Nulla domus, plaustris habitant, migrare per arva
Mos, atque errantes circumvectare Penates.
They dwell in wains, not houses; and do stray
Through fields, and with them lead their gods each way.
And worthily may they owe their names to them, from whom they borrow so much of their na∣ture:
for the people to this day spend their lives in hunting, and stay but three or four dayes in a
place, as long as the grass will serve the Camels. This is the cause why this Countrey is so ill peopled,
the Towns so small in themselves, and so remote from others. An example hereof is Teffet a great Ci∣ty
in their esteem, which yet containeth but 400 housholds, and hath no neighbours within 300
miles of it.
The Country aboundeth with Dates, whence it is called Dactylorum regio, and in the Arabick Bi∣ledulgerid,
which signifieth also a Date-region. These Dates are (to speak properly) the fruit of the
Palm Trees, usually growing in hot Countries, of which some are male, some female; the first bring∣ing
forth only flowers; the other fruit: and yet the male so beneficial to the increase of the Dates,
that unless a flowred bough of the male be ingrafted into the female, the Dates never prove good, in
case they bear any Dates at all, as before was noted. This fruit is the chief diet of the people: but
this sweet meat hath sowre sawce; for it commonly rotteth their teeth betimes. As for the stones of
these Dates, they feed their Goats with them, whereby they grow fat, and yield store of milk. The
Aire hereof, of so sound a nature, that if a man be troubled with the French disease, he shall there,
without any course of Physick, finde a present remedy.
The natural Inhabitants of this Country, are said to be base and vile people, theeves, murderers,
treacherous, and ignorant of all things; feeding most commonly on Dates, Barley, and Carrion;
accounting Bread a Diet for their Festival Dayes. But the Arabians who are intermingled with
them, in most part of the Country, affirmed to be (comparatively with the Natives) ingenuous,
liberal, and civil. The Garments of these Numidians, of the coursest cloth, so short that they co∣ver
not half the body: the richer sort, distinguished by a Jacket of blew Cotton with wide sleeves.
Their Steeds are Camels, which they ride on without stirrop, or so much as a saddle; a leather, thrust
thorow on hole made in the nose of the Camel, serves them for a bridle; and to save the charge of
Spurs they make use of a goad. Their Religion, Mahometism, to which perverted (Christianity
having once had some footing here) in the year 710. the Azanaghi and other people of those parts
then subdued by the Saracens: who held them for a Nation of so little reckoning, that no man of
accompt amongst them would descend so low, as to be their Prince, but left them to be ruled as in
former times, by the Chiefs or Heads of their several Clans!
The chief River which is left, hath the name of Dara, and possibly enough may be the Daradus
of Ptolomy: the rest which are mentioned in that Author, rising out of Mount Atlas, and falling
headily this way, finding these barren wildernesses to afford them the readiest Channels, are trained
along by the allurements of the Sands, and are either swallowed up in great Lakes; or being too
liberal to the thirsty sands in their way to the Sea, die at the last for thirst in the midst of the
Desarts.
The Principal of their Provinces (if capable of a distinction into better and worse.) 1 DARA;
more cultivated then the rest, because of the River running thorow it, whence it hath its name: 250
miles in length, indifferently fruitful, where the River doth overflow and water it; and of so diffe∣rent
a nature from all the rest, that here the Country people have some scattered Villages, the better
sort their several Castles. 2 PESCARA, so called from the chief Town of it, exceedingly in∣fested
with Scorpions; the sting whereof is present death. 3 FIGHIG, so called from the chief
Town also, inhabited by an industrious and witty People (in respect of the rest) some of which
betake themselves to Merchandise; some to the studie of their Law, which they studie at Fesse, and
grow rich upon it. 4 TEGORARIN, a large Region, and well inhabited, better then any except
Dara; as having in it 50 Castles or Gentlemens houses, and 100 Villages. The people wealthy in
regard of the gread trade which they drive with the Negroes; and pretty good husbands in manu∣ring
their land on which they are forced to lay much soil; and will therefore let some of it Rent-free
to strangers, reserving only the dung of themselves and their cattell. 5 BILEDVLGERID, speci∣ally
so called, abundantly fruitful in Dates, whence it had the name, but destitute of Corn by reason
of the extream dryness of the soyle; and yet hath in it many Towns of good note among them.
Of less note, 6 Tesset, 7 Segelmesse, 8 Zeb, 9 Tebelbeti, and 10 Fessen, so called from the chiefest of
their Towns and Villages.
Towns of most note both now and in former times, besides those spoken of before, 1 Timugedit,
in the Province of Dara, the birth-place of Mahomet Ben Amet and his three sons, the founders of
the Xeriffian Empire. 2 Tafilete, in the said Province, to which place Mahomet the second of these
sons and first King of Morocco of that Family, confined his eldest brother Amet, having took him
prisoner, Anno 1544. 3. Teffet, a great Town of 400 houses, but so poorly neighboured that
there is no other inhabited place within 300 miles of it; but of that before. 4 Techort, the inhabi∣tants
whereof are very courteous to strangers, whom they entertain at free-cost; and choose rather
to marry their daughters to them then to any of the Natives. 5 Eboacah, the most Eastern Town in