are built at 
Kachungsk, Verkholensk and UstJIginsk, and the goods brought 
on sledges In winter from the capital of Siberia, including con- 
siderable amounts of corn and salt meat, are shipped down 
the river. A few steamers descend to the delta of the Lena,- and 
return with cargoes of fish and furs. Cattle are brought from 
Transbaikalia. Two routes, mere horse-tracks, radiate from 
Yakutsk to Ayan and to Okhotsk. Manufactured goods and 
groceries are imported to Yakutsk by the former. 

See F. Thieas, Das Cowtrnement Jakutsk in Ostsitirien, in PWr> 
menn's Mitialvngen (1807), and Maydetl, JUisen und /srjdbstffns 
im JakuUkudun Getter tsj Oslsibiricn (St Petersburg, a vols., 1805- 
1896). (P. A. K.; J. T. Be.) 

YAKUTSK, a town of Asiatic Russia, capital of the province 
of the same name, in 6a* a' N. and tao* 4V £•* 1165 m. N.E. 
of Irkutsk, on a branch of the Lena. Pop. about 7000. 
The old fort is destroyed, except its five wooden towers. The 
wooden houses are built upon high basements to protect them 
from the floods. Yakutsk possesses a theological seminary and 
a cathedral. Its merchants carry on trade in furs, mammoth 
ivory an d reindee r hides. The town was founded in 1633. 

YALE TJinVERSrTY, the third oldest university in the United 
States, at New Haven, 



The founders of the New Haven colony, like those of Massa- 
chusetts Bay, cherished the establishment of a college as an 
essential part of their ideal of a Christian state, of which educa- 
tion and religion should be the basis and the chief fruits. New 
Haven since 1644 had contributed annually to the support of 
Harvard College, but the distance of the Cambridge school from 
southern New England seemed in those days considerable; and 
a separate educational establishment was also called for by a 
divergent development in politics and theology. Yale was 
founded by ministers selected by the churches of the colony, as 
President Thomas Clap said, to the end that they might " educate 
ministers in our own way.'? Though " College land " was set 
apart in 1647, 1 Yale College had its actual beginning in 1700 when 
a few clergymen met in the New Haven with the purpose " to 
stand as trustees or undertakers to found, erect and govern the 
College 11 for which at various times donations of books and 
money had been made. The forma] establishment was in 1701. 
The Connecticut legislature in October granted a charter which 
seems to have been partly drafted by Judge Samuel Sewall of 
Boston; the Mather family also were among, those in Boston 
who welcomed and laboured for the establishment of a seminary 
of a stricter theology than Harvard, and the ten* clergymen who 
were the founders and first trustees of the College were graduates 
of Harvard. 

The legislature, fearful of provoking' in England attention 
either to the new school or to the powers used in chartering it, 
assumed merely to license a " collegiate school," and made its 
powers of conferring degrees as unobtrusive as possible. In 
170a the teaching of Yale began. In the early years the 
upper students studied where the rector lived, and considerable 
groups of the lower students were drawn off by their tutors to 
different towns. In 1716 the trustees purchased a Jot in New 
Haven, and in the next year the College was established thereby 
the legislature. Commencement was held at New Haves in the 
same year, but the last of the several student bodies did not 
disband until 1719. The school did not gain a name until the 
completion of the first building in 1718. This had been made 
possible by a gift from Elihu Yale (1640-1731), a native of 
Boston and son of. one of the original settlers of New Haven; 
he had anumed great wealth in India, where he was g ov er nor 
of the East India Company's settlement at Madras. The trustees 
accordingly named it Yale College in his honour. 

The charter of 170s stated that the end of the school was the 
instruction of youth " in the art* and sciences," that they might 
be fitted " lor public employment, both in church and xrvfl 
state." To the clergy, however, who controlled the College, 
theology was the basis, security and test of " arts and sciences." 
In 172a the rector, Timothy Cutler, was dismissed because of 
a leaning toward Episcopacy. Various special tests were em- 
ployed to preserve the doctrinal purity of Calvinism among the 
instructors; that of the students wss carefully looked after. In 
1753 a stringent test was fixed by the Corporation to ensure the 
orthodoxy of the teachers. This was abolished in 1778. From 
1808 to 18x8 the President and tutors were obliged to signify 
assent to a general formulation of orthodox belief. % When 
George Whitefield, in 1740, initiated by his preaching the 
" Great Awakening," a local schism resulted in Connecticut 
between "Old Lights "and "New Lights." When the^CoUege 
set up an independent church the Old Lights made the contention 
that the College did not owe its foundation to the original 
trustees, but to the first charter granted by the legislature, 
which might therefore<control the College. Thisdaim President 
Clap triumphantly controverted (1763), but Yale fell in con- 
sequence under popular distrust, and her growth was delayed 
by the shutting off of financial aid from the legislature. 

By the first charter (1701) the trustees of the College 
were requi r ed to be ministers (for a long time, practically, 

1 In 1668 the Hopkins Grammar School, next after the Boston 
Latin School the oldest educational institution of this grade in the 
United States, was established in New Haven. 

•Thb number was increased to eleven, the full number allowed 
by taw charter, wHbia a month after k was granted. 



goo 



YALE UNIVERSITY 



Congregationalists) residing in Ibe colony, By a supplementary 
act of 1733 the rector was made ex-officio a trustee. By a second 
charter (1745) ample powers were conferred upon the president 
(rector) and fellows, constituting together a governing board or 
Corporation. This charter is still in force. In 1792 the governor 
and lieutenant-governor of the state, and six state senators, 
were made exoffido members of the Corporation. In 187a the 
six senators were replaced by six graduates, chosen by the alumni 
body. The clerical element still constitutes one half of the 
Corporation. In the first half of the 19th century, under the 
lead of Nathaniel W. Taylor (?.».), the Divinity School of Yale 
became nationally prominent for " Taylorism " or " New Haven 
Theology." Daily attendance at prayers is still required of all 
college students. 

The first college professorship established was that of divinity 
(1755), which, in a sense, was the beginning of extra-college 
or university work. The theological department was not 
organized as a distinct school until 1822. In 1770 a second 
professorship was established, of mathematics and natural 
philosophy. Timothy Dwight (president, 1795-18x7) planned 
the establishment of professional schools; his term saw the 
foundation of the Medical School (1813) besides the Divinity 
School. In 1803 a chair was created for Benjamin Siltiman, Sr. 
(1 779-1864) in chemistry and natural history; English grammar 
and geography did not disappear from the curriculum until 
1826, nor arithmetic until 1830; political economy was intro- 
duced in 1825, and modern languages (French) in the same 
year. Not until 1847 did modern history receive separate 
recognition. The library had been given the status of an 
independent department in 1843. Compulsory commons were 
abolished in 1842, thus removing one feature of a private 
boarding schooL Corporal punishment ("cuffing" of the 
offender's ears by the President) had disappeared before the 
War of Independence; and so also had the custom of printing 
the students' names according to their social rank, and using 
a " degradation " in precedence as punishment; while Dwight 
abolished the ancient custom of fagging, and the undemocratic 
system of fines that enabled a rich student to live as he pleased 
at the expense only of his pocket. The School of Law was 
established in 1843. Instruction to graduates in non-profes- 
sional courses seems to have been begun in 1826. The appoint- 
ment of Edward E. Salisbury to the chair of Arabic and Sanskrit 
(1841) was the first provision at Yale for the instruction of 
graduates by professors independent of the College. About the 
same time graduate instruction in chemistry became important. 
(In 1846 also a chair of agricultural chemistry was established — 
the first in the country.) In 1846 an extra-College department 
of Philosophy and Arts was created, conferring degrees since 
1852; and from this were separated in 1854 the sciences, which 
were entrusted to a separate Scientific School, the original 
promoter of agricultural experiment stations in the United 
States. Since that time this school and the College have 
developed much as complementary and coordinate schools of 
undergraduates, Yale affording in this respect a very marked 
contrast with Harvard. Graduate instruction was concentrated 
in 1 87 1 into a distinct Graduate School This with the three 
traditional professional schools— the Art School, established 
in 1866 (instruction since 1869), and the first university art 
school of the country, the Music School, established in 1894 
(instruction since 1890), and the Forest School, established in 
1900— make up the University, around the College. For the 
founding of the Peabody Museum of Natural History, George 
Peabody, of London, contributed 8150,000 in 1866. The 
Observatory, devoted exclusively to research, was established 
in 1871. In 1887 the name Yale " University " was adopted. 
The organic unity of the -whole was then recognized by throwing 
open to' students of any department the advantages of all. In 
1886, for the first time, a president was chosen who was not of the 
Cottage faculty, but from the University faculty. 

Ofttt'as were the changes in the metamorphosis of old Yale, 
qgM|B£.inorc influence upon its real and inner life than the 
fflpi titer- 1 ' "- freedom accorded .the students in 



the selection of their studies. In 1854 there was in election 
permissible until late in the Junior year. In 1876, 1884 and 
1893 such freedom was greatly extended. In 1892 the work of 
the Graduate School was formally opened to women (some pro* 
lessors having admitted them for years past by special consent). 
Yale was the first college in New England to take this step. 

The buildings number sixty-four in all. Connecticut Hall 
J 740-52), long known as South Middle College, a plain I ' 
building, is the only remainder of the colonial style (restored, t< 



(1750-52), long known as South Middle College, a plain brick 
building, is the only remainder of the colonial style (restored. 
Around it are fourteen buildings forming a quadrangle 
College campus on the W. side of the New Haven Green, between 



ed, 1905). 

le on the 



Elm and Chapel Streets. The oldest are the Old Library (184*) 
and Alumni Hall (1853). Others are the Art School (1864), Taraam 
Hall (1869), Darfee Hall (1870), Uwrance Hall (1886), BarteJl 
Chapel (1876), Osborn Hall (1689). Vanderbilt Hall (1894), Chit- 
tenden Hall (1888) and Linsly HaU (1908). Dwight Hall, erected 
in 1886 for the Yale University Christian Association, Welch Hall 
(1892) and Phelps Hall complete the quadrangle. Across from 
the w, side of the quadrangle is the Peabody Museum (1876). 
On the N. side of Elm Street is a row of buildings, including the 
Gymnasium (1842). the Divinity School (1870) and the Law 
School (1897). University Avenue leads N. from the College campus 
to the University court or campus, on which are the Bicentennial 
Buildings (1901-2), £. and N.E. of the University court are 
the buildings of the Sheffield Scientific School. Farther N.E. are 
the Observatory, Hammond Metallurgical Laboratory, Forestry 
Building and Infirmary, and to the S.W. of the CoHege campus 
are the Medical School and University Clinic 

The University is organized in four departments — Philosophy 
and the Arts, Theology, Medicine, and Law— each with a distinct 
faculty. The first embraces the Academical Department (College), 
the Sheffield Scientific School,— named in honour of Joseph Earn 
Sheffield (1793-1882), a generous benefactor,— the School of the 
Fine Arts, the Department of Music, the Graduate School and 
the Forest School, founded in 1900 by a gift of $150,000 from 
J. W. Pinchot and his wife. Other institutions u i gauu cd inde- 
pendently of any one department are: the Library, the Peabody 
Museum of Natural History, the Astronomical Observatory and 
the Botanical Garden, established in 1900 on the estate of Professor 
O. C. Marsh. The special treasures of the Library include the 
» - - ~ - • • • ' Oriental 1 ' 



classical libruy of Ernst Curtius; the collection of ( . 

and manuscripts made by Edward E. Salisbury (.814-1901); the 
Chinese library of Samuel Wells Williams (1812-1884); ajapaneso 
collection of above 3000 volumes; the Scandinavian horary of 
Count Riant; the .collection of Arabic manuscripts made by 



Count Landberg; the political science collection of Robert von 
; a copy of Newton's Principia presented to the College by 



Mohl: 



the author; manuscripts of Jonathan Edwards; and large pans 
of a gift of nearly a thousand volumes given to Yale in 1733 by 
Bishop George Berkeley, who also gave to the College his American 
farm, as a basis .of a scholarship, the first established in America. 
The Library is especially stroiuY in the departments of American 
history, medieval history and English dramatic literature. Its 
total number of volumes in 19 10 was nearly 600,000, exclusive of 
many thousand pamphlets. The Peabody Museum contains an un- 
rivalled collection of Silurian trilobhes; a fine collection of pseudo- 
morphs; a beautiful collection of Chinese artistic work in stone 
made by Samuel Wells Williams; a notable mineralogies! collec- 
tion; a fine collection of meteorites made by Professor Hubert 
Anson Newton (1830-1896); and the magnificent palaeontological 
collection of Professor O. C. Marsh. The School of the Fine Arts 
p offi fss es the Jarvcs gallery of Italian art, a remarkable collection 
of Italian " primitives " dating from the nth to the I7th century; 
the Aldcn collection of Belgian wood-carvings, of the I7t£ 
century; and a large collection of modern paintings among which 
arc fifty-four pictures by John Trumbull. The organization of 
the Trumbull collection in 1831 was the first step taken in the 
United States toward the introduction of the fine arts into a 
university. The equipment of the Observatory consists principally 
of a six-inch heliometer by Repsold, an eight-inch equatorial by 
Grubb, and two sets of equatorially mounted cameras for photo- 
graphing meteors. 

In the College and the Medical School four years are required 
to complete the course of instruction; in the Divinity School and 
the Law School, three years; in the Forest School, two years; 
and in the Scientific School there are both three-year and five-year 
courses, five years being required for all engineering degrees. Ad* 
mission to the College is gained only by passing an examination in 
Latin, Greek or substitutes for Greek, French or German, English, 
mathematics and ancient history. Admission to the Scientific 
School Is also only by examination. Substantially the equivalent 
of a college degree is required for admission to the Divinity 
School, but the Medical School and the Law School require only 
two years of college work, and a student may obtain a degree 
from Yale College and a degree in divinity* medicine or law in 
six years. The Forest School, with an extensive equipment at 
New Haven and a Forest Experiment Station < 



*i 



YALTA— YAM 



901 



es 



too acres of forest and open bad at Milford, Piks county, Pennsyl- 
vania— the estate of J. W. Pinchot— is open only to such graduates 
of colleges and scientific schools* as have had a suitable scientific 
training, especially in advanced botany. It confers die degree 
off Master of Forestry. 

In the College the individual courses are arranged in twenty-six 
roups within three divisions, and each studeat must complete 
jefore graduation both a major and a minor in some one 01 the 
three divisions and one minor in each of the other two divisions. 
In the Freshman and Sophomore years the student's freedom of 
election is further restricted. In the Scientific School there is a 
somewhat different system of groups. The College confers only 
the degree of Bachelor of Arts, but the Scientific School confers 
the degre es of Bachelos of Philosophy. Master of Science (requiring 
at least one year of resident graduate study), and the engineering 
degrees. In the Divinity School the student has the choice of three 
courses— the historical, the philosophical and the practical— or, by 
the use of elective*, he may combine the three; the study of Hebrew 
is required only in the historical course. In the Law School there 
is one course for candidates for the degree of Bachelor of Laws and 
another for candidates for the degree of Bachelor of Civil Law, the 
latter requiring the study of Roman law and allowing the sub- 
stitution of certain studies in political science for some of the law 
subjects. The Graduate School confers the degrees of Master of 
Art* and Doctor of Philosophy; the School of Music, the degree 
of Bachelor of Music; and the School of Fine Arts, which is open 
to both sexes, the degree of Bachelor of the Fine Arts. 

In 1910 the body of officers and instructors in all departments 
numbered 496, and the students 3312. 

In addition to the regular work of the departments there are 
several lecture courses open to all students of the University. 
Among them are : the Dodge Lectures on the Responsibilities of 
Citizenship X1900); the Bromley Lectures on Journalism, Litera- 
ture and Public Affairs (1900); the Lyman Bcechcr Lectures on 
Preaching (1871); the Silliman Memorial Lectures (18*4) on 
subjects connected with "the natural and moral world"; the 
Stanley Woodward Lectures (1907) by distinguished foreigners: 
the Harvard Lectures (1905) by members of the faculty of Harvard 
University; the Sheffield Lectures on scientific subjects; and 
the Medical Alumni Lectures. 

The principal publications with which the University is more 
or less closely associated are: The Yale Review, a Quarterly Journal 
for the Scientific Discussion of Economic, Political and Social 
Questions, edited by Professors in Political Science and History; 
the Yale Law Journal, edited by a board of students; the Yale 
Medical Journal, edited by members of the Medical Faculty with 
the assistance of a board of students; the Yale Alumni Weekly; 
and the Yale News,*, daily paper managed by the students. The 
Yale Bicentennial Publications contain reprints of Research Paters 
from the Kent Chemical Laboratory, Studies t« Physiological Chemistry 
and Contributwns to Mineralogy and Petrography. Numerous 
other publications of the Yale University Press are issued only 
with the approval of the University. 

In addition to several million dollars invested fn tands and build- 
ings the University possessed at the end of 1909 productive funds 
amooatlng to $10,561,830 (in 1886, $2,111,000). The income 
from all sources for the year 1908-9, exclusive of benefactions 
(fx 469,9.1s)* was $1,240,208. Up to 1908 more than three-fourths 
of all the University buildings had been erected as private gifts; 
the rest were built with College funds, or from legislative grants. 

Yale shares with its fellow colleges founded in colonial days 
the advantages of old traditions and social prestige. In par- 
ticular H shared these with Harvard so long as New England 
retained its literary and intellectual dominance over the rest of 
the country. But the spirit of the two institutions has always 
been very different. Harvard has on the whole been radical and 
progressive; Yale conservative. Yale could not draw, like 
Harvard, on the leaders of the New England schools of letters 
and philosophy to fill her professorial chairs. Her " compara- 
tive poverty, the strength of college feelings and traditions" 
(President Hadley) united with the lesser stimulus of her 
intellectual environ men t to delay her development. Harvard's 
transformation into a modern university was more spontaneous 
and rapid; Yale remained much longer under the dominance of 
collegiate traditions. But, according to Dr Charles F. Thwing 
(The American College in American Life, New York, 1897), of the 
men filling " the highest political and judicial offices," and coming 
from American colleges founded before 17701. Yale had helped 
(up to. 1897) *o train the largest number. On the roll of her 
alumni are such names as Philip Livingston. Di Whitney. John 
C. Calhoun, James Kent, Samuel F. B. Morse, Chief Justice 
Morrison R. Waite and President Taft. 

The Presidents have been at follows: in 1701-1707, Abraham 



Pierson (1645-1707); pro tern. 1707-17 19, Samuel Andrew 
(1656-1737); In 1719-1722, Timothy Cutler (1684-1765); in 
1722-1726, office filled by the College trustees in rotation; in 
1726-1739* Elisha Williams (1694-1755); in 1730-1766, Thomas 
Clap (1703-1767); Pro tern. 1766-1777, Naphtali Daggett (1727- 
1780); in I777-I79S* Erra Stiles (1727-1795); in 1705-1817, 
Timothy Dwight (1753-1817); in 1817-1846, Jeremiah Day 
(1773-1867); in 1846-1871, Theodore Dwight Wootsey (1801- 
1889); in i87i«-x886, Noah Porter (181 1-1892); in 1886- 
1809, Timothy Dwight (b. 1828); and Arthur Twining Hadley 
(b. 1856). 

See Universities and their Sons (Boston, 5 vols., 1 898-1900); 
Charles E. Norton, Arthur T. Hadley et aL.Four American Uni- 
nersitms (New York, 1893); Timothy Dwight, Memories of Yale 
Ufe and Men, 1845-1890 (New York, 19031; Franklin Bowditch* 
Dexter, Shetch of the History of Yale University (New York, 1887). 
and Biographical Sketches of Yale College mth Annals of the College 
History, 1701-170* (New York, 4 vols., 1885-1907); B. C Steiner. 
The History of Education in Connecticut, Circular of Information 
No. a oi the United States Bureau of Education (Washington. 
1893): L. S. Welch and Walter Camp, Yale, Her Campus, Class 
Room and Athletics (Boston, 1899); Charles Franklin Thwing, A 
History of Higher Education in America (New York, 1906). 

YALTA, a seaport of Russia, in the government of Taurida, 
on the S. coast of the Crimea, at the foot of the Yaila Mountains, 
32 m. S. of Simferopol. Pop. 13,269. It is the CaNto or Jalita 
of the Arab geographers. Its roadstead is open, and the 
annual mean temperature b 56*5° F. The town is a fashion- 
able summer resort. 

YAM, a term usually applied to the tubers of various species 
of Dioscorea. These are plants with thick tubers (generall. 
a development of the base of the stem), from which pro- 
trude long, slender, annual climbing stems, bearing alternate 
or opposite, entire 
or lobed leaves and 
unisexual flowers in 
long clusters. The 
flowers are gene- 
rally small and 
individually incon- 
spicuous, though ; 
collectively showy. 
Each consists of a 
greenish bell-shaped 
or flat perianth of 
sis pieces, enclosing 
six or fewer stamens 
in the male flowers, 
and surmounting a 
three-celled, three- 
winged ovary in the 
female flowers. The 
ovary ripens into a 
membranous cap- 
sule, bursting by 
three valves to 
liberate numerous 
flattbh or globose 
seeds. The spedes 
are natives of the 
warmer regions of 
both hemispheres. 
According to Professor Church's analysis of the Chinese yam, it 
contains more nitrogenous matter, but less starch, than 
potatoes: fn too pans there are of water 82-6, starch 13*1, 
albumen 2*4, fat 0-2, woody fibre 0*4 and mineral matter 
!-3 parts. 

D sattva and D alata are the species most widely diffused in 
tropical and subtropical countries. D. acukata, grown in India, 
Cochin China and the South Sea Islands, it one of the best varieties. 
D Batatas, the Chinese yam. is hardy in Great Britain ( but the great 
depth to which its enormous tubers descend renders its cultivation 
unprofitable. It has deeply penetrating, thick, dub-shaped, fleshy 
roots, full of starch, which when cooked acquire a mild taste like 
that of a potato ; they grow 3 ft. or upwards in length, and sometimes 




Yam (Dioscorea Batatas). Branch about 
\ nat. size. Root much reduced. 



qoi 



YAMA— YANG-CHOW FU 



weigh mom than i^ ft». The plant grows freely in deep sandy 
floilT moderately enriched. The sets, consisting of pieces of the 
roots, may be planted in March or April, and require no other 
culture than the staking of the, climbing stems. They should not 
be dug up before November, the chief increase in their size taking 
place in autumn. They sometimes strike downwards a or 3 ft. 
into the soil, and must be carefully dug out, the upper slender 
part being reserved for propagation, and the lower fleshy portion 
eaten after having been allowed a few days to dry. The tubers of 
D, data sometimes weigh 100 m. Most of the yams contain an 
acrid principle, which is dissipated in cooking. 

The only European Dioscorea is that known as D. pyrenaica, 
a native 01 the Pyrenees, a remarkable instance of a species growing 
at a long distance from all its congeners. True yams must not 
be confounded with the sweet potato, Ipomoea Batatas, as they 
sometimes are in London markets. The common black bryony 
(Tamus communis) of hedges in England is closely allied to the 
yams of the tropics, and has a similar root-stock, which is reputed 
to be poisonous. 

For the history of the yam, and its cultivation and uses in India, 
see G. Watt, Dictionary of the Economic Products of India, ui. (1890). 

YAMA (Sanskrit "twin," in allusion to his being twin with 
his sister Yami, traditionally the first human pair), in Hindu 
mythology, judge of men and king of the unseen world. He 
was the first mortal to die, and having discovered the way to the 
other world is the guide of the dead. Three hymns in the Rig 
Veda are addressed to him. 

YAMAGATA. ARITOMO, Prince (1838- ), Japanese 
field-marshal, was born in Choshu. He began life as an ordinary 
samurai and rose steadily in reputation and rank, being created 
a count in 1884, a marquess in 1895 (after the war with China) 
and a prince in 1007 (after the war with Russia). He twice 
held the post of premier, and was the leader of Japanese con- 
servatism, being a staunch opponent of party cabinets. 

YAMBOU, a town of Bulgaria, on the river Tunja, 49 m. W. 
of Burgas by rail. Pop. (1906) 15,708. It has a large agricul- 
tural trade, being situated in the centre of one of the chief corn 
districts. In the town are the remains of old fortifications, and 
the ruins of a fine mosque. The bacdan, or old market-house, 
is entire, but is now used as a military magazine. An ancient 
Macedonian town lay some 4 m. N., but Yamboli is first men- 
tioned in the nth century, when it was known by the Byzan- 
tines as Dampolis or Hyampolis. 

YAMnTHlN, a town and district in the Meiktila division of 
Upper Burma. The town has a station on the railway 27s m. 
N. of Rangoon. Pop. (1001) 8680. It is an important centre 
of trade with the Shan States, The district lies between the 
Shan States and the Meiktila, Magwe and Toungoo districts; 
area, 4258 sq. m.; pop. (1901) 343,197, showing an increase 
of 18% in the decade. The staple crop is rice, which is irrigated 
from tanks and canals. Millets and oil-seeds are grown in the 
N., where drought has more than once caused distress. There 
are special industries of inlaid metal- work and ornamental 
pottery. Besides the chief town, Pyinmana and Pyawbwe, 
both also on the railway, cany on an active trade with the Shan 
States. 

YAMAON, or Yanam, a French settlement In India, near the 
mouth of the river Godavari, within the Godavari district of 
Madras. It is situated in 16* 44' N. and 82° 13' E.; area, 
5 sq. m.; pop. (1901) 5005. Yanaon was founded about 1750, 
and followed the vicissitudes of French history in S. India. It 
was finally restored to the French by the treaty of 1815. 

YAHCBY, WILLIAM LOWKDES (1814-1863), American 
political leader, son of Benjamin Cudworth Yancey, an able 
lawyer of South Carolina, of Welsh descent, was born near the 
Falls of the Ogeechee, Warren county, Georgia, on the 10th of 
August 18x4. After his father's death in 181 7, his mother 
remained and removed to Troy, New York. Yancey attended 
Williams College for one year, studied law at Greenville, South 
Carolina, and was admitted to the bar. As editor of ihe Green- 
ville (South Carolina) Momtiaumr (1834-3$). «* ardently 
opposed nullification. In 1835 he married a wealthy woman, 
tad in the winter of 1836-1837 removed to her plantation in 
Atfnms, near Cahaba (Dallas county), and edited weekly papers 
■n end in Wetumpka (Elmore county), his summer home, 
■imr — 2-*inf of his slaves in 1830 forced aim 10 



devote himself entirely to law and Journalism; he was now an 
impassioned advocate of State's Rights and supported Van Buren 
in the presidential campaign of 1840. He was elected in 1841 
to the state House of Representatives, in which he served for 
one year; became state senator in 1843, and in 1844 was elected 
to the national House of Representatives to fiH a vacancy, being 
re-elected in 1845. In Congress his ability and his unusual ora- 
torical gifts at once gained recognition. In 1846, however, he 
resigned his seat, partly on account of poverty, and partly 
because of his disgust with the Northern Democrats, whom he 
accused of sacrificing their principles to their economic interests. 
His entire energy was now devoted to the task of exciting 
resistance to anti-slavery aggression. In 1848 he secured the 
adoption by the state Democratic convention of the so-called 
" Alabama Platform," which was endorsed by the legislatures 
of Alabama and Georgia and by Democratic state conventions 
in Florida and Virginia, declaring that it was the duty of Congress 
not only to allow slavery in all the territories but to protect it, 
that a territorial legislature could not exclude it, and that the 
Democratic party should not support for president or vice* 
president a candidate "not . . . openly and unequivocally 
opposed to either of the forms of excluding slavery from the 
territories of the United States mentioned in these resolutions." 
When the conservative majority in the national Democratic 
convention in Baltimore refused to incorporate his ideas into the 
platform, Yancey with one colleague left the convention and 
wrote an Address to the People of Alabama* defending his course 
and denouncing the cowardice of his associates. Naturally, be 
opposed the Compromise of 1850, and went so far as openly to 
advocate secession; but the conservative element was m control 
of the state. Disappointment of the South with the results of 
" Squatter Sovereignty " caused a reaction in his favour, and in 
1858 he wrote a letter advocating the appointment of committees 
of safely, the formation of a League of United Southerners, 
and the repeal of the laws making the African slave-trade piracy. 
After twelve years' absence from the national conventions of the 
Democratic party, he attended the Charleston convention in 
April i860, and again demanded the adoption of his ideas. 
Defeated by a small majority, he again left the hall, 1 followed this 
time by the delegates of Alabama, Mississippi, Louisiana, South 
Carolina, Florida, Texas, and two of the three delegates from 
Delaware. On the next 'day the Georgia delegation and a 
majority of the Arkansas delegation withdrew. In the Balti- 
more convention of the seceders he advocated the nomination 
of John C. Breckinridge, and he made a tour of the country on his 
behalf. In Alabama he was the guiding spirit in the secession 
convention and delivered the address of welcome to Jefferson 
Davis on his arrival at Montgomery. He refused a place in 
President Davis's cabinet. On the 31st of March 1 861 he sailed 
for Europe as the head of a commission sent to secure recognition 
of the Confederate government, but returned in 186a to take a 
seat in the Confederate Senate, in which he advocated a mm* 
vigorous prosecution of the war. On account of his failing 
health, he left Richmond early in 1863, and on the s?th of Jury 
died at bis home near Montgomery. 

See J. W. Du Bose. Life ami Times of W. I. Yancey (Birmingham. 
Ala.. 1892); W. G. Brown, The Lower Sonik in American Hummy 



(New York, 1002); and Joseph Hodgson. The CmdU of At Cast* 
fedcracy (Mobile; Ala., 1876). 

YAHG-4H0W FU, a prefecture! city in the province of Riang- 
su, China, forming the two distinct cities of Riang-tu and Kan- 
ch'u&n, on the Grand Canal, in 33* ax' N., no* 15* E. Popw 
about 100,000. The walls are between three and four miles in 
circumference. The streets are well supplied with shops, and 
there are handsome temples, colleges, and other public buildings. 
There was a serious religious outbreak in 1868, when Hudson 
Taylor, the founder of the China Inland Mission, opened a station 
here; bnt Yang-chow is now one of the centres of the Protestant 

1 It is probable that Yancey was approached with the offer of the 
vice-presidential nomixiatioa on the Douglas ticket by George N. 
Sanders. There was a movement to nomiante him on the tadmt 



YANGTSZE-KIANG— YAOS 



9<>3 



wiMinnnrin in the province. Yang-chow Fa possesses in early 
historical connexion with foreigners, for Marco Polo ruled over 
It for three yean by appointment from KuMai Khan (?i28a-8s). 
YAMGTSZB-K1AHQ, a great river of China, and the principal 
commercial watercourse of the country. It is formed by the 
junction of a series of small streams draining the E. slopes of the 
Tibetan plateau, and for the- first third of its comae flows almost 
parallel with the Mekong and the Salween, each, however, 
separated from the other by intervening ridges of great height 
The total length of the Yangt&ze is calculated to be not less than 
5000 m. Although the term Yangtsse is applied by Europeans 
to the- whole course of the river, in China it indicates only the 
last three or four hundred miles, where it flows through a division 
of the empire which in ancient time was known as " Yang," a 
name which also survives in the oily of Yang-Chow in the province 
of Kiang-so. The ordinary official name for the whole river is 
Ch'ang Kiang (pronounced in the north, Chiang) or Ta Chiang, 
meaning the " long river " or the M great river." Popularly in 
the upper reaches every section has its local name. As it emerges 
from Tibet into China it is known as the Kinsha Kiang or river 
of Golden Sand, and farther down as the Pai-shui Kiang. In 
Sze-ch'uen, after its junction with the large tributary known as 
the Min, it is for some distance called the Min-kiang, the people 
being of opinion that the Min branch is in fact the main river. 
The fall in the upper reaches is very rapid. At the junction 
of the two main affluents in Upper Tibet, where the river is 
already a formidable torrent barely fordable at low water, 
the altitude is estimated at 13,000 ft. From Patang (8540 ft.) 
to Wa-Wu in Sze-ch'uen (1000 ft.) the fall is about 8 ft. 
per mile, thence to Hwang-kwo-shu (1200 ft.) about 6 ft. per 
mile, and farther down to Pingshan (1030 ft.) the fall is about 
3 ft. per mile. At Pingshan, fn the province of Sxe-ch'uen, 
the river first becomes navigable, and the fall decreases to about 
6 in. per mile down to Chungking (630 ft.). From Chungk'ing 
through the gorges to Ich'ong (130 ft.), a distance of nearly 
400 m., the fall again increases to about 14 in. per mile; but 
from Ich'ang down to the sea, a distance of 1000 m., the fail is 
exceedingly small, being as far as Hankow at the rate of 2} in., 
and from Hankow to the mouth at the rate of little more than 
1 in. per mfle. The last 200 m. are practically a dead level, for 
at low-water season there is a rise of tide enough to swing ships 
as far up as Wuhu, 200 m. from the mouth. 

The principal tributaries, counting from the sea upwards, are: 
1) the outlet from Poyang lake, draining the province of Kiang-si; 



@ 



(2) the Han river, entering on the left bank at Hankow; (3) the 
outlet from Tant ring lake on the right bank, draining the pro- 
vince of Hu'nan; (4) the three great rivers of Sse-ch'uen, the Ki*W , 
the To Kiang and the Min, all entering on the left bonk; and C3) the 
Yahing , draining a vast area on the borderland between Sze-ch'uen 
and Tibet. The whole drainage area is about 650,000 sq. m., of 
which more than four-fifths fie above Hankow. The period of 
low water is from December to March. The melting of the snows 
on the Tibetan highlands combined with the summer rainfall causes 
an annual rise In the river of from 70 to 90 ft. at Chungk'ing and from 
40 to 50 at Hankow and Khikiang. The mean volume of water 
discharged into the sea is estimated at 170/109 cub. ft. per second. 
The quantity of sediment carried in solution and deposited at the 
mouth is similarly estimated at 6428 million cub. ft. per annum, 
representing a suoaenal denudation of the whole drainage area at 
the rate of one foot in 3707 years. (See Journal of the China Branch 
of the Royal Asiatic Society, vol. xvi., Dr Guppy.) 

The Yangtese>kiang forms a highway of first-daw importance. 
As the rise in the river is only about 130 ft. for the first 1000 m.. 
it resembles a huge canal expressly formed for steam navigation. 
Except at winter low water, steamers of 5000 or 6000 tons can reach 
Hankow with ease. Between Hankow and Ich'ang, especially above 
the outlet from Tungfing lake, the volume of water diminishes 
very much, and as the channel is continually shifting with the 
•hitting sand-banks, navigation is more difficult. Above Ich'ang, 
where the river flows between rocky gorges, and where a series of 
rapids are encountered, navigation is still more difficult. But taking 
the Yangtsse as a whole, with its numerous subsidiary streams, 
canals and hikes, it forms a highway of communication unrivalled 
m any other country in the world. About half the sea-borne com- 
merce of all China U further distributed by means of the Yangtsse 
and its connexions, not to mention the interchange of native pro- 
duce b etween the provinces, which is carried by native sailing craft 
numbered by thousands. 

The Yangtsse valley as •> political term indicates the sphere of 



influence or development which by international agreement was 
assigned to Great Britain. This was first acquired in a somewhat 
negative manner by the Chinese government giving an undertaking, 
which they did in 1898, not to alienate any part of the Yangtsse 
vmUey to any other power. A more formal recogni tion of the British 
claim was embodied in the agreement between the British and 
Russian governments in 1899 for the delimitation of their respective 
railway interests in China, Russia agreeing not to interfere with 
British projects in the basin of the Yangtsse, and Great Britain 
agreeing not to interfere with Russian projects north of the Great 
Wall (Manchuria). The basin or valley of the Yangtsse was de- 
fined to comprise all the provinces bordering on the Yangtsre river, 
together with the provinces of Ho-nan and Chebekiang. This agree- 
ment was communicated to the Chinese government, and has been 
generally acknowledged. The object of the negotiations was to 
guard against conflict of railway interests; in all other respects 
the policy known as that of the " open door " was advocated by 
Great Britain and the chief commercial states. This policy was 
more fully declared by mutual engagements entered into in 1900 
by the Great Powers on the initiative of the United States, whereby 
each undertook to guarantee equality of treatment to the commerce) 
of all nations within its- own sphere. As to railway enterprise, 
an agreement of 1910 admitted French, German and American 
financial interests equally with those of great Britain in the pro- 
jected line from Hankow to Sze-ch'uen. (G. J.) 

YANKEE, the slang or colloquial name given to a citizen of 
the New England states in America, and less correctly applied, 
in familiar European usage, to any citizen of the United States. 
It was used by the British soldiers of their opponents during 
the War of Independence, and during the Civil War by the 
Confederates of the Federal troops and by the South of the 
North generally. The origin of the name has given rise to 
much speculation. In Dr William Gordon's History of Ike 
American War (cd. 1789, i. 324) it is said to have been a cant 
word at Cambridge, Mass., as early as 17 13, where it was used 
to express excellency, and be quotes such expressions as " a 
Yankee good horse." Webster gives the earliest recorded use 
of its accepted meaning, from Oppression, a Poem by an American 
(Boston, 1765), " From meanness first this Portsmouth Yankee 
rose," and states that it is considered to represent the Indian 
pronunciation of "English" or Anglais, and was applied by 
the Massachusetts Indians to the English colonists. On the 
other hand, the Scots " yankie," sharp or clever, would seem 
more probable as the origin of the sense represented in the 
Cambridge expression. Other suggestions give a Dutch origin 
to the name. Thus it may be a corruption of "Jankin," 
diminutive of " Jan," John, and applied as a nickname to the 
English of Connecticut by the Dutch of New York. Skeat 
(Etym. Did., 1910) quotes a Dutch captain's name, Yanky, 
from Dampier** Voyages (ed. 1699, i. 38), and accepts the theory 
that u Yankee " was formed from Jan, John, and Ktts t a familiar 
diminutive of Cornelius (H. Logeman, Notes and Queries, 10th 
series , iv. 50 9, v. 15). 

YANKTON, a city and the county-seat of Yankton county, 
South Dakota, U.S.A., on the left bank of the Missouri river, 
about 60 m. N.W. of Sioux City, Iowa. Pop. (1000) 412$ 
(850 foreign-born); (1910) 3787. It is served by the Chicago, 
Milwaukee & St Paul, the Great Northern, and the Chicago 
& North- Western railways. The Missouri is navigable at this 
point, and the city has a considerable river traffic Yankton 
is the seat of Yankton College (founded by Congregationalists 
in 1881, opened in 1882; now non-sectarian). The city is buih 
on a nearly level plateau, averaging about 1200 ft. above the 
sea-level. It is in a rich grain-growing and stock-raising dial net , 
has grain-elevators, and manufactures flour, beer and cement 
The water supply is obtained from artesian wells. The first 
permanent settlement, a trading post, was made here in 1858, 
when a treaty was concluded with the Yankton Indiana. This 
was the tint settlement made in the Missouri Valley in Dakota. 
Yankton was laid out in 1859, first chartered as a city in i860, 
rechartered in 1873, and in 1910 adopted s cofauriaskm form 
of government. In 1861-82 Yankton was the capital of the 
Territory of Dakota. The name is a corruption of the 9sous 
name Ikanktomoan, meaning " end village." 

YAOS, or Ajawa, a Bantu-Negroid people of cast-central 
Africa, whose home is the country around the upper reactors of 



«°4 



YA*Q0Bi— YARKAND 



the Rovuma river, and the north of Portuguese East Africa. They 
are an enterprising and intelligent race, and have spread into 
British territory south of Lake Nyasa and throughout the 
Shire districts. They are the tallest and strongest of the natives 
In the Mozambique country, have negroid features and faces 
which are noticeable for their roundness, and, for Africans, have 
light skins. They have long been popular among Europeans as 
carriers and servants. - They earned, however, a bad name as 
slave-traders, and gave much trouble to the British authorities 
in Nyasaland until 1806, when they were reduced to submission. 
They do not tattoo except for tribal marks on their foreheads. 
The women wear disks of ivory or burnished lead in the sides 
of their nostrils, and some, probably of Anyanja origin, disfigure 
the lip with the peleU or lip-ring. The Yaos have elaborate 
ceremonies of initiation for the youth of both sexes. They bury 
their dead in a contracted position, the grave being roofed with 
logs and earth sprinkled over, in the case of a rich man, some 
of his property is buried with him and the rest is inherited by 
his eldest sister's son. 

See Miss A. Werner, The Natives of British Central Africa (too6) ; 
Sir H. H. Johnston, Brtttsk Central Africa (1897); "• L- &uH. 
Nyasaland under the Foreign Office (1003). For the Yao language 
see Bantu Languages. 

YA'QtfBl [Abroad ibn abt Ya'qtlb ibn Ja'far ibn Wahb ibn 
Wa<Jih] (9th century), Arab historian and geographer, was a 
great-grandson of Wfitfih, the freedman of the caliph Mansur. 
Until 873 he lived in Armenia and Khorasan; then he travelled 
in India, Egypt and the Maghrib, where he died in 891. His 
history is divided into two parts. In the first he gives a compre- 
hensive account of the pre-Mahommedan and non-Mahommcdan 
peoples, especially of their religion and literature. For the time 
of the patriarchs his source is now seen to be the Syriac work 
published by C. Bczold as Die Sckahhdklt. In his account of 
India he is the first to give an account of the stories of Kalfla 
and Dimna, and of Sindibad (Sinbad). When treating of Greece 
he gives many extracts from the philosophers (cf. M. Klamroth 
in the Zeitschrift dcr deulschen morgenl&niischen Gescllschaft, 
vols. xl. and xlL). The second part contains Mahommedan 
history up to 872, and is neither extreme nor unfair, although 
he inherited Shi'ite leanings from his great-grandfather. The 
work is characterized by its detailed account of some provinces, 
such as Armenia and Khorasan, by its astronomical details and 
its quotations from religious authorities rather than poets. 

Edition by T. Houtsma (2 vols., Leiden, 1883). Ya'qubfs geo- 
graphy, the Ktl&b ul-Butddn, contains a description of the Maghrib, 
with a full account of the larger cities and much topographical and 
political information (ed. M. de Goeje, Leiden. 1892). (G. W. T.) 

YlQ0T, or Yakut (YaqOt ibn 'Abdallah ur-Rflml) (1170- 
1229), Arab geographer and biographer, was born in Greece 
of Greek parentage, but in his boyhood became the slave of a 
merchant of Hamah (Hamath), who trained him for commercial 
travelling and sent him two or three times to Kish in the Persian 
Gulf (on his journeys, cf. F, Wustenfeld, " Jacut's Reisen " in 
the Zeitsckr. d detdsck. ntorg. GescUsckaft, vol. xviii pp. 397-403) 
In 1 194 he quarrelled with his master and had to support himself 
by copying; he took advantage of the opportunity of studying 
under the grammarian al-'UkbarL After five years he returned 
to his old master and again travelled for him to Kish, but on 
his return found his- master dead, and set up for himself as a 
bookseller and began to write. During the next ten years be 
travelled in Persia, Syria, Egypt and visited Merv, Balkh, 
Mosul and Aleppo. About 1 222 he settled in Mosul and worked 
on his geography, the first draft of which was ready in 1224. 
After a journey to Alexandria in 1227 he went to Aleppo, where 
he died in 1229. In his large geography, the Mujam ul-Bnldin 
(ed. F. Wustenfeld, 6 vote., Leipzig, 1866-73), the places men- 
tioned in the literature or the stories of the Arabs are given 
in alphabetical order, with the correct vocalization of the 
names, an indication whether they are Arabic or foreign and 
their locality. Their history is often sketched with a special 
account of their conquest by the Moslems and the name of the 
- at the time is recorded. Attention is also given to 
s they contain and the celebrities who were born in 



them or had lived there. In this way a quantity of old ttterattne, 
both prose and poetry, is preserved by Yiqat. 

The parts of this work relating to Persia have been extracted 
and translated by Barbier de Meynard under the title D ictit n ma ir* 
giographique t historiqut et litthaire de la Peru (Paris, 1871). borne 
account of its sources is given in F. J. Heer's Die kistorischen 
und geographisehen Quellen in Jatufs geograpkhehem Wdrttrbuch 
(Strasaburg, 1808), ond the material relating to the Crusade* is 
treated by H. Derenboor^, " Les Cioieades cP aprea le dictionnaire 
geographique de Jacout " in the volume of the Centtnaire de tUole 
dtslaniues orientales vhantes, 71-92. A digest of the whole work 
was made by Ibn 'Abdulhaqq (d. 1338) under the title Mar&sid 
ul-Itm. (ed. T. G. J. Juyaboll, Leiden, 1850-1864). YflqQt also wrote 
a dictionary of geographical homonyms, the liusklarik (ed. F. 
Wustenfeld, Gottingen, 1846). Besides all this activity in geography 
YftqQt gave his attention to biography, and wrote an important 
dictionary of learned men, the MuUatH td-Vdaba*. Parts of this 
work exist in MS. in different libraries; vol. i. has been edited by 
D. S. Margoliouth. Irshad al-Arib II 4 Ma'rifal of Adib (London, 

1908). (g.vvTtT 

YARKAND (Chinese name Soch€ Fu), the chief town of the 
principal oasis of Chinese Turkestan, on the Yarkand-Darya, 
in 38 25' N., 77 1 6' E., and 3900 ft. above sea-level. The 
settlements of the Yarkand oasis occupy the S.W. corner of 
£. Turkestan, and are scattered along the numerous rivers which 
issue from the steep slopes of the Pamir in the W., and the Kara- 
koram and Kuen-Lun Mountains in the S. The oasis of Kashgar 
limits it in the N., and a tract of desert separates it from the 
oasis of Khotan in the S.E. The Yarkand-Darya and its numer- 
ous tributaries, which are fed by the glaciers of the mountain 
regions, as also many rivers which are now lost in the steppe or 
amidst the irrigated fields, bring abundance of water to the 
desert; one of them is called Zarafshan (" gold-strewing "), as 
much on account of the fertility it brings as of its auriferous sands. 
Numberless irrigation canals carry the water to the fields, which 
occupy a broad zone of loess skirting the base of the mountains. 
In the spurs of the mountains there are rich pasturages, where 
goats, yaks, camels, sheep and cattle are reared. The oasis of 
Yarkand is regarded as the richest of E. Turkestan, and its popu- 
lation probably numbers about 200,000 inhabitants. Wheat, 
barley, rice, beans and various oil-yielding plants are grown, and 
melons, grapes, apples and other fruits. The cotton tree and the 
mulberry are cultivated in the warmer parts of the oasis. Gold, 
lead and precious stones are found in the mountains, though 
only the first-named is worked. Yarkand is renowned for its 
leather-ware and saddlery. Carpets and silk fabrics, cotton and 
woollen goods arc manufactured. The population consists of 
Persians, who now speak Turkish, and of Turkish Saris. 

The town of Yarkand, which has a population of about 100,000 
(5000 houses in the city, and as many in Yanghishar and the 
suburbs), is situated on the river of the same name, five days* 
journey S.E. from Kashgar. It is surrounded by a. thick earthen 
wall, nearly 4 m. long, with towers in the Chinese style of archi- 
tecture, and is well watered by canals. The square fortress 
of Yanghishar, which was built by the Chinese, stands within 
400 yds. of the walls of the town. This is one of the three strong 
places in Chinese Turkestan. The ten mosques and madrases of 
Yarkand, although poorer than those of Bokhara or Samarkand, 
enjoy wide renown in the Moslem world. There is a brisk trade, 
especially in horses, cotton, leather-ware and all kinds of im- 
ported manufactured goods. 

Yarkand is surrounded by a number of smaller towns, the 
chief of which are— Yanghi-hissar, which has about 600 houses, 
Tashkurgan on the Pamirs, Posgam (1600 houses), Kargalyk, 
at the junction of the routes leading to Ladakh and Khotan 
(2000 houses), Sanju (2000), Tagarchi, Kartchum, Besh-taryt 
(1800) and Guma (3000). 

Yarkand was very imperfectly known until the second half ok 
the 19th century* Marco Polo visited it between 1271 and 1275. 
and Goes in 1603; but the continuous wars (tsee Turkestan) 
prevented Europeans from frequenting it, so that until 1863 the 
information borrowed from medieval travellers and from Chinese 
sources, with that supplied by the pundit Mir Isset Ullah in 181a. 
was all that was known about the. Yarkand region. The first 
European who reached it in the 19th century was Adolph Schlagint- 
wcit, who passed by Yarkand in August 1857, but was kilted a few 
days later at Kashgar* The pundit Mohammed Harold visited it 



YARMOUTH 



*>5 



fa 1*3 and determined it* geographical position and altitude. 
Later information is due to Robert Shaw arid G. W. Hayward, who 
stayed at Yarkmnd in 1869. and to Sir Douglas Forsyth, who first 
visited it in 1*701 Three years later he visited it again with an 
expedition which had Gordon, Bellew. Chapman. Trotter, Biddulpfa 
and Stolicska as members, and afterwards published a detailed 
report upon the scientific results of the mission. In 1886, after a 
remarkable journey throosh E. Turkestan. A. D. Carey reached 
Yarfcand and spent the winter there. It was again visited by Dr 
LansdeU in 1 888, and by Dr Aurcl Stein in 1906. The Swedish 
Protestant missionaries whose headquarters are at Kashgar main- 
tain a medical mission at Yarkand. 

YARMOUTH, a seaport town and port of entry, Yarmouth 
county, Nova Scotia, Canada, on the Dominion & Atlantic 
railway, 216 m. from Halifax. Pop. (1001) 6430. Steamers 
run daily to Boston (Mass.), and weekly to St John (N.B.) and 
Halifax. It contains the county buildings, and has good schools 
and small local manufactories. Fish and lumber are exported 
in large q uantit ies. 

YARMOUTH (Great Yamcotjth), a municipal, county 
and parliamentary borough, watering-place, and seaport of 
Norfolk, England (with a small portion in Suffolk), mm. N.E. 
from London by the Great Eastern railway, served also by the 
Midland 81 Great Northern joint line. Pop. (1001) 5Mi& 
It lies on a long and narrow peninsula of sand, between the 
North Sea and the Breydon Water (formed by the rivers Yare 
and Waveney) and the river Bure. The neighbouring country 
is very flat, but the Bure affords access to the Norfolk Broads, 
which give the district Us well-known individuality. The old 
town of Great Yarmouth was built chiefly along the E. bank of 
the Yare, but the modern town has extended beyond its ancient 
walls, of whkh some remains exist, to the seashore, where there 
are a marine drive and three piers. On the landward or Suffolk 
side of the estuary is the suburb of Southtown, and farther S. 
that of Gorleston. The principal features of Yarmouth are the 
N. and S. quays, and the straight narrow lanes called " rows," 
145 in number, running at right angles to them. These rows 
were at one time inhabited by the wealthy burgesses, and many 
of the houses, now tenanted by the poorer classes, have panelled 
rooms with richly decorated ceilings. The old town is connected 
with Little Yarmouth by a bridge across the Yare of stone and 
Iron, erected in 1854. The Bure is crossed by a suspension 
bridge, The church of St Nicholas, founded in 11 01 by Herbert 
Losinga, the first bishop of Norwich, and consecrated in mo, 
it own of the largest parish churches in England. It is erud- 
form, with a central tower, which perhaps preserves a part of 
the original structure, but by successive alterations the form 
of the church has been completely changed. The Transitional 
derestoried nave, with columns alternately octagonal and 
circular, was rebuilt in the reign of King John. A portion of 
the chancel is of the same date. About fifty years later the 
aisles were widened, so that the nave is now the narrowest part 
of the building. A grand W. front with towers and pinnacles 
was constructed in 1330-1338, but the building was interrupted 
by a visitation of the plague. In the i6ih century the monu- 
mental brasses were cast into weights and the gravestones cut 
into grindstones. Within the church there were at one time 
rightffft chapels, maintained by gilds or private families, but 
these were demolished by the Reformers, who sold the valuable 
utensils of the building and applied the money to the widening 
of the channd of the harbour. During the Commonwealth 
the Independents appropriated the chancel, the Presbyterians 
the N. stele and the Churchmen were allowed the remainder 
of the building. The brick walls erected at this time to separate 
the different portions of the building remained till 1847. 'In 
1864 the tower was restored, and the E. end of the chancel 
rebuilt; in 1860-1870 the S. aisle was rebuilt; and in 1884 the 
S. transept, the W. end of the nave and the N. aisle underwent 
restoration. The width of the nave is 26 ft., and the total length 
of the church is 336 ft. St John's is a noteworthy modern church, 
and the Roman Catholic church is a handsome Gothic building 
erected is 1850. A grammar-school was founded in 1551, 
when the great hall of the old hospital, founded in the reign of 
Edwigsj L by Thomas Fastolfe, was appropriated to its use. 



It was closed from 1757 to i860, was re-established by the 
charity trustees, and settled in new buildings in 1872. Among 
the principal public buildings are the town hall and public 
offices (1883); a picturesque toll-bouse of the 14th century, 
carefully preserved and serving as a free library; assembly 
rooms, museum, drill hall, custom house, barracks at South- 
town and theatres. Among charitable and benevolent institu- 
tions are a royal naval lunatic asylum, three hospitals, and 
fishermen's hospital, the North Sea Church Mission and various 
homes and minor charities. To the S. of the town, on the part 
of the peninsula known as the South Denes, are a race-course 
and a Doric column erected in 18x7 to commemorate Lord 
Nelson. To the N. (on the North Denes) are golf links. Winter 
gardens were opened in 1004. The municipal and parliamentary 
borough became coextensive by the inclusion in the former 
of Gorleston in 1890. The parliamentary borough, returning 
one member, falls between the E. division of Norfolk and the 
Lowestoft division of Suffolk. Yarmouth is governed by a 
mayor, 12 aldermen and 36 councillors. Area, 3568 acres. 

Yarmouth Roads, off the coast, afford excellent anchorage except 
in El or N.E. winds. The channel to the quays was made by Joost 
Jansen, a Dutch engineer, in 15O7, and affords a depth at the bar of 
12 ft. at low water. The herring and mackerel fisheries are most 
important, and fish-curing is an extensive industry, Yarmouth 
bloaters being widely famous. The fishing fleet numbers some £00 
vessels of 20.000 tons, and employs about 3000 hands. The principal 
imports are coal, timber and seeds, and exports are grain and fish. 
Other industries are ship and boat building, rope, twine and trawl- 
net manufactories, silk-crape works and malting*. 

Yarmouth (Gernemwa, Yernemuth), which lies near the 
site of the Roman camp of Gariannonum, is believed to have 
been the landing-place of Ccrdk in the 5th century. Not 
long afterwards, the convenience of its situation having at* 
tracted many fishermen from the Cinque Ports, a permanent 
settlement was made, and the town numbered seventy burgesses 
before the Conquest Henry I. placed it under the rule of a 
reeve. The charter of King John (1208), which gave his bur- 
gesses of Yarmouth general liberties according to the customs 
of Oxford, a gild merchant and weekly hustings, was amplified 
by several later charters asserting the rights of the borough 
against Little Yarmouth and Gorleston. In 1552 Elizabeth 
granted a charter of admiralty jurisdiction, afterwards con- 
firmed and extended by James I. In 1668 Charles II. incor- 
porated Little Yarmouth in the borough by a charter which 
with one brief exception remained in force till 1703, when 
Anne replaced the two bailiffs by a mayor, reducing the alder- 
men and common councilmcn to eighteen and thirty-six. By 
the Boundary and Municipal, Corporation Acts of 1832 and 
1855, Gorleston was annexed to the borough, which became a 
county borough in 1888. Yarmouth returned two members 
to parliament from 1300 to 1868, when it was disfranchised 
until 1885. From the nth to the 18th century the herring 
trade, which has always been the main industry of Yarmouth, 
was carried on at an annual fair between Michadmas and 
Martinmas. This was regulated by the barons of the Cinque 
Ports, and many quarrels arose through (heir jurisdiction and 
privileges. Yarmouth has had a weekly market at least from 
the 13th century. 

See Victoria Co*ni? History, Norfolk: H. Swmden, History of 
Great Yarmouth (1772): C J. Palmer. History of Crtat Yarmouth 
(1854). 

YARMOUTH, a small port at the western extremity of 
the Isle of Wight, England, on the shore of the Solent, wheu 
the estuary of the Yar debouches. Pop. (1001) 003. Steamers 
connect it with the London ft South-Western railway at 
Lymington on the mainland, and it is also served by the Isle 
of Wight Central line. The church contains a fine monument 
to Admiral Sir Robert Holmes, who took New Amsterdam, 
afterwards New York, from the Dutch. 

The place appears in the Domesday Survey of 1086 under the 
name of Erroud ; it was then assessed at 1 hide si virgates, and held 
in parage by Aluric and Wislac. two of the king's thegns who had 
also held it under Edward the Confessor. The first charter waa 

Ented by Baldwin de Redvers in uml and was confirmed by 
ward 1; Henry VI., Edward IV. and^lianbeth. but the 1 ' 



ao8 



YATES, M. A.— YAWS 



to Household Words.' 'He wrote several farces which were acted 
between 1857 and i860. In 1855 be had began writing a column 
for the Illustrated Times (under Henry Vizetelly) r headed " The 
Lounger at the Clubs ": this was the first attempt at combining 
" smart " personal paragraphs with the better dass of journalism, 
and in 1858 Yates was made editor of a new paper called 
Town Talk, which carried the innovation a step forward. 
His first number contained a laudatory article on Dickens, 
and the second a disparaging one on Thackeray, containing 
various personal references to private matters. Thackeray, 
regarding this as a serious affront, brought the article before 
the committee of the Garrick Club, of which he contended that 
Yates had made improper use, and the result was that Yates 
was expelled. Besides editing Temple Bar and Tinslcy's Maga- 
tine, Yates during the 'sixties took to lecturing on social 
topics, and published several books, including his best novel, 
Black Sheep (1867); and under the heading of "Le Flaneur" 
he continued in the Morning Star the sort of " personal column " 
which he had inaugurated in the Illustrated Times. On his re- 
tirement from the Post Office in 1872 he went to America on a 
lecturing tour, and afterwards, as a special 'correspondent for 
the New York Herald, travelled through Europe. But in 1874, 
with the help of £. C. Grenville Murray, he established a new 
London weekly, The World, " a journal for men and women," 
which he edited himself. The paper at once became a success, 
and Yates bought out Grenville Murray and became sole pro* 
prietor. The World was the first of the new type of " society 
papers," abounding in personal criticism and gossip: one of its 
features was the employment of the first person singular in its 
columns, a device by which the personal element in this form 
of journalism was emphasized. After Truth was started in 1877 
by Mr Henry Labouchere (who was one of Yates's earliest 
contributors), the rivalry between the two weeklies was amus- 
ingly pointed by references in The World to what " Henry " 
said, and in Truth to the mistakes made by " Edmund." In 
1885 Yates was convicted of a libel in 1884 on Lord Lonsdale, 
and was imprisoned in Hollo way gaol for seven weeks k In the 
same year he published his Recollections and Experiences in two 
volumes. He died on the 20th of May 1894. He had been the 
typical flSncvr in the literary world of the period, an entertaining 
writer and talker, with a talent for publicity of the modern type 
—developed, no doubt, from his theatrical parentage — which, 
through his imitators, was destined to have considerable influence 
on journalism. 

YATES, MARY ANN (1728-1787), English actress, was the 
daughter of William Graham, a ship's steward. In 1753 she 
appeared at Drury Lane as Marcia in Samuel Crisp's (d 1783) 
Virginia, Garrick being the Virginias. She was gradually en- 
trusted with all the leading parts. Mrs Yates, whose husband, 
Richard Yates (c. 1706-1706), was a well-known comedian, 
succeeded Mrs Cibber as the leading tragedian of the Eng- 
lish stage, and was in turn succeeded— and eclipsed— by Mrs 
Siddons. 

YATES, RICHARD (18x8-1873), American political leader, 
was born at Warsaw, Kentucky, on the i&th of January 1818. 
He graduated at the Illinois College at Jacksonvlie in 1838, 
was admitted to the bar, and entered politics as a V 'hig. From 
1842 to 1845 and again in 1849 he served in the state House of 
Representatives. He was a representative in Congress in 1851- 
1855, but having become a Republican, was defeated for a third 
term. From 1861 to 1865 he was governor of Illinois, and was 
successful in enlisting troops and in checking the strong pro- 
Southern sentiment in the state. He was a member of the 
United States Senate in 1865-71, and was prominent in 
Reconstruction legislation. He died at St Louis, Missouri, on 
the 27th of November 1873. His son Richard (b. i860) was 
governor of Illinois from 1901 to 1005. 

TAT8AUK, called by the Shans Lawksawx, a state in the 
central division of the southern Shan States of Burma. Area, 
3 107 •%> ta. Pop. (1001), 24,839, of whom less than one-hall are 
Shans; revenue, £2000. The crops grown are rice, segamum, 
cotton, ground-nuts and oranges. As a whole the state is moun- 



tainous, with ranges running N» and S. The main range has a 
general height of 5000 ft,, with peaks, such as Loi Sampa, rising 
to 7846 ft. The middle and S,, however, consist of open roll- 
ing couritry, with an average height of 3500 ft. To the N. the 
country falls away to the Nam Tu (Myitnge), where there are fine 
teak forests, as well as along the Nam Lang and Nam Et, which 
with the Zawgyi form the chief rivers of the state. Most of them 
disappear underground at intervals, which makes the extraction 
of timber impossible except for local use. Lawksawk, the capital, 
stands on the N. bank of the Zawgyi, near a small weedy lake. 
The old brick walls and the moat are falling into decay. The 
chief at the time of annexation had been at war with the Bur- 
mese, but refused to submit to the British, and fled to K&ig 
Hung, where he died some years afterwards. The sawbwa 
chosen in 1887 belonged to another Shan ruling house. He 
died in iooo f and was succeeded by his son. 

YATUNG, a trade-market of Tibet, situated in the mouth of the 
Chumbi valley near the Indian frontier. According to the Con- 
vention of 1890-93, the market at Yatung was opened to India, 
and the conduct of the Tibetans in building a wall across the 
road between Yatung and Tibet was one of the incidents that led 
up to the British mission of 1904. According to the treaty of 
that year, a British trade-agent was to be maintained at Yatung. 

YAUCO, a city of the department of Ponce, Porto Rico, 
aom.W.byN of the city of Ponce. Pop. (1899) 6108. Yaucois 
served by the American Railroad of Porto Rico. The city is 
situated about 150 ft. above the sea, and has a delightful climate. 
It is connected by a wagon road with its port, Guanica (pop. 
about 1000), which has an excellent harbour. Coffee and 
tobacco are the chief industries. Yauco was first settled in 
1756- 

YAVORSKY, STEPHEN (c. 1658-1722), Russian archbishop 
and statesman, one of the ablest coadjutors of Peter the Great, 
was educated at the Kiev Academy and various Polish schools. 
Becoming a monk, he settled at the Kiev Academy as a preacher 
and professor, being appointed prefect of the institution and 
prior of the monastery of St Nicholas. He attracted the 
attention of Peter by his funeral oration over the boyar Shefa, 
and was made archbishop of Ryazan in 1700. In 1702, on the 
death of the last patriarch of Moscow, Yavorsky was appointed 
custodian of the spiritualities of the patriarchal see. Not- 
withstanding frequent collisions with Peter, and his parti- 
ality for the unfortunate tsarevich Alexius, Yavorsky was too 
valuable a man to be discarded. In 1721 he was made first 
president of the newly erected Holy Synod, but died in the 
following year. 

Yavorsky's chief works are his Rock of the Faith of the Orthodox- 
Catholic Eastern Chunk and Dogmatic, Moral and Panegyrical 
Sermons See Y T Samarin, Stephen Yavorsky (Rus.) (Moscow, 
1844); I Morev, " The Rock of ike Faitk " of the Metropolitan 
Stephen Yavorsky (Rus.) (Petersburg, 1904). 

YAWL, the name of a special rig of small sailing vessels 
or yachts, with two masts, the mainmast cutter-rigged, and a 
small mizzen stepped far aft with a spanker or driving sail. The 
name has also been applied to a small ship's boat rowed with 
four or more oars. The word is apparently an adaptation of 
the Dutch M skiff. 

The English " jolly-boat." a small bluff-bowed, wide-transomed 
ship's boat, swung at the stern of a vessel for ready use. is probably 
a corruption of the Danish form of the wordjofc. Other authori- 
ties take it to be a corruption of a late 15th-century jolywal, a small 
ship's boat, which is supposed to represent galiote, galliot (see 
Galley). A galliot, however, was never a small boat, but an in- 
dependent vessel propelled by oars or sails. 

YAWS, the name in use in the British West Indies for a 
contagious inoculable tropical disease, running a chronic 
course and characterized by a peculiar eruption, together 
with more or less constitutional disturbance. It is known 
by various local names in different parts. In the French 
Antilles it is called pian; in "Brazil, boba ; on the west coast 
of Africa, gattu, dube and iaranga; in Fiji, coho\ in the Malay 
Peninsula, purrw, in the Moluccas, bouton aVAmboine\ in Samoa, 
tonga or lono\ in Basutoland, makaola , t and In Ceylon it if 



YAZDEGERD^— YEATS 



909 



spoken of under the name of paramgL The name fromioesia 
was first given to the disease by Sauvages in 1750 from the 
likeness of the typical excrescences to a raspberry. For many 
years yaws was thought to he peculiar to the African negro, 
either in his home (both west and east coasts) or in the West 
Indies and BraaiL. But a disease the sane In every respect has 
long been known in the East Indies (first mentioned by Bontius 
early in the 17th century), affecting the Mahys rather than 
the negroes, its chief seats being Amboyna, Temate, Timor, 
Celebes, Java and Sumatra, It has been identified by De 
Roches and other observers in New Caledonia and Fiji. 

The general course of Jthe disease is as follows. Prev io u s to the 
eruption there may or may not be any disorder of health: in 
children (who form a huge part of the subjects of yaws) there will 
probably be rheumatic pains in the limbs and joints, with languor, 
debility and upset of the digestion; in adults of ordinary vigour 
the eruption is often the first sign, and it is attended with few or 
no constitutional troubles. The eruption begins as small pimples 
like a pin's head, smooth and nearly level with the surface; they 
have a little whitish speck on their tops, grow rapidly and reach 
the size of a sixpence or a shilling. The pustules then break and a 
thick viscid ichor exudes and dncs upon them as a whitish slough 
and around their base as a yellowish-brown crust. Beneath toe 
whitish slough is the raspberry excrescence or yaw proper, a reddish 
fungous growth with a nodular surface. The favourite scats of 
the eruption are the forehead, face, neck, arm-pits, groin, genitals, 
perinaeum and buttocks. Hairs at the seat of a yaw turn white. 
In young children or infants, the corners of the mouth ulcerate, as 
in syphilis, and the perineal excrescences resemble condylomata. 
The pustules and excrescences do not all arise in one crop: some 
are found mature while others are only starting. If the patient 
be of sound constitution and good reaction, the yaws may reach 
the full size of a mulberry in a month, in which case they wilt 
probably be few; but in persons of poor health they may take 
three months to attain the size of a wood-strawberry, in which case 
they will be numerous inversely to their size. Often there is one 
yaw much larger than the rest, and longer in falling; it is called 
the'' master yaw'*** or mother yaw." On the soles of the feet 
(less often on the palms of the hands) the bursting yaws are as if 
imprisoned beneath the horny cuticle; they cause swelling and 
tenderness of the foot, until set free by panne the callous skin 
down to the quick; these yaws are called " crab yaws " or tubbas. 
Usually a yaw is painless unless when rubbed or irritated. The 
absence of pain is used as a diagnostic sign if there be any doubt 
as to the nature of the attack: a pustule is opened and a little of 
the juice of capsicum dropped into it ; if it be a yaw, no smarting 
will be felt. In some cases a few yaws will show themselves lone 
after the primary attack is over; these are catted " memba yaws 
(from " remember "), the term being sometimes applied also to 
protracted cases with successive crops of eruption. Six weeks is 
the average time in a good case, from the first of the eruption to 
the fall of the excrescences; in such regular cases a scar remains, 
it may be for many months, darker than the rest of the (negro) 
alrin. But the disease is often a much more tedious affair, the mere 
protracted type having become common in the West Indies of 
recent years. In such cases the eruption comes out by degrees and 
as if with difficulty, crop after crop; foul, excavating and corroding 
ulcers may remain, or a limb may be in part seamed and mutilated 
by the scars of old ulceration. The scars after ulceration are not 
so dark as the skin around. 

Attiohgy.— Yaws is a highly contagious disease. It is 
neither hereditary nor congenital The disease spreads by 
contact with previously infected cases, though it has been 
stated that infection also arises from inhabiting cfirty houses, 
the floors and walk of which are contaminated with yawey 
matter from former yaw cases; and it is also believed, and 
has been proved by experiment, that infection may be con- 
veyed by flies, which act as go-betweens, carrying infective 
material from a yaws sore to an ordinary nicer. The virus 
must be introduced directly through a breach of the skin or 
mucous membrane; an attack in childhood gives a large 
degree of immunity for the rest of life. A fmerococeus was 
found by Pierez and NichoQs in- the tubercles of yaws, bat a 
pure culture of this micro-organism failed to give rise to yaws 
in animals into whom it was injected experimentally, and in 
no instance was H present in the blood. In 100s Aldo Castellani 
demonstrated in yaws the presence of a slender spirillum, 
which he named the Spirockaeta perknutt or Spirothdeta faUv- 
into. It was also experimentally proved by him (1) that the 
material taken from persons suffering from yaws and con- 
taining; the Spirockaeta paienuis h Infective io monkeys; I 
xxvxu 15* 



(a) that when the Spkockaata pertenms is removed by filtration 
the material becomes inert; (3) that the injection of blood 
from the general circulation of a yaws patient gave positive 
results in monkeys; (4) by means of the Bordet-Gengou 
reaction it is possible to detect specific yaws anti-bodies and 
antigen. 

The prophylaxis consists in the segregation of the patients 
suffering from the disease, the antiseptic dressing of the erup- 
tion, the application of a covering to protect it from flies, and 
the thorough cleansing and disinfection of infected houses 
and clothing, even the demolition of houses in endemic centres, 
and finally the compulsory notification of cases of yaws to the 
local sanitary authority. 

As regards treatment, the malady in a person of good con- 
stitution runs its course and gets well in a few weeks. What- 
ever tends to check the eruption, such as exposure to chill, is to 
be avoided. A week's course of cream of tartar and sulphur 
(confection of sulphur) at the beginning of the illness is often 
resorted to, so as to bring the eruption well out The patient 
should remain indoors, in a well-aired room, and take dairy 
warm baths and diluent drinks. If the excrescences are flabby 
and unhealthy, it is an indication for generous diet. When 
the eruption is declared, iodide of potassium and arsenic are 
very beneficial. As external applications, weak lotions of sine 
or carbolic add may be used, and, if the e x cre sc e n ce s are irri- 
table, a watery solution of opium. Tedious and unhealthy yaws 
should be dressed with a wash of sulphate of zinc or of copper; 
the same may be applied to a yaw ulcer. The crab yaws of 
the horny soles or palms, after they are let through by paring 
the cuticle, may be dusted with alum powder. 

On the whole, the mortality is small. In 7157 West Indian cases 
treated in various hos p it a ls there were only 185 deaths, a mortality 
of as* Ptf thousand (NJchoHs). 

YAZDBQERD ("made by God," Isdegcrdts), the name of 
three Sessanid kings of Persia, (x) Yazdegexd L, son of 
Shapur HI., 309-420, cafled " the sinner " by the Persians, 
was a highly intelligent ruler, who tried to emancipate himself 
from the dominion of the magnates and the Magian priests. 
He punished the nobles severely when they attempted op- 
pression; he stopped the persecution of the Christians and 
granted them their' own organization. With the Roman 
Empire he lived in peace and friendship, and is therefore as 
much praised by the Byzantine authors (Procop. Pers. L 2; 
Agath. iv. 26) as he fa blamed by the Persians. After a reign 
of twenty years he appears to have been murdered in Khotasan. 

(2) Yazpegekd II., was the son of Bahrain V. Cor, 438-457. 
He persecuted the Christians and Jews, and had a short war 
with Rome in 441. He tried to extend his kingdom in the 
East and fought against the Kushans and FJdarites (or Huns). 

(3) Yazdegebo III., a grandson of Chosroes II., who had been 
murdered by his son Kavadh II. in 628, was raised to the throne 
in 632 after a series of internal conflicts. He was a mere child 
and never really ruled; in his first year the Arabic invasion 
began, and m 637 the battle of Kadisiya decided the fate of 
the empire. Ctesiphon was occupied by the Arabs, and the 
king fled into Media. Yazdegerd fled from one district to 
another, till at last he was murdered at Merv in 651 (see Caxj- 
kate, sect. A. 1). The Parsees, who use the old Persian 
calendar, continue to count the years from his accession (era of 
Yazdegerd, beginning June 16th, ad. 632). (Ed. M.) ' 

YEAST (O.E. gfesi or gyst; the root yes-, to boil, ferment, is 
seen in Sansk. ttir-y&sa, exudations from trees, and Gr. f ehr, 
to boil), a cellular organism produced in the alcoholic fermenta- 
tion of saccharine liquids (see Fukoi, FERMENTxrtOM, Buwing). 

YEATS, WILLIAM BUTLER (1865- ), Irish author, son 
of J. B. Yeats (b. 1S39), a distinguished Irish artist and member 
of the Royal Hibernian Academy, was born at Sandymount, 
Dublin, on the 13th of June 186s. At nine years old he went to 
live with his parents in London, and was sent to the Godofphin 
School, Hammersmith. At fifteen he went to the Erasmus 
Smith School in Dublin. Later be studied painting for a 
short time at the Royal Dublin Society, but soon turned to 



910 



YECLA— YELLOW FEVER 



literature, contributing poems and articles to the Dublin Unu 
tersiiy Rene* and other Irish periodicals. In x888 he was 
encouraged by Oscar Wilde to try his fortune in London, where 
he published in 1880 his first volume of verse, The Wandering* 
of Oisin; its original and romantic touch impressed discerning 
critics, and started a new interest in the " Celtic " movement. 
The same year and the next he contributed to Mr Walter 
Scott's " Camelot Series," edited by Ernest Rhys, Fairy and 
Folk Tales, a collection of Irish folklore, and Tales from Carleton, 
with original introductions. In 1891 be wrote anonymously 
two Irish stories, John Sherman and Dkoya, for Mr Fisher 
Unwin's " Pseudonym Library." In 1892 he published another 
volume of verse, including The Countess Kathleen (a romantic 
drama), which gave the book its title, and in 1893 The Celtic 
Twilight, a volume of essays and sketches in prose. He now 
submitted his earlier poetical work to careful revision, and it 
was In the revised versions of The Wanderings of U sheen and 
The Countess Kathleen, and the lyrics given in his collected 
Poems of 1895 that his authentic poetical note found adequate 
expression and was recognized as marking the rise of a new 
Irish school. In the meantime he had followed The Countess 
Kathleen with another poetical drama, The Land of Heart's 
Desire, acted at the Avenue Theatre for six weeks in the spring 
of 1894, published in May of that year. He contributed to 
various periodicals, notably to the National Observer and the 
Bookman, and also to, the Book of the Rhymers' Club— ihc 
English Parnasse ConUmporain of the early 'nineties. With 
Edwin J. Ellis he edited the Works of William Blake (1893), 
and also edited A Book of Irish Verse (189s). In 1897 ap- 
peared The Secret Rose, a collection of Irish legends and tales 
in prose, with poetry interspersed, containing the stories of 
Hanrahan the Red. The sam&year he printed privately The 
Tables of the Law and the Adoration of the Magi, afterwards 
published in a volume of Mr Elkin Mathews's " Vigo Street 
Cabinet " in 1904. In 1889 he published The Wind among the 
Reeds, containing some of his best lyrics, and in 1900 another 
poetical drama, The Shadowy Waters. He now became specially 
interested in the establishment of an Irish literary theatre; 
and he founded and conducted an occasional periodical (appear- 
ing fitfully at irregular intervals), called first Beltain and later 
Samkam, to expound its aims and preach his own views, the 
first number appearing in May 1899. In the autumn of 1901 
Mr F. R. Benson's company produced in London the play 
Oiarmuid and Crania, written in collaboration by him and 
George Moore. In 1902 he published his own first original 
play in prose, Cathleen ni Houlihan, which was printed in 
Samhain in October that year. In 1003 he collected and 
published a volume of literary and critical essays, to which he 
gave the title, Ideas of Good and Evil. In the same and the 
following years he published a collected edition of his Plays for 
an Irish Theatre, comprising Where There is Nothing, The Hour* 
Glass, Cathleen ni Houlihan, The Pot of Broth, The King's 
Threshold and On Basle's Straw*. In 1904 he also edited two 
volumes of Irish Representative Tola. Whether or not " Celtic " 
is the right word for it, Mr Yeats's art was quickly identified 
by enthusiasts with the literary side of the new Irish national 
movement. His inspiration may be traced in some measure 
to the Pre-Raphaelites and also to Blake, Shelley and Maeter- 
linck; but he found in his native Irish legend and life matter 
apt for his romantic and often elfin music, with its artful sim- 
plicities and unhackneyed cadences, and its elusive, inconclusive 
charm. 

See the section on W. B. Yeats in Poets of Ike Younger Generation 
by William Archer (100s). and for bibliography up to June 1903, 
Emglish illustrated Magazine, vol. oixTTN.i) p. a88. A Horary 
edition of his collected works in prose and verse was issued by Mr 
Bulten from the Shakespeare Head Works, Stratford-on-Avoa, in 
• vols., 1908. 

YECLA, a town of E. Spain, in the extreme N. of the pro- 
vince of Murda, on the Yecla-Villena railway; it is situated 
on the W. slope of Monte Castillo, which rises above the left 
bank of the Arroyo del Jua. Pop. (1900) 18,743. The chief 



buildings are a half-ruined citadel, a modern parish church 
with a pillared Corinthian facade, and a town hall standing 
in a fine arcaded square. Yecia has a thriving trade in the 
grain, wine, oil, fruit and esparto gran produced in the sur- 
rounding country. 

YEI8K,a town of Russia, in the province of Kuban (Caucasus), 
founded in 1848 on a sandbank which separates theshallow 
Bay of Yeisk from the Sea of Azov, 76 m, S.W. of Kostov- 
on-the-Don. Pop. 55,446. Notwithstanding its shallow road* 
stead, Yeisk has grown with great rapidity, and exports corn, 
Unseed and wooL There are wool-cleansing factories, oil-works 
a nd tan neries* 

YELLOW FEVER, a specific infective tropical fever, the germ 
of which is transmitted by the Stegomyia fasciata or domestic 
mosquito, occurring endemically in certain limited areas. The 
area of distribution includes the West Indies, Mexico, part of 
Central America, the W. coast of Africa and BrasU. 

The first authentic account of yellow fever comes from Bridge- 
town, Barbados, in 1947, where it was recognized as a " nova 
pestis " that was unaccountable in its origin, except that Ligon, 
the historian of the colony, who was then on the spot, connected 
it with the arrival of ships. It was the same new pestilence that 
Dutcrtre, writing. in 1667, described as having occurred in the 
French colony of Guadeloupe in 1655 and 1640; it recurred at 
Guadeloupe in 1648, and broke out in a peculiarly disastrous 
form at St Kitts the same year, and again in 1652; in 1655 it 
was at Port Royal, Jamaica; and from those years onwards 
it became familiar at many harbours in the West Indies and 
Spanish Main. It appeared at the Brazilian ports in 1849. In 
1853 it appeared in Peru and in 1820 on the W. coast of Africa. 
In Georgetown (British Guiana) 69% of the garrison died in 
1840. 

During the great period of yellow fever (1793-1805), and for 
some years afterwards, the disease found its way time after time 
to various ports of Spain. Cadis suffered five epidemics in the 
1 8th century, Malaga one and Lisbon one; but from 1800 down 
to 1821 the disease assumed much more alarming proportions. 
Cadis being still its chief seat, while Seville, Malaga, Cartagena, 
Barcelona, Palma, Gibraltar and other shipping places suffered 
severely, as well as some of the country districts nearest to the 
ports. In the severe epidemic at Barcelona in the summer of 
1821, 5000 persons died. At Lisbon in 1857 upwards of 6000 
died in a few weeks. In New Orleans 7970 people died in 1853, 
3093 in 1867, and 4056 in 1878. In KJo 4160 died in 1850, 
1943 in 1852, and 1397 in 1886. 

Certain distinct conditions have seemed to be necessary for 
an outbreak. Foremost we may notice a high atmospheric 
temperature, one of 75* F. or over. * As the thermometer sinks, 
the disease ceases to spread. Moisture favours the spread of 
yellow fever, and epidemics in the tropics have usually occ ur red 
about the rainy season. Seaport towns are most affected. 
In many instances the elevated airy and hygienic quarters of 
a town may escape, while the shore districts are drrimated 
Usually the disease does not spread to villages or sparsely popu- 
lated districts. Certain houses become hotbeds of the disease, 
case after case occurring in them; and it is usually in houses 
that the drwiv is contracted. A house may be said to be 
infected when it contains infected mosquitoes, whether there 
be a yellow-fever patient there or not. Ships become infected 
in the same way, the old wooden trading ships affording an ideal 
hiding-place to the Stegomyia in a way that the modern and 
airy steamship does not. 

The incubation period of yellow fever is generally four or five 
days, but it may be as short as twenty-four hours. There are 
usually three marked stages: (1) the febrile period, (2) the period 
of remission or luQ, (3) in severecsses, the period of reaction. The 
illness usually starts with languor, ^ro^m*, headache, and mus- 
cular pains, which might be the precursors of any febrile attack. 
These are followed by a. peculiar look of the eyes and face, 
which is characteristic: the face is flushed, and the eyes suffused 
at first and then congested or ferrety, the nostrils and tips red, 
and the tongue scarlet— these being the most obvious signs of 



YELLOW FEVER 



■ntoml congestion of the skin, 
Meanwhile the temperature has risen to fever heat, and may reach 
a very high figure (maximum of xxo° Fahr~, it is said); the 
pulse is quick, strong and f all, hot may not keep up in these 
characters with the high temperature throughout. There are 
all the usual accompaniments of high fever, iarindmg hot skin, 
failure of appetite, thirst, nausea; restlessness and delirium 
(which may or may not be violent); alhtimen will nearly always 
be found in the urine, the fever is continued; but the febrile 
excitement comes to an end after two or three days. In a certain 
dass of ambulatory or masked cases the febrile reaction may 
never come out, and the shock of the infection after a brief 
interval may lead unexpectedly and directly to prostration and 
death. The cessation of the paroxysm makes the stadium, or 
lull, characteristic of yellow fever. The hitherto militant or 
violent symptoms cease, and prostration or collapse ensues. 
The internal heat falls below the normal; the action of the 
heart (pulse) becomes slow and feeble, the skin cold and of a 
lemon-yellow tint, the act of vomiting effortless, like that of an 
infant, the first vomit being dear fluid, but afterwards black from 
an admixture of blood. It is at this period that the prospect 
of recovery or of a fatal issue declares itself. The prostration 
following the paroxysm of fever may be no more than the weak- 
ness of comme n c in g recovery, with copious flow of urine, which 
even then is very dark-coloured from the presence of blood, 
The prostration will be all the more profound according to the 
height reached by the temperature during the acute paroxysm. 
Much blood in the vomit and in the stools, together with all other 
haemorrhagic signs, is of evil omen. Death may also be ushered 
in by suppression of urine, coma and convulsions, or by fainting 
from failure of the heart. In severe types of the disease an 
apoplectic, an algid and a choleraic form have been described. 

The case mortality averages from xa to 80%. In Rio in 1898 
it reached the appalling height of 04 5%- I» cities where it is 
endemic the case mortality is usually lower. In 269 cases 
obser v ed by Sternberg, the mean mortality was 37*7%. In 
1 $8 cases of yellow fever in Vera Crux in x 905 there were 91 
deaths. The death-rate, however, tends to vary in different 
epidemics. In the epidemic occurring in Zacspa, Mexico, ia 100$ 
in a population of 6000 there were 700 oases, and the mortality 
among the infected was 40%. 

Treatment.— Tht patient should be removed' from the focus of 
infection and nursed in a well-ventilated room, screened from 
mosquitoes. - The further treatment is. symtomatic. A purga- 
tive, followed by hot baths, is useful in the early stages to relieve 
congestion, high temperature may be controlled by sponging; 
vomiting, by ice; or, if haemorrhagic, by ergot, perchloride of iron 
or other styptics; and pilocarpine may be given if the- urine be 
scanty. Sternberg has introduced a system of treatment by 
alkalis to counteract the hyperacidity of the intestinal contents 
and increase the flow of urine. Of 301 whites treated by this 
method only 7 -3% died, and of 72 blacks ail recovered. 

Causation.— -The pathology of the disease is discussed in 
the article Parasitic Diseases. In 188 1 Dr Charles Finlay, 
of Havana, propounded the theory that mosquitoes were the 
carriers of the infection. Numerous theories had previously 
been brought forward, notably that of the Bacillus icicroides, 
described by Sanarelli; but it is now certain that this organism 
is not the cause. Other authorities held that the disease was 
spread by contagion, by miasmata, or some other of the vague 
agencies which have always been put forward in the absence of 
exact knowledge. Fialay's mosquito theory remained in abey- 
ance until attention was again drawn to it by the demonstration 
in recent years of the part played by these insects in the causa- 
tion of other tropical diseases. The mosquito selected by Finlay 
was the Stegamyia fascieJa, a black insect with silvery markings 
on the thorax, which is exceedingly common in the endemic 
area. It frequents towns, and breeds in any stagnant water 
about houses. Specimens were caught, fed upon yellow-fever 
patients, kept for a fortnight, and then allowed to bite susceptible 
persons established in a special camp with other susceptible 
persons as a control Those bitten developed' the fever, the 



9" 

did not. An American commhwkm was appointed in 
soon, constating o£ Walter Reed, James Carroll, A. Agramonte 
and Laasar, and its rwJmaons were: that the SUgemyU 
/espials is the agent of infection, that the virus of yellow fever 
is present in the blood during the first three days of the fever, 
and is generally absent on the fourth; that the germ is at small 
that it can pass through a Chamberiand porcelain filter; that 
the bite of all infected SUfomyio does not produce yellow fever 
(about 35% of the experiments proving negative); that mos- 
quitoes fed on yellow-fever blood were not capable of giving rise 
to infection until after a lapse of twelve or fourteen days, but the 
insects retained their infective power for at least fifty-seven 
days. It can therefore be concluded that the virus of yellow 
fever is a parasite, requiring as in malaria an alternate passage 
through a vertebrate and an insect host, the analogy to malaria 
being vary complete. E. M a r choux and P. L. Shnond, of the 
French Yellow Fever Commission to Rio de Janeiro, 1906, have 
observed an interesting met in connexion with the S, fascia**. 
In order to lay her eggs she must first have a feed of blood) three 
days after which she lays them. Before she lays her eggs she 
strikes both day and night, after that period at night only. 
Persons bitten in the day-time, therefore, do not develop yellow 
fever, while those bitten at night do. This may axplain the 
impunity with which Europeans may visit an infected district 
in the day-time provided that they are careful not to sleep there 
at night. It was stated by Marchoux and Slmond that an 
infected mosquito transmits the parasite to her eggs, the progeny 
proving infective. 

Prophylaxis— Following on the publication of these experi- 
ments there was instituted a vigorous campaign against mos- 
quitoes in Havana in 1901, based on the methods applied to the 
suppression of malaria, and carried out under the direction of 
Major W. C. Oorgas of the United States army, chief sanitary 
officer of Havana. The work was begun on the 27th of February 
loot . An order was issued that all receptacles containing water 
were to be kept mosquito-proof; sanitary inspectors were told off 
for each district to maintain a constant house-to-house inspection, 
and to treat all puddles, frc, with oil; receptacles found to contain 
larvae were destroyed and their owners fined; breeding-grounds 
near the town we.«e treated by chaining and oil; hospitals 
and houses containing yellow-fever patients were screened; 
infected and adjacent buildings were fumigated with pyrethrum 
powder. The results exceeded all expectation, and after January 
root the disease entirely ceased to originate in Havana. , Casts 
occasionally now come into Havana from Mexican ports, but 
are treated under screens with impunity in ordinary city hospitals 
and never at any time infect the city. Thus in 1907 there was 
one death from yellow fever, and the general death-rate of Havana 
fiom all diseases was 17 per thousand. In the Bulletin of Public 
Health and Charities of Cuba it is stated there only occurred 
between 1905-9 a total of 545 cases of yellow fever in all Cuba, 
where formerly they numbered many thousands, and in April 
ioto the republic was declared to be entirely free from the 
disease. 

Among other modern outbreaks in which sanitary measures have 
triumphed in the suppression of yellow fever were the outbreak in 
New Orleans in 1905, in which a medical staff of 50 with sub- 
ordinates to the number of 1303 started immediately on the outbreak 
to dean up the dry; the outbreak in Belize, British Honduras, in 
1905; the anti-yellow-fever campaign undertaken in the British 
W. Indies in 1906-9. As soon as the isthmian- Canal commissioners 
took over the administration of the Panama Canal Zone they 
undertook a vigorous campaign against the mosquito, as the result 
of which yellow fever was successfully banished. Colond Gorgas 
in his 1908 report wrote: " It is now three years since a case 
of yellow fever has d eveloped in the Isthmus, the last bring in 
November 1901" 

Rio de Janeiro, which had lost 38,07$ Inhabitants in 13 years by 
yellow fever, and Santo, have also waged war against the disease; 
as a result of the anti-5fef»i»y** policy the deaths from ydlow 
fever in Rio fdl to 43 in 1906, 39 in 1907, 4 in 1908, and o in 1909. 



I1906) 

in Ike West Indies (1910); Bulletins of the U.S. Yellow I 
Annates ie tlnstitut Pasteur (January 1906). 



9« 



YELLOWSTONE NATIONAL PARK 



YELLOWSTONE MATIOMAL PARK, an American national 
reservation, situated mainly in N.W. Wyoming, U.S.A., dedi- 
cated by the United States government as " a public park or 
pleasure ground for the benefit and enjoyment of the people." 
It is nearly a rectangle in shape, with a length, from N. to S., 
of 62 m., a width of 54 m. and an area of approximately 3350 
sq. m. It extends into Montana, on the N., about 2J m. and into 
Montana and Idaho, on the W., a m. Except at its main en- 
trance, through the valley of the Yellowstone on the N., the 
park is entirely surrounded by national forests: the Gallatin 
and Absaroka national forests, on the N.; the Shoshone and 
the Beartooth, on the £.; the Teton, on the S.; and the 
Targbee, the Madison and the Gallatin, on the W. 

The central portion, comprising an area of about 2000 sq. m., 
is an undulating volcanic plateau with a mean elevation above 
the sea of about 8000 ft. Along the entire £. border stretches 
the Absaroka range, with peaks exceeding u,ooo ft. (Index 
Peak, ix, 740 ft.) in height. On the N. is the Snowy range 
with its snow-capped peaks. W. of the Snowy the Gallatin 
range extends S. for so m. along the W. border. Electric 
Peak, in the N.W. corner of the park, rises to a height of 
11,155 ft. Near the S. end of the park are the Red Mountains, 
which culminate in Mt. Sheridan (10,385 ft.) and afford a mag- 
nificent view of the whole region; and farther S. the N. spur of 
the lofty Tetons juts across the S. border. 

In the production of these mountains and plateau there 
was first, -at the close of the Cretaceous period, an upheaval of 
the earth's substance to form a mountain rim and a depressed 
basin. Subsequently, in the Tertiary period, there were two 
enormous outpourings of volcanic material— first andesitic lava, 
and later, after a long interval of quiet, rhyolitic— which nearly 
half filled the basin, converted it into a plateau and broke 
up the mountain rim. Two centres of volcanic activity were 
Mt. Sheridan, in the S., and Mt. Washburn, in the N. The 
volcanoes have long been extinct, but the diminished energy 
now causes hot springs and geysers in all parts of the plateau, 
about 100 in number. More than half, including the largest 
and finest, are in the upper and the lower Geyser basins, near 
the bead of the Madison, here known as the Firehole, river. 
Several others are farther N. in the Norris basin upon Gibbon 
river, a branch of the Madison, and others are farther S. in the 
Shoshone basin. 

Excelsior, the largest geyser, with a crater about 300 ft. long and 
200 ft. wide, ha» not been active since 1890, but for several years 
after its discovery it threw up at intervals a huge mass of water to 
a height of 200-250 ft. Old Faithful, at regular intervals of 65-70 
minutes, throws up a column of hot water 2 ft. in diameter to a 
height of 125-150 ft., and the eruption lasts 4-4) minutes. The 
Giant, at intervals of 2 to 4 days or more, throws up a column to a 
height of 250 ft. for 90 minutes. The Beehive (so called from the 
shape of its cone), the Grand and the Lone Star throw up columns 
to a height of 200 ft. but at irregular intervals. In the Norris basin 
are the Black Growler and the Hurricane, which consist of small 
apertures through which steam rushes with such tremendous force 
that it may be beard for miles. The hot springs are widely distri- 
buted over the plateau and number from 3000 to 4000. The water 
of most of the springs and geysers holds silica in solution in con- 
siderable quantities, so that as it cools and evaporates it deposits 
a dassling white sinter which has covered many square miles of the 
valleys and contrasts strongly with the dark green of the surrounding 
forests. The springs, geysers and steam vena are scattered over 
it in the most irregular fashion. The ailicioua matter has also built 
up around the springs and geysers cones or mounds of considerable 
sue and great beauty of form. The water Of many of the springs 
contains sulphur, iron, alum and other materials in solution, which 
m places stain the pure white sinter with bright bands of colour, 
The tints and hues of some of the pools are of matchless beauty. 
Near the N. boundary of the park there is a group of about 70 active 
springs, known as the Mammoth Hot Springs, which hold carbonate 
of lime in solution. Their deposits have built across a small valley 
or ravine a series of broad, flat, concentric terraces beautiful in 
form and 300 ft. in height. The water which trickles over the rims 
of the pools and basins on the upper terraces is a transparent blue, 
while the formation itself contains a network of fibrous algae which 
gives it a wonderful variety of colours. In the lower Geyser basin 
are the Mammoth Paint Pots, a group 01 mud springs with colours 
varying according to the mineral ingredients in the steam, which 
not only colours the mud but also forms it into imitative figures. 
1, ., ntre Q f the p^jj k ^ U( j Caldron, a circular crater about 



40 ft. deep with the boiling mud at the bottom. Although there 
have been some changes in the thermal energy in the park since 
1 871, there has been no appreciable diminution. Certain springs 
and geysers lose some of their energy at intervals, while others gain; 
certain geysers have oeconie quiescent, but sosserssw ones have been 
formed. 

The Continental Divide coosses the park in a S.E. direction 
from the meeting-point of die states of Wyoming, Idaho and 
Montana. The small section S. of the Divide » drained by 
the Snake river into the Columbia river and the Pacific Ocean; 
the large section N. of the Divide » drained by the Yellowstone 
and Madison rivers into the Missouri, the Mississippi and the 
Gulf of Mexico. The Lewis river, a fork of the Snake, has 
its origin in the beautiful Shoshone Lake, and the Heart river, 
another fork of the Snake, rises in Heart Lake, under Mt. 
Sheridan. 

The Yellowstone drains the entire E. section. Rising just beyond 
its S, limits, it flows into and through Yellowstone Lake, a magni- 
ficent sheet of water, very irregular in shape, dotted with forested 
Islands, having an area of about 140 sq. m., lying 7741 ft. above the 
sea and nearly surrounded by lofty mountains. A few miles beknr 
the lake, the river, after a succession of rapids, leaps over a cliff, 
making the Upper Fall, 109 ft. in height. Half a mue lower down 
it rolls over the Lower Fall, which has a tlear descent of 308 ft. 
The river at this point carries, at the average stage of water, about 
1200 cub. ft. per second. With this fall the river enters the M Grand 
Canyon," which in many scenic effects is unequalled. Its depth is 
not great, at least as compared with the canyons upon the Colorado 
river system ; it ranges from 600 ft. at its head to 1200 near the 
middle, where it passes the Washburn Mountains, Its length to 
the mouth of Lamar river is 24 m. It is cut in the volcanic ptafraii, 
and its ragged broken walls, which are inclined at very steep angles, 
are of a richness of colouring that almost defies description, a 
colouring that is produced by the action of the thermal springs, at 
the base of the canyon, upon the mineral pigments in the lava. 
Bright orange, yellow, red and purple hues predominate end see 
set off very effectively against the dark green pines with which the 
margins of the canyon are fringed* and the white foam of the river 
at the bottom of the chasm. Near the foot of the Grand Canyon. 
Tower creek, which drains the concavity of the horseshoe formed 
by the Washburn Mountains, enters the Yeuowstone. Just above 
its mouth this stream makes a beautiful fall of 13a ft into the gorge 
in which it joins the river. A few miles farther down, the Yellow- 
stone Is joined by an E. branch, Lamar- river, which drains a large 
part of the Absaroka Range. Then it enters the Third Canyon, 
from which it emerges at the mouth of Gardiner river. The latter 
stream drains an area of elevated land by means of its three forks, 
and upon each of them occurs a fine fall in its descent toward the 
Yellowstone. The Madison rises in the W. of the park and flows in 
a generally N. and then W. course out of the park. Its waters are 
mainly collected from the rainfall upon the plateaux, and from the 
hot springs and geysers, most of which are within its drainage area. 
Upon this river and its affluents are several fine falls. Indeed, all 
the streams in this region show evidence, in the character of their, 
courses, of a recent change of level in the surface of the country. 

The climate, influenced by the high elevation, is character- 
ized by long and severe winters and short summers with great 
diurnal extremes of temperature. But the low temperature 
causes Che moisture-laden winds to deposit here greater quantities 
of rain and snow than in the semi-arid regions below, which not 
only promote the growth of vegetation, but cause the activity 
of the springs, geysers and waterfalls. The mean annual 
temperature at the station of the United States Weather Bureau, 
near the N. boundary, is 39° F. The summer (June, Jury 
and August) mean Is 59°; the winter (December, January and 
February) mean, 20°. 

Extremes have ranged from 06° in July to -£5* In February. The 
temperature has fallen to 30* in July, and a warm summer day may 
at any time be followed by frost at night. The mean annual pre- 
cipitation is !Q*6 in. Much of this is in the form of snow, and nearly 
half of it is during the four months from December to March ; in 
the four dryest months, from Jury to October, ft is only 4*4 in. 
Some snow falls in every month except Jury and August, and the 
average annuaf snowfall amounts to 947 in. • The prevailing winds 
areS. 

About four-fifths of the park Is covered with dense forests 
of black pine (Pimu Mwreyona), balsam, fir, spruce, cedar 
and poplar. These trees do not attain a large siae. A low 
blueberry (Voccinutn vtyrtiiis) forms a thick underbrush in 
much of the forest. Choke-cherries, gooseberries, 
berries, red currants and black currants grow along the s 
and in moist places of the lower altitudes. la the glades are 



YEMEN 



9*3 



and a- variety of flowering plants; buttercups, 
daisies, forget-me-nots and other wild flowers, may be found 
near melting snow-banks in August. In the hot-spring districts 
are plants with peculiarities both of those common to the 
desert and those common to the seashore. In the N.E. corner 
of the park fossil forests rise one above the other. After the 
destruction of one forest by volcanic eruptions, another grew 
over it; it, too, was buried under volcanic material, and the 
process was repeated several times. 

The native fauna is abundant and varied. The policy of 
the government which protects game, both in the park and in 
the surrounding national forests, has induced elk, deer, ante- 
lope, mountain-sheep, bears, porcupines, coyotes, squirrels, 
gophers and woodchucks to take shelter here. There are also a 
few moose and some beavers. Black, brown and grizzly bears 
may be seen at almost any time during the summer season 
feeding on the garbage from the hotels. A few wild bison still 
remain at large, and besides these there is a herd of about 100 
confined within a pasture in the Lamar Valley. The lakes 
and rivers are well stocked with trout and other fish, and 
visitors have the privilege of catching a limited number with 
rod and line. Robins, bluebirds, warblers, chickadees, finches, 
vtreos, wrens, yellow-beaded blackbirds, nutcrackers, nut- 
hatches, meadow-larks, sparrows, woodpeckers, swifts, kingbirds 
and several other species of small birds are found in the park, 
but the number of each is not great. Among birds of prey 
are the golden eagle, bald eagle, hawks and owls. Geese, 
ducks, cranes, pelicans and gulls are very numerous in the 
autumn months. 

The park is under the supervision of a superintendent who 
is appointed and instructed by the Secretary of the Interior. 
It is policed, however, by troops of United States cavalry 
with headquarters at Fort Yellowstone, near the Mammoth 
Hot Springs, and the building of roads and other improvements 
is under the direction of the Secretary of War. The only rail- 
way approaches to the park are a branch of the Northern 
Pacific railway up the valley of the Yellowstone to the main 
gate at Gardiner, Montana, and a branch of the Oregon Short 
Line up the valley of the North Fork of the Snake to Yellow- 
stone, Montana. Automobiles are not allowed within the park, 
and the principal means of conveyance is by stage coaches and 
by a s t eam boat on Yellowstone Lake. There are hotels at the 
Mammoth Hot Springs, at the principal geyser basins and at 
Yellowstone Lake. The hotekand stage lines open for the tourist 
season carry in June and close in the middle of September. 

The strange phenomena of this region were known to some 
of the Indians; they* were discovered by John Colter, a member 
of the Lewis and Clark expedition, in 1007; the region was 
visited by James Bridger before 1840; an account of the 
geysers was published at Nauvoo, Illinois, in The Wasp, a 
Mormon paper, in 184s; Captain W. F. Raynolds, of the 
United States Corps of Topographical Engineers, with full 
knowledge of Bridget's accounts, was ordered to explore the 
region in 1850, and yet, chiefly because of the persistent in- 
credulity with which the accounts of the phenomena were 
received, the region remained practically unknown until 1870. 
From 1863 to 1866 gold seekers repeatedly confirmed the 
early reports, and the publication of their accounts in Western 
papers gradually aroused interest. In 1869 a private exploring 
party, consisting of David E. Folsom, C. W. Cook and William 
Peterson, set out from the gold-fields of Montana with the 
express purpose of verifying or refuting the rumours, and 
they returned full of enthusiasm. In 1870 a semi-official 
expedition, led by Henry D. Washburn, the surveyor-general 
of Montana, and Lieutenant Gustavus C. Doane of the Second 
United States Cavalry, made the M Yellowstone Wonderland " 
widely known. A year later an expedition under Dr Ferdinand 
V. Haydcn (18*0-1887) made a large collection of specimens 
and photographs, and with these data, together with the reports 
of this and the Washburn-Doane expedition, Congress was 
Induced to reserve the area from settlement, which was done 
by an act approved the xst of March 1872. In that year 



further explorations were made, and in subsequent years 
army expeditions continued the work of exploration. In 1878 
a map of the park based upon triangulation was drawn up by the 
Hayden survey, and in 1883-35 a more detailed map was made 
by the United States Geological Survey, and a systematic study 
of its geological phenomena was instituted. 

See Arnold Hague, Geoloty of the Yellowstone National Park 
(Washington, 1899), "Geological History of the Yellowstone 
National Park," in the Annual Reports of the Smithsonian Institu- 
tion (ibid., 1893), and " The Yellowstone National Park," in 
Scribtur's Masons* (May. 1904); W. H. Weed, "Formation of 
Travertine and Siliceous Sinter by the Vegetation of Hot Spring*,'* 
in the oth Annual Report of the Director of the United States 
Geological Survey (Washington, 1889) ; descriptions in the 5th. 6th 
and 12th Reports of the Hayden Geological and Geographical Survey 
of the Territories (ibid., 1671, 187a and 1878); J. H. Kaftery, His* 
torical and Descriptive Sketch of the Yellowstone National Park, 
Senate Document No. 73a, 2nd Session of the 60th Congress (ibid.. 
1909): H. M. Chittenden, Yellowstone National Park, Historical 
and Descriptim (Cincinnati,- 1895) ; and Annual Reports of the 
Superintendent of the Park (Washington, 1880 sqq.). 



(Kosson), a province of Arabia, forming the S.W 
corner of the peninsula, between 12* 35* and 18 N., and 4a* 
and 47° E., bounded on the N. by Asir and on the E. by the 
Dahlia desert and Hadramut. Ptolemy and the ancient 
geographers in general include the whole peninsula under the 
name of Arabia Felix (etfojuui'), in which sense they translate 
the Arabic Yemen, literally " right hand," for all Arabia S. of 
the Gulf of Akaba was to the right from their standpoint of 
Alexandria; the Mahommedan geographers, however, viewing 
it from Mecca, confine the term to the provinces S. of Hejaa, 
including Asir, Hadramut, Oman and part of southern Kejd. 
The Turkish vilayet of Yemen includes Asir, and extends along 
the Red Sea coast from El Laith in the N. to Shekh Said at 
the straits of Bab-el-Mandeb; its land boundary on the E. is 
undefined, except in the S.E., where the boundary between 
Turkish territory and that of the independent tribes under 
British protection was denned by an agreement between Great 
Britain and Turkey in 1004, by a line running approximately 
N.E. from Shekh Said to the Dahna desert. The main physical 
characteristics of the province are described in the article 
Ababxa. A lowland strip 20 to 30 m. wide extends along its 
western and southern coasts, skirting the great mountain 
range which runs along the whole western side of the Arabian 
peninsula, and attains its greatest height in the Jibal, or high- 
lands of Yemen; beyond this mountain zone the interior plateau 
falls gradually towards the N.E. to the Dahna desert. 

The lowland, or Tehama, is hot and generally sterile; it contains 
oases, however, near the foot of the mountains, fertilised and 
irrigated by hill streams and supporting many large villages and 
towns. The most important of these are Abu Arish, Bet el Fakih 
and Zubed in the western Tehama, the latter a thriving town of 
20,000 inhabitants and the residence of a Turkish kaimakam: 
and Abyan and Lahej, the chief place of the independent Abdak 
tribe, in the southern Tehama. Hodeda and Aden are the only 
porta of commercial importance, Lohaia and Ghalefika have sunk 
to insignificant fishing villages, and Mokha, the old centre of the 
coffee trade, is now almost deserted. The Jibal forms a mountainous 
zone some 50 m. in width rising steeply from the foothills of the 
Tehama to an average height of 9000 ft.; many summits exceed 
10,000 ft.— -the highest fixed by actual survey is Jenel Manar, 10^65 
ft., about 10 m. tL of the town of Ibb. With ha temperate climate 
and regular rainfall, due to the influence of the S.W. monsoon, the 
Jibal must be considered the roost favoured district of Arabia, 
The villages are substantially built of stone, often picturesquely 
situated on the spurs and crests of the huls, the houses clusterinc 
round the dars or towers which dominate the cultivated slopes and 
valleys. The principal crops are wheat, barley, millet and coffee, 
the last-named more particularly on the western slopes of the range 
within reach of the moist sea-breezes. In many places thehflV 
sides, otherwise too steep for cultivation, are cut into terraced 
fields supported by stone walls; the name given by the Greek 
geographers to the range of S. Arabia was no doubt intended to 
describe the step-like appearance of the hills due to this method of 
cultivation. A special characteristic of the Yemen highlands is 
that fields and inhabited sites are found at the highest elevations, 
the mountain-tops forming extensive plateaux, often scarped on 
every aide and only accessible by difficult paths cut in the cliffs 
which encircle them like the escarpments of a natural fortress; a 
remarkable example of this b Jebel Jihaf on the Aden border, 800O ft. 



9*4 



YENISEI— YENISEISK 



above sea-level and 4000 ft. above the Kataba valley, an isolated 
plateau tome 6 m. long, containing thirty or forty villages. 

The principal town of the Jibal is Talx, the teat of a Turkish 
mutassarif ; Its present population does not exceed 4000, but it was 
formerly a large city, and from its position in the centre of a com- 
paratively ferule district at the junction of several trade routes it 
must always be important. It contains five mosques and the 
Turkish government offices and barracks, and in the business quarter 
several cafes and shops kept by Greeks. The climate is unhealthy, 
perhaps owing to its position in a low valley, 4400 ft. above sea-level, 
at the foot olthe lofty Jebel Sabur (9900 ft.), and even in Niebuhr's 
time many of the houses in the city were in ruins. Thirty miles 
further N. are the small towns of Ibb (6700 ft.) and Jibla, about 
5 m. apart, typical hill towns with their high stone-built houses and 
paved streets. To the E. on the main road to the coast via Zubed 
ts Uden, the centre of a coffee-growing district: 80 m. to the N. is 
Manikha, a Turkish post 00 the main road from Hodeda to the 
capital, and the chief place of Jebel Hart*, which produces the best 
coffee in Yemen. Another group of hill towns lies still further N. in 
the mountain mass between the Wadi Maur and Wadi La's, where the 
strongholds of Dhafir, Afar, Haja and KaurkaSan held out for long 
against the Turkish advance; the last-named town, now almost 
deserted, was once a city of 20,000 inhabitants, and the capital of 
a small principality which preserved its independence during the 
earlier Turkish occupation be twe en 1536 and 1630. 

The inner or plateau sone of Yemen stretches along the whole 
length of the province, with an average width of 120 m ; it lies 
entirely to the E. of the M ' range, and hat therefore a smaller 
rainfall than the Jibal: its general character is that of a steppe 
increasing in aridity toward* the E. where it merges in the desert, 
but broken in places by rocky ranges, some of which rise 2000 ft. 
above the general level, and which in the Hamdan district N. of Sana 
show evidence of volcanic action. It is intersected by several 
wadi systems, of wh: '■< the principal are those in the N. uniting to 
form the Wadi Nejrin, in the centre the Wadi Kharid and Shibwan 
running to the Jauf, and in the r 5. the Wadi Bana and its affluents 
draining to the Gulf ft Aden- The plateau has a gradual fall from 
the watershed near Yarim, &500 ft. above sea-level, to less than 
4000 ft. at the edge < vt the cWrt. 

The northern part m .wlv down to the latitude of Sana, is the 
territory of the warlike Huh id and Bakll tribes, which have never 



submitted to the Turks, aud m 1B92 and again in 1904-5 drove the 
Turkish troops from almost every garrison in the province, and for a 
time held the capital Sana itself for the Imam Muhammad Yahiya, 



the representative of the old dynasty that ruled in Yemen from the 
expulsion of the Turks in 1650 till its reconquest in 187 1. The 
principal places are Sa'da, the residence of the Imam, an important 
town on the old pilgrim road 120 m. N*. of Sana, Khaiwan and Khamr. 
In the N.E., bordering on the desert, is the district of Nejrin, a 
mountainous country with several fertile valleys including the 
Wadi Nejrin, Bedr and Habuna, all probably draining N.E. to 
the Wadi Dtwasir. Further S. is the oasis of Jauf, a hollow or 
depression, as its name signifies, containing many villages, and of 
great antiquarian interest as the central point of the old Minaean 



j kingdoms, known to the ancients from the earliest 

historical times through their control of the frankincense trade of 
S. Arabia. Ma*in, identified by Halevv as the seat of the former, 
b on a hilltop surrounded by walls still well preserved. Numerous 
other ruins were found by him in the neighbourhood, together with 
inscriptions supporting the identification. M&rib, the Sabaean 
capital, was celebrated lor its great dam, built according to tradition 
by the Queen of Sheba, and the bursting of which in a.d. 120 is said 
to have led to the abandonment of the city. This was, however, 
more probably due to the deterioration of the country through 
desiccation, which has forced the settled population farther west- 
ward, where Sana became the centre of the later Himyaritic kingdom. 
The Arhab district drained by the Wadi Kharid and Shibwan between 
Sana and the Jauf is covered with Himyaritic ruins, showing that 
the land formerly supported a large settled population where owing 
to the want of water cultivation is now impossible. 

South of this independent tribal territory the principal places are 
Amran and Shibtm on the road leading N. from the capital Sana; 
Dhamar (a town of 4000 inhabitants, the residence of a kaimakam, 
and the seat of an ancient university) and Yarim are on the road 
leading S. to Aden; and two days 1 journey to the E. is Rada in the 
ex trem e S.E. of Turkish Yemen, formerly a large town, but now much 
decayed. From near Rada the boundary runs S.W. to the small 
town of Kataba through which the direct road passes from Aden to 
Sana. The territory to the S. and E. is occupied by independent 
tribes under British protection, of which the principal are the Yafa', 
the Haoshabi and the AbdalL 

The inhabitants of Yemen are settled, and for the most part 
occupied in agriculture and trade, the conditions which favour the 
pastoral or Bedouin type found in Hejas and Nejd hardly exist- 
ing. As in the adjoining province of Hadramut, with which Yemen 
has always been closely related, the people are divided into four 



(1) The Seyyids or Ashrlf, descendants of the prophet, 
forming a religious aristocracy; (2) the Kabail, or tribesmen, 
belonging to the Kahtanic or original S. Arabian stock, who form 



the bulk of the population, a_ 
arms; (3) the trading class: < 

African descent, and including _. _ _____ . 

wear a distinctive garb and occupy separate villages, or quarters 
in the towns. Owing to the l_srdships to which they have been 



,an<Iaretheottry__sashal)h_---y_s_rrying 
iss: (4) the servile class, mostly of mixed 
ludtng a number of Jews. These latter 



through the disturbed atate of the country, many are 
emigrating to Jerusalem. 

See C. Niebuhr, Travels and Description of Arabia (Amsterdam, 
1774); D. G. Hogarth, Penetration of Arabia (London, 1904); E. 
Glaser, Ge t tkick t e und Ceographu Arabian (Berlin, 1890), and in 
Petermann's Mitt. (1886); ft. Mansoni. U Yemen (Rome. 1884); A. 
Deflers, Voyag* en Yemen (Paris, 1889); S M. Z^mer\ Arabia 
(Edinburgh, 1000): W. B. Harris. A Journey through Yemen 
(London. »&93); H. Burehardt, Z. d. Ges. ffir Erdkunde (Berlin, 
19 0a), No . 7. (R. A. w.) 

YENISEI, a river of Asia, which rises in two principal bead- 
streams, the Bei-kem and the Khua-kem, on the plateau of 
N.W. Mongolia— the former on the S. flank of the Sayan 
Mountains in 97° 30' E. and 52° _o' N. v and the latter in marshes 
a few miles W. of Lake Kosso-goi They have a westerly 
course, but after uniting they turn N. f through the Sayan 
Mountains in the wild gorge of Kemchik, in 92 E. Thence the 
river makes its way across the Alpine region that borders the 
Sayan Mountains on the N. until it emerges upon the steppes at 
Sayansk (53° to' N.). Augmented by the Abakan on the left 
and the Tuba on the right, it traverses the mining region of 
Minusinsk, approaches within 6 m. of the Chulym, a tributary 
of the Ob, Intersects the Siberian railway at Krasnoyarsk, 
and h joined first by the Kan and then by the Upper 
(Verkhnyaya), the Stony (Podkamennsya), and the Lower 
(NLshnyaya) Tunguzka, all from the right. The Upper Tun- 
guzka, known also as the Angara, drains Lake Baikal, and is 
navigable from Irkutsk. The Yenisei continues N. to the 
Arctic Ocean, joined on the left by the Zym, Tumkhan and 
Ingarevka, and on the right by the Kureika and Daneshlrina. 
After the confluence of the Angara, the stream continues to 
widen out to 30 m., its bed being littered with islands until it 
breaks Into its delta (240 m. long). The length of the river is 
nearly 3000 m., and the area of its drainage basin 970,000 sq. m. 
It is navigable as far up as Minusinsk, a distance of 1840 m., 
and is free from ice on the average for 155 days at Turuknansk 
and for 106 days at Krasnoyarsk. A canal connects the Great 
Kas, a tributary of the Yenisei, with the Ket, an affluent of 
the Ob. 

YENISEISK, a government of E. Siberia, extending from 
the Chinese frontier to the shores of the Arctic Ocean, with an 
area of 986,908 sq. m. It has the governments of Tobolsk and 
Tomsk on the W., Yakutsk and Irkutskon the B., N.W. Mon- 
golia on the S. and the Arctic Ocean on the N. Its southern 
extremity being in 51° 45' N. and its northern (Cape Chelyuskin) 
in 77° s8\ it combines a great variety of prographical types, 
from the Sayan alpine regions In the S. to the tundras of the 
Arctic littoral. 

The border-ridge of the high plateau of N.W. Mongolia, which ■ 
known under the general name of the Western Sayans, and reaches 
altitudes of 7000 to 8000 ft., limits it on the S. This is flanked oa 
the north-western slope by a sone, nearly 100 m. wide, characteriied 
by narrow valleys separating parallel chains of mountains, which are 
built up of crystalline slates, 6600 to 7000 ft. high. Here in the 
impenetrable forests a few Tungus families live by minting. Towards 
the S., in the basins of the Tuba, Sisim, Yus, Kan, Agul and Biryusa. 
the valleys of the alpine tracts contain rich auriferous deposits, and 
numerous gold-washings have been established along the taiga. 
A flattened range of mountains, hardly attaining more than 3000 to 
3500 ft., shoot* N.E. from the Kuznetskiy Ala-tau, and separates 
the dry steppes of Minusinsk and Abakan from the next terrace 
of plains. 1200 to 1700 ft, in altitude, which also stretch N.E. from 
Barnaul in the government of Tomsk to Krasnoyarsk, and into the 
upper basin of the Vilui. Another system of mountains, known as 
the Yeniseisk Taiga, rises on the outer border of this terrace. In the 
space between the upper Tunguska, or Angara, and the Podkamen- 
naya Tunguska. This system consists of several parallel chains 
running S.W. to N.E., and reaching 2500 to 4500 ft. in altitude, though 
they are much lower on the left bank of the Yenisei, For many 
years past the Yeniseisk Taiga has been one of the most productive 
auriferous regions of Siberia, on account not so much of the percentage 
of gold in its alluvial deposits (which are poor in comparison with 
those of Olekminsk) as of the facilities for supplying the gotd-nesds 
with food produced in the steppes of Mmusinak. 



YENISEISK— YEOMAN 



9*5 



Beyond the Yeniseisk Taiga begin the lowlands, which aft no point 
fwniore then a few hundred feet above the sea. They slope gently 
towards the Arctic Ocean and are covered with lakes, acanty 
forests and marshes; and, as they approach the ocean, thev assume 
more and more the character of barren tundras. Beyond 70* N. 
trees occur only along the courses of the rivers. Two ranges, 
however, break the monotony of the lowlands t he Tungusk, 
which stretches N.E., between the Khatanga and Anabar rivers, 
and the Byrranga mountains, which skirt the N.W. shore of the 
Taimyr peninsula- The shores of the Arctic Ocean are indented by 
deep estuaries, that of the Tax penetrating 600 m. into the interior 
of the continent, and that of the Yenisei jooro. Taymyr, Thaddeus 
and Khatanga Bays are wide and deep indentations, ice-bound 
almost all the year round. Taymyr peninsula, between the Yenisei 
and the Khatanga, is a stony tundra. 

The government is drained by the Yenisei and its affluents. 
In 55* N. this river approaches the Chulym, a tributary of the Ob, 
from which it is separated by an isthmus only 6 m. in width. The 
possibility of connecting the two great river systems of Siberia 
at this point has often been discussed; the difficulty is that the 
Oiulym valley is 440 ft . higher than the other. 

Yeniseisk is rich in all kinds of metals and miaerals. Gold dust 
appears in the N. Yeniseisk Taiga, in the reekm of the Kusnetskiy 
Ala-tau and »tt spurs, with the basins of the Tuba, Sisim and Black 
and White Yus, and In the upper parts of the tributaries of the 
Kan and Agul. Silver ore is found in the basin of the Abakan, but 
the mines have been abandoned. Iron ore occurs almost everywhere 
in S. Yeniseisk, but there is only one iron-work on the Abakan. 
Salt lakes are common* 

The climate, though very severe throughout, offers mat, varieties. 
The Minusinsk steppes have a dry andVefatively mild climate At 
Krasnoyarsk (55* 1' N.) the climate is more severe, and the winds 
are disagreeable. The yearly faU of snow is so small that the 
winds blow it away in the neighbourhood of the town. The town of 
Yeniseisk (58* 27 N.) has an average temperature below freering- 
point, and at Turukhansk the coldest month (February) averages 
—24* F. On the Taymyr peninsula the average summer tempera- 
ture hardly reaches 45** 

The highlands of Sayan and Ala-tau are thickly clothed with 
forests of cedar, pitch-pine, larch, elder and birch, with rhodo- 
dendrons, Berberis and Rtbes; the Scotch fir appears only in the 
lower and drier parts of the valleys. The summits and slopes of 
the mountains are strewn with debris and boulders, and thickly 
carpeted with lichens and mosses; but there arc patches of meadow- 
land brightened with flowers, most of which are known in Europe. 
Still, the flora is poor as a rule, and Dr Martianov, after several 
years* labour, succeeded in collecting only 104 species of phanero- 
gams. 1 On the other hand, the Mtoueinsk plains and the steppes 
of the Abakan are bright with flowers scattered amid the common 
Gramiuead, and in June and July with the Polygala, Diantkus, 
Hcduap, Lathyrus, yellow sweet-scented lily, and scores of other 
flowers, mostly famikar in Europe, but attaining in Yeniseisk a 
larger sbe and greater brilliancy of colour. The rich carpet of 



and flowers is overtopped by the talk white blossoms of Arch*n£fluo 
and Spivmea Ulmaria, and by the blue masses of Veronica knpfolui. 
The meadows of the moister localities, surrounded by thickets of 
willow, poplar, wild cherry and hawthorn, are still more attractive, 
on account of their wealth in a n emone s, violets, gentians and so on, 
and the numerous creepers which festoon the trees and shrubs. 
Dr Martianov s lists enumerate a total of 760 flowering and 760 cryp- 
togamic plants. Of the lower Fungi and parasitical Myxotnycete* 
1300 species were noted, and out of the 1*3 species hitherto described 
by specialists no fewer than 134 have proved to be new. Farther 
N. the flora is similar in character to that of the Siberian lowlands 
(see SiasniA). In the Taimyr peninsula it is represented by only 
124 species of flowering plants. 

The steppes of the upper Yenisei have been inhabited from 
a very remote antiquity, and numberless knrgans, or burial- 
mounds, graves, rock inscriptions and smelting furnaces of 
the successive inhabitants are scattered all over the prairies of 
Abakan and Minusinsk.* The present population exhibit traces 
of all their predecessors. Numerous survivals of Turkish and 
Samoyedic tribes are found in the steppes and in the Sayans; 
but some of them are greatly reduced in numbers. The 
estimated population in 1006 was 657,000. It is almost entirely 
Russian, the rest (about 10%) consisting of Samoyedes, Tatars, 
Tunguses, Yakuts, Mongols and Ostyaks. The government is 
divided into five districts, the chief towns of which are Krasno- 
yarsk, Achinsk, Kansk, Minusinsk and Yeniseisk. 

* N. Martianov, * r Materials for a Flora of the Minusinsk Region," 
in Trasfy of the Kazan Society of Naturalists (xi. 3, 1882). 

•Sea W. Radlov, Am SiHriem (a vols.. Uiprig. iflflo), 
N. Savewkov, in /aaawts of the East Siberian Geographical 
(avsv. iM7). 



Some 1,117,000 acres (0-2%) are under crops, the principal 1 
rye. wheat, oats, barley and potatoes. Live-stock, including reia> 
dter t breeding is very extensively carried on. Fishing, especially 
on the lower Yenisei, is of great importance. Sables are not now 
to be found, and the hunters obtain chiefly squirrels, foxes, Arctic 
foxes and bears. In the middle of the 10th century 410/100 to 
obtained annually in N. and 5. Yeniseisk, 



£35,000 < 



but by the endof the century the output had dropped to less than 
100,0000a. Salt is extracted as well as Epsom salts. Coal has been 
found on the Lower Tunguxka, near the mouth of the Yenisei, and 
in many places in the S» of the government. Silver, copper, lead, 
brown coal or lignite, rock-salt, graphite and mica all exist in large 
quantities, but are not regularly mined. There are several dis- 
tilleries. The trade is in furs (exported), and in groceries and manu- 
factured goods (imported). The cold-fields of the Yeniseisk Taiga 
are supplied with grain and cattle by river from the Minusinsk 
region, and with salt, spirits and iron by the Angara. The govern- 
ment is traversed from W. to E. by the Siberian railway, and con- 
siderable efforts have been made to establish regular steamer com- 
munication between the mouth of the Yenisei and W. Europe. For 
some years before the close of the toth century steamers («.*. that 
of the English Captain Wiggins) reached the mouth of the Yenisei, 
importing provisions and machinery for the gold mines. Efforts 
have been made to dear the rapids of the Angara, so as to bring 
Lake Baikal into steamer communication with the Yenisei. Owing 
to the shallow n ess, however, of the small tributaries of the Yenisei 
the canal connecting the Yenisei with the Ob has not proved as 
serviceable as was expected. (P. A. rO; J. T. Bs.) 



a town of Asiatic Russia, capital of the govern- 
ment of the same name, on the right bank of the Yenisei, 170 m 
N.N.W. of Krasnoyarsk, with which it has regular wmmimir^ 
tion by steamer. Pop. isjooo. It is the centre of a goM- 
mining region, and has a public library and a natural history 
a mi arc haeological museum. The town was founded in 1618. 

YEOLA, a town of British India, in the Nasik district of 
Bombay, on the chord line of the Great Indian Peninsula 
railway, 18 m. from Manmad junction. Pop. (1001) 16,550. 
There are important manufactures of cotton and silk doth and 
thread, and also of gold and silver wire. At the time of its 
foundation Yeola was under the emperor of Delhi; it subse- 
quently passed into the hands of the rajas of Satan, and then 
the Peshwas. Finally it was given in grant to Vithai, the 
a ncesto r of the present chief of Vinchur. 

YEOMAN, a term of which the various meanings fail into 
two main divisions, first that of a dass of holders of land, and 
secondly that of a retainer, guard, attendant or subordinate 
officer or official. The word appears in M.E. as ynun, pass* 
and yeman; it does not appear in O.E. Various explanations 
of the first part have been suggested, such njumg-manm, young 
man, and ytnu-man, attendant, from yrstc, care; but it is 
generally accepted that the first part is the same word as the 
Ger. Can, district, province, and probably occurs in OJ5. as fls 
in 5s8ri-jJo, Surrey, i.e. southern district, and other place-names. 
Thus in O. Frisian is found gdman, a villager; Bavarian, 
gSumann, peasant. " Yeoman M thus meant a countryman, a 
man of the district, and it is this sense which has survived in the 
special use of the word for a class of landholders, treated below. 
For the transition in meaning to a guard of the sovereign's body 
and to officials of a royal household see YioaTSM cor tux Guaid 
and Valet. In the British royal household there are, besides 
the Yeomen of the Guard, a yeoman of the wine and beer cellar, 
a yeoman of the sOvcr pantry and yeoman state porters. The 
term also occurs in the title of the first assistant to the Usher of 
the Black Rod, the Yeoman Usher of the Black Rod. In the 
British navy there are petty officer* in charge of the signalling 
styled M Yeomen of Signals." For the history and present 1 
organization of the "yeomanry cavalry" see YiosJAjrav and 
United Kingdom (§ Army). 

The extent of the class covered by the word " yeoman " in 
England has never been very exactly defined. Not only has the 
meaning of the word varied from century to century, but men 
writing about it at the same time have given to it different in- 
terpretations. One of the earliest pictures of a yeoman is that 
given by Chaucer in the Prologue to the CaiOtrbmy Tain. 
Here, represented as a forester, he follows the esquire as a 
retainer or dependant. The yeomen of the ages snemriing 
Chaucer are, however, practically all occupied in cultivating the 



qib 



YEOMANRY— YEOMEN OF THE GUARD 



land, although, doubtless from its younger sods, the class 
furnished retainers for the great lords, men-at-arms and archers 
for the wars, and also tradesmen for the towns. Stubbs {Const. 
Hist, vol iii.) refers to them as " a body which in antiquity of 
possession and purity of extraction was probably superior to 
the classes that looked down upon it as ignoble," and Medley 
(Eng. Const. Hist.) describes the yeomen as in the 15th century 
representing on the whole " the small freeholders of the feudal 
manor." Holinshed, in his Chronicle, following Sir T. Smyth 
(De rcpublica Anghrum), and W. Harrison (Description of 
England), describes them as having free land worth {fi annually, 
and in times past 40s., and as not entitled to bear arms, being 
for the most part farmers to gentlemen, and this description may 
be accepted as the popular idea of the yeoman in the 16th 
century. He formed the intermediate class between the gentry 
and the labourers and artisans, the line of demarcation, however, 
being not drawn very distinctly. 

The yeomen were the smaller landholders, and in the 15th 
century were practically identical with the forty-shilling free- 
holders who exercised the franchise under the act of 143a 
Occasionally they found their way into parliament, for in 1446 
the sheriffs were forbidden to return vattetti (i.e. yeomen) as 
members, but this- prohibition had very little result. Soon, 
however, the name appears to have included tenant farmers as 
well as small freeholders. Thus Latimer, in his famous sermon 
before Edward VI., says: " My father was a yeoman, but had 
no land of his own"; the bishop represents the yeoman as an 
exceedingly prosperous person, and the same opinion had been 
expressed about a century before by Sir John Fortescue in his 
Governance of England. The decay of the class began with the 
formation of large sheep farms in the 16th century, but its 
decline was very slow, and the yeomen furnished many sturdy 
recruits to the parliamentary party during the Civil War. Their 
decay was accelerated during the 18th century, when many of 
them were bought out by the large landowners, while they re- 
ceived another blow when the factory system destroyed the 
country's domestic industries. Many writers lament the decay 
of the yeoman in the 18th and 19th centuries, but this is partly 
accounted for by the fact that they exclude all tenant farmers 
from the class, which they confine to men cultivating their own 
land. Thus the wheel has come full circle and the word means 
to-day much the same aa it meant in. the early part of the 15th 
century. 

YEOMANRY, the name given to the volunteer mounted 
troops of the home defence army of Great Britain, ever since their 
original formation; it indicated that recruiting, organization 
and command were upon a- county basis, the county gentlemen 
officering the force, the farmers and yeomen serving in its ranks, 
and all alike providing their own horses. Although the yeomanry 
was created in x 761, it was not organised until x 704. Under the 
stimulus of the French War recruiting was easy, and 5000 men 
were quickly enrolled. A little later, when more cavalry was 
needed, the Provisional Cavalry Act was passed, whereby a sort 
of revived knight-service was established, every owner of ten 
horses having to find and equip a horseman, and all who owned 
fewer than ten, grouped by tens of horses, similarly finding one. 
But an amending act was soon passed, by which yeomanry 
cavalry could be substituted for provisional cavalry in the county 
quota. This gave a great stimulus to yeomanry recruiting, as 
similar enactments had done in the case of the infantry volun- 
teers. But even so the provisional cavalry, which was embodied 
only in counties that did not supply the quota in yeomanry, was 
stronger than the yeomanry at the peace of Amiens. At that 
peace, partly with a view to preserving internal order, partly 
because of the probable renewal of the war, the yeomanry was 
retained, although the provisional cavalry was disbanded. 
There was thus a nucleus for expansion when Napoleon's 
threatened invasion (1803*5) called out the defensive powers of 
the country, and as early as December 1803 there were in England, 
Scotland and Ireland 44,ooo yeomen. At the same time the 
limitations as to place of service (some undertaking to serve in 
any pari of Great Britain, some within a specified militaxy 



district, most only in their own county) were ahoBshrd. Hie 
unit of organization was the troop of 80-100, but most of the 
force was grouped in regiments of five or more troops, or in 
" corps " of three or four troops. Permanent paid adjutants and 
staff sergeants were allowed to corps and regiments, but no 
assistance was given in the shape of officers on the active list and 
serving non-commissioned officers of the army and militia. 
Equipment, supply and mobilization arrangements were purely 
regimental, and through all the war years most of the troops and 
squadrons were ready to take the field, with equipment, food and 
forage, complete at a day's notice. They were trained as light 
cavalry, and armed with sabre and pistol. But a few town 
corps bad mounted riflemen, and several corps, both in town and 
country, had one or more dismounted troops, who were carried 
on vehicles similar to the " Expedition or Military Fly " pictured 
byRowlandson. 

From the extinction of Chartism to the South African War 
the history of the yeomanry is uneventful. The strength of the 
force gradually sank to 10,000. But when it became apparent 
that mounted troops would play a decisive part in the war 
against the Boers, the yeomanry again came to the front. Of 
its 10,000 serving officers and men, 3000 went to South Africa 
in newly formed battalions of " Imperial Yeomanry," armed and 
organized purely as mounted rifles, and to these were added over 
32,000 fresh men, for whom the yeomanry organization at home 
and at the seat of war provided the cadres and training, while 
the home yeomanry not only filled up its gaps but expanded. 
In 1001 the yeomanry, now all styled " Imperial," was re- 
modelled; and the strength of regiments was equalized on a 
tour-equadron basis. In the prevailing conditions practically 
all regiments were able to recruit up to the increased establish- 
ment, and the strength of the force was more than trebled. 
Fresh regiments were formed, some in the towns, others on the 
nucleus of special corps disbanded at the dose of the South 
African War. In 1907 the yeomanry became part of the new 
Territorial Force (see United Kingdom, f Army). 

YEOMEN OF THE GUARD, originally "Yeomen of the 
Guard of (the body of) our Lord the King," or in the 1 sth-century 
Latin, " Valecti garde (corporis) domini Regis," the title (main- 
tained with but a slight variation since their institution in 1485, 
the official wording under Edward VII. being " The King's Body 
Guard of the Yeomen of the Guard ") of a permanent military 
corps in attendance on the sovereign of England, as part of the 
royal household, whose duties, now purely ceremonial, were 
originally that of the sovereign's personal bodyguard. They are 
the oldest existing body of the kind, having an unbroken record 
from 1483, as well as the oldest military body in England. Before 
that time there had been forms of royal guard, but no permanent 
institution. Under Edward I. we find in England the ** cross- 
bowmen of the household," and under Edward II. an "Archer 
guard of the King's body "; but the " Archers of the King," 
" of the crown " or M of the household," who appear in the 
records up to 1454, seem to have had no continuous establish- 
ments. Apparently each sovereign, on coming to the throne, 
established a new Guard of his own particular followers. It 
was not till Henry VII. created the " Yeomen of the Guard " 
that the royal bodyguard came into regular existence. The 
first warrants to individual " Yeomen of the Guard " date from 
September x6, 1485, and it is a fair inference that the Guard was 
created by the king on the battlefield of Bosworth (August a», 
148s), its first members being men who had shared Henry's 
exile in Brittany, followed him on his return, and fought as his 
private Guard in that action. The warrant of September 18, 
1485, now in the Record Office, " to William Brown, Yeoman 
of the King's Guard," corroborates this view — " in consideration 
of the good service that oure humble and faithful subject William 
Browne Yeoman of oure Garde hath heretofore doon unto us 
as well beyonde the see as at our victoricux journeye." It is 
argued by Sir Reginald Hennell that the title of " Yeomen of 
the Guard" signified Henry VII.'s intention to choose the 
special protectors of his person not from the ranks of the nobility, 
but from the class just below them (see Yeonux), who had 



YEOMEN OF THE GUARD 



917 



prove* m sour the backbone of the national strength. The 
teem tateff, or " valets " (see Valet), was already in use, as 
signifying personal attendants, with none ol the modem menial 
sense of the word. 

The first official recorded appearance of the king's bodyguard 
of the Yeomen of the Guard waa at the ooronatkm of ha founder 
Henry VII. at Westminster Abbey on the 31st of October 14S5, 
when it numbered 50 members. This number was rapidly 
increased, for there is an authentic roll of 126 attending the 
king's funeral in 1509. Henry VIII. raised the strength of the 
Guard to 600 when he took it to visit Francis 1. of France at 
the Field of the Cloth of Gold. In Queen Elizabeth's reign it 
numbered roo. The corps was originally officered by a captain 
(a post long associated with that of vice-chamberlain), an ensign 
(or standard-bearer), a clerk of the cheque (or chequer roll, 
his duty being to keep the roll of every one connected with the 
household), besides petty officers, captains, sergeants or ushers. 
In 1669 Charles II. reorganized the Guard and gave it a fixed 
establishment of 100 yeomen, officered by a captain, a lieutenant, 
an ensign, a clerk of the cheque and four corporals, which is 
the present organization and strength. The only variation is 
that the captaincy is now a ministerial appointment filled by a 
nobleman of distinction under the lord chamberlain, and that 
the old rank of " corporals " has been changed to " exon," a 
title derived from " exempt," i.e. exempted from regular regi- 
mental duty for employment on the staff. Formerly officers 
on the active list were given these appointments in addition to 
their own. 

The original duties of the Guard were of the most compre- 
hensive nature. They were the king's personal attendants 
day and night at home and abroad. They were responsible 
for his safety not only on journeys and on the battlefield, but also 
within the precincts of the palace itself. The regulations for 
making of the king's bed in Tudor times were of the most elabor- 
ate formality. No one but the Yeomen of the Guard under an 
officer might touch it. Each portion was separately examined. 
Each sheet or coverlet was laid with the greatest ceremony, 
and the sovereign could not retire to rest until the work was 
reported as well and truly done. The existence of the custom 
is verified at the present day by the designations Y.B.H. 
(" Yeomen Bed-Hangers ") and Y.B.G. (" Yeomen Bed-Goers "), 
which are still affixed against the names of certain yeomen 
on the roll of the Guard. Another of their duties outside the 
palace is retained, viz. the searching of the vaults of the houses 
of parliament at the opening of each session, dating from the 
M Gunpowder Plot " in 1605, when the Yeomen of the Guard 
seized Guy Fawkes and his fellow-traitors and conveyed them to 
the Tower.' Owing to the destruction by fire of most of the 
records of the Guard in St James's Palace in 1809. the precise 
history of the search is a matter of controversy. It is recorded 
in the papers of the House of Lords that the Guard conducted 
it in 1690 and that it has been continuous since 1760, but Sir 
Reginald HenneU's contention is that it dated from 1605 and has 
since been regularly observed. 

Though the corps from the earliest day was composed of 
foot-soldiers, during royal progresses and journeys a portion 
of the Guard formed a mounted escort to the sovereign until 
the end of the Georgian period. 

The dress worn by the Yeomen of the Guard is in its most 
striking characteristics the same as it was in Tudor times. It 
has consisted from the first of a royal red tunic with purple 
facings and stripes and gold lace ornaments. Sometimes the 
sleeves have been fuller and the skirts longer. Red knee-breeches 
and red stockings (white in Georgian period only), flat hat, and 
black shoes with red, white and blue rosettes are worn. Queen 
Elizabeth added the ruff. The Stuarts replaced the ruff and 
round hats with fancy lace and plumed hats. Queen Anne 
discarded both the ruff and the lace. The Georges reintroduced 
the ruff, and it has ever since been part of the permanent dress. 
But the most interesting point connected with the dress is that 
the gold-embroidered emblems on the back and front of the 
coats teU the history of the consoSdation of the kingdoms of 



Great Britain and Ireland. From 1485, when the Guard was 
created, till i6oj, the emblems were the Tudor crown with the 
Lancastrian rose, and the initials of the reigning sovereign. 
When the Stuarts succeeded the Tudors in 1603, they substi- 
tuted the St Edward's crown for the Tudor, and added under it 
and the initials the motto " Dieu et mon Droit," which is still 
worn. When William and Mary came to the throne in 1689, 
their initials were entwined, W.M.R.R. (William, Mary, Rex, 
Regina), the only instance of the queen and king's initials being 
so placed. Anne restored the Tudor crown, and added the 
thistle to the rose on the official union with Scotland in 1709. 
The Georges reverted to the St Edward's crown, and on the 
union with Ireland in 1801 George III. added the shamrock 
to the rose and thistle. No change was made during Queen 
Victoria's reign. But Edward VII. ordered the Tudor crown to 
be substituted for the St Edward's, and now the coats of the 
Guard are as they were in 1485, with the additions of the motto 
" Dieu et mon Droit " and the shamrock and the thistle. 

Up to 1830 the officers of the Guard wore the same Tudor dress 
as the non-commissioned officers and men, but when William IV. 
ordered that in future no civilian should be appointed, and that 
the purchase and sale of officers' commissions should cease, 
the old Tudor dress was discontinued, and the officers were 
given the dress of a field officer of the Peninsular period. 

There has also been little or no change in the arms of the 
Guard. No doubt they retained during Henry VH.'s reign 
(1485-1509) the pikes with which they had helped to win ihc 
battle of Bos worth Field. Under Henry VIII. archery became 
a national pastime, and the long-bow and arrow were issued 
to at least one-half of bis Guard. When firearms came into use, 
a certain portion were armed with the harquebus, the Guard 
being given buff cross belts to support the weight on service. 
When on duty in the palace gold-embroidered cross belts took 
the place of the service buff, and are worn now as part of the stale 
dress. The present weapons of the Guard are a steel gilt halberd 
with a tassel of red and gold, and an ornamental sword. 

The real fighting days of this Guard ended with the Tudor period, 
only at th * * * ' " 



but it was only at the end of the reign of Geofgc II. that the Guard's 
function of attending a sovereign on the battlefield ceased. Their 
last duty in this nature was at the battle of Dcttingcn (J743), when 
they accompanied the king as personal attendants. For a brief 
period during the Georgian era the Guard lost to a certain extent 
its distinctive military character, and a custom crept in of filling 
vacancies with civilian*, who bought their places for considerable 
sums, the appointments of the yeomen proper and the officers being 
of great value. But William IV. put a stop to the practice. The 
bst civilian retired in 1648, and the Guard regained its original 
military character. Every officer (except the captain), non-com- 
missioned officer and yeoman must have served in the Home or 
Indian army or Royal Marines. They are selected for distinguished 
conduct in the field, and their pay is looked upon as a pension for 
the same. The officers must be of the rank of captain and over, 
and the yeomen of that of sergeant or warrant officer. 

The Guard has a permanent orderly room in St James's Palace, 
where the routine of duty is carried on by the adjutant and " clerk 
of the cheque," the latter old true designation being retained after 
the former modern title Under the orderly room is a guard room 
lined with lockers in which the uniforms are stored. They are in 
charge of a resident wardrobe-keeper. Here the division for duty 
musters once a week in the season and once a fortnight at other 
times, and here the yeomen dress for state functions. These now 
are confined to receptions of foreign potentates, levees, court* and 
state banquets, the Guard still taking part in the searching of the 
houses of parliament, the ceremony of the distribution of Maundy 
money in Westminster Abbey and in the Epiphany offerings of 

Kid, frankincense and myrrh in the Chapel Royal, St James's 
ilace. The yeomen live in their own homes. 

The nickname " Beef-eaters." which is sometimes a mrriitrd with 
the Yeomen of the Guard, had its origin in 1669, when Count Corimo, 
grand duke of Tuscany, was in England, and, writing of the size 
and stature of this magnificent Guard, said, M They are great eaters 
of beef, of which a very large ration Is given them daily at the court, 
and they might be called Beef-eaters." The supposed derivation 
from " Buffetier " (i.e. one who attends at the sideboard) has no 
authority. 

A singular misapprehension exists as regards the Tower warders. 
Wearing as they do the same uniform, except the cross belt which 
used to bold the harquebus, and being so much more before the 
public in their daily duty as warders 01 the Tower, they are often 
thought erroneously to be Yeomen of the Guard. They had their 



918 



YEOTMAL— YEW 



origin in 1500-10 in the twelve Yeoman of the Guard whom young 
King Henry VIII. left, when he gave up the Tower of London as a 
permanent residence, to show that it was still a royal palace. When 
the Tower was finally given up as a royal residence they became 
warders and were deprived of the dress, but were given it back 
in Edward VI.'s reign, on a petition from the lord protector, who 
had been confined there and to whom the warders had been most 
considerate. They are now a distinct body, but in an honorary 
sense still termed Extraordinary of the Guard." But they perform 
no state functions, being solely yeomen warders under the orders 
of the constable of the Tower. They are all old soldiers. 

A brief notice of the other royal guard will be appropriate. 
In 1509, Henry VIII., envying the magnificence of the bodyguard 
of Francis I. of France, decided to have a noble guard of his own, 
which he accordingly instituted and called The Gentlemen 
Specrs." It was composed of young nobles gorgeously attired. In 
1539 this guard was reorganized and called " Gentleman Pen- 
sioners." This title it retained till William IV. 's reign, when the 
corps regained its military character, the king on their petition 

Othem their present designation, *' The Honourable Corps of 
imen-at-Arms." 

See The History of the King's Body Guard of the Yeomen of the 
Guard, by Colonel Sir Reginald Hennell, D.S.O., Lieutenant of the 
Yeomen of the Guard (1904)- (R- Ha.) 

YEOTMAL, a town and district of India, in Berar. The 
town stands at an elevation of 1476 ft. Pop. (1901) 10,545. 
It was formerly the headquarters of Wun district, but in 1905 
a new district of Ycotmal was established, covering the former 
Wun district, with additions from the district of Basim. 
Cotton-ginning and pressing are carried on. The town b also 
the chief trading centre in the district, and is connected by 
road with Dhamangaon station, 29 m. distant. 

The District o? Yeotmal has an area of 5183 sq. m. It is 
a wild hilly country, intersected by offshoots from the Ajanta 
mountains. The hills are bare, or clothed only with dwarf 
teak or small jungle; but on the heights near Wun town the 
bamboo grows abundantly, and small bamboos are found in the 
ravines. The Wardha and Pcnganga, which bound the district 
on the E. and S., unite at its S.E. corner. The Pcnganga 
drains the greater part of the district. The tiger, leopard 
and hyena abound; bears, wolves and jackals are also numer- 
ous; while small game is plentiful. The climate is enervating 
and unhealthy; the annual rainfall averages about 41 in. Pop. 
(1901) 575,957. The principal crops are millets, cotton, pulses, 
oil-seeds and wheat. Coal has been found, and iron ore abounds. 

See Yeotmal District Gazetteer (Calcutta, roo8). 

YEOVIL, a market town and municipal borough in the 
S. parliamentary division of Somersetshire, England, on the 
Great Western and South- Western railways, 127 m. W. by S. 
of London. Pop. (1901) 9861. The town lies on the river 
Yeo, and is a thriving place, with a few old houses. The church 
of St John the Baptist is a perpendicular cruciform structure, 
consisting of chancel, nave of seven bays, aisles, transepts and 
lofty western tower. There are some 15th- and 16th-century 
brasses, a dark cradle roof, and an early 13th-century crypt 
under the chancel. The town is famous for its manufacture of 
gloves (dating from 1565). Its agricultural trade is consider- 
able. The town is governed by a mayor, 4 aldermen and 
12 councillors. Area, 654 acres. Yeovil (Gyoele, Evill, I vie, 
Ycoclc) before the Conquest was part of the private domains 
of the Anglo-Saxon kings. The town owed its origin to trade, 
and became of some size in the 13th century. In 14th-century 
documents it is described as a town or borough governed by 
a portreeve, who frequently came into conflict with the parson 
of- St John's church, who had become lord of the manor of 
Yeovil duriqg the reign of Henry III. The corporation in 
the 1 8th century consisted of a portreeve and eleven burgesses, 
and was abolished when the town was reincorporated in 1853. 

Fairs on the 17th of July and the 6th of November were held 
under grant of Henry VI L, and were important for the sale of 
leather and of woollen cloth, both made in the town.' The Friday 
market dates from 1215. There is a great market every other 
Friday and a monthly horse sale. 

YBRKES, CHARLES TYSON (1837-1905), American capitalist, 
was born of Quaker parentage, in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, 
on the 25th of June 1837. He was a clerk in a grain-commission 
house, an exchange broker (1858-61) and a banker (1861-86). 



When he failed in 1871 he refused to give any p r efe r e nc e to 
the city of Philadelphia for bonds sold on its account, and 
was convicted .of " misappropriating dty funds," and sentenced 
to two years and nine months in the penitentiary. After 
serving seven months of this sentence be was pardoned, and 
the Cjty Council afterward passed an ordinance cancelling the 
municipality's claim against him. He established a banking 
business in Chicago in 1881; in 1886 got control of the Chicago 
City Railway Company; and within the next twelve years 
organized a virtual monopoly of the surface and elevated 
railway service of Chicago. He disposed of his street railway 
interests in Chicago, and removed to London (1900). There 
he acquired in xooi a controlling interest in the Metropolitan 
District railway, and by organizing the finances of the Under- 
ground Electric Railways Company he took an important 
initiative in extending the system of London electric railways. 
Yerkes gave to the university of Chicago the great telescope 
installed in the Yerkes Observatory at Lake Geneva, Wisconsin, 
and gathered in his New York residence a remarkable collection 
of paintings, tapestries and rugs, which were sold at auction 
in April 1910 for $2,034,450. He died in New York on the 
29th of December 1005. 

YETHOLM, a village of Roxburghshire, Scotland. Pop. 
(1001) 571. It is situated on Bowmont Water, 7} m. S.E. of 
Kelso, and 5 m. S.S.W. of Mindrum in Northumberland, the 
nearest railway station. It is divided into two quarters, Kirk 
Yetholm on the right and Town Yetholm on the left of the stream. 
The name is said to be the O.E. yet, "gate," and holm (here the 
same as ham), " hamlet," meaning " the hamlet at the gate " 
of Scotland, the border being only 1} m. distant. Since about 
the middle of the 17th century the district has been the head- 
quarters of a tribe of gipsies. 

YEW (Taxus baccate), a tree which belongs to a genus of 
Coniferae (see Gymnosperus), in which the ordinarily woody 




9 6 

Yew. 1, shoot with male flowers; 3, leaf and in section; 3, branch 
bearing two ripe seeds each with its crimson aril; 4, male 
Bowers; 5, stamens; 6, 7, female flower in different stages; 
8, section of ripe seed ana aril, o. I, slightly reduced; 2, and 
4 to 8, enlarged. 

cone is represented by a single seed surrounded by a fleshy 
cup. Usually it forms a low-growing evergreen tree of very 



YEZD— YEZIDIS 



919 



habit, but generaJfy with dense spending branches, 
thickly covered with very dark green linear leaves, which 
are given off from all sides of the branch, but which, owing 
to a twist in the base of the leaf, become arranged in a single 
series on each side of it. The trees are usually dioecious, 
the male flowers being borne on one individual and the female 
on another, although instances occur in which flowers of both 
sexes are formed on the same tree. The main flowers are more or 
leas globular and occur in the axils of the leaves. They consist 
of a number of overlapping brownish scales, gradually increasing 
in sine from below upwards and Surrounding a naked stalk 
that bears at its summit a head of. four to eight stamens. Each 
stamen has a flat five-lobed top, something like a shield; from 
its under surface, five, six. or more pollen cases hang down, and 
these open lengthwise to liberate the globose pollen-grains. 
The female flowers are also placed each separately in the axil 
of a leaf, and consist of a number of overlapping teaks, as in the 
male. These scales surround a cup which is at first shallow, 
green and thin (the so-called aril), but which subsequently 
becomes fleshy and red, while ft increases so much in length 
as almost entirely to conceal the single straight seed. It is 
clear that the structure of the female flower differs from that 
of most conifers, from which it is now often separated in a 
distinct order, Taxaceae. 

The poisonous properties, referred to by classical writers 
such as Caesar, Virgil and Livy, reside chiefly if not entirely 
in the fohage. This, if eaten by horses or cattle, especially when 
it has been cut and thrown in heaps so as to undergo a process 
of fermentation, is very injurious. The leaves have abo been 
used for various medicinal purposes, but are not employed now. 
An alkaloid taxine, said to depress the circulation, is extracted. 
It forms white crystals soluble in alcohol and ether. As a timber 
tree the yew is used for cabinet-work, axle-trees, bows and the 
like, where strength and durability are required. 

The yew occurs wild over a large area of the northern hemi- 
sphere. In N.E. America and in Japan trees are found of a 
character so similar that by some botanists they are all ranged 
under one species. Generally, however, the European yew, 
J. toccata, is regarded as native of Europe, N. Africa, and 
Asia as far as the Himalayas and the Amur region, while the 
American and Japanese forms are considered to represent 
distinct species. The yew is wild in Great Britain, forming 
a characteristic feature of the chalk downs of the southern 
counties and of the vegetation of parts of the Lake District 
and elsewhere. The evidence of fossil remains, antiquities and 
place-names indicates that it was formerly more widely spread 
in Europe than at the present day. The varieties grown in 
the United Kingdom arc numerous, one of the most striking 
being that known as the Irish yew— a shrub with the pyra- 
midal or columnar habit of a cypress, in which the leaves spread 
from all sides of the branches, not being twisted, as they usually 
are, out of their original position. In the ordinary yew the 
main branches spread more or less horizontally, and the leaves 
are so arranged as to be conveniently exposed to the influence 
of the light; but in the variety in question the branches arc 
mostly vertical, and the leaves assume a direction in accordance 
with the ascending direction of the branches. The plants 
have all sprung from one of two trees found growing wild more 
than a hundred years ago on the mountains of Co. Fermanagh 
in Ireland, and afterwards planted in the garden of Florence 
Court, a seat of the earl of Enniskillen. 

The yew ia a favourite evergreen tree, either for planting separately 
or for hedge*, for which its dense foliage renders it well suited. Its 
dense growth when pruned has led to its extensive use in topiary 
work, which was introduced by John Evelyn and became very 
prevalent at the close of the 17th and the beginning of the 18th 
centuries. The wood is very hard, cloce>grained and of a deep red- 
brown colour internally. The planting of the yew in. churchyards 
was at one time supposed to have been done with a view to the 
supply of yew staves. But. while importation from abroad was 
fostered, there seems to have been no statute enforcing the cultiva- 
tion of the yew in Great Britain; a statute, however, of Edward I. 
(crtsdin Tht Gardeners' Ckro*id*,6th March 1880, p. 306) states that 
she trees were often planted in churchyards to defend the church from 



high wind*. The Crowhufst yew, meationed by Evelyn as JO ft 

in circumference* still exists. The Urge yew at Ankerwyke, near 
Staines, with a trunk 30} ft. in circumference, In sight of which 
Magna Carta was signed (1*15). probably exceeds a thousand years 
of age. The fine yew in Buckland churchyard, near Dover, was 
removed in 1880 to a distance of 60 yds. The trunk had been split 
so that it bad a direction nearly parallel with the soiL This huge 
tree was moved with a ball of soil round its roots, 16 ft 5 in. by 
15 ft. 8 in., by 3 ft. 6\ in. in depth, the weight of the entire mass being 
estimated at 9S tons. The dimensions of the tree in 1 880 were as 
follows: " circumference of the main trunk, as ft.; of the upright 
portion of the trunk, 6 ft. 10 in.; second horizontal trunk, 10 ft. 
10 in.; do., .south limb forking off at 9 ft. from the main trunk, 

7 ft. ro in.; do., west limb forking off at 9 ft. from the main trunk, 

8 ft. 8 in. ; extent of branches from centre of main trunk southwards, 
36 ft. 10 in., and from north to«outh. 48 ft.; they extend from the 
main trunk westward 33 ft." The tree was replanted so that the 
horizontal portions were replaced in their original erect position 
and the natural symmetry restored. 

For further detail* see Veitch, Manwd of Comferae {1900) ; Erwea 
and Henry, Trots of Great Britain and Inland (1906). 

YEZD, or Yaxo, a province of Persia, bounded S.-by Kerman, 
W. by Fare and Isfahan, and N. and E. by the central Persian 
deserts. It contains an area of about 20,000 sq. m., but its 
population barely exceeds 100,000, of whom about half inhabit 
the capital of the province. Its subdivisions are: (1) the city 
of Yezd and immediate environs; (2) Ardakan; (3) Bafk; 
(4) Taft; (5) Kuhistan (Pish Kuh, Mian Kuh, Pusht Kuh, on the 
slopes and in the valleys of the Shir Kuh, a part of the great 
Central Range of Persia W. of the city of Yezd, and rising to an 
elevation of x 1,000 ft.); and (6) Shahr i Babek. The last is 
situated far S. near Kerman, and sometimes is regarded as part 
of that province. The revenues slightly exceed £60,000 a year. 
Much silk is grown in the district, but is not sufficient for 
the silk stuffs which Yezd manufactures with its 1000 looms, 
and raw silk (about j 5,000 lb yearly) has to be obtained from 
Khorasan and Gilan. Great quantities of felts (nimads), white 
and yellow cotton stuffs, the latter a kind of nankeen made 
of Gossypium herbaceum, arc also manufactured and exported. 
Other exports are opium, madder and almonds. The grain 
produced suffices for only two or three months' consumption, 
and supplies have to be brought from Khorasan, so that wheat 
and barley are dearer than at other places in Persia. The 
part of the district situated in the plain is much exposed to 
moving sands, which render cultivation difficult and at times 
i mposs ible.- 

YEZD, the. capital of the province of the same name in 
Persia, situated 192 m. N.W. of Kerman, 162 m. S.E. of 
Isfahan, in 31° 54' N. and 54° 22' E., at an elevation of 4240 ft. 
Its population, 100,000 in 18 jo, is now estimated at 50,000, 
including 2000 Jews and 1300 Zoroastrians. 1 The city is divided 
into the Shahr i nau (new town) and Shahr i kohnch (old town), 
separated by a wall with two gates. The ark, or citadel, in 
the E. of the town, is fortified with walls, bastions and dry 
ditch, and contains the governor's residence. The bazaar is in 
good repair and well stocked; other parts of the town are 
irregularly planned, with dark, narrow streets. There are 
eighteen mosques, one, the Masjed i Jama, also called Masjed i 
Mir Cbakhmak, is an old and decayed structure originally built 
in 1 1 19, with a lofty and imposing frontage dating from 1472. 
There are seven colleges. The caravanserais number thirty- 
three. There are telegraph (English staff since 1003) and post 
offices. The Englishman in charge of the telegraph office acts 
as British vice-consul. 

YEZIDU, a sect of devil-worshippers, calling themselves 
Dasni, who are found in Kurdistan, Armenia and the Caucasus. 
Their religion has points of connexion with old Iranian and 
Assyrian beliefs and traces of Manichacism and Nestorianism. 
Thus they regard the devil as the creative agent of the Supreme 
God, a reinstated fallen angel who is the author of evfl. They 
avoid mentioning his name and represent him by the peacock. 
They regard Christ as an angel in human form and recognize 

* In 1879 the Zoroastrian community of Yezd numbered 6483, 
1243 residing in the city, 5241 in the villages; in 1893 the com- 



munity numbered 6908, and as many have emigrated, it » computed 
that ft now numbers not more than 7000. 



920 



YEZO— YGGDRASIL 



Mahomet as a prophet with Abraham and the patriarchs. 
They believe in a future life and practise both circumcision and 
baptism. The name is probably derived from the Kurdish 
and Persian Yazd&n, God; though some have connected it 
with the city of Vezd, or with Yezid, the second Omayyad 
caliph (720-24). Their sacred book is called Ai-Yalvak t and 
its chief exponent was Shaikh Adi (c. 1200). 

See Layard, Ninevah and its Remains (London, 1850) ; Menant, 
Us Yeudis (Paris, 1892). 

YEZO, or Ero, the most northerly of the five principal islands 
forming the Japanese empire, the five being Yezo, Nippon, Shi- 
koku, Kiushiu and Formosa. It is situated between 45° 30' and 
41° 21'. N. and between 146 9 7' and 139° 11' E.; its coast-line 
measures 1423-32 m., and it has an area of 30,148-41 sq. m. On 
the N. it is separated from Sakhalin by Soya Strait (La Perouse) 
and on the S. from Nippon by Tsugaru Strait. Its northern 
shores are washed by the Sea of Okhotsk, its southern and eastern 
by the Pacific Ocean, and its western by the Sea of Japan. 



of Kushiro are O-akan-dake (4470 ft.) and Meakan-takc (4500 ft.). 
Dr Rein's investigations led him to state that Tokachi-dake forms 
a species of central elevation whence most of the principal rivers flow 
towards the sea, and that the mountain system is a continuation, 
on the W., of the Sakhalin range, and on the E. of the Kuriles range; 
the former consisting of granite and old schists, the latter chiefly 
of volcanic formations. Near Hakodate arc two conspicuous 
volcanic peaks, Komaga-take (3822 ft.) and Tokatsu-dakc (3&00 ft.) ; 

fnd 24 m. from Kushiro (by rail) is a volcano called Atosa-nobori, or 
wo-zan (sulphur mountain), whence great quantities of first-rate 
sulphur are exported to the United States. Mention must also be 
made of Kishin, an islet on the extreme N.W, of Yezo, which has a 
peak of the same name rising to a height of nearly 6000 ft. 

Rivers. — Yezo boasts the largest nver. in the Japanese empire, 
the !shikari-gawa, which is estimated to measure 275 m. Its other 
large rivers are the Teshio-gawa (192 m.),the Tokachi-gawa (120m.). 
the Shiribeshi-gawa (88 m.), the Kushiro-gawa (81 m.) t the Toshi- 
betsu-gawa (64 m.), and the Yubctsu-gawa (64 m.). The valley of 
the Ishikari is believed to be the most fertile part of the island ; the 
Tokachi is navigable to a point 56 m. from its mouth, but the 
Teshio has a bar which renders its approach extremely difficult; 
A peculiarity of several of the rivers is that, on approaching the sea- 
shore, they run parallel to it for some distance before finding an 
exit. Those flowing to the S. coast take a W. direction, those flowing 
to the E. coast a NT direction. This is attributed to the fact that the 
prevailing winds set up the sand so as to deflect the rivers from their 
straight course. Nearly all these rivere abound with salmon, the 
most remarkable in that respect being the Nishibetsu-gawa, which 
yields an average of over 2000 tons offish annually. 

Lakes.— There are no large takes, the most, extensive — Toyako, 
Shikotsuko and Kushiroko — not having a circumference of more 
than 25 m. Lagoons, however, are not uncommon. The largest 
of these — Saruma-ko in Kitami — is some 17 m. long by 7 wide. It 
abounds with oysters nearly as large as those for which the much 
smaller lagoon at Akkeshi is famous, the molluscs measuring about 
18 in. in length. 

Climaie.-^The climate differs markedly from that of the main 
island of Japan, resembling rather the climate of the British Isles, 
though the winter is longer and more severe, and the atmosphere 
m the warm season contains a greater quantity of moisture. During 
five months the country is under snow, its depth averaging about 
2 ft. in the regions along the southern coast and more than 6 ft. in 
the northern and. western regions. An ice-drift, setting from the 
north and working southwards as far as Ncmuro, stops all sea trade 
on the E. coast during January, February and March, though the 
W. coast is protected by the warm current of the Kuro-shiwo. Fogs 
prevail along the E. coast during the summer months, and it is not 
uncommon to find a damp, chilly atmosphere near the sea in July, 
whereas, a mile inland, the. thermometer stands at 80* or 90° F. in 
the shade, and magnolia trees are in full blossom. 

Zootomy.— Tsugaru Strait has been shown by Captain T. W. 
Blakiston, R.A., to form a line of zoological division. Pheasants 
and monkeys are not found on the Yezo side of this line, though 
they abound on Nippon, and, on the other hand, Yezo has grouse 
and solitary snipe which do not exist in Nippon. The Yezo bear, 
too, is of a distinct species, and the island has an abundance of 
singing birds which are absent S. of the strait. There are also 
notable differences in the flora, the trees and flowers of Yezo re- 
semblmg those of the British Isles rather than those of Japan. 

Population.— The island seems to have been originally peopled 
by a semi-barbarous race of pit-dwellers, whose modern repre- 
sentatives are to be found in the Kuriles or their neighbours of 
Kamchatka and Sakhalin. These autochthons were driven 



out by the Ainu, and the latter, in their turn, succumbed Co the 
Japanese. The population of Yezo is 605,742, of whom 17, 573 
are Ainu. There is a steadily growing but not large emigration 
from Japan.proper to Yezo. Yezo is divided into tea provinces, 
the names of which, beginning from the S., are Oshima, Shiribeshi, 
Ishikari, Teshio, Kitami, Ibnri, Hidafca, Tokachi, Kushiro and 
Nemuro. Of these, Oshima, Shiribeshi and Ishikari are by far 
the most important. There are only three towns having a 
population of over 20,000, viz. Hakodate (50,314), Sapporo 
(46,247) and Otaru (34,586). Other towns of importance axe 
Fukuyama (formerly called Matsumae), the seat of government 
.in feudal days, Esashi, Mombetsu, Oiwake, Tomakomai, 
Piratori (the chief Ainu settlement), Mororan, Kushiro, Akke- 
shi, Nemuro, Horobetsu, Yunokawa, Abashiri and Mashike. 
Yunokawa, 4} m. from Hakodate, is much frequented for its 
hot springs; Oiwake is the junction of the main tine of railway 
with the branch to the Yubari collieries; Kushiro exports .coal 
and sulphur; Akkeshi is celebrated for its oysters. 

Industries aid Predicts.— Murine products constitute the prin- 
cipal wealth of Yezo. Great quantities of salmon, sardines and 
codfish are taken. The salmon are salted for export to Nippon 
and other parts of Japan; the sardines are used as an agricultural 
fertilizer, their value varying from (2 to £5 per ton; and the *»d- 
fish serve for the manufacture of 0O. An immense crop of edible 
seaweed is also gathered and sent. to Chinese markets as well as to 
Japanese. This kontbu* as it is called, sometimes reaches a length 
of 90 ft. and a width of 6 in. The herring fishery, too, is a source of 
wealth, and the canning of Akkeshi oysters as well as of salmon 
gives employment' to many hand*. Vast tracts are co rn ed with 
a luxuriant growth of ash, oak, elm, birch, chestnut and pine, but, 
owing to difficulties of carriage, this supply of timber has not vet 
been much utilized. One of the earliest acts of the Meiji govern- 
ment was to develop the resources of Yezo and encourage Japanese 
to emigrate thither. Free grants of agricultural land were made, 
roads were constructed, model farms established, beet-sugar 
factories and sawmills opened, horse-breeding undertaken, foreign 
fruit trees planted and railways laid. The outlays incurred did 
not immediately bear fruit, but they attracted large numbers of 
settlers. During recent years attention has been attracted to the 
mineral resources of Yezo. Coal of fair quality is abundant, and 
a railway has been built for its carriage; an apparently inex- 
haustible supply of sulphur is obtained from a mountain near 
Kushiro lake; petroleum seems likely to pay exploiters, and is 
1899 g^ld was discovered at Usotannai, Pankanai and other places 
along the Poropctsu river, near Esashi in Kitami province. 

Communications. — The roads are few and in bad order, but there 
is a railway which, setting out from Hakodate in the 'extreme $., 
runs, via Sapporo and Iwamizawa, to the extreme N., with branches 
from Iwamizawa, S. to Mororan and £. to Poronai, and from 
Oiwake N.E. to the Yubari coal-mines. There is also a line W. 
along the S. coast from Nemuro. In districts beyond the railway, 
travelling is done on horseback, there being an abundant supply 
of ponies. There is good coastwise communication by steamer. 

History.— Yezo was not brought under Japan's effective 
control until medieval times. In 1604 the island was granted 
in fief to Matsumae Yoshihiro, whose ancestor had overrun it, 
and from the close of the 18th century the E. was governed by 
officials sent by the sbogun, whose attention had been attracted 
to it by Russian trespassers. In 1871 the task of developing 
its resources and administering its affairs was entrusted to a 
special bureau, which employed American agriculturists to assist 
the work and American engineers to construct roads and rail- 
ways; but in 1881 this bureau was abolished, and the govern- 
ment abandoned to private hands the various enterprises it 
had inaugurated. 

YGGDRASUV in Scandinavian mythology, the mystical ash 
tree which symbolises existence, and binds together earth, 
heaven and hell. It is the tree of life, of knowledge, of fate, 
of time and of space. Its three roots go down into the three 
great realms— (1) of death, where, in the well Hvergelmer, the 
dragon Nidfcug (Nidhoggr) and his brood are ever gnawing 
it; (2) of the giants, where, in the fountain of Miner, is the 
source of wisdom; (3) of the gods, Asgnrd, where, at the sacred 
fountain of Urd, is the divine tribunal, and the dwelling of the 
Fates. The stem of Yggdrasil upholds the earth, while its 
branches overshadow the world and reach up beyond the heavens. 
On its topmost bough sits an eagle, between whom and Nidhug 
the squirrel Ra'atoskr runs to and fro trying to provoke 



YO-CHOW PU— YONOE, C. M. 



94 1 



strife, ffcmeydew falls from the tree, and on it Odin hung 
nine nights, offering himself to himself. G. Vlgfussou and York 
Powell (Corpus Pactions Borate, Oxford, 1883) see in Yggdrasil 
not a primitive None idea, bat one due to earl y contact with 
Christianity, and a fanciful adaptation of the cross. 

TIKCHOW FU, a prefectural city in the Chinese province 
of Hu-nan, standing on high ground EL of the outlet of Tung- 
t'ing Lake, in 29° 18' N., 1x3° a' E. Pop. about 20,000. It was 
opened to foreign trade in 1809. The actual settlement is at 
Chraling-ki, a village si m. below Yo-chow and half a mile 
from the Yangtsee. From Yo-chow the cities of Chang sha and 
Chang te are accessible for steam vessels drawing 4. to 5 ft. 
of water by means of the Tung-t'ing Lake and its affluents, 
the Siang and Yuen rivers. The district in which Yo-chow Fu 
stands is the ancient habitat of the aboriginal San Miao tribes, 
who were deported into S. W. China, and who, judging from some 
non-Chinese festival customs of the people, would appear to 
have left traditions behind them. The present city, which 
was built in 137 1, is about 3 m. in circumference and is entered 
by four gates. The walls are high and well built, but failed 
to keep out the Taip'ing rebels in 1853. Situated between 
Tung-ting Lake and the Yangtsze-kiang, Yo-chow Fu forms 
a depot for native products destined for export, and for foreign 
goods on their way inland. The net value of the total trade 
of the port in roo6 was 747,ooo taeb. 

YOGI* a Hindu religious ascetic. The word yoga means union, 
and first occurs in the later Upcnishads; and yogi means one 
who practises yoga, with the object of uniting bis soul with the 
divine spirit. This union, when accomplished by the individual 
soul, must enhance its susceptibilities and powers, and so the 
yogis claim a far-reaching knowledge of the secrets of nature 
and extensive sway over men and natural phenomena. The 
most usual manifestation of this power is a state of ecstasy, 
of the nature of self-hypnotism. 

YOKOHAMA, a seaport of Japan on the W. shore of Tokyo 
Bay, 18 m. S. of Tokyo by rail. It stands on a plain shut in by 
hills, one of which, towards the S.E., terminates in a promontory 
called Honmoku-misaki or Treaty Point. The temperature 
ranges from 95° to 43° F., and the mean temperature is 57*7°- 
Toe cold in winter is severe, owing to N. winds, while the heat is 
great in summer, though tempered by S.W. sea breezes. The 
raiafaD is about 70 in. annually. In 1859, when the neighbour- 
ing town of Kanagawa was opened to foreigners under the 
treaty with the United States, Yokohama was an insignificant 
fishing village; and notwithstanding the protests of the 
foreign representatives the Japanese government shortly after* 
wards chose the latter place as the settlement instead of Kana- 
gawa. The town grew rapidly— in 1886 the population was 
112,179 (3004 foreigners, including 2573 Chinese, 615 British 
and 256 Americans, while in 1003 there were 3U.333 Japanese 
and 2447 foreigners (1089 British, 527 Americans, 270 Ger- 
mans, x$s French) besides about 3800 Chinese. The Japanese 
government constructed public works, and excellent water 
was supplied from the Saganngawa. The foreign settlement 
has well-constructed streets, but the wealthier foreigners reside 
S. of the town, on the Bluff. The land occupied by foreigners 
was leased to them by the Japanese government, 20% of the 
annual rent being set aside lor municipal expenses. The 
harbour, which is a part of Tokyo Bay, is good and commodious, 
somewhat exposed, but en cl os e d by two breakwaters. There 
is a pier scoo ft. long, and two docks were opened in 1897 
and 1898, with lengths of 331 it. and 478 ft.ao in., and depths 
of s6 ft. 2 in. and 28 ft. on the blocks at ordinary spring tides. 
The average depth in the harbour at high water is about 46 if., 
with a fall of tide of about 8 ft., the entrance being marked by 
a lightship and two buoys. The railway connecting Yokohama 
with Tokyo was the first in Japan, and was constructed in 
187a. The value of export* and imports, which in x88o was 
ft.79*.99i *nd £5*378*385, and in the ensuing five years 
averaged 44A3M35 *nd £4,366,507, had increased in 1905 
to £14361,823 and £19,066,821. Metals and metal goods, 
ike, wool and woollen goods, and cotton and coUon goods 



are the chief imports; and silk, sOk goods and tea are the 
chief exports. 

YOHO80KA, a seaport and naval station of Japan, on the 
W* shore of Tokyo Bay, rs m. S. of Yokohama. The town Is 
connected by a branch line with the main railway from Tokyo. 
The port is sheltered by bills and affords good anchorage. The 
rite was occupied by a small fishing village until 1865, when 
the shogun's government established a shipyard here. In 
1868 the Japanese government converted the shipyard into 
a naval dockyard, and subsequently carried out many improve- 
ments. In 1884 the port became a first-class naval station; 
and naval barracks, warehouses, offices, hospitals, Ac, were 
established here. The dockyard was first constructed by 
French engineers ; but after 1875 lae **»* passed entirely 
into the hands of Japanese engineers. 

TOLA, once a native state of West Africa, forming part of 
the Fula emirate of Adamawa, now a province in the British 
protectorate of Nigeria. The province, which has an area of 
16,000 sq. m., occupies the S.E. of the protectorate and both 
banks of the upper Benue. It Is bounded S. and E. by the 
German colony of Cameroon, N. by the British province of Bornu , 
and W. by the British provinces of Baucbl and Muri. It has 
an estimated population of 300,000. The capital is Yola, a 
town founded by the Fula conqueror Adama about the middle 
of the 19th century. It was the capital of the emirate of 
Adamawa, the greater part of which is now a German pro- 
tectorate. The town is situated in 9* 12' N., ia° 40* £. and is 
built on the left or S. bank of the Benue, 480 m. by river from 
Lokoja. It can be reached by shallow draught steamers when 
the river is in flood. The Niger Company had trading relations 
with Yola before the establfshment of British adnnnistration 
in Northern Nigeria. Insoox the reigning emir, a son of Adama, 
forced them to evacuate their station, and, all attempts to 
establish friendly relations proving unavailing, the British 
government despatched an expedition from Lokoja in August 
xoor. The emir was deposed and a new emir installed in his 
place. The hostility of certain pagan tribes had to be over- 
come by British expeditions in January and April of 1002. By 
1903 the province was brought fairly under administrative 
control, and divided into three administrative divisions— the 
N.W. with a station at GasJ, the N.E. and the S. with Yola 
for its station. The new emir proved friendly and loyal, but 
though appointed in zooi was not formally installed till October 
1904, when he took the customary oath of allegiance to the 
British crown and accepted all the conditions with regard to 
the suppression of slavery, ftc The slave markets were imme- 
diately closed as a result of British occupation, and any alavc- 
trading which is still done is smuggled. In 1903 an exploring 
expedition was sent up the Gongola, one of the principal 
rivers of the Yola province, and as a result the navigability of 
the river for steam launches as far as Gombe at high water was 
demonstrated. An important means of communication with 
the province of Bornu was thus established, and a rich agri- 
cultural district opened to development. The Gongola valley 
was in ancient times extensively cultivated, and the population 
are readily returning to the land Cotton, rice and tobacco are 
among the heavy crops (see Nigeria, Adamawa). 

YOLANDB (ot Isabella] OF BRIENVB (raia-iaag), the 
daughter of John of Brienne, who had married Mary, daughter of 
Conrad of Montferrat, heiress on the death of Amebic II. of 
the kingdom of Jerusalem. Yolande inherited the throne on her 
mother's death in xara, bat her father ruled as her guardian. In 
1225 she married the emperor Frederick II., the pope hoping by 
this bond to attach the emperor firmly to the crusade. Im- 
mediately upon his marriage Frederick demanded all the rights 
of sovereignty in the kingdom of Jerusalem, which he claimed 
to exercise in his wife's name. His action led to difficulties with 
John, who did not relish the loss of his position. Yolande died 
in 1228 after the birth of a son, Conrad, and her husband then 
continued to rale, though not without opposition. 

YOMGB.CHABUm'EHARY (1823-1901), English novelist and 
writer on religious and educational subjects, daughter of William 



922 

Crawley -Yonge, 52nd Regiment, and Frances Mary Bargus, 
was born on the nth of August 1823 at Otterbourne, Hants. 
She was educated by her parents, and from them inherited much 
of the religious feeling and High Church sympathy which coloured 
her work. She resided at Otterbourne all her life, and was one 
of the most prolific writers of the Victorian era. In 1841 she 
published five works of fiction, including The Clever Woman of 
Ike Family, Dynevor Terrace and The Trial; and after that she 
was the author of about 120 volumes, including novels, tales, 
school manuals and biographies. Her first conspicuous success 
was attained with The Heir of Redciyfe (1853), which enjoyed an 
enormous vogue. The Daisy Chain (1856) continued the success; 
and among hex other popular books may be mentioned Heartsease 
(1854), The Young Stepmother (1861) and The Dove in the Eagle's 
Nest (1866). In more serious fields of literature she published 
Landmarks of History (three series, 1852-57), History of Christian 
Names (1863), Cameos of English History (1868), Life of Bishop 
Palteson (1874), English Church History for Use in Schools (1883) 
and many others. She also edited various- educational works, 
and was for more than thirty years editor of the Monthly 
Packet. She died at Otterbourne on 23rd March 1901. Her 
books err on the side of didacticism, but exercised a wide and 
wholesome influence. The money realized by the early sales of 
The Daisy Chain was given to the building of a missionary college 
at Auckland, N.Z., while a large portion of the proceeds of The 
Heir of Redclyjffe was devoted to the missionary schooner " The 
Southern Cross. " 

See Charlotte Mary Yonge: an Appreciation, by Ethel Romanes 
(1908). 

YONGE, JOHN (1467-15x6), English ecclesiastic and diplo- 
matist, was born at Heyford, Oxfordshire, and educated at 
Winchester and New College, Oxford, where he became a fellow in 
1485. He was ordained in 1500 and held several livings before 
receiving, his first diplomatic mission to arrange a commercial 
treaty with the archduke of Austria in 1504, and in the Low 
Countries in 1506 in connexion with the projected marriage 
between Henry VII. and Margaret of Savoy. In 1507 he was 
made Master 'of the Rolls, and in the following year was em- 
ployed in various diplomatic missions. He was one of the 
ambassadors who arranged the Holy League in 1513, and accom- 
panied Henry VIII. during the ensuing campaign. In 1514 
be was made dean of York in succession to Wolsey, and in 
151 5 he was one of the commissioners for renewing the peace 
with Francis I. He died in London on the 25th of April 1526. 
Yonge was on terms of intimate friendship with Dean Colet, and 
was a correspondent of Erasmus. 

YONGE, 8IR WILLIAM, Bast. (c. 1693-1755). English 
politician, was the son of Sir Walter Yonge of Colyton, Devon- 
shire, and great-great-grandson of Walter Yonge of Colyton 
(?i 581-1649), whose diaries (1604-45), more especially four 
volumes now in the British Museum (Add. MSS. 18777-18780), 
are valuable material for history. In 1722 he was elected to 
parliament as member for Honiton; and he succeeded bis 
father, the third baronet, in 1731. In the House of Commons 
he attached himself to the Whigs, and making himself useful 
to Sir Robert Walpolc; was rewarded with a commissionership 
of the treasury in 1724. George II., who conceived a. strong 
antipathy to Sir William, spoke of him as "Stinking Yonge"; 
but Yonge conducted himself so obsequiously that he obtained a 
commissionership of the admiralty in 1728, was restored to the 
treasury in 1730, and in 1735 became secretary of state for war. 
He especially distinguished himself in his defence of the govern- 
ment against a hostile motion by Pultency in 1742. Making 
friends with the Pelhams, he was appointed vice-treasurer of 
Ireland in 1746; and, acting on the committee of manage- 
ment for the impeachment of Lord Lovat in 1747, he won the 
applause of Horace Walpole by moving that prisoners impeached 
for high, treason should be allowed the assistance of counsel. In 
1748 he was elected F.R.S. He died at Escott, near Honiton, 
on the 10th of August 1755. By his second wife, Anne, daughter 
and coheiress of Thomas, Lord Howard of Effingham, he had 
two sons and six daughters. He enjoyed some reputation as a 



YONGE, J.— YONKERS 



versifier, some of his lines being even mistaken for the work of 
Pope, greatly to the disgust of the latter; and he wrote the 
lyrics incorporated in a comic opera, adapted from Richard 
Brome's The Jovial Crew, which was produced at Drury Lane 
in 1730 and had a considerable vogue. 

His eldest son, Sir Geobge Yonge (1731-1812), was member 
of parliament for Honiton continuously from 1754 to 1704, and 
held a number of different government appointments, becoming 
a lord of the admiralty (1766-70), vice-treasurer for Ireland 
(1782), secretary of state for war (1789-94, with an interval 
from April to December 1783), master of the mint (x 704-90). 
In x 790 he was appointed governor of the Cape of Good Hope. 
Serious charges being brought against his- administration, 
which was marked by great lack of judgment, he was re- 
called in 1 801. He died on the 25th of September 181 1. The 
baronetcy became extinct at his death. 

YONKERS, a city of Westchester county, New York, U.S.A., 
on the E. bank of the Hudson river, immediately adjoining New 
York City on the N. Pop. (1900) 47,931, of whom 14,634 were 
foreign-born and 1005 were negroes; (1910, U.S. census) 79,803. 
Yonkers is served by three divisions of the New York 
Central & Hudson River railway, and is connected with New 
York City and other places E. and N. by interurban electric 
lines. It has also during most of the year steamboat service 
on the Hudson. There are two principal residential districts: 
one in the N., including Amackassin Heights and (about x m. 
W.)Glenwood, where are the old Colgate Mansion and " Grey- 
stone," the former home of Samuel J. Tilden; the other in 
the S., including Ludlow, Van Cortlandt Terrace and Park Hill 
(adjoining Riverdale in the borough of the Bronx), a park- 
like reserve with winding streets and drives. The business 
and manufacturing districts occupy the low Jands along the 
river. Among the public buildings are the City Hall, the High 
School and a Manual Training School, and Yonkers is the seat 
of St Joseph's Theological Seminary (Roman. Catholic; 1896), 
the Halsted School (founded 1874) for girls, and a business 
college. It has a good public library (established 1893; 35,000 
vols, in 19x0), and the Woman's Institute (1880) and the Holly- 
wood Inn Club (1897; for working-men) have small libraries. 
Philipse Manor Hall, built originally about 1682 as the mansion 
of the son of Frederick Philipse (1626-1703), the lord of 
Philipsburgh, and enlarged to its present dimensions in 1745, 
is of some historic interest. It was confiscated by act of the 
legislature in 1779 because its owner, Frederick Philipse (1746* 
X785), was suspected of Toryism, and was sold in x 789. In 1867 
it passed into the possession of Yonkers, and from 1872 to 1908 
was used as the city hall. In 1908 it was bought by the state, 
and is now maintained as a museum for colonial and revolu- 
tionary relics. It is one of the best examples of colonial archi- 
tecture in America. In the square before it stands a monument 
to the soldiers and sailors of the Civil War. Yonkers is an 
important manufacturing, city, and in 1005 the value of its 
factory products was $33,548,688. 

On the site of Yonkers stood an Indian village known as 
Nappeckamack, or town of the rapid water, at the time -of 
the settlement of the Dutch in New Amsterdam; and a great 
rock, near the mouth of the Nepperhan Creek, was long a place 
of Indian worship. The territory was part of the " Keskeskick 
purchase," acquired from the Indians by the Dutch W. India 
Company in 1639. In 1646 the tract was included in the grant 
to Adrian van der Donck, the first lawyer and historian of 
New Netherland, Author of A Description of New Netherlaud 
(1656), in Dutch. His grant, known as "Colen Donck M 
(Donck's Colony), embraced all the country from Spoyten 
Duyvil Creek, N. along the Hudson to the Amackassin Creek, 
and E. to the Bronx river. Some squatters settled here before 
1646. Van der Donck encouraged others to remove to has lands 
along the Hudson river, and in 1649 he built a saw-null near 
the mouth of the Nepperhan Creek, which for many years was 
called "Saw-Mill river." The whole settlement soon came to 
be called " De Jonkheer's Land " or u De Jonkheers "—meaning 
the estate of the young lord, as Van der Donck was called by 



YONNE— YORCK VON WARTENBURG 



fak tenant*— and 1 afterwards Yonkers. Sdfbnqacotly the tact 
passed largely into the bands of Frederick Philinse and became 
part of the manor of Phtlipsburgh. Early in the War of Inde- 
pendence Yonkers was occupied for a time by part of Washing- 
ton's army, and was the scene of several skirmishes. The 
town of Yonkers was i n c or porated in 1788 and the village 
m 1855. In 187s Yonkers became a dty; at the same time 
the southern pert was separately incorporated as Kingsbridge, 
which in 1874 was annexed to New York. 

See Frederic Shonnard and W. W. Spooner, History of. West- 
chester County (New York, 1900); J. T. Srharf, History of 
Westchester County (New York, 1886); and Allison. History of 
Yonkers (New York. 1896). 



. a department of central France, formed partly 
from the province of Champagne proper (with its depend- 
encies, Senonais and Tonnerrois), partly from Burgundy 
proper (with its dependencies, the county of Atuterre and 
Avallonnais) and partly from Gatinais (Orieanais and tle-de- 
France). It is bounded by Aubc on the N.E., C6te-d'Or on 
the S.E., Nlevre on the S., Loiret on the W. and Seine-et- 
Marac on the N.W. Pop. (1906) 315,199. Area, 2880 sq. m. 
The highest elevation (2000 ft.) is in the granitic highlands of 
Morvan, in the S.E., where other peaks range from 1300 to 
1600 ft. The department belongs to the basin of the Seine, 
except a small district in the S.W. (Pulsaye), which belongs to 
that of the Loire. The river Yonne flows through it from 
S. to N.N.W., receiving on the right bank the Cure, the Serein 
and the Armancon, which water the S.E. of the department. 
Farther N. it is joined by the Vanne, between which and the 
Armancon lies the forest -clad plateau of the Pays d'Othe. Jo 
the W. of the Yonne, in the Puisaye, are the sources of the 
Loing, another tributary of the Seine, and of its affluents, the 
Ouanne and the Lunain. The Yonne is navigable throughout 
the department, and is connected with the Loire by the canal 
of Nivernais, which in turn is connected with that of Briare, 
which connects the Seine and the Loire. The climate is tem- 
perate, except in the Morvan, where the extremes of heat and 
cold are greater, and where the rainfall is most abundant. 
The prevailing winds arc S.W. and W. 

The de pa r tmen t is essentially agricultural. Wheat and oats 

are the chief cereals; potatoes, sugar-beet, lucerne, mangold- 

wunel and other forage plants are also cultivated, and there is 

much good pasture. 

Tpe vineyards of the Tonnerrots and Auxerrois produce the 

d wines of lower Burgundy, and those of Chablis the finest 

The wine of the Cow St Jacques (Jofeny) is also highly 



Cider-apples are the chief fruit. Charny is a centre 

for the rearing of horses. Forests cover considerable areas of the 
department and consist chiefly of oak, beech, hornbeam, elm, ash, 
birch and pine. Quarry products include building-stone, ochre 
and cement. Among the industrial establishments are tanneries, 
tile-works, saw-mills and breweries, but there is little manufac- 
turing activity. Cereals, wines, firewood, charcoal, ochre and bark 
are exported. 

The department is served chiefly by the Paris-Lyon railway. 
The canal of Burgundy, which follows the valley of the Armancon, 
has a length of 57 m. in the department, that of Nivernais, following 
the valley of the Yonne, a length of 43 m- The department con- 
stitutes the archiepiscopal diocese of Sens, has its court of appeal 
in Paris, its educational centre at Dijon, and belongs to the district 
of the V. army corps. It is divided into five arrondissements (37 
cantons, 486 communes), of which the capitals are Auxcrre, also 
Sens, Joigny and Tonnerre, 

jntin and vezelay are its most 

noteworthy towns and are treated separately. Yonne is rich in 
objects of antiquarian and architectural interest. At Pontigny 
there is a Cistercian abbey, where Thomas Beclcet spent two years 
of his exile. Its church is an excellent type of the Cistercian 
architecture of the 12th century. The fine i2th-ceutory chateau 
of Druyes, which stands on a hill overlooking the village once 
belonged to the counts of Auxene and Never*. VUIeneuve-sur- 
Yonne has a medieval keep and gateways and a church of the 
13th and loth centuries. The Renaissance chateaux of Fleurigny, 
Ancy-le-France and Tanlay, the last-named for some time the 
property of the CoUgny family, and the chateau of St Fargeau, of 
the 13th century, rebuilt by Mademoiselle de.Moatsensier under 
Louis XIV.. are aH architecturally remarkable. At St Mor« there 



capital ofthe department, AvaOon, Sens,' Joigny 
which with those of Chablis, St Ftorentin and veze 



1 of the Roman road Inn Lyons to Gallia Bclgica and 

el a Roman fortified post. 



9*3 

DAVID LUDTO. 

Count (1759-1830), Prussian general field-marshal, was of Eng- 
lish ancestry. He entered the Prussian army ki 1772, but after 
seven years' service was cashiered for disobedience. Entering 
the Dutch service three years Inter he took part in the operations 
of 1783-84 in the East Indies as captain. Returning to Prussia 
in 178$ he was, on the death of Frederick the Great, reinstated 
In his old service, and in 1704 took put in the operations in 
Poland, distinguishing himself especially at Ssekoetyn. Five 
years afterwards Yorck began to make a name for himself as 
commander of a light Infantry regiment, being one of the first 
to give prominence to the training of skirmishers. In 180$ 
he was appointed to the command of an infantry brigade, and 
in the disastrous Jena campaign he played a conspicuous and 
successful. part as a rearguard commander, especially at Alteu- 
zaun. He was taken prisoner, severely wounded, in the last 
stand of Blucher*s corps at Lubeck. In the reorganisation of 
the Prussian army* which followed the peace of Tilsit, Yorck 
was one of the leading figures. At first major-general, com- 
manding the West Prussian brigade, afterwards inspector- 
general of light Infantry, he was finally appointed second in 
command to General Grawert, the leader of the auxiliary corps 
which Prussia was compelled to send to the Russian War of 
18x2. The two generals did not agree, Grawert being an open 
partisan of the French alliance, and Yorck an ardent patriot; 
but before long Grawert retired, and Yorck assumed the com- 
mand. Opposed in his advance on Riga by the Russian General 
Steingell, he displayed great skill in a series of combats which 
ended in the retirement of the enemy to Riga. Throughout 
the campaign he had been the object of many overtures from 
the enemy's generals, and though he had hitherto rejected them, 
it was soon borne in upon him that the Grand Army was 
doomed. Marshal Macdonald, his immediate French superior, 
retreated before the corps of Diebitsch, and Yorck found himself 
isolated. As a soldier his duty was to break through, but as 
a Prussian patriot his position was more difficult. He had to 
judge whether the moment was favourable for the war of 
liberation; and, whatever might be the enthusiasm of his 
junior staff-officers, Yorck had no illusions as to the safety of 
his own head. On December 30th the general made up his 
mind. The Convention of Tauroggen " neutralised " the 
Prussian corps. The news was received with the wildest enthu- 
siasm, but the Prussian Court dared not yet throw off the 
mask, and an order was despatched suspending Yorck from 
his command pending a court-martial. Diebitsch refused to 
let the bearer pass through his lines, and the' general 
was finally absolved, when the treaty of Kalisch definitely 
ranged Prussia on the side* of the Allies. Yorck's act was 
nothing less than the turning-point of Prussian history. His 
veterans formed the nucleus of the forces of East Prussia, 
and Yorck himself in public took the final step by declaring 
war as the commander of those forces. On March 17th, 1813, 
he made Ms entry into Berlin in the midst of the wildest 
exuberance of patriotic joy. On the same day the king declared 
war. During 1813-14 Yorck led his veterans with conspicuous 
success. He covered Blucher's retreat after Bautsen and took 
a decisive part in the battles on the Katzbach. Injthe advance 
on Leipzig his corps won the action of Wartenburg (October 4) 
and took part in the crowning victory of October 18th. In 
the campaign in France Yorck drew off the shattered rem- 
nants of Sacken's corps at Montmirail, and decided the day 
at Laon. The storm of Paris was his last fight. In the cam- 
paign of 1815 none of the older men were employed in Blucher's 
army, in order that Gneisenau (the ablest of the Prussian 
generals) might be free to assume command in case of the old 
prince's death. Yorck was appointed to a reserve corps m Prussia, 
and, feeling that his services were no longer required, he retired 
from the army. His master would not accept his resignation 
for a considerable time, and in 1821 made him general field- 
marshal. He had been made Count Yorck von Wartenburg 
in 1814. The remainder of his life was spent on his estate of 
Klein-Ob, the gift of the king. He died there on the ath of 



YOREDALE SERIES— YORK (HOUSE OF) 



9*4 

October 1850. A statue (by Rauch) was erected to him in 
Berlin in 1855. 

See Seydlitt, Tajebuch du Preussiscken Amut Korps x8iz (Berlin, 
18*3); Droysen, Leben des G. F. if. Grajen Yarck vm Wortadmrg 
(Berlin, 1851). 

YOHEDALE SERIES, in geology, a local phase of the lower 
Carboniferous rocks of the N. of England. The name was 
introduced by J. Phillips on account of the typical develop* 
ment of the phase in Yoredale (Wenslcydale), Yorkshire. In 
the Yorkshire dales the Carboniferous rocks assume an aspect 
very different from that which obtains in the S. Beds of 
detrital sediment, sandstones, shales and. occasional ironstones 
and thin coals separate the limestones into- well-defined beds. 
These limestone beds have received various names of local 
significance (Hardraw Scar, Simonstone, Middle, Underset, 
Main and many others), and owing to the country being little 
disturbed by faulting and being much cut up by the streams, 
they stand out as escarpments on either side of the valleys. 
The first indication of the intercalation of thick detrital deposits 
within the massive limestone is seen in Inglcborough and Peny- 
ghent; but as the rocks are traced N. the detrital matter 
increases in quantity and the limestones diminish, till in North- 
umberland the whole Carboniferous series assumes the Yoredale 
phase, and consists of alternations of detrital and calcareous 
beds, no massive limestone being seen. 

The Yoredale limestones are characterized by the presence of 
Productus liganteus and the brachiopod fauna usually associated 
with it. The main limestone of Weardale is fall of corals, including 
LonsdaUia fioriformis, DibunopkyUim sp., CydophyUum packyen- 
dotketum, &c, and has a typical Visean fauna; it would therefore 
correspond, palaeontologically. with the upper part of the Carboni- 
ferous Limestone of Derbyshire. On Inglcborough the limestones 
are not very fossHiferous, but the Main Limestone contains small 
corals of a saphrentoid type and an upper Visean fauna. Posi- 
donomya Beckett occurs fairly low down in the series in the Shale 
above the Hardraw Scar and Gayls limestones, but it is not accom- 
panied by any of the goniatites or other cephaldpods and lamclli- 
branchs which characterize the Posidtmomya Beckeri beds of the 
Pendleside Series, the faunas of the Yoredale and Pendleside phases 
being very distinct. The Red Bed Limestone of Leyburn, the upper- 
most limestone of the series, is very rich in fish remains, which are 
identical in many cases with those found in the topmost beds of 
the massive Carboniferous Limestone at Bolt Edge quarry in 
Derbyshire. The shales between the limestones are rich in fossils 
and contain abundant single corals referable to Zaphrentis cnniskO- 
Uni, CydopkyUum pachsendothtcum and others; these, though 
high-zonal forms, occur low down in the Yoredale strata; even in 
the shale above the Hardraw Scar limestone. In the Derbyshire 
area and farther N. these corals would indicate the uppermost beds 
of the limestone series of those districts, and their early appearance 
in the Yoredale area is probably entirely due to conditions of 
environment. Attempts have been made to correlate rocks in a 
number of widely separated areas with the Yoredale strata, but 
on wholly insufficient grounds. It is clear that the exact relation- 
ship which the Yoredale series of the type area bears as a whole 
to the lower Carboniferous rocks of the Midlands, N. and S. Wales, 
&c.,on the one hand, and to the Pendleside series on the other, 
has yet to be established on a firm palaeontological basis. 

See Mem. Geol. Survey, "Geology of Mallerstang " ; W. Hind, 
Proc York*. Geol. and Poty. Soc. (1902), xiv. part iii.; and Rep. 
BriL Ass.. " Life Zones Brit. Carb. Rocks " (1901)- 

YORK (House 01), a royal line in England, founded by 
Richard, duke of York (q.v.), who claimed the crown in opposi- 
tion to Henry VL It may be said that his claim, at the time 
it was advanced, was rightly barred by prescription, the house 
of Lancaster having then occupied the throne for three genera- 
tions, and that it was really owing to the misgovernment of 
Margaret of Anjou, and her favourites that it was advanced at 
all. Yet it was founded upon strict principles of lineal descent. 
For the duke was descended from Lionel, duke of Clarence, the 
third son of Edward III., while the house of Lancaster came of 
John of Gaunt, a younger brother of Lionel. One thing which 
might possibly have been considered an element of weakness 
in his claim was that it was derived (see the Table) through 
females— an objection actually brought against it by Chief- 
Justice Fortescue. But a succession through females could not 
reasonably have been objected to after Edward III.'s claim to 
\he crown of France; and, apart from strict legality, the duke's 

<uim was probably supported in the popular estimation by the 



tact that he was descended from Edward HI. through his father 
no less than through his mother. For his father, Richard, earl 
of Cambridge, was the son of Edmund, duke of York, fifth 
son. of Edward III.; and he himself was the direct lineal heir 
of this Edmund, just as much as he was of Lionel, duke of 
Clarence. His claim/was also favoured by the accumulation of 
hereditary titles and estates. The earldom of Ulster, the old 
inheritance of the De Burghs, had descended to him from Lionel, 
duke of Clarence; the earldom of March came from the Morti- 
mers, and the dukedom of York and the earldom of Cambridge 
from his paternal ancestry. Moreover, his own marriage with 
Cecily Neville, though she was but the youngest daughter of 
Ralph, 1st earl of Westmorland, allied him to a powerful family 
in the north of England, to whose support, both he and his son 
were greatly indebted. 

The reasons why the claims of the line of Clarence had been 
so long forborne are not difficult to explain. Roger Mortimer, 
4th carl of March, was designated by Richard II. as his suc- 
cessor; but he died the year before Richard was dethroned, and 
his son Edmund, the 5th earl, was a child at Henry IV.'s usurpa- 
tion. Henry took care to secure his person; but the claims of 
the family troubled the whole of his own and the beginning of 
his son's reign. It was an uncle of this Edmund who took part 
with Owen Glendowcr and the Perdes; and for advocating the 
cause of Edmund Archbishop Scrope was put to death. And 
it was to put the crown on Edmund's head that his brother-in- 
law Richard, earl of Cambridge, conspired against Henry V. 
soon after his accession. The plot was detected, being revealed, 
it is said, by the earl of March himself, who does not appear to 
have given it any encouragement; the earl of Cambridge was 
beheaded. The popularity gained by Henry V. in his French 
campaigns secured the weak title of the house of Lancaster 
against further attack for forty years. 

Richard, duke of York, seems to have taken warning by his 
father's fate; but, after seeking for many years to correct by 
other means the weakness of Henry VI.'s government, he first 
took up arms against the 31 advisers who were his own personal 
enemies, and at length claimed the crown in parliament as his 
right. The Lords, or such of them as did not purposely stay 
away from the House, admitted that his claim was unimpeach- 
able, but suggested as a compromise that Henry should retain 
the crown for life, and the duke and his hdrs succeed after his 
death. This was accepted by the duke, and an act to that 
effect recdved Henry's own assent. But the act was repudiated 
by Margaret of Anjou and her followers, and the duke was slain 
at Wakefield fighting against them. In little more than two 
months, however, his son was proclaimed king at London by the 
title of Edward IV., and the bloody victory of Towton imme- 
diately after drove his enemies into exile and paved the way for 
his coronation. After his recovery of the throne in r47i he bad 
little more to fear from the rivalry of the house of Lancaster. 
But the seeds of distrust had already been sown among the 
members of his own family, and in 1478 his brother Clarence was 
put to death— secretly, indeed, within the Tower, but still by 
his authority and that of parliament— as a traitor. In 1483 
Edward himself died; and his eldest son, Edward V., after a 
nominal reign of two months and a half, was put aside by his 
uncle, the duke of Gloucester, who became Richard HI., and 
then caused him and his brother Richard, duke of York, to be 
murdered. But in little more than two years Richard was slain 
at Bosworth by the earl of Richmond, who, being prodatmed 
king as Henry VII., shortly afterwards fulfilled his pledge to 
marry the eldest daughter of Edward IV. and so unite the 
houses of York and Lancaster. 

Here the dynastic history of the house of York ends, for its 
claims were henceforth merged in those of the house of Tudor. 
But, although the union of the Roses ought to have extinguished 
controversy, a host of debatable questions and plausible pre- 
texts for rebellion remained. The legitimacy of Edward IV.'s 
children had been denied by Richard III. and his parliament, 
and, though the act was denounced as scandalous, the slander 
might still be reasserted. The duke of Clarence had left two 



YORK, EDMUND OF LANGLEY, DUKE OF 

GOMIALOOICAl. TASLB OF T8W HotJSS OP YOBK 
11XL 



9*5 






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feofv.dakecfautac* ^^RkWim. _ A^. ««ifcd Hmry Hottwd. dake «l 



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of tk« finUftrt of EntSl 



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Edward, duk« of Buck- 



TrMmaadanedJuckter. 
Artkor ud Edaoad. who wo 



children, a son and a daughter, and the attainder of their father 
could not be a greater bar to the crown than the attainder of 
Henry VIL himself. Seeing this, Henry had, immediately 
•iter his victory at Bosworth, secured the person of the son, 
Edward, earl of Warwick, and kept him a prisoner in the Tower 
of London. Yet a formidable rebellion was raised m his behalf 
by means of Lambert Stand, who was defeated and taken 
prisoner at the battle of Stoke in 1487. The earl of Warwick 
lived for twelve years later in unjust confinement, and was 
ultimately pot to death in 1490 because he had consen t ed to a 
plot for his own liberation. As to his sister Margaret, she was 
married to one of Henry VII.'s Welsh followers, Sir Richard 
Pole (or Poole), and could give no trouble, so that, when Henry 
VIII. came to the throne, be thought it politic to treat her with 
kindness. He made her countess oi Salisbury, reversed her 
brother's attainder, created her eldest son, Henry, Lord Mon- 
tague, and caused one of her younger sons, Reginald, who dis- 
playcd roach taste for Warning, to be carefully educated. This, 
however, was the very thing which involved the whole family in 
ruin. For Henry looked to the learning and abilities of Reginald 
Pole to vindicate before Europe the justice of his divorce from 
Catherine of Aragon; and, when Pole was conscientiously 
compelled to declare the \trj opposite, the king's indignation 
knew no bounds. Pole himself was safe, having secured some 
time before a retreat in Italy. He was even made a cardinal by 
the pope. But this only made matters worse for his family 
at home: his brother, Lord Montague, and even his mother, the 
aged countess of Salisbury, were beheaded as traitors because 
they had continued to correspond with him. Cardinal Me, 
however, came back to his owa country with great honour 
in the reign of Queen Mary, and was made archbishop of Canter- 
bury on the deprivation of Cranmer. 

Early in the reign of Queen Elizabeth, two nephews of the 
cardinal, Arthur and Edmund Pole, being ardent young men, 
conspired to go over to the duke of Guise in France, hoping to 
return with an army into Wales and so promote the claims of 
Mary Queen of Scots to the crown of England, for which service 
the elder, Arthur, expected to be restored to the dukedom of 
Clarence. The result was that they were condemned to death, 
but were only imprisoned for the rest of their days in the Tower, 
where they both carved inscriptions on the walls of their dungeon, 
which are still visible in the Beauchamp tower. 

Another branch of the house of York might have given trouble 



to the Tudors if they had not been narrowly watched and ulti- 
mately extinguished. Of the sisters of Edward IV., the eldest, 
Anne, who married the duke of Exeter, left only one daughter 
by her second husband, Sir Thomas St Leger; but the second, 
Elisabeth, married John de la Pole, duke of Suffolk, and had 
several children. Their eldest son was created earl of Lincoln 
during his father's life, and Richard III., after the death of bis 
own son, had designated him as his successor. Disappointed of 
a kingdom by the success of Henry VIL, he joined in Simnel's 
rebellion and was killed at the battle of Stoke. His brother 
Edmund thus became heir to his father; but in the reduced 
circumstances of the family be agreed to forbear the title of duke 
and take that of earl of SufoUu He continued for some years 
in favour with the king, who made him a knight of the Garter; 
bat, having killed a man in a passion, he fled abroad and was 
entertained at the court of the emperor Maximilian, and after- 
wards at that of Philip, king of Castile, when resident in the Low 
Countries before bis departure for Spain. Philip, having been 
driven on the English coast when going to take possession of bis 
Spanish kingdom, was entertained at Windsor by Henry VIL, 
to whom be promised to deliver up the fugitive on condition 
that his life should be spared. Edmund de la Pole accordingly 
was brought hack to England and lodged in the Tower. Though 
the promise to spare hi* life was kept by the king who gave H, 
his son Henry VIII. caused him to be executed in 1513, when 
war broke out with France, apparently for treasonable corre- 
spondence with his brother Richard, then in the French service. 
After bis death Richard de la Pole, remaining in exile, called 
himself earl of Suffolk,, and was flattered occasionally by 
Francis I. with faint hopes of the crown of England. He was 
killed at the battle of Pavia in 152$- There were no more De 
la Poles who could advance even the most shadowy pretensions 
to disturb the Tudor dynasty. (J. Ga.) 

YORK. EDMUND OP LAMGLEY, Duke or (1341-1403), fifth 
son of Edward III., was born at sting's Langley in Hertford- 
shire on the 5th of June 1341. He accompanied his father on a 
campaign in France in 1359, was created earl of Cambridge in 
1362, and took part in expeditions to France and Spain, being 
present at the sack of Limoges in 137a After marrying Isabella 
(d. 1393), daughter of Peter the Cruel, king of Castile, he was 
appointed one of the English lieutenants in Brittany, whither he 
led an army in 1375. A second campaign in Brittany was 
followed in 13S1 by aa expedition under the earl's leadership to 



926 



YORK, DUKES OF 



aid Ferdinand, king of Portugal, in bis struggle with John I., 
king of Castile; but after a period of inaction Edmund was 
compelled to return to England as Ferdinand had concluded an 
independent peace with Castile. Accompanying Richard II. on 
his march into Scotland, he was created duke of York in August 
1385, and subsequently on three occasions he acted as regent of 
England. In this capacity he held a parliament in 1395, and he 
was again serving as regent when Henry of Lancaster, after- 
wards Henry IV., landed in England in July 1309. After a 
feeble attempt to defend the interests of the absent king, York 
joined the victorious invader; but soon retired from public Kfe, 
and, in the words of Froissart as translated by Lord Berners, 
" laye styll in his castell, and medled with nothynge of the 
busynesse of Englande." He died at King's Langley on the 1st 
of August 1402. York was a man who preferred pleasure to 
business, and during the critical events of his nephew's reign he 
was content to be guided by his more ambitious brothers, the 
dukes of Lancaster and Gloucester. His second wife was Joan, 
or Johanna (d. 1434), daughter of Thomas Holland, earl of 
Kent, but his only children were two sons and a daughter, 
Constance (d. 1416), by his first wife. 

YORK, EDWARD, Duke op {c. 1373-1415), elder son pf the 
preceding, was created earl of Rutland in 1300. Being an 
intimate friend of his cousin, Richard II., he received several 
important appointments, including those of admiral of the fleet, 
constable of the tower of London and warden of the Cinque 
Ports. He accompanied the king to Ireland in 1394 and was 
made earl of Cork; arranged Richard's marriage with Isabella, 
daughter of Charles VI. of France; and was one of the king's 
most active helpers in the proceedings against the "lords 
appellant " in 1397. As a reward he secured the office of con- 
stable of England and the lands in Holdemess which had 
previously belonged to his murdered uncle, Thomas of Wood- 
stock, duke of Gloucester, together with other estates and the 
title of duke of Aumerle or Albemarle. He appears to have 
deserted Richard in 1399, but only at the last moment; and in 
Henry IV. 's first parliament he was vigorously denounced as the 
murderer of Gloucester. After declaring that his part in the 
proceedings of 1397 had been performed under constraint, his 
life was spared, but he was reduced to his former rank as carl of 
Rutland, and deprived of his recent acquisitions of land. It is 
uncertain what share Rutland had in the conspiracy against 
Henry IV. in January 1400, but his complete acquittal by 
parliament in 1401, and the confidence subsequently reposed in 
him by the king, point to the conclusion that he was not seriously 
involved. Scrying as the royal lieutenant in Aquitaine and in 
Wales, Rutland, who became duke of York on his father's death 
in 1402, was, like all Henry's servants, hampered by want of 
money, and perhaps began to feel some irritation against the 
king. At all events he was concerned in the scheme, concocted 
in 1405 by his sister, Constance, widow of Thomas le Despencer, 
carl of Gloucester, for seizing the young earl of March, and his 
brother Roger Mortimer, and carrying them into Wales. On 
her trial Constance asserted that her brother had instigated the 
plot, which also included the murder of the king, and York was 
imprisoned in Pevensey castle. Released a few months later, he 
was restored to the privy council and regained his estates, after 
which he again served Henry in Wales and in France. York led 
one division of the English army at Agincourt, where, on the 
25th of October 1415, he was killed by "much hcte and 
thronggid." He was buried in Fotheringhay church. The 
duke left no children and was succeeded as duke of York by bis 
nephew, Richard. 

York compiled the Maystre of the Gome, a treatise on hunting 
which is largely a translation of the Livrede Chaste of Gaston Phochus, 
count of Foix. This has been edited by W. A. and F. Baillie- 
Grohman (1904). 

YORK, FREDERICK AUGUSTUS, Duke op (1763-1827), 
second son of George III., was born at St James's Palace on the 
1 6t h of August 1 763. At the age of six months his father secured 
his election to the rich bishopric of Osnabrtlck. He was invested 
a knight of the Bath in 1767, a K.G. in 1771, and was gazetted 



colonel in 1780. From 1781 to 1787 he lived In Germany, where 
he attended the manoeuvres of the Austrian and Prussian armies. 
He was appointed colonel of the 2nd horse grenadier guards 
(now and Life Guards) in 1782, and promoted major-general 
and appointed colonel of the Coldstream Guards in 1784. He 
was created duke of York and Albany and earl of Ulster in 1784. 
but retained the bishopric of Osnabrtlck until 1803. On his 
return to England be took his seat in the House of Lords, where, 
on December 15, 1788, he opposed Pitt's Regency Bill in a speech 
which was supposed to have been inspired by the prince of Wales. 
A duel fought on Wimbledon Common with Colonel Lennox, 
afterwards duke of Richmond, served to increase the duke of 
York's popularity, his acceptance of the challenge itself and his 
perfect coolness appealing strongly to the public taste. In 1791 
he married Princess Frederica Charlotte Ulrica Catherina 
(b. 1767), daughter of Frederick William II. of Prussia. The 
princess was enthusiastically received in London, but the 
marriage was not happy, and a separation soon took place. The 
princess retired to Oatlands Park, Weybridge, where she died 
on the 6th of August 182a 

In 1793 the duke of York was sent to Flanders in command 
of the English contingent of Coburg's army destined for the 
invasion of France (see French Revolutionary Wars). On 
his return in 1795 the king promoted hira field-marshal, and 
on April 3rd, 1708, appointed him commander-in-chief. His 
second command was with the army sent to invade Holland 
in conjunction with a Russian corps d'armU in 1799. Sir Ralph 
Abercromby and Admiral Sir Charles Mitchell in charge of the 
vanguard had succeeded in capturing the Dutch ships in the 
Helder, but from time of the duke's arrival with the main 
body of the army disaster followed disaster until, on the 17th of 
October, the duke signed the convention of Alkmaar, by which 
the allied expedition withdrew after giving up its prisoners, 
Although thus unsuccessful as commander of a field army the 
duke was well fitted to carry out reforms in the army at home, 
and to this task he devoted himself with the greatest vigour and 
success until his enforced retirement from the office of com- 
mander-in-chief on the r8th of March 1809, in consequence of his 
relations with Mary Ann Clarke (1776-1852), who was convicted 
of profiting by her intimacy with the duke to extract money 
from officers by promising to recommend them for promotion. 
A select committee was appointed by the House of Commons to 
inquire into the matter, and the duke was acquitted of having 
received bribes himself by 278 votes to 196. Two years later, 
in May 1811, he was again placed at the head of the army by the 
prince regent, and rendered valuable services in this position. 
He died on the 5th of January 1827 and was buried at St George's 
Chapel, Windsor. 

A firm friendship seems to have existed between the duke and his 
elder brother, afterwards George IV., and he is also said to have 
been his father's favourite son. He was very popular, thanks to 
his amiable disposition and a keen love of sport, but it is as the 
organizing and administrative bead of the army that he has left 
his mark. He was untiring in his efforts to raise the tone of the 
anny, restore discipline, weed out the undesirables, and suppress 
bribery and favouritism. He founded the Duke of York's School 
for the sons of soldiers at Chelsea, and bis name is also com- 
membrated by the Duke of York's column in Waterloo Place. 

YORK, RICHARD, Duke of (141X-1460), was "born on the 
21st of September 141 x, the son of Richard, earl of Cambridge, 
second son of Edmund of Langley, duke of York. By the death 
of his uncle Edward at Agincourt he became duke of York, and 
on the death of Edmund Mortimer in 1425 he succeeded to his 
claims as representing in the female line the elder branch of 
the royal family. He had been kindly treated by Henry V., 
and his name appears at the head of the knights made by the 
little Henry VI. at Leicester on the 19th of May 14*6. York's 
first service was in France during 1430 and 1431. In 143 2 he 
obtained livery of his lands and afterwards went over to Ireland 
to take possession of his estates there. In January 1436 he 
was appointed lieutenant-general of France and Normandy, but 
did not enter on his command till June. He snowed vigour and 
capacity, and recovered Fecamp and some other places in 



YORK (CITY) 



NoniBdy. Probably be "was not supported cordially by the 
borne g o v er n ment, and in 1437 applied to be recalled. One 
authority alleges thai his council thwarted him in his desire to 
relieve Montereau, because he had been discharged from his 
office (Chronicles of London, 143). York returned to England 
in the autumn of 1437. From this time at all events he attached 
himself to the war-party of which Humphrey of Gloucester was 
bead, in opposition to the government under Cardinal Beaufort. 
By his marriage in .1438 to Cicely, sister of the earl of Salis- 
bury, he allied himself to the rising family of the Nevilles. 
On. the and of July 1440 York was again appointed, to the 
French command. His previous experience made him stipulate 
for full powers and a sufficient revenue. He did not, however, 
go to Rouen till June 1441- During his second governorship 
York maintained, if he could not improve, the English position 
in Normandy. He was again hampered by his political oppo- 
nents at home, and at the end of 1446 was recalled, on the 
pretext that his term of office had expired. The death of 
Humphrey of Gloucester in February 1447 m*de York the first 
prince of the blood. Suffolk, now Henry's chief- minister, found 
a convenient banishment for a dangerous rival by appointing 
York to be lieutenant of Ireland for ten years (9th of December 
1447). York, however, contrived to put off his departure for 
eighteen months. During bis absence in Ireland English dis- 
content came to a crisis in Jack Cade's rebellion. The use 
made of the names of Mortimer and York, however unauthorised, 
shows the trend of popular opinion. In September 1450 York 
landed in Wales. His opponents endeavoured to waylay him, 
but he came to London with an armed retinue and forced 
himself into the king's presence. Nevertheless he declared his 
loyalty and that he desired only justice and good government. 
He took part in the punishment of Cade's supporters, and dis- 
countenanced a proposal in parliament that he should be 
declared heir to the crown. In March 145a he came once more 
In arms to London, and endeavoured to obtain Somerset's dis- 
missal On a promise that his rival should be held in custody 
he disbanded his men, and thus outwitted found himself virtu- 
ally a prisoner. However, a nominal agreement was concluded, 
and York accepted the king's pardon. The situation was 
changed by the birth of a prince of Wales and the king's illness 
in October 1453. • After a struggle with the queen and Somer- 
set, York secured his recognition as protector on the 27th of 
March 1454* He declared that he accepted the post only as 
a duty, and, though he put his own friends in power, exercised 
his authority with moderation and on the side of good order. 
But at the end of the year the long's sudden recovery brought 
York's protectorate to an end. When it was clear that the 
queen and Somerset would proceed to extremities, York and 
his friends took up arms in self-defence. Even when the two 
armies met at St Albans, York endeavoured to treat for settle- 
ment. The issue was decided by the defeat and death of 
Somerset on the 22nd of May I4S5- York used his success 
with moderation. He became constable of England, and his 
friends obtained office. • This was no more than a change of 
ministers. But a return of the king's illness in October 145s 
made York again for a brief space protector. Henry recovered 
in February 1456, and Margaret, his queen, began to assert 
herself. Finally, at Coventry, in October, the Yorkist officials 
were displaced. Still there was no open breach, and in March 
1458 there was even a ceremonial reconciliation of all parties 
at St Paul's in London. York would not again accept honour- 
able banishment to Ireland, but made no move till the queen's 
preparations forced him to act. In September 1459 both 
parties were once more in arms. York protested that he acted 
only in self-defence, but the desertion of his best soldiers at 
Ludlow on the x 2th of October left him helpless. With a few 
followers he escaped to Ireland, where his position as lord- 
lieutenant was confirmed by an Irish parliament, and he ruled 
in full defiance of the English government. In March 1460 the 
earl of Warwick came from Calais to concert plans with his 
leader. York himself only landed in England on the 8th of 
September, two months after Warwick's victory at North- 



1*7 

w Alt pnefteno* of moderation was put wide, ana 1 he 

marched on London, using the full arms of England, and with 
his sword borne upright before him. On leaching Westminster, 
York took up his residence in the royal palace, and formalr/ 
asserted his claim to the throne in parliament. In the end a 
compromise was arranged, under which Henry was to retain 
the crown for life, but Richard was to succeed him. On the 
8th of November he was accordingly proclaimed heir-apparent 
and protector. Meantime the queen was gathering her friends, 
and early in December, Richard went north with a small force. 
He kept Christmas at Sandal Castle near Wakefield. There, on 
the 30th of December, he was hemmed In by a superior force 
of Lancastrians. Declaring that he had never kept castle in 
the face of the enemy, Richard rashly offered battle, and was 
defeated and slain. His enemies had his head cut off, and set 
it up on the walls of York adorned with a paper crown. 

Richard of York was not a great statesman, but he had 
qualities of restraint and moderation, and might have made a 
good king. He had four daughters and four sons. Edmund, 
earl of Rutland, his second son, was killed at Wakefield. The 
other three were Edward IV., George, duke of Clarence, and 
Richard UL 

See The Pashm Letters with Dr Gairdner's Introduction; Three 
Fifteenth Century Chronicles, and Collections of a London Citizen 
(published by the Camden Society); Chronicles of London fed* 
C. L. Kingsford, 1005) ; J. S. Stevenson's Wars of the Engfish in Prance 
(Rolls Series). The French chronicles of Matthieu dtEscouchy, 
T. Basin and Jehan Waurin should also be consulted (these three 
are published by the SociOS de PHistcire de Prance). For modern 
accounts see especially Sir James Ramsay's Lancaster and Yorh, 
and The Political History ef England, vol. tv., by Professor C. Oman. 

\C» L. K.) 

YORK, a city, municipal, county and parliamentary borough, 
the seat of an archbishop, and the county town of Yorkshire, 
England, 188 m. N. by W. from London by the Great Northern 
railway. It is an important junction of the North-Eastem 
railway. Pop. (1901) 77,9*4* It Hes in a plain watered by 
the river Ouse, at the junction of the Foss stream with the 
main river. It has narrow picturesque streets, ancient walls, 
and, besides the cathedral, many churches and buildings of 
architectural interest. 

York was a Roman station (see below), and large collections 
of Roman remains are preserved in the hospitium of St Mary's 
Abbey. Of these a great proportion came from the cemetery 
and from the foundations of the railway station. A note- 
worthy relic of the Roman occupation, however, appears in 
its original place. This is the so-called multangular tower, 
on the N.W. of the city walls. Its base is Roman, of mingled 
stone and brick work. The city walls date in part from Norman 
times, but are in the main of the 14th century. Their circuit 
is a little over 2) m., and the area enclosed is divided by the 
river Ouse, the larger part lying on the left bank. The walls 
have been carefully preserved and are remarkably perfect. 
On the E. for a short distance the river Foss took the place 
of a wall. Of the gates, called Bars, the best specimen is 
Micklcgate Bar on the S.W., where the heads of traitors were 
formerly exposed. It is a square tower built over a circular, 
probably Norman, arch, and has embattled corner turrets. 
Others are Bootham Bar, the main entrance from the N. f 
also having a Norman arch; Monk Bar (N.E.), formerly called 
Goodramgate, but renamed in honour of General Monk, and 
Walmgate Bar, of the time of Edward I., retaining the barbican 
repaired in 1648. The castle stands in the angle between the 
Ouse and the Foss immediately above their junction. Of the 
fortress built by William the Conqueror in 1068 some portions 
were probably incorporated in Clifford's tower, the shell of 
which, showing an unusual ground plan of four intersecting 
circles, rises from an artificial mound. The castle serves as the 
prison and county courts. 

The cathedral of St Peter, commonly known as the minster, 
has no superior in general dignity of form among English 
cathedrals. It is in the form of a Latin cross, consisting of nave 
with aisles, transepts, choir with aisles, a central tower, and 



g*8 



YORK (CITY) 



[Tie cathedral occupies the site 
King Edwin was baptised by 



two W. towers. The palace of the archbishops it at Bishop- 
thorpe, 2} m. S. of York. It is of various dates, and includes 
slight remains of the Early English palace of Archbishop Grey. 
The diocese includes over half the parishes in Yorkshire, and 
also covers very small portions of Durham, Nottinghamshire 
and Lincolnshire. 

The extreme externa! length of the cathedral is 524 ft. 6 in., 
the breadth across the transepts 250 ft., the height of the central 
tower 213 ft., and the hiithl of the western towers 202 ft. The 
materia! u magne*ian I 

t)$ the wooden church ... m 

pjiulinui iqn) on Easier Day 627. After his baptism Edwin, 
according to Bedt, began to convruct "a large and more noble 
basilica of «otit," but it was partly destroyed during the troubles 
which followed his death, and was repaired by Archbishop Wilfrid. 
Tfce building Miff Lied from fire in 741, and, after it had been re- 
paired by Archbishop Albert, was described by Alcuin as " a most 
magnificent batilica* At the time of the Norman invasion the 
Saxon cathedral , with the library of Archbishop Egbert, perished 
in the fire by which the greater part of the otv was destroyed, 
the only rebe remaining lieine the central wall of the crypt. 
U wa* rectm strutted by Archbishop Thomas of Bayeux (1070- 
1100); but of ihia building I portions remain. The apsidal 
choir and crypt 
(1154-81), the S. 



tpsid; 
were risccnMructed by Archbishop Roger 

% ..^, _.,. . transept by Archbishop Walter de Grey (1216- 

1255), and the N. transept and central tower by John Romanus, 
treasurer of the cathedral (1228-56). With the exception of the 
crypt, the transepts arc the oldest portions of the building now 
remaining. They represent the Early English style at its best, 
and the view across ihe grc^i transept It unsurpassed for archi- 
tectural effect* The S. transept i* the richest and most elaborate 
in its detail s< one of it* principal features being the magnificent 
rose window: jnd the N. transept contains a series of beautiful 
lancet window* called the Five Stater*. The foundation of the 
new nave was laid by Archbishop Romanus (1286-06), son of the 
treasurer, th* building ol ii being compter, d by Archbishop William 
de Melton about 1340. The chapter-tin use, a magnificent ornate 
building, wan built during the tame perind. The W. front, con- 
sisting of a centre and two division? coirc&p* >nding with the nave and 
aisles, has been described as " more ari-hitecturalry perfect as a 
composition and in its details thin '.rut of any other English 
cathedral, 1 ' the great window above the *!oor being considered by 
tome superior to the famous E, window at Carlisle. . 

In 1361 Archbishop thorcsby Ci3SH$) °eg an the kdy chapel 
and presbytery, burn in the Larly Perpendicular style. The re- 
building el the chuir t begun about the sirne period, was not com- 
pleted till about 1400. it is Late Perpendicular, the great E. 
window being one of the finest in the world. With the rebuilding 
of the choir the whole of the ancient Norman edifice was removed, 
the only Norman architecture now remaining being the E. portion 
of the crypt of the second period, built by Archbishop Roger (1 154- 
1191). To correspond with later alterations, the central tower 
was recased and changed into a Perpendicular lantern tower, the 
work being completed in 1144. The S. W. tower was begun in 1432 
during the treasurcrship of John de Bermingham, and the N.W. 
tower in 1470. With the erection of this tower the church was com- 
pleted as it now stands, and on the 3rd of February 1472 it was re- 
consecrated by Archbishop Neville. On the 2nd of February 1829 
the woodwork of the choir was set on fire by Jonathan Martin, a 
madman. On the 2nd of May 1840 a fire broke out in the S.W. 
tower, reducing it to a mere shell. The stained glass both in the 
cathedral and in other churches of the city is particularly note- 
worthy; its survival may be traced to the stipulation made by 
the citizens when surrendering to parliament in the civil wars that 
it should not be damaged. 

The following is a list of the archbishops of York:— 

16. Wulfstan. 928-956. 



I. Paulinus. 627-633. 

•2. Chad. 664-669. 

•3. Wilfrid, 669-678. (He again 
held the see in 686— for 
how long is not certain 
— Bosa retiring in his 
favour.) 

•4. Bosa. 678-c. 705. 

•5. John of Beverley. 7©5-7i8. 

•6. Wilfrid II.. 718-732. 

2. Egbert, 732-766. 
. Albert. 766-782. 
9. Eanbald 1., 782-796- 
ro. Eanbald II., 796-812. 

11. Waifs! . 812-831. 

12. Wigmund, 837-854. 

13. Wulfhere. 854-890. 

14. Ethelbald, 890-895. 

15. Redewald. 895-928. 



17. Oskytel, 956-972. 

18. Ethelwold, 972. 

19. Oswald. 972-992. 

20. Adulf, 992-J002. 

21. Wulfstan. 1002-1023. 

22. Alfric Puttoc, 1023-105Q. 

23. Kind, 1050-1060. 

24. Ealdred, 1060-1067. 

25. Thomas of Bayeux, 1070- 

1100. 

26. Gerard, 1101-1108. 

27. Thomas, 1108-11 14. 

28. Thurstan, 1114-1140. 

29. William Fitzherbett.' 1143- 

1147. (His election was 
disputed, and he was 
deprived by the pope.) 

30. Henry Mordac, 11 47- 11 53. 



* These bishops did not receive the pall as metropolitans. 



William Fittherbert, re- 
instated, 1153 to 1154. 
31 Roger of Pont lXveque, 
1154-1181. 
(The see was now vacant for 
ten years.) 

32. Geoffrey, 1 191-1207. 

(The see was vacant for nine 
years.) 

33. Walter de Grey, 1216-1255 

34. Sewal de Bovil. 1 256-1 258. 

35. Geoffrey of Ludham, 1258- 

1265. 

36. Walter Giffard, 1266-1279. 

37. William of Wickwaine, 

1 279-1 286. 

38. John Komanus, 1286-1296. 

39. Henry of Newark. 1298- 

1299. 

40. Thomas of Corbridge, 1300- 

1304. 

41. Wiluam Greenfield, 1306- 

1315. 

42. William de Melton, 1317- 

1340- 

43. William la Zouche, 1342- 

1352. 

44. John Thoresby. 1352-1373- 

45. Alexander Neville, 1374- 

1388. 

46. Thomas Fitaalan, 1388- 

1396. 

47. Robert Waldby, l397-»398. 

48. Richard Scrope, 1398-1405. 

49. Henry Bowet. 1407-1423. 

50. John Kemp, 1426-1452. 

51. William Booth, 1452-1464. 

52. George Neville, 1464-1476. 

53. Laurence Booth. 1 476-1480. 

54. Thomas Scott. 1480-1500. 

55. Thomas Savage, 1 501-1 507. 

56. Christopher Bainbridgc, 

1 508-1 5 14. 

57. Thomas Wolsey, 1 514-1530. 



58. Edward Lea, 1531-1544* 

59. Robert Holgate, 1545-1 554- 

60. Nicholas Heath, 1555-1559- 

61. ThomA Young, 1561-156$. 

62. Edward Grindal, 1 570-1 576. 

63. Edwin Sandys, 1577-1588. 

64. John Piers, 1588-1594. 

65. Matthew Button, 1595- 

1606, 

66. Tobias Matthew, 1606-1628. 

67. George Mooteign, 1628. 

68. Samuel Harsnett. 1628-1631. 

69. Richard NeuV, 1632-1640. 

70. John Williams, 1641-1650. 

71. Accepted Frewen, 1660- 

1664. 

72. Richard Sterne, 1664-1683. 

73. John Dolben. 1 683- 1686. 

74. Thomas Lam pi ugh, 1688- 

169 1. 

75. John Sharp. 1691-1714. 

76. William Dawes, 17 13- 1724. 

77. Lancelot BJackburne, 1724- 

78. Thomas Herring, 1743~»747- 

79. Matthew Hutton, 1747- 



ln Gilbert. 1757- 
81. Robert Hay Drummond. 



80. John Gilbert. 1757-1761. 



1761-1776. 

82. William Markham, 1777- 
1807. 

83. Edward Vernon Harcourt, 
1808-1847. 

84. Thomas Musgrave, 1847- 
1860. 

85. Charles Thomas Longley, 
1860-1862. 

86. William Thomson, 1863- 
1891; 

87. William Connor Magee, 1891. 

88. William Dalrymple Mac- 
lagan. 1891-1008. 

89. Cosmo Gordon Lang, 1008- 

Next to the cathedral, the most interesting building in York is 
St Mary's Abbey, situated in Museum Gardens, founded for Bene- 
dictines by Alan, lord of Richmond, in 1078, its bead having the 
rank of a mitred abbot with a seat in parliament. The principal 
remains of the abbey (see Abbey) are the N. wall and the ruins 
of the church, in the Early English and Decorated styles, and the 
principal gateway with a Norman arch. They lie near the cathedral, 
outside the walls. The hospitium, of which the upper part is of 
wood, contains a collection of Roman antiquities; the building 
is of the 14th and 15th centuries. A considerable portion of the 
abbey was employed for the erection of the king's manor, a palace 
for the lord president of the north, now occupied as a school for 
the blind. In the gardens is also the ambulatory of St Leonard's 
hospital, founded by King Aethclstan and rebuilt by Stephen. 
St William's College, near the minster, was founded in 1453 as a 
college for priests holding chantries in the minster; its restoration 
as a church house and meeting-place for convocation was under- 
taken in 1906. York also possesses a large number of churches 
of special architectural interest, including All Saints, North Street, 
Early English, Decorated and Perpendicular, with a spire 120 ft. 
in height; Christ Church, with S. door in the Decorated style, 
supposed to occupy the site of the old Roman palace; Holy Trinity, 
in Goodramgatc. Decorated and Perpendicular, with Perpendicular 
tower; Holy Trinity, Micklcgate, formerly a priory church, now 
restored, showing Roman masonry in its walls; St Denis, Walm- 

fate. with rich Norman doorway and Norman tower arches; St 
lelen's, St Helen's Square, chiefly Decorated; St John's, North 
Street, chiefly Perpendicular; St Margaret's, Walmgate. cele- 
brated for its curiously sculptured Norman porch and doorway: 
St Mary the Elder, Bishophill, Early English and Decorated, with 
brick tower, rebuilt in 1659; St Mary the Younger, Bishophill. 
with a square tower in the Saxon style, rebuilt probably in the 
13th century; St Mary, Cast legate, with Perpendicular tower and 
spire 154 ft. in height, the body of the church dating back to tran- 
sit ionaf Norman times; St Michael-lc- Belfry, founded in 1066, but 



rebuilt in 1538 in Late Perpendicular style: St Martin's-le-Grand, 
Perpendicular; and St Martin's cum Gregory. Early English 



fine 



and Perpendicular. Among modern churches is the Roman Catholic 
pro-cathedral, standing near the cathedral; 

The guild-hall, with a fine old room in Perpendicular style erected 
in 1446, contains a number of stained-glass windows. Adjoining 
it are handsome municipal buildings (1891), and near it is the 
mansion house, built in 1725 from designs by the earl of Burlington. 
The courts of justice were opened in 1892. Assembly rooms, a 
corn exchange, barracks and a theatre are the other chief buildings. 



YORK 



929 



T1»epaUktatatk>osl*dad*theY<j^^ 
whose museum, in tht Grecian style, was opened m 1830 and the 
free library in the building of the York Institute of Science and 
Art. The principal schools are St Peter's cathedral grammar-school 
(originally endowed in 1557). Archbishop Holgate's grammar-school, 
the York and diocesan grammar-school, and the bluecoat school for 
boys (founded in 1705)1 with the associated greycoat school for girls. 
There are numerous charities. 

The chief industrial establishments are iron foundries, railway 
and motor engineering works, breweries, flour-mills, tanneries ana 
manufactories of confectionery, artificial manure, &c. There is 
water commuakatbn by the Ouse with the Humber, and by the 
Foss Navigation to the N.E. This is under the control of the 
corporation. The parliamentary borough returns 3 members. 
The county borough was created in 1888. The municipal borough 
is under a lord mayor, 12 aldermen and 36 councillors. The city 
within the municipal Emits constitutes a separate division of the 
county. The municipal city and the Ainsty (a district on the S.W. 
included in the city bounds in 1449) are for parliamentary purposes 
included in the N. Riding, for registration purposes in the E. Riding, 
andf for all other purposes in the W. Riding. The parliamentary 
borough extends into the £. Riding. Area, 3730 acres. 

History. — York is known to have been occupied by the 
Britons, and was chosen by the Romans as their most important 
centre in north Britain and named Ebordcum or Eburacum. 
The fortress of Legio VI. Vktrix was situated near the site 
of the cathedral, and a municipality (colonic) grew up, near 
where the railway station now is, on the opposite side of the 
Onse. Many inscriptions and a great quantity of minor 
objects have been found. The emperor Hadrian visited 
York in ad. 120, and, according to tradition, the body of the 
emperor Sevrrus who died there in a.d. six was burnt on 
Severus Hill, near the dty. After the death of Constantine 
Chlorus, which also took place in York,- his son Constantine 
the Great, who, according to an ancient but incorrect tradition, 
was born there, was also inaugurated emperor there. A bishop 
of York is mentioned, along with, and with precedence of, 
bishops of London and Lincoln (the last name is uncertain) 
as present at the council of Aries in 314. Nothing is known 
of the history of the city from the time the Romans withdrew 
from Britain in 410 until 627, when King Edwin was baptized 
there, and where shortly afterwards Paulinus, the first arch- 
bishop, was consecrated. In the time of Archbishop Egbert 
(732-766) and of Alcuin, at first a scholar and afterwards master 
of the cloister school, York became one of the most celebrated 
places of education in Europe. It was also one of the chief 
Danish boroughs, and Earl Siward is said to have died there 
in X055. In 1066 it was taken by Harold Hardrada, and in 
xo68 the men of the north of England, rising under Edgar 
Aethding and Earl Waltheof, stormed the castles which 
William L had raised, putting t6 death the whole of the Norman 
garrison. The (Conqueror in revenge burnt the town and laid 
waste the country between the Humber and Tees. York was 
frequently visited by the kings of England on the way to 
Scotland, and several important parliaments were held there, 
the first being that of 1x75, when Malcolm, king of Scotland, 
did homage to Henry n. In the reign of Richard I., the citizens 
rose against the Jews, who fled to the castle. Here, however, 
they were obliged to surrender, many killing themselves after 
to death their wives and children, the rest being 
by the rituena, The council of the North was 
fax York in 1537 after the suppression of the 
Pilgrimage of Grace. In 1642 York was garrisoned by Royalists 
and besieged by the parliament. It was relieved by Prince 
Rupert, but surrendered after the battle of Marston Moor. 
Being tinder the rule of the earls of Northumbria, York is not 
mentioned in the Domesday Survey. In the first charter 
(which is undated) Henry II. granted the citizens a merchant 
gOd and all the free customs which they had in the time of 
Henry L Richard I. in 11 94 granted exemption from toll, 
&c t throughout the kingdom, and King John in 1200 con* 
firmed the preceding charters, and in 12x2 granted the city 
to the citizens at a fee-farm of £160 a year. These charters 
were confirmed by most of the early kings. Richard II. con* 
ferred the title of lord mayor, and a second charter, given in 
X392, shows that the government then consisted of a lord 



mayor and aldermen, while a third in 1396 made the city a 
county of itself and gave the burgesses power to elect two 
sheriffs. Edward IV. in 1464 incorporated the town under 
the title of " Lord Mayor and Aldermen," and in 1473 directed 
that all the citizens should choose the mayor from among 
the aldermen. As this led to constant disputes, Henry VII. 
arranged that a common council, consisting of two men from 
each of the more important gilds and one from each of the 
less important ones, should elect the mayor. The dty is now 
governed under a charter of Charles II., confirming that of 
1464, the governing body consisting of a lord mayor, 12 
aldermen and 36 councillors. The dty has returned two 
members to parliament since 1295. During the 14th century 
there were constant quarrels between the dtizens and the 
abbey of St Mary's about the suburb of Bootham, which the 
dtizens claimed as within the jurisdiction of the dty, and 
the abbey as a separate borough. In 1353 the king took the 
borough of York into his own hands, '' to avoid any risk of 
disturbance and possible great bloodshed such as has arisen 
before these times," and finally in the same year an agreement 
was brought about by Archbishop Thoresby that the whole of 
Bootham should be considered a suburb of York except the 
street called St* Marygate, which should be in the jurisdiction 
of the abbey. 

From the time of the conquest York was important as a 
trading and commercial centre. There were numerous trade 
gilds, one of the chief being that of the weavers, which received 
a charter from Henry H. During the 17th and 18th centuries 
the trade declined, partly owing to the distance of the dty from 
the sea, and partly owing to the regulations of the trade gilds. 

See Francis Drake, Eboracum: or the History and Antiquities 
of the City of York, from its original to the present time (1736); 
Extracts from the Municipal Records of the City of York durint the 
Reigns of Edward IV., Edward V. and Richard III. (1843); Victoria 
County History, Yorkshire; J. Raine, York (1893); A. P. Purcy- 
Cust, York Minster (1897). Heraldry of York Minster (Leeds, 
1890); B. S. Rowntree, Poverty: a Study of Town Life (1901). 

YORK, a township of York county, Maine, U.S.A., on 
the Atlantic coast about 45 m. S.W. of Portland, and 9 m. by 
rail N.E. of Portsmouth, New Hampshire. Pop. (19x0) 2802. 
Area, 64 sq. m. York is at the terminus of the York Harbor 
and Beach division of the Boston & Maine railway. In York 
village is the county gaol (1653-54), preserved by the Old York 
Historical and Improvement Society as a museum of local 
antiquities. Two colonial taverns also remain. York Harbor, 
York Beach, York Cliffs and Long Beach are attractive summer 
villages. The first settlement was made about 1624. In April 
1641 Sir Ferdinando Gorges, proprietor of the province of Maine, 
erected this into the Borough of Agamenticus, and on the 1st of 
March 164a he chartered it as a dty under the name of Gorgeana. 
In 1652, when Massachusetts extended her jurisdiction over 
Maine, the dty of Gorgeana became the town of York. In 1692 
most of the houses were burned by the Indians and the inhabitants 
lulled or taken captive. York was the shire town of Yorkshire 
from X716 to 1735, the shire town with Portland (then Falmouth) 
of the district of Maine from 1735 to 1760, and a county-seat of 
York county from X760 to 1832. During the middle of the 18th 
century York had considerable trade with the West Indies and 
along the coast, and as late as the middle of the 19th century it 
had important fishing interests. Its development as a summer 
resort was begun about 1873, but until 1887, when the railway 
reached it, its chief means of access was by stage from Ports- 
mouth. 

See J. P. Baxter, Agamenticus, Bristol, Gorgeana, York (Portland, 
1904); G. A. Emery, Ancient City of Gorgeana and Modern Town 
of York (Boston, 1873); and Pauline C. Bouve, "Old York; a 
Forgotten Seaport," in the New England Magatine (July 1902). 

YORK, a dty and the county-seat of York county, Nebraska, 
U.S.A., about 46m. W. by N. of Lincoln. Pop. (1900) 5132; (1910) 
6235. It is served by the Chicago, Burlington & Quincy and 
Chicago & North- Western railways. It is the seat of the School 
of the Holy Family and of York College (founded in 1890, 



93° 



YORK— YORKSHIRE 



co-educatk>nal). The dty is situated in a fanning and stock- 
raising region, and among its manufactures are foundry products, 
bricks and flour. York was settled in 1864, was laid out in 1869, 
was incorporated as a town in 1875 and was chartered as a city 
in 1877. 

YORK, a city and the county seat of York county, Pennsylvania, 
U.S.A., about 100 m. W. of Philadelphia and about 28 m. S.E. 
of Harrisburg. Pop. (1 000) 33 ,708— 1 304 being foreign-born and 
776 negroes; (1910) 44,75a York is served by the Maryland & 
Pennsylvania, the Northern Central (Pennsylvania) and the 
Western Maryland railways. Among the public buildings are the 
County Court House (1809) And a large Federal Building (19x0). 
York is the seat of the York Collegiate Institute (1873), founded 
by Samuel Small (d. 1885) and of the York County Academy 
(1785). The Historical Society of York (1895) has a valuable 
collection of documents relating to local history. York is the 
commercial centre for a rich agricultural region, and has manu- 
factures of foundry and machine-shop products, silk goods, &c. 
The total factory product in 1905 was valued at $14,258,696. 

York, the first permanent settlement in the state W. of the 
Susquehanna, was laid out in 1741 in what was then the Manor 
of Springe ttsbury (named in honour of Springett Penn, a grand- 
son of William Penn) by Thomas Cookson, a surveyor for Richard 
and Thomas Penn, then the proprietors of the colony, and was 
named after York, England. The first settlers were chiefly 
Germans from the Rhenish Palatinate, who were Lutherans, 
Reformed, Mennonites and Moravians. English Quakers and 
Scotch-Irish settled here also. The settlement lay on the 
Monocacy road, the main line of travel to the S. and S.W., and 
it grew rapidly, especially between 1748 and 1751. In 1749 the 
county of York was erected (from Lancaster county) and York 
was made the county-seat. In 1754 York had 210 houses and 
1000 inhabitants. Troops from York took part in the Seven 
Years' War and the War of American Independence. In the old 
county court-house (built in 1754-56, pulled down in 1841) the 
Continental Congress sat from the 30th of September 1777 to the 
27th of June 1778, having left Philadelphia on the approach 
of the British, and having held a day's, session at Lancaster. 
At York the Congress passed the Articles of Confederation (15th 
of November 1777) and received news of the American victory 
at Saratoga and of the signing of treaties between the United 
States and France. The Conway cabal came to an end here, 
and the arrival here of Baron Steuben and of Lafayette in 1777 
helped the American cause. In September 1778, $1,500,000 in 
silver lent by France to the United States was brought to York; 
and Benjamin Franklin's press, removed from Philadelphia, 
issued $10,000,000 of Continental money. Thomas Paine here 
wrote part of his Fifth Crisis. Philip Livingston, a signer of 
the Declaration of Independence, is buried here. In the Civil 
War, Confederate troops under General John B, Gordon entered 
York on the 28th of June 1863, and a small Federal force retreated 
before them; and the battle of Gettysburg was fought about 
28 m. E. York was incorporated as a borough in 1787 and was 
chartered as a city in 1887. 

See G. R. Prowell, The City of York, Past and Present (York, 
looi), and C. A. Hawkins and H. E. Landis, York and York County 
(ibid. 1901). 

YORKB, CHARLES (1722-1770)/ English lord chancellor, 
second son of Philip Yorke, 1st earl of Hardwicke, was born in 
London on the 30th of December 1722, and was educated at 
Corpus Christi College, Cambridge. His literary abilities were 
shown at an early age by his collaboration with his brother 
Philip in the Athenian Letters. In 1745 he published an able 
treatise on the law of forfeiture for high treason, in defence of 
his father's treatment of the Scottish Jacobite peers; and in 
the following year he was called to the bar. His father being 
at this time lord chancellor; Yorke obtained a sinecure appoint- 
ment in the Court of Chancery in 1747, and entered parliament 
as member for Reigate, a teat which be afterwards exchanged 
for that for the university of Cambridge. He quickly made 
his mark in the House of Commons, one of bis earliest speeches 
being in favour of his father's reform of the marriage law. In 



175s he became counsel to the East India Company, and fa' 
1756 he was appointed solicitor-general, a place which he re- 
tained In the administration of the elder Pitt, of whose foreign 
policy he was a powerful defender. He resigned with Pitt in 
1761, but in 1762 became attorney-general under Lord Bute. 
He continued to hold this office when George Grenville became 
prime minister (April 1763), and advised the government on 
the question raised by Wilkes's North Briton. Yorke refused to 
describe the libel as treasonable, while pronouncing it a high 
misdemeanour. In the following November he resigned office. 
Resisting Pitt's attempt to draw him into alliance against the 
ministry he had quitted, Yorke maintained, in a speech that 
extorted the highest eulogy from Walpolc, that parliamentary 
privilege did not, extend to cases of libel ; though he agreed 
with Pitt in condemning the principle of general warrants. 
Yorke, henceforward a member of the Rockingham party, 
was elected recorder of Dover in 1764, and in 1765 he again 
became attorney-general in the Rockingham administration, 
whose policy he did much to shape. He supported the repeal 
of the Stamp Act, while urging the simultaneous passing of 
the Declaratory Act, His most important measure was the 
constitution which he drew up for the province of Quebec, and 
which after his resignation of office became the Quebec Act of 
1774. On the accession to power of Chatham and Grafton in 
1767, Yorke resigned office, and took little part in the debates 
in parliament during the next four years. In 1770 he was 
invited by the duke of Grafton, when Camden was dismissed 
from the chancellorship, to take his seat on the woolsack. He 
had, however, explicitly pledged himself to Rockingham and 
his party not to take office with fini ton. The king exerted 
all his personal influence to overcome Yorke's scruples, warning 
him finally that the great seal if now refused would never again 
be within his grasp. Yorke yielded to the king's entreaty, 
went to his brother's house, where he met the leaders of the 
Opposition, and feeling at once overwhelmed with shame, fled 
to his own house, where in* three days he was a dead man 
(January 20, 1770). The patent raising him to the peerage aa 
Baron Morden had been made out, but his last act was to 
refuse his sanction to the sealing of the document. 

Charles Yorke was twice married. His son by his first marriage 
became earl of Hardwicke; his eldest son by his second 
marriage, Charles Philip Yorke (1 764-1834), member of parlia- 
ment for Cambridgeshire and afterwards for Liskeard, was 
secretary of state for war in Addington's ministry in i8ox, and 
was a strong opponent of concession to the Roman Catholics. 
He made himself exceedingly unpopular in 1810 by bringing 
about the exclusion of strangers, including reporters for the 
press, from the House of Commons under the standing order, 
which led to the imprisonment of Sir Francis Burdett in the 
Tower and to riots in London. In the same year Yorke 
joined Spencer Perceval's government as first lord of the 
admiralty; he retired from public life in 1818, and died in 
1834. Charles Yorke's second son by his second marriage was 
Sir Joseph Sydney Yorke (1768-1831), an admiral in the navy, 
whose son succeeded to the earldom of Hardwicke. 

See under Hardwicke, Philip Yobke, 1st Earl of. 

YORKSHIRE, a north-eastern county of England, bounded 
N. by Durham, E. by the North Sea, S.E. by the Humber 
estuary (separating it from Lincolnshire), S. by Nottingham- 
shire and Derbyshire, S.W. for a short distance by Cheshire, 
W. by Lancashire and N.W. by Westmorland. It is the 
largest county in England, having an area of 6066-1 sq. m., 
and being more than double the size of Lincolnshire, which 
ranks next to it. In a description of the county it is con- 
stantly necessary to refer to its three great divisions, the North 
Riding, East Riding and West Riding (see Rnuxo, and map of 
England, Sections L, II.). 

The centre of the county is a plain, which in the S., about the 
head of the Humber, resembles the Fens in character. The hifls 
W. of the cent rat plain, covering nearly the whole of the W. Riding 
and the N.W. of the N. Riding, are part of the mat Pennine 
Chain (g»v.). These bills consist of high-lying moorland, and are 



YORKSHIRE 



parte Me 



for out beauty of 
andthe ' 



, 11m Maker 

■lope towards tbe central pma 
U gradual. Tbe chief beauty of the district is to be found 
in the numerous deeply tcored valley* or dales, such as Teeadale, 
Swaledale. Wensleydale (*.».), Nidderdale. Wharfedale aad Aire- 
dale, in which tbe course of the streams is often broken by water- 
falls, such as High Force in Teeadale and Aysgarth Force in wensley- 
dale. 

The hills E. of tbe central plain cannot be similarly considered 
as a unit. In the N., wholly within tbe N. Riding, a line of heights 
known as the Cleveland Hills, forming a spur of the N. Yorkshire 
Moon, ranges from 1000 to nearly 1500 ft-, and overlooks rather 
abruptly the lowest part of the Tees valley. The fine of greatest 
elevation approaches the central plain, and swings sharply S. in 
the Hambleton Hills to overlook it, while to the S. of the line 
long deep dales carry tributary streams S. to the river Derwent. 
thus draining to the Ouse. Eastward the N. Yorkshire moors 
give immediately upon the coast. Their higher parts consist 
of open moorland. The remarkable upper valley of the Derwent 
(op.) marks off the N. Yorkshire moors from the Yorkshire wolds 
of the E. Riding, tbe river forming tbe boundary between the N. 
and E. Ridings. The wolds superficially resemble the moors, 
inasmuch as they abut directly on the coast E., run thence W., 
and swing S» to overlook the central plain. At the S. extremity 
they sink to the shore of the Humber. Their greatest elevation is 
found near the W. angle (Howardtan Hills), but hardly reaches 
800 ft. Eastward they encircle a low-lying fertile tract bounded 
S. by tbe Humber and E. by the North Sea. The name of 
Holderness is broadly applied to this low tract, though the 
wapentake of that name includes properly only the E. of it. 

The diverse character of the coast may be inferred from the 
foregoing description. In the north, S. of Teesmouth, it is low for 
a short distance; then the E. abutments of the Cleveland Hills 
form fine cliffs, reaching at Boulby the highest elevation of sea- 
din's in England (666 ft.). Picturesque valleys bearing short 
streams break the fine, notably that of the Esk, reaching tbe sea at 
Whitby. The trend of the coast is at first S.E. and then S. South 
of Scarborough it sinks with the near approach of the Derwent 
valley, begins to rise again round the shallow sweep of Filey Bay, 
and then springs seaward in the fine promontory of Flamborough 
Head (see BaiDUNGTO*). South of this, after the sharp incurve of 
Bridlington Bay, tbe low coast-line of Holderness succeeds, long and 
unbroken, as far as Spurn Point, which encloses the mouth of the 
Humber. Encroachments of the sea are frequent, but much land 



There are several watering-places on the coast in high favour 
with visitors from the manufacturing districts. The principal, from 
N. to S. are Redcar, Seltburn-by-thc-Sea, Whitby, Robin Hood's 
Bay, Sc ar borough (the largest of all), Filey, Bridlington and Horn- 



being Chose at Harrogate. 



mineral springs in Yorkshire, the principal 
There is also a spa at Scarborough, and 



Croft 00 the Tees near Darlington, 
Guiabrough in Cleveland and SlaSthwahe 
springs are chiefly sulphurous and chalybeate. 



jston Spa near Harrogate, 
Hovingbam, near MaTtoa, 



Huddersfield. Tbe 



By far tbe tranter part of^Yorkshire is within the drain 



r part of Yorkshire ss within the drainage basin 
rith the Trent makes the estuary of the Humber 
in the central plain by the junction of the Ure 



of the Ouse, 
(*>».). It is formed 

aad Swale, both rising in the Pennine bills; but whereas the Swale 
drains the N. of the plain, the Ure, traversing Wensleydale, is 
endowed by the hills over the greater part of its course. The Oust 
also receives from the Pennine district the Nidd. traversing Nidder- 
dale. the Wharfe, the Aire, with its tributary the Calder. and the 
Don. The Aire rises in the fine forge of Malham Cove, from the 
subterranean waterways in the hinestone. None of these tribu- 
taries Is naturally navigable, but the Aire, Calder and Don are in 
from the E. 



pan canalised. From the E. the principal tributary is the Derwent, 
which on entering the central plain follows a course roughly parallel 
to that of the Ouse, and joins it in its lower part, between Selby and 
Howden. The Fees joins the Ouse at York. In the W. the county 
contains the headwaters of several streams of "the W. slope of the 
Pennines, draining to the Irish Sea; of these the principal is the 



. the Tees forms most of the boundary with the 
from Yorkshire. 



Kibble. In tbe 

county of Durham, but receives no large tributary from 

In the S. of tbe W. Riding a few streams drain to the Trent. In 
Holderness, debarred by the wolds from the general drainage 
system of the county, the chief stream is the Hull. The only 
sheets of water of any sixe are Senuner Water, in a branch of Weasley- 
dale: alalham Tarn K near the head of Airedale, the effluent of which 
Tcldy disappears into an underground channel 



SutckJy disappears 
(ere, near the flat seacoast at 

Gtoloty.— The great variety in the scenery of Yorkshire is but a 
reflec ti on of the marked differences in the geological substructure. 
The stratification is for the most part regular, but owing to a great 
line of dislocation nearly coincident with the W. boundary of the 
county the rocks dip towards tbe E., while the strike of the strata 
is from N. to S. The bold and picturesque scenery of the western 
hills and dales is due to the effects of denudation among the harder 
rocks, which here come to the surface. The strata in the P< 



931 

of <i) cider Pnlneosoic rocks, vis. a faulted InUer of Suurian 
and Ordovician at Hortoa in Ribblesdale, and a small patch of 
Silurian at Sedbergh with infers of Coniston limestone; (?) the 



Carboniferous or Mountain Limestone, which has been subjected to 
great dislocations, the more important of which are known as the 
N. and S. Craven faults; (3) the Yoredale series, consisting of shales, 
flagstones, limestones andthin seams of coal; and (4) the Millstone 
Grit, forming part of the billy moorlands, and capping many of the 
loftier eminences. In the W. Riding the Pennine range forms part 
of the elevated country of Craven and Dent. The scenery in the 
W. of the N. Riding is somewhat similar to that in Craven, except 
that the lower hills are of sharper outline owing to the perpendicular 
limestone scars. To the intermingling of the limestone with the 
softer rocks are due the numerous " forces " or waterfalls, which 
are one of the special features of the scenery of this district. The 
action of water on the limestone rocks assisted by joints and faults 
has given rise to extensive caverns, of which tbe best examples are 
those of Clapham and Ingleton in the W. Riding, as well as to 
subterranean watercourses. At Brimham, Plumpton and elsewhere 
there are fantastic masses of rocks due to irregular weathering of 
the Millstone Grit. Tbe Pennine region is bounded on the S.E. 
by the Coal Measures, forming the N. ofthe Derbyshire, Nottingham 
and Yorkshire coal-field, which in Yorkshire extends from Sheffield 
N. to Leeds. The noted fireclays of the Leeds district are obtained 
from this formation. To the E. tbe Coal Measures dip beneath the 
unconformable Permian beds, with magnesian limestone and marl 
slate, of which a narrow band crops up from Masham southwards, 
The Permian strata are overlain to the E. by # the Trias or New 
Red Sandstone, scarcely ever exposed, but having been partly worn 
away is covered with Glacial deposits of day and gravel, forming 
the low-lying Vale of York, extending from the Tees S. to Tadcaster 
and E. beyond York to Market Weighton.. Near Middlesbrough 
red rock with gypsum and rock-salt (100 ft.) have been proved. 
Farther E. the Triassk beds are overlain by Lias and Oolite; 
Rhaetic beds have been recorded from near Northallerton. The 
Lias crops to the surface in a curve extending from Redcar to tbe 
Humber. In the Middle Lias there is a seam of valuable iron ore, 
the source of the prosperity of the Cleveland region. The moorlands 
extending from Scarborough and Whitby are formed of Liassk 
.sr/ata, topped with the ffuarine beds of Lower Oofite, rising 
gradually to the N.E. and attaining at Burton Head a height of 
1480 ft-, tbe greatest elevation of the Oolite formation in England. 
In the Oolitic Dogger '* series tbe magnetic iron ore of Rosedale is 
worked. Coralhan rocks form the scarp of the Hambleton hills 
and extend E. on the N. of the Vale of Pickering through Hackneas 
to the coast, and S.W. of the vale to tbe neighbourhood of Mahon. 
The Vale of Pickering is underlaid by faulted Kimeridge Clay. 
Lias and Oolites fringe the E. of the Vale of York to Ferriby on the 
Humber In the S.E. of the county. Cretaceous rocks cover up the 
older strata, N. to the Vale of Pickering and W. to the Vale of York. 
The Chalk forms the Yorkshire wolds and the country & through 
Driffield, Beverley and Holderness. 

The Yorkshire coast between Redcar and Flamborough oresenta 
a continuous series of magnificent exposures of tbe strata from tbe 
Lower Lias to the Chalk. The Upper Lias fossils and jet of Whitby 
and alum 'shale of Saltwick are well known. At Scar b orough the 
Coralliaa, Oxford Clay. KeOaways Rock. Combrash and Upper 
Estuarine beds are well exposed in the cliffs. In Filey Bay tbe 
Kimeridge Clay appears on the coast, but it U covered farther 9. 
by the historic beds of Speeton, representing the marine equivalents 
of Portland, Purbeck, Wealden, and Lower Greensand of S. England, 
Over the Speeton beds lies the Red Chalk, the Yorkshire equivalent 
of the Upper Greensand and Cault. The evidences of glacial action 
are of unusual interest and variety; the great thickness of boulder 
clay on the coast is familiar to all, but inland also great deposits of 
glacial day, sand and gravel obscure the older geology. The Vale of 
Pickering and many of the smaller northern valleys were at one 
period the sites of Glacial lakes, and the V warp " which covers much 
of the Vale of York is a fluvie-glacial deposit. The Cleveland Dike 
is an intrusive igneous dike of augit e a n d eshe of Tertiary age which 
can be traced across the country in a N.W. direction from the 
neighbourhood of Fylingdales Moor. _ . . , 

JftMro/WThe coalfield in the W. Riding b one of the chief 
sources of mineral wealth in Yorkshire, the most valuable seams 
being the Snkstone, which is bituminous and of the highest reputa- 
tion as a house coal, and the Barnsley Thick Coal, the great seam of 
the Yorkshire coal-field, which is of special value, on account of its 
semi-anthradtic quality, for use In iron-smelting and in engine 
furnaces. Associated with the Upper Coal Measures there si a 
valuable Iron ore, occurring in the form of nodules, Large quantities 
of fireclay are also raised, as well as of gannister and oil-shale. 



Middlesbrough is the most important centre of pig-L _ 
facturc in the kingdom. Lead ore is obtained in the Yoredale beds 
of tbe Pennine range in Wharfedale, Airedale. Nidderdale, Swale* 
dale, Arkendale and Wcuslcydale. Slates . and flagstones are 
quarried in the Yoredale rocks. In the Millstone Gnt there are 
several beds of good building stone, but that most largely quamad » 
the magnesian limestone of the Permian eenee, which, however, » 
of somewhat variable quality. 



93* 



YORKSHIRE 



Agriculture.— Nearly nine-tenths of the E. Riding is under 
cultivation, but of the N. and W. Ridings only from three- 
fifths to seven-tenths— proportions explained by the different 
physical conditions. The till or boulder day of Holderness 
is the richest soil in Yorkshire, and the chalk wolds, by careful 
cultivation, form one of the best soils for grain crops The 
central plain bears all kinds of crops excellently. Wheat is 
grown in the E. and W. Ridings, but oats are the principal 
grain crop in these ridings, and barley exceeds wheat in all 
three. The bulk of the acreage under green crops is devoted 
to turnips and swedes. A little flax is grown, and liquorice 
is cultivated near Pontefract. The proportion of hill pasture 
is greatest in the N. Riding and least in the E., and the 
N. and W. Ridings are among the principal sheep-farming 
districts in England. Cattle; for the rearing of which the 
W. Riding is most noted, do not receive great attention. The 
Teeswater breed, however, is increasing in Yorkshire, and in 
Holderness there is a short-homed breed, chiefly valuable for 
its milking qualities. Cheese-making is largely carried on in 
some districts. Of sheep perhaps the most common breeds are 
the Leicester, Lincoln and South Down, and crosses between 
the Cheviot and the Leicester. Large numbers of pigs are 
kept at the dairy farms and fed mainly on whey. The small 
breed b that chiefly in favour. Yorkshire bacon is famous. 
Draught horses arc generally of a somewhat mixed breed, but 
the county is famed for its hunters and carriage and saddle 
horses. The breed of Cleveland bays is much used for carriages. 

Manufactures. — The industrial district of south Yorkshire 
occupies the S. of the W. Riding, and may be taken as marked 
off approximately by the watershed from the similar district 
in S. Lancashire. The W. Riding is now the chief seat of the 
woollen manufacture of the United Kingdom, and has almost 
a monopoly in the production of worsted cloths. The early 
development of the industry was in part due to the abundance 
of water-power, ' while later the presence of coal helped to 
maintain it on the introduction of steam-power. In this in* 
dustry nearly all the most important towns are engaged, while 
the names of several of the largest are connected with various 
specialities. Thus, while almost every variety of woollen and 
worsted cloth is produced at Leeds, Bradford is especially 
concerned with yarns and mixed worsted goods, Dewsbury and 
Batley with shoddy, Huddcrsfield with fancy goods and Halifax 
with carpets. The cotton industry of Lancashire* has also 
penetrated to the neighbourhood of Halifax. Among the 
characteristics of the industrial population, the love of music 
should be mentioned. Choral societies are numerous, and the 
work of some of those in the larger towns, such as Sheffield, 
Leeds and Bradford, has attracted wide notice. Next to the 
woollen industry comes the manufacture of iron and steel 
machinery and implements of every variety, which is common 
to most of the larger centres in the district. Sheffield is especi- 
ally famous for iron-work, fine metal-work and cutlery. The 
development of the iron ore deposits of Cleveland dates only 
from the middle of the 19th century. About two and a half 
million tons of pig-iron are produced in this district annually, 
and there are considerable attendant industries, such as the 
production of steel, and shipbuilding. The chemical manu- 
facture is important both here and in the W. Riding, where 
also a great variety of minor industries have sprung up. Such 
are leather working (at Leeds), the manufacture of clothing, 
printing and bleaching, and paper-making. Besides coal and 
iron ore, great quantities of clay, limestone and sandstone are 
raised. Excellent building-stone is obtained at several places 
in the W. Riding. The sea-fisheries are of some importance, 
chiefly at Hull, Scarborough, Whitby and Filey. 

Communications.-*-?*, and E. of Leeds communications are 
provided almost wholly by the North-Eastern railway, the main 
line of which rum from Leeds and from Doncaster N. by York, 
Thirsk and Northallerton. The main junction with the Great 
Northern line is effected immediately N. of Doncaster, at which 
town are the Great Northern works. This company serves the chief 
centres of the W. Riding, as do also the Midland. Great Central, 
London & North-Western, Lancashire & Yorkshire, and North- 



Eastern companies, the trains working over a close network of 
hues, while the system of running-powers held by one or more 
companies over the lines of another assists intercommunication. 
The Midland main line to Carlisle runs by Leeds, Sldpton and 
Settle through the hilly country of the W. The Hull ft Barnsley 
line runs from Hull to Barnsley. A complete system of canals 
links the centres of the southern W. Riding with the sea both E. 
and W., the Aire & Calder Navigation communicating with the 
Ouse at Goole; the Huddcrsfield canal runs S.W. into Lancashire, 
crossing the watershed by the long Stanedge tunnel, and other 
canals are the Leeds & Liverpool, Calder ft Nebble Navigation, 
and the Sheffield & South Yorkshire Navigation, which gives 
access from Sheffield to the Trent. The Aire ft Calder Naviga- 
tion, the most important of these canals, which has branches from 
Castleford to Leeds and Wakefield, and other branches to Barnsley. 
Bradford and Selby, has a total length of 85 ra., and has been much 
improved aince its construction. It was projected by John Rennie 
and opened in 1826, with a depth of 7 ft. and locks measuring 72 
by 18 ft. Its depth now varies from 8 ft. 6 in. to 10 ft., and over 
a distance of 38 ra., between Goole and the collieries, the locks 
have been enlarged to 460 by 25 ft., and the width of the canal to 
90 ft. The chief ports are Middlesbrough on the Tees, Hull on 
the Humber, and Goole on the Ouse, 

Population and Administration.— -The area of the ancient 
county is 3,882,328 acres. Its population in 1891 was 3,208,521, 
and in 1001, 3,584,762. The population increased over fivefold 
between 180 1 and 1901; the increase in the W. Riding ex- 
ceeding sevenfold. The manner in which the population is 
distributed may be inferred from the following statement of 
the parliamentary divisions, parliamentary, county and muni- 
cipal boroughs, and urban districts in the three ridings. It» 
should be premised that each of the three ridings is a dis- 
tinct administrative county; though there is one high sheriff 
for the whole county. The city of York (pop. 77,9x4) is situated 
partly in each of the three ridings. 

The West Riding has an area of 1,771,562 acres, with a popula- 
tion in 1891 of 2445.033, and in 1901 of 2,750,493. Of this area 
the S. industrial district, considered in the oraadest application 
of the term as extending between Sheffield and SUpton, Sheffield 
and Doncaster, and Leeds and the county boundary, covers rather 
less than one-half. The area thus defined includes the parliamen- 
tary divisions of Barnsley, Colne Valley, Elland, Hallamshire. 
Holm firth, Keightey, Morley, Normanton, Pudsey, Rotherham. 
Shipley, Sowerby, Spen Valley. It also includes parts of the 
divisions of Barkston Ash, Doncaster, Osgoldcross, Otley and 
Sainton (a small part). The remaining parts of these last divisions, 
with that of Ripon, cover the rest 01 the riding. Each division 
returns one member. The following are parliamentary boroughs: 
Bradford, returning 3 members, Dewsbury 1, Halifax 1, Hudder*- 
field 1. Leeds 5. Pontefract 1, Sheffield 5. Wakefield 1. All these 
are within the industrial district. Within this district are the 
following municipal boroughs (pops, in 1901): Barnsley (41.086). 
Batley (30421), Bradford, city and countv borough (270,767). 
Brighouse (21.735), Dewsbury (28.060), Doncaster (28,932), Halifax, 
county borough (104,936), Huddershcld, county borough (95.047). 
Kcighley (41,564), Leeds, city and county borough (428.968), 
" rley (23,636), Ossett (12,903), Pontefract (13427), Pudsey 
herham (54.349). Sheffield, city and countv borough 

* Wakefield, 
icre in the 



Morley 
(14.007). Rot! 



(469,070), Todmorden (partly in Lancashire, 25418), \ 
city (41,413). The only municipal boroughs elsewhei 
riding are Harrogate (28,423) and Ripon (cathedral dty, 8230). 
Within the industrial region there are 113 other urban districts, 
those with populations exceeding 10.000 being Bingley (18449), 
Castleford (17.386). Clcckheaton (12,524). Elland (10412), Feather 
stone (12,093), Handsworth (13404). Hoyland Nether (12464), 
Liversedgc (13,980), Mcxborough (10430), Mirfield (t 1.341), Nor- 
manton (12.352). Rawmarsh (14,587), Roth well (11,702), Saddle- 
worth (12.320). Shipley (25,573), Skipton (11 086), Sowerby Bridge 
(11477), Stanley (12.290). Swinton (12,127), Thornhill (10.290), 
Wombwell (13.252). Wnrsborough (10.336). The only urban dis- 
tricts in the West Riding not falling within the industrial region 
are— Goole (16,576), llldey (7455). Knaresborough (4979) and Selby 
(7786). 

The North Riding has an area of 1,362,378 acres, with a popu- 
lation in 1891 of 359,547 and in 1901 of 377,338. It comprises 
the parliamentary divisions of Richmond, Cleveland, Whitby, and 
Thirsk and Malton, each returning one member; and the parlia- 
mentary boroughs of Middlesbrough (one member), Scarborough 
(one member), and parts of Stockton-on-Tees and York. The 
municipal boroughs are Middlesbrough, county borough (91.302). 
Richmond (3837). Scarborough (38.161) and Thornabv-on-Tees 
(16,054). 'The urban districts are Eston (11, too), Gtusborougb 
(5645), Hinderwell (1937). Kirklington-cum-Upsland (255), Loftus 
(0508). Malton (4758). Masham (1955), Northallerton (4009), 
Ormesby (9482), Pickering (3491), Redcar (7695), Saltburn-by-the- 
Sea (2578), Scalby (1350), Skelton and Brotton (13,240), South 



YORKSHIRE 




Whitby are in trie populous Cleveland district. Besides rickcnng, 
there lie at the S. of the Cleveland hills the snail towns of Kirlcby 



Moorekie (1550) and Heknsley (136a). South of the last-named 
is the Tillage of AmpWorth, with its large Roman Catholic college, 
founded in 1802, and accommodating, iajfoe modern buildings, 
about 120 students. 

The East Riding has an area of 750*030 acres, with a population 
in 1891 of 34t,s«> *"d in 1901 of 385.007. It comprises the 
parliamentary divisions of Buckrose. Howdenshlre and Holderness, 
each returning one member: ana contains the parliamentary 
borough of Hull, returning three members, and part of that of 
York. The municipal boroughs are Beverley (13,183), 



, Bridlington 



(12,489), Hedon (1010), and Hull, or Kingscon^upon-Hntt, a city 
and county of a city and county borough 
districts are CottJngbam. near Hull (3751), 
(S766)i Hessle, near Hull (3754). Hornsea 
Matton (3842), Pocklington faf ' 
The West Riding comprises , 
Ripoa. It has one court of quarter 



(240,250). Tl 
Fuey (3003), 
(3754). Hornsea (2381). Nort 
(2463) and Wrthernsea (1426) 
ises 9 wapentakes and the I 
if quarter session i and is div 



The urban 

Driffield 

orton, near 

liberty of 
divided into 



26 il divisions. The boroughs of Bradford, Doncaster. 

Lecd\ Ponicif jet, Rotberham and Sheffield, and the liberty of 
Ripon, have «* arate courts of quarter sessions and commissions 
of the peace; and Barnsley, Batley, Brighouse, Dewsbury, Hali- 
fax, Harrogate, Huddersaeld, Keighley.Jtforley, Ossett and Wake* 
icl 1 have commissions of the peace. The liberty and borough of 
RJ : separately from the West Riding for the purposes 

of the countv 1 te. 

mtm: i^vrih kiding co mprises 11 wapentakes, and the liberties 
of E. and W. Langbaurgk and of Whitby Strand, ft has ona 
court of quarter sessions and is divided into 19* petty sessional 
divisions. The boroughs of Richmond and Scarborough have 
separate courts of quarter sessions and commissions of the peace/ 
and the borou g h of Middlesbrough has a commission of the peace. 
The East Riding com pri ses 6 wapentakes and has out court of 
quarter sessions, and is divided into 12 petty sessional divisions, 
while Hull has a separate court of quarter sessions and commis- 
sion of the peace, and Beverley has a separate commission of the 
peace. The city of York has a separate court of quarter sessions 
and comaussioo of the peace. Yorkshire is in the N.E. circuit. 
The total number of civil parishes is 1586. The county contains) 



934 



YORKSHIRE 



ft 7* Micfawamiml parisfw cad districts wholly or in part. It 
is divided betweea the dioceses of York, Ripon and Wakefield, 
with small parts in those of Manchester, Southwell, Durham and 
York is the seat of. the northern archdiocese. 



History.— The kingdom of Delia (q.v.), which was afterwards 
to include the whole of the modern Yorkshire, is first known to 
us in the 6th century, an Anglian tribe having seized the pro- 
montory at the mouth of the Humber, named by the invaders 
Holderness, followed by the gradual subjugation of the whole 
district now known as the East Riding. The wolds between 
.Weighton and Flamborough Head were then mere sheep-walks, 
and the earliest settlements were chiefly confined to the rich 
valley of the lower Derwent, but the district around Weighton 
became the Deiran sacred ground, and Goodmanham is said to 
mark the site of a temple. The area computed in the modern 
West Riding constituted the British kingdom of Elmet, and 
at this date presented a desolate and unbroken tract of moor- 
land in the. N.; in the central parts about Leeds stretched a 
forest region where the last wolf seen in Yorkshire is said to 
have been slain by John of Gaunt; while in the S. the forest 
and fen of Hatfield Chase presented a barrier to invasion 
broken only by the line of Watling Street, which crossed the 
Don at Doncaster,' the Aire at Castleford and the Wharfe at 
Tadcaster. The N. continuation of the road from York through 
Catterkk to the Tees opened the way to the fertile plain in 
the heart of the modern North Riding, the S.E. of which offered 
an unbroken forest area, later known as the forest of Galtres, 
which in the middle ages stretched from York N. to Easing- 
wold and Craike and E. to Castle Howard, and as late as the 
1 6th century lay a waste and unfrequented region abounding 
only in deer. Ella, the first king of Deira, extended his ter- 
ritory N. to the Wear, and his son Edwin completed the conquest 
of the district which was to become Yorkshire by the subjuga- 
tion of Elmct, prompted thereto by vengeance on its king, 
Cerdic, for the murder of his uncle Hereric. Traces of the 
" burns " by which Edwin secured his conquests are perhaps 
visible in the group of earthworks at Barwick and on the site 
of Cambodunum, but the district long remained scantily popu- 
lated, and as late as the 17th century deer were said to be as 
plentiful in Hatfield Chase as " sheep upon a hill/' for Prince 
Henry in 1600 was asserted to have killed 500 in one day's 
hunting. The defeat of Edwin at Hatfield in 633 was followed 
by a succession of struggles between Mercia and Northumbria 
for the supremacy over Deira, during which the boundaries 
underwent constant changes. After the Danish conquest of 
Deira, Guthrum in 875 portioned the district among his fol- 
lowers, under whose lordship the English population were for the 
most part allowed to retain their lands. Cleveland came under 
Scandinavian influence, and the division into tithings probably 
originated about this date, the boundaries being arranged to 
meet at York, which, as the administrative and commercial 
centre of the district, rapidly increased in importance, and it has 
been estimated that in a.d. 1000 it had a population of over 
30,000. At the battle of Stamford Bridge in 1066 Harold 
Hardrada, who had seized York, and Earl Tosti were both 
defeated and slain by Harold of England. The merciless 
harrying with which the Conqueror punished resistance to his 
claims is proved by the reiterated entries of waste land in the 
Domesday Survey, and for many years all the towns between 
York and Durham lay uninhabited. In x 138 the forces of David 
of Scotland were defeated near Northallerton in the Battle of the 
Standard. In the barons' wars of the reign of Henry II. Thirsk 
and Malgeard Castles, which had been garrisoned against, the 
king by Roger de Mowbray, were captured and demolished. In 
the harrying of the northern counties by the forces of Robert 
^Jruce in 13x8, Northallerton, Boroughbridge, Scarborough and 
Skipton were reduced to ashes. In 1329, at the battle of 
Boroughbridge, the rebel barons were defeated by the forces of 
Edward II. In 1309 Richard II. was murdered in Pontefract 
Castle. In 1405 Archbishop Scrope and Thomas Mowbray 
joined in the insurrection against Henry IV., and led the citizens 
of York to Skipton Moor, where, after a defeat by the earl of 



WestinoYttiKi, tno 'leaders were beheaded under the wans of 
York. In 1408 the rebel forces of the earl of Northumberland 
were defeated by Sir Thomas Rokesby, high sheriff of Yorkshire, 
at Bramham Moor near Tadcaster. In 1453 a skirmish between 
the Percies and the Nevilles at Stamford Bridge was the opening 
event in the struggle between the houses of York and Lancaster; 
in 1460 the duke of York was defeated and slain at Wake- 
field; in 1 46 1 the Lancastrians were defeated at Towton. The 
suppression of the monasteries roused deep resentment in 
Yorkshire, and the inhabitants flocked to join the Pilgrimage of 
Grace, Sjpplon Castle being the only place immediately N. of the 
Humber which remained loyal to the king. On the outbreak of 
the Civil War of the 17th century, opinion was divided in York- 
shire, the chief parliamentary families being the Fairfaxes and 
the Hothams, while the Puritan clothing-towns of the West 
Riding also sided with the parliament. Sir William Savile 
captured Leeds and Wakefield for the king in 1642, and in 1643 
Newcastle, having defeated the Fairfaxes at Adwalton Moor, 
held all Yorkshire except Hull, which the Hothams, moved by 
jealousy of the Fairfaxes, had already designed to give up. In 
X644, however, the Fairfaxes secured the East and West Ridings, 
while Cromwell's victory at Marston Moor was followed by the 
capture of York, and in the next year of Pontefract and Scar- 
borough. 

On the redistribution of estates after the Norman Conquest, 
Alan of Brittany, founder of Richmond Castle, received a vast 
fief which became the honour of Richmond; Ilbert de Lad was 
rewarded with lands which afterwards constituted the honour 
of Pontefract. Earl Harold's estate at Coningsburgh passed to 
William de Warenne, earl of Surrey, together with Sandal Castle, 
which on the expiration of the Warenne line in the 14th century 
was bestowed on Edmund Langley, duke of York. Other 
great Domesday landholders were William de Percy, founder of 
the abbey of Whitby; Robert de Bruce, ancestor of the royal 
line of Scotland, the head of whose fief in Cleveland was trans- 
ferred in the 12th century from Danby Castle to Skelton; Roger 
de Busli owned a large tract in S. Yorkshire, of which Tickhill 
was the head; the archbishop of York enjoyed the great lordship 
of Sherburn, and Howdcnshire was a liberty of the bishop of 
Durham. Among the great lordships of the middle ages for 
which Yorkshire was distinguished were: Topcliffe, the honour 
of the Percies; Thirsk, of the Mowbrays; Tanfield, of the 
Marmions; Skipton, of the Cliffords; Middleham, of the Fitx- 
Hughes and Nevilles; Helmsley, of the de Roos; Masham and 
Bolton, of the Scrapes; Sheffield, of the Furoivalb and Talbots; 
Wakefield, of the duke of York. The Fairfaxes were settled in 
Yorkshire in the 13th century, and in the x6th century Denton 
became their chief seat. 

The shire court for Yorksnire was held at York, but extensive 
privileges were enjoyed by the great landholders. In the 13th 
century Henry de Lacy, earl of Lincoln, claimed to hold the 
sheriff's tourn at Bradford and Leeds; his bailiff administered 
the wapentake of Stainclif in his court at Bacskalf and Slaidburn; 
and his steward judged cases of felony in his court at Almond- 
bury .~ The archbishop of York held the sheriff's tourn at Otley, 
and had his own coroners at York, Hull, Beverley and Ripon. 
Eudo la Zouche held the sheriff's tourn at Bingley, and Thomas 
de Furnivall in Hallamshirc. The bailiffs of Tickhill Castle also 
held towns in place of the sheriff. The bishop of Durham had 
a court at Hoveden, and the king's bailiffs were excluded from 
executing their office in his estates of Howdenshh-e and Allerton- 
shire. The abbot of St Mary's York had his own coroners in the 
wapentake of Ryedale, and the abbot of Bella Lands in Sutton. 
The prior of Bradenstoke held a court in his manor of Wales. 
The archbishop of York, Robert de Ros, and the abbot of 
St Mary's York judged felonies at their courts in Holderness. 
The liberty of Ripon (q.v.), city of Ripon, still constitutes a 
franchise of the archbishops of York. 

In the 13th century the diocese of York included In this 
county the archdeaconry of York, comprising the deaneries of 
York, Pontefract, Doncaster and Craven; the archdeaconry 
of Cleveland, comprising the deaneries of Buhner, Cleveland 



YORKSHIRE 



935 



tad Ryedale; the archdeaconry of East Riding, comprising the 
deaneries of Harthfll (Hull), Buckrosc, Dickering and Holder- 
ness; and the archdeaconry of Richmond, comprising the 
deaneries of Richmond, Catterick, Boroughbridge and Lonsdale. 
In 1541 the deaneries of Richmond were transferred to Henry 
VUI/s new diocese of Chester. Ripon was created an episcopal 
see by act of parliament in 1836, and the deaneries of Craven and 
Pontefract were formed into the archdeaconry of Craven within 
its jurisdiction, together with the archdeaconry of Richmond. 
The archdeaconry of Sheffield was created in 1884 to include the 
deaneries of Sheffield, Rotherham, Ecdesfield and Wath. In 
t888 the area of the diocese of Ripon was reduced by the creation 
of the see of Wakefield, including the archdeaconry of Halifax 
with the deaneries of Birstail, Dewsbury, Halifax, Silkstone and 
Wakefield, and the archdeaconry and deanery of Huddersfield. 
The diocese of Ripon now includes in this county the arch- 
deaconries of Craven with three deaneries, Richmond with three 
deaneries and Ripon with seven deaneries. The diocese of York 
includes the archdeaconries of York with six deaneries, Sheffield 
with four deaneries, East Riding with thirteen deaneries and 
Cleveland with nine deaneries. 

The great woollen industry of Yorkshire originated soon after 
the Conquest, and the further development of this and other 
characteristic industries may be traced in tbe article* on the various 
industrial centres. The time of tbe American War marked the 
gradual absorption by Yorkshire of the clothing trade from the 
E. counties. Coal appears to have been used in Yorkshire by the 
Romans, and was dug at Leeds in the 13th century. The early 
fame of Sheffield as the centre of tbe cutlery and iron trade k 
demonstrated by tbe line in Chaucer, " a Sheffield white! bore he 
in his hose." In the run century a forge is mentioned at Rosedale,- 
and the canons of Gisburn had four "fabricae" in blast in 
Gsahdaie in Cleveland. In the I6th century limestone was dug 
in many parts of Elmet, and Huddkstone. Hesselwood and Tad- 
caster had famous quarries; Pontefract was famous for its liquorice, 
Aberford for its pins, Whitby for its jet. Alum was dug at 
Guisborough, Seodsend, Dunsley and Whitby in the 17th century, 
and a statute of 1659 forbade the importation of alum from abroad, 
in order to encourage Ha cultivation m this country. Bolton 
market was an important distributive centre for cotton materials 
:n the 17th century, and in 1787 there were eleven cotton mills in 
the county. 

P ar li am entary foprtstntoJum.—Th* county of York was repre- 
sented by two knights in the parliament of 1393, end the boroughs 
of Beverley, Hedon, Malton, Pickering, Pontefract. Ripon, Scar- 
borough, Think, Tkkhfll, Yarm and York each by two burgesses. 
Northallerton acquired r e p r ese ntation in 1298, Boroughbridge in 
1300. Kingston-on-Hull and Ravensburgh in 1304. In most of the 
boroughs the privilege of re p r esen tation was allowed to lapse, and 
from 1328 until 1547 only York, Scarborough and Kingston-on-Hull 
returned members. Hedon, Think, Ripon and Beverley regained 
the franchise in the J 6th century, and Boroughbridge, Knares- 
borough, Aldborough and Richmond also returned members. 
Pontefract was represented in 1623, New Malton and Northallerton 
in 1640. In 18*6 two additional knights were returned for the shire 
of York, and 14 boroughs were represented. Under the Reform 
Act of 1833 the county returned 6 members in 1 divisions— a for 
each riding; Aldborough, Boroughbridge and Hedon were dis- 
franchised; Northallerton and Think lost f member each; 
Bradford, Halifax, Leeds and Sheffield acquired representation by 
7 members each, and Wakefield and Whitby by 1 member each. 
Under tbe act of 1868 the representation of the West Riding division 
was increased to 6 memben in 3 divisions; Dewsbury and Middles- 
brough were enfranchised, returning 1 member each; Leeds now 
returned 3 memben; Knaresburough, Malton, Richmond and 
Ripon lost 1 member each. Beverley was disfranchised in 187a 
(For arrangements under the act of 1885 see | Administration.) 

Anticmtus.—CX ancient castles Yorkshire retains many interesting 
examples. The fine ruins at Knaresborougfa, Pickering, Pontefract, 
Richmond, Scarborough and Skipton axe described under their 
respective headings. Barden Tower, picturesquely situated in 
upper Wharfedale, was built by Henry de Clifford (d. 1523), called 
the " shepherd lord " from the story that he was brought up as a 
shepherd. He was a student of astronomy and astrology. Bolton 
Castle, which rises majestically above Wensleydale, was pronounced 
by Ldand M the fairest in Richraondshire." It is • square building 
with towers at the corners, erected in the reign of Richard II. by 



way tower erected la the reign of Henry VI. The castle, said to 
have been founded by jEthelstan in 6ao, was the palace of the 
archbishops of York, and Wolsey resided in it. tomsboroogh 
Castle stands by the Don between Rotherham and Doncaster. its 
origin is uncertain, but dates probably from Saxon times. The 
keen and portions of the walls remain; and the ruin possessss 
additional Interest from its treatment in Scott's /sonass. The 
rums of Dauby Castle, which is supposed to have been buih shortly 
after the Conquest by Robert de Bruce or Brua, are of various dates 
Harewood Castle in lower Wharfedale was founded soon after the 
Conquest, but contains no portions earlier than the reign of Edward 
III. The keen of Hdmsley Castle was built late in the xath century 
probably by Robert de Ros, surnamed Fursan; the earthworks are 
apparently of much earlier date. There are picturesque remains 
of tbe quadrangular fortress of Middkham in Wensleydale, bulk 
in tbe t«h century by Robert FitsRanulph, afterwards poss es s ed 
by the Nevilles, and rendered untenable by order of parliament in 
1647. Mulgrave Castle, near the modern residence of tbe same 
name in the Whitby district, is said to have been founded two 
centuries before the Conquest by a Saxon giant named Wade or 
Wadda. Parts are clearly Norman, but some of the masonry 
suggests an earlier date. The castle was diamanrlrd after the 
dvd wars. There are slight remain, of the 15th century, of 
Ravensworth Castle, near Richmond. This was probably an early 
foundation of the family of Fits Hugh. Sheriff Hutton Castle, 
between York and Malton, was the foundation of Bertram de Buhner 
in tbe reign of Stephen; the remains are of the early part of the 
Mth century, when the property passed to the Nevilles. Spofforth 
Castle, near Harrogate, was erected by Henry de Percy in 1309. 
Its ruins range from the period of foundation to tbe 15th century. 
Of Tickhill Castle, near Doncaster, built or enlarged by Roger de 
Busli in the nth century, there are foundations of the keep and 
"Of WhorittM Castle in Cleveland, the 



fragments of the walla> 
Perpendicular gatehouse is very 



w w w v^mav iu v.ictcwoui uk 

fine. One side remains of the 



ia the North Riding near Barnard Castle, there remains only the 
square keep, supposed to have been built by Alan Niger, 1st earl of 
Richmond, in the 12th century, but the site was occupied by tbe 
"" Cawood Castle, on toe Ouse near Selby, retain* its gate- 



great quadrangular fortress of Wressell, E. of Selby, built by Thomas 
Percy, earl of Worcester, in the reign ot Richard II. Some of the 
mansions in the county incorporate remains of ancient strongholds, 
such as those at GiUiag. under tbe Hambieton Hills in the North 
Riding, Ripley near Harrogate, and Skeiton in Cleveland. Medieval 
mansions are numerous, a noteworthy example being tbe Eliza- 
bethan hall of Burton Agnes, in the N. of Holderness. 

In ecclesiastical architecture Yorkshire is extimordinarn> rich 
At the time of the Dissolution there were 28 abbeys. *6 priories. 
2% nunneries, 30 friaries, 13 cells, 4 commandenes of Knight* 
Hospitallers and 4 preceptories of Knights Templars. The principal 
monastic ruins are described under separate headings and else- 
where. These are Bolton Abbey (properly Priory), a foundation of 
Augustinjan canons; Fountains Abbey, a Cistercian foundation, 
the finest and most complete of the ruined abbeys in England; 
the Cistercian abbey of Kirkstall near Leeds («.?.) ; the Cistercian 



For the plans and buildings of Fountains, Kirkstall and St Mary's, 
York, see Abbey. Separate reference is also made to the ruins 
of Jervauht (Cistercian) and Covernam (Premonstratensian) in 
Wensleydale, and to the remains at Bridlington, Guisborough, 
Malton, Whitby, Easby near Richmond. Kirkham near Malton, 
Monk Bretton near Barnsley, and Mount Grace near Northallerton. 
There are fine though scanty remains of Byiand Abbey, of Early 
English date, between Think and Malton; the abbey was founded 
for Cistercian monks in the 12th century, and was previously 
established at Old Byiand near Rievaulx. There was a bouse of 
Premonstratensians at Egglestone above the Tees near Barnard 
Castle. Other ruins are the Cistercian foundations of the lata 
century at Meaux in Ho l d e rness. Roche, E. of Rotherham, and 
Sawley in Ribblesdale; the Benedictine nunneries of Marrick 
in upper Swaledale, and Rosedale under the high moon of the 
N.E. ; and the Gilbertine house of Watton in Holderness, of the 
1 2th century, converted into a dwelling. 

Descriptions are given in the articles on tbe respective cities and 
towns 01 the cathedral or minster at York, and of the numerous 
churches in that city; of the cathedral churches at Ripon and 
Wakefield; of tbe minster and the church of St Mary at Beverley; 
and of the fine parish churches at Bradford, Bridlington (the old 
priory church), Hedon, Hull, Rotherham, Selby (abbey church), 
Sheffield and Think. In Holderness are the splendid churches 
of Howden and Patrington, both in the main Decorated; and tbe 
fine late Norman building at Kirkburn. A very perfect though 
small example of a Norman church is seen at Btrion on the Awe 
below Pontefract. At Nun Monkton near York is • beautiful 
Early English church, formerly belonging to a Benedictine nunnery. 
Goodmanham in the S. Wolds is the scene, in all probability, of 
the conversion by Paulinus of Edwin of Northumbna in fes, who 
was afterwards baptised at York. At Kirkdale near Rjrkby 
Moorride In the N. Riding is a singular example of an inscribed 
sundial of pre-Conquest date. At Ijatingham m the same district 
is a very fine and early Norman crypt. 

See Victoria County History, Yortshirs; T. Allen, History of 
tkt County of York (3 vols.. London, 1816-31); T. Balnea, York* 
shirt Past ami Prtsont, including an account of the woollen trade 



936 



YORKTOWN— YQRUBAS 



of Yorkihiie by E* Baines (l vols,, London, tSjt-jpi John 
Burton, Monnxticou Ehpmttnst f London, 1753-59); \fc. Smith, 
Qtd Yorkshire (London, 1SS1); G + Frank, ^y^nk aw* \arrt 



IVr JfAirt ilnfigHtita '(York, iflSS): G. R Park + /WffcttJ^toj-y 
/?^«(r«i«wii 0/ FwJbAire (Hull, 1&86); A. D. H. Leadman, 
Freciia Eboraetnsia. BaitUs fought in Yorkshire (London, 1I91); 
T, D. Whitnkc* t f/iitof^ of kkhntvndihire (London, tR?£), History 
of Cratam (London, 1S7&), History of Leeds and Elmei (1 vok, U-cda, 
i«i6h J. Wtfiowrieht, frrtiair*; Wapentake of Stfi&eri and 
Tidtkitt, voL u (Sheffield, iSjoJ: W* Graingt, Cattle 1 and Abbeys 
of Yorkshire (York, 1655); J* Hun iff, South YerajAir* {j vob., 
London, ijIjS-ai); J> J + Sheahan and T- Whcllan, History of the 
CiSy of York, H* 4«ury |f*4pe*M&. a«^ f** Jmj' JKdi'aj of York- 
j Air* (3 vol*., Beverley, 1455-57)* T* Langdalc, Topoyaphieal 
Dictionary of Yorkshire (Northallerton, 1S09); G. H. de S, N. 
PLntagcnet Harmon, History of Yorkshire (London, tfl?n, Ac); 
sec also publication* of the Yorkshire Archaeological and Topo- 
graphical Society, 

YORKTOWN, a town and the county-seat of York county, 
Virginia, U.S.A., on the York river zo m. from its mouth, and 
about 60 m. E.S.E. of Richmond. Pop. (1010) 136. It is 
served by the Baltimore, Chesapeake & Richmond steamship 
line, and about 6| m. distant is Lee Hall, a station on the Chesa- 
peake & Ohio railway. Large deposits of marl near the town 
are used for the manufacture of cement. In the main street 
is the oldest custom-house in the United States, and the house 
of Thomas Nelson (1 738-1 789), a signer of the Declaration of 
Independence. In commemoration of the surrender of Lord 
Cornwallis in October x 781, there is a monument of Maine granite 
(100 ft. 6 in. high) designed by R. M. Hunt and J. Q. A. Ward; 
its corner-stone was laid in 1881 during the centennial celebra- 
tion of the surrender, and it was completed in 1883. Yorktown 
was founded in 1691, as a port of entry for York county. It 
became the county-seat in 1606, and although it never had more 
than about 200 houses its trade was considerable until it was 
ruined by the War of Independence. In that war the final 
victory of the Americans and their French allies took place at 
Yorktown. 

Baffled by General Nathanael Greene In his campaign in the 
* Carolinas, his diminished force (fewer than 1400) sadly in need of 
reinforcement, and persuaded that the more southern colonies could 
not be held until Virginia had been reduced, Lord Cornwallis 
inarched out of Wilmington, N. Carolina, April 25th, 1781, arrived 
at Petersburg, Virginia, on May 20th, and there with the troops 
which had been under William Phillips and Benedict Arnold and 
with further reinforcements from New York raised, his army to 
more than 7000 men. Facing him in Richmond was Lafayette, 
whom Washington had sent earlier in the year with a small force 
of light infantry to check Arnold, and who had now been placed 
in command of all the American troops in Virginia. Cornwallis's 
first attempt was to prevent the union of Lafayette and General 
Anthony Wayne. Failing in this t he retired down the James in 
the hope, it is thought, of receiving further reinforcements from 
General Henry Clinton. Clinton, who had not approved Cornwallis's 
plan against Virginia, at first ordered him to send a portion of 
nis troops to aid in the defence of New York; but as other rein- 
forcements came to New York, and as the home government ap- 
proved Cornwallis's plan, Clinton resolved to establish a permanent 
base in the Chesapeake and directed Cornwallis to fortify a post 
for the protection of the British navy. Cornwallis seized Yorktown 
and Gloucester early in August and immediately began to fortify 
them. While Cornwallis was marching from N. Carolina to 
Virginia. Washington learned that a large French fleet under 
Count de Grasse was to come up from the West Indies in the summer 
and for a brief period co-operate with the American and French 
r-jixji— ■ armie »- At a conference (May 21st) at Wcthersfield, 
1*7*7" Connecticut, with the French commanders, Washington 
J5a# ^' favoured a plan for a joint attack on New York when 
De Grasse should arrive. An attack on the British in 
Virginia was, however! considered, and the minutes of the con- 
ference with some suggestions from Rochambeau having been sent 
to De Grasse. he announced in a letter received the 14th of August 
that he should sail for the Chesapeake for united action against 
Cornwallis. About the same time Washington learned from 
Lafayette that Cornwallis was fortifying Yorktown. Sir Samuel 
Hood with 14 ships-of-the-line arrived at the Chesapeake from 
the West Indies three days ahead of De Grasse, and proceeding 
to New York warned Admiral Thomas Graves of the danger. 
Graves took command of the combined fleet, 19 ships-of-t he-line, 
and on the 31st of August sailed for the Chesapeake in the hope 
of preventing the union of the French fleet from Newport, under 
Count de Barras. with that under De Grasse. He arrived at the 

Shesapeake ahead of De Barras, but after an encounter with De 
rasse alone (September 5U1), who had 24 ships-of-the-line, he 



was obliged to return to New York to refit, and the French were 
left in control of the coast. Leaving only about 4000 men to 
guard the forts on the Hudson, Washington set out for Virginia 
with the remainder of his army immediately after learning of De 
Grasse's plan, and the French land forces followed. The French 
fleet transported the allied army from the head of the Chesapeake 
to the vicinity of Williamsburg, and on the 28th of September 
it marched to Yorktown. Receiving, on the same day, a despatch 
from Clinton promising relief, and fearing the enemy might out 



batteries along the river bank. The allies, 16,000 strong, took 
possession of the abandoned posts and closed in on the town in 



icircle extending from Wormley Creek below it to about 
• above it, the Americans holding the right and the French 
ft. On the night of October «.h-6th the allies opened the 



a mile 

the left „ _ — 

first parallel about too yds. from the British works, and extend- 
ing from a deep ravine on the N.W. to the river bank on the 
S.EL a distance of nearly 2 m. Six days later the second parallel 
was begun within 300 yds. of the British lines, and it was practically 
completed on the night of the 14th and 15th, when two British 
redoubts were carried by assault, one by the Americans led by 
Alexander Hamilton and one by the French led by Lieut-Colonel 
G. de Deux-Ponts. In the morning of the 1 6th Cornwallis ordered 
Lieut.-Colonel Abercrorabie to make an assault on two French 
batteries. He carried them and spiked eleven guns, but they were 
recovered and the guns were ready for service again twelve hours 
later. On the night of the 16th and 17th Cornwallis attempted 
to escape with bis army to Gloucester on the opposite side 01 the 
river, but a storm ruined what little chance of success there was 
in this venture. In grave danger of an assault from the allies, 
Cornwallis offered to surrender on the 17th; two days later his 
whole army, consisting of 7073 officers and men, was surrendered, 
and American Independence was practically assured. The British 
loss during the siege was about 156 killed and 326 wounded; the 
Am e ri can and French losses were 85 killed and 199 wounded. 

In 1862 the Confederate defences about Yorktown were 
besieged for a month (April 4-May 3) by the Army of the 
Potomac under General M'CIeUan. There was no intention on 
the part of the Confederate commander-in-chief, Joseph Johnston, 
to do more than gain time by holding Yorktown and the line 
of the Warwick river as long as possible without serious fighting, 
and without imperilling the line of retreat en Richmond; and 
when after many delays M'CIeUan was in a position to assault 
with full assistance from his heavy siege guns, the Confederates 
fell back on Williamsburg. 

SeeT. N. Page, " Old Yorktown," in Scr timer's Magazine (October. 
1881) ; H. P. Johnston, The Yorktown Campaign and the Surrender 0} 
CornwaUis (New York, 1881); A. S. Webb, The Peninsular Cam- 
paign (New York, 1882); and J. C Ropes, Story of Ike CwH War, 
vol. ii. 

YORUBAS; YORUBALAND. The Yoruba, a group of Negro 
tribes, have given their name to an extensive area in West 
Africa, in the hinterland of Lagos. The Yoruba are of true 
Negro stock, in many respects typical of the race, but among 
them are found persons with lighter skins and features recalling 
the Hamitic or Semitic peoples. This arises, in all probability, 
from an infiltration of Berber and Arab blood through the Fula 
(q.v.). The Yoruba themselves have traditions «f an Oriental 
origin. They are divided into many tribes, among the best 
known being the Oyo» Yoruba proper, the Egba, Jebu, Ife and 
Ibadan. They are sometimes called by the French Nago, and 
are known to the Sierra Leonis, many of whom are of Yoruba 
descent, as Aku. A considerable proportion of the American 
negroes are also said to be of Yoruba origin. For a long period 
the Yoruba were raided by the Dahomeyans and other coast 
tribes, to sell as slaves to the white traders. They are both 
an urban and agricultural people. Pottery, weaving, tanning, 
dyeing, and forging are among their industries. The houses of 
chiefs, often containing fifty rooms, are well built, and decorated 
with carvings representing symbolic devices, fabulous animals 
and scenes of war or the chase. 

The Yoruba have considerable administrative ability. Their 
system of government places the power in a council of elders pre- 
sided over by a chief who owes his position to a combination of 
the principles of heredity and election. 1 The ruling chief must 

1 R. E. Dennett. states that the government Is based on the rule 
pf four great chiefs who respectively represent the phases of family 
life, namely, (!) the deified head of the family, called Orisha; (2) the 



939 



always be taken from ni 
mrcritira in many cases 
alternately, rriia oy uiture is not necessarily considered, 

' Before the introduction of letters the Yoruba are mid to havel altssT 
employed knotted strings for recording events. Their ' x 



^*-*. . nrly fifty when he decided to take hory orders. 

t he author of JWgnf TAougfiU was not, in has 

»ment to religion and morality which he 



i members of one of two '-mii^ ^ 

passing from one to the other faessW lT*** * >+ 

oe is not necessarily considered. ~* 1 *T *-*»-l 



which has been reduced to writing and carefully studied, has 
traced as far E. as Kano in the_Hausa country. 



. The best known 

, Jebu, Ondo. Ife, Ittorin and 

Oyo (Yoruba proper, called also Nago); but the discrepancies are 
slight. The most marked feature, a strong tendency towards 
monosyllabbm— produced by phonetic decay — has given rise to 
the principle of intonation* required to distinguish words originally 
different but reduced by corruption to the condition of homophones. 
Besides * v " *•— ~ t — *- : -*- »u__ __*. >l_„ . l:_l. «^_ __j _£j~m. 

Yoruba 

vowels of % 

as in Bantu, is effected chiefly by prefixes; and there is a remarkable 
power of word-formation by the fusion of several relational elements 
in a single compound term. The Bible and several other books 
have been translated into Yoruba, which as a medium of general 
intercourse in West Africa ranks in importance next to Hausa 
and Mandingan. The Yoruba religion is that usually known as 
fetishism. 

. The Yc4iioacoim^exteiKb from Beiiin on the £. to Dahomey 
on the W. (where it somewhat overlaps the French frontier), 
being bounded N. by Borgu and S. by the caastlands of Lagos. 
It covets about 25,000 sq. m. Moat of it is included in the 
British prote ct o r ate of Southern Nigeria. The land is moder- 
ately elevated and a large part of it is densely forested. It 
well watesed; the rivers belong mainly to the coast systems, 
though some drain to the Niger. The history of Yorubaland, as 
known to Europeans, does not go back beyond the close of the 
17th century. At that time it was a powerful empire, and had 
indirectly come—through its connexion with Benin and Dahomey 
— to some extent under European influence. There was also a 
much slighter Moslem influence. One tradition brought the 
founder of the nation from Bornu.. The Yoruba appear to have 
inhabited their present country at least as early as a.d. xooo. 
In the x&th century the Yoruba were constantly engaged in 
warfare with their Dahomeyan neighbours, and in 1738 
they captured Kana, the sacred city of the lungs of Dahomey. 
From 1747 to the time of King Goto (1818) the Dahomeyans 
paid tribute to Yoruba. It was not until the early years of the 
10th century that the Yoruba came as far S. as the sea, when 
they founded a colony at Lagos. About 1825 the province of 
Illorin, already permeated by Moslem influences from the north, 
declared itself independent of the Yoruba, and shortly afterwards 
Yorubaland was overrun by Fula invaders. From this time 
(1830-35) the Yoruba empire— there had been six confederate 
kingdoms — was broken up into a number of comparatively weak 
states, who warred with one another, with the Dahomeyans and 
with their Moslem neighbours. The advent of the British at 
first led to further complications and fighting, but gradually 
the various tribes gained confidence in the colonial government 
and sought its services as peacemaker. A treaty placing their 
country under British protection was signed by the Egba in 
January 1803, and the subsequent extension of British control 
over the other portions of Yorubaland met with no opposition. 
Though divided into semi-iitdcpendcnt states, the Yoruba 
retain a feeble sense of common nationality. The direct repre- 
sentative of the old Yoruba power is the olefin or king of Oyo 
occupying the N. and central parts of the whole region. Round 
this central state, which has lost much of its importance, are 
grouped the kingdoms of lllorin, Ijesa, Ife and Ondo in the E., 
Mahin and Jebu in the S. and Egba in the W. The ruler of 
each of these states has a title characteristic of his office. Thus 
the chief of Ife bears the title of oni (a term indicating 
spiritual supremacy). To the oni of Ife or the alafin of Oyo all 
the other great chiefs announce their succession. The oni, 
says Sir William MacGregor, is regarded as the fountain of 
honour, and without his consent no chief can assume the privi- 
lege of wearing a crown. The most important of the Yoruba 



___ ; (3) motherhood; (4) sonship. The chief representing 

motherhood is brother to the mother, and in the developed state has 
: the Balognn or war lord. 



eh UT~* 

<We*L^- 

*here the 

■utualpn 

important 

Ib5 *Hial*^ Q > - 

^^ of th« TnCL M - '. 

population <*CuZTJ'~* - 



'•is intimacy with the duke of Wharton 

I not improve his reputation. A 

'obabry gives the correct view, 

-js, though without common 

no guide, was perpetually 

- -nade him pass a foolish 

'• <s having a \try good 

character when he 

•Is with honour" 

l .e was made one 

to ewe college 

1731 Udy 

'*„_ xkL Her 

ids Lee, 



and Nigeria, 



*"■*•*!, 



>'~*- 



YfiSAI [KikucbiJ (, 7 8,- ll7 « . "' ' 

son of a samurai named *%». ****«*•« 
by the Kikuchi family, wwt£*>£ *">- 
the Tokugawa dan. Whm etS* 1 &*L ' 
Takata Enjd; but, after studyb-dtJ^W^ 
Shijo, and Maruyama schoc4-^^!Jv*^W vl*. * ' 
Osui, a son of Okyo-he developed £*?' *-*0 ' 
having some affinities with thatoT tH *«*v£. 
c«ofthelastoftr«grealpamteTSofTac^.T^ l, * *V" 
history of Japanese heroes, the *ssW^£*> ****:;, 
specimen of his power as a draughtsman in \2*. V "•»•*»* 



Her 

heee 
in 
d 



Y06EMITE, a famous valk^on^h? W ^EL'S *E 
Nevada of California, about 150 m. E. of 8a?pfjSt **»* 
4000 ft. above the sea. It is 7 m. long, half a mile tol^X** ** 
and nearly a mOe deep, eroded out of hard massiw t *!??**' 
glacial action. Its precipitous walls present a mS"?^ 1 * 
of forms, and the bottom, a filled-up lake Dash. iTuJrf \ 
park-like. The most notable of the wall rocka Tue.'vi 
Capttan, 3300 ft. high, a sheer, plain mass of granite-' ih* 
Three Brothers, North Dome, Glacier Point, the Sentinel 
Cathedral, Sentinel Dome and Cloud's Rest, from 1800 to 
nearly 6000 ft, high; and Half Dome, the noblest of all, winch 
rises at the head of the valley to the height of 4740 ft. These 
rocks illustrate on a grand scale the action of ice in mountain 
sculpture. For here five large glaciers united to form the 
grand trunk glacier that eroded the valley and occupied it 
as its channel Its moraines, though mostly obscured by 
vegetation and weathering, may still be traced; while on the 
snowy peaks at the headwaters of the Merced a considerable 
number of small gladers, once tributary to the main Yosemite 
glacier, still exist. The Bridal Vdl Fall, 000 ft. high, is one 
of the most interesting features of the lower end of the valley. 
Towards the upper end the great Yosemite Fall pours from a 
height of aooo ft. The valley divides at the head into three 
branches, the Tenaya, Merced and South Fork canyons. In 
the main (Merced) branch are the Vernal and Nevada Falls, 
400 and 600 ft. high. The Nevada is usually ranked next 
to the Yosemite among the five main falls of the valley, and 
is the whitest of all the falls. The Vernal, about half a mile 
below the Nevada, b famous for its afternoon rainbows, At 
flood-time it is a nearly regular sheet about &Wt. wide, changing 
as it descends from green to purpbsb-grey and white. In 
the S. branch, a mile from the head of the main valley, is the 
lUilouette Fall, 600 ft. high, one of the moat beautiful of the 
Yosemite choir. 

Considering the great height of the snowy mountains about 
the valley, the climate of the Yosemite is remarkably mild. 
The vegetation is rich and luxuriant The tallest pines are over 
soo ft- high; the trunks of some of the oaks are from 6 to 8 
ft. in diameter; violets, lilies, golden-rods, ceanothus, man* 
aanita, wild rose and asalee make broad beds and banks of 
bloom in the spring; and on the warmest parts of the walls 
flowers blossom in every month of the year. 



9*8 



YOUGHAL— YOUNG, A. 



The valley was discovered in 1851 by a military company 
in pursuit of marauding Indians; regular tourist travel began 
in 1856. The first permanent settler in the valley was Mr J. C. 
Lamon, who built a cabin in the upper end of it in i860 and 
planted gardens and orchards. In 1804 the valley was granted 
to the state of California by act of Congress on condition 
that it should be held as a place of public use, resort and 
recreation fr«H»n»M» for all time, was re-ceded to the United 
States by California on the 3rd of March 1005, and is now 
included in the Yosemite National Park. 

In the number and height of its vertical falls and ia the massive 
grandeur of El Capstan and Half Dome rocks Yosemite is unrivalled. 
But there are many other valleys of the same kind. The most noted 
of those in the Sierra, visited every summer by tourists, hunters and 
mountaineers; are the-Hetch Hetchy Valley, a wonderful counter- 
part of Yosemite in the Tuolumne canyon; Tehipiiee Valley, in 
the Middle Fork canyon of King's river; and the King's river 
Yosemite in the South Fork canyon, the latter being larger and 
deeper than the Merced Yosemite. All are similar in their trends, 
forms, sculpture and vegetation, and arc plainly and harmoniously 
related to the ancient glaciers. The Romsdal and Naerddal of 
Norway and Lauterbrunnen of the Alps are well characterized 
glacial valleys of the Yosemite type, and in S.E. Alaska many may 
be observed in process of formation. 

See the Annual Reports (Washington, 1891 sqq.) of the Super- 
intendent of the Park; the Guide to the Yosemite published by the 
California Geological Survey; John Muir. Our National Parks 
(Boston, 1901); and Bunnell's Discovery of tke Yosemite (New 
York,i893r (J- Mu.*) 

YOUGHAL (pronounced Fotsf), a> seaport, market town and 
watering-place of county Cork, Ireland, on the W. side of the 
Blackwater estuary, and on the Cork & Youghal branch of 
the Great Southern & Western railway, sof m. E. of Cork. 
Pop. (root) 5393. The collegiate church of St Mary, in the 
later Decorated style, was erected in the nth century, but 
rebuilt in the X3U1, and since that time frequently restored. 
It contains a beautiful monument to the sst carl of Cork. 
The college was founded by an earl of Desmond in 2464. 
There are still a few fragments of the Dominican friary founded 
in xaoo. The Clock Gate (177 1) is noticeable, and portions of 
the old walls are to be seen. Myrtle Grove was. formerly the 
residence of Sir Walter Raleigh. He was mayor of Youghal 
in 1588-89, and is said to have first cultivated the potato here. 
The harbour is safe and commodious, but has a bar at the 
mouth. At the N. extremity of the harbour the river is 
crossed by a bridge on wooden piles. The principal exports 
are com and other agricultural produce; the imports are 
coal, culm, timber and slate. Coarse earthenware and bricks 
are manufactured. Fine point-lace commanding high prices 
is made by the Presentation Sisters. The Blackwater is 
famous for salmon, and sea-fishing is important. The Strand, 
the modern portion of the town, has all the attributes of a 
seaside resort. 

Youghal {EschaiU, " the Yew wood ") was made a settlement 
of the Northmen in the 9th century, and was incorporated 
by King John in 1200. The Franciscan monastery, founded 
at Youghal by FiUGcrald in 1334. was the earliest house of 
that order in Ireland. Sir Roger Mortimer landed at Youghal 
in 1 31 7. The town was plundered by the earl of Desmond 
m 1570. In 1641 it was garrisoned and defended by the earl 
of Cork. In 1649 it declared for the parliament, and was 
occupied as his headquarters by CromwelL It sent two 
members to parliament from 1374 till the Union, after that 
only one down to 1885. 

YOUNG, ARTHUR (1741-1830), English writer on agriculture 
and social economy, second son of the Rev. Arthur Young, 
rector of Bradfield, in Suffolk, chaplain to Speaker Onslow, was 
born on the nth of September 1741. After being at a school 
at Lavenham, he was in 175S placed in a mercantile house 
at Lynn, but showed no taste for commercial pursuits. He 
published, when only seventeen, a pamphlet On tke War in 
North America, and In 1761 went to London and started a 
periodical work, entitled Tke Unhms Museum, which was 
eVosw— ■ w- ♦*- -4viee of Samuel Johnson. He also wrote 
fc ions on lea Present Stale of AJairrat Home 



and Abroad in 17 $9. After bis fathers death in 1750, his 1 
bad given him the direction of the family estate at Btad&dd 
Hall; but the property was small and encwabeted with debt. 
From 1763 to 1766 he devoted himself to tanning on his 
mother's property. In 1765 he married a Miss Alien; but the 
union is said not to have been happy, though he was of domestic 
habits and an affectionate father. In 2767 he undertook on 
his own account the management of a farm in Essex. He 
engaged in various experiments, and embodied the results of 
them in A Course of Experimental Agriculture (1770). Though 
Young's experiments were, in general, unsuccessful, he thus 
acquired a solid knowledge of agriculture. He had already 
begun a series of journeys through England and Wales, and 
gave an account of his observations in books which appeared 
from 1768 to 1770—4 Six Weeks' Tour through the Southern 
Counties of England and Wales, A Six Months' Tour through the 
North of England and the Farmer's Tour through the East of 
England, He says that these books contained the only extant 
information relative to the rental, produce and stock of England 
that was founded on actual examination. They were very 
favourably received, being translated into most European lan- 
guages by 1792. 

. In 1768 he published the Parmer's Letters to the People of 
England, in 1771 the Parmer's Calendar, which went through a 
great number of editions, and in 1774 his Political Arithmetic, 
which was widely translated. About this time Young acted 
as parliamentary reporter for the Morning Post. He made a 
tour in Ireland in 1776, publishing his Tour in Ireland in 1780. 
In 1784 he began the publication of the Annals of Agriculture, 
which was continued for 45 volumes: this work had many con- 
tributors, among whom was George III., writing under the nam 
de plume of " Ralph Robinson." Young's first visit to France 
was made in 1787. Traversing that country in every direction 
just before and during the first movements of the Revolution, 
he has given valuable notices of the condition of the people 
and the conduct of public affairs at that critical juncture. The 
Travels in France appeared in 3 vols, in 1793. On his return 
home he was appointed secretary of the Board of Agriculture, 
then (1793) jus* formed under the presidency of Sir John Sinclair. 
In this capacity he gave most valuable assistance in the collection 
and preparation of agricultural surveys of the English counties. 
His sight, however, failed, and in 181 1 he had an operation for 
cataract, which proved unsuccessful. He suffered also in his 
last years from stone. He died on the 20th of April 1830. 
He left an autobiography in MS., winch was edited (1898) by 
Miss M. Betham-Edwards, and is the main authority for his 
life; and also the materials for a great work on the " Elements 
and practice of agriculture." 

Arthur Young was the greatest of all English writers on agri- 
culture; but it is as a social and political observer that he b best 
known, and his Tour in Ireland and Travels in France are still fuA 
of interest and instruction. He saw clearly and exposed u n sp ari ngly 
the causes which retarded the progress of Ireland. He strongly 
urged the repeal of the penal laws which pressed upon the Catholics; 
he condemned the restrictions imposed by Great Britain on the 
commerce of Ireland, and also the perpetual interference of the 
Irish parliament with industry by prohibitions and bounties. He 
favoured a legislative union 01 Ireland with Great Britain, though 
be did not regard such a measure as absolutely necessary, many of 
its advantages being otherwise attainable. 

The soil of France he found in general superior to that of England, 
and its produce less. Agriculture was neither as well u n de rs t o od 
nor as much esteemed as in England. He severely censured the 
higher classes for their neglect of it. " Banishment (from court) 
alone will force the French nobility to execute what the English do 
for pleasure — reside upon and adorn their estates." Young saw 
the commencement of violence in the rural districts, and his sym- 
pathies began to take the side of the classes suffering from the 
excesses of the Revolution. This change of attitude was shown by 
his publication in 1793 of a tract entitled The Example of France a 
Warning to EntUind. Of the profounder significance of the French 
outbreak be seems to have had little idea, and thought the crisis 
would be met by a constitutional adjustment in accordance with the 
English type. He strongly condemned the mitayer system, then 
widely prevalent in France, as " perpetuating poverty and esctutf- 
ing instruction M — as, in fact, the rain of the country. Sons* of 
bis phrases have been often quoted by the advocates of pes**** 



YOUNG, R— YOUNG, E. 



939 



peoprittonMnas favouring their viest "Thematic of property torn* 
sand to fold. " Give a man the secure possession of a bleak rock, 
and be will turn' it into a garden ; give him a nine years' lease of a 
garden, and he will convert it into a desert." But these sentences, 
n which the epigrammatic form exaggerates a truth, and which 
might seem to repre sen t the possession of capital as of no importance 
in agriculture, must not be taken as conveying his approbation of 
the system of small proper ti es in general. He approved it only 
when the subdivision was strictly limited, and even then with great 
reserves; and he remained to the end what J. S. Mill calls him, 
" the apostle of la grands cul t ur e " 

The Directory in 1801 ordered bis writings on the art to be trans- 
lated and published at Paris in 30 volumes under the title of Le 
Cultivatemr anglais. His Travels m Franc* were' translated in 
1793-94 by Soutts; a new version by M. Lesage, with an intro- 
duction by M. de Laverjgne, appeared in 1656. An interesting 
review of the latter publication, under the title of Arthur Young 
et la Frame* do 1789, wOl be found in M. Baudrillart's Publicist** 
r (and ed. f 1873). 



BRIGHAM (1801-1877), second president <* U* 
Church of Jem Christ of Latter-Day Saints, wu born in 
Wbittingham, Vermont, on the 1st of June 1801. He died in 
Salt Lake City, Utah, on the aoth of August 187 7. (See Mormons.) 

YOUNG, CHARLES MAYNB (1777-1856), English actor, was 
the son of a surgeon. His first stage appearance was in Liver- 
pool in 1708 as Douglas, in Home's tragedy. His first London 
appearance was m 1807 as Hamlet. With the decline of John 
Philip Kemble, and until the coming of Keen and Macready, 
he was the l endin g Engbsh tragedian. He retired in 183a. 

YOUNG* EDWARD (1683-1765), English poet, author of 
Night Thoughts, son of Edward Young, afterwards dean of 
Salisbury, was born at bis father's rectory at Upham, near 
Winchester, and was baptised on the 3rd of July 1683. He was 
educated on the foundation at Winchester College, and matri- 
culated In 170a at New College, Oxford. He soon removed to 
Corpus Ghristi, and in 1 708 was nominated by Archbishop Tenison 
to a law fellowship at All Souls', for the sake of Dean Young, who 
died in 1705. He took bis degree of D.CX. in 1710. His first 
publication was an Epistle to ... . Lord Lomsdoune (1713)* It 
was followed by a Poem om the Last Day (1713), dedicated to Queen 
Anne; The Force of Edition: or Vanquished Love (1714), ft- poem 
on the execution of Lady Jane Grey and her husband, dedicated 
to the countess of Salisbury; and an epistle to Addison, On the 
UuQucen*sDeathondHisMojesty*s Accession to 0* ThroneUjie), 
in which he made indecent haste to praise the new king. The 
fulsomestyk of these dedications ill accords with the pious tone 
of the poems, nod they are omitted in the edition of his wotks 
drawn up by himself . About this time began bis conaexkm with 
Philip, duke of Wharton, whom he accompanied to Dublin in 
1717* In 1719 ms piay of ifenrir was produced at Drury Lane, 
and in 1731 his Revenge. The latter play was dedicated to 
Wharton, to whom it owed, said Young, its " most beautiful 
incident." Wharton promised him two annuities of £100 each 
and a sum of £600 in consideration of his expenses as a candidate 
for parliamentary election at Cirencester. In view of these 
promises Young said that he had refused two livings in the gH t 
of All Souls' College, Oxford, and had also sacrificed a life 
annuity offered by the marquess of Exeter if be would act as 
tutor to bis son. Wharton failed to discharge his obligations, 
and Young, who pleaded his case before Lord Chancellor 
Hardwicke in 1740, gained the annuity but not the £600. 
Between 1735 and 1728 Young published a series of seven satires 
on The Universal Passion, They were dedicated to the duke 
of Dorset, Bubb Dodington (afterwards Lord Melcombe), Sir 
Spencer Compton, Lady Elisabeth Germain and Sir Robert 
Walpole, and were collected in 1728 as Love of Pome, Ike 
Universal Passion. This is qualified by Samuel Johnson as a 
" very great performance," and abounds in striking and pithy 
couplets. Herbert Croft asserted that Young made £3000 by 
his satires, which compensated losses be had suffered in the 
South Sea Bubble. In 1726 be received, through Walpole, a 
pension of £soo a year. To the end of his life he continued to 
urge on the government his claims to preferment, but the 
king and his advisers persisted in regarding this sum as an 
adequate settlement. 



Young was nearly fifty when he decided to take hory orders. 
It was reported, that the author of Night Thoughts was not, in bss 
earlier days, " the ornament to religion and morality which he 
afterwards became," and his intimacy with the duke of Wharton 
and with Lord Melcombe did not improve his reputation. A 
statement attributed to Pope probably gives the correct view. 
" He had much of a sublime genius, though without common 
sense; so that his genius, having no guide, was perpetually 
liable to degenerate into bombast. This made him pass a foolish 
youth, the sport of peers and poets; but his having a very good 
heart enabled him to support the clerical character when he 
assumed it, first with decency and afterwards with honour" 
(O. Ruffhead, Life of A, Pope, p. soi). In 1738 he was made one 
of the royal chaplains, and in 1730 was presented to the college 
living of Welwyn, HertfonUnxe. He married in 1731 Lady 
Elisabeth Lee, daughter of the 1st earl of Lichneki Her 
daughter, by a former marriage with her cousin Francis Lee, 
married Henry Temple, son of the 1st viscount Palmerston. 
Mrs Temple died at Lyons in 1736 on her way to Nice. Her 
husband and Lady Elisabeth Young; died m 1740. These 
successive deaths are supposed to be the events referred to in 
the Night Thoughts as taking place M ere thrice yon moon had 
filled her horn " (Night i). In the preface to the poem Young 
states that the occasion of the poem was. seal, and Philander 
and Nardam have been rather rashly identified with Mr and 
Mo Temple. M. Thomas suggests that Philander represents 
Thomas Tickell, who was an old friend of Young's, and died three 
months after Lady Elisabeth Young. It was further supposed 
that the infidel Lorenzo was a sketch of Young's own son, a 
statenientdisr^vedbythefarjtthathewasachikiofeightyears 
old at the time of publication. The Compiaint, or Night Thoughts 
on Life, Death and InunortoliSy, was puobsbed in 174a, and 
was followed by other " Nights," the eighth and ninth appearing 
in 1745. In 1753 his tragedy of The Bremen, written many years 
before, but su ppres s e d because be was about to enter the Church, 
was produced at Drury Lane. • Night Thoughts had made him 
famous, hut he lived m almost uninterrupted retirement, ahbougb 
he continued vainly to solicit preferment. He was, however, made 
clerk of. the closet to the princess dowager in 1761. He was 
never cheerful, it was said, after his wife's death. He disagreed 
with hk eon, who had remonstrated, apparently, on the excessive 
influence exerted by his housekeeper Miss (known as Mh) 
Hallows. The old man refused to see his son before he died, but 
is said to have forgiven hiin, and left him his money . A descrip- 
tion of him is to be found in the letters of his curate, John Jones, to 
Dr Samuel Birch. He died at Welwyn on the cth of April 1765. 

Young is said to have been a brilliant talker. He had an 
extraordinary knack of epigram, and though the Night Thoughts 
is long and discomtrtrted H abounds in brilliant isolated passages. 
Its success was enormous. It was translated into French, 
German, Italian, Spanish, Portuguese, Swedish and Magyar. 
In France it became one of the classics of the romantic school. 
The suspicion of insincerity that damped the enthusiasm of 
English xeaden acquainted with the facts of his career did not 
exist for French readers. If he did not invent M melancholy and 
moonlight " in literature, he did much to spread the fashionable 
taste for them. Madame Klopstock thought the king ought to 
make him archbishop of Canterbury, and some German critics 
preferred him to Milton. Young; wrote good blank verse, and 
Samuel Johnson pronounced Night Thoughts to be one of M the 
few poems " in which blank verse could not be changed for 
rhyme but with disadvantage. 



Other works by Young are: The Instalment (to Sir R. Walpole, 
1736); Cynthio (1737); A Vindication of Providence . . . (17**). 
a sermon; An Apology for Punch (1729); a sermon; Impertum 
Pelagi, a Naval Lynch . . . (1730); Two Epistles to Mr Pobe 
concerning the Authors of the Age (1730); A Sea-Piece . . . (i733>J 
The Foreign Address, or The Best Argument for Peace (1734); 
The Centaur not Fabulous: in Five Letters to a Friend 0753); An 
Argument . . . for the Truth of His IChrist's] Religion (175B), a 
sermon preached before the king; Conjectures on Original Compost- 
Hon . . . (1759). addressed to Samuel Richardson ; and Resignation 
(176a), a 1 



9+o YOUNG, J.— YOUNG MEN'S CHRISTIAN ASSOCIATION 



Night Thoughts was illustrated by William Blake in 1797. *o4 by 
Thomas Stothard in 1790. The Poetical Works of the Ha. Edward 
Young . . . were revised by himself for publication, and a com- 
pleted edition appeared in 177& The Compute Works, Poetry and 
Prose, of ike Rev % Edward Young . . ., with a life by John Doran, 
appeared in 1854- His Poetical Works are included in the Aldiue 
Edition of the British Poets, with a life by J. Mitford (1830-1816, 1857 
and i860). Sir Herbert Croft wrote tfte lire included in Johnson's 
Lives of ike Poets, but the critical remarks are by Johnson. For 
Youag s influence on foreign literature see Joseph Texte, Jean 




Young (Paris, 1901), who gives an exhaustive study of 

Young's life and work. 

YOUNG, JAMBS (1811-1883), Scottish industrial chemist, 
was born in Glasgow on the 13th of July 181 x. During his 
apprenticeship to his father, a carpenter, he attended evening 
classes at Anderson's College, where he had Lyon Playfair and 
David Livingstone for fellow-pupils; and the ability he showed 
was such that Thomas Graham, the professor of chemistry, 
chose him as lecture assistant in 183a. About 1839, on the 
recommendation of Graham, whom in 1837 he had accom- 
panied to University College, London, he was appointed 
chemist at James Muspratt's alkali works in Lancashire; in 
connexion with alkali he showed that cast-iron vessels could 
be satisfactorily substituted for silver in the manufacture of 
caustic soda, and worked out improvements in the production 
of chlorate of potash. But his name is best known in connexion 
with the establishment of the Scottish mineral-oil industry. 
In 1847 Lyon Playfair informed him of a spring of petroleum 
which had made its appearance at Ridding's Colliery at 
Alfreton in Derbyshire, and in the following year he began 
to utilise it for making both burning and lubricating oils. 
This spring was practically exhausted by 1851. It had served 
to draw Young's attention to the question of oil-production, 
and in 1850 he took out his fundamental patent for the dis- 
tillation of bituminous substances. This was soon put into 
operation in Scotland, first with the Boghead coal or Torbane- 
hill mineral, and later with bituminous shales, and though 
he had to 'face much litigation Young successfully employed 
it in the manufacture of naphtha and lubricating oils, and 
subsequently of illuminating oils and paraffin wax, until in 
i860, after the patent had expired, he transferred Ins works to 
a limited company. In 1872 he suggested the use of caustic 
lime to prevent the corrosion of iron ships by the bilge water, 
which he noticed was add, and in 1878 he began a determina- 
tion of the velocity of white and coloured light by a modifica- 
tion of H. L. Fiseau's method, in collaboration with Professor 
George Forbes (b. 1840), at Pitlochry. The final results were 
obtained in 1880-81 across the Firth of Clyde from Kelly, 
his house at Wemyss Bay, and a hill above Indian, and gave 
values rather higher than those obtained by M. A. Cornu and 
A. A. Micbelson. Young was a liberal supporter of David 
Livingstone, and also gave £10,500 to endow a chair of technical 
chemistry at Anderson's College. He died at Wemyss Bay on 
the 14th of May 1883. 

YOUNG, THOMAS (1773-1829), English man of science, 
belonged to a Quaker family of Milverton, Somerset, where 
be was born on the 23th of June 1773, the youngest of ten 
children. At the age of fourteen he was acquainted with 
Latin, Greek, French, Italian, Hebrew, Persian -and Arabic. 
Beginning to study medicine in London in 1799, he removed 
to Edinburgh in 1704, and a year later went to Gdttrngen, where 
he obtained the degree of doctor of physic in 1706. In 1797 
he entered Emmanuel College, Cambridge. In the same year 
the death of his grand-unde, Richard Brocklesby, made him 
financially independent, and in 1700 he established himself 
as a physician in Wdbeck Street, London. Appointed in 1801 
professor of physics at the Royal Institution, in two years he 
delivered ninety-one lectures. These lectures, printed in 1807 
(Course of Lectures on Natural Philosophy), contain a remark- 
able number of anticipations of later theories. He resigned 
his professorship in 1803, fearing that its duties would interfere 



with his medical practice. In the previous year he was ap- 
pointed foreign secretary of the Royal Society, of which he had 
been elected a fellow in 1794. In i8n he became physician 
to St George's Hospital, and in 1814 he served on a committee 
appointed to consider the dangers involved by the general 
introduction of gas into London. . In 1816 he was secretary 
of a commission charged with ascertaining the length of 
the seconds pendulum, and in 1818 he became secretary to 
the Board of Longitude and superintendent of the Nautical 
Almanac A few years 'before his death he became interested 
in life assurance, and in 2827 he was chosen one of the eight 
foreign associates of the French Academy of Sciences, He 
died in London on the xoth of May 1829. 

Young is perhaps best known for his work in physical optics, 
as the author of a remarkable series of researches which did 
much to establish the undulatory theory of light, and as the 
discoverer of the interference of light (see Iirizmresorcx). 
He has also been called the founder of physiological optics. 
In 1793 be explained the mode in which the eye a cc o mmo dates 
itself to vision at different distances as depending on change 
of the curvature of the crystalline lens; in 1801 he. described 
the defect known as astigmatisms and in his Lectures he 
put forward the hypothesis, afterwards developed by H. von 
HelmholU, that colour perception depends on the presence 
in the retina of three kinds of nerve fibres which respond 
respectively to red, green and violet light. In physiology be 
made an important contribution to haenuMTymatnics in the 
Croonian lecture for 1808 on the " Functions of the Heart and 
Arteries," and his medical writings included An Introduction to 
Medical Literature* including a, System of Practical Nosology 
(1823) and A Practical and Historical Treatise on Consumptive 
Diseases (181 5). 

In another field of research, he was one of the first successful 
workers at the decipherment of Egyptian hieroglyphic inscrip- 
tions; by 1814 he had completely translated the enchorial 
(demotic) text of the RosetU stone, and a few years later had 
made considerable progress towards an understanding of the 
hieroglyphic alphabet (see Egypt, | Language and Writing). 
In 2823 he published an Account of the Recent Discoveries in 
Hieroglyphic Literature and Egyptian Antiquities. Some of his 
conclusions appeared in the famous article of Egypt which 
in 18x8 he wrote for the Encyclopedia Britonnica. 

His works wens collected, with a Life by G. Peacock, in 1855. 

YOUNO MBM'8 CHBBTIAsT AJSOOATIOaV an organization 
for social and religious work among young men, founded in 
England by Sir George Williams (1821-1905), a merchant of 
London. IvIIUams's organisation grew .out of meetings he 
held for prayer and Bible-reading among his fellow-workers 
in a dry goods business in the city of London, and was founded 
in 2844; on the occasion of its jubilee Its originator was 
knighted. Similar associations, indeed, had been in existence 
in Scotland at a much earlier date. In 1824 David Naismith, 
who also founded city missions in London and Glasgow, started 
the Glasgow Young Men's Society for Religious Improvement, 
a movement which spread to various parts of the United 
Kingdom, France and America: later the name was changed 
to the Glasgow Young Men's Christian Association. The 
object of such associations is to provide in large towns a 
rendezvous for young men who are compelled to Kve in lodgings 
or in the apartments provided by the great business houses. 
An associate of the Y.M.C.A. must not only be of good 
moral character, but must also express his adherence to the 
objects and principles of the association. To be a member 
means a definite acceptance of the doctrines of the Evangelical 
Christian faith. In 1910 there were about 400 associations 
in England, Ireland and Wales, and 226 in Scotland— besides 
various soldiers' and other auxiliaries. The total membership 
was about 146,000, Some of the buildings, notably in the 
Midlands and the north of England, are very fine. The 
London Association, which from 1880 until shortly before its 
demolition in xoo8 used Exeter Hall, Strand, has erected a 
1 Commonly abbreviated Y.M.GA* 



YOUNGSTOWN -YPSILANTI (FAMILY) 



handsome block of buildings ia Tottenham Court Road, de- 
signed to provide, in addition to the usual features, bedrooms 
at a reasonable rent. 

The Young Men's Christian Association is seen at its best 
in the United States. It is true that Germany has more 
associations than any other country, but of its 2139 branches 
only 142 have their own buildings, and the total member- 
ship is only 125,000. In America, however, the associations 
have been built on * broad basis and worked with enterprise 
and business skill Thus they have been able to secure the 
generous support of many of the leaders of commerce. America 
has over 1900 associations, and the total membership is 456,000. 
In Greater Britain the associations are numerous and nourishing, 
and Canada has 35,000 members. There are many active 
associations in Switzerland, Norway, Denmark and the Nether- 
lands, and indeed the Y.M.C.A. is now well known all over the 
world. Even in Japan, China and Korea there are 150 branches 
with a membership of nearly 12,000. The value of associa- 
tion buildings all over the. world is £11,940,000 (America, 
£8,900,000; Greater Britain^ £1,912,000; United Kingdom, 
£1,128,000). 

The Younf Women's Christian Association was founded in 1855, 
by two ladies simultaneously. In the south of England Miss 
Robarts started a Prayer Union with a purely spiritual aim; in 
London Lady Kinnaird commenced the practical work of opening 
domes and institutes for young women in business. In 1877 the 
two branches united in the Young Women's Christian Association, 
which seeks to promote the all-round welfare of young women by 
means of residential and holiday homes, club rooms, restaurants, 
noon rest rooms, classes and lectures, and other useful departments. 
The Young Women's Christian Association has spread all over the 
world, and the total membership b about half a million. 

- YOUHGSTOWlt, a dty and the county-seat of Mahoning 
county, Ohio, U.S.A., on the Mahoning river, about 60 m. S.E. 
of Cleveland. Pop. (1000) 44,885 (12,207 being foreign-born 
especially English, Irish and German); (1910 census) 79,066. It 
is served by the Baltimore & Ohio, the Erie, the Lake Shore & 
Michigan Southern, the Pennsylvania, and the Pittsburg & Lake 
Erie railways, and by interurban electric lines. The Rayen High 
School (incorporated 1856) was endowed under the wul of 
Judge William Rayen (1776-1854). The Reuben McMillan 
Public Library (about 25,000 volumes in 1910) is housed in 
a building finished in 1910 and is named in honour of Reuben 
McMillan (18 20- 1898), formerly superintendent of schools. 
Among other public buildings are the post office and Federal 
court house, the county court house, the city and the Mahoning 
Valley hospitals, and the Y.M.C.A. building. The business 
district lies in the valley on the N. of the river; the resi- 
dential districts are chiefly on the neighbouring hills. Youngs- 
town has four parks, including Mill Creek (483 acres), East 
End (60 acres) and Wick (48 acres), presented to the dty by 
the Wick family, descendants of the merchant Henry Wick 
(1771-1845). The value of its factory products increased from 
$33,908,459 in 1900 to $48,126,885 in 1905. The most im- 
portant establishments are blast-furnaces, iron and steel works 
(of the U.S. Steel Corporation) and rolling mills. 

Youngstown was named in honour of John -Young (1763- 
1825), a native of Peterborough, New Hampshire, who in 1796 
bought from the Connecticut Land Company a tract of land 
upon which the dty now stands, and lived there from 1799 
until 1803. The first permanent settlement was made prob- 
ably in 1796 by William Hill man. The tract was set off as a 
township in 1800, and the first township government was 
organized in 1802; the town was incorporated in 1848, and 
was chartered as a dty of the second class in 1867. The county- 
seat of Mahoning county was removed from Canfield to Youngs- 
town in 1876, and after much litigation the legality of this 
removal was confirmed by the United States Supreme Court in 
1879. The first iron-mining in the region was done in 1803 by 
Daniel Eaton, who in 1804 built the first blast-furnace W. of 
Pennsylvania and N. of the Ohio river. Eaton also buUt in 
1&26 the first blast-furnace within the present limits of Youngs- 
town. 

XXVIU |6 



941 

YFRBB (Flemish Y per en), a town of Belgium, in the province 
of West Flanders, of which it was formerly considered the 
capital Pop. (1904) 17,073. It is situated 35 m. S. of Ostend 
and. » m, W. of Courtrai, on. the Yperlee, a small river flowing 
into the Yser, both of which have been canalized. In the 
14th century it ranked with Bruges and Ghent, and its popula- 
tion in its prime reached 200,000. It is remarkable chiefly for 
its fine Halles or doth market, with a facade of over 150 yds. 
in length. The main building was begun in 1 201 and com- 
pleted in 1304. The cathedral of St Martin dates from the 
13th century, with a tower of the 15th century. Jansen, 
bishop of Ypres and the founder oi the Jansenist school, is 
buried in the cathedral The Butchers' Hall is also of interest 
and dates from the 15th century. Although Ypres is unlikely 
to regain the importance it possessed when its ." red-coated " 
contingent turned the day in the great battle of Courtrai (1302), 
it has an important linen and lace trade and a great butter 
market. The Belgian cavalry training-school is established at 
Ypres. 

YPSILANTI, or Hypstlanti, the name of a family of Phan- 
ariot Greeks claiming descent from the Comneni. Alexander 
Ypsilanti (1725-1805) was dragoman of the Porte, and from 
1774 to 1782 hospodar of Wallachia, during which period he 
drew up a code for the prindpality. He was again appointed 
hospodar just before the outbreak of the war with Austria and 
Russia in 1790. He allowed himself to be taken prisoner by 
the Austrians, and was interned at Brttnn till 1792. Returning 
to Constantinople, he fell under the suspidon of the sultan 
and was executed in 1805. His son Constantine (d. 1816), 
who bad joined in a conspiracy to. liberate Greece and, on its 
discovery, fled to Vienna, had been pardoned by the sultan 
and in 1799 appointed by him hospodar of Moldavia. Deposed 
in 1805, he escaped to St Petersburg, and in 1806, at the bead 
of some 20,000 Russians, returned to Bucharest, where he set 
to work on a fresh attempt to liberate Greece. His plans were 
ruined by the peace of Tilsit; he retired to Russia, and died 
at Kiev. He- left five sons, of whom two played a conspicuous 
part in the Greek war of independence. 

Alexander Ypsilanti (1792- 1828), eldest son of Constantine 
Ypsilanti, accompanied his 'father in 1805 to St Petersburg, 
and in 1809 received a commission in the cavalry of the Imperial 
Guard. He fought with distinction in 181 2 and 1813, losing 
an arm at the battle oi Dresden, and in 1814 was promoted 
colond and appointed one of the emperor's adjutants. In this 
capadty he attended Alexander L at the congress of Vienna, 
where he was a popular figure in sodety (see La Garde-Cbam- 
bonas, Souvenirs). In 1817 he became major-general and com- 
mander of the brigade of hussars. In 1820, on the refusal of 
Count Capo dlstria to accept the post of president of the 
Greek Hetairia PkHike, Ypsilanti was elected, and in 182 1 he 
placed himself at the head of the insurrection against the Turks 
in the Danubian principalities.- Accompanied by several other 
Greek officers in the Russian service -he crossed the Pruth on 
the 6th of March, announcing that he had the support of a 
" great power." Had he advanced on Ibraila he might have 
prevented the Turks entering the principalities and so forced 
Russia to accept the fait accompli. Instead, he remained at 
Jassy, disgracing his cause by condoning the massacres of 
Turkish merchants and others. At Bucharest, whither he 
advanced after some weeks' delay, ft became plain that he 
could not rely on the Vlach peasantry to rise on behalf of the 
Greeks; even the disco nc e r ting expedient of his. Vlach ally 
Theodore Vladimirescd, who called on the peasants to present 
a petition to the sultan against Phanariot misrule, faled to 
stir* the*people from their apathy. Then, wholly unexpectedly, 
came a letter from Capo d'Istria upbraiding Ypsilanti for mis- 
using the tsar's name, announcing that his name had been 
struck off the army list, and commanding him to lay down his 
arms. YpsUanti's decision to explain away the tsar's letter 
could only have been justified by the success of a cause which 
was now hopeless. There followed a. series of humiliating 
ddeats, culminating m that of Dragashan on the xoth of June 

2o 



\ 



942 

Alexander, Accompanied by his brother Nicholas and a remnant 
of his followers, retreated to Rimnik,. where he spent some days 
in negotiating with the Austrian authorities for permission to 
cross the frontier. Fearing that his followers might surrender 
him to the Turks, he gave out that Austria had declared war 
on Turkey, caused a Te Deum to be sung in the church of 
Kosia, and, on pretext of arranging measures with the Austrian 
commander-in-chief, crossed the frontier. But the Austria of 
Francis I. and Metternich was no asylum for leaders of revolts 
in neighbouring countries. Ypsilanti was kept in close con- 
finement for seven years, and when released at the instance of 
the emperor Nicholas I. of Russia, retired to Vienna, where he 
died in extreme poverty and misery on the 31st of January 1828. 

Demetrios Ypsilanti (1 793-1832), second son of Prince 
Constant inc, distinguished himself as a Russian officer in the cam- 
paign of 1814, and in the spring of 1821 went to the Morea, where 
the war of Creek independence had just broken out. He was 
one of the most conspicuous of the Phanariot leaders during the 
earlier stages of the revolt, though he was much hampered by 
the local chiefs and by the civilian element headed by Mavro- 
cordato. In January 1822 he was elected president of the 
legislative assembly; but the ill-success of his campaign in 
central Greece, and bis failure to obtain a commanding position 
in the national convention of Astros, led to his retirement 
early in 1823. In 1828 he was appointed by Capo d'Istrta 
commander of the troops in East Hellas. He succeeded, on the 
25th of September 1829, in forcing the Turkish commander 
Asian Bey to sign a capitulation at the Pass of Pctra, which 
ended the active operations of the war. He died at Vienna on 
the 3rd of January 1832. 

Gregory Ypsilanti (d. 1835), third son of Prince Constantine, 
founded a princely family still settled near Bruno. Nicholas 
Ypsilanti wrote Mhnoires valuable as giving material for the 
antecedents of the insurrection of 1820 and the part taken in 
them by Alexander I. of Russia. They were published at Athens 
in ioox. 

See the works cited in the bibliography of the article Greek 
Independence, War op, especially the M^ toropufc' of J. 
Philemon. 

YPSILANTI, a city of Washtenaw county, Michigan, U.S.A., 
on the Huron river, 30 m. W. by S. of Detroit. Pop. (1000) 7378; 
( 1904) 7587; (1910) 6230. It is served by the Michigan Central 
and the Lake Shore & Michigan Southern railways, and is the 
seat of the Michigan State Normal College (1849). There are 
various manufactures. Ypsilanti was laid out and named in 
honour of Demetrius Ypsilanti, the Greek patriot, in 1825; it was 
incorporated as a village in 1832, and chartered as a city in 1858. 

YSAYB, EUGftNB (1858- ), Belgian violinist, was born at 
Ll6ge, where he studied with his father and under R. Massart, 
at the Conservatoire, until he was fifteen; he had some lessons 
from Wieniawski, and later from Vieuxtemps. In 1870 Ysaye 
played in Germany, and next year acted as leader of Bilsc's 
orchestra in Berlin; he appeared in Paris in 1883, and for the 
first time in London at a Philharmonic concert in 1880. He 
was violin professor at the Brussels Conservatoire from 1886 to 
1898, and instituted the celebrated orchestral concerts of. which 
he was manager and conductor. Ysaye first appeared as con- 
ductor before a London audience in 1000, and in 1007 conducted 
Fidelio at Covent Garden. The sonata concerts in which he 
played with Raoul Pugno (b. 1852), the French pianist, became 
very popular in Paris and Brussels, and were notable features 
of several London concert seasons. As a violinist he ranks with 
the finest masters of the instrument, with extraordinary tempera- 
mental power as an interpreter. His compositions include a 
Programme Symphony (played in London, 1005), a Piano 
Concerto, and a " Suite Wallonne." 

YSTAD, a seaport of Sweden on the S. Baltic coast, in the 
district (/*») of MalmShus, 39 m. E.S.E. of Malm*} by rail. 
Pop. (1000) 0862. Two of its churches date from the 13th 
century. Its artificial harbour, which admits vessels drawing 
19 ft., is freer from ice in winter than any other Swedish Baltic 
port. Apart from a growing import trade-in coal and machinery, 



YPSILANTI (CITY)_YUCATAN 



its commerce has decBned; but it is among the first twelve 
manufacturing places .in Sweden, having large mechanical 
workshops. 

YTTERBIUM (NEO-YTTESBitm) [symbol, Yb; atomic weight, 
172-0 (0-i6)l, a metallic chemical element belonging to the 
rare earth group. Mixed with scandium it was discovered by 
Marignac in gadolinite in 1878 (see Rare Earths). The oxide, 
YbtCfe, is white and forms colourless salts; the crystallized 
chloride, YbClr6HiO, forms colourless, deliquescent crystals; 
the anhydrous chloride sublimes on heating (C. Matignon, 
Ann. ckim. pkys., 1006 (8), 8, p. 440). In 1007 G. Urbain 
separated ytterbium into two new elements, neo-ytterbium and 
lutecium (atomic weight, 174*0); and in 1908 C. A. vbp Wdsbach 
published the same result, naming his elements aldebaranium 
and cassiopeium (on the question of priority see F. Wenzel, 
Z eit. ano rg. Ckcm., 1909, 64, p. 1x9). 

YTTRIUM (symbol, Y; atomic weight,'8o-o (O- 16)], a metallic 
chemical element. In its character yttrium is closely allied to, 
and in nature is always associated with, cerium, lanthanum, 
didymiurn and erbium (see /Rare Earths). For the prepara- 
tion of yttrium compounds the best raw material is gadolinitr, 
which, according to Konig, consists of 2261% of silica, 34-64. 
of yttria, YjOj, and 42-75 of the oxides of erbium, cerium, didy- 
miurn, lanthanum, iron, beryllium, calcium, magnesium and 
sodium. Tbe extraction (as is the case with all the rare earths) 
is a matter of great difficulty. Metallic yttrium is obtainable as 
a dark grey powder by reducing the chloride with potassium, 
or by electrolysing the double chloride of yttrium and sodium. 
It decomposes water slowly in the cold, and more rapidly on heat- 
ing. Yttria, YjOj, is a yellowish while powder, which at high 
temperatures radiates out a most brilliant white light It is 
soluble, slowly but -completely, in mineral acids. It is recog- 
nized by its very characteristic spark spectrum. Solutions of 
yttria salts in their behaviour to reagents are not unlike those of 
zirconia. The atomic weight was determined by Cleve. 

YUCATAN, a peninsula of Central America forming the S.E. 
extremity of the republic of Mexico and including the stales 
of Campeche and Yucatan and the territory of Quintana Roo. 
Small parts of British Honduras and Guatemala are also in* 
eluded in it. The natural boundary of the peninsula on the S. 
is formed in part by the ridges extending across N. Guatemala, 
the line terminating E. at the lower part of Chetumal Bay, and 
VV. at Laguna de Terminos. From this base the land extends 
N. between the Gulf of Mexico and Caribbean Sea in nearly 
rectangular form for about 280 m., with about the same extreme 
width In longitude. It has a mean breadth of about 200 m. r 
a coast-line of 700 m. and an area of about. 5 5,400 sq.m. 

The coast on the N. and VV. is low, sandy and semi-barren, 
and is made dangerous by the Campeche banks, a northward 
extension of the peninsula, covered with shifting sands. The 
outer shore-line on the N. for nearly 200 m. consists of a narrow 
strip of low sand dunes, within which is a broad channel terminat- 
ing to the E. in a large lagoon. There are a. number of openings 
through the outer bank and several small towns or ports have 
been built upon it. The E. coast consists of bluffs, indented with 
bays and bordered by several islands, the larger ones being 
Cozumel (where Cortes first landed), Cancum, Mujeres and 
Contoy. There is more vegetation on this coast, and the bays 
of Chetumal, Espiritu Santo, Ascencion and San Miguel (on 
Cozumel Island) afford good protection for shipping. It is, 
however, sparsely settled and has little commerce. 

The peninsula is almost wholly composed of a bed of coralline and 
porous limestone rocks, forming a low tableland, which rises 
gradually toward the S. until it b merged in the. great Central 
American plateau. It is covered with a layer of thin, dry soil, 
through the slow weathering of the coral rocks. The surface* is 
not so level and monotonous as it appears on many maps; for, 
although there are scarcely any running streams, it is diversified 
by a few lakes, of which Baealar and Chichankanab are the largest, 
as well as by low isolated hills and ridges in the W., and in the E. 
by the Sierra Aha. a range of moderate elevation traversing the 
whole peninsula from Catoche Point S. to the neighbourhood of 
Lake Pcteu in Guatemala. The culminating points of the W. ridges 
do not exceed 900 ft., and some authorities estimate it at 500 ft. 



The climate of Yucatan is hot and dry; the Gulf Scream, which 
sweeps by ils N. shores, adds to its naturally tiitrh tcmpenTvre, 
and the abseace of high mountainous ridges to Uftercefrt the 
moisture-bearing clouds from the Atlantic gives it a EZfllltfd < ill. 
The temperature ranges from 75° to 98* F. in the &hade t but the 
heat is modified by cool sea winds which prev.nl .Jay ami night 
throughout the greater part of the year. The aJmotpbdre !* also 
purified by the fierce temporalis, or northers," which occAriorwIIy 
sweep down over the Gulf and across this open iraion. The dry 
season lasts from October to May, the hottest mr«ntfi* IfMM id be 
in March and April, when the heat is increased by the burrtipc 0/ 
the corn and hencquen fields. The rains are quickly aUorU'J by 
the light porous soil and leave only temporary cftm* pq the lUflFttce, 
where arboreal growth is stunted and grasses arc- en m manly ihin 
and harsh. For the most part the climate of Yucaiin i* luahhy, 
though enervating. • There are nndrained, swampy dUtrkrs in 
Campeche, in the vicinity of the Terminos Lagoon, where malarial 
diseases arc prevalent, and the same conditions prevail along the 
coast where mangrove swamps are found. Yellow k-\cr t^^.ics 
are common on the Campeche coast, and sometimes appear at 
Progrrso and Merida. The sites of some of the old Maya cities are 
also considered dangerous at certain seasons. 

All the N. districts, as well as the greater part of the Sierra Alta, 
arc destitute of large trees; but the coast -lands on both sides 
towards Tabasco and British Honduras enjoy a sufficient rainfall 
to support forests containing the mahogany tree, several valuable 
cabinet woods, vanilla, logwood and other dye-woods. Logwood 
forests fringe all the lagoons and many parts of the seaboard, which 
arc flooded during the rainy season. The chief cultivated plants arc 
maize, the sugar-cane, tobacco, cotton, coffee and especially henc- 
quen. the so-called " Sisal hemp," which is a strong, coarse fibre 
obtained from the leaves of the Agave ritida, var. elongaia. It 
requires very little moisture, grows luxuriantly on the thin calcareous 
soil of Yucatap and is cultivated almost exclusively by the large 
landowners. It is used chiefly in the manufacture of coarse sack- 
cloth, cordage and hammocks, and is exported in large quantities. 
The labour needed in this industry is supplied by Indian peons, who 
live in a state of semi-servitude and are paid barely enough to 
sustain life. 

History and Antiquities.— The modern history of Yucatan 
begins with the expedition of Francisco Hernandez dc Cordova, 
a Spanish adventurer settled in Cuba, who discovered the E. 
coast of Yucatan in February. 1517, when on a slave-hunting 
expedition. He followed the coast round to Campeche, but 
was unable to penetrate the interior. In 151 8 Juan dc Grijalva 
followed the same coast, but added nothing to the information 
sought by the governor of Cuba. In 1519 a third expeditions 
under Hernando Cortes, the conqueror of Mexico, came into 
collision with the natives of the island of Cozumcl. In 1525 
the inland part of the peninsula was traversed by Cortes during 
an expedition to Honduras. The conquest of the peninsula 
was undertaken in 1527 by Francisco de Montcjo, who en- 
countered a more vigorous opposition than Cortes had on the 
high plateau of Anihuac. In 1549 Montcjo had succeeded in 
establishing Spanish rule over barely one-half of the peninsula, 
and it was never extended further. The Spaniards found here 
the remains of a high aboriginal civilization which had already 
entered upon decline. There were deserted cities falling into 
ruins, and others, like Chichcn-itza, Uxmal and TuJoom, which 
were still inhabited by remnants of their former Maya popula- 
tions. The Mayas have left no record of their institutions 
or of the causes of their decline, beyond what may be deduced 
from their ruined structures. The number and extent of these 
ruins (temples, palaces, ball courts, market-places, &c.) indicate 
large towns in the midst of thickly settled, productive districts, 
for there were then, so far as can be determined, no means 
of supporting large urban populations through commercial 
exchanges. The exhaustion of the soil in the vicinity of towns, 
or epidemics brought on by insanitary habits, might easily 
cause depopulation in so hot a climate. Other remains which 
bear witness to the civilization of the Mayas are the paved 
higlyrays and the artificial reservoirs (aguadas) designed for 
the preservation of water for towns through the long dry 
season. These aguadas were huge basins, paved and cemented, 
with underground cisterns, also lined with stone and cement, 
which may have been used for the protection of water against 
heat when the principal supply had become exhausted. The 
great problem in all the Maya settlements of Yucatan was 
that of securing and preserving a water supply for the dry 



YUCCA 943 

season. Some of their towns were built near large under- 
ground reservoirs, called cenoics, that afforded a perennial 
supply. Since the Spanish conquest, the Mayas have clung 
to the semi-barren, open plains of the peninsula, and have 
more than once revolted. TTiey seceded in 1839 and maintained 
their independence until 1843. In 1847 another revolt fol- 
lowed, and the Indians were practically independent through- 
out the greater part of the peninsula until near the beginning 
of the Diaz administration. In 1910 there was another revolt 
with some initial successes, such as the capture of Valladolid, 
but then the Indians withdrew to the unknown fastnesses of 
Quintana Roo. 

The Mexican State 07 Yucatan is bounded N. by the 
Gulf of Mexico, E. and S. by the territory of Quintana Roo, 
S. and W. by the state of Campeche. Pop. (1000) about 
306,00c. The railways include the three lines of the United 
Railways of Yucatan (373 m.), and a line from Merida to Pcto 
(145 m.). The capital is Merida, and its principal, towns, 
inhabited almost exclusively by Indians and mestkos, are 
Valladolid, Acanceh, Tekax, Motul, Tcmax, Espita, Maxcanu, 
Hunucma, Tixkokob, Peto and Progreso, the port of Merida. 

Quintana Roo was separated from the state of Yucatan in 
1002 and received a territorial government under the imme- 
diate supervision of the national executive. It comprises the 
sparsely settled districts along the £. coast of the peninsula, 
and the wooded sections of the S., which have not been 
thoroughly explored. Its population is estimated at 3000, but 
as its inhabitants never submitted to Spanish and Mexican 
rule, and have maintained their independence against over- 
whelming odds for almost four centuries, this estimate should 
be accepted as a conjecture. Little is known of the wild tribes 
of the territory. 

YUCCA, 1 a genus of the order Liliaceae (qv.), containing about 
thirty species. They occur in greatest frequency in Mexico and 




Yucca doriosa in flower, much reduced. 1, flower, abt. J rut. size; 
2, diagram showing arrangement of the parts of the flower in 
horizontal plan. 

the S. W. VnHed States, extending also into Central America, and 
occurring in such numbers in some places as to form straggling 

1 A Spam* word meaning " bayonet," recalling the form aad 
character of the leaves. 



944 



YUE-CHI 



forests. They have a woody or fibrous stem, sometimes short, 
and in other cases attaining a height of is to 20 ft., and branching 
at the top into a series of forks. The leaves are crowded in 
tufts at the ends of the stem or branches, and are generally stiff 
and sword-shaped, with a sharp point, sometimes flaccid and in 
other cases fibrous at the edges. The numerous flowers are 
usually white, bell-shaped and pendulous, and are borne in 
much-branched terminal panicles. Each flower has a perianth 
of six regular pieces, and has as many hypogynous stamens, with 
dilated filaments, bearing relatively small anthers. The three- 
celled ovary is surmounted by a short thick style, dividing above 
into three stigmas, and ripens into a succulent berry in some of 
the species, and into a dry three-valved capsule in others. The 
flowers are fertilised by the agency of moths. 

A coarse fibre is obtained by the Mexicans from the stem and 
foliage, which they utilize for cordage, and in the S.E. United 
States the leaves of some species, under the name " bear-grass," 
are used for seating chairs, &c. The fruits, which resemble 
small bananas, are cooked as an article of diet; and the roots 
contain a saponaceous matter used in place of soap. 

Many of the species are hardy in Great Britain, and their striking 
appearance renders thcnl attractive in gardens even when not in 
flower. They thrive in a rich, light soil, and arc propagated by 
divisions planted in the open ground, or by pieces of the thick, 
fleshy roots in sandy soil under heat. Their rigid foliage, invested 
by thick epidermis, enables them to resist the noxious air of towns 
better than most plants. A popular name for the plant is " Adam's 
needle." The species which split up at the margins of their leaves 
into filaments are called " Eve's thread." 

.YUE-CHI (or Yueh-Chih), the Chinese name of a central 
Asiatic tribe who ruled in Bactria and India, are also known as 
Kushans (from one of their subdivisions) and Indo-Scythians. 
They appear to have been a nomad tribe, inhabiting part of the 
present Chinese province of Kan-suh, and to have been driven W. 
by Hiung-nu tribes of the same stock. They conquered a tribe 
called the Wusun, who lived in the basin of the Hi river, and 
settled for some time in their territory. The date of these events 
is placed between 175 and 140 B.C. They then attacked another 
tribe known as Sakas, and drove them to Persia and India. 
For about twenty years it would seem that the Yuc-Chi were 
settled in the country between the rivers Chu and Syr-Darya, 
but here they were attacked again by the Hiung-nu, their old 
enemies, with whom was the son of the defeated Wusun chieftain. 
The Yuc-Chi then occupied Bactria, and little is heard of them 
Cor a hundred years. During this period they became a united 
people, having previously been a confederacy of five tribes, 
the principal of which, the Kushans (or Kwci-Shwang), supplied 
the new national name. They also to some extent gave up their 
nomadic life and became civilized. Bactria about this time was 
said to contain a thousand cities, and though this may be an 
exaggeration it was probably a meeting-place of Persian and 
Hellenic culture: its kings Demetrius and Eucratidcs had invaded 
India. It is therefore not surprising to find the warlike and 
mobile Yue-Chi following the same road and taking fragments 
of Persian and Greek civilization with them. 

The chronology of this invasion and of the history of the 
Kushans in India must be regarded as uncertain, though we know 
the names of the kings. Indian literature supplies few data for 
the period, and the available information has been collected 
chiefly from notices in Chinese annals, from inscriptions found in 
India, and above all from coins. From this evidence it has been 
deduced that a king called Kozulokadphises, Kujulakasa or 
Kieu-tsieu-k'io (? a.d. 45-85) united the five tribes,* conquered 
the Kabul valley and annihilated the remnants of Greek dominion. 
He was succeeded, possibly after an interval, by Ooemokadphises 
(Himakapisa or Yen-kao-tsin-tai), who completed the annexation 
of N. India. Then followed Kanishka (? c. a.d. 123-53), who is 
celebrated throughout eastern Asia as a patron of the Buddhist 
church and convener of the third Buddhist council. He is also 
said to have conquered Kashgar, Yarkand and Khotan. His- 
successors were Huvishka and then Vasudeva, who may have 
died c. aj>. 125. After Vasudeva's reign the power of the 
Kushans gradually decayed, and they were driven back into the 



valley of the Indus and N.E. Afghanistan. Here, according to 
Chinese authorities, their royal family was supplanted by a 
dynasty called Ki-to-lo (Kidara), who were also of Yue-Chi stock, 
but belonged to one of the tribes who had remained in Bactria 
when the Kushans marched to India. The subsequent migration 
of the Kitolo S. of the Hindu Kush was due to the movements 
of the Jwen-Jwen, who advanced W. from the Chinese frontier. 
Under this dynasty a state known as the Little Kushan kingdom 
flourished in Gandhara (E. Afghanistan) about a.d. 430, but was 
broken up by the attacks of the Hunas. 

Some authorities do not accept the list of Kushan kings as given 
above, and think that Kanishka must be placed before Christ and 
pg_u 1.. ._ ,.9 r r . ^^ that t | J|Cre was anotner fc^ 

wiili .x ri;imc wpmrtbing lite Vasushka before or after Huvishka. 
In any case iht invasion of the Yue-Chi cannot have been very 
lonp Ucfore or very lone atux the Christian era, and had an im- 
portant influence on fnflian civilization. Their coins show a 
renuirkaUL- uni.tin rjf chair.u (iristics, derived from many nations. 
The general shape arid &r \ W- 'are Roman : the inscriptions arc in 
Greek or in a Ptrhmn lan-i. age written in" Greek fetters, or in 
Kfi.mkshr.rik the reverse vi'^ it Dears the figure of a deity, either 
Greek (Herakles, Htliui, S lenc) or Zoroastrian (Mithra, Vata. 
Vemhraclinn) or Indian 'Vmcrally Siva or a war god). One 
figure called 5arapo appear- 3 be the Egyptian Serapis, and others 
are perhaps Babylonian deities. On the obverse is generally the 
king, who, in the earlier coins at any' rate, wears a long open coat, 
knee boots and a tall cap- 1 Icarly the costume of a nomad from 
the north. The Gandhara school of sculpture, of which the best 
specimens come from the neighbourhood of Kanishka 3 capital. 
Purushpura (the modern Peshawar), is a branch of Graeco-Roman 
art adapted to Oriental religious subjects. The Yuc-Chi were 
probably the principal means of disseminating it in India, though 
all movements which kept open the communications between 
Bactria and Persia and India must have contributed, and the first 
introduction was due to the short-lived Graeco-Bactrian conquest 
(180-1.30 B.C.). The importance of the Gandhara n influence on 
the art of India and all Buddhist Asia is now recognized. Further, 
it is probably in the mixture of Greek, Persian and Indian deities 
which characterizes the pantheon of the Kushan kings that are 
to be sought many of the features found in Mahayinist Buddhism 
and Hinduism (as distinguished from the earlier Brahmanism). 
Kanishka and other monarchs were zealous but probably by no 
means exclusive Buddhists, and the conquest of Khotan and 
Kashgar must have facilitated the spread of Buddhist ideas to 
China. It is also probable that the Yue-Chi not only acted as 
intermediaries for the introduction of Greek and Persian ideas 
into India, and of Indian ideas into China, but left behind them 
an important element in the population of N. India. 

It is hard to say whether the Yue-Chi should be included tn any 
of the recognized divisions of Turanian tribes such as Turks or 
Huns. Nothing whatever is known of their original language. 
Such of the inscriptions on their coins as are not in Greek or an 
Indian language are in a form of Persian written in Greek uncials. 
In this alphabet the Greek letter £ (or rather a very similar letter 
with the loop a little lower down) is used to represent sh, and 
there arc some peculiarities in the use of o apparently connected 
with the expression of the sounds k and w. Thus Paonano Pao 
Kanhpki Kopano is to be read as something like Skikan&n SUk 
Kaniskki Keshan: Kanishka the Kushan, king of kings. This 
Persian title became in later times the special designation of the 
Kushan kings and is curiously parallel to the use of Arabic and 
Persian titles (padishah, sultan, &c.) by the Ottoman Turks. The 
physical type represented on these coins has a strong prominent 
nose, large eyes, a moderately abundant beard and somewhat 
thick or projecting lips. Hence, as far as any physical characters 
can be formulated for the various tribes (and their validity is very 
doubtful) the Yue-Chi type is Turkish rather than Mongol or 
Ugro-Finnic. In such points of temperament as military ability 
and power of assimilating Indian and Persian civilization, the Yue- 
Chi also resemble the Turks, and some authorities think that the 
name Turushka or Turukha. sometimes applied to them by Indian 
writers b another evidence tjf 4he connexion. But the national 
existence and name of the Turks (g.v.) seem to date from the 5th 
century A.D., so that it is an anachronism to speak of the Yuc Chi 
as a division of them. The Yue-Chi and Turks, however, may both 
represent parallel* developments of similar or even originally 
identical tribes. The Mahommedan writer Alberuni states that 
in former times the kings of the Hindus (among whom he mentions 
Kanik or Kanishka) were Turks by race, ana this may reptrsent 
a native tradition as to the affinities of the Yuc-Chi. Some authors 
consider that the Yue-Chi arc the same as the Gctac and that the 
original form of the name was Ytit or Get, which is, also supposed 
to appear in the Indian Jat. 

Sec Vincent Smith, Early Historyof India (1908); Hocrnle and 
Stark, History of India (1905); Kapson H Indian Coins (1898); 
Gardner, Coins of Creek and Scythian Kings tn India (1886): Franke, 
B$itra& aus Cktntsiscken Quelltn tur Kennlnis der TurkvoUor nnJ 



YUKON— YUKON TERRITORY 



945 



_ by Cunningham. Fleet, 

Sylvian Levi, E. H. Parker and others in 

the Journal of the Royal Asiatic Society, Journal asiatique, Asiatic 
~ ~ r/y, Ac. Owing to the new evidence which is continually 



Skytktn (1004), and. ni 
A. Stein, Vincent South, 
the Joun ' "" " 

Wag brought forward, the most recent writings on this subject 
axe generally to be preferred. (C El») 

YUKON, the largest river in Alaska, and the fifth largest in 
N. America. With its longest tributaries not in Alaska, the Lewes 
and the Teslin (or HootaUnqua), its length is about 2300 m., in 
the form of a great arc, beginning in the Yukon District of British 
Columbia, near the Pacific Ocean, and ending at the Bering Sea 
coast. Its catchment area is about 330,000 sq. m., more than 
one-half of which lies in Canada. The Lewes river rises m Lake 
Bennet (Yukon District) on the N. slope of the Coast Range, 
about 15 m. inland from the Lynn Canal (at the head of Chatham 
Strait), and flows N. through a chain of lakes, its confluence with 
the Pelly river, at Selkirk, Yukon District, about xao m. due £. 
of the Alaskan-Canadian boundary, forming the headwaters of 
the Yukon. Flowing thence N.W., the Yukon turns abruptly 
to the S.W. near Fort Yukon, Alaska, on the Arctic Circle, and 
continues nearly at right angles' to its former course to a point 
S. of the head of Norton Sound, where it turns again and flows 
in a N.W. direction, emptying into the Sound from its S. shore. 
The length of the river, from its headwaters to Us mouth, is 
about 1500 m. 

The Yukon Valley comprises four sub-provinces, or physiographic 
divisions; in their order from the headwaters of the river these 
divisions have been called the " Upper Yukon/' " Yukon Flats," 
" Rampart Region " and " Lower Yukon." The " Upper Yukon " 
Valley is about 450 m. long and from 1 to 3 m. broad, and is flanked 
by watts rising to the plateau level from 1500 to 3000 ft. above 
toe stream. In this part of its course the Yukon receives from 
the S. the Selwyn river (about 40 m. below the junction of the 
Lewes and Pelfy rivers); from the W. the White river (about 
60 m. below the Selwyn); from the N. the Stewart river (about 
10 m. below the White), one of the largest tributaries of the Yukon ; 
from the E. the Klondike river (near 64* N.) ; from the W. Forty- 
mile Creek (about 40 m. above the Alaskan-Canadian boundary 
line), and many other smaller streams. The " Yukon Flats 
flank the river for about 200 m. and arc from 40 to 100 m. wide. 
Here the* stream varies in width from to to nearly 20 m., and 
involves a confused network of constantly changing channels. 
Here, too, the river makes itsgreat bend to the S.W., and its channels 
are constantly changing. The " Flats " are monotonous areas of 
sand bars and low islands, thickly wooded with spruce. The 
principal tributaries here are the Porcupine river (an important 
affluent, which enters the main stream at the great bend about 
3 m. N. of the Arctic Circle); the Chandlar river, also confluent 
at the great bend, from the N., and, near the W. edge of the Flats, 
the Dall river, also from the N. The " Rampart Region M begins 
near 66* N., where the M Flats " end abruptly, and includes about 
110 m. of the valley, from 1 to 3 m. wide, and extending to the 
mouth of the Tanana. No large tributaries are received in this 
part of the river. The Lower Yukon includes that portion between 
the Ramparts and the sea, a stretch of about 800 m. At the 
mouth of the Tanana (which enters the main stream from the S.) 
the gorge opens into a lowland from 15 to 20 m. wide. Along the 
N.W. boundary of the valley are low mountains whose base the 
Yukon skirts, and it continues to press upon its N. bank until 
the delta is reached. The valley is never less than 2orim., and 
the river has many channels and numerous islands; it has walls 
nearly to the head of the delta, though about 100 m. above the 
delta the S. wall merges into the lowland coastal plain; the relief 
is about 1000 ft. 

At the W. edge 01 the Ramparts the Yukon receives the Tanana 
river, its longest tributary lying wholly within Alaska. The Tanana 
Valley is about 400 m. long, nearly parallel to the Yukon from 
about due W. of its headwaters to the great bend, and drains 
about 25.000 sq. m. Its sources are cbieflyglaciers in the Alaskan 
Range and it receives many tributaries. The Yukon delta begins 
near 63* N. Here the main stream branches into several channels 
which follow N. or N.W. courses to Norton Sound. The northern- 
most of these channels is the Apoon Pass, and the most southerly 
is Kwikluak Pass; their outlets are about 75 »• apart on the 
coast, and from 40 to 50 m. from the head of the delta. Between 
them is a labyrinth ot waterways, most of the intervening land 
being .not more than 10 ft. above low tide. The stream is mud- 
laden throughout its course, and though the sediment b heavier 
above the 'Flats " than below them (where the slower current 
permits the settling of much of the silt), so much of it is carried 
to the river's mouth that the delta is being steadily extended. 
Immediately & of the Yukon delta proper is that of the Kush- 
kowim, into which undoubtedly the Yukon's waters once found 
their way. 



The Yukon Is navigable from May tut September, and steamers ply 
on several of it* larger tributaries, making the aggregate navigable 
waters about 3500 m., about three-fourths or which are in Alaska. 
The nearest harbour for ocean-going vessels is a poor one at 
St Michael's Island, about 60 m. N.E. of the delta; here freight 
and passengers are transferred to flat-bottomed river steamers. 
These enter the delta and the river by the Apoon Pass, which is 
about 4 ft. deep at mean low water, the current varying from if to 
4 m. an hour. The Lewes (about 400 m. long) is navigable (with 
some difficulty, during low water, at Lake Lebarge) as far as 
White Horse Rapids, which, with Miles Canyon, obstruct the river 
for a few miles; above them the stream is again navigable to its 
source, about 100 m. beyond. The Pacific & Arctic railway from 
Skagway to White Horse (m in.) overcomes these obstructions, 
however, for traffic and travel; and even the dangerous White 
Horse Rapids may be ran by a skilful pilot in a small boat, as was 
done repeatedly by the gold-seekers in 1896-97. The Stewart 
river, seldom less than 150 yds. wide, is navigable by light-draught 
steamers to Frazer Falls, a distance of nearly 200 m. The Porcu- 
pine is navigable, in high water, to about the Alaska-Yukon 
boundary line (c.oom.); the Chandlar for a few miles; the Tanana 
(which is about 500 m. long) for about 225 m. to the Cbena river 
(which is navigable for about 100 m.); and the Tolovana, another 
affluent of the Tanana, is also navigable for about 100 m. 

In 1842-43 the Yukon was explored by the Russian Lieu- 
tenant Zagoskin, who built a trading post at Nulato, ascended 
the river (which he called the Kwikpak) as far as the Tanana, 
made a track survey of the stream to that point and reported 
that it was not navigable beyond there. In 1861 Robert 
Kennicott made his way overland by the Hudson Bay route from 
the Mackenzie river down the Yukon to Fort Yukon, and in 
1865 he and Captain Charles S. Bulklcy led the expedition sent out 
by the Western Union Telegraph Company to survey a route for a 
land telegraph line to Europe by way of Alaska and Siberia. 
Kennicott died at Nulato in 1866, and the expedition was 
abandoned in that year, but explorations were continued by 
other members, notably Dr William H. Dall, 1 with the result 
that valuable surveys were made and the Yukon identified as 
the Kwikpak of the earlier Russian surveys. Captain C. W. Ray- 
mond made a reconnoissance of the Yukon in 1869; the Indian 
route by the Lewes to the head waters of the Yukon was used by gold 
prospectors as early as 1881, while in 1883 Lieutenant Frederick 
Schwatka (1840-1892) crossed the Chilkoot Pass (which he 
called " Perricr Pass "), descended the Lewes to Fort Selkirk, and 
down the river to the sea, Charles W. Homan, who accompanied 
Schwatka, made the first sketch survey of the great system; 
since then it has been frequently explored, but much of the 
region has not been mapped. 

See Alfred H. Brooks, The Geography and Geology of Alaska* 
VS. Geo!. Survey, Document No. 201 (Washington, 1906)' also 
G. M. Dawson, Yukon District and British Columbia, Annual Report 
of the Geo!, and Natural History Survey of Canada, vol. 3, pt. 1 
(1889); William Ogilvie, The Klondike Official Guide (Buffalo, 
N.Y.. 1898); C. W. Haynes, "An Expedition through the Yukon 
District, Nat. Geog. Mag. vol. 4 (1892); R. G. McConnell, Salmon 
Rrrer Gold Fields, Summary of Report of Geol. Survey of Canada 
'1901); Idem, The MacmiUan Riter, Yukon Dutrict, Summary of 



i New, * mm jiu»miNw> «**vcr. s hmw vwwhi, ^uiniuary wi 

of the Geological Survey of Canada for 1902; A. H. Brooks, 
A Reconnaissance in the Tanana and White River Basins in 1898, 
Twentieth Annual Report, U.S. Geo!. Survey (Washington, 1900) ; 
and A Reconnaissance from Pyramid Harbor to Eagfe City, Alaska, 
Twenty-first Annual Report, [bid. (Washington, 1900), and other 
sources cited by Brooks in the first-named work. 

YUKON TERRITORY, the most westerly of the northern 
territories of Canada, bounded S. by British Columbia, W. by 
Alaska, N. by the Arctic Ocean and E. by the watershed of 
Mackenzie river. It has an area of 207,076 sq. m. The territory 
is chiefly drained by the Yukon river and its tributaries, though 
at. the S.E. corner the headwaters of the Liard river, flowing 
into the Mackenzie, occupy a part of its area. The margins of 
the territory are mountainous, including part of the St Elias 

. * William Healey Dall (1845- ), American naturalist, was 
born in Boston, Massachusetts, served with the United States 
Coast Survey of Alaska from 1871 to 1884, became honorary 
curator of the United States National Museum la 1880, and in 1893 
was appointed professor of invertebrate palaeontology at the Wagner 
Institute of Science, Philadelphia. He was palaeontologist to the 
United States Geological Survey in 1 884-1009. The white moun- 
tain sheep, or Dall's sheep (Oris datti), discovered in 1884, was 
named in his honour. 



946 



YULE, SIR H.— YUN-NAN 



range with the highest mountains in Canada at the S.W. corner 
(Mount Logan and Mount St Elias), and the N. extension of the 
Rocky Mountains along the S. and N.E. sides; here, however, 
not very lofty. The interior of the territory is high toward the 
S.E. and sinks toward the N.W., and may be described as a much- 
dissected peneplain with low mountains to the S. The most 
important feature of the hydrography is the Yukon (q.v.) and the 
rivers which flow into it. The Klondike gold mines are reached 
by river boats, either coming up from St Michael at its mouth, 
or down 460 m. from White Horse. The White Horse route is 
now used almost entirely, since the White Pass railway, mm. 
■ long, was constructed from Skagway, on Lynn Canal, an inlet of 
the Pacific As the voyage up the Pacific coast from Vancouver 
or Victoria is almost entirely through sheltered waters, the 
journey to the Klondike is very attractive in summer. Com- 
paratively little snow is seen in crossing White Pass during 
summer, though there are patches on the low mountains on each 
side. The Rocky Mountains, N.E. of the interior plateau, 
are somewhat snowy, but apparently with no large glaciers; 
but the St Elias range to the S.W. is buried under immense 
snowfietds, from which great glaciers project into the valleys. 
The rocks are largely ancient schists and eruptives, Palaeozoic or 
Archean, but considerable areas are covered with Mesozoic and 
Tertiary rocks, some of which include important seams of lignite 
or coal, the latter especially in the neighbourhood of White 
Horse. There have been comparatively recent volcanic eruptions 
in the region, as shown by a layer of white ash just beneath the 
soil for many miles along the river, and by a quite perfect 
cone with a crater and lava stream; but there are no records 
of volcanic outbreaks within the short modern history of the 
territory. 

Before the discovery of gold on the Forty Mile and other 
rivers flowing into the Yukon the region was inhabited only 
by a few Indians, but the sensational finds of rich placers in the 
Klondike (q.v.) in 1896 brought in a vigorous population centred 
in the mines and at Dawson City, which was made the capital of 
the newly constituted Yukon Territory. When the White Pass 
railway was built, White Horse at its N. terminus became of 
importance, and since then a fluctuating body of prospectors 
and miners has been at work, not only in the Klondike but at 
various points along the other rivers. The territory is ruled by a 
governor and council, partly elective, seated at Dawson, and has 
a representative in the parliament of the Dominion. Almost 
the only economic product of the territory was at first gold, but 
copper and other ores later began to attract attention in the S. 
near White Horse. Though so near the Pacific the Yukon 
territory has a rigorous continental climate with very cold 
winters seven months long, and delightful sunny summers. 
Owing to the lofty mountains to the W. the amount of rain and 
snow is rather small, and the line of perpetual snow is more 
than 4000 ft. above sea-level, so that glaciers are found only on 
the higher mountains; but the moss-covered ground is often 
perpetually frozen to a depth of zoo or 200 ft. Vegetation 
is luxuriant along the river valleys, where fine forests of spruce 
and poplar are found, and the hardier grains and vegetables are 
cultivated with success. (A. P. C.) 

YULB, SIR HENRY (1820-1880), British Orientalist, was 
born on the xst of May 1820, at Invcresk, near Edinburgh, 
the sou of Major William Yule (1 764-1839), translator of the 
Apothegms of Ali. He was educated at Edinburgh, Addiscombe 
and Chatham, and joined the Bengal Engineers in 1840. He 
served in both the Sikh wars, was secretary to Colonel (afterwards 
Sir) Arthur Phayre's mission to Ava (1855), and wrote nis 
Narrative of the Mission to the Court of Ava (1858). He retired 
in 1862 with the rank of colonel, and devoted his leisure to the 
medieval history and geography of Central Asia. He published 
Cathay and the Way Thither (i860), the Book of Ser Marco Polo 
1871-75), for which he received the gold medal of the Royal 
Geographical Society, and brought out with Dr Arthur C. 
Burnell Hobstm-Jobson (1886) , a dictionary of Anglo-Indian 
colloquial phrases. For the Hakluyt Society, of which he was 
for some time president, he edited (1863) the Mtrabtiio descripta 



of Jordanus and The Diary of William Hedges (1887-89). Tire 
latter contains a biography of Governor Pitt, grandfather of 
Chatham. From 1875 to 1889 Yule was a member of the Council 
of India, being appointed K.CSJ. on hit retirement. He died 
on the 30th of December 1889. 

See Memoir by his daughter, prefixed to the posthumous third 
edition of Marco Polo (1903). 

YULB. the season of Christmas (q.v.). This word is chiefly 
used alone as an archaism or in poetry or poetical language, 
but is more common in combination, as in " yule-tide," " yule- 
log," &c. The Old English word appears in various forms, 
e.g. getia, iula, geol, gtkhol, gehhel; cognate forms are Ice), jit; 
Dan. juul; Swed. Jul. It was the name of two months of 
the year, December and January, the one the " former yule " 
(se aerra geaU), the other the " after yule " (se aeftera getffo), 
as coming before and after the winter solstice (Cotton MS. 
Tib. B. L; and Bede, De Temporum Ratione, 13, quoted in 
Skeat, Etym. Diet., 1898). According to A. Fick ( VcrgUichendcs 
Worterbuch der Indogermamschen Sprachen, vol. iii. 245, 1874) 
in proper meaning is noise, clamour, the season being one of 
rejoicing at the turning of the year among Scandinavian peoples 
before Christian times. 

YUN-NAN (ie. Cloudy South), a S.W. province of China, 
bounded N. by Sze-ch'uen, E. by Kwei-chow and Kwang-si, 
S. by Burma and the Lao tribes and W. by Burma and Tibet; 
area estimated at from 122,000 to. 146,000 sq. m. Though the 
second largest province of the empire, its population is esti- 
mated at only 12,000,000. The inhabitants include many 
races besides Chinese, such as Shans, Lolos and Maotsze. The 
Musus, in N.W. Yun-nan, once formed an independent kingdom 
which extended into E. Tibet. Many of the inhabitants are 
nominally Moslems. The greater part of the province may be 
said to consist of an extensive plateau, generally from 5000 to 
7000 ft. in altitude, containing numerous valley plains, which is 
divided in the N. by mountain ranges that enter at the N.W. 
corner and separate the waters of the Yangtsze-kiang, the 
Mekong and the Salween. The mountains attain heights of 
16,000 ft. The climate is generally healthy and equable; on the 
plateau the summer heat seldom exceeds 86*, and in winter 
there is little snow. The principal rivers are the Yangtsze- 
kiang (locally known as the Kinsha-kiang- Golden Sand river), 
which enters Yun-nan at its N.W. corner, flows first &£. and 
then N.E., forming for a considerable distance the N. boundary 
of the province; the Mekong, which traverses the province from 
N. to S. on its way to the sea through Annam; the Salween, 
which runs a parallel course through its W. portion; and the 
headwaters of the Songkoi, which rises in the SJE. of the province. 
This last-named river is navigable from the Gulf of Tongking to 
Man-hao, a town ten days' journey from Yun-nan Fu. There 
are two large lakes— one in the neighbourhood of Ta-li Fu, which 
is 24 m. long by 6 m. broad, and the other near Yun-nan Fu, 
which measures from 70 to 80 m. in circumference. 

n-iian Fu, the capital, the province contains thirteen 

1 ties, several of which — Teng-ch'ucn Fu, Ta-K Fu, 

n^h'atiR Fu. Ch*u-siung Fu and Lin-gan Fu, for example — 



prefect u rat cities, several of which — Teng-ch'ucn Fu, Ta-li Fu, 
Yunif-ch u ;iEi|i Fu, Ch*u-siung Fu and Lin-gan Fu, for example — 
are Miuated in tbe valley plains. Mengtsze, Szcmao and Motnein 



(or TRiiE-yuelO are open to foreign trade. Yun-nan Fu b connect ed 
by railway (1910) with Tongking. The line which starts from 
Ho f phonic runs, in Yun-nan, via Mengtsse hsien (a great com- 
mercial; ccnrre) t to the capital. Several important roads intersect 
the province; among them are — 1. The road from Yun-nan Fu 
to MasM in Burma via Ta-li Fu (12 days), Teng-yueh Chow or 
Momein <i day-) and Manwyne — beyond Ta-li Fu it is a difficult 
mountain rouie, 2. The road from Ta-li Fu N. to Patang via 
Lt-listng Fu, which thus connects W. Yun-nan with Tibet. 3. The 
anrjent trade road to' Canton, which connects Yun-nan Fu with 
Patal I'u. in Kwang-si, on the Canton West River, a land journey 
wfcirh emeu pie* about twenty days. From this point the river is 
navigable 10 Canton. 

Agricultural products include rice and maixe (the principal 
crop**, wheat, barley and oats. The poppy was formerly ex- 
teniivcly cultivated, but after the ami-opium edict of 1906 vigorous 
measures were taken to stamp out the cultivation 01 the plant. 
In certain localities the sugar-cane is grown. Tea from Pu-erh 
Fu in S. Yun-nan is appreciated throughout the empire. Fruits 
and vegetables are plentiful, and there are large herds of buffaloes* 



YUN-NAN FU— YVETOT 



9+7 



goats and sheep. ^Silkworms .are reared. The chief wealth of 
Yun-nan consists, however, in its minerals. Cooper it the most 
important of the minerals worked. Silver and gold are produced, 
but they are not known to exist in any large quantities. Lead b 
of frequent occurrence, and indeed the area through which copper, 
silver, lead, tin and zinc are distributed in sufficient quantities 
to make mining answer, comprises at least 80,000 sq. m. Coal 
b also found and several salt mines are worked. The ores are 
generally of good quality, and are easy of extraction. Cotton 
yarn and cloth, petroleum, timber and lurs are among the chief 
imports; copper, tin, hides and tea are important exports: 
medicines in the shape not only of herbs and roots, but also 01 
fossils, shells, bones, teeth- and various protracts of the animal 
kingdom; and precious stones, principally jade and rabies, are 
among the other exports* 

Yun-nan, long independent, was subdued by Kublai Khan, 
bat was not finally incorporated in the empire until the 17th 
century. It was the principal centre of the great Mahommedan 
rebellion, which lasted sixteen years and was suppressed in 1872. 
Even in xoxo the province had not wholly recovered from the 
effects of that struggle and the barbarity with which it was 
stamped out. The opening of Christian (Protestant) mission 
work in Yun-nan began in 1877, and was one result of the 
murder of Mr Margary (sec China, History* S £)•' 

See H. R. Davies, Yun-nan, the Link between India and the 
Yanepe (Cambridge. 1909); A. Little, Across Yunnan (London, 
rtio); Rev. J. M'Carthy, "The Province of Yunnan," in The 
Chime* Empire (London, 1907): L. Richard, Compeehentwe 
Geography of the China* Empire (Shanghai, 1908). 

YUV-sUN FU. the capital of the province of Yun-nan, China, 
in 25° & N., 10a* 5^ £- It b about 500 m. by rail N.N.W. 
of tie port of Haiphong, Tongkmg. The population was 
returned in 1907 at 45,000. Originally the surrounding district 
was known as the " land of the southern barbarians." The 
city ia situated on a plain, and is surrounded by fortified 
walls, 6} m. in circuit. For many years Mahommedans have 
been numerous in the city and neighbourhood; and in 
1855 a Mahommedan rising occurred. Before the rebeUfcn 
Yun-nan Fu bad a prosperous aspect; the shops were large 
and well supplied with native silken goods, saddlery, ftc., 
while English cotton, Russian cloths and raw cotton from 
Burma constituted the main foreign merchandise. Employ- 
ment for large numbers of work-people was found in the copper 
factories. A mint at Yun-nan Fu issued annually 101,000,000 
cash. Nearly ruined by the rebellion, the city took many years 
to recover its prosperity. A fresh Impetus to commerce was 
given by the opening in 19x0 of the railway from Tongkmg, a 
line built by French engineers and with French capital The 
construction of a British railway to connect Burma with 
Yuo-aao Fu and onwards to the Yangtsae-kJang has been in 
contemplation. 

YURIE? (formerly Dokpat, also DoYpi; Russian, Derpt; 
Estbonian, Tarlo and Tarioim; in Lettish, Tehrbata), a town of 
W. Russia, in the government of Livonia, situated on the 
Embach, 158 m. by rail N.E. of Riga, in 58° 33' N. and *6° 25' E. 
Pop. 43,431. The principal part of the town lies S. of the river, 
and the more important buildings are clustered round the two 
eminences known as the Domberg (cathedral hfll) and the 
Schlossberg (castle hill), which in the middle ages were occupied 
by the citadel, the cathedral and the episcopal palace. Owing 
to a great fire in 1777, the town b almost entirely modern; 
and its fortifications have been transformed into promenades. 
Besides a good picture gallery in the Ratshof, and the 13th- 
century church of St John, Yuriev possesses a university, with 
an observatory, an art museum, a botanical garden and a 
library of 250,000 volumes, which are housed in a restored 
portion of the cathedral, burned down in 1624. The university 
was founded by Gustavus Adolphus of Sweden in 1631; but in 
1609 teachers and students removed to Pernau on the advance 



of the Russians, and on the occupation of the country by Peter 
the Great again took flight to Sweden. In spite of the treaty 
of 1710 and the efforts of the Livonian nobles, it was not UO 
1803 that its restoration was effected under the patronage of 
Alexander L Down to 1895, in which year it was thoroughly 
Russified, the university was German in spirit and in sentiment. 
It b now attended by some 1700 students annually. The 
astronomical department b famous, owing partly to the labours 
of F. G. W. von Strove (1830-39), *od partly to Fraunhofer'B 
great refracting telescope, preaenUd by the emperor Alexander L 
There are monuments to the naturalist K. E. von Baer (1886) 
and Marshal Barclay do Tolly (1849), and the town is the 
headquarters of the XVIII. army corps. 

The foundation of Dorpat b ascribed to Yaroslav, prince 
of Kiev, and b dated 103a In 1*34 the town was seized by 
the Teutonic Knights, and in the following year Bishop Her- 
mann erected a cathedral on the Domberg. From that date 
till about 1558 the town enjoyed great prosperity, and the 
population reached 50,000. In 1558 it was captured by the 
Russians, but in 158s was yielded to Stephen Bathori, king 
of Poland. In 1600 it fell into the bands of the Swedes, in 
X603 reverted to the Poles, and in 1615 was seised by Gustavus 
Adolphus of Sweden. The Russians again obtained temporary 
possession in 1666, but did not effect a permanent occupation 
till 1704. In 1708 the bulk of the population were removed 
to the interior of Russia. 

YU8AFZAJ, a large group of Pathan tribes, originally 
immigrants from the neighbourhood of Kandahar, which 
includes those of the Black Mountain, the Bunerwab, the 
Swatis, the people of Dir and the Fanjkora valky, and also 
the inhabitants of the Yusafsai plain in Peshawar district of 
the North- West Frontier Province of India. Three sections 
of the tribe, the Hswnnmit, Akazais and Chagarzab, inhabit 
the W. slopes of the Black Mountain, and the Yusafsai country 
stretches thence to the Utman Khel territory. The trans-border 
Yusafeab are estimated at 65,000 fighting men, giving a total 
population of about 350/000, The Yusafsab are said to be 
descended from one Mandai, who had two sons, Umax and 
Yusat Umax died, leaving one son, Mandan; from Mandan 
and Yusaf come the two primary divisions of the Yusafsab, 
which are spUt into numerous subdivisions, including the 
tfwif fjf fKMi^ Akazais, Ranizab and Utmanzais. 

YUZQAT, the chief town of a sanjak of the same name in 
the Angora vilayet of Asia Minor, altitude 4380 ft., situated 
X05 m. E. of Angora, near the head of a narrow valley through 
which the Angora-Sivas road runs. The town was built 
largely out of the rums of Nefes Keui (anc. Tavivm), by Chapan 
Oghlu, the founder of a powerful Dere Bey family. There b 
a trade in yeuow berries and mohair. The sanjak b very 
fertile, and contains good breednig-grounds, upon which horses, 
camels and cattle are reared. The population, about 15,000, 
in cludes a l arge Armenian community. 

YVBTOT, a town of N. France, capital of an anondbsement 
in the department of Sefae-Inferieure, 24 nu N.W. of Rouen 
on the railway to Havre. Pop. (1906) 6314. Cotton goods 
of various kinds and hats are made here, and trade a carried 
on in agricultural products. The church (x8th century) con* 
tains a marble altar from the Carthusian monastery at Rouen, 
fine woodwork of the 17th century from the abbey of St 
Wandrilk, and a handsome pulpit. The town b the seat of a 
sub-prefect and has tribunals of first instance and of commerce, 
and a chamber of arts and manufactures. The lords of Yvetot 
bore the title of king from the 15th till the middle of the loth 
century, their petty monarchy being popularized in one of 
Stranger's songs. In 150* Henry IV. here defeated the troops 
of the League 



9+8 



Z— ZACATECAS 



Zthc twenty-sixth letter of the English alphabet and 
the last, although till recent times the alphabets used 
by children terminated not with s but with &, or 6% 
For & the English name is ampersand, i.e. " and per se 
and," though the Scottish name eptrskand, i.e. "El, per se and," is 
more logical and also more clearly shows its origin to be the Latin 
ct, of which It is but the manuscript form. To the following of s 
by & George Eliot refers when she makes Jacob Storey say, " He 
thought it (z) had only been put to finish off th 1 alphabet like, 
though ampusand would ha' done as well, for what he could 
see." Z is put at the end of the alphabet because it occupied 
that position in the Latin alphabet. In early Latin the sound 
represented by s passed into r, and consequently the symbol 
became useless. It was therefore removed from the alphabet 
and C (q.v.) put in its place. In the ist century B.C. it was, 
like y, introduced again at the end, in order to represent more 
precisely than was before possible the value of the Greek Z, 
which had been previously spelt with s at the beginning and ss 
in the middle of words: sona^wvri, "belt "; tarpessita = Tpa- 
wvffnp, "banket." The Greek form was a close copy of the 
Phoenician symbol X, and the Greek inscriptional form remained 
in this shape throughout. The name of the Semitic symbol was 
Zayin, but this name, for some unknown reason, was not adopted 
by the Greeks, who called it Zeta. Whether, as seems most likely, 
Zeta was the name of one of the other Semitic sibilants £ade 
(Tzaddi) transferred to this by mistake, or whether the name is a 
new one, made in imitation ol Eta fa) and Theta (6), is disputed. 
The pronunciation of the Semitic letter was the voiced s t like 
the ordinary use of f in English, as in zodiac, rate. It is 
probable that in Greek there was a considerable variety of pro- 
nunciation front dialect to dialect. In the earlier Greek of 
Athens, North-west Greece and Lesbos the pronunciation seems 
to have been zd, m Attic from the 4th century B.C. onwards it 
seems to have been only a voiced s, and this also was probably 
the pronunciation of the dialect from which Latin borrowed 
its Greek words. In other dialects, as Elean and Cretan, the 
symbol was apparently used for sounds resembling the English 
voiced and unvoiced th (0, \>). In the common dialect (*xwj) 
which succeeded the older dialects, f became a voiced s, as 
it remains in modern Greek. In Vulgar Latin the Greek Z 
seems to have been pronounced as dy and later y; di being 
found for % in words like baptidiare for baptaare, " baptize," 
while conversely % appears for di in forms like zaconus, zabulus, 
fot diacanus, "deacon," diabulus, "deviL" Z also is often 
written for the consonantal I (J) as wtunior for iunior, " younger " 
(see Grandgent, Introduction to Vulgar Latin, §§ 272, 339) 
Besides this, however, there was a more cultured pronunciation 
of t as dz, which passed through French into Middle English 
Early English had used s alone for both the unvoiced and the 
voiced sibilant; the Latin sound imported through French was 
new and was not written with a but with g or t. The successive 
changes can be well seen in the double forms from the same 
original, jealous and zealous. Both of these come from a late 
Latin tdosus, derived from the imported Greek fytas. Much 
the earlier form is jealous; its initial sound is the lis which in 
later French is changed to s (voiced s). It is written gelows or 
ielous by Wydiffe and his contemporaries, the form with * is 
the ancestor of the modern form. The later word tealous was 
borrowed after the French dz had become s. At the. end of 
words this t was pronounced ts as in the English assets, which 
comes from a late Latin ad salts through an early French asa, 
11 enough." With s also is frequently written th, the voiced 
form of sh, in azure, seizure. But it appears even more fre- 
quently as s before u, and as si or li before other vowels in 
measure, decision, transition, &c, or in foreign words as g, as in 
rouge. For the 3 representing g and y in Scottish proper names 
see under Y. (P. Gi.) 

ZAANDAH (incorrectly Saardam), a town of Holland, in 



the province of North Holland, on the river Zaan, 6§ m. NAY. 
of Amsterdam, with which it is connected by railway and 
steamer. Pop. (1905) 23,773* It is of typically Dutch appear- 
ance, with low, brightly coloured houses. It has an important 
trade in timber, and numerous windmills in the vicinity provide 
power for oil, cement and paper works, timber-sawing and 
corn-grinding. At Zaandam is preserved the wooden hut 
which Peter the Great occupied for a week in 1697 while studying 
shipbuilding and paper-making. 

ZABERJf (French, Saverne), a town of Germany, in the 
imperial province of Alsace-Lorraine, district of Lower Alsace, 
situated on the Rhine-Marne canal at the foot of a pass over 
l he Vosges, and 27 m. N.W. of Strassburg by the railway to 
Deutsch Avricourt. Pop. (1000) 8499. Its principal building, 
the former episcopal residence, rebuilt by Cardinal de Rohan 
in 1779, is now used as barracks. There are also a 15th century 
church and an antiquarian museum. In the vicinity are the 
ruined castles of Hoch-barr, Grossgeroldseck, Ochsenstein and 
Greifenstein. Hence a beautiful road, immortalized by Goethe 
in Duhtung und Wahrkeit, leads across the Vosges to Pfalzburg. 

Zabern ( Tres Tabernac) was an important place in the times 
of the Romans, and, after being destroyed by the Alamanni, 
was rebuilt by the emperor Julian. During the Peasants 1 War 
the town was occupied, in 1525, by the insurgents, who were 
driven out in their turn by Duke Anton of Lorraine. It suffered 
much from the ravages of the Thirty Years' War, but the epis- 
copal castle, then destroyed, was subsequently rebuilt, and in 
1852 was converted by Louis Napoleon into a place of residence 
for widows of knights of the Legion of Honour. 

See Fischer, GeschichU der Stadt Zabem (Zabern, 1824). 

ZABRZB, a town of Germany, in the extreme S.E. of Prussian 
Silesia, on the railway between Gleiwitz and Kdnigshuitc. 
Pop. (1905) 55,634. Like other towns in this populous region, it 
is an important manufacturing centre, having coal-mines, iron, 
wire, glass, chemical and oil works, breweries, &c. 

ZACATECAS, a state of Mexico, bounded N by Durango 
and Coahuila, E. by San Luis Potosf, S. by Aguascalientes and 
Jalisco, and W. by Jalisco and Durango. Area, 24,757 sq. m. 
Pop. (1900) 462,190. It belongs wholly to the great central 
plateau of Mexico, with an average elevation of about 7700 ft. 
The state is somewhat mountainous, being traversed in the W. 
by lateral ranges of the Sierra Madie Occidental, and by 
numerous isolated ranges in other parts— Mazapil, Norillos, 
Guadalupe and others. There are no large rivers, only the 
small bead-streams of the Aguanaval in the N., and of the 
Guazamota, Bolanos and Juchipila in the W. f the last three 
being tributaries of the Rio Grande de Santiago. As the rain- 
(all is light this lack of streams suitable for irrigation is a draw- 
back to agriculture. The climate is dry and generally healthy, 
being warm in the valleys and temperate in the mountains. 
The agricultural products are cereals, sugar and maguey, the 
first being dependent on the rainfall, often failing altogether, 
the second on irrigation in the lower valleys, and the latter 
doing best in a dry climate on a calcareous soil with water not 
far beneath the surface. There is also a considerable produc- 
tion of peaches, apricots and grapes, the last being made into 
wine. A few cattle are raised, and considerable attention is 
given to the rearing of sheep, goats and swine. A natural 
product is guayvle, a shrub from which rubber is extracted. 
The chief industry of Zacatecas, however, is mining for silver, 
gold, mercury, copper, iron, zinc, lead, bismuth, antimony and 
salt. Its mineral wealth was discovered soon after the conquest, 
and some of its mines are among the most famous of Mexico, 
dating from 1546. One of the most productive of its silver 
mines, the Alvarado, has records which show a production of 
nearly $800,000,000 in silver betwech 1548 and 1867. The 
state is traversed by the Mexican Central and the Mexican 
National railways. Its manufactures are limited chiefly to the 



ZACATECAS— ZACHARIAE 



9+9 



reduction of mineral ores, the extraction of robber bom guayuU, 
ibe making of sugar, rum, mescal, pulque, woollen and cotton 
fabrics, and some minor industries of the capital The capital 
is Zacatecas,. and the other principal towns are Sombrcrete 
(pop. 10,000), an important silver-mining town 70 m. N.W. of 
the capital (elevation 8430 ft.); Ciudad Garcia (about 9500); 
Guadalupe (9000); Pinos (8000), a mining town; San Juan de 
Mezquital (7000); and Fresnillo (6300), an important silver- 
and copper-mining centre. 

ZACATECAS, a city of Mexico, capital of the state of 
Zacatecas, 442 m. by the Mexican Central railway N.W. of 
' Mexico city. Pop. (1000) 39,912. It is built in a deep, narrow 
ravine, 8050 ft. above sea-level, with narrow, crooked streets 
climbing the steep hillsides, and while, flat-roofed houses of 
four and five storeys overtopping each other. Its streets are 
well paved, and are lighted with electricity. The city is well 
drained and has a fine aqueduct for its water supply. The 
cathedral is an elaborately carved red-stone structure with un- 
finished towers and richly decorated interior. Several domed 
churches occupy prominent sites. The National College and the 
Colcgio de Nuesta Scnora de Guadalupe with its fine library 
may be noticed. Overlooking the city from an elevation of 
50Q ft. is the Bufa Hill, which is crowned by a chapel and is a 
popular pilgrimage resort. The Guadalupe chapel near the 
city has elaborate decorations, including frescoes, onyx steps, 
silver rails and paintings, and a curious tiled dome. The in- 
dustries comprise carriage building, weaving and the manu- 
facture of coarse pottery. The town is an important com- 
mercial centre. 

Zacatecas was founded In 1546 and was built over a rich vein 
of silver discovered by Juan de Tolosa in the same year. This 
and other mines in the vicinity attracted a large population, 
and it soon became one of the chief mining centres of Mexico. 
It was made a city in 1585 by Philip II. 

ZACH, FRANZ XAVER, Bason von (1754-1839), German 
astronomer, was born at Pesth on the 4th of June 1754. He 
served for some time in the Austrian army, and afterwards lived 
in London from 1783 to 1786 as tutor in the house of the Saxon 
minister, Count BrQhl. In 1786 he was appointed by Ernest II. 
of Saxe-Coburg-Gotha director of the new* observatory on the 
Sccbcrg at Gotba, which was finished in 1791. From 1806 
Zach accompanied the duke's widow on her travels m the south 
of Europe. He died in Paris on the 2nd of September 1832 

Zach published TabUs of the Sun (Cotha, 1793; new and improved 
edition, ibid., 1804). and numerous papers on geographical subjects, 
particularly on the geographical positions of many towns and 
places, which he determined on his travels with a sextant. His 
principal importance was, however, as editor of three scientific 
journals of great value: AUgrmeine Ceographische Ephemeriden 
(4 vols.. Cotha. 1798-99), Monadiche Correspondent xur Befarderuug 
der Erd- mnd Uimmds-Kunde (28 vols., Cotha, 1800-13, from 1807 
edited by B. von Lindcnau). and Correspondence astronomique. gto- 
grapkique, hydrogratktque, el statistique (Genoa. 1818-26, 14 vols., 
and one number of the 15th suppressed at the instigation of the 
Jesuits). 

ZACHARIAE VON UNGENTHAL, KARL SALOMO (1760- 
1843), German jurist, was born on the 14th of September 1769 
at Meissen in Saxony, the son of a lawyer, and received his early 
education at the famous public school of St Afra in that town. 
He afterwards studied philosophy, history, mathematics and 
law at the university of Leipzig. In 1792 he went to Wittenberg 
University as tutor to one of the counts of Lippe, and con- 
tinued his legal studies. In 1704 he became privataostnt, 
lecturing on canon law, in 1708 extraordinary professor, and 
1802 ordinary professor of feudal law. From that time to his 
death in 1843, with the exception of a short period m which 
public affairs occupied him, he poured out a succession of works 
covering the whole field of jurisprudence, and was a copious 
contributor to periodicals. In 1807 he received a call to 
Heidelberg, then beginning its period of splendour as a school 
of law. There, resisting many calls to Gtttingen, Berlin and 
other universities, he remained until his death. In 18*0 he 
took his seat, as representative of his university, in the upper 
house of the newly constituted parliament of Baden. Though 



be himself prepared many reforms— notably in the harsh 
criminal code-— be was, by instinct and conviction, conservative 
and totally opposed to the violent democratic spirit which 
dominated the second chamber, and brought it into conflict 
with the grand-duke and the German federal government. 
After the remodelling of the constitution in a " reactionary " 
sense, ho was returned, in 1825, by the district of Heidelberg 
to the second chamber, of which he became the first vice- 
president, and in which he proved himself more " loyal " than 
the government itself. With the growth of parliamentary 
Liberalism, however, be grew disgusted with politics, from which 
be retired altogether in 1820. He now devoted himself wholly 
to juridical work and to the last days of his life toiled with 
the ardour of a young student. His fame extended beyond 
Germany. The German universities then enjoyed, in regard 
to legal questions of international importance, a jurisdiction 
dating from the middle ages; and Zachariae was often con- 
sulted as to questions arising in Germany, France and England. 
Elaborate " opinions," some of them forming veritable treatises 
— -e.g. on Sir Augustus d'Este's claim to the dukedom of Sussex, 
Baron de Bode's daim as an English subject to a share in the 
French indemnity, the dispute as to the debts due to the elector 
of Hesse-Cassel, confiscated by Napoleon, and the constitutional 
position of the Mecklenburg landowner s w er e composed by 
Zachariae. Large fees which he received for these opinions 
and the great popularity of his lectures made him rich, and he 
was able to buy several estates; from one of which, Lingenthal, 
be took his title when, in 1842, he was ennobled by the grand- 
duke. He died on the 27th of March 1843. He had married 
in 181 1, but bis wife died four years later, leaving him a son, 
Karl Eduard. 

Zachariae's true history is in his writings, which are extremely 
numerous and multifarious. They deal with almost every branch 
of jurisprudence; they are philosophical, historical and practical, 
and relate to Roman, Canon, German, French and English law. 
The first book of much consequence which he published was Die 
Binheit da Stoats und der Kirch* mil Rtieksicht auf die Deutsche 
Reteksverfossung (1797), a work on the relations of church and 
state, with special reference to the c 



. _ constitution of the empire, which 

displayed the writer's power of analysis and his skill in making a 
complicated set of facts appear to be deductions from a few prin- 
ciples. In 1805 appeared Versuch einer atlgemeinen Hermeneutik 
des Rechts; and in 1806 Die Wissensehaft der Cesetzgebung, an 
attempt to find a new theoretical basis for society in place of the 
opportunist politics which had led to the cataclysm of the French 
Revolution. This basis he seemed to discover in something re- 
sembling Bentham's utilitarianism. Zachariae's last work of 
importance was Viertig Butcher vom Staate (1830-42), to which his 
admirers point as his enduring monument. It has been compared 
to Montesquieu's V Esprit des his. and covers no small part of the 
field of Buckle's first volume of the History of Civilization. But 
though it contains proof of vast erudition and many original ideas 
as to the future of the state and of law, it lacks logical sequence, 
and is, consequently, full of contradictions. Its fundamental 
theory is, that the state had its origin, not in a contract (Rousseau- 
Kant), but in the consciousness of a legal duty. What Macbiavelli 
was to the Italians and Montesquieu to the French, Zachariae 
aspired to become to the Germans; but be lacked their patriotic 
inspiration, and so failed to exercise any permanent influence on 
the constitutional law of his country. Among other important 
works of Zachariae arc his Staatsreckt, and his treatise on the Code 
Napoleon, of which several French editions were ^published, and 
which was translated into Italian. Zachariae edited with Karl 
Joseph Mittcrmaier the Kritiscke Zritschrifl fur Rtchtswisseuschaft 
und Gesettgehuug des Auslandes, and the introduction which be 
wrote illustrates his wide reading and his constant desire for new 
light upon old problems. Though Zachariae's works have been 
superseded, they were in their day epoch-making, and they have 
been superseded by books which, without them, could not have been 
written. 

For an account of Zachariae and his works, sec Robert von 
Mohl. Cesckuhte u. Literatur der Staatswissenschaften (1855-58), 
and Charles Brocher, K. S. Zachariae, sa vie et us enures (1870); 
cf. abo his biography in AUgem. Deutsche Biograpkie (vol. 44) by 
Wilbdm Fischer, and Hottsendorff. Retkls-Ltxicou, Zachariae von 
Lingenthal* 

His son, Kail Eduabd Zanuaui (181 2-1 894), also an 
eminent jurist, was born on the 24th of December 1812, and 
studied philosophy, history, mathematics and languages, as 
weil as jurispn^iciw^, at Le^xzig. Berlm and Heidelberg. Having 



ZACHARIAS, ST— ZAIMUKHT 



950 

made Roman and Byzantine law his special study, he visited 
Paris in 1832 to examine Byzantine MSS., went in 1834 to 
St Petersburg and Copenhagen for the same purpose, and in 
1835 worked in the libraries of Brussels, London, Oxford, 
Dublin, Edinburgh and Cambridge. After a few months as a 
practising lawyer and prbatdvunl at Heidelberg, he went in 
1837, in search of materials, to Italy and the East, visiting 
Athens, Constantinople and the monasteries of Mount Athos. 
Having a taste for a country life, and none for teaching, he gave 
up his position as extraordinary professor at Heidelberg, and 
in 1845 bought an estate in the Prussian province of Saxony. 
Here he lived, engaged in scientific agriculture and interested 
in Prussian politics, until his death on the 3rd of June 1804. 

He produced an enormous mass of works of great Importance 
for student* of Byzantine law. The task to which he devoted his 
life was, to discover and classify the sources of Byzantine law 
hidden away in the libraries of the East and West; to re-edit, in 



life was, to discover and classify the sources of Byzantine law 
hidden away in the libraries of the East and West; to re-edit, in 
the light of modern criticism, those sources which had already 



been published; to write the history of Byzantine law on the basis 
of this hitherto undiscovered material; and finally, to apply the 
results to the scientific elucidation of the Justinian law. His Jus 



Gratoo-Rotnanum, of which the first part was published in 1856, 
the last in 1891, is the best and most complete collection of the 
sources of Byzantine law and of the Novels from the time of 
Justin II. to 1453. On the general history of the subject he wrote 
two epoch-making works, the Histohae Gneto-Romani juris dt- 
lineatw, cum appeudice ineditarum (Heidelberg, 1839). and Inuere 
GesckichU des grieschisch-rdmischen Rechts. I. Personalrecht; 



last work, which covered ground hitherto unexplored. Byzantine is 
treated as a development of Justinian law, and incidentally many 
obsenre points in the economic and agrarian conditions of the 
Eastern empire are elucidated. For a list of Zachariae's other works, 
see AUgem. Deutsche Biogr^ art. by Wilhelm Fischer. 

ZACHARIAS, ST, pope from 741 to 753, was a Greek by birth, 
and appears to have been on intimate terms with Gregory III., 
whom he succeeded (November 741). Contemporary history 
dwells chiefly on his great personal influence with the Lombard 
king Luitprand, and with his successor Rachis; it was largely 
through his tact in dealing with these princes in a variety of 
emergencies that the exarchate of Ravenna was rescued from 
becoming part of the Lombard kingdom. A correspondence, 
of considerable extent and of great interest, between Zacharias 
and St Boniface, the apostle of Germany, is still extant, and 
shows how great was the influence of this pope on events then 
passing in France and Germany: he encouraged the deposition 
of Childeric, and it was with his sanction that Boniface crowned 
Pippin as' king of the Franks at Soissons in 752. Zacharias is 
stated to have remonstrated with the emperor Constantine 
Copronymus on the part he had taken in the iconoclastic con- 
troversy. He died on the 14th of March 75a, and was succeeded 
by Stephen VL 

The letters and decrees of Zacharias are 'published in Migne, 
Patrolog. UU. lxxxix. p. 917-960. 

ZAOAZIO (Zafcazlk), a town of Lower Egypt, capital of the 
province of Sharkia. Pop. (1007) 34,909, including 2617 Copts 
and 1355 Greeks. It is built on a branch of the Fresh Water 
or Ismailia canal, and on the Al-Mo'iz* canal (the ancient 
Tanitic channel of the Nile), and is 47 m. by rail N.NX. of 
Cairo. Situated on the Delta in the midst of a fertile district, 
Zagazig is a great centre of the cotton and grain trade of Egypt. 
It has large cotton factories and the offices of numerous European 
merchants. About a mile south of the town are the ruins of 
Bubastis (q.v.). 

ZAHRINGEN, the name of an old and influential German 
family, taken from the castle and village of that name near 
Frciburg-im-Breisgau. The earliest known member of the 
family was probably one Beaelin, a count in the Breisgau, who 
was living early in the nth century. Bezelin's son Bertold I. 
(d. 1078) was count of Zahringen and was related to the Hohen- 
staufen family. He received a promise of the duchy of Swabia, 
which, however, was not fulfilled, but in 1061 he was made 
duke of Carinthia. Although this dignity was a titular one only 
Bertold lost it when he joined a rising against the emperor 



Henry IV. in 1073. His son Bertold II. (d. n n), who like hia 
father fought against Henry IV., inherited the land of the 
counts of Rheinfelden in 1090 and took the title of duke of 
Zahringen; he was succeeded in turn by his sons, Bertold III. 
(d. xi 22) and Conrad (d. 1152). In 1127 Conrad inherited some 
land in Burgundy and about this date he was appointed by the 
German king, Lothair the Saxon, rector' of the kingdom of 
Burgundy or Aries. This office was held by the Zahringens 
until 1218 and hence they are sometimes called dukes of 
Burgundy. Bertold IV. (d. 11 86), who followed his father 
Conrad, spent much of his time in Italy in the train of the 
emperor Frederick I.; his son and successor, Bertold V. t 
showed his prowess by reducing the Burgundian nobles to order. 
This latter duke was the founder of the town of Bern, and when 
he died in February 1218 the main line of the Z&hringcn family 
became extinct. By extensive acquisitions of land the Zah- 
ringens had become very powerful in the districts now known 
as Switzerland and ' Baden, and when their territories were 
divided in 1218 part of them passed to the counts of Kyburg 
and thence to the house of Habsburg. The family now ruling 
in Baden is descended from Hermann, margrave of Verona 
(d. 1074), a son of duke Bertold I., and the grand-duke is thus 
the present representative of the Zahringens. 

See E. J. Leichtlen, Die Zdhringer (Freiburg, 1831); and E. 
Heyck, Geschkkte der Henoge von Zikringen (Freiburg, 1891), and 
Urkunden, Siegd und Wopfen der Henoge am Zahringen (Freiburg, 
1892). 

ZAHRINGEN, a village of Germany, in the grand duchy of 
Baden, situated under the western slope of the Black Forest, 
9 m.. from Freiburg-im-Breisgau, and on the railway from 
Heidelberg to Basel. Pop. (1900) 1200. Above the village on 
a spur of the mountains, 1500 ft. above the sea, lie the ruins of 
the castle of Zahringen, formerly the stronghold of the ducal 
line of that name (see above). 

See Schopflin, Historia Zaringch.Badensis (Karlsruhe, 1763-66, 
7 vols.). 

ZAILA, or Zetla; a town on the African coast of the Gulf of 
Aden, 124 m. S.W. of Aden and 200 m. N.N.E. of Harrar. 
Zaila is the most western of the ports of the British Somaliland 
protectorate, being 170 m. N.W. of Berbera by the coast caravan 
track. The town is surrounded on three sides by the sea; land- 
ward the country is unbroken desert for some fifty miles. The 
principal buildings, which date from the days of Egyptian 
occupation (1875-1884) are of white (coral) stone; the Somali 
dwellings are made of grass. Zaila has a good sheltered 
anchorage much frequented by Arab sailing craft, but heavy 
draught steamers are obliged to anchor a mile and a half from 
the shore. Small coasting boats lie off the pier and there is no 
difficulty in loading or discharging cargo. The water supply of 
the town is drawn from the wells of Takosha, about three miles 
distant; every morning camels, in charge of old Somali women 
and bearing goatskins filled with water, come into the town in 
picturesque procession. The population varies from 3000 to 
7000, the natives, who come in the cool season to barter their 
goods, retiring to the highlands in hot weather. The chief 
traders are Indians, the smaller dealers Arabs, Greeks and 
Jews. The imports, which reach Zaila chiefly via Aden, are 
mainly cotton goods, rice, jowarce, dates and silk; the exports 
— of which 00 per cent, are from Abyssinia— are principally 
coffee, skins, ivory, cattle, ghee and mother-of-pearl. 

Zaila owed its importance to its proximity to Harrar, the 
great entrepot for the trade of southern Abyssinia. The trade 
of the port received, however, a severe check on the opening 
(1901-2) of the railway to Harrar from the French port of 
Jibuti, which is 35 m. N.W. of Zaila. A steamer from Aden to Zaila 
takes fifteen hours to accomplish the journey ; caravans proceeding 
from Zaila to Harrar occupy from ten days to three weeks on 
the road. 

For history and trade statistics, see Somaliland, British. 

ZAIMUKHT, the name of a small Pathan tribe on the Kohat 
border of the North-West Frontier Province of India, The 
Zaimukhts inhabit the bills to the south of the Orakaais 



ZAIRJB— ZAMBEZI 



951 



between the M iranzai and Kurram vafcy*. Their country may be 
described as a triangle, with the range of hills known as the 
Samana as its base, and the village of Thai in the Kurram 
valley as its apex. This includes a tract on its western side 
occupied by an Orakzai clan. The total area is about 400 sq. m., 
of which the Ofakzais occupy a fourth. The Zaimukhts are a 
fine-looking powerful race, with a fighting strength of some 
3000 men. 

ZAIRB, a name by which the river Congo was formerly 
known. Zaire Is a Portuguese variant of a Bantu word (nzari) 
meaning river. In the 16th and 17th centuries the powerful 
native kingdom of Congo possessed both banks of the lower 
river, and the name of the country was in time given to the 
river also. Until, however, the last quarter of the 19th century 
"Zaire" was frequently used to designate the stream. It is 
so called by Camoens in the Lusted*. Since H. M. Stanley's 
discoveries " Congo " has become the general name for the 
river from its mouth to Stanley Falls, despite an effort on the 
part of Stanley to have the stream re-named Livingstone, (See 
Congo, river.) 

ZAISAN, or Zaisansk, a town of Russian Central Asia, in 
the province of Semipalatinsk, near the Chinese frontier, at an 
altitude of 9200 ft. and near the S.E. corner of Lake Zaisan. 
Fop. (1897) 4471. Lake Zaisan, situated lh an open valley 
between the Altai range on the north-east and the Tarbagatai 
on the south, b'es at an altitude of 1355 ft. Jt has a length of 
65 m., a width of 14 to 30 m., an area of 707 sq. m., and a 
maximum depth of 50 ft. Its water is fresh, as it receives 
the Black Irtysh and the Kendyrlyk from the east, and several 
small streams from the west, all of which leave the lake at its 
north-west extremity by the White Irtysh. The fisheries, 
which yield abundantly, are in the hands of the Siberian 
Cossacks. The lake is generally frozen from the beginning of 
November to the end of April. 

ZALEUCUS, of Locri Epizcphyrii in Magna Graecia, Greek 
lawgiver, is supposed to have flourished about 660 B.C. The 
statement that he was a pupil of Pythagoras is an anachronism. 
Little is known of him, and Timaeus even doubted his existence, 
but it is now generally agreed that this is an error. He is said 
to have been the author of the first written code of laws amongst 
the Greeks. According to the common story, the Locrians 
consulted the Delphic oracle as to a remedy for the disorder 
and lawlessness that were rife amongst them. Having been 
ordered to make laws for themselves, they commissioned one 
Zaleucus, a shepherd and slave (in later tradition, a man of 
distinguished family) to draw up a code. The laws of Zaleucus, 
which he declared had been communicated to him in a dream 
by Athena, the patron goddess of the city, were few and simple, 
but so severe that, like those of Draco, they became proverbial. 
They remained essentially unchanged for centuries, and the 
Locrians subsequently enjoyed a high reputation as upholders 
of the law. One of the most important provisions was that the 
punishment for different offences was definitely fixed, instead 
of being left to the discretion of the judge before whom a case 
was tried. The penalty for adultery was the loss of the eyes, 
and in general the application of the lex tolionis was enjoined 
as the punishment for personal Injuries. Special enactments 
concerning the rights of property, the alienation of land, settle* 
meat in foreign countries, and various sumptuary laws (<?.*. 
tile drinking of pure wine, except when ordered medicinally, 
was forbidden) are attributed to* him. After the code was 
firmly established, the Locrians introduced a regulation that, 
if a citizen interpreted a law differently from the cosmopolis 
(the chief magistrate), each had to appear before the council 
of One Thousand with a rope round his neck, and the one against 
whom the council decided was immediately strangled. Any 
one who proposed a new law or the alteration of one already 
existing was subjected to the same test, which continued in 
force till the 4th century and even later. Zaleucus is often 
confused with Charondaa, and the same story is told of their 
death. It is said that one of Zaleucus's laws forbade a citizen, 
under penalty of death, to enter the senate-house bearing a 



During the sties of- war, Zaleucua violated this law; 
and, on its being pointed out to aim, he committed suicide by 
throwing himself upon the point of his sword, declaring that the 
law must be vindicated. 

See Bentley, Dissertation on the Epistles of Pkalaris; F. D. 
Gerlach, ZaUukos, Charondas* Py&atoras (1858); G. Busolt, 
Griechtsche Geschicku, !.: SchoL on Pindar, Of. x. 17; Strabo vi. 
p. 259; Dtod. Sic. rii. 30, ti; Demosthenes, In Timoeratem, 
p. 744; Stobacua, FhrUftium, xUv. jo, ai, where the supposed 
of Zaleucus and the collection of laws as a whole is spurious; 
S.V., who makes him a native of Thurii; Cicero, DtUgibus, 
also article Greek Law. 

ZALMOXIS, or Zamolhs, a semi-mythical social and re- 
ligious reformer, regarded as the only true God by the Thracian 
Gctae. According to Herodotus (iv. 94), the Getae, who be- 
lieved in the immortality of the soul, looked upon death merely 
as going to Zalmoxis. Every five years they selected by lot 
one of the tribesmen as a messenger to the god. The man was 
thrown into the air and caught upon the points of spears. If 
he did not die, he was considered unfit to undertake the mission 
and another was chosen. By the euhemeristic Hellespontine 
Greeks Herodotus was told that Zalmoxis was really a man, 
formerly a slave of Pythagoras at Samoa, who, having obtained 
his freedom and amassed great wealth, returned to Thrace, and 
instructed his fellow-tribesmen in the doctrines of Pythagoras and 
the arts of civilization. He taught them that they would pass 
at death to a certain place, where they would enjoy all possible 
blessings for all eternity, and to convince them of this he had a 
subterranean chamber constructed, to which he withdrew for 
three years. Herodotus, who declines to commit himself as to 
the existence of Zalmoxis, expresses the opinion that in any case 
he must have lived long before the time of Pythagoras. It 
is probable that Zalmoxis is Sabazius. the Thraqian Dionysus 
or Zeus; Mnaseas of Patrae identified him with Cronus. In 
Plato (Ckarnides, 158 B) he Is mentioned with Abaris as skilled 
in the arts of incantation. No satisfactory etymology of the 
name has been suggested. 

ZAMAKH&HArF [ AbQ-1 Qasim MafcmOd ibn 'Umar us- 
Zamakhsharl] (1074-1143), Arabian theologian and grammarian, 
was born at Zamakhshar, a village of Khwarizm, studied at 
Bokhara and Samarkand, and enjoyed the fellowship of the 
jurists of Bagdad. For many years he stayed at Mecca, from 
which circumstance he was known as J&r~nUdh (" God's client "). 
Later he returned to Khwarizm, where he died at the capital 
Jurjanlyya* In theology he was a pronounced Mo'tazilile (see 
Mauoumedam Religion: section Sect*). Although he used 
Persian for some of his works he was a strong supporter of the 
superiority of the Arabic language and an opponent of the 
Shu'ubite movement. ZatnakhsharTs fame as a commentator 
rests upon his commentary on the Koran, called al-Kashskdf 
(" the Revcaler "). In spite of its Mo'tazilite theology it was 
famous among scholars and was the basis of the widely-read 
commentary of Baidhlwl (?.».). It has been edited by W. 
Nassau Lees (Calcutta, 1856), and has been printed at Cairo 
(1800). Various glosses on it have been written by different 
authors. His chief grammatical work is the Kitdb nl-mufassat, 
written about 1120 and edited by J. P. Broch (;nd ed. a 
Cmistiania, 1870). Many commentaries have been written on 
this work, the fullest being that of Ibn YaTsh (d. 1245), edited 
by G. Jahn (a vols., Leipzig, 1876-86). 

Of his lexicographical works the Kii&b linoaddimat id- A dab was 
edited as Somackxharii Lexicon Arab. Pen. (ed. J. G. Wet/stein. 
2 vols., Leipzig, 1844), and the Aids ut-baligka, a lexicon of choice 
words and phrases* was printed at Bulaq, 188a. Of his adab works 
the Naw&bxtk ul-kalim, an anthology, was edited by H. A. Schultens 
(Leiden. 1772), by £. de Mcvnard in the Journal asiatique, ser. 7, 
vol. vi., pp. 31J n. (cf. M. de Goeje in Zrilschr. d. deutsch. morg. 
GeseUuhafi, voL xxx. pp. 569 ft*.). The Atw&q vdk-DMokab was 



edited by J. von Hammer-Purgstall (Vienna, "1835); by 



H. L. 
and by 



Fleischer (Leipxjg, 1835); by G. Weil (Stuttgart. 1861); ar _ 
B. de Mcynerd (Paris, 1876 ; cf. de Goeje as above). (C W. T.) 

ZAMBEZI, the fourth in size of the rivers of Africa, and the 
largest of those flowing eastwards to the Indian Ocean. Its 
length (taking all curves into consideration) is about sioo m. 
The area of its basin, according to Dr Bludau, is 513.500 sq. m* 



952 



ZAMBEZI 



or rather leas than half that of the Nile. The main channel is 
clearly marked from beginning to end. The river takes its 
rise in x i° n' 3' S., 14° 22' E. The source lies in British territory 
in a depression of an undulating country 5000 ft. above the 
sea, covered with bracken and open forest. The water, like 
that of all the rivers of the neighbourhood, issues from a black 
marshy bog { and quickly collects into a well-defined stream. 
In the first hundred miles of its course the river is known as the 
Yambeshe— in sound almost identical with its name in its 
bwer course, though intervening sections are known as Liam- 
beshe, Liambai, &c. Eastward of the source the water- 
parting between the Congo and Zambezi basins is a well-marked 
belt of high ground, falling abruptly north and south, and 
running nearly east and west between n° and 12° S. This 
distinctly cuts off the basin of the Luapula (the main branch 
of the upper Congo) from that of the Zambezi. In the neighbour- 
hood of the source, however, the water-parting is not so dear, 
but the two river systems do not connect. 

The Upper River.— The infant Zambezi, after pursuing a south- 
westerly course for about 150 m., turns more directly south and, 
toon after the 12" S. is crossed, is joined by a stream (coroine from 
the north-west) whose source is near a marshy lake called Dilolo, 
4600 ft. above sea-levd in n* 50' S., 22* 10' E. Lake Dilolo was 
at one time believed to communicate with the Kasai river, one of 
the great affluents of the Congo flowing north-west, but this is not 
the case. Dilolo belongs to the Zambezi system only, sending water 
to that river after heavy rain. The Zambezi as it flows southward 
receives on either side numerous small tributaries. A few miles 
above Kakengi (in 12" 24' S.), the Zambezi, narrow, picturesque 
and tortuous, suddenly widens from 100 to 350 yds. Below 
Kakengi arc a number of rapids ending (13* 7' S.) in the Sapuma 
cataracts. At this point the river flows tumultuously through a 
rocky fissure. 

The first of its large tributaries to enter the Zambezi b the 
Kabompo, a left-hand affluent. It joins the main stream in 
14° 26' S. A little lower down (in 14" 18' S.) the Zambezi receives 
from the west the waters of a much larger stream than the Kabompo, 
namely, the Lungwebungu. (For details concerning these and the 
other chief tributaries of the Zambezi, see below.) The savannah 
forest, which has hitherto characterized the country, now gives 
place to a more open bush valley, studded with Borassus palms. 
Dense vegetation is confined to narrow strips of matted forest which 
skirt the first few hundred yards of the sources of the Zambezi 
and its tributaries during the first too m. or so. The land, from 
5000 ft. at the source, tails gradually to 3600 ft. at Kakengi— a 
distance of 220 m. From this point until the Victoria Falls are 
reached— 500 m. — the level of the Zambezi basin is-very uniform, 
the fall being in this distance 600 ft. only. Twenty miles below 
the confluence of the Lungwebungu the country becomes flat, and 
in the rainy seasons is largely covered by floods. Some 50 m. 
farther down, the Luanginga, which with its tributaries drains a 
large area to the westward, joins the Zambezi. A few miles higher 
up on the cast the main stream is reinforced by the waters of the 
Luena. On the same (eastern) side a little below the junction of 
the Luanginga and the Zambezi stands Lialui, the capital of the 
Barotse (?.».). The river, which for some distance has had a flight 
western as well as southern trend, now turns distinctly south-east. 
From the east the Zambezi continues to receive numerous small 
streams, but on the west is without tributaries for 150 m., when 
Che great river formerly misnamed the Chobe, but known to the 
natives as Kwando or Linyante, joins it (in 17° 47' S.). Before 
this junction is effected, the Gonye Falls, the work of erosion 
[16 s 40' S.), offer an interruption to navigation, whilst below the 
falls are numerous rapids. The western bank of the Zambezi, 
which in this part of its course is very tortuous, is German territory 
from the most southern of these rapids— Katima Molilo (17* 2%' S.) 
—to the confluence of the Kwando, including the right or northern 
bank of the lower course of the last-named river; this narrow strip 
of land projecting from the main portion of German South-Wcst 
Africa expressly to allow Germany access to the Zambesi. 

Below the junction of the Kwando and the Zambezi the river 
bends almost due east. The stream has hitherto flowed, in the 
main, in a gentle steady current, the depth of water, owing to the 
breadth of the channel, not being great. But hs character is about 
to change. As it flows eastward towards the border of the great 
central plateau of Africa it reaches a tremendous chasm in the floor 
of the earth, and thus the Victoria Falls (4.9.), the largest waterfalls 
In the world, are formed. 

The Middle Zambezi.— The Victoria Falls are reached some 60 m. 
after the Kwando confluence is passed, and below them the river 
continues to flow due east for about 120 m. It then cuts its way 
through perpendicular walls of basalt from 60 to 100 ft. apart. 
This dismal canyon, named by Major St Hill Gibbons " The Devil's 



i 



Gorge," is 8 m. long. Towering over the rocks which form the 
\ of the river are precipitous hills* 700 to 800 it. hich. The 



Oorgc, 
banks < 



nver flows swiftly through the gorge, the current being < 

interrupted by reefs. Beyond the gorge are a succession of rapids, 
ending with those called Molelc, which is 146 m. below the Victoria 
Falls. In this distance the fall of the river is 800 ft. From the 
Devil's Gorge the Zambezi takes a decided trend north whilst still 
pursuing its general easterly course. For the neat 700 m, until 
the Kebrabasa Rapids are reached, the river flows through well- 
defined and occasionally rocky banks. Besides the rapids already 
mentioned there are several others in the middle stretch of the 
river, forming impediments to navigation at low water. One of 
the most difficult passages is that of a grand gorge a little above the 
mouth of the Loangwa, in about 30* £., namedby Major Gibbon* 
Livingstone's Kanba, in distinction • from a second Kariha 
(- ,f gorge") a little beyond the Kafukwe confluence. Between 
the two gorges the river is generally unobstructed, but at the 
western end of the second Kariba navigation is dangerous at km 
water. Exclusive of the Shire (qjo.) the Loangwa and the Kafukwe 
(also called Kafue) just mentioned are the two largest left-hand 
tributaries of the Zambezi. The Kafukwe joins the main river in 
15* 57* S. in a quiet deep stream about 200 yds. wide. From this 
point the northward bend of the Zambezi is checked and the stream 
continues due east. At the confluence of the Loangwa (13* 37' S.) 
it enters Portuguese territory, and from this point to the sea both 
banks of the river belong to that kingdom. At the Kebrabasa 
Rapids— goo m. below the Victoria Falls— the Zambesi is sharply 
deflected to the south, the river at this point breaking through the 
continental escarpment to reach the sea. The Kebrabasa Rapids, 
which extend about 45 m. — the road taking a detour of 70 m. — 
are absolutely unnavigable, and with them the middle stretch of 
the Zambezi as definitely ends as does the upper river at the 
Victoria Falls. 

The Lamer River.— The lower Zambezi— 400 m. from Kebrabasa 
Rapids to the sea — presents no obstacles to navigation save the 
shallowness of the stream in many places in the dry season. This 
shallowness arises from the different character of the river basin. 
Instead of, as in the case of the middle Zambezi, flowing mainly 
through hilly country with well-defined banks, the river traverses 
a broad valley and spreads out over a large area. Only at one point, 
the Lupata Gorge, 200 m. from its mouth, is the river confined be- 
tween high hills. Here it is scarcely 200 yds. wide. Elsewhere it 
is from 3 to 5 m. wide, flowing gently in many streams. The river- 
low ai 



bed is sandy, the banks arc 



r in many 
reed-l 



and reed-fringed. 



however, ana especially in the rainy season, the street 

one broad swift-flowing river. About 100 m. from the sea the 



At 

unite into 



Zambezi receives the drainage of Lake Nyasa through the rivi 
-•-- - •• ft reaches in j8* 50/ ! 



— „_ ,_ _ — „_ — _ nver 

Shirt*. On approaching the ocean, which ft reaches in j8* 50' S. 
the Zambezi splits up into a number of branches and forms a wide 
delta. Each of the four principal mouths— Milambe, Kongone, 
Luabo and Timbwe — is obstructed by a sand-bar. A more northerly 
branch, called the Chinde mouth, has a minimum depth at low 
water of 7 ft. at the entrance, and of 12 ft. farther in, and is the 
branch used for navigation. Sixty miles farther north is a river 
called the Qua-Qua or QuUimane, from the town founded by the 
Portuguese at its mouth. This stream, which is silting up, re- 
ceives in the rainy season the overflow of the Zambezi. 

The region drained by the Zambezi may be represented as a vast 
broken-edged plateau 3000 or 4000 ft. high, composed in the 
remote interior of metamorphic beds and fringed with the igneous 
rocks of the Victoria Falls. At Shupanga, on the lower Zambezi, thin 
strata of grey and yellow sandstones, with an occasional band of 
limestone, crop out on the bed of the river in the dry season, and 
these persist beyond Tete, where they are associated with extensive] 
seams of coal. Coal is also found in the district just below the 
Victoria Falls. Gold-bearing rocks occur in several places. 

Four Thousand Miles of Navigable Water.— As a highway into the 
interior of the continent the Zambezi, like all other large African 
rivers, in greater or less degree, suffers on account of the bar at its 
mouth, the shallowness of its stream, and the rapids and cataracts 
which interrupt its course. Nevertheless its importance JLo com- 
merce is great, as the following recapitulation of its navigable 
stretches will show. (1) From the sea to the Kebrabasa Rapids, 
400 m. (2) From Chtkoa (above Kebrabasa) to within 140 a. of 
the Victoria Falls, 700 m. (3) From the rapids above the Victoria 
Falls to the Katima Molilo Rapids, 100 m. (4) Above the Gonye 
Falls to the Supuma cataract, 300 m. (3) Above the Supuma 
cataract, I2Q m. Thus for 1620 m. of its course the Zambezi is 
navigable for steamers with a draught of from 18 to 28 in. Were 
the obstruction caused by the Kebrabasa Rapids removed, there 
would be a clear passage from the sea almost to the foot of the 
cataracts below the Victoria Falls. The difficulty at Kebrabasa 
might be removed either by the cutting of a side channel or the 
building of a dam to convert the gorge into a lake, to be connected 
with the river below by a lock and weir. 

Several of the Zambezi affluents are also navigable for many 
miles. The Lungwebungu, which enters the upper river, is navigable 
for a long distance, thus supplying communication with the extreme 
north-west corner of the Zambezi basin. Parts at least of the 
Luena, Kafukwe, Loangwa and the Kwando tributaries are also 
capable of being navigated. The possibility of connecting the 



ZAMBOANGA— ZAMINDAWAR 



953 



Kwando with the navigable waters of the Okavaago, at the point 
where the overflow mentioned below takes place, has likewise been 
suggested. The Shire is also navigable for a considerable distance. 
The sum of such navigable reaches within the Zambezi basin as 
exceed too m. b nearly 4000 m. 

Tributaries.— The tributaries of the Zambesi are very numerous. 
The course of the more important streams is as follows: The 
Kabompo, which flows in from the east in about 14° 8' S., rises not 
far from li* 34' S., 25* if E. in the high land which forms the 
eastern watershed between the Zambesi and Congo systems. In 
I3i° S. it receives on the right bank a tributary, the Lunga. said 
to be more important than the upper Kabompo itself, and rising 
somewhat farther north. The Lungwebungu. which enters the 
Zambezi from the west in 14* 35' S.. is a strong, deep stream 200 yds. 
wide in its upper course, flowing in a valley bordered by undula- 
tions of white sand covered by thin forest, it* floor forming at times 
an inundated plain 2 to 3 m. wide. 

The Kwando, largest of the western affluents of the Zambezi, 
formerly known as the Chobe and frequently spoken of as the 
Linyante from the ruined capital of the Makoloto, situated on its 
lower course, rises in about 12' 40' S„ 18 30' £., and flows in a 
generally straight course south-east to 17* 30' S., at which point it 
makes a sudden bend to the south before flowing east to the 
Zambesi. In thb eastward stretch the Kwando for some 70 m. 
flows through a vast reedy swamp or lake studded with alluvial 
islands. Apart from its bead-streanu, it receives most of its tribu- 
taries from the west, and at its most southern bend is joined by the 
Magwe'-kwana, which in time of flood receives 8ome of the surplus 
water of the Okavango (see Ncami). This surplus water, received 
after most of the flood water of the Kwando has passed, raises the 
level of the lake and holds up the waters of the Kwando for some 
miles above it. 

Of the streams which enter the upper Zambezi from the east, the 
largest, after the Kabompo, is the Luena, which rises in 16* S., 
26* E., and flows first north-west, afterwards west-south-west, 
joining the main river a little north of 15° S. Others are the Njoko 
joining in 17* 8' S., the MachilL which enters in about 25* E., the 
Lumbi. 16* 45' S., and the Umgwezi. ij* 37' S. The largest 
tributary of the middle Zambezi—the Kafulcwe — riser in about 
11 * 35' 5. at an elevarion of 4400 ft. in thick forest country. The 
main head-stream, which flows first south-east, afterwards south- 
west, is joined in 14* 35' S. by the Lunga or Luanga, an important 
right-bank tributary, the united stream then flowing first south, 
afterwards due east. The lower Kafukwe b a large navigable 
river until about 40 m. from its mouth, but it then descends from 
the plateau by a series of fans and cataracts, the drop being over 
1000 ft. in 15 m., one very high fall occurring in a stupendous 
chasm. The next great tributary to the cast is the Loangwa (also 
called Luangwa) which in its upper course runs parallel to the 
western shores of Lake Nyasa, having its source not far from the 
north-west corner of the lake. The main stream flows in a generally 
level valley, bounded by steep plateau escarpments, and b for the 
most part shallow and rapid, though fairly wide. In 14° 30' S., 
however, it passes through narrow gorges with a speed of 8 or o ra. 
an hour. In 15° 5' S. it.b joined by the Lunsefwa, which, with its 
tributary, the Lukosasi, drains a large extent of the western plateau, 
its basin being separated by the Mchinga mountains from that of 
the Loangwa. The Loangwa joins the Zambezi a little above the 
town of iZumbo. For some distance its lower course forms the 
frontier between Portuguese and British territory. From the south 
the middle Zambesi receives various rivers which water northern 
Matabele and Mashona lands — namely, the Shangani, Sanyati.and 
Hanyani, besides minor streams. The Mazoc. which also rises in 
Mashonaland, joins the Zambezi below the Kebcaba&a Rapids. 

Exploration of the Jfcrwr.— The Zambesi region was known to 
the medieval geographers as the empire of Monomotapa and 
the course of the river, as well as the position of Lakes Ngami 
and Nyasa', was filled in with a rude approximation to accuracy 
in the earlier maps. These were probably constructed from 
Arajb information. The first European to vbit the upper 
Zambesi was David Livingstone in his exploration from Bechu- 
analatui between 1851 and 1853. Two or three years later he 
descended the Zambesi to its mouth and in the coarse of thb 
journey discovered the Victoria Falls. During 1858-60, accom- 
panied by Dr (afterwards Sir) John Kirk, Livingstone ascended 
the river by the Kongooe mouth as far as the Fails, besides 
tracing the course of its tributary the Shire and discovering Lake 
Nyasa. For the next thirty-five years practically no additions 
were made to our knowledge of the river system. In 1889 the 
entrance of vessels from the sea was much facilitated by the 
discovery by Mr D. J. Rankin of the Cbinde channel north of 
the main mouths of the river. Major A. St Hill Gibbons and 
his assistants, during two expeditions, in 1805-06 and 1808-1000, 
ably continued the work of exploration begun by Livingstone 



in the upper basin and central course of the river. Of non- 
British travellers Major Serpa Pinto examined some of the 
western tributaries of the river and made measurements of 
the Victoria Falls (1878). Steamers had been used on the lower 
river— the " Ma-Robert" and the "Pioneer "—by the Livingstone 
expedition of 1858-61, but the utilization of the Zambesi ss a 
comment highway was inconsiderable until after the discovery 
of the Cbinde mouth. The first steamer placed on the river 
above the Kebrabasa Rapids was the "Constance " launched 
by the Gibbons expedition at Chikoa in September 1898. She 
steamed to beyond- the Guay confluence, and being ultimately 
sold to a commercial company, was used to carry goods on the 
middle Zambesi. The first steamer placed on the river above 
the Victoria Falls was the "Livingstone," launched in August 
1901. 

See David and CfcnfWi Livingtt one, Narratfe* of an Expedition 
to the Zambesi and its Tributaries 1 18G5K A. dc ^crpa Pinto, How I 
Crossed Africa (1881 1; D. J. Rankin in Fnx- R- G. S. (March. 
1800); A. Sharpe. Hid. (December. 1890); R S Bhrar, "Curs© 
medio do Zambeze," D, S. C. Luhoa, vol. ixiv- (1906); G. W. 
Lamplugh in Ceo. Jnl., vol xxxi. fr.908): F. Coillard, On the 
Threshold of Central A ttk<i (London^ IB97), and A. St H. Gibbons. 
Africa from South to N&rtk tkrvurh Marvbelawi {2 vols., London, 
1904),. which gives the result* of a detailed rumination of the 
upper Zambezi valley (wStk nao>. The Li^t-iumed author has 
kindly revised the accuum ^vca above, (F. R. C.) 

ZAMBOAXQA, the capital of the Moro Province, and of the 
District (or Comandancia) of Zamboanga, and a port of entry, 
on the island of Mindanao, Philippine Islands, at the S. ex- 
tremity of the western peninsula. Pop. (1003) 3281; of the 
comandancia, 90,692. Zamboanga has one of the most health- 
ful sites in the islands, its climate being decidedly cooler than 
that of Manila. Since the American occupation the trade has 
greatly increased and various improvements have been planned 
or are underway, including a new custom-house, better facilities 
for docking, pavements, bridges, and public parks. The Pro- 
vincial Capitol, one of the finest government buildings in the 
Philippines, was completed in 1008. There is considerable 
valuable timber in the vicinity, live-stock is extensively raised, 
and rice, copra, hemp, sugar-cane, tobacco, and sweet potatoes 
are other important products. Zamboanga was one of the 
oldest Spanish settlements in the islands, it having been taken 
and fortified, as a base against the Moras, and it still contains 
an old stone fort. Many of the inhabitants are descendants 
of slaves who escaped from the More* and sought Spanish 
protection. A Spanish patois, called " Zamhoangumo," is 
spoken by most of the native inhabitants. 

ZAMIJfDAR, or Zeminda* (from Persian xamin- "land"), 
an Indian landholder. In official usage the term is applied to 
any person, whether owner of a large estate or cultivating 
member of a village community, who is recognised as possessing 
some property in the soil, as opposed to the ryot (tf.t.), who is 
regarded as having only a tight 0/ occupancy, subject in both 
cases to payment of the land revenue assessed on his holding. 
The tamindari system obtains throughout northern and 
central India, and also in the permanently settled estates 
of Madras. 

The raja of Benares had certain special rights as zemindar, 
and in 1910 it was arranged to make part of his " family 
domain" a new native state with an area of 887 sq. m. (pop; 
362,000). 

ZAMINDAWAR. a district of Afghanistsn, situated on the 
right bank of the Helmund river to the N.W. of Kandahar, 
bordering the road which leads from Kandahar to Herat via 
Farah. Zamindawar is a district of hills, and of wide, well 
populated, and fertile valleys watered by important affluents 
of the Helmund. The principal town is Musa Kala, which 
stands on the banks of a river of the same name, about 60 m. 
N. of Girishk. The whole of this region is a well-known hot- 
bed of fanaticism, the headquarters of the Achakxais, the most 
aggressive of all Durani tribes. It was from Zamindawar that 
much of the strength of the force which besieged Kandahar 
under Ayub Khan in 1880 was derived; and it was the Zamiq- 



95+ 



ZAMORA— ZAMOYSKI 



dawar contingent of tribesmen who so nearly defeated Sir 
Donald Stewart's force at Ahmad Khel previously. The control 
of Zamindawar may be regarded as the key to the position for 
safeguarding the route between Herat and Kandahar. 

ZAMORA, an inland province of north-western Spain, one 
of the three into which the former province of Leon has since 
X833 been divided; bounded on the W. by Portugal and Orense, 
N. by Leon, E. by Valladolid, and S. by Salamanca. Pop. 
(1000) 275,545; area, 4097 sq. m. Zamora is traversed from 
east to west by the river Duero or Douro (?.».), which receives- 
within the province the Valderaduey anoV the Esla on the right 
and the Guarena on the left; the Tormes also skirts the south- 
western boundary for some 25 m. Except fn the north-west, 
where it is entered by two outlying ridges of the Cantabrian 
Mountains, the Sierra dc la Culebra and Sierra dc Pefta Negra,. 
the surface consists of a level or slightly undulating plateau; 
its lowest point is 1070 ft. above sea-level. Its plains, especially 
the valley of the Esla, yield large quantities of grain and pulse; 
wine and flax are also produced; and on the higher grounds 
large numbers of merino sheep and goats are reared, chiefly 
for export to Portugal. The manufactures of Zamora are 
unimportant. Three lines of railway, from Astorga on the N., 
Salamanca on the S., and Medina del Campo on the E., traverse 
the province and meet at the city of Zamora; there is a lack 
of good roads, and it is largely for this reason that the mines 
and extensive forests are neglected. The only towns with more 
than 5000 inhabitants are Zamora (pop., 1000, 16,287) and Toro 
(8379), which are described in separate articles. The people 
of the province are very poor, badly educated, and lacking in 
enterprise. (See also Leon.) 

ZAMORA, an episcopal city, and the capital of the Spanish 
province of Zamora; on the Tight bank of the river Duero 
(Douro), and at the junction of railways from Salamanca, 
Medina del Campo and Astorga. Pop. (1000) 16,283. Zamora 
occupies a rocky height overlooking the Duero, a little below 
its confluence with the Valderaduey. The river is crossed by a 
fine 14th-century bridge of sixteen pointed arches. The citadel 
of Zamora dates from the 8th century. The small but beautiful 
cathedral, -one of four 12th-century churches in the city, is a 
Romanesque building, with a square tower, a dome above the 
crossing, and an elaborately-decorated interior. It was com- 
pleted about X175, and contains some interesting medieval 
tombs, and paintings by Fernando Gallegos (1475-1550)- The 
other principal buildings are the 17th-century town-hall, the 
palace of the provincial assembly, a hospital with curious 
Gothic windows, an ecclesiastical seminary, and a school of 
engineering. The trade is chiefly agricultural, but linen and 
woollen goods, pottery, hats, leather, and spirits are manu- 
factured in small quantities. 

In the early period of the Christian re-conquest Zamora, 
from its position on the north bank of the Duero, was a place 
of considerable strategic importance. It was taken from the 
Moors by Alphonso I. of Leon in 748, but was again held by 
them for. short periods in 813, 939, 963, 984 &nd 986. It was 
entirely repaired by Ferdinand I. of Castile and Leon,, who in 
xo6i gave it to his daughter Dona Urraca. After his death in 
X065 his son Sancho II. disputed possession with Urraca and 
laid siege to the city, but without success, although the famous 
Ruy Diaz de Bivar was among his warriors, and indeed at this 
time received his title of " The Cid." Zamora became subject 
to Alphonso VI. in 1073. 

ZAMOYSKI, JAN (1 541-1605), Polish statesman, was the 
son of Stanislaw, Castellan of Chelm, and Anna Herburtowna, 
who belonged to one of the most ancient and illustrious families 
in Poland. After completing his education at Paris, Strassburg, 
and at Padua, where as rector of the academy he composed his 
celebrated work De tenalu romano (Venice, 1563), he returned 
home in 1565, one of the most consummate scholars and jurists 
in Europe. His essentially bold and practical genius sought 
at once the stormy political arena. He was mainly instru- 
mental, after the death of Sigismund II., in remodelling the 
Polish constitution and procuring the^ election of Henry oi 



Valois. After the Bight of that prince Zamoyski seems to have 
aimed at the throne himself, but quickly changed his mind said 
threw all his abilities into the scale in favour of Stephen Bathory 
and against the Austrian influence. By his advice, at the 
beginning of January 1576 a diet was summoned to Jedrzejow 
to confirm the election of Bathory, and from the time of that 
monarch's arrival in Poland till his death ten years later 
Zamoyski was his foremost counsellor. Immediately after the 
coronation, on the xst of May 1576, Zamoyski was appointed 
chancellor, and in 1580 widki hctman, or commander-in-chief, 
so that he was now the second highest dignitary in the kingdom. 
He strenuously supported Stephen during his long struggle 
with Ivan the Terrible, despite the obstruction and parsimony: 
of the diet. He also enabled, the king in 1585 to bring the 
traitorous Samuel Zborowski to the scaffold in the face of a 
determined resistance from the nobility. On the death of 
Stephen, the Zborowski recovered their influence and did their 
utmost to keep Zamoyski in the background. Their violence' 
prevented " the pasha," as they called him, from attending 
the convention summoned to Warsaw on the death of Bathory; 
but at the subsequent election diet; which met at Warsaw on 
the 9th of July 1587, he appeared at the head of 6000 veterans 
and intrenched himself with his partisans in what was called 
"the Black Camp" in contradistinction to "the General 
Camp " of the Zborowski. Zamoyski was at first in favour of a 
member of the Bathory family, with which he was united by 
tics of amity and mutual interest; but on becoming convince^ 
of the impossibility of any such candidature, he pronounced 
for a native Pole, or for whichever foreign prince might be found 
most profitable to Poland. The Habsburgs, already sure of the 
Zborowski, bid very high for the support of Zamoyski But 
though he was offered the title of prince, with the Golden Fleece 
and 200,000 ducats, he steadily opposed the Austrian faction, 
even at the imminent risk of a civil war; and on the 19th of 
August procured the election of Sigismund of Sweden, whose 
mother was Catherine Jagiellonica. The opposite party imme- 
diately elected the Austrian Archduke Maximilian, who there- 
upon made an attempt upon Cracow. But Zamoyski traversed 
all the plans of the Austrian faction by routing the archduke 
at the battle of Byczyna (January 24, 1588) and taking him 
prisoner. From the first there was a certain coldness between 
the new king and the chancellor. Each had his own plan for 
coping with the difficulties of the situation; but while Zamoyski 
regarded the Habsburgs with suspicion, Sigismund III. was 
disposed to act in concert with them as being the natural and 
strongest possible allies for a Catholic power like Poland. 
Zamoyski feared their influence upon Poland, which he would 
have made the head of the Slavonic powers by its own en- 
deavours. Zamoyski was undoubtedly most jealous of his 
dignity; his patriotism was seldom proof against private 
pique; and he was not always particular in his choice of means. 
Thus at the diet of 1589 he prevailed over the king by threaten- 
ing to leave the country defenceless against the Turks, if the 
Austrian* were not excluded from the succession. In general, 
however, his Turkish policy was sound, as he consistently 
.adopted the Jagiellonic policy of being friendly with so dangerous 
a neighbour, as the Porte. His views on this head are set out 
with great force in his pamphlet, La deffaick its Tertarcs et 
Turcs (Lyons, 1500). The ill- will between the king and the 
chancellor reached an acute stage when Sigismund appointed 
an opponent of Zamoyski vice-chancellor, and made other 
ministerial changes which limited his authority; though ulti- 
mately, with the aid of his partisans and the adoption of such 
desperate expedients as the summoning of a confederation to 
annul the royal decrees in 1592, Zamoyski recovered his full 
authority. In 1595 Zamoyski, in his capacity of commander- 
in-chief, at the head of 8000 veterans dethroned the anti-Polish 
hospodar of Moldavia and installed in his stead a Catholic 
convert, George Mohila. On his return he successfully sustained 
in his camp at Cecora a siege by the Tatar khan. Five years 
later (October 20, 1600) he won his greatest victory at Ter- 
goviate, when with a small well-disciplined army he touted 



ZANARDELLI— ZANESVILLE 



955 



Michael the Brave, hospodar of Walachia and Moldavia. But 
beyond securing the Polish frontier Zamoyski would never go. 
He refused to wage war with Turkey even under the most favour- 
able circumstances, nor could he be drawn into the Holy League 
against the Ottomans in 1600. When pressed by the papal 
legate and the Austrian envoys to co-operate at the head of all 
the forces of the league, he first demanded that in case of 
success Moldavia, Walachia and Bessarabia should fall to 
Poland, and that she should in the meantime hold Otmutz 
and Breslau as guarantees. The refusal of the Austrian* to 
accept these reasonable terms justified Zamoyski's suspicion 
that the league would use Poland as a cat's-paw, and the 
negotiations came to nothing. Statesman though he was, 
Zamoyski canndt, however, be called a true patriot. Polish 
historians, dazzled by bis genius and valour, are apt to over* 
look his quasi-treasonable conduct and blame Sigismund III. 
for every misadventure; but there can be no doubt that the 
king took a far broader view of the whole situation when be 
attempted to reform the Polish constitution in 1605 by streng- 
thening the* royal power and deciding all measures in future by 
a majority of the diet. These reforms Zamoyski strenuously 
opposed. The last speech he delivered was in favour of the 
anarchic principle of free election. He died suddenly at 
Zamosc on the 3rd of June 1605. 

See Vincent Lanreo, 1574-78, el us dipickes inSdites (Ita!.) Warsaw. 
1877); Augu«tin Thciner, Vetera monument* Poloniae et Liluaniae 
vol. ii. (Rome, 1863); Adam Tytus Dzialynski, Collectanea vitam 
resque gtslas J. Zamoyocii illuUrantia (Poaen, 1881). ; (R. N. B.) 

ZAWARDELLI, GIUSEPPE (1826-1003), ItaKaV jurisconsult 
and statesman, was born at Brescia on the 20th of October 
1816. A combatant in the volunteer corps during the war of 
1848, he returned to Brescia after the defeat of Novara, and for 
a time earned a livelihood by teaching law, but was molested 
by the Austrian police and forbidden to teach in consequence 
of his refusal to contribute pro-Austrian articles to the press. 
Elected deputy in 1859, he received various administrative 
appointments, but only attained a political office in 1876 when 
the Left, of which be had been a prominent and influential 
member, came into power. Minister of public works in the 
first Depretis cabinet of 1876, and minister of the interior in 
the Calroli cabinet of 1878, he in the latter capacity drafted the 
franchise reform, but created dissatisfaction by the indecision 
of his administrative acts, particularly in regard to the Irre- 
dentist agitation, and by his theory of repressing and not in 
any way preventing crime, which led for a time to a perfect 
epidemic of murders.' Overthrown with Cairoli in December 
1878, he returned to power as minister of justice in the Depretis 
cabinet of 188 1, and succeeded in completing the commercial 
code. Abandoned by Depretis in 1883, he remained in opposi-, 
tion until 1887, when he again joined Depretis as minister of 
justice, retaining his portfolio throughout the ensuing Crispi 
ministry until the 31st of January 1891. During this period 
he promulgated the Criminal Code, and began the reform of the 
magistracy. After the fall of the Giolitti cabinet in 1893, 
Zanardellr. made a strenuous but unsuccessful attempt to form 
an administration. Elected president of the chamber in 1894 
and 1896, he exercised that office with ability until, in December 
1897, he accepted the portfolio of justice in the Rudini cabinet, 
only to resign in the following spring on account of dissensions 
with his colleague, Visconti- Venosta, over the measures necessary 
to prevent a recurrence of the tumults of May 1808. Returning 
to the presidency of the chamber, he again abandoned his post 
in, order to associate himself with the obstructionist campaign 
against the Public Safety Bill (1800-1900), and was rewarded 
by being enabled to form an administration with the support 
of the Extreme Left upon the fall of the Saracco cabinet in 
February rooi. He was unable to achieve much during his 
last term of office, as his health was greatly impaired; his 
Divorce Bui, although voted in the chamber, bad to be with- 
drawn on account of the strong opposition of the country. He 
retired from the administration on the ?nd of November 1903, 
and died on the 21st of December following. 



ZAJTBLLA, GIACOMO (1 820-1888), Italian poet, was born 
at Chiampo, near Vksenza, on the 9th of September 1820,. and 
was educated for the priesthood. After his ordination he be- 
came professor at the lyceum of his native place, but his patriotic 
sympathies excited the jealousy of the Austrian authorities, 
and although protected by his diocesan, he was compelled to 
resign in 1853. After the liberation of Venetia, the Italian 
government conferred upon him a professorship at Padua, and 
he achieved distinction as a poet on the publication of his first 
volume of poems in 1868. In 187s grief for the death of his 
mother occasioned a mental malady, which led to the resigna- 
tion of his professorship. After his complete and permanent 
recovery he built himself a villa on the bank of his native river, 
the Astichcllo, and Jived there in tranquillity until his death on 
the 17th of May 1888. His last published volume contains a 
series of sonnets of singular beauty, addressed to the river,, 
resembling Wordsworth's " Sonnets to the Duddon," but more 
perfect in form; and a blank verse idyll,. " II Pettirosso " 
(" The Redbreast "), bearing an equally strong, though equally 
accidental, resemblance to the similar compositions of Coleridge. 
His ode -to Dante, and that on the opening of the Suez Canal, 
are distinguished by great dignity. Of his other compositions, 
the most individual are those in which, deeply impressed by the 
problems of his day, he has sought to reconcile science and 
religion, especially the fine dialogue between Milton and Galileo, 
where the former, . impressed by. Galileo's predictions of the 
intellectual consequences of scientific progress, resolves "to 
justify the ways of God to man." Zanella was a broad-mirded 
and patriotic ecclesiastic, and his character is justly held in 
equal honour with his poetry, which, if hardly to be termed 
powerful, wears a stamp of peculiar elegance and finish, and 
asserts a place of its own in modern Italian literature. 

ZANESVILLE. a city and the county-seat of Muskingum 
county, Ohio, U.S.A., on the Muskingum river, at the mouth of 
the Licking river, about 60 m. E. of Columbus. Pop. (1890) 
21,009; ( ? ooo) *3»53&, of whom 1435 were foreign-born; (1010, 
census) 28,016. Zanesville is served by the Baltimore & 
Ohio, the Pennsylvania, the Cleveland, Akron & Columbus, 
the Ohio River & Western, the Wheeling & Lake Eric, the 
Zanesville & Western, and the Ohio & Little Kanawha 
(B. and O. system) railways, by a belt line around the city, and 
by the Ohio Electric and the South-Eastern Ohio electric inter- 
urban lines. By a series of locks and dams the Muskingum 
river has been made navigable for small vessels to the Ohio 
and above Zanesville to Dresden, where connexion is made with 
the Ohio Canal extending north to Cleveland. Within the city 
limits the Muskingum is crossed by seven bridges (including a 
notable concrete Y bridge) and the Licking by two. The 
business districts of the city lie on both sides of the two rivers; 
the residential districts being chiefly on the hills to the north 
and west. Among the principal buildings are the Federal 
building, the county court-house, the Soldiers and Sailors' 
Monumental Building, containing, a large auditorium, the 
Masonic and Oddfellows' temples, the Market bunding; con- 
taining city offices, a National Guard armoury, the John Mclntire 
public library, the John Mclntire Children's Home (1880), the 
Helen Purcell home for women, the county infirmary, the 
Bethesda Hospital (1890), and the Good Samaritan hospital 
(1002; under the Franciscan Sisters). The John Mclntire 
public library (about 20,000 volumes) is a consolidation of the 
Zanesville Athenaeum (1827) and the Eunice Buckingham 
library of the former Putnam Female Seminary (183s) here; 
Andrew Carnegie contributed $50,000 for the erection of the 
building. John Mclntire (1759-1815), one of the early settlers, 
provided by will for the maintenance of a school for poor 
children, and such a school was maintained from 1836 to 1856, 
when it was transferred to the city school system, annual con- 
tributions being made from the fund for poor children; later 
the Mclntire Home was founded, and in 1902 donations to the 
city school system were discontinued and the entire revenues 
of the estate devoted to the maintenance of the Home, which is 
a model of its kind. Zanesville Is an important centre for the 



95 6 



ZANGWILL— ZANY 



manufacture of art and domestic pottery, plain and ornamental 
tile, building and paving bricks, and other clay products. In 
1005 it ranked sixth among the cities of the country in the 
amount of pottery produced, and third in the degree of the 
specialization of that industry. In 2005 the value of all factory 
products was $7,047,637, of which $1,144,384 (16*2 per cent) 
represented pottery, terra-cotta, and fireclay products. 

Zanesville was first platted in 1800 by Ebenezer Zane (1747- 
181 x) of Wheeling, Virginia (now West Virginia), his brother 
Jonathan, and John Mclntire, his son-in-law, of Alexandria, Va^. 
who .under an act of Congress of 1706 surveyed a road from 
Wheeling to what is now Maysville, Kentucky, and received for 
this service three sections of land. Jonathan Zane and Mclntire 
selected the land at the point where the new road crossed the 
Muskingum river. The settlement was first called Westbourne 
and later was named Zanesville; a post office was established 
in 1802. Zanesville became the county-seat upon the creation 
of Muskingum county in 1804, was the capital of the state from 
1810 to 181 2, was incorporated as a town in 1814, and was 
chartered as a city in 1850. 

ZANGWILL, ISRAEL (1864- ), Jewish man of letters, 
was born in London on the 14th of February 1864. His early 
childhood was spent in Plymouth and at Bristol, where he 
received his first schooling. He was in his ninth year when his 
parents settled in Spitalfields, and he entered the Jews' Free 
School, where eventually he became a teacher. Concurrently 
with his teaching work be took his degree with honours at London 
University. He had already written a fantastic tale entitled 
The Premier and the Painter in collaboration with Louis Cowen, 
when he resigned his position as a teacher owing to differences 
with the school managers and ventured into journalism. He 
founded and edited Ariel, The London Puck, and did much 
miscellaneous work on the London press. He made his literary 
reputation with a novel, The Children of the Ghetto (1892), which 
was followed by Ghetto Tragedies (1893); The Master (1895); 
Dreamers of the Ghetto (1898); The MantU of Elijah (1901); 
and other tales and novels of great interest dealing with Jewish 
life. Children of the Ghetto was produced in a play in New York 
with success in 1899, and has since been extensively played both 
in English and Yiddish. Others of his plays are: Merely Mary 
Ann, played at the Duke of York's theatre, and The Serio- 
comic Governess; Nurse Marjorie; and The Melting -Pot, all 
produced in New York. Mr Zangwill was the founder of the 
International Jewish Territorial Organization (see Zionism). 

ZAJiTB (anc. Zacynthus), an island of Greece, one of the 
Ionian group, in the Ionian Sea, in 37 40' N. lat. and 21° £. 
long., is 25 m. long, about 12 broad, and 64 m. round,, with an 
area of 277 sq. m., and a population in 1907 of 42,502. Zante 
lies 8 m. S. of Cephalonia, forming with it, Leucas and Ithaca 
a crescent-shaped insular group, which represents the crests of a 
submerged limestone ridge facing the Gulf of Patras. Zante is 
of somewhat irregular oval shape, with its main axis disposed 
in the direction from north-west to south-east, and indented by 
a deep inlet at its southern extremity. The surface is mainly 
occupied by an extensive and highly productive central plain, 
skirted on the west side by a range of bare limestone hills from 
1000 to 1 200 ft. .high, which fall gently landwards, but present 
bold steep cliffs towards the sea> and which culminate north- 
wards in Mount Skopos, the ancient Elalos (1600 ft.), the highest 
point in the island. On the east side the plain is also limited 
by a low ridge, which still justifies the epithet of nemorosa, or 
the "wooded," applied by Virgil to Zacynthus. These hills 
are densely clothed to their summits with an exuberant growth 
of olives, figs, myrtles, laurels, oranges, aloes, vines and other 
sub-tropical plants. The central plain is highly cultivated, 
forming an almost continuous stretch of gardens and vineyards, 
varied here and there with a few patches of cornfields and pasture 
lands. Here is grown a peculiar dwarf vine, whose fruit, the 
" currant " (from " Corinth ") of commerce, forms the chief 
resource and staple export of Zante, as well as of the neigh- 
bouring m a i nla n d. The vine, which grows to a height of 3 ft., 
begins to yield in seven years and lasts for over a century. From 



the grape, which has a pleasant bitter-sweet taste, a wine is 
also extracted, which is said to excel all others in flavour, fire 
and strength. Besides this species, there are nearly forty 
different kinds of vine and ten of the olive, including the karu- 
dolia, which yields the best edible olive berry. For size, vigorous 
growth and productiveness the olive tree of Zante is rivalled 
only by that of Corfu. 

The island enjoys a healthy climate; and, although there are 
no perennial streams, an abundant supply of good water is 
obtained from the numerous springs, occurring especially in 
the eastern and central districts. But earthquakes are frequent 
and at times disastrous. During recent times the most de- 
structive were those of 181 1, 1820, 1840 and 1893; and, 
although the prevailing geological formations are sedimentary, 
chiefly calcareous, there seems no doubt that these disturbances 
are of igneous origin. Other indications of volcanic agency 
are the oil springs occurring on the coast, and even in the bed of 
the sea near Cape Skinari on the north side, and especially the 
famous pitch or bituminous wells already mentioned by Hero- 
dotus (Hist., bk. iv.). These have been productive throughout 
the historic period and still yield a considerable supply of pitch. 
They are situated in a swamp near the coast village of Chieri, 
and comprise two basins, with alternate layers of water and 
bitumen, the lower sheet of water apparently communicating 
with the sea. 

Zante, capital of the island, is a considerable seaport on the 
east side, with a population in 1907 of 13,501.. It occupies the 
site of the ancient city of Zacynthus, said to have been founded 
by Zacynthus, son of a legendary Arcadian chief, Dardanus, to 
whom was also attributed the neighbouring citadel of Psophis. 
But of this, as well as of the temple of Artemis that formerly 
crowned Mount Skopos, no vestiges can now be discovered. 

Traditionally the island formed part of the territory of 
Ulysses, king of Ithaca. luwas peopled in ancient times by 
settlers variously represented as coming from Achaea or Arcadia. 
It figures occasionally in history as a base for belligerents in 
the Ionian Sea. Thus during the Peloponnesian War it served 
as a naval station for the Athenians, who again in 374 b.c 
endeavoured to acquire it for a similar purpose; in 357 it 
became the headquarters of Dion on his expedition against 
Syracuse. In 217 it was seized by Philip V. of Macedon. The 
Romans captured it in 211, but restored it temporarily to 
Philip; in 191, wishing, to keep it out of the hands of ambitious 
Greek powers, they definitely annexed it In 86 it was raided 
by Mithradates' admiral Archelaus during a short foray into 
Ionian waters. Under the Roman Empire Zante was included 
in the province of Epirus, In the nth century it passed to 
the Norman kings of Sicily; after the Fourth Crusade it be- 
longed at various times to the despots of Epirus, the emperors 
of Constantinople, and the Orsini, counts of Cephalonia. After 
remaining from 1357 to 1482 in the hands of the Tocco family 
it became a Venetian possession. In 1797 it was ceded to 
France, and after a short occupation by the Russians was 
brought under British protection; in 1864 it was ceded with 
the other Ionian islands to the Greek kingdom. 

The long Venetian occupation is reflected in the appearance, 
character, and to some extent even the language and religion 
of the Zantiots. Nearly all the aristocracy claim Venetian 
descent; most of the upper classes are bilingual, speaking both 
Greek and Italian; and a considerable section of the popula- 
tion are Roman Catholics of the Latin rite. Even the bulk of 
the people, although mainly .of Greek stock, form in their 
social usages a connecting link between the Hellenes, whose 
language they speak, and the Western nations by whom they 
were so long ruled. 

SeeB. Schmidt, Die Inset Zahynihos (Freiburg,* 1899); B. V. 
Head, Historia Numorum (Oxford, 1887), pp. 359-00. 

ZANY, a fool or silly person. The word came into Fjiglwh 
in the 16th century from Ital. Zane, mod. Zanni, an abbrevia- 
tion of the name Giovanni (John). This, familiar form of the 
name was given by Italians to a special type of clown or 
buffoon who acted as on attendant or follower of the regular 



ZANZIBAR 



957 



profesBoaal down oo the stage and made clumsy and ludicrous 
attempts to mimic his performance. 

ZANZIBAR, a sultanate and British protectorate of East 
Africa. The sultanate, formerly of much larger extent (see 
below, History)* was reduced in 1890 to the islands of Zanzibar 
and Pemba, some adjacent islets, the nominal sovereignty of 
the coast hne — for ten miles inland— of the protectorate of 
British East Africa (?.«.), and the possession, also nominal, of 
five ports on the Benadir coast, leased to Italy. (In 1005 the 
saltan of Zanzibar sold his sovereign rights to these ports to 
Italy. See Son auland: % Italian.) The islands of Pexnba and 
y pTf* n ^" > have a collective area of 1020 sq. m. and an estimated 
population (1909) of 250,00a 

Topopapkf % fire— The political and commercial, as well as the 
geographical, centre of the state is the fertile and densely peopled 
island of Zanzibar, which lies at a mean distance of 20 m. from the 
mainland, between 5° 4°' and 6° 10' S. Pemba (g.v.) to the north 
and the more distant Mafia (to the south) form with Zanzibar an 
independent geological system, resting on a foundation of coralline 
reefs, and constituting a sort of outer coast-line, which almost 
everywhere presents a rocky barrier to the Indian Ocean. All 
three are disposed parallel to the mainland, from which they are 
separated by shallow waters, mostly under thirty fathoms, strewn 
with numerous reefs dangerous to navigation, especially in the 
Mafia channel opposite the Rufiji delta. (For Mafia, see German 
East Africa.) Some 6 m. N. of Zanzibar and forming part of 
the coral reef is the small, densely wooded island of Tumbatu. Its 
inhabitants are excellent sailors. 

Zanzibar island is 47 m. kmgand 20 broad at its greatest breadth. 
It has an area of 640 sq. m. The island, called Unguja in Swahili, 
is not exclusively of coralline formation, several heights of a reddish 
ferruginous clay rising in gentle slopes 400 to 450 ffc in the centre 
and double that in the north. There are several tolerable natural 
harbours, used only by Arab dhows, the port of Zanzibar sufficing 
for the general trade. The forests which formerly covered the 
island have largely disappeared; the eastern half is now mostly 
covered with low scrub. The western part is noted for the luxuri- 
ance and variety of its flora, notwithstanding the absenceof timber 
trees. Among fruit-trees the coco-nut palm is conspicuous. Each 
tree yields 100 to 120 nuts a year. In places there are extensive 
groves of these trees, elsewhere the palms grow indiscriminately 
among other trees, which include the mangrove (in swampy 
districts), lemons, sweet and sour limes, the bread fruitjpapaw, 
pomegranate, tamarind, the orange and mango trees. The two 
last-named and plantains and bananas are abundant. The mango 
trees attain a great size. Many of the fruit-trees and plants have 
been introduced from India and Malaysia, such as the mangosteen, 
guava, durian, cinnamon, nutmeg and doves, all of which thrive 
welL The soil seems specially suited for the dove, which, although 
nearly destroyed by a terrible cyclone in 1873, completely recovered 
from that disaster. 



Although the fauna is almost exclusively continental, Zanzibar 
01 recently possessed a distinct variety of monkey. {Colobus kirkii), 
which appears to be now extinct. Other varieties of monkeys are 



fairly numerous. Hippopotami have occasionally swum to the island. 
Wild boars and aervals are common, pythons are found in the 
swamps. Camels and bullocks are used as draught animals. 

Climate. — The great heat and the excessive moisture of the atmos- 
phere render the climate very trying, especially to Europeans. The 
year is divided into two seasons, according to the direction of the 
monsoons. The north-east monsoon sets in about the end of 
November, the south-west monsoon in April. The " hot season " 
corresponds with the north-east monsoon, when the minimum 
readings of the thermometer often exceed 8o v F. In June to 
September the minimum readings drop to 72*, the mean annual 
temperature being about 80*. Rain falls in every month of the 
year. December , April and May are the rainiest months, August 
to October the driest. The average annual rainfall (18 yean 1 
observations) is 65 in. (In 1859 as much as 170 in. were registered.) 

Inkabitants.—On the east side of the island the inhabitants, 
a Bantu-speaking race of low development, probably represent 
the aboriginal stock. They are known as Wahadimu and are 
noted as good fishermen, cattle raisers, and skilled artisans. 
In the west, and especially in the capital (for which, see below), 
the population is of an extremely heterogeneous character, 
induding full-blood and half<aste Arabs, Goanese, Parsis, 
Hindus, Comoro Islanders, Swahili (q.v.) of every shade, and 
representatives of tribes from all parts of East Africa. The 
Arabs number about 7000; Asiatics (mostly British Indians), 
20,000; whites (chiefly British), 25a Besides the port of Zanzibar 
there are no huge towns. Chuaka £s a pleasant health resort on- 
the eastern shore fadng the Indian Ocean. 



/Warffcm.—Cloves and copra are the chief products of 
the island. There are also extensive chilli and rubber planta- 
tions. The muhogo (cassava), the tobacco plant and vanilla 
are cultivated on a smaller scale; experiments in cotton-grow- 
ing proved unsuccessful The shambas (plantations) are mostly . 
the property of Arabs. The labourers are chiefly Swahihs, and * 
were formerly slaves. The labour available at harvest time is 
often inadequate, and year after year a large proportion of the 
clove crop has remained unpicked. As its prosperity depended 
much more on its transit trade (Zanzibar being the entrepot 
for all the East African ports as far south as the Zambezi) than 
on agriculture the resources of the island were somewhat 
neglected; but when in the early years of the 20th century 
the competition of Mombasa and Dar-es-Sa!aam was felt, efforts 
were made to increase the number and productiveness of the 
crops and also to decrease costs by providing better means of 
transport. Good roads were made by the government, and 
an American company built a 3-ft. gauge railway from Zanzibar 
town to the north of the island, where are the chief plantations. 
Rice is imported in large quantities from Rangoon and Bombay. 
Besides rice, cassava, grown on the island, and fish (which is 
abundant) are the chief foods of the natives. The pigeon pea 
(cajanus Indkus) is commonly grown, and the Wahadimu and 
Watumbata cultivate the betel-nut creeper. 

Revenue and Currency. — Custom duties are the chief source of 
revenue. Other sources are registration and market fees, hut tax 
(one dollar per hut) on government ground, post office receipts, &c, 
and the produce of crown shambas. A sum of £17,000 a year is 
paid to the government by the British East Africa Protectorate 
for the right to administer the mainland portion of the sultanate; 
the Zanzibar government also receives some £10,000 a year interest 
on the purchase money paid by Germany and Italy lor the part 
of Zanzibar territory acquired by those Powers. In 1900 the revenue 



the revenue was £191,000, the expenditure £156,000. In the last- 
named year there was a public debt of £88,000. The principal 
items of expenditure come under the heads of administration, 
public works, civil list and military polke. 

The coinage system is somewhat complicated. The Maria Theresa 
dollar (equalling approximately 3s. od.) is used as a standard of 
value in price quotations, but the coin is not in circulation. The 
Indian rupee is in universal currency and ,the British sovereign 
is legal tender at the fixed rate of 15 rupees to £1. The division 
of the rupee into annas and pice was abolished in 1908 and the 
rupee divided into 100 cents. In the same year the government 
issued notes of 5, 10, 20, 50 and 100 rupees.. British weights and 
measures are used in wholesale transactions, with the exception 
of the frasila, which equals 35 tt> avoir. 

Religion, Education and Justice. — Mahommedanism is the 
dominant religion. Most of the inhabitants are Sunnb of the 
Shaft school, Bat the sultan and his relatives are schismatics of 
the Ibadbi sect. There am several Protestant and Roman Catholic 
missions with branches on the mainland. These missions maintain 
schools. The government supports kuttabs in which elementary 
education is given in Arabic and the vernacular, and more advanced 
in whicT ~ * 



ich English, geography and arithmetic are taught. 
In December 1892 the sultan delegated to the British agent and 
consul-general his right to try all cases in which a British subject 
is plaintiff or accuser, and the defendant or accused is a Zanzibar 
subject. The British court also tries all cases in which other 
Europeans (and Americans) are concerned, the consular jurisdiction 
exercised by other Powers having been finally abolished in 1007. 
Cases between natives are tried by Moslem tribunals. There u a 
military police force under a British officer. 

History.— From the earliest timet of which there is any 
record the African seaboard from the Red Sea to an unknown 
distance southwards was subject to Arabian influence and 
dominion. Egyptians, Chinese and Malays also appear to have 
visited the coast. At a later period the coast towns were founded 
or conquered by Persian and -Arab Mabommedans who, for 
the most part, fled to East Africa between the 8th and nth 
centuries on account of the religious differences of the times 
the refugees being schismatics. Various small states thus grew 
up along the coast, Mombasa seeming to be the most important. 
These states are sometimes spoken of as the Zenj empire, 
though they were never, probably, united under one ruler. 
Kilwa (q.v.) was regarded as the capital of the " empire. 1 ' The 



95 8 



ZANZIBAR 



seaboard itself took the name of Zanquebar (corrupted to 
Zanzibar by the Banyan traders), the Balid ez-Zenj, or " Land 
of the Zenj " of the Arabs, a term which corresponds to the 
Hindu-bar, or "land of the Hindu," formerly applied to the 
west coast of India. By Ibn Batuta, who visited the coast in 
1328, and other Arab writers the Zenj people are referred to in 
a general way as Mahommedan negroes; and they are no doubt 
still represented by the semi-civilized Mahommedan Bantus 
now collectively known as the Swahili or " coast people," and 
in whose veins is a large admixture of Asiatic blood. The Zenj 
" empire " began to decline soon after the appearance of the 
Portuguese in East African waters at the close of the 15th 
century. To them fell in rapid succession the great cities of 
Kilwa with its 300 mosques (1 505), Mombasa the " Magnificent " 
(1505), and soon after Malindi and Mukdishu the " Immense " 
(Ibn Batuta). The Portuguese rule was troubled by many 
revolts, and towards the end of the 16th century the chief cities 
were ravaged by the Turks, who came by sea, and by the 
Zimbas, a fierce negro tribe, who came overland from south of 
the Zambezi. On the ruins of the Portuguese power in the 17th 
century was buih up that of the Imams of Muscat. Over their 
African dominions the Imams placed vaiis or viceroys, who in 
time became independent of their overlord. In Mombasa 
power passed into the hands of the Mazrui family. The island 
of Zanzibar, conquered by the Portuguese in 1 503-8, was occupied 
by the Arabs in 1730, and in 1832 the town of Zanzibar, 
then a place of no note, was made the capital of his dominions 
by the Sayyid Said of Muscat, who reconquered all the towns 
formerly owning allegiance to the Imams, Mombasa being 
taken by treachery in 1837. On the death of <5aid in 1856 his 
dominions were divided between his two sons, the African 
section falling to Majid, who was succeeded in 1870 by his 
younger brother Bargash ibn Said, commonly known as sultan 
of Zanzibar. Bargash witnessed the dismemberment of his 
dominions by Great Britain, Germany and Italy (see Africa, 
§ 5), and in March 1888 left to his successor, Sayyid Khalifa, 
a mere fragment of the territories over which he had once ruled. 
The Sayyids Majid and Bargash acted largely under the influence 
of Sir John Kirk (g.v.), who from 1866 to 1887 was consular 
representative of Great Britain at Zanzibar. By Sir John's 
efforts a treaty for the suppression of the slave trade throughout 
the sultanate had been concluded in 1873: 

In the negotiations between the Powers for the partition 
of Africa the supremacy of British interests in the island was 
acknowledged by Germany and France, thus rendering a treaty 
made in 1862 between France and Great Britain Recognizing 
the " independence " of Zanzibar of no effect. On the 4th of 
November 1800 the sultanate was proclaimed a British pro- 
tectorate, in conformity with conventions by which Great 
Britain on .her part ceded Heligoland to Germany and renounced 
all claims to Madagascar in favour of France. 1 Sultan (Sayyid) 
Ali, who had succeeded his brother Sayyid Khalifa in February 
1800, in August following issued a decree which resulted in the 
liberation of large numbers of slaves. Sayyid Ali was succeeded 
in March 1893 by Hamed bin Thwain, on whose death in August 
1896 his cousin, Sayyid Khalid, proclaimed himself sultan, and 
seized the. palace. The British government disapproved, and 
to compel Khalid's submission the palace was bombarded by 
warships. Khalid fled to the German consulate, whence he 
was removed to the mainland, and Hamed bin Mahommed, 
brother of Hamed bin Thwain, was installed sultan by the 
British representative (27th of August 1806). The government 
was reconstituted under British auspices in October 1891, when 
Sir Lbyd Mathews* was appointed prime minister, and the 

1 By the Zanzibar Order in Council, 1906, the protectorate of 
Zanzibar was limited to the islands of Zanzibar and Pemba, includ- 
ing the territorial waters thereof and any islets within those waters. 

'Sir Uoyd Mathews (1850-1901) was a British naval officer. 
He served in Asbanti 1873-74 and went to Zanzibar in 1875 as 
lieutenant on a ship engaged in the suppression of the slave trade. 
In 1877 he was selected to command the military force being raised 
by Sayyid Bargash and thereafter devoted his services entirely to 
the Zanzibar government. He was made a K.C.M.G. in 1894. 



sultan made virtually a down pensioner, with a civil list of 
x 20,000 rupees. In x 897 the legal status of slavery was abolished, 
compensation being given to slave owners. In July 190a 
Hamed bin Mahommed died, and was succeeded by his son Alt 
bin Hamud, born in 1885. The British government is repre- 
sented by an agent and consul-general, without whose sanction 
no important steps can be undertaken. This officer also ad- 
ministered the East Africa Protectorate, but the dual appoint- 
ment was found to hamper the progress of both protectorates, 
and in 1904 when Mr Basil S. Cave was given charge of the 
Zanzibar protectorate another officer was appointed for the 
mainland. In 1906 the British agent assumed more direct 
control over the protectorate and again reorganized the adminis- 
tration, Capt. (locally general) A. E. H. Raikes being appointed 
prime minister. These changes, together with the abolition 
of foreign consular jurisdiction, led to many reforms in the 
government and the increased prosperity of the Zanzibari. 

Authorities.— J. L. Krapf, Travels ... in Eastern Africa 
(London, i860); Precis of Information concerning . . . Zantibar 
(War Office, London, 1902); W. W. A. Fitzgerald Travels w . . . 
the island of Zantibar (London, 1898); H. S. Newman, Banani, 
the Transition from Slavery to Freedom in Zantibar (London, 1898) ; 
Sir C. Eliot, The East Africa Protectorate (London, 1905); R. N. 
Lyne, Zantibar in Contemporary Times (London, 100O, a useful 
historical summary, with bibliography of British Blue Books; 
Drumkeys* Year Book for East Africa (annually since 1908)'; and 
the annual reports to the British Foreign Office. 

ZANZIBAR, an East African seaport, capital of the island 
and sultanate of the same name, in 6° 9' S., 39 x 5' E. The town 
is situated on the western side of the island, 26 m. N.E. of the 
mainland port of Bagamoyo, which is visible from Zanzibar 
in very clear weather. Zanzibar is built on a triangular-shaped 
peninsula about. a mile and a half long which runs from east 
to west, forming a safe and spacious roadstead or bay with 
a minimum depth of water exceeding five fathoms. Ocean 
steamers anchor in the roadstead and are loaded and discharged 
by lighters. The harbour, frequented by British, German and 
French steamers, warships and Arab dhows, affords a constant 
scene of animation. Viewed from the sea, the town presents a 
pleasant prospect with its mosques, white flat-topped houses, 
barracks, forts, and round towers. The most prominent 
buildings are the Sultan's palace and the Government offices 
(formerly the British consulate), the last-named situated at the 
Point, the south-west horn of the bay. To the left of the 
palace— viewed from the sea— is the " stone ship," a series of 
water tanks (now disused) the front of which is cleverly carved 
to resemble a ship. The town consists of two quarters— 
Shangani, the centre of trade and residence of the sultan, and 
the eastern suburb, formerly separated from the rest of the 
town by the Malagash lagoon, an inlet of the sea, now drained, 
For the most part Zanzibar consists of a labyrinth of narrow 
and dirty streets, in which live the Banyans, Singalese, the 
negro porters, fishermen and half-castes. There are numerous 
markets. In Shangani are the houses of the European merchants 
and the chief Arabs, and the headquarters of various Protestant 
and Roman Catholic missions. Characteristic of the streets are 
the carved and massive wooden doors, whose blackness con- 
trasts with the white stone of the houses, and the bright red of 
the acacias in the garden enclosures. Ndia Kun or Main Road 
extends from the Sultan's palace to the (new) British Agency 
at Mnaa Moja, a castellated building situated in beautiful 
grounds. Along this thoroughfare are the custom house, the 
post office buildings (an imposing edifice) and several con- 
sulates. In a turning off Main Street is the residence of Tippoo 
Tib (now an hotel). Next to this house is the English Club, and 
in the same street are the law courts (built 1900-10). The 
Anglican cathedral (built 1873-79) * semi-Gothic coral building, 
occupies the site of the old slave market. The Roman Catholic 
cathedral— in the Renaissance style— is one of the finest build- 
ings in East Africa. On the outskirts of the town at Moan 
Moja is a public park, a golf course and cricket ground.' Zamuhtr 
is well supplied with pure water brought from the neighbouring 



2APAROS— ZARHdN 



Submarine cable* connect Zanzibar with til parts of the world; 
whilst lines of steamships from Europe and India make it a 
regular port of calL It was not, however, until 1010 that direct 
steamship communication with London was established. The 
average annual value of the external trade for the five yean 
1902-6 was: imports, £1,075,580; exports, £1,084,214. In 1007 
the imports were valued at £1,232,957, the exports at £1,070,067. 
The figures for 1908 were: imports, £969,841; exports, £977,628. 
Many of the imports brought from the neighbouring mainland 
also figure as exports. Of these the most important are ivory, 
and rhinoceros horn, gum copal, hides and skins. Cloves, 
dove stems and copra arc the chief exports, the production of 
the island The bulk of the articles named, with the exception 
of copra, are sent to the United Kingdom; India, however, 
has a larger trade with Zanzibar than any other country. 
From it are imported food stuffs (rice, grain, flour, ghee, groceries) 
and piece goods. The copra is sent almost exclusively to 
Marseilles. The most valuable articles of import are piece 
goods and rice. The piece goods come chiefly from the United 
Kingdom, India, America and the Netherlands, the rice entirely 
from India. Other imports of value are building material, 
coal, petroleum and sugar. 

The motley population of Zanzibar is indicative of the com- 
mercial importance of the city. Its geographical position has 
made it the key of East Africa from Cape Guardafui to Delagoa 
Bay. " When you play on the flute at Zanzibar " (says an 
Arab proverb) " all Africa as far as the lakes dances." From 
the time (1832) when Seyyid Said of Muscat fixed on the town 
as the capital of his empire, 'Zanzibar became the centre 6f the 
trade between the African continent, India, Arabia and the 
Persian Gulf, as well as Madagascar and the Mauritius. It 
also speedily obtained a large trade with Europe and America. 
The Americans were the first among white merchants to realize 
the possibilities of the port, and a United States consulate was 
established as early as 1836. The name Merikani, applied to 
cotton goods and blankets on the east coast, is a testimony to 
the enterprise of the American trader. Zanzibar is to a greater 
degree than any other city the capital of negro Africa; made so, 
however, not by the negroes but by Arab conquerors and traders. 
The aspect of the city has changed since the establishment of 
the British protectorate, the suppression of the slave market 
and of slavery itself, and the enforcement of sanitation; but 
Professor Henry Drummond in Tropical Africa (1888) aptly 
sketched the characteristics of Zanzibar in pre-protectorate days 
when he wrote of it as a " cesspool of wickedness Oriental in 
its appearance, Mahommedan in its religion, Arabian in its 
morals ... a fit capital for the Dark Continent." Neverthe- 
less Zanzibar in those days was the focus of all exploring and 
missionary work for the interior, the portal through which 
civilizing influences penetrated into the eastern section of 
equatorial Africa. The growth of the British and German 
protectorates on the neighbouring shores led in the early years 
of the 20th century to considerable trade which had hitherto 
gone through Zanzibar being diverted to Mombasa and Dar-es- 
Salaam, but Zanzibar maintains its supremacy as the great 
distributing centre for the eastern seaboard. 

ZAPAROS, a tribe or group of tribes of South American 
Indians of the river Napo. They occupy some r 2,000 sq. m. 
between the Napo and the Pastaza. Their only industries 
are hammock plaiting and fishing-net weaving. Polygamy fa 
general. They wear a long skirt of bark, fibre. 

ZARA (Serbo-Croatian Zadar), the capital of Dalmatia, 
Austria. Pop. (1900), of town and commune, 32,506: includ- 
ing a garrison of 1330. Zara is situated on the Adriatic Sea, 
52 m. S.E. of Trieste, and opposite the islands of UgKano and 
Pasman, from which it is separated by the narrow Channel of 
Zara. It is the meeting-place of the provincial diet, and the seat 
of a Roman Catholic archbishop and an Orthodox bishop. 
The promontory on which it stands is separated from the main- 
land by a deep moat, practically making an island of the city. 
In 1873 the ramparts of Zara were converted into elevated 
promenades commanding extensive views to seaward and to 



959 

landward. Of its four old gates one, the Porta Marina, in- 
corporates the relics of a Roman arch, and another, the Porta 
di Terraferma, was designed in the x6th century by the Veronese 
artist Sanmichele. The chief interest of Zara lies in its churches, 
the most remarkable of which is the cathedral of St Anastasia, a 
fine Romanesque basilica, built between woa and 1205. The 
churches of St Chrysogonus and St Simeon are also in the 
Romanesque style, and St Mary's retains a fine Romanesque 
campanile of 1105. The round church of St Donatus, tradi- 
tionally but erroneously said to have been erected in the 
9th century on the site of a temple of Juno, is used for 
secular purposes. The church treasuries contain some of the 
finest Dalmatian metal-work; notably the silver ark or re- 
liquary of St Simeon (1380), and the pastoral staff of Bishop 
Valaresso (1460). Most of the Roman remains were used in 
the construction of the fortifications. But two squares are 
embellished with lofty marble columns; a Roman tower stands 
on the east side of the town; and some remains of a Roman 
aqueduct may be seen outside the ramparts. Among the other 
chief buildings are the Loggia del Comune, rebuilt in 1565, and 
containing a public library; the old palace of the priors, now 
the governor's residence; and the episcopal palaces. The 
harbour, to the north-east of the town, is safe and spacious, 
and it is annually entered by about 2500 small vessels, mainly 
engaged in the coasting trade. Large quantities of maraschino 
are distilled in Zara; and the local industries include fishing, 
glass-blowing, and the preparation of oil, flour and wax. 

In the early days of the Roman empire Zara was a flourishing 
Roman colony under the name of Jadera, subsequently changed 
to Diadara. It remained united with the eastern empire down 
to 998, when ft sought Venetian protection. For the next fouT 
centuries it was always under Venetian or Hungarian rule, 
changing hands repeatedly. It was occupied by the Hungarians 
at the end of the 12th century, but was recaptured by the 
Venetians m 1202, with the aid of French crusaders on their 
way to Palestine. In 1409 it was finally purchased from 
Hungary by Venice for 100,000 ducats. In 1792 it passed into 
the possession of Austria. From 1809 to 1813 it belonged to 
France. 

About is m. S.E. is Zara Vecchia, or OH Zara, an insignificant 
village on the site of Biograd, the former residence of the 
Croatian kings, which was destroyed during the wars between 
Venice and Hungary. 

See Aneelo Nan!. Zara, e suoi Dintorni (Zara, 1878), and Atotfwe 
StarUka ddla CiitA di Zara, (Zara, 1883). 

ZARC1LL0 V ALCARAZ, FRANCISCO (1 707-1 7*0, Spanish 
sculptor, was born in Murcia on the 12th of May 1707. At the 
age of twenty he completed the statue of St Ines of Monte- 
pulciano, which had been begun for the Dominicans at Murcia 
by his father. On the death of the latter the care of the family 
fell upon Francisco, who with the help of his brothers and sisters 
organized a workshop. In 1765 he also founded a small 
academy, which, however, was speedily dissolved owing to dis- 
union among the members. In the Ermita de Jesus' in Murcia 
may be seen Zarcillo's scenes from the Passion of Our Lord, a 
vast work in which all the sculptor's qualities and defects are 
revealed. In the church of St Miguel are an Immaculate 
Conception and a St Francis. Mention should also be made 
of the Christ at the Well in the church of Santa Maria dcllas 
Gracias in Murcia, and of the sculptures in San Pedro and in 
the Capudne monastery in Murcia. ZarciDo worked in wood, 
which was coloured. The ascription of the stone sculptures 
on the facade of the St Nicolas Church in Murcia to him rests on 
conjecture. He died at Murcia in 1781. 

See B. Haendcke, Studim tar Ceschicile der spaniuhen Plastik 
(Strassburg, 1900). 

ZARH6N, a mountain in Morocco, 94 m. N. of Mequinez, on 
whose hSIside is the town Mulai Idris Zarhon, so called after 
Mulai Idris I., the founder of the Moorish empire, who was 
buried there in ad. 791. The whole town is considered as a 
sanctuary, pays no taxes, provides no soldiers and is never 
vhated save by Mahommedans. Near the town are the rains 



960 



ZARIA— ZARLINO 



of Voiubilis— Kasar Fara'on or Pharaoh's Castle, once the 
Roman capital, and the first home of Idris. 

ZARIA* a province of the British protectorate of Northern 
Nigeria. It lies approximately between s° 50' and 8° 30' £. 
and 9* ao' and 1 x° 30' N. It has an area of 22,000 sq. m. and 
an estimated population of about 250,000. The province, of 
which a great portion consists of open rolling plains, is watered 
by the Kaduna affluent of the Niger and its many tributaries, 
and is generally healthy and suitable for cultivation. The 
chief towns are Zaria, the capital of the emirate, 87 m. S.W. of 
Kano, and Zungeru, the headquarters of the British adminis- 
tration for the whole of Northern Nigeria. The British station 
at Zaria town, with an elevation of 2150 ft., has so far proved 
the healthiest and most agreeable point of occupation in the 
protectorate. The climate here for a great portion of the year 
is bracing, and in the cold season there is frost at night. 

The British capital at Zungeru, in- the south-western corner 
of the province, less fortunate than .Zaria, has only an elevation 
of about 450 ft. above the sea. The climate, though better than 
that of Lokoja, is still relaxing and trying for Europeans. The 
site of Zungeru, 6° 9' 40" E. 9 48' 32' N., was selected in 1001. 
By the summer of 1902 brick houses for the public departments, 
a residency, a hospital, barracks and a certain number of 
houses for the civilian staff had been erected, and the town is 
now a flourishing settlement, having all the appearance of an 
English suburban town with shaded avenues and public gardens 
clustering on either side of the river Dago, over which several 
bridges have been thrown. 

Zaria is not a great grain-producing province. Its principal 
crop is cotton, of which the surplus is available for purposes of 
trade, and among the Mfchommedan population there is a grow- 
ing demand for cloth, agricultural and culinary implements, 
Birmingham goods, soap, oil, sugar and European provisions. 
The construction of roads, telegraphs and other public works 
consequent upon the British occupation of the province makes 
somewhat heavy calls upon the local labour supply and ac- 
centuates to some of the large landowners the inconvenience 
resulting from the abolition of the slave trade, but the practice 
of owning domestic slaves is not forbidden, and it is the policy 
of the administration to render the transition from slave labour 
to' free labour as gradual as possible. 

The ancient state of Zaria, also called Zeg-Zeg by the geo- 
graphers and historians of the middle ages, was one of the 
original seven Hausa stages. It suffered all the fluctuations 
of Hausa history, and in the 13th and early 14th centuries seems 
to have been the dominating state of Hausaland. At later 
periods it underwent many conquests and submitted in turn to 
Kano, Songhoi and Bornu. At the end of the x8lh century it 
was an independent state living under its own Mahommedan 
rulers; but, like the rest of northern Hausaland, it was con- 
quered in the opening years of the 19th century by the emissaries 
of the Fula Dan Fodio. It remained a Fulani emirate paying 
allegiance to Sokoto up to the period of the British occupation 
of Nigeria, January 1900. Early in X900 a British garrison 
was placed at Wushishi, a town in the south-western corner of 
the emirate which marks the limit of navigation of the Kaduna 
river. The emir of Zaria professed friendliness to the British, 
and at his own request British troops were quartered at his 
capital, in order to protect him from the threatened attacks 
of Kontagota. In March 1902 the province was taken under 
British administrative control. Throughout that year it was 
found that, notwithstanding his friendly professions, the emir 
of Zaria was intriguing with Kano and Sokoto, then openly 
hostile to Great Britain, while at the same time he continued, 
contrary to his undertaking in return for British protection, 
to raid for slaves and to perpetrate acts of brutal tyranny and 
oppression. He was deposed in the autumn of 1902, and after 
the Sokoto-Kano campaign of xooj, which assured the supremacy 
of Great Britain in the protectorate, another emir was appointed 
to Zaria. The new emir, Dan Sidi, took the oat h of allegiance to 
the British crown and accepted his appointment on the condi- 
tions required of all the Nigerian native rulers. He afterwards 



continued to act in loyal co-operation with the British ad- 
ministration.. 

The province has been organized for administration on the 
same system as the rest of the protectorate. It has been 
divided into four administrative districts, each under a British 
assistant resident. A good cart road suitable for wheeled 
traffic has been constructed between Zungeru and Zaria, and 
the Kaduna has been handsomely bridged at a point near 
Wushishi, which is the. meeting-point of main caravan roads, 
and whence there is at certain seasons of the year uninterrupted 
water carriage to the mouth of the Niger. The development of 
trade was further facilitated in the early days of the British 
occupation by the building of a light railway from Barijuko, * 
point on the Kaduna river below Wushishi, to Zungeru. This 
line was superseded by the construction, in 2907-1909, of a 
3 ft. 6 in. railway from Baro, a port on the lower Niger, to 
Zungeru, whence the line was continued to Zaria. 

The taxation scheme introduced by. the British administra- 
tion works satisfactorily, and the revenue shows a regular 
surplus. Courts of justice have been established in the 
administrative districts. In 1904 Zaria suffered from the mis- 
fortune of a famine, but excellent harvests restored prosperity 
in the following year, and the province shows every sign of 
contentment under existing rule. The main artery of commerce 
which runs from Zaria to Wushishi has been rendered not only 
safe and peaceful, but has been made so much more commodious 
by the construction of a good road and by the bridging of the 
river that the north and south trade is steadily increasing. 
The local movements of trade throughout the province are also 
greater. 

A large portion of the province is occupied by pagan tribes, 
especially in the south and the south-west. These districts 
require more direct British supervision than the Fula districts, 
in which the native administration, under British control, is 
fairly efficient. The creation of an administrative division at 
Kachia with a British station and garrison at Kachia town had 
an excellent effect, and the resident was able to report in 1905 
that " the inhabitants of the once dangerous pagan districts 
now buy cloth, kolas and salt from the traders in exchange for 
mats, rubber, palm oil and corn, instead of seizing these articles 
as they formerly did." (F. L. L.) 

ZARLINO, OIOSEFFO (15x7-1590), Italian musical theorist, 
surnamed from his birthplace Zakunfs Clodifnsis, was born 
at Chioggia, Venetia, in 1517 (not 1540, as Burney and Hawkins 
say). Studying in his youth for the Church, he was admitted 
to the minor orders in 1539 and ordained deacon in 1541 at 
Venice; but he soon devoted himself entirely to the study of 
music under the guidance of Adrian Willaert, then choirmaster 
at St Mark's. Willaert, dying in 1562, was succeeded by 
Cipriano di Rore, on whose removal to Parma in 1565 Zarlino 
was elected choirmaster. Though now remembered chiefly 
for invaluable contributions to the theory of music, it is evident 
that he must have been famous both as a practical musician and 
as a composer; for, notwithstanding the limited number of his 
printed works, consisting of a volume entitled Modulationcs Sex 
Vocum (Venice, 1566), and a few motels and madrigals scattered 
through the collections of Scot to and other contemporary pub- 
lishers, he both produced and superintended the public per- 
formance of some important pieces in the service of the republic. 
First among these was the music written to celebrate the battle 
of Lcpanto (on the 7th of October 1571). Again, when Henry III. 
of France passed through Venice on his return from Poland in 
1574, Zarlino directed on board the "Bucentaur" the per- 
formance of an ode for which he himself had composed the 
music, to verses supplied by Rocco Benedetti and Cornclio 
Frangipani. The ode was followed by a solemn service in St 
Mark's, in which Zarlino's music formed a prominent feature, 
and the festival concluded with the representation of a dramatic 
piece entitled Orjeo composed by Zarlino. When the church 
of S. Maria della Salute was founded in 1577 to commemorate 
the plague, he composed a solemn mass for the occasion. No 
one of these works is now known to be in existence; the only 



ZARNCKE— ZEALAND 



961 



1 ; example we poises* of Zarfiao'* compositions on a grand scale 

is a MS-tmass for four voices, in the library of the Philharmonic 
e 1 Lyceum at Bologna. He died at Venice on the 14th, or 

2 according to some the 4th, of February 1590. 

c- Zarlino's first theoretical work was the IstHutioni Armoniche 

, , {Venice, 1558; reprinted 1*62 and 1573). This was followed by 

the Dimostrationi Armoniche (Venice, 1571; reprinted 1573) and 
- by the SofplimenH Musical* (Venice, IS88). Finally, in a complete 

? edition of his works published shortly before his death Zariino 

reprinted these three treatises, accompanied by a Tract on Patience, 
a Discourse on ike True date of the Crucifixion of Our Lord, an essay 
on The Origin of the Capuchins, and the Resolution of Some Doubts 
"' Concerning ike Correction of tke Julian Calendar (Venice, 1 589). 1 

— The Istttutioni and Dimostrationi Armoniche deal, like most other 

1. theoretical works of the period, with the whole science of music as 

it was understood in the 16th century. The earlier chapters, treat- 
ing chiefiy of the arithmetical foundations of the science, differ 
; ' but little in their line of argument from the principles laid down 

: ■ by Pietro Aron, Zacconi, ana other* early writers of the Boeotian 

school; but in bk. ii. of the InstUutioni Zariino boldly attacks the 
^ false system of tonality to which the proportions of the Pytha- 

gorean tctrachord, if strictly carried out in practice, must inevit- 
F- ably lead. The fact that, so far as can now be ascertained, they 

t never were strictly carried out in the Italian medieval schools, 

a at least after the invention of counterpoint, in no wise diminishes 

„. the force of the reformer's argument. The point at issue was, 

that neither in the polyphonic school, in which Zariino was educated, 
'■■ nor in the later monodic school, of which his recalcitrant pupil, 

C Vmcenzo Galilei, was the most redoubtable champion, could those 

proportions be tolerated in practice, however attractive they might 
be to the theorist in their mathematical aspect. So persistently 
u does the human ear rebel against the division of the tctrachord 

* into two greater tones and a Icimma or hemitone, as represented 
c by the fractions g, |, III* that, centuries before the possibility of 

reconciling the demands of the ear with those of exact science was 
satisfactorily demonstrated, the Aristoxenian school advocated the 
use of an empirical scale, sounding pleasant to the sense, in pn> 

* ference to an unplcasing tonality founded upon immutable pro- 



portions. Didymus, writing in the year 60, made the first step 
towards establishing this pleasant-sounding scale upon a mathe- 
matical basis, by the discovery of the lesser tone; out unhappily 
he placed it in a false position below the greater ton*. Claudius 
Ptolemy (130) rectified this error, and in the so-called syntonous 
or intense diatonic scale reduced the proportions of his tctrachord 
So ft -tV H» — *•*- the greater tone, lesser tone, and diatonic semi- 
tone 01 modern music? Ptolemy set forth this system as one of 
eight possible forms of the diatonic scale. But Zariino uncom- 
promisingly declared that the syntonous or intense diatonic scale 
was the only form that could reasonably be sung; and in proof 
of its perfection he exhibited the exact arrangement of its various 
diatonic intervals, to the fifth inclusive, in every part of the diapason 
or octave. The- proportions are precisely those now universally 
accepted in the system called " just intonation." But this system 
is practicable only by the voice and instruments of the violin class. 
For keyed or fretted instruments a compromise is indispensable. 
To meet this exigency, Zariino proposed that for the lute the 
octave should be divided into twelve equal semitones; and after 
centuries of discussion this system of " equal temperament " has, 
within the last thirty-five years, been universally adopted as the 
best attainable for keyed instruments of every description.* 
1 Again, Zariino was in advance of his age in his classification 
of the ecclesiastical modes. These scales were not, as is vulgarly 
supposed, wholly abolished in favour of our modern tonality in the 
17th century. Eight of them, it is true, fell into disuse; but the 
medieval Ionian and Hypo-ionian modes are absolutely identical 
with the modern natural scale of C; and the Aeolian and Hypo- 
aeolian modes differ from our minor scale, not in constitution, but 
in treatment only. Medieval composers, however, regarded the 
Ionian mode as the least perfect of the scries and placed it last in 
order. Zariino thought differently and made It the first mode, 
changing all the others to accord with it. His numerical table, 
therefore, differs from all others made before or since, prophetically 
assigning the place of honour to the one ancient scale now recog- 
nized as the foundation of the modern tonal system. " 

These innovations were violently opposed by the apostles of the 
monodic school. Vincenzo Galilei led the attack in a tract entitled 



1 Ambros mentions an edition of the Jstttutioni dated 1557, and 
one of the Dimostrationi dated 1562. The present writer has never 
met with either. 

* We have given the fractions in the order in wbkh they occur 
in the modern system. Ptolemy, following the invariable Greek 
method* placed them thus— ff . |, rV This, however, ssade no 
difference in the actual propor ti o n s. 

1 1t was first used in France, for the organ, in 1835; In England, 
for the pianoforte in 1846 and for the organ in 1854. Bach had 
advocated it in Germany a century earlier; bat it was not gene- 
rally adopted. 



Disoorso Intotno alio Opera di Hester Gioseffe Zariino, 

it up in his famous Dtalogo, defending the Pythagorean system in 
very unmeasured language. It was in answer to these strictures 
that Zariino published his SoppUmentu 

ZARNCKE, FRIBDRICH KARL THEODOR (1825-1891), 
German philologist, was born on the 7th of July 182s at 
Zahrenstorf, near Bruel, in Mecklenburg, the son of a country 
pastor. He was educated at the Rostock gymnasium, and 
studied (1844-1847) at the universities of Rostock, Leipzig and 
Berlin. In 1848 he was employed in arranging the valuable 
library of Old German literature of Freiherr Karl Hartwig von 
Meusebach (1781-1847), and superintending its removal from 
Baumgartenbrttck, near Potsdam, to the Royal Library al 
Berlin. In 1850 he founded at Leipzig the LUerarisckes CentraU 
UattfUr Deutsckland. In 1852 he established himself as Priml- 
dotent at the university of Leipzig, and published an excellent 
edition of Sebastian Brant's Narrensckiff (1854), a treatise Zur 
Nibelungenfrage (1854), followed by an edition of the Nibelmngen- 
lied (1856, 1 2th ed. 1887), and BcUr&g* zur Erl&uUruug und 
GcsckickU des Nibdungen!iedes (1857). In 1858 he was ap- 
pointed full professor, and commenced a series of noteworthy 
studies on medieval literature, most of which were published 
in the reports (Bcrickte) of the Saxon Society of Sciences. 
Among them were that on the old High German poem Mu*- 
pilli (1866); Cesang vom keiligen Georg (1874); the legend of 
the Priester Johannes (1874); Der Graltempel (1876), and the 
Annolied (1887). He also wrote a valuable treatise on Christian 
Reuter (1884), on the portraits of Goethe (1884), and published 
the history of Leipzig university, Die wkundlicken Quellen sur 
GcsckickU der UntvcrsiUU Leipzig (1857) and Die deulscken 
UnivcrsiUUen im MiUelaller (1857). Two volumes of his Klcine 
Sckriften appeared in 1897. 

See Zur Brinnerunt an den Heimgant sou Dr Friedrick Zamcke 
(1891); Franz Vogt in Zeitsckrift ftir deutscke Pkilohgie; Eduard 
Zarncke in Biogropkisckcs Jahr buck fur Altertumswissensckaft (1895) ; 
and £. Sievers in Allgemeine deutscke Biographic. 

ZEALAND (also Sealand or Seeland; Danish SjceUand), 
the largest Island of the kingdom of Denmark. It is bounded 
N. by the Cattegat, £. by the Sound, separating it from Sweden, 
and the Baltic Sea, S. by narrow straits separating it from 
Falster, Mcen, and smaller islands, and W. by the Great Belt, 
separating it from Funen. Its nearer point to Sweden is 3 m., 
to Funen xi. Its greatest extent from N. to S. is 82 tn., from 
E. to W. 68 m., but the outline is very irregular. The area is 
2636 sq. m. The surface is for the most part undulating, but 
on the whole little above sea-level; the highest elevations are 
in the south-east, where Cretaceous hills (the oldest geological 
formation on the island) reach heights of upwards of 350 ft. 
The coast is indented by numerous deep bays and fjords; the 
Ise Fjord in the north, with its branches the Roskilde Fjord on 
the east and the Lamme Fjord on the west, penetrates inland 
for about 25 m. There are no rivers of importance; but several 
large lakes, the most considerable being Arre and Esrom, occur 
in the north-east. The soil is fertile and produces grain, 
especially rye and barley, in great abundance, as well as 
potatoes and other vegetables, and fruit. The scenery, especi- 
ally in the neighbourhood of the fjords, is pleasant, lacking the 
barrenness of some portions of the kingdom. ~ _^ 

Zealand is divided into five amter (counties), (t) Frederiksborg, 
in the north, named from the palace of Frederiksborg. In the 
north-cast, where the coast approaches most nearly to Sweden, is 
Heuttngdr or Elsinore. (2) Kjobenhavn, south of Frederiksborg. 
The capital is that of the kingdom, Copenhagen (Kjobenhavn). 
The only other town of importance is the okf cathedral city of 
Roskilde on the fjord of that name. Off the little port of Kjoge 
in the south the Danes under Nils Jud defeated the Swedes in t677. 
and in another engagement in 1710 the famous Dunish commander 
Hvitfeldt sank with his ship. (3) Holbaek, west of Kjobenhavn. 
The chief town, Holbaek, lies oa an arm of the Ise Fjord. In the 
west b the port of Kauundborg, with regular comtnunfcation by 
steamer with Aarhus m Jutland. It has a singular Romanesque 
church of the 12th century. The district is diversified with small 
lakes, as the TOs So. (4) Sort, occupying the south-western part 
of the island. The chief town, Sort, lies among woods on the 
small Sora lake. *' ' * *"" 



Formerly the seat of a university, and 
lacational centre. Its church, of the 



960 



ZEBRA-^ZECHARIAH 



,^^ i 



«f VolubiKs— Kasar Fara'on or r 
ZARIA, a province of the Bnu. 

which a great portion consists .** 
by the Kaduna affluent of th ^ 
and is generally healthy and 
ddd to£s are Zaria, the cap^l 
Kano and Zungeru, the headq< 
5£»far the whole of North- 
aiZaria town, with an elevate 
the healthiest and most ajrrer 
protectorate. ?*****}? 
is bracing, and in the cold sea 
The British capital at Zu: 
of the province, less fortunate 
of about 450 ft. above these 
that of Lokoja, is still relax! 
site of Zungeru, 6° 9 4© *-. 
By the summer of xooa bru . 
a residency, a hospital, b 
houses for the civilian stu 
now a flourishing settles 
English suburban town w 
clustering on either side 
bridges have been throw 

Zaria is not a great 
crop is cotton, of whic- 
trade, and among the J 
ing demand for doth 
Birmingham goods, ; 
The construction of 
consequent upon the 
somewhat heavy cr 
centuates to some 
resulting from the 
of owning domesti' 
of the administr 
to' free labour as v 

The ancient * 
graphers and h 
original seven I 
of Hausa histon 
to have been 
periods it undt | 
Kano, Songhc 
was an ihder 
rulers; but, 
quered in tht 
of the Fula 
allegiance t 
of Nigeria, 
was placed 
the emirat 
river. T 
and at b 
capital, • 
of Kont: 
British 
found * 
of Zar 
hostile 
contn 
tora* 

oppy 

the? 
off 

thf 
tif 



*d**. 




1 'i- |0 «** ***** 

\ld* t *r" % x ^ e ±zscz route between 

<r wd members of the 

,f ^J^nk •air » the iroe or 

* |V *v7&Uj ** rc) inhabits the 

' ***£ir-V **ere. owing to the 

a*> ^iZJtmkk extermination, but 
The second 



\ Jc*"* 1 r fLlr ? is represented by a 
^"ZTm the plains north of 

1^ *£?*» (shout 4 ft. high at the 

^ ri more scantily clothed with 

^ **5/«cocr«! ground colour is white, 

]c Jif^psrt of the face is bright 

,tf tb ^X abdomen and the inside of 

. .pi'** c \ hce is covered with stripes, the 

< f 'Ifhart reaching quite to the hoofs, 

^. abo barred. The outsides of the 

-' , Abroad black mark occupying the 

' *1 W are white at the base. Perhaps 

ioes distinction between this species 

o-i ^^^t of the stripes on the hinder 

^ rnU ?L- «ie a number of short transverse 

. *rr If*** . -. .j-__i J 1 _. • J 



here are a numoer 01 snorc transverse 
"^"median longitudinal dorsal stripe, and 
' !hC poero«ost of the broad stripes which pass 
> 4 ."^cbfrom tbc flanks towards the root 
c /ten a median longitudinal stripe under 

,11$ aebra, or the bonte-quagga {Equus 
,'hf larger and more robust animal, with 




-The True or Mountain Zebra (£gu«j ttfrra). 

longer mane, and fuller taU. The general ground- 
body fs pale ycllowifh brown, the limbs nearly 
pes dark brown or black. In the typical form the 
~ extend on to the limbs or tail; but there is a 
a in this respect, and as we proceed north the 
ascs, till in the north-eastern E. burchetti gronti 
triped to the hoofs. There is a strongly marked 
tudinal ventral black stripe, to which the lower 
-ransverse side stripes are usually united, but die 



stripe (also strongly marked) » compJetefy isoizsr? i 

half, and the uppermost of the broad fc-~H 

runs nearly parallel to it. A much larger prop-c— - < 

is white than in the other species. In the m_ i- 4 

ride intervals between the broad black stripes of rise £=a* 

haunches fainter stripes are generally seen. Ii is «-» ~»f 




Fie. 2.— BurcheU's Zebra (£. bmnidli). 

allied to the quagga, but the typical form, in which the 1 
blance is closest, is extinct. The Abyssinian and Somali Greyy's 
zebra (E. petyi) is markedly distinguished by its enormous ears 
and more numerous and narrower black stripes. The fkesb of 
BurchdTs zebra (or quagga, as it is often called) b relished by 
the natives as food, and its hide is very valuable for leather. 
Although the many attempts that have been made to break in 
and train zebras for riding and driving have sometimes been 
rewarded with partial success, the animal has never been 
domesticated in the true sense of the word (see Horse). 

(W.H.F.; R.L.*) 

ZEBUUTIf , a tribe of Israel, named after Jacob's sixth " son " 
by Leah. The narrator of Gen. xxx. so offers two etymologies of 
the name, from the roots t-b-d, " give," and a-*-/, " exalt (?)." » 
The country of Zebulun lay in the fertile hilly country to the 
north of the plain of Jezreel, which forms the first step towards 
the mountains of Asher and Naphtali, and included the goodly 
upland plain of d-BaUof. The description of its boundaries 
is obscure, owing in some measure to its position between 
Issachar and Naphtali, with one or the other of which it is fre- 
quently combined. At one period Zebulun, like Dan and 
Asher (Judges v. 17), would seem to have reached the sea and 
bordered on Phoenician territory (Gen. xlix. 13, Deut. xxxiii. 
18 acq). In the latter passage allusion is made to a feast upon 
a sacred mountain held by Zebulun and Issachar in common, 
and to the wealth these tribes derived from commerce by sea. 
Zebulun had a chief part in the war with Sisera (Judges iv. 6, 
v. 18; see Deborah); it is said to have furnished at least one of 
the "judges," Elon the Zebulonite (Judges xii. xx seq.); and 
the prophet Jonah, who foretold the victories of Jeroboam II., 
came from the border town of Gath-hcpber (probably the 
modern el-Meshhed) (a Kings xiv. 25). The deportation of tho 
northern tribes under Tiglath Pileser IV. (a Kings xv. 39) 
appears to have included Zebulun (Is*, ix. 1). Nazareth lay 
within the territory of Zebulun but is not mentioned in tho 
Old Testament. (S. A. C) 

ZBCHARIAR, son of Berechiah, son of Iddo (or by contrac- 
tion, son of Iddo), a prophet of the Old Testament. He 
appeared in Jerusalem along with Haggai (q.v.), in the second 
year of Darius Hystaspis (520. B.C.), to warn and encourage the 

J A connexion with a divine name (cf. Baal-Zebu!) n) not im- 
probable; see H. W. Hogg, Ency. Bib., art. " Zebulun.' 1 



ZECHARIAH 



9*3 



Jews to address themselves si length to the restoration of the 
Temple. 1 Supported by the prophets, Zerubbabel and Joshua. 

set about the work, and the elders of Judah built and the work 

went forward (Ezra v. 1 aeq.<*vL 14). The first eight chapters 
of the book of Zechariah exactly fit into this historical setting. 

— . They are divided by precise chronological headings into three 

sections— <o) chap. L 1-6, in the eighth month of the second 
year of Darius; (b) chap. i. 7-vi. 15, on the twenty-fourth day 
of the eleventh month of the same year; (c) chap. vii.-vriL, 
on the fourth day of the ninth month of the fourth year of 
Darius. The first section is a preface containing exhortation 
in general terms. The main section is the second, containing 
a series of night visions, the significant features of which are 
k pointed out by an angel who stands by the prophet and answers 

2 his questions. . 

Nt * i. 7-17. The divine chariots and hones that make die round of 

Mi the world by Yahweh's orders return to, the heavenly palace and 

•tj - report that there is still no movement among the nations, no sign 

s> V oC the Messianic crisis. Seventy years have pasted, and Zion and 

* the cities of Judah still mourn. Sad news! hut Yahweh gives a 

\ comfortable assurance of His gracious return to Jerusalem and the 

rebuilding of His temple. 

L 18-ai (Heb. iL 1-4). Four horns, representing the hostile 

~- r world-power that oppresses Israel and Jerusalem, are cast down 

%• Jf by four smiths. 

- r ii. 1-13 (Heb. ii. £-17). The new Jerusalem is laid out with the 
** measuring nne. It is to have no walls, that its population may not 

be limited, and it needs none, for Yahweh is its protection. The 
*— catastrophe of " the land of the north " is near to come; then the 

exiles 01 Zion shall stream back from all quarters, the converted 
heathen shall join them. Yahweh Himself will dwell in the midst 
of them, and even now He stirs Himself from His holy habitation. 

itL 1-10. The high priest Joshua b accused before Yahweh by 
Satan, but is acquitted and given rule in Yahweh's house and 
courts, with the right of access to Yahweh in priestly intercession. 
The restoration of the temple and its service is a pledge of still 
- hkher things. The promised " branch " (or " shoot, simak), the 

Messiah, will come; the national kingdom is restored in its old 
splendour; and a time of general felicity dawns, when every man 
shall sit happy under his vine snd under his fie tree. As by rights 
the Messianic kingdom should follow immediately on the exile, 
it b probable that the prophet designs to hint in a ranted way 
that Zerubbabel, who in an other places b mentioned along with 
Joshua, b on the point of ascending the throne of hb ancestor 
David. The jewel with seven facets is already there, the inscrip- 
tion only has still to be engraved on ft (Hi. 9). The charges brought 
against the high priest consist simply in the obstacles thst have 
hitherto impeded the restoration of the temple and its service; 
and in like manner the guilt of the land (Ui. 9) b simply the still 
continuing domination of foreigners. 

iv. 1-14. Beside a lighted golden candlestick of seven branches 
stand two dive tree*— -Zerubbabel and Joshua, the two anointed 
on es sp ecially watched over by Him whose seven eyes run through 
the whole earth. Tbb explanation of the vision is separated from 
the description by an animated dialogue, not quite clear in its 
expression, in which it b said that the mountain of obstacles shall 
disappear before Zerubbabel, and that, having begun the building 
of the temple, be shall also bring it to an end in spite of those who 
now mock at the day of small beginnings. 

v. 1-4. A written roll flies over the Holy Land; this b a con- 
crete rep r esen tation of the curse which in future will fall of itself 
£ on all crime, so that, «.g ., no man who has suffered theft will have 

occasion buusel! to pronounce a curse against the thief (cf. Judges 
xvii.2). 

v. 5-11. Guilt, personified as a woman, b cast into an ephah- 
measure with a heavy lid and carried from Judah to ChaUaea, 
where it b to have its home for the future. 

, vi. 1-*. The divine teams, four in number, again tia w uat the 
world toward the four winds, to execute Yahweh's commands. 
That which goes northward b charged to wreak Hb anger on the 
north country. The series of visions has now reached its close, 
returning to its starting-point in i. 7 sqq. 



1 The alleged foundation of the second temple in 536 (Ezra Hi. 
8-13; cf. iv. 1-5, 24) b open to doubt, because (a) the statements 
of the compiler of Esra are not contemporary evidence, (ft) the 
contemporary Haggai and Zechariah seem to imply that thb work 
first began in 530 (Hag. ii. 18; Zcch. viii. 9; cf. Ezra v. a). If. 
on the ground of Earn v. 16, we accept the truth of an original 
foundation in 536 (so Driver, Minor Prophets, p. 148), that event 
was admittedly formal only and without success, so that the real 
beginning was made in 520. VYcUhausen (/jr. und Jud. Gcsck., 3rd 
ed., p. 160) rejects the earlier foundation: on the other hand, he 
insists, with the majority of scholars and sgainst Kostera, on the 
actual return of exiles in 537 to form the nucleus of the post-exilic 
community UoG*iL.p. 157 «i)« 



An appendix follows (vL 9-15) Jews from Babylon have 
brought gold and silver to Jerusalem: of these the prophet must 
make a crown designed for the " branch " who b to buikf Yahweh's 
bouse and tit king on the throne, but retain a good undemanding 
with the high pnest Zerubbabel b certainly meant here, and, a 
the received text names Joshua instead of him (vi. 11) thb is only 
a correctioa, made tor reasons easy to understand, which breaks 
the context and destroys the sense and the reference of " then, 
both '' in verse 13. 

The third section (chaps. vH.-viiL), dated from the fourth 
year of. Darius, contains an inquiry whether the fast days that 
arose in the captivity are still to be observed; with a comforting; 
and encouraging reply of the prophet. 

Thus throughout the first eight chapters the scene is Jem* 
salem in the early part of the reign of Darius.' ZerubbabeT and 
Joshua, the prince and the priest, are the leaders of the com- 
munity. The great concern of the time and the chief practical 
theme of these chapters is the building of the temple; but its 
restoration b only the earnest of greater things to follow, via., 
the glorious restoration of David's kingdom. The horizon of 
these, prophecies b everywhere limited by the narrow con- 
ditions of the time, and their aim b clearly seen. The visions 
hardly veil the thought, and the mode of expression is usually 
simple, except in the Messianic passages, where the tortuous- 
ness and obscurity are perhaps intentional. Noteworthy is the 
affinity between some notions evidently not first framed by the 
prophet himself and the prologue to Job — the heavenly hosts 
that wander through the earth and bring back their report to 
Yahweh's throne, the figure of Satan, the idea that suffering 
and calamity are evidences of guilt and of accusations pre- 
sented before God. 

Passing from chaps, i.-viii. to chaps, ix. seq., we at once feel 
ourselves transported into a different world. 

(1) Yahweh's word b accomplished on Syria-Phoenicia and 
Phihstb; and then the Messianic kingdom begins in Zion, and 
the Israelites detained among the heathen, Judah and Ephraim 
combined, receive a part in it. The might of the sons of Javan 
b broken in battle against thb kingdom (ch. ix.). After an inter- 
mezzo of three verses (x. 1-3: " Ask rain of Yahweh, not of the 
diviners ") a second and quite analogous Messianic prophecy follows. 
The foreign tyrants fall*, the lordship of Assyria and Egypt has 
an end; the autonomy and martial power of the nation are restored. 
The scattered exiles return as citizens of the new theocracy, all 
obstacles in their way parting asunder as when the waves of the 
Red Sea gave passage to Israel at the founding of the old theocracy 
(x. 3-12). Again there is an interlude of three verses (xL 1-3): 
fire seizes the cedars of Lebanon and the oaks of Bashan.* 

(i) The difficult passage about the shepherds follow*. The 
shepherds (rulers) of the nation make their flock an article of trade 
and treat the sheep as sheep for the shambles. Therefore the 
inhabited world shall fall a sacrifice to the tyranny of its kings, 
while Israel b delivered to a shepherd who feeds the sheep for 
those who make a trade of the flock (jib* "»«?, xi. 7, 11 - they 
that sell them," ver. 5) and enters on his office with two staves, 
"Favour" and ** Union." He destroys "the three shepherds" 
in one month, bat b soon weary of hb flock and the flock of him. 
He breaks the staff " Favour," ix. the covenant of peace with the 
nations, and asks the traders for his hire. Receiving thirty pieces 
of silver, he casts it into the temple treasury and breaks the staff 
" Union," ix. the brotherhood between Judah and Israel. He is 
succeeded by a foolfoh shepherd, who neglects his flock and lets 
it go to ruin. At length Yahweh intervenes; the foolish shepherd 
falls by the sword; two-thirds of the people perish with him in 
the Messianic crisis, but the remnant of one-third forms the seed 
of the new theocracy (xi. 4-17 taken with xiu. 7-9, according to 
the necessary transposition proposed by EwaM). Ail this must be 
an allegory of past events, the time present to the author and his 
hopes for the future beginning only at xi. 1 7, xiii.7-9. 

(3) Chap. xii. presents a third variation on the Messianic promise. 
AH heathendom is gathered together against Jerusalem and perishes 
there. Yahweh first gives victory to the countryfolk of Judah 
and then they rescue the capital. After thb triumph the noblest 
houses of Jerusalem hold, each by itself, a great b mentation over 
a martyr "whom they have pierced" (or "whom men have 



■The historical occasion of the emergence of Haggai and 
Zechariah was supplied by the series of revolts following ;he suc- 
cession of Darius in $22 (cf. Driver, op. cit. t p. 150). His recon- 
quest of Babylon ia 520 may, in particular, have seemed the 
prelude to the Messianic age (Wellhausen, GcxM.. p. 16; a.). 

V The cedars of Lebanon, the oaks of Bashan, the forest of 
lordan represent the national might of the heathen kingdoms'* 
"ellh.. DU Ki. Propk., 3rd ed.. p. 192). 






9 6 * 



ZEDEKIAH— ZEEHAN 



pierced "). It is taken for granted that the readers will know who 
the martyr is, and the exegesis of the Church applies the passage 
to our Lord. Chap. xiii. 1-6 is a continuation of chap. xii. ; the 
dawn of the day of salvation is accompanied by a general purging 
away of idolatry and the enthusiasm of false prophets. 

(4) Yet a fourth variation of the picture of the incoming of the 
Messianic deliverance is given in chap. xiv. The heathen gather 
against Jerusalem and take the city, but do not utterly destroy 
the inhabitants. The Yahweh, at a time known only to Himself, 
shall appear with all His saints on Monnt Olivet and destroy the 
heathen in battle, while the men of Jerusalem take refuge in their 
terror in the great cleft, that opens where Yahweh sets His foot. 
Now the new era begins, and even the heathen do homage to Yahweh 
by bringing due tribute to the annual feast of tabernacles. All 
in Jerusalem is holy down to the bells on the horses and the cook- 
iog-pots. 

There is a striking contrast between chaps. L-viii and chaps, 
ix.-xiv. The former prophecy is closely linked to the situation 
and wants of the community of Jerusalem in the second year of 
Darius I., and relates to the restoration of the temple and, 
perhaps, the elevation of Zenibbabel to the throne of David. 
In chaps, ix.-xiv., however, " there is nothing about the restora- 
tion of the temple, or about Joshua and Zerubbabd; but we 
read of the evil rulers, foreign and native alike, who maltreat 
their subjects, and enrich themselves at their expense. 1 There 
are corresponding differences in style and speech, and it is 
particularly to be noted that, while the superscriptions in the 
first part name the author and give the date of each oracle 
with precision, those in the second part (ix. L,. xii. x) are with- 
out name or elate. That both parts do not belong to the same 
author is now generally admitted, as is also the fact that 
chaps, ix.-xiv. are of much later date. 1 The predictions of 
these chapters have no affinity either with the prophecy of 
Amos, Hosea and Isaiah, or with that of Jeremiah. The kind 
of eschatology which- we find in Zech. ix.-xiv. was first intro- 
duced by Ezekiel, who in particular is the author of the con- 
ception that the time of deliverance is to be preceded by a joint 
attack of all nations on Jerusalem, in which they come to final 
overthrow (Ezek. xxxviii. seq.; Isa. lxvi 18-24; Joel). The 
importance attached to the temple service, even in Messianic 
times (Zech. xiv.), implies an author who lived in the ideas of 
the religious commonwealth of post-exile times. A future king 
is hoped for; but in the present there is no Davidic king, only 
a Davidic family standing on the same level with other noble 
families in Jerusalem (xii. 7, 12). The " bastard " (mixed race) 
of Ashdod reminds us of Neh. xiii. 33 sqq.; and the words of 
ix. 12 (" to-day, also, do I declare that I wQl render double 
unto thee ") have no sense unless they refer back to the deliver- 
ance from Babylonian exile. But the decisive argument is that 
in ix. 13 the sons of Javan, i.e. the Greeks, appear as the 
representatives of the heathen world-power. This part of the 
prophecy, therefore, is later than Alexander, who overthrew the 
Persian empire in 333. Egypt and Assyria (x. 10, xi) must be 
taken to represent the Ptolemaic and Seleudd kingdoms, which 
together made up for the Jews the empire of the sons of Javan.* 

The whole prophecy, however, is not a unity. By reference to 
the analysis given above, it will be seen that there are four sections 
in Zech. ix.-xiv„ viz. (1) ix., x. (xi. 1-3); (2) xi. 4-17, xiii. 7-9; 
(3) xii., xiii. 1-6; (4) xiv., which are more or less independent of 
each other. Of these (3) and (4) are of marked cschatological 
character, and show little contact with definite historical events 



1 Driver, op. cit., p. 229, who also refers to the differences of 
Messianic outlook, and the substitution of an atmosphere of war 
for one of peace. * 

* Earlier critics made the second part the older. Chaps. ix--xi 
were ascribed to a contemporary of Amos and Hosea, about the 
middle of the 8th century B.C., because Ephraim is mentioned as 
well as Judah, and Assyria along with Egypt (x. 10), while the 
neighbours of Israel appear in ix. 1 sq. in the same way as in Amos 
i.-ii. That chape, xii.-xxv. also were pre-exilic was held to appear 



especially in the attack on idolatry and lying prophecy (xiii. Y-6) 
but. as this prophecy speaks only of Judah and Jerusalem, it wai 
dated after the fall of Samaria, and assigned to the last days of 



the Judacan kingdom on the strength of xii. 11, where an allusion 
is seen by some to the mourning Tor King Josiah, slain in battle 
at Megiddo. 

•What follows Is summarized from Wellhausen, Die Kleinen 
PropkUen, pp. 190, 192, 193-197. 



(except xii. 7, which suggests the Maccabean age). On the other 
hand U) implies a. period when the Jews were governed by the 
Selcuads, since it is against these that the anger of Yahweh is 
first directed (ix. 1, 2).* This section, therefore, belongs to the 
first third of the and century B.C., when the Jews were first held 
in the power of the Sdeucids.* The same date may be assigned to 
(2), where the traffickers in the sheep may be regarded an the 
Seleuad rulers, and the shepherds as the Jewish high priests and 
ethnarchs; the prelude to the Maccabean revolt largely consisted 
of the rapid and violent changes here figured. In particular, the 
evil shepherd of xi. 15 f. may be Menelaus; whilst the disinterested 
speaker may be Hyrcanus ben Tobias (cf. xj. 13 and. 1 1. Mace 
in. 11). 

Recent criticism (for further details see G. A. Smith, The Book 
of the Twehe Prophets, U. pp. 450 f . and Driver, Minor Prophets. 
pp. 232-234) shows some difference of opinion as to the question 
of unity, and also of actual date within the Greek period. Whilst 
G. A. Smith (following Stade).and Marti find no adequate ground 
for the further division of Zech. ix.-xiv., Driver (following Nowack) 
accepts the fourfold division indicated above (" Four anonymous 
Prophecies, perhaps the work of four distinct Prophets." op. ciL, 
p. 235). In regard to date, G. A. Smith (here also following Stade) 
accepts the earlier part of the Greek period (306-278). With this 
Driver provisionally agrees, whilst Nowack thinks no more can be 
said than that (1) belongs to the Greek and (2W4) to the post- 
exilic period in general. On the other hand. Marti assigns the 
whole to 160 b.c. (Maccabean period; a little later than Well- 
hausen) and sees a number of references to historical personages of 
that age. The chief arguments to be urged against this late date 
are the character of the Hebrew style (Driver, op. ciL, p. 233) and 
the alleged dose of the prophetic canon by 200; but perhaps 
neither of these can be regarded as very convincing. 

Recent Literature.— Nowack. Dte Kleinen Propheten (1897; 
ed. 2, 1003); Wellhausen, Die Kleinen Propketen,* (1898); G. A. 
Smith, The Book of the Twehe Prophets (in The Expositors Bible), 
vol. ii. (pp. 253-328, 447-490) (1898); Marti. Dodekopropkeion, 
u. (1904); Driver, Minor Prophets, n. (in The Century Bible, 1906; 
the most useful for the general reader). The article in Hastings's 
Dictionary of the Bible (vol. iv., pp. 967-970) (1902). by Nowack. 
is a reproduction from his work cited above; the article in the 
Ency. BM. by Wellhausen is a revision of his article in the nth 
edition of the Ency. Brit., and the present independent revision 
is in some points indebted to it. (J- We.; H. W. R.*) 

ZEDEKIAH (Hebrew for "righteousness of Yahtweh]"), son 
of Josiah, and the last king of Judah (2 Kings xxiv. 17 sqq.; 
2 Chron. xxxvi. xo seq.). Previously known as Mattaniah 
(" gift of Yah[weh] "), he was appointed king by Nebuchadrezzar . 
after the capture of Jerusalem (597 b.c.) and his name changed 
to Zedekiah. He held his position under an oath of allegiance, 
but after three years (cf. Jehoiakim, 2 Kings xxiv. x) began an 
intrigue with Moab, Edom, Ammon, Tyre and Sidon, which the 
prophet Jeremiah vigorously denounced (Jer. xxvii. scq.; cf. also 
Ezek. xviL 11-21). It is possible that he was summoned to. 
Babylon to explain his conduct (Jer. Ii. 59; the Scptuagint reads 
"from Zedekiah "; see also xxix. 3). Nevertheless, relations 
were maintained with Egypt and steps were token to revolt. 
The Babylonian army began to lay siege to Jerusalem in the 
ninth year of his reign, and a vain attempt was made by Pharaoh 
Hophra to cause a diversion. The headings to the prophecies 
in Ezek. xxix. sqq. suggest that fuller details of the events 
were once preserved, and the narratives in Jer. xxxii.-xxxiv., 
xxxvii. give some account of the internal position in Jerusalem 
at the time. After six months a breach was made in the city, 
Zedekiah's flight was cut off in the Jordan Valley and he was 
taken to Nebuchadrezzar at Riblah. His sons were killed, and 
be was blinded and carried to Babylon in chains (cf. Ezek. xii, 
10-14). Vengeance was taken upon Jerusalem, and, on the 
seventh day of the fifth month, 586 B.C., Ncbuzaradan sacked 
the temple, destroyed the walls and houses, and deported the 
citizens, only the poorest peasantry of the land being left behind. 
See Jews (History), § 17 seq. (S. A. C.) 

ZEEHAN. a town of Montagu county, Tasmania, 22s m." 
direct N.W. of Hobart, on the Little Henty river. Pop. (1901) 
5014. It is an important railway centre, and from it radiate 
lines to Strahan, its port on the Macquarie Harbour, to Dundas, 
to Williamsford, and to Burnie,. where connexion Is made to 

'Hadraeh, i.e the Assyrian Hatarika, apparently denotes a 
district S. of Hamath (between Palmyra and the Mediterranean). 

• WeUhausen. Sketch of At History of Israel end Judnk, pp. 137* 
id* 



ZEELANI>— ZEITUN 



965 



Launceston and Hobart. The town is lighted by electricity 
«nd has an academy of musk and a state-aided school of mines. 
It is the principal centre of the silver-lead mining district, and 
lias large smelting works. 

ZEBLAND (or Zealand^* province of Holland, bounded S.E. 
and S. by Belgium, W. by the North Sea, N. by South Holland, 
and E. by North Brabant. It has an area of 690 sq. m. and a 
population (1005) of 227,292. Zecland consists of the delta 
islands formed about the estuaries of the Maas and Scheldt 
with its two arms, the Honte or Western Scheldt, and the 
Ooster Scheldt, together with a strip of mainland called Zceland- 
Flanders. The names of the islands are Schouwen and Duive- 
land, St Filipsland, Tolen, North Bevcland, South Beveland 
and Walcheren. The history of these islands is in every case 
one of varying loss amPgain in the struggle with the sea. They 
were built up by the gradual accumulation of mud deposits 
in a shallow bay, separated by dunes from the North Sea. As 
late as the 1 2th and 13th centuries each of these islands con- 
sisted of several smaller islands, many of whose names arc still 
preserved in the fertile polders which have taken their place. 
Lying for the most part below sea-level, the islands are pro- 
tected by a continuous line of artificial dikes, which hide them 
from view on the seaward side, whence only an occasional 
church steeple is seen. The islands of Schouwen and Duive- 
land are united owing to the damming of the Dyk water; St 
Filipsland, or Philipsland, and South Bevcland are connected 
with the mainland of North Brabant by naturally formed mud 
banks. 

The soil of Zeeland consists of a fertile sea clay which especi- 
ally favours the production of wheat; rye, barley (for malting), 
beans and peas, and flax are also cultivated. Cattle and swine 
are reared, and dairy produce is largely exported; but the 
sheep of the province are small and their wool indifferent. The 
industries (linen, yam-spinning, distilling, brewing, salt-refining, 
shipbuilding) are comparatively unimportant. The inhabi- 
tants, who retain many quaint and archaic peculiarities of 
manner and dress, speak the variety of Dutch known as Low 
Frankish. 

The chief towns on the island of Schouwen are the ports of 
Zierikseeand Brouwershaven. On the well-wooded fringe of the 
dunes on the west side of the island arc the two villages of 
Renesse and Haamstedc, the seats in former days of the two 
powerful lordships of the same name. St Maartensdyk on the 
adjoining island of Tolen was formerly the seat of a lordship 
which belonged successively to the families of Van Borssele, 
Barren and Orange-Nassau. There is a monument of the Van 
Borsseles in the Reformed church. The castle built here in 
the first half of the 14th century was demolished in 18 19. The 
island of South Beveland frequently suffered from inundations 
and experienced a particularly disastrous one in 1530. In the 
same century the flourishing walled town of Reimenswaal and 
the island of Borsele or Borssele disappeared beneath the 
waves; but the last-named was gradually recovered during the 
17th century. This island gave Its name to the powerful lord- 
ship of the same name. Goes is the chief town on South 
Beveland. Oyster-breeding is practised on the north coast of 
the island, especially at Wemekiinge and Ierseke or Yerseke. 
Ierseke was once a town of Importance and the seat of a lord- 
ship, while at Wemeldinge there was formerly an establishment 
of the Templars. In 1866 South Beveland and Walcheren were 
joined by a heavy railway dam, a canal being cut through the 
middle of the former island to restore the connexion between 
the East and West Scheldt. South Beveland is sometimes 
called the " granary " and Walcheren the " garden " of Zeeland. 
The principal towns in Walcheren are Middelburg, the chief 
town of the province, Flushing andVeere; all three connected 
by a canal (1867-72) which divides the island in two. The 
fishing village of ArnemuMen flourished as a harbour in the 
16th century, but decayed owing to the siting up of the sand. 
Domburg is pleasantly situated at the foot of the dunes on the 
west side of the island, and in modern times has become a 
popular but primitive watering-place. It is a very old town, 



having received civic rights in the 13th century, and from time 
to time Roman remains and other antiquities have been dug 
out of the sands. Between Domburg and the village of West- 
kapelle there stretches the famous WestkapeUe sea-dike. The 
mainland of Zeeland-Flanders was formerly also composed of 
numerous islands which were gradually united by the accumula- 
tion of mud and sand, and in this way many once flourishing 
commercial towns, such as Sluis and Aardenburg, were reduced 
in importance. The famous castle of Sluis, built in 1385, was 
partly blown up by the French in 2704, and totally demolished 
in 1818. Ysendyke represents a Hanse town which flourished 
in the 13th century and was gradually engulfed by the sea. 
Similarly the original port of Breskens was destroyed by in- 
undations in the 15th and 16th centuries. The modern town 
rose into importance in the 19th century on account of its good 
harbour. The old towns of Axel and Habt were formerly 
important fortresses, and as such were frequently besieged in 
the 16th, 17th and x8th centuries. Ter Neuzen was strongly 
fortified in 1833-39, and has a flourishing transit trade, as the 
port of Ghent, by the canal constructed in 1825-27. 

ZEERUST. a town of the Transvaal, 149 m. by rail, via 
Krugersdorp, N.N.W. of Pretoria and 33 ra. N.E. of Mafeking. 
Pop. (1004) 1945. It was founded in 1868 and is the chief 
town of the Marico district, one of the most fertile regions of 
South Africa. In the neighbourhood are lead, sine and silver 
mines, and some so m. S. are the Malmani goldfields. The 
Marico Valley was occupied early in the 19th century by Mata- 
bele, who had come from Zululand. They were driven out by 
Boer trekkers in 1837. To Boer cultivation the valley of the 
Marico river owes its fertility. Wheat and oats are largely 
cultivated and almost all sub-tropical fruits flourish. Follow- 
ing the relief of Mafeking, 17th of May 1900, Zeerust was 
occupied by the British under General R. S. S. Baden-Powell. 
Railway connexion with Pretoria was established in 1907. 

ZEIS8BBR0, HBUIRICH* Rims von (1839-1899), Austrian 
historian, was born in Vienna on the 8th of July 1839, and in 
1865 became professor of history at the university of Lemberg. 
In 1871 he removed to Innsbruck; in 1873 he was appointed 
professor at the university of Vienna, and here he was historical 
tutor to the crown prince Rudolph. In 1891 he was made 
director of the Vienna institute for historical research, and in 
1896 director of the imperial court library at Vienna. He 
resigned his professorial chair in 1897 and died on the 27th 
of May 1809. 

Zetisberg's writings deal mainly with the history of Austria and 
of Poland, and among them the following may be mentioned:— 
Die peiuiscke Gesckicklssekretbunt des MUudaUers (Leipzig, 1873) ; 
A mo, trsUt Ertbistkof von Salzburg (Vienna, 1863); Die Kriege 
BoUsiato I. ton PoU "" 



Kaiser Heinricks II. mit Hertog < 



I. ton Pokm (Vienna, 



t868); Rudolf ton Habsburg und dtr dsterreickiuke Staulsgedanke 
(Vienna, 1882); Ober das Recktswerfakren Rudolf s vou Habsburg 
» Otlokar von Bokmen (Vienna, 1887); and Der dsttrreickische 
_. falgestreit nock dem Tode desKdnigs Ladislaus Postkumus, 1457-58 
(Vienna, 1870). Dealing with more recent times he wrote:— Z«r 
ientscken KaiserpoliUk OtsUrrtUks: era Beitrag zur Gtstkkkl* des 
Rerolmtumsjakres 17Q< (Vienna, 1899); Zwcs Jakre bdgiscker 
GesckukU J7JH-Q2 (Vienna, 1891); BHtien unlet do GtneralstaU 



kalUrsckafl Enhenog Karls 1793-Q4 , ~ ,,.. 

Karl von Oesierreick. Lebensbiid (Vienna, 1893); and Pram Josef 



); Enkerzot 



(Vienna, 1888). He edited three volumes of the Qudlen tur 
GesckukU der Deutuken KaiserpoliUk Oesterreicke w&krend der 
fronzosisekc* Rcvotutiorukruge 1790-1801 (Vienna, 1882-1885, 
!8go). 

ZBTTUM (-"olive"), the name of several places in Turkey 
and Egypt, but principally an Armenian town in the Aleppo 
vilayet, altitude about 4000 ft., situated in the heart of Mt. 
Taurus, about 20 m. N.N.W. of Marash. The inhabitants, 
about 10,000, all Christians, are of a singularly fine physical 
type, though too much inbred, and are interesting from their 
character and historical position as a remnant of the kingdom 
of Lesser Armenia. The importance of Zeitun dates from the 
capture of Leo VI. by the Egyptians in 1375, and it probably 
became then a refuge for the more active and irreconcilable 
Armenians; but nothing certain is known of the place till 
300 years later. It long maintained practical independence as 



966 



ZEITZ— ZEMARCHOS 



a nest of freebooters, and it was only in 1878 that the Turks, 
after a long conflict, were enabled to station troops in a. fort 
above the town. In 1800 there was a serious revolt, from the 
worst consequences of which the town was saved by the inter- 
cession of the British consul at Aleppo warned in time by the 
devoted energy of T. Christie, American missionary at Marash; 
and in 1895, after the Armenian massacres had commenced 
elsewhere, the people again rose, seized the fort, and, after 
holding out for more than three months against a large Turkish 
force, secured honourable terms of peace on the mediation of 
the consuls of the Powers at Aleppo. The inhabitants seem to 
be abandoning their robber customs and devoting themselves 
to oil and silk culture. In consequence transit trade through 
the passes of eastern Taurus (see Marash), long almost anni- 
hilated by fear of the Zeitunli marauders, revived considerably. 
The governor must be a Christian, and certain other privileges 
arc secured to the Zeitunlis during their good behaviour. 

(D.C.H.) 

ZBITZ, a town of Germany, in the extreme south of the 
Prussian province of Saxony, pleasantly situated on a hill on 
the Weisse (White) Elster, 28 m. by rail S.S.W. of Leipzig on 
the line to Cera, and with branches to Altenburg and Wcissen- 
fcls. Pop.. (1885) 19,707; (1000) 27,301. The river is here 
crossed by two iron bridges, and one stone and one timber 
bridge, and the upper and lower towns are connected by a 
funicular railway. The Gothic abbey church dates from the 
15th century, but its Romanesque crypt from the 12th. The 
old Franciscan monastery, now occupied by a seminary, con- 
tains a library of 20,000 volumes. Just outside the town rises 
the Moritzburg, built in 1564 by the dukes of Saxe-Zeitz, on 
the site of the bishop's palace; it is now a reformatory and 
poorhouse. Zeitz has manufactures of cloth, cottons and other 
textiles, machinery, wax-cloth, musical instruments, vinegar, 
cigars, &c; and wood-carving, dyeing and calico-printing are 
carried on. In the neighbourhood there axe considerable 
deposits of lignite, and mineral-oil works. 

Zeitz is an ancient place of Slavonic origin. From 068 till 
1028 it was the seat of a bishopric, afterwards removed to 
Naumburg, 15} m. to the N.W., and styled Naumburg-Zeitz. 
In 1564 the last Roman Catholic bishop died, and his dominions 
were thenceforward administered by princes of Saxony. From 
1653 till 1718 Zeitz was the capital of the dukes of Saxe-Zeitz 
or Sachscn-Zcitz. It thereafter remained in the possession of 
the electors of Saxony until 18 15, when it passed to Prussia. 

See Rothc, A us der Cesckichte der Sladt Zeiss (Zeitz. 1876); and 
Lange, Chronik des Bisthums Naumburg (Naumburg, 1891). 

ZBLLER, EDUARD (1814-1908), German philosopher, was 
born at Kleinbottwar in Wurtlcmbcrg on the 22nd of January 
1814, and educated at the university of Tubingen and under 
the influence of Hegel. In 1840 he was Privaldotent of 
theology* at Tubingen, in 1847 professor of theology at Bern, 
in 1849 professor of theology at Marburg, migrating soon after- 
wards to the faculty of philosophy as the result of disputes 
with the Clerical party. He became professor of philosophy 
at. Heidelberg in 1862, removed to Berlin in 1872, and retired 
in 1895. His great work is his Philosophic der Criechen (1844- 
52). This book he continued to amplify and improve in the 
light of further research; the last edition appeared in 1902. 
It has been translated into most of the European languages 
and became the recognized text-book of Greek philosophy. He 
wrote also on theology, and published three volumes of philo- 
sophical essays. He was also one of the founders of the 
Thcohgische Jahrbiicher, a periodical which acquired great im- 
portance as the exponent of the historical method of David 
Strauss and Christian Baur. Like most of his contemporaries 
he began with Hegelianism, but subsequently he developed a 
system on his own lines. He saw the necessity of going back 
to Kant in the sense of demanding a critical reconsideration of 
the epistemological problems which Kant had made but a 
partially successful attempt to solve. None the less his merits 
as an original thinker are far outshone by his splendid services 
to the history of philosophy. It is true that his view of Greek 



thought is somewhat warped by Hegelian formalism. He it 
not alive enough to the very intimate relation which thought 
holds to national life and to the idiosyncrasy of the thinker. 
He lays too much stress upon the "concept," and explains 
too much by the Hegelian antithesis of subjective and objective. 
Nevertheless his history of Greek philosophy remains a noble 
monument of solid learning informed with natural sagacity. 
He received the highest recognition, not only from philosophers 
and learned societies all over the world, but abo from the 
emperor and the German people. In 1894 the Emperor Wil- 
liam II. made him a " Wirklicher Geheimrat " with the title of 
" Excellent," and his bust, with that of Hdmholtz, was set 
up at the Brandenburg Gate near the statues erected to the 
Emperor and Empress Frederick. He died on the 19th of 
March 1908. 

The Pkilosopkie der Criechen has been translated into English 
by S. F. Alleyne (2 wis., 1881) in sections: S. F. Atleyne, Hist, 
of Ck. Phil, to the time of Socrates (1881); O. J. Rcichd, Socrates 
and the Sccratic Schools (1868; 2nd ed. 1877); S. F. Alleyne and 
A. Goodwin, Plato and the Older Academy (1876); Costclloe and 
Muirhcad, Aristotle and the Earlier Peripatetics (1897) ;0. J. Reichd. 
States, Epicureans and Sceptics (1870 and 1880); S. F. Alleyne, 
Hist, of Eclecticism in Ck. Phil. (1883). The Pkilosopkie appeared 
in an abbreviated form as Crundriss d. Cesch. d. Crieeh, Philos. 
(1883; 5th ed. 1898); Eng. trans, by Alleyne and Evelyn Abbott 
(1866). under the title. Outlines of the Hist, of Ck. Philos. Among 



geschichie krit. untersuckt (1854; Eng.- trans. J. Dare. 1875-76); 
EnhoickaUtng 4. Monolkeismus bet d. Crieeh. (1862); Cesch. d. 
christlich. Kirche (1 898); Cesch. d. deutsch. Philos. sett Leibniz 
(1873. ed. 1875); Stoat und Kirche (1673): Strauss in seinen Leben 
und Schriften (1874; Eng. trans. 1874); Oher Bedeutung und 
Aufgabe d. ErhenutnisS'Theorie (1862); Cher leteotog. und nuchas*. 
Naturerhlarung (1876); Vortr&M und Abhandlungeu (1865-84); 
Religion und Pkilosopkie bei den Rdmern (1866, ed. 1871) ; Phiiosopk 
Aujsdtne (1887). 

ZEMARCHUS (A. 568), Byzantine general and traveller. The 
Turks, by their conquest of Sogdiana in the middle of the 6th 
century, gained control of the silk trade which then passed 
through Central Asia into Persia. But the Persian king, 
Chosroes Nushjrvan, dreading the intrusion of Turkish influ- 
ence, refused to allow the old commerce to continue, and the 
Turks after many rebuffs consented to a suggestion made by 
their mercantile subjects of the Soghd, and in 568 sent an 
embassy to Constantinople to form an alliance with the Byzan- 
tines and " transfer the sale of silk to them." The offer was 
accepted by Justin II., and in August 568, Zemarchus the 
Cilician, " General of the cities of the East," left Byzantium 
for Sogdiana. The embassy was under the guidance of Maniakh, 
44 chief of the people of Sogdiana," who had first, according to 
Menander Protector, suggested to Dizabul (Dizaboulos, the Bu 
Min hhq* of the Turks, the Mokan of the Chinese), the great 
khan of the Turks, this " Roman " alliance, and bad himself 
come to Byzantium to negotiate the same. On reaching the 
Sogdian territories the travellers were offered iron for sale, and 
solemnly exorcised; Zemarchus was made to "pass through 
the fire " (*.«. between two fires), and strange ceremonies were 
performed over the baggage of the expedition, a bell being 
rung And a drum beaten over it, while flaming incense-leaves 
were carried round it, and incantations muttered in " Scythian." 
After these precautions the envoys proceeded to the camp of 
Dizabul (or rather of Dizabul's successor, Bu Min khan having 
just died) " in a hollow encompassed by the Golden Mountain," 
apparently in some locality of the Altai They found the khan 
surrounded by astonishing barbaric pomp— gilded thrones, golden 
peacocks, gold and silver plate and silver animals, hangings 
and clothing of figured silk. They accompanied him some way 
on his march against Persia, passing through Talas or Turkestan 
in the Syr Daria valley, where Hsuan Tsang, on his way from 
China to India sixty years later, met with another of Dizabul's 
successors. Zemarchus was present at a banquet in Talas 
where the Turkish^kagan and the Persian envoy exchanged 
abuse; but the Byzantine does not seem to have witnessed 
actual fighting. Near the river OCkh (Syr Daria?) he was sent 
back to Constantinople with a Turkish embassy and with 



ZENAGA— ZEND-AVESTA 



967 



envoys from virions tribes subject to the Turks. Halting by 
the " vast, wide lagoon " (of the Aral Sea?), Zemarcfaus sent off 
an express messenger, one George, to announce his return to 
the emperor. George hurried on by the shortest route, " desert 
and waterless," apparently the steppes north of the Black Sea: 
while his superior, moving more slowly, marched twelve days 
by the sandy shores of "the lagoon"; crossed the Emba, 
Ural, Volga, and Kuban (where 4000 Persians vainly lay in 
ambush to stop him); and passing round the western end of 
the Caucasus, arrived safely at Trebtaond and Constantinople. 
For several years this Turkish alliance subsist ed, while dose 
intercourse was maintained between Central Asia and Byzan- 
tium; when another Roman envoy, one Vakntinos (Oftohemw*), 
goes on his embassy in $75 he takes back with him 106 Turks 
who had been visiting Byzantine lands; but from 570 this 
friendship rapidly began to coot It is curious that aU this 
travel between the Bosporus and Transoxiana seems not to 
have done anything to correct, at least in literature, the wide- 
spread misapprehension of the Caspian as a gulf of the Arctic 
Ocean. 

See Menander Protector, B*t Upm fi liar 'Pf/mlm* «yfc "Bay* 
(De legaimmibus Rtmanorum ad CenUs), pp. 995-308, 380-65. 



Yule, Cathay, 

cia.~«j*ti. \uvnuun, ii«iihiuyi «^*-«:ijr, iouu/i l». VraniiA, iMSroduC- 

turn a VhisteiredePAsU, pp. io*-i8 (Paris, 1896): C. H Beaskry, 
Dawn of Modem Geography, i. 186-89 (London, 1897). (C R. B.) 

ZHIA0A (SamhajA, Sena/eh), a Berber tribe of southern 
Morocco who gave their name to Senegal, once their tribal 
home. They formed one of the tribes which, uniting under the 
leadership of Yusef bin Tashfin, crossed the Sahara and gave a 
dynasty to Morocco and Spam, namely, that of the Almoravidcs 
(?.».). The Zeirid dynasty which supplanted the Falimhes 
in the Maghrib and founded the dty of Algiers was also of 
Zcnftga origin. The Zeniga dialect of Berber is spoken in 
southern Morocco and on the banks of the lower Senegal, 
la rgely by the negro population. 

ZBHAMA (Persian Manama), the apartments of an Eastern 
house in which the women of the family are secluded (see 
Hasxh). This is a Mahommedan custom, which has been 
introduced into India and has spread amongst the Hindus. 
The senana missions are missions to Indian women in their 



ZBHATA, or ZanatA, a Berber tribe of Morocco in the dis- 
trict of the central Atlas. Their tribal home seems to have been 
south of Oran in Algeria, and (hey seem to have early claimed 
an Arab origin, though it was alleged by the Arabs that they 
were descendants of Goliath, ix. Philistines or Phoenicians 
(Ibn Khaldun, vol. iii. p. 184 and voL iv. p. 597). They were 
formerly a large and powerful confederation, and took a pro- 
minent part in the history of the Berber race. The Bent- 
Marin and Wattasi dynasties which reigned in Morocco from 
1 213 to 15 48 we re of Zenata origin. 

ZEND-AVESTA, the original document of the religion of 
Zoroaster (?.«.), stul used by the Parse** as their bible and 
prayer-book. The name " Zend-Avesta " has been current in 
Europe since the time of Anquetfl Duperron (c. 1771), but the 
Parsees themselves call it simply A*estc t Zend (U. "inter- 
pretation") being specially employed to denote the transla- 
tion and exposition of a great part of the Avesta which exists 
in Pahlavf. Text and translation are often spoken of together 
in Pahlavi books as Ansldk as Zand (" Avesta and Zend "), 
whence— through a misunderstanding— our word Zend-Avesta. 
The origin and meaning of the word " Avesta " (or m its older 
form, Atisidk) are alike obscure; it cannot be traced further 
back than the Sasanian period. The language of the Avesta is 
still frequently called Zend; but, as already implied, this is 
a mistake. We possess no other document written in it, and 
on this account modern Parsee scholars, as well as the older 
Pahlavi books, speak of the language and writing indifferently 
as Avesta. As the original home of the language can only be 
very doubtfully conjectured, we shall do well to follow the 
vsage sanctioned by old custom and apply the word to both. 



Although - the Avesta is a work of but moderate compass 
(comparable, say, to the Iliad and Odyssey taken together), 
there nevertheless exists no single MS. which gives it in entirety. 
This circumstance alone is enough to reveal the true nature of 
the book: It is a composite whole, a collection of writings, as 
the Old Testament is. It consists, as we shall afterwards sec, 
of the last remains of the extensive sacred literature in which 
the Zoroastrian faith was formerly set forth. 

Contents. — As we now have it, the Avesta consists of five 
parts— the Yasna, the Vispered, the Vendidad, the Yashts, 
and the Khordah Avesta. 

1. The Yasna, the principal liturgical book of the Pamees, ia 
72 chapters (hdiii. Ad), contains the text* that are read by the 
priests at the solemn yasna (Izeshne) ceremony, or the general 
sacrifice in honour of eU the deities. The arrangement of the 
chapters to purely liturgical, although their matter in part has 
nothing to do with the liturgical action. The kernel of the whole 
book, around which the remaining portions are grouped, consists 
of the Glthas or " hymns " of Zoroaster ($.».), the oldest and most 
sacred portion of the entire canon. The Yasna accordingly falls 
into three sections of about equal length: — fa) The introduction 
(chaps. 1-47) is, for the most part, made up of long-winded, mono- 
tonous, reiterated invocations. Yet even this section includes some 
interesting texts, «.£. the Haema (Horn) Yasht (9, 11) and the 
ancient confession of faith (12), which is of value as a document 
for the history of civilization. (6) The Git has (chaps. 28-54) 
contain the discourses, exhortations and revelations of the prophet. 
written in a metrical style and an archaic language, different in 
many respects from that ordinarily used in the Avesta. As to the 
authenticity of these hymns, see Zokoastri. The Gathi* proper, 
arranged according to the metres in which they are written, fall 
into five* subdivisions (28-54, 43-46* 47-5°. $'• 53)- Between 
chap. 37 and chap. 43 is inserted the so-called Seven-Chapter 
Yasna (hapUughdilt), a number of small prose pieces not far behind 
the Githfts ia antiquity, (c) The so-called Later Yasna (Apart 
Yasnd) (chaps. 54-7?) has contents of considerable variety, but 

consists mainly of invocations. Special mention ought to be made 
of the Sraaska (Sr&sh) Yasht (57), the prayer to fire (62), and the 
great liturgy for.the sacrifice to divinities of the water (63-60). 

2. The Vispered, a minor liturgical work in 24 chapters (karde\ 
is alike in form and substance completely dependent on the Yasna, 
to which it is a liturgical appendix. Its separate chapters are 
interpolated in the Yasna in order to produce a modified — or 
expanded— Yasna ceremony. The name Vispered, meaning " all 
the chiefs " (mtf ratavO\, has reference to the spiritual heads of 
the religion of Ormuzd, invocations to whom form the contents 
of the first chanter of the book. 

3. The Vendidad, the priestly code of the Parsees, contains in 
22 chapters (fargard) a fcind of dualistic account of the creation 
(chap. 1), the legend of Yima and the golden age (chap. 2), and in 
the bulk of the remaining chapters the precepts of religion with 
regard to the cultivation of the earth, the care of useful animals, 
the protection of the sacred elements, such as earth, fire and water, 
the keeping of a man's body from defilement, together with the 
requisite measures of precaution, elaborate ceremonies of purifica- 
tion, a t onements, ecclesiastical expiations and so forth. These 
prcsrriptiom are marked by a conscientious classification based on 
considerations of material, size and number; but they lose them- 
selves in an exaggerated casuistry. Still the whole of Zoroastrian 
legislation is subordinate to one great point of view: the war— ■ 
preached without intermission— against Satan and his noxious 
creatures, from which the whole book derives its name; for " Ven- 
didld" is a modern corruption for H-aaee*-d&tem — "the anti- 
demonic Law." Fargard 18 treats of the true and false priest, of 
the value of the house-cock, of the four paramours of the she-devil, 
and of unlawful lust. Fargard 19 is a fragment of the Zoroaster 
legend: Ahriman tempts Zoroaster; Zoroaster applies to Ormuzd 
for the revelation of the law, Ahriman and the devils despair, and 
flee down into hett. The three concluding chapters are devoted to 
sacerdotal medicine. 

The Yasna, Vispered and Vendidad together constitute the 
Avesta in the stricter sense of the word, and the reading of them 
appertains to the priest atone. For liturgical purpose* the separate 
chapters of the Vendidad are sometimes inserted among those of 
the Yasna and Vispered. The reading of the Vendidad in this 
case may, when viewed according to the original intention, be 
taken as corresponding in some sense to the sermon, while that of 
the Yasna and Vispered may be said to answer to the hymns and 
prayers of Christian worship. 

4. The Yashts, U. *' songs of prafoe," In so far as they have not 
been received already into the Yasna, form a collection by them- 
selves. They contain invocations of separate Izads, or angels, 
number 21 in all, and are of widely divergent extent and antiquity. 
The great Yashts — some nine or ten — are impressed with a higher 
stamp: they are cast almost throughout in a poetical mould, and 
r»pr?sent the religious poetry of the ancient Iranians. So far they 



968 



ZEND-AVESTA 



may be compared to the Indian Rig-Veda. Several of them may 
have been cemented together from a number of lesser poems or 
songs. They are a rich source of mythology and legendary history. 
Side by side with full, vividly coloured descriptions of the Zoroas- 
trian deities, they frequently interweave, as episodes, stories from 
the old heroic fables. The most important of all, the 19th Yasht, 
gives a consecutive account of the Iranian heroic saga in great 
broad lines, together with a prophetic presentment of the end of 
this world. 

5. The Khordah Avesta, ix. the Little Avesta, comprises a collec- 
tion of shorter prayers designed for all believers— the laity included 
— and adapted for the various occurrences of ordinary life. In 
part, these brief petitions serve as convenient substitutes for the 
more lengthy Yasnts — especially the so-called Ny&ithes. 

Over and above the five books just enumerated, there are a 
considerable number of fragments from other books, e.g. the 
Nirongist&n, as well as quotations, glosses and glossaries. 

The Larger Avesta and the Twenty-one Nash.— In its 
present form, however, the Avesta is only a fragmentary rem- 
nant of the old priestly literature of Zoroastrianism, a fact 
confessed by the learned tradition of the Parsees themselves, 
according to which the number of Yashts was originally thirty. 
The truth is that we possess but a trifling portion of a very 
much larger Avesta, if we are to believe native tradition, carry- 
ing us back to the Sassanian period, which tells of a larger Avesta 
in twenty-one books called nasks or nosks, as to the names of 
which we have several more or less detailed accounts, parti- 
cularly in the Pahlavi Dlnkard (9th century aj>.) and in the 
Rivayats. From the same sources we learn that this larger 
Avesta was only a part of a yet more extensive original Avesta, 
which is said to have existed before Alexander. We .are told 
that of a number of nasks only a small portion was found to be 
extant " after Alexander." For example, of the seventh nask, 
which "before Alexander" had as many as fifty chapters, 
there then remained only thirteen; and similar allegations are 
made with regard to the eighth, ninth, tenth and other nasks. 
The Rivayats state that, when after the calamity of Alexander 
they sought for the books again, they found a portion of each 
nask, but found no nask in completeness except the Vendidad. 
But even of the remains of the Avesta, as these lay before the 
Author of the 9th century, only a small residue has survived 
to our time. Of all the nasks one only, the nineteenth, has come 
down on us intact -the Vendidad. All else, considered as 
wholes, have vanished in the course of the centuries. 

It would be rash summarily to dismiss this old tradition of the 
twenty-one nasks as pure invention. The number twenty-one 
points, indeed, to an artificial arrangement of the material; for 
twenty-one is a sacred number, and the most sacred prayer of the 
Parsees, the so-called Ahuno Vairyd (Honovar) contains twenty-one 
words; and it is also true that in the enumeration of the nasks 
we miss the names of the books we know, like the Yasna and the 
Yashts. But we must assume that these were included in .such 
or such a nask. as the Yashts in the seventeenth or Jiak&n Yasht; 
or, it may be that other books, especially the Yasna. are a com- 

r llation extracted for liturgical purposes from various nasks. 
urther, the statements of the Dinkard leave on us a very distinct 
impression that the author actually had before him the text of the 
nasks, or at all events of a large part of them: for he expressly 
states that the eleventh nask was entirely lost, so that he is unable 
to give the slightest account of its contents. And, besides, in other 
directions there arc numerous indications that such books once 
really existed. In the Khordah Avesta, as we now have it, we 
find two Srdsh Yashts; with regard to the first, it is expressly 
stated in old MSS. that it was taken from the H&ddkht nask /the 
twentieth, according to the Dinkard). From the same nask also 
a considerable fragment (Y Is. 21 and 22 in Westergaard) has been 
taken. So, also, the Nirangisl&n is a portion of the seventeenth 
(or HAsparam) nask. Lastly, the numerous other fragments, the 
quotations in the Pahlavi translation, the many references in the 
Bundahish to passages of this Avesta not now known to us, all 
presuppose the existence in the Sassanian period of a much more 
extensive Avesta literature than the mere prayer-book now in our 
hands. The existence of a larger Avesta, even as late as the 9th 
century A.o % , is far from being a mere myth. But, even granting 
that a certain obscurity still hangs undispelled over the problem 
of the old Avesta. with its twenty-one nasks, we may well believe 
the Parsees themselves, when they affirm that their sacred litera- 
ture has passed through successive stages of decay, the last of 
which w represented by the present Avesta. In fact we can clearly 
trace t> ! - J — • -~-~* 9 of decay in certain portions of the Avesta 
durir 'tries. The great Yashts are not of very 



frequent occurrence in the manuscripts: some of them, indeed, 
are already met with but seldom, and MSS. containing all the 
Yashts are of extreme rarity. Of the fifteenth, seventeenth and 
nineteenth Yashts the few useful copies that we possess are derived 
from a single MS. of the year 1591 a.d. 

Origin and History.— While all that Herodotus (i. 15s) ha* 
to say is that the Magi sang "the tbeogony "at their sacrifices, 
Pausanias is able to add (v. 27. 3) that they read from a book. 
Hernrippus, in the 3rd century B.C., affirmed that Zoroaster, 
the founder of the doctrine of the Magi, was the author of 
twenty books, each containing 100,000 verses. According to 
the Arab historian, Tabari, these were written on 12,000 cow- 
hides, a statement confirmed by Masudi, who writes: " Zartusht 
gave to the Persians the book called Avesta. It consisted of 
twenty-one parts, each containing 200 leaves. This book, in 
the writing which Zartusht invented and which the Magi called 
the writing of religion, was written on 12,000 cowhides, bound 
together by golden bands. Its language was the Old Persian, 
which now no one understands." These assertions sufficiently 
establish the existence and great bulk of the sacred writing*. 
Parsee tradition adds a number of interesting statements as 
to their history. According to the Arda-Virof-NSma the 
religion revealed through Zoroaster has subsisted in its purity 
for 300 years, when Iskander Rumi (Alexander the Great) 
invaded and devastated Iran, and burned the Avesta which, 
written on cowhides with golden ink, was preserved in the 
archives at Persepoks. According to the Dinkard, there were 
two copies, of which one was burned, while the second came 
into the hands of the Greeks. One of the Rivayato relates 
further: " After the villainy of Alexander, an assemblage of 
several high-priests brought together the Avesta from various 
places, and made a collection which included the sacred Yasna, 
Vispered, Vendidad and other scraps of the Avesta." As to 
this re-collection and redaction of the Avesta the Dinkard gives 
various details. One of the Arsacid kings, Vologcses (I. or 
III.?), ordered the scattered remnants of the Avesta to be 
carefully preserved and recorded. The first of the Sassanian 
kings, Ardashlr Babagan (226-240), caused his high-priest, 
Tanvasar, to bring together the dispersed portions of the holy 
book, and to compile from these a new Avesta, which, as far 
as possible, should be a faithful reproduction of the original. 
King Sh&pur I. (241-272) enlarged this re-edited Avesta by 
collecting and incorporating with it the non-religious tractates 
on medicine, astronomy, geography and philosophy. Under 
ShapOf II. (309-380) the nasks were brought into complete 
order, and the new redaction of the Avesta reached its definitive 
conclusion. 

Historical criticism may regard this tradition, in many of its 
features, as mere fiction, or as a perversion of facts made for 
the purpose of transferring the blame for the loss of a sacred 
liLerature to other persons than those actually responsible for 
it. We may, if wc choose, absolve Alexander from the charge 
of, vandalism of which he is accused, but the fact nevertheless 
remains, that he ordered the palace at Pcrscpolis to be burned 
(Diod., xvii. 72; Curt., v. 7). Even the statement as to the 
one or two complete copies of the Avesta may be given up as 
the invention of a later day. Nevertheless the essential ele- 
ments of the tradition remain unshaken, viz. that the original 
Avesta, or old sacred literature, divided on account of its great 
yulk and heterogeneous contents into many portions and a 
variety of separate works, had an actual existence in numerous 
copies and also in the memories of priests, that, although 
gradually diminishing in bulk, it remained extant during the 
period of foreign domination and ecclesiastical decay after the 
time of Alexander, and that it served as a basis for the redaction 
subsequently made. The kernel of this native tradition — the 
fact of a late collection of older fragments— appears indisputable. 
The character of the book is entirely that of a compilation. 

In its outward form the Avesta, as we now have it, belongs to 
the Sassanian period — the last survival of the compilers' work 
already alluded to. But this Sassanian origin of the Avesta must 
not be misunderstood: from xpt remnants and heterogeneous 



ZBND-AVESTA 



969 



fragments at their disposal, the diasrniasf or diaaceuasts com- 
posed * new canon— erected a new edifice from the material* 
of the old. In point of detail, it is now impossible to draw a 
sharp distinction between that which they found surviving 
ready to their hand and that which they themselves added, or to 
define how far they reproduced the traditional fragments with 
verbal fidelity or indulged in revision and remoulding. It may 
reasonably be supposed, not only that they constructed the 
external framework of many chapters, and also made some 
additions -pf their own— a necessary process in order to weld 
their motley collection of fragments into a new and coherent 
book— but also that they fabricated anew many formulae and 
imitative passages on the model of the materials at their dis- 
posal. In this consisted the " completion " of Tanvasar, ex- 
pressly mentioned in the account of the Dlnkard. All those 
texts in which the grammar is handled, now with laxness and 
want of skill, and again with absolute barbarism, may probably 
be placed to the account of the Sasssnisn redactors. All the 
grammatically correct texts, together with those portions of 
the Avesta which have intrinsic worth, especially the metrical 
passage*, are indubitably authentic and taken ad verbum from 
the original Avesta. To this class, above all, belong the 
Gathas and the nucleus of the greater Yashts. Opinions differ 
greatly as to the precise age of the original texts brought 
together by subsequent redactors: according to some, they are 
pre-Achaemenian; according to Darmesteter's former opinion, 
they were written in Media under the Achaemenian dynasty; 
according to some, their source must be sought in the east, 
according to others, in the west of Iran. But to search for a 
precise time or an exact locality is to deal with the question 
too narrowly; it 4s more correct to say that the Avesta was 
worked at from the time of Zoroaster down to the Sassanian 
period. Its oldest portions, the Gathas, proceed from the prophet 
himself. This conclusion is inevitable for every one to whom 
Zoroaster Is an historical personality, and who does not shun 
the labour of an unprejudiced research into the meaning of 
those difficult texts (cf. Zoroaster). The rest of the Avesta, 
in spite of the opposite opinion of orthodox Parsees, does not 
even claim to come from Zoroaster. As the Gathas now con- 
stitute the kernel of the most sacred prayer-book, viz. the 
Yasna, so they ultimately proved to be the first nucleus of a 
religious literature in general. The language in which Zoroaster 
taught, especially a later development of it, remained as the 
standard with his followers, and became the sacred language 
of the priesthood of that faith which he had founded; as such 
it became, so to speak, absolved from the ordinary conditions 
of time and space. Taught and acquired as an ecclesiastical 
language, it was enabled to live an artificial life long after it 
had become extinct as a vernacular— in this respect comparable 
to the Latin of the middle ages or the Hebrew of the rabbinical 
schools. The priests, who were the composers and repositories 
of these texts, succeeded in giving them a perfectly general 
form. They refrained from practically every allusion to 
ephemeral or local circumstances. Thus we search vainly In 
the Avesta itself for any precise data to determine the period 
of Its composition or the place where it arose. The original 
country of the religion, and the seat of the Avesta language, 
ought perhaps to be sought rather in the east of Iran (Sdstan 
and the neighbouring districts). But neither the spiritual 
literature nor the sacred tongue remained limited to the east. 
The geography of the Avesta points both to the east and the 
west', particularly the north-west of Iran, but with a decided 
tendency to gravitate towards the east. The vivid descrip- 
tion of the basin of the HOment (Yaski 19, 65-69) is peculiarly 
instructive. The language of the Avesta travelled with the 
Zoroastriao religion and with the main body of the priesthood, 
in all probability, that is to say, from east to west; within the 
limits of Iran it became international. 



As has been already stated, the Avesta now in our hands is but 
• small portion of the book as restored and edited wader the 



Ftitftsntftflt The larger part perished under the Mahomniedan rale 
and under the more barbarous tyranny of the Tatars, when through 



convemon and es termination the Zoroastnans became a mere 
remnant that concealed its religion and neglected the necessary 
copying of manuscripts. A most meagre proportion only of the 
real rchgious and ritual writings, the sacerdotal law and the liturgy, 
has been preserved to our time. The great buuV-over three- 
fourths of the Sassanian contents— especially the more secular 
literature collected, has fallen a prey to oblivion, The under- 
standing of the older Avesta texts beganjo die away at an early 
period. The need for a translation and int erpretati on became 
evident; and under the Later Sasaaniaos the majority of the books, 
if not the whole of them, were rendered into the current Pahlavi. 
A thorough use of this translation will not be possible until we 
have it in good critical editions, and acquaintance with its lan- 
guage ceases to be the monopoly of a few privileged individuals. 
For the interpretation of the older texts it is of great value where 
they are concerned with the fined, formal .statutes of the church. 
But when they pass beyond this narrow sphere, as particularly in 
the Gathas, the Pahtavi translator becomes a defective and un- 
reliable in t e r pre ter. The Parsee priest, Neiyosangh, subsequently 
translated a portion of the Pahlavi version into Sanskrit. 

The MSS, of the Avesta are, comparatively speaking, of recent 
date. The oldest is the Pahlavi Yispered in Copenhagen, dated 
1258. Next come the four MSS. of the Herbad Mihirapan Kal 
Khusro at Catnbay (1323 and 1324), two Vendidads with Pahlavt 
in London and Copenhagen, and two Yasnas with Pahlavi in Copen- 
hagen and formerly in Bombay (now Oxford). Generally speaking, 
the MSS. fall off in quality and carefulness in proportion to tbctr 
lateness; though an honourable exception must he made in favour 
of those p roceeding from Kirman and Yasd in Persia, mostly 
dating from the 17th and 18th centuries. 

The first European scholar to direct attention to the Avesta 
was Hyde of Oxford, in his Historia Rdirionis Vcterum Perxarum 
eoramque Magorum (1700), which, however, failed to awake any 
lasting interest in the sacred writings of the Parsees. The merit 
of achieving this belongs to the enthusiastic orientalist Anqoetil 
Dnperron. the (ruit of whose prolonged stay in India 0755-1 761) 
ana his acquaintance with the Parsee priests was a translation 
(certainly very defective) of the Zend-Avesta. The foundation of a 
scientific exegesis was laid by Burnouf. The Interpretation of the 
Avesta is one of the most difficult problems of oriental philology. 
To this very day no kind of agreement has been reached by con* 
flictiog schools, even upon some of the most important points. 
The value of the Pahlavi interpretation was overrated by Spiegel, 
Darmesteter, but wholly denied by Roth. The truth lies between 
these two extremes. Opinion is divided also as to the significance 
of the Avesta in the uterature of the world. The exaggerated 
enthusiasm of Anquetil Duperroa has been followed, especially 
since Spiegel's translation, by an excessive reaction. Upon the 
whole, the Avesta is a monotonous book. The Yasna and many 
Yashts in great part consist of formulae of prayer which are as 
rich in verbiage, the book of laws 
an arid didactic tone; only here 

his dicta in the guise of graceful 

dialogues and tales, or of poetic descriptions and similitudes; and 
then the book of laws is transformed into a didactic poem. Nor 
can we deny to the Yashts, in their depiction of the Zoroastriao 
angels and their prese nt m e nt of the old sagas, a certain poetic 
feeling, at times, and a pleasant diction. The Gathas are quite 
unique in their kind. As a whole, the Avesta, for profundity of 
thought and beauty, stands on a lower level than the Old Testa- 
ment. But as a religious book— the most important document of 
the Zoroaatrian faith, and the sole literary monument of ancient 
Iran— the Avesta occupies a prominent position in the literature 
of the world. At the present day its significance is decidedly 
underrated. The future will doubtless be more just with regard 
to the importance of the book for the history of religion in general 
and even of Christianity. 



K. Geldner (Stuttgart. 1886-96). Translations.— Anquetil Duper> 
ron, Zend-Avesta, Ouorae* do Zoroastre (Paris, 1771); Fr. Spiegel, 
3 vols. (Leipzig. 1853-03), both completely antiquated. Avesta 
traduit parC/de rfarlex. ed. 2 (Paris. 1881); The Zend-Avesta, 
Pari I. Vendidad, Part II. SlrOsaks, Yaskts and Ny&ytsk, tr. by 
J. Darmesteter, Part III. Yasna, Visporad, &c, by L. H. Mills 
(Oxford, 1880-87), in the Sacred Books of the East; U Zend-Avesta, 
traduction n ome tit par J. Darmesteter, 3 vols. (Paris. 1893-93) 
CwJmrt) a t 



(AnsMUidMMuootl 



i most important work. 



deT Avesta (Paris. 188 1); 
voL iv.; Edtiard Meyer, c 



tooiji Max Duncker. Geschickte da AUeriums, 
ever, GosckkkU des Altertums, vol. L (Stuttgart, 
1884); J. Darmesteter. in the Introduction to his translation 
(ate above); ft Geldner, Avesta-Littoratur in the Crundrus 
dor iranisckon PhOolorU. by Geiger and Kuhn (Scrasaburg, 
1896). vol. a. x f.; E. W. West, Contents of ike Nasks. S. B. E. 37 
(Oxfosd. 189a). (K. G.) 



97© 



ZENGG— ZENO OF ELEA 



ZBM(rG(Hungar!an, Zeng; Croatian, Senj; Italian, Segno) t 
a royal free town of Hungary, in the county of Lika-Krbava, 
Croatia-Slavonia, 34 m. S.E. of Flume, on the Adriatic Sea. 
Pop. (1900) 3x82. Zengg lies at the entrance to a long deft 
among the Velebit Mountains, down which the bora, or N.N.E. 
wind, sweeps with such violence as often to render the harbour 
unsafe, although the Austrian Lloyd steamers call regularly. 
Apart from the cathedral of its Roman Catholic bishop, a 
gymnasium, and some ancient fortifications, the town contains 
little of interest. It carries on a small trade in tobacco, fish 
and salt. The island of Veglis faces the town and the port 
of San Giorgio ties 5 m. S. 

The captaincy of Zengg was established, in the 15th century, 
by King Matthias Corvinus of Hungary, as a check upon the 
Turks; and subsequently, until 1617, the town became famous 
as the stronghold of the Uskoks. 

ZENITH (from the Arabic), the point directly overhead; its 
direction is defined by that of the plumb-line. 

ZEHJkti, or Zanjan, a town of Persia, capital of the Khamseh 
province, about S05 m. N.W. of Teheran, on the high road thence 
to Tabriz, at an elevation of 5180 ft. It has a population of 
about 25,000 and post and telegraph offices, and was one of the 
original strongholds of the B&bl sectarians, who held it fcgainst 
a large Persian force from May 1850 to the end of the year, 
when most of them were massacred. It has extensive gardens, 
well watered by the Zanjaneh river, which flows south of it. 
The well-stocked bazaar supplies the neighbouring districts. 

ZENO, East Roman emperor from 474 to 491, was an Isauxian 
of noble birth, and originally bore the name of Trascslissaeus, 
which he exchanged for that of Zeno on his marriage with 
Ariadne, daughter of Leo I., in 468. Of his early life nothing 
is known; after his marriage (which was designed by Leo to 
secure the Isaurian support against his ambitious minister 
Aspar) he became patrician and commander of the imperial 
guard and of the armies in the East. While on a campaign in 
Thrace he narrowly escaped assassination; on his return to 
the capital he avenged himself by compassing the murder of 
Aspar, who had instigated the attempt. In 474 Leo L died 
after appointing as his successor Leo the son of Zeno and 
Ariadne; Zeno, however, with the help of his mother-in4aw 
Verina, succeeded in getting himself •crowned also, and on the 
death of his son before the end of the year became sole emperor. 
In the following year, in consequence of a revolt fomented by 
Verina in favour of her brother Basiliscus, and the antipathy 
to his Isaurian soldiers and administrators, be was compelled 
to take refuge in Isauria, where, after sustaining a defeat, he was 
compelled to shut himself up in a fortress. The growing mis- 
government and unpopularity of Basiliscus ultimately enabled 
Zeno to re-enter Constantinople unopposed (476); his rival 
was banished to Phrygia, where he soon afterwards died. The 
remainder of Zeno's reign was disturbed by numerous other 
less formidable revolts. Since 47 a the aggressions of the two 
Ostrogoth leaders Theodoric had been a constant source of 
danger. Though Zeno at times contrived to play them off 
against each other, they in turn were able to profit by his 
dynastic rivalries, and it was only by offering them pay and 
high command that he kept them from attacking Cons t ants 
nople. itseH. In 487 he induced Theodoric, son of Theodemir, 
to invade Italy and establish his new kingdom. Zeno is de- 
scribed as a lax and indolent ruler, but he seems to have 
husbanded the resources of the empire so as to leave it appreci- 
ably stronger at his death. In ecclesiastical history the name 
of Zeno is associated with the Henoticon or instrument el union, 
promulgated by him and signed by all the Eastern bishops, 
with the design of terminating the Monophysite controversy. 

See J. B. Bury, The Later Raman Empire (London, 1889), L 
pp. 250-274; E. W. Brooks in the Enrlisk Historical Review 
(1893), pp. 209-238; W. Berth, Der Kaiser Zeno (Basel, 1894). 

ZBHO OF ELEA, son of Teleutagoras, is supposed to have 

been bom towards the beginning of the 5th century B.C. The 

^ and the friend of Parmenides, he sought to recommend 

atcr's doctrine of the existence of the One by contro- 



verting the popular belief in the existence of the Many. In 
virtue of this method of indirect argumentation be is regarded 
as the inventor of " dialectic," that is to say, disputation bavins; 
for its end not victory but the discovery or the transmission of 
truth. He is said to have been concerned in a plot against a 
tyrant, and on its detection to have borne with exemplary 
constancy the tortures to which he was subjected; but autho- 
rities differ both as to the name and the residence of the tyrant 
and as to the circumstances and the issue of the enterprise. 

In Plato's Parmenides, Socrates, " then very young," meets 
Parmenides, " an old man some sixty-five years el age," and 
Zeno, " a man of about forty, tall and personable," and engages 
them in philosophical discussion. But it may be doubted 
whether such' a meeting was chronologically possible. Plato's 
account of Zeno's teaching (Parmenides, is8 acq".) is, however, 
presumably as accurate as it is precise. In reply to those who 
thought that Parmenides's theory of the existence of the One 
involved inconsistencies and absurdities, Zeno tried to snow 
that the assumption of the existence of the Many, that Is to 
say, a plurality of things in time and space, carried witn h 
inconsistencies and absurdities grosser and more numerous. In 
early youth he collected bis arguments in a book, which, accord- 
ing to Plato, was put into circulation without his knowledge. 

Of the paradoxes used by Zeno to discredit the belief in plurality 
and motion, eight survive in the writings of Aristotle and Simpliehia. 
They are commonly stated as follows. 1 (1) If the Existent ss 
Many, it must be at onoe infinitely small and infinitely great— 
infinitely small, because the parts of which it consists must be 
indivisible and therefore without magnitude; infinitely great, 
beca m e, that any pat having magnitude may be separate from 
any other part, the intervention of a third part having magnitude 
is necessary, and that this third part may be separate from the 
other two the intervention of other parts having magnitude js 
necessary, and so on ad infinitum. (2) In tike manner the Many 
must be numerically both finite and infinite— numerically finite, 
because there are as many things as there are, neither more nor 
less; numerically infinite, because, that any two things may be 



separate, the intervention of a third thing is necessary ."and so on 
ad infinitum. (3) If all that is is In space, space itself must be in 
apace, and so on ad infinitum. (4) If a bushel of corn turned out 



upon the floor makes a # noise, each 



grain 
(5)B 



grain 

out, 



and each part of each 



must make a noise likewise; out, in fact, it is not 
body in morion can reach a given pointt 
traverse the half of the distance; before tt can traverse the half 



of the distance, it must first traverse the quarter; and so on ad 
infinitum. Hence, that a body may pass from one point to another, 
it must traverse an infinite number of divisions. But an infinite 
distance (which Zeno fails to distinguish from a finite distance 
infinitely divided) cannot be traversed in a finite time. Conse- 
quently, the goal can never be reached. (6) If the tortoise has 
the start of Achilles, Achilles can ne*er come up with the tortoise; 
for, while Achilles traverses the distance from his starting-point 
to the starting-point of the tortoise, the tortoise advances a certain 
distance, and while Achilles traverses this distance, the tortoise 
makes a further advance, and so on ad infinitum. Consequently, 
Achilles may run ad infinitum without overtaking the tortoise, 
[This paradox is virtually identical with (5), the only difference 
being that, whereas in (5) there is one body, in (6) there are two 
bodies, moving towards a limit. The " infinity * of the premise 
is an infinity of subdivisions of a distance which is finite; the 
" infinity " of the conclusion is an infinity of distance. Thus Zeno 
again confounds a finite distance infinitely divided with an infinite 
distance. If the tortoise has a start of 1000 ft. Achilles, on the 
supposition that bis speed is ten times that of the tortoise, must 
traverse an infinite number of spaces— iooo ft., 100 ft-, 10 ft., Ac. — 
and the tortoise must traverse an infinite number of spaces— 100 ft, 
10 ft, I ft., Ac— before they reach the point, distant from their 
starting-points mil ft and ml ft. respectively, at which the tor- 
toise is overtaken. In a word, 1000+100+10 Ac, in (6) and 1+1+1 
Ac, in (5) are convergent series, and ini| and 1 are the brait* 
to which they respectively approximate.] (7) So long as anything 
is in one and the same space, it is at rest. Hence an arrow is at 
rest at every moment of its flight, and therefore also during the 
....._ ... *.... .~ .j.^ j^jg, moving with equal speed 

But. when two bodies move 
is, the one passes the other 
in half the time in which it passes it when at rest. These pro- 
positions appeared to Zeno to be irreconcilable. In short, the 
ordinary belief in plurality and motion seemed to him to involve 
fatal incoMbtendes, whence he inferred that Parmenides was 
justified in distinguishing the mutable movable Many from the 



whole of its flight. (8) Two bodies m 
traverse equal spaces in equal time. Bu 
with equal speed in opposite directions, f 



1 See ZeUer, Die PhUosaphu d. Griechen, L 591 acq. ; Grundriss, 54. 



ZENO OF ELEA 



97 » 



rat* One. ■ 
reaffirmed t 



. which alone b really existent, la 
1 the dogma. M The Eat is, the Non-ent 
ii not.*' 

If tradition has not misrepresented these paradoxes of time, space 
and motion, there is in Zeno's reasoning an element of fallacy. It 
as indeed difficult to understand how so acuta a thinker should 
confound that which is infinitely divisible with that which is infinitely 
great* as in (i), (2), (sh and (6); that he should identify space 
and magnitude, as in (3); that he should neglect the imperfection 
of the organs of sense, as in (4): that he should deny the reality 
of motion, as in (7); and that he should ignore the relativity of 
speed, as in (8) r and of late years it has been thought that the 
conventional statements of the parado x es, and in particular of 
those which are more definitely mathematical, namely (5), (6), 
(7)1 (8), do less than justice to Zero's acumen. Thus, several 
French ^writers — notably, Tannery and No il re ga rd them as 
dilemmas advanced, with some measure of success, in refuta- 




r arguments all immeasurably subtle and profound, the gross- 
ness 01 subsequent philosophers pronounced him to be a mere 
ingenious juggler,- and his arguments to be one and all sophisms. 
After two thousand years of continual refutation, these sophisms 
were reinstated, and made the foundation of a mathematical renais- 
sance, by a German professor, who probably never dreamed of any 
connexion between himself and Zeno. Wderstrass, by strictly 
banishing all infinitesimals, has at last shown that we live in an 
unchanging world, and that the arrow at every moment of its 
flight is truly at rest." " The interpretation off Zeno's last four 
paradoxes given by Messrs. Nod and Russell," says G. H. Hardy. 
'' may be briefly stated as follows: The notion of time, which 
seems at first sight to enter into (5) and (6), should be eliminated. 
The former should be regarded as asserting that the whole is. not 
temporally, but logically, subsequent to the. part, and that there- 
fore there is an infinite regress in the notion of a whole which is 
infinitely divisible— a view which at any tatfe demands a serious 
refutation. The kernel of the latter Ues in the perfectly valid 
proof which it affords that the tortoise passes through as many 
positions as Achilks— a view which embodies an accepted doctrine 
of modern mathematics. The pa r ado x of the arrow (7), says 
Mr Russell, is a plain statement of a very elementary fact: the 
arrow is at rest at very moment of its flight: Zeno's only mistake 
was in inferring (if he did infer) that it was therefore at the same 
point at one moment as at another. Finally, the last paradox- 
may be interpreted as a valid refutation of the doctrine that space 
and time are not infinitely divisible. How far this interpretation 
of Zeno is historically justifiable, may be doubtfuL But one may 
well believe that there was in his mind at any rate a foreshadowing 
of some of the ideas by which modern math em a t i c ians have finally 
laid to rest the traditional difficulties connected with infinity and 
continuity/* _ 

Great as was the importance of these paradoxes of plurality 
and motion in stimulating speculation about space and time, 
their direct influence upon Greek thought was less considerable 
than that of another paradox—strangely neglected by historians 
of philosophy— the paradox of predication. We learn from 
Plato (Parmenides, 127 D) that " the first hypothesis of the first 
argument " of Zeno's book above mentioned ran as follows: 
" If existences are many, they must be both like and unlike 
(unlike, inasmuch as they are not one and the same, and like, 
inasmuch as they agree in not being one and the same, Proclus, 
On the Parmenides, ii. 143]. But this is impossible; for unlike 
things cannot be like, nor like things unlike. Therefore exist- 
ences are not many." That is to say, not perceiving that 
the same thing may be at once like and unlike in different 
relations, Zeno regarded the attribution to the same thing of 
likeness and unlikeness as a violation of what was afterwards 
known as the principle of contradiction; and, finding that 
plurality entailed these attributions, be inferred its unreality. 
Now, when without qualification he affirmed that the unlike 
thing cannot be like, nor the like thing unlike, he was on the 
high road to the doctrine maintained three-quarters of a century 
later by the Cynics, that no predication which is not identical 
Is legitimate. He was not indeed aware how deeply he had 
committed himself; otherwise he would have observed that his 
argument, if valid against the Many of the vulgar, was valid 
also against the One of Parmenides, with its plurality of attri- 
butes, as well as that, in the absence of a theory of predication, 
it was useless to speculate about knowledge and being. But 
others were not slow to draw the obvious conclusions; and it 
may be conjectured that Gorgias's sceptical development of 



the Zenonian logic contributed, not less than Protagoras's 
sceptical development of the Ionian physics, to the diversion 
of the intellectual energies of Greece from the pursuit of truth 
to the pursuit of culture. 

For three-quarters of a century, then, philosophy was at a 
standstill; and, when in the second decade of the 4th century 
the pursuit of truth was resumed, it was plain that Zeno's 
paradox of predication must be disposed of before the problems 
which had occupied the earlier thinkers— the problem of know- 
ledge and the problem of being— could be so much as attempted. 
Accordingly, in the seventh book of the Republic, where Plato 
propounds his scheme of Academic education, he directs the 
attention of studious youth primarily, if not exclusively, to 
the concurrence of inconsistent attributes; and in the Pkatdo, 
ios B-X03 A, taking as an instance the tallness and the short- 
ness simultaneously discoverable in Simmias, he offers his own 
theory of the immanent idea as the solution of the paradox. 
Simmias, he says, has in him the ideas of tall and short. 
Again, when it presently appeared that the theory of the 
immanent idea was inconsistent with itself, and moreover in- 
applicable to explain predication except where the subject was 
a sensible thing, so that reconstruction became necessary, the 
Zenonian difficulty continued to demand and to receive Plato's 
best attention. Thus, in the Parmenides, with the paradox of 
likeness and unlikeness for his text, he inquires how far the 
current theories of being (his own included) are capable of 
providing, not only for knowledge, but also for predication, 
and in the concluding sentence he suggests that, as likeness 
and ttnKkeness) greatness and smallness, &c, are relations, the 
initial paradox is no longer paradoxical; while in the Sophist, 
Zeno's doctrine having been shown to be fatal to reason, 
thought, speech and utterance, the mutual Kowcaifa of ctSa 
which are not ovrd xofr* avra b elaborately demonstrated. It 
would seem then that, not to Antisthencs only, but to Plato 
also, Zeno's paradox of predication was a substantial difficulty; 
and we shall be disposed to give Zeno credit accordingly for 
his perception of its importance. 

In all probability Zeno did not observe that in his contro- 
versial defence of Eleatidsm he was interpreting Parmenides's 
teaching anew. But so it was. For, while Parmenides had 
recognized, together with the One, which is, and is the object 
of knowledge, a Many, which is not, and therefore is not known, 
but nevertheless becomes, and is the object of opinion, Zeno 
plainly affirmed that plurality, becoming and opinion are one 
and all inconceivable. In a word, the fundamental dogma, 
" The Ent is, the Non-ent is not," which with Parmenides had 
been an assertion of the necessity of distinguishing between 
the Ent, which is, and the Non-ent, which is not, but becomes, 
was with Zeno a declaration of the Non-ent 's absolute nullity. 
Thus, just as Empedodes developed Parmenides's theory of 
the Many to the neglect of his theory of the One, so Zeno 
developed the theory of the One to the neglect of the theory 
of the Many. With the severance of its two members Eleatidsm 
proper, the Eleatidsm of Parmenides, ceased to exist. 

The first effect of Zeno's teaching was to complete the dis- 
comfiture of philosophy. For the paradox of predication, 
which he had used to disprove the existence of plurality, was 
virtually a denial of all speech and all thought, and thus led 
to a more comprehensive scepticism than that which sprang 
from the contemporary theories of sensation. Nevertheless, 
he left an enduring mark upon Greek speculation, inasmuch as 
he not only recognized the need of a logic, and grappled, how- 
ever unsuccessfully, with one of the most obvious of logical 
problems, but also by the invention of dialectic provided a new 
and powerful instrument against the time when the One and 
the Many should be reunited in the philosophy of. Plato. 

Bibliography.— F. W. A. Mullach, Pragmenta PkSosophorum 
Gratcomm (Paris, i860), L 266 seq.: Zeller, Die Philosophic d. 
Criecken (Leipzig, 1876), i. 534-553; P. Tannery, Pour VHisUrire 
de la Science HeUbu (Puis, 1887}; pp. 247-261; H. Diets, Die 
Fragmenle der Vorsokratiktr (Berlin, 1906, 1907). On the mathe* 
matical questions raised by certain of Zeno • paradoxes, see G. Nod. 
Rewue de Metapkysique et de Morale, I 107-125, and Hon. Bertram! 



i 



972 



ZENO OF SIDON— ZENODOTUS 



Russell, PrincipUs of Mathematics (Cambridge* I9<>3).PP. 346-3S4- 
For histories of philosophy and other works upon Eleatidsm see 
Parmbnidbs. (H. Ja.) 

ZENO OF SIDON, Epicurean philosopher of the first century 
B.C., and contemporary of Cicero. In the De Natura Deorum 
(>• 54), Cicero states that he was contemptuous of other philo- 
sophers and even called Socrates " the Attic Buffoon." Diogenes 
LaCrtius and Cicero both speak of him with respect and describe 
him as an accurate and polished thinker. He held that happi- 
ness includes not merely present enjoyment and prosperity, 
but also a reasonable expectation of their continuance. His 
views were made the subject of a special treatise by Posidonius. 

ZENO OF TARSUS, Stoic philosopher and pupil of Chry- 
sippus, belonged to the period of the Middle Stoa. He appears 
to have accepted all the Stoic doctrines except that be denied 
the final conflagration of the universe (see Stoics). 

ZENOBIA (Gr. Zijwtfto), queen of Palmyra, one of ' the 
heroines of antiquity. Her native name was Septimia Bath- 
zabbai, a name also borne by one of her generals, Septimius 
Zabbai. 1 This remarkable woman, famed for her beauty, her 
masculine energy and unusual powers of mind, was well fitted 
to be the consort of Odainatti (see Odaenathus) in his proud 
position as Dux Orientis; during his lifetime she actively 
seconded his policy, and after his death in ad. 266-7 she not 
only succeeded to his position but determined to surpass it 
and make Palmyra mistress of the Roman Empire in the East. 
Wahab-allath or AthenodOrus (as the name was Graecized), 
her son by Odainath, being still a boy, she took the reins of 
government into her own hands. Under her general-in-chief 
Zabdl, the Palmyrenes occupied Egypt in aj>. 270, not without 
a struggle, under the pretext of restoring it to Rome; and 
Wahab-allath governed Egypt in the reign of Claudius as joint 
ruler with the title of fieuriKAt (king), while Zenobia herself 
was styled pafftkLoaan (queen). In Asia Minor Palmyrene 
garrisons were established as far west as Ancyra in Galatia 
and Chalcedon opposite Byzantium, and Zenobia still pro- 
fessed to be acting in the interests of the Roman rule. In his 
coins struck at Alexandria in aj>. 270 Wahab-allath is named 
along with Aurelian, but the title of Augustus is given only to 
the latter; a Greek inscription from Byblos, however, mentions 
Aurelian (or his predecessor Claudius) and Zenobia together as 
Eepcunk and Tk&aaH) (i.e. Augustus and Augusta, C./.G. 
4503 b). When Aurelian became emperor in 270 he quickly 
realized that the policy of the Palmyrene queen was endangering 
the unity of the empire. It was not long before all disguises 
were thrown off; in Egypt Wahab-allath began to issue coins 
without the head of Aurelian and bearing the imperial title, 
and Zenobia's coins bear the same. The assumption marked 
the rejection of all allegiance to Rome. Aurelian instantly 
took measures; Egypt was recovered for the Empire by Probus 
(close of 270), and the emperor himself prepared a great expedi- 
tion into Asia Minor and Syria. Towards the end of 271 be 
marched through Asia -Minor and, overthrowing the Palmyrene 
garrisons in Chalcedon, Ancyra and Tyana, he reached Antioch, 
where the main Palmyrene army under Zabdft and Zabbai, 
with Zenobia herself, attempted to oppose his way. The at- 
tempt, however, proved unsuccessful, and after suffering con- 
siderable losses the Palmyrenes retired in the direction of 
Emesa (now Hdras), whence the road lay open to their native 
city. The queen refused to yield to Aurelian's demand for 
surrender, and drew up her army at Emesa for the battle which 
was to decide her fate. In the end she was defeated, and there 
was nothing for it but to fall back upon Palmyra across the 
desert. Thither Aurelian followed her in spite of the difficulties 
of transport, and laid siege to the well-fortified and provisioned 
city. At the critical moment the queen's courage seems to 
have failed her; she and her son fled from the city to seek 

1 See the Palmyrene inscriptions given in Vogue 1 , Syne cenlrale, 
Nos. 28, 29 -Cooke. North-Semitic Inscriptions, Nos. 130, 131. 
Zabbai, an abbreviation of some such form as Z&bd-\\&.- dowry oj 
Cod, was a common Palmyrene name; it occurs in the Old Testa- 
ment. Eir. x. 28; Neh. iiL 20. 



help from the Persian king;* they were captured on the bask 
of the Euphrates, and the Palmyrenes, losing heart at this 
disaster, capitulated (a.o. 272). Aurelian seized. the wealth 
of the city but spared the inhabitants; to Zenobia he granted 
life; while her officers and advisers, among whom was the 
celebrated scholar Longinus, were put to death. Zenobia 
figured in the conqueror's splendjd triumph at Rome, and by 
the most probable account accepted her fall with dignity and 
closed her days at Tibur, where she lived with her sons the life 
of a Roman matron. A few months after the fall of Zenobia, 
Palmyra revolted again; Aurelian unexpectedly returned, 
destroyed the city, and this time showed no mercy to the 
population (spring, 273). 

Among the traditions relating to Zenobia may be mentioned 
that of her discussions with the Archbishop Paul of Samoaata 
on matters of religion. It is probable that she treated the 
Jews in Palmyra with favour; she is referred to in the Talmud, 
as protecting Jewish rabbis (Talm. Jer. Ter. vifi. 46 b). 

The well-known account of Zenobia by Gibbon (Decline and 
Fail, L pp. 302-312 Bury's edition) is based upon the imperial 
biographers QZisioria Augusta) and cannot be regarded as strictly 
historical in detail. An obscure and distorted tradition of Zenobia 
as an Arab queen survived ia the Arabian story of Zabba, daughter 
of 'Amr b. Zarib, whose name is associated with Tadmor and with 
a town en the right bank of the Euphrates, which is no doubt the 
Zenobia. of which Procopius speaks as founded by the -famous 
queen. See C de Perceval, Essoi sur Vhist. des Amies, ii. 28 f ., 
i97f.;Tahari, L 757f- See further Paxhvsa, (G.A.C*) 

ZKNOBITJS, a Greek sophist, who taught rhetoric at Rome 
during the reign of Hadrian (aj>. 1x7-138). He was the author 
of a collection of proverbs in three books, stfll extant in an 
abridged form, compiled, according to Sufdas, from Didymus 
of Alexandria and " The Tarrhaean " (Ludllus of Tarrha in 
Crete). Zenobius is also said to have been the author of a Greek 
translation, of Sallust and of a birthday poem (y&4\tojd») 
on Hadrian.. 

Editions by T. Gaisford (1836) and E. L. Leutsch-F. W. Schnekfe. 
win (1839). and in B. E. Miller, Melanges de litteratme grecqm 
(1868) ; see also W. Christ, CriecJnsche LUteraUtrgtschichU (1898). 

ZENODOCHIUM (Gr. frntoxtlop, $**, stranger, guest, 
6ex«90ac, to receive), the name given by the Greeks to a building 
erected f or the reception of strangers. 

ZENODOTUS* Greek grammarian and critic, pupil of Phfletas 
(q.v.) of Cos, was a native of Ephesus. He lived during the 
reigns of the first two Ptolemies, and was at the height of his 
reputation about 280 B.C. He was the first superintendent of 
the library at Alexandria and the first critical editor (kocdfrnrt) 
of Homer. His colleagues in the Kbrarianship were Alexander 
of Aetolia and Lycophron of Chalds, to whom were allotted 
the tragic and comic writers respectively, Homer and other 
epic poets being assigned to Zenodotus. Although he has 
been reproached with arbitrariness and an insufficient know- 
ledge of Greek, in his recension he undoubtedly laid a sound 
foundation for future criticism. Having collated the different 
MSS. in the library, he expunged or obelised doubtful verses, 
transposed or altered lines, and introduced new readings. He 
divided the Homeric poems into books (with capitals for the 
Iliad, and small letters for the Odyssey), and possibly was the 
author of the calculation of the days of the Iliad in the Tabula 
Hiaca. He does not appear to have written any regular com- 
mentary on Homer, but his Homeric 7X3*701 (lists of unusual 
words) probably formed the source of the explanations of 
Homer attributed by the grammarians to Zenodotus. He also 
lectured upon Hesiod, Anacreon and Pindar, if he did not 
publish editions of them. He is further called an epic poet by 
Sufdas, and three epigrams in the Greek Anthology are assigned 
to him. 

There appear to have been at least two other grammarians 
of the same name: (1) Zenodotus of Alexandria, surnamed 

1 Whether Shapur or his son Horrouzdi is not certain; ShlpeVs 
death is variously placed in 269 and 272. 



ZENTA— ZEPHANIAH 



6 y AVm; (a) Zenodotus of Malms, the disciple of Crates, 
who like his master attacked Aristarchus, 



F. A. Wolf, 



OS> aMRMMIi 86CQOO 43 \t' 



XTOfMWMM 

edition); H. Duatzer, Dt Zenodoti stmdns Homerieis (il 
A. Rimer, Ubcr die Homerrecensum des Zenadotu/ (Munich, iU^, 
F. Susemihl, Gtsckkkte der triechischen Litteratur in der Alexan- 
drintraeit, i. p. 330, ii. p. 14; J. E. Sandys, BisL of Class. SchoL 
(1906), ed.«a, vol i. pp. 1 19-121. 

ZENTA, a market town of Hungary, in the county of Bacs- 
Bodrog, 133 m. S.E. of Budapest by rail. Pop. (1000) 28,58a. 
It is situated on the right bank of the river Theiss, and is 
historically known for the decisive victory won in its vicinity 
by Prince Eugene of Savoy over the Turks on the nth of 
Septem ber 16 97. 

ZEOLITES, a family of minerals consisting of hydrated 
silicates of alumina with alkalis or alkaline earths or both. 
The water they contain is readily lost, and before the blowpipe 
It is expelled with intumescence; hence the name zeolite, from 
the Greek feT* (to boil) and Wos (a stone), given by A. Cron- 
stedt in X758. In some other characters, as well as in their 
origin and mode of occurrence, they have points in common. 
Several species have been distinguished, of which the following 
are the more important. Apophyllite (q.v.) and pectolite (see 
Pyroxene) are also sometimes included. 

H«CaA1,(5iO0<+3HA 
H.(Sr. Ba ( Ca)A],(SiO,).+3HiO. 
H<CaAI,(SiO,),+3H,0. 
(Ba, Ca, Ki)AkSi,0.*+3Hrf). 
(K,, Ca)AU&iO.)4-MH*0. 
H,(K» Ba)AUSiO,)»+6H,0. 
CaAl,(SiO,)«+6H*0. 
CaAl«(SiOa)4+4H*0. 
H«CaAl£t40M+2H<0. 



Croup. l Epi8tilbite 

{WelWte . 
Phillipaite 
Harmotome 
Stilbite . 
Gismondite 
Laumontite 
rChabaate 
<j Groelinite 
iLevyaite 
Analcite . 
fNatrolite. 
NatrolitejMesolite. 
Group. I Scolecite . 
lEdingtonite 
Thomsonite 



Group. 



(Ca. Na,)A!,(SiO0i+4HiO, Ac. 
(Na,, Ca)Al,(SiO,) 4 +6HiO. 

NaAl(SiO0i+HgO. 

Na»Al^A.4-2HA 

(Ca. Na,)AI,Si,0..+2H f O. 

CaAI»Si,O w +3Hrf>. 

BaAl»SiA«+3rU0. 

(Na to a)Al,(Si04),+2iH i O. 



Some of the chemical formulae given above are only ap- 
proximate, since in some species the composition varies between 
certain limits and can be best expressed by the isomorpbous 
mixing of different molecules (see, for example, Chabaztte). 
They are all readily decomposed by hydrochloric acid, usually 
with the separation of gelatinous silica. By the action of various 
reagents several substitution products have been prepared 
artificially: thus, crystallized products, in which the alkalis 
or alkaline earths are replaced by ammonium or silver, &c., 
have been obtained. 

The zeolites are often beautifully crystallized, and belong to 
several crystal-systems. The crystals usually show evidences 
of twinning, and when examined in polarized light they fre- 
quently exhibit optical anomalies and a complex structure. 
The hardness (H.=3i~si) and specific gravity (2-0-2*4) ve 
comparatively low, and so are the indices of refraction and the 
double refraction. 

The water of seolites presents many points of interest. Laumon- 
tite loses water on exposure to air, and the crystals soon crumble 
to powder unless they are kept in a moist atmosphere. All the 
seolites lose a portion of their " water of crystallization " in dry 
air (over sulphuric add), and a considerable portion at a tempera- 
ture of 100* C, increasing in amount to 200* or 300": the actual 
amount lost depending not only on the temperature, but also on 
the tension of aqueous vapour in the surrounding atmosphere. In 
some species the remaining water is expelled only at a red beat, 
and is therefore to be regarded as " water of constitution." With 
the progressive loss of water there is a progressive change in the 
optical characters of the crystals. When a partially dehydrated 
and opaque crystal is exposed to moist air the water is reabsorbed, 
the crystal becoming again transparent and regaining its original 
optical characters. Not only may water be reabsorbed, but such 
substances as ammonia, hydrogen sulphide and alcohol may be 
absorbed In definite amounts and with an evolution of heat. The 
water of zeolites may therefore be partly driven off and reabsorbed 
xxviu 16* 



973 

or replaced by other substances without des tr o yin g the crystalline 
structure of the material, and it would thus seem to differ from the 



water of crystallization of most other hydrated salts. 

Zeolites are minerals of secondary origin and in mc 
resulted by the decomposition of the felspars of basic ig 



Zeolites are minerals of secondary origin and in most cases have 

d by the decomposition of the felspars of basic igneous 

rocks; in fact their chemical composition is somewhat analogous 



to that of the felspars with the addition of water. NcpheKne and 
aodatins are often altered to seolites. They usually occur as crystals 
lining the amygrlaloirtal and other cavities of basalt, melaphyre, Ac. 
Usually two or more species are associated together, and often 
with aeate, caldtc and some other minerals. Less frequently they 
occur in cavities in granite and gneiss, and in metalliferous veins 
(e.g. harmotome) ; while only exceptionally are they primary con- 
stituents (a* . analdte) of igneous rocks. Several species have been 
observed in the Roman masonry at the hot springs of Bourbonne- 
les-Bains in France: and philhpsite has been dredged from the 
floor of the deep sea. 
See Analcite, Crabazttb, Hakmotomb, Hbulahdite, Natro- 

LITB, PHIXAIFSTTS, SCOLBCXTB, STXLBITB. (L. J. S.) 

ZEPHAJOAH, the ninth of the minor prophets in the Bible. 
The name (Yah[wch) "hides" or "treasures"; there is a 
similar Phoenician compound of Baal) is borne by various 
individuals, in Jer. xxix. 25 (cf. lit. 24); Zech. vi. xo, 14; 
1 Chron. vi. 36, and among the Jews of Elephantine in Egypt 
(5th century B.C.). The prophet's ancestry is traced through 
Cusbi (cf. Jer. xxxvi. 14) to his great-grandfather Hezekiah, 
who may, in spite of 2 Kings xx. 18, xxl. x, be the well-known 
king of Judah (e. 720-690). This would agree fairly with the 
title (i. x) which makes the prophet a contemporary of King 
Josiah (e. 637), and this in turn appears to agree (a) with the 
internal conditions (i. 4-6, cf. 2 Kings xxiii. 4, 5, 12) which, 
it is held, are evidently earlier than Josiah's reforms (620); 
(6) with the denunciation of the royal household, but not of 
the (young) king himself (i. 8, Hi. 3); (c) with the apparent 
allusion, in ch. i. to the invasion of the Scythians (perhaps 
c. 626), and (d) with the anticipated downfall of Assyria and 
Nineveh (ii. 13, 607 B.C.). Zephaniah's prophecies are charac- 
terized by the denunciation of Judah and Jerusalem and the 
promise of a peaceful future, and these are interwoven with 
the idea of a world-wide judgment resulting in the sovereignty 
of a universally recognized Yahweh. The theme in its main 
outlines is a popular one in biblical prophecy, but when these 
$3 verses are carefully examined and compared with pro- 
phetical thought elsewhere, several difficult problems arise, an 
adequate solution of which cannot as yet be offered. 

After the title (i. 1) and the announcement of the entire destruc- 
tion of every living thing (2-3), the fate of Judah and Jerusalem 
as heralded (4-6). The name of Baal (so LXX.; remnant implies 
a date after Josiah's reforms) and of the idolatrous priests will be 
cut off, together with them that worship the " host of heaven " 



(condemned later than 620 in ler. xtx. 13, cf. xliv. 15-19) and 
swear by the Ammonite god Milcom (or perhaps by their Moloch: 
for the persistence of his grim cult, see Moloch). Silence is enjoined 
at the presence of Yahweh (*. 7, cf. Zech. ii. 13) and there follows 
a fine description of " the Day of Yahweh " (pe. 7-18). 1 The 
inveterate popular belief in the manifestation of the warring deity 
on behalf of his people (e.g. Isa. xxxiv. 8, lxiii. 4; Jer. xlvi xo; 
Obad. 15; Exck. xxx. 3) is treated (a) ethically, as a day of judgment 
upon sin and pride (Amos v. 18 ; Isa. ii. 12-21) and (*) apocalyptically, 
is bound up with ideas of a universal doom. Punishment will fan 
upon an oppressive court, upon those who wear foreign apparel, 
and who "leap over the threshold " (v. 9, cf. x Sam. v. 5, a Philis- 
tine custom)— a protest against heathen intercourse, for which 
cf. Isa. ii. 6, and Costume, Oriental. The blow falls upon the 
north side of Jerusalem (v. 10 acq., the merchant quarter (?), cf. 
Zech. xiv. 21); the dry will be ransacked and the indifferent or 
apathetic who thought that Yahweh could do neither good nor 
evil (so, of the idols, Isa. xli. 23: Jer. x. 5) will be ruined. With 
v. 13 contrast the promises Isa. Ixv. 21. That day is a day of 
wrath " (v. 15)* with celestial signs (cf. Amos v. 18, 20, viii. 9; 
Isa. riii. 10; Joel ii. 2, Hi. 15), war and distress, when wealth shall 
not avail (v. 18, cf. Isa. xiiL 17, of the Medes against Babylon, and 
more generally Ezek. vii. 10). Thus Yahweh s jealousy fired by 
the dishonour shown towards him in Judah will make an end of 
all them thai dwell in the earth (•. 18, cf. v. 2 seq., and see Isa. x. 23, 



1 For " day " (1*. of battle) cf. the Arab usage, W. R. Smith, 
Prop*. 0/ Israel, p. 398. The victorious and divine kings of Egypt 
in the XlXth andXXth Dynasties are likened to Baal in his " hour " 
(J. H. Breasted, HuL Doc. £;., iiL || 312. 3*6, iv. f 106). 

* The Vulgate Dta irae dies Ma,- whence the striking hymn by 
Thomas of Celano if. 1250), 



974 



ZEPHANIAH 



Chap. U. opens probably " Get yon shame, and be yc ashamed, 

nation unabashed, before ye become as eh*;!? thjt. i^wi-th a*jy " 
(the last two clauses of ?. 2 ate doublets). With thit very general 
call to repentance (cf. Amos v. 6, 15; Jcr. Effk 14* &o) is jotted a 
particular appeal to " the humble ones of the earth " (t?, i, cf , iii, 
12; Isa. xi. 4; Ps. lxxvi. 9) to seek righteousness* and humility, ptr- 
adventure (but LXX. so that) they may be hid in the day of YaM t h t 
wrath (cf. Isa. xxvL 20). '• For " the cities at the Philistine* shall 
be destroyed (v. 4, cf . on i. 9 above), and an oracle of woe is uttered 
against their land (f. 5 seq.). With a ^ sudden transition the 
" remnant of the house of ludah " is promised the maritime coast 
(v. 7, read by the sea for thereupon), and this it enhanced by the 
tidings of the return of the captivity. This thought is developed 
further. Yahweh has " heard (cf. Isa. xvi. 6, 15 seq. ; Jer. nlviii, 
29 sqq.; Ezelc xxxv., 12) " the reproach of Moab and the wviKsif* 
of the Ammonites," and the Lord of Hosts, the God of ltf*JM, 
swears by his life that both shall be destroyed for their hostility 
towards nis people, and the remnant of his nation thai! po&scss 
their territory ^w. ft-io). After turning aside to Yihwch's supre- 
macy (v. II, iii. 9 seq.) the chapter continues with a short and 
vague doom "also" upon Cush (Ethiopia) "slain by my sword " 
(cfT Isa. lxvi. 16), and a more detailed prophecy upon Assyria and 
Nineveh. The exulting and boastful city (cf. Babylon, lu. \lviL S, 
10, with xlv. 5 seq.) shall be a haunt of wild animal* fcf, Babylon, 
Isa. xiii. 20 sqq., and more especially Edom ibid, jdcuv. 11-13) and 
is pictured as shortly to be made desolate (p. 15, with the last 
words cf. Jerusalem, Jer. xix. 8, Edom, xTuc, 17), 

In chap. iii. there are again changing situation*. The defiant, 
polluted and oppressive city is condemned for fail inn to regard the 
warnings. Her secular and religious leaders arc denounced, and 
stress is laid, not upon foreign cults, but upon the rampant tncachcry 
and profanation (cf. Mai. ii. 11 ; Isa. lvi. 10- r 2, and especially Ezelc. 
xxii. 25-28). Yahweh in the midst of her is " righteous " (df. Neh. 
ix- 33. and especially the " Deutero-Isaiah," xL sqq), 1 but al- 
though the nations round about have been cut off and destroyed, 
ierusalem, instead of taking warning in order to escape destruction, 
as been persistently corrupt (w. 1-7; ». 2, cf. Jcr. ii. jo and often). 
" Therefore, wait ye for me, saith Yahweh, for the day when 1 
arise as a witness (so read in v. 8, cf. Mic. L 2 ; Mai. iii, 5), Out 
there it another sudden transition — in that day Yahweh th.ill 
assemble all nations and kingdoms to pour out upon them hi* 
anger (v. 8). This judgment upon the world will be fallowed by a 
universal conversion (v. 9, cf. n. 11) and " from beyond the rivers 
of Cush " (cf. ii. 12) tribute will be brought to Yahweh [cf . fsa, xlv. 
14, and especially xviii. 1, 7; some reference lo a return cf dispersed 
Jews may be suspected in the now corrupt text). " In thru day " 
7i\«. after the judgment, implied by v. 7 seq,.) there will be a puri- 
fied Judah (cf. often in Isaiah, i. 24 son., W. 7-6} and. with the 
removal of the proud, there will be felt an afflicted,, poor and 
trusting people (v. 12). " The remnant of Israel ," al&o, shall dwell 
in peace and piety (v. 13; cf. the corrupt people who arc to be 
"refined," Jer. ix. 3-9). Next, a noteworthy jubilant note is 
struck when " the daughter of Zion " is bidden to exult fir. 14, 
cf. Zech. ii. 10, ix. 9), for the "judgments" art removed, the 
" enemy " is cleared away. Yahweh, the mighty deliverer, is in 
her midst as " king of Israel " (Isa. xxiv 13, xliv. 6}. he will take 
joy in her (cf. Isa. Ixii. 5, lxv. 19), and she eihall no more see evil. 
In conclusion (w. 18-20), he will gather them that are in exile away 
from the sacred festivals, who were a cause of " reproach " (cf. 
Esek. xxxvi. 15; Isa. liv. 4; Neh. i. 3); he will "deal with " all 
oppressors and restore the outcast and the lame (,. f. M it. iv. 6 seq.; 
Ezek. xxxiv. 16). She shall become a praise and a name (cf. Jer. 
xxxiii. 9) when Yahweh brings back thi: captivity " before your 
eyes " (».#. in your generation). 

It is a natural assumption that prophecies have a practical 
end and refer to existing or impending conditions. 1 But 
although one single leading motive runs through the book of 
Zephaniah there are abrupt transitions which do not concern 
mere subjective considerations of logical or smooth thought, 
but material and organic changes representing di Lie rent groups 
of ideas. The instruments of Yahweh's anger (ch. i.) are not 
so real or prominent on the political horizon as, for example, 
in Isaiah, Jeremiah or Habakkuk. The true dale of the 
Scythian inroad and its results for Judah and Fhilistia are less 
important when it is observed that the doom upon Phitistia, 
the vengeance upon Moab and Amnion and the promises for 
Judah (ch. ii.) belong to a large group of prophecies against 
certain historic enemies (Edom included) who ore denounced 
for their contempt, hostility and intrusion. These prophecies 

1 The idea of " righteousness " (f-d-k), or loyalty, appear? to have 
implied the mutual bonds uniting the community and its deity, sec 
/turn. Theol. Stud., 1908, p. 63a n. 1; Expositor. Aug. njio 1 p. 120, 

1 ■ Material familiar to contemporary thought ii naturally used 
(see especially H. Gressmann.. Ursprung d. wail-pid. Esthaivktie; 
J. M. P. Smith. Biblical World, 1910, pp. 323 sqq £ 



are in large measure associated traditionally with the fall ol 
Jerusalem, and to such a calamity, and not to the inroad of the 
Scythians, the references to the "remnant" and the "cap- 
tivity " can only refer.* The anticipation of future events b 
of course conceivable in itself, but the promises (in ch. n.) 
presuppose events other and later than those with which the 
Scythians were connected. On the other hand, it is entirely 
intelligible that a prophecy relating to Scythians should have 
been re-shaped to apply to later conditions, and on this view it 
is explicable why the indefinite political convulsions should be 
adjusted to the exile and why the gloom should be relieved by 
the promise of a territory extending from the Mediterranean to 
the Syrian desert (ii. 7, 9). After a period of punishment 
(cf . Lamentations) Yahweh's jealousy against the semi-heathen 
Judah has become a jealousy for his people, and we appear to 
move in the thought of Haggai and Zechariah, where the 
remnant are comforted by Yahweh's return and the dispersed 
exiles are to be brought back (cf. Zech. L 14-17, viii. 2-17). 
But in ch. iii. other circles of thought are manifest. Israel's 
enemies have been destroyed, her own God Yahweh has proved 
his loyalty and has fulfilled his promises, but the city remains 
polluted (vs. 1-7, cf. Isa. Iviii. seq.; Malachi). Once more doom 
is threatened, and once more wc pass over into a later stage 
where Yahweh has vindicated his supremacy and Zion is 
glorified. Instead of the realities of history we have the 
apocalyptical feature of the gathering of the nations («. 8); 
the thought may be illustrated from Zech. xii. i.-xiii. 6, where 
Jerusalem is attacked, purged and delivered, and from Zech. xiv. 
where the city is actually captured and half the people are 
removed into captivity (cf. Zeph. iii. zx purging, 15 removal 
of the enemy, 18-20 return of the captivity). The goal is the 
vindication of Israel and of Israel's God, and the establishment 
of universal monotheism (ii. xx, iii. 9 seq.). The foe which 
threatened Judah has become the chastiser of Ethiopia and 
Assyria (ii.) and the prelude to the golden age (iii., cf. Exek. 
xxxviii. seq.). No longer does Yahweh contend for recognition 
with Baal and the " host of heaven " (i. 4-6); the convulsions 
of history are Yahweh's work for the instruction and amend* 
ment of Israel (iii. 6 seq.); the heathen gods prove helpless 
(ii. xi), but in what manner the conviction of Yahweh's great* 
ness is brought home is not stated. 4 

If Jer. iv. 5-vi. 30 originally referred to the Scythians, it has 
been revised to refer to the Chaldeans; also in Exek.zzzvixi.seq. 
the northern foe has been associated with the great world- 
judgment. The replacing of the sequel of Amos (9.9.) by one 
which presupposes a later historical background, the addendum 
to the prophecy against Moab (Isa. zvi. 13 acq.), the pessimistic 
glosses in Isa. xlviii., the variations in the Hebrew and Greek 
text of Jeremiah, and the general treatment of prophecies of 
judgment and promise, exemplify certain literary processes 
which illustrate the present form of Zephaniah. In Isaiah 
and Zechariah, notably, older and later groups of prophecies 
are preserved, whereas here the new preludes and new sequels 
suggest that the original nucleus has passed through the hands 
of writers in touch with those vicissitudes *of thought which 
can be studied more completely elsewhere. It is not to be 
supposed that the elimination of all later passages and traces 
of revision will give us Zephaniah's prophecies in their original 
extent. In fact the internal religious and social conditions in 
i. 4-6 or iii. 1-4 do not compel a date before Josiah's reforms. 
The doom of Cush is still in the future in Ezek. xxx. 4; and if 
the impending fall of Nineveh (ii. 13) implies an early date, 
yet it is found in writings which have later additions (Nahum), 
or which are essentially later (Jonah, cf. Tobit xiv. 4 [LXX), 
8, xo, 15); cf. also the use of Assyria for Babylon (Ezra vt 22) 
or Syria (Zech. x. xo). Historical references in prophecies are 

"The "humble" (ii. 3) can scarcely be identified with the 
" remnant " and, as in iii. 12, are viewed at a small pious com- 
munity such as we find in the Psalms (see Nowack'a Comnu). 

4 See further W. R. Smith, art. " Zephaniah," Ency. BriL. oth ed., 
who points out that " in the scheme of Isaiah it is made clear that 
the fall of the power that shatters the nations cannot fail to be 
recognised as Yahweh's work." 



ZEPHYRINUS, ST— ZEUS 



975 



not always decisive (Seek, xxxfl., for example, look* upon 
Edorn and Sidon as dead), and while tbe continued revision of 
the book allows the presumption that the tradition ascribing 
its inception to the time off Josiah may be authentic, it is doubt- 
ful how nrach of the original nucleus can be safely recognised. 
These are problems which concern not only the criticism of 
biblical prophetical writings as a whole, but also tbe historical 
vicissitudes of the period over which they extend (see Jews; 
Palestine: History). 

According to late tradition Zephantah, like fiabakkuk, was of 
the tribe of Simeon (cf. Micah of Mareshah and Obadiah of Beth- 
hacceran. see Cbevne, Ency. Bib., coL 3455)* Tbe apocryphal 
prophecy of Zeph. (Clement of Alex.. Strom., v. 1 1, 77 ; see SchQrer, 
Cesck. Yolk. lvr. % iii. 271 sea.) merely illustrates the tendency to utilize 
older traditions. See further on textual, metrical and literary de- 
tails, W. R. Smith (note 4, previous pace), reprinted in Ency. Bib., 
with additions by S. R. Driver, J. A. Selbte in Hastings's Diet. Bib., 
J. Lippl in BibL Studien (1910), and the commentaries on (all or 
portions of) the Minor Prophets by A. B. Davidson (Camb. Bibb, 
1896); G. A. Smith (1898); W. Nowack (1903); K. Marti (1904; 
especially valuable); Driver (Cent. Bib., 1906); Von Hoonacker 
(1908). (S.A.C.) 

ZEPHYRINTJ8, ST, bishop of Rome from about 108 to 917, 
succeeded Victor I. He is described as a man of little intel- 
ligence or strength of character, and the somewhat important 
controversies on doctrine and discipline that marked his ponti- 
ficate are more appropriately associated with the names of 
Hippolytus and of Ca&xtus, his principal adviser and afterwards 
his successor. 

ZEPHTRUS, in Greek mythology, the west wind (whence the 
English " zephyr," a light breeze), brother of Boreas, the north 
wind, and son of the Titan Astraeus and Eos, the dawn. He 
was tbe husband of Chloris, the goddess of flowers, by whom he 
had a son, Carpus, the god of fruit (Ovid, Fasti, v. 197); by 
tbe harpy Podarge* he was also the father of Xanthus and Balius, 
the horses of Achilles. Being spurned by Hyacinthus (?.*), 
he caused his death by accident at the bands of Apollo. He was 
identified by the Romans with Favonius, and Chloris with 
Flora. 

ZERBST, a town of Germany, in the duchy of Anhalt, 
situated on the Nuthe, xx m. N.W. of Dessau and 27 m. S.E. 
of Magdeburg by the railway Dessau-Leipzig. Pop. (1000) 
17,095. It is still surrounded in part by old walls and bastions, 
while other portions of the whilom fortifications have been 
converted into pleasant promenades. It contains five churches, 
one of which (St Nicholas), built in 1446-88, is a good example 
of the late Gothic style as developed in Saxony, with its spacious 
proportions, groined vaulting, and bare simple pillars. The 
town hall dates from about 1480, but it was disfigured by addi- 
tions in the beginning of the 17th century. It contains the 
municipal museum, among the chief treasures of which is a 
Luther Bible illustrated by Lucas Cranach the younger. Tbe 
palace (1 681-1750) has been used as a depository of archives 
since 1872. There are several quaint old houses, with high 
gables, in the market-place, in the middle of which stand a 
Roland column, of about 1445, and a bronze figure known as 
tbe Bvtterjungfcr (butter-girl), of uncertain origin and meaning, 
but now regarded as the palladium of the town. The old 
Franciscan monastery, with fine cloisters, founded in 1250, 
contains the gymnasium; a Cistercian nunnery of 1214 has 
been converted into barracks; and the Augustinian monastery 
of 1390 has been a hospital since 1545. Gold and silver articles, 
silk, plush, cloth, leather, soap, starch, chemicals and carriages 
are among the chief manufactures. Iron-founding is carried 
on; and several breweries are engaged in the preparation of 
Zerbster bitter beer, which enjoys considerable repute. 

Zerbst is an ancient town, mentioned in 049. In 1307 it 
came into the possession of the Anhalt family, and from 1603 
UU 1793 was the capital of the collateral branch of Anhalt- 
Z erbst. In 1793 it passed to Anhalt-Dcssau, 

ZERMATT. a mountain village at the head of the VTsp valley 
mad at the foot of the Matterhorn, in the canton of the Valais, 
Switzerland. It is 22I m. by rail from Visp in the Rhone 
valley, and there is also a railway from Zermatt past the Riffel 



inns to the very top of the Gornergrat (10,289 &•)• The village 
is 5315 ft. above the sea, and .in 1900 bad 741 permanent in* 
habitants (all Romanists save 9, and all but 12 German-speaking); 
resident in 73 houses. Formerly Zermatt was called "Pra» 
borgne," and this name is mentioned in the Swiss census of 
1888. Its originally Romance population seems to have been 
Teutonised in the course of the x 5th century, the name" Matt ", 
(now written " Zermatt," i.e. tbe village on the meadows) 
first occurring at the wry end of that century. Zermatt was 
long known to botanists and geologists only, and has an in- 
teresting though very local history. De Saussure in 1789 was 
one of the first tourists to visit it. But it was not till the 
arrival of M. Alexandre Seiler in 1854 that its fame as one of 
the chief tourist resorts in the Alps was laid, for tourists abound 
only where there are good inns. When M. Seiler died in 1891 
he was proprietor of most of the great hotels in and around 
Zermatt The Matterhorn, which frowns over the village from 
which it takes its name, was not conquered till 1865, Mr E. 
Whymper and two guides then alone surviving the terrible 
accident in which their four comrades perished. The easy 
glacier pass of the St Theodule (10,809 ft.) leads S. in six hours 
from the village to the Val Tournanche, a tributary glen of the 
v alley of Aoata, 

ZERO, the figure in the Arabic notation for numbers, 
nought, cipher. The Arabic name for the figure was sifr, 
which meant literally an empty thing/ The old Latin writers 
on arithmetic translated or transliterated the Arabic word at 
tefhyrum) this in Ital. became tefiro, contracted to itro, 
borrowed by F. sfrv, whence it came late into English. The 
Spanish form dfro, more closely resembling the original Arabic, 
gave O. Fr. cifrt, mod. drifre, also used in the sense of mono- 
gram, and English "cipher" which is thus a doublet. In 
physics, the term is applied to a point with which phenomena 
are quantitatively compared, especially to a point of a graduated 
instrument between a positive and negative or ascending and 
d escend ing scale, as in the scales of temperature. 

ZBDUOfRODA, a town of Germany, in the principality of 
Reuss-tbe-Elder, situated on a high plateau in a well-wooded 
and hilly country, 35 m. N. from Hof by the railway to Werdau. 
Pop. (rooo) 0419. The town contains a handsome town hall, 
several churches and schools, and carries on an active industry 
in cotton and woollen stocking manufacture. Zeulenroda is 
mentioned as a village as early as 1399, and it obtained muni- 
cipal rights in 1438. Since 1500 it has belonged to the Greis 
bra nch o f the Reuss line of princes. 

ZEUS, the Greek counterpart of the Roman god, Jupiter 
(?.«.). In the recorded periods of Hellenic history, Zeus was 
accepted as the chief god of the pantheon of the Greeks; and 
the religious pr ogr ess of the people from lower to higher ideas 
can be well illustrated by the study of his ritual and personality. 
His name is formed from a root dw, meaning " bright," which 
appears in other Aryan languages as a formative part of divine 
names, such as the Sanskrit Dytus, "sky"; Latin Dions, 
Jovis, Ditspiter, dints; Old English Trur, Norse Tyr. The 
conclusion that has been frequently drawn from these facts, that 
all the Indo-Germanic stocks before their dispersal worshipped a 
personal High God, the Sky-Father, has been now seen to be 
hazardous. 1 Nevertheless, it remains probable that Zeus had 
already been conceived as a personal and pre-eminent god by 
the ancestors of the leading Hellenic tribes before they entered 
the peninsula which became their historic home. In the first 
place, his pre-eminence is obviously pre-Homeric; for Homer 
was no preacher or innovator in religion, but gives us some at 
least of the primary facts of the contemporary religious beliefs 
prevailing about toco B.C.: and he attests for us tbe supremacy 
of Zeus as a belief which was unquestioned by the average 
Hellene of the time; and appreciating how slow was the process 
of religious change in tbe earlier period, we shall believe that 
the god had won this position long before the Homeric age. 
In the next place, we cannot trace the origin of his worship 

l Sce, however, Schrader, Prehistoric Antiquities of the Aryan 
Peoples (trans. Jevons), 416-419. 



( 



976 



ZEUS 



back to any special stock or particular locality; we cannot 
find a single community that did not possess his worship or 
that preserved any legend that suggests a late date for its 
introduction. Doubtless, it has very ancient and dose asso- 
ciations with Thessaly; for most of the leading tribes must 
have entered Hellas by this route, and remembered the moun- 
tain Olympus that dominates this region as the earliest home 
of his cult, and took with them to their most distant settlements 
the cult-title 'OXufurios. Also, some of the prehistoric stocks 
in Thessaly, like the Achaean Aeacidae, may have regarded 
him as specially their ancestor. But to maintain therefore 
that he originated in Thessaly as the special deity of a single 
tribe, who were able to impose him upon the whole of Hellas, 
is against the analogies offered by the study of the special 
cults of Greek polytheism. But if we assume that he was the 
aboriginal Hellenic High God, we must be quite ready to admit 
that the separate communities were always liable to cherish 
other divinities with a more ardent and closer devotion, whether 
divinities that they brought with them or divinities that they 
found powerfully established in the conquered lands, Athena 
or Hera, for instance, in Attica or Argolis, or Poseidon in the 
Minyan settlements. This in fact is a frequent fate of a " High 
God " in polytheistic systems; he is vaguely praised and 
reverenced, but lower divine powers are nearer to the people's 
love or fear. _ 

The Cretan legend of his birth and origin, which gave rise to 
the Cretan cult of Zeus Kpirrtrycrrjs, 1 " Zeus born in Crete," 
may appear evidence against the theory just set forth. But it 
is not likely that any birth-legend belongs to the earliest stratum 
of the Zeus-religion. The Aryan Hellenes found in many of 
the conquered lands the predominant cult of a mother-goddess, 
to whom they gradually had to affiliate their own High God: 
and in Crete they found her cult associated with the figure of a 
male divinity who was believed to be born and to die at certain 
periods; probably he was an early form of Dionysus, but owing 
to his prominence in the island the Hellenic settlers may have 
called him Zeus; and this would explain the markedly 
Dionysiac character of the later Zcus-religion in Crete. 

We can now consider the question how the god was imagined 
in the popular belief of the earliest and later periods. Homer 
is our earliest literary witness; and the portrait that he presents 
of Zeus is too well known to need minute description. To 
appreciate it, we must distinguish the lower mythologic aspect 
of him, in which he appears as an amorous and capricious deity 
lacking often in dignity and real power, and the higher religious 
aspect, in which he is conceived as the All-Father, the Father 
of Gods and men in a spiritual or moral sense, as a God 
omnipotent in heaven and earth, the sea and the realms below, 
as a God of righteousness and justice and mercy, who regards 
the sanctity of the oath and hears the voice of the suppliant 
and sinner, and in whom the pious and the lowly trust. In 
fact the later Greek religion did not advance much above the 
high-water mark of the Homeric, although the poets and 
philosophers deepened certain of its nobler- traits. But Homer 
we now know to be a relatively late witness in this matter. 
How much of his sketch is really primitive, and what can we 
learn or guess concerning the millennium that preceded him? 
His God is pronouncedly individual and personal, and probably 
Zeus had reached this stage of character at the dawn of Hellenic 
history. Yet traces of a prc-deistic and animistic period sur- 
vived here and there; for instance, in Arcadia we find the 
thunder itself called Zeus (Zeus Ktpawfe) in a M ant in can inscrip- 
tion, 1 and the stone near Gythium in Laconia on which Orestes 
sat and was cured of his madness, evidently a thunder-stone, 
was named itself Zefe KcunrArat, which must be interpreted as 
"Zeus that fell from heaven ";' we here observe that the 
personal God does not yet seem to have emerged from the divine 
thing or divine phenomenon. Yet the Arcadians, like the 
other Greeks, had probably long before Homer risen above 
this stage of thought; for Greek religion was so strongly 

1 &"£• L nscr - Grace. 2554. 

• Butt. Corr. Hell.. 1878. p. 515. t p auaM . ft, M , ,. 



conservative that it preserved side by aide the deposits of differ- 
ent ages of thought sundered perhaps by thousands of years. 

Again the Homeric Zeus is fully aniiiropomorphk; but in 
many domains of Greek religion we discover the traces of therio- 
morphism, when the deity was regarded as often incarnate in 
the form of an animal or the animal might itself be worshipped 
in its own right. We seem to find it latent in the Arcadian 
worship of Zeus Auuuos and the legend of King Lycaon. The 
latter offers a cannibal-meal to the disguised God, who turns 
him into a wolf for his sins; and the later Arcadian ritual in 
honour of this God betrays a hint of lycanthropy; some one 
who partook of the sacrifice or who swam across a certain lake 
was supposed to be transformed into a wolf for a certain time. 4 
Robertson Smith* was the first to propose that we have here 
the traces of an ancient totemistk sacrifice of a wolf-clan, who 
offered the " theanthropic " animal "the man-wolf" to the 
wolf-God. The totemistic theory in its application to Greek 
religion cannot be here discussed; but we may note that there 
is no hint in the story that the wolf was offered to Zeus and 
that the name Awccuos could not originally have designated 
the " wolf "-God: for from the stem taco- we should get the 
adjective \omos, not Xikojos; the latter is better derived from 
a word such as Xu«j» " light," and may allude to the God of 
the dear sky; in fact the wolf, which was a necessary animal 
in the ritual and legend of Apollo Afectos, may have strayed 
casually into association with Zeus Atacaios, attracted by a 
false etymology. Another ritual, fascinating for the glimpse 
it affords of very old-world thought, is that of the Diipolia, the 
yearly sacrifice to Zeus Polieus on the Acropolis at Athens.* 
In this an ox was slaughtered with ceremonies unique in Greece; 
the priest who slew him fled and remained in exile for a period, 
and the axe that was used was tried, condemned and flung 
into the sea; the hide of the slain ox was stuffed with hay, 
and this effigy of the ox was yoked to the plough and feigned 
to be alive. Again Robertson Smith saw here the " thean- 
thropic" animal, the Ox-God-man, eaten sacramentally by an 
ox-tribe, and so sacred that his death is a murder that must be 
atoned for in other ways and by a feigned resurrection. We 
recognize indeed the sacramental meal and the sanctity of the 
ox; but the animal may have acquired this sanctity tempo- 
rarily through contact with the altar; we need not suppose 
an ox-dan — the priest was merely 0©6njs " the herdsman "— 
nor assume the permanent sanctity of the ox, nor the belief 
that the ddty was permanently incarnate in the ox: the main 
parts of the ceremony can be explained as cattle-magic intended 
to appease the rest of the oxen or to prevent them suffering 
sympathetically through the death of one. We may indeed 
with Mr Andrew Lang explain the many myths of the bestial 
transformations of Zeus on the theory that the God was the 
tribal ancestor and assumed the shape of the animal-totem in 
order to engender the tribal patriarch; 7 but on the actual 
cults of Zeus thcriomorphism has left less trace than on those 
of many other Hellenic deities. The animal offered to him 
may become temporarily sacred; and its skin would have 
magic properties: this explains his use of the aegis, the goat- 
skin, as a battle-charm; but of a Goat-Zeus, a Ram-Zeus, or a 
Wolf -Zeus, there is no real trace. 

The peculiar characteristic of his earliest ritual was the 
human sacrifice; besides the legend of King Lycaon, we find 
it in the story of the house of Athamas and in the worship of 
Zeus Ao06<mos of Thessaly, 9 and other examples are recorded. 
The cruel rite had ceased in the Arcadian worship before Pliny 
wrote, but seems to have continued in Cyprus till the reign of 
Hadrian. It was found in the worship of many other divinities 
of Hellas in early times, and no single explanation can be 
given that would apply to them all. A hypothesis favoured by 
Dr Frazcr, that the victim is usually a divine man, a priest-king 

4 Pliny. Nat. Hid. vHi. 82; Pausan. vtu. a, % J and % 6. 

* Article on M Sacrifice " in Ency. BriL, 9th ed. 

*Cf. Porphyry, ii. 39, 30 (from Theophrastus) and Pftusan. L 

^Myik, Ritual and Riligion+iL 176. • Herod. v&\ 197. 



ZEUS 



977 



incarnating the God, may be well applied to the Arnamantid 
sacrifice and to that of King Lycaon; for he derives his name 
from the divinity himself, and according to one version 1 he 
offers his own child; and the Lycaonid legend presents one 
almost unique feature, which is only found elsewhere in legendary 
Dionysiac sacrifice, the human flesh is eaten, and the sacrifice 
is a cannibeJattic-sacrament, of which the old Mexican religion 
offers conspicuous rxamnjr, Yet it is in this religion of Zeus 
that we see most clearly the achievement of progressive morality; 
Zeus himself punishes and abolishes the savage practice; the 
story related by Plutarch,* how a kid was substituted miracu- 
lously for Helen when she was led to the altar to be offered, is a 
remarkably dose parallel to the biblical legend of Abraham's 
sacrifice of Isaac. 

t We can now consider the special attributes of the anthropo- 
morphic God. His character and power as a deity of the sky, 
who ruled the phenomena of the air,* so clearly expressed in 
Homer, explains the greater part of his cult and cult-titles. 
More personal than Ouranos and Helios— with whom he has 
only slight associations— he was worahipped'and invoked as 
the deity of the bright day ('Andpof, Aeuccuot, Aunubi), 
who sends the rain, the wind and dew ("OmAxoi, Neios, Tines, 
OSpiof, E6**ej»s» 'LgcoSos), and such a primitive adjective 
as durerfo applied to things "that, fall from heaven," 
attests the primeval significance of the name of Zens. But the 
thunder was his most striking manifestation, and no doubt 
he was primevally a thunder-God, Kcpofaot, KipqwofloXw, 
'Aarpemuos. These cult-titles had originally the force of 
magk invocation, and much of ms ritual was weather-magic: 
the priest of Zeus Asaator, in time of drought, was wont to 
ascend Mount Lycaeum and dip an oak-bough in a sacred 
fountain, and by this sympathetic means produce mist.* A 
god of this character would naturally be worshipped on the 
mountain-tope, and that these were very frequently consecrated 
to him is shown by the large number of appellatives derived 
from the names of mountains.* But probably in ha earnest 
Hellenic period the power of Zeus in the natural world was not 
limited to the sky. A deity who sent the f ertfliring rains would 
come to be regarded as a god of vegetation, who descended 
into the earth and whose power worked in the life that wells 
forth from the earth ha plant and tree. Abo the dose special 
association of the European Thunder-God and the oak-tree has 
recently been exposed.* Homer calls the God of the lower 
world Zevs Ksroxflonot,* and the title of Zeus X66p*ds winch 
was known to Hesiod, occurred in the worship of Corinth ;' and 
there is reason to believe that Enbouleus of Elensis and Tro- 
phontns of Lehedeia are faded forms of the nether Zens; in 
the Phrygian religion of Zeus, which no doubt contains primitive 
Aryan dements, we find the Thunder-God swodatert also with 
the nether powers.* > 

' A glimpse into a vay old stratum of Hellenic religion is 
afforded us by the records of Dodona. A Dodonean liturgy 
has been preserved which, though framed m the form of an 
invocation and a dogma, has the force of a spell-prayer—" Zens 
was and is and will be, oh great Zeus: earth gives forth fruits, 
therefore call on Mother Earth."* Zens the Sky-God Is seen 
here allied to the Earth-Goddess, of whom his feminine counter- 
part, Dione, may have been the personal form. And it is at 
Dodona that his association with the oak is of the closest. His 
prophet-priests the Scuci "with unwashed feet, couching on 
the ground,"* lived about the sacred oak, which may be re- 
garded tt as the primeval shrine of the Aryan God, and inter- 
preted its oracular voice, which spoke in the rustling of its 
leaves or the cooing of its doves. Achilles haOs the Dodonean 
God as IliWyu*, either in the sense of " Th tJoaBa n " or 



3», 3- 



* Clemens, Protrept. p. 31 P. 

*ParaUela, 35. 'Pauaan. vm.' 

« Farnell, Culls of the Creek States, 1 154; ref. 66-89. 

• Sea Chadwick in Anthropological Jour*., 1900, 00 " The Oak 
and th© Thunder-God." _ • Jl. ix. 457- 



1 Works and Days, 456: Pauaan. IL 2, 8. 
•Journ, HelUn. Stair, iii. 124; v. 257. 
. Jl. avi. a 33. 



'Pauaan. x. 11,10. 
"Chadwick, **.<&. 



" primitive ";■ and Zens, we may believe, long remained at 
Dodona such as he was when the Hellenic tribes first brought 
him down from the Balkans, a high God supreme in heaven 
and in earth. 

We may also believe that in the earnest stages of worship 
he had already acquired a moral and a social character. The 



view of him as the All-Father is a high spiritual con- 
cept, but one of which many savage religions of our own time 
are capable. The family, the tribe, the city, the simpler and 
more complex organisms of the Hellenic polity, were specially 
under his care and direction. In spite of the popular stories 
of his amours and infidelities, he is the patron-God of the mono- 
gamic marriage, and his union with Hera remained the divine 
type of human wedlock. " Reverence Zeus, the Father-God ": 
" all fathers are sacred to Zeus, the Father-God, and all brothers 
to Zeus the God of the family ": these phrases of Aristophanes 
and Epictetus° express the ideas that engendered his titles 
Hoiwor, rausjtor, TcXtfot, X)pfrynoi. In the Bumenides of 
Aeschylus 14 the Erinyes are reproached m that by aiding 
Qytemnestra, who slew her husband, " they are dishonour- 
ing and bringing to naught the pledges of Zeus and Hera, the 
marrisge»goddess "; and these were the divinities to whom 
sacrifice was offered before the wedding, 1 * and it may be that 
some kind .of mimetic representation of the " Holy Marriage," 
the 'Ispfe ira/io*, of Zeus and Hera formed a part of the Attic 
nuptial ceremonies. 1 * The " Holy Marriage " was celebrated In 
many parts of Greece, and certain details of the ritual suggest 
that it was of great antiquity: here and there it may have had 
the significance of vegetation-magic, like the marriage of the 
Lord and lady of May; but generally it seems to have been 
only regarded as a divine counterpart to the human ceremony. 
Society may have at one time been matrihnear in the com- 
munities that become the historic Hellenes; but of this there 
is no trace in the worship of Zeus and Hera. 1 * 

In fact, the whole of the family morality in Hellas centred in 
Zeus, whose altar in the courtyard was the bond of the kins- 
men; and sins against the family, such as unnatural vice and 
the expos u re of children, ore sometimes spoken of as offences 
against the High God» 

He was also the tutelary deity of the larger organisation of 
the phratria; and the altar of Zeus vparsto* was the meeting- 
point of the pkraicres, when they were assembled to consider 
the legitimacy of the new applicants for admission into their 
drde» 

His religion also came to assist the development of certain 
legal ideas, for instance, the rights of private or family pro- 
perty in land; he guarded the allotments as Zri* KXapiet,* 
and the Greek commandment "thou shalt not remove thy 
neighbour's landmark " was maintained by Zeus "Opun, the 
god of boundaries, a more personal power than the Latin 
Jupiter Terminus. 1 * 

His highest political functions were summed up in the title 
IloXaife, a cult-name of legendary antiquity in Athens, and 
frequent in the Hdlenk world.** 

Hb consort in his poUtkal life was not Hera, but his daughter 
Athena Polias. He sat in her judgment court fcri IlaXXofly 
where cases of involuntary homicide were tried.** With her he 
shared the chapel in the Council-Hall of Athens dedicated to 
them under the titles of BowXoSot and BevXoXa, " the inspirers 
of counsel/' by which they, were worshipped in many parts of 

■Jl. xri.233. 

» Arist. Nub. 1468; Epict- Diatrib. uLch.ii. 

** SI3-SI4. ■SchoL Ariatopn. Tkum. 973. 

M Pbotiua, S.V. TmAt 7***». 

n See Fraser's Golden Bout*, sod ed. i. 326-2*7. 

"The attempts to discover the traces of matrilinear society in 
Greek religion may be regarded as mainly unsuccessful: rite 
A. B. Cook, Class. Ra. 1006 (October, November), " Who was tfce 
wife of Zeus?" ' 

■ Dio. Chrys. Or. 7 (Diad. i. 139). 

■Demosth. Centra Macartatum, 1078, i. 

~ Pauaan. via. 53, 9. ■ Plato's Lams, 842 E. 



1 Vide FaraeO, op.oiL{. 159; ref, 107-109. 
4 Carp. /avcx. Attic, m. 71 and 273. 



978 



ZEUXIS 



Greece. 1 The political assembly and the law-court were conse- 
crated to Zcte 'kyoptuxn? and being the eternal source of justice 
he might be invoked as Autoon/pos " The Just."* As the god 
who brought the people under one government he might be 
worshipped as Ddriwios; 4 as the deity of the whole of Hellas, 
'EAX&wot,* a title that belonged originally to Aegina and to 
the prehistoric tribe of the Aeacidae, and had once the narrower 
application to the "Thessalian Hellenes," but acquired the 
Pan-Hellenic sense, in fact expanded into the form UaptXkfynos, 
perhaps about the time of the Persian wars, when thanks- 
giving for the victory took the form of dedications and sacrifice 
to " Zeus the Liberator "— 'EXarfepo* .« Finally, in the for- 
mulae adopted for the public oath, where many deities were 
invoked, the name of Zeus was the masterword. 

There is reason for thinking that this political character of 
Zeus belongs to the earliest period of his religion, and it re- 
mained as long as that religion lasted. Yet in one respect 
Apollo was more dominant in the political life; for Apollo 
possessed the more powerful oracle of Delphi. Zeus spoke 
directly to his people at Dodona only, 7 and with authority only 
in ancient times; for owing to historical circumstances and 
the disadvantage of its position, Dodona paled before Delphi. 

It remains to consider briefly certain moral aspects- of his 
cult. The morality attaching to the oath, so deeply rooted in 
the conscience of primitive peoples, was expressed in the cult 
of Zeus "Optaot, the God who punished perjury.* The whole 
history of Greek legal and moral conceptions attaching to the 
guilt of homicide can be studied in relation to the cult-appella- 
tives of Zeus. The Greek consciousness of the sin of murder, 
only dimly awakened in the Homeric period, and only sensitive 
at first when a kinsman or a suppliant was slain, gradually 
expands till the sanctity of all human life becomes recognized 
by the higher morality of the people: and the names of Zed* 
MaXlxtost the dread deity of the ghost-world whom the sinner 
must make " placable/' of Zebt Tctaos and Upocrporaun, to 
whom the conscience-striken outcast may turn for mercy and 
pardon, play a guiding-part in this momentous evolution.' 

Even this summary reveals the deep indebtedness of early 
Greek civilization to this cult, which engendered ideas of im- 
portance for the higher religious thought of the race, and which 
might have developed into a monotheistic religion, had a 
prophet-philosopher arisen powerful enough to combat the 
polytheistic proclivities of Hellas. Yet the figure of Zeus had 
almost faded from the religious world of Hellas some time 
before the end of paganism; and Ludan makes him complain 
that even the Egyptian Anubis is more popular than he, and 
that men think they have done the outworn God sufficient 
honour if they sacrifice to him once in five years at Olympia. 
The history of religions supplies us with many examples of the 
High God losing his hold on the people's consciousness and 
love. In the case of this cult the cause may well have been a 
certain coldness, a lack of enthusiasm and mystic ardour, in 
the service. These stimulants were offered rather by Demeter 
and Dionysus, later by Cybele, Isis and Mithras. 

Bibliography.— For older authorities tee Pietler-Robert, Grie- 
ehische Mvthoiogie, i. pp. 115-159; Welcker's Griechische GWerlebr*, 
ii. pp. 178-316; among recent works, Gruppe's Griechische Mytho- 
logy, ii. pp. 1 1 00-1121; FarneU's Cults of the Creek States, vol. L 



monuments and art-representations, Overbeck, Kunst-Mytholope, 
voLL (L.R.F.) 

ZEUXIS, a Greek painter, who flourished about 420-300 B.C., 
and described himself as a native of Heracka, meaning pro- 
bably the town on the Black Sea. He was, according to one 

* Antiphon vL p. 789 ; Pausan. L 3, 5 : cf . Corp. Inter, Attic, iii. 683. 

* Farnell, op. cU. vol* i. p. 163. 

* Amer. Joum. Archaeol., 1905, p. 303. 

* C L A. 3, 7. Head. Hist. Num. p. 560. 

* Herod, ix. 7, 4; Ptnd. If em. v. 15 (Schol.). 
•Simonidea, Frag. 140 (Bergk), Strab. 41a. 

' There was a minor oracle of Zens at Olympia. See Obacls. 

* Fausan. v. 34* 9- ' FameU, op. cu\ vol i. pp. 64-69. 



account^ a pupil of Damophihis of Himera in Sicfly, the other 
statement being that he was a pupil of Neseus of Thasos. After- 
wards he appears to have resided in Ephesus. His known 
works are— 

8. Alcmena, ~ possibly another 
name («j. 

9. Helena at Croton. 

10. Penelope. 

11. Meneiau*. 

12. Athlete. 

13. An old Woman. 

14. Boy with grapes. 

15. Grapes. 

16. Monochromes; 
Plastic works in clay. 



1. Zeus surrounded by Deities. 

2. Eros crowned with Roses. 

3. Marsyas bound. 

4. Pan. 

i. Centaur family. . 

6. Boreas or Triton.! 

7. Infant Heracles strangling the 

serpents in presence o? his 
parents, Alcmena and Am- 
phitryon. 



»7< 



In ancient records we are told that Zeuxis, following the 
initiative of ApollodoruSj had introduced into the art of paint- 
ing a method of representing his figures in light and shadow, 
as opposed to the older method of outline, with large fiat 
masses of colour for draperies, and other details, such as had 
been practised by Polygnotus and others of the great fresco 
painters. The new method led to smaller compositions, and 
often to pictures consisting of only a single figure, on which it 
was more easy for the painter to demonstrate the combined 
effect of the various means by which he obtained perfect round- 
ness of form. The effect would appear strongly realistic, as 
compared with the older method, and to this was probably due 
the origin of such stories as the contest in which Zeuxis painted 
a bunch of grapes so like reality that birds flew towards it, 
while Parrhasius painted a curtain which even Zeuxis mistook 
for real. It is perhaps a variation of this story when we are 
told (Pliny) that Zeuxis also painted a boy holding grapes 
towards which birds flew, the artist remarking that if the 
boy had been as well painted as the grapes the bards would 
have kept at a distance. But, if the method of Zeuxis led him 
to real roundness of form, to natural colouring, and to pictures 
consisting of single figures or nearly so, it was likely to lead 
him also to search for striking attitudes or motives, which by 
the obviousness of their meaning should emulate the plain 
intelligibility of the larger compositions of older times. Lucian, 
( in his Zeuxis, speaks of him as carrying this search to a novel 
and strange degree, as illustrated in the group of a female 
Centaur with her young. When the picture was exhibited, the 
spectators admired its novelty and overlooked the skill of the 
painter, to the vexation of Zeuxis. The pictures of Heracles 
strangling the serpents to the astonishment of his rather and 
mother (7), Penelope (xo), and Mcnelaus Weeping- (xi) are 
quoted as instances in which strong motives naturally presented 
themselves to him. But, in spite of the tendency towards 
realism inherent, in the new method of Zeuxis, be is said to have 
retained the ideality which had characterized his predecessors. 
Of all his known works it would be expected that this quality 
would have appeared best in his famous picture of Helena", for 
this reason, that we cannot conceive any striking or effective 
incident for him in her career. In addition to this, however, 
Qumtilian states (Inst. Oral. xii. xo, 4) that in respect of robust* 
ness of types Zeuxis had followed Homer,. while there is the 
fact that he had inscribed two verses of the Iliad (iii *s6 seq.) 
under his figure of Helena. As models for the picture he was 
allowed the presence of five of the most beautiful maidens of 
Croton at his own. request, in order that > he might be able to 
"transfer the truth of life to a mute image." Cicero (De 
Iment. ii. 1, x) assumed that Zeuxis had found distributed 
among these five, the various elements that went to make up a 
figure of ideal beauty. It should not, however, be understood 
that the painter had made up his figure by the process of com- 
bining the good points of various models, but rather that he 
found among those models the points that answered to the 
ideal Helena in his own mind, and that he merely required the 
models to guide and correct himself by during the process of 
transferring his ideal to form and colour. This picture also is 
said to have been exhibited publicly, with the result that 
Zeuxis made much profit out* of it, By this and other means, 



ZHELESNOVODSK— ZIEM 



979 



we are told, he became so rich as rather to give away his pic- 
tures than to sell them. He presented his Alcmena to the 
Agrigentines, his Pan to King Archelaus of Macedonia, whose 
palace he is also said to have decorated with paintings. Accord- 
ing to Pliny (N.H. xxxv. 6a), he made an ostentatious display 
of his wealth at Olympia in having his name woven in letters 
of gold on his dress. Under his picture of an athlete (12) he 
wrote that " It is easier to revile than to rival " (jiupftycral tw 
fai\So» 4) /u/i*>«rat). A contemporary, Isocrates (De Permut. 2), 
remarks that no one would say that Zeuxis and Parrhasius 
bad the same profession as those persons who paint pinakia, or 
tablets of terra-cotta. We possess many examples of the vase- 
painting of the period circa 400 B.C., and it b noticeable on 
them that there is great freedom and faculty in drawing the 
human form, besides great carelessness. In the absence or" 
fresco paintings of that date we have only these vases to fall 
back upon. Yet, with their limited resources of colour and 
perspective, they in a measure show the influence of Zeuxis, 
while, as would be expected, they retain perhaps more of the 
simplici ty of o lder times. 

ZHELESNOVODSK, a health resort of Russian Caucasia, in 
the province of Terek, lying at an altitude of 1885 ft. on the 
S. slope of the Zhelesnaya Gora (1805 ft.), 11 m. by rail N.N.W. 
from Pyatigorsk. It possesses chalybeate springs of tempera- 
ture. 567-96° Fahr.; the buildings over the springs were erected 
in 1863. The season lasts from early in June to the middle of 
Sep tembe r. 

ZHITOMIR, or Jitoios, a town of western Russia, capital 
of the government of Volhynia, on the Teterev river, 83 m. 
W.S.W. of Kiev. Pop. (1000) 80,787, more than one-third 
Jews. It is the see of an archbishop of the Orthodox Greek 
Church and of a Roman Catholic bishop. Two printing offices 
in Zhitomir issue nearly one-half of all the Hebrew books printed 
in Russia. The Jewish merchants carry on a considerable 
export trade in agricultural produce, and in timber and wooden 
wares from the forests to the north. Kid gloves, tobacco, dyes 
and spirits are manufactured. 

. Zhitomir is a very old dty, tradition tracing its foundation 
as far back as the times of the Scandinavian adventurers, 
Askold and Dir (9th century). The annals, however, mention 
it chiefly in connexion with the invasions of the Tatars, who 
plundered it in the 13th, 14th and 17th centuries (1606), or 
in connexion with destructive conflagrations. It fell under 
Lithuanian rule in 1320, and during the 15th century was one 
of the chief cities of the kingdom. Later it became part of 
Poland, and when the Cossacks rose under their chieftain, 
Bogdan Chmielnicki (1648), they sacked the town. It was 
annexed to Russia along with the rest of the Ukraine in 1778. 

ZHOB, a valley and river in the N.E. of Baluchistan. The 
Zhob is a large valley running from the hills near Ziarat first 
eastward and then northward parallel to the Indus frontier, 
tQl it meets the Gomal river at Khajuri Kach. It thus becomes 
a strategic line of great importance, as being the shortest route 
between the North-West Frontier Province and Quetta, and 
dominates all the Patban tribes of Baluchistan by cutting 
between them and Aighanistan. Up to the year 1884 it was 
practically unknown to Europeans, but the Zhob Valley Expe- 
dition of that year opened it up, and in 1889 the Zhob Valley 
and Gomal Pass were taken under the control of the British 
Government. The Zhob Valley was the scene of punitive 
British expeditions in 1884 and 1800. In 1800 Zhob was 
formed into a district or political agency, with its headquarters 
at Fort Sandcman: pop. (root) 3552. As reconstituted in 
1903, the district has an area of 0626 sq. m.; pop. (1001) 
69,718, mostly Pathans of the Kakar tribe. 

See Sir T. H. Holdich's India* Borderland (1901): Brace's 
Forward Policy (1000); McFall't With the Zhob Field Font (189S); 
and Zhob District CautUtr (Bombay, 1907). 

ZIARAT C a Mahommedan shrine "). the summer residence 
of the chief commissioner of Baluchistan, and sanatorium for 
the European troops at Quetta: 8850 ft. above the sea and 



33 m. by cart-road from the railway. There is a good water- 
supply, and the hilk around are well-wooded and picturesque. • 

ZICHY (of Zkfa and Vasonykeo), the name of a noble Magyar 
family, conspicuous in Hungarian history from the latter part 
of the 13th century onwards. Its first authentic ancestor bore 
the name of Zayk, and this was the surname of the family 
until it came into possession of Zkh in the 15th century. It 
first came Into great prominence in the 16th century, being given 
country rank in 1679 in the person of the imperial general 
Stefan Zichy (d. 1693). His descendants divided, first into two 
branches: those of Zichy-Palota and Zichy-Karlburg. The 
Palota line, divided again into three: that of Nagy-Lang, that 
of Adony and Szent-Miklos, and that of Palota, which died out 
in the male line in 1874. The line of Zichy-Karlburg (since 
1811 Zichy-Ferraris) split into four branches: that of Vedrod, 
that of Vtzsony, and those of Daruvar and Csics6, now 
extinct. 

Count KAxoly Zichy (1753*1826) was Austrian war minister 
in 1809 and minister of the interior in 1813-18x4; his son, 
Count FeidinAnd (1783-1862) was the Austrian field-marshal 
condemned to ten years' imprisonment for surrendering Venice 
to the insurgents in 1848 (he was pardoned in 1851). Count 
0d5n [Edmund] Zichy (1809- 1848), administrator of the 
county of Veazpr6m, was hanged on the 30th of September 
1848 by order of a Hungarian court-martial, presided over by 
Gorgei, for acting as Jellachich's emissary to the imperial 
general Roth. Count Fekenc Zichy (1811-1900) was secre- 
tary of state for commerce in the Szechenyi ministry of 1848, 
but retired on the outbreak of the revolution, joined the im- 
perial side, and acted as imperial commissary; from 1874 to 
1880 he was Austrian ambassador at Constantinople. Count 
0d5n Zichy (181X-1894) was remarkable for bis great activity 
in promoting art and industry in Austria-Hungary; he founded 
the Oriental Museum in Vienna. His son, Count Eucen 
Zichy (b. 1837), inherited his father's notable collections, and 
followed him in his economic activities; he three times visited 
the Caucasus and Central Asia to investigate the original seat 
of the Magyars, publishing as the result Voyages an Cancan 
(2 vols., Budapest, 1897) and Pritte dsiaiische Forschvntsrcise 
(6 vols., in Magyar and German; Budapest and Leipzig, 1900- 
1905). Count FekdinAnd Zichy (b. 1829), vice-president of 
the Hungarian stadtholdershfp under the Mailath regime, was 
condemned in 1863 under the press laws to the loss of his 
titles and to imprisonment. In 1867 he was elected to the 
Hungarian parliament, at first joining the party of Desk, and 
subsequently becoming one of the founders and leaders of the 
Catholic People's Party (see Hungary, History). His second 
son, Count AladAr Zichy (b. 1864), also a member of the 
Catholic People's Party, was made minister of the royal house- 
hold in the Wekerle cabinet of 1906. Count JAnos Zichy 
(b. 1868), also from 1896 to 1906 a member of the Catholic 
People's Party in the Lower House, and after 1906 attached 
to Andrissy's Constitutional Party, was of importance as the 
confidant of the heir to the throne, the Archduke Francis 
Ferdinand. Count GfiA Zichy (b. 1849). nephew of the 
Count Fcrenc mentioned above, studied under Liszt and be- 
came a professional pianist; in 1891 he became intendant of 
the Hungarian national opera-house, a member of the Hungarian 
Upper House and bead of the Conservatoire at Budapest. 
Count MihAly Zichy (b. 1829), one of the most conspicuous 
Hungarian painters, was appointed court painter at St Peters- 
burg in 1847 and accompanied the Russian emperors on their 
various journeys. The National Gallery at Budapest possesses 
some of his paintings, notably that of " Queen Elizabeth before 
the coffin of Francis Deak "; but he is best known for his 
illustrations of the works of the great Magyar writers (Petdfy. 
Arany, &c). 

ZIEM. FfiLIX FRANCOIS GEORGE PHIUBBBT (1871- ), 
French painter, was born at Beaune (Cote d'Or) in i8ai. 
Having studied at the art school of Dijon, where he carried off 
the grand prix for architecture, he went to Rome in 1839 and 
there continued his studies. The years from 184s to 1848 



980 



ZIERIKSEE— ZIMBABWE 



were spent in travel In the south of France, Italy and the East, 
where he found the glowing sunlight and the rich colour 
peculiarly suited to his temperament. His reputation is, how- 
ever, not based so much on his orientalist canvases as on his 
pictures of Venice, which are generally characterized by the 
intensity of the sunny glow on the red sails and golden-yellow 
buildings under a deep blue sky. Many of his Venetian pic- 
tures are purely imaginative, and their appeal is entirely due. 
to their qualities of colour, his architectural drawing being 
frequently faulty and careless. After " Sunrise at Stamboul," 
which Theodore Gautier called " the finest picture of modem 
times,' 1 he received the Legion of Honour In 1857, and was 
made an officer in 1878. The majority of his paintings have 
gone to American private collections, but two of his finest 
pictures, " The Doge's Palace in Venice" (185a), and a marine- 
painting, are at the Luxembourg Museum, and a " View of 
Quai St Jean, Marseilles" at the Marseilles Gallery, whilst 
many others are to be found in the leading private collections 
of modern pictures in France, England and Germany. In 
collaboration with Luc de Vos he illustrated . The Death of 
Paganini. 

See Felix Ziem, by L. Roger-Miles {Ukraine de Tart, Paris). 

ZIERIKSEE, a town in the province of Zeeland, Holland, on 
the south side of the island of Schouwen. Pop. 6800. It is a 
very old town, and formerly flourished exceedingly on account 
of its trade and fishing, and important salt-making industry, 
and now is the chief market centre and. port in the island. 
Among the principal buildings are the town-hall (15th century); 
the Great Church, which was rebuilt after a fire in 1832, but 
retains the lofty tower (1454) belonging to the earlier building; 
the Little Church, the prison and the exchange. The chief 
public square occupies the site of a residence of the counts of 
Zeeland dating from 1048. 

ZIETEN, HANS JOACHIM VON (1690-1786), Prussian 
general-field-marshal, began his military career as a volunteer 
in an infantry regiment. He retired after ten years' service, 
but soon afterwards became a lieutenant of dragoons. Being 
involved in some trade transactions of his squadron-commander, 
he was cashiered, but by some means managed to obtain 
reinstatement, and was posted to a hussar corps, then a new 
arm. At that time light cavalry work was well known only 
to the Austrians, and in 1735 Rittmeister von Zieten made the 
Rhine campaign under the Austrian general Baronay.- In 
1 74 1, when just promoted lieutenant-colonel, Zieten met his 
old teacher in battle and defeated him at the action of Roth- 
schloss. The chivalrous Austrian sent him a complimentary 
letter a few days later, and Winterfeld (who was in command at 
Rothschloss) reported upon his conduct so favourably that 
Zieten was at once marked out by Frederick the Great for high 
command. Within the year he was colonel of the newly formed 
Hussar regiment, and henceforward his promotion was rapid. 
In the " Moravian Foray " of the following year Zieten and his 
hussars penetrated almost to Vienna, and in the retreat to 
Silesia he was constantly employed with the rearguard. Still 
more distinguished was his part in the Second Silcsian War. 
In the short peace, the hussars, like the rest of the Prussian 
cavalry, had undergone a complete reformation; to iron dis- 
cipline they had added the dash and skirmishing qualities of 
the best irregulars, and the hussars were considered the best 
of their arm in Europe. Zieten fought the brilliant action of 
Moldau Tein almost on the day he received his commission as 
major-general In the next campaign he led the famous 
ZidenriU round the enemy's lines with the object of delivering 
the king's order to a distant detachment. At Hohcnfriedberg- 
Striegau and at Katholisch-Hennersdorf the hussars covered 
themselves with glory. Hennersdorf and Kesselsdorf ended 
the second war, but the Prussian army did not rest on its laurels, 
and their training during the ten years' peace was careful and 
unceasing. When the Seven Years' War broke out in 1756 
Zieten had just been made lieutenant-general. At Reichcn- 
bcrg and at Prag he held important commands, and at the dis- 
astrous b? ' Tune 1 757) his left wing of cavalry 



was the only victorious corps of troops. At Leuthen, the moat 
brilliant battle' of the x8th century, Zieten 's cavalry began the 
fighting and completed the rout ol the Austrians. He continued, 
during the whole of the war, to be one of Frederick's moat trusted 
generals. Almost the only error in his career of battles was 
his misdirection of the frontal attack at Torgau, but he redeemed 
the mistake by his desperate assault on the Siptitx heights, 
which eventually decided the day. At the peace. General 
Zieten went into retirement, the hero alike of the army and 
the people. He died in 1786. Six years later Frederick's suc- 
cessor erected a column to his memory on the Wilbelmsplatz in 
Berlin. 

See the lives by his daughter, Frau von Blumenthal (Berlin. 
1800), by Hahn (5th ed., Berlin, 1878), by Lippe-Weissenfeld 
(2nd ed., Berlin, 1878), and by Winter (Leipzig, 1886). 

ZIMBABWE* a Bantu name, probably derived from the two 
words timba (" houses ") and mabgi (" stones "), given to certain 
ruins in South-East Africa. Its use is not confined to Southern 
Rhodesia and should not properly be restricted to any one 
particular site. For, as the medieval Portuguese stated, it is 
merely a generic term for the capital of any considerable chief, 
and it has been applied even by them to several distinct places. 
From about 1550 onwards the Zimbabwe generally referred to 
by Portuguese writers was at a spot a little north of the Afur 
district, not far from the Zambezi. There is some reason, 
however, to suppose that before this the capital of the Monoroo- 
tapa was situated much farther south, and it may plausibly 
be identified with the most extensive ruins as yet known, viz. 
those near Victoria (Mashonaland) to which popular usage has 
now attached par excellence the name of Zimbabwe. 

These ruins were discovered by Adam Renders in 186S and 
explored by Karl Mauch in 187 1. They became well known 
to English readers from J. T. Bent's account of the Rmimed 
Cities of Mashonaland, but the popularity of that work dis- 
seminated a romance concerning their age and origin which 
was only dispelled when scientific investigations undertaken in 
1905 showed it to be wholly without historical warrant. Even 
before this it had been clear to archaeologists and ethnologists 
that there was no evidence to support the popular theory that 
Zimbabwe bad been built in very ancient days by some Oriental 
people. Swan's measurements, which had misled Bent into 
accepting a chronology based on a supposed orientation of the 
"temple," had been shown to be inexact. There was no 
authentic instance of any inscription having been found there 
or elsewhere in Rhodesia. Numerous objects had been dis- 
covered in the course of excavations, but not one of them could 
be recognized as more than a few centuries old, while those 
that were not demonstrably foreign imports were of African 
type. 

The explorations conducted in 1005 added positive evidence. 
For it was proved that the medieval objects were found in 
such positions as to be necessarily contemporaneous with the 
foundation of the buildings, and that there was no super- 
position of periods of any date whatsoever. Finally Irom a 
comparative study of several ruins it was established that the 
plan and construction of Zimbabwe are. by no means unique, 
and that this site only differs from others in Rhodesia in respect 
of the great dimensions and the massiveness of its individual 
buildings. It may confidently be dated to a period not earlier 
than the 14th or 25th century- A.D., and attributed to the same 
Bantu people the remains of whose stone-fenced kraals are found 
at so many places between the Limpopo and the Zambezi. 

There are three distinct though connected groups of ruins at 
'Zimbabwe, which are commonly known as the' "Elliptical 
Temple," the "Acropolis" and the "Valley Ruins." The 
most famous is the first, which is doubly misnamed, since it is 
not a temple and its contour is too unsymmetrical to be de- 
scribed properly as elliptical. It is an irregular enclosure over 
800 ft. in circumference, with a maximum length of 292 ft. 
and a maximum breadth of 220 ft., surrounded by a dry-built 
wall of extraordinary massiveness. This wall is in places over 
30 ft. high and 14 ft. wide, but is very erratic in outline and 



ZIMMERMANN— ZINC 



981 



variable in thickness. The most carefully executed part is on 
the south and south-east, where the wall is decorated by a row 
of granite monoliths beneath which runs a double line of 
chevron ornament. The interior has been much destroyed by 
the ravages of gold-seekels and amateur excavators. Enough, 
however, remains to show that the scheme was a combination 
of such a stone kraal as that at Nanatali with the plan of a fort 
like those found about Inyanga. The only unique feature is 
the occurrence of a large and a small conical tower at the southern 
end, which Bent and others considered to be representatives of 
the human phallus. Their form, however, is not sufficiently 
characteristic to warrant this identification, though it may be 
noted that the nearest approximation to phallic worship is 
found amongst the most typical of African peoples, viz. the 
Ewe-speaking natives of the West Coast. The floor of the 
enclosure is constituted as in the other Zimbabwe buildings 
by a thkk bed of cement which extends even outside the 
main walL This cement mass is heightened at many places so 
as to make platforms and supports for huts. Groups of these 
dwellings are enclosed by subsidiary stone walls so as to form 
distinct units within the larger precinct. 

The " Acropolis " is in some ways more remarkable than the 
great kraal which has just been described. It is a hill rising 
200 to 300 ft. above the valley, fortified with the miuutest 
care and with extraordinary ingenuity. The principles of con- 
struction, the use of stone and cement are the same as in the 
"elliptical" kraal; there is no definite plan, the shape and 
arrangement of the enclosures being determined solely by the 
natural features of the ground. Between this and the " ellip- 
tical" kraal are the "Valley Ruins," consisting of smaller 
buildings which may have been the dwellings of those traders 
who bartered the gold brought in from distant mines. Zimbabwe 
was probably the distributing centre for the gold traffic carried 
on in the middle ages between subjects of the Monomotapa 
and the Mahommedans of the coast. 

Compare also the articles Rhodesia- Archaeology $ and 
Monomotapa. 

See D. RandalVMacIver, Mediaeval Rludesia (London, 1906); 
Journal of Anlkrop. Inst., vol. xxxv.; Oeog. Journal (1006): 
Mauch's report in Ausland (1872) is now only of bibliographical 
interest, while Bent'* Ruined Cities of Mashnnaland (1802) and 
R. N. Hall's Great Zimbabwe (1905) are chiefly valuable for their 
illustrations. 1 (D. R.-M.) 

ZIMMERMAN*. JOHAOTT GEORG, Rittei von (1728- 
1795). Swiss philosophical writer and physician, was born at 
Brugg, in the canton of Aargau, on the 8th of December 1728. 
He studied at Gdttingen, where he took the degree of doctor 
of medicine; and he established his reputation by the disserta- 
tion, Dt irritabiliiate (1751). After travelling in Holland and 
France, he practised as a physician in his native place, and 
here he wrote Vber die EsnsamkeU (1756, emended and enlarged, 
1784-85) and Vom Notumalslol* (1758). These books made a 
great impression in Germany, and were translated into almost 
every European language. They are now only of historical 
interest. In Zimmermann's character there was a strange 
combination of scntimentalism, melancholy and enthusiasm; 
and it was by the free and eccentric expression of these qualities 
that he excited the interest of his contemporaries. Another 
book by him, written at Brugg, Von der Erfahrung in der 
Arxneivissenschafl (1764), also attracted much attention. In 
1768 he settled at Hanover as private physician of George III. 
with the title of Hofrat. Catherine II. invited him to the 
court of St Petersburg, but this invitation he declined. He 
attended Frederick the Great during that monarch's last illness, 
and afterwards issued various books about him, of which the 
chief were Obtr Friederich den Grossen und meint Unterredung 
mil ikm kun vor seinem Tad* (1788) and Fragment* note Friedrick 
den Grossen (1790). These writings display extraordinary 

1 [In 1909 Hall published another volume. Prehistoric Rhodesia^ 
in whkhhe maintained, in emphatic opposition to Dr Maclver's 
concltmooa, that the ruins were of ancient date and not the un- 
aided work of Bantu negroes. Sec the review by Sir Harry Johnston 
in the Goop Jul., Nov. 1009. Eo.l 



personal vanity, and convey a wholly false impression of 
Frederick's character. Zimmermann died at Hanover on the 
7th of October 1795. 

See A. Rengger, Zimmermann's Briefe an einige seiner Frennde 
in der Sekweis (1830); E. Bodemana, Johann Georg Zimmermann, 
sein Leben nnd bisher ungedruekte Briefe an ihn (Hann., 1878); 
and R. Ischer, Johann Georg Zimmermann's Leben una Werke 
(Berne, 1893). 

ZINC, a metallic chemical element; its symbol is Zn, and 
atomic weight 65*37 (0=i6). Zinc as a component of brass 
(xoXk&s, opel-xaXxDs) had currency in metallurgy long before 
it became known as an individual metal. Aristotle refers to 
brass as the " metal of the Mosynoeti," * which is produced as 
a bright and light-coloured x<*A«6fi not by addition of tin, but 
by fusing up with an earth. Pliny explicitly speaks of a mineral 
Ka&iida or cadmia as serving for the conversion of copper into 
aurickalcum, and says further that the deposit (of ainc oxide) 
formed in the brass furnaces could be used instead of the 
mineral. The same process was used for centuries after Pliny, 
but its rationale was not understood. Stahl, as late as 1702, 
quoted the formation of brass as a case of the union of a metal 
with an earth into a metallic compound; but he subsequently 
adopted the view propounded by Kunckcl in 1677, that " cadmia " 
is a metallic calx, and that it dyes the copper yellow by giving 
its metal up to it. 

The word sine (in the form ttnken) was first used by Para- 
celsus, who regarded it as a bastard or semi-metal; but the 
word was subsequently used for both the metal and its ores. 
Moreover, zinc and bismuth were confused, and the word 
spiauter (the modern spelter) was indiscriminately given to 
both these metals. In 1597 Libavius described a "peculiar 
kind of tin " which was prepared in India, and of which a friend 
had given him a quantity. From his account it is quite clear 
that that metal was zinc, but he did not recognize it as the metal 
of calamine. It is not known to whom the discovery of isolated 
zinc is due; but we do know that the art of zinc-smelting was 
practised in England from about 173a The first continental 
zinc-works were erected at Liege in 1807. 

Occurrence. — Zinc does not occur free In nature, but in com- 
bination it is widely diffused. The chief ore is zinc blende, or 
sphalerite (see Blende), which generally contains, in addition 
to zinc sulphide, small amounts of the sulphides of iron, silver 
and cadmium. It may also be accompanied by pyrites, galena, 
arsenides and antimonides, quartz, caldte, dolomite, &c It 
is widely distributed, and is particularly abundant in Germany 
(the Harz, Silesia), Austro-Hungary, Belgium, the United 
States and in England (Cumberland, Derbyshire, Cornwall, 
North Wales). Second in importance is the carbonate, cala- 
mine (q v.) or zinc spar, which at one time was the principal 
ore; it almost invariably contains the carbonates of cadmium, 
iron, manganese, magnesium and calcium, and may be con- 
taminated with clay, oxides of iron, galena and calcite; " white 
calamine " owes its colour to much day; " red calamine " to 
admixed iron and manganese oxides. Calamine chiefly occurs 
in Spain, Silesia and in the United States. Of less importance 
is the silicate, ZntSiQi-HrO, named electric calamine or hemi- 
morphite; this occurs in quantity in Altenburg near Aix-la- 
Chapelle, Sardinia, Spain and the United States (New Jersey, 
Pennsylvania, Missouri, Wisconsin). Other zinc minerals are 
willemite (?.».), Zo*SiQ«, hydrozincite or zinc bloom, 
ZnCOi-*Zn(OH)t, zindte (q.v.) or red zinc ore, ZnO, and frank* 
Unite, 3(Fe,Zn)O-(Fe,Mn)r0i. 

Production.— Until about 1833 the supply of zinc was almost 
entirely obtained from Germany, but in this year Russia began 
to contribute about 2000 tons annually to the 6000 to 7000 
derived from Germany. Belgium entered in 1837 with an output 
of about 2000 torn; England in 1855 with vaoo; and the United 
States hi 1873 with 6000 tons. The productions of Germany. 
Belgium and the United State* have enormously and fairly 
regularly increased; the rise has been most rapid in the United 



* From the name of this tribe the German word Messing, pnu\ 
is undoubtedly derived (see K. B. Hoffmann. Zeit. f Berg, und 
Huttonumen, vol. 41). 



983 



ZINC 



States. England, France, Spain and Austria have been fairly 
constant producers. Germany produced 155.799 tons in 1900, and 
198,208 in 1905, Belgium, 120.000 in 1900 and 143,165 in 1905, 
the United States, 1 1 1,000 in 1900 and 183,014 in 1905. The world 3 
supply was 445438 tons in 1900, and 654,367 in 1905. 

Metallurgy 

The principles underlying the extraction of zinc may be sum- 
marized as (1) the ore is first converted into zinc oxide, {2) the 
oxide is distilled with carbon and the distillate of metallic zinc 
condensed Oxide of sine, like most heavy metallic oxides, is 
easily reduced to the metallic state by healing u to redness with 
charcoal, pure red zinc ore may be treated directly, and the 
same might be done with pure calamine of any kind, because the 
carbon dioxide of the zinc carbonate goes off below redness and 
the silica of zinc silicate only retards, but does not prevent, the 
reducing action of the charcoal Zinc blende, however, being zinc 
sulphide, is not directly reducible by charcoal, but it is easy to 
convert it into oxide by roasting the sulphur goes off as sulphur 
dioxide whilst the zinc remains in the (infusible) form of oxide, 
•ZnO. In practice, however, we never have to deal with pure 
zinc minerals, but with complex mixtures, which must first of all 
be subjected to mechanical operations, to remove at least part 
of the gangue, and if possible also of the heavy metallic impurities 
(see Ore- Dressing). 

As ores of zinc- are usually shipped before smelting from widely 
separated places — Sweden, Spain, Algiers, Italy, Greece, Australia 
and the Rocky Mountains region of North America — it is important 
that they be separated from their mixtures at the mines. The 
difficulty in separating zinc blende from iron pyrites is well known, 
and probably the most elaborate ore-dressing works ever built 
have been designed with this end in view The Wetherill system 
of magnetic concentration has been remarkably successful in 
separating the minerals contained in the well-known deposit in 
Sussex county, N.J. Here, very clean non-magnetic concentrate 
of willcmite, which is an anhydrous zinc silicate and a very high- 
grade zinc ore, is separated from an intimate mixture of willemite, 
zincite and franklinites, with calcite and some manganese silicates. 
The magnetic concentrates contain enough zinc to be well adapted 
to the manufacture of zinc oxide. Magnetic concentration is also 
applied in the removal of an excess of iron from partially roasted 
blende. Neither mechanical nor magnetic concentration can effect 
much in the way of separation when, as in many complex ores, 
carbonates of iron, calcium and magnesium replace the isomorphous 
zinc carbonate, when some iron sulphide containing less sulphur 
than pyrites replaces zinc sulphide, and when gold and silver are 
contained in the zinc ore 'itself. Hence only in exceptional cir- 
cumstances is it possible to utilize a large class of widely distri- 



buted ores, carrying from to to 35 per cent, of zinc, in which the 

zinc alone, estimated *at 2d. a pound, is worth from about (2 to { 

per ton of ore. The ores of the Joplin district, in the Ozark upli 



in the Mississippi Valley, are remarkable in that they are specially 
adapted to mechanical concentration. The material as mined will 
probably not average over 10 per cent, of zinc, but the dressed 
zinc ore as sold ranges from 45 to 63 per cent, of zinc. This region 
now furnishes the bulk of the ore required by the smelters of Illinois, 
Missouri and Kansas. 

The ore, even if it is not blende, must be roasted or calcined in 
order to remove all volatile components as completely as possible, 
because these, if allowed to remain, would carry away a large 
proportion of the zinc vapour during the distillation. If the zinc 
is present as blende, this operation offers considerable difficulties, 
because in the roasting process the zinc sulphide passes in the 
first instance into sulphate, which demands a high temperature 
for its conversion into oxide. Another point to be considered in 
this connexion is that the masses of sulphur dioxide evolved, being 
destructive of vegetable life, are an intolerable nuisance to the 
neighbourhood in which the operations take place. For the de- 
sulphurization of zinc blende where it is not intended to collect 
ana save the sulphur there are many mechanical kilns, generally 
classified as straight-line, horse-shoe, turret and shaft kilns; all 
of these may be made to do good work on moderately clean ores 
which do not melt at the temperature of dcsulphurization But 
the problem .of saving the sulphur is yearly becoming more im- 
portant. In roasting a ton of rich blende containing 60 per cent, 
of zinc enough sulphur is liberated to produce one ton of strong 
sulphuric acid, and unless this is collected not only are poisonous 
gases discharged, but the waste is considerable. When sulphuric 
or sulphurous acid is to be collected, it is important to keep the 
fuel gas from admixture with the sulphur gases, and kilns for this 
purpose require some modification. If hot air is introduced into 
the kiln, the additional heat developed by the oxidation of the 
zinc and the sulphur is sufficient to keep up a part of the reaction , 
but for the complete expulsion of the sulphur an externally-fired 
muffle through which the ore is passed is found to be essential. 

Distillation of ike Oxide with Charcoal. — The distillation process 
in former times, especially in England, used to be carried out 
" per descensum." The bottom of a crucible is perforated by a 
pipe which projects into the crucible to about two-thirds of its 



height. The mixture of ore and charcoal is pot into the crucible 
around the pipe, the crucible closed by a loted-on Ud, and placed 
in a furnace constructed so as to permit -of the lower end of the 
pipe projecting into the ash-pit. The zinc vapour produced 
descends through the pipe and condenses into liquid zinc, which 
is collected in a ladle held under the outlet end of the pipe. For 
manufacturing purposes a furnace similar to that used for the 
making of glass was employed to heat a circular row of crucibles 
standing on a shelf along the wall of the furnace. This system, 
however, has long been abandoned. 

The modern processes may be primarily divided into two gr o ups. 
according to the nature of the vessel in which the operation » 
effected These distilling vessels are called retorts il they axe 
supported only at the ends, and the furnace using them is termed 
a Belgian furnace* If they are supported at mter\als along a flat 
side, tbey are called muffles, and the furnace is known as a Stlesian 
furnace Various combinations and modifications of these two 
types of furnace have given rise to distinctive nair.es, and as each 
system has its advantages and disadvantages local conditions 
determine which is the better 

In the Belgian process the reduction and distillation are carried 
out in cylindrical or elliptical retorts of fire-clay, from 3 ft. 3 in- 
to 4 ft 9 in long and 6 to 10 in. .internal diameter. Some forty- 
six or more retorts, arranged in parallel horizontal rows, are heated 
in one furnace. The furnaces are square and open m front, to 
allow the outlet ends of the retorts to project, they are grouped 
together by fours, and their several chimneys are within the same 
enclosuoe Each retort is provided with two adapters, namely, 
a conical pipe of fire-clay, about is in. long, which fits into the 
retort end. and a conical tube of sheet iron, which fits over the 
end of the fire-clay pipe, and which at its outlet end is only about 
an inch wide. To start a new furnace, the front side is closed 
provisionally by a brick wall, a fire lighted inside, and the tempera- 



ture raised very gradually to a unite neat. After four days' heating 
at front wall is removed piecemeal, and the retorts. 



the provisional 



after having been heated to redness, are inserted in corresponding 
sets. The charge of the retorts consists of a mixture of 1 100 ft) 
of roasted calamine and 550 lb of dry powdered coal per furnace. 
A newly started furnace, however, is used for a time with smaller 
charges. Supposing the last of these preliminary distillations to 
have been completed, the residues left in the retorts are removed, 
and the retorts, as they lie in the hot furnace, are charged by means 
of semi-cylindrical shovels, and their adapters put on. The charging 
operation being completed, the temperature is raised, and as a 
consequence an evolution of carbon monoxide soon begins, and 
becomes visible by the gas bursting out into the characteristic 
blue flame. After a time the flame becomes dazzling white, showing 
that zinc vapour is beginning to escape. The iron adapters are 
now slipped on, and left on for two hours, when, as a matter of 
experience, a considerable amount of zinc has gone out of the 
retort, the greater part into the fire-clay adapter, the rest into the 
iron cone. The former contains a mixture of semi-solid and molten 
metal, which is raked out into iron ladles and cast into plates of 
66 to 77 lb weight, to be sold as " spelter." The contents of the 
iron recipient consist of a powdery mixture of oxide and metal, 
which is added to the next charge, except what is put aside to be 
sold as " zinc dust " This dust may amount to 10 per cent of the 
total production. As soon as the adapters have been deaeed of 
their contents, they are replaced, and again left to themselves for 
two hours, to be once more emptied and replaced, Ac. The com- 

Elete exhaustion of the charge of a furnace takes about eleven 
ours. 
In the Stlesian process the distillation is conducted in specially 
constructed muffles of a prismatic shape arched above, which are 
arranged in two parallel rows within a low-vaulted furnace, similar 
to the pots in a glass furnace. As a rule every furnace accom- 
modates ten muffles. Through an orifice in the outlet pipe 1 which 
is closed during the distillation by a loose plug) a hot iron rod 
can be introduced from time to time to clear away any solid zinc 
that may threaten to obstruct It. As soon as the outlet pipe has 
become sufficiently hot the zinc flows through it and collects in 
conveniently placed receptacles About six or eight hours after start- 
ing the distillation i* in full swing, and in twenty-four hours it is 
completed. A fresh charge is then put in at once, the muffles being 
cleared only after three successive distillations. The distillate consists 
of a conglomerate of drops (" drop zinc "). Itisfused up in iron basins 
lined with clay, and-cast out into the customary form of cakes. 

The chief improvements in the plant of these processes are con- 
cerned with the manufacture of the retorts or muffles, and especially 
with the introduction of gas-firing. Even a machine of simple 
type, like the ordinary drain-pipe machine, in which the retorts 
are made by forcing the plastic clay mixture through a die, may 
result in greater economy and uniformity than is possible when 
retorts are made by hand. When hydraulic pressure to the amount 
of 2000 to 3000 lb per square jnch is applied, the saving is unques- 
tioned, since less time Is required to dry the pressed retort, its life 
in the furnaces is longer, its absorption of zinc is less, and the 
loss of zinc by passage through its walls in the form of vapour 
• is reduced. 



ZINC 



9«3 



Tim* modes of gas-firing are to be noticed, each of which it 
adopted to special local conditions, (a) The gas is made from the 
fadTin a detached fireplace and conducted white hot into the com- 
bustion chamber of the furnace, and the air for complete combustion 
ia heated by the products of combustion on their way to the chimney 
(•) Both the producer gas and the air are heated before they enter 
the combustion chamber, as in the Siemens system of regenerative 
firing, (c) Natural gas is piped to the furnace, where k meets 
air heated by the chimney gases. The primary advantages of gas- 
. firing are that less fuel is required, that there is better control of 
the heat in the furnace, and that larger and more accessible furnaces 
can be built. In Silesia the introduction of gas-firing has led to 
the use of furnaces containing eighty muffles. In the United 
States, Belgian furnaces of type (a) are built to contain 861 retorts; 
of type (*), to contain 300 to 400 retorts; and of type (e), prefer- 
ably about 600 retorts. The use of gas-fired furnaces greatly 
simplifies manual labour. On a direct-fired furnace at least one 
man, the brigadier, must be an experrtn all the operations involved; 
but with a gas fdrnace a division of labour is possible. One man 
who understands the use of gaseous fuel can regulate the heat of 
a thousand or more retorts. The men who charge and empty the 
retorts, those who draw and cast the metal, and those who keep 
the furnace in repair, need not know anything about the making 
or using of gas, and the men who make the gas need not know 
anything about a sine furnace. Again, in direct-fired furnaces 
there are commonly seven or eight rows of retorts, one above 
another, so that to serve the upper rows the workman must stand 
upon a table, where he is exposed to the full heat of the furnace 
and requires a helper to wait upon him. With gas-firing the retorts 
can be arranged in four horizontal rows, all within reach of a man 
on the furnace-room floor. Furthermore, with the large furnaces 
which gas-firing makes possible mechanical appliances may be 
substituted for manual labour in many operations, such as removing 
and replacing broken retorts, mixing and conveying the charge, 
drawing and casting the metal, charging and emptying the retorts, 
and removingthc residues and products. 

Refining.— The specific effects of different impurities on the 
physical properties of zinc have only been imperfectly studied. 
Fortunately, however, the small amounts of any of them that are 
likely to be found in commercial zinc are not for most purposes 
very deleterious. It is generally recognized that the purest ores 
produce the purest metal. Grades of commercial zinc are usually 
based on selected ores, and brands, when they mean anything, 
usually mean that the metal is made from certain ores. Chemical 
control of the metal purchased is not nearly as common as it 
should be, and the refining of zinc is at best an imperfect opera- 
tion. To obtain the metal chemically pure a specially prepared 
pure oxide or salt of zinc is distilled. A redistilled zinc, from an 
ordinarily pure commercial zinc, is often called, chemically pure, 
but redistillation is seldom practised except for the recovery of 
zinc from g"lvanizer's dross and from the skimmings and bottoms 
of the melting furnaces of zinc rolling mills. The only other method 
of refining is by oxidizing and settling. A bath, even of very 
impure zinc, is allowed to stand at about the temperature of the 
melting-point of the metal for forty-eight or more hours, where- 
upon the more easily oxidizable impurities can be largely removed 
in the dross at the top, the heavier metals such as lead and iron 
settling towards the bottom. This method is rarely practised 
except by the rollers of zinc A certain amount of refined zinc 
can be dipped from the furnace; a further amount, nearly free 
from iron, can be liquated out of the ingot* cast from the bottom 
of the bath in a subsequent slow remclting, and it is sometimes 
possible to eliminate a zinciferous lead which collects in the sump 
of the furnace. Owing to th«> fact that at temperatures between 
its melting and boiling poiat zinc has a strong affinity for iron, 
it is often contaminated by the scraper while being drawn from 
the condenser, as b shown by the fact that the scraper wears away 
rapidly. As each retort in a furnace is ia all essentials a separate 
crucible, and as the metal from only a few of them goes tnto a 
single ingot, there can be no uniformity either in the ingot* made 
from the same furnace during a day's run or in those made from 
several furnaces treating the same ore. Some brassfounders break 
from a single ingot the quantity of zinc required to produce the 
amount of brass they wish to compound in one crucible, but when 
perfect uniformity is desired the importance of remclting the zinc 
on a large scale cannot be too strongly emphasized. 

Electrolytic Separatum of Zinc.— The deposition of pure sine is 
beset with many difficulties. Zinc being more electro-positive even 
than nickel, all the heavy metals must be removed before its deposi- 
tion is attempted. Moreover, unless the conditions are closely 
watched, it is liable to be thrown down in a spongy form. M. 
Kiliant found that the sponge was produced chiefly when a weak 
solution, or a low current-density, was used, and that hydrogen 
was usually evolved simultaneously; sound deposits resulted from 
the use of a current-density of 200 amperes, or more, per sq ft., 
and strong solutions. The cause of the spongy deposit is variously 
explained, some (Siemens and Halske) ascribing it to the existence 
of a compound of zinc and hydrogen, and others, among whom 
arc G. Nahnsen. F. My Liu* and A. Fromm, F. Foerster and 



W. Borchcrs, trace it to the presence of oxide, produced, for example, 
either by the use of a solution containing a trace of basic salt of 
zinc (to prevent which the bath should be kept just— almost imper- 
ceptibly—acid), or by the presence of a more electro-negative 
metal, which, being co-deposited, sets up local action at the expense 
of the zinc. Many processes have been patented, the ore being 
acted upon by acid, and the resulting solution treated, by cither 
chemical or electrolytic means, for the successive removal of the 
other heavy metals. The pure solution of zinc is then electrolysed. 
E. A. Ashcroft patented a process of dealing with complex ores 
of the well-known Broken Hill type, containing sulphides of silver, 
lead and zinc, but the system was abandoned after a long trial 
on a practical scale. A full account ol the process (Trans. Inst. 
Min. and Met., 1S98. vol. vi. p. 282) has been published by the 
inventor, describing the practical trial at the Cockle Creek Work*. 
The ore was crushed roasted, and leached with sulphuric acid 
(with or without ferric sulphate); the solution was purified and 
then electrolysed for zinc with lead anodes and with a current- 
density of 5 amperes per sq. ft. at 2*75 volts when diaphragms 
were used, or 2-5 volts when they were dispensed with, or with 
10 amperes per sq. ft. at 3 or 2*5 volts respectively, the electrolyte 
containing 1-2 lb of zinc in the form of sulphate, and } to I oz. 
of sulphuric acid, per gallon. The current efficiency was about 
83 per cent. Canvas diaphragms were used to prevent the acid 
formed by electrolysis at the anode from mixing with the cathode 
liquor, and so hindering deposition. C. Hoepfncr has patented 
several processes, in one of which (No. 13.336 of 1S94) a rapidly 
rotating cathode is used in a chloride solution, a porous partition 
separating the tank into ancde and cathode compartments, *nd 
the chlonne generated by electrolysis at the anode being recovered. 
Hoepfner's processes have been employed both in England and 
in Germany. Nahnscn*s process, with an electrolyte containing 
alkali-metal sulphate and zinc sulphate, has been used in Germany, 
and a process invented by Dieffcnbach has also been tried in that 
country. Siemens and Halske have proposed the addition of 
oxidizing agents such as free halogens, to prevent the formation 
of zinc hydride, to which they attribute the formation of zinc- 
sponge. Borchcrs and others deposit zinc from the fused chloride. 
In Borchers' process the chloride Is heated partly by external 
firing, partly by the heat generated owing to the use of a current- 
density of 90 to 100 amperes per sq. ft. 

Prokstrs 

Zinc Is a bluish-white metaf, showing a high lustre when freshly 
fractured. It fuses at 415* C. and under ordinary atmospheric 
pressure boils at 1040* C. Its vapour density shows that it is 
monatomiov The molten metal on cooling deposits crystals belong- 
ing to the hexagonal system, and freezes into a compact crystal- 
line solid, which may be brittle or ductile according to circum- 
stances. If zinc be cast into a mould at a red heat, the ingot 
produced b laminar and brittle; if cast at just the fusing-point, 
it is granular and sufficiently ductile to be rolled into sheet at the 
ordinary temperature. According to some authorities, pure zinc 
always yields ductile ingots. Commercial " spelter " always breaks 
under the hammer; but at 100* to I«J0* C. it is susceptible of 
being rolled out into even a very thin sheet. Such a sheet, if once 
produced, remains flexible when cold. At about 200* C, the 
metal becomes so brittle that it can be pounded in a mortar The 
specific gravity of zinc cannot be expected to be perfectly constant; 
according to Karstcn, that of pure ingot is 6-919, and rises to 



much in the air. It is fairly soft, and clogs the file. If zinc be 
heated to near its boiling-point, it catches fire and burns with a 
brilliant light into its powdery white oxide, which forms a reek 
ia the air (Jana pkilosopkica, "philosopher's wool "}. Boiling water 
attacks it appreciably, but slightly, with evolution of hydrogen 
and formation of the hydroxide, Zn(OH)«. A rod of perfectly pure 
zinc, when immersed in dilute sulphuric acid, is so very slowly 
attacked that there is no visible evolution of gas; but, 11 a piece 
of platinum, copper or other more electro-positive metal be brought 
into contact wan the zinc, it dissolves readily, with # evolution of 
hydrogen and formation of the sulphate. The ordinary impure 
metal dissolves at once, the more readily the less Dure it is. Cold 
dilute nitric acid dissolves zinc as nitrate, with evolution of nitrous 
oxide. At higher temperatures, or with stronger acid, nitric oxide, 
NO, is produced besides or instead of nitrous. Zinc is also soluble 
in soda and potash solutions, but not in ammonia. ^ 

Applications —Zinc is largely used for "galvanizing" iron, sheets 
of clean iron being immersed in a bath of the molten metal and 
then removed, so that a coat of zinc remains on the iron, which 
is thereby protected from atmospheric corrosion. It is also a con- 
stituent of many valuable alloys; brass, Muntz-mctal. pinchbeck, 
tombac, are examples. In technological chemistry it finds applica- 
tion as a reducing agent, e.g. in the production of aniline from 
nitrobenzene, but the use of iron is generally preferable in view 
of the cheapness of this metal. 



9 8 4 



ZINOTE 



COMfOOMM 



Zinc forms only one oxide, ZnO, from which is derived * well- 
characterized senea of salts. It is chemically related to cadmium 
and mercury, the resemblance to cadmium being especially well 
marked; one distinction is that zinc is less basigenic Zinc is 
capable of isomorphously replacing many of the bivalent metal* — 
magnesium, manganese, iron, nickel, cobalt and cadmium. 

Zinc oxide, ZnO, b maufactured for paint by two processes— 
directly from the ore mixed with coal by volatilization on a grate* 
as in the Wctherill oxide process, and by oxidizing the vapour 

Even off by a boiling bath of zinc metaL The oxide made by the 
tter method has generally a better colour, a finer texture, and a 
greater covering power. It is also manufactured by the latter 
process from the metallic zinc liquated out of galvanizer's dross. 
It is an infusible solid, which is intensely yellow at a red heat, but 
on coo ting becomes white. This at least is true of the oxide pro- 
duced from the metal by combustion; that produced from the 
carbonate, if once made yellow at a red heat, retains a yellow 
shade permanently. By heating the nitrate it is obtained as 
hcmimorphous pyramids belonging to the hexagonal system; and 
by heating the chloride in a current of steam as hexagonal prisms. 
It is insoluble in water; it dissolves readily in all aqueous acids, 
with formation of salts. It also dissolves in aqueous caustic 
alkalis, including ammonia, forming "zincates" [e,e. Zn(OK),]. 
Zinc oxide is used in the arts as a white pigment (zinc white) ; 
it has not by any means the covering power of white lead, but 
offers the advantages of being non-poisonous and of not becoming 
discoloured in sulphuretted hydrogen. It is used also in medicine. 

Zinc hydroxide, Zn (OH)i. is prepared as a gelatinous precipitate by 
adding a solution of any zinc satt to caustic potash. The alkali 
must be free from carbonate and an excess of it must be avoided, 
otherwise the hydrate redissolves. It is a white powder, and is 
insoluble in water. To acids and to alkalis it behaves like the 
oxide, but dissolves more readily. 

Zinc chloride, ZnCla, is produced by heating; the metal in dry 
chlorine gas, when it distils over as a white translucent mass, fusing 
at 250* and boiling at about 400°. Its vapour-density at ooo° C. 
corresponds to ZnCl*. It is extremely hygroscopic and is used 
in synthetical organic chemistry as a condensing agent. It dis- 
solves in a fraction of its weight of even cold water, forming a 
syrupy solution. A solution of zinc chloride is easily produced 
from the metal and hydrochloric acid ; it cannot be evaporated to 
dryness without considerable decomposition of the hydrated salt 
into oxychloride and hydrochloric acid, but it may be crystallized 
as ZnCJj-HiO. A concentrated solution of zinc chloride converts 
starch, cellulose and a great many other organic bodies into soluble 
compounds; hence the application of the fused salt as a caustic 
in surgery and the impossibility of filtering a strong ZnCli solution 
through paper (see Cellulose). At a boiling heat, zinc chloride 
dissolves in any proportion of water, and highly concentrated 
solutions, of course, boil at high temperatures; hence they afford 
a convenient medium for the maintenance of high temperatures. 
< Zinc chloride solution readily dissolves the oxide with the forma- 
tion of oxychloridcs, some of which are used as pigments, cements 
and for filling teeth in dentistry. A solution of the oxide in the 
chloride has the property of dissolving silk, and hence is employed 
for removing this fibre from wool. 

Zinc bromide, ZnBr t , and Zinc iodide, Znlt. are deliquescent 
solids formed by the direct union of their elements. With ammonia 
and alkaline bromides and iodides double salts arc formed. 

Zinc sulphide, ZnS, occurs in nature as blende (q.v.), and is arti- 
ficially obtained as a white precipitate by passing sulphuretted 
hydrogen into a neutral solution of a zinc salt. It dissolves in 
mineral acids, but is insoluble in acetic acid. 

Zinc sulphate, ZnSO^+^HfO, or white vitriol, is prepared by 
dissolving the metal in dilute sulphuric acid. If care be taken 
to keep the zinc in excess, the solution will be free from all foreign 
metals except iron and perhaps manganese. Both are easily 
removed by passing chlorine through the cold solution, to produce 
ferric and manganic salt, and then digesting the liquid with a 
washed precipitate of basic carbonate, produced from a small 
portion of the solution by means of sodium carbonate. The iron 
and manganese are precipitated as hydroxides, and are filtered off. 
The filtrate is acidified with a little sulphuric acid and evaporated 
to crystallization. The salt crystallizes out on cooling with 7 mole- 
cules of water, forming colourless orthorhombic prisms, usually 
small and needle-shaped. They arc permanent in the air. Accord- 
ing to Poggiale, 100 parts of water dissolve respectively of (7H1O) 
salt, 115-3 parts at o* and 653-6 parts at 100 . At 100* C the 
crystals lose 6 of their molecules 01 water; the remaining molecule 
goes off at 250°, a temperature which lies close to that at which 
the salt begins to decompose. The anhydrous salt, when exposed 
to a red heat, breaks up into oxide, sulphur dioxide and oxygen. 
An impure form of the salt is prepared by roasting blende at a 
low temperature. In the arts it is employed in the preparation of 
varnishes, and as a mordant for the production of colours on calico. 
A green pigment known as Rinmann's green is prepared by mixing 
100 parts of zinc vitriol with 2«< parts of cobalt nitrate and heating 
the mixture •- - • ~xluce a compound of the two oxides. 



Zinc sulphate, like 
of the 



nilphate, lake magnesium sulphate, unites with the sulphates 
potassium metals and of ammonium into crystalline double 
ZnSO«-RtS04+6H|0, isomorphous with one another and the 



,inc carbonate, ZnCOi, occurs in nature as the mineral *>«i»minr 
(a.v.), but has never been prepared artificially, basic carbcuates, 
ZnCOi.xZn(OH)i, where x is variable, being obtained by precipi- 
tating a solution of the sulphate or chloride with sodium carbonate. 
To obtain a product free of CI or SO4, there must be an excess of 
alkali and the zinc salt must be poured into the hot solution of . 
the carbonate. The precipitate, even after exhaustive washing with 
hot water, still contains a trace of alkali: but from the oxide, 
prepared from it by ignition, the alkali can be washed away. The 
basic carbonate is used as a pigment. 

Of zinc phosphates we notice themineralshopeite,Zn.»(P04)»^HiO. 
and tarbuttitc, Zn,(PO«),.Zn(OH),, both found in Rhodesia. 



insoluble in acetic acid. In the case of acetate the precipitation 
is quite complete: from a sulphate or chloride solution the greater 
part of the metal goes into the precipitate; in the presence of a 
sufficiency of free HC1 the metal remains dissolved; sulphide of 
ammonium precipitates the metal completely, even in the presence 
of ammonium salts and free ammonia. The precipitate, when 
heated, passes into oxide, which is yellow in the heat and white 
after cooling; and, if it be moistened with cobalt nitrate «*^i»hhi 
and re-heated, it exhibits a green colour after cooling. 

Zinc may be quantitatively estimated by precipitating aa basic 
carbonate, which is dried and ignited to zinc oxide. It may also 
be precipitated as zinc ammonium phosphate, NH«ZnPO*. which 
is weighed on a filter tared at ioo\ Volumetric methods have 
also been devised. 

Pharmacology and Therapeutics op Zinc Compounds 

Zinc chloride is a powerful caustic, and is prepared with plaster 
of Paris in the form of sticks for destroying warts. &c Its use 
for this purpose at the present day is, however, very rare, the 
knife or galvanocautery being preferred in most cases. The salt 
is a corrosive irritant poison when taken internally. The treat- 
ment is to wash out the stomach or give such an emetic as apo- 
morphine, and, when the stomach has been emptied, to administer 
demulcents such as white of egg or mucilage. Numerous other 
salts of zinc, used in medicine, are of value as containing this metaL 
Certain others are referred to in relation with the important radicle 
contained in the salt. Those treated here are the sulphate, oxide, 
carbonate, oleate and acetate. All these salts are mild astringents 
when applied externally, as they coagulate the albumen of the 
tissues and of any discharge which may be present. In virtue 
of this property they are also mild haemostatics, tending to coagu- 
late the albumens of the blood and thereby to arrest haemorrhage. 
Lotto Rubra, the familiar " Red Lotion," a solution of zinc sulphate, 
is widely used in many catarrhal inflammations, as of the ear. 
urethra, conjunctiva, &c There are also innumerable ointments. 

These salts have been extensively employed internally, and 
indeed they are still largely employed in the treatment of the 
more severe and difficult cases of nervous disease. The sulphate 
is an excellent emetic in cases of poisoning, acting rapidly and 
without much nausea or depression. For these reasons it may 
also be given with advantage to children suffering from acute 
bronchitis or acute laryngitis. 

Bibliography. — For the history of zinc see Bernard Neumann, 
Die Metalle (1904); A. Rossing, Gesckuhie der Metalle (1001). 
For the chemistry see H. Roscoe and C Schorlemmer, Treatise on 
Inorganic Chemistry, vol. 2 (1807)1 H Moissan, 7rait4 de ehtmie 
miner ale; O. Dammcr, Handbuck der anorganischen Chemie. For 
the metallurgy sec Walter Renton Ingalls, The Metallurgy of Zinc 
and Cadmium, Production and Properties of Zinc; A. Lodin, 
MHallurgia du tine (1005); C. Schnabel, Handbook of Metallurgy. 
English translation by H. Louis (1907)' See also The Mineral 
Industry (annual). 

ZINCITE, a mineral consisting of sine oxide (ZnO), crystalliz- 
ing in the hemimorphic-hemihedral class of the rhombohedral 
system. Distinct crystals are of rare occurrence; they have 
the form of a hexagonal pyramid terminated at one end only by 
a basal plane. There is a perfect cleavage parallel to the basal 
plane, and usually the mineral is found as platy foliated masses. 
The blood-red colour and the orange-yellow streak are char- 
acteristic features. The hardness is 45. and the specific gravity 
is 5-6. Some manganese is usually present replacing zinc. It 
is found in the zinc mines at Sterling Hill and Franklin Fur- 
nace in Sussex county, New Jersey, where it is associated with 
franklinite and willemite in crystalline limestone, and is mined as 
an ore of zmc. Artificial crystals of a white or yellowish colour 
are not infrequently formed by sublimation in zinc furnaces. 



ZINDER— ZINZBNDORF 



9»5 



ZHDIR, a town on the northern margin of the central 
Sudan. Zinder is a great emporium of the trade across the 
Sahara between the Hausa states of the south and the Tuareg 
countries and Tripoli in the north. Its ruler was formerly 
subordinate to Bornu, but with the decline of that kingdom shook 
off the yoke of the sultan, and on the conquest of that country 
by Rabah (?-».) seems to have maintained his independence. The 
country of which Zinder is the capital is known as Damerghu. 
It is semi-fertile, and supports considerable numbers of horses 
and sheep, besides troops of camels. By the Anglo-French 
agreement of June 1808 it was included in the French sphere, 
having already been the object of French political action. The 
explorer Cazemajou was assassinated there in 1897, but the 
town was occupied in July 1809, after a slight resistance, by 
Lieutenant Paflier of the reconstructed Voulet-Chanome 
mission (see Senegal, country). A French post (named Fort 
Cazemajou) was built outside the town on a mound of huge 
granite blocks. Zinder was the first point m the Sudan reached 
by F. Foureau after his great journey across the Sahara via 
Air in t8oo. Subsequently Commandant Gadel, from his head- 
quarters at Zinder, mapped and pacified the surrounding 
region, and sent out columns of mekartstts (camel-corps) which 
occupied the oasis of Air and Bilma in 1906. Zinder is a large 
and fine town surrounded with high earthen walls, very thick 
at the base and pierced with seven gates. Its houses, in part 
built of day, in part of straw, are interspersed with trees. 
There is an important colony of Tuareg merchants, who occupy 
the suburb of Zengu, and who deal in a variety of wares, from 
cotton, silks, spices, ostrich feathers, &c , to French scent 
bottles. Salt ts a great article of merchandise. A busy market 
is held outside one of the gates. Administratively Damerghu 
is dependent on the French colony of Upper Senegal and Niger 

See Cazemajou, in Bid. Com. de VAfrxque Fransaise (1000), 
F Foureau. tn La Giographu (December 1900), D Alger au Congo 
par la Tchad (Paris, 1902); Joalland, tn La Geographie. vol ui 
(1901); E. Arnaud and M: Cortier, Nos Confins Sakanens (Paris, 
1908), C Jean,!** Touaragdu Sud-Est (Paris, 1909) 

ZMGERLB, IOHAZ VICBNZ (1825-1892), Austrian poet and 
scholar, was born, the son of the Roman Catholic theologian 
and orientalist, Pius Zingerle (1 801-1 881), at Meran on the 6th 
of June 1825. He began his studies at Tricnt, and entered for 
a while the Benedictine monastery at Marienberg. Abandoning 
the clerical profession, he returned to Innsbruck, where, in 1848, 
be became teacher in the gymnasium, and in 1859 professor of 
German language and literature at the university He died at 
Innsbruck on the 17th of September 1892. 

Zingerle » known as an author by his Zetfgtdichle (Innsbruck, 
1848); Von den Alpen (1850); Du MuiUrtn, a village tale (1833); 
Dor Bamer von LonpaU (1874); and Enahiungen aus dan Burg- 
grafenamte (1S&4). His ethnographical writings and literary studies, 
dealing especially with the Tirol, have, however, rendered him 
more famous. Among them may be mentioned his editions of 
Kama Laurin (1850), of the legend. Von den heyitgen dm Kumgtn 
(1855J: <Sflft» <"«* Tirol (1850, 2nd ed. 1891); Tirol. Natur, 
GtsSkuhU and Sage im SpUgtl deulscker Dichtung (1851), Die 



r series, 1888). With E. Inama-Steroegg, he edited TirUisckt 

Weutumer (5 vols., 1875-1891). 

ZUfWIA, in botany, a genus of the natural order Cbmpositae, 
containing about a dozen species of half-hardy annual or per- 
ennial herbs or undershrubs, natives of the southern United 
States and Mexico. The numerous single and double garden 
forms are mostly derived from Zinnia detans, and grow about 
2 ft. high, producing flowers of various colours, the double 
ones being about the siae of asters, and very handsome. The 
colours include white, yellow, orange, scarlet, crimson and 
purple. Zinnias do best in a rich deep loamy soil, in a sunny 
position. They should be sown on a gentle hotbed at the end 
of March or in April and planted out early in June 

ZmZBMDOBF, tflCOLAUS LUDWIQ, Count of Zinzckdorp 
and PoTTOWnoBT (1700-1760), German religious and social re- 
former, was born on the 26th of May 1700 at Dresden. His 



ancestors belonged to Lower Austria, but had taken the Pro- 
testant side in the Reformation struggle, and settled near 
Nuremberg. Both bis parents belonged to the Pietist circle 
and the lad bad Pbilipp Jakob Spener for his godfather. His 
father died six weeks after he was bom. His mother married 
again when he was four years old, and he was educated under 
the charge of his pious and gifted grandmother, 1 Catherine von 
Cersdorf, who did much to shape his character. His school 
days were spent at Halle amidst Pietist surroundings, and in 
1716 he went to the university of Wittenberg, to study law and 
fit himself for a diplomatic career. Three years later he was 
sent to travel tn Holland, in France, and in various parts of 
Germany, where be made the personal acquaintance of men 
distinguished for practical goodness and belonging to a variety 
of churches. On his return he visited the branches of his family 
settled at Oberbirg and at Castefl. During a lengthened visit at 
Castell he fell ra love with his cousin Theodora, but the widowed 
countess, her mother, objected to the marriage, and the lady 
afterwards became the wife of Count Henry of Reuss. Ziazen- 
dorf seems to have considered this disappointment to be a call 
to betake himself to some special work for God. He had 
previously, in deference to his family, who wished him to become 
a diplomatist, rejected the invitation of August Francke to take 
Baron von Canstein's place in the Halle orphanage; and he now 
resolved to settle down as a Chnstian landowner, spending his 
hfe on behalf of his tenantry He bought Berthelsdorf from his 
grandmother, and selected John Andrew Rothe for pastor and 
John George Heiz for factor; he married Erdmute Dorothea, 
sister of Count Henry of Reuss, and began living on his estate. 
His intention was to carry out into practice the Pietist ideas 
of Spener He did not mean to found a new church or religious 
organization distinct from the Lutheranism of the land, but to 
create a Christian association the members of which by preach- 
ing, by tract and book distribution and by practical benevolence 
might awaken the somewhat torpid religion of the Lutheran 
Church. The "band of four brothers" (Rothe, pastor at 
Berthelsdorf, Melchior Schaffer, pastor at G&rlitz; Frauds 
von Wattewille, a friend from boyhood; and himself) set them- 
selves by sermons, books, journeys and correspondence to 
create a revival of religion, and by frequent meetings for prayer 
to preserve in their own hearts the warmth of personal trust in 
Christ. From the printing-house at Ebersdorf large quantities 
of books and tracts, catechisms, collections of hymns and cheap 
Bibles were issued; and a translation of Johann Arndt's True 
Christianity was published for circulation in France. A dislike 
of the high and dry Lutheran orthodoxy of the period gave 
Zinsendorf some sympathy with that side of the growing 
rationalism which was attacking dogma, while at the same time 
he felt its lack of earnestness, and of a true and deep Under- 
standing of religion and of Christianity, and endeavoured to 
counteract these defects by pointing men to the historical 
Christ, the revelation of the Father. He seems also to have 
doubted the wisdom of Spener's plan of not separating from the 
Lutheran Church, and began to think that true Christianity 
could be best promoted by free associations of Christians, which 
in course of time might grow into churches with no state con- 
nexion. These thoughts took a practical turn from his connexion 
with the Bohemian or Moravian Brethren. Zinsendorf offered 
an asylum' to a number of persecuted wanderers from Moravia 
(see Moravian Bkxthxen), and built for them the village of 
Herrnhut on a corner of his estate of Berthelsdorf The re- 
fugees who came to this asylum (between 1732 and 173s— the 
first detachment under Chnstian David) from various regions 
where persecution raged, belonged to more than one Protestant 
organisation. Persecution had made them cling pertinaciously 
to small peculiarities of creed, organization and worship, and 
they could scarcely be persuaded to live in peace with each other. 
Zinxendorf devoted himself to them He, with his wife and 
children, lived in Herrnhut and brought Rothe with Mm. He 
bad hard work to bring order out of the confusion. He had to 
■ A volume of Spiritual Sonn, written by ZinzendorT* grand- 
mother Catherine, was published in 1729 by Paul Anton. 



9 86 



ZION— ZIONISM 



satisfy tike authorities that his religions community could be 
brought under the conditions of the peace of Augsburg; he had 
to quiet the suspicions of the Lutheran clergy; and, hardest of 
all, he had to rule in some fashion men made fanatical by perse- 
cution, who, in spite of his unwearied labours for them, on 
more than one occasion, it is said, combined in his own house to 
denounce him as the Beast of the Apocalypse, with Roth* as 
the False Prophet. Patience had at last its perfect work, and 
gradually Zinzendorf was able to organize his refugees into 
something like a militia Ckruti, based not on monastic but on 
family life. He was able to establish a common order of worship 
in 1727, and soon afterwards a common organization, which has 
been described in the article Moravian Bketheem. Zinzendorf 
took the deepest interest in the wonderful missionary enterprises 
of the Brethren, and saw with delight the spread of this Protestant 
family order in Germany, Denmark, Russia and England. He 
travelled widely in its interests, visiting America in 1741-41 
and spending a long time in London in 1750. Missionary 
colonies had by this time been settled in the West Indies (1732), 
in Greenland (1733), amongst the North American Indians 
(i735)t and before Zinzendorf 's death the Brethren had sent 
from Herrnhut missionary colonies to Livonia and the northern 
shores of the Baltic, to the slaves of North Carolina, to Surinam, 
to the Negro slaves in several parts of South America, to 
Travancore in the East Indies, to the Copts in Egypt and to the 
west coast of South Africa. The community in Herrnhut, from 
which almost all these colonies had been sent out, had no money 
of its own, and its expenses had been almost exclusively furnished 
by Zinzendorf. His frequent journeyings from home made it 
almost impossible for him to look after his private affairs, he 
was compelled from time to tune to raise money by loans, and 
about 1750 was almost reduced to bankruptcy This led to the 
establishment of a financial board among the Brethren, on a 
plan furnished by a lawyer, John Frederick Kober, which worked 
weiL In 1752 Zinzendorf lost his only son, Christian Renatus, 
whom he had hoped to make his successor, and four years 
later he lost his wife Erdmute, who had been his counsellor 
and confidante in all his work. Zinzendorf remained a widower 
for one year, and then (June 1757) contracted a second marriage 
with Anna Nitschmann, on the ground that a man in his official 
position ought to be married. Three years later, overcome with 
his labours, he fell ill and died (on the 9th of May 1760), leaving 
John de Wattewille, who had married his eldest daughter 
Benigna, to take his place at the head of the community 

Zinzendorf had a naturally alert and active mind, and an 
enthusiastic temperament that made his life one of ceaseless 
planning and executing. Like Luther, he was often carried 
away by strong and vehement feelings, and he was easily upset 
both by sorrow and joy He was an eager seeker after truth, 
and could not understand men who at all costs kept to the 
opinions they had once formed, yet he had an exceptional 
talent for talking on religious subjects even with those who 
differed from him. Few men have been more solicitous for 
the happiness and comfort of others, even in little things. His 
activity and varied gifts sometimes landed him in oddities and 
contradictions that not infrequently looked like equivocation 
and dissimulation, and the courtly training of his youth made 
him susceptible about his authority even when no one disputed 
it. He was a natural orator, and though his dress was simple 
his personal appearance gave an impression of distinction and 
force His projects were often misunderstood, and in 1736 he 
was even banished from Saxony, but in 1749 the government 
rescinded the decree and begged him to establish within its 
Jurisdiction more settlements like that at Herrnhut. 

He wrote a large number of hymns, of which the best known 
are " Jesus, Thy blood and righteousness," and " Jesus, still lead 
on." A selection of hi* Sermons was published by G. Clemens in 
10 vols., hia Diary (1716-1719) by G. Reichel and J. Th. M Oiler 

elerrnhut, 1907), and his Hymns, &c, by H. Bauer and G. Burk- 
rdt (Leipzig, 1900). 

See A. G. Spangenberg, Leben des Grafen von Zinzendorf (Barby, 
1772-1773); L. von Schrautcnbach, Der Graf v. Zinundorf (Gnadau, 
187 1 ; written in 1782, and interesting because it gives Zinzendorf 's 



dorfim Verkdlsnus s. Philosophy u. Kirekenthum seiner Zeis (Leipzig. 
1886), H. Rdmcr, Zinzendorf s Leben und Werken (Gnaudau, 1900}. 
and other literature mentioned under Moravian Brbtukkm and 
in the article " Zinzendorf " by J. Th Mailer in Hauck-Henog's 
Reaiencyk. fur prot. Tkeolopo it. Kirche. 

ZION, or Sion (Heb. |Vs, perhaps from ra "to be dry/* 
nji " to set up," or pi " to protect "; Arabic analogies] 
favour the meaning " hump," " summit of a ridge," and so 
" citadel "), the name of the Jebusite stronghold at Jerusalem 
captured by David (2 Sam. v.). Zion (which is synonymous 
with the Ophel) is properly the southern part of the eastern 
hill l on the top of which was built the temple, so that the name 
came to be given to the whole hill (2 Rings six, 31, Isaiah rxiv 
2$ and throughout x Maccabees), to all Jerusalem (Isaiah i, 27, 
cf iv 3), and even to the nation or its spiritual nucleus. Thus 
the people of Jerusalem are spoken of as "the daughter of 
Zion " (Isaiah 1 8), the name being often personified and idealized, 
especially in Isaiah ii., and in the Psalter, «| Ps. LuxviL 5, 
" Every one calls Zion his mother " 

See G. A. Smith, Jerusalem (London, 1908) 

ZIONISM. One of the most interesting results of the anti- 
Semitic agitation (see Anti-Semitism) has been a strong revival 
of the national spirit among the Jews in a political form. To 
this movement the name Zionism has been given. In the same 
way that anti-Semitism differs from the Jew-hatred of the early 
and middle ages, Zionism differs from previous manifestations 
of the Jewish national spirit It was originally advocated as an 
expedient without Messianic impulses, and its methods and pro- 
posals have remained almost harshly modern None the less 
it is the lineal heir of the attachment to Zion which led the 
Babylonian exiles under Zerubbabel to rebuild the Temple, and 
which flamed up in the heroic struggle of the Maccabees against 
Antiochus Epiphanes. Without this national spirit it could, 
indeed, never have assumed its present formidable proportions. 
The idea that it is a set-back of Jewish history, in the sense that 
it is an unnatural galvanization of hopes long since abandoned 
for a spiritual and cosmopolitan conception of the mission of 
Israel, is a controversial fiction The consciousness of a spiritual 
mission exists side by side with the national idea. The great 
bulk of the Jewish people have throughout their history re- 
mained faithful to the dream of a restoration of their national 
life m Judea Its manifestations have suffered temporary 
modifications under the Influence of changing political condi- 
tions, and the intensity with which it has been held by individual 
Jews has varied according to their social circumstances, but in 
the main the idea has been passionately clung to. 

The contention of some modern rabbis that the national idea 
is Messianic, and hence that its realization should be left to the 
Divine initiative {e.g. Chief Rabbi Adler, Jewish Chronicle, 25th 
November 1808), is based on a false analogy between the politics 
of the Jews and those of other oppressed nationalities. As all 
Hebrew politics were theocratic, the national hope was neces- 
sarily Messianic It was not on that account less practical 
or less disposed to express itself in an active political form. 
The Messianic dreams of the Prophets, which form the frame- 
work of the Jewish liturgy to this day, were essentially politico- 
national They contemplated the redemption of Israel, the 
gathering of the people in Palestine, the restoration of the 
Jewish state, the rebuilding of the Temple, and the re-establish- 
ment of the Davidic throne in Jerusalem with a prince of the 
House of David. How little the dispersed Jews regarded this 
essentially political programme as a mere religious ideal is 
shown by their attitude towards the pseudo-Messiahs who 
endeavoured to fulfil it Bar Cochba (aj>. 1x7-138) lived at a 
period when a Jewish national uprising might well have been 
exclusively political, for the dissolution of the kingdom was 

* Christians of the 4th century removed the name to the S.W 
hill, and this tradition has persisted until modern times, when 
archaeological and .topographical evidence has re-identified Stoo 
with the E. hilL 



ZIONISM 



987 



scarcely half a century old, and Palestine stUl had a large 
Jewish population. None the less Bar Cochba based his right 
to lead the Jewish revolt on Messianic claims, and throughout 
the Roman Empire the Jews responded with enthusiasm to his 
calL Three centuries later Moses of Crete attempted to repeat 
Bar Cochba's experiment, with the same results. In the 8th 
century, when the Jews of the West were sufficiently remote 
from the days of their political independence to have developed 
an exclusively spiritual conception of their national identity, 
the Messianic claims of a Syrian Jew named Serene shook the 
whole of Jewry, and even among the Jews of Spain there was no 
hesitation as to whether they had a right to force the hands of 
Providence. It was the same with another pseudo- Messiah 
named Abu-Isa Obadia, who unfurled the national banner in 
Persia some thirty years later 

During the middle ages, though the racial character of the 
Jews was being transformed by their Ghetto seclusion, the 
national yearning suffered no relaxation. If it expressed itself 
exclusively in literature, it was not on that account under- 
going a process of idealization (Cf. Abrahams'* Jewuk Ltje m 
the Middle Ages, pp 24-25.) The truth is that it could not 
have expressed itself differently. There could have been no 
abandonment of national hopes in a practical sense, unless the 
prospect of entering the national life of the peoples among 
whom they dwelt had presented itself as an alternative. Of 
this there was not the remotest sign The absence of militant 
Zionism during this period is to be accounted for partly by the 
want of conspicuous nscudo- Messiahs, and partly by the terror 
of persecution Unlike the modern Creeks, the medieval 
Jews could expect no sympathy from their neighbours in an 
agitation for the recovery of their country One may imagine 
what the Crusaders would have thought of an international 
Jewish conspiracy to recapture Jerusalem In the 1 s<h century 
the aversion from political action, even had it been possible, 
must have been strengthened by the fact that the Grand Signor 
was the only friend the Jews had in the world. The nationalist 
spirit of the medieval Jews is sufficiently reflected in their 
liturgy, and especially in the works of the poet, Jehuda Halevi 
It is impossible to read his beautiful Zionide without feeling 
that had he lived another twenty years he would have gladly 
played towards the pseudo-Messiah David Alroy {evea 1160) 
the part that Akiba played towards Bar Cochba. 

The strength of the nationalist feeling was practically tested 
In the 16th century, when a Jewish impostor, David Rcubeni 
(circs 1530), and his disciple, Solomon Molcho (1 501-1532), 
came forward as would-be liberators of their people Through- 
out Spain, Italy and Turkey they were received with enthusiasm 
by the bulk of their brethren. In the following century the 
influence of the Christian Millenarians gave a fresh impulse to 
the national idea. Owing to the frenzy of persecution and the 
apocalyptic teachings of the Chiliasts, it now appeared in a 
more mystical form, but a practical bias was not wanting 
Mcnassch ben Israel (1604-1657) co-operated with English 
MiUeaarians to procure the resettlement of the Jews in England 
as a preliminary to their national return to Palestine, and he 
regarded his marriage with a scion of the Davidic family of 
Abarbanel as justifying the hope that the new Messiah might 
be found among his offspring. The increasing dispersion of 
the Marranos or crypto-Jews of Spain and Portugal through the 
Inquisition, and the persecution of the Jews in Poland, deepened 
the Jewish sense of horoelessness the while the Millenarians 
encouraged their Zionist dreams. The Hebraic and Judeophil 
tendencies of the Puritan revolution in England still further 
Stirred the prevailing unrest, and some Jewish rabbis are said 
to have visited England in order to ascertain by genealogical 
investigations whether a Davidic descent could be ascribed to 
Oliver Cromwell. It only wanted a leader to produce a national 
movement on a formidable scale. In 1666 this leader presented 
himself at Smyrna, in the person of a Jew named Sabbatai Zevi 
(1626-1676), who proclaimed himself the Messiah The news 
spread like wildfire, and despite the opposition of some of the 
leading rabbis, the Jews everywhere prepared for the journey 



to Palestine Not alone was this the case with the poor Jews 
of Lithuania and Germany, but also with well-to-do communities 
like those of Venice, Leghorn and Avignon, and with the great 
Jewish merchants and bankers of Hamburg, Amsterdam and 
London. Throughout Europe the nationalist excitement was 
intense. Even the downfall and apostasy of Sabbatai were 
powerless to stop it. Among the wealthier Jews it partially 
subsided, but the great bulk of the people refused for a whole 
century to be disillusionised. A Messianic frenzy seized upon 
them. Encouraged on the one band by Christian Millenarians 
like Pierre Jurien, OUger Paali, and Johannes Speeth, pandered 
to by Sabbatak impostors like Cardoso, Bonafoux, Mordtcai 
of EisensUdt, Jacob Querido, Judah Chasaid, Nehemiah 
Chayon and Jacob Franks, and maddened by fresh oppressions, 
they became fanatidzed to the verge of demoralization. 

The reaction arrived in 1778 in the shape of the Mendels- 
sohman movement. The growth of religious toleration, the 
attempted emancipation of the English Jews in 1753, and the 
sane Judeophilism of men like Leasing and Doom, showed that 
at length the dawn of the only possible alternative to national- 
ism was at hand. Moses Mendelssohn (1720-1786) sought to ■ 
prepare his brethren for their new life as citizens of the lands 
in which they dwelt, by emphasizing the spiritual side of Judaism 
and the necessity of Occidental culture His efforts were suc- 
cessful The narrow nationalist spirit everywhere yielded 
before the nope or the progress of local political emancipation 
In 1806 the Jewish Sanbednn convened by Napoleon virtually 
repudiated the nationalist tradition. The new Judaism, how- 
ever, had not entirely destroyed it. It had only reconstructed 
it on a wider and more sober foundation. Mendelssohnian 
culture, by promoting the study of Jewish history, gave a fresh 
impulse to the racial consciousness of the Jews. The older 
nationalism had been founded on traditions so remote as to be 
almost mythical, the new race consciousness was fed by a 
glorious martyr history, which ran side by side with the histories 
of the newly adopted nationalities of the Jews, and was not 
unworthy of the companionship From this race consciousness 
came a fresh interest in the Holy Land. It was an ideal rather 
than a politico-nationalist interest— a desire to preserve and 
cherish the great monument of the departed national glories. 
It took the practical form of projects for improving the circum- 
stances of the local Jews by means of schools, and for reviving 
something of the old social condition of Judea by the establish- 
ment of agricultural colonies. In this work Sir Moses Monte- 
fiorc, the Rothschild family, and the Albance Israelite Uni- 
versale were conspicuous. More or less passively, however, 
the older nationalism still lived on— especially in lands where 
Jews were persecuted— and it became strengthened by the 
revived race consciousness and the new interest in the Holy 
Land. Christian Millenarians also helped to keep it alive. 
Lord Ashley, afterwards Lord Shaftesbury, Colonel Cawler, 
Mr Walter Cresson, the United States consul at Jerusalem, 
Mr James Finn, the British consul, Mr Laurence Oliphant and 
many others organized and supported schemes for the benefit 
of the Jews of the Holy Land on avowedly Restoration grounds. 
Another vivifying element was the reopening of the Eastern 
Question and the championship of oppressed nationalities in 
the East by the Western Powers. In England political writers 
were found to urge the re-establishment of a Jewish state under 
British protection as a means of assuring the overland route to 
India (Hollingsworth, Jews 1* Palestine, 1852). Lord Palmerston 
was not unaffected by this idea (Finn, Stirring Times, vol i. 
pp 106- it a), and both Lord Beaconsfield and Lord Salisbury 
supported Mr Laurence Oliphant in his negotiations with the 
Porte for a concession which was to pave the way to an auton- 
omous Jewish state in the Holy Land. In 1854 a London Jew 
attempted to float a company "for the purpose of enabling 
the descendants of Israel to obtain and cultivate the Land of 
Promise " (Hebrew Observer, 12th April) In 1876 the publica- 
tion of George Eliot 'a Daniel Deronda gave to the Jewish 
nationalist spirit the strongest stimulus it bad experienced 
since the appeaxance of Sabbatai Zevi. 



988 



ZIONISM 



It was not, however, until the spread of anti-Semitic doctrines 
through Europe made men doubt whether the Mendelssohnian 
denationalization of Judaism possessed the elements of per- 
manency that the Jewish nationalist spirit reasserted itself in 
a practical form. As long as the anti-Semites were merely 
polemical, the nationalists were mute, but when in Russia their 
agitation took the form of massacres and spoliation, followed 
by legislation of medieval harshness, the nationalist remedy 
offered itself. In 1882 several pamphlets were published by 
Jews in Russia, advocating the restoration of the Jewish state. 
They found a powerful echain the United States, where a young 
Jewish poetess, Miss Emma Lazarus, passionately championed 
the Zionist cause In verse not unworthy of Jehuda HalevL 
But the movement did not limit itself to literature. A society, 
11 Chovevi Zion," was formed with the object of so extending 
and methodizing the establishment of agricultural colonies 
in Palestine as to make the eventual acquisition of the country 
by the Jews possible. From the beginning it was a great 
success, and branches, or " tents " as they wete called, were 
established all over the world. At the same time two other 
' great schemes for rescuing the Jewish people from oppression 
were brought before the public. Neither was Zionist, but both 
served to encourage the Zionist cause. One was due to the 
initiative of Mr Cazalet, a financier who was interested in the 
Euphrates Valley Railway project. With the assistance of 
Mr Laurence Oliphant he proposed that the concession from 
the Porte should include a band of territory two miles wide on 
each side of the railway, on which Jewish refugees from Russia 
should be settled. Unfortunately the scheme failed. The 
other was Baron de Hirsch's colossal colonization association 
(see Hirsch, Maurice de). This was neither political nor 
Zionist, but it was supported by a -good many members of the 
" Chovevi Zion," among them Colonel Goldsmid, on the ground 
that it might result in the training of a large class of Jewish 
yeomen who would be invaluable in the ultimate settlement of 
Palestine. (Interview in Daily Graphic, xoth March 1893.) 

None of these projects, however, proved sufficiently inspiring 
to attract the great mass of Jewish nationalists. The Chovevi 
Zion was too timid and prosaic; the Hirsch scheme did not 
directly appeal to their , strongest sympathies. In 1897 a 
striking change manifested itself. A new Zionist leader arose 
in the person of a Viennese journalist and playwright, Dr 
Theodore Herzl (1860-1904). The electoral successes of the 
anti-Semites in Vienna and Lower Austria in 1895 had impressed 
him with the belief that the Jews were unassimilable in Europe, 
and that the time was not far distant when they would be once 
more submitted to civil and political disabilities. The Hirsch 
scheme did not, in his view, provide a remedy, as it only trans- 
planted the Jews from one uncongenial environment to another. 
He came to the conclusion that the only solution of the problem 
was the segregation of the Jews under autonomous political 
conditions. His first scheme was not essentially Zionist. He 
merely called for a new exodus, and was ready to accept any 
grant of land in any part of the world that would secure to the 
Jews some form of self-government. The idea was not new. 
In 1566 Don Joseph Nasi had proposed an autonomous-settle- 
ment of Jews at Tiberias, and had obtained a grant of the city 
from the Sultan for the purpose. In 1653 the Dutch West India 
Company in Curacao, in 1654 Oliver Cromwell in Surinam, and 
in 1659 the French West India Company at Cayenne had at- 
tempted similar experiments. Marshal de Saxe in 1749 had 
projected the establishment of a Jewish kingdom in South 
America, of which he should be sovereign; and in 1825 Major 
M. M. Noah purchased Grand Island, in the river Niagara, with 
a view to founding upon it a Jewish state. All these projects 
were failures. Dr Herzl was not slow to perceive that without 
an impulse of real enthusiasm his scheme would share the fate 
of these predecessors. He accordingly resolved to identify it 
with the nationalist idea. His plan was set forth in a pamphlet, 
entitled The Jewish Slate, which was published in German, 
French and English in the spring of 1806. It explained En 
detail how the new exodus was to be organised and bow the 



state was to be managed. It was to be a tribute-paying state 
under the suzerainty of the Sultan. It was to be settled by a 
chartered company and governed by an aristocratic republic, 
tolerant of all religious differences. The Holy Places wereto be 
eztenitorialized. The pamphlet produced a profound sensa- 
tion. Dr Herzl was joined by a number of distinguished Jewish 
literary men, among whom were Dr Max Nordau and Mr Israd 
Zangwill, and promises of support and sympathy reached him 
from all pans of the world. The haute fenanu and the higher 
rabbinate, however, stood aloof. 

The most encouraging feature in Dr Herzl's scheme was that 
the Sultan of Turkey appeared favourable to it. The motive 
of his sympathy has not hitherto been made known. The 
Armenian massacres had inflamed the whole of Europe against 
him, and for a time the Ottoman Empire was in very serious 
peril. Dr Herzl's scheme provided him, as he imagined, with a 
means of securing powerful friends. Through a secret emissary, 
the Chevalier de Newlinsky, whom he sent to London in May 
1806, he offered to present the Jews a charter in Palestine pro- 
vided they used their influence in the press and otherwise to 
solve the Armenian question on lines which he laid down. 
The English' Jews declined these proposals, and refused to 
treat in any way with the persecutor of the Armenians. When, 
in the following July, Dr Herzl himself came to London, the 
Maccabaean Society, though ignorant of the negotiations with 
the Sultan, declined to support the scheme. None the less, it 
secured a large amount of popular support throughout Europe, 
and in 1010 Zionism had a following of over 900,000 Jews, 
divided into a thousand electoral districts. The English 
membership is about 15,000. 

Between 1897 and 1910 the Zionist organization held nine 
international Congresses. At the first, which met at Basel, 
a political programme was adopted on the following terms: — 

" Zionism aims at establishing for the Jewish people a -publicly 
and legally assured home in Palestine. For the attainment of this 
purpose the Congress considers the following means serviceable: 
(1) The promotion of the settlement of Jewish agriculturists, 
artisans and tradesmen in Palestine. (2) The federation of all 
Jews into local or general group*, according to the laws of the 
various countries. (3) The strengthening of the Jewish feeling 
and consciousness. (4) Preparatory steps for the attainment of 
those governmental grants which are necessary to the achievement 
of the Zionist purpose." 

Subsequent congresses founded various institutions for the 
promotion of this programme, notably a People's Bank known as 
the Colonial Trust, which is the financial instrument of political 
Zionism, a National Fund for the purchase of land in Palestine 
and a Palestine Commission with subsidiary societies for the 
study and improvement of the social and economic condition 
of the Jews in the Holy Land. For the purposes of these 
bodies about £400,000 was collected in small sums and invested. 
Very little practical work of any abiding value, however, was 
accomplished, and on the political side the career of Zionism 
had up to the end of 1910 proved a failure. 

In May 1001 and August 1902 Dr Herzl had audiences of the 
Sultan Abdul Hamid, and was received with great distinction, 
but the negotiations led to nothing. Despairing of obtaining 
an immediate charter for Palestine, he turned to the British 
government with a view to securing a grant of territory on an< 
autonomous basis in the vicinity of the Holy Land, which would 
provisionally afford a refuge and a political training-ground 
for persecuted Jews. His overtures met with a sympathetic 
reception, especially from Mr Chamberlain, then Colonial 
Secretary, and Earl Percy, who was Under-Secretary for Foreign 
Affairs (October 1002). At first a site for the proposed settle- 
ment was suggested in the Sinai peninsula, but owing to the 
waterless character of the country the project had to be 
abandoned. Then Mr Chamberlain, who in the Interval had 
paid a visit to Africa, suggested the salubrious and uninhabited 
highlands of the East Africa Protectorate, and in 1003 the 
British government formally offered Dr Herzl the-Nasm Gishiu 
plateau, 6000 sq. m. m area. No such opportunity for creating 
a Jewish self-governing community had presented itself since 



ZIRCON 



989 



the Dispersion, and for a moment H seemed as if Zionism were 
really entering the field of practical politics. Unhappily it 
only led to bitter controversies, which nearly wrecked the whole 
movement. The British offer was submitted to the Sixth 
Congress, which assembled at Basel in August 1903. It was 
received with consternation and an explosion of wrath by the 
ultra-nationalist elements, who interpreted it as an abandon- 
ment of the Palestine idea. By his personal influence Dr Herd 
succeeded in obtaining the appointment of a commission to 
examine the proposed territory, but its composition was largely 
nationalist, and in the following year the Congress gladly availed 
itself of certain critical passages in the report to reject the whole 
scheme. 

Meanwhile Zionism had suffered an irreparable blow by the 
death of Dr Herzl (1904). He was succeeded by Mr David 
Wolffsohn, a banker of Cologne, but there was in truth nobody 
who in ability and personal dignity and magnetism could take 
his place. The movement was further shaken by the dis- 
sensions which followed the rejection of the East African project. 
Mr Israel Zangwill led an influential minority which combined 
with certain non-Zionist elements to found a rival organization 
under the name of the ITO (Jewish Territorial Organization) 
with a view to taking over the East African offer or to establish 
an autonomous place of refuge elsewhere. Thus freed from all 
moderating elements the Zionists hardened into an exclusively 
Palestinian body, and under the auspices of Mr Wolffsohn 
fresh negotiations were opened with the Porte. These, how- 
ever, were rendered finally hopeless by the Turkish revolution, 
which postulated a united Ottoman nationality, and resolutely 
set its face against any extension of the racial and religious 
autonomies under which the integrity of the Empire had 
already severely suffered. 

During 1905-1910 the Jewish national idea, for all practical 
purposes, was in a state of suspended animation. The re- 
covery of the Holy Land appeared more distant than ever, 
while even the establishment of an independent or autonomous 
Jewish state elsewhere, for which the ITO was labouring, had 
encountered unexpected difficulties. On the rejection of the 
British offer by the Zionists Mr Zangwill approached the Colonial 
Office, but he was too late, as the reserve on the Nasin Gishiu 
plateau had already been officially withdrawn. The ITO then 
turned its attention to Cyrenaica, and an expedition to examine 
the country was sent out (1908), but it was not found suitable. 
A project for combining all the Jewish organizations in an 
effort to secure an adequate foothold in Mesopotamia in con- 
nexion with the scheme for the irrigation of that region was 
subsequently proposed by Mr Zangwill, but up to January 
191 1 it had not been found practicable. The ITO, however, 
did valuable work by organizing an Emigration Regulation 
Department for deflecting the stream of Jewish emigration 
from the overcrowded Jewry of New York to the Southern 
states of the American Union, where there is greater scope for 
employment under wholesome conditions. For this purpose a 
fund was formed, to which Mr JacobSchiff contributed £100,000 
and Messrs Rothschild £20,000. 

Although the Zionist organization was numerically strong— 
indeed, the strongest popular movement Jewish history had ever 
known— its experience from 1897 to 1910 rendered it very 
doubtful whethet its nationalist aspirations could, humanly 
speaking, ever be fulfilled. From Turkey, either absolutist 
or democratic, it appeared hopeless to expect any willing re- 
laxation of the Ottoman hold on Palestine, while in the event 
of a dissolution of the Empire it was questionable whether 
Christendom— and especially the Roman and Greek Churches- 
would permit the Holy Land to pass to the Jews, even though 
the Holy Places were exterritorialized. Should these obstacles 
be overcome, still more formidable difficulties would await the 
Jewish state. The chief of these is the religious question. The 
state would have to be orthodox or secular. If it were orthodox 
it would desire to revive the whole Levities! polity, and in these 
circumstances it would either pass away through internal chaos 
or would so offend the modern political spirit that it would be 



soon extinguished from outside. If it were secular it would not 
be a Jewish state. The great bulk of its supporters would refuse 
to live in it, and it would ultimately be abandoned to an 
outlander population consisting of Hebrew Christians and 
Plu-f^fo f) Millena rians 

Modern Zionism is vitiated by its erroneous premises. It is 
based on the idea that anti-Semitism is unconquerable, and 
thus the whole movement is artificial. Under the influence of 
teligious toleration and the naturalization laws, nationalities 
are daily losing more of their racial character. The coming 
nationality will be essentially a matter of education and 
economics, and this will not exclude the Jews as such. With 
the passing away of anti-Semitism, Jewish nationalism will 
disappear. If the Jewish people disappear with it, it will only 
be because either their religious mission in the world has been 
accomplished or they have proved themselves unworthy of it. 

l l iTEflATirf£. — A Zionist bibliography fuis been published by 
the Federation of American Ztanim. Beside* the world already 
atL-d in the body of ihi* artide, v.* un the early nationalist Move- 
ment Cmetf, Gestkicht* der Jitden. under the head 1 of the various 
pscud.o-Mfsuah* and their adherent*, Jewish agricultural colonies 
will be found discussed werv fully io T*e JewUk Encyclopedia, 
vol. L pp, 240-36J, For early Zionist project* see Publications vf 
tht AfKrrn'zn JtH'iik UitUtticai Society, No. B„ pp, 75-118; Laurence 
Oilplant, tMti of Giiead; Mrs OBpJMat, Lift tf Laurence Oliphant. 
pp. lofl et scq. The Zionist movement since 1895 i& fully recorded 
tn it* official organ, pit Welt {Vienna), Fof proceedings of the 
Congresses ux the Ojjkiat Protocols published tor each year by 
the society "Erci Isnel" of Vienna; also Herzl, Dor BoseUr 
Canz T c** (Vitnna. iSqj). On the mo vcwent generally, see Herd's 
Zutniitistkt^Sikriftcn, edited by Dr Leon Kelincr; Ten Years of 



ZfentFTt { Cologne, 1907) ; Nordau t Zionism t iij History and its 
r 9**5'i J- de Haas, Zitmim, Jewish Needs and 



Ai> 

Jo 
ift ; 

(A 

1897); H. Bentwhch in Nineteenth Century [October 1807), and 

Forimrhiiy Ktnrm (December 1 So*); Reich in Nineteenth Century 



also articles by L Zangwril in CmmfifoHs (October 

pvrary Ptpirss ( October iRqq} and Fortnightly Review 

Dr Gister in Astatic Quarterly Review. (October 

(Den 

_ .« ML^. — , 

(August 1*97): Lucien Wolf in jtneish Quarterly Review (October 
1901 "The Zionist Peril '"J. On the J TO w pamphlets and leaflets 
published by the Je«™h Territorial Organ lotion; also the Report 
of the Cvmmiiritn vn Cyrenaica (London, 1909), (L. W.) 

ZIRCON, a mineral composed of xirconium silicate, some- 
times used as a gem-stone. It is believed that the name comes 
from the Arabic targun, and is essentially the same as " jar- 
goon," the name given to certain varieties of xircon. The 
mineral crystallises in the tetragonal system, generally in com- 
binations of square prisms and square pyramids, as in figs. 1 
and 2. Zircon is isomorphous with cassiterite and rutile, and 





Fie. 1 



Fie. ?. 



like them may occur in geniculated twins. There is no distinct 
cleavage, and the mineral breaks with a conchoids! fracture. 
The hardness is about 7*5. It is notable that the specific 
gravity has a very wide range, extending from a little below 
4 to rather more than 4*7i and being thus greater than that 
of any other gem-stone. Rarely colourless, zircon is usually 
brown or red, sometimes orange, yellow or green, and occasionally 
parti-coloured or zoned. Whilst common zircon is opaque, the 
gem-varieties are transparent. The dichroism of coloured 
zircons is always feeble; the double refraction usually strong 
and of positive sign; and the optical properties of some zircons 
suggest a biaxial mineral. It was pointed out long ago by 
Sir A. H. Church that many transparent zircons afford a spectrum 



99© 



ZIRCONIUM 



marked by certain absorption-bands, a property perhaps due 
to the presence of uranium. 

, The effect of heat on zircon is remarkable. Most coloured 
zircons, exposed to a high temperature, either change or lose 
their colour, but this loss is attended by a gain in brilliancy. 
The " Matura diamonds " of Ceylon are zircons which have been 
thus artificially decolorized. Certain zircons when heated in 
a Bunsen-flame glow with an orange incandescence, whilst 
others may emit an orange glow when ground on a copper- 
wheel fed with diamond-dust. Even exposure to sunlight will 
sometimes modify the colour and lustre of a zircon. Some 
zircons suffer contraction when heated, so that the specific 
gravity becomes raised; but the behaviour of zircons in this 
respect shows such anomalies that S. Stevanovic has been led to 
suggest the existence of three classes of zircon. One group has 
a specific gravity of 4*0 and another of 4-7, both remaining un- 
changed in density when heated. L. J. Spencer, who has studied 
some remarkable crystals from Ceylon, calls the former o-zircon, 
and the latter 0-zircon. A third class has specific gravity 
between 4-0 and 4-7, and Increases in density on heating. 
These stones consist, according to Spencer, of an. inter- 
growth of a-zircon or 0-zircon, with a third unstable modifica- 
tion which he distinguishes as 7-zircon. 

Whilst zircon is usually regarded as a zirconium silicate 
(ZrSiO«) it is sometimes placed with the oxides as consisting 
of ZrOrSiOt. A small proportion of ferric oxide seems to be 
always present, and to this the colour of zircon, according to 
G. Spezia, may be ascribed. Traces of so many elements have 
been recorded in certain zircons that it was at one time pro- 
posed to call the species polycrasilite from the Greek woKin 
(many) and Kpaais (mixture). Zircon is used as a source 
of zirconia in various preparations, for incandescent gas- 
mantles, &c. It was in this mineral that zirconia was originally 
discovered by M. H. Klaproth in. 1789. 

Zircon fit for use as a gem-stone is often known as " noble " 
or •' precious zircon." The red and orange stones are termed 
hyacinth (q.v.) and jacinth, whilst those of other colours, 
as also the colourless transparent zircons, are called jargoon 
(q.v.). The lytuurium of the ancients, described as an amber- 
coloured stone used for signets, is supposed by some authorities 
to have been zircon and by others amber. The gem varieties of 
zircon are found in detrital deposits, especially in Ceylon and in 
New South Wales, where they accompany sapphire, &c. They 
occur also in the Anakie sapphire district, near Emerald, in 
Queensland. A. K. Coomaraswamy has pointed out that most 
of the stones in the gem-gravels of Ceylon, known locally as 
toranudli, are zircons rather than tourmalines. 

Zircon u an accessory constituent of many rocks, especially 
granite, where it appears to have crystallized at an early stage of 
consolidation. In microscopic sections, viewed by transmitted 
light, the zircon by virtue of its high refractive power appears to 
stand out in relief. It forms an important constituent of the 
zircon-syenite of Norway. Zircon occurs also in many basic 
eruptive rocks, notably the basalts of the Rhine and Central France. 
Being but little subject to alteration, it is common in secondary 
deposits, as in auriferous and other sands, occurring usually in 
small characteristic crystals, with rounded angles. Fine crystals 
of zircon are found in the Ilmen Mountains in Russia, and in 
Renfrew 00., Ontario, where it occurs in crystalline limestone. 
Many localities in the United States yield zircon, especially in 
New York state and in North Carolina: it has been largely worked 
in Henderson 00. f N.C. Zircon occurs also in Tasmania. Certain 
varieties of zircon have received distinctive names, such as the 
azorite, which occurs in sanidine-trachyte in the Azores. Several 
other minerals seem to be altered zircon, generally hydrated, such 
as malacon, cyrtolite and oerstedite, the last being a Norwegian 
mineral containing titanium and magnesium. Auerbachite is a 
Russian mineral closely related to zircon. (F. W. R.*) 

ZIRCONIUM [symbol Zr, atomic weight 006 (O-16)], a 
metallic chemical element. Klaproth in 1789 analysed the 
mineral zircon or hyacinth and found it to contain a new earth, 
which he called "zirconia." The metal was obtained by 
Berzelius as an iron-grey powder by heating potassium zircono- 
fluoride with metallic potassium. The amorphous metal also 
results when the chloride is heated with sodium; the oxide 
reduced with m?^^»m' or when fused potassium aircono- 



fluoride is electrolysed (Wedekind, Zeit. EUktrockem., 1904, 
IO » P- 33i)> Troost produced crystallized zirconium by fusing 
the double fluoride with aluminium in a graphite crucible at the 
temperature of melting iron, and extracting the aluminium 
from the melt with hydrochloric acid. It is more conveniently 
prepared by heating the oxide with carbon in the electric furnace. 
The crystals look like antimony, and are brittle, and so hard as 
to scratch glass and rubies; their specific gravity is 4*25. The 
powdery metal burns readily in air; the crystalline metal re- 
quires to be heated in an oxyhydrogen flame before it catches 
fiTe. Mineral acids generally attack the crystallized metal very 
little even in the heat; aqua regia, however, dissolves h readily, 
and so does hydrofluoric acid. In its chemical affinities 
zirconium resembles titanium, cerium and thorium; it occurs 
in company with these elements, and is tetravalent in its more 
important salts. 

Zirconium oxide or tiramia, ZrOi, has become important since 
its appltrntton to (he manufacture of mantles for incandescent 
ga^lighting. For ins extraction from zircon the mineral is heated 
and quenched in water lo render it brittle, and then reduced to a 
fine powder, which h fused *ith ihn.e to four parts of acid potassium 
fluoride in a platinum crucible. When the mass is guietly fusing, 
the crucible it heated for two hours in a wind-furnace. The 
porcc-Earn-like rndt is powdered, boiled with water, and acidified 
with hydrofluoric add, and the residual potassium fluosilkate b 
filtered oft. The fUir.ne on cooling deposits crystals of potassium 
zircunofljjuride h KjZrF*. which arc puqfied by crystallization from 
hot water The dun hie ll no ride is decomposed with hot concen- 
trated eufphorie arid; the mined sulphate is dissolved in water; 
and the nrennia bt pitvipit jicd with ammonia in the cold. The 
precipitate, being difficult to wash, is (after a preliminary washing) 
re-diajdlved in hydrochloric acid and re-precipitated with ammonia. 
Zirconium hydroxide, Zr(OH) iP as thus obtained, is quite appre- 
ciably ioluhle in water and tos.Ty in mineral adds, with formation 
of zirconium salt*, *.$. ZrCl» But, if the hydroxide is precipitated 
in the heat, ti demand*, concern rated acids for its solution. The 
h) ! r- • vi- :,- re .j. ri5> U<- it* \<,.,u,t ,t a dull red heat and passes into 
anlijilndc wnii nud iiK _indesccnce. Zirconia can be obtained 
crystalline, in a form isomorphous with cassiterite and rutile, by 
fusing the amorphous modification with borax, and dissolving out 
with sulphuric acid. The anhydrous oxide is with difficulty soluble 
even in hydrofluoric acid; but a mixture of two parts of concen- 
trated sulphuric acid and one of water dissolves it on continued 
heating as the sulphate, Zr(SO«)j. Zirconia, when heated to white- 
ness, remains unfused, and radiates a fine white light, which sug- 
gested its utilization for making incandescent gas mantles; and, 
in the form of disks, as a substitute for the lime-cylinders ordi- 
narily employed in " limelight." Zirconia, like stannic and titanic 
oxides, unites not only with acids but also with basic oxides. For 
instance, if it be fused with sodium carbonate, sodium zirconate, 
NatZrOa, is formed. If the carbonate be in excess, the salt Na«ZrO< 
results, which when treated with water gives NatZr^Oit • 12H1O, 
which crystallizes in hexagonal plates. When heated in a loosely 
covered crucible with magnesium the nitride ZriN* is formed 
(Wedekind, Ztil. onort. Chan., 1905, 45, p. 385). 

Zirconium hydride, ZrH f . is supposed to be formed when zirconia 
is heated with magnesium in an atmosphere of hydrogen. Zirconium 
fluoride, ZrF 4 , is obtained as glittering monoclinic tables (with 
3H1O) by heating zirconia with acid ammonium fluoride. It forms 
double salts, named zircono- fluorides, which are isomorphous with 
the staniti- and titani-fluorides. Zirconium chloride, ZrC1«, is pre- 
pared as a white sublimate by igniting a mixture of zirconia and 
charcoal in a current of chlonne. It has the exact vapour-density 
corresponding to the formula. It dissolves in water with evolution 
of heat: on evaporation a basic salt, ZrOOr8HiO. separates out 
in star-shaped acicular aggregates. Zirconium bromide, ZrBr*. is 
formed similarly to the chloride. Water gives the oxybromide 
ZrOBrj. Zirconium iodide, Zrl 4 , was obtained as a yellow, micro- 
crystalline solid by acting with hydriodic acid on heated zirconium 
(Wedekind. Ber., 1904, 37, p. 1135). It fumes in air; with water 
it gives ZrOIfSHtO; and with alcohol ethyl iodide and zirconium 
hydroxide are formed. The iodide combines with liquid ammonia 
to form ZrI«-8NHi; and with ether to give Zri4*4(C t H«)jO. 
Zirconium combines with sulphur to form a sulphide, and with 
carbon to form several carbides. The sulphate, Zr{SO«)i, is a white 
mass obtained by dissolving the oxide or hydroxide in sulphuric 
acid, evaporating and heating the mass to nearly a red heat. Since 
it forms a series of double sulphates, Ruer (Zeit. anore. Chtm^ 
1904, 4a, p. 87) regards it as a dibasic acid, ZrOSO«-SO«Hj, and 
that the crystalline sulphate is ZrOSO«-SO«Hr3HiO (not 
Zr<SO«) r 4H1O). Zirconium also forms double sulphates of the 
type Zr^7(SO«M)r«H,0, where M-K. Rb. Cs, and «-8 for K, 
15 for Rb, 11 for Cs (Rosenheim and Frank, Bet., 1905, 38, p. 812). 
The atomic weight was determined by Marignac to be 90-03; 
Bailey (Proc. Roy. Soc., 1890, 46, p. 74) deduced the value 89-95. 



ZLRKEL— ZITTEL 



991 



(1858* ), German geologist and 
petrographer, was bom at Boob on the aoth of May 1838. Ha 
was educated in his native town, and graduated PhD. at the 
university in 1861. In early years he was engaged in teaching 
geology and mineralogy in Vienna. He became professor of 
geology in 1863 in the university of Lemberg, in 1868 at Kiel, 
and in 1870 profe ss o r of min e r alogy and geology Sn the university 
of Leipzig. 



His numerous papers and essays include UeotcgtscMe Sitae von 
der Westh&ste SchotUands (1871); Die Struktur derVarioliU (1875); 
Mierastopieal Petrography (in Report of U.S. Geol. Exploration 
of 40th Par., vol. vi., 1876); Umnrit am dtr VaUee de Lesponme 

ii»7y); Ober den Zirkon (1880). His separate works include 
tkrbuck der Petrograpkie (1866; 2nd ed. 1893, 1894); Die mikre* 
shopiuhe BeschafenheU der Mineralien und Cesteine (1873). 

Z1THBB (Ger. Zither, Schlagtitktr, Streicktiiher; ItaL eiiharo), 
a name applied in modern Germany to the ancient dthara (9. v.), 
to the cittern (q.v.) t and to an instrument which is a kind of 
psaltery, consisting oC a shallow sound-chest with ribs having 
the outline of a flattened jug (termed in German Floschen- 
form, bottle-shape). In the centre of the sound-board is a rose 
sound-bole, and the finger-board with frets lies along the straight 
side of the either in front of the performer. The number of the 
strings varies, but 36, 38 and 43 are the most usual. Over the 
finger-board are four or five strings known as violin, on which the 
melody is played. These five melody strings are stopped with 
the thumb and fingers of the left 
hand and plucked with the thumb 
of the right hand, which usually 
has a thumb ring with plectrum. 
v No*, x and 2 are steel strings; 
No. lis only used for pas- No. 3 of brass, and 4 end 5 of 
sages in double notes and spun wire; the bass is played 
for chords. ^th the fingers of the right 

hand, and in order to facilitate 
the fingering the strings are tuned in fourths and fifths. 
Most of the other strings from the 6th are of gut. All the 
strings lie horizontally across the sound-board, being fastened 
in the usual manner to hitch and wrest pins. The zither is 
placed on the table in front of the performer, who holds his right 
arm so that the wrist rests on the side of the zither parallel with 
the hitch pins, the thumb being over the finger-board. 

The foregoing remarks apply to the distant and concert SJther; 
the elegiac or bass either is of similar construction but larger, and 
is a transposing instrument, having the same notation as the former, 
the real sounds being a fourth lower. These zithers are the favourite 
instruments of the peasants in the Swisb and Bavarian highlands, 
and are sometimes seen in the concert halls of north and western 
Germany. The Streiduither, or bowed zither, has a body of heart- 
or pear-shape similar to that of. the cittern, but without the long 
iwckof the latter. The finger-board covers the whole of the sound- 
board with the exception of a few inches at the tapering end, which 
is finished off with a raised _nut or bridge, the bow being applied 




in the centre of this f 



: has tittle feet and is 



tre of this gap. The bowed x. r „ 

placed on a table when being played. There are four strings 
ling to those of the violin or V " 



r viola, but the tone is nasal 



The speUmg of the word with a " Z " bad already become usual 
in the early 17th century, for, although the instrument described 
above did not then exist. Cither was the name by which the cittern 
was known in Germany, and Mkhael Praetorius, writing in 1618, 
speus it with both " C ''and " Z." 



ZtTTAlT, a town of Germany, in the kingdom of Saxony, on 
the left bank of the Mandau, near its confluence with the Ndsse, 
dose to the Bohemian and Sikaian frontier, 25 0. try rail S.E. 
of Bautzen, 48 E.S.E. of Dresden and at the junction of lines 
to Reschenberg (in Bohemia), Eibau and HermsdorT. Pop. 
(1005) 34,706. The town ball dates from 1844, and contains a 
beautiful hall with rich stained glass windows. Among the six 
Evangelical churches, the following are noticeable: that of 
St John, rebuilt in 1834-37, with twin spires, and the church of 
St Peter and St Paul, with its elegant tower, which formerly 
belonged to an old Franciscan monastery. The latter was 
restored in z88s and part of it fitted up as an historical 



museum. Another wing of this building contains the muni- 
cipal library of 4*>ooo volumes and valuable manuscripts.; 
Zittau is well equipped with schools, including a gymnasium 
and a commercial school, which are both accommodated in the 
Jobanneum, and several technical institutions. There axe also 
a theatre, well-equipped public baths and a richly endowed 
hospital Ziltau is one of the chief manufacturing towns of 
Saxony. The leading branch of industry is linen and damask 
weaving; but woollen stuffs, trimmings, &c, are also produced 
in the factories of the town, and in the surrounding weaving 
villages, sixty-six of which, with 113,455 (1000) inhabitants, 
are included in the municipal jurisdiction. The corporation 
owns valuable forests on the mountains of Upper Lusatia and 
other estates, the annual income of which is about £15,000. 
There are various steam-mills, iron-foundries, brick-fields and 
potteries near the town, and extensive deposits of lignite. 

Ziltau is of Wendish origin (Chytawa is its Wendish name), 
and was made a town by Ottocar II. of Bohemia, It was one 
of the six towns of the Lusatian League (1346), at which period 
it belonged to Bohemia. It suffered severely in the Hussite 
wars and in the Thirty Years' War, and was* bombarded and 
burnt by the Austrians in 1757 during the Seven Years' War, 
The musical composer Marschner (1705-1861) was born at 
Zittau. 

See Carpsov, Analecta fastorum ZUtavtensium (Leip 
Mosckkau, Zittau und seine Umgtbung (5th ed«, Zittau, 1 8 
Lamprecht, Wegweiser durch Zittau unddasZittauerGebirge \ 
19°«). 

ZITTEL, KARL ALFRED VON (18307x004), German palae- 
ontologist, was born at Bahlingen in 'Baden on the 25th of 
September 1839. He was educated at Heidelberg, Paris and 
Vienna. For a short period he served on the Geological Survey 
of Austria, and as assistant in the mineralogical museum at 
Vienna. In 1863 he became teacher of geology and mineralogy 
in the polytechnic at Carlsrube, and three years later he suc- 
ceeded Oppel as professor of palaeontology in the university 
of Munich, with the charge of the state collection of fossils. 
In x88o be was appointed to the geological professorship, and 
eventually to the directorship of the natural history museum 
of Munich. His earlier work comprised a monograph on the 
Cretaceous bivalve molluscs of Gosau (1863-66); and an 
essay on the Tithonian stage (1870), regarded as equivalent 
to the Purbeck and Wealden formations. In i$73~74 be 
accompanied the Rohlfs expedition to the Libyan desert, the 
primary results of which were published in Uber den geelo* 
gischen Ban dor libyschen Wlistc (1880), and further details in 
the PalatmlographAca (1883). Dr Zittd was distinguished for 
his paJaeontological researches. From 1869 until the close of 
his life be was chief editor of the Palattntographica (founded 
in 1846 by W. Dunker and H. von Meyer). In 1876 be com- 
menced the publication of his great work, fJandbuch der Palaeon- 
tologies which was completed in 1893 in five volumes, the fifth 
volume on palacobotaoy being prepared by W. P» Schimpcx 
and A. Sche&k. To make his work as trustworthy as possible 
Dr Zittd made special studies of each great group, commencing 
with the fossil sponges, on which he published a monograph 
(1877-79)- 1* t*95 oe issued a summary of bis larger work; 
entitled GnmdtMge der PalaeonioUtie (ed. a, part 1, Invert* 
braid, revised by Dr Zittd In 1003; the American edition o| 
xoco by C R. Eastman is so revised, sometimes in opposition 
to ZitteTs views, as to be practically an independent work). 
He was author of Ami dtr Until (1873. ed. s, 1875); and Dig 
Sahara (1883). In 1809 he published GeuhichU dtr Gealogia 
Anas' Palaeemrtogu bit Emit dot 19 Jahrhwderls, a monumental 
history of the progress of geological science (Eng. trans* 
Mrs Maria M. Ogilvie-Gordon, 1001). Dr Zittel was from 1809 
president of the Royal Bavarian Academy of Sciences, and is 
1804 he was awarded the Wollaston medal by the Geological 
Society of London. He died on the 5th of January 1904. 

Obituary with portrait and bibliography, by Dr F. L. Kitchta. 
GavL Map (February 1904)." 



992 



2i2ka— zobeir rahama 



2l2KA, JOHN (c. 1376-1424), Bohemian general and Hussite 
leader, was born at Trocnov in Bohemia, oi a family which 
belonged to the gentry. He took part in the civil wars in 
Bohemia in the reign of Wenceslaus IV., during which he lost 
one eye in a skirmish. He was from his youth connected with 
the court, and held the office of chamberlain to Queen Sophia. 
Ziika 's name first became prominent when the Hussite movement 
began. When in 1419 a Hussite procession was stoned at 
Prague from the town hall, 2izka headed those who threw the 
town councillors from its windows. When a temporary armis- 
tice was concluded between the partisans of King Sigismund 
and the citizens of Prague, 2i2ka marched to Plzen (Pilsen) 
with his followers, but soon left that city, and, after defeating 
at Sudomer the partisans of Sigismund, arrived at Tabor, the 
newly founded stronghold of the advanced Hussites. Zizka 
took a large part in the organization of the new military com- 
munity and became one of the four captains of the people 
(hejtmane) who were at its head. Meanwhile Sigismund, 
king of the Germans and. king of Hungary, invaded Bohemia, 
claiming the crown as the .heir of his brother Wenceslaus. 
Menaced by Sigismund, the citizens of Prague entreated the 
Taborites for assistance. Led by 2i£ka and their other captains, 
the Taborites set out to take part in the defence of the capital. 
At Prague 2i£ka and his men took up a strong position on the 
hill then known as the Vitkov, on the spot where 2i£koz, a 
suburb of Prague, now stands. At the end of June (1420) 
the siege of the city began, and on the 14th of July the armies 
of Sigismund made a general attack. A strong German force 
assaulted the position on the Vitkov which secured the Hussite 
communications with the open country. Mainly through the 
heroism of 2izka, the attack was repulsed, and the forces of 
Sigismund abandoned the siege. Shortly afterwards (August 
22, 1420) the Taborites left Prague and returned to Tabor. 
2i£ka was now engaged in constant warfare with the partisans 
of Sigismund, particularly with the powerful Romanist, Ulrich 
of Rosenberg. By this struggle, in which 2ifka was invariably 
successful, the Hussites obtained possession of the greatest 
part of Bohemia, which Sigismund now left for a time. It was 
proposed to elect a Polish prince to the throne; but meanwhile 
the estates of Bohemia and Moravia, who met at Caslav on the 
xst of June 142 1, decided to appoint a provisional. government, 
consisting of twenty members chosen from all the political 
and religious parties of the country, 2i2ka, who took part in 
the deliberations at Caslav, being elected as one of the two 
representatives of Tabor. He summarily suppressed some 
disturbances on the part of a fanatical sect called the Adamites. 
He continued his campaigns against the Romanists and ad- 
herents of Sigismund; and having captured a small castle 
near Litomtfice (Leitmeritz) he retained possession of it — the 
only reward for his great services that he ever received or 
claimed. According to the Hussite custom he gave the biblical 
name of " Chalice " to this new possession, and henceforth 
adopted the signature of " Ziika of the Chalice." Later, in 
1421, he was severely wounded while besieging the castle of 
Rabi, and lost the use of his remaining eye. Though now 
totally blind, he continued to command the armies of Tabor. 
At the end of 1421 Sigismund, again attempting to subdue 
Bohemia, obtained possession of the important town of Kutna 
Hora (Kuttenberg). Ziika, who was at the head of the* united 
armies of Tabor and Prague, at first retreated to Kolhv, but 
after having received reinforcements he attacked and defeated 
Sigismund 's army at the village of.Nebovid between Kolio and 
Kutna Hora (January 6, 2422). Sigismund lost 12,000 men 
and only escaped himself by rapid fight. Sigismund's forces 
made a last stand at Nemecky Brod (Deutschbrod) on the xoth 
of January, but the city was stormed by the Bohemians, and, 
contrary to 2i2ka's orders, Its defenders were put to the sword. 
Early in 1423 internal dissensions among the Hussites led to 
civil war. Ziika, as leader of the Taborites, defeated the men 
of Prague and the Utraquist nobles at Hdric on the 27th of 
April; but shortly afterwards the news that a new crusade 
against Bohemia wa- ' J induced the Hussites to 



conclude an armistice at Konopist on the 24th of June 142$. 
As soon, however, as the so-called crusaders had dispersed with- 
out even, attempting to enter Bohemia, the internal dissensions 
broke out afresh. During his temporary rule over. Bohemia 
Prince Sigismund Korybutovic of Poland had appointed as 
governor of the city of Kralove Hradec (KoniggriUs) Borek, 
lord of Miktinek, who belonged to the moderate Hussite, the 
so-called Utraquist, party. After the departure of the Polish 
prince the city of Kralove Hradec, in which the democratic 
party now obtained the upper hand, refused to recognize Borek 
as its ruler, and called Ziika to its aid. He acceded to the 
demand, and defeated the Utraquists under Borek at the farm 
of Strachov, near the city of Kralove Hradec (August 4, 1423). 
Ziika now attempted to invade Hungary, which was under the 
rule of his old enemy King Sigismund. Though this Hungarian 
campaign was unsuccessful owing to the great superiority of 
the Hungarians, it ranks among the greatest military exploits 
of Zizka, on account of the skill he displayed in retreat. In 
1424, civil war having again broken out in Bohemia, 2iika 
decisively defeated the Praguers and Utraquist nobles at Skalic 
on the 6th of January, and at Malesov on the 7th of June. In 
September he marched on Prague, but on the 14th of that 
month peace was concluded between the Hussite parties through 
the influence of John of Rokycan, afterwards Utraquist arch- 
bishop of Prague. It was agreed that the now reunited Hussites 
should attack Moravia, part of which country was still held by 
Sigismund's partisans, and that Ziika should be the leader in 
this campaign. But be died of the plague at Pribyslav (October 
ii, 1424) before reaching the Moravian frontier. 

See Count Ltitsow, Bohemia: an Historical Sketch (London, 
1896); Louis Leger, Jean Ziika in " Nouvellcs ttudes Slates," 
deuxieme sArie (Paris, 1886), the best account of Zttka'a career for 
those unacquainted with the Bohemian language; Tomek, Jan 
ZWca t and Dljepis Uesta Praky; Palacky, History of Bohemia. 
Ziika is the hero of a novel by George Sand, of a German epic by 
Meiaaher, and of a Bohemian tragedy by Alois Jirasek. (L.) 

ZLATOUST, a town of Russia, in the government oi Ufa, 
close to the river Ufa, in a picturesque valley of the middle 
Urals, 1025 ft. above sea level, 109 m. by rail E.NJ&. of the 
town of Urn. Pop. 20,073. The town has a first-class meteoro- 
logical and magnetical observatory, a cathedral and a museum; 
it is the seat of the mining administration for the Zlatoust 
district, and has a brisk trade in agricultural produce and 
manufactured wares. 

ZNAIM (Czech Znqjmo), a town of Austria, in Moravia, 50 m. 
S.W. of Briinn by rail. Pop. (1900) 16,261, mostly German. 
It is picturesquely situated on the left bank of the Tfcaya. 
Tne site of the former fortifications is occupied by a promenade. 
The R&uberturm is a relic of the old castle of the margraves 
of Moravia; the round castle-chapel, known as the heathen 
temple (Heiden-Tempel), in the Romanesque style of the mh 
century, was at one time considered the most ancient building 
in Moravia. The Gothic church of St Nicholas was built about 
1348 by the emperor Charles IV.; the town house, with a 
Gothic tower, 250 ft. high, dates from about 1446. The ancient 
and once powerful Premonstratensian abbey of Brock, east of 
the town, is now occupied as barracks. 

The present town of Znaim was founded in 1226 by Ottacar I. 
of Bohemia on the site of Znojmo, the ancient capital of the 
tributary margraves of Moravia, which had been destroyed in 
1145. Znaim is best known to history for the armistice con- 
cluded here in 1809 after the battle of Wagram between 
Napoleon I. and the archduke Charles. In 1866 the Prussians 
occupied the town from July 13th till September 3rd. The 
novelist Karl Post! (1793-1864), who wrote under the pseudonym 
of Charles Sealsfield, was born at Poppits, 2} m. S.W. 

ZOBEIR BAHAMA (1830- ), Egyptian pasha and 
Sudanese governor, came of the Gemaab section of the Jaahn, 
and was a member of a family which claims descent from the 
Koreish tribe through Abbas, uncle of Mahomet. He became 
prominent as the most energetic and intelligent of the Arab 
ivory and slave, traders who about i860 established themselves 



ZODIAC 



993 



Ob the White NBe and in the Bahr-el-Ghazal. Nominally a 
subject of Egypt, he raised an army of several thousand well- 
armed blacks and became a dangerous rival to the Egyptian 
Authorities. At the height of his power Zobcir was visited 
(1871) by Georg Schwcinfurth,. who found him " surrounded 
with a court which was little less than princely in its details" 
{Heart of Africa, voL ii., chap. av.). In i86oan expedition sent 
from Khartum into the Bahr-el-Ghazal was attacked by Zobcir 
and completely defeated, its commander being slain. Zobcir 
represented that he was blameless in this matter, received a 
" pardon/' and was himself appointed governor of the Bahr- 
el-Ghazal, where he was practically independent. In 1873 be 
attacked the sultan of Darfur, and the khedive Ismail gave him 
the rank of bey and sent troops to co-operate. After be bad 
conquered Darfur (1874)1 Zobetr was made a pasha, but he claimed 
the more substantial reward of being made governor-general of 
the new province, and went to Cairo in the spring of 1876 to 
press his title. He was now In the power of the Egyptian 
authorities, who prevented his return, though he was allowed to 
go to Constantinople at the outbreak of the Russo-Turkish War. 
In 1878, however, his son Suleiman, having got possession of the 
Bahr«el-Ghazal, and acting on instructions from his father, 
defied the authority of General Gordon, the new governor- 
general of the Sudan. Gordon sent Romok> Gessi against 
Suleiman, who was subdued after an arduous campaign and 
executed. During the campaign Zobeir offered, if he were 
allowed to return to the Sudan, to restore order and to pay a 
revenue of £25,000 a year to the khedive. Gordon declined this 
help, and subsequently, for his instigation of the revolt, Zobeir 
was condemned to death, but the trial was a farce, the sentence 
was remitted, and he remained at Cairo, now in high favour 
with the khedival court. In March 1884, Gordon, who had been 
sent to Khartum to effect, if possible, the relief of the Egyptian 
garrisons in the Sudan, astonished Europe by requesting that 
Zobeir, whose son he had overthrown and whose trade be had 
ruined, should be sent to Khartum as bis successor. 1 Zobeir, 
described by Sir Reginald Wingate, who knew him well, as " a 
quiet, far-seeing, thoughtful man of iron will— a born ruler of 
men " (Makdium and the Egyptian Sudan, book v.). might 
have been able to stem the mahdist movement. But to re- 
instate the notorious slave-dealer was regarded in London as 
too perilous an expedient, even in the extreme circumstances 
then existing, although Colonel Stewart (Gordon's companion 
in Khartum), Sir Evelyn Baring and Nubar Pasha in Cairo, 
and Queen Victoria and Mr Gladstone, all favoured such a 
course. In March 1885 Zobeir was arrested in Cairo- by order 
of the British government for treasonable correspondence with 
the raahdi and other enemies of Egypt, and was interned at 
Gibraltar. In August 1887 be was allowed to return to Cairo, 
and atter the reconquest of the Sudan was permitted (1899) to 
settle in his native country. He established himself 00 his 
estates at Geili, some 30 m. N. of Khartum. 
See Gordon. Ch axles Geokge, and the authorities there cited. 

ZODIAC (A fuotaxot icfr&ot, from fctftor, "a little 
animal "), in astronomy and astrology, an imaginary zone of the 
heavens within which He the paths of the sun, moon and prin- 
cipal planets. It is bounded by two circles equidistant from 
the ecliptic, about eighteen degrees apart; and it is divided 
into twelve signs, and marked by twelve constellations. These 
twelve constellations, with the symbols of the signs which corre- 
spond to them, are as follows; 



Aries, the Ram 
Taums, the Bull 
Gemini, the Twins 
Cancer, the Crab 
Leo, the Lion 
Virgo, the Virgin 



Libra, the Balance A 

Scorpio, the Scorpion 1T1 

Sagittarius, the Archer ?C 

Capricprnus, the Goat tt 

Aquarius, the Water-carrier a* 

Pisces, the Fishes X 



* Gordon and Zobeir met in Cairo on the 25th and 26th of January 
(see Egypt No. 12 of 1884k and Gordon from that time onward 
askedtor Zobetr's help. It was not, however, until the loth of 
March that his wish was made public, in a telegram from Khartum 
published in The Times. 



The signs— the Greek &0fc«an|fioput~--are geometrical 
divisions thirty degrees in extent, counted from the spring 
equinox in, the o5rection of the sun's progress through them. 
The whole series accordingly shifts westward through the effect 
of precession by about one degree in seventy-two years. At 
the moment of crossing the equator towards the north the sun 
is said to be at the first point of Aries; some thirty days later 
it enters Taurus, and so on through Gemini, Cancer, Leo, Virgo, 
Libra, Scorpio, Sagittarius, Capricornus, Aquarius and Pisces. 
The constellations bearing the same names coincided approxi- 
mately in position, when Hipparchus observed them at Rhodes, 
with the divisions they designate. The discrepancy now, how- 
ever, amounts to the entire breadth of a sign, the sun's path in 
Aries lying among the stars of Pisces, in Taurus among those 
of Aries, &c 

Assyria and Babylonia. — The twelvefold division of the zodiac 
was evidently suggested by the occurrence of twelve full moons 
in successive parts of it in the course of each year. This ap- 
proximate relation was first systematically developed by the 
early inhabitants of Mesopotamia, and formed the starting* 
point for all their divisions of time. As the year separated, 
as it were of itself, into twelve months, so the day was divided 
into twelve " double hours," and the great cosmical period of 
43,soo years into twelve " sars.'* Each sar, month and hour 
was represented at once visibly and symbolically by a twelfth 
part of the " furrow " drawn by the solar Bull across the heavens. 
The idea of tracing the sun's path among the stars was, when it 
occurred to Chaldaean astronomers, an original and, relatively 
to their means, a recondite one. We owe to its realization by 
them the constitution and nomenclature of the twelve signs 
of the zodiac Assyrian cylinders and inscriptions indicate for 
the familiar series of our text-books an antiquity of some four 
thousand years. Ages before Assur-bani-pal reigned at Nineveh 
the eighth month (Marchesvan) was known as " the month of 
the star of the Scorpion," the tenth (Tebet) belonged to the 
" star of the Goat," the twelfth (Adar) to the " star of the Fish 
of Ea."' The motive underlying the choice of symbols is in 
a few cases obvious, but in most remains conjectural. The 
attributes of the deities appointed to preside over the months 
and signs were to some extent influential. Two of them, in* 
deed, took direct possessi on - of their respective portions of the 
sky. The zodiacal Virgo is held to represent the Assyrian 
Venus, Ishtar, the ruling divinity of the sixth month, and 
Sagittarius the archer-god Ncrgal, to whom the ninth month 
was dedicated. But no uniform system of selection was pur* 
sued, or rather perhaps the results of several systems, adopted 
at various epochs, and under the influence of varying currents 
of ideas, became amalgamated in the final series. 

This, there is reason to believe, was the upshot of a pre- 
historic reform. So far as positive records go, Aries was always 
the first sign. But the arrangement is, on the face 
of it, a comparatively modern one. None *>f the 
brighter stars of the constellation could be said even roughly 
to mark the equinox much before 1800 B.C.; during a long 
stretch of previous time the leading position belonged to the 
stars of Taurus. 1 Numerous indications accordingly point to 
a corresponding primitive zodiac Setting aside as doubtful 
evidence derived bom interpretations of cuneiform inscriptions, 
we meet, in connexion with Mithraic and Myiittic legends, 
reminiscences of a zodiac and religious ^fn/fir in which the 
Bull led the way.* Virgfl's 

Candidas auratis aperit cum coraibus annum 
Taurus 
perpetuates the tradition. And the Pleiades continued, within 
historical memory, to be the fiat aateosm of the bow zodiac 

• Lenormant, Ovgrno do VHistoire, L 336. 

'The possibility should not, however, be overlooked that the 
" stars of the months " were determined by their heliacal risings 
(see Bosanquet and Sayce on Babylonian astronomy, in Monthly 
NoUus Roy. A sir. Soc xL 117). This would give a further exten- 
sion backwards of over 1000 years, during which the equinox might 
have occurred in the month of the Ram. 

* J. B. F. Lajard, Ruherches sur U CulU do Mitkra, p. 605. 



994 



ZODIAC 



v*t* 



In the Chaldaean signs fragments of several distinct strata 
of thought appear to be embedded. From one point of view 
they shadow out the great eptc of the destinies of the human 
race, again, the universal solar myth claims a share in them, 
hoary traditions were brought into ex post facto connexion with 
them, or they served to commemorate simple meteorological 
and astronomical facts. 

The fast Babylonian month Nisan, dedicated to Ami and Bel, 
was that of "sacrifice", and its association with the Ram 
as the chief primitive object of sacrifice is thus intelligible. 1 
According* to an alternative explanation, the heavenly Ram, 
placed as leader in front of the flock of the stars, merely em- 
bodied a spontaneous figure of the popular imagination. An 
antique persuasion, that the grand cycle of creation opened under 
the first sign, has been transmitted to modern cognizance by 
Dante (/«/. i. 38). The human race, on the other hand, was 
Taunu. WPP 08 ** to oave °° me mt0 1*" 1 * *"""* Taurus. The 
solar interpretation of the sign goes back to the far* 
off time when the year began with Taurus, and the sun 
was conceived of as a bull entering upon the great furrow of 
heaven as he ploughed his way among the stars. In the third 
month and sign the building of the first city and the 
fratricidal brothers— theRomulus and Remusof Roman 
legend— were brought to mind. The appropriate symbol was 
at first indifferently a pile of bricks or two male children, always 
g^^ on early monuments placed feet to feet. The retro- 
grade movement of a crab typified, by an easy asso- 
ciation of ideas, the retreat of the sun from his farthest 
northern excursion, and Cancer was constituted the sign of the 
i_ summer solstice. The Lion, as the symbol of fire, 

represented the culmination of the solar heat. In 
the sixth month, the descent of Ishtar to Hades in search 
of her lost husband Tammuz was celebrated, and 
the sign of the Virgin had thus a purely mytho- 
logical signification. 

The history of the seventh sign is somewhat complicated. 
The earlier Greek writers— Eudoxus, Eratosthenes, Hip- 
parchus— knew of only eleven zodiacal symbols, but made 
one do double duty, extending the Scorpion across the seventh 
and eighth divisions. The Balance, obviously indicating the 
equality of day and night, is first mentioned as the sign of the 
Utn autumnal equinox by Ocminus and Varro, and ob- 
**<* tained, through Sosigenes of Alexandria, official re- 

S****** cognition in the Julian calendar. Nevertheless, 
Virgil (Georg. i. 52) regarded the space it presided over as so 
much waste land, provisionally occupied by the " Claws " of 
the Scorpion, but readily available for the apotheosis of 
Augustus. Libra was not of Greek invention. Ptolemy, who 
himself chiefly used the " Claws " (XtjXol), speaks of it as a 
distinctively Chaldaean sign;* and it occurs as an extra- 
zodiacal asterism in the Chinese sphere. An ancient Chinese 
law, moreover, prescribed the regularization of weights and 
measures at the spring equinox.* No representation of the 
seventh sign has yet been discovered on any Euphratean monu- 
ment; but it is noticeable that the eighth is frequently doubled, 4 
and it is difficult to avoid seeing in the pair of zodiacal scorpions 
carved on Assyrian cylinders the prototype of the Greek 
scorpion and daws. Both Libra and the sign it eventually 
superseded thus owned a Chaldaean birthplace. The straggle 
of rival systems of nomenclature, from which our todilral 
series resulted, is plainly visible in their alternations; and the 
claims of the competing signs were long sought to be conciliated 
by representing the Balance as held between the claws of the 
Scorpion. 
The definitive decline of the sun's power after the autumnal 

1 Sayce. Transactions of the Society of Biblical Archaeohfj, til. 
162. 

* In citing a Chaldaean observation of Mercury dating from 
335 B.C. i Almagest, ii. 170. ed. Halma). 

■See Uranographie Chinotte, by Custav Schfegel, who. however, 
chums an extravagant antiquity for the Chinese consteUattonal 
system. 

. Orifttus, I 767. 



equinox was typified by placmg a Scorpion as the symbol of 
darkness in the eighth sign. Sagittarius, figured later as a 
Centaur, stood for the Babylonian Mars. Capricornus S*g*» 
Che sign of the winter solstice, is plausibly connected *■*■> 
with the caprine nurse of the young solar god in Oriental 
legends, of which that of Zeus and Amalthia is a Cmprt* 
variant,* The fish-tailed Goat of the zodiac presents «•*■■»» 
a close analogy with the Mexican calendar sign Cipactli. 
a/kind of marine monster resembling a narwhal. 4 Aquarius is 
a still more exclusively meteorological sign than Leo. The 
eleventh month was known in Euphratean regions as 
that of " want and rain." The deluge was tradi- **—*** 
tinaolly associated with it. It was represented in zodiacal 
syiubolism by the god Ramman, crowned with a tiara and 
pouring water from a vase, or more generally by the vase and 
water without the god. The resumption of agricultural labours 
after the deluge was commemorated in the twelfth month, and 
a mystical association of the fishes, which were its 
sign, with the life after death is evident in a monu- 
ment of Assyrian origin described by Clermont-Ganneau, 
showing a corpse guarded by a pair of fish-gods.' The doubling 
of the sign of Pisces still recalls, according to Sayce, 1 the arrange- 
ment of the Babylonian calendar, in which a year of 360 days 
was supplemented once in six years by a thirteenth month, a 
second Adar. To the double month corresponded the double 
sign of the " Fishes of Hea."* 

Cyclical Meaning of the Succession of Stgns.— The cyclical 
meaning of the succession of zodiacal signs, though now ob- 
scured by interpolations and substitutions, was probably once 
clear and entire. It is curiously reflected in the adventures of 
the Babylonian Hercules, the solar hero Gilgamesh (see Gn> 
gamesh, Epic or). They were recorded in the comparatively 
late surviving version of the 7th century B.C., on twelve tablets, 
with an obvious design of correlation with the twelve divisions 
of the sun's annual course. Gilgamesh's conquest of the divine 
bull was placed under Taurus; his slaying of the tyrant Khunv 
baba (the prototype of Geryon) in the fifth month typified the 
victory of light over darkness, represented in plastic art by the 
group of a lion killing a bull, which is the form ordinarily given 
to the sign Leo on Ninevite cylinder*.* The wooing of Ishtar by 
the hero of the epic falls under Virgo, and his encounter with 
two scorpion men, guardians of the rising and the setting sun, 
under Scorpio. The eleventh tablet narrates the deluge; the 
twelfth associates the apotheosis of Eabani with the wHiaml 
emblems of the resurrection. 

In the formation of the constellations of the zodiac little 
regard was paid to stellar configurations. The Chaldaeans 
chose three stars in each sign to be the M councillor gods" of 
the planets," These were called by the Greeks "decans," 
because ten degrees of the ecliptic and ten days of the year were 
presided over by each. The college of the decans was con- 
ceived as moving, by their annual risings and settings, in an 
" eternal circuit " between the infernal and supernal regions. 
Modern asterisms first appear 1q the Phaenonuna of Eudoxus 
about 370 b.c But Eudoxus, there is reason to believe, con- 
sulted, not the heavens, but a celestial globe of an anterior 
epoch,.on which the stars and the signs were forced into un- 
natural agreement. The representation thus handed down (In 
the verses of Aratus) has been thought to tally best with the 
state of the sky about 2000 B.C.;" and the mention of a pole- 
star, for which Eudoxus was rebuked by Hipparchus, seems; ss 
W. T. Lynn pointed out," to refer to the time when a Dracoius 

• Lenomuuit. Originct, 1. 367. 

• Humboldt, Vues des Cordttem (1810), p. 157. 
v Rev ArckeoL (1879). P- 344- 

• Trans. Soc. Btbi Archaeol., Hi. 166. 

• The god Ea or Hea, the Oannes of Beroasus, equivalent to the 
fish-god Dagon. came to the rescue of the protagonist in the Chal- 
daean drama ot the deluge. 

" Lenormant, Ortgmes, i. aao. 

u Diod. Sic., Hist., U. 30, where, however, by an obvious mistake 
the number of " councillor gods " is stated at only thirty. 
u R. Brcnm. Babylonian Record, No. 3, p. 34. 
u Babylonian Record, No. 5, p. 79. 



ZODIAC 



995 



» • stood near the pole. The data afforded by Eudoxus, however, 

* are far too vague to serve as the basis of any chronological 

» conclusion. 

" Egyptian Zodiacal Signs— The Egyptians adopted from the 

- Greeks, with considerable modifications of its attendant sym- 
» holism, the twelve-fold division of the zodiac Aries became the 
■ Fleece; two Sprouting Plants, typifying equality or resem- 

- blance, stood for Gemini; Cancer was re-named Scarabaeus; 
Leo was converted, from the axe-like configuration of its chief 

1 stars, into the Knife: Libra into the Mountain of the Sun, a 

m reminiscence, apparently, of the Euphratean association of 

the seventh month with a " holy mound," designating the 
a biblical tower of Babel. A Serpent was the Egyptian equi- 

l- vaknt of Scorpio; the Arrow only of Sagittarius was retained; 

t Capricornus became " Life," or a Mirror as an image of life; 

r Aquarius survived as Water; Taurus, Virgo and Pisces re- 

. jnaincd unchanged. 1 The motive of some of the substitutions 

, was to avoid the confusion which must have ensued from the 

duplication of previously existing native asterisms; thus, the 
'- Egyptian and Greek Lions were composed of totally different 

> stars. Abstractions in other cases replaced concrete objects, 
r with the general result of effacing the distinctive character of 

the Greek zodiac as a "circle of living things." 
Spread of Creek System. — Early Zoroastrian writings, though 
i impregnated with star-worship, show no traces of an attempt 

to organize the heavenly array. In the Bundakish, however 
: (oth century), the twelve " Akhtirs," designated by the same 

t names as our signs, lead- the army of Ormflxd, while the seven 

t "Awakbtars" or planets (including a meteor and a comet) 

i fight for Ahriman. The knowledge of the solar zodiac thus 

r turned to account for dualhtk purposes was undoubtedly de- 

rived from the Greeks. By them, too, it was introduced into 
Hindustan. Aryabhafa, about the beginning of the Christian 
i era, reckoned by the same signs as Hipparcbus. They were 

transmitted from India by Buddhist missionaries to China, but 

> remained in abeyance until the Jesuit reform of Chinese 
astronomy in the 17th century. 

Chinese Zodiacal Signs.— The native Chinese zodiacal system 
1 was of unexampled complexity. Besides divisions into twenty- 

eight and twepty-four parts, it included two distinct duodenary 
aeries. The (se or " stations " were referred by E. C. Biot to 
the date im B.C. Measured from the winter solstice of that 
epoch,, they corresponded, in conformity with the Chinese 
method of observation by intervals of what we now call right 
ascension, to equal portions of the celestial equator.* Projected 
upon the ecliptic, these were considerably unequal, and the tse 
accordingly differed essentially from the Cbaldaean and Greek 
signs. Their use was chiefly astrological, and their highly 
figurative names— " Great Splendour/' "Immense Void," 
44 Fire of the Phoenix/' &c. — had reference to no particular 
stars. ' They became virtually merged in the European series, 
stamped with official recognition over two centuries ago. The 
twenty-four tsieki or demi-tse were probably invented to mark 
the course of weather changes throughout the year. Their 
appellations are purely meteorological. 

The characteristic Chinese mode of dividing the "yellow 
road " of the sun was, however, by the twelve "cyclical animals " 
—Rat, Ox, Tiger, Hare, Dragon or Crocodile, Serpent, Horse, 
Sheep, Monkey, Hen, Dog, Pig. The opening sign corresponds 
to our Aquarius, and it is remarkable that the rat Is, in the far 
East, frequently used as an ideograph for "water." But here 
the agreement ceases. For the Chinese series has the strange 
peculiarity of proceeding in a retrograde direction or against 
the course of the sun. Thus, the second sign (of the Ox) 
occupies the position of Capricorn, the third that of Sagittarius, 
and so on. The explanation of this seeming anomaly is to be 
found in the primitive destination of the "animals" to the 
purposes of an " horary zodiac." Their succession, established 
to mark the hours of day and night, was not unnaturally 

1 Brogtch, Z. D. M. C, ix. 515. 

•Biot, Jonm. des Savons, 1839, p. 739, and 1840, p. ljl; 
Gauttl Hist, do FAstr. Ckinoise. p. 9. 



associated with the diurnal revolution of the sphere from east 
to west.* They are unquestionably of native Origin. Tradition 
ascribes their invention to Tajao, minister of the emperor 
Hwang-ti, who reigned e. 2697 B.C., and it can scarcely be placed 
later than the 7th century B.C. 4 

The Chinese circle of the " animals " obtained early a wide 
diffusion. It was adopted by Tatars, Turks and Mongols, in 
Tibet and Tong-king, Japan and Korea. It is denominated by 
Humboldt* the "zodiac of hunters and shepherds," and he 
adds that the presence in it of a tiger gives it an exclusively 
Asiatic character. It appears never to have been designed for 
astronomical employment. From the first it served to char- 
acterize the divisions of time. The nomenclature not only of 
the hours of the day and of their minutest intervals was supplied 
by it, but of the months of the year, of the years in the Oriental 
sixty-year cycle, and of the days in the " little cycle " of twelve 
days. Nor has it yet fallen into desuetude. Years " of the 
Rat/* "of the Tiger," " of the Pig," still figure in the almanacs 
of Central Ask, Cochin China and Japan. 

Astec Zodiacal Signs. — A large detachment of the " cyclical 
animals " even found its way to the New World. Seven of the 
twenty days constituting the Aztec month bore names evidently 
borrowed from those of the Chinese horary signs. The Hare 
(or Rabbit), Monkey, Dog and Serpent reappeared without 
change; for the Tiger, Crocodile and Hen, unknown in America, 
the Ocelot, Lizard and Eagle were substituted as analogous.* 
The Aztec calendar dated from the 7th century; but the zodiacal 
tradition embodied by it was doubtless much more ancient. 
Of the zodiac in its true sense of a partitioned belt of the sphere 
there was no aboriginal knowledge on the American continent. 
Mexican acquaintance with the signs related only to their 
secondary function as dies (so to speak) with which to stamp 
recurring intervals of time. 

Lunar Zodiac.— The synodical revolution of the moon laid 
down the lines of the solar, its sidereal revolution those of the 
lunar zodiac. The first was a circlet of "full moons"; the 
second marked the diurnal stages of the lunar progress round the 
sky, from and back again to any selected star. The moon was 
the earliest " measurer " both of time and space; but its 
servioes can scarcely have been rendered available until stellar 
"milestones" were established at suitable points along its 
path. Such were the Hindu nakshatras, a word originally 
signifying stars in general, but appropriated to designate certain 
small stellar groups marking the divisions of the lunar track. 
They exhibit in an exaggerated form the irregularities of dis- 
tribution visible in our zodiacal constellations, and present the 
further anomaly of being frequently reckoned as twenty-eight 
in number, while the ecliptical ires they characterize are in- 
variably twenty-seven. Now, since the moon revolves round 
the earth in 27$ days, hesitation between the two full numbers 
m>ght easily arise; yet the real explanation of the difficulty 
appears to be different. The superfluous asterism, named 
Abhijit, included the bright star a Lyrac, under whose influence 
the gods had vanquished the Asuras. Its invocation with the 
other nakshatras, remoteness from the ecliptic notwithstanding, 
was thus due (according to Max MQller's plausible conjecture)' 
to its being regarded as of especially good omen. Acquaintance 
with foreign systems of twenty-eight lunar divisions tended 
doubtless to fix its position, which remained, nevertheless, 
always equivocal. 1 Alternately admitted into«or rejected from 
the scries, it was finally, some six or seven centuries ago, 
eliminated by the effects of precession in reversing the order of 
culmination of its limiting stars. 

The notion of a twenty-seven-fold division of the zodiac was 
deeply rooted in Hindu tradition. The number and the name 
were in early times almost synonymous. Thus a nakshatra-milA 



• Humboldt. Vues des Cordill}res, p. 168. 

"* ~ "" h Op. n't., p. 219. 

of Mexico, iii. 321 (ed 



* G. Schlegd, Ur. Chin., pp. 37, 5*1. 
•Ibid, p. 152; Preacott, . Conquest 
i860). 



' Rig* Veda'Samkila, vol. tv. (1862), Preface, p. lxii. 
• Whitney, Journ. Am. Orient. Soc., viii. 394. 



996 



ZODIAC 



denoted a necklace of twenty-seven pearls; 1 and the funda- 
mental equality of the parts was figured in an ancient legend, 
by the compulsion laid upon King Soma (the Moon) to share 
his time impartially between all his wives, the twenty-seven 
daughters of Prajapati. Everything points to a native origin 
for the system of nakskotras. Some were named after ex- 
clusively Vedic deities; they formed the basis of the sacrificial 
calendar of the Brahmins; the old Indian names of the months 
were derived from them; their existence was pre-supposed in 
the entire structure of Hindu ritual and science.* They do not, 
however, obtain full recognition in Sanskrit literature until the 
Brahmana period (7th or 8th century B.C.). The Rig- Veda 
contains only one allusion to them, where it is said that "Soma 
is placed in the lap of the nakskotras "; and this is in a part 
including later interpolations. 

Positive proof of the high antiquity of the Hindu lunar zodiac 
is nevertheless afforded by the undoubted fact that the primitive 
series opened with Krittika (the Pleiades) as the sign of the 
vernal equinox. The arrangement would have been correct 
about 2300 b.c; it would scarcely have been possible after 
1800 b.c. 9 We find nowhere else a well-authenticated zodiacal 
sequence corresponding to so early a date. The reform by which 
Krittika, now relegated to the third place, was superseded as the 
head of the series by " Acvini "* was accomplished under Creek 
influence somewhere near the beginning of the Christian era. 
For purposes of ritual, however, the Pleiades, with Agni or 
" Fire " as their presiding deity, continued to be the first sign. 
Hindu astronomy received its first definite organization in the 
6th century, with results embodied in the SOrya-Siddhfinta. 
Here the " signs " and the " constellations " of the lunar zodiac 
form two essentially distinct systems. The ecKptic is divided 
into twenty-seven equal parts* called bhogas or arcs, of 800' each. 
But the nakskotras are twenty-eight, and are represented by as 
many "junction stars" (yogdt&ro), carefully determined by 
their spherical co-ordinates. The successive entries of the 
moon and planets into the nakskotras (the ascertainment of 
which was of great astrological importance) were fixed by means 
of their conjunctions with the yogStdras. These, however, soon 
ceased to be observed, and already in the 11th century, al- 
BirQni could meet with no Hindu astronomer capable of point- 
ing out to him the complete series. Their successful identifi- 
cation by Colebrooke* in. 1807 had a purely archaeological 
interest. The modern nakskotras are twenty-seven equal 
ecliptical divisions, the origin of which shifts, like that of the 
solar signs, with the vernal equinox. They are, in fact, the 
bkogas of the SVrya-Siddkanta. The mean {dace of the moon 
in them, 'published in all Hindu almanacs, is found to serve 
unexceptionally the ends of astral vaticination. 1 
> The system upon which it is founded is of great antiquity. Belief 
in the power of the nakskotras evidently inspired the invocations 
of them in the Athana-Veda. In the Brahmana period they 
were distinguished as " deva " and " yama," the fourteen lucky 
asterisms being probably associated with the waxing, the four- 
teen unlucky with the waning moon. 7 A special nakshatra was 
appropriated to every occurrence of life. One was propitious 
to marriage, another to entrance upon school-life, a third to 
the first ploughing, a fourth to laying the foundation of a house. 
Festivals for the dead were appointed to be held under those 
that included but one star. Propitiatory abstinences were 
recommended when the natal asterism was menaced by un- 
favourable planetary conjunctions. The various members of the 
body were parcelled out among the nakskotras, and a rotation 
of food was prescribed as a wholesome accompaniment of the 
moon's revolution among them. 1 

1 Max M tiller, op. cit., p. lxiv. * Ibid., p. 42. 

1 A. Weber, Jndische Siudien. x. 241. 

4 Named from the Acvins, the Hindu Castor and Pollux. It Is 
composed of the stars in the head of Aries, and is figured by a 
horse's head. • As. Res., ix. 330. 

. • J. B. Biot, Eludes sur I'Aslronomie Indicnne. p. 225. 
• ' A. Weber, ''.Die Vedischen Nachrichten von den Naxatra," in 

'ogatara its Varamikira; Weber's 



Berliner Abkandlungen (1861), p. 309. 
*_/*i'o\p' 322; «■ Kern, Dte Yoga 



81. 



The nomenclature of the Hindu signs of the sodiac, save as 
regards a few standard asterisms, such as Acvini and KritUkft, 
was far from uniform. Considerable discrepancies occur in 
the lists given by different authorities. 9 Hence it is not sur- 
prising to meet in them evidence of foreign communications. 
Reminiscences of the Greek signs of Gemini, Leo, Libra, Sagit- 
tarius, Capricornus and Pisces are obvious severally in the 
Hindu Two Faces, Lion's Tail, Beam of a Balance, Arrow, 
Gazelle's Head (figured as a marine nondescript) and Fish. The 
correspondence does. not, however, extend to the stars; and 
some coincidences adverted to by Humboldt between the 
nakskotras and the zodiacal animals of Central Asia are of the 
same nominal character. 1 * Mexican loans are more remarkable. 
They were apparently direct as well as indirect. The Aztec 
calendar includes nakshatra titles •borrowed, not only through 
the medium of the Tatar zodiac, but likewise straight from the 
Indian scheme, apart from any known intervention. The 
" three footprints of Vishnu," for example, unmistakably gave 
its name to the Mexican day OUin, signifying the " track of the 
sun "; and both scries further contain, a " flint weapon," a 
" stick," and a " house." u Several houses and couches were 
ranged along the Hindu sodiac with the naive idea of providing 
resting-places for the wandering moon. 

Relative Antiquity of Hindu, Chinese and Arabian Systems.— 
Relationship of a more intimate kind connects the Hindu lunar 
mansions with those of the Arabs and Chinese. The resem- 
blance between the three systems is indeed so close that it has 
been assumed, almost as axiomatic, that they must have been 
framed from a single model. It appears nevertheless to have 
become tolerably clear that the nakskotras were both native to 
India, and the sieu to China, but that the monosU were mainly 
of Indian derivation. The assertion, paradoxical at first sight, 
that the twenty-eight " hostelries " of the Chinese sphere had 
nothing to do with the moon's daily motion, seems to convey 
the actual fact. Their number, as a multiple of four, was pre- 
scribed by the quaternary partition of the heavens, funda- 
mental in Chinese astronomy. It was considered by Biot to have 
been originally twenty-four, but to have been enlarged to 
twenty-eight about xioo B.C., by the addition of determinants 
for the solstices and equinoxes of that period. 12 The essential 
difference, however, between the nakskotras and the sieu is that 
the latter were equatorial, not ecliptical, divisions. They were 
measured by the meridian-passages of the limiting stars, and 
varied in amplitude from 2 42' to 30° 24'." The use of the 
specially observed stars constituting or representing the sieu 
was as points of reference for the movements of sun, moon and 
planets. They served, in fact, and still serve (though with 
astrological ends in view), the precise purpose of " fundamental 
stars " in European astronomy. All that is certainly known 
about the antiquity of the sieu is that they were well established 
in the 3rd century -B.C. Their initial point at the autumnal 
equinox marked by Kio (Spica Virginis) suits a still later date; 
and there a no valid evidence that the modern series resulted 
from the rectification of an older superannuated arrangement, 
analogous to the Krittika sequence of nakshatras. The Hindu 
zodiacal constellations belong then to an earlier epoch than the 
Chinese " stations," such as they have been transmitted to our 
acquaintance. Yet not only were the latter an independent 
invention, but it is almost demonstrable that the nakskotras, 
in their more recent organization, were, as far as possible, 
assimilated to them. The whole system of junction stars was 
doubtless an imitation of the sieu; the choice of tnem by the 
Hindu astronomers of the 6th century ajd. was plainly instigated 
by a consideration of the Chinese list, compiled with a widely 
different intent. Where they varied from it, some intelligible 
reason can generally be assigned for the change. Eight junc- 
tion stars lie quite close to, seven others are actually identical 
with, Chinese determinants; " and many of these coincidences 

• Sir William Jones, As. Res., H. 294-95. 

w Humboldt, Vues des Cordilieres, p. 154. u Ibid., pi 152. 

M Biot, J our n. des Savons (1845), p. 40. 

" G. Schlegel, Ur. Ckin. t p. 77. " Biot, £i*dfi % p, ijfr 



ZODIAC 



997 



are between insignificant and, for the pur pos es of ediptkal 
division, inconveniently situated objects. 

Arabian Mansions of the Moon.— -The small stellar groups 
characterisiiig the Arab " mansions of the moon " (man&eii oi- 
kamar) were more equably distributed than either the Hindu 
or Chinese series. They presented, nevertheless, striking re- 
semblances to both. Twenty-four out of twenty-eight were 
formed, at least in part, of nakshatra or situ stars. 1 That the 
Arab was essentially a copy of the Hindu lunar zodiac can 
scarcely admit of doubt. They were divided on the same 
principle; each opened at the spring equinox; the first Arab 
sign Sharat&n was strictly equivalent to the Hindu Acvini; and 
eighteen constellations in each were virtually co in cident. The 
model of the sieu was, however, also regarded. Eightern 
Chinese determinants were included in the Arab asterisms, 
and of these five or six were not nakshatr* stars; consequently, 
they must have been taken directly from the Chinese series. 
Nor were the Greek signs without effect in determining the names 
of the ntandsil* the late appearance of which, in a complete 
form, removes all difficulty in accounting for the various foreign 
influences brought to bear upon them. They were first 
enumerated by Alfarghini early in the 9th century, when the 
Arabs were in astronomy the avowed disciples of the Hindus. 
But, although they then received perhaps their earliest quasi- 
scientific organization, the mansions of the moon had for ages 
previously figured in the popular lore of the Bedouin. A set of 
twenty-eight rhymes associated their heliacal risings with the 
changes of season and the vicissitudes of nomad life; their 
settings were of meteorological and astrological import; 1 in 
the Koran (x. 5) they are regarded as indispensable for the 
reckoning of time. Yet even this intimate penetration into the 
modes of thought of the desert may be explained by prehistoric 
Indian communication. The alternative view, advocated by 
Weber, that the lunar zodiac was primitively Chaldaean, rests 
on a very shadowy foundation. It is true that a word radically 
identical with mandxU occurs twice in the Bible, under the 
forms numaloth and matsaroth (a Kings xxiii. 5; Job xxxviii. 
3a); but the heavenly halting-places which it seems to designate 
may be solar rather than lunar. Euphratean exploration has 
so far brought to light no traces of ecliptical partition by the 
moon's diurnal motion, unless, indeed, zodiacal associations be 
claimed for a set of twenty-eight deprecatory formulae against 
evil spirits inscribed on a Ninevite tablet. 4 

The safest general conclusions regarding this disputed subject 
appear to be that the situ, distinctively and unvaryingly Chinese, 
cannot properly be described as divisions of a lunar zodiac, 
that the nakskotras, though of purely Indian origin, became 
modified by the successive adoption of Greek and Chinese 
rectifications and supposed improvements; while the mandsU 
constituted a frankly eclectic system, in which elements from 
all quarters were combined. It was adopted by Turks, Tatars 
and Persians, and forms part of the astronomical paraphernalia 
of the Bundahish. The sieu, on the other hand, were early 
naturalized in Japan. 

Astrological Systems.— The refined system of astrological predic- 
tion based upon the solar zodiac was invented in Chaldaea, obtained 
a second home and added elaborations in Egypt, and spread ixre- 
»istibly westward about the beginning of the Christian era. For 
gcnethliacal purposes the signs were divided into six solar and 
six lunar, the former counted onward from Leo, the " house " of 
the tun. the latter backward from the moon's domicile in Cancer. 
Each planet had two houses— a solar and a lunar— dUub-jted 
according to the order of their revolution*. Thus Mercu the 

planet nearest the sun, obtained Virgo, the sign adjacent i<< Leo, 
with the corresponding lunar house in Gemini; Venus 1 ttfa 

(solar) and Taurus (lunar) ; and so for the rest. A ram I tly 

stamped on coins oil Antiochus, with head reverted toi the 

moon and a star (the planet Mars), signified Aries to be < '< oar 
house of Mars. With the respective and relative posttic the 

zodiac of the sun, moon and planets, the character of th ion 



on human destiny varied indefinitely. The influence of the awns, 
though secondary, was hence overmastering: Julian called them 
•sAp omtpms *&iul they were the objects « a. 



Cities and kingdoms were allotted to their 
patronage on a system fully expounded by Manures: — 

Hos erit in fines orbis pontusque notandus, 
Quern Deus in partes per singula dividit astra, 
Ac sua cuiquc dedit tutelae regna per c 
Et proprias gentes atque urbes addidit 
In quibus exercent praestantia sidera vires.* 
Syria was assigned to Aries, and Syrian coins frequently bear the 
effigy of a ram ; Scvthia and Arabia fell to Taurus, India to Gemini. 
Palmyra, judging from numismatic evidence, claimed the favour of 
Libra, Zeugma that of Capricorn; Leo protected Miletus, Sagit- 
tarius Singaia.' The "power of the signs" was similarly dis- 
tributed among the parts of the human body:— 

Et quanquam communis eat tutda per omne 
Corpus, et in proprium divisis artubus exit: 
Namque aries captti, taunts cervicibus haeret ; 
Brachia sub geminis censentur, pectora cancro.' 

Warnings were uttered against surgical treatment of a member 
through whose sign the moon happened to be passing;* and 
zodiacal anatomy was an indispensable branch of the healing art 
in the Middle Ages. Some curious memorials el the superstition 
have survived in rings and amulets, engraven with the various 
situs, and worn as a find of astral defensive armour. Many such, 
of the 14th and 15th centuries, have been recovered from the 
Thames." Individuals, too, adopted zodiacal emblems. Capri- 
cornus was impressed upon the coins of Augustus, Libra on those 
fof Pythodoris, queen of Pontus; a sultan of Iconium displayed 
Leo as his " horoscope" and mark of sovereignty; Stephen of 
England chose the protection of Sagittarius. 

Egyptian Astrology. — In Egypt celestial influences were con- 
sidered as emanating mainly from the thirty-six " decans " of the 
signs. They were called the " media of the whole circle of the 
zodiac"; u each ten-day period of the Egyptian year was con- 
secrated to the decanal god whose section of the ecliptic rose at 
its commencement; the body was correspondingly apportioned, 
and disease was cured by invoking the zodiacal regent of the oart 
affected. 12 As early as the 14th century B.C. a complete list ot the 
decans was placed among the hieroglyphs adorning the tomb of 
Seti I.; they figured again in the temple of Rameses II., " and 
characterize every Egyptian astrological monument. Both the 
famous zodiacs of Dendera display their symbols, unmistakably 
identified by Lepsius. The late origin of these repr e sen tations 
was established by the detection upon them of the cartouches of 
Tiberius and Nero. As the date of inception of the circular zodiac 
now at Paris the year 46 n.c has, however, been suggested with 
high probability, from (among other indications) the position among 
the signs of the emblem of the planet Jupiter " Its design was 
most Cicely to serve as a sort of tiema coeii at the time of the birth 
of Caesanon. The companion rectangular zodiac still in situ on 
the portico of the temple of Isis at Dendera suits, as to eonstclla- 
tional arrangements, the date 29 A.D. It set forth, there is reason 
to believe, the natal scheme, not of the emperor Tiberius, as had 
been conjectured by Lauth, u but of the building it served to decorate. 
The Greek signs of the zodiac, including Libra, are obvious upon 
both these monuments, which have thrown useful tight upon the 
calendar system and method of stellar grouping of the ancient 

tpkeres .— An Eqvpto-Greek planisphere, first described by 
Bianchim, resembles in its general plan the circular zodiac of 
Dendera. The decans are ranged on the outermost of its five 
concentric zones; the planets and the Greek zodiac in duplicate 
occupy the next three; while the inner circle is unaccountably 
reserved for the Chinese cyclical animals. The relic was dug up on 
the Aventine in 1705, and is now ia the Louvre. It dates from the 
2nd or 3rd century a.d. The Tatar zodiac is not unirequently 
found engraven on Chinese mirrors in polished bronze or steel of 
the 7th century, and figured on the " plateau of the twelve hours " 



* Whitney. Notes to Surya-Siddhanta, p. 200. 

• Ibid., p. 206. 

• A. Sprenger, Z. D. M. C, xm. 161 ; BIruni, Chronology, trans. 
by Sachau (London. 1879). p. 336 seq. 

* Lenormant, Chaldean Magic, p. 1. 



• " Orat, in Solem," 0*„ L 148 (ed. 1696). 

• Astr.. bk. iv. ver. 696 seq. 

'Eckhel, DescripHo Nummorum Antiochiae Syria*, pp. 18, 25. 

• Manilius, Astr., bk. iv. ver. 702-5. 

• A. J. Pdrce. Science of ike Stars, p. 84. 

» Joum. Arcki Soc. xih. 254, 310, and xx. 80. 
u In a fragment of Hermes translated by Th. Taylor at p. 362 
of his version of lambucbua. 

• PcttimmjSuperstitious Connected with Hist, of Medicine, p. 30. 
" Leperas, Chrwnotogie dm Aegypter, part L p. 68. 

" Jbta\, p. 102. 

" Let Zediaques de Denderah, p. 78. 

» See Riel's Daefeste Jakr eon Denderah (1878). 

"Menu de f Acad., Paris, 1708, Hist-, p. no; see also Hum- 
boldt, Vmes des CordiBeres, p. 170; Lepsius, op. cit.. p. 83: Frdhner. 
Sculpture du Loner*, p. 17. 



998 



ZODIACAL LIGHT 



fai the treasury of the em p erors of the Tang dynasty. 1 Probably 
the most ancient zodiacal representation in existence is a fragment 
of a Chaldacan planisphere in the British Museum, once inscribed 
with the names of the twelve months and. their governing signs. 
Two only now remain. 1 

A zodiac on the " astrological altar of Gabies " in the Louvre 
illustrates the apportionment of the signs among the inmates of the 
Roman Pantheon;* and they occur as -a classical reminiscence in 
the mosaic pavements of San Miniato and the baptistery at Florence, 
the cathedral of Lyons, and the crypt of San Savino at Piacenza.' 
Zodiacal symbolism became conspicuous in medieval art. Nearly 
all the French cathedrals of the 12th and 13th centuries exhibit 
on their portals a species of rural calendar, in which each month 
and sign has its corresponding labour. The zodiac of Notre Dame 
of Pans, opening with Aquarius, is a noted instance.* A similar 
series, in which sculptured figures of Christ and the Apostles are 



associated with the signs, is to be seen in perfect preservation on 
the chief doorway of the abbey church at Vezclavi The cathedrals 
of Amiens, Sens and Rheims are decorated in the same way. In 



Italy the signs and works survive fragmentarily in the baptfc 
at Parma, completely on the porch of the cathedral of Crer 
and on the west doorway of St Mark's at Venice. They are less 
common in England; but St Margaret's, York, and the church 
of Iffiey in Oxfordshire offer good specimens. In the zodiac of 
Merton College, Oxford, Libra is represented by a judge in his 
robes and Pisces by the dolphin of Fitzjames, warden 01 the college. 
1482-1507.* The great rose-windows of the Early Gothic period 
were frequently painted with zodiacal emblems; and some frescoes 
in the cathedral of Cologne contain the signs, each with an attendant 
angel, just as they were depicted on the vault of the church at 
Mount Athos. Giotto's zodiac at Padua -was remarkable (in its 
undisturbed condition) for the arrangement of the signs so as to be 
struck in turns, during the corresponding months, by the sun's 
rays.' The " zodiac of labours " was replaced in French castles 
and hotels by a " zodiac of pleasures," in which hunting, hawking, 
fishing and dancing were substituted for hoeing, planting,, reaping 
and ploughing. 1 

It is curious to find the same sequence of symbols employed for 
the same decorative purposes in India as in Europe. A perfect 
set of signs was copied in 1764 from a pagoda at Verdapettah near 
Cape Comorin, and one equally complete existed at the same period 
on the ceiling of a temple near Mindurah.' 

The hieroglyphs representing the signs of the zodiac in astrono- 
mical works are found in manuscripts of about the 10th century, 
but in carvings not until the 15th or i6th. w Their origin is unknown; 
but some, if not all of them, have antique associations. The hiero- 
glyph of Leo, for instance, occurs among the symbols of the Mithraic 
worship. 11 

See also the article Astrology, and the separate articles on the 
constellations. The whole subject of the history of the zodiac is 
very obscure. See generally Franz Boll, Sphaera (Leipzig, 1903); 
also the bibliographies to Ast&ology and Babylonian and 
Assyrian Religion. (A. M. C.) 

ZODIACAL LIGHT, a faint Illumination of the sky, sur- 
rounding the sun and elongated in the direction of the -ecliptic 
on each side of the sun. It is lenticular in form, brightest 
near the sun, and shades off by imperceptible gradations, 
generally becoming invisible at a distance of 90° from the son. 
Until a recent time it was never observed except in or near the 
zodiac; hence its designation. Its breadth varies with the 
time and place of observation, depending upon the position of 
the ecliptic with respect to the horizon. In the tropics, where 
the ecliptic is nearly perpendicular to the horizon, it may be 
seen after the end of twilight on every clear evening, and before 

1 Schlegel, Ur. Chin. t p. .561; Pettigrew, Jount. Arch. Soc., 
viii. 21. 
1 Fox Talbot, Trans. Soc. BiU. Archaeol. iv. .260.3 

* Menard, La Mythology dans I' Art, p. 388. 
4 Fowler, Archacoloria, xliv. 172. 

* VioIlet-le-Duc, Dxct. de VArch. Franchise, ix. 551; Le Gentil, 
Mhn. At FAcad., Paris, 1785, p. 20. * 1 

* Fowler, Archaeoloeta, xliv. 150. 

* Viollet-le-Duc, Diet, de VArch., ix. 55T. 

* John Call, Phil. Trans, lxii. 353- Cf. Honzeau, Bibliographic 
Astronomique, vol. i. pt. 1. p. 136, where a useful sketch of the 
general results of zodiacal research will be found. 

■ R. Brown, Archaeologia^ xlvii. 341 ; Sayce, in Nature, nv. 

"*See Lajard, Culte de Mithra, pi. xxvii. fig. 5. Ac. The actual 
symbol 6 can be carried back to about 250 B.C. (see Journal of the 
Asiatic Society of Bengal, vol. 50 (1881), 171, No. 20, and plate 17, 
No. 6); it occurs there with an Assyrian winged bull. But there is 
nothing to prove that it there, or elsewhere, means Taurus; h is 
found, m the same early period, with a lion as well as with a bull 
—on coins, seals, &c 



» Ibid., p. 175. 



twilight on every dear morning, unless blotted out by moon- 
light. It then presents a nearly vertical wedge-shaped form, 
the base of which extends 15° or 20° on each aide of the point 
at which the ecliptic intersects the horizon. The point of the 
wedge is quite indefinite, the extremely diffuse light gradually 
fading into invisibility at a height which may range from 50" 
to 70° or even more, according to the keenness of the observer's 
vision. The boundary everywhere is ill defined so that no 
exact statement of the extent of the light can be made. The 
brightness is at its maximum along its central line, called the 
axis of the light. Along this axis the brightness continually 
increases as the sun is approached. Owing to the softness of 
the outline, it is not possible to fix the position of the axis with 
precision; but, so far as observations have been made, it is 
found that it lies near the ecliptic, though deviating from it by 
a quite sensible amount. 

Having this position, the conditions of visibility win be best 
when the ecliptic, and therefore the axis of the light, are nearly 
perpendicular to the horizon, and, as the angle between the 
ediptic and horizon becomes acute, will deteriorate, slowly at 
first, more and more rapidly afterwards, owing to the increasing 
effect of atmospheric absorption. -This effect is enhanced by 
the light being brighter as we approach the sun. More and 
more of the brighter regions of the light will then be near the 
horizon the more acute the angle. The result is that the light 
can be only indistinctly seen when the angle with the horizon 
is less than 45 , unless in a region where the atmosphere is un- 
usually clear. From this statement of the conditions it will be 
seen that the tropical cone is the most favourable for observa- 
tion, and that the most favourable hour of the day at which the 
light can be seen most always be the earliest after sunset 
and the last before sunrise. Practically, this is when twilight 
is first ended in the evening, and about to begin in the morning. 
At these hours the angle of the ecliptic with the horizon varies 
with the season. At the close of evening twilight the angle is 
greatest about three weeks before the vernal equinox. The 
months of February and March are therefore best for the evening 
observations in the northern hemisphere, but the light can 
generally be seen from January until April. Similar favourable 
conditions prevail in the morning from September to November. 

It is dear that the light proceeds from a region surrounding 
the sun, and lenticular in form, the axis of the lens being nearly 
perpendicular to the ecliptic, while the circumference extends 
at least to the orbit of the earth. If it did not extend so far 
as this it could not be seen as frequently as it is at a distance of 
oo° from the sun. The accompanying figure shows the form of 
the outline, as it would appear to an observer on an outer planet 
were the light of the sun cut off. The hypothesis which best 
explains ail the phenomena is that the light is that of the sun 
reflected from an extremely tenuous doud of particles having 
the form and extent described, and becoming more and more 
tenuous as the earth's orbit is approached until, immediately 
outside the orbit, it fades into complete invisibility. The fact 
that the light widens out toward the sun leads to die inference 
that it entirely surrounds the sun. It is therefore of interest 
to test this inference by observations at midnight in such a lati- 
tude that the distance of the sun below the horizon is no more 
than necessary to predude the possibility of twilight. Such an 
opportunity is offered when the sun is near the summer solstice, 
in latitudes not differing much from 50 north. A transparent 
atmosphere and dear horizon are necessary, conditions which can 
best be secured on- a mountain top. The visibility of a light 
corresponding to the inference was shown by Simon Newcomb, 
by observations at the top of the Brienxer Rothorn, in 1005. 
Previously to this, E. £. Barnard had observed the same 
phenomenon at Chicago. The only source of doubt as to the 
validity of the conclusion that this is really the zodiacal light 
arises from the possibility that, after the dose of the ordinarily 
recognized twilight, there may be a faint illumination arising 
from the reflection of light by the very rare upper atmosphere, 
shown by the phenomena of meteors to extend some handled 
miles or more above the earth's surface. The problem of 



ZODIACAL LIGHT 



999 



separating a possible effect produced in this way from the zodiacal 
light proper may. seem to offer some difficulty. But the few 
observations made show that, after ordinary twilight has ended 
in the evening, the northern base of the aodiacal light extends 
more and more toward the north as the hours pass until, towards 
midnight, it merges into the h'ght of the sky described by the 
two observers mentioned. Yet more conclusive are the ob- 
servations of Maxwell Hall at Jamaica, who reached con- 
clusions identical with those of Barnard and Newcomb, from 
observations of the base of the light at the dose of twilight, 
which be estimated at 6o° in the line through the sun. 

These observations show that the outline on that portion of 
the light commonly seen in the morning or evening is concave 
instead of convex, as it would be were the cloud strictly lenti- 
cular. The actual outline of the cloud is that of which a section 
through the sun is shown in the figure. Since the tenuous edge 
of the lens extends beyond the earth's orbit it follows that there 
must be some zodiacal light, whether it can be seen or not, 
passing entirely across the sky, along or near the ecliptic Ob- 
servations of this zodiacal band are therefore of great interest. 
It has been seen to stretch across the sky at midnight by several 
observers, especially Barnard, to whom it appears 3* to 4* wide. 
He found it to be best seen during the months of October, 
November and May. 

Intimately connected with this band and with the zodiacal 
light is the Gegnuckciu, or counter-glow, a faint illumination 
of the sky in the region opposite the sun, which may generally 
be seen by a trained eye when all the conditions are favourable. 
Unfavourable conditions are moonlight, nearness to the Milky 
Way, and elevation of the h'ght above the horizon (and there- 
fore a depression of the sun below the horizon) of less than 30*, 
and the presence in the region of any bright planet. The 
Milky Way renders the object invisible during the months of 
June, July, December and January. Its light is so faint and 
diffuse that it is impossible to assign dimensions to it, except 
to say it covers a region of several degrees in extent. Barnard, 
the most successful observer, assigns diameters of 5* or even io° 
or more. From what has been said of its position it is evident 
that the zodiacal band, when seen across the sky, must include 
it. It may therefore be regarded as an Intensification of this 
band, possibly produced by the increased intensity of the h'ght 
when reflected nearly back toward the sun, and therefore 
toward the earth. From the description given of the zodiacal 
band and the GtgensckHn, it is clear that these objects should 
be best seen at the highest elevation, especially within the 
tropics. But the only well-authenticated observations we have 
of this kind show anomalies which have never been cleared up. 
This is especially the case with those of Chaplain George Jones, 
who spent eight months at Quito, Peru, at an elevation of more 
than 0000 ft., for the express purpose of observing the pheno- 
menon in question. He saw the zodiacal band at midnight 
as a complete arch spanning the sky, agreeing in this point 
with the observations of Barnard. One anomaly of his ob- 
servations is his description of the arch as sometimes so bright 




as to resemble the Milky Way, a condition which would make it 
easily visible at ordinary altitudes. Another anomaly is that 
he never saw the G<tenscktin, but describes the band as equally 
bright in all its parts, except near the horizon. We arc there- 
fore forced to the conclusion that cither he must have been a 
quite untrustworthy observer, or that there are anomalies in 
the phenomena which are yet to be explained. 

The latter possibility is also suggested by the curious fact 
that the visibility of the light does not seem to be proportional 



to the transparency of the atmosphere. Barnard reports it as 
sometimes best seen when the sky is slightly milky, while 
during the observations already mentioned from the Rothorn 
the Gegensckein was scarcely, if at all, visible, though the 
conditions were exceptionally favourable. It has even been 
said that observers at great elevations have failed to see the 
zodiacal light; but it is scarcely credible that this failure could 
arise from any other cause than not knowing what it was or 
where to look for it. Moreover, it has been well seen by Hansky 
from the observatory on the summit of Mont Blanc. 

In studying the causes of the phenomenon we must clearly 
distinguish between the apparent form /u seen from the earth, 
and the real form .of the lenticular-shaped cloud. The former 
refers to the earth, which is continually changing the point 
of view of the observer as he is carried around the sun, while 
the latter relates to the invariable position of the matter which 
reflects the light. First in importance is the question of the 
position of the principal plane, passing through the sun, and 
containing the circumferential regions of the cloud. This 
plane must be near, but not coincident with, that of the ecliptic 
It has therefore a node and a certain inclination to the ecliptic 
The determination of these elements requires that, at some 
point within the tropics where the atmosphere is dear, observa- 
tions of the position of the axis of the light among the stars 
should be made from time to time through an entire year. In 
view of the simplicity of the necessary appliances, and of the 
smaH amount of labour that would be required, we find a singular 
paucity of such observations. The most elaborate attempt in 
the required direction was made by the American chaplain, George 
Jones, during a voyage of the "Mississippi n in the Pacific Ocean, 
In i85*-54. Owing to the varying latitude of the ship, and the 
fact that the observer attempted to draw curves of equal 
brilliancy instead of the central line, the required conclusions 
cannot be drawn with certainty from these observations. More 
recently Maxwell Hall in Jamaica made a satisfactory deter- 
mination during the months from January to March, July and 
October, and carefully discussed his results. But the observa- 
tions do not extend continuously throughout the year, and do 
not include a sufficient length of the central line on each evening 
to enable us to distinguish certainly the heliocentric latitude 
of the central line, as distinct from its apparent geocentric 
position. Yet his observations are of the first importance as 
showing the smallness of the deviation of the central line from 
the ecliptic. When smoothed out, the- maximum latitude is 
less than 3*, which seems to preclude the coincidence of the 
central plane of the h'ght with that of the sun's equator. Hall 
also reaches the interesting conclusion that the plane in question 
seems to lie near the invariable plane of the solar system, a 
result which might be expected if the light proceeded from a 
swarm of independent meteoric particles moving around the 
sun. Chaplain Jones concluded, from his observations at 
Quito, that the central Ene of the arch made an angle of 3° 20' 
with the ecliptic, the ascending node being in Taurus, near 
longitude 62*. This is about 40° from the ascending node of 
the invariable plane, so that there is a well-marked deviation 
of his results from those of HalL 

Yet more divergent are the conclusions of Francis J. Bayidon, 
R.N.R., who made many observations while on voyages through 
the Pacific Ocean between Australia and the west coast of North 
America. He places the ascending node at the vernal equinox, 
and assigns an inclination of 4°. He found that as the ob- 
server moved to the north or south the axis of the light appeared 
to be displaced in the direction of the motion, which is the op- 
posite of the effect due to parallax, hut in the same sense as 
the effect of the greater atmospheric absorption of the light 
on the side nearest the horizon. He also describes the moon 
as adding to the zodiacal light during her first and last quarters, 
a result so difficult to explain that it needs confirmation. It is 
noteworthy that he could see the zodiacal band across the entire 
sky during the whole of every very clear moonless night in 
tropica] regions. 

If we accept the general conclusion already drawn as to the 



IOOO 

form and boundary of the region from which the light emanates, 
the next question is that of the matter sending it forth. The 
most plausible view is that we have to do with sunlight reflected 
from meteoric particles moving round the sun within the region 
of the lens. The polariscope and the spectroscope are the only 
instruments by the aid of which the nature of the matter can be 
inferred. The evidence afforded by these instruments is not, 
however, altogether accordant. In 1867, Angstrom, observing 
at Upsala in March, obtained the bright auroral line (W.L. 5567), 
and concluded that in the zodiacal light there was the same 
material as is found in the aurora and in the solar corona, 
and probably through all space, Upsala, however, is a place 
where the auroral spectrum can often be observed in the sky, 
even when no aurora is visible, and it has generally been 
believed that what Angstrom really saw was an auroral and 
not a zodiacal spectrum. 

Professor A. W. Wright, of New Haven, also made careful 
observations leading to the conclusion that the spectrum differs 
from sunlight only in intensity. Some evidence has also been 
found by the same observer of polarization, showing that a 
considerable portion of the light must be reflected sunlight. 
The observations of Maxwell Hall also embraced some made 
with the spectroscope. He was unable to see any marked 
deviation of the spectrum from that of the sun; but it does 
not appear that either he or any other of the observers dis- 
tinctly saw the dark lines of the solar spectrum. Direct proof 
that we have to do with reflected sunlight is therefore still 
incomplete. 

The question whether the Gegenschcin can be accounted for 
by the reflection of light from the same matter as the zodiacal 
band is still unsettled. Taking the general consensus of the 
observations it would seem that its light must be so much 
brighter than that of the band as to imply the action of some 
different cause. In this connexion may be mentioned the in- 
genious suggestion of S. Arrhcnius, that the phenomenon is 
due to corpuscles sent off by the earth and repelled by the sun 
in the same way that they are sent off from a comet and form 
its tail. In other words, the b'ght may be an exceedingly tenuous 
cometary tail to the earth, visible only because seen through its 
very great length. The view that no cause intervenes addi- 
tional to that producing the zodiacal band is strengthened, 
though not proved, by a theorem due to F. R. Moulton of 
Chicago. He shows that, supposing the cloud of particles 
to move around the sun in nearly circular orbits immediately 
outside the earth, the' perturbations by the earth in the motion 
of the particles will result in their retardation in that part 
of the orbit nearest the earth, and therefore in their always being 
more numerous in a given space in this part of the orbit than in 
any other. This view certainly accounts for some intensifica- 
tion of the light, to which may be added the intensification 
produced by the vertical reflection of the sunlight. 

A new interest was given to the subject by the investigations 
of H. H. Seeliger, published in 1006, who showed that the 
observed excess of motion of the perihelion of Mercury may be 
accounted for by the action of that portion of the matter re- 
flecting the zodiacal light which lies nearest to the sun. Plaus- 
ible though his result is, the subject still requires investigation. 
It seems not unlikely that the final conclusion will be that 
instead of the reflecting matter being composed of solid particles 
it is an exceedingly tenuous gaseous envelope surrounding the 
sun and revolving on an axis the mean position of which is 
between that of the sun's equator and that of the invariable 
plane of the solar system. 

Bibliography.-- Childrey, Natural History ef England (16; 
Britannia Baconica, p. 183 (1661); D. Castini, Nouv. P 
d'une lumiere UUste [sodiacale] (1683) and Decouverte do la lumiere 
cilcstc out paroist dans le todtaque (1685); R. Hooke, Explication 
of a Glade of Light, &c. (1685); Matron, Observations de Id lumiere 
todiacale; L. Euler, Sur la cause de la lumiere todiacale (1746); 
Mairan, Sur la cause de la lumiere todiacale (1747); R. wolf. 



ZOFFANY— ZOISITE 



Astro*, Nachr., boon, p. too; Jacob. Memoirs HAS., 

p. uq; G* Jour*, in Gould, No. 84, Monthly Notices 1L4-S., xvi. 
p. |i, Amtr. jour*, f Science, Series II., vol. 24, p. 274, and in F/-S. 
Ex faring Expedition Narrative, vol. iu. (1856): Humboldt, 



?■ 274. 

SSL 



Beobachtuugen des ZodiacaUichtes (1850-52"*; Bronen Ueber den 

" * diacaUickts fi8<o *nd in Schumacher, 008; 

Das ZodiacaUtcht (Brunswick, 1856) and in 



Gegensckein des Zodiacailichts fl8«o 



MfiftfUilxr, £ fc ptsuss. Akad. d. Wiss. (July 1855), M. Not. tLAS., 
xvL p* 10; C* P. Smyth, Trans. RSJL, xx. p. 489 (1853), M. Not. 
R-AJ>> *viu p» 704, xxxfi. p. 277; T. W. Backhouse, hi. Not 
1LA.S„> xxxvL p. 1 and xli. p. 333; Tupman, M. NoL R.A-S., 
p. 74; LiaK Comples Rendus, bdv. p. 262 (January 1873); 
A. W. Wright. Amrr. Jour, of Science, cviL p. 451 and cvm. p. 39; 
Jul». mvu ., i'^. .innoL, aoexvii. p. 162; Arthur Searie, Proc 
Amer. Acad., xix. p. 146, vol. xi. p. 135, and Annals of the Harvard 
Observatory, vol. xix.; Trouvelot, Proc. Amer. Acad., xiii. p. 183 
(1877); Barnard, Popular Astronomy, vu. (1899) P- , 7 I - Bayldon, 
Pub. Ask Soc. of the Pacific, vol. xu. (1900); Maxwell Hall, U.S. 
Monthly Weather Review (March 1906); Newoomb, Astropkrsical 
Journal (1905) ii. (&. N.) 

ZOFFANY, JOHANlf (1733-18x0), British painter, whose 
father was architect to the prince of Thurn and Taxis, was born 
in Fraiikfort-on-Main. He ran away from home at the age of 
thirteen and went to Rome, where he studied art for nearly 
twelve years. In 1758 he left for England, and after under- 
going some hardships was brought into fashion by royal 
patronage, and in 1769 was included among the foundation 
members of the Royal Academy. He went to Florence in 1772 
with an introduction from George HI. to the grand duke of 
Tuscany, and did not return until 1779. During this second 
stay in Italy he met with much success, and was commanded 
by the empress Maria Theresa to paint a picture of the royal 
family of Tuscany; this work he executed so much to the 
satisfaction of the empress that in 1778 he was created a baron 
of the Austrian empire. He went next to India, where he lived 
from 1783 to 1700, to which period belong some of his best- 
known paintings; but the last twenty years of his life were 
spent in England. He died in 1810 and was buried in Kew 
churchyard. His portrait groups of dramatic celebrities are, 
perhaps, the most highly esteemed of his many productions; 
they have considerable technical merit and show much shrewd 
insight into character. Several of the best are in the Garrick 
Club, London. 

ZOlLUS (c. 400-320 b.c), Greek grammarian of Amphipohs 
in Macedonia. According to Vilruvius (viL, preface), he lived 
during the age of Ptolemy Phfladelphns (285-247 B.C.), by whom 
he was crucified as the punishment of his criticisms on the king. 
This account, however, should probably be rejected. Zollus 
appears to have been at one time a follower of Isocrates, but sub- 
sequently a pupil of Polycrates, whom he heard at Athens, where 
he was a teacher of rhetoric Zollus was chiefly known for the 
acerbity of his attacks on Homer (which gained him the name of 
Homeromastix, " scourge of Homer "), chiefly directed against 
the fabulous element in the Homeric poems. Zollus also wrote 
against Isocrates and Plato, who had attacked the style of 
Lysias of which he approved. The name Zollus came to be 
generally used of a spiteful and malignant critic 

See U. FKedlander, De Zoilo oliisque Homeri Obtreetatoribtts 
(Kdnigsberg, 1895) ! J- E. Sandys, History of Classical Scholarship 
(2nd ed. 1906). 

ZOISITE, a rock-forming mineral, consisting of basic calcium 
and aluminium silicate, Caa(A10H)Alx(Si0 4 )«, crystallizing in 
the orthorhombic system. It is closely related to epidote (q.t.) 
both in the angles of the crystals and in chemical composition: 
a soistte containing some iron replacing aluminium may be 
identical in composition with an epidote (** clinozoisite ') 
poor in iron. The crystals are prismatic in habit and are deeply 
furrowed parallel to their length; terminal planes are rare; 
there is a perfect cleavage parallel to the brachy-pinacoid 
Columnar and compact masses are more common. The hard- 
ness is 6$ and the specific gravity 3*2S-3»37. The colour is 
often grey; a rose-red variety, known as "thulite," occurs 
with sky-blue vesuvianite at Telemarken in Norway, and has 
been used to a limited extent as an ornamental stone. Accord- 
ing to differences in the optical characters, two kinds of roisite 
have been distinguished. Zoisitc is a product of dynamo* 
metsmorphism, and occurs as a constituent of some crvstalhne 



ZOLA— Z0LK1EWSKI 



ioox 



terns**, such as ajnphtboUte and edogfce, • It was fat observed I 
by Baron Zois (after whom it waa named) in the eclogfcc of 
Sau-Alpe in Carinthia; other localities are the Ducktown 
copper mines in Tennessee, where it occurs embedded in ' 
chakopyrite; Loch Garve in Boss-shire. &c. The "saus- 
surite " of the Alps and elsewhere, which has resulted from the 
alteration of the plagioclase felspar of gabbro, consists largely 
of aoisite with epidote. <L» J. S.) 

ZOLA, fHUB JDOVARD CHARLES AVTOINB (1840-iooa), 
French novelist, was bom in Paris on the and of April 1840, his 
father being an engineer, part Italian and part Greek, and his 
mother a Frenchwoman. The father seems to have been an 
energetic, visionary man, who, dying while his only son was a 
little lad, left to his family no better provision than a lawsuit 
fj pint the municipality of the town of Aix It was at Aix, 
which figures as Hassans in so many of his novels, that the boy 
received the first part of his education. Thence he proceeded, 
in 1858, to Paris, where, as later at Marseilles, he failed to 
obtain his bachelor's degree, Then came a few years of terrible 
poverty; but at the beginning of x86s he obtained a clerkship, 
al the inodeit salary of a pound a week, in the house of Hachette 
the publisher. Meanwhile he was writing apace, but nothing 
of particular merit. His first book. Conks d Ninon, Appeared 
on the 14th of October 1864, and at tract ed some a tt ention, 
and in January 1866 he determined to abandon clerking and 
take to literature. Vigorous and aggressive as a critic, his 
articles on literature and art in Vfllemesstnfs paper L' tene- 
ment created a good deal of interest. So did the gruesome but 
powerful novel, Theresa Raqum (1867). Meanwhile, with 
characteristic energy, Zola was projecting something more im- 
portant: the creation of a world of his own, like that of Balxac'e 
Comtdie fljtMOMe— the history of a family in its various rami- 
fications during the Second Empire. The history of. this family, 
the Roogon-Macquart, was to be told in a series of novels con- 
taining a scientific study of heredity— science was always Zola's 
ignis fatuus—and a picture of French life and society. The 
first novel of the series, La Fortune des Rtugon, appeared in 
book form at the end of 1871. It was followed by La Curie 
(1874), be Venire de Parit (1874), La ConqutU de Plassans 
(1875), La Faute de FAbbi Uouret (187s), Son Excellence Eugene 
Ronton (1876)— all books unquestionably of immense ability, 
and in a measure successful, but not great popular successes. 
Then came UAssommmvr (1878?), the epic of drink, and the 
author's fortune was made. Edition followed edition. He 
became the most discussed, the most read, the most bought 
novelist in France— the sale of VAssowmovr being even exceeded 
by that of Nana (1880) and La Dtbdde (189a). From the 
Fortune des Rougon to the Decteur Pascal (1893) there are some 
twenty novels in the Rougou-Macquort series, the second half 
of which includes the powerful novels Germinal (1885) and 
La Terre (1888). In 1888 Zola departed from bis usual vein in 
the idyllic story of Le Rtee Zola also wrote a aeries of three 
romances on cities, Lourdes, Rome, Paris (1894-08), novels on 
the M gospels" of population {Ficonditi) and work (JVetctO, a 
volume of plays, and several volumes of criticism, and other 
things. These books are based on study and observation; the 
novels are crowded with characters. The whole is a gigantic 
opus, the fruit of immense labour, of an admirable tenacity— 
so many pages written, morning after morning, without Inter- 
mission, during some thirty years. He prided himself on his 
motto, Nutta dies sine linea. 

ZoU was the apostle of the M realistic M or " naturalistic " 
school; but he was in truth not a " naturalist " at all, in so 
tarn" naturalism " is to be regarded as a record of fact. He 
was an idealist, but while other idealists idealise the nobler 
dements in human nature, so has be, for the most part— the 
later books, however, show improvement— idealised the elements 
that are bestial. He saw man's lust, greed, gluttony, as in a 
vision, magnified, overwhelming, portentous. And what be 
saw he presented with tremendous power. His style may lack 
the classic qualities of French prose— lightness, delicacy, 
it certainly has not Daudet's colour and felicity of 



touch. The first iiuprrssinii it produces may be one of heaviness, 
and the later u gospels " on population and work are distinctly 
ponderous. But for rendering the gloomy horror of the sub- 
jects m wmcb be niest debghts— detail an detail being accumu- 
lated till the result is overwhelming— Zola has no superior. 
Some of his descriptions of crowds in movement have never 



ZoU played a very important part in the Dreyfus affair, 
which convulsed French politics and social life at the end of the 
10th century. At an' early stage he came to the conclusion that 
Dreyfus' was the innocent victim of a nefarious conspiracy, and 
on the 13th of January 1898, with his usual intrepidity, he pub- 
lished in the Aware newspaper, in the form of a letter beginning 
with the words J*occust, a terrible denunciation of all those 
who had had a hand in bounding down that unfortunate officer. 
Zola's object was a prosecution for libel, and a judicial inquiry 
into the whole a/atre, and at the trial, which took place in Paris 
in February, a fierce flood of light was thrown on the case. 
The chiefs of the army put forth all their power, and Zola was 
condemned. He appealed. On the and of April the Cour de 
Cassation quashed the proceedings. A second trial took place 
at Versailles, on the 18th of July, and without waiting the result 
Zola, by the advice of his counsel and friends, and for reasons 
of legal strategy, abruptly left France .and took refuge in 
England, Here he remained in hiding, writing FtcandUi, till 
the 4th of June 1899, when, immediately on hearing that there 
was to be a revision of the first Dreyfus trial, he returned to 
Paris. Whatever may be thought of the afawe itself, there 
can be no question of Zola's superb courage and disinterested- 

On the morning^if the 29th of September 290a Zola was 
found dead in the bedroom of bis Paris house, having been 
accidentally asphyxiated by the fumes from a defective flue. 
He received a pubfic funeral, at which Captain Dreyfus was 
present. Anatole France delivered an impassioned oration at 
the grave. At the time of his death Zola had just completed 
a novel, Viriti, dealing with the incidents of the Dreyfus trial. 
A sequel, Justice, had been planned, but not executed. After 
a life of constant struggle and an obloquy which never relaxed, 
the sensational close of Zola's career was the signal for an 
extraordinary burst of eulogy. The verdict of posterity will 
probably be kinder than -the first, and less unmeasured than 
the second. Zola's literary position would have more than 
qualified him for the French Academy.' He was several times 
a candidate in vain. (F. T. M.) 

See tmQe Zola. NoteHst and Reformer (1004), giving a full account 
of his lite and work, by E. A. Vtsetelly, who translated and edited 
many of his works in English: also P. Alexia, EmtU Zola, Notes 
dun ami; F Brunetiire, Le Roman NaturahsU (1883); vols, iit., 
v and vi. of the Journal des Goucourt (1888-92) ; E. Hennequifi, 
Qudoues Ecrioains francais (1890), R. H. Sherard, Emit* Zola, a 
Siograpmcal and critical study (1903); A. Laporte, £mue Zola. 
I'komme et Veeuore (1804) with a bibliography. A complete report 
of the proceedings against Zola is printed in Le Proas Zola (a vols. 
1898, Eng. trans. 1898). 

ZOLKIEWSKI, STANISLAUS (1547-1619). the most illustrious 
member of an ancient Ruthenian family which emigrated to 
Galida in the x 5th century. During the interregnum in Poland 
after the death of Henry of Valois, Zolkiewaki was an ardent 
partisan of the chancellor Zamoyski, and supported the can- 
didature of Stephen Bithory, under whose banner he learned 
the art of war in the Muscovite campaigns. On the death of 
Stephen, Zolkiewski vigorously supported the policy of Zamoyski, 
and took an active part in the battle of Byczyna, when the 
Austrian archduke Maximilian was defeated by the Polish 
chancellor. Shortly afterwards Zolkiewski was made castellan 
of Lemberg and acting commander-in-chief. On the secession 
of Sigismund HI he retired from court and divided his time 
between improving his estates, where he built towns and for- 
tresses, and disciplining the Cossacks, with whom he enjoyed 
great influence. In 1601-2 he served with distinction in the 
Livonian war against the Swedes, whom he defeated at Reval. 
During the insurrection of Nicholas Zebrxydow&ki be led the 



1002 



ZOLLNER— ZOOLOGICAL DISTRIBUTION 



army which routed the rebels at Guaow in 1607, though pro- 
testing against the necessity of shedding " his brothers' blood." 
For his services he received the palatinate of Kiev. He was 
opposed to the expedition sent to place the false Demetrius 
on the throne of Muscovy; but nevertheless accompanied the 
king to Smolensk and was sent thence with a handful of men 
against Moscow. On his way thither he defeated and captured 
Tsar Vastly Shuiski at the battle of Klushino (July 14, 1610), 
and two months later entered the Russian capital in triumph. 
His tactful and conciliatory diplomacy speedily won over the 
boyars, whom he persuaded to offer the Muscovite crown to 
the Polish crown prince, Wladislaus. For a moment it seemed 
possible that the Vasa family might occupy the throne of Ivan 
the Terrible; but Sigismund ILL would not consent to the re- 
ception of his son into the Greek Church, and refused to ratify 
the terms made with the boyars. Zolkiewski then returned 
to the Polish camp and assisted in the reduction of Smolensk, 
but Moscow in the meantime drove out the Polish garrison and 
proclaimed a native dynasty under Michael Romanov. When 
Zolkiewski presented his captives, Tsar Vastly and his family, 
to the Polish diet, he received an ovation and was rewarded with 
the dignity of kdman widki (commander-in-chief). For the 
next few years he defended the Ukraine against the latars 
and Cossacks, and in 16x7 was involved in a war with the Porte 
owing to the unauthorized interference of the Polish nobles 
in the affairs of Wallachia and Moldavia. Unable to defeat 
the vastly superior forces of the Turkish commander Skinder, 
be concluded with him an advantageous truce at Jaruda (27th 
of August 1618), by the terms of which he pledged himself to 
curb the Cossacks and at the same time renounced all the claims 
of Poland to the Danubian principalities. Thus he saved the 
one army of Poland to guard her southern frontier from appa- 
rently inevitable destruction. On his return he was fiercely 
assailed by the diet for not risking everything in a pitched 
battle, but Zolkiewski defended himself with an eloquence which 
silenced his most venomous opponents. The peace of Jaruda 
was then confirmed, and the king conferred upon Zolkiewski 
the grand-chancellorship, an honour he had neither drsired 
nor expected. Fresh attacks were presently made against him 
for failing, it was alleged, to prevent the Tatar incursions. 
So deeply wounded was the hero by these calumnies that when 
in 1619 he was sent against the Turks he publicly declared that 
he would never return alive unless victorious. He was as good 
as his word. Surrounded near the Dniester by countless hosts 
of Turks, Tatars and Janissaries, he retreated through the 
Steppes, fighting night and day without food or water, towards 
Cecora. By the time he reached it, he saw clearly that success 
was impossible, and deliberately determined to die where he 
stood. Disguising himself so that his dead body might not be 
recognized, he turned upon the pursuers and was slain after 
a desperate resistance (6th of October 1620). His head was 
cut off, exhibited in the Turkish camp and then sent to Con- 
stantinople as a present to the sultan, from whom it was subse- 
quently ransomed at a great price. Zolkiewski is one of the 
most heroic figures in Polish history. An accomplished general, 
a skilful diplomatist, and a patriot who not only loved his 
country above all things, but never feared to tell his countrymen 
the truth, he excelled in all private and publk virtues. As a 
writer he made a name by an important history of his Muscovite 
campaigns. 

See Stanislaw Gabryel Kozlowski, £tf* if Stanislaus Zolkiewski 
(PoL) (Cracow, 1904). (R. N. B.) 

ZOLLNER, JOHANN KARL " FRIBDRICH (1854-1883), 
German astronomer and physicist, was born at Berlin on the 
8th of November 1834. From 1872 he held the chair of astro- 
physics at Leipzig University. He wrote numerous papers 
on photometry and spectrum analysis in Poggendorff's Annalen 
and BerichU der k. s&cksischen Ccsellsckaft der Wissmsckoflen, 
two works on celestial photometry (Grvrtdt&ge einer ollgemeitmi 
Photoi***r{* A?r fTimmds, Berlin, 1861, 4to, and Pkotometriscke 
XJr' \ 1865, 8vo), and a curious book, Utber 



die Natur dm ComOen (Uipaig, 187s, 3rd ed. 1883). He diedf 
at Leipzig on the 25th of April 1882. 

ZOLLVEREIN (Ger. ZoU, toll, customs, and Vet tin, union), 
a term used generally for a certain form of Customs Union, but 
specially for the system among the German states which was in 
force between 18x9 and 1871 (see Takhf, and Germany: 
History), 

ZOUBOR, a town of Hungary, capital of the county of Bics 
Bodrog, 146 m. S. of Budapest by rail. Pop. (1900) 29,036, 
two-thirds Servians. It is situated in a fertile plain neav the 
Franz Josef canal, which connects the Danube and the Tnciss, 
and is the centre of the corn and cattle trade of an extensive 
area. 

ZOVARAS, JOANNES (John), Byzantine chronicler and theo- 
logian, flourished at Constantinople in the 12th century. Under 
Alexius I. Comnenus he held the offices of commander of the 
bodyguard and private secretary to the. emperor, but in the 
succeeding reign he retired to Hagia Glykeria (one of the Princes' 
Islands), where he spent the rest of his life in writing books. 
His most important work, 'Etito/4 'IoToptiu* (compendium 
of history), in eighteen books, extends from the creation of the 
world to the death of Alexius (1 1x8). The earlier part is largely 
drawn from Josephus; for Roman history he chiefly followed 
Dio Cassius, whose first twenty books are not otherwise known to 
us. His history was continued by Nicetas Acominatus. Various 
ecclesiastical works have been attributed to Zonaras — com- 
mentaries on the Fathers and the poems of Gregory of Naztanzus; 
lives of Saints; and a treatise on the Apostolical Canons — 
and there is no reason to doubt their genuineness. The lexicon, 
however, which has been handed down under his name (ed. 
J. A. H. Tittmann 1808) is probably the work of a certain 
Anlonius Monachus (Stein's Herodotus, ii. 479 f .). 

Complete edition in Migne, Patrohgia Graeca, exxxiv. exxxv. 
cxxKvii.; the Ckrontcon by M. Pindcr and T. Buttner-Wobst in 
the Bonn Corpus Scriptorum Hist. By*. (1841-97) and by L. Din- 
dorf in the Tcubner series (1868-76); see bibliography in C. Krum- 
bacher, Ccschichtc der bytantiniscken Litteratur (2nd eo. 1897). 

ZONE (Gr. £<b>9, a girdle, from {unrirput, to gird), a term 
for a belt or girdle, now used chiefly in the transferred sense 
of a demarcated area. Thus the earth's surface is divided, for 
classification of climates, into five climatic zones: the two 
temperate and the two frigid zones and the tropical or torrid 
zone. (See Climate and Climatology.) 

ZOOLOGICAL DISTRIBUTION (also known as Zoogeography), 
the science dealing, in the first place, with the distribution of 
living animals on the surface of the globe (both land and water), 
and secondly with that of their forerunners (both in time and 
in space). The science is thus a side-branch of zoology, 1 in- 
timately connected on the one hand with geography and on the 
other with geology. It is a comparatively modern science, 
which dates, at all events in its present form, from the second 
half of the 19th century. 

Different parts of the land-surface of the globe are inhabited 
by different kinds of animals, or, in other words, by different 
faunas. These differences, in many cases at any rate, are not 
due to differences of temperature or of climate; and they do 
not depend on the distance of one place from another. The 
warm-blooded land-animals of Japan are, for example, very 
much more closely related to those of the British Isles than 
is the corresponding fauna of Africa to that of Madagascar. 
Again, on the hypothesis of the evolution of one species from 
another, in the case of land-animals unprovided with the means 
of flight such resemblances and differences between the faunas 
of different parts of the world depend in a great degree on the" 
presence or absence of facilities for free communication by 
land between the areas in question. Prima facie, therefore, 
it is natural to suppose that the fauna of an island will differ 
more from that of the adjacent continent than will those of 
different parts of that continent from one another. 

To a great extent this is the case; and if the present con* 
tinents and islands had always been in statu quo, the proposition 
1 For the distribution of plants, aw Plants: Distribution- 



GENERAL) 

would, for the most part at any rate, be universally true. 
Geology has, however, taught us that many parts of what are 
now continents formed at earlier periods of the earth's history 
portions of the ocean-bed, while what are now islands have in 
some instances been connected with the adjacent mainlands, 
or even with land-masses the sites of whkh are now occupied 
by the open sea, 

We can hope, therefore, to understand and explain the present 
distribution of terrestrial animal life only by taking into account 
what geology teaches us as to past changes in the configuration 
of the land-masses of the globe, accompanied by investigations 
into the past history of animals themselves, as revealed by their 
fossil remains. 

Although to understand the reason of many facts in the present 
distribution of animals— as, for example, why tapirs are con- 
fined to the Malay countries and South America— it is essential 
to study fossil faunas, yet it has been found possible from the 
consideration of existing faunas alone to map out the land- 
surface of the globe into a number of zoological " regions," or 
provinces, more or less independent of the ordinary geographical 
boundaries, and severally characterised by a greater or smaller 
degree of distinctness in the matter of their faunas. One of 
the pioneers in this line of research was Dr P. L Sclater, who m 
a paper on the geographical distribution of birds, published in 



ZOOLOGICAL DISTRIBUTION 



1003 



Af^**, 




the Journal of the Linnean Society of London for 1S5S, was 
enabled to define and name six of such zoological regions; 
these being mamky based on the distribution of the perching 
or passerine birds. Two years later Dr A. Rossel Wallace, in the 
same journal, discussed in some detail the problems presented 
by the distribution of animals in the Malay Archipelago and 
Australasia. This preliminary essay was followed in 1S76 
by the appearance of the latter author's Geographical Distribu- 
tion of Animals, an epoch-making work, which may be said to 
have first put the study of the distribution of animals generally 
on a thoroughly firm and scientific basts. With some slight 
modifications, the names proposed for the six zoological regions 
by Dr Sclater were adopted by Dr Wallace. Certain changes 
in regard to the limits and number of the zoological regions 
adopted by Sclater and Wallace have been proposed; but the 
original scheme forms the basis of all the later modifications, 
and these eminent naturalists are entitled to be regarded as the 
fathers of the study of distributional zoology. T. H. Huxley 
was also one of those who did much to advance the science 
in its early days, while among those who have proposed more 
or less important modifications of the original scheme special 
mention may be made of Dr W. T. Blanford, Dr A. Ueilprin, 
Prof. P. Matschie and Prof. Max Weber. 

The zoological regions proposed by Dr Sclater were based 
mainly on the distribution of the perching birds; but in the 
writings of Dr Wallace and of later authors mammals were 



very largely taken into consideration, and in later schemes 
there has been a similarly extensive use of the evidence afforded 
by mammalian distribution. That different groups of animals 
do not agree with another in the matter of geographical distri- 
bution will be evident when we reflect that in many instances 
there are very great differences in the relative ages of such groups, 
or, at all events, in the dates of their dispe r sal, or " radiation," 
over the surface of the earth. The radiation and dominance of 
reptiles, for example, greatly antedated that of either birds or 
mammals, Consequently, the zoological regions indicated by 
the present geographical distribution of the former group are 
very different from those suggested by the distribution of the 
two latter. If zoological regions are based on the evidence of 
the existing distribution of animals, groups with a relatively 
late radiation are clearly to be preferred to those the dispersal 
of which was earlier Mammals and birds, therefore, are of 
greater value from this point of view than reptiles; while the 
absence of the power of flight in the great bulk of the dass 
renders the evidence afforded by mammals superior to that 
derived from birds. The marked general agreement between 
the geographical distribution of birds on the one hand and of 
mammals on the other is, however, a fact of the greatest im- 
portance in regard to the value of the zoological regions estab- 
lished on their evidence. Further testimony in the same direc- 
tion is afforded by the distribution of certain other groups, 
more especially spiders (Arachnids); and it is also noteworthy 
that the distribution of the three main divisions of the human 
race accords to a certain extent with the boundaries of some of 
the zoological regions based on the distribution of the lower 



With regard to the theory of the polar origin of life and the 
gradual dispersal of animals from the arctic regions, it may be 
briefly stated that the presumed series of radiations of life 
southward from the northern pole can have nothing to do with 
the present geographical distribution of animals, since we have 
abundant evidence that mammals have been spread over the 
whole of the warmer parts of the globe since, at any rate, the 
commencement of the Tertiary period, while the radiation of 
reptiles commenced at a much earlier epoch. 

As regards barriers to the free dispersal of nonvolant terrestrial 
animals these may be grouped under two main heads, namely, 
climatic and geographical, of which the second is by far the more 
important. At the present day a certain number of animals 
are fitted to live respectively only in hot and in cold climates. 
The man-like apes and elephants among mammals, and trogona 
and parrots among birds, are, for example, now exclusively 
dwellers in tropical or subtropical climates, whereas the polar 
bear, the musk-ox and ptarmigan are equally characteristic 
of the arctic zone. To a great extent this must be regarded 
as a comparatively modern adaptive feature, since many of 
these arctic and tropical animals belong to groups the distribu- 
tion of which, either in the past or the present, is more or less 
independent of climate. Elephants, for instance, formerly in- 
habited Siberia at a time when the climate, although probably 
less cold than at present, was certainly not tropical; while 
the polar bear is a specialized member Of a group some of the 
representatives of which are denizens of the tropics. 

It is true, indeed, that within the limits of the different 
zoological regions temperature-control has had an important 
influence on the distribution of animals, and has resulted m 
certain cases in the formation of life-zones, as in North America, 
As remarked, however, by H. A. Pilsbry and J. H. Ferries 1 in 
connexion with the distribution of land-molluscs," the life- 
zones of the United States as mapped by Dr C. H. Merriam 
emphasize the secondary and not the primary facts of distribu- 
tion. The laws of temperature-control do not define trans- 
continental zones of primary import zoologically. These zones 
are secondary divisions of vertical life-areas of which the mol- 
luscan faunas were evolved in large part independently." And 
what b true of ino uu scs will hold good in the case of several 
other groups, 

* Pro** Acodtmy of Ph i lo d o lpkia , 1906, p. ttj. 



i 



ioo4 



ZOOLOGICAL DISTRIBUTION 



(TERRESTRIAL 



There is also the phenomenon of vertical temperature-control. 
On this subject Dr A. R. Wallace has written (Ency. Brtt., 
9th ed., art. " Distribution "): " As we ascend lofty mountains, 
the forms of life change in a manner somewhat analogous to 
the changes observed in passing from a warm to a cold country. 
This change is, however, far less observable in animals than in 
plants; and it is so unequal in its action, and can so frequently 
be traced to mere change of climate and deficiency of food, 
that it must rank as a phenomenon of secondary importance. 
Vertical distribution among animals will be found in most 
cases to affect species rather than generic or family groups, 
and to involve in each case a mass of local details. . . « The 
same remarks apply to the bathymetrical zones of marine life. 
Many groups are confined to tidal, or shallow, or deeper waters; 
but these differences of habit are hardly geographical, but in- 
volve details, suited rather to the special study of individual 
groups." Temperature-control is therefore mainly a factor 
which has acted independently in the different zoological 
regions of the globe, and as such demands little or no further 
mention in a general sketch of the present nature. 

The same remark will apply in the case of the influence of 
humidity on distribution, and also as regards *' station." To 
illustrate the latter we may take the instances of the European 
squirrel and the chamois, the former of which is found only 
in wooded districts and is entirely absent from the open plains, 
while the latter occurs only in the isolated mountain ranges of 
the Pyrenees, the Alps, the Apennines and the Caucasus. The 
distributional area of both may, however, be regarded as includ- 
ing Europe generally, so that these local restrictions of range 
have nothing to do with the wider problems of distribution. 

Very different is the case with regard to geographical barriers 
to the free dispersal of terrestrial animals. It should be ob- 
served, however, that even these act with different degrees of 
intensity in the case of different groups. From the fact that 
the great majority of them are oviparous, reptiles, whose powers 
of dispersal in the adult state are generally as restricted as those 
of mammals, have an advantage over the latter in that their 
eggs may be carried long distances on floating timber down 
rivers and thence across the ocean, or may even be occasionally 
transported by birds. The eggs of batrachians, like those of 
fresh-water fishes, will in some cases at any rate withstand 
being frozen, and hence conceivably may be transported by 
floating ice. Adult insects may be carried in the same manner 
as the eggs of reptiles. After all, however, such unusual means 
of transport are probably of no great importance; and it seems 
most likely that the varying features in the geographical dis- 
tribution of different groups of animals are due much more to 
differences in the dates of radiation, or dispersal of those groups, 
than to varying degrees of facility for overcoming natural 
geographical barriers to dispersal. 

The greatest barriers of all are formed by the ocean and the 
larger rivers; and from the former factor it follows that zoo- 
logical regions coincide to a considerable extent— although by 
no means altogether— with the main geographical (as distinct 
from political) divisions of the earth's surface. In the main, 
mammals and other nonvolant terrestrial animals are debarred 
from crossing anything more than comparatively narrow 
channel* of the sea, while even these and the larger rivers form 
a more or less effectual barrier to the dispersal of the great 
majority of the species. Hence it results that oceanic islands 
are usually devoid of such forms of life; while it may be laid 
down, as a- general rule, that the existence of nearly allied types 
of terrestrial animals in countries now separated by stretches 
of sea implies a former land-connexion between them. There 
are, however, in many cases great difficulties in determining 
the nature of such connexions, largely owing to the fact 
that we are still in the dark as to whether the dispersal 
of many groups of animals has taken place down the lines of 
the present continents from north to south or equatorially 
by means of belts of land long since swallowed up by the ocean. 
In this connexion it may be remarked, as tending against the 
old idea of the radiation of all the modern groups of .terrestrial 



animals from the north towards the sooth, that there is deceive 
. evidence to prove the existence during the Tertiary period (so 
far at least as mammals are concerned) of certain great centres 
of development, and in some instances, at all events, also of 
radiation, in the southern hemisphere; one of these develop- 
mental centres being in Africa a second in South America, and 
a third in Australia. 

To the general law that straits and arms of the sea form an 
effectual barrier to the dispersal of the larger land-animals, 
and more especially mammals, certain exceptions . may be 
pleaded. Jaguars have, for instance, been known to cross the 
Rio de la Plata, while tigers constantly swim from island to 
island in the delta of the Ganges and probably also in the Malay 
Archipelago, and a polar bear has been observed swimming 
twenty miles away from land in Bering Sea. Deer, certain 
antelopes, pigs and elephants are also good swimmers; while 
hippopotamuses and crocodiles—especially the latter — can 
cross channels of considerable width. The great tropical and 
subtropical rivers also carry down masses of floating soil or 
large trees upon which -mammals and reptiles are borne, and 
although in many or most instances such are swept out to sea 
and their occupants drowned, in other instances they may be 
stranded upon the opposite bank or shore where their living 
freight can effect a landing. Such instances, however, cannot 
be very frequent, and they cannot affect widely sundered 
countries, owing to the lack of food supplies. Moreover, 
supposing a mammal to have reached a new land, unless it 
happened to be a pregnant female, or unless another 
individual of the opposite sex be similarly stranded, it would 
eventually die without progeny. Even in the case of a pregnant 
female, there is no certainty that the offspring, if but one, 
would be a male; and even supposing this to be the case, the 
progeny might perish from the attacks of other animals or from 
inbreeding. On the whole, it may be said, that instances of 
such methods of dispersal must be relatively few and can affect 
only countries not very widely sundered. The most important 
case that can be dted is the occurrence of a pig and an extinct 
hippopotamus in Madagascar, which probably reached that 
island by swimming from Africa. As a rule, a strait like that 
separating Ceylon from India may be considered an effectual 
barrier to the dispersal of large land-animals. 

Although the Rio de la Plata has effectually prevented the 
amphibious carpincho from reaching Argentina, deserts form 
even more impassable barriers than large rivers, the Sahara 
having prevented the North African fauna from reaching the 
heart of that continent. High and continuous mountain- 
ranges are likewise most effective in restricting the range of 
animals;- this being more especially the case when, like the 
Himalaya, their trend is equatorial instead of , as in the case 
of the Rocky Mountains and the Andes, from north to south in 
the direction of the main continental extension. Forests also 
present great obstacles to animal migration, although this is to 
a great extent of a local nature and comes, in fact, under the 
category of "station." Indeed, there appears to be no in- 
stance of the separation of one zoological region from another 
by forest alone. 

Lastly it should be mentioned that ice may serve as a factor 
in the dispersal of animals by acting as a bridge between 
different land-areas; and at some period this means of communi- 
cation may, have aided in the great migrations of animals that 
have taken place between the Old and the New World by way 
of what is now Bering Sea. 

I. Terrestrial Distribution 
' The zoological regions recognized by Dr A. R. Wallace in 
2876, which are in the. main identical with those foaifrtaf 
proposed by Dr P. L. Sdater in 1858, and ace chiefly *»* * «■ ■ . 
based on the distribution of birds and mammals, are as 
follows: — 

I. Palatorctic, which Includes Europe to the Azores and Iceland,' 
temperate Asia from the hith Himalaya and west of the Indus, 
with Japan, and China from Nwgpo and to the north of the watershed 



TEMtESTRIAU 



ZOOLOGICAL DISTRIBUTION 



1005 



of the Yang^se-kiamu alto N 
the line of the tropic of Cancer. 



North Africa and Arabia, to about 



a. Ethiopian, including Africa south of the tropic of Cancer, 
as well as the southern part of Arabia, with Madagascar and the 
adjacent islands. . 

x. Oriental, or Indo-Malay, comprising India and Ceylon, the 
Indo-Chinese countries and southern China, and the JAalay Archi- 
pelago as far as the Philippines, Borneo and Java. 

4. Australian, comp o sed of the remainder of the Malay Archi- 
pelago* Australia, New Zealand and all the tropical islands of the 
Pacific, as far east as the Marquesas and the Low Archipelago. 

5. Neotropical, which comprises South America and the adjacent 
islands, the West Indies or Antilles, and Central America and Mexico. 

6. Nearctic, consisting of temperate and arctic North America* 
with Greenland. 

"These six regions," remarks Dr Wallace, "although aU 
of primary importance from their extent, and well marked 
try their total assemblage of animal forms, vary greatly in their 
zoological richness, their degree of isolation and their relation- 
ship to each other. The Australian region is the most peculiar 
and the most isolated, but it fa comparatively small and poor 
in the higher animals. The Neotropical region comes next in 
peculiarity and isolation, but it is extensive and excessively 
rich in ail forms of life. The Ethiopian and Oriental regions are 
aho very rich, but they have much in common. The Palae- 
arctic and Nearctic regions being wholly temperate are less 
rich, and they too have many resemblances to each other; but 
while the Nearctic region has many groups in common with 
the Neotropical, the Palaeatctic is closely connected with the 
Oriental and Ethiopian regions." 

In Dr Sclater/s original scheme the first four of the above regions 
were bracketed together under the designation of Palatogaea, 
and the fifth and sixth, or those belonging to the New World, 
as Ncogacc T. H. Huxley, in a paper on the distribution of 
game-birds, published in the Proceedings of the Zoological 
Society of London for 1868, instead of dividing the world into 
an eastern and a western division, adopted a northern and a 
southern division, calling the former Arctogaea, and the latter 
(which included Australasia and the Neotropical region of Messrs 
Sdater and Wallace, but not the Ethiopian region) Notogaea. 

In 1874 Dr Sdater, 1 taking mammals as well as birds into 
consideration, adopted Huxley's Arctogaea as the major northern 
division to include the Nearctic, Palaeatctic, Oriental and 
Ethiopian regions; and instead of Huxley's Notogaea recognised 
three primary divisions, namely, Dendrogaea for the Neotropical 
region, Anlarctogaea for the Australian region (in a somewhat 
restricted sense), and Ornilkogaea for New Zealand and Poly- 



The tendency of these amendments on the original scheme 
of a simple division into six regions was to recognize three 
primary divisions of higher rank than such " regions." This 
view was adopted in 1800 by Dr W. T. Blanford, a who proposed 
to designate these three major divisions of the earth's land 
surface respectively the Australian, the South American and 
the Arctogaean regions. A weak point in this scheme is that 
since the term " region " is likewise applied to the subdivisions 
of Arctogaea, there is a danger of confusion between the primary 
and secondary divisions. An amendment proposed anony- 
mously* in 1803 was to substitute the names Notogaea, 
Neogaea and Arctogaea for the three primary divisions of 
Dr Blanford. Yet another emendation, suggested by R. 
Lydekker * and subsequently adopted by Prof. H. F. Osborn,* 
was to designate these three primary divisions as "realms,". 
and to reserve the name " region " for their subdivisions. 

Emendations on the original scheme also included modifica- 
tions in the limits of tbe regions themselves. In 1878, for 
instance, Dr A. HeflprU * (in accordance with, a suggestion of 

' Manchester Science Lectures, ser. 5 and 6, p. 303 sea, 

• Pros, G00L Sou (London, 1890), p. 7°- 

• Natural Science, iii. 289. 

*Ceopaphifei Distribution of Mammals (London. 1896), p. rj. 

• " Correlation between Tertiary Mammal Horizons of Europe 
and America.** Annals New York Academy, xiiL 46 (1000). 

The Gomphical emd Geological Dis tri bu t io n of Animals 
loo.!l87ftV 
XXVUI 17 



Prof. A. Newton) proposed to unite the Nearctic with tint 
Palaearctic region under the name of Holarctic ; separating at the 
same time from the former a " transitional " Sonoran, and from) 
the latter a similar Mediterranean, or Tyrrhenian, region, while 
he also recognized a distinct Polynesian region, distinguished in 
the main by negative characters.. The Sonoran region was 
subsequently adopted by Dr C H. Merriam 7 in 1893, and later 
on by Dr Blanford in the address already cited, the title being, 
however, changed to Memo-Columbian. A most important 
proposal was also embodied in Dr Blaniord's scheme, namely, 
the separation from the Ethiopian region of Madagascar and 
the Comoro islands to form a separate Malagasy region. Another 
modification of the original scheme was to transfer the island of 
Celebes, together with Lombok, Flores and Timor, from the 
Australian to the Oriental region, or to regard them as repre- 
senting a transitional region between the two.* The effect of 
this change was practically to abolish " Wallace's line " (the 
deep channel between the islands of Bali and Lombok and thence 
northward through the Macassar Strait), the deepest channel 
being really situated to the eastward of Timor. 

The later evolution of the scheme, as presented by Dr Max 
Weber* may be Ubularised, with some slight alteration, as 
follows, the "realms" being. printed in capitals, the regions 
and sub-regions in ordinary type, and the transitional regions 
in italics?— 



I. Arctogaea 
2. Ethiopian. 3. Malagasy. 4. Oriental. 



1. Holarctic. 

— 1 T 

Nearctic Palaearctic 

So n o ran Mediterranean Austro-Malayan 

If. Nsogaea III. Notogaea. 

5. Neotropical. 6. Australian 

(7). 7. Polynesian 
(?) 8. Hawaiian. 

In the accompanying map the Sonoran and Mediterranean 
transitional regions are represented as equivalent in value to 
the main regions, and the Austro-Malayan transitional region 
is not indicated. The recognition of a Polynesian and still 
more of a Hawaiian region, is provisional. 

The most distinct of the three primary realms is undoubtedly 
Notogaea, the Australian section of which is tbe sole habitat of 
egg-laying mammals (Monotremata) and of a great wy^, 
variety of marsupials, inclusive of the whole of the ^ 
diprotodonts, with the exception of the few (cuscuses) found in 
the Austro-Malayan transitional region. Apart from monotremes 
and marsupials, the only indigenous mammals found in Notogaea 
are rodents and bats, with perhaps a pig in New Guinea; although 
it is most probable that the latter b introduced, as is almost cer- 
tainly the dingo, or native dog. in Australia. The rodents are all 
referable to the family Muridae, and are mostly of peculiar types, 
such as the golden water-rat (Hydromys) and the jerboa-rats (Umi- 
/una, NotomySt ftc): they are, however, in many instances more 
or less nearly related to species found in Celebes, tbe mountains 
of the Philippines and Borneo, and apparently represent an ancient 
fauna. The mammalian fauna of Notogaea is practically limited 
to the Australian region, its indigenous representatives in New 
Zealand being only a couple of bats, The monotremes are in all 
probability the survivors of a group which was widely spread in 
Jurassic times; while marsupials, as represented by the American 
opossums (Didelphyidae), had a very wide range even as late as the 
Ougocene division of the Tertiary period. Tbe diprotodont mar- 
supials may not improbably have originated within the Australian 
region, or this region conjointly with the Austro-Malayan transi- 
tional region. 

Notogaea is likewise the home of a number of peculiar types of 
birds, some of which range, however, into the Austro-Malayan area, 
that is to say, Celebes and Ceram. In the Australian region the 



* " The Geographical Distribution of Life In North America with 
special reference to the Mammalia," Prou Biol. Sou, Washington, 
vol. vii. op. 1-64 (1893). 

•See W. L. Sdater, "The Geography of Mammals,** part v., 
Geographical Journal, 1896; M. Weber, "On the Origin of the 
Fauna of Celebes," Ann. Mag. Nat. HisU, ser. 7, vol. hi. pp. 1*1-136 
(1809), and Dor Indo-emtraiinke Archipd uud die GemMcmo 
seiner Ticrwett (leas. 1002); Lydekker, "Celebes: a JVoM 
in Distribution." AmsWa/m. voL xxL pp. I75~>77 (1898); see 1 
DmTo/AUUnds.p.l68(lS 9 &). ^ ^ 

*Du S dw ge tier a (Jens, 1904), p. 308. 



ioo6 



ZOOLOGICAL DISTRIBUTION 



peculiar avian families include the birds-of-paradise (Paradiseidae). 
the boneysuckers (Mdiphagidae), and the lyre-bird* (Menuridae) 
among the perching group, the cockatoos (Cacatuidae) and lories 
(Loriidae) among the parrots, the mound-builders, or brush-turkeys 
(Megapodiidae) among the game-birds, and the cassowaries and 
emeus. {Casuariidae and Dromaeidae) in the ostrich group. The 
peculiarity of the region is also marked by the absence of certain 
widely spread family groups, such as the oarbcts (Megalaemidae), 
the otherwise -cosmopolitan woodpeckers (Picidae), the trogons 
(Trogonidae), and the pheasant and partridge tribe (Pharianjdae). 



The reptiles, owing probably to their earlier radiation, are 
less peculiar, such widely spread types as the monitors (Varanidae) 
and skinks, (Scincidae) being abundant, as are also crocodiles (Croco- 
dilidae). The tortoises belong, however, exclusively to the side- 
necked group (Pleurodira), now restricted to the southern hemi- 
sphere; among these the most noteworthy being the giant horned 
tortoise (Mialania) from the Pleistocene of Queensland, which 
belongs to a genus elsewhere known only from the South American 
Tertiary. The Australian lung-fish (Ceralodus, or Neoceratodus) is 
the sole survivor of a widely spread Triassic and Jurassic type. 
The salmon tribe (Salmonidae), however, is notable for its absence, 
although one peculiar form occurs in New Zealand; and the 
Cyprimdae, or carps, are wanting throughout the realm, this 
absence extending to Celebes, although in Borneo the group is 
abundantly represented. 

New Zealand, here provisionally included in a separate Poly- 
nesian region, b characterized by the absence of all indigenous 
mammals except two bats, each representing a peculiar genus. 
Among birds, the Neogaeic family Meliphagidae includes several 



peculiar genera, as does also the widely spreajd starling group 
(Sturnidae) ; while the parrots of the genera Strtngops and Nestor 
are likewise peculiar. Still more noteworthy is the abundance of 



the ostrich group, represented by the living kiwis (Apteryx) 
(DinornUhidae) which have been exterminated t 



and 



the , 

comparatively recent times. Reptiles are scarce, but among them 
the tuatera lizard (Sphenodou) is especially noteworthy on account 
of being the sole survivor of an ordinal group (Rhynchocephalia) 
widely spread during Triassic and Jurassic times. 

Of the Hawaiian area (whether or no rightly regarded as a dis- 
tinct region), it must suffice to state that it is the sole habitat of 
the gorgeously coloured birds known as mamos, or sickle-bills 
(Drepamdidae). 

With regard to the origin of the modern fauna of Notogaea, 
and more especially the Australian region, as here restricted, we 
enter extremely debatable ground. Dr Wallace, who refused to 
admit the existence of any great inter-continental connexions in 
the past, was of opinion that Australia received the ancestors of 
its marsupials and monotremes from Asia by way of the Auatro- 
Malayan area fas it certainly has its rodents) ,r far back in the 
Secondary period." This view has been endorsed by the present 
writer 1 who suggested the early Eocene as the most probable date 
of immigration; and it has also received the assent of Dr Max 
Weber* who is of opinion that in pre-Tertiary^-vcry likely Creta- 
ceous—times Australia was united by land with Asia. A Euro- 
Asiatic fauna inhabited this land, from which during the Eocene 
a southern portion was cut off by partial submergence, this southern 
portion being the modern Australia and New Guinea, the home of 
monotremes, marsupials and ancient forms of other groups, such 
as cassowaries and birds-of-paradise, while widely distributed 
specialized types are, wanting. Northwards extended a coral-sea. 
in the islands of which dwelt primitive rodents, insectivores and 
other ancient groups, with perhaps discuses. During the Miocene! 
great changes of level took place in the archipelago, which attained 
its present form in the Pleistocene. Celebes was insulated early, 
Java later. Intermittent land-connexions took place, which allowed 
of periodical immigrations of Asiatic forms from one side and of 
Australian types from the other. The question is left undecided 
whether the cuscuscs of the Austro-Malayan islands are remnants 
of the primitive Euro-Asiatic fauna or later immigrants from 
Australia. The suggestion is also made that the Australian and 
Philippine rodents are survivors of the original pre-Tertiary fauna, 
although it is admitted that the specialization of Hydromys.'a 
against this. The author fails to see r any evidence in favour of a 
former connexion of Australasia with either South America or a 
former large antarctic continent (Antarctica). 

While admitting that this may be the true explanation, Mr B. A. 
Bensley ' considers it possible that opossums (Didelphyidae), which 
he regards as the ancestral stock of the marsupials, may have 
effected an entrance into Neogaea by way of Antarctica. In 
either event, he would place the date of entry as post-Eocene; 
but against this view is the occurrence of remains of a diprotodont 
marsupial (Wrnyardia) in Tasmanian strata believed to be of 
Eocene age. Prof. Baldwin Spencer 4 is also of opinion that the 

1 LyAtkber,Gaotmf>kicat Distribution of Mammals (1896). 
•Der Indo-Austratiscke Archibd, &c. (Jena, tooa). 
» American Naturalist, xxv. 260 and 261 (1902). 
•Report of Horn Expedition to Central Australia, pp. 187 and 
%3» U896J. 



I Deiievea in tne existence 01 an tvogaca connecting the 
great continents exclusive of Antarctica; and in 1884 Cap*, 
a, abandoning bis former view, suggested the connexion of 
ilia and South America by means ©fa mid-Pacific continent. 



frERRESTRIAI, 

Australian marsupials and m o no t r em es reached their present 
habitat by means of a land-connexion in the south subsequent to 
the insulation of New Zealand. This, of course, implies the exist- 
ence of an extinct southern marsupial fauna of which we have no 
knowledge except in the case of the Epanorthidae of Patagonia. 

That Australia formed part of a great equatorial land-belt con- 
necting the southern continents in Jurassic times appears to be 
demonstrated by the evidence of the "Gondwana flora.** The 
question b whether such a connexion—either by way of Antarctica 
or not — persisted in the case of Neogaea long enough to admit of 
the ancestors of the modern fauna (supposing it auto have cone 
by a southern route) having effected an entrance. The existence 
of such a land-bridge was suggested by Sir Joseph Hooker in 1847; 
and the idea of a Tate connexion between Neogaea and Notogaea 
has been adopted by L. Rfitimeycr (1867), Captain F. W. Hutton 
(1873), Prof * H- ° * orbe » < ! ^3), Mr C. Hedley (189O, Dr H. von 
Ihenng (1891 and 1000), Prof. H. F. Osborn, who takes an inter- 
mediate view of the extent of the part played by Antarctica (1900). 
and by Dr A. F. Ortmann (190a). On the other hand, Dr T. Gill 
(1875) believed in the existence of an "Eogaca" connecting the 

three great r "* "■■* ' * ' - --"■ 

Hutton, aJ 

A summary of these views, with' references, is given by Dr Ortmann 
in vol. xxxv. pp. 139-142 of the American Naturalist (1901). 

So far as mammals are concerned, the evidence In favour of a 
comparatively late land-connexion is weakened by the recent view 
■that certain supposed Patagonian Tertiary marsupials, such as 
ProUtylacinus, are really creodont Carnivora. On the other hand 
(putting aside these carnivores), Mr W.J. Sinclair 1 is of opinion 
that the living South American marsupial Caeuolesles and its extinct 
relatives are annectant forms between diprotodonts and poly pro- 
tectants, and not far removed from the ancestral stock which gave 
rise to the Australian phalangers. The occurrence in the Tertiary 
of Patagonia of primitive opossums, which cannot be regarded as 
ancestral to the modern South American forms, is also an important 
determination.. From this, coupled with the testimony afforded 
by the invertebrate faunas, he considers himself justified in stating 
that " considerable evidence is now available to show that a land- 
connexion between Patagonia and the Australian region existed not 
later than the close of the Cretaceous or the beginning of the 
Tertiary, and it b possible that at this time the interchange of 
marsupials between the two continents was effected. Whether the 
marsupials originated in South America and migrated thence to 
Australia, or tne reverse, cannot at present be determined.*' The 
above-mentioned tortoises of the genus Miolania also appear to 
afford strong evidence of the persistence of the Jurassic connexion 
between Notogaea and Neogaea to a comparatively late epoch. 

Again, ProC W. B. Bcnham,* from the evidence of earthworms, 
is strongly disposed to believe in a late connexion between the 
areas in question. From their invariable association with angio- 
spermotts plants, this author is of opinion that earthworms are a 
comparatively modem group, which did not attain any important 
development before the Cretaceous. The ancestral tvpe would 
appear to have been more cr less nearly related to tne existing 
Notiodrilus, of which the headquarters, if not the birthplace, was 
the " Melanesian plateau.." New Zealand and the neighbouring 
islands, which possess the most ancient worm-fauna, were separated 
at an early date from this plateau. From this area the^primitive 
worms travelled in one direction into the Austro-Malayan countries, 
while in another, by way of Antarctica, they reached South America 
and Africa. With this brief summary of the chief views, this part 
of the subject must be dismissed without the writer being com- 
mitted to any definite conclusion. 

Next to Notogaea the most distinct faunistic continental area, 
so far at any rate as its present and later Tertiary mammals are 
concerned, is Neogaea, containing, as we have seen, only rfimn 
the Neotropical region. It is remarkable as being, with ~ 
the exception of Notogaea. the only land-area which contains, at 
the present day more than one living genus of marsupials, and also 
a large middle Tertiary marsupial fauna. The living marsupials 
include a large number of true opossums, constituting the family 
Didelphyidae and CaenoUstes the surviving representative of the 
Epanorthidae of the Patagonian Tertiariea. The opossums are 
represented by the genera Ckironectes and Dtdelphys; the latter 
divisible into a number of sub-genera of which the typical group 
alone ranged into North America. Whether the modern opossums 
belong to the endemic Neogaeic fauna, or whether they are late 
immigrants from the north (where they were represented tn the 
Otigocene of both hemispheres), is a question in regard to which 
a definite answer can scarcely at present be given. It appears, 
however, that Microbiotherium and certain allied forma from the 
middle Tertiary of Patagonia are endemic representatives of the 
Didelphyidae which did not give rise to the modern types. The 
Epanorthidae. in the opinion of Prof. Max Weber, indicate a sub- 
ordinal group by themselves: and if this be correct their evidence 



' Proc. Amor. PkU. Sac, xtfx. 75 (i**)- % 
• Report, Australian Assoc., is. 319 (1903)* 



TERRESTRIAL! 



ZOOLOGICAL DISTRIBUTION 



1007 



_.. Neogaea 

cannot have the weight attributed to it by Mr W. J. Sinclair. 

The typical Edentata (sloths, anteatera and armadillos) are at 
the present day practically confined to Neogaea where they have 
existed from the date of the Santa Cruz beds of Patagonia (which 
are probably of Miocene age). A few armadillos, however, have 
penetrated into Texas; and in the Pleistocene epoch several repre- 
sentatives of the extinct ground-sloths (Megatheriidae) and a 
glyptodon, or giant armadillo, also ranged into North America. 
The group is, however, essentially Neogaeic. Among the monkeys 
the Cebidae, or American monkeys, and their relatives the Hapalidae, 
or marmosets, are likewise peculiar to Neogaea, where they date 
from the Santa Cruz epoch. The vampire-bats, or Phyllostoma- 
tidae. are likewise peculiar to this realm, and are doubtless also 
endemic. With the exception of a few shr€w-micc, which have 
evidently entered from the north, continental Neogaea is at the 
present day devoid of Inseetivora. It is, however, very note- 
worthy that one peculiar family (Solenodontidae) of the order, 
apparently nearly allied to the Malagasy Centetidae (tenrecs), occurs 
In the West Indies, while the extinct NecroUstes, believed to be 
near akin to the African golden moles (Chryaoehloridae), m found 
in the Santa Cruz beds. Rodents of more or less peculiar types 
are highly characteristic of Neogaea and for the most part date 
from the Santa Crua epoch. Among these the Caviidae, Chin- 
chitlidae and Octodontidae are peculiar to this realm, while the 
Capromyidae are common to the Ethiopian region of Arctogaea, 
but are unknown elsewhere. 



Ungulates are in the main very poorly represented in Neogaea 
nd include only the llama group (guanaco, &c.), tapirs, and 
certain small or medium-sized deer related to North American 



types. Palaeontological evidence tells os that these, like certain 
peculiar genera of horses now extinct (such as Hippidinm) and 
mastodons, were comparatively recent intruders into the realm 
from the north. On the other hand, Neogaea at the date of the 
deposition of the Santa Cruz beds was the home of certain endemic 
groups of ungulates, such as the Toxodontia and Litopterna, some 
of the r e pr ese ntatives of which {Toxodon and Matrauckema) nourished 
during the Pleistocene Pampean epoch. 

Of the Carnivora, the civet group (Vtverridae) is absent, and the 
representatives of the dog tribe (Canidae), bears (Ursidae), of which 
there is only a single existing r epresentative, cats (Fehdae), and 
'■My raccoons (Procyonidae). must be regarded as intruders 



probab 
from tl 



from the north, although' several genera of the last-named group 
are peculiar to the area. In the Santa Cruz epoch the place of 
these modern specialized Carnivora was taken by marsupial-tike 
creodonts, such as Protkytocinns. 

In birds Neogaea is especially rich and contains more than a 
score of family croups unknown elsewhere. Several of these, such 
as the tyrant-birds (Tyrannidae). manakins (Pipridae), chatterers 

iCotingidae), ant-thrushes (Formicariidae), the oven-bird group 
DcndrocoUptkUe). plant-cutters(Phvtotomidae),and wren-thrushes 
Pteroptychidae), belong to a low and generalized type of the perch- 
ing, or passerine, group. Among the so-called piearian birds, 
which are likewise a generalized type, the big-billed toucans (Rhanv 
phasiidae). puff-birds (Bucconidae), jacamars (Galbulidae), motmots 
(Momotidac) . and the vast assemblage of hummuig-birds (Trochtlidac) 
•re in the main peculiar to this realm, although some of the last- 
named family wander to the northward in summer. The condors 
(Cathartidae), form a highly characteristic Neogaeic family; while 
the hoatrin (O*istkocomus) represents another. Of the higher 
forms of perching-birds the quit-quits (Coerebidae), greenlets 
fVireonidae), the hang-nests and many other representatives of the 
Icteridae, and the tanagers (Tanagridae) are exclusively Neogaeic; 
while crows, starlings, thrushes, warblers and flycatchers are 
either rare or wanting, although the finches are abundant. Parrots 
•re numerous, and represented by peculiar forms such as the macaws 
lAra) and conures or ordinary South American parrots (Conwus). 
Very characteristic of the realm, and unknown elsewhere are the 
curassows and jtuans (Craadae) among the game-birds, the chajas, 
or scr e ame rs (Pslamedeidae), the trumpeters (Psophiidae), sun- 
bitterns (Eurypygidae), and the seriema (Cariamidae). Allied 
apparently to the last is Phororhachos, a giant extinct bird from 
the Santa Cruz beds with a skull nearly as large as that of a pony. 
The tinamous (Tinamidae), possibly an annectant type be t ween 
game-birds and the ostrich croup, and the rheas or American 
o stifch es (Rheidae) are likewise exclusively Neogaeic. It may be 
added that the distribution of all the mem b er s of the ostrich group 
affords a strong argument in favour of a former union of the 
southern continents, especially as their earliest known rtp r tsen - 
tative is African. 

Among reptiles, the tortoises, with the exception of representa- 
tives of the terrestrial genus Testudo, an belong to the Pleurodira. 
and include several peculiar generic types such as Chdys (matamata) 
and one, Podoaumu, common to Madagascar. The occurrence in 
the Tertiary of Patagonia of a representative of Uiolania, else- 
where known only from the Pleistocene of Queensland, has been 
already mentioned. A number of snakes of the boa group (Boinae) 
occur in the realm, to which the genus Eutuctts (anacondas) is 
restricted; but Boa itself. like Podoatemis among the tortoises, is 



common to Neogaea and Madagascar. The. blind burrowing- 
snakes of the family Glauconiidae occur throughout the warmer 
parts of the realm, and are also found in Africa and south-western 
Asia. The caimans or South American alligators (Caiman) arc 
solely Ncogaean; the iguanas (Iguanidae) are mainly peculiar to 
the realm, although a lew inhabit North America, and there are 
two outlying genera in Madagascar and a third in Fiji. The tejus 

Sejidae) are wholly Neogaean. The Xantusiidae are exclusively 
ntral American and Antillean; while the Amphisbaenidae are 
practically restricted to Neogaea and Africa. On the other hand, 
Lacertidae, Varanidae and Agamidae are absent. Tailed amphi- 
bians are unknown south of Central America; but the region is 
the home of several peculiar types of toads, such as Pip* (Surinam 
toad) befonjringto an otherwise Ethiopian section, and the majority 
of the family Cystignathidae, as exemplified by the horned toad 
and the cacuerso (Ctratophrys), the remainder of the group being 
Australian. 

Freshwater fishes are very abundant in Neogaea, where they are 
represented by a number ofpeculiar generic and certain family 
types; some of the members have /developed the remarkable habit 
of feeding upon the floating fruits abundant in the rivers of the 
tropical forest-districts. 

The electric eels (Gymnotidae) are peculiar to the waters of 
Neogaea, as are certain other groups, such as the armoured cat- 
fishes (Loricariidae), while true cat-fishes (Sfluridac) are extremely 
abundant. Perhaps, however, the most remarkable feature of the 
fish-fauna of Neogaea is its affinity to that of the Ethiopian region. 
Among the lung-fishes the family Lepidosircnidae is, for example, 
restricted to the two areas, with one genus in each, as is also the 
family Characiniclae. Much the same may be said of the Cichlidae. 
which have, however, r ep r ese n tatives in the Malagasy and Oriental 
regions; and the Cypriitodontidae, which are extremely abundant 
in Neogaea (where certain of their representatives are separated by 
some naturalists as a distinct family. Poeciliidae) likewise present 
the same -general type of distribution, although their area includes 
the southern fringe- of the Palaearctk sub-region and a considerable 
portion of the Oriental region. 

As regards the past history of Neogaea, Professor Carl Eigen- 
mann, writing in the Popular Science Monthly toe June 1906, 
observes that " in the earliest Tertiary tropical America consisted 
of two land-areas, Archtguiana and Archamasonia, separated by 
the lower valley of the Amazon, which was still submerged. There 
was a land-mass, Hellcnis, between Africa and South America, 
possibly m contact with Guiana and some point in tropical Africa. 
This land-mass, which was inhabited, among other things, by fishes 
belonging to the families Lepidosirenida (lung-fishes). Poccifiidae. 
Charadnldae, Cichlidae and Siluridae (cat-fishes), sank beneath the 
surface of the ocean, forcing the fauna in two directions, towards 
Africa and towards South America, exterminating all types not 
moved to the east or to the west. From these two rudiments have 
developed the present diverse faunas of Africa and South America, 
each reinforcea by intrusions from the ocean and neighbouring 
land-areas, and by autochthonous development within its own 
border. . . . The connexion b e twe e n Africa and South America 
existed before the origin of present genera, and even before the 
origin of some of the present families and sub-families, some' time 
before the early Tertiary. There has never been any exchange 
between Africa and Soujh America since that time." 
. This connexion between Neogaea and Africa was doubtless a 
continuation of the old Jurassic equatorial land-belt to which 
allusion has been already made; freshwater fishes being probably 
a group of earlier radiation than mammals. Perhaps the distri- 
bution of the reptilian genera common to Neogaea and Madagascar 
may be explained in the same manner, although tortoises apparently 
identical with Podocnemu occur in the Eocene of Europe (as well 
as in that of Africa and India), so that this group may have radiated 
from the north. Whether the evidence of the Cystignathidae 
among the amphibians and of the extinct Mudania among chctonians 
is also evidence of the persistence of the Jurassic connexion be t wee n 
Neogaea and Notogaea till a considerably later epoch must, for the 
present, be left an open question. The distribution of other 
families of lizards is, however, not in favour of such a connexion, 
the Lacertidae and Agamidae being confined to the Old World, 
inclusive of Australia but exclusive of Madagascar, while the cosmo- 
politan Scinddae. so abundant in Notogaea, are ext r emely scarce 



Reverting to the mammalian fauna, its evidence, combined with 
that of geology, indicates that during the greater portion of the 
Tertiary period South America was isolated from North America, 
and Inhabited by its autochthonous fauna of monkeys, marmosets, 
sloths, ground-sloths, ant-eaters, armadillos, glyptodonts, toxodonts, 
macrauchenias (together with certain other peculiar ungulates), 
rodents, marsupials and creodonts. as well as by Phororhachos, 
rheas, tinamous and probably some of the other groups of birds 
now peculiar to the area. This state of things continued till the 
later Miocene or Pliocene epoch, during some portion of which a 
connexion was established with North America by way of the 
isthmus of Daricn. By means of this new land-bridge a certain 
proportion of the autochthonous fauna of Neogaea waa enabled 



ioo8 



ZOOLOGICAL DISTRIBUTION 



(TERRESTRIAL 



to effect an entrance into North America, as is exemplified by the 
occurrence there of ground-sloths and.glyptodonts. Simultaneously 
a large immigration of northern forms took place into Neogaea; 
these invaders from Arctogaca. including cat* and sabre-toothed 
tigers, bears, fox-like dogs, raccoons, llamas, horses, tapirs, deer, 
mastodons and perhaps opossums. While representatives of moot 
of these invaders have persisted to the present day, some groups, 
such as horses and mastodons, have entirely disappeared, as has 
also a large portion of the autochthonous fauna. Here it may be 
well to notice that the evidence for the insulation of Neogaea during 
a large portion of the Tertiary period docs not by any means rest 
only on that supplied by mammals. C. H. Gilbert and E. C. Stark*, 1 
for instance, in a work on the fishes of the two sides of the isthmus 
of Daricn, wrote as follows: — " The khthyological evidence is over- 
whelmingly in favour of the existence of a former open communica- 
tion between the two oceans, which must have become closed at a 
period sufficiently remote from the present to have permitted the 
specific differentiation of a very large majority of the forms 
involved. . . . All evidence concurs in fixing the date of that 
connexion at some time prior to the Pleistocene, probably in the 
early Miocene." This, it will be observed, agrees almost precisely 
with the conclusions drawn from the fossil mammalian faunas of 
North and South America, which indicate that land-communication 
between those two continents was interrupted during a consider- 
able portion of the Tertiary epoch, and only re-established (or [?] 
established for the first time; either towards the dose of the Miocene 
or the early part of the Pliocene epoch. 

The South American mammalian fauna, as we now know it, is, 
then, a complex, consisting of an original autochthonous element 
and of a large foreign infusion from the north. As to the origin 
of the latter, there is no difficulty; but some degree of obscurity 
still prevails with regard to the source of the autochthonous fauna. - 
According to Prof. Eigenmann's interpretation of the evidence of 
the fresh-water fishes the early Tertiary Atlantic " Hellenis " may 
have been in contact with Guiana on the one side and tropical 
Africa on the other. That such a connexion did really exist in 
Tertiary times is the conclusion reached by Dr C. W. Andrews, 1 
as the result of his studies of the Tertiary vertebrate fauna of the 
Fayum district of Egypt, as expressed in the following passage:— 
"Speaking generally, it appear? that (i) probably in Jurassic 
times Africa and South America formed a continuous land-mass; 
(2) in the Cretaceous period the sea encroached southwards over 
this land, forming what is now the South Atlantic. How far this 
depression had advanced southwards at the end of the Secondary 
period is not clear, but it appears certain that the final separation 
of the two continents did not take place till Eocene times, and 
that there may have been a chain of islands between the northern 
part of Africa and Brazil which persisted even till the Miocene." 

By this route, as was suggested considerably earlier by Prof. 
W. 6. Scott and subsequently by the present writer, Neogaea may 
have received a considerable portion of its autochthonous mammal- 
fauna. Further reference to this point is made later; but it may 
be added that the evidence of the land-faunas is supplemented by 
that of the shallow-water marine faunas on the two sides of the 
Atlantic, which present a striking similarity. 

In an address to the British Association at the meeting in 1905 
in South Africa Mr G. A. Boulenger expressed himself , nowever, 
as by no means satisfied with the evidence of a Tertiary connexion 
between Africa and South America. " It is undeniable," he 
observed, "that the hypothesis of a South Atlantic land-com- 
munication in the Eocene has much in its favour, and when this 
is really established, all difficulty in explaining the distribution of 
the Cichlidae will have disappeared. In the meanwhile ... we 
must not construct bridges without being sure of our points of 
attachment." in this connexion it may be mentioned that those 
who explain the distribution of certain forms of life by the former 
existence of a land-connexion between the southern continents by 
way of " Antarctica," have attached some importance to the exist- 
ence of fishes of the genus Calaxias in the freahwatcrs of New 
Zealand, Australia, South America and the Cape. This evidence 
has been shattered by Mr Boulengor's description (in a memoir of 
the fishes of the Congo) of a marine representative of the genus 
in question from the Southern Ocean. 

For the zoological subrcgions of Neogaea the reader must refer, 
as in the case of most, of the other regions, to special works on 
zoological distribution. 

As Arctogaca includes the whole of the rest of. the land-surface 
of the globe (with the exception of Antarctica) it b almost impossible 
AMtoMW9 . to give any general diagnosis even of its mammalian 
"""*- ' fauna. It may be mentioned, however, that at the 
present day monotrcrncs are wholly wanting, while marsupials arc 
represented only by one or two species of opossums (DuUlpkys) 
in North America and by cuscuses (Phalanjer) in the Austro- 
Malayan aubregion. The true or typical Edentata are, if we 
except late wanderers from Neogaea into North America, absent 
from this realm at the present date and during the Pleistocene; 
— 'irrence of a ground-sloth in the Pleistocene of 



Madagascar being probably due to a misinterpretation. On the 
other hand, this region, and more especially its eastern half, is the 
great home of the ungulate mammals. Indeed rhinoceroses may be 
considered absolutely characteristic of factoffpea, ««* at one time 
or another they have ranged over the whole area, except Mada- 
gascar, and are quite unknown elsewhere. The modem land 
Carnivora are likewise an essentially Arctogaeic group, which only 
found its way into Neogaea at a comparatively recent epoch ; and 
the realm may be said to have been the birthplace of most of the 
higher groups of placental mammals. The tortoises of the family 
Tnonycnidae form an exclusively Arctogaean group, once ranging 
all over the realm, although long since extinct in Europe. 

If Mada g asca r be excepted, the Ethiopian region (or Ethiopia) 
is the most distinct of all the regions of Arctogaca. So distinct 
is it that, on the evidence of the distribution oT moths, 
Dr H. S. Packard* has suggested that it should be sepa- 
rated from Arctogaca to form a realm by itself, under 
the name of Apogaea. The mammalian fauna* even exclusive of 
the Tertiary one of Egypt, docs not, however, countenance such a 
separation. By Sclater and Wallace, Madagascar was included in 
the Ethiopian region, but that island was subsequently made a 
region by itself by Dr Blanford. This separation of Madagascar 
to form a Malagasy region has met with general acceptance; but 
in the opinion of Mr K. I. Pocock, 4 who bases his conclusion on 
the distribution of trapdoor-spiders (which in other respects accords 
curiously well with that of mammals), it is not justified. The 
mammalian evidence appears, however, to be overwhelmingly 
strong in its favour; and it also receives support from reptilian 
distribution. Ail are agreed that the Ethiopian region should 
exclude that part of Africa which, lies, roughly speaking, north- 
ward of the tropic of Cancer. By Sclater and Wallace the 



in Academy, vol. iv. (1904). 
Tertiary Vertebrafa of the Pa 



Payum (London, 1906). 



ken to include that portion of Arabia lying to the south 
of the same tropic; but Mr Pocock 1 has pointed out that this 
separation of Arabia into two portions is not supported by the 
distribution of scorpions, and he would refer the whole of it to 
the Mediterranean transitional region. The occurrence of a tahr- 
goat (Uemilragus) in Oman lends some support to this proposal 
since that genus has no representative in Africa, and occurs else- 
where only in the Himalaya and the mountains ot southern India. 
Other writers have not accepted Mr Pocock's emendation; and 
the reference of the northern naif of Arabia to the Mediterranean 
and of the southern half to the Ethiopian region is usually followed. 
The area is admittedly a meeting-ground of at least two faunas. 
Discoveries in the Fayum district of Egypt have conclusively 

g roved that during the early (Eocene) part of the Tertiary period 
thiopia was a great centre of development, and subsequently of 
dispersal, instead of having received (as was formerly supposed) 
the whole of its higher modern mammalian fauna from the north. 
In this Ethiopian centre were developed the ancestors of the 
elephants (Proboscidca) and of the hyraxes (Hyracoidea); the 
latter group being represented by species of much larger size than 
the existing forms, some of the former of which ranged into southern 
Europe during the later Tertiary. It was also the home of a 
peculiar subordinal group of ungulates (Barypoda), typified by 
ArsinGUherium, and may likewise have been the birthplace of the 
swine (Suidae) as the earliest known representative of that group 
(Geniohyus) occurs in the Fayum Eocene. The hippopotamuses 
(Hippopotamidae), which appear to be descended from the Tertiary 
Antnracotheriidae, may likewise be of Ethiopian origin, and the 
same may turn out to be the case with the giraffe group (Ciraffidac) 
although definite evidence with regard to the latter point is wanting. 
The occurrence of an ostrich-like flightless bird in the Fayum 
Eocene— the oldest known representative of that group — is sugges- 
tive that the Ratitae. originated in Ethiopia, which would accord 
well with their distribution both in the present and the past. A 
giant land-tortoise (Testudo) is likewise known from the Fayum 
beds, and as it is allied to the species recently or still inhabiting 
Madagascar and the Mascarene islands, there is a strong probability 
that Ethiopian Africa was likewise the centre of development and 
dispersal of that group. 

Turning to its existing mammalian fauna, Ethiopia possesses a 
number of peculiar family or generic groups, and is also nearly 
equally well characterized by the absence of others. As remarked 
by Wallace, one of its characteristics is the great number of species 
of large size. Among the Primates, it is the home cf the typical 
group of the Negroid branch of the human specks, whose northern 
limits coincide approximately with the boundary of the region 
itself, being replaced in northern Africa by races of the Caucasian 
stock. Gorillas and chimpanzees (Antkrapopiikecvs) are peculiar 
to the region, as are also baboons (Papio and Tktropilhecus), if 
southern Arabia be included. Monkey* abound, and although in 
most cases nearly allied to chose of the Oriental region, are genencally 



1 Science, ser. 2, vol. xix. p. 221 (1904). Dr Packard groups 
Notogaea and Neogaea in a single realm under the name Antart* 
togaea. Some other writers, such as Dr H. Gadow, take Notogaea 
to include all the three southern continents, and employ the term 
Arctogaca for the rest of the world. 

*Proc. Zocl. Soc., London, 1903, pp. 340-368. 
M (l894) r 



1 Natural Science, vol. iv., pp. 353-3*4 \ 



TEXXESTMAL) 

distinct. TlieiVodMi^orle«W8«^tiidwtethef*l^o«((Waf9) 
and potto* (PiroSdctieus), of which the latter are akin to the Oriental 
lorbes, white the former are quite distinct from the Malagasy 
femurs. Among the Carnivore, the aard-wolf (ProUUt), the 
hunting-doe; (Lycaon) and the long-eared fox (Qtocyon) are peculiar 
generic types, as are several forme of mongooses (Herjacstinae) ; 
while the spotted hyaena form* a subgenus by itself. The bear- 
family (Ureidae), on the other hand, is totally absent. In the 



ZOOLOGICAL DISTRIBUTION 



1009 



great ungulate order the African elephant is widely sundered from 
its Asiatic cousin, ae are the two species of rhinoceros from their 
rep res en tatives in the Oriental region; indeed each group b sub- 



sjenericnlly distinct. The hyraxes, forming the 



Hyra- 



coidea, are, with the exception of a single outlying Syrian specie 
. «^_. - ^ ..^ 1 are lifcewu 



to Ethiopia. Zebra* and true wild 
to the region. More remarkable is the extraordinary 
' of peculiar genera of antelopes, a few of which range, 
mwvvcr, into North Africa, Syria and Arabia; the African 
buffaloes are markedly different from those of Asia; and sheep 
and goats are absent from the region, with the exception of intruding 
into it to some extent in the mountains of the Sudan and Abyssinia. 
The giraffe-family (Giraffidae), as represented by giraffes (Ciraffa) 
' (Occpia), b absolutely confined to tab region, from 
>tribe (Cervidae) b completely ah ~ * " 

are represented by the peculiar 

{or Hyompschus); in the pigs the wart-nogs iPL***.m>*ni, % .«i W 
hogs (Hjitduxrus), and the bush-pigs (subgenus Potamochoerus), 



and the okapi i<kapi*) % , 

which the deer-tribe (Cervidae} b completely absent. 



Chevrotfiina, 
genus Dorcaiktrium 
'hacockoerm), forest- 



with the exception of one Malagasy species, are now unknown 
e ls ewhere , as are also hippopotam u s es . Rodents include a number 
of peculiar types, among which may be noticed the scaly-tailed 
squirreb (Anomaluridae), the jumping-hares {PedeUs), the strand- 
moles (Botbyergidae), the crested-rats (Lopkumjs), and the cane- 
rats (fkryorumys. or Aulacodus); the last being nearly allied to 
Sooth American forms, la the ln s ec t ivora, moles (Talpktae) are 
absent, the jumping-shrews (Macrascelididae) are solely African, 
although ranging north of the Sahara, while the golden moles 
(Cbrysocaferidae) and the Potamogalidae are exclusively Ethio- 
pian. Lastly, the ant-bears, or aard-varfcs (Orycteropodidae), 
mpmamat a suborder of the Edentata unknown elsewhere; while 
the African pangolins (Manidae) differ markedly from their Oriental 

The Ethiopian birds are less peculiar. The ostrich {StnUkio) 
ranges, in suitable localities, all over the region, thus entering 
the Mediterranean tiansition-regioQ in the north. The guinea- 
fowls (Numidinae) form a subfamily confined to Ethiopia and 
Madagascar, where true pheasants are unknown. Other peculiar 
types are plantain-eaters (Musophagidae), colics (Coliidae). wood- 
hoopoes (frrboridae), barbets (Megataemidae), ground-hornbiUs 
(Bkcotiu); sscretary-birds (Serpentarndae), glossy starlings (Lam- 
prvtontis), oa-peckers (3«pMfa), the genera Lamaritu and Tclt- 
pkorus, as well as a number of others, all of which are unknown 
in Madagascar, la addition to true pheasants, wrens (Trogtodyt- 
idae) and water-ousels (Cinclidae) are unknown in the Ethiopian 

Apart from the widespread Trionycboidea (of which there are 
two genera peculiar to the region), the Ethiopian fresh-water 
inrtnbri belong to the section Pleurodira; the two genera Pdo- 
and Sttmotkatrus being common to Africa and Madagascar, 
The Amphisbeenldae are common to 



Neogaea and Ethiopia, to the exclusion of Madagascar; but the 
Gerrnceauridae and Zonuridae, on the other hand, are restricted to 
toe present region and Madagascar, which also form the head- 
Matters of chameleons. In contrast to the latter community b 
die absence in Madagascar of Agamidae and Varanidae, which are 
common in Ethiopia. The absence of slow-worms and their kindred 
(Angutdae) b a marked negative feature of the present region. 
As regards batrachians, the region has no salamanders or other 
tailed forms, but, in common with India, posse s se s caectlbns 
(Apoda); while it shares the group of toogueieas toads (Agtosea) 
with Neogaea, its peculiar family being the Xen op odidae. in contra- 
distinction to the South American Pipidae. The PelobatSdae are 
absent, and true toads are few, but frogs are abundant. 
Among fishes, Africa south of the Sahara poss es se s a number of 
™"~*- " ** -*- — the posse 



pecahar 'types. With Neogaea it shares the poss e ssion of the 
typical king-fishes (Lepklosirenidae), while it b the habitat of the 
species of bkhir (PoiypUms) and Cclamoichtkys, the sole survivors 
of the aacbnt group of fringe-finned ganoids (Crossopterygii). 
The other families peculiar to Ethiopia are the Mormyridae (pro- 
boscb-fishes), PantodontkJae, and Phractolaemidae: the two latter 
being represented only by a single species each. The Notopteridae, 
OphiocephaHdae, Anabantidae, Osphromenklae and Mastacembe- 
Kdae am common to Ethiopia and the Oriental region. In addition 
to the Lepidosfamidae, the Cbaracinidee are peculiar to this region 
and Neogaea. The Cichfidae occur in Madagascar, Ethiopia, the 
Oriental region and Neogaea; and the Osttoglossidae are common 
to the last three of these regions, as well as Australia, while the 
are Ethiopian, Oriental and Neotropical. On the 
:be affinities of the fish-fauna of Ethiopia ere nearest to 

of the Oriental region, and, secondly, to that of South 

America. 
Although invertebrates do not come within the scope of the 



v article, it may be mentioned that Ethiopia b remarkable 

for the total absence of fresh-water cray-fishes. 

Aa regards its past history, Ethiopian Africa was in connexion 
with India during the Triasnc and Jurassic periods, the two areas 
collectively forming *' Gondwanalana," which doubtless constituted 
a portion of the equatorial land-belt referred to as existing during 
the epochs in question. Gondwanaland was the home of a large 
section of the anomodortt reptiles from which mammab have 
sprung; and it b quite probable that the evolution of the latter 
group took place within the pre s e n t area. Between the Trias 
and the Eocene little or nothing b known of the vertebrate palae- 
ontofogy of Ethiopia; 1 and in Egypt there is also a long gap 
b et w e en the lower Miocene and certain Pliocene beds in the Wadi 
Natrun. The Tertiary deposits of southern Europe and northern 
India indicate, however, that Ethiopian Africa was in free communi- 
cation with these countries during the upper Miocene and Pliocene 
epochs. There occur, for instance, either in south-eastern Asia or 
southern Europe, or both, during the latter period numerous genera of 
antelopes now restricted to Ethiopia, as well as giraffes, okapi-like 
ruminants (PalaeotragHs), elephants and rhinoceroses of an African 
type, probably zebras, hippopotamuses, baboons, chimpanzees and 
ostriches. Owing to imperfect knowledge of Pliocene Africa, it b 
impossible to say whether these types were first developed in 
Ethiopia or to the north-east, and consequently whether or not 
Professor Huxley was right in his theory that the modern higher 
mammalian fauna of Ethiopia came from the north. It has, how- 
ever, been suggested that while the Bovidae are an autochthonous 
Ethiopian group, the Cervidae originated in either the Holarctic 
or the Oriental region; a theory which if confirmed will materially 
aid in explaining the absence of the latter group from Ethiopia. 
It b supported to some extent by the fact that we are acquainted 
with primitive ancestral deer in the European Tertiary. whDe the 
ancestors of the Bovidae are at present unknown, whatever be' 
the truth 00 thb. point, it b manifest that whether the middle 
Tertiary Bovidae migrated from Ethiopia to Asia or in the opposite 
direction, there must have been some cause which barred the 
entrance by the same route into the latter area of all members 
of the deer-tribe (as well as bears). It should be added that 
although the ancestral Proboscidea were Ethiopian, the passage 
from the mastodons into the true elephants appears to have taken 
place in Aria; a circumstance which would imply the Asiatic 
origin of the African elephant. 

The evidence in favour of the continuation of the Mesosoie land- 
bridge between Ethiopia and Neogaea has been discussed under 
the heading of the latter area. If the arguments in favour of 
such a connexion are valid, it b to the old mammal fauna xA 
Ethiopia that we must probably look for the progenitors of the 
Santa Crux fauna of Patagonia. Very noteworthy b the alleged 
occurrence of remains of primitive armadillos in the OCgocene beds 



of the entire Edentate order. 

In the case of an bland lying so dose to the African continent 
as does Madagascar the natural expectation would be that its 
fauna should be intimately related to that of the former. 
As a matter of fart— in the case of mammals and birds, 
at any rate— it b much more distinct from the Ethiopian "• — 
fauna than b the latter from the fauna of either the Oriental or 
the Holarctic region. The evidence— from the above-mentioned 
groups— in favour of recognizing a distinct Malagasy region b ift 
fact positively overwhelming, while it b also supported in some 
degree by the distribution 01 groups other than those named. In 
place of the Ethiopian assemblage of apes, monkeys, baboons, 
galagos and pottos. Madagascar (together with the Comoro islands) 
possesses an absolutely unique fauna of lemurs, constituting the 
family Lemuridae, which, as now understood, b confined to thb 
bland, where it is represented by the three subfamily-groups of 
sifakas (Indrisinae), true lemurs (Lemurinae), and aye-ayes (Chiro- 
myinae). All these animals agree with one another in the char- 
acters of the tympanic region of the skull; thereby differing from 
the African and Oriental Prosimbe, but agreeing with the European 
Oligocene Adapts, which must apparently be regarded as the ances- 
tral form. Thb is a striking confirmation of the theory advanced 
many years ago by Huxley that Madagascar received its lemuroid 
fauna from Europe at a very early date, since which time, at any 
rate, it has been isolated from Africa. Some of the Pleistocene 
Malagasy lemurs were much larger than any of the living forms, 
rivalling in this respect a chimpanzee. The Carnivore are repre- 
sented only by a small number of species, mostly referable to 
peculiar genera, of Viverridae, among which the fossa (Crypto 
procta) b the largest. In the ungulates there are only two extinct 
species of hippopotamus and a living bush-pig, the ancestors of all 
three of which probably crossed the Mozambique channel by swim- 
ming; and Edentata are equally conspicuous by their absence, 
lnsectivora, on the other hand, are represented by the tearecs 
(Ccntetidac). with numerous generic types, whose nearest relatives 



1 The fossus of the Uheohage beds, now generally classed as 
Jurassic, consist chiefly of invertebrates and plants. 



IOIO 

appear to be the west Indian •oleoodons. The bats are likewise 
different from those of the mainland; a notable feature being the 
occurrence of flying-foxes of the Asiatic and Australian genus 
Pleropus. Of the countless rodents of Africa, all are wanting; 
while the only members of that group inhabiting the island are 
certain rat-like animals collectively constituting the family Neso- 

The birds are scarcely less remarkable than the mammals, such 
common Ethiopian types as the ostrich, secretary-bird, honey- 
guides (Indicator), wood-hoopoes, ground-kornbiUs, ox-peckers, 
barbcts and glossy starlings being entirely unknown. On the 
other hand, the Malagasy region, inclusive of the Mascarene islands, 
comprises quite a number of distinctive bird-genera, such as Mesiles, 
TyUu. Artamia, Calicalicus, Euryuros, PkiUpitta, Atdornis and 
Leptosomus; the first of these representing a peculiar family of 
game-birds, while the last, including only the kirombo, forms a 
subfamily of rollers (Coraciidae). In the Pleistocene the ostrich 
group was represented by various species of Aeppomis t probably 
the original of the legendary roc; while within historic times 
Mauritius and Reunion were the respective homes of the two species 
of dodo (Didus), and Rodriguez was inhabited by the solitaire 
{Paophaps), the three constituting the family Dididae. m The 
guinea-fowls, on the contrary, form a group common to the Ethiopian 
and Malagasy regions and are unknown elsewhere. 

Many of the features of the reptilian fauna are alluded to under 
the headings of Neogaea and the Ethiopian region. Among lizards, 
the absence of Agamidae, Veranidae. Lacertidae, Amphisbaenidae 
and Anguidae is very remarkable, since all these except the last 
are Ethiopian. In addition, Madagascar possesses, apart from the 
cosmopolitan slrinks and geckos, only Gerrhosauridie, Zonuridae 
and chameleons (Chamaeleontidae), which are essentially African 
groups. Affinity with Neogaea is indicated by the presence of a 
few iguanas, of snakes of the boa group (especially the genus Boa), 
and of Podocnemis among the tortoises. The other plcurodiraa 
tortoises are, however, of an Ethiopian type. The same may 
perhaps be said with regard to the giant land-tortoises of the genus 
Testuaa, which in Pleistocene or modern times were spread over 
all the islands of the region, while they existed in Africa in the 
Eocene, as well as id India in the Pliocene. The spider-tortoise 



ZOOLOGICAL DISTRIBUTION 



(Raainae). among them the (Mental genus Kkacophorus. Of fishes, 
the peculiar Ethiopian types are absent from the present region, 
although the community of the Cichlidae to Neogaea and the 
Ethiopian, Malagasy and Oriental regions is noteworthy. It may 
be added that Madagascar differs from Ethiopia in possessing one 
fresh-water cray-fish, the representative of a genus by itself. 

The radical distinctness of the Malagasy fauna is thus demon- 
strated from all sides. That the island has been separated from 
Ethiopia during the greater portion of the Tertiary period is self- 
evident. The interpretation of its relationships with other regions 
is, however, exceedingly difficult. It is generally considered that 
the Comoro and Seychclle groups mark the line of a former con- 
nexion between Madagascar and India, and also with South Africa; 
but it is evident that this line must have been closed to the passage 
of mammals since a very remote date, as is exemplified by the 
fact that the lorises of Ceylon and southern India are quite distinct 
from the Malagasy lemurs, and much nearer to the African pottos. 
Whether the occurrence of South American types of reptiles (boas, 
Podocnemis, and iguanas) in Madagascar and not in Africa can be 
held to indicate a late connexion with Neogaea by way of the 
Pacific, cannot yet be decided. The occurrence of iguanas in Fiji 
is, however, as noteworthy as is the community of Miolania to 
Patagonia and Queensland. Moreover, Polynesia is evidently a 
subsiding area. In the opinion of Captain F. Hutton * the land- 
shells ofthe genus Endoaonta. which range all through Polynesia, 
New Zealand, eastern Australia, New Guinea and the Philippines, 
with an outlier in Ceylon, afford the best evidence in favour of a 
Polynesian continent, the Singhalese outlier pointing to the conclu- 
sion that this group of molluscs originally came from the north. 
The molluscan evidence will not, however, explain the South 
American connexion. 

Zoological evidence of the latter connexion, by way of Antarctica, 
Is afforded by the earthworms of the family Acanthodrilidae, which 
are unknown north of the equator, although their occurrence in 
Madagascar may point to a northern origin. Additional evidence 
of a connexion with Patagonia is afforded by the occurrence in the 
Tertiary strata of South America and New Zealand of a number of 
shallow-water marine invertebrates. Further, the occurrence of 
these forms in older strata in South America than in New Zealand 
suggests that the migration took place from the former to the 
latter area. 

The relatively small and wholly tropical or subtropical Oriental 
region was originally taken to include the Punjab; but in a memoir. 
of which an abstract appeared in the Proceedings of the Royal 
Society of London lor 1900 (vol. brvii. p. 484), Dr Blanford came 



1 Index Faunae Novoe-Zealandioe (London, 1904). 



[TERRESTRIAL 

to the conclusion that the Punjab differ* so remarkably in its 
fauna from the rest of India that it cannot be included in the 
Oriental region, and must be assigned to the Mediter- 
ranean transitional region. To the latter belongs also the 
Himalayan area above the forests, as does Tibet. India 
proper, together with Ceylon, is regarded as a single subdivision 
of the Oriental region, under the title of Cisgangetic, while the 
Himalaya and Burma form a second subregion. the Traosgangetic, 
which also includes southern China, Tonqiun, Siam and Cambodia. 
A third subregion, the Malayan, includes southern Tenaaserisn, the 
Malay Peninsula, and the Malay Archipelago exclusive of Celebes. 
In the map in the present article the last-named island is included 
in the present region, although, as stated, H is by preference referred 
to an Austro-Malay transitional region. Wallace drew the main 
line dividing the Oriental from the Australian region between the 
islands of Bali and Lombok, and between Borneo and Celebes': 
*' The strait (between Bali and Lombok] Is here fifteen miles wide, 
so that we may pass in two hours from one great division of the 
earth to another, differing as essentially in their animal life as 
Europe does from America. If we travel from Java or Borneo to 
Celebes or the Moluccas, the difference is still more striking." The 
hydrographic results obtained by the Dutch Stboea Expedition 
show, however, that although there exists a line of great depth 
separating the' two areas, this line on no point c wi esj i unds to 
" Wallace's line." On the contrary, to passes east of Timor and 
through the Banda and Molucca seas, separating Sola from Bum, 
Obi and Halmaheira, For this line which replaces ''Wallace's 
line," Dr A. Pelseneer has proposed the name of " Weber's tine." 
It is this " Weber's line " which marks the real division between 
the Arctogaeic and the Notogaetc faunas, although it has been 
convenient to make Celebes the centre of an intermediate transi- 
tional region. 

The Oriental region agrees with the Ethiopian in being Inhabited 
by elephants, rhinoceroses, buffaloes, several large representatives 
of the Felidae (among which the lion, leopard and hunting-leopard 
are common to the two areas), and numerous civets and mongoose*. 
The elephant and the three species of rhinoceros are, however, 
subsenerically distinct from their Ethiopian relatives, and the 



buffaloes are also widely different from those of Africa. Wild 
cattle (of the subgenus Bibos), as represented by the gaur and the 
bantin, are peculiar to this region; and, with the exception of 
gazelles, antelopes are poorly r e pres en ted, although the three, 
genera Antihpe (btackbuck), Tetracero* (chottsmgha), and Drag*. 
camelus (nilgai) are restricted to the area. Southern India has 
one tahr (Hemttragus) in its mountains, and this genus also occurs 
in the Himalaya, where serows {Nemorhaedus) &nd gcn\*{Urotrotus) 
—goat-like antelopes ranging through the Malay countries— are 
likewise met with. Deer (Cervidae) are abundant, and include 
three peculiar subgenera of Cervus, namely Rusa. Hydaptua and 
Rucerwus, to the exclusion of the typical red deer group. The 
typical Tragulus represents the chevrotains; and the pigs, unlike 
those of Ethiopia, belong to the typical section qI$ui. In addition 
to Neogaea, the Malay subregion is now the sole habitat pf tapirs 
(Tapiridae). A notable distinction from Ethiopia is the presence 
of bears, which are, however, distinct from the typical Ursus arctus 
group of the north. 1 Borneo and Sumatra form the home of the 
/c--..-.\ *v- —1- ,*-:— 1 :.„ ^ t heSimiidae, 

far west as the 

region, The monkeys are 

all genetically distinct from those of Ethiopia. The taraier repre- 
sents a family (Tarriidae) by itself; and the lorises a subfamily 
(Nycticebinae) peculiar to the forest-tracts. Fruit-bats of the genera 
Pteropus, RouseUus and Cyuopterus help to distinguish the region 
from Ethiopia; while among the Insectivora the tupais, or tree- 
shrews (Tupaikiae), with three genera, and the rat-shrews (Gym- 
nurinae), also with three generic modifications, are likewise solely 
Oriental The cobegos, or flying-lemurs (Galeopilkecus), represent 
an ordinal group (Dermoptera) peculiar to this region; while there 
are several distinctive genera of rodents, especially in the mountains 
of the Philippines, where some approximate closely to the Australian 
type represented by Hydronyt. 

Pangolins, of a type different from those of Ethiopia, alone repre- 
sent the Edentata, A striking feature of the mammalian fauna of 
the region is the presence of so many peculiar and probably archaic 
types in the Malay subregion, and the affinity of the fauna of this 
■area to that of western Africa. Both districts may be said to be 
highly conservative in the matter of their faunas. 

The birds are extremely abundant, and include a number of 
peculiar genera to which detailed reference is impossible. There is 
no representative of the ostrich group; and the place of guinea- 
fowls is taken by pea-fowl (Pavo) and argus-pheasants (Argusiano), 
while francolins (Fraucotinus) abound. Attention may be directed 
to the abundance of pheasants, pigeons, king-fishers, sunbirds, 
flycatchers and starlings. The babblers (Timeliidae) are especially 
numerous, the group allied to the hill-robin (jjiotkrix) being peculiar 
to the region, as are also the green bulbuls (Chloroptu). True 



orang-utan (Si'mia), the sole Oriental representative c 
while the gibbons (Hylobatidae), which range as f 
eastern Himalaya, are restricted to the region. Th 



•One member of this group has recently been des cri bed from 
the Shan States. 



ratXBsntiALi 

bolbob (Pyeaonotldae) ami king-crows f Dicruridae) are alao more 
abundant than elsewhere; while the broad-bills (Eurylaemidae) are 



ZOOLOGICAL DISTRIBUTION 



Among reptile*, the long-snouted crocodile* of the genera Canalis 
and Tomistoma are elsewhere unknown at the present day. The 
river-tortoises of the family Trionychidae have three peculiargenera • 
while the other fresh-water tortoises differ from those of Ethiopia 
in belonging to the section Cryptodira. of which there are a number 
of pecuhnr generic types. The family Platysterntdae is solely repre- 
sented by a tortoise confined to the Malay countries In the 
bxard* the family Anguidae is re p resen ted by one genus; Agamidae 
are very abundant: and include several types peculiar to the 
n, among which may be noticed the flying-dragons (Draco). 
___ neleons are rare. The burrowing-enakes of the genus Tjpklops 
are exceedingly numerous; the allied llysiidae are common to 
India and Neogaea; while the Uropeltidae are restricted to India 
and Ceylon. In the presence of pythons the region agrees, with 
Ethiopia, aa it does in poseessuij ■ »-- '• J "- J -* u 



and Ceylon. 

■•---- Messing 

Jlycephal . 

by ptt-vipers (Crotalinee), which form an exclusively Asiatic and 
American group Among the Amphibia, the region agrees with 
Ethiopia in possessing representatives of the limbless Ajpoda, but 
differs in the presen ce of frogs of the family Pelobatidae, while 
toads (Bufonidne) and true frogs (Raninae), especially those of 
he genus Rkacopkorus, are abundant. 
Of the fishes It must suffice to state that lung-fishes and ganoids 



: hing-fisl 
Jut the 



the genus Rhotopkorus, are abundant. 

Off the fishes it must suffice to start _ 

are absent, as are also Mormyridae. But the families Ophio- 
cephaKdae (serpent-heads) and RhynchobdeHidae (or Mastacem- 
belidae), which have a few African representatives, are abundant ; 
while the Cobittdae are a group unknown in Ethiopia. SiUiridae 
and Cyprinidae are common. 

Allusion has been already made to the presence of African forms 
of mammals in the Tertiary deposits of northern India (some of 
Which are, h owever, within the Mediterranean transition-region); 
and it may be added that remains of a baboon (Papio) and of a 
large pangolin allied to the west African species have been found 
in Madras. 

Few words most suffice for the Malayan transitional area, which 
► Celebes, the Moluccas, Ac; and has a fauna showing a 
blending of that of the Oriental with that of the Australian 
region.' While Celebes possesses a small buffalo allied 

to the Indian species, a monkey (Cynopilkecus), and a 

:. ^_ peculiar type of pig (Babiruut). it has also cusevses 
■•**•» {Pkalanter), while cassowaries cockatoos and other 
Notogaeic types occur in the area. A notable feature is also the 
absence of Cyprinidae (carps) from Celebes, although they are 
abundant in Borneo. 

The Mediterranean transition-region, the limitations of which 
are approximately shown en the map, must likewise be dismissed 

with brief notice; its fauna at the eastern end being 

••J""* intermediate between those of the Oriental and the 
""'fl Holarctic region, while in the west it serves as the 
*' m V m mm No-man's-land between the Holarctic and the Ethiopian 
•**■** faunas. The most distinct portion of the Mediterranean 
fauna is undoubtedly that of Tibet, where are such peculiar types 
I mammals aa the takin (Bndorcas), the chiru antelope (ran- 




tkaiaps), the yak, representing a subgenus of Bos, snub-nosed 
ntonfceye (RMinopithecus), the giant panda (Aduropns), and certain 
peculiar shrews {NeciapiU). 

Farther west the great mole-rat (Spatax), the rabbit (subgenus 
OryctoUgns) and the two species of fallow-deer (subgenus Dama), 
are very characteristic of the Mediterranean none, which is also 
the home of the addax antelope (Addax)Ahc Barbery sheep (sub- 
genus Antmctnpts), and numerous true sheep, wild goats and 
garefles. Oenadactytus, the gundi, is a characteristic North African 
genus of rodents. It is also noteworthy that with the Mediter- 
ranean tone we enter the domain of typical deer of the red deer 
group (Cere**}, and of bears of the brown bear group (Vrsns arctus). 
The wolf and the fox are also animals whose territory we reach 
on entering the Mediterranean cone, although neither of these, or 
the brown bear, are confined to this tract, or even to the Palae- 
arcric section of the Holarctic region. 

■» Reference to many other animals of the Mediterranean tract 
will be found under the heading of the Pabearetic subregion. 

The Holarctic region, which c om pr is e s the whole of the land 
lying northward of the- Mediterranean transitional aone in the 
__ . . .. eastern, and north of the Sonoran aone in the western 
■***'* » hemisphere, is the largest of all the aoologicat provinces 
****** of the globe. The whole territory is extra-tropical, and 
It is inhabited at the present day neither by monotremes, mar- 
supials, edentates, lemurs nor monkeys, although representatives 
of the three latter occur in portions of the Mediterranean transi- 
tional region. The types common to the eastern and western 
halves of this region are to be met with on the two sides of the 
noilhe rn Pacific, and it is evident that the main communication 
took place by way of Bering Strait, although It has been suggested 
that there was also a brad-bridge connecting the European continent 
with Iceland, and thus with Greenland. 

Among characteristic groups of m a mmals common to the two 



10 1 1 

halves of the Homrctic region (or in some instances of portions of 
the adjacent transitional nones to the southward) the following 
may be mentioned: elk (Aices), reindeer (Jtowftfsr), wapiti (Cerwut 
canadensis and its Asiatic re p resen tatives), bason (subgenus Bisom^ 
bighorn sheep {Otis canadensis and its re p resen tatives in north* 
eastern Asia), musk-ox (Ovibos), now extinct in the eastern hemi- 
sphere, glutton or wolverine (unto), brown bear (Untu orchis and 
its representatives in north-east Asia and America), lynx (Asia 
lynx), wolf {Cants lupms) t fox (C 9uip*s), pine-marten (Jfsisfek 
marUs and the allied American form), ermine and weasel (Pa/ortsuK 
variable hare (Lepus tmidux and its relatives), okas (Ockotanoi or 
lagest yjlbeavers (Castor), marmots {A rctomys), chipmunks (Tamias), 
iks (SpermopkUns, or CitdUus), jumpmg-nuce (Zapus), f 



£&$. . . ... 

or votes (Mtcretus, or Arvicoto), lemmings (Lemmus and Dicro- 
storiyx), mole-shrews (Uratrickus), 1 and several genera of bats. To 
these may be added, as more exclusively arctic forma* the polar 
bear (Ursus mariiimus), and the arctic fox (Cants logopm). There 
are likewise many groups or species of birds common to the two 
divisions of the region. Among reptiles, the pond-tortoises of the 

Emus Emys, if we include their Pleistocene -range, are an essentially 
olarctic (and Mediterranean-Sonoran) group. In r 
fishes, the whole area is characterised by the abundance of a 



(Adpenseridae), carps (Cyprinidae), pike (EsocJdae), and the i 



Further testimony in favour of the unity of the Holarctic region 
is afforded by the p reatnee on the two sides of the Pacific (and 
in most cases nowhere else) of true alligators (Alligator), giant 
salamanders (Cryptobranckus and Megalobalrnikus, really sc a rcel y 
worthy of separation), and shovel-beaked sturgeons (Scapktrkymckus). 
Again, it is highly probable that Pere David T s deer of Central Asia, 
alone representing the genus Elaphurus, is akin to the fork-antlered 
deer, Mazama, of North America: and many other analogous 
instances might be quoted. Finally, the distribution of earth* 
worms affords the strongest confirmation of the view that the two 
halves of the Holarctic region form but a single zoological province, 
with the Mediterranean and Sonoran cones as transitional appen- 
dages. 

In briefly reviewing some of the chief faunistic areas of the 
PaJaearetk, as distinct from the Nearctic, subregion, it will be 
convenient to include some of the groups and species ^_._. 
inhabiting the transitional Mediterranean aone, much of y M ** *, . 
which is in reality only a portion of the Palaearctic sub- T n . rm m 
region. Distinctive of the area in this wider sense are n * mm ' 
a number of wild sheep, such as Ons musman, gniefun, ommm, 
poti, Ac, which have no representatives on the other aide of Bering 
Strait, as well as wild goats, like Cmfra kircusaegagrns^ C. ibex, 
and C. sibirica, belongii . . ~. . .. 

The saiga antelope (SaifL, , _. , .. 

be regarded as Palaearctic (in the. sense of Old World) types; aa 
are also wild horses (Eanus cabalius prwewahkii), and the kiang 
(E. hemumus) and onager (B. kemipjms), the two latter being 
commonly termed wild asses, although widely different from the 
African animals properly KveaUed. There are also many peculiar 
types of deer, inclusive of the red deer {Cenms etaphns), Pere 
David's deer (Elapkurms), the roe-deer (Capreolus), and the musk* 
deer (Moschut); while the Chinese water-deer (Hydrdapkw) is 
one of the characteristic forms from the Mediterranean cone. 
Camels {CamdusS are a type quite unknown east of Bering Sea. 
Among the Camivora, reference may be made to the raccoon-dog 
(NyclerenUs), the panda (Act urns), now a Himalayan and Chinese 
type, but occurring in the later Tertiary of England and the con- 
tinent, and the tiger (Felts Herts); the last being essentially a 
Siberian and Mongolian animal which only reached India at a 



sibirica, belonging to an exclusively Old World genus. 
_ . .__ ""ujafand the chamois (Rnpicopra) may also 



comparatively recent date, and never penetrated to Ceylon. 
Badgers (Melts) are unknown in the Nearctic region. In the 
Insectivora the water-shrew (Neamvs or Crctsopus) is exclusively 
Palaearctic, as is the allied Diptomesedon, while the desmans 
(Myofak), although a Mediterranean type, are solely Old World. 
Among the rodents, reference may be made to the Old World 
family of the dormice (Gliridae or Myoxidae). of which the genera 
Cits and Mnscardinus are restricted to the area; as are the hamsters 
(Cricetus) and zokors (EUobius and Sipkneus) in the Muridae. and 
EuckortuUs, Alaelaga, and Plaiycercomys in the jerboa-group 
(Jaculidae, or Dipodidae). Smtnlkns is another characteristic 
Palaearctic (and Mediterranean) rodent. To continue the list 
wouM merely be wearisome, without any compe n sating advantage; 
but it may be added that there are a number of characteristic 
extinct forms, among the most notable of the latter of which are 
the aurochs or wild bull (Bos taunts pnmigmitu) and the giant 
Irish deer (Cervus [Megaceros] ptanteus). 

Of the remaining groups of vertebrates characteristic of thss 
subregion space admits of but scant mention. Among , 
and more or less characteristic birds, reference may be 
thrushes, warblers, jays, magpies, buntings, sparrows, and (in the 
eastern part of the Mediterranean aone) pheasants, pratincoles. 



'The American form is often 
this does not affect the relationship 



separat 
> of the 



ted as Neurptrkkus, but 



NitrvOc 



possibly serve to connect the white goat and ' 
the serow and the takin of the Old World. 



IOI2 

coursers (Clareoltdae), and bustards (Otididae), of which there am 
numerous genera confined to the area. The two families last 
named, together with that of the Panuridae (represented by the 
bearded tit), being" solely Old World, are of themselves sufficient 
to distinguish the Palaearctic from the Nearctic fauna. 

Of reptiles there is not much to be said, the Palaearctic subregion, 
in its restricted sense, being characterized by the poverty of its 
fauna, several of the widely spread families of the Old World, such 
as the Varanidae and Agamidae, stopping short of its southern 
limits. Among batjachians, the tailed salamanders are common 
in this and the Mediterranean region (as in the northern hemi- 
sphere generally), the genera Salamandra and Chioglassa, as well 
as the frogs and toads of the genera AlyUs and Pelobates, being 
unknown in the Nearctic subregion, whue newts (Motge) abound 
in the Palaearctic and are rare in the Nearctic subregion. The 
ohn (Proteus) is a native of the Mediterranean rather than the 
proper Palaearctic area. 

As regards fishes, the subregion differs from the Nearctic province 
by the absence of bony-pike (Lepidosteidae), bow-Ens (Amiidae), 
and the family Catostomatidae, as typified by the " suckers/' " red 

u ii an( j •• stone . ro || ers •• ^ t he genus Catostomus, and the 

t of loaches (Cobitidae) and barbels (Bar bus). 

As compared with the Palaearqtic (and Mediterranean) province 
of the Holarctic region the Nearctic subregion (together with the 
Sonoran transitional zone) is characterized by the extreme 
poverty of its fauna of hollow-horned ruminants. Of 
these the bison is genetically (andsubgeuericaUy) identical 
with its European relative, while the musk-ox can scarcely be 
regarded as a distinctive Nearctic type, seeing that it is only since 
the Pleistocene epoch that it has ceased to be a denizen of northern 
Europe and Asia. The only other living members of the group 
are the bighorn sheep (Oris canadensis), which has representatives 
in Kamchatka and north-eastern Siberia, and the white, or Rocky 
Mountain goat (Oreamnus. or Hophceros), which is a peculiar type. 
All must be regarded as originally immigrants from Europe; and 
it is noteworthy that In the Nearctic Pleistocene are several extinct 
types of musk-oxen, together with certain other genera which may 
"' ' '* "' " wd the musk-ox with 

The deer (Cervidae), 

yut from the three Old World types alluded to under the heading 
the Holarctic region, are altogether peculiar types referable to 
the genus Mamma (subgenus Dorcetaphus, Cariacus or Odocoileus), 
but they may be akin to the Asiatic Elaphurus, and the group » 
certainly of Old World origin. The same may be said of the bears 
(Urridae), in which the black bear (Ursus americanus) is a peculiar 
species, although probably allied to the Himalayan U. torquatus. 
In the brown bear group (U. arctus) it is noteworthy that while 
the Alaskan forms are very close to those inhabiting Kamchatka 
and Amurland, the Rocky Mountain grizzly, which has penetrated 
farther into the continent, is more distinct. The grey-fox (subgenus 
Urocyon) is a characteristic Nearctic type. Among other groups 
of mammals, the following generic groups distinguish the Nearctic 
from the Palaearctic subregion, although some of them enter the 
Sonoran area. In the Insectivora we nave Marina, Scalofs and 
Seapanus; in the Carnivora Procyon among the raccoons, Mephitis 
among the skunks, and Taxidea among the badgers. Cynomys 
(" prairie-dog ") is a characteristic rodent; and in the same order 
a very important feature is the replacement of all the true rats 
and mice (Murinae) of the Old World by the deer-mice and their 
allies belonging to the subfamily Cricetlnae, which is but poorly 
represented in the Old World. Peromyscus is a very characteristic 
Nearctic genus, although it has an analogue in the Old World in 
the form of the single representative of the Persian Calomyscus. 
The wood-rats of the genus Neotoma and the musquash (Fiber) 
are characteristic Nearctic types of the vole-group. More important 
b the family Haplodontidae, represented only by the sewellels 
(Haplodvn, or Aplodon), all the members of which are exclusively 
North American, although some are Sonoran. The pocket-gophers 
(Geomyidae) and kangaroo-rats (Heteromyidae) are also solely 
American, though more developed in the Sonoran than in the 
Nearctic area; Geomys and Thomomyt in the former and Peso- 
gnatkut in the latter family are, however, found in the Nearctic 
area. Lastly, among the rodents, we have the Canadian porcupine 
(Eritkison), typifying the New World family Erithizontidae. Among 
bats it must suffice to state that the genus Lasiurus (Atalapha) 
a solely North American. 

Reference to the Tertiary mammal-faunas of North America 
must be of the briefest. It may be mentioned that even in the 
Pleistoceoe these display a much greater development of large 
forms than occurs at the present day; while a notable feature 
at this epoch is the mingling of Arctogaeic and Neogaeic types, 
as exemplified by the occurrence of elephants and mastodons 
alongside of ground-sloths (Megaknyx and Mylodon). In the 
Pliocene and Miocene, the fauna was more of an Old World type, 
including a great development of camels (Tylopoda), horses (Equidae), 
rhinoceroses (Rhinocerotidae), mastodons, &c., but also a number 
of peculiar types, such as the ruminating oreodonts (Oreodontidae, 
or Merycodidae), the perissodaetyle Titanotheriidae, and the more 
generalised Uintatheriidae, which typify a aubordinal ungulate group 



ZOOLOGICAL DISTRIBUTION 



[TERRESTRIAL 

by themselves. It has been suggested that some of the more 
widely spread of these groups, such as the camels and horse*, may 
have originated in the New World, but there seems at least an 
equal probability that Central Asia— or a land-area common to 
Asia and America — may have been their birthplace. 

The earliest Tertiary North American fauna is that of the lowest, 
or Puerco, Eocene, which includes a number of mammals of various 
types, some of the largest being of the approximate dimensions 
of a mastiff. Evidently the Puerco epoch was a period of great 
development and radiation on the part of mammals; Us fauna 
including primitive creodont Carnivora, amblypodous and condy- 
larthrous Ungulata, and a number of smaller types, some of which 
were probably related to the modern Rodentia, Insectivora and 
Primates. As only a foreshadowing of the Puerco mammals is 
found in the under upper Cretaceous Laramie beds, it has been 
suggested that the fauna was largely .of northern origin. 

By the middle of the Eocene period the more generalized types 
of the Puerco fauna had almost disappeared, although a few creo- 
donts survived till the OUgocene. ft n surmised that the low 
brain-capacity of the members of this fauna rendered them unfit 
to cope with the irruption of more highly organized mammals 
which suddenly appeared on the scene in the Lower Eocene; this 
new fauna, it u conjectured, may have developed from a tide-line 
of the original Puerco stock which had remained in the old northern 
home at the time of the earlier radiation. 

" Assuming that the Puerco mammals," observes Mr Madison 
Grant, 1 " were driven out of more northerly or boreal lands, where 
they had originally developed, by a declining temperature, it is 
conceivable that some animals remained behind and adjusted 
themselves to the changed conditions, until a still further increase 
of cold freed them also to follow the path of their predecessors, 
southward. 

"Some of these Lower Eocene types of this second radiation, 
which are found in the Wasatch beds of Wyoming;, have sent down 
lines of descendants, which have ultimately culminated in existing 
animals. At this time first appear the hones, tapirs, rhinoceroses, 
camels and dogs (or rather the ancestral stocks thereof). Some of 
these animals, such as the horses and rhinoceroses, are found con- 
temporaneously in Europe, others, like the (ancestral) camels, are 
peculiar to America (some of the later types have recently been 
discovered in Asial. 

"Being more highly organized and better adapted to their 
environment, these new types entirely supplanted the older fauna, 
and by the Oligocene this transformation was complete, and the 
older fauna had disappeared. This Wasatch fauna culminated, 
and then faded gradually away on this [American] continent, until 
in the Middle Pleistocene it was largely supplanted by arrivals 
from Asia." 

The relationship of the fauna to that of South America, and the 
interchanges which took place between the two during the Pleis- 
tocene and Pliocene epochs, have been already sufficiently discussed 
when treating of Neogaea. 

Of the birds of the Nearctic subregion and the adjacent Sonoran 
zone, there are a very large number of peculiar genera in the pas- 
serine order, a large proportion of which are referable to the finch- 
group (PringUlidae), and the American warblers (Mniotiltidae), the 
latter being solely a New World family; there are also a few 
stragglers from the Neogaeic family of tanagers (Tanagridae). 
Among game-birds the turkeys (Mcleagris), the ruffed grouse 
(Boitasa), the prairie-grouse (Tymfanuchus, or Cupidonia), the 
sage-cock (Cenlrocercus), the prairie-chicken (Pedtoecetes), and 
several genera of the American partridges (Odontophorioac), such 



distinguishing the Nearctic subregion (together with America 
generally) from the Palaearctic; in the more southern territories 
we also enter the domain of iguanas; while among chelomans we 
have the family of snappers (Chelydridae), the " stink-pot terrapins " 
(Cinosternidae), and in the Tcstuduiidae the box-tortoises (Ciiludo), 
and the terrapins of the genera Ckrysemys and Malaiodemmys arc 
solely American, although some of them range far to the south, 
while during the Pliocene the snappers were represented in Europe. 
There are several more or less peculiar types of North American 
amphibians, but since these are tor the roost part Sonoran in range, 
they may be best noticed in a later paragraph. 

From that of the Palaearctic (-f Mediterranean) subregion the fish- 
fauna of the Nearctic subregion (together with that of at least 
much of the Sonoran area) is broadly distinguished by the pr es en ce 
of bony-pike (Lepidosteidae), bow-fins (Amiidae), ana the members 
of the family Catostomatidae, for which there appears to be no 
collective English name, as well as by the absence of the loach 
family (Cobitidae), and barbels (Barbus) among the Cyprinidae. 

The last of the zoological provinces into which the land-surface 
of the globe is divided on the evidence of the distribution of mammals 
and birds is the Sonoran, which, although often regarded as an 



1 " The Origin and Relationship of the Large Mammal* of North 
America." Ref\ Nev York Zoal. Sac (1904). p. 7. 



TEBSESTR1AL) 



ZOOLOGICAL DISTRIBUTION 



1013 



C 



independent region, U best ranked (on Prof. Mas Weber's scheme) 
as a transitional zone between the Nearctic subregion of the 
Holarctic region of Arctogaea, on the one hand, and 
Neogaea on the other. Its fauna is indeed essentially a 
9amm ^ mixture of Nearctic and Neotropical types (inclusive of 

k those originally indigenous to Neogaea and such as are 
properly immigrants from the north) together with a few more or 
less wholly endemic forms. Marsupials are represented by opossums 
(Diddpkjs), and armadillos by Taltma. Peccaries (DtcotyUs, or 
" Tagassu '*) make their appearance, but the fork>aatlered deer 
(Hksamo) are mainly of the northern type. The pronghorn 
antelope, representing the family Antilocapndae, may be regarded 
as mainly a Sonoran type; and the same may be said with regard to 
the pocket-gophers (Gcomyidac) and kangaroo-rats (Hcteromyidac), 
some of the genera of which arc peculiar to this area. Among 
cricetine rats, Rhithrodonlomyt, Sigmodon and Neofibtr are charac- 
teristically Sonoran. In the Carnivora the three genera of skunks. 
Mephitis, Conepctus and Spibiale are represented, as are the 
three raccoon genera Proeyon, Nasma and Bassariseus; the third 
in each case being mainly confined to this tone. ScaUps and 
Notiflsorex among the Insectivora arc almost exclusively Sonoran, 
while Blarino and Scapanus here attain their maximum develop- 
ment. 

Omitting all reference to birds, it may be mentioned that among 
reptiles the poisonous lizards (Hebdcrmatidae) and the chclonian 
family Deroiateraydidae, with two or three genera, are almost or 
quite exclusively Sonoran; while such southern types as iguanas 
become more numerous than in the north. The Mississippi alli- 

tor is also Sonoran, although with a congener in China. Among 
-utrachians the salamanders of the genera Cryptebranchui (if dis- 
tinct from the Old World Megalobatrackus), Ampkiuma, Typkto- 
moi&, Nedurus and Siren, together with Scaphiopus and certain 
other genera of the frogand toad groups, are exclusively American 
and mainly Sonoran. The axolotls, or tiger-salamanders (A mbly- 
stoma), are also a group attaining a great development in this zone, 
although also ranging to the northward, and likewise recurring in 
south-eastern Asia. 

So far as birds and mammals are concerned, the Antarctic con- 
tinent can scarcely represent a distinct zoological province: its 
j-tfMtffca. * aima consisting mainly of certain peculiar generic groups 
Ar" m ^"^> of ,^1, (which are at least as much inhabitants of the 
pack-ice as of the continent) together with a number of species of 
penguins— a group common to the extremities of the three great 
southern continents— and certain other birds. 

The zoological provinces already discussed are based on the 
present distribution of mammals and birds (see further Mammalia 
and Bird). The distribution of reptiles and batrachians, 
like that of fresh-water fishes, by no means accords with 
that indicated by mammals and birds, probably owing 
to the earlier radiation, or rather radiations, of the 
former groups, and different zoological provinces have 
been proposed to indicate their distribution, as is more fully recorded 
in the articles Batkachia and Reptiles. 

From the evidence of batrachian distribution Dr H. Gadow 
adopts the view that the world may be divided into a northern 
and a southern half, for the former of which the name Arctogaea 
a adopted, while Notogaea is used for the latter. It would, how- 
ever, be much better if entirely new terms were proposed, since 
the use of the former in a sense different from that in which they 
are now employed in the case of mammals is liable to create con- 
fusion. Notogaea, which (in this sense) includes Australia, Poly- 
nesia and the Neotropical region, is characterized by the presence 
of that famOy of frogs known as the Cystignathidae, combined with 
the preponderance of the section Arcifera, the representatives of 
which form nearly 90 per cent, of the Anura (frogs and toads') 
inhabiting this half of the globe. Arctogaca, on the other hand, 
is characterized by the absence of Cystignathidae, and is divisible 
into two main provinces, or regions, re s pec ti vely termed Periarctic 
and PalaeotropicaJ. Of these latter, the Penarctic province is 
characterized by the presence of salamanders and their allies 
fUrodela), which are indeed almost peculiar to the area. It 



divisible into the (1) Western Palaearctic, (2) Eastern Palaearctic 
and (3) Nearctic subregions, of which the first two approximately 
correspond to the Palaearctic subregion plus the Mediterranean 



transition-zone of the mammalian scheme, while the third repre- 
sents the combined Nearctic and Sonoran areas. The Palaeo- 
tropical region has few salamanders or newts; but possesses 
caecilians (Appda) which are wanting in the Periarctic; and 
includes the Ethiopian, Oriental, Malagasy and Austro-Malayan 
areas of the system based on mammalian distribution, together 
with Melanesia. Whether the region should be broken up into 
the four above-named divisions, or regarded as indivisible, may be 
a matter of opinion; but if such divisions be adopted, they have 
no approach to the corresponding mammalian areas, the OrMhtal 
tract not even possessing a peculiar subfamily. It is thus evident, 
as might have been expected, that the zoological provinces indi- 
cated try the distribution of batrachians are in no wise comparable 
to those based on mammalian evidence. 
As regards reptiles, Dr ML Gadow has remarked that since the 



various orders have come into existence at very di 

periods, and have each followed their own Kne of , 

scheme of zoological distribution can be formulated for the class 
as a whole. In the case of the crocodilian order little informa- 
tion of importance can be gathered from its present distribution, 
seeing that representatives of all the principal groups occur together 
in the older Tertiary deposits of Europe. It is, however, of some 
interest to note that caimans (Caiman) are restricted to Neogaea 
(ia the mammalian sense); while the long-snouted Gamalis and 
Tomxsloma are equally confined to the Oriental region. An impor- 
tant feature in the present distribution of chelonians is the restrict 
tion of the section Pleurodiia to the southern hemisphere (inclusive 
of all the three southern continents, as well as Madagascar), and 
thus in no wise corresponding to the " batrachian Notogaea." The 
value of this feature in chclonian distribution is to some extent 
discounted by the occurrence of Pleorodira in the northern hemi- 
sphere during the Eocene period. 

In regard to lizards (uuertiHa), Dr Gadow remarks that their 
distribution does not support the division of the land-areas of the 
globe into a northern and a southern half; the marked distinctness 
of the laccrtian fauna of the New from that of the Old World point- 
ing in the same direction. On the other band, lizards countenance 
the view " that the Palaeotropical region is but the tropical and 
therefore richer continuation of the now impoverished Palaearctic 
subregion." 

The present distribution of snakes, according to the same natu- 
ralist, indicates that the Ophidia arc a group of late radiation, while 
it further suggests that some of the divisions adopted in classifies* 
tion are not natural ones. Perhaps the most important fact is 
that the two families, Botdae (boas and pythons) and Typklopida* 
(blind buirowing-snakes), which alone retain vestiges of hind-ltmbs, 
occur all over the tropical zone, while certain allied families are 
found in portions of the same. The restriction of true vipers 
(Vipcrinae) to the Palaeotropical and Periarctic areas of the batra- 
chian distributional scheme is a noteworthy fact. The pit-vipers 
(Crotalinac), however, may perhaps be presumed to have originated 
in the Palaearctic area, whence they reached and spread all over 
America, although they were unable to enter either Africa or 
Australia. The absence of all venomous snakes (which abound in 
Africa and India) from Madaga s car, is a fact harmonizing with 
mammalian distribution, so far as the peculiarity of the fauna 
of that island is concerned. 

For a fuller account of the distribution of fishes, both fresh- 
water and marine, see Ichthyology ; here it will suffice to refer 
to a zoo-geographical scheme, based on the present, 
distribution of the freshwater families, adopted by illkm _- 
Dr A. C. L. G. Gunther. According to this scheme. JJJV; 
the land-surface of the earth is divided into three parallel ^T*" 
zones, the Northern, the Equatorial and the Southern. The SET 
Northern zone is characterized by the presence of sturgeons mM ** 
(Acipenseridae), the paucity of cat-fishes (Siluridac), and the abund- 
ance of carps (Cypriiudac), the salmon-tribe (Salraonidae), and 
pike (Esocidac). This zone falls naturally into an eastern and a 
western section. In the first, forming the Palaearctic, or Europe- 
Asiatic region, bony-pikes (Lepidostcidae) arc lacking, while loaches 
(Cobitidae) and barbels (fiarbus) abound. In the second section, 
constituting the Nearctic or North American region, bony-pikes, 
bow-fins {Amiidae), and the family Catostomatidac, all of which are 
unknown in the Palaearctic area, are present, while loaches and 
barbels are lacking. 

The Equatorial zone is divisible into two provinces, an Eastern, 
characterized by the presence of carps and of the family (Anaban- 
tidae) typified by the well-known " climbing-perch," and a Western 
province, in which these two groups are wanting. The Eastern 
province includes an Indian (Oriental) region, in which lung-fishes 
(Dipnoi) are absent, while serpent-heads (Ophiocephalidae), Masta- 
cembelidae and loaches are numerous; and an African (Ethiopian) 
region, distinguished by the presence of lung-fishes, bichirs (Crossop- 
terygii), and proboscis-fishes (Mormyridac), the abundance of 
chromids (Chromididae) and characinids (Characinidae), and the 
lack of loaches. The Western Equatorial province is likewise 
divisible into two regions, namely, a Tropical American (Neotropical), 
distinguished by the possession of lung-fishes and electric eels and 
the abundance of chromids and characinids, and a Tropical Pacific 
( Australian and Hawaiian) characterized by the presence of Dipnoi 
(widely different, however, from those of Africa and South America, 
which are nearly related), and the lack of chromids and characinids. 

Lastly, the Southern zone is characterized by the absence of 
carps and the scarcity of cat-fishes, while the salmon tribe is replaced 
by the Haplochitorudae and pike by the Galaxiidae (since this 
classification was p ro pose d a marine uataxias has been discovered). 
This none includes only a single (Antarctic) region, embracing 
Tasmania and the south-eastern point of Australia, New Zealand 
and Patagonia and Tierra del Fuego. 

It will be seen that the present distribution of fishes, although 
showing certain features in common, by no means accords as a 
whole with that of mammals. Indeed, k is suggestive of the 
period of the earth's history when there was an extensive and 
more or less continuous belt of equatorial land 



xoi4 



ZOOLOGICAL DISTRIBUTION 



(MARINE 



For the distribution of invertebrate animals generally, the reader 
may be referred to the articles dealing with the various groups 
of that assemblage. An exception must, however, be 
made with regard to that group of spiders known as 
the Mygalomorphae (which includes the trap-door spiders) 
on account of the remarkable general similarity presented 
by its distribution to that of mammals. According to Mr R. 1. 
Pbcock, 1 the distribution of this group justifies the mapping of the 
world into the following zoological regions: — (l) The Holarctic, 
including Europe north of the southern mountain-chains. North 
Asia, and North America north of about the 45th parallel of latitude, 
(a) The Mediterranean, including South Europe, Africa north of the 
Sahara and the desert-regions of south-western Asia, (3) The 
Sonoran, comprising the United States of America south of about 
the 45th parallel and the plateau of Mexico. (4) The Ethiopian, 
embracing Africa south of the Sahara, South Arabia and Mada- 
tr. The last-mentioned island ranks merely as. a subrcgion of 



the Ethiopian, (5) The Oriental, including India, Ceylon, Burma, 
Ssam, and all the Indo- and Austro-Malayan Islands to Australia; 
" Wallace's line " being non-existent so far as spiders are con- 
cerned. (6) The Australian, containing Australia and New Zea- 
land; the latter being worthy of recognition as a subregion. 
(7) The Neotropical, including Central America, apart from the 
Mexican plateau, the West Indies and South America. 

These spiders furnish, moreover, strong evidence in favour of a 
former union between Africa and South America, and of a con- 
nexion between the Afro-Mascarene and Austro-Zcalandian con- 
tinents on the one hand and Austro-Zealandta and the southern 
extremity of South America on the other. As regards the " regions, " 
apart from the greater divisions, or " realms, the distribution of 
these spiders accords with remarkable closeness to that of mammals, 
if we except the more intimate connexion indicated between the 
faunas of- Ethiopian Africa and Madagascar. 

The fact that the generally accepted scheme of division of 
the land-surface of the globe into Ecological regions is based 
almost entirely upon the present distribution of mammals and 
birds has already been emphasized. It is perhaps only fair to 
quote the views of Dr A. E. Ortmann* (who has devoted much 
study to the distribution of animals), although they by no 
means wholly commend themselves to the present writer: — 

" (1) Any division of the earth's surface into coo-geographical 
regions which starts exclusively from the present distribution of 
animals, without considering its origin, must be unsatisfactory, 
since always only certain cases can be taken in, while others remain 
outside of this scheme. (2) Considering the geological development 
of the distribution of animals, we must pronounce it impossible to 
create any scheme whatever that covers all cases. (3) Under these 
circumstances, it is incorrect to regard the creation of a scheme 
of animal distribution as an important feature or purpose of zoo- 
geographical research. " 

Dr Ortmann adds in a later paragraph, " the chief aim of 
sBo-geographical study consists— as in any other branch of 
biology— in the demonstration of its geological development." 

II. Marine Distribution 

That the fauna of the ocean, apart from the influence of 
temperature, would be much more uniform, and therefore less 
susceptible of being divided into zoological provinces, or regions, 
will be apparent from a glance at the map of the world on 
Mercator's projection, in which the fact that the three great 
oceans— -the Pacific, the Atlantic and the Indian—are in free 
communication with one another in the southern hemisphere 
is clearly brought out. There is, however, more than this; 
for there is evidence that during the early part of the Tertiary 
period the Pacific and the Atlantic were not separated by the 
isthmus of Darien; while there is a probability that the Medi- 
terranean was at one time in communication with the Red Sea, 
and that other connexions of a like nature have existed. 

In addition to this general community of the marine fauna 
of the world, there is the further important fact that such 
faunas may be divided into three main, and for the most part 
perfectly distinct, groups: namely, the littoral, or shallow water, 
fauna, the abyssal, or deep-sea, fauna, and the pelagic, or 
surface, fauna. Of these three the first alone is really suscep- 
tible of division into more or less ill-defined zoological regions, 
the other two being practically uniform in character. More- 

1 Proc. Zool. Soc., London, 1903, vol. i. p. 340. 
% Proc. Amer. Phil. Soc., xli. p. 167 (190a). 



over, these three faunas are for the most part perfectly well 
defined; the pelagic being very sharply sundered from the 
abyssal, although there may in certain, instances be a tendency 
for the littoral to merge locally into the abyssal. As regards 
the sharp demarcation between the pelagic and the abyssal 
faunas, an idea was formerly current that whales, which are 
essentially pelagic animals, when "sounding,'* descended to 
abyssal depths in the ocean. A moment's reflection will show 
the absurdity of such a supposition; for no surface-dwelling 
animal could possibly support the enormous pressure existing 
at great depths, which would crush in the body-cavities. Evi- 
dence of this is afforded by the fact that when fishes are brought 
to the surface from great depths their bodies are practically 
broken to pieces by the removal of the normal pressure, whue 
their scales start from the skin and the eyes from their sockets. 
The absolute darkness prevailing at great depths would be 
another bar to pelagic animals descending to the ocean abysses. 
We may accordingly regard the pelagic and the abyssal faunas 
as perfectly distinct and widely sundered from one another; 
as widely sundered in the case of some specks as axe beings 
living in three-dimension space fiom these (if such there be) 
inhabiting space of four or more dimensions. 

Modern research shows that invertebrates, and probably also 
fishes, live at the greatest depths that have yet been reached by 
the dredge, and the inference from this is that they 
occur everywhere. The general results of these explora- 
tions is indeed to show that the fauna of the ocean 
depths is much the same all the world over, and that identical 
species occur at points sundered as widely as possible from one 
another. The ocean floor, as has been well remarked, with its 
uniformity in the matter of temperature, food, station and general 
conditions of life, contains, in fact, no effectual barriers to the 
almost indefinite dispersal of species. 

The following general conclusions with regard to the deep-sea 
fauna were arrived at after working out the material and evidence 
obtained during the cruise of H.M.S, " Challenger " : — (1) Animal- 
life Is present at all depths On the ocean floor. (2) At extreme 
depths life is not nearly so abundant as at moderate depths; but 
since representatives of all classes of marine invertebrates are met 
with at all depths, this poverty probably depends more upon 
certain causes affecting the composition of the bottom deposits, 
and the degree to which the bottom-water is provided with chemical 
substances necessary for animals, rather than upon conditions 
immediately associated with depth. (3) There is reason to believe 
that the fauna of " blue water is chiefly restricted to two belts; 
one at or near the surface, and the other near the bottom, the 
intervening zone being more or less completely devoid of inhabitants. 
From the surface-zone a continual rain of organic debris is falling 
to the bottom, which, however, in the case ol the greatest depths 
may be completely dissolved in desrensu, (4) Although all the 
chief groups of invertebrates are represented in the abyssal fauna 
their relative proportions are unequal ; molluscs, crabs and annelids 
being, as a rule, scarce, while echinoderms and sponges predominate. 
(5) Depths below 500 fathoms are inhabited by a practically uniform 
fauna, the genera ocing usually cosmopolitan, although the species 
may differ, and be represented by allied forms in widely sundered 
areas. (6) The abyssal fauna, so far as invertebrates are con- 
cerned, is of an archaic type as compared with shallow-water 
faunas. (7) The most characteristic and archaic abyssal types seen 
to be most abundant and to attain their maximum dimensions in 
the southern ocean. (8) In general character the abyssal fauna 
approximates to that of shallower water in polar latitudes, doubt- 
less owing to the fact that the conditions of temperature, on which 
the distribution of marine animal life mainly depends, are nearly 
the same. 

In reference to the abundance of sponges in the deep-eca fauna, 
it may be mentioned that the calcareous jgroup is absent, and 
that among the siliceous section, the Hexactinellidae, of which the 
Venus flower-basket {EupkcteUa) and glass-rope sponge (Hvolonento) 
are familiar representatives, are exceedingly abundant; this group 
being likewise of great geological antiquity. Corals are spane 
and belong for the most part to the Turbinolidae. Echinodcnns 
are represented by all the existing ordinal groups; some of the 
crinoids. or stone-lilies, belong to the family Apiocrinidae. which 
attained its maximum development during the Jurassic epoch; 
and somewhat similar relationships are exhibited by certain of the 
brittle-stars (Ophiuroidea). Very noteworthy is the great develop- 
meaa of the sea-cucumber group (Holothuroidea). and likewise 
the bizarre forms assumed by some of its abyssal representatives. 
Molluscs, however, are poorly represented, ana it is not improbable 
that cephalopods (nautilus and cuttlefish group) are wanting. 
Bivalves of the genera Leda and Area have, however, been obtained 
from a depth of 16,000 ft. Lamp-shells (Brac hi opoda) are likewise 



MAWNEJ 



ZOOLOGICAL DISTRIBUTION 



1015 



jernosg oimniiiv esam n otrcrminsjuj >«««■ «*■»■ W i . p»— ■ 
fishes are dredged. Although many aperies display various struc* 
tural peculiartUts, oath a* a hat* head, or an at ten ua t ed ribbon- 
like body, while apcdal phosphorescent organs are very generally 
present, yet deep sea fishes as a whole do not represent an ordinal 
or sectional group by t hemselv es, but ase drawn from a number of 
femilirs. certain members of which have adapted themselves to an 
abyssal existence. A preponderance of represent atives of the 
families Macruridae, Ophkntdae and Scorpefidae is, however, notice- 
able. 

Whether light or temperature » the prepotent agency in regu- 
lating the limitations of the d ee p sea fauna, has long been a debated 
question. It may be noted that reef-building comb, which require 
an average temperature of from 70* to 75* F. and one which never 
falls below 68 , are never found below a depth of 20 fathoms 
(lao ft.). Nevertheless, there are several areas where a tempera- 
ture of from 70* to 77* obtains to depths of between 80 and 
mo fathoms. It is further remarkable that weU<haracterised 
datp arn faunas are locally met with in comparatively shallow 
waters, one such area occurring in the European Atlantic and a 
second in the Mediterranean, where they live within the 100-fathom 
zone. Light, which was* formerly supposed not to penetrate to a 
greater depth than the 40 to 50 fathom-line, has also been regarded 
as the chief agent controlling vertical distribution. It appears, 
er, as Prof. Heilprin has remarked. M more than likely that 
single cause, but a combination of causes, fa operative in 
ig about the general results. That the Jee p s ta fauna is a 



I darkness must be admitted; but this is so from the nature 

of the case rather than a matter of choice resting with the animals 

After referring tor the fact of the dissimilarity between the faunas 
of the two poles. Dr A. E. Ortmann, in a paper on the origin of the 
deep-sea fauna, 1 observes that we have reason to believe that each 
of these faunas had a separate origin. " the north-polar fauna being 
a derivate of the old Mcsosoic Mediterranean, the south-polar 
fauna of the old Pacific fauna. The first developed along the 
shore ■ of the northern continents, while the second had its original 
home on the shores of the Antarctic continent. We know that 
there is a strange element among the littoral fauna of the southern 
extremities of the continents, differing entirely from the arctic 
fauna, and we cannot but think that this is a remnant of the old 
Tertiary antarctic fauna. The above considerations give us a 
threefold origin of the present deep-sea fawns'— (1) An ancient 
Mcsosoic (or pre-Tertiary) constituent, derived from a transformed 
part of the old warm-water fauna of the deep sea, adapted to the 
changed climatic conditions. It is clearly autochthonous. (2) A 
more modern, immigrant. Tertiary constituent, which came from 
the north-polar littoral waters, and immigrated into the deep sea 
together with the cool water (or after it had cooled). This element 
goes back to an old pre-Tcrtiary stock that lived in the warm 
littoral waters of the old Tethys (Mediterranean Sea), but as a 
cool-water fauna, it is not older than Tertiary. (3) Another Ter- 
to the second one. but belonging to 
be traced back to the warm 



riary dement, corresponding to the 
the south pole, which is finally to 
waters of the old Pacific Ocean of pre 



waters of the old Pacific Ocean of pre-Tertiary times." 

The surface, or pelagic, fauna contains some of the smallest and 
actually the largest of all living animate, for among its mem b er s 
are included a host of so-called animalcules on the one 
hand and the whales on the other. The essential char- 
acteristic of pelagic animals is that they pass the whole 
of their existence swimming st or near the surface of the 

, and only by accident touch the chores or the bottom. Much 

information with regard to the smaller pelagic creatures will be 
found in the article Plaitxtom. Among the groups included in the 
pelagic fauna may be mentioned the radiolarian animalcules, 
t og e the r with certain r epres e n tatives of the Foraminifcra; the 
siphon braring jelly-fishes, suchasParacfM (Portuguese man-of-war), 
VMla, Porptta, Ac; all the pteropod molluscs, such as D»>. 
Glome and Cavolinia (Hyolata), together with less aberrant gas- 
tropods, like Janthina (violet-snail), Atlanta and Glaucus; a Tew 
cephalopodous molluscs, such as the paper-nautilus {Arronauto) 
and Sfnrmla. and a number of social asddians, like SoJpa and 
Pyro so m a . Crustaceans belonging to the entomostracous (shelled) 
and scbizopod divisions abound; and there it a group of insects 
{Bolobatts), belonging to the order Hcmiptera. whose home is on 
the ocean-surface at, practically, any distance from land. Fishes 
form no inconsiderable, portion of the pelagic fauna, among these 
true flying-fishes, or flying-herrings (JB*ocoetus), herrings, 
tunny, flying-gurnards (Dactyloptera), sword-fishes (Hisho- 



being the true flying-fishes, or flying-herrings (J&xocottus), herrings, 

mackerel, tunny, flying-gurnards (Dactyloptera), sword-fishes (Histto- 

thorns), sea-horses (Hipjfocampns), pipe-fishes (Fistuhma) and 

any of the sharks, with the except i on of the comparatively 



few fuviatue species, the whole of the cetacean mammals— that is 
to say, whaks. grampuses, porpoises, dolphins, cVc— claim a place 
among the sjrrface-fauna of the ocean. Whether the sea-cows 
(Slrema) should likewise be included is doubtful, as they hold a 
somewhat intermediate position in regard to habits between ceta- 
ceans and seals. While they agree with the former in never (or 
wary rarely) landing and in bringing forth their young at sea. they 



* SUp. Eighth International Geographic Congress, p. 619. 



J to feed. Turtles certainly cannot be considered truly 

pelagic, since they come ashore to lay their eggs. 

A large proportion of the smaller pelagic animals are more or 
less completely transparent, while others, such as the violet-snail, 
have developed an azure tint which renders them aa inconspicuous 
as possible in the waste of waters. In the case of the larger animals, 
like mackerel and the finner-whales, the same result is attained by 
the under surface of the body being silvery white (thus rendering 
them invisible when looked at from below against the sky), and the 
upper surface olive or blackish green, sometimes, as in the mackerel, 
mottled to harmonize with the ripple of the waves. 

The distribution of whaks and dolphins has been taken by P. L. 
and W L. Sclater to some extent as a basis in dividing the ocean 
into zoo lo gical regions. Since, however, such regions were mainly 
defined on the distributional evidence afforded by seals and sea- 
cows, they are best considered in connexion with the shallow, 
water fauna. 

The shallow-water, or Httoral, fauna Includes all marine animals 
which belong neither to the deep-sea nor to the surface fauna, and 
is the most important of all three. In addition to the Vhmmhm . 
.great bulk of marine invertebrates, the littoral fauna HZH^i 
may be taken to include the reef-building corals (whose 
distributional limitations under the influence of tempera- 
ture-control have been already mentioned) and likewise seals and 
sea-cows among mammals, and turtles among reptiles. 

" The fauna of the coast," observes Prof? H. N Moseley, " has 
not only given origin to the terrestrial and fresh-water faunas, it 
has through all time, since life originated, given additions to the 
pelagic fauna in return for having received from it its starting- 
point. It has also received some of these pelagic forms back again 



to assume a fresh littoral existence. The terrestrial fauna has 
returned some forms to the shores, such as certain shore-birds, 
seals and the polar bear; and some of these, such as the whales 
and a small oceanic insect (Halobales), have returned thence to 
pelagic life. 

" The d e e p-s ea fauna has probably been formed almost entirely 
from the littoral, not in most remote antiquity, but only after 
food, derived from the debris of the littoral and terrestrial faunas 
and floras, became abundant in deep water. It was in the littoral 
region that all the primary branches of the zoological family-tree 
were formed : all terrestrial and deep-sea forms have passed through, 
a littoral phase, and amongst the' representatives of the littoral 
fauna the recapitulative history, in the form of series of larval 
conditions, is most completely retained." 

From the distribution of certain groups of animals, 
it has been attempted (as stated) to divide the ocean . 
into a number of zoological provinces, or regions. '***■*' 
Among the more important of such schemes, the following, may be 
mentioned. 

The reef-building corals, whose limitations are defined by con- 
ditions of temperature and depth, are necessarily restricted to 
certain seas and coasts within or near the tropics. „_ — 
" They abound/* wrote Dr A. R. Wallace in the ninth 7Vr.. 
edition of the present work, "in and near the West •^••"-- 
Indies, on the east coast of Africa, in the Indian Ocean, in the 
Malay and Pacific archipelagoes and on the const of Australia; 
while they are absent from the whole of the west coasts of South 
America and of Africa, from the Indian peninsula, and from much 
of the east coast of South America. The coral-reefs of the Ber- 
mudas, in 33* N. lat., are the farthest from the equator; in the 
Red Sea they reach 30* N.. in the Pacific 17° N., while they nowhere 
extend to more than 29* S. of the equator. . . . The coral regions 
are therefore somewhat peculiar, and differ considerably from those 
which best exhibit the distribution of other marine animals. The 
regions adopted by Prof. J. D. Dana are three— the first Com- 
prising the Red Sea and Indian Ocean; the second, the whole of 
the Pacific islands and the adjacent coasts of Australia; and the 
third the West Indies. This last region is the most isolated in 
position ; and it is not surprising that it should contain the largest 
proportion of peculiar forma. The corals of the Central Pacific 



are also very peculiar, as are those of the Red Sea and Indian 
Ocean." 

Prof. J. D. Dana* proposed to divide the oceans into three main 
areas according to the distribution of Crustacea. These areas are 
respectively termed the Occidental, the Africo-European CFmmm 
and the Oriental. The first comprises both coasts of T~7 
America; the second, the western shores of the Atlantic, "~T"7 
both African and European ; while the third comprehends "*—■■• 
the vast area from the east coast of Africa to the Central Pacific. 
Each of these regions is subdivided into dimatal and local provinces 
but the primary divisions can alone be mentioned here. The 
facts adduced in support of this scheme of distribution are interest- 
ing. At the date of Prof. Dana's memoir 47 genera were known 
to be exclusively American, 13 being common to both the east 
and west coasts; but as 36 genera were said to be confined to the 
west and 6 to the east coast, these two provinces arc really distinct, 
even if they do not form primary regions. The Africo-European 
region had 19 peculiar genera, and only 8 in common with the 



'See Amtr. Jonrn. Science, ser. a, vol xvi p, 155 (1853). 



ioi6 



ZOOLOGICAL DISTRIBUTION 



American region; so that the eastern and western shores of the 
Atlantic appear decidedly more distinct than the eastern and 
western coasts of America* The extensive Oriental region is by 
far the richest. 

From the distribution of the species (not genera) of barnacles, 
or drrhipeds, which are an aberrant group of Crustacea, Darwin 
considered that the ocean might be divided into the following 
legions, via,. — (i) The North Atlantic, comprising North America 
and Europe down to N. lat. 30° , (2) The West American, from 
■Bering Strait to Ticrra del Fuego; (3) The Malayan, from India 
to New Guinea, and U) The Australian, comprising Australia and 
New Zealand, the Malayan and Australian regions being the 
richest in cirrhipeds. 

One of the earliest students of the geographical distribution of 
marine animals was Dr S. P. Woodward* who, in his Manual of 
MoBmcmn *** Mollusea, proposed a scheme of zoo-geographical 
jMtoasT^ regions. He adopted three main divisions for the 
"^ warmer parts x>t the ocean, namely, the Atlantic, the 

Indo-Padfic and the West American*, and these Wallace was 
inclined to regard as the only valid marine moUuscan regions. 
The Indo- Pacific region extends from the Red Sea and the east 
coast cf Africa to the eastern Pacific islands, and corresponds to 
Prof. Dana's Oriental region for Crustacea, many species ranging 
over nearly the whole area. The Atlantic region unites the fauna 
of the east coast of America with that of West Africa and South 
Europe, but has considerable aftnity with that of West America, 
many genera bang common to both areas. Several genera appear 
restricted to the north temperate zone, which in Wallace's opinion 
should perhaps form a distinct region. Numerous genera are con- 
fined to the Indo-Padfic region. The Atlantic coasts have few 
peculiar genera of importance, while the west coast of America 
has hardly any. the difference of its fauna from that of the Atlantic 
on the one side and the Pacific on the other bang chiefly specific. 
It is stated that while there is not a single species common to the 
east and west coasts of tropical South America, the corresponding 
coasts of North America have a large number in common, while 
others are so closely representative as to be almost identical. 

Inclusive of an Arctic province of somewhat doubtful value, 
Dr Woodward's three main regions were divided into 18 sub- 
regions; but, according to a somewhat modified later scheme, 
these may be arranged in four main groups, as follows: — 



Regtoos. 


Subresjam. 


Region. 


Subregloos. 


4. Atlantic 
and Cir- 

CUM POLAR 
B. IWDO- 

Pacific 


I.Arctic 

2. BoreaL 
m 3. Celtic. 
* 4. Lusitanian. 

5. W. African. 

6. S. African. 

fi. Indo-Padfic. 
]2. Japanese. 


C. Australian 

D. Aitbrican . 


fi. Australian. 
\2. Neoicalanian. 

1. Aleutian. 

2. Californian. 

3. Panamic. 

4. Peruvian. . 

" 5. Magellanic. 

6. Argentinian. 

7. Caribbean. 

8. Transatlantic. 



Fish Regions. — From the distribution of shore-haunting fishes. 
Dr A. C. C G. GQnther l suggested the following marine zoological 
regions, the characteristic family and generic types of which we 
are prevented by limitations of space from discussing: — ■ 

I. Arctic Ocean. 
11. Northern Temperate Zone. 
A. Temperate N. Atlantic 

1. British district. 

2. Mediterranean district. 

3. N. American district. 
8. Temperate N. Pacific. 

1. Kamchatkan district. 

2. Japanese district. 

3. Californian district. 

III. Equatorial Zone. 

A. Tropical Atlantic. 

B. Tropical Indo-Padfic 

C. Pacific Coast of Tropical America. 

1. Central American district. 

2. Galapagos district. 

3. Peruvian district. 

IV. Southern Temperate Zone. 

1. Cape of Good Hope district. 

2. South Australian district. 

3. Chilean district. 

4. Patagonian district. 
V. Antarctic Ocean. 

Mammalian Regions. — The last scheme of marine zoological 
regions necessary to mention is one proposed by P. L. and W. L. 
Sdater » on the distributional evidence afforded by seals, sea-cows 



* See Study of Fishes (London, 1880). 

• The Geography of Mammals (London, 1699). 



UN TIME 
and cetaceans. According to this, we have the following she 



(j) Arctatmatica (North Atlantic), characterized by the pre- 
sence of seals of the subfamily Pkocmaa, with the genera 
Ha l i ch o or ms peculiar to it, and Phoca common to it and 
No. iv.; the absence of sea-cows; and (it b stated) by 
the bottle-nosed whales (Hypcraodon) being peculiar to 



Gi) Mcsatnatica (Mid Atlantic), the sole habitat of the « 

seal (Monachus) and the manatis {Monaius). 
(hi) Philopdagka (Indian Ocean, ftc), characterised by the 

presence of dugongs and the absence of seals. 
Civ) Arctirenia (North Pacific), agreeing with No. i. in the pos- 
session of Phoca but distinguished by also having sea- 
bears and sea-lions (OJortstte); formerly the habitat of 
the northern sea-cow (Rkytina), and now of the grey 
whale (RhachtanecUs). 
(v) Mesirenia (Mid Padfic), without Pkacmaa or sea-cows, but 
with the elephant-seal (Moaorkinus), from the south, 
and also Otartidae. 
(vi) Notopebgka (Southern Ocean), with four peculiar genera 
of seals (Phoctdae), numerous sea-bears and sea-lions, 
and two peculiar genera of cetaceans, the pigmy-whale 
(Neobaiaena) and Arooux's beaked-whale {Boriudms). 
To explain the absence of sea-beam and sea-lions from the North 
Atlantic, and likewise the existence of manatis on both Atlantic 
coasts, the authors of this scheme call in the aid of a land-con- 
nexion between Africa and South America, which presented •> 
barrier to the northward progress of the former, while its coasts 
afforded a means of dispersal to the latter. As the Olamiat are 
at present unknown previous to the Miocene* such an explanation, 
if valid, requires the persistence of the ancient land-bridge across 
the Atlantic to a much later date than is commonly supposed. 

III. Distribution in Time 

The subject of the distribution of animals in time, La. the 
relative dates of their first appearance on the earth, and in the 
case of extinct forms the length of their sojourn there, can be 
treated but briefly, reference being restricted to the larger 
groups, and not even all of these being mentioned. The dates 
of appearance and disappearance of the various groups are 
only relative, for although many more or less vague attempts 
have been made to determine the age of the earth, there is no 
possibility of indicating in years the length of time occupied 
by the deposition of any one stratum or series of strata. All 
that can be attempted is to say that one stratum (and conse- 
quently the remains of animals that may be entombed in it) 
is older or younger, as the case may be, than another. For the 
sequence and names of the various strata, or time-periods of 
the geological record, see Geology. An important factor in 
regard to the past history of animals is the imperfection of the 
geological record. Recent discoveries have rendered this im- 
perfection much less marked than was formerly the case. 
There are, however, still many very serious gaps; and we 
have, for instance, no definite information as to where and 
when the transformation from reptiles into mammals took 
place. 

It may nevertheless be emphatically affirmed that the geo- 
logical, or rather the palaeontological» record indicates a gradual 
progression in the status of animals from the lowest to the highest 
fossfliferons strata. That is to say, the earlier animals were 
creatures of comparatively low grade (although certain repre- 
sentatives of such groups may have attained a relatively high 
degree of specialisation), and that as we ascend the geological 
ladder higher and higher types of animals make their appearance, 
till the series culminates in man himself— the crowning effort 
of creation, in the modern evolutionary signification of that 
term. It is not, indeed, to be supposed that the higher groups 
made their appearance exactly according to their relative 
grades (or what we regard as such); all that can be affirmed b 
that in the main the higher forms have made their appearance 
later than the lower. The record is thus almost exactly what 
it might be expected to be on the theory of evolution; while 
it also accords fairly well— if regarded with sufficient breadth 
of view— with the Biblical narrative of creation. 

A brief survey of the time-distribution of the leading groups 
of animais may now be undertaken, commencing with the highest 
and concluding with the lowest groups. 



IN TIME] 



ZOOLOGICAL DISTRIBUTION 



1017 



As the highest of all vertebrates, h b natural to expect that 
m»iw»»i« should be one of the latest groups of that assemblage 

.. «_ to make their appearance; and this as a matter of fact 

■■■si in ^^ afe> although it is by no means improbable that 
birds are the latest of all. Mammals are commonly stated to 
commence ia the Trias, where they are presumed to be repre- 
sented by MicroUstes in Europe and by Dromathmum in North 
America. From the fact, however, that the approximately con- 
temporary Tritytodon, which has cheek-teeth very like those of 
the former, appears to be in great degree intermediate between 
reptiles and mammals, it is by no means improbable that none 
of these Triassic creatures were true mammals. Undoubted 
mammals occur in the lower Jurassic Stonesheld Slate, in the 
upper Jurassic Permian beds, and, very sparingly, in the Wealden 
of England ; while a large fauna has been discovered in the upper 
Cretaceous of North America. The mammals included among 
these Mesozoic forms appear, for the most part at any rate, to be 
referable to the Marsupiatia, Insectivora, and, not improbably, 
the Monotremata (see Marsupialix). After the lowest Eocene 



(when the Puerco fauna represented an inferior and apparently 
non-progressive type) mammals became abundant-; ana during 
that epoch most it not all of the existing orders made their appear- 



ance. The lower Eocene representatives of several of the orders, 
such as the Condylarthra among the Ungulata and the Creodonta 
among Camivora, belonged, however, to low suborders which dis- 
appeared more or less completely by the Oligocene. Several sub- 
ordinal groups of Ungulata developed and became extinct at later 
periods than the Eocene; but with the exception of the^AncyJo- 
poda and Tillodontia (whose right to ordinal distinction is by no 
means universally admitted), none of the Tertiary orders of mammals 
are extinct. At the present day — as during the greater part of 
the Tertiary epoch— mammals are the dominant t erre stri al repre- 
sentatives of the Vertebrata. We have at present no evidence of 
the existence of Cretacea before the lower Eocene. 

Although some of the three-toed bipedal tracks in the Trias of 
the Connecticut valley were formerly supposed to have been made 
_~ by birds, there is little doubt that they are really due 

•— — to dinosaurian reptiles. The class Ave*, so far as we 
know, is therefore first represented by the long-tailed Archato- 
Pteryx of the upper Jurassic, which represents a subclass (or order) 
by itself. Toothed birds also existed in the upper Cretaceous of 
both Europe and North America, but all these appear referable 
to existing ordinal (or subordiaal) groups. By the lower Eocene, 
when teeth appear to have been entirely lost, most or all of the 
existing ordinal groups were developed, since which date the 
majority at all events have steadily increased. 

In contradistinction to both the preceding classes, reptiles, which 
date from the Permian, are a waning group, at all events so far 
r rtfc _ as both terrestrial and marine forms of large bodily 
mm * m9> size are concerned. The Permian reptiles were small 
or medium-sized creatures, few in number, and of generalized 
character. The one existing order dating from that epoch (when 
it was represented by Pfotoramumu) is the Rhynchocephalia, of 
which the sole survivor is the New Zealand tuatara (Sphmodon). 
The Mesozoic period, from the Trias to the Chalk, is the true " age 
of reptiles,'* a number of orders being confined to that period. It 
is no te w o rthy, however, that the Triassic forms were m the case 
of the marine groups very generally of small size, and apparently 
amphibious, or perhaps freshwater. Of the various extinct Meso- 
aoic orders, the Dinosauria, as demonstrated by their footprints 
in the sandstone of the Connecticut valley, were represented by 
species of huge size even in the Trias. The other extinct orders 
whose distribution was approximately coequal with the Mesozoic 
period were the icbthyosaurs (Ichthyopterygia). the plesiosaurs 
tSauroptcrygia), and the pterodactyles (Ornithosauna). The 
Chelonta and Crocodilia (if we include the PhytosaurjjO date from 
the Trias, bat are also dominant forms at the pr ese n t day. But 
the mammaKGke Anotnodontia (Thsttsnorpha), which ranged from 
South Africa to India and Russia, were solely Triassic. The 
Squamata, including lizards and snakes, together with the extinct 
Cretaceous Pytbonomorpha (Mosascmrw, Ac), did not come Into 
being till the upper Jurassic, or lower Cretaceous, and constitute 
the great bulk of the existing m embers of the class. 

Batrechia, as represented by the latoyrinthodonts, or Stego- 
cepbalia, carry the origin of vertebrates one stage further back, 
namely, to the upper Carboniferous. Thestegocephalians, 
which appear to have included the a n ce st or s of the anomo- 
dont reptiles, died out at the close of the Triassic epoch. 
The existing, representatives of the class date, so faf as is known, 
only from the Tertiary, but it is not improbable that the limbless 
caccilians (Apoda) may really be much older, since they appear 
to be related to the Stenocephalia. 

The class Pisces is the lowest and at the same time the oldest 
representative of the Vertebrata, datingjrom the lower Ludlow 
-^— . beds of the upper Silurian. The oldest group is that 
of the sharks and rays (Elasmobranchii). in which the 
orders Pleuropterygii. Iehthyotomt and Acanthodii are confined 
to the Palaeozoic The lung*nshes (Dipnoi) are also an ancient 
group, although surviving in the form of three genera widely 



sondered in space! the order Arthrodira (as represented by Coc 
ceasnsi of the Devonian) was solely Pal a e ozoic. Of the subchut 
Teleostomi. the fringe-finned group (Crossopterygii) attained its 
maximum In the Palaeozoic, although it survives in the shape of 
two African geotra. In the case of the subclass Teleostomi the 
enamel-sealed, or ganoid, division was abundant during the Palaeo- 
zoic and early Mesoeoicperiods (and still survives in North America), 
but the modern soft-scaled bony fishes did not make their appear- 
ance till the Cretaceous, or thereabouts. 

Of the class Agnatha, as typified by the modern lampreys, the 
palaeontologkal record is very imperfect. There is, however, an 

armoured subclass, the Ostracodermi, represented by . -1 

Puricklkvs* Cepkalaspis. Ac, which was confined to the «■"»«/** 
upper Silurian and Devonian; and Paiaeospondyius of the Devonian 
has been regarded as an early lamprey (Cyclostomi). Whether 
the so-called conodonts, ranging from the upper Cambrian to the 
Carboniferous, are realty teeth of lampreys, has not been definitely 
ascertained. 

The lamp-shells, or Brachiopoda, form an exceedingly ancient 
group, dating from the lower Cambrian, and surviving at the 
present day, although in greatly diminished numbers com- 
pared to the Palaeozoic epoch, when they far surpassed 

the now dominant bivalve molluscs. The group attained *^ 
its maximum in the Silurian, when, as in the Palaeozoic genera, 
nearly all the forms belonged to the hingeless section. With the 
beginning of the Mesozoic period the waning of the brachiopods, 
which bad set in with the Devonian, became mote pronounced, 
and was continued throughout the Mesozoic formations. A remark- 
able feature is the survival to the present day of the Cambrian 
genera Lunula, Diuina and Crania (or closely allied types). 

The Polyzoa, of which the sea-mats (fiustra) are well-known 
r e pr es entatives, date from the Ordovician ; the Palaeozoic -^^ 
forms belonging almost exclusively to the section Cyclo- "~^" 

which attained its maximum in the Jurassic; while the 



dominant modern Chilostomata came in with the Tertiary. 

The Mollusca, of which the great bulk are marine and the majority 
of the remainder freshwater, are perhaps the most important of all 
fossils from the chronological point of view. Since the «._-._ ... 
three principal classes (Pelecypoda, Gastropoda and B - 

Cephalopoda] are represented in the upper Cambrian, it is evident 
that the origin of the group was much earlier. In the Palaeozoic 
the chambered cephalopods of the section Tetrabranchiata (now 
represented by the nautilus) were the dominant forms; the bivalves 
(Pelecypoda) and gastropods showing a relatively poor develop- 
ment. The tetrabranchiatc cephalopods continued throughout the 
Mesozoic, when they were specially represented by the ammonites; 
but by the Tertiary they had become almost extinct. The section 
Dibranchiata (cuttle-fishes) commenced with the Mesozoic. The 
bivalves and gastropods have shown a steady increase to the present 
day, and are now the dominant forms. 

insects date from the Ordovician graptolite-slates of Sweden, 
where they are represented by Proloetmex; the next oldest being 
PaUutMaUina of the French upper Silurian. From the § mmmtt - 
Devonian about a dozen forms are known, belonging ****** 
to several groups; and from the Coal-measures extensive insect- 
faunas have been described. All the Palaeozoic forms lack most 
of the distinctive features by which the modern groups are char* 
acterised, the majority of them showing kinship to the cockroach 
group. 

The Myriapoda (centipedes and millipedes) are of comparatively 
little importance as fossils. The class dates from the Devonian, and 
is abundant in the Coal-measures; the Palaeozoic forms 



for the most re p r esen ting two orders— Archipolypoda 22"" 
and Protosyngnatha— peculiar to that period, of which ***** 
the second has only a single known species. The modern centipedes 
(Chilopoda) date mainly from the Tertiary, although several Car* 
boniferous genera have been assigned to the group. Millipedes 
(Diptopoda), although known from the Cretaceous of Greenland, 
elsewhere date from the Tertiary. 

The class Arachnida, now taken to include truobites and king- 
crabs, as well as scorpions and spiders, is ancient. Scorpions— 
not far removed from existing type s a re known in the A rmgAm 
Silurian, while true spiders occur in the Coal-measures. .S^ " 
The great majority of the more typical Palaeosoicarachnids WM * 
are, however, referred to an order by themselves— the AntbracomartL 
King-crabs (Xiphosura) date from the Silurian, the existing genus 
Limufus occurring in the Trias; but the gigantic evrypterids 
(Eurypterida) ana the trilobitee (Trilobita} are exclusively Palaeo- 
zoic, the former dating from the Ordovician, and the latter from 
the upper Cambrian. 

Most of the existing ordinal groups of the class Crustacea a pp e al 
to date from the Palaeozoic; the decapods (lobsters and crabs) 
which represent the highest development of the class. Cmtmt ^ m 
did not. however, attain a dominant position till well ^7* 
on In the Mesozoic and are at their maximum in the mammm 
present day; genuine crabs (Brachyura) apparently not having 
come into existence till the Cretaceous. 

Among the Echinodertnata. the classes Bkstoidea and Cystoidea 
are exclusively Palaeozoic, while the stone-Knes (Crinoidea) form a 



ioi8 



ZOOLOGICAL GARDENS 



group, dating from the nine epoch, now on the verge of extinction. 
The sea-urchins (Ecbinotdea), which date from the Ordovirian but 
Mtoo . attain no great development till the Mesoaoic. the 
derma, starfishes (Asteroidea) and brittle-stars (Ophiuroides), 
which also date from the Ordovician, and the sea- 
cucumbers (Holothuroidea), which appear to be represented in 
the Carboniferous, do not seem, however, to have attained their 
full development till the modern period. 

That the Annelida are a very ancient group is indicated by the 
occurrence of remains of marine worms in the Ordovician; while 
AamtmH. " trac ' tt " or " burrows " apparently point to the exist- 
ence of the class in the lower Cambrian, if not indeed 
in the Laurentian. 

The earliest-known representatives of the Codenterata occur in 
the upper Cambrian, where we find primitive types of hydroid 
-*. polyps, especially the graptolites, which lived only till 

ftmfes* tnc Sim"* 11 ' and have no near relatives. The equally 
twnieM ' isolated stroma toporids, on the other hand, commenced 
in the Ordovician and survived tiU the Devonian. The corals 
(Actinozoa) were completely differentiated from the Hydroxoa in 
the Ordovician. Most of the Palaeozoic actinoxoans belong to the 
Rugosa (inclusive of the four-rayed corals) which did not survive 
the Permian, but the Aporosa are also well represented. In the 
Mesoaoic and Tertiary as well as at the present day the Aporosa 
and Porosa became, however, the dominant forms. 

As might have been expected from their low grade of organiza- 
tion, the sponges (Porifera) were strongly represented in the early 
. formations; the oldest known form occurring in the 

"***** Welsh Cambrian. In the Silurian and Carboniferous 
silicious sponges were extraordinarily abundant, and are repre- 
sented by several extinct groups. 

Foraminifera, extremely abundant in the Carboniferous, date at 
any rate from the Ordovician, where the existing genus Saccam- 
nm ■ mina has been identified. The Chalk consists almost 
r .w.wM9m. ent j re |y f foraminifera. The Radiolaria, as represented 
by the Polycystina, are believed to date from the Silurian, or even 
the Cambrian, but did not attain their maximum till the Mesozoic 
or Tertiary.- The so-called Eozoon of the Laurentian is not admitted 
to be of organic origin. 



and the Palaeogeography vi lie Anurttic Region." Rip, Austral. 
Assoc., vol. ix., pp. 3 '9-43 £1903); B- A. Oenitey, "A Theory 
of the Origin and Evnlmian of the Australian MafaupbELa," After. 
Naturalist, vol. xxxv. pp. J45-&9 (igot); W. T. Btonlurd "The 
African Element in ttte Fauna of India/' Ann. Mag. NaL Hut., 
ser. 4, vol. xviii. pp. 3T}-§a (1^76); " Anniversary Address to the 
Geological Society, ' Proc. Ccol. sac. London. 1*04, pp. 43-1 to; 
"The Distribution of Vertebrate Animal* in India, Ceylon and 
Burma," Proc. Royal Sac, London t vol. frtvli. pp. 4^4-^2 Uyoo), 
and Phil. Trans. R. Ax- (9 J. voL exciv. pp. V35-43& (wi); 
G. A. Boulenger, " The Lw.- — ,iwu «i A***w.u i J«jj»-ia Fishes," 
Rep. BriL Assoc., 1905, 21 pp.; C. Burckhardt, " Traces Geolo- 
giques d un Ancien Continent Pacinque," RevisL Mus. La Plata, 
vol. x. pp. 177-90 (1900) ; J. D. Dana, " An Isothermal Oceanic 
Chart, illustrating the geographical distribution of marine animals," 
Amur. J oum. Set. and Art., voL xvi. pp. 153-80 (1853); C. H. 
Eigenmann, "The Fresh-water Fishes of South and Middle 
America," Papular Science Monthly, vol. lxviii. pp. 515-30 
(1906); H. O. Forbes, " The Chatham Islands, their relation to a 
former Southern Continent," Supplemental Papers, R. Geogr. Soc., 
London, 1693, pp. 607-37; M. Grant, " The Origin and Relation- 
ship of the Large Mammals of North America, Rep. New York 
Zool. Soc, 1904, 30 pp. ; A. HeUprin, The Geographical and Geo- 
Uveal Distribution of Animals (London, 1887); F. W. Hutton, 
" Theoretical Explanations of the Distribution of Southern Faunas, 
Proc. Linn. Soc. N.S. Wales, 1896, pp. 36-47; T. H. Huxley, 
" On the Classification and Distribution of Alectoromorphae and 
Heteromorphae," Prop. Zool. Soc London, 1868, pp. 294-319; 
R. Lydekker, A Geographical History of Mammals (Cambridge. 
1896); "South American Animals and their Origin," Quarterly 
Rooiew, 1903, pp. 41-67; "The Animals of Africa," op. cit., 
1904, pp. 465-92; C. H. Merriam, "The Geographic Distribu- 
tion of Life in North America, with special reference to the Mam- 
malia." Proc. Biol. Soc. Washington, voL vii. pp. 1-64 (1892): 
" Laws of Temperature-Control of the Geographic Distribution of 



Terrestrial Animals and Plants," Nat. Geogr. Mag., vol. vi. pp. 229- 
_.« * " * * " ~- 'The Theories of the Origin of the 



338 (1894); A. E. Ortmann, 
Antarctic-Fai 



. „ __. Faunas and Floras," Amer. Naturalist, vol. xxxv. pp. 139- 

142 (1901); "The Geographical Distribution of Freshwater Deca- 
pods — J — ** ' * " ' ""* " * " " * 
Soc. 

the 

College, Zoology, voU L art. 2 (1893); " The Geological and Faunal 

Relations of Europe and America during the Tertiary period and 

the theory of the ■successive Invasions of an African Fauna," 

t. 2, vol, xi. pp. 561-74 (1900); " The Law of Adaptive 



Radiation," Amer. Naturalist, voL xxxvi. pp. 353-63 (1002)1 A. S. 
r Packard. " The Two Chief Faunae of thelart^&isEr, serl 2. 
voL xix. pp. 220 and 221 (1904), abstract; R. I. Pocock. "The 
Geographical Distribution of Spiders of the Order Mygalomorphae," 
Proc. Zool. Soc. London, 1903, vol. i. pp. 340-68; R. F. ScharfJ, 
The History of the European Fauna (London, 1899): •" Remarks 
on the Atlantic Problem," Proc. R. Irish Acad., vol. xxiv. (B), 

Ed. 268-302 (1903); P. L, Sclater, "On the General Geographic 
hstnbution of the Members of the Class Aves," Journ. Linn. Soc.. 
Zool., vol. iL pp. 130-45 (1858); "The Geographical Distribu- 
tion of Mammals," Manchester Science Lectures, ser. 5 and 6, 
pp. 202-19 O874); P- L. Sclater and W. L. Sclater. The Geo- 
trophy of Mammals (London. 1890) ; B. Spencer, "Summary of 
the Zoological. Botanical and Geological Results of the (Horn) 
Expedition." Rep. Horn Exped. to Central Australia (1896); A. R. 
Wallace. The Geographical Distribution of Animals (London, 1876), 
2 vols.; M. Weber, Der Indo-Australischc Arch pel und die Geschichte 
seiner Tienaeft (Jena, 1902); K. A. von Zittcl. " Die Geologische 
Entwickelung, Herkunft, und Verbreitung der Saugeticre." Sibber- 
bayer. Ahad., vol. xxiii. pp. 137-98 (1893). See also C. W. 
Andrews, Catalogue of the Tertiary Vcrtebrata of the Fayum (London. 
1906); and numerous text-books on various groups of animals, 
such as A. GQnther's The Study of Fishes (1880), together with 
Works like H. A. Nicholson and R. Lydekkcr's A Manual of Palaeon- 
tology (London, 1889); K. A. Zittel's Handbuch der Palaeoutologie 
(Munich and Leipzig, 1876-93), &c. &c (R. L.*) 

ZOOLOGICAL GARDENS, sometimes called Zoological 
Parks, institutions in which wild animals are kept in captivity. 
Their primary object is to gratify the pleasure most persons 
take in viewing at close range the curious and beautiful living 
products of nature, but they serve also as means of instruction 
in natural history, providing material for museums and for 
investigations in comparative anatomy and pathology, while 
they may have a commercial value as pleasure resorts, or as 
show grounds for the display of animals that have been imported 
or bred for sale. 

According to Captain Stanley Flower, director of the Zoological 
Gardens at Gira r Cairo, Egypt, the ancient Egyptians kept 
various species of wild animals in captivity, but the first Zoo- 
logical Garden of which there is definite knowledge was founded 
in China by the first emperor of the Ch6u dynasty, who reigned 
about 1 100 b.c This was called the "Intelligence Park," 
and appears to have had a scientific and educational object. 
The ancient Greeks and Romans kept in captivity large number* 
of such animals as leopards, lions, bears, elephants, antelopes, 
giraffes, camels, rhinoceroses and hippopotamuses, as well as 
ostriches and crocodiles, but these were destined for slaughter 
at the gladiatorial shows. In later times royal persons and great, 
feudal magnates frequently kept menageries of wild animals, 
aviaries and aquaria, and it is horn these that modern public 
Gardens have taken their origin. Henry I. (1100-1135) estab- 
lished a menagerie at Woodstock, Oxfordshire, England. This 
was transferred to the Tower of London, apparently in the reign 
of Henry III., and kept up there until at least 1828. Philip VI. 
had a menagerie in the Louvre at Paris in 1333, Charles V. 
maintained collections at Conflans, Tourneiles and in Paris, 
and Louis XI. formed a menagerie at Plessis les Tours in 
Touraine, which after his death was re-established at the Louvre 
in Paris and enlarged by collections obtained in North Africa. 
It was destroyed by Henry III. Henry IV. had a small 
collection, which included an elephant. Louis XIII. kept some 
animals at Versailles, whilst his son Louis XIV. founded the 
famous " Menagerie du Pare" at Versailles, which received 
many animals from Cairo, was maintained for over a century, 
and furnished much valuable material to French naturalists 
and anatomists. It gradually decayed, however, and was 
almost extinguished by the mob in 1789. In 1793 the Paris 
Museum of Natural History was re-established by law, and 
Buff on's idea of attaching to it a menagerie was carried out; 
the latter, as the collection in the Jardin des Plantes, still 
survives. 

In Germany the elector Augustus I. founded a menagerie at 
Dresden in 1554. In the New World, according to Prescott, 
Ring Nesahualcoyotl had zoological gardens at Tezcuco in 
Mexico in the middle of the 15th century, whilst in the next 
century Cortes found aviaries and fishponds at Iztapalapaa. 



ZOOLOGICAL GARDENS 



10 19 



and Monteairma II., emperor of Mexico in the beginning of 
the 16th century, maintained large collections of animals in 
the gardens of his capital. 

Most of the modern soological gardens date from com- 
paratively recent years, and there are a larger number stocked 
«ith a finer collection of animals, more suitably housed, than at 
any past time in the history of the world. According to a 
reference list compiled by Captain Stanley Flower, there were 
tot actually existing public gardens or parks containing col- 
lections of wild animals in 1910, while there are also a consider- 
able number of private collections. It is possible to refer here 
only to the more important of these. 

Africa.— The Zoological Gardens at Gua f Cairo, are a govern- 
ment institution administered by the Public Works Department. 
The grounds are beautifully laid out and the collection is particularly 
rich in African animals, to which the climate b well adapted. The 
Khartum Zoological Gardens are free to the public and are under 
the control of the municipality, but the collection of animals is 
under the Game Preservation Department. The Transvaal Zoo- 
logical Gardens at Pretoria are a government institution, and are 
associated with the Museum. 

America, North,— The Zoological Park at Bronx Borough. New 
York City, opened in 1890.1s one of the largest in the world. It n con- 
trolled by the Zoological Society of New York, with representatives 
of the municipality of the City of New York, and is financed largely 
out of municipal funds, and is open; free to the public five days 
a week. The Park occupies nearly 300 acres, of great natural 
beauty, which has been increased by the judicious arts of the 
landscape gardener. It contains many fine buildings, designed on 
the roost modern lines, but its special feature b a series of spacious 
enlosures for large herds of bison and deer. In a sense h serves 
also as a national reserve, and has already been an important 
factor in the preservation of the American bison. The National 
Zoological Park at Washington, DC, was founded by Congress 
in 1889-1890 " for the advancement of science and the instruction 
and r ecreat i on of the people." The site was purchased by the 
United States government, and all the expenses come from national 
funds, the management being vested in the Smithsonian Institution. 
The Park consists of about 265 acres of undulating land with 
natural woods and rocks, traversed by a gorge cut by Rock Creek, 
a tributary of the Potomac. The river and gorge extend into the 
country far beyond the Park, and in- addition to the animals that 
have been introduced, there are many wild creatures living in 
their native freedom, such as musk rats in the creek, grey squirrels, 
crested cardinals and turkey buzzards. The varied natural con- 
ditions form an almost ideal site for a collection of animals; great 
care and skill have been expended on the designing and construc- 
tion of the houses, the collection receives many a ccessi o n s from 
various government departments, including the foreign consular ser- 
vice, and the whole institution b rapidly becoming a model of what 
is possible; The Zoological Gardens in Fairmount Park, Phila- 
delphia, resemble the gardens of the Zoological Society of London, 
on which they were modelled. They are controlled by the Zoo- 
logical Society of Philadelphia, founded in 1850, and are supported 
partly by subscriptions of members, partly by gate-money and 
partly by an allowance from the city of Philadelphia. They 



partly by gate-money and 

. . aty of Philadelphia. They 

contain an admirable collection, well housed and carefully managed, 



a specially interesting feature being the careful quarantine system 
of new arrivals and the post-mortem examinations of animals that 
have died. There are many smaller collections in the United 
States and several in Canada, but none of these present features 
of special interest. 

America, South.— The Zoological Gardens at Buenos Aires are 
" f the municipality, and contain many interesting 
I boused in beautiful surroundings. The director 

J a popular illustrated guide and a valuable quarterly scientific 

journal. At Para, Brazil, Is a good collection attached to the 
Museum Goetdi. and there are unimportant collections at Rio de 
Janeiro and Bahia. 

j|*»av--There are many small collections in different parts of 
Asia, but the only garden of great interest is at Alipore, Calcutta, 
supported chiefly by gate-money and a contribution from govern- 
ment, and managed by an honorary committee. It was estab- 
lished in 187s by the government of Bengal, in co-operation with 
the public, and is 33 acres in area. An extremely interesting 
collection is maintained, the variety of bird life, both feral and in 
captivity, being notable 

Australia and New Zealand.— That are Zoological Gardens at 
Melbourne (founded in 1857), Adelaide, Sydney and Perth, and 
amafl gardens at Wellington, New Zealand, supported partly by 
private societies and partly by the municipalities. These collec- 
tions are not specially rich in the very interesting and peculiar 

-' ; fauna, but devote themselves prepossJeratingry to imported 



Imperial Menagerie of the palace of Schoabrunn, Vienna, was 
founded about 1752, The public are admitted free to the greater 
part of the grounds, but the gardens and collection are the pro- 
----•■- - - ■ ■ Thecofiac- 



perty of and are supported by the emperor of Austria, 
taon is fine and well cared for in beautiful 



The 



garden and lame menagerie of the Royal Zoological Society of 
Antwerp were founded In 1843, and have been maintained at a 



ful existence, and partly because of the extensive possessions 
it Britain throughout the world, the Zoological Society of 
1 has been able to exhibit for the first time in captivity a 



Bmropt^Than are a large number of soological gardens in 
Bsvopsv but those of real unportence ase not numerous. The 



The collection is not usually very rich m species, 
but there have been great and long-continued successes in the 
breeding of large animals such as hippopotamuses, lions and ante- 
lopes, and a very large business is done in domesticated birds, 
water-fowl and cage birds. The annual sales of wild animals, 
held in the Gardens, chiefly surplus stock from various European 
Gardens, are famous. The revenue is derived partly from sub- 
scriptions, partly from gate-money, from the fine concert-hall and 
refreshment pavilions, and from sales. The Gardens of the Zoo- 
logical Society of London in Regent's Park, founded in 1828, 
extend to only about 35 acres, but the collection, if species and 
rare animals be considered rather than the number of individuals, 
has always been the finest in existence The Society is not assisted 
by the state or the municipality, but derives its revenue from the 
subscriptions of Fellows, gate-money, Garden receipts and so forth. 
In addition to the menagerie, there is an infirmary and operating 
room, an anatomical and pa th ological laboratory, and the Society 
holds scientific meetings and publishes stately volumes containing 
the results of zoological research. Partly because of its long ana 
successful e " " ' 

of Great V 

London has been able to exhibit for the first time in captivity l 
greater number of species of wild animals than probably the total 
of those shown by all other collections. The Royal Zoological 
Society of Ireland, founded in 1830, maintains a fine collection in 
the Phoenix Park at Dublin, and has been specially successful in 
the breeding of lions. The Bath. Clifton and West of England 
Zoological Society owns small but extremely well-managed Zoo- 
logical Gardens, well situated on the edge of Cuf ton Downs. Messrs 
Jennisoo have maintained since 1831 a Zoological Collection in 
their pleasure Park at Belle Vue, Manchester. The animals 
exhibited are selected chiefly because of their popular interest, 
but the arrangements for housing are specially ingenious and 
successful, those for monkeys and snakes being notable. The 
ZcologJsk Have at Copenhagen, founded in 1859, contains a good 
collection, with a specially well-designed monkey-bouse. At Lyons 
and at Marseilles in France there are beautifully situated Gardens 
with small collections, in each case owned ana controlled by the 
municipalities. In Paris there are two well-known Gardens. That 
of the Jardin des Plantes was founded in 1793 and » under the 
control of the Museum authorities. It is open free to the public 
and generally contains a good collection of mammals. The larger 
and better known Jardin d'Acclimatation in the Bois de Boulogne 
is owned and conducted by a private company. It was bunded in 
1858 and is beautifully situated and well laid out. In addition to 
wild animals it usually contains many domesticated creatures of 
commercial value. In recent years it has been somewhat neglected 
and presents no features of special interest, but efforts are being 
made to revive its prosperity. Germany contained in 1910 nineteen 
Zoological Gardens in active existence whilst several others were 
in process of formation. In most cases they are associated with 
concert-halls and open-air restaurants, which account for much of 
their material prosperity, but the natural taste of the people for 
wild animals, and the increasing scientific and commercial enter- 
prise of the nation have combined to make the collections rich 
and interesting. The great Gardens at Berlin were founded in 
1844, and belong to a private company, but owe much to the 
interest and beneficence of the Royal House. The collection b 
extremely good, the houses are well constructed and sumptuously 
decorated, and the general management is conducted on the most 
adequate scientific lines. The Zoological Gardens at Breslau. 
founded in 1863 *"<* owned by a private company, although not 
large, contain many fine buildings and are a notably well-managed 
institution. They poisssssd a fine gorilla, keeping it alive for a 
longer period than has been done in any other aoological collec- 
tion. The beautiful Gardens at Cologne, founded in i860, contain 
many interesting features and in particular one cf the finest aviaries 
in £urope. The Gardens of the Zoological Society of Hamburg, 
founded in 1863. always contain a large and fine collection and 
display many ingenious devices for the housing of the animals. 
More recently C Hagenbeck has constructed a remarkable aoo- 
logical park at SteUingen, near Hamburg. The chief feature of 
this is a magnificent panorama, from the central point of which 
large coilecUons cf wild animals are visible without any inter- 
vening bars. The background consists of artificial rockwork, sup- 
ported on huge wooden scaffoldings. The surface Is formed of 
cement moulded over metal gimmd-work. and arranged to form 
ledges and boulders, peaks andescarpments, and faced with coloured 
sand and paint. It. is made sufficiently strong to bear the weight 
of the animals, which are confined within their bounds by undercut 
overhanging ridges, and by deep and wide ditches, masked by 
rockwork. The arrangement is extremely successful from the 



1022 

because of tautooomy, and thus A pus ap'us apus may be a valid 
designation of a sub-specics iC the names are otherwise valid. 

It has happened frequently and continues to happen that a 
creature is discovered to have been given more than one name. 
Which of these is valid ? The decision of this is one of the most 
difficult and controverted problems in nomenclature. In the 
hope of settling it by some system which should be as nearly 
as possible automatic and should leave the least possible to the 
inclination or choice of the individual worker, there was formu- 
lated what is called the rule of priority. The valid name of a 
genus or species is that name under which St was first designated, 
but with the conditions first that the name was published and 
accompanied by an indication, definition or description, and 
second that the author applied the principles of binary nomen- 
clature. The tenth edition of Linnaeus' Systema naturae (175S) 
is the work that first consistently applied the binary system to 
soology generally and is accepted as the starting-point of 
zoological nomenclature. Beginning from this the oldest avail- 
able name is therefore to be retained. The application of 
the rule of priority is in many cases very difficult, but the 
labours of zoologists in many groups are rapidly succeeding in 
making the necessary direct and incidental changes in nomen- 
clature, whilst, with regard to recent work, the rule is invaluable. 
A special difficulty has, however, arisen and is pressing so acutely 
that a most important modification is likely to be introduced. 
To systcmatists working with a large series of species in a 
museum or collection, one species is as important as another, 
and changes of names even of familiar animals are matters of 
little moment. But a comparatively small number of animals 
hold a prominent place in the attention of zoologists who arc 
not specially systematise* and of the public interested in natural 
history. It is complained that application of the rules of priority 
is changing the names of many familiar animals, designations 
that are sanctioned by long usage in museums and laboratories, 
in the famous treatises of comparative anatomy, of general 
biology, of travel, medicine, and the sciences and subjects 
closely related to soology. There is being claimed, in fact, 
protection against the law of priority for a certain number of 
such familiar and customary appellations. The machinery 
for drafting such a list of exceptions exists in the permanent 
nomenclature commission of the International Congress of 
Zoology, and there is more than a hope that this change will 
come into operation. 

To make the denotation of zoological names precise, exact 
workers are endeavouring to associate the conception of types 
with names, a process which can be made simple and definite 
with new work, but which presents great difficulties in the 
attempt to apply it to existing terms. Every family should 
have designated one of its genera as the type genus, every 
genus a type species and so forth. In the case of species or 
sub-species the type is a single specimen, either the only one 
before the author when writing his description, or one definitely 
selected by him, the others being paratypes. Such type speci- 
mens are the keynote of modern expert systematic work and 
their careful preservation and registration is of fundamental 
importance. A co-type is one of several specimens which hove 
together formed the basis of a species, no one of them having 
been selected by the author as a type. A topotype is a specimen 
killed at the typical locality. (P. C. M.) 

ZOOLOGY (from Gr. few, a Irving thing, and Xbyot, theory), 
that portion of biology (q.v.) which relates to animals, as dis- 
tinguished from that portion (Botany) which is concerned with 
plants. 

Hisroav 

There is something almost pathetic in the childish wonder 
and delight with which mankind in its earlier phases of 
civilization gathered up and treasured stories of strange animals 
from distant lands or deep seas, such as are recorded in the 
Pkysiolagm, in Albertus Magnus, and even at the present 
+h* popular treatises of Japan and China. That 
universally credulous stage, which may he called 



ZOOLOGY ihistok* 

the " legendary," was succeeded by the age of collectors and 
travellers, when many of the strange stories believed in were 
actually demonstrated as true by the living or pre* ft mot 
served trophies brought to Europe. The possibility of lm!Sm 
verification established verification as a habit; and cswracsar 
the collecting of things, instead of the accumulat- £e*mm» 
ing of reports, developed a new faculty of minute 
observation. The early collectors of natural curiosities were 
the founders of zoological science, and to this day the naturalist- 
traveller and his correlative, the museum curator and sys- 
tematise play a most important part in the progress of zoology. 
Indeed, the historical and present importance of this aspect 
or branch of zoological science is so great that the name " zoo- 
logy " has until recently been associated entirely with it, to 
the exclusion of the study of minute anatomical structure and 
function which have been distinguished as anatomy and physio- 
logy. Anatomy and the study of animal mechanism, animal 
physics and animal chemistry, all of which form part of a true 
zoology, were excluded from the usual definition of the word 
by the mere accident that the zoologist had his museum but 
not his garden of living specimens as the botanist had; 1 and, 
whilst the zoologist was thus deprived of the means of anato- 
mical and physiological study— only later supplied by the 
method of preserving animal bodies in alcohol— the demands 
of medidne for a knowledge of the structure of the human 
animal brought into existence a separate and special study of 
human anatomy and physiology. 

From these special studies of human structure the knowledge 
of the anatomy of animals has proceeded, the same investigator 
who had made himself acquainted with the structure of the 
human body desiring to compare with the standard given by 
human anatomy the structures of other animals, llius com- 
parative anatomy came into existence as a branch of inquiry 
apart from zoology, and it was only in the latter part of the 19th 
century that the limitation of the word ." zoology " to a know- 
ledge of animals winch expressly excludes the consideration 
of their internal structure was rejected by the general con- 
sent of those concerned in the progress of science. It is now 
generally recognized that it is mere tautology to speak of 
zoology and comparative anatomy, and that museum natu- 
ralists must give attention as well to the inside as to the outside 
of animals. 

Scientific zoology really started in the 16th century with 
the awakening of the new spirit of observation and exploration, 
but for a long time ran a separate course uninfluenced by the 
progress of the medical studies of anatomy and physiology. 
The active search for knowledge by means of observation and 
experiment found its natural home in the universities. Owing 
to the connexion of medicine with these seats of learning, ft 
was natural that the study of the structure and functions of 
the human body and of the animals nearest to man should 
take root there; the spirit of inquiry which now for the first 
time became general showed itself in the anatomical schools of 
the Italian luiversftie* of the xoth century, and spread fifty 
years later to Oxford 

In the 17 th century the lovers of the new philosophy, the 
investigators of nature by means of observation and experi- 
ment, banded themselves into academies or societies for mutual 
support and intercourse. The first founded of surviving 
European academies, the Academia Naturae Curiosorum (1651)** 
especially confined itself to the description and illustration of 
the structure of plants and animals; eleven years later (166*) 
the Royal Society of London was incorporated by royal charter, 
having existed without a name or fixed organization for 

1 The medieval attitude towards both plants and animals had no 
relation to real knowledge, but was part of a peculiar and in itself 
highly interesting mysticism. A fantastic and elaborate doctrine of 
symbolism existed which comprised alt nature; witchcraft, alchemy 
and medidne were its practical expressions. Animals as well as 
plants were regarded as " simples and used in medicine, and a 
knowledge of them was valued from this point of view. 

* The Academia Secretorum Naturae was founded at Naples 14 
1560, but was suppressed by the ecclesiastical authorities. 



HISTORY) 



ZOOLOGY 



1023 



seventeen years previously (Cram 1645). A little later the Aca- 
demy of Sciences of Paris was established by Louis XIV- The 
inflWnce of these great academies of the 17th century on the 
progress of zoology was precisely to effect that bringing together 
of the museum-men and the physicians or anatomists which was 
needed for further development. Whilst the race of collectors 
and systematizers culminated in the latter part of the x8th 
century in Linnaeus, a new type of student made its appearance 
in such men as John Hunter and other anatomists, who, not 
satisfied with the superficial observations of the popular " zoo- 
logists," set themselves to work to examine anatomically the 
whole animal kingdom, and to classify its members by aid of 
the results of such profound study. Under the influence of the 
touchstone of strict inquiry set on foot by the Royal Society, 
the marvels of witchcraft, sympathetic powders and other 
relics of medieval superstition disappeared like a mist before 
the sun, whilst accurate observations and demonstrations of 
a host of new wonders accumulated, amongst which were 
numerous contributions to the anatomy of animals, and none 
perhaps more noteworthy than the observations, made by the 
aid of microscopes constructed by himself, of Leeuwenhoek, 
the Dutch naturalist (1683), some of whose instruments were 
presented by him to the society. 

It was not until the 19th century that the microscope, thus 
early applied by Leeuwenhoek, Malpigbi, Hook and Swammer- 
dam to the study of animal structure, was perfected as an 
instrument, and accomplished for zoology its final, and most 
Important service. The perfecting of the microscope led to a 
full comprehension of the great doctrine of cell-structure and 
the establishment of the facta— (1) that all organisms are either 
single corpuscles (so-called cells) of living material (microscopic 
animalcules, ftc) or are built up of an immense number of such 
wits; (a) that all organisms begin their individual existence as 
a single unit or corpuscle of living substance, which multiplies 
by binary fission, the products growing in size and multiplying 
similarly by binary fission; and (3) that the life of a multi- 
cellular organism is the sum of the activities of the corpuscular 
units of which it consists, and that the- processes of life must 
be studied in and their explanation obtained from an under* 
standing of the chemical and physical changes which go on 
in each individual corpuscle or unit of living material or 
protoplasm. 

Meanwhile the astronomical theories of development of the 
solar system from a gaseous condition to its present form, put 
forward by Kant and by Laplace, had impressed men s minds 
t+m*t with the conception of a general movement of spon- 
taneous progress or development In all nature. The 
science of geology came into existence, and the whole 
1 of successive stages of the earth's history, each with 
its distinct population of strange animals and plants* unlike 
those of the present day and simpler in proportion as they 
recede into the past, was revealed by Cuvier, Agassis and others. 
The history of the crust of the earth was explained by Lyell as 
due to a process of slow development, in order to effect which 
he called in no cataclysmic agencies, no mysterious forces differ- 
ing from those operating at the present day. Thus he carried 
on the narrative of orderly development from the point at which 
H was left by Kant and Lapbce--explaining by reference to the 
ascertained laws of physics and chemistry the configuration of 
the earth, its mountains and seas, its igneous and i*s stratified 
racks, just as the astronomers had explained by those same 
laws the evolution of the sun and planets from diffused gaseous 
matter of high temperature. The suggestion that living 
things must also he included in this great development was 
obvious. 

The delay in the establishment of the doctrine of organic 
evolution was due, not to the ignorant and unobservant, but to 
the leaders of zoological and botanical science. Knowing the 
almost endless complexity of organic structures, realizing that 
man himself with all the mystery of his fife and consciousness 
must be included in any explanation of the origin of living things, 
they preferred to regard living things as something apart from 



the rest of nature, specially cared for, specially created by a 
Divine Being. Thus it was that the so-called " Natur-philoso- 
phen " of the last decade of the 18th century, and r»# 
their successors in the first quarter of the 19th, Wgw» 
found few adherents among the working zoologists ffjj" ' 
and botanists. Lamarck, Treviranus, Erasmus Dar- ^*"* 
win, Goethe, and Saint-Hilaiie preached to deaf ears, for they 
advanced the theory that living beings had developed by a slow 
process of transmutation in successive generations from simpler 
ancestors, and in the beginning from simplest formless matter, 
without being able to demonstrate any existing mechanical 
causes by which such development must necessarily be brought 
about. They were met by the criticism that possibly such a 
development had taken place; but, as no one could show as 
a simple fact of observation that it had taken place, nor as a 
result of legitimate inference that it must have taken place, it 
was quite as likely that the past and present species of animals 
and plants had been separately created or individually brought 
into existence by unknown and inscrutable causes, and (it was 
held) the truly scientific man would refuse to occupy himself 
with such fancies, whilst ever continuing to concern himself 
with the observation and record of indisputable facts. The 
critics did well; for the " Natur-philosophen," though right 
in their main conception, were premature. 

It was reserved for Charles Darwin, In the year 2859, to 
place the whole theory of organic evolution on a new footing, 
and by bis discovery of a mechanical cause actually 
existing and demonstrable by which organic evolution 
must be brought about, entirely to change the attitude •#• 
in regard to it. of even the most rigid exponents of JJJj^" 
the scientific method. Darwin succeeded in estab- 
lishing the doctrine of organic evolution by the introduction 
into the web of the zoological and botanical sciences of a new 
science. The subject-matter of this new science, or branch of 
biological science, had been neglected: it did not form part of 
the studies of the collector and sjrstematist, nor was it a branch 
of anatomy, nor of the physiology pursued by medical men, 
nor again was it included in the field of microscopy and the cell- 
theory. The area of biological knowledge which Darwin was 
the first to subject to scientific method and to render, as it were, 
contributory to the great stream. formed by the union of tho 
various branches, is that which relates to the breeding of animals 
and plants, their congenital variations, and the transmission 
and perpetuation of those variations. This branch of biological 
science may be called thremmatology (Opi^ta, " a thing bred "). 
Outside the scientific world an immense mass of observation 
and experiment had grown up in relation to this subject. From 
the earliest times the shepherd, the farmer, the horticulturist, 
and the " fancier " had for practical purposes made themselves 
acquainted with a number of biological laws, and successfully 
applied them without exciting more than an occasional notice 
from the academic students of biology. It is one of Darwin's 
great merits to have made use of these observations and to have 
formulated their results to a large extent as the laws of variation 
and heredity. As the breeder selects a congenital variation 
which suits his requirements, and by breeding from the animals 
(or plants) exhibiting that variation obtains a new breed specially 
characterized by that variation, so in nature is there a selection 
amongst all the congenital variations of each generation of a 
species. This selection depends on the fact that more young 
are born than the natural provision of food will support. In 
consequence of this excess of births there is a struggle for 
existence and a survival of the fittest, and consequently an 
ever-present necessarily acting selection, which cither maintains 
accurately the form of the species from generation to generation 
or leads to its modification in correspondence with changes m 
the surrounding circumstances which have relation to its fitness 
for success in the struggle for life. 

Darwin's introduction of thremmatology into the domain of 
scientific biology wis accompanied by a new and special de- 
velopment of a branch of study which had previously been 
known as teleology, the study of the adaptation of organic 



1026 



considerable use of anatomical character* in his definitions 
of larger group*, and may thus be considered as the father of 
modern zoology. Associated with Ray in his work, and more 
especially occupied with the study of the Worms and Mottusca, 
was Martin Lister (1638-1712), celebrated also as the author 
of the first geological map. 

After Ray's death the progress of anatomical knowledge, 
and of the discovery and illustration of new forms of animal life 
lta« from distant lands, continued with increasing vigour. 
Kay* We note the names of Vafflsmeri (1661-1730) and 
tmmomn Alexander Monro (1697-1767); the travellers Tourne- 
fort (1656-1708) and Shaw (1692-1751); the collectors 
Rumphius (1637-1706) and Hans Sloane (1660-1753'); the 
entomologist Reaumur (1683-1757); Lhwyd (1703) and Linck 
(1674-1734). the students of Star-Fishes; Peyssonel (b. 1694), 
the investigator of Polyps and the opponent of MarsigK and 
Reaumur, who held them to be plants; Woodward, the 
palaeontologist (i66s-i72a)-rnot to speak of others of less 
importance. 

Two years after Ray's death Carl Linnaeus (1707-1778) was 
born. Unlike Jacob Theodore Klein (1685-1759), whose careful 
treatises on various groups of plants and animals were 
published during the period between Ray and Lin- 
naeus, the latter had his career marked out for him in a 
university, that of Upsala, where he was first professor of 
medicine and subsequently of natural history. His lectures 
formed a new departure in the academic treatment of zoology 
and botany, which, in direct continuity from the middle ages, 
had hitherto been subjected to the traditions of the medical 
profession and regarded as mere branches of " materiajnedica." 
Linnaeus taught zoology and botany as branches of knowledge 
to be studied for their own intrinsic interest. His great work, 
the System* naturae, ran through twelve editions during his 
lifetime (1st ed. 1735, 12th 1768). Apart from his special dis- 
coveries in the anatomy of plants and animals, and his descrip- 
tions of new spedes, the great merit of Linnaeus was his intro- 
duction of a method of enumeration and classification which 
may be said to have created systematic zoology and botany 
in their present form, and establishes his name for ever as the 
great organizer, the man who recognized a great practical want 
in the use of language and supplied it, Linnaeus adopted Ray's 
conception Of species, but he made spedes a practical reality 
by insisting that every spedes shall have a double Latin name 
— the first half to be the name of the genus common to several 
spedes, and the second half to be the specific name. Previously 
to Linnaeus long many-worded names had been used, sometimes 
with one additional adjective, sometimes with another, so that 
no true names were fixed and accepted. Linnaeus .by his 
binomial system made it possible to write and speak with 
accuracy of any given spedes of plant or animal. He was, m^ 
fact, the Adam of zoological science. He proceeded further 
to introduce into his enumeration of animals and plants a series 
of groups, viz. genus, order, class, which he compared to the 
subdivisions of an army or the subdivisions of a territory, the 
greater containing several of the less, as follows: — 

Class. Order. Genus. . Species. Variety. 

Genus sum- Genus inter- Genus proxi- Species. Individuum. 

mum. medium. mum. 

Provihda. Tcrritorium. Paroecia. Hagus. Domicilium. 

Legio. Cohors. Manipulus, Contubernium. Miles. 

Linnaeus himself recognized the purely subjective character 
of his larger groups; for. him spedes were, however, objective: 
" there are, " he said, " just so many spedes as in the beginning 
the Infinite Bang created." It was reserved for a philosophic 
zoologist of the 19th century (Agassiz, Essay on Classification, 
1859) to maintain that genus, order and class were also ob- 
jective facts capable of precise estimation and valuation. This 
climax was reached at the very moment when Darwin was 
publishing the Origin of Species (1859), by which universal 
ooinion has been brought to the position that spedes, as well 
— orders and classes, are the subjective expressions of 



ZOOLOGY (CLASSIFICATION 

a vast ramifying pedigree in which the only objective existences 
are individuals, the apparent spedes as well as higher groups 
being marked out, not by any distributive law, but by the inter- 
action of living matter and its physical environment, causing 
the persistence of some forms and the destruction of vast series 
of ancestral intermediate kinds. 

The classification of Linnaeus (from Syst. Nat., 12th ed., 
1766) should be compared with that of Aristotle. It ommta- 
is as follows— the complete list of T.in»g^m genera emOmn 0/ 
being here reproduced. — Lk m m tm . 

Class I. Mammalia. 
Order I. Primates. 

Genera: Homo, Simia, Lemur, Vesper&io. 
„ 2. Bruta. 

Genera ;EUphas t Tricktcus, Brady***. Myrme* 
copkogo, Mams, Dasypus. 
„ 3. Ferae. 

Genera: Phoca, Cams, Felts, Vieerra, Mustek*, 

Vrsus, JHdelpkys, Talpa, Sorex, Eriuaeeus. 

„ 4. Glxrts. 

Genera: Hystrix, Lepus, Castor, Mus, Sciurus, 
Noclilto. 
„ 5. Pecora. 

Genera: Camelus, Mosckus, Cenus, Copra, Oois, 
Bos. 
„ 6. BeUuae. 

Genera: Equus. Hippopotamus, Sue, Rhinoceros. 
„ 7. Cete. 

Genera: Monodon, Balaena, Pkyseter, Delpkmus. 
Class II. Aves. 

Order 1. AuipUres. 

Genera: VuUur, Falco, Strix, Lanius. 
„ 2. Picae. 

Genera: (a) TrockUus, Certhia, Upupa, Buphaga, 
Sitta, Oriolus, Coracias, Gracula. Corpus, Para- 
dised; (b) Ramphastos, Troeon, Psittacus. Crate* 
pkaga, Picus, Yunx, Cucufus, Buceo; (c) r 
ros, Alcomo, Merops, Todos. 
„ 3. Anserts. 



Genera: (a) Anas, Mergus, Phaethon, Plofus; 
(b) Rhyntops, Diomedea,. Alca, ProuUaria, 
Peleconus, Lotus, Sterna, Cdymbus. 
M 4. Crallae. 

Genera: (a) Photnicopterus, Platalea, Palamedea, 
Myctena, Tantalus, Ardea, Rocurvirostra, Scale* 
pax, Tnnga. Fulica, Parra, Rellus. PsofMo, 
Cancroma; (b) Hcmatopus, Ckaradrius, Otis, 
Stmtkie. 
„ 3. CaUinae. 

Genera : Didus, Pavo, Ueleagris, Crax, Phasianm, 
Tetrao, Numida. 
„ 6. Passeres. 

Genera: (a) Loxia, FringiOa, Emberiea; (I) 
Caprimulgus, Birunda, Pipra; fc) Tnrdus, 
Ampelis. Tanaera, Muscicapa; (4) Pan*, 
MotanUa, Alauda, Sturnus. Colombo. 
Class III. Amphibia. 
Order 1. Reptilia. 

Genera; Testudo, Draco, Lacerta, Rana. 
2. Serpentes. 

Genera: Ctotalus, Boa, Coluber, Anguis, Ampku* 
baena, Caecilia. 
„ 3. Nantes. 

Genera: Pttrtmyum, Raja. Squolus, Cktmaeru, 
Lopkius, Acipenser, Cydopterus, Batistes, Os~ 
tracion, Tetrodon, Dtodon, Centrist**, Syn- 
gnatkus, Pegasus. 
Class IV. Piscbs. 
Order 1. A pedes. 

Genera: Muraena, Gymuotus, Tridnurus, Anar- 
rkUfuu, Anmodytes, OphUium, Strentateus, 
Xtpkias. 
„ 2. Jupdares. 

Genera: Cattionymus, Uranoscefus, Ttockinus, 
Gadus, Blennius. 
v 3. TkoraeioL 

Genera: Cepola, Bchenms, Corypmumn, Cattm. 
Coitus, Scorpaena, Zeus, PJeurouedes, Chaetoden, 

„ 4. Abdominales. 

Genera: CobnUs, Amia, Suurus, Zeutbis, Lewi- 
caria, Sahno, Fistularia, Rsox. Elope, Arm- 

* mwj9mB9*9uwmi VS*swJ^iPf v^iNfWt 



CLASSIFICATION] 

Cbas V. Inner a. 

Order I. CoUopbtra. 

Genera: (a) Scarabaeus, Luconus, Dermestes, 
Hister, Byrrhus, Grrinns, Attdabus, Curculio, 
Sitpha, CocrineOa; (b) Bruckus, Casstda. Ptinns, 
Chrysomota, Hispa, lido*. Tenebrio, Lampyris, 
MordeUo, Staphytinus; (e) Cerambyx, Lepturo, 
Cantkoris, Slater, Cicindda, BnpresHs, Dytiscus, 
Carabm, Necydaiior Forfiatta. 

■§ 3» HtmtpttrO. 

Genera: BlaUa, Mantis, GryUus, Futgom, Cicada, 
Nolonecta, Nepa, Cimex, Aphis, Chermes, Coc- 
cus, Thrips. 
n 3; LcpidcpUtu. 

Genera: Papilto, Sphinx, Phalaeno. 
M 4* Neuroptera, 

Genera: LibeUula, Ephemera, Myrmeleon, Pkry- 
gonea, Hemerobius, Pnnorpa, Raphidia. 
it 5* Hymenoptera. 

Genera: Cynips, Tenlkredo, Sirex, Ichneumon, 
Spbex, Otrysis, Vespa, Apis, Formica, Mtdilia. 
n 6. Diptera. 

Genera: Oestrus, Tiptda, Musca, Tabanns, Culex, 
Empis, Conops, Asilus, Bombylius, Hippobosca. 

Genera: (a) Fedibua sex: capite a thorace dis- 
crete: Lepisma, Podura, Tames, Pedicu- 
lus, Putex. 

(b) Podibus 8-14; capite thoraceque nrntit : 

Acorns, Phalanttmm, Aranea, Scorpio, 
Comer, Monaculus, Oniscms. 

(c) Pedlbus pluribus; capite a thorace discrete*: 

Scctopcndra, Julus. 
CUai VI. Vermes. 
Order 1. Intestina, 

Genera: (a) Pcrtus* laterali poro? Lumbricus, 
Sipuuculus, Fasdola. 

(a) ImperforaU poro laterali nullo: Gordius, 

Ascaris, Hirudo, Myxsmt. 

Genera: (a) Ore supero; ban ae ajfigens; 
Actiu%a } Ascidia. 
(a)Ore antico; corpore pertuso laterali fora- 

rainulo: Limax, Aplysia, Dons, Teihts, 
(c)Ore antico; corpore tentaculis antice 
cincto: HoloOmria, Terebdla, 

(d) Ore antico; corpore brachiato: Triton, 

Sepia, Clio, Lemaea, ScyUaea. 
(f) Ore antico; corpore pedato: Aphrodite, 

Nereis. 
(J) Ore infero centrali: Medusa, Asteria, 

m 3. Testacea. 

Genera: (a) Mukivalvia: Chiton, Lepas, Photos. 

(b) Bivalvia (-Concha*): Mya, Solen, TdUna, 

Cardium, Mactra, Donax, Venus, Spon- 
dylus. Chama, Area, Ostrea, Anomut, 
Mytuus, Pinna. 

(c) Univalvia spira ngu!iari(~ Cochleae) :Artp- 

nauta. Nautilus, Conus, Cypraea, Bum, 
Volnio, Buccinum, Stromous, Murex, 
Trothus, Turbo, Hdix } Neriia, RalwUs. 

(d) Univalvia absque spira regular! : Patella, 

Dentalium, Serpulo, Teredo, Sabdla. 
m 4. Lithophyta. 

Genera: Tubipora, Madrepora, MUUpora, Cdls- 
pora. 
H 5. Zoopkyta. 

Genera: (a) Fixata: Isis, Gorgouia, Alcyonium, 
Spimrta, Flustro, Tubutarto, CoraUtno, 
Sertularta, VorticeUa. 
(ft) Locomotiva: Hydra, Pennatula, Taenia, 
Vohox, Furia, Chaos. 

The characters of the six classes are thus given by Linnaeus: — 

Cor bfloculart, biauritum; 
Sanguine ealido, rubror 
Cor uniloculare, uniaurituro ; * I pulmone arbitrario, AmbkfbiU', 
> braachm externis. Pinions. 



ZOOLOGY 



1027 



} viviparts, Mammalibus; 
l oviparis, Avibus. 



Sanguine frigido, rubra 

Cor uniloculare, inauritum 

Sanie frigida, albida: 



I antennatis, Insectis; 
t tentaculatis, Vermibus. 



* The anatomical error in reference to the auricles of Reptiles and 
BatrachJans on the part of Linnaeus is extremely interesting, since 
it shows to what an extent the most patent facts may escape the 
observation of even the greatest observers, and what on amount 
of repeated dissection and unprejudiced attention has been necessary 
before the structure of the commonest animals has become known. 



Between Linnaeus and Cuvier there are no very great names; 
but under the stimulus given by the admirable method and 
system of Linnaeus observation and description t¥nm 
of new forms from all parti of the world, both l ' m mmmm9 
recent and fosafl, amimnlated. We can only dte the *•***•* 
names of Charles Bonnet (1790-1793), the entomologist, who 
described the reproduction of Aphis; Banks and Solander, 
who accompanied Captain Cook on his first voyage<t 768-1771); 
Thomas Pennant (1796-1708), the describer of the English 
fauna; Peter Simon Pallas (1741-1811), who specially extended 
the knowledge of the Linnaean Vermes, and under the patronage 
of the empress Catherine explored Russia and Siberia; De Geer 
(1 720-1778), the entomologist; Lyonnet (1701-1789), the 
author of the monograph of the anatomy of the caterpillar of 
Cossus- ligmperdus; Cavolim* (1756-1810), the Neapolitan 
marine zoologist and forerunner of Delia Chiajc (fl. 18*8); 
O. F. MQlfcr (1730-1784), the describer of fresh-water Oft* ockoeto; 
Abraham Trembley (1 700-1 784), the student of Hydra; and 
O. F. LedermnHer (17x0-1769), the inventor of the term In- 
fusoria. Hie effect of the Linnaean system upon the general 
conceptions of soologists was no less marked than were its 
results in the way of stimulating the accumulation of accurately 
observed details. The notion of a scala naturae, which had 
since the days of classical antiquity been a part of the general 
philosophy of nature amongst those who occupied themselves 
with such conceptions, now took a more definite form in the 
minds of skilled soologists. Hie species of Linnaeus were 
supposed to represent a series of steps in a scale of ascending 
complexity, and ft was thought possible thus to arrange the 
animal kingdom in a single series— the orders within the classes 
succeeding one another in regular gradation, and the classes 
succeeding one another in a similar rectilinear p r ogr es sion. 

J. B. P. de Lamarck (1744-1829) represents most completer/, 
both by his development theory (to be further Lomontro 
mentioned below) and by" his scheme of dassifica- •*■ " * *> 
tion, the high-water mark of the popular but Mrt ** 
fallacious* conception of a scala naturae. His 
(1801-1812) is as follows: — 



Class I. InrusoatA. 

Orders: Nuda, Appeudtcutata, 
Class II. Polvfi. 

Orders: Ciliati (Rotifero), DtnudaH (Hydroids). Vagi- 
nati (Ausuoooo and Potyoo). Natantes (Crinoio*). 
Cass III. Radiaua. 

Orders: MoUus (Acalephae), Echinoderma (including 
Acttmae). 
Class IV. Tvkicata. 

Orders: BothryUaria, Ascidia. 
Class V. Vermes. 

Orders: Malta (Tape-Worms and Flukes). Rigiduli 
(Nematoids). Hispuiutt (Nats, Ac), Episoanae 
(Lernacans, Ac). 
2. Sensitive Antmals. 

Class VI Iksbcta (Hexopodo). 

Orders: Aptera, Dtptera, Hemiptera, UpidopUra, 
Hymenoptera, Neuroptera, Orthopiero, Coteoptera. 
Class VII. Arachnida. 

Orders: Anlennato-TrachooUo (-Thysouura and 
Myrtoboda), Exantennato-Trachoalia, Exaniennato- 
Branckuslia. 
Class VI IL CausTACiA. 

Orders: Heterobranchia (Branchiopoda, Isopoda. Am- 
phtpoda, Stomapoda), Homobranchta (Decapoda). 
Class IX. Annelida. 

Orders. Apoda, Antennata, Sedeutoria. 
Class X. CixxirsniA. 

Orders: Sessilio, Pedunculota, 

Class XI CONCHIFHRA, 

Orders: Dimyaria, Monomyaria. 
Class XII. Mollusc a. 

Orders: Pteropoda, Gasteropoda, TrachoUpoda, Cepaa- 
lopoda, Heseropoaa. 



Class XV. Buds. 
., XVT. Mammau. 



x. I nteUigeut Animals. 
Class XIII. Fishes. 
„ XIV. Rkptilu. 



tozS 



ZOOLOGY 



The enumeration of ordeia above given will enable the nader 
to form some conception of the progress of knowledge relating 
to the lower forms of life during the fifty odd yean which inter- 
vened between Linnaeus and Lamarck. The number of genera 
recognized by Lamarck is more than ten times as great as that 
recorded by Linnaeus. 

We have mentioned Lamarck before bis great contemporary 
Cuvier because, in spite of his valuable philosophical doctrine 
of development, he was, as compared with Cuvier and estimated 
as a systematic zoologist, a mere enlargement and logical out- 
come of Linnaeus. 

The distinctive merit of G. L. Cuvier (1769-1833) " that hc 
started a new view as to the relationship of animals, which he 
C^jt,., may be said in a large measure to have demon- 
strated as true by his own anatomical researches. He 
opposed the scala naturae theory, and recognized four distinct 
and divergent branches or embronckemens, as he called them, 
in each of which he arranged a certain number of the Linnaran 
classes, or similar classes. The embronckemens were charac- 
terised each by a different type of anatomical structure. Cuvier 
thus laid the foundation of that branching tree-like arrangement 
of the classes and orders of animals now recognized as being 
the necessary result of attempts to represent what is practically 
a genealogical tree or pedigree. Apart from this, Cuvier was 
a keen-sighted and enthusiastic anatomist of great skill and 
industry. It is astonishing how many good observers it re- 
quires to dissect and' draw and record over and over again the 
structure of an animal before an approximately correct account 
of it is obtained. Cuvier dissected many Molluscs and other 
animals which had not previously been anatomized; of others 
he gave more correct accounts than had been given by earlier 
writers. Another special distinction of Cuvier is his remarkable 
work in comparing extinct with recent organisms, his descriptions 
of the fossil Mammalia of the Paris basin, and his general applica- 
tion of the knowledge of recent animals to the reconstruction of 
extinct ones, as indicated by fragments only of their skeletons. 

It was in 181 2 that Cuvier communicated to the Academy 
of Sciences of Paris bis views on the classification of animals. 
He says:— 

" Si Ton considere le regne animal d'apres les principe* que nous 
venons de poser, en se debarassant des prejuges etablia sur les 
divisions andennement admises, en n'ayant egard qu' a l'organisa- 
tion et a la nature des animaux, et non pas a leur grandeur, a leur 
utilite, au plus ou moins de connaissance que nous en avona, m a 
toutea lea autre* circonstances accessoirea, on trouvera qu'il existe 
quatre formes jprindpales, quatre plana generaux, si Ton peut s'ex- 
primer ainsi, d'apres lesqucls tous les animaux semblent avoir ete 
moddes et dont ha divisions ulterieures, de queique titre que les 
naturalists les aient decorees, ne sont que dea modifications assez 
legem, fondees sur le developpement, on I'addition de quetques 
parties qui ne changent rien a i'essence du plan." 

€"*"£• . His classification as finally elaborated in Le Regne 
SSmT Animal (Paris, 1819) is as follows:— 

First Branch. Anlmalla Vertebrate. 

Class I. Mammalia. _ . 

Orders: Bimana, Quodrumona, Camtoora, Marsufnalta, 
RodtnHa, Edentata, Paehydermata, Ruminantia, Cetacea. 
Class II. Birds. ^ ., 

Orders: AccipUres, PaSseres, Scansores, Callinae, Crauae, 
Palmipedes. 
Class III. Reptilia. 

Orders: Chehnia, Sattria, Ophidic, Batrockia* 
Class IV, Fishbs. _ mm m 

Order*: (a) Acanlkopterygii, Abdomtnales, Subbrochit, 
A pedes, Lobhobranchii, PUctornatkt; (6) Sturionts, 
Selacktt, CychsiomL 



Second Branch. 

Class I. Cephalopoda. 
Class II. Pteropoda. 

Class III. Gastropoda. „ . 

Orders: Ptdmonoia, Nndibranckia, Inferobronchta, Tectt- 
bronchia, Heteropoda, Pectmibronckio, Tubulibranckta, 
ScuHbratuhia, Cyclobranckia. 
Class IV. Achphala. 

Orders: Testaeea, Tunieata. 
Class V. Brachiopoda. 
Class VI. Cirruofoda. 



Third Branch. Anlmalla Arocmtata. 
Class I. Annblidbs. 

Orders-' TubicoUu, Dorsibranckiae, Abranddae, 
Class II. Crustacea. 

Orders: (a) Malacostraca : Decapod*, Stomopoda, Am- 
pkipeda. Laemodipoda, Isopoa\ (») Entomostraca: 
Brancktopeda, Poeahpoda, TriUbUae. 
Class III. Arachnids*, 

Orders: PulmonaHae, Traekeariae. 
Class IV. Insects. 

Orders: Uynapoda, Thysauum, Parasita, Smcloria, C0U0- 
ptera, OrihopUra, Hemipiera, NeuropUra, Hymenopiero. 
Lepidoptera, Rktptptera, Diptcra. 
Fourth Branch. Anlmalia Radiata. 
Class 1. Ecbinodbrms. 

Orders. PedueUala, Apoda. 

Class 11 IMTESTIMAL WORMS. 

Orders. Nematotdea, Parenckymatasa* 

Class III. ACALEPHAB. 

Orders. Simplices, Hydroslaticae. 
Class IV Polypi (including the CotUxUra of later authorities 
and the Polysoa). 
Orders: Canon, GeloJtnori. PoJypiariu 
Class V. Infusoria. 

Orders: Rotifera, Hometenea (this includes the Protozoa 
of recent writers and some Protophyta). 

The leading idea of Cuvier, his four embronckemens, was con- 
firmed by the Russo-German naturalist Von Baer (1 793-1876), 
who adopted Cuvier's divisions, speaking of them as YmaBoor. 
the peripheric, the longitudinal, the massive, and the 
vertebrate types of structure. Von Baer, however, has another 
place in the history of zoology, being the first and most striking 
figure in the introduction of embryology into the consideration 
of the relations of animals to one another. 

Cuvier may be regarded as tke zoologist by whom anatomy was 
made the one important guide to the understanding of the rela- 
tions of animals. But the belief, dating from Malpighi ._ 
(1670), that there is a relationship to be discovered. ff?.~ * 
and not merely a haphazard congregation of varieties 01 *j^ 
structure to be classified, had previously gained ground. •""• 
Cuvier was familiar with the speculations of the u Natur-phito- 
sophen," and with the doctrine of transmutation and filiation by 
which they endeavoured to account for existing animal forma. 
The noble aim of F. W. J. Schelling, " das ganze System der Natur- 



among the scientific men of the year 1 800. Lamarck accepted 
the development theory fully, and pushed his speculations 
far beyond the realm of fact. The more cautious Cuvier adopted 
a view of the relationships of animals which, whilst denying genetic 
connexion as the explanation, recognized an essential identity of 
structure throughout whole groups of animals. This identity was 
held to be due to an ultimate law of nature or the Creator's plan. 
The tracing out of this identity in diversity, whether regarded as 
evidence of blood-relationship or as a remarkable display of skill 
on the part of the Creator in varying the details whilst retaining 
the essential, became at this period a special pursuit, to which 
Goethe, the poet, who himself contributed importantly to it, gave 
the name "morphology." C. F. Wolff. Goethe and Oken share 
the credit of having initiated these views. In regard especially 
to the structure of flowering plants and the Vertebrate akulL 
Cuvier's doctrine of four plans of structure was essentially a morpho- 
logical one, and so was the single-scale doctrine of Buffon and 
Lamarck, to which it was opposed. Cuvier's morphological doctrine 
received its fullest development in the principle of the " correla- 
tion of parts," which he applied to pafocontoiogical investigation, 
namely, that every animal ia a definite whole, and that no parr 
can be varied without entailing correlated and law-abiding varia- 
tions in other parts, so that from a fragment it should be possible, 
had we a full knowledge of the laws of animal structure or morpho- 
logy, to reconstruct the whole Here Cuvier was imperfectly 
formulating, without recognizing the real physical basis of the 
phenomena, the results of the laws of heredity, which were sub- 
sequently investigated and brought to bear oa the problems of 
animal structure by Darwin. 

Sir Richard Owen (1804-1892) may be regarded as the fore- 
most of Cuvier's disciples. Owen not only occupied himself 
with the dissection of rare animals, such as the Pearly owom* 
Nautilus, Lingula, Ltmulus, Protopterus, Aptcryx, &c ( 
and with the description and reconstruction of extinct reptiles, 
birds and mammals— following the Cuvierian tradition— but 
gave precision and currency to the morphological doctrines 
which had taken their rise in the beginning of the century by 



ZOOLOGY 



1029 



the introduction of two terms, "homology* and "analogy/ 9 
which were defined ao as to express two different kinds of agree- 
ment in animal structures, which, owing to the want of such 
" counters of thought," had been hitherto continually confused. 

AnaUtgous structures in any two animals compared were by 
Owen defined as structure* performing similar functions, but not 
necessarily derived from the modification of one and the same 
part in the " plan " or " archetype " according to which the two 
animals compared were supposed to be constructed. Homologous 
structures were such as, though greatly differing In appearance 
and detail from one another, ana though performing widely different 
functions, yet were capable of being shown by adequate study 
of a series of intermediate forms to be derived from one and the 
same part or organ of the " plan-form "or" archetype." It is 
not easy to exaggerate the service rendered by Owen to the study 
of zoology by the introduction of this apparently small 
piece of verbal mechanism; it takes place with the classifi- 
catory terms of Linnaeus. And, though the conceptions of " arche- 
typal morphology," to which it had reference, are now abandoned 
in favour of a genetic morphology, yet we should remember, in 
estimating the value of this and of other speculations which have 
given place to new views in the history of science, the words of 
the great reformer himself. " Erroneous observations are in the 
highest degree injurious to the pro gre ss of science, since they often 
persist for a long time. But erroneous theories, when they are 
suppor t ed by facts, do little harm, since every one takes a healthy 
pleasure in proving their falsity " (Darwin). Owen's definition of 
analogous structures holds good at the present day. His homo- 
logous structures are now spoken of as " homogenetic " structures, 
the idea of community of re pres en tation in an archetype giving 
place to community of derivation from a single r epres entative 
structure present in a common ancestor. Darwinian morphology 
has further rendered necessary the introduction of the terms " homo- 
plasy " and " homoplastic " (E. Ray Lankester, in An*, and Mae. 
Aai. Hist. 1870) to express that close agreement in form which 
may be attained in the course of evolutional changes by organs or 
parts in two animals which have been subjected to similar moulding 
conditions of the environment, but have not a close genetic com- 
munity of origin, to account for their similarity in form and struc- 
ture, although they have a certain identity in primitive quality 
which is accountable for the agreement of their response to similar 
moulding conditions. 

The danificarirm adopted by Owen in his lectures (1855) 
OvrWa does not adequately illustrate the progress of zoological 
knowledge between Cuvier's death and that date, but, 
such as it is, it is worth citing here. 
Vertebrate {Mydencepkala, Owen). 
»: Mammalia, Aves, Reptilia, Pisces. 
ArticuUta. 
.»«•: AraCHHTDa, Iksbcta (including Sub-Classes Myria- 
poda, Hexapoda), Crustacea (including Sub-Classes Ento- 
mostraca, Malacastraca), Enzoa (Epizootic Crustacea), 
Amtellata (Chaetopods and Leeches), Cirkipbdia. 
Province: MoUusca. 

Classes: Gbmialovoda. Gasteropoda, Ptebofoda, Lamblli- 

•RANCBIATA, BfcACHIDfODA, TUVICATA. 

Province: .Sadlata. 

Sub-Province: F f^f^f - 

Classes: Echinodermata, Bkyozoa, Akthozoa, Aca- 

LBPBAE, HVDROZOA. 

Sub-Pr o v i nce: Eatoaoa* 

Classes: Coblblmintma, Stbbeuhntha. 
Sub-Province: Infusoria. 

Classes: Rotifera, Polygastria (the Prototoo of recent 



PreaveycCi 

Clai 

Province. 



The teal centre of progress of systematic zoology was no 
longer in France nor with the disciples of Cuvier in England, 
but after his death moved to Germany. The wave of mor- 
phological speculation, with its outcome of new systems and new 
theories of classification (see Agassis, Essay on Classification, 
1850), which were as numerous as the professors of zoological 
science, was necessarily succeeded in the true progress of the 
science by a period of minuter study in which the microscope, 
the discovery of embryologjcal histories, and the all-important 
cell-theory came to swell the stream of exact knowledge. 

'the greatest of all investigators of animal structure in the 
19th century was Johann M Oiler (1 801-1858), the successor in 
JMijMfc Germany of the anatomists Rathfce (1 793-1860) 
and Meckel (1 781-1833). His true greatness can 
only be estimated by a consideration of the fact that he wa« % 
great teacher not only of human and comparative anatomy 
and zoology but also of physiology, and that nearly all the most 



distinguished German zoologists and physiologists of the period 
1850 to 1870 were his pupils and acknowledged his leader- 
ship. The most striking feature about Johann Muller's work, 
apart from the comprehensiveness of his point of view, in which 
he added to the anatomical and morphological ideas of Cuvier 
a consideration of physiology, embryology and microscopic 
structure, was the extraordinary accuracy, facility and com- 
pleteness of his recorded observations. He could do more with 
a single specimen of a rare animal (e.g. in his memoir on 
Ampkiaxus, Berlin, 1844) in the way of making out its complete 
structure than the ablest of his contemporaries or successors 
could do with a plethora. His power of rapid and exhaustive 
observation and of accurate pictorial reproduction was pheno- 
menal His most important memoirs, besides that just 
mentioned, are those on the anatomy and classification of 
Fishes, on the CneHmini and on the developmental history 
of the Eehinodenns. 

A name which is apt to be f org o tten in the period between 
Cuvier and Darwin, because its possessor occupied all isolated 
position in England and was not borne up by any j, y % 
great school or university, Is that of John Vaughan. Tboeaa* 
Thompson (1770-1847), an army surgeon, who in 1816 •**• 
became district medical inspector at Cork, and then took to the 
study of marine Invertebrata by the aid of the microscope. 
Thompson made three great discoveries, which seem to have 
fallen in his way in the most natural and simple manner, but 
must be regarded really as the outcome of extraordinary genius. 
He showed (1830) that the organisms like Fluslra are not 
hydroid Polyps, but of a more complex structure resembling 
Molluscs, and he gave them the name Poiyzoa He discovered 
(1823) the Pcntacrinus europaeus, and showed that it was 
the larval form of the Feather-Star Anlcdon (Comotula,. 
He upset (1830) Cuvier's retention of the Cirripedcs among 
MoUusca, and his subsequent treatment of them as an isolated 
class, by showing that they begin life as free-swimming 
Crustacea identical with the young forms of other Crustacea, 
Vaughan Thompson is a type of the marine zoologists, such as 
Dalyell, Michael Sars, P. J. Van Bencden, Claparede, and Allman, 
who during the 19th century approached the study of the lower 
marine organisms in the same spirit as that in which Trembley 
and Schfiffer in the 18th century, and Swammcrdam in the 17th, 
gave themselves to the study of the minute fresh-water forms 
of animal life. 

It is impossible to enumerate or to give due consideration 
to all the names in the army of anatomical and embryological 
students of the middle third of the 19th century whose labours 
bore fruit in the modification of zoological theories and in the 
building up of a true classification of animals. Their results 
are best summed up in the three schemes of classification which 
follow below— those of Rudolph Lcuckart (1823-1896), Henri 
Milne-Edwards (1800-1S84), and T. H. Huxley (18*5-1805), all 
of whom individually contributed very greatly by- their special 
discoveries and researches to the increase of exact knowledge. ^ 

Contemporaneous with these were various schemes of classi- 
fication which were based, not on a consideration of the entire 
structure of each animal, but on the variations of a 
single organ, or on the really non-significant fact of 
the structure of the egg. All such single-fact systems 
have ^proved to be departures from the true line of 
growth of the zoological system which was shaping 
itself year by year— uiiknown to those who so shaped it— as a 
genealogical tree. They were attempts to arrive at a true know- 
ledge of the relationships of animals by " royal roads "; their 
followers were landed in barren wastes. 

R. Leuckart's classification (Die Morphologic und ff"*2** 
die VerwandtschaftsverkSltnisse der wirbcUosen Tkicre, JJSi" 
Brunswick, 1848) is as follows:— 

Type t. Coelenterata. 

Class I. Potrn m . 

Orders: Anttotoa and Cyttcotoa. 

„ II. ACALETIf AE. 

Orders: Dtscopkorae and Ctcnopkorm, 



•/cftfSA* 



1030 

iTypej. B 
Clan 



ZOOLOGY 



Pelmatozoa. 

Orders: CysHdeo and Crinoidea. 
N II. Actwozoa. 

Orders: Eckinida and AsUrido, 

H III. SCYTODBRMATA. 

Orders: Holotkuriae and SipmncuUda. 
Types. Vermes, 

Class I. Anbntebaeti. 

Orders: Cestodes and AcantkouphalL 
„ II. Apodes. 

Orders: Nemertini, TmbcUarHt Tiremalodes and 
Hintdinei. 
M III. ClLlATI. 

Orders: Bryotoa and Rotifer*. 
„ IV. Aknblidbs. 

Orders: Nematodes Lumbrictni and BrandUa/i. 
Type 4. Artfcropoda. 
Class I. Crustacea. 

Orders: Entomostraea and Malacostraca, 
„ II. Insect a.. 

Orders: Myriapoda, Aracknida (Acer*, Latr.), 

• and Hexapoda. 
Type 5. Mottnaca. 

Class 1. Tunxcata.. 

Orders: i4«Cf&oe and So/Ao*. 

* II. ACBPHALA. 

Orders: JtamttttroadUafa and Brackiopodo, 

n III. GASTBBOPOOA. 

Orders: Ueterobrandua t Dermatobronckio. Helero- 
poda, Ctenobranckia, Pulmonale and Cjdb- 
araatAta. 
„ IV. Cephalopoda. 
Type 6. Vertebrate. (Not specially dealt with.) 

. The classification given by Henri Milne-Edwaids 
™ (C<ri<r« EUmentaire d'Histoire Naturelle, Paris, 1855) 
is as follows.— 

Branch I. Osteoioaria or Vertebrate, 

Sub-Branch 1. Allantoidiana. 

Class I. Mammalia. 

Orders: (o) Monodelphia: Bimana, Quadru- 
' ma*o. Cheiroptera, Jnsectieora, Rodentio, Eden- 
tata, Camnora, Amphibia, Packydermato, 
Ruminantia, Cetocea; (b) Didelphia: Marsu- 

„ II. Birds. 

Orders: Rapaces, Paueres, Scansores, CaUinae, 
GraUae, Palmipedes. 
w III. Reptiles. 

Orders: Cketonia, Sauna, Opkidio. 
Sub-Branch 2. AnaUantoidiana. 
Class I. Batbachians. 

• Orders: Anura, Urodelo, Perennibranckia, Cae- 

eUiae. 
„ II. Fishes. 

Section t. OsseL 

- Orders: Acantkopterypi, Abdominales, Sub- 
brackii, A podes, Lopkobravchii, Plectognathi. 
Section 2. ChondropierygiL 
Orders: Sturiones, Selachii, Cydostomi. 



Branch II 

Sub-Branch 1. Artbxopoda. 
Qaisl. Insecta. 

Orders: CoUoptera, Orlhoptera, Neuroptera, 
Hymenoptera, Lepidoptera, Hemiptera, Di- 
ptera, Rkipiptera, Anopleuro, Tkysanura. 
M II. My Rl A POD A. 

Orders: Chilognotha and Chilopoda. 
* lit. Abachnids. 

Orders: Pulmonaria and Tratkearia. 
M IV* Crustacea. 

Section 1; Podopktkalmia. 

Orders: Decapoda and Stomopodo, 
Section 2. Edriophthalmi. 
Orders: Amphipoda, Loemodipoda and Iso- 

Section 3. Bronchiapo&a. 
• Orders: Qstracodo, PkyUopodo and Trikh 

bitae. 
Section 4. Entomostraca. 
Orders: Copepoda^ Cladocera, Stpaonostoma, 
. .' Lemaeida, Cimpedia. 
Section 5. Xiphosura. 
Cthe orders of the classes which follow are not given in the work 



Sub-Branch a. Vermes. 
Class I. Annelids. 
M II. Helminths. 

„ III. TURBSLLABSA.. 



Class IV. Cbstoxdea. 
„ V. Rotatoria. 



Branch III. Malaeozoarla or VeJtasea. 
Sub-Branch 1. MoUuaca proper. 
Class I. Cephalopoda. Class III. Gasteropoda. 

„ II. PtEBOPODA. „ ly. ACBPHALA. 

Sub-Branch 2. Molluscoidea. 
Class I. Tunicata. Class II. Brtozoa. 

Branch IV. Zoophytes. 

Sub-Branch 1. Radiaria. 
Class I. Echimoderms. Class III. Corallaria or 

,, II. Acalephs. Polypi. 

Sub-Branch 2. Sarcodana. 
Class L Infusoria, Class II.. Spongiabia, 

In England T. H. Huxley adopted in his lectures 
(1869) a classification which was in many respects 
similar to both of the foregoing, but embodied im- 
provements of bis own. It is as fojtows:— 

Sub-Kingdom I. Pretax** 

Classes ; kiiizorODA. C»SLEOAKJMDA, KaDIOLAKIA* SPONGIDA. 
Sub* Kingdom II. Infusoria. 
Sub-Knigdofu HE. CoeLeotents, 

ClnsAM: Hvdsozoa, Actisq/qa, 
Sub- Kingdom JV. Annuloida* 

Classes: ScOLttitJA. EtHiNoofclLUATA. 
Sub- Kingdom V. AnauJosa, 

Ckasca : C rust Act A , A R A t U X IDA ,M VU APOD A J HSECTA.CbAB- 
TO^NAtUA, Anselioa. 
Sub-Kingdom Vf. Motluficoida. 

Clasuea: Folvzoa. BhAChiopooA.Tt'NiCATA^ 
Sub- Kingdom VIE. MoUusCi. 

CUb« : L AH E L L 01 ft A N C 1 1A T A , B BANCUtDCAGT BOPODA.PUIJSO 
CASTflOPODA, PibtiuruLiA, ClPttALOPODA. 

Sub-Kingdom VIII. Vertebrate. 

Classes: Pisces, Amphibia, Reptilia, Avbs, Mammalia. 

We now arrive at tne period when the doctrine of organic 
evolution was established by Darwin, and when naturalists, 
being convinced by him as they had not been by- the trans- 
mutationists of fifty years' earlier date, were compelled to take 
an entirely new view of the significance of all attempts at 
framing a "natural" classification. 

Many zoologists— prominent among them in Great Britain 
being Huxley— had been repelled by the airy fancies and 
assumptions of the "philosophical" morphologists. 
The efforts of the best minds in roology had been 
directed for thirty years or more to ascertaining 
with increased accuracy and minuteness the struc- 
ture, microscopic and gross, of all possible forms of 
animals, and not only of the adult structure but of the steps 
of development of that structure in the growth of each kind 
of organism from the egg to maturity. Putting aside fantastic 
theories, these observers endeavoured to give in their classi- 
fications a strictly objective representation of the facts of 
animal structure and of the structural relationships of *nim»l« 
to one another capable of demonstration. The groups within 
groups adopted for this purpose were necessarily wanting in 
symmetry: the whole system presented a strangely irregular 
character. From time to time efforts were made by those who 
believed that the Creator must have followed a symmetrical 
system in his production of animals to force one or other 
artificial, neatly balanced scheme of classification, upon the 
zoological world. The last of these was that of Louis Agassi* 
(1807-X873), who, whilst surveying all previous 
classifications, propounded a scheme of his own 
(Essay on Classification, 1859), in which, as well as in the 
criticisms he applies to other systems,, the leading notion is 
that sub-kingdoms, classes, orders and families have a real 
existence, and that it is possible to ascertain and distinguish 
characters which are of class value, others which are only of 
ordinal value, and so on, so that the classes of one sub-kingdom 
should on paper, and in nature actually do, correspond in 
relative value to those of another sub-kingdom, and the orders 
of any one class similarly should be so taken as to be of equal 



ZOOLOGY 



103 1 



value villi time of another < 




, and have been actually so 



The whole position was changed by the acquiescence, which 
became universal, in the doctrine of Danria. That doctrine 
took some few yean to produce its effect, but it 
became evident at once to those who accepted Dar- 
winism that the natural classification of animals, 
after which collectors and anatomists, morphotogisCs, 
philosophers and embryologists had been so long 
striving, was nothing more nor less than a genea- 
logical tree, with breaks and gaps of various extent in its record. 
The facts of the relationships of animals to one another, which 
had been treated as the outcome of an inscrutable law by most 
zoologists and glibly explained by the transcendental morpho- 
lofjsts, were amongst the most powerful arguments in support 
of Darwin's theory, since they, together with all other vital 
phenomena, received a sufficient explanation through it. It 
is to be noted that, whilst the zoological system took the form 
of a genealogical tree, with main stem and numerous diverging 
branches, the actual form of that tree, its limitation to a certain 
number of branches corresponding to a limited number of diver- 
gences in structure, came to be regarded as the necessary 
consequence of the operation of the physico-chemical laws of 
the universe, and it was recognized that the ultimate explanation 
of that limitation is to be found only in the constitution of 
matter itself. 

The first naturalist to -put into practical form the conse- 
quences of the new theory, in so far as it affected zoological 
Umftai classification, was Ernst Haeckel of Jena (b. 1834), 
who in 1866, seven years after the publication of 
Darwin's Origin of Species, published his suggestive Generelle 
Morphologic. Haeckel introduced into classification a number 
of terms intended to indicate the branchings of a genealogical 
tree. The whole "system" or scheme of classification was 
termed a genealogical tree (Slammboum); the main branches 
were termed " phyla," their branchings " sub-phyla "; the great 
branches of the sub-phyla were termed "dadl," and the 
"•cladi " divided into H classes," these into sub-classes, these 
into legions, legions into orders, orders into sub-orders, sub- 
orders into tribes, tribes into families, families into genera, 
genera into species. Additional branchings could be indicated 
by similar terms where necessary. There was no attempt in 
Haeckel's use of these terms to make them exactly or more than 
approximately equal in significance; such attempts were 
clearly futfto and unimportant where the purpose was the 
exhibition of lines of descent, and where no natural equality of 
groups was to be expected ex hypolhesi. Haeckel's classifica- 
tion of 1866 was only a first attempt. In the edition of the 
NatUrlickc Schopfungsgeschiehie published in 1868 he made a 
great advance in his genealogical classification, since he now 
introduced the results of the extraordinary activity in the study 
of embryology which followed on the publication of the Origin 
of Species. 

The pre-Darwinian systcmatists since the time of Von Baer had 
attached very great importance to embryological fact*, holding that 
the stages in an animal'* development were often more significant 
of its true affinities than its adult structure. Von Baer had gained 
unanimous support for his dictum. " Die Emwickehmgsgeschichte 
ist der wahre Lkhttrager fur Untersuchungen fiber organised 
KOrper." Thus }. Mailer's studies on the larval forms of Echino- 
derma and the discoveries of Vaughan Thompson were appreciated. 
But it was only after Darwin that the cdl-trxory of Schwann was 
extended to the embryology of the animal kingdom generally, and 
that the knowledge of the development of an animal became a 
knowledge of the way in which the million* of cells of which its 
body is composed take their origin by fission from a smaller number 
of cells, and these at last from the single egg-cell. Kdlliker (Develop- 
ment ef Cephahpois. 1844), Remak {Deoelopment of the Frog, 1850). 
and others had laid the foundations of this knowledge in isolated 
examples; but it was Kovalevsky, by his accounts of the develop- 
ment of Ascidians and of Ampkioxus (1866), who really made 
zoologists see that a strict and complete cellular embryology of 
iftnnah was as necessary and feasible a factor in the comprehension 
of their relationships as at the beginning of the century the coarse 
anatomy bad been shown to be _by _Cuvier. ** 



appeared betw 



._ # Kovalevsky 's work 

the dates of the Generelle Morphologic and the 



Stho+funpfsctrickle. Haeckel himself, with hk pupil Miklucho* 
Maclay, had in the meantime made studies on the growth from the 
egg of Sponges— studies which resulted in the complete separation 
of the unicellular or equicellular Pratowa from the Sponges,' hitherto 
confounded with them. It is this introduction of the consideration 
of cell-structure and cell-development which, subsequently to the 
establishment of Darwinism, has most profoundly modified the views 
of systematists, and led in conjunction with the genealogical doctrine 
to the greatest activity in research— -an activity which culminated 
in the work (1873-1882) of F. M. Balfour, and produced the pro- 
fouadest modifications in classification. 

Haeckel's second pedigree is as follows;— 
Phyla. Clades. 



Protozoa. 



Zoophyta. 



Ma 

Echinoderma. 

Aithropoda. 

Vertebrate. 



Ovularia. 

.Blastularia. 
Sfongiab. 

acalbphae. 

AcoBLom. 

COSLOHATI. 

ACEPBALA. 

EUCEPHALA. 

COLOBRACHIA 

LXFOBXACBIA. 
C A RIDES. 

Trachbata. 

ACRANIA. 
MONORRHINA. 

ANAKlflA, 

Amniota 



(Archcaoa. 
JGregaHtuu. 
I Infusoria. VZl mmmm 
\Pianaeada. **y* 
IGostroeoda. m9mL 
Porifera. 

{Corolla, 
Hydromtdusae. 
Ctenophora. 

Platykelminthts. 
' Nemathclminthcs. 

Bryozoa. 

Tunicato. 

Rhynchocoda. 

Gephyraeo. 

Rotatoria. 

.Annelida. 

Spirobranchia, 

LameUibranckia. 
5 Cocklides. 

Cephalopoda. 
\ Asterida. 
1 Crinoida. 
, Echinida. 
iHoioihuriae. 

{Crustacea. 
Arachnido. 
Myriapoda. 

Cyclostoma. 

'Pisces. 

Dipneusla. 

Halisauria. 

Amphibia. 

ReptWa. 

Axes. 

In representing pictorially the groups of the animal kingdom 
as the branches of a tree, it becomes obvious that a distinction 
may be drawn, not merely between the individual 
main branches, but further as to the level at which 
they are given off from the main stem, so that one 
branch or set of branches may be marked off as be- 
longing to an earlier or lower level than another set 
of branches; and the same plan may be adopted 
with regard to the clades, classes and smaller branches. The 
term " grade " was introduced by Ray Lankester (" Notes on 
Embryology and Classification," in Quart. Jour*. Micr. Set. 
1877), to indicate this giving off of branches at a higher or 
lower, i.e. a later or earlier, level of a main stem. 1 The mech- 
anism for the statement of the genealogical relationships of 
the groups of the animal kingdom was thus completed. Re- 
newed study of every group was the result of the acceptance 
of the genealogical idea and of the recognition of the importance 

' Sir Edwin Ray Lankester (b. 1847) was the eldest son of Edwin 
Lankester (1814-1874), a physician and naturalist (F.R-S. 1845), who 
became well known as a scientific writer and lecturer, editor of 
the Ouarterly Journal of Microscopical Science from 1853 to 1871, 
and from 1863, in succession to Thomas Wakley, coroner lor Central 
Middlesex. Educated at St Paul's and both at Downing College, 
Cambridge, and Christ Church, Oxford, E. Ray Lankester obtained 
the Radcliffe Travelling Fellowship at Oxford in 1870, and became 
a fellow and lecturer at Exeter College in 1872. From 1874 to 
1890 he was professor of zoology and comparative anatomy at 
University College. London; and from 189 1 to 1898 Linacre pro- 
fessor of comparative anatomy at Oxford. From 1898 to 1907 he 
was director of the Natural History Department of the British 
Museum. He was made K.C.B. in 1907. [Ed. E. £.]. - 



103* 



ZOOLOGY 



of cellular embryology. . On the one hand, the true method of 
arriving at a knowledge of the genealogical tree was recognized 
as lying chiefly in attacking the problem of the genealogical 
relationships of the smallest twigs of the tree, and proceeding 
'from them to the larger branches. Special studies of small 
families or orders of animals with this object in view were taken 
in hand by many zoologists. On the other hand, a survey of 
the facts of cellular embryology which were accumulated in 
regard to a variety of classes within a few years of KovaJevakys 
work led to a generalization, independently arrived at by Haeckel 
and Lankester, to the effect that a lower grade of animals may 
be distinguished, the Protosoa or Plastidoxoa, which consist 
either of single cells or colonies of equiformal cells, and a higher 
grade, the Mctazoa or Enterotoa, in which the egg-cell by u cell 
division " gives rise to two layers of cells, the endoderm and 
the ectoderm, surrounding a primitive digestive chamber, the 
archenteron. Of these latter, two grades were further distin- 
guished by Lankester— those which remain possessed of a 
single archenteric cavity and of two primary cell-layers (the 
Coelentera or Diploblastica), and those which by nipping off the 
archenteron give rise to two cavities, the coelom or body-cavity 
and the metenteron or gut (Coelomata or TriploUaslica). To the 
primitive two-cell-layered form, the hypothetical ancestor of all 
Mctazoa or Enieroioa, Haeckel gave the name Gastraea\ the em- 
bryonic form which represents in the individual growth from the 
egg this ancestral condition he called a " gastrula." The term 
" diblastula " was subsequently adopted in England for the gas- 
trula of Haeckel. The tracing of the exact mode of development, 
cell by cell, of the diblastula, the coelom, and the various tissues 
of examples of all classes of animals was in later years pursued 
with immense activity and increasing instrumental facilities. 

Two names in connexion with post-Darwinian taxonomy 
and the ideas connected with it require brief mention here. 
Prto Fritz Muller, by his studies on Crustacea (PMr Darmm, 
1864), showed the way in which genealogical theory 
may be applied to the minute study of a limited group. 
He is also responsible for the formulation of an im- 
portant principle, called by Haeckel "the biogenetic funda- 
mental law," viz. that an animal in its growth from the egg to 
the adult condition tends to pass through a series of stages 
which are recapitulative of the stages through which its ancestry 
has passed in the historical development of the species from a 
primitive form; or, more shortly, that the development of the 
individual (ontogeny) is. an epitome of the development of the 
race (phylogeny). Pre-Darwinian zoologists had been aware 
of the class of facts thus interpreted by Fritz Muller, but the 
authoritative view on the subject had been that there is a 
parallelism between (a) the series of forms which occur in in- 
dividual development, (ft) the series of existing forms from lower 
to higher, and (c) the series of forms which succeed one another 
in the strata of the earth's crust, whilst an explanation of this 
parallelism was either not attempted, or was illusively offered 
in the shape of a doctrine of harmony of plan in creation. It 
was the application of Fritz Mailer's law of recapitulation 
which gave the chief stimulus to embryological investigations 
between 1865 and 1890; and, though it is now recognized that 
u recapitulation " is vastly and bewilderingly modified by special 
adaptations in every case, yet the principle has served, and 
still serves, as a guide of great value. 

Another important factor in the present condition of zoolo- 
gical knowledge as represented by classification is the doctrine of 
degeneration propounded by Anton Dohrn. Lamarck believed 
in a single progressive series of forms whilst Cuvier introduced 
the conception of branches. The first post-Darwinian 
sy sterna tists naturally and without reflexion accepted 
the idea that existing simpler forms represent stages 
Sn the gradual progress of development— are in fact 
survivors from past ages which have retained the exact grade 
of development which their ancestors had reached in past ages. 
The assumption made was that (with the rare exception of para* 
sites) all the change of structure through which the successive 
generations of animals have passed has been one of progressive 



etabaratson. It is Dohrn's merit to have pointed out 1 that 

this assumption is not warranted, and that degeneration or pro- 
gressive simplification of structure may have, and in many 
lines certainly has, taken place, as well as progressive elaboration 
and in other cases continuous maintenance of the status quo. 
The introduction of this conception necessarily has had a most 
important effect in the attempt to unravel the genealogical 
affinities of animals. It renders the task a more complicated 
one; at the same time It removes some serious difficulties and 
throws a flood of light on every group of the animal kingdom. 

One result of the introduction of the new conception*; dating 
from Darwin was a healthy reaction from that attitude of mind 
which led to the regarding of the classes and orders recognized 
by authoritative zoologists as sacred institutions which were 
beyond the criticism of ordinary men. That state of mind 
was due to the fact that the groupings so recognized did not 
profess to be simply the result of scientific reasoning, but were 
necessarily regarded as the expressions of the M insight " of 
some more or less gifted persons into a plan or system which 
had been arbitrarily chosen by the Creator. Consequently there 
was a tinge of theological dogmatism about the whole matter. 




Sus-ciade a. cc£iEnrefta> 
Grafts 2. ENTEROZOA. 



•^ 



Grade 1. PROTOZOA. 
A genealogical tree of animal kingdom 



'. X884). 



To deny the Linnaean, or later the Cuvierian, classes was very 
much like denying the Mosaic cosmogony. But systematic 
zoology is now entirely free from any such prejudices, and the 
Linnaean taint which is apparent even in Haeckel and Gegen- 
baur may be considered as finally expunged. 

There are, and probably always will be, differences of opinion 
as to the exact way in which the various kinds of animals may 
be divided into groups and those groups arranged lm. 
in such an order as will best exhibit their probable *■•***• 
genetic relationships. The main divisions which, •*■*»»»' 
writing in 19 10, the present writer prefers, are those adopted 
in his Treatise on Zoology (Part II. ch. ii.) except that Phylum 
17, Diplochorda (a name doubtfully applicable to Pkoronis) is 
replaced by Podaxonia, a term employed by Lankester in the 
oth edition of this encyclopaedia and now used to include a 
number of groups of doubtful but possible affinity. The terms 
used for indicating groups are " Phylum " for the large diverging 
branches of the genealogical tree as introduced by Haeckel, 
each Phylum bears secondary branches which are termed 
"classes," classes again branch or divide into orders, orders 
into families, families into genera, genera into species. The 
general purpose is to give something like an equivalence of 
importance to divisions or branches indicated by the same 
term, but it is not intended to imply that cvay phylum has the 

1 Ursprung der WirbelAiere (Leipzig, 1873); and Lankester, Degen- 
eration (London, 1880). 



ZOOLOGY 



1033 



lame range and distinctive character ai every other, nor to 
make such a proposition about classes, orders, families and 
genera. Where a further subdivision is desirable without 
descending to the next lower term of grouping, the prefix "sub" 
is made use of, so that a class may be divided ant of all into sub- 
classes each of which is divided into orders, and an order into 
sub-orders each of which bears a group of families. The term 
" grade " is also made use of for the purpose of indicating 
the conclusion that certain branches on a larger or smaller 
stem of the genealogical tree have been given off at an earlier 
period in the history of the evolution of the stem in question 
than have others marked off as forming a higher grade. Thus, 
to begin with, the animal pedigree is divided into two very 
distinct grades, the Protoaoa and the Metasoa. The Metazoa 
form two main branches; one, Parazoa, is but a small unpro- 
ductive stock comprising only the Phylum Porifcra or Sponges; 
the other, the great stem of the animal series Enterozoa, gives 
rise to a large number of diverging Phyla which it is necessary to 
assign to two levels or grades— a lower, Enterocoela (often called 
Coelentera), and a higher, Coelomocoela (often called Coelomata). 
These relations are exhibited by the two following diagrams. 



Pmhhom 



fwwisw 




V 

Grade A PftOTOZOA. 

Diagram showing the primary grades and branches' 
of the Animal Pedigree. 




Or** A. cWEftOCOflA 
totcHS. ENTEROZOA. 

Diagram to show the division of the great branch Enterozoa 
into two grades and the Phyla given off therefrom. 

Hie Phylum Vertebrata in the above scheme branches into 
the sub-phyla Hemichorda, Urochorda, Cephalochorda and 
Craniata. The Phylum Appendiculata similarly branches into 
sub-phyla, viz. the Rotifera, the Chaetopoda and the Arthro- 
poda, Certain additional small groups should probably be 
recognized as independent lines of descent or phyla, but their 
relationships are obscure— they are the Mesotom, the Polyzoa, 
the Acanthocephala and the Gastxotricha. 

We may now enumerate these various large groups in tabular 
form. 
BIONTA— Pbtta, Ammalia. 

Gbadb A. Protozoa (various groops included). 

Gbadb B. Metazoa.* 
Branch a. Parazoe. 

Phylum t. Poatnaa. 



Branch b. Enterozoa. 
Grade 1. Enterocobla. 
Phylum 2. Hydromedusab. 

3. scyfhomedusab. 

4. Anthozoa. 

5. Ctenophopa. 
Grade 2. Coelomocoela. 

Phylum 6. Platyelmia. 

2. Nematoidea. 
. Chaetognatha 
9. Nemertwa. 

10. mollusca. 

11. Appendiculata. 

Sub-phyla: Rotifera, Chaetopoda, Ar- 
thro poda. 
xa. Ecminoderma. 

13. Vertebrata. 

Sub-phyla: Hemichorda, Urochorda, 
Cephalochorda. Craniata. 

14. Mesozoa. 

15. Polyzoa. 

16. Acanthocephala 

17. Podaxonia. 

18. Gastrotricha. 

A statement may now be given of the classes and orders in 
each group, as recognized by the writers of the 
various special zoological articles in the Eleventh 
Edition of the Encyclopaedia Britonnka. These sub- 
divisions of the larger groups are not necessarily 
those theoretically approved by the present writer, 
but they have the valuable sanction of the individual 
experts who have given special attention to different portions 
of the vast field represented by the animal kingdom. 1 

Grade A. Protozoa (?.».). 

Phylum 1. Sarcodina («.».). 
Clam 1. Proteomyxa (9.9.) 
Class 2. Rhizopoda (tf.v.). 
Orders: Lobosa, Filosa. 
Class 3. Hbliozoa (qv.). 

ClaSB 4. FORAMINIFERA (?•*•). 

Orders: Nuda, AUotromidiaeeoe* Astrorkitidiaeea*, 
Liluolidaceae, Muiotidaceae, Textulidaridaceae, 
CkeilostonuUa&ae, Laeenidaceae, dobigerinidaccae, 
Rota l idaceae, Nnmmtdiduueae. 
Insertae sedis, Xenophyophoridae (see Foramim- 
fera). 
Class 5. Radiol aria. 

Orders: SpunuUaria (-Peripylaeo), Atantharia 
(- Aclipytoca), Nassehria ( - Monopytam}, Photo- 
Carta ( « Tripyiota). 
Class 6. Labyrimtuulidba (j.t-X 

No Orders. 
Class 7. Myxomycetes. 
No Orders. 
Phylum 2. Masdgophora (w.). 
Class 1. Flacellata (*.».). 
Sub-class A. Rhizoflagellata. 

Orders: Holomastiraceae, RktMomastigtKoae. 
Sub-class B. EuAageftata. 
Orders: Protomastigaceae, Chrysomonadaeeae, Crypto- 
monadactae, CUoromonad(ueae t Entftnauaz, Volvo- 
caceae. 
Class 2. Dinopiacbllata. 

Orders: Gymnodiniaua*, Prorocentrac*04 t Peridim- 



Orders. 



Phylum 3. Sporozoa (?.».). 
Class i.Endospora (*.**.). 
Orders: " 



rders: Myxosporidia. 
sporidia, Haplosporidio, 



Actiitomyxidia, Sarco- 

, r , r —- r - --ft*. 

Class 2. Ectospora (qv ). 

Orders: Grqariuo (seeGRBCARillBS), Coccidia (q.v.), 
Haemosporidia (}.?.). 
Phylum 4. Infusoria (?J>.). 
Class 1. ClLIATA. 

Orders: Gymonoslomacue, Trichostomuta, Aspiro- 
trukaccae, Spirotricha, Heterotrickauae, tVi'f*- 
trukoxeae. Hypotrickauae, Peritricktutto, 
Class 2. SucToaiA. 
No orders. 



• It » to be noted that the terms used for designating categories 
in the classification are not always identical in this summary and 
separate articles, as authors differ as to the use of these. 



i°3+ 



ZOOLOGY 



Grade B. Metaxoa. 
Bsanch a. Parazoa. 
Phylum 1. Porifera (xe Sponges). 
Sub-phylum I. Calcarea. 
Class. Calcarea. 

Orders: Homocoela, Helerocoela. 
Sub-phylum 2. Non-Calcarca. 
Class 1. Myxospongida. 

Order: Myxospongida. 
Class 2. Triaxonida ( = Hexactinellida). 

Orders: Ampkidiscopkora, Ilexasteropkora. 
Class 3. Tetraxonida. 
Sub-Class 1. Tctractinellida. 
Orders: Homosclcrophora, Astrophora, Sigmaio- 
phora. 
Sub-class 2. Lithistida. 

No Orders. 
Sub-class 3. Monaxonellida. 
Orders: AstromonaxotuUida, Sigmatomonaxonet- 
lida. 
Class 4. Euceratosa. 
Order: Euceratosa. 
Branch b. Enterozoa. 
Grade 1. EnterOcoela (see Coelektera). 
Phylum 2. Hydromediisae or Hydrozoa (q.v. 
Class. Hyoromedusae, (q.v.). 

Orders: EUutheroblastea, Hydroidae seu Leptdinae 
(Sub-orders: Antkomedusae, Leptomedusae), Hy~ 
drocoraUinae, Graptolitoideo Trockytinat (Sub- 
orders: Trachomedusae, Harcomedusae), Sipkone- 
pkora. 
Phylum 3. Scyphomedusae (q.v.). 
Class. Scyphomedusae. 

Orders: Cnbomedusae, Stanromedusae, CoronaUx, 
Discopkora. 
Phylum 4. Anthozoa (q.v.). 
Class. Anthozoa. 
Sub-class 1. Alcyonaria. 
Orders: Stolonifera, Alcyonacea, Pseudaxonia, Axi- 
fera, Steleckotokea, Coeuolkecalia. 
Sub-class 2. Zoantharia. 
Orders: Zoanlkidea, Cereanlkidea. Antipatkidea, 
Actiniidca (Sub-orders: Maiacactiniae and ScUr- 
actiniae or Madreporta). 
Phylum 5. Ctenophora. 
Class. Ctenophora. 
Sub-class 1. Tentaculata. 

Orders: Cydippidea* Lobata, Cestoidea. 
Sub-class 2. Nuda. 
No Orders. 
Grade 2. Coblomocobla. 
Phylum 6. Platyehnla («.».). 

Class 1. Planaria (see Plana RIAN3). 

Order: Turbtllaria. 
Class 2. Temnocephaloidea (see appendix to Plan- 
arians). 
No Orders. 
Class 3. T rem a tod a (see Trbmatoues). 

Orders: HeUrocotyUa, AspidocotyUa, Malacoco- 
tylea. 
Clan 4. Cbstoda (see Tapeworms). 
Orders: Monovoa, Merovoa. 
Phylum 7. H ematoidea. 

Class 1. Nematoda (see Nematode). 
No Orders. 

Class 2. CllAETOSOMIDAB (sC« CMAETOSOMATIDA). 

No Orders. 
Class 3. Desmoscolecida (q.v.). 

No Orders. 
Class 4. Nematomorpiia (q.v.). 
No Orders. 
Phylum 8. Chaetognatha (q.v.). 

No Orders. 
Phylum 9. Nemertina. 

Class. Nembrtina (q.v.). 

Orders: a Protenemerlini, Mesonemtrtini, Afcta- 
nemertini, Heleroncmcrtini. 
Phylum 10. Mollusca (q.v.). 
Grade A. IsopleurA. 
Class 1. Amphineura (see Chiton). 

Orders: Polyplacophora, Apiacopkora. 
Grade B. Prorhipidoclossomorpha. 
Class 2. Gastropoda (q.v.). 
Sub-class l. Streptoneura. 

Orders: Asfidobranckia, Pcctinibranckia. 
Sub-class 2. Euthyneura. 
Orders: Opisthobranckia, Pulmcnata. 
Class 3. Scaphopoda (qv.). 
No Orders. 



_ 4. Lambllibranciiia (#.<). 
Orders: Protobranthio. FUtbrenckia, Evdanteiiu 
bronchia, Scptibranckia. 
Grade C. Siphonopoda. 
Class 5. Cephalopoda (q.v.). 

Orders: Tetrabranchta, Dibrunckia. 
Phylum ti. Appendicular*. 
Sub-phylum 1. Rotifera ({.v.). 
Class. Rotifera. 

Orders: Asptanck n a c ea t , Metkertaceae, Troche- 
spkaeraceae, Ptoimoidaceae, BdcUoidaceae, Fioscu- 
laraccae, Ploima, Seisonaccae. 
Sub-phylum 2. Chaetopoda (q.v.). 

CUSS I. POLYCHAETA. 

Orders: Nereidifortnia, Cryptocephata, CapiUlli- 
formia, TerebeUiformia, Spiomformw, Scotai- 
formia. 
Class 2. Oligochaeta. 

Orders: Apkaneura, bimicolae, Mtoniligastres, 
Terricolae. 
Class 3. Hirudinae (see Leech). 

Orders*: RkynckobdeUidae, GnaikobdeOidae, Acan* 



Class 4. Myzostomida (q.v.). 

No Orders. 
Class 5- Saccocirrida. 

No Orders. 
Class 6. Haplodrili (q.v.). 

No Orders. 
Class 7. Echiuroidea (q.v.). 
No Orders. 
Sub-phylum 5. Arthropoda (q.v.). 
Grade 1. Ceratophora. 
Class 1. Pbripatidba (see Pbripatus). 

No Orders, 
Class 2. Chilopoda (see Centipede). 
Sub-class 1. Pleurostigma. 
Orders: Geophilomorpka. Scotopendromorpha, Crate- 
rosiigmomorpka, Lttkobiomerpka. 
Sub-class 2. Xotostigma. 
Order: Scutigeromorpka, 
Class 3. Diplopoda (see Millipede). 
Sub-class I. Psclaphognatha. 

Order: Peniciitata. 
Sub-class 2. Chilognatha. 
Orders: Oniscomorpha, Limacomorpka, Colobog- 
Hatha, Axospermophora.Proterospermopkora, Mero- 
chaeta, Opiithospermopbora. 
Class 3. Pauropoda (see Millipede). 

No Orders. 
Class 4. Sympiiyla (see Millipede). 

No Orders. 
Class 5. Hex a pod a (qs.). 
Sub-class 1. Apterygota. 

Order: Aptera, 
Sub-class 2. Exopterygota. 
Orders: Dermaptera, Ortkoptera, PUcoptera. Iso- 
ptera, Cerrodentia, Ephemoptera, Odonata, Tkysane- 
ptera, Hrmiptera, Anoplura. 
Sub-class 3. Endopterygota. 
Orders: Neuroptera, Cbteopten, Afecaptera, Tricke- 
ptera, Lepidoptera, Dipten, Sipkonaptera, Hymene- 
ptera. 
Grade 2. Acerata. 
Class 1. Crustacea (q.v.). 
Sub-class 1. Entocnostraca (q.v.)- 
Orders: BranckioPoda (Sub-orders: Pkyttopoda, 
Cladoetra, Branckiura), Ostracoda, Copepoda. 
Sub-class 2. Thyrostraca (q.v.) - (Cirripedia). 

No Orders. 
Sub-dass 3. Leptostraca. 

No Orders. 
Sub-class 4. Malacostraca (q*.). 
Orders: Decafoda (Sub-orders: Brackyvra, Mac- 
two), Srkuopoda (including Anasptdes). Stoma- 
topeda, Sympeda (Cumacea), Isopoda (including 
Tanaidacoa), Ampktpode. 
Class a. Arachmda (q.v.). 
Grade A. Trilobitae (see Trilowtb). 

(Orders not determined.) 
Grade B. Nomomeristica. 
Sub-class 1. Pantopoda. 
Orders: Nympkonomorpka, Ascorkynckomorpha, 
Pycnogonomorpha. 
Sub-class 2. Eu-Arachna. 
Grade a. Dclobrancha (orHydropneusta). 
Orders: Xipkatura, Cigantostraco, 



ZOOLOGY 



Grade b. Ejabolobranchia (or Aeropneusu). 
Section. Pectin if era. 
Order: Scorpionidea. 
Section. Efectinata. 

Ordera: Pedipoipi, Aranrur. Palpigradi, Soli- 
fugae, Pseudoscorpiones, Podogona, Optliones, 
Rkynckostomi (Acari). 
Class t. Tardigrada (q.v.). 

No Orders* 

Class 4- Luigi/atalina (see Pentastomioa). 

No Orders. 

Phylum 12. Echlnoderma (see Echinoderms). 

Branch A. Pelmatozoa. 

Class I. Cystidea. 

Orders: Ampkoridea, Carpoidea, Rkombifera, Apo- 
rita, Diptoporila. 
Class 2. Blastoidra. 
Divisions: Protoblastoidea, Eublaatoidea. 
No Orders. 
Class 3. Crinoidba. 

Orders: Monocydica Inadunata, Aduuata, Mono- 
cydka Camerata, Dicydka Inodunai*, Flexibilia, 
Dicydka Camerata. 
Class 4. Edrioasteroidea. 
No Orders. 
Branch B. Eleutherozoa. 

Class I. HOLOTHUROtDBA. 

Orders: Aspidoekirota, Dendrochirota. 
Class 2. Stbllipormia. 
Sub-class 1. Asterkla. 

Orders: Pkaneraumia, Cryptotonia. 
Sub-class 2. Onhiurida. 
Orders: Streptopkinrae, Zygopkiurae, Cladopkiurae. 
Class 3. Echinoidra. 

Orders: Boikriocidaroida, MeUmitoida, Cystocida- 
roida, Cidaroida, Diademotda, HoUctypoida, 
Spatangoida, Clyptastroida. 
Phylum 13. Vertebrata (q.v.). 
Sub-phylum a. Hem i chorda (q.v.). 
Class. Entbropneusta (see Balanoclossvs). 
No Orders. 
Sub-phylum b. Urochorda. 
Class. Tunicata (q.v.). 

Orders: Larvacea, Tkaliatta (Sub-orders: Cydo- 
myariOr Hemimyaria), Ascidiacea (Sub-orders: 
Ascidiae Simplices, Ascidiae Compositae, Ascidiae 
Luciae). 
Sob-phylum c. Cephalochorda (see Ampmoxus). 
Class. Cbphalochorda. 
No Orders. 
Sub-phylum d. Craniata. 1 
Class 1. Pisces (see Ichthyology). 
Sub-class 1. Cyclostomata ({.».). 
Ordera: Myxinoides (or ayperotreti), Petromyumtes 
(or Hyper oar tit). 
Sub-class 2. Selachia or Elasmobranchtt (see Sela- 
chians). 
hders: PlenropterygH, . 
Plagiostomi, Hdocepkali. 
Sub-class 3. TeJeostoma. 
Orders: Ganoid**, Crossopterygii, Dipneusti, TeU- 
ojtei. 
Orbs 2. Batracria (q.v.). 

Orders: SUpxepkaH*. Apod* (or Perbmd*), Caudal* 
(or Urodda), Ecaudata (or Anura). 
Class 3. Rsptilia (see Reptiles). 

Orders: Anomodontia, Ckelonia, Samopterytia, 
Uktkyopterygia, Rkyneocepkalio, Dtnosauria, Cro~ 
codilia, Ornitkosauria. Sqnamata. 
Class 4. Avbs (see Bird and Ornithology). 
Sub-class 1. Archaeornitucs. 

No Orders. 
Sub-class 2. Neornithes. 
Division I. Ratitae. 
Orders: Strulkiones, Kkeae, Casnariae, ApUryges, 
Dinornilkes, Aepyomitkes. 
Division 2. Odontolcae. 

No Orders. 
Division 3. Cartnatae. 
Ordera: lcktkyornet, Cdymbijontut, Spkenisci- 
forma, Proullariiformes, Cwoniiformes, (Sub- 
orders: Steganopodes, Ardeae, Ckoniae. Pkoeni- 
copteri). Ansertformes (Sub-orders: PaJamedeoe, 
Anseres), Fakonifomus (Sub-orders: Catkartae, 

1 Craniata may be usefully divided into 3 grades: (a) Branchiata 
Heterodactyla. which includes Pisces except Cyclostomes. (b) Bran- 
rhiata Pentadactyla, which includes Batrachia. (c) Lipobranchia 
Ptotadactyla, winch includes Reptiles, Birds and Mammals. 



1035 

Accipitret), Tinamiformes t CaUiformes (Sub orders: 
ite sites, Turnices, Galli, Obistkocomi). Gruiformes, 
Ckaradriiformes (Sub-orders: Limkolae, Lari, 
Ptnodes, Columbae), Cuculiformes (Sub-orders: 



Cuculi, Psittaci), Coraciiformes (Sub-orders: Cot' 
aciae. Strips, Caprimtdgi, Cybsdi. Cdii, Tro- 
tones, Pict), Passeriformes (Sub-orders: Passeres 



Anisomyodae, Passeres Diacrvmyodae). 
Class 4. Mammalia (q.v,). 
Sub-class 1. Monotremata (q.v.) (Prototberia). 

No Orders. 
Sub-class 2. Marsupialia (q.v.) (Metatheria). 
One Order: Mafsupiaha. 
Sub-orders: Polyprotodonta, PaucUuberculata, Di- 
prolodonia. 
Sub-class 3. Placental!* (Monodelphia, q.v.; or 
Eutheria). 
Orders: Insectwora, CkiropUra, Dermopier*, Eden- 
tata (Sub-orders: Xenartkra, Pkoltdota, Tubtdiden- 
tola), Rodentia (Sub-orders: Dnplicidentat*, Sim- 
plicidentata), Tillodontia, Camxtora (Sub-orders: 
Fissipedia, Pinnipedia, Creodonta), Cetacea (Sub- 
orders: Archaeoceli, Odontoceti, Mystaeoceti), 
Sirens*, Unttdata (Sub-orders: Probostidea, 
Hyrucoidea, Barypoda, Toxodonti*, Amblypoda, 
Liiopterna, Ancylopodd, 6ondyiartkm. Perisso- 
dactyla, Artiodaciyla), Primates (Sub-orders: Pro- 
simian, Antkropoidea). 
Phylum 14. Mesotoa (q.v.). 
Class r. Rmomboxoa. 

No Orders. 
Class 2. Orthonectioa. 
No Orders. 
Phylum 15. Polytoa (q.v.). 
Class 1. Entoprocta. 

No Orders. 
Class 2. Ectoprocta. 

Orders: Gymnohemota (Sub-orders: Tripostomat*, 
Cryptostomata. Cyclostomata, Ctenostomata, Ckeilo- 
stomata), Pkytactoiaemata. 
Phylum 16. Acanthocephals (q.v.). 

Class. ACAKTHOCEPHALA. 

No Orders. 
Phylum 17. Fodaxonia. 

ChUS I. SlPUNCULOIDEA (q*.). 

No Orders. 
Class 2. Priapuloidba (q.v.). 
No Orders. 

Class 3. PllORONIDEA (?.».). 

No Orders. 
Class 4. Pterobrachia (q.v.). 

No Orders. 
Class 5. Brachiopoda (q.v.). 
Sub-class 1. Ecardines (Inarticulata). 

Orders: Atremata, Neotremota. 
Sub-class 2. Testicardines (Articulata). 
Orders: Protremata, Tdotremata. 
Phylum 18. Gastrotrichs (q.v.). 
Class. Gastrotricha. 

Sub-orders: Ichtkydina, Cepodino, (Possibly Kjna- 
rkyncka (q.w.) with only Eckdnoderts is to be 
placed here).' 

General Tendencies since Dabwin 
Darwin may be said to have founded the science of bionomics, 
and at the same time to have given new stimulus and new 
direction to morphography, physiology, and piasmology, by 
uniting them as contributories to one common biological 
doctrine— the doctrine of organic evolution— itself but a part 
of the wider doctrine of universal evolution based on the laws 
of physics and chemistry. The immediate result was, as 
pointed out above, a reconstruction of the classification of 
animals upon a genealogical basis, and an investigation of the 
individual development of animals in relation to the steps of 
their gradual building up by cell-division, with a view to obtain- 
ing evidence of their genetic relationships. On the other hand, 
the studies which occupied Darwin himself so largely subse- 
quently to the publication of the Origin of Specie*, vis. the 
explanation of animal (and vegetable) mechanism, colouring, 
habits, &c., as advantageous to the species or to its ancestors, 
are only gradually being carried further. The most important 
work in this direction has been done by Frits MUller {FUr 
Darwin), by Herman M tiller (Fertilization of Plants by Insects), 



1036 



ZOOLOGY 



by August Weismann (memoirs translated by Meldola) by 
Edward B. Poulion (see his addresses and memoirs published 
in the Transactions of the Entomological Society and else- 
where), and by Abbot Thayer (Conceding Coloration in the 
Animal Kingdom, Macmillan & Co. 1910). In the branch of 
bionomics, however, concerned with the laws of variation and 
heredity (thremmatology), there has been considerable progress. 
In the first place, the continued study of human population 
has thrown additional light on some of the questions involved, 
whilst the progress of microscopical research has given us a 
dear foundation as to the structural facts connected with the 
origin of the egg-cell and sperm-cell and the process of fertili- 
zation. 

Great attention has been given lately to the important ex- 
periments upon the results of hybridizing certain cultivated 
varieties of plants which were published so long ago as 1865, by 
the Abbe" Mendel, but failed to attract notice until thirty-five 
years later, sixteen years after his death (see Mendeusm). 
MeatM- Mendel's object was to gain further knowledge as to 
ttm ' the result of mixing by cross-fertilization or inter- 

breeding two strains exhibiting diverse characters or structural 
features. The whole question as to the mixture of characters 
in offspring thus produced was — and remains — very imper- 
fectly observed. Mendel's observations constitute an ingenious 
attempt to throw light on the matter, and in the opinion of 
some biologists have led to the discovery of an important 
principle. Mendel made his chief experiments with cultivated 
varieties of the self-fertilizing edible pea. He selected a variety 
with some one marked structural feature and crossed it with 
another variety in which that feature was absent. Instances 
of his selected varieties are the tall variety which he hybridized 
with a dwarf variety, a yellow-seeded variety which he hybridized 
with a green-seeded variety, and again a smooth-seeded variety 
which he hybridized with a wrinkle-seeded variety. In each 
set of experiments he concentrated his attention on the one 
character selected for observation. Having obtained a first 
hybrid generation, he allowed the hybrids to self-fertilize, and 
recorded the result in a large number of instances (a thousand 
or more) as to the number of individuals in the first, second, 
third and fourth generations in which the character selected 
for experiment made its appearance. In the first hybrid gene- 
ration formed by the union of the reproductive germs of the 
positive variety (that possessing the structural character 
selected for observation) with those of the negative variety, it 
is not surprising that all or nearly all the individuals were found 
to exhibit, as a result of the mixture, the positive character. In 
subsequent generations produced by self-fertilization of the 
hybrids it was found that the positive character was not present 
in all the individuals, but that a result was obtained showing 
that in the formation of the reproductive cells (ova and sperms) 
of the hybrid, half were endowed with the positive character 
and half with the negative. Consequently the result of the 
haphazard pairing of a large number of these two groups of 
reproductive cells was to yield, according to the regular law of 
chance combination, the proportion iPP, aPN, xNN, where P 
stands for the positive character and N for its absence or 
negative character— the positive character being accordingly 
present in three-fourths of the offspring and absent from one- 
fourth. The fact that in the formation of the reproductive 
cells of the hybrid generation the material which carries the 
positive quality is not subdivided so as to give a half-quantity 
to each reproductive cell, but on the contrary is apparently 
distributed as an undivided whole to half only of the repro- 
ductive cells and not at all to the remainder, is the important 
inference from Mendel's experiments. Whether this inference 
is applicable to other classes of cases than those studied by 
Mendel and his followers is a question which fa still under 
investigation. The failure of the material carrying a positive 
character to divide so as to distribute itself among all the 
reproductive cells of a hybrid individual, and the limitation of 
As distribution to half only of those cells, must prevent the 
" swamping " of a newly appearing character in the course of 



the inter-breeding of those individuals possessed of the character 
with those which do not possess it. The tendency of the pro- 
portions in the offspring of iPP, aPN, iNN is to give in a series 
of generations a regular reversion from the hybrid form PN to 
the two pure races, viz. the race with the positive character 
simply and the race with the total absence of it. It has been 
maintained that this tendency to a severance of the hybrid 
stock into its components must favour the persistence of a new 
character of large volume suddenly appearing in a stock, and 
the observations of Mendel have been held to favour in this 
way the views of those who hold that the variations upon 
which natural selection has acted in the production of new 
species are not small variations but large and " discontinuous." 
It does not, however, appear that "large" variations would 
thus be favoured any more than small ones, nor that the 
elir.-.inaling action of natural selection upon an unfavourable 
variation could be checked. 

A good deal of confusion has arisen in the discussions of this 
latter topic, owing to defective nomenclature. . By some writers 
the word " mutation " is applied only to large and suddenly 
appearing variations which are found to be capable of here- 
ditary transmission, whilst the term " fluctuation " is applied 
to small variations whether capable of transmission or not. 
By others the word " fluctuation " is apparently applied only 
to those small " acquired " variations due to the direct action 
of changes in food, moisture and other features of the environ- 
ment. It is no discovery that this latter kind of variation is 
not hereditable, and it is not the fact that the small variations, 
to which Darwin attached great but not exclusive importance 
as the material upon which natural selection operates, are of 
this latter kind. The most instructive classification of the 
" variations " exhibited by fully formed organisms consists 
in the separation in the first place of those which arise from 
antecedent congenital, innate, constitutional or germinal 
variations from those which arise merely from the operation 
of variation of the environment or the food-supply upon normally 
constituted individuals. The former are " innate " variations, 
the latter are " superimposed " variations (so-called " ac- 
quired variations ")• Both innate and superimposed varin- 
tions are capable of division into those which are more and 
those which are less obvious to the human eye. Scarcely 
perceptible variations of the innate class are regularly and in- 
variably present in every new generation of every species of 
living thing. Their greatness or smallness so far as human 
perception goes is not of much significance; their real import- 
ance in regard to the origin of new species depends on whet her 
they are of value to the organism and therefore capable of 
selection in the struggle for existence. An absolutely imper- 
ceptible physiological difference arising as a variation may be of 
selective value, and it may carry with it correlated variations 
which appeal to the human eye but are of no selective value 
themselves. The present writer has, for many years, urged 
the importance of this consideration. 

The views of dc Vrics and others as to the importance of 
" saltatory variation," the soundness of which was still by no 
means generally accepted in 1010, may be gathered from the 
articles Mendeltsm and Variation. A due appreciation of 
the far-reaching results of " correlated variation " must, it 
appears, give a new and distinct explanation to the phenomena 
which are referred to as "large mutations," "-discontinuous 
variation " and '• saltatory evolution." Whatever value is to 
be attached to Mendel's observation of the breaking up of 
self-fertilized hybrids of cultivated varieties into the two 
original parent forms according to the formula " iPP, 2PN, 
xNN," it cannot be considered as more than a contribution 
to the extensive investigation of heredity which still remains 
to be carried out. The analysis of the specific variations of 
organic form so as to determine what is really the nature and 
limitation of a single "character" or "individual variation,** 
and whether two such true and strictly defined single variations 
of a single structural unit can actually " blend " when one is 
transmitted by the male parent and the other by the female 



ZOOLOGY 



1037 



parent, are mitten -which have yet to he determined. We do 
not yet know whether such absolute blending is possible or not, 
or whether all apparent blending is only a more or less minutely 
subdivided "mosaic" of noa-combinable characters of the 
parents* in fact whether the combinations due to heredity in 
reproduction are ever analogous to chemical compounds or 
are always comparable to particulate mixtures. The attempt 
to connect Mendel's observation with the structure of the sperm- 
tells and egg-cells of plants and animals has already been made. 
The suggestion ia obvious that the halving of the number of 
nuclear threads in the reproductive cells as compared with the 
number of those present in the ordinary cells of the tiss u es ■ a 
phenomenon which has now been demonstrated as universal 
— may be directly connected with the facts of segregation of 
hybrid characters observed by Mendel. The suggestion requires 
further experimental testing, for which the case of the parthene- 
genetic production of a portion of the offspring, in such insects 
as the bee, offers a valuable opportunity for research. 

Another important development of Darwin's conclusions 
deserves special notice here, as it is the most distinct advance 
vmri* in the department of bionomics since Darwin's own 
<*»*• writings, and at the same time touches questions of 

fundamental interest The matter strictly relates to the con- 
sideration of the "causes of variation," and is as follows. 
The fact of variation is a familiar one. No two animals, even 
of the same brood, are alike: whilst exhibiting a close similarity 
to their parents, they yet present differences, sometimes very 
marked differences, from their parents and from one another. 
Lamarck had put forward the hypothesis that structural 
alterations acquired by (that is to say, superimposed upon) a 
parent in the course of its life are transmitted to the offspring, 
and that, as these structural alterations are acquired by an 
animal or plant in consequence of the direct action of the 
environment, the offspring inheriting them would as a conse- 
quence not unfrequently start with a greater fitness for those 
conditions than its parents started with. In its turn, being 
operated upon by the conditions of life, it would acquire a 
greater development of the same modification, which it would 
in turn transmit to Its offspring. In the course of several 
generations, Lamarck argued, a structural alteration amounting 
to such difference as we call " specific " might be thus acquired. 
The familiar illustration of Lamarck's hypothesis is that of the 
giraffe, whose long neck might, he suggested, have been acquired 
by the efforts of a primitively short-necked race of herbivores, 
who stretched their necks to reach the foliage of trees in a land' 
where grass was deficient, the effort producing a distinct elonga- 
tion in the neck of each generation, which was then transmitted 
to the next. This process is known as " direct adaptation "; 
and there is no doubt that such structural adaptations are 
acquired by an animal in the course of its life, though such 
changes are strictly limited in degree and rare rather than fre- 
quent and obvious. 

Whether such acquired characters can be transmitted to the 
next generation is a separate question. It was not proved by 
Larnasck that they can be, and, indeed, never has been proved 
by actual observation. Nevertheless it has been assumed, and 
also indirectly argued, that such acquired characters must be 
transmitted. Darwin's great "merit was that he excluded from 
his theory of development any tucessary assumption of the 
transmission of acquired characters. He pointed to the ad- 
mitted fact of congenital variation, and he showed that con- 
genital variations are arbitrary and, so to speak, non-significant. 
Cmmmmi T^ 6 * 1 " causes are extremely difficult to trace in detail, 
1 1 Mi if but it appears that they are largely due to a " shaking 
<j#r«f«s- up" of the living matter which constitutes the 
fertilized germ or embryo-cell, by the process of 
mixture in it of the substance of two cells— the germ- 
cell and the sperm-cell — derived from two different individuals. 
Other mechanical disturbances may assist in this production 
of congenital variation. Whatever its causes, Darwin showed 
that it is all-important. In some cases a pair of animals pro- 
duce ten million offspring, and in such a number a large range 
xxvru vj* 




of congenital variation is possible. Sines on the average only 
two of the young survive in the straggle for existence to take 
the place of their two parents, them is a selection out of the ten 
million young, none of which am exactly alike, and the selection 
is determined in nature by the survival of the congenital variety 
which b fittest to the conditions of life. Hence there nv no 
necessity for an assumption of the perpetuation of direct adapta- 
tions. The selection of the fortuitously (fortuitously, 
that is to say, so far as the conditions of survival are 
concerned) produced varieties is sufficient, since it 
is ascertained that they will tend to transmit those 
characters with which they themselves were horn, 
although it is net ascertained that they could transmit 
characters acquired on the way through life. A 
simple illustration of the difference is this: a m 
with four fingers only on his right hand is ascertained to 
be likely to transmit this peculiarity to some at least of his 
offspring; on the other hand, there is not the slightest ground 
for supposing that a man who has had one finger chopped off, 
or has even lost his arm at any period of his life, will produce 
offspring who are defective in the slightest degree in regard 
to fingers, hand or arm. Darwin himself, influenced by the 
consideration of certain classes of facts which seem to favour 
the Lamarckian hypothesis, was of the opinion that acquired 
characters are i* some case* transmitted. It should be observed, 
however, that Darwin did not attribute an essential part to this 
Lamarckian hypothesis of the transmission of acquired char- 
acters, but expressly assigned to it an entirely subordinate 
importance. 

The new attitude which has been taken since Darwin's 
writings on this question is to ask for evidence of the asserted 
transmission of acquired characters. It is held * that the 
Darwinian doctrine of selection of fortuitous congenital varia- 
tions Is sufficient to account for all cases, that the Lamarckian 
hypothesis of transmission of acquired characters is not sup- 
ported by experimental evidence, and that the latter should 
therefore be dismissed. Wefsmann has also ingeniously argued 
from the structure of the egg-cell and sperm-cell, and from the 
way in which, and the period at which, they are derived in the 
course of the growth of the embryo from the egg— from the 
fertilized egg-cell— that it b impossible (it would be better to 
say highly improbable) that an alteration in parental structure 
could produce any exactly representative change in the sub- 
stance of the germ or sperm-cells. 

The one fact which the Lamarcldans can produce in their 
favour is the account of experiments by Brown-Sequard, in 
which he produced epilepsy in guinea-pigs by section of the large 
nerves or spinal cord, and in the course of which he was led to 
believe that in a few rare instances the artificially produced 
epilepsy and mutilation of the nerves was transmitted. This 
instance does not stand the test of criticism. The record of 
Brown-Sequard's original experiment is not satisfactory, and 
the subsequent attempts to obtain similar results have not been 
attended with success. On the other hand, the vast number of 
experiments in the cropping of the tails and ears of domestic 
animals, as well as of similar operations on man, are attended 
with negative results. No case of the transmission of the results 
of an injury can be produced. Stories of tailless kittens, 
puppies and calves, born from parents one of whom had been 
thus injured, are abundant, but they have hitherto entirely 
failed to stand before examination. 

Whilst simple evidence of the fact of the transmission of an 
acquired character is wanting, the a priori arguments in its 
favour break down one after another when discussed. The 
very cases which are advanced as only to be explained on the 
Lamarckian assumption are found on examination and experi- 
ment to be better explained, or only to be explained, by the 
Darwinian principle. Thus the occurrence of bhnd animals 
in caves and in the deep sea was a fact which Darwin himself 
regarded as best explained by the atrophy of the organ of vision 
in successive generations through the absence of light and 
VWfawf , Ac (1886). 



1038 



ZOOLOGY 



consequent disuse, and the transmission (as Lamarck would 
have supposed) of a more and more weakened and structurally 
impaired eye to the offspring in successive generations, until 
the eye finally disappeared. But this instance is really fully 
explained (as the present writer has shown) by the theory of 
natural selection acting on congenital fortuitous variations. 
U is definitely ascertained that many animals are thus born with 
distorted or defective eyes whose parents have not had their 
eyes submitted to any peculiar conditions. Supposing a number 
of some species of arthropod or fish to be swept into a cavern 
or to be carried from less to greater depths in the sea, those 
individuals with perfect eyes would follow the glimmer of light 
and eventually escape to the outer air or the shallower depths, 
leaving behind those with imperfect eyes to breed in the dark 
place. A natural selection would thus be effected. In every 
succeeding generation this would be the case, and even those 
with weak but still seeing eyes would in the course of time 
escape, until only a pure race of eyeless or blind animals would 
be left in the cavern or deep sea. 

It is a remarkable fact that it was overlooked alike by the 
supporters and opponents of Lamarck's views until pointed 
out by the present writer (Nature, 1804, p. 127)* that the two 
statements called by Lamarck his first and second laws are 
contradictory one of the other. Lamarck's first law asserts 
that a past history of indefinite duration is powerless to create 
£tawa- a bias by which the present can be controlled.. He 
***?' declares that in spite of long-established conditions 
and correspondingly evoked characters new conditions will 
cause new responsive characters. Yet in the second law he 
asserts that these new characters will resist the action of yet 
newer conditions or a reversion to the old conditions and be 
maintained by heredity. If the earlier characters were not 
maintained by heredity why should the later be ? If a char- 
acter of much longer standing (certain properties of height, 
length, breadth, colour, &c) had not become fixed and con- 
genital after many thousands of successive generations of 
individuals had developed it in response to environment, but 
gave place to a new character when new moulding conditions 
operated on an individual (Lamarck's first law), why should 
we suppose that the new character is likely to become fixed 
and transmitted by mere heredity after a much shorter time of 
existence in response to environmental stimulus? Why should 
we assume that it will be able to escape the moulding by environ- 
ment (once its evoking cause is removed) to which, according 
to Lamarck's first law, all parts of organisms are subject? 
Clearly Lamarck gives us no reason for any such assumption, 
and his followers or latter-day adherents have not attempted 
to do so. His enunciation of his theory is itself destructive 
of that theory. Though an acquired or " superimposed " 
character is not transmitted to offspring as the consequence 
of the action of the external agencies which determine the 
" acquirement," yet the tendency to react to such agencies 
possessed by the parent is transmitted and may be increased 
and largely developed by survival, if the character developed 
by the reaction is valuable. This newly discovered inheritance 
of " variation in the tendency to react " has a wide application 
and has led the present writer to coin the word " educability." 
It has application to all kinds of organs and qualities, but is of 
especial significance in regard to the development of the brain 
and the mental qualities of animals and of man (see the 
jubilee volume of the Soc de Biologie, 1809, and Nature, 
1000, p. 624). 

It has been argued that the elaborate structural adaptations 
of the nervous system which are the corporeal correlatives of 
Theory complicated instincts must have been slowly built 
•/<»•*• up by the transmission to offspring of acquired ex- 
perience, that is to say, of acquired brain structure. 
At first sight it appears difficult to understand how 
the complicated series of actions which are definitely 
exhibited as so-called " instincts " by a variety of animals can 
have been due to the selection of congenital variations, or can 
be otherwise explained than by the transmission of habits 



acquired by the parent as the result of experience, and con* 
tinuously elaborated and added to in successive generations. 
It is, however, to be noted, in the first place, that the imitation 
of the parent by the young possibly accounts for some part of 
these complicated actions, and, secondly, that there are cases 
in which curiously elaborate actions are performed by animals 
as a characteristic of the species, and as subserving the general 
advantage of the race or species, which, nevertheless, can tut 
be explained as resulting from the transmission of acquired 
experience, and must be supposed to be due to the natural 
selection of a fortuitously developed habit whkh, like fortuitous 
colour or form variation, happens to prove beneficial. Such 
cases are the habits of " shamming dead " and the combined 
posturing and colour peculiarities of certain caterpillars (Leptdep* 
terous larvae) which cause them to. resemble dead twigs or 
similar surrounding objects. The advantage to the animal of 
this imitation of surrounding objects is that it escapes the 
pursuit of (say) a bird which would, were it not deceived by the 
resemblance, attack and eat the caterpillar. Now it is clear 
that preceding generations of caterpillars cannot have acquired 
this habit of posturing by experience. Either the caterpillar 
postures and escapes, or it does not posture and is eaten; it is 
not half eaten and allowed to profit by experience. We seem 
to be justified in assuming that there are many movements of 
stretching and posturing possible to caterpillars, and that some 
caterpillars had a congenital fortuitous tendency to one position, 
some to another, and, finally that among aU the variety of 
habitual movements thus exhibited one has been selected and 
perpetuated because it coincided with the necessary conditions 
of safety, since it happened to give the caterpillar an increased 
resemblance to * twig. 

The view that instinct is the hereditarily fixed result of 
habit derived from experience long dominated all inquiry into 
the subject, but we may now expect to see a renewed and careful 
study of animal instincts carried out with the view of testing 
the applicability to each instance of the pure Darwinian theory 
without the aid of Lamarckism. 

Nothing can be further from the truth than the once favourite 
theory that instincts are the survivals of lapsed reasoning 
processes. Instincts, or the inherited structural mechanisms 
of the nervous centres, are in antagonism to the results of the 
reasoning process, which are not capable of hereditary trans- 
mission. Every higher vertebrate animal possesses the power 
of forming for itself a series of cerebral mechanisms or reasoned 
conclusions based on its individual experience, in proportion 
as it has a large cerebrum and has got rid of or has acquired 
the power of controlling its inherited instincts. Man, ^ 
compared with other animals, has the fewest inherited Jtacon* 
mental mechanisms or instincts and at the same time •#<*• 
the largest cerebrum in proportion to the size of his **"*■ 
body. He builds up, from birth onwards, his own mental 
mechanisms, and forms more of them, that is to say, is more 
"educable," and takes longer in doing so, that is to say, in 
growing, up and maturing his experience, than any other animal. 
The later stages of evolution leading from his ape-like ancestors 
to man have consisted definitely in the acquirement of a larger 
and therefore more educable brain by man and in the conse- 
quent education of that brain.* A new and most important 
feature in organic development makes its appearance when we 
set out the facts of man's evolutional history. It amounts 
to a new and unprecedented factor In organic development, 
external to the organism and yet produced by the activity of the 
organism upon which it permanently reacts. This factor is the 
Record of the Past, which grows and develops by laws other 
than those affecting the perishable bodies of successive genera- 
tions of mankind, and exerts an incomparable influence upon the 
educable brain, so that man, by the interaction of the Record 
and his educability, is removed to a large extent from the status 
of the organic world and placed in a new and unique position, 
subject to new laws and new methods of development unlike 
those by which the rest of the living world is governed. That 
which we term the Record of the Past comprises the " taboos," 



ZORILLA— ZOROASTER 



1039 



the customs, the traditions, the beliefs, the knowledge which 
are handed on by one generation to another independently 
of organic propagation. By it a new heredity, free from the 
limitations of protoplasmic continuity, is established. Its first 
beginnings are seen in the imitative tendencies of animals by 
which the young of one generation acquire some of the habits 
of their parents, and by which gregarious and social animals 
acquire a community of procedure ensuring the advantage of 
the group. "Taboo," the systematic imposition by the com- 
munity of restrictions upon the conduct of the individual, is 
one of its earliest manifestations in primitive man and can 
be observed even in animal communities. But with the de- 
velopment of the power of inter-communication by the use of 
language, the Record rapidly acquired an increased develop- 
ment, which was enormously extended by the continuous growth 
in mankind of the faculty of memory. To the mere tradition 
preserved by memory and handed on by speech was then added 
the written record and its later multiplication by the mechanical 
arts of printing, by which it acquired permanence and universal 
distribution. The result is jthe creation of an almost incon- 
ceivably vast body of traditional custom, law and knowledge 
into which every human being is born, less in the more isolated 
and barbarous communities, but large everywhere. Educa- 
tion is not in its essential nature a training administered to the 
young by an older generation, but is the natural and unaided 
assimilation of the Record of the Past by the automatically 
educabk brain— an assimilation which is always in all races 
very large but becomes far larger in civilized communities. It 
is among them so important whilst the Record in all its details 
is so far beyond the receptive capacity of the brain, that selec- 
tion and guidance are employed by the elders in order to enable 
the younger generation to benefit to the utmost by the absorp- 
tion (so to speak) in the limited span of a lifetime of the most 
valuable influences to be acquired from this prodigious envelope 
of Recorded Experience. The imperishable Record invests 
the human race like a protective atmosphere, a new and yet 
a natural dispensation, giving to man, as compared with his 
animal ancestry, a new heaven and a new earth I 

A result of the very greatest importance arising from the 
application of the generalizations of Darwinism to human 
development and to the actual phase of existing human popu- 
lation is that education has no direct effect upon the mental or 
physical features of the race or stock: it can only affect those 
of the individual Educability, defects or excellences, or 
peculiarities of mind or body, can be handed on from parent 
to offspring by protoplasmic continuity in reproduction. But 
the results of education cannot be so banded on. The educated 
man who has acquired new experiences, new knowledge, can 
place these on the great Record for the benefit of future genera* 
tions of men, but he cannot bodily transmit his acquirements 
to his offspring. Were acquired (superimposed) characters 
really transmissible by breeding, then every child born would 
inherit, more or less completely, the knowledge acquired by 
both its parents. But we know this is not the case: the child 
has to begin with a dean slate and learn for itself. Aptitudes 
and want of aptitude, which are innate and constitutional, 
are transmitted to offspring, but not the results of experience, 
education and training. Blemishes in the stock, defects of 
mind or body, though they may be to some extent corrected 
in the individual by training, cannot be got rid of from the stock 
by any such process. A defective stock, if allowed to breed, 
will perpetuate its defects, in spite of the concealment of those 
defects in an individual by training or other treatment. Equally 
it must be concluded that the weakness and degradation pro- 
duced by semi-starvation and insanitary conditions of life are 
only an effect on the individual and cannot affect the stock. 
The stock may be destroyed, killed out by adverse conditions, 
but its quality is not directly affected, and if removed to more 
favourable conditions it will show no hereditary results of the pre- 
vious adversity; indeed it will probably have been strengthened 
in some ways by the destruction in severe conditions of its 
weaker members and the survival of the stronger individuals. 



Such considerations have the very greatest importance lor the 
guidance of the action of civilized man in seeking the health 
and happiness of the community. But it must not be forgotten 
that the problems presented by human communities are ez* 
trcmely complex, and that the absence of any selection of healthy 
or desirable stock in the breeding of human communities leads 
to undesirable consequences. The most thrifty and capable 
sections of the people at the present day are not (it has been 
shown) fat overcrowded areas, producing offspring at such a 
rate as to contribute to the increase of the population. That 
increase, it has been shown, is due to the early marriage and 
excessive reproduction of the reckless end hopeless, the poorest, 
least capable, least desirable members of the community. The 
questions raised by these conside r a t ions have attracted much 
public attention under the newly invented name of "eugenics/* 
but they are of an exceedingly difficult and delicate nature. 

(E.R.L.) 

ZORILLA, MAVUB. RUB, Don (1034-1805), Spanish 
politician, was born at Burgo de Osma in 1434. He began hie 
education at Valladolid, and studied law afterwards at Madrid 
University, where he leaned Cowards Radicalism in politics. 
In 1856 he was elected deputy, and soon attracted notice among 
the most advanced Progressists and Democrats. He took 
part in the revolutionary propaganda that led to the military 
movement in Madrid on the 22nd of June 1866. He had to 
take refuge in France for two years, like his fdlow^xnispiratois, 
and only returned to Spam when the revolution of 1868 took 
place, He was one of the members of the first cabinet after 
the revolution, and in i860, under the regency of Marshal 
Serrano, he became minister of giace and justice. In 1870 
he was elected president of the House of Deputies, and seconded 
Prim in offering the throne to Amadeus of Savoy. He went to 
Italy as president of the commission, carrying to the prince at 
Florence the official news of his election. On the arrival of 
Amadeus in Spain, Ruiz ZorflU became ministei of public 
works for a short time, and resigned by way of protesting 
against Serrano and Topete entering the councils of the new 
king. Six months later, in 1871, he was invited by Amadeus 
to form a cabinet, and he continued to be the principal councillor 
of the king until February 1873, when the monarch abdicated 
in disgust at the resistance be met with in the army, and at 
the lack of sincerity on the part of the very politicians and 
generals who had asked him to ascend the throne. After the 
departure of Amadeus, Ruiz Zorilla advocated the establish- 
ment of a republic Notwithstanding this, he was not called 
upon either by the Federal' Republicans to help them during 
the year 1873, or by Marshal Serrano during 1874 to join Martos 
and SagasU in his cabinet. Immediately after the restora- 
tion of Alphonso XII., early in 167s, Ruis Zorilla went to 
France. He was for nearly eighteen years the soul of the 
republican conspiracies, the prompter of revolutionary propa- 
ganda, the chief inspirer of intrigues concerted by discon- 
tented military men of all ranks. He gave so much trouble to 
the Madrid governments that they organized a watch over him 
with the assistance of the French government and police, 
especially when it was discovered that the two military move- 
ments of August 1883 and September 1886 had been prepared 
and assisted by him. During the last two years of his life Ruiz 
Zorilla became less active; failing health and the loss of his 
wife had decreased his energies, and the Madrid government 
allowed him to return to Spam some months before he died 
at Burgos, on the 13th of June 1805, of heart disease, 

ZORNDORF, a village of Prussia, in the Oder valley, north- 
cast of Cistrin. It is famous as the scene of a battle in which 
the Prussians under Frederick the -Crest defeated the Russians 
commanded by Fermor, on the 75th of August 1758 (see Seven 
Years' War). 

ZOROASTER, one of the great teachers of the East, the 
founder of what was the national religion of the Perse-Iranian 
people from the time of the Achaemenidae to the dose of the 
Sassanian period. The name (ZupoaVrpes) i* the 
Greek form of the old Iranian ZaratkutSra (ne»t 



1040 



ZOROASTER 



Zarduskt). Its rigmncatic* b obsotre; but it certainly contains 
the word tutoro, " camel." 

Zoroaster was already famous in classical antiquity as the 
founder of the widely renowned wisdom of the MagL His 
jainiuj, name is not mentioned by Herodotus in his sketch 
Aw A* of the Medo-Fersian religion (L 131 seq.). It occurs 
** for the first time in a fragment of Xantbus (ay), and 

in the Akiinades of Plato (i. p. 12 a), who calk him the son 
of Oromacdea. For occidental writers, Zoroaster is always 
the Magus, or the founder of the whole Magian system (PluU 
de Is, d Osir. 46 ; Plat. loc. eU.\ Diog. Lafert. prootm. a; 
other passages in Jackson's Zoroaster, 6 seq.). They sometimes 
call him a Bactrian, sometimes a Median or Persian (cf . Jackson, 
op. cii. 186). The ancients also recount a few points regarding 
the childhood of Zoroaster and his hermit-life. Thus, according 
to Pliny (NaL HisL viL 15), be laughed on the very day of his 
birth— a statement found also in the Zarduskt-Ndma— nod 
lived in the wilderness upon cheese (si. 97). Plutarch speaks of 
his intercourse with the deity, and compares him with Lycurgus 
and Numa {Nnrns, 4). Dio Chrysostom, Plutarch's contem- 
porary, declares that neither Homer nor Hesiod sang of the 
chariot and horses of Zeus so worthily as Zoroaster, of whom 
the Persians tell that, out of love to wisdom and righteousness, 
he withdrew himself from men, and lived in solitude upon a 
mountain. The mountain was consumed by fire, but Zoroaster 
escaped uninjured and spoke to the multitude (vol. ii. p. 60). 
Plutarch, drawing partly on Theopompus, speaks of his religion 
in his J sis and Osiris (cc 46-47)* He gives a faithful sketch of 
the doctrines, mythology and dualistic system of the Magian 
Zoroaster. 

As to the period to which he lived\ most of the Greeks have already 
lost the true perspective. Hermodorus and Hermippus of Smyrna 
place him 5000 vears before the Trojan war, Xanthue 6000 years 
before Xerxes, Eudoxus and Aristotle 6000 years before the death 
of Plato. Agathias remarks (ii- 24). with perfect truth, that it is 
no longer possible to determine with any certainty when he lived 
and legislated. " The Persians," he adds, " say that Zoroaster 
lived under Hystaepes, but do not make it clear whether by this 
name they mean the father of Darius or another Hystaspes. But, 
whatever may have been his date, he was their teacher and in- 
structor in the Magian religion, modified their former religious 
customs, and introduced a variegated and composi t e belief." 

He is nowhere mentioned in the cuneiform inscriptions of the 
Achaeraenidae, although Darius and his successors were without 
doubt devoted adherents of Zoroastrianlsm. The Avesta is, indeed, 
our principal source for the doctrine of Zoroaster; on the subject 
of his person and his life it is comparatively reticent; with 
regard to his date it is. naturally enough, absolutely silent. The 
13th section, or Spend Nash, which was mainly consecrated to the 
description of his life, has perished; while the biographies founded 
upon it in the 7th book of the Dtnhard (9th century a.d.), the 
Skak-N&mo, and the Zarduskl'N&ma (13th century), are thoroughly 
legendary — full of wonders, fabulous histories and miraculous 
deliverances. 

Under all circumstances we must imitate the ancient authors in 
holding fast to the historic personality of Zoroaster: though he- 
like many another name of the dim past— has failed to escape the 
fate of being regarded as a purely mythical creation (for instance, by 
Kern and by Darmesteter. in the Sotted Books of the East, vol. iv. 
1880. Introd. 76). According to Darmesteter, the Zarathustra of 
the Avesta is a mere myth, a divinity Invested with human attri- 
butes, an incarnation of the storm-god, who with his divine word, 
bunder, comes and smhea the demons. Darmesteter has 
to realize sufficiently the distinction between the Zoroaster 
of the later Avesta and the Zoroaster of the Gathas. It cannot be 
denied that in the later Areata, and still more in writings of more 
recent date, he Is presented in a legendary light and endowed with 
superhuman powers. At his appearing all nature rejoices (Yaskt, 
>3» 93) ; he enters into conflict with the demons and rids the earth 
of their presence (YashL 17,10); Satan approaches him as tempter 
to make aim renounce his faith (Vendidad, 19, 6). 

The Gathas alone within the Avesta make claim to be the 
ipsiisima verba of the prophet; in the rest of that work they are 
put into Zoroaster's own mouth (Kama, 0, 1) and are expressly 
called "the Gathas of the holy Zoroaster ^ (Yasna, 57, 8). The 
litanies of the Yasna. and the Yashts, refer to him as a personage 
belonging to the past. The Vendidad also merely gives accounts 
of the dialogues between Ormasd and Zoroaster. The Gathas alone 
claim to be authentic utterances of Zoroaster, his actual expressions 
in presence of the assembled congregation. They are the last genuine 
— rivals of the doctrinal discourses with which — as the promulgator 
" ' religion— he appeared at the court of King Vbhtiapa. 



The p e rs on of the Zoroaster whore we meet with in these trysails 
differs toto coelo from the Zoroaster of the younger Avesta. He is 



the exact opposite of the miraculous personage of later legend— 
a mere man, standing always on the solid ground of reality, whose 
only arms are trust in his God and the protection of hb power! ul allies. 



At times his position is precarious enough. He whom we hear 
in the Gathas has had to face, not merely all forms of outward 
opposition and the unbelief and lukewarmness of adherents, but 
also the inward misgivings of his own heart as to the truth and 
final victory of his cause. At one time hope, at another despond- 
ency, now assured confidence, now doubt and despair, here a firm 
faith in the speedy coming of the kingdom of heaven, there the 
thought of taking refuge by flight— such » the range of the emotions 
which find their immediate ex p ression in these hymns. And the 
whole breathes such a genuine originality, all is psyclttlogically 
so accurate and just, the earliest beginnings of the new religious 
movement, the childhood of a new community of faith, are reflected 
so naturally in them all, that it b impossible for a moment to think 
of a later period of co m position by a priesthood whom we know to 
have been devoid of any historical sense, and incapable of recon- 
structing the spiritual conditions under which Zoroaster lived. So 
soon as the point of view is dear— that in the Gathas we have firm 
historical ground on which Zoroaster and his surroundings may rest, 
that here we have the beginnings of the Zoroastrian religion—- then 
it becomes impossible to answer otherwise than affirmatively every 
general question as to the historical character of Zoroaster. Yet 
we must not expect too much from the Gathas in the way of definite 
detail. They give no historical account of the life and teaching 
of their prophet, but rather are, so to say, versus memoriales, which 
recapitulate the main points of interest, often again in brief outlines. 
They are more of general admonitions, asseverations, solemn 
prophecies, sometimes directed to the faithful flock or to the princes* 
out generally cast in the form of dialogues with God and the arch- 
angels, whom he repeatedly invokes as witnesses to his veracity. 
Moreover, they contain many allusions to personal events which 
later generations have forgotten. It must be remembered, too, 
that their extent b limited, and their meaning, moreover, frequently 
dubious or obscure. 

The Person of Ike PropkeL—Sn to his birthplace the testi- 
monies are conflicting. According to the Avesta (Yasna, 9, 17), 
Airyanem VaejO, on the river Daitya, the old sacred country 
of the gods, was the home of Zoroaster, and the scene of his 
first appearance. There, on the river Darejya, assuming that 
the passage {Vend., 19, 4) is correctly interpreted, stood the 
bouse of his father; and the Bundahisk (20, 32 and 24, is) says 
expressly that the river Dftraja lay in Airan Vej, on its bank 
was the dwelling of his father, and that there Zoroaster was born. 
Now, according to the Bundahisk (29, 13), Airan Vej was 
situated in the direction of Atropatene, and consequently 
Airyanem Vaejo is for the most part identified with the district 
of Arrin on the river Aras (A raxes), close by the north- western 
frontier of Media. Other traditions, however, make him a 
native of Rai (Ragha, 'Pd-yoi). According to Yasna, 19, 18, 
the waraAushtrStema, or supreme head of the Zoroastrian priest- 
hood, had at a later (Sasanian) time, his residence in Ragha. 
The Arabic writer Shahrastanl endeavours to bridge the diver- 
gence between the two traditions by means of the following 
theory: his father was a man of Atropatene, while the mother was 
from Rai. In his home tradition recounts he enjoyed the celestial 
visions and the conversations with the archangels and Ormaxd 
which are mentioned already in the Gathas. There, too, 
according to Yasht, 5, 105, he prayed that he might succeed in 
converting King Vlshtaspa. He then appears to have quitted 
his native district. On this point the Avesta is wholly silent: 
only one obscure passage (Yasna, 53, 9) seems to intimate that 
he found an ill reception in Rai. Finally, in the person of 
Vlshtaspa, who seems to have been a prince resident in east 
Iran, he gained the powerful protector and faithful disciple of 
the new religion whom he desired— though after almost super- 
human dangers and difficulties, which the later books depict 
in lively colours. According to the epic legend, Vlshtaspa was 
king of Bactria. Already in the later Avesta he has become a 
half-mythical figure, the last in the series of heroes of east 
Iranian legend, in the arrangement of which series priestly 
influence is unmistakably evident. He stands at the meeting- 
point between the old world and the new era which begins with 
Zoroaster. In the Gathas he appears as a quite historical 
personage; it is essentially to bis power and good eyamrJp 
that the prophet b indebted for hb success. In Yasna, cj, a; 



ZOROASTER 



104 1 



be is spoken of as a pioneer of the doctrine revetled by Ormaxd. 
In the relation between Zoroaster and VIshtispa already lies 
the germ of the state church which afterwards became com- 
pletely subservient to the interests of the dynasty and sought 
its protection from it. 

Among the grandees of the court of Vbhtftspa mention is 
made of two brothers, Frashaoshtra and J&mftspa; both were, 
according to the later legend, vizirs of Vbhtftspa. Zoroaster 
was nearly related to both: his wife, HvoYi, was the daughter 
of Frashaoshtra, and the husband of his daughter, Pourucista, 
was Jftmftspa. The actual role of intermediary was played by 
the pious queen Hutaosa. Apart from this connexion, the new 
prophet relies especially upon his own kindred (kwaltusk). His 
first disciple, Maidhyoiin&ongha, was his cousin: his father 
was, according to the later Avesta, Pourushaspa, his mother 
DughdOvft, his great-grandfather Haecataspa, and the ancestor 
of the whole family Spttama, for which reason Zarathushtra 
usually bears this surname. His sons and daughters are re- 
peatedly spoken of. His death is, for reasons easily intelligible, 
nowhere mentioned in the Avesta; in the ShdM-Ndma he is 
said to have been murdered at the altar by the Turanians in 
the storming of Balkh. 

We are quite ignorant as to the date of Zoroaster; King 
VIshtispa does not seem to have any place in any historical 
chronology, and the G&thfts give too hint on the subject. In 
former times the assertion often was, and even now is often 
put forward, that VIshtispa was one and the same person with 
the historical Hystaspes, father of Darius 1. This identifica- 
tion can only be purchased at the cost of a complete renuncia- 
tion of the Avestan genealogy. Hutaosa Is the same name as 
Atossa: but in history Atossa was the wife of Cambyses and 
Darius. Otherwise, not one single name in the entourage of 
our Vbhtftspa can be brought into harmony with historical 
nomenclature. According to the Arda Vfrftf, r, 2, Zoroaster 
taught, in round numbers, some 300 years before the invasion 
of Alexander. The testimony of Assyrian inscriptions relegates 
him to a far more ancient period. If these prove the name 
Mazdaka to have formed part of Median proper names in the 
year 715 B.C., Eduard Meyer (v. Ancient Persia) is justified in 
maintaining that the Zoroastrian religion must even then have 
been predominant in Media. Meyer, therefore, conjecturally 
puts the date of Zoroaster at 1000 B.C., as had already been done 
by Duncker {Gesckickte des Aliertums, a\ 78). This, in its 
turn, may be too high: but, in any case, Zoroaster belongs to a 
prehistoric era. Probably he emanated from the old school of 
Median Magi, and appeared first in Media as the prophet of a 
new faith, but met with sacerdotal opposition, and turned his 
steps eastward. In the east of Iran the novel creed first ac- 
quired a solid footing, and subsequently reacted with success 
opon the West. 

Zoroastrianism.—Zorov&ex taught a new religion; but this 
must not be taken as meaning that everything he taught came, 
so to say, out of his own head. His doctrine was rooted in the 
old Iranian— or Aryan— folk-religion, of which we can only 
form an approximate representation by comparison with the 
religion of the Veda. The newly discovered Hillite inscrip- 
tions have now thrown a welcome ray of light on the primitive 
Iranian creed (Ed. Meyer, Sittungsberickte der Preuss. Akadtmic, 
1908). In these inscriptions Mitra, Varuna, Indra and Nasatya 
are mentioned as deities of the Iranian kings of Mitani at the 
beginning of the 14th century— all of them names with which 
we are familiar from the Indian pantheon. The Aryan folk- 
religion was polytheistic Worship was paid to popular 
divinities, such as the war-god and dragon-slayer Indra, to 
natural forces and elements such as fire, but the Aryans also 
believed in the ruling of moral powers and of an eternal law in 
nature (t. Ed. Meyer in the article Persia: History, \ Ancient). 
On solemn occasions the inspiring drink soma {haoma) ministered 
to the enjoyment of the devout. Numerous coincidences with 
the Indian religion survive in Zoroastrianiam, side by side with 
astonishing diversities. 

The most striking difference between Zoroaster's doctrine 



of God and the old religion of India lies in this, that while in 
the Avesta the evil spirits are called daeaa (Modem Persian 4f»), 
the Aryans of India, in common with the Italians, Celts and 
Letts, gave the name of dims to their good spirits, the spirits of 
light. An alternative designation for deity in the Rig-Veda is 
asnra. In the more recent hymns of the Rig-Veda and in later 
India, on the other hand), only eoil spirits are understood by 
asuras, while in Iran the corresponding word akttra was, and 
ever has continued to be, the designation of God the Lord. 
Thus akura-doeoa, dtvo-asura in Zoroastrian and in later Brah- 
man theology are in their meanings diametrically opposed. 

Asura-daha represent originally two distinct races of gods 
(like the Northern Aser and Vaner)— two different aspects of 
the conception of deity, comparable to oai/jMr and osst. 
Aswa indicates the more sublime and awful divine character, 
for which man entertains the greater reverence and fear: 
daiva denotes the kind gods of light, the vulgar— more sensuous 
and anthropomorphic— deities. This twofold development of 
the idea of God formed the point of leverage for Zoroaster's 
reformation. While in India the conception of the asnra had 
veered more and more towards the dreadful and the dreaded, 
Zoroaster elevated it again— at the cost, indeed, of the daivas 
(datoas), whom he degraded to the rank of malicious powers and 
devils. In one Asura, whose Aryan original was Varuna, he 
concentrated the whole of the divine character, and conferred 
upon it the epithet of "the wise" (matdao). This culminating 
stage in the awo-conception is the work of- Zoroaster. The 
Wise Lord (Aknr* Mawdaa— later Ornund) is the primeval 
spiritual being, the All-father, who was existent before ever 
the world arose. From him that world has emanated, and its 
course is governed by his foreseeing eye. 'His guiding spirit 
is the Holy Spirit, which wills the good: yet it is not free, but 
restricted, in this temporal epoch, by its antagonist and own 
twin-brother (Yasna, 30, 3), the EvU Spirit (angrt mainyush, 
Akrunau), who in the beginning was banished by the Good 
Spirit by means of the famous ban contained in Yasna, 45, 9, 
and since then drags out his existence in the darkness of Hell 
as the principle of ill— the arch-devil In the Gftthas the Good 
Spirit of Mazda and the Evil Spirit are the two great opposing 
forces in the world, and Ormaxd himself is to a certain extent 
placed above them both. Later the Holy Spirit is made directly 
equivalent to Ormaxd; and then the great watchword is: 
" Here Ormaxd, there AhrimanI" The very daHas are only the 
inferior Instruments, the corrupted children of Ahriman, from 
whom come all that Is evfl in the world. The daevas, unmasked 
and attacked by Zoroaster as the true enemies of mankind, are 
still, in the Gftthas, without doubt the perfectly definite gods 
of old popular belief— the idols of the people. For Zoraaster 
they sink to the rank of spurious deities, and in his eyes their 
priests and votaries are idolaters and heretics. In the later, 
developed system the daivas are the evil spirits in general, and 
their number has increased to millions. Some few of these 
have names; and among those names of the old Aryan divinities 
emerge here and there, e.g. Indra and Nftonhaitya. With some, 
of course— such as the god of fire — the connexion with the good 
deity was a priori indissoluble. Other powers of light, such as 
Mitra the god of day (Iranian hiitkra), survived unforgottcn 
fn popular belief till the later system Incorporated them in the 
angelic body. The authentic doctrine of the Gftthas had no 
room either for the cult of Mithra or for that of the Haoma. 
Beyond the Lord and his Fire, the Gftthas only recognize the 
archangels and certain ministers of Ormaxd, who are, without 
exception, personifications of abstract ideas. This hypo- 
stasization and att-egotization is especially characteristic of the 
Zoroastrian religion. The essence of Ormaxd is Truth and Law 
<uAa-Vedk rta): this quality he embodies, and its personifica- 
tion (though conceived as sexless) is always by his side, a con- 
stant companion and intimate, The essence of the wicked 
spirit is f als e hood: and falsehood, as the embodiment of the 
evil principle, is much more frequently mentioned in the Gftthas 
than Ahriman himself. 

Zoroaster says of himself that he had received from God a 



104-2 



ZOROASTER 



commission to purify religion (Yosna, 44, 9). He purified it 
from the grossly sensual elements of daiva worship, and up- 
lifted the idea of religion to a higher and purer sphere. The 
motley body of Aryan folk-belief, when subjected to the unify- 
ing thought of a speculative brain, was transformed to a self- 
contained theory of the universe and a logical dualistic principle. 
But this dualism is a temporally limited dualism— no more 
than an episode in the world-whole— and is destined to ter- 
minate in monotheism. Later sects sought to rise from it to 
a higher unity in other ways. Thus the Zarvanites represented 
Ormasd and Ahriman as twin sons proceeding from the funda- 
mental principle of all — Zrvana Akarana, or limitless time. 

Ethically, too, the new doctrine stands on a higher plane, 
and represents, in its moral laws, a superior civilization. The 
devil-worshippers, at their sacrifices, slay the ox; and this 
the daivas favour, for they are foes to the cattle and to cattle- 
breeding, and friends to those who work ill to the cow. In 
Zoroaster's eyes this is an abomination: for the cow is a 
gift of Ormasd to man, and the religion of Maxda protects the 
sacred animal It is the religion of the settled grazier and the 
peasant, while the ruder daHa-oAl holds its ground among 
the uncivilized nomadic tribes. In an old confession of faith, 
the convert is pledged to abjure the theft and robbery of cattle 
and the ravaging of villages inhabited by worshippers of Mazda 
(Yasnc, 12, 2). 

Zoroaster's teachings show him to have been a man of a highly 
speculative turn, faithful, however, with all his originality, to the 
Iranian national character. With zeal for the faith, and boldness 
and energy, he combined diplomatic skill in his dealings with his 
exalted protectors. His thinking is consecutive, self-restrained, 
practical, devoid of everything that might be called fantastic or 
excessive. His form of expression is tangible and concrete: his 
system is constructed on a clearly conceived plan and stands on a 
high moral level : for its time it was a great advance in civilization. 
The doctrine of Zoroaster and the Zoroastrian Church may be sum- 
marized somewhat as follows :— ... ... 

At the beginning of things them existed the two spirits who repre- 
sented good and evil (Yosna, 30, 3). The existence of evil in the 
world is thus presupposed from the beginning. Both spirits 
creative power, which manifests itself positively in th~ - 
negatively in the other. Ormazd is light and life, and 
that is pure and good— in the ethical world of law, order and 
truth. His antithesis is darkness, filth, death, and produces all 
that is evil in the world. Until then the two spirits had counter- 
balanced one another. The ultimate triumph of the good spirit 
is an ethical demand of the religious consciousness and the quint- 
essence of Zoroaster's religion. 

The evil spirit with his wicked hosts appears in the G&thas much 
less endowed with the attributes of personality and individuality 
than does Ahura Mazda. Within the world of the good Ormazd 
is Lord and God alone. In this sense Zoroastrianism is often referred 
to as the faith of Ormazd or as Mazdabm. Ormazd in his exalted 
majesty is the ideal figure of an Oriental king. He is not alone in his 
doings and conflicts, but' has in conjunction with himself a number 
of genii— for the most part personifications of ethical ideas. These 
are his creatures, his instruments, servants and assistants. They 
are comprehended under the general name of ameshd spetM (" im- 
mort.i1 holy ones **) and are the prototypes of the seven amshaspands 
of a hict date. These arc— (i) Vohu Mano (<£«*«), good sense, 
it. the good principle, the idea of the good, the pmv iple that works in 
man inclining him to what i* good; (2) Aahtm, afterwards Ashem 
Vahbhicm (Plutarch's ***&*«), the prrrins of truth and the em- 
bodiment of all that i* (rue, good and right, upritht law and rule — 
idi-ai pracueally identical lor Zoroaster; (3) Khshathrem. after- 
wW, Kh*Mhrem VaJrirn Utvofila}. the power and kingdom of 
Ormaid, which have subsisted from the first but not in integral 
tomptetcne», the evil having crept in like tares among the wheat: 
the time is yet to come when it shall be fully manifested in all its 
unclouded majesty; (4) Arnuiii (&i£M* due reverence for the 
divine, terecundxa. spOKCA of as daughter of Grm.izd and regarded 
as having liti *«vuc upon the earth; (%) Haurvuiit (rXovrot), per- 
fection; (6) A mere tat, immortality. Other ministering angels are 
Geush Urvan (" the genius and defender of animals "), and Sraosha, 
the genius of obedience and faithful hearing. 

As soon as the two separate spirits (cf. Bundahish, I, 4) encounter 
one another, their creative activity and at the same time their 
permanent conflict begin. The history of this conflict is the 
history of the world. A peat cleft runs right through the world : 
all creation divides itself into that which is Ahura s and that which 
is Ahriman's. Not that the two spirits carry on the struggle in 
person; they leave it to be fought out by their respective creations 
and creatures which they sent into the field. The field of battle 
is the present world. 



in the one and 
creates all 



In the centre of battle b man: his soul is the object of the wsr. 
Man is a creation of Ormazd. who therefore has the right to call 
him to account. But Ormazd created him free in his determina- 
tions and in his actions, wherefore he b accessible to the influences 
of the evil powers. This freedom of the will is clearly expressed 
in Yosna, 31, 11: " Since thou, O Mazda, didst at the first create 
our being and our consciences in accordance with thy mind, and 
didst create our understanding and our life together with the body, 
and works and words in which man according to his own will can 
frame his confession, the liar and the truth-speaker alike lay hold of 
the word, the knowing and the ignorant each after bis own heart 
and understanding. Armaiti searches, following thy spirit, where 
errors are found." Man takes part in this conflict by all his life and 
activity in the world. By a true confession of faith, by every good 
deed, word and thought, by continually keeping pure his body 
and hb soul, he impairs the power of Satan and strengthens the 
might of goodness, and establishes a daim for reward upon 
Ormazd; by a false confession, by every evil deed, word and 
thought and defilement, he increases the evil and renders service 
to Satan. 

The life of man falls into two parts— its earthly portion and that 
which b lived after death b past. The lot assigned to him after 
death b the result and consequence of hb life upon earth. No 
religion has so clearly grasped the ideas of guilt and of merit. On 
the works of men here below a strict reckoning will be held in 
heaven (according to later representations, by Rashnu, the genius 
of justice, and Mithra). All the thoughts, words and deeds of 
each are entered in the book of life as separate items — all the 
evil works, &C-, as debts. Wicked actions cannot be undone, but 
in the heavenly account can be counterbalanced by a surplus of 
good works. It is only in thb sense that an evil deed can be atoned 
for by a good deed. Of a real remission of sins the old doctrine 
of Zoroaster knows nothing, whibt the later Zoroastrian Church 
admits repentance, expiation and remission. After death the soul 
arrives at the cinvate hereto, or accountant's bridge, avtr which lies 
the way to heaven. Here the statement of his life account b made 
out. If he has a balance of good works in hb favour, he passes 
forthwith into paradise (Card dematta) and the blessed life. If his 
evil works outweigh hb good, he falls finally under the power of 
Satan, and the pains of hell are hb portion for ever. Should 
the evil and the good be equally balanced, the soul passes into an 
intermediary stage of existence (the HamOstaUns of the Pahlavi 
books) and its final lot b not decided until the last judgment. 
Thb court of reckoning, the judicium particular*, b called Ska". 
The course of inexorable law cannot be turned aside by any sacrifice 
or offering, nor yet even by the free grace of God. 

But man has been smitten with blindness and ignorance: he 
knows neither the eternal law nor the things which await him 
after death. He allows himself too easily to be ensnared by the 
craft of the evil powers who seek to ruin his future existence. He 
worships and serves false gods, being unable to dbtingubh between 
truth and lies. Therefore it b that Ormazd in hb grace deter- 
mined to open the eyes of mankind by sending a prophet to lead 
them by trie right way, the way of salvation. According to later 
legend (Vd., 2, 1), Ormazd at first wished to entrust thb task to 
Yima (Jemshid), the ideal of an Iranian king. But Yima, the 
secular man, felt himself unfitted for it and declined it. He con- 
tented himself therefore with establishing in his paradise (vara) a 
heavenly kingdom in miniature, to serve at the same time as a 
pattern for the heavenly kingdom that was to come. Zoroaster 
at last, as being a spiritual man, was found fit for the mission. He 
experienced within himself the inward call to seek the ameliora- 
tion of mankind and their deliverance from ruin, and regarded this 
inner impulse, intensified as it was by long, contemplative solitude 
and by visions, as being the call addressed to him by God Him- 
self. Like Mahommed after him he often speaks of hb conversations 
with God and the archangels. He calb himself most frequently 
manlhran (" prophet "), ratu {" spiritual authority "), and saoshyant 
(" the coming helper "—that is to say, when men come to be judged 
according to their deeds). 

The full contents of hb dogmatic and ethical teaching we cannot 
■ gather from the G&th&s. He speaks for the most part only in 
general references of the divine commands and of good and evil 
works. Among the former those most inculcated are renunciation 
of Satan, adoration of Ormazd. parity of soul and body, and care 
of the cow. We learn little otherwise regarding the practices con- 
nected with hb doctrines. A ceremonial worship b hardly men- 
tioned. He speaks more in the character of prophet than in trust 
of lawgiver. The contents of the G&thas are essentially escha to- 
logical. Revelations concerning the last things and the future lot, 
whether bliss or woe, of human souls, promises for true believers. 
threatenings for misbelievers, hb firm confidence as to the fixture 
triumph of the good— such are the themes continually dwelt oa 
with endless variations. 

It was not without special reason— so Zoroaster believed— tKat 
the calling of a prophet should have taken place precisely wtsen 
it did. It was, he held, the final appeal of Ormazd to mankind 
at large. Like John the Baptist and the Apostles of Jesus, Zorosfcstes: 
also believed that the fulness of time was near, that the kingdom 
of heaven was at hand. Through the whole of the G&th&s srusas 



ZORRILLA Y MORAL 



1043 



•t '.'* 



the pious hope that the cod of the present world is not far distant. 
He himself hope*, with his followers, to live to see the decisive 
turn of things, the dawn of the new and better aeon. Ormazd 
will summon together all his powers for a final decisive struggle 
sad break the power of evil for ever; by his help the faithful will 



achieve the victory over their detested enemies, the dt 

, and render them impotent. Thereupon Ormaid will hold 



* judicium 



a Judicium universal*, in the form of a general ordeal, a great test 
of all mankind by fire and molten metal, and will judge strictly 
according to justice, punish the wicked, and assign to the good 
the hoped-for reward. Satan will be cast, along with all those who 
have been delivered over to him to suffer the pains of hell, into 
the abyss, where he will henceforward lie powerless. Forthwith 
begins the one undivided kingdom of God in heaven and on earth. 
This is called, sometimes the good kingdom, sometimes simply the 
Here the sun will for ever shine, and all the pious and 



Hfiguom. neie in* sun win «ur ctw •nine, anu •» iw viuib ami 

faithful will live a happy life, which no evil power can disturb, in 
the eternal fellowship of .Ormazd and his angels. Every believer 
will receive as his guerdon the inexhaustible cow and the gracious 
gifts of the Voku man*. The prophet and his princely patrons 
will be accorded special honour. 

History and Later Development.— For the great man of the 
people Zoroaster's doctrine was too abstract and spiritualistic. 
The vulgar fancy requires sensuous, plastic deities, which admit 
of visible representation; and so the old gods received honour 
again and new gods won acceptance. They are the angels 
iyawala) of New Zoroast nanism. Thus, in the later Avesta, 
we find not only Hithra but also purely popular divinities such 
as the angel of victory, Veiethiaghna, Anihita (Anaitis), 
the goddess of the water, Tishrra (Sinus), and other heavenly 
bodies, invoked with special preference, *Tbe Gathas know 
nothing of a new belief which afterwards arose in the Provoski, 
or guardian angels of tbe faithful. Propositi properly means 
M confession of faith," and when personified comes to be re- 
garded as a protecting spirit. Unbelievers have no/ravoski. 

On the basis of tbe new teaching arose a widely spread priest- 
hood (AikraoonO) who systematized its doctrines, organized and 
carried on its worship, and laid down the minutely elaborated 
laws for tbe purifying and keeping dean of soul and oody, which 
are met with in the Vendidad. To these ecclesiastical precepts 
and expiations belong in particular the numerous ablutions, bodily 
chastisements, love of truth, beneficial works, support of comrades 
in the faith, alms, chastity, improvement of the land, arboriculture, 
breeding of cattle, agriculture, protection of useful animals, as the 
dog. the destruction of noxious animals, and the prohibition either 
to Durn or to bury the dead. These are to be left on the appointed 
places (dokkmas) and exposed to the vultures and wild dogs. In 
the worship the drink p rep a red from the hoomo (Indian soma) 
plant had a prominent place. Worship in the Zoroastrian Church 
was devoid of pomp: it was independent of temples. Its centre 
was the holy fire on the altar. The fire altars afterwards developed 
to fire temples. In the sanctuary of these temples the various 
sacrifices and high and low masses were celebrated. As offerings 
meat, milk, show-bread, fruits, (lowers and consecrated water were 
used. The priests were the privileged keepers and teachers of 
religion. They only p erformed the sacrifices (Herodotus, i. 132). 
educated tbe young clergy, imposed the penances; they in person 
executed the circumstantial ceremonies of purification and exercised 
a spiritual guardianship and pastoral care of the laymen. Every 
young believer in Mazda, after having been received into the 
religious community by being girt with the holy lace, bad to choose 
• con f essor and a spiritual guide [rain). 

Also in esclutoiogy, as may be expected, a change took place. 
The last things and the end of the world are relegated to the close 
of a long period of time (3000 years after Zoroaster), when a new 
Saoshyant is to be born of tbe seed of the prophet, the dead are 
to come to life, and a new incorruptible world to begin. 

Zoroastrianism was the national religion of Iran, but it was not 

1 by Turanians 
> Armenia and 

- . abo,xv. 3, 14; 

, 4; 14. 76). Of the Zoroastrian Church under the Achae- 

snenides and Aeraddes little is known. After the overthrow of 
the dynasty of the Acnaemenides a period of decay seems to have 
set in. Yet the Aeraddes and the Indo-Scythian kings as well 
as the Achaemenides were believers in Mazda. Tbe national 
le st or a t i on of the SasankJes brought new life to the Zoroastrian 
religion and long-tasting sway to the Church. Protected by this 
dynasty, the priesthood developed into a completely organized 
state church, which was able to employ the power of the state 
in enforcing strict compliance with the religious law-book hitherto 
enjoined by their unaided efforts only. The head of the Church 
(Zara-ShushtrOtema) had his scat at Ral in Media and was the 
first person in the state next to the king. The formation of 
sects was at this period not infrequent (et MajncsUBntt). The 



permanently restricted to the Iranians, being professed by Turanians 
as well The worship of the Persian gods spread to Armenia anc' 
~ * 1 and over the whole of the Near East (Strabo, xv. 3, 14 



Mohammedaniavasion (636). with the terrible persecution* of tbe fol- 
lowing centuries, was the death-blow of Zoroastrianism. In Persia 
itself only a few followers of Zoroaster are now found (in Kerman 
and Yezd). The Parsers (?.».) in and around Bombay bold by 
Zoroaster as their prophet and by the ancient religious usages, 
but their doctrine has reached the stage of a pure monotheism. 

Literature.— See under Zend-Avesta. Also Hyde, Historic 
ReHeionis oeterum Purarum (Oxon, 1700); Windischmann, Zero* 
astnseke Stndien (Berlin, 1863); A. V. Williams Jackson, Zoroaster, 
the Prophet of Ancient Iran (New York. 1809); Jackson, in the 
Grundnss der iranischen Phtlolarie, vol. ii. 612 sqq. (Strassburg, 
1896-1904); Tiele, Die Religion lei den iranischen Volkem (Cotha, 
1898); Tiele, Kompendium der Rdipons&schickte, German trans!, 
by SOderblom (Breslau, 1903); Rastamjt Edulji Dastoor Peshotan 
Saaiana, Zarathushtra and ZaratkushtrianisM in Ike Avesta (Bombay, 
1906); E. Lehmann, Zaraihushtra, 2 vols. (Copenhagen, 1899 1902); 
E. W. West. ** Marvels of Zoroastrianism 'Hn the Sacred Books 
of the East, vol xlvii.; Z. A. Ragorin, The Story of Medio, Babylon 
and Persia (New York, 1888); Dosabhai Framji Karaka, History 
of the Parsis (a vols., London, 1884). (K. G.) 

ZORBILLA Y MORAL. JOS* (1817-1893), Spanish poet and 
dramatist, son of a magistrate in whom Ferdinand VII. placed 
special confidence, was born at Valladohd 00 the aist of 
February 1817. He was educated by the Jesuits at the Real 
Seminario de Nobles in Madrid, wrote verses when he was 
twelve, became an enthusiastic admirer of Scott and Chateau- 
briand, and took part in the school performances of plays by 
Lope de Vega and Calderon. In 1833 he was sent to read law 
at the University of Toledo, but, alter a year of idleness, be 
fled to Madrid, where he horrified the friends of his absolutist 
father by making violent speeches and by founding a newspaper 
whid} was promptly suppressed by the government. He 
narrowly escaped transportation to the Philippines, and passed 
the next few years in poverty. The death of the satirist Laxro 
brought Zorrilla into notice, His elegiac poem, dedaimed at 
Larra's funeral in February 1837, served as an introduction 
to the leading men of letters. In 1837 he published a book of 
verses, mostly imitations of Lamartine and Hugo, which was so 
favourably received that he printed six more volumes within 
three years. His subjects are treated with fluency and grace, 
but the carelessness which disfigures much of his work is pro- 
minent in these juvenile poems. After collaborating with 
Garcia Gutierrez, in a piece entitled Juan Ddndolo (1839) 
Zorrilla began his individual career as a dramatist with Coda 
cuol con su rason (1840), and during the following five years 
he wrote twenty-two plays, many of them extremely successful. 
His Cantos del trovodor (1841), a collection of national legends 
versified with infinite spirit, showed a dedded advance in kill, 
and secured for the author the place next to Espronceda in 
popular esteem. National legends also supply the themes of 
bis dramas, though in this department Zorrilla somewhat com- 
promised his reputation for originality by adapting older plays 
which had fallen out of fashion. For example, in El Za paler o 
y el Rey he recasts El monlatUs Juan Poscual by Juan de la 
Hoc y Mota; in La mejor rason la espada he borrows from 
Morcto's Travesuros del estudiante Pantoja; in Don Juan 
Tenor io he adapts from Tirso de Molina's Burlador de Sevilta 
and from the elder Dumas's Don Juan de Mar ana (which itself 
derives from Les Ames du pnrgatoire of Prosper Merimee). But 
his rearrangements usually contain original elements, and in 
Sancko Garcia, El Rey loco, and El Alcalde Ronquillo he ap- 
parently owes little to any predecessor. The last and (as he 
himself believed) the best of his plays is Troidor, inconfeso y 
mdrtir (184s). Upon the death of his mother in 1847 Zorrilla 
left Spain, resided for a while at Bordeaux, and settled in Paris, 
where his incomplete Granada, a striking poem of gorgeous 
local colour, was published in 1852. In a fit of depression, 
the causes of which are not known, he emigrated to America 
three years later, hoping, as he says, that yellow fever or small- 
pox would carry him off. During eleven years spent in Mexico 
he produced little, and that little was of no merit. He returned 
in 1866, to find himself a half-forgotten classic. His old fertility- 
was gone, and new standards of taste were coming into fash* 
A small post, obtained for him through the influence of Jov 
and Canovas dd Castillo, was abolished by the repub 



I04+ 



ZOSIMUS— ZOUAVE 



minister. If« was always poor, and for some twelve yean after 
1871 he was in the direst straits. The law of copyright was not 
retrospective, and, though some of his plays made the fortunes 
of managers, they brought him nothing. In his untrustworthy 
autobiography, Recuerdos del tiempo vujo (1880), he complained 
of this. A pension of 30,000 reales secured him from want in 
his old age, and the reaction in his favour became an apotheosis. 
In 1885 the Spanish Academy, which had elected him a member 
many years before, presented him with a gold medal of honour, 
and in 1889 he was publicly crowned at Granada as the national 
laureate. He died at Madrid on the 23rd of January 1893. 

Zorrflla is so intensely Spanish that it is difficult for foreign 
critics to do him justice. It is certain that the extraordinary 
rapidity of his methods seriously injured his work. He declares 
that he wrote El Caballo del Rey Don Saucho in three weeks, and 
that he put together El PuMal del Codo (which, like La Calentura, 
owes much to Southey) in two days; if so, his deficiencies need 
no other explanation. An improvisator with the characteristic 
faults of redundance and verbosity, he wrote far too much, and 
in most of his numbers there are numerous technical flaws. Yet 
the richness of his imagery, the movement, fire and variety of 
his versification, will preserve some few of his poems in the antho- 
logies. His appeal to patriotic pride, his accurate dramatic instinct, 
together with the fact that he invariably gives at least one of his 
characters a most effective acting part, have enabled him to hold 
the stage. It is by Don Juan Tenorio, the play of which he thought 
to meanly, that Zorrilla will be best remembered. (J* F.-K-) 

ZOSIMUS, bishop of Rome from the 18th of March 417 to the 
26th of December 418, succeeded Innocent I. and was followed 
by Boniface I. For his attitude in the Pelagian controversy, 
see Pelagius. He took a decided part in the protracted 
dispute in Gaul as to the jurisdiction of the see of Aries over that 
of Vicnne, giving energetic decisions in favour of the former, 
but without settling the controversy. His fractious temper 
coloured all the controversies in which he took part, in Gaul, 
Africa and Italy, including Rome, where at his death the clergy 
were very much divided. 

ZOSIMUS, Greek historical writer, flourished at Constanti- 
nople during the second half of the 5th century a.d. According 
to Photius, he was a count, and held the office of " advocate " 
of the imperial treasury. His New History, mainly a compilation 
from previous authors (Dezippus, Eunapius, Olympiodorus), 
is in six books: the first sketches briefly the history of the early 
emperors from Augustus to Diocletian (30s); the second, third 
and fourth deal more fully with the period from the accession of 
Constantius and Galerius to the death of Theodosius; the fifth 
and sixth cover the period between 395 and 4x0. The work, 
which is apparently unfinished, must have been written between 
450-502. The style is characterized by Photius as concise, 
clear and pure. The historian's object was to account for the 
decline of the Roman empire from the pagan point of view, and 
in this undertaking he at various points treated the Christians 
with some unfairness. 

The best edition is by Mendelssohn (1887). who folly discusses 
the question of the authorities used by Zostmus; there is an 
excellent appreciation of him in Rankc's Weltgeschtckle. tv. French 
translation by Cousin 11678); English (anonymous), 1684, 1814. 

ZOSTEROPS, 1 originally the scientific name of a genus of 
birds founded by N. A. Vigors and T. Horsfield (Trans. Linn. 
Society, xv. p. 235) on an Australian species called by them 
Z. dorsalis, but subsequently shown to be identical with the 
Certkia caertdescens, and also with the Sylvia lateralis, previously 
described by J. Latham. The name has been Anglicized in the 
same sense, and, whether as a scientific or a vernacular term, 
applied to a great number of species 2 of little birds which inhabit 
for the most part the tropical districts of the Old World, from 
Africa to most of the islands in the Indian and Pacific Oceans, 
and northwards in Asia through India and China to the Amur 
regions and Japan. 

* The derivation is fveHjoiipot and &+, whence the word should 
be pronounced with all the vowels long. The allusion » to the 
ring of white feathers round the eyes, which is very conspicuous 
in many species. 

'In 1883 R. B. Shafpe (Cat. B. Brit. Museum, ix. pp. 146-203) 
admitted 85 species, besides 3 more which he had not been able 
to examine. 



The birds of this group are mostly of unpretending appearance, 
the plumage above being generally either mouse-coloured or 
greenish olive; but some are varied by the white or bright yellow 
of their throat, breast or lower parts, and several have the 
flanks of a more or less lively bay. Several islands are inhabited 
by two perfectly distinct species, one belonging to the brown 
and the other to the green section, the former being wholly 
insular. The greater number of species seem to be confined to 
single islands,, often of very small area, but others have a very 
wide distribution, and the type-species, Z. caeruUscens, has 
largely extended its range. First described from New South 
Wales, where it is very plentiful, it had been long known to 
inhabit all the eastern part of Australia. In 1856 it was found 
in the South Island of New Zealand* when it became known to 
the Maories by a name signifying " Stranger/' and to the British 
as the " Blight-bird,"* from its clearing the fruit-trees of a 
blight. It soon after appeared in the North Island, where it 
speedily became common, and thence not only spread to the 
Chatham Islands, but was met with in considerable numbers 
300 miles from land, as though in search of new countries to 
colonize. In any case it is obvious that this Zosterops must be 
a comparatively modern settler in New Zealand. 

All the species of Zosterops are sociable, consorting In large 
flocks, which only separate on the approach of the pairing season. 
They build nests— sometimes suspended from a horizontal fork 
and sometimes fixed in an upright crotch— and lay (so far as is 
known) pale blue, spotless eggs, thereby differing wholly from 
several 01 the groups of birds to which they have been thought 
allied. Thoueh mainly insectivorous, they eat fruits of various 
kinds. The habits of Z. caeruUscens have been well described 
by Sir W. BuUer {Birds of New Zealand), and those of a 1 



u.) and Layard (B. South Africa) respectively. 

It is remarkable that the largest known species of the genus, 
Z. albiguloris, measuring nearly 6 in. in length, is confined to so 
small a spot as Norfolk Island, where also another, Z. lenuirostris, 
not much less in size, occurs; while a third, of intermediate stature, 
Z. strenua, inhabits the still smaller Lord Howe's Island. A fourth, 
Z. vaUnsis, but little inferior in bulk, is found on one of the New 
Hebrides; the rest are from one-fifth to one-third less in length, 
and some of the smaller species hardly exceed 3} in. 

Placed by some writers, if not systematise, with the Panda* 
(see Titmouse), by others among the Meljphagidae (see Honey- 
Eater), and again by others with the Nectariniidae (see Sunbird), 
the structure of the tongue, as shown by H. F. Gadow (Proc. Z00L 
Society, 1883, pp. 63, 68, pi. xvi. fig. 2). entirely removes it from 
the first and third, and from most of the forms generally included 
among the second. It seems safest to regard the genus, at least 
provisionally, as the type of a distinct family — Zostcropidae— -as 
families go among Passerine birds. (A. N.) 

ZOUAVE, the name given to certain infantry regiments in 
the French army. The corps was first raised in Algeria in 1831 
with one and later two battalions, and recruited solely from 
the Zouaves, a tribe of Berbers, dwelling in the mountains of 
the Jurjura range (see Kabyles). In 1838 a third battalion 
was raised, and the regiment thus formed was commanded 
by Lamoriciere. Shortly afterwards the formation of the 
Tirailleurs algiricns, the Turcos, as the corps for natives, changed 
the enlistment for the Zouave battalions, and they became, as 
they now remain, a purely French body. Three regiments 
were formed in 1852, and a fourth, the Zouaves of the Imperial 
Guard, in 1854. The Crimean War was the first service which 
the regiments saw outside Algeria. There are now four regi- 
ments, of five battalions each, four of which are permanently in 
Africa, the fifth being stationed in France, as a depot regiment. 
For the peculiarly picturesque uniform of these regiments, see 
Uniform. 

The Papal Zouaves were formed in defence of the Papal states 
by Lamonci6rc in i860. After the occupation of Rome by Victor 
Emmanuel in 1870, the Papal Zouaves served the government of 
National Defence in France during the Franco-Prussian war. and 
were disbanded after the entrance of the: German troops into Paris. 



English-speakini 



' tfy most fcnglish-speaking people the prevalent species 
Zosterops is commonly called " White-eve " or "Saver-eye." 



tie the prevalent 



ZOUCH— ZRINYI 



1045 



ZOUCH, RICHARD (e. 1500-1661), English jurist, wu bom 
at Anstey, Wiltshire, and educated at Winchester and after- 
wards at Oxford, where he became a fellow of New College in 
1609. He was admitted at Doctor's Commons in January 
16 1 8, and was appointed regius professor of law at Oxford in 
162a In 1625 he became principal of St Alban Hall and 
chancellor of the diocese of Oxford; in 1641 he was made judge 
of the High Court of Admiralty. Under the Commonwealth, 
having submitted to the parliamentary visitors, he retained his 
university appointments, though not his judgeship; this last 
be resumed at the Restoration, dying soon afterwards at his 
apartments in Doctor's Commons, London, on the 1st of March 
1661. 

1 He published EUmenta jurisprudential (1629), Descriptio juris 
et judicii feudatis, secundum consuetudines Medtolani et Normanuiae, 
pro introauetione ad jurisprudentiam Anglicanam (1634). Descriptio 
juris §t judicii temporalis, secundum consuetudines feudales et tfor- 
maunicas (1696), Descriptio juris et ptdieu ecclesiastic*, secundum 
concern et consuetudines Anglican** (1636). Descriptions juris et 
judicii sacri, . . . miliiaris, . . . mariHmi (1640), Juris et judicii 
fecialis she juris inter gentes . . . cxpticatto (1650), and Solutio 
auaesUoms de legaH deUnquenlis judice competent* (1697). In virtue 
of the last two he has the distinction of being one of the earliest 
systematic writers on international law. He was also the author 
of a poem. The Dove, or Passages of Cosmography (1613). 

ZOUCHE, or Zouch, the name of an English family descended 
from Alan la Zouche, a Breton, who is sometimes called Alan 
de Forrhoeu Having settled in England during the reign el 
Henry II., Alan obtained by marriage Ashby in Leicestershire 
(called after him Ashby de la Zouch) and other lands. His 
grandson, another Alan la Zouche, was justice of Chester and 
justice of Ireland under Henry III.; he was loyal to the king 
during the struggle with the barons, fought at Lewes and helped 
to arrange the peace of Kcnilworth. As the result of a quarrel 
over some lands with John, Earl Warenne, he was seriously 
injured in Westminster Hall by the earl and his retainers, and 
died on the 10th of August 1270, Alan's elder son Roger 
(d. 1285) had a son Alan k Zouche, who was summoned to 
parliament as a baron about 1208. He died without sons, and 
this barony fell into abeyance between his daughters and has 
never, been revived. The elder Alan's younger son, Eades or 
Ivo, had a son WiUiam (c x 276-1352), who was summoned to 
parliament as a baron in 1308, and this barony, which is still 
in existence, is known as that of Zouche of Haryngworth. 

John, 7th baron Zouche of Haryngworth (c. 1460-1526), 
was attainted in 1485 as a supporter of Richard III., but was 
restored to his honours in 1495. His descendant, Edward, the 
nth baron (c 1556-1645), was one of the peers who tried Mary, 
queen of Soots, and was sent by Elisabeth as ambassador to 
Scotland and to Denmark. He was president of Wales from 
1602 to 1615 and lord warden of the Cinque Ports from 161$ to 
t6«4. He was a member of the council ot the Virginia Company 
and of the New England council. He had many literary friends, 
among them being Ben Jonson and Sir Henry Wotton. Zouche 
left no sons, and the barony remained in abeyance among the 
descendants of bis two daughters until 1815, when the abeyance 
was terminated in favour of Sir Cecil Bisshopp, Bart. (17 53- 
1828), who became the 12th baron. He died without sons, a 
second abeyance being terminated in 1829 in favour of his 
daughter Harriet Anne (1787-1870), wife of the Hon. Robert 
Canon (1771-1863). In 1873 bcr grandson, Robert Nathaniel 
Curson (b. 1851), became the 15th baron. 

Two antiquaries, Henry Zouch (c. 1725-1795) and his brother 
Thomas Zouch (1737-181$), claimed descent from the family of 
Zouche. Both were voluminous writers, Thomas's works including 
a life of Xtaah Walton (1833) and Memoirs of Sir Philip Sidney 
(1808). 

ZOUTPAKSBBRQ, the north-eastern division of the Transvaal 
This was the district to which Louis Trichard and Jan van 
Rensburg, the forerunners of the Great Trek, journeyed in 
1835. In 1845 Hendrik Potgieter, a prominent leader of the 
Trek Boers, removed thither. The Zoutpansberg Boers formed 
a semi-independent community, and in 1857 Stephanus Schoc- 
nsmn. their commands nt-general, aided against Marthinue 



Pretorius and Paul Kroger when they invaded the Orange Free 
State. It was not until 1864 that Zoutpansberg was definitely 
incorporated in the South African Republic. Trichard and his 
companions had been shown gold workings by the natives, and 
it was in this district in 1867-70, and in the neighbouring region 
of Lydenburg, that gold mines were first worked by Europeans 
south of the Limpopo. The white settlers in Zoutpansberg 
had for many years a reputation for lawlessness, and were later 
regarded as typical " back velt Boers." Zoutpansberg contains 
a larger native population than any other region of the Transvaal 
It is highly mineralised, next to gold, copper, found near the 
Limpopo (where is the Messina mine) being the chief metal 
worked. The district long suffered from lack of railway com- 
munications, but in 1910 the completion of the Selati line giving 
it direct access to Delagoa Bay was begun. The chief towns 
are Pictersburg and Leydsdorp. 

See S. Hofmeyr, Tviulig jaren in Zoutpansberg (Cape Town, 
1890); Report on a Reconnaissance of the N.~W. Zoutpansberg 
District (Pretoria, 1908). 

ZRINYI. MIKlAs, Coumt (1508-1566), Hungarian hero, 
was a son of Miklos Zrinyi and U6na Karlovks. He distin- 
guished himself at the siege of Vienna in 1529, and in 1541 
saved the imperial army from defeat before Pest by intervening 
with 400 Croats, for which service he was appointed ban of 
Croatia. In 154a he routed the Turks at Somlyo. In 1543 ha 
married Catherine Frangipan, who placed the whole of her 
vast estates at bis disposal. The Emperor Ferdinand also 
gave him large possessions in Hungary, and henceforth the 
Zrinyis became as much Magyar as Croatian magnates. In 
1556 Zrinyi won a series of victories over the Turks, culminating 
in the battle of Babocsa. The Croatians, however, overwhelmed 
their ban with reproaches for neglecting them to fight for the 
Magyars, and the emperor simultaneously deprived him of the 
captaincy of Upper Croatia and sent 10,000 men to aid the 
Croats, while the Magyars were left without any help, where- 
upon Zrinyi resigned the banship (1561). la 1563, on the 
coronation of the Emperor Maximilian as king of Hungary, 
Zrinyi attended the ceremony at the head of 3000 Croatian and 
Magyar mounted noblemen, in the vain hope of obtaining the 
dignity of palatine, vacant by the death of Thomas Nadasdy. 
Shortly after niarrying(in 1564) his second wife, Eva Rosenberg, 
a great Bohemian heiress, he hastened southwards to defend 
the frontier, defeated the Turks at Segesd, and in 1566 fsont 
the 5th of August to the 7U1 of September heroically defended 
the little fortress of Szigetv&r against the whole Turkish host, 
led by Suleiman the Magnificent in person, perishing with every 
member of the garrison in a last desperate sortie, 

See F. Salamon, Ungarn im Zekoiler der TSrhtnherrschafl (Leipzig, 
18^7); J. Csuday, The Zrinyis in Hungarian, History (Hung.), 
Sxombathcly 1884, 8vo. (R. N. B.) 

ZRINYI, MIKLftS, Court (1620-1664), Hungarian warrior, 
statesman and poet, the son of George Zrinyi and Magdalene 
Szechy, was born at Caikvar. At the court of Piter Pasminy 
the youth conceived a burning enthusiasm for his native lan- 
guage and literature, although he always placed arms before 
arte. From 1635 to 1637 he accompanied Seenkveczy, one of 
the canons of Esztergom, on a long educative tour through 
Italy. During the next few years he learnt the art of war in 
defending the Croatian frontier against the Tucks, and approved 
himself one of the first captains of the age. la 1645 be acted 
against the Swedes in Moravia, equipping an army corps at 
his own expense. At Sakalec he scattered a Swedish division 
and took aooo prisoners. At Eger he saved the emperor, who 
had been surprised at night in his camp by WrangeL Subse- 
quently he routed the army of Rakoczy on the Upper Tbeiss. 
For his services the emperor appointed him captain of Croatia. 
On his return from the war he married the wealthy Eusebia 
Draskovics. In 1646 he distinguished himself in the Turkish 
war. At the coronation of Ferdinand IV. be carried the sword 
of state, and was made ban and captain-general of Croatia. 
In this double capacity he presided over many Croatian diets, 
always strenuously defending the political rights of the Croats 



1046 



ZSCHOKKE— ZUCCARELLI 



and steadfastly maintaining that at regarded Hungary they were 
to be looked upon not as partes annexae but as a rtgnum. During 
1652-53 he was continually fighting against the Turks, yet from 
his castle at Csiktornya he was in constant communication 
with the learned world; the Dutch scholar, Jacobus Tollius, 
even visited him, and has left in his EpistoUu ilinerariae a lively 
account of his experiences. Tollius was amated at the linguistic 
resources of Zrinyi, who spoke German, Croatian, Hungarian, 
Turkish and Latin with equal facility. Zrinyi's Latin letters 
(from which we learn that he was married a second time, to 
Sophia Ldbel) are fluent and agreeable, but largely interspersed 
with Croatian and Magyar expressions. The last year of his 
life was also its most glorious one. He set out to destroy the 
strongly fortified Turkish bridge at Esseg, and thus cut off the 
retreat of the Turkish army, re-capturing all the strong fortresses 
on his way. He destroyed the bridge, but the further pur- 
suance of the campaign was frustrated by the refusal of the 
Imperial generals to co-operate. Still the expedition had covered 
him with glory. ' All Europe rang with his praises. It was 
said that only the Zrinyis had the secret of conquering the Turks. 
The emperor offered him the title of prince. The pope struck 
a commemorative medal with the effigy of Zrinyi as a* field- 
marshal. The Spanish king sent him the Golden Fleece. The 
French king created him a peer of France. The* Turks, to wipe 
out the disgrace of the Esseg affair, now laid siege to Uj-Zerin, 
a fortress which Zrinyi had built, and the imperial troops under 
Montecuculi looked on while he hastened to relieve it, refusing 
all assistance, with the result that the fortress fell. It was 
also by the advice of Montecuculi that the disgraceful peace 
of Vasvir was concluded. Zrinyi hastened to Vienna to protest 
against it, but in vain. Zrinyi quitted Vienna in disgust, after 
assuring the Venetian minister, Sagridino, that he was willing 
at any moment to assist the Republic against the Turks with 
6000 men. He then returned to Csaktornya, and there, on 
the 1 8th of November, was killed by a wild boar which he had 
twice wounded^and recklessly pursued to its lair in the forest 
swamps, armed only with his hunting-knife. 

His poetical works first appeared at Vienna In 1651," under 
the title of The Siren of the Adriatic (Hung.); but his principal 
work, Obsidio Stigetiana, the epopoela of the glorious self- 
sacrifice of his heroic ancestor of the same name, only appeared 
in fragments in Magyar literature till Arany took it in hand. It 
was evidently written under the influence of both Virgil and 
Tasso, though the author had no time to polish and correct 
its rough and occasionally somewhat wooden versification. 
But the fundamental idea — the duty of Hungarian valour to 
shake off the Turkish yoke, with the help of God — is sublime, 
and the whole work is intense with martial and religious en- 
thusiasm. It is no unworthy companion of the other epics 
of the Renaissance period, and had many imitators. Arany 
first, in 1848, began to recast the Zrinyiad, as he called it, on 
modem lines, and the work was completed by Antal V£k6ny 
In 189a. 



. Kl _ „ w ..., 

vdli (Hung.), Budapest, 1895. (R. N. B.) 

ZSCHOKKE, JOHANW HEIHRICH DANIEL (1771-1848), 
German author, was born at Magdeburg on the 92nd of March 
1771. He was educated at the monasterial (kloster) school and 
at the Altsttdter gymnasium of his native place. He spent 
some time as playwright with a company of strolling actors, but 
afterwards studied philosophy, theology and history at the 
university of Frankfort -on-the-Oder, where in 1792 he established 
himself as Prvoatdotent. He created much sensation by an 
extravagant novel, Abdllino, der grosse Bandit (1703; subse- 
quently also drama t teed), modelled on Schiller's Riluber, and the 
melodramatic tragedy, Julius ton Sassen (1796). The Prussian 
government having declined to make him a full professor, 
Zschokke in 1700 settled in Switserland, where he conducted 
an educational institution in the castle of Reichenau. The 
authorities of the Grisons admitted him to the rights of a 



citizen, and in 1708 he published his Cesehkhte des PreistaaU der 
drei BUnde im kohen R&tien. The political disturbances of this 
year compelled him to close his institution. He was, however, 
sent as a deputy to Aarau, where he was made president of the 
educational department, and afterwards as government com- 
missioner to Unterwalden, his authority being ultimately 
extended over the cantons of Uri, Schwyz and Zug. Zachokke 
distinguished himself by the vigour of his administration and 
by the enthusiasm with which he devoted himself to the interests 
of the poorer classes of the community. In 1800 he reorganized 
the institutions of the Italian cantons and was appointed 
lieutenant-governor of the canton of Basel. Zschokke retired 
from public life when the central government at Bern proposed 
to re-establish the federal system, but after the changes effected 
by Bonaparte he entered the service of the canton of Aargau, 
with which he remained connected. In 1801 he attracted 
attention by his Cescfaekte tern Kampfe und Unier gauge der 
sckweucrischen Berg- und Wald-Kontone. Through his Sckwei- 
zerbcte, the publication of which began in 1804, he exercised a 
wholesome influence on public affairs; and the like may be 
said of his MisceUenfur die neuesU WeUkunde, issued from 1807 
to 1813. In 181 1 he also started a monthly periodical, the 
Erheitamngen. He wrote various historical works, the' most 
important of which is Des Sckweuerlondes Gesckickte fur das 
Sckwc ise rvo l k (182a, 8th cd. 1849). Zachokke's tales, on which 
his literary reputation rests, are collected in several series, 
BUder aus der Sckweiz (5 vols., 1824-35), AusgemOhUe Novella* 
und Dickhtngen (16 vols., 1838-39). The best known are: 
Addrick im Moos (1794); Der Freikof ton Aarau (1794); 
Alamantade (1803); Der Creole (1830); Das Goldmuukcrdorf 
(1817); and Meisttr Jordan (1845). In Siunden der Andackt 
(1809-1816; 27 editions in Zachokke's lifetime), which was 
widely read, he expounded in a rationalistic spirit the funda- 
mental principles of religion and morality. Erne Stibstscham 
(1842) is a kind of autobiography. Zschokke was not a great 
original writer, but he secured an eminent place in the literature 
of his time by his enthusiasm for modern ideas in politics and 
religion, by the sound, practical judgment displayed in his works, 
and by the energy and lucidity of his style. He died at bis 
country house of Blumenhalde on the Aar on the 97th of June 
1848. 

An edition of Zachokke's selected works, in forty volumes, was 
issued in 1824-28. In 1851-54 •» edition in thirty-five volumes 
was published. A new edition of the NaveUen was published by 
A. Vogtlin in twelve volumes (1904). There are biographies of 
Zschokke by E. MOnch (1831); Emil Zschokke (3rd ed. 1876); 
R. Sauerlander (Aarau, 1884); and R. Wernly (Aarau, 1894)* 
See also M. Schneiderreit, Zschokke, seine WeLanstkauung und 
Lebenswcisheil (1904). 

ZSCHOPATJ, a town In the kingdom of Saxony, on the left 
bank of the Zschopau, 18 m. S.E. from Chemnitz by the railway 
to Annaberg. Pop. (1900) 6748. It contains a handsome 
parish church dedicated to St Martin, a town hall and a castle 
(Wildeck), built by the Emperor Henry I. in 932. The indus- 
tries include ironfounding, cotton and thread-spinning, cloth- 
weaving and furniture making. 

ZUCCARELLI, FRANCESCO (1702-1788), Italian painter, 
was born at Pitigliano in Tuscany, and studied in Rome under 
Onesi, Moraadi,, and Nelli. At Rome, and later in Venice, he 
became famous as one of the best landscape painters of the 
classicizing 18th century. Having visited England on a previous 
occasion, he was induced by some patrons to return thither 
in 1752, remaining until 1773, *hen he settled in Florence, 
dying there in 1788. Zuccarelli, who was one of the foundation 
members of the Royal Academy, enjoyed the patronage of 
royalty and of many wealthy English collectors, for whom he 
executed his principal works—generally landscapes with classic 
ruins and small figures. A large number of them are at Windsor 
Castle, and of the seven examples which formed part of the 
John Samuel collection two are now at the National Gallery. 
The royal palace in Venice contains as many as twenty-one, 
and the academy four. Others are at the Vienna Gallery and 
at the Louvre in Paris. His work was very unequal, but at his 



ZUCCARO— ZUG 



10+7 



bat ha rivals the leading landscape painters of his time. His 
paiti^ngB often bear a mark representing a pumpkin, a pictorial 
representation of hit name, which signifies ' tittle pumpkin." 

ZUCCARO, or Zuccmao, 1 the name of two Italian painters. 

I. Tadobo Zuccaro (1529-1566), one of the most popular 
painters of the so-called Roman mannerist school, was the son 
of Ottaviano Zuccaro, an almost unknown painter at St Angelo 
in Vade, where he was born in 15*9. Taddeo found his way to 
Rome, and he succeeded at an early age in gaining a knowledge 
of painting and in finding patrons to employ him. When he 
was seventeen a pupil of Correggb, named Daniele da Parma, 
engaged him to assist in painting a series of frescoes in a chapel 
at Vhto near Sora, on the borders of the Abruzzi. Taddeo re- 
turned to Rome in 1548, and began his career as a fresco painter, 
by executing a series of scenes in monochrome from the life of 
Furius Camillas on the front of the palace of a wealthy Roman 
named Jacopo MatteL From that time his success was assured, 
and he was largely employed by the popes Julius III. and Paul 
IV., by Delia Rovcre, duke of Urbino, and by other rich patrons. 
His best frescoes were a historical series painted on the walls of 
a new palace at Caprarola, built for Cardinal Alessandro Farnese, 
for which Taddeo also designed a great quantity of rich decora- 
tions in stucco relief after the style of Giulio Romano and other 
pupils of Raphael. Nearly all his paintings were in fresco, very 
huge in scale, and often in chiaroscuro or monochrome; they 
were more remarkable for rapidity of execution and a certain 
boldness of style than for any higher qualities. His work is 
mannered in style, artificial and pompous in conception, and 
lacks any close or accurate knowledge of the human form and 
its movements. He died in'Rome in 1 566, and was buried in the 
Pantheon, not far from Raphael. 

Taddeo's easel pictures are leas common than his decorative 
frescoes. A small painting on copper of the Adoration of the 
Shepherds, formerly in the collection of James II., is now at 
Hampton Court; it is a work of very small merit. The Capra- 
rola frescoes were engraved and published by Premier, lUustri 
Fatti Farnesiani Cohrtti net Real Pahw di Caprarola (Rome, 

IT. Fedekico ZuCCako (1543-1609) *as in 1550 placed under 
his brother Taddeo's charge in Rome, and worked as his assist- 
ant; he completed the Caprarola frescoes. Federigo attained 
an eminence far beyond his very limited merits as a painter, 
and was perhaps the most popular artist of his generation. 
Probably no other painter has ever produced so many enormous 
frescoes crowded with figures on the most colossal scale, all 
executed under the unfortunate delusion that grandeur of 
effect could be attained merely by great size combined with 
extravagance of attitude and exaggeration of every kind. 
Federigo's first work of this sort was the completion of the 
painting of the dome of the cathedral at Florence; the work 
had been begun by the art-historian Vasari, who wrote in the 
most generous language about his more successful rival. Re- 
gardless of the injury to the apparent scale of the interior of the 
church, Federigo painted about 300 figures, each nearly so ft. 
high, sprawling with violent contortions all over the surface. 
Happily age has so dimmed these pictures that their presence 
is now almost harmless. Federigo was recalled to Rome by 
Gregory XIIL to continue in the Pauline chapel of the Vatican 
the scheme of decoration begun by Michelangelo during his 
failing years, but a quarrel between the painter and members of 
the papal court led to his departure from Italy. He visited 
Brussels, and there made a series of cartoons for the tapestry- 
weavers. In 1574 he passed over to England, where he received 
commissions to paint the portraits of Queen Elizabeth, Mary, 
queen of Scots, Sir Nicholas Bacon, Sir Francis Walsingham, 
Lord High Admiral Howard, and others. A curious full-length 
portrait of Elizabeth In fancy dress, now at Hampton Court, 
is attributed to this painter, though very doubtfully. Another 
picture in the same collection appears to be a replica of his 
painting of the " Allegory of Calumny," as suggested by Lnrian's 
description of a celebrated work by Apelles; the satire in the 

*&> spelt by Vaasrl 



original painting, directed against some of his courtier enemies, 
was the immediate cause of Federigo's temporary exile from 
Rome. His success as a painter of portraits and other works 
in oil was more reasonable than the admiration expressed for 
his colossal frescoes. A portrait of a " Man with Two Dogs," 
in the Pitti Palace at Florence, is a work of some real merit, 
as is also the " Dead Christ and Angels " in the Borghese Gallery 
in Rome. Federigo was soon recalled to Rome to finish his work 
on the vault of the Pauline chapeL In 158s he accepted an 
offer by Philip II. of Spain to decorate the new Escorial at 
a yearly salary of 2000 crowns, and worked at the Escorial 
from January 1586 to the end of 1588, when he returned to 
Rome. He there founded in 1595, under a charter confirmed 
by Sixtus V., the Academy of St Luke, of which he was the first 
president. Its organization suggested to Sir Joshua Reynolds bis 
scheme for founding the English Royal Academy. 

like his, contemporary Giorgio Vasari, Federigo aimed at 
being an art critic and historian, but with very different success. 
His chief book, L'Idea oV Pittori, Stultori, ed ArdriteUi (Turin, 
1607). is a senseless mass of the most turgid bombast. Little 
can be said in praise of his smaller works, consisting of two 
volumes printed at Bologna in 1608, describing his visit to Parma 
and a journey through central Italy. Federigo was raised to 
the rank of a CGvalierc not long before bis death, which took 
place at Ancona in 1609. 

For both Taddeo and Federigo Zuccaro, see Vasari, pt. iit., and 
Lanxi, Sloria PiUarica, Roman School, epoch iii. (J. H. M.) 

ZUG (Fr. Zovg), a canton of central Switzerland. It is the 
smallest undivided canton, both as regards area and as regards 
population. Its total area is but 92-3 sq. m., of which, however, 
no fewer than 75-1 sq. m. are reckoned as " productive," forests 
covering 19-9 sq. m. • Of the rest ro sq. m. are occupied by the 
cantonal share of the lake of Zug (?.*.), and 2| sq. m. by the 
lake of Aegeri, which is wholly within the canton. 

It includes the fertile stripe on the eastern and western shores 
of the lower portion of the lake of Zug, together with the alluvial 
plain at its northern extremity. The lower range, culminating 
in the Zugcrberg (3355 ft.), and the Wildspitt (5194 ft.), the highest 
summit of the Kossberg, that rises east of the lake of Zug;, separates 
it from the basin and lake of Aegeri, as well as from the htUy district 
of Mcnzingen. The Lorze issues from the lake of Aegeri, forces its 
way through moraine deposits in a deep gorge with fine stalactite 
caverns and falb into the lake of Zug, issuing from it 1 



way through moraine deposits in a deep gorge with i 
caverns and falb into the lake of Zug, issuing from it very ac 
flow into the Reus*. The canton thus belongs to the hilly, not to 



the mountainous, Swiss cantons, but as it commands the entrance 
to the higher ground it has a certain strategical position. Railways 
connect it both with Lucerne and with Zurich, while lines running 
along either shore of the lake of Zug join at the Arth-Goldau station 
of the St Gotthard railway. On the eastern shore of the lake 
of Aegeri, and within the territory of the canton, is the true site of 
the famous battle of Morgarten (g.v.) won by the Swiss in 131$. 
Till 1814 Zug was in the diocese of Constance, but on the recon- 
struction of the diocese of Basel in i8a8 it was assigned to it. In 
1900 the population of the canton was 25.093. of whom 24/142 were 
German-apeaking, 819 Italian-speaking, and 157 French-speaking, 
while 21462 were Romanists, 1 701 Protestants, and 19 Jews. Its 
capital is Zug, while the manufacturing village of Baar, 2 m. N.. 
had 4484 inhabitant*, and the village of Cham, 3 m. N.W., had 
3025 inhabitants. In both cases the environs of the villages are 
included, and this is even more the case with the wide-6preading 
parishes of Unter Aegeri with 2593 inhabitants, of Menxingen with 
2493 inhabitants, and the great school for girls and female teachers, 
founded In 1844 by Father Tbeodosius Florentini, and of Ober 
Aegeri with 1891 inhabitants. 

In the higher regions of the canton the population is mainly 
engaged in pastoral pursuits and cattle-breeding. There are 61 
" alps," or high pastures, in the canton. At Cham is a well-known 
factory of condensed milk, now united with that of Nestle of 
Vevey. At Baar there are extensive cotton-spinning mills and 
other factories. Round the town of Zug there are great numbers 
of fruit trees, and " Kirukwasser " (cherry-water) and cider are 
largely manufactured. Apiculture too flourishes greatly. A num- 
ber of factories have sprang up in the new quarter of the town, 
iving industry has all but disappeared. The canton 
administrative district, which comprises eleven 
communes. The legislature, or Kantonsrat, has one member to 
every 350 inhabitants, and the seven members of the executive, or 
Rezurvngtwat, are elected directly by popular vote, proportional 
representation obtaining in both cases if more than two members 
are 10 be elected in the same electoral district to posts in the same 



bat the silk-i 
forms a »m 



1048 



ZUG— ZUHAIR 



authority. The term of office in both cases is four years. Besides 
the " facultative Referendum " by which, in case of a demand by 
one-third of the members of the legislative assembly, or by 800 
citizens, any law, and any resolution involving a capital expenditure 
of 40,000, or an annual one of 10,000 francs, must be submitted 
to a direct popular vote, and the " initiative " at the demand of 
1000 citizens in case of amendments to the cantonal constitution; 
there is also an " initiative " in case of bills, to be exercised at the 
demand of 800 citizens. The two members of the Federal St&nderat, 
as well as the one member of the Federal Natwnalrat, are also 
elected by a popular vote. 

The earlier history of the canton is practically identical with 
that of its capital Zug (see below). From 1728 to 1738 it was 
distracted by violent disputes about the distribution of the 
French pensions. In 1708 its inhabitants opposed the French, 
and the canton formed part of the Tellgau, and later of one 
of the districts of the huge canton of the Waldstfttten in the 
Helvetic republic In 1803 it regained its independence as a 
separate canton, and by the constitution of 1814 the " Landage- 
meinde," or assembly of all the citizens, which had existed for 
both districts since 1376, became a body of electors to choose 
a cantonal council. The reform movement of 1850 did not 
affect the canton, which in 1845 was a member of the Sonderbund 
and shared in the war of 1847. In 1848 the remaining functions 
of the Landsgemeinde were abolished. Both in 1848 and in 
1874 the canton voted against the acceptance of the federal 
constitutions. The constitution of 1873-76 was amended in 
1881, and was replaced by a new one in 1894. 

Authorities.— J. J. Eh men Stoats- ttnd RecktsgesckkSle ier 
schwetM. Demokraiten, 3 vok (bi. Call, 1850-9): GeicMkkufrrund, 
from 1843; A. LUtolf, Scrm t Brauchr. Lcitnden aui denjunf Often 
(Lucerne, 1862): AchilU Renaud. Stoats- und Ruktsg/tsiktchtt d. 
Kant. Zug (Pforzheim, 1R47); H, RylM r Di* tehwci*. Landsgc- 
meinden (Zurich, 1903); V. K- Stud fin, Die Tepcgraphit d. Kant. 
Zug, 4 parts (Lucerne, i8iq-?.|>; It Stnub, Der Kant- Bug. 2nd ed. 
(Zug, 1869); A. Strilby, Dk A if* vjut WtUrmrthnkujt im Kant. 
Zug (Soleure, 1901); and ih« Zuttrittht* ttetojahrsUail (£u& from 
1882). (W, A. B. Q 

ZUG, capital of the Swiss canton of that name, a picturesque 
little town at the N.E. corner of the lake of Zug, and at the 
foot of the Zugerberg (3255 ft.), which rises gradually, its lower 
slopes thickly covered with fruit trees. Pop. (1900) 6508, 
mainly German-speaking and Romanists. The lake shore has 
been embanked and forms a promenade, whence glorious views 
of the snowy peaks of the Bernese Oberland, as well as of the 
Rigi and Pilatus, are gained. Towards its northerly end a 
monument marks the spot where a part of the shore slipped 
into the lake in 1887. The older part of the town is rather 
crowded together, though only four of the wall towers and a 
small part of the town walls still survive. The most striking 
old building in the town is the parish church of St Oswald Gate 
15th century), dedicated to St Oswald, king of Northumbria 
(d. 642), one of whose arms was brought to Zug in 1485. The 
town ball, also a 15th-century building, now houses the Historical 
and Antiquarian Museum. There are some quaint old painted 
houses close by. A little way higher up the hill-side is a Capuchin 
convent in a striking position, dose to the town wall and leaning 
against it. Still higher, and outside the old town, is the fine new 
parish church of St Michael, consecrated in 1902. The business 
quarter is on the rising ground north of the old town, near the 
railway station. Several fine modern buildings rise on or close 
to the shore in the town and to its south, whilst to the south- 
west is a convent of Capuchin nuns, who manage a large girls' 
school, and several other educational establishments. 
• The town, first mentioned in 1240, is called an " oppidum " 
in 1242, and a "castrum " in 1255. In 1273 it was bought by 
Rudolph of Habsburg from Anna, the heiress of Kyburg and 
wife of Eberhard, head of the cadet line of Habsburg, and in 
1278 part of its territory, the valley of Acgeri, was pledged by 
Rudolph as security for a portion of the marriage gift he pro- 
mised to Joanna, daughter of Edward I. of England, who was 
betrothed to his son Hartmann, whose death in 1281 prevented 
the marriage from taking place. The town of Zug was governed 
by a bailiff •»*««»«♦ ~< hv the Habsburgs, and a council, and 
was mv t family. Several country districts 



(Baar, Menzingcn, and Acgeri) had each Its own "1 
meinde " but were governed by one bailiff, also appointed by the 
Habsburgs; these were known as the " Aeusser Amt," and wen 
always favourably disposed to the Confederates. On the 27th 
of June 1352 both the town of Zug and the Aeusser Amt entered 
the Swiss Confederation, the Litter being received on exactly 
the same terms as the town, and not, as was usual in the case of 
country districts, as a subject land; but in September 1352 
Zug had to acknowledge its own lords again, and in 135s to 
break off its connexion with the league. About 1364 the town 
and the Aeusser Amt were recovered for the league by the men 
of Schwyz, and from this time Zug took part as a full member 
in all the acts of the league. In 1379 the German king Wencea- 
Iaus exempted Zug from all external jurisdictions, and in 1389 
the Habsburgs renounced their claims, reserving only an annual 
payment of twenty silver marks, and this came to an end in 
14x5. In 1400 Wenceslaus gave all criminal jurisdiction to the 
town only. The Aeusser Amt then, in 1404, claimed that the 
banner and seal of Zug should be kept in one of the country 
districts, and were supported in this claim by Schwyz. The 
matter was finally settled in 1414 by arbitration and the banner 
was to be kept in the town. Finally in 141 5 the right of electing 
their " landammann " was given to Zug by the Confederates, 
and a share in the criminal jurisdiction was granted to the 
Aeusser Amt by the German king Sigismund. In 1385 Zug 
joined the league of the Swabian titles against Leopold of 
Habsburg and shared in the victory of Sempach, as well as in 
the various Argovian (14x5) and Thurgovian (1460) conquests 
of the Confederates, and later in those in Italy (1512); having 
already taken part in the occupation of the Val d'Ossola. Be- 
tween 1379 (Walchwil) and 1477 (Cham) Zug had acquired 
various districts in her own neighbourhood, principally to the 
north and the west, which were ruled till 1708 by the town 
alone as subject lands. At the time of the Reformation Zug 
clung to the old faith and was a member of the " Christh'che 
Vereinigung" of 1520. In 1586 it became a member of the 
Golden League. (W. A. B. C.) 

ZUO, LAKE OF, one of the minor Swiss lakes, on the out- 
skirts of the Alps and N. of that of Lucerne. Probably at some 
former date it was connected by means of the Lake of Lowerz 
and the plain of Brunnen with the Lake of Lucerne. At present 
it is formed by the Aa, which descends from the Rigi and enters 
the southern extremity of the lake. The Lorze pours its waters 
into the lake at its northern extremity, but ij m. further W. 
issues from the lake to pursue its course towards the Reuss. 
The Lake of Zug has an area of about 15 sq. m., is about 9 m. 
in length, 2} m. in breadth, and has a maximum depth of 650 ft., 
while its surface is 1368 ft. above sea-level. For the most part 
the lake is in the Canton of Zug, but the southern end is, to the 
extent of 3] sq. m., in that of Schwyz, while the Canton of 
Lucerne claims about } sq. m., to the N. of Immensce. Toward 
the S.W. extremity of the lake the Rigi descends rather steeplj 
to the water's edge, while part of its east shore forms a narrow 
level band at the foot of the Rossberg (5 194 It.) and the Zugerberg. 
At its northern end the shores are nearly level, while on the west 
shore the wooded promontory of Buonas (with its castles, old 
and new) projects picturesquely into the waters. The principal 
place on the lake is the town of Zug, whence a railway (formerly 
part of the St Gotthard main route) runs along its eastern 
shore past Walchwil to Arth at its south end, which is con- 
nected by a steam tramway with the Arth-Goldau station of the 
St Gotthard line. This line runs from Arth along the western 
shore to Immensce, where it bears S.W. to Lucerne, while from 
Immensee another railway leads (at first some way from the 
shore) to Cham, 3 m. W. of Zug. The first steamer was placed 
on the lake in 1852. Many fish (including pike and carp of 
considerable weights) are taken in the lake, which is especially 
famous by reason of a peculiar kind of trout (Salmo scltdinus, 
locally called Rdtkcli). (W. A. B. C.) 

ZUHAIR [Zuhair ibn Abi SulmS Rabf a ul-Muxanl] (6th 
century), one of the six great Arabian pre-Islamic poets. Of 
his life practically nothing is known save that he belonged to 



ZUIDER ZEE— ZULOAGA 



1049 



a family of poetic power; his stepfather, Aus ibn Hajar, his 
sister, Khansft, and his son, Ka*b ibn Zuhair, were all poets of 
eminence. He is said to have lived long, and at the age of 
one hundred to have met Mahomet. His home was in the land 
of the BanI Ghatafin. His poems are characterised by their 
peaceful nature and a sententious moralizing. One of them 
is contained in the MoaUahdk 

As a *bole his poems have been published by W. Ahlwardt in his 
The Diwans of the six Ancient Arabic Poets (London, 1870); and 
with the commentary of al-A'lam (died 1083) by Count Landbcrg 
in the second part of his Primeurs arabes (Leiden, 1889). Some 
supplementary pocras are contained in K. Dyroff's Zur Gesckichte 
drr Oberliejernng des Zukairdiwans (Munich, 1892). (G. W. T.) 

ZUIDER ZEE, or Zuydez .Zee, a land-locked infet on the 
coast of Holland, bounded N. by the chain of the Frisian Islands, 
and W., S., and E. by the provinces of North Holland, Utrecht, 
Geldcrland, Overysel, and Friesland, It is about 85 ». long 
N. to S., and from 10 to 45 m. broad, with an area of 2037 sq. 
m., and contains the islands of Marken, Schokland, Urk, Wierin- 
gen, and Griend. In the early centuries of the Christian era the 
Zuider (i.e. Southern) Zee was a small inland lake situated in 
the southern part of the present gulf, and called Fleto by 
Tacitus, Pliny, and other early writers. It was separated from 
the sea by a belt of marsh and fen uniting Friesland and North 
Holland, the original coast-line being still indicated by the line 
of the Frisian Islands. Numerous streams, including the 
Vecht, Eem, and Ysel, discharged their waters into this lake 
and issued thence as the Vlfe (Latin Flcttu), which reached the 
North Sea by the Vliegat between the islands of Vlifeland and 
Terschdling. fat the Lex Prisonum the VTie (Fli, or Flehi) is 
accepted as the boundary between the territory of the East and 
West Frisians. In time, however, and especially during the 
1 2th century, high tides and north-west storms swept away the 
we s tern banks of the VTie and submerged great tracts of land. 
In 1 170 the land between Stavoren, Texel, and Medemblik was 
washed away, and a century later the Zuider Zee was formed. 
The open waterway between Stavoren and Enkhuizen, however, 
as it now exists, dates from 140a In the south and east the 
destruction was arrested by the high sandy shores of Gooi, 
Vduwe, Voorst, and Gasterland in the provinces of Utrecht, 
Gclderland, Overysel, and Friesland respectively. 

The mean depth of the Zuider Zee is 11-48 ft.; depth in the 
southern basin of the former lake, 19 ft.; at Val van Urk (deep 
water to the west of the island of Urk), 14} ft. If a line be drawn 
from the island of Urk to Marken, and thence westwards to Hoora 
(North Holland) and N.N.E. to Lemmer (Friesland), these lines 
will connect parts of the Zuider Zee having a uniform depth 
of 8 ft. The other parts on the coast are only 3 ft. deep or less* 
This shallowness of its water* served to protect the Zuider Zee 
from the invasion of large ships of war. It also explains how many 
once flourishing commercial towns, such as Stavoren, Medemblik. 
Enkhuizen, Hoorn, Moniukendam, declined to the rank of provincial 
trading and fishing ports. The fisheries of the Zuider Zee are of 
considerable importance. Eighty per cent, of the bottom consists 
of sea day and the more recent silt of the Ystl; so per cent, of 
•and, paVtly ia the north about Urk and Enkhuizen, partly in the 
south along the high shores of Gooi, Veluwe, &c The shallowness 
of the sea and the character of its bottom, promising fertile soil, 
occasioned various projects of drainage. The scheme recommended 
by the Zoider Zee Vereeniging (1886) formed the subject of a report 
in 1894 by a state commission. The principal feature in the 
scheme was the building of a dike from the island of Wieringen to 
the coast of Friesland. The area south of this would be divided 
into four polders, with reservation, however, of a lake, Yeetmeer, in 
the centre, whence branches, would ran to Yed and the Zwobche 



Daep, to Amsterdam, and, by sluices near Wieringen, to the northern 
part of the sea. The four polders with their areas of fertile soil 
would be: — 

1) North-west polder, area 53,599 acres; fertile soil, 46,189 acres. 

2) South-west „ M 77.854 .. *. » 68.715 .. 
South-east „ „ 266,167 »• h ,. 222,275 •• 
North-east .. „ 125,599 „ „ „ 120,783 „ 

The Lake Yselmeer would have an area of 560 sq. m. The gain 
would be the addition to the kingdom of a new and fertile pro- 
vince of the area of North Brabant, a saving of e xp en se s on dikes, 
diminution of inundations, improvement of communication between 
the south and the north of the kingdom, protection of isles of the 
sea, Ac. The costs srere calculated as foQowt: (1) esx 



I 



sluices, and regulation of Zwolsehe Die?. £1.760*000; (2) fcdama- 
lion of four polders, &200.000; (3) defensive works, £400.000; 
(4) indemnity to fishermen, £180,000; total. £7,540.000. 

In 1901 the government introduced a bill in the States General, 
based on the recommendations of the commission, providing for 
enclosing the Zuider Zee by building a dike from the North Holland 
coast, through the Amstddiep to Wieringen and from that island 
to the Friesland coast at Piaam ; and further providing for the 
draining of two portions of the enclosed area, namely the N.W. 
and the S.W. polders shown in the table. The entire work was 
to be completed in 18 years at an estimated cost of £7,916,000. 
The bill failed to become law and in consequence of financial diffi- 
culties the project had not, up to 1910,. advanced beyond the stage 
of consideration. 

With the exception of Grlend and Schokland, the Islands of the 
Zuider Zee are inhabited by small fishing communities, who retain 
some archaic customs and a picturesque dress. • Urk is already 
mentioned as an island in 966. The inhabitants of Schokland were 
compelled to leave the island by order of the state in 1855, lt being 
considered insecure from Inundation. The island of Griend (or 
Grind) once boasted a walled town, which was destroyed by flood 
at the end of the 13th century. But the island continued for some 
centuries to serve as a pasturage for cattle, giving its name to a 
well-known description of cheese. Like some of the other islands, 
are still brought to graze upon it in summer, and a large 

jr of birds' eggs are collected upon it in spring. Several 

of the islands were once the property of religious houses on the 
mainland. 

The British Foreign Office report, Draining ef the Zmidenee (1901), 
gives full particulars of the Dutch government's scheme and a 
retrospect of all former proposals, See also De ecanomisehebeteekens 



(2nd ed., 1901), and D. Bellet, Le dessechement du Zuidertee, 
Rev. Geog. (1902) and W. J. Tuyn, Oude HoUandsche Dorpeu on* 



van de of slutting, en drooglegging der Zuidertee vom Zuidertee-Verein 
'--■'-' — v i D. Bellet, " Le < 

de Zuidertee (Haarlem, 1906). 

ZULA, a small town near the head of Annesley Bay on the 
African coast of the Red Sea. It derives its chief interest from, 
ruins in its vicinity which are generally supposed to mark the 
site of the ancient emporium of Adulis CAaovXh, 'Afa/XeO, the 
port of Arum (q.v.) and chief outlet in the early centuries of 
the Christian era for the ivory, hides, slaves and other exports 
of the interior. Cosmas Indicopieustes saw here an inscription 
of Ptolemy Euergetes (247-222 B.C.); and hence, as the earliest 
mention of Adulis is found in the geographers of the first century 
aj>., it is conjectured that the town must have previously 
existed under another name and may have been the Berenice 
Panchrysus of the Ptolemies. Described by a Greek merchant 
of the time of Vespasian as " a well-arranged market," the place 
has been for centuries buried under sand. The ruins visible 
include a temple, obelisks and numerous fragments of columns. ' 



In 1857 an agreement was entered into by DeJaJ Negusye, a 

Tigre, in revolt against the Negus Theodore of Abyssinia, 

Negusye was defeated by Theodore, 

and the commander of a French cruiser sent to Annesley Bay 



chief of Tigre, in revolt against 
to cede Zula to the French. Ni 



in 1859 found the country in a state of anarchy. Uo farther steps 
were taken by France to assert its sovereignty, and Zula with the 
neighbouring coast passed, nominally, to Egypt in 1866. Zula 
was the place where the British expedition of 1867-68 against 
Theodore disembarked, Annesley Bay affording safe and ample 
anchorage for the largest ocean-going vessels. The road made 
by the British from Zula to Senate on the Abyssinian plateau is 
still in use. The authority of Egypt having lapsed, an Italian 
protectorate over the district of Zula was proclaimed in x888, and 
in 1890 it was incorporated in die colony 01 Eritrea (q.v.). 

See Eduard Ruppell, Reise iu Abyssinitu, i. 266 (1838) ; G. Roblfs 
in Zeitschr. <L Cesett. /. Erdhunde in Berlin, Hi. (1868), and. for 
further references, the editions of the Periplus by C. Muller {Geog, 
Gr. Min., L 259) and Fabricius (1883). Consult also Ethiopia: 
The Jtxumiie Kingdom. 

ZULOAGA* IGKACIO (1870- ), Spanish painter, was 
born at Eibar, in the Basque country, the son of the metal- 
worker and damswrnft Placido Zukaga, and grandson of the 
organiser and director of the royal armoury in Madrid. The 
career chosen for him by his father was that of an architect, 
and with this object in view he was sent to Rome, where he 
immediately followed the strong impulse that led him to paint- 
ing. After only six months* work he completed his first picture, 
which was exhibited at the Paris Salon of 1800, Continuing 
his studies in Paris, he was strongly influenced by Gauguin and 
Toulouse Lautrcc Only on his return to his native soil he 
found his true style, which is bated on the national Spanish 



1050 



ZULULAND 



tradition embodied in the work of Velazquez, Zurbaran, El 
Greco, and Goya. His own country was slow in acknowledging 
the young artist whose strong, decorative, rugged style was the 
very negation of the aims of such well-known modern Spanish 
artists as Fortuny, Madraso, and Benlliurc. It was first in 
Paris, and then in Brussels and other continental art centres, 
that Zuloaga was hailed by the reformers as the regenerator of 
Spanish national art and as the leader of a school. He is now 
represented in almost every great continental gallery. Two 
of his canvases are at the Luxembourg, one at the Brussels 
Museum ("Avant la Corrida"), and one ("The Poet Don 
Miguel") at the Vienna Gallery. The Pau Museum owns an 
interesting portrait of a lady, the Barcelona Municipal Museum 
the important group " Amies," the Venice Gallery, " Madame 
Louise"; the Berlin Gallery, "The Topers." Other examples 
are in the Budapest, Stuttgart, Ghent and Posen galleries 
and in many important private collections. 

A fully illustrated account of the artist and his work, by M. Utrillo, 
was published in a special number of Forma (Barcelona, 1907). 

ZULULAND, a country of south-east Africa, forming the 
N.E. part of the province of Natal in the Union of South Africa. 
The " Province of Zululand," as it was officially styled from 
1808 to 19x0, lies between 26° 50' and 29° 15' S. and 30 40' 
and zf E., and has an area of 10,450 sq. m. It includes in the 
north the country of the Ama Tonga, Zaambanland, and other 
small territories not part of the former Zulu kingdom and 
stretches north from the lower Tugela to the southern frontier 
of Portuguese East Africa. Bounded S.E. by the Indian Ocean 
it has a coast line of 2 10 m. North and north-west it is bounded 
by the Utrecht and Vryheid districts of Natal and by Swaziland. 
Its greatest length in a direct line i* 18$ m., its greatest breadth 
105 m. (For map see South Africa?) 

Physical Features. — Zululand is part of the region of hills and 
plateaus which descend seaward from the Drakensberg— the great 
mountain chain which buttresses the vast tableland of inner South 
Africa. The coast, which curves to the N.E., is marked by a line 
of sandhills covered with thick bush and rising in places to a height 
of 500 ft. There are occasional outcrops of rock and low per- 
pendicular cliffs. Behind the sandhills is a low-lying plain in 
which are a number of shallow lagoons. Of these St Lucia Lake 
and Kosi Lake are of considerable sue and com m u n icate with the 
sea by estuaries. St Lucia, the larger of the two, is some 35 m. 
long by 10 m. broad with a depth 019 to 10 ft. It runs parallel to 
the ocean, from which it is separated by sandhills. The opening 
to the sea, St Lucia river, is at the south end. Kosi Lake lies 
further north, in Tongaland. It is not more than half the size 
of St Lucia and its opening to the sea is northward. Between 
Kosi and St Lucia lakes lies Lake Sibayi, close to the coast but 
not communicating with the sea. The coast plain extends inland 
from 5 to 30 m.. increasing in width northward, the whole of Tonga- 
land being low lying. The rest of the country is occupied by ranges 
of hills and plateaus 2000 to 1000 ft. above sea level. Behind 
Eshowe, in the south, are the Entumcni Hills (3000 ft.), beyond 
which stretch the Nkandhla uplands (rising to 4500 ft.) densely 
wooded In parts and abounding in flat-topped hills with precipitous* 



Westward of the uplands are the Kyudeni Hills (5000 ft.), 
also densely wooded, situated near the junction of the Buffalo 
and Tugela rivers. Further north, along the S.W. frontier, are 
Isandhlwana and the Nqutu hills. To the N.W. the Lebombo 
Mts. (1800 to 2000 ft.), which separate the coast plains from the 
interior, mark the frontier between Swaziland and Zululand. On 
their eastern (Zululand) side the slope of the Lebombo mountains 
is gentle, but on the west they fall abruptly to the plain. 

The geological structure of the country is comparatively simple, 
consisting in the main of plateaus formed of sedimentary rocks, 
resting on a platform of granitic and metamorpbic rocks (see 
Natal: Geology). 

The country is well watered. Rising In the high tablelands or 
on the slopes of the Drakensberg or Lebombo mountains the rivers 
in their upper courses have a great slope and a high velocity. In. 
the coast plains they become deep and sluggish. Their mouths 
are blocked by sand bars, which in the dry season check their 
flow and produce the lagoons and marshes which characterize the 
coast. After the rains the rivers usually clear the bars for a time. 
The following are the chief rivers in part or in whole traversing 
the country.*— The Pongola, in its lower course* flows through 
TongaJand, piercing the Lebombo Mts. through a deep, narrow 

of confluence with the 
) marks the parallel along 

I Portuguese E as t Africa 

is drawn. The Umgavuma which rises in Swaziland and also 



pierces the Lebombo. joins the Pongola about ten miles above 
its confluence with the Maputa. The Umkiui which rises in the 
Vryheid district of Natal forces its way through the Lebombo 
Mts. at their southern end and flows into the northern end of 
51 J-VS?. ^i" 5, , The u,nfoIo «' w >th two main branches, the Black 
and White Umfolosi, drains the central part of the country and 
reaches the ocean at St Lucia Bay. In the bed of the White 
Umfolosi are dangerous quicksands. Farther south the Umhla- 
tuzi empties into a lagoon which communicates with the ocean 
by Richards Bay. For a considerable part of their course the 
Blood, Buffalo and Tugela rivers form the S.W. frontier of Zulu- 
land (see Tugela). There are numerous other riven — every valley 
has its stream, for the most part unnavigable. 

Climate.— The climate ot the coast belt is semi-tropical and 
malaria is prevalent; that of the highlands temperate. The 
summer is the rainy season, but in the higher country snow and 
sleet are not uncommon in the winter months of May, June* and 
July. On the coast about 40 in. of rain fall in the summer months 
and about 7 in. in the winter months. A fresh S.E. wind is fairly 
constant in the inland regions during the middle of the day. A 
hot wind from the N.W. is occasionally, experienced in the high- 
lands. 

Fhm and Fauna.— The coast plaiii (in large part), the river 
valleys, and the eastern sides of the lower hiUs are covered with 
mimosa and other thorn trees. This is generally known as thorn- 
bush and has little undergrowth. " Coast forests " grow in small 
patches along the lower courses of the rivers, at their mouths, 
and on the sandhills along the coast. They contain stunted 
timber trees, palms, mangroves and other tropical and sub-tropical 
plants and have an almost impenetrable undergrowth. The largest 
coast forest is that of Dukuduku, some 9 m. by 15 m. in extent, 
adjacent to St Lucia Bay. The upland regions are those of high 
timber forests, the trees including the yellow-wood and iron-wood. 
The most noteworthy timber forests are. those of Nkandhla and 
Kyudeni and that near Eshowe. Large areas of the plateau are 
co* tt-j with &-»-? and occasional thorn trees. Orchids are among 
the common flo*rrs. 

The fauna includes the lion and elephant, found in the neigh- 
bourhixKi of the Portuguese frontier (the lion was also found as 
late as 1H95 in ilie Ndwandwe district), the white and the black 
rhinoceros, the? Iwpard, panther, jackal, spotted hyena, aard-wolf, 
bulUK k\jta, gnu, impala, inyala, oribij hartebeeste, kudu, spring- 
bok, vmerbuck, 1 i.ind, roan antelope, duiker, &c., hares and rabbits. 
Hiprxipouini are found on the coast, and alligators are common 
in tV rivers and lagoons of the low country. Venomous snakes 
abound. The great kori bustard, the koornan, turkey buzzards 
(knuwn 3us i*si*f%?i), wild duck, and paauw are among the game 
bird*. Thr- ostrich and secretary-bird are also found. Of domestic 
arum i l * 1 liv <. : l r> possess a dwarf breed of smooth-skinned humped 
can : c, Loc u s 1 * Jtr \i an occasional pest. 

Inhabitants'.— -The population in 1004 was estimated at 
330,000. Of these only 5635 lived outside the area devoted to 
native locations. The white population numbered 1693. The 
vast majority of the natives are Zulu (see Kaffirs), but there 
is a settlement of some 2000 Basutos in the Nqutu district. 
After the establishment of the Zulu military ascendancy early 
in the 19th century various Zulu hordes successively invaded 
and overran a great part of east-central Africa, as far as and 
even beyond the Lake Nyasa district. Throughout these regions 
they are variously known as Ma-Zitu, Ma-Ravi, Wa-Ngoni 
(Angoni), Matabele (Ame-Ndebeli), Ma-Viti, and Aba-Zanri. 
Such was the terror inspired by these fierce warriors that many 
of the tribes, such as the Wa-Nindi of Mozambique,' adopted 
the name of their conquerors or oppressors. Hence the impres- 
sion that the true Zulu are far more numerous north of the 
Limpopo than has ever been the case. In most places they have 
become extinct or absorbed in the surrounding populations 
owing to their habit of incorporating prisoners in the tribe. 
But they still hold their ground as the ruling element in the 
region between the Limpopo and the middle Zambesi, which 
from them takes the name of Matabeleland. The circumstances 
and history of the two chief migrations of Zulu peoples north- 
ward are well known; the Matabele were led by Mosilikatze 
(Umsfligazi), and the Angoni by Sungandaba, both chiefs of 
Chaka who revolted from him in the early 19th century. 

The Zulu possess an elaborate system of. laws regulating the 
inheritance of personal property (which consists chiefly of cattle), 
the complexity arising from the practice of polygamy and the 
exchange of cattle made upon marriage. The giving of cattle 
in the latter case is generally referred to as a barter and sale of 
the bride, from which indeed it is not easily distinguishable. But 
it is regarded in a different light by the natives. The kraal is 



ZULULAND 



1051 



wider the immediate rule of It* headman, who is a patriarch respon- 
sible for the good behaviour of all Us members. Over the headman, 
whose authority may extend to more than one kraal, is the tribal 
chief, and above the tribal chief was the king, whose authority 
is now exercised by a British commissioner. By the custom or 
hUmipa a woman carefully avoids meeting her husband's parents 
or the utterance of any word which occurs in the names of the 
principal members of her husband's family: e.g. if she have a 
brother-in-law named U'Nkomo, she would not use the Zulu for 
" cow," inkomo, but would invent some other word for it. The 
husband observes the same custom with regard to his mother-in- 
law. The empioymeot of " witch doctors n for " smelling out " 
criminals or abotoetui (usually translated " wizards," but meaning 
evildoers of any kind, such as poisoners}, once common in Zulu- 
land, as in neighbouring countries, was discouraged by Cetywayo, 
who established " kraals of refuge " for the reception of persons 
rescued by turn from condemnation as obaiaead. ^ Smelling out 
was finally suppressed by the British in tbe.early years of the 
aoth century. (For the Zulu speech, see Bantu Languages.) # 

Ttnms.—The Zulus live in kraals, circular enclosures with, 
generally, a ring fence inside forming a cattle pen. Between this 
fence and the outer fencing are the huts of the inhabitants. The 
royal kraal for a considerable period was at Ulundi, in the valley 
of the White Umfolosi. The last king to occupy it was Cetywayo; 
Dinizulu's kraal was farther north near the Ndwandwe magistracy. 
The chief white settlements are Eshowe and Melmoth. Eshowe 
(pop. 1904, 1855 of whom 570 were whites) is about 95 ro. N.E. 
of Durban, lies IS m. inland and some 1800 ft. above the sea, 
Eshowe is a m. W. of the mission station of the same name in 
which Col. Pearson was besieged by the Zulus in 1879, and was 
laid out in 1883. It is picturesquely situated on a well-wooded 
plateau and has a bracing climate. Two hundred acres of forest 
hod in the centre of the town have been reserved as a natural 
park. Melmoth, 25 m. N.N.E. of Eshowe, lies in the centre of a 
district farmed by Boers. Somkcle is the headquarters of the 
St Lucia coal-fields district. Nkandhla is a small settlement in 
the south-west of the country. 

&mmMtfa&w.— Notwithstanding its 210 m. of coast-line Zulu- 
land possesses no harbours. Thirty-six miles N.E. of the mouth 
of the Tugela there is, however, fairly safe anchorage, except in 
S.S.W. or W. winds, about 1500 yds. from the shore. The landing- 
place is on the open sandy beach, where a small stream eaters the 
sea. This landing-place is dignified with the name of Port Dura- 
ford. It was used to land stores in the war of 1870. Well-made 
roads connect all the magistracies. The Tugela is crossed by 
well-known drifts, to which roads from Natal and Zululand con 



verge. Two, the Lower Tugela and Bond's Drift, are both near the 

»c_MkkUe Drift is 36 m. in a direct line 

Rorkc's Drift, 48 m.. also in a 



mouth of the river. The 

above the mouth of the Tumvm. mum; » jl/«ii, 40 w., aw >u *. 
direct line, above the Middle Drift, is a crossing of the Buffalo 
river a little above the Tugela confluence. A railway, completed 
in 1904, which begins at Durban and crosses into Zululand by a 
bridge over the Tugela near the Lower Drift, runs along the coast 
beh over nearly level country to the St Lucia coal-fields in Hlabisa 
magistracy — 167 m. from Durban, of which 08 are in Zululand. 
There is telegraphic communication between the magistracies and 
townships and with Natal. 

/«d«j**i.— The Zulu gives little attention to the cultivation of 
the soil. Their main wealth consists in their herds of cattle and 
flocks of sheep. They raise, however, crops of maize, millet, sweet 
potatoes and tobacco. Sugar, tea and coffee are grown in the 
coast belt by whites. Anthracite is mined in the St Lucia Bay 
district, and bituminous coal is found in the Nqutu and Kyudeni 
hills. Gold, iron, copper and other minerals have also been found, 
but the mineral wealth of the country is undeveloped. There is a 
considerable trade with the natives in cotton goods, etc., and numbers 
of Zulu seek service in Natal. (Trade statistics are included in 
those of Natal.) 

jt4*mi»jtai<fofi.~Zululand for 
the provincial council of Natal 

Union parliament, to which it returns one — 

of Assembly. It was formerly represented in the Natal legis- 
lature by three members, one member sitting in the Legislative 
Council, and two being elected to the Legislative Assembly, one 
each for the districts of Eshowe and Melmoth. # Their selection 
and election were governed by the "same laws as in Natal proper, 
and on the establishment of the Union the franchise qualifications 
—which practically exclude nativ es r em ained unaltered. The 
parliamentary voters in 1910 numbered 144a. The executive 
power is in the hands of a civil commissioner whose residence is 
at Eshowe. Zululand is divided into eleven magistracies, and. the 
district of Tongaland (also called Mputa or Amaputaland). In 
the magistracies the authority of the chiefs and indmtims (headmen) 
is exercised under the control of resident magistrates. The Ama- 
Tonga enjoy a larger measure of home rule, but are under the 
general supervision of the civil commissioner. The Ingwavuma 
magistracy, like Tongaland, formed no part of the dominions of 
the Zola kings, but was ruled by independent chiefs until its annexa- 
tion by Great Britain in 1895. 



I for provincial purposes ts governed by 
Matal; otherwise it is subject to the 
1 it returns one member of the House 



With the exception of the townships and a district of Emton- 
ianeni magistracy known as " Proviso B." l mainly occupied by 
Boer farmers, all the land was vested in the crown and very little 
has been parted with to Europeans. The crown lands are, in 
effect, native reserves. A hut tax of 14s. per annum is levied on 
all natives. The tax has to be paid lor each wife a Zulu may 
possess, whether or not each wife has a separate hut. Since 1900 
a poll tax of £1 a head is also levied on all males over eighteen, 
European or native. 

History.— At what period the Zulu (one of a number of 
closely allied septa) first reached the country to which they have 
given their name is uncertain; they were probably settled 
in the valley of the White Umfolosi river at the beginning of 
the 17th century, and they take their name from a chief who 
flourished about that time. The earliest record of contact 
between Europeans and the Zulu race is believed to be the 
account of the wreck of the u Doddington " in 1756. The 
survivors met with hospitable treatment at the hands of the 
natives of Natal, and afterwards proceeded up the coast to 
St Lucia Bay. They describe the natives as " very proud and 
haughty, and not so accommodating as those lately left" 
They differed from the other natives in the superior neatness 
of their method of preparing their food, and were more cleanly 
in their persons, bathing every morning, apparently as an act 
of devotion. Their chief pride seemed to be to keep their hair 
in order. It is added that they watched strictly over their 
women. 

At the close of the 18th century the Zulu were an unimportant 
tribe numbering a few thousands only. At that time the most 
powerful of the neighbouring tribes was the Umtctwa (mTetwa 
or Aba-Tetwa) which dwelt in the country north-east of the 
Tugela. The ruler of the. Umtetwa was a chief who had had 
in early life an adventurous career and was known as Dingiswayo 
(the Wanderer). He had lived in Cape Colony, and jum 
there, as is supposed, had observed the manner in of the 
which the whites formed their soldiers into disciplined JJJJL 
regiments. He too divided the young men of his 
tribe into impis (regiments), and the Umtetwa became a formid- 
able military power. Dingiswayo also encouraged trade and 
opened relations with the Portuguese at Delagoa Bay, bartering 
ivory and oxen for brass and beads. In 1805 he was joined by 
Chaka, otherwise Tshaka (bom c 1783), the son of the Zulu 
chief Senzangakona; on the latter's death in 1810 Chaka, 
through the influence of Dingiswayo, was chosen as ruler of the 
Ama-Zulu, though not the rightful heir. Chaka joined in his 
patron's raids, and in 1812 the Umtctwa and Zulu drove the 
Amangwana across the Buffalo river. About this time Dingis- 
wayo was captured and put to death by Zwide, chief of the 
Undwandwe clan, with whom he had waged constant war. The 
Umtetwa army then placed themselves under Chaka, who not 
long afterwards conquered the Undwandwe. By the incorpora- 
tion of these tribes Chaka made of the Zulu a power- rtasa 
ful nation. He strengthened the regimental system 
adopted by Dingiswayo and perfected the discipline of his army. 
A new order of battle was adopted— the troops being massed 
in crescent formation, with a reserve in the shape of a parallelo- 
gram ready to strengthen the weakest point.' Probably Chaka's 
greatest innovation was the introduction of the stabbing assegai. 
The breaking short of the shaft of the assegai when the weapon 
was used at close quarters was already a common practice among 
the Ama-Zulu, but Chaka had the shaft of the assegais made 
short, and their blades longer and heavier, so that they could be 
used for cutting or piercing. At the same time the size of the 
shield was increased, the more completely to cover the body of 
the warrior. Military kraals were formed in which the warriors 

1 The Boers obtained the right to settle in this district in virtue 
of Proviso B of an agreement made, on the 22nd of October 1886, 
between the settlers in the " New Republic " and Sir A. E. Have- 
lock, governor of Natal. 

* Dr G. McCall Theal states that the ancestors of the tribes 
living in what is now Natal and Zululand were acquainted with 
the regimental system and the method of attack in crescent shape 
formation in the 17th century. Memories of these customs lingered 
even if the practice had died out. Among the Ama-Xosa eeetios 
of Kasars they appear to have been smite unknown. 



105a 



ZULULAND 



were kept apart Members of a regiment were of much the 
same age, and the young warriors were forbidden to marry until 
they had distinguished themselves in battle, 

Chaka had but two ways of dealing with tne tribes with 
whom he came in contact; either they received permission 
to be incorporated in the Zulu nation or they were practically 
exterminated. In the latter case the only persons spared were 
young girls and growing lads who could serve as carriers for 
the army. No tribe against which he waged war was able 
successfully to oppose the Zulu arms. At first Chaka turned 
his attention northward. Those who could fled before him, the 
first of importance so to do being a chief named Swangendaba 
(Sungandaba), whose tribe, of the same stock as the Zulu, was 
known as Angoni. He was followed by another tribe, which 
under Manikusa for many years ravaged the district around 
and north of Delagoa Bay (see Gazaiand). Chaka next attacked 
the tribes on his southern border, and by 1820 had made 
himself master of Natal, which he swept almost clear of in- 
habitants. It was about 1820 that Mosilikatze (properly 
Umsjlikazi), a general in the Zulu army, having incurred Chaka's 
wrath by keeping back part of the booty taken in an expedition, 
fled with a large following across the Dnkensberg and began to 
lay waste a great part of the country between the Vaal and 
Limpopo rivers. Mosilikatze was not of the Zulu tribe proper, 
and he and his followers styled themselves Abaka-Zulu. Chaka's 
own dominions, despite his conquests, were not very extensive. 
He ruled from the Pongolo river on the north to the Umkomanzi 
river on the south, and inland his power extended to the foot 
of the Drakensberg; thus his territory coincided almost exactly 
with the limits of Zululand and Natal as constituted in 1903. 
His influence, however, extended from the Limpopo to the 
borders of Cape Colony, and through the ravages of Swangen- 
daba and Mosilikatze the terror of the Zulu arms was carried 
far and wide into the interior of the continent. 

Chaka seems to have first come into contact with Europeans 
in 1824. In that year (see Natal) he was visited by F. G. 
Arrtrai Farewell and a few companions, and to them he made 
ottb* a grant of the district of Port Natal Farewell found 
*»***• the king at Umgungindhlovu, the royal kraal on the 
White Umfolosi, " surrounded by a large number of chiefs and 
about 8000 or 9000 armed men, observing a state and ceremony 
in our introduction little expected." At this time an attempt 
was made to murder Chaka; but the wound he received was 
cured by one of Farewell's companions, a circumstance which 
made the king very friendly to Europeans. Anxious to open 
a political connexion with the Cape and British governments, 
Chaka entrusted early in 1828 one of his principal chiefs, 
Sotobi, and a companion to the care of J. S. King, one of the 
Natal settlers, to be conducted on an embassage to Cape Town, 
Sotobi being commissioned to proceed to the king of England. 
But they were not allowed to proceed beyond Port Elizabeth, 
and three months later were sent back to Zululand. In July 
of the same year Chaka sent an army westward which laid 
waste the Pondo country. The Zulu force did not come into 
contact with the British troops guarding the Cape frontier, 
but much alarm was caused by the invasion. In November 
envoys from Chaka reached Cape Town, and it was determined 
to send a British officer to Zululand to confer with him. Before 
this embassy started, news came that Chaka had been murdered 
(23rd of September 1828) at a military kraal on the Umvote 
about fifty miles from Port Natal. Chaka was a victim to a 
conspiracy by his half brothers Dingaan and Umthlangana, 
while a short time afterwards Dingaan murdered Umthlangana, 
overcame the opposition of a third brother, and made himself 
king of the Zulu. 

Bloodstained as had been Chaka's rule, that of Dingaan 
appears to have exceeded it in wanton cruelty, as is attested 
ftte by several trustworthy European travellers and 

nruMn jnCTchants w }, now ^h some frequency visited 
Zuhuand. The British settlers at Port Natal were alternately 
terrorized and conciliated. In 1835 Dingaan gave permission 
*■ Was at Port Natal to establish missionary 



stations in the country, in return for a promise made by the 
settlers not to harbour fugitives from his dominions. In 1836 
American missionaries were also allowed to open stations; in 
1837 be permitted the Rev. F. Owen, of the Church Missionary 
Society, to reside at his great kraal, and Owen was with the king 
when in November 1837 he received Pieter Retief, the leader 
of the first party of Boer immigrants to enter Natal 

Coming over the Drakensberg in considerable numbers 
during 1837, the Boers found the land stretching south from 
the mountains almost deserted, and Retief went to ArHrat 
Dingaan to obtain a formal cession of the country •/*#• ' 
west of the Tugela, which river the Zulu recognized B—n. 
as the boundary of Zululand proper. After agreeing to Retief s 
request Dingaan caused the Boer leader and his companions 
to be murdered (6th of February 1838), following up his treachery 
by slaying as many as possible of the other Boers who had 
entered Natal. After two unsuccessful attempts to avenge 
their slain, in which the Boers were aided by the British settlers 
at Port Natal, Dingaan's army was totally defeated on the 
1 6th of December .1838, by a Boer force under An dries Pretoriua. 
Operating in open country, mounted on horseback, and with 
rifles in their hands, the Boer fanners were able to inflict fearful 
losses on their enemy, while their own casualties were few. On 
" Dingaan's day " the Boer force received the attack of the Zulu 
while in laager; the enemy charged in dense masses, being met 
both by cannon shot and rifle fire, and were presently attacked 
in the rear by mounted Boers. After the defeat Dingaan set 
fire to the royal kraal (Umgungindhlovu) and for a time took 
refuge in the bush; on the Boers recrossing the Tugela he 
established himself at Ulundi at a little distance from his former 
capital. His power was greatly weakened and a year later was 
overthrown, the Boers in Natal (J^muary 1840) supporting his 
brother Mpande (usually called Panda) in rebellion against him. 
The movement was completely successful, several of Dingaan's 
regiments going over to Panda. Dingaan passed into Swaziland 
in advance of his retreating forces, and was there murdered, 
while Panda was crowned king of Zululand by the Boers. 

When in 1843 the British- succeeded the Boers as masters 
of Natal they entered into a treaty with Panda, who gave up 
to the British the country between the upper Tugela 
and the Buffalo rivers, and also the district of St 
Lucia Bay. (The bay was not then occupied by the British, 
whose object in obtaining the cession was to prevent its acquisi- 
tion by the Boers. Long afterwards the treaty with Panda was 
successfully invoked to prevent a German occupation of the 
bay.) No sooner had the British become possessed of Natal 
than there was a large immigration into it of Zulu fleeing from 
the misgovemment of Panda. That chief was not, however, as 
warlike as his brothers Chaka and Dingaan; and he remained 
throughout his reign at peace with the government of Natal. 1 
With the Boers who bad settled in the Transvaal, however, he 
was involved in various frontier disputes. He had wars with 
the Swazis, who in 1855 ceded to the Boers of Lydenburg a 
tract of land on the north side of the Pongolo in order to place 
Europeans between themselves and the Zulu. In 1856 a 
civil war broke out between two of Panda's sons, Cetywayo and 
Umbulazi, who were rival claimants for the succession. A 
battle was fought between them on the banks of the Tugela in 
December 1856, in which Umbulazi and many of his followers 
were slain. The Zulu country continued, however, excited and 
disturbed until the government of Natal in 1861 obtained the 
formal nomination of a successor to Panda; and Cetywayo 
was appointed. The agent chosen to preside at the nomination 
ceremony was Mr (afterwards Sir) Theophilus Shepstone, who 
was in charge of native affairs in Natal and had won in a 

1 Bishop Schreuder, a Norwegian missionary long resident in 
Zululand, gave Sir Battle Frere the following estimate of the three 
brothers who successively reigned over the Zulu: — ** Chaka was a 
really great man, cruel and unscrupulous, but with many great 
qualities. Dingaan was simply a beast on two legs. Panda was 
a weaker and less able man, but kindly and really grateful, a very 
rare quality among Zulus. lie used to IdU sometimes, bus never 
wantonly or continuously." 



ZULULAND 



*053 



nanrkable degree the respect and liking of the Zuhi. Panda 
died in October 1871, but practically the government of Zululand 
had been in Cetywayo's hands since the victory of 1856, owing 
both to political circumstance* and the failing health of his 
father. In 1873 the Zulu nation appealed to the Natal govern- 
ment to preside over the installation of Cetywayo as king; and 
this request was acceded to, Shepstone being again chosen 
as British representative. During the whole of Panda's reign 
the condition of Zululand showed little improvement. Bishop 
Colenso visited him in 1857 and obtained a grant of land for 
a mission station, which was opened in i860, by the Rev. R. 
Robertson, who laboured in the country for many years, gaining 
the confidence both of Panda and Cetywayo. German, Nor* 
wegian and other missions were also founded. The number of 
converts was few, but the missionaries exercised a very whole- 
some influence and to them in measure was due the comparative 
mildness of Panda's later years. 

The frontier disputes between the Zulu and the Transvaal 
Boers ultimately involved the British government and were one 
rkpmtv °* tDC dus* 9 of the war which broke out in 1879. 
wkM cs« They concerned, chiefly, territory which in 1854 was 
Trmm»- proclaimed the republic of Utrecht, the Boers who 
**"* had settled there having in that year obtained a deed 
of cession from Panda. In i860 a Boer commission was ap- 
pointed to beacon the boundary, and to obtain, if possible, 
from the Zulu a road to the sea at St Lucia Bay. The com- 
mission, however, effected nothing. In 1861 Umtonga, a 
brother of Cetywayo, fled to the Utrecht district, and Cetywayo 
assembled an army on that frontier. According to evidence 
brought forward later by the Boers, Cetywayo offered the 
fanners a strip of land along the border if they would surrender 
his brother. This they did on the condition that Umtonga's 
Bfe was spared, and in 1861 Panda signed a deed making over 
the land to the Boers. The southern boundary of the strip 
added to Utrecht ran from Rorke's Drift on the Buffalo to a 
point on the Pongolo. The boundary was beaconed in 1864, 
but when in 1865 Umtonga fled from Zululand to Natal, Cety- 
wayo, seeing that he bad lost his part of the bargain (for he 
feared that Umtonga 1 might be used to supplant him as Panda 
had been used to supplant Dingaan), caused the beacon to be 
removed, the Zulu claiming also the land ceded by the Swazis 
to Lydenburg. The Zulu asserted that the Swazis were their 
vassals and denied their right to part with the territory. During 
the year a Boer commando under Paul Kruger and an army 
under Cetywayo were posted along the Utrecht border. Hos- 
tilities were avoided, but the Zulu occupied the land north of 
the Pongolo. Questions were also raised as to the validity of 
the documents signed by the Zulu concerning the Utrecht 
strip; in 1869 the services of the beut.-governor of Natal were 
accepted by both parties as arbitrator, but the attempt then 
made to settle the difficulty proved unsuccessful. 

Such was the position when by his father's death Cetywayo 
(qj$.) became absolute ruler of the Zulu. As far as possible 
Cm y w w be revived the military methods of his uncle Chaka, 
***► and even succeeded in equipping his regiments with 

firearms. It is believed that he instigated the Kaffirs in the 
Transkd to revolt, and he aided Sikukunj in his struggle with 
the Transvaal His rule over bis own people was tyrannous. 
By Bishop SchreudVr he was described as " an able man, but 
for cold, selfish pride, cruelty and untruthfulness worse than 
any of his predecessors." In September 1876 the massacre of 
a large number of girls (who had married men of their own age 
instead of the men of an older regiment, for whom Cetywayo 
had designed them) provoked a strong remonstrance from the 
government of Natal, inclined as that government was to look 
leniently on the doings of the Zulu. The tension between 
Cetywayo and the Transvaal over border disputes continued, 
and when in 1877 Britain annexed the Transvaal the dispute 
was transferred to the new owners of the country. A commission 



1 Umtonga had been originally designated by 
accessor. He afterwards served in the Zulu wa 



Panda as his 
r with Woods 



was appointed by the Heut. governor of Natal in February 
1878 to report on the boundary question. The commission 
reported in July, and found almost entirely in favour of the 
contention of the Zulu. Sir Bartle Frere, then High Com- 
missioner, who thought the award "one-sided and unfair to 
the Boers " (Martineau, Life of Frere, ii. six.), stipulated that, 
on the land being given to the Zulu, the Boers living on it 
should be compensated if they left, or protected if they remained. 
Cetywayo (who now found no defender in Natal save Bishop 
Colenso) was in a defiant humour, and permitted outrages by 
Zulu both on the Transvaal and Natal borders. Frere was 
convinced that the peace of South Africa could be 
preserved only if the power of Cetywayo was curtailed. 
Therefore in forwarding his award on the boundary 
dispute the High Commissioner demanded that the 
military system should be Bemodelled. The youths 
were to be allowed to marry as they came to man's estate, and 
the regiments were not to be called up except with the consent 
of the council of the nation and also of the British government. 
Moreover, the missionaries were to be unmolested and a British 
resident was to be accepted. These demands were made to 
Zulu deputies on the nth of December 1878, a definite reply 
being required by the 31st of that month. 

Cetywayo returned no answer, and in January 7879 * British 
force under General Thesiger (Lord Chelmsford) invaded Zulu- 
land. Lord Chelmsford had under him a force of 5000 
Europeans and 8aoo natives: 3000 of the latter were employed 
in guarding the frontier of Natal; another force of 1400 Euro- 
peans and 400 natives were stationed in the Utrecht district. 
Three columns were to invade Zululand, from the Lower Tugela, 
Rorke's Drift, and Utrecht respectively, their objective being 
Ulundi, the royal kraal. Cetywayo's army numbered fully 
40,000 men. The entry of all three columns was unopposed. 
On the 22nd of January the centre column (1600 Europeans, 
2500 natives), which had advanced from Rorke's Drift, was 
encamped near Isandhlwana; on the morning of hsmiku 
that day Lord Chelmsford moved out with a small wasw. 
force to support a reconnoitring party. After he had left, 
the camp, in charge of Col. Durnford, was surprised by a Zulu 
army nearly 10,000 strong. The British were overwhelmed and 
almost every man killed, the casualties being 806 Europeans 
(more than half belonging to the 24th regiment) and 471 natives. 
All the transport was also lost. Lord Chelmsford and the 
reconnoitring party returned to find the camp deserted; next 
day they retreated to Rorke's Drift, which had been the scene 
of an heroic and successful defence. After the victory at 
Isandhlwana several impis of the Zulu army had fto/iVa 
moved to the Drift. The garrison stationed there, Dttttm 
under Lieuts. Chard and Brombead, numbered about 80 
men of the 24th regiment, and they had in hospital between 
30 and 40 men. Late in the afternoon they were attacked by 
about 4000 Zulu. On six occasions, the Zulu got within the 
entrenchments, to be driven back each time at the bayonet's 
point. At dawn the Zulu withdrew, leaving 350 dead. The 
British loss was 17 killed and 10 wounded. 

In the meantime the right column under Colonel Pearson had 
reached Eshowe from the Tugela; on receipt of the news of 
Isandhlwana most of the mounted men and the native troops 
were sent back to the Natal, leaving at Esbowe a garrison of 1300 
Europeans and 65 natives. This force was hemmed in by the 
enemy. The left column under Colonel (afterwards Sir) Evelyn 
Wood, which had done excellent work, found itself obliged to 
act on the defensive after the disaster to the centre column. 1 
For a time an invasion of Natal was feared. The Zulu, however, 
made no attempt to enter Natal, while Lord Chelmsford awaited 
reinforcements before resuming his advance. During this time 
(March the 12th) an escort of stores marching to Luneberg, 
the headquarters of the Utrecht force, was attacked when en- 
camped on both sides of the Intombe river. The camp was 
surprised, 62 out of 106 men were killed, and all the stores were 

9 With the column were 40 Boers, the Uys clan, under PSet 
Uys, whose lather had been kuled in 1838 in the wars with Dingaan, 



1054 



ZULULAND 



lost. News of Isandhlwan* reached England on tbe nth of 
February, and on the same day about 10,000 men were ordered 
out to South Africa. The first troops arrived at Durban on the 
17 th of March. On the 29th a column, under Lord Chelmsford, 
consisting of 3400 Europeans and 2300 natives, marched to the 
relief of Eshowe, entrenched camps being formed each night. 
On the 2nd of April the camp was attacked at GinginhJovo, the 
Zulu being repulsed. Their loss was estimated at 1200 while 
the British had only two killed and 52 wounded. The next 
day Eshowe was relieved. Wood, who had been given leave 
to make a diversion in northern Zululand, on the 28th of March 
occupied Hlobane (Inhlobane) mountain. Tbe force was, bow- 
ever, compelled to retreat owing to the unexpected appearance 
of the main Zulu army, which nearly outflanked the British. 
Besides the loss of the native contingent (those not killed 
deserted) there were 100 casualties among the 400 Europeans 
engaged. 1 At mid-day next day the Zulu army made a desperate 
attack, lasting over four hours, on Wood's camp at Kambula; 
the enemy— over 20,000 strong— was driven off, losing fully 
1000 men, while the British casualties were 18 killed and 
65 wounded. 

By the middle of April nearly all tbe reinforcements bad 
reached Natal, and Lord Chelmsford reorganized his forces. 
The ist division, under major-general Crealock, advanced along 
the coast belt and was destined to act as a support to the 2nd 
division, under major-general Newdigate, which with Wood's 
flying column, an independent unit, was to march on Ulundi 
from Rorke's Drift and Kambula. Owing to difficulties of 
transport it was the beginning of June before Newdigate was 
ready to advance. On the ist of that month the prince imperial 
of France (Louis Napoleon), who had been allowed to accompany 
the British troops, was killed while out with a reconnoitring 
party. On the ist of July Newdigate and Wood had reached 
the White Umfolosi, in the heart of the enemy's country. During 
their advance messengers were sent by Cetywayo to treat for 
peace, but he did not accept the terms offered. Meantime Sir 
Garnet (afterwards Lord) Wolseley had been sent out to super- 
sede Lord Chelmsford, and on the 7th of July he 
tmam reached Crealock's headquarters at Port Durnford. 
But by that time the campaign was practically over. The 2nd 
division (with which was Lord Chelmsford) and Wood's column 
crossed the White Umfolosi on the 4th of July— the force 
numbering 4200 Europeans and 1000 natives. Within a mile 
of Ulundi the British force, formed in a hollow square, was 
attacked by a Zulu army numbering 12,000 to 15,000. The 
battle ended in a decisive victory for the British, whose losses 
were about ioo, while of the Zulu some i.soo men were killed 
(see Ulundi). 

After this battle the Zulu army dispersed, most of the leading 
chiefs tendered their submission, and Cetywayo became a 
w»i$4ty*a fugitive. On the 27th of August the king was cap- 
wait- tured and sent to Cape Town. His deposition was 
•***• ' formally announced to the Zulu, and Wolseley drew 
up a new scheme for the government of the country. The 
Chaka dynasty was deposed, and the Zulu country portioned 
among eleven Zulu chiefs, John Dunn,* a white adventurer, 
and Hlubi, a Basuto chief who hati done good service in the war. 
A Resident was appointed who was to be the channel of com- 
munication between the chiefs and the British government. 
This arrangement was productive of much bloodshed and 
disturbance, and in 1882 the British government determined 
to restore Cetywayo to power. In the meantime, however, 
blood feuds had been engendered between the chiefs Usibepu 

'For his action on this occasion Colonel (afterwards General 
Sir) Redvers Buller, who was Wood's principal assistant, received 
the V.C, Pitt Uys was among the slain. 

* Dunn was a son of one of the early settlers in Natal and had 
largely identified himself with the Zulu. In 1856 he fought for 
Umbulari against Cetywayo, but was high in that monarch's favour 
at the time of his coronation in 1873. When Frere's ultimatum 
was delivered to Cetywayo, Dunn, with 2000 followers, crossed the 
Tugela into Natal (10th of January 1879). In 1888 he fought 
against Diniaulu. 



(Zibebu) and Hamu* on the one aide and die tribe* who sup- 
ported the ex-king and his family on tbe other. Cetywayo** 
party (who now became known as Usutus) suffered severely 
at the hands of the two chiefs, who were aided by a band of 
white freebooters. When Cetywayo was restored Usibepa 
was left in possession of bis territory, while Dunn's lead and 
that of the Basuto chief (the country between the Tugela and 
the Umhlatuai, *.*. adjoining Natal) was constituted s» reserve, 
in which locations were to be provided for Zulu unwilling to 
serve the restored king. This new arrangement proved as 
futile as had Wolseley's. Usibepu, having created a formidable 
force of well-armed and trained warriors, and being left aa 
independence on the borders of Cetywayo'* territory, viewed 
with displeasure the re-installation of his former king, and 
Cetywayo was desirous of humbling his relative. A collision 
very soon took place; Usibepu's forces were victorious, and 
on the 22nd of July 1883, led by a troop of mounted whites, 
he made a sudden descent upon Cetywayo's kraal at Ulundi, 
which he destroyed, massacring such of the inmates of both 
sexes as could not save themselves by flight. The king escaped, 
though wounded, into the Reserve; there he died in February 
1884. 

Cetywayo left a son, Dinizulu, who sought the swtHinfff of 
some of the Transvaal Boers against Usibepu, whom he defeated 
and drove into the Reserve. These Boers, led by Lukas Meyer 
(1846-1002), claimed as a stipulated reward for their services 
the cession of the greater and more valuable part of central 
Zululand. On the 21st of May the Boer adventurers nb* 
had proclaimed Dinizulu king of Zululand; in August Mnr 
following they founded the " New Republic," carved ■*■■**. 
out of Zululand, and sought its recognition by the British 
government. The Usutu party now repented of their bad 
bargain, for by the end of 1885 they found the Boers «*Uimii^ 
some three-fourths of their country. The British government 
intervened, took formal possession of St Lucia Bay (to which 
Germany as well as the Transvaal advanced claims), caused the 
Boers to reduce their demands, and within boundaries agreed 
to recognize the New Republic — whose territory was in 1888 
incorporated in the Transvaal and has since 1003 formed the 
Vryheid division of Natal 

Seeing that peace could be maintained between the Zulu 
chiefs only by the direct exercise of authority, the British 
government annexed Zululand (minus the New Re- ^^ 
public) in 1887, and placed it under a commissioner 4^4 
responsible to the governor of Natal. In the following «■*«*•* 
year Dinizulu, who continued his feud with Usibepu, 5J5JJ* 
rebelled against the British. After a sharp campaign 
(June to August 1888), the Usutu losing 300 killed in one 
encounter, Dinizulu fled into the Transvaal. He surrendered 
himself to the British in November; in April 1889 he and 
two of his uncles (under whose influence he chiefly acted) were 
found guilty of high treason and were exiled to St Helena. 

Under the wise administration of Sir Melmoth Osborn, the 
commissioner, whose headquarters were at Eshowe, and the 
district magistrates, the Zulu became reconciled to British 
rule, especially as European settlers were excluded from the 
greater part of the country. Large numbers of natives sought 
employment in Natal and at the Rand gold mines, and Zulu- 
land enjoyed a period of prosperity hitherto unknown. Order 
was maintained by a mounted native police force. 

At the end of 1888 and at the beginning of 1800 some small 
tracts of territory lying between Zululand and Tongaland, 
under the rule of petty semi-independent chiefs, Ttf ffgfr 
were added to Zululand; and in 1895 the territories 1—1 1» 
of the chiefs Zambaan (Sambana) and Umtegixa, <*•«»■ 
688 sq. m. in extent, lying between the Portuguese l " lrtrf 
territories, Swaziland, Zululand and Tongaland. were abo 
added. In the same year a British protectorate was declared 
over Tongaland. The coast-line was thus secured for Great 
Britain up to the boundary of the Portuguese territory at 

• Both these chiefs were members of the royal family. 



ZUMALACARREGUI 



*°55 



i Bay. At that tisne the Trmwv»»l government— -which 
had been the fast to reap the benefit of Great Britain's defeat 
of the Zulu by acquiring the " New Republic "—was endea- 
vouring to obtain the territories of Zambaan and Umtegum, 
hoping also to secure a route through Tongaland to Kosi Bay. 
President Kruger protested in vain against this annexation, 
Great Britain being determined to prevent another Power 
establishing itself on the south-east African seaboard. 

In 1803 Sir M. Osborn was succeeded as resident commissioner 
by Sir Marshal Clarke, 1 who gained the confidence and good 

will of the Zulu. At the dose of 1897 Zululand, in 

"JJf which Tongaland had been incorporated, was handed 

atimmmx over by the imperial government to Natal, and Sir 

(then Mr) C. J. R. Saunders was appointed dvil 
commissioner of the province, with whose government he had 
been associated since 1887. In 1808 Dinizuhi was allowed to 
return and was made a " government induna." Officially one of 
several chiefs subject to the control of the resident magistrate, 
he was, in fact, regarded by most of the Zulu as the head 
of their nation. His influence appeared to be in the main 
caerds ed on the aide of order. During the war of 1800-xooa 
there was some fighting between the Zulu and the Boers, pro- 
voked by the Boers entering Zulu territory. A Zulu kraal 
having been raided, the Zulu retaliated and, surrounding a 
small Boer commando, succeeded in killing every member of it. 
In September 1001 Louis Botha made an attempt to invade 
Smt Natal by way of Zululand, but the stubborn defence 
*■«*• made by the small posts at Itala and Prospect HOI, 
both within the Zulu border, caused him to give op the project. 
Throughout the war the Zulu showed marked partiality for 
the British side. 

At the close of the war the Natal government decided, to 
allow white settlers in certain districts of Zululand, and a Lands 
Delimitation Commission was appointed. The commission, 
however, reported (1005) that four-fifths of Zululand was unfit 
for European habitation, and the remaining fifth already densely 
populated. The commissioners urged that the tribal system 
should be maintained. Meantime the coal mines near St 
Lucia Bay were opened up and connected with Durban by 
railway. At this time rumours were current of disaffection 
among the Zulu, but this was regarded as the effervescence 
natural after the war. In 1005 a poll tax of £x on all adult 
males was imposed by the Natal legislature; tins tax was the 
ostensible cause of a revolt in 1906 among the natives of Natal, 
j^/f^ who were largely of Zulu origin. Bambaata, the 
rem mi leader of the revolt, fled to Zululand. He took 
*mu refuge in the dense bush in the Nkandhla highlands, 
^ST*** where Cetywayo's grave became the raHying-point 

of the rebels, who in April were joined by an aged 
chief named Sigananda and his tribe. After an arduous cam- 
paign, the Natal force (about 5000 strong) being commanded 
by Col. Sir Duncan McKenzie, the rebellion was crushed by 
July 1906, without the aid of imperial troops. Bambaata was 
killed in battle (June 10th); his head was cut off for purposes 
of identification, but afterwards buried with the body. Siga- 
nanda surrendered. In all some 3500 Zulus were killed and 
about 3000 taken prisoners, the majority of the prisoners being 
released in 1907 (see further Natal: History). Zululand re- 
mained, however, in a disturbed condition, and a number of 
white traders and officials were murdered. Dinizulu bad been 
accused of harbouring Bambaata, and in December 1007 the Natal 
government felt justified in charging him with high treason, 
murder and other crimes. A military force entered Zululand, 
and Dinizulu surrendered without opposition. He was brought 
to trial in November 1908, and in March 1909 was found guilty 
of harbouring rebels. The more serious charges against him 

■Lieut.-Col. Sir Marshal James Clarke. R.A. (1811-1909) was 
ADC. to Sir Theophilus Shepstone when the Transvaal waa annexed 
1*1877. He served in the Boer war of 1880-81; was resident 
commissioner of Basutoland from 1884 to 1893, and after leaving 
Zululand became resident commissioner in Southern Rhodesia 
(1898). He was made a K.C.M.G. in 1886. 



were not proved. He was sentenced to four yeaie imprison- 
ment and deprived of his position as a government induna. 
Other Zulu chiefs were convicted of various offences and sen- 
tenced to imprisonment. At his trial Dinizulu was defended 
by W. P. Scludner, ex-premier of Cape Colony, while Miss 
H. £. Coknso (a daughter of Bishop Coknso) constituted herself 
ma champion in the press of Natal and Great Britain. On the 
day that the Union of South Africa was established (31st of 
May 1910)1 the Botha ministry released Dinizulu from prison'. 
He was subsequently settled on a farm in the Transvaal and 
given a pension of £500 a year* 

BrsuoGBArav.— British War Office, Pricis of information ton* 
earning Zululand (1894) and Pruds . . . concerning Tongaland and 
North Zululand (1905); Report on the Forests of ZuluUmd (Col 
Off., 1 801); J. S. Lister. Report on Forestry in Natal and Zululand 
(Maritzburg, 1902); Zululand Lands Delimitation Commission. 
tpoz-4. Reports (Maritzburg, 1905) ; A. T. Bryant, A Zulu-English 
Dictionary with ... a concise htstorypf the Zulu People from the 
most Ancutnt Times (1905); G. McC Thesl, History of South Africa 
since 170$% 3 vols. (1908), vols. L and iv. are specially valuable 
for Zululand ; J. Y. Gibson, The Story of the Zulus (Maritzburg, 
1008); J. A. Farrer, Zululand and the Zulus: their History, Beliefs, 
Customs, Military System. &c. (4th ed. 1870). For more detailed 
study consult Saze Bannister, Humane Policy (1830), and autho- 
rities collected in Appendix; A. Delegorgue, Voyage de VAfriqut 
Australe (Paris, 1847); A. F. Gardiner, Narrative of a Journey to 
the Zoelu Country (1836); N. Isaacs.. Travels . . . descriptive of 
the Zoelus: their Manners, Customs, be (a vols. 1836); Zululand 
under Dingaan: Account of Mr Owen's Visit in 1837 (Cape Town, 
1880); Rev. B. Shaw, Memorials of South Africa (1841): Rev. 
G. H. Mason. Life with the Zulus of Natal (185a) and Zululand: 
a Mission Tour (1862); D. Leslie, Among the Zulus and Amatongas 
(and ed. Edinburgh, 1875): Bf<h*p Colenso, Langalibalete and the 
Apt&Muiti Tribe (1874); Zulu Boundary Commission (Books i.-iv., 
1878, M^S. in Oluftul O: nary, London) : C. Vijn (trans. 

from the Dutch by Bishop Colenso). Cetshwayp's Dutchman (1880); 
BritUh official Narratrn of . . . the Zulu War of 1879 (1881); 
A Septan?, Us Kxpidtit&ts angfaises en Affiant: Zulu, 1879 
(Piru, n/j). France* 1L Cokrtw and CoL B. Durnford, History of 
the Zulu War and iis Origin (2nd &L l88l)j F._E. Coknso, The Ruin 
of Zululand {2 vol*. " 
Aajfit and Zulu Wart ( 
Macm^hn") Magazine 
White Neighbours {1HS1); B. Mkford, Through the Zulu Country 
(iStiil; J. Tyler* Forty Tears among the Zulus (Boston, 1891); 
Bri tfih offici if Military Rtp*ri on Z ulufand (IQ06) 5 W. Bosnian, The 
Naial RtbtUion of 1906 (1007): Rosamond Sootbey, Storm and 
Sunihin* in South Africa (tqio). See also the Urns of Sir Bartle 
Frrrc, Bishop Colcnw, Sir G. Pomeroy Colley and Sir J. C. Molteno. 
and the authorities cited under NataL (F. R. C.) 

ZUMALACARRBOUI. THOMAS (1788-1835), Spanish Carlist 
general, was bom at Ormaiztegui in Navarre on the 19th of 
December 1788. His lather, Francisco Antonio Zumalacarregui, 
was a lawyer who possessed some property, and the son was 
articled to a solicitor. When the French invasion took place 
in 1808 he enlisted at Saragossa. He served in the first siege, 
at the battle of Tudda, and during the second siege until he was 
taken prisoner in a sortie. He s ucceeded in escaping and in 
reaching bis family in Navarre. For a short time be served 
with Gaspar de Jauregui, known as " The Shepherd " (El Pastor), 
one of the minor guerrillero leaders. But Zumalacarregui, who 
was noted for bis grave and silent disposition and his strong 
religious principles, disliked the disorderly life of the guerrillas, 
and when regular forces were organized in the north he entered 
the 1st battalion of Guipuzcoa aa an officer. During the re^ 
mainder of the war he served in the regular army. In 1819 he 
was sent with despatches to the Regency at Cadiz, and received 
his commission as captain. In that rank he was present at 
the battle of San Mardal (31st of August 1813). After the 
restoration of Ferdinand VII. he continued in the army, and is 
said to have made a careful study of the theory of war. Zumala- 
carregui had no sympathy with the liberal principles which were 
spreading in Spain, and became noted as what was called 
nServil or strong Royalist. He attracted no attention at 
headquarters, and was still a captain when the revolution of 
1820 broke out. His brother officers, whose leanings were 
liberal, denounced him to the revolutionary government, and 
asked that he might be removed. The recommendation was 
not acted on, but Zumalacarregui knew of it, and laid up the 



1056 



ZUMPT— ZURBARAN 



offence in bis mind. Finding that he was suspected (probably 
with truth) of an intention to bring the soldiers over to the 
royalist side, he escaped to France. In 1823 he returned as an 
officer in one of the royalist regiments which had been organised 
on French soil by the consent of the government. He was now 
known as a thoroughly trustworthy servant of the despotic 
royalty, but he was too proud to be a courtier. For some years 
he was employed in bringing regiments which the government 
distrusted to order. He became lieutenant-colonel in 1825 and 
colonel in 1829. In 1832 he was named military governor of 
Ferrol. Before Ferdinand VII. died in 1833, Zumalacarregui 
was marked out as a natural supporter of the absolutist party 
which favoured the king's brother, Don Carlos. The pro- 
clamation of the king's daughter Isabella as heiress was almost 
the occasion of an armed conflict between him and the naval 
authorities at Ferrol, who were partisans of the constitutional 
cause. He was put on half pay by the new authorities and 
ordered to live under police observation at Pamplona. When 
the Carlist rising began on the death of Ferdinand he is said to 
have held back because he knew that the first leaders would be 
politicians and talkers. He did not take the field till the Carlist 
cause appeared to be at a very low ebb, and until he had received 
a commission from Don Carlos as commander-in-chief in Navarre. 
The whole force under his orders when he escaped from Pamplona 
on the night of the 29th of October 1833, and took the command 
next day in the Val de Araquil, was a few hundred Unarmed, 
and dispirited guerrilleros. In a few months Zumalacarregui 
had organized the Carlist forces into a regular army. The 
difficulty he found in obtaining supplies was very great, for 
the coast towns— and notably Bilbao— were constitutional in 
politics. It was mainly by captures from the government 
troops that he equipped his forces. He gradually obtained full 
possession of Navarre and the Basque provinces, outside of the 
fortresses, which be had not the means to besiege. Whether 
as a guerriUero leader, or as a general conducting regular war 
in the mountains, he proved unconquerable. By July 1834 
he had made it safe for Don Carlos to join his headquarters. 
The pretender was, however, a narrow-minded, bigoted man, 
who regarded Zumalacarregui with suspicion, and was afraid 
of his immense personal influence with the soldiers. Zumala- 
carregui had therefore to drag behind him the whole weight of 
the distrust and intrigues of the court. Yet by the beginning 
of June 1835 he had made the Carlist cause triumphant to the 
north of the Ebro, and had formed an army of more than 30,000 
men, of much better quality than the constitutional forces. 
If Zumalacarregui had been allowed to follow his own plans, 
which were to concentrate his forces and march on Madrid, he 
might well have put Don Carlos in possession of the capital. 
But the court was eager to obtain command of a seaport, and 
Zumalacarregui was ordered to besiege Bilbao. He obeyed 
reluctantly, and on the 14th of June 1835 was wounded by a 
musket bullet in the calf of the leg. The wound was trifling 
and would probably have been cured with case if he had been 
allowed to employ an English doctor whom he trusted. But 
Don Carlos insisted on sending his own physicians, and in their 
hands the general died on the 24th of June 1835 — not without 
suspicion of poison. Zumalacarregui was a fine type of the old 
royalist and religious principles of his people. The ferocity 
with which he conducted the war was forced on him by the 
government generals, who refused quarter. 

An engaging account of Zumalacarregui will be found in The 
Most Striking Events of a Twebemonth Campaign with Zunula- 
edrregni in Navarre and the Basque Provinces, by C. F. Henningsen 
(London, 1836). A chap-book called Vida politico y mililar de 
Don Tamos Zumalacdrregui, which gives the facts of his life with 
fair accuracy, is still very popular in Spain. (D. H.) 

ZUMPT, the name of two German classical scholars. Karl 
Gottlob Zuhpt (1 792-1 894), who was educated at Heidelberg 
and Berlin, was from 18x2 to 1827 a schoolmaster in Berlin, and 
in 1827 became professor of Latin literature at the university. 
His chief work was his Lateinische Crammatik (1818), which 
stood as a standard work until superseded by Mad vig's in 1844. 



He edited Quintflian's lnstilntU oraUria (1831), Cicero's Ver- 
rines and De officii* (1837), and Curtius. Otherwise he devoted 
himself mainly to Roman history, publishing Annates vcterum 
rtgnomm ct populorum (3rd ed. 186a), a work in chronology 
down to a.d. 476, and other antiquarian studies. His nephew, 
August Wilrelk Zuhpt (18x5-1877), studied in Berlin, and 
in 1851 became professor in the Friedrich WQhdm Gymnasium. 
He is known chiefly in connexion with Latin epigraphy, hit 
papers on which (collected in Commentalianes epigrapnicae, 
a vols., 1850-54) brought him into conflict with Mommsen in 
connexion with the preparation of the Corpus inscriptionum 
Latinarum, a scheme for which, drawn up by Mommsen, was 
approved in 1847. His works include Monumentum Ancyrannm 
(with Franck, 1847) and De monumenfo Ancyrano supplcndo 
(1869); Studia Romana (1859); Das Krimnakeckt der rOsa. 
Repubiii (1865-69); Der Kriminalprcaess der rem. RepuUik 
(1871); editions of Namatianus (1840), Cicero's Pro Mmrena 
(1859) and De lege agraria (1861). Ihne incorporated materials 
left by him in the 7th and 8th vols, of his Romiscke Gcstkvkte 
(1840). 

ZUNZ, LBOPOID (1794-1886), Jewish scholar, was born at 
Detmold in 1794, and died in Berlin in 1886. He was the 
founder of what has been termed the " science of Judaism," 
the critical investigation of Jewish literature, hymnoJogy and 
ritual Early in the 19th century he was associated with Gans 
Moser and Heine in an association which the last named called 
" Young Palestine." The ideals ot this Verein were not des- 
tined to bear religious fruit, but the " science of Judaism " 
survived. Zunz took no large share in Jewish reform, but never 
lost faith in the regenerating power of " science " as applied 
to the traditions and literary legacies of the ages. He had 
thoughts of becoming a preacher, but found the career un- 
congenial. He influenced Judaism from the study rather than 
from the pulpit. In 183a appeared what £. H. Hirsch rightly 
terms " the most important Jewish book published in the 19th 
century." This was Zmu's GottesdiensUiche Vortrtge der Jmden, 
tV*. a history of the Sermon. It lays down principles for the 
investigation of the Rabbinic exegesis (Midrash, q.v.) and of the 
prayer-book of the synagogue. This book raised Zuns to the 
supreme position among Jewish scholars. In 1840 he was 
appointed director of a Lehrerseroinar, a post which relieved 
him from pecuniary troubles. In 1845 appeared his Zur 
Gesckickle und Liter atur, in which he threw light on the literary 
and social history of the Jews. Zuns was always interested in 
politics, and in 2848 addressed many public meetings. In 1850 
he resigned his headship of the Teachers' Seminary, and was! 
awarded a pension. He had visited the British Museum in, 
1846, and this confirmed him in his plan for his third book; 
Synagogale Poesie des MiUetalters (1855). It wss from this 
book that George Eliot translated the following opening of * 
chapter of Daniel Deronda: u If there arc ranks in suffering, 
Israel takes precedence of all the nations " . . . kc After its 
publication Zuns again visited England, and in 1859 issued his 
RUus. In this he gives a masterly survey of synagogal rites. 
His last great book was his Literaturgeschkhte der synagogaUn 
Poesie (1865). A supplement appeared in 1867. Besides these 
works, Zunz published a new translation of the Bible, and wrote 
many essays which were afterwards collected as GesemmeUe 
Schrijten. Throughout his early and married life he was the 
champion of Jewish rights, and he did not withdraw from 
public affairs until 1874, the year of the death of his wife Adelhei 
Beermann, whom he had married in 1822. 

See Emil G. Hirsch, in Jewish Encyclopedia, xu. 699-704. 

ZURBARAN, FRANCISCO (1598-1662), Spanish painter, was 
born at Fuente de Cantos in Estremadura on the 7th of 
November 1598. His father was Luis Zurbaran, a country 
labourer, his mother Isabel Marquet. In childhood he set about 
imitating objects with charcoal; and his father sent him, still 
young, to the school of Juan de Roelas in Seville. Francisco 
soon became the best pupil in the studio of Roelas, surpassing 
the master himself; and before leaving, him he had achieved a 



ZURICH 



X057 



ssBd reputation, Mil though Sevflte then was of able painters. 
Re may have had here the opportunity of copying some of the 
paint ingi of Michelangelo da Caravaggio; at any rate he gained 
the name of " the Spanish Caravaggio/' owing to the forcible 
realistic style in which he 'excelled. He constantly painted 
direct from nature, following but occasionally improving on 
his model; and he made great use of the lay-figure in the study 
of draperies, in which he was peculiarly proficient. He had a 
special gift for white draperies; and, as a consequence, Car- 
jhustan houses are abundant in bis paintings. To these rigid 
methods Zurbaran b said to have adhered throughout his career, 
which was prosperous, wholly confined to Spain, and varied by 
few incidents beyond those of his daily labour. His subjects 
were mostly of a severe and ascetic kind— religious vigils, the 
flesh fhastivd into subjection to the spirit— the compositions 
seldom thronged, and often reduced to a single figure. The 
style is more reserved and chastened than Caravaggio's, the 
tone of colour often bluish to excess. Exceptional effects are 
attained by the precise finish of foregrounds, largely massed out 
in light and shade. Zurbaran married in Seville Lconor de 
Jordan, by whom he had several children. Towards 1650 he 
was appointed painter to Philip IV.; and there is a story that 
osi one occasion the sovereign laid his hand on the artist's 
shoulder, saying, " Painter to the king, king of painters." It 
was only late in life that Zurbaran made a prolonged stay in 
Madrid, Seville being the chief scene of his operations. He 
died, probably in 166*, in Madrid. 

In 1697 be painted the great altarpfece of St Thomas Aquinas, 
now in the Seville mi ..*-... ... 



of that taint 1 



it was executed for the church of the 
This is Zurbaran'* largest composition, 



st there. 

_, of Christ and the Madonna, various saints, 

Charles V. with knight*, and Archbishop Desa flounder of the 
college) with monks and servitors, all the principal personages 
being beyond the she of life. It had been preceded by the 
snmerous pictures of the screen of St Peter Nolaaeo in the cathedmi 
In the chinch of Guadalupe he painted various large pictures, 
eight of which relate to the history of St Jerome, and in the church 
of St Paul, Seville, a famous figure of the Crucified Saviour, in 
grfasJUe, presenting an innsive effect of marble. In 163$ he finished 
the r**-**rgr of the high altar of the Carthusians in Jeres. In the 
palace of Boenmttro, Madrid, are four large canvases representing 
the Labours of Hercules, an unusual instance of non-Christian 
subject* from the hand of Zurbaran. A fine specimen is in the 



National Gallery, London, a whole-length, life-eised figure of a 
attesting Franciscan holding a skull, ft seems probable that 
another picture in the same gallery, the " Dead Roland,'' whkh used 
to be ascribed to Velasquez, is really by Zurbaran. His principal 
scholars, whose style has as much affinity to that of Ribera as to 
Caravaggio's, were Bernabe de Ayala and the brothers Fobneo. 

Z0BICH (Fr. Zurich; ItaL ZaWge), one of the cantons of 
north-eastern Switzerland, ranking officially as the first in the 
Confederation. Its total area b 665-7 *q. m., of which 615-1 
sq. m. are reckoned as " p rod u c tiv e » (forests covering 180-8 
aq. m., and vineyards 16-9 sq. m., the most extensive Swiss 
wine district save in Vaud and in Tidno). Of the rest, si sq. m. 
are occupied by the cantonal share of the lake of Zurich, while 
wholly within the canton are the smaller lakes of Oreffen (3} 
sq. m.) and POffikon (if sq. m.). The canton b of irregular 
shape, consisting simply of the acquisitions made in the course 
of years by the town. Of these the more important were the 
whole of the lower part of the lake (1362), KOssnacht (1384), 
Thalwil (1385), Erlenbach (1400), Greifensee (1402), Horgen 
(1406), Grttningen and Stifa (1408)1 Bulach and Regensberg 
(1409), Wald (14*5). Kyburg (145*), Winterthur (1467), EgUseu 
(1406), Konau (15x3), and Wldenswfl (1549)— Stein was held 
from 1484 to 1708, while in 1798 the lower part of the Stammheim 
glen, and finally in 1803 Rheinau, were added to the canton. 
In 1798 the town ruled nineteen "inner " bailiwicks and nine 
rural bailiwicks, besides the towns, of Stein and of Winterthur. 
The canton at present extends from the left bank of the Rhine 
(including also Eghsau on the right bank) to the region west of 
the lake of Zurich. It b bounded on the E. and W. by low hffls 
that divide it respectively from the valleys of the Thar, and from 
tisose of the Reuss and of the Aar. In itself the canton consists 
of four shallow river valleys, separated by low ranges, all 



running from S.E. to N.W. The most important of these b 
that of the Linth (?.*.), which forms the lake of Zurich. To 
the east are the valleys of the Glatt (forming lake Greifen) and 
of the Toss (forming lake PfUfikon), both sending their streams 
direct to the Rhine. The highest point in the canton b the 
Albishorn (30x3 ft.) in the Alois range, which limits the Sihl 
valley to the west. All the valleys named are traversed by 
railway lines, while many lines branch off in every direction 
from the town of Zurich. The first railway line opened (1847) 
in Switzerland was that from Zurich to Baden in Aargau (14 m.). 
From the town of Zurich mountain railways lead S.W. to near 
the summit of the UetUberg (2864 ft.) and N.E. towards the 
Zurichberg (2284 ft). 

In 1900 the population was 43i«Ql6* of whom 413.141 were 
German-speaking, 11,192 Italian-speaking, 3894 French-speaking, 
and 610 Romonscfa-apeaking, while there were 345*446 Protestants, 



345*446 Protestanta, 
3 Jews. The capital 



'Old"), and 



of the canton Is Zurich (g*.), but Winterthur (g.v.) is the only 
other considerable town. Utter (76*3 inhabitants), and He "~~ 



80,75a Catholics (Roman or ' 
* the canton Is Zurich (g* 

ler considerable town. Utter (76*3 inhabitants), and Horgen (6883 
inhabitants) being rather large manufacturing villages. The land 



in the canton b highly cultivated and much subdivided. But the 
canton b above all a great manufacturing district, especially of 
machinery and railway rolling-stock, while both silk weaving and 
cotton weaving are widely spread. It b divided into ix adminis- 
trative districts, which comprise 189 communes. In i860 the 
cantonal constitution was revised in a democratic sense, ana with 
the exception of a few changes made later, it b the existing con- 
stitution. There b an executive or Xetienmgsmt of seven members 
and a legislature or Kontonsrat (one member to every woo resident 
Swiss dtisens or a fraction over 750), each holding office for three 
years and elected at the same time directly by the vote of the 
people. The referendum exists in both forms, compulsory and 



gresstve income tax. 
in the canton. 



all laws and all money grants of a total sum over 350,000 
from, or an annual sum of 20,000 must be submitted to a popular 
vote, the people meeting for that purpose at least twice in each 
year, while the executive may submit to a popular vote any other 
matter, though it fall within its powers as defined by bw. One* 
third of the members of the legislature or 5000 legally qualified 
voters can force the government to submit to the people any matter 
whatsoever (initiative). Both members of the Federal Stdn/Urat 
and the 22 members of the Federal NaHonalrol are elected aunuW 
by a. popular vote and hold office for three years. The 
m provides for the imposition of a graduated and pro- 
In 1885 the penalty of death was abolished 
(W. A. B. C.) 

ZttRICH (Fr. Zurich; ItaL Zurigo), the capital of the Swiss 
canton of the same name. It b the most populous, the most 
important, and on the whole the finest town in Switzerland, 
and till 1848 waa practically the capital of the Swiss Confedera- 
tion. It b built on both banks of the limmat (higher up called 
Linth) as it issues from the lake of Zurich, and also of its 
tributary, the Sihl, that joins it just below the town. That 
portion of the town which lies on the right bank of the Limmat 
b called the " Grease Stadt " and that on the left bank the 
"Kleino Stadt." Till 1893 the central portion of the town 
on cither bank of the Limmat formed the " city " and ruled 
the outlying communes or townships that had sprung up 
around it. But at that time the eleven outer districts (including 
Aussmihl, the workmen's quarter on the left bank of the Sihl) 
or suburbs were incorporated with the town, which b now 
governed by a town council of 1*5 members (one to every 1200 
inhabitants), and an executive of 9 members, both chosen direct 
by a popular vote. Much land has been rescued from the lake, 
and b the site of fine quays, stately public buildings, and 
splendid private villas. The older quarters are still crowded. 
But the newer quarters stretch up the slope of the Zurichberg 
(above the right bank of the Limmat) while the fine Bahnhof- 
strssse (extending from the railway station to the lake) has the 
best shops and b in the neighbourhood of the more important 
public buildings. 

Zurich has always been wealthy and prosperous. Ithasiscreassd 
enormously, as b shown by the following figures. Its population 
in 1900 (Including the eleven suburbs above named) was 130,703. 
while (without these) in 1888 it was 94,129; In 1880, 7*M5> m 
1870, 58,637; in i860, 44,978; and in 1850 only 39483. Of the 
inhabitants in 1900 no fewer than 43.761 (as against 20,938 in 
1888 and 3155 in 1830) were not Swiss dtisens, Germans number- 
ing 31,123. Italians 5330, Austrian* 4210, Russians 683. French 652. 
British subjects 137. and dtisens of the United States 232. In 



1058 



ZURICH 



1900 there were in the town 140*803 German-speaking persona, 
$100 Italian-speaking, 2586 French-speaking, ana 415 Komoasch- 
speaking. In 1888 the corresponding figures were 90,500, 1135, 
1320, and 148. In 1900 the town numbered 102,794 Protestants, 
43,655 " Catholics " (Roman or u Old ") and 2713 Jews. In 1888 
the religious figures were 70,970, 20,571 and 122 1 respectively, 
while in 1850 the numbers were 32,763, 2664 and 56. The inter- 
national character of the town has thus become much more marked. 
This is partly due to the immigration of many foreign workmen, 
and partly to the arrival of Russian and Polish exiles. Both have 
added a turbulent cosmopolitan element to the town, in which 
the Socialist party is strong, and is increasing in power and influ- 
ence, even in matters concerned with civic government. 

Of the old buildings the finest and most important is the Gross 
Mttnster (or Propstei), on the right bank of the Limmat. This 
was originally the church of the king's tenants, and in one of 
the chapels the bodies of Felix, Regula and Exupexantius, the 
patron saints of the city, were buried, the town treasury being 
formerly kept above this chapel. The present building was 
erected at two periods (c. 1090-1150 and c. 1225-1300), the high 
altar having been consecrated in 1278. The towers were first 
raised above the roof at the end of the 15th century and took 
their present form in 1779. The chapter consisted of twenty-four 
secular canons; it was reorganized at the Reformation (1536), 
and suppressed in 1832. On the site of the canons' houses' 
stands a girls' school (opened 1853), but the fine Romanesque 
cloisters (12th and 13th centuries) still remain. There is a 
curious figure of Charlemagne in a niche on one of the towers; 
to him is attributed the founding or reform of the chapter. Oa 
the left bank of the Limmat stands the other great church of 
Ziirich, the Fran Mttnster (or Abtei), founded for nuns in 853, 
by Louis the German. The high altar was consecrated in 1170; 
but the greater part of the buildings are of the 13th and 14th 
centuries. It was in this church that the relics of the three 
patron saints of the town were preserved till the Reformation, 
and it was here that the burgomaster Waldmann was buried 
in 14S9. There were only twelve nuns of noble family, com- 
paratively free from the severer monastic vows; the convent 
was suppressed in 1524. Of the other old churches may be 
mentioned St Peter's, the oldest parish church, though the 
present buildings date in part from the 13th century only 
(much altered in the early z8th century), and formerly the 
meeting-place of the citizens; the Dominican church (13th 
century), in the choir of which the cantonal library of 80,000 
volumes has been stored since 1873; the church of the Austin 
friars (14th century), now used by the Old Catholics, and the 
Wasserkirche. The last-named church is on the site of a pagan 
holy place, where the patron saints of the city were martyred; 
since 1631 it bos housed the Town Library, the largest in Switzer- 
land, which contains 170,000 printed volumes and 4500 MSS. 
(among these being letters of Zwingli, Bulfinger and Lady 
Jane Grey), as well as a splendid collection of objects from the 
lake dwellings of Switzerland. The building itself was erected 
from 14 79 to 1484, and near it is a statue of Zwingli, erected in 
1885. The existing town-hall dates from 1608, while the gild 
houses were mostly rebuilt in the x8th century. One of the 
most magnificent of the newer buildings is the Swiss National 
Museum, behind the railway station. This museum, which 
was opened in 1898, contains a wonderful collection of Swiss 
antiquities (especially medieval) and art treasures of all kinds, 
some of which are placed in rooms of the actual date, removed 
from various ancient buildings. There are some fine old 
fountains (the oldest dating back to 1568). There are several 
good bridges, Roman traces being seen in the case of the Niedcr- 
brttcke (now called the Rathausbrucke). The mound of the 
Lindenhof was formerly crowned by the king's house, which 
disappeared in the 13th century, and the hillock was planted 
with limes as early at 14". 

The town is noted for its numerous dubs and societies, and is 
the intellectual capital of German-speaking Switzerland. Cotton- 
spinning and the manufacture of machinery are two leading indus- 
tries, but by far the most important is the silk-weaving industry. 
This flourished in Zurich in the 12th and 13th centuries, but dis- 
appeared about 1420; it was revived by the Protestant exiles 
(such as the Murelti and Orelli families) from Locarno (1555) and 



by the Huguenot refugees from France (1681 and itt& The 

value of the silk annually exported (mainly to France, the United 
States and England) is estimated at over three millions sterling. 
Zurich is the banking centre of Switzerland. Besides the excellent 
primary and secondary schools, there are the Cantonal School. 
including a gymnasium and a technical aide (opened 1842). and m 
high school lor girls (opened 1875). The Cantonal University and 
the Federal Polytechnic School are housed in the same building, 
but have no other connexion. The university was opened in 1833, 
no doubt as a lucctssar to the ancient chapter school at the Gros* 
MQaster said to date back to Charlemagne's ti m e h en c e its 
the Carolinum — reorganized at the Reformation, and suppi 



in 1832. The Polytechnic School, opened in 1855, includes seven- 
main sections (industrial chemistry, industrial mechanics, < 



ing, training of scientific and mathematical teachers, architecture, 
forestry and agriculture, and the military sciences), besides a 
general philosophical and political science department. The Poly- 
technic School has good collections of botanical specimens and of 
engravings. Near it is the observatory (1542 ft.). There are also 
in Zurich many Institutions for special branches of education— 
€.g. veterinary surgery, music, industrial art, silk - weav ing , Ac 

The earliest inhabitants of the future site of Zurich were the 
lake dwellers. The Celtic Helvetians had a settlement on the 
Lindenhof when they were succeeded by the Romans, who 
established a custom station here far goods going to and coming 
from Italy; during their rule Christianity was introduced early 
in the 3rd century by Felix and Regula, with whom Exuperantius 
was afterwards associated. The district was later occupied by 
the Ammanni, who were conquered by the Franks. 

The name Zurich is possibly derived from the Celtic dur 
(water). It is first mentioned in 807 under the form 
" Turigus," then in 853 a* " Tuiegus." The true Latinized 
form is Turicum, but the false form Tig*nm was given 
currency by Glareanus and held its ground from 1 si a to 1748. 
It is not till the 9th century that we find the beginnings of 
the Teutonic town of Zurich, which arose from the union of 
four elements: (x) the royal house and castle on the Lindenhof, 
with the king's tenants around, (2) the Gross Munster, (3) the 
Frau Munster, (4) the community of " free men " (of Alamannian 
origin) on the Zttrichberg. Similarly we can distinguish four 
stages in the constitutional development of the town: (i.) the 
gradual replacing (c. 1250) of the power of the abbess by that 
(real, though not nominal) of the patricians, (ii.) the admittance 
of the craft gilds (1336) to a share with the patririans in the 
government of the town, (iiL) the granting of equal political 
rights (1831) to the country districts, hitherto ruled as subject 
lands by the burghers, and (iv.) the reception as burghers of 
the numerous, immigrants who had settled in the town (town 
schools opened in i860, full incorporation in 1893). 

The Franlrish kings had special rights over their tenants, were 
the protectors of the two churches, and had jurisdiction over the 
free community. In 870 the sovereign placed his powers over 
all four in the hands of a single official (the Rdchsvogt), and 
the union was still further strengthened by the wall built round 
the four settlements in the xoth century as a safeguard against 
Saracen marauders and feudal barons. The " Rekhsvogtei ". 
passed to the counts of Lenzburg (1063-1x73), and then to the 
dukes of Z&hringen (extinct 12x8). Meanwhile the abbess of 
the Benedictine Frau Munster had been acquiring extensive 
rights and privileges over all the inhabitants, though she never; 
obtained the criminal jurisdiction. The town flourished greatly 
in the nth and 13th centuries, the silk trade being introduced 
from Italy. In x 2x8 the " Rekhsvogtei " passed back into the 
hands of the king, who appointed one of the burghers as his 
deputy, the- town thus becoming a free imperial dty under the 
nominal rule of a distant sovereign. The abbess in 1234 becama 
a princess of the empire, but power rapidly passed bom her 
to the council which she had originally named to look after 
police, &c, but which came to be elected by the burghers, 
though the abbess was still " the lady of Zurich." This council 
(all powerful since 1304) was made up of the representatives of 
certain knightly and rich mercantile families (the " patricians "), 
who excluded the craftsmen from all share in the government, 
though it was to these last that the town was largely indebted 
for its rising wealth and importance. 
_ In October 1291 the town made an alliance with Uri and 



ZURICH 



*°59 



Schwyz, and in 1292 failed in a desperate attempt to seise the 
Habsburg town of Winterthur. After that Zttrich began to 
display strong Austrian leanings, which characterise much of its 
later history.. In 1315 the men of Zttrich fought against the 
Swiss Confederates at Morgarten. The year 1336 marks the 
admission of the craftsmen to a share in the town government, 
which was brought about by Rudolf Brun, a patrician. Under 
the new constitution (the main features of which lasted till 
1708) the little Council was made up of the burgomaster and 
thirteen members from the " Constofd " (which included the 
old patricians and the wealthiest burghers) and the thirteen 
masters of the craft gilds, each of the twenty-six holding office 
for six months. The Great Council of 200 (really 9x2) members 
consisted of the Little Council, plus 78 representatives each of 
the Constofd and of the gilds, besides 3 members named by the 
burgomaster. The office of burgomaster was created and given 
to Brun for life. Out of this change arose a quarrel with one of 
the blanches of the Habsbuxg family, in consequence of which 
Brun was induced to throw in the lot of Zttrich with the Swiss 
Confederation (1st May 1351). The double position of Zurich 
as a free imperial dty and as a member of the Everlasting 
League was soon found to be embarrassing to both parties (see 
Switzerland). In 1373 and again' in 1393 the powers of the 
Constofd were limited and the majority in the executive secured 
to the craftsmen, who could then aspire to the buxgomastership. 
Meanwhile the town had been extending its rule far beyond 
its walls— a process which began in the 14th, and attained its 
height in the 15th' century (1362-1467). This thirst for terri- 
torial aggrandizement brought about the first dvfl war in the 
Confederation (the. w Old Zurich War," 1436-50), in which, 
at the fight of St Jacob on the Sihl (x443>> under the walls of 
Zurich, the men of Zurich were completely beaten and their 
burgomaster Stttssi slain. The purchase of the town of Winter- 
thur from the Habsburgs (1467) marks the culmination of the 
territorial power of the city. It was to the men of Zurich and 
their leader Haas WeJdmann that the victory of Morat (1476) 
was due in the Burgimdian war; and Zurich took a leading 
part in the Italian campaign of 15x2-15, the burgomaster 
Schmid naming the new duke of Milan (15x2). No doubt her 
trade connexions with Italy led her to pursue a southern policy, 
traces of which are seen as early as issi in an attack on the 
Val Leventina add in 1478, when Zurich men were in the van at 
the fight of Giornico, won by -a handful of Con f ederates over 
13,090 Milanese troops, 

In 1400 the town obtained from the Emperor Wenceslaus the 
Rekhavogtei, which carried with it complete immunity from 
the empire and the right of criminal jurisdiction. As early as 
J393 the chief power had practically fallen into the hands of 
the Great Council, and in 1408 this change was formally 
recognised. 

This transfer of all power to the gilds had been one of the 
aims of the burgomaster Hans Waldmann (1483-89), who 
wished to make Zurich a great commercial centre. He also 
introduced many financial and moral reforms, and subordinated 
the interests of the country districts to those of the town. He 
practically .ruled the Confederation, and under him Zttrich 
became the real capital of the League. But such great changes 
excited opposition, and he was overthrown and executed. His 
main ideas were embodied, however, in the constitution of 1408, 
by which the patricians became the first of the gilds, and which 
remained in force till 1798; some special rights were also given 
to the subjects in country districts. It was the prominent part 
taken by Zttrich in adopting and propagating (against the 
strenuous opposition of the Constofd) the principles of the 
Reformation (the Frau Mftnster being suppressed in 1524) which 
finally secured for it the lead in the Confederation (see Swmca- 
kamd and Zwxmcu). 

The environs of Zurich are famous in military history on account 
of the two battles of 1799- In the first battle (4th June) the French 
wader Msssa n s.on the defensive, were attacked by the Austrians 
under the Archduke Charles, Mastena retiring behind the Llmssat 
before the engagement had reached a decisive stage. The second 



and far more important battle took place on the 25th and 26th of 
September. Massena, having forced the passage of the Limmat, 
attacked and totally defeated the Russians and their Austrian 
allies under KorsakoVs command. (See FaxNCB RbvolutioKaxy 
Waks.). 

In the 17 th and 18th centuries a distinct tendency becomes 
observable in the town government to limit power to the actual 
holders. Thus the country districts were consulted for the' 
last time in 1620 and 1640; and a similar breach of the charters' 
of 1480 and 1 53 1 (by which the consent of these districts was' 
required for the conclusion of important alliances, war and 
peace, and might be asked for as to other matters) occasioned 
disturbances in 1777. The council of 200 came to be largely 
chosen by a small committee of the members of the gilds actually 
sitting in the council — by the constitution of 17x3 it consisted 
of 50 members of the Little Council (named for a fixed term by' 
the Great Council), 18 members named by the Constofd, and 
144 selected by the 12 gilds, these 162 (forming the majority) 
being co-opted for life by those members of the two councils who 
belonged to the gild to which the deceased member himself had 
belonged. Early in the 18th century a determined effort was 
made to crush by means of heavy duties the flourishing rival 
silk trade in Winterthur. It was reckoned that about 1650 the 
number of privileged burghers was 0000, while their rule ex- 
tended over 170,000 persons. The first symptoms of active 
discontent appeared later among the dwellers by the lake, who 
founded in x 704 a club at Stlfa and claimed the restoration of 
the liberties of 1489 and 1531, a movement which was put down 
by force of arms in 1795. The old system of government 
perished in Zurich, as elsewhere In Switzerland, in February 
X708, and under the Helvetic constitution the country districts 
obtained political liberty. The cantonal constitution was 
rather complicated, and under it the patrician party obtained a 
small working majority. That constitution was meant to 
favour the town as against the country districts. But under 
the cantonal constitution of 1814 matters were worse still, for 
the town (10,000 inhab.) had 130 representatives in the Great 
Council, whOe the country districts (200,000 inhab.) had only 
82. A great meeting at Uster on the 22nd of November 1830 
demanded that two-thirds of the members in the Great Council 
should be chosen by the country districts; and in 1831 a new 
constitution was drawn up on these fines, the town getting 71 
representatives as against 141 allotted to the country districts, 
though it was not till 1837-38 that the town finally lost the 
last relics of the privileges which it had so long enjoyed as com- 
pared with the country districts. From 1803 to 18x4 Zttrich 
was one of the six " directorial cantons," its chief magistrate 
becoming for a year the chief magistrate of the Confederation, 
while in 1815 it was one of the three cantons, the government of 
which acted for two years as the Federal government when the 
diet was not sitting. In 1833 Zurich tried hard to secure a 
revision of the Federal constitution and a strong central govern- 
ment. The town was the Federal capital for 1830-40, and 
consequently the victory of the Conservative party there in 1839 
(due to indignation at the nomination by the Radical govern- 
ment to a theological chair in the university of D. F. Strauss, 
the author of the famous Life of Jesus) caused a great stir 
throughout Switzerland. But when in 1845 the Radicals re- 
gained power at Zurich, which was again the Federal capital for 
1845-46, that town took the lead in opposing the Sonderbund 
cantons. It of course voted in favour of the Federal con- 
stitutions of 1848 and of 1874, while the cantonal constitution 
of 1869 was remarkably advanced for the time. The enormous 
immigration from the country districts into the town from the 
" thirties " onwards created an industrial class which, though 
" settled " in the town, did not possess the privileges of burgher- 
ship, and consequently bad no share in the municipal govern- 
ment. First of all in i860 the town schools, hitherto open to 
" settlers " only on paying high fees, were made accessible to 
all, next in 1875 ten years' residence ipso facto conferred the 
right of burghership, while in 1893 the eleven outlying districts 
(largely peopled by working folk) were incorporated with the 



io6o 



ZURICH, LAKE OF— ZWEIBRUCKEN 



town proper.' The town and canton continued to be on the 
liberal, or Radical, or even Socialistic side, while from 1848 to 
1007 they claimed 7 of the 37 members of the Federal executive 
or Bundtsral, these 7 having filled the presidential chair of the 
Confederation in twelve years, no canton surpassing this record. 
From 1853 onwards the walls and fortifications of Zurich were 
little by little palled down, thus affording scope for the ex- 
tension and beautification of the town. 

Authorities.—}. Amiet, Die Grundungs-Sage der Sckwesterstddt* 
Salothurn, Zurich, und Trier (Soleure, 1890); F. Becker, Die erste 
Schlachi be* Zurich; Juni, 1799 (Zurich, 1899); J. C. Bluntschli, 
Staah-undReektsgesckichte d. Stadt mud Landschaft ZUrich tend ed., 
Zurich, 1856); A. Burkli-Meyer, Geschickte d. wire*. Seidenin- 
dustrie vom Schlusse d. ixten Jahrkunderts an bis in die neuere 
Zeit (Zurich, 1884) : K. D&ndUker, Hans Waldmann und die ZUrcher 
Revolution von td$Q (Zurich, 1889); E. EgH, Adensammlung s. 
Gesckickle d. ZUrcher Reformation, i$iO-iS33 (Zurich, 189 v ~ * 
Schlachi von Kappd, 751/ (Zurich, 1873) and Zwinglis 



Gesckickle d. ZUrcher Reformation, 1 $10-1533 (Zurich, 1897-99), Die 
Schlachi von Kappd, iui (Zurich, 1873) and Zwinglis Tod nock 
seiner Bedeutung tor Ktrche und Vatertand (Zurich, 1893J; Fest- 



schrift tur Feier Acs soj&hriten Bestehens des eidgendss. Polyteck- 
nkums, 2 vols, (one by W. Oechsli as to the history of the institu- 
tion, and the other by various hands as to the general develop- 
ment of the town) (Frauenfcld, 1905); G. Finsler, Zurich in der 
moeiten HdlfU d. i8ten Jahrkunderts (Zurich, 1884); G. Heer, 
Die ZUrcker-Heiligen, St Felix u. Reiula (Zurich, 1889); Max 
Huber, " Das Staatsrecht d. Republik Zurich vor dem Jahr 1798 " 
(article in vol. L of the Sckweit. Gesckleckterbuck, Basel, 1905); 
W. Meyer, Die moetie Schlachi bei Zurich, Sept. 1709 (Zurich, 1899); 
G. Meyer von Knonau, Der Kanton Zurich (2 vols., St Gall and 
Bern, 1814 and 1846); MiUkeilungcn d. antiquarisck. GeseVUcko.it 
in Zurich (from 1837); E. Muller, Eine reindemokratische Repub- 
lik. Der Kanton Zurich tu Anfang des 20 Jahrkunderts (Zurich, 1908) ; 
R. von Reding- Bibercgg, Der Zug Suworoffs durch die Schwei* 
in 1790 (Stans, 1895) ; K. Ritter, Dte Politik ZUricks in der xweiten 
Hdlfle d. JAten Jahrkunderts (Zurich, 1886); P. Rtttsche, Der 
Kanton Zurick tur Zeis. d. Hdvetik (1708-1803) (Zurich, 1900); 
StadlbUcker, Zuriker (1314-1515), edited by H. Zellcr-Wentaiuller 
and Hans Nabholz. 3 vols. (Leipzig, 1800- 1906): H. Strauli, Die 
Verfassungvon Zurich von 1809 (Winterthur, 1902); J. J. Trcichler, 
PolttischeWandlungen d. Stadt Zurich (Berlin. 1886); Turicensia— 
Beitrdge a. sUrch. Geschickte (Zurich, 1891); Urkundenbuch d. Stadt 
it. Landschaft Zurich, edited by H. Escher and P. Schweiser, in 
course of publication since 1888 (voL vti. readies 1301) — an appen- 
dix is the Siegdbildungen (2 parts, Zurich, 1891-93), edited by 
P. Schweizer and H. Zeller-Werdmuller; S. Vogehn, Das alle 
ZUrick, 2 vols. (Zurich, 1878 and 1890); W. Wettstein, Die Regene- 
ration d. Kant. Zurich (1830-39) (Zarich, 1907); G. H. Wunderii, 
Hans Waldmann und seine Zeit (Zurich, 1889); F. von Wyss, 
" Die Reichsvogtei Zurich " (reprinted in his Abhandlungen zur 
Geschickte d. schweia. dffenUich. Reckts (Zarich, 1892); G. von 
Wyss, " Geschichte d. Abtei Zurich M (in vol. viS. of the Mittkeil. 
d. antie>> GeseUschaft in Zurich, 1851-58), and Zurich am Ausgange 
d. Z3ten JahrkmnderU (Zurich, 1876); Zurcher Taschenbuch (from 
1878). For the present state of the town see Nos. 126-29 of 
Illustrated Europe (Zarich), and Nos. 101-2 of Stddtebilder und 
Landschaften aus otter Welt (Zurich). Many of the recent general 
works on Swiss history, e.g. those of D&ndliker, Oechsli, Orelln 
Schollenberger, Schweizer, Strickler, are by Zurich men and pay 
special attention to Zurich matters. See also Zwincli. 

(W. A. B. C.) 

ZttBJCH, LAKB OF, a. Swiss lake, extending S.E. of the 
town of Zurich. It is formed by the river Linth, which, rising 
in the glaciers of the Todi range in Glarus, was diverted by the 
Escher canal (completed in x8xi) into the WaJensee, whence, by 
means of the Linth canal (completed in 1816), its waters are 
carried to the east end of the lake of Zurich. This river issues 
from the lake at its north-west end, passing through the town 
of Zurich, bat is then called the Limmat. No streams of im- 
portance flow into the lake. Its area is about 34 sq. in., its 
extreme length 95 m., its greatest breadth 2J m., and its greatest 
depth 469 ft., while its surface is 134a ft. above sea-levd. It is 
included, or the greater portion, in the Canton of Zurich, but 
at its east end 8f sq. as. towards the southern shore are in that 
of Schwyx, and 4 sq. m. towards the northern shore in that of 
St Gall. The great dam of masonry, carrying the railway line 
and carriage road from Rapperswil to Pfaffikon, which cuts off 
the extreme eastern part of the lake from the rest, is passed 
only by small boats; steamers (of which the first was placed 
on the lake in 1835) do not go beyond the dam, as the eastern 
portion of the lake is shallow and choked by weeds. West of 
this dam is the small island of Ufenau, where in 1523 Ulrica van 



Hutten took refuge and died. Both shores are well cultivated 
«nd fertile. There are many villas, particularly near Zurich, 
and elsewhere numerous factories in the various flourishing 
villages. Zurich, at the north end of the lake, is the principal 
place on it. On the west shore (which gradually becomes the 
south shore) are Thalwil, Horgen, Wldenswil, Richtersw/il, 
Pfaffikon, and Lachen. On the opposite shore are MeQen (near 
which the first lake dwellings were discovered in 1853-54), Stifa, 
and the quaint town of Rapperswil, the castle of which shelters a 
Polish museum, wherein is the heart of Kosduszko. Schmerikoo 
is dose to the east end of the lake, and a little beyond & the 
more important town of Uznach. (W. A. B. C) 

ZURITA T CASTRO. JER6MIM0 (1512-1580), Spanish his- 
torian, was born at Saragossa, and studied at AlcaUL de Henares 
under the celebrated Hellenist, Hernan Nunez. Through the 
influence of his father, Miguel de Zurita, physician to Charles V., 
he entered the public service as magistrate at Barbastro, and in 
1537 was appointed assistant-secretary of the Inquisition. In 
1548 Zurita was nominated official chronicler of the kingdom of 
Aragon, and in 1566 Philip II. attached him as secretary to 
the council of the Inquisition, delegating to him the conduct of 
all matters sufficiently important to require the king's signature. 
Zurita resigned these posts on the arst of January 1571, obtained 
a sinecure at Saragossa, and dedicated himself wholly to the 
composition of his Ancles de la corona de Aragon, the first part 
of which bad appeared in 1562; he lived to see the last volume 
printed at Saragossa on the 22nd of April 1580, and died on the 
3rd of November following. Zurita's style is somewhat crabbed 
and dry, but his authority is unquestionable; he displayed a 
new conception of an historian's duties, and, not content with the 
ample materials stored in the archives of Aragon, continued his 
researches in the libraries of Rome, Naples and Sicily; he 
fou nded the school of historical scholarship in Spain. 

ZUTPHEN, or Zutven, a town in the province of Gelderland, 
Holland, on the right bank of the Ysel at the influx of the 
Bexkcl, and a junction station 18 m. by rail N.N.E.of Arabem. 
Pop. 19,000. It is a picturesque old town with several brick 
houses of the x6th and 17th centuries. The most important 
building is the Groote Kerk, of St Walpurgis, which dates from 
the 1 2th century and contains monuments of the former counts 
of Zutphen, a 13th-century candelabrum, an elaborate copper 
font (1597), and a fine modern monument to the van Heeckeren 
family. The chapter-house contains a pro-Reformation library 
which includes some valuable MSS. and incunabula. There are 
some remains of the old town walls. The place has an active 
trade, especially in grain and in the timber floated down from 
the Black Forest by the Rhine and the Ysel; the industries 
include tanning, weaving, and oil and paper manufactures. 
Not far from Zutphen on the west at Monnikhuiaen once stood 
the Carthusian convent founded by Reinald III., duke of Gelder- 
land, in 1342 and dissolved in 1572. About 3 m. to the north of 
Zutphen is the agricultural colony of Nederlandsch-Mettray, 
founded by a private benefactor for the education of poor 
friendless boys in 1851, and since that date largely extended. 

In the middle ages Zutphen was the seat of a fine of counts, 
which became extinct in the 12th century. Having been fortified 
the town stood several sieges, specially during the wars of freedom 
waged by the Dutch, the most celebrated fight under its. waUs 
being the one in September 1386 when Sir Philip Sidney was mor- 
tally wounded. Taken by the Spaniards in 1587 Zutphen was 
recovered by Maurice, prince of Orange, in 1591, and except for 
two short periods, one in 167a and the other during the French 
Revolutionary Wars, it has since then remained a part of the United 
Netherlands. Its fortifications were dismantled in 1874. 

ZWEIBRttCKEN, a town of Germany, in the Palatinate, en 
the Schwaixbach, and on the railway between Germersheim and 
Saarbrttcken. Pop. (1005) M,7«- The town was the capital of 
the former duchy of Zwcibrucken, and the Alexander-Kkche 
contains the tombs of the dukes. The ducal castle is now 
occupied by the chief court of the Palatinate. There is a fine 
Gothic Catholic church. Weaving and brewing and the manu- 
facture of machinery, chicory, cigars, malt, boots, fu r ni t ur e 
and soap are the chief industries. 



ZWICKAU— ZWINGLI 



1061 



Zwdbrucken C»w© bridges") *• tke Latin Bipmtimm; it 
appears in early domme nU also aa Ceminus Pens, and was catted 
by the French Dtux-PonU. The independent territory was at 
first a countship, the counts being descended from Henry L. 
youngest son of Simon I., count of SaatbrOcken (d. ic8o)> This 
line became extinct on the death of Count Eberhard (1393), who 
in u*5 had sold half his territory to the count palatine of the 
Rhine, and held the other half as bis feudatory. Louis (d. 1489), 
son of Stephen, count palatine of Zimmera-Vddena, founded 
the line of the dukes of Zweibrucken, which became extinct in 
1731, when the duchy passed to the Birkenfeld branch, whence 
it came under the sway, of Bavaria in 1700. At the peace of 
Luneville Zweibrucken was ceded to France; on its reunion 
with Germany in 18 14 the greater part of the territory was 
given to Bavaria, the remainder to Oldenburg and Prussia. At 
the ducal printing office at Zweibrucken the fine edition of the 
classics known as the Bipontine Editions was published 

d?99 *qq)« 

See Lehman*. Gestkkku des tfcrsogtasst Zweibrilcken (Munich, 
1867). 

ZWICKAU, a town of Germany, in the kingdom of Saxony, 
situated in a pleasant valley at the foot of the £ragebirge, on 
the left bank of the Zwkkauer Mulde, 41 m. S. of Leipzig and 
so m. S.W. of CnemnRx on the main line of railway Dresden- 
Hoi and at the junction of several other lines. Fop. (1834) 
6701; <i38o) 3S.005; (*Soo) 44>to8; (1905) 08,50s. Among 
the nine churches, the fine Gothic church of St Mary (145 r-1536 
and restored 1885-01), with a spire 285 ft. high and a bell 
weighing 5} tons, ia remarkable. The church contains an altar 
with wood-carving and eight pictures by Michael Wohlgemuth 
and a remarkable Pietd in carved and painted wood, probably by 
Veit Stoss. The late Gothic church of St Catharine (sestored 
1803-04) has an altarpiece ascribed to Lucas Cranach the Elder, 
and is memorable for the pastorate (1520-22) of Thomas 
Munaer. Of the secular buildings the most noteworthy are 
the town-hall of 1581, with the municipal archives, including 
documents dating back to the 13th century and an autograph 
MS. of the works of Hans Sachs, and the late Gothic Cemandhau* 
(cloth merchants' hall), built 1522-24 and now in part converted 
into a theatre. The manufactures of Zwickau include spinning 
and weaving, machinery, motor-cars, chemicals, porcelain, paper, 
glass, dyestuffs, wire goods, tinware, stockings, and curtains. 
There are also steam saw-mills, diamond and glass polishing 
works, iron-foundries, and breweries. Though no longer 
relatively so important as when it lay on the chief trade route 
from Saxony to Bohemia and the Danube, Zwickau carries on 
considerable commerce in grain, linen, and coaL The mainstay 
of the industrial prosperity of the town is the adjacent coalfield, 
which in 1008 employed 13,000 hands,* and yields 2} million tons 
of coal annually. The mines are mentioned as early as 1348; 
but they nave only been actively worked since 1823, during 
which time the population has increased more than tenfold. 

Zwickau is of Slavonic origin, and is mentioned in 11x8 as a 
trading place. The name is fancifully derived from the Latin 
cygnem, from a tradition that placed a " swan lake " here which 
bad the property of renewing the youth of those who bathed 
in it- Zwickau was an imperial possession, but was pledged 
to Henry the Illustrious, margrave of Meissen (d. 1288). The 
German king Charles VL conferred it as a fief in 1348 on the 
margraves of Meissen, and it thus passed to their successors 
the electors of Saxony. The discovery of silver in the Schnee* 
berg in 1470 brought it much wealth. The Anabaptist move- 
ment of 1525 began at Zwickau under the inspiration of the 
"Zwickau prophets." Robert Schumann (1810-1856), the 
musical composer, was born here in a house which still stands 
m the market-place. 

See Hemp, Chrxmik dtr Kreitstadt Zwickau (2 vol*., Zwickau, 



1839-45). Cesthkhte des Zwickaner Steinkokieubaues (Dresden, 
1852); Hansen, Das ZmuktuCktmnitatr KikUngtbui (Meis«ca, 
1908). 



ZWUDIHaXK VON SODENHORST. HAMS (1845-1006), 
German historian, was born at Frankfort -on-the- Main on the 



14th of April 1845. He studied at the university of Grata, 
where he became a professor In 1885, and died at Grata on the 
sand of November 1906. 

SOdenhortt's principal writings are DvrfUben im 18 Jakrkunderi 
(Vienna, 1877); Hans Wrick, Furl «m Eggenbert (Vienna, 1880); 
Die PoUtik dtr Republic Vtmedig wdhwend des drmssigjfihrigtn Kritgts 
(Stuttgart, 1882-85); V audit all WeUmackl und Wellsladl (Biele- 
feld, 1899 and 1906): Kriegsbildtr aus dtr Zeit dtr Landskneckte 
(Stuttgart, 1883); Die dfftntlickt Meinung in Deuiscktand im 
Ztilalier Ludmgs XIV. i6$o-i900 (Stuttgart, 1888); Erxkertog 
Jokaun im Feldsuge ws /lop (Grata, 1892); and Maria Tkeresia 
(Bielefeld, 1005). He edited the BiUiotkeh dtuUcker Gesckickit. 
writing for this series, Deutsche GeschichU im ZeitalUr dtr Grundung 
des vreussisektn Konigtums (Stuttgart, 1887-94); and Deutsche 
Gesducklt ton dtr Aufl&sung dts alien bis our GrUndung des 1 



stf II, und Leopold II. (Berlin, 
if t fir aUgemtineUesehichu (Stutt- 



Reickes (Stuttgart, i897-<905)< He completed A. Wolf's OesStt- 

retch unter Maria Tkeresia, Josef II, ' ' "* " 

1882-84). and edited the Zeilsckrij 
gart, 1884-88). 

ZWItfQU, RULDRUCH (1484-15J1), Swiss reformer, was 
born on the 1st of January 1484, at Wildhaus in the Toggenburg 
valley, in the canton of St Gall, Switzerland. He came of a 
free peasant stock, his father being omtmarmot the village; bis 
mother, Margaret Meili, was the sister of the abbot of Fischingen 
in Thurgau. His uncle, Bartholomew Zwingli, afterwards dekan 
or superintendent of" Wrsen, had been elected parish priest of 
Wildhaus. As he was keen at his books and fond of musk be 
was destined for the Church, and when eight years old was sent 
10 school at Wesen, where he lived with his uncle, the dean. 
Two years later be was sent to a school in Basel, where he 
remained throe years, passing thence to the high school at Bern, 
where his master, Heinrkh Woulin, inspired him with an enthusi- 
asm for the classics. After some two years there the boy took up 
his abode in the Dominican monastery. But his father had no 
thoughts of letting him become a monk, and in r 500 he was sent 
to the university of Vienna, where he remained for another 
two years and "included in his studies all that philosophy 
embraces. " He then returned to Basel, where he graduated in 
the university and became a teacher of the classics in the school 
of St Martin's church. 

The circumstances and surroundings of Zwingli's early life 
were thus dissimilar from those of Ms contemporary, Martin 
Luther. Zwingli, moreover, never knew anything of those 
spiritual experiences which drove Luther into a cloister and 
goaded him to a feverish " searching of the Scriptures " m the 
hope of finding spiritual peace. Zwingli was a humanist, a 
type abhorred of Luther; and he was far more ready for the 
polite Erasmian society of Basel than for a monastery. Luther, 
never quite shook off scholasticism, whereas Zwingli had early 
learnt from Dr Thomas Wyttenbach that the time was at hand 
when scholastic theology must give place to the purer and 
more rational theology of the early Fathers and to a fearless 
study of the New Testament. He beard from this same teacher 
bold criticisms of Romish teaching concerning the sacraments, 
monastic vows and papal indulgences, and unconsciously he 
was thus trained for the .great remonstrance of his maturer 
life. 

At the age of twenty-two Zwingli was ordained by the bishop 
of Constance (1506), preached his first sermon at Rapperswyl, 
and said his first mass among his own people at Wildhaus In 
the same year he was elected parish priest of Glarus, in spite of 
the pope's nomination of Heinrkh GoJdti, an influential pluralist 
of Zurich, whom Zwingli found it necessary to buy off at an 
expense of more than a hundred gulden. The Holy See, much 
dependent at that time on its Swiss mercenaries in the pursuit 
of its secular ends, expressed no resentment on this occasion. 
Zwingli indeed seemed still to be devoted to the pope, whom 
he styled " beatissimus Christi vicarius," and he publicly pro- 
claimed the mercenary aid given by the Swiss to the papal cause 
to be its dutiful support of the Holy See. The Curia, following 
its accustomed policy, rewarded bis zeal with a pension of 
50 gulden. 

The ten years which Zwingli spent at Glarus laid the founda- 
tions of his work as a reformer. He there began the study of 



1062 



ZWIKGLI 



Greek that he might " learn the teaching of Christ from the 
original sources," and gave some attention to Hebrew. He read 
also the older Church Fathers and soon won for himself fame as 
a student, whilst his skill in the classics led his friends to hail him 
as " the undoubted Cicero of our age." He had an unbounded 
admiration for Erasmus, with whom he entered into corre- 
spondence, and from whom he received a somewhat chilling 
patronage; whilst the brilliant humanist, Pico dclla Mirandola 
(1463-1494), taught him to criticize, in a rationalizing way, the 
medieval doctrines of Rome. His first publications, which ap- 
peared as rhymed allegories, were political rather than religious, 
being aimed at what he deemed the degrading Swiss practice 
of hiring out mercenaries in the European wars. His. con- 
victions on this matter were so much intensified by his later 
experiences as army chaplain that in 1521 he prevailed upon 
the authorities of the canton of Zurich to renounce the practice 
altogether. Especially did he oppose alliances with France; 
but the French party in dams was strong, and it retaliated so 
fiercely that in 15 16 Zwingli was glad to accept the post of 
people's priest at Einsiedeln. He always in later days dated 
his arrival at evangelical truth from the three years (1516-19) 
which he spent in this place. There he studied the New Testa- 
ment in the editions of Erasmus and began to found his preaching 
on " the Gospel/ 1 which he declared to be simple and easy to 
understand. He held that the Bible was the sufficient revela- 
tion of the will of God, and he threw away the philosophy and 
theology of the later Roman Church, whereas he declared that 
the early Church Fathers were helpful, though stall fallible, 
interpreters of the Word. In his definite recognition of the 
theological place of Scripture he showed, says Dr T. M. Lindsay 
(History of the Reformation), clearer insight than the Lutherans, 
and Zwingli rather than Luther was In this matter Calvin's guide, 
and the guide of the reformed churches of Switzerland, France, 
England and the Netherlands. All these set forth in their 
symbolical books the supreme place of Scripture, accepting 
the position which Zwingli laid down in 1536 in The First 
Helvetic Confession, namely, that" Canonic Scripture, the Word 
of God, given by the Holy Spirit and set forth to the world by 
the Prophets and Apostles, the most perfect and ancient of all 
philosophies, alone contains perfectly all piety and the whole 
rule of life." 

Zwingli began to preach " the Gospel " in 1516, but a con-r 
temporary says that he did it so cunningly (lisliglich) that none 
could suspect his drift. He still, to use his own words, hung his 
new exposition on to " the old doctrines, however much they at 
times pained me, rather than on to the purer and clearer "; 
for he hoped that the reformation of the Church would proceed 
quietly and from within. The papal curia had no wish to 
bring things to a quarrel with him. The Swiss, who furnished 
them with troops, were to be treated with consideration; and 
the pope sought to silence the reformer by offers of promotion, 
which he refused. He held himself, as did the Swiss in general, 
very free of papal control. They had long been used, in their 
orderly democratic life, to manage their own ecclesiastical, 
affairs. Church property paid its share of the communal taxes,' 
and religious houses were subject to civil inspection. Zwingli 
looked rather to the City Fathers than to the pope, and as long 
as he had them with him he moved confidently and laboured 
for reforms which were as much political and moral in character 
as religious. He had none of Luther's distrust of " the common 
man " and fear of popular government, and this fact won for 
his teaching the favour of the towns of South Germany not less 
than of Switzerland. 

As yet he had preached his Gospel without saying much 
about corruptions in the Roman Church, and it was his political 
denunciation of the fratricidal wars into which the pope, not 
less than others, was drawing his fellow-countrymen, that first 
led to rupture with the papal see. Three visits which he had 
paid to Italy in his capacity of army chaplain had done much 
to open his eyes to the worldly character of the papal rule, and 
it was not long before he began to attack at Einsiedeln the 
superstitions which attended the great pilgrimages made to 



that place. Zwingli denounced the publication of plenary 
indulgence to all visitors to the shrine, and his sermons in the 
Swiss vernacular drew great crowds and attracted the attention 
of Rome. His quarrel was turned more immediately against 
the pope himself when in August 15x8 the Franciscan monk 
Bernardin Samson, a pardon-seller like Johann Tetad, made 
his appearance in Switzerland as the papally commissioned 
seller of indulgences. Zwingli prevailed on the council to 
forbid his entrance into Zurich; and even then the pope 
argued that, so long as the preacher was still receiving a 
papal pension, he could not bo a formidable adversary, 
and be gave him a further sop in the form of an acolyte 
chaplaincy. 

Zwingli had never meant to remain at Einsiedeln long, and 
he now threw himself into a- competition for the place of people's 
priest at the Great Minster of giirich, and obtained it (15x8) 
after some opposition. He stipulated that his liberty to preach 
the truth should be respected. In the beginning of 1510 he 
began a series of discourses on St Matthew's Gospel, the Acts 
of the Apostles, and the Pauline epistles; and with these it 
may be said that the Reformation was fairly begun in Zurich- 
He had made a copy of St Paul's epistles and committed them 
to memory, and from this arsenal of Scripture he attacked the 
unrighteousness of the state no less than the superstition of the 
Church. His correspondence of this year shows him jealous 
of the growing influence of Luther. It was his claim that ho 
had discovered the Gospel before ever Luther was heard of in 
Switzerland, and he was as anxious as Erasmus to make it clear 
that he was not Luther's disciple. Towards the end of September 
he fell a victim to the plague which was ravaging the land, and 
his illness sobered his spirit and brought into his message a 
deeper note than that merely moral and common-sense one with 
which, as a polite humanist, he had hitherto been content. He 
began to preach against fasting, saint worship and the celibacy 
of priests; and some of his hearers began to put his teachings 
into practice. The monasteries raised an outcry when people 
were found eating flesh in Lent, and the bishop of Constance 
accused them before the council of Zurich. Zwingli was heard 
in their defence and the accusation was abandoned. His first 
Reformation tract, April 152a, dealt with this subject: " Von 
Erkiesen und Frykcit dor Spysen." The matter of the celibacy 
of the clergy was more serious. Zwingli had joined in an 
address to the bishop of Constance calling on him no longer to 
endure the scandal of harlotry, but to allow the priests to marry 
wives, or, at least, to wink at their marriages. He and Ins 
co-signatories confessed that they had lived unchastety, bat 
argued that priests could not be expected to do otherwise, soring 
that God had not seen fit to give the gift of continence. Pope 
Adrian VI. interfered and asked the Zttrichers to abandon 
Zwingli, but the reformer persuaded the council to allow a 
public disputation (1523), when he produced sixty-seven theses * 
and vindicated his position so strongly that the council do* 
cided to uphold their preacher and to separate the canton from 
the bishopric of Constance. Thus legal sanction was given in 
Zurich to the Reformation. In 1522 Zwingli produced his first 
considerable writing, the Arckiteks, "the beginning and the 
end," in which he sought by a single blow to win his spiritual 
freedom from the control of the bishops, and in a sermon of that 
year he contended that only the Holy Spirit is requisite to make 
the Word intelligible, and that there is no need of Church, 
council, or pope in the matter. 

The progress of the Reformation attracted .the attention of all 
Switzerland, but there was a strong opposition to it, especially in 
the five Forest Cantons: Lucerne, Zug, Schwyz, Uri and Unter* 
walden; and the Zttrichers felt, it necessary to form a league in 
its defence. They were especially anxious to gain Bern, and 
Zwingli challenged the Romanists to a public disputation in 
that city. No less than 350 ecclesiastics came to Bern from 
the various cantons to hear the pleadings, which began on 
the 2nd of January 1523 and lasted nineteen days. Zwingli 

» Cf. P. SchatT. Creeds of the Boontdinl Protestant Cfarcfes, 
p. 197. 



ZWINGLI 



1063 



undertook to defend the following pro- 
position!: — 

(f ) That the Holy Christian Church, of which Christ b the only 
Head, is born of the Word of God, abides therein, and dees not 
listen to the voice of a stranger; (a) that this Church imposes 
no laws on the conscience of people without the sanction of the 
Word of God, and that the laws 01 the Church are binding only in 
so far as they agree with the Word; (3) that Christ alone is our 
righteousness and our salvation, and that to trust to any other 
merit or satisfaction, is to deny Him; (4) that k cannot be proved 
from the Holy Scripture that the- body and blood of Christ are 
corporeally present in the bread and in the wine of the Lord's 
Supper; (5) that the mass, in which Christ is offered to God the 
Father for the sins of the living and of the dead, is contrary to 
Scripture and a grass affront to the sacrifice and death of the 
Saviour; (6) that we should not pray to dead mediators and inter- 
cessors, but to Jesus Christ alone; (7) that there is no trace of 
purgatory in Scripture; (8) that to set up pictures and to adore 
them is also contrary to Scripture, and that images and pictures 
ought to be destroyed where there is danger of giving them adora- 



tion; foj that marriage is lawful to all, to the clergy as well as to 
the laity; (10) that shameful living is more disgraceful among the 
clergy than among the laity. 

The* result of the discussion was that Bern was won over to 
the side of the reformer, who apprehended the whole struggle 
of Protestantism as turning directly on the political decisions 
of the various units of the Confederation. He had enunciated in 
his theses the far-reaching new principle that the congregation, 
and not the hierarchy, was the representative of the Church; 
and he sought henceforward to ieorganize the Swiss constitution 
on the principles of representative democracy so as to reduce 
the wholly disproportionate voting power which, till then, the 
Forest Cantons bid exercised. He argued that the administra- 
tion of the Church belongs, like all administration, to the state 
authorities, and that if these go wrong it then lies with Christian 
people to depose them. 

On the 2nd of April 1524 the marriage of Zwingtt with Anna 
Reinhard was publicly celebrated in the cathedral, though for 
tome two years already he had had her to wife. Many of his 
colleagues followed his example and openly made profession of 
marriage. In the August of that year Zwingli printed a pamphlet 
in which he set forth his views of the Lord's Supper. They 
proved the occasion of a conflict with Luther which was never 
settled, but in the meantime more attention was attracted by 
Zwingli's denunciation of the worship of images and of the 
Roman doctrine of the mass. These points were discussed at a 
fresh congress where about 000 persons were present, and where 
Vadian (Joachim von Watt, the reformer of St Gall) presided. 
It was decided that images are forbidden by Scripture and that 
the mass is not a sacrifice. Shortly afterwards the images were 
Temoved from the churches, and many ceremonies and festivals 
were abolished. When a solemn embassy of rebuke was sent to 
Zurich from a diet held at Lucerne, on the 26th of January 1524, 
the city replied that in matters relating to the Word of God 
and the salvation of souls she would brook no interference. 
When a new embassy threatened Zurich with exclusion from 
the union she began to make preparations for war. 

It was at this moment that the controversy between Luther 
and Zwingli took on a deeper significance. In March 1525 the 
latter brought out his long Commentary on the True and False 
Religion, in which he goes over all the topics of practical 
theology. Like others of the Reformers he had been led inde- 
pendently to preach justification by faith and to declare that 
Jesus Christ was the one and only Mediator between sinful man 
and God; but bis construction rested upon what he regarded as 
biblical conceptions of the nature of God and man rather than 
upon such private personal experiences as those which Luther 
had made basal. In this Commentary there appear the mature 
views of Zwingli on the subject of the Elements of the Lord's 
Supper. He was quite as clear as Luther in repudiating the 
medieval doctrine of transubstantiatkm, but he declined to 
accept Luther's teaching that Christ's words of institution re- 
quired the belief that the real flesh and blood of Christ co-exist 
in and with the natural elements. He declared that Luther 
was in a fog, and that Christ had warned His disciples against 



all such notions, and had proclaimed that by faith alone could 
His presence be received in a feast which He designed to be 
commemorative and symbolical. Efforts to reach agreement 
failed. The landgrave of Hesse brought the two Reformers 
together in vain at Marburg in October 1529, and the whole 
Protestant movement broke into two camps, with the result that 
the attempt made at Schmalkalden in 1530 to form a compre- 
hensive league of defence against all foes of the Reformation 
was frustrated. 

But the dose of Zwingli's life was brought about by trouble 
nearer borne. The long-felt strain between opposing cantons 
led at last to civil war. In Tebruaiy 1551 Zwingli himself urged 
the Evangelical Swiss to attack the Five Cantons, and on the 
roth of October there waa fought at Kappel a battle, disastrous 
to the Protestant cause and fatal to its leader. Zwingli, who as 
chap lsi n was carrying the banner, was struck to the ground, and 
was later despatched in cold blood. His corpse, after suffering 
every indignity, was quartered by the public hangman, and 
burnt with dung by the Romanist soldiers. A great boulder, 
roughly squared, standing a little way off the road, marks the 
place where Zwingli feU. It is inscribed, " ' They may kill the 
body but not the soul ': so spoke on this spot Ulrica Zwingli, 
who for truth and the freedom of the Christian Church died a 
hero'sdeath, Oct. n, 1531." 



the i ... yw - 

disciples. 1 They contain the elements of Reformed as distinguished 
from Lutheran doctrine. As opposed to Luther, Zwingli insisted 
more firmly on the supreme authority of Scripture, and broke 
more thoroughly and radically with the medieval Church. Luther 
was content with changes in one or two fundamental doc tri ne s ; 
Zwingli aimed at a reformation of government and discipline as 
well as of theology. Zwingli never faltered in his trust in the 
people, and was earnest to show that no class of men ought to be 
called spiritual simply because they were selected to perform certain 
functions. He thoroughly believed abo that it was the duty of 
all in authority to rule in Christ's name and to obey His laws. 
He was led from these ideas to think that there should be no 
government in the Church separate from the civil government 
which ruled the commonwealth. All rules and regulations about 
the public worship, doctrines and discipline of the Church were 
made in Zwingli's time, and with his consent, by the council of 
Zurich, which was the supreme civil authority in the state. This 
was the ground of Us quarrel with the Swiss Anabaptists, for the 
main idea in the minds of these greatly maligned men was the 
modern thought of a free Church in a free state. Like all the 
Reformers, he was strictly Augustinian in theology, but he dwelt 
chiefly on the positive side of predestination — the election to salva- 
tion — and he insisted upon the salvation of infants and of the 
pious heathen. His most distinctive doctrine b perhaps his theory 
of the sacrament, which involved him and his followers in a long 
and, on Luther's part, an acrimonious dispute with the German 
Protestants. His main idea was that the sacrament of the Lord's 
Supper was not the repetition of the sacrifice of Christ, but the 
faithful remembrance that that sacrifice had been made once for 
all; and his deeper idea of faith, which included in the act of 
faith a real union and communion of the faithful soul with Christ, 
really preser v ed what was also most valuable in the distinctively 
Lutheran doctrine. His peculiar theological opinions were set aside 
in Swkrcrlsnd for the mmrw! it profounder vicwi of Calvin. The 
pul'liirjsiiuii of the Zurich Cpn«n*u* U>wj*>w tus Trivrinuf) in 1349 
mark* th* Adherence of the S*is* to Calvinfct theology. 

Zwingli** most important writinc* arc— I'tm Ertirsm i*rf Frykrii 
aer Spyir* (April 1522); Dr Canon* Miaa* Etnthirtiis (SerrfeniUr 
1523); Cemmfttlari** it Vera ef Fvha Rtiitionr U&$): Vnm 
font SSSS Wi*4t?tenL und rem KimUrtovJ (rsss): £'* *^« 
Unifrrithitnti rom Naihtmal Chrisji (tuo): &c PnmJmiia Dti 
(1530); And Christiana* Fidti Expatiti* ( 1 53 1 >. For a full bildio- 
graph V **e G. Finslcr, Zmntfi+RiUiettaphie (ZOrich, 1*V7>* 

Wetki.— Collected edition*, 4 voU, (Zurich > i545> (581); by 
M\ Schuler and J oh. Scluikheas. 8 volt, jZflrich, Jfi3«-43, *ith 
" supplement arum faaocolu*/' jflSi); by £. Egli and G. Finder 
in " Cofpu* Rrf anna Forum " (Berlin, 1905 wwj.j. 

iwi-O, Mytoniu* 0&3?); H* Bullinm-'* Reformations- 

Stkitmtt fed. Hotlinper and VoceU. I838); J. M. Sthutei {t&iF) ; R. 
irtlWsfil {1857, En*, tr. hy J. Cochrafi, Edinburgh* 1**8); J. c - 
Moriko(er + ? vols. (Lei prig, 1 £67^60}; R, Stindin, a voTv (Ba.'eL 
1893^7): S. rVL jAckwit in Hrroti of ike Reformation J^** 
nd London. f>oi)j Prof. L^li'i artirln to Hauek-HertosV 
.' ' «,' > f i ' " '■■ ' ' \ I Z« iufi - >, 



Yofl 

Re 



1 p. Schaff. Creeds a/ the E wtmp iirmi JVaSnswa* Cnmxkes, sv ail. 



1064 



ZWOLLE— ZYMOTIC DISEASES 



published twice a year si nee 1897 at Zurich. S. M. Jackson's 
book give* a chapter on Zwingli's Theology by Prof. F. H. Foster, 
and full details of further information on the subject, together 
with a list of modern English translations of Zwingli's works. 

(E. A*,*) 

ZWOLLE, the capital of the piovince of Overysel, Holland, 
on the Zwarte Water, and a junction station 24} m. N.E. of 
Harderwyk. Pop. (1005) 33,773. I* is the centre of the whole 
northern and eastern canal systems, and by means of the short 
canal, the Willcmsvaart, which joins the Zwarte Water and the 
Ysel, has regular steamboat communication with Kampen and 
Amsterdam. The Oroote Kerk, of St Michael (first half of the 
15th century) occupies the site of an earlier church of which an 
interesting 11th-century bas-relief remains. The church con- 
tains a richly carved pulpit, the work of Adam Straes van 
Weilborch about 1620, and there is besides some good carving 
and a fine organ (1721). The Roman Catholic church, also 
dedicated to St Michael, dates from the end of the 14th century. 
The modernized town hall was originally built in 1448. Mention 
should also be made of the Sassen Poort, one of the old dty 
gates; a gild*house (1571); the provincial government offices, 
containing the archives; and a museum of antiquities and 
natural history. Three miles from Zwolle, on a slight eminence 



called the Affuetenbefg, or hill of St Agnes, once stood the 

Augustinian convent in which Thomas a Kempis spent the 
greatest part of his life and died in 147 x. Zwolle has a consider- 
able trade by river, a large fish market, and the most impor- 
tant cattle market hi Holland after Rotterdam. The more 
important industries comprise cotton manufactures, iron works, 
boat-building, dyeing and bleaching, tanning, rope-making 
and salt-making. 

ZYMOTIC DISEASES (Gr. £6/117, ferment), a term in medicine, 
formerly applied to the class of acute infectious maladies. As 
originally employed by Dr W. Farr, of the British Registrar- 
General's department, the term included the diseases which were 
"epidemic, endemic and contagious/' and were regarded as 
owing their origin to the presence of a morbific. principle in the 
system, acting in a manner analogous to, although not identical 
with, the process of fermentation, A large number of diseases 
were accordingly included under this designation. The term, 
however, came to be restricted in medical nomenclature to the 
chief fevers and contagious diseases (e.g. typhus and typhoid 
fevers, smallpox, scarlet fever, measles, erysipelas, cholera, 
whooping-cough, diphtheria, &c). The science of bacteriology 
has displaced the old fermentation theory, and the term has 
practically dropped out of use. 



END OF TWENTY-EIGHTH 



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