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EASTERN DISTRICT OF PENNSYLVANIA, to wit:

BE IT REMEMBERED, that on the tenth day of August, in the fifty-fourth year of the Independence of the United States of America, A. D. 1829, Carey, Lea & Carey, of the said district, have deposited in this office the title of a book, the right whereof they claim as proprietors, in the words following, to wit:

"Encyclopædia Americana. A Popular Dictionary of Arts, Sciences, Literature, History, Politics and Biography, brought down to the present Time; including a copious Collection of Original Articles in American Biography; on the Basis of the seventh Edition of the German Conversations-Lexicon. Edited by Francis Lieber, assisted by E. Wigglesworth'

In conformity to the act of the Congress of the United States, entitled, "An Act for the encouragement of learning, by securing the copies of maps, charts and books to the authors and proprietors of such copies, during the times therein mentioned:" and also to the act, entitled, "An Act supplementary to an act, entitled, An Act for the encouragement of learning, by securing the copies of maps, charts and books to the authors and proprietors of such copies, during the times therein mentioned; and extending the benefits thereof to the arts of designing engraving and etching historical and other prints."

D. CALDWELL,

Clerk of the Eastern District of Pennsylvania.

ENCYCLOPÆDIA AMERICANA.

BATTLE-AXE; a weapon much used in the early part of the middle ages, particularly by the people who fought on foot. It was not uncommon, however, among the knights, who used also the mace, a species of iron club or hammer. Both are to be seen in the different collections of old arms in Europe. Both these weapons, and another kind, called, in German, Morgenstern (morning star), consisting of a staff, having an iron ball at the end, with cross iron spikes, served to give stunning blows, whose force was felt through the iron armor of the knights. Knights used chiefly the Morgenstern and the mace. The Greeks and Romans did not employ the battle-axe, though it was found among contemporary nations. In fact, the axe is one of the earliest weapons, its use, as an instrument of domestic industry, naturally suggesting its application for purposes of offence; but, at the same time, it will always be abandoned as soon as the art of fencing, attacking and guarding is the least cultivated; because the heavier the blow given with this instrument, the more will it expose the fighter. It is a weapon which affords hardly any guard, and it never would have remained so long in use in the middle ages, had it not been for the iron armor, which protected the body from every thing but heavy blows. In England, Ireland and Scotland, the battle-axe was much employed. At the battle of Bannockburn, king Robert Bruce clave an English champion down to the chine with one blow of his axe. A blow of equal force was given by a Suabian knight, in the Levant, in presence of the German emperor. The Lochaber axe remained a formidable implement of de

struction in the hands of the Highlanders nearly to the present period, and is still used, by the city-guard of Edinburgh, in quelling riots, &c.

BATTLE-PIECE; a painting which represents a battle, exhibiting large masses of men in action. The armor of the ancients, and the whole array and action of their battles, afford subjects much more favorable to the artist than the straight lines, or condensed columns, and the firearms of the moderns. A painter of battle-pieces ought to have an accurate knowledge of the appearance of horses and men, and, if possible, to have seen a battle, as few persons are able to form from hearsay an accurate idea of such a scene. Some of the greatest pieces of this kind are, the battle of Constantine, of which the cartoons were drawn by Raphael, and which was executed by Giulio Romano; Lebrun's battles of ALexander, and the battles of the Amazons, by Rubens. From these may be distinguished the skirmishes, surprises, &c., which are represented with so much skill by Antonio Tempesta, John Snellink, Jos. van der Velde, John Asselyn, Peter Sneyers, Robert von Hoek, Fulcone, called oracolo delle battaglie, James Courtois, Francis van der Meulen, Philip Wouvermann, Charles Breydel, Henry Verschuuring and George Philip Rugendas.

BATTOGES, BATTACKS; two thin sticks, with which criminals in Russia were formerly beaten upon their naked backs. The criminal was laid upon the ground, and one of the executioners sat upon his head, another upon his feet. By the code of Catherine II, this punishment was abolished.

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BATTUECAS, Las; two valleys, enclosed by high mountains, in the Spanish kingdom of Leon, 50 miles from Salamanca, about a Spanish mile long, and so inaccessible that the inhabitants are said to have been unknown to the Spaniards for several centuries. However, a convent of Carmelites was built in the Battuecas valleys as early as 1559. They are situated so low, that, in the longest days, the sun only shines there for four hours. The common account, that these valleys were discovered in the 16th century, by two lovers, who fled there to escape the pursuit of their families, has been declared by father Feyjoo to be unfounded. Madame de Genlis has founded upon this story her romance Las Battuécas (Paris, 1816, 2 vols.); but she labors under a mistake when she asserts that M. de Bourgoing, in his Travels through Spain, has quoted, as a historical fact, what she relates of the Battuecas.

BAUCIS; a Phrygian woman; the wife of Philemon. They received Jupiter and Mercury hospitably, after these gods had been denied hospitality in the whole country, while travelling in disguise. A deluge destroyed the remainder of the people, but Philemon and Baucis, with their cottage, were saved. They begged the gods to make their cottage a temple, in which they could officiate as priest and priestess, and that they might die together; which was granted. Philemon and Baucis are therefore names often used to indicate faithful and attached married people.

BAUMAN ISLANDS; a cluster of islands in the South Pacific ocean, discovered, in 1722, by Bauman, in his voyage round the world with Roggewein. All the inhabitants, says a writer, are white; some of them burned by the sun: they are numerous, and armed with bows and arrows, but represented as of a gentle and humane disposition, and friendly to strangers. The largest island is about 21 or 22 miles in circumference, with good anchorage. Lon. 173° W.; lat. 122 S.

BAUMANN'S CAVERN (in German, Baumannshohle); an interesting natural cavern in the Harz, in the principality of Blankenburg, on the left bank of the Bode, about five miles from Blankenburg, in a limestone mountain, consisting of six principal apartments, besides many smaller ones, every where covered with stalactites. The earthy ingredients of these petrifactions are held in solution by the water, which penetrates the rock, and deposits a calcarious stone. The name

of this cavern is derived from a miner, who entered it, in 1672, with the view of finding ore, but lost his way, and wandered about for two days before he could find the entrance. He soon after died.

BAUMGARTEN, Alexander Gottlieb, born, in 1714, at Berlin, an acute and clear thinker, of the school of Wolf, studied at Halle, and was, for a time, professor extraordinary there. In 1740, he was made professor of philosophy at Frankfort on the Oder, and died there in 1762. He is the founder of æsthetics as a science, and the inventor of this name. He derived the rules of art from the works of art and their effects. Hereby he distinguished himself advantageously from the theorists of his time. (See Esthetics.) His ideas of this science he first developed in his academical discussion, De Nonnullis ad Poema pertinentibus (Halle, 1735, 4to). George Fr. Meier's Principles of all Liberal Sciences (3 vols., Halle, 1748-50) originated from his suggestions. Eight years later, B. published his .Esthetica (Frankfort on the Oder, 1750-58, 2 vols.), a work which death prevented him from completing.

BAUSE, John Frederic, a distinguished German engraver, born at Halle, in 1738, died at Weimar, 1814. He resided chiefly at Leipsic, where he executed many highly esteemed engravings. He was a member of several academies of fine arts.

BAUTZEN, OF BUDESSIN; capital of Upper Lusatia, in the part belonging to the king of Saxony, upon a height defended on the west side by steep rocks, the foot of which is watered by the Spree. Among the 11,500 inhabitants, who are principally Lutherans, there are a great number of Wendes, or descendants of the Vandals, who worship in a Lutheran and in a Catholic church, in their own language. The German part of the population, both Catholic and Protestant, worship together in the cathedral: the former are in possession of the third part of it, including the high altar, sufficiently large for the small Catholic congregation; the nave serves the Lutheran community as their parish church, and the mutual spirit of toleration in both parties has, in recent times, prevented trouble from such an arrangement.-Here was fought, on the 20th and 21st of May, 1813, the second great battle in the campaign of the Prussians and Russians against the French. The allies had been compelled, after the battle of Lützen (May 2, 1813), to retreat to the right bank of the Elbe, and prepared themselves, near Bautzen on the Spree, for a new engagement. Although

BAUTZEN-BAVARIA.

the army of Napoleon was far superior in number, being strengthened by reënforcements from France, Italy and the troops of the confederation of the Rhine, so as to amount to about 148,000 men, yet the allies determined to risk a battle, that Prussia might gain time for its levies in Silesia, and Napoleon be checked in his advance as much as possible. It was also desirable that the wavering troops of Austria should be convinced that the army was able to make a stand against the enemy, and that the courage of the new Prussian recruits should not be damped by continual retreat, but, on the contrary, their wish for battle gratified. On the morning of May 20, Napoleon disclosed his plan of attack. In the evening, the French had gained the city of Bautzen. On the 21st, the fight continued until 4 o'clock in the afternoon, when the allies resolved on a retreat, which was performed in such order, that Napoleon was not able to gain any immediate advantage from his victory. The field of battle was covered with the dead, and was lighted by 30 burning The French loss was about villages. 8000 men killed, and 18,000 wounded; that of the allies, between 8 and 12,000. Napoleon, to encourage his troops, assigned 25,000,000 francs for the erection of a monument upon mount Cenis, as a token of his gratitude towards the French and Italian troops. The rear of the allies repulsed two serious attacks, and, contrary to the expectations of Napoleon, they marched to the intrenched camp of Pül

zen.

But Lauriston occupied Breslau. The position of the allies, threatening the right wing of the French army, the great loss which the French had suffered, and the detached corps, which cut off Napoleon's communication with Saxony, induced him to accede to a suspension of arms on the 4th of June, near the city of Jauer. (See War of 1812-1815.)

BAVARIA. At the time of the general migration of the barbarians, the regions formerly inhabited by the Boii, the Celts of the Danube, were taken possession of by some German tribes. This country, in the time of Cæsar, had been a waste, and, in the time of Augustus, a Roman province (Vindelicia and Noricum). At the end of the fifth century, these tribesthe Heruli, the Rugians, the Turcilingians and the Skyres-formed a confederacy, like those of the Franks and the Marcomanni, under the name Baioarians. They spread from Noricum westward to the Lech. Ratisbon was their chief seat, This country was then called Noricum,

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and, according to Mannert, was never subjected to the Ostrogoths. When the Franks took possession of Rhotia, the Baioarians became subject to them. The people, however, still retained the liberty of choosing their own rulers. After the division of the empire of Charlemagne, this region was disturbed, like the rest of Europe, by the conflicting claims of rival dukes, till the time of Otho the Great, count palatine of Wittelsbach. Otho, the ancestor of the present dynasty, died in 1183. His successor, Louis I, enlarged the Bavarian territory, and acquired the palatinate of the Rhine. He was murdered in 1231, probably at the instigation of Henry, whose rebellion against his father, the emperor Frederic II, the duke had censured. He was succeeded by his Under his reign, the bishops son Otho, the Illustrious, palatine of the Rhine. made themselves independent. His dominions, however, were considerably increased. His attachment to the emperor involved him in the excommunication His sons, Louis and Henry, pronounced against that prince. He died in 1253. reigned for two years in conjunction. In 1255, they divided the territories, Louis receiving Upper and Henry Lower Bavaria. The line of the latter became extinct a few years afterwards. The inheritance of the unhappy Conradin of Hohenstaufen fell into the hands of these princes. One of the two sons of Louis was raised to the imperial dignity, in 1314, under the title of Louis IV (q. v.), called the Bavarian. He entered into an agreement with the sons of his brother (Pavia, 1329) for the division of the dominions of the family. In consequence of this agreement, king Maximilian Joseph united all the dominions of the Wittelsbach dynasty in 1799. After the extinction of the Lower Bavarian line, the emperor Louis, by the desire of his states, united Lower with Upper Bavaria, The emperor introduced a new code of laws for Upper Bavaria, a new organization of the courts for Lower Bavaria, conferred the privileges of a city on Munich, and reduced to order the internal administration. He died Oct. 11, 1347, leaving six sons by two marriages. His dominions included Bavaria, Brandenburg, the provinces of Holland and Zealand, Tyrol, &c. These provinces were soon lost by the divisions and dissensions of the different lines. Most of the lines founded In 1506, a diet of the states of Upper and by the six brothers early became extinct. Lower Bavaria was assembled by duke

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Albert II, who, with the consent of his brother Wolfgang, and of the estates, published a pragmatic sanction, introducing the law of primogeniture, and fixing the allowance of the younger sons. Albert died in 1508. Of his three sons, William IV, Louis and Ernest, William ought, accordingly, to have been his sole heir. The authority was, however, divided, after much contest, between William IV and Louis, until the death of the latter, in 1534. These princes were both opposed to the reformation. Luther's most violent opponent, John Eck, lived at Ingolstadt, under their protection, which they also extended to the Jesuits. William died in 1550; his son Albert V, the Generous, succeeded him. He also favored the Jesuits, but was a liberal patron of the arts and sciences. The states received from him great privileges. He died in 1579. Of three sons, the eldest, William V, the Pious, succeeded him, and, in 1596, resigned the government to his eldest son, Maximilian I, and retired to a monastery. Maximilian, a prince of distinguished abilities, was the soul of the league formed against the Protestant union. In the course of the 30 years' war, which had just broken out, Maximilian was invested, by the emperor Ferdinand II (1623), with the dignity of elector palatine. The peace of Westphalia confirmed Maximilian in the clectoral dignity and the possession of the upper palatinate, in return for the renunciation of Upper Austria, which had been pledged to him for 13,000,000 florins, expenses of war; and, on the other hand, a new electorate, the eighth, was established for the palatinate line, and its succession to the title and territory of the original electorate was settled, in case of the failure of the line of William. Maximilian died Sept. 27, 1651, after a reign of 55 years. He was succeeded by his son Ferdinand Maria, who was succeeded, in 1679, by his eldest son, Maximilian Emanuel. In the war of the Spanish succession, the elector declared for France. After the unfortunate battle at Blenheim, Bavaria was treated by the emperor as a conquered country. The elector was put under the ban of the empire in 1706, and was not reinstated in his government till the peace of Baden (1714). After his death, in 1726, Charles Albert succeeded him in the electoral dignity. Although he had signed the pragmatic sanction of the emperor Charles VI, yet, after the death of the emperor, and the beginning of the first Silesian war, so

fortunate for the king of Prussia, he claimed the whole Austrian territory, subjected all Upper Austria, assumed the title of archduke of Austria, after the capture of Prague in the same year received homage as king of Bohemia, and was elected emperor of Germany, at Frankfort, 1742, under the title of Charles VII. But here his fortune began to decline. As he had received the homage of Austria and Bohemia, so, after the sudden change in the fortune of the war (1743), Maria Theresa obliged the states of Bavaria, and of the upper palatinate, to swear allegiance to her. Notwithstanding his alliance with the landgrave of HesseCassel and Frederic II (1744), and the progress of the Prussian arms, Charles was compelled, by the superior talent of the Austrian general, Charles of Lorraine, to expose Bavaria. He did not live to see the end of the war, but died Jan. 20, 1745. His son and successor, Maximilian Joseph III, who also assumed, at first, the title of archduke of Austria, made peace with Austria soon after, at Fussen (April 22, 1745), became one of the guarantees of the pragmatic sanction, promised the archduke Francis his vote in the election of emperor, and received, in return, all the Bavarian territories which had been conquered by Austria. Maximilian Joseph devoted himself entirely to the good of his country. He encouraged agriculture, manufactures, mining; regulated the judicial establishments, the police, the finances, and institutions for instruction; the sciences were promoted by the foundation of the academy of sciences at Munich, in 1759, and the fine arts found in him a liberal protector. He, himself without children, confirmed all the contracts relating to the inheritance, which had been made with the electoral line of the palatinate since the treaty of Pavia (1329). In compliance with the treaties of the house of Wittelsbach, as well as with the terms of the peace of Westphalia, the right of succession in Bavaria reverted, undeniably, to the elector of the palatinate, since the Wittelsbach-Bavarian line became extinct on the death of Maximilian Joseph, 30th of Dec., 1777. Austria then laid claim to Lower Bavaria, and attempted to support her demands by arms, without any previous declaration of war. Charles Theodore, being without children, was persuaded to sign a treaty (Jan. 3 and 14, 1778), formally renouncing the Bavarian succession. But the duke of Deux-Ponts, uncle of the reigning king, the nearest

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