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Notice of the Admirable Crichton; published at Venice in 1580.
The Microscope. No. I.-Letters.

Anecdotes of Alexander Selkirk, the original of Robinson Crusoe.
Journal of a Visit to Holland and Flanders in 1817. Letter III.

Letters from England. No. I.

Mode of Living among Scottish Farmers during the early part of last
Century.

On the Poor Laws of England.

Ferther Notice of a huge Unknown Animal in North America.

On the Ignorance of the Learned.

Notice of M. Biot's Scientific Tour to London, Edinburgh, and the
Shetland Islands.

Moorish Letters. No. I.

REVIEW OF NEW PUBLICATIONS.

Phillips's Recollections of Curran, &c.

Leslie's Philosophy of Arithmetic.

ORIGINAL POETRY.

The Morn of Spring.-The Infant's Tomb.-Stanzas.-Ode to Silence.
-Hebrew Melody.-Sonnets, &c.

LITERARY AND SCIENTIFIC INTELLIGENCE.

Mr Aiken's new mode of curing Fish, and other Provisions.-Attempts to penetrate into the Interior of Africa.-Mr Belzoni's Researches in Egypt. Table of the average Heat in Great Britain, from 1774, to 1817.-Locusts in India, &c. &c.

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Appointments and Promotions,-Civil, Ecclesiastical, Military, and

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EDINBURGH GAZETTEER.

THE

Edinburgh Gazetteer,

OR,

GEOGRAPHICAL DICTIONARY:

COMPRISING A COMPLETE BODY OF

GEOGRAPHY,

Physical, Political, Statistical, and Commercial.

ACCOMPANIED BY AN ATLAS,

CONSTRUCTED BY

A. ARROWSMITH,

HYDROGRAPHER TO THE PRINCE REGENT.

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Ir is intended that this Work shall comprehend a complete body of Geography, in all its branches, under the form generally acknowledged to be the most convenient for a science composed of such diversified materials, that of a GEOGRAPHICAL DICTIONARY, or Gazetteer.

The Work will be dedicated (by permission) to the Right Honourable Sir JOSEPH BANKS, President of the Royal Society, and will be executed by six different Authors of literary eminence, each taking a separate department: That which treats of the Geography of Foreign Europe will be compiled by a gentleman residing on the Continent, where he has the best opportu nities of accurate and complete information.

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By this arrangement it may be expected, that the Work will be so constructed as to answer every purpose of information and reference to the Scientific, the Political, and especially to the Commercial World. The subject, at all times universally interesting, is at the present time peculiarly important, as the channels of Commerce are again open to British enterprize throughout the world, and new divisions of territory have changed entirely the Political Geography of Europe.

The advantages afforded to the Public by such an undertaking must be obvious to every one; particularly to those who are acquainted with the defects of most geographical works hitherto published, in which, commonly, a single individual has, with inperfect means, aimed at performing what, it is apprehended, can only be satisfactorily executed by the combined labours of an association of scientific and literary men.

The physical structure and the grand natural features of our globe, with the various dependent phenomena, will be illustrated with a copiousness and precision as yet unattempted; the position and elevation of every important spot on its surface will be fixed with accuracy; the extent, productions, manners, customs, commerce, and, in short, every thing interesting relative to the various countries into which it is divided, will be amply detailed, from an investigation of all the most original and authentic sources of information in the different languages of Europe. Every City, Town, and even Village of any consequence, will be described; and, under this head, the Editors hope to introduce a great variety of important matter, which has not yet appeared in any similar publication, and has never before been united in one work. Indeed, throughout every department, the greatest pains will be taken to render this publication of the utmost utility, and worthy of general patronage.

In the conclusion there will be given a general view of Astronomical Geography, and the construction and use of Maps; also, Tables of Coins, Weights, and Measures of different Countries; the Geographical Position of Places, the Temperatures of Climates, the Heights of Mountains, and whatever else can render the Work a complete body of Geographical Science.

To render the GAZETTEER complete, it will be accompanied by an elegant Atlas, consisting of Fifty-three Maps, Royal Quarto, engraved in the best style, from a series of Drawings made on purpose, by Mr Arrowsmith. In order to accommo

Profes of tha

EDINBURGH GAZETTEER

date purchasers who already possess Collections of Maps, the Gazetteer and the Atlas will be sold separately.

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CONDITIONS.

I. The Work will extend to Six Volumes octavo, elegantly printed. Each Volume to consist of fifty sheets, or eight hundred pages letter-press.

11. The Price of each Volume will be Eighteen Shillings in boards; and, in order to suit every class of purchasers, the Work will come out periodically, in Parts or Half-Volumes, price Nine Shillings each.

III. The First Part of Volume Second was this day published; and a Part, or Half-Volume, will appear regularly on the first day of each succeeding three months.

IV. The Atlas, consisting of fifty-three Maps, engraved in the first style of the art, price L.1, 16s. half-bound. Coloured Copies L.2, 12s. 6d. half-bound.

ARROWSMITH'S ATLAS.

A NEW GENERAL ATLAS,

Constructed from the latest Authorities,

By A. ARROWSMITH,

HYDROGRAPHER TO THE PRINCE REGENT.

Exhibiting not only the Boundaries and Divisions, but also the Chains of Mountains and other Geographical Features of all the known Countries in the World; comprehended in 53 Maps, from original Drawings, engraved in the best style of the art by SIDNEY HALL; this day was published, in royal 4to, L.1, 16s. neatly half-bound. Coloured Copies L.2, 12s. 6d.

The Publishers beg respectfully to call the attention of the Public to this Atlas, constructed by the most eminent Geographer of the present day, and which they trust, for accuracy, beauty of execution, and moderation of price, will be found worthy of attention.

SUPPLEMENT

TO THE

Encyclopaedia Britannica,

VOLUME III. PART I.

Price L.1, 5s. boards,

ILLUSTRATED WITH NUMEROUS ENGRAVINGS, BY MILTON, TURREL, AND OTHER ARTISTS.

EDITED BY

MACVEY NAPIER, Esq. F.R.S. L. & E.

THIS PART is enriched with a Preliminary Dissertation on the History of Chemical Science, from the earliest ages to the present time, by Mr BRANDE, Professor of Chemistry in the Royal Institution of London; and with Contributions by JOHN BARROW, Esq. Professor LESLIE, JAMES MILL, Esq. WALTER SCOTT, Esq. and other well-known Writers.

Besides the Preliminary Dissertation, it contains the following, among a variety of shorter Articles in Science and Miscellaneous Literature, viz. CHEMISTRY, CHINA, CHIVALRY, CHRO MATICS, CLIMATE, COHESION, COINING, COLD, COLONY, COMMERCE, CONCHOLOGY, CONGELATION.

The Plan of this SUPPLEMENT, which will be completed, it is hoped, in Five, at the very utmost in Six Volumes, is such as to render it not only a valuable companion to the various Editions of the Encyclopædia Britannica, but of extensive utility as a separate work; being calculated of itself to furnish a View of the Progress and Present State of all the most important departments of human knowledge.

The first half of the first volume is prefaced with a Dissertation on the History of the Moral and Political Sciences, by Mr DUGALD STEWART; and to the first half of the second volume there is prefixed a similar Dissertation, on the History of the Mathematical and Physical Sciences, by Mr Professor PLAYFAIR.

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