Oldalképek
PDF
ePub

CONCORDANCE, verbal index, VI. 240; |
of the Bible, by Calasio, IV. 653; by
Cruden, VI. 621.
CONCORDAT, papal agreement, VI. 241;
XXIII. 531; Austrian, abolished, III.
141; with Napoleon, XVII. 205; of
Worms (1122), XIX. 500.
CONCORDIA, Roman goddess, VI. 243.
Lombard league, XIII. 473.
town, Italy, VI. 243.

town, Namaqualand, Africa, XVII.
168.
CONCORDS, Musical, XVII. 82.
CONCRETE, substitute for stone, VI. 243;
in building, IV. 453, 456; Roman, XX.
808.

CONCUBINAGE, VI. 243; XV. 569.
COND, Irish king, XIII. 245.
CONDAMINE, Charles Marie de la,
French geographer and mathematician,
XIV. 193; his South-American ex-
plorations, X. 189; measuring arc of
meridian, VII. 598.
CONDATE (Libourne), ancient town,
France, XIV. 509.

(Rennes), ancient town, France, XX. 401.

CONDÉ, town, France, VI. 244.

Princes of, France, VI. 244.
Louis, Prince of (Condé the Great),
VI. 245; IX. 571; his relations with
Turenne, XXIII. 626.

[ocr errors][merged small][merged small]

CONDOTTIERI, Italian mercenary troops, | CONGO, country, West Africa, VI. 266.
VI. 256; XIII. 477.

CONDUCTION, Electric, VIII. 4, 41, 106.
Electrolytic, VII. 219; VIII. 106.
OF HEAT, XI. 577; XX. 212.
CONDUCTIVITY, Electric, VIII. 52.
Thermal, XI. 578, 586.

BOXES, Electric, VIII. 45.
CONDUCTOR, Lightning, XIV. 633.
CONDUIT, in water-works, XXIV. 408.
CONDURRITE, mineral, XVI. 393.
CONDYLOPODA, or Arthropoda, II. 271,
647.

CONE, in geometry, VI. 282; X. 417;
XXII. 668; mensuration of, XVI. 25.

On the Section of the, Serenus's
work, XXI. 675.
CONECTE, Thomas, French monk and
preacher, VI. 256.

CONEGLIANO, town, Italy, VI. 256.
CONEN DE PRÉPÉAN, French steno-
grapher, XXI. 841.

CONEPATL, skunk of Central America,
XXII. 126.

CONEY, islet, Sligo, Ireland, XXII. 159.

ISLAND, village, Long Island, New
York, U.S.A., XIV. 866.
CONFARREATIO, form of Roman mar-
riage, VI. 256; xx. 671.
CONFECTIONERY, VI. 256.
CONFEDERATE STATES, of America,
XXIII. 773.

CONFEDERATION, German, III. 135; X.

505.

Louis Henry Joseph, duke of OF THE RHINE, III. 133; VIII. 363;
Bourbon, VI. 248.
XVII. 210; its dissolution, XVII. 220.
CONDE, José Antonio, Spanish Orien- CONFEDERATIONS, Political, IX. 62.
talist, VI. 248.

[blocks in formation]

Steam-engine, XXII. 513, 518. CONDER, Josiah, English writer, VI. 249. CONDESCENDENCE, in Scots law, XIX.

220.

CONDE-SUR-NOIREAU, town, France,

VI. 244.

CONDICTION, in Roman law, xx. 683. CONDILLAC, Étienne Bonnot de, French philosopher, VI. 249; IX. 669; on the association of ideas, II. 732; his logic, XIV. 794; on logical analysis, I. 797. CONDITIONED, Hamilton's philosophy of the, XI. 418.

CONDIVICENUM (Nantes), ancient town,

France, XVII. 173.

CONDOLMIERI, Gabriel (Pope Eugenius
IV.), VIII. 663.

CONDOM, town, France, VI. 253.

CONFERENCE, in diplomacy, VI. 269.
CONFESSIO, in early Christian archi-
tecture, VI. 667; XX. 834.
CONFESSION, of sin, VI. 257; its place
in the Eastern, Latin, and Lutheran
Churches, XVIII. 487.
CONFESSIONAL, VI. 258.

or Zaire, river, Africa, XXIV. 763; I. 254; exploration of, X. 192. FREE STATE, Central Africa, XXII. 144; XXIV. 765.

LANGUAGES, group of Bantu dialects, XXIV. 828.

CONGOU TEA, XXIII. 99.

CONGREGATIO DE PROPAGANDA FIDE,
XVI. 514.

CONGREGATION, Christian, early organi-
zation of, XIX. 675.

347.

Lords of the, Scotland, XXI. 501.
University, XXIII. 835.

OF THE ORATORY, Rome, XVII.

CONGREGATIONALISTS, religious de-
nomination, vi. 268; XII. 722;
American, in relation to Unitarianism,
XXIII. 726.
CONGREGATIONS, administrative bur-
eaus of Roman Catholic Church, XX.
629.
CONGRESS, in diplomacy, VI. 269; of
Münster or Westphalia (1643-1648),
III. 268; of Vienna (1815), III. 135,
270.

[ocr errors]

of the United States, its constitution, XXIII. 749; first meeting of, XVIII. 741.

American Continental, XXIII. 737, 740, 743.

CONGREVE, Sir William, inventor of
the rocket, VI. 272.

William, English dramatist, VI.
271; VII. 436; VIII. 424.
CONGRUENCE, in geometry, XXII. 670.
CONI, town, Italy, VI. 272.
CONIC SECTIONS, or Conics, VI. 273; X.
395; projection of, XIX. 798.
CONIDIA, reproductive organs in plants,
IX. 829; XX. 424:

CONIFERÆ, order of trees, II. 315, 321;
IX. 222; XIX. 102; XXIV. 131.

CONFESSION OF FAITH, Westminster, CONINE, vegetable alkaloid, XI. 647.

VI. 558; XXI. 503.

CONFESSIONS, Rousseau's, XXI. 16.
OF AN ENGLISH OPIUM-EATER,
De Quincey's work, VII. 102.

OF FAITH, or Creeds, vi. 558.
CONFESSOR, VI. 258.
CONFIRMATION, ecclesiastical rite, VI.
258.

CONFLAGRATIONS, IX. 233.

CONFLANS, France, Treaty of (1465), IX.
552.

CONFUCIUS, Chinese sage, VI. 258; his
doctrines, v. 662, 671; xx. 363; his
relation to Mencius, XVI. 3; temple of,
at Shanghai, II. 448.

CONGÉ D'ÉLIRE, mandate for election
of a bishop, VI. 265.

CONDOR, bird, VI. 253; XXIV. 302; in CONGER-EEL, fish, VII. 693.
Chili, v. 623.

CONDORCET, Marquis de, French philo

sopher and politician, VI. 254; IX. 667. CONDORE, India, Battle of, vI. II.

CONGLETON, town, England, vi. 265.
Lord, chancellor of Irish ex-
chequer, VI. 265.
CONGLOMERATE, rock, X. 237.

CONINGTON, John, English scholar, vi. 284.

CONISBROUGH CASTLE, Yorkshire,

England, XXIV. 749.

CONISTON OLD MAN, mountain, England, XIV. 252.

CONIUM, genus of plants, XI. 646; XVII.
232.

CONJEVERAM, town, India, vi. 285.
CONJUNCTIONS, in grammar, XI. 41.
CONJUNCTIVITIS, eye disease, XVII. 780.
CONJURING, by tricks and illusions, XIV.
414; XV. 207.
CONNAUGHT, province, Ireland, VI. 285;
area and population of, XIII. 215; first
mention of, XIII. 246.
CONNECTICUT, State, U.S.A., vi. 285;
XXIII. 748; population, XXIII. 802;
original colony of, XXIII. 730, 731.
CONNELLITE, mineral, XVI. 385.
CONNEMARA, district, Ireland, VI. 289;
X. 55.

CONNOR, Bernard, English physiologist,

VI. 289.

CONNUBIUM, or Conubium, form of Roman marriage, xv. 568; xx. 671. CONOIDS, Archimedes on, II. 380.

CONSERVATOIRE DES ARTS ET DES MÉTIERS, Paris, XVIII. 281. CONSERVATORY, Garden, XII. 222.

or Conservatoire, Musical, vI. 291; XVII. 83.

CONOLLY, John, English physician, VI. CONSIDERATION, in legal contracts, VI.

[blocks in formation]

in Rome, XX. 790.

III., emperor, X. 489.

IV., emperor, X. 492.

of Montferrat, crusader, XX. 540; XXIII. 161.

of Würzburg, German poet, X. 524. CONRADIN, king of Sicily, vI. 289; XXII.

27. CONRART, Valentin, first secretary of the French Academy, VI. 290. CONSALVI, Ercole, Italian cardinal and statesman, VI. 290. CONSANGUINITY, or Kindred, VI. 291; systems of reckoning it, IX. 22; closeness of, in relation to deaf-muteism, VII. 4. CONSCIENCE, or Moral Sense, Butler's doctrine of, IV. 587; Hutcheson's, XII. 409; Shaftesbury's, XXI. 733. See also article Ethics.

Hendrik, Flemish writer, XII. 98. CONSCIENTIOUSNESS, in phrenology, XVIII. 845. CONSCIOUSNESS, in metaphysics, XVI. 92; states of, XX. 38; physiology of, XIX. 20, 41; Christian, VII. 336; Cousins's theory of, VI. 525; Descartes's, V. 142; Hamilton's, XI. 417; Locke's, XIV. 758. CONSCRIPTION, Military, II. 565, 566; its effect on emigration, VIII. 175. CONSECRATION, VI. 291. CONSEIL DE PRUD'HOMMES, tribunal of employers and employed, XIV. 173; at Paris, XVIII. 286.

322.

CONSISTOIRE, French

court, XIX. 693.

Presbyterian

of

CONSISTORIAL CONGREGATION,

Church of Rome, XX. 629. CONSISTORIAUX, section of French Presbyterians, XIX. 694. CONSISTORY, ecclesiastical council, VI. 292.

COURT, Canterbury, II. 370. CONSIVA, or Ops, Roman goddess, XXI. 321.

CONSOLATION OF PHILOSOPHY, Boetius's work, III. 857.

CONSOLATIONS AGAINST THE FEAR OF
DEATH, Drelincourt's work, VII. 468.
CONSOLE, in architecture, II. 462.
CONSOLIDATION ACTS, English, VI. 292.
CONSOLS, British Government annuities,
VI. 293; XVII. 245.
CONSONANCE, Musical, XVII. 105.
CONSONANTS, Pronunciation of, XXII.
385.

CONSPIRACY, in law, VI. 293; in relation to trade unions, XXIII. 500. CONSTABLE, officer of the peace, VI.

294.

emperor, VI. 301; his encouragement of literature, IV. 613; XI. 145. CONSTANTINE XIII. (Palæologus), Byzantine emperor, XVIII. 166.

-, emperor of Gaul, Spain, and Britain, VI. 301.

I-II., kings of Scotland, XXI. 478. missionary to the Slavs, XVI. 194.

-, bishop of Harran, Syriac writer, XXII. 841.

826.

Basilica of, at Rome, III. 414; XX.

BRANCOVAN, Voivode of Walachia, XXI. 17.

PAVLOVICH, Russian prince, VI. 302; XVII. 485.

SYLVANUS, founder of the Paulicians, XVIII. 433. CONSTANTINOPLE, capital of Turkey, VI. 302; founding of, XI. III; XX. 778; council of (381), XXIII. 259; repulse of Moslems at (717), XVI. 574; taken by the Crusaders (1204), VI. 629, 803; by the Turks (1453), XVII. 484; XXIII. 642; Renaissance dates from its capture, XX. 381; aqueducts, II. 221; cemeteries, V. 331; ancient libraries, XIV. 512; newspapers, XVII. 432; plague in, XIX. 166; its suburb, Scutari, XXI. 573.

[merged small][merged small][ocr errors][merged small]
[blocks in formation]

Henry, English poet, VI. 295. John, English painter, VI. 296. CONSTABULARY, police force, XIX. 332; in Ireland, XIII. 239. CONSTANCE, town, Baden, Germany, VI. 297; congress of Old Catholics at (1873), XVII. 755; council of (1414-18), X. 550; XII. 405; XIII. 712; XIX. 502; XX. 320, 805; peace of (1183), XIII. 474.

Lake of, Switzerland, VI. 297; XIV. 217; XX. 519; XXII. 776.

of Aquitaine, wife of Robert I. of France, IX. 536.

CONSTANT DE REBECQUE, Henri Benjamin, French philosopher and economist, VI. 297; IX. 673; XVIII. 223; XXII. 799; on the philosophy of caste, V. 187, 189.

CONSTANTIANA (Kustendje), ancient town, Roumania, XIV. 162. CONSTANTINA, town, Spain, XXI. 708.

CONSENSUS SANDOMIRIENSIS, church CONSTANTINE, town, Algeria, vI. 298.

congress (1570), XXI. 259.

CONSERVATION OF ENERGY, VIII. 208; XVIII. 553.

CONSERVATISM, as influenced by the

Renaissance, XX. 394. CONSERVATIVE PARTY, British, XXIV. 540.

I., the Great, Roman emperor, VI. 298; XI. 110; XX. 778; cross in the sky, seen by, XI. 399.

V. (Copronymus), Byzantine emperor, XII. 713.

VI., Byzantine emperor, XIII. 274.
VII. (Porphyrogenitus), Byzantine

CONSTANTIUS I., Flavius Valerius, Roman emperor, VI. 309; XX. 777; in Scotland, XXI. 472.

II., Flavius Julius, Roman emperor, XIII. 768; XX. 778.

CONSTANTS, Mathematical, Tables of, XXIII. 13.

Tidal, XXIII. 366.

CONSTELLATIONS, groups of stars, II. 816; XXIV. 791.

CONSTITUENT ASSEMBLY, of France, IX. 598.

CONSTITUTION, and Constitutional Law, VI. 309.

CONSTITUTIONAL HISTORY OF ENG-
LAND, Hallam's, XI. 393.
CONSTITUTIONALISM, Metternich's op-
position to, XVI. 201.
CONSTITUTIONNEL, Le, Paris news-
paper, XVII. 426.
CONSTITUTION OF BODIES, VI. 310.
CONSTITUTION OF ENGLAND, De-
lolme's work, VII. 51.

CONSTITUTION OF MAN, Combe's work,
VI. 180.
CONSTITUTIONS, Apostolic,
Christian work, II. 195, 196.

early

of Justinian, XIII. 793; XX. 712. OF CLARENDON, VIII. 372. CONSTRAINT, in mechanics, xv. 678. CONSTRUCTION, Principles of, in building, IV. 447.

CONSTRUCTIVENESS, in phrenology, | CONTRAST, in mental association, II.

XVIII. 845. CONSUBSTANTIATION,

Eucharistical doctrine, VIII. 653; XV. 85; taught by Occam, XVII. 718. CONSUEGRA, town, Spain, vi. 313. CONSUETUDE, in Roman law, xx. 698. CONSUL, commercial and legal officer in foreign country, VI. 315; British, precedence of, XIX. 667.

Roman magistrate, VI. 313; XX. 735, 738, 771, 785; in the provinces, XIX. 885. CONSULATE, French, IX. 612; XVII. 203.

OF THE SEA, Book of the, VI. 317; XXI. 584. CONSULS, The Three, in France (1799–1800), IX. 612; XVII. 203. CONSUMPTION, pulmonary disease, XVIII. 405, 855. CONTADES, Louis G. É., French marshal, IX. 589.

in

CONTAGION, or Infectiveness, pathology, XVIII. 401; in case of the plague, XIX. 161. CONTAGIOUS DISEASES

(ANIMALS)

ACTS, British, XX. 158. CONTANGO, stock exchange term, I. 92; XXII. 557.

CONTARINI, Ambrogio, Venetian envoy to Persia, XVIII. 633.

Andrea, doge of Venice, XXIV. 144. CONTÉ, Nicolas Jacques, French pencilmaker, XVIII. 490. CONTEMPT OF COURT, offence, VI. 318. CONTES, La Fontaine's, XIV. 205.

DROLATIQUES, Balzac's, III. 305. CONTI, Prince of (Armand de Bourbon), VI. 319.

-, Gregorio (Victor IV., antipope), XXIV. 213.

733.

CONTRASTO, love-song, by Ciullo
d'Alcamo, XIII. 499.
CONTREXÉVILLE, spa, France, XVI. 433.
CONTRIBUTORY NEGLIGENCE, in law,
XVII. 316; XXIII. 455.
CONTROL DEPARTMENT, British army,
II. 581.

CONTUBERNIUM, in Roman marriage
law, xv. 568.

CONTUCCI, Andrea, Florentine sculptor,
XXI. 295.

CONTUSION, in surgery, XXII. 681, 686.
CONUBIUM, form of Roman marriage,
XV. 568; XX. 671.
CONUNDRUM, interrogative pun, XX.
549.

CONURUS, genus of birds, XVIII. 322.
CONVECTION, mode of transference of
heat, XX. 212.
CONVENT, or Conventual Establish-
ment, I. 10; XVI. 700; Lamaist, in
Tibet, XIV. 499.
CONVENTICLE ACT, of 1664, in England,
VIII. 348; XIX. 690; of 1670, XIX.
690; XX. 149.
CONVENTION, French National (1792),
IX. 604.

International, defined, XXIII. 530.
OF PHILADELPHIA (1787), XXIII.

748.
CONVENTUALS, order of monks, IX. 699.
CONVERSANO, town, Italy, VI. 324.
CONVERSATIONS-LEXICON, of Brock-
haus, VIII. 203.
CONVERSION AND TROVER, in law,
XXIII. 589.

CONVEYANCING, in law, VI. 324. CONVICTS, Treatment of, XIX. 747; on ticket of leave, VI. 590; agitation against, in Cape Colony, V. 45.

Lothario (Pope Innocent III.), CONVITO, Dante's work, VI. 814; XIII.

[blocks in formation]

Nicolo, Italian traveller, X. 179. CONTIGUITY, in mental association, II.

733.

CONTINENTAL CONGRESS, of American colonies, XXIII. 737, 740, 743. CONTINENTAL SYSTEM, of Napoleon,

XVII. 212.

CONTINUITY, Temporal, in psychology,

XX. 56.

CONTOURS, in mapping, X. 210; XXII.

709, 711.

CONTRABAND, VI. 320; XXII. 185. CONTRABASSOON, musical instrument, XVII. 707.

CONTRACT, in law, VI. 322; XXI. 205; under Brehon law, IV. 253; in Roman law, XX. 675, 677, 692, 699; freedom of, economic aspects of, XIX. 360; of partnership, XVIII. 330.

dialogue, XV. 44.

discoveries in Australasia, III. 104; his Arctic and Antarctic explorations, XIX. 319, 329; his exploration of New Zealand, XVII. 471; of Tahiti, XXIII.

24.

COOK, Prof., meteorological spectroscopist, XX. 256.

Mount, New Zealand, XVII. 466. COOKE, Thomas, telescope-maker, XXIII. 149; his micrometers, XVI. 244.

—, Sir W. F., his contributions to telegraphy, XXIII. 113. COOKERY, VI. 331.

COOKING STOVES, XXII. 579.
COOK'S ISLANDS, or Harvey Archi-
pelago, South Pacific, VI. 331.
COOKSTOWN, town, Ireland, XXIII. 713.
COOK STRAIT, New Zealand, xvii. 467.
COOKTOWN, town, Queensland, XX. 172.
COOKWORTHY, William, English potter,
XIX. 642.

COOLIE, or Cooly, Asiatic labourer, VI. 333; coolie emigration, VIII. 175. COOLING, Newton's law of, XX. 129. COOLY (Coolie), Asiatic labourer, VI. 332; VIII. 175.

COOMASSIE, capital of Ashantee, West
Africa, VI. 336; II. 681.
COOMPTAH, or Kumpta, town, India,
XIV. 155.
COOPER, Abraham, English painter, VI.
336.

Anthony Ashley, three earls of
Shaftesbury, XXI. 727, 731, 734.
Sir Astley Paston, English surgeon,
VI. 336.

[ocr errors]

Charles Henry, English historiographer, VI. 337.

James Fenimore, American novelist, VI. 337; I. 725.

John, English musician, XVII. 87. COOPERAGE, handicraft, VI. 338. CO-OPERATION, VI. 338, 218; XIV. 321; productive and distributive, XXII. 210; agricultural, its results, I. 416; Fourier's system, IX. 489.

XXI. 84.

CONVOCATION, of Church of England, CO-OPERATIVE SOCIETIES, in Russia,
VI. 325; VIII. 380.
CONVOLVULIN, vegetable resin, XIII.
547.

COOPER INSTITUTE, New York, XVII. 466.

CONVOLVULUS BATATAS, vegetable, COOPER'S HILL, Denham's poem, VII. 79.

XIX. 596; XXIV. 727. CONVULSIONS, in pathology, XVIII. 391. CONWAY, town, Wales, VI. 330; river, V. 119.

Lady, friend of Henry More, XVI. 815.

COOPER'S OBSERVATORY, Markree
Castle, Ireland, XVII. 711.
COOPER'S WELL, spa, Mississippi,
U.S.A., XVI. 436.

COORDINATES, in geometry, X. 408; polar, X. 414; transformation of, in surveying, XXII. 706.

CONWAY'S CABAL, against George COORDS, or Kurds (q.v.), tribes, Asia,

[merged small][ocr errors][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small]

CONTRACTIONS, in ancient MSS., COOK, Captain James, English navigator XVIII. 164. and explorer, VI. 330; X. 189; his

284.

Coos BAY, town, Oregon, U.S.A., XVII. 824.

COOSH BEHAR, or Kuch Behar, state,
India, XIV. 152.

COOT, water-fowl, VI. 341.

COOTE, Sir Eyre, British general, VI. 342.
COPAIBA, Balsam of, III. 293.
COPAL, resin, VI. 342.
COPALINE, mineral, XVI. 428.
COPAN, town, Honduras, VI. 343; ruins
of, I. 693; XXIV. 758.
COPARCENERS, in English law of in-
heritance, XIII. 77.
COPE, ecclesiastical vestment, VI. 463.
E. D., on the classification of rep-
tiles, XX. 438.

Sir John, English general, v. 426. COPENHAGEN, capital of Denmark, VI. 343; population, XXIV. 771; IX. 614; battle of (1801), XVII. 323; academy, I. 73; libraries, XIV. 532, 549; newspapers, XVII. 430; observatory, xvII. 715; university, XXIII. 842.

FIELDS, London, XIV. 828. COPEPODA, group of crustaceans, VI. 664; in Lankester's classification, XXIV. 813.

COPERNICAN SYSTEM, II. 778.
COPERNICIA CERIFERA, wax-yielding
palm, XVIII. 191.
COPERNICUS, Nicolaus, German astro-
nomer, VI. 346; his astronomical
system, II. 752, 778; his theory of the
earth's rotation anticipated, VI. 729;
on the lunar theory, XVI. 800; his
treatise on money, XIX. 356; on trigo-
nometry, XXIII. 562.

COPHO, mediæval writer on medicine,
XV. 806.

COPIAPITE, mineral, XVI. 401.

COPIAPO, town, Chili, vi. 346.
COPING, in architecture, II. 462; IV.
464.

XXIV. 5; in Michigan, U.S.A., XVI.
239; in Missouri, U.S.A., XVI. 525;
production of, XVI. 467; production
in England, VIII. 229; production in
United States, XXIII. 816.
COPPERAS, mineral, VI. 352; XVI.

401.

COPPER-GLANCE, mineral, XVI. 391.
COPPER MINING, XVI. 452.
COPPERNIN, English dwarf, VII. 568.
COPPERPLATE ENGRAVING, VIII. 439.
COPPER PYRITES, mineral, XX. 129.
COPPER SMELTING, at Swansea, XXII.
733.

COPPER WIRE, XXIV. 615.
COPPET, Switzerland, Madame de Stael's
residence, XXII. 439.

COPPICE, or Copse, Culture of, II. 319.
COPROLITES, Fossil, VI. 353; as manure,
I. 348; XVIII. 818.
COPRONYMUS (Constantine V.), Byzan-
tine emperor, XII. 713.
COPTIC CHURCH, Egypt, XX. 631.
COPTIC LANGUAGE, VII. 721; XVIII.
778; dictionaries of, VII. 192.
COPTIC MONASTERY, Plan of a, I. II.
COPTOS, ancient town, Egypt, VI. 355.
COPTS, Egyptian people, VI. 354; I. 260;
VII. 728.

COPULATION, of animals, XX. 410.
COPYHOLD, land tenure, VI. 355; XIV.
264; XX. 307; its relation to feu-
dalism, IX. 122; surrender of, XXII.
692; copyhold rents, XX. 402.
COPYRIGHT, VI. 356; XIX. 710; inter-
national, 1.720; English Acts relating
to, XIV. 541.

COQUEREL, Athanase Josué, French
Protestant theologian, VI. 367.
Athanase Laurent Charles, French
Protestant theologian, VI. 368.

COPLEY, John Singleton, historical COQUES, Gonzalez, Flemish painter, VI.

painter, VI. 347.

John Singleton (Lord Lyndhurst), lord chancellor of England, XV. 106. CÖPNICK, town, Prussia, XIV. 139. COPPER, metal, chemical element, VI. 347; XVI. 382; chemistry of, v. 528; cyanide of, XX. 23; sulphate of, XXII. 637; sulphate in electrotyping, VIII. 115; spectrum of, XXII. 376; strength of, XXII. 603; as a poison, XIX. 278; constituent of brass, IV. 217; of bronze, IV. 366; as alloy of silver, XXII. 71; in pig iron, XIII. 284; ores of, XVI. 58; dressing of ores, XVI. 466; deposits or mines in Australia, III. 109; in Bolivia, IV. 14; in Brazil, Iv. 224; California, IV. 702; in Chili, v. 622; in China, V. 639; in Cuba, VI. 680; in Cyprus, VI. 747; in Cornwall, England, VI. 425; in India, XII. 765; in Ireland, XIII. 218; in Japan, XIII. 572; in Newfoundland, XVII. 384; in New South Wales, XVII. 409; in Philippine Islands, XVIII. 749; in Queensland, XX. 173; in Russia, xxi. 85;

368.

COQUET, river, Northumberland, Eng-
COQUET, river, Northumberland, Eng-
land, XVII. 565.

COQUILLA NUT, XVII. 665.

CORAM, Thomas, English philanthropist,

VI. 388.

CORANGAMITE, lake, Victoria, Australia,
XXIV. 216.

COR ANGLAIS, musical instrument,
XVII. 706.

CORANTYN, river, Guiana, XI. 250.
CORARIO, Angelo (Pope Gregory XII.),
XI. 178.

CORAX, of Syracuse, rhetorician, XX.
508.

CORAY, Adamantius, Greek scholar, VI. 388.

CORAZON, mountain, Ecuador, VII. 645. CORBEIL, town, France, VI. 388; XXI. 625.

Gilles de, medieval writer on medicine, xv. 806.

CORBEL, in architecture, II. 462. CORBIE MONASTERY, Picardy, Library of, XIV. 513.

CORBIÈRES, mountains, France, XX.

125.

CORBILO (St Nazaire), ancient town,
France, XXI. 187.

CORBUEIL (Francis Villon), French poet,
XXIV. 232; IX. 647.
CORBULO, Domitius, Roman commis-
sioner to the Parthians, XVIII. 602.
CORCHORUS, genus of plants, XIII.
798.

CORCOBADO, island, Peru, xvIII. 671.
CORCYRA (Corfu), island, Greece, vi.
395; XIII. 205; coins of, XVII. 641.
CORD, Manufacture of, xx. 845.
CORDAY D' ARMANS, Marie Anne Char-

lotte, assassin of Marat, VI. 388; IX.
606; XV. 527.

CORDELIER, rope-spinning machine, XX.
844.
CORDELIERS, Franciscan monks, VI. 389;
IX. 698.

French Revolutionists, VI. 389. CORDERIUS (Mathurin Cordier), French writer, VI. 389; his Colloquies as a school book, XXI. 751.

COQUILLART, Guillaume, early French CORDIALS, liqueurs, XIV. 686.

writer, IX. 648.

COQUIMBITE, mineral, XVI. 401.
COQUIMBO, province, Chili, v. 617.
CORA, Greek myth of, XVII. 127.

CORDIER, Mathurin, French writer, vi.
389; his Colloquies, XXI. 751.

CORDIÈRE, La Belle (Louise Labé),
French poetess, IX. 651.

(Cori), ancient town, Italy, vi. 368; CORDIERITE, mineral, XVI. 418.
temple at, II. 418.
CORACIAS, genus of birds, xx. 627.
CORAIS, Adamantios, Greek scholar, XI.
151.

Cordilleran SYSTEM, North America,
XXIII. 796.

CORAL ISLANDS AND REEFS, xix. 420,
421; theories of their formation, VI.
377; XVIII. 128.
CORALLIGENA, subdivision of Actinozoa,
I. 129.
CORALLINE, dye, v. 86.

CORAL ROCK, X. 238; in Kentucky,
U.S.A., XIV. 42.

CORALS, or Coral Animals, VI. 369; I.
129; fisheries, VI. 387; Italian fisheries,
XIII. 455.

CORDILLERAS, of the Andes, 1. 670; II.
15; in Ecuador, VII. 644.
CORDOBA, town, Argentine Republic,
VI. 390.

CORDOVA, province, Spain, XXII. 298.
town, Spain, VI. 389; mosque at,
XVI. 864; XXII. 310.

[ocr errors]

or Cordoba, town, Argentine Republic, VI. 390; observatory at, XVII. 716.

[ocr errors]

town, Mexico, VI. 390.

CORDUBA (Cordova), ancient town,
Spain, VI. 390.

CORE, Magnetic, XV. 252.

COREA, kingdom, Asia, vi. 390; language
of, XVIII. 779; XXIV. 3; dictionaries
of language, VII. 192.
COREGGIO, or Correggio, Antonio Al-
legri, Italian painter, VI. 437; XXI.
437, 443.
COREGONUS, genus of fishes, XI. 346;
XIX. 402, 650; XXI. 221, 223; XXIV.
137, 552.

CORELLI, Arcangelo, Italian musical
composer, VI. 394; XVII. 93.
CORENTIN, St, bishop of Cornouailles,
France, xx. 181.

CORENZIO, Belisario, Greek Neapolitan
painter, VI. 395; XX. 532.

CORFU, island, Greece, VI. 395; XIII. 205; town, vi. 396.

CORI, town, Italy, vi. 368.

CORMONTAIGNE, Louis de, French mili- | CORNO DI BASSETTO, musical instru-
tary engineer, VI. 407.
ment, XVII. 708.

CORMOPHYTA, division of vegetable CORNOUAILLES, Counts of, France, xx.
kingdom, III. 694.

CORMORANT, bird, VI. 407.

CORMORNE, musical instrument, XVII.
705.

CORN, British trade in, VI. 413.

121.

181.

CORN-SALAD, vegetable, XII. 281.
CORN THRIPS, insect, XXIV. 534.

CORN TRADE, British, VI. 413; early
laws regarding, I. 298.

local thickening of the skin, XXII. CORNU, Roman trumpet, XXIII. 592.
A., his simplification of diffraction
problems, XXIV. 444.

Indian (Maize), XV. 309.
CORNALIA, Corpuscles of, parasites in CORNUS, genus of plants, VII. 342.
silkworms, XXII. 59.

CORNARIUS, Janus, German physician,
XV. 808.

CORNARO, Luigi, Italian writer, VI.
417.

CORNAVII, ancient British tribe, XXI.
648.

CORIANDER, plant and fruit, VI. 396; CORNAY, Joseph Émile, on classification

XII. 289.

CORIANDOLI, in Roman carnival, v.

124.

CORIGLIANO, town, Italy, VI. 396.
CORINGA, town, India, vi. 396.
CORINNA, Greek poetess, VI. 397.
CORINNE, Madame de Stael's novel,
XXII. 441.

CORINTH, town, ancient Greece, VI. 397;
coins of, XVII. 642; slaves in, XXII.
130; St Paul at, XVIII. 420.
CORINTHIAN ARCHITECTURE, Greek

order, II. 407; Roman order, II. 415; inventor of the column in, IV. 709. CORINTHIANS, Epistles to the, VI. 399; XVIII. 421.

of birds, XVIII. 29, 35.

CORNUTUS, L. Annæus, Roman Stoic philosopher, VI. 423; XVIII. 662. CORNWALL, county, England, vI. 424; population and representation, XXIII. 727; ancient remains, XXI. 51; Celtic language of, v. 298; Celtic literature, V. 323; fisheries, IX. 253; miracle plays in, VII. 414; serpentine rocks of, XXI. 683.

CORN-BRUISER, agricultural implement, CORNWALLIS, First Marquis, British
I. 326.

[merged small][ocr errors][merged small][ocr errors][merged small]

general, VI. 428; in American War, XXIII. 744; governor-general of India, XII. 803, 805.

CORNWALLITE, mineral, XVI. 405.
CORN WEEVIL, wheat pest, XXIV.
536.

CORO, town, Venezuela, VI. 428.
CORODY, Right of, obsolete prerogative
of English crown, XIX. 672.
COROLLA, of plants, IV. 132.
COROMANDEL COAST, India, VI. 428.
CORONA, envelope of the sun, VI. 428;
XXII. 645, 647; II. 789; XI. 398; XIV.
597; XXIV. 435.

-, Third Epistle to the, apocryphal CORNELIA, mother of the Gracchi, VI. CORONADO, F. Vasquez de, Spanish ex

[blocks in formation]

CORIOLANUS, Caius Marcius, Roman CORNELIUS, Peter von, German painter,

patrician, VI. 401.

-, Shakespeare's play, XXI. 764. CORIOLI, ancient town, Italy, VI. 402. CORITANI, early British tribe, XIV. 655; XVII. 556.

CORK, bark of tree, VI. 402; formation of, XII. 17; the tree, XVII. 694; in Portugal, XIX. 538; in Tunis, XXIII. 620.

county, Ireland, VI. 402; population and representation, XXIII. 727. -, town, Ireland, VI. 405; library, XIV. 524; observatory, XVII. 711; Queen's College at, XXIII. 855.

Earl of (Richard Boyle), English statesman, IV. 183.

AND ORRERY, Earl of (John Boyle),
English writer, IV. 183.
CORKWING, fish, XXIV. 686.
CORLEAR, early Dutch settler, New

York, XVII. 454.

CORLEONE, town, Italy, VI. 406.
CORLISS STEAM ENGINE, XX. 507,

514.

CORM, of plants, IV. 98; XX. 423.
CORMAC, Irish king, XIII. 246.

VI. 421; XIV. 16.

O'DOWD (Charles Lever), Papers
by, XIV. 486.
CORNELLI, Vincenzo Maria, his Biblio-
teca Universale, VIII. 195.
CORNELL University, at Ithaca, New
York, U.S.A., XXIII. 857.
CORNET, musical instrument, XXIV.
787; IX. 351.

CORNETO, town, Italy, VI. 423; VIII.
634.

CORN FLOUR, XV. 310.
CORNHERT, Theodore, Dutch writer, VI.
423.

CORNICE, in architecture, II. 462.
CORNISH DIALECT, V. 298; dictionaries
of, VII. 188.

CORNISH LITERATURE, ancient, V.

323.

CORN-LAW RHYMES, by Elliott, VIII.
149.

CORN LAWS, English, VI. 408; IX. 754;
their effect on agriculture, I. 304;
agitation against, VIII. 366; repeal of,
VI. 84; XVIII. 457.
CORN-MILDEW, XVI. 293.

CORMENIN, Vicomte de, French jurist, CORNO, Monte, Italy, II. 170; XIII.

[blocks in formation]
[blocks in formation]

OATH, England, XVII. 701. CORONEA, Greece, Battle of (394 B.C.), XXIII. 229.

CORONELLI, Vincenzio, Italian geogra-
pher, VI. 430.

CORONER, officer of the law, VI. 430.
CORONER'S JURY, XIII. 786.

CORONET, in heraldry, XI. 711; ducal,
VII. 519.

COROT, Jean Baptiste Camille, French
painter, VI. 431.

COROZO NUT, or Vegetable Ivory, XIII. 525; XVII. 664.

CORPANCHO, Manuel Nicolas, Peruvian

poet, XVIII. 676.

CORPI SANTI, suburb of Milan, Italy,
XVI. 290.

CORPORAL PUNISHMENT, Law of, XXIII.
465.

CORPORA QUADRIGEMINA, CORPORA
STRIATA, in the brain, 1. 872; XIX.
37.
CORPORATION,

VI. 432; in United

States, XXIII. 785.

CORPORATION-SOLE, XVIII. 296.

CORPULENCE, VI. 435; in pathology,

« ElőzőTovább »