a marquisate of Germany, derives the name of Mahern, as it is called by the Germans, and of Morawa, as it is called by the natives, from the river of that name which rises in the mountains of the county of Glatz, and passes through the middle of it. It is bounded to the south by Austria, to the north by Glatz and Silesia, to the west by Bohemia, and to the east by Silesia and Hungary; being about 120 miles in length, and 100 in breadth.
A great part of this country is over-run with woods and mountains, where the air is very cold, but much wholesome than in the low grounds, which are full of bogs and lakes. The mountains, in general, are barren; but the more champaign parts tolerably fertile, yielding corn, with plenty of hemp and flax, good saffron, and pasture. Nor is it altogether destitute of wine, red and white, fruits, and garden-fruit. Moravia also abounds in horses, black cattle, sheep, and goats. In the woods and about the lakes there is plenty of wild fowl, game, venison, bees, honey, hares, foxes, wolves, beavers, &c. In this country are likewise quarries of marble, baltard diamonds, amethysts, alum, iron, fulphur, saltpetre, and vitriol, with wholesome mineral-waters, and warm springs; but salt is imported. Its rivers, of which the March, Morawa, or Morau, are the chief, abound with trout, crayfish, barbel, eels, perch, and many other sorts of fish.
The language of the inhabitants is a dialect of the Slavonic, differing little from the Bohemians; but the nobility and citizens speak German and French.
Moravia was anciently inhabited by the Quadi, who were driven out by the Scythians. Its kings, who were once powerful and independent, afterwards became dependent on, and tributary to, the German emperors and kings. At last, in the year 908, the Moravian kingdom was parcelled out among the Germans, Poles, and Hungarians. In 1086, that part of it properly called Moravia was declared a marquisate by the German king Henry IV. and united with Bohemia, to whose dukes and kings it hath ever since been subject. Though it is not very populous, it contains about 42 greater or walled towns, 17 smaller or open towns, and 198 market-towns, besides villages, &c. The states of the country consist of the clergy, lords, knights, and burgesses; and the diets, when summoned by the regency, are held at Brunn. The marquisate is still governed by its own peculiar constitutions, under the directorium in publicis & cameralibus, and the supreme judicatory at Vienna. It is divided into five circles, each of which has its captain, and contributes to its sovereign about one-third of what is exacted of Bohemia. Towards the expenses of the military establishment of the whole Austrian hereditary countries, its yearly quota is 1,856,490 florins. Seven regiments of foot, one of cuirassiers, and one of dragoons, are usually quartered in it.
Christianity was planted in this country in the 9th century; and the inhabitants continued attached to the church of Rome till the 15th, when they espoused the doctrine of John Huss, and threw off popery; but after the defeat of the elector Palatine, whom they had chosen king, as well as the Bohemians, the emperor Ferdinand II. re-established popery. However, there are still some Protestants in Moravia; and here it was that the Hernbutters, or Moravian Brethren, first made their appearance. See Moravians. The bishop of Olmutz, who stands immediately under the pope, is at the head of the ecclesiastics in this country. The supreme ecclesiastical jurisdiction, under the bishop, is vested in a consistory.
The commerce of this country is inconsiderable. Of what they have, Brunn enjoys the principal part. At Iglau and Trebitz are manufactures of cloth, paper, gun-powder, &c. There are also some iron-works and glass-houses in the country.
The inhabitants of Moravia in general are open-hearted, not easy to be provoked or pacified, obedient to their masters, and true to their promises; but credulous. Moravians lous of old prophecies, and much addicted to drinking, though neither such louts or bigots as they are represented by some geographers. The boors, indeed, upon the river Hanak, are said to be a thievish, unpolished, brutal race. The sciences now begin to lift up their heads a little among the Moravians; the university of Olmutz having been put on a better footing; and a riding academy, with a learned society, have been lately established there.