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eral Graham. He still retained his titles and his honors, but, as a firm republican, he could never expect the favor of the court; particularly as, in his memorial to the king, he openly and severely censured the measures of government, in consequence of which he was passed over in the new organization of the academy of sciences.

When Napoleon was once more at the helm of state, in 1815, he made Carnot count and peer of the empire, and pressed upon him the ministry of the interior. Carnot discharged the difficult duties of this office with his usual integrity. After the emperor's second fall, he was made a member of the provisory government of France, and was afterwards the only one of the members of it comprehended in the ordinance of July 24. He retired to Cerney, where he employed his pen on political subjects; then to Warsaw, in 1815, with his family; and, finally, to Magdeburg, where he died Aug. 3, 1823. (See the Corresp. de Nap. Buonap. av. le Cte. Carnot pend. les 100 Jours (Paris, 1819), and Carnot's Leben (Carnot's Life), by Körte.) The brothers Baudouin, in Paris, who have in their possession all Carnot's manuscripts, published, in 1824, Mem. histor. et militaires sur Carnot, redigés d'après ses Manuscrits, sa Corresp. inédite, et ses Écrits, etc., par Tissot. Among Carnot's writings, the most valuable are his Essai sur les Machines; Reflexions sur la Métaphysique du Calcul infinitesimal; Sur la Geometrie du Position; De la Défense des Places fortes; Exposé de la Conduite politique de Carnot, depuis le 1 Juill., 1814. In Magdeburg, Carnot published Mémoire sur la Fortification primitive, and a volume of poems. He was rigid in his love of virtue, a scholar, a general, and an inflexible republican. He was universally esteemed, both in France and in foreign lands, and was honored by all parties. Carnot's life is one of those which ought to be familiar to every young republican, like that of Barneveldt. (q. v.)

CARO, Annibale, one of the most celebrated Italian authors of the 16th century, born 1507, at Città-Nuova, in the March of Ancona, after the death of his patron, Gaddi, 1543, was appointed secretary to Pietro Ludovico Farnese, duke of Parma and Piacenza, who intrusted him with several missions to Charles V. After the assassination of the duke, his own life was in considerable danger. He took refuge in Parma, and was treated in a friendly manner by the new duke, Octavio Farnese, whose two brothers, the car

dinals Ranuccio and Alexander, took him successively into their service. With the latter he remained from 1548 to his death in 1566, and received from him several ecclesiastical preferments. Caro devoted himself chiefly to the study of numismatics and the Tuscan language, and his pure and elegant style, in verse and prose, soon became generally admired. His translation of the Eneid, in blank verse, is excellent. After his death, appeared a translation by him of Longus, and of Aristotle's Rhetoric; also Rime and Lettere, the former of which are admired for the elegance of the verse, and the latter as models of beautiful Italian prose. He belongs to the most elegant writers of Italian literature.

CAROLINA. This name is generally given to a famous law of the German empire, of the year 1532, under Charles V, which he called himself an ordinance of criminal procedure (Peinliche Gerichtsordnung). From him, it was, at a later period, called Constitutio criminalis Carolina, or, shortly, Carolina. The arbitrary administration of justice, the disorder and cruelty which had become customary in the courts of Germany, where many a process was begun and ended with the torture, and persons were sentenced even to death without regular process, gave occasion to this law. From the beginning of the peace of the land, the necessity of such a law was felt throughout the country; but it was difficult, in this, as in all other cases, to make the different members of the empire agree on one general measure. The baron John von Schwarzenberg, a man of talent and a patron of science (of the family of the present princes of Schwarzenberg), was chiefly instrumental in introducing this ordinance. He was born in 1463, became minister of state of the prince-bishop of Bamberg, and succeeded in procuring an ordinance of criminal procedure for Bamberg to be drawn up and published in 1507. The same was also adopted, in 1510, by the margrave of Brandenburg and Franconia; and, at last, a law of criminal procedure for the empire at large was passed by the diet at Regensburg, in 1532, which, for that time, was a very great step, and had a salutary influence. Several German princes, as the elector of Saxony, the elector of Brandenburg, and of the palatinate, protested against it, in order to protect the laws of their states and their own privileges against the legislative power of the emperor; but at last the Carolina was

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CAROLINA-NORTH CAROLINA.

established in almost every part of the empire. (See Malblank's Geschichte der peinlichen Gerichtsordnung Kaiser Karls V, 1783.)

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W.; lat. 33° 50′ to 36° 30′ N.; 430 miles long and 180 broad. Square miles, 50,000. Population in 1790, 393,751: in 1800, 478,103: in 1810, 555,500; 179,090 blacks. Population in 1820, 638,829; whites, 419,200; white males, 209,644; white females, 209,556; slaves, 205,017; free colored, 14,912 persons engaged in agriculture, 174,196; in manufactures, 11,844; in commerce, 2,551. Militia in 1817, 50,387.-This state is divided into 63 counties. There are no large towns in this state. Raleigh is the seat of government. The other most considerable towns are Newbern, Fayetteville, Wilmington, Edenton, Washington, Hillsborough, Halifax, Tarborough, Salisbury and Salem.-The legislative power is vested in a senate and house of commons, both chosen annually. One senator and two members of the house of commons are sent from each county, and one of the latter from each of the towns of Newbern, Wilmington, Edenton, Fayetteville, Halifax, Salisbury and Hillsborough. The governor is chosen by joint ballot of both houses, and is eligible three years in six.

CAROLINA MARIA; wife of Ferdinand I, king of the Two Sicilies, daughter of the emperor Francis I and of Maria Theresa, born 13th August, 1752; an ambitious and intelligent woman, but, unfortunately, without firmness of character. According to the terms of her marriage contract, the young queen, after the birth of a male heir, was to have a seat in the council of state; but her impatience to participate in the government would not allow her to wait for this event, previous to which she procured the removal of the old minister, Tanucci, who possessed the confidence of the king and of the nation, and raised a Frenchman named Acton (q. v.) to the post of prime minister, who ruined the finances of the state by his profusion, and excited the hatred of all ranks by the introduction of a political inquisition. The queen, too, drew upon herself the dislike of the oppressed nation by coöperating in the measures of the minister; and banishments and executions were found insufficient to repress the general excitement. The declaration of war by Naples against France (1798) was intended to give another turn to the popular feeling; but the sudden invasion of the French drove the reigning family to Sicily. The revolution of cardinal Ruffo in Calabria, and the republican party in the capital, restored the former rulers in 1799. The famous lady Hamilton (q. v.) now exerted the greatest influence on the unhappy queen, on her husband, on the English ambassador and admiral Nelson, and sacrificed more victims than Acton and Vanini had formerly done. (See Speziale.) After the battle of Marengo, 12,000 Russians could not prevent the conquest of Naples by the French, and the formation of a kingdom out of the Neapolitan dominions for Joseph (Bonaparte), who was afterwards succeeded in the same by Joachim (Murat). The queen was not satisfied with the efforts which the English made for the restoration of the old dynasty, and thereup--North Carolina, in its whole width, for on quarrelled with lord Bentinck, the British general in Sicily, who wished to exclude her from all influence in the government. She died in 1814, without having seen the restoration of her family to the throne of Naples.

CAROLINA, North; one of the United States; bounded N. by Virginia, E. by the Atlantic, S. by South Carolina, and W. by Tennessee; lon. 75° 45′ to 84°

The principal denominations of Christians in North Carolina are Methodists, Baptists, Presbyterians, Quakers, Moravians and Episcopalians.-There is a respectable institution, entitled the university of North Carolina, at Chapel Hill. Academies are established at various places, and an increasing attention has, of late, been paid to education.-The principal rivers are the Roanoke, Chowan, Neuse, Pamlico or Tar, cape Fear, Yadkin and Catawba. Of these, the cape Fear affords the best navigation, and is ascended by vessels of 300 tens to Wilmington, and by steam-boats to Fayetteville. The two most considerable sounds on the coast are those of Pamlico and Albemarle.-Dismal swamp lies partly in North Carolina and partly in Virginia. Little Dismal or Alligator swamp is between Pamlico and Albemarle sounds.There are three noted capes on the coast, viz., cape Hatteras, cape Lookout and cape Fear, which are all dangerous to seamen.

about 60 miles from the sea, is generally a dead level, varied only by occasional openings in the immense forest with which it is covered. After traversing this tedious plain, we are at length relieved by the appearance of hills and mountains, from the summits of which we behold a beautiful country, which stretches west far beyond the range of vision, and is adorned with forests of lofty trees.-In

the level parts, the soil, generally, is but indifferent. On the banks of some of the rivers, however, and particularly the Roanoke, it is remarkably fertile; and in other parts of this champaign country, glades of rich swamp, and ridges of oakland, of a black and fruitful soil, form an exception to its general sterility. The sea coasts, the sounds, inlets, and lower parts of the rivers, have, invariably, a soft, muddy bottom. That part of the state which lies west of the mountains is, for the most part, remarkably fertile, and abounds with oak-trees of various kinds, walnut, elm, linn and cherry-trees; the last of which not unfrequently attains the size of 3 feet in diameter. The soil and productions, in the hilly country, are nearly the same as in the Northern States. Wheat, rye, barley, oats and flax are the crops most generally cultivated, and seem to suit well the nature of the soil. Throughout the whole state, Indian corn and pulse of all kinds are abundant. Cotton is raised in considerable quantities. North Carolina abounds in iron ore; and it is the only one of the U. States in which gold has been found in any considerable quantities. The gold mines, which have lately excited a good deal of interest, though they have not yet proved very productive, are found on the Yadkin and its branches, and extend over a district comprising about 1000 square miles. In almost any part of this territory, gold may be found in greater or less abundance, mixed with the soil. It exists in minute grains or particles, and is also sometimes found in lumps of one or two pounds weight. Of the plains in the low country, the large natural growth is, almost universally, pitch pine, a tall and beautiful tree, which grows here to a size far superior to the pitch pine of the Northern States. This valuable tree affords pitch, tar, turpentine, and various kinds of lumber, which, together, constitute about one half of the exports of North Carolina. It is of two kinds, the common and the long-leaved. The latter differs from other pines, not in shape, but in the length of its leaves, which are nearly half a yard long, and hang in large clusters. The trees in the low countries, both of North and South Carolina, are loaded with quantities of a long, spongy moss, which, hanging in clusters from the limbs, gives the forests a singular appearance. The misletoe frequently engrafts itself upon the trees in the back country. In this part, plums, grapes, blackberries and strawberries grow spontaneously; also

several valuable medicinal plants, as ginseng, Virginia snakeroot, Seneca snakeroot, and some others. The rich bottoms are overgrown with canes, the leaves of which continue green through the winter, and afford good pasture for cattle.-North Carolina is far removed from that perfection of culture, which is necessary to give it the full advantage of the natural richness of its soil and the value of its productions. One great cause of its backwardness, in agricultural improvement, is the want of inland navigation, and of good harbors. It has several large rivers, but their mouths are blocked up with bars of hard sand. The best of the indifferent harbors in this state are those of Wilmington, Newbern and Edenton. The most of the produce of the upper country, consisting of tobacco, wheat, maize, &c., has hitherto been carried to Charleston, S. C., and to Lynchburg, and Petersburg, Va. Since 1815, the state has been zealously engaged in an extensive system of internal improvements. These improvements relate to the navigation of the sound, inlets, and the rivers Roanoke, Tar, Neuse, cape Fear, Yadkin, Catawba, &c.; the construction of canals and roads, and the draining of marshes and swamps.-Like all the Southern States, North Carolina has a considerable diversity of climate, occasioned by the physical peculiarities of its different parts. In the level part of the country, intermittent fevers are frequent during the summer and autumn, During these sickly seasons, the countenances of the inhabitants have a pale-yellowish hue, occasioned by the prevalence of bilious affections. Many fall victims, during the winter, to pleurisies and peripneumonies. In the western and hilly parts, the air is as pure and salubrious as in any part of America, and the inhabitants live to a great age. The heat of the summer's day is succeeded in the evening by a grateful and refreshing coolness. Autumn is temperate and serene, and, in some years, the winters are so mild, that autumn may be said to continue till spring. The wheat harvest commences in the beginning of June, and that of Indian corn early in September.-In 1827, merchandise to the value of $276,791 was imported into North Carolina, and $449,237 worth exported. (For similar accounts of preceding years, see Watterson and Zandt's Tabular Statistical Views, Washington, Jan. 1829).

Historical Sketch of North Carolina. In 1586, the first attempt was made by the English to colonize North America, under

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NORTH CAROLINA-SOUTH CAROLINA.

a patent to sir Francis Drake. A small colony was left on the Roanoke in 1587, but was never again to be found; all attempts to ascertain their fate were fruitless. Some emigrants from Virginia penetrated into the country about 1650, and made the first actual settlement of whites. On the early Spanish maps, what is now called Carolina had been marked as part of Florida. The French had given it the name of Carolina in honor of king Charles IX, when they made the disastrous attempt to colonize the North American coast, noticed under the head of Florida. The name Carolina prevailed. In 1661, a second English colony from Massachusetts arrived, and established themselves at cape Fear rivIn 1667, after many vexatious struggles, the infant colony obtained a representative government. Two years later, the fanciful constitution, so famous under the name of Locke's scheme of government, was introduced. This wild project was soon abandoned; and, like other English colonies, Carolina advanced but slowly, and experienced the horrors of Indian warfare as late as 1712. Previous to 1717, Carolina had been a proprietary government, but, in that year, became a royal one by purchase, and continued such until the revolution in 1775. In 1720, the two Carolinas were separated into North and South Carolina. The inaccessible coast of North Carolina gave it very great advantages in the revolutionary war. Those destructive inroads, from which other states along the Atlantic suffered so much, were here impracticable. Though, however, less exposed, the people of this state evinced their full share of sympathy with the residue of the American people. A convention was assembled at Halifax, where, on Dec. 18, 1776, the existing constitution was adopted. Since that auspicious event, it may be doubted whether any other community ever passed 52 years with less disturbance. (Darby's View of the U. States. See Carey and Lea's American Atlas.)

CAROLINA, South; one of the U. States; bounded N. by North Carolina, E. by the Atlantic, S. W. and W. by Georgia; lon. 78° 24' to 83° 30′ W.; lat. 32° to 35° 8' N.; 200 miles long, 125 broad; containing 30,000 square miles. Population in 1790, 240,000 in 1800, 345,591: in 1810, 415, 115; 200,919 blacks: in 1820, 502,741; whites, 237,440; white males, 120,934; white females, 116,506; slaves, 258,475; free colored, 6,826. Militia in 1821, 23,729. -S. Carolina is divided into 30 districts.

Columbia is the seat of government, but Charleston is the largest town.-The legislature consists of a senate and house of representatives. The senate consists of 43 members, chosen every 4 years by districts. The representatives are chosen every 2 years. The governor and lieutenant-governor are chosen biennially, by a joint ballot of both houses.-The principal denominations of Christians in South Carolina are Presbyterians, Episcopalians, Baptists and Methodists.-Education is liberally patronised by the state government. The two literary institutions are the college of South Carolina at Columbia, and Charleston college, in the city of Charleston.-The distinguishing virtues of the Carolinians are hospitality to strangers, and charity to the indigent and distressed. The planters in the low country, who, in general, have large incomes, live in a luxurious and splendid style, devoting much of their time to the pursuit of pleasure, and possessing much of that pride and dignity of spirit, which characterize an independent country gentleman. The virtues of the farmers of the upper country are less brilliant, but more substantial. They have fewer vices, are of more frugal and industrious habits, and exhibit greater fortitude in the reverses of fortune. In the low or alluvial country, labor in the field is performed almost wholly by slaves, who, in this part of the state, exceed the free inhabitants in the ratio of more than three to one. This division, comprising less than one third of the territory of South Carolina, contains more than half of the slaves, and only about one fifth of the whites.-The principal rivers are the Waccamaw, Pedee, Black river, Santee, Cooper, Ashley, Stono, Edisto, Asheppo, Cambahee, Coosaw, Broad and Savannah.-South Carolina is divided by nature into two parts, which, from their physical situation, have been called Upper and Lower Carolina. The latter is supposed to have once been under the ocean. Towards the coast, the country is a level plain, extending more than 100 miles westward from the sea. Here the eye finds no relief from the dull uniformity of boundless forests, swamps, and level fields. This fatiguing plain is succeeded by a curious range of little sand hills, resembling the waves of an agitated sea. This singular country occupies an extent of about 60 miles. It is extremely barren, enlivened here and there by spots of verdure, or by some straggling pines; and its few inhabitants earn a scanty subsistence by the

cultivation of corn and sweet potatoes. After passing these sand hills, we come next to a remarkable tract of ground, called the Ridge, which, on its approach from the sea, is lofty and bold, but on the northwest is level from its summit. This is a fine belt of land, extending from the Savannah to Broad river, fertile, well cultivated, and watered by considerable streams. The country beyond this ridge resembles, in its scenery, the most interesting of the Northern States. The traveller is gratified by the pleasant alternation of hill and dale. The lively verdure of the hills is contrasted with the deeper tints of the extensive forests, which decorate their sides; and, in the valleys, broad rivers roll their streams through the varied beauties of luxuriant and cultivated fields. From these delightful regions, the ground still continues to rise, till we reach the western limit of the state. Here 7 or 8 mountains run in regular direction, the most distinguished of which is Table mountain. Other mountains are Oolenoy, Oconee, Paris's, Glassey, Hogback and King's. These are all in the districts of Pendleton, Greenville, Spartanburg and York.-The soil of South Carolina is divided into six classes:1. tide swamp; 2. inland swamp; 3. high river swamp, or low grounds, distinguished by the name of second low grounds; 4. salt marsh; 5. oak and hickory high land; 6. pine barren. The first two classes are peculiarly adapted to the culture of rice and hemp; the third is most favorable to the growth of hemp, corn and indigo. The salt marsh has been much neglected. The oak and hickory land is remarkably fertile, and well adapted to the culture of corn, as well as indigo and cotton. The pine barren, though the least productive, is so much more salubrious than the other soils in the low country, that a proportion of pine barren is an appendage indispensable to every swamp plantation.—The staple commodities of this state are cotton and rice, of which great quantities are annually exported. These articles have so engrossed the attention of the planters, that the culture of wheat, barley, oats, and other crops equally useful, but less profitable, has been almost wholly neglected. So little wheat is raised throughout the state, that considerable quantities are annually imported. Cotton was not raised in any considerable quantities till as late as 1795. Before that period, indigo was, next to rice, the most important article of produce; but it is now neglect

ed. Tobacco thrives well. The fruits which flourish best are pears, pomegranates and water-melons: the latter, in particular, grow to an enormous size, and are superior, perhaps, to any in the world. Other fruits are figs, apricots, nectarines, apples, peaches, olives, almonds and oranges. The period of vegetation comprehends, in favorable years, from 7 to 8 months, commencing in January or February, and terminating in October or November. The frosts, generally, in the months of November, December, January and February, are too severe for the delicate productions of more southern latitudes. The low country is seldom covered with snow, but the mountains near the western boundary often are. Frost sometimes binds up the earth, but seldom penetrates deeper than 2 inches, or lasts longer than 3 or 4 days. At some seasons, and particularly in February, the weather is very variable. The temperature has been known to vary 46 degrees in one day. In Charleston, for 7 years, the thermometer was not known to rise above 93° or to fall below 17° above 0. The number of extremely hot days in Charleston is seldom more than 30 in a year; and there are about as many sultry nights, in which the heat and closeness of the air are such as to prevent the enjoyment of sound sleep. The low country is infested with all the diseases which spring from a warm, moist and unelastic atmosphere. Of these the most frequent are fevers, from which the inhabitants suffer more than from any, or perhaps from all other diseases together. The districts of the upper country enjoy as salubrious a climate as any part of the U. States. -In 1827, merchandise to the value of $1,434,106 was imported into South Carolina, and $8,322,561 worth exported. (For similar accounts of preceding years, see Watterson and Zandt's Tabular Statistical Views, Washington, Jan. 1829.)

Historical Sketch of South Carolina. The first settlement of South Carolina by the whites appears to have been made at Port Royal, about 1670; but, until 1680, no permanent establishment was formed, when the few settlers then in the country fixed on Oyster point, between Ashley and Cooper rivers, and laid the foundation of the city of Charleston. A grant had, however, been made, in 1662, previous to the founding of Charleston, by Charles II, to lord Clarendon and seven others, of all that zone of North America from N. lat. 31° to 36°; and, two years afterwards, the boundaries were extended

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