Bab Sudan, [456.]
Badge of distinction worn by the lepers, [91.]
Bahar Segrer, the Mediterranean designated by that term, [486.]
------ Sudan, corroborative testimony of its situation, [450,] [451,] [465,]
----------, situation of, [436.]
------ Kulla, explanation of the term, [444.]. Ditto of Bahar Sudan, [448.]
------ El Kabeer, or Bahar Addolum, Atlantic Ocean designated by that name, [489.]
------ El Abeed, not Bahar El Abiad, [517.]
Ba Scafeena, of Park, synonymous with the sea of Sudan, [450,] [465.]
----------, of Park, synonymous with the sea of Sudan, properly called Bahar S'feena, [506.]
Bank, in West Barbary, recommended, [237.]
Banks, Sir Joseph's letter to Mr. Dickson, respecting the death of Mungo Park, a passage in it confirmed only in Mr. Jackson's translation of the Shereef Ibrahim's account of that traveller's death, brought by Mr. Bowdich from Ashantee, but not in Mr. Salemé's translation, [425.] The author's translation, [409.]
Barbary, conquered by the Romans, by the Vandals, by the Greeks, by the Arabs, [458.] Partial conquest of by the Portuguese and Spaniards, [458.]
--------, travelling in, [293.]
Bashaw of Abda, interview with, [136.]
Bedouins, emigration of. Camel's milk, their food, [203.] Domestic looms of. Manufactures of. Custom of, [204.] Mode of living. Extempore poetry of, [205.] Manners of, [206.]
Beef, mode of preserving for food in the desert, [349.]
Berebbers, their contest with the emperor, [308.] Their territory and language, [327.] Names of their clans or tribes, [124.] Specimen of their language, [367.]
Bernou, etymology of, [449.]
Bism illak, and El Ham'd û lillah, signification of, [231.]
Bonaparte, his system respecting Africa, [229.]
Bouska, exhibition of that monstrous serpent, [451.]
Brimstone mines, [331.]
British public, address to, [253.]
Buffé, Dr. his medical success at Marocco, [396.] He is recommended to his majesty George the Third, and his majesty is requested, by the emperor, to return him to Gibraltar, to reside there as the emperor's physician, [397.]
Buhellessa, the pretender, described, [287.] He is an adept in the occult sciences, [288.] He marches with 22,000 men to attack Delemy's castle, [289.] He is vanquished and beheaded, [290.] His army dispersed, his head and feet sent to the Prince Muley Abdsalam, at Santa Cruz, [290.] The prince rewards the man who killed the usurper: the author visits the field of battle, which resembled the plains of Waterloo, [291.]
Buregreg river, [113.]
Burkhardt, anticipation respecting, [449.]
Butellise, or night-blindness, described, [332.]
--------, or nyctalopia, an ophthalmia that affects our seamen in the Mediterranean, [433.]
Butter, melted, food in the desert, [6.]
C.
Camel, the ship of the desert, [247.]
Caffer, or Khaffer, signification of, [345.]
Cairo, derivation of the name, [326.]
Canary language resembles the shelluh of Atlas, [381.]
Caravans accumulate as they proceed to the confines of Sahara, [4.]
Cape of Good Hope, how to preserve, and to improve its produce, [339,] [340. ]
Cape de Verd, compared to Ceuta, [229.]
Ceuta, preparation for the siege of, by the emperor Muley Yezzid, [403.]
Christians, harmony among, necessary to precede the conversion of Africa, [131.]
Christian religion, how to propagate it in Africa, [224.]
--------, impediments to its propagation, [225.]
--------, the influence of its principles in Africa, [227.]
Civilisation of Africa, the necessary result of commerce, and the only plan by which an expectation of the conversion of the natives to Christianity can possibly be indulged, [263.]
---------- of Africa, through commerce, the only effectual means of abolishing the slave trade, [270.]
Civil war prevalent in West and in South Barbary, [279.]
Characteristic trait of Muhamedans,[308.]
Christians, ordered by the emperor, on pain of death, to live peaceably with one another, [520.]
Christ acknowledged by muselmen, [240.]
Circumcision, when performed among Muhamedans, [345.]
Cobas described, [272.]
Colonial produce, consequences of the cultivation of, in Senegal by the French, [228.]
Commercial intercourse with Africa favourable to the propagation of Christianity, [227.]
Recommended on a large scale, [249,] [251,] [259.]
Commercial adventurer in Africa more likely to succeed than a scientific one, [259.]
Commerce, the key of Africa,[428.]
Communication with Africa to be effected by the medium of commerce, [493.]
Connubial customs, [313.]
Copper mines, [331.]
Corn, abundant at Dar el Beida and at Fedalla, [110.] Abundance of, in West Barbary,[208,] [340.]
Couriers, confidence reposed in them, [405.]
Coffee of Timbuctoo, [279.]
Consuls of the European powers, their residence, [130.]
Congo, Africans of, how converted to the Christian faith, [442_.]
Continental markets of Europe, contemplation how they will be supplied with colonial produce, [229.]
Cuscusoe, or more properly Kuskasoe, an excellent food, mode of preparing it, [97.]
Customs, Muhamedan, [230.].
Cuba, slave-trade and produce of, increased, [270.]
Customs of the shelluhs of Idaultit, and laws of, remarkable,[313.]
Customs, ceremonies at funerals, [465.]
D.
Dances of the Arabs described, music of, [140,] [344.]
Dates abundant at Tafilelt, [80.]
Dar el Beida, a corn country, [110.]
Dead, bodies of the, never interred in towns or in the mosques, [272.] Ceremony of interment, [273.]
Deism, [325.]
Deef Allah, what, [341.]
Decay of science and the arts among the Arabs, [352.]
Delel, i.e. auctioneer of slaves at Marocco, [95.]
Deleim, woled Arabs, [138.]
Decked vessels in the interior of Africa, [449.]
Delemy, sheik of the Deleim Arabs,[138.] Invites the author and his companion, Signor Andrea de Christo, to pass the night at a douar of the Woled Abbusebah Arabs, [139.] Garden of, described, [147.] Renown of, [148.] A main pillar to the throne of Marocco, [148.] Receives an exhortation from the prince Abdsalam to give battle to the usurper Buhellessa, [288.] Dextrous in the management of a horse, [289.]
Desert, rate of travelling through, [470.]
Dews of the night, how they secure themselves against, when sleeping, [154.]
Deef Allah, custom of uttering, [233.]
Dimenet, in the Atlas, attacked by the emperor,[305.]
Difference between the oriental and occidental Arabic alphabets, [351.]
Djinawa, definition of the name, [507.]
Distances from port to port, along the coast, calculated, [132.]
Discovery of Africa, plan for, [200.]
Disgrace of inhospitality,[240.]
Doctors, itinerant, their apparatus, [242.]
Douars, or villages of tents, described, [328.]
Draha, province of, [2.] Hire of camels from Tafilelt to, [2.] Dates, the names of the different species, [3.] Plantations of, [3.] Inhabitants of nearly black, [2.] Character of them, [2,] [7.]
Drahim, what,[3.]
Driss Zerone Muley, renowned sanctuary of,[118.] Author's hospitable reception there, and admission to the adytum, [119.]
Duplicity of the Africans exemplified,[293,] [314.]
E.
East India trade, our, how likely to be affected by French colonisation, in Senegal, [229.]
Ebekoaits, or Ait Ebeko, a tribe of Berebbers, [124.]
Effah el, exhibition of that venomous serpent, [453.]
Elephants, [8.]
Elegant females, [142.]
Emperor admits an ambassador without prostration, and why, [282.]
-------- Yezzid is wounded, and dies, [285.] His body exhumated, [286.] Compared to his majesty George the Fourth, [287.]
Emperor, anecdote of one, [307.] His contest with the Berebbers, [308.] Letter from him to his bashaw of Suse respecting English seamen wrecked on the western coast of Africa, [364.] Titles of H.I.M., [382.]. Style of addressing him, [382.]
Emperor's letters, [384,] [387,] [392,] [394,] [395,] [398,] [402,] [403,] [405.]
---- plan of reconciling catholics with protestants, [520.]
---- table, simplicity of the furniture of, [96.]
---- audience of business of the, [98.] Audience of leave in the garden of the Nile, [98.]
Embassy, British, to Marocco, result of, [128.]
Encroachments of the French anticipated on our colonial arkets, [230.]
Encyclopedia Britannica, misapplication of an anachronism, [442.] The editor of has adopted the author's opinion respecting the course of the Niger, [447.]
Epistolary correspondence, [382.]
Epistolary diction used by Muhamedans, [404.]
Equity, case of, [312.]
Esshume, See Shume.
Euphorbium plant, [74.]
European merchants at Mogador in danger of being decollated by order of the emperor, on a charge of high-treason, [284.]
F.
Fas, bankrupts, how treated at, [16.] Is the metropolis of the north, [87.] Talb Cadus, [87.]
----, gold thread manufactured at, of a superior quality, [126.] Manufactures, various of, [126.]
----, houses of the merchants of, described, and gardens at, [275.] Library at, [324.]
Fakeers, or muselmen-saints excite hostility between Christians and Muhamedans, [267.].
Fedalla, corn country, [110.]
Fig-trees, very large, [82.]
Food, [316.] Food of the desert, [349.]
---- of the Arabs similar to that used in the days of Abraham, [243.]
Fourban, Comte de, anecdote of, [112,] [113.]
Fragments, notes, and anecdotes, [276.]
French army, landing of, in Egypt, [100.]
Fruits of all kinds abundant at Salee and Rabat, [114,] [125.]
Fruga, town of, [76,] [78.]