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BENYOWSKY-BENZOIN.

some 80 or 100 miles from where Dr Barth crossed. Dr Barth regards this river as offering the best channel for the introduction of civilisation into the heart of Central Africa. If not actually connected in some way with the Shari (q. v.), and consequently with Lake Tsad, 'the breadth of the water-parting between these two basins [the Niger and the Tsad], at the utmost, cannot exceed 20 miles, consisting of an entirely level flat, and probably of alluvial soil.... The level of the Tsad, and that of the river B. near Gewe, where it is joined by the Mayo Kebbi, seem to be almost the same; at least, according to all appearance, the B., at the place mentioned, is not more than 850 or 900 feet above the level of the sea.' In a second expedition, 1862, Dr Baikie explored as far north as Kano, in Haussa.

Palus and Sisara Palus, two lakes within the dominions of Tunis, from which town they are about 30 miles distant, in a north-west direction. They are each about 9 miles long, and the larger one, which is clear and salt, is about 5 miles broad; the smaller, which is turbid and fresh, 34. They are about two miles apart, but united by a channel with a general depth of 6 feet and breadth of 75. Tunis is supplied with fish mainly from these lakes. So valuable is the fishing, that a wealthy Arab rents it from the Bey of Tunis for £4000 per annum.

BE'NZILE, BE'NZOILE, or BENZOYLE, is the radicle or root of the group of substances which comprehends as members the hydride of benzoyle (oil of bitter almonds), benzoic acid, benzoin, and benzole. It is prepared by passing a stream of chlorine gas through fused benzoin, or by heating one part of benzoin with two parts of concentrated nitric acid. B. floats to the upper part of the liquid mixture as a liquid oil, which solidifies on cooling. B. is a tasteless solid, insoluble in water, but readily dissolved by ether and alcohol, and on concentration of the ethereal or alcoholic solution, the B. crystallises in regular six-sided prisms, of a yellow colour. When heated to 194° to 198°, it fuses. Its composition is expressed by the chemical formula C,,H1004, and many chemists name the substance possessing this formula benzile, reserving the title benzoile, or benzoyle, for a substance polymeric (see POLYMERISM) with benzile, which has not yet been isolated, but which may be represented by C14H, O2.

BENZO'IC ACID, or the Flowers of Benzoin and Benjamin, occurs naturally in many balsamiferous plants, and especially in Benzoin (q. v.), from which it may be readily obtained by several processes, which it is not necessary here to describe. B. A. is always in the form of snow-white, glistening, feathery crystals, with a fairy aspect of lightness. It has a very fragrant and pleasant aromatic odour, due to the presence of a trace of an essential oil, and a hot bitter taste. It is readily dissolved by alcohol and ether, but sparingly soluble in water. B. A. is one of the materials present in Tinctura Camphora Composita, and has been administered in chronic bronchial affections; but the benefit derivable from its use in such cases is questionable. B. A. taken into the stomach, increases within 3 or 4 hours the quantity of hippuric acid in the urine. It forms a numerous class of compounds with the oxides of the metals, lime, &c., called benzoates. The chemical formula for crystallised B. A. is HO,C,,H,O3•

BENYOWSKY, MAURICE AUGUSTUS, COUNT DE, a man of remarkable character and extraordinary fortunes, was born at Verbowa, in Hungary, 1741. He served in the Seven Years' War, and during his youth displayed that restless love of adventure which marked his subsequent career. He went to Dantzic for the purpose of studying navigation, and from thence made several voyages to Hamburg and Plymouth. When about to start for the East Indies in 1767, he received a pressing invitation to join the Polish Confederation, with which he complied, and shared most of the dangers and glories of the campaign against the Russians until he was taken prisoner in May 1769. After being transferred from one Russian prison to another, he was, in December 1769, banished to Siberia, and from thence, in a few months, to Kamtchatka. During the voyage, his exertions and skill saved the vessel that carried him. This recommended the prisoner to the governor, Nilov, who was further pleased by B.'s skill as a chess-player, and made him tutor in his family. In this capacity he gained the affections of Aphanasia, daughter of the governor, by whom he was assisted in his plans for escape; which, however, was not effected without a struggle, in which the governor was killed. B., with ninety-six companions, in a ship well armed and provisioned, and with a considerable amount of treasure, set sail from Kamtchatka in May 1771. Having visited some of the islands of Japan and Formosa, B. arrived at Macao on the 22d of September, where he remained until the 14th January, and then sailed for France. He had not been here long when the French government proposed that he should found a colony at Madagascar, and he at once acquiesced. B. arrived on the island in February 1774, and was made king in 1776 by the chiefs in conclave, he adopting the native costume. Returning to Europe with a view BENZOIN, BE'NJAMIN, or BENZO'IC GUM, to establish commercial relations between France a fragrant resinous substance, formed by the drying and Madagascar, B. met with a very cold reception of the milky juice of the Benzoin or Benjamin Tree from the French government, and returned to the (Styrax, or Lithocarpus Benzoin), a tree of the service of Austria, in the hope that the emperor which produces STORAX (q. v.), a native of Siam, and natural order Styracaceae, and a congener of that would assist him in his schemes-a hope not fulfilled. He next made unsuccessful overtures to the British of Sumatra and other islands of the Indian Archigovernment, but at length receiving assistance from pelago. The tree grows to nearly two feet in diameprivate persons in England and America, departed ter; the smaller branches are covered with a whitish again for Madagascar, where he arrived in 1785; rusty down; the leaves are oblong, acuminate, and and, involving himself in contention with the French entire, downy and white beneath; the flowers are in compound racemes. B. comes to us in reddishgovernment of the Isle of France, was killed in battle, May 23, 1786. B. was a man of remark-yellow transparent pieces. Different varieties, said able resources, great decision of character, courage, and sagacity. He was particularly well versed in human nature, a knowledge which proved of essential service to him during his brief but most remarkable career.-Memoirs and Travels of Count de Benyowsky, Written by Himself, and Edited by W. Nicholson (2 vols 4to. London. 1790).

different price; the whitest, said to be the produce of to depend upon the age of the trees, are of very the youngest trees, being the best. There is a variety which contains whitish almond-like tears diffused known in commerce as Amygdaloidal Benzoin, through its substance, and is said to be the produce of the younger trees. B. is obtained by making longitudinal or oblique incisions in the stem of the BENZERTA, LAKES OF, the ancient Hipponitis tree: the liquid which exudes soon hardens by

BENZOLE-BEOWULF.

exposure to the sun and air. B. contains about 10

14

great power it possesses of dissolving caoutchouc, -14 per cent. of Benzoic Acid (q. v.); the remainder gutta-percha, wax, camphor, and fatty substances. of it is resin. B. is used in perfumery, in pastilles, It is thus of service in removing grease-stains from &c., being very fragrant and aromatic, and yielding woollen or silken articles of clothing. When heated, a pleasant odour when burned. It is therefore it also dissolves sulphur, phosphorus, and iodine. much used as incense in the Greek and Roman B., when acted upon by chlorine, nitric acid, &c., Catholic Churches. Its tincture is prepared by gives rise to a very numerous class of compounds. macerating B. in rectified spirit for seven to fourteen days, and subsequent straining, when the BE'NZOYLE, HYDRIDE OF, is the volatile or Compound Tincture of Benjamin, Wound Balsam, essential oil belonging to the benzoic series. It is Friar's Balsam, Balsam for Cuts, the Com-represented by the formula C,,H,O,,H, and has mander's Balsam, or Jesuit's Drops, is obtained. been already considered under ALMONDS, VOLATILE It is frequently applied to wounds directly; or still OIL, or ESSENTIAL OIL OF (q. v.). better, when the edges of the wound are brought together, and bound with lint or plaster, the tincture of B. may be used as an exterior varnish. In the preparation of Court-plaster, sarcenet (generally coloured black) is brushed over with a solution of isinglass, then a coating of the alcoholic solution of benzoin. The tincture is likewise employed in making up a cosmetic styled Virgin's Milk, in the proportion of two drachms of the tincture to one pint of rose-water; and otherwise it is used in the preparation of soaps and washes, to the latter of which it imparts a milk-white colour, and a smell resembling that of vanilla. B. possesses stimulant properties, and is sometimes used in medicine, particularly in chronic pulmonary affections. It may be partaken of most pleasantly when beaten up with mucilage and sugar or yolk of egg. The name Asa dulcis (q. v.) has sometimes been given to it, although it is not the substance to which that name seems properly to have belonged.-The milky juice of Terminalia Benzoin, a tree of the natural order Combretacea, becomes, on drying, a fragrant resinous substance resembling B., which is used as incense in the churches of the Mauritius. It was at one time erroneously supposed that B. was the produce of Benzoin odoriferum, formerly Laurus Benzoin, a deciduous shrub, of the natural order Lauracea, a native of Virginia, about 10-12 feet high, with large, somewhat wedge-shaped, entire leaves, which still bears in America the name of Benzoin, or Benjamin Tree, and is also called Spicewood or Fever-bush. It has a highly aromatic bark, which is stimulant and tonic, and is much used in North America in intermittent fevers. The berries are also aromatic and stimulant, and are said to have been used in the United States during the war with Britain as a substitute for pimento or allspice. An infusion of the twigs acts as a vermifuge.

BEOWULF, an Anglo-Saxon epic poem, which is one of the greatest literary and philological curiosities, and one of the most remarkable historical monuments in existence. The date of the events described is probably about the middle of the 5th c.; and as the legends refer to the Teutonic races which afterwards peopled England, it is believed that the poem, in its original shape, was brought by the Anglo-Saxons from their original seats on the continent. Only one MS. of the poem is known to exist; that, namely, in the Cottonian Library, which was seriously injured by the fire of 1731. This MS. consists of two portions, written at different times and by different hands, and is manifestly a copy, executed perhaps about the beginning of the 8th c., from an older and far completer version of the poem. But, even in the form in which it came from the hands of its last recaster, B. is the oldest monument of considerable size of German national poetry, and notwithstanding the Christian allusions which fix the existing text at a period subsequent to 597 A. D., a general heathen character pervades it, which leaves little doubt as to the authentic nature of the pictures which it presents of Teutonic life in ante-Christian times. Much learned labour has been bestowed on this strange relic by Sharon Turner (Hist. of AngloSaxons, vol. iii.); Conybeare (Illustrations of AngloSaxon Poetry); Dr G. J. Thorkelin of Copenhagen, who first published the entire work in 1815; and above all, by Mr Kemble, whose beautiful edition was published by Pickering in 1833, and was followed in 1837 by a translation, with glossary, preface, and philological notes.

At first Mr Kemble was disposed to regard B. as an historical epic, but his view of it latterly came to be, that though to some extent historical, it must be regarded, in so far as the legends are concerned, as mainly mythological; and this remark he conceived BE'NZOLE, BE'NZINE, or PHENE, is a com- to apply to the hero not less than to the incidents pound of carbon and hydrogen (C,,H), formed related. But Beowulf, the god, if such he was, during the destructive distillation of coal (see occupies only a small space in the poem, and seems GAS; COAL), and found dissolved in the naphtha to be introduced chiefly for the purpose of conwhich is condensed from the vapours evolved from necting Hrothgar, king of Denmark, whom Beowulf, the gas retort. It may be prepared from coal-tar the hero, comes to deliver from the attacks of the naphtha by subjecting the tar to a temperature monster Grendel, with Scef or Sceaf, one of the of 32° F., when the B. solidifies, while the other ancestors of Woden, and the common father of the naphtha constituents remain liquid. Two gallons of whole mythical gods and heroes of the north. Sceaf the naphtha yield a pint of pure rectified benzole. is traditionally reported to have been set afloat as a It can also be obtained (1) by subjecting oil-gas child on the waters, in a small boat or ark, having to a pressure of 30 atmospheres; (2), by the dry dis- a sheaf (Ang.-Sax. sceaf) of corn under his head; tillation of kinic acid (q.v.); and (3) by cautiously whence his name. The child was carried to the heating a mixture of one part of benzoic acid and shores of Slesvig, and being regarded as a prodigy, three parts of quick-lime, when the material which was educated and brought up as king. Between distils over is impure benzole. At ordinary tem- Sceaf and Beowulf, Scyld intervened, according to peratures, B. is a thin, limpid, colourless liquid, the opening canto of the poem; but when compared evolving a characteristic and pleasant odour. At with kindred traditions, the whole genealogy becomes 32° F., it crystallises in beautiful fern-like forms, involved in extreme obscurity, and Scyld seems which liquefy at 40°; and at 177°, it boils, evolv- sometimes to be identified with Sceaf, and someing a gas which is very inflammable, burning with times with Woden. But the view of the connection a smoky flame. It readily dissolves in alcohol, between Beowulf and Sceaf is strengthened by ether, turpentine, and wood-spirit, but is insoluble the following considerations. The old Saxons, and in water. It is valuable to the chemist from the most likely the other conterminal tribes, called their

BEOWULF-BEQUEATH.

harvest month (probably part of August and September) by the name Beo or Beowod, in all probability their god of agriculture or fertility. Whether, or to what extent, this divinity is identical with the mythical hero of the poem, Mr Kemble does not venture to determine, though he indicates a strong leaning to the affirmative.

But in so far as the main points of historical interest are concerned-viz., the date of the legends, and the race and regions to which they belong-the results of the historical and of the mythological view seem to be pretty nearly the same. The poem falls entirely out of the circle of the Northern Sagas, and probably belongs to Slesvig. All the proper names are Anglo-Saxon in form, but not the slightest mention is made of Britain, the Ongle mentioned being manifestly Angeln (see ANGLES), and not Anglia. From these and many other considerations, the learned editor infers that B. records the mythical beliefs of our forefathers; and in so far as it is historical, commemorates their exploits at a period not far removed in point of time from the coming of Hengest and Horsa, and that in all probability the poem was brought over by some of the Anglo-Saxons who accompanied Cerdic and Cyneric, 495 A.D.

The poem opens with an incident which reminds us of one of the most beautiful of Mr Tennyson's earlier poems, the Mort d'Arthur, and seems to shew a similarity between British and Germanic traditions. We give it in the simple words of Mr Kemble's prose translation.

'At his appointed time then Scyld departed, very decrepit, to go into the peace of the Lord; they then, his dear comrades, bore him out to the shore of the sea, as he himself requested, the while that he, the friend of the Scyldings, the beloved chieftain, had power with his words; long he owned it! There upon the beach stood the ringed-prowed ship, the vehicle of the noble, shining like ice, and ready to set out. They then laid down the dear prince, the distributer of rings, in the bosom of the ship, the mighty one beside the mast; there was much of treasures, of ornaments, brought from afar. Never heard I of a comelier ship having been adorned with battle-weapons and with war-weeds, with bills and mailed coats. Upon his bosom lay a multitude of treasures which were to depart afar with him, into the possession of the flood. They furnished him not less with offerings, with mighty wealth, than those had done who in the beginning sent him forth in his wretchedness, alone over the waves. Moreover they set up for him a golden ensign, high over head; they let the deep sea bear him; they gave him to the ocean. Sad was their spirit, mournful their mood. Men know not in sooth to say (men wise of counsel, or any men under the heavens) who received the freight.' The following is a brief outline of the story B. is introduced to us, preparing for a piratical adventure. After a vivid description of the embarkation of the hero and his friendly Scyldingi,' the scene changes, and the palace of Hrothgar rises before us. Here the Danish king has assembled his warriors, and holds a feast, unconscious of the deadly peril in which he is placed. The scop' ('shaper,' from scapan, to shape' or 'create') sings a poem on the origin of things, and how evil came into the world. This is deftly used to bring upon the stage the 'grim stranger Grendel, a mighty haunter of the marshes, one that held the moors, fen, and fastness, the dwellings of the monster-race.' Malignant and cruel, he hears with envious hate the sounds of joy echoing from the hall, and stealing into the palace after dark, when the revel is over, he seizes and destroys thirty of the sleeping thegns. In the morning, when the havoc wrought by Grendel becomes known, there is a fierce outcry,

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and Hrothgar is loudly blamed. Yet twelve winters pass by before the outrage is avenged. The king is continually 'seethed in the sorrow of the time;' but help is at hand. B. has heard of the crimes of the monster, and comes with his Geats (Jutes) to inflict punishment. The voyage over the waves, and the landing of the brave adventurers on the shores of Hrothgar's dominions, is finely told. After some parley with the coast-guards, an interview takes place between the monarch and the hero, who almost pleads to be allowed to deliver the land from the ravages of Grendel. Most tender and pathetic is the passage in which he asks-if fortune should be adverse to him (if Hilda'—i. e. ‘the goddess of slaughter'-' should take him away'), that they would not mourn over the solitary rover,' but plant a 'simple flower' on his cairn, and send back his garments of battle' to his lord and kinsman, Higelac. The inevitable feast follows, in the course of which the 'scop' sings of the peace that is to be, and B. enlarges upon his past exploits. Then we have an exquisite picture of the Danish queen: There was laughter of heroes, the noise was modulated, words were winsome; Wealtheow, Hrothgar's queen, went forth; mindful of their races, she, hung round with gold, greeted the men in the hall; and the freeborn lady gave the cup first to the prince of the East Danes; she bade him be blithe at the service of beer, dear to his people. He, the king, proud of victory, joyfully received the feast and hall-cup. The lady of the Helmings then went round about every part of young and old; she gave treasure-vessels, until the opportunity occurred, that she, a queen hung round with rings, venerable of mood, bore forth the mead-cup to Beowulf. Wise of words, she greeted the Geat, she thanked God because her will was accomplished, that she believed in any earl, as a consolation against the crimes.' That night, when the shadows of darkness have fallen, Grendel comes swiftly to the palace from the misty moors, and assails Beowulf. A fierce struggle ensues, but the monster is baffled, and obliged to flee. Next day a second feast is held in honour of the hero's success, magnificent gifts are showered upon him by the grateful Hrothgar, the services of the scop' are again called into request, music and sports follow, and the queen once more moves through the crowd of warriors with courtesy and grace. The night, however, is not to pass without its tragedy. The mother of the monster secretly enters, and destroys one of the king's dearest thegns. B., in a magnanimous speech, undertakes to avenge him. Having sought the wild haunts of the 'hateful one,' he first slays the mother after a furious combat, in which he would have been vanquished but for the apparition of a magic sword 'over the waves,' which came into his grasp. Grendel is then destroyed, and his head carried off as a present to Hrothgar. B. then returns home, and after a variety of other but less interesting adventures, succeeds to the throne on the death of his kinsman Higelac. Besides the editions and versions referred to above, we may notice Ettmuller's translation of B. into German (Zür. 1840); Wackerbarth's metrical version in modern English (Lond. 1849); Thorpe's Anglo-Saxon Poems of B., &c. (Oxford, 1855); Karl Simrock's German version (Stuttg. 1859); Grundtvig's (Copenhagen, 1861); Heyne's (Paderb. 1863); Grein's (Cassel, 1867).

BEQUEATH, to leave personal property by will or testament to another. In the case of real estate, the proper term to employ is devise. But although it is usual and safe so to use these words, neither of them is essential to the validity of an English will, but other words, shewing clearly the intention of the testator, will suffice. In the Scotch law, the term

BEQUEST-BERBERA.

B. can only apply to personal estate. Real estate, indeed, according to the existing regulations of that system, cannot be left or conveyed by will or testament; a testamentary disposition or settlement, expressed in certain technical terms of present conveyance, being necessary for the purpose. See WILL; LEGACY; DISPOSITION (Mortis Causa); SETTLEMENT; REAL; PERSONALITY.

BEQUEST, a legacy of personal property left by

will. See BEQUEATH and its references.

power, were anxious to bestow, he retired to live in privacy at Passy. In 1833, he published a fifth collection of songs, when he took a formal leave of the public; and from that time until the day of his death, twenty-four years after, he remained silent. In 1848, B. was elected a member of the Assemblée Constituante by more than 200,000 votes; but after taking his seat, to shew his appreciation of the resigned. He consistently rejected all the offered honour conferred on him, he almost immediately favours of the present Emperor, as well as a graceBÉRANGER, JEAN-PIERRE DE, a celebrated ful overture on the part of the Empress, which he French poet, was born in Paris, 19th August 1780, owned it cost him much to refuse. B. died at Paris, in the house of his grandfather, a tailor in the Rue July 17, 1857. The cost of his funeral was defrayed Montorgueil, to whose care he was left entirely by by the French government, and his remains were his father, a scheming and not over-scrupulous attended to the grave by the most distinguished men financier. After living some time with an aunt at in all departments of literature. B. was as emphaPéronne, to whom he appears to have been indebted tically the poet of the French people as Burns was for those republican principles which afterwards the bard of the Scottish peasantry. The same made him so obnoxious to successive French govern- stanch and fearless independence, genuine manliments, B., at the age of fourteen, was apprenticed to ness, sound common sense, and contempt for everya printer in that place, where he remained three thing mean and hypocritical, characterised both years, devoting all his leisure hours to the acquire-men; and as poets, they differ in excellence only as ment of knowledge. He now returned to Paris, the sentiments of the French and Scottish people where his father, a zealous royalist, was engaged in differ in their capacity to be turned into song. some questionable schemes of money-getting, which Neither friend nor enemy has as yet disclosed to were mixed up with conspiracy. B. assisted him in us any speck on the heart, the honour, the genius, his money affairs, so far as he honourably could, and or the good sense of Béranger.' Since his death, his kept his political secrets; but he did not disguise his Last Songs, written between 1834 and 1851, have contempt for the royalist cause, nor fail to express been published, and also My Biography (Paris, M. his opposite sympathies. The business, however, Perrotin; London, Jeffs). See My Biography; and was not one to the taste of B., who was throughout Memoirs of Béranger, by M. Lapointe (Paris, 1857). the whole of his life a man of the most sensitive honour, and he soon left it. He had ere this begun to write, but his poems were not successful; and reduced almost to destitution, he, in 1804, enclosed some of his verses to M. Lucien Bonaparte, with a letter explaining his circumstances, and with a request for assistance the one solitary instance of solicitation during a long life of independence, marked by the refusal of numerous offers of lucrative patronage. The appeal was not made to a deaf M. Bonaparte obtained employment for the poet, first as editor of the Annales du Musée, and afterwards as a subordinate secretary in the University; a post which he held for twelve years, when the government, provoked at his satire, and alarmed at his popularity, dismissed him. During the 'Hundred Days, Napoleon offered B. the remunerative post of censor-a singular office for such a man. He refused it. But though he scorned to accept favour from, or to flatter Napoleon, at a time when it was alike fashionable and profitable to do so, he was of much too noble a nature to join in the sneers and reproaches which greeted the hero on his fall. Above the fear of power, he was incapable of taking advantage of misfortune. In 1815, B. published his first collection of songs, which soon attained a very wide popularity. In 1821, he published another collection, which was followed shortly after by some fugitive pieces, which subjected him to a government prosecution, a sentence of three months' imprisonment, and a fine of 500 francs. In 1825, a third collection, and in 1828, a fourth appeared, still more withering in its sarcasm on those in power; and the penalty of B.'s outspokenness was a fine of 10,000 francs, and nine months' confinement in La Force. The fine was soon paid by the poet's friends, and his prison became the resort of the most eminent men in the kingdom, and a very armoury in which he forged those keen-piercing bolts which galled so terribly, and contributed so much to the overthrow of the Bourbons. But B. refused to profit by the new state of things he had been instrumental in bringing about. Rejecting the emoluments and honour which his friends, now in

ear.

BERA'R, a valley situated locally in the Nizam's territories, but annexed politically to British India, for the maintenance of what is called the Nizam's Contingent. It is bounded on the N. by a detached portion of Scindia's dominions and the Nerbudda provinces; on the E., by Nagpoor; on the W., by Candeish; and on the S., by two of the Nizam's remaining districts-Maiker Bassim and Mahur. It lies between 20° 15′ and 21° 40′ N. lat., and between 76° and 78° 2′ E. long., having an area of about 9000 square miles. It is traversed in its length by the Poornah-itself a tributary of the Taptee-which, with its numerous affluents, affords an ample supply of water to the valley, and, on other grounds, is peculiarly suitable to the culti vation of cotton. The transfer in 1853 from the Nizam to the British has proved favourable to this production: about 25 per cent. of the area is devoted to cotton. In the cast part there is a coal-field of 40 square miles, and at Akolah, in Purana, there are salt wells fed by a subterranean lake. Though Ellichpore is the chief town, yet it is inferior to Comrawattee, the dépôt for the raw cotton.

BERA'T, a town of Albania, European Turkey, the Tuberathi or Ergent, about 30 miles north-east in the pashalic of Avlona, situated on the banks of It has a populaof the seaport of the same name. tion of from 8000 to 10,000, two-thirds of whom are Greeks; the remainder, Turks. The valley in which B. stands is very fertile, producing large quantities of grain, oil, and wine. B. has a citadel, and traces of ancient Greek buildings, and gives title to a Greek archbishop.

BE'RBERA, a seaport station of Somali, Eastern Africa, with a good harbour, on a bay of the Gulf of Aden. Lat. 10° 26' N., long. 45° 8' E. It is celebrated as the scene of a large annual fair, which brings nearly 20,000 people together from all quarters in the East. Coffee, grains, ghee, golddust, ivory, gums, cattle, ostrich-feathers, slaves, &c., are brought down to this place from the interior on strings of camels, sometimes numbering as many as 2000, and exchanged for cotton, rice, iron, Indian

BERBERIDEE-BERCHTA.

piece-goods, &c. As soon as the fair--which usually extends from November to April-is over, the huts are carefully taken down, and packed up, and nothing remains to mark the site of the town but the bones of animals slaughtered for food during the continuance of the fair.

BERBERI'DEÆ, or BERBERIDA'CEÆ, a natural order of exogenous plants, of which the different species of Barberry (q. v.) afford the best known examples. Many of the plants of this order are spiny shrubs; some are perennial herbaceous plants. Their leaves are alternate, their flowers sometimes solitary, sometimes in racemes or panicles. The calyx consists of 3, 4, or 6 deciduous sepals; the corolla, which arises from beneath the germen, consists of petals equal in number to the sepals, and opposite to them, or twice as many; the stamens are equal in number to the petals, and opposite to them; the anthers are 2-celled, each cell opening curiously by a valve which curves back from bottom to top; the carpel is solitary and 1-celled; the fruit is either a berry or a capsule. This order, which is nearly allied to Vitaceae (q. v.), (Vines, &c.), contains more than 100 known species, chiefly belonging to the temperate parts of the northern hemisphere, and of South America.

BE'RBERS, the general name usually given to the tribes inhabiting the mountainous regions of Barbary and the northern portions of the Great Desert. It is derived, according to Barth, either from the name of their supposed ancestor, Ber, which we recognise in the Lat. A-fer, an African (see letter B); or from the Greek and Roman term Barbari. The name by which they call themselves, and which was known to the Greeks and Romans, is Amazigh, or Mazigh, Mazys, Amoshagh, Imoshagh, &c., according to locality, and whether singular or plural. These tribes have a common origin, and are the descendants of the aboriginal inhabitants of Northern Africa. They appear to have been originally a branch of the Semitic stock; and although they have been conquered in succession by the Phoenicians, Romans, Vandals, and Arabs, and have become, in consequence, to some extent, a mixed race, they still retain, in great part, their distinctive peculiarities. Till the eleventh century, the B. seem to have formed the larger portion of the population inhabiting the southern coast of the Mediterranean, from Egypt to the Atlantic Ocean; but, on the great Arab immigrations which then took place, they were driven to the Atlas Mountains, and to the desert regions where they now live. In Tripoli, the allegiance they pay to the Turks is little more than nominal; in Algeria, where they usually are termed Kabyles, they are yet unconquered by the French; and in Marocco, where they are called 'Shellooh,' they are only in form subject to the emperor. The B. occupying the desert, who are called Tuaric, or Tawarek, by the Arabs, have become much mixed with the negro race. The number of the B. is estimated at between three and four millions. They are of middle stature, sparely but strongly built. The complexion varies from a red to a yellow brown, and the shape of the head and of the features has more of the European than the oriental type. The hair is, in general, dark, and the beard small. The eyes are dark and piercing. Their manners are austere, and in disposition they are cruel, suspicious, and implacable. They are usually at war either with their neighbours or among themselves; are impatient of restraint; and possessed of a rude, wild spirit of independence, which makes it impossible for them to unite for any common purpose, or to make the advances in civilisation which one might otherwise

The

expect from their high physical organisation. They
live in clay-huts and tents; but, in their larger
villages, they have stone-houses. They have herds
of sheep and cattle, and practise agriculture, and
are especially fond of the cultivation of fruit-trees.
They possess water-mills and oil-presses.
mines of iron and lead in the Atlas are wrought by
them, and they manufacture rude agricultural
implements, as well as swords, guns, and gunpowder.
since the Arabs drove them from the fertile plains
They formerly professed the Christian religion; but
between the mountains and the sea, they appear to
have retrograded in every way, and they are now
among the most bigoted adherents of the religion of
Mohammed; although their former creed has left a
few traces, as in the names Mesi for God, and
observed among them. See Barth's Africa, vol. i.
angelus for angel, and many curious customs still

BERBI'CE, the east division of British Guiana, having its middle division, Demerara, on the W.; the Atlantic on the N.; Dutch Guiana or Surinam on the E.; and on the S., the basin of the Amazon, or rather, perhaps, the upper waters of the Surinam. From being a Dutch possession, this part of the coast, between the Amazon and the Orinoco, fell under the power of England in 1796. It was, however, soon restored to Holland at the peace of Amiens, but only to be recaptured in 1803. It stretches in long. between 57 and 58° W., and in lat. indefinitely southward, from about 6° 30′ N. B. is subdivided into six parishes. The popula tion is above 27,000, of whom nearly 4000 are whites; and the principal products are sugar, coffee, and cotton.

statistics, and of climate also, may be more easily But details generally of trade and and satisfactorily treated under the general head of BRITISH GUIANA, than under the separate divisions of B., Demerara, and Essequibo. New Amsterdam, standing on the right bank of the river near its mouth, is at once the chief town and the seaport of the district. The Berbice river, though by no means the largest in the colony, is navigable certainly to the greatest distance from the sea. While the vastly more considerable Essequibo is interrupted by rapids within 50 miles of the coast, the Berbice admits a draught of 12 feet for 100 miles, and one of 7 feet for 60 more, the influence of the tide reaching nearly the whole way; and even as far as lat. 3° 55' N.-175 miles from its outlet by the crow's flight it was found to have still a width of 100 feet, with a depth of from 8 to 10.

BERCHE'MIA. See SUPPLE JACK, in SUPP.

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BE'RCHTA (in Old German, Peracta, and the original form of the name Bertha, being from the same root as the English word bright, and meaning shining,' 'white') is, in German mythology, the name given in the south of Germany and in Switzerland to a spiritual being, who was apparently the same as the Hulda (gracious, benign) of Northern Germany. This being represented originally one of the kindly and benign aspects of the unseen powers; and so the traditions of Hulda (q. v.) in the north continued to represent her. But the B. of the south, in the course of time, became rather an object of terror, and a bugbear to frighten children; the difference probably arising from the circumstance, that the influence of Christianity in converting the pagan deities into demons was sooner felt in the south than in the north. Lady B. has the oversight of spinners. The last day of the year is sacred to her, and if she find any flax left on the distaff that day, she spoils it. Her festival is kept with a prescribed kind of meagre fare oatmeal-gruel, or pottage, and fish. If she catches any persons eating other food on that day, she cuts them up, fills their

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