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ANIMETTA

Volume 2 · 231 words · 1797 Edition

among ecclesiastical writers, de- ANNINGA, in commerce, a root which grows in the Antilles islands, and is pretty much like the China plant. It is used by sugar-bakers for refining the sugar.

ANJOU, a province and duchy of France, bounded on the east by Touraine, on the south by Poitou, on the west by Bretagne, and on the north by Maine. It is 70 miles in length, and in breadth 60. Through this province run five navigable rivers: the Loire, which divides it into two parts; the Vienne, the Toue, the Maine, and the Sarte.

The air is temperate, and the country agreeably diversified with hills and meadows. There are 33 forests of oak-trees mixed with beech. The country produces white-wine, wheat, barley, rye, oats, peas, beans, flax, hemp, walnuts, and some chestnuts. In lower Anjou they make cider. There are fruit-trees of all kinds, and pasture proper for horses. The greatest riches of the province consist in cows, oxen, and sheep. There are several coal and iron mines; and yet there are but two forges in the whole province. There are quarries of marble and of slate; as well as quarries of white stone, proper for building, on the side of the river Loire. Here are also several salt-pan works and some glasshouses. The remarkable towns, besides Angers the capital, are Saumur, Brissac, Pons de Cea, La Fleche, and Beaufort.