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when he was about to treat the question submitted to the senior bachelors of arts in the university of Cambridge, Anne liceat invitos in servitutem dare?-B. regarded all mankind as his brethren. About the year 1763, the wrongs inflicted on the aboriginal race of North America excited his susceptible mind, and prompted him to publish a tract, entitled, Some Observations on the Situation, Disposition and Character of the Indian Natives of this Continent. He addressed the British governors and military commanders, on the effect of hostilities against the natives, with characteristic boldness and pathos. His various philanthropical efforts, and his excellent qualities, obtained for him peculiar consideration in the society of Friends. In 1780, he wrote and published a Short Account of the religious Society of Friends, commonly called Quakers; and, in 1782, a Dissertation on the Plainness and innocent Simplicity of the Christian Religion. About the same time, he issued several tracts against the use of ardent spirits.-The person of B. was small, and his face far from handsome, though benignity might be traced in his animated aspect, even by those who knew not how his whole being and small estate had been devoted. His understanding was originally strong, and much improved by reading and observation. His private habits, morals and pursuits were adapted to endear and dignify his public career. He died at Philadelphia, May 5, 1784, aged 71 years. When it was announced that he was seriously ill, a multitude of his fellow-citizens presented themselves at his dwelling with anxious inquiries; and he conversed lucidly with hundreds after his case was pronounced to be hopeless. There is extant a full and interesting memoir of his life, by Roberts Vaux.

BENGAL; an extensive and valuable province of Hindostan, situated between the 21st and 27th degrees of N. lat., and between the 86th and 92d degrees of E. lon., being in length about 400 miles, and in breadth, 300. On the north and east, it is defended by the mountains of Nepaul, Assam and Ava; on the south, by a line of inhospitable and dangerous seacoast, containing but one harbor capable of admitting ships of any considerable size, and even that one guarded by innumerable shoals: on the west, it joins Behr and Oude; and, although rather exposed to invasion on this frontier, it is, nevertheless, better defended by nature than any province of similar extent on the conti

nent of Asia: and should the English be ever driven from all the other parts of India, as long as they shall retain their maritime pre-eminence, they will find in B. a secure asylum against their enemies. Thus guarded from a foreign foe, they are equally safe from any insurrection of the natives, whose mildness of disposition and aversion to war are such, that nothing short of the most atrocious cruelty, or religious persecution, could induce them to draw their swords against their present rulers.—The fertile soil of B. produces every thing requisite for the sustenance of life, and in such abundance, that the crops of one year are sufficient for the consumption of its inhabitants for two. It abounds in fruits and animals of many varieties, and yields every article essential to the comfort, or even luxury, of man. Its ingenious inhabitants are well versed in all the arts of useful industry; and, whilst their delicate and valuable manufactures are exported to every part of the world, they require no assistance from other countries. In short, it has been truly said of this province, that it is the most valuable jewel in the British crown. The revenues of B. consist chiefly of rents paid to the government for land. In the year 1811-12, they amounted, including those of Behar and Orissa, to £2,590,000 sterling, to which may be added nearly £200,000 for the monopolies of salt and opium. The exports of B. are principally rice, cotton and silk, both raw and manufactured; indigo, sugar, saltpetre, ivory, tobacco, and drugs of various kinds: hemp and flax are also to be procured in great abundance. Its imports by sea are gold and silver, copper and bar-iron, woollen cloths of every description, tea, salt, glass and china ware, wines, and other commodities, for the use of its European inhabitants, and a few Arabian and English horses. The native breed of these animals being diminutive, B. is chiefly supplied with them from the north-west provinces, although the government have a stud of their own in Behar, and hold out great encouragement to the zemindars, or landholders, to breed them. The south-east districts produce fine elephants, which are not only in considerable demand, among the opulent natives, for state or riding, but also used for carrying the camp equipage of the army. They vary in price from £50 to £1000: a good one should be from 8 to 10 feet high, and not less than 30 years of age.-B. is intersected by the

Ganges, the Brahmapootra, Dummooda, and several other rivers, so connected by various streams, and the annual inundations, that there is scarcely a town which does not enjoy the benefits of an inland navigation, the boats employed in which are of various sizes and shapes, many of them very handsome, and fitted both for convenience and state. The Delta of the Ganges, the water of which is either salt or brackish, exhibits a labyrinth of uninhabited inland navigation; and in other parts of the country, during the rainy season, some hundred miles of rice fields may be sailed over. These inundations are, however, frequently the cause of much injury, by carrying away the cattle, stores of grain, and habitations of the poor peasants. The greater proportion of the inhabitants of B. are Hindoos: they are olive-colored, with black hair and eyes. They are small and delicate in their persons, and, although very timid, are litigious; humble to their superiors, and insolent to their inferiors. In youth, they are quick and inquisitive, and would probably be much improved by their intercourse with Europeans, but for the supreme contempt in which they hold other nations, from the notion of their being degraded Hindoos. The indigent wear scarcely any clothing other than a rag round their waist: the rich, when out of doors, dress much like Mohammedans; within the house, they usually resume their old national costume, which consists merely of different pieces of cloth twisted round the body, and having one end tucked into the folds. No small part of the population are Mohammedans; they are the descendants of the Afghan and Mogul conquerors, and Arabian merchants, softened, in the course of time, by an intermixture with Hindoo women, converts, and children, whom they purchased during a scarcity, and educated in their own religion. There are also a number of the descendants of the Portuguese, and of various other nations; and, in spite of the checks held out by the English against colonization, it is probable, that, in the course of another century, their descendants will become so numerous, that it will be necessary to permit them to become cultivators of the soil.-The thermometer, part of the year, in B., is as high as 100 degrees, and the climate is injurious to European constitutions. The year is there divided into three seasons, viz. the hot, the rainy and the cold: the former begins in March, and ends in June; the rains then commence, and continue

till October; after which it becomes cool, and the weather continues pleasant for four months.-Of the ancient history of B. we have no authentic information. It is said to have been sometimes an independent kingdom, and at other times tributary to Magadha (Behar). In the institutes of Akbar, a list of 61 Hindoo kings is given; but the number of years assigned to many of the reigns does away its credibility. B. was first invaded and conquered by the Afghan Mohammedans in Â. D. 1203, and continued tributary to the emperor of Delhi till the year 1340, when Fakher Addeen, a confidential servant of the governor, murdered his master, and, having seized the reins of government, threw off his allegiance, and took the title of sultan Sekunder. From this period till 1538, B. remained an independent kingdom, when it was conquered by Shere Shah, who shortly after annexed it to Delhi. From the descendants of Shere Shah it was conquered by the emperor Akbar, and continued subject to Delhi, or nominally so, till the year 1757, when it fell into the hands of the English, who have gradually changed its form of government, and introduced a code of regulations, founded on the Hindoo, Mohammedan and English laws, by which impartial justice is administered to all the inhabitants, and toleration granted to all religions, owing to which the country improves, and the population increases. The cities of Gour, Tonda, Rajemahil, Dacca and Moorshedabad have each, at various times, been the capital; but, since the conquest of it by the English, Calcutta is become the seat of government. The government of this presidency is vested in the supreme council, consisting of the governor-general and three counsellors. The former is appointed by the king; the latter are chosen by the court of directors from the civil servants of at least 12 years' standing. For the administration of justice, there is 1 supreme court at Calcutta, 6 courts of appeal and circuit, and 46 inferior magistrates, stationed in as many different towns or districts. The circuit courts are formed by 3 judges, with an assistant and native officers. Criminal cases are tried by the Mohammedan law, in form and name, but so modified as to approach nearly, in fact, to the English; and capital sentences are confirmed by the nizamat adalat, or supreme court at Calcutta. The district magistrates or judges, as they are often called, have each a registrar and one or more of the junior civil servants,

as assistants, with native lawyers, Mussulman and Hindoo. An appeal lies from their sentence, in almost all cases, to the provincial court. The average size of a district in this presidency is about 6000 square miles. In civil causes, the respective codes of the Mohammedans and Hindoos are generally followed. In 1793, regular advocates, educated at the Mohammedan and Hindoo colleges at Calcutta and Benares, were appointed to plead in these courts. Their fees are regulated by law. Written pleadings are allowed, and written evidence must sometimes be admitted, on account of the disinclination of the Asiatics to have women appear in public.-Domestic slavery is permitted by law, but the slaves are kindly treated. The number of these slaves it has been thought unsafe to ascertain. Their marriage is never impeded; but few children are sold, as it is reputed discreditable to sell them, and their manumission is considered an act of piety. Parents themselves, who are reduced by famine, &c., are usually the persons who supply the slave-market. Inability to provide for their children, not the desire of gain, seems to be the real motive of this horrid custom. Slaves, like freemen, are under the protection of law. The Mohammedans may be estimated at one seventh of the whole population. Various estimates of the population have been made at different times, but rather from conjecture than from well-authenticated documents. The sum total for Bengal appears to be 25,306,000, and there are strong reasons for believing this number to be short of the real amount. The number of native troops, called seapoys (sipahis) or soldiers, was, in 1811, 207.579, besides 5875 invalids. The non-commissioned officers are natives, those who have commissions are Europeans, and the number of the latter in this presidency, at the time above mentioned, was 2024. About 22,000 of the king's troops are also stationed in India, and occasion an expense to the company of about £160,000 per annum.-Before concluding this article, it may be proper to observe, that the Dutch possess the town of Chinsura, the French, Chindunagore, and the Danes, Serampore, with a small territory adjoining each. These towns are situated on the Hoogly river, from 15 to 25 miles above Calcutta.

BENGEL, John Albanus, a famous German theologian, born in 1687, at Winneden, in Würtemburg, studied at Stuttgart and Tübingen, and, in 1713, became a

preacher and professor at Denkendorf. His chief studies were the fathers of the church and the New Testament. He died, after having been appointed to several offices, in 1752. B. was the first Lutheran theologian who applied to the criticism of the New Testament a comprehensive spirit, which embraced the subject in its whole extent, and manifested the power of patient investigation which the study required. His sugges tions for the correction of the text are particularly valuable. In some of his observations, his judgment has been led astray by his inclination to mysticism. His explanation of the Apocalypse has given him, with some persons, the fame of an inspired prophet; with most people, that of an enthusiast. He was esteemed for his private virtues.

BENGER, Miss Elizabeth Ogilvy, was born in 1778, at Portsmouth, in England. She was the daughter of a purser in the navy, who died in 1796, and left his wife and daughter with a slender provision. In 1802, she removed with her mother to London. She soon attracted attention by her verses, and Miss Sarah Wesley early became her patron. She composed some theatrical pieces, which did not meet with success. Mr. Bowyer, the engraver, employed her to write a poem on the Slave-Trade, which, with two others, was published in quarto, with engravings, in 1812. She successively published memoirs of Mrs. Elizabeth Hamilton, memoirs of John Tobin, the dramatist, and notices of Klopstock and his friends, prefixed to a translation of their letters from the German. These writings were followed by the history of Anne Boleyn, which was translated into French, and the memoirs of Elizabeth, queen of Bohemia. She undertook to compile memoirs of Henry IV of France, but the progress of this work was prevented by her death, January 9, 1827. By all who knew her, among whom the editor has the pleasure of counting himself, she was esteemed as a kind, faithful and candid friend, a most affectionate daughter, beloved by all ages and both sexes on account of her fine talents, benevolent disposition, and pure heart.

BENGUELA; a country in Africa, bounded N. by Angola, E. by the country of Jaga Cassangi, S. by Mataman, and W. by the sea. Cape Negro forms its S. W. extremity, whence mountains run northward, in which are contained the springs of many rivers. The productions are similar to those of Angola and Congo;

one of the principal is manioc; divers sorts of palms are found; dates grow in great abundance; the vines naturally form alleys and arbors; cassia and tamarinds also flourish; and, from the humidity of the soil, there are two fruit seasons in the year. The air of the country is exceedingly unwholesome. The chief towns are Old Benguela, St. Philip or New Benguela, Man-kikondo, and Kaschil. Lon. 30° to 35° E.; lat. 13° 30 to 15° 30 S.

BENIN; a kingdom in the west of Africa, the limits of which are not well ascertained; but the name may be applied to that part of the coast extending from the river Lagos, the eastern limit of the Slave coast, to the Formosa, about 180 miles. The interior limit is unknown. The whole coast presents a succession of estuaries, some of them very broad, and their origin never explored. Between the Lagos and Cross rivers, the number of rivers flowing into the gulf of Guinea is said to exceed 20, some of them very broad and deep. This tract, called the Delta of Be nin, is about 260 miles in extent. The aspect of the coast, and the great body of water flowing into the gulf, have led to the supposition that the waters of the Niger here find an entrance into the ocean. This region has been but little explored, and is little known. The country is low and flat, the soil on the banks of the rivers very fertile, but the climate unhealthy. The inhabitants are of a mild disposition; polygamy is practised; almost all labor is performed by females; the government is despotic. Chief towns, Benin, Agatton, Bododa, Ozebo and Meiberg, which are situated on the Formosa, the principal river.

Benin; capital of the above kingdom, on the Formosa; lon. 5° 6' E; lat. 6° 12' N. This town, according to some, is 18 miles in circuit, the largest street 3 miles long, and others nearly equal; according to other statements, it is only 4 miles in circuit. The streets are filled with various articles of merchandise, and present the appearance of a crowded market, though always clean. The houses are large, and, though their walls are of clay, the reeds and leaves, with which they are covered, give them a pleasing appearance. The king's palace consists of a great number of square enclosures.

BENJOWSKY, Maurice Augustus, count of, a man of indefatigable activity and extraordinary adventures, born in 1741, at Werbowa, in Hungary, where his father was a general in the Austrian army,

entered the same service himself, and acted as lieutenant in the seven years' war till 1758. He afterwards studied navigation in Hamburg, Amsterdam and Plymouth. He then went to Poland, joined the confederacy against the Russians, and became colonel, commander of cavalry and quarter-master general. B. was taken prisoner by the Russians in 1769, and sent, the next year, to Kamtschatka. On the voyage thither, he saved the ship that carried him, when in peril from a storm. This circumstance procured him a favorable reception from governor Niloff, whose children he instructed in the German and French languages. Aphanasia, Niloff's younger daughter, fell in love with him. B. prevailed on her father to set him at liberty and to betroth her to him. He had, however, already conceived the project of escaping from Kamtschatka, together with several other conspirators. Aphanasia discovered his design, but did not forsake him. On the contrary, she warned him when it was resolved to secure his person. Accompanied by Aphanasia, who remained invariably faithful to him, though she had now learned that he was married, B., together with 96 other persons, left Kamtschatka in May, 1771, and sailed to Formosa; from thence to Macao, where many of his companions died, and among them the faithful Aphanasia. At length he arrived in France, where he was commissioned to found a colony in Madagascar; an undertaking of which he foresaw the difficulties, especially as the success depended on the assistance of the officers in the Isle of France, to whom he was referred for the greater part of his equipment. In June, 1774, B. arrived in Madagascar, established a settlement at Foul point, and gained the good will of several tribes, who, in 1776, appointed him their ampansacabe, or king; on which occasion the women also swore allegiance to his wife. Afterwards, he went to Europe, with the design of obtaining for the nation a powerful ally and some commercial advantages. But, on his arrival in France, he was compelled, by the persecutions of the French ministry, to enter into the Austrian service, in which he commanded against the Prussians in the battle of Habelschwerdt, 1778. In 1783, he made an attempt in England to fit out an expedition to Madagascar. He received assistance from private persons in London, and particularly from a commercial house at Baltimore, in America. In

October, 1784, he set out, leaving his wife in America, and landed in Madagascar, 1785. Having there commenced hostilities against the French, the authorities in the Isle of France sent troops against him. In an action which took place May 23, 1786, he was mortally wounded in the breast by a ball. B. wrote an account of the events of his life in French. William Nicholson has published an English translation of it, made from the manuscript. His widow died at her estate Vieska, near Betzko, Dec. 4, 1825. Benjowsky's only son is said to have been devoured by rats in Madagascar.

BEN-LAWERS; a mountain of Scotland, in the county of Perth, 4015 feet above the level of the sea; 11 miles S. George

town.

BEN-LODI; a mountain of Scotland, in Perthshire, 3009 feet above the sea; 4 miles S. W. Callander.

BEN-LOMOND; a mountain of Scotland, in Stirlingshire, 3240 feet above the sea; 26 miles W. Stirling.

BEN-MACDUIE; a mountain of Scotland, on the western confines of Aberdeenshire, 4300 feet high. It is the second highest mountain in Great Britain.

BEN-MORE; a mountain of Scotland, in the island of Mull, 3097 feet above the evel of the sea.

BEN-MORE; a mountain of Scotland, in Perthshire, 3903 feet above the level of the sea; 20 miles W. Crief.

Tilsit, he retired to his estates. In 1813, he led a Russian army, called the army of Poland, into Saxony, took part in the battle of Leipsic, and blockaded Hamburg. After cominanding the army in the south of Russia, he finally settled in his native country, and died Oct. 3, 1826. He is the author of Thoughts on certain Points requisite for an Officer of Light Cavalry to be acquainted with (Riga, 1794; Wilna, 1805).

BENNINGTON; a post-town in a county of the same name, in Vermont, watered by a branch of the Hoosack; 37 miles N. E. Albany, 68 S. W. Windsor, 115 S. by W. Montpelier, 132 W. N. W. Boston. Lon. 73° W.; lat. 42° 42' N. Population in 1810, 2524; in 1820, 2485. It borders on New York, is situated in a good farming country, and is a place of considerable trade and manufactures. The courts for the county are held alternately at Bennington and Manchester. On mount Anthony, in this town, there is a cave containing many beautiful petrifactions.— Two famous battles were fought here, on the 16th of August, 1777, in which general Stark, at the head of 1600 American militia, gained a distinguished victory over the British.

BENNO, St., of the family of the counts of Woldenberg, born at Hildesheim, in 1010, became (1028) a Benedictine monk, in the convent of St. Michael there. Henry IV (1066) made him bishop of Misnia, and BEN-NEVIS; a mountain of Scotland, favored him by repeated donations of in the county of Dumbarton, the highest estates for his church. Nevertheless, B. in the island of Great Britain. It rises took a secret part in the conspiracy of the 4370 feet above the level of the sea. A Saxon nobles against the emperor, for great portion of this mountain consists of which reason Henry led him away prisporphyry of different shades, and beauti- oner, when he passed Misnia, in 1075, ful red granite. It also contains a vein after the battle on the Unstrut. He was of lead ore, richly impregnated with sil- afterwards set at liberty, but several times The summit is generally covered proved faithless to the emperor. He died 1107. His bones began by degrees to work miracles; and pope Adrian VI, after many entreaties from the Saxons, as well as from the emperor Charles V, and having received large sums of money, placed him among the saints, 1523. It was thought that this canonization would tend to the promotion of the Catholic faith in Saxony. At present, the bones of St. Benno are in the city of Munich, which has chosen him for its patron.

ver.

with snow.

BENNINGSEN, Levin Augustus, baron of, Russian commander-in-chief, born at Banteln, in Hanover, 1745, early entered into the Russian service, and distinguished himself by great gallantry in the war against Poland, under the empress Catharine II. He acted a chief part in the conspiracy of the palace against the emperor Paul I. In 1806, he was appointed to command the Russian army which hastened to the assistance of the Prussians; but, before his arrival, the Prussians were defeated at Jena. He afterwards fought the murderous battle of Eylau (next to that of Mojaisk, perhaps, the most bloody in military history), and the battle of Friedland. After the peace of

BENSERADE, Isaac de, a poet at the court of Louis XIV, born, 1612, at Lyonsla-Forêt, a small town in Normandy, wrote for the stage, and composed a great number of ingenious verses for the king and many distinguished persons at court. In the first half of the reign of Louis XIV,

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