Home1860 Edition

BOMBAX

Volume 4 · 7,832 words · 1860 Edition

a genus of soft, spongy trees, of the natural order of Bombacaceae. The most noted is B. Ceiba, the silk-cotton tree of South America, the trunk of which is often 100 feet high, and of enormous thickness, so that a canoe hollowed out of its spongy stem will carry at once fifteen or twenty hogsheads of sugar. B. pubescens of Brazil attains only a height of 20 or 30 feet. Its tough bark is manufactured into ropes.

END OF VOLUME FOURTH. LIST OF WORKS

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General Atlas of the World, 1853.

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EDINBURGH: ADAM AND CHARLES BLACK. ENCYCLOPÆDIA BRITANNICA,

EIGHTH EDITION.

In every country where Science and Literature have been long and successfully cultivated, and books extensively multiplied, attempts more or less skilful have been made to reduce the mass of information to a compendious and regulated form, and to furnish a ready access to its varied details by means of Encyclopaedias. Of the importance and advantages of such publications, there can scarcely be two opinions. Executed on a plan sufficiently comprehensive, they ought to embrace all the departments of human learning, rendering the Alphabet a ready key, not only to the Arts and Sciences, but to the multiplied details of History, Biography, Geography, and Miscellaneous Literature. A work thus constructed is not only valuable to the Scholar and the man of Science as a Dictionary of Universal Reference, but the subjects being treated in a form consistent with Systematic Exposition, as well as with Alphabetical Arrangement, the book becomes an inestimable treasure to those who, although they cannot afford leisure for very laborious research or profound investigation, are yet desirous to possess that general information on all subjects which constitutes an intelligent and well-informed man.

Among books of this class, the Encyclopædia Britannica has long been conspicuously eminent. As a Great Repertory of Human Knowledge, it has continued since 1771 to accumulate the ever-increasing treasures of Science and Literature. It was first published in three volumes 4to, 1771; next, in ten volumes, in 1778; in eighteen volumes in 1797, to which was added the Supplement, in two volumes, by Bishop Gleig, in 1801; this was followed by an edition in twenty volumes, in 1810; and other two editions during the succeeding ten years; to which was added the celebrated Supplement, in six volumes 4to, edited by Professor Napier, commenced in 1815, and finished in 1824.

The Seventh Edition, which was completed in 1842, embodied whatever remained valuable in the previous editions and in the Supplements, and was further enhanced in value by the addition of some of the most celebrated disquisitions which have adorned the literature of the nineteenth century. The publication thus of Seven Editions with successive improvements, and the Sale of 35,000 copies, not during an excitement raised by a factitious reputation, but during a succession of years, in which the work was tested and approved by the most accomplished and scientific scholars, remains an irrefragable proof of its unquestionable merit, and have given it so decided a preference in public favour, that its popularity, instead of suffer- ing diminution from rivalship, has steadily continued to increase, and never stood higher than at the present time.

It has been the leading object of its conductors to combine abstract with practical, and solid with pleasing information, in such proportions as would be most useful and most acceptable to the public, to deliver the truths of Science in the most accurate and intelligible form, and, at the same time, to pay due attention to those branches of knowledge, which, though not admitting of a scientific shape, are yet deservedly popular, and have a powerful influence on the taste, habits, and character of the individual,—in a word, to render the Work at once a Dictionary of Science, a Copious Abstract of Literature and Philosophy, and a Book of Universal Reference.

The Eighth Edition will undergo careful revision and extensive alterations, so as to be accommodated to the improved taste and advanced intelligence of the times. Arrangements are accordingly made to secure the co-operation of the most eminent living Authors, who have contributed treatises in the various departments of Science, Literature, the Arts, Manufactures, Commerce, Statistics, and General Knowledge, to supersede those now rendered obsolete by the progress of discovery, improvements in the Arts, or the general advancement of society.

In giving effect to the extensive plan of reconstruction thus adopted, due consideration will, at the same time, be given to the great and permanent value of many of those Articles and Treatises with which the former Editions were enriched. The possession of these invaluable contributions forms, indeed, a characteristic feature of the Work, and gives it a decided pre-eminence over every other publication of its class.

To the Gentleman and the Merchant, to the Agriculturist and the Manufacturer, to the Clergyman and the Layman, to the Student of Science or Philosophy and the Cultivator of Literature or the Fine Arts, the Encyclopædia Britannica will prove an acquisition of the highest value. The great scope of its information also recommends it to Emigrants and other persons resident in quarters where access to books is difficult, or whose fortunes do not permit them the enjoyment of extensive libraries.

To all such the Publishers confidently recommend the Encyclopædia Britannica, as a Work deserving of their confidence and support, and worthy of the National Name.

EDINBURGH: ADAM AND CHARLES BLACK. "The Encyclopædia Britannica, a publication well worth your having."

Wilberforce's Letter to Pitt.—Life, Vol. III., p. 14.

Now Publishing, in Monthly Parts, price 8s., and Quarterly Volumes, price 24s.,

ENCYCLOPÆDIA BRITANNICA,

EIGHTH EDITION.

GREATLY IMPROVED AND BROUGHT DOWN TO THE PRESENT TIME.

EDITED BY

THOMAS STEWART TRAILL, M.D., F.R.S.E.,

Professor of Medical Jurisprudence in the University of Edinburgh;

ASSISTED BY NUMEROUS CONTRIBUTORS, WHOSE INITIALS ARE ATTACHED TO THEIR RESPECTIVE ARTICLES.

The ENCYCLOPÆDIA BRITANNICA forms an Alphabetical Repertory of every branch of Human Knowledge, and renders the Alphabet a ready key not only to the Arts and Sciences, but to the multiplied details of History, Philosophy, Biography, Geography, Commerce, Manufactures, Statistics, and Miscellaneous Literature.

The Publishers are fully aware that in a comprehensive work of reference, as this is, it is desirable to obtain Completeness and Accuracy of Detail in all the Articles, of whatever length or consequence they may be. Accordingly, while arrangements have been made to secure the co-operation of some of the most eminent living authors for the more important contributions, the greatest regard will in every respect be paid to those of the smallest size.

LIST OF SOME OF THE CONTRIBUTORS TO THE EIGHTH EDITION.

Rt. Hon. Thomas Barrington Macaulay, M.P. Richard Whately, D.D., Archbishop of Dublin. R. Dickson Hampden, D.D., Bishop of Hereford. William Whewell, D.D., Professor of Moral Philosophy, Trinity College, Cambridge. Baron Justin Von Liebig. Dr. Wm. Gregory, Professor of Chemistry in the University of Edinburgh. William Spalding, Professor of Rhetoric, St Andrews University. Sir Archibald Alison, Bart., Author of the History of Europe, &c. &c. John Stuart Blackie, Professor of Greek, Edinburgh University. Edward Thornton, Esq., Statistical Department, East India House, Author of Gazetteer of Science. Augustus Petermann, Esq., Physical Geographer to the Queen. John Wilson, Esq., Farmer, Edlington Mains, Berwickshire, Author of various papers on Agriculture read before the Highland and Agricultural Society. Thomas Anderson, M.D., Professor of Chemistry, Glasgow, and Lecturer on Agricultural Chemistry to the Highland and Agricultural Society. John Hill Burton, Esq., Advocate, Author of the History of Scotland from the Revolution, &c. Rev. Wm. Lindsay Alexander, D.D., Author of Connection and Harmony of Old and New Testaments, &c. &c. George Farquhar Graham, Esq., Author of various Works on Music.

J. R. McCulloch, Esq., Member of the Institute of France Author of Commercial Dictionary, &c. Sir William Hamilton, Bart. George Ferguson, LL.D., Professor of Humanity, King's College, Aberdeen. Charles MacLaren, Esq., F.R.S.E., Author of Topography of the Plain of Troy, Geology of Fife and the Lothians, &c. &c. William Hosking, Esq., Professor of Architecture and Arts of Construction, King's College, London. Rev. Robert Main, M.A., F.R.A.S., First Assistant, Royal Observatory, Greenwich. Lieut.-Col. Ponsonby, R.M.A., Woolwich. Rev. Wm. Scoresby, Author of Account of the Arctic Regions, &c. &c. J. H. Stocqueler, Esq., Author of British Officer, Military Encyclopaedia, &c. &c. Jonathan Aylen, Esq., Master Attendant, H.M. Dockyard, Sheerness. James Wilson, Esq., F.R.S.E., Author of various Works on Natural History. David Urquhart, M.D., F.R.S.E. Hon. Lord Conyngham, Author of Life of Lord Jeffrey. Dr. Leonard Schmidt, F.R.S.E., Rector, High School, Edinburgh, Author of History of Rome. John Hutton Balfour, M.D., Regius Professor of Botany, Edinburgh University. James D. Forbes, F.R.S.E., &c. &c., Professor of Natural Philosophy, Edinburgh University. Emerik Szabadi, late Secretary under the Hungarian National Government of 1849.

Three Volumes are now published:

VOLUME I. contains the Preliminary Dissertations. By Dugald Stewart, Sir James Mackintosh, Richard Whately, D.D., John Playfair, and Sir John Leslie.

VOLUME II. contains Articles from A to ANATOMY. Illustrated by numerous Engravings on Wood and Steel.

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