in his power. By the same Mss. we have been enabled to correct many mistakes in Des Maizeaux’s life of Haiti, as well as in those in the General Dictionary, and Biographia
Mr. Faringdon had collected materials with a view to the
life of Mr. Hales, which, Mr. Zouch informs us, were on
his demise consigned to the care of Isaac Walton, by Mr.
Fulman of Corpus Christi college, Oxford, who had proposed to finish the work, and on that occasion had applied
for the assistance of Mr. Walton. Mr. Zouch adds, that
“the result of this application is not known.
” Having,
however, by the kindness of Henry Ellis, esq. of the British museum, had access to a transcript of Mr. Fulman’s
Mss. in Corpus college, as far as they regard the project
of writing Hales’s life, we are enabled to say that it was a
Mr. Milington, and not Mr. Fulman, who sent Faringdon’s
materials to Mr. Walton, and that the latter gave Fulman
every information in his power. By the same Mss. we have
been enabled to correct many mistakes in Des Maizeaux’s
life of Haiti, as well as in those in the General Dictionary,
and Biographia Britannica.
, of Haiti, or Grossen-hayn, in Misnia, was born in 1675. His first
, of Haiti,
or Grossen-hayn, in Misnia, was born in 1675. His first
publication was an edition of Empedocles “de Sphsera,
”
xvith his own notes, and the Latin version of Septimius
Florens, in 1711, Dresden, 4to. He then published a
“Notitia Auctorum,
” Greek
Lexicon
” was published, first at Leipsic, in
the services he rendered Spain during the war of Naples, induced Ferdinand to send him to the Island of Haiti, as intendant and inspector-general of the trade of the
, in Spanish Gonçalo Hermandez de Oviedo Y Valdes, a Spanish historian,
was born at Madrid, about the year 1478. He was educated among the pages in the court of Ferdinand king of
Arragon, and Isabella queen of Castile, and happened to
be at Barcelona in 1493, when Columbus returned from his
first voyage to the island Haiti, which he called Hispaniola, and which now is known by the name of St. Domingo. Curiosity led him to obtain from Columbus and
his companions an account of what was most remarkable in
their voyages; and the information he obtained, and the
services he rendered Spain during the war of Naples, induced Ferdinand to send him to the Island of Haiti, as
intendant and inspector-general of the trade of the new
world. The ravages which the syphilis had made during
that war, led him to inquire into the most efficacious remedies for this malady, which was supposed to have come
from the West Indies. His inquiries were also extended
to every thing which regards the natural history of these
regions and on his return to Spain, he published “Summario de la Historia general y natural de les Indias Occidentales,
” Toledo, La Historia general y
natural de las Indias Occidentales,
” Salamanca,