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CEYLON

covered the country. The orchids of Ceylon sumber about 150 species. With the excep; tion of about a dozen Dendrobiums, Erias, and Saccolabiums, and the lovely Wana-rajah, there are few of a striking character. The ferns number about 270 species. Among the latter is an anomalous variety which bears spores on the upper instead of on the under side of the frond. One of the handsomest native trees of Ceylon is the Muruta Lagerstromia Flos-regina). To this might be added the Saraca indica, and the lovely Na Mesua ferrea), or ironwood. In the forests elimbing plants and epiphytes of prodigious size and striking appearance cover the trees with a ass of parasitical foliage of extraordinary growth. in the north of Ceylon the dry forest-region is remarkable for its valuable timber-trees, such as the Palu, Halmilla or Trincomalee wood, and elony. The characteristic palm of the north and of the peninsula of Jaffna is the Palmyra (Borasas flabelliformis).

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of the native communities, are met with in every province as enterprising traders, and are generally believed to be of Arab descent. The 'burghers' of Ceylon are people of European descent, who have become naturalised. Those of Portuguese extraction hold the lowest place, and are mostly tradesmen and artisans; but the Dutch burghers frequently fill responsible posts, and are employed in the government offices. There is besides a remarkable tribe of outcasts-the Veddahs-hardly removed from the wild animals of the forest, and believed to be descended from the Yakkhos, the aboriginal inhabitants of the country. They occupy a district in the eastern part of the island, and have there preserved their ancient customs and manner of living unaltered for more than

2000 years.

Religion. The Singhalese are devoted to Buddhism (q.v.), which is the prevailing religion of the island. Its sacred books are identical with those of Burma and Siam, and both record the Fauna.-In Ceylon, quadrumanous animals are doctrines of Gautama in the Pali language; the represented by the Loris gracilis and five species deviations are in matters of practice. The Malaof monkeys. Sixteen species of bats exist in bar kings adulterated Buddhism to a considerable Ceylon, including the flying-fox. Of the larger extent with Brahmanism, introducing the worship camora, the bear and leopard; and of the of Hindu deities into the Buddhist temples, and anader, the palm-cat and the glossy genette (the this continues more or less to be the case. More cet of Europeans) may be mentioned. The than once have the Buddhists of Ceylon sought to tiger is not met with in Ceylon. Deer, buffaloes, restore the purity of their faith-at one time sendand the humped ox of India are plentiful; the cheving deputies to Siam, at another to Burma, with cains q.v.) are also said to be abundant. The ephant, which is for the most part tuskless, is empatically lord of the forests of Ceylon. The who boar is also found. Whales are captured off the cast Three hundred and twenty species of birds are found. The song of the robin and long-tailed turish, and the flute-like voice of the oriole, are heard over the whole mountain-zone and far down into the neighbouring plains. Eagles, the beautiful peregrine falcon, owls, swallows, Anguishers, sun-birds, bulbuls, crows, parroquets, pigeons, pea-fowl, jungle-fowl, and many others of the feathered tribe, might be mentioned did * permit. Myriads of aquatic birds and waders, amongst which the flamingo is conspicuus, cover the lakes and lagoons. The crocodile the largest reptile in the island; tortoises and uzards are also found. There are a few species of venomous snakes, and of these the ticpolonga and the cobra da capello are the most deadly.

Inhaintants.-The Singhalese (Sinhalese, also spest Congalese), the most numerous of the natives of Ceylon, are supposed to be the descendants of those colonists from the valley of the Ganges who first settled in the island 543 B.C., and speak an Arvan language closely allied to the Pali (q.v.). The dress of the men, who have delicate features and slender limbs, looks singularly effeminate, and | mrsists of a comboy or waist-cloth, very much resembling a petticoat; their long hair, turned hack from the forehead, is confined with combs, and earrings are worn by way of ornament. Polyairy still lingers in the interior of Ceylon; but, thas and many other customs repugnant to ChrisLarity are disappearing under the influence of macation, of which the Singhalese readily avail The Kandyans, or Highlanders, are a more sturdy race, and maintained their independfor three centuries after the conquest of the ountry by European settlers. The Malabars, Tams, have sprung from those early invaders ₫ Cevion who from time to time swept across from Southern Hindustan, and contended with Singhialese kings for the sovereignty of the a. They have formed the chief population ut Jana for full 2000 years, and constitutionally | e-vi the Singhalese and Kandyans. The Moorara, who are the most energetic and intelligent

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this object in view. The Burman or Amarapura sect have long been the reformers of Singhalese Buddhism, and maintain no very friendly relations with the party who, supported by the priests of Siam, sanction the worship of Hindu deities and the employment of the priesthood in secular occupations, uphold caste, and restrict the sacred books. Caste was acknowledged by the Singhalese prior to the introduction of Buddhism, which in principle is opposed to it; but so firmly was it rooted that it still endures, though more as a social than a sacred institution. Gautama Buddha is said to have visited Ceylon three different times to preach his doctrine, and his Sri-pada, or sacred footstep, on the summit of Adam's Peak (q.v.), still commands the homage of the faithful. Bud dhism was not, however, permanently introduced into Ceylon till 307 B.C. The influence of the priests gradually increased, and, by the piety of the Singhalese kings, monasteries were richly endowed, and at the present day no less than onethird of the cultivated land of the island is computed to belong to the priesthood, and is exempt from taxation. The priests of Ceylon are divided into two orders; any member is at liberty to lay aside his ascetic character, and return to a secular life. The most celebrated Buddhistic relic in Ceylon is the Dalada, or sacred tooth of Gautama, at Kandy, which is guarded with jealous care, and preserved in an elegant shrine; but it is well known that the original relic was destroyed by the Portuguese, and the present substitute is a piece of discoloured ivory, bearing no resemblance to a human tooth. Brahmanism or Hinduism (g.v.) is the faith of the Tamils or Malabars, but the Moormen are Mohammedans. After the expulsion of the Dutch Christians, Protestant missions to the natives of Ceylon were commenced by the Baptists in 1813. The Wesleyan Methodists followed in 1814, the Americans in 1816, the Church of Eng land in 1818, and Christian instruction has made some progress amongst the native populations. Schools, collegiate institutions, and female seminaries, under the direction of the missionaries, are in successful operation; and there is a government system of education.

Ancient Buildings.-In all Buddhist countries the sacred buildings present, with certain modifica

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tions, the same general character (see articles BUDDHISM, BURMA, &c.); and in Ceylon we find the three classes represented by the dagoba, or relic-shrine, the temple proper, and the vihara or monastery. The labour bestowed on these edifices in the early ages of the Singhalese monarchy is truly astonishing. In the north of the island, ruined cities buried for ages in the depths of the forest have been discovered, revealing monuments that in dimensions may almost compare with the pyramids of Egypt. The most remarkable of these vestiges of an early civilisation is Pollanarrua, the ancient capital of Ceylon; and here is the celebrated Gal-wihara, a rock-hewn temple.

Entrance to the Temple of Dambula.

The cave-temple of Dambula was built 100 B.C., and is the most celebrated in the island. The bell-shaped tapering dagobas of Ceylon, as relicshrines, answer to the pagodas of Burma-which they very much resemble- and the topes of Afghanistan. The ruins of the Jaytawanarama dagoba still reach the height of 249 feet; its diameter is 360 feet; and from base to pinnacle

The Ambustella Dagoba, Mihintala.

it is covered with trees of the largest size. The Ambustella of Mihintala is another remarkable dagoba. A very famous object in connection with Buddhism in Ceylon is the sacred Bo-tree (q.v.) of Anuradhapura. Amongst the antiquities of Ceylon must be mentioned those wonderful monuments of the former greatness of the Singhalese

people-the ruined tanks, with which scarcely anything of a similar kind, whether ancient or modern, can be compared. Thirty colossal reservoirs, and about 700 smaller tanks, still exist, though for the most part in ruins. The restoration of these magnificent works of irrigation has been for some time carried on by the government. In February 1888 the largest and most important tank in Ceylon, that of Kalawewa, was, after four years of labour, completely restored. It was built 460 A.D. to supply Anuradhapura with water, but has been ruinous for centuries. Now again it contains an area of seven square miles of water 20 feet deep, and supplies smaller tanks more than 50 miles distant.

The history of Ceylon may be conveniently divided into ancient and modern, and the latter into the Portuguese, Dutch, and British periods. The most famous of the Singhalese books is the Mahavansa, a metrical chronicle in the Pali language, extending from the earliest period to 432 A.D., and continued to 1756. The story begins with the invasion of Wijayo (543 B.C.), son of a petty Indian sovereign in the country watered by the Ganges. He subdued the Yakkhos, the aboriginal inhabitants; founded a dynasty that held undivided sovereignty in Ceylon for nearly eight centuries; and bestowed on his kingdom his patrimonial name of Sihala (whence Singhalese, Ceylon). In the reign of King Devenipiatissa (307 B.C.), Buddhism was established as the national religion, and his reign was further remarkable by the planting of the sacred Bo-tree, 288 B.C.; and now commenced the erection of those stupendous buildings already noticed. The next important epoch in Singhalese history is the usurpation of the Malabars (237 B.C.), foreign mercenaries from the Coromandel coast, to whom the native sovereigns had intrusted the defence of the island. In 1071 A.D. a native dynasty was re-established in the person of Wijayo Bahu, which, for 100 years, delivered the country from the dominion of the Malabars. Prakrama Bahu commenced a reign in 1153, the most renowned in the records of Ceylon. He devoted himself to religion and agriculture, and besides many notable religious edifices, he caused no less than 1470 tanks to be constructed, subsequently known as the seas of Prakrama.' Thirty years after the death of this monarch, the Malabars landed with a large army, and speedily conquered the whole island. In 1235 a native dynasty recovered a part of the kingdom. During the reign of Dharma Prakrama IX. the Portuguese first visited Ceylon (1505); but it was in 1517 that they first formed a permanent settlement at Colombo for trading purposes. Their encroachments soon met with fierce resistance from the patriotic Kandyans. Amity, commerce, and religion,' was the Portuguese motto; but their rule in Ceylon is a sad story of rapacity, bigotry, and cruelty. They were at last driven from the island by the Dutch in 1658, after a contest of twenty years, when the fanatical zeal of Roman Catholic sovereigns for the propagation of the faith was replaced by the earnest toil of the Dutch traders to intrench their trading monopolies. But the purely military tenure of the Dutch was destined to give place to the colonisation of the British. It was during the great European war succeeding the French Revolution that the English gained possession of the island. On the 1st August 1795 an expedition under Colonel James Stuart landed at Trincomalee, which was speedily captured, and finally the garrison of Colombo surrendered on the 16th February 1796. By this capitulation, all the Dutch settlements and strongholds in Ceylon were ceded to the English; though the island was not formally annexed to the British crown till the Peace of Amiens,

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CEYLON

27th March 1802. The native sovereigns, however, continued in the possession of their mountain ter ntory; but at length the Kandyan king, Wikrama Raya Singha, after perpetrating the most frightful Atrocities on his own people, seized and murdered certain native merchants, British subjects, trading to Kandy. War followed, January 1815; Kandy was taken, and the tyrant sent a captive to the fortress of Vellore. On the 2d March 1815, a treaty was concluded with the native chiefs, by which the king was formally deposed, and his territories annexed to the British crown.

After the settlement of the Kandyan provinces, attention was drawn to the hill country of Ceylon as a probable field for the profitable investment of British capital and energy, and among other agriestural enterprises the cultivation of coffee was entered upon. The condition of soil and climate proved favourable, and the abolition of slavery in the West Indies, and the consequent labour diffi ellies, caused a rush towards Ceylon, and the area under coffee cultivation rapidly extended. T- enterprise, though subject to all the vicissi ties incidental to tropical agriculture, steadily Aw, and coffee soon became the staple export irm the island; and the revenue directly and indirectly derived from it enabled successive gover

nors to bridge rivers, to make roads and railways, a. i to restore many of the ancient irrigation works which, in the period antecedent to British rule, had fallen into disrepair. In 1869, however, a bagus Hemilcia rastatrix) attacked the leaves of De coffee-trees, and the energy of the tree which I hitherto produced fruit was now required for constant reproduction of leaf. Everything which practice or science could suggest was tried to mitigate or overcome the pest, but in spite of all efforts it steadily increased in virulence, and the coffee planters were obliged to turn their attention to other products of the soil.

Cinchona, cacao, cardamoms, and many other products were introduced with varying success, but it soon became plain that Ceylon was capable of becoming a great tea-producing country, and tea has become the chief factor in restoring the finan Cal equilibrium.

namon and cocoa-nut cultivation are chiefly in the hands of natives; tea, cinchona, cacao, and cardamom cultivation in the hands of Europrazs; and the export table shows how through the energy of the planters new products have to a great extent replaced coffee.

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173,497

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1-3 200.033
1887 180,429 14,389,184 12,013,886

6,925,950 1,522,82

Between 1883 and 1887 the export of cacao rose from 358% to 16,638 lb., and of cardamoms from 2635 to 321,560 lb. Between 1873 and 1887 te export of cinnamon rose from 1,265,757 to 2.20 ×44 lb. Between 1873 and 1883, that of

sut oil, from 163,274 to 306,209 cwt.; of our yarn from 36,921 to 98,697 ewt.; of plum12 from 168,627 to 279,057 ewt.; while that ofy fell from 46,635 to 18,273 ewt. Minor evers are oils, fibres, and dyes.

Ceylon is the largest and most important of what Are known as the crown colonies of the British entre. The government is administered by a „vernor aided by executive and legislative counrls the former consisting of five members, the latter of tfteen, partially elective), and municipal Local boards and village tribunals give a measure of self government to the people. The petuation of Ceylon, 2,763,984 at the census of P... risen to about 3,000,000, of whom

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2,000,000 are Singhalese, 750,000 Tamil immigrants and settlers, 200,000 Moormen (Mohammedans of Arab descent), 5500 Europeans, 20,000 Eurasian descendants of Portuguese and Dutch, 2500 Veddahs, 22,000 mixed races.

The revenue, which in 1882 was 12,161,570 rupees, was in 1886, 12,682,548 rupees; but owing to the depreciation of the rupee, the value in pounds sterling was £1,140,147 in 1882, and £1,004,035 in 1886. The total annual trade is about £10,000,000. There are 2500 miles of metalled roads; 185 miles of railways; and 120,000 scholars in the government schools, and those of the various religious denominations. See Ceylon, by Sir James Emerson Tennent (2 vols. 1859); Captain Suckling's Ceylon (2 vols. 1876); The Colonial Office List for the current year; Ceylon in the Jubilee Year, by John Ferguson (1887).

Ceyx. See KINGFISHER.

Cezimbra, a coast town of Portugal, about 18 miles S. of Lisbon. Pop. 6815.

gist, was born January 2, 1817, at Briançon. Chabas, FRANÇOIS, a great French EgyptoloThough at first engaged in commerce, he found time to become a learned linguist, but it was not till 1851 that he gave himself up to the study of appeared in 1856, followed by a series of invaluable The first results of his studies hieroglyphics. books and papers, elucidative chiefly of two important periods of ancient Egyptian history-the conquest of the country by the Hyksos, and the time of their expulsion. Among the more important of his many books are-Les Pasteurs en Egypte (1868), Histoire de la XIX. Dynastie et spécialement des Temps de l'Exode (1873), and Etudes sur l'Antiquité historique d'après les Sources égyptiennes (24 ed. 1873). From 1873 to 1877 he edited L'Egyptologie. He died at Versailles, May 17, 1882. Chabasite. See ZEOLITE.

Chablis, a town in the French department of Yonne, 12 miles E. of Auxerre. It gives name to an esteemed white Burgundy (q.v.) wine. Pop.

2363.

Chaco, EL GRAN. See GRAN CHACO.

Chaconne (Fr.), an obsolete dance, probably Spanish (chacona, from Basque choruna, 'pretty'). The movement is slow, and the music, a series of variations on a ground bass, mostly eight bars in length, appears in sonatas as well as in ballets.

Chad, LAKE. See TSAD.

Chad, ST (Ceadda), was born in Northumbria, became a pupil of St Aidan, spent part of his youth in Ireland, and in 666 became Bishop of York. Doubt having been cast on the validity of his consecration, he withdrew in 669, but was immediately made Bishop of Mercia, fixing the see at Lichfield (q.v.). He died in 672, after a life eminent for humility and sanctity.

Chadwick, EDWIN, C.B., a social reformer, born in the vicinity of Manchester, 24th January 1801, studied law, and was called to the bar in 1830. He attracted the notice of Jeremy Bentham by an article on Life Assurances. He early devoted his attention to questions of social, sanitary, and political science, and was by Lord Grey's government appointed an assistant-commissioner to inquire into the operation of the poor-laws. His report, published in 1833, commanded great attention, and laid the foundation of the later systems of government inspection. On the organisation of the new Poor-law Board, Chadwick was appointed secretary, In connection with this Board, and the General Board of Health, Chadwick for twenty years was energetic in improving the administration of poorlaw funds and the sanitary condition of the country. His report on interments in towns (1843) laid the

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foundation of later legislation on the subject. He served on commissions as to the employment of children in factories, on preventable diseases, and on education. On a change being made in the Board of Health in 1854, Chadwick retired with a pension. He afterwards took great interest in promoting competitive examinations for government offices, and indeed in almost all questions of social economy. He was an active member of the Social Science Association. Some of his papers appear in the Transactions of the Statistical Society and of the British Association. Died July 5, 1890. See Chadwick's Work and Works on Health and Social Reform, by Richardson (2 vols. 1885).

Chæronea, a town in ancient Boeotia, near the river Cephissus, memorable for the disastrous defeat of the Athenians here by Philip of Macedon, 338 B.C. This defeat struck a death-blow to the liberties of Greece, and broke the heart of Isocrates; it was the 'dishonest victory' that killed with report that old man eloquent." A colossal marble lion, together with the bones of 260 Greeks, was dug up here in 1880. Here also Sulla defeated the generals of Mithridates in 86 B. C. The famous Plutarch was a native of Charonea.

Chatoderma, a remarkable primitive gasteropod, which in some respects serves as a connecting link between the worm and snail type. See CHITON.

Chaetodon, a typical genus of a family of bony fishes, known as Squamipennes. The body is much compressed sideways, and consequently high; the scales are more or less smooth, and cover portions of the dorsal and anal fins in such a fashion that the boundary between fins and body is indistinct.

Chaetodon setifer.

The mouth is generally small in front of the snout, and the slender teeth are arranged in bands. The lower rays of the pectoral fins are branched, and the hind fins are situated far forward on the thorax. The Squamipennes, or as some would call them, the Chaetodontidæ, are tropical fishes, abounding near coral reefs, and well suited in the beauty of their colouring to such brilliant surroundings. They feed on small animals, are never very large, and but little used for food. Chaetodon itself is a large genus, with some 70 beautiful species from the tropical Atlantic and Indo-Pacific. It has one dorsal fin, and a moderately long snout. In Chelmo the snout is longer, and is used to draw animals from their crevices. It often gets false credit for catching insects by spouting water. Heniochus is another pretty genus with horns on its head. Holacanthus, one species of which is called the Emperor of Japan' by the Dutch, is yet more brilliantly adorned, and Pomacanthus is peculiarly variable in its colouring. The Atlantic species of Ephippus (E. faber) is peculiar in the pathologicallike enlargement of some of the bones at the back of the head. The Archer-fish (q.v.) is an allied genus. See Günther, Study of Fishes (1880).

CHAFFINCH

Chatopods (Gr., 'bristle-footed'), a class of worms including familiar types like the Earthworm, the Fisherman's Lobworm, and the Seamouse. They are often included under the title of Annelids or ringed worms. The body consists of numerous more or less similar joints; and the locomotor organs are furnished with or represented by bristles. The class is split into two main orders of Oligochata and Polychata, of which the latter is much the larger. The Oligochata have very rudimentary locomotor structures, which are in fact reduced to bristles; they are fresh-water or subterranean in habit; the familiar earthworm (Lumbricus) and certain river and pond worms (e.g. Tubifex and Nais) are common representatives. The Polychata are, with three or four exceptions, marine; the bristles, which are numerous, are fixed in special locomotor outgrowths; and many other characters, such as the possession of antennæ, gills, &c., distinguish them from the earthworm order, and are in obvious association with their very different habits. Many of them, described as errant, lead a free life, and are carnivorous in their diet. The common Nereis, or Alitta, and the Sea-mouse (Aphrodite) are good examples. A large number, however, are sedentary in habit, vegetarian in diet, and often inhabit tubes. The lobworm (Arenicola), the common Serpula, and Terebella are characteristic types. To the two parasitic Myzostomata causing 'galls' on feathermain orders of Chatopods above mentioned, the cirrus must be added. stars (Crinoids), and the primitive aberrant Saccocommon marine worm which, along with a few Polygordius is another others, is usually regarded as a survival of the ancestral Chatopods or Annelids. See EARTHWORM, LOBWORM, SEA-MOUSE, WORMS, &c.

Chafer, a common name for beetles or coleopterous insects, especially for those which, either in the perfect or larval state, are destructive of plants, particularly of the wood, bark, or roots of trees. The word is seldom used alone, but generally as part of a name, with some prefix; thus, we have Cock-chafer, Rose-chafer, Bark-chafer, &c. Kafer is the German word for beetle.' "

Chaffinch (Fringilla calebs), one of the commonest British birds, a species of Finch (q.v.), and probably that to which the name Finch, now so extended in its signification, originally belonged. Fink, the German form of the name, and pink and twink, still used in England as popular names, have some resemblance in sound to the common call-note of the chaffinch. The whole length of the bird is about six inches. The tail is very slightly forked. The beak is almost equal in breadth and height. The male, in summer, has the top of the head and nape of the neck bluish-gray; the back, chestnut; the wings almost black, with two conspicuous white bars; the tail nearly black. The lower surface is reddish. The colours of the female are much duller than those of the male. The chaffinch is a very widely distributed species, being found in almost all parts of Europe, in some parts of Asia, in the north of Africa, and as far west as the Azores. In the colder northern countries it is migratory; in more southern regions it is stationary. Linnæus gave it the specific name calebs, from observing that the flocks seen during winter in Sweden consisted chiefly of males, the females having, as he sup posed, sought a milder climate. A partial separation of the sexes is observed also in the great winter-flocks in Britain, but it is only partial; and Yarrell thinks that the young males of the previous season, which resemble the females in plumage, are associated with them, and have been mistaken for them. The flocks seen in Britain in

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CHAGNY

winter are believed to be augmented by migration from Scandinavia. The eggs are usually four or five in number, of pale purplish buff colour, sparingly streaked and spotted with reddish brown. The chaffinch feeds in great part on insects, and does much service in summer by destroying aphides and caterpillars; but eats also seeds, and is sometimes persecuted, because in spring it pulls up and eats young turnips and radishes when in the seed leaf. It is particularly fond of the seeds of beeches and conifers. Great numbers of chaffinches are kiled for the table in Italy. In Germany this ! bird was formerly in the highest esteem as a song. bard Its notes are very clear and loud, but some in lividuals greatly excel the ordinary multitude of their species.-The common Scotch name of the Chaffinch is Shilfa.

Chagny, an important railway junction and commercial centre in the French department of Saone-et-Loire, on the Canal du Centre, 32 miles S. of Dijon. As the key of the roads to the Loire district, it has been strongly fortified. Pop. 4291. Chagres, a town of the United States of Colomhta, on the N. coast of the Isthmus of Panama, sitasted at the mouth of the Chagres River. It is a 1 place, with a harbour for vessels drawing from 10 to 12 feet of water. The river of the same name about 10 miles NE. of Panama, makes an immense bend round to the NE., and enters the Caribbean Sea. Though towards its mouth it

varies in depth from 16 to 30 feet, it is yet, by reason at once of its rapidity and its falls, but little available for navigation. The route of the Panama Canalg.v.) is by the valley of the Chagres for part of its course; and the canal crosses the river repeatedly.

Chaillu, PAUL DU. See DU CHAILLU.

Chain, in Surveying (called Gunter's Chain, from its inventor, Edmund Gunter, q.v.), is a measure of 22 yards long, composed of 100 iron links, each of which is thus 7-92 inches long. As an acre contains 4840 square yards, 10 square chains (22 × 22 × 10 = 4840 square yards) or 100,000 #are links make an acre.

Chain Cable. See CABLE.

Chain-mail, or CHAIN-ARMOUR, much used in Europe in the 12th and 13th centuries, and still used in India

Piece of Chain-armour.

and the inte

rior of the

Asiatic continent, consists of hammered iron links, connected together by riveted links so that each link em

braces four

others, and worked into the form of a garment.

harmour was much more flexible and convenient to the wearer than that which was formed of steel or brass plates, but was less fitted to bear the turust of a lance. See ARMOUR.

Chain-plates, on shipboard (wood vessels), are iron plates bolted below the channels to serve attachments for the dead-eyes, through which the standing rigging or shrouds and back-stays are reve and secured. In most of the modern iron-steel varis rigging reirs take the place of the older eciowa, the chain-plates to which they are attached consisting simply of flat palms, having an eve projection, riveted to the inside of the sheer or top strake of shell plating.

Chains. Chain-making being a distinct trade

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made by men trained to the work, although some of the very small sizes of common chains are made by women, boys, and girls, Chains are of two generally distinct kinds-short-link or unstudded (frequently called close-link) chain, and stud-link or stayed chain. The former usually embraces the smaller sizes of chain up to 14 inches, and the latter comprises ships' cables and other heavy chains. Short-link chain is made in the following manner: The end of the bar from which the link is to be made is heated, then cut to gange, and while still hot is bent into U-form; the free ends are then heated to a white heat and flattened or scarphed by a hammer, and in this state they are brought together and welded so as to form the other end of the link. The flattening or scarphing of the two ends and the closing of them being all done in one heat, the scarphed ends are again heated to welding-point, and the link is placed in a suitable recess under a hollow-faced tool, worked mechanically, which strikes the roughened weld and ultimately finishes it off as smooth as the other end of the link. The result is the finished link, and when the first has been completed, another piece of iron is bent in the same way and threaded or rove through it, and another link formed and

finished in the same manner as the first. In this

way each successive link is added until the required length of chain is made.

The foregoing illustrates the way in which chains generally are made, but as a rule, links of chains of 1-inch diameter and over are welded at the side instead of at the end, and a stud or stay-pin is welded across from side to side of cables are made by men, and the expert workman the link. The larger sizes of chains and chainwhen employed making first-class chains of all descriptions gets an extra price for his skill and labour. Common (not to say inferior) chains, however, are too often welcomed by bargain-loving users if they can at all be made to pass the statutory tests. Chains which stand certain of the standard tests may be found totally unequal to meet certain others, and superior and inferior parts are often purposely mingled in one chain by dishonest makers to cheapen production and defeat the system of testing. The iron used for very superior chains is selected not only for its tensile strength and welding properties, but for its ductility, as high tensile strength is not infrequently possessed by a hard brittle iron, liable to snap upon the application of a sudden jerk, and therefore totally unsuited for chains. The system of testing cables followed by Lloyds' Register Society well exem plifies what should be adopted in the case of all chains. Every 15-fathom length is subject to a fair standard strain, sufficient to detect bad work

manship, by pulling asunder or opening any defec tive welds, yet not so severe as to injure the nature of the material by crystallising it-a result invari ably produced by overstraining. This standard test, however, not being the extreme limit of strain which the chain ought to bear in actual use at sea, a few links are required to be cut out at random from any part of each 15-fathom length, and submitted to a so-called breaking strain of 50 per cent. in excess of the standard test. If these trial pieces are found to withstand this extra strain satisfactorily, they are then assumed to represent a fair average of the strength of that particular length to which they belong. This operation being gone through with satisfactory results in each length of cable, the whole is then passed, and certified accordingly. Any unsatisfactory lengths are con demned, marked, and sent back to the manufac turer.

In his treatise on Chain Cables and Chains, Mr of itself, thoroughly reliable chains can only be | T. W. Trail, surveyor-in-chief to the Board of

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